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A17051 The vvay to true peace and rest Deliuered at Edinborough in xvi. sermons: on the Lords Supper: Hezechiahs sicknesse: and other select Scriptures. By that reuerend & faithfull preacher of Gods word: Mr. Robert Bruce, for the present, minister of the Word in Scotland.; Sermons upon the sacrament of the Lords Supper Bruce, Robert, 1554-1631.; Bruce, Robert, 1554-1631. Sermons preached in the Kirk of Edinburgh. aut; I. H., fl. 1617.; Mitchell, S., fl. 1614. 1617 (1617) STC 3925; ESTC S105939 298,483 380

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at his pleasure why is it not lawfull to craue it Indeed Iohn in his 12. Chap. 25. ver seemeth to gainsay this where he saith He that loueth this life shall lose it This knot may be soone loosed There is a loue of this life which is commendable and there is a loue which is worthie of reproofe whereof Iohn speaketh to wit an extraordinarie loue and such a loue whereby we place our whole felicitie in this life not looking for a better after this So this loue is damned by Iohn The other loue which is of God is whē we are readie to lay downe our life at his Maiesties feete and seeke the prorogation of our life for no respect but for his glory as this King did as he sheweth clearely in the end of his owne words in the 18 and 19 verses Thus farre concerning the petition So if we respect God and his glorie we may seeke this blessing Alwaies ye see in the greatest extremitie the onely comfort that he hath is the testimonie of a good conscience And this ought to be our stay when we are threatned of God either with plague or any other calamitie Well as I said in the beginning if it were possible that the Lords threatnings could make vs to haue recourse to him that he might cleanse our consciences in time we should haue as great comfort in our trouble as this King had Would God he would giue vs melting hearts Lord worke this in you Sir that as he hath honoured in your byrth so ye may honor him by your doings in your gouernment The Lord of his mercy giue vs hearts to craue this Lord giue vs hearts to sigh for the things we cannot amend Lord giue vs grace to haue recourse to Christ Iesus and by his mercy to enter into that City for without it there is nothing but swine and dogs nothing but Papistrie and idolatrie Let vs I say haue recouse to this God who is onely able to preserue both Church and Countrie To this God be all honour praise and glorie for euer and euer Amen THE SEVENTH SERMON VPON THE 38. CHAP. of the Prophecie of ISAIAH preached in the presence of the Kings Maiestie The text 4 Then came the word of the Lord to Isaiah saying 5 Go and say vnto Hezekiah Thus saith the Lord God of Dauid thy Father I haue heard thy prayer and seene thy teares Behold I will adde vnto thy dayes fifteene years 6 And I will deliuer thee out of the hand of the King of Ashur and this City for I will defend this City IN the describing of this Kings disease we obserued first the manner and kinde of the disease We noted secondly the time when it tooke him We noted thirdly the greatnesse of this disease And last of all we marked his behauior vnder this disease As to the kind of the disease we marked it to haue bene a pestilent kinde of byle like vnto the botch of Egypt a byle of the worst kind that could be in those dayes So it pleased the Lord to exercise the patience of his tender seruant suppose he had an entire liking of this King yet it pleased him so roughly to handle him Vpon this we marked that the fauor hatred of God should not be esteemed by any externall thing in the earth suppose plagues and afflictions be common both to good euill yet the cause from whence they come is not common the end whereunto they tend is not common The Spirit of God assureth vs that this kind of exercise is the onely way to purge our iniquity By this kinde of exercise the sinnes of Iacob are remoued Then let no man iudge the woe of his brother by reason of affliction Secondly we marked the time when he tooke this disease we noted this time to haue bene the 14. yeare of his reigne shortly after he was deliuered out of the hands of Senacherib So he is not so soone deliuered from one fearefull warre but he falleth in the hands of a terrible plague And here we gathered that the life of a good King is a continuall griefe and a continuall tentation so that the issue of one trouble is the beginning of a greater and their whole life is as it were a continuall vexation So it pleaseth the Lord to exercise the patience of his owne to the end he may engender a bitternesse of this life into them that this life being bitter they may seeke for a better for the Lord feedeth not his owne as slaughter oxen No but he holdeth their backes vnder continuall crosses that by this they may learne to haue their mindes aloft that they may learne how to vse the world and all these trifles beneath to wit as they may serue them to the life to come Thus for the time As for the greatnesse of the disease we painted it forth by two circumstances First by nature it was deadly for there was no force of nature that could preuaile over it Secondly the seruant of God by a denunciation assured him that it was deadly and this aggrauateth highly the greatnesse of this disease Vpon this denunciation we tooke vp a generall lesson concerning the promises and threatnings of God to wit that in all his promises and threatnings there is a condition annexed which either is expressed or perpetually to be vnderstood So it is here for suppose the Prophet vsed the simple forme of denunciation yet it was not to bring him to despaire but that he might the more earnestly seeke grace and mercy at God Lastly we marked his behauiour vnder this disease and we found that suppose the plague threatned him on the one hand and God terrified him on the other hand yet in this extremity he maketh his recourse to him that terrifieth him It was an easie matter to haue retyred to him when the King of Asshur terrified him But this is a wonderfull triumph of faith that the Lord appearing to be his enemy yet he maketh his recourse vnto him This he could not haue done except he had bene sustained by the testimony of a good conscience it is not possible that he could haue retyred to God that is a consuming fire in a guilty conscience except he had bene vpholden by the testimony of a good conscience hauing this testimony he knew that this threatning was to amend him and not to slay him in word and not indeede Vpon this we gathered this obseruation Blessed is the man that is not condemned in his owne conscience for if we cannot escape the condemnation of our owne heart how much lesse can we be able to escape the condemnation of God who made the heart for The Lord condemneth no man but him whom his conscience first condemneth so the Lord hath placed this conscience here to resemble the iudgement which is to follow after For whom the conscience condemneth assuredly the Lord condemneth And whom the conscience with the warrant of the word approueth no
question the Lord approueth Then the the lesson we gathered was this All office-bearers ought so to behaue thēselues in this life that in their death they may haue the testimony of a good conscience for it is not possible that the conscience can testifie well except in time he take vp a new trade of liuing except you keepe your hands free of other mens sinnes And therefore I exhorted all inferiour magistrates superiour and in speciall the supreme that the Lord by his spirit would so rule your conscience Sir that ye may keepe your selfe free from other mens iniquities Thus farre we proceeded in our last exercise Now followeth the comfort that the King being placed in this extremity did finde the Lord sendeth him comfort from heauen The forme and manner of the comfort is set downe in there verses which I haue read but the circumstances are more particularly set downe in the 2. King 20. chap. Alwayes this order is kept in these verses First in the 4. verse is set downe the circumstance of time when this comfort was offered and vpon the circumstance of time the circumstance of place where he was when he receiued this comfort may easilie be gatherd Besides this the persons the Author the giuer of this commission the Minister and bearer are noted Vnto this verse before that he come to the comfort he vseth a preface in the end of this preface there is a narration that the Lord had heard the kings prayer had seene his teares In the third place he propoundeth the comfort And last of all we haue the confirmation of this proposition by a wonderfull signe and miracle from heauen Then to come backe to the 4. verse he touched the circumstance of time very obscurely when the King receiued this comfort for it is said Then came the word of the Lord. This particle Then is relatiue to that time which is more chearely set downe in 2. King 20. This then is to be vnderstod when the Prophet was in the middle court when the word of the Lord came vnto him and commanded him to stay look how much space there was betwixt the Kings bed where he lay and the second hall as great space is there betwixt the denunciation the recalling thereof He was not as yet passed the second hall when the word of the Lord came vnto him and commanded him to go backe and to recall that same sentence in a moment with one mouth which before he pronounced now he commandeth him to pronounce the contrary This is a wonderfull change in such a suddainnes and vpon this suddainnes there are many notable things that offer themselues worthy of consideration First of this suddainnes marke this lesson we see how pithie and effectuall the prayer of the King hath bene this prayer is so effectuall that in a moment it moueth the great God to reuerse that same sentence which he had pronounced that which heauen nor earth nor any other creature was able to alter he maketh the prayer of his owne seruant to call backe Beside this his prayer purchased health of bodie length of dayes a sure and prosperous estate and afterward all this is confirmed by such a wonderfull miracle the like whereof was neuer seene nor heard of before Looke then if the prayers of the faithfull be not wondrous effectuall It is not possible that all these effects can flow of the pithinesse of prayer seeing there is nothing so weake in it selfe but it cometh of the free nature of God whose nature is to be mercifull and it is the nature of mercie to haue pitie vpon miserie This is the reason why our prayers are in an instant of time heard And here also we may learne how well God answers to the names that are giuen him Exod. 34.6 where he is called exceeding mercifull slow to anger readie to forgiue he vttereth himselfe to be a God of great compassion and exceeding in mercie toward vs in such sort that in an instant sometimes he granteth our requests The last thing that I marke vpon the suddainnes is the strict and entire coniunction that is betwixt the faithfull soule in earth on the one part and God in heauen on the other part This coniunction is so entire and strict that it maketh God as present to our prayers as if heauen and earth were ioyned together This coniunction maketh his Sonne Christ to be as neare in time of neede as if he had placed his throne of grace in the bed where we lie To prooue this ye see how speedily his prayer mounteth ye see how swiftly the answer returneth and with such celeritie all this matter is done as if there were no distance betwixt heauen and earth So the lesson is this The faithfull soule hath God as present as if heauen and earth were ioyned together There is no distance of place no distance of roome that can make God to consume time in doing of his will but where faith is it maketh him so present that incontinently we get our dispatch Craue not therefore ô Papist any other presence then this and examine not this presence by naturall reason for where faith hath place naturall reason must ceasse Examine not these things by reason of nature which are aboue nature Thus far concerning the circumstance of time Now of the circumstance of time I gather the circumstance of place where the King was when he receiued this comfort For if the Prophet was commanded to turne backe when he was in the second hall it behooueth the King to be at home lying on his owne bed And this by the way is a great signe of the fauour of God toward him that his sicknesse taketh him at home where he might be best eased without the trouble of others This is by the way Now as to the third circumstance The Author of the comfort no doubt was God for there is no good gift but it floweth from him The minister that he vsed is his owne Prophet He vseth the ministerie of his Prophet in applying of the comfort not that he was forced to vse the ministerie of man in doing of this thing but so it pleaseth the Lord to ingage and binde himselfe to his instruments that he will not worke beside them so it pleased him to binde him to his preached word that beside his word he will not worke And therefore he calleth his word a Sword a fire an hammer and an arrow and that from the diuerse effects that he worketh by his word As he bindeth him to his word so he willingly bindeth him to his seruants who are the Ministers of his word to worke by their ministerie In such sort that he will not be bound to the word pronounced by euery man and woman but by them whom he sendeth And therefore they are in an error who thinke that by their owne reading of the Scriptures in their priuate houses they are able to get as
whole world he bringeth him into such dangers that whereas nature and naturall meanes could haue no place he deliuereth him so miraculously by such wonders to make all the world to stoupe Another end was this that this good King might be honored of all the world whom God so honored For good reason it is that those whom God so honoreth they should honour These haue bene the two ends why God hath wrought so many miracles in the person of this King For ye heard how wonderfully in the night by his Angell he destroyed a hundreth and fourescore thousands of persons this is a wonderfull thing and now when he had fallen in the hands of a terrible plague so that there is none able to helpe it yet the Lord healeth him extraordinarily and he confirmeth it by such a wonder that the like was neuer heard of or seene before In deede we reade in Iehoshuashs time that the Sunne was made to stand in the firmament but to go backe by so many houres and degrees it was neuer heard of nor seene before Looke then if these signes serued not to the honor of God and vnder God to the honor of his seruant The profite that is to be gathered of signes properly called signes instituted by God stands in the representation for there cannot be a signe properly except it represent in some measure the thing signified by it There must be some conformitie and proportion or else it is not a signe as Augustine saith But this signe whereof we speake is miraculous and supernaturall and therefore hath no such relation as Sacraments haue But yet there may be a proper and secret relation espied in it which is this for it appeareth well that God would let vs see and let the King see by the working of this signe that looke how easie it was to him to bring backe the Sunne which had but two houres to his going downe to that same place where he rose in the morning as easie it is to him and farre easier to bring backe the Kings life which had but two houres to the time of death to a fresh morning of youth againe and to a ioyfull age It is as easie to God to worke the one as the other And so we may take vp the end why these signes and such like wonders was wrought by Christ in establishing of the new couenant The end no doubt was to strengthen our faith which we haue alreadie receiued by the preaching of the Gospel for signes are not giuen to create in vs faith they are not giuen to begin our coniunction with Christ it is the preaching of the Gospell that beginneth this coniunction Signes are giuen as seales to enlarge and confirme this our coniunction And as the Apostle saith well Heb. 2. signes serue to two two ends first to beare witnesse to the truth secondly to confirme the faith of the beleeuer This ye see clearely in our Sacrament the Sacrament of the Supper This Sacrament was not appointed to make our coniunction first with Christ we haue not entry vnto Christ by this Sacrament but it maketh vs to possesse Christ whom we had alreadie in some measure It maketh vs to possesse him more fully and extendeth the bounds of our narrow heart that he may be the more largely receiued of vs so of this signe the King hath great comfort I grant there is greater comfort to be had in the word then of the signe and greater comfort to be had of the working of the Spirit within then of either of them yet it is as true that euery one of these bringeth their owne comfort There is greater comfort to be had of the word then of the signe and yet the signe hath the owne comfort There is greater comfort to be had of the Spirit then of the word and yet the word hath the owne comfort And there is no word able to vtter and far lesse any heart able to receiue that comfort yea not halfe the quarter of that comfort which is prepared for them that loue God So this signe suppose there be not so great comfort vttered by it as by the word yet it hath the owne comfort Thus farre concerning the signe it selfe As to the third thing the manifesting of this signe it is not by the vertue or power that flowed out of Isaiah suppose he was an instrument for the text resolueth this clearely where it is said This is the signe of the Lord besides this it is certaine that there is no force nor vertue in any creature yea not in the diuell himselfe to worke any true wonder but in God himselfe onely For why there is no signe or wonder which is a true wonder but it passeth the force bounds and compasse of nature Therefore there is no creature able to worke any wonder For why they are bounded within the compasse and bounds of their nature and therefore as to all these wonders and miracles which are wrought by the diuell and the Pope his vicar they are false and lying wonders I say it not but the Apostle saith it 2. Thess. 2. that the coming of Antichrist shall be in the mightie power of the diuell in the which he shall worke false wonders and lying signes And as all the rest are false and lyes so these legs and armes which ye see in the entries and porches of their Churches are manifest lies and deceits of Sathan Now as to the manner of the working of this miracle it it is said in the 2. Kings 20. that it was procured by the Prophets prayer It is ●aid there that the Prophet prayed that the Sunne should be brought backe So the prayer of the Prophet preuented before it came to passe Now that same very thing which the Lord was purposed to do and promised to do yet he wil do it in such sort that he wil haue the Prophet first to aske it Now this letteth vs see clearely that there is no merit in our prayers there is no such force or worthinesse in our prayers as to merit any thing but the Lord promiseth freely and as he promiseth freely so he performeth it as freely Then wherefore will he haue vs to pray Because prayer is a part of the worship of God he will haue vs to feele what the want of benefits is he will haue vs exercised in this part of duty that when we get them we may vse them so much the more to his glory What the prayers of this Country specially the prayers of the Church of this towne haue purchased in the withdrawing of the Lords threatning and chiefly of the last threatning I meane that huge Nauie of ships I think now the manifest effects declare But what honour God hath gotten for it our manners since that time clearely testifie For if yee looke to the growth of sinne more ougly sinnes were neuer committed then since that fame ceassed So I say he is mad and voide of all
zeale or of force we shall be spoyled of it Thus farre concerning the second cause As to the third I shall touch it shortly and so I shall end The third cause is this he sayth he shall see man no more among the inhabitants of the earth Now what a cause is this This appeareth to be a very slight cause that he should be grieued at his death because he should see man no more For I am assured there were men in his daies whom he tooke no pleasure to see and whom he could not see without great griefe euen such monsters as are now in our dayes This generall must be restrained to this as if he would say I shal not see men that is faithfull men honest and obedient subiects to God and their King of whose company I had delight and whose protection I was I shall see these good men no more He had such a care of the Church and of the Christian subiects vnder him that in the very houre of his death he sheweth his compassion toward them and is grieued that they should lacke his protection in time coming Well the country is exceeding blessed that hath such a Prince who is endued with the care of his subiects and specially of the Church that in his death he is sorrie that they should be depriued of his protection And turne it ouer againe As cursed and vnhappy is that countrie who hath a King that hath no kind of care or respect of his subiects much lesse of Gods Church which is the best part of his subiects Therfore it is euery one of your duties that heare me see what it is to lacke this blessing to craue of God that he would distill his grace into his Maiesties heart which may moue him to take vp another manner of protection then hitherto he hath done Oh would to God it were so Thus farre for the exposition of the causes shortly In all these causes some things are worthy of praise and some things are worthy of dispraise for I stand not to iustifie him in them all They are worthy of commendation so far as they flowed from faith and tended to the glory of God and weale of his Church They are worthy of reproofe so far as they flowed from the foolish affectiō corruption of nature without the which none can be so long as we be in this life Then ye see the best goods that we haue to carry with vs of our owne is this corruption foolish affection No question Kings haue not this power to carry their iewels magnificenc● with them but surely they carry their vices faults of their gouernment with them which shall meete them And surely if this good King caried any of this stuffe with him much more shall other Kings And as it is in Kings so is it in euery of vs we shall all carry with vs vertues or vices If we cary vertue with vs then shal we haue a good conscience to meete vs there Then to end this matter prepare your hearts and make both hand and heart voide of the loue and affection of the world that your hearts being busied onely with the loue of good things ye may cary your hearts with you when the Lord calleth And as your eares are bent to receiue this word so let it be digested in your hearts that in your death I may see the fruites and effects thereof And seeing we must either cary with vs vertues or vices the fauour of God to mercy or the fauour of sathan to iudgement should not our whole indeuour be that these foule vices may be remoued out of our hearts and should not our whole study be that our soule which is holden so fast bound in the chaines of wickednesse may be set at freedome and liberty That we may haue melting hearts acknowledging that by the bloud of Christ our sins are forgiuen that through a stedfast faith in his bloud sure hope in his mercy we may seale vp that peace which floweth from the pacification purchased by the offering vp of his owne body Now when I see mine owne conscience pacified and my soule so washed from the spots of corruption that all my sinnes are forgiuen me am I not happy and this can neuer be except in your hearts ye be as attentiue as with your eares ye are to heare me But if this matter as it is heard by the eare so it were learned remēbred by the heart we should see greater profite in sanctification and newnesse of life this day then we do and death would not be so fearefull to many as it is For the ready way to eschue the feare of death is not to delay your repentāce but let the whole course of your life be a continuall repentance Happy is he that learneth this lesson and more then happy is he that followeth it and as vnhappy he that neuer practiseth it The Lord worke so with vs grant vs such increase of his Spirit that we may follow it and study to practise it in our life and conuersation The Lord grant this for the righteous merits of Iesus Christ to whom with the Father and the holy Spirit be all praise honour and glory for now and for euer Amen THE NINTH SERMON VPON ISAIAH CHAPTER 38. 12 Mine habitation is departed and is remoued from me like a shepheards tent I haue cut off like a weauer my life he will cut me off from the height from day to night thou wilt make an end of me 13 I reckoned to the morning but he brake all my bones like a Lion from day to night wilt thou make an end of me 14 Like a Crane or Swallow so did I chatter I did mourne as a Doue mine eyes were lift vp on high O Lord it hath oppressed me comfort me IN our last sermon welbeloued in Christ Iesus the Prophet assureth the King of his health by a wonderfull signe which was giuen to him The manner and forme of the manifesting of the signe was this The King seeketh a signe and the Lord granteth a signe vnto him and after the same manner that he sought a signe it was giuen to him Thirdly the Lord manifesteth this signe by his owne power and vertue without the support of any creature The King seeketh a signe not that he is distrustfull of Gods promise nor yet to tempt God as the wicked do but he seeketh a signe to strengthen his beliefe in the Lords promise He belieueth the promise yet his beliefe was weake and to strengthen his weake fai●h he seeketh the signe The thing that weakeneth his beliefe was this The Prophet in an houre and shorter space cometh to the King and proposeth two contrarie sentences Fi●st he saith to him Make thee readie thou must die in an instant of time he pronounceth the plaine contrarie and saith Thou shalt liue both these two could not stand Therefore he seeketh a signe to strengthen
he will praise him yea praise him in his song he shall praise him with his instrument and he shall praise him publikely in the house and congregation of the Lord because the benefit is publike he shall praise him in his bodie because he receiued the health thereof and he shall praise him in his soule because he is restored to the wonted ioyes thereof This I thinke be the meaning of the last verse The King in thus doing sheweth himselfe to be verie thankfull and if that good seruant of God shew himselfe so thankfull how much more should we whom he deliuereth notwithstanding we cast our selues headlong into our diseases by our owne follie But there is neuer a man so soone as the heauie hand of God is off him but he returneth with the Sow to that same puddle wherein he was with the dogs to that same vomit againe As to the praise I haue spoken of it before I insist no further but go to the last The last two verses are added to and as it appeareth appertaine not to the song but to the historie howsoeuer they are added to I will not dispute it hath pleased the Spirit of God so to do and so it should please vs. I haue spoken of the last verse of these two alreadie and will not repeate As to the first of the two ye see there is an iniunction giuen by the Prophet to the King to take a lumpe of drie figs and make a plaister and lay it vnto the byle and it shall be whole This iniunction is obeyed by the King Of this iniunction it would appeare that the Prophet playeth the part of a Physition rather then of a Prophet of God For this Simple which he biddeth him apply pertaineth to the Physition of the bodie so that it appeareth he rather doth the office of a Doctor of Physicke then of a Prophet Yet howsoeuer it would appeare so it is not so for the Prophet was occupied at this time in vttering of his commission in the which he doth nothing whereof he hath not a warrant Therefore in the same words he doth nothing vnbeseeming the part of a true Prophet and he hath his speciall warrant in this doing Now what is the reason when as the Lord might haue done this without any ordinarie meanes yet he biddeth the Prophet applie the same plaister He doth this no question for these three ends First to let the King see by this doing he would not haue his ordinarie meanes nor second causes be contemned And suppose he may worke without them yet he hath appointed secondarie causes to bring about his effect which he will not haue contemned The second end which was the chiefe end he saw that the Kings faith was but weake for the Prophet promised that within three dayes he should passe vp to the Temple and the Kings sore was not come as yet to a maturitie but raging on him so he thought this almost impossible and could scarsly apprehend the truth of this promise Now to support his faith he vseth an externall obiect For the more and the more pithie the obiects be the more our faith is stayed and confirmed Therefore in the Sacraments we haue so many obiects to our eye to our hands all to strengthen our faith And so he giueth him this meanes to strengthen his faith to assure him that it should come to passe which the Prophet promised The third end is to teach him that the Lord is the onely Physition as well of the bodie as of the soule he hath command ouer all remedies and so he may stay or further the effects thereof as he pleaseth and consequently he hath command ouer all diseases This is certaine and therefore except the blessing of God concurre with these seconda●ie things there is no physicke can auaile or profite And it is so to be thought of Physitions as of the husbandmen and their husbandrie Ye see when the husbandmen haue done their whole exact trauell so that they haue left nothing vndone that in them lieth yet if the Lord giue not increase they are disappointed of their trauell Euen so suppose Physitions propound remedies to be applyed with all diligence yet if the Lord blesse not the worke if he abstract his effect or power from the second causes it is not possible that the patient can be cured So he teacheth the diseased and all Doctors of Physicke these two lessons First he teacheth the Patient to desire of God that he will giue leaue to the meanes to worke some good effect and let the Doctor craue on the other side that the Lord would blesse his worke that it may redound to Gods glorie and the comfort of the Patient And where God is begun with and ended with no doubt but the worke shall haue a good issue Therefore in all troubles let euery one haue recourse vnto God and in God vse his creatures and so God shall blesse you and the creatures both in his Sonne Christ Iesus To whom be all praise honour and glorie both now and euer Amen THE TWELFTH SERMON VPON THE 76. PSALME BY M. ROBERT BRVCE IN THE Church of Edinborow at a thanksegiuing to God for deliuery from the tyranny of the Spaniards The text 1 God is knowne in Iurie his name is great in Israel 2 For in Shalem is his Tabernacle and his dwelling in Zion 2 There brake he the arrowes of the bow the shield and the sword and the battell Selah 4 Thou art more bright and puissant then the mountaines of prey 5 The stout hearted are spoyled they haue stept their sleepe and all the men of strength haue not found their hands 6 At thy rebuke ô God of Iacob both the chariot and horse are cast asleepe 7 Thou euen thou art to be feared and who shall stand in thy sight when thou art angry 8 Thou didest cause thy iudgement to be heard from heauen therefore the earth feared and was still I Haue chosen this song which is a song of praise and of thansegiuing Welbeloued in Christ Iesus as a song that is most meete for our purpose and that agreeth best with the businesse and holy action that we haue in hand this day For in this song the Psalmist praiseth God for his singular benefites bestowed from time to time vpon his owne people As namely by reason he hath chosen them to be his people and selected them out from amongst all the Nations on the earth to be a peculiar inheritance and possession to himselfe he hath bequeathed vnto them his Oracles which he had done to no other company vnder the Sunne beside her he hath made his residence with her which he hath done with no other society of men in the earth he hath taken the defence of her against whatsoeuer sort of enemies which he hath done to no other sort or conditiō of men In such sort that she hath found from time to time experience of his
Spirit of God offer the contrarie occasion will not be a thousand times more ready to comfort And therefore the Lord in his mercy giue you grace Sir that ye may haue that testimony of a good conscience to vphold you without the which there is no true comfort But alas when I looke on the misery and calamity of this Country I am almost out of hope for why Your subiects haue gotten such a custome of sinne and euil doing whereby they haue drawne on such an habite and hardnesse of heart that nothing is pleasant to them but that which is displeasing to God and nothing displeasing to them but that which is pleasing to him What is it I pray you that custome wil not bow What is it that custome will not alter What is it that continuall vse will not harden There is no potion so bitter-tasted in the beginning but if thou vse it a litle while it shall appeare not so bitter continue yet further in it it shall appeare nothing bitter at all go forward yet in it and in the end it shal become sweete suppose in the beginning it were most bitter Euen so it standeth with that miserable man that casteth his whole delight in ill doing that he hath such a custome in euill doing that nothing is pleasing to him but whi●h is displeasing to God and nothing displeasing to him but that which is pleasing to God For the mischieuous custome of euill doing banisheth light out of the minde· And as it banisheth light out of the minde it so banisheth all feeling out of the conscience and in stead of light cometh darknesse and in stead of feeling cometh hardnesse Now the conscience being hardened the minde being darkened what remaineth but a desperate and an obstinate condition like to the diuell who is said to be bound in chaines vnder perpetuall darknes This is wonderful that such continuall thundering of these threatnings is not able to moue them But it is no maruaile for there is no words will moue them yea it is impossible to the bloody man or oppressor to refaine from time they be once giuen ouer to sinne For from time the sinne hath gotten superiority in them as Peter sayth it commandeth them more absolutely then a Prince would command his subiect for sinne hath made them such slaues and they are so carried with impotency of their affections that they dare no more refraine from the seruice of sinne then a good seruant from his masters seruice I pray God that he so multiply the Spirit of gouernment vpon you Sir that holy vnction of Kings that we may once see this great insolency that breaketh out in so great contempt condignly punished that ye may keep your conscience pure and holy Thus much concerning the thing that is to be eschued in Ionas Now followeth another lesson to be learned in the person of Isaiah ye see Isaiah is ready to do what the Lord commandeth When the Lord biddeth him blow the blast of iudgement he bloweth it When the Lord biddeth him come he cometh when the Lord biddeth him go he goeth Then the lesson is this We that are the Trumpetters of the Lord we must not blow as our affections and men bid but as the Lord biddeth vs we must not sound the retreate when we should sound the march nor we must not sound the march when we shauld sound the retreate We must not sound iudgement when the Lord biddeth sound mercy and we must not sound mercy when the Lord biddeth sound iudgement But now the sinnes of the Land craue that all pulpits sound iudgement Therefore iudgement must be sounded There is no way to auert this iudgement but that euery man according to his calling put to his hand to reforme according to the bounds and power that is committed vnto him And the best way were that ye that are Noble men concurre with your Prince and his Maiestie concurre with heart and hand to repaire the ruines of this Country Thus farre for the second lesson Now he subioyneth the Narratiue In the Narratiue he sayth to the King That the Lord hath heard his prayer and hath seene his teares as if he would say Suppose thou lay in thy chamber turned thee to the wall yet I heard all the words that thou spake and I saw all the teares that distilled from thee And suppose it was not in the temple yet all was manifest to me This is a great comfort Then the lesson in generall is this In all places and to all estates the Lords eare is euer fastned to the cryes of his owne he seeth their teares and he heareth their words And suppose he be not alway as ready to dispatch them as he was to Hezechia yet he leaueth them not but he susteineth them in the meane time by the comfort of his spirit and in the end he granteth them their petition so farre as is sufficient And if it be according to his will he giueth them more then they sought If this be true that the Lords eare is present to heare the prayer of his owne and his eye to see their teares will not the Lord be moued at the cryes of them that are oppressed with these bloudy men It is wonderfull that no threatning nor denunciation will moue these men but if euery teare be powred in the Lords viole and euery word heard of the Lord how much more shall euery drop of bloud be in the Lords viole What is the reason that these bloody men will not giue eare The reason is this they haue layed this ground and vpon this false ground they build all their false conclusions with Atheists that there is not a God and vpon this ground they build all their mischieuous workes But I would demand of these men that haue layd this ground if there be not a God whence floweth this feare and terror of conscience this trembling and vnquietnesse which gnaweth them if there be not a God how is it that they are so tormented Suppose they haue banished knowledge out of their minde feeling out of their conscience all that should feare them out of their heart yet they haue euen this feare trembling in their soule And it is not possible to banish this feare do what they can yea the more murthers they commit the greater is their feare So where men thinke to make themselues sure by slaughter it is the high way to cast themselues in greater vnsurety and make their heart more fearefull then it was From whence come these torments but from God forewarning them of Hell and these are the beginning of hell to thee in this life Which if God would let off the all full measure they would not faile to put violent hands on themselues thinking thereby to get an outgate to their soule for they thinke if the soule were out of this bodie it should be in a better case where in the meane time
they passe to ouglier paines and greater torments Now all these torments and vglie paines which eate them vp mooue them not and except the Lord worke it they will neuer be moued he hath commanded all to heare his word and he hath promised to worke by his seruants who vtter his word and therefore I say these bloudie men and oppressors they ought to be here present that the Lord if it be possible by this meanes may call them backe by repentance that they may preuent that terrible iudgement whereof they haue but little feeling as yet But ere they go they will feele it better Now I come to the proposition and there I shall end he propoundeth the comfort shortly in three points two of them are according to the petition The third is more then he craued health of body agreeth to the petition prorogation of dayes agreeth to the petition a glorious estate a sure a prosperous estate came not in his minde and this also he getteth he not onely will deliuer him out the hands of Ashur but deliuer the whole Citie And this promise of a prosperous and ioyfull estate is more then he thought on or looked for Of this there might be many things marked but I leaue them And this only I obserue The Lord hauing to do with this King to make him thankfull in times comming he granteth him more then he sought and prouoketh him as it were after this manner saying What euer thou lackest seeke it of me Lackest thou health of bodie seeke it of me Lackest thou prorogation of dayes seeke it of me Lackest thou a sure glorious and prosperous estate seeke it of me There cannot be a more affable kinde of intreating then is betwixt God and the King he desireth him what euer he lackes to seeke it of him Except Kings humble them to honour God hold them in his continuall fauour it is not possible that they can look for these things of him But by the contrarie if Kings humble them to serue God hold them in his fauour there is no honour nor dignitie that he hath prouided for thē by birthright or otherwaies but if he see it serue to their good in despite of the world they shall haue it But if they fall from the seruice of God and cast themselues out of his fauour they shall lose dignitie birthright priuiledge of nature and all other things themselues beside Examples of this we haue in the Scriptures Cain being Adams eldest sonne and hauing the birth-right so long as he kept him in the fauour of God he was in hope of it but from time he lost the fauour of God by the slaughter of his brother Abel he was banished from the face of God and lost his birthright with all his inheritance Ismael in like manner was Abrahams eldest sonne yet because he was not in the fauour of God he gat no part of his inheritance Esau was his fathers eldest sonne yet because he fell from the fauour of God his brother was preferred to him his birthright helped him not Now the generall doctrine is this It is onely the fauour of God that maketh men to enioy priuiledges dignities or whatsoeuer they haue right to if they keepe the fauor of God it is not possible that they can be disappointed So the exhortation is easie vnto you Sir as your maiestie thinketh to possesse that which the Lord hath appointed for you so looke that you keepe you in the fauour of God There is no way to keepe the fauour of God but to purge your countrie of these two Idolatrie and bloud for vnder these I comprehend all the sinnes committed against the two tables Let this be done and it is not possible that ye can be disappointed of any thing that may serue for your wealth For it is the fauour of God that shall make you to enioy not onely your possessions but all other priuiledges that ye are borne to The Lord of his mercie worke it in your heart Sir that we may see this as an argument that ye are in his fauour when ye shall put to your hand to reforme this countrey and so make it knowne that ye feare God and loue his people This being done suppose men would be inconstant and lie yet God is not as man not as the sonne of man saith Balaam that he should lie Depend on him The Lord worke it in our hearts that we may earnestly craue it and obtaine it that your heart being established by grace ye may obey his holy will The Lord grant it for Christs sake to whom be all honour praise and glorie for now and euer Amen THE EIGHTH SERMON VPON ISAIAH CHAPTER 38. 7 And this signe shalt thou haue of the Lord that the Lord will do this thing that he hath spoken 8 Behold I bring againe the shadow of the degrees whereby it is gone downe in the diall of Achaz by the Sunne ten degrees backward so the Sunne returned by ten degrees by the which degrees it was gone downe 9 The writing of Hezechiah King of Iudah when he had bene sicke and was recouered of his sicknesse 10 I said in the cutting off of my dayes I shall go to the gates of the graue I am depriued of the residue of my yeares 11 I said I shall not see the Lord euen the Lord in the land of the liuing I shall see man no more among the inhabitants of the world IN our last lesson welbeloued in Christ Iesus we heard the manner and forme of the comfort that was offered by the Prophet vnto the sicke King we heard when this comfort was offered we heard where it was offered we heard the person that was the giuer we heard the person that was the bearer we heard the preface which the Lord vsed to make the King attentiue we heard the narratiue shortly and the parts o● the comfort propounded As to the circumstances we noted where the Prophet was when he receiued this commission he was in the middle court he was not as yet past the second hall when the word of the Lord bad him stay and go backe againe At this time he is commanded to recall his former sentence and with that same mouth to pronounce the quite contrarie No further distance is there betwixt the pronouncing of the one sentence and the other then is betwixt the Kings bed and the second hall Looke what space the Prophet spent in going betwixt the Kings bed and the second hall as great space is consumed betwixt the one sentence and the other Vpon the suddainnesse we marked sundrie notable things and first we marked the great force of the Kings prayer to wit his prayer is so effectuall that it maketh the Lord to recall his owne sentence in one instant of time That same thing which heauen and earth and all the creatures therein could not haue moued him to do that the prayer of his seruant
lying in the farthest part of England if ye haue a good title to it the distance of the place cannot hurt your title so I say the distance of place hurts not my title and my right that I haue to Christ. But though he be sitting at the right hand of the Father yet the title and right that I haue to him makes him mine so that I may say truly this Christ is my property Then Christ is not made mine because I fetch him out of the heauens but he is mine because I haue a sure title and right to him and hauing a sure title and iust right to him the distance of place how farre soeuer it be can no wayes hurt my title nor right but where-euer he be he is mine because I haue a right and title to him Yea not onely haue I a title to him but this title is confirmed to me For as I get a title to him in the word and if I got not that title to him in the word I durst not come to the Sacrament so in the Sacracrament I get the confirmation of my title I get the Seale which confirmes my title Then to come to the point Christs body is sitting at the right hand of the Father and yet he is mine and is deliuered to me because I haue right to his body be it where it will he was borne for me giuen to mee and deliuered to me So distance of place hurts not the surety of my title as propinquity of place helpes not the surety of the same Though Christ would bow the heauens and touch thee with his body as he did Iudas yet this could not helpe thee for if thou hast not a title to him thou darest not call him thine So it is not the neerenesse nor proximity of place that maketh Christ mine It is onely the right that I haue to him I haue right to him onely by faith So by faith onely Christ is made mine But they thinke they haue gotten a great vantage of vs if we be so farre from Christ as the heauen is from the earth but this shall be answered by Gods grace I haue a title to his bodie his bodie is distant from my bodie yet his bodie is not distant from me that is from my soule I say his bodie and my soule are conioyned It is a strange ladder that will reach from the earth to the heauens yet let me tell you there is a cord that extendeth from the earth to the heauens and coupleth me and Christ together and this is onely true faith By true faith Christ though he be in the heauens is coupled and conioyned with me who am here on earth I will shew you this by a similitude Is not the bodie of the Sunne in the firmament It is impossible for you to touch the bodie of the Sunne yet the bodie of the Sunne and ye are conioyned How By those beames that shine on you by that light that shineth vpon you Why may not the bodie of Christ then though it be in the heauens be conioyned with me that am on earth namely by the beames by the light and gladnesse that floweth from his bodie My bodie and Christs bodie are conioyned by the vertue and power flowing from his bodie which vertue and power quickneth my dead soule maketh me to liue the life of Christ to begin to die to my selfe and euer the more I die to my selfe the more I liue to Christ. This coniunction now is the ground as I told you of all our felicitie and happinesse and I haue made it cleare to you at this time so far as God hath giuen me insight Alwaies ye see this coniunction is brought to passe by two speciall meanes by the holy Spirit by faith If there be no other meanes but these two what needest thou a carnall or a visible coniunction Faith is inuisible and the Spirit is inuisible therefore thou canst not see it nor take it vp with the eye of thy bodie The power of the holy Spirit is so subtile secret and inuisible that thou canst not perceiue it nor take it vp with the eye of the bodie and it will worke great effects in thy soule or euer thou perceiuest his working In respect therefore that the meanes of this coniunction are so subtill secret and spirituall why thinkest thou to get a sight of this coniunction with the eye of thy bodie why imaginest thou such a carnall coniunction as this which would do thee no good if thou hadst it Knowest thou not that the Spirit that coupleth vs and Christ is infinite so that it is as easie for the Spirit to couple vs and Christ how far distant soeuer we be as it is easie for our soules to couple our head and the feete of our bodies though they be distant Then seeing this coniunction is the ground and fountaine of all our happinesse and seeing this ground of happinesse is so substill and so spirituall what is your part Remoue all your outward senses remoue all your naturall motions remoue your naturall discourses and your naturall reason and follow the sight and information of the Spirit of God Craue that it would please him to illuminate your vnderstanding that by the light of his Spirit ye may see clearely the spirituall coniunction Except the eye of the Spirit be giuen you to perceiue this spirituall coniunction it is not possible that ye can get any insight in it But if the Lord of his mercie will bestow some measure of his holy Spirit vppon you out of question ye shall soone come to the vnderstanding of it and ye shall thinke the time happie that euer ye heard this word Except ye haue some part of this Spirit it is not possible that ye can be spirituall That which is borne of flesh and bloud will remaine flesh and bloud except the Spirit come in and make it spirituall Therefore ye must be borne againe of the Spirit ye must be borne in the bodie of Christ his Spirit must quicken you This is called the quickning and liuing Spirit of Christ by Iohn And so soone as the Spirit cometh what doth it It chaseth away darknesse out of the vnderstanding whereas before I knew not God now I see him not onely generally that he is a God but that he is my God in Christ. What more doth the holy Spirit It openeth the heart as well as the minde and what doth it there Those things whereon I bestowed the affections of my heart and imployed the loue of my soule are by the working of the holy Spirit made gall to me he maketh them venome to me and to be as deadly hated of me as poyson He worketh s●ch an inward disposition in my soule that he maketh me to turne and flie from those things whereon I imployed my loue before and to imploy it vpon God This is a great perfection Alwaies in some measure he make●h me to loue God better then any other thing
whether God Angell or man Secondly whosoeuer he be that maketh them holy by what meanes and way he maketh them holy And by the consideration of these two we shall come to the consideration and right viewing of the sanctification of the Elements For the First we say that God is onely he that may make a thing which was common to be holy So we say that God by his will and ordinance declared and set downe in his word hath made the things that were common by his appoyntment to be holy As for the way and meanes whereby they are made holy it is the word of God the institution of Christ the wil of Christ declared in his institution that maketh them holy For the preaching and opening of the word institution of Christ le ts vs see that God hath made these things holy and not onely that he hath made them holy but letteth vs see an holy manner how they should be vsed in what place at what time with what heart and to what end So it is the will Christ declared in his institution whereby the things that were common before are now made holy There are two other things also which make the same elements holy and these two are vsed in this institution There is prayer and thanksgiuing which make the creatures of God holy to our vse whereas otherwise if we receiue the good creatures of God like dogs and thanke him not for them it is a sure token that they were neuer sanctified to our vse By prayer we obtaine grace and strength from God to vse the creatures and this whole action holily and lawfully as it should be And therefore not onely in this holy action should we begin with God with inuocation of his name but in all actions in the world we begin in the name of God So it is the will of God that prayer and thansgiuing conioyned with the elements do make them holy All these three contained in the action of the Lords Supper make the Seales holy For beside the will of God declared in the institution in the Lords Supper we vse inuocation and in this inuocation we vse thankesgiuing The elements are not made holy by the word of God onely but by the vse of prayer and thankesgiuing which three are the onely meanes whereby these things are sanctified Now to expresse and lay forth the sanctification of the Elements The Euangelists and the Apostle Paul vse indifferently the word To blesse and to giue thankes and commonly they put the one for the other For ye may see that Marke and Paule vse the word Blesse Mathew and Luke vse the word to giue thankes and all in one signification And Marke himselfe in the 14. of his Gospell 22. verse speaking of the same action of the Lords Supper vseth the the word to Blesse and in the 23. verse he vseth the word ●o Giue thankes and both in one signification to let you see that the Apostle Christ himselfe and the Euangelists vse the word to Blesse and to Giue thankes indifferently to signifie the sanctification and consecration of the elements Except ye take the one for the other it will be hard to gather any good meaning out of the Apostles wordes for I remember the Apostle 1. Corinthians 10.16 sayth The cup of blessing which we blesse what is that I take the word to signifie as I haue said which we blesse that is which we sanctifie and prepare by blessing So to blesse and to giue thankes in the Lords Supper signifie no other thing but to sanctifie otherwise if ye take the word in another signification ye shall fall into an error and why God is said to blesse and man is said to blesse God is said to blesse when he giueth good things vnto his creatures for Gods blessing is euer effectuall and therefore he is said to blesse when he giueth good thing Man againe is said to blesse either priuately or publikely when he craueth blessing at the hands of God for any man when he blesseth in the name and at the commandement of God any person or people Now if ye ascribe blessing in any of these two significations to the cuppe it is amisse for we vse neyther to craue a blessing to insensible elements nor yet to blesse them in the name of God and God vseth to giue good things to the sonnes of men and not to insensible creatures Therefore we must needes vse the word Blesse in the third signification The cuppe of blessing which we blesse that is which we sanctifie and prepare by blessing Thus farre we vnderstand for the sanctification of the elements Now let vs see how they sanctifie the elements and what is the forme of their consecration so farre as I vnderstand of it it consisteth in these fiue words Hoc est enim corpus meum It standeth in these fiue words and in the whispering of them for if you whisper them not ye lose the fashion of incantation for the thing which we call sanctifying they call whispering and the whispering of those fiue words they call the consecration of the elements And when the words are after this manner whispered they presuppose such a secret and monstrous vertue to be inclosed in the syllables that the vertue and power which floweth from the words is able to chase away wholly the substance of the bread so that the very bread and substance of it is altogether destroyed by this power Secondly that this power which floweth from these words is able to fetch and pull downe another substance to wit the flesh and bloud of Christ Iesus that sitteth at the right hand of his Father and is able to put it within the compasse of that bread This is a strange and a great vertue that not onely will ouerthrow that substance but put it within the compasse of that bread The same fiue words whispered in this manner haue such a monstrous operation say they that they are able both to chase away the one substance to pull downe another and to put it within the compasse of that bread We altogether denie that there is such a vertue in these words for as I haue said before we denie not that the word hath a vertue but denie that there is such a vertue inclosed in the words we denie the qualitie of the vertue or that it floweth from such a fountaine For we grant that the word hath a vertue there is neuer a word that God speaketh here but it hath a vertue ioyned with it but we denie that this vertue is inclosed in the syllables in the whispering or pronouncing of the words for if there were such a vertue and power inclosed in the syllables by the same reason it should follow that there were a vertue in the figure shape of the letters that make vp the words Now there is no man will thinke that there is any vertue in the figure or shape of the letters and there is as
be applyed to our times Then I say praised be the liuing God our King is not diseased but surely his country is heauily diseased for so long as Papists Papistry remaine in it so long as these pestilent men remaine in it and so long as these floods of iniquity which flowes from the great men remaine there is an heauie iudgement hanging ouer this Country And in my conscience I cannot but look for a heauy iudgement vntill these things be remoued There is no great man but whatsoeuer liketh him he thinketh it lawfull And not onely is this in this part of the land but in all other parts of this Nation grosse iniquities are committed and the Church is made a prey to all men there is such disdaine and contempt of the word in the whole estate Except these things be purged I cannot looke but the Lord shall raise some if it were out of the furthest Indies to plague this land Albeit I doubt not but the liberty of the Church here and the sobs and sighes of the godly here haue delayed the iudgement from the whole land yea I am assured of it and therefore I pray God that he may so worke in your heart Sir by grace that ye may put to your hand to purge your part of the I le The Lord of his mercy establish your heart by grace that for no mans pleasure ye communicate with other mens sinnes Three maner of wayes we are said to communicate with other mens sinnes First when both with heart and hand we do one thing with them Secondly when we consent with our heart only Thirdly when we ouersee where we should reproue and forbeare where we should punish And in this way Magistrates are onely guilty Thus farre for the application Now I go forward to my text The last thing that we haue to speake of is the manner of the Kings behauiour vnder so terrible a disease we haue in the second three verses his behauiour liuely expressed As to his behauiour I speake onely of it as the text speaketh I doubt not but he reasoned otherwise and gaue other answers to Isaiah But I content me with that which the text saith Then in his behauiour we see he retyreth himselfe first to God by prayer and to testifie that he prayeth ●rom his heart it is said that he weeped bitterly Surely this is an euident argument that his prayer flowed from his heart was indited by the right Spirit for if God leaue vs to our owne natural spirit we neither know what to pray nor how to pray But as it is said Rom. 8.26 it is the Spirit of God that inditeth our prayer that raiseth these sighes and these sobbes that maketh our heart to melt in those teares that are pleasing to him So it appeareth here by the earnestnesse of his prayer that it flowed from the right fountaine and therefore it can not be but pleasing to God This prayer and manner of his behauiour assureth vs of two things first it makes vs certaine of his faith Secondly of his repentance I say it makes vs certaine of his faith For how is it possible that I can craue any thing at the hands of him in whom I trust not Or how can we call vppon him saith the Apostle in whom we belieue not Then Prayer to God is an euident argument that we trust in God So I say it is an argument of his faith and where faith is of necessity repentance must be for these two companions Faith and Repentance are inseparable As Peter testifieth in the Actes 15. chap. For so farre as the heart is purged so farre is the life renewed so faith and newnesse of life going together faith and repentance must also go together Then his prayer testifieth his faith his faith testifieth his repentance his repentance testifieth of the secret condition inclosed in the threatning and the condition being fulfilled the threatning can not strike So by this deduction it may appeare that suppose the Prophet denounced very strictly yet vnder the denunciation there was a condition which condition taketh effect in the King Thus far concerning his behauiour Now as to his gesture I shall be short in it It is said that he turned him to the wall he did this out of question for two respects First that he might weepe the more bitterly for it is said that he powred forth his soule in teares And so he desired not that he should be seene Secondly he turned him to the wall to the end that his eyes should not carry his minde from God For we know easily that when any of vs is making our prayer in any publike place there is no obiect that falleth before our senses but it will draw vs from that communing which we haue with God So it is necessarie for them that would pray earnestly to withdraw them vnto a secret place according as our maister commanded his Disciples to enter into their secret chamber Thus farre for his gesture As to the words of the prayer they are set downe in the third vers● in his prayer he suppresseth his petition for his petition is the prorogation of his dayes according to the custome of the godly men of old as Daniel 9.4 And in place of the petition he setteth downe the reason why his petition should be heard As to the reasons they are three in number The first is Remember Lord that I haue walked in thy truth Secondly I haue walked with an vpright heart Thirdly I haue done that which is good in thy sight In all these three it would appeare that he is boasting of his owne merits for the words appeare to be full of ostentation and pride But to answer to this the Lord measureth not ostentation and pride by words but by the heart from whence the words proceede A broken a contrite and humble heart is euer acceptable to him vse what forme of words you will And a proud hea●t is euer displeasing to him vse what forme of words it will Now what is he doing here he is not making a vaunt or bragging of his works onely he is shewing to God that howsoeuer his plague was great yet he had a good conscience the testimonie whereof vpheld him In such sort that suppose all outward things said that God was angry at him yet he could not be perswaded in his conscience but he was his friend And therefore in his whole prayer he reasoneth as though he would say after this manner Lord thou knowest that the prophane men of this countrie will thinke it an extreme curse that I shall die without children and by this they will esteeme the deedes to be accu●sed which I haue done before they will curse and damne the religion that I haue reformed and the order of thy house which I haue begun And yet notwithstanding I am assured in my conscience that I haue the warrant of thy Law in all that I haue done For I sought
not my selfe but thee onely therefore Lord deliuer me So this kind of reasoning commeth neither of ostentation nor of pride Now as to my selfe would he say when I examine my doings I find my conscience so pure that in all my proceedings I had a good warrant and in all my doings I sought not mine owne particular but thy glorie And therefore Lo●d remember me take not my life from me that I be not a stumbling blocke to the weake ones and a reioycing to mine enemies This is the onely thing whi●h we a●e taught here We see this good King when all worldly comfort faileth him and in his greatest extremitie he reposeth himselfe vpon the testimonie of a good conscience this is the onely thing that sustaineth him this is the onely thing that comforteth him and wherein now in the very instant of his death he hath to glorie Surely when I reade through the Bible I find that all the seruants of God in their greatest trouble had recourse to this testimonie of consci●nce Ye see Moses when he hath to do with Core Dathan and Abiram he ha●h recourse to the testimonie of his conscience Ye see Dauid when he hath to do with Saule he hath recourse to this testimonie of conscience Ye see Nehemiah maketh recourse to this Ye see Daniel maketh recourse to this 6.23 And the Apostle Paule 1. Cor. 4. maketh his recourse to this and saith I passe very little for your iudgment or any mans iudgement my glorie is the testimonie of mine owne conscience And the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes in his last Chapter I am assured saith he that I haue kept a good conscience in all things So go through all the seruants of God and ye shall see they haue had euer recourse to this testimonie of conscience and blessed is that man that i● not condemned in his doings by his owne conscience For if we are not able to eschue the condemnation of our owne heart how shall wee be able to eschue the condemnation of God who seeth all the secrets of the heart So that man is more then blessed that is not condemned of his owne heart For as to this conscience it is a faithfull pledge keeper the pawnes that it receiueth it rendreth of good turnes it giueth a ioyfull testimonie of euill turnes it giueth a bitter testimonie And suppose the most part of our deeds be now couered from the eye of man and her testimonie for the most part hid from our selfe yet there is a day coming which now is at hand in the which all these things that are now hid vnder darkenesse shall come to light and the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed The bookes of conscience shall be cast open and he that bringeth not in these bookes the discharge of his sinnes in register purchased by the bloud of Christ Iesus whereby our consciences are onely washen from these dead workes he that bringeth not this discharge with him to him shall his whole sinnes present themselues So that not onely shall he be iudged by the sentence of the righteous Iudge but his owne conscience which in this life foreiudged him shall cōdemne him there and all the Angels of God with his elect children shall iustifie his iudgement Therefore it is time we had now our discharge registred Now would God I might obtaine this of the office bearers in Church or Policie that they would now cast them in their life to haue the approbation of their conscience in the time of their death The Lord grant it to all them that seeke to serue him But specially the Lord make you Sir so to walke in your life that you may haue a ioyfull testimonie of your conscience in your death that being approued with your owne conscience and the testimonie of God within your conscience in the mouth of these two faithful witnesses your saluation may be sure not in your selfe but in the bloud of Christ Iesus whose mercie is on●ly our merit As this is desired in him so it is required in the rest of the office-bearers Lord grant that they may follow such a trade of life that in their death their conscience may make mention of their deeds to their ioy Thus far for this part of his behauiour Now resteth one thing to speake and so I shall end T●ke vp the manner of his behauiour vnder this disease he is straitned with the extremitie of his disease on the one side and with the Lords threatning on the other what doth he in this strait pinch He se●keth by prayer to the same God that strooke him and now by his P●ophet threatneth him This is wonderfull for if he had had to do with any other person as namely if he had had to do with the King of Ashur as before it had bene an easie matter to haue retired to God But now hauing to do with God and God apparently being his enemy it is wonderfull that he should haue recouse to God This is a notable faith in him for he hopeth against hope he runneth to that same God that smiteth him So notwithstanding that he threatneth him with death yet he runneth to him and he appealeth from his iustice to mercie in the merits of Christ he appealeth from God as a righteous Iudge vnto him as a Redeemer in Christ and his appellation is heard For as we shall heare hereafter by Gods grace he is healed Thus farre concerning his repentance Now as to the prorogation of his dayes the question might rise whether it was lawfull for him to craue it or not I shall touch it but in generall and first I say in Hezechias person it is very lawfull for he lacked posteritie and in this the promise of God had not taken effect in him and so it was lawfull for him to seeke the accomplishment of the Lords promise made to his father Dauid and also the reformation of the Church was but new begun the common-wealth was not as yet established and all these craued the presence of the King So if we looke to the particular in him it was lawfull I come to the generall it is lawfull at some times to seeke at God prorogation of dayes and my reason is this Length of dayes is one of the greatest blessings temporall that we haue as in that promise annexed to the commandement appeareth And as the Apostle in the 2. Chap. 27. to the Philip. when he maketh mention of the disease of Epaphroditus he saith No doubt he was sicke verie neare vnto death but the Lord had mercie on him and not onely vpon him but on me also So he counteth the prorogation of dayes a speciall mercie And there is no mercie nor benefit of God but it may be craued so that it be craued to the right end For we directing our life to the glorie of God and vsing it as Pilgrims and strangers seeking our home and hauing it ready to lay downe in the hands of God
great profite as by hearing proaching Yea suppose they say they can reade better then he can preach No reade as much as they will their reading shall neuer bring forth faith for it is by hearing that faith cometh and where the ministerie is and they contemne the hearing they contemne faith for faith cometh onely by hearing ordinarily Thus farre for the circumstances Now the effect of the comfort is set downe in three points the first two points agree with the petition the third is further then came in his minde to seeke The health of bodie is the first it agreeth with the petition Length of daies is the second it agreeth also with the petition The third is further then he could haue looked for and more then he sought what is that A sure estate a prosperous estate and a glorious estate promised to him during all the rest of his daies This was more then he sought Now as to the order that the Prophet keepeth ere he come to the comfort he vseth a short preface The words are these The Lord calleth on him and he saith Go to Hezekiah thus saith the Lord God of thy father Dauid This preface differeth in two points from the preface that he vsed in the beginning of the chap. First there is here mention made of Dauid which is not in the former and so oft as euer ye find mention made of Dauid in the beginning of any preface so oft let the singular fauour and mercie of God come in your mind And when euer ye see Dauid placed in any preface let Christ come in your mind because Dauid was a type of Christ. This mention of Dauid placed here is to let the King see that the readinesse of his comfort flowed from the Messias to wit Iesus Christ from whom all true comfort flowed and without whom there is neither comfort nor consolation He calleth himselfe the God of Dauid because the principall promises of grace were made to Dauid and his house and specially that promise concerning the Messias in whom all the rest of the promises are yea and Amen fully accomplished in him This is the first point of difference the second point wherein they differ is this in this preface he calleth Dauid the Kings father as if he would say The man whom I loue so well I see him to be thy father and thee to be his child and his sonne not onely by nature but by graces I see thee to be his sonne by faith And therefore the whole promise of grace made to him and his seede must properly appertaine to thee where otherwise if thou hadst bene his sonne by carnall propagation onely these promises of grace had no more appertained to thy person then they did appertaine to the person of Achaz thy father But by reason thou art not onely his sonne by nature but also by grace therefore the whole promise of grace appertaines to thee for as the Apostle saith Rom. 9. It is not carnall generation that maketh vs sonnes of the promise for not all that are of Israel are Israel in deede They are not all the sonnes of God that are the sonnes of the flesh but onely the sonnes of the promise are the children of God that is they that through beliefe in the promise of mercie become the sonnes of mercie and are made the children of God Then this beliefe in the promises maketh vs not onely sonnes to God but sonnes to Dauid and Abraham for following the footsteps of Abraham in his faith by imitation of his faith we become his sonnes Thus far concerning the words of the preface Of this I marke two or three things and first by these words ye see the Prophet stayeth not nor bideth not but holdeth forth his course till he be commanded of the Lord to stand and stay he hath a speciall command for him ere he returne This teacheth all Officebearers that in Gods errand no m●n ought to enterprise any thing at his owne hand but to haue the Lords own aduice ere he proceed to his worke we haue his aduice when we haue the warrant of his word The second thing I marke as soone as he is commanded to go he stayeth not but so soone as God saith the word he obeyeth he maketh no doubting he a●keth no reasons at God he taketh it not to his aduisement he maketh no opposition but incontinently he obeyeth and surely this is true that if euer flesh and bloud had any reason to haue repined Isaiah had reason at this time And why In a moment and with one mouth he was commanded to recall that seuere sentence which he had pronounced and to pronounce the contrary which might haue ingendered a wonderfull suspition in the Kings heart in respect of the suddainnes If Isaiah had bene as short and as angrie as Ionas no question he would haue asked a reason at God For Ionas was not commanded to recall his sentence neither was he sent in such suddainnes to call it backe but he seeing the words of his threatning not to come to passe therefore he fretteth and fumeth against God where if he had bene commanded in such suddainnes to go and recall his sentence ye may easily coniecture what should haue bene his part This perturbation that was in Ionas letteth vs see that he was ignorant of the nature of the threatnings of God For if he had vnderstood that in all the threatnings of God there is a condition annexed he would not haue taken it so highly And if he had vnderstood that the minde of God was not to cast off a sinner he had not taken it so angerly But being ignorant of this he falleth into this fuming and fretting against God So I say there is two things here to be noted one thing to be eschued of the teachers in the person of Ionas another thing to be followed of them in the person of Isaiah The thing that is to be eschued is this Ionas standeth so precisely vpon his reputation that he is exceeding angry that God should change his iudgement in mercie Now I say this fault would be eschued of all and specially of office-bearers and I am sure there is no office-bearer which hath the feare of God in his heart who would not reioyce exceedingly and be glad to see all these threatnings which from time to time are pronounced against these bloudy men all those threatnings that are pronounced against the manifest oppressors and against these sacrilegious persons I am assured there is none but he would exceedingly reioyce to see these threatnings turned in mercy Againe I am assured there is not a spirituall office-bearer that hath the feare of God in his heart who would not exceedingly reioyce to see all the threatnings and admonitions directed from this place to Magistrates of all rankes inferiour superiour and supreme turned in mercy He is more then vnhappy that is so inclined to threatning that if he see the
moued him to do Now beside the retraction the force of his prayer appeareth in the health of his bodie in lengthning of his dayes in giuing him a prosperous and sure estate and last in confirming it by such a wonderfull signe that the like was neuer heard nor seene before Iudge ye then what is the force and effect of the prayer of a faithfull man The second thing that I marked was this the wonderfull inclination that the Lord hath to mercie how well he answereth to his names and stiles whiles he is called a God of compassion a God of exceeding and infinite mercie The third thing that we marked on this suddainnesse was that strict and entire coniunction that standeth betwixt the faithfull soule on the one part and God on the other part to wit the coniunction is so strict that it maketh God as present to the faithful soule as if heauen and earth were coupled together Th●s coniunction by faith maketh Christ our helpe to be as neare in time of neede as if he had placed his throne of grace in the bed where we lie Ye see how swiftly the Kings prayer mounteth ye see how swiftly the answer returneth ye see in such a celeritie the matter is dispatched as if there were no distance betwixt heauen and earth Then by this it clearly appeareth that there is no distance of place that can make the Lord consume time in doing of his will Also there is no distance of place neither thicknesse of walls that can hold the Lords presence from the faithfull soule but he is as present to the faithfull soule as any corporall obiect is to the bodily eye There is no obiect so present to the bodily eye as the Lord is present to the soule Thus farre we proceeded in the first circumstance Vpon this we gathered and let you see where the King lay It behoued him to haue bene layed in his owne house And we shew also that this was a signe of the fauour of God that he should be diseased there where he might be best eased without trouble to others As to the giuer of the gift it is God for there is no good gift but it floweth from him As to the bearer it is Isaiah not of necessity for the Lord is not bound to any second instruments but of a voluntary and free obligation he hath obliged himselfe to vtter his power and to worke by them Here I wished you in my exhortation be diligent hearers of the word be not deceiued with your foolish conceits I will reade as good at home better I say the Lord will not worke by thy reading when thou contemnest the ordinary meanes he hath bound him to his instruments that by hearing faith shall come he will not worke by his Spirit except thou heare Heare the word therefore as long as the Lord giueth thee grace and continueth it He hath bound himselfe to grant faith by hearing and not by reading in contempt of hearing As to the preface we shew it differed from the former preface in two poynts First there was mention here made of Dauid which was not in the other and consequently of Christ in whom the comfort of the King stood and on whom all the comfort of the olde Testament is grounded without whom there is no true comfort Secondly in this preface he is called Dauids sonne not onely by nature but by grace and therefore the whole promise of grace made vnto Dauid iustlie appertaineth to him whereas otherwise if he had bene his sonne by nature onely the promises of grace had no more concerned him in particular then they concerned his father Achas But because by grace he was made the sonne of grace therefore the promises of grace iustlie appertaine to him Here we did let you see that it is not carnall generation which we draw from our parents that maketh vs the sonnes of God faithfull as they are but the generation of the promise in following the trade of their faith we are made the sonnes of our faithfull predecessors There was two things marked in the preface First the Prophet returneth not vntil he got a command The lesson is this to office-bearers in their calling to enterprise nothing in Gods affaires vntill they get his owne aduice The other thing we see in him a wonderfull and ready obedience to God For suppose the Prophet saw his threatning in an instant of time to be turned in mercy yet he is not angry but reioyceth to see the Lord worke so with this King Vpon this we gathered a lesson for teachers They should not be moued greatly when they see the Lords threatnings in an instant of time if it were possible turned in mercy I thinke there is none as I spake then but they will be exceedingly reioyced to see these threatnings which are threatned against these bloudy butchers against these adulterers against these oppressors and sacrilegious persons there is none I thinke but he will be exceedingly reioyced to see the Lord worke so that the Minister haue as great occasion to comfort as he had to threaten I thinke also that there is none that feareth God who will not reioyce to see the Magistrate who is the ouerseer and should take order with these bloudy men there is none but he will reioyce to see the threatnings which are iustly pronounced and shall as iustly light if they be not preuented to be turned in mercy But surely there is no hope of it for iniquity groweth so and it is come to such a maturity that surely the Lord from heauen will take vengeance on it if the Magistrate put not to his hand in time On the other part we learne of Isaiah to blow mercy when the Lord biddeth and to sound iudgement when the Lord biddeth for seeing the Lord hath appointed vs to be his mouth we must not speak what we please for so we are not the Lords mouth but our owne mouth So he that taketh vpon him to be his mouth let him sound as the Lord biddeth him In the Narratiue he saith he heard the Kings prayer And as he heard the Kings prayer so he heareth the prayers and seeth the teares of the oppressed of this land which the Magistrate should both heare and see And as he heareth them so he hath gathered their teares in his viole and in his owne time he will prouide a remedy Lastly he pronounceth three things vnto him health of the body length of dayes and a sure and prosperous estate which neuer entred in his minde to seeke And therefore I exhorted him that was present and you all what so euer ye want seeke it of God seeke it in Christ Iesus whether it be for the soule or body in him are placed full treasures for both if ye keepe you in the fauour of God and keepe you in his protection nothing shall hurt you And by the contrarie if ye lose his f●uour ye shall lose all Thus farre we proceeded in our
naturall light much more supernaturall who thinketh that the Lord hath taken away his hand suppose he striketh not Indeede he hath withdrawne his hand to let vs see the force of our prayers and to try vs how we would vse this benefite but seeing it is so highly abused if there were no other thing but the birth of iniquity wherewith the land is ouerburthened ere the Lord want any meanes to punish the committers and ouerseers of these iniquities he will rather punish the land from heauen immediatly or else make it to spue out the inhabitants For suppose the Lord spare yet he will not forgiue this contempt But this sparing is of the Lords benignity he letteth them hoord vp sinne against the day of wrath I insist no further in it Now followeth in order the Kings thankefulnesse vnto the Lord for the benefite which he hath receiued And forsooth this King is greatly thankefull and he hath set downe and left in register his song of thankefulnesse to testifie that he is not like to vs he hath set downe a notable song of lamentation and thanksegiuing that we reade of none better in any King except that which is in the 51. Psal. He hath set downe a song of lamentation to testifie his infirmitie and disease and he hath set downe a song of praise to testifie his thankefulnes toward God This song standeth of three parts In the first part he letteth vs see the great trouble and perplexity whereinto he was fallen what he said and what he did in his trouble In the second part he maketh a rehearsall of the greatnesse of ●he benefites that he hath receiued and promiseth to put his trust in him to make his dependance on God and on no other In the third part he letteth vs see that he is mindefull to be thankfull as long as he liueth and all his dayes to praise him and not to be forgetfull of him I thinke these be the three parts of the song Now ere we enter into the first part it is necessary that ye vnderstand the course of this Kings life and the manner of his behauiour in his whole life that marking the course of his life at least if ye will not follow the course of other common Christians ye may learne to follow a King Take heede then vnto the course of his life In the 14 yeare of his reigne he was threatned by the King of Ashur he was threatned by two sundrie Ambassadours and God his Master and he himselfe was in their face blasphemed After this in his great extremity what doth he He and the Prophet go to the Church and addresse them to prayer this is one part of his exercise And vpon his instant prayer what commeth to passe He purchaseth a wonderfull deliuerance and vpon this deliuerance what doth he He and the Prophet praiseth God So here ye see prayer and prayse are his chiefe exercises Now he is not so soone deliuered but he falleth in the hands of a terrible plague and death is so present sent to him that he seeth no outgate Now what doth he He and the Prophet both pray I doubt not What followeth vpon this He is deliuered What followeth of the deliuerance He and the Prophet thanke God So here also ye see prayer and prayse What further Vpon this deliuerance he falleth into pride ambition he braggeth of all his iewels and treasures as if he had conquered them by his owne industry What followeth vpon this The Prophet threatneth him Vpon this threatning he is humbled After humiliation the Prophet comforteth him and vpon his comfort he thanketh God and saith The word of the Lord is good but yet let there be peace and rest in my dayes Now take heede to the whole course of this Kings life and ye shall see his whole life to be nothing els but a falling and rising a praying and praysing of God continually For as long as we cary about with vs these decaying houses of clay as Iob saith are clogged with them yea as long as the dregs of iniquity remaine in our soules we shall be subiect to a continuall falling and rising by the grace of God and not of our selues Of the which this his continuall praying and praysing of God springeth He prayeth for strength in his battels and he prayseth God for his victory and deliuerance Now take vp the lesson and learne of a King what should be a Christians excercise that seeing this mortality wherein we dwell the corruption wherewith we are beset for our sanctification is but begun and very imperfect in this life maketh vs to slide and seeing we are subiect to daily trouble and our life is but a continuall fighting should not this be our exercise continuall praying and praysing of God praying God for strength in the time of our falles and troubles and praysing him for our victories He that shall follow the life of this King shall obtaine the like end And suppose his life be a continuall fighting yet the Lord shall euer raise him and comfort him with his Spirit He that omitteth this exercise of prayer is most vnhappy for if he craueth not strength he is vnworthy of rising There is none of vs but we are all subiect to this estate And therefore if we would rise we must pray yea pray instantly and continually So I recommend prayer praysing vnto you all Thus farre concerning the course of the Kings life Now to come to the first part of the song In the first part he letteth vs see the great trouble perplexity and perturbation of minde wherein he was he letteth vs see what he said in this trouble Ere he enter to the words in the beginning of the 9. verse he noteth the circumstance of time when he was cast into this trouble and perturbation of mind and forsooth the circumstance is worthy of noting In the circumstance of time it is said In the cutting off of my dayes when was that to wit at what time the P●ophet told him that it behooued him to die Then this trouble and perturbatiō came on me From the time he had once said it behooued him to die he fell into this feare suppose a godly King and as well reported of as any other King in the Scriptures yet as soone as he heareth the sentence of death pronounced he trembleth and feareth exceedingly And surely it cannot be otherwise for death is a violent separation and tearing asunder of that which the Lord hath appoynted to be conioyned to wit the soule and the body If the body had remained in the first estate and continued vnder obedience these two had neuer bene separated but by reason of disobedience and breakeng of the law of God in came sinne in cometh the violent separation in cometh death which is the reward of sinne as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6. It is true indeede for this is necessary to be knowne that there haue bene
many euill men that haue sought death and it is as true that there haue bene many good men that haue sought death yet neuer one of these sought death for it selfe for it is not naturall to seeke the dissolution of our selues But these euill men that sought death and put hand on themselues in their appearance they sought it for a better to wit to eschue the present torment and vexation of hell in their conscience wherein they were thinking that their miserable soule being out of the body should be at greater libertie then if it were detained in this prison But they are all deceiued For suppose hell be begun here yet it is not in a full measure vntill this life be done and so the miserable caitife deceiueth himselfe On the other side there haue bene good men that haue sought death but not for it selfe but for a better If they knew not felt not that there were a better life to follow after death they would not seeke it but by reason they see there is a greater ioy to follow after it therefore they regard not to taste in some measure for the present of the bitternesse of death It it true againe I grant that death vnto thee who art a Christian is sanctified in the death of our maister and Sauiour Christ Iesus for blessed is the death of them that die in the Lord. But suppose the death be sanctified yet thou art not wholly sanctified for if thou were as sanctified as the death thou wouldst not haue such a thing as terror paine or griefe in thy death But seeing in the best of vs all there is a remnant of corruption would to God it were but a remnant so thicke and foule that it is shame to speake of it this corruption vrgeth the conscience so that where the conscience is vrged there must be a feare and the more the conscience be vrged the greater is the paine and terror It is true that this feare is tempered by faith that dwelleth in the soule and the hope of ioy that dwelleth in the faithfull soule holdeth this feare in awe that hope of heauenly ioy so swalloweth vp and deuoureth the feare and maketh it to appeare to the looker on that the soule hath no feare but no doubt there is a feare and it is sure there is some griefe It is onely as I haue said the hope of that heauenly ioy that holdeth this feare in awe where this hope is not terrible is that feare wonderfull are these terrours great is that anguish of soule that is there so that I cannot find names to expresse it Terrible it is to see the countenance of God in his iustice there is no creature that can abide it Terrible it is to see their owne sinnes present themselues the ouglinesse and guiltinesse of sinne And beside all these to be left destitute of hope it is not the least part of their grief and yet this is not regarded For men will not rise to get faith if it should cost them but an houre they will not come to heare the word This is a wonderfull and miserable madnesse that is in the soule of man that he will neuer prouide for hell vntill hell catch him Now to come to our purpose the lesse the corruptions be the lesse must be the feare Wherein then should your exercise stand should ye not studie to diminish this corruption For he that would be voide of feare must trauell to diminish this corruption that the conscience may be cleane and ye may haue a good testimonie which maketh men to be without terrour For as long as the loue of this world and of worldly things occupieth our soule it is not possible that it can be without feare For why there is no heart that can willingly part with the thing that it loueth without exceeding sorrow and griefe Then we should trauell to take order with these affections and loue to worldly things but so farre as they may serue to the loue of God and in God to loue our selues and our neighbour that when he calleth no strange loue may draw vs from him There is a common law in all cities concerning the forbidden goods which are discharged plainly to be carried out of the country where we are presently and suppose they were carried they can serue to no vse in the countrey whither we go To let you see the exposition of the Parable I say the loue of this world the cares thereof the loue of the flesh and the lusts thereof are these forbidden goods which serue to no vse in the countrey whither we go yea they are plainly forbidden by the King of the countrey For the heart which is replenished with these shall haue no entrie there There is a plaine discharge sounded concerning these goods that we cleanse our hearts of them and prepare our selues to bring those commodities with vs that agree with the nature of that countrie Let vs make vs for the loue of God and of our neighbour and let vs cast off all contrarie loue onely let vs loue God and in God let vs loue our neighbour Now if I might obtaine this one lesson for all the rest I would thinke my trauell verie well bestowed and therefore I insist so much the more in it that it may sinke into your hearts Now then this good King feareth which telleth me that in all Christians there is some feare I come to the next what saith he in his trouble and perturbation The effect of the thing he saith is this First he saith He saw his owne death prepared for him Next because he was troubled with it and cast in a great perturbation he subioyneth the reasons why he was so grieued And as I may gather them they are three in number But ere I come to the reasons I will tell you his owne words which he said in time of his trouble he said I shall go downe to the gates of the graue I am drawing neare to the gates of death For so soone as I heard the Prophet say that I should die so soone I began to prepare me for it for if all threatnings come to passe as the Prophet hath said if I find no outgate in the mercie of God I must die For this I know that I am a mortall man and suppose I be a King and a glorious King yet I am not exempted from death and therefore I will prepare me for it He knew wel that suppose he made himselfe readie he was not one haire nearer to death Now surely if ye would follow this King ye would be a thousand times readier and more able to liue then ye are in your diseases But ye are cast vp in such a daintie and delicate fashion that no man will suffer to heare of death saying It is a thing that will further man to die But I say the contrarie and the Spirit of God saith the contrarie I say the readier ye be
some roote of infidelity abiding stil in them to vtter voices sometimes full of doubting and sometimes full of faith Thus farre for the first Now againe to testifie that the soule hauing faith hath bene subiect to doubting and as faith is on the one part so doubting is on the other this is a thing that hath bene in all the seruants of God and shall be to the end of the world The example of this ye haue in Dauid ye haue the example of it here in Hezechiah in all the rest of the good seruants of God Then suppose many of you know not what I say yet keepe the lesson in memory for it shall stand you in great good steede For this is sure that suppose the paines of the body be great yet there is as great difference betwixt the paines of the body and the paines of the soule as is betwixt God and the creature Ye would choose rather all the torments of the body that can be deuised ere ye felt one touch of the consuming wrath of God in the soule But yet these words will not effect it for words will not mollifie the heart except the Lord by the power of his Spirit worke in the heart And therefore I haue to craue of God ye haue by your prayers to assist me that ye be not vnfruitefull hearers of the word but seeing there is a Hell ye may study to preuent it Now last of all ye see the King learneth you a new fashion of prayer and I beseech you marke it When the extremity is so great that he may not vtter nor speake distinct voices and his speech is taken from him yet he leaueth not off to pray but hath recourse to his lamenting mourning conterfeiting the distinct voices of the Doue Crane Swallow by this diuersitie of tunes vttering his great anxiety And what fashion of prayer is this I say this kinde of sighing mourning and lifting vp of the eyes is as good language to God as any language spoken by the tongue He vnderstandeth the meaning of thy sigh and grone better then thou vnderstandest me that speakest And how is this It is his owne Spirit that raiseth these sighs grones that moueth these mournings And I pray you knoweth he not the meaning of his owne Spirit This the Apostle declareth Rom. 8. He knoweth the meaning of his owne Spirit and therefore whether this Spirit moue vs to sigh to mourne or to speake the Lord vnderstandeth all alike Then learne this forme of prayer when the Lord visiteth you with sicknesse in such sort that the vse of the tongue is taken from you and ye may not lift vp your hands to praise him nor lift vp your eies to looke vnto him yet let your moane be made yea further suppose the heart would not make moane with the mouth yet let the mouth suppose it hath no helpe honour and glorifie God Yea I say more suppose the case stand so as it may be that the heart be contrary to prayer and the mind will not assist the mouth to pray yet ere God be not honoured let him be honoured with the lip if the mouth wil not do it let the hand do it And euery member in like maner to the which the Lord ha●h giuen leaue let thē honor God because euen this striuing against the hardnes of the heart and prouoking of it with the outward members of the body is pleasant to God no doubt it is he who giues this will as a speciall grace howbeit we get not incontinently the performance If ye can learne this it is not possible that ye can want prayer for prayer is such as sometimes is vttered by teares sometimes by sighes sometimes by words and sometimes by gesture And euer let thy Spirit be well occupied musing vpon God and spirituall things and whether thou eate whether thou drinke take thy rest or what euer thou do let thy Spirit haue euer thy minde on God comfort thee with this When the Lord visiteth thee with such kinde of disease that thy tong is taken from thee let the rest of thy members honour him And if ye be not so diseased your selfe yet in your visitation comfort others herewith assuring them that this kinde of language is as well vnderstood as if it were spoken with the tongue I end here This king is not exempted from trouble he is not exempted from tentation both of body and soule There is none that cast them to liue godly but of force they must suffer trouble There is none that will make them for heauen but of all estates prince or people or what euer they be they must walke in the strait way As to them that walke in the broade way they shall grow worse and worse as the Apostle saith till they come to such an height vntill at the last the Lord anger them by the same sinnes whereby they anger him For this is his iust iudgement that as thou hast angred him by Adultery he shall anger thee by the same sinne Hast thou angred him by blood he shall anger thee by bloud also Hast thou angred him by blasphemy he shall anger thee with the punishment of blasphemy Hast thou angred him with drunkennesse he shall anger thee with the punishment of drunkennesse For euery sin hath the owne punishment in the selfesame Then as ye would eschue the punishment of sinne so cast you to eschue sinne that so farre as the Lord will giue you grace ye may keepe your selues free And so ye shall haue not onely ioy long dayes here but euerlasting ioy after this purchased to vs in the righteous merits of Christ Iesus To whō with the Father the holy Spirit be al honor praise glory for euer euer Amen THE TENTH SERMON VPON ISAIAH CHAPTER 38. 15 What shall I say For he hath said it to me and he hath done it I shall walke weaklie all my yeares in the bitternesse of my soule 16 O Lord to them that ouerliue them and to all that are in them the life of my spirit shall be knowne that thou causest me to sleepe and hast giuen life to me IN our last Sermon welbeloued in Christ Iesus the King returned to his wonted griefe and tooke vp his old lamentation againe vttering his trouble in these words My habitation is departed and transported from me as if he should say my life is ready to depart death is instant and my remouing is at hand he sheweth the maner of his remouing by two similitudes the one similitude is taken from a shepheards tent the other from a Weauer and his web As to the first looke in what maner we se the sheepheard tents flitted and remoued after the same manner I see my life to be flitted and remoued In the which we are taught not to settle our standing here nor to fixe our anker here but that we may be ready to remoue because we are vnder
praise and thanksgiuing for the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing sanctifieth not only thy person but all the benefits which the Lord bestoweth on thy person For that which is true in meate and drinke is true in all the rest of the benefits which are pledges of his mercy in Christ Iesus Now the Apostle testifieth in the 4 to Timothie first Epist. 4. verse that thanksgiuing sanctifieth our meate and drinke and maketh it both holy and wholsome As this is true in these creatures so it is true in all the rest of the benefits and blessings of God So when I looke on this thanksgiuing I am mooued yea I am compelled to marke three things in it first I am mooued to marke the wonderfull goodnesse of God Secondly our horrible ingratitude Thirdly the great arrogancie of the enemies of God the Papists First then I say ye may easily see the goodnesse of God in this forme of praise who when he may require our life our soule and bodie and the whole actions of our life for his benefits yet he is content with a simple kind of praise and thanksgiuing in such sort that if the heart be good suppose we babble with words yet it is acceptable to him As this sheweth his kindnesse and wonderfull mercie on his part so on our part it sheweth our horrible ingratitude that albeit little will content our God yet we will not bestow that little on him it cometh neuer in our mind to thinke it much lesse to do it in deed So this is an intollerable ingratitude vpon our part This ingratitude maketh it come to passe that we possesse his benefits with an euill conscience This maketh it come to passe that the curse of God hangeth ouer all your riches which curse ye either see in your daies or else it is seene after you in your prodigall posteritie And this is onely by reason ye are vnthankfull to God for his benefits I am assured and this ground cannot deceiue me there is none of you that hath purchased any benefit in a good conscience but ye will thanke God for it for a good conscience will neuer shake off the memory of God altogether So when ye forget to thanke God it is an euident argument that the benefit is purchased in an euill conscience For the which cause the curse of God is hanging ouer your riches Which appeareth either in your time or suppose the Lord be long-suffering in your posteritie Then to testifie that the benefits are well come by be thankfull to God for them and purchase nothing but that whereof ye haue a sure warrant in your conscience Now the third thing that I am mooued to marke I say this letteth vs see the horrible arrogancy of the Papists who thinke that they can not onely be thankfull for his benefits in word but also they are able to do him one good turne for another in deede and when after their māner they haue satisfied him they make a superplus which they call works of supereroga●ion Those their works of supererogation are a superlatiue follie and madnesse which cannot be expressed that whereas the best seruants of God found in experience that by word they were not able to satisfie him they thinke by their deeds to satisfie his infinite goodnesse But I leaue them and go forward He sheweth in the next words the greatnesse of the benefit and he taketh it vp briefly vnder two words after this manner He hath said it and himselfe hath done it he said it in his promise he did it in keeping of his promise he both said and did it himselfe that the whole glorie of the worke might appertaine to him he said it freely for I procured the contrary he kept it as freely for the Lord is true suppose all the world be false Ye see how properly he taketh vp vnder these two words the mercie and truth of God the mercie of God in promising the truth of God in keeping and pe●forming of his promises The mercy of God in promising freely for he is debter to no man and therefore whatsoeuer he promiseth he promiseth freely for there is none of vs can make claime to any better condition then the naturall branches might haue made claime to and if ye list to reade of their naturall inclination ye haue many places of Scripture and in speciall I send you to Deuter. 32. Exod. 32. Isaiah 48. For there speaking of the Iewes the Lord saith I foreknew thy stubbornnesse I saw the sinewes of thy necke were of brasse and thy face of yron I foresaw that thou wouldst remaine false and vnfaithfull yet notwithstanding I made my promise freely vnto thee and as freely as I made it I kept it as feely It is I it is I saith he in the 43. of Isaiah that putteth away thine iniquities it is I that for mine owne name sake calleth not thy sinnes to memorie If this be true in the naturall branches how much more is it true in vs Then we haue nothing to lay betwixt vs the iudgements of God but his mercie freely offered vs in the bloud of Christ Iesus It is God saith he that hath done this As if he would say all the rest are lyars onely God is true and ere he faile in one iot of that he saith he is able to make the world turne vpside downe and to inuert the order of nature as ye may see in the former part of the Chapter in bringing backe of the Sunne by ten degrees And therefore this teacheth vs that there lacketh not in God neither a power nor a will onely on our part there lacketh an hand an instrument to receiue and belieue the promises And therefore suppose there be carts full of promises and as sure promises that there can be nothing surer it is not possible that these promises can auaile any thing except the Spirit prepare a way for himselfe except the Lord create in the soule faith Therefore all your care and diligence should stand in this to craue that with the hearing of the word the Lord would conioyne the working of his Spirit that faith being wrought and the heart being opened fully we may leane and repose stedfastly on the faithfull promises of God In the end of the verse he sheweth a blessed and happie effect which issued out of this notable benefit he saith I shall henceforth all the rest of my yeares walke ouerpassing the bitternesse of my soule As if he would say by this benefit the griefe of my conscience and the terrors and troubles of my soule are remoued He maketh no mention of the rest of the benefits of the health of his bodie of his sure and prosperous estate which was both promised and giuen vnto him But he touched that which troubled him most the griefe of his conscience was the thing that troubled him most and therefore he maketh mention onely of it This bitternesse made such a deepe impression
cometh to passe that suppose the substance of our body and soule be not abolished yet both body and soule is so hurt changed and altered that they appeare not to be the thing they were at the first For as to the body by reason of this corruption it is subiect to death and from death it is resolued to powder and ashes As to the soule suppose the substance of it decay not yet ye see the qualities of it are so altered and changed that the light of the vnderstanding is turned in darkenesse the integrity of the will in wickednesse the vprightnes and intention to good is turned in a declining from good and in a bent purpose to do euill And shortly in a word by this corruption we haue lost the image of God which shined so brightly in vs in our creation Vnder the third sort of sin I vnderstand the lacke of the obedience and want of the accomplishment of the Law For by nature in our first creation we were not onely bound to abstaine from sinne but to accomplish all righteousnes and to conforme vs to the will of God perfectly in all things Now by this corruption we faile in this poynt as well also as in the rest and so we are guilty of all sortes of sinne and being guiltie of all sortes of sinne of necessity we must be subiect to death and condemnation for the reward of sinne as the Apostle saith is death Now the King sayth not that the Lord hath freed him from one or two sorts and not deliuered him from the third bur he saith he hath deliuered him from all his sinnes and consequently from death and condemnation For this is the custome of God in Christ if ye mark it wel from the time he beginneth to call his children to repentance and to worke with them inwardly he forgiueth them not a part of their sins but from the time he enters to this worke at an instant he forgiueth them all the sinnes of their whole life past present and to come as the Parable Mat. 18.23 testifieth where ye see the Lord forgiueth the whole debt The reason of this is Christ his Sonne who tooke our debt on him and was surety for vs he died not for a part of our sinnes onely nor satisfied not his Father for a part onely but for the whole businesse And therefore the debt being once payed the Father cannot require further and so when he beginneth to forgiue vs our sinnes he forgiueth vs all our sinnes simul semel The remission of sinnes is freely offered to all flesh in Christ by the publishing of the Gospell and is freelie applied by the working of the Spirit of God and is receiued onely by the hand of faith which is in the heart Except the Lord purifie the conscience cleanse the heart and open it as he did Lydias heart offer what remission ye will it is not possible we can apply it vnto our selues except the conscience and soule be recreated in the sweetnes and peace that floweth out of Christ. Offer remission neuer so oft the conscience dare not be so bold as to apply it to it selfe And therfore the whole study of a Christian should stand in this that he be not deceiued with presumption in steed of faith which presumption in the end tendeth to desperation And l●t vs not be flattered by euery sleight faith light opinion that flieth in the fantasie For iustifying faith must open the heart and be digested in the heart inwardly that the heart may be turned thereby For where the heart is onely touched with a light taste which is not stedfast incontinently as soon as the truth cometh this taste is spued forth but where this grace is digested in the heart in such sort that the stubbornnesse of our will is abated our vnderstanding changed our affections altered no question we haue accesse to God and seeing him in our minde and feeling him in our heart there is no storme that can make vs to runne from him but the greater the storme is the nearer we will draw to him Seeing we know there is a better life with him then is here all this is the duty of a Christian therfore euery one of you trie your hearts and mindes vrge God continually by importunate suiting and wring this grace out of him that it may please him to open our hearts For except the heart be opened that yee may feele the sweetnesse that your will and affections be altered it is not possible that ye can be inclined to good Desire of God therefore increase of faith that we may abide the storme blowe when soeuer it will Now ere we go from the words of this verse he sayth It is he that hath cast all my sinnes c. Which he is this God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost three persons one God hath done it no creature but God onely And ye see as ye may reade Luke 5. that the Pharisies were not ignorant of this that God onely might forgiue sinnes For in that same place Luke 5. in that conference which the Pharisies haue they say What a blasphemy is this Who hath power to forgiue sinnes but God onely Now looke to the behauiour of Christ after these words who pa●tlie by his silence approueth them partly by a miracle he ratifieth their speach to be true that God in heauen hath onely power to forgiue sinnes there is a good reason euen in our naturall iudgement that ratifieth this to be true for who hath power to forgiue the debt but the creditor Now God onelie is our creditor therefore God onely hath power to forgiue for it is the law of God that is transgressed For all sin is the transgression of the Law therfore al sin offendeth him mediatly or immediatly and seeing he prope●ly is offended he onelie must forgiue As to Christ Iesus man he hanging on the crosse craueth mercie for his murtherers o● God his Father and saith Forgiue them Lord for they know not what they do And when he himselfe forgiueth sinnes in this he testifieth that he is true God as the Ancients gathered well by this effect that he forgaue sinnes that he was not a simple creature but true God also where the Church is said to forgiue sinnes they remit in the name authority of Christ Iesus or else when they forgiue they may be called pronouncers and publishers of Gods remission For in vttering his word they shew themselues to be his mouth not their owne mouth As to vs that are brethren we are said to forgiue others we forgiue others indeede but our remission relieueth not the man of his guiltinesse but the guiltinesse remaineth euer in the soule vntill God remoue it And in respect the guiltinesse remaineth vntill it be remoued by God none hath power to wash away the guiltinesse but God therefore it is God properly that is the forgiuer of sinnes and for this cause
must redound backe to him that gaue it Therefore the nearer the soule is conioyned with God it praiseth him so much the more Now after the death of the bodie the soules of the faithfull are more straightly coupled with God therefore after death they praise him the more Where Christ hath dwelt once in this life suppose the bodies die and be resolued in powder by reason of sinne yet the soule liueth by reason of righteousnesse Yea suppose the body be dissolued yet that Spirit of life that dwelt in the soule raiseth thy soule to heauen euen as the Spirit of life that dwelt in Christ Iesus raised his bodie from the graue And as the Spirit of life is the onely cause that made vs to praise him in our bodies so that same Spirit maketh vs to praise him out of these bodies by reason suppose we be absent in bodie yet are present in our soule with the Lord. For the words Rom. 8 are these If Christ dwell in you suppose the body be dead by reason of sinne yet the Spirit is aliue for righteousnesse sake The meaning of the words is suppose they that are departed leaue off to praise the Lord in their bodies and in the earth which he calleth the land of the liuing yet they leaue not off at all Now of this I shall marke one or two things Take vp the end wherefore the Lord deliuereth any person citie or country from any trouble within or without the chiefe end of his deliuerie is this That that person citie or countrey may serue as an instrument to preach his benefits to sound his praise and to render vnto him heartie thanks for it Are our sinnes forgiuen vs to this end is there any countrey or any citie set at libertie to this end that we should prouoke God to anger by heauier sinnes againe Is this the end wherefore he forgiueth sinnes Is this the end wherefore he bestoweth his benefits that we should vse them as weapons to fight against himselfe Is not this rather the high way to kindle him to greater seueritie and to sharpen his furie against our selues Yea and what exception I pray you can we vse in his greatest seueritie seeing we haue prouoked it our selues I speake it to this end there is not a person in particular nor any in generall but of naturall knowledge they will say There was neuer a greater benefit bestowed on a countrey then in releeuing vs of the feare of that barbarous Nation he must either confesse this or he is an asse This benefit if it were rightly measured and considered reade ouer the Scriptures conferre benefit with benefit miracle with miracle all circumstances being well considered ye shall finde that since the children of Israel came through the red Sea there hath not bene a greater To what end deliuered he vs is it that we should prouoke him with greater sinnes Looke since the feare of these strangers past what sinne is there but this countrey hath defiled her selfe with it See ye not slaughter in greater measure oppression murther without any mercie see ye not all law and equitie trampled vnder foote And briefly see ye not this confusion risen to such a height that euery Lord in his owne bounds is a King what sort of birth I pray you shall this confusion bring foorth At the last it must bring foorth one of these two of necessitie and take heeed ye may chance to see it except the Lord preuent it Either the supreme magistrate and inferiour magistrates must concurre in one voyce to put an end to this confusion or the confusion out of doubt shall put an end to him I am assured one of these two must follow for the weight of his wrath which hangeth ouer this land is insupportable the earth is not able to beare this birth of our iniquitie and if there were no other punishment as I haue often said the earth shall be compelled to spue foorth the inhabitants ere God want meanes to punish As this is true in the countrey in generall so it is as true in this Citie in particular for it neuer came yet for the most part in your hearts to thanke God aright for your deliuerie Therefore the Lord is beginning to let you see that he can raise strangers men who haue the hearts of strangers among our selues he hath meanes enough in the middest of our owne bowels to punish this countrey suppose he seeke not strangers But indeed in this late brag of our neighbour Lord he desireth you to go backe to the consideration of the greatnesse of the last benefit And if ye acknowledge it rightly and be thankfull for it there is no domesticke force ye neede to regard For as to the force that can proceede any way from that man ye know it And surely it would appeare to me that that man hath sold himselfe to iniquitie and the end will declare it except the Lord preuent him with his vndeserued grace which I desire most heartily Although in the meane time suppose there be peace promised yet stand ye on your guards and let it not come to passe by your misbehauiour and backwardn●sse that the glory of God and the libertie of this Citie be impaired in any wise but stand on your guardes that as this Citie hath bene a terrour to euill men before-time so it may terrifie him also For no question where God and a good quarrell concurre that side shall haue the vpper hand This onely by the way For it becometh me of my dutie to maintaine the good cause and to instruct you in this point of your dutie The second thing that I marke ye see the glorie of God is euer conioyned with the life of his owne so that we cannot aduance Gods glo●ie but we shall further our owne saluation and we cannot neglect the one but we shall neglect the other Seeing th●n that these two are necessarily conioyned for Gods sake let euery one remember to set forward the glorie of God in his life so farre as he may according to his estate and calling This life is so miserable in it selfe and there is none that seeth the confusion of this countrey to grow so fast that can looke for any redresse of these things in his own time So here beneath is no comfort all runneth on to such a desolation and miserable confusion that of all liues of the earth our liues were most miserable if we had not a sight of a better For all ioy to be looked for here beneath is taken away Well I leaue this second part and come to the last The third part of this song is in this 20. verse which is the conclusion of the whole song In this conclusion the King testifieth that he will not onely praise God for the present for the benefit which he hath receiued but he maketh a solemne promise that so long as he liueth he will neuer forget this benefit all the dayes of his life
precious corner Albeit in this point among the rest we haue this petition to seeke at God that howsoeuer it be a stumbling stone vnto them it may remaine a sure foundation ground-stone to vs on the which we being builded as liuely stones may be an holy Temple to our Lord and that the Lord in time would preuent this vtter extermination which the diuell in his rage and members intend Thus farre concerning the particulars by iust proportion betwixt that singular deliuery from Senacherib and our deliuery from Spaine Now what resteth ye see in the 7. verse he is rauished in admiration of the great work and of this great benefit And what doeth he he bursteth forth in the pithy sentence Thou euen thou art terible as if he would say Thou only euen thou art terrible hast not any match or cōpanion For the proudest man in the earth he that is most high in his own conceit is not able to strike any such terror as to dash a man or stupifie his senses This terror is proper to God only it is he only that giueth the heart to men and spoyleth them of this heart when he pleaseth and casteth them into a dead sleepe Therefore this onely is proper to God And wherefore is it that he doubleth the Pronoune Thou thou but to testifie that it is he onely that is terrible He proueth this in the end of the verse how By an interrogation there saying Who is able to stand and abide in his presence if once his anger beginneth neuer so little to kindle Looke to the diuell what became of him from the time he presumed to make himselfe companion to him He was cast downe out of heauen perpetually Looke to Adam from the time he beganne to follow the wit of the diuell and presumed in himselfe he was cast out of Paradise And so there is no creature that can abide in the presence of God of it selfe For how is it possible that we that are stubble can abide in the presence of a consuming fire Is not stubble the mater of fyre euen so we that are conceiued in sinne borne in sinne and are but a masse of sinnes we are no more but as stubble is to the fyre so are we in the presence of God who is a consuming fire except we haur a sconce except we haue Christ Iesus to stand betwixt vs and him And therefore he is appointed to be a mediator and intercessor to stand betwixt vs and God the Father to make our prayers acceptable his merits step in betwixt the Father and vs his iustice couereth our wickednesse his purity couereth our impurity that vnder this couerture the Father may be well satisfied we may stand in his presence be defended from the diuel and all enemies Otherwise there is no creature able to stand in the presence of God What teacheth this vs It letteth vs see the great weaknesse infirmity of the creature in respect of the Creator Is not this a great weaknesse when the blessed Angels although they stand shal stand by grace yet they are not able to behold his countenance but must couer their faces with their wings how much more are other creatures vnable to stand in his presence And yet notwithstanding all this great infirmity which is in vs which are but wormes of the earth sinfull flesh will sometime forget it selfe so that in it owne conceit it will match it selfe with God and in his word despite him and prouoke him to the combat as it were as Iuliā did I haue heard of him that hath prouoked God to combat and it hath come to mine eares this is blasphemy If it be true that man is fallen into the hands of the liuing God And suppose he be delayed because the Lord is long suffering to try his repentance if he abuse the Lords patience that by blasphemies his wrath be nourished and his anger as it were with coales incensed heauy shall his end be Well it is an heauy thing that he is fallen into the hands of such a God Iest not with the maiesty of God whateuer ye do with flesh Indeed it is no new thing for flesh to misse-know it selfe and specially whilest he hath cast them into a reprobate sense and spoyled them not onely of supernaturall light but of naturall also Alas they know not what torments abideth them nor the terrible hell that is prepared for them except God preuent them in his mercy Indeed I wish that God may preuent them who vtter these blasphemies and if it be possible they may be reclaimed that their life may testifie their repentance And now to end this present exercise that I and so many of you as are to communicate may dresse vs to that Table let vs remember that he is onely terrible and seeing he only is terrible because he is onely Lord of body soule onely he hath power to saue and cast away And seeing it is so let vs feare and retyre our selues to him who is able to preserue and keepe both body and soule and sanctifie them throughout and present them blamelesse at that great day of the glorious appearing of Iesus Christ. To whom with the Father and the holy Ghost be all honour praise and glory both now and for euer Amen THE THIRTEENTH SERMON VPON THE 76. PSALME 8 Thou diddest cause thy iudgment to be heard from heauen therefore the earth feared and was still When thou O God arose to iudgement to helpe all the meeke of the earth Selah 10 Surely the rage of man shall turne to thy praise the remnant of the rage shalt thou restraine 11 Vow and performe vnto the Lord your God all ye that be round about him let them bring presents vnto him that ought to be feared 12 He shall cut off the spirit of Princes he is terrible to the Kings of the earth WE deuided welbeloued in Christ Iesus this Psalme in three parts In the first part there was propounded vnto you certaine benefits wherein the Lord sheweth himselfe exceeding mercifull and gracious to his Church The benefits wherein he sheweth himselfe so gracious were two namely The first and chiefe benefit wherein he sheweth himselfe exceeding mercifull to his Church was this that he had reuealed himselfe to her by a familiar and heauenly reuelation For why the Church knoweth not onely that which may be knowne of God by a generall knowledge which is common to the whole world but she knoweth that which may be knowne of God by a speciall knowledge heauenly reuelation and supernaturall light the which supernaturall light and heauenly reuelation maketh vs to be counted the children of the light and of the day Which supernaturall light seuereth vs from the rest of the world who are darknesse and the children of the night supernaturall light is proper to the Church onely so that there is none that can know God rightly but they who haue receiued of this
yet in setting foorth of this wonderfull iudgement and in the 8. verse he letteth vs see that this great and terrible iudgement was wrought by the power and force of God onely it was done extraordinarily from the heauen by himselfe onely So that the whole world saw the finger and hand of God in it Then in the beginning of this eight verse I say he maketh it knowne that he did it onely and in the end of the verse he letteth vs see what his iudgements wrought in the hearts of men In the 9. verse he letteth vs see the time when it was that it pleased him to worke it and to what end he wrought it In the 10. verse he letteth vs see whereunto the great furie and rage of the wicked serued and in the end of that verse he meeteth with an obiection which the Chur●h might haue made And in the last two verses is contained the conclusion of the Psalme Then to rerurne to the 8. verse in the beginning thereof the Prophet maketh it knowne that it was God onely that did this worke immediately without the imployment of any creature And therefore this manner of execution testified to the whole world that God onely was the chiefe doer of it Then the chiefe reason that moued God to do this extraordinarily and immediatly with his owne hand is this Although our God hath infinite wayes and as many meanes in his hand at all times ready to destroy his enemies yet such is the malice of man and the enuy of the Diuell that possesseth man to the glory of God that so long as God worketh his worke ordinarily and imployeth this or that instrument in doing of his worke so long man spoyleth God of his Glory and spoyleth him of a part of his praise So that man will sometime ascribe the glory to his owne industry and wit or to fortune or to one occasion or other so that ere they suffer God to haue his whole glory they will giue a part of it to any creature of the earth For this cause the Lord worketh extraordinarily and from heauen that the mouthes of all the world yea of the very enemies may be compelled to say and this confession must be wrung out of them that it is the finger of God that wrought this without the support of any creature After what sort he wrought this ouerthrow I wil not dispute in particular whether it were by lightning thunder earthquake vpon this I insist not The generall is sure and certaine that it was a worke that flowed from heauen immediatly Now he sayth in the end of the verse that this terrible iudgement brought forth two effects in the hearts of men First it brought forth a wonderfull feare and secondly it brought forth a great silence their tongues were taken from them The earth feared and was still By the earth the inhabitants of the earth is vnderstood or if we will hold vs in our particular the remanent of Senacheribs army is vnderstood I meane the remanent of the armie that were saued from the iudgement This remanent beganne to feare and be afraid with a terrible feare and the tongues of them that were so stout the night before held themselues quiet They that lifted and hoissed their armes the night before prouoked God as it were to the combat after the sight of this iudgement they haue their hands to seeke and they who boasted so much of their valiantnesse and filled the very earth with their blasphemies the night before when they saw this terrible iudgement were silent and had not a word to speake It is wonderfull the Lords manner of doing and proceeding is a hid manner of doing against his enemies and few perceiue the fashion of the bringing about of his iudgements For ye see he taketh his enemies in an instant at vnawares whilest a man is in the height of his pride he bereaueth him of his counsell he bereaueth him of his force and spoyleth him both of heart and hand in such sort that he hath no wit to deuise more then an Asse and hath not a hand to performe any more then if he wanted hands So he bereaueth him of his policy exquisite iudgement And how is this done It is by a blinde feare that he striketh them with he casteth them into such anguish and blindnesse of minde that they neither see God who is the striker nor can finde any way out but are cast into a desperate estate and vtter darkenesse remedilesse And so it commeth to passe that these miserable men lay violent hands on themselues thinking that the soule which now is in prison as it were will be in a better estate if it were out of the body but alas they are deceiued So I say the iudgement of God when it lighteth how long soeuer it be delayed terrible shall it be when it lighteth on the enemie It is a fearefull thing to cast our selues willingly into the hands of a consuming fire Therefore now seeing ye haue courses in hand ye should take good heede to your courses looke well about you and be diligent to know whether ye be on Gods side or against him Ye againe that are not practisers and meddle not with high matters take heede how ye walke in your owne calling Looke vnto your trade ye that are Merchants looke vnto your dealing ye that are Lawyers how croked or how straight ye are ye that are Lords and Iudges with what conscience ye proceed in your vocation and marke this Looke to his word looke what profite ye haue made of his word examine your calling by his word And if ye examine your calling by his word this way ye shall find the fruite or losse of your calling but if ye depend on the testimony of your conscience without the examination and rule of his word ye will be deceiued for many do this and say I am not troubled in conscience I am sure my conscience presseth me not when in the meane time they runne a wicked course trie not their calling by the blessed word of God but looke onely to the estate of their conscience which in such euill affaires flatters them they thinke themselues sure enough O but thou art deceiued and why Thy conscience may be deceiued as well as thou And how Thy conscience can giue thee no better warrant of thy doing neither to accuse nor to excuse but as she is informed So that if she be rightly informed she will giue thee a right warrant but if she be euilly informed she will giue thee as euill a warant and flatter thee So that of a slight informatiō she wil giue as slight a testimony There is no right information but that which proceedeth of the word therefore seeing now ye haue the word so clearely taught vnto you ye should trie and examine your callings by this word See what this word biddeth you do try in particular and say What warrant of
end that he may draw them by the hand to repentance And now seeing they haue abused the time of his sitting he is euen at the rising And assuredly the Lord shall rise to be reuenged vpon the iniquities of the great men of this Country whose sinnes do so abound And whereby know ye this By one argument which is infallible Examine by your owne wit and iudgement which ye haue of the booke of God and by your naturall iudgement Is it possible that the ground of this country is able to beare a greater birth of iniquitie both in Hie-land Low-land Is it possible that it can be heauier loaden with mischiefe in all corners then it is now Yea the ground must be disburdened of this iniquity where the Leiutenant whō God hath placed ouerseeth it and will not disburden the earth of her birth where the Magistrates that are inferiors neglect their duties of necessity he must extraordinarily from the heauen disburden the earth thereof And surely to let this passe if there were no more but these horrible confusions in all parts which no man can ouertake it appeareth that the Iudge of the world himselfe shall come downe shortly to disburden it And why Because I see all tokens that go immediatly before his cōming to be already passed faith is skarslie to be found yea no faith in promises much lesse faith in Christ Iesus For iniquity aboundeth so and there are so many confusions left vnouertaken by the Magistrate that it appeareth clearely ●he Iudge himselfe must needes come and that the Iudge of the world shall be the first that shall redresse this confusion And seeing it is so it becometh not vs to be idle for surely the time draweth neare And if the time shall be shortened for the elects cause now I thinke it shall be shortened for the cries of the poore of this land Therfore it is no time for vs to sleepe It is time for vs to prepare to go meete that great Iudge now whilst oyle is offered abundantly buy oyle to your lamps for so soone as the Trumpet blowes and that he is making homeward from the cloudes to his Fathers dwelling from whence he shall come it is no time to haue our oyle to seeke Now we haue this oyle of gladnesse freely offered Therfore it becometh you to prepare your selues that when he cometh whether it be at night or in the morning by night or by day he may not finde you vnawares These iniquities and wickednesse of the heart of man are so deepe that if the Ethnik might say iustlie that the labyrinths deceits of the hart of man are infinite how much more may we speak it hauing Ierem. his warrant who calleth it deepe and inscrutable aboue all things Ierem. 17. It is time therefore that we be busie in seeking the renewing breaking and humiliation of our hearts for the outward scarre suppose it appeareth to be whole where the inward is festered it auaileth nothing but maketh it to fester againe Therefore now it is time to study to haue your hearts broken for once they must be broken ere they be healed Once they must be low ere they be high For thine heart that was neuer touched with any sense of thine owne sinne and feeling of Gods iudgement knew neuer what the taste of mercy meant For there is no way to go to heauen but by the gates of hel Therefore it is time to beg of God that he would bring your hearts to that estate that ye may know your sin sorrow for it and that he may prepare your hearts so that ye may looke for the accomplishment of your happinesse in his coming And where the hart is so desirous of that day it may be welcome come when it will The Lord of heauen prepare your hearts It is not possible that this can be done O Lord except thou by the mighty power of thy Spirit humble them and hammer downe this naturall hardnes that is in them otherwise our hearts wil neuer giue obedience to thee Therfore O Lord worke it Now in the end of the verse he letteth vs see to what end the Lord rise and executed iudgment The chiefe cause that mooued him to rise was the poore and oppressed in all corners of the earth The great complaint and crie of the people in all countries was the cause why God did rise Examine then and try hath not God good cause to rise in this countrie I know wel there can not be more complaints of the poore in a countrie then in this so that it is no maruell but he rise and that suddainlie he is like vnto himselfe no was of before Then these great complaints and cries of the poore must make him to rise as ye haue it Psal. 12. And if they preuent no● his rising terrible shall it be to the wicked for euer with the saluation of his owne the destruction of his enemies is ioyned And out of these both saluation destruction he maketh himselfe to be glorified Then I would these bloudie men and oppressors that renowne themselues with shame and ignominie knew that the Lord will ris● and that shortly except they preuent him whereof I see no appearance In the tenth verse he letteth vs see to what purpose the great furie of these men serueth and in the beginning he letteth vs see it with a constant affirmation Surely surely the rage of men shall turne to his praise Their greatest rage and highest furie is the highest matter of the Lords praise That same fury and rage whereby they thinke to dishonour God and ouerwhelme his Church he turneth to the contrary and maketh out of that same furie his owne glorie and the deliuery of his Church to shine The Lord is a wonderfull workman he bringeth about his purpose in such sort that he can draw out light out of darknesse and bring forth his owne praise out of their greatest rage Haue ye not seene this from time to time hath he not made his greatest enemies to testifie it and drawne a confession out of their owne mouthes Ye reade in the historie of Iulian the Apostata when he was in his greatest rage and in the top of his fury prouoking Christ to the combat in that high rage whilest he draweth his weapon to strike our head he striketh himselfe and after he had giuen himselfe a deadly wound he bursteth foorth and saith at the last Thou hast won ô Galilean so out of his owne mouth the Lord drew a confession of this praise Ye reade in the 6. of Exod. of those inchanters that opposed themselues to Moses and Aaron and counterfeited all that they did vntill it came to the plague of Lice there they stand and say It is the finger of the Lord as if they would say This plague is done by the mightie hand and power of God onely we are not able to counterfeit it Here we see they are compelled out of their owne mouth to confesse
the Lord his trust and regardeth not the proud nor such as turne aside to lies 5 O Lord my God thou hast made thy wonderfull works so many that none can count in order to thee thy thoughts toward vs I would declare and speake of them but they are moe then I am able to expresse 6 Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire for mine eares hast thou prepared burnt offering and sinne offering hast thou not required 7 Thou said I Loe I am come for in the rolle of the booke it is written of me 8 I desired to do thy good wil O my God yea thy law is within mine heart 9 I haue declared thy righteousnesse in the great Congregation Loe I will not refraine my lips O Lord thou knowest 10 I haue not hid thy righteousnesse within my heart but I haue declared thy truth and thy saluation I haue not concealed thy mercie and thy truth from the great Congregation 11 Withdraw not thy tender mercie from me O Lord let thy mercie and thy truth alway preserue me 12 For innumerable troubles haue compassed me my sinnes haue taken such hold vpon me that I am not able to looke vp yea they are moe in number then the haires of mine head therefore mine heart hath failed me 13 Let it please thee O Lord to deliuer me make haste O Lord to helpe me 14 Let them be confounded and put to shame together that seeke my soule to destroy it let them be driuen backward and put to rebuke that desire mine hurt 15 Let them be destroyed for a reward of their shame which say vnto me Aha aha 16 Let all them that seeke thee reioyce and be glad in thee and let them that loue thy saluation say alway The Lord be praised 17 Though I be poore and needy the Lord thinketh on me thou art mine helper and my deliuerer my God make no tarying THis Psalme for the most part tendeth to praise and thankesgiuing For the Author of it Dauid partly praiseth God from his owne late experience and partly from the publike experience of the whole Church Therefore for this his experience he offereth his seruice to God protesting to be thankefull to him as he had bene thankfull in times past And in the end of the Psalme he retireth himselfe to prayer and commendeth his estate to the protection of God that as he had deliuered him in time past so he would continue the same in mercy to him in time to come This I take to be the summe of this Psalme Touching the parts of it we haue three in the first wherof we haue the praise and commendation of the mercy and kindnesse of God whereby it commeth to passe that he reiecteth not them that depend vpon him In the second for this experience that he hath found he offereth his seruice to God as he had proclaimed his iustice mercy in time past so he protesteth that he is ready to do the same in time to come In the third as I spake before he retireth to prayer he commendeth his estate to God that as it had pleased him to preserue him in time past so it would please him to preserue him in time to come Following the literall meaning this is the effect of the Psalme If you take it otherwise there is a notable prophecy concerning the office of Christ Iesus concerning the abolishing of the old couenant and establishing of the new and concerning the sacrifice of our high Priest the Priest of the new Testament Christ Iesus Then to returne to the first part therein we haue a singular experience set downe Indeed if the circumstances were well considered his experience is more then singular for by the last Psalme the estate and care wherein he was at this time may be easily gathered He was pursued by the treason of his owne sonne Absalon he was pursued by the skornes and Iests of his owne seruants In this great extremity he bursteth out into prayer beggeth of God that he would withdraw his hand from him for a space and why He was consumed with his owne iniquity he desireth that at the last he would incline his eares to his prayers and keepe no longer silence at his teares in respect he knew he was but a soiourner and a pilgrime in the earth as the rest of his fathers were he sayth Withdraw thine heauie hand O Lord and let the mercy that I looked for appeare to me Now in this Psalme he letteth vs see what issue and end his long wayting obteined to wit a most blessed and happy end For in this Psalme we see that the Lord at last inclined his eare vnto him and shewed in experience that though he answereth him not at first yet he was not deafe but accomplished his desire in drawing him out of his misery in the which he lay which misery he describeth by two proper similitudes The first similitude is taken from the pit The second is taken from the myre of clay At the last the Lord drew him out of this horrible pit and placed him vpon the shore he opposeth the rocke vnto the pit and the faire way to the myrie clay and placed him vpon a plaine and faire way and directed his iourney So his long expectation obtayned a most happy issue In this his experience there are three things that offer themselues to be considered First what was this that he susteyned in this long wayting what was it that made him to continue without despaire Secondly what was Dauids exercise all the time of this long wayting Thirdly what issue end this long wayting obtayned As for the wayting there was no other thing that susteined him but that same which we Christians call a Christian hope or a Christian expectation which hope is the worke of the holy Spirit wrought in vs by the power therof whereby it cometh to passe that we with great patience abide the performance of the Lords promises In this hope there are two things inclosed There is first the absence of the thing hoped for yet notwithstanding a certaine expectation of the same This hope of ours is different from our faith though it rise and spring thereof in two speciall points For the nature of faith taketh hold on the promise for nothing can be beleeued but the promise promises are propounded to be beleeued and commandements to be obeyed The nature of faith then taketh hold of the promise The nature of hope looketh not so much to the promise as to the thing promised The nature of hope is to looke continually vntil it possesse the thing that is promised The nature of faith maketh the thing which is absent in it selfe and in very deede to be present as if it were extant and subsisting before thy senses and therefore faith is called the ground substance of things absent for faith maketh them as sure by the promise as if the thing promised were in my hand It maketh me
yet and aduersaries to this faith If they be friends and of the family of faith as he is he willeth him to keepe Charitie to keepe peace in Christ Iesus and vnity with them that as he keepeth his faith to God so he may keepe vnity in loue and peace with them If againe those men be not of the family of faith but aduersaries to this faith they are either obstinate with knowledge or else ignorant and obstinate with ignorance Obstinate with knowledge such as are heretickes Apostates that had knowledge and haue lost it In case these men be heretickes he teacheth in the Epistle to Titus how he should behaue himselfe toward them If they be Apostates he teacheth in the person of Hymenaeus and Philetus how he should behaue himselfe toward them to wit he should first trauell to winne them if it be possible And if thy trauell succeedeth not that thou get no gaines at their hands this way then he willeth Timothie and the Pastors in Timothie to go another way to worke to proclaime their names yea at the last to giue their flesh as he speaketh to the diuell that their soule may be safe if it be possible in the day of the Lord To proclaime their names and make their names manifest to the people that the people may be warie of such persons and feare to fall into such offences If the persons againe be ignorant they are either ignorant with simplicity or ignorant with a wilful stubbornnes In both these cases he informeth his Disciple If they be ignorant with simplicity he recommendeth vnto the teacher three vertues meeknesse gentlenesse and patience Patience not of their euill nor of their vices but patience toward their persons suffering them to come and heare And suppose thou suffer him to come heare yet he willeth thee not to suffer his vices he willeth thee not to conceale his vices nor yet to flatter his vices But this is his meaning reproue his vices aduertise him of his faults And in thine admonition do the thing that lyeth in thee that he who is admonished may perceiue that the admonition floweth from loue and that we seeke nothing lesse then his shame and losse and nothing more then his weale and honour This ought to be the behauiour of those who haue to do with simple ignorants for if it were so that any man would beare with vices or iniquities that he knoweth to be in any person it were the ready way not onely to lose the person with whom he beareth but to lose himselfe also in concealing that part of his office and duty which is enioyned to him And therefore it is not such a patience that is required in the Pastor or Minister that he suffers his vices or conceale the persons vices but onely this kinde of moderate meeke and good behauiour is required in him that in his reproofe he may let the person see ●o far as in him lyeth that he desireth nothing lesse then his shame and nothing more then his amendment In case againe the person be ignorant and wilfull with ignorance as there are many that are obstinate in ignorance in such sort that the person of the Pastor is troubled and wearied with continuall admonition and reproofe and maketh no speed at his hands in such sort that at last the Pastor himselfe through the long trauell that he hath taken conceiueth a despaire of the recouery of that person The Apostle in this place admonisheth the Pastor not to faint nor to conceiue by his long trauels a despaire but though he remaine stubborne yet to abide vpon him pronounce the thre●tnings and promises of God indifferently to tary vpon him at list and leasure why Because the gift of repentance which turneth the heart of man is not in his owne hand nor is it in the hands of the Pastor to giue it but the gift of repentance which turneth the heart of man is in the hands of God and God will bestow this gift at such time as he pleaseth not at that time when the Pastor pleaseth In like manner the gift of repentance is not visibly wrought it is not a corporall gift that it may be rceeiued by the Pastor at the first hand when it is giuen and wrought in the heart of man But it is a spirituall gift and inuisibly wrought in the soule of man And oft times it is wrought then when the Pastor least thinketh and that by the mighty and gracious prouidence of our God Therefore seeing it falleth out so oft times that the Lord will bestow this gift when the Pastor least thinketh he willeth the Pastor albeit the man be stubborne not to despaire And when the Lord shall giue him the gift of repentance there is no question but many commodities shall accompany this gift which commodities are sette downe in the end of this Chapter By this gift first he shall be delyuered from the snare of the Diuell in the which he was holden captiue to do him seruice By this gift secondly he shall come to knowledge not only to the knowledge of God in Christ but of himselfe his own misery Thirdly by this gift of repentance where his soule was sick diseased before his conscience terrified and exceedingly astonied that soule by the enioying of this gift shall be restored to health he shall come to amendement and to a wholsome disposition of heart minde and conscience This I take to be the summe of all that I haue read The matter is large and the heads are many that might be handled vpon this text But I purpose not to insist in euery head but to content me onely with such points as are most necessary for our edification and instruction Therfore I select out of the whole two points to speak of by the grace of God at this time as his Spirit shall assist me for the present The two points that I am to speake of are these The first point the first verse that I haue read the first part of it giueth manifest occasion to it to wit what is the first chiefe thing from which yong men should flee The second point the last verse saue one of this text giueth occasiō to it and the end of that verse and it is this What is the chiefe and principall thing that yong men should follow and pursue The chiefe and principall thing that yong men should flee euery youth in the world is the lusts and affections of the minde whereunto youth is inclined he should flee from the lusts of his youth not so much from the lusts of any other mans youth or another persons youth as from the lusts that are in himselfe and the lusts that his yong yeares bring with them And as he should flee from the lusts of his owne youth so the chiefe thing that he should follow seeke and pursue is the gift of repentance amendement of life conuersion vnto God taking vp of a new course a
Diuers opinions concerning the presence of Christs body in the Sacrament How a thing is said to be absent and present How the body of Christ is present Our difference with the Papists to whom the words ought to be directed c. SERM. VI. Out of Isaiah 38. Intreating of Hezechiahs Sickenesse v. 1.2.3 Sheweth that the greatest are not exempt from great and sore trials That Hezechiahs disease was though not in the greatest extremity that which we by an emphasis call the Sickenesse Why God thus visiteth his children The time when the King fell into this disease What is our duty in the like case of distresse from the Prophets plaine dealing with the King That the Prophet as appeareth was not too rigorous in his denuntiation in adding affliction vpon affliction to the King The Kings excellent behauiour in this Sicknesse His gesture in the same expressing the signes of a good conscience His recourse in extremitie to the same great power which now did smite him seeme to be his enemy our lesson from thence SERM. VII On Isa. 38.4.5.6 Intreating of Hezechiahs Sicknesse sheweth The speedy issue and hearing of the Kings prayer our lessons from thence It is a mercy to be visited at home as this King was The author of the Kings comfort was God vsing the meanes of his minister and word Why mention is made of Dauid in this comfort the King receiued Why Dauid is called the Kings Father Our lessons from this preface That the Lord is neare the prayers of his children That as this King receiued more then he asked from God so for the most part do all the Saints SERM. VIII On Isaiah 38.7.8.9.10.11 Intreating of Hezechiahs sicknesse Sheweth why the King sought a signe how some refuse signes How the signe was shewed Why the Signe was wrought in the Diall Why in the bodie of the Sunne What profit is to be gathered of signes By whose power this signe was wrought The force of prayer The Kings thankfulnesse for the benefit receiued A short summe of the Kings life Our lesson from thence The Kings song shewing first when he was troubled The diuersitie of the feare of death in the godly and wicked The way to eschue the feare of death The reasons why death seemes now so grieuous to the King A censure of these his reasons SERM. IX Out of Isaiah 38.12.13.14 Intreating of Hezechiahs sicknesse Sheweth the similitudes whereby the King amplified his present lamentation Why the Patriarks conuersed in tents Our vses thence The extremitie of the Kings disease Why God suffereth his children to fall into such extremities Our lessons thence By what meanes the King in this extremitie seeketh vnto God Why the King sought the prorogation of his dayes In what respect it is lawfull to seeke the prolonging of our dayes That faith and doubting may remaine in one soule If Christ in his agonie had contrarie voyces no maruell this King had also How this King teacheth vs to pray in extremitie SERM. X. On Isaiah 38.15.16 Intreating of Hezechiahs sicknesse Sheweth the Kings thankefulnesse in three things That a good conscience giueth thankes for euery thing receiued How the King expresseth the greatnesse of the mercy receiued What effects this mercy did breede in him How the sweetnesse of this mercy did make him burst forth in praise of the word How a man shall know if the Spirit of life be begun in him How the Spirit is sai● to be nourished in vs and how banished c. SERM. XI On Isaiah 38.16 to the end of the chapter Intreating of Hezechias sicknesse Sheweth how from the other effects of the word the King continueth to extoll the same The time when this King did thus fall sicke The manner of the Kings deliuery That sin is the onelie thing punished in the wicked and purged in the godly That remission of sinnes cureth all diseases That when God forgiueth sinnes he also forgetteth them That God onely forgiueth sinnes The cause and reasons why God did forgiue this King his sinnes Doctrine from thence why the Lord worketh by meanes and secondary causes SERM. XII Out of Psalme 76 From 1. to the 8. ver Intreating of the great deliuery in 88. from the Spanish tyranny Sheweth the purpose of the Prophet in this Psalme what is meant by the name of God That the true knowledge and praises of God accompany each other The profite which cometh to vs by thankesgiuing That it is a mercy to haue God neare vs and to dwell with vs. The place of this ouerthrow What that is which driueth God from any place How this victory was obtained How the Lord is said to rebuke Gods former dealing with his Church To what end the Lord appointeth enemies vnto his Church How of Gods great mercyes followeth admiration SERM. XIII On Psalme 76.8.9.10.11.12 Intreating of the former subiect Sheweth that God onely did this great worke The effects that this great work brought forth One lesson from thence The time of this great iudgment The times of Gods sitting and rising To what end God commonly riseth An obiection of the Church preuented Exhortation to thankefulnesse That we should vpon extraordinary mercyes chiefly stirre vp our selues to the same SERM. XIIII On Psalme 40. preached in a publike fast enioyned by authority The parts of this Psalme In the 1. part from Dauids experience diuerse obseruations How Hope differeth from Faith The life of hope Hope and mourning may stand together How to obtaine patience in trouble How to know when God heareth our prayer though he grant not instantly our sute How constant mourning in trouble vnto God argueth certaine deliuerance Why the Lord delayeth to helpe his seruants The end why our prayers are heard Two sorts of abusing the grace of God SERM. XV. Out of 2. Tim. 2.22 preached at the publike Repentance of the Earle Bothwell in the Church of Edinborough Sheweth the summe and meaning of the words what these things be which all yong men should flie What is meant by the lusts of youth Whence the restraint of sinne doth come By what meanes the Lord restraineth sinne in vs. What things yong men should seeke after The definition and sorts of Repentance In what respects wordly sorrow is called a blind terror What godly sorrow is A caution to be obserued in Repentance What the greatest sinne a a man can commit is The effects of godly sorrow The manner of Repentance Why some parts of Repentance haue the name of Mortification and Viuification That in the worke of Repentance the diuell stayeth nothing more then our sincere confession of Sinnes A caution to beware of Presumption That there be two sortes of Repentance c. SERM. XVI Out of 2. Tim. 2.13 In way of an Exhortation to a Prouinciall Assembly Sheweth at whose hands the Pastor ought chiefly to seeke approbation How to obtaine true approbation The weight of ministeriall function The groundworke of the ministery Whereupon it consisteth What it is to rule in the
Lord. c. THE FIRST SERMON VPON THE PREPARATION TO THE LORDS SVPPER 1. COR. 11.2 Let euery man therefore examine himselfe and so let him eate of this Bread and drinke of this Cup. WElbeloued in Christ Iesus The Apostle in the words which we haue read deliuereth his counsell and giueth his aduice and not onely giues his aduice but giues his admonition and command That we should not come to the Table of the Lord that we should not come to the hearing of the word rashly but that euery one of vs should come to this holy worke with reuerence that we should prepare and sanctifie our selues in some measure And seeing we go vnto the King of heauens Table it becomes vs to put on our best array In a word he deliuereth the whole doctrine and matter of this preparation when he saith Let euery man and let euery wowan trie and examine themselues As if he would say Let euery one of you trie and examine your soules That is trie the estate of your owne hearts and condition of your owne consciences Marke and behold in what estate your heart is with God and in what estate your conscience is with your neighbour He biddeth not your neighbour to try you he biddeth not your companion to try your heart but he biddeth your selfe in person to trie your owne conscience he biddeth your selfe trie your owne heart because none can be certaine of the estate of your heart or of the condition of your conscience but your selfe Now he excludes not others from the triall of you neither for it is lawfull for the Pastor to trie you but others cannot trie you so narrowly as ye your selues may for no man can know so much of me as I kn●● of my selfe No man can be certaine of the estate of your heart and condition of your conscience and yet you your selues may be certaine of it As for others men may iudge of your heart and conscience according to your works and effects and except your workes and effects be very wicked and altogether vicious we are bound in conscience to iudge charitably of your hearts and consciences Therefore there is none so meete to trie the spirit of man to try the heart or conscience of man as is the man himselfe Now that this triall may be the better made ye haue first to vnderstand what it is that ye should trie what ye call a a conscience which the Apostles commands you to trie Next ye are to consider for what reasons causes ye should try your consciences Thirdly last of all ye are to know in what chiefe points ye should try and examine your consciences Then that we speake not vnto you of things vnknowne it is necessary for euery one of you seeing there is none of you that lacketh a conscience to vnderstand what a conscience is as neerely as God shall giue me grace I will bring you to the vnderstanding and knowledge of a conscience I call a conscience a certaine feeling in the heart resembling the iudgement of the liuing God following vpon a deed done by vs flowing from a knowledge in the minde accompanied with a certaine motion in the heart to wit feare or ioy trembling or reioycing Now we will examine the parts of this definition I call it first of all a certaine feeling in the heart for the Lord hath left such a stampe in the heart of euery man that he doth not that thing so secretly nor so quietly but he makes his owne heart to smite him and to strike him he makes him to feele in his owne heart whether he hath done well or ill The Lord hath placed this feeling in thy heart why Because cause the eyes of God looke not so much vpon the outward countenance and exterior behauiour as vpon the inward heart For he saith to Samuel in the first booke 16.7 The Lord beholds the heart So 1. Chron. 28.9 he saith to Salomon The Lord searcheth all hearts and vnderstandeth all imaginations and thoughts Also Ieremie 11.20 The Lord tries the reines and the heart And the Apostle 1. Cor. 4.5 saith The Lord shall lighten things that are hid in darkenesse and make the counsels of the heart manifest So in respect that the Lord will chiefly haue to do with the heart therefore in the heart he placeth this feeling which is the chiefe part of conscience I say next that this feeling resembleth the iudgement of God for this feeling was left and placed in our soule for this end and purpose that we might haue a domesticall and familiar iudgement within our selues to resemble and describe the secret and inuisible iudgement of the high God a particular iudgement to goe before that generall iudgement in that generall and great day where euery man shall be iustified or condemned according to the particular iudgement that is within his owne conscience In the meane time this conscience is left in vs to arrest vs in this life thereby as it were to ease the liuing God at that last iudgement For the bookes of our owne consciences in that last day shall be opened and euery man shall receiue according to the report of the decree that is within his owne conscience therefore I say that our conscience resembles the iudgement of God The third thing that I say is this It followeth vpon a deed done by vs our conscience nor our heart strikes vs not before the deed be done our heart strikes vs not before the euill deed be committed no it goeth not before the deed but the stroke of the conscience and feeling of the heart followeth immediatly vpon the deed in such sort that the deed is no sooner done by thee but thy conscience applies it to thy selfe and giues out the sentence against thy selfe therefore I say it is a feeling following vpon a deed done by vs. And next I say flowing from a knowledge in the minde for except the conscience haue information and except the heart know that the deede which is done is euill the heart nor the conscience can neuer count it to be euill therefore knowledge must go before the stroke of the conscience thy heart can neuer feele that to be euill which thy minde knoweth not to be euill So knowledge must euer go before feeling and according to the measure of thy knowledge according to the nature and qualitie of thy knowledge accordingly shall the testimonie and stroke of thy conscience be For a light knowledge a doubting and vncertaine knowledge makes a light and small stroke as on the other part a holy and solid knowledge drawne out of the word of God maketh a heauie stroke of the conscience So the conscience must answer to the knowledge If we haue no other knowledge but the knowledge which we haue by nature and by the light and sparks which are left in nature our conscience will answer no further but to that knowledge but if beside the light of nature we haue
ye will find it the more worthie of praise I am sorie in my heart that our disposition is so euill that we cannot praise him as we would yet howsoeuer it be that we can do it as we would let vs do it as we may according to that measure of grace that is granted to euerie one of vs. And for this default that is in vs let euery one of vs desire pardon following me after this manner Lord be mercifull to our vnprepared hearts Lord behold vs in the righteous merits of thy Sonne and suffer not this euill disposition of ours to be a hinderance to the second deliuerie if peraduenture that Balaak with his Priest Balaam make the second assault But Lord in thy mercies sanctifie our hearts more and more to all thy holy vses that thy mercifull protection may couer vs and being inuironed therewith we shall not be found naked let the furie and rage of the enemie assaile when he pleaseth Let vs I say after this manner be thankfull to God And surely the thankfull memory of this benefit shall be the readie way to purchase the second deliuerie in case as I haue said the enemies of God being possessed with that restlesse spirit of the Diuell make the second assault Thus farre concerning the first benefit The second benefit whereby he sheweth himselfe gracious to his people followeth in the second verse to wit He made his residence with them he dwelt at Shalem as his Tabernacle placed in Sion doth testifie He dwelt at Ierusalem which at that time was called Shalem where his Tabernacle was placed This dwelling of God with his Church is the second benefit wherein he sheweth himselfe gracious to her For suppose it be true that the maiestie of our God replenisheth heauen and earth and is euery where yet it is as true that this God of ours dwelleth not euery where for he dwelleth onely in his Church and among his faithfull For the Lord is farre off continually from the hearts of the wicked as the Apostle saith Therefore the Lord had made as yet his residence and dwelling to be in Sion He dwelt in the hearts and consciences of his owne people of old he gaue them ensignes of his visible presence as was the Tabernacle the Arke as types and ceremonies which were seates of his oracles and gaue many miracles and wonders for the confirming of his presence Now it hath pleased the Lord to translate his Tabernacle from the Iewes to vs and to set downe the ensignes of his presence among vs such as the preaching of his word as ye heare it this day the ministring of his Sacraments as ye see this day and the exercise of discipline as we haue at this time These are the visible ensignes of his presence whereby your senses are informed that the inuisible God dwelleth here he maketh his residence properly in the hearts of faithfull men and women And the Lord dwelleth in his Saints two manner of waies to wit by faith and by his holy Spirit It is by the benefit of faith the Spirit of God that we become the Church of God Temples of his holy Spirit Citizens with the Saints and domesticks of heauen For by this faith our hearts as Peter speaketh Act. 15. are purified whereby Christ Iesus may haue residence in them and as Ephes. 3.17 whereby Christ may dwell in vs. By the same faith againe we are builded on the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles that we may be an habitation to God by his holy Spirit as in the last verse Ephes 2. Then I say if the Lord dwelleth in his Saints by these two manner of waies by faith and by his holy Spirit he dwelleth not substantially in his Saints but he dwelleth so onely in his owne Sonne For the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelleth in him corporally By faith and his holy Spirit therefore he maketh his residence with you by the ministerie of his word and Sacraments he testifieth his presence here And surely moe and greater promises Ierusalem had neuer then this Church of ours hath moe notable testimonies of his presence and mightie deliuerances Iudah had neuer then we haue And God dwelt neuer in no nation of the earth at least since the Gospell began so long in such sinceritie and puritie without error or heresie as he hath done with vs. So that if there be any nation vnder the Sunne bound to praise God we are chiefly bound and of all nations we must be most vngrate if his name be not great among vs. But when I looke to the horrible ingratitude answering to this obligation I cannot promise a continuance of this light and presence For will ye looke vnto our answering in our liues the great men in this countrey are become companions to the eues and Pirates oppressors and manifest blasphemers of God and man Ye see murther oppression and bloodshed is the onely thing that they shoote and marke at As to the simple sort of people the prophane multitude they are altogether godlesse there is not such a thing in them as a naturall light whereby they may see God in his works much lesse the supernaturall As to the greatest part of our Priests our Ministers their mouthes haue lost the truth and their persons haue lost their reuerence the Lord hath made them contemptible in the eyes of men And by reason they haue forgot to giue him his due reuerence he hath taken their reuerence out of the hearts of men Well the Lord will not wearie and trouble himselfe perpetually as he hath done these many yeares past in offering pearles to filthie swine to curres and to dogs It is not possible that he should wearie himselfe still but at the last seeing there is no estate of life that testifieth any true loue to his truth therefore it is as ye see the most part of this countrey is giuen ouer alreadie to a strange delusion because they would not receiue his Sonne when he was offered therefore the Lord hath giuen them ouer to a strange delusion And to what I pray you Euen to prefer the leauen of the Pharisies and dregs of Papistrie to the wholsome and blessed word of truth And shal this be the end of these plagues No but in respect of the contempt of the truth their bodies shall be plagued also in the sight of you all whosoeuer they be that haue made foule defection from that blessed truth And vpon this we haue also a petition in the second place to craue of God as in the first place to craue that the Lord of his great mercie in time would preuent this vtter extermination which this great confusion both in Church and policie so terribly threatneth and portendeth For it is not possible that things can euer stand still in this estate but of necessitie either the Magistrate and in speciall the supreame Magistrate must put to his hand and make an end of this confusion or else this
confusion shall make an end of him Therefore yet I say ioyne your prayers with me that the Lord would preuent this extermining confusion threatned and giue him grace and an inclining will to make his soule free of the iniquities of his Nobles Thus farre concerning the second benefit Now in the second part of this Psalme which beginneth at the third verse he praiseth God for a singular deliuerance which he had granted to his Church for a deliuerance in the which he shewed himselfe more then wonderfull a deliuerance accomplished by his owne power and force without the helpe or aide of any creature a deliuerance in the which he shewed himselfe a mightie preseruer of his owne and a terrible Iudge to the enemie What deliuerance it was in particular he expresseth not I agree well to thinke it the same deliuerance which was purchased against Senacherib I will not insist in the particular but if ye take it to be so ye shall take it well He keepeth this order in setting downe this wonderfull deliuerance First in the third verse he setteth downe the ouerthrow generally together with the circumstance of place where this ouerthrow was done In the 4. verse he amplifieth this deed and by way of comparison he enlargeth it And that it may be the more pithie he turneth his speech to God In the 5. and 6. verses he setteth downe the manner of the victorie more particularly and he letteth vs see in the same verses how easily God did it And in the 7. verse he is rauished in admiration of the worke and he bursteth footh into that graue sentence Thou euen thou art terrible c. To come backe then to the third verse in it there are two things First he setteth downe the ouerthrow generally and he noteth the place next where the ouerthrow was done As to this ouerthrow he saith He brake their bowes and their arrowes their shields and their battell As if he would say in one word he vtterly ouerthrew the enemies put them to flight he made them to leaue all their armour behinde them that came to inuade his dwelling place For the breaking of the armor had serued to little purpose except he had broken the men also that managed the armor And therefore by that accustomed figure he vnderstandeth by the breaking of the armor the breaking of all them that did beare the armour As to the place where this ouerthrow was done he noteth it in the first word by an aduerbe of place pointing it out as it were by his finger Where was it done It was done where God dwelt where he made his residence at Salem which is Ierusalem he testified to his owne people and bare Senacherib witnesse that he dwelt there There is no man that will suffer himselfe to be cast out of his dwelling place willingly These men to wit the King of Ashur and his complices came to cast out God out of his dwelling place but he stoode to the defence of his owne house shewed them that he would not remooue for their pleasure For the Church then and the Church now haue found in experience that there is no externall force in the world able to dislodge God against his will nor make him to change his dwelling place if we dislodge him not our selues if they had not cast him out by their actions he had neuer bene dislodged So long as the Iewes left him a cleane footstep to remaine in so long he dwelt and lodged with them But from time all was defiled therefore as ye haue heard sometimes from this place and may reade in that 9.10 and 11. of Ezechiel at last he is compelled to take his leaue How loath he was to depart his manie good-nights his manie rests which are there set downe do clearely testifie I thinke betweene the Cherubims and the mount of Oliues he made foure rests as ye haue in that prophecie of Ezechiel and all to testifie how loath he was to depart and how ready he was to abide if they had turned vnto him But they turned not vnto him and therefore he departed Thus farre concerning the text Now if we shall compare deliuerie with deliuerie and compare like with like it is commonly questioned alreadie and will be questioned till the end of the world where was yonder great ouerthrow giuen and in what place was yonder nauy destroyed It will be answered againe and I am assured it is answered alreadie this nauy was destroyed about the coasts of the Lords owne dwelling place where he made his residence They came to inuade his own Isle to cast him out of his possession And what did he He shewed them to their owne cost that he would not remooue neither for the Pope nor Spaniards pleasure And surely if we haue not the fault our selues he will neuer remooue What glory what preheminence what comfort what dignitie we haue by the presence of God I thinke it was neuer well knowne of vs And if there were no more but this singular comfort which as yet appeareth neuer to haue entred into your hearts I thinke the very commoditie besides the glory which we haue of the presence of God should mooue vs much And yet notwithstanding all this glorie and dignity that we haue by him we will not suffer him to remaine among vs. That thing which no externall force was able to bring about we by our filthie and wicked lines are like to bring to passe Looke all the corners of the countrey is there a cleane place wherin he may make his residence and his rest without the cries and lamentable voyces of terrible murther oppression and blood where shall he make his residence where he shall not be dislodged by blasphemie Alas this is ouer rife among men whom we would otherwise account good men It is not possible for him to make his residence amongst a people that is altogether vncleane he must haue a cleane chamber to rest in at the least if that our hearts be altogether vncleane he can haue no abode here O then what is the remedie of this and how shall this matter be helped for if he depart we lose all There is no other remedie but to prepare a lodging for his remaining And how shall this be I will tell you Looke how much more excellent our God and his blessed Spirit is then any Monarch or Prince in the earth let vs be so much the more carefull that our hearts and consciences may be cleane and holy for his remaining Let not our hearts be a closet and a dunghill of all corruption It is not possible for him to dwell there For the blessed Spirit of God cannot rest but in a cleane place Then I say looke what reuerence thou bearest to earthly men for is it possible that the face and countenance of a Prince should strike thee with such feare that the reuerence thou bearest to him will make thee not onely to compose thy
the praise of the Lord. Senacherib was compelled to say who list to reade that historie and it is said that his graue hath this superscription that he confessed it was the great God of heauen that fought against him Now heare ye at the same present what say the Spaniards They are compelled to say that it was the finger of the Lord the mightie hand of the God of Iacob that hath wrought this ouerthrow without the helpe of any creature So by these examples and manie moe ye see the veritie of this proposition God maketh the greatest rage and furie of his enemies to be the greatest matter of his praise Now in the end of the verse he meeteth an obiection which the Church might haue obiected For the Church in those dayes as the Church this day might haue said Although this victory of the Lords be strange and wonderfull yet he hath not slaine all For we vnderstand that the Lord shall not make all Christs enemies his footstoole vntill the last day And therefore seeing there is a remnant of them who are endued with that same restlesse spirit that their fo●efathers were before they cannot rest but still pursue and come against the Church of God For the spirit of the diuell although it possesse not all the enemies in a like measure yet they are all possessed with one sort and kind of spirit which possest their elder brother Cain to wit the spirit of persecution possesseth thē all where euer they be scattered And as Cain persecuted his brother Abel so we must looke to be persecuted of them as ye heare this spirit bursting forth in horrible effects which come to your eares our of Roan out of Paris and out of all those parts Ye heare there of the gr●at persecution and bloudie rage of the enemies which testifieth that they are possessed with that same spirit of persecution where with their elder brother Cain was possest So the Church seeing that the Lord hath not slaine all but that there is a remnant left who are endued with that same restlesse spirit of their predecessors she might haue said Who shall restraine the remnant of the rage of the enemies For although that here they be called a remnant yet in respect of vs they are not a remnant but an huge multitude Therefore seeing it is so that they are possessed with this spirit that will make them to conioyne their forces they will renew their assault and who shall restraine them The Prophet answers clearely in the name of God and biddeth the Church take no thought of their rage for he that had destroyed the roote would destroy the remnant the God of glorie that ouerthrew the maine armie would also restraine the remnant The Church hath no more adoe but to depend vpon the God of armies and he shall fight for her Now ye see how clearely and easily this matter applyeth it selfe Ye know how it is common in the mouthes of all men that this fleete which is perished is counted to haue come onely to haue scoured the waters and to haue espied the forces of the Queene of England there is a greater armie coming the second assault shall be made with greater courage and shall haue a better successe This is the cōmon obiection vpon this the weake ones of the Church may aske Who shall restraine this remnant and who shall oppose vnto this second assault The Prophet answereth the God of heauen shall restraine the second assault The mightie God of this Isle who hath shewed himselfe wonderfull from time to time in this countrey howsoeuer we be ingrate he shall restraine the second as he did the first So on our part we haue no more ado but to hold vs in the sight of God And this is euen a very great worke to hold vs in his eye for by bending vp of our eye to him we shall draw downe his mercifull eye to vs and so being guarded with his eye and being enuironed with his mercifull protection which is vnto vs a brasen wall the enemie shall neuer preuaile assaile when he pleaseth And this shall be done onely by holding vs in the sight of Gods eye Therefore so long as euery one of you in particular and this countrey in generall is able to hold themselues in the sight of his eye heauen and earth and all that is therein is not able to ouercome them But if thou build vp a parpan wall of thine own making betweene thee and him then not he onely but all his creature shall be fearefull to thee and ready to destroy thee For wherefore is it that some men are commonly so exceedingly affraid but only for want of an issue and we haue this issue of trouble onely in the sight of his eye So that if thou keepe God thou hast euer a sure issue O then the care of a Christian should be this to repent and sorrow for his sinnes past to demolish and cast downe this parpan wall of iniquitie that it grow no more but that by sobs and sighs peece by peece it may be demolished No question the more sinne is remooued the more we are in the sight of his eye and the more we see him the greater comfort shall we get all manner of waies There is no other way to be saued but by this Thus farre concerning the second part of our diuision Now in the third part which is in the last two verses he concludeth with a notable exhortation that seeing the God of heauen hath deserued so well of her she should shew her selfe thankfull The least thing that she can do is to praise the Name of God yea surely it is the least thing Therefore he saith Vow and performe your vowes Vow to testifie your thankfulnesse Performe your vowes to testifie your obedience and how readie ye are to serue so good a God By vowes here he vnderstandeth not these foolish vowes but the action of praise and t●anksgiuing for so oft as the Spirit of God maketh mention of vowes so oft he meaneth of vowes of thanksgiuing as ye may see clearely in this booke of the Psalmes as namely in the 50.55.60.61.65 and 66. Psalmes And to vow to thanke God it is a part of our dutie we are bound to it yea we haue our warrant for it And these sorts of vowes are very profitable for we haue two great benefits by them First they stirre vp confirme our faith For when a man is in any great extremitie and promiseth to be thankfull to God if he be deliuered it strengtheneth his faith and maketh him to looke the more for his deliuerie And againe when the deliuery is past that we are returned to our owne home if it were no more but for very shame keeping of the promise that we made we cannot but be thankful So these sorts of vowes are good ought to be vowed and performed but those vnlawfull vowes of the Papists haue no ground here Neither