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A15673 A glasse for the godly Contayning many comfortable treatises to perswade men from the loue of this world, to the loue of the world to come, and exhorting them with cherefulnes to passe through the crosses and afflictions of this life. Full of spirituall comfort for all such as hope to be saued by Iesus Christ. The first [-second] part. By R:W: minister of Gods word. Wolcomb, Robert, b. 1567 or 8. 1612 (1612) STC 25941; ESTC S121029 292,196 642

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iourney except he trauell forward continually We must goe to heauen and the iourney is long for we must ouercome many tentations and kéepe many commaundements and doe many good workes and endure many tribulations before we can come thither The time for trauelling to heauen is this life whose daies are short and we cannot be sure of to morrowe Why then doe we loyter in the waie Nay why doe we slumber When there are many impediments in our waie as when it is hard to finde or théeues lye in ambush or the passage is rough and vneasie is it not néedefull that the Traueller should walke so much the more spéedily In the path of life there are many trials many conteruailes of Sathan many difficulties therefore we must neuer loyter but hold on continually If a friend offer vnto vs the meanes whereby we may be deliuered from inconueniences doth not he abuse his friend that neglects those meanes God daily affoordes vs his grace by meanes of which we are certainly freed from the daunger of leesing our soules and shall we abuse the long suffering of God in not apprehending the grace and fauour of the Almightie At a word is not he to be blamed iustly that omits the opportunitie and iust occasion to obtaine any thing It is vsually said that time and tide tarrie for none And Ausonius thus describes the statue and representation of Occasion and opportunitie which P●●dias carued that she stoode on a wheele to shew her rowling inconstancie that she had wings on her féete to shew her ha●tie departure that she had a lo●ke of haire on her forehead to shew how hardly she can be discerned and that she must be apprehended when she offers her selfe that the hinder part of her head was bald to shew that she could not be caught if she were once escaped and that her companion is Repentance to shew that sorrowe waits on those as a due portion that reiect iust occasion of doing good when it is offred vnto them Apelles the famous painter was wont to complaine that he had lost that day in which he had drawne no line and shall not the godly be grieued if they haue spent a day without procéeding and profiting in godlines and in the feare of God One saies that we must chiefly be héedfull of two times the morning and the euening that is we must consider what we will doe and what we haue done for so we shall in good sort both dispose our time and order our dutie And therefore Catoes manner was to repeat in the Euening what he had done séene or read in the day before and to recall himselfe to an account not onely for his busines but for his leisure The wise man fully perceiued that time is most pretious and the losse of time vnrecouerable Which thing if all men would consider the sharpe reprehension of the graue Censurer of depraued manners should not be renued in our age when he saies That we haue not little time Sen. but we leese much time that we receiue not a short life but make it short that we want not life but are wastfull of life and that whereas men are sparing in keeping their patrimony when they come to losse of time they are most prodigall in that in which couetousnesse and pinching deserues commendation If we must thinke all time lost wherein we haue not thought of God as Bernard saies when we call our selues to a reckoning how slender a part of our life shall we finde imparted on God how few houres spent in his seruice how rare the thoughts directed and erected towards Heauen Let many carefully recount what they haue thought spoken done in the day what shall they sée but innumerable wicked vnbridled thoughts idle words redounding neither to the profite of the speaker nor hearer backbitings slaunders lyings blasphemies swearings and a whole haruest of vanitie and iniquitie Indéed all our life is the time appointed of God for the laying hold on his grace which bringeth saluation vnto beléeuers but let vs suppose euery day to be our last day and this time to be the accepted time and this day to be the day of saluation and then we will in no case permit this time of grace to slip and slide away and we shall performe the Prophets exhortation Esai 55.6.7 Seeke ye the Lord while he may be found call ye vpon him while he is neere let the wicked forsake his waies and the vnrighteous hi● owne imaginations and returne vnto the Lord and he will haue mercie vpon him and to our God for he is very readie to forgiue Wherefore let vs not curiously prie into other mens actions but descend euery man into his owne soule and sée how we haue laboured in Gods vineyard And that we may be the willinger to worke in the vineyard and to employ the talents with which we are entrusted to the glorie of our Maister Christ and the edifying of his elect let vs haue an eye to that wages and pennie which shall be paied vnto vs in the Euening when this transitorie and wretched life is ended And what is that pēnie It is eternal life it is our Masters ioy it is the glorie of heauen it is the wiping away of all teares it is the resting from all labors it is the end of sorrowe sicknes trouble care hatred anger it is the beginning perpetuall enioying of true pleasure ioy blessednes Austen saith excellently Soliloq c. 21. If thou O Lord hast ordained for this base corruptible body so great and so many blessings from the heauen aire the earth the sea the light and darkenes the heate and shadow the deaw and shewers the wind and raine the birds and fishes the beasts and trées and the varietie of hearbs plants which successiuely serue our turnes ease our tedious loathing what maner how great infinite are those good things which thou hast prepared for those that loue thée in that heauēly countrie where we shall sée thée face to face If thou bestowe so great things on vs now being in prison what wilt thou bestowe vpō vs when we are in the Palace If thou giue vs such comforts pledges of thy loue in the day of teares what wilt thou giue vs on the mariage day If thy gifts are so infinite diuerse which thou impartest both on thy friends and enemies how swéete and delectable shall those be which thou wilt bestowe vpon thy friends alone And elsewhere he saith Enarrat in Psal 85. ô my brethren thinke on and consider the good things which God giueth to sinners and by them vnderstand what he kéepeth for his seruants God giueth the heauen and the earth God giueth fountaines fruits health children plentie abundance to sinners that doe blaspheme him daily He that giueth these things to sinners what must we suppose doth he reserue for his faithfull people This hath béene the wisedome of the Saints when
they haue séene the beautie and brauerie of this world not to be bewitched and beguiled therwith but thereby to climbe vp as it were by staires and steps to the contemplation of the happines of that other world As it is reported of Fulgentius when he fled the persecution of the Arrians and soiourned at Rome and when he sawe the glorie of the citie and Senate of Rome that he spake thus to the companions of his exile How beautifull may the heauenly Ierusalem be if earthly Rome doe so shine and if in this world there be giuen such dignitie and honour to those that loue vanitie and errour what honour and glory shall be giuen in heauen to the Saints that loue veritie and vertue It is too apparant how gréedily we doe gape after earthly treasure and fading riches which is either lost by shipwracke or cōsumed by fire or stolne by théeues or taken away by fraude and oppression or corrupted and empaired by rust canker and long space of time or at last left behind in death But how backward and vnwilling are we to labour for the riches and wealth that neuer decaieth Wherein we forget why God hath placed the mettals which we so much estéem in the bowels and entrailes of the earth and hath displayed the face and cope of heauen where the true treasure is stored vp namely because we should not so gréedily séeke and search for the one but thirst and long after the other Neither hath he onely laid open the heauen to our view and fight that we might alway remember the maker thereof and for what place we were ordained after the race of mortalitie is finished but whereas other creatures are so formed that they bend downward to the earth God hath giuen to men a shape erected and lifted vp toward heauen that they may more easily contemplate heauenly and spirituall things When Anaxagoras was asked for what purpose he thought himselfe to be borne he said It was to behold the Heauen and Sunne Which spéech though otherwise men haue much admired Instit l. 3. c. 9. yet Lactantius laughed at it affirming that he brake foorth into these words not knowing what true answere to yéeld and that if a man indéed with wisedome indéed should be demanded why he was borne he would answere presently that he was created to serue God his Creator Psal 19.1 Rom. 1.20 But with Lactantius fauor doth not the Maiestie of God cléerely shine in the outward beautie of the heauen and doth not the heauen declare and proclaime his glorie and doth not God as it were stretch out his hand to lift vs vp from groueling on the ground to behold the fairenes of his worke and thereby also to extoll his power wisedome goodnes and mercy Wherefore we must blush to beare a crooked minde in a straight body and to suffer our soule to wallowe in dirte and drosse of the earth whose conuersation should be in heauen and which was created for heauenly and diuine things Heauen then is the pennie giuen for working in the Lords vineyard and that we may be diligēt in that working let vs fixe our minds in the consideration of the celestiall and new Ierusalem where that pennie of immortalitie shall be deliuered vs whose Ruler King is the sacred Trinitie whose lawe is perfect charitie whose walls are of Iasper and the citie pure gold like to cleere glasse Reu. 21.18.21 Reu. 22.1.2 Heb. 12.22 1. Cor. 13.12.13 1. Pet. 2.24 whose gats are pearles and euery gate is of one pearle whose inhabitants are Angels the Spirits of iust perfect men where is the pure riuer of water of life the tree of life and where all vnperfect things shall be done away we shal no more see darkely through a glasse but cleerely face to face shall knowe God as we are knowne Of all which good things Christ Iesus the Shepheard Bishop of our soules who his owne selfe bare our sinnes on his body on the tree that we being dead to sinne should liue in righteousnesse and by whose stripes we were healed make vs euerlasting beholders possessors for his endles incomprehensible goodnes and mercies sake that at last as the marriner after surging stormes quietly arriues in the harbor and the patient after drinking of a bitter medicine obtaines health and the souldiour after brunts in the battell is rewarded by his Captaine so we diligently continually walking in our calling and in the narrow way to life may in the end be partakers of the end of this way which is endles ioy blessednesse and may rest in the kingdome of Christ with the Patriarks Prophets Apostles Martyrs and Saints of all ages Amen HYPOCRISIE VNMASKED Matt. 22. 11. Then the King came in to see the guests and sawe there a man which had not on a wedding garment 12. And he said vnto him Friend how camest thou in hither hast not on a wedding garment And he was speechles 13. Then said the king to the seruants bind him hand and foote take him away and cast him into vtter darkenes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth THe name of a Christian is deriued from Christ our Sauiour signifieth a scholler of Christ one that followes the precepts life of Christ and one that hath fellowship with Christ and is engraft into Christ But as the Apostle saith of the Iewes Rom. 9.16 that all they are not Israell that are of Israell so it may be said truely that all are not Christians in déede that beare the Name of Christ For there are two sorts of Christians the one appearing and séeming the other right and true They are onely seeming Christians that are baptized and are of the outward congregation and professe Christ yet without true conuersion and repentance that is they are dissembling Hypocrites and christians but in tongue Of these séeming Christians our Sauiour saith Many are called but few chosen Matt. 20.16 They are right and true christians who are not only baptized and professe the Faith of Christ but also are indued with a liuely Faith doe declare the same by fruits of Repentance and by faith are made the members of Christ and partakers of his anointing that is by Faith and the holy Ghost 1. Ioh. 2.27 who is signified by the name of annoynting true christians are ioyned to Christ and engraft into him euen as a branch is fastned to the stocke and a member knit to the head whereby wee are made partakers of his iuyce and of his life and being truely made one with him do bring forth fruits worthy of our calling All true Christians are appearing christians For Christ saith Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen Iam. 2.18 And S. Iames saith Shew me thy faith out of thy works and I will shewe thee my faith
him Iam. 4.4 for the amitie of the world is the enimitie of God and whosoeuer will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemie of God Let vs remember that wee are in the latter end of the world And therefore they that haue wiues 1 Cor. 7.29.30.31 must be a● though they had none and they that weepe as though they wept not and they that reioyce as though they reioyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not and they that vse this world as though they vsed it not for the fashion of this world goeth away that is let vs not fixe and tie our affections on earthly things Heb. 13. ●4 For we haue h●ere no continuing Citie but wee seeke one to come but let vs hunger and th●rst after ●ighteousness● that we may be filled with eternall blessednesse through our Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus Amen KNOW THIS THAT GOD WILL bring thee to iudgement Luk. 21.36 Watch therfore and pray continually that ye may be counted worthie to escape all these things that shall come to passe and that ye may stand before the Sonne of man WHen our Sauiour had shewed the terriblenesse of that last and great day wherein hee will come to iudge all flesh and to giue to euery one after his doings hee exhorts all men to haue these things in continuall remembrance that they may attaine to eternall blessednes escape euerlasting wretchednes For they that are drawne from sinne neither by the loue of God nor the desire of heauenly blessings nor by the embracing and following of vertue yet if they giue héede to that they heare they must néedes be terrified and consequently something refrained from euill by the expectation and looking for of this dreadfull iudgem●nt And therefore our Sauiour propounds this as a meane● to reclaime obdurate and obstinate offenders and concludes the fearefull description of the day of doome with this admonition Watch therfore and pray continually that ye may be counted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to passe and that wee may stand before the Sonne of man And that which in this Euangelist is spoken briefely in Saint Matthew is expounded and amplified more largely where Christ saith Watch therefore Matt. 24.42 c. for ye knowe not what houre your Maister will come Of this be sure that if the good man of the house knewe at what watch the theefe would come hee would surely watch and not suffer his house to be digged through therefore be yee also readie for in the houre that yee thinke not will the sonne of man come Who then is a faithfull seruant and wise whom his Maister hath made ruler ouer his household to giue them meate in season Blessed is that seruant whom his Maister when he commeth shall finde so doing Verily I say vnto you he shall make him ruler ouer all his goods But if that euill seruant shall say in his heart my Maister doth deferre his comming begin to smite his fellowes and to eate and to drinke with the drunken that seruants Maister will come in a day when he looketh not for him and in an houre that he is not ware of and will cut him off and giue him his portion with hypocrites there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Likewise our Sauiour saith in S. Marke Take heede watch and pray Mar. 13.33.34 c. for ye know not when the time is For the Sonne of man is as a man going into a strange countrey and leaueth his house and giueth authoritie to his seruants and to ●uery man his worke and commandeth the porter to watch Watch yee therefore for yee know not when the Maister of the house will come at euen or at midnight at the cocke crowing or in the dawning least if he come suddenly he should finde you sleeping And those things that I say vnto you I say vnto all men Watch. Now to the end we may be the more prepared and the more watchfull and the more earnest in praier let vs weigh with our selues first the dreadfulnes of the last iudgement secondly why the day thereof is not knowne thirdly whereunto the expectation and remembrance thereof is profitable 1. The dreadfulnes of the last iudgement The fearefulnes of the last iudgement the Lord describes in the foregoing words when he saith Then there shall be signes in the Sunne and in the Moone and in the Starres and vpon the earth trouble among the nations with perplexitie the sea and the waters shall roare and mens hearts shall faile them for feare and for looking after those things which shall come on the world Luk. 21.25.26.27 for the powers of heauen shall be shaken and then shall they see the Sonne of man come in a cloud with power and great glorie Thus also it is expressed in Saint Matthew Matt. 24. ●9 30.31 And immediately after the tribulation of those daies shall the Sunne be darkened and the Moone shall not giue her light and the Starres shall fall from heauen and the powers of heauen shall be shaken And then shall appeare the signe of the Sonne of man in heauen and then shall all the kinreds of the earth mourne and they shall see the Sonne of man come in the clouds of heauen with power and great glorie And he shall send his Angels with a great sound of a trumpet and they shall gather together his elect from the fower windes and from the one end of the heauens vnto the other The substance of Christs words is this that then all Elements and heauenly bodies shall both suffer strangely in themselues to affright the wicked and shall also work strangely on the wicked by casting vpon them diuerse torments as well of soule as of body and that all Creatures aboue and beneath shall be cryers and trumpetters to summon men before that horrible Tribunall seate which because they haue contemned therefore they haue persisted still in all vngodlines How the Sun shall be darkened the Moone shall not giue her light and the starres shall fall from heauen and the powers of heauen shall be shaken and the sea and floods shall roare in such ghastly sort that men shall be readie to yeeld vp the ghost through feare and anguish At this time we canno● coniecture but the euent it selfe will declare and though the manner thereof be not knowne to vs yet to God it is well knowne But howsoeuer it shall be because the vse of the scripture is by the darkening of the Sunne Moone and Starres and by the like things as Christ héere foretels to discipher and signifie the extreame stormes and tempests of Gods wrath vengeance therefore those threatning predictions in the old Prophets may be applied to the last day of Iudgement in which they prophesie that the world shal be in such anguish perplexitie as that men shal thinke the Sun to be darkened the Moone to be bloodie the Sars
to léese their brightnes the earth to tremble the Sea to roare and all things else to manace a present ruine not as if it were so indéed but because men shall be so straitned as that they shall thinke it is so And because those notable reuengements of God on the Babylonians Tyrians Egyptians Iewes other nations were as it were paintings out of the great day of iudgement and forerunners thereof we may fitly apply vnto that day such descriptions as the Prophets haue made of those reuengements Behold then what Isaiah saith speaking of the punishment of the Babylonians Behold the day of the Lord commeth Isa 13.9 c. cruell with wrath and fierce anger to lay the land waste and he shall destroy the sinners out of it for the stars of heauen and the planets thereof shall not giue their light the Sunne shall be darkened in his going f●rth and the Moone shall not cause her light to shine Therefore I will saith the Lord shake the heauen and the earth shall moue out of her place in the wrath of the Lord of hoasts and in the day of his fierce anger and it shall be as a chased Doe and as a sheepe that no man taketh vp and I will visite the wickednes vpō the world and their iniquitie vpon the wicked and I will cause the arrogancie of the proud to cease and will cast downe the pride of tyrants Behold againe what the same Prophet saith speaking of the punishment of all vngodly enemies of the Lords Church Isai 34.1.2 c. Come neere yee nations and heare and hearken ye people let the earth heare and all that is therein the world and all that proceedeth thereof for the indignation of the Lord is vpon all nations and his wrath vpon all their armies he hath destroyed them and deliuered them to the slaughter and their slaine shall be cast out and their stinke shall come vp out of their bodies and the mountaines shall be melted with their blood and all the hoast of heauen shall be dissolued and the heauens shall be folden like a Booke and all their hoasts shall fall as the leafe falleth from the vine and as it falleth from the figge tree Behold againe what Ezekiel saith Ezek. 32.4 c. speaking of the punishment of Egypt I will leaue thee vpon the land saith the Lord God and I will cast thee vpon the open field and I will cause all the foules of the heauen to remaine vpon thee and I will fill all the beasts of the field with thee and I will lay thy flesh vpon the mountaines and fill the vallies with thine heigth I will also water with thy blood the land wherein thou swimmest euen to the mountaines and the riuers shall be full of thee and when I shall put thee out I will couer the heauen and make the starres thereof darke I will couer the Sunne with a cloud and the moone shall not giue her light all the lights of heauen will I make darke for thee and bring darkenes vpon thy land saith the Lord God Behold againe what the Prophet Ioel saith speaking of the plagues that should light vpō the Iewes Ioel. 2.1.2.31 Blowe the trumpet in Zyon and shoute in mine holy mountaine let all the inhabitants of the land tremble for the day of the Lord is come for it is at hand a day of darkenes and of blacknes a day of clouds and obscuritie the Sunne shall be turned into darkenes and the Moone into blood When we behold these and the like spéeches let vs suppose that they are foretellings of the last iudgement When the Psalmist saith The God of Gods euen the Lord hath spoken and called the earth from the rising vp of the Sunne Psal 50.1.3.4 vnto the going downe thereof our God shall come and shall not keepe silence a fire shall deuour before him and a mightie tempest shall be moued round about him he shall call the heauen aboute Zephan 1.14 c. the earth to iudge his people When the Prophet Zephania saith The great day of the Lord is neere it is neere and hasteth greatly euē the voyce of the day of the Lord the strong man shall crye there bitterly that day is a day of wrath a day of trouble heauines a day of destruction desolation a day of obscuritie darkenes a day of clouds and blackenes a day of the trumpet alarme against the strong cities and against the high towers and I will bring distresse vpon men saith the Lord that they shall walke like blind men because they haue sinned against the Lord and their blood shall be powred out as dust and their flesh as the dongue neither their siluer nor their gold shal be able to deliuer them in the day of the Lords wrath but the whole land shal be deuoured by the fire of his iealousie for he shall make euen a speedie riddance of thē that dwell in the land When the Prophet Daniel saith I behold Dan. 7.9.10 till the thrones were set vp and the ancient of daies did sit whose garment was white as snowe and the haire of his head like the pure wooll his throne was like the fiery flame his wheeles as burning fire a firie streame issued came foorth from before him thousand thousands ministred vnto him and ten thousand thousands stood before him the iudgement was set the bookes opened When these things are spoken what else is it but that the Diuine saith And I sawe a great white throne Reu. 20.11.12.13 and one that sate on it from whose face fled away both the earth heauen and their place was no more found and I sawe the dead both great small stand before God the bookes were opened another Booke was opened which is the booke of life and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes according to their workes And the sea gaue vp her dead which were in her and death and hell deliuered the dead which were in them and they were iudged euery man according to their workes This is the second comming of Christ much differing from his first comming For in his first comming he appeared humble in the shape of a seruant in his second cōming he shall appeare stately in the shape of the King of Kings and Iudge of all in his first cōming he was subiect to reproach in his second comming he shall shine in glorie in his first cōming he appeared weake in his secōd comming he shall appeare in heauenly power in his first comming he did vndergoe the iudgement and condemnation of the reprobate in his second comming he shall iudge and condemne all the wicked and reprobate In his first comming he fought like little Dauid against Goliah without worldly furniture in his second comming he will descend like armed and angrie Dauid 1. Sam. 25 21.22 against vnthankefull Nabal and will say as Dauid said
such death and tribulations are not a reproach vnto them but a thing glorious in Gods sight and pleasing vnto him Rom. 5.3 Therefore the Apostle saieth That we reioyce in Tribulations That is we iudge afflictions to be a glorious thing which God will after chaunge into glorie and this is the peculiar wisdome of the Church which the world perceiueth not Lastly hee affirmeth that there remaines a life and iudgement after the death of the bodie For if the death of the godlie be not neglected of God but is pretious in his sight and on the contrarie * Mors impiorum pessima vulgata translatio ex Graeco Psal 6.8 If the death of the vngodly bee euill there must néedes remaine a iudgement wherein this shall bee made manifest to all Tyrants shall receiue punishment for their crueltie but the godly shall be ●dorned w th eternall glorie For if God number the teares of the faithfull and put them into a Bottell Ps 34.21 How can he suffer the blood that is shed for the confession of his diuine Name to perish and vanish away to nothing Doest thou quake and tremble at the remembrance of that horrible day 2. Pet. 3.10 in which the Heauens shall passe away with a noyse and the Elements shall melte with heate and the earth with the workes that are therein shal be burnt vp Bee of good comfort For thy Iudge is also thy Sauiour he is thy Brother he is thy head and thou a member of his bodie Hee loues thée most ardently hee is thy Iesus That is SAVIOVR Patrone Aduocate Redeemer Intercessor Hee layed downe his life for thée Ioh. 5.24 He hath sworne with an oath that if thou belieue in him thou shalt haue eternall life He maketh request for thée and who shall condemne thée He cōmeth to finish the troubles of the World and to auenge himselfe of his enemies and to deliuer the godly from the hands of sinners and he commeth not to condemne thée but to absolue thée and not to torture thée but to rid thée from all miserie and to make manifest thy full Redemption and to frée thy bodie also from all calamities to performe that promise of eternall life which so often he hath made vnto thée in his sacred word For he that heareth his word belieueth God that sent him hath euerlasting life shall not come into condemnation but hath passed frō death to life Therefore as Christ saith Surely Reu. 22.20 I come quickly So thou mayest say with the Euangelist Amen euen so come Lord Iesus It is for the wicked that haue no part in Christ to tremble and be dismaied at the very mention of the great day For what haue they to doe with it Amos. 5.18.19.10 the day of the Lord is as darknes and not light as if a man did flie from a Lyon a Beare met him or went into the house and leaned his hand on the wall and a Serpent bit him shall not the day of the Lord to the wicked be darknes not light euen darknes and no light in it Zach. 9.9 But the Prophet Zachariah bids the Daughter of Zyon to reioyce for the comming of her King And vpon good reason Isai 35.4 for as another Prophet testifieth The same day that brings wrath vengeance to the vngodlie brings a recompence and saluation to the godly For which cause the holie Apostle Paul sets this downe for a marke of the faithfull by which they may be knowne Namely 1. Cor. 1.7 2. Tim. 4.8 that they wayre for the appearing of CHRIST and loue his comming Therefore if we shall happē to liue at such time as Christ shall come to Iudgement against the beholding of those ghastly signes which shall be ioyned with his Cōming we must cōfort our selues with Christs promise that then our Redemption draweth neere that is that he will take vs to himselfe into heauen finally deliuer vs from all miseries In the meane time let vs belieue with the Apostle That there is layed vp for vs the crowne of righteousnes which the Lorde the righteous Iudge shall giue vs at that day not to vs only but vnto all them that loue that his appearing And when we sée the clowds of the Heauen let vs be admonished of these things For as when Christ Ascended Act. 1.11 a clowde tooke him out of sight and as Christ shall so come againe euen as he was takē vp that is in the clowds 2. Thess 4.17 so the clowds shall as a Charret to lift vs vp to eternal glorie and we shal be rapt vp into the clowdes to meete the Lorde in the Aire Psal 20.3 c. When we heare the Thunder which is the terrible and mightie voice of God let vs suppose that we heare the lowde voice of the high Iudge pronouncing the Sentence both of the shéepe and goates When wee sée the swift and bright and sudden flashes and flakes of lightning Let them call to our mindes the sudden and vnexpected and * Epipháneian 2. Tim. 4.8 cleere and perspicuous comming and appearing of the supreme Iudge For as the lightening that lighteneth out of the one part vnder heauen shineth vnto the other part vnder Heauen so shall the Sonne of man be in his day Luk. 17.24 And since these things must be so For heauen and earth shall passe and be changed but the word of the Lorde abideth for euer what manner persons ought wee to be in holy conuersation godlines looking for and hasting vnto the cōming of that day of God by which the heauens being on fire 2. Pet. 3.11.12.13.14 shal be dissolued the Elements shall melte with heate But we looke for new Heauens and a newe Earth according to his promise wherein dwelleth righteousnes Wherefore seeing we looke for such things Let vs be diligent that wee may bee found of him in peace without spot and blameles Let vs take heed to our selues Luk. 21.34 least at any time our hearts be oppressed with surfetting and drunkennes and cares of this life and least that day come on vs at vnawares There are thrée Robes and Garments belonging to a true Christian The first is a Purple robe the second is a white robe the third is a golden robe If we will attaine to true happines and holines Iude. vers 23. wee must cast off our owne polluted rags and denie our selues and we must put on these rich pretious garments First we must be arraied in a purple garment dyed and dipped in the blood of the Sonne of God That is Gal. 3.27 wee must fréely receiue forgiuenes of sinnes and be reconciled to GOD through CHRIST and Faith in his blood and this is our Iustification Next Rom. 13.13 wee must be clothed with a white robe That is it becomes vs to be renued in the spirit of our mind and to serue God in holines and
according to his labour writes on this sort I will say a thing which may seeme to excéed the opinion of many but it shall not excéed the truth Although a man shall doe some worthy and couragious thing In epist ad Olymp. and yet without labour and danger he shall receiue no great reward For euery man shall receiue his owne wages according to his labour not according to the greatnes of the worke but according to the qualitie of the labour and suffering And he proues this by examples out of the scriptures For Paul glorieth not 2. Cor. 12. Iob. 1.1 27.6 but in his infirmities and tribulations Iob before his calamities which he suffered was a iust man and righteous and that feared God and of wonderfull godlines for his heart reprooued him not for his daies past But all this Sathan accused and said Doth Iob feare God for nought Iob. 1.9.10 hast not thou O God made an hedge about him and about his house about all that he hath on euery side But when he had lost al that he had and was striken with grieuous boyles and yet retained patience Sathan departed and could cauil and wrangle no more against him Lastly saith he Christ Our Lord bare in his glorious body the marks and scars of his wounds carried them into heauen for none other cause but to teach vs that the worke of his passion farre surpassed in dignitie all his other workes miracles For as odours doe disperse their swéete smell farther when they are mooued so the vertues of the godly being stirred by patience yéeld foorth a more acceptable sauour both to God and men Therefore that Christs word may dwell in vs we must haue an honest and good heart and we must heare the word and we must heare and kéepe the word and we must bring foorth fruit with patience Wherefore since the word of God is so beneficiall and profitable for vs and must be heard after this manner let vs all beseech our heauenly father that we may be partakers of that inestimable commoditie of the scriptures and may be right and worthy hearers readers and kéepers thereof Art thou young Let the word of Christ dwell in thée plenteously for if a child be taught in the trade of godlines Pro. 22.6 he will not depart from it Psal 119.9 when he is olde And wherewith shall a young man redresse his way but in taking héed thereto according to Gods word and Timothie knowing the scriptures from a child 2. Tim. 3.15 1. Tim. 4.6 and being nourished vp in the words of faith and of good doctrine did continually followe it Art thou old Let the word of Christ dwell in thée plenteously for it will teach thée to repent for thy former sinnes to bewaile the vanities of the world to prepare for thy dissolution to fixe thy faith on Christ Iesus who hath ordained a Mansion for thée in heauen and therefore to say with old Symeon Lord Luk. 2.29.30 now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes haue seene thy saluation Art thou vertuous and a louer of the word Let the word of Christ dwell in thée plenteously let vs be led forward to perfection Heb. 6.1 let vs followe the direction of the scripture till we come to heauen Matt. 2. ● as the wiseman trauelled by the leading of the Starre till they came to Christ The kingdome of God is compared to a graine of musterd seede Matt. 13.31 which at the first is the least of all séedes but when it is sowne it becomes first an hearbe then the greatest of hearbes then a tree then the birdes make nests in the branches thereof so the godly must procéede from the séede of godlines to the hearbe of godlines from the hearbe to the trée from the trée to branches so great that birdes may make nests in them that is their fruits and good workes must be so manifest that others may be brought to the feare of the Lord by their president When Eliah was gone a daies iourney in the wildernes and sate and slept vnder a Iuniper trée Gods Angell cald vpon him vp and eate and when he slept againe the Angell the second time cald vpon him 1. King 19.5.6.9.13.15 vp and eate for thou hast a great iourney and when he had trauelled 40. daies and was lodged in a caue the Lord cald vpon him what doest thou heere Eliah and when he was brought foorth to the mount the Lord said vnto him What doest thou héere Eliah goe and returne by the wildernes vnto Damascus and doe thus and thus So when we are entered into the way of life we must vp and eate and strengthen our selues first with milke then with stronger meate we must walke from vertue to vertue we must remember that we haue a great iourney to goe we must alwaies thinke that euery blessing of God bestowed vpon vs is a farther calling and prouocation to godlines and that we heare a voyce that cals vs forward thou hast yet a greater iourney to goe what doest thou héere Eliah Art thou vitious yet labour and desire that the word of Christ may dwell in thee plenteously and hearken attentiuely to the word and thou shalt see the admirable efficacie thereof If Polemon a drunken and intemperate young man when he rushed with his complices into Xeno●rates schoole Laert. lib. 4. after a contemptuous sort were so altered by the Oration of the Philosopher that afterward he embraced sobrietie much more can the doctrine of Christ dutifully and héedefully heard mooue a sinner to renounce wickednes When the chiefe Priests and Pharises had sent messengers to take Iesus as he was preaching to the people the messengers tar●ying till he had ended his sayings not with a purpose to learne but to entrap him in his words were so pricked in heart and changed that they returned without doing their message and being asked why they had not brought Iesus Ioh. 7.46 Confess l. 5. c. 13. 14. they aunswerad neuer man spake like this man Saint Austen reports of himselfe that being yet polluted with the errour of the Manichet hearing Ambrose preaching not with an intent to beléeue his doctrine but with a purpose to marke his eloquence though he contemned the matter and was delighted with the words onely yet with the words which he loued there came to his minde also the things which he neglected and when he opened his heart to consider quàm disertè diceret pariter intrabat quàm verè diceret how eloqently he spake it entered also into his minde how truely he spake Therefore since the hearkening to the word brings such profite though it shew thy vanities and spots and faults and imperfections yet despise it not nor throwe it away from thée as the Ape when he beholds his deformitie in the glasse doth throw it from him and seekes by all meanes to breake
that the infirmitie is expelled the Patient cased so God workes in vs by his grace vt peccatum consumatur homo liberetur that sinne is consumed and we set at libertie to the end we may fréely serue the Lord in holines righteousnes all the daies of our life Or else the Kingdome of God in this place may be taken for the kingdome of glorie which is the scope last ende of all the godlie and vnto which we are directed and led by the kingdome of grace For as among the Romanes Honour had a temple and Vertue had a temple but these temples were so built and scituate that none could come into the temple of Honour but hée must first passe through the temple of Vertue so there is a kingdome of grace in this life and there is a kingdome of glorie in the life to come but these two Kingdomes haue such coherence and societie betwéene themselues that none can enter into the kingdome of glorie except he walke through the kingdome of grace nor none may be a subiect in the latter except hée haue bene a subiect in the former In the kingdome of glorie there shall be perfect knowledge here wée know but in parte and sée darkely through a glasse 1. Cor. 13 9. In the kingdome of glorie shal be eternall life peace quietnes ioy and concord here our life is as a Flower our peace is soone broken our quietnes troubled our ioy molested our concorde dissolued In the kingdome of glorie is no death sorrowe wearines infirmitie hunger thirste pouertie slauerie Reu. 21.27 For no imperfection or vncleannes enter into the newe Ierusalem héere the waues of affliction and tribulation tumble one vpon the others necke as long as wee carrie about vs this bodie of death Briefly if we liue here in prosperitie yet we liue subiect to mortalitie and sicknes yet we sée but a vaine and wicked world yet we behold but mortall men and dwell but with sinfull men and conuerse but with inconstant men but in the kingdome of glorie our bodies shall be immortall the Maiestie of God shall be the obiect of our eyes Hebr. 12.22 the company of innumerable Angels and the assemblie and congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and the spirites of iust and perfect men shall be those with whom we shall continually abide and dwell What is the earth and earthly glorie compared with the glittering Pallace of heauen but an earthen and dirtie cottage of a beggar in respect of a gay gilded mansion of a Prince They that are translated out of the wretchednes of this world into the blessednes of that other worlde are like those that are exalted out of Dungeons fetters into a Royall throne of dignitie It is much to say this but when S. Iohn Chrysostome had saide it Hom. 6. ad Heb. he addes presently Sed neque sic integrè pertingere potui ad illius regni similitudinem that by this spéech he could not fully expresse the likenesse of that glorious Kingdome For in the aduancement from worldly miserie to worldly felicitie there ariseth a pleasure and great delight but after a few dayes the minde begins to be satiate with the ioy and gladnes and though it remaine in delectation yet the delectation beginnes to fade for that it is vsuall and common but in those good things which eye hath not séene nor eare hath heard nor mans heart can comprehend there is no decrease ende or change but there is an augmentation of ioy replenished with all desireable good things For as the death of the wicked may be termed euill worse and worst euill because it ends their earthly ioy Bernard in paruis sermonib ser 41. worse because it sends to tormēts worst because there is no ende of those anguishes so the death of the godly may be called good better and best good because it finisheth their miseries better because it puts into possession of happines best because there is no alteration nor feare of alteration in that happines In a word as much as the soule excels the bodie so much the ioyes of heauen surmount all the pleasantest and carest choisest delites of this fading life And this is that kingdome that Christ commands vs to seeke before all other things and who will not be desirous to attaine vnto it The Righteousnes of God which Christ bids vs to followe is that Righteousnes and holines which God in his word commaunds and allowes And these wordes The righteousnes of God are an exposition and declaration of the former namely the K ngdome of God For then God doth raigne in vs and then we are subiects of Gods kingdom when he by his holy spirit works sanctification and an earnest desire of godlines in our hearts to liue godly and holily and soberly in this present world Therefore if we will be inheritors of Gods kingdome and finde the ioyes thereof we must as obedient children not fashion our selues vnto the former lusts of our ignorance 1. Pet. 1. v 4 15. ●6 17 ●8 19 but as he which hath called vs is holie so we must be holy in all manner of conuersation because it is written Bee ye● holie for I am holie And since we call him Father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans work we must passe the time of our abiding héere in feare knowing that we were not redéemed with corruptible things as siluer and golde but with the pretious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe vndefiled and without spot And is it not reason that we should studie to please the Lord in holines Ioh. ● 16 and righteousnes and newnes of life Since God hath so loued vs that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beléeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life When thou art worne out with age or liuest in pouertie or art tossed and turmoyled with affliction and aduersitie what wouldest thou not suffer to bee made young and lustie rich and wealthie setled and quiet Christ hath promised and will performe more then all these Pr●● 25.14 Iud. 11.12 Antiochus was called Dolon because hée was wont to say that he would giue and he would reward he would pay and yet gaue and rewarded and payde nothing being like the vapour and winde that hath no Raine Hebr. 13.18 and the clowde without water but Iesus Christ is no willinger to promise then able to performe and hée is the same yesterday and to day and for euer For youth doth not so much excéede Age riches beggerie peace quietnes Nay truth doeth scarce so much excéede a dreame and the bodie a shadow and a precious iewell a clod of clay as all the brauery and pleasant delights of this world shal be truely and indéede excéeded by the glorie and ioy of heauen If any would liken the glorie of heauen to the brightnes of the Sunne yet he should say nothing
recorded in histories that the Phylosopher Heraclitus did alway wéepe for the miseries and calamities of men and that the Phylosopher Democritus did alway laugh at the follies and vanities of men If Heraclitus and Democritus were now aliue they should haue as great cause to lament the woes and to deride the follies which men procure to themselues and which they embrace as they had in the daies wherein they liued In the Poets time men refused wholesome counsell to embrace vertue chiefly and to seeke after it aboue riches and honours and they gladly consented to that corrupt lesson of the couetous chuffe O ciues ciues quaerenda pecunia primùm Horat. Epist l. 1. Epist 1. Virtus post nummos Wherein he taught that monie and coyne is first to be sought and vertuous manners and conditions afterward Are not these fashions of this age We purchase land we build houses we prouide the best foode and apparell that we can we h●●t for promotion honor and dignitie but what c●re is there for the eternall habitation and for the felicitie and good estate of the soule Neither onely in our health and youth doe we so but euen in our old yeares and in our sicknes we retaine the same custome For when we are sicke we attempt all courses and labour by all meanes of physicke to recouer health Ecclus. 38 1.2.4 and herein we doe well for physicke is from the highest and herbes and plaisters are ordained of God Ietròs gàr anèr pollôn antáxios allon Homer And therefore the learned Physitian is to be honoured for necessities sake * séeing he is to be preferred before many other men For he oftentimes restoreth health preserueth health cureth not onely apparent maladies but inward infirmities and sometimes staieth the soule in the body when it is readie to flie to breake out of it as it were out of a prison This is much but it is but the Physicke of the body and he that doth it is but a Physitian of the body Mat. 9.2 Isay 53.4 Christ is the Physitian of the soule that cureth the diseases of our mindes that bare our infirmities that sits in heauen yet heales those that are diseased on earth that is Isid de sū bono lib. 1. cap. 14. Non tantùm ostensor vulneris sed sanator not onely a searcher and declarer of the wound but also a healer and saluer thereof As Physitians of the bodie doe sometimes cure by things like and sometimes by things dislike as heate by cold things and coldnes by hoate things so Christ the Physitian of soules comming downe from heauen and finding mankind attainted with so great and many infirmities Lib. 2● ● he partly healed vs by things like saith Gregory and partly by things contrarie For he came to man in the flesh of man but he came to sinners in perfect righteousnesse and he agréed with vs in truth of humane nature but disagréed from vs in righteousnes and innocencie Magnus per totum munaum iacebat aegrotus saith Saint Austin a great Patient laye sicke throughout the whole world that is all mankind was subiect to many anguishes and griefes of bodie and soule and therefore Christ the great Physitian came by whose stripes we were healed O admirable matter and full of loue and commiseration Quòd fusus est sanguis medici factus est medicamentum phrenetici that the blood of the Physitian was shed and made the medicine to heale the Phrensie of sinners Therefore since the physick of the soule so far eclipseth the dignitie of the physicke of the body and the infirmities of the body procéede and issue from the inward corruption of the soule as from a fountaine let vs first labour to be reconciled to the Lord Ecclus. 38 9.10.11.12 c. 2. King 23.2.3 2. Chron. 16.12 and séeke to appease his anger by repentance and prayer as good King Hezekiah did let vs not repose more confidence in the Physitian of body then in the power and goodnes of God as Ala did and let vs not persist in the customarie error to seeke the Physitian before we séeke God and to respect the state of the body more then the state of the soule For whither it be not fitter to begin with the Diuine and end with the Physitian then to begin as the common vsage is with the Physitian and at last perhaps when all strength and memorie failes to come to the Diuine let all iudge that can iudge and that heare Christs commaundement Seeke first the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things shall be ministred vnto you If we must séeke first the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse then those are to be reprehended that are so much addicted and wedded to worldly gaine and commoditie that they regard not to haue their children and seruants instructed in the knowledge of Christ and of his word If our people be sick we repaire to the Physitian if they breake a bone we goe to the Surgion if naturall loue and affection moue vs we prouide nourishment cloathes and liuings for them that they may maintaine themselues in decent sort All this is but for this life which is as vnconstant as a shadowe as fugitiue as a dreame as brittle as glasse as short as a span yea as one sand of the sea-shore in comparison of the whole earth if it be compared with eternitie and shall we not be carefull to procure our children and families to be instructed in the doctrine of our Sauiour Christ whereby their vices my be reformed and they may liue as becommeth those that carrie the name of Christ and whereby they may possesse heauen for euer with Christ Some thinke euery sermon too long and all time lost that is bestowed in diligent repairing to the house of God and therefore are vnwilling to giue the seuenth day according to Gods ordinance to the worship of God though they haue sixe daies allotted to the workes of mans necessitie They will ride then confer then meditate then vpon their worldly busines or if they haue no earnest busines to exercise them they will rather passe the time or to say truth léese the time in play pastime ioyes trifles and vanities then spend the Lords day in the Lords seruice Let none be so prophane to thinke that Time lost that is employde on Gods seruice If an vnworthy seruant of Christ shall not be beleeued yet belieue Dauid a man after Gods owne heart and inspired of the Lorde who thus describes the blessednes of the man that deliteth in the law of the Lord and meditates therein day and night Psal 1.1.2 c. Namely that he shall be like a trée planted by the riuer of waters that will bring foorth her fruite in due season whose leafe shall not fade so whatsoeuer hee shall doe shall prosper But the wicked contemners of Gods lawes shall be as the chaffe which the winde driueth away they shall
by my workes But on the contrarie all appearing christians are not true christiās For to many that will say Lord Matt. 7.22 Lord haue we not by thy name prophecied by thy name cast out diuels by thy name don manie great works Christ wil thus professe I neuer knewe you depart from me yee that worke iniquitie So that the visible outward Church in this world hath good and bad hath worthy vnworthy hath elect and reprobate Matt. 13.24 Mat. 13.47 Mat. 13.3 For it is the fielde wherein there growes wheate tares and it is the draw-net which cast into the sea gathereth of all kindes of things and it is the receiuer of the séede of Gods word which sowne fell foure wayes some by the way side some vpon stony groūd some among thornes some in good ground And all this is plainely set foorth by our Sauiour in the parable of them that were called vnto the marriage Of which parable partly out of the words of Christ partly out of the circumstance of the time persons when and to whō they were spoken we may gather this to be the sense meaning The King that made a mariage for his Sonne is God the Father The Kings Sonne is Christ The mariage is the blessednes of heauen which the elect after this life shall for euer enioy with Christ The first worthier sorte that were called are the Iewes The seruāts whom the King sent are the prophets The calling to the marriage is the drawing to faith and repentāce This calling the Iews despised being giuē to the loue of earthly things many of them chiefly the rulers of the people contumeliously entreated the prophets slew them Therfore God destroied them by his hoasts warriors that is by the armies of the Romans First vnder the cōducting of Vespasian after of Titus his sonne and hée burnt vp Ierusalem their Citie with fire Afterwards reiecting the Iewes God sent the Apostles vnto the Gentiles and called thē into the place room of the Iews in whose stéed they were are and shall be vnto the ende of the world as wel good as bad that is as well elect as reprobate of whō the one are of euill made good by the holy Ghost the other are left in their natural wickednes The marriage garmēt is true holines which is of 2. sorts th' one is the holinesse of Christs sacrifice imputed vnto vs by Faith the other is an holines wrought in our mindes by the sanctification of the holie Ghost which shews it selfe by holines of life Whosoeuer are not clothed which this wedding garment shal be throwne out from the marriage into vtter darknes that is into the eternall torments of Hell and that shall bee done by the Seruants that is Gods holie Angels Therefore beeing all inuited and called to the marriage of the Kings Sonne that is to the fruition and participation of the ioyes of heauen Wée must neither contemne and refuse the abundant mercie of God that so louingly bids vs either by addicting our selues whollie to the vanitie and mucke of this world or by despising of Gods Messengers who are sent to inuite vs neither must wee presume to approach without the marriage garment making onely a bare profession naked shew without any sinceritie For though we spin Hypocrisie with neuer so small a thréede so that the eyes of man cannot discerne it yet when the King of heauen whose eyes are ten thousand times more bright then the Sunne shall come in to sée the Guests hée will pull off the vizard from the masked dissembler and discouer the counterfeiter and as the Hypocrite pretends onely loue amitie to Christs religion and entends far otherwise with his heart So the King shall Ironically and colourably call him Friend but a painted friēd and therefore hée shall say How camest thou in hither and hast not on a Wedding garmēt Binde him hand and foote Take him away and cast him into vtter darknes Wherefore that wee may examine our selues our soules and consciences the better whether wée are arrayed with the Wedding garment or not and that we may labour and pray that we may be more and more apparelled therewith whereby we may neuer be cast out of the presence of the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and that we may know how to professe CHRIST aright For it is a most important matter and to professe is not enough except wee professe aright it shall be vnfolded First what the Wedding garment is without which wee cannot be partakers of Heauenly blessednes secondly what Hypocrisie is and how detestable and odious it is in the sight of God The Wedding garment is Iustification 1 What the Wedding garmēt is and Sanctification or Faith good workes or to belieue well and to liue well All this is but true holinesse which is of two sorts Namely the righteousnes of Christs sacrifice imputed to vs by Faith and inherent righteousnes wrought in vs and brought into vs by the holy Ghost So that this garment is of two colours partly red partly white It is red by reason of Christs blood shead on the Crosse for the purging of our soules and this is our Iustification and Righteousnes before God It is white by reason of holy harmeles cōuersation which shines before the world this is the putting on of the new man Christ Iesus the washing of our robes the makīg of them white in the bloud of the lambe our sāctification holines in the eyes of men Iustificatiō is attained by Faith sanctification brīgeth forth good works iustificatiō cānot be wtout faith faith cānot be wtout good works iustification therfore holines are inseparable companions where the one is there is also the other They agrée in the efficient cause For God is the Author and worker of them both by the merit of Christ They agree in the instrument which is Faith for faith receiues Iustification and Faith brings foorth sanctification they agrée in the scope ende that is our eternall life but iustificatiō as the cause sāctification as the way therfore the Apostle saith Eph. 2.10 that we are Gods workmāship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which god hath ordained that we should walk in them What then is this true faith by which we are iustified before God accounted righteous absolued frō the guiltines of all our sins Rom. 11. reputed as holy as if wee had neuer sinned had our selues fulfilled all the cōmandements of God Faith is the means helpe instrumēt whereby a sinner doth apprehēd Christ which all his benefits Eph. 3.17 Luk. 2.11 doth applie them particularly to himself is ioyned to Christ doth liue in Christ This faith is liuely effectuall both in respect of our affections in respect of our actions It is liuely in respect of our affectiōs for it works in
mount vp to the Heauen and his head reach vnto the clouds yet shal he perish for euer like his dunge and they which haue seene him shall say where is he he shall flee away as a dreame and they shall not finde him shall passe away as a vision of the night so that the eye which had seene him shall doe so no more his place shall see him no more Christ speaking of the euill seruant that shall say in his heart Matt. 24.48 My maister doth defer his comming and therefore shall begin to smite his fellowes to eate and to drinke with the drunken that seruants Maister will come saith he in a day when he looketh not for him and in an houre that he is not w●re of and will cut him off and giue him his portion with hypocrits there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth And what is the portion of hypocrites What but that spoken of in the scripture Iob. 13.16 which saith that the hypocrite shall not come before God It is gréeuous to be tortured in fire and brimstone it is gréeuous to be thrust out of the blessed companie and out of heauenly glorie it is greeuous to know that there shall be none end of these torments but how vnspeakable and intollerable anguish shall it be to be secluded and separated from the very sight of heauen and of the king of immortalitie so that nothing shall be seene heard or felt but lamentation woe and mourning Wherefore if we will auoid these extreame and exquisite paines we must in no case presume to come to the wedding but in the wedding garment One saies of earthly glorie Cic. lib. 1. Offic. and reputation of this world Compendiaria est via ad gloriam vt qualis quisque haberi vult talis sit It is the readie way to glory that euery one be such a one indeed as he would seeme to be Much more it may be said of eternall glorie that the direct way to it is to be such Christians indeed as we appeare outwardly to be that is to be godly in word and godly in worke Seneca saies That it makes a far greater matter what manner of person thou appeare to thy selfe Epist 87. then what manner of person thou appeare to other and that none can long beare a counterfaite shewe ficta in naturam suam citò recidunt fained things doe soone returne to their owne nature but those things that are supported by truth and doe rise from soliditie they growe greater and better as he writes to Nero the Emperour God is the soūder searcher ●éer of hearts God is not mockt God cannot be blinded God will quickly desire the guest that is not fitly apparrelled God will challenge him and say vnto him Friend how camest thou in hither and hast not on a wedding garment God will punish him commaund his Angels to take him away and to cast him into vtter darkenes 1. Cor. 2.11 where shall be wéeping gnashing of téeth None knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him therefore euery one must seuerally enter into the closet of his own mind and examine his owne soule priuately whether his heart be sincere before the Lord and whether his soule be frée from hypocrisie and dissimulation God deceiues none and may be deceiued of none his eyes are the infallible touchstone that trie our faith whether it be true liuely and effectuall But the fruits of good workes are the touchstone wherby men make iudgmēt of faith Matt. 22.33.35 Matt. 7.16.17.18 And for this cause our Sauiour saith Either make the tree good his fruit good or else make the tree euil his fruit euill for the tree is knowne by his fruite do mē gather grapes of thorns or figs of thistles so euery good tree bringeth forth good fruit and a corrupt tree bringeth forth euill fruit a good tree cānot bring forth euil fruit neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and an euill man out of an euill treasure bringeth forth euill things for of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Where there is séene zeale and deuotion charitie and commiseration patiēce humilitie an earnest endeuour sincere desire to kéepe the lawe of God it may be said that there is a Christian faith and there is an vnfained Christian Where there is seene coldnes in religion neglect of the word praier and sacraments enuie strife malice couetousnes deceit dissimulation pride incontinencie swearing drunkennes and other markes of the flesh it may be said that there is no manifest step and trace of true faith there is no sincere Christianitie there is no signe of the marriage garment Where there is séene haunting of the Church listning to sermons and outward fauour countenance to the word of God and frequenting of the vse of the Sacraments and continuall boasting of faith profession yet without the life and soule of faith and profession which is performance and practise it may be said that there is false semblance and hypocrisie or else what manner of thing is hypocrisie It is said of Epicurus Cic. ● Tuscul that he did put on but the bare habite of a Philosopher and was not a Philosopher in truth It may as truely be spoken that many in this age put on but the naked shape of Christians and are not Christians indéed and that many colour their wickednes by outward pretence of religion and by bearing Bibles in their hands and the word in their mouth though it be neuer setled in their hearts being like the Carbuncle that hath a firie shew yet neuer flames and like those that vse muske and pomanders to conceale their vnsauorie and stinking breath Diogenes séeing one clothed in a Lyons skin Laer. l. 6. cap. 2. flattering himselfe as if he were thereby valorous Wilt thou not cease saith he to disgrace the apparell of valour may it not be said to him that hath but a shew of godlines 2. Tim. 3.5 and religion and by works denieth the power thereof Wilt thou not cease to disgrace the profession of Christianitie Plut. in regum Imperat. apoph For as Alexander the great when some commended the frugalitie of Antipater in that he led an austere life exempt from all deliciousnes he said that Antipater wore a white cloake outwardly but inwardly his heart was wholly of purple colour wherein he glaunced at his dissembled parsimonie and thriftines whereas else his heart desired honors and the purple robes of Princes euen so against the outward zeale and pietie and protestations and humilitie of some in our time it may be obiected that these are but the disguised cloakes of hypocrisie seruing onely for the shadowing shrowding of irreligiousnesse impietie falsehood and haughtines 2. Mace 6.23 There was once an
it is cut downe and withereth the time of our life is threescore yeeres ten and if they be of strength fourscore yeeres yet their strēgth is but labour sorrow for it is cut off quickly we flee away Note what the great Apostle doctor of the Gē●iles Paul saith Ephes 6.12.13 We wrestle not against flesh and blood but against Principalities against powers and against the worldly gouernours the Princes of the darknes of this world against spirituall wickednesses which are the high places And therefore he addes presently For this cause take vnto you the whole armor of God that yee may be able to resist in the euill day and hauing finished all things stand fast Euen so doth Peter in this present place declaring vnto vs the coūterwaites of Sathan and exhorting vs diligently to beware take héed of them And therefore he saith Besober and watch for yuur aduersarie c. In which words the holy Apostle doth thrée things first he exhortes vs vnto a continuall care for our saluation which care consisteth in Sobrietie vigilancie or watchfulnes in these words Be sober watch secōdly he addes a reason of his exhortation and therein is contained a description of our grand-enemie Sathan in these words For your aduersarie the Diuell as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whō he may deuoure Thirdly he shewes what we must doe in this case in these wordes Whom resist stedfast in the faith 1. We must continually care for our saluation First then the Apostle commends vnto vs a perpetual care and studie for the sauing and health of our soules And because he hath an eye and respect to warfare he vseth a double metaphore borrowed spéech from the things that are requisite and necessarie in Earth Warfare and Militarie discipline The first borrowed phrase is this Be sober that is vse temperācie in all your actiōs For as surfeting drūkennes makes the body vnapt for worldly busines So they that drowne their soules in the sinke of earthly delights pleasures they cānot desire follow the kingdome of heauen And as the worldly souldior that stuffes crains himselfe too full with meate and drinke cannot readily nimbly resist his bodily enemie So CHRISTS souldior that liues intemperately cannot withstand the enemies of his soule as he ought to doe And therefore the Apostle sayes Be sober When Peter saith Be sober hee saith no other then that which Christ saith Take heede to your selues Luk. 21.34.35.39 least at any time your hearts be oppressed with surfetting drunkennes and cares of this life least that day come on you at vnawares For as a Snare shall it come on all them that dwel on the face of the whole earth watch therefore pray continually that yee may bee counted worthie to escape all these things that shal come to passe that yee may stand before the Sonne of man When P●ter saith be sober he saith no other thē that which Paul saith It is now time that wee should arise frō sleepe for now is our saluation neerer thē when wee belieued it the night is past Rom 13 11.12.1● the day is at hand let vs therefore cast away the works of darknes let vs put on the armor of light so that we walke honestly as in the day not in gluttony drūkennes neither in chābering wantonnes nor in strife and enuie Whē Peter saith 1. Thess 5.5.9.7.8 Be sober it is no other then that which Paul saith againe Yee are all the childrē of light the childrē of the day we are not of the night neither of darknes therefore let vs not sleepe as doe other but let vs watch and be sober for they that sleepe sleepe in the night they that be drūken are drūken in the night but let vs which are of the dai be sober Whē Peter saith Ephes 4.22.23.24 be sober it is no other thē that which Paul saith againe cast off concerning the cōuersation in time past that old mā which is corrupt through the deceiuable lusts be renued in the spirite of your minde put on the new man which after God is created vnto righteousnes true holines And what is tēperācie or sobrietie It is a vertue that moderates the desires of meat drink that we may neither by excesse hinder meditation prayer the labors of our calling nor yet on the other side hurte our bodily health by too much abstinēce Therefore else-where our Apostle saith Be sober watching in praier For what attētion ● Pet. 4.7 or intention cā drūkards vse in praier how cā they muse thinke deuoutly of God godly things S Basil saith truely Drunkēnes chaseth away the gifts of the no y● Spirit smoke driueth away Bees drūkennes driuet away the gifts of the holy Ghost And the Hathenish Poet saith well Corpus onustum Hesternis vitijs animum quoque praegnauat vnà Horat. ser l. 2. sat 2. Atque affigit humi diuinae particulam aurae When the body is surcharged with excessiue diet it burdens the minde also and fasteneth to the earth that portion of the diuine breath Drunkennesse saith Austin is a flattering Diuell a sweet poyson a pleasant sinne In sermons quod which whosoeuer hath hath nor himselfe which whosoeuer commits not so much commits sinne as is altogheter made sinne Drunkennesse is the bewitching Circe that metamorphoseth turneth men into Swine Dogs and Lyons Apes discouering and setting on fire the vices that were before secret and drawing foorth into the light of the Sunne those qualities of the minde which were lurking in close caues and cabbines Then the vnchast professeth and publisheth his disease then the wanton refraines Sen. ep 8 nor tongue nor hand then appeares the pride of the insolent the crueltie of the vnmercifull the enuie of the malignant Omne vitium grassatur prodit Euery v●ce then rageth and rusheth foorth And who becomes not a Beast in his Drunkennesse when he knowes not himselfe nor others hée cannot speake plainely intelligiblie he speakes to no purpose hee rowles his eyes he staggars and réeles hee vtters and vomits his owne secrets and shame hée féeles the swimming of the head he imagineth one candle to be two and that the very house whirleth round about him he findes that of the Poet verified in himself ●agnū hec vitium est vinc Plautus in Pseudolo Pedes captat primu● luctator dolosus est That the great faulte of immoderatie drinking of wine is this that like a craftie wrestler it first seekes to trippe vp the héeles Drunkennesse makes men worse then beasts For beasts will not by compulsion take more meate or drinke then their neede craueth And therefore Drunkards those that enforce others to drinke excessiuely are in this respect to be iudged worse then Asses and worse then Dogs saith S. Chrysostome Hom. 58.
c First he remooues doubtfulnes in that he saith that it is a true saying that we are saued by Christ Iesus As though he should thus say there is no doubt to be mooued in this spéech for that is before spoken is firme and vndoubted and certaine and cannot deceiue any and therefore farewell they that make doubtes touching the maine points of the Christian faith For these words this is a true saying may fitly be referred to the foregoing words which entreated of the pith and summe of our saluation And by this phrase he shewes the certaintie of his doctrine like as Christ in the gospell declares the infallibilitie of his doctrine when he saith Verily verily I say vnto you Wherefore the faithfull must diligently note and remember this singular comfort in whatsoeuer troubles and afflictions For our faith is continually battered and beaten on by manifold tentations and trials Christ saies That the time shall come Ioh. 16.2 that whosoeuer killeth the godly will thinke that he doth God seruice and that the godly shall be betraied of their parents Luk. 21.16.17 and of their brethren and kinsmen and friends and shall be hated of all men for his names sake And when Paul had made report of his owne persecutions and afflictions which came vnto him at Antiochia at Iconium and at Lystri 2. Tim. 3.11.12 he adds presently a generall conclusion Yea and all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution Now in the mids of these afflictions and aduersities what can staie and helpe vs but a cléere and a good and a sound and a setled conscience grounded on the faith of Christ Iesus And therefore the Apostle witnesseth that the faith in Christ Iesus is a most sure and vndoubted faith this is a true saying And this summe of our saluation may be easily prooued because the whole scripture doth agrée therein For that man is naturally wicked and ill disposed Psal 14.2.3 how plainely doe Dauid and Isaiah teach Dauid when he saith that the Lord looked downe from heauen vpon the children of men to see if there were any that would vnderstand and seeke God And what was the sequele of Gods search All are gone out of the way they are all corrupt there is none that doth good no not one Isaiah when he saith Isai 64.6 that we haue all beene as an vncleane thing and all our righteousnesse as filthy cloutes and we all doe fade like a leafe and our iniquities like the winde haue taken vs away Man being so polluted was not able to saue himselfe for then sacrifices could haue appeased and pleased God but sacrifices were not able to performe that Psal 50.5.9.10.11.12.13 for it is said in the psalme by the Lord That he will not reproue for sacrifices or burnt offrings that haue not beene continually before him I will take no bullocke out of thine house saith God nor goates out of thy foldes for all the beasts of the forrest are mine and the beasts on a thousand mountaines I know all the foules on the mountaines the wild beasts of the field are mine If I be hungrie I will not tell thée for the world is mine and all that therein is will I eate the flesh of ●●ls or drinke the bloud of goates And another Prophet saith Isai 1.11.12.13 what haue I to doe with the multitude of your sacrifices saith the Lord I am full of the burnt offrings of rams and of the fat of fed beasts and I desire not the blood of bullocks nor of lambes nor of goates when ye come to appeare before me who hath required this of your hands to tread in my courts Bring no more oblations in vaine incense is an abomination vnto me I cannot suffer your new moones nor Sabbaths nor solemne daies it is iniquitie nor solemne assemblies And most euidently speakes the holy ghost by the mouth of Paul Heb. 10.1.2.3.4 that the lawe hauing the shadowe of good things to come and not the very Image of the things can neuer with those sacrifices which they offer yeare by yeare continually sanctifie the commers thervnto For would they not then haue ceased to haue bene offered because that the offerers once purged should haue had no more conscience of sinnes But in those sacrifices there is a remembrance againe of sins euery yeare For it is vnpossible that the blood of ●uls and goats should take away sinnes If then legall sacrifices and ceremonies were insufficient to abolish and take away our naturall corruption there must of necessitie be some other meanes This meanes is Iesus Christ who is all in all Col. 1.19.20 for it pleased the father that in him should all fulnes dwell and through peace made by that blood of that his crosse to reconcile to himselfe through him all things both which are in earth and which are in heauen Gen. 3.15 22.18 49.10 God promised that Christ the séede of the woman should breake the Serpents head and that in him all the kinreds of the earth should be blessed and that the scepter should not depart from Iudah nor a lawgiuer from betwéene his féete vnto Shiloh that is Christ the Messiah come and the people shall be gathered vnto him Dut. 18.18 Act. 3.22 Christ is he at whom Moses pointed when he foretold the children of Israel that the Lord their God should raise vp vnto them a Prophet euen of their brethren like vnto him Christ is he whom the types and ceremonies of the lawe prefigured and signified and namely the Paschall lambe for the Baptist cryes Ioh. 1.29 Matt. 27.51 Behold that lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world And therefore the vaile and partition of the holiest place from the vtter part of the temple did rent from the top to the bottome when Christ suffered to shew that now there is no more distinction of nations Act. 10.34.35 and God is no accepter of persons but in euery nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnes is accepted with him Christ is he which hath this testimonie of God the father from heauen This is that my beloued sonne Matt. 17.5 Ioh. 8.12.51 in whom I am well pleased heare him And he himselfe cals vs vnto him saying that he is that light of the world and he that followeth him shall not walke in darkenes but shall haue that light of life and that if a man keepe his word he shall neuer see death He saies of himselfe that he is greater then the temple greater then Ionas Matt. 1● 6.1.22 greater then the wise Salomon And in the great and last day of the feast of the tabernacles he cried saying If any man thirst let him come vnto me and drinke Ioh. 7.37 Ioh. 17.11 15.17.21.24 And to make it manifest that our saluation is most déere vnto him he praies most earnestly for the faithfull that they may be kept in the
make a statue thereof as good as the matter would permit so saith he a wise man and why not a Christian endued with vertue will shew it in riches if he be rich in pouertie if he be poore in authoritie if he be a Magistrate in health or sicknes according to his place quamcunque fortunam acceperit aliquid ex ca memorabile efficiet in whatsoeuer state he liue he will doe some praiseworthy thing therein On the other side as good workes are good and profitable so euill workes are dangerous and vnprofitable Psal 5.6 Rom. 2.25 2. Tim. 2.6 Eph. 4.30 For euill déedes are displeasing to God that hates all the workes of iniquitie Euill déedes disgrace our profession and Gods glory what lies in vs. Euill deedes make vs the slaues and vassals of Sathan and by them he dominéers ouer vs. Euill deedes hinder all spirituall exercises Deut. 28. for by them faith faints the conscience is hurt praier ceases and the holy spirit of God is greeued Euill déedes doe procure and pull on vs punishments both publike and priuate as warres famines pestilence and the like At a word euill deeds do merite eternall torments after this life For they that doe commit euill works haue no parte in Christs Kingdome Gal. 5.21 1. Cor. 6.10 neither shall possesse it And is it so Is death the stipend and wages of iniquitie What exhortation then is fitter then that of the holie Apostle Let not sinne therefore raigne in our mortall bodie that we should obey it in the lusts thereof That is Rom. 6.23 let vs not fréeze in the dregges of vngodlinesse Let vs not wallow welter in the puddle of wickednes Rom. 6 1● Let vs compare and examine our liues and doings by the rule line of Gods lawes and statutes and where we finde our faultines and imperfection and who will be able to say My heart is cleane Since the righteous falles seuen times in a day therefore let vs hartily repent for the same and beséech God the Father to forgiue our offenses for the merites and Passion of his dearely beloued Sonne CHRIST IESVS Let the swearer and blasphemous person forsake his Oathes and vaine prophaning of Gods sacred name Let the abuser of the Sabbath and neglecter of Prayer and Sermons and Sacraments reclaime himselfe sanctifie the Lords Sabbath Let the enuious and malicious person lay aside his hatred and spitefulnes Let the couetous and gréedie mizer forsake his inordinate loue of money which is the roote of all euill Let the drunkard abstaine from drunkennes the fornicator from vncleannes and the hypocrite from counterfeiting and the lyer from slaunderous vncharitable reports and the brawler contēder from strife and d●ssention To be short let the ignorant of the mysteries of their saluatiō seeke to be filled with the knowledge of Christ spiritual vnderstāding And let the breaker offender of Gods Lawes perswade himselfe that it is sufficient to haue spēt the time past in wātonnes lusts concupiscences abhominable trāsgressions and let him not suffer sinne to raigne swaye longer in his mortall bodie CHRIST our high Priest Heb. 7.26 that offered a full perfect sufficient sacrifice for our Redemption was holie innocēt vndefiled separate frō sinners higher then the Heauēs And this our holie high Priest hath sāctified vs by his Sacrifice that we should also be holy innocent vndefiled For Heb. 2.11 He that sāctifieth they which are sāctified are all of one And CHRIST gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie Tit. 2.14 purge vs to bee a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes Therefore we ought also as being sanctified by Christ our redeemer as being members of so worthy an head as being made conformable to so excellent an Image wée ought also to loath detest and abhorre sinne iniquitie F●●e from si●ne as frō a serpent for if thou cōmest too néere it it wil bite thee Ecclus 21.2.3 the teeth thereof are as the teeth of a Lyon to slay the soules of men All iniquity is as a two edged sword the woundes therefore cannot bee healed saith the Wise man Consider how pestilentiall how horrible how fowle a thing sinne is and tell whether it bee a fit guest to be harbored lodged of vs or not What is it that makes a separation betwéene God and our sillie soules but sinne Hearken what the Lord saith by his holy Prophet Beholde Isai 59.1.2 the Lords hand is not shortned that it cānot saue neither is his Eare hea●e ●hat it cannot heare but your iniquities haue separated betweene you your God and your sinnes hau● hid his Face from you that hee will not heare And how vn speakeable a losse is it to be separated and diuorced from GOD As almost euery one offers wrong to a Widowe because shee wants a protector So euery vncleane spirite and euery creature riseth vp against the soule that is a widow Psal 70.10.11 that is depriued of the GRACE OF GOD And the spirituall Foes that seeke such a soule take counsell together and say God hath forsaken that Soule Persecute and take it for there is none to deliuer it The Shippe that hath lost her Mast and Rudder and Gouernor yeeldes to the flawes and flouds is driuen hither and thither and tossed by euery Tempest and at last is dashed against a Rocke and is broken in pieces and the Citie that is besieged of most cruell enemies hauing no Walles nor Bulwarkes to defend it and no Garrison nor strength of Soldiours to protect it but the Citizens that are in it are in hostilitie and ciuile discord this cittie must néeds be sacked and ransacked Euen so the wretched soule destitute of the loue and fauour of God it is exposed to innumerable flouds of tēptations and is néere to shipwrack it is as a prey readie to bee torne and rent by her enemies Sathan the world and the Flesh and it is cast foorth by the very bodie that it quickeneth to vncleane spirites to be deuoured When the King remooues his Court all the Kings houshold and all the Courtiers depart with him and we say that the Court is remoued Ezek. 18.14 So when God departs from the soule all the Angels that are Gardians to the soule celestiall Courtiers depart also from it and the very good works which were formerly done are forgotten and doe léese their reward For so saith the Prophet If the righteous man turne away from his righteousnes and commit iniquitie and doe according to all the abhominations that the wicked man doth shall he liue all his righteousnesse that he hath done shall not be mentioned but in his transgression that he hath committed and in his sinne that he hath sinned in them shall he die Of the departing of this heauenly Court Saint Basin thus saies In Psa 33 Like as smoke driues away Bees and
hee is faint and his soule longeth So shall the multitude of all Nations be that fight against Mount Zion This is true generally of all the ioyes of the vngodly although Literally the Prophet compares onely the glorie and power of the Assyrians and their Adherents that oppugned the Churche of GOD to the pleasure of those that dreame they eat drinke whereas it is a false and illuding pleasure In a Mappe or Chart are seene Kingdoms and Prouinces and Cities and Seas and diuerse Countreyes and yet all this is paper and ynke which is blurred corrupted with one drop of water The heart of man possessed with the vaine delites of the world is such a map Hee that thinks that he shall or doth possesse Towers and Castels and honors and Treasures and what not shall find all these to be but as paper and yuke and a table painted in the imagination which one Ague or other sicknes by the approching of death vtterly defaceth and dissolueth Let the wicked flatter himselfe neuer so much Iob. 20.6.7.8.9 yet his reioycing is short and the ioye of Hypocrites is but a moment though his excellencie mount vp to the Heauen and his head reach vnto the clowdes yet shall he perish for euer like his Dung and they which haue séene him shall say where is he He shall flie away as a Dreame and they shall not finde him and shall passe away as a vision of the night so that the eye which had séene him Hom. 2. ad popul Antioch shall doe so no more and his place shall sée him no more Therefore S. Chrysostome affirmes that in he hath laughed at the follie of some men who in their last Wils and Testaments haue bequeathed the vse of some Houses and Fieldes to one man and the Lordship of them to an other man whereas in trueth the vse onely of these things is granted vnto men and not the Lorship For the earth is the Lords and all that is therein Howsoeuer men perswade themselues yet we are in this life but Guests Strangers and Pilgrims and we haue the world for a lodging place not for an abiding Citie Let vs therefore vse this world as if wee did not vse it for the fashion of this world passeth away Let vs not set our hearts on riches though they encrease Let vs not set our affections on earthly things but on heauenlie things Fixing our heartes there where true ioyes are found Againe on the other side when we are afflicted we must not be dismaied but we must remēber that afflictiōs are very profitable vnto vs For they stirre vs vp to praier they trie and prooue our Faith whither it be true or temporarie onely they worke Patience in vs which the holie Ghost powreth into our hearts by suggesting and affoording manifolde consolations They cause vs to yéeld obedience to the commaundements of God they humble vs in that they shew vnto vs our weaknes and enforce vs to depend vpon God they mooue vs to repentāce clense away the drosse of iniquitie that hangs so fast on they bréed at length the praises of God in our minds mouthes and instruct vs both to comfort other with that comfort wherewith wee our selues are comforted of God and to Sympathize and be compassionate towardes them that are in other or the like case And who will not with patience endure afflictions if he consider that they are sent from the gratious prouidence of God which measureth them out vnto vs according to our strength and as hee foreséeth that they will redound to our saluation For as the best and skilfullest Physitians do heale dislike diseases by dislike curings remoouing some by swéete medicines some by bitter though to some they applie searing to some launcing to some oyle to some gentle Plaisters yet by most variable meanes they seeke one and the same health So GOD if hee scourge vs seuerely hee cures our soules as it were by Searings and cuttings if he refresh vs with prosperity hee comfortes vs as it were with oyle and pleasant plaisters working by diuerse courses one and the same saluation If Tribulation pricke thée and thou wilt deriue the name thereof from a ” Tribulus Thistle yet the Lord will so order it that it shall but pricke thee to amendment and forsaking of sinne or pricke thee to runne the race that is set before thee to eternall life with more diligence and watchfulnes Or if thou account Tribulation to be as a Threshing-toole as the * Tri●●la name thereof also may seeme to importe Yet as the Threshing toole doeth not crush or bruise the good graine but onely exempts it from the d●●r and chaffe that after the Chaffe is separated and blowne away from the good Corne it may be conuerted to Bread the strengthening of mans hart So Tribulation by the gratious appointmēt of the Lord shall not extinguish our Faith and godlines but by little and little abandon and chase away the relicts of our naturall pollution that our vertue and good workes may bee layde vp in Gods garner and we obtaine the ende of our Faith euen the saluation of our soules This is euidently declared by Saint Peter when he saieth that Affliction is layed vpon vs for the triall of our Faith 1. Pet. 1.7 that it being much more pretious then Golde that perisheth though it bee tried with Fire might be found to our praise and honor and glorie at the appearing of Iesus Christ And he vseth a most apt similitude in comparing affliction to a fire For as fire workes diuerse effects vpon things of diuerse natures for it melts waxe and hardens claye it purgeth gold and burneth drosse so affliction hath diuerse operations according to the persons on which it is inflicted for it consumes the wicked with impatience or obdurates them with distrust but the godly are thereby mollified to mortifie their concupiscence to cal on God to fashion themselues to his holy will to manifest their faith in taking tribulation patiently that the Lord may temper the bitternes thereof with his loue and gentlenes If then affliction be but a purging fire it is to be feared of chaffe and not of pure metall For it is the chaffe that is burnt and turned into ashes in the fornace but gold is there purified and refined Aug. in Psal 60. The fornace is the world the gold are the righteous the fire is tribulation the goldsmith is God The goldsmith doth what he listeth and when he punisheth we must suffer for he commaunds vs to suffer and he knowes how to purge vs. Although the chaffe flame to burne and consume vs yet the chaffe is turned into ashes and we are made cleane thereby And therefore séeing affliction is so beneficiall to our saluation and God vseth it as a remedie to reforme our imperfections it must be so far off from our hearts to suppose our selues miserable in wrestling with tribulations that with the
all their distresses so that by faith they subdued kingdomes wrought rigteousnes obtained the promises stopped the mouthes of lions quenched the violence of fire escaped the edge of the sword of weake were made strong waxed valiant in battell turned to flight the armies of the Aliants Consider these things well and may we not truely say Rom. 8.28.35.36 c. that all things worke together ioyntly for the good and saluation of them that loue God and may we not say who shall seperate vs from the loue of Christ shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednes or perill or sword In all these things we are more then conquerors through him that loued vs. For we must be perswaded with the Apostle that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor heigth nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of GOD which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. We thinke amisse if we thinke that God doth chastise vs by crosses because hee hateth vs. Was not Abraham beloued of God the Patriarkes beloued of God and Moses and Dauid and the Prophets beloued of God yet all these sayled in the Sea of Tribulation Luk. 22.40.41 c. 24 26. Which is most of all was not CHRIST our Sauiour most déerely beloued of GOD yet was he not afflicted troubled tossed tormented and doth not the Scripture testifie that he must suffer many things and so enter into his glorie Wherefore by Tribulation the Lord maketh vs like the Image of his own Sonne and being faithfull we are the children of God and if wee be Children Rom. 8.17.18 wee are also heires euen the heires of GOD and heires annexed with Christ if so bee that wee suffer with him that we may also be glorified with him For wee must count that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy to be laied in comparison with the glory that shall be shewed vnto vs. Let vs then run with patience the race that is set before vs Hebr. 12.1.2 c. looking vnto IESVS the Author and finisher of our Faith who for the ioy that was set before him endured the Crosse and despised the shame and is set at the right hand of the Throne of God Let vs consider him that endured such speaking against of sinners least we shuld be wearied faint in our minds For whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he scourgeth euery sonne whom he receiueth If we endure chastening God offreth himselfe to vs as vnto sonnes for what sonne is it whom the father chasteneth not If therefore we be without correction whereof all are partakers then are we bastards and not sonnes When fathers chastise their vnruly sonnes by remouing them from their table by correcting them with stripes by giuing them vilde and reproachfull termes or after any other fashion yet when they doe thus they loue their sonnes and cease not to be fathers nay they shew themselues most of all to be fathers when they doe these things Shall men that are often transported with furie and rage be thought to punish their sonnes whom they loue not of crueltie but of care and loue and is it not much more méete to thinke that the loue of God in afflicting his children doth excéede the greatest loue and affection whatsoeuer of earthly and naturall fathers for as Parents when their children are too much delighted with their play mates thereby departe farther from them then they should doe cause their Seruants or some other to fraye them that being terrified they may runne home to their parents and wander no farther So God oftentimes not onely permits other things to afflict and molest vs but also himselfe now and then séemes to threaten vs and to shew an angrie and seuere countenance towards vs not to confound and discourage vs but to reclaime and bring vs home vnto himselfe againe Gregor in Iob. lib. 23. cap. 22. And what is this life but a way to Heauen our abiding Citie and desired Countrey and therefore we are often exercised with tribulation to the end we should not loue the way to our countrey more then our countrey it selfe We sée manie Trauellers when they behold plesant and alluring Fieldes in the way to turne aside and to fall from their former haste and to preuent this God doth make the way of this world rough vneasie to his Elect that are trauelling towards him least whiles they are delighted with the ioyes of this present life they should forgot their Countrey to which they trauell Solon one of the seuen Sages of Greece when his friend bewailed his miserie immoderately hée tooke him with him into the Castle of Athens from which he might behold the Citie vnder him and hee willed his friend to cōsider what sorrow there had bene and then was would be after vnder so many Roofes thereby admonishing him to take griefe and miserie more patiently that was generally incident to all mankinde And hee said also that if all men should lay their Troubles into one common masse and heape out of which euery man should take his equall portion Hée that did endure great anguish were better to rest content with his portion that befalleth him then take it by due proportion out of that generall heape If then no new thing happeneth vnto vs when we are afflicted but such as agréeth with the nature condition of man we must arme our selues with patience that thereby we may possesse our soules and declare our selues to be the Sonnes of God For God afflicteth the Faithfull and the vnfaithfull also but yet in diuerse manners The Faithfull he afflicteth as a Father the vnfaithfull as a Iudge And therfore the Faithfull haue comfort in their sorrow knowing that light will rise out of darknes and that their bitter potion will bréede health of soule but the vnfaithful murmure vnder the hand of God increase their affliction with impatiencie as the Horse that is fallen vnder the loade hurts himselfe by too much strugling Saint Austin sayes excellently As by one and the same fire De Ciuit. Dei lib. 1 cap. 8. Golde shineth and Chaffe smoketh and vnder one and the same threshing instrument the stubble is broken and the graine purged and the Fome is not mixed with the Oyle because it is wroong out vnder one and the same presse So one and the same force of Affliction when it comes it approoueth purifieth and clarifieth the good but it condemnes spoyles and destroyes the wicked And therefore in one and the same affliction the wicked doe detest and blaspheme God the good doe pray and praise God So great is the difference not what things euery one suffereth but what manner of person euery one is that suffereth For wish the like agitation and moouing the Puddle stinckes loathsomely and the Oyntment smells fragrantly One sayes of pleasures that we
righteous dealing shal not only be approued applauded in this world of God Angels and men but also shall be adorned with eternall reward in that other life Pro. 19.17 The wise King of Israel saies He that hath mercie vpon the poore lendeth vnto the Lord and the Lord will recompence him in that which he hath giuen Men desire commonly to commit their money and goods to trusty persons that will re pay surely according to promise In Epist Therfore as Saint Austin sayes If thou wilt be a good Marchant and a notable Vsurer giue that which thou canst not keepe to th' ende that thou mayest receiue that which thou canst not leese giue a little that thou mayest receiue an hundreth folde giue of thy temporall possession that thou mayest obtaine the euerlasting inheritance Who is it the will not most gladly Till the Fielde that will neuer misse to yéelde increase And who desires not to bee guided in his iourney by signes and directions that hee may not swerue straye Heare then In serm de verb. Domin what the same Father sayes Foecundus est ager pauperum The Fielde of the poore is fertile and soone yeeldes fruite to them that giue Via coeli est pauper The poore man is the way to Heauen by which wee come to our heauenly Father Begin therefore to bestowe on the néedy if thou wilt not erre from the straight way As flowing Wells Cl●m Alex Pedag lib. 5. cap. 7. though they be emptied yet they returne to their former measure and fulnes and the more they are exhausted the more they are replenished the purer the water is So giuing to the poore which is the fountaine of liberalitie that giues drinke to the thirsty and succour to the néedy is encreased filled againe Hom. 33. a● pop Antioch as milke comes againe in the breasts that haue bin suckt And for this S. Chrysostome doubts not to call liberalitie to the poore ●he gainefullest Arte Trade in the world H●m 37. ad pop An. And he asketh the question whether a man can be so ignorant as not to know that God commaunded vs to giue Almes not so much for the benefite of the poore that take as for the recompence of them that giue Hee that would enter into a Potentates Pallace procures the Porters fauor to be admitted wilt thou be admitted into the Pallace of Heauen the poore are the Porters as our Sauiour witnesseth when he saies Make yee Friends with the riches of iniquitie Luk. 16.9 that when ye shal want they may receiue you into euerlasting habitatiōs He that giues Almes is like one that agréeth with the owner of an Orchard to eate as much as he cā wtin the Orchard but to carry no fruite out of the Orchard which condition because he findes somwhat strict he eates in the Orchard till he be satiate carries indéede no apples with him out of the Orchard yet while he is eating he now then flings an apple ouer the Orchard wall or hedge which when he comes foorth he may find and enioy So they that are rich in the world and rich in God though they haue receiued their riches on this condition that they shall carrie away nothing with them out of the world yet they shew a godly wisedome while they vse héere the blessings of this life and in bestowing on the poore they doe as it were cast ouer the wall of the Orchard that which they shall finde recompenced in the world to come A man that knowes certainely that after a small time he shall be remooued into a strange countrey where forsaking his natiue soile he shall liue in neede all daies of his life if he be not sottish he will be well content to haue his goods carried before him into that countrey where he shall after enioy them though for a little space he want them where he now dwels and who will not account them foolish that knowing the brittle and fading state of this life and the short abode that they haue héere doe refuse by Almes and liberalitie to the poore to send their goods before them into Heauen where they most assuredly knowe that they shall liue in all affluence and plentie and receiue the eternall reward specially since now we liue Heb. 13.14 not in our abiding citie and true countrey but in a strange countrey and since by liberalitie to poore and distressed Christians our goods are conueyed into our vnmooueable abiding place What follie is it then to leaue our riches there whence we must depart and not to send it thither before hand Chrys in Matth. Hom. 6. whither we shall goe Place therefore thy substance there where thy countrey is Hee that placeth his treasure in Earth hath not what to hope for in Heauen Why should hee looke vp toward Heauen where he hath nothing layed stored vp for him Manus pauperis est Gazophylacium Christi Petr. Rau. in quadam Serm. The hand of the poore is the Treasury of Christ and whatsoeuer the poore receiue Christ doth accept as giuen to himselfe Giue therefore earthly things to the poore that thou mayest receiue heauenly things giue a crumbe and piece that thou mayest receiue the whole giue to the poore that it may be giuen to thée For whatsoeuer thou giuest to the poore thy selfe shalt haue whatsoeuer thou giuest not to the poore another shal haue And all this the Sonne of Syrach hath summarily comprehended in few words when he saith Ecclū● 19.9.1.11 12.13 16. Helpe the poore for the commaundements sake and turne him not away because of his pouertie Lose thy money for thy brothers and neighbours sake and let it not rust vnder a stone to thy destruction Bestow the treasure after the commandemēt of the most H●gh and it shall bring thee more profit then gold lay vp thine almes in thy secret chamber and it shall keepe thee from all affliction A mans almes is as a purse with him shall keepe a mans fauour as the apple of the eye and afterward shall it arise and pay euery man his reward vpon his head it shall fight for thee against thine enemies better then the shield of a strong man or speare of the mightie If the plentifull reward of liberalitie moue thée not Fourth motiue to mercy Prou. 21.13 Prou. 28.27 yet haue remorse at the terrible manaces against the vnmercifull Heare Salomon He that stoppeth his eare at the crying of the poore he shall also cry and not be heard Againe He that giueth to the poore shall not want but he that hideth his eyes shall haue many curses Doest thou not tremble at the remembrance of the fearefull iudgement of Sodome that was destroyed with fire and brimstone from heauen How grieuous a punishment was it to be heard of how grieuous to be séene nay how grieuous to be suffered And wilt thou knowe their sinnes that caused this horrible
because we haue obtained mercy our selues and because when we loue the brethren we declare that we loue God Who is there that will not loue God who made vs of nothing redéemed vs when we were vtterly lost preserueth vs daily and powreth vpon vs his innumerable benefits He that loueth not knoweth not God for God is loue 1. Io. 4.8 saith S. Iohn He vseth a most forcible word when he cals God loue it is far more then if he had said God is mercifull God is kinde and gratious God is gentle and fauourable God loues vs infinitely God saith he is loue it selfe If God then so loued vs ought not we to loue him againe Euery one will héere answere I loue God yea but note what the blessed Apost●e saith 1. Ioh 3.17 Whosoeuer hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him 1. Ioh. 4.20 If any man say I loue God and hate his brother he is a lyar for how can he that loleth not his broth●● whom he hath seene loue God whom he hath not seene By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples Ioh. 13.35 if ye haue loue one to another saith our Sauiour Christ Seruants and souldiours are knowne of what retinue and armie they are by their badge cognizance and colours loue and compassion is the true badge and cognizance of Christianitie therefore let vs weare these cognizances and colours that we may be knowne to be the seruants and souldiours of our Maister Christ Iesus Hom. 36. de elecnios As the sonnes of great and rich men doe weare golden ouches and iewels about their necks saith S. Chrysostome and doe not put them off but carrie them alwaies about them as tokens and testimonies of their discent and nobilitie so let vs put on and still carrie about vs the tender bowels of compassi●n mercy shewing our selues to be the sonnes of a mercifull father of whom we haue receiued vnspeakable blessings specially since this our mercy will shew that we loue God and dwell in God Againe wee must haue mercie on the poore because we are members one of another and we that are many members seuerally yet are but one body in Christ We sée plainely what an harmonie sympathie and agréement there is in our bodie 1. Cor. 12. For if one member suffer all suffer with it if one member be had in honor all the members reioyce with it There is no deuision in the body but God hath so tempered the body that the parts should haue the same care one for another Verse 14.15.16 c. The body is not one member but many If the foote would say because I am not the hand I am not of the body is it therefore not of the body If the eare would say because I am not the eye I am not of the body is it therefore not of the body If the whole body were an eye where were the hearing If the whole were hearing where were the smelling But God hath disposed the members euery one of them in the bodie at his owne pleasure for if they were all one member where were the bodie But now are there many members yet but one body And the eye cānot say to the hand I haue no néede of thée nor the head againe to the feete I haue no néede of you Euen so since Christians are all members of one body in Christ one depending vpon the other and one hauing an interest in the other let vs weepe with them that wéepe and reioyce with them that reioyce let the learned instruct the ignorant let the wi●● giue counsell to those that want experience let the healthy comfort the sicke let the strong beare with the weake and let them that abound supply the want of those that néede Againe we must haue mercie on the poore because in reléeuing the poore we relieue and succor Christ himselfe who accounts that giuen to himselfe that is giuen to his afflicted members who will reward it plenteously as giuen to himselfe If Christ should come vnto our houses poore and naked hungrie and thirstie sicke and harborles who would not extend his deuotion vpon him But Christ sits at the right hand of God in heauen and he hath left the poore among vs vnto the end of the world and he sends them as his Bailiffes to take vp his rents and reuenues of mercie and if we denie it to them we denie it to Christ himselfe if we deliuer it to them they are a sufficient quittance and discharge of themselues Many refuse to paie rent to these poore Bailiffes and rather repell them for their néedfulnes and deride them for their destortion deformities and diseases of body then receiue and entertaine them But who made them distorted deformed and loathsome for their boyles and infirmities was it not the highest Ruler of heauen and earth that hath power to inflict that punishment vpon many or all that he inflicts vpon any or some He that mocketh the poore Prou. 17.5 14.31 reproacheth him that made him but he that hath mercy on the poore honoureth God saith Salomon Howsoeuer some leath and contemne the poore yet the faithfull poore are most pretious and déere in the eyes of Christ It is written of Lawrence that constant Martyr and worthy Deacon of the Church of Rome that when the Tyrant demanded the treasure of the Church expecting chalices candlesticks and other ornaments of gold he gathered the poore of the citie the lame the maymed the leapers the attainted with manifold maladies that were reléeued by the Almes of the Christians and shewed these to the Tyrant as the riches of the Church but when the Tyrant disdainefully frowned and abhorred those sillie people Lawrence told him that they were the beautie and wealth and gaines of Christs church and that though they were ragged and vnséemely now in the eyes of men yet they should one day shine in incomparable gloriousnes before the throne of God and that they were not to be detested for their outward infirmities of body since the inward foulnes and diseases and vices of him and other worldlings where far more odious loathsome Pruden● Peristeph in Laurent Swelling pride saith he is worse then the dropsie pinching couetousnes is worse then the gowte or crampe filthy incontinencie and fornication is worse then dirtie fluttishnes boyling ambition is worse then a burning feuer an vnbrideled tongue is worse then an itching soare malice and enuie is worse then a putrified impostume superstitious Idolatrie is worse then the Kings Euill Peccante nil est tetrius N●l●am leprosum aut putridum Cruda est cicatrix criminum Oletque vt antrum tartari There is nothing so foule so leprous so rotten as a sinner the scar that remaines after the wound of iniquitie is neuer whole but still fresh and rawe and smels like the den and
shall not lose his reward And who knowes not Christs verdict of the two mites of the poore widowe Luk. 21.1.2.3.4 For when he saw the rich men cast their gifts into the treasurie and a certaine poore widow also to cast in thither two mites he said Of a truth I say vnto you that this poore widowe hath cast in more then they all for they all haue of their superfluitie cast into the offrings of God but she of her penurie hath cast in all the liuing that she had Therefore it is not the quantitie of the gift but the minde and the manner of the giuing that is respected of the Lord. But perhaps some will say I haue wife children and familie my selfe why should I giue I know not what want I and mine may haue I haue people of mine owne to maintaine The rather for this cause thou must reléeue the poore that by a small portion which thou giuest nay lendest to the Lord thou maiest prouide his blessing and fauour for thy wife and familie after thy departure If thou wilt haue care for thy familie and children canst thou doe it better then in leauing them sure bonds and obligations of debt not confirmed by the hands and seales of mortall men but by the vndoubted promise of the king of kings and Lord of Lords The Apostle prooues out of the Psalme that he that sparseth abroad and giueth to the poore his beneuolence shall remaine for euer and be euerlasting and he shall neuer want to giue to the poore For God that findeth seede to the sower 2. Cor. 9.9 will minister likewise bread for foode and multiplie the seede and encrease the fruit of his beneuolence And the same Apostle elsewhere wils vs not to be wearie of well-doing Gal. 6.9 For that in due season we shall reape if we faint not In which places he compares the bestowing of almes and releefe on the poore to sowing and sparsing of graine vpon a fruitfull soyle And S. Chrysostome saith well Semen vocatur el●emosyna quia res haec non tam sumptus est quam redditus Almes is called seede because it is not so much a charge as a reuenue Depaenis 7. ser If corne saith he be shut vp close in the house of the husbandman it encreaseth not but is consumed of vermine but if it be sparsed on the ground it is not onely kept safe but also encreased so the wealth that is shut vp in chests and kept vnderlocks and bars soone flées from the owners but if it be distributed in liberalitie to the afflicted it remaines not onely surely kept but riseth also to more encrease He that hid●●● is treasure vpon earth Chrys hom 9. in Matt. and sends it not by liberalitie to heauen doth as if an husbandman should take séede and not sowe it on fertile soyle but scatter it into the water where he can neither enioy it nor preserue it from corruption Id. hom 5. in Matt. For where séede is fitly sowne there followes multiplying of fruits And if thou find a fat and fruitfull ground thou wilt not only manure it and till it plenteously with thine owne seede but thou wilt also borrow seede of other reckon it a great losse if thou shouldest be sparing in tillage thereof since then if thou be liberall to the poore thou sowest on a field that will yéeld encrease with manifold vsurie linger not nor procrastinate but vnderstand this That by sparing thou shalt leese and by sparsing thou shalt gather When we sow our séede we doe not so much looke vpon the emptying of our barnes as hope for the fruitfull haruest to come and that also when we are vncertaine of the euent for the rust and Caterpiller and vnseasonable stormes may frustrate our expectation Shall we be so chéerfull to commit our seede to the ground and shall we linger to commit our séed of almes into Gods hands and into the heauens where no tempests nor calamities can hurt it and where vnspeakable fruit shall be gathered For in sowing of graine the séedtime and haruest are of one nature he that sowes wheate or barlie or any other graine shall at haruest reape the same sort of graine but in sparsing of the séede of almes it is not so For we sparse siluer and we sparse bread and we sparse cloathes and we sparse other earthly things but if we sparse in faith and with a willing minde we reape mercie and we reape a recompence and we reape heauen and those incomprehensible blessings that transcend and exceede mans séeing hearing and vnderstanding Say not that thou wilt take order on thy Testament that somewhat shall be bestowed on the succouring of the néedy therfore that thou wilt bestow little or nothing while thou liuest For knowest thou that thy legacie shall alway be performed according to thy purpose and may not many that at this present time stand in néede depart out of this world before thy Testament be in force and so thou léese the offered opportunitie of doing good and is not thy gift after thy death like a candle lighted at thy backe that cannot guide thy féete in darkenes and hast thou forgotten the counsell of the sonne of Sirach Ecclus. 14.12.13.14.15.16 Defraud not thy selfe saith he of the good day and let not the portion of the good desires ouerpasse thee shalt thou not leaue thy trauels vnto another thy labours for the diuiding of the heritage giue and take sanctifie thy soule worke thou righteousnes before thy death for in Hell there is no meate to finde Remember that death tarrieth not and that the couenant of the graue is not shewed vnto thee doe good vnto thy friend before thou die and according to thine abilitie stretch out thine hand and giue him Wherefore while thou hast space be diligent in imparting thy knowledge in counsell vpon the simple thy wishes on the desires of them that want thy power on the helping of the néedie * Nosse incōsilijs velle in desiderijs posse insubsidijs for these things thy neighbour must haue if he want them Thy life is a race to the goale of eternitie so runne then that thou maiest obtaine and thou shalt runne the nimbler if thou throwe from thée vpon the distressed somewhat of this worlds wealth that presseth thée downe so waightily Chrysost hom 5. de auar A Lyon or a Libard saith an ancient Father or a Beare or some other such wild beast while it is shut and pind vp in the darke it rageth and fumeth horribly euen so when riches are shut vp and hid closely they rage worse then lyons and trouble all things But if thou bring them out of darkenes and sparse them on the bellies of the needy where before they were sauage beastes they will become shéepe where before they were rocks they will become harboroughs where before they caused shipwrack they will bréede a calmenes For as in shipping too