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A13339 The amendment of life comprised in fower bookes: faithfully translated according to the French coppie. Written by Master Iohn Taffin, minister of the word of God at Amsterdam.; Traicté de l'amendement de vie. English Taffin, Jean, 1529-1602. 1595 (1595) STC 23650; ESTC S118083 539,421 558

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indeed Philip wondring at her speech in hart touched gaue audience not onely to her but from thenceforth to all men Artaxerxes Mnemon followed not the austeritie and cruell maiestie of his predecessors kings of Persia for he was not onely redy to heare all commers but also opened shewed himselfe in his chariot that all might see such as hil to speake to him might draw neere We also reade that the Emperour Traian being on horsebacke ready to go to the battel alighted to heare the complaint of a poore woman Lewes the ninth of France tearmed S. Lewes may in this vertue be a mirrour to all Magistrates of our time and therefore consider heere what the Lorde of Ionuille who liued in his time hath written Hee sayth hee vsed to sende vs the Lordes of Nesse of Soissons Ionuille in his hist ca. 94 cited by H●toman in his French Gaul and my selfe to the pleas of the gate and then would enquire of vs the state of all matters and aske whether there were anie such as could not be determined without his presence And many times vpon our report he would send for the parties content them by ministring reason and iustice Otherwhiles he would walke for recreation in the parke at Boys de Vincennes and there sit downe at the root of an oake euen vpon the grasse and cause vs to sitte with him there woulde hee giue free audience to euerie one that stood in need of him yea and many times aloud he would take whether there were anie man that were in strife or sute Then if anie stepped in he would presently heare him and giue sentence according to right and equitie Otherwhiles hee woulde charge Peter Fountain and Geoffrey Vilette to heare the parties and to determine the cause yea I haue sometimes seene this good king walking in a garden in the suburbes of Paris verie simply apparelled and there calling sutors command them to open their griefes and presently minister iustice to them 30 Thus this king was not onely affable and readie to heare such as had to doo with him but also ended theyr causes and determined their sutes without anie long delaies And in truth that is one great point which the magistrates ought mightily to regard namely the speedie ministration of iustice to euerie man without admitting any long sutes or delayes which many times ouerthrow good causes for want of meanes to prosecute In this respect doeth the Prophet Esaie commend Dauid Esay 16.5 whome hee tearmeth a seeker of iudgement and one that would hasten iustice The Emperor Marcus Aurelius a little before his death exhorting his sonne to minister speedie iustice to the fatherlesse widdow saith thus I commend vnto thee Drusia a Romane widdowe who is in great sute with the Senate In a book intituled a golden booke of M. Aurelius because in the former commotions her husbande was banished I take great compassion of her for shee exhibited her petition three moneths since but in respect of my great warres I had no time to doo her iustice Then to stirre him vp to his example he addeth Thou shalt in truth finde my sonne that in fiue and twentie yeeres for so long haue I gouerned Rome there was neuer widdow that followed sute or other busines before mee aboue eight daies Let therefore all Christian magistrates continually fixe the mirror of this heathen Emperor before their eies that they may follow his example so purchase the title attributed to Dauid that he was a magistrate that wold minister speedy iustice 31 Herein is iustice by name spoken of which as Cicero sayth is a constant and perpetuall will to euery man reason Cicero offic lib. 2 Hierom. to Demetrius For aboue all things it is the duty of magistrates to yeald to euery man his due so to minister iustice Al vertue saith S. Hierō is comprehended vnder the onely name of Iustice And Aristotle termeth it the general vertue And indeed the heathen haue noted that the first cause of the establishmēt of kings magistrats was to administer right iustice without the which no estate can subsist For without iustice saieth S. Augustin Aug. of the Citie of God lib. 4. Plato in his fourth booke of the common wealth what are kingdomes but thieueries And therefore hath Plato written that the most excellent gift that euer God gaue to man considering what miseries hee is subiect vnto was a gouernment by iustice which brideleth reshameth the presumption of the furious preserueth and mayntayneth the inocent in their honesty and yealdeth equally to euery man his due And in this sence saith Solon The safety of the common wealth consisteth in these two points That rewards bee distributed after the desert of vertue and punishments after the qualitie of the offence And this doth Plato confirme saying Cicero in his booke entituled Brutus Arist Polit. lib. 5. cap. 10 that publik cōcord shal hereby be maintayned And therfor haue some iustly tearmed the magistrates Guardians of iustice in respect that in duety they are to prouide that the Poore wrong not the superiors or ritch men also that the ritch oppresse not neither tread the poore vnder foote To bee short iustice in gouerments is as the Sunne mercy as the moone other vertues as the starres Psal 82. Exod. 18. And to these ends are they to thinke that in their functions they present God as also that in that sence the holy ghost termeth them Gods And Moses sayth that hee that commeth to them seeketh God that is to say the iudgement of God And this shal be to them a most liuely argument so to moue their harts that they shall not administer wrongfull iudgement vnworthy the maiestie of God This did Iehosaphat declare to the magistrates of his time saying 2. Chron. 19 Take heed what ye doe for yee do not admimister the iudgement of men but of God and he wil be with you in the cause of Iudgement Wherefore let the feare of the Lord be vpon you Take heede and doe it for there is no iniquitie with the Lorde our God neither respect of persons Psal 82.2 neither receauing of reward In this respect doth the holy ghost so sharpelie reproue those that polute this so honorable title of God by wrongfull iudgements How long saith he will ye iudge vniustly and accept the persons of the wicked Do right to the poore and fatherlesse Doe right to the poore and needy Deliuer the poore and the needy saue them from the handes of the wicked Also because many do the rather presume to wrong the widow the fatherlesse and others in like tribulations for that they neuer thinke to giue accompt to God for their wickednesse he addeth I haue said yee are Gods and yee all are children of the most high Here you see that yee are exalted into high estate and honor But yee shall die as a man and yee princes shall fall like
The Contents The first Booke Of mans follies and that his wisedome consisteth in the Amendement of the same That the word translated Amend you signifieth to be better aduised And why Chapter 1. Follio 1. Of the first folly to thinke that there is no God Chap. 2. Follio 4. Of the second folly to thinke better of man then of God Chap. 3. Follio 24. Of the third To thinke to liue euer Chap. 4. Follio 33. Of the fourth Not to know wherefore we doe liue Chap. 5. Follio 39. Of the fifth By the outward appearance to iudge of mans felicitie or miserie Chap. 6. Follio 50. Of the sixt To put more cōsidence in our enemies then in our friends Chap. 7. Follio 59. Of the seuenth To thinke our selues wise Chap. 8. Follio 65. The second Booke Wherein man ought to Amend That man knowing what Idolatrie superstition is ought wholy to abstaine from all participation in the same Chap. 1. Fol. 70. That it is not enough that we seperate our selues from Idolatrie but that we must moreouer ioyne with the Church of Christ Chap. 2. Fol. 77. That we ought diligently to frequent Sermons Chap. 3. Fol. 80. That in dutie we are to participate in the holy Sacraments Chap. 4. Fol. 91. That we ought to assist at common Prayer Chap. 5. Fol. 97. Of the dutie concerning domesticall and priuate praiers of euery faithfull man Chap. 6. Fol. 101 Of our dutie in reading the holy Scriptures Chap. 7. Fol. 105. That we must put in practise the word of God Chap 8. Fol. 117. Of charitie in generall Chap. 9. Fol. 120. Of Almes and releefe of the poore Chap. 10. Fol. 125. Of Couetousnesse Chap. 11. Fol. 152. Of Pride and Ambition Chap. 12. Fol. 168. Of Sumptuousnesse and excesse in apparell Chap. 13. Fol. 183 Of Ryot and superfluitie in banquets and feastes Chap. 14. Fol. 192. Of Voluptuousnesse in generall Chap. 15. Fol. 199. Of Drunkennesse Chap. 16. Fol. 205. Of Adulterie and other whoredomes Chap. 17. Fol. 215. Of Daunces Chap. 18. Fol. 228. Of games at hazard as Cardes and Dice Chap. 19. Fol. 249. Of Enuie Chap. 20. Fol. 255. Of Backbiting and slaundering Chap. 21. Fol. 262. The third Booke Who ought to Amend Of the duties common both to the man and the wife Chap. 1. Fol. Fol. 274. Of the particuler dutie of the wife to her husband Chap. 2. Fol. 285. Of the particuler dutie of the husband to his wife Chap. 3. Fol. 293. Of the duties of fathers and mothers to their Children Chap. 4. Fol. 297. Of the duties of Children to their fathers and mothers Chap. 5. Fol. 316. Of the dutie of Magistrates to their subiects Chap. 6. Fol. 327. Of the dutie of subiects to the Magistrates Chap. 7. 374. Of the duties of the ministers of the word to their Church Chap. 8. Fol. 385. Of the duties of the Church to her pastors Chap. 9. Fol. 416. The fourth Booke Of the causes of Amendement The first cause why wee shoulde Amend taken of the Authoritie of Iesus Christ to commaund vs. Chap. 1. Fol. 422. The second cause is drawne from the name Holy attributed to Iesus Christ And doth briefly intreate vpō election reprobation Gods prouidence Chap. 2. Fol. 426 The third cause deriued from the predestination and prouidence of God intreated of in the former Chapter Chap. 3. Fol. 448 The fourth cause grounded vpon the name Emanuel attributed to Iesus Christ Chap. 4. Fol. 464. The fifth cause drawne from these titles Holy Wonderful a counsailer The strong and mightie God The prince of peace The father of eternitie Attributed to Iesus Christ Chap. 5. Fol. 473. The sixt cause deriued of these two names Iesus Christ. Chap 6. Fol. 485. The seuenth cause gathered of the signification of this word Amend Chap. 7. Fol. 497. The eight cause taken of the reason added by Iesus Christ where hee saith For the kingdome of heauen or of God is at hand Chap. 8. Fol. 499. The ninth cause taken hereof That the kingdome of God which wee looke for in heauen doth admonish vs that in this life we are straungers pilgrimes and trauelers Chap. 9. Fol. 506. The tenth cause deriued from the kingdome of heauen which is in vs. Chap. 10. Fol. 516 The eleuenth cause taken of the holy ministerie called the kingdome of God Chap. 11. Fol. 520. The twelfth cause taken hereof That by the kingdome of heauen is signified the blessed felicitie of the children of God in heauen The kingdome of God in vs and the holy ministerie Chap. 12. Fol. 533. The thirtenth and last cause of Amendement deriued of this saying of Iesus Christ The kingdome of heauen is at hand Chap. 13. Fol. 540. Faults escaped Page 40. line 2. for same Read sunne Pa. 79. l. 11. at the end R. in heauen Pa. 124. l. 28. pronouncing R. procuring P. 162. l. 2. so plentie as R. as plentie of P. 164 l. 37. hateh R. loueth P. 180. l. 41. so to resist R. so to employ our forces to resist P. 224 l. 2● 22. as also R. otherwise P. 257. l. 31. grounded vpon R. pining at Ibidem l. 34. setting sure footing is brought R. pining away is worne ib. l. 37. soule R. ha●t P. 259. at the end of the page read at the good of others and reioyceth at their P. 267. l. 27. shew R. shame P. 295 l. 21. prone R. reproue P. 323. l. 22. grieued R. reuealed ib. l. 32. after mother Re. to his Disciple Iohn P. 341. l. 22. after should R. not l. 40. after did R. not Pa. 387. l. 14. put out owne Pa. 403. l. 39. after deliuered R. to the death P. 409. l. 16. path R. youth P. 412. l. 41. passion R. parson P. 417. l. 14 carnall R. eternall P. 428. l. 36. after ghost R. to say P. 450. l. 1. that R. thereof but P. 465. l. 39. after clense R. our selues P. 467. l. 20. we R. ye P. 482. l. 25. after resolue R. to walke P. 496. l. 37. after that R. neuer P. 498. l. 9. amend R. bee damned P. 499. l. 29. best Re. least P. 505. l. 41. after if R. we belieue these things that l. 1. God R. we P. 513. l. 40. hand R. hart P. 515. l. 4. wine R. wiues P. 519. l. 6. after this R. ioy l. 16. after retaine R. in vs P. 526. l. 36. after the R. darke and for darke R. Deuill P. 527. l. 8. signe R. Cyon li. 28. dead into R. mortified in P. 534. l. 20. hands R. harte OF AMENDEMENT OF LIFE The first Booke Of the foolishnesse of Man and that his wisedome consisteth in amendement of the same That the word translated Amend signifieth to be better aduised and why Chap. 1. IT is a matter worth the noting that the whole summe of the first sermon of Iesus Christ as also of Saint Iohn the Baptist is by S. Mathew comprised in these wordes Amend your liues Math. 3.2 Math 4.17
beast that hee knew nothing and that in the sight of God he was but a beast Ieremie touched with the same errour Iere. 11.7 entereth into argument with God demaunding why the wicked shoulde prosper and the righteous bee in tribulation Io● 11 6.7 Psal 22.2 Psal 13.2 Psal 79.5 Psal 77 10. Esa 49.14 Iob also confesseth that it troubled him and made his flesh to tremble How often doth Dauid complaine resting onely vppon the outwarde shew of his troubled estate as if God had forsaken him as if hee had forgotten him as if hee had beene angrie with him as if hee had withdrawen his grace mercy from him The Church of Israel considering her afflictions entered into opinion complaint that God had forgotten forsaken hir To be briefe al men naturally haue respect to the outward apparance deeming such as doo prosper to be blessed the afflicted to be accursed 2 This peruerse iudgement proceedeth of another folly and abuse euen this That wee imagine that all grace sauour blessing and felicitie resteth onely in honour riches and carnall commodities But as this sparke of the image of God sometimes giueth light to our mindes that all thinges depende vppon Gods prouidence yet fall wee into this errour to thinke that God in his wrath and displeasure reiecteth all those that are afflicted and that contrarywise hee loueth and fauoureth such as doo prosper and thereof wee conclude that the afflicted are accursed and the wicked blessed As for others who attribute all to fortune and aduenture and knowe no other good or felicitie but this lyfe they lykewise fall into the same errour as thinking all that prosper in this lyfe to bee blessed and the afflicted to bee accursed And this causeth the wicked to flatter and harden theyr heartes in all iniquitie Much lyke to the Sicilian tyrant who when he had despoiled the temple of all the golde therein Dionisius hauing a fayre winde vpon the sea sayd You see that the immortall Gods doo fauour sacriledge and Church-robbers The lyke blasphemies doth the prophet Malachie attribute to the wicked in his dayes saying It is in vaine to serue God Malach. 3.4 and what profite is it that wee haue kepte his commandements and that wee walked humbly before the Lorde of hoastes Therefore wee count the proude blessed euen they that worke wickednes are set vp and they that tempt God yea they are deliuered Besides what is the reason that many hauing knowledge of the truth doo yet rest plunged in idolatrie And others also that had forsaken it do returne therto but euen that considering of the outward apparance of Idolaters inioying their goods dignities and carnall commodities and the afflictions of such as followe Iesus Christ they thinke them to bee more blessed than those that carrie the crosse of Christ 3 What lykewise is the reason that so much people yea euen so many nations which professe religion doo giue ouer themselues to vnlawfull traffique to fraude deceit and other iniquities Euen this that they imagine that those men which doo most abounde in riches and carnall commodities albeit wrongfully gotten are neuerthelesse more blessed than the poore afflicted that walke sincerely and vprightly Our sight is so thicke and our eyes are so dimme that we cannot penetrate beyond the outward prosperity and come to the sight of the iniquity that lurketh vnder the same which is vndoubtedly accursed by God bringeth forth mischief notwithstanding whatsoeuer colour it be shaddowed and clothed withall We discerne onely the prosperitie of the one and the affliction of the other but doo neuer looke to the cause and end of the same We see the garment onely and not the bodie or the bodie but not the soule the outward worke but not the workeman 4 Let vs therefore applie this to our purpose In the first Psalme it is saide Blessed is the man that doeth not walke in the counsell of the wicked nor stand in the waie of sinners nor sit in the seate of the scornefull And this may wee well beleeue if wee but looke vpon the wicked the sinners and scornefull eyther vpon a scaffolde or vpon a ladder readie to be executed to the death or cast into hell But if thou considerest these wicked ones these sinners and scorners clothed in wealth adorned with honour reioycing in carnall commodities thy minde will alter For casting thy e●e vppon the garment the delight of the flesh thou wilt thinke them blessed yea thou wilt not beleeue the doctrine of Dauid who sayth thou canst not bee blessed vnlesse thou renouncest the wicked course of the wicked and sinners Thou resemblest those who seeing a man in a goodly bed serued with all dainties and with sound of musicke doo thinke him much blessed but himselfe contrarywise feeling the intollerable anguish of the gout or collike will complaine as a miserable and wretched man 5 This folly also to iudge by the outward apparance is so much the greater as that thereby wee doo conclude that wee are brute beasts voide of an immortall soule Likewise that beeing beasts wee are more miserable than all other beasts Beasts fishes or souls haue easier liues than men especially than the children of God who aboue all other are subiect to tribulations These creatures wanting vnderstanding doo manye times passe ouer the whole course of theyr liues without feeling anie calamitie vntill death whereof likewise they haue no apprehension They liue without care sorrow or other passions that trouble man And therefore if man as beasts haue no immortal soule these creatures are more blessed than hee and consequently the wicked that liue at ease and in prosperitie are much more blessed than the afflicted children of God if after death they haue no feeling of good or euill But if wee bee fully resolued that man is not a beast but hauing an immortall soule is after his death to looke to go either to heauen or to hell we will no longer by the outward apparance iudge that the beast much lesse the wicked man in all his triumph is more happie than the afflicted children of God Luke 16.19 If afflicted Lazarus and the rich man triumphing in pleasures had had no immortall soules men might with some reason haue adiudged Lazarus accursed and the rich man blessed But that iudgement is to passe vpon beastes onely For as for them beeing no beasts but endued with immortall soules albeit the rich man was honourably buryed and Lazarus with beggerie yet the rich mans soule beeing cast into hell fire cryed out that hee was and is accursed and that the soule of Lazarus beeing by the Angels lifted into heauen was is blessed We read that Croesus king of Lidia inioying great abundance of wealth Plu. in the life of Solon and all other prosperitie that might make a man blessed in this worlde on a time demaunded of Solon one of the seuen wise men of Greece whether he thought there were anie man more blessed
earth shall perish from the earth from vnder these heauens He hath made the earth by his power c. Wherein we are to note that albeit Ieremie writ al his prophecies in Hebrew yet this one sentence is set downe in the Caldean or Babilonian speech therby admonishing the captiue Iewes to disaduow Idols to cōfesse the true God plainly sensibly in a language knowen to the Idolaters If this confession bee required of these poore captiue Iewes how can these men be excused who being at libertie to depart from among the Idolaters do assist at their Idolatry thereby to giue the world to vnderstand that they also are Idolaters therefore dare not vtter one word in reproofe of the Idols 9 Sith therefore that the first sermon both of Christ of Iohn the Baptist do notably proclaime Amend your liues Let all such as haue attained to the knowledge of the truth resolue with thēselues to renounce all Idolatrie superstition vtterly to denie all assistance participation whatsoeuer therin either in hart or body Let them remember that all abandoning of their bodies to Idolatrie is a prophanation of the temple of God That the yeelding of the body to the deuill reseruing the hart to God is intollerable sacriledge That the denial of the true God the worshipping of the deuill is detestable hipocrisie That thereby they blaspheme Iesus Christ honor the Idol that they giue offēce to their neighbours as well by confirming some in their errors as by inducing others to follow their examples But especially let them remember that their pretended excuse will redound to their double damnatiō For if he who thinking to worship God yet of ignorāce throgh worshiping an Idoll offendeth deserueth death surely then he that boweth his body to worship that which he knoweth to be an Idoll 1. Con. 10.20 Luk. 12.47.48 yea a very deuil as S. Paul calleth it offendeth in far greater measure deserues greter punishmēt And so doth Christ himself pronounce concerning the disobedient seruant who knowing his masters wil not doing it Exod. 20.5 shall be beaten much more grieuously thē he that was ignorāt therof And indeed it is not only a simple sinne and transgression as in the ignorant but more contempt and misprision against the maiestie of the law-giuer as God in many places complaineth of his people that they haue dispised him Rom. 5.20 yea euen hated him as himselfe faith in his law And hereto likewise may be referred the sentence of the Apostle where hee saith That God gaue the law that sinne might abound because the knowledge of the law taking away ignorance maketh the transgression to be conioyned with contempt and despising of God 10 The more therfore that we know the inconuenience of Idolatrie the more we are to detest abhor and flie from it and neuer flatter our selues in the presence of God who knoweth our hearts It is but a foolish enterprise to vndertake to deceiue the Lord or to thinke to prosper by offending him We feare the losse of our goods dignities countrie and life if we go not to masse with other men and counterfeate our selues to bee Idolaters as they are yet we feare not to loose the treasure and inheritance of heauen life euerlasting and the kingdome of God by polluting our bodies in Idolatrie euen by the assured testimonie of our owne hearts We are not to order our duties after the easements of our flesh but according to the word of God The meanes to obtaine safetie and felicitie consisteth not in prouoking God to wrath by seruing of Idols but if we desire his mercie and fauour towardes vs wee must renounce and denie our selues and the world that wee may worship and serue him onely Let vs obey S. Iohn who saith 1. Ioh. 5.21 Psal 97.7 1. Cor. 6.20 My little children keepe your selues from Idols And let vs remember that the holy Ghost pronounceth woe to all those that worship Idols And contrariwise blesseth all those that adore and glorifie God both in hart and minde That it is not enough that we seperate our selues from Idolatrie vnlesse we also ioyne with the Church of Christ by frequenting Sermons communicating in the Sacraments and comming to common prayer Chap. 2. AS repentance and Amendement of life consisteth in this that we forsake sinne and applie our selues to goodnesse So it is not enough that we keepe both bodies and soules from Idolatrie and superstition vnlesse that also seperating our bodies from Idolaters we adioine our selues to the Church of Christ by hearing his word receiuing the Sacraments calling vpon God in the name of Iesus Christ The titles that the holy Ghost attributeth to this Church do euidently declare vnto vs of how great importance to the glory of God saluatiō of mankind this duty of ioyning with the true Church is First it is in many places called the kingdom of God yet not without great cause For as this kingdome consisteth in euidēt assured knowledge of the true God of his Son Iesus Christ in faith righteousnes peace and comfort of the holy Ghost in sanctification to be briefe in euerlasting life glory So is it in the church wherin God manifests himself reueales his truth pleasure To the mēbers therof he giueth faith righteousnes holines peace ioy and finally life glory euerlasting Contrariwise the kingdom of Sathan cōsisteth in ignorance Mat. 13. infidelity corruptiō vice sin iniquity in a bad conscience trouble of mind dispaire death damnation The members therfore of Christs Church are the kingdome of God retired from the power dominion of Sathā to the end that God may raigne in them by his spirit the scepter of his word as contrariwise al that are without the Church do belong to the kingdome of Sathā as S. Paul also doth say of the excōmunicate that they be deliuered to Sathā who raigneth without the Church of Christ 1. Cor. 5.5 1. Cor 6.9.10 Luk. 13.28 Act. 1.47 This likewise is confirmed in that the same title of the kingdom of God wherby the Church is signified is also attributed to that blessed glorious estate which the elect shal enioy after the resurrection Wherin we are taught that theris such a cōiunction betweene the Church that glorious kingdom of Iesus Christ that it is as it were the suburbes gate thereinto wherupon also al they that refuse to ioyne with the Church can pretend no portion in this kingdom of heauē For the path to felicitie importeth an ascention frō the kingdome of God vpon earth to the kingdome of God in heauē And that doth S. Luke note saying that God did dayly adioyne vnto the Church those that should be saued thereby signifying that such as refuse to adioyne themselues therto do minister no occasion to imagine that they haue attained the way to saluation and life euerlasting 2 By another title are the
of our Lord Iesus Christ at the least once a yeere they seperated not themselues from the Idolaters and heathen shewing some testimonie of their Christianitie Let them that we speake of therefore consider by what title they may be called Christians sith they neuer communicate in the supper of Iesus Christ Neither may they replie as some doe that in ioyning with one Church they condemne all others for it is true that all assemblies that entitle themselues the Church of Christ are not so yet to acknowledge or alow of none for feare of condemning of the rest is to denie and condemne Christ in not condemning those who calling themselues Christ are Antichrists If a man bring a payment in golde where among there bee some peeces that seeme light or counterfaite thou doest not straight say I will take none least by taking so much as I take to be waight and currant you should complaine that I reiect the rest but thou wilt bring thy ballance and touch-stone and then wilt thou take so much as thou findest to be waight and currant and boldly refuse the rest Let these men therefore set before their eyes the markes of the true Church as their touch-stone and scales and by them consider where they are thereto also adioyning prayer to God that he will direct them by his holy spirit and so knowing the true Church and ioyning themselues therto Amend their liues by communicating in the holy supper of the Lord. Of our dutie to assist at publique Prayer Chap. 5. AS concerning publique or common prayer Gen. 17.7 Act. 9.14.21 2. Tim. 2.19 Psal 14.4 Esa 56.7 Mat. 21.13 Ioh. 16.23 Mat. 18.19 considering that thereby the holy Scripture signifieth the whole seruice of God also that his seruants are called people calling vpon God it alreadie appeareth that such as despise the same do cut off themselues from the degree of Gods seruants Where God calleth the temple the house of prayer he sheweth that the principall part of that seruice which he requireth of vs is that wee should assemble to pray and call vpon him as indeed these publique praiers are of great efficacie For albeit all priuate praiers directed to the heauenly father in the name of Iesus Christ haue promise to be heard yet is it not without cause that Iesus Christ aduertiseth and promiseth vs that if two faithfull doe agree vpon earth whatsoeuer they demaund of their heauenly father it shall be graunted This is a fauour as it were peculiar to the Church and noted by Dauid where he saith Praise waiteth for thee in Sion Psal 65.2 and vnto thee shall the vow be performed Herein he sheweth that the praiers of the Church signified by Sion are so sure to bee heard that God who heareth them looketh for praise in thē as indeed it is his dutie whose prayers are heard to yeeld thankes praisings to God And truely as when a whole Burgeoysie of a Citie doe come before their Prince and with one voice craue pardon for some offence or begge some grace or fauour the Prince will be more moued then if they being absent some one mā should speake for the whole Euen so whē the whole Church assembled together doth with hart and minde in the presence of God accōpanie the praiers which the preacher as the mouth of the congregation poureth forth let them be assured that those praiers do penetrate the heauens and that God is moued to heare them Not that he is subiect to passions as we but that by the feeling of our affections hee vouchsafeth to assure vs of his mercy goodnes toward vs. Whē Amb. de paenitent diuers how few so euer saith S. Ambrose are assembled together being vnited they are great And the praiers of a gret multitude cannot possibly be cōtemned 2 Likewise all people and nations in the world euen the Idolaters haue euermore had their assemblies therein publique prayers This sence or feeling being grauen in all mens harts that haue any religion that they ought to call vpon their God that it is an honour that God requireth at their hands and the true meanes to purchase his blessings toward them But in Christian Churches there is also this farther reason That their publique praiers are as it were a publique renouncing of all sects and societie with Idolaters and prophane people an acknowledgement and confession of the true God a publique sanctification of his name to his glory And therefore Act. 16.13 as the Iewes in old time so since haue the Christians euermore very carefully obserued this dutie of pietie and seruice to God as appeareth by the writings of the Apostles Prophets and by al Ecclesiasticall histories And to this purpose doth S. Luke rehearse that Paul and his companions being at the towne of Philippos came forth vpon the Sabaoth day and went to the riuers side where they vsed to pray This vndoubtedly was some out corner where the faithfull vsed secretly to meete to call vpon God So that albeit euery man priuately might haue prayed in his house Act. 21.5 and so haue auoided both the paine and daunger yet knowing that in dutie they were to separate themselues from Idolaters and the efficacie of the praiers of the congregation they ouercame the feare of the danger met in that place especially to pray and with one consent to poure out their praiers to the Lord. When S. Paul and his companions departed from Tirus all the congregation with their wiues and children brought them out of the towne and kneeling with them on the shore prayed Shall wee in these daies find this zeale among Christians No men will bee ashamed to imitate it and to kneele downe vpon a shore to pray to God publikely And yet the faithful of those times neuer did it without both reson fruit It is therfore a holy ordināce of God a most profitable exercise to come together to call vpon the Lord. As also it is yt●uty of al faithful carefully to come to such praiers that they may be pertakers of the fruits of the same especially in time of gret calamities or vpō feare or liklihood therof We should euē extraordinarily come together to call vpon God as we read that the prophet Ioel in the name of God cōmaunded Blow the trumpet in Sion sanctifie a fast Ioh. 2.15 cal a solemne assemblie gather the people sanctifie the congregation gather the elders assemble the children and together cry vnto the Lord in praiers feruent and extraordinarie old and young none exēpted And as euery one in respect of himself is therto bound so is it not enough that he faithfully employ himselfe only vnlesse he sollicit exhort others according to the prophesie of Zacharie saying The enhabitants of one Cittie shall say to another Vp let vs goe and pray before the Lord and seeke the Lord of hoasts I will go also Zach. 8 21. 3 Neither is it inough that in body we
soule from Christ making the beholders fornicators and effeminate persons And well I wot that thou darest not reply that being ouercome with wine the womens songs and dances did not much moue thee for truely thou art entised to impudencie and in thee is this horrible sinne accomplished that of the members of Christ thou makest the members of an harlot True it is that Herodias daughter is not there but the deuill is which at that time danced in her and now in that woman whom thou beholdest and leadeth into captiuitie the deceiued soules of those that sit and looke on Agayne after many lyke exhortations These thinges sayth hee doo I propound vnto you and not without cause Chrisost in his last homilie vpon the Col. Chrisost in his second homily vpon Gen. but onely to the end you may shunne all such marriages dances and deuillish pastimes Also expounding the histories and marriages of Isaac Iacob hee exhorteth the people wel to note that there was no dancing You see sayth he with what modestie those marriages were celebrated Note this all you that make such account of those deuillish pompes and euen at the beginning doo pollute the honour of marriage with such abhomination Were ther then anie viols Had they anie tabers and pipes Did they practise such deuillish dancing Ambrose in his 3. book of Virginitie 20 Among our Latine Doctors Saint Ambrose also speaketh of dancing Where the last messe of good cheere is dancing shamefastnes hath but small assurance and allurements are greatly to be feared I could wish maidens to keepe them awaie For as a learned man euen in wordly affaires doth saie No man danceth vnles he be either dronke or mad What counsels do we looke for in the Scriptures when Saint Iohn the herald of righteousnes was put to death at the request of a dancer which is an example that the entisement of one dance hath procured more hurt than the rage of sacrilegious madnes and furie Againe what can a daughter learne of her adulterous mother but the losse of her honour Can anie thing tend more to villanous lust than by disordinate motions to discouer such partes of the bodie as either nature hath hidden or discipline couered To plaie with the eies to turn the head about to cast the lockes here and there Not without cause haue some there learned to do iniurie to God For what modestie or shamefastnes can there be where they dance and friske about with such noise And speaking of the villanous Herodias that taught her daughter so to dance he addeth this What saie you yee holy women you see what you are to teach your daughters also what they should forget Let a daughter dance but if a daughter dance let it be the daughter of that vild incestuous person But as for her that is modest and chast let her teach her daughters godlinesse not dancing 31 Saint Augustine complaining of the corruptions of his time Aug against Petil. cap. 6. saith thus Bishoppes were wont to suppresse foolishe and lasciuious dances but now we may finde some Bishops that wyll bee lookers on yea and somtimes dance with women so farre are they from suppressing them August vpon the 32. psalm Where is he which sufficiently sheweth that before through the diligence of Gods good seruants dances were suppressed and banished from among Christians as dissolutions vtterly vnworthie theyr profession and therefore in another place hee vpholdeth that it is better vppon the holy daie to worke than to dance 22 As for the Doctors of our dayes they also concurre with the former some calling dances the deuils baudry others saying that dancing is as a circle Viret in his Instit vpon the 7. commandement of the law whereof the deuill is the center and the circumference are all his Angels Among the rest one thus writeth What brimstone or bellowes can a man finde more sit and infernall wherewith to inflame and kindle the fyres of youth that doo alreadie by nature so burne that wee can hardly finde water enough to quench the same For albeit women and maides doo dance theyr rounds alone yet by theyr songs and lasciuious motions they entice not onely themselues but the lookers on and hearers to lasciuiousnesse and are to themselues and others as drums musitions trumpets spectacles of the deuill If they haue yong men among them so much the woorse for so is the fyre neerer at hand and more kindled If they bee at anie other dances whereof the numbers are infinite how many meanes hath sathan to allure to his stewes both men and women olde and young dancers and standers by There shall yee haue instrumentes by theyr lasciuious tunes to serue as the deuils trumpets to prouoke the hearers to all villanie the foulest speeches that may bee lascinious gestures signes motions and as dishonest touchings as may bee found out let such consider heereof as haue had experience Speaking also of Herodias daughter We reade sayth hee of the daughter of a whoore that daunced Wherein hee sheweth that dances are the doctrine of the schoole of whoores and strumpets not of honest women 23 If all these authorities may not suffice whole assemblies of Bishoppes haue lykewise condemned dancing In the yeere 364. in a councell holden at Laodicia it was decreed by the common aduice of all good men there present that Christians shoulde vse no dancing at marriages onely they might there dine and sup together in all chast conuersation as it beseemeth Christians The same was afterward confirmed in the sixt vniuersall councell of three hundred Bishoppes holden at Constantinople Lykewise in the Councell of Agatha holden about the yeere 430. chap. 39 all dancing loue songs or lasciuious behauiours were also condemned and prohibited among all Christians of whatsoeuer estate Agayne the Councell of Ilerd in Spaine about the yeere 515. forbadde all dauncing and lasciuious singing at Christian marriages The Sinodes and assemblies of the pastors of our time haue euermore condemned dauncing as an exercise pernitious vnworthy the professors of reformed religion To conclude at the last Estats holden at Orleans France by her deputies required to take awaie all publike dancing and thereupon obtayned a decree that yet is extant 24 If the authoritie of Gods worde the verie vanitie and most daungerous corruption of daunces the testimonies of the holie Fathers and Doctours of the Church both olde and new the decrees of Councels and Sinodes and of Christian princes bee no sufficient groundes to suppresse dauncers of necessitie we must put them to schoole among the Heathen especially the Romanes of them to learne euen to theyr shame what modestie holynesse honestie and temperance is to bee required amonge Christians Whereas among other superstitions and corruptions brought from Greece into their common welth they had taken vp a custome in theyr Bacchanalian feastes that men and women should daunce together in respect of such great inconueniences as thereby dyd ensue they
bannished that fashion out of theyr Citie and coulde not by anie meanes bee well perswaded of that man that was addicted to dauncing This lawe was in force in the dayes of the Oratour Cicero about the declining of theyr common wealth notwithstanding theyr manners were alreadie much corrupt and degenerate from the former integritie 25 For the testimonie of the truth heereof wee wyll alleadge some parte of his writinges Cic. for Murena orat 25. Lucius Murena was a noble man and chosen to bee Consull at Rome some enuiers of his aduancement and his enemyes to the ende to declare him vnworthie that dignitie accused him of many crimes among the rest that hee had daunced Cicero who had vndertaken his defence comming to that point of the accusatōi sayth not that it was no fault to dance and so the same was a vaine obiection but acknowledgeth it in deede to bee a greate fault and therefore for his clyent sayeth that there was no apparance to beleeue that Murena daunced his reasons because dauncing is euermore accompanyed with many other vices As also that a man coulde not giue himselfe to dancing vnles he were eyther dronke or mad That the vices that minister presumption of dauncing as the causes of their effectes are for the most parte villanous and dissolute banquets dronkennesse lust and fornication But no man coulde accuse Muraena of anie such and therefore it was not to bee thought that euer hee daunced Heere wee see that among the Romanes dauncing was a great fault verie ignominious and sufficient to denounce a man vncapable of preferment in the common wealth Also that they were resolued that dauncing was alwayes accompanyed wyth mightie and most villanous vices To bee short that a vertuous man woulde neuer daunce All this was thought most true among the Romanes Otherwyse neither had Cato accused Muraena for dauncing neither had Cicero alleadged this ground for his defence 26 Agayne Deiotarus a king in Asia beeing lykewise accused before Caesar for dauncing at a banquet the same Cicero in his defence for that crime declared that there was no such presumption in such a man first because hee was a king who vsed not to be dronke next that hee resembled not many other kinges such as presuming of theyr lybertie applyed themselues to all ryot and lustfull pleasure But that he was a modest sober and stay de man one who in his youth gaue himselfe to more honest exercises as ●●ding of horses practise of weapons c. Heere agayne wee see that the Romanes were fully perswaded that dauncing and dronkennesse went commonly together that they are exercises more fit for men drowned in pleasures than for such as are endued with modestie also that all young princes well brought vp omitting all such vanitie should giue themselues to the exercises of vertue 27 The same Cicero after his returne from exile representing to the Senate the life and behauiour of one of his enemies Aulus Gabimus among other the good qualities of a ruffian and effeminate person entituleth him to be a gallant dancer and verse nimble Hauing also to deale with Anthonie a man drowned in all kinde of vice among other his reproches of fornication and ordinarie dronkennesse he also obiecteth that hee had danced Hereto let vs adde the saying of the same Orator in his third booke of Offices There hee sheweth that a wise man such a one as maketh account or professeth vertue should neuer meddle with any such villanous or dishonest action notwithstanding whatsoeuer greate profite might be gotten thereby And for example he putteth this case If a man by Will should chance to bequeath to one that professeth vertue two or three millions of crownes vpon condition that before he tooke possession of this legacy he should come into the common place and there dance and that he should promise so to doo he hereupon demandeth whether this man in performing his promise and dancing in the face of the world should shew him selfe either vertuous or wise Then he aunswereth that hee ought not to haue promised so had he shewed his grauitie Likewise that hee ought not for anie thing to doo that which in the accomplishment imported anie villanie These sentences of Cicero a hethen may bee a reproch and iust condemnation against Christians with whome dancing is so common that some haue erected publyke schooles wherein to teach dancing 28 All the premises tending to condemne dauncing might suffice to cut off all replication yet least wee should omit anie thing that might make with the atturneys thereof and dazell the eies of the flesh enclined to this corruption we will answere to theyr vsuall propositions in defence thereof First they obiect that wee seeke to abolish all pleasure recreation which were a matter repugnant to nature to right and reason considering that rest and recreation are as necessarie as meate drinke sleepe and such lyke which wee vse for the preseruation of lyfe But we do confesse that both bodie and minde doo require recreation Yet albeit it bee permitted sometimes to take recreation it doth not therfore follow that they must bee allowed to dance All recreations are not permitted otherwise it would be lawfull for men to recreate them selues in lewd and foolish speeches in dronkennes fornication c. But all recreation must tend to prepare vs either in body or mind to our vocation euerie other recreation conioyned with apparance of euill occasion or entisement to wantonnesse or offence to our neighbour is by Gods mouth accursed To be short euerie recreation repugnant to the modestie temperance and holines required in Christians is to be condemned and reiected Therefore this obiection is false If it bee lawfull to take recreation it is also lawfull to dance 29 They also replie To leape friske and daunce are thinges indifferent therefore to make them a sinne is iniurie to Christian libertie Wee aunswere Those thinges are indifferent which with faith and for the glory of God without danger of offence a man may eyther doo or leaue as to eate flesh or to eate none but dances cannot be drawen into that compasse The vanities lightnesse and excessiue sport of dances the ordinarie companions to dronkennesse the manifest allurements to lasciuiousnesse and the apparant occasions of sundry notable inconueniences doo forbidde them to be accounted among things indifferent For it were meere impudencie to maintaine that such vanitie or corruption may please God and so wee may applie our selues thereto in faith which if wee haue not all that wee doo is sinne Also albeit wee should admit them which we cannot to be things indifferent Rom. 14.23 Rom 14 1. Cor. 8.13 yet ought we to practise the same which Saint Paule protesteth That rather than to offend our neighbour for whom Iesus Christ hath dyed we will neuer vse it while we liue 30 Some do cōfesse that in deed ther is abuse yet the same may be taken awaie not the whole exercise therof
then to be occasion of offence to our neighbors 1. Cor. 8.13 by our plesures to bring destruction vpon those for whom Iesus Christ hath dyed And as to the end to represent the corrupt world as it were in a table we haue alredy shadowed out men and women dancing so by inserting thereinto players and gamesters at Cardes Dice we shall more liuely demonstrate the world and shew that such as giue themselues to gaming are indeed of the world not truly of the church of Christ And as by lots the souldiers parted the garments of Iesus Christ so may we wel say that these games at Dice Cards are the meanes to part between the world the Deuil many of those who professing reformed religion are addicted thereunto 9 But in as much as Iesus Christ admonisheth vs to Amend our liues and to repent our former transgressions let vs stedfastly resolue hereafter to abstaine and not to bee carried awaie with the taunts of gamesters that scorne our simplicitie because we will not play with them Let vs remember the aunswere of a heathen Xenophanes who at a feast being called dasterd for that he would not play at Dice wisely replyed I am indeede a dasterd and fearefull in all dishonest causes Let therefore his censure who tearmed these thinges dishonest together with his constancie against the taunts of gamesters be vnto vs Christians an instruction and example constantly to refraine from such games And the better to confirme vs herein let vs also thinke vpon the wordes of Saint Cyprian Let vs sayth he be Christians not players at Cardes and Dice Let vs poure forth our mony vpon the table of the Lord wher Christ sitteth as president and the Angels do see vs. In hew of loosing them folishly let vs distribute our goods to the poor Yea let vs commit them to the custodie of Iesus Christ For these games saith he are daungerous worthie of death and replenished with folly They containe no truth but a quagu●yre of all falsehood periurie Let vs pull away our hands from such pastimes and in our harts turne off and take away the darkenesse wherewith Satan blindeth vs let our hands be cleane and not defiled in doing honour to the Deuil Let vs flie from the enemie that pursueth vs and spend our time in the learning of true wisdome and instruction in the doctrine of the Gospell Yea let vs lift vp pure hands to C●rist and to the ende wee may please God let vs neuer looke vpon Cardes or Dice So beit Thus doth Saint Cyprian conclude his treatise against players at Cardes and Dice Of Enuie Chap. 20. NOw let vs speake of Enuie the sister and inseperable companion of couetousnesse and ambition Wisd 1.24 Augustine of Christ Doctrine which likewise proceedeth of a foolish wicked selfe loue As it is written in the booke of wisedome Thorow Enuie of the Deuill death came into the world Which Saint Augustine also confirmeth saying Enuie is a deuelish vice whereof the Deuill is vnpardonably guiltie in the sight of God For in the sentence of the Deuils damnation it is not saide that he had committed adulterie or theft but that hee had enuyed the state of man created to the image of God Againe Petrarck of the remedies of fortune whereas all other vices doe breede some pleasure and contentment albeit but false and wretched Onely Enuie engendereth nothing but sorrow feedeth vpon mischiefe grieueth at others good and in it selfe alreadie hath that euill which it wisheth to others Aug. In a certaine Sermon And indeede Enuie is a passion in the soule yeelding sorrow and heauinesse for such benefites as other haue that may bee desireable amiable or commendable and thereof ensueth a hatred of their felicitie and prosperitie If they be our betters because we be not so good as they If our inferiours least they should grow equall with vs Plut. of curiositie If our equals for feare they shoulde get before vs. 2 Concerning the first We ordinarily see that they which are endued with the greatest vertues and exalted into highest prosperitie are subiect to Enuie as Aristotle saith That Enuie is the enemie that assaulteth vertue and others prosperitie Plut. of Enuie and hatred Also as there is no shadow where there is no sunne so where there is no prosperitie there is no Enuie We doe Enuie saith Plutarch such as prosper and therefore as they that are tender sighted doe finde themselues grieued with euery light and bright obiect so is it with the enuious in euery the prosperitie of others Whereupon he compareth enuious persons to Cantharides a certaine greene and venimous worme or a Flie that vsually feedeth vpon wheate when it waxeth ripe and roses in their pride for so doth the enuious man he taketh against those that be honest Cicero to Heren lib. 4. greeueth at the encrease of other mens vertue Cicero also saith that Enuie as a companion to vertue do still pros●cute the good And therefore Seneca aptly saith Seneca of maners It is more easie for a poore man to shunne contempt then for a rich man to auoide Enuie 3 Enuie vseth onely one point of discretion and temperance which is this That seldome or neuer●●t medleth with those whose greatnesse and excellencie doe take from the enuious all hope of attaining to the like degree Aristo in his Rhet. lib. 2. And this doth Aristotle note saying Enuie for the most part seaseth vpon that which it may best ouertake or out goe and that in this consideration men neuer Enuie the dead Plut. of Enuie and hatred neither such as in greatnesse do without comparison exceede them Father as Plutarch saith those that in age doe farre out goe them And in that sence it is written that Enuie is many times extinguished by the greatnes and excellencie of other mens prosperitie And for example hee addeth saying No man enuied Alexander the great or Cirus when they had attained the tipe of their deuises For as the sunne beating directly vpon the crowne of the head yeeldeth but a small shadow so they that are in eminencie farre aboue vs doe purchase small Enuie against them And therefore hee very properly compareth enuie vnto smoke which so long as the fire is but small maketh a great shew but so soone as it staineth vanisheth away or at the least appeareth nothing so plainely as at the first 4 As for those that be equall in degree it is an old-saying that the earthen potter enuieth the potter Eras in his Chiliads whether for gaine or for reputatation and honor this doth another prouerbe note saying The neighbours eye is alwaies an enemie and enuieth For surely men cannot abide that others of their owne callings should bee better thought of or come to be greater then themselues Gen. 4. As Cain enuied Abell Gen. 30.1 because the sacrifice of Abell was more acceptable in the sight of
more able to with and temptations and a line of three twists is not so soone broken They are 〈◊〉 each to helpe vp other if either of them happen to 〈…〉 or sinne Wis 4. ● Two are better sayeth the same Salomon 〈…〉 they haue better wages for their labour And if they 〈…〉 will 〈◊〉 vp the other but wo vnto him that is alone for if he 〈…〉 lift him vp They ought also each to per●●●●● 〈…〉 to relieue the poore diligently to frequent 〈◊〉 to vse prayers and supplications and praise and thankesgiuings to the Lord to comfort each other in the time of affliction to be short either to exhort other to walke in the feare of God 〈◊〉 in all duties and exercises beseeming the children of God In this m●nner did that holy woman Elizeus hottesse exhort her husband to prepare a chamber for the prophet to lodge in Saint Paul also sayth 2. King 4 1● 1. Cor. ●4 ●● That women desirous to learne should question with theyr husbandes at home Whereby he sheweth that the husband ought to bee so instructed as hee maie bee readie to instruct his wyfe at home And in deede a heathen Philosopher in this sense sayth verie well Plutarch in the rules of marriage That the husband after the example of the Bee should euerie where gather euerie good instruction that he might be able to impart it to his wife and by hauing communication acquaint her therewith Thus sayeth hee maye the mindes of women well taught be wonne from vanitie to vertue 7 Other duties there are which be common both to the husband the wife as among the rest such as proceed of the vnion of marryage wherof God in the institution thereof sayde They are one flesh And Iesus Christ confyrmed saying Two shall bee one 〈◊〉 And therfore in Saint Marke hee addeth They are no more two but one flesh Gen 2.24 Math. 19. 5 Marke 10.8 And in deede if Eue being created of one of the ribbes of Adam was as parte of himselfe then is the wife also a parte of her husband and as the one halfe of himselfe And of this vn●●● and coniunction proceedeth the mutuall loue betweene man and wife For no man sayth Saint Paule hateth his owne flesh but loueth and cherisheth it And speaking to husbandes hee sayeth Husbandes loue your wiues Ephes 5.15 Titus 2.4 Eccle. 25.1 And writing to Titus hee commaundeth him to exhort the elder women to teach the younger to bee modest and to loue theyr husbandes Three thinges sayth Wisedome doo reioyce thee and with them am I beautifyed before God and men Vnitie of brethren loue of neighbours a man and wife that agree together But syth the foundation of this mutuall loue is the vnity of marriage wherby the husband and the wife are made one flesh the husbande as the head the wife as the bodie It followeth that this loue must bee stedfast not variable and that the vnion of marriage continue notwithstanding whatsoeuer befall either the husband or the wife Notwithstanding whatsoeuer complexions I saie natures infyrmities may appeare whatsoeuer sicknesse losse of goods iniuries griefes or other inconueniences that may arise yet so long as the foundation of loue that is the vnion of marriage doth continue so long must loue and affection remaine God commandeth vs to loue our neighbors as our selues because they be of our flesh Albeit therefore that hee contemne hate offend or wrong vs albeit he bee our enemie and in respect of himselfe deserueth not that wee should loue him yet because hee is of our flesh the foundation of loue remayning wee must loue him As also our sauiour Iesus Christ sayth Loue your enemies blesse those that curse you Mat. 5.44 doo good to those that hate you and praie for those that molest and persecute you Howe much rather ought they to put this in practise who by the bonde of marryage are made one flesh The rather because the vnion betweene man and wife is without comparison more straight and bindeth them each to loue other much more than the coniunction whereby man is vnited vnto his neighbour 8 But this is the mischiefe that in many their loue is not grounded vpon the vnion of marriage but vpon beautie riches other carnal and worldly considerations subiect to chang alteration and losse This corruption that respecteth beautie is olde and noted to bee among the causes of the floud The sonnes of God sayth Moses seeing the daughters of men were faire lusted after them Gen. 6. 2 toke them in marriage But in deed it is monie that maketh loue and riches ingender affection witnesse the experience of our daies Yet such loue resembleth onely a fire of straw which is but a blaze and is soone out vnles it be continued with great wood or other lyke substance Loue growing of beautie riches lust or anie other lyke slight vncertain and fraile grounds is soone lost and vanished vnlesse it be maintained with the consideration of this vnion of two in one flesh and the vertues thereto adioyned and therefore must euerie man thinke vpon this vnion in marriage that he may inioy nourish continue the loue that therof procedeth the rather because such loue is the nurse of cōcord that maketh marriage happy As contrariwise the want of this loue is the fountaine of strife quarelling debate and other like afflictions that conuert the paradise of marriage into a hell Augustine of baptisme of children Dissention between man and wife saith S Augustine is the trouble and ouerthrow of the householde They that will auoid such strife must therefore loue each other and especially they must haue care heereof when they are first married For as a vessell made of two peeces glewed together may at the first be easily broken but in time groweth strong so is it also wyth two persons that are glewed or ioyned together by the bond of marriage 9 This loue the mother of peace will ingender a care and dutie each to support other and so to practise the same which Saint Paul requireth in all beleeuers Ephes 4.31 that is To be gentle one to another friendly and each to forgiue other euen as God hath forgiuen vs through Christ Let the husband thinke that he hath married a daughter of Adam with all her infyrmities and likewise let the woman thinke that she hath not married an Angell but a child of Adam with his corruptions And so let them both resolue to beare that that cannot be soone amended Let not the bodie complaine of the head albeit it haue but one eie neither the head of the bodie albeit it be croked or mishapen Such defaultes doo neuer break vnion and loue betweene the head and the bodie neyther must the infirmities of the husband or the wife infringe the loue that procedeth of the vnion in marriage If the husband be giuen to brauling or the wife to chiding let them both beware
of giuing anie occasion The bell hath a loude sound and therefore hee that wyll not heare it must beware how hee pull the roape and shake it So if the one wyll beginne to chide without a cause let the other bee eyther deafe Eras Apotheg lib. 8 and so not heare it or dumbe and make no aunswere Heereto hath the saying of Alphonsus king of Arragon relation Where the husband is deafe and the wife blinde marriage is quyet and free from dissention Heereby meaning that the wife must winke at many the infyrmities of her husband as if shee see them not and the husband put vp many shrewde speeches of his wyfe as if hee heard them not Neyther can it bee anie reproch to the husband and wife so steadfastly vnited to practise this dutie considering that Dauid protesteth that hee vsed the like patience and discretion among his enemies Psalme 38.12 They that seek after my life lay snares and they that go about to do me euil talke wicked things and imagine deceite continuallie But I as a deafe man hearde not and am as a dumbe man which openeth not his mouth Thus I am as a man that heareth not and in whose mouth are no reproofes 10 This vnion betweene man and wife doth also engender that dutie which the holy Ghost noteth saying Mat. 19.5 Ephe. 5.31 For this cause shal a man leaue his father and mother and cleaue to his wife As also the wife in the like respect is bound to the like dutie toward her husband Not the marriage exempteth any from their due honor and obedience to parents but to declare that the vnion betweene man and wife is greater then betweene the children and the parents And indeede the true loue of the husband to the wife and of the wife to the husband surmounteth all loue of children to their parents The husband and the wife haue their secret counsels and communication of matters concerning their profit and commoditie The wife is more obedient to her husband and the husbandmore desirous to please his wife then their parents Yea and at length it falleth out that they depart from their parents to keepe house by themselues And this plainely appeared in Lea and Rachell being sisters and the wiues of Iacob For Iacob grieued at the wronge offered him by their father Laban boldly made his moane to them Wherupon they also complaining of their father agreed with Iacob and consented together to leaue their father and to follow their husband Iacob Herein likewise consisteth another dutie of the husband to the wife and of the wife to the husband namely that they shew no greater secrecie or communication of their housholde affaires to their parents Gen. 26. then mutually each to other and this rule is especially to be put in practise when they groweth any discontent betweene themselues For if the husband should complaine to his parents of his wife or the wife of her husband such dealing might breede a most dangerous ielouzie and consequently perhaps irreconciliable dissention strife But if it should grow to any complaint it were requisite so discreetly to prosecute the matter as that the woman should come to her husbands parents and the husband to his wiues So should all cause of iealouzie cease and the complaint procure most assured remedie 11 This vnion in marriage produceth yet another dutie common both to the husband and the wife And that is that they neuer seeke neither once thinke of diuorce And to that end let them remember what is written That which God hath ioyned together Matt 10.6 let no man put asunder Likewise that nothing but adulterie may separate those that are vnited by marriage All other agreements and contracts made by mutuall consent may be broken and dissolued by the like consent of both parties but in the contract of marriage almightie God commeth in as a witnes yea he receaueth the promise of both parties as ioyning them in that estate And this doth Salomon note Prou. 2.17 where he obiecteth to the harlot that she hath forgotten the couenant or alliance of her God But Ma●achie speaketh more plainely and giueth a reason why God punished such husbands as leauing their lawful wiues tooke others Because saith he Mala. 2.14 the Lord hath beene witnesse between thee the wife of thy youth against whom thou hast transgressed yet is she thy companion and the wife of thy couenant The promise therefore to God cannot be broken but onely by his authoritie In the daies of Moses husbands were very easily and soone entreated to forsake their wiues by giuing them a Bill of diuorce Yet so farre was this course from being lawfull that contrariwise Iesus Christ saith that it was tollerated onely in respect of the hardnesse of husbands hearts who otherwise would haue vexed their wiues and intreate them cruelly Mat. 19. 8 And this libell containing the cause of diuorce and putting away of the woman Leuit. 20.10 did iustifie her and condemne the man For seeing it was neuer giuen in case of adulterie which was punished with death all other causes aledged in the libell tended to iustifie the woman Iohn 8.5 and to declare that she was wrongfully diuorced and so condemned the husband as one that contraried the first institution of marriage whereto Iesus Christ condemning this corruption Mat. 1● 1 doth returne them saying It was not so from the beginning and therefore whosoeuer shall put away his wife except it be for whoredome and marrie another committeth Adulterie and whosoeuer marrieth her which is diuorced doth commit Adulterie with her So straight is the bond of marriage 12 Hereof it followeth that notwithstanding whatsoeuer difficulties that may arise betweene the husband and the wife whether it be long tedious and incurable sickenesse of either partie whether naturall and contrarie humours that breede debate wrangling or strife about householde affaires Whether it be any vice as the husband to be a drunkerd or the wife a slouthfull Idle or vnthrustie huswife whether either partie forsake the truth and profession of religion doe fall into Idolatrie or heresie Yet still the bond of marriage remaineth steadfast and not to be dissolued Neither may they be seperated euen by their owne mutuall consent Mat. 19.6 2. Cor. 7.12 For as the holy Ghost hath pronounced That which God hath ioyned together let not man put a sunder And therefore S. Paul saith If any brother haue a wife that beleeueth not if shee bee content to dwell with him let him not forsake her And the woman which hath a husband that beleeueth not if he be content to dwell with her let her not forsake him Also because some did suppose that the vnbeleefe in any of the parties might breed some pollution or disquiet in marriage he aunswereth no his reason For the vnbeleeuing husband is sanctified by his beleeuing wife And the vnbeleeuing wife by her beleeuing husband And this he proueth by
vicious thou puttest him in danger of losse both of body and soule 16 Some doo respect their friendship with some masters rather than their vertue and so doo commit to them their children least they should be angrie for putting them to another These men do resemble him who being daungerously sick vseth the aduise of an ignorant phisition that is his kinseman or familiar friend for feare he should take offence if he shuld cal another albeit without comparison more learned skilfull If thou shouldest haue any waightie matter in law wouldest thou rather commit thy cause to an ig●an● and negligent atturney because he is thy friende than to him that were both diligent and learned Making a voiage through some daungerous sea wouldest thou in a tempest commit thy ship to a yong pilot vnskilful or dronke because he is thy friend what a foole art thou that wilt not take the like care of the profit honor and saluation of thy child 17 Others commit their children either to him that is best cheap or by whome they may growe into greatest aduancement in the world but neuer respect the hazard of their child so they may either spare or get worldly goods When one shewed the Orator Lycurgus Eras Apo. li. 8 that hee had offered great wages to a philosopher to teach his children he vertuously answered If anie man will assure me to restore me my children endued with more vertue I will giue him not onely that some but euen halfe my goods The vertuous and wise Emperor Marcus Aurelius writeth that in the Annals of the Tarentine warre he found that the renowmed Purlius did weare a ring wherein was ingrauen this sentence The dominion of the whole earth is a small reward to him that is vertuous but to the vicious the losse of life is a simple punishment Heereby may fathers learne how carefully they ought to restraine their children frō vice to inure thē to vertue As in deede the fathers that instruct or cause their children to be instructed do far excel such as onely do beget them for of these they receiue life only of the other good and vertuous life 18 Moreouer parents ought not so much to relie vpon the diligence of childrens masters as neuer to care to vnderstād how they profite and proceed in vertue for the regarde of such diligence would make the masters more carefully to discarge their dueties And thereof came the prouerbe The masters eie fatteth the horse this The masters eie is the fruitfulnes of the garden Parents ought not too much to hearken or credite children when they complaine of their masters rigor and seueritie Among the Lacedemonians if the children vpon the reproofe or chastisement of any whosoeuer Plutar. in his Lacon Instit for anie man was at libertie to vse correction euen to other mens children did complaine to their parents the same was a great reproch to them because themselues corrected not their children Not that we are not in discretion to inquire or take notice whether the master vseth crueltie or inhumanitie towarde them least through too much rigor hard vsage they shuld grow desperate 19 Howbeit such is the inclination of many euen from theyr youth to wickednesse that instruction by words either of parents or masters will not suffice without the rodde and correction And this doth God command and experience sheweth it to bee most necessarie He that spareth the rod sayth Salomon hateth the childe Prou. 13.24 Prou. 19.18 Pro. 29.15 17. Prou. 23.13 but he that loueth him basteth to correction Againe Correct thy childe while there is hope and regard not his crying Againe The rod and correction minister wisedome but the child lefte at libertie shameth his mother Correct thy sonne he will giue thee rest and pleasure to thy soule Withdrawe not correction from thy child if thou smite him with the rod hee shall not die Thou shalt smite him with the rod and deliuer his soule from hell The booke of Ecclesiasticus intreateth heereof more at large saying He that loueth his sonne causeth him oft to feele the rod Eccle. 30 1● ● that he may haue ioy of him in the end Hee that chastiseth his son shall haue ioy in him and shall reioyce of him among his acquaintance An vntamed horse will be stubborne and a wanton child will be wilfull 8.9.10.11.12 13. If thou bring vp thy sonne delicatly he shal make thee afraid if thou play with him he shall bring thee to heauines Laugh not with him least thou be sorie with him and least thou gnash thy teeth in the end Giue him no libertie in his youth and winke not at his folly Bow downe his necke while he is young and beat him on the sides least he waxe stubborne and be disobedient to thee and so bring sorrow to thy heart Chastise thy child be diligent therein least his shame grieue thee In this sense do we say that many times the rod is better for children than bread And in deed as Phisitions surgeons Apothecaries are necessarie in a town for the cure of sicknes and bodily wounds so are rods chastisement for the correction of the corruptions of the soule 20 Herein is God so resolute that in the dutie of the father to chastise his child he willeth vs to learn that he doth the office of a father when he chastiseth vs with afflictions And as a father by correction declareth a true loue to his child with a desire of his good and saluation Heb. 12 so is it the will of God that wee should receiue such afflictions as he laieth vpō vs as effects of his loue towards vs as testimonies that he accepteth vs as his lawfull children and no bastardes Likewise if seeing many children fighting together wee also see a man come and correct onely one of them wee presently thinke that to bee his childe because hee performeth the dutie of a father and so sheweth that hee loueth him better than the rest whome hee letteth goe without correction Therefore as wee saie that the pittiful and gentle Surgion empaireth the wounds so doth too much gentlenesse toward children and winking at their faults without correction breed theyr disobedience vnthriftinesse and miserie Likewise as God is thereby greatly dishonoured so doeth hee not suffer the parents that are slacke in theyr duetie to their children to escape scot free And to this purpose haue we a notable example in Holy the high priest for when he heard of the wickednesse and offensiue dealings of his sons Ophny Phinces he vsed some verball reprehensions yet because he neither reproued nor chastised thē more sharply God obiecteth to him their iniquities saying Wherefore haue you kicked against my sacrifice and hast honored thy children more than me 1. Sam. 2 Then doth hee pronounce also this horrible sentence That the priesthoode should be taken from his house that both his sonnes should die in one
Empire consist in my due obedience to him For that man putteth off the affection of a childe to his father who by the eminencie of an office ouer him quencheth the name of a sonne Salomon forgat not himselfe in this kinde of dutie for hee did not onely bow before his mother Bathseeba as is aforesaide but also called her mother saying 1. King 2.20 Mother aske and I will not denie thee And this doe we the rather note also vpon another consideration namely that his example condemneth the custome of these daies wherein this name of father and mother is accompted so base and comtemptible that the children of Kinges Princes yea euen of meane Gentlemen speaking to their parentes must not say father mother but Sir my Lorde my Ladye Madam c. 5 But the due honor to parents that we here speake of implyeth not onely this outwarde reuerence but also that wee shoulde so esteeme of them as that neither our selues should dispise them neither shoulde wee suffer others to haue them in contempt Ioh. 8.49 Telecrus Plut. in his Lacon Apotheg And this are we to vnderstand in the saying of Iesus Christ I honor my father but you dishonour mee Hee there defendeth the honor of his father against the false opinions and slaunders of the Iewes A certaine Lacedemonian in olde time did truely performe this dutie of a childe For when one tolde him that his father spake hardly of him he aunswered Stobeus Scr. 177. that he would not doe it if he had not good cause Thus hee choose rather to beare the blame himselfe then his father shoulde In this sence when an other was readie to accuse his father in iudgement did one Pittacus reprooue him saying if thou preferrest a bad cause thou shalt bee condemned Likewise if the cause be right thou also shalt bee condemned for procuring thy fathers condemnation This also in this case is to bee noted that amonge the Romaines the childe was not admitted to sue the will or testament of his deade father by action but by petition onely wherein hee shoulde speake of him with humilitie honour and reuerence and referre his case wholy to the discretion and consciences of the iudges Thus ought children to honour and respecte theyr parentes Bodin in his first booke of a common-wealth cap. ● But some there are so vnnaturall and peruerse that forgetting all due reuerence and respecte to theyr parents they will not onelie despise them in theyr owne hearts and suffer others to speake hardly of them but also will themselues so farre exceede as euen to laye them open to the skorne of others Gen. 3.22 C ham the sonne of Noah seeing his father lye vncouered called his brethren to shewe them his fathers shame But so odious was this impietie in the sight of God that Noah by the conduct of the holy Ghost cursed both him and all his posteritie And therefore we well and truely may say that those children who in liew of defending the honor of their parents doe lay them open to shame and reproofe are come of the cursed seede of Cham. 6 But what if they proceede farther Deut. 27.16 Exod. 21.17 Leuit. 20.9 Exod. 21 1● and vse stubborne speeches against them with demonstration of pride and contempt which the holy Scripture tearmeth accursed This iniquitie is so abhominable in the sight of God that hee pronounceth Woe vnto those children that curse theyr father or mother Yea hee ordaineth that they should bee put to death as also all such as in action shall iniurie their parents by smiting either with staffe or fist c. And to cut off all replication as if death were to hard and rigorous a punishment especially in case there were no hurt or wound Leuit. 20.9 he confirmeth the former iudgement with this addition Because he hath cursed his father or mother his bloud shall bee vpon his owne head And indeede such children as either in word or deede shall iniurie father or mother euen those I say of whom they haue taken life who beare the Image of God and the title of father proper to God so that God is in them iniuried and condemned are monsters in nature In this respect among other the causes why the children of Israel were so hardly entreated by Nabuchadnezzer Ezech. 22.7 led captiue into Babilon the Prophet Ezechiel obiecteth vnto them that they dispised and contemned their parents Besides by experience we see that vsually those children that iniurie their parents are afterward as hardly intreated by their owne children Eras Apotheg lib. 8. And the knowledge of this iust vengeance is naturally imprinted in the hart of man as we reade of a wicked childe who being accused that he had smitten his father answered And he likewise did smite his father and this lad pointing to his owne sonne when he groweth bigger will also smite and wrong me And surely Laert. lib. 1. c. 1 as Thales the Milesian said As children doe intreate their parents so will their children entreate them Therefore it might beseeme children to suffer their parents rather to treade them vnder their feete then so furiously to rise against them And to that ende let them acknowledge this Image of God and remember what their parents haue done for them that detesting such enormities of cursing or smiting their parents as is aforesaid they contrariwise may beare them reuerence respect and honor in heart and minde both in word and deede 7 This commaundement of honoring our parents comprehendeth also subiection and obedience as Saint Paule plainely teacheth saying Children obey your parents in the Lorde for this is right Ephe. 6.1 Honor thy father and mother Which is the first commaundement with promise That it may bee well with thee and that thou maist liue long vpon the earth Hereby it appeareth that subiection obedience forced and constrained the Lord doth not accept but that which proceedeth of honor and reuerence either to father or mother And therefore it is the dutie of children vnluntarily to submitte themselues to their parents commaundements without replying or cōtradiction euen albeit the obedience might import some trouble and difficultie Ionadab the sonne of Rechab forbad his children that they should build no houses plant no vines nor drinke any wine They obeyed their father Iere. 35. and that with such constancie that the Prophet Ieremie obiecteth the same against the Iewes in reproch of their disobedience against God The obedience of Abraham vnto God when he was ready to sacrifice vnto him his only sonne is highly commended Gen. 22.9 and as notable was the obedience of his son Isaac in that he suffered himself to be bound and was content to be slaine sacrifised vnto God But most excellent of al was the obedience of Iesus Christ Who as S. Paul saith being in the forme of God thought it no robberie to bee equall with God Phil. 2.6 yet made himselfe of
forget that Dauid putteth among his roiall verses the support of the good and the punishment destruction of the wicked Also that Salomon to the same purpose sayth Pro. 20.26 A wise king scattereth the wicked causeth the wheel to turne ouer them 48 But as there is great difference betweene iustice crueltie so this representation of the duetie of magistrates to punish vice and sin according as iustice requireth tendeth not to induce them to crueltie but to the execution of the iust iudgement and vengeance of God according to his holy lawes and commaundements For as for crueltie it is so much the more detestable as that there is nothing more against the nature of God Seneca of clemēcy to Nero and the coniunction that he hath constituted among men It is as Seneca sayth a vice not of man but of a wild beast and therefore it is to be abhorred and detested but especially by such as are not onely men but also the lieutenants and vicars of God least by crueltie they shoulde pollute and prophane the seate of his holy maiestie And they also who vpon ambition couetousnes wrath or anie other passion are moued and induced to this crueltie cannot but expect iudgement without mercy and consequently horrible and fearefull besides the hatred and feare of men and so leade a most miserable wretched life both in this world and in the world to come as by the examples of many tyrants from time to time we may euidently perceiue And Aristotle in his Politikes noteth that tyrannie can neuer holde out in one family to the fourth generation for in deede crueltie can haue no continuance and hee that is feared and dreaded of many doth also stand in feare and dread of many It breedeth rather feare in gouernment than power to gouerne the rather because that continuall seueritie taketh awaie authoritie besides it is most certaine and vndoubtedlye true as Iulius Caesar sayeth that the remembraunce of a passed crueltie is meruaylous and exceeding grieuous to olde age Seneca of Clemencie 49 This cruelty may be cōsidered three wais first when by death or otherwise hee is wronged that hath not deserued it As when Saul wrongfully charging Abimelech the priest of Nob 1. Sam. 2● of conspiring with Dauid against him caused him together wyth foure score and fiue priests that wore the Ephod to be murthered yea and which is more stroke wyth the edge of the swoord all the inhabitants of the towne men and women young and olde and all theyr cattell This was monstrous crueltie The lyke crueltye is set downe of Herod Math. 2.16 who seeking to slaie him whom the wise men reported to bee borne king of the Iewes put to death all the children that were in Bethleem and in all the borders round about from two yeeres old and vnder The second kind of crueltie consisteth in punishing transgressions excessiuely and wyth greater rigour than they deserue I call those men cruell sayth Seneca that hauing iust cause to punish doo obserue no measure in punishing Heereupon dyd God ordaine that if a wicked man had deserued stripes the Iudge shoulde in his presence cause him to bee beaten according to the hainousnes of the offence Deut. 25. ● to a certaine number of stripes but not aboue fortie The third resteth in this that some doo receiue pleasure and contentation in the euill and tormentes that others doo indure This doth Adonibezecke confesse of him selfe saying Iudg. 1.7 Ioseph in his Antiquit. l. 17 c. 9 Seuentie kings hauing the thumbes of their handes and of their feet cut off gathered bread vnder my table As also Herod seeing himselfe at the point of death knowing that the Iews would reioyce because of his cruelties exercised against them called the chiefest among them and shutting them vp in a great roome commanded that immediatly vpon his decease before there were any noise thereof they should all be slaine to the end the Iews might weepe and mourne at his death And among all tyrants Lucian Erasm in his Chiliads in this point the crueltie of Phaleris is to bee noted who caused fyre to bee put vnder a brasen bull so arteficially made that the partye there inclosed dying wyth heate and thorough angu●●h crying out yeelded not the voyce of a man but the roaring of a Bull. 50 Contrarywise Magistrates in punishing the trespasses and offences of theyr subiectes ought in themselues to apprehende the nature of parents chastising theyr children for so farre are they from reioycing therein that they doo it wyth griefe and such compassion that were it not in respect of Gods commaundement together wyth experience which teacheth that correction is euen profitable and necessarie for children they would neuer do it This may we note in Iosua who seeing that Acan was taken by lot as guiltie and culpable of Gods wrath against the people Ios 7.14 did neuerthelesse call him My sonne thereby shewing a fatherly affection to him and yet disobeyed not God but condemned him to death 51 This was a kinde of mercie which being generally considered Salust to Caesar enclineth the heart to gentlenesse and clemencie but wyth iudgement and discretion And this vertue is specially requyred in Magistrates for it engendereth loue and loue safetie And by experience wee haue euermore found that such as haue vsed gentlenesse and clemencie haue alwaies prospered and haue founde theyr verie enemies more righteous in theyr behalfe Pliny Epistle Lib. 8. Liuy Lib. 8. Seneca than Citizens haue beene to those that haue exercised crueltie ouer them And in deed of greater force is the peoples loue of the magistrate for the obtaining of anie thing than theyr feare and no dominion is more sure than the same that the subiectes like of Neyther can that long indure Plut. in the banquet of the 7. Sag. which the people doo hate Wee reade that the seuen Sages of Greece sitting all at a banquet beeing demanded what might make a king happie and purchase him glorie dyd all aunswere diuersely Solon sayde by changing the dominion of one into a popular gouernment By as If himselfe be the first in obeying his countrie laws Thales If by the course of nature he die an olde man Anacharsis If himselfe onely bee wise Cleobulus If hee repose not himselfe vpon his familiars Chilon If his mind runne not vpon worldly matters but vpon immortalitie If saith Pittacu● hee teach and accustome his subiects to liue in feare not of him but for him But nothing doth sooner engender feare not of the magistrate but for the magistrate than good will and clemencie for as too much crueltie and seueritie of a prince doeth make his subiects to feare him with hate so doeth generall good will and gentlenesse make them to loue him and to feare lea●● h●e should bee taken from them or incurre anie mishappe To c●nclude this purpose let all magistrates remember the aunswere of a Lacedemonian
hist l. 6. c. 45 forced agaynst thy will thou mayst now shew it in returning with thy will It had beene better to haue indured all things rather than to haue brought a schisme into the church Martirdome for preseruing the Church from diuision is no lesse glorious than the same that is suffered for not communicating in Idolatrie yea in my opinion it is worthie greater glorie because it is a greater matter to suffer for the preseruation of the vniuersall Church than for the sauing of one soule Now therefore if thou perswadest the brethren and euen compellest them to reunite themselues with the Church that notable action will be accounted greater than the former fault yea as the fault shall not bee imputed so the duetie and power to reduce them to concord shall be commended Yet if it shall happen that they rest so obstinate that thou canst not induce or perswade them at the least haue a care to saue thy owne soule by retiring from them 14 It is another case when the question concerneth thinges indifferent in Gods Church For therein wee must much relent and rather accomodate our selues than trouble the Churches or bring in anie schisme Euseb Eccle. hist l. 5. c. 26. And therefore when Victor Bishoppe of Rome had excommunicated all the Churches in Asia because they celebrated the feast of Easter vpon the fourteenth daie of the Moone contrarie to the custome vsed in the Latine churches where it was holden as it yet is vpon the daie of the resurrection Irenaeus Bishop of Lyons albeit himselfe also allowed the celebration vpon the daie of the resurrection did iustly reproue him and wrote to him a notable Epistle wherein he alledged the example of his predecessor Anicetus and of Polycarpus S. Iohns disciple who when he came to Rome and could not by Anicetus bee induced to alter the custome receiued from Saint Iohn in the Churches of Asia neither could induce Anicetus to receiue his custome they notwithstanding remained vnited and sealed their agreement wyth the holy communion 15 If the pastor for the faithfull discharge of his dutie in defence of the truth be wronged or slaundered euen of some of his owne flocke the rather must he beare it seeke to cure reduce them to amendement of lyfe And in deed albeit a sicke bodie troubled in minde should spit in the phisitions face yet would he not bee so displeased as to forsake and giue him ouer for it Likewise albeit the nipples of a womans brest should be so sore that she could not suffer her child without great pain to take them yet would she indure all to suckle her child euen so must pastors deale with theyr flockes and haue patience as S. Paul requireth them For hee exhorteth Timothie to preach the word to reproue 2. Tim. 2.24 2. Tim. 4.2 2. Cor. 6.4 to chide with all patience And in another place he saieth In all thinges let vs approue our selues as the ministers of Christ in much patience 16 Againe when the Phisition hath prescribed some potion or other receit for the cure of the sicke man returning the next daie he enquireth of the operation thereof and feeleth his pulses that hee may learne his disposition and thereafter order himselfe so it is not inough that the pastor preach reproue exhort and comfort the Church but he must also seeke to vnderstand how euery member thereof is disposed and what his preaching hath wrought in them In this sense are they tearmed Bishops which is as much to saie as ouerseers or watchmen to haue their eies vpon those whom the Lord hath committed to their charge And this is it that God noteth saying to Ezechiel I haue made thee a watchmā ouer the house of Israel Ezech. 3.14 Heb. 13.17 Acts 20. Hereby are they warned to watch ouer the flocke which the Lorde hath committed vnto them as the Apostle saith that they watch ouer the soules as men that are to giue account vnto God As also Saint Paul saith Looke to your selues and to the whole flocke that the Lord committed to you 17 In this consideration they ought after the example of Iesus Christ to know their sheep Ioh. 10.14 27 chiefly to marke whether they heare their voice in diligent frequenting of their sermons and communicating in the holy supper of the Lord. For as at a feast when one that sitteth at the table eate●h nothing wee vse to demaund whether he be well or no so if anie of those that are committed to the pastors charge doo not eate of the spirituall foode vnto him offered it is to bee feared least he bee crased or not well at his ease and therefore without delaie the pastour is to hearken out the cause and diligently to see to his cure and to procure him an appetite Secondly as Iesus Christ requireth that his sheepe should not onely heare his voyce but also follow him so is it the pastors duetie to learne whether his auditours doo followe the doctrine preached vnto them and to that end he is to visit his sheepe Ioh 10.27 to see whether they bee instructed in the knowledge of the principall points of doctrine required to saluation whether they perseuere in the truth whether they profite in purenesse of lyfe and holy conuersation yea and to that effect hee is to take example in the care and diligence of some parents towardes theyr children that go to schoole whome they cause to saie theyr lessons or looke vpon theyr writing and by such examination trie and see whether they profite or no But finding them to bee neglygent and faultie they reproue admonish and exhort them to their dutie For so must the good and faithfull pastours deale with theyr sheep following the example of Saint Paul who visited the churches and thereby enquired of their estate As also hee wrote to the Thessalonians saying Yee are witnesses and God also how holily and iustly and vnblameably wee behaued our selues among you that beleeue As you know how that wee exhorted you Acts 15 36 1 Thes 2 10 and comforted and besought euerie one of you as a father his children that ye would walke worthie of God who hath called you to his kingdome and glorie And this doeth hee also protest to the Elders of the Church of Ephesus saying I haue kept from you nothing that was profitable Acts 20 20 but haue taught you openly and throughout your houses witnessing the repentance towardes God and faith in our Lord Iesus Christ. Heereto also should wee bee moued by the threatnings of the Lorde against the pastours of Israel where hee sayth Iere 23.2 Because yee haue not visited my sheepe beholde I will visite vppon you the maliciousnes of your actions And as a good shepheard seketh his lost sheep a surgeon bindeth vp the wounds a phisition trieth all medicines for the cure of the sick and a father seeketh all meanes to reclaime his vnthriftie sonne into the ryght
of the deuill Col. 1.15 neither by smiting the first borne of Egipt but by giuing himselfe euen the first borne of euery creature to death for vs. It were therfore a two-folde rebellion not to amend our liues and so to obey him who being as S. Paul saith the sauiour of all men 1. Tim. 4.10 as concerning the bodily life but especially of the faithful in respect of eternall saluation hath a two-folde right and authoritye to command vs. And the premises doth S. Augustine confirme by an excellent confession and praier that hee maketh to God saying I know Aug. in his Medita c. 39. O Lord that I owe to thee my self because thou hast created me yea more then my selfe because that being made man for me thou hast redeemed me euen so much the rather as thou 〈◊〉 greater then he for whom thou hast giuen thy selfe But in as much as I haue nothing more then my selfe also that I cannot giue to thee that which I haue without thy selfe take me and draw me vnto thee that I may be thine in following and louing thee as I am thine in being created and redeemed by thee 4 Moreouer in tha● in our beleefe we doe confesse that we doe beleeue in Iesus Christ our Lord wee doe also by that tytle acknowledge in him a two-folde authoritie to commaund vs and consequently in our selues a twofolde obligation to obey him For as beeing both God and man in respect of his diuinitie hee is Lord ouer all creatures so hauing redeemed vs by his death hee is our Lord and wee that doo beleeue in him are his peculyar people and seruantes And therefore it were a double disobedience in vs if we as his creatures shoulde not obey the Lorde of all and as his peculyar people and proper purchase bee wholy subiect to him that is more particularly Lorde ouer vs. Iesus Christ is also called King of Kings and consequently king of the whole world yet is hee also particularly king ouer his Church And in deed 1. Tim. 6.15 Psalm 2 as wee reade that the yron scepter is giuen to him to raigne and rule ouer all nations and kingdomes of the earth so is hee particularly established king ouer 〈…〉 heere a twofolde authoritie in Christ which doth doubly binde vs to amend by obeying of him who beeing Lord of the whole world is particularly and more excellently king ouer the Burgeses of Sion and the members of his Church 5 All th●se names and titles Iehoua Creator Redeemer Sauiour Lord and king attributed to him that commaundeth to amend being well considered as is afore shewed doth teach vs what authoritie hee hath to commaund vs and how deeplie wee are bounde to obey him as his creatures children subiectes and seruantes and wholy to consecrate vnto him all whatsoeuer wee are haue knowe or can doo in his seruice wythout whome we neyther haue neyther are neyther doo or knowe anie thing Let vs therefore acknowledge that wee are not in our owne power to liue at our owne pleasures but doo appertaine vnto Iesus Christ and must practise the same which the Apostle Saint Paul sayth of himselfe I liue yet not I but Iesus Christ liueth in mee Galat. 2 20 1. Cor. 6.19 Let vs remember what the same Apostle sayth You are not your owne for yee are bought with a price therfore glorifie God in your bodies and in your spirites for they are Gods We are therefore bound as our sauiour Iesus Christ admoniseth vs to denie our selues that is to saie our owne sense and wisedome and to followe his also our owne will Math 16.24 Luke 9.23 Rom. 12.2 that wee may will that which hee willeth And heereto also doeth Saint Paul exhort vs saying Bee ye changed by the renuing of your minde that ye may proue what is the good wil of God and acceptable and perfect 6 There bee two sorts of seruants and bondmen the one borne at their masters houses the others purchased by their masters Neither of these may liue after his owne will sense or vnderstanding but as it shall please theyr master and Lord. Now are we borne the seruants of Christ for he created vs all and besides he hath also redeemed and purchased vs that wee may belong more particularly to him As the master therefore of those seruantes that are borne in his house or whome he purchaseth doo pretend that they doo him wrong when they spend anie time either to theyr owne particular profite or in the seruice of others so maye Iesus Christ and much more iustly complaine of vs that are his two folde seruants namely by birth and by purchase if wee imploy euen neuer so lyttle of our liues to serue and please our selues the world or the deuill our enemies and this must needes redounde to a double sacriledge and twofolde prophanation of that which by double reason ought to bee dedicated and consecrated to him who with double authoritie doth command vs to amend The second cause of Amendement drawen from the name Holy attributed to Iesus Christ wherein is handled Election Reprobation and Gods prouidence Chap. 2. THE Prophet Esaie rehearseth that hee sawe the Lord sitting vpon his throane Isay 6.3 and the Seraphims aboue him crying one to another Holy holy is the Lord of hoasts Heere dyd they speake of Iesus Christ Iohn 12.41 as Saint Iohn in his Gospell doth affirme who also reporting another vision which himselfe sawe sayeth There were foure beasts which cryed night and daie wythout ceasing Holy holy holy is the Lord God almightie Apoc. 4.8 This title Holy thus thrice repeated among other thinges doth teach vs that he is souerainly good righteous merciful wise mightie and true euen so excellently and perfectly that in these and other lyke diuine properties he is most holy and in them holdeth nothing in common wyth other creatures And in deed if in man there bee anie goodnesse righteousnesse wisedome or truth hee hath them not of himselfe but from God Neither hath hee thereof anie more but small droppes or sparkes and the same are but graces happened and accidents or qualities as they saie in schooles so that euen without them hee is neuerthelesse a man But as concerning God hee hath all these properties of himselfe they bee in him perfect and infinite yea they are in such sorte his essence that to denie his righteousnesse wisedome power mercie and goodnesse is to denie God Marke therefore how rightly he is called Holy holy holy 2 It is no maruel that this and all that proceedeth herefro doth passe mans vnderstanding for it exceedeth euen the capacitie of the Angels And this doth Esaie in this vision testifie saying The Seraphims couered their faces with two wings Esay 6. ● as not able to abide the brightnesse of this holynesse But the more incomprehensible that it is the more doth it admonish vs diuersely and in many sortes to amend And indeed among the most dangerous pernitious
this when he beheld the glorie of Iesus Christ 15 According to the purpose of the premises we saie that whereas God hath chosen some euen whome hee woulde and not other some and in all that God in his prouidence hath ordained done for the execution thereof there resteth such wisedome goodnesse mercie and iustice that for the approuing of that which in the wisdome of mans flesh seemeth strange vniust it sufficeth to shew that the same was so ordained and decreed in the eternall and determinate counsel of God And indeed if anie man ask why the gospell is preached rather to some than to other some also why among those to whom it is preached some doo beleeue some do rest vnbeleeuers it is reason sufficient to aunswere that some are chosen and other some are not So many saieth Saint Luke did beleeue as were ordained to life euerlasting You beleeue not saieth Iesus Christ because yee are not my sheep Acts 13.42 Iohn 10.26 My sheep heare my voyce and follow mee When the Apostles asked Iesus Christ why he taught the people by parables wherein they had no vnderstanding which afterward hee opened to them alone hee lifted them vp into this consideration that they were chosen and the other not To you sayth he it is giuen to know the secrets of the kingdome of heauen Marke 13.10 but it is not giuen to them And therefore when we reade that some euen in lieu of conuerting and beleeuing haue bin hardned and become more wicked whereby the preaching of the Gospell hath bin vnto them a sauour of death vnto death It sufficeth that we aunswere that this befalleth not the elect but as Saint Paule saith 2. Cor. 2.15 those that perish and are vessels of wrath prepared to perdition And therfore the preaching of the Gospell whereby some are hardned is neuerthelesse of a sweet sauour before God as hee doeth expresly affirme 16 Let vs therefore conclude that all that God hath willed in the election of some and not of other some and in his prouidence and the execution of the same is good righteous holy and commendable And albeit we cannot comprehend it yet let vs beware that of our ignorance we take no occasion to blaspheme God but rather let vs acknowledge that it is because we doo not yet know anie thing of the incomprehensible holynes of Iesus Christ namely that he hath an infinite power to dispose of his creatures as hee will an incomprehensible wisedome to ordeine most wisely mercie and iustice which in him are but one essence wherby he can do nothing but in mercy iustice This if thou doest not vnderstand I saie to thee againe accuse thine owne ignoraunce and reuerence this holynesse which passeth thy vnderstanding Beleeue so much as in his word he testifieth vnto thee and permit this infinit power and wisedome to doo and to know euen that which thou canst not comprehend Remember that he dwelleth in an vnaccessible light which thou must reuerence but not enter into Beware thou beest not an aduocate for so wicked a cause 1. Tim 6 16 Rom. 3.4 Psalm 51 6 as is the cause of the reprobate to iustifie it in the sight of God For howsoeuer thou thinkest it to be he will alwaies as Dauid saith ouercome when he is iudged 17 In the meane time for the better vnderstanding of our intent knowledg in this doctrine we saie that if we stād vpon the consideration of mans creation to the image of God both hee and all that are descended of him were created to life for in man created to the image of God there was no matter or argument of death But if wee speake of the predestination hidden in the eternall counsell of God the same is a profound deapth that should euen rauish vs into admiration And whereas Saint Paule calleth those that are not elect vessels of wrath prepared to destruction he hath regard to theyr first original and nature of men Rom. 9. 22 Heb. 7.10 Rom. 5.12 according as all beeing yet in the loines of Adam when he transgressed Gods commandement dyd all sinne in him and are all guiltie of death and infected with mortall corruption Not that there was not in God a former counsell which went before wherby he had decreed and disposed of his creatures vpon certaine causes to vs vnknowen but for that from the transgression of Adam proceeded the curse and death of mankinde Saint Paule sayth that God prepared vessels of mercie for his glorie because that all that the elect haue to guide them to life euerlasting proceedeth of the grace of God Rom. 9.13 but others are prepared to perdition because they are giuen ouer to themselues so that following their owne corruptions they go according to the eternall decree of God to destruction And heereof do we gather that albeit God had iust cause to vs vnknowen thus to dispose of his creatures by choosing some and reiecting other some yet did hee not hate or condemne anie thing but sinne and corruption It is not therefore fit that wee should seeke the cause of the destruction of the reprobate in heauen when wee see that it resteth in earth neither that we should impute that vnto God which is in man himselfe neither should the reprobate also murmure at the mercie of God poured vppon the elect considering that God may doo good to whom he wil either at their owne destruction whereof there resteth a twofold occasion in thēselues namely original sin the iniquities that do therof daily proceed 18 Moreouer as concerning the transgression of Adam Eue 1. Sam. 2.6 Amos 3.6 Iere. La. 3.38 Iob. 30.39 Psalme 104. 105. 106 107. 136 Math. 10.29 it is certaine that the same neuer came to passe without the decree and ordinance of God And in deed the holy Scripture in infinite places doth testifie that all things depend vpon his prouidence decree If a sparow falleth not to the ground without the will of God shall man so excellent a creature created after the image of God take so horrible a fall without his prouidence and decree A man may giue a little child some small stripe with a rod without the parents appointment which notwithstanding they would peraduenture dissemble and winke at but none dare vndertake to cut him of the stone or to cut off any lim without his fathers good will and authority Euen so the greater that the importance of Adams transgression was in that it tended to destroie ouerthrow so excellent a work of God namely man created to his image the more are we to beleeue that it was neuer doone without his counsell or decree Moreouer if in his prouidence hee hath ordained what he will haue done with all other creatures hath he not think you ordained what shall be done with the principall and most excellent for which he created all the others Again if God creating all the world
and man to his own image purposed that the principall end of his worke should be the manifestation of his glory did he not also ordaine meanes to attaine thereto But the fall of man was as it were a preamble and a preparation to declare his loue in his redemption through Christ to make manifest his mercie to his elect his iustice to the reprobate And in this especially doth the glorye of God appeare If there were sinne in the fall of Adam so was there in the pursuite against Iesus Christ And yet loe the Apostles speaking vnto Almightie God doeth saie Doubtlesse against thy holy sonne Iesus whom thou hast annointed both Herod and Pontius Pilat Acts. 4.27 with the Gentiles and the people of Israel gathered together to doo whatsoeuer thy hand and thy counsell had before determined to be done Againe speaking to the Iewes in expresse wordes they obiect vnto them that by the handes of the wicked they tooke Iesus Christ and crucified and slew him Acts. 2.23 being to them deliuered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God Albeit they cannot comprehend that Adams transgression wherein there was sinne came not to passe without the prouidence and decree of God and yet that God is not the author of sinne Must they therefore denie his prouidence those places of holy Scripture wherein the holy Ghost doth so often and so euidently testifie the same Or contrarie to so many testimonies of his word will they make God the author of sinne They do not murmure blaspheme or replie against vs but against the holy Ghost Must they because they cannot comprehend how it should bee possible that God should prohibite Adam that thing which neuerthelesse came not to passe without his decree will and eternall counsell denie those testimonies which himselfe deliuereth in his word or malitiously gather that in God there should bee two contrerie wills Let vs beleeue so much as hee testifieth in his word and reuerence so much as wee doo not vnderstand If we should conioyne the redemption wrought by Iesus Christ with the fal of Adam we shuld soone confesse that as well the one as the other came to passe by the prouidence of God 19 Yet if it were requisite to consider some reasons the same which Saint Augustine doth note might well content vs. We safely doo confesse Augustine of reprouing grace c. 10 sayth he that we do well beleeue that God the Lord of all who created all things good and who both did foresee that from good they should digresse to bad or knew that it dyd better beseeme his almightie goodnes to make of euill good than not to suffer the euill hath so determined the liues of Angells and men that in the same he would manifest first what free will was able to doo next what his grace with the iudgement of his iustice were able to bring to passe First Saint Augustine saith in that he calleth God the Lord of all he doth shew that he had power and authoritie to dispose of his creatures as he wold Secondly in that he saith that God created all things good he noteth that God is the author of the goodnes that hath bin in all his creatures namely in man created to his image but not of the sin afterward cōmitted Thirdly in that he knew that from good they should degenerate to euill and yet that voluntarily he permitted it hee propoundeth this reason that it better beseemed him to shewe his almightye goodnesse in making of euill good then in permitting the euill And then he sheweth the good that God gathered out of the fall of Adam First that it serued to shew what freewill was able to do thereby signifiyng that there is no stedfastnesse but in God and yet that Adam was inexcusable in his fall For hauing created man with free will his sinne was not vpon compulsion but voluntarily and indeed he did eate of the forbidden fruit not to the end to obey the decree of God wherof he was yet ignorant but at the instigation of Satan and vpon a lust to be like vnto God And therefore when God reproued him he complained not of Gods decree but of his wife Eue and his wife of the Serpent Gen 3.6 and 3.12.13.14 and God in his sentence pronounced against them denounceth them all to be guiltie and worthy of punishment 20 For the second fruit gathered in the fall of Adam hee saith that it serued to declare the benefite of the grace of God to the elect and consequently to cause vs to confesse that our saluation is indeed free and grounded vpon the onely loue and mercye of God Also that this we ought not to misdoubt because hereby we are pulled out of the gulfe of death and damnation whereinto by Adams transgression we were plunged likewise that he hath elected vs to the ende to make vs pertakers of so great a benefit and left and abandoned so many others of like condition as ours in the deapth of euerlasting woe and to saue vs hath deliuered his onely begotten sonne Iesus Christ to the death Finally in that he saith that he vouchsafed to shewe the iudgement of his iustice namely vpon the reprobate he thereby representeth vnto vs that they haue no cause to murmure or contende and indeede as already we haue shewed that Adam was in his fall inexcusable so are they who being in Adam did with him fall into death and corruption for the sinne and corruption is in them and proceedeth from Adam not from God And albeit that which they doe is not without the prouidence and determinate counsell of God yet not knowing neither hauing any regarde thereof but voluntarily abandoning themselues to sinne and executing as S. Paul saith the l●stes of their fleshe Eph. 2.3 they cannot impute the cause of their damnation to God considering it is in themselues neither the r corruption seeing they take it from Adam In this sence Iudas seeing that he was condemned grounded not his excuse vpon the determinate counsell of God but accused and condemned hi●●elfe saying Mat. 27.3 I haue sinned in betraying the righteous bloud and ouercome with the iust iudgement of God he hanged himselfe 21 By the premises it appeareth that the true wisedome humility and sobriety of Christians consisteth in this that when God openeth his mouth to teach vs we likewise opē our eares to learn and when he shutteth his mouth we couet not to know Let vs in our selues finde that in God there is a wisedome iustice which we must not search into but reuerence and beleeue all that Gods worde doth teach vs concerning the election of some and the reprobation of other some as also of the prouidence of God notwithstanding we comprehend not the iustice or reason thereof for the glory of God must euen swallow vp all our replycations and murmurings because it is a true sanctification of Gods name to beleeue that he neither doth