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A13272 Sermons vpon solemne occasions preached in severall auditories. By Humphrey Sydenham, rector of Pokington in Somerset. Sydenham, Humphrey, 1591-1650? 1637 (1637) STC 23573; ESTC S118116 163,580 323

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swadling band Iob 26.11 breakes up for it his decreed place and sets barrs and gates and saies Hither to shalt thou come no farther and here shall thy proud waves bee stayed Iob 38.9 10. Shall we yet step a staire lower and opening the Jawes of the bottom lesse pit see how powerfully hee displayes his Eanners in the dreadfull dungeon below Behold Hell is naked before him Iob 26.6 and destruction hath no covering This made our Prophet sing more generally The Lord is above all Gods whatsoever pleased him that did He in Heaven and Earth and in the Sea and in all deepe places Psal 135.6 Psal 135.6 Thus you heare God is in the world as the Soule is in the body life and government And as the soule is in every part of the body so is God in every part of the world No Quarter-master nor Vice-gerent He but universall Monarch and Commander Totus in toto Totus in qualibet parte A God every where wholly a God and yet one God every where onely One whom the vaine conjectures of the Heathen dreaming to be moe gave in the Skie the name of Iupiter in the Ayre Iuno in the Water Neptune in the earth Vesta and sometimes Ceres the name of Apollo in the Sunne in the Moone Diana of Aeolus in the windes Ex D. August Hot kerus Eccles pol. l. b. 1. Sect. 3. of Pluto and Proserpine in Hell And in fine so many guides of Nature they imagin'd as they saw there were kinds of things naturall in the world whom they honour'd as having power to worke or cease according to the desires of those that homaged and obey them But unto us there is one onely Guide of all Agents naturall and he both the Creator and Worker of all in all alone to be bless'd honour'd and ador'd by all for evermore And is God the Lord indeed Is he chiefe Soveraigne of the whole world Hath his Power so large a Jurisdiction Doth it circuit and list in Water Earth Aire Fire nay the vaster Territories of Heaven and Hell too How then doth this fraile arme of Flesh dare list it selfe against Omnipotence Why doth it oppose or at least incite the dreadfull Armies of him who is the great Lord of Hosts Why doe we muster up our troupes of Sinnes as if we would set them in battel-aray against the Almighty Scarce a place where he displaies the Ensignes of his Power but man seemes to hang out his flag of Defiance or at least of Provocation and though he hath no strength to conquer yet he hath a will to affront If he cannot batter his Fort he will be playing on his Trenches anger his God though not wound him In the earth he meetes him by his groveling Sinnes of Avarice oppression violence rapine Sacriledge and others of that stye and dunghill In the Water by his flowing sinnes of Drunkennesse Riots Surfets Vomitings and what else of that frothy Tide and Inundation In the Aire by his windy sinnes of Ambition Arrogance Pride Vain-glory and what vapour and exhalation else his fancie relisheth In the Fire by his flaming sins of Lust Choller Revenge Bloud and what else sparkles from that raging furnace In Heaven by his lofty Sinnes of Prophanation Oathes Blasphemies Disputes against the Godhead and the like And lastly as if Hell were with man on earth or man which is but Earth were in Hell already by his damned sins of Imprecations Curses Bannings Execrations and others of that infernall stampe which seeme to breath no lesse than Fire and Sulphure and the very horrors of the burning Lake Thus like those Monsters of old wee lift our Pelion upon Ossa Tumble one mountaine of transgressions upon another no lesse high than fearefull as if they not onely cryed for thunder from above but also dar'd it But wretched man that thou art who shall deliver thee from the horrour of this death 2 Thes 1.8 When the Lord shall reveale himselfe from Heaven with his mighty Angels in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that feare him not what Cave shall hide 2 Sam. 22.9.16 or what Rocke cover them At his rebuke the foundations of the world are discovered even at the blast of the breath of his displeasure Out of his mouth commeth a devouring flame and if he do but touch these mountaines they shall smoake Psal 104.32 if he but once lift up his iron Rod he rends and shivers and breaketh in pieces like a Potters vessell he heweth asunder the snares of the ungodly and his enemies he shall consume like the fat of Lambes Psal 37.20 O then let all the earth feare the Lord let all the Inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him let Kings throw downe their Scepters at his feet and the people their knees and hearts at those Scepters from the Cedar of Libanus and the Oke of Basan to the shrub of the Valley and the humble Hysope on the wall let all bow and tremble Princes and all Iudges of the Earth both young men and Maidens old men and children let them all seare and in searing praise and in praising sing of the Name and Power of the Lord God for his Name onely is excellent Psal 148.13 and his power and Glory above Heaven and Earth On the other side is the Lord Omnipotent indeed Hath his Power so wide a Province and extent Is the glory of his mighty Acts thus made knowne to the sounes of men Is his Kingdome not onely a great but an everlasting Kingdome His Dominion through and beyond all Generations Psal 145.13 Doth hee plant and root up prune and graft at his owne pleasure Psal 147.6 Doth hee raise the humble and meeke and bring the ungodly down to the ground Is he with his Ioseph in the prison with Eliah in the Cave with Shadrach in the Furnace with Daniel in the Den Doth hee deliver his anoynted from the persecution of Saul His Prophet from the fury of Iezcbel his Apostle from the bonds of Herod His Saint from the Sword and Fagot of the Insidell Psal 104.21 Doth hee cloath the Lillies of the field Have Lyons roaring after their prey their food from him Doth he give fodder unto the Cattell quench the wild Asses thirst feed the young Ravens that call upon him Doth he stop the mouthes of wilde beasts Quench the violence of fire Abate the edge of the Sword Shake the very powers of the Grave and all for the rescue and preservation of his servants his faithfull his beloved servants Why art thou then so sad O my soule why so sad and why so disquieted within thee Trust in God Psal 147.3 he healeth those that are broken in heart and giveth medicine to heale their sick enesse Though thy afflictions be many thy adversaries mighty thy temptations unresistable thy grievances unwieldie thy sinnes numberlesse their weight intollerable yet there is a God above in his provident watch-Tower a God
maintenance and support of these fleshly tabernacles thou shalt eate and drinke ad necessitatem and the church to take downe the frankenesse of nature and tame the wildnesse of the flesh for in point of fasting there is as well a religious as a civill or politicke respect saies thou shalt not eate and drinke ad intemperantiam let us so eate and drinke that we may live and not lust and so live that thus eating drinking we care not if we die to morrow The cause why Moses so long fasted in the Mount was meere divine speculation the cause why David did humiliation so that the way to mortify the flesh and to advance the spirit is by the doore of abstinence whereby wee may undermine the pallaces of lust and wantonnes plant parcimony as nature where riotousnes hath beene study Hooker Eccles pol. lib. 5. that whereas men of the Flesh eate their bread with joy and drinke their wine with a merry heart Eccles 9.7 The man of the Spirit may be contrite and wounded and so humble his soule with fasting Psal 35.13 Beware then of this Ingenuosa Gula this kick-shawed luxury when the braine turnes Cooke for pleasing both of the eye and palate let 's not court appetite when we should but feed it not feed excesse when we should strangle it Moderation and sobrietie are the best Governours of our meetings and where these are as they are not too often in the meetings of a multitude the example of our Saviour will allow us to turne Water into Wine and the advice of his Apostle to drinke it also for our stomacks suke and doubtlesse sometimes for our mirths sake too if we exceed not the bounds of temperance nor flye out into superfluity or Epicurisme which are the blot and staine of Societie and a hinderance of that true joy and comfort which otherwise might smile in our publike meetings when invitations are turned into riots feeding into suffocation clogging the body and damping the spirits and thereby those blessings which else happily might have shower'd upon us A Soule drown'd in meat as the Father phraseth it can no more behold the light of God than a body sunk in puddle can behold the light of the Sun For as fogs and mists arising from the Earth and hiding the light of the Sunne from us debarre us for the present of the vertue of those heavenly influences which otherwise we might partake of So the fumes and vapours of an over-charg'd stomacke ascending to the brain cause a cloudinesse in the soule hindring and darkning those heavenly speculations which the Spirit would else mount to in God and his Son Christ Iesus To conclude then it should be our principall care to keepe the whole man brush'd all sluttishnes swept-of as well within as without not only those outward spots and blemishes which bestain the flesh but even those smaller dusts and atomes which over-spred the soule Remember it is the white robe which is the dressing of the Saint and that the hand which is wash'd in innocency is accepted at Gods Altar The haire that is unshaven is not for his congregation nor the fowle and uncleane thing for his kingdome We read that Solomons Temple had two altars the one without Vbi animaliū caedebatur Sacrificium 1. Kings 6.20 22. where the bullocke was flaine for sacrifice The other within Vbi Thymiamitis offerebatur incensum where incense and perfumes were offered the best mirrhe and the onyx the sweet storax Ecclus. 24.15 And we know that this temple of the holy Ghost hath two altars also the one without in the flesh where the bullocke should bee slaine the Hecatomb of our hundred beasts offered our beastly lusts and corruptions which fight against the soule The other within in the minde where the fumes of mirrhe and frank incense ascend the incense of prayer and gratulation that spirituall holocaust that viall of the Saints full of odours which reacheth the very nostrils of the Almighty On these two altars D. Aug. 256. serm de temp God requires a two fold sacrifice munditiem in corde cleanesse in the heart which David so vehemently desired create in mee a cleane heart O God Psal 5 1. and castitatem in corpore chastity in the body S. Bern. inter sententias which S. Bernar calls martyrium sine sanguine a martyrdome without bloud where there is a death of the flesh without the death of the body a death of her lusts and a death of her corruptions by mortifying and subduing all carnall rebellions And this martyrdome of the flesh S. Paul glories in I keepe under my body or as the Greeke hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Corpus contundo Paulin. Ep. 58. et Lividum reddo soe Paulinus reades it to S. Augustine I Bray as it were and macerate my body and marke what followes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In servitutem redigo I bring it into subiection 1. Cor. 9.27 And in subjection indeed it must be brought in subjection to the soule which as it gives the other forme so it should steere and master it Vnumquodque sicundum hoc vivat unde vivit saith S. Augustine let every thing live according to the rule and platforme of that by which it lives Vnde vivit caro tua De anima tua unde vivit anima tua De Deo tuo unaquaque harum secundum vitam suam vivat Whence lives thy body from thy soule whence lives thy soule from thy God Let both then live according to that Life which gave them life The world was made for man and man for his soule his soul for God Tū rectè vivit carosecundū animā D. Aug. Serm. 13. deverb Dom. cùm anima vivit secundum Deum The sweet Saint Augustine still then the body lives rightly according to the soule when the soule lives rightly according unto GOD. Let the body then so live after the soule and the soule after GOD that both body and soule may live with God in his eternall kingdome and that for his deare Sons sake Iesus Christ the righteous to whom with the Father the holy Ghost bee all honour and glory ascrib'd both now and for ever Amen Gloria in excelsis Deo FINIS Jehovah-Jireh GOD In his PROVIDENCE And OMNIPOTENCE Discovered A SERMON PREACHED Ad Magistratum at CHARD in Sommerset 1633. By Humphrey Sydenham Laudate Dominum de omnimoda potentia ejus Laudate eum secundum multitudinem Magnitudinis ejus Psal 150.2 LONDON Printed by IOHN BEALE for Humphrey Robinson at the Signe of the Three Pigeons in PAULS Church-yard 1637. TOMY HIGHLY HONOUR'D FRIEND Sr. JOHN STAVVELL Knight of the BATH THIS SIR IUST promises are just debts and debts though delayed ever come acceptably if they come with advantage I long since promised you a transcript of this Sermon which was the Principall and now I send it you with a Dedication which is the Interest and such an Interest I
owne Secretaries speake The registers and pen-men of Divine story How they sing of his Power How they blazon his Omnipotence Loe Isa 40.12 He metes out Heaven with a span measureth the waters in the hollow of his hand comprehends the dust of the Earth in a measure weigheth the Mountaines in Scales and the Hills in a Ballance Isa 40.12 Here is the whole world circled in one verse and yet not his whole Power in that Circle his Power is his Godhead and God himselfe hath been call'd a Circle It is he that sitteth upon the Circle of the Earth and the Inhabitants thereof are as Grassehoppers before him Marke He sits there he is not contained there There no that were above miracle the greater Circle contain'd in the lesse The Heathens themselves could tell us God was an intelligible Spheare Empedocles without Dimensions a Circle whose center was every where no where his Circumference no where not in the whole World not in the Earth not in the Waters not in the Heavens that circle both The Waters you heare he measures in the hollow of his hand the Earth in the same measure the Heavens that containe these in a Span Here is but a Span and Handfull of his Power and yet this Handfull graspes the Vniverse This made our Prophet often sing and in his song close as he began How wonderfull is thy Name in all the World Psal 8.1 9. How wonderfull in all the World A double wonder indeed in respect of Man though of God not so God could not be so wonderfully Great if man had ability to expresse him and therefore having none hee expresses himselfe by himselfe or at least himselfe by his Prophets to whom himselfe hee dictates who like men infus'd and intranc'd Speake aloft in sacred Allegories such as beseeme the Majesty and Greatnesse aswell of the Pen-man as Inspirer And here Psa 104.2 what sublimity both of power and language He clothes himselfe with light as with a garment Isa 40.22 stretcheth out the heavens like a curtaine and spreadeth them as a tent to dwell in by his spirit hath he garnished the skie Job 26.10 and fashioned it like a molten looking glasse In them hath he set a tabernacle for the Sun Psal 19.5 which as a Bridegroome commeth out of his chamber Psal 103. and rejoyceth as a Gyant to run his course He he hath appointed also the Moone for seasons and at his pleasure sealeth up the starres Job 9.7 He bindes the sweet influences of the Pleiades Iob. 9.7 and loses the bonds of Orion brings forth Mazaroth in his season and guides Arcturus with his Sons Iob. 38.31.32 Heere all bumane Eloquence is befool'd Non vox hominum sonut Oh Dei certe Such an expression of God none could frame but God himselfe and this made our Prophet finge againe Psal 104.24 O Lord of hosts how wonderfull are thy workes In wisedome hast thou made them all who is a strong Lord like unto thee or to thy power and faithfulnesse round about thee Psal 89.8 Let us now leave the firmament and the Lord bowing the heavens and comming downe see what empire and dominion he hath in the regions of the aire There Psal 104.3 he layeth the beames of his chamber in the waters maketh the cloudes his chariot and rideth upon the wings of the winde Through the brightnes of his presence are coales of fire kindled lightnings and hot thunderbolts Psal 18. There he hath made a decree for the raine Iob. 38.28 en 37.16 the ballancings of the cloudes as Iob styles them and there hath he begotten the drops of dewe Thence he giveth snowe like wooll Psal 147.17 18 and scattereth the hoare frosts like ashes casteth out his ice like morsells There Iob. 28.25 he maketh waight for the windes he bindeth up the waters in a cloude as in a bottell Iob. 26.8 and the cloude is not rent under them This made our Prophet sing aloft Praise the Lord in the heights praise him fire and haile snowe and vapours stor my winde sulfilling his worde Psal 108.1 and 8. verses Let us descend once more and amongst those proud heapes of earth which seeme to lift their heads even to the very starres observe what sway his power carries there or rather what terror He shall thresh the mountaines and beate them smal Isai 41.15.16 and make the hills as chaffe he shall fanne them and with his whirle winde shall he scatter them Iob 28.10 and shall overturne them by the rootes Isai 40.16 If he be angry Lebanon is not enough for incense nor the beasts thereof for a burnt sacrifice The foundations of the round world are discover'd at his chiding Psal 18.15 at the blasting of the breath of his displeasure This made our Prophet sing againe The Lord is a great God and a great King above all Gods in his hands are all the corners of the earth and the strength of the hills is his also Psal 95.3.4 Shall wee yet stoope lower and descending this mount see how he is a Lord of the valleys and the inhabitants thereof Iob 38.6 Loe the foundation of the earth he hath wonderfully set Iob 9.6 and laid the corner stone thereof at his pleasure againe hee shaketh it out of her hindges Psal 114.8 and the pillars thereof tremble He turnes the hard rocke into a standing water and the flint-stone into a springing well The Nations before him are lesse then nothing they are accounted as the drops of a bucket Psal 149.8 and as the small dust of the ballance He bindeth Kings in chaines and Nobles in fetters of iron Isai 41.2 he gives his enemies as dust to the sworde and as driven stubble to his bow He shal rise up as in mount Perazim Iosh 10.12 He shall be wroth as in the valley of Gibeon that he may doe his worke his great worke Isai 28.21 and bring to passe his act his great act This made our Prophet sing againe The earth is the Lords and all that therein is the compasse of the whole world and all that dwell therein for he hath founded it upon the Seas and prepar'd it upon the floudes Psal 24.1 2. Shall wee now leave the earth and those that sojourne there and see the wonders of the Lord in the great deepe Psal 33.7 There he gathereth the waters of the Sea together and layes them up in store-houses At his commaund the flouds lift up their voyce the waves beginne to swell Iob 41.31 and he makes them boile like a pot of oyntment Againe he ruleth the raging of the Sea and the waters thereof he stilleth at his pleasure Psal 93.4 He bindeth the flouds from over flowing shuts up the Sea with doores when it breakes forth as if it issued out of the wombe makes the cloude a garment thereof and thicke darkenes a