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A15819 Gods arraignement of hypocrites with an inlargement concerning Gods decree in ordering sinne. As likewise a defence of Mr. Calvine against Bellarmine; and of Mr. Perkins against Arminius. Yates, John, d. ca. 1660. 1615 (1615) STC 26081; ESTC S120537 353,274 440

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our eyes into our owne bosomes Ier. 8.6 4. Is want of thinking of this duty toward God Ierem. 5.24 so the foolish virgins contented themselues with their lampes vnprepared neuer thinking of the oyle till the time of grace was past thus hardnesse of heart and securitie bring forth these wicked thoughts Hence obserue the strange opinion of the world men haue good hearts meanings intents and purposes howsoeuer the actions of their liues be faultie Hence learne that the Scriptures are no policies of men for nothing could reueale these wicked thoughts but the diuine truth Angels and men know not the thoughts Secondly learne that thoughts are not free though they neuer come into consent or action therefore repentance of thoughts is necessarie Ioel 2.12 Act. 8.22 1. Thess 5. Paul requires that they be sanctified in bodie soule and spirit Reas 1. Because a man is cursed for his thought Pro. 5.26 2. Because actuall sinnes proceed of euill thoughts 1. the thought thinketh it 2. after thought comes delight 3. after delight consent of will 4. after consent an execution or practise of the sinne 5. after practise comes custome in practise 6. after custome and practise death and damnation for thoughts the old world was destroyed Gen. 7.21 For repentance of euill thoughts Remedies of euill thoughts vse 1. examination 2. praier 3. reformation In examination first we must remember that all thoughts are in euery mans minde by nature therefore the least occasion turnes the mind to think them secondly we must heare the word of God attentiuely we must lay open all our senses to the hearing thereof and let it goe thorough them all 1. Cor. 4.25 2. Point Prayer A man must pray for the pardon of his thoughts Act. 8.22 3. Point Reformation of the minde for wicked thoughts Ephe. 4. be renewed in the spirit of your minds wherein thoughts and imaginations are conceiued and framed Rule 1. All thoughts must be in obedience toward God Prou. 20.18 15.22 he must not conceiue a thought in his mind before he haue consulted with the word 1. Cor. 10.4 5. Phil. 4.8 2. Rule Prou. 4.24 to keepe and counter-guard our hearts aboue all watch ward men dovsually guard their cities houses and their treasures now Salomon teacheth that the heart must be guarded more then any citie house or treasures because from it proceed the actions of life 1. Therefore make a couenant with thy senses that they be no occasion or prouocation to any manner of sinne this did Iob cap. 31. and Dauid Psal 119. Turne mine eies from beholding couetousnesse the senses are the windowes of the soule and if God enter not sathan will creepe in at them into our hearts 2. At the beginning checke an euill thought for the thought beeing checked the affections will be quiet 3. Labour with all care to cherish euery good motion of Gods spirit 1. all good cogitations by the ministerie of the word or good counsell hence quench not the spirit 3. Rule We must often vse eleuation of the heart and mind vnto heauen where Christ sits at the right hand of the Father Psal 25.1 Paul bids the Philippians haue their conuersation in heauen Iam. 4. drawe neere to God Hence the Lords Supper is a principall meanes of the eleuation of the heart and mind vnto God this eleuation must be continually practised such as are appointed to keepe clockes doe often euery day pull vp the waights because they are alwaies going downeward Pray continually 1. Thess 5. There be three speciall times the beginning of the day the first good thought affection euerie day must be the Lords The 2. time the end of the day commend our soules vnto God The 3. time receiuing of blessings or feeling the want of them to praise God for the one and call vpon him for the supply of the other 4. Rule The meditation of some speciall matters whereby saluation may be furthered which is either concerning God or our selues concerning God his presence this made Dauid to drawe neere vnto God Psal 139. Psal 19. his heart is purified by seeing God in his lawe Psal 23. in the shadow of death he wil not feare 2. Consideration of Gods iudgments not old but late and particular vpon persons cities townes we should lay these to the heart Ier. 12.11 Here we must practise three things 1. wee must obserue and carefully marke and remember Gods iudgements 2. wee must apply them to our owne persons in particular that they may make vs afraid Thus Habacuk when he heard of Gods iudgement his knees beate one against another Hab. 3. If in a familie one child be beaten others will take heed 3. We must make vse of them Luk. 13.3 Third consideration is of Gods word Psal 1. It is the propertie of the righteous man to meditate in Gods lawe day and night Luk. 2. Marie hid all those things in her heart 1. we must consider the sence of the Scriptures 2. what experience we haue had of the truth of the word of God in our own liues and consciences 3. how farre forth we haue swarued in the practise of the word or how farre forth we haue practised it Fourth consideration is of Gods works in vs and vpon vs this will make vs consider the workes of creation preseruation prouidence Isa 5.12 he pronounceth a woe to them that forget this 1. Consider the work of creation God hath made vs men when we might haue beene beasts that of nothing he made vs to be something 2. for preseruation and prouidence we must consider how he hath preserued vs from time to time from all dangers and hath giuen vs all things necessarie for this life and the life to come 3. for his patience that he hath not cast vs into hell but hath giuen vs a long and large time of repentance 4. that wee are not borne among the heathen but in the bosome of the church where hee hath giuen vs his word reformed our iudgments mollified our hearts and prouoked vs to euerie good worke Eccles 7.13 Psal 77.12.13 Second consideration of our selues 1. of our owne particular sinnes whether they be corruptions of the heart or sinnes of our liues Psal 119.59 Lam. 3. Come let vs search and try our wayes 1. In what manner we haue sinned against God whether of ignorance or knowledge of presumption or weaknes of constraint or wilfulnesse 2. The greatnesse of euerie sinne yea of the least sinne how the infinite maiestie of God is offended and his iustice violated 3. The number of them and here we shall find them with Dauid more then the haires of our head or the sands of the sea Must a man consider them whē he is sure they are pardoned yes so did Dauid Psal 25. Hee praied for the pardon of the sinnes of his youth That this may take the deeper impression let vs consider of the degrees of our misery 1. A separation from all fellowship with God Isa 59.2 2. a
whose iudgment seat are called his holy ones such as feare him in sinceritie of heart and hypocrits such as feare him in shewe whose lips call vpon him but their hearts are far estranged from him therefore that we may profitably behaue our selues in this matter set our selues to the true consideration of the forme manner of proceeding let vs giue the summe of the whole Psalme in a plaine orderly analysis of the whole matter and the rather I take it in hand because that if I shall vnderstand the Church of God to reape benefit by it I shall proceed in the rest of my purposes tending this way for this I haue purposed to doe by the grace of God and the assistance of his spirit First to shew the changeable estate of Gods Church in outward things Secondly to discouer the lights of Prophecie which haue made these diuers colours apparent least through our corruption wee should ascribe all to fortune Thirdly Due performance of his promises in making all things worke together for the good of his Church and children whereby all doubts that might spring out of the two former are fully resolued and God prooued most wise in disposing of all things and most true in foretelling of all future accidents Fourthly Because the most liuely colour of Gods Church in this world is affliction to laie down a discourse of that whereby euery faithful soule may see what dammage it is to the profession of Christ Fiftly Because affliction is the worst estate of Gods Church I will shew that it is a more happie estate then the best estate in the world Sixtly To drawe men from the confidence of the world and from that vaine conceite of religion as the discontentedst life in the world I will plainely shew that the world and all the excellencie of it can not giue a man content in all his wants ioy in all his sorrowes neither to reach vnto eternitie and therefore men shall find the issue thereof nothing but vanitie and vexation of spirit and that their onely happinesse consists in the feare of God and keeping of his commandements Seuenthly To take away all Balams wishes and the perswasion of hypocrites wee will shewe what the Lord requires for the attaining of true happinesse Eightly Wee will lay downe the true triall of our estates least with hypocrites we build the spiders house and so be swept down with the besome of Gods wrath with hypocrites throwne downe into hell Ninthly Wee will laie downe Gods admonition to all whose case is not desperate that they looke to themselues whilest the gracious call of the day of the Lords visitation is vpon them that they be reclaimed Lastly wee will shew the comfortable invitation of the Lord to euery one that is hungry and thirstie for the bread and water of life Wherewith wee wil ioyne Gods awaking of euery sleeper to stand vp from the dead that Christ may giue him light And because many deceiue themselues this shall be the conclusion that after the light hath appeared how they ought to walke vntil the day starre of righteousnesse hath guided them to the place of all blisse and happinesse These things haue so inflamed my heart that I would faine haue the fire break out and yet my yeeres make mee with Elihu to say I am yong in yeeres and many about mee are ancient Therefore hitherto haue I doubted and still am afraid to shew mine opinion for it beseemes youth to say the dayes shall speake and the multitude of yeeres shall teach wisedome neither blessed be God need I to speake because I haue waited till the ancient haue spoken and yet perceiue that they haue found out no matter to comfort good Christians and condemne the world for the world is full of their learned writings and they haue brought sufficient testimonies to prooue all truths convince all errors establish the godly and throw downe the wicked and profane yet seeing God will haue line vpon line and precept vpon precept I haue beene bold to doe something for the building vp of Gods sanctuarie Surely there is a spirit in man but the inspiration of the Almightie giueth vnderstanding Therefore renouncing my owne spirit and desiring wisedome from the true fountaine I trust in God I shall not speake out of my turne nor shew mine opinion in an vnseasonable time for I confesse God hath made mee full of matter and the spirit within mee compelleth me behold my bellie is as the wine which hath no vent and like the new bottels that brast therefore will I speake that I may take breath I wil open my lippes that so I may be cased of my trauel And God grant that when I haue deliuered my hearts desire I may reioyce that God thereby is glorified his Church edified poore Christians comforted and my owne soule saued when I shall come to giue vp my accounts to my God that bestowed his talents vpon mee to trade withall vnto his comming and therefore in confidence that God wil accept of my poore desire and that it shall not be in vaine I offer this as a pledge of the rest But to returne againe to our former subiect the partes of this Psalme are in number two The comming of the Iudge and his order of proceeding the comming of the iudge to the seauenth verse his proceeding in iudgement in the rest V. 1 The comming of the Iudge laies downe his excellencie and power his excellencie in the two first verses His excellency consists in his authoritie and maiestie his authoritie in the first verse a great commander for he is the God of gods and the Lord of lords And the manner of his commanding is forcible for it is but speaking and calling and at his word heauen and earth obey 2. The extent is exceeding large for it is from the rising of the sunne vnto the going downe thereof and therefore when the Lord shall come to iudge both quick and dead hee shall not extend his authoritie beyond his commission V. 2 The Maiestie of this Iudge is described in the 2. verse first from the subiect place Sion which greatly magnifies the Iudge for Sion is the perfection of beautie and therefore the very appearance of the Iudge shal dazle the eies of all beholders 2. From his effect in these words hath God shined therfore shal Sion reioyce for this honour and all that dwel in Sion shall lift vp their heads for the day of their deliuerance drawes neere but the wicked which are strangers in Sion and Alliants from the common wealth of Israel without God and without Couenant shall be taken at vnawares to their euerlasting confusion and this is the Iudges excellency his power followes V. 3 The power of the Lord is declared 2. prooued declared verse the third by two effects first God shall come it is no rumour or flying tale inuented to terrifie the world withall but it is most certaine as though it were alreadie done secondly God
speake I will testifie and therfore shall not Gods people heare when the Lord of hosts shall speake and shall they not beleeue when the most faithfull witnesse shal testifie vnto them surely it were intollerable if God should not haue the hearing with all reuerence 4. Reason is drawn from the right of creation preservation and in a word from the only fountaine of our happinesse for I am God therefore as able to doe what I will either for the sauing or destroying of my creature so also most willing and readie to doe both when it shall stand for my glorie therefore must I be heard because I am God and haue good right to command it 5. and lastly an argument of arguments to perswade to this dutie for I am God euen thy God it is much that I said I am God this argument haue I often vsed to perswade in many waightie matters but when I shall adde further God euen thy God what heart shall not be mooued with all feare and reuerence to take notice of that which now I will deliuer vnto thee V. 8 Consider of my loue and then my reproofe shall not bee grieuous vnto your soules my reproofe is this v. 8. a misconceiuing of my worship to think that I stand so much vpon sacrifices I renounce that opinion because I see that the world is ready enough to embrace it first in that I haue no cause to find fault with you for sacrifices since they haue been continually before me secondly I haue no mind to reprooue for such matters for they are not the things that I respect thirdly because I haue these by multitudes sacrifices and burnt offerings I will not stand to number them yet in a word in that indefinite number thinke with thy selfe that I haue iudged them too many fourthly in that they haue beene before me more then thy selfe when indeed I haue alwaies desired that in thē thou shouldst set thy selfe before me I would rather see thee on the altar sacrificing thy sinnes and offering vp thy selfe vpon my altar Christ Iesus as a holy liuing and acceptable sacrifice then all these dead sacrifices V. 9 The remoouall of the occasion of their error is v. 9. First the taking away of the matter no bullocks nor goats an excellent way to dispatch error is euen the remoouall of the matter though in it selfe it be lawfull and as here commaunded of God Secondly to put away the cost and charges that wee are at in providing of such matter I will not haue them out of thine house nor out of thy folds so that thereby they shall not complaine they haue sustained any great losse by his worship or that hee had any neede of their goods Thirdly they are to take notice that after they haue been at all this cost and charges that God will not esteeme of it for he saies hee will not take it at their hands V. 10 Now least the Lord should be found a changeling n playing fast and loose with them to say and vnsay to commaund and againe forbid he will cleare the point by fowre most excellent reasons The first is drawne from the right of possession v. 10. proouing that all is his owne and therefore that he is nothing enriched by them and his argument is drawne from an induction sufficient bringing all into his Syllogisme by an absolute ennumeration for if all the beasts of the forrest be his and the beasts on a thousand mountaines then cannot man bring God a present out of any countrie which is not his owne de proprio and therefore we should but steale for him in one place to inrich him in another This is the first reason V. 11 The second reason is drawne from the right of election v. 11. the Lord hath the best skill to choose for himselfe first because he hath the most exact knowledge of all his creatures therefore able to please himselfe best in his choise secondly his knowledge is most generall because hee knowes all the foules on the mountaines and all the wild beasts verie hard to be knowne of man for he can neither take them nor count them thirdly the Lords election is most free for he may take where he will and yet enter into no mans possession for all is his owne V. 12 The third argument is drawne from the right of prouision v. 12. the Lord he needes no stewards or marke-officer for his owne vse for first hee will make his wants knowne vnto no man secondly no man can knowe when the Lord is hungrie after these things thirdly because all the world cannot satisfie him nor all that is therein therefore iustly may he put off all the prouision of man because it will not serue his turne or be able to giue him contentment V. 13 The fourth argument is drawn from the vanitie of the end v. 13. first because the Lord can neither eate nor drinke secondly God hath no appetite vnto such things Will I eate will I drinke no I will not tast these things thirdly though I would eate and drinke yet neuer should my meate bee the flesh of bulls or the blood of goates but my whole rellish is in the sacrifices of the heart a contrite and a broken spirit I will neuer refuse I haue eares to heare of such prouision eyes to looke vpon it a smell to sauour the sweet sauour of rest in it a tast to please my palate and a touch of liuely feeling to do them good that shal thus worship me in spirit and truth but all other sacrifices are abhomination vnto mee against them I will close vp all my senses V. 14 Now followes Gods direction in the truth which is twofold first of the parts of his worship secondly of the end of his worship The parts of his worship are prayer and prayse praise in the 14. ver described first by his parts to offer and pay the first shewes the willingnes of the mind the second that it is a debt and therefore wee are to performe it Secondly from the obiect on which it must be fixed and that is the Lord and the most High therefore the first lookes for feare because a Lord and the other lookes for magnanimitie because most high and therefore Christians must be no base minded persons taken vp with the world and things here below but they must vp on high to God that dwells in the heauen of heauens who onely hath immortalitie and dwelleth in the light that none can attaine vnto whom neuer man saw neither can see and therefore an high estimation beseemeth the Saints in praysing of God that hath abased himselfe to behold miserable man and accept at his hands the offring of thanksgiuing Foure things notable for Christian practise 1. purpose 2. promise 3. vowes 4. oathes Thirdly the extent of our praise which must reach as high as vowes for there be foure excellent helpes in the practise of all Christian duties which carefully beeing obserued will
nothing but deceit nature is so farre spent within that he speakes against his brother and the bowels of pittie and compassion are so eaten vp that he slaundereth his owne mothers sonne therfore it cannot bee but that the criticall day should bee most dangerous That I lie not 1 Iudgement 2 Day 3 Symptomes 4 Cure see the sentence of the Lord most plainely vnfolding it v. 21. in the iudgement in the day in the Symptomes in the cure The iudgement these things hast thou done the day I held my tongue the Symptomes thou thoughtest I was like thee the cure I will reprooue thee and set them in order before thee The crysis or iudgement is most exact first in the cause of his disease these things profanation adulterie theeuerie euill speaking slaunder deceit causes sufficient to destroy the soundest temper Secondly in the subiect thou God is not deceiued of the principall part and member that suffers actionem laesam it is an hypocrite euen poisoned at the verie heart The third crisis is in the effect done a perfect concoction of the disease and therefore presently to be purged As the crisis is very manifest Da● so the day is not the seauenth day since the disease tooke him but seauen twice told nay I dare bee bold to say seuentie times seauen times Matth. 18.22 for he that taught Peter Matth. 18.22 not to forgiue seuen times but vnto seauenty times seuen times hath practised the same and therefore doublesse the hypocrite hath often been visited of the Lord in hope of amendement These things hast thou done was no false iudgment and I held my tongue was no few daies of triall Now for the third the Symptomes of his discase Symptomes what can more sensibly be perceiued First his pulse shewes the temper of his heart thou thoughtest a weake pulse shewing the decay of the spirits neither reason nor grace but a meere dreame of his weake phantasie Let vs handle his pulse and we shall find in it all mortall and deadly signes Pulsus intermittens First it intermits shewing his soule to bee so burdened with sinne that it cannot strike one good stroke suppose there were a motion to goodnesse as to declare Gods ordinances take his couenant into his mouth yet his vngodly heart and profane life strike all dead The next pulse to this Caprizan● is a skipping or capring pulse a plaine signe that his heart is vnequall by reason of the smoakie excrements of vanity and pleasure Date ●uam verbo which push his heart this way and that way and therefore as he intermits all good so he is skipping and capring in his impietie for what a proud thought is gotten into him that hee is like God But a third pulse followes this Vndosus and that is swelling full of waues and surges Vermiculans tossing him to this vanitie and that vanitie but alas all is but as the rowling of a worme not able to get vp the head but still sticking it in the ground vntill God tread on them by his iudgement and then would they faine lift vp the head to heauen Formicaus call vpon God offer sacrifice c. but alas all this creeping is so soft and dainty as though their spirits were a company of antes creeping vnder the hand of their confidence and may be makes them smart a little with the feeling of the venome of their sinne but as yet they haue not learned the thing that God requireth Micah 6.8 Surely to do iustly and loue mercy and to humble themselues to walke with their God Hence followes a sixt pulse which they call minute Myurus so small that it can scarse be felt not able to extend to the outward props of their confidence but they sinke downe as readie to giue vp the ghost for feare of Gods vengeance And then comes the last pulse which wee call trembling Tremulus alwaies expecting when death will giue the heart his deadly blow And these bee the symptomes of his heart which God alone was able to feele and discouer and therefore tells him thou thoughtest The second principall Symptome is Actio laesa actio laesa the action annoied in these words to make God like himselfe a strange imagination that hath so besotted his senses that nothing can please him but meere idolatrie a wrong sense of God and a wandring motion from God therefore as in the bodie the losse of the action is either of animall or naturall forces naturall as the losse of stomacke hurt of the liuer obstruction of the veines oppression of the heart swelling of the splen convulsion of the sinewes consumption of the lunges c. animall actions are sense and motion the hurt whereof is either priuation diminution or deprauation as in the eie 〈…〉 blindnesse is the priuation dulnesse of sight the diminution and wrong apprehension the deprauation in the hearing deafenes the priuation difficultie in hearing or hardnesse of hearing the diminution the glowing of the eares the deprauation so in feeling tasting smelling c. This may most fitly be applyed First Application ● the similion●● he is shroudly wounded in his very natural actions he suffers the dart to strike through his liuer by his adulterie his heart by his consent vnto theeuerie he hath lost his breath by running with them his tast by participation his mouth hath suffered a strange convulsion all the sinewes haue drawne it awry the lips are the doores of euill the tongue the forge of deceit both of them are set to speake against his brother and slander his mothers sonne all the passages of goodnes are filled vp with obstructions there is no way to the hands for the workes of charitie to the feete to runne in the pathes of righteousnesse euerie member is decaied and wholly put out of ioynt if he eate hee is giuen to gluttonie if hee drinke to surfet with drunkennesse if he sleepe to become a sluggard c. for his spirituall senses he hath no eye to see withall no care to heare withall he sauours not the things of the spirit he hath no feeling of his sinne nor the loue of God he can tast none of the meanes of his saluation his phantasie is possessed with dreams of peace and welfare his vnderstanding is taken with a spirituall madnesse and his memorie with a forgetful Lethargie euen of his owne name that he tooke in his baptisme for he neuer remembers what was therein promised vnto God and for motion he is starke dead can neither mooue hand nor foote nay alas his sickenes is surely vnto death for the disease hath so wounded him that he cannot perceiue any thing amisse his fancie workes so strongly that God onely must be imagined to be like him and therefore the action is a plaine Symptome that all is not well with him and surely there needs no further inspection his water is cast already and the prescript
themselues to forget Christ and his flocke who are as great and deere vnto him as the price they cost him they cannot stagger but runne like hungrie dogges with an eie only to the fleshpots and sell both themselues and their people for a morsel of bread and a messe of pottage to the deuill and haue sworne like sonnes of the earth to possesse the earth for euer and leaue heauen and the heyres thereof to God himselfe Alas poore soules faine would they haue somewhat to keepe life and soule within them and therefore as famished and starued creatures which haue for a space been pownded vp and pinfolded in a ground of barrennesse debarred from all succour and releife will suffer any thing to go downe the throat be it as bitter as gall as deadly as poison they swallow bitternesse as sugar and licke vp death as sweet hony These things God knowes are too common among vs and for these how many threats and warnings from heauen from earth from God from men from foes abroad and friends at home Ierem 9. ● Shal not I visit for these things saith the Lord or shall not my soule bee auenged on such a nation as this I will assuredly prooue my selfe to be Lord of hosts muster vp the clouds call foorth the winds cause the fire to deuoure before me Psal 50 3. and a mighty tempest to be round about me all powers in heauen and earth shall be shaken and I will take the foure corners of the world and shake out this off-scouring I will raise vp the standerd blowe the trumpet bring destruction vpon destruction death vpon death plague vpon famine sword vpon both Another sort there be that declare my ordinances against which I haue many things such are like the Ostrich Iob. 39. which haue wings feathers not like the doues to flie vnto Gods arke to bring the faithfull newes of the abating of the waters of Gods wrath they haue no oliue leaues in their mouth no Gospel of peace vnto the heires of righteousnes receiued into the arke of Gods couenant but when the time is that is when they haue gotten themselues the wings of honour they mount on high mocke the horse and his rider they leaue their egges in the earth small thanks vnto them if they be made hote in the dust it is not their owne heate but the heat of an other sunne which perhaps the Lord makes to shine vnto them but in the meane time they forget that the foole might scatter them or the wild beasts might breake them Alas howe many in their pride tread the godly vnderfeete what store of wild beasts breake into the Lords vinyard therefore it cannot be but that they shew themselus cruell vnto their young ones as they were not theirs and are without feare as if they trauailed in vaine But let me tell them for all their learning and wisdome yet while they forsake Gods heritage they are depriued of all wisedome neither hath God giuen them any part of his vnderstanding Oh therefore for the loue of God and comfort of your owne soules recal your selues before this sentence come out against you God hath a long time holden his tongue it cannot be for euer for it is most certaine that he will reprooue for these things and set them in order re-enter therefore and recouer your forsaken charges languishing and worne away for want of pasture stretching on the ground for faintnes fetching their groanes deep and their pants thicke as readie to giue ouer and yeld vp the ghost if they die it must needs be laid to your charge Ier 5.3 and for these things God will haue you arraigned hereafter O Lord are not thine eyes vpon the truth yes assuredly and therefore the harmelesse sheep that droppe away by famine of the word hath raised a lowder crie and clamour in thine cares then any man is able to make by his iust complaint in the eares of men yet O God if any place for mercie and why should we doubt of mercie with thee who art the God of mercy looke not vpon this drosse and filth but sweep them out and open the rocke of stone againe let againe sweet Iesus the waters euen the liuing waters of the word flow out and let the sauing riuers of thy Gospel runne in all the drie places of our land We see the fruitfull weedes and thornes of prophannesse and iniquirie oh giue thine husbandmen hearts to roote them out we see the wofull ruines of vertue piety oh let the builders be readie to repaire them that so to thee who art the great Shepheard and Bishop of our soules we may render an account at the dreadfull day of thine Oecumenicall visitation In the meane time thou oh God which instructest the husbandman to haue discretion Esay 28. and doest teach him to cast in wheate and by measure euerie graine teach thy seruants how to plowe vp the fallow ground of mens hearts and keep them from sowing among thornes Againe Secondly 〈◊〉 taxe all v●●e formed professors as the words are specially directed against such ministers as would declare Gods ordinances and yet hate all reformation so likewise may they be applyed to euerie professor that would make a shew of godlinesse yet wholly denyes the power thereof and therefore the sentence is verie large neither can we come to make any vse of it vntil we haue cleared it by the rules of Gods wisedome which is better then mans The wit of man hath many strange inuentions Gods wisdome our direction first seene by analysis then imitated by genesis and therefore seeing I haue been so large vpon one small verse it may rather be thought to be mine inuention beside the nature of the text then that which Gods wisedome will any waies afford I will not therefore thinke it grieuous to expresse the way of mine inuention All wisedome lookes vnto God as the author analysis genesis and will acknowledge no more in man then obseruation and after that to followe God by way of imitation for the wisedom of God is as the Sunne ours as the beames no beames where the sunn hath not gone before his wisdome as the real and substantiall face ours as the reflexion or image in the glasse no image or reflexion without the presence of the bodie Gods wisedome is as the seale ours as the stampe no stampe but by the seale his wisdome is the fountaine ours the streames no streames where the fountaine is not open and sending foorth his water Let Iacobs well be stoped and he will presently complaine for want of water therefore no worke of the creature is primarie Imitation by obseruation but an imitation of Gods worke The husbandman could neuer haue pianted trees except hee had first obserued Gods plantation in the world Apelles could neuer haue painted any exquisite colours vnlesse he had taken notice of Gods most beautifull colours in nature Let it
and water good and euill may as well bee reconciled In deede Gods silence might haue wrought better effects in the mind of these wicked men but they haue so hardned themselues Rom. 2.4 and brought impenitencie vpon their hearts that they are become subiects vnfit to be wrought vpon neither haue they that wisdome as to turne themselues vnto such a subiect as Gods silence to ponder seriously thereon so that neither can it worke vpon them nor they vpon it and therefore what consention betwixt God and their thoughts 2. Acception is to conforme the fruit of agreement 2. Conformiti●● by a metanomie of the effect for the cause for conformity is the effect of consention neither will this stand in any good sense thou conformedst for it is the only thing that God complaines of in this place R●u 2.21 that he did not conform himselfe vnto the large time that God gaue him to repent for how can there be any peace as long as the whoordomes of Iezabel are in such multtiudes peace is where men agree together but where they are vp in armes all is in an vproare and the tumult is so great that they will bee brought vnto no order The men of Ephesus when they were troubled about their goddesse made the whole citie full of confusion Act. 19. one crying one thing another the cleane contrarie all out of order and the more part knewe not wherefore they were come together the Towne Clarke for all his wisdome can hardly bring them vnto any conformitie so as long as the tumult of sinne disturbs all within vs it is impossible that God should haue audience especially when for his silence he would be heard of vs. Let a sonne of thunder cry at a doore where all are fighting and quarrelling and they will out-cry him but if he should stand silent at the doore it were impossible that they should heare him when they were at the best therfore God may stand at the doore and knocke by his silence as long as he will and he shall neuer be heard therefore thou thoughtest was no conformitie with Gods silence 3. Signification is assimulation 3. Assimulation either to assimulate himselfe vnto the thing or the thing vnto himselfe if it had beene of himselfe vnto the thing thē had his thought without all question been lawfull and honest but it is of the thing vnto himselfe and therefore let the thing bee what it will it must bee made to serue his turne And this signification is very emphaticall and seruing for our purpose and is thus much in sense as if the Lord should haue said As a wicked man thinks of me so must I be indeed he will frame mee according to his owne conceit and not his conceit according to that which I would haue him thinke of me and my silence toward him and this is the first beginning of his thought now assimulation is neuer without a conceiued image Imagination comming betwixt the two things that make themselues like Hence a fourth signification to imagine and that is a second degree vnto this thought first by turning Gods silence vnto his owne will he saw no great difference but that there was proportion and similitude enough then in the second place he imagined that hee sawe God well pleased with him Resolution Now a third degree is to bee added and that is from the imagination a direct resolution that I may thinke it and acknowledge it for the truth The reason of the phrase is this because when any thing approaches toward the minde of man then the minde turnes it selfe vnto it sees how it likes it imagines what contentment may be drawne out of it and then thinks on it if the thing be good and the mind frame it selfe according to the same then the thought that riseth from that thinking is good If on the contrarie it be bad and the mind will impresse his image then the thought is bad silence and mercie from God in this place were exceeding comfortable they enter the mind of this wicked hypocrite but they are not intertained in their owne name neither will he part with so much as a cup of cold water for his sake that sent them but he will bee refreshed by them according to his owne liking Amos 4 5. The people will bring sacrifices yea betimes in the morning tythes after three yeers a thankesgiuing of leauen free offerings c. but according to whose liking euen their owne and therefore God counts of it as to transgresse at Bethel Esa 58. and multiply transgressions at Gilgal Esay 58. they fasted punished themselues but it was to seeke their own wills and require all their owne debts they care not to haue a good glasse to looke in but they must needs breath in it and therefore the inward corruption of the heart sends out such smoakie fumes that the true image is dimmed and so they see nothing but themselues The flowers that God sent them all the time of his long silence were exceeding sweete but the mind beeing corrupt in it selfe and also in his breathing infects or rather driues backe the pleasant smell and so most truely sents it selfe yea takes the deeper poison because a sweete flower poisoned is more louingly imbraced of the sences and so the poison doth creepe in with the pleasant smell and strikes with the spirits presently to the heart so often they poison the good graces of Gods spirit which willingly would be imbraced but the poyson creepes in too into the soule and strikes all dead at the very heart the glasse that is coloured casts about all the beames of the sunne with the appearance of his colour so the glasse of our mind beeing coloured and deepe died withall impietie makes euery beame of Gods goodnesse shine according to his owne minde intus apparens prohibet alienum was an old axiome of Aristotle but well may it be brought into diuinitie sinne that onely appeares within hinders all grace and goodnesse for alas they come but as strangers vnto vs and therefore they find very meane intertainment As Christ was dealt withall when hee came vnto the inne all inward roomes were taken vp and onely the stable is left for him so doe we deale with his grace and mercie all the cheife roomet in our soules are taken vp with greater personages then Christ and his grace there is either lord couetousnesse or lord pride or ambition or pleasure or reuenge c. and therefore must Christ and his grace into the stable for we will not haue these men to rule ouer vs and therefore if his grace will become our seruant we will giue it entertainement but to be Lord ouer vs is too much we will not haue it take so much vpon it and for our seruice we haue no other place for grace but the stable and therefore no maruell if all goodnes disdaine once to come neere the houses of these wicked men
denying graunt the one and graunt the other denie the one and denie the other Secondly because it is not onely the part of a wise man to produce his worke but also to direct it to his ende therfore most absurd to denie it of the wisest Thirdly because it is impossible that a thing should be produced by one wisdome and gouerned by another thus things would not serue the ende of their creation but another Observ 6. According to this wisdome euery nature worketh and to this he ought to obey Reason 1. Because they are Gods effects and therefore obeying the cause must needs obey the wisdome that ordered the causes sinne therefore beeing nothing obeies not God neither any sinner as he serues sinne Secondly this wisdome carries to the ende and euery thing obeies his ende and inclines bends and bowes vnto it Observ 7. This obsequie or obedience of the creature is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or true impression of this producing and gouerning wisdome This first wisdome is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The gouernement of the Creator the obedience of the creature or liuely seale that stamped that marke vpon the creature therefore the stampe is the liuely effigies or impression of that first wisdome and the obsequie or obedience of the creature is nothing but to imitate his gouernour A familiar example of this you may see in the seale and the impression vpon the waxe the seale leaues his marke and the marke is a plaine representation of the seale though the seale it selfe could be seene of none but him that stamped his marke vpon the waxe The waxe sets forth the creature the stampe the obedience and the seale Gods wisdome and this is that Idaea which is so much dreamed of whereof the creature is not capable yet the reflexion of it may be in the creature As for example sixe or seuen men may see their faces all in one glasse yet the glasse is farre lesse then any one of their faces for the naturall face of a man can not be put into the glasse but the image of his face reflected and that in most liuely proportion so Gods face no man can see yet his backe parts may be seene Exod. 33. now this face as I may say of Gods wisdome beeing stamped vpon his creatures carrie them in all their motions to their ends appointed of his Maiestie These things beeing well conceiued of wee finde two things most necessarie to concurre to the producing of any act 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 First facultie or power which God giues the creature when he giues them beeing 2. a rule of Gods wisdome to bring that facultie into exercise and so carrie it along vnto his ende The rule is the principall cause the facultie the instrumentall or ministeriall cause to ioyne with the principall neither alone can doe any thing but both together can doe any worke that the Creator would haue to be done To come then to our purpose God created man a reasonable creature indued with two most excellent qualities will and vnderstanding so that man was made able to vnderstand his Creator and will him as his onely good Yet man could not actually will God except God had giuē a rule to haue taught him so to doe the Lord bad man loue him with all his heart soule minde and strength and then to loue his neighbour as himselfe And for the effecting of this he gaue him a perfect rule of righteousnes to ioyne with his will in the performance of any dutie neither did God withhold this rule from him at any time and therefore God gaue man by creation power to will and rule sufficient for to haue taught him how to will so that neither for power or act any thing was wanting Let vs see then how these two things concurred in mans first fall How rule and facultie meet together in the first fall The deuill comes in the serpent and he beginnes to withdraw man from his rule knowing if man and woman had sticked close thereunto sinne should haue had no entrance He beginnes first to propound a question that so he might bring the woman to dispute with him and the question is made about the rule of obedience Hath God indeed said Ye shall not eate of euerie tree of the garden To this the woman answers first by affirmation we eate of the trees of the garden secondly by negation from the sentence of the law of the fruit which is in the mids of the garden God hath said not onely I The dispu●●● on of the 〈◊〉 man and 〈◊〉 deuill but neither I nor my husband must eate of it neither shall ye touch it and to the prohibition she laies the curse least ye die So then the rule would haue made his part good against the Deuill and haue taught the woman to haue holden this conclusion against all the deuills arguments The deuill replies againe vpon the woman and first he begins to take away that which might feare her in breaking the law yee shall not die at all and then to her negation brings a testimonie first from God God doth knowe secondly from contradiction to the law when ye shall eate therof thirdly a threefold reason to perswade them to that act of eating first knowledge your eyes shall be opened secondly the measure of this knowledge it shal make you like God himselfe thirdly from the kinds of their knowledge knowing both good and euill As yet no hurt was done Let vs now see how the Law concurres in the next The con●● of the 〈◊〉 and we shall easily see both Gods and the lawes confluxe with Adams fall The 1. act of the woman was approbation of the deuills reasons so the woman here 's consent against both God the law The 2. act was seeing here God concurred naturally and that by the rule of nature in optickes neither was this the breach of that rule but presently the will wheeles or turnes it selfe vpon the obiect and saies the tree was good and that approbation was also good for the tree was good by Gods creation but this goodnesse did so affect the will that Gods law must be forgotten and the tree beeing made good for that which the law forbad to wit that it was good for meat when before out of the sentence of the law she had saide the law and God himselfe hath saide ye shall not eate and to say it was good for meate was a direct affirmation against both God and his law and so could not haue their concourse and this was her internall iudgment The next is her externall iudgment in regard of the tree obiected to her eyes in these words and that it was pleasant to the eyes Now this was no where forbidden but that they might looke on it and it may be she said too much when she added we may not touch it yet this likewise is made a sinne for after the will is spoyled then all the other
that he would die as Christ did and rise the third day therefore deluding the people with a ramme which they beheaded in stead of Simon and hauing caried it forth and buried it Simon himselfe appeares againe the third day yet see I pray you this Simon will bee baptized as well as the rest and make a shew of beleeuing continue with Philip wondring at the signes and miracles which were done yet when they were to be confirmed by Peter and Iohn and by laying on of hands the holy Ghost to be receiued he would bestow money that he might haue that for the perfection of his art but now for all his baptisme and beleeuing he is found out of Peter to bee in the gall of bitternesse and the bond of iniquitie and all that hee prayeth for is onely that the iudgements might not light on him And I would to God that these persons would but bee so much touched that they would feare Gods iudgements for these sinnes Historie is plaine for it A woman in Italie hauing sore eies and could by no meanes be eased of the paine was perswaded that a Priest could doe it for her therefore comming vnto him intreating with a great reward in her hands the Priest against his skill writ her a paper to be hanged about her neck wishing her no good but all mischiefe yet she taking the paper and following his rule was presently cured of her eyes yet when a yeare was expired she would needs haue the paper read wherein were written these words Diabolus eruat oculos tuos foramina stercoribus impleat which when shee vnderstood burnes the paper for anger and presently her eyes were in as ill case as euer before Hemingius reading the Logicke lecture in the schooles and beeing disposed to make merrie with his auditors in iesting manner told them that if any man should say these two verses ouer one sicke of the feuer it would presently leaue them The verses were vsed of antient Logitians for the figures of a Syllogisme Fecana Cage Daphenes Gebare Gedaco Gebali stant sed non stant Phebas Hecas Hedas One in the companie more simple then the rest tried his words and the euent followed for the space of a yeere before it was knowne insomuch that he was famous for his art But as soone as Hemingius knew the matter and had preached against it all his practise came vnto an ende shewing that the deuill will worke no longer then men serue him ignorantly and therefore if the effect follow no wonder for the parties that doe these things and the persons that seeke vnto them are ignorant and blinded people such as haue no true feare of God for euery one that seareth God speaketh against them nay they speake against themselues for tell mee I pray you how many of these vse to blesse themselues children and family by earnest praier vnto God tell me how many of them haue Bibles in their houses and godly exercises surely they may professe what they will for beasts but they proclaime themselues to be worse then bruit beasts Is there neuer a man of God able to pray as well as they hath God giuen them a greater measure of his spirit then he hath done to any other If this be so commendable why send they not to the minister before these wretches to intreat him to pray for their cattell but alas no maruell if the world be deluded when they will not intertaine the truth of God in the loue of the truth For it were strange to consider how persons beeing galled did euen gnash against these declarations that they should be taught by any young headed boy Well let them know that they haue euery mothers sonne of them made anvnknowne conclusion against themselues for except they repent I tell them as much in writing as I haue done in speaking that they cannot be saued 2. Reason Carnall wisedome is the high conceit men haue of their owne wisdome Rom. 1.22 When they professed themselues to be wise they became starke fooles Pharaoh Exod. 1. come let vs worke wisely and what is that I pray you 1. burdens 2. tyrannie 3. secret murther by the midwiues 4. Wickednes hunts the wicked to his destruction open drowning by all his people and what became of all this wisdome drowning indeed of Pharaoh and all his host in the redde sea What became of Ahitophels wise counsell surely the hanging of himselfe Therfore letall such foxes as Herod was know for a certentie that Gods children shall walke to day and to morrow and for euer most safely for they haue bin simple to denie their owne wisdome yet happie are they for they haue found a better that shall neuer deceiue them Reas 3. is their practise Euill practise they thinke all is well that begins well they neuer respect the ende but runne along with the present satisfaction of their hearts and therfore they are bold to say we shall neuer be mooued Thus promising faire things vnto to them selues A present misery is better then a future mercy to the wicked they make a conclusion more bitter then death before they haue liued halfe their dayes to an end It is the godly man that sees the sword come and hideth himselfe when wicked men are so blinded with the glistering shewes of this world that they can not behold the glittering appearance of Gods armour comming into the field to fight against them 1. Vse is reprehension first the confutation of the wicked that build vpon false grounds and laie sandie foundations of all their hopes and therefore shall it perish as the house of the spider when the Lord shall come with the besome of his wrath and fetch them down out of their kings palaces Secondly correction of the godly that often thinke the wicked haue built thēselues so strongly that there is no way to bring them downe Israel in Egypt is out of heart and the Lord cannot haue the hearing because of the anguish of their hearts yet if with Moses they will be but still a little they shall see the saluation of the Lord. 2. Vse is instruction first an admonition to the wicked that they cry not with Diues soule take thy rest for thou art rich enough for manie yeares Take heed the conclusion is otherwise then he tooke it to be for it is this night thou foole shall thy soule be taken from thee and then whose goods shall these be Secondly a direction to the godly that they make right steps vnto their feete 3. Vse is consolation first in prosperitie to see the fetches of the deuill to perswade vs that there can be no change let vs not reioyce in this but because our names are written in the booke of life A sorrowfull beginning with a ioyfull ending is more sweete then a paradise of pleasure with hell hereafter Secondly in all trouble this may afford consolation because by afflictions we are made more wise vnto
saluation then wicked men in all their craftie fetches to plant themselues while the Lords silence is vpon them for affliction lets a man see at the first the worst conclusion that shall befall him in the profession of his God and therefore beeing best knowne he may assure himselfe that all other consequences shall be ioyfull and exceeding comfortable It shall not be so with the wicked for they make the best conclusions first and therefore blind their eyes that they cannot behold how they runne to fearfull woes and sudden destruction now followes the conclusions of a part of the argument to wit Gods silence alone Obser 4. This bond therefore lets vs see a fourth collection to wit that wicked men sucke poyson out of euery word of God his verie silence and mercie which ought to haue a sweete rellish vnto their soules shall by the corruption of their natures become the baine of the body and soule If God be but silent then will they be filled with wicked thoughts of God himselfe Reas 1. The corruption of nature From corrup nature which turnes all into it selfe A corrupt stomacke makes all meats rellish of his qualitie it turnes sweete into sowre pleasant into as bitter as gall so the heart of a wicked man makes silence sinne iudgement blasphemie loue hatred peace warre and the feares of hel the thoughts of pleasure Corpus tabed●● quo plus nutrias eo magis laedas A naughty temperature the more it is fedde with good nourishments the worse it becomes so an ill tempered soule with the vntempered mortar of sinne becomes worse for the mercies of God and such excellent foode is turned into a most dangerous nourisher of the very canker and gangrene of bodie and soule Reas 2. Ill digestion either of mercie or iudgement From the ill digestion of the soule That which lies raw in the stomack and so consequently spoyled in the first concoction can neuer be mended againe in the liuer or in the assimulation of the parts where euery thing drawes and sucks for his own vse So all the mercies and iudgments of God lie raw at the heart of a wicked man and there are spoiled so that no good blood can be dispersed through bodie soule to make the sanguine complexion of a Christian neither shall you see any member to gather strength but rather to pine away euen as men doe that labour of consumptions Good things without Gods blessing heauie curses when they are fedde with the best nourishments when wee may see a poore beggers boy that fares hardly euen with such diet as would make a man melancholick to looke on it yet he is fresh and well liking so Christians which are of the blood royall are like Daniel which was better liking feeding on the pulse then when he had his diet off the Kings table So these vnder affliction profit more then all the wicked doe in their prosperitie Lazarus is better in soule though he cannot obtaine the crummes that the rich mans dogges might be welcom vnto then the rich-man that fared daintily euery day and yet pined in his soule The woman of Canaan for all her strange repulses first no answer 2. the disciples speaking against her 3. Christ giuing her a cold answer I am not come but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel 4. an vtter distast of her kindred it is not meete to take the childrens bread and cast it vnto dogges such a one art thou because a Canaanitish woman and no Israelite well for all this cold comfort shee will haue her soule fedde or shee will neuer giue ouer True Lord I am neither sonne nor seruant to sit at thy table yet seeing it hath pleased thee to style me a dogge I pray thee let me at thy table be but as one of thy whelps to gather but the crummes that fall from thee or thy children yea or thy seruants and that shall suffice my hungrie soule This woman by this meanes was fedde better then any Israelite euen by the very testimonie of Christ himselfe I haue not found such faith in Israel ah woman great is thy faith go in peace and let all be according to thy desire 3. A wicked m●n makes no vse 〈◊〉 Gods mercy Reas Is that which followes a bad concoction and that is ill distribution whereby all the vitall parts waxe weake and the spirits decay and so consequently sence and motion lie dead in the bodie he is not able to mooue vp and downe to performe the duties of his calling his hands which are the keepers of his house begin to tremble with the palsie his limmes and legs which were the strong men bow themselues his senses decay his eies waxe darke that looke out by the windowes his ears with all the daughters of singing are abused his tast is gone he is like old Barsillai that is not fit to set at the kings table in a word his senses shall be so decayed that nature shall not bee able to bind them vp in the night time to refresh him with comfortable sleepe but he shall be awake before the bird sing in the morning and shall be so out of heart with the disquietnes of the night that the bird shall be no means to lull him asleep but he shall rise at the voyce of the bird Euen so is it with wicked men they make no good distribution of Gods mercies iudgements in their liues and therefore no maruell if their life languish if their spirits to good actions bee cold and frozen with the dreggs of impietie and can no wayes be dissolued for mooue they cannot or bestirre themselues that so heate might be gotten into them to dissolue the frosts of their soules and expell the abundance of vapours that arise out of the sinke of sinne wherby they are choaked neither can they be chafed for they haue vtterly lost all sense and feeling Let the grace of God shine neuer so clearely yet they haue no eyes to seee withall let God thunder from heauen and they are so hard asleep that they cannot heare it let God threaten them and they haue yet no touch of their conscience let God promise them mercie and they cannot tast it let him offer them some of the flowers of his garden yet they cannot smell them And thus it comes to passe that as euery thing worke together for the good of Gods children so euery thing workes together for the destruction of the wicked Vse 1. reprehension First confutation of the wickēd that bragge and boast of their prosperitie Alas what cause haue they to reioyce in that they poyson themselues There is a kind of poyson that will make men die laughing surely so is it with the wicked they are fed fat for the day of slaughter and yet they perceiue not how fast they run to the slaughter house Secondly correction of the godly that are discontented with affliction would they haue the estate of a
generated from pure ayre whereby the heart and the braine are preserued in their functions so that what shall bee without reason to deny God his prouidence 3. In Iudiciall Astrologie Neither would I haue the Astrologians to thinke themselues free from this conceit when they make the starres the rule to square all actions as well voluntary as naturall and to determine of the ends and issue of them both Secondly it is strange Idolatrie that there should be any conceit of idolatrie seeing that nothing can be like God either in beeing or doing Isa 40. Againe all the idols of the heathen are known by their causes which to imagine of God is absolutly impossible The smith Isa 44. taketh an instrument worketh in the coales euē with the strength of his armes is an hungred his strength faileth he drinketh no water and is faint the like is said of the carpenter ver 13. and therefore verie strange that such feeble creatures as these should bring forth their creator nay stupid blockishnes that the workman should esteeme the worke of his own hands better then himselfe that made it The like may be said of the matter which is as fit in his owne conceit to warme his body and prepare his meat as be an idole for his soule folly incomparable that fit matter for the fire in his chimney should be as fit for the kindling vp of the fire of his zeale and deuotion in his heart strange againe that the picture of a man beast or the foules of the ayre should be counted better then the liuing man himselfe nay alas then the liuing God Lastly that whose ende is vanitie to be counted the felicitie of the soule is most shamefull and intolerable yet for all this Iere. 44. v. 17. We will burne incense to the queene of heauen and powre out drinke offerings vnto her haue they not reason for this yes assuredly they haue a double reason First losse in that they haue not done it ver 18. Since we left off this worshippe we haue had scarcenesse of all things and haue beene consumed by the sword and by famine A second reason is the profit of idolatry v. 17. when we did this then had we plentie of victualls and were well and felt no euill Thirdly Heresie Transubstantiation Consubstantiation no heresie but some reason for it as Transubstantiation must needes bee true because Christ hath said this is my body and consubstantiation must be as good as this because of the personal vnion of man-hood with the deitie A pretie dispute we haue in the 12. Christ not the Messias of Iohn betwixt Christ and the people concerning the Messias In the 32. v. Christ layes downe this proposition If I were lift vp from the earth I would drawe all men vnto mee this Christ meant of his death and so the people vnderstood it but he hath put an argument into their heads whereby they will conquer him ver 34. We haue heard out of the law that Christ bideth for euer therefore by thy owne confession thou art not Christ because thou saiest thou must die And I pray you consider how they triumph in this their argument How sayest thou now that the sonne of man must bee lift vp who is that sonne of man Fourthly Prophanation for prophanation see how the Apostle labours to preuent the wicked conceits of man concerning the abundance of grace 1. Of grace where sinne abounds there grace abounds much more a good reason in the conceits of wicked men to make them sinne the more that grace may abound Againe for Election and Reprobation see how men profane them If I must be saued let me doe what I will and I shall not be damned 2. Election Reprobation and if I must bee damned let mee doe what I will and I shall not bee saued Now should I come to discouer that the ground of all these opinions is nothing but thou thoughtest or it was thy conceit but because this is the last obseruation in the conclusion I wil put it off vntill I haue briefly giuen the reasons and made the vse of this point Reason 1. No man will denic himselfe and therefore though oftentimes he denie the rule of reason yet neuer will be absolutely denie reason because reason is one of the principall faculties in man and therefore must it trudge to make vp his broken conclusions Reason cannot act without reason and therefore men will haue false reason before they will haue none Reas 2. Is the simplicitie of truth and multiplicitie of errour From errors multiplicity and therefore though men cannot bring in truth to maintaine falshood yet may they haue many falshoods to make a faire shewe for one falshood Reas 3. Is the nature of opposition From opposition which on both sides is to defend his own Truth and falshood are deadly enemies and therefore as truth laboureth to confirme himselfe by all those that loue him so falshoold laboureth to gather together all his forces by those that maintaine him Hence it comes to passe that heretickes will neuer be coufuted but as long as they can breath they will vent what they haue conceiued Vse 1. reprehension First confutation of the wicked in that they adde sinne vnto sinne First to poyson themselues with strange opinions and secondly to enquire for reasons whereby they may ground themselues in these poysoned errors so that from errors they grow to heresie from simple ignorance to that which we call affected ignorance ignorance is so good a mother to deuotion that she will nource vp error and error will grow vp to heresie a child of rebellion Secondly correction of the godly that they yeeld not at any time to the least motions of errour least they become disputers for errors and opposers of Gods truth Many honest and well-minded persons haue gotten such familiar acquaintance with hereticks that they haue beene poysoned by them and so haue come to hate the truth which once they imbraced Vse 2. instruction First an admonition of the wicked that they be a little more sober in broaching of their errors least that the Lord seeing their malice against his truth come with a sharpe reproofe and cut them off suddenly Secondly direction for the godly to keepe themselues to Gods word and neuer labour to wrest it either to the right hand or to the left for the vpholding of any conceits that the deuill their owne flesh or the wicked world shall suggest vnto them Vse 3. consolation First in prosperitie to remember that euerie good thing we enioy shall willingly bee spent for the maintaining of the truth and the opposing of error euen vnto the death Secondly in aduersitie to consider how wee haue vsed no indirect meanes to bring our purposes to passe but still haue rested vpon the Lord for the reuelation of his will and the time of our deliuerance Obser 7. The ground of all wicked mens opinions and likewise
begin to swage hence the prouerb serò sapiunt Fryges they shut the stable dore when the steed is stoln And so many like Diues in hell would be wise when it is too late Thus when we are taken away we come to had I wist and doe penance in hell to no purpose 1. Vse reprehension First confutation of all wicked men that boast of their newe inuentions We haue many that crie with Pythagoras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but alas what haue they found parturiant montes nascetur ridiculus mus they haue found out strange matters yet when all is brought to the birth it was but a mountaine conceiuing and the offspring was a poore mouse They were in the toppes of Kings houses in their vaine conceit but alas all is but the spiders webbe fitting for nothing but the besome to sweepe it to the dunghill 2. Vse is correction of the godly that are too credulous of wicked mens opinions Good Bereans will search whether the things be so or no and these shall be wiser then they of Thessalonica It behooueth a wise man in these cases to haue his eyes in his head 2. Vse instruction First admonition Thou saiest thou art rich and increased with goods and hast neede of nothing and knowest not how thou art wretched and miserable and poore and blinde and naked Reu. 3.17 This is the conceit of all hypocrites therfore let them looke to Christs admonition v. 18. I counsell thee to buie of me gold tried by the fire that thou maiest be made rich and white rayment that thou mayest be cloathed and that thy filthy nakednesse doe not appeare and annoint thine eyes with eie salue that thou mayest see Surely if God loue thee hee will rebuke and chasten therefore in the second place let it be a direction to the godly that they be zealous and in their zeale ielous ouer their hearts with a holy inquisition how it stands betwixt God and their soules if they find Gods truth rooted in their hearts praise God for it but if they see the deceits of their hearts repent and amend least the Lord come against them and cut them in peices with the sword of his iudgements that would not suffer the word of God liuely and mightie in operation sharper then any two edged sword to enter through euen to the diuiding asunder of their soule and their spirit of their ioynts marrow and to discerne of the thoughts and intents of their hearts let this be powerfull and we shall neuer be conceited Vse 3. consolation First when we do not conceit too high of any grace or gift of God in vs but say from the very heart glorie be to God When Dauid can say I am not puft in minde I haue no proud looke then he found ioy at will Secondly in our affliction not to conceit with Cain my sinne is greater then can be forgiuen but as wee descend downe into our owne hearts and plead guilty so againe by the eye of faith to ascend vpward vnto God in Christ and then shall we say with Iob although he kill me yet will I trust in him and I know my redeemer liueth and shall stand the last vpon earth and that I shall see him with these eyes And thus much of the bond of inference the bond of copulation followeth These things hast thou done and I held my tongue Sinnes Sinne and Gods silence may for a time agree together and Gods silence are no kindly friends yet they are here yoked together and that by a bond that doth not onely conioyne but gather together and that not by connexion but cheeke by ioule not one drawing in another for neither can sinne by any good consequence drawe after it Gods silence neither Gods silence except abused any wayes allure vnto sinne both are absolute and therefore soone may they bee parted From hence might be obserued first that more may absolutely be affirmed of sin silence coupled together then can be vpon condition for God makes no condition with sinners for the time of his silence neither haue they any lease from God how long they shall sinne and he wil say nothing for God will haue his libertie Secondly wicked men shall haue nothing to excuse them from God Indeed their sinnes goe before Gods silence Gods silence comes after and they againe come after with more sinne for so are the words ioyned together 1. They doe 2. God is silent 3. They thinke it may be by their latter sinning they haue a perswasion of conditions of peace but alas they are deceiued for hereby riseth a threefold iudgement against them one for their first sinne a second for the abuse of his silence and a third for that they haue had no measure in their sinning and therefore shall God haue no measure in his punishing Obser But the obseruation proper to the place is this that mans sinnes and Gods silence may stand together for a time The disciples of our Sauiour Christ knewe not of what spirits they were when they asked Christ that hee would call for fire from heauen to destroy his enemies Indeed if any tender hearted man should sit but one howre in the throne of God almighty and look downe vpon the earth as God doth continually and see what abhominations are done in that houre he would vndoubtedly in the next set all the world on fire and not suffer his wrath to bee pacified or the fire to be quenched Reas From opposition 1. From the nature of opposition Two things that disagree may be coupled together by some third and in that third they may agree Heate and cold may stand together in water but because water hath cold naturally and heate accidentally the heate must out againe and the water remaine in his nature So our sinnes and Gods silence euen fire and water stand together in this world and sinne burnes very hote in this world insomuch that the whole world boyles with it and the Lord hath a long time beene silent with the world verie coole and patient with sinners but this burning must out of the world for the world in Gods creation did neuer acknowledge him as any home borne brood The deluge once cooled him sufficiently and againe another fire stronger then he shall get the conquest and then shal an ende be made of Gods silence and smoaking coales shall issue out of his mouth for euer to augment the fire of hell that it may neuer bee extinguished Reas 2. The order of lawes which is to promise threaten The order of lawe punish all the while the law is promising and threatening the Iudge sits still as one at rest but when that time is expired he ascends the throne of iudgement giues sentence deliuers to the executioners and straitly commands that such villaynes be dispatched out of the world Reas 3. From meth● de Methode makes a good agreement betwixt things that dissent when it brings euerie thing to his proper
sea yet thither shall thine hand lead me and thy right hand hold me Secondly for the circumstance of time v. 11. If I say yet the darknes shall hide me euen the night shall be light about thee yea the darknes hideth not from thee but the night shineth as the day the darknes and light are both alike Here is no plea that olde things are out of date and sinnes committed many yeares agoe are forgotten of the Lord for be sure that the sinne of Cain in murthering of his brother is as freshly bleeding in the presence of God as the sin thou hast committed this day so that neither time past present or to come will helpe vs at all with the Lord. Thirdly for the circumstance of persons he knoweth all by their names Psal 147.4 therefore no companie shall excuse thee Indeede in the world multitudo peccantium tollit poenam peccati when multitudes sinne then mens lawes dare not execute yet be sure with the Lord he that runnes with a multitude to doe euill shal be sure to be punished with them Neither great men nor rich men shall be able to rescue vs out of the hands of God therefore the point is cleare that the Lords knowledge is most exact in all particulars 1. Vse is reprehension first confutation of the wicked that are ashamed to doe that in the presence of men which they dare most impudently doe before God surely hee is able to iudge more exactly of our offences then any man therefore if we labour to keepe our selues secret from the eyes of men how should we not tremble to sinne before God Secondly correction of the godly that doe not alwaies set themselues in the presence of God but sometimes take libertie to slip into the wayes of their owne hearts thinking that this is but a small sinne and therefore the Lord will be mercifull to me in this thing neuer considering the puritie of the Lord and the brightnesse of his glorie which is alwayes shining round about them 2. Vse instruction first an admonition to the wicked that beat their fellow feruants because their master deferreth his cōming let them take heed for he will come at vnawares vpon them and let them blush for shame seeing that mens scruants here vpon earth hearing that their master approacheth betake themselues to their worke although before they were at their sports idle recreations we know that schoole-boies in the absence of their master leaue their seats spread themselues abroad yet the verie voyce of venit magister the master comes presently makes euery one hastily betake himselfe vnto his seat Shall then man bee so bold as to dare to leaue his place betake himselfe to his owne pleasure when the verie eye of his God lookes vpon him surely nothing is more obuious vnto our eye then this which argueth that the world is very destitute of the feare of God Secondly this may be a driection to the godly to examine them-selues in all their particular carriages Thus Dauid deales with his soule vpon the consideration of Gods excellent knowledge Psal 139. to the ende first a pretious estimation of it 17 18. how deare how great what account to make vp the summe all is too short yet this will he aime at when he awakes he will still be with God Indeede in the violence of passion Dauid may make warre a pretense to excuse Vrias death but yet Psal 51. it shall cause him vtter many a bitter word heauie sighs and euen water his couch with teares The second is the manifestation of his zeale 1. in his loue of the maiestie of God v. 19 20.2 of his hatred to the wicked that dishonour God v. 21 22. See them both Oh that thou wouldest slay O God the wicked and bloody men to whome I say depart ye from me which speake wickedly of thee and beeing thine enemies are lifted vp in vaine I hate them I contend with them as with mine vtter enemies The 3. his confidence v. 23. Trie me O God and know my heart prooue me and know my thoughts consider if there be any way of wickednes in me and lead me in thy way for euer This consideration can not but haue powerfull operations in the hearts of Christians fire all that is within them let vs see it in a few of Dauids affections in the Psalmes breathing zeale out of euery pipe How doe I loue thy law O Lord more then the hony or the hony combe Loue. more then thousands of siluer and gold Thine enemies I hate with a perfect hatred Hatted Thy testimonies are my delight Ioy. I reioyce more in them then they that finde great spoyles more then in my appointed foode Mine eyes gush out riuers of teares Griefe Oh that my head were a fountaine of teares because they destroy thy law Mine eyes are dimme with waiting Hope how doe I long for thy saluation Thy iudgements are terrible Feare I tremble and quake Looke what pitch of affection the naturall man bestowes vpon his dearest darling what vnsatiable thirst the couetous worldling vpon his mammon the ambitious vpon his honour the volup●uous vpon his pleasure the same the Christian striueth in equall yea if possible farre exceding in as much as the more pure the heart is the more actiue we shall finde it Zeale is to the soule that which the spirits are to the bodie wine to the spirits putting vigour and agilitie into them be not drunke with wine wherein is excesse but be filled with the spirit an excellent Antithesis the soule may be filled with this zeale and yet neuer exceede As wings to the foule as wheeles to the chariot as sailes to the shippe wind to the sailes courage to the soldier mettell to the horse and dust to make the earth fruitfull so is zeale as wings to the soule to flie aboue earthly and worldly cogitations as wheeles not to goe but runne the wayes of Gods Commandements as sayles to driue vs with a plerophorie vnto God This makes vs fight and puts mettle into vs yet must we take heede how we meddle with this fire least wee heape coales vpon our owne heads and bring an ill sauour vpon all ●ur seruice as Nadab and Abihu beeing vnsanctified Aguish and distempered heats are farre remote from the radicall nay an enemie vnto it and the verie causes of sickenesse and death a very empericke may iudge of them For first some of these are deepely sicke of the Pharisaicall humour they ioue more to be seene of men then God and yet God wil see them the best as I●hu Come and see how zealous I am for the Lord of hosts These trumpets praise them before men but shame thē before God An aguish or consuming heat by his flushings is seene more in the face then the naturall heat that warmeth the heart In wisdome and skill artis est celare artem hiding of art is the best art so hidden zeale is often the
be laid to heart and driue vs to a better consideration of the time present Reas 2. By this meanes a prouocation to repentance Rom. 2.4 Despisest thou the riches of his bountifulnesse and patience and long sufferance not knowing that the bountifulnesse of God leadeth thee to repentance c. Reas 3. Because the creature shall finde nothing commendable in himselfe which he shall not see in God now silence beeing commendable in man it shall plainely appeare to bee with God the commendation of silence in man is often in the prouerbes as for example Prou. 10.19 In many words there cannot want iniquitie but he that refraineth his lips is wise 25.12 A word spoken in his place is like apples of gold with pictures of siluer 26.23 The heart of the wise guideth his mouth wisely and ad leth doctrine to his lips Therefore will the Lord be free from many words he will speake in his place and guide his mouth most wisely Reas 4. The lawe of creation Eccles. 3. a time for euerie thing and therefore that which is to the creature shall be vnto himselfe he hath a time for mercy and hee hath a time for iustice Reas 5. Because an appointed day Acts. 17.30 31. The time of this ignorance God regarded not but now hee admonisheth all men euerie where to repent because hee hath appointed a day in which he will iudge the world c. Therefore God for the time of the ignorance of the Gentiles was verie silent but now hauing made his grace shine most apparently according to his owne appointment will sleepe no more in silence but awake all by the trumpet of the Gospel and if they disobey the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ then shall hee shewe himselfe from heauen 2. Thess 1.7 with his mightie Angels in flaming fire rendring vengeance vnto them not for the dayes of their ignorance or miscariages in them but because they doe not knowe God and haue not obeyed his gospell then shall they bee punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glorie of his power Vse 1. reprehension First confutation of the wicked which cry Mal. 3.14 It is in vaine to serue God and what profit is it that we haue kept his commandement and that we haue walked humbly before him we count the proud blessed euen they that worke wickednesse are set vp and they that tempt God yea they are deliuered Alas poore wretches if there were no more to condemne thee yet this were sufficient that God hath beene silent with thee Secondly correction of the godly that as yet haue not learned this lesson to imitate God in refraining their tongues from speaking against wicked men if they know their calling they may doe it but to exasperate the wicked is not alwayes necessarie nay alas they cannot refraine their tongues from speaking against their brethren when they may see plainly by this doctrine that the Lord is silent with his verie enemies Againe it reprehends all fretting at the prosperitie of the wicked Psal 77.8 yeeld God his silence and wait vpon him also all censuring is here condemned Rom. 2.1 2 3. Iam. 3. 2. Vse instruction first admonition to the wicked that they haue some consideration of the Lords mercies towards them The Sun often beating vpon the stones causeth them to haue some heat though not at the heart yet in the outward parts and therefore a shame for them if they be neuer the warmer for Gods silence the wicked are worse then little children who when they haue gotten any thing of their parents will away without either looke or legge yet if they know they will haue dutie then they doe it in such fashion that all men may see their hearts another way on their game abroad But wicked men though they haue bin often told that the Lord lookes for duty at their hands yet he shall haue none at all and surely suppose they haue so good a nature as they will take off their hatts before they sit downe to the table yet I am afraid it is more for custome then any thing els Thus a sensuall mind counteth nothing sweete but what is taken in hugger mugger without Gods allowance like some gallants thinke no venison sweet but that which is stolne fooles they are which admire the brightnesse of the sunne in the watter and neuer looke vp to the body The whelps that feed vnder the tables will fawne vpon their masters if any smite them they will presently flie at them the oxe and asse knowes their owners but wicked men are worse to God then oxen asses and dogs are to them And surely for the best of their speeches they are as I may say no better then common tearmes of holines without affection and therefore like court holy water good words but pay no debt And if at any time with Balaam they see the beautie of Gods church in the dayes of Gods silence then like hypocrits they wish as Balaam did Oh that their soules might die the death of the righteous and that their eude might be like his yet all is but a flash of lightning soone come soone gone for there is a thorne caught in their foote which hindreth their pretended iourney For this loth to depart he singeth vnto his own soule Shall I in this calme of Gods mercie loose my pleasure in this time the cost is cleere but alas to liue a godly life makes me thinke a lyon is in the way and therefore must I needs slippe my necke out of the collar And thus by their high estimation of the present they become pennie wise but pound foolish so that when they shall be taken away from this estate they come to had I wist But alas let them know for conclusion that they are worse afraid then hurt they know not that to physicke in the spring is the best time of the yeare the vomit of the soule which is the griefe of repentance shal do the most good while it pleaseth the Lord to visite them with the day of his silence Secondly here is excellent direction to the godly first to praise God Psal 136. all things must praise God why be cause his mercie endureth for euer which is repeated in euery verse and surely this may be an excellent motiue to Christians to make them full of holy affections for it is a great mercie of God to haue a large affection of well-doing when we haue good occasion thereof For God neuer ceaseth in offering occasion but we often cease in hauing affections Therefore it were an excellent thing to keepe reckoning what wo runne vpon Gods score we do it with men but alas they are hardly found which thinke how deepe they are in Gods books such ill husbands we are for our soules if I ouershoote my selfe with men that they may haue a saying of me behold an vngratefull person that will cut me at the heart but rare it is to know how I haue
may see what a wonderful hard thing it is to conuert a sinner a man may be a long hearer of the word and by hearing his mind may be furnished with knowledge with a good conceit with verie good vtterance so that he may teach and publish the Gospel and conceiue prayer and that verie well and yet this damnable imagination may lurke in his heart therfore he may not onely hereby deceiue others but euen his owne soule for so long as this thought is in his soule hee is voide of true repentance for where true repentance is there is a resolution to please God in all things Third thought touching God It is a vaine thing to worship God Iob. 21.15 he speakes it not with the mouth but in the heart Matth. 3.14 Nay Dauid Psal 73.13 had this thought in his heart now I see I am deceiued In vaine haue I worshipped God but yet this thought comes not into mans heart at all times but vpon occasion as when the godly seeth the wicked flourish Examination This thought takes great place in our hearts for goe to the poore mans family he works and toyles all day to get riches but neuer worshippeth God or calls vpon his name why so because the heart saith so I may haue wealth it is no matter whether I serue God or no. Come to the rich mans house there is nothing but eating drinking sleeping gaming and the like why so because his heart saith all is wel so I may haue my pleasure it is enough for me it is no matter for Gods worship The ordinarie man saith he will do as his ancestors haue done he hath as good a faith as the best hee will not come to sermons for they that haunt sermons most are vsually the worst disposed persons and none so bad as they If a man professe Christ in sinceritie hee is a by-word and a mocke to men Nay almost all men betake themselues to will-worship not onely the Papist Iewe and Turke but the common Protestant he comes to Church and serues God by mumbling ouer the Creede the Lords praier and the tenne Commandements thereby thinking to serue God as well as the best the cause is because this imagination taking place in the heart hindereth all good things in vs. Fourth thought is the thought of distrust and it runnes much in the mind of man God doth not regard me God will not helpe me God will not be mercifull vnto me This made an entrance to the fall of our first parents for first Eue lookes vpon the fruit and sees it to be very beautifull 2. There enters into her heart a thought of distrust viz. It may be there is no such danger in eating this fruit as the Lord faith there is and it may be God doth not regard vs. When the Israclites murmured at the waters of strife Numb 20.12 Moses was barred the Land of Canaan for this distrust for when hee smote the rocke as God had commanded him he thought in his heart God will not giue water though I strike the rocke Dauid Psa 31.23 Psal 78.2 is full of spirituall confidence but in an other place saies I thought all men were lyers Samuel the Lords Prophet hath deceiued mee now I see that Samuel spake not by the spirit of God as aprophet but by his own sense lyingly when he said that I should come vnto the kingdome of Israel Thus Dauid did not openly distrust God but Samuel as if he had not knowne Gods will but had passed beyond the bonds of his calling Matth. 14. why did Peter sinke when Christ bad him come to him on the water because his minde was troubled with the thought of distrust it may be God will not helpe me now walking vpon the sea Christ reprooues this why didst thou doubt Touching this thought two points 1. the time when it was in mans thought 2. the danger of it For the first it takes place in the time of danger temptation aduersitie sickenesse and death it troubled Iob in his affliction Iob 16. when he said God hateth me hee is myne enemie hee makes me a but Psalm 77.9 It may be God will no more haue mercie vpon me In peace Sathan tempts by presumption The dangers hereof 1. horrors of conscience and all feares and astonishments of the heart which come when the minde distrusteth 2. Desperation whereby men confidently auouch that God hath forsaken them and that he hath cut them off and that nothing remaines but death this is often in the heart of repentant sinners 3. It weakens the foundation of our saluation which stands in the certentie of Gods promises and thus it doth by weakning faith for by faith we beleeue that God is our Sauiour and that Christ shed his blood for vs in particular now this thought is cleane contrarie to faith as fire to water and where distrust preuailes there shall be no faith hence appeareth the great danger We must take heede of it Remedie and vse all meanes in the daies of our peace that it raignes not in our hearts in the daies of trouble The meanes are three 1. the preaching of the Gospel this is the especiall meanes to applie Gods mercie truly to our soules and consciences therefore a soueraigne remedie against this thought for the speach of the minister is as though God himselfe spake by vertue of the very ordinance of God if God should say to me in his owne voice my mercie belongs to the beleeuer I would surely beleeue and not doubt now whē the minister saith beleeue in God his mercie belongs to thee it is by the power of this ordinance of God as if God himselfe had said it 2. Baptisme if a Prince shall giue a man a pardon and put his name and seale to it he will neuer doubt but assure himselfe of pardon now when a man is baptized God puts the parties name in the pardon and his owne seale to the pardon of his sinnes in Christ 3. The Lords Supper wherein the bread and wine are particular pledges of Gods particular mercie to euery particular receiuer and therefore it is that euery particular man receiues for himselfe in speciall II. Point Of euill thoughts touching our neighbour To finde out what these be we must haue recourse to the commandements especially to the second Table These beeing spirituall condemne not onely wicked actions words and affections but also the wicked thoughts of man against man And they are of two sorts in the second table First thoughts without consent Secondly with consent Without consent hath the first motions and inclinations in the mind forbidden in the tenth commādement Thoughts with consent are those wherein the wil consenteth with the first motions these as they are conceiued so are they practised and are forbidden in the 6.7.8.9 Commandements 1. Thought is of dishonour against the 5. commandement the 2. of murther against the 6. the 3. of Adulterie against the 7. the 4. of theft against
the 8. the 5. of disgrace against the 9. 1. Is any thought that tendeth to the contempt and dishonour of the person of our neighbour and that is a base estimation of the persons of our inferiours in respect of our selues Luk. 18.11 the learned and zealous Pharisie thinkes basely of the Publican this thought is like to Adonibezek who sitting in his royaltie had diuers kings with their thombs cut off receiuing meat of him vnder the table as dogs Pride makes a man destitute of all friends he hath neither God nor his neighbour nor himselfe he that hath not God what happinesse can he haue he that hath not his neighbour what societie can he haue and not to haue himselfe is to be a slaue when he thinks he domineers ouer all Therfore with Iob learne to say Lord I am vile when we can say this see it it will be a meanes to represse this thought Iob 39. 2. Thought of murther is any intent of murthering his neighbour or any thing tending to murther Deuter. 15.9 where two signes are laide downe of it first an euill eye to looke vpon the poore without compassion secondly vnmercifull dealing A second is the thought to doe some hurt to them that worship God truly Psal 74.8 the Babylonian speakes against the Iew Let vs destroy them altogether Christ saith Ye shall be hated of all men for my names sake this hath bin since the time of righteous Abel This thought proceeds from an other set downe 1. Pet. 4.4 the wicked maruell that others will not doe as they doe Ob. Nebuchadnezzar a wicked man fauoured Daniel Ans Dan. 1.9 it was Gods prouidence that disposed the Kings heart to doe good 3. Murdering thought is when a man thinks the Minister ripps vp his sinne in malice 3. Thought of adultery as all vnchast thoughts 4. thought theft Psal 50.18 when thou seest a theefe thou runnest with him this seeing makes him runne in thought and deede 5. thought disgrace to thinke a thing well done ill done or ill done well done 1. Sam. 1.13 and v. 17.28 Matth. 19.4 Act. 2.13 yet loue thinkes no euill which beeing wanting amongst men makes them thinke all euill Mens hearts are like drie wood which burne not alone but put the least cole to them and they will burne so the least occasion offered wil set all on fire This thought of dishonour is as the table of Adonibezek in respect of murther it is a meere slaughter-house in respect of the thought of adulterie a meere stew in respect of theft a den of theeues and in respect of the thought of disgrace a verie fountaine of all backbiting slaundering reuiling c. 3. Point euill thoughts touching our selues fowre 1. The thought of pride thinking himselfe most excellent Isa 14.13 Zeph. 2.15 Luk. 18.11 Reu. 18.7 Gen. 3. our first parents learned this lesson of the deuill You shall be as gods and the lesse we see it the more it raignes in vs. Pride in outward apparell is a most damnable pride but none aboue spirituall pride from hence sprung many sinnes and therefore to be abhorred As 1. ambition whereby men are not content with their owne estate but seeke to be aduanced 2. presumption in daring things aboue his calling 3. boasting 4. hypocrisie 5. obstinacie 6. contention 7. affectation of nouelties Secondly when this thought raignes in vs Gods spirit cannot dwel in vs Luk. 1.51 52. Iam. 4.6 Isa 66.2 Thirdly when all other sinnes die in vs this thought dies not nay when the graces of God come this thought reuiues because he makes them matter of his pride 2. The highest degree of this is when a man thinkes himselfe check-mate with God Isa 14.14 two waies first when he thinks he may haue power to preuaile with or against God Dan. 3.15 Exod. 5.2 Secondly taking honour due vnto God vnto themselues Act. 12.22 23. 2. Thess 2. Antichrist sits in the Temple of God as God Obiect But he is servus servorum Ans It is not in word but in the thought of his heart in that he thinks he hath power to make lawes binding conscience to dispense with the morall law and Apostolicall constitutions and to forgiue sinnes hereby he thinks himselfe to be equall with God 2. Thought I am righteous and neede no repentance Deut. 9.4 two things first that a man thinks himselfe by nature righteous secondly that the Lord giues them all that they haue for their righteousnes Ier. 2.25 Reuel 3.17 Christ came not to call these righteous because their imagination was such that they were vncapable of his grace The angels reioyce more for one penitent sinner then for nintie nine that neede no repentance Come to an ignorant man aske him can you keepe the law yea and that he lookes to be saued by this righteousnes and by the works of the law Hence we see how euery man by nature is a Papist Secondly this sheweth vs that it is a very difficult point to bring a man to true humiliation Thirdly we see why men neglect the preaching of the Gospel because it teacheth a strange doctrine vnto corrupt reason 3. Thought of securitie I prosper and am free from all Gods iudgements I am not in danger of hell death and damnation Psal 10.6 Isa 28.15 Psal 30.7 This makes the Ministers labour in vaine Zeph. 3.5 Noe an hundreth and twentie yeares Fourth thought in miserie to thinke my crosses to be worse then indeede they are Iob. 6.3 come to comfort them Oh neuer man was vexed as I am The cause of these is Gen. 6.5 v. 21. the heart which sometimes signifieth the fleshie part of man which is the beginning of vitall blood placed in the middle of the body 2. the soule 3. the faculties 4. the middle of any thing Psal 46.2 but here is meant the vnderstanding wil and affections Ephes 4.23 imaginations this word sheweth the frame of the heart first for his corruption 2. for his fruits 3. tearmed mans heart not euil men alone or those before the flood but all men naturally 4. word euill that is against Gods lawe 5. from his childhood as soone as he beginnes to vse reason he frames euill in his heart Hence the cause plainely riseth want of all good thoughts or want of all consideration this is the mother sinne we must keep all the morall law euen in thought Luk. 10.27 the want of this may be seene in matters earthly 2. in matters spiritually in matters earthly Eccles 4.8 in regard of their natures ends and vses but in spirituall things there is an absolute want 1. Is want of the consideration of Gods presence and prouidence in regard of our sinnes Hos 7.2 2. In regard of Gods iudgements for men neuer thinke of iudgement in this life nor in the life to come An 120. yeares Noah preached yet no consideration Luk. 12. the rich man neuer thought that his soule was in danger 3. Is in respect of a mans owne sinnes for we cannot turne
against poyson therefore if we haue made the word of God a Scorpion to sting vs yet let vs now make it a lenitiue to cease the paine if we like beasts haue poysoned our selues yet now like men created for God let vs recouer our selues againe by this word of life But to proceed Thou thoughtest this is the consequent of Gods silence not proper but by accident forced and befide the scope of it therfore this wicked thought of an hypocrite argueth strange corruption of heart that can frame no obiect vnto it selfe that shall make good thoughts Surely affections haue gotten the masterie ouer the mind so that now it must become a slaue to serue them and dispose it selfe that all his iudgments may aime at their satisfaction and thus the good word of God by accident becomes the cause of sinne Gen. 3. hath God said Yee shall not eate of the tree of knowledge of good and euill the Lord by this law debars you of great good for it is certaine when yee cate yee shall beas gods knowing good and euill therefore the law is too strict and rather an hinderer then furtherer of your good Men we see are very quiet vntil they be prouoked by the preaching of the lawe Steuen Act. 7. shall be stoned for his good sermon Christ shall be an enemie to church and common-wealth because he speaks against the Scribes and Pharisies Moses Aaron shal be hated of Pharaoh for preaching a deliuerance Iohn Baptist for telling Herod his sinne Elias shall be Ahabs enemy for telling him the truth and Paul shall become an enemie to the Galatians for telling them of their apostacie from Christ thus lawe and Gospel mercie and iudgement are abused of the wicked yet for all this the law is holy and iust as for example a man that holds a glasse in his hands as long as it ●ests there is safe but if they throwe it against the wall the wall will breake it but the sault will rest in the hands so when we take our selues dash our selues against Gods law the law breaks vs but the fault is in our selues the bankes are no cause of the furie and rage of the waters but the waters themselues so the lawe of God that banks in our corruption is no cause why it rageth but the nature of it which can indure no limits Reasons 1. Because sinne will indure no law There be three effects of the law that sinne cannot away withall First it stoppeth corruptiō hence the irritation of the law Secondly it terrisieth the conscience and that cannot be indured they that liue like gallie-slaues and are whipped euerie day will doe nothing but by force and are glad any waies to rid them-selues of such a burden Thirdly it exacts perfect obedience which our nature can not away withall to loue God with all our hearts with all our soules with all our minde and our whole strength is a lesson that will neuer be learned or practised Reas 2. A misconceit as a medicine against which the stomack ariseth will not be indured a plaister which stings at the heart must be throwne off and a glasse that sheweth vs an vgly face cannot be looked into so the misconceiuing of Gods silence makes it that it can neither become meate or medicine to our soules Thirdly the diuersitie of subiects the selfe same seed is sowne in all the foure grounds yet takes but root in one the hammar beats vpon all but it makes not all pliable to Gods worke the axe hewes at all but it timbers but some for building the rest it hewes downe for firing the fire burnes all but only the the gold loseth his drosse the light shines to all but only they that haue eyes behold it the salt seasons all but in some it cannot enter to the bone and therefore they putrifie and rotte away foode would feede all but some want stomacks appetite and digestion therfore they pine away with the best nourishment the goad prickles all but some are hardned that it cannot enter and therefore no maruell that the mercies and filence of God should worke no good effects in the wicked Fourthly the curse of God is vpon them therefore they shall eate but not be satisfied drinke but not to quench their thirst sleepe but not to take their rest for God alone giues rest vnto his welbeloued nay let them doe what they will all shall be nought pray or not pray sacrifice or not sacrifice come to church or not come to the church for they cannot lay aside their wicked thoughts and therefore according to our prouerb all is marred in the making Deut. 28.16 cursed shall they be in the towne and cursed shall they be in the field they shal make no good markets of that which god hath giuen them in the field cursed shall they be in the basket and in their dough bad prouision shall be in their houses when the Lord will not become both the master and the steward cursed shall be the fruite of his body and the fruits of his land the increase of his kine and the flocks of his sheepe extreame pouertie in the middes of all his wealth cursed shall he be when he comes in and cursed also when he goes out ill successe in his interprises neither will the Lord here make an ende These be foure great curses First he shall make no good market in buying and selling Secondly from this shall follow he shall haue no good prouision in his house Thirdly from this shall rise the next that he shall haue no true riches Fourthly to make that good fortune shall alwaies crosse him Fiftly to proceede yet further God will make him cracke his credit for trouble shame shall be vpon all that he sets his hand to do euerie man shall call him banke-rout neither shal he haue any law against thē for with God he hath lost his credit and therefore shall he perish quickly Sixtly that he may make his word good in all these the pestilence consumption feuer burning ague sword blasting mildew the heauens aboue shall be brasse and the earth vnder iron for raine dust and therefore no staie but perish thou must in bodie goods and good name Seuenthly to make the finall vp-shotte of his bodie he shall fal before his enemies and his carkeis shal be without all burial the foules of the ayre and the beasts of the field shall haue him for their pray and none shall rescue him if the enemies spare him God will smite him with the botch of Egypt with the Emorods with the scab with the itch euen worse then he hath done Egypt for he shall not be healed neither will God be defectiue in his methode for from these more sensible torments vpon the bodie he will proceede to greater iudgements vpon the soule which though least felt yet more fearefull madnes blindnes astonying of heart with all their ill consequents to grope at noone day to be oppressed powled and
doe vnto God for if God should neuer reprooue the wicked would boast and triumph notoriously 4. The consolation of the godly when should their heads be lift vp if it were not to see their enemies trampled vnder their feete Vse 1. reprehension First confutation of the vngodly that thinke the Lord will condemne no person he that made all will saue all and a pitifull thing it is to imagine that God should haue made any man to damne him well they see God will reprooue Secondly correction of the godly that they take heede of securitie and labour to please God with reuerence and feare Rom. 12.29 For euen our God is a consuming fire 2. Vse instruction first admonition to the vngodly Oh consider this ye that forget God least he teare you in pieces Secondly a direction to the godly to walke before the Lord as he is their father and master Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoureth his father and a seruant his master if then I be a father where is mine honour and if I be a master where is my feare 3. Vse consolation first in trouble to consider God will reprooue Iehoshua stands before Christ Iesus Zach. 3. and Satan stands at his right hand to resist him but here is comfort v. 2. for Christ saies vnto Satan The Lord reprooue thee O Satan euen the Lord that hath chosen Ierusalem reprooue thee Secondly in wel-doing because the Lord will neuer reprooue for that but approoue it and commend it for euer 2. Sect. Of the forme of this Iustice Reprooue Reproofe is a second argument to set forth the instice of God Vindicatiue iustice is more violent then correction for that is alwaies in mercie and the ende of it is the quiet fruit of righteousnesse but the nature of this is to be a curse and the ende therof the death and destruction of the creature Also it is more forcibly felt of the creature then Gods remuncratiue iustice because this strikes at the verie heart touches his verie conscience with the extremitie of horror and feare and leaues neither bodie nor soule without most exquisite torments such as were neuer inuented of men the racke in England the Strappado in Spaine nor any torture inuented by the wit of man shall euer come neere this no not the strange torments of Tyrants Children are scared with harmlesse bul-begger but dread lesse the fire water so men in this world feare them that can kil the bodie but neuer feare at all for him that can kil both bodie and soule we tremble to heare a great man speake and the young men hide themselues at the voyce of Iob and yet alas who trembles at a verball reproofe of the Lord they thinke him a simple person that can not indure a word And therefore Christians that are so much cast downe at the threatnings of the Lord are with the wicked but fooles and faint hearted persons nay more then this let the hand of the Lord light vpon their fellow-companions and that shall be no prognostication to them When diuination was by lightnings those lightnings which fell in the sea or toppes of mountaines were neuer brought into obseruation but were called bruta fulmina so the indgments of God that light vpon others are farre enough remooued from them and therefore they neuer call them into question nay alas they make lighter account of them as long as they are threatned in Gods word or executed vpon others then Morbizan the Turke did of the Bull of Pius the second or of his indulgences to the people to take armes against him that by a letter to the Pope he required that he would call in his Epigrammes againe so men thinke that when the Lord threatneth the seisure both of soule and bodie the attaching of our spirits the confiscation of our consciences the banishing of vs from heauen the hanging of vs in hell the suspending of our saluation the adiudging of vs to condemnation to be nothing but wittie Epigrammes inuented of men to exercise men withall One calls the excommunication of Paulus quintus against the Venetians dirum carmen and Bellarmine saies of Prudentius when he appoints certaine holy-daies in hell Paenarum celebres sub styge feriae Euen so the world deales with God his threatning are but idle Tragedies and the punishments in hell may haue their holy-daies wherein men may take their recreations So that now God shall be as well beholding to iesting Lucian or any inuenter of fables or tragedies of hell to make one old woman weepe or tremble as to his owne Prophets or Apostles but let them be assured that hell is no painted fire for they shall finde that God hath fire and sagot sword and bow speare and yron rods to dash in pieces euery one although as hard hearted as Pharaoh himselfe then shall they tremble most that feared least when Gods iudgements were threatned Observ The Iustice of God shall be manifested as well in plagues and curses as in promises and mercies Doe this and thou shalt liue there is rewarding iustice but the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death there is iustice punishing which a long time is kept vnder the cloud of Gods silence but at length breaketh forth and by that meanes is made to shine the brighter Euen as in a darke night one starre breaking out of a thicke cloud deliuereth a farre more splendent and glorious light then if it shone with many in a cleare euening so this iustice hath the more grace and beautie from the Lord in the wicked insomuch as almost all other planets had a long time beene eclipsed or quite fallen out of their spheres to the great discomfort of all such as trauailed with the wicked though not in their waies yet in the selfe same night and busied themselues at the lamps of Gods word beeing carefull to vphold the societie of mankind by learning and instruction Ionah the Prophet was content to enter into the citie a daies iourney and preached and so continued walking with the men in the citie vntill they put on sackcloth fasted and humbled themselues this might exceedingly haue comforted Ionah to see so chearefull and comfortable a light breake forth as repentance but alas Ionah is displeased and that exceedingly that he should prognosticate of a flaming fire from heauen within fourtie daies to destroy Nineueh and yet nothing appeare according to his word this made him angrie impudent with God now againe to defend his fleeing into Tarshish although the Lord had appeared vnto him in the fearefull tempest prepared a fish heard his prayer brought him to drie land yet now because God will not come from heauen according to his word he wisheth that he might die and that God would shew his iustice on him One would haue thought Ionah might haue bin well cooled in the sea from raging so hotly against God Well Ionah get thee vnder the Lords gourd that it may be a shadow for thy head and deliuer
not goe vnreprooued Secondly because it opposeth the light and therefore cannot long stand in opposition by clouding of the light but the light will breake out The clouds in the aire can not alwaies shade the sunne from the eyes of the world nor the darknesse of the night alwaies shut vp the morning brightnes so shall not sinne alwaies fill the world with his mysts and clouds and alwaies shut vp the day of the Lords appearance to iudgment but the Lord will breake the heauens and make the glorie of his Sonne appeare at which heauen and earth shall flee away and then shall the thoughts of all hearts be made manifest Thirdly because God must be glorified for except the Lord do it himselfe he shal neuer haue any glorie in the sinnes of the wicked for they dishonor him as much as possibly they can Isa 59 4. No man calleth for iustice no man contendeth for truth v. 14. Iudgement goes backward iustice stands farre off truth is fallen in the streete and equitie can not enter The Lord seeth it it displeaseth him and he wonders that no man will offer himselfe for his defence therefore his arme did saue it and his righteousnes it selfe did sustaine it he put on righteousnes as an habergeon and an helmet of saluation vpon his head and he put on the garments of vengeance for clothing and was clad with zeale as with a cloake Then shall sinne surely haue his reproofe and a recompence shall be giuen for euill doing he will fully repay the Islands of the world 1. Vse reprehension first confutation of the wicked that make so much of their sinnes that are not ashamed to boast of them Well let them goe too these are the very things that the Lord will reprooue to their shame and confusion Secondly correction to the godly that are so meale-mouthed at sinne that haue not a word to say for the Lord of hosts We are too often in the extreames when God is silent we would be speaking and when the Lord is speaking we would be silent especially Ministers that dare not speake when the Lord hath bidden them speake boldly and not feare the faces of the proudest 2. Vse instruction First an admonition to the wicked to beware of sinning know they not that euery time they sinne they hold vp their hands to heauen to pray vnto God for vengeance Secondly a direction to Gods children to mitigate the bitternes of their sinnes Exod. 15. for sinnes may be compared to the waters of Marah and Gods reproofe to the bitternesse of those waters and Israels murmuring may set forth the discontednesse of the soule in tasting of those waters the crie of the people what shall we drinke to set forth the thirstie desire of the soule to be satisfied with some sweet water Moses cry vnto the Lord sets forth the grace of prayer vnto God for some sweet comfort in the bitter conflicts with sinne Lastly the Lord shewing Moses a tree to cast into the waters which doth make them sweet and so giueth them a pleasant rellish vnto the soule may set forth the action of God the father giuing of Christ the tree of life to euerie distressed soule which beeing receiued by faith into his soule will make riuers of water flow out of him to eternall life and keepe him from euer languishing againe vnder the burden of his sinne therefore let this be our direction in all Gods reproofes for sinne to sweeten them in Christ and so beare them patiently 3. Vse Consolation to all that are in Christ for God hath alreadie reprooued their sinnes in his sonne and therefore shal they be free from his wrath Suppose that a malefactor were condemned to die and the day of his execution were at hand how would this affect him in his soule how would he labour to escape it trie all his friends his goods wife children kinsfolkes the dearest of his acquaintance his wealth can serue him no better but to prouide for him while he liueth see him honourably buried when he is dead his wife and children and the rest tell him they will weepe for him all these are but cold comforts to the man that must die But if one should step out and say my life for yours if that will free you hee offers himselfe to the king the king accepts of him deliuers the pardon brings it to the malefactor now he is at ease and hardly can a man imagine the greatnesse of his ioy surely if that bee true that a man may die laughing hee might as soone loose his life in this passion of ioy as he might haue done in the passion of his sorrow Euen the selfe same cause is paralelled in a man on his death-bed I am reprooued of the Lord and adiudged to eternall death for my sinnes alas how shall I escape my goods are nothing vnto thee O Lord thou wilt not take them for the redemption of my soule my wife and children and good friends standing about my bed cut me at the very heart no worldly comfort can refresh my soule Oh my God take thy Christ for the redemption of my soule he is able to stand betwixt thy wrath and my sinne in him lift vpon me the light of thy countenance for therein stands my exceeding ioy farre aboue the increase of oyle corne wine or any worldly thing Obser 2. Hypocrites shall not goe vndiscouered it shal be knowne what they are they shall see what a sandie foundation they haue laid and how all their hopes are no better then the spiders web Isa 29.13 because this people come neere vnto me with their mouth and honour mee with their lips but haue remooued their hearts farre from mee and their feare toward mee was taught by the precept of men therefore to discouer them I will doe a marueilous thing the wisedome of the wisest of them shall perish and the vnderstanding of the most prudent shall be hid Woe shall be vnto their deepes and their workes of darkenesse and they shal meete with him that seeth them and knoweth them their deuises cause them most foolishly to stand vp with the pot against his maker and with the thing formed against him that fashioned him to say thou hast no vnderstanding Well your Lebanon shall become Carmel and your Carmel a forest the best you haue shall become worse and that which is next shal become a barren wildernesse yet Iacob shall not be confounded neither shall his face be pale for he shall see his children because the worke of mine hands is in the middst of him they shall still sanctifie my name euen the holy one of Israel and shal feare him then they that erred in spirit shall haue vnderstanding they that murmured shal learn this doctrine euen the hypocrits themselues whose spirit made them erre shall know that all their profession was nothing and they that murmured often against God for not respecting them as they deserued shall learne this doctrine that
his posteritie who couenanted with God for vs as well as for himselfe for performance of obedience therefore he breaking we breake likewise by the law of inheritance he was our father we his heires he was the root of all mankind and we were in his loynes the manner is by imputation of the transgression and so consequently of blame guilt and punishment Originall sinne is conceiued in vs by our next parents and so goes a long to all posteritie bodie and soule are the excellent worke of God as if a skilfull workeman should make all the wheeles of a clocke verie artificially but being put into the hands of an vnskilfull prentice is so disorderly set together that one wheele cannot go aright so God the maker both of bodie and soule hath left them to our first parents and so consequently to our next parents to put them together who hauing lost their first standing with God are become not onely vnskilfull but also vncapable of any vertue to put together a man brought forth in the image of God for as this was onely Gods creation so must it againe be the new creation of God so that man and woman being not the causes of bodie and soule but of the procreation of a third thing riing from both may truly be said to beget a man according to their owne image and similitude Lastly it is true that euerie man shall beare his burden for actuall sinne is not conueyed in speciall but in generall so that euerie one shall answer for his owne actuall sinnes without hee followe his forefathers steps and then shall he be punished for both because he will needs haue both imputed vnto him the first by nature the second by imitation Therefore if man may see in this world thus much of Gods placing of sinne for this is but our obseruation what shal then this God of all order do when he shal not only set it forth but apply it to our hearts and consciences then shall we experimentally know the causes of all our mischeife the consequents in the guilt of conscience and the punishments both vpon soule and bodie so that that which is in this world both sinne and punishment shall be felt of vs in hell in no other regard but as punishment In this world we haue had some pleasure in sinne but in hell all shall be onely in torment the miseries of the body in this world haue vexed vs and the soule hath beene senslesse of punishment but in hell both bodie and soule shall haue exquisite sense of Gods anger wrath and vengeance and the soule shal then exceed in feeling And this is the setting of sinne in his place and order Reas 1. Because things must be separated Now methode alone is the true diuider of things and makes euerie one to rainne and hasten to his home we see how euerie creature maketh hast vntill he be come to the place in which alone he can rest sinne therefore which is frozen with many things that it ought neuer to haue touched and will not out of them because then he knowes not where to haue rest must needs be● disioyned els would all lie together in a confusion You see how cold congeales together water earth stickes stones and many disagreeing natures but when the fire comes it dissolueth and parteth them and maketh euerie one appeare in his nature So method finding men and their sinnes all on heapes disioynes them lets them see what is Gods what is their own But because men are blind and will see nothing God hath prepared hell fire to dissolue these frozen soules that they may see what a strange confusion they haue made of the workes of Gods hands by their owne Reas 2. Is perspicuitie and cleare knowledge The onely rule of perspicuitie is methode and therefore sinne beeing fullest of darkenesse had neede of the best helpe to make all cleare and euident especially seeing that sinne is one of the haters of light The darkenesse of the night opposeth the day and likewise the day the night wee see the morning expells the darkenesse and the appearance of the Sunne makes the shadowes of the night part away they that haue gotten themselues into holes and rockes must be pulled out off their dens by violence A theife or murtherer that hath gotten a hole fights like a beare and roares before men can drawe him into the open view of the world and he comes to Gods iudgement seat as beares vnto a stake They that haue seene villaines pulled out of their holes may marke them to look like fiends comming out of hell therfore great need of method that must cleare so hard causes as these are and bring all things vnto the light Reason 3. Iudgement which can not begiuen before euidence haue bin brought in and therfore must methode needs cleare all the bills and inditments that are to be brought in against wicked and euill doers that so iudgement may be truly and substantially deliuered Reason 4. Because of the consciences of wicked men which haue bin so long accustomed to sinne that they are so confufed that they can giue no euidence against the sinner therefore must the Lord needs vse his methode before conscience can any way assist the Lord in his iudgement Reason 5. Gods glory which must shine brightly out of all workes euen out of the workes of darkenesse which cannot be imagined without methode the glory of a stately building is not seen in the confused masse of it lying vpon the earth but when it is reared vp to the view of the whole world Reason 6. Multitude of offences now wee can doe nothing with multitudes vnlesse we bring them vnto some heads How should a iust account be taken of all sinne if the Lord should not summe them vp into some generall how should the general be prooued except the order of the specials might be seene how they were contained in the generall Reason 7. Quicke dispatch If truths were to be tryed by Syllogismes with the Lord it would be a long time before all arguments should be brought in and euery conclusion inferred Again much time would be spent in prouing of euery doubtfull proposition and great dispute might be held on this side and on that therefore the Lord will speedily finish all in an exact methode which is alwaies full of breuitie and perspicuitie Reason 8. Remembrance neither God nor man should be able to carry in mind the sinnes of the world but for methode we might wonder how the Lord should tel vs all that euer we haue done except it were for this rule of methode and man could neuer make any good account out of his broken crafie memory except the Lord by his own method should helpe him Methodus mater memoriae Vse 1. Reprehension first a confutation of the wicked that thinke as they haue done all in the darkenesse so the darknes shal couer them for euer but Psal 139.12 the darknes hideth not from
his book in this world by afflicting and punishing of them let them know that God is iust and sinne must haue smart therefore either in this world or in the world to come and blessed is he that hath it in this world 2. Vse instruction First admonition to the wicked to shew them plainly that if they will haue their fill of sinne in this world they shall haue their paiment of it hereafter and therefore if they will stand to their taske they shall be sure to stand to their perill Secondly direction to the godly that they awake and strengthen the things which remaine remember what they haue receiued and heard concerning the Lord Iesus and hold it fast and repent of their wants least he come on them as a thiefe and they know not what houre shall be the time of his approach 3. Vse consolation in all estates to him that disposeth his way aright because the Lord will shew vnto him the saluation of his soule Psal 50.23 And thus much concerning the Order of Gods Iustice in the Cause Forme and Effect ❧ TO THE RIGHT Worshipfull Sir IOHN CROFTS a true louer of learning Grace and Peace BEEING well perswaded right Worsh both of your good knowledge in Gods holy truth of your vnfained affection therunto I could not but in loue and duty present you with some part of my labours I haue reserued vnto you the last part of my booke but not the least part of my loue the last is sometimes the best and I doubt not but the experience of Gods loue toward you will constraine you to confesse this last to be the best seeing I am fully perswaded that you knowe that there is nothing like vnto the feast of a good conscience The reason why I would with-hold the Reader a little in suspence is for that I haue wearied him with a large discourse and as yet haue giuen him no refreshment therefore being 〈◊〉 in the last period of my text which is the placing of sinne before the conscience a torment most lamentable wofull and miserable I should vtterly breake his heart if I should giue him no breathing No strappade racke wheele or any exquisite torture euer inuented by the witte of man is comparable to this The Poets haue ma●ked this vnder the furies of hell whose hayres on their heads they haue compared to snakes their eies to sparkling fire their faces grim and griesly their hands full of burning torches c. The maske beeing taken off the morall will prooue no fable but a plaine expression of the greatest horror and distresse of mind that possibly can bee imagined no physickeeither by purgation can dispatch this humour or cordialls by their sweetest spirits drine these spirits from the trembling heart No surgerie either by corrasiue can eate it out lenitiue mitigate and asswage the paine oyles mollifie or salues cure Friendship by loue labour intreatie gifts ransomes pledges c. may deliuer a man out of prison but who can vnlock the prison dores of the conscience knocke off the bolts heale vp the wounds refresh the decaied spirits of a sorrowfull mind if there were but one of a thousand he were better then millions of gold and siluer but alas there is but one in all the world and he seemes to be so farre remote that the conscience dare neuer once imagine that if he were sent for he would make any hast to come in time Power and commaundmay recouer a man from banishment but what command shall preuaile with the powers of darkenes and the gates of hell Authoritie and timecan we are out reproach but eternitie it selfe cannot out-last this sorrowe no countenance can beare it out or fauour releiue it this dies not when we die but makes vs liue when with all our hearts we would be dead Therefore right Worsh patronage a fewe verses of a bad Poet I haue desired to make them sauourie meat if they tast harshly excuse the cooke for his good-will as ready to make amends in the next seruice if they want arte or be dressed without their sugred sauce I hope a good appetite wil serue insteed of that seruice And the rather I offer them vnto your selfe because I haue made bold to dresse them with some of your fire and I doubt not but in regard thereof they wil be a little the warmer and though I would not wish that any man should scald himselfe with ouer-hasty tasting yet doe I wish with all my heart that the fire of your zeale against the sacrilegious patrones of our dayes might a little dissolue the cold and frozen hearts of these robbers of Churches to worke in them a better respect vnto Gods people and the good of their owne soules And so praying the Lord to make your heart stable and vnblameable in holinesse I commit you to his grace in Christ Iesus August 10. 1615. Yours in all good affection IOHN YATES 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The commoditie which no man may neglect to buy or dare to sell GRace more then grace and vertue then her pay He payes not well that loues her but a day The day is yours and vertue is the prize The gaine is great if that no more arise The world doth buy to sell and sell to buy But few there be that trade the truth to try The pretious truth is bought but not to sell And he that gaines so much doth trade full well But many sell that neuer care to buy Prophane like Esau of their birthright cry Alas that cry is great when they with griefe Shall seeke with teares and goe without releife Worlds praise to spend but pitie to be spent And loose lifes-lease for paiment of Gods rent To spinne the thread of thraldome is mans ill And weaue the web of woe is all his will But he that weares the garment shall complaine Which cannot hide him for disgrace and paine Le ts leaue this trash in others feeke due praise Which I confesse is rare in these our dayes Where be the learned Patrone of our age That sooner giue then take and spare to rage Presume who dare their gifts without his gifts Or vndertake to striue at these dead lifts To winne to weare is vnder ouer take And lesse then this to thee no friends can make Will a booke make a man part with his best Liuing I meane for euer-liuing rest This is right Macenas that learning knowes Rewards the man before his gifts he showes Rare to be sound and lesse the greater shame No shame to speake if any beare this name Who fault can finde when deeds examples make And teach what others ought to vndertake To vndertake is for to match him right In vertue good but money is too light A liuing White the center of your loue Though dead from White the center cannot mooue Oh worthie White name nature do contend And nature more then can thy name pretend Thy learning life and name were all one white Let Papists shoot they
the iustice of the eternal God which is endlesse and whose seueritie admitteth no mediation and this extends not to one ioynt sinew or vanie but to all neither that of the bodie onely but of the soule whose nature as it is impatible of all other things in greatest peace assurance and tranquilitie so beeing once shaken by the terrours of Gods wrath and blasted with the whirlewind of his displeasure it faileth and with it driueth the whole frame of nature into extreame miserie and vtter confusion The other hath for his cause a dry and cold humour whose subiect especially is the spleen swolne vp with windines and hardnesse vnder the left ribbes the consequents are the hemeroydes not flowing blacknesse and grossenesse of blood fearefull dreames solitarinesse sadnesse And therefore those are to be condemned which make the terrors of conscience nothing but melancholie and thereby labour to benumme the sense of that sting which sinne euer carrieth in the tayle and turne men to their vsuall pleasures and so delude the foole and simple in his waies skilfull to doe euill sottish in the pathes of righteousnesse and vtterly ignorant of her rule and wherein nature giueth some sparke of light more distinctly to discerne yet they turne them out of the way and make them like to stubborn and vnbroken horses shaking off reason despising her mannage and layeth the noble rider in the dust these be Salomons fooles that follow wickednes Like an oxe that goeth to the slaughter and as a foole that goeth to the stockes for correction and as a bird hasteth to the snare not knowing that he is in danger But beside these another sort are iustly taxed euen the Physitians themselues who when their patients come vnto them for physicke and they spie out their disease to be melancholy aske them vnder what minister they liue if they mention some conscionable man that deals truely with mens soules giue the parties counsell not to heare them but get from them as farre as they can Alas are not these distinct diseases and therefore what wretched persons are those that labour to turne a disease that is not vnto death into one that is both the death of bodie and soule For more particular differences consider That whensoeuer the mind according to these ingrauen lawes of nature which no man is voide of be he neuer so barbarous raiseth any molestation directly it is no fancy but a case of conscience The verie testominie of the heathen doth sufficiently witnes this point whose Poets according to their receiued opinions haue fained Hecates Eumenides and the infernall furies whose force Seneca in his tragedie of Hercules furens hath most liuely expressed These indeed are but fained persons yet the matter vnder this maske is serious true and of wofull experience This was Cains marke the spirit that possessed Saul Iudas the traytour by this wound tooke the reuenge of betraying the innocent vpon himselfe with his owne hands such was the anguish that Esau felt when he found no repentance after he had sold his birthright for a messe of pottage and such is the state of all defiled cōsciences with hainous crimes whose hearts are neuer free from the worme but with deadly bite thereof are driuen to despaire This may the more plainely appeare if we consider how the soule may suffer of the body in life sense and motion The body is a great troubler of the soule not in his being but in his actions hence may he cause madnesse strange imaginations sudden feares dolefull apparitions feeblenesse of bodie and want of heart in the performance of any action but the mind will of man are of such excellency and perfection that they are not directly patible of any thing but of God alone that made them so standeth both mind and will in awe of none but of him neither admit they any other violence then from him into whose hands it is most terrible to fall No calamity comparable to the distresse of conscience All diseases of the bodie may haue some medicine either to cure them or to mitigate asswage their paine for all sores Chirurgie hath a salue freinds helpe pouertie there is no imprisonment but there is hope of libertie suite and fauour recouer a man from banishment authoritie and time weare out reproch But what physick cureth what chirurgerie salueth what riches ransome what countenance beareth out what authoritie asswageth what fauour releeueth these troubles yea if all should band themselues together in league though they would conspire a confederacie yet could they not preuaile If our assistance were an host of armed men if our freinds were princes and gouernours of the world if our possessions were as large as East and West if our meat were manna frō heauen if euery day like the day of Christs resurrection if our apparel as costly as Aarons Ephod yet al these would little comfort vs. This causeth such distresse vnto those that feele the torment hereof that they would redeeme it gladly if it were possible with the verie losse of their liues which often they assay to doe that this might off their stomach they would be content if it were possible to suffer all other kinds of miserie at the verie selfe same time This giues no warning as the diseases of the body doe for in them we find the head beginne to ake or stomach trouble vs lassitude of body remoov●d of sleep want of appetite to our meat but this taketh of a suddain like lightning and giueth no warning Here the purity of the blood and the sincerity and liuelines of the spirits auaile nothing to mitigate the paine it drieth vp the blood wasteth the marow pineth the flesh consumeth the bones makes pleasure painefull shortens life no wisedome can counsell it no counsell can aduise it no aduisment asswage it no asswagement cure it no eloquence perswade it no power ouercome it no scepter affray it no inchanter charme it A man languishing in sicknes as long as he is heart-whole he hath hope of recouery he that is in reproach among men and yet can remember that he is in fauour with God will not much care for the shame of the world he that is banished out of his owne country and yet remembreth that he is a citizen of the kingdom of heauen will not be ouermuch grieued but the wound of conscience is so deadly that he dare not sue vnto him that should be the only physitian of it because he thinks that he is his onely enemie Alas who dare meet with the Lord of hosts who can put to silence the voyce of desperation who will make an agreement with the hells of conscience what compact with the deuill In all other afflictions there is some comfort against sinne but this is alwaies accompanied with the accusation of sin this breeds hurliburlies in men that when it is day he wisheth for night when night for day his meat doth not nourish him his dreames terrifie him
his sleepe forsakes him when he speakes he is little bettes when he keeps silence he boyles in disquietnes the light doth not comfort him and the darknes doth terrifie him All other afflictions are tolerable because temporall and pursue but to death yet this beeing not ●u●ed endeth not in death Mens lawes transgressed may be helped by bribing of the magistrate or if the offence be capitall that there can be no pleading for him yet he may flie his country and so escape but God will not be bribed neither is there any flying from his presence Psal 139. nay alas we shall neede no seeking out we shal neede no apparitor to summon vs no bayl●ffe to fetch vs no accuser to giue in euidence against vs sinne it selfe will arrest vs for he lieth at the doore our conscience will impanell a quest against vs our hearts will giue in sufficient euidence to conuict vs and our owne iniquities will plead guiltie to our faces This made the heathen to kill themselues thinking death to be an end of all miserie and thus like fond fishes they leape out of the pan into the fire out of the hell of their consciences into hell it selfe Let them doe the best they can get them to merrie companie laugh their sinnes out of countenance yet let them know that with Nero they may change their chamber but their chamber-fellow shall neuer leaue them They may sacrifice vnto the Lord humble themselues weepe with Esau confesse with Iudas lay hold on the hornes of the altar to mitigate their paine but onely the expiatorie sacrifice of the immaculate lamb is able to giue them rest and quietnes of soule Indeede this distresse of conscience soone becommeth melancholike vile and base turneth reason into foolishnes and disgraceth the beautie of the countenance How conscience may disigu●e the body and transformeth the stoutest Nebuchadnezzer becomes a beast so easily is the bodie subiect to alteration of minde and soone looseth with anguish and distraction thereof all the support of his excellencie In melancholie the heart is troubled with vaine seares vpon euery small obiect the very eye by a false apparition may strike him the eares with the imagination of euery voice sounding may dolefully appale him a very touch may make him startle and many such like troubles which are whelps of that melancholie litter bred of that corrupted state of bodie altered in spirit in blood in substance and complexion This may increase the terrour of the afflicted minde double the feare and discouragement How distemper of body may increase this wound and hinder all cure by counsell and aduise and shut vp all meanes of consolation for it must enter by the senses to the minde Now the instruments of sense beeing altered by the humour and their sinceritie stained with the obscure and darke spots of melancholie receiue not indifferently the medicine of consolation As the braine the original and fountaine of all sense and motion is thus euilly disposed so the heart the cherisher and refresher of our nature beeing in no better case and acquainted with terror and ouerthrowne with that searefull passion imptisoneth the spirits contracts it selfe and hardly yeilds to perswasion of comfort whatsoeuer it bringeth of assurance For though the griefe strike down at the first respecting no time place person condition or opportunitie of working but breaketh through all such considerations and beareth downe all resistance yet the comfort requireth them all and the missing of one makes the affliction to be long and hard in the cure The Comforters person his manner of handling the patient the time and place of performance with the braine and heart which are as the gates and entrance vnto the soule may hinder or aide the consolation No distemper can hinder the inward comfort of Gods grace But all this is to be vnderstood of outward meanes for the inward meanes to wit the grace of God and his mercie his comfortable spirit and gratious fauour in like swiftnes without meanes may restore the minde thus distressed which lieth open equally to the kind of cure euen as it lay to the wound Therfore seeing the body workes nothing vpon the mind altogether impatible of euery beeing sauing of God alone and secondly that the efficient can do it without helpe of the bodie and thirdly that the comfort is not procured by any corporall instrument nor the discomfort directly procured by the same lastly because all is done by causes in subiects nothing corporall and producing effects of an other nature then corporall it must needes bee concluded that there is great difference betwixt these two troubles The punishment of bodily racking is not the passion of the heart but a cause of it so that racking of the soule by sinne is not a melancholie passion but yet may it cause it and therefore makes the distinction not so cleare for oftentimes the symptome of a disease is taken for the disease it selfe The affliction of mind The persons which are hable to this sorrow to what persons it falleth and by what meanes is thus to bee resolued All men are subiect to this by reason of our fall the breach of Gods lawe and the wrath of God that followeth thereupon yet of all sorts of men melancholie persons are most subiect vnto it not from the humour but because he is most doubtfull and iealous of his estate for life temporall and life spirituall For temporall physitians and apothecaries shops will beare sufficient witnes for if they be able to walk we find them for the most part in these places And I would to God they were as readie for their spirituall life to bee with Gods spirituall physitians and in the shops of the true balme of Gilead By experience we find that when they beginne to examine how their actions answer the naturall and written line of righteousnesse and wanting the arch-pillar of faith and assurance in Christ Iesus our hope presently feele the very anguish due vnto sinners and in that most miserable condition fall into flat despaire The manner how this is done is when the curious melancholie person carrieth his mind into the senses of such mysteries How it befalls them as exceed humane capacitie and is desirous to knowe more then is reuealed in the word of truth and yet being ignorant of that which is reuealed he suddenly falls into the gulfe of Gods secret counsells which swalloweth vp all conceit of man or angel and measuring the truth of such depths by the shallow modell of his own wit is caught and deuoured of that which his presumptuous curiositie mooued him to attempt to apprehend Of this we haue a memorable example of a vertuous gentlewoman in this land who was carried along in this course doubting verie often of her saluation and making her case known vnto a worthy minister of God he often coūfelled her to take heede of inquiries further then Gods word and trust assuredly that shee might
conclude her saluation out of Gods word without any further reuelations yet still did the temptation grew vpon her insomuch that hauing a venice glasse in her hands and the selfe-same minister setting by her presently breakes forth into lamentable words You haue often told mee that I must seeke no further then Gods word but I haue been long without comfort and can indure no longer therefore if I must be saued let this glasse be kept from breaking and so she threw it against the walls Here might the Lords hand for this tempting of his maiestie haue left her to the euerlasting woes of her distrustfull heart yet the Lord that is rich in mercie hauing stamped her with the seale of his election was content to satisfie the languishing soule with a miracle the glasse rebounds againe and comes safe vnto the ground which the minister hauing gotten into his hands sayeth Oh repent of this sinne blesse God for his mercie and neuer distrust him more of his promise for now you haue his voyce from heauen in a miracle telling you plainly of your estate This was curiositie and might haue brought despaire yet it was the Lords mercie to remit the fault and graunt an extraordinarie confirmation of her faith But to proceede melan cholie persons that are giuen to contemplation if they be not well grounded in the word of God and haue resolued in all their speculations not to remooue one haire from the same are easily ouertaken and plunged in miserie and especially all such as haue their vocation consisting in such studies as philosophie c. which if they cary not a low saile and sometime to strike and lie at the anker of the Scriptures of God but hoist vp saile leaue it to the tempest of presumption are presently carried into the whirle-poole of Gods infinite secrets and are in daunger without the speciall grace of Gods mercie neuer to deliuer themselues for these men being not balanced with knowledge of Gods scriptures and assurance of his spirit are neuer able to abide the vglines of their sinnes when they shall once be vnfolded that narrow point of reprobation and election propounded vnto their melancholie braines and hearts and most miserable polluted soules Others which haue but some little knowledge of Gods word and practise answerable for want of the true apprehending of Gods reuealed will touching election and reprobation and the right methode of learning and conceiuing the doctrine causeth them to stumble and fall at this stone for a sword taken at the wrong ende is readie to wound the hand of the taker yet held by the handle is a fit weapon of defence so Predestination preposterously conceiued may through fault of the conceiuer procure hurt whereas in it selfe it is the most strong rock of assurance in al storms of temptations that can befall vnto bodie or soule because predestination is Gods immutable will the cause and rule of all iustice and vttermost of all reason in his workes Now if reason ascending to this supreame cause descend not againe to the meanes then when our sinnes shall meete with Gods iustice and we haue no eye to looke vpon his mercie in his sonne Christ we shall find nothing but the assurance of our owne destruction Againe if with the world we eye alone his mercie and consider not his iustice then miserable man who melteth as snow and vanisheth like a vapour before his iustice must needes perish eternally in that his carelesse presumption Againe as the melancholie person in generall and secondly in speciall 1. of giuing himselfe to contemplation 2. knowing Gods word vngroundedly so in the 3. place this makes the melancholie nature subiect to this passion when with a passionate humour he reads G●ds word and doth as melancholy persons doe in regard of their bodie for if they read or heare of any disease presently they conceicue they haue it so deale they with the Scriptures they are guiltie of all iudgements and no sinne or iudgement but they either haue it or presently expect it and especially they resemble the one the other in this that they haue the strongest conceit of the most deadly diseases as consumptions and sicknesses incurable so the other of nothing but the sinne against the holy Ghost So that as ignorance before was their guide here ignorance and infidelitie linked together A fourth speciall manner in this melancholike subiect is the good and christian heart the waight of whose sinnes exceeding for a time the strength of their faith see not so clearely as they desire but euen as in a stormy tempest the ship seemeth at euery blast and sourge of the sea to be in danger of wracke and as the young ash bending to euerie blast of wind seemeth in perill of breaking and rooting vp when notwithstanding both the ship keepeth her constant course and the tree yet hath the rooting In winter we thinke the trees are dead and in a tempest we thinke wee haue lost the brightnes of heauen yet summer prooues the contrarie and the space of an houre may shewe the cleare heauens againe So when this tempest of Gods anger is ouer-blowne and his gracious countenance beginneth to shine on vs againe then the saith which was as it were hid for a time taketh life and sheweth foorth it selfe and plainely prooueth that as the trees when they bud in the spring time and bring forth fruite were not dead in the winter as they seemed so the faith of Gods children springeth afresh after the stormie winter of temptation and therefore no dead faith The diseases of the bodie make vs sometime seeme little better then dead corpses and yet the hidden life is after recouered and raised vp againe Thus saith by reason of our owne weakenes and thorough Sathans tempestuous malice bendeth seemeth feeble and yeeldeth to the force while notwithstanding it is built on the rocke and planted with the hand of God in the Eden of his gracious election and doth remaine a plant for euer in his Paradise of euerlasting felicitie Thus the lilly of God and euerie member of it though among many thornes is preserued because they are planted by the good husbandman watred with the dewes of heauen hedged and preserued by his continuall care for this husbandman is night and day in his field and yet he neuer sleepeth no not so much as slumbereth by his watchfull care for Israel his flocke Psal 121. In deed we had need of a good shepheard for wee are extraordinarie wandring sheep we had need of good gouernours for we are but punies in our wayes we had neede of a good guide on the seas of this world for we are but like vnexperienced trauailers by sea fearing euery weauing of the ship and ●●ying with the disciples helpe vs Master or else we perish we imagine euery puffe of temptation to bee nothing but the gate of destruction when indeede it is the way of Gods dearest children and appointed of the Lord to bring vs
children are in sorrow but when they consider how of his owne will he hath begotten them with the word of truth that they should be as the first fruits of his creatures then their hearts doe reioyce and their ioy no man shall take from them Now that compleat ioy may be drawne out of all these arguments it is necessary that the word of God be specially looked vnto for in afflictions it onely giueth vs the liuely sight of our sinne manifests the riches of the mercies of God in Christ Iesus to deliuer vs from sinne and therefore Dauid saies often but for thy lawe I had perished in mine afflictions therfore for further comfort he shewes what is required to make vs profit in Gods word first qualification secondly practise the first the soule the second the life of the soule the qualification v. 19. the reason of it v. 20. and the conclusion out of both ver 21. Wherefore laying apart all silthinesse and superfluity of malitiousnesse receiue with meekenes the word that is grafted into you which is able to saue your soules After this qualification followes the practise that the mercies of God might not be in vaine which he hath bestowed vpon them therefore v. 22. be ye doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing your selues now because this cousening of our selues in hearing of Gods word is a disease incident to the most hee playes the good Physitian first discouering the disease by a familiar similitude laying together these fowre tearms spots and a glasse sins and the law as spots may be seene in a glasse so sinnes may be seene in the law secondly in their qualitie wherein they are laid together and that is beholding considering and immediately forgetting as a man beholding falls to consider something amisse in himselfe yet going his way and other matters possessing his head immediately forgetteth what manner of face-he had So they come to the Church looke into Gods word consider that all is not well yet going their way home againe to their olde courses and now all is spoiled and they are neuer better Secondly hauing discouered the disease by the most familiar fymptomes applyes the remedie and tells them what must be their receit ver 15. the perfect law of libertie must be carefully looked into Thirdly he giues them the manner how it must be receiued first what must be abstained from as deadly poison to the nature of a Christian and secondly the onely hinderer of the worke of all good physicke First therefore v. 26. If any man seeme religious and refraineth not his tongue but deceiueth his owne heart that mans religion is in vaine Secondly thus must it bee taken according to pure religion and vndefiled before God in visiting the fatherles and widdowes in their necessity and to keep himselfe vnspotted of the world Seeing then that God hath so many comforts patience to possesse the soule when it is at a loffe wisedome to make i● finde it selfe in the greatest night of trouble contentation to quiet it as well in aduersitie as prosperitie a crowne of glory to recompence it after all combats and such a word as may be a light to direct a sword to defend and teach the true watch word of a Christian when he is readie to be swallowed vp of his enemies it cannot bee but that we should alwaies rest in the hauen of happinesse A recaptulation of all the former heads in a briefe and perspicuous table for the further impression of Christian comfort in the memories of the faithfull Comfort in affliction donation of grace informing the action present patience working v. 4. perfecting v. 4. wifedom giuen freely and liberally receiued by praier faith future true contentation in all things v. 9 the ende of the action blessednes in the crowne of life v. 12. sanctifying causes principall the will of God v. 18. instrumentall the word of truth v. 18. effect first fruits a holy kind of offering taken out of the residue of men v. 18. true application in the qualification manifested v. 19. prooued in clearing the point v. 20. in concluding v. 21. in the practise honest and good hearing and doing v. 22. dishonest and vnprofitable illustrated 23. 24. by tearms spots a glasse sin and the law qualitie beholding forgetting applyed first in the prescript v. 25. in the vse vnlawfull v. 26. lawfull v. 27. Seeing then that this is the course that the Lord will take let no man think to be Diues all his life time in this world and Lazarus after death If God promise riches the way thereunto is pouertie before loue correction before exaltation deiection whom he saueth first he damneth he bringeth not to heauen but by hell if he promise life hee slaieth first Ioseph sawe the sunne moone and starres worshipping him neuertheles yet that could come to passe God laid him where he could see neither sunne nor moone nor any starre of the skie and all that many yeares and also vndeserued yet all this while to nurture him vp against the time of honour God promised Israel a land of milke and honie yet for the space of forty yeeres they went through a land not only where there were no riuers of milke and honey but not so much as a droppe of water to refresh them withall yet all this was done of God to doe them good at the latter end God promised Dauid a kingdom yet immediatly he stirred vp Saul against him to hunt him and ferret him out of euery hole and that many years Thus he that will weare the crowne of glory must weare the crowne of thornes he that will haue all teares wiped from his eyes must first shed them Reu. 15.3 the children of God before they can sing the song of Moses the seruant of God and the song of the lambe Christ Iesus must first swim through the glassie sea mingled with fire and brimstone It is not the way to heauen to liue in this world in perpetual ease rest quietnes in body soule goods and good name therefore as the end of all afflictions is full of ioy and comfort so is the way seeing it is appointed of the Lord most comfortable because euery steppe brings vs towards Gods kingdome and I may tearme afflictions markes in the way to tell vs we are to keepe on that way they lead vs. A man inquiring his way and is told he hath no plaine way but by desolate woods hills and mountaines very stony and troublsome to passe by when the trauailer seeeth these marks he saies vndoubtedly I am right but if he find all to be plaine presently stands still lookes about and saies I see neuer a one of my directiōs therfore I am assuredly wrong this way will neuer bring me to the end of my iourney So the Lord hath told vs that this is the way to heauen to passe by many crosses we run a long and find no such matter well may we suspect that we are out
of the way and then assuredly that our pleasant way did not affoard vs so much comfort but the want of the signes will as much discomfort vs and therefore affliction may more comfort vs then all worldly pleasure because the Lord hath made the one a signe we are going toward heauen Heb. 12.6 but the other none at all saue onely of our iourneying toward hell But you may obiect that euerie crosse is not a marke for first the sinne against the holy Ghost is a mark of reprobation secondly impenitencie and therfore when he hath these sinnes in the eies of his conscience how shall he be perswaded that he can euer be brought into the way to heauen For the answer of this point let vs consider a threefold fountaine of this perswasion First for that open and wilfull apostasie from God is a voluntary willingnes malitious hatred against the profession of a knowne truth now the fruits will iudge the cause Is there in you the renouncing of Gods truth which before you haue professed heartily embraced perceiue you this malice prosecuting this mischiefe what persecution doe you remember in word or deede you euer raised against the truth what sword haue you euer drawn against it or what volumes haue you either written or approued against found doctrine with purposed opposition against your owne conscience neither that of frailty but of meere will and obstinacie of this examples are rare as Iulianus the Emperour called Apostata Of the second impenitencie there is the same fountaine but not in the same degree and that is extremitie of hardnesse of heart of which kind was Cain Esau Saul Iudas many of the prophane people of the world that know not Christ and such as knowe him onely in vaine profession outwardly and so continue are partners of the sinne and shal be examples of Gods vengeance This fountaine cannot be in them that sinne onely against their conscience for then should euerie man be guiltie of it when the sinne was committed we may remember that the illumination of our vnderstanding the regeneration of our wills did oppose it but both beeing weake and imperfect we were drawn vnto the euill And here before I come to the second fountaine I propound a briefe distinction of temptations some touch our faith whether we beleeue or not othersome the fruits of faith either of profession of the truth or els of obedience sutable and kindly to our profession the former is tryed by persecutions feare fauour c. the second concerning persons possessions and good name is knowne by charitie in keeping of the second table Now these are not the things that exclude Christs propitiatorie sacrifice except incredulitie bringing forth impenitencie and vtter renunciation of the faith be ioyned with them But here we often heare the cries of Gods children alas I beleeue not therfore draw vpon me the paine due to the vnfaithfull Here I would intreat euery one to waigh with circumspection and due consideration his owne estate in so waightie a point as this And therefore let him be aduised that there be other two fountaines that may scare our soules with these feares The first is corporall infirmitie deluding the heart and braine whereby strange imaginations are wrought in our heads and dolefull passions in our hearts these things alwaies vrge terror and distrust and deludeth vs with opinion of want of that whereof we haue no lacke as others often are caried with opinion and confidence of those things whereof they haue no part Aetius reporteth that Phylotimus was faine to put a cap of lead vpon a Melancholickes head that could not be perswaded he had any head at all vntill at the length feeling the waight to oppresse him cryed out my head akes why thē saies his freinds you haue a head Artemidorus the Grammarian did imagine that he wanted both an hand and a legge when euery man els could iudge it was but a fancie from which he could not be recalled to his dying day So often deales the deuill with vs by deluding of our phancies that we want both head and heart to God-ward and that we haue disposed both to him-ward But many a bleeding soule may go further what tell you me of melancholie it is a disease that I am free from well let that be granted yet rare it is to finde persons without it that are touched with this kinde of griefe yet we finde a third fountaine that may without all delusion streame this water of bitternes as the sense of our sinnes may pricke vs especially such as most hunger and thirst after righteousnesse and are poore in spirit and broken in heart yet this is an infallible token of grace that they long after the liuing God and their soules pant for him Oh when shall I enter into his presence Oh men of God what shall I doe to be faued The rest of the world except some vengeance of God lay hold vpon them or some horrible fact gnaw their wounded consciences passe their time in blind securitie carelesse of God and empty of all sense hope of a better life these passe their daies and finish their courses as the calfe passeth to the shambles not kowing his ende to be slaughter by the butchers knife You therfore that truly grone vnder the burden of your sinne consider the groūd of your error you iudge your faith by inward feeling and your actions proceeding therefrom by your thirst of righteousnesse and presence of your wants Here you iudge by the quantitie of faith and not by his vertue when a very graine of mustard seed a little smoking flax or a broken reed may suffice with God to bring forth a tree a burning fire and a stable plant of righteousnesse for both the sense of faith the sincerity of the fruits and increase of the measure are all the gifts and graces of God dispensed vnto vs according to his owne wisedome making most for his glory and our good If we consider but the extemity of our misery the lest sparke of faith may giue vs a world of comfort and the smallest worke of obedience performed in sincerity though not in perfection may perswade vs of the same loue of God as though we were as strong as our father Abraham or any resolue martyr that hath sealed his religion with his blood But the Christian saies I haue no feeling of Gods grace and therefore no faith I answer true faith may bee without feeling and therefore it is dangerous to iudge the want of faith Faith without feeling by the want of feeling That this is the truth let these be the grounds of it First a man may rest vpon God and yet want the feeling of the loue of God as Iob. Dauid the woman of Canaan c. Iob 13.15 God is mine enemie the arrowes of the Almightie drinke vp my blood he makes me as a butte to shoote at here Iob hath none of the feeling of Gods loue
towards himselfe but he hath not lost his loue and fath toward God for he saith though the Lord should kil me yet would I trust in him Dauid Psal 22. Oh my God I crie by day but thou hearest not by night but thou giuest no audience neither night nor day had he any feeling that God did heare his prayers or graunted his requests but yet he was not without faith for he made this praier in faith and that with speciall application my God The Canaanitish woman had fowre repulses 1. silence 2. deniall I am not come but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel 3. the Apostles to speake against her send her away for she crieth after vs. 4. a wofull remembrance of her miserable estate Woman it is not good to take the childrens bread and cast it vnto dogges in all these Christ shewes her small comfort yet shee hath not lost the feeling of her saith for still shee cries Truth Lord yet the dogges may eate the crummes that fall from their masters table And surely all that can thus hang on the breasts of Gods mercies are children of hope that neuer miscarrie but at length after many scourges shall heare the admirable voyce of commendation I haue not found such faith in any goe away in peace and be it to euery one of you according to your faith Reas 2. Hee that will rest vpon the meanes of his saluation though he finde not any sweetnes in the performance of them is a true beleeuer though hee feele not his wished ioy Wilt thou goe to beare Gods word and frequent the places of his worship wilt thou pray read conferre meditate c. and performe all these in obedience vnto God though thou feele no sweetnesse in them then assure thy selfe that resting vpon Gods meanes for comfort thou hast true faith and that cannot but at length make thy ioy to breake forth Reas 3. He that with all his heart can wish the saluation of any member of Christ is a true member of Christ and ingrafted into Christ by a liuely faith now these diffressed soules can wish with all their hearts the saluation of others and therfore it cannot be but they should be of Christs bodie and haue in them the true life of that bodie for a member of the world can neuer in vpright sinceritie wish the wel-fare of Christs bodie Reas 4. They that most complaine of their corruption from the true sense and feeling thereof are sanctified by the spirit of grace for corruption cannot complaine of corruption neither one sinne become an enemie to another but grace alone complaines of corruption and the law of the spirit opposeth the law of the flesh nowe it is prooued by experience that none complaine more of sinne then the poore Christian afflicted in conscience neither is this their complaint that of the wicked for they crie out of the sense and feeling of the pupunishment but these for that they should so displease God O therefore lift vp your hearts and cry with Dauid Psal 51. Lord restore vnto vs the ioy of thy saluation Againe let vs consider with whom we fight and for what crowne and how both heauen and earth mooued at our redemption and the same power concurred thereto as in our first creation and therefore the worke beeing so great no maruell if we vndergo many an heauie burthen be put to many a dangerous lift yet the foundation is so surely laid that it must vp in spight of all opposing power For as the great and mighty oakes are slower in attaining their full growth then the shrubs and weedes whose enduring is for many yeares and for time out of mind as we say when the other in short time wither and fade away so must Christians esteeme their increase of heauenly graces slowe but sure and euerlasting as immortalitie that they may bee as a beame or a pillar in the temple of God for euer and euer for the life of grace is no naturall life but spirituall therefore no way corruptible for if it were so contradictions would be true that spirituall life should bee naturall life incoruptible corruptible and immortal mortall Neither here let vs be deceiued in iudging according to our sense or meere shewes of things for then the most fruitfull trees in winter shall be taken for barren and the lustie soyle dry and vnfruitfull while it is shut vp with the hard frost but reason and experience prooues the contrarie faith the spirituall sheild in this our spirituall war-fare endureth much battering and many brunts and receiueth the forefront of the encounter oftentimes fareth as if it were peirced through and worne vnfit for battell whereupon we lay it aside yet euen for all this it proues inuincible and repelleth whatsoeuer engine the enemie inforceth against vs and standeth firme rooted whatsoeuer storme Sathan raiseth for the displacing thereof therefore when the sense of faith is dulled in vs and the fruits minister discontentment remember that the graces and mercies of God are without repentance and Christ Iesus whom he loueth he loueth vnto the ende Suppose that fire were extraordinarily fixed in the cold water so that you would say there can be no coldnesse at all in the water yet consider that cold is so naturall to the water that secretly he will driue out the heate and make it apparent that the fire had no place there but by vsurpation so faith in the soule of man assisted by patience when man in the verie fire of affliction will by little and little bring out sinne and with sinne the punishment of the same so that it shal clearly appeare that faith doth but esteeme of them both as tenants at will Oh consider this that our goodnes did not mooue God to bestowe his mercie vpon vs neither shall our sinne cause him to remooue it for he saw them before be gaue vs his mercie why did he not then withhold his mercie surely as he knew vs when we were strangers from him and loued vs when we hated him and had nothing which might prouoke his mercie but our miserie so is his goodnes continued vpon vs still for his owne sake and not at all for our deseruing but for that righteousnes sake which is in his Sonne and that oblation of his offered vp not for himselfe but for others and therefore with whome he was well pleased for that sacrifice with them shall he still be well pleased otherwise both these absurdities should follow that this sacrifice might be in vaine and this wel-pleasing might be changed from whose righteousnesse so much is detracted as we attribute either vnto chāge or vnto our selues or thinke to attaine vnto in respect of our owne satisfying and againe so much of Gods mercie is impaired as we shall rest vpon any power or vertue in our selues whereby to auoid his vengeance iustice Election is onely the Lords therefore committed to no hazard if on vs who are like the
he knows our minds and gathers much by the inclination of our affections and will and marking the obiect on which we dwell But you will obiect the Lord hath reserued this propertie vnto himselfe to know the heart Ans It is true but the communication of the heart may be betwixt man and man and man and angels therefore the Lord directly knowes the heart and all the corners of it so that wee can bring no fallacian out of it to deceiue God but the deuill may be deceiued as surely often he is in the discourses of the godly Experience hath prooued that the consultations of wicked kings haue been reuealed to the godly 2. kin 6.11 Will ye not shewe me which of vs bewrayeth our counsell to the King of Israel one of his seruants makes answer It is Elisha the Prophet that telleth the King of Israel euen the words that thou speakest in thy priuy chamber Elisha heard not these words yet they are communicated vnto him after a spirituall manner such as are the visions of God and thus Paul depriued of all bodily instruments sawe things inutterable Yea the deuill beeing Gods ape hath detected one wicked mans counsell to an other but he hath alwaies bin deceiued in the consultations of the godly and neuer was able to reueale them To proceede From this experience he can conclude not onely from our speeches and gestures to conceiue of our intents and purposes but out of our vniuersall corruption whereof hee hath continuall proofe much matter of argument to discouer the vanitie of our minds the secret thoughts of our hearts and the verie inclinations of the same Now these beeing found out hee will proceed to suggestion as he seeth occasion and our greatest inclination and so by instigation vnto sinne make vs disobey God and all his holy commandements Againe that he doth not all by suggestion vnto the soule inclining it is plaine whē our natures seem not to incline vnto them in any speciall consideration or loue it before other wickednesse neither the world alluring or inforcing vs especially Gods children abhorring the very least conceit of such sinnes as blasphemies and laying violent hands on themselues or others without all hate or malice or any occasion of reuenge And surely of the same nature is despaire and distrust of Gods mercies losse of the seede of Gods word when we haue no inclination vnto them at all but rather contrarily affected and these the deuill puts vnto vs in regard of our generall corruption without any further consideration of speciall inclination and therfore he neuer ceaseth in these temptations because he hath hope to preuaile in them and therefore shall we neuer be rid of the deuil vntill God haue wholly deliuered vs from our staines Truely Gods children often admire how euer such a thought should rise in their head when they hate the very appearance of it Now I come to the second head which is done by meanes first single and then mixt but before I enter this let vs consider the deuill as a fowler whose nature is to be a friend in shew but a foe in heart Secondly looke vpon his snares which all of them haue three properties sweet dangerous secret Thirdly consider the waies of his laying the deuills way is suggestion reall operation and both together the way wherein he layes them is inward or outward inward iudgements and lusts outward actions graces things indifferent and euill company as the stale the hold that he hath is very strong for vntill grace haue turned him out he holds men at his will a most beastly captiuitie nay worse then beastly because beasts hauing once bin snared wil come there no more but a man is neuer wel but when he is in the snares of the deuil Secondly it is a voluntarie captiuitie and therefore like to be for euer except the Lord haue mercy to change his mind and draw him against his wil. Thirdly it is most base for Israel in Egypt may be accounted kings in regard of the slaues of the deuill Lastly it is most treacherous because they renounce their couenant with God and strike hands with the deuill and therefore from these things cōsidered we may make full account that the deuil hath many meanes to helpe him the first is suggestiō on the soule accompanied with all the baits he can imagine the second reall operation on the bodie affecting humour and spirit and so making them assist him as meanes to worke our woe Humor distempered causeth diseases to the bodie and the bodie diseased changeth our manners and course of liuing hinc mores sequuntur humores Againe he dulls the spirits and so causeth drousinesse in the worship of God and euerie good calling againe he refresheth them in euill and therefore keepes vs long waking vnto it For the mixing of both together both suggestion and real operation the deuill can play his part most dangerously for he can worke the humours of our bodies to make notable way for suggestion vpon our soules If a man bee of a melancholie constitution whose humour is drie and cold the deuill will make it notably affect a man in all his members especially in his heart and braine the two of the principall parts of man and where the soule hath most residence in the heart he will affect him with sudden feares strange distrusts suspition of infinit euills whereby he will mooue the soule in iudgement will and affection to set about the inuenting willing and effecting of some strange exploits to ease himselfe of his paines hence often either murder of himselfe or of some other which he falsly suspects an instrument of his woe Againe the braine by altering all the senses working strange imaginations by which it is almost impossible but that the mind of man should be set a working and these being false grounds hardly shal the iudgement escape vncorrupted nay alas whatsoeuer they conceit vpon these grounds shall not be remoued out of their iudgement They that thinke themselues to be made of glasse wil not suffer their verie freinds to come neere them he that thought himselfe to be a cocke would neuer giue ouer the spreading of his armes in imitation of the cocke clapping his wings and then would endeuour to imitate the cockes crow he that conceited himselfe to be Atlas could neuer be brought to sit down lest his head that vnderpropped heauē being remoued should suffer heauen to fall vpon him he that thought a certaine tyrant had cut off his head could neuer be perswaded to the contrary vntill his head aked the physitian hauing put a cap of lead on it The woman that imagined that she had swallowed a Serpent could neuer be at rest vntill she sawe one priuily conueied into her stoole which she imagined to haue beene brought downe by the physitians purgation Another thinking himselfe dead would eat no meat because it was not vsuall for dead men to eate vntill he sawe one come out of a sheete
seaze vpon that which he pursueth 1. Pet. 5.8 Secondly that yet we may a little the more conceiue of his brutish cruelitie he is compared Reu. 12.3 to a red dragon whose fiercenes we find in history to exceede all lyons for a lyon if he be not hungry and see one not oppose him but fall downe before him will not hurt him but a dragon will deuoure mans flesh for sport This malice is open and so lesse dangerous but if he see that we are strongly fortified with Gods grace and at all points armed with compleat armour of a Christian if fenced and hedged on all sides as Iob was Iob 1.10 then leauing his raging violence he striues with vs by fawning and alluring vs to sinne thus with our first parents to tast of that pleasant fruit which depriued them of the breast-plate of righteousnes and vncocouered them of Gods protection so that euer since that time he hath had full blowes without all resistance hence he is called a tempter and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that tempter the tempter of tempters after temptation he falls to accusation hence he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the deuill after accusation he is very glad that God will any where make him an executioner and hang-man his will then can be no lesse then maliciousnesse it selfe Eph. 6.12 But you will say though his will be malitiously bent yet he wants strength but let me tell you that the deuill is very strong both in himselfe and in his aides In himselfe he can raise great tempests both by sea and by land he is compared to the great Leuiathan that makes the sea to boyle with his motion as strong vpon earth as a lyon a dragon with seuen heads and tenne hornes and with his very taile he throwes to the ground the third part of the starres of heauen Luk. 11.21 a strong armed man who keepeth in peace all that he possesseth nay a mightie prince not of one country or land but a monarch of the whole world Ioh. 12.31 and by his authoritie can command infinit multitudes to goe for him neither is this all but they bee called princes powers worldly gouernours Ephes 6.12 and that these may not be one against another they haue a head vnder which they all conspired Math. 25.41 fire prepared for the deuill and his angels in this sense he is called Beelzebub the prince of deuils the word signifies a prince of flies not for their weaknesse but mulitudes euen as though they were swarmes conioyned together to do mischeife one spirit taketh seuen more Mat. 12.45 nay a legion of deuils are spoken of Luk. 8.30 so that they are a sufficient number to beset vs all on all sides and in all places Lastly to set forth the aduantage he hath of vs poore men they are said to be princes of darkenesse and that is lamentable to fight with an enemy that can see vs but not be seen againe Secondly they are not enemies of flesh but spirituall wickednesses most dangerous because spirits and pestelent because no lesse then wickednesse it selfe they wil be with vs because they are so swift and they neuer come without the plague and pestelence of sinne hanging about them Thirdly they haue gotten the vpper ground and fight from higher places then wee can reach vnto being poore silly worms crawling vpon the earth and the Scriptures truely laying open his strength call him no lesse then a god of this world 2. Cor. 4.4 as though he were omnipotent vpon earth But perhaps you will say he wants courage to his strength but let me tell you I find him in the scriptures to be no lesse then exceeding desperate and audacious there was neuer man that liued but he had some thing to say with him Adam in paradise yea our sauiour Christ nay Reu. 12.7 there is mention of a battell in heauen Michael and his angels fought against the dragon the dragon and his angels c. But if I should proceed I should vtterly dis-hearten the poore Christian and make him despaire of any encounter and hope of victorie yet dare I boldly giue the deuill his aids and yet bid the weakest Christian offer the deuill his challenge his aids are two first the world secondly his own flesh the one playes on both hands with prosperity and aduersitie and the other a traytour alwaies readie to betray him into the hands of his enemies Hauing described the deuill in his wit will and power let vs see if there be any wisdom to oppose him any wil that exceeds as much in goodnesse vnto man as the deuill doth in malice any power that can master the deuils For the first the good angels haue more wit then the bad and yet their wisedome is nothing vnto Gods now the eye of the Lord is on the righteous and all the holy angels pitch their tents about them and therefore this counsel shall stand against all the policies of the deuil and the gates of hell shal neuer preuaile And for the vertues of vnderstanding God hath intelligence to crosse all the inuentions of the deuill science to preserue his owne truth from the lies of the deuill sapience to drawe more good out of euill then the deuill can euill out of good and for prudence God can order all that which he hath laboured to bring to confusion and for arte the Lord hath more skill to tye his owne vnto himselfe then the deuil hath to draw them from him and for all those stratagems wrought vpon the vnderstanding the Lord can take away the vaile of ignorance preserue from error hardnes of heart or any thing that might rise out of that head And for wil and affection and the whole body the Lord hath promised and will performe that his holy ones shall be sanctified throughout both in body and soule For the malice of the deuills will we ought to lay to heart the good will and pleasure of our God which hath said he wil not forsake vs and for power we may be assured that the deuill hath no power but that which God shal permit vnto him he cannot touch Iob vntill God giue him leaue he cannot be a meanes of Ahabs ruine vntill it please God to yeild him that liberty that he may be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his false prophets nay he cannot enter so much as into such creatures as swine vntill Christ haue giuen him so much refreshment before the time of his wofull torture Secondly wee may fight with courage for the deuill is alreadie chained and reserued to more strong chaines hereafter Iud. v. 6. Thirdly God hath left vs such store of armour of proofe as the deuill can neuer strike through hee may as easily wound God as wound vs being couered with it he can neuer loose our girdle of veritie strike through our breast-plate of righteousnes vncouer our feet beeing shod with the preparation of the Gospel of peace his blowes can neuer enter
without all succour neither here shall the Lord rest vpon bodie and soule but strike him in his nearest friends his wife c. Neither may we maruel at this for in nature wee see how some corne is sowen but neuer riseth some springeth and yet shortly withereth some groweth vp to an eare and yet then is stricken or blasted other at Gods good pleasure commeth to ripenesse some trees are planted yet neuer take roote some roote yet neuer blossome some blossome yet neuer bring forth fruit others through Gods blessing bring forth fruite in due season if God so deale with the plant and hearb of the field why may he not deale in like manner with man which is as wel in the hands of his creator as the smallest creature vpon the face of the earth 1. Vse reprehension first confutation of all wicked men which reproch religion for the idle profession of it If they see one that makes a great flourish in religion fall away As wicked men haue euill conceits of God so haue they of religion and the true professors thereof then presently see what religion these professours haue Alas doe they not see Sathan falling from heauen like lightning with his taile sweepe downe many a glorious though wandering starre if any thing be amisse presently it must be laid vpon God and his word these wicked thoughts of the hypocrite fixe vpon Gods silence But he that takes the foure corners of the earth in his hands as the lap of a garment shall shake the world together and cast out these wicked ones as his refuse and then shall be seene what sandie foundations they built vpon Nay alas this vncharitable world is so full of spite against God and his Saints that if a godly mans beast make but a smal trespasse presently shall it be laid vpon them as a great disgrace of their profession that which they account as nothing in others shall be verie hainous in them If Ligarius trip but a little then swelling Tubero will call it nefandum scelus vntollerable mischeife but as Cicero answered for Ligarius scelus tu illud vocas Tubero cur isto enim nomine illa adhuc causa caruit dost thou call it wickednes O boisterous Tubero wherefore I pray thee surely for that name there is no reason be a little perswaded by thy neighbours alij enim errorem appellant alij timorem qui durius spem cupiditatem odium pertinaciam qui gravissimè temeritatem scelus praeter te adhuc nemo thy neighbours round about thee call it some mistake or a little base feare they which are a little more vncharitable some hope or desire of gaine or fome mislike or ouermuch malepertnes they which say the worst of it are content that it be called rashnes but for wickednes thou hast not any other witnes beside thy selfe and therefore be intreated for Ligarius for he shall come to thee with an ignosce pater erravi lapsus sum non putavi si vnquam posthac paulo post temere feci paenitet ad clementiam tuam confugio delicti veniam peto vt ignoscas oro Suppose then in the like case a kind hearted Dauid come to a churlish Nabal in the name of Christ making him his Orator to plead for him why chalenge you religion for this small trespasse I am perswaded you haue no shew of reason for it all your neighbours doe make a fauourable construction of it I pray you therefore be pacified I am sorie I haue giuen you this offence thinke more fauourably of me I will be readie to put vp the like iniurie at your hands well Dauid send thy seruants to Nabal to aske him in thy name how hee doth let this bee their salutation both thou and thy house and all that thou hast be in peace wealth and prosperitie thy shepheards were with vs and we did them no hurt neither did they misse any thing all the while they were in Carmel aske thy seruants and they shall testifie the same wherefore let these young men finde fauour in thine eyes for we come in a good season neither shall they be chargeable vnto thee giue I pray thee whatsoeuer commeth to thine hand vnto thy seruants and to thy sonne Dauid Dauid thou hast plaied the Orator most excellently passions in thy selfe and strong arguments to Nabal especially one drawne from profit Let vs see what welcome Nabal will giue them Who is Dauid and who is the sonne of Ishai there be many seruants now a daies that breake away euery man from his master shall I take my bread and my water and my flesh that I haue killed for my shearers and giue it vnto men whome I know not whence they be the dogges shall haue it before them Well Dauid is a Mars as well as a Mercurie as good at his sword as at his words therefore Nabal shal smart for it What shall withhold Dauid surely the seruants of Nabal had respect vnto themselues and their mistresse therefore Abigail shall know that Dauid was as a wall both by night and by day to them and their masters sheepe therefore take heede for our master is so wicked that a man cannot speake vnto him good Abigail will giue Dauid good contentment that he shall blesse her counsell and when Nabal heares what his wife hath done his heart shal die within him and become like a stone after this the Lord shall smite him and he shall die Euen thus standeth it betwixt the godly and the world Wicked men liue and prosper because the godly are among them but alas they shall receiue hard measure at their hands they had rather feede the dogges then any poore Lazarus at their doores full of sores Hang him he is a stinking Puritan an enemie to the King and the whole common-wealth a breaker away from all masters can endure no yoke when alas if it were knowne they are the best subiects the King hath and as they neuer cease to pray for him so if once they should come to venture their liues for him and the good of the Church and commonwealth they should be found with the eagerest but alas by disgracefull tearmes they abuse many good Christians not esteeming those puritans which the King hath detected in his book but euery one that is not of their phantasie There be three kinds of Puritans and he that prooues not one of them shall neuer be saued First is the Papisticall puritan that dare plead with God for his iustification and this is a damnable puritan The second is a schismaticall puritan that rends himselfe from euery Church that will not agree with his phantasie and this is likewise a wretched puritan A third is the Christian Puritan such an one as I am sure the word of God approoues of and onely pronounceth them blessed that are pure in heart and these are defended by the booke of common prayer wherein we call vpon God that we might lead a godly sober and