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A19987 Doomes-Day: or, A treatise of the resurrection of the body Delivered in 22. sermons on 1. Cor. 15. Whereunto are added 7. other sermons, on 1. Cor. 16. By the late learned and iudicious divine, Martin Day ...; Doomes-Day Day, Martin, d. 1629. 1636 (1636) STC 6427; ESTC S109431 470,699 792

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when they see a Beare or a Lion or a Wolfe dead in the street they will pull off his haire and insult over him and deale with them as they please they will trample upon their bodies being dead which they durst not looke upon when they were alive Such a thing is death it is a furious Beast a rampant Lion a devouring Wolfe which consumes all the world The Lord hath laid him now at his length he hath laid him dead that he is unable ever to have life againe and so the very children saith St. Chrysostome are able to insult over him That wee have had Martyrs saith hee of 14. or 15. yeares old which have offred themselves to the fire and to the sword and to all the passions of this hungry beast they have offered themselves to the devourers with a willing imbrace and have played upon him which is the common swallower of all mankind as Theophylact saith well We doe still devour and swallow up death by the faith that wee have in the life of Christ for that faith makes us so constant as that nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Iesus as the holy Apostle saith Rom. 8. Rom. 8.35 What shall separate us from the love of God shall tribulation or persecution or sword or hunger or cold or nakednesse shall Angels or life or death things present or to come life or death No none of these are able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Iesus our Lord But these things are easily spoken and as long as we be in Theories so long as we bee in Contemplation wee may easily subscribe to them but who is hee that is able to doe thus when the time serves That is in the hand of the great God to give the garland whensoever it shall please him It must be our ambition to seek for it to intreat the Lord to crowne us with that victory with that heavenly valour which himselfe hath promised to all that love him Apoc. 2.17 I will give him the crowne of life and blessed is hee that continueth to the end for hee shall eat of that hidden Mannah and shall flourish as a tree in the Paradice of God But it lies not in us to continue neither therefore he that gives the end must also give the meanes and the same prayer that sues for the one must also beg and intreat for the other all this comes from God from the true love that wee have to Christ from the hope that we have in him to partake of his victory from our beleeving and confessing that God hath raised up Christ from the dead For if thou beleeve with thy heart and confesse with thy mouth that God hath raised up Christ from the dead thou shalt bee saved If wee beleeve that this victory of Christ is for ever accomplished wee shall be saved If thou beleeve although thou must doe many other things which are conditionall to salvation yet this is the maine point beleeve in the Conquerour and the conquest is thine hee conquered not for himselfe but for thee to make the spirits of his Saints conquer in heaven and to make their bodies also to reigne with him there when he shall appeare Col. 3 4. for when the Lord Iesus shall appeare we shall also appeare with him in glory See the extent and latitude of his conquest When God takes a field hee takes it for all the world not for one countrey as earthly Princes doe but all commers from the East and West and North and South shall yeeld unto the Lord and rest under his shadow Even all Nations a tot quot The Dinner of the great King refuseth no guests and rather then they will want guests and the Feast shall be unfurnished he will send to the hedges and highwayes to bee searched to come and fill his Table whereunto hee calleth by the Gospel and whereunto he bring us for his Sonnes sake Amen FINIS SERMONS On 1 COR. 15. Of the Resurrection 1 COR. 15.56 The sting of death is sinne and the strength of sinne is the Law but God bee thanked that giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ TO bragge before the victory begotten before the field bee wonne it was ever held a most vaine presumption as the King of Israel said to the King of Syria Let not him that buckleth on his armour bragge as he that puts it off For there is nothing more uncertaine then the events of warre and oft times when mighty men promise to themselves the assurance of the victory they faile and come to be foiled Yet notwithstanding so great is the confidence of St. Pauls spirit and so great is the assurance that wee have in Christ Iesus our Lord that wee dare boldly insult over death and proclaime the victory although our selves must bee vanquished For this most noble and gracious Triumpher over death hee lies in the grave he lies in the dust as well as wee must doe and there is no difference to the sight of flesh and blood betweene the ashes of St. Paul and the ashes of another common man and yet notwithstanding the Spirit of God was so mighty and potent in him and the faith of the things to come did so represent unto him the things promised that as though the matter were now presently performed he insults over death and takes upon him the person of a man new risen again from the dead As St. Ierom well speaks hee supposeth that those times that bee long to come and God knowes how long he supposeth that they were come in his time and as it were in the person of a man newly risen newly raised from death he begins Oh death where is thy sting oh hell where is thy victory So the holy Father tells us that the words should bee then rise in every mans mouth when God shall raise them out of their graves to that incorruption and that immortality which this corruptible and this mortall must put on It shall be the speech in every mans mouth then as being triumphant over death Oh death whre is thy sting oh grave where is thy victory Thou hast had victory over my poore bones and body a long time but what is it now thou hast lost it for evermore In these victories in the world there is no certainty because that which they call fortune is so changeable as it seldome setteth up one man but anon it raiseth another to pull him downe againe So the victories are fading and passing away and he that is a Conqueror is conquered and made a slave to those that formerly were his inferiours Ignarius it is said had a great victory over the Cimbri and Tutons yet hee fell shortly after into the hands of Scilla that conquered him and Scilla that was once the Sunne-rising when Pompey once appeares he becomes the Sunne-setting And if Pompey were never so famous a Victor as there was none more glorious
I assent to that which is written in the Gospel and because I hope for a reward at the resurrection therefore I give almes to my brethren I exercise works of charity and doe good to my fellow members because that one day I hope to be proclaimed a member of the Sonne of God Upon this work therefore followes all the rest this is that great worke of the Lord which is called The worke of the Lord by way of excellency All good things be the workes of God It is true but the worke the singular worke of the Lord is this whereby hee raised his Sonne from the dead the totall of our faith and resurrection the onely thing that makes us assured of salvation Rom. 10. If thou beleeve with thine heart and confesse with thy mouth that God hath raised Christ from the dead thou shalt bee saved saith the Apostle Behold the whole worke of salvation runnes upon this and though there bee other things required for hee that beleeveth must bee conformed to the glory of God which hath raised his Sonne yet the maine and chiefe point of a mans salvation is this that hee beleeve and confesse that God hath raised his Sonne Iesus from the dead and that he shall give life unto those that are dead and those things that were conquered hee shall make them more then conquerers This is that that saves a man 2. Part the degree Abound Bee abundant alway in the worke of the Lord. It is not onely necessary for us to worke the worke of the Lord but we must bee abundant in it God doth require of us an eminency for it is true that unto him that worketh by the grace of God that he hath received there is a commendation and a testimony due unto him yet notwithstanding if hee rest satisfied with his small measure hee cannot aspire to this dignity to partake of the conquest of Christ because he doth not abound in the worke of the Lord. Abound in the worke of the Lord that is bee abundantly able to comfort thy selfe in this matter of the resurrection and to comfort others that shall come to take comfort of thee The childe of God must abound as a River that keepes not the water that is in it for it selfe but disperseth it to the dry ground so the children of God must abound in the worke that they have by the Lord in the worke of charity in the worke of beliefe and apprehension of the Articles of their faith In every thing the Lord will have them abounding creatures In the first beginning it was the blessing of the Lord increase and multiply Gen. 1.20 we see of two creatures hee made a great world by that blessing upon it And as in naturall things much more in spirituall a man must increase and multiply he must not stand at a stay but abound and goe forward Hee must abound not to supererogation as the Papists would have it a man cannot be so abundant as to have enough for himselfe and others God knows he that hath the most hath too little for himselfe for it is the merit of Christ that must doe all For this is the meaning of the Apostle where he saith Bee abundant in the worke of the Lord that is that they should not content themselves with that measure that they had received there is more before forgetting that which is behind and pressing forward So that if a man have done that which is good he must not think that he hath done enough but he must goe forward in well-doing and not bee weary Whatsoever good worke the Lord hath in him to crowne and accomplish it with perseverance it is that that makes up all the graces of God and that is it which he saith here 3. Part. The extent Alway A grievous thing it is to bee set to worke there is no man can endure labour and worke especially the work of the Lord is hard and contrary to flesh and blood which is made easie by the grace of God but when a man hath begun he thinkes he may safely with a good conscience leave off after a short time and so he falls to be cold in his profession of those good things which formerly he contented himselfe withall Hee that hath beene in the service of God from his youth a long time hee thinks he may take some respite in his old age he thinks his earnestnesse and fervour and heat of zeale in his youth may admit some kinde of allay and his former zeale may be a sufficient defence for it A man that hath given to a poore man hee thinkes hee hath beene very beneficiall when hee hath given so much and hee bids him come no more at him hee hath done so much for him already When a man prayes when hee hath done his devotion in the morning he thinks whatsoever occasion comes hee shall have no occasion to pray till night And so in the course of al holy matters we grow weary of the service of God so the Apostle cuts this sluggishnesse away tells them he would have them be as a fountaine he would have them abound never to be exhausted never to be drawne dry as the fountaine runnes alway so the fountaine of grace in Gods children it runs continually To what purpose is it to give a poore man a peny to day and see him starve to morrow hee had as good give him nothing at all hee were as good have died to day it is but a dayes respite the charity of Gods children must bee perpetuall let them give as they are able but let them give continually let them pray continually let them reade continually let them meditate on the works of God continually let them rejoice let them give thanks continually let them approve the works of God continually let them satisfie doubting consciences continually let their fountaine be alwayes running let there be no stop in the fountaine of grace when it hath once begun let it goe on in a happy streame and flow unto all the inheritance of God I beseech you beloved be alway abundant in the worke of the Lord. This worke of the Lord the resurrection bee abundant in that and in all the rest of the works of the Lord because the Lord is alway plentifull to you in mercy so be you plentifull to him in good workes to draw this mercy of God upon your owne soules Now followes the reason of all and it is indeed a sweete contentment to every Christian man Knowing that your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. There is no signe more ridiculous and frivolous then the labour in vaine for a man to wash an Ethiopian for a man to wash a brick● for a man to take paines for that which is not worth his labour if it be atchieved or which he cannot possibly atchieve If their labour had beene such as this then the Apostle should wish them to their losse to their great
mirth But the children of God have another promise Whether this be the true sence of S. Paul or that of the cup of persecution they are almost both coincident and one of these certainely is Saint Pauls reason For he speakes of some singular persons all were not ready to offer themselves for Christ but hee speakes of a singular company that were different from the common sort of men Certainly wee must take it in one of these two sences And for that of Beza though it be true and have some force in it yet Saint Paul seldome insists upon the weake actions of men It is true that which men doe publiquely it comes to have the nature of a law in it and this hath beene a publique thing in all nations to honour the going of their friends out of the world therefore Saint Paul might have drawne a good argument from that if he used such in other places But because we finde not that therefore we cannot settle upon this His manner is not to fashion himselfe to the world or to the actions of men to draw things of such weight as these especially from heathen and simple men that did that which it may be they had no reason for And besides it is no argument to prove the resurrection from the dead although a childe of God understand and God hath put into their hearts good affections because these vessels these parties are not dead but sleepe therefore God teacheth them to honour the ashes of his Saints because they have hope in Christ but to say that the world and all mankinde dreames of a resurrection because they honour their friends departed this doth not argue For they may doe it to their friends out of love or out of fondnesse or for fashion to shew their gallantry or the like I will not contradict that learned man but yet I thinke that which is most agreeable here to Saint Pauls great spirit is that opinion about the cup of affliction Those that gave themselves freely to persecution to stoning to sword to banishment to affliction as the Apostle speaks in another place men that are alway working upon their owne passions and lusts this I take to be the proper sence To what end doe these men macerate their bodies and trouble themselves by mortification and by yeelding themselves to persecution and sword if they be not fulfilled with a lively hope of the resurrection In that sence the argument thence drawne teacheth us thus much That whatsoever action or president Gods children and Saints have given in this world they are all of them of singular and excellent use to prove the glory of God in this article of the resurrection I say the president of Gods Saints in former times and of those in our times that are before our eyes they are arguments invincible and we should not offer to cast any scruple against the power and validity of them There be a company of men that will follow none but themselves under pretence of following none but Christ whereas indeed they follow none lesse than Christ in presuming to follow him alone without any other they follow none at all Christ is then followed when he is followed in his members as well as in himselfe therefore the Apostle bids us be followers of him as he is of Christ It is true the point of proofe and imitation it rests not in man as he is man but as he is a follower of God So farre we must take the force of the argument as it hath a higher reference and relation unto God which is the Prince of reason and the ground of all demonstration Therefore he that neglects and condemnes the presidents of Martyrs in former times or of the ancient Fathers or our precedent Fathers that lived in the dayes of persecution that suffered fire and banishment from their Country for Christ he that cals these things idle fopperies or weake infirmities without any ground or reason or that they were deceptions of stubborne flesh that dyed for the maintenance of erronious opinions he that speakes thus blasphemously against the honour of Gods holy presidents he pluckes the argument out of Saint Pauls hand and makes it nothing worth For so might the Corinthians have answered the Apostles argument that they would not be ruled by any man but by Christ they would have none over them but Christ they would have no president but God they would have no direction but Gods wayes and as for men they are but men and to be no further followed then they follow God But Saint Paul he raiseth a mighty argument from them and so in other places he saith Observe and walke as you have seene us walke and observe them that are as lights before you that are as lights shining in a darke generation The children of God are borne for example and either they winne men by their rare and excellent accommodation to God or else they stop their mouthes for ever that they shall have nothing to say at the day of judgement because they have had such examples before them and had no hearts to follow them All the presidents of Gods Saints in former times if they be followed they further our salvation but if they be neglected they shall fall heavy upon us to our condemnation All things that were done before were done for our learning and for our sakes as whatsoever was written before time Rom. 15.4 was written for our learning to confirme and strengthen us and build us up in our most holy faith Let us glory in this let us study the history of the Martyrs that have beene before us After this manner Christ comforted his Apostles saying Rejoyce and be glad in that day Math. 5.12 for great is your reward Why should they rejoyce because so they persecuted the Prophets before you so the example of those that have beene before us are convincing arguments to us The God of glory and peace that hath given us so many rare examples before us give us power to follow them Amen FINIS 1 COR. 15.29.30 What shall they doe that are baptised for the dead if altogether the dead rise not why are they baptised over the dead and why are we in danger and jeopardy every houre THis is one of Saint Pauls difficult and hard places which Saint Peter puts us in minde of 2 Pet. 3.16 2 Pet. 3.16 saith he In Pauls Epistles there are certaine things that are hard to be understood which the reprobates doe wrest as they doe the rest of the Scriptures to their owne damnation But this Text which is so difficult and hard may be best explained and expounded by the context by the sence that followes after August Saint Austin gives us a Rule when saith he I finde the Scriptures darke and obscure then I looke to the scope and purpose and drift of them and surely it seemes that these latter words which I have now read to you Wherefore are
in his third Booke of the Trinity he saith The Apostle did not feare to confirme the certainty of his salvation by swearing for saith he by the confidence that I have in Christ Iesus I dye daily Among the Greekes none doubted of it but those that were simple and unlearned Therefore I say this was an oath and so the strongest confirmation that can be 2 The thing he sweares by Esay 45.23 But how doth Saint Paul sweare by that which is not God It is not lawfull to sweare by any thing but the name of God as the Lord saith Every knee shall bow to me and every tongue shall confesse me and sweare by my name Heb. 6.13 It is true that when God sweares having no greater to sweare by he sweares by himselfe and when man sweares he must alway sweare by a greater For that is the end of an oath to protest an unknowne truth by the presence and countenance of a greater person then himselfe and one which cannot lye Therefore it is unlawfull for a Christian to sweare by any name but the name of God and that not often much lesse alway or in frivolous causes for this our Lord Christ condemnes when hee saith sweare not at all Math 5.34 that is not often nor out of passion But as an oath is a speciall service of God so it is to be taken upon speciall occasions but now we are bound to sweare by no name but the name of God and reioycing in Christ is not Christ himselfe Wherefore then doth the Apostle sweare by his reioycing in Christ We must understand that to sweare by any immediate fruit of the spirit of God by any thing that flowes immediately from God to us it is all one as to sweare by the name of God it selfe This is so individuall and inseparable a thing the comfort namely and the joy of Christ hath brought into the world that it is as inseparable from the spirit as the shadow from the body Therefore as a man may sweare by the shadow that there is a body and swearing the one he intimates the other and concludes the other so the Apostle here he sweares by this fruit of the holy Ghost which is ioy and peace even the peace of God which passeth all understanding which he found in his heart by the meanes of Christ Iesus who maketh our ioy to be full who is the fountaine of ioy swearing by this he sweares by the chiefe iewell of salvation which is the penny that Christ had given him as an earnest as a pawne and gage of his love Out of this that he saith Our reioycing observe I beseech you the wondrous temper of a Christian how he is composed of strange extreame contraries of death and life of sorrow and joy of peace and war There is nothing in the world that can be imagined so contrary as be the severall parts of a Christian mans constitution Upon this ground the holy Apostle goeth 2 Cor 4. 2 Cor. 4.8 c. where he makes the definition of a Christian after the same manner Saith he we are indeed oppressed and persecuted but yet not crushed altogether we are as men dead and yet behold we live poore and yet making many rich as having nothing and yet we possesse all things This is that marvellous mixture that God hath appointed his children to come to that they should be conformable to the sufferings of Christ and so be in death and yet that they should revive againe by the spirit of God and so no man be lesse in death being alway in life and having the certaine pledge and pawne of life eternall As for the men of this world the sonnes of flesh and bloud when they thinke themselves most lively then are they most deepely in death every thing worketh against them the stormes of Gods wrath attend them and worke upon their consciences at some time or other such fearefull deaths as out of which they can make no evasion or escape But with the children of God it is contrary when they are in the middest of death they are in the height of life 2 Cor. 4.16 As the Apostle saith Although our outward man dye daily and is corrupted yet the inward man is renewed and revived by the spirit of Christ So in all the passages of their life where death seemes to have the greatest sway and predominancie even there is life abundantly over death and the roote of life shall at length eate out the fruit of death And although death make a flourish for a time upon the Saints of God yet because there is a root of life it shall still grow and bud and bring forth at length that death may be swallowed up into victory 1 Cor. 15.54 In all things the children of God have full contentment in this life although they be in the middest of death This is the great miracle that God doth in the world Every holy man is a wonder every good man is a miracle like the children of Israel Exod. 14.22 that walked through the deepe where there was never way knowne before like the three children in the furnace Dan. 3.25 that walked in the middest of the fire as if they had beene in a pleasant Medow like the Israelites and all their cattell that passed over Iordan Acts 16.25 like Paul and Sylas singing at midnight in chaines and fetters in prison A miraculous spectacle to God and men which drawes the eyes of Ang●●s to the contemplation of it For in sicknesse a Christian is full of the saving health of God In persecution he is full of quiet and contentment of the holy Ghost In prison he is full of Psalmes and spirituall Songs as were Paul and Sylas When he is bound in shackles he is free and expedite and loose As the Apostle saith in another place though I be bound 2 Tim. 2.9 yet the word of God is not bound the Gospell of Christ is not bound In all things he is a breathing miracle of the power of God that sounds unto us as so many silver Trumpets the omnipotencie of God that makes such a correspondence and proportion betweene life and death that makes death and life dwell together in one body and yet hee will evacuate death by the power of life that life may surmount and death may be put under that at the last death may be debased and life may be advanced And in that he saith Our reioycing or your reioycing For it is not materiall whether way it is read for it is a common ioy If I reade it yours I have it if mine you have it for it is a common ioy in our common Saviour This is that which all of us confesse when we make our prayers to God we call him our Father and we call the Saviour of the world our Saviour and so we may call the spirit our comforter because this common veyne of joy it flowes and runnes
regard of this among the rest to have a care of the poore Gal. 2. Gal. 2. Wheresoever he came he did found and settle this constitution as strongly as any of the rest as that of faith so this of workes that those that had beleeved and received the Lord Christ into their hearts by faith that they should extend their hands by good workes to feed him and to minister to his members which are wanting here upon earth We have thus farre proceeded to shew what kinde of Gift or Present this was which the Apostle required it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their fruit it is the corne they yeeld the harvest which Gods children which be his fruitfull field yeeld unto him It is the shot they pay which are invited to the supper of the great King And it is not cast away upon such as are unworthy persons but bestowed upon the Saints themselves that whereas God requires that we should helpe our owne flesh whether good or bad and we should imitate our heavenly Father which makes his light to shine and his raine to fall as well upon the uniust as the iust yet the Apostle recommends unto them not the common refuse of men whereunto notwithstanding they were bound by nature but a select company of Saints and such a company as were under persecution and that the most hot and sharpe persecution and trouble that was then to be found in the world for the Church of God never suffers so ill as it suffers from it selfe all civill wars and intestine discords being the greatest plagues that can he The Church of Ierusalem having received the law and the promises and glorying in their prerogative they could not therefore indure that a new religion should come and confront theirs and put that out of place but they sought by all meanes to beat it downe againe and by consequent no man could lift up his head but presently there were letters from the high Priests and Elders to cast him into prison to thrust that light under a bushell which God had set upon a Candlesticke to give light to the whole house And againe there was another cause of it by reason of the famine which Agabus prophecied of in the end of Caligula his reigne for which cause the Church of God made provision against that time of famine and scarcity Now the quantity that they should give it is not set downe but it is left to every mans disposition for the Church of God will not make charity compulsive but leaves it to the free-will in it selfe that it may be the more gratious and the better accepted with God but look whatsoever God had prospered them withall according as God had blessed them according as he had given them a good voyage in the affaires of the world according to that hee should not scant and balk the Lord but he that had received much should give much and he that had received little should give of that little according to the quantity and proportion so that was left to the conscience of every man And that this collection should be done in private that every man should lay up by himselfe by himselfe because there were no officers appoynted as then in the Church or because he might be defeated of it by trusting of others or because some had so little that they durst not bring it every weeke being so small but were to lay it up by them that many littles might make a mickle therefore they were to keep it till it might be a convenient summe that it might carry some shew with it in regard of this the Apostle bids them lay up by themselves And they must lay it up as a Treasure for as much as the Lord accounted of that in heaven he tooke account of that in heaven which they layd forth in earth and it was a treasure to them that when they should come to faile to faile of this life when they should come to dye when no friend should help and rescue them from the hand of death they may have some treasure in heaven that when they came into a strange country they might finde some treasure there they might have a banke there to give them refreshing As when a man is outed in England when he is outlawed or banished if hee can make an escape and can have a banke at Venice or at Amsterdam and can goe to his friends there and have somewhat laid up for him in trusty hands he is as well there almost as he is here So the Lord compares the passages of this life to those of a better life but we cannot deny nor doubt but that we shall be infinitely farre better there then we are here but yet we are loath to part with this habitation we would faine keepe this tabernacle of the body as long as we could although it be with hard conditions Now the Lord tels us to incourage us in our journey that all our good works all our Almes-deeds are sent before as a treasure they are laid up as a stocke of money in a faithfull hand not in a mountebankes hand but in the trusty hand of God which will repay us againe and will repay us with interest he that gives to the poore lends to the Lord upon interest so it is called in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Thesaurus a treasure to lay up treasure to lay up for to morrow to lay up for the time to come thus farre we proceeded Now we come to the next point in the Text The time of the collection which is what day what time he chooseth out for the setting apart of this portion of those that offered to the Lord and to his poore Saints and that is noted here to be the first day of the weeke Secondly wee are to note the incentives reasons and arguments to moove them to this because charity and the workes of charity are not easily perswaded men must be drawne to them by very attractive and forcible reasons and arguments such as may win though not constraine and force their piety His first argument is this the common example for these things we must propound them diversly and otherwise then they lye in the Text for order sake and for method of teaching For those things that are first in the Text are not alway first in order of time nor in order of teaching how will he therfore winne the Corinthians to give unto strange poore when they had enow of their owne he tels them there is an example for it the Churches of Galatia As I have ordained in the Churches of Galatia so doe ye As if he should say I bring no new matter among you I put no burthen upon you which is not generall and common in all the Churches your brethren have gone before in other Countries which are poorer men and weaker every way in their fortunes then you therefore that which they doe which are poorer and more unable