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A13732 The soules alarum-bell Wherein the sicke soule (through the horror of conscience) being awakened from security by the sight of sinne, hath recourse to God by meditation and prayer. By H. Thompson. Thompson, Henry, fl. 1618. 1618 (1618) STC 24024; ESTC S100563 111,521 484

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and fansies which beare away the due reuerence wee owe vnto God For when we haue praied to GOD that hee will giue eare vnto our requests and receiue our petitions they are sonegligently done that we had need pray againe to desire him that hee will out of his bountifull loue and great mercy cast his eye of pitty and not of anger vpon the great offence which was committed in the idlenesse of our prayers and supplications made by vs vnto his diuine Maiestie and that he will forgiue vs our sins committed in our prayers because wee thinke then leas● of him at the time we make our prayer vnto him neuer remembring the Maiestie of his person to whom we● speake nor the Excellencie of the worke wee take in hand neuer rowsing vp the spirit of a sorrowfull repentant heart for our former offences committed but if we ●hance then to stirre vp ou● deuotion to prayer we leaue them halt and lame bodie without soule or soule without deuotion sound of lips without the heart one part of our selues without the other or the whole without a whole clamour without intention But Dauid practised true repentance which may not bee repented of and such were the panges and prickings of Iobs heart vnto GOD My groanings saith he come forth before I eate and my roarings are powred forth Not onely groaning nor crying but also roarings with a continual inundation as one waue dasheth forth another Now when the soule is thus prepared to speake the eares of the Lord are euer open to heare the true penitent sinners cry These are wonderfull passions The hungry Lyon in the desert opprest with extremitie of suffering want neuer roared so much for his prey nor the Hart braying after the water brookes as the goodnesse of the Lord in the soule of the faithfull He is the mighty LORD of Heauen and Earth whose name be blessed and hallowed for euer in Earth as it is in Heauen and blessed are all those that are in loue with his goodnes and tra●● nearest vnto his steps And to giue vs a further example in his owne cause when his soule was hedged in and enuironed round about with vexation euen vnto death when anguish sorrow incompassed him round about as also then in his greatest agony when he cried with a great voice not for particular persons as before hee wept but vndergoing the burthen and punishment of all the sinnes and sinners in the World My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and crying againe with a great voice gaue vp the ghost Therefore the blessed Apostles mentioning the daies of his humanitie and the exercise of his godly and sacred life and fruite of his lips and the passions of his spirit thought it not enough to giue notice to the World that he prayed to his Father that hee praied with teares which trickled downe his blessed cheekes and watered the ground nor of a cry alone weakely sent out but of a vehement and strong cry which if Heauen were brasse were able to pierce through it and find way into the Sanctuary into the eares of the Almighty Such a prayer as it ascends lightly vp borne vpon the wings of Faith so it eue● comes laden heauily downe with a blessing on the head of him that first gaue it flight This Lanthorne of our direction and composition of humilitie and goodnesse this glorious and neuer enough admired LORD of life who prest opprest with the weight burthen thereof groaned vnder the affliction of our sinnes in a most perfect forme of exact obedience with his bleeding teares for vs shewed vs the right forme of faithfull supplications for our selues Let vs then bee importunate and feruent in our praiers that our Petitions may wrestle with GOD and ouercome him For if our praiers bee powred forth in the ●eruentnesse of zeale without wauering then let vs make no doubt but hee wil graciously receiue them into his armes of mercie Way h●e thus grieue● for vs and shall not wee grieue for ourselues groaned hee vnder the weight of our sin being himselfe without sinne onely in compassion and pitty towards vs why then doe not we continuallie groane and grieue It is so farre from vs that in no way wee giue his heauenlie Maiestie his due except in committing finne and drinking it downe the throate with greedinesse and a desiring thirsting appetite euen as Behe●●th drinketh down I●rdan without sense sorrow or griefe for the same The true consideration hereof will enforce and procure in vs a more perfect desire to follow the true prescription that our Sauiour hath prescribed for vs in his holy Gospell which commandeth vs by expresse words to bee importunate and feruent in our prayers that our Petitions may ascend vp to GOD our Lord and onely Sauiour and there to be receiued into his bosome to pre●rent a further and greater danger before the dreadfull Maiestie of the omnipotent LORD of Heauen and Earth who with the breath of his nostrels is able to destroy our bodies and soules change the World and the beauty thereof into a Chaos and ●eape of confusion turne the Sunne into darkenesse and the Moone into blood and alter the property and being of all the Creatures in the World at the twinckling of an eye Considering what we are that speake that offer vp the calues of our lippes and the fruites of our repentance poore naked impotent vnworthy wretches wee should be importunate and with a feruentnesse of zeale poure out our supplications vnto GOD that he wil mercifully heare vs and gently receiue our supplications and according to his won●ed goodnesse satisfie our faithfull requests poured forth vnto him in the name of CHRIST IESVS our Lord and onely helper in all distresse But our wretchednesse and mortality our nakednesse in good workes towards him is such that if there were any spark of true faith in vs it would make vs ashamed as it did our first Parents when they bidde themselues from the presence of their GOD. The view of our sinnes is exceedingly sinful the number the weight the danger thereof hang about our neckes like milstones that we are notable nor worthy to cast vp our eyes to heauē for our sinnes are so exceedingly miserable that the Prophet of GOD being astonished to see either man or the Sonne of man so kindly visited biddeth vs be feruent in our Petitions to GOD. And we must expect an happy successe of our supplications vnlesse we wil cal in question or doubt of the promises of God which are more stable then the pillars of the Earth or the basis of the surest foundation except we will cast our graine into the earth and expect no haruest plant Vines and not drinke the Wine thereof If wee meane to receiue that at GODS hand we doe expect to haue then wee must prepare our selues in another forme to poure out our vnworthy plaints and petitions and thinke that GOD either heareth not or regardeth not at all the
of paine where euery mans soule shall be rewarded according to his desarts CHAP. III. Of the Body A BODY hath length breadth thicknesse a man is nothing else but a liuely body sensible reasonable which man hath fiue wittes or senses hearing feeling seeing smelling and tasting and these senses are deuided into Animall and Rationall The Animall senses bee diffused throughout all the members of man such as bee seeing hearing smelling c. And all these are common to vs with brute beasts The Rationall faculties consiste in reason which doth make a man a Gen. 1. 28. 29. reasonable Creature who by reason may rule vnreasonable beasts all things being vnder his dominion CHAP. IIII. Of earthly pleasurs and the vanity thereof Of the comfort and commoditie which man reapes in and by knowing himselfe Of the shortnesse frailty and miseries of mans life With a remembrance of death and meditation thereof THE way to ballance our selues and our desires is to know our selues first then to know God and to fixe our whole hope confidence and desire in him who is the true fountaine and well spring of all happinesse and content within the compasse of whose mighty Protection we are no longer his then while wee walke within the boundes of his gracious directions Miserable are those and most wretched that wander and runne astray out of the armes and safegard of his omnipotencie If the Lord should forget vs as wee forget him nay if he should not remember vs sinfull Creatures a thousand times ere wee remember him once and keep vs in wee should daily and howrely wander out of the right way and perish therein But his mercy and goodnesse is aboue al his works and his great benefites are so generally extended that the wicked haue their portion therein as well as the godly his enemies as well as his friends If the Lord should reuenge our iniuries and ingratitude which wee commit in contemning his will and Commandements and deale with vs as wee deale one with another what would or should become of vs then Nothing but woe and meere confusion O let vs therefore learne from him which is the true patterne of all goodnesse and consolation in some poore measure to be like vnto our Lord and and Maister Christ Iesus from whence we deriue our name are called Christians Let vs whose Image wee carry stamped by the fingers of his owne hands let vs bee not onely shadowes but bodies mouing after his steppes that is our head let vs walke heere on earth as good Christians whereby we may shew the wicked a patterne of good life to imitate such humility and sobrietie as our Lord Iesus Christ the true and liuely patterne of all goodnesse and pietie hath walked before vs the print of whose blessed feete wee daily looke on with our eies and consider in our heartes with ioy and comfort If wee will be his Disciples wee must take vp his Crosse and follow him making it our glory that are the people of his pasture and the sheepe of his handes who neuerthelesse in simple sight grasing on the mountaines are either fleeced of the shearer growne into we oll or snatched vp by the bucher growne into flesh and the water of affliction being wrung vnto vs out of a full cup wee be exposed to the shame of the world and the windes still beate on our sayles and our liues bound vp in vexation and sorrow whilest the wicked like the bramble in confidence of their shadow Iudg. 9. 15. dare challenge to be Kings ouer the forrest And though they sayle calmely as in the Hauen and their breastes are full of milke as IOBE Iob 21. 26. speaketh and their bones of marrow and though with DAVID in the 73 PSALME wherein the property of the wicked is liuely set forth how they come not to misfortunes like other folke neither are they plagued like other men their eyes swell with fatnesse and they do euen what they liste yet let vs take comfort to our selues stay our soules on the anchor of his prouidēce as the same Prophet did although in the consideration of his chastisement all the day long euery morning yet the prosperity of the wicked hee confessed said My feete had almost slipt yea and I had sayd as they vntill I went into the Sanctuary of God then vnderstood I the end of these men namely how thou settest them in slippery places and castest them downe and destroyest them how suddenly they come to a fearefull end So when death shall make vs both euen with the Earth here is our comfort The graue shall bee to vs as a folde till our Shepheard come and to them a shambles vntill the destroyer of their soules shall receiue an endlesse commission to torment them Therefore neither the pleasures of this life nor health wealth or liberty are at the best but candied wormewood that delighteth the taste but destroyeth the stomacke without a true and sanctified vse therein that makes those happy and blessed that haue them for with all the goodly branches of delectation pleasure they cast if their Tree answer not with fruit the leaues will not protect it from the fire Cursed is he that is blessed in this world to be cursed in the world to come Here we haue the eloquence of the flesh to perswade vs the inticements of the diuell to allure vs the company of the wicked to associate vs All these to diuert our course from the place whither we are going and the World with her inticements to traine vs furthest from what wee seeke and the pride of our life to perswade vs for trifles to forgoe the interest wee haue in heauen and our branched corruption euery way ready to set vs forward being ambitious like Adam who if he may be as God there is Gen 3. 5. no command can restraine him vaine-glorious like Esau who if hee may haue a Gen. 33. 1. traine of men at his heeles will soone digest the losse of his birth-right and so byvsury if our bags may thereby be made fuller the word of God shall n●t restraine vs from it If the sonnes of men shall take the diuell at his word which the Sonne of God did not when the diuell tempted him and shewed him ●ll the Kingdomes of the Earth and the glory thereof All these will I giue thee if thou wilt fall downe and worship me and for the glory of the world which he shall shew and cannot giue shal fall downe and worship him If he shew honors preferment pleasure riches saying as this I will giue thee though the minions and louers of the world that seeke for their heauen vpon earth shal be ready to betray their soules as Iudas betraied Christ with his Haile Master shall bee ready to imbrace him to serue him to serue themselues yet with the Sonne of God after his fasting be thou so strong in thy strength as he was in his
vnto his ende Here good Reader is both the manner the method the forme the fashion how to meditate and what to meditate as time and necessity shall require with a requisite regard and serious consideration that our holy meditations may bee the more gracious in the eyes of God and successefull in our desires and occasions that God may blesse both them and vs with an happy Earnest in this World of the eternity in the World to come whether by his blessed will so prospering this intended meanes that it may be able to bring vs to the blessed Hauen of rest and endlesse ioy The Lord of life and death in whose hands is the breath of euery liuing thing so direct vs that wee may learne to number our dayes that wee may run out the short race of our sinfull Pilgrimage in godlinesse of holy meditation with much patience looking to Christ Iesus the Authour and finisher of our faith that when we shall haue finished these dayes of sinne wee may bee translated to a better life in the Kingdome of Glory which GOD hath purchased to vs in the blood-shedding of his beloue● Sonne To whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be rendered all glory maiesty power and dominion now euer Amen Thine in the Lord Henry Thompson What the Soule loseth by mortall sinne THe grace of the Holy Ghost The friendship and familiaritie with God All mortall vertues infused and of Gods Spirit The inheritance of the Kingdome of Heauen The portion of Gods children and patronage of his Fatherly prouidence which he hath ouer the iust The peace and quietnesse of a good and cleere conscience What misery the Soule gaineth by mortall sinne COndemnation to eternall paine to bee quite cancelled out of the Booke of life To become of the childe of God the thrall of the Diuell To bee changed from the Temple of the Holy Ghost into a denne of theeues a nest of vipers a ●inke of corruption How a Soule is prepared to Iustification by degrees Faith setteth before our eies God is a iust Iudge Angry with the bad Mercifull to the repentant Of this Faith by the gift of God Spirit arises a feare by cōsideratiō of Gods Iustice and Our owne sinnes This feare is comforted by hope grounded in Gods mercie and The goodnes of Christ Of this hope ariseth loue and charitie vnto Christ For louing vs without desert Rredeeming vs with so much loue Of this loue followes sorrowe for offending Christ of whom we haue been so mercifully Created Redeemed Sanctified and called to his Faith Of this sorrow ariseth a firme purpose to auoide all sinne which GOD aboue all ●things detesteth The Diuel aboue all things desireth And aboue all things hurteth the soule THE SOVLES Alarum-Bell CHAP. I. That GOD his beginning was without beginning and is and shall bee euer without end THere was euermore a Thing being and that Thing that was euer before all other things must needs be without be ginning and must be the first Maker and the first Cause of all things which hath no maker nor no cause out of whom as out of the verie fountaine and will of all causes euery thing taketh his being So that Thing which was first being must needes bee the Exo. 3. 14. cause and foundation of all things and of all beings and that First cause or Maker is among all people called Ioh. 8. 58. God Then sith God is the first cause of euery thing Iob. 1. 2. 3. 4. and the first principall cause of the being of euery thing it requireth that there bee in him such a being that it must bee the most perfect most substant all being and the most sure being that is or can bee which shall neuer haue end For if it shall haue an end it is not the most perfect most substantiall and most sure being for it must bee such a being which excludeth euery imperfection that soonest tendeth to Not being There is no time past in which hee was not no time present in which he is not nor no time to come in which he shall not bee So that of necessity it followeth that his being was euer without beginning and is and shall bee euer without end therefore conueniently God is called Omnipotent as being of most power and might Then sith God is the cause of all things and Gen. 1. 1. euery thing taketh his effect by God and commeth of God as of his first cause Pro. 8. 22. and euery thing that taketh any effect hath neede of the cause for without the cause the effect could neuer haue Iohn 1. 1. 2. 3. 4. been Therefore it must follow that euery thing hath neede of God and that God hath neede of nothing And likewise that thing that Act 〈◊〉 14. 24. hath no life nor neuer had life may not by his owne Ephes 1 11. power make a thing to haue life But wee see in this world man beast to haue life which life proceeded and came first from that Creator which is very life in whom first must needs bee life Then sith God is first Creator and causer of euery thing which hath life it followeth that in him there was euer a life And as I haue said before because the being of God is the first being and cause of Gen. 1. 7. the being of euery thing the most perfect most substantiall and most sure being and because that thing which hath being and life also is more worthy then that thing which hath but being onely as the trees herbes which haue a quicknesse of life whereby they grow and increase haue a more noble and worthy being then a dead stocke or a dead stone which grow not and as the brute beast which hath a life sensitiue and power to moue it selfe and memory hath a more noble and worthy being then the Tree or herbe which hath but quickning and growing without power to moue or memory and also as the being of man which hath both life sensitiue power to moue memory and vnderstanding hath a more worthy being then the brute beast which hath but life sensitiue power to moue and memory without vnderstanding so it must needs follow that vnderstanding is the cause of the most worthy being And sith that God hath the most noble and worthy being that can bee it must needs follow that in God there must bee knowledge and vnderstanding and that the same being of God must bee with the same knowledge and vnderstanding And then if the being of God as I haue proued before be without beeginning and ending eternall infinite without measure and his being is and hath been euer most perfect and as hee himselfe may bee himselfe so may he himselfe vnderstand himselfe so that his being cannot bee seuered from his knowledge and vnderstanding nor his knowledge and vnderstanding seuered from his being it must follow that hee vnderstandeth all knoweth euery thing that was
is or shal be and euery mans thought and deede done or to be done in the world is present to his knowledge For the eternall essence of God which must excell all other beings hath in it selfe such a nobilitie that it comprehendeth all the whole plenty of life together and knitteth time past and time to come with the time present and nothing is to God past or to come but all things are to him present For if any thing were to him newly knowen then God had not all perfect knowledge in him as the beginning and so there should bee in God some mutability and change and augmentation of knowledge And because hee had euer most perfect being and most perfect knowledge and his knowledge cannot bee separated from his being as I haue proued before it must needes follow that God knew all things euer and euery thing was euer is and shall bee to him present CHAP. II. What the Soule is THere is a three-fold soule that is to say a soule Vegetatiue Sensitiue and Intellectiue a soule vegetatiue is that life that is in Plantes Trees Grasse Herbes or fruits which do Gen. 2. 9. grow A soule sensitiue is that life which is in a brute beast which occupieth vseth the fiue senses such as are the taste the smelling the hearing the sight and touching but lacketh reason and vnderstanding as is a horse a cowe a bird a fish and such like But a soule intelectiue is aspiritual substance created inuisible most like to the immortall God hauing no other image or figure but only of his creator Gen. 1. ●7 Ephes 4. 2. and hath a liuely power and vnderstanding to know good from euill and right from wrong man is that Creature to whom GOD hath giuen this soule Intellectiue Now because man hath growing as plants and herbes haue he is therefore called liuely and because he hath the vse of the fiue senses as brute beastes haue therefore hee is called Sensible and because hee hath reason and vnderstanding therefore hee is called Reasonable A man then is nothing else but a liuely sensible and reasonable creature For the body and the reasonable soule ioyned together doe make a man Therefore there is no Creature of God in earth that hath any knowledge and reason how to do honour to God saue onely man so that God will by his goodnesse and mercy reward man for Mat. 25. his good deeds and by his Iustice punish him for his offences and euill deeds For the soule of man is immortall and shall neuer dye For no incorporeal substāce created by God shall euer haue end Which thus is proued the soule must needs be made of somewhat or else of nothing but there can bee nothing named of the which it is made or if it be made of any other meane thing or things then must it bee made of part of it selfe which so gathered together maketh the whole soule or else it is made of some matter with some forme and fashion added thereto but it is not made of parts gathered together for the soule hath no parts nor cannot be deuided neither is it made of any other matter for euery thing that is made of any matter and forme may bee resolued vnto the same matter whereof it was first made when the forme or fashion is broken or destroyed as an Image an house a cup such like And therefore sith that the soule of man cannot bee resolued to any such matter whereof it is made because it is a simple substance of it selfe ergo it is made of no matter Then if it be neither made of part of it selfe neither of any matter it hath no meane cause of it creation and being and as it must needs be immediately made Gen. 1. 26. of God which is infinite so consequently it followeth that the soule of man must needs bee infinite incorruptible and immortall and doth liue after it is separated from the body either in ioy or paine And as touching the being of the ●oule after it is separated from the body it is not circumscribed in any place For a naturall place is the vtter and extreame terme or part and hollow superficies of a body containing another body within it a superficies is that which hath but length and breadth and no manner of thicknesse for 〈◊〉 it haue length breadth and thicknesse then it is a body So that euery thing that I see which is the obiect of my sight and whereupon my sight doth rest not considering the thicknesse is called a superficies so the vtter part of euery bodily thing that I do see is called the Superficies because I do see the length breadth thereof but not the thicknesse As by example a Tun is called by cōmon people the place of the wine because it containeth the wine within it and so that hollow superficies of the tunne is the very naturall place of the wine and such a naturall place doth containe within it alwaies a corporall substance and a bodily thing Therefore the soule can neuer bee contained in any natura●l place because it is no corporall substance but a spirituall which doth occupy no place no more then the thought or minde doth which occupieth no place Also vnderstand thou that there bee two kind of things which haue being the one is a reall thing and the other is a rationall A reall thing is that which is perceiued by the Organs and Instruments of the fiue wits as that thing which may be seene heard tasted felt or smelled But rationall things are those which bee not perceiued by the fiue witts but onely bee perceiued by reason and they bee things incorporeall as loue charity meeknesse abstinence pride malice sloth and such other Furthermore of places there bee three diuersities One is a place Continentiue another is a place Limitatiue and the third a place Operatiue A place Continuentiue is that wherein reall things as bodies images and figures be contained as the Tunne wherein the wine is contained A place Limitatiue is where things incorporeal bee limited to bee as the proper place limitatiue for loue is that thing which is loued and that thing which is so loued is the place limited for that to bee and there the loue is in his place limitatiue which place limitatiue of loue cannot bee euer certaine but mutable and because loue may bee at once in diuers things therefore loue may bee in diuers places limitatiue at one time A place operatiue is that place where the operation of the thing is because wee see that the maruailous operation of God is that maruailous swift mouing of the heauenly Spheares and bodies aboue which do appeare to vs therefore wee say that the place where God is is heauen so that Gen. 1. 8 where so euer the operation of God appeareth there is the place operatiue and there is God And thus to conclude God hath ordained a place of ioy a place
which is the key that doth open where no Man shuts and shuts where no man 〈◊〉 that enters where no man hath passage and returnes where no man can hinder The prayer of the faithfull is the life of that soule which is sore wrapped and perplexed with the noysome puddle of a sestered and sinfull conscience where by the heart is so oppres●● with griefe that neither wine nor strong drinke by the rules of Salomon can comfort O then what shal● wee doe but crie to thee 〈◊〉 GOD with heart and hand listed vp to 〈◊〉 saying 〈◊〉 that thou wouldest hide 〈◊〉 in thy Grace and keepe 〈◊〉 secret vntill thy wrath 〈◊〉 past Therefore if any 〈◊〉 afflicted let him pray and 〈◊〉 vs not presume in the height of our prosperitie lest wee suddenly see a change but let vs put our whole confidence in the Lord our God and pray vnto him and to none other Neither let vs presume vpon our selues or any earthly meanes besides for there was neuer contemplation exercise or any kind of study in the World so acceptable to the Maiestie of GOD so gracious in his sight so lincked and true a friend to him as heauenly meditation It awaketh in the night season it rests not in the day it forsaketh vs not by Land or by Sea in health in sicknesse in prosperity or aduersitie in weale or woe it is such a sure and tried friend in all extreamities such an inseparable companion in mans greatest distresse as no tongue is able to expresse the contentation it yeelds vnto the oppressed Therefore let vs loue it and lodge it in the bosome of our weake consciences and imbrace it in sincerity of heart for it is our last and best friend alwaies solliciting our Father in Heauen whose name is so worthy to be called vpon so mighty for deliuerance so p●●ssant for protection so gainfull for successe so compendicus to abridge vnnecessary labours as the name of LEHOVAH our most mercifull louing Father There was neuer Sanctuary so free for transgressors in the strongest priuiledge neuer such safetie neuer holes in the Rocke so open for the Fowles of the field the arme of my Mother neuer so open to her child as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Gods mercifull compassion to all true and faithfull beleeuers Therefore with speede let vs all 〈◊〉 faithfully vnto this good GOD in all our wants and extremities there shroa●● our selues vnder his protection There was neuer Creature liuing vnder the Sunne that 〈◊〉 not affliction in his daies neither 〈◊〉 there euer any to whom affliction was not grieuous and irkesome● yet neuer was there affliction so great but it hath beene vnder the correction of a louing Lord whose hand hath beene aable to master it Euery affliction as it comes in seuerall kinds for our seueral sinnes and transgressions so our meditations must be seuerall and framed and fitted thereunto and powred forth both with wisedome and zeale that they seem not harsh and vndigested to those sacred eares that can both sift and trie the one and the other The delicacy and tendernesse both of our meditations and prayers must be so deuoutly and wisely composed and the fauour of his countenance so carefully sought for as may appeare by the example of him that knew in his soule that a faint and dissembling Petition would returne emptie into the bosome of him that sent it vp Cursed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that doth the Ier. 48. 10 worke of the Lord negligently saith the Prophet 〈◊〉 But saith Dauid A broken and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord will not despise Dauid neuer sent vp his petitions but with the deepest affection and zeale of heart with the most sincere integritie and meditated zeale that might be for euery night washed hee his bedde and watered his Couch with teares which argued his singular contrition and feruentnesse in his Petitions And therefore after his godly example let vs with a sincere true desire of contrite hearts pray to that good GOD that he will so inspire his heauenly grace into our sinfull hearts that when wee make our Petitions we may haue the force of two tongues in our 〈◊〉 whereby we may the better speede and auoide the malediction which otherwise we may receiue in stead of 〈◊〉 blessing Wee may learne precepts and draw many excellent examples from the liues of the Heathen Philosophers and Writers as also we may learne a zeale in our Petitions euen of those woodden Priests 1 Kings 18 of whom it is written That they called vpon the name of Baal from morning to noon and when they had no answere they cried aloude nay cutte themselues with kniues till the bloud flowed so they praied not onely in teares but in bloud And then shall not wee being the Children of light be as seruent and zealous in our Petitions to GOD The agony zeale of the Sunne of righteousnesse was such that in the dayes of his flesh hee offered vp Prayers and supplications with strong cries and teares to him that was able to helpe him O Lord inspite thy heauenly grace so 〈◊〉 our hearts that wee may learne to addresse ourselues that in all temptations necessities and afflictions wee may in the true zeale of our heart pray so de●outely vnto thy omnipotent Maiestie that our Petitions may haue a gracious acceptance in thy sight And as Gods word further declares vnto vs not only that he kneeled at the naming of whose name all knees must bow both in Heauen and Earth and vnder the Earth but that he fell vpon the ground the foot-stoole of his owne Maiestie and lay vpon that face that neuer Angell beheld without reuerence and when hee had praied once hee praied againe more earnestly as his word records He once praied departed a secōd time yet a third praied and departed euermore vsing the same petitions his prayer ascending by degrees like incense persume And not only his lips went but his agony contention within was so great that an Angel was sent from Heauen to comfort him and out of the trouble of his soule the sweate like drops of bloud trickled downe to the ground Let vs not therefore at any time offer vp any vnworthy sacrifice but let vs remember in our Prayers this glorious example of this our worthy and blessed Sauiour for our imitation that they may be blessed in their speede and wee in their successe and not to vtter them carelesly as if our spirits and tongues were strangers ignorant of eithers purpose the lippes bab●ing without the heart but no compu●ction within honouring God with our mouthes but our spirits of true deuotion being farre from him our hearts not bleeding with the drops of true sinceritie which would bee heard and pittied Our Altar without fire our Petitions without heate and all that wee doe without zeale If we meane that our Petitions should be heard and accepted at the hands of GOD wee must frame our supplications with an ardent true affectionated zeale
weakenesse of our faith is such but hee is willing to grant as farre as is expedient for our good If our darke vnderstanding would giue vs leaue duely to consider there is another motiue for feruency to bee vsed vnto that great GOD who will not be mocked with the idlenesse of ou● thoughts and lippes i● be pittifulnesse of his fauourable countenance which is so great to man as if wee doe but carefully aske it in zeale and humility of heart hee is then so ready to hearken to our requests that presently he opens his hand of bountie and powreth on vs his benefits plenteously All these respects and considerations thereto tending doe crie vnto vs in most pittifull and lamentable manner to make out hard and stony hearts to melt and cry vnto his Omnipotent and Diuine Maiestie whereby wee may grow to be more feruent in our Petitions We must not thinke that the noise of our lips as the ringing of basons meer sounds and voices that awake and flie vp whilest the inward man doth slumber and keepe downe procures audience at the hands of God The strongest and most effectuall speech in the secret eares of GOD proceedeth not from bare words but from intention of heart Hee that heareth without eares can interpret our praiers without our tongues he that made both the one and the other knowes the language of both alike He that saw Nathaniel vnder the Fig-tree before hee was called saw and sanctified Iohn Baptist in his Mothers wombe before hee came forth and read the heart of Zachcus before his conuersion seeth and blesseth our godly praiers feruently conceiued and sowen in the root of our consciences before they bring forth any fruite But if they be onely verball and vocall sounds without wringing any droppe of contrition from the conscience bloud from the spirit they may beat the aire with empty sounds but into the eares of the Almighty shall they not enter but their want of deuotion shall bee answered by him as the prayers of those Idolaters Ezechiel 8. Though they crie in mine eares with a loude voice yet wil I not heare them Therefore let vs not herein behaue our selues vnworthilie nor presume to speake to the Maiestie of GOD but with such a due respect and reuerence to his Omnipotence that in speaking wee know to whom wee doe it Let vs stirre vp both our tongues spirits that they may ioine hand in hand the sooner to preuaile with GOD. And further if wee doe thinke that our often powred out petitions and plaints to God doe not preuaile according as our fraile flesh would haue it yet wee must not be discouraged or waxe Luc. 18. 1. faint thereby but goe on still in our suite grounded vpon Faith and so importune his Maiestie euermore and more sollicite his long suffering patient eares with our faithful clamors so shall wee at last obtaine all that we godly desire Peraduenture not in the same manner that our fraile flesh desires yet in that which the LORD out of his great mercies seeth most conuenient for the helpe of the Soule and for the comfort of the Bodie It were good for vs to carry Iobs minde saying Though GOD kill me yet will I trust in him Though GOD denieth vs a while yet let vs not despaire in him for without his helpe there is no good to bee had or to be expected either for the reliefe of body or soule It is said Heauen Earth shall passe but not one tittle of his word shall fall to the ground Therefore when we haue powred forth our suite and made our petition knowne then let vs beginne anew repeate it recite it ingeminate it and dwell vpon it bee not beaten away by any distrust or temptation from thy hold Learne adherence to thy suite from the Mariners constancy which is we beseech thee O LORD we beseech thee And if wee set our he arts truely on worke they will soone finde out this theame When the affection is fastened the tongue is easie and willing to dwell thereupon For example Dauid when he heard of the death of his ●onne Absolon he said O Absolon O my sonne Absolon ô Absolon my sonne my sonne where his affection seemes onely to dwell vpon the name and memory of his Sonne and his tongue to haue forgottē to pronounce any other speech saue onely Absolon It manifesteth likewise what loue our SAVIOVR ●are towards that holy Ci●ie in that hee ingeminated ●nd repeated his sorrowes ●uer and ouer saying O Ie●usalem Ierusalem if I forget Ierusalem let my right hand ●orget ●e● c●●ning Our affections must be in oue with him a●d his bles●ed name more then Sonne ●r Citie or any worldly de●ight that it m●● be● euer ●editating in our hearts ●nd walking in our tongues ●aying My God and my Lord. And the more we are held off the nee●e● let vs preasse Let vs attend his leasure mer●ifull pleasure with patience without distrust without wearinesse The longer Abraham talked with GOD the more h● preua●ted hee brought him from the whole number to fiftie from fiftie to ten before he gaue him ouer Mar● the manner of his i●portunitie Behold I haue begunne t● speake vnto my Lord and ● am but dust and ashes L● not my Lord be angry And will speake againe once word I haue beg●●ne and againe will speak● And let not ●● Lord be angry So f●rre w● GOD from anger that he● gaue him both a patien●●are and a gracious answere in hi● most importunate request If ●●● befound there I will not destroy ●● Let vs confider and be●olde what is the force of ●raier poured forth in since●ity from the tongue of a ●ighteous and zealous man It is so powerfull in the ●ares of his Diuine Maiesty that if in the who●e City ● Citie so exceedingly sinfull ●hat the crie thereof ascen●ed vp into Heauen euen in●o the eares of the Holy of ●oliest whose wrath and re●olution was of their ouerthrow ●●d his de●●●minate decr●e past thercupon If I ●ay there had b●●ne but ten ●igh●eous persons to haue stood vp betwi●t his wrath and their sinnes for their sakes it had not beene destroied It pleaseth the eare● of his Heauenly Maiesti● right well to bee long in treated whose blessed condition and nature is neuer 〈◊〉 truly leuelled at as when 〈◊〉 persw●de our selues th●● our importunity therein c●● neuer be bur●hensome to h●● Highness● Many times h●th his M●iestie vnto vs ●●nfull and ●●serable wretches in gemin●ted recited and repeated ●●uer the riches of his merci●● As in these and the like pl●ces The Lord is mercif●● gracious 〈◊〉 to anger ab●●dant in goodnesse and 〈◊〉 〈…〉 for t●●●sands for giving i●●iq●i●●● 〈◊〉 and or a●sgressions What did he meane there by but that twise and 〈◊〉 ●imes together wee should ●●geminate recite and re●eate ouer againe our re●uests and petitions and cry or his mercy and then if he ●eeme deafe for a while and ●ake as though hee heard ●ot yet at last the
measure beyond the strēg●● of man in so much that we doubt whether wee liue 〈◊〉 no receiuing the sentence 〈◊〉 d●ath within our selues s● that in our opinion we com●prehend no deliuery no euasion but lie open to the direct accomplishment there of Yet in this exigent an● extremitie we come to Go● by these meanes of Prayer being almost beyond hope without expectation and b● his gracious and merciful● pleasure wee are deliuered Therefore let vs here in r●●●ue comfort his Maiestic ●ut of his great clem●nrie ●ath and doth deliuer vs daiie not onely from the death of our bodies when wormes ●nd rottennesse haue made ●heir last and long prey vp●on them but from the ●eath of our minds when the spirit is buried vnder ●orrowes and no Greature ●ound in Heauen or Earth to giue it comfort Be our minds be our afflictions neuer so many and great though in our weake ●magination we can imagin ●o deliuery no release when all earthly comforts forsake ●s yet let not vs forsake thi●●efuge let vs not despaire in his mercifull helpe ●o more then I●●● did who being in the bottome of the Sea and within a prison in that bottome in such an affliction so great so strange as greater nor stranger could not be to humane reason or more without hope yet said Io●●● 2. 2. I cried in ●in● affliction vnto the Lord and hee heardme● 〈◊〉 of the be●ty of h●●● cr●ed I and thou he●r d●st my voice Therefore in our aduersitie and wants how great greeuous soeuer they oppresse our weakenesse yet let vs neither distrust or despaire of his mercifull helpe but let vs pray still in hope in all the anguish of minde ●●d let our prayers bee with such a confidence and zeale of loue to GOD as the feruencie thereof may ascend vp to his Throne and there rest in his pittifull eye and armes of mercy In our prosperity be it neuer so flourishing let vs pray nay pray continuallie In our health and prosperitie let vs pray to continue it In our sicknesse and aduersity let vs pray to release vs. For if wee consider our estates rightly wee shall perceiue many reasons to the exercise of Prayer daily to feek his sauour and the long continuance thereof without whose mighty protection and care ouer vs we are ready to fall into a thousand dangers of vndoing both the body and soule and to perish continuallie And therefore let vs well consider and take heed both in time and season with words sutahle in our Petitions to our purp●se and intention in giuing thankes for his great benefits daily poured vpon vs with intrestie in our Petitions for necessities to bee implored by vs in the time of sicknesse in the time of our health in the time of our aduersity in the time of our prosperity Let vs come before him suting our words in the habite of our occasions with such a fitnesse and decencie that they fall not harshly from the purpose ascend into the eares of the Almighty LORD the true patterne of all w●sdome and goodnesse who hath giuen vs the first and best forme there of himselfe who hath both taught vs to pray and taught vs how to pray and who will both heare our petitions and grant our requests contained therein as farre as seemes expedient to his vn searchable wisedome that knowes our wants before hee heares our complaints our necessities better then we our selues And because meditation is so excellent a thing so readie so swift so powerfull so vnseparated from vs that it cleaues vnto vs when all other meanes faile and forsake vs therefore we should the more earnestly imbrace it more zealously imploy it more dearely esteeme it It finds vs out comfort in our greatest extremities and miseries our wayes being hedged vp as with thornes that we cannot stirre to deliuer our selues therehence When we are ouer flowen with the deluge of sinne as with a floud iudgements inuiron vs on euery side this is the D●ue that brings vnto our Soules the Oliue branch of comfort But alasse we kill the life thereof through the coldnesse of our deuotio● and carelesnesse of our deliuerie and vnfit preparation thereunto and find not the sweetnesse and successe that else wee might expect and obtaine at the hands of GOD thereby Let these things be oftentimes our meditation and study that so despising the vaine things of this transitorie life and passing our steps in the path-way to fe●icity we may at the last obtaine the reward which our Sauiour CHRIST hath promised Come ye blessed of my Father Euen so let vs resolue with our selues that for as much as wee haue begunne our Pilgrimage in the Spirit neuer to end it in the Flesh and that if all the World would fall away from GOD and his Word yet wee and ours will serue the LORD So shall we be sure in the ende of this our P●lgrimage which we haue passed with feare to enter into that spirituall Canaan which CHRIST our IEHOVA hath promised vs which LORD for thy mercy sake grant vs. Amen Come ye blessed c. Go ye cursed c. THE SOVLES Alarum-bell The Second Part. Containing diuers godly PRAYERS most fit to comfort the wounded consciences of all such penitent sinners who hope for saluation through the merits of Christ Iesus By H. Thompson At London printed by Io. Beale 1618 TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE and my very good Lord WILLIAM Lord Eurye Baron of Ma●lton He●ry Thompson wisheth all honour grace and spiritual● gifts by Iesus Christ our Lord. BEing willing Right Honourable and my verie good Lord in the sight of all the World to leaue some publike testimonie of my humble d●●ty and v●f●ined good will towards your Honour I thought I could no better way performe it then by dedicating these poore labours of mine to bee shrowded and harboured vnder your Honours fauourable protection beseeching your Honour to accept this my humble and bounden dutie And as I dedicate it to your Honour so I humbly craue that it may bee defended for GOD hath set you in authoritie to maintaine his Word and loue his Religion which hee hath prescribed in his holy Gospell Hee hath honoured you that you should honour him and hath set you up that you should maintaine him and wholly trust in him and li●e to him as a s●ay that can neuer faile neither in this World nor t● the World to come All other things shall faile for all flesh is grasse and the glory of man is as the flower of the field but GOD is euerlasting his Word is euerlasting and they that are begotten to him by the i●●●rtall seede of his Word shall liue for euer and this life beginneth and groweth and increaseth in the true knowledge of GOD to the increasing of our faith and ●●●king in vs as the seale of our adoption that true sanctification that maketh vs to liue vnto GOD by righteousnesse purely to worship hi●●ccording to his Word an● with brotherly
more care of vs then we ha●e of our sel●es How often hath he spa●ed vs when wee haue fallen into sinne whereas if his l●●●●ad not beene gr●at to vs hee might easily ●a●● th●●●ne vs downe into perpetuall destruction without giuing vs ti●● of repentance Therefore let vs call to mind how dangerous a thing it is to offend so mercifull a Father let vs call to mind● why wee should put our soules into so great a danger considering wee see that hee strikes many ti●es suddenlie witho●t gi●ing any repentance ●● all If ●●●●●●●● but diligently consider t●● danger w●●rest in by our idle and cold seruing of GOD q●estionlesse wee should betake our selues to a better seruing of him Say we should die and leaue this life this present night what iudgement should we look or expect or to what place should wee bee brought where should wee giue and make account for euerie idle word we speake for whatsoeuer wee thinke or doe Of what a hard and fearefull thing is this vnto vs if wee would but duly consider what wee lose in not seruing God truly Let vs giue ouer this lazie seruing of God and leaue the idle vanities of the World which luls vs asleepe in the lap of destruction It is fit that we earnestly enforce our thoughts still to be calling to GOD for mercy and remission of our sins promising from the bottome of our hearts to be more carefull and to vse greater diligence for the amendement of our wicked liues And if it please his diuine Maiesty to take our liues away this night desire him according to his infinite mercie to deale mercifully with vs not according to our deseruings which are meerely naught but according to his righteousnesse which is all good but if it please his omnipotencie to prolong our daies any further here in this world pray that he will so infuse into our hart the oile of his grace that we may magnifie him in a better fashion then we haue usually done heretofore and pray that he will giue vs grace ●o liue discreetely vprightly and godlily in this life and in the World to come to giue vs life euerlasting Amen A Prayer for the Euening O Most worthy redeemer and Sauiour of Mankind I avile and a wretched sinn●● in hope of pardon and forgiuenes of my great offences doe here humbly prostrate my selfe before thy sacred f●ete this night confessing vnto thee and accusing my selfe of all my faults and heinous transgressions where-with vnto this houre I haue so offended thee my Lord and Maker and that I haue not trembled to commit those execrable sinnes for which if thy mercies were not great towards me I should remaine as a lost sheepe I must needs confesse my most great ingratitude which I haue committed vnto this houre against thee my onely Lord and Redeemer so vnthankefull to thee for all thy loue graces and benefits bestowed vpon me and that thou hast so patientlie spared mee so long a time persisting in euill and continuing my wicked and vngracious courses that in mercie thou hast tollerated so great contempt of thy diuine will and Commandements yea so exceeding and great hath beene thy loue that in stead of casting mee into hell fire thou hast kept me vnder the shadow of thy wings as for these my offences I had iustly deserued thou contrariwise hast spared mee for amendemnt of life for which cause how often hast thou knockt at the doore of my heart by thy heauenlie inspirations how often hast thou preuented ●ee with blessings allured mee with comforts drawne me with fauours yea forced mee many times by crosses and afflictions to seeke vnto thee and yet neither hath my flintie heart beene mollified therewith nor my will reclaimed A wonder it is that now at last comming to finde the foulenesse of my errour my very heart doth not burst with extremitie of contrition Hath Hell it selfe sufficient torment to punish such wickednesse and to take vengeance of such exceeding ingratitude vnworthie I am to bee called thy Creature or whom the earth should beare much lesse affoorde nourishment and things necessarie for preseruation of my health nay doubtlesse had not thy mercie with-held them both Heauen and Earth the Elements and all Creatures had long ere this taken vengeance of me for such horrible contempt and abuses O how many thousands in the World by thy righteous iudgements are alreadie condemned to the neuer ending torments of hell fire who neuer came neere the measure of any mortal transgressions Yea who in comparison of me a sinfull caitiffe might rather bee Saints in Heauen then damned soules adiudged as they be vnto eternall perdition But now O mercifull Father and God of pittie and compassion in vnfeined sorrow and remorse of conscience for all my misdeeds I throw my selfe downe at thy feete this night humbly beseeching thee to be reconciled vnto mee to pardon all my offences both new and olde to looke vpon me a miserable and a wretched sinner with the eye of mercie as thou diddest the penitent Publican the ●●nner Magdalen and the Apostle that thrice denied thee Bee pleased to admit mee again into thy grace and fauour Lord I pray thee work that speedilie in mee for which cause thou hast so long spared mee Wo is mee that I should leaue so louing and so kinde a Father who hath not ceased to procure my good that I haue refused to bestow vppon him my heart who would haue made an habitation for his owne abode therein which by keeping from him my selfe haue defiled it with much filth and corruption Yea made it a vessell of impietie a stew of vncleane thoughts and cogitations in a word I confesse my selfe to be the most vicious Creature vpon the Earth Yet the rather will I throw my selfe into the Sea of thy mercie for as my sinnes bee numberlesse so be thy mercies endlesse But most louing Father if thou wilt thou canst make mee cleane Lord heale the wounds of my soule for vnto thee doe I open the sore Remember thy selfe sweete Lord of that comfortable speech pronounced by the mouth of one of thy Prophets Thou hast committed folli● with many Louers yet turn● thee againe vnto me and I wil receiue thee Much confidence haue I Lord in this thy sweete and comfortable saying with all my heart do I returne vnto thee and to none else I am that prodigall child I am that vnfaithful seruant who haue separated my selfe from the Father of lights from whom all goodnesse doth flow I haue forsaken the fountaine of lluing w●ters and haue digged vnto my selfe Ci●●●rnes which will hold no water contenting my selfe with such barren comforts as the Creatures did affoord mee such momentanie sading pleasures as to the great detriment of my soule I h●ue ●ried to be lighter then cha●●e and more vaine then vanitie itselfe But what is past gracious God let it be cancelled and forgotten and for the time to come let there be an eternall league
exceed mans impietie and thy mercy to bee greater then mans misery Sinnes as they cannot choke thy loue so they cannot stand in any degree of comparison with the infinitene● of thy mercy for how much thy greatnesse ouerspreads mans weakenesse so much the goodnesse of thy goodnesse exceeds the euill of his euill and therefore it were first high treason to thy omnipotency and power to say My sinnes are greater then thou canst pardon when thy mercy is like thy selfe great without all quantity good without all quality Secondly it were a wrong vnpardonable to thy will a trespas dangerous to thy truth an iniury too desperate in despairing of thy promises to say Thou wilt not doe what thou canst when with thee to doe is as easie as to will and to wil is ready euerie houre It is worse then the staine of hypocrisie to say I am no sinner for none can challenge to himselfe that priuiledge Sinne was my Mother which brought me into the VVorld and sin is the daughter of my affection in the VVorld the VVorld is become a loathsome Cage of vncleane Birds a troubled Sea diuided into many puddles a dangerous desert nursing and nusling vp strange and venemous creatures where couetousnesse like a burning Serpent breathes out the fire of vnhallowed desires where lust like the Scorpion enuenometh the soule and prouokes it to blacke attempts where pride lies close at the hart like a snaile lurking in the bushes wher nay where else should sinne be when the VVorld is termed the denne and couert of all euill Here euery sinne great and little though euerie little sinne be too great ranges and keeps his Court. The trimme fashion of the VVorld is out of fashion because it is sicke of euery fashion it being composed the vvonderfull checke and countermand of all Art is novv become a miserable Chaos the ruinous and disordered heape of all disorder it is the Stage and Theater of hypocrisie faire and beautifull without but full of foule sinne within like straight grovving reeds satis●ying the eyes vvith a greene and pleasing sight but vvithin nothing more vaine nothing more light nothing more empty like vnto Nabuchadnezars Idol glittering vvith a golden Dan. 3. 1. head yet standing vpon feet of clay by striuing to excell in beauty it hath vvashed avvay all beauty and there is no sure hold for the soules anchor in so slippery a station The effects proue it so for it is become Murthers slaughter-house Thefts refuge VVhoredomes and Oppressions safety and for all sinnes a sinfull Sanctuarie Who can svvallovv Circes Cuppe and not bee transformed Who can taste deadly poyson and escape infection Who can liue in Sodome and not be vvicked Who can breathe in the World and bee no sinner The Infant-blush at mine natiuity vvas it not the tell-tale of my originall sinne how I had tasted of that sovvre fruite vvhich all my auncestors from the first to the last had eaten And from the time of my natiuity how I haue since hewen off my age by sinne filling and fulfilling as Christ saith the measure of my fathers My sinne-prest conscience secretly doth tell me there is no way to hide and smother what I am for if disguised Adam in his figge-leaued coate close and secure as he thought among the bushes could not shelter him from Gods presence how can I promise to my selfe security Well may the blind-folde World being as deepely couered in sinne as I either for weakenesse not see or for the thicke skinne of his own sinne still be dazel-eyed and not behold the heapes and drifts of iniquity but God which hath intelligence of my secret thoughts hath an eare to heare my priuate words an eye to see my light and darke actions God which is the scrutator of our hearts and reines enters the priuy chamber of our hearts and is an eye-witnesse of our sinne before it be hatched Hee knew all things before they were begunne therefore hee must needes know them when they are done He saw thee and Dauid intending adultery before thou and Dauid comitted adulterie If then no running awaye will serue turne no place close enough to smother sinne when euery thing is naked and open to his view into what an hard obduration is man cast how is his face made stiffe with oyly colours of shamelesse impudencie that will feare the presence of the creature and no way stand-in awe or reuerence of the all-presence of the Creator There may be a secret roome where no man comes a secret stage to act sinne where no man sees but is it possible to keepe God out is it possible to blinde his eyes O poore runawaies that we are wee hide not our selues frō God but rather hide God from vs. What though the eyes of thy vnderstanding being darkned thou canst not see him yet hath hee made thee a casement to thy conscience and beholds thee within and without in the cogitation in the action Wherefore if running from God bee but a step to greater sinne then will I runne from sinne to God till I recouer strength in his mercifull eyes As there is no security to hide sinne so there is no remedy to excuse it or to post it off saying The womā which thou ga●est mee did cause mee to sinne as Adam Gen. 3. or as Eue to cleere her selfe saying The Serpent begui●ed mee this is rather an increase then a decrease of sinne the offence was heauier in examination then it had been before in commission for heere the blinde leades the blinde and the further they goe the greater is their danger First they sin and then they flie Secondly they are taken but they denie Thirdlie it being proued they stand out in their owne defence and dispute the case Adam excusing himselfe by the Woman the Woman laying the fault on the Serpent both of them priuily taxing God for placing such and such with them in Paradise But alas this is but a naked shift and to no purpose to bandy words with God neither did he cal them for any such discourse but God as it were lamenting the first fruites of his labor should vtterly perish therefore questioned with our first Parents that the fire of their confession might burne downe the wall which the rancor of sinne had builded between them and God As then hopefull Israel found meanes to supplant the vsurping Canaanites by electing Iuda their guide and Captaine Iudg. 1. so many put to flight that great daring Canaanite that musters vp whole legions of temptations against vs when as Iuda which interpreted signifies confession doth not onely conduct and guide our forces but also blunts the edge of our enemies sword returning his intended poyson to his own confusion The confession of our sinne saith Augustine barres vp the mouth of Hell which stands gaping to deuoure thee and opens the gates of Heauen that willingly would receiue thee Therefore let vs launce the festered soare with the knife of true confession let
vs complaint to him that is the great Shepheard of soules as hee is a Physition he will cure thee as hee is a Shep●eard hee will number thee with his flocke sinnes-saluing plaster is to reueale our wickednesse Well may wee confesse our offences but hide them wee cannot by such our confession the Diuell is preuented of his seuere accusation which ancient malice would cōmence against vs. To anatomize exenterate sinne to poure it forth vpon the Altar of repentance before God will not onely take away the occasion of plea from the accuser but also reconcile vs to the whole fauour of that High Commission Beleeuing Nini●i● wrapt and confounded in sorrow was soone turned out of her mourning gowne of sackecloth and ashes and was girded about with a faire sindon of Gods eternall sauor but harde-hearted Sodome swelling in the pride of her strength is stript of all her beautifull attire and nakedly left in the base ashes of ●er owne destruction Therefore I will confesse with Dauid against my selfe my wic●ednesse Psal 32. vnto the Lord. It is ●ot an vsurpation to turne ●udge to cal an Assise to ex●mine mine owne soule to ●roduce my thoughts as ac●users of my conscience as 〈◊〉 thousand witnesses to a●erre and confound the gilt ●f sinne but these shall pre●ent that latter and fearefull examination how wee haue spent our time how we haue imployed our wealth how we haue ruled our appetites how we haue mortified our desires how wee haue vsed and bestowed all good gifts and graces of the holy Spirit Nay we shall neuer haue cause to feare that dolefull distaste which Abraham cast in Diues teeth Sonne remember Lu. 16. how thou in thy life time receiuedst pleasure disporting thy time in wanton dalliance solacing thy selfe in pleasing pastimes braue in apparell glittering in gold high in honour delicate in fare defending pride to bee but a point of gentry gluttony a part of good fellowship wantonnesse a tricke of youth because thou hast inclosed and taken in all pleasures to thy selfe vpon earth thou shalt now take vp thy ●ents and reape a plentifull haruest in Hell Meete with ●he day of Iudgement saith Augustine before it come ●ooke about before hand ●repare thy selfe to enter an ●ction against thy selfe for ●o presumption will serue ●e that seeth his house run 〈◊〉 ruine and will not at the ●●rst or second breach seeke 〈◊〉 reparations striues to ●ake rubbish of a good ●●ilding And he that tra●●ls in a leaking shippe and ●ill not in the beginning ●oke to empty it sayles for ●ught but to drowne him●●fe To morrow to morrow 〈◊〉 the voice of presumption 〈◊〉 who can tell whether he 〈◊〉 liue till to morrow God saith Augustine hath sealed a pardon to him that truly repents but none to him that deferres and saies he will repent And hee that is not fit for his conuersion to day will bee lesse ready to morrow for on the morrow he will bee the same man againe and sing the same song againe languishing still in delay trifling out the time till God in whose hands only are the moments of times shut and barre him out from all time and leaue him to paines without time for so abusing the precious date of time To morrow to morrow is an vncertaine time though the times bee certaine in themselues ye● are they most vncertaine vnto man as he knew not hi● beginning so he is ignorant of his ending much like to little birds who on their ●earch looke about to flie this way or that way yet before they take their flight they are preuented by the shaft Death is a common ●tate-searcher both of old and young striking as well Dauids young sonne before he was seauen dayes old as 2 Sam. 22. that ancient of dayes Methusalem that liued nine hundred sixtie nine yeeres Lest the Kingdome of Sathan should bee established in vs by frequency of sinning therefore let vs breake off delay putting no trust in old age but as Saint Paul saith Heb. 3. ●uen in this very instant while it is named to day let us repentantly crie to God and call to him to forgiue vs our leude and mispent time and let vs giue our sinnes leaue to die before vs it is good riddance of a painefull pardon for it is little better then desperatiō to giue free liberty to thy youthfull wil to range abroade vpon confidence of repentance in thy last and least part of thy life For alas what can helpelesse old age helpe when all the strength of the body all the faculties of the mind all the parts and passions are not onely daunted and out-dared with sickenesse but also worne out with a multitude of yeeres as age-spent Dauid is not able to retaine heate of himselfe but Abishai the Shunamite must cherish him An old man is halfe deathes man destitute of all good meanes to conuersion vnfit to fast vnable to pray vnapt to watch or to any other exercise What voice is there more lamentable the● that of Milo when seeing the young Champions striuing each with other to obtaine the Conquest he cried out with teares looking on his withered armes My bloud is dead my veines wrinckled my sinewes shrunke to nothing The counsell of the Wise-man may be a present Memorandum to euery man Let vs remember Eccles 12. our Creator in the dayes of our youth while the euill dayes come not That is in our prosperity of strēgth in our hopefull youth in the vigor and lustinesse of our yeeres before forgetfull old age ouertake vs. Let vs betake our selues to him that tooke vs out of the dust and created vs after his own likenesse otherwise it were an euerlasting blemish of ingratitude and a most infamous stampe of iniustice to hope for the receite of eternall glory to receiue at one instance an Angels inheritance to enioy for nothing a place with Christ and not to tender the best of thy selfe to God his Father If it were pol●ution to the Altar to offer the lame and sicke with what face then canst thou present that little short and maimed peece of seruice which limping old age will affoord Hee which is the Childe of many yeeres is no doubt the Father of many sinnes for life the longer it is the more sinfull it is If in the oblation of burnt offerings and peace offerings the young Lambes without Leuit. 1. blemish were elected for the sacrifice if the chiefe fat of the Ramme made the Exod. 29. sweetest sauour vnto the Lord then stands it against the rule of decencie and good manners to serue in Leuit. 3. Gods messe with the bare leane and rotten bones of sinnes that haue lien rotting in the pit of corruption as many s●●re yeeres as did Lazarus dayes in the graue If no man were admitted to stand before Nabuchadnezzar but children that were Dan. 1. 4. most beautifull how dare any man shuffle himselfe into Gods presence disiointed crooked old aged