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A03903 Davids sling against great Goliah conteining diuers notable treatises, the [n]ames whereof follow next after the epistle to the reader / by E.H. Hutchins, Edward, 1558?-1629.; Hake, Edward, fl. 1560-1604. 1593 (1593) STC 14012; ESTC S4711 77,891 358

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thereof it came without question that they did cursse not onlie the daie of birth but also him that brought the message to their father that a child was borne They had fullie considered the degrees of their miserie Their birth place was but a foule and filthie dungeon they themselues were but a substance of bloud and instruments of their mothers their nourishment little better than venom their birth not without extreme pains of the deere mother and violent offense of their tender bodies They knewe throughlie that they were conceiued in filth and vncleannes born in sinne and care and nourished with paine and labour They dyd knowe themselues to haue bin like cralling wormes and that at their entrie into this worlde they were apparelled with bloud And therefore considering their miserable condition they curssed the daye of their wretched birth Yea this made father Ieremie to wishe that his mothers wombe hadde serued for his tumbe and father Esaie to bewaile his birth and to murmur againste the knees that helde him vppe and also the breasts that gaue him suck They had fully conceiued that man was made of the slime of the earth conceiued in sinne borne in paine and at the laste made a prey for wormes This miserie of mans life had they fullie digested and therefore wished to haue died before they were borne Come hither nowe beloued Christians wee are manie an ace short of Iob Ieremie or Esay in life and in iudgement One after a through sifting of this miserable life wished that his mothers wombe had been his tumbe another murmured at the paps that gaue him suck the third curssed the daie of his birth and not onelie that but him also that firste declared it Did they soe lyttle sette by this myserable life as to cursse it and so little loue the pappes that norished them as to murmur against them yea the verie knees that helde them vp and by reason of this wretched pilgrimage to be so wearie of this life as to wishe they had beene buried in their mothers wombe and shall wee feare death They wished they had neuer liued and shal we for feare of death wishe euer or a longe time to liue they curssed the daie of their birth whoe were holie men and shal we weepe for the daie of death the verie ende of their wishe did they murmur against the paps that gaue them sucke and shall not we welcome death when the Lord sendeth him naye they murmured euen againste the knees that did beare them vp and shal not we bee willing to surrender heade feete handes heart knees and al to mother earth and to salute death in ioy of spirit Fie for shame and out vpon vs if we doo not willinglie and merrilie wishe and crye Thy kingdome come ô father of heauen Come Lord Iesus come Let vs denie the olde man cherish our hope that wee haue in the full merites of Christ that when the Lorde shall call we may come vnto him without anye rebellion And as for death account of it but as a moste blessed ende or period of this wretched life an axe that cutteth off al miseries and therefore feare it not The thirde weapon Consider the commodities of death WE are tossed turmoyled vppon the seas of this world with manie a dangerous tempest euen till wee be we arie or at least should be with holie Paule of our short vncerteine miserable liues and then dooth the Lorde euen of mercie call vs to reste and ioy with his Saints in heauen 〈◊〉 that resting from our labours wee may continuallie pray se him with the band of his holie Angels By death he deliuereth vs from danger and therefore to arme vs against the feare therof it pleased the holie spirit to cal death a sleepe by the which being dispatched of all aduersities wee are brought to our graues therein to lie as it were in a soft featherbed and in a sweet sleep abiding the comming of Christ our lord whe● hee shall knocke at the bedd● and cal vs vppe to liue for eue● with him and his holye Aungels Death therfore doth not swalow vp our bodies thogh for a time they must lie in the bellie of mother earth For death is a sleepe and is vnpossible as it is that a whole man being in a sound sleepe should not wake vp againe euen so vnpossible is it that a Chrystian shoulde continue in Death for euer And as for this sleepe it is but a shorte sleepe for the daye is at hand and the time of iudgmente draweth neere when dead bodies shall arise and the earth shal render them vp that be in her that meeting and appearing together with our beloued friends and set vpon the right hand of his blessing wee may as liuely members be fully knit in our body Christ Iesus So that death is but a sleepe and a shorte sleepe out of the which we and al our brethren sisters and friends that are departed in the Lorde shall rise more fresh than euer we were to leaue this fraile and earthie bodie and to haue it made like to the glorious bodie of Iesus Christ. And who now would feare death or who should grudge at the Lorde for castinge vs asleepe Death is a sleepe the earth is the Christian mannes featherbed where he must lie● till the trumpet shall sound to awake him and call him vnto iudgement Who wil murmur againste this necessitie or rather againste this mercie for mercie it is that we die but for a time or rather sleepe for a time where of merit we shuld die for euer And therefore vnles by your gronings and sighings you wil exclaime against the mercy of the Lord by the which you are saued doo not feare Death or murmur against him but bles him with father Iob and thank him hartily that he hath granted thee thy daielye petition wherein thou praiest sayeng Our Father which art in heauen thy wil bee doone deliuer vs from euil For as for the first his will is doone whensoeuer any man dieth The verie farthing sparrowe can not fall without his prouidence the heares of our head can not perishe without his will much lesse dieth anie man without his will whoe far surpasseth all farthinge Sparrowes So that to wishe them aliue that are departed in peac it is to wishe that God his wil were not doone and what is that but to wishe that GOD were no God For if God bee God his wil is iust and muste needs be doone But as for many they will acknowledge that the will of God is doone againe that hi● wil was iust in calling for their children whome hee had but lent them for a time and yet will carrie a biting sorrowe in their hearts and so wil they go neere to bringe death vppon themselues But to such mourning mothers I saye Why doo you mourne this life is a warfare death is asleepe Why do you mourne this life is short by condition and ful of myseries
in the kingdome of glory Fourthly let all couetous persons looke vpon mee and amend their euill liues For as I came naked into this world so did they and as I carrye nothinge with mee but my winding sheete euen so shall they Their riches the pelfe of this world shall they leaue behind them which they haue gathered in paine and hourded vp with greedie minds Oh you hungrie lions you are alwaies gaping for y e prey you are euer hungrie and neuer satisfied get you neuer so much by hooke or by crook by violent iniurie or biting vsurie But looke you vpon me For an eln of earth now shall serue mee and so must it serue you whom nothing may suffice in this world Sorrowe therefore and amende in time For you were not borne to gather worldelye substance but to serue poore Iesus who of God made himselfe poore to enrich you You were not borne to continue in this world No you haue no continuing citie heere but you must looke for another euen Heauen whence you are nowe exiled and therefore you must seeke the things that be aboue Your conuersation must be in Heauen You must not tie your harts to the earth and hourd vp the pelfe of this world lest the verie moths and rust of your tresure cry for a plague vpon and against you in the daie of vengeance For die you muste one day and be as I am and so rest in the bellye of mother earth vntil the day of accoūts when God shal rewarde euerie man according to his deserts Fifthlie let all enuious persons and euil willers beholde my hart let all bloodshedders looke vpon my feete all backbiters slanderers and curssers marke my toong all robbers and Vsurers view my handes all couetous persons note my winding sheete all selfelouers and proud men gaze vpon my face and hollowe eies let all men looke vpon me amende their liues for as I am euen so shall they be Sixtly let al Christians look vpon me courtiers and countrey men highe and lowe rich and poore yoong and old noble and vnnoble all let them looke vpon mee and remember their end Die they shal al this 〈…〉 l remember that they may neuer sinne Let all swearing belly gods al selfelouers men or women that monstrously disguise chast nature and paint their bodies which are stinking toombes of their seelie soules with intollerable vanities let al that care for beawties hewe looke vpon mee and iudge of theyr owne vanitie and condemne themselues least they be iudged of the Lord. For their broydered hayre their faced and defaced apparell theyr superfluous lasings their sumptuous Veluetes and silks their golden caules their wrought clothes their ringed fingers and their costlie fare in this worlde which Lazarus wanteth they are all vanitie neither shal they redeem them but to earth they shall and vanish with the vapour They shal al sleepe with me and they shall be one daye no better than I am worms meat stinking carcases duste and ashes they shall be whatsoeuer they doo appeare to the foolish world Kinges and princes magistrates and subiects schollers and maisters rich and poore al may looke vpon me For I am able to teache them a lesson which they forget dailie That earth they are and vnto earth they must with mee one daie and noe man knoweth howe soone Disdaine not to learne this at me for I teach you the truth which one day you your selues shal approue to be very true Seuenthly let all mourning mothers sorrowing friends lette them giue ouer weeping and vnchrystian wailinge For that cannot helpe them because it grudgeth and complai neth againste the will of God but rather let them bee merrie and reioise For behold this life is a warfare euen a continual warfare as Iob calleth it and death is a sleepe a sweete sleepe so that by it I rest from my labours I am deliuered from daunger to safetye from labour to ioye from trauel to rest from paine to pleasure and lie in the earth as it were in a bed till I must rise to iudgement This is the lucky estate of them that are dead in the lord And therfore did father Simeon desire to departe in peace and Paule counted hymselfe a wretch because hee was not deliuered from this bodye of sinne So that you haue no cause to mourne for your friends whoe by deathe are passed beyonde death euen to life to liue with GOD and to see him face to face euen as hee is But rather you haue cause to reioyse because by death they are taken into ioye to be where Christe Iesus is The dead man is but a sleepe hee is not dead but for a time and at length he shall awake euen by the sounde of a trumpet and crie of an Archangell to see his redeemer in heauen where he with thee and thou with him and the Heauenlye armie of Angels saints mailiue for euer Looke vpon me and remember this al you that mourne for the death of your friendes For blessed am I and thrise blessed This worlde is an exile Heauen my naturall countrey and so by death I am deliuered frō exile and heerein I am verie happie This present worlde is euill in heauen are ioyes that passe sense and conceit And so by death in the Lorde I am freed from euil and placed in ioye and heerin I am happie This world is no continuing citie but another that is heauen which when I liued in faith I looked for so that by death I am set in a permanent place and heerein am I happy This life is a pilgrimage hea uen my home and so by death of a pilgrim I am made a citizen and heerein I am happy To conclude by death from earth to heauen from men to Angels from warre to peace from paine to pleasure from griefe to euerlasting gladnes from vanitie miserie to perpetuall felicitie I haue passed in peace herin I am happie So that death is not to bee feared nor yet to bee lamented but rather welcome in ioye of spirit whensoeuer it commeth And for this are al Christians bound to render hartie thanks vnto the Lorde that hath turned the cursse into a blessinge and by his pretious death vpon the crosse made death no deth but an entrie to life a passage to ioy a deliuery from miserie For this blessing blessed be the name of the Lorde and let al people say Amen Imprint these few lessons in your memoryes and engraue them in the tables of your harts And thus farwel A Lodge for Lazarus Wherein the poore and friendlesse are exceedinglie comforted in spirit against all kinde of calamities incident to this temporall and miserable life made by the sayd E. H. THere are two sorts of pilgrimes in the worlde some are rich and some are pore Though the earth be the Lordes and the riches thereof his owne possessions though al men be his subiects haue deserued the like condition of life yet to blase his
desperation noe I wil not For the sunne of mercie can disperse the thick myst and great cloude of mine iniquitie the parching beame of thy sunne O Lord is not onlie able to calme but also to drie vp the angrie floud of sinne and so to dash the ship of Satan that diuelish pirat against the sands So that no storme of the Diuel shal ouerturne mee no raging blaste of sinne shall dismaie me no thundercracke of biting conscience shal sinke the little barke of my weake faith which is grounded vpon a rocke and ouercommeth the world Indeed if I were left to my selfe then were there noe waie but sinkinge and shipwracke but thanks be to thee O gratious god for it thou hast not left me to my self to wade in the Gulfe of desperation but thou hast spred foorth the beames of thy mercie and by the heate of thy charitie dryed the gulfe and kept mee from danger to thee therefore bee al glorie Amen The 4. Morning praier THe glorious facc of the sunne which sheweth it selfe casteth his beames ouer the whole world I take it for an argument and earnest penie of thy good wil towarde thy children in the number of whome I account my selfe though cheefe of sinners and not worthie to lose the latchet of thy sonnes sh●●e For if we enioye suche a benefite in this strange countrie togither with thine enimies then what ioyous sightes what store of thy goodnes shall wee reape in our natural countrie the blissefull land of Canaan where we shal not behold this worldly sunne and eie of the world but thee euen thee good Lord face to face the sunne of glorye and onelie starre of maiestie Such ioyes O Lord shal we haue in the beholding of thee as neyther eie hath seene nor eare hath heard nor hart euer conceiued Such ioys I say as passe the reach not onelie of man but also of Aungels and archaungels to esteeme of Blessed are the doore keepers of this house of ioye where thou O Lorde the sunne of righteousnes doost most clearely spread foorth the beames of thy diuine maiestie Ah! how long shal I liue in prison how long shall I iournie in this bodie of sinne before I see thee Lord let thy kingdome come Come Lord Iesus come I beseech thee Amen The 1. Euening praier O Lorde it is of mercie without merite that I am a branch of the vyne Iesus that I am thy house and temple of the holie Ghost It is of iustice that thou haste appointed thine house to be a place of praier and of dutie therefore that we should pray vnto thee For thus O Lord I thank thee that thou hast made mee thy childe to lodge thee and I acknowledge that of dutie I am bounde to serue thee But giue me O Lorde the grace of thy spirite to conduct mee in the waie of thy wil clense or create a new hart within me that I may be a fit lodging for thee and yeelde vp the sauourie sacrifice vnto thee which thou requirest of euerye Christian I meane the sacrifice of prayer the sacrifice of the heart which sauoureth sweetelie vnto thee And at this time in hope of the assistance of thy spirit 〈…〉 thee that as thou 〈…〉 cie couered me this day vnder thy winges of safetie so thou wilt defend and keepe me this night from storming Sathan who is woont not onlie by day but also and that especially by nighte to vndermine man when his senses are fettered in bandes of rest But I doo hope good Lorde that as I am then most vnable to withstande the buffets of Satan so thou wilte be most readie to succour me partlye bicause thereby thou shalte vnlocke the rich chest of thine infinite mercie and partlye because thou louest euerye thinge which thy handes haue made I will laye me downe therefore in hope of thy protection to whom be al glorie Amen The 2. Eueuing praier O Moste mightie and wise God powr into me aboundantlie the oile of thy grace vnfetter my stammering toong that I may vtter and vnrippe the strings of my blind want hart that I may sufficrentlie conceiue the infinitenes of thy fauour vnto me But what shoulde I saie of thine infinite goodnesse which thou haste shewed vppon mee where shall I beginne or where shall I ende to discourse of thy mercie I was nothing and what did mooue thee to make ●●e a manne endued with reason and whie not a tree a frog a beast I am brought to a nonplus O Lorde what shall I saie I did disgrace thy goodnes and doo deface by my dailie sinnes the image of innocencie so that I was not onely borne wrapped in damnable estate but also daily incur the danger of dam nation and yet doost thou vnderprop mee in the promised seede in that blessed seede of Abraham euen thine own and one only beloued sonne Iesus Christ by whom thou hast redeemed mee My bodie and soule were maruelously eclipsed for want of grace and are dailie filthied in the puddle of iniquitie the reward whereof was death But what mooued thee I being a cast a way euen thine vtter enimie to wash and bathe me in the streame of thy sonnes pretious bloud I cannot tell good Lorde it was thy mercy to thee therefore bee the glorie both now and euer Amen The 3. Euening praier O Good GOD the sun is gon downe the web of this day is spun almost and night is at hand After day suc cedeth night after light darknes after faire weather a 〈…〉 die firmament and frowning element There is a myst 〈…〉 locked in this good God for thereby thou doest lesson vs of our mortalitie Our birth and life is like the daie our Death is like the night as the day perisheth so dooth our life vannishe with the vapour and as night succeedeth the daie so death followeth life the tearme and period of these our daies ô sweet Iesus of thy mercie beat this lesson into my head and roote it firmelie into my heart and take away the vaile from my minde that I may not onelie know and acknowledge but hourelye remember that I am mortall For it would bee a bridle to restraine and keepe me from raunging licentiouslie and a spurre to incite mee to liue holilie all the continuance of this my pilgrimage Thy spirit hath spoken it saiyng Remember thine end and thou shalt neuer perish Giue mee therefore thy grace that I may remember faithfully the night of this my bodye when I shall sleepe in the bosome of the earth til y e trumpet shall sound cal me to iudgement Help mee Lorde before this night Lord saue me or else I perishe Amen The 4. Euening praier O Louing Lorde of labouring and laden heartes looke downe with the e●e of thy pittie see the altar of the crosse where thy sonne thine onelie 〈…〉 is slaughtered 〈…〉 ther of heauen his 〈…〉 bored his head crowned with thornes his thirst quenched with vineger his side wounded and streaming bloud attend
appearance of the sunne in fulnes of comfort He desired to se the day but could not see it which is nowe paste wherin the sonne of God hath opened fully the storehouse of ioy and yet beeing wearie of the burthen of his bodie and willing to forsake it as a most stinking prison house without feare of death he crieth out Oh how long shall I lie in this prison Paule ioineth hands with father Dauid euen Paule that notable Organne of the holie Ghost who saide of himselfe It is not I that liue but Christ that liueth in mee Hee that in body saw the Lorde and knew that as a vapour his life should vanish so he in a small space should suppe with his mayster Christe in heauen after his ascension yet carriyng about himselfe this case of the soule accounteth himself wretched and therefore cryeth out Oh wretch that I am who shal deliuer me from this body of sin As if hee shoulde haue saide I knowe that the time will come when men will faint in faithe and broch infidelitie when this life shall bee more loued than wisely lothed this bodie more esteemed than godlinesse wil suffer I knowe foolish parentes will be so be witched with the immoderate loue of their children that they wil grudge at the will of God when he calleth them and sorrowe and sighe a long time after their departures which is both sinne and follie But I tell them that they ought to reioise bicause they are rested from theyr laboures bicause they are passed from Death to life because they are blessed For wretch O wretche that I am who shal deliuer mee out of this body of sinne The bodie which you haue lost is but a bodie of sinne it is but a prison of the soule as father Dauid speaketh it is but a burthen of the soule so that by Death they are deliuered from sinne to safetie from imprisonment to libertie from a yoke of myserie to endles felicitie and therefore oh wretch that I am who shal deliuer me from this body of sinne Paule indeed knewe that this world was an exile and Heauen his contrey that he was a pilgrim this world but an Inne heauen his home nay at a sight of his owne Countrey when hee was rapt hee saw at his owne home whence by sin hee was banished in Adam such ioyes as eie neuer sawe nor eare heard nor heart euer conceiued These are the ioyes which shal endure for euer for number vnmeasurable for durance perpetual and without end or period And therefore let euerye Christian bee readie and willing in ioy of spirit to welcome death in token thereof learne to crie out with Paule Oh wretch that I am who shal deliuer me from this bodye of sinne Lette vs account our selues wretched as long as we carry this weede of earth aboute vs vntill our soules bee vncased and wee deliuered from this body of sinne But if examples will not bee of force to schoole vs yet let nature speake and preuaile The seconde causes whereof you are made are the foure elements which concur to the constitution of euerye mixt creature and being euer at combat doe also naturally worke the shipwracke of the same according to the common axiome rule of nature The causes of corruption are all one with the causes of gene ration and therefore vnlesse we wil denie nature and be vn thankful to God for our creation we may not in anye case feare death which is mothered vpon nature our common and generall mother But if neyther example nor Nature will or can preuaile yet let the authoritye of our Heauenlie Creatour and his wisedome compell vs to welcome death and to accept willinglye the condition of our bodies Our bodies and soules God created he made them by the power of his almightie hande and hath lente them vnto vs but for a time to vse til mother earth require the bodie and he our soules For as of earth wee came so into earth wee must returne againe therefore vnles we will be vnthankfull to nature and rebellious to God wee must bee willing to paie our debts vnto him least if we doo it not he cast vs into prison til we haue paid the vttermost farthing So much for thy bodie Now consider thy soule As thy bodie is a prison so is thy soule during this pilgrimage a prisoner as it is a body of sin so is thy soule lodged in a most stinking prison as it is of earth earthy so is thy soule an exile from heauen heauenlie ther fore to feare death it is to feare the deliuery of thy soule from prison which is meere follie it is to wish a stinking lodging and a filthie cage to dwell in and euer to carie it about thee which is a very harde and extreame misery it is to wish thy continuall banishmente from the ioyefull realme of heauen thy natural countrey which is extreame madnes So that vnles you wil be counted foolish wretched carelesse and mad who are willed to be as wise as serpents you muste in no case feare death which is the best ghest that euer came to the godlie For now there is not cōdemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus but blessed are the dead that die in the Lord. The second weapon Consider thy life IT is short vncerteine and miserable It is short for man that is borne of a woman hath but a shorte time to liue the daies of man are the dayes of an hyrelinge yea winde and nothing as father Iob telleth vs. A man in his time is but grasse and flourisheth as a flower of the field For as soone as the wind goeth ouer it it is gone and the place thereof knoweth it no more as the prophet Dauid teacheth There is a time to be borne and a time to die And man is like a thing of naught his daies passe away like a shaddowe It is the proclamation of the Lorde vttered by Esay that al flesh is grasse and al the glorie of man as the flower of grasse And it is tolde vs by Paule that heere we haue no continuing cyttie but wee seeke for one to come This is it which is shaddowed vnto vs in sundrie similitudes Saynt Iames sayeth Our life is euen a vapour that appeereth for a little time and then vanisheth away Our daies on the earth also are but as a shadowe there is none abiding They are like a bubble in the water like a weauers shuttle like a smoke they are like a thought soone conceiued and soone ended Dailie experience dooth teache vs thus muche For wee see that by some storme or other the greene apple falleth before the mellowed fruite the lambe is brought to the slaughterhouse as wel as the sheepe the chicken is killed for the broath as wel and sooner than the cock yoong men passe awaie as wel as old our daies are short our life is as the shadowe Now therefore reason with me Shal we feare
mercy and to open his iudgementes and iustice vnto the world it hath pleased him to blesse som with store of his goodnes and to punish others with the wante of his temporall blessings Thus with pouertie he beateth the poore to declare his iudgement against sinne and the ritch man hee storeth with aboundance to the manifestation of his vndeserued mercie By these his benefits vpon the ritche and these his scourges laid vpon the poore hee crieth out to them Sinne no more alluring the one partie by faire and gentle the other by sharp and bitter meanes vnto safe repentance The rich man he maketh his deputies on earth or rather the stewards of his familie or rather the paterns of his mercie to take pitie vpon the begger when he craueth reliefe euen as he hath taken cōpassion vpon them who neuer deserued it And that they may vse them selues as shewers of his mercy hee hath promised that they shal alwaies haue y e poore with them this we see at this daye What a band of beggers be in euery place the poore doo swarme in euerye corner the fatherles and widowes yoong and old of all ages infinite doo grone and crie for very neede Som want cloth to couer their naked bodies some haue not meate to mittigate their hunger some noe drinke to ease their thirst some lie vnder hed ges in steed of lodginges some are lame and cannot go some are blind and cannot see some are deafe and cannot heare some are dumbe and cannot speake some are sicke some are sore of all people to the iudgement of the worlde most miserable and therefore doo they seeme to make this complaint to God our Heauenlye father O Lorde thou hast created vs thou hast framed vs we are thy handiworke and thou the potter that madest our grandfather Adam of the moulde of the earth Was thy goodnesse such to make vs when we wer not gentle Lord and wilt thou beate vs nowe thou hast made vs O Lord where is thy mercie is the eie of thy pitty dim med are the eares of thy woon ted goodnesse sealed what Lord is the hand of thy fauor shortened is the riuer of thy goodnesse dried vp Shal we hunger nay shall wee hungerstarue for want of thy blessinges what now good Lord thy sonne taught vs to praie Our Father Are we thy children and thou our Father Oh! where is thy fatherlie prouidence for beholde O piteous Lord we are borne to nothing besides skin flesh and bones we haue nothing in this world We post from place to place run from towne to towne wee goe from house to house we cry for releefe in thy name we aske it for thy sake but alas good Lorde wee can get nothing If we be strong though wee haue charge of children we are whipped we are stocked wee are imprisoned and howe not abused if wee bee lame dum deafe sicke or sore we may cry but alas charity is frozen where one heareth hundreds doo stop their eares and are deafe at our sutes O Lord charitie is drowned the best friend which we shuld haue hard hearts doo reigne the stoutest enimy that we can haue with this enimie we are assaulted almost in euery place alas for pitty pitty sweet lord is our request haue mercy vpon vs. Looke vppon Lazarus our king and capteine behold Lord he commeth to the rich mans gate there he lieth there he crieth Crums crummes he craueth to ease his hunger but he cannot get them dogs haue them but Lazarus cānot haue them The dogs come to Lazarus and licke his sores but Diues hath no feete to carrie him no tongue to laie the playster of comfort to his earnest sute no hand to helpe him not a crum to feede him Beholde Lorde doggs are better vnto vs than Diues nay they are in better case than we are for they haue the crums that falles from their maisters table but alas Lazarus cannot come by them O Lorde now where is thy wonted mercie shall Lazarus want shal he want the crums of breade to ease his hunger what shal he crie for them shal hee not haue them shall he shout but shall hee not bee heard what good Lorde shal hee die for hunger and Diues walowe in pleasure What Lord hast thou loste thy name god which soundeth as much as good thou art called Deus quasi Dans and yet shall Lazarus wante bread to refresh him This complaint of the poore man dooth gnawe him nay sometimes it quyte deuoureth him But to lay a salue of comfort to this sore of Lazarus O Lazarus why doest thou weepe why doest thou crie out whie doest thou seeme to blame the Lorde he hath appointed Diues as a father to regard thee But what dooest thou come to his gate dooest thou craue charitie art thou denied it the Lord commanded it therefore is the Lord instified when he is iudged But Diues hath abused his benefits and therefore shal he answer for it Let this be thy cōmfort let this be thy lodge to reste in from all complaints that one daie God who is charitie shal iudge the worlde the greatest scourge that Diues shall haue Then shall hee say as accounting that not doone vnto him which was not doon vnto you when I was hungrye thou gauest me no meate noe not the crums that fell from thy table when I was thirstie thou gauest me no drink when I was naked thou didst not cloath me when I was in prison thou didst not comfort me when I was harbourles thou didst not lodge mee giue an accoumpt of thy stewardship Then shal he crie out that hee neuer saw him hungrie or thirstie or else he would haue refreshed him not imprisoned or else hee would haue visited him not lodgles or else he would haue harboured him But this is all lies and therefore will he say vnto him Nescio I know thee not Departe as cursed into euerlasting fire where shall bee weeping and gnashing ofteeth Come hither crieng Lazarus thou that criest and showtest out vppon the Lorde and vpon the tyrannie of worldelings art thou sicke art thou sore art thou deafe art thou dumbe art thou naked what hast thou no place to laie thy head in come hither for here are pallaces of pleasure to pastime in excellente turrets of ioy to banket in and lodgelesse of infinit comfort to harbor in For what haue you not hadd meate when you haue craued it or drinke when you haue asked it haue you beene in prison and not visited sicke not comforted sore not eased naked and not cloathed wanderers and not succored Behold in your behalf Christ will iudge the rich and mercilesse gluttons of this worlde and in the daye of reuelation you to your ioyous conquest and to their vtter shame shall testifie beare witnes against them This is the first lodge of comfort But yet there is another besides this enter into that Behold when you asked reliefe it was Christ that asked and
is better to be crossed than not crow ned it is better to bee beaten than neuer to be chastised For God receiueth no childe but whom he scourgeth But yet thou criest Oh my life is miserable is it myserable then lodge in comforte For miserie is the high waie to felicity Thou muste bee buffeted if thou wilt be saued for he that will liue godlie in Christ Iesus must suffer persecutions I am the waie sayth hee But what was his waie to Heauen A crosse was his waie vnto the crowne and thus woulde hee lead thee to immortal glorie What saiest thou nowe Lazarus hast thou anie thing to complaine of I hope these lodges of comforte doo please thee But if they doo not yet harken a little Is thy life a castle of misery because thou art wrapt in pouertie art thou a wretch of this world because thou art cloathed in sores dooest thou sing of nothing but calamitye because health faileth thee or store of temporall blessinges why then reason with me What if thou hadst the riches of Diues his health his wealth his garners his treasure hys lands his cattell yet vanitie of vanites crieth the Preacher and al is vanitie Vanitie what Vanitie of vanities nay what is all vanitie ritches health treasure pleasure wealth is all woe nay is al vanitie vanitie what worth a nit naye worth nothing and yet art thou troubled The rich men of this world doe fall into manie temptations in so much that wher they shoulde bee gods on earth to helpe and to aide the needye when neede requireth they prooue themselues cages of vn cleane diuels Some lords of landes do begger their poore tenantes they racke and impouerish them to better their owne estate some hourde vppe corne for deere times to the vtter beggering of the poor some haue catching hands who though they haue enough yet are alwaies catching and snatching at the widowes mite Vsurers or rather robbers who haue inough but the rich who want it but the poor whie want they it but because charitie is deade and the rich are snared in deadly temptations But yet they will be riche they scrape and trauel for goods But what crie the proud and the rich men in the fift of wisedome Oh say they what hath pride profited vs or what hath the pompe of riches broughte vs Come hither Lazarus art thou poore desire not to bee rich for this is the vsuall song of such as are rich in this world Oh! what hath the pompe of riches brought vs doo not riches better a man nay dooth not the pompe of riches bring any commodity with it What can it not deliuer vs from dansing with death from the gnawing worme from the bed of earth no though wee were as beautifull as Absolon as long liued as Methuselah as eloquent as Cicero as subtile as Aristotle to end as riche as Cresus yet we must needs become wormes meate turne to dust and ashes How now Lazarus what if thou hadst courtlye palaces to lodge in excessiue plentie of al thinges euen the pompe of riches what should they auail thee nothing yea nothing and yet is pouertie a burthen vnto thee It is the will of God Lazar that thou shouldest be a Lazarus and it is thy dailie praier that his wil be doone and it is his will to saue all men But what is it his will that thou shouldest bee poore and art thou not merrie It is his wil to saue thee nay is it he that can only saue thee nay is he woont to saue vs by crossinge vs that wee shoulde enter into heauen by manie tribulations and wilte thou not yet lodge in comfort Nay what doest thou praie that the wil of God be doone if thou praie for it as it standeth thee vpon so thou dooest wish it Now his will is to beat thee with pouertie thou praiest for it thou wishest it What now dooest thou wish it and yet art thou sad and pensiue Men are woont to ioye yea and to reioyse when they haue their wishe but thou hast it and wilte thou bee sorie The Lord saith nay the Lord sweateth it that He wil not the deth of a sinner and death is the due wages of thy sinnes the which of iustice he might paie vnto thee but hee will not of mercie Wil he not thy death which is due vnto thee and yet doost thou complaine of pouertye which is his will to laie vppon thee let this bee thy lodge of comfort that his mercie is our safetie and that his will is nothinge else but his mercie yea though hee doo beat and buffet vs neuer so much And to perswade vs in this point who are so incredulous of nature from time to time it hathe pleased him to scourge his children or rather to scour the vessels of their heartes the lodge place of his holy spirite from the dregs of iniquity Caine was an heire he possessed al hee was the childe of this world but Abel the child of God hee had his name of vanitie his end was to be mur thered he receiued his deaths wound euen by hi 〈…〉 〈…〉 wne brother Looke vpon the whole colledge of Saints and wee shall see some imprisoned with Ieremie some be headded with Baptist some stoned with Steuen som crucified with Christ Iesus lapped in lothsom sores wrapt in bands of vtter extremitie with poore Lazarus notwithstanding Diues the world ling wallowe in all health and wealth How nowe Lazarus looke vpon thy brethren be thou comforted yea if thou haste been rich euen as riche as Iob if thou hast sat on the pinnacle of pleasure and mounted vpp with the highest trees if thou haste flourished like the glorious lillie and yet vppon a sudden wither awaie if thou hast fallen from the top to the foore of a hil that is from prosperitie to aduersitie and become a bare Iob yet beholde the pallace of comfort I am sure that my redeemer liueth and that with these eies I shall see him saith Iob. Whoe was this Iob a riche man he was he had plentie of al thinges GOD had blessed him with children and vpon a sudden all is gone Oxen Camels children and al. His own friendes doo forsake him hee wadeth in wo and sicknes and yet these clubs can not batter him downe but stil he climeth to the lodge of comforte saying I am sure that my redeemer liueth and that with these eies I shall see him What though this earthye masse our body this dustie tabernacle bestormed and tossed with the winter blastes of this world what thoughe our bellies feel the gnawing worm of a plaining stomach our backes want cloth to couer it yet is heere a lodge of comfort which by faith wee must take possession of euerye one sayeng with father Iob I am sure that my redeemer liueth and that with these eies I shall see him Though God scourge mee yet as a father to correct mee not as a iudge to condemne me for I