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A19306 The shield of our safetie: set foorth by the faythfull preacher of Gods holye worde A. Anderson, vpon Symeons sight, in hys Nunc dimittis. Seene and allowed Anderson, Anthony, d. 1593. 1581 (1581) STC 572; ESTC S100137 125,541 166

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retchlesse ignorant Simeon and Nicodemus not three yeares but by tymes fortie yeares in the schoole of Christ and nowe these last twenty yeares contynually without intermission or play daye hast thou vnder her graces Maiestie and most happy gouernment bene vertuouslye and aboundantly taught in purenesse of doctrine But how art thou encreased Howe followest thou Ioseph Simeon and Nicodemus Truely euen as the shadowe doth the sunne For the shadowe runneth as fast as he but neuer higher then the earth euen so we runne and poste with spéede but still vpon the earthly minds of grosse fantasies and therein counteruayle we the sunne which swiftly runneth in the Heauen to his appoynted course Heb. 5.12 We are come to this encrease that when for tyme we should be apt to receyue stronger meate we are not able to digest the dyet of Infantes which is sucking mylke When Paule vz Gods teachers by doctrin in truth should leade vs further into perfection we crye out still we are Iosephs Heb. 6.1.2 we are Nicodemitans we are not yet past the doctrine of the beginning of Christ the foundation of repentance from deade works of fayth towards God c. We also abuse this sentence of Paule Heb. 5.14 Strong meate belongeth to them that are of age which through long custome haue their wyts exercised to discerne both good and euill So we confesse there are a people to whome more perfection belongeth but we kéepe our selues from that number For we the Ministers can scarcely in the Country get our people to come to the beginnings of Religion so much as to send their seruants to learne the apointed Catechisme But if age should breed perfection are wée not older in the Gospell then Ioseph was Haue not we vnder the gospell synce K. H. dayes past the yeares which ouer ranne the Hebrewes after Christ his death before this Epistle was written vnto them Centu. 1. lib. 2. 10. Yes verily for it was written by the author therof as it séemeth from Rome about 25. yeres after Christs death And if custome could doe it how conuersant haue the scriptures bene with our wittes nowe this ninetéene yeres together And if in thrée yeres Ioseph and Nicodemus became so strong how can we for shame say we are lyke to them which in nintéene yeres are in the bowels of this long taught lande not able for the most parte to giue a reason of our fayth and hope And the better sort of vs are euen rather staying from farther then standing fast to that wee haue We be lesse louing more colde then we haue bene It may be said of England as the Stories report of the Iewes who when they came to Ierusalem Nehe. 4.17 by the commaundement of Cyrus King of Persia the were so whote in buylding the decayed Citie that they beset with enimies helde their weapons in the one hande and laboured with the other Beholde feare of the enimy could not driue them from the Lords labor And when the Samaritanishe ypocrites offered to helpe them they were so zealous that though they hungred the fynishing of the worke yet would they not admit an hypocrites hande to touch the buylding of the Lorde And when they were complayned vpon and subtyle deuises made to stay their labors they contynued their buylding styll manger the enimy euen as the king had commanded them But after a tyme of rest they began euerye man to buylde vp his owne house and let the house of God lye vnfynished xvij yeres tyll the Prophete was sente to Zorobabell the Prince and Iohosua the high Priest Hag. 1.1 to excite them to their increase in former labour And is it not so with England In the first of hir Maiesties raigne how vehemently how zealously A generall decrease in respect in England how diligently laboured we to repayre the decayed Church in England It was a heauen to see princely Péeres Noble bloods prouoke the multitude to imbrace the Gospell Popery was beaten downe her broode remoued and Gods true Ministers placed Idolatry extinguyshed and the Churches beset with the Sacrifice of the Gospell which whote beginning hath of the sodaine receyued such a coole as we are now wholy giuen to the buylding of costly bowres and houses of pleasure But as for Gods house eyther in our own soule or the common Catholique Church we commit it to the reuerend Bishops Ministers of God except a reserued séede which ioyne with Noble Nehemias Zorobabel and Esra to assist our most Christian Cyrus the principall Nourcing mother to Gods children this daye in all christian landes in the redifying of Gods house in our dayes whose gracious beginning with good progresse hytherto the Lorde hath prosperously blessed his name be praysed therfore whose harte the Lord yet more and more inflame in him and direct by his holy spirit contynually And to many of our Fathers and Brethren of the Clargy we may say as the spirite spake to the Angell and Church at Ephesus These things sayth he that holdeth the seauen starres in his right hande Apo. 21.2.3 c. walketh in the midst of the seauen golden Candlesticks I know thy works thy labour and thy pacience and howe thou canst not forbeare them which are euill and hast examined them which saye they are Apostles and are not and hast founde them lyers And thou was burdened hast pacience Apo. 2.1.2.3 c. and for my names sake hast laboured and hast not faynted Neuerthelesse I haue somewhat against thee because thou hast left thy fyrst loue Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen and repent and do the fyrst workes Or else I will come against thee shortly and will remoue thy Candlesticke out of hys place except thou amende The Iewes from Key cold persons became hote and cruell enimies so that in whose defence they stood to their great perill at the fyrst once making stay of their increase they thrust the sworde into his bowels For they fell from God they crucified his sonne and tooke the Regiment of his Church into their handes excommunicating and murthering his Apostles Disciples and whomsoeuer confessed his name But their ende was desolation by the iust iudgement of God yet so as he forewarned them by his sonne Christ called them to repentance by his Apostles contynued his power of saluation to them to saye his holy Gospel during fortie yeares But when they contynued more and more obstinate and rebellious hauing hartes past féeling he gaue them and their City Ierusalem into the hands of the Romans Vespasian and Titus being the Rod of his anger for their vtter destruction that they which woulde not receyue Christ comming in his fathers name of whom they much bragged should by his iudgement receyue them which came in their owne names for their priuate glorye and earthly commoditie For the Romane Deputies partly by eager auarice partly by cruel oppression gréeuously vexed them And the Iewes dreaming styll of a
THE SHIELD OF our Safetie Set foorth by the Faythfull Preacher of Gods holye Worde A. Anderson vpon Symeons sight in hys Nunc dimittis Seene and allowed Micha 2.11 If a man walke in the Spirite and woulde lye falslye saying I wyll prophecy vnto thee of Wyne and of strong Drinke he should euen be a Prophet of thys people ¶ Imprinted at London in Fleetestreate beneath the Conduite at the Signe of S. Iohn Euangelist by H. Iackson 1581. ❧ TO THE RIGHT REuerend Father in God by Gods appoyntment the Byshop of London Anthony Anderson the Preacher of Gods holy Gospell wysheth all heauenly helpe in Christ our Lorde AS THE BENEFITS OF GOD to this Nation Right Reuerend are mo then many so aboue al are we bound to praye and prayse greatly the Lorde Omnipotent by whose mightie hande Satan is from vs banished in his olde Popishe pride his chiefe Instrument the Romishe Antichrist so fully slayne by the daily breath of Gods holy worde that neuer is he lyke in such sort with vs to be reuiued The prouidence of God hath apointed this to be the time of our Christian translation Colo. 2.13 and hir Maiestie oure gracious Soueraigne Elizabeth his Noble Nourse to his English Church taking from vs in one hower both Pope Cardinall and persecuting Prince And hath from the gates of death drawne her and nowe set her chiefe among the princes of the earth For the losse of her Graces Syster some Papistes doe sore lamente but for the gaine by hir Maiestie now both one and other may reioyce For againe is verifyed the olde prophesie of Dauid Psal 68.11 God gaue the worde and great was the company of the Preachers Kings of the Armies did flee they did flee and shee that remayned in the house deuyded the spoyle Though yee haue lyen among the Pots yet shall ye be as the wings of a Doue that is couered with Syluer and whose feathers are as yellow Golde For God hath giuen sufficient matter to hir and to all other to tell of our delyuerie from the innumerable Hostes of Popishe Locustes which in the pestilent dayes of late Popery pinched vs in hir Noble Grace and her Grace to the terror of vs. But are not these Armies and their Kings fled they are by the mightie hande of our Christ scattred banished and deade that sought the desolation of our Englishe Israell and our most godly Hester hath obteyned in mercy hir selfe and christian subiects Esther 3.4.5.6 7.8 9.13.14.15.16 these presente Halcions dayes From God by hir hande we enioy this most pleasaunt seedes tyme of the Gospell nowe well neare full twentie three yeares By her Maiesties faythful care in bounden duetye oure decayed Ierusalem is mightily repayred yea though Sanballat and Tobiah spyte it Nehe. 4. and seeke to hynder it yet Noble Nehemias goeth on with all GOD graunt vs hir louing subiects to ioyne with the Iewes in this namely eche man in his calling to buylde to his power in the house of the Lorde that wee may be the Mansions of the holye Ghost and to haue oure weapons ready in hande and earnest hartes in true loyaltie to hir Maiestie 1. Cor. 3.16 c. 6.19 to fyght against his and hir enimies for her and then our defence wheresoeuer they shal assault vs. And let vs not be afrayde of our Popishe aduersaries which is to them sayth saint Paule a token of perdition and to you of saluation Phil. 1.28 and that of God Would God in these buylding dayes we had not in authoritie in sundrye Shyres yea in the harte of this Realme spyghting Sanballat and menacing Tobiah But as the Gospell by suche receyueth some hinderance so I truste in the Lorde that were they better knowne to Nehemias As for her earnest zeale to his truth shee cannot by their surmised traynes and fayned fayth to her godlye growth in Christ bee stayde from hys labours in hir heroycall harte fyrmely planted to increase So through her kingly power shee woulde not admyt such the seates of Iustice for peace which are sonnes of Warre to Gods Church but contrary with God her Lorde thruste these myghty from the bench to the Barre and by Dauids example cut of the wicked Psal 101. or at least weede them out of the Citie of the Lorde Yea euen as manye as haue euill wyll at Syon and that my diligence wyth others my Brethren may appeare Mala. 27. at whose mouths people should aske and haue knowledge and that also some at least hereby myght be profited I haue to my possibilitie set Plough on gate and furrowed this lande that after followeth as appeareth And albeit many other could haue farre passed this my tyllage yet perceyuing the clowdes to houer towardes Haruest God for Christes sake pardon our synnes and preserue Elizabeth our christian Queene and this fertyle ground so long to lye fallowe I after some vewe of my seedes whether they woulde abyde weather and well agree with the lande sanctified my Plough with christian and earnest prayer and haue layde open my labours to the skilfull suruey of godly husbandmen And doubt not that good fruite and much encrease shall be fall to the Reapers Which labour ended I deemed best to shrowde my trauayling Plough vnder your Lordships learned Shelter assured that whatsoeuer frowning weather then shal assayle it as nipping frost carping cold Romish rayne hatefull stormye hayle or other wynters wynde so euer can come well hapt should my poore Plough be against al these and where neede is at all oportunitie the same in right to be defended Another cause why I presume my symple Pen to your learned L. is to offer hereby a token of my good wyll and duety to your good L. and that from your olde Country man receyuing this little by it your godly disposition maye be againe as it were desyred to stretch your former hande to helpe Gods house in Lecester shyre but specially in Northampton shyre where God it knoweth neede is both of sowing and weeding I speake of experience And if this my bold enterprise your L. wil vouchsafe fauorably to accept if by your great skyl in Gods husbandry thought fyt for the lower sort for whose sake chiefly I haue done it you wil publishe the same and alowe it for sounde I shal account my selfe more and more bounde and endeuour my hande to such godly further labours as his holye wyll hath determined The Lorde for euer blesse you wyth this olde Father Symeon whose wordes followe and giue you wyth Gods whole Church his and our common consolation Christ our Lorde that he may be yours and you for euer his Amen From Medborne in Lecestershire this 12. of December 1580. Your L. humbly in Christ A. Anderson LORD nowe lettest thou thy seruant departe in peace Luc. 2.29 according to thy worde For mine eyes haue seene thy Saluation which thou hast prepared before the face of all people To be a light
money to haue bought the bodye of the Lorde which possyblie might as wel haue come to passe as the high Priests to corrupt the Souldiours for money Mat. 28.13 to saye that his Disciples stole him away by night This might fleshe bloude in infyrmitie of Nature haue perswaded this Princely Péere in God But the wisedome of God hath otherwise determyned and therefore at a sodaine changed the harte of Ioseph and of a priuie and quaking Disciple made hym an open and most Heroycall spirited Souldiour all which holy Luke testifieth of purpose in these words Luc. 23.50 Tum ecce vir nomine Ioseph c. As if he would saye beholde nowe a maruellous matter and sodayne mutation A christian courage in a Noble counsellour beyonde the expectation of all men come to passe When the matters of Christ the Lorde were thus in hande that he was crucyfied slayne and dead vpon the crosse and there hanging was of all men neglected his louers and friends for feare hyding themselues some other of them standing aloofe wéeping the miserable daye and beholding with grieslye griefe the most pitifull case of our despised Christ no man daring to offer himselfe for the glory of the father to honor the bloody body of his dead sonne Then euen then dyd this graue Councellour ritche seruant and faythfull Disciple caste of the cowardishnesse of his fleshe and armed wyth the spirite of God professed himselfe alone to be the seruaunte of Christe in the myddle of his enimies and at Pilates person he stowtely but wisely and with reuerent duety beggeth the bodye of his mayster not anye longer fearing the losse of goods credite office dignitie or caring for anye perrill that might to his Noble person or honorable house thereafter befall O Noble christian Counsellour And note well ye Noble seruants of Iesu the Lorde your mayster who hath the hartes of Kings in his hands and doth turne them as he doth the Tydes of the Sea Pro. 21.1 and Ryuers of water did so humble the harte of Pilate to hys Counsellors request that spéedily he obtayned his godlye desyre And that more is where Ioseph thought hymself alone to haue this cause in hand there the Lord of lyfe doth in the moment of tyme ioyne to him a most Noble Pharisie named Nicodemus God gyueth good successe to godly labours farre beyonde all expectation a teacher of the Law that so both estates Spiritual and Temporall may perceyue that the Lorde doth keepe them in power and fauour with princes and potentates bicause they shoulde with courage doe the Lorde seruice yea euen in dangerous seasons if Christ be eyther accused prysoned or anye waye else euill dealt withall The heroycall hartes then of christian Counsellours and Noble Christians Courtyers and Gentlemen of credite should though alone make humble and earnest and eftsoones peticions to the Deputie of our head Christ for the godly members of the same God will ioyne with them and enclyne the hartes of the hardned for his sonnes glory and graunt ayde vnto you in his businesse beyonde your expectation and your selues shall finde fauour wyth God for your labors in his Christ Now in Ioseph his person and also in Nicodemus there are two things to be well and déepely considred for want wherof many doe to their great hindrance from God take euill example not rightly giuen First therfore we are to consider what be the thinges in these men to be followed of Noble men women others Secondly the hyndring euill A righte eye is to be had in the deeds and lyues of godly men which manye doe presumptuously take as offered in the persons of these men to be receyued without reproofe The thing to bée followed that so this faythfull seruice to God may appeare to the more Noble christians is that they be endowed with their exampler Ioseph his spiritual quallities and christian habite which maketh them truely braue and bewtifull yea so as neyther Silkes Veluets Syluer or Golde can doe and that is that they be in person honest not giuen to the notable vices folowing for the most parte forreyn Nobilitie so I call al those by carnall byrth enobled in whose hart God by his spirite and worde beareth not the soueraigntie as Idlenesse the mother of al euill surfetting dronkennesse whoredome chambring wantonnesse blasphemous othes filthy and rybaldous talking and couetous cruelty ouer their sore oppressed Tenants and inferior people and such lyke but that they be giuen to the custome of honest and chast lyfe sobrietie of minde and manners comlynesse of apparell agréeable his dignitie moderate dyet and frugall hospitality louing harted and vsing vpright dealing with all men assured that as their persons doe farre excell the lower sorte so God requireth more regard of them Luc. 12.48 For to whom much is giuen of him shall be much required And let them make thys reckning if they hunte counter herein the verye heathen Nobilitie shall ryse agaynst them to iudgement It is sayde of the seueritie among the olde Romaynes in iudgement that if an olde person or famous Senator al if greatly for hys desertes were to be renowmed became in any sorte to be the example of yll to the common weale he should haue seuere censure Lucius Antonius Lucius Antonius was cast out of the Senate house for that hauing maried a Mayde he cast her off by deuorce wythout the counsell of his friends Fabritius Lucius Censor adiudged Cornelius Rufinus Cornelius Rufinus who had bene twise Consul and twise Dictator vnworthy the fellowship of Senators bycause he had ouercuriously decked his Cubborde wyth Syluer plate as gyuing thereby a superfluous example to hys fellow brethren and others Duronius Duronius also was remoued the Senate for that being Tribune he did dissolue that reasonable lawe set downe before by the Senate which dyd restrayne the lashing prodigalitie in fumptuous feasts and banquets These and such other examples the Stories delyuer vs. But who thinketh these men were they in these dayes worthye such seuere censure being Noble and well deseruing Or who is of Iulius Caesars Iulius Caesar iudgement holding it most honorable for a noble man or of higher calling by vertues to excell others and also so to guyde his family that his housholde maye be frée from all suspition of euill O that our christian Gentrie were come to this heathen mans perfection in this poynte Or that our Byshops would in all their houses beginne thys daunce What is asked of the Nobilitie Well Ioseph must beginne to doe it and also to be iuste in his dealing with all men which consisteth in the equall gyuing to euery man his owne and to doe to others as they would they should doe to him And to the vtterest of his authority and power Mat. 7.12 he must follow the counsel of the noble prince and Prophet Dauid hymselfe to defende the fatherlesse and people in righteousnes and the poore
miseries of sinne but so as with griefe and anguishe of heart they carry that lumpe of death Yet they in pacient mortification by his holy spirite wayte his tyme set for their delyuerie and earnestly desyre the same Note also the right ende of this peticion which by the wicked and desperate is abused A due respect in the desyre of naturall death The godlesse cumbred with piercing sting of conscience ashamed of their state and looking for his heauye iudgement doe also desyre and cry for death So doe the poore ignorante persons which in pryson in Gallyes or Iayles and pyning in payne The poore oppressed the néedie which cannot haue to satisfie the hungry crye of their children and selues the sick pacient which long hath lyen of an incurable disease These and such lyke desyre death but it is not to the right ende for which it should be desyred They only haue respect to the present paine or shame and to fynish that they do not onely desyre but the wicked desperate persons in despite of God his holy lawe and instinct of Nature doe with the pernicious knyfe of perpetuall paine bereaue for a tyme the sorrowes of thys synfull corps But such desperate death is the purchase of Hel with Iudas Achitophel king Saule and such others Now the true and lyuely ende of this peticion in the elect of God is That least they should by to much acquaintance wyth finne and death become resty in the bed of hir delight and so be slayne Sap. 4.11.12 sléeping with Holophernes in dronken pleasures of the fleshe the same daylie more and more assaulting them they doe pray for death as for the last remedye and perfite victory against sinne and Sathan Yet so as I saye still they doe by fayth in hope suppresse the dolorous griefe of sinne in lyfe with the continual meditation of the inwarde ioyes receyued by grace in Christ and therein solace themselues as with the earnest penny of their Fathers possession which they are assured of when the Lord in mercy shall call them to himselfe by death Till when they punishe this bodie of sinne least it shoulde proue to lustie 1. Tim. 5.23 but they nurrish nature weakned that she may the sooner and the better yéelde the office which their seuerall callings doe require And this is the heauenly ende of our desyre to die that so we may receiue to our selues that life which now is treasured vp for vs with GOD in Christ which is our onely lyfe Col. 3.1.2 And thirdly the loue and longing desyre which in the saintes is apparant for the whole and perfite ioye of the Church the Apostle S. Iohn manifesteth in these wordes O Lorde come quickly Apo. 22.17 which there is approoued by the Lorde who to the comforte of his Church sealeth vp thys prayer with Amen Saying So be it Beholde I come quickly Amen Lorde perfite vs in thée and shortly ende these dayes of sinne for thy holye names sake Lorde Iesu and giue vs that truely call vpon thée thy eternall glorye Amen Last of all when Symeon sayth Lord now let thy seruaunt departe in peace he doth teach vs to abhorre all troublesome and murtherous kinde of death And doth cōuince all those guyltie of this precept Thou shalt not kill which in any maner haue slaine themselues for any cause Symeon abhorreth al troublesome and murdering deaths And doth forewarne the Church of God to flye such damnable enterprises which are no other but the perswasions of Satan and the acte herein is the obsequie of his deadly will Though Symeon desyre to dye and that death is to him comfortable in that he hath séene in bodye and soule the Sauyour of the worlde come now in fleshe to saue his Church by the ransome of his bloud which fayth only maketh death desyred in hart yet will he not shorten his life by sodaine crueltie to be a Felondese But he will dye as hath ordayned the wyll of God And therefore he addeth according to thy worde What shall we then say to them which else haue their great commendation in that to auoyde some the dayes of tyranny some other the sight of Gods church persecuted or to auoyde the purpose of synful persons or the infamy of synne or therby thinking to glorifye God haue from the consistory of the harte giuen commission and commaundement to the violent hande to cut in sunder soule and bodye by murthering stroake of merciles arme Truely I say that neyther Cato Razias Lucretia Curtius or his lyke are sure warrants to thée or yet the Donatists which to bring the Christian Byshops into contempt would offer to kill themselues rather then to prouoke the Emperours sworde against them which they spake to winne more ease when the godly Bishops craued his ayde against their pernitious pollution and yet would they be accounted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cato in kylling himself thought to be ridde of Caesars tyranny by which meanes he offred himselfe to Sathans bondage yea he conuinceth himselfe of folly when he exhorteth hys sonne to obey and séeke the peace of Caesar from whome he ran by murthering death If it were good and a wise parte for his sonne to obteyne the Princes fauour why not for the father also His impacience which could not suffer himself to liue a bearing subiect was a thousande partes worse then the Tyrants crueltie But thou which fearest God hast another rule if the Prince be neuer so cruel thou art commaunded to pray for him that thou mayest liue a quyet godly honest lyfe 1. Tim. 2.12 which thing sayth Paule in that place is good and acceptable What to kyll himselfe from Nero his tyranny being a persecuted christian No but that God will vnder his Regiment giue thée at length a quyet lyfe For the same cause Ieremy sendeth by Baruck Baruk 1.11.12 exhortations to the afflicted Iewes in captiuitie vnder Nabuchadnezar that they should pray for his lyfe Persecuting Princes muste bee prayed for How much more ought wee to call vpon God for such as professe hys Gospell that they might also lyue quyetly vnder him And the Apostles doe arme vs to pacience and vnto forbearing of tyranny with long suffering as well by their owne example as doctrine But in no waies haue they eyther slayne themselues to be ridde of prisons Irons cruell murther or tyranny but haue sought by all meanes rather to maintayne their lyfe to doe more good therein to the Church of God then to hasten their ende by violent stroke For thys cause did Paule exhorte Timothie to pacience willing him to suffer aduersity to do the worke of an Euangelist 2. Tim. 4.5 and to make his ministery knowne He telleth him that he is now ready to be offred to dye for Christ but he feareth it not or will preuente Nero his cruelty by his owne hande but will lyue till the daye of his dissolution which the Lorde hath set
Iewishe or much lesse the Popishe priests can be to vs men of good warrante to pacifie hys wrath for our synnes with and by their dayly counterfeyte sacrifices when they haue neyther warrante from thy holy written worde or be The Pope very vnfytte to offer vp sacrifice for synne hys Cardinals lesse hys priests least but his irreligious all to bad or can be such men as it becommeth our priests to be Can the Pope or any his broode be found in truth and search of his owne friends holy harmelesse and vndefyled Is he in all sortes seperate from synners or are his priests Is hys dwellings aboue the Heauens or haue not his Fryers Monkes Byshops Cardinals and Popishe prelates the fertyll soyle of euery Nation to plante their dwelling places in Doe they not néede to offer sacrifice fyrst for their owne sinnes which of all other are most acquainted therewith And doe they not in the daylie sacrifice of their blasphemous Masse fyrst offer for the Pope then for the king Byshop and themselues then for him her or them for whome they are for that tyme hyred These therefore can be no lawfull priests to offer for sinne were there any such sacrifyce to be offered The lawe of Moses made such men priests as were subiect to death The Popishe lawe anoyleth such as are wrapped in infyrmities but the law of the othe of God which is the gospell maketh the sonne of God Christ Iesus onely the sacryfycing priest of hys Churche who is without synne deuoyde of infyrmitie holy harmelesse vndefyled higher then the heauens seperate from synners once for all offred a full price in sacrifyce to his father vpon the crosse for the syns of the whole worlde which can no more be offered or any other in place therof is not subiect any more to death but lyueth to make intercession for his church to God hys father for euer Nowe we haue to consyder also from what it is that thys Sauyour Christ delyuereth vs. Truely from the Fathers wrath from the chaynes of synne and her rewarde which is eternall death Of which deliuerance Zacharius speaketh in his Song Rom. 6.23 Luc. 1.74 that wee being delyuered from the feare of our enimies might serue him without feare c. But when it is sayde he delyuereth vs it is imported we are fyrst in thraldome Mans state wythout Christ thraldome and most misery and bounde from libertie Euen so are the sonnes of men by nature thralled vnto the wrath of God bound in chaynes of synne and subiect to the cursse of euerlasting death Therin borne in it lyuing and lusting death by the contynuall desyres therof Eph. 2.3 But Synne synne is the cause that Gods iustice cannot but giue vs wrath and his wrath cannot procéeding from his iustice but cast the synner into the prison of eternal payne where is darknesse sorrowe wéeping torments and gnashing of téeth the worme that dyeth not and the anger of God And this synne is and maye be sayde to be of two kyndes the one procéeding from the other Originall and Actuall Originall commeth wyth the lumpe of massy poysoned fleshe Originall synne and actuall which our parentage hath brought to vs from the loynes of oure fyrst father Adam And he becommeth synful by the breach of Gods holye lawe in Paradise hath begotten by synfull séede his children in synne who by succession haue encreased the worlde to thys daye from his synfull loynes to beget vs synfull creatures of our synfull mothers And thus are we guyltie of Adams synne called Originall the beginning synne For lyke as out of a poysoned Vessell can be drawne no other lycour but poysoned So from the poysoned séede of Adam can procéede no other then lyke corrupted matter for mans propagation and ofspring And againe thys worde synne signifyeth generally the disobedience to God the offending of God by the breaking of hys most holy commaundements This difference is betwéene Originall and Actuall synne the one we bring with vs in flesh as guyltie by byrth of our fathers transgressiō as the Apostle sayth By Adam all men do dye The other is that our selues in mynde and bodye doe commit daylie agaynst our God and his holy lawe which we do eyther in mynde 1. Cor. 15.22 in will in harte and affection in tong or hande in soule or bodye in one or both The fyrst doth infecte all other that come from his fyrst roote For lyke as leporous parents of their bodyes cannot but beget and the chyldren which are borne of them are defyled as wel with the parents leprosie as contaminate with their owne naturall corruption Euen so are the posteritie of Adam infected with the fyrst fathers leprosie in synne and steyned with their owne actuall offences and iniquitie which one lamenting sayeth And great is that Original synne Barnardus which doth not alone infect the person but corrupteth the whole nature of man also The second which is actuall synne dwelleth in the body of the synner alone and hurteth others no otherwise then when they be pertakers therof eyther by ioyning in facte or consente by suffring or not regarding the poyson thereof the ende of both is death euerlasting Rom. 6.23 How horrible that synne is the Scriptures doe tell Synne breaketh our couenant with God prouoketh anger of God The fruits of synne in man seperateth his loue from vs hasteneth his iustice procureth our perpetuall destruction caused Christ to come from heauen and he the sonne of God to suffer death for vs moste wretched creatures which else should haue perished in synne Is of that nature that if we wyllingly fall into it agayne we crucifye Christ anewe and there is no more looking for redemption but a fearefull wayting for the wrath of Gods furye fyre and vengeance Finally it is the worke of the Deuill and he the author therof who is the vtter aduersarye of God and we his sworne enemies and Gods famylye How intollerable a matter it is for the Quéenes seruante of her priuie chamber from beggery exalted farre aboue all brauery to become Traytor to her grace and in her secret chamber to violate his fayth who séeth not with darkned eyes How much more vgly is he and most intollerable is his case that casteth dyrte by synne euery daye into the face of God by carnall concupiscence courtly carnall lustes and fylthy actions Well from all thys yet he the Lord Christ saueth his people 1. Ioh. 1.7 euen his bloud doth wash their soules and bodyes from euerye synne and his death doth purge our consciences from dead workes Heb. 9.14 Esay 1. to serue the lyuing God Of this delyuerance Esay sayth Washe you make you cleane if your synnes were as redde as Scarlet I wyll make them as whyte as Wooll Iere. 31. sayth the Lorde Ieremy Your synnes and iniquities will I remember no more Ezechiel Ezech. 18. At what tyme soeuer a synner doth repent of hys synne
for the age to come Amen Thirdly he is sayde to wayght for the consolation of Israel The Euangelists purpose is Symeons ioye to shewe vs wherein the ioy of this olde father consisted Namely that whether he did eate or drinke or whatsoeuer he else did therin he neyther tooke more then was méete and sufficient or made his b●lly his pleasant God or any worldly thing else but that his ioye was fixed in his féeling fayth fastened in the Messias our annoynted Christ which he knewe by the studie of the Scriptures to be at hande by whome he sawe his synnes to bée forgiuen and hys whole Countrye and brethren with him to haue their full and only consolation And here agayne is noted Symeons iustification in that he beléeued in Iesus Christ promised in the worde of God to haue the forgiuenesse of hys synnes and in hym eternall lyfe His fyrme fastened fayth is here noted vnder thys worde He wayted which expresseth as well his constancie as his fortitude against those perillous tymes wherein he was The common welth of Israell so ruyned and the Church of God in Iewry so corrupted that it mighte seeme all her hope of recouerie from their woes or consolation in their hartes to be vtterly extinguished We may not forget here howe the Euangelist significantly noteth the corruption and degenerate condition of the Citie Ierusalem which sometymes being the holyest place vnder Heauen is nowe become so estranged from her God so plunged in securitie and synne Shadow of Englands securitie so hardened in hart against the truth and so ignorante of her estate that neyther shée féeleth her present miserie or wayteth for her consolation Christ the Messiah Onely this one man in a whole Citie is here named to féele the one and with long expectation and pacient abode for the Lords leasure hopeth after the other and that bicause he had the warrante of God by his holy worde for the same and was fylled with the spirite whereby he was in mercye preserued from that déepe and iuste iudgement of blyndnesse wherein the wicked Pharysies and the whole people and Princes of Iewrie a few with Symeon excepted were ouerwhelmed which is vehemently noted by the Euangelist in this worde Ecce beholde O beloued England thou mayest lawfully mourne fostering a great number of such people which be as wandring as carelesse as bolde in their synne and hardned in heart as euer were the inhabitants of Ierusalem They talke of Christ and they are myraculously preserued by this our Messiah but as in their déeds they doe denie him So they counte him to them eyther vnprofitable or think him not their consolation For truely they desire not hys presence they hate his Gospel Iere. 3.19 that bicause their deeds are euill Neyther desire they his comming But as the théefe imprisoned wysheth the Iudgement seate ouerturned the lawe with his Princes and power deade and the day of his execution neuer to come Euen so doe these Caterpillers of the earth whose consciences doe accuse them guyltie and fearing his iudgement they desyre rather that he were not at al then that he should come to giue them the rewarde of synne Eternall death the assured stypende to al wicked actions and thoughts Rom. 6.23 to Princes fyrst and to whomsoeuer men and women which in like wickednesse ioyne with these Princes and prophane Pharysies of Ierusalem Surely lyke desolation shall ouerthrowe them if they séeke not Christ in tyme by repentance and with Symeon wayte for their consolation in him Note with me gentle Reader in the commendation of this good man that the spirite of God ioyneth righteousnesse and Religion in one yoke together saying No godlynesse of lyfe no ryghte Religion Symeon was iust and religious Hereby he teacheth vs that these two are so lincked and connexed by the Fynger of God that they cannot be seperate in twayne but of lyke necessitie with the Sunne which hath his Globe his light and his heate so conioyned that wheresoeuer the one shyneth the other cannot but warme and as the soule body are so compact in one that the bodye cannot but performe the pleasures of the same Euen so in whomsoeuer true Righteousnesse in Christ is in him also there cannot but be the true feare of God and holynes of lyfe which is the singuler seruing of our God in the inwarde desyre of our hartes vnfaynedly and here called Religion or true godlynesse Psal 116. Act. 4.20 I beleeued and therfore I spake sayth Dauid We cannot but testifie the things which we haue heard and seene sayth the Apostle I determined to holde my tongue sayth Ieremy the preaching Prophet the peoples obstinacy was such and my daungers so great but the worde was as fyre within my hart as a burning fyre shut vp within my bones and I was weary with forbearing I could not stay Again I will be their GOD sayth the Lorde by his Prophet and they shall be my people Iere. 20.9 Ier. 31.33 They shall not but serue the Lorde to whome he is God Againe I will poure cleane water into you and you shall bee cleane yea from all your filthynes and from all your Idols will I clense you A newe harte will I giue you and a newe spirite will I put into you and I will take away the stony harte out of your bodye and will giue you an harte of fleshe And I will put my spirite within you and cause you to walke in my statutes and you shall keepe my iudgements and doe them To conclude it is the Lorde Christ which hath created his seruaunts after the Image of God in righteousnesse and true holynesse which is the perfect newe man in whom both these graces be ioyned Ephes 4.24 as Paule sayth to the Ephesians So that true righteousnesse wyll effectually shewe faythfull holynes in one and selfe same Christian But as for such as onely haue Christ in their lyppes and denye him in their déedes whose whole course of lyfe is set vpon sensuall appetite to worldly lustes and yet can crye Lorde Lorde Thou knowest deare Reader what the Lord hath denoūced against them Luc. 13.26 We haue eaten and dronke at thy Table saye these men yea wee haue preached and taught in thy name and therein cast out Deuils But they haue this sentence Depart from me ye workers of iniquity I know you not That is I approoue not your acts for godly or you for mine therfore departe from me into the Lake of burning fyre that neuer shall be quenched These be those Atheists of our dayes which because the gracious Prince godly lawes laye hande to the Plowe of the Gospels profession the which the Lord in mercy continue and increase therfore to winne fauour in the Courte to maintayne their carnall countenance they wil be Temporarij for the time Gospellers they will heare the Preacher they will curteouslye salute hym they will giue him séemely entertaynment
the preaching of his worde then at any tyme he hath bene since the Apostles tyme. This only remayneth that with hart and will by the motion of his holy spirite we ioyntly enter our Churches where Iesus Christ is graciously offred not into our armes but into our harts and soules not in a body subiect to myseries and death but in the Maiestie of his worde which is his eternall power Rom. 1.16 1. Cor. 1.18 to bring vs by his light to that saluation assured in him and to engraffe quyetnesse in Conscience perswaded in his truth by the testimony of his sayde spirite of the full forgyuenesse of our sinnes That we shall with newe raysed hartes as men risen from a most déepe Dungeon of death most ioyfully with Symeon syng and saye in heart and truth Lorde nowe whensoeuer thou callest vs from this naturall lyfe 1. Cor. 1.30 Ephe. 1.7 Mat. 20.28 at thy good pleasure thou lettest vs departe to quiet rest in christian peace For the eyes of our fayth haue and doe sée Christ Iesus and receyue hym as he is to vs in mercy giuen our onely raunsome and full matter of our spirituall health and celestiall ioy to whom with thée our best father and the holy spirite be praise and glory for euer and euer Amen Thus much receyued by the Gospels wordes touching Symeon nowe let vs lende eare attentiuely vnto the words deliuered vs in this his ioyful song Thus he sayth Lorde now lettest thou thy seruaunt departe in peace according to thy worde For mine eyes haue seene thy Saluation This olde holye fathers song conteyneth shorte wordes and long matter wherein he giueth the Lorde his due praise by publique spéeche in ioyed hart and after the example of the former church for the present benefite receyued according the faythfull promise of God that he hath not departed to his Fathers before he sawe the Lordes Christ he singeth the Lords truth and blaseth the honorable armes of our Captaine Christe manifesting his power efficacie and glory in this his pithy encomia That done he setteth downe the perfite platforme of a quyet cōscience and the ancor of her health in the middle of many miseries in his owne person saying Now Lorde all if by the Romaine Tyranny thy people of Israell haue béene sore oppressed our fayth sore assaulted so that twixt hope and sorrow we haue wayted for Consolation in thy promise Now that thou hast giuen vs thy Christ our glory I ioy so much in him my Sauiour that death shall be to me welcome and my departure shall be in peace bicause by this Christ my Consolation Gods wrath to me is pacified my syns in him pardoned my selfe for him of my heauenly father dearely beloued and my soule shall rest in ioy for I am thy seruant wherfore Now let me I praye thee departe in peace I am satisfyed that I haue séene thée and the dayes of my age are in thy hande But whereas Symeon sayth Lorde Nowe doth thy mercy let me departe in peace he plainely sheweth that vntill he perfitely had the fruition of his hope he was in auxietie and griefe and walked with a heauie harte for the affliction of Israell This argueth not an absolute weakenesse of fayth in Father Symeon but rather expresly an ardent expectation of the promise of God nothing pleasured with the forreine matters of this lyfe albeit they should abounde to hym But by trauaile in fyght against temptations in worldly pleasures he hungreth and spiritually thirsteth in approoued hope the Lords promise enduring the griefe of present oppression assuredly by fayth to reape the rewarde of his pacient hope bicause he had the worde of God a most faythfull Norice therto for his warrante 1. Pet. 2.2 For thus sayde the Lorde by Reuelation to Symeon Thou shalt not dye before thou hast seene the Messias Christ the Lorde Luc. 2.26 Note here good Reader the nature of Gods promises giuen to his chosen children They are not performed at the first houre but they are deferred longer then our selues would desyre and they are not performed till the fayth of the parties be perfitly prooued and by the opposite occurrents sore exercised God the Father promised the comming of his beloued sonne Christ here imbraced of Symeon at the fall of Adam and Heuah Gene. 3. Gen. 22.18 Gal. 3.8 Esa 64.1 Mat. 13.16 Luk. 10.24 and renewed it to Abraham and by hys Prophets continued the same but the time prolonged forced many of the best fathers to cry Oh that thou wouldest pierce the heauens and come downe and to say Oh Lorde sende thy glory vnto Syon and thy sauing health vnto Ierusalem And as our Christ doth testifie many kings and Prophets haue desyred to sée Christ and haue not séene him or could the times enioy the performance of this promise till the fulnesse of time by him set were come Heb. 1.1 and that by contrary presumptions the fayth of his chyldren were thorowly exercised But when the tyme by his deuine wisedome appointed was come then did he faythfully giue the same Messias into the worlde that Symeon and the godlye then might beare wytnesse to vs his children nowe of his euerlasting faythfulnesse In this worde Nowe lyeth an Emphasis as if he had sayd The worde of my promise hath fed my fayth stablished my hope to wayte for thys our consolation Christ and sythe in thy mercy thou hast performed the word of truth Now let me depart in peace Here is to be well marked the force of true and lyuely fayth it doth persist in one it resteth vpon the promise of the worde The force of true fayth albeit that heauen and earth should séeme to runne on heaps together This is that most excellent gift of God that excelleth al vertues in whatsoeuer man Ephe. 3.17 Pray the Lorde therefore to giue thée fayth in Christ christian Reader and Christ thereby to dwell in thée then shalt thou abyde stedfast in hope after the worde of Gods promise whatsoeuer obstact shal arise against thée The Lord by his seruant Moyses promised the Israelits delyuerance out of the bondage of Egypt Exod. 4.29.30.31 But straight wayes wyth this promise arose such presumptions to the contrary as the hardnesse of Pharaos hart and cruelty their oppression and more labor thereby their sharpe correction for wants in worke and in the hower of their deliuerance his huge army persecuting them on the one syde the high Mountaynes and swallowing Seas to hold them in on the other syde that it might haue séemed to Israel Moyses warrant from God to haue bene rather a dreame of their desolation then the day of their delyuerance But they by this spirite confirmed in fayth did suppresse the present calamities by the Ancor of hope which from the shyp of their beléeuing consciences in these terrible Seas tossed they cast fyrmely pitched vpon the worde of promise which thus they had vz I will in a
this Razias be thou iudge indifferent Reader thy selfe conferring them together Neyther can the excuse by Augustine and others made that something was lawfull for them which is not for vs wype this bloody body when as the same commandement was then which now is Thou shalt not kyll As for languyshing Lucrece I leaue her to her Torquine whose adultresse she seemeth and to her selfe a murtheresse But to vs godly and chaste Susanna is a contrarye and christian example But Curtius for the loue of his country cast himselfe into the gaping gulfe by whose death the earth reclosed yea but this was Satans arte to whome this Noble and valyaunt Champion was to seruiceable We are to fight for our Country to spend our lyues for our Prince but in the warres to doe our best against the aduersaries and not to cast oure selues desperatly to death by Satans delusion But some will say Did not Christ séeing that no waye else mankinde could be saued most wyllingly gyue himselfe to death for man And so did Curtius Yea but as Christ sayde I lay downe my lyfe for the people and take it to me agayne So did he it in most noble order First he obeyed his fathers ordinance herein A bodye hast thou ordeyned me Loe I am here to doe thy will O God Secondly Heb. 10.5 he nayled not himselfe on the crosse nor thrust hymselfe to the hart or crowned himselfe with thorne but quyetly tooke this crueltie at the Magistrates hande which dyd manger their hartes performe that which the deuyne counsell had determined Act. 2.23 Let Curtius shewe this order or lyke warrante to his case in truth and you shall haue answere Sampson freed from selfe murther As for Sampson which pulled the house vppon hys owne person and all that were therein This appeareth to haue warrante from God as well in that his strength being taken from hym was at this moment of tyme restored to him as also God did by this iudgement execute his wrath on them Iud. 16.30 Psal 1.1 Heb. 11.32 which were obstinately set in the chayre of Scorners And to conclude his actes are warranted to procéede of fayth in the cononicall Epistle to the Hebrewes Furthermore Sampson is not to be taken as a priuate person but he was in déede the Lords Magistrate which office he best executed in the office of his death wherin the Lorde by his hand did reuenge the blasphemy of the Philistines and their Idolatry And did also perfite that curse which by the Prophet Dauid is giuen to those Psal 109. which do afflict them whom the Lord doth scurge This horrible sinne is crauing vengeance vntitl it be powred out euen to the dredges of the Lords angry cup. Amos. 1.11 Wherefore Amos doth threat Edom for that Israell being exiles they vsed them most cruelly which God sayeth by the Prophete he wyll not leaue vnpunished So did the Philistines to Sampson whome God had delyuered into their handes for hys sinne and whoredome They put oute his eyes and caste hym in pryson and proclayming a Popishe feast daye to their Mungril God that Idol Dagon which was in forme aboue the Nauell lyke to a man but from the belly lyke to a Fishe they gathered themselues into his Temple to prayse him for their victory of their enimy Sampson The house was full of men and women and there were all the Princes of the Philistines and vpon the house top were 3000 men which looked down into the house to sée Sampson play whome these wicked Philistines made their iesting Foole. But as Dauid hath sayde Let his dayes bee fewe and another take his office Psal 109. for he remembred not to shewe mercy but persecuted the poore helplesse man the begger and the broken harted that he might slay him So came it to passe Their dayes were fewe for euen the hower of their most tryumph was the moment of their vtter destruction Sampson prayeth to the Lord O Lorde Iehoua remember me In which wordes he confesseth Gods power his owne sinnes calleth for mercy as by the same words did the théefe vpon the crosse Luc. 22.42 He expresseth his faith as well in that he maketh prayer to God for without faith it is impossible in hart to call vpon God as in the presently after he assayeth to doe that which he had prayed for And with the théefe he was receyued to mercye and his prayer heard For his desyre was graunted him he pulled downe the house so in his death he slue mo persons then he did during the dayes of his naturall lyfe Sampson cannot be charged sayth that godlye and learned Martyr Peter Martyr Iudi. ca. 6. For he sought not his owne death but by the spirite of God he roycally bente he desyred and executed herein the iudgement of the Lorde against his enemies which by this waye he knew should come to passe The Apostles acts and Sampsons he tyeth together putting on their persons saying If we teach as we haue begunne the Gospell of Christ without doubt we shall be slayne Well they contynued tho their preaching they were slayne and yet are not the causes of their owne death So sayth Martyr Sampson did not rashly cast himselfe to death but faythfully followed his vocation lyke as the hartie Souldiour albeit the Coward say vnto him beware go not there are arrowes Speares Gunnes and shot innumerable wherewith yée shall perishe They answere what if We go not to séeke death we go to defend our Countrie and goods and to bée reuenged of our enimies to followe our calling Euen so sayth he did Sampson and was thereto ledde by the spirite of God Ambrose sayth that Sampson herein was the Image of Christ who as he lyued he much vexed wounded the Deuill so by his death he tryumphed against him The Philistines he compareth with the Iewes Sampson with Christ as a figure of him The Philistines in the victory against Sampson receyued their vtter ruine and decay And the Iewes crucifying Christ cast themselues into eternall damnation The ende sayth Peter Martyr in nature was both one but in condition sundry twixte the Philistines and Sampson In nature they both dyed but in condition the Philistines in surfetting cruelty and Idolatry are destroyed And Sampson endeth his naturall lyfe in repentance in fayth and in prayer to God Sampson had fallen in déede sayth he but he is turned vnto God he calleth vpon him was heard As for these his wordes Let me loose my lyfe with the Philistines he spake them not of despaire but he hereby humbled himselfe before God for that he had so greatly neglected his function and calling beséeching God hereby to be aduenged of the Philistines who had put out the eyes of Gods magistrate not bicause they would this way punish his trespasse but this they did in despite of Israell and that he should no more be able to doe them violence And iustly sayth mayster Bucer
thys golden aunswere she gaue him It were a most wicked thing sayth she to take this temple of God my body once dedicated to his honor to cast it nowe eyther to Idolatry or fleshly lusts Secondly I am condemned to death for my Lorde Christ and louing husbande by your maysters sentence and am preparing my selfe thereto What should I now yeelde to wickednesse and luste But this is farre vnsytting your Lords estate to alure me a poore condemned prisoner to so lasciuious lyfe and by fugred words from tyrannous harte to counterfeyte suche fayre promises And if I could be thus bewitched to damnation yet howe coulde I be perswaded of the softnesse of Maxentius harte that cannot be mollified in the flowing Ryuers of our christian blood which euery daye he so cruelly sheddeth But now this Tyran was more set on fyre by these godly denials and would haue forced her had not she wisely for the tyme perswaded him from whose face as by intermission for a tyme escaped she priuily fledde forsaking her house her riches and all she had and that in the night tyme with her chast body from the face of so fylthie a Prince and corrupted Courte This Matrone had both regarde to her religion and therefore would not offend against it which sayth Thou shalt not kyll and to her chast conuersation also which caused her to flie from that satanicall synke of Venus Court And for the Romish Matrone I say her harte God might enclyne to him by repentance in the twinckling of her death so in her Christ vouchsafe her pardon But I cannot sée her acte to bée soundly warranted when as we may not doe an euill that good may come thereof Rom. 3.8 Deut. 23.25 But surely the violent force to adulterous acte is both by the lawe of God and man layde vpon the oppressor onely and the oppressed is set frée If a man fynde a betrothed mayde in the Féelde and force her In forced extremitie the compelled in thys syn guyltlesse and lye with her then the man that lay with her shall dye alone and vnto the mayde thou shalt doe nothing bicause there is no cause of death in her For as when a man aryseth against his neighbour sayth the Lord and woundeth him to death so is this matter Againe she cryed and there was none to succour her Loe the violator of virginity shal dye and the deflowred being hereto forced shewing her whole and contynuall power to the contrary she is by the lawe of God adiudged innocent Here is then the lawfull remedy against rape and pollucion Not with Lucrece to yéelde and then to kyll or with christian Sophronia to fall into an extreme miserie to auoyde a pestilente mischiefe but with best aduised Dorothe to flée and if you cannot with chaste Susanna to fall into the hands of Gods direction to vse all power ye may to kéepe your bodyes impolluted But in no wise kyll your selues for that is repugnant to the law and will of God which kynde of death whatsoeuer your good intentes bee God hath promised to reuenge vpon the impenitent And to conclude this matter wherein for the dangerous subtyltie of flattering temptation I haue sayde somewhat the more I say as Father Augustine sayde If we shal to auoyde sinne in vs déeme it lawfull to kyll our selues we shoulde not suffer our bodyes to lyue one little whyle after baptisme For what is he that lyueth and synneth not Not lawful to kyll our selues therby to shun synne But he that kylleth himselfe or others with bloudy hande that is without lawful authority from his God and Magistrate let him heare what the almightye sayth thereto Surely I will require your bloude wherein your lyues are at the hande of euery beast will I require it and at the hand of man euen at the hande of a mans brother will I require the lyfe of man that is to say whatsoeuer it be that taketh the lyfe from man whether it bée your selues that kyll your owne lyfe whether it be a beast that flayeth you or if it be thy owne brother that murthereth thee thy selfe that beast this thy brother shal answere his bloud for thine Looke for this ye tyrannous opressors ye Popish murtherers beastly butchers of Gods saints ye blinde guydes and dombe Dogs ye ydle shepeards ye obstinate heretikes ye théeues and murtherers for mens purses ye brawlers and fyghters and you that kyll your selues tremble and feare So then we maye not for anye cause by how much soeuer we should seeme to praise God or to auoyde daunger of the heathen or yet to kéepe oure bodies chaste from sinfull bedde by anye meanes laye violente hands vpon our selues thereby to bereaue our lyfe for that act is damnable We are to hate flee from syn as from a Serpent and to desyre the Lorde to ende the dayes therof Eccle. 21.2 and to delyuer vs from that euil Satan and his bodye of iniquitie yea and that by death but yet so that the same may be to vs in peace estranged from al violence in our selues and alwayes according to his worde To thys our holy Symeon giueth vs instruction to whose succéeding words we will giue eare which giue to vs the cause of his peticion thus For mine eyes haue seene thy Saluation During the dayes of Israels miserie Symeon euer hoped after release whereby he teacheth vs how plunged in Popery we should expect the returne of Gods holy gospel whereof we haue in our childrens daies had eftsoones the experience God make bs thankfull therefore And this is natural that after Winter commeth Sommer after stormy tempest serenious season and after the darknesse of the night the bright shyning day So is it also the spirituall course of God in his Christ from time to time as the testimony therof in the scriptures is most apparante We now are with ioye of heart to imbrace the Halcion dayes our Sommers warmth this quyet raigne the shyning countenance of Gods good fauour to vs mauger the malice of all Romanists at home and abroad and with effect but not in vayne to receyue the light of the gospell yet plentifully casting his blessed beames least we haue greater cause to saye when we see darknesse againe to shadow the sunne beames of righteousnesse Lord that we were with Symeon dead in peace from the miserable deaths we are lyke to féele in the sworde of thy wrath And nowe sayth Symeon that as well my bodily eyes as the inward of my soule haue séene thy sauing health Nowe Lorde for thys cause shall I dye most wyllingly But if so the naturall sight of Christ as yet an infante and subiect to infyrmities whose glorie yet was holden in the bodye of the little Babe wrought such and so great ioy in heart assurance in death to this good Symeon how muche more ought the same Christ to worke in vs quietnesse of conscience nowe that he is glorifyed and the
hym to preaching Paule And also of a most zealous Pharisey in blyndnesse made him most feruent in the Gospell of God to all our comfortes which be Gentyls For thys our Lord Christ Aelion most highe hath consecrated Paule aboue Peter to be our especiall Apostle both at Rome and else where in the rounde world Our Sauyour Christ our God Iere. 20. Esa 42. is also called of the Hebrewes El. to say of his great strength For whatsoeuer he wyll doe that can he doe For which cause he is called by the Prophets The God of strength and the mightye Lorde or Gygante Sometyme also Eloah and of the Trinitie in coniunction we may say Elohim which signifyeth God our Christ in his deuyne nature to be alwayes and euery where present in heauen and in earth and in peace and warre in persecution and preaching peace in workes and playes in actes and thoughtes in lyfe and death in all places at one and selfe instante Of whose presence the Psalmist sayth thus Whether shall I go from thy Spirite Psal 139. or where shall I flee from thy face If I ascend into heauen thou art there if I go down to hell thou art there also But if I shall take the wings of the morning and dwell in the farthest part of the Sea euen there shall thy hande gouerne me and thy right hande shall beholde me And Paule aptly pronounceth our Lordes presence to the Athenians Act. 17.28 testifying him not to be farre from them but they in him rather saying For in him we lyue moue haue our being And it séemeth probable for this cause the Grecians to haue called God Theos and the Latines to haue formed thence thys worde Deus As one learned affyrmeth Theos to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of redynesse and running to and fro so is God called by such a name as best can expresse his presence who is neuer absent from mortall men in earth but to euery man in all places gyueth all things that they possesse Of which his liberalitie some suppose him to be called Deus a dando for that he gyueth to all men that they haue God our Lorde and Christ is also called Schaddai .i. sufficient in himselfe and the sufficientcy to all creatures that whosoeuer hath him to their Lorde hath all sufficientcy to body and soule to this and the lyfe eternall And in oure tongue we call Christ in his deuyne nature God that is the most principall and best good Lastly he is called the God of Abraham the God of Isaack the God of Iacob insinuating vnto vs from whence the holynesse of these Fathers with their fayth came And also that as we are the posteritie of the Noble Abraham by fayth in Christ So is he to vs our best good and most excellent God so that with Paule we may conclude our selues in him most vertuous Rom. 8.31.32 sufficient and blessed saying If God be on our syde who can be against vs. It is God that iustifyeth who shall condemne Againe if he hath giuen vs Christ how shal he not giue vs all things with him And by him we shall bée more then Conquerors Loe this god is thy Iesus whose power is prest and ready to thy best good if thou faythfully put thy trust in him He is also called the Lordes Christ which word Christ Luc. 4.18 Esa 61.1 importeth his honorable Function by the excellent Oyntment aboue his fellowes euen the holy ghost by which he is annoynted of his father to be the king and Priest of his Church for euer according to this saying Heb. 7.17 Thou art a priest for euer after the order of Melchesidech So then he is called Iesus of the worde Iesehak and so called as the Angell testifyeth bicause he saueth his people from theyr synne Mat. 1.21 The worde Christ is a greeke word which aunswereth the Hebrewe vocable Messhiah annoynted In olde tyme with the people these persons Prophets Priests and Princes were annoynted with Oyle Wherefore our Iesus is called Anoynted signifying the plentifull graces of Gods spirite giuen to those called of god to these Functions and also into what perillous daungers and harde battles they were to enter which truely exercised that seuerall calling By which Oyling they were as with a Symbole put in mynd what couragious Champions they ought to be in their offices This was the cause why the noble Champions before the pryse playde were annoynted But in as much as the Lord Christ had a greater enimy then all other Champions and therewyth a most deadly fyght towards whose body and soule was to stande in the battle of death vppon the crosse against his fathers iustice for the synnes of the whole worlde Satans malice and mans corruption Hell and Death it was most necessary that he shoulde before thys cruel combate haue a more precious Oyntment then had his shadowing fellowes preaching Prophets sacrifycing priests and ruling Princes Wherefore he was annoynted with the holy ghost The spirit of God is vpon me sayth Christ because he hath annoynted me that I should preache the Gospell to the poore c. Esa 61. Luc. 4.18 This sentence expresseth Christs priesthood kingdome and preaching office He is sente sayth he to preache His kingdome he is annoynted to delyuer the oppressed His priesthood he is giuen to heale the broken and wounded hartes wyth synne and iniquitie by the sacrifice of his death vpon the crosse During hys lyfe he preached the gospel Rom. 1.16 which is Gods power in Christ to saluation to euery one that beleeueth In his sacrifice of hymselfe vpon the crosse he performed both the other By his death he healed our infirmities Esa 53. Col. 1.20 for the chastisment of our peace was layde vpon him In hys death he obtayned the victory hauing fully aunswered the Fathers iustice against synne death and hell and spoyled principalities and powers and hath made a shew of them openly Col. 2.15 and hath tryumphed ouer them in the same crosse He hath forgyuen vs our synnes put out the hande wryting that was agaynst vs he hath taken it out of the waye and fastened it to his crosse hath translated vs from the power of darknes into the kingdome whereof he is king of kings and Lorde of Lordes vz the body of hys Church of which he is the onely heade Whose kingdome is thréefold of power of grace and of glory Of power for all Nations shall bow the knee to this Lorde of Lordes and king of kings Christ the annoynted king and priest And who so wyl not kysse the sonne Christ Iesus shal perish whether Prince Psal 2. 1. Rom. 14 17. Potentate Preacher Magistrate people or pestilente Pope Of grace which he sayth by Luke is within vs and consisteth as Paule sayth in righteousnesse Christ the high Byshop of our soules in peace and ioy in the holy Ghost His kingdome of glory as well in that he
flaunte 1. Cor. 10.31 and vaine gloryous shewes giue none offence neyther to the Iewe nor to the Grecians nor to the Church of God Marke this you cannot replye and say Who hath to do with vs who shall comptroll vs we are the maysters of our selues For euen in those things which be lawfull and indifferent the more Noble the greater care you ought by the rule of Gods holy word In indifferent things the help or hurte of our brethren is chiefely to be respected to haue to your actions for the cause of your brethren which be eyther Gods enimies as the Iewes who maye not receyue offence at you or Grecians popish worldlings or wanton Atheists which séeke to be of the fashion though it be against god or that the people of God by your insolency be gréeued the daunger whereof is not smale Whosoeuer sayth our mayster Christ shall offende one of these little ones which beleeueth in mee Mat. 18.6 it were better for him that a Mylstone were hanged about his necke and he were drowned in the depth of the Sea Yea greater care the noble the mightie the ritch the prowde one and other ought to haue of their godly brethren then of their owne members Woe to the worlde sayth our Christ in the place afore coted bicause of offences for it must needs be that offences shal come but woe be to the man by whom they doe come Wherefore if thine hande or thy foote cause thee to offende cut them of from thee it is better for thee to enter into lyfe halt or maymed then hauing two handes or two feete to be cast into euerlasting fyre And if thine eye cause thee to offende pluck it out c. Loe christian thy bodyes desyre muste to her great losse giue place to thy brothers good estate Dauid therefore prayeth the Lord to shut vp his eyes from beholding of vanitie For hence it is Psal 119. that the concupiscence of the heart being produced by the conducte of the eye doth lust after the pryde of thys worlde without regarde of God his people his or oure enimies or our owne deare brethren whom eyther we strayne with their sorrowe to sore after our Courtly guyse Two euils in outragious apparel or else we grieue their consciences to beholde our too to much vanities And thys is monstruous that that which is to vs a signification of our fyrst fathers synne in whom we all are damned to death should be to vs a delighting pleasure and the same which was giuen to couer our shame Gen. 3.21 1. Cor. 15.22 we shoulde abuse to our great confusion For most true it is that apparell whereof we now pride so much was and is the accuser of synne for our fyrst parents were naked before they sinned and were not ashamed bycause nothing gaue cause to blushe they frée from synne and being made to the ymage of God But hauing transgressed his commaundement they sawe their nakednesse and synfull bodies by eating of the apple The cause of apparell is synne and did blushe for shame blushing and confusion are the fruites of synne to whome nowe some couerture was necessary as well to keepe the lesse honorable partes secrete as to defende them from the parching sunne and Winters colde Gen. 3.21 Wherefore our good God gaue to eyther of them a coate of peltes or skyns This symple sufficient attyre cōdemneth two sortes of persons the Adamits which runne naked to counterfeyte Adam and Heuah which thing if God would to haue had in vse he had not giuen these naked creatures these néedy coates The other are our lusty Gallants of eyther sexe that to to much doe glory in their apparell which is and ought to be to them a preacher of their fathers shame In our attyre we ought to kéepe modestie and comlynesse eche man in his degrée as their is great difference the which to excéede is thus to walke in darknesse First they inuerte the vse of aparell that is eyther a bounde beyonde their calling or take pride therein which onely ought to defend their bodyes as is sayde and to put vs in minde of our frayle condition These blynde men are lyke to those fellowes chayned with heauy yrons for some horrible murther and yet doe bragge of them as of matter worthy much glory and therfore set them forth to shew in all brauery Secondly the delight of braue and costly araye doth marueylously encrease the pride of the lurking heart which once enflamed is neuer content but causeth vs to forget our state and condition it enuyeth others more gaye and despiseth all such as to vs be attyred in inferior sorte Euill branches of a naughtie tree Thirdly prowde aparell as it satisficeth fleshly appetite so is it verye offensiue to the moste beholders Adde to this it bewrayeth a lewde harte a light person a vayne mutable man delighting change in vanities and such a one is euer inconstante in all his wayes Neyther did godly Iudith decke her in prowde array Iudi. 10.1 tyll shée purposed to spoyle curssed Holophernes And cruel Iezabel sought to allure Iehu his hart by her sumptuous shewe in brauery Fourthly you breake contemptuouslye this commaundement of Christ Be not carefull what to put on c. If not for necessaries Math. 6. how much lesse for these superfluous vanities which shall bring woes and Gods euerlasting cursse to them which be faulty herein Lastly the iudgement of God aprooueth his hate herevnto which beateth downe iustly so manye to beggerie from former great patrimony by their synfull excesse in costly aparell and doth also often throwe vs into those Country plagues whose fashions we haue most fauoured in the strange guyse of monstruous attyre But perhaps these Courtly Ladyes and Gentils will doe as our Lord Christ sayeth the Pharyseis did They did hate the present teachers and yet they made much of the Monumentes of the Prophetes Mat. 23.29 whome their forefathers murthered And it maye be that these our riche and myghty Gallaunts will say what haue these pratling preachers to doe with vs why should they correct vs let them kéepe them to the Text of Scripture Well then we will in this point pleasure you Marke ye lusty Gallants and to ende withall onely giue you the Scripture Text which would GOD ye would take heede vnto Luc. 1.78 till the day starre Iesus Christ apeared fully in your hearts Thus sayth this scripture then against this darke corruption of pride in the rich practised for want will not permit the hawtie harts of the least able to atchyue hereto Now hearken to you Nobles of eyther sexe ye Gentils riche in lands and possessions for now the Lorde himselfe speaketh vnto you Esa 3.11 Woe be to the wicked sayth the Lorde it shall be euill with him for the rewarde of his hands shall be giuen hym Children are Extortioners of my people women haue rule ouer them as
Iezabel had of her husband Achab to spoyle Naboth of his Vineyarde for her prides sake O my people they that lead thee cause thee to erre and destroy the way of thy paths The Lorde standeth vp to pleade yea he standeth to iudge the people The Lorde shall enter into iudgements with the ancients that is the Rulers and gouernors of his people and the princes thereof for ye haue eaten vp the Vineyarde the spoyle of the poore is in your houses the case is something changed in our dayes for the spoyle of the poore by the mighty couetous rich is for the most passed their hands into the Marchant Vserers house Entrest eating vp both stocke state gayne and substance what haue you to doe that you beate my people to peeces and grynde the faces of the poore sayth the Lorde that is they shewe all crueltie and extreme impouerishment of them euen the Lorde of hostes The Lord also sayth Bicause the daughters of Syon are hawtie christian women prowde and walke with outsteetched necks Reade and beware to offende the Lorde and with wandring eyes walking and mynsing as they go they tryp on typtoes making a tinckling with their feete Therefore shal the Lorde make the heads of the daughters of Syon balde and the Lorde shall discouer their secret parts In that day shal the Lord take away the ornament of the slyppers and the Cawles and the rounde tyres of the head and the slops be they linnen or sylken secrete bréeches and the heade bands and the Tablets and the eare Rings the Rings and the Muflers the costly apparel and the vayles and the wymples and the crispine pinnes wherwith these monstruous heads in heyre be frisled beyonde Natures disposition and the Glasses and the fine linnen the hoods and the Lawnes And in steade of sweete sauour there shal be stinke The plague of pryde and superfluous apparell and in stead of a gyrdle a rente and in stead of dressing of the heyre baldnesse and in steade of a stomacher a gyrding of sackcloth and burning in stead of bewty Thy men that is to say your fond husbands which fed your follyes shal fal by the sworde and thy strength in the battle Then shal her gates mourne and lament theyr pryde and she being desolate voyde by conquest in warre of her Gouernors and Nobles shal syt on the grounde in sadnesse and sorrowe The dayes of our pryde in déede maye boast of antiquitie as here we sée but therewith the preachers warrante is declared by the Sermon of thys imboldened Esay in whome the promise of God to all his Ministers in the person of Ieremy was apparente Thou therfore trusse vp thy loynes and arise sayth the Lord speake vnto them al that I haue commaunded thee Ier. 1.17 The Preacher shall be destroyed fyrst if ●ee wynke at others syn Be not afrayde of their faces lest I destroy thee before them For I beholde I a notable warranting consolation to Gods Preacher I this day haue made thee a defenced Citie and an yron pyller or walles of Brasse against the whole lande against the kings of Iudah and against the princes thereof against the priestes therof and against the people of the lande for they shal fyght against thee but they shal not preuayle against thee for I am with thee to delyuer thee sayth the Lord. Christ is the lyght his worde and preachers manifest the same He is giuen of the father to be reuealed vnto men And though kings and men séeke to stop the same he shall preuayle in his weake instrumentes at his good pleasure mauger their malice Wherefore ye darke Doughties and Damsels Feares which turne day into night and night into daye lye in Beddes of Iuory Esa 5.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15 Amo. 6.4.5 and quasse carowsse in Goblets of Golde which despise to haue the light of the Gospell to pierce your hearts that encrease your Instruments of Musicke aboue Dauids number and haue no compassion on Iosephs imprisonmente and miseries Suffer thys word to be reuealed to you séeke it hunger after it eate it In taste to fleshe and bloud it is bitter in digestion harde Iere. 15.16 but in operation swéete pleasante and most profitable The nature of Gods holy worde It is more sweete sayth Dauid that Noble Gentleman king then Honey or the Honey Combe Psa 19.119 It is more precious then Golde and Syluer For it is the Lanterne to thy feete and the light to thy paths It is the immortall séede 1. Pet. 1.23 Ia. 1.18 1. Pet. 2.2 that begetteth vnto God It is the Mylke for Babes and bread of Gods children It is the muniment of Gods warre wherby all strong holdes vaine imaginations and euery high thing that is exalted against God is throwne downe 2. Cor. 10.4 Psal 19. Rom. 1.16 It bringeth into captiuitie euery thought and conuerteth the soule to the obedience of Christ Finally the worde of God nowe preached is the power of GOD to take vengeance of the disobedient and to bring to saluation all them which loue lyue and beleeue the same This worde by the Prophets remayneth crying out of the darknesse of the ritche so that we may sée howe as a Canker couetousnesse hath festered into the whole progeny of the worldly more wealthy Micha 2. Wo vnto them sayth Micha that imagine iniquitie to worke wickednesse vpon their beds when the morning is light they practise it bicause their hande hath power And they couet Fields sayth he and take them by violence and houses and take them away a Towne is tourned into a Shéepecoate so they oppresse a man and his house his bloud and kyndred euen man and his heritage But against thys Family haue I deuised a plague wherout you shal not sayth the Lord pluck your necks They shal lament dolefully ouer thée and saye We be vtterly wasted The Destroyer shall be destroyed this is his iust plague What darknesse is this that so manye Noble men men of worship and men of wealth professing the Gospell shall reade thys and not sée it shall heare and not vnderstande this but the couetous cares and pleasures of this lyfe hath choked his worde in their harts and therfore they ryse and tourne on the other syde againste the Lorde of lyfe But what is the darknesse of the common sorte Truely one with the best sort as the worlde counteth best ignorance of God and his worde and crueltie one to another For as for whoredome and such grosse sinnes they are so common as skante they are thought worthye reproofe Robery in a Gentleman is wrapped vp with helas it was néede in him Great darknesse Theft is good shift for tall felowes to lyue by Whoredome is called the worke of Nature and dronkennesse good felowship c. O Lorde shyne into this doungeon of darknesse with the beames of thy reuealing truth that oure harts may once hate to sléepe in this bedde of synne and