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A03949 Bromelion A discourse of the most substantial points of diuinitie, handled by diuers common places: vvith great studie, sinceritie, and perspicuitie. Whose titles you haue in the next page following. S. I., fl. 1595.; Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605. Summa totius Christianismi. English. 1595 (1595) STC 14057; ESTC S107410 412,250 588

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giuen to wicked waies with gréedinesse and are so subiect to the bondage and slauery of the diuell and of sin that we thinke no way better then the broad way that leadeth to destruction thinking that heauen is in this world and that hell is but an old wiues tale saying vnto our selues Peace peace and all is in safety when sodainly either death shall ouertake vs or the latter day bring vs to iudgement True it is that which the eie seeth not the heart rueth not and the diuell hath diuers deuices to blinde the eies of our vnderstanding to make vs still to run on vntill it be too late to turn backe Being destitute of the grace of God and not as yet regenerate we are holden vnder the euill spirit of bondage setting all our delight in earthly and transitorie things yéelding vp our selues to our fleshly desires being strangers from God and strangers from our redéemer strangers from the life to come and altogither vnacquainted with his grace Wherby although we may think we are in the estate of fréedome and as fréemen yet are we of no better account then the basest seruants that liue and againe vnder such a maister whose seruice is nothing els but tyrannie shaddowed ouer with flattery a roaring lion seeking after his pray a gréedy wolfe clothed in a shéep skin But as Christ came into the world to destroy the workes of the diuel so hath he caused his grace to be published and sent his spirit into our hearts to open the eies of our vnderstāding to turn our harts and make them relent to make vs sée how cruell our maister is whome we serue and how dangerous an estate we are in being nothing but bondage slauery death destruction And this is the peculiar effect of the spirit of God and of his grace to shew vs our miserable estate by the law of God to strike our consciences with the rememembrance of our sinnes that we may vnderstand that we are in a desperate estate vnlesse we fly to Christ for succor Wherfore being directed by the spirit of god our stubburn harts are made to yéeld and to shed abundance of teares in consideratiō we haue offended God Which spirit of fréedom prouoketh vs to flie vnto Christ our only succour by a stedfast faith to take hold of the promises of gods mercy through the death of Christ whereby it commeth to passe y● our sins are forgiuen and although we are vnworthy therof are we accounted numbred among the children of God This is that spirit of adoption that maketh vs reioyce vnder the glorious libertie of the sonnes of GOD. Which maketh our ioy so much the more aboundant in consideration of our fearefull estate whereby we were so miserable So that wee may boldly triumph with the Apostle saying Reioyee in the Lord alwaies and againe I say reioyce For what greater ioy can there be then the ioy and peace of a quiet conscience being fully resolued of forgiuenesse of sinnes and of the fauoure of God who hath aduanced vs to so high a dignitie as of his enemies to make vs his sonnes and children Wherefore in meditation of our former estate let vs follow the Apostles counsaile 1. Pet. 1. 17. Passe the time of your dwelling here in feare and liue not carelesly as thongh we might doe what we list much like to wanton children which had néed continually to be corrected with the rod. But as the Apostle saith Brethren be not children in vnderstanding but as concerning maliciousnesse be children but in vnderstanding be of a ripe age so manie I say brethren as concerning wickednesse and vngodly behauiour let vs be children but as concerning the feare of God let vs grow from strength to strength vntill we be of a ripe age A dutifull seruaunt standeth alwaies in feare and distrust that that which he doth to his maister be not perfitly and sufficiently done as one desirous to continue his maisters fauour and good liking toward him So also a dutifull child should be careful still to please his father for feare not onely of loosing his fathers good wil but also of hindering himselfe from the which otherwise his father would leaue him and do for him How much more should an adopted child looke vnto himselfe and to his waies because he is taken in but of fauour without any desert and onely vpon pitie and compassion rather then vpon any other consideration Wherefore it is not for vs to make a triumph of our adoption and to make our boast and vaunt of it but rather in a godly sort to humble our selues through feare forecasting with our selues how to continue Gods good will toward vs which through our negligence and carelesse behauiour may be remooued For as they that come to goods to landes and possessions by fauour friendship and by adoption through their own foolishnes may dispossesse themselues of all so if a godly wisdome be not vsed the benefit of adoption may greatly be disgraced in vs and we may bring our selues into that case as iustly to thinke that we are none of Gods children So did that godly king Dauid and that holy blessed Apostle S. Peter by their infamous sinnes so alter the certaintie of their adoption as though they had quite béen forsaken of God So the it is not without great cause that the Apostle vseth these words Let him y● standeth take héed least he fall As if he had said let the adopted children of God take héed lest they offend God and let the testimony of a good cōscience be alwaies a reioycing vnto them and that the certaintie of our adoption may alwaies be warranted vnto vs. Where is therefore our ioy or where is our chiefest care grounded and setled not in the things of this world neither in this world Better it is to be in the house of mourning then to be in the house of laughter better it is to mourne for our ●innes past then in worldly sort to reioyce of our adoptions Considering that whē Adam and Eue were in the chiefest worldly ioy and thought themselues in the estate of Angels and in high fauour with God they procured thēselues to be mimiserable wretches and not worthie the name of gods children Who before had a blessing if they had continued in the fauour and grace of God and could haue perceiued their happie estate or if at lestwise they could haue foreséen the danger that would haue followed but instéede of a blessing they receiued a curse and instéed of fauour great displeasure Although we may be certified of our adoption yet it beh●ueth vs so long as we dwell in this world and are compassed with this our sinnefull flesh to be circumspect and wise to be warie and watchfull knowing that the broade way is as neare vnto vs as the narrowe way the right hand as neare as the left the diuel tempting the world inticing the flesh yéelding nay fighting and resisting the good spirit
vnto thée from thy God For I will set mine eies vpon them for good and I wil bring them again to this land and I wil build them and not destroy them and I wil plant them and not roote them out saith the Lord. Therfore they shall come reioyce in the height of Sion and shall run to the bountifulnesse of the Lord euen for the wheat for the wine and for the oile for the increase of shéep bullocks and their soule shal be as a watred garden they shall haue no more sorrow Then shal the virgin reioyce in the dance and the yong men the old mē togither for I wil turn their mourning into ioy wil comfort them giue them ioy for their sorrows And y● voice of ioy and the voice of gladnesse and the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride shal be heard in their stréets as also the voice of them y● shal say Praise the Lord of hostes because the Lord is good for his mercy endureth for euer Hagar Abrahams handmaid being ready to wéepe out her hart with sad mournfull teares and pittious lamentable cries God caused her to behold ioy and gaue her the life of her infant when it was ready to die with thirst promised her moreouer that of him shuld come a great people What trobles did king Dauid endure whē he was a subiect vnder king Saul who continually sought his death and most cruelly and vndeseruedly to shead his innocent blood how many feares how many flights how many dangers Where death was God made life appeare where contempt was God gaue credit and when his crosses were ended God gaue him his crowne to reioyce him Which made him thankfull to God saying Thou hast turned my mourning into ioy thou hast loosed my sackcloth and girded mee with gladnesse Therefore shall my tongue praise thee and not cease O Lord my God I will giue thankes vnto thee for euer Ieremiah the Prophet beaten cast into prison readie to starue for hunger like to be put to death but the Lord hi● him Who had regard of his trouble and of his sorrow and sent him ioy with great credit For in the sight of them that were led into captiuitie Zabuzaradan the chiefe steward according to the commaundement of king Nabuchodonozor who willed him to looke well vnto him and to doo him no harme but euen as he himselfe would desire to be dealt withall loosed him from the chaines which were on his hands and intreated him most kindly saying If it please thée to come with me into Babel come and I wil looke wel vnto thée but if it please thée not to come with me into Babel tarry still Behold all the land is before thée whither it séemeth good and conuenient for thée to go thither go So the chiefe steward gaue him vittailes and a reward and let him go If we looke vpon the deathfull sorrow of chaste Susanna do we not in reading her storie reioyce with her to sée what ioy of heart God sent her The Apostle Saint Peter being in prison his bands were loosed the prison doore set wide open and he by an Angel willed to come forth so was his ioy increased vpon the suddain beyond expectation Tolet goe other examples I will vse but this one King Ashuerus through the accusations of wicked Haman gaue out his letters that the Iewes should be slaine throughout his dominions A pittifull thing it was to sée and heare the outcries of the poore distressed Iewes Mardocheus gréeuously mourning yea Hester the Quéene her selfe fainted and fel down in a swoune Yet behold after a while the kings heart and mind is changed after a while life ioy yea and a solemne and a yearly remembrance of that ioy throughout their posterities and generations After a tempest a calme after stormie weather faire All which examples ought to be sufficient incouragements vnto vs not to be daunted or dismaied for any sorrow but rather to sustaine our selues with the hope of ioy to come After pouertie may come wealth after sicknesse Psal 107. 41. health after imprisonment libertie after shame by false reports credite againe after miserie dignitie after hatred good will after sorrow ioy and who knoweth what a day may bring foorth The seruant that endureth much drudgery that is beaten vndeseruedly that continueth painfully that performeth faithfully is in time released and with riches store and plentie blessed when as to remember what great miserie hee hath abidden and gone through is one of his chiefe ioyes Experience prooueth this to be true and the example of Iacobs seruice vnder Laban vnrequited by his grudging maister but plentifully rewarded by God himselfe dooth shewe howe thy sorrowes may bee turned into ioy Feare not saith Tobit to his sonne though thou bee poore for thou hast many things if thou feare God For indéed all Gods blessings especially pertaine to them that feare him though otherwise enioyed by vsurpation and an easie thing it is with God suddeinly to make a poore man rich The sorrowes of sicknesse may ende in ioyfull health King Hezekiah had fiftéene yeares added to his daies and it reioyced him more then his kingdome Compare Iosephs imprisonment with his honour and Susannais credite with her shame and Mordecais miserie with his dignitie and Esaus hatred Pro. 16. 7. toward Iacob altered to good will and louing affection and sée whither it be not true that Christ hath said set downe in the behalfe and respect of the godly Ye shall sorrow but your sorrow shal be turned into ioy It was a benefite and a ioy to Hezekiah to haue his daies prolonged and it was promised to king Iosiah for a great blessing to haue his daies cut off But the cause of this blessing and ioy was the great sorrowe that he tooke considering the great plagues that were to come vpon his people As it was answered by Hulda the Prophetesse These euils which you haue heard read vnto you shall come vpon this land because of their idolatry But to the king that sent you thus shall you say Thus saith the Lord because thy heart did melt when thou heardst what was spoken against this place and didst rent thy clothes and wéepe before me I haue heard it saith the Lord. Behold therefore I will gather Esay 57. 1. thee to thy fathers and thou shalt be put in thy graue in peace and thine eyes shall not sée all the euil which I wil bring vpon this place Moses wéepeth and mourneth to himselfe that he could not be partaker of his desire as to enter into that promised plentifull pleasant land that hée could not sée that goodly mountaine and Lebanon and was angry with his people who were the cause that he was bereaued of his ioy but in that he was taken vp into paradise and placed in the heauens were not all sorrows think you fully and most aboundantly requited with ioy The world
them that oppresse them yet they that haue respect to gods working herein receiue much comfort by gods good spirit and perceiue oftentimes gods gratious and mightie hand in deliuering and defending them that he may be praised of them for his mercie wherof they haue so rare comfortable experience Otherwise god hath such great care ouer the godly that euen the angels of his wrath which are farre more mightie then tyrants and all the oppressors of the earth euen those wrathfull angels shall not hurt them As we reade Reue. cap. 7. 2. Those angels to whome power was giuen to hurt the earth and the sea they were charged not to hurt the earth neither the sea vntill the seruants of god were sealed in their foreheads Those houses in Egipt whose doore postes were sprinckeled with blood were safe from the destroying angell when other houses not so marked were stroken with death The angels that came to destroy Sodome confessed they could doo nothing till Lot was gone out of Sodome The diuel could not hurt Iob without gods leaue If then neither angels nor diuels much lesse can tyrants and wicked men hurt vs when gods pleasure is to the contrary But if his pleasure be so that they shall preuaile against vs let vs flie vnto god by true repentaunce for our sinnes and waite patiently his good leisure when it shall please him to send helpe and redresse For hée vseth then to sende remedie and comfort when men thinke none God ruleth all things according to his good pleasure and will his order of gouernment is moste beautifull and excellent his iudgements moste right and vnblameable the meanes that he vseth and whereby hée worketh are diuerse and wonderfull as is best knowne to his wisedome and hid from mans vnderstanding Turning all to the good of his people sometimes restraining the power of the wicked and sometimes making them to fulfill and obey his will against their owne willes So that the godly may say I haue bene yoong and now am old and yet sawe I neue● wonderfull workes and that my soule knoweth right wel The last part of this text which I haue read vnto you doth shewe out the punishment of God and their il successe which distrust Gods prouidence Which is made manifest in the iudgement of God against the prince that gaue out such distrustfull words and said Though the Lord would make windows in the heauen could it come so to passe But it was answered him that he should sée great plentie but should not eate thereof And so it caine vnto him for the people trode vpon him in the gate and he died For in this fearefull example let vs censider of what estate countenance and calling this man was that said If God would open the windowes of heauen could it be so By his estate and degrée he was a prince and one of the kings chiefest nobles and such a one on whome the king leaned who should haue glorified God most For the higher the degrée is the more doth God require at their hands If a meane man had spoken it there had not bene so great cause of offence neither should it haue bene so much regarded But séeing a noble man and that a prince did speake it eueris one thought so too and all their hearts no doubt were daunted According as we reade Eccle. 13. 24. When the rich man speaketh euery one holdeth his toong and looke what he saith they praise vnto the cloudes But if the poore man speake they say What fellow is this and though he speak wisely yet can it haue no place When king Abimelech had told his seruants waightie matters they were all affraied The worde of a magistrate superior and high calling pearce farre and that which they speake is in euery mans mouth It preuaileth much among the lower sort either to drawe them to good or to mooue them to the contrary If their spéeches and déedes be otherwise then well vs maketh great men great examples as we reade And he smote downe the chosen men that were in Israel According as we sée in a realme when the heades and chiefe doers of any rebellion be cut off and put to death the rest their courage is gone and all things are quiet If the sinne and offence be notorious in persons of account God sometimes maketh their punishment to be notorious also that y● matter may be remembred and that there may be a feare in euery mans heart that they do not the lyke How highly his and all such spéeches do offend and displease God we sée by his example Farre be it therefore that any should distrust gods prouidence either in féeding and nourishing vs as wee say there is no mouth but God sendes meate and as it is in the Psalme He giueth foode to all flesh for his mercy endureth for euer Or that we should distrust him and his power in other matters whatsoeuer for god is aboue all and ruleth all But yet the nature of man is too distrustfull and lightly none do put their trust in god but they that know gods prouidence and are fully perswaded thereof And yet to sée how backward men be that euen the very best haue bene found faultie herein as Moses an excellent prophet and one that saw gods wonders and his miracles the disciples also that were continually in Christ his presence and did so often sée his mightie and straunge working When the people of Israel murmured for want of flesh and were destrous to satisfie their lust and not their hunger God spake vnto Moses and told him that the people should not eate flesh a day or two or fiue or ten or twentie but a whole moneth vntill it came out at their nosthrils God heard them granted their request But how in his anger as the words doo import which follow Because ye haue contemned the Lord which is among you and haue wept before him saying Why came we hither out of Egypt Which plentie when Moses had heard from god yet he doubted greatly and measured gods power by his simple reason and therewithall gaue foorth distrustfull spéeches saying Sixe hundred thousand footemen are there of the people among whom I am and thou saiest I will giue them flesh that they may eate a month long Shal the shéep and the béeues be slain for them to finde them either shall all the fish of the sea be gathered togither for them to suffice them And the Lord said to Moses Is the Lordes hand shortned Thou shalt see now whether my word shall come to passe vnto thee or no. Our Sauior Christ to try what was in man hauing a great multitude present and minding to reléeue to féed them he saith to one of his disciples Whēce shal we buy bread that these may eate This he said to proue him for he himselfe knew what he would do Philip his disciple answered him Two hundreth peniwoorth of bread are not sufficient for them that euery man
lawes of men as of the lawes of God The lawes of men haue respect but to the outward déed but the lawes of God to the hart and inward thoughts of the minde No doubt euery one thinketh it a worthy matter to them that can kéep themselues in that compasse but because they knowe not the happinesse that consisteth therein therefore they do not so greatly set their hearts and mindes vpon it Which happinesse and great commodities and aduantages that it bringeth being considered would make vs to haue it in high estimation and more to desire it then that happinesse which the world doth account off Therefore let vs hearken how the word of God doth set it foorth vnto vs that we may be fully assured and perfectly know the benefites thereof and that we may account all earthly and worldly delights in respect of this delight but vanitie that we may be throughly inamoured therewith as if wée did behold the glorious and glistering throne of the Maiestie of God and that we may be as they that are rauished with an excellent and excessiue desire who can neuer be at rest vntill they haue obtained it And because the heart of man is principally set vpon earthly commodities and temporall blessings therefore it pleased the spirit of God first to begin with that perswasion that so by little and little hée might draw their mindes from earthly commodities to heauenly matters of great waight and importance And to say the truth what profite is there or what blessing may bee reckoned which the feare of God dooth not bring The Prophet Moses in a briefe summe dooth set downe all worldly commodities which procéede from the feare of God which are named Deutro 28. These blessings saith he shall come vppon thee and ouertake thee Blessed shalt thou be in the Cittie and blessed also in the field Blessed shall be the frute of thy bodie and the frute of thy ground and the frute of thy cattle the increase of thy kine and the flockes of thy sheepe Blessed shalt thou bee when thou commest in and blessed also when thou goest out The Lord shall cause thy enemies that rise against thee to fall before thy face they shall come foorth against thee one way and shall flie before thee seuen wayes The Lord shall commaund the blessing to be with thee in thy store-houses and in all that thou settest thine hand vnto The Lord shall make thee plenteous in goods Hee shall open vnto thee his good treasure euen the heauen to giue raine vnto thy lande in due season and to blesse all the workes of thy handes so that thou shalt lend vnto many Nations but shalt not borrowe thy selfe And the Lorde shall make thee the heade and not the tayle and thou shalt be aboue onely and shall not bee beneath thou shalt be of the better and not of the baser sort of whom there is made small reckoning and account yea thou shalt liue in countenance and be well taken It is said of our sauiour Christ that hée encreased in wisedome and stature and in fauour with God and men so is it also with them that feare God whom it pleaseth God to account and accept for his children they shal increase in the fauour of God and men and they shall liue with credit and good report Good report whereas if thou liuest contrary and without the feare of God euery body shall be readie to speake ill of thée and as the Prouerbe is An ill name halfe hangd In consideration also of which prosperitie the Prophet Dauid doth breake forth into this spéech of wonder Psal 31. 19. How great is thy goodnes ô Lord which thou hast laid vp for them that feare thee And how hast thou done for them which trust in thee euen before the sonnes of men And as though the Prophet could not sufficiently satisfie himselfe with the commendation of the estate of them that feare God and liue in his obedience he vttereth yet more being plentifull in his spéeches as the sea is in his waues Psal 128. Blessed is euerie one that feareth the Lord and walketh in his waies When thou eatest the labours of thy handes thou shalt be blessed and it shall be well with thee Thy wife shall be as the fruitfull vine on the sides of thine house and thy children like the Oliue branches round about thy table Lo surely thus shall the man be blessed that feareth the Lord yea further he shall sée his childrens children to reioyce his heart and make his life the longer All this prosperitie the wicked sort shall sée and behold The wicked enuy at their prosperitie and be amazed they shall be angry in their heart and shall greatly enuy to sée the godly in such good state they shall gnash with their téeth and consume away For their own enuy shall eate them vp and bring them to their graue before their time God doth inrich the godly and them that feare him in such sort that it is past mans expectation and past that The straunge inriching of them that fear God which the godly themselues may hope for so that it séemeth straunge and wonderfull to the world both that the godly might haue the greater cause and that with moste chéerfull hearts to praise and magnifie the name of God and be thankfull vnto him and also that all other that sée it may acknowledge it to be Gods doing and as Iannes and Iambres the sorcerers of King Pharaoh said when they resisted Moses the seruant of God This is the finger of God and God hath done it and he onely hath brought it to passe who hath a care ouer his children more then the hen that flocketh her broode togither and couereth them with her wings As we read in the Psalmes When my father and mother forsake mee the Lord taketh mee vp According to that in the Prophecie of Esay Cap. 49. 15. Can a woman forget her childe and not haue compassion on the sonne of her wombe Though they should forget yet will not I forget saith the Lord. So true it is that the Prophet Dauid recordeth I haue bene yoong and now am old and yet sawe I neuer the righteous forsaken nor their seede begging their bread Which thing is manifestly séene in the examples of Abraham Isaack Iacob Ioseph and their posteritie which examples I cannot stand vpon but onely I referre you to their stories in the booke of Genesis where you shall sée the plentifull goodnes of God toward them being fed mainteined and inriched onely by Gods hand which stories are most worthie both the reading and meditation They that feare God want nothing whereas the Lyons want roare for hunger The earth is the Lords and all that therein is and he hath prepared the earth and all the blessings thereof principally and chiefly for them that liue in his obedience So that they may speake boldly and with assurance of confidence Quaeuis terra patria Euery place in the
goe out againe The Lorde hath giuen and the Lord hath taken Blessed be the name of the Lord. Againe it is not without great cause that they are called Riches of iniquitie because for the most part they are gotten by wrong and oppression by fraude and deceit And therefore no maruell if the Apostle giue this counsell 1. Tim. 6. 8. Let vs saith hée alwaies carry contented mindes For they that will bee rich fall into tentation and snares and into many foolish and noisome lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction For the desire of mony is the roote of all euill which while some lusted after they erred from the faith and pearced themselues through with many Lands purchased for a name sorrowes Some there are that heape vp riches to purchase lands to get themselues a name and to leaue the same to their posteritie which thing the Prophet Dauid noteth Psal 49. They trust in their goods and boast themselues in the multitude of their riches They thinke their houses and their habitations shall continue for euer euen from generation to generation and call their landes and houses by their owne names The chiefest delight they haue is to leaue these goodly possessions to their heires that they may kéepe their name and that they be not forgotten on the earth neuer séeking the Lordes fauour and mercy to direct and make strong their desires neither euer séeking to plant his feare in them that must enioy those things But their issue is thereafter and the Lord turneth all crosse in his iudgement so that they are dispearced and driuen often to forsake not onely the place but the verie land For being brought vp in all idlenesse loosenesse and libertie they soone ouerlash and run beyond their compasse and through leaudnesse and ryot they bring all to nothing and being pinched with scarcitie and penury they commit some mischiefe or other whereby they are enforced either to flie their natiue Country or to end their liues both lamentably and fearefully He that neuer knew the getting can kéepe no measure in spending as also euill gotten goods come neuer to the third generation as the wise man saith She begetteth a sonne and in his hand is nothing We thinke them best beloued of God who enioy most The blessing of God in heauenly gifts wealth and substance but if we haue eyes to sée the blessing of God consisteth in heauenly gifts and graces which the common sort doo not enioy albeit their wealth may bee without number What is it for him that had such store of goods to reioyce and say to his soule Soule liue at ease and take thy rest for thou hast much goods laid vp for many yeares when that he could not enioy his life a night to an end yea further it may be feared that with his life he lost not only his goods but his soule too In respect wherof we may well say with the Prophet Dauid The greater sort craue worldly goods and riches do imbrace But Lord graunt vs thy countenance thy fauour and thy grace For thou thereby shalt make my heart more ioyfull and more glad Then they that of their corne and wine full great increase haue had When I saw that such delight had such heauinesse I turned aside to behold the excellencie of wisedom and there VVisedome I found but vanitie and vexation For he that séeks by learning to come by wisedome behold how he is incombred before he come to the goale and though all runne yet but one receiueth the prize that is fewe there be that do excell Yet by the way we must not therefore leaue off but run on with a good courage in hope that at last we may obtain The eye is neuer satisfied with reading and the mind searcheth till it be weary our spirits faint before they come to the depth and when they are nearest then are they far off Which maketh the holy man Iob say Cap. 28. Where is wisedome found and from whence commeth it and where is the place of vnderstanding Man knoweth it not and it is hid from the eyes of all the liuing Here is the vexation of the spirit For in the multitude of wisedom is much grief And he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow hée searcheth after it and cannot find it According to y● saying Maxima pars eorum quae scimus est minima corum quae ignoramus Although we know much yet our ignorance is as great if not greater as if the vnderstanding of man were nothing else but couered ouer with darknesse Many there are who being too desirous to know more then is méete and conuenient for them to search after haue bene so bold as to clime into Gods secrets but with Lucifer they haue had their falles And yet because they cannot be partakers of their vnlawfull desires by lawfull meanes they enter into couenant with the diuel to shew them hidden matters and to helpe them to their desires damning thereby their soules for euer for a worldly delight which cannot long endure Againe some being as it were wrapt into the heauens with a foolish conceit of their owne wisedome thinking none so excellent as they exalted in their imaginations being ouer and aboue rauished with selfe loue rather then there should want any to praise them admire and extoll themselues But euen as it was said to King Nabuchodonozor O King to thée be it spoken thy kingdome is departed from thée so in a manner as by experience we see the self same voice soundeth into their eares To thée that doest admire and exalt thy selfe in thy wisedom to thée be it spoken thou art bereft of thy wit and sences and thy vnderstanding and wisedome is departed from thée Whereby such become a gazing stocke and wonder to men and Angels and a wretched and wofull spectacle to themselues Being thus satisfied with the view of wisedomes vanitie I went along and followed my guide and he brought Honous me to the mount of honour and made me behold the vanitie of this high and mounting delight To sée what créeping and crowching what capping and knéeing and how as seruants and slaues men were sutors to honour and yet behold againe their slippery estate much adoo to come thither and yet soone throwne downe and dispossessed What is the estate of Kings and Princes in their thrones who although they haue many and sundry delights yet are they recompenced with infinit cares and troubles and still in daunger of treachery and treason The Magistrates Iudges and highest Officers in a realme although God hath vouchsafed them in his owne title and called them Gods yet shall they die like men nay for the most part they liue corrupted men Which thing if King Salomon had not séene in his dayes and foreséen what would haue falne out in time to come he would not so resolutely haue set it downe Eccle. 5. 7. If in a country saith he thou seest the oppression of the poore
reioycing alway before him She is the breath of the power of God and a pure influence that floweth from the glory of the Almightie She is the brightnesse of the euerlasting light the vndefiled mirrour of the maiestie of God and the image of his goodnesse Which being one she can do all things and remaining in her selfe renueth all In the beginning was the word and the word was with God and that word was God The same was in the beginning with God Al things were made by it and without it was made nothing that was made In it was life euen the life of all gods creatures quickning and preseruing all things and in great wisedome disposing all things in their due order So that the wise man might well call it the delight of God which sitteth about his throne and the bewty of all his creatures through the beholding wherof it pleased God to pronounce and say That all things that were made were very good and in respect of their workemanship excellent This also is woorthie the marking in the worke of gods creation that whereas in the workes of all earthly creatures there is labour and sweate and wearinesse god by his almightie power brought this wonderfull matter to passe with great ease with great delight and ioy It was no more with him but his word and his commandement onely it was his will it should be so At whose will and word and commaundement as all the liuing creatures were made which he in his infinit wisedome thought good off so also might hee haue caused many more to bee made and created not because he was a weary of his worke but because hée thought it not expedient Yet some may thinke that Gods Creation was a laboure vnto him and a wearisome labour because we reade that he rested the seuenth day from all his worke which he had made VVhich he did not because he fainted as it were vnder the burthen of so waightie a businesse for it was neither a businesse nor a matter of waight nor a burthen vnto him or for his ease and refreshing but onely for his delight and further contentation but only because it was his will and that it so pleased him The easinesse of this woorke is so muche the more to be wondred at not onely that it was without paine and wearinesse but also that he did both vndertake and finish the same of his owne accord and of himselfe without any other helpes and meanes Nothing excellent nay if it be neuer so meane that is done on the Earth but hath great helpes The Citie and the Tower which Nimrod and his company went about to build the top whereof they purposed should reach vnto the heauens a mirrour to the worlde if it might haue bene finished was it done by one or by two No an infinit multitude put their heades and their hands to it and all little inough There were Carpenters and Masons and suche as should make bricke and burne it in the fire there were maister deuisers and maister builders and inferiour drudges and a number of labourers as thicke as the swarmes of Egypt They laboured all ioyntly with heart and hand heauing and shouing toyling and sweating and all to no purpose to their great griefe and discontentment for all was dasht How were the Pyramides of Egipt those famous monuments erected and set vp as easie think you as if one stone might be laide View the building but of a smal cottage and say what a busie piece of worke it it But with God was no such thing he was all alone and there was none other he begunne it and he brought it to passe hée commaunded and neuer laboured he created and neuer rested vntill all was as you sée The night and faintnesse come vppon man and hée must of necessitie leaue off That creature which hath not his rest cannot continue his strength to labour When the Sunne riseth man goeth foorth to his woorke and to his labour but how long If sixe or seuen houres togither without some foode and some refreshing it is a maruell but if hee continue vntill the euening hée can staie no longer at it for the weakenesse of his bodie will not suffer him and the light of the day is closed vp with night and darknesse Againe the woorkes of men may haue manie chaunges before they come to perfection and the workeman himselfe may bee displeased at his worke and beginne anewe but GOD as hee is vnchaungeable so euen at the first was his worke perfect without any alteration VVho hath made the earth by his power and established the world by his wisedome and hath stretched out the heauen by his discretion Ier. 10. 12. Furthermore in the maner of Gods creation this is All good not the least and meanest thing to be considered of That all that God made was good And God sawe all that hee had made and beholde it was verie good Euery thing in his order and in his kind perfect and absolute as saith the Prophet Moses though not durable and alwayes to continue No maruell then if the learned did name the worlde to bee bewtie séeing God himselfe after hée had created all sawe that they were verie good Also because the maiestie wisedome and power gods workmanship did giue a grace to euery thing to adorne it and to set it foorth to the commendation of man The works of the Lord saith the Psalme are great and worthie to be praised and had in honor which also are sought out of all them that haue pleasure therein All the workes of the Lord saith the wise man are good and he giueth euery one in due season and when need is So that a man néed not say this is worse then that For in due season they are all worthie praise And therefore praise the Lord with whole heart and mouth and blesse the name of the Lord who vpon all his workes hath powred foorth his blessings and hath made the wise and godly to beholde it although this knowledge be kept from the wicked who in no sort are worthie to be partakers either of gods goodnesse or of his blessings and comforts None are so set to dispraise and discommend and to disdain at gods workes and his creatures as the wicked which are readie to finde fault where they haue no cause and to despise that whereof they sée no present vse and to curse and abhorre those creatures whereby they may haue any hurt or hinderance Yet certain it is that god hath made nothing that hath any fault although many a gracelesse people thinke so which are destitute of wisedome For the one commendeth the goodnes of the other and who can be satisfied with beholding gods glory in them For through him all things are directed to a good end Many creatures séeme to be created hurtful and some wil say what good is in them Doubtlesse god forelawe that the earth should be filled and inhabited with two sorts of people the
good the bad the wicked and the godly for whose sake were created his beneficiall and helpefull creatures and his plaguing and reuenging creatures Which god in his wisedome hath thus disposed to frame vs to thankfulnesse to a reuerence and feare of his maiestie that we should not offend him or prouoke his anger against vs. And although the foolish mind of man may thinke some creatures of god to haue no goodnesse in their creation because they that deserue the contrary finde it not yet in their nature they are good because they are the worke of God and this is their goodnesse that they execute Gods punishments A notable example whereof we sée in the Prophecie of Daniel concerning his malicious enemies and wicked accusers who when they were cast vnto the lions were torne in pieces before they came to the ground which if they had done vpon a rauening kinde of nature it would haue bene séene vpon Daniel himselfe who was cast amongst the lions before they were and yet was not touched To giue a manifest proofe vnto vs that God hath made them to execute his wrath and hath ordeined them to a good ende though in their tune they bee terrible and most hurtfull Which as yet more manifestly it appeareth in the examples of the Prophets that disobeyed Gods commandement and was therefore slaine by a lion whereof we reade 1. King 13. The old Prophet which had caused the yoong Prophet to transgresse Gods commandement as they were sitting at the table the word of the Lord came vnto him and he cried vnto the yoong Prophet saying Thus saith the Lord because thou hast disobeyed the mouth of the Lord and hast not kept the commandement which the Lord the God commanded thee but camest backe againe and hast eaten bread and drunke water in the place whereof hee did say vnto thee Thou shalt eate no bread nor drinke any water therefore thy carkasse shal not come into the sepulchre of thy fathers So when the Prophet was departed and gone a lion met him by the way and slew him and his bodie was cast in the way and the asse stood therby the lion stood by the corps also The asse which is wont to be the praie of the lion was vnhurt the hungry lion stood by as though ●e had no lust to eate because God had shut his mouth to shewe his iudgement and therefore the lion stood still till other came to behold the same and as it were to beare witnesse In the lion we may behold gods wisedome in all other cruell and terrible beasts who neuer rage till men be come to an outlawe I meane when they forget God and themselues then doth God vse the fiercenesse of his reuenging creatures because hee would haue good order kept and that men should liue in awe and as we say vnder a lawe euen Gods lawe which is most righteous and holy This is not ordinary for God hath put the sword into the Magistrates hand to punish offendors and to cut them off but sometimes he punisheth extraordinarily As we reade Eccle. 39. 28. 32. There be spirits that are created for vengeance which in their rigour lay on sure strokes In the time of destruction they shewe forth their power and accomplish the wrath of him that made them Fire and haile and famine and death all these are created for vengeance The téeth of wilde beastes and the scorpions and the serpents and the sword execute vengeance for the destruction of the wicked They shall be glad to doo his commaundements and when néed is they shall be readie vppon earth and when their houre is come they shall not ouerpasse the commaundement The night and darknesse is created of God to a good end that all his creatures may take rest therein yet was it a gréeuous punishment vnto the Egiptians and a forerunrer of hellish darknesse Frogges and lice and grashoppers and such creatures lightly do no great hurt but when God would punish the Egiptians his enemies by them they came among them in aboundance and in swarmes and molested them gréeuously in so much that the land did stinke with their huge heaps No creature we think so vgly to looke to as a toad yet it is a good creature of God and in his time deserueth praise The phisitian knoweth it which creature though some do vse to mischief yet he to medicine for he draweth the vertue dried po●●er therof into his purging helpes yet so that he allaieth it with greater preseruatiues Againe God doth make this creature commendable vnto vs if it were for nothing else but for the precious stone which is found in him and therfore is set in gold and some do weare it in their rings being there delectable to their sight which otherwise they take to bee so loathsome Concerning all hurtfull creatures which in their creation are good if we find our selues agréeued let vs consider and waigh the matter with greater deliberation and we shall then finde that no creature had bene hurtfull if man had not bene sinfull So that now the fault of man is to be blamed and lamented not Gods creation which is highly to be honored cannot sufficiently be praised The most hurtfull creature that euer was or is or shal be I meane the diuel let vs consider Gods worke in him For he was made angel of heauen which for his pride was cast downe into hell and forced to dwell in bottomlesse darkenesse and plagued with euerlasting torments In respect of which his excellent creation the history of Iob numbreth him among the children of God that is his Angels As in the chapter 1. v. 6. Now on a day when the children of God came and stood before the Lord Sathan came also among them Also the Prophet Michaah 1. Kin. 22. 19. speaking of the deceiuing of King Achab by a false spirite generally amongst Gods angels maketh mention of him The diuel was good at the first how hurtfull so euer he is now Which is a good instruction to vs that stand or rather that thinke we stand lest we fall away from God as he did and so be partakers of his wofull miseries Lastly let vs beholde our selues next to the angels none more excellently created then we but as the diuel fell away from God and all goodnesse so by our disobedience in our first parents did we deserue the like punishment and in like sort to bee cast away vnlesse God in great mercy had taken compassion on vs and deliuered vs from the gates of hell For whose goodnesse we haue the greater cause to be thankfull that he gaue his onely sonne to death for the redemption of mankind passing by and leauing these rebellious Angelles in their cursed estate And to sée no creatures haue defaced gods worke so much as they that were his moste excellent creatures and of whome it might haue bene very well saide They are verie good So that almightie God was highly displeased and sorrie that
seeth them shal laugh them to scorne And all men that sée it shall say This hath god done for they shall perceiue that it is his worke Againe the tongues of the godly God directeth as shall be best for their behoofe The nature of man is fearefull how to answere being called before mightie men But to the comfort of them that feare God it is written Mat. 10. 17. Ye shal be brought to the gouernors and kings for my sake in witnesse to them to the gentiles But when they deliuer you vp take no thought how or what ye shall speake For it shall be giuen you in that houre what ye shall say For it is not ye that speake but the spirite of your father which speaketh in you Concernining other parts of the bodie As the Prophet praieth that God would open his eyes to sée the wonders of his lawe so also he praieth that he would turne away his eyes that they should not behold vanitie The disciples that iournied to Emaus their eyes were holden that they could not know Christ The eyes are shut and somtimes also the eares are dull and closed vp Act. 28. 27. King Saul had a speare in his hand to throw at Dauid but his hand was restrained The heart the affections the tongue the eyes eares and hands yea the whole body God ruleth as is manifest in the example of Saul the persecutor who after became Paul a blessed Apostle Yet before his conuersion and happie change he breathed out threatnings and slaughter and made hast to procure trouble to the godly But as he iournied it came to passe that he fell from his horse by a miracle from heauen was striken blind and cast into a great feare and trembling I haue bene hitherto tedious because the treatise is so comfortable in the rest I purpose to be briefe to satisfie thy minde The maruellous prouidence of God and his most secret handy worke being now declared concerning the affaires of men as also men themselues there remaineth behinde a matter as waightie as the rest and that is this That if all things be ruled by Gods prouidence and by an euen and vpright hand First how falleth it out that such mischieuous and wicked déeds are committed in the world as we daily sée Secondly why do the wicked and vngodly flourish when as they that serue God most are put to the worst and that they finde their affaires to goe crosse and ourethwart Which matters although they be so waighty I cannot now stand vpon but must referre the handling of them vntill some other time onely at this time I minde God willing to touch them and briefly to set downe the resolution God hath so created the world that he is still gouernour thereof in such sort that nothing is done or can come to passe but by his counsell and prouidence And albeit the diuel and the reprobate labour by their wickednesse and mischiefes to bring all things to confusion yea and the faithfull by the faults that they commit peruert good order and iustice yet God hath the chiefe superioritie aboue all and turneth the euill into good And howsoeuer it be he disposeth and gouerneth all with a secret bridle and after so wonderfull a fashion that we must reuerence it with all humilitie because we are not able to comprehend it Vaine therefore are their spéeches and most vngodly which séeme to defend their wicked déeds by gods prouidence and making the diuine maiestie which is nothing but holinesse it selfe in a maner culpable with them Whose spéeches are after this sort Some desperate ru●●ian hath slaine a good citizen he hath performed say they gods counsell an other hath stolen or committed adultery he hath done that which God hath suffred an vngodly and carelesse childe lets his father die and neuer séekes for remedie and helpe he could not resist God which had so ordeined from the beginning And thus they shroud their hainous sinnes vnder gods prouidence and thinke they deserue no otherwise but well They thinke they did performe gods will but they followed their owne wicked will Gods commaundements are to the contrary whereunto we ought to haue respect And if any thing be committed otherwise then may stand with the same it cannot be without offence much more will the sin abound if it be expresly and purposely against gods will and commandement God bringeth about his purpose and decrée diuers waies according to his infinit wisedome which herein sheweth it selfe so much the more that he can vse the workes of the wicked well though the wicked be fouly in fault Théeues and murtherers and such malefactors are often instruments of gods iustice vnawares to them yet neuerthelesse there can be no lawfull excuse for their notorious mischiefes For if the lawe of God be not sufficient their owne conscience will reprooue them and cry vengeance against them In God there is no euill in men there is nothing but euil The Sunne by his heate causeth a stinking smell to come forth of a carkasse when as there is no such thing in the Sunne but in the carkasse So God vseth the mischieuous déeds of the wicked as may stand most with his glory though it tende to their great condemnation vnlesse the mercy of god bee the greater It lieth in Gods power to restraine them but oftentimes he giueth them vp to themselues As our Sauiour Christ confessed when he was taken of his malicious and cruell enemies This is your very houre saith he and the power of darkenesse For then God gaue libertie to Sathan and his ministers to execute their rage In their mindes was malice mischiefe and crueltie but the glorious purpose of God was to giue his onely sonne for the redemption of the world God detesteth sinne but yet turneth the wickednesse of sinners as séemeth best to him oftentimes to the confusion of themselues to make his iustice more famous The wicked cannot choose but doo ill God is not the authour of their wickednesse but at what time or against whome their mischiefe shall breake foorth and take place that is in Gods hand and in his most mightie power As for the other matter in question why the wicked flourish and the godly are oppressed Although it be so let vs not therefore deny Gods prouidence Many tyraunts there are and wicked men in the world and as Iob saith the tabernacles of robbers doo prosper and they are in safetie that prouoke God They raigne and rage and their power is great yet who knoweth what God mindeth to worke by them Amongst the rest this séemeth to be one cause that the minds of the godly might be proued There are many excellent vertues which lie hid in them which without this meanes cannot be knowne Especially in the time of martirdom and persecution when they shal be tried and put to death by tyrants for the profession of gods truth And although otherwise also they suffer many mischiefs wrongs by the hands of
may take a little And Andrew an other of his disciples sayd There is a Lad which hath fiue barly loaues and two fishes But what are they among so many And Iesus said Make the people sit downe and he gaue thanks brake The men y● sat down wer in nomber about fiue thousand and they had all inough left And they filled twelue baskets with the broken meat that remained Let no man distrust Gods prouidence God hath inough in store for vs all Let vs descend from the best and looke into the minds of that common sort As in this example which followeth which I haue vsed before but to an other purposc How farre did the Israelites go astraie who had manifest proofe of Gods prouidence euen from heauen and diuerse waies else and that in straunge and miraculous sort They begin to grudge and to distrust as it were against their owne conscience Hée brought water say they out of the stonie rocke so that it gushed out like the riuers yet for all this they sinned against him and prouoked the most highest in the wildernesse they tempted god in their harts required meat for their lust they spake against god also saying Shal god prepare a table in the wildernesse He smote the stony rocke indéed but can he giue bread also or prouide flesh for his people When the Lord heard this he was wroth I will adde one example more concerning the prouidence of god in the gouernment of the affaires of men The example is not so wonderfull as the hearts of men are fearfull and their mindes distrustfull God had promised to giue vnto his people the lande of Canaanites to possesse and to inherite but before they had ouercome it god willed Moses that one of euery Tribe should goe to espie and search the land These spies they knew for a certaintie that by gods promise they should possesse the lande and yet when they came backe there was nothing but distrustful spéeches in their mouthes The land say they floweth with milke and hony and is plentiful of all gods goonesse neuerthelesse the people be strong that dwell in the land and the citties are walled and excéeding great and moreouer we sawe the sonnes of Anake there And we be not able to go vp against the people for they are stronger then we It is a land that eateth vp the inhabitaunts thereof for the giants that dwelt there were so cruel that they spoyled killed one another and those also y● came to them all the people y● we saw in it are men of great stature for there we sawe giants the sons of Anake which come of the giants so that we séemed in our sight like grashoppers and so we were in their sight They did not thus only bring vp an euil report and distrust themselues but also made all the peoples hearts to saint so that they cried and wept and wished they were dead and sayd Wherefore now hath the Lord brought vs into this land to fall vpon the sword Our wiues our children shall be a pray And they said one to an other let vs make a captaine and returne into Egipt All these examples are to prooue not onely howe wée are giuen to distrust but also that it is a great offence against GOD and that they that haue bene faultie herein haue smarted for it To teach vs to hope although we sée no present helpe and not in any sort to distrust God in whome is all power and who bringeth to passe what euer hee will both in heauen and earth God gaue Moses leaue to sée the plentifull land of Canaan that goodly mountaine and Lebanon but he suffered him not to enter into it although he praied God I pray thée let me go ouer and sée the good that is beyond Iordan But the Lord saith he was angry with me for your sakes would not heare me And the Lorde said vnto me Let it suffice thee and be content speake no more vnto me of this matter Get thee vp into the top of the mount P●sgah And assoon as he had viewed that pleasant land God caused him to die there What was the cause no other but this the people murmured and Moses distrusted The people of Israel had bread inough nay they had hony out of the stone and oyle out of the hard rock yet they thought y● God was not able to giue them flesh But they had triall thereof to their cost For God caused that they had flesh as thick as dust and feathered foules like as the sand of the sea and that in such plentie that they were al aweary of it But now commeth soure sauce to their swéete meate When the Lord heard their grudging and distrust he was wrath So the fire was kindled in Iacob and there came vp heauy displeasure against Israel because they beléeued not in God and put not their trust in his helpe While they were chewing y● meat the wrath of the Lord was kindeled and the people were consumed with an excéeding great plague and the chosen men and the chiefest of account in all Israel were smitten downe And yet for all this they sinned still and beléeued not Gods wondrous workes Therefore their dayes did he consume in vanitie and their yeares in trouble and soone and hastily they perished as though they had not bene Last of all let vs sée the heauy iudgements of God vpon the difcomfortable spies and vppon the distrustfull people The spies that brought vp that vile slaunder died by a plague before the Lord and the people whose harts fell away from God through their ill report God pronounced that for their disobedience they should wander in the wildernesse fortie yeares Certainly saith the Lorde I wil do so to all this wicked faint-harted and vnbeléeuing company For in this wildernesse they shal be consumed all of them from twenty yeare old and aboue that haue murmured and there they shall die and leaue their carkasses Furthermore saith the Lord Your children which you said should be a praie them will I bring in and they shall know the land the land which you through your distrustfull hearts haue refused Wherefore content your mindes and set your hearts at rest there is none of you all shall enter into the land or see it saue onely Ioshua the sonne of Nun and Caleb the sonne of Iephnueh which spake comfortable words and who in their hearts and mindes were fully assured of Gods helpe and doubted not but that God would performe his promise and encouraged and cheared vp the peoples mindes saying Let vs go vp at once and poslesse the land for vndoubtedly wee shall ouercome it As if he had said God is the same god that euer he was and his power is not weakened Feare not the people of the lande for they are but bread for vs and we shall easily ouercome them Their shield is departed from them there is no strength in them and the Lord is with vs
I wil some say if such a man of honour and worship were my friend or if I had the fauour of such a rich and wealthie man I might haue some helpe of maintenance from him and I should be sure whatsoeuer fel out that he would stand me in steed he wold sée me take no wrong he would speake for me and spende his mony in my behalfe he would not refuse me if I or any friend of mine stood in néede of him Mens mindes be changeable and friends be deceitfull and nothing so vncertaine as to trust in man I speake not against them that are carefull to procure friendes in all good sort but fo● a man to put his whole staie and trust in friends is not only an offence to God but sometimes yea and oftentimes it so falleth out that it is but a vaine helpe and as a broken staffe How fled Iobes friends from him in his misery In prosperitie a friend cannot bee vnknowne for then they flocke as doues to a house but in aduersitie the number is verie small euen as one swallow which cannot make a summer Prou. 19. 7. The friends of the poore will depart from him though he be instant with words to haue comfort from them yet will they yeeld none Who wil vouchsafe to looke vppon him that is in neede and in aduersitie lightly a mans very friend will then forsake him There is an other distrust as faultie as the former as when a man is carefull more then néedes and so pensiue that it weares him away That care which is in a measure and agréeable to Gods will is to be commended as when men trauaile painfully to get their liuing in that vocation wherein God hath placed them but otherwise it is to be reprooued For by that care we grow greatly into the distrust of Gods gratious prouidence which distrust our Sauiour Christ doth much speake against Which of you saith he by taking care can adde one cubit vnto his stature Behold the soules of the heauen they sow not neither do they reape nor carry into the barnes yet your heauenly father feedeth them It is written in the lawe of Moses Thou shalt not mussel the mouth of the oxe that treadeth out the corn Dooth God take care for oxen Or saith hee it not for our sakes Doubtlesse it is written for our sakes For God in making the lawe had principall respect vnto men But if thou wouldest faine knowe how thou maist auoyd this distrust our Sauiour Christ doth also instruct thée saying Take no thought that is take no thought more then ordinary in extraordinary vnmeasurable sort If thou wouldest haue God to serue thy turne and shew thée the meanes of thy maintenance and reliefe his counsell is first to séeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse that is how to serue and please him And then behold all these things shall be ministred and cast vnto thée so that thou shalt not haue any such great cause to care but that thou maist well disburthen thy selfe and cast all thy extraordinary care vpon God And in so dooing Cast all your care vpon God saith the Apostle and he will care for you Who will comfort them that are comfortlesse and prouide for them that stand in néede That olde and godly Tobit may be our example who hauing had often triall hereof spake comfortably to his sonne and with a stedfast mind in GOD Feare not saith he forasmuch as wee are made poore for thou hast many things if thou feare God and flie from sin and doo the thing which is acceptable in his fight So that in what want and distresse so euer wee bee let vs not breake foorth into discontend spéeches but togither with painfull indeuoure let vs make our moste heartie and earnest requests vnto God our Father who in due time will performe that which wée pray vnto him for if he sée that it bee profitable for vs. Matters greatly vnlooked for and as it were vnpossible dooth God worke for them and in their behalfe who put their whole trust and confidence in him For either hée will raise them friendes of straungers or make yea sometimes their verie enemies to take pittie and compassion on them and to doo them some good or take away the wicked that the godly may enioy their great wealth and possessions And who can recken vp the meanes that God hath in store For alasse what a miserable case were it if a man should bee left to himselfe destitute and forlorne Let vs looke backe to our childhood and infancie and we shall be assured of comfort For before that God woulde haue anie of vs to liue and breathe in this world we sée that hée prouided parents and friends and nurses and houses and comforts and whatsoeuer might Conclusion be néedfull for vs. And therefore from our cradle to our graue such helpes cannot want if we loue and serue him Marke Gods care for other creatures If he giue foode to the asse in drie and barreine groundes If in due season be satisfie the rauens when they cry and call to him being pincht with hunger If he suffer not the roaring lion to want that is ready to starue for although they haue inough to day yet know they not what shall be their foode to morrow or where to haue it before God send it If he shewed vnto Hagar and to her childe being readie to perish for thirst in the wildernesse a well of water when she thought no other but present death If hee cloath the lily with royall array which is to day in the field and to morrow is cast into the ouen that is to say a thing in a manner of no account Howe much more will hee prouide for mankinde who hath created all thinges for their vse profit and comfort The earth is the Lords and all that therein is and they that liue in his feare shall not want where euer they be The Lord is my shepheard saith the Prophet and therefore can I lacke nothing As Iacob saide The Lord is mercifull to me and therefore I haue all thinges Hee shall feede me in a greene pasture and leade mee foorth by the waters of comfort Yea thou shalt prepare a table for mee against them that trouble mee Psal 23. Thou hast annointed my head with oyle and my cuppe shall be full Sée what plentie followeth a stedfast trust in gods prouidence The full perswasion whereof is also a staffe and a staie vnto vs to auoyd all iniury and hurt The Prophet Dauid in the example of his owne person dooth greatly comfort vs. The Lorde is my helpe I will not feare what man can do vnto me the Lord is the strength of my life of whom then shall I be affraid When the wicked euen my enemies and my foes came vpon me to eate vp my flesh they stumbled and fell Though an hoste of men were laide against me yet shall not my heart be affraied and though there
without spot that he might vndertake that punishment that was due vnto our sins and endue vs with his righteousnes So that now we are iust and righteous in him not that we can satisfie the iudgement of God by our owne workes but that we are accounted iust and righteous through Christ who is ours through faith Who is made vnto vs wisdome and righteousnesse satisfaction and redemption that he that reioyceth might only reioyce in the Lord for whose sake we are fréely accounted both iust innocent before god in whom are seene the glorious treasures of God that wée might bée inriched by him For if wée looke for saluation wée are taught by the very name of Iesus that it is in him if wée séeke for any other gifte of the spirit they are to bée found in his annointing if wée séeke for strength it is in his dominion if we séeke for cléerenesse it is in his conception if we séeke for tender kindnesse it sheweth it selfe in his birth whereby he was made in all things like vnto vs that he might learne to sorrowe with vs. If we séeke for redemption it is in his passion if we séeke for absolution it is in his condmnation if wée séeke for release of the curse it is in his crosse if we séeke for satisfaction it is in his sacrifice if wee séeke for clensing it is in his blood if wée séeke for reconciliation it is in his going downe into hell if we séeke for mortification of the flesh it is in his buriall if wée séeke for newnesse of life it is in his resurrection if for immortalitie it is in his victory ouer death if we seeke for the inheritaunce of the kingdome of heauen it is in his entraunce into heauen if wée séeke for defence for assurednesse for plentie and stoare of all good thinges it is in his kingdome And therefore this is the diademe and bewtifull crowne that is sette vpon our heads the fine linnen and the silke and the broidered worke wherewith wée are couered these are the ornaments wherewith wée are decked the bracelets on our hands and the chaine that is put about our neckes this is the frontlet on our face the earings in our eares this is the garment of siluer and gold wherewith wée are cloathed this is the fine flower the hony and the oyle whereby we become so bewtiffull Euen the remssion of our sinnes and the imputation of Christ his righteousnesse who hath put away our transgressions like a cloud and our sinnes like a mist and filled our harts with ioy and gladnesse that in a sure confidence we may break out and say Nowe there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus Reioice therefore O ye heauens at the goodnes and mercie of the Lord for he only hath done it shout ye lower partes of the earth brast foorth into praises yee mountaines 3. Sanctification The lawe is fulfilled of the regenerate by reason of Christ O forrest and euerie trée threin The third braunch is sanctification and holinesse of life whereby as before being vnregenerate we hated the lawe and the lawe was vnto vs the cause of death nowe being reconciled to God of our owne accord respecting our former rebellion we are readie and obedient to doe the will of God yea and all our delight is therein so nowe vnto vs it ceaseth to bee a curse and condemnation for the lawe of God is writte in our harts whereby we vnderstand the will of God and are stirred vp to the obedience thereof So then through faith the lawe is not made of none effect but it doeth rather establish the lawe For without Christ the lawe is not fulfilled yea it setteth our concupiscence on fire and maketh vs subiect vnto condemnation but in Christ we find the exact righteousnesse of the lawe for he is the end of the lawe to eucrie one that beleeueth by whom also we are sanctified and our hearts framed to the obedience of the lawe which though it be vnperfect yet doth it aime at perfection And this obedience procéedeth from faith which through the merit of Christ obtaineth the holie spirit which spirit doth make vs newe harts doth exhilarat vs doth incite and inflame our harts to doe the lawe willinglie Nowe the lawe in the regenerate that is in those whose sinnes are forgiuen vnto whom the righteousuesse of Christ is imputed who are sanctified bringeth foorth good frutes Therefore euill actions procéede not from the lawe and from The workes of the regenerate no cause of iustification the regenerate but from sinne and our corrupt nature Neither let vs thinke so highly of these frutes as though from thence our iustification were deriued For though we hate sinne in other men and especially in our selues although we delight in all things which are agréeable to the A true doctrine of good workes will of god although all our actions and conuersation do expresse the same yet are they but signes and tokens of our loue to God and arguments to vs of our election and frutefull examples to drawe others to that excellent knowledge which is in Christ The lawe in the regenerate a mind rightly formed and ruled perswaded on thing but corruption also which hath her seate in the regenerate an other thing for it striueth against the spirit and the lawe of the In the regenerate is a fight betwixt the flesh and the spirit An especiall comfort in this fight is that we are vnder grace mind so that they cannot either liue as wel as they would or be so voide of sinne as they could wish Neuerthelesse this is their comfort that they are not vnder the lawe but vnder grace whereby enioying the fauour mercie fréegoodwill and beneuolence of God towarde vs in Christ the reliques of sinne are not imputed vnto vs but we are reputed and accounted before God as men fullie and perfectly iust He hath giuen vs his spirit the fulnes whereof we do not enioy because in this life there will alwaies remaine in vs remnants of sinne which fight against the spirit Which conflict the Apostle plainly setteth forth before our eies hauing sufficient experience thereof in himself For the mind of a regenerate man is spirituall but he himself is carnall sold vnder sinne and that which he hateth that doth he in his flesh there is no good thing To wil is present but he findeth no means to perform that which is good yea euil togither continually is present with him and though his inner man delight in the lawe of God yet doeth he sée an other lawe in his members rebelling against the lawe of his minde and leading him captiue vnto the lawe of sinne which is in his members And that euen the godly might know that they are laden The profit of this fight with infirmities therefore is this sting left in their flesh that they might alwaies haue recourse vnto the Lord who is able to beate downe
also retaining the faithfull in godly life and manners what moueth these our aduersaries séeing they are ouercome with the manifest and inuincible trueth to thinke they speake well saying Although this doctrine of Predestination be true yet it ought not to be preached vnto the people Nay so much the rather it is good to be throughly preached that he that hath eares to heare may heare And who hath them But he that hath receiued them of God who promiseth to giue them And as for him that doth receiue it let him refuse it if he will so that he that doth receiue it may take it drinke it be sufficed and haue life For as we must preach the feare of God to the end that God may be truly serued so must wée preach predestination that he which hath eares to heare may heare and reioyce in God not in himselfe for the grace of God towards him This is the mind of that excellent Doctor as touching this point Which notwithstanding bindeth vs to two conditions The one is that we speake no farther héerein then Gods worde doth limit vs. The other that we set forth the same thing which the scripture teacheth accordingly and to edification Wherefore we will briefly speake of both these partes first of the doctrine it selfe and next of the vse and applying of the same The second chapter Of the eternall counsell of God hidde in himselfe the which afterwards is knowen by the effects thereof GOD whose iudgements no man can comprehend The councell purpose will of God is the fountaine and originall of all causes whose waies cannot be found out and whose will ought to stop all mens mouthes according to the determinate and vnchaungeable purpose of his will by the vertue whereof all things aremade yea those things which are euill and execrable not in that they be wrought by his diuine counsell but forasmuch as they procéed of the prince of the aire and that spirit which worketh in the childrē of disobedience hath determined from before al beginning with himselfe to create all things in their time for his glory and namely men whome hée hath made after two sorts cleane contrary one to the other Whereof hée maketh the one sort which it pleased him to choose by his secret will and purpose partakers of his glory through his mercie Vessels of honor and these we call according to the word of God the vessels of honour the elect the children of promise predestinate to saluation And the other whom likewise it pleased him to ordaine to damnation that hée might shewe foorth his wrath and power to bée glorified also in them wée doe Vessels of dishonor call the vessels of dishonour and wrath the reprobate and cast off from all good workes This election or predestination to euerlasting life being Our election is hid in the secret purpose of God considered in the will of God that is to say this selfe same determination or purpose to elect is the first fountaine and chief originall of the saluation of Gods children neither is it theron grounded as some say because god did foresée their faith or good workes But only of his owne good will from whence afterwards the election the faith and the good workes spring foorth Therefore when the scripture will confirme the children of God in full and perfect hope it doth not stay in alledging the testimonies of the second causes that is to say in the frutes of faith nor in the second causes themselues as faith calling by the Gospell neither yet sometimes in Christ himselfe in whom notwithstanding we are as in our head elected adopted but ascendeth higher euen vnto that eternal purpose which god hath determined only in himselfe Likewise when mention is made of the damnation of the reprobate although the whole fault thereof be in thēmselues Reprobation is hidde in the secret purpose of God yet notwithstanding sometimes when néede requireth the scripture to make more manifest by this comparison the greate power of Gods patience and the riches of his glory towards the vessels of mercy leadeth vs vnto this high secret which by order is the first cause of their damnation Of the which secrete no other cause is knowen to men but only his iust will which we must with all reuerence obey as comming from him who is onely iust and cannot by any meanes nor of any man in any sort be comprehended For wée must put difference betwixt the purpose or ordinance of reprobation and reprobation it selfe The secret purpose to elect or reproue only appertaineth to God but the causes of election reprobation are manifest in the Scriptures because God would that the secrete of this his purpose should be kept close trom vs and againe wée haue the causes of Reprobation and Damnation which dependeth thereof expressed in Gods word that is to say corruption lacke of faith and iniquity which as they bée necessary so are they also voluntary in the vessels made to dishonor like as on the other part when wée describe orderly the causes of the saluation of the elect wée put difference betwixt the purpose of the electing which God hath determined in himselfe and the election which is appointed in Christ In such sort that this his purpose or ordinance doth not only go before election in the degrée of causes but also before all other things that followe the same The chiefe matters gathered out of this second chapter with places of proofe taken out of the worde of God ioyned thereunto God disposeth all according to his will and hath created all things for his glory and namely man Concerning whome first hée challengeth the ordering of all affaires as also the hardening of hearts Secondly hée hath made them after two sorts the one contrary to the other That God disposeth all according to his will Esay 46. 9. 10. 11. 12. Remember the former things of old For I am God and there is no other God and there is nothing like me Which declare the last thing from the beginning and from of old the things that were not done saying My counsaile shall stand and I will do whatsoeuer I wil. I call a bird from the East Cyrus which shal come as swift as a bird and the man of my counsel who shal execute that which I haue determined from farre As I haue spoken so will I bring it to passe I haue purposed and I will do it Esa 14 26. The Lord of hostes hath determined it and who shal disanull it and his hand is stretched out and who shall turne it away Dan. 4. 32. All the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as nothing and according to his will he worketh in the army of heauen and in the inhabitants of the earth and none can stay his hand nor say vnto him What doest thou Ephe. 1. 9. 11. And he hath opened vnto vs the mistery of his will according to his good pleasure which
voice and let Israel goe I knowe not the Lord neither wil I let Israel go Iohn 6. 64. There are some of you that beléeue not For Iesus knew from the beginning which they were that beléeued not Ioh. 10. 26. But ye belieue not For ye are not of my shéep as I said My shéep heare my voice and I know them and and they follow me Ioh. 12. 36. While ye haue light beléeue in the light that ye may be the children of the light These things spake Iesus and departed and hid himselfe from them And though he had done so many miracles before them yet they beléeued not in him That the saying of Esay the Prophet might be fulfilled that he said Lord who beléeued our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord reuealed Therfore could they not beléeue because that the Prophet saith againe He hath blinded their eyes and hardned their heart that they should not sée with their eyes nor vnderstand with their heart and should be conuerted and I should heale them 1. Pet. 2. 6. Wherefore it is conteined in the scripture Behold I put in Sion a chiefe corner stone elect and precious and he that beléeueth therin shall not be ashamed Vnto you therfore which beléeue it is precious but vnto them which be disobeient the stone which the builders disalowed the same is made the head of the corner And a stone to stumble at a rock of offence euē to thē which stūble at the word being disobedient vnto the which thing they were euen ordained 2. Thess 2. 10. 11. They that wil not beléeue God shall send them strong delusions that they should beléeue lies and so be damned Rom. 11. 20. The Apostle speaking of the Iewes and the Gentiles saith of the Iewes That through their vnbeliefe they were broken off and that the Gentiles stand by faith 2. Cor. 4. 3. 4. If your gospel be then hid it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the mindes of infidels that the light of the glorious gospel of Christ which is the image of God should not shine vnto them The third Chapter How God putteth in execution his eternall counsaile as well toward the elect as the reprobate THe Lord God that he might put in execution his eternall counsaile to his glory prepared a way according to his infinit wisedome indifferent both to those that hée would choose and those also which he would refuse For when he determined to shewe his infinit mercy in the saluation of the elect and also his iust iudgement in the condemnation of the reprobate it was necessary that he should shut vp both vnder disobedience and sinne to shew his mercy to all those that beléeue that is to say to the elect because faith is a gift of God which properly belongeth to the elect and contrariwise to haue iust cause to condemne them to whom it is not giuen to beléeue nor to know gods misteries Therefore god did this in such sort and with such wisdome that the whole fault of the reprobates damnation lieth in themselues and on the other side all the glorie and praise of the elects saluation belongeth wholly to his only mercy For he did not create man a sinner for then hée The creation of man should haue béene with reuerent feare be it spoken the author of sinne which afterwards he could not iustly haue punished but rather he made him after his owne image to wit in innocency puritie and holinesse Who notwithstanding without constraint of any neither yet forced by any necessity of concupisence as touching his will which Mans fall as yet was not made seruant to sinne willingly and of his owne accord rebelled against God binding by his meanes the whole nature of man to sinne so consequently to the Adam fell not by chaunce death of body soule Yet we must confesse that this fall came not by chaunce or fortune séeing his prouidence doth stretch foorth it selfe euen to the smallest things Neither can we say that any thing doth happen that God knoweth not or careth not for except we would fall into the opinion of the Epicures from the which God preserue vs neither yet by any bare or idle permission or sufferaunce which is seperate from his will sure determination For séeing he hath appointed the end it is necessary also that he should appoint the causes which leade vs to the same ende Vnlesse we affirme with the wicked Manichées that this end happeneth at all aduentures or by meanes of causes ordained by some other God Furthermore we cannot thinke that any thing happeneth contrary to gods wil except we deny Enchiri ad Laurent Cap. 99. blasphemously that he is omnipotent and almightie As Saint Augustine noteth plainly in his booke De correptione gratia Cap. 104. We conclude therefore that this fall of Adam did so procéede of the motion of his will that notwithstanding it happened not without the will of god whō it pleaseth by a maruellous and incomprehensible meane that the thing which he doth not allowe forasmuch as it is sinne should not happen without his will And this is done as we said before that he might shewe the riches of his glory towards the vessels of his mercy And his wrath and power vpon those vessels which he hath made to set foorth his glory by their shame and confusion For the finall end of Gods counsaile is neither the saluation of the elect nor The finall end of Gods counsell is neither saluation nor damnation but Gods glory the damnation of the reprobate but the setting foorth of his owne glory in sauing the one by his mecy and condemning the other by his iust iudgement Thē to auoid all these blasphemies vnto the which the infirmity of our wittes doth draw vs let vs confesse that the corrupion of the principall worke that God hath made which is man is not happened by chaunce nor without the will of him who according to his incomprehensible wisdome doth make gouerne all things to his glory Albeit we must confesse in despite of mans iudgement which was limitted in the beginning within a certaine compasse after was miserably corrupted that the whole fault of his damnation lieth in man Forasmuch as betwixt the secret and incomprehensible The whole fault of mans perdition is in himselfe and not of God will of God and the corruption of mans nature which is the very first occasion of the reprobates damnation the will of the first mā was a meane which being created good hath willingly corrupted it selfe thereby opened the doore to the iust iudgement of god to cōdemne all those to whom it doth not please him to shew mercy And if they would yet obiect cauil saying y● they cannot resist the will of God let vs suffer thē to their owne destruction to plead against him who will be able inough to defend his iustice against their
God hath raised vs vp togither and made vs sit togither in the heauenly places in Christ Iesus Philip. 1. 23. For I am greatly in doubt on both sides destring to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all Luke 23. 43. Iesus said to the théefe that repented Verily I say vnto thée To day shalt thou be with me in Paradice And chapter 16. 22. And it was so that the begger died and was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome Wis● 3. 1. But the soules of the righteous are in the hands of God and no torment shall touch them Eccle. 12. 7. And dust return to the earth as it was and the spirit returne to God that gaue it Then shall they enioy fully that vnspeakeable comfort prepared Rom. 8. 18. For I account that the affictions of this present time are not worthie of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs. Mat. 25. 34. Then shall the king say to them on his right hand Come ye blessed of my father inherit ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world 1. Cor. 15. 42. 43. 53. The bodie is sowne in corruption and is raised in corruption It is sowne in dishonour and is raised in glory it is sowne in weakenesse and is raised in power For this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortalitie 1. Cor. 2. 9. The things which eye hath not séene neither eare hath heard neither came into mans heart are which God hath prepared for them that loue him By whose vertue and spirit they haue proceeded and gone forward from faith to faith as shall manifestly appeare by the whole course of their life and good workes Rom. 1. 17. The righteousnesse of God is reuealed from faith to faith ●● 2. Re● 1. 2●1 2. Grace and peace be multiplied to you by the knowledge of God of Iesns our Lord. According as his godly power hath giuen vnto vs all things that pertaine vnto life and godlinesse through the knowkledge of him that hath called vs vnto glory and vertue Whereby most great and precious promises are giuen vnto vs that by them ye should be partakers of the godly nature in that ye flie the corruption which is in the world through lust Therefore giue euen all diligence thereunto Ioine moreoner vertue with your faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperaunce and with temperaunce patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindenesse and with brotherly kindnesse loue For if these things be among you and abound they wil make you that ye neither shal be idle nor vnfruitfull in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ For he that hath not these things is blinde and cannot sée farre off and hath forgotten that hee was purged frōm his olde sinnes Wherefore brethren giue rather diligence to make your calling and election sure For if ye do these things ye shall neuer fall For by these meanes an entering shall be ministred vnto you aboundantly into the cuerlasting kingdom of out Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Whereas altogither contrary the Reprobate conceiued borne and brought vp in sin death and the wrath of God when they depart out of this world they fall into another gulfe of destruction and their soules are plunged in that endlesse paine vntill the day come that their bodies and solues being ioined again they shall enter into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuel and his angels 〈◊〉 Psal 5 ●●●5 Behold I was borne in iniquitle and in sinne hath my mother conceaued me Ephe. 2. 3. And were by nature the children of wrath as well as others Rom. 7. 14. sold vnder sinne Rom. 5. 14. Wherefore as by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men forasmuch as all men haue sinned Dani. 12. 2. And many of them that sléepe in the dust of the earth shall awake some to euerlasting life and some to shame and perpetuall contempt Iohn 5. 28 29. Maruell not at this for the houre shall come in the which all that are in the graues shall heare his voyce And they shall come forth that haue done good vnto the resurrection of life but they that haue done cuill to the resurrection of condemnation Luke 16. 22. 23. 24. The rich man also died and was buried and being in hell torments he lift vp his yes and sawe Abraham a farre off and Lazarus in his hosome Then he cried and said Father Abraham haue merry on me and send Lazarus that he may dippe the tippe of his singer in water and coole my tongue for I am tormented in this flame But Abraham said Sonne remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore is he comforted and thou art tormented Mat. 25. 41. Then shall he say to them on the left hand Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuel and his angels The seuenth Chapter After what sort this doctrine may be preached with most profit SInte wee haue nowe declared the effect of this doctrine VVhat discretion the matter requireth it remaineth also that wee shewe what order we thinke best to be obseru●● in preaching and applying the same to euery particular man Whereas many find this matter so sharp and strange that they flie from it as from a dangerous rocke it is partly to be attributed to the malice and arrogancy of men And partly to the rashnesse and lacke of discretion of them that teach it and thirdly it is to be imputed to their ignoraunce which cannot orderly apply the same to themselues which faithfully and truly hath bin taught of others Concerning them which sinne of malice it onely appertaineth to GOD to amend them Which surely he hath done alwaies in his reason and likewise will do from time to time to whom he hath appointed to shewe mercy But for others which remain● obstinate in their sinne and wickednesse there is no cause why we should be moued either for their number or authority to dissemble Gods truth And as touching the second sorte I haue thought these things principally to be obserued in preaching this misterie First as in all other things so chiefly in this matter of predestination they ought to take diligent héede that in stéede of Gods pure and simple truth they bring not soorth vaine and curious speculations or dreames Which thing they cannot choose but do which goe about to compasse and accord these secret iudgments of God with mans wisdome so do not onely put difference betwirt predstinatiō and the purpose of god which thing they must néedes do but seperate the one frō the other For they either imagine a certaine naked and idle permition or else make a double purpose and counsell in God From the which errors they must néeds fall into many and greate absurdities For sometimes they are constrained to diuide
those things which of themselues are ioined most straightly and sometimes they are compelled to inuent a great sort of foolsh and darke distinctions wherein the further they occupie themselues and search the wi●er the● stray from the purpose and so intangle their miserable braines that they can finde no way out This then ought to be auoided with all carefull diligence chieflie in this matter which aboue all other ought purely and cincerely to be taught in the church of God Moreouer VVhat maner of words and speech must be vsed as much as is possible let them take héede though sometimes for a more clear vnderstanding of things a man may be bolde and godly and reuerently to doe that no strange maner of spéech or not approueable by gods word be vsed And also that such praises and words which the scriptures approue be expounded fitly least otherwise any man should take occasion of offence which as yet is rude and ignorant Furthermore we must haue good respect Consideration of persons vnto the hearers wherein also we must make distinction betwixt the malicious and the rude and againe betwixt them which are willfull ignorant and those which are not capable through a simple and common ignorance For to the malicious and wilfull our Lord is accustomed to set foorth plainly the iudgement of God but the other must be led by litle and litle to the knowledge of the truth Likewise we must take héed that we haue not so much respect to the weake that they in the meane season which are apt to vnderstand be neglect and not sufficiently taught Whereof we haue notable examples in S. Paul which declare to vs the wisedome and circumspection which he obserued in this matter chiefly in the 9. 10. 11. 14. 15. chapters of the Epistle to the Romanes Also except some great cause let that they begin at the lowest and most manifest causes and so ascend vp to the highest as Paul in his Epistle to the Romanes which is the right order and way to procéed in matters of diuinitie from the lawe goeth to remission of sinnes and thence by steppes he mounteth till he come to the highest degrée or else let them consist in that point which is most agréeable to the text or matter which they haue in hand rather then contrariwise to begin at the verie toppe of this mistery and so come to the foote For the brightnesse of Gods maiestie suddeinly presented to the eyes dooth so dimme and dazle the sight that afterwards if they be not through long continuance accustomed to the same they waxe blinde when they should sée other things What then remaineth That whether they begin beneath and ascend vpward or contrariwise aboue and come downward to the lowest degrée they take alwaies héede lest omitting that which ought to be in midst they leape from one extremitie to another as from the eternall purpose to saluation and much more from saluation to the eternall purpose Likewise from Gods eternall counsell to damnation or backward from damnation to his purpose leauing the neare and euident causes of Gods iudgement Except perchance they haue to doo with open blasphemers and contemners of God who haue néed of nothing else but the sharpe prickes of Gods iudgement or else with men so trained and exercised in Gods word that there be no suspition of any offence Finally that they neuer so propound this doctrine as if it should be applied to any one man particularly although men must be vsed after diuers sorts some by gentlenesse and some by sharpnesse vnlesse some Prophet of God be admonished by some especiall reuelation Which thing because it is out of course and not vsuall ought not lightly to be beléeued When the Ministers also visit the sicke or vse familiar and priuate admonitions it is their dutie to lift vp and comfort the afflicted conscience with the testimoniall of their election And againe to wound and pearce the wicked and stubborn with the fearfull iudgement of God So that they kéepe a meane refraining euer from that last sentence which admitteth no exception nor condition For this right and iurisdiction only appertaineth to God Notes and proofes The Preachers ought to take diligent heed that in steed of Gods pure and simple truth they bring not foorth vaine and curious speculations 1. Tim. 6. 3. If any man teach otherwise and consenteth not to the wholesome words of our Lord Iesus Christ and to the doctrine which is according to godlinesse he is puft vp and knoweth nothing but doateth about questions and strife of words whereof commeth enuy strife railings euil surmisings vaine disputations of men of corrupt mindes and destitute of the truth 2. Tim. 2. 14. 16. Of these things put them in remembraunce and protest before the Lord that they striue not about words which is to noprofit but to the peruerting of the hearers Staie prophane and vaine bablings for they shall increase vnto more vngodlinesse Verse 23. Put away foolish and vnlearned questions knowing that they ingender strife Mat. 28. 20. Teaching men to obserue all things whatsoeuer I haue commanded you Which thing they cannot choose but do which go about to compasse and accord these secrete iudgements of God with mans wisedome Mat. 23. The whole chapter Iohn 8. 44. Ye are of your father the diuel who abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him Whē he speaketh a lie then speakeh he of his owne for he is a lier and the father thereof Furthermore there must be good respect had vnto the hearers wherein also we must put a difference betwixt the malicious and the rude be twixt the wilfull and ignorant Iohn 9. 41. Iesus said vnto them If ye were blinde ye should not haue sinne but now ye say We sée therefore your sinne remaineth And chap. 10. 26. 27. But ye beléeue not For ye are not of my shéeepe as I said vnto you My shéepe heare my voice and I know them and they followe me Luke 20. 46. 47. Beware of the scribes which desire to go in long robes and loue salutations in the markets and the highest states in the sinagogues and the chiefe roomes at feastes Which deuour widowes houses euen vnder a colour of long praying these shall receiue greater damnation Mat. 23. 37. Ierusalem Ierusalem which killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent to thée how often would I haue gathered thy children togither as the henne gathereth her chickens vnder her winges and ye would net But the other must be led by litle and litle to the knowledge of the truth 1. Cor. 3. 2. I gaue you milke to drinke and not meate for ye were not yet able to beare it neither yet now are ye able for ye are carnall Rom. 14 1. Him that is weake in the faith receiue vnto you but for controuersies of disputations Neuer so propound this doctrine as if it should be applied to any one man particularly Iohn 8. 23. 24. And
of great account Maister Rowland Barker Esquire Iustice of peace and quorum in the Countie of Salop S. I. wisheth the blessings of God in this life and the ioyes of that which is to come RIght Worshipfull I cannot write vnto you but as vnto a stranger yet such a stranger in whome I haue perceiued great good wil kindnesse toward me So that I may resolue with my selfe to make account of you as of my friende whereof I haue some triall in that you haue giuen a great token in the preferment of my sister for the which both she and I am bound to giue you hartie thankes And yet great reason there is that you should be strange because as yet I haue shewed no dutie wherby I might in some sort warrant my selfe of your fauoure and friendship The godly minde wherewith Gods spirit no doubt hath indued you may be some cause to procure your fauour toward me if it were but for my profession sake And so much the more because you carry a name in Shropshire to be a great fauourer of the Gospell and if I should adde the peoples report of a good Iusticer I might be iudged to flatter And yet there is no cause For where the word of God hath taken deep roote there of necessitie followeth all vprightnesse both in life and office To procure your Worships good will toward me I haue at this time though boldly offered vnto your view some part of my laboure which as you like it so I hope you will accept it and your good liking shal giue it both countenance and credit inough And seeing your credit is great in the furtherance of the Gospell so I would humbly request you to promote and further the same more and more to the vtmost of your power Though it bee my request yet is it Gods cause and his glorie which may both stirre you vp and also incourage you who need not my perswasion being forward inough of your owne disposition and good nature Doubtlesse God woorketh excellently in notable men at whose handes hee requireth woorthie matters euen at the handes of famous men and men of renowme Whome hee hath greatly aduaunced furthered and furnished vnto suche woorkes And vnto whome much is giuen of them also shall much bee required King Dauid woulde haue built a Temple vnto the Lord God of Israel but God appointed his sonne King Salomon to doo it Manie Kinges in Iuda yet none but Hezekiah caused the brasen Serpent to be pulled downe and GOD wrought with him and hee prospered and flourished and God sent him a miraculous and famous deliuerance from the handes of his enemies Iosiah was famous for Religion and none more zealous the solemne keeping of the Passeouer that was in his daies doth declare it King Cyrus hee is appointed of God to deliuer the Iewes from their captiuitie and thraldome Many Heathen Kings there were in the worlde yet it pleased God that his glorie should bee set forth by none so much as by King Nabuchodonosor who wondrously set foorth the praises of God was a notable meane to deface idolatrie that God onelie might bee truly serued And although notable men bee not all Kings yet vnder Kinges great matters are committed vnto them and they are rulers vnder Princes and in the places where GOD hath seated them hee dooth giue them honour as is meete for them and agreeable to their estate Especially hee crowneth them with honour which honour him What worke more notable then the preaching of the Gospell and that the Nobilitie and also Gentlemen of good calling and credit might see it performed in the places where they dwell and about them I would to God the reuerend Fathers of the land of whome the Prince maketh choyce as of notable men and men of renowme had that care as Bishop Hooper and Bishop Latimer had to see the people taught and instructed in euerie parish throughout their Diocesse and I doubt not but that they haue the selfesame care howsoeuer oftentimes it falleth out otherwise contrarie to their willes Most gentlemē are set against it because they know not the worthinesse of it as also the glittering shew of this deceiueable world hath vtterly blinded thē togither with their corrupt affections which are so far from correctiō or amendment that they cannot abide to heare any reproofe or counsell or so much as to acknowledge their fault therfore cōsequētly notable men they must needs bee that fauour it Who in so dooing procure vnto themselues the fauour of God and the hearts and good reportes of men whis is a great honour that God doth crowne them withall May I not write vnto your Worship as I reade in the Reuelation chapter 3. 11. is written to euery Christiā Behold I come shortly hold that which thou hast that no man take thy Crowne And again verse 21. To him that ouercommeth and continueth will I grant to sit with me in my throne I haue bene too tedious and here I must staie and so I humbly take my leaue praying your Woorship to remember my humblesute I haue made vnto you not long since so farre forth as conueniently you may neither is it reason we should presse vpon you too farre Wherin if you vouchsafe to pleasure vs wee shall all of vs bee bounde to pray to God for your prosperous estate and that you may liue long to Gods glorie your owne comfort and contentment to the ioy of your friends and admiration of your enemies Your VVorships in his praiers to God for you and yours S. I. A Patterne of Sanctification Titus 2. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. For the grace of God that bringeth saluation vnto all men hath appeared And teacheth vs that we should deny vngodlinesse and wordly lusts a●d that we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world Looking for the blessed hope and appearing of the glory of the mightie God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ. Who gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie and purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of goodworkes This text standeth on foure parts 1 A generall proposition The grace of God hath appeared vnto all 2 The effect of this grace consisting in Sanctificatiō which hath two parts Mortification And teacheth vs to denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts Viuification And that we shuld liue soberly and righteously godly 3 A perswasion vnto this Sanctificatiō Looking for the blessed hope and appearing of our Lord and Sauiour 4 The cause of this Sanctification which is Christ Who gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs. THe Apostle writing to the Corinthians of this grace of God which is nothing else but his fauour his mercy and louing kindnesse wherby we are fréely beloued by the meanes of Iesus Christ calleth this grace the wisedome of God and calleth it also a misterie Well may it be called the wisedome of God both in respect of God himselfe who intendeth
defend them and stand with them But if they swarue they must remember that the presence of God is no small matter who hath made notable men offending notable examples also of his wrath As it is in the Psalme And he smote downe the chosen men of Israel famous and men of renowme The presence of God is about them to giue them honour and to defend them but if they do otherwise then well to depose them and to dispossesse them both of their liues and of their honors Againe that they should not be corrupted the King and crowne hath graunted them a most large and liberall pension to the end that gifts bribes should not blind their eies nor peruert true iudgement And because God is the God of iustice and iudgement and righteousnes therfore he hath regard is mindfull of the Iudges and let them think with themselues also be fully perswaded that this is spoken vnto them frō God I am thy excéeding great reward The Lawier he must deale iustly and giue euery man Lawi●er his owne For he pointeth out men their inheritance and sheweth them their right and title how far it goeth and so breaketh off the controuersie He telleth euery one in his doubtfull cause where his claime and title lieth what lawe and equitie wil beare him in and where it wil forsake him He is the liuing land-marke which by true opening of the lawes boundeth euery man within the compasse of his own title And because of that doth highly deserue of the commōwealth as a most necessary and profitable member thereof Such men are the common treasure house of the land whereunto the euidences of euery mans liue load are committed and they put in trust withall to reserue for euery man his right and title That when he is incombred for that which of right belongeth vnto him they should out of that treasure house of the lawe bring good euidence for him and so foorthwith cleare his innocency The lawe is the house of euery man who being tossed with many stormes abroad he findeth a place to hide his head in and being in safetie dooth boldly contemne both winde and weather and also quietly take his rest For being tossed with iniuries either in bodie goods or name wee haue no house of refuge and rest beside the lawe no sanctuary in our vniust vexation besides that The place which they serue God in who are ministers of the lawe is very high and honourable the good they may doo is verie much if God giue them conscience and care of it The hurt in like manner is excéeding great where the feare of God dooth not rule For is it not a maruellous mischiefe to remoue the land-marke of any man It is that sinne that had a solemne curse Deut. 7. against it called for by the ministery of the Le●ites whereunto all the people were commaunded to say Amen And what diuersitie or difference is there betwéen him that remoueth the land-marke and therby boundeth a man shorter and him that either by wresting of the lawe or hiding the true meaning of it is an occasion of cutting short or impairing the title of any man Euery man will grant that if a man of no conscience had the custodie of all the euidences of this land he might do much mischiefe by cancelling crossing interliuing putting in and out at his pleasure hiding or shewing renting or reseruing as him listeth And is not this performed while the law is made to speak that which they knew in truth it did neuer meane as also to bury that in silence which it was appointed to giue testimonie and witnesse vnto And if all this were nothing what can be so miserable as when a man hath bene all the day abroad in the stormes and tempests at night when he commeth home to finde his house in that case that it can hold out neither winde nor raine And do not many who are forced by reason of the stormes and tempests abroad to betake them to this their house and harbour I meane the lawe finde the tempest often as gréeuous there as before they did in the plain Would to God there were none turned out of their owne doores in the midst of the storm without any hope at all of harbour from thence Or if a man that had bene dogged to his owne doores by théeues and hauing gotten his house vpon his head beginneth to breathe himselfe and to reioyce for his good escape thinking all to be safe and suspecting no harme who could sufficiently bewaile him if in the midst of his triumph they be founde in his owne house that fall vpon him and murther him And is not the lawe the house of the troubled and vexed man Yea Westminster-Hall is the poore mans house And therfore doth he paie taxe and subsidie that it might be an house of defence vnto him able to kéepe out winde and weather how tempesteous soeuer it bee If a man that is oppressed and wronged abroade in any part of this lande shall bring his matter vnto hearing at Westminster-Hall looke that ye be good vnto him in his owne house Let him take no harme at home his griefe is great inough abroad It hath alwaies euen by the lawes of man bene counted an hainous offence to vexe and annoy a man in his own house What ye thinke of the matter I cannot tell this I am assured of it is his due to be well dealt withall there And ye are to answere the Lord not only for denying but also for Del●●● delaying and deferring of iudgement For why the man hath right and title in his good cause vnto as spéedie a dispdtch at your hands as possibly may be had And therefore Iob professed Iob. 31. 16. that he had wearied the eies of the widow with waiting long for helpe before it came It is a true saying of the Heathen man He doubleth his gift that giueth it spéedily It was a griefe to Iethro Moses father in lawe to sée the people stand from morning to euening about Moses waiting for dispatch How would he haue taken it if he had séene men which commonly happeneth heere among vs to waite from terme to terme nay from yeare to yeare from seuen yeare to seuen yeare vnto the end of their liues It is our part therefore to pray for our Magistrates and those that be in place of iustice that they may looke to the cause of the widow fatherlesse and oppressed that they may purge the land of blood by taking punishment vpō male factors that they may haue courage and the feare of God and that they may hate couetousnesse So shall our Prince sit sure among vs our holds strongly fortified our state still vpholden so may we long enioy peace to the better honouring of our God and safetie of the land According to that we read in the prophecie of Esay cap. 5. where the Lord vnder the comparison and similitude of a vine doth most liuely
declare how he will deale with his people whē iudgement righteousnesse cannot be found among them That is he will break downe the wall thereof and it shall be troden downe he will take away the hedge and it shall be eaten vp By the vine is vnderstood the common-weale by the wall and by the hedge fortresses and castles and bulwarkes which shall be of no greater force with vs to defende vs if iustice bee not ministred in the lande then the walles of Ierico which fell downe of their owne accord no man touching them but onely God appointing it to be so We sée then what cause Magistrates haue to watch ouer euill and what occasion we haue to commend vnto God by feruent praier that they may sincerely serue the Lord in so great a calling lest the whole lande should be arrained before the iudgement seate of the highest and all founde guiltie and all punished Thus ye haue heard generally what is meant by liuing Euery one particularly to another righteously being set downe in the duties of them to whom principally it pertaineth Secondarily more néerly it toucheth the state of euery one particularly For we are all of vs seuerally particularly to deale righteously with our brethren in all our conuersation with them whereby we should declare the loue we beare vnto them And the Lord hath appointed vs not only to shewe this loue vnto them but also the things that be deare vnto them as goods and good name euen to these hath the Lord bounde vs as well as to their persons For wee must intermedle one with another and find succour one from another And their name and goods by his appointment go through our hands and charge as well as his person and must finde succour there This is the charge from God that when any thing of theirs passeth through our hands it finde that affection towards it which may giue testimony of our brotherly good wil to them and witnesse our obedience vnto God And the same God that forbiddeth the murther of his bodie forbiddeth also the stealth of his goods And the same God the hath bound our loue good affectiō ouer to his body hath in like maner done it towards his goods Hardly shall any man be perswaded that he is louing vnto him who is impairing him in any thing that is deare vnto him alwaies gaining by his losse The poore man whose mony must passe through the hands of the merchant the farmer the draper mercer and such like by that time that euery one ouerselling his commodities hath gottē a fliece he bringeth the sweat of his brows that is his blood which he hath plenteously powred out and made no spare of it throughout the whole yeare into a narrow roome Neither can he giue a true report of any loue he founde at their handes more then one might finde at the hand of a Turke or Infidell In the 25. chapter of Leuiticus the people of God are charged not to oppresse one an other in buying and selling Wherein the lawe of conscience and equitie should be shewed so that a man should not too much regarde himselfe only and his owne commoditie but also the estate and welfare of an other By which commandement of God it is apparant that it was not lawfull for a man to take whatsoeuer he could get without regard what a bargain his neighbour was like to haue at his hands We are exhorted by the Apostle to make conscience of such matters in the 1. Thess 4. Let no man oppresse or defraud his brother in anything for euen the Lord is a reuenger of such things Know ye not saith Saint Paul that the vnrighteous shall not inherite the kingdome of God 1. Cor. 6. 9. And what right hath any man to another mans money not giuing him the value or woorth of it in wares or merchandise Be not deceiued saith the holy Ghost in the same place neither théeues couetous persons nor extortioners shall inherite the kingdome of God The want and and default of equitie and conscience in this behalfe is notably taxed and touched by Salomon Prouer. 20. It is naught it is naught saith the buyer but when he is gone apart he boasteth Such is our naturall corruption through the which euery man would haue regarde only of himselfe euen without any respect of another When not only his owne thoughts but euen his owne words also doo oftentimes condemne his dealing both of iniury and dissimulation Better it were for vs if our conscience were more vpright For our carefull walking in the waies of righteousnesse haue plentifull promises of blessings from the Lord. So that if his word be of any credit with vs we may be well assured that by such dealings our gaines will growe to be the greatest Hée that walketh in his integritie saith Salomon Prou. 20. 7. is iust and blessed shall his children be after him And 20. 21. Hée that followeth after righteousnesse mercy shall find life righteousnesse and glory And 28. 20. A faithfull man shall abound in blessings But let vs marke what followeth But he that maketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent Noting thereby that suddaine wealth and riches lightly commeth neuer by honest dealing but for the most part by iniury and oppression whereby although they be rich and wealthie yet are they hated The order that is here obserued in the text may in no wise be neglected For sobrietie is set before righteousnesse in this place We must liue soberly and righteously saith the Apostle Without sobrietie and temperance righteous and iust dealing cannot be holden vp and mainteined For if a man haue not learned to be rich and to be poore he shall neuer hold out the course of iustice and righteous dealing He shall neuer buy and sell with conscience that hath not accounted with himselfe to carry a lowe saile and lower then he hath done if God sée it good so The fashion of the world is that whē the matter lieth vpon the losse of fauour credit wealth or countenance then conscience and equitie and iustice and righteous dealing is stretched out made to serue where it should not Sobrietie is banished where righteous dealing cannot take place For if we could be contented to be humbled in the worlde if God could not otherwise be serued or a good conscience maintained wée should haue more power to doo iustice and to liue vprightly in our calling whatsoeuer But while we are so drowned in profits pleasures and honours in the world we are neuer put to any strait but we must borrow an ace and go beyond compasse Let vs imbrace temperance and sobrietie and so shall iustice and righteousnesse shine in our dealings and God shall be glorified in our conuersation Many good lawes are made to cause vs to liue iustly one with another but little fruite of them and our vnrighteous dealing is aboue the lawes because it preuaileth more And againe our excesse which is
counsaile and instruction by the promises threatnings thereof For if this Praier and fafling be not godlinesse what can we say y● godlinesse is To the reading hearing of Gods word we ought to ioyne often and continual praier and preparing our selues more effectually by taming our body bringing it in subiection by vsing the great helpe of fasting For both the body therby shall be more apt able to endure and the soule shal be the more heauenly disposed hauing not the lusts of the flesh to hinder it in so great and godly an action Great and most necessary is the cause of praier not only that God would c●ntinue his benefits gifts and graces towards vs which we stand in néede of continually from time to time but also that God would keepe vs from euill vnto the which we are moste prone and whereof by our fleshly and naturall corruption we are most desirous And if it were so that wee were not desirous nor prone thereunto yet mightily should we be prouoked by the secret temptations of the diuell and by the euill examples of the world● and by the naughtie counsaile of those that are ill disposed From all which mischiefes by praier we are deliuered besides that in the exercise of praier wée haue the company of GOD we talke with God and God with vs. And being so Thankfulnesse heauenly exercised what can be more godly Thanfulnesse also is godlinesse when we are not vnmindfull of Gods benifits neither forgetfull to shewe our dutie both in heart and in word and in open profession and in doing good to others to testifie to the world Gods goodnesse towards vs and so to be thankfull Too thankfull we cannot be because we can neuer make recompence According to that the Apostle saith In all things giue thanks By nature we are too vngratefull but the grace of God doth change our minds and learne them to be thankfull Vpon thankfulnesse Contentation will also follow contentation that is a mind satisfied and contented with that portion which God hath sent They that are not contented can neuer be satisfied neither can they be thankfull and they that can neither ●e content nor thankfull it can hardly be said that there is godlinesse in them For godlinesse is greate gaine if a man be content with that he hath There is none of vs all that brought any thing into the world and certaine it is we shall carrie nothing out Therefore we may find our selues well contented if we haue foode and raiment wherewithall to serue our turne But if this will not serue marke what may followe They that will be rich they fall into temptations snares and into manie foolish and noysome lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction Remember who it was that said All these will I giue thée if thou wilt fall downe and worship me He that maketh gold his God shall surely be beguiled As destruction often followeth the great desire of riches so godlinesse which is séene in contentation is the high way vnto saluation They that are discontent haue many cares and desires and troubles and vexations to hinder them from God and godlinesse Of all which cares troubles desires and vexatiōs they are disburthened which carry cōtented minds and most frée they are by that meanes vnto the seruice of God From thankfulnes and a minde contented proceedeth a good will loue and a charitable desire yea and a fellow-féeling of the wants Charitable deeds and necessities of others so farre that it prouoketh vs not only to pittie them and their estate but also to helpe and relieue them to the vttermost of our power Charge them that are riche saith the Apostle that they trust not in their vncertaine riches but in the liuing God who giueth vs aboundantly all thinges to enioy And yet his charge stretcheth further that is that they should doo good and be rich in good workes and readie to distribute and communicate and giue to others And this is the gaine that bringeth godlinesse with it and this godlinesse hath great gaine For thereby we laie vp in store a good foundation against the time to come And hée that so laieth out his goods giueth them not to the poore but vnto GOD. And as God hath giuen vnto vs so let them whome God hath commended vnto vs I meane the godly poore the fatherlesse the widdow and the straunger be partakers with vs of Gods blessings Lest it may so fall out that wée may say that God hath o●●en and God hath taken away And if there bee any good workes else as more there bee then I can name euen all the good workes that are are we bound to performe if godlinesse bee bounde and founde in our hearts For good workes is godlinesse and godlinesse desireth to shewe it selfe in them And who is it not that know●● not what it is to liue godly but who can say my knowledge is turned into practise my heart is turned to imbrace godlinesse and to followe good waies vnlesse the grace of God hath first thus wrought it And yet there is another kinde of godlinesse more harde then all the former which is patiently to suffer Patience losses wronges iniuries persecution yea and death it selfe for the stedfast profession of Gods truth and his seruice As wee reade They that will liue godlie must suffer persecution For GOD dooth thereby trie vs and by little and little hée dooth bring vs to contemne the worlde and to desire heauen If thou hast losse of goods or friendes or any other helpe taken from thée godlinesse exhorteth to take it patiently not grudgingly and to say as God hath taken so God may giue and forgiue mée my sinnes and restore vnto mée againe at pleasure If thy enemie hath done thée iniury and wrong say not with the worlde hée shall starue before I relieue him hée shall bee hanged before I will doo him anie good but godlinesse is charitable and teacheth thée to doo good to thine enemies that thy enemies heart may bee turned towarde thée to wish thée well and that god may blesse thée If thy patience be séene in thy persecution and death for gods truth blessed shalt thou be and thy rewarde shall bee greate in heauen As the Apostle saith In all thinges giue thanks because for the moste part we are forgetfull so also may it well bee saide In all thinges bee patient because our nature is such and so farre from patience Discontentment grudging enuying murmuring reuenge these are matters almost vnseperable from vs and patience cannot growe in our heartes before gods grace hath watered them that they may bring foorth this frute Cast not away patience which hath great recompence of rewarde For yée haue néede of patience saith the Apostle that after yee haue done the will of God yee might receiue the promise of an enduring inheritaunce For yet a verie little while and he that shall Perseuerance come will come
the blessed hope c. Faith must giue vs assurance of greater glory frō god ere we can let go the hold we haue here beneath Therfore it is made a speciall note of gods childrē and necessarily toyned vnto his worship to be in expectation of the latter day and the glorie and of Christ his comming who shall bestow this benefite vpon the godly as to deliuer them from the wrath to come The Apostle going about to perswade the Thessalonians taketh his effectuall reason from that which was in most reuerence and regard with them and likewise to bring them into the earnest consideration of his words framing his speach thus 2. Thes 2. I beseech you brethren by the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ and our gathering togither and vniting vnto him So that the looking for of the last day séemeth to him to be in great reuerence regard and assured expectation among them And when hee laboureth to lift them off the earth commonly he reareth them vp with no other instrument then this that is the waiting for the glorie and hope of another life And in the third to the Phil. opening the meane of their stay from hunting after worldly and transitorie matters with the false Apostles which minded earthly thinges he saith thus But our conuersation is in heauen from whence we looke for a sauiour euen the Lord Iesus who shall change our vile bodie that it may be like his glorious bodie In the 11. to the Heb. the obedience of Abraham in leauing his own countrey not knowing whither he should go nor what should become of him is ascribed to this that he waited for a citie that had a foundation whose builder and maker is God For all thinges in the world are subiect to corruption and alteration The great thinges that are spoken of Moyses in accomp●ing the rebuke of Christ to be of more value than the treasures of Egypt and his not fearing the furie of the king is onely imputed to this that he was as if he had séene him that is inuisible The comming of the glory of the great God was alwaies before his eies The greatnesse of the thing and the excellency of it is noted in these wordes The glory of the great God our sauior Christ The same glory which the great God our sauior Christ inheriteth is that which we waite for and hepe in due time according to our measure to be partakers of Most worthie it is the waiting for and great cause there is why we should be moued to sanctification and holinesse of life hauing so great things in expectation We beséech you saith S. Paul 1. Thes 2. 12. that ye would walk worthie of God who vouchsafeth to call you vnto his owne kingdome and glory The glory of this world dazeleth our cies and therefore must we be drawne vp by meditation of greater things before we shal be able to let these be of smal reckning and account with vs. The greatnesse of the glorie once throughly digested would set these in a base and lowe place it would make the things of this life vanish as smoake from our presence While in minde and inwarde thought we behold and looke not on the things which are séene but on the things which are not séene For the things which are séene are temporall but the things which are not séene are eternall If it be but the expectation of a transitorie kingdome when it is once deuoured and digested by hope we sée it maketh men neglect liues goods landes friends wife and children and so to hazard all The Merchant that is in expectation of some great gaine we sée into what vnknowne countries into what dangers by sea he wil commit himselfe The great regard and care that is had euery where to the things here belowe the gréedie following after them the carefull pursuing of pleasures profits and honors doo plainly speake that the hope of another life is not yet setled in the hearts of a number and that is the cause that godlinesse and a holy life is so litle practised and performed Let vs call to remembrance how that in this life is our day to wait and this is our time to serue and we must assure our selues with the holy Apostle S. Paul 2. Tim. 4. that we haue fought a good fight against our ghostly enemies sinne the world and the diuel and that we haue led our liues in the feare of God before we can or shal truly say and our conscience witnesse vnto vs that from hencefoorth is laide vp for me the crowne of righteousnesse And if our consciences and the good spirite of God can warrant our hearts herein without all doubt and feare then when Christ which is our life shall appeare shall be glorious and appeare with him in glory There is no pleasure in this world which the Lord hath not matched with some griefe and paine to take away and remoue if it might be our delight and to place it in thinges of greater estimation and which shal be more sure vnto vs. If the glorie of God cannot preuaile against vs ●● it cannot change our taste and that the pleasures of this life be more swéete vnto vs this sweete shal not alwaies 〈◊〉 but as after a faire day commeth a foule and after a calme a tempest and so miserie in the world to come shall follow earthly delightes and this our transitorie worldly happinesse If so great hire as is Gods owne glory cannot allure vs brutish and sencelesse must then our nature néedes be what a greater argument and proofe can we haue of our blockishnesse then that so great thinges can get no more attendance of vs The truth is that we are too much perswaded of the excellencie of these worldly matters as pleasures honours riches and such like And therefore in all places that are alleadged and which speak of the waiting for of Christ his comming there the benefite is set sorth with it and the greatnesse thereof remembred which pointeth at our darknesse and vnbelief herein and telleth vs that the glory of this world standeth as a cloud betweene the great glory which is to come and our blinded sight Wherefore let ve inlarge our hope and by meditation and praier enter into some serious and waightie consideration of the length bredth depth of that glory So shall we sée such a portion of it as will comfort vs euen in our great afflictions and deepest extremities counting ●● a great honour that we are vouchsafed his seruice as the Apostles heretofore haue reioyced herein And if the waiting for of that glory be so great as shall swallow vp all griefe and sorrow which afflictions may bring with them how much more shall the same incourage vs to a holie and sanctified life and to all duties of godlinesse And now am I come to the last part of my text which I purpose God willing in a few words to end least ye should be 〈◊〉 much wearied and too
and readie Marke the minde but of a worldly man that accounhimselfe greatly beholding to another is not this his courage that he could finde in his heart to die in his quarrell and to offer his seruice before he commaunded thereunto The readinesse of our Sauiour Christ whose example if it be too high for imitation yet that of the Apostle Saint Paule heerein is notable and able to giue the weakest minde great courage Get thée behind me Sathan saith Christ vnto Peter thou art an offence vnto mée because thou vnderstandest not the things that are of God but the things that are of men The Prophet Agabus Act. 21. tooke Pauls girdle and bound his owne hands and féete and said Thus saith the holy Ghost So shall the Iewes at Ierusalem binde the man that oweth this girdle and shall deliuer him into the hands of the Gentiles Then his friends perswaded him and besought him with teares that he would not go vp to Ierusalem To whom Paul answered and said What do ye weeping and breaking my heart for I am ready not to bee bounde only but also to die at Ierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus And in an other place And now behold I goe bound in the spirite vnto Ierusalem and knowe not what things shall come vnto mee there Saue that the holy Ghost witnesseth in euery citie saying that bands and afflictions abide me in Ierusalem but I passe not at all neither is my life deare vnto my selfe This is a notable example of incouragement beside the promise of excéeding great reward Hee that looseth his life for my sake shall finde ●● But weake mindes are soone offended and fraile flesh cannot beare out these bitter brunts neither stand to the triall of so worthie a cause when we shall behold as it were great mountaine to fall vpon vs and great surges readie to swallow vs vp No doubt we shall méet with hinderances inow and those mighty hinderances yet greater renowne it is to ouercome our selues then to winne a citie both are hard to do and to accomplish but the first most hard and to flesh and blood impossible True it is that we should cast off all hinderances in this so waightie a matter and deny our selues and in this combat betwixt the spirit and flesh and blood we should shewe our selues conquerers but our hearts for the most part are so faint that strawes can make vs stumble We bl●nch at the least matters and are astund euen at the very name of persecution When King Hezechiah heard of his death he wept sore and so do many of vs carry the like affliction that in no sort we can brooke affliction The pur●●●ion is too bitter although health and immortallitie bee the effect of it Why is it that we are readie to put finger in the eie when we heare that we must endure trouble but that the world a●desh and blood do carry more sway with vs then Gods spirit and that the ioy of this life can abide no sorrow Although God hath appointed this to be our lot Ye shall weepe and lament yea furthermore although we heare that our sorrow shal be turned into ioy Gladly we would be at peace with the world but when the world shall hate vs that beginneth to breake vs then are we surprized of sorrow and for the time swallowed vp of griefe The Prophet Ieremy a man of great courage patience and constancie before he could frame himselfe to drinke of this bitter cuppe as one most passionate breaketh out into these words and in the presence of God Cursed be the day wherin I was borne oh that my mother had bene my graue or her wombe a perpetuall eonception How is it that I came forth of the wombe to see labour and sorrow And againe chapter 19. Woe is me my mother that thou hast borne mee a contentious man and a man that striueth with the whole earth I haue done them neither hurt nor wrong yet euerie one doth curse me According to that of the Prophet Dauid They hated mee without any cause and that thou ô God knowest Yet should this matter be so farre from mouing vs to heauinesse that therein we should reioyce As the Apostle S. Paule doeth moue vs by his example Gal. 6. 14. God forbid saith he that I should reioyce in any thing but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ whereby the world is crucified vnto me and I vnto the world Our Sauior Christ hath foretold vs that we should be hated of all men for his name and for the profession of his truth And lest any of vs should faint he addeth further But hee or they that endure to the end they shall be saued What if the world and the mightiest in the world hate ve what if they séeke our blood Feare not their feare saith the Apostle neither be troubled but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts Feare not them saith our Sauiour which haue power ouer your bodies and whose furie and rage can goe no further but rather feare him who after the body is distroied by death can cast both soule and body in hell God hath commanded vs vnto this wéeping and lamentation Foure principal● reasons to pers●●d●●s to vndertake perse●cution w● 〈◊〉 the first is Gods Commandement and appointed vs vnto this trouble and sorrow and persecution let vs not therefore feare men to auoid gods commandement but rather glorifie God by withstan●●ng euill men and such as are bent to resist and deface to suppresse and vtterly to roote out gods truth And because the world is giuen to nothing more then to oppresse gods truth therefore ought we the more to maintaine it and not to regard our liues in respect of the defence therof Striue for y● truth vnto death saith the wise man Eccle. 4. 28. And defend iustice for thy life God hath created vs for his glory and if we loue God and his loue be setled in our hearts wée ought to the vtmost of our power to maintaine his glory Dearely beloued saith the blessed Apostle thinke it not straunge concerning the firy tryall It pleaseth God to try you by the extremities of this wicked world whether ye will like valiant souldiours stand to the defence of his cause We count it a glorious matter and worthy of immortall fame to spend our liues in the defence of our prince and country yet is it more glorious if wée be called thereunto not to refuse any torment and extremitie in shewing our dutie and our loue to God and his Church Re. 2. 10. Vnto the Angell of the church of Smirna it was said Feare none of those things which thou shalt suffer behold it shall come to passe that the diuell shall cast some of you into prison that ye may be tried and ye shall haue tribulation tenne daies that is a long time Bee thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee the crowne of life Hee that ouercommeth shall not bee hurt of
a price or it may be the readers leisure may not serue The matter is so notable that although I be iudged too tedious yet I must set it downe and when you haue read it I hope you will thinke neuer a whit the worse of me The matter is set downe as followeth All this while the quéene and the bishops who had kept This may serue for priuate reading but not otherwise the archbishop almost now thrée yeares in prison seeing by no meanes they could preuaile with him to turn him from his religion did secretly suborne certaine men which when they could not ouerthrow him by argumentes and disputation should by intreatie and faire promises or any other meanes allure him to recantation For these men wily enough for their own profit perceiued how great a wound they should receiue if the archbishop had stoode stedfast in his sentence and contrariwise how great profit they should get if he as the principall standard-bearer should sing a retreit By reason whereof the wilie papistes flocked about him labouring by threatning flattering entreating and promising and all other meanes especially Henry Sydall Friar Iohn a Spaniard De villa baccina that they might driue him from his former sentence to recantation They set foorth how acceptable it would be both to the King and Quéene and especially howe gainfull to him and for his soules health it would be They added moreouer how the Councell and Noble men beare him good will They put him in hope that he should not only haue his life but also be restored to his auncient dignitie Saying it was but a small matter an so easie that they required him to do only that he would subscribe to a fewe words with his owne hand Which if he did there shuld be nothing in the realm that the Quéene would not easily graunt him whether he would haue riches or dignitie or else if he had rather leade a priuate life in quiet rest in what place soeuer he listed without all publike ministery only that he would set his name in two words to a little leafe of paper But if he refused there was no hope of health pardon for the Quéene was so purposed that she would haue Cranmer a Catholike or else no Cranmer at all Therefore he should choose whether he thought it better to ende his life shortly in the flambes and firebrands now readie to be kindled then with much honour to prolong his life vntill the course of nature did call him For there was no middle way Moreouer they exhorted him that he would looke to his wealth his estimation and quietnesse saying he was not so old but that many yeares yet remained in this his so lustie age And if he would not do it in respect of the Quéene yet he should do it for respect of his owne life and not suffer that other men should be more carefull for his health then he was himself Saying that this was agréeable to his notable learning and vertues which being adioyned with his life wold be profitable both to himself and to many other But being extinct by death should be fruitfull to no man that he should take good héede that he went not too farre yet there was time inough to restore all things safe and nothing wanted if he wanted not to himselfe Therefore they would haue him to lay hold vpon the occasion of his health while it was offered lest if he would nowe refuse it while it was offered he might héereafter séeke it when he could not haue it Finally if the desire of life did nothing moue him yet he should remember that to die is gréeuous in all ages and specially in these his yeares and flower of dignitie it were more gréeuous but to die in the fire and such torments is most gréeuous of all With these and the like prouocations these faire flatterers ceased not to sollicite and vrge him vsing all Compare this Archbishop with Eleazar the Scribe 2. Mac. 6. 18. and no doubt thou shalt be much moued meanes they could to drawe him to their side whose force his manly constancie did a great while resist But at last when they made none end of calling and criing vpon him the Archbishop being ouercome whether through their importunitie or by his owne imbecillitie or of what minde I cannot tell at length gaue his hand It might be supposed that it was done for the hope of life and better daies to come But as we may since perceiue by a letter of his sent vnto a lawier the greatest cause why hee desired his time to be delaied was that he would make an end of Marcus Anthonius which he had begunne But as it was manifestly plaine howsoeuer it was done it was plaine against his conscience How bee it so it pleaseth God that so great vertues in this Archbishop should not bee had into much admiration of vs without some blemish or else that the falshood of the popish generation by this meanes might be made more euident or else to minish the confidence of our strength that in him should appeare an example of mans weake imbecilitie See howe vnder the baite the hooke was hidden howe honny was mixed with sorcerie and how poison was offred in a golden cup. Peter a chiefe Apostle Cranmer a péere of the realme and a piller of Christianity O Lord howe are the mightie ouertaken I had almost said ouerthrowne Let none therefore presume of their owne strength but rather aske strength and courage of God by praier because as the Apostle saith As to beleeue so also to suffer is Gods gift Philip. 1. Setting before our eies the examples of Peter and Iohn who perceiuing what was like to come to passe betooke themselues to praier saying And no● ô Lord behold their threatenings and graunt vnto thy seruants with all boldnesse to speake thy word Whose praier the place being shaken where they were assembled in token of Gods presence the Lord heard In so much that with great power the Apostles gaue witnesse of the resurrection of the Lord Iesus and great grace was vppon them all and being filled with the holie Ghost they spake the word of God beldly Act. 29. Courage without feare constancie without wauering patience without offence hope without distrust are no small matters The Apostles praied yea Christ himselfe praied and that with such feruencie that the very blood trickled downe and Gods Angel was faine to comfort him Let vs all therefore as many as be so minded prepared and readie to this daungerous matter pray with the Apostles O Lord increase our faith let no kind of 1. Macca 2. 21. wauering ouerturne vs O Lord giue boldnesse constancie courage and strength And in so dooing let vs commit our selues soules and bodies to our heauenly father Iesus Christ as vnto a faithfull Creator and an assured preseruer and a moste stedfast performer of all his promises And so much for the burthen imposed Ye shall weepe and
Achab did that wicked King of Israel Some will say it is an eafie matter for a man to ouercome his sinfull affections and wee may doo well if wee will But I aske them who was more able and better furnished then the blessed Apostle S. Paul yet he findeth the matter so hard to performe that he confesseth it to the whole world Rom. 11. 22. I delight in the law of God concerning the inner man but I see an other lawe in my members rebelling against the lawe of my minde and leading me captiue vnto the lawe of sinne which is in my members that is in all the sences and in all the parts of my bodie Yea he seeth it to be a matter so impossible that he is faine to crie out O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me And seeth no other meane of deliueraunce but only praier for Gods helpe that it would please God to beate downe the power of sinne in him I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me And answere was made My grace is sufficient for thee and my power is made perfect through thy weaknesse For that which is impossible to man is most easie for God to bring to passe Most truly therefore might he say Very gladly will I reioyce rather in mine infirmities that the power of Christ may dwell in me and master and mortifie sinne which would full faine haue the better hand ouer me Many will not be knowne of their sinnes when they be admonished of them because they are loth to leaue them yet some of a better minde and more tractable will acknowledge them and in their minde will mislike them and also will not sticke to confesse that they would faine leaue them and would thinke themselues happie if they might be rid of them yet find in themselues no power at all to forgo them No maruell then though the Apostle Heb. 12. perswadeth vs to cast off sinne which cleaneth vnto vs and hangeth on so fast But how may we forgo them how may we be rid of them we cannot it is impossible to vs. Craue it and beg it as the apostle did once twice thrice yea often euer at the hands of God in earnest and humble praier and he will performe it vnto thée and after a while thou shalt perceiue how weake the power of sin will begin to be in thée So that thou shalt be daily lesse proude lesse giuen to drunkennesse to theft to whoredome and the like till thou growest at the last to hate that sin that troubled thy soule so much till in time thou hast gathered that strength that thou maiest dispossesse and throwe out that strong man Behold then how great cause the godly haue to reioyce at their infirmities in that not only the power of their ruling sinnes is abated but also by the power of Gods good spirit and by the grace of Christ who dwelleth in the harts of the godly they are quite ouercome and ouerthrowne Whereby we may gather these two comforts First that this is a sure token vnto vs that we appertaine vnto God and secondly that the diuel shall haue no power to destroy vs séeing that we haue escaped his snares and that his bands that held vs in so fast are loosed burst and broken I will adde but one ioy more which is most pertinent To do good for euill and for the present purpose And that is that the godly reioyce to do the wicked good as the wicked reioyce to hurt them and sport and solace themselues in their sorrowes At the conuertion of the sinner and wicked the Angels in heauen reioyce and it is not to be doubted but that the godly beare them company heerein and are as greatly ioyfull The enemy of the Prophet Eliseus sought his death but he set bread water before them and sent them away in peace when they were al in his hand and at his word they might haue bene put to death When Dauid might haue saline Saul yet he reioyced in preseruing his life The Prophet Ieremy counselled the Israelies to pray for the life of King Nabuchodonosor who held them in captiuitie although he were a wicked and an idolatrous King Our Sauiour Christ praied for the life of his persecutors O Lord laie not this sinne to their charge for they know not what they do So did the blessed Martyr S. Stenen when the stones flue thicke about his eares Thus doo they pray for them that persecute them that God would turn his wrath from them and that in mercy he would call them as the Apostle Saint Paul was called from persecution to profession thus doo they speake well of them that hate them blesse them that curse them thus do they good for euil and séeke the preseruation of their liues who gréedily hunt after their ouerthrow death According to the examples of the Apostles 1. Cor. 4. 12. We are reuiled and yet we blesse we are persecuted and suffer it we are euill spoken of and we pray I say the truth in Christ saith S. Paul Rom. 9. 1. I lie not my conscience bearing mee witnesse in the holie Ghost that I haue great heauinesse and continual sorrow in my heart For I would wish my self to be seperate from Christ for my brethren that are my kinsmen according to the flesh but his professed and vtter enemies by persecution Yet he calleth them brethren Brethren my hearts desire and praier to God for Israel is that they might bee saued Accounting the good and welfare of his enemies the greatest ioy that might befall him More might be said but I haue stood vpon this point of the ioy of the godly somewhat too long Wherefore as a matter more proper to the godly I will The sorrow of the godly returne vnto the words of my text and intreat once againe of their sorrow The world shall reioyce and ye shall sorrow as if they were both borne and bred to it and should end their liues in the same For as the oxen appointed to the slaughter are let runne a fatting at their pleasure and other oxen kept vnder daily labour of the yoke so fareth it with the godly that are exercised with trouble all the daies of their life while the wicked escape run at randam gathering fat and growing grosse dying shortly nay more then that eternally If the godly haue any comfort in this world it continueth not long and therefore their life may well be said to be a mixture of swéet soure and a continual interchange of sorrow comfort comfort sorrow Which if they consider wel is a benefit vnto them so far forth as to draw their minds frō earth to heauen from y● world to God Wherunto they are the more moued bicause the world maketh a wonder of them a gazing stock a matter of contempt and derision As the Apostle 1. Cor. 4. 13. hath foretold We are counted as the filth of the worlde and the
to be scorned whose desire is to liue according to Gods will and commandements And this is a greate cause of the fall of many that otherwise would doe well let them that vse it refraine it they knowe not what hurt they doe The least of vs are readie to fall away and therfore the Apostle willeth vs to exhort and Esd 10. 50. prouoke one another vnto good workes daily This mocking and taunting the Apostle doubteth not to call by the name of persecution wherewith Isaac was vexed by Ismael In consideration whereof it gréeueth the godly that they are aliue among the wicked whose reproachfull spéeches and vngodly behauiour haue bin pricks in their sides and thorns in their eies if not knines to their throats and as grieuous as the point of a dagger to their hearts For if they looke into the world and take a viewe of the fashion of men amongst whome they must liue they shall sée the mallice of Caine reuiued the hatred of Esau set on foote flattering tongues like Ioab but murdering minds Some as proud and as diuellish as Haman some as trecherous as Iudas some as cruel as Iezabel as incroching and gréedily hunting after other mens mainteuance and liuings if not their liues withall as euer was wicked Achab Naboths vineard litle kindnesse and much churlishnesse as bad or worse then that of Nabal many dissemblers as Ananias and where is the man that speaketh the truth from his heart For the most part all the conuersation of the wicked stanvpon Vncleannesse to beare so greate asway baudry and vncleannes Iust Lot was vexed with the vncleanly conuersation of the wicked For he being righteous and dwelling among them in séeing hearing vexed his righteous soule from day to day with their vnlawfull déeds In respect of all which snares and incombrances the godly are vexed with sorrow euē to the death I am aweary of my life for the daughters of Heth saith Rebeccay Abrahams wife It is inough now O Lord take my soule for I am no better then my fathers séeing I only am aliue and the rest hath forsaken thée saith Elias Woe is me saith the Prophet Dauid Ps 120. 5. that I must dwell with Mesech and haue mine habitation among the tents of Cedar My soule hath too long dwelt among them Yet hath God so appointed that we should shine as glistring starres amongst a naughty generation Whose behauiour shall make vs more wary and circumspect as also our good workes which they shall sée and behold shall turn either to their happy conuersion or most iust confusion and endlesse condemnation The weake minds which are not as yet throughly strengthned wish daily continually although it be godly and wel with the Apostle I desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ which is best of all Hitherto of the sorrowes of the godly And y● I may make perfect this part touching the difference betwixt the godly and the wicked concerning ioy and sorrow as also that ye may be the better comforted and encouraged to vndertake and endure sorrow I will let you vnderstand howe that the world hath his sorrow also And séeing I haue begun to be tedious beare with mee a while I hope you will not thinke your labour altogither lost in reading which may be at your leisure though it cost mee some studie to gather it Who would thinke that the wicked should haue any sorrow in this world howsoeuer they are like to spéed in the world to come séeing they haue the world at will and as the Prophet saith they come in no misfortune like other men And yet it falleth out sometimes that they haue sorrow but what is the cause of their sorrow No other but for worldly matters for temporall losses and that their transitorie ioyes are abated and diminished As for example when their goods are taken by pirates their wealth consumed by shipwracke their houses burnt with fire their landes taken from them by violent oppression their riches wasted by vsurie their libertie restrained by imprisonment their children to miscarry suddeinly their friends either to die or to fall away from them daily as the wise man saith In prosperitie a friend cannot bee knowne and in aduersitie and calamitie a mans verie friend will fall away from him and forsake him Now when these miseries and these worldly calamities come vppon them what crying what wringing of hands what lamenting what wéeping is there among them But that God by their wickednesse is offended his name through them blasphemed his lawe and holy word contemned his patience and long sufferance daily prouoked and abused his threatnings his admonitions his counsels neglected his louing mercies forgotten and his great benefits not remembred that many good things pertaining to our dutie haue bin through our follies omitted and many wickednesses whereof we should haue bene cleare committed by vs who wéepeth for these matters who lamenteth for these causes The world reioyceth in hurting the godly and if their mischiefe and their mallice be preuented then are they sorry for nothing more then that they can do no more hurt nor any more mischief where the godly pray for them their cōuersion How do they enuy maligne those persons in whō they sée Gods gifts graces This was the cause y● Iosephs brethren hated him that Core Dathan and Abiram did set themselues against Moses that king Saul did enuy and séeke the destruction of Dauid Whereat the godly are not to take any discomfort for their enuie shall not hurt them no more then Ioseph and Moses and Dauid was hurt For God shal turn all to his glorie and their good as is in his good pleasure determined of them And as they cannot abide the godly so secretly in their hearts they hate God as their déedes and workes declare for if the loue of God were in them the fruites therof would also appeare For who are more backward to heare Gods word to be present at his diuine seruice who make lesse accompt of christian profession yea they hate it they scoffe and scorne it and they that counsell them to religion goodnesse are their chiefest enemies King Dauid bearing the person of the godly was otherwise minded who counted it his great sorow that he was debarred for a time from Gods seruice Ps 48. 3. O Lord of hostes how amiable are thy tabernacles my soule longeth yea and fainteth for the courts of the Lord for my heart my flesh reioyce in the liuing God Yea the sparrow hath found her an house and the swallow a neast for her where she may lay her yoong ones euen by the altars ô Lord of hostes my king and my God But because the wicked are so set against God good men therefore the Prophet said truely of them Many are the sorrowes and great are the plagues that remaine for the wicked Psa 32. 10. Which is most effectually set downe Eccles 40. Great trauell is created for all men
hath many dumps and amidst their ioyes doe often wéepe but the sorrowes of the godly are such that neither make them to breake their sléep nor yet to be heauy hearted For Paul Silas being in prison in fetters and cold iron Act. 16. Sung a Psalme and praised God The reason that may mooue them both so to do is great waightie the one remembring that their ioyes shall end in perpetual sorrowes the other reioyce knowing that their sorrowes shal not alwaies last and y● their crosse and their crowne are ioyned both togither as matters inseparable For of all other they were the most miserable if their hope were onely in this life Mat. 5. 4. Blessed are they that mourne for they shall be comforted Luke 6. 21. Blessed are they that weepe now for they shall laugh Looke vpon Lazarus wéeping on earth and reioycing in heauen In the midst and in the multitude of my sorrowes that I had in my heart saith the Prophet Psal 44. 19. Thy comfortes haue refreshed and reioyced my soule In the Lords word will I comfort me which is so full of heauenly promises Phil. 4. 4. Reioyce in the Lord alway and againe I say reioyce The sorrowes of persecution turned into ioyes let your patient minde be knowue vnto all men The Lord is at hand to succor you to giue you ioy What bréedeth patience in troubles so much as that when they know that their sorrowes shal be turned into ioy Ye sorrowed with me for my bandes saith the Apostle Heb. 10. 34. and suffered also with ioy the spoiling of your owne goodes knowing in your selues how that ye haue in heauen a better and induring substance Whosoeuer shall forsake houses or brethrē or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands and possessions for my names sake he shal receiue a hundred f●●d more and shall inherite euerlasting life And who would not be patient in trouble and persecution seeing it shal be requited with such icy No trouble so bitter as the trouble of persecution yet this is the comfort that it is but short though it séeme vnto vs long Else the Apostle would not haue vsed this spéech Yet a while and that a very little while and that shall come will come and will not tarry yea and bring his rewardes with him The flesh is fraile and rebellious the world is cruel persecution is most gréeuous and therefore ye haue great néede of patience that after ye haue done the will of God yée might receine the promise Through which and other like waightie causes and considerations the same Apostle being mooued praied for the Collossians that they might be strengthened with all might through the glorious power of God vnto all patience and long sufferance and that with ioyfulnesse Which ioyfulnesse hée himselfe expressed in his owne person most liuely speaking thereof more then once and twice To the Collossians chapter 1. 24. Now reioyce in my suffrings and to the Cor 2. epist 7. he writeth thus Ye are in our hearts to die and liue togither I vse great boldnesse of speech toward you I reioyce greatly in you I am filled with comfort and am exceeding ioyous in all our tribulation For if there be any bitternesse in persecution as certaine it is that it is most great it is altogither swallowed vp of spirituall ioy for worldly ioy cannot attaine to that strength as to endure it Through faith we haue accesse vnto this grace wherein we stand and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God neither doo we so only but also we reioyce in tribulations For whē we are most weake then is God most strong and able to giue vs strength to endure our triall 2. Cor. 4. 8. We are afflicted on euery side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie but not ouercome of pouertie We are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but we perish not Neither do wee faint though our inward man perish because our inward man is renewed daily and strengthned comforted in hope which maketh vs not ashamed although the world would laie shame inogh vpon vs. And in an other place he speaketh of himselfe and of all the faithful 2. Cor. 6. 8. We must approue our selues as those that haue hope in God by honor and dishonor by euil report good report as deceiuers yet true as vnknowne and yet knowne as dying and behold we liue as chastened and yet not killed as sorrowing and yet alwaies reioycing The vine the more it is pressed the more it riseth the spice y● more it is beaten the swéeter it smelleth the fire y● more it is kept vnder the more it bursteth out the Israelites the more they were oppressed the more they multiplied and so is it with the godly the more their outward sorrowes be the more are their inward ioyes In this matter the Apostle S. Iames is of the same mind with the Apostle S. Paul who in the beginning of his epist maketh persecutiō one of his chéefest matters to speak of giuing it a great cōmendatiō encouraging other therein by shewing them what shall ensue My brethren count it excéeding ioy when ye fall into this especiall temptation of affliction and persecution Excéeding ioy he termeth it because no earthly ioy may be compared to that which they that are afflicted and persecuted both féele and shall also be partakers of As in the same chapter is declared Blessed is the man that suffereth temptation that is affliction and persecution for when he is is tried he shall receiue the crowne of life because the Lord hath promised That he may be bold to say I haue runne my race I haue fought a good fight and henceforth is laid vp for me the crowne of righteousnesse And because of this ioy which was fully setled in their mindes and hearts Saint Peter and the rest of the Apostles as we shall reade Actes 5. 41. when they were reuiled threatened and beaten departed reioycing that they were counted worthie to suffer rebuke for his name The world saith Christ shall hate and excommunicate you and thinke they please God highly in killing you And because I haue saide these thinges vnto you your hearts are full of sorrow But marke againe another spéech of his and sée howe hee dooth raise vs vp in comfort and in ioy Hee that will follow mee must take vp his crosse and follow mee and whosoeuer shall forsake houses or brethren or sisters father mother wife children landes possessions yea bid farwell to the world and hate and despise his owne life for my sake hee shall receiue an hundreth folde more and shall inherite euerlasting life For the ioy of conscience which Gods children féele euen in their afflictions is a thousand fold more worth then all worldly treasure These things saith Christ haue I spoken vnto you that my ioy might remaine in you and that your ioy might be full The prince of our peace and saluation was consecrated
vnto God through affliction and persecution Whereby the Apostle signifieth that there could be no worke more acceptable in the sight of God then that The captaine in war sheweth himselfe most venterously and if he die he is resolued What is his comfort and his ioy this that he cannot please his prince and countrey better The souldiers likewise through the captains valiant exploits are incouraged hauing the selfesame comfort and ioy with their captaine And a valiant souldier aimes at nothing more then at honour and renowme How should the extremitie of sorrow or the dint and horror of death pull vs backe séeing the recompence is so glorious honour renowme and ioy But many are loth to venture fearing their own frailty weaknesse Good it is to be aduised and to cast al circumstances to pray to God for strength and when thou art resolued doubt not that God will laie more vpon thée then thou art able to beare neither will God suffer vs to be afflicted aboue our power but in the bitter hest of persecution and in the smarting sorrow of death approching he wil giue a comfortable issue and fill thy heart with swéet ioyes Comfort in warre makes death séeme nothing so sorrowfull and séeing in affliction and persecution many haue suffered before thée and thou art not like to bee the last bee not faint-harted yea althogh thou mightst escape knowing that thou shalt receiue a better resurrection Moreouer it is not the least comfort that the faithfull and the godly yea and Christ himself doth help vs with their praiers wherby the extremitie of paine is mitigated vnto vs or sufficient strength courage granted vs to endure euen to the end and in the end For this cause saith the Apostle to the Colloss cap. 1. We cease not to pray for you that ye might be strengthened with all might through his glorious power and addeth this comfortable clause Giuing thankes vnto the father which hath made vs meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light And if as yet thou desirest greater comfort● more abundant ioy if thou mightest haue thy choice thou canst not make a better choice then the quietnesse of conscience and ioy of the holy Ghost Can a mother forget her children if she could or would yet the Lord wil not forget vs being vnto him as the signet vpon his right hand and therfore in cōtinual remembrance and as the apple of his eie and therfore most tender So that the prophet Dauid had great cause to say to the great comfort and ioy of the godly Right deare in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints Psal 116. 15. Knowing therfore that the cause is Gods cause and his glorie and that it is his wil we should suffer in fulfilling his wil let vs commit our soules vnto him in weldooing as vnto a faithfull creator Let me adde a constant Martir his exhortation in verse who neither feared nor doubted but most willingly and ioyfully was to giue vp his life for the profession of the truth and maintenance of the Gospell Cotent thy selfe with patience with Christ to beare the crosse of paine Who can and will thee recompence A thousand fold with ioyes againe Let nothing cause thy heart to quaile Launch out thy boate haul vp thy saile Put from the shore And at the length thou shalt attaine Vnto the port that shall remaine For euermore Thus if it please God that they shall be put to the shedding of their blood and the losse of their liues for the testimony of a good conscience for the profession of his truth and maintenance of his Gospell ye sée that it is a matter that brings heapes of ioyes so that although there be great sorrowes yet this persecution and triall of their faith makes them in a maner not to appeare Else how could it haue bin true which the Apostle reporteth of the churches of Macedonia 2. Cor. 8. 2. that in the great trial of affliction their ioy abounded As though in their extremitie they had felt no sorrow nor perceiued any discomfort In token whereof the Apostle willeth the Philippians to be so bold that in nothing they shuld fear their aduersaries which is saith he to them a tokē of perditiō but to you a tokē of saluatiō and the of god And that which furthereth ●ur saluation with what ioy is it vndertaken and performed Neuerthelesse God séeing our heartes and knowing our readinesse doth not alwaies put vs to the triall and yet accepteth our readinesse as though we had béen tried doth send vs comfort ioy and that after such a sort as we least looked for That we might praise him in his iudgementes and woonder at his mercies and giue him thankes for his goodnesse that worketh so great deliuerances for his people And to increase our ioy the more God worketh our deliuerance Ioy by deliuerance Their enemies being destroied by the destruction of our enemies The Israelites being deliuered saw the Egyptians their enemies drowned in the red Sea and their dead careases lying on the Sea shore Then sung Moses and the children of Israel When the Iewes were deliuered from the cruel massacre Eze. 38. 16. 21. 22. 23. and bloudie slaughter which was deuised and pretended and purposed against them and almost put in mischieuous execution through the meanes of that proud and wicked Haman Haman himselfe was destroied and hanged and fell into the pit that he had made for others Then had the Iewes rest and ioy and they remembred it for euer This also is plainly set downe in the storie of godly Tobit chap. 1. If king Senacharib had slaine any when he fled from Iudea I buried them priuily but the bodies were not found when they were sought for of the king Therefore when a certain Niniuite had accused me to the king because I did burie them I hid my self and because I knew that I was sought to be s●aine I withdrew my selfe for feare Then all my goodes were spoiled neither was there any thing left me besides my wife Anna and my sonne Tobias Neuertheles within fiue and fiftie dayes two of his sennes killed him and another of his sonnes reigning in his stéed appointed Achiacharus my brothers sonne to be the ouerseer of his accountes who made request for me and I came againe to Niniuie When Herod was dead who sought Christ his death then he being a babe and infant was brought againe into the land of Israe● Presently after the death of King Herode mentioned Actes 12. the bloody tyrant being punished by Gods iudgement and that after a strange sort then the word of God grewe and multiplied and flourished and God gaue his seruants libertie If we aske an example in our owne realme Quéene Mary and mischieuous Gardiner bishop of Winchester being taken away and strooken by the hand of God our gracions Soueraign whom God long preserue to his glory and our comfort came then to her
ioy and to her crowne who was ful néere her death The greatnesse of our peril can be no stop to our deliuerance because the power of our deliuerer is infinit Indéed we sée that men are altogither amazed and in a manner berest of wit and vnderstanding when they féele themselues daungerously tossed too and fro But do we not also sée that when they crie vnto the Lord in their trouble he bringeth them out of distresse hee turneth the storme to calme so that the waues thereof are still Do we not sée how that they passe through tribulations to the kingdome of heauen and through stormie tempests are brought to the hauen where they would be This the Lord doth that we might confesse his louing kindnesse before him and his wonderfull workes before the sonnes of men God for diuers secret causes leadeth his church through many bitter afflictions as it were to no other purpose then by trying them by the crosse to make them true to his crowne and then either in death doth giue them patience and constancie or by deliuerance doth send them ease and libertie Psal 38. 19. Many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord deliuereth him out of them all It is euen the time of Iacobs trouble saith the Lord yet shall he be deliuered from it and shall be in rest and prosperitie and none shall make him afraid And there shall be a day Zacha. 14. 7. it is knowne to the Lord neither day nor night but about the euening time it shall be light And loe in the euening there is trouble but afore the morning it is gone Esay 17. 14. The wrath of the Lord endureth but the twinkling of an eie and his pleasure is life heauinesse may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning Ps 30. 5. The thoughts of the Lord are thoughts of peace and not of trouble to giue you an ende and your hope Ieremy 29. 10. Then shall ye cry vnto me and I will heare you ye shall seeke me and find me because ye shall seeke me with all your heart And if hee come out presently at our call it is most méete and conuenient that wée should waite his pleasure Knowest thou not or hast thou not heard that the euerlasting God the Lord hath created the ends of the earth neither fainteth nor is weary there is no searching of his vnderstanding But he giueth strength to him that fainteth and vnto him that hath no strength he increaseth power Euen the yong men shall faint and be weary and they shall stumble and fall Eut they that wait vpon the Lord shall renue their strength they shall lift vp theire winges as the eagles they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not faint Somtimes it pleaseth God to send his people deliuerāce by turning the hearts of the percecutors So was the firie and fierce wrath of Nabuchodonozor turned to great good will toward Shadrake Meshake and Abednago Saul breathing out threatenings and slaughter against the saints of God was conuerted miraculously and Saule a persecutor became Paule the professor and then had the churches rest in those daies King Agrippa beganne to yéeld and from iudging was readie to defend Paule Pontius Pilate spake for Christ when all the Iewes were against him saying I finde no fault in him at all Sometimes by sending danger and trouble to the persecutors Themselues in danger themselues As when Dauid was almost taken and like to come into the hands of Saul his enemy then he heard that the Philistines had inuaded his land Lastly God sendeth comfort and ioy by powring foorth Gods ven g●ance being powred out his vengeance on their enimies Vengeance is mine I will repay faith the Lord. God in time will reuenge our cause According to that we reade in the prophet Ieremie against king Nabuchodonozor and his land Iere. 50. 22. Acrie of Eze. 25. 17. 26. 5. 28. 22. 23. battell is in the land and of great destruction How is the hammer of the whole world destroied and broken how is Babel become desolate among the nations At the noise of the winning of Babel the earth is mooued mooued and the cry is heard among the nations Make bright the arrowes gather the shields the Lord hath raised vp the spirit of the king of Medes For his purpose is against Babel to destroy it because it is the vengeance of the Lord and the vengeance of his temple Iere. 5. 11. Re. 16. 19. Great Babylon came in remembrance before God to giue vnto her the cup of the wine of the fiercenesse of his wrath 18. 20. Oheauen reioyce of her and ye holy Apostles and Prophets For God hath giuen your iudgement on her and reuenged your cause in punishing her and in one houre shee is made desolate But let vs come a little néerer and behold Gods iudgementes vpon persecutors and the ouerthrow not of the And his iudgmentes being put in execution meanest but of the greatest and mightiest in the world kinges and emperours Ioas slaine of his seruauntes after he had caused Zachariah to be put to death by stoning Senacharib murthered by two of his owne sonnes after that he Eze. 28. 26. 35. 11. ca. 39. 21. 22. had blasphemed God and done his worst against godly Ezekiah Antiochus perished by grieuous tormentes in the bowels so that wormes came out of his bodie in aboundance and being aliue his flesh fell from him for paine and torment and all his armie was gréeued at his smell yea and he himselfe might not abide his owne stinke When Nero one of the Emperours of Rome went about by all meanes to extinguish and blot out for euer the religion of Christ and had caused both Paul and Peter and many holy martyrs to be murdered at length he also receiued reward according to his crueltie For being left of all his prouinces souldiers and acquaintance being iudged of the Romaine Senate an ennemie and condemned by most ignominious death to suffer flying at midnight with Sporus his page there fell before bis féete a thunderbolt whereat afraid and hiding himselfe and falling into vtter dispaire he vttered these words Filthily haue I liued and worse shall I die and so taking his dagger with the helpe of Sporus he cut his owne throate and perished What punishments Domitian Traiane Antoninus Verus Seuerus Maximinus Decius Valerianus Emperours yet bloodie and cruell persecutors of Gods church haue suffered time would faile to declare vnto you Most euident it is that Aurelian for his crueltie against the Saints was slaine of his seruaunts that Dioclesian after he had shead much Christian blood druncke poyson in extreame desperation and so perished that Maximian was hanged at Massilia by Constantine and Maximine strooken for his crueltie with Antiochus his disease wormes growing in bodie and deuouring him vp Infinite the like examples might be alledged of the iust iudgements of almightie God vpon such as
but to be deliuered of a man child is a greater ioy To haue women children of the 2. Esd 9. 38. Israelites did not so much vexe Pharaos minde but the men children the hope and ioy of their parentes and their strength they must die the death Among the innocentes Herode caused the men children to be slaine fearing least one of them should weare his crowne and put him or his beside their princely roialtie The chiefest deliuerances that euer God wrought for his people it may be somewhat he brought to passe by women but most of all by men And therefore was Moses preserued that hée might in time deliuer his people The victorie and the honour thereof did belong to Barake but because he feared and doubted the honour thereof was ●iuen to a woman Iudges 4. 9. This iourney shall not be for thine honour For the Lord shall sell Sisera into the hand of a woman Iael the wife of Heber the Benite shall be blessed aboue other women blessed shall shée be aboue women dwelling in tentes Chapt. 5. 24. Vnto whom was it sayd Blessed is the wombe that bare thée and the pappes that gaue thée sucke but to the man childe What coulde the midwife or the rest of the women say more to comfort the distressed soule of the wife of Phinehas Elias sonne but this Feare not for thou hast borne a sonne yet woulde shée not be comforted because the glorie of God was departed O Lord God saith Abraham Genesis 15. what wilt thou giue mée séeing I haue no heire It is not so much the womans comfort but the midwife or other women runne to the father to tell him that a man childe is borne vnto him and well is she that can bring that gladsome tidinges The grudgeing mindes of some when they haue daughters borne whereas indéede they shoulde be contented with Gods appointment doe shewe how ioyfull and acceptable a thing it is when God sendeth a man childe Children are Gods blessinges and why shoulde wée account otherwise of our daughters It pleaseth God oftentimes to send vs more comfort by our daughters then by our sonnes to disprooue the vanitie of their mindes which cannot be content with that which God sendes Yet neuerthelesse it so falleth out that the men children are more accounted of then women children whether it be that they are the weaker vessels and God hath giuen man the honour or els because women are oftentimes the occasions of the falles and ouerthrowe of men according to the course of their graundmother Eue as we reade 1 Timoth. 2. 14. Adam was not deceiued but the woman was deciued and was in the transgression howsoeuer the case standes or for what cause it is I leaue it to your iudgement yet so it is In the scripture for the most part there is neuer mention made of women children vnlesse it be to expresse matters to be considered and thought on shewing rather euill then good As Iepthe his daughter to expresse the rash vow of her father Lots daughters to shewe their fathers offence the daughters of Moab to make the sinne of the Israelites knowne the daughter of Herodias to shewe forth the mothers malice in the death of Iohn Baptist Eue had two children and both men Sara one childe and that a sonne and that an heire of the whole earth because all the kindreds of the earth should be blessed in him Hannah the mother of Samuel praied that God woulde take away her report and reproche of barrennesse and giue there a child and God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man child The wife of Zocharias being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at last God sent them a child a man child yea and that a great Prophet An Angel telleth him that his wife should beare a sonne and that he should haue ioy and gladnesse and that many should reioyce at his birth Because he should be great in the sight of the Lord. Iacob amongst so many men children had but one Dinah the daughter of Leah but what trouble and mischiefe was raised vp through her meanes No doubt men children bréed much trouble and sorrow to the hearts of the parents oftentimes but sée how the scripture rather noteth the care and griefe that commeth by the woman-child Eccle. 42. 9. The daughter maketh the father to watch secretly and the carefulnesse that he hath for her taketh away his sleepe In her youth least she should passe the slower of her age and when she hath an husband lest she should be hated In her virginitie lest she should be defiled or gotten with child in her fathers house and when she is with her husband least she misbehaue her self If thy daughter be vnshamefast keep her straightly least she cause thy enemies to laugh thée to scorne and make thée a common talke in the cittie and defame thée amōg the people and bring thée to publike shame It may be thy daughter is not shamefast watch and lie in waite to perceiue it and cause that other may giue thée intelligence If it be so hold her straightly lest she abuse her selfe through ouermuch libertie as Dinah did to sée fashions and lost her virginitie When we aske men-children we aske not as Hamah the mother of Samuel that it may be for Gods glory but for our owne priuate ioy and worldly respects and therefore God sendeth I say not women children but wicked and vngodly children whether they be sonnes or daughters And because thou neglectest thy dutie in bringing vp thy children in the feare of the Lord therefore God sendeth trouble with thy children and great grief and sorrow to recompence thy foolish vnaduised ioy Make not thy choice either of sonne or daughter but desire that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may be tone let thy chiefest care be that God may 〈◊〉 ●lorified in them and by them Which especially is performed by praier for them and in bringing them vp in Gods feare and so shalt thou haue great ioy of thy children when other haue sorrow And happie are those parentes that haue such children as may procure their ioy Of all the considerations why the ioy of a man-childe should be so great I may recite these two The one is that the men-children are more likely to come in place of preferment or to great wealth whereby they may be a help and a state to their kindred if not by their wisedome and counsel they may do them furtherance Not but that the women children come often to the like yet that not by themselues but by the meanes of their husbands who are to do nothing but that their husbands shall thinke well of and allowe at whose direction both themselues and that which was giuen with them is The second is that by the man-child the name is continued and the posteritie increased Which is a Iob. 18. 17. 19. great blessing of God as we may sée in the exhortation which King Dauid deliuered to his sonne Salomon who recited the promise of God vnto him saying If
as the worlde giueth giue I vnto you Therfore let not your heart be troubled nor feare The worlde can giue but outward comforts if it shewe neuer so much fauour but as for the inward comfort of the minde and conscience it cannot reach thereinto it is past the power thereof and must let that alone to the working of an other And if it were not for the heauenly comfort the heart of the godly would soone fall away And vnlesse our Sauior Christ had perceiued such weaknesse and such doubtfulnesse in the féeble and vnconstant nature of man hee would not haue vttered these words to make their comfort stedfast and sure in him Ye haue heard saith he how I said vnto you I goe away and will come vnto you If ye loued me ye would verily teioyce because I said I goe vnto the father for my father is greater then I. As if hee had saide If ye loued mee throughly and my loue were stedfast in you your hearts would reioyce and no troubles should mooue you and no discomfortes should perswade you to the contrary This haue I spoken vnto you before it come that when it is come to passe ye might beléeue and your hearts then might abound with ioy For surely those things which I haue promised shall come to passe and therefore doubt nothing and let your hearts be confirmed and setled in ioy Ouer and besides I will send the comforter vnto you my holy spirit the comforter of the elect and chosen which shall not suffer your hearts to faile but stil shal raise them vp in comfort in their greatest griefes and sorrowes What cause therefore haue the godly séeing these great comforts as mightie proppes may staie them from falling though in the sight of the world there be great cause of sorrow but séeing they are we aned from the world and are not of the world what cause haue they I say to cast downe their hearts with sorrow and pen●●uenesse Wherefore let the counsell of the wise man take place with them Giue not ouer thy minde to heaninesse The ioy of the heart is the life of man and a mans gladnesse is the prolonging of his daies Griefe and sorrow shorten the time and bring age before the time Wherefore comfort thy heart and driue sorrow farre from thée For sorrow hath slaine many and there is no profit therin Sorrow did slaie the hearts of the Canaanites because God had weakened their hearts According to the confession of Rahab of whom we reade Iosh 2. when she talked with the spies I know saith she that the Lord hath giuen you the land and that the feare of you is fallen vpon vs and that all the inhabitants of the land faint because of you And when we heard of you our hearts did faint and there remained no more courage in any of vs all This is one of Gods great punishments toward them that do not liue in his feare and obedience that he wil giue them a trembling heart and a sorrowful mind Le. 26. 36. to throw them out of their possessions and to make them haue no ioy of their goods Which we may partly see in the example of churlish Nabal denying to giue comfort to them that were greatly distressed Who when his wife had told him what heauie things were toward him his hart died within him and he was like a stone For the Lord smote Nabal with that sorrowe that hee died Samu. 25. 38. But séeing in all wel-doing God doeth comfort our hearts why should we be enemies to our selues and to our owne welfare With the Apostles imprisoned let vs sing Psalmes to testifie the ioy of our hart to Godward Speaking vnto our selues in Psalmes and himnes and spirituall songes singing and making melodie to the Lord in our hearts And séeing all our hope is or ought to bee in God who is our only treasure why should not our hearts be there also Saying with the blessed virgine My soule doth magnify the Lord and my spirit hath reioyced in God my Sauiour Who although he be absent from vs yet hath he promised to come againe and to sée vs and to comfort our hearts and to make them reioyce So that when your redemption shall drawe nigh then lift vp your heads and when your ioy shall approach let your hearts also be lifted vp with excellent comfort Considering what hath béene fortold long agone by the Prophet Esay 65. 13. 14. Concerning the sorrow of the wicked and the ioy of the Godly Thus saith the Lord God Behold my seruants shall eate and yee shal be hungry Behold my seruants shall drinke and yee shal be thirs●ie Behold my seruants shall reioyce and yee shal be ashamed Behold my seruants shall sing for ioy of heart and yee shall cry for sorrow of heart and shall houle for vexation of mind Foure times Behold for the certaintie thereof and in token of admiration as also to establish the hearts of the godly with ioy As for all worldly ioy which doth not agrée with God and godlinesse let vs vtterly abandon it and banish it farre from vs neither let our hearts in any sort delight therein Because they be meanes to drawe vs from God All these will I giue thée if thou wilt fall downe and worship me Wherefore if thou mightst be set vpon the highest mountaine there to beholde the ioy of earthly maiestie if thou mightst be possessed and inthroned in the glory thereof yet farre is it that thy heart should be setled in any certain comfort Take hold of that comfort and ioy which Christ thy sauiour and redéemer hath promised which though thou canst not sée as yet in due time thou shalt be partaker therof Let thy heart therefore rest vpon this and despise the other for the one shall vanish the other shall neuer deca●e Which is very well confirmed by the last place of proofe in the application Your ioy shall no man take from you I will see you againe your harts shall reioyce and your Your ioy shall no man take away from you ioy shall no man take from you Which toy is so much the more estéemed because it is no common ioy no worldly ioy where sorrow and trouble may follow as a chaunge For worldly ioyes are often taken away and haue diuers ellipses alterations and chaunges Soone come and soone gone soone ripe and soone rotten Moses could not sée that goodly mountaine and Lebanon which if he had séene the sorrow and trouble of the back-sliding people would haue danted his ioy Besides his longing would soone haue bene satisfied and there is a kinde of glut in worldly ioyes But although he could not sée that goodly mountaine of Lebanon yet he was brought into the highest mountaine farre more goodly beautifull and pleasant then all the mountaines of the world being full of oliue braunches for Noahs doues Where such ioyes are setled and are hereafter to be séene which suffer no chaunge no alteration no
the wicked rise vp men hide themselues but when they perish the righteous increase Prou. 28. 28. When the righteous are in authoritie the people reioyce but when the wicked beareth rule the people sigh If it vexe thy minde to sée the wicked in great prosperitie The godly to be oppressed and to flourish much more ought it to grieue thée to sée the good oppressed troden vnder foote despised yea and destroyed Which made the Prophet Abacuc to crie out and say O Lord how long shall I crie and thou wilt not heare euen crie out vnto thee for violence and thou wilt not helpe Why doest thou shewe mee iniquitie and cause me to behold sorrow for spoyling and violence are before mee and there are that raise vp strife and contention Therefore the lawe is dissolued and iudgement doth neuer goe foorth For the wicked doth compasse about the righteous therfore wrong iudgement proceedeth The oppression of the poore and of the godly is a crying sinne and pierceth the cloudes and howe can it but pierce thy heart to heare of it much more to behold it This made Quéene Hester when shée heard of the cruell decrée against the Iewes to be so sadde and heauie yea furthermore to venture her life for the safegard of her people If I perish saith she I perish Alasse how can I suffer and sée the euill that shall come vpon my people So she spake for them vnto the King and preuailed The Prophet Ieremiah being cast into the dungeon and like to perish it gréeued Ebedmelech the blackmore and hee pittied his case and spake for him vnto the King and did himselfe helpe him out of the prison My Lord the King saith he these men haue done euill in all that they haue done to Ieremiah the Prophet whom they haue cast into the dungeon and he dieth for hunger in the place where he is for there is no more bread in the citie W●e is me saith Mattathias the Priest wherefore was I borne to sée this distruction of my people Macc. 2. 7. 13. 14. What helpeth it vs to liue any longer And hee rent his cloathes and put on sackcloth and mourned verie sore If in a countrey saith the wise man Eccle. 5. 7. thou seest the oppression of the poore and the defrauding of iudgement and iustice be not astonied at the matter For he that is higher then the highest regardeth and there be higher then they He doth not forbid them to grieue and mourn at it but willeth them not to be dismaid nor vtterly to be discouraged and discomforted because that God did regard it And in the fourth chap. ver 1. So I turned considered all the oppressions y● are wrought vnder the sun and behold the tears of y● oppressed and none comforteth them And ●o the strength is of the hand of them that oppresse them and none comforteth thē And if the world do not regard it should not y● godly pitie it and pray for the comfort of the afflicted and put to their helping hands to relieue them If one member of the body reioyce al the members reioyce with it and likewise is it so in grief and pain Now if we be members of Christ his bodie why should not the miserable estate of others grieue vs as if it were our own Again what more apparant cause may there be of griefe Sinne to be so rife and vnpunished and sorrow in the godly then to sée sinne so rife and vnpunished Mine eies gush out with teares saith Dauid because Psal 119. 158. the vngodly keepe not thy lawe When we not only heare but sée and behold the cruell dealings of the world their intollerable pride their filthinesse of the flesh and riotousnesse of life their great falshood lying deceit vndermining one of an other their enuie hatred mallice their slanders reproaches backbiting and all iniquitie which nowe raigneth Ez● 9. 4. 2. Kin 22. 19. Esd 8. 70. 71. in our whole life mercifull God what fountaines and what wells of teares should it cause in vs Hos 4. 1. Heare the word of the Lord saith the prophet ye children of Israel for the Lord hath a controuersie with the inhabitants of the land By swearing and lying and killing and stealing and whoring they breake out and blood toucheth blood therefore shal the land mourne And if the sence lesse creaturres be so affected howe should not we be moued They that endeuour to liue well are a pray vnto others and wicked men are countenanced out and mighty sinnes are borne withall theft robbery adultery murder O Lord that a murderer shuld find any one friend in a christian common weale But of nobles of Iudges of magistrates it were too intollerable A poore thiefe packs to tiburne but a manqueller and a murtherer can shift his legs out of the shackles and his necke out of the haulter Oh that the chiefest were not guiltie in all the trespasses aforesaid The multitude of offendoures doth proue them to be guilty And a fearefull thing it is and a lamentable for want of due punishment and due execution of lawes will pull downe gods vengeance on the land All which doe moue vs not only to be sorry and agréeued but to pray that God would turne his wrath from vs because of those grieuous sinnes wherewith the whole land is ouerflowne Where hence ariseth another great sorrow to sée that Gods threatnings not to be regarded nor his mercies accepted Gods threatnings are not regarded neither are his mercies accepted For if they were our liues should not be vnreformed and sinnes should not goe vnpunished This made the prophet Ionas aweary of the ministry prouoked Christ himselfe to shed forth teares for Ierusalem O Ierusalem Ierusalem howe oft would I haue gathered thee together as a henne gathereth her chickens vnder her wings and ye would not Oh if thou hadst knowne at the least in this thy day those things which belong vnto thy peace but now are they hid from thy eies For where Gods mercy patience and long sufferance can take no place neither yet the threatnings of his iudgements preuaile then doe gréeuous punishments hang ouer the heads of that people and it is to be feared and doubted howsoone God will powre downe his wrath vpon them A prudent man seeth the plague and hideth himself but the foolish goe on still and Ezek. 11. 13. are punished The pitiful man the godly minded foreséeth heauie punishments and praieth for the offendours Oh that my head were full of water saith the prophet Ieremy chap. Iere. 14. 17. 9. 1. and mine eies a fountaine of teares that I might weepe day and night for the slaine of the daughter of my people This destruction was not yet come but the Prophet foresawe that it would come and therfore he wept for sorrow But one of the greatest griefs and sorrowes is to sée religion Religion and the feare of god to be scorned mockt at and them