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A93601 Scintillula altaris. or, A pious reflection on primitive devotion : as to the feasts and fasts of the Christian Church, orthodoxally revived. / By Edward Sparke, B.D.; Thysiasterion. Sparke, Edward, d. 1692. 1652 (1652) Wing S4807; Wing S4806; Thomason E1219_1; ESTC R203594 218,173 522

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man of fervent Prayer Humiltiy Reverence miraculous Patience and forgiveness all evidenced in his Christian Deportment First his Faith through his eye S. Stephen stedfastly looking up into heaven there saw blessed visions even before his death while here on earth saw Christ standing at the right hand of God Mark that posture of encouragement our Creed Article telleth us of Christ sitting at the right hand of God but our St. Stephen here sees him standing i. in a readinesse of assistance defence And if Christ thus stand with his suffering servants who shall withstand their happiness but that as the sufferings of Christ abound in us even so also shall our consolation abound through him 2 Cor. 1. Prayer is all his shield v. 59. Calling upon God He who is invited to the Fountaine needs not go to the streams nor using Lord alone a name of power but through Justice not of willingness and therefore adding Jesus Dulce salvatore nomen the saving name of Mercy The good Angels and blossed Saints in Heaven are willing but not able uncharitable men on Earth neither of them Onely Christ is both and therefore invocated here Able because Lord willing because Jesus Quem in coelis quem in terris Psal 73. Whom then have I in Heaven c. His Charity 's extensive yet wisely begins at home would all men would do so for spirituall charity He takes care to recommend his soul to the right owner Col. 3. Lord Jesu take thine own into thine own custody Souls then survive the bodies in spite of Atheists who think but what they wish and are immediatly determined in their state of Bliss or Misery in spite of other Hereticks St. Stephen here quite contrary to most is all for his soul and nothing for the body For alas Quid proderit mundus Matth. 16.26 as our blessed Lord saith Matth. 16. c. the soul being of more price then all were there as many worlds as Empedocles and Democritus imagined * Laertius in vita Democriti i. Thousands Save This and save all and so the contrary according to that Dutch Proverb one of the wholsomest things I ever heard of from them Goods lost nothing lost Credit lost much lost Soul lost all lost Next unto Faith in God he adjoyneth Love to Men the best evidence in Foro exteriori without which all the rest had been but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a tinkling 1 Cor. 13.3 not a well-tuned Cymball But He a true Disciple of his great good Master Luke 23.34 Qui pendebat tamen petebat as Augustine sweetly who as he hung upon the Cross prayed Ignosce pater c. So this holy Saint forgives his enemies that is more then to give he that gives doth it Desuo of his goods but who so forgives gives De se something of himself yet more he prayes for them though enemies mortall enemies and in hot blood when he scarce had any time to think of his friends Lord lay nt c. more sorry for them Serm. 5. de Stepha then for his own ruine saith St. Augustine because eternall death followed their impiety but his Death eternall life And was not this the Apex the Height of Charity And 't is remarkable that he kneeled down when he prayed for his enemies that stood when for himselfe shewing the greatnesse of their sin that could not easily be forgiven and therefore the earnestnesse of his Piety Qui plus illorum dolebat peccata quam sua vulnera Cajetan in locum that did more lament their Sins then his own wounds Magnus clamor magnus amor his lowd voyce shewed his great affection and his kneeling down his reverend gesture in devotion the God of both parts challengeth both Exteriores actus demonstrent interiores affectus Dan. 6.10 Acts 9.40 cap. 26.36 Luke 22.41 In praying either stand as a servant before his master or kneel as a subject to his Prince Daniel prayed kneeling so St. Peter so St. Paul so Christ himself And the Centurists acknowledge this gesture the most ancient and most usefull in all sacred solemnities in all Ages among Christian Congregations Magdeburgenses centuria secunda And therefore not to kneel except in case of corporall infirmity argueth either Ignorance or Arrogance or some other worse infirmity of Mind And herein t is Saint Hierom so commends Asella for devotion Epist ad Marcellum that her knees were grown Brawny like the knees of Camels with her pious Geniculation Saint Stephen you see here used both postures and kneeling for his most earnest and last prayer Loco citato Wherein he was heard saith Augustine Si Stephanus non sic orasset Ecclesia Paulum non habuisset For if St. Stephen had not thus prayed the Church had never had St. Paul a Convert And Fulgentius saith whither St. Stephen went before being slain with stones thither St. Paul followed being holpen with his prayers And when he had thus spoken he fell asleep Such and so pretious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints asleep in respect both of Rest Resurrection Graves are grown but * Isa 57.2 Beds and Churchyards 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. sleeping places so here like Jacob his pillow is of stone whereon lying down as well as if on Down Saith Damianus Serm. de Steph. he taketh rest and fell asleep Foelix somnus it was an happy sleep being joyned with such rest that rest with pleasure that pleasure with eternity Thus blest St. Stephen as Nissen observes Oratione de Stephan esteemed the Ring of his persecutors with which he was inclosed as his Crown and every stone flung at him as a pretious one as a pretious Diamond so that that of David might be applied to him Psal 21.3 Thou hast set a Crown upon my head I a Crown of Proto-martyrdom upon his Name and on his Soul a Crown of Glory Anno Christi 35. POEM 7. STtout Champion of the Truth who by Dispute First Rescu'dst it and didst her Foes confute By Dint of Argument irrefragable Which they to Answer or resist unable To harder motives do themselves betake Even Threats and Stones but vain thy Faith to shake Who So through Sphaeres transparent Christ doth Ey Begins blest visions here nor fears to dy Captain of Martyrs Thou didst lead the van Of that same Noble Army you began To seal with bloud the Christian Faith's defence Teaching us to take Heaven by violence Thy Soul breath'd forth in Charitable groans Return'd a showre of Prayers for one of Stones Therefore blest Saint 'T is but a due Renown Thy Name and Day wear the chief Martyrs Crown Vouchsafe us the like Heavenly Visions Lord That we to Thee may Tongues Hearts Lives afford And for thy sake in mean time while we live May those that stone us like this Saint forgive The COLLECT PRAYER The Epistle Acts 7. from verse 55. to the end The
his own free gracious act On our part undeserv'd oppos'd effect Light on us therefore O Celestial Dove So with thy Fanning Wings inflame our Love That Earth with grateful Harmony may sing With those Aetherial Spirits to Heavens King That both in compleat Consort so aspire Till all one Hallelujah singing Quire Then they 're ill Shepherds sure will not always Together with their Flocks Christ this day praise The COLLECT PRAYER The Epistle Heb. 1. from vers 1. to 13. The Gospel John 1. from vers 1. to 15. Almighty God which hast given us thy onely begotten Son to take our nature upon him and this day to be born of a pure Virgin Grant that we being regenerate and made thy children by Adoption and Grace may daily be renewed by thy holy Spirit through the same our Lord Jesus Christ who liveth and reigneth c. The stoning of Steuen Act 7* 58 And cast him out of the Citie and stoned him the witnesses layd downe there clothes at a voung mans feete named Saul 59 And they Stoned Steuen who called on God and said Lord Jesus receiue my spirit 60 And he kneeled downe cried with a loud voyce Lord laye not this sinne to there charge etc The Plate here Saint Stephens Day DISQUISITION 4. YEsterday presented a Nativity and this a Martyrdome like a Deaths-head served up at a Festivall the Church thereby first tacitly intimating human Condition both our natural accidental frailty how neer our End bordereth on our Birth Finisque ab origine pendet And yet how many outward dangers equalling inward diseases hasten the pace of precipitating Nature Vitae unicus introitus mille exitus Our life for one sole ingress having many thousand out-lets And secondly expressly desirous by joyning these two Festivals that we should all learn to live well as Christ and to die well as St. Stephen Ideo natus est Dominus ut moreretur pro servo In a Sermon on St. Stephen ne servus deficeret mora pro Domino saith holy Austin yesterday we celebrated the Birth of that heavenly King of Martyrs born into the World and to day the first fruits of Martyrs going out of the world It behoved the Immortall saith he First to take Flesh for Mortals that so mortall man might the better contemn Death for the Immortall Therefore was the Lord born to die for his servant that the servant might not fear to die for his Lord. Christ was born in Earth that Saint Stephen and his other followers might be born in Heaven Christus pro nobis induit hominem Stephanus pro Christo hominem exuit Christ for us put on human Flesh and Saint Stephen here for Christ put it off The story is so obvious that I shall need only glance on it out of the Scriptures for the Day Acts 7. it consisting of two remarkables Acts 7. viz. the Jews cruelty and his Piety their bloody and his godly behaviour in his Martyrdome First here Mat. 23. They retaining their old Title of Killers and stoners of the Prophets put him to death who endeavoured to bring them to everlasting life by his large Sermon to them Acts 7. that sweet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 7. or Recapitulation of the whole sacred Scripture Law Prophets and Evangelists even from Abraham to Christ whom he would have applied home to them had not their fury withstood their conversion even that they should have seen him as he did at the right hand of God but that they stopt him there with a Constructive Blaspphemy becomming Accusers Judges and Executioners all at once presently beginning their persecution with their tongues and teeth v. 54. gnashing on him with c. beside the malice of their tongues that they could even tear his Flesh but that their hands beguiled their mouthes with as ready and more mortall instruments The Jews had among them Quatuor magna supplicia foure speciall sorts of torments besides their bonds and scourgings and other lighter punishments which they had borrow'd from Scythians the Masters of those Arts and other cruell Heathens as the first was Burning Gen. 38.24 Dan. 3.22 The second Casting to wild Beasts Dan. 6. and St. Pauls Case supposed by many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 15.32 Thirdly Stoning Exod. 19 13. And lastly Crucifying Luke 23.21 as all are frequently to be seen elsewhere in Scripture but of all this of stoning was most ordinary among them as the onely Deucalion-race of mankind Vnde homines nati durum genus ad lapides currebunt saith * Loco citat St. Augustine Duri ad duros Presently they run to stones hard hearts unto hard instruments of mischief whether for their readiness cheapness fatalness I argue not or as the best Emblems of their flinty nature Sed Petris lapidabatur qui pro Petra i. Christo moriebatur but with stones destroyed they the servant of him who was the chiefe Corner stone and Rock of his Church Jesus Christ an harsh and an hard act of a right stony people whose obduratnesse to God and man hath turn'd their memory into a Niobean monument of shame not sorrow while Arator hath inscribed this due Epitaph Lapides Judaea rebellis In Stephanū lymphata rupis qua crimine duro Saxea semper eris Arator lib. Carm. in Act. Rebellious Judah that did Stephen stone For that hard act shall pittied be of none Till at length their Punishment so ecchoed their Sin that for their killing of the Prophets and stoning them who were sent unto them Non lapis super lapidem inter Lapidatores Their House was left to them so desolate that not a stone was left upon a stone Matth. 24.2 O let all their Successors consider this not onely in Judea but in England or where ever that still make the Prophets cry and sigh and that as lowd as in most times heard heretofore Psal 44.22 onely with a little cruell variation For sheep appointed to be slain Pastors appointed to be starv'd Think of stony Jerusalem avoid her sins and so her Plagues lest likewise the same judgement follow and overtake you Temporall your house be left unto you desolate Spiritual Christ saying You shall not see me henceforth Matth. 23. And eternall that upon you come not all the righteous blood both of Abel and Zechariah i. both of Laicks and Clergy So Cajet in locum Sanguine fundata est Ecclesia sanguine crevit Sanguine decrescit sanguine finis erit Christs bloud did found his Church and Saints increase Which wains in storms yet in 's Foes bloud shall cease But now to take a glimpse of that which more particularly concerns us observe St. Stephens behaviour in his suffering an excellent Patern to reflect on at our deaths made up of Piety and Charity a man of an high Character and and that by the pencill of the Highest * Acts 6.55 Full of faith and power of the Holy Ghost v. 55. a
Coelum corporale Saint Austin Coelum 3. spirituale super intellectuale the Corporal Heaven saith he conteins the Spheres and whole materiall Fabrick the Spiritual One is the Habitacle of Angels all blessed Spirits the Super-intellectual is a Place apart a Sanctū sanctorum solely appropriated to the Deity and thither saith he Christ ascended as the Apostle meaneth Eph. 4.30 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 farr above all heavens Ephes 4. into that true Paradise that habitation of light that light inaccessible the Kingdom of Heaven But read we not of others that ascended before Christ yes but like those that rose before him with difference enough Enoch indeed walked with God Gen. 5.24 and was taken away Gen. 5. and Elijah found a Coach-way to Heaven 2. King 2. So me dare not think these bodily ascended 2 King 2. but as 't is said of Moses Deut. 34. that God buried them no man knowing of their sepulchre unto this day Others dreaming that they are still alive reserved in some by part of the world personally to fight with Antichrist but suâ fruantur insaniâ let them have their Phansie to themselves Greg. the great in locum while we here distinguish with Gregory Homo purus Adjutorio indigebat These though purest of men wanted supporters you see a Chariot from Heaven and Angels to draw it but Christ by his own power whereby he first made all things lifted himself now above all things nay indeed Causa fuit ejus Ascensio His Ascension though later in time yet in order of Nature before was the sole efficient of their elevation as shall be one day of ours Next for the Instruments of his Ascension Ps 104 3. Act. 1.9.11 a cloud saith the text received him out of their sight and not unprophesied posuit Nubem vehiculum Psalm 104. He it was that made the Clouds his Chariots and rode upon the wings of the wind I that cloud was the Canopy of the King of glory which the blessed Angels carried over him while he was now going to that high Court of Parliament the Court of the most high to treat about a Peace 'twixt Heaven and Earth A cloud received him out of their sight we cannot without a just Reprehension pry with curiosity where God hath interposed a cloud of secresie Act. 1.11 and therefore let not the Piety of our Affections spend it self in vain desires of an Earthly Pilgrimage to see the pretended steps of our Ascending Saviour the Pressures of his Feet still on Mount Olivet but rather veiw and trace his spirituall footsteps I am sure more certain less expensive in his sacred Oracles of Scriptures for thereunto are we called saith the Apostle 1 Pet. 2. for Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example 1 Pet. 2.21 that we might follow his steps though not Passibus aequis yet Amoris Ephes 5. Eph. 5.2 Be ye followers of God c. and walk in love as Christ hath loved us Lastly the end of his Ascension was ut impleret omnia Ephes 4.10 that he might fulfill all things all things concerning us all that concerned himself for us to compleat the work of our Redemption and to Prepare each of us one of those many Mansions to open the Kingdom of heaven to all beleevers The day of Christs Ascension Pro Nobis facta saith Saint Bernard Christ his Ascension was also for our exaltation assuring us here with a confirmed hope that our souls shall whensoever separated ascend to him and at length our soul and body both like his by his to heaven John 14.3 And as unto himself to fulfill Prophesies Psalm 68. Thou art gone up on high Ps 68 18. hast led captivity captive c. Also to shew an irrefragable Demonstration of his Godhead by that exalting his Manhood into heaven to manifest to the whole world to Heaven as well as earth that glorious Majesty of his which by Divine dispensation had so long lay shrowded in the form of a servan till now by entring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and Man into Heaven such a new Guest as the glad Angels never saw there before and how readily me thinks how joyfully did those Dorekeepers of the house of our God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 open unto him when hee called Aperite Portas stand ope yee Gates bee you lift up yee Everlasting dores that the King of glory may come in And if some serious devotions have beleeved that at Christs Passion the whole Quire of Angels and Saints were interrupted in their sacred Hymns and for a season ceased their Singing Haliluiahs O what increase of joys by Rule of contrariety may we here imagine when he returned Triumphantly unto his Throne of Glory David as though he had heard that Musick of the Spheres awakeneth his Harp and Lute bears a part with them Psalm 47. Psal 47.5 Deus ascendit cum Jubilatione God is gone up with a merry noise and the Lord with the voice of Melody Gone up I to the third and highest steppe of all his exaltation and that is the Right hand of God And but a touch of that which mortalls cannot handle Dextra Majestratem Gloriam Honorem Denotat Gods Right hand what the Right hand is a Metaphor expressing Power Honour Glory Empire and dominion to all which Christ was here exalted Ephes 1.21 Raised from the dead Ephes 1.21 set at Gods right hand in Heavenly places farr above all principalities and powers might and Dominion and every name that is named in this world or that to come Indeed his Resurrection and Ascension were but Motus ad hunc Terminum Onely the motion tending to this perfection This being Solium Triumphale his transcendent Throne of Glory where Triumphing over sinne death and Hell He shall Raigne saith the Apostle till He hath put all things under him 1 Corinthians 15. 1 Cor. 15. And whereas the other two Resurrection and Ascension shall be in some manner common to us with Christ thorough his infinite goodnesse one day to Arise and ascend to Glory but to Sit at the right hand of God in his Kingdome of Glory is too high for the most beloved Disciple Heb. 1.13 that is onely the Fathers Gift and the Sonns Prerogative not communicable either to Man or Angell Hebr. 1.13 There he Sitteth alone the Posture of State of Rest of Judgement as one pithily and sweetly Quiescentis Regnantis Judicantis est Well is our Redeemer after his Passion and Ascension said to Sit at the Right hand of God saith he Quia post Laborem Requiescit Ardens in locum post praelium Regnat postquam Judicatus est Judicat as keeping his Sabbath of Rest after his six grand * His Nativity Circumcision Presentation Baptism Passion Resurrection Ascension Raulin in Festum Labours as after Conquest raigning and after himselfe adjudged being the Judg of all things and what a comfort
is it to have a Friend of the Judg before we come to the Barr and that is our consolation if not our own default Christ is ascended our Best friend our Brother our Advocate and now we have a Mediatour in Heaven I till this Peace-maker went up Sin had set open war 'twixt heaven and earth Justice with an unbound Arm fetched a more heavy stroke not only on single persons but upon whole Cities Gen. 17. Gen. 7 Gen. 19. nay on the whole sinful world Gen. 7. then no Moses in the gap no Jacob there to wrestle for a blessing but now happy day for us the Angel of the Covenant is gone up to hold the hand of the striking God of Abraham our Aaron is at the high Altar to pray for the People Heb. 9.24 The Sanctum Sanctorum Hebrews 9.23 Christ our high Priest is entered into the Heaven of Heavens once for all to make an Attonement for us what place then is there now left black Dispaire but only Hell Rouse thee afflicted soul and ly no longer in the groanes of Cain For though the envious man Satan be ever pleading against us at the throne of God yet now is salvation in heaven saith Saint John and the power of Christ which casteth down the accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 c. Rev. 12.10 There his Intercession cries louder for us then our sins against us Ostendit Patri vulnera saith Saint Augustine He is ever shewing to his angred Father those wounds He suffered for our sins and so whatever he be with us God is in Him appeased Thus pleadeth he our cause before the eternall Judge an Advocate 1 John 2.1 1 John 2. If any man sin c. Yet for all this presume not Ransomed Soul bee not high-minded but fear God forbid sinne should because grace abounds Desperation like Saul slayeth thousands but Presumption her ten thousands This were even to crucifie the Son of God afresh and grieve the Holy Spirit Eph. 4.30 Ephes 4.30 Lastly Though wee have now one yet have we but one Mediatour in Heaven we dare not admit of that Delusion that there are as many Saviours as good men Each one meriting for himselfe some for others and no fewer Intercessours then Saints and Angels since Noah Job and Daniel shall deliver but their own soules by their righteousnesse Ezech. 14. Ezeck 14.14 We dare not so rob God of his Honour nor derogate from Christ's all-sufficient merits and intercession for all the thinne Distinction of Mediatio Redemptionis Intercessionis Away with cobweb shifts and Aiery phansies Listen to infallibility 1 Tim. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one God and one Mediatour between God and man even He that was both and none but He Jesus Christ then to close with St. Bernards Counsel Ascendit Christus sequamur Fratres sequamur Agnum quocunque ierit sequamur patientem resurgentem multo lubentius Asceudentem c. Christ is now ascended into Heaven what do we groveling so on earth Letus follow Brethren let us follow the Lamb whither soever he goeth Let us follow him suffering Bernard in Festum Arising much more willingly ascending exaltationem concupiscimus omnes We all love to be exalted born Corahs all of an aspiring Nature yet change but the object set Heaven and grace in the place of earthly transitories and keep your Ambition stil Si consurrexistis coascendite if risen with Christ Ascend with him Borrowing the wings of the Dove Scalam de vitiis make a ladder of your Sins saith Aug. every one of which subdued is a new stepp toward Heaven POEM 17. THose three steps of Christs later Passion Were answer'd in his exaltation By triple opposites building him high As his foundation laid debasingly The degradation of his bitter death Sweetned by Reviviction Resum'd Breath His bed made in the dust with worms to ly Was fairly oppos'd by his Ascent on high And for his stooping to the infernall Pit He now at Gods Right hand of power doth sit The first step we have trod Le ts now ascend The rest and Heaven shall be our journies end To th'Mount of Olives then for That 's the place Christs wonted Pulpit that must have the Grace Of this Triumphant wonder there while he Instructs and comforts his disciples see Elijah in his Antitipe again Transported thence in a coelestiall wain The Clouds his Chariot and the nimble winds His winged horses Angels in their kinds His Train and Lacquayes yet no needed ayd As is of Enoch and Elijah said Thus stately mounted his etherial Chaire Glides through the yeilding Regions of the Ayre To th' everlasting doors which open wide To th' King of Glory who brings a spring Tide Both of new Joy and wonder to that place Where ne're till now appeared a Humane Face And if some serious minds Christs Passion thought Even to Heavens Quire some silence to have wrought And for awhile the Saints and Seraphins Thence interrupted in their sacred Hymns O here by contrary's what Floud of joyes When Christ ascends with such a Raptive Noise David as though H 'had heard the Melody Streight Tunes his Harp and joyns i th' Harmony Angels and Saints all one glad Chorus Sing The Welcome Triumphs of their Glorious King Where Gods Right hand being his triumphant throne He still for us makes Intercession And such as needs no help who Rivals joyn His honour and their own successe Purloyn As Angels Pry this Death so let us Scan What 's said or done to Them as here to Man Then from Christs Mount now let our souls take Rise Whos 's Olivet speaks Peace and victories Follow our Leader in this holy Fight From Earth and Sin leading to glorious Light Follow the Lamb we should whereso'ere he goes Through joyes Spirituall through temporal woes Suffering or Rising follow him but sure Ascending we will easily endure Born Corahs all yet be but Heaven the Hill We climb and then keep our Ambition stil Souls are but sparkles of Coeiestial fire O let them to their Center then aspire Though Bodies are slow Pac'd Let souls ascend And bodies will ore'take their joyes i th' end That so a full Beatifying ascent As Christs may be our Journall's complement The COLLECT The Epistle Act. 1. v. 1. to 12. The Gospel Mar. 16. v. 14. to the end Grant we beseech thee Almighty God that like as we do beleeve thy only begotten Son our Lord to have ascended into the heavens so we may also in heart and mind thither ascend and with him continually dwel who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the holy Ghost one God world without end Amen The comminge of the Holy Ghost Act. 2. 1 And when the day of Pentecost was come they were all with one accord in one place 2 And suddenly there came a sound from heauen ect 3 And there appeared unto them clouen tongues like fire and it sate upon each
from labour and a Sanctification of that Rest Non prosunt singula Wherein the duties of the Lords Day consists especially If either of which be wanting it makes one but like a Bird with one wing or a Boat with one Oar rendreth but a lame devotion but juncta junant Like two gloves the one lost the other is of little use yet both together make themselves compleat First of the Cessation Thou shalt do no manner of work c. i.e. No servile works of thine ordinary Calling much less any works of sin it must be a double Sabboth from labour rom sin And two sorts of people transgresse here especially First such as imploy Man and Beast upon that day contrary to Gods Design of Rest to both by ordinary Coaching of it in fairest weather and the neerest distances while wise men cannot discern the Reason why equall care should not be taken then to prevent all prophanation as well by land as water Secondly such as rest in their impieties like Elements in their own places idlely spending this Day in excesse and vanity So that God is then more then all the week beside dishonored In Rest from Labour Thou shalt do no manner of work c. No Yes sure some manner of works are then lawful and most seasonable This day being Mercatura animarum as it were the Market Day of Souls Schola Dei saith Ramus De Rel. Christ l. 2. c. 6. the School day of Christ the Preachers as it were his Ushers and the Churches then as it were his open School-house Then such works are most lawfull as appertain to Gods publick worship as reading Divine Service painfull preaching administring the blessed Sacrament and things subordinate thereunto as Ringing of Bells Sabboth days Journeys 2 King 4.23 c. Acts 1.12 And beside these works of piety there are works of Mercy lawfull both toward our selves in necessary provision Mat. 12.1 and toward others whether men as our Saviour visited and healed Mark 3.5 or beasts in relieving them What works lawfull on the Lords day as requisite Luke 14.5 A third sort of works then lawfull are those of present Necessity which doubtlesse may be exercised by Physicians Midwives Shepheards Mariners Messengers and Souldiers upon visible necessities To say nothing of the works of honest Recreation Men therein being too apt to indulge themselves which I advise may be such onely as may cheere not interupt Devotion and then that reason given by Christ may extend to all the forementioned The Sabboth was made for Man Mark 2.27 not Man for the Sabboth But yet not for Man onely but for God chiefly or which is all one for Man spiritually and to further his eternall Good It must not be an empty or an idle Requiescence for as the Apostle saith of Bodily exercise so may I here say of Bodily Rest it profiteth nothing Bene vestiri nihil agere We may complain of as well as Leo Men cloath their bodies and not then ornament their souls they are so fine they are the worse again And this the Fathers call Sabbatum Boüm Asinorum The Ox and the Ass keep as good a Sabboth as these and a better then those that St. Augustine complains of that do vacare nugis Theatris spectaculis choraeis That spend the day in sports and Interludes Huntings and Compotations which is but Sabbatum Aurei vituli like wanton Israel to proclaim an holy to Jehovah and to worship a Calf Exod. 32. Exod. 32. Now this sanctifying of the Sabboth stands principally in our esteem of it and improving the opportunities thereof First we must count it our pleasure and delight Deliciae Christiani generis the Vespasian of all dayes to us Calling the Sabboth our delight Isa 58. Isai 58.3.3 Not doing our own works not thinking our own thoughts or speaking our own words c. But resigning our Heart Tongue and Hand i.e. our will voyce and practice to the businesse and object of it depositing the world and all her interruptions not nauseating the Divine Solemnities when orthodoxally performed saying Amos 8.9 When will the New Moons and Sabboths be gone c. that we may return to our Saecular advantages No but improving all we can the spirituall i.e. Prayer Reading Hearing and Meditating the sacred Mysteries of our Redemption Prayer is the Jewell of Gods Ear the Tongue of Angels the Dialogue between Heaven and Earth Gen. 18● Gen. 18. the Souls Embassadour with God our Leiger in Heaven working against the States of Death and Hell 't is the Phoenix of the Graces that still reviveth into a Bird of Paradise and makes an Arabia Petrea to become Arabia Foelix for stony hearts procures us hearts of flesh Ezek. 11. Ezek. And if God be thus pleased with single piety how is he importuned think you and as 't were besieged with the publick worship Vis unita fortior If our Domestick prayer be as a Brand in the corner and keep fire sure the publick is as a Bonfire of Incense a Sacrifice flaming up to Heaven the very highest design of Christianity The joynt prayers of the Congregation are a kind of revers'd lightning and as St. Basil said of his Church their Amen is like a Clap of Thunder And therefore David still to set the better glosse upon his gratulations tells both God and Man that he performeth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. in the Congregation in the great Congregation And that variety might refresh Devotion Reading is another means of sanctifying the day and therefore the appropriated Chapters are called Lessons as being then to be heeded and taken forth by us The Word is the best Glass and mends the Lookers eye And therefore Search the Scriptures John 5. John 5.39 Those are they saith Christ that testifie of me in them you hope to have eternall life It must be no superficiall much less oftentatious reading but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. make a scrutiny search diligently like Laban for his gods Gen. 31.33 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very word he searched the Tent and to this search there are some requisites viz. inspectio Fontium oculus adscopum Collatio locoruus fervens Oratio Lest with the Eunuch we understand not what we read there should be an inspection of the Originals but especially for Teachers but for all an eye still to the Scope of the Author a Collation of places Scripture often its own best Expositer and lastly Prayer will be an help to all the rest And for more safty keep in the shallows for Scriptures are waters wherein the Lamb may wade as well as the Lion swim and for deep mysteries goe to an Interpreter i.e. attend the Preacher Hearing and seeing are the two Disciplinary Senses Rom. 10. Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. 10. In hearing seek out the Wise Charmer i.e. the Orthodox Teacher and be not of
more appetite then digestion Be not like the Corimandi a kind of people whose Ear covereth their whole body as now-a-dayes all for hearing little for meditation nothing for practice having as 't were the Rickets of Religion their heads sweld with knowledge or pretensions but their feet not walking accordingly And therefore hear but with Christs caution Matth. 4. What and How Take heed what you hear Try the spirits Matth. 4. Luke 8. 1 Joh 4.2 as those noble Beraeans did even by Paul himself Act. 17.11 And all this practise wil make it Otium sanctum as St. Austin calls the Sabboth an holy rest and so effect that Sabbatum pectoris that double Sabboth of the soul whereas that of Time is but a figure viz. the internall rest of conscience here in grace and that eternall rest of soul and body hereafter in full glory So be it Amen POEM 20. SHall we sing of the Streams and not the Fount This Holy of holy Dayes which doth surmount The rest according to their Objects nature As the Creator doth excell the Creature This Day unyoaks the world and ease bestows Suspending of the Curse on sweating Brows A Day of unbought Indulgence and Rest Of Gods in-acting both for Man and Beast Nor yet must This Brute-acquiescence be But the Souls Travell while the Body free Though Jews o' th' Sabboth might not yet We may Best gather Manna Now two showers a day Oh let not Plenty and such Choyce of Fare Make us like Wanton Israel appear Loath not this Heavenly Dew but come and tast Let not such Holy water run at wast With your old Raining Banquet rest content Lust for New Quails tempts but new Punishment Long not for Bethlem Waters there 's no good Nutrition in the juyce that 's price of Blood Sweet Festivall of Heaven's Beneficence Which now keeps Open House and do'st dispence The bounteous Doles of Mercy unto All That Piously approach and for them call Great Market-day of Souls Divinity On thee as 't were holds a Monopoly Come Buyers God himselfe turns Merchant now Leave Trades of Sin your selves his Chapmen vow For though his Wares are yet his Price not high Pardon for asking Heaven for Piety For Patience Conquest for Confession A gracious Act of Heaven's Oblivion This is the Souls good Clymacterick Day Boding her weal as to'ther her Decay If Number have its Vertue sure This seaven Wil most inchant a good Soul toward Heaven The Lords Dayes me thinks make up Jacobs Scale The weeks the Empty spaces whereon all Gods Right and Left-hand Blessings do descend And by which Pious Souls to him ascend Make then the Sabboth here so the Lords Day That endlesse Rest with him we once enjoy THE COLLECT PRAYER The Epistle Rom. 15. v. 4. to the 14. The Gospel Luke 21. v. 35. to 34. BLessed Lord which hast caused all holy Scriptures to bee written for our learning Grant us that me may in such wise hear them read mark learn and inwardly digest them that by Patience and comfort of thy holy word we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life which thou hast given us in our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Amen ALmighty God which hast promised to hear the Petitions of them that ask in thy Sons Name we beseech thee mercifully incline thine ears to us that have made now our Prayers and Supplications unto thee and grant that those things which we have faithfully asked according to thy will may effectually be obtained to the relief of our necessity and to the setting forth of thy glory through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen Rogation Week DISQUISITION 18. THis was the Week immediatly preceding Holy Thursday or indeed but the foure dayes next before it denominated à Rogationibus from the extraordinary Prayers and Supplications then used by good Christians the better to prepare their souls at that time to attend our Saviour by a spirituall Ascension as God made the Day of Ascension a day of Giving Psal 68.18 so the Church made the time a week of Asking as in the Gospel appointed And therefore this is no spurious issue of Novell Superstition but a venerable Institution of pious Antiquity and sincere Religion it being more then probable that this holy custome was practised in the Church in if not before St. Augustines dayes Serm. 173. de Temp. tom 80. Witnesse his Sermon preached on Ascension Eve and his Titles on some other Sermons Magdeburg cent 5. fol 693. and 741. De Dominicâ in Orationibus c. concerning Rogation Sunday and of the second and third day thereof it is unanimously acknowledged by Authors of both perswasions that this ancient Order was either invented or restored rather by Mamercus Bishop of Vienna Baron Animal fol. 309. long before the time of Gregory the Great Anno 450. the Reasons of which Holy Custome I find to be of two sorts viz. from Occasions Naturall and Accidentall Those of accident were the great Afflictions and Calamities that befell those times which made them happly convert their superstitious Processions to the Tombs of Martyrs into a better use of Prayer and strong Supplications for removing Judgements as things invented for one purpose by use are easily converted into more Socrates lib. 6. c. 8. And so it was by the People of Vienna when such Earthquakes of terrors befell them as amazed the hearts of all men who then began to forsake the Citie as a place which Heaven seemed to have destined to ruine for then their Bishop before mentioned as it became a Christian Prelate Hooker Ec. P. l. 5. neither void of councell as yet nor secure in himself alone under such common perplexity earnestly exhorted the remainder of the people to prevent portended Calamities by those vertuous and holy means whereby others in like case have prevailed with God To that purpose perfecting and adapting the Rogations Reasons of Rogation week or Letanies formerly in use to their present Necessities and sad occasions whose good successe therewith afterward moved Sidonius Bishop of Averna to use the same so corrected Rogations at such time as he and his people were afflicted with Famine and besieged with potent adversaries till at length it was thought convenient by Gregory the first and best of that name to contract the Flower of all the said Rogations into one And however this Iron have since got some rust yet hath it been scoured off too as I shall shew anon And this I may call as to us-ward at least the Accidentall cause of these Rogations The generall Troubles and Calamities of Nations But besides these there are some Naturall Occasions of them I mean from Gods blessings on increasing Nature and as the first tremble before God as an angry Judge so these kneel to him as a Father and a Benefactor As now you see Natures Carpet spread enameled with rare variety of flowers and hopefull blossoms Jam prata rident
Glory to God Grace might Redound to all These are the Churches Rent which here do pay To our grand Landlord every Quarter day And that shall either here prolong our Lease Or House us where our Term shall never cease Vpon the Vigils or eves of Festivalls Mat. 24.42 Mar. 13.35 ARGUMENT 2. AS Lent is the Terra firma of Religious Abstinence and the Ember weeks as it were the four main Continents Thereof so are these Vigils and Eves of Festivals even as so many dispersed Ilands yet not without their native Treasures and because our sinfull memories are so bad that an Annuall Monitor of Lent or the Quarterly Remembrancer of Ember weeks is not a sufficient Bridle for our Loosnesse therefore our pious Mother did Recommend these monthly and weekly Admonitions to her Children Wednesdayes and Frydayes being Anciently taken in that so Abundance of caution might oppose Abundance of Temptation we indeed having need of Philips dayly Memento and each morning to be minded of our Frailty especially at Festivalls wherein the world hath and will ever deserve blame as Job was not ignorant that his Childrens Banquet though it intended Amity might need a sacrifice Job 1. and therefore these Fasts have been set as ushers unto Festivalls Job 1.5 to Caution and Prevent disorder in them and a very wholsome Method it is both as to soul and body Hierom. Episto ad Eustochium valdè absurdum est nimiâ saturitate velle Honorare Martyrem Quem scias Deo placuisse Jejuniis It were but a fond thing to think we honour the Memoriall of an Apostle Saint or Martyr with excesse whom we know to have pleased God with Prayer and Fasting and therefore these are added as frequent circumspections to oppose such intemperance and daily incursions that so often Payment might make our debts the lighter and such even Reckonings keep God and us long Friends even everlasting Friends in Heaven POEM 42. LEnt is the Mother-Fast grand-Daughters these Wait on Humiliation God to please That like the Body of an Army stands While these are but particular Train'd Bands That like the spacious and the brackish main These as Rils flowing Thence and home again That more like Faith high-flown strong Pinnioned While these as Charity Distributed Many in One Fast are contracted there While these dispersedly run through the year That Devout Abstinence not only might Season our Spring but all Times else aright That none Extravagate at any Feast Each is attended with an humble Guest And because both those few to Sin and Fear More Fasting Days of old too added were That so Austereness might Hunt out and seek That Fox our sin unkennell him each week Nay Sin and Danger 's grown so high in force That all need now become days of Remorse One more at least then let each seven impart As voluntary Sacrifice o' th' Heart To make our sorrows weight and fill our Measure Of Griefs in some proportion to Sins pleasure And who such unexpected Odours brings God most accepts as Free-will offerings Since other Fasts then as Sins Brine appear Be these our salt to sprinkle all the year Vpon the DOXOLOGIE to the Sacred TRINITIE Matt. 28.19 1 Tim. 1.17 1 John 5.7 Rev. 8.4,11 The ARGUMENT MY Book drawes to a close and I desire it may end as all things ought with the Glory of God Nor can I close my sacred Hymnes with a sweeter Rellish then that harmonious DOXOLOGIE wherewith the Church was ever wont to conclude her Psalms and sacred Anthems and wherein she did but joyn with Angels in her Gloria Patri c. Ascribing Glory to the Father Son and Holy Ghost as c. indeed so it was in the Beginning Epist 7.8 Nor for the Matter onely but for the Form also being an Hymn more then Ancient saith Saint Basil As wee have Received even so we baptize and as we baptize so we beleeve and as we beleeve even so we give Glory and all this we use in the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost Confessing at once Gods Excellencies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the Persons offices and Distinctions and the very Integrity of the Christian Faith it being a token of a true and sound understanding for matter of Doctrine about the Trinity when in Ministring Baptism and making Confession of our Faith and giving of Glory there is a conjunction of all Three and no one severed from the other two in confutation of the Arians and their later Spawn enacted in that famous Councel of * Magd. Cent. 4. F. 617. Nice consisting of 318 Bishops under CONSTANTINE the Great Anno Christi 320. 'T is as 't were the Abridgment of the Creed the Epitome of the Gospel the businesse of both Worlds and the usual Posture of Defence becomes it and therefore as it hath been reverently used from the Beginning may it be so to the End as 't is here Glory be to the Father and to the Sonne and to the Holy Ghost as it was in the Beginning is Now and ever shall be World without End Amen POEM 43. THese Riv'lets after a Maeander's stray Have at length found their Fountain and repay Their grateful Streams here to the Deity That fed their Pipes with Baptiz'd Poetry Oh may the Channel where these waters flow Be cleans'd by them They thence not soyled go 1 That Man at first had an Immortall Frame Till he by Sin self-murderer became That then a Mercifull Invention Repair'd his Progeny by th' onely Son Of the Omnipotent who Him thus sent To change Grace Life for Sin and Punishment The Glory of all this is onely Thine Aeternall FATHER of the sacred TRINE 2 And next for all those high designes of Grace Perform'd by our deer Lord for humane Race Combats or Conquests o're Earth Heaven and Hell Whose Life and Death did Miracles excell Whose sugered Benefits to all extend Unlesse their own fault and both lives befriend The Glory of all this returns to Thee Coequall SON of the bless'd Trinity 3 Then for the Noble Army the Red List In this small Book of Martyrs following Christ Whose Cause and Courage was so strongly knit Nor Toyle nor Torture e're could sever it One making their Life far and neer Christ Preach While th' other by Death made them the same Teach Hastning unto their Graves as cheerfully As Bees unto their honyed hives do fly And in the midst even of their flames to sing With conquering Patience their Foes torturing The Glory of all This is justly paid To Thee bless'd SPIRIT for thy sacred Aid Each Parcel's honour to Each Person be And the whole Glory to the TRINITIE A te Principium Tibi desinet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS APPENDIX SACRA OR Serious Attendants ON THE Sacred Solemnities Alia per Eundem E. S. B. D. Mart. Epig. l. 1. Quem Recitas mcus est ô Fidentine Libellus Sed malè dum recitas incipit esse tuns The Book thou
tell Sounding to each of us a serious caution A Timely pray'r and a due preparation First when or wheresoever it Thee find It proves or should A monitor o' th' mind If in thy Bed it waken thee There best It doth insinuate thy latest rest If as a dressing it salute thine eare It Hints Deaths Livery Thou once must weare And when thou hear'st it in thy cheerfull walke It seasons with Mortality thy Talke And if you heare it as at meat you sit Then thinke it sounds earth to earth I commit In pride of passions if the ●are it beat How streight it Damps the wild-fires cooles the Heat And when in Frollicks thou shalt heare This Toll May it forthwith all sinfull mirth controule To men buried alive This cheering Bell Doth Liberty infallible foretell And unto such as languish in exile This sounds a Returne home againe e're-while When most transported in the busie hall This in thine eare Thee to thy selfe doth call When Earths Affaires Thee from thy self estrange This tolls Thee Home unto thine own exchange What ever our conditions Good or ill This rings us in the eare with that news still Of Philips Monitor Remember man Or Davids Rather Thy life 's but a span Thus having rung all in next let it move Thine Heart and Tongue to Piety and Love Now shew thy Christian Sympathy and Groane With them whom even Bell mettall doth bemoane Do as thou wouldst be done for that is Kneel And pray as heartily as thou didst feel The burdens of the sick the worst they Ayle Knowing that fervent Prayers still prevaile And shall for soules or bodies better state For both therefore thy Prayers ejaculate From thy sick servant Lord let this Cup pass Yet with submission as Christs Patterne was Be pleas'd to act their Body's Physitian Howe'r be their Soules good Samaritan And though these winged Doves should not succeed Yet shall they once fly home with happy speed And more good company ' gainst thy Turne come And pay thy Parcels with a totall Sum. And yet relie not on that hoped Aide But let thy daily Debt be duely paid To God and Man Take care Accounts to Even With jarring Earth but Chiefly with just Heaven This Bell minds Thee o' th' Church That of Devotion Thy Neighbours Case Spurs on thy preparation For thou wouldst take the Hint did his house burne Shall not his Feavour make Thee mind thine urne Ensafe thy Goods then at this warning Given Remove from the worlds Dangers store in heaven There if thy Deeds laid up thou canst not miss Though this world turne to coale the land of bliss Meane time when thou dost such a Soule-Bell heare Thinke that St Jerome's Trump sounds in thine eare This triple use then of each passing Bell E're it pass from him He that makes doth well Vpon a Skeleton or Resemblance of Death Eccl. 12.1 Ioh. 17.13 LOe here the Frame of a rare Structure stands Which was a building too not made with hands Although on Earth where the Creator great Did an immortall heavenly Tenant feat The house then Fitted for such Guest of state Was built in opposition to all Fate Of strong Materials by Divine art For endlesse Fellowship and ne'r to part But This admitting Inmates the first day By their ill usage soon 'gan to decay And then through Rent and Homages neglect The Landlord forc'd the Tenant did eject And now like Buildings disinhabited That by all stormes and showres are injured Where Elves and Satyrs dance where Bats and Owles And Beasts of prey keep their Nocturnall howles All Shatter'd and Forlorne I such is this House Become through Sin and Death so Ruinous A Rendevouz of wormes and Creeping things VVhere they disport their dusty Traffickings Yet Look well on 't againe and you 'l descry I' th' Ruines of this Pyle its Dignity How wonderfully made Exact and even Strong Uniforme and erect toward heaven Let thy Thoughts then dwell henceforth in this place For thy Soule doth in such another Case Here fix thy Meditations startle not To thinke the best Skin Flesh and Bloud must Rot For St Markes Carpenter Can all Repaire And make this house more firme than e re more faire Strength'ning the timber-work with his Crasse wood The Morter temper'd with his precious Bloud VVhile on thy Part all Trouble and Expence Amounts but to true Faith and Penitence Acted in Pious Deeds and not delay'd But made good timely e'r too far decay'd Before the Keepers of the House do Grew Be-Palsi'd Trembles and the strong men bow E're the Nutrition Grinders become few Or what remaine unserviceable Chew Mind this this needfull object Early marke Before the Lookers forth the windows darke This debt pay as wise payment ought by Light E're Natures stars do set in Ages Night Or are Eclips'd by Sickness Chance or Griefe That none of Them Anticipate Reliefe Before the Portals of the Lips do Close And every whisper interrupt Repose Or ever Musicks daughters become mute Nor voice nor Eare Consorting sweetest Lute Before the Almond flourish and wax gray In that Trees spring boding the heads decay E're all ascents grow tedious and with Fear The way still block'd A load each Grassehopper Then This desire before Desire doth fail Which with endeavour too sure shall prevaise Before the Loosing of the Silver Coard While Spinall Marrow doth Thee strength Afford Or e're that Ewer broke resembling Gold Which the Braine 's vitall Moysture doth infold Before the Pitcher's broken at the well Or veines distemper'd such a Liver tell Before the Head or Phancy's turning wheele The Fractures of that Cisterne the Heart feele Before Man thus Goes to the House of Age Leaving his Friends to Mournefull Equipage Let him here commune often with his Urne His Spirit then doth and shall to God returne By whose kind Power both after some dismiss Ne'r more to part shall reunite in bliss Let outward Prudence then herein controule All slack ill-husbandry for our own soule Let 's streight Renew our Lease or rather buy This repair'd house whose Rate low whose Seat high Each Faithfull Pray'r and Charitable Act Passeth for Currant Coyne to this Effect In obitum Effigiem Librum venerandi Josiae Shute praeconis mellitissimi ab Authore nuper Editum SUrgito Lector adest Tibimet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anglus Scilicet egregius Shutus orator adest Flexanimus vates Animas Qui traxit in Aures Voce docens Sacrum quod pede pandit iter Malleus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 constans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui nequit à Recto Spe-ve Metu-ve Trahi Hunc tulit in Partum Dominus Minitante Procellâ Nec fuerant Tanto Sacula digna viro Umbra dat Essigiem resonat tihi Pagina Mentem Assolet ut Reliquis gratus adesto Tibi HEre 's that wise Charmer whose Sweet Ayres to Hear Each Soule delighted so to dwell i' th' Eare Whose Life and Doctrine's Combin'd Harmony Familiarized St Paul's Extasy
But now from growing Evils mounted high Change but the Soule her Seat from Ear to th' Eye This bright Starre still doth Lead wise men to Christ Through this dark Bochim and Aegyptian Myst Nay here what himself doth in Heav'n behold Ev'n Blessed Visions doth his Book unfold In Eximium Pijssimumque Richardum Holdsworth S. T. P. Theologum Flexanimum HIc Celebri Fato Pollenti Claruit ortu Holdsworth Flos vatum Cujus Doctrina stupori Non minus Emicuit Totus fuit ere voluptas Et populo plaudente Favus Cant'brigia Gemmam Perdit Eximiam Londini Ecclesia stellam Fulgentem amisit vigilans Quemcunque Priorum Inspice Praelatum meritò Canit Hippo sagacem Urbs Constantini Commendat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Auri Pagina Scriptores Loquitur Romana Solennes Sed nec Pinetum Corili nec sidera solem Aequant Annales Latios Graiósque revolve Prisca Parem ignorans aequalem postera nullum Ex hibitura Dies vates super Eminet omnes Solus Praeteritis melior majorque futuris Vpon the Pious and Learned Doctor Holdsworth THis Church as Isle's a Ring Holdsworth the Gemme Too bright for Earth now decks Heaven's Diadem We mourn our Losse He joyes in his Remove From Envious Men unto the God of Love Whose Learned Pious high and steady Soule No Gainfull Transmutations could controule Nor Hopes nor Feares Prisons nor Liberty Could move from Orthodoxall verity Nor Storms nor Calms could warp him the same Lives And like well season'd Timber never Gives Right owner of his Name which Sweet shall last And Holds ' worth still in Spight of Envy's Blast His Latter Prophesies then Left behind O may we Reall and successefull find Vpon the Early and neere Contemporary Death of Divers learned and Pious Divines viz. Doctor Featly Doctor Somes Master Browning Master Symons Master Haynes Master Chestlin Eminent all for Pen and Pulpit VVHat now most need Leave your poor Mother so To that Complaint of Jacob in his woe Joseph is not and Simeon is gone And must Death too our Benjamin Seise on These Prudent Watchmen equall Dangers saw With that Grave Guide o' th Church of Affrica Who when the Gothes and Vandalls enter'd There Took him to Christian Weapons Teares and Prayer Importuning Th' Almighty to Remove Or Them in Judgement or Himself in Love A Suite which his Great Master not deny'd For Austin soone in Besieg'd Hippo dy'd As much for These fure did their Prayers effect When all mens Church-Indeavours found neglect Early Transplanted from this Scaene of Wees Where spight of Virtue Crimson sinne so Growes Heaven was their Center while the Earth whirld Round While Classick Synods reel'd These stood their Ground These when the Church Like a Bestormed Barque Where Winds and Seas wage Warre and Skies grow Dark Like stoutest Marriners Expos'd Themselves To save the Vessell from the Wracking Shelves And Thereby soonest wash'd off with fierce Waves Were snatch'd away from us with hasty Graves Yet herein happy Fates did them betide That They for Presse or Pulpit harness'd Dy'd And though we mourn their worth when heard or Read Bless'd Spirits that have Them smile to see Them dead Or rather living in their better Parts Above in Soules below in Divine Arts. These were a Bunch of Canaans Grapes as 't were Which to make Wine for Angels God press'd here Who puls away such Pillars when he meanes The Fabrick should to Ruinous Extreams Yet that it might not alwayes so remaine There Ink's a Cement t'aedifie't againe God plucks such Stakes out of the Churches Hedge When He 'l set Sacrilegious Teeth on Edge Yet drunk with that Vine Lest to Hell they reele These both Disease and Med'cine did reveale God calls Home such skil'd Pilots from the Helme When He will Sin-fraught Vessels overwhelme Yet lest a totall wrack should us befall These fram'd and left a Card to Steere with all And who sayles by their Compasse cannot misse Mangre all Stormes and Rocks the Port of Blisse Vpon the prudent Dove and Vindicatresse of Stepmothers Mothers in Law justly half-hang'd by Fame Are now repriev'd by this Indulgent Dame Richer in Love to an Adopted Graft Then others to their Native usuall Craft Here turn'd to Sweetnesse Bits in stead of Blowes And for Neglect Good Breeding she bestowes Some talke of Memphis some of Jasons Fleece Perfumes some think none to their Amber Greece Awedge of Gold some boast a fine new Fashion Raiseth in others a strange Admiration Kindnesse Nam'd Thee more then the Law a Mother Earth ' mongst her Wonders shewes not such another A Consolatory to the Deprived of their Dearest Mate who thus bespeaketh the Relict THough a Right Turtle to thy Living Mate Yet now being Sour'd thou mayst not imitate In her incessant moanes that mournfull Dove Which thou exceedest in a Spotlesse Love If Nature claime her Tribute yet let Grace Christen thy Teares and Re-possesse her Place That Grief not Love but Envy doth expresse Which floweth from a Dear Friends Happinesse Who now is sfe from Griefe and Warres Above the Reach of Earthly Jarres By Christ sequestred happily From Sorrow Sinne and Misery Admitted through his precious Bloud To those Joyes here not understood Speed on thy Pious Race and then We nere to part shall meet againe Mean-time beare Christianly thy Cross And let not my Gaine seem thy Losse Fie-Lavish Eyes Dear drown not thine ' Cause God hath wip'd all Tears from mine That God ô high Advance for thee Himself might now thy Consort be Then all th' Affections born the Dead Be on the Living Off-spring shed In Oculos Catarrho labo rantes PLurima Lascivos intrant dum Crimina Ocellos Guttula nec madidis Exeat ulla Genis Efficit id morbus virtus quod debuit una Lumina defluxu bina madere gravi Culpae digna Lues Qui non peccata dolerent Lumina Diffluerent absque Liquore Sacro O tristes oculi vitreos Sic perdere humores Fletus Aeterni Flendo Notare Locum Foelices Oculi maculas si spoute dolendo Praevenerant Animae Corporis atque Cladi Morbus adhuc Foelix magis hic Medicina vocandus St Magdalenae fit liquor iste pius Tunc ad Supremi ac Animae Sponsalia Regis In soles oculi in vina revertet Aquae The Epigram upon sore Eyes thus rendred VVHile wanton Eyes Sinnes daily entertaine And no repentant Teares flow Thence againe A Disease doth what Vertue should effect Melts them into a dolefull Cataract And a just Scourge those Eyes that mourne not Guilt Their Teares should thus in Vaine and Pain be spilt Unhappy Eyes to lose such pearly Dews Which forc'd the Place of weeping but foreshews But happy those which freely Sinnes lament And so both Soules and Bodyes Ill prevent Yet Happier this Disease this Remedy If Maudlins cleansing Bath it prove to be Then at the Nuptials of the Soule 's Bride-groome Those Eyes shall Sunnes that Water Wine become Melvinus Poeta Scoticus De Altaris Cultu
Apud Anglos CUr duo stant Libri Clausi Anglis Regia in Aul● Lumina Caeca duo Polubra sicca Duo Num sensum Cultumque dei tenet Anglia Clausum Lumine caesa suo sorde sepulta sua Responsio Authoris PEctore Qui retinet Claudat merit ò ille Libellos Et Christus Pietas ut sit operta monet Scotia dat Tenebras duplices Perfida sordes Hinc Anglis praestant Pollubra Lustra Libri Scotia Testatur Flagrans non lumina caeca Anglis nec penitùs Pollubra sicca nuper A Christian paraphrase upon those Verses Like Hermit poore c. LIke Christian well resolv'd in place obscure I meane to spend the Remnant of my Dayes In unfrequented Paths of Folk Impure To meditate on my Redeemers praise And at thy Gates ô Death I le Linger still To let out Life when God and Nature will A mourning Weed my Body shall attire My Staffe the Crosse of Christ whereon I le stay Of true Repentance Linkt with Chast desire The Couch is made whereon my Limbs I 'le lay And at thy Gates ô Death I 'le Linger still To let out Life when God and Nature will My Food shall be of Christian Manna made My Drink the Streames flow'd from my Saviours Side And for my Light through Earths erroneous Shade The Beames of Grace shall be my safest Guide And at thy Gates ô Death I 'le Linger still To let out Life when God and Nature will Teares and Flowers strew'd upon the Hearse of Mrs S. S. Dying Sept. 15. 1641. SInce it is Solomon that saies A virtuous woman shall have praise Do modest paper tell the Truth Of my deare Sarah's Aged Youth And when thy Inkie-moysture dries I will supply it from mine eyes So though of her we are bereft Her faire example may be left To th' Imitation of the best Wonder and Envy of the rest God the Beginning was and End Whence did her Acts flow whither tend The Scripture was her Booke of Books Nor only object of her Looks But the true Glass by which she drest Continually her Head and Breast Each day she hallow'd but that same Which to our Lord owes time and Name With knowing zeale and strictest care Observ'd and kept she every where Church-publike-exercises led Which Home-Devotions Ecchoed Strong Prayer was the Lock and Key To every Harmeless night and day Those Arrows wing'd and Headed flew With Sighs and Tears of Heavenly dew I although not for Sins nor years She was a Magdalen for Teares Remembring the great Bridegrooms cry I 'm wounded with thy melting eye An eye that cared not to looke In any unless Sacred Booke Wherin if she found Christ's name there Fix'd her delights and pleasures were Nor only Student Agent she And Practiser of Piety Devotions Handmaid did awaite Each Day 's approaching and retreate Thinking of all the time God lent That best was in his service spent That Calling Here Christ and she chose Which prophane worldlings most oppose And as she Mary hence appeares So Martha too for house-Affaires Who like th' Aegyptian Emblem right To we are her own house did delight Oh had she had that Snailes slow pace In parting from mine Armes Embrace No Planet she that lov'd to stray To see or to be seene so gay But kept Jobs Covenant with her eyes And turn'd them from such Vanities A well Tun'd Cymball was her Tongue And not a Loud one loosely rung Her Mind still gratefully content Envying none for what God lent Her Hand was open Evermore To Good but chiefly to such Poore Sweet unto all pure at the Heart Without the Zeale pretending Art Covering the Good Graine she did sow That so it might the better grow She was a Rose for Sent and Hiew No Garish Tulip but for view Neat without Niceness was her dress None of those Isai'h doth express No Phancy-follower was she But of th' Apostles D cency She was that Merchants ship well fraught Not that which Apes and Peacocks brought Her Needle did succeed her Booke And both by course the whole day tooke What rare doth Nature propagate That her Art could not Imitate Old subtle Time could ne'r steale by Her Active Hand or studious Eye But one Adorn'd her outward store While t'other Deck'd her Mind much more And all this ready to impart With Humble not Imperious Art Nay even her Recreations were For Body's so as Soul's welfare Not to be Infinite the rest You find in Solomon exprest What there he speakes Prov. 31.10 c. is here as true Of this as that Good-House wifes due Thus like the Sun in her own Sphaere Her House she mov'd and only there Through all whose parts she did dispence Her Motion Light or Influence And such a Sun at Noone to set Must needs a long sad Night beget To him indeed whose rest and light Was in his Faithfull Sarah's sight Faithfull as ever Abra'm's Dame For Grace and Love worthy Her Name She made a Competency wealth And oft Nurs'd Sickness into Health By joyning to her Skill and Cares The Cordiall of Prayer and Teares Oh could mine have as much prevail'd When her o're hasty Death assail'd So one as shade and Body They Did even together move or stay One will and nill one Joy and Feare One Comfort unto both one care While others Plough with Oxe and Ass Th' Apostles Yoake here equall was One Soule as in two Bodies dwelt And both the same Affections felt Nor could Death Altogether part Whom God united so in heart His soule with hers to Heaven ascends While to her Grave his body tends Nor long erect can be that Head Whose better part 's already dead Like Thee best halfe I mould away I dayly haste and only stay A while by God and Thee design'd To Care for one Thou left'st behind Earths Joyes for Thee Too narrow were More worthy of an Heavenly Sphere And too much Heaven 't was for me Here to Enjoy both Fruit and Tree As deare a Mother as a Wife Thou dy'dst to give Another life Delivered by Fates Controule At once almost of Child and Soule Those Twins of Innocence yet Thine The brighter of the two doth shine What not all vertues prevalent Such praemature Death to prevent No God too hath his early Fruit Which when he 'l plucke who shall dispute Grace made her Twenty Five as old As many that have Fivescore told Her yeares were few yet her life long God's lov'd Iosiahs oft dye young This Plant from out Earths Soyle of vice Hath God remov'd to Paradise Yet lest his lower Garden bee Bereft quite of so Good a Tree A Branch in Mercy he hath Given Which water'd with the dew of Heaven May it so sprout and shoot up here As one day to be planted where Now it s own Stem Grows ne'r to Dye But flourish to Eternity Where Tumults Sin and Sorrows cease Their roome supply'd with Ioy and Peace Where short-breath'd-Time Eternall grows And Health that no diseases knows Where
Gospel Matth. 23. from vers 34. to the end Grant us Lord to learn to love our enemies by the example of thy Martyr St. Stephen who prayed for his persecutors to Thee which livest and reignest now and for ever world without end Amen S. IOHANNES T was Eagle sighted Iohn that best could pry and search into the mistigue trinity earth to ascend darkenes to fetch light from heauen is strange yet like such was his flight The Plate here Vpon the Festivall of St. JOHN the Evangelist DISQUISITION 5. THis St. John was one of the sons of Zebede and had at length for better reasons as much as his Mother asked for him Matth. 20.20 Chap. 4. 18. he was the brother of James surnamed the Great where by the way take notice how Christ at first made choyce of Brethren as Matth. 4.18 Simon which was called Peter and Andrew his brother So afterward Simon and Jude brethren sons of Alphaeus and here John the brother of James Hereby prudently providing against Schisme and division both by corporall and spirituall correlation For what ever it would have been in That sure in this Age one of them had been too little to prevent it We shall here reflect upon this Saint first as a Disciple while abiding with his Master and then as an Apostle sent out with Commission from him St. John his double Notion both which I take to be sufficiently distinct Notions First as a Disciple for so He oftnest stiles himself through his Gospel and 't is exemplary humility not terming himselfe a Master in Israel though one of the first Magnitude but a Disciple yet with some Emphasies The Disciple and with a quem dilexit whom Jesus loved John 21. not onely one of his Triumvirate admitted to Mount Tabor John 21.7 Matth. 17.2 but even the most eminently beloved Disciple at least Extensivè as the School speaks though intensively He bespake all of them alike Aquin. tom p. 1. Quaest 20. Ar. 3. John 15.9 As the Father hath loved me so have I loved you Continue in my love Which sure St. John did eminently being the last at the Crosse and the first at the Sepulcher besides his amiable sublime graces and coming unto Christ so young for which 't was certainly that Christ shewed more signes of favour and familiarity to St. John then to the rest For he is said to have leaned on his breast at Supper and when St. Peter and all his other fellows were silent only he durst ask Lord John 13.24 which is he that betrayeth thee John 13. When the Eagle broods saith Plutarch the Chick that cometh of that Egge that lieth nearest her heart is best beloved of her and so here Coloss 2.3 our St. John leaning on that breast in which are hid all the treasures of Wisdome and Knowledge may well gratefully acknowledge himself honored with the Title of the Disciple whom Jesus loved Whereof his fellow Disciples had a kind of jealous emulation which our Saviour checked in Peter John 21. the Dialogue is obvious in the words fore-going where St. Peter neglecting the charge given himself both as to life and death is curious touching St. John John 21.19 What shall this man doe to which Christs Redargution is If I will that he tarry c. What is that to Thee c. teaching him and all Excentrick Spirits to move in their own Spheare not to examine others but their own imployments 1 Cor. 1. 1 Cor. 1.25 c. 7.20 1 Thess 4.11 See to your own calling and Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he is called studying to be quiet and to meddle with his own business 1 Thess 4. Seasonable cautions for this Age so over-full of Bees and Apes all these being parallels to that of Christ What is that to thee Confining all to their professions and that in all matters Theological Ecclesiastical Political moral Oeconomical for each of them may say each one of another Function Quid tibimet What is that to thee for neither of them must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 4.15 as St. Peters word is Play the Bishop in another mans Diocesse For What is that to thee Advising on the contrary to do good unto all men Gal. 6.10 especially c. For else 't is easie for the wisest to mistake as the Disciples here did that speech of our Saviour If I will that c. How heedfully had we need hear Heming in loc and read the Scriptures as one notes when so many Disciples are mistaken apprehending an absolute Affirmative in a conditionall proposition If I will that c. as the Vulgar Translation corruptly taking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If for so without any reason or similitude and therefore modest St. John here retracts that error that went abroad among the brethren in the same 23. as some do that translation no man so denominated from grace as our St. John will promise himself an immunity from suffering and especially in such an Age as he then lived in or we now And that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is generally interpreted of Christs coming in that famous execution on the Jews oft mentioned in the Gospel Matth. 23. and 24. Luke 19. and John 21. which John survived thirty years continuing not onely till Titus his time but through Domitians and Cocceius Nerva's to Trajans reign above an hundred years after Christs birth and so 30 years after this coming of Christ was past and by what Irenaeus adds of the Seniores qui non solum Johannem viderint sed alios Apostolos And it is probable that some other of the Apostles lived to that time of Trajan also That St. John wrot this Gospel at the intreaty of the Bishops of Asia constituted by him is affirmed by Eusebius And yet for all his modesty there was somewhat in it what ever fell out afterward as will appear anon he was in present the Saul among his brethren Inter Delphinas Arion highest in his Masters affection and records it thankfully as his most honorable Title and Fount of all his graces that he was the Disciple whom Jesus loved and leaned on his breast Nay St. Ambrose saith that Christ too leaned on his bosome saying there was Sinus triplex a threefold Bosom whereon Christ did rest who else had not whereon to rest his head viz. in Patre Divinitas in Matre virginitas in Evangelista Johanne Fides in the bosom of his Father rested his Deity in his mothers bosom rested his virginity in St. John Evangelists bosom rested his faith and confidence bequeathing his dear Mother to His sole care and affection and Him to Hers as a mutuall legacy John 19. And thus having seen him as a Disciple most beloved let us now take one view of him as an Apostle publishing the Name and Faith of his dear Lord and Master 'T is said Ephes 4. that Christ ascending Eph.
4.11 gave some to be Aposles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Doctors according to his will distributing to every man a severall gift 1. Cor 12.11 St. Peter was an Apostle but not an Evangelist St. Mark an Evangelist not an Apostle St. Matthew both these yet no Prophet St. Augustine a Doctor but no Martyr St. Laurence a Martyr but not a Doctor But behold saith one the beloved Disciple was * Portan Petrus de Palude all these in his Epistles an Apostle in his Apocalyps a Prophet in his Gospel an Evangelist in his Faith Sufferings a Confessor in his preaching a Doctor St. John the Divine in his chastity a Virgin in his readiness and will to suffer a Martyr yea the Protomartyr saith Osorius suffering inwardly when Christ outwardly Osorius in locum St. Stephen will spare him the Figure of a Sympathy Amans quippe plus in amato quam in seipso patitur 't is an high complement that a lover suffers more in his beloved object then in his own person suffering yet St. John both did and suffered much in his own person also 1. The same is he that testified and wrot these things John 21.24 v. 24. is for his piercing sight into high mysteries well Emblem'd by the Towring Eagle Jovis ales right his quil writing the Divinity of Christ against Ebion and Cerinthus early Hereticks and Grandfathers of Arrianisme as that is of Socinianisme and later errors beginning his Gospell before Moses or the beginning of the world and ending his Revelation beyond all Historians beyond Time it selfe or the end of the world He chiefly lived at Ephesus where he wrot his Gospel in the 69. year of * Euseb Niceph at the desire of the Asian Bishops by him there constituted Christ whence the neighbour Churches of the lesser Asia were by that division made by the Apostolical Synod Acts 15. alotted to his Visitation for his diligence wherein and testimony to the truth he was by the Pro-Consull of Asia transported to Rome to suffer about the 90. year of Christ where being miraculously preserved in a Chaldron of scalding oyl Alsted Chron. Euseb Ec. Hist l. 3. c. as the three Children in the fiery furnace he is banished by Domitian into Patmos a disconsolate Isle of the Aegaeansea where the defect of earths accommodations was advantagiously supplied with heavenly Revelations and afterwards recall'd by Cocceius Nerva home to Ephesus Cocceius Nerva Though some write that he suffered after under Trajan yet the most and best write that he died there of an Apoplexy Anno Christi 104. aetatis 102. Happily determining the forementioned ambiguity of our Saviours words according to the Disciples aprehension of them Tarrying till his Master came not by any violent but a naturall dissolution And now as Aristotle said Metal l. 2. c. 1. if Timotheus had not been we had not had so much sweet musick but if Phrynis which was his Master had not been we had not had Timotheus So here if St. John had not been we had wanted much of the Evangelical Harmony but if our great Master Jesus had not been gracious to his Church it should not have had such a John to ornament it and therefore in this holy Saint as in all others we honor and praise through the Servant but his Lord and Master POEM 8. Coelestiall Herauld that dost draw Christs Line No lower then from Pedigree Divine And like a Towring Eagle from above To drooping Man describ'st the God of love Of love to all but Thee above the rest Because so young Thou leaned'st on his Breast As thou his Honour so we thine make known Must love Thee twice for His sake and thine own Who soonest comes to Christ doth longest stay Nor shall the boyling Oyly Chaldron slay Whom Christ but hints should tarry till he came Or Nature summond in her Masters Name Though Torture spare him yet will not Exile Malice extrudes him into Patmos Isle What must the Best expect yet sees he more There then in 's Asian latitude before Into that Angle of the Earth being hurl'd He sees an ample Prospect of the World Of Heaven and Earth and Seas Hell not conceal'd All future Times and Actions there reveal'd Deserv'dly then of all the Saints thy Birth We celebrate with Christs throughout the Earth His early and late fruit the rest we sing Their Deaths as Waiters on him Suffering Lord though our Zeal to thee make no such hast Draw and accept of us among Thy last And while ware banish'd to this Isle of clay Do Thou to us thy saving Truths display The COLLECT PRAYER The Epistle 1 Jo. 1. from v. 1. to the end The Gospel Joh. 21. from 19. to the end Mercifull Lord we beseech thee to cast thy bright beams of light upon thy Church that it being lightned by the doctrine of thy blessed Apostle and Evangelist John may attaine to thy everlasting gifts through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen UPON The Festivall of Innocents Day DISQUISITION 6. WHy the Feast of Christs Nativity is attended with These Saints above the rest St. Stephen St. John and these blessed Innocents Johan Raulin Ser. 2. de beat Innocen is handsomely conjectured by some to shew his comming into the world for all sorts of men of what degree or age soever and by These severally represented or happily that these here applyed rather then other as having more fulfilled that of Christ Mat. 16. Mat. 16. 24. By taking up the Cross and following him There being three kinds of Martyrdom in Christs Cause as St. Bernard notes the first Voluntatis operis both in will and act as that of St. Stephen 2. Voluntatis sed non operis in will Ser. de Innocent but not in Act as that of Saint John The 3. Operis sed non voluntatis in act but not in will as this of the Innocents And sorasmuch as St. Stephens Martyrdom comes neerest unto Christs his Festival is next unto him and in the 2d place St. Johns and in the 3d. These suffering Innocents all three making Christ as in Cant. 5.10 white and ruddy the chiefest of 10000. Candidus in Johanne Rubicundus in Stephamo electus ex millibus Ludolp de vit Christi p. 1. c. 13. in Innocentibus And it was impossible to Christen the Day with a Name of a more vast Reputation then Innocency which dares not signifie any thing here below but the state of the first Man and that of Children and sure he must have little of man in him nothing at all of God the more of the Devil that could so break into the Circle of such harmless simplicity and self-shielding innocence Yet this doth barbarous Herod but which of them he deserves to be known that he may both in person and example be abhorred Then not to wrong the rest as most do by their not distinguishing know there were three Herods and
boared head his smeared face and furrowed body and see whether he be not likelier for a Grave then a Throne Ecce homo Behold the man Yet all this is not enough for Jews or Jewish spirits And therefore Venerable Bede and others are for the later Beda in locum and that these words were a Belch of Envy whether from fear of Caesar or to please the Jews not much materiall and they prove it by the close Nam quem absolvit Judicio crucifigit ministerio For whom he cleareth in word he doth condemne in action I find no fauls in Him take ye Him and crucifie him Ecce homo Behold the man so that all the washing of his hands though he rubbed neyer so hard would hardly ever fetch out the steins of this Bloud from his Heart Behold the man But here not to build a Mindus sorrow loving no descant and being but an ill Methodist I shall briefly resolve this subject into these 3 circumstances reserving the Ecce toattend the Application if not rather carrying it along with us all the way viz. The Quis the Quid the Quare and consider the Person the Act and the Reason of it Who it was What it was and why it was Christ suffered All wrapped up in this Ecce homo Behold the man First for the Quis. Who as to his being the Son of God is answered with another Quis another Question Isai 53. Quis enarrabit Isa 53 8. Who shall declare his generation Not the Tongues or Quils of Men or Angels as he is Aquila in Nubibus St. Johns Eagle in the clouds Yet may we look upon him as Vermis in pulvere Davids worm in the dust and outcast of the people Though we cannot reach his Deity yet as this Text inviteth we may behold the man And so indeed was he too plainly seen by the eye of an oppressive world Vir dolorum no sooner man then center of calamities one acquainted with Griefs His only Intimates and Familiars his inseparable companions Thus as in relation to his sufferings our businesse here this word most particularly answereth the Quis with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Behold the man Man and Son of Man our Saviours usual compellation John 8. and frequently elsewhere the Son of Man and that for weighty Reasons John 8.28 As first to strengthen his Disciples Faith Whom say you that I the Son of Man am Secondly to demonstrate his Humanity as his Miracles did his Divinity And here most properly Man as being Passive only in his Human Nature Thirdly called Man to shew Christ was not ashamed of our Infirmities but as the Prophet speaks hath born them and our sorrows meaning all those infirmities that are painfull without sin but none of those that are sinfull without pain as Lombard well distinguisheth Lombard 4. Distinct And yet withall he is Man with an Article that imports an Emphasis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. among men as Demosthenes among Greek Orators or as Tully among the Latins or Homer among the Graecian Poets or Virgil amongst other The Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a Figure of Excellency Behold the Man a Dicier Hic est Christ here Emphatically stiled Man and by a transcendent singularity above all others Not like ordinary men propagated in sin originall and by a double Parentage This spotlesse Lamb having in Heaven no Mother and on Earth no Father No nor like Adam in his best state with a Posse labi with any possibility of falling into actuall But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2.17 the Man in all things like us but that which is nothing sin excepted Heb. 2. 'T is remarkable that none is called Sonne of man in Scripture except Daniel once But the Prophet Ezekiel and He so Dan. 8.17 neer an hundred times as being more conversant with Angels and Diviner Revelations How much more Christ in that regard here stiled emphatically Behold the man Nor yet is this all his Excellency He was Innocens Benefaciens Rex Dei Filius c. all easie to dilate on I can but name them He was innocent and declared so by his Judge Insons ante Reum the Dove of Innocence the Lamb without blemish the true Nathaniel He was the Vniversall Benefactor of the world to all parts doing good according to their severall Receptivities He was a King acknowledged not only by the Scriptures but also by his enemies at his Crucisixion by his Title on the Crosse c. He was the Son of God testified by miracles on earth and thrice at least by a voyce from heaven and the Devill himself was tormented to this Truth Matth 8.29 Behold the man that was the summe of the whole world both God and Man And all this Excellency of Person doth in finitly highten the indignity of his Sufferings which are the next Considerable the Quid What this person underwent But soft let me not promise more then I can perform alas more then can be performed This being Infandum scelus infandique dolores on the Jews part a wickednesse unutterable on Christs part sorrows inexpressible and therefore fitter here to be Effigiesed like sacrified Ipbigenia with Agamemnon's veil of silence How hard the holy Penmen labour here for Metaphors Psal 129.3 Isai 53.7 Rom. 4.25 Luke 22.47 Phil. 2.8 He was ploughed upon saith David Dumb before the shearers and Butchers saith Isaiah given up saith St. Paul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Given up of God betrayed of man Traditus mundo John 3.16 Delivered to the world that Scoen of miseries and vale of tears Traditus dolori Delivered up to sorrows Traditus Populo Luke 22. Delivered up to the people and no wild beast or Sea so raging Traditus morti traditus Cruci Delivered to Death even to the death of the Crosse as the Complement of all Tortures And this is the generall Prospect of Christs innumerable sufferings which come on so thick and fast upon us that they will not permit us here to glance upon his Prior passio as the Fathers call Christs life from his first Birth to the institution ot his last Supper his former passion Cujus tota vita continuata passio whose whole life indeed was but one Crimson Thred spun to make us a Garment But his later Passion now calleth us into the Gard●n Joh 18. John 13.1 Where think not of a place of Recreation but of Passion Dream not of Beds of Roses and delicious Flowers but think of bitter Herbs of Rue and Wormwood There Ecce homo Behold the man there weeping sweating bleeding for us Till he becometh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even a Circle of Calamity made an Island in his own inundation of Tears of Sweat of Bloud a treble Island as Bernard passionatly Non tantum oculis Serm. 3. de Ram. Palmar sed membris singulis Christ wept saith he not only with his eyes but with all the members of his blessed body to wash away our
Whence springs a Grain which gather'd as it ripes Wil nourish Souls and heal them by those stripes Some trouble their own Heads to torture His For which a double Engine studied is A Crown his Kingly Office to delude And Thorns his sacred Temples to intrude Strange Coronation is' t not in mean while Where Briers are the Crown and Bloud the Oyle Thorns too that grew in our own Sluggards Field Yet planted There will us Grapes one day yeeld Others to answer such a Crown command A Reeden Scepter into that Right-hand Which made and could null all things with like speed But that He will not break the bruised Reed On still proceeds unsatiable Scorn Which woundeth more then either Scourge or Thorn They next a Mocking Purple him cast o're Fit Emblem of their Guilt and his Loves store Which like a Royall Robe Christ will cast over His naked Servants and all their sins cover Thus sadly dight He 's brought to publick view As Anthony did mangled Caesar shew Pilate presents him with Behold the Man Whether in scorn or pitty do you scan But what e're he did let us sympathize By and for whom all this Yet wipe your eyes A while once more Behold the man again Lest of this Spectacle you lose the main See willing Isaac beare his Funerall Pile That must requite him in a little while Loyall Vriah see here going on With th' Instruments of his destruction Such is the Burden to Christs shoulders ty'd That He 's with Sin Load Crosse thrice crucify'd Making good that ill-cry once Jews doubled And Christians by their sins have Ecchoed Thus panting swouning up a tyresome Hill Not out of Love but out of Hast to kil Another's forc'd to help but happy he O Christ that freely bears the Crosse for Thee Being come to Calvary that fatall Mount Where Adam was interr'd as some recount And Isaac t' have been sacrificed there His Crosse and Him together up they rear Fixing an envy'd Inscript that belongs To Him and at once consecrates three Tongues Hard-hearted Nails that Bore each Hand and Foot But what Chide you Alas you 're driven to 't Ah flinty Jew that yet remorslesse stands But why rate you our sins help'd arm your Hands Yet thus much good was done Thereby at last Sin Death and Hell's Hand-writings all naild fast They Checquey Taunts and Tortures He doth call Eli and they with Ignorance do all Conclude he Courts Elias to come help Sure that 's the Syre of Blind Devotions whelp How well confutes he their Contrary Brave Sav'd not Himself that he might others save He 's numbred with Transgressors yet one Thiefe Steals Heaven at the last by true Beliefe A good way ne're to be of Life bereft Is All to become conscious of such Theft Hence Christs dear Mother and Disciple He Bequeathes as a Rich mutuall Legacy And then that nought without a Prophesie Might happen to him by a Lottery They share his Garments and his Seamlesse Coat That figured his Church the Souldiers got Whose pristine Glory 't was Her to defend And for her Patrimony not so contend Thus was the Healing Serpent lifted up Who to our Health drank off this Bitter cup Bitter indeed as Gall and Vineger Which as last cordiall Jews administer In spight of custome which had wont propine To dying men some Draught of cheering wine As he did unawares that pierc'd Christs side To us broach'd a full vessell on t whose Tide Shall know no Ebb from whence two Fountains ran That glads in Life and Death the heart of man With which He takes his leave bowing the Head To kisse his Spouse saying then 'T is finished The Story 's finish'd too his outward woe But th' Inward to expresse what shall we doe Those sufferings though Methodicall to sense Nothing to these of his Intelligence The apprehensions of his Fathers wrath A Terra incognita no limits hath His Body's pain was but the corps of woe That of the Soule must for the Soule out-goe All those were Feathers to this heavy Load Which crusht out that strong cry My God! My God! Well then with the Greek Church may we pray thus By th' unknown sufferings Lord deliver us These may be guess'd by those strange Sympathies That then appeared both in Earth and Skies The Rocks did rend Tut'ring hard Hearts to mourn When Seas of Bloud this chiefe Rock did or'eturn The Graves did open either to present Each of themselves his willing Tenement Or else to Bury quick those murderous Jews Who so inhumanly their King did use The rending of the Temples veil in sunder Was both a Mysticall and Literall wonder The Earth shook with an Ague quak'd for fear Such cursed Burdens as the Jews to bear And Heaven hath view'd so long their cruelties 'T will look no more nor longer lend them Eyes Both Sun of Light and Glory at once Set And to the world a double Night beget Which so unnat'rall an Eclips did make Ner'e read nor reason'd for in Almanake The world 's in Black all things in sable weed Fit Servants mourn when as their Lord is dead These Prodigies made one o' th worlds wise men Say Nature or her Maker suffer'd then Nay clear Confession then extorted is From very Jews The Son of God was This This the worlds Altar then The Sacrifice For All unlesse through their own Nullities This kind of Death fell Scythians lent the Jewes Which they too once only for Slaves did use And Suidas saith a Crosse was set o' th Grave Of such as chanc'd some Fatall End to have And Cicero himselfe 's here at a losse Quid dicam being all he can say o' th Crosse Which of all Death 's the Scripture proves the worst If not for shame or pain yet ' cause accurst But as our Misery grew on a Tree So doth our fruitfull Comfort too we see Our bitter waters sweetned by this Wood Right Lignum vitae for all Nations good Then let 's not only with his Kin deplore But with good Joseph treasure up in store His Body Embalmd with Grace our Heart 's a stone And therefore me thinks fit to make his Tomb. And being there Buried let Faith set a Seale And Prayer watch that Him Thence nothing steale The COLLECT PRAYERS The Epistle Heb. 10. from verse 1. to 16. The Gospel John 18. v. 1. to the end of Chapter 19. ALmighty God we beseech thee graciously to behold this thy Family for which our Lord Jesus Christ was content to be betrayed and given up into the hands of wicked men to suffer death upon the Crosse who liveth and reigneth c. ALmighty and Everlasting God by whose Spirit the whole body of the Church is governed and sanctified receive our Supplications and Prayers which we offer before thee for all estates of men in thy holy Congregation that every Member of the same in his Vocation and Ministery may truly and Godly serve-thee through our Lord Jesus Christ who liveth and
testimonii sufficientiam Two for a full and sufficient Testimony by the Jews own Law Witnesses of all sorts from Heaven and Earth too Angels tell the Women He is not here but c. Angels I they were alwayes ready attendants on our Saviour Et congruum fuit ut Rex Coelorum Satellitium haberet Angelorum Most fit it was that the King of Heaven should alwayes have such a Guard such a Retinue and had so at his Conception Luke 1. an Arch-Angell at his Birth Luke 2. a Multitude of the Heavenly Hoast In his Temptation Mark 1. in his Agony Luke 22. Angels ministred unto Him At his Apprehension had he so pleased could have easily prayed down more then twelve Legions i. innumerable company of Angels had he meant to countenance Religion propagated by the Sword and to come home here to his Resurrection And so likewise afterward to his Ascention miraculously proclaimed by Angels And if These to the Creature be appointed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How much more ought they to be alwayes Ministring spirits to their Maker Heb. 1.14 Pennati proceres induti vestibus albis Matribus hi Christum jam surrexisse reportant These winged Mercuries of Heaven here tell the seeking women to their joy and astonishment He is not here but is risen To women then Christ first was manifested to three women and to them doubly by the voyce of Angels and his own First appearance John 20. Three pious women Mary Magdalen Joanna and Mary mother of James v. 12. who to the glory of their Sex were led by their Devotion as the three wise Men by the Star unto their Saviour for they were seeking Christ Mark 28.5 'T is not here worth while to dispute whether or no Christ first appeared to his Mother as some contend since the Evangelists mention not his appearing unto her at all but sure we are 't was to her Sex I and to her Name also Mark 16. Mary Magdalen Apostolorum Apostola as Cajetan calleth her she was the first preacher of the Resurrection the Apostoless of the Apostles and various are the reasons of this Condescention I passe the phansie of some Misogynists as too light that it was because they are the more garrulous the more divulging Sex to spread a rumour sticking too rigidly on the 10. and 11. verses This might hold in secular affairs perhaps but here too contrary to Christs humble modesty Nemini dixeris still prefaced to all those Acts tending to his honour See thou tell no man more probable is that of Ludolphus In Lenim en doloris On Christs part as an Antidote and Cordiall to their Deeper sorrows First he appeared to them lest by his longer absence their griefs should prove too strong a Passion for those weaker vessels Woman why weepest thou v. 15. To asswage their sorrow and comfort them Then at other side saith Beda Quae prima ad culpam prima ad veniam Woman that first made hast to sinne now come first to Pardon She that first broke her Faith in Paradice Bedas Reasons in Locum first recovereth it at the Sepulcher Contendit de morte rapere vitam quae prius de vitâ rapuit mortem That Sex saith he which first snatcht Death as it were out of Life here contends as much to fetch Life even out of Death Aemulemur saltem Foeminas Though that Angelicall Attendance on our Saviour passe our dull Earths Imitation I our Souls and their most active Graces Yet let us at least aemulate these Womens piety Men for shame lest that feebler Sex prove the strongest in Devotion and Vertue appear so farre of the Foeminine Gender as not derived à viro Again let Women imitate them lest with the Foolish Virgins they Eclips the Glory of their vertuous kind and honour their Sex onely with that worst of Arguments Corruptio optimae est pessima The corruption of the best proves the worst Those that will accompany them must note how they came Early and not Empty Early Nec ubi mox abiit nec tamen orta dies In the Dawning saith Saint John while it was yet dark John 20.1 No deferring holy Duties Poenitentia sera raro seria Especially delay not Penitence Christ himself must he sought Early in the Day of Life Age and Sicknesse being Dies mortis days of Death in the morning of this day i.e. in times of strength and health Early in this Morning i.e. in the prime of youth with Samuel and Timothy nay in the very Dawning i.e. in the time of tender innocency as Saint Jerom of Eustochium Materno lacte That she sucked in Piety with her Mothers milk loving to hear Children Balbutire Christum Epist ad Eusiock Chanting Hosanna's er'e they wel could speak None ever came too soon to CHRIST or can make too much hast to Heaven Many Esau's with too late Teares to gain a Blessing And as early so these came not empty reflecting upon that Nemo vacuus Exod. 23.15 Exod 23.15 None shall appeare before me empty saith the giver of all things And minde it you cheap Auditors and Readers Quaelibet Aromata Vnguenta Each here brought her Oyntments and sweet Odours And such must be our addresses Odore virtutum suavitate Orationum With flowers of Vertue and Fragrancies of Prayer Revel 8. With the pretious Unguents of Alms and Hospitality Rev. 8. Psalm 141. All which indeed are like Mary Magdalens effused Oyntment Matth. 26. And to close this with St. Bernards sweeter Allegory Tres mulieres sunt Mens Lingua Manus The three good Women here bringing pretious Oyntments and sweet Odours must be saith he the Mind the Tongue the Hand Serm. in Loc. Those of the Mind are Zeal Compassion Patience Those of the Tongue are Prayers and good Exhortations Those of the Hand are Charity and Distributions Thus having saluted the Company Observe next the Person and his Motion He John 1.1 is not here but is risen He a word of the Person He that was the Word John 1. He that was born among Beasts lived among Publicans and died among Thieves He whom they attached bound reviled He whom they buffeted scourged thorned He whom they nailed pierced crucified whose Sepulcher they stoned sealed watched and that with the Garrison appointed to guard the Temple saith Josephus yet He so little the Plots of the impious prevaile against the Righteous He who sitteth in Heaven so laugheth them to scorn and Catastropeth all their wits into Dirisions The Person He. that Ipsissimus He the very selfe-same Christ awakeneth his Divinity which seemed before to sleep and at once conquereth those Fatall Enemies Sin Death and Hell even to a sensible Demonstration Luke 24. Videte palpate Handle me and see me Luke 24.35 When the Priests and Scribes those grand Councellors at Law expected from the Grave an Habeas Corpus the Body which they gave it they receive from Angels a non est inventus He
life-giving bread so that the Schools in Generall and many of the Fathers where opinioned from this John 6. that there is a kind of divine seed infused by the Eucharist not only into the souls but into the bodies also of faithfull Receivers whose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or vivifying Quality inclineth and as 't were fitteth them to a Reviviction non Disputo sed Credo ut Credo Edo how far the words may bear it I dispute not but believe him that said it John 6.54 whosoever eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud hath eternall life and I will raise him up at the last day The Ascention of Christ. matt 28. mark 16. luk 24. * * 50. And he led them out as farre as Bethany and he lift up his hands and blessed them 51. And it came to passe while he blessed them he was parted from them and carryed upp into heauen Here the Plate POEM 16. Upon this day as the Sweet Prophet sings The Sun arose with healing in his wings The Sun of Righteousnesse which lately sate In a Cloud Red as Bloud yet now in state He reapproacheth with Refulgent Rayes Cheering our sadness Lengthning of our Days Our declinations of Mortality Into a Solstice of Eternity This day the Lord made and it sorrow marr'd Nay This day made the Lord that is declar'd His Mercy on others many wonders show'd But now his Power one on Himself bestow'd This stronger Samson breaks the cords and bands Of death and Hell with his Triumphant hands See honest Joseph here from Prison come In Christ Returning from deaths dungeon The Gates of Gaza Samson bare away But Christ the Gates of death unhing'd to Day Stout Daniel here from fierce companions free While Christ returns from vanquish'd Divels See Here is that Temple which Jews did destroy Yet as foretold repaired the third day Here Jonah too the whale doth cast on shore Now the devouring Grave doth Christ restore Which Morsell hath Death's stomack so sick made Hee 'l one day vomit all that 's therein laid Mean time the Grave 's well Metamorphosed Thus warm'd by Christ Fear not to go to bed For though what 's sown do dy yet see the Graine With gay advantages revives again In stead of mouldring Drought Green-Flourishing Each single vertue many Multiplying Christ thus our humane Nature did calcine Not Transubstantiate into divine But what was naturall Spiritualize By the exaltation of the Qualities More then Angelick Beuty Crowns that Face Where the Forme of a servant late took place That Body new Agility doth move Who 's Center 's not below now but above Enfranchis'd too from Earth's necessities And supports humane by Divine supplies Needs neither Rest Food Raiment as before As being to hunger thirst and tire no more And when Christ fed since 't was not Him to nourish But onely his Disciples Faith to cherish And in his Body rais'd those wounds and scars Became the brightest parts in their orb stars Such the Prerogative spiritual is Of bodies glorifi'd of Christ and His. First fruits imply the Later look what he Injoy'd we shall for act though not degree Each vessel full of true felicity According to its Receptivity If we mean while but rise from graves of sin And Transitories which most buried in If of such Bats we pitch an Eagles flight And to be where this Carcass is delight Then doubt not but who thus the first partake The second Resurrection bless'd shall make Thus by the resurrection of the dead The Living's Faith is chiefly comforted The COLLECT The Epistle Col. 3. ver 1. unto 8. The Gospel John 20. ver 1. to 11. Almighty God which thorow thy only begotten Son Jesus Christ hast overcome death and opened to us the gate of everlasting life we humbly beseech thee that as by thy speciall grace preventing us thou dost put into our minds good desires so by thy continual help we may bring the same to good effect through Jesus Christ our Lord who liveth c. Vpon Ascension Day or Holy Thursday DISQUISITION 14. WEe may well say of this Feast as the Jews of that same Sabbath John 19. John 19.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That this is an High Day dies Solennis a day of Joy to all Generations both in respect of Christ our Lord and of all true Christian people as being the first day of Christs Ascension in the flesh for his Deity cannot be said either to ascend or descend this being the first day of his sitting in joy and glory rest and triumph The Proem at the right hand of God And as to our selves This the first day as it were of our right to Heaven the first day that our Nature entred there whence we have both a Priviledg and an Assurance to follow as this day the sentence of our corruption was changed and in stead of that curse in the beginning Earth thou art c. it was now said unto our Nature Ascend to Heaven and which never was to Angels Sit thou at my right hand c. Heb. 1. Sure Heb. 1.13 an inestimable happinesse was Christs personall Society his bodily Presence while he lived on earth could the hardened Jews have seen or seeing have perceived it but Light came into the world and darknesse comprehended it not They like the brutish Gadarens had rather have their swine then this pearle while the devout Saint Augustine made it you know the chiefest of his chiefe desires Romam in Flore Paulum in Cathredra Christam in Carne S. August 3 chief desires To have seen widowed Roome in her Virgin Foelicity to have heard that Divine Oracle Saint Paul out of the Pulpit but above all to have embraced his Redeemer in the flesh And could then have sung his Swann like Anthem the Nunc dimittis as cheerfully as old Simeon could willingly have closed his eyes with that blest object How full of joy needs must his presence be on earth in whose presence is fulnesse of joy in heaven I and who still carryed Heaven along with him And so fill'd with this joy of his presence were his Apostles he having oft miraculously sed them by Land saved them by Sea instructed them both by Sea and Land that they could not with patience endure once to think of his abscence or hear of his Departure and therefore one of them to enjoy him longer disswadeth him from his sufferings Mat. 16. though he be called Satan for his labour the rest in a sad copartnership of sorrow lament the death and losse of him Mat. 16.22 All his other actions were desiderabilia but this parting as another death here their affections cry out with the Pilgrims of Emmaus Mane nobiscum Domine we have now most need of thee Advesperascit For now the dark evening draweth on c. All of them at his Final valediction his telling them of his Ascending to Glory seem impatiently unwilling to stay behind him John 13.37 John 13.
verse 17. Why cannot I follow thee now saith Saint Peter He hath done with his Bonum est esse hic now he thinks nothing worse then to bee here his Master gone 〈◊〉 How can wee know the way saith Saint Thomas John 14. verse 5. how indeed Thou gone who art the way Then saith Saint Philip unto him Lord shew us the Father verse 8. heareing Christ speake of going to Him Thus all of them in an united Longing desire either to detaine him or accompany him and sweetly Saint BERNARD In 2 Serm. in Ascens Sympathizeth with them Quantus dolor irrupit Apostolica Pectora dum eum propter quem omnia Reliquerant à se tolli viderunt what heart-breaking Grief alas seazed on the Apostles when hee for whom they had left all was now leaving them Oh how could the children of the Bride-Chamber chuse but mourne when the Bride-groome was to bee taken from them Mat. 9.15 Matthew 9. verse 15. And if so irkesome bee thy corporall absence Oh CHRIST Let us never know how unsufferable is thy Spirituall thine eternall separation but since for his corporall Absence there is an Oportet Act. 3.21 Acts 3. for the heavens must contain him till c. and an Expedit John 16.7 Joh. 16. that it was expedient he go to the Father for else the Comforter would not come see how like a tender Parent he goes about to wean their affections 14.1 2. c. John 14. Little children saith he admonishing them to be such in the best sense yet a little while and I am with you our longest abode here is no better Job 14.2 but let not your heart be troubled Cur turbaretur cor cum tantùm deserit oculos What need your heart be troubled when he onely leaveth your eyes and not at all your heart Therein I am with you to the end and therefore be not troubled either to think what shall become of you hereafter For I go to prepare a place for you ver 2. For there was never any place for humane flesh til he carried it thither Nor fear your selves left desolate in present for you shall not lose but change your comfort c. Orabo Patrem that is his Office Intercession I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter you shall rather have two then lose any one I pass my word whose word shall never pass John 14.18 Non relinquam I will not leave you comfortlesse John 14.18 to which S. Augustine sweetly alludeth Euarg in Psal 46. Videte ascendentem Credite absentem Sperate venientem sed tamen per misericordiam occultam etiam sentite praesentem Behold him now ascending beleeve in him being absent expect his second coming and yet by his inward mercies apprehend him present with you 'T is handsomly observed by some learned * August 157. Serm. de Temp. Greg. in Hom. in Ezech. 1. c. Authors that those four Beasts Ezek. 1. and Apoc 4. mystically represent the four chief Actions of Christ in his work of our Redemption the first with the face of a man pointeth at his Incarnation the second like a Bullock denoteth his Passion the third like a Lion speaketh his Resurrection the fourth of the Eagle This of his Ascension flying above the clouds and pearching in the highest heavens at the right hand of God Though our Saviours first life on earth for he lived two you know before and after his Resurrection although his first I say was but one crimson thred a meer debasement and continued passion yet was his second as full of Triumph and Exaltation whereof there were three degrees or sublimations answerable to those three of his later Humiliation Resurrectio Morti Ascensio Discensui Sessio ad dextram permansioni in sepulchro Christs Exaltation threefold viz. his Resurrection opposed to his Death his Ascent into heaven to his Descent into hell and his sitting on the right hand of God to his lying in the Sepulchre The first step of this exaltation was his step out of the grave his Resurrection as before demonstrated the second stair of his Triumphancy is this which now wee contemplate his translation from earth to heaven In Festum and this saith Bernard is Consummatio reliquarum Solennitatum foelix causula totius Itinerarii Christi as it were the complement of all other Solemnities and happy period of Christs whole Journal in the flesh S. Luke describeth the substance and circumstances of it Luke 24.50 c. Luke 24. Eduxit discipulos Christ now about to take his ultimum vale of his disciples He led them forth the city to Bethania out of the city to admonish them and us of a Non habemus that wee have here no continuing city Heb. 13. but must seeke one to come Heb. 13. and led them forth only a few witnesses to shew He was as private in all those actions tending to his glory as publick in those pointing out his shame as his Twin-born poverty is laid open in an Inne Domus populi nay the commonest room of that same common house a Stable his buffetings and derisions in Pilat's open Hall his crucifixion in the eye of Jerusalem when that was the very Face of the world But the glorious attendance on his Birth that 's by night Luke 2. a multitude of the heavenly Hoast His radiant Transfiguration hath but three beholders Peter James and John All his miraculous cures he would have gratified with silence See thou tell no man His Resurrection at first manifested but onely to Mary Magdalene and this his most glorious Ascension but to his Apostles only He led them forth and all this to prick the bladder of vain glory which so puffeth up the heart of man especially now a dayes so much made of every where so be-plush'd and scar-letted but you see Ostentatious ones are Christs Antipedes who here contenteth his wonderfull preferment with no more pomp then His Apostles company He led them forth and that for their own sakes too giving them both a Blessing and a Charge The Blessing the Charge Luke 24.50 ver 50. He lift up his hands and blessed them Happy those imployments that are so led on with his Blessing Rom. 10.15 Jer. 23.21 and so those parting 's too that close in mutuall Benedictions Secondly There was exite praedicate Goe ye forth into all Nations Matth. 10.5 and preach the Gospel there is a double commission for them whom he chooseth both of Authority and Ability This not to be done without warrant Rom. 10.15 Jer. 23.21 the inward Call is best known by the Talents and both best made known by the externall Call of lawfull Authority And here that former Edict was repealed Matth. 10. Goe not into the way of the Gentiles that was to be the main way now to all Nations to every creature that is capable thereof or to the System and the Epitome
of them 4 And they were all filled with the holy ghost And began to speake with other tongues etc The Plate here Whitsunday DISQUISITION 15. THis Day is worthily devoted to the Holy Ghost the third Person in the Blessed Trinity by whom all things times and persons that are such are sanctified and made holy Epist 118. ad Januarium and therefore so devoted over all the world saith Augustine in memoriall of that day Acts 2. wherein the Spirit after a Wonderful and mysterious manner descended for the propagating governing and preserving of Christs holy Catholick Church unto the end of the world 'T is sometime called Pentecost as being fifty days after our Christian Passeover Deut. 16. The Jewish Pentecost was a memoriall of the Law which was an hidden Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Fifty Acts 2.1 but our Pentecost a memoriall of the Gospel which is the revealed Law One delivered in Mount Sinai th' other in Mount Sion and somtimes called Whitsunday from the glorious light of heaven that was then shed upon the earth as also from a custome of some Christians Thence cloathing themselves in white Cyril Catech. in token of the joy and solemnity thereof as Saint Augustine speaks for whereas Christs Birth and other times we keep in Honour of his coming in the flesh now at Whitsuntide wee should rejoyce more for his coming in the Spirit Now we have a double joy Serm. 133. de Evang. saith he Quod abeuntem Christum non amisimus venientem Spiritum possidemus that we have not lost our Christ departed but yet enjoy the Spirit approached I the Sun of Glory being now in his height shines forth on his Apostles in a Light from Heaven and knowing the worlds charity would soone wax cold as he foretold them Matth. 24. He warmeth them with a shower of Heavens better fire and lest great sorrows for his Absence strike them dumb as ingentes stupent He sendeth each of them for a Token an inspired tongue Christs Promises O how worthy confidence that so in each point answered their necessities as not in any thing left them comfortlesse John 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereas without him Joh. 14.15 16. and his Comforts what forlorne Orphanes are the best of men very Apostles you see in the Metaphor here as fatherlesse children or widdowed mothers Orphanos In locum Hierom rendreth it Orbos so Beza One of the words speaking a neer Allegory to helplesse children The other to deprived parents both pregnantly expressing man's destitute condition without Christ Christs Fatherly affection towards man Man who left alone is the desolatest creature in the world especially for Spirituals how unable therein to help himselfe Rom. 1.19 so much as to a good thought Rom. 7. When thus the Apostles without Christ are very Orphanes as children Fatherlesse exposed to oppressions injuries and delusions Let Nature boast of nothing what are the rest of men without him but even wormes as it were and no men But on the other side How manifestly did Christ's Parentall care appear to them that while present gathered them as an Hen her chicken and now absent set so good a Guardian over them Earth could not afford a Comforter sufficient no alas her miserable ones and therefore Heaven shall nor is any Angel there thought good enough to be intrusted with so dear a charge but even God himselfe the Holy Ghost who from the sweet effects of his Illumination and Assistance is Emphatically stiled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all the world the Comforter indeed sometimes he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 14.16 i. e. another Comforter yet not exclusively but relatively Christ still remaining one Abiit per id quod Homo est manet per id quod Deus 'T is Saint Augustines Christ though absent in body yet by spirituall protection Lo I am with you to the end of the world Matth. 28. Nay and so farre even literally it is made good by Him Matth. 28.20 being personally for ever with our humane Nature Lo I am with you c. or else another Comforter saith Calvin both for distinction of Persons In locum and difference of Gifts as it was proper to the Son to pacifie the wrath of God to ransome us from hell to purchase life by dying but peculiar to the Spirit to aply these Benefits to make us partakers of Christ and all his saving graces I we have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cor. 12.14 i. e. Diversities of gifts by that same Spirit or as the same Apostle else where calleth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the manifold wisdome of God Spiritus benignus Spiritus dulcis Spiritus fortis So St. Bernard He is a Spirit of Comfort as various as our Misery a Spirit of Love to unite the envious a Spirit of strength to support the weak a Spirit of truth to guide the ignorant a Spirit of Consolation to bind up the Afflicted Psal 68.18 So that David's prophesie is fulfilled here Psal 68. Ascendisti Dedisti Thou art gone up on high and hast given gifs unto men I Thou hast now given all good gifts by giving them the Giver of all the Holy Spirit The gifts bestowed as upon this day were of a double considerability viz. Officia Gratiae Abilities or Graces Either gifts of Edification for the Church which are legible Eph. 4.11 He gavesome Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and sme Pastors and Teachers Or gifts of Sanctification for the immediate Benefit of Soules whose Catalogue you have Gal. 5.22 The Fruit of the Spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse c. Psal 68.18 which St. Paul repeats Ephes 4.8 Davids word received and the Apostles Gave no opposition butshewing the Heavenly Derivation c. But what John 20.22 Dr. Hammon in locum had they not formerly received the Holy Ghost Joh. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet some say This signifies here not the actuall giving of the Holy Ghost for that came not on them till Acts 2. and they are appointed to abide at Jerusalem Luke 24.29 til they were endued with power from above which therfore now before his Ascension they had not received and when the Spirit came it would lead them into all truth and as yet it appears by their question Acts 1.6 Acts 1.6 they were not thus led but onely the confirming to them his former promise and by the ceremony of breathing on them to expresse the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The eternall Breath and Spirit of God sealing it as it were solemnly unto them The Holy Ghost not received til now and preparing and fitting them for the receiving of it So saith Theophylact 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words Receive the Holy Ghost signifie Be ye ready to receive him and again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He
his owne esteem was in his very Zenith in his scorching Meridian then Christ said Siste gradum stand still or go down rather set at noon which was his transmutation our second Considerable his Conversion Acts 9. and 4. where in the third you have the manner and in the fourth the matter of it Acts 9.3 4. suddenly there shined round about him a light from heaven Verse 3. Divine Illumination is the sole efficient of mans conversion There is no Deriding or Censuring of any no despairing of our selves or others touching Conversion we know not how soon or suddenly the light may shine from Heaven yet much less is there any presuming on such singular examples for the case may differ the good Thief was converted at the first Call and Saint Paul here at the first Illumination Take heed then of both Rocks Scylla and Carybdis and thou shalt escape Demetrius his Shipwrack of Faith and a good Conscience Vers 4. next in the fourth verse he fell to to the Earth and heard a voice from Heaven c. Humiliation is a Christians way to exaltation and brings us even to a Conference with Christ Saul Saul why persecutest thou me and mark the happy consequent of such Antecedents viz. Remorse Obedience readiness vers 6. Vers 6. And he trembling and astonished said Lord what wilt thou have me to do acting according to all those directions following in the ninth Chapter which the Church appositely appointeth as this day's contemplation And here was a strange Trasmutation wrought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Wolf 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Man a kind of transubstantiation contrary to the worlds Lycanthropy whereby too oft one man becomes a wolf unto another for here ex lupo agnus a very wolf is made a lamb ex vepribus racemus a Bramble becomes a Vine and cockle it self good wheat here as t were Is Grapes of Thornes and Figs of Thistles a Pirate becomes a Pilot the mouth of Blasphemy here becomes Christs Oratour and Satans Trumpet the Organ of the Holy Ghost Quantum mutatus happy all those that find but any degrees of such changed Affections as our Saint Paul did here that can say with him as to evil not I but sin that dwelleth in me and as to every good not I but Christ that liveth in me Rom. 7.20 Gal. 2.20 Rom. 9.3 not to speak of the raptures of his piety Rom. 9.3 that seraphick zeal by which he could have wished himself an Anathema for good of others and increase of Christs Kingdome that it may well be said of him that ex novissimo primus ex abortivo perfectus that of the last Apostle he became the chiefest and of Abortion a man of the most eminent perfection 2 Cor. 5. in Coelis Homo in Terris Angelus saith one of him he was a man in Heaven 2 Cor. 11.23 not onely by his Conversation but in his rapture where he heard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unutterable words and while yet upon the earth chap. 12.4 he was a kind of Angel insomuch Origen saith that many thought him to be that Holy Ghost which Christ had promised to send after his departure From what a lowness was Saint Paul here raised unto what a height see what strange Changes here Grace can effect what then can Glory be therefore like him alwaies obedient to the Heavenly vision whether in his word or secreet motions that so you may be renewed in the Spirit of your mind till each one with Saint Augustin come to his Ego non sum Ego I am not now the same as heretofore and that so made appear by redeeming of lost time and by a bettered Conversation as Saint Paul did 2 Cor. 11. in labours more abundant 2 Cor. 11.23 c. quot verba tot tonitruae Hier his words were like Thunder And one of Saint Augustins three chief wishes was Paulum in cathedra Prud. Enchirid. To have heard Paul out of the Pulpit or seen him in the chaire Hic Lupus ante rapax vestitur vellere molli Saulus qui fuerat fit adempto lumine Paulus Mox recipit visum fit Apostolus ac populorū Doctor ore potens Corvos mutare Columbis He 's now a sheep that was a wolf before And Saul being blinded makes Paul see the more His sight receiv'd the Gentiles Doctor preves His holy Rhetorick turns Rav'ns Doves Thus our Saint Paul though he arose a Red and fiery Sun of persecution yet was his Meridian full of miraculous splendor and Illumination and his setting with more blush of penitence and passion vindicating his former time and mistaken zeal with multiplyed labours in propagating the true Gospel so that while other Apostles had their particularly designed Circuits totum pariter Mundum Paulo He was more then any the universal Bishop and had the whole World for his Diocess left to his peregrination and which indeed as the Sun in the Apostles Zodiack he did run through or the most known parts of it viz. Seleucia Phrygia Pamphilia Galatia Macedonia Athens Corinth Ephesus and the rest of the Graecian and Asiatick Churches besides the Mediterranean Islands Cyprus Creet Malta c. with the Continents of Spaine and Italy in which last after as large a Catalogue of dangers as Indeavours he had his Quietus by the Sword of Nero about the 67 year of Christ his Master Poem 24. BOld Poetry durst never feign a change Like this Conversien yet as true as strange That sings of Men turn'd Beasts but this doth paint A Ravenous Wolf turn'd Man and that man Saint Even Paul himself that breath'd Destruction Here proves a Vessel of Election Whence flow Balsamick oyles such to restore As his wild zeal so wounded had before Posting on he 's struck down that he might Rise Blinded with Light but yet to mend his Eyes First Heaven stoops to him he next soar'd to That And mounted higher for being thus thrown flat For he that er'st did to Stephens Death consent Instructs all to Believe now and Repent And who to Bonds and Death once Jews betray'd Is now great Doctor of the Gentiles made And with strange Paines and Perils doth Redeeme His former Actions Time and lost Esteeme Compassing Sea and Land to effect this In others divine Metamorphosis O may the same Coelestiall Bridle check Our gallopping corruptions and pull back Our ranging hearts Lord strike us so to ground That we thy Tennis-Balls to Heaven rebound Dazzle us with thy Beames that we may see No more the waies of Sin but better Thee That to himself or others Each mad Saul May prove a Penitent or Preaching Paul The COLLECT-PRAYER The Gospel Matth. 9. vers 23. to the end The Epistle Acts 9. vers 1. unto vers 23. God which hast taught all the world through the preaching of thy blessed apostle S. Paul grant we beseech thee that we which have his wonderful conversion in remembrance may follow and
damno Coelibatum In Epist ad Domnionem I discommend not honest singlenesse both may be great advantages to Piety according to the Temper of the Persons that improve Them Let not one of Them disparage the other with that Janus Proverbe That Marriage filleth Earth but Virginity 't is filleth Heaven and againe whence is Heaven Filled but from the Earth Quote not her Example to the Prejudice of Either that was so transcendently Pious under both Conditions both in her Espousals and Virginity Blessed among Blessed above all women POEM 27. GOod Offices of Angels and Degrees From this Annunciation who not Sees While winged Gabriel stoops from above With a miraculous Embassie of Love To the Sweet Uirgin and by Her to all Whom sharing in her Blisse They blessed Call Of all Judaea's Virgins She 's the Choice In whom God Angels Men and all Rejoyce Of the whole Ring of Israel She 's the Gem At once Adornes and weares Heaven's Diadem Of all the Parkes of Iury This the Deare Singled out not to Chase but Chastly beare Like Aarons Rod that without Sap of Earth Buds Blossoms Beares her News is such a Birth The Messenger and Message both so strange As in her Virgin-Cheeke work many a Change The Angel frights her Roses off and then The News Replants Them Lilies yield againe What e'r her Countenance yet still her Brest Disputes not but Believes her heavenly Guest Argues not She but piously submits As in such Mysteries it all befits She yields the Angel here no Adoration But yet Returnes all humble Gratulation It Derogates from Christ Religion Taint's To Worship or Invoke those blessed Saints But when Their pious steps our Soules do raise We Honour Them in Giving God the Praise Thus Christ like whom Heaven Earth had none other On Earth no Father had in Heaven no Mother Here Mary being Shee doth most Excell All Virgins Matrons Dames of Israel Like Cibele Sh' hath of her Sex such Odds That Shee 's more than feign'd Mother of the Gods Yet happier the Conception of her Heart Than her Corporeall Acting Mothers Part For That indeed through Earth spreads her Renown But This decks her with a Coelestiall Crown Those Aves wrong her scarce Sense by the Story That Haile her full of Grace when full of Glory Yet Glorying not in any Phansied Power O're Christ as Son but in her Saviour The COLLECT The Epistle Isa 7. ver 10. to 16. The Gospel Luk. 1. ver 26. to 39. VVE beseech thee Lord poure thy grace into our hearts that as we have known Christ thy Sons incarnation by the Message of an Angel so by his Cross and Passion we may be brought unto the glory of his Resurrection through the same Christ our Lord. S. MARCVS True Doctrine Charity Repentance these if one but marke these tymes doe seldome please A Lyons voyce is reguisite where men preferre before Heauens Pallace Earths close Den. Here the Plate Vpon the Festivall of St MARKE DISQUISITION 25. THe foure Evangelists were prefigured and lively Represented in Ezekiels Vision of the foure Living Creatures with foure severall Faces in Homine Humanitas in Leone Regnum in vitulo Sacerdotium Lyrain Glossa in Aquilâ Divinitatis Sacramentum That with the Face of Man Pointed out St Matthew describing Christs Humane Nature his Genealogy according to the Flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he begins the Book of the Generation of Jesus Christ c. That with the face of the Oxe denoteth St Luke delineating Christs Priestly Office Offering up that universall Sacrifice upon the generall Altar of the World his Cross mainely Running on that Argument That Creature with the Face of rhe Eagle Figured St John Christs Divinest Herauld that fetcheth his Pedigree from the King of Kings Proving his Descent from Heaven that He is the Son of God the Quill of this Eagle penning Christs Eternall Generation But that with the visage of a Lyon was to intimate our St Marke here who mainly Trumpets out Christs Regall Office and his Imperiall Soveraignty over all Creatures in the world thus Christ is the Center of Them all though Each hath His peculiar Lines drawn from it all the foure Evangelists have the same Subject Christ as was likewise There prefigured in the wheeles Rota in Rotâ running all one within another but yet Each hath his severall Predications of that Subject Marcus vero quod est Rex Ludolphus de vita V●… 2. p. c. 63. etiam Imperator omnium but our St Marke's designe is to Prove Christ a King saith Ludolphus and to be the Supreame Power of all things which appeareth saith he almost in every Chapter in that he Treateth still of the Choice and most Eminent Passages and Miracles of Christ frequently inculcating his Transcendent Power and Greatness Finitque Evangelium in Ascensione ejus in Coelum Sessione à Dextris Dei And as He beginneth his Gospel with the History of Iohn the Baptist Christs wonderfull Fore-runner then whom there was not a greater borne of women so Closeth He his Gospell with the highest of all Miracles Christs Ascension into Heaven and sitting at the right Hand of God all the way thorough his Booke framing as 't were this Syllogisme saith Ludolphus from the Testimony of Christs Actions Proving this Conclusion That Man whose Power and Uertue we see Extended to all Spirits and to all Flesh to all Elements and all Persons to all Distances of Times and Places to all Instructions of Law and Gospell to all sufferings with Patience and Victory to all Passages of Life and Death to all Comforts of this World and a Better That man surely that Can all This and more is Rex verè virtuosissimus Omnium Dominus He Certainly is truly the most powerfull King of all nay the Omnipotent Monarch of the World But now that Christ is the same Powerfull Agent St Marke fully Proves the Assumption or minor Proposition Minorem serio Deducit Marc. in Evangetio suo Idem Ibid. Quantum ad viginti Conditiones throughout his whole Booke saith Ludolphus by at least twenty severall Arguments and Instances But more Particularly This was his Sirname Marke Act. 12.25 his Proper Name being Iohn He was the Disciple and Nephew of St Peter his Sisters Son and therefore sometime Called His Son 1 Pet. 5.13 1 Pet. 5.13 as the manner of the Iews was to Call their Kindred by words of nearest Relation so Iames and Iude were Called the Brothers of our Lord This St Marke was also Cosin-German unto Barnabas Col. 4.10 by whom and St Paul He seemeth at first to have been assumed to the worke of the Ministry Acts 12.25 Act. 12. And though He Left Them in Pamphilia Discouraged perhaps with Tediousnesse of Travell and an infirme Body yet Here He desisted not from the Propagation of the Gospel but afterward accompanied his Cosin Barnabas into Cyprus an Island of the Mediterranean Sea so in
the first place his Descent speaks him the son of Zachariah and Elizabeth Luke 1.13 Luke 1. remarkable for each of them Son of Zachary Christ chooseth not his Officers as some do Sheriffs by measure of their goods but goodness Saint John here not the son of any wealthy Laick but of an holy Priest one descended of the Aaronick line no contemptible Gmealogy in Josephus his Herauldry In vita Josephi who proves his own Noble extract by his being descended of the line of the Priesthood both by his Fathers and his Mothers side as appears in his life written by himself and too Son of Elizabeth there is somwhat in that Elizabeth that was called Barren but shall be called so no more but Mother of such a Son Then whom there hath not been a greater born of Women St. John his Relations Thus God oft-times turns seeming reproach into the greater blessing and doth recompence contented expectation with more joyful issue You say Nullum tempus occurrit Regi indeed no time excludes the power of that King of Heaven reflect but upon Sarah and Elizabeth and tell me What Brests so dry that God cannot make fruitful And what Soul so barren but this Giver of increase can make to bear To bear like Davids happy Trees i. e. More fruits in their age more and better even fruits of Righteousness and Repentance Hence then apply that of David in both senses Spiritual and Corporal Faecundat sterilem He maketh the barren to keep house and to become a joyful mother of children Psal 113. Psal 113.9 And now if we joyn both together Zachary and Elizabeth we have here then an holy President for the legitimate and successful Matrimony of Priests Gravius peccare sacerdotem si uxorem ducat quā si domi concubinam foveat Costerus Inchirid c. 17. Blush then all you that go about to stain the Honor of the Married Clergy when Christ himself you see doth both approve and honor it choosing Priests Zacharies son to be his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Vsher and Fore-runner We envy not that sinful Liberty Praestat Scortart while our Church out of the Apostles office licenceth the Vxorem ducere the leading about a sister which is Saint Pauls phrase for Marriage as * Lib. 3. c. 24. Eusebius expounds it to St. Paul himself as married 1 Cor. 9.5 And they that urge him so hard for Coelibate 1 Cor. 7.26 1 Cor. 7. forget the six and twentieth Verse of that Chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where he means Because of the present distress and persecution But enough of his Relation now for his Birth which on his own part was not without some wonder also Not a greater among Women onely the Son of a Virgin greater Ardens in locum Vt mirabilitèr natus mirabiliùs nasciturum demonstraret Of such an aucient man and of a barren woman wonderfully born that he might the better demonstrate him that was to be more wonderfully born of a Virgin at whose approaching to his Mother Saint John leaped in the Womb Exultans puer Prophetavit that springing of the Babe at the visitation of the Mothers was a kinde of salutation of the Infants Quasi intra Matris viscera As though Saint John here in the very Womb if possible would have cried out Ludolphus Devita Christi Eccè Agnus Dei Behold the Lamb of God c. And though he cannot do it with his voice yet will he with his motion which was no ordinary one saith a Father but such as causeth wonder and expostulation Dic Infans dic Prophetarum maxime c. Thou great thou more then a Prophet say Whence this nimble Joy and strange Exultation Nondum natus Prophetas Does thy prophesie fore-run thy Birth Yes Chrys 7. Hom. in Matth. 16. Praesentiam Domini sentiens As it were feeling the presence of his Lord by this accoast he rejoyceth in the Womb in a maner hasting to salute his Master And hence it is saith Saint Austin the Church onely celebrates the Baptist his Nativity the death of other Martyrs Quia illorum fides post aetatis accessum Johannis Nativitas Christum celebravit Because others indeed in a full grown Faith stuck to Christ at their deaths but our Saint John here besides that did with an early confidence salute him ere his Birth Luke 1.60 and so are their Feastivals proportioned to their service Those as Christs followers Saint John as his fore-runner Next 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 From the Root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sig gracious The Hebrews usually adde the Letter Jod to proper names or some other Letter of the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 see a pair of good Omens in his Names one of them speaking his Person full of grace John and therefore the other his deserved office Baptist Such good names are or still should be as good Counsellors and to that end pious antiquity imposed them significant Compellations are constant Admonitions And that as often as we hear our selves named we might reflect upon our Covenant with God in Baptism and who so disparageth a good name with a bad life may well be chid as a Father did some dissolute Christians and that doubly Ipsum nomen crimen That even their names shall aggravate their crimes as here John Baptists do express his vertues I and his office too our next considerable which some say was four ways fulfilled viz. Nascendo Praedicando Baptizando Moriendo By his Birth by his Preaching by his Baptism by his Dying By his Birth Vtero exiliens praecursionis officium inchoavit by his Exultation in the Womb initiating his Office and as it were Preaching Christs Conception Ludolph in Johannem Baptistam but of this before For the second Saint Matthew describes his Preaching with his Text and other necessary circumstances Matth. 3.1 2 c. Matth. 3. In those days came John the Baptist Preaching in the Wilderness of Judea and saying Repent for c. He was indeed the first Christian Preacher and the same was Christs Text afterward Chap. 4.17 Matth. 4. An ever needful Subject Thus what his Infancy began his riper years made up Saint Johns Office and wherein it consisted Preaching Repentance and Baptizing in the Name of Christ Penitence and Baptism a Doctrine and Discipline which the Jews never heard before of you may guess how they rellished them to lay aside their weighty Ceremonies nay their main and ancient Laws as to offer no other Beasts then their own hearts for bleeding Sacrifices but weeping eyes Nay and to change that ancient Sacrament of their Circumcision so strictly commanded and so long continued above Two thousand years from Abraham unto Christ so sharply still performed or else more sharply punished Now to perswade them to Baptism to a little washing in Jordan seems no less to them then double Blasphemy against God and Moses as they told Saint Stephen
Redemptions Mystery Pardon our Contemplations if so bold A little your bright Natures to behold All Spirit without clog of Body yee Move as the Wind or Light or Lightning free And yet each of your Millions Scripture tells The strongest human force in strength excells Of Distinct Orders and yet for the most All styl'd in Holy Writ The Heavenly Host The Horse and Chariots of the Mighty Lord Ready for March and Motion at his Word So that in Heaven sometime we read of War No marvell then poor Mortals live in jar But how got Foes in there Sure as in Flowers Serpents do breed so There degenerate Powers There Michael fought with his Traind-bands of Light And beat the Dragon down to Endlesse night Yet in the Praecipiece his knotted Tayl Against some of those Splendors did prevail And so puld many thence of that bright Train One day from us to be supply'd again Your joy then at our penitence we pay With joy for Christs confirming of your stay Then since we both but one Church constitute Let us be neither Actionlesse nor mute Sith ' Angels need not our Good Offices Let us to Men what those to us expresse Joyning above i' th Song of Victory Still singing Triple-Holy to 'th most High For if to this words Root we stoop our Mind Who 's like the Lord in Michael we find To pray to Angels then if you mark well Is a Mistake for Christ is Michael He the Arch-Angell is that conquereth Sin Satan in us for us Hell and Death Or if another Angel they withstand All Adoration by severe command Our gratefull love is Theirs but to dispence Worship on Them 's a Double vlolence THE COLLECT PRAYER The Epistle Rev. 12. v. 7. to 13. The Gospel Matth. 18.1 to 11. EVerlasting God which hast ordained and constituted the services of all Angels and Menin a wonderfull order mercifully grant that they which alwayes doe thee service in Heaven may by thy appoyntment succour and defend us in Earth through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen S. LVCAS He whome the world containes not and whose court shines with his glorious presence to confort with beasts and in a manager lodge wee see excepts vs not without Humilitie The Plate here Vpon Saint Lukes Day DISQ●ISITION 34. THis Evangelist was by Nation of Syria by Birth of Antioch Ecccles Hist l. 3. c. 4. as Eusebius and * In vita Lucae Hierom report by Profession a Physician saith St. Paul Col. 4.14 Luke the beloved Physiciau greets you A Physician and therefore the more admirable for his Devotion being not onely a Courtier of Nature lost in second Causes but per scalas Creaturarum ascending to the first by the Ladder of the Creatures Corpus humanum objectum Medicinae and teaching others so to climb to Heaven The Human Body not being the adaequate object of his study and practice Medicus totius compositi being first cured himselfe by him that was so farre more eminently he became a Physician of the whole Man of Soul as well as Body and that both for the Therapeutick and Phylactick part of Physick first curing their Infidelity and Impenitence with the Soveraign Precepts and prescripts of his Gospel and then preserving that same spirituall temper with the wholsome Examples and good Acts of the Apostles And this Religio Medici although none can equall yet for the honour of God and that Profession I wish more would imitate To take off all vulgar imputations and just occasions of those Ironick Apologues viz. How once such an one knocking at Heaven-Gates Saint Peter demanding who he was and that by an enumeration of almost all Religions art thou a Jew No replieth he A Christian Neither c. till being asked in generall Of what Religion hewas He answered That he was a Physician and so at length was denied for his Denials But God forbid so honorable and needfull a Profession should suffer for the Delirations of some of the worst pieces of it Perhaps some few Philosophicall Humorists that are but as the Warts and Wens meer excrescenses of that same Noble Science whose brains being over-heated by their Chymicall Experiments may as easily mistake the Truth as the Philosophers Stone Quod ad ab omnibus amatur tamen virgo est which though wooed of so many yet still remains a Virgin But for the Profession Ecclus 38.1.2 't is the Wise mans counsell Honour the Physitian c. And our blessed Lord himself at once commends and recommends him Matth. 9.12 Jer. 8.21 Matth. 9. The sick have need of the Physician God Himself owning the Compellation Ier. 8.22 Is there no Physician there Christ also imitating their practice in the Good Samaritan But here expressly honoring the Profession with the Office of an Evangelist sc in St. Luke the Physician Some think him to have been one of the 70. Disciples from his 24 Chapt. v. 13. Lib 4 contra Marci But Tertullian and other Ancients say That he was none of Christs immediate Disciples but onely Sectator Discipulus Apostolorum A Companion and Disciple of the Apostles as indeed himselfe intimates in the very beginning of his Gospel Chap. 1.2 Luke 1.2 Sicut tradiderunt As they have delivered them unto us which from the beginning saw themselves Insinuating that he wrot his Gospel by Dictation but the Acts of the Apostles by his own observation But that he writ both he attestates Acts 1.1 In the former Treatise O Theophilus Acts 1.1 c. Which former Treatise being his Gospell he wrot Anno Christi 51. Lib. 1. saith Eusebius Others say Anno 54. from the mouth of Saint Paul who thence is thought to use that phrase Rom. 16. According to my Gospel Rom. 16. And Saint Luke indeed being the constant companion of Saint Paul in his double Travels Acts 16. so he became both the Masters the Apostles Register His being but a deserved Emblem viz. The Ox strong to labour his Pen as unwearied as his Person and both proportionable to his excellent Subject He becomss an Evangelist before Peter and James Gal. 2.9 those Pillars of the Church Ten of the Apostles are past by and his Quill chosen God sometimes is pleased to effect great Designes by obscure means and even by unthought of Instruments Amos an Heardsman made a Prophet Amos 1.1 Many Fishermen Fishers of many men an easier transition then may make St. Luke here an Evangelist of a Physician And 't is worth while to take notice of his Dedication Most excellent Theophilus Acts 1.1 c. which some doubt whether it be a common or a proper Name And Baronius though he hath tried cannot unty the knot If we take it for a common Appellative Ad annum 58. it hints the Gospel written to such as are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. lovers of God as being a Pearl not to be cast to Swine Matth. 7.6 But every
true Christian is a Theophilus and hath a Gospel dedicated to him Explan Proem Evang. Luc. as St. Ambrose sweetly Si Deum diligis ad te scriptum est si ad te scriptum suscipe munus c. If thou lovest God to thee the Gospel is written if to thee it be written accept the gift of the Evangelist the pledge of such an Heavenly Friend and treasure up this Jewell in the retirements of thy Bosome out of the reach both of Moath and Thief i.e. of Sin and Error But more proble 't is to be a proper Name from Saint Lukes own words Luke 1.3 Luke 1. v. 3. It seemed good to me also to write unto thee in crder most excellent Theophilus that thou mightst know the certainty of those things Wherein thou hast been instructed Wherein me thinks he doth evidence some one particular person Maldonat in Luc. 1. whom he had catechised formerly by word of mouth And this is seconded too by the Title 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being the same used elsewhere to Eminent Persons Theophilact in Luc. 3. occasions Expositers justly to conceive it was some Man of quality Lyran and Nicephorus think him the then Bishop of Antioch Others that he was some chiefe Governour in his Common-wealth because the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 importeth most Excellent or most Noble as it is translated and applied to Festus by St. Paul Acts 26. and by Tertullus that great Master of words to Foelix Acts 34. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by Claudius Lystus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the most Noble Governor c. And then from Theophilus we note That Greatnesse doth not exclude Goodnesse but may much advance it and so to that end 't is not onely Equity and Civility to give due Titles of Respect to personages of Honour Rom. 13.7 Honour to whom honour belongeth Rom. 13.7 But it is withall a Pious policie for good men to devote their Labours to such Mecoenasses as may advance Religion and the Glory of God rather then their own privat Names and Fortunes as here St. Luke doth unto his Theophilus But not to seem digressive this Evangelist like his Industrious Ensign the Ox forementioned hath his time of Vnyoaking also as well as of hard labour This holy Physician after his numerous and double cures is at length himselfe cured of all earthly Maladies dying in Bithynia a Region of the lesser Asia Hieron in Cat. vir Illust now called Anatolia neer Pontus in the 84. year of his age and Anno Christi 74. POEM 37. HOw fit't is we commemorate Thy Facts Who Registerst more then th' Apostles Acts The Church but gratefully doth celebrate Saint Lukes Festivity at highest Rate Because although a Grand-Physician He Deigns to take notice of Divinity Nay and to make his practice of it too And that you 'l say is rare for such to doe He through all second Causes sees the Prime And doth by Natures scale to Heaven climbe While others lodge by th' way the Soul 's his care While some perhaps some Bodies do impaire He layes aside his Apollinean Art Or doth Heavens Recipe's withall impart The Soul-pulse Conscience now he feels and thus Christ is become his Esculapius Tears are the Critick water he doth cast Where he discerns Sins danger overpast Or if he sees the Symptoms still prove bad Applies the healing Balm of Gilead And where the Case seems despr ' ate to doe good Adapts the Balsome of our Saviours Bloud That Panacean Medicine that all-heal So carefull is He of each Patients weal Visits without a Fee and the more thrives Freely he hath receiv'd and freely gives Whose Gospel is a Shop well furnished Where each Grief opened may of cure be sped Full of choyce Cordials or Corrosives Spirituall Antidotes Restoratives And all these free List to the Prophets Cry Come all that languish without Money buy And Lord we come beseeching Thee grant this As Saint Luke Saint Pauls convert make us His. THE COLLECT PRAYER The Epistle 2 Tim 4. v. 5. to 10. The Gospel Luke 10. v. 1. to 7. ALmighty GOD which calledst Luke the Physician Whose praise is in the Gospel to be a Physician of the Soul may it please Thee by the wholsome Medicines of his Doctrine to heal all the diseases of our Souls through thy Son Jesus c. S. SIMON S. THADAEVS The Plate here Vpon Simon and Judes day DISQUISITION 35. THESE were another pair of Brethren as before Peter and Andrew James and John The Reason of Christs choice herein to spread unanimity and prevent schism is expressed in their Feastivals Fratres Naturâ Aquin. glossa ordinar Fide Doctrina Vitâ They were brethren in Blood and brethren in Good brethren in Nature in Faith in Doctrine and Good life Bonum jucundum Oh how happy and pleasant a thing it were if Ministers were in the three later but such brethren that would sent like Aarons Oyntments would be both good and pleasant Psalm 133. and few things that are both Though Simons here first named I shal crave leave to begin with Jude as most remarkable in Scripture I and for Scripture too having enriched that Crown with a precious Jewel viz. An Epistle of Catholick and universal excellence and therefore well named Lebbaeus Math. From 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cordatum fecit unde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. cor 10.3 from a root signifying the heart and to make hearty He having done it hartily as unto the Lord not more discouraging the Enemies of Christ then animating and cheering his true servants and for the same reason not amiss surnamed Thaddeus In the place forecited from that Syrio-Chaldaick word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a Dug his Epistle being Mamilla Ecclesiae as it were a dug a Nipple of the Church yet I think the better Etymology is from the root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which speaks him Laudantem confitentem a confessor and a Saint praising God and so uniting with his name of Jude streaming in one channel both and from the same Fountain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Radice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi celebrationis P●liis the most we read of him in Scripture is from his own Pen yet that being guided by the Holy Spirit we cannot suspect the modesty thereof where above all Titles he stiles himself Judas the Servant of Jesus Christ The honorablest relation That the perfectest freedom therefore all the Apostles use it Rom. 1.1 2 Pet. 1.1 1 Cor. 7.22 c. I and the best Christians joy most in this Title as the good Theodosius Euseb Ecc. His in being Membrum Ecclesiae quam caput Imperii Deemed his being a member of Christ's Church an higher honor then that he was Head of the Empire So St. Jude in his Exordium a servant of Jesus Christ yet adding withal the brother of James mentioning his Kindred and Allies partly
either Pliny tels us Nat. Hist that the Eagle knowes her young ones by their eyes their perspicacy and unlesse they can outface the Sun that she rejects them as a Bastard brood but I must tell you God knowes his children by their hands their liberality and will own no withered Jeroboams God requires no costly sacrifice as of the Jews Pauper est Altare Dei the calves of our lips Oblations of our hearts and hands is all He looks for and therefore to do good and to distribute or communicate forget not Heb. 13.16 Heb. 6.10 for c. Hebr. 13.16 And God will not forget c. Sola misericordia comes defunctorum Mercy is the sole companion of the dead and God hath given men wealth non tanquam Dominis sed Dispensatoribus not as unto Treasurers Enthymius but as to Stewards Imitate then the wise one in the Gospel Luke 16. For to every one shortly shall bee said Redde rationem Give an account of thy Stewardship And believe it none shall make a more comfortable reckoning at the Day of Judgement then the charitable man if you will believe the Judge Himselfe Matth. 25.35 Matth. 25. who there takes notice onely of such Actions as Feeding Clothing Visiting Ministring and those He sets upon his own Account Mihi fecistis Ye have done it unto me and therefore Himselfe rewards it with a Venite Benedicti Come yee Blessed c. And who thus practise the Communion of Saints here need no whit doubt his Eternall fellowship with them hereafter POEM 40. PArticular Accounts you have had hither Now take the Totall of All Saints together And that 's Communion Union with the Head And all the Members mutually shed Both the Saints Militant and Those above All knit together with the Bond of Love So that strong Sympathies thence rise in All So far as suits Each State reciprocall Yet not as though we Prayers might addresse To our Related Saints in Blessednesse Or as their joyes had leisure to look down On our poor Accidents of Smile or Frown But that in Generall both joyntly Pray Stil for the Churches Consummation Day The Number of th' Elect might be suppli'd And All together shortly Glorifi'd Thus Earth's Hosannah onely not so long And Heavens Halleluiah's the same song Thus Love 's the Cement of the World the Chain Links Heaven to Earth and Earth to Heaven again Where Strife is Hel's begun but where This Love There 's Heaven i th' bud below full blown above No Article of Faith Cures more complaints Then This Communion of All Blessed Saints The COLLECT The Epistle Revel 7. v. 1. to 10. The Gospel Matth. 5. v. 1. to 13. Almighty God which hast knit together thy Elect in one communion and fellowship in the mysticall Body of thy Son Jesus Christ our Lord grant us grace so to follow thy holy Saints in all vertuous and godly living that we may come to those unspeakable joyes which thou hast prepared for them that unfainedly love thee through Jesus Christ c. Vpon The four Ember weeks at the four seasons of the year The ARGUMMNT OF all the solemn Fasts as Lent holds the first so these the second place times of Dovotion anciently observed at the four seasons of the year viz. the first being Wednesday Friday and Saturday after Saint Lucys Day Decemb. 13. the second being those dayes aforesaid after the first Sunday in Lent the third being the said days next following Pentecost Which are the Ember weeks the fourth the same days next after that called Holy Crosse Sept. 14. and they were then observed among other chiefly for these * Leo de Jejunio decim Mensis S. 4. Hierom in Zach. 8. And why then observed Reasons 1. That Christians might not come short of the Jews Devotion but improve the same opportunities to better ends that so consecrating the first Fruits of each season unto God the Remainder of the year might all be Holy 2. That such Devout abstinence might at once chastise the exorbitancies of the ending Quarter and caution That beginning 3. That the Devotions of them might both Apprecate the Almighties Blessing to the Fruits of the Earth then either sown sprung up Ripening or gathered and deprecate the dangers and distempers commonly most incident to those Seasons Lastly with ferventest devotion to Assist the Churches sacred Ordinations which were of old Solemnized the next Lords day following Each of These and which ought as by CHRIST and his Apostles so ever by their successours to bee performed with Prayer and Fasting Luke 6. ver 12. Acts 1. verse 24. and ch 13.3 POEM 42. WHo strictly Primitive Devotion seeks Must Rake out of Times Ashes Emberweeks And blow them too into an holy Flame Of Prayer and Fasting sinfull Lusts to tame Next to the soul Feast Lent these Fasts of old The Church did every Quarter solemn hold That Christians zealous might as Jews appear And Consecrate Each season of the year For if first Fruits grow ripe in Piety Of Things or Times the rest will holy be Then let our Janus zeal at once lament The Sins forepast the following prevent The First in Advent First sacred Abstinence makes Preparation To entertain the Author of Salvation Cleansing the Stable garnishing the Heart That he may There reside and never part Such vessels as are full can hold no more The Rich go empty while Christ Feasts the poor This true Mortification vices kils And 't is the the Hungry soul our Saviour fils The second in Lent And now conformity to Christ bids Fast And Pray for he did both and more did taste That bitter cup of Divine wrath for us Shall we do nothing when He suffred thus Fasting and Prayer was ever prescrib'd good Before a Medicine and such Christs blood Whom Satan tempting had so foyld a Pull That where he tempts one Fasting Thousands full The third after Pentecost Now doth Religious Abstinence attend That Sacred Spirit which did of late descend On the Apostles and them all inspire Requiting Holy zeal with heavenly fire Those then that Blessings from above expect Must not these Duties in their times neglect But if they look for the descending Dove Must wait with Prayer and Fasting Faith and Love The fourth Sept. 14. And now our Crops are Ripe we going to Reap Hath God no Harvest no part of our Heap That gave it all shall he fill every place And our Hearts only empty be of Grace No Prayer and Fasting now wil quench excesse Both sin and sicknesse of the time suppresse Let these Devotions then bring up the Reare And mak 't an holy and an happy year The Churches last and not the least good sense Was this being sacred Orders to dispense On the Lords day succeeding each of these Sought God by Prayer and Fasting to appease That so by joynt Devotion might be gain'd Choice Blessings on her work and those ordein'd That thence the outward ecchoing inward call
now perusest Friend is mine But yet if ill thou read'st 't is so farre thine LONDON Printed for Richard Marriot and are to be sold under St. Dunstans Church in Fleetstreet 1652. Vpon Prayer DEvotions Hebrew 's Prayer her holy Tongue That heaven-born Language Dialogu'd among God Angels Men by Him best understood And for both t'other purchasing all Good Unto which end our Leiger 't is in Heaven The soul's Ambassadour to whom is given Quick Audience and all Favours that may suite The Senders necessary safe Recruite This Grace as 't were omnipotent Commands All Elements and holds th' Almighties hands From smiting very Sodomites nor can Heaven show'r down Hell till praying Lot is gone This is the Jacobs Ladder whereon Soules And Blessings Trade 'twixt Center and the Poles Sometimes it mounts aloft as having Keyes To open or shut Heaven when it please ' Thath stopt the foaming Horses of the Sun So Garrison'd their Mouths they could not run And sometimes Broach'd the Clouds that they might pow Into scorch'd Tellus Lap a Danac's showr Sometime Descending pregnanteth the wombe Of Teeming Earth or opening the Tombe Even of the Dead recalling Those are gone To a Compendious Resurrection Pray'r gives th' unruly Element command Girdling the Ocean with a Belt of Sand Nor only limiting but setting Bars To the insulting winds and waters-wars Making Deeps dry paths for some Passengers While others find them but wet Sepulchers Pray'r hath made Iron swim and Fire descend Whole Towns and Armies brought to sudden end Conquers th' Invincible to flesh turns stone An heart obdurate to a Plyant one Till Desart Araby this Phoenix grace Transforme an happy and a fruitfull Place What can it not that may our good procure As strong above as e're if here as pure Unto thy Closet then and shut the dore But thy heart open and thy Sins out poure To him that for retyred Piety Loves to exchange open foelicity Sometimes be with thy selfe yet let all share Throughout thy Family Domestick pray'r This renown'd Abraham and doth Record That fam'd Resolve I and mine serve the Lord. Be not rash with thy mouth But let due care From wandring looseness guard thee and thy Pray'r Compose both by the Scriptures 't is well known Each Place likes best the Language that 's her own Yet all affected Eloquence avoid Honey was never Sacrifice but cloyd Grave and expressive be thy words but few And Pharisaick bablings so eschew Prayers should like Arrows unto Heaven fly Winged with sighs uninterruptedly Yet though such private Prayer have its high praise The Publike Forme 't is that designe doth raise Even up to Heaven whither with stronger wings It Flies and thence a fuller blessing brings Such private Suitors like less stars do shine In Constellations while more lights combine Those but like Planets oft excentrick move But These fix'd stars Heavens Galaxia prove Brands that in corners smoake may have some Fire But those that burne together sure flame higher While private prayer but begs This doth besiege The Towres of Heaven it selfe and much obliege The Governsur to open or doth reach The Battlements thereof and make a breach Such Pray'r is revers'd Lightning Heavens wonder While the joint Amen's like a Clap of Thunder But know each Sacrifice must season'd be And the Lords Prayer is the Salt which we Must Sprinkle all our own with that their Taste May rellish to Christs Palate and Repast I then all our Addresses shall appeare As precious Jewels in th' Almighties Eare Or pleasant Harmony whose divine Ayres Shall drown the Musick of the Rapid Spheares And though Heavens starry window do not ope With sudden Answers to our greedy hope 'T is not for that God listens not to Thee But will not interrupt the Melody With hasty grants but then at length repaies With fuller Bounty thy thought-long delaies Pray on and He 'l not only quit thy Guilt But to thy Faith say Be it as thou wilt Vpon the Holy Scriptures Isa 12.3 Iohn 5.39 1. LIGHT THese are Heavens milky way wherein combine Millions of Stars so many Guides Divine While your new spitting lights those wandring Fires Lead Ignorants into a Ditch of Briers These are the bright Beams of that glorious Sun Which Batis of Sin and Errour only shun As chased shaddows fly the rising Light Soules that live under this Line know no Night 2. ARMOUR And as God so his Word 's both Sun and Shield Which who so knows but dexterously to wield Shall vanquish that Triumvirate of Foes Which Christian life doth constantly oppose 'T is a Sword also and that most acute To lop off Sin and Errors Root and Fruit It yields that compleat Armour in whose guard Safety and Conquest make a full reward 3. A GLASSE And as it armes one Sex 't is t'others Glasse Suff'ring no sinfull blemishes to passe The lookers eye which still it mends by view Who dresse by This sure are of lovely Hiew Hereto then Ladies each morn Sacrifice And it will make your Beauty pasle the Skies T' will helpe adorn you with the brightest fashion First Trim you with a Grace then with Salvation 4. A GARDEN This is a Garden too where both may walke And recreate your selves with vertuous talke With all choise Flowers sweetly Inameled Poses at hand and Chaplets for the head Or if you more affect here 's pleasant Fruits All barmelesse yet such as each Palat suits If any Ulcer or Disease within Here grow Herbs medicinall for all Sinne. 5. A FOUNTAINE And in this Garden there 's a sacred Well Which doth all Fountains of the World excell A true Bethesda what e're we endure But timely enter and ner'e doubt of Cure The Water 's strangely sweet yet red as bloud Look how it will That ner'e failes doing good Who so pollutes these Streames then or what 's worse Seales up the Fountaine runnes a double Curse You then whom crazy Frame or feeble age Sends to the Wells on yearly Pilgrimage Come hither panting hearts spare paines and wealth Drink freely here and drink Eternall health 6. A TREASURE And mark it tastes of a rich Mincrall That speakes a Treasure hid there passing all The precious things that Natures Store-house yields O part with all to buy these Treasure Fields None to the Gospell Pearie besides whose wealth There is a Soveraign Cordiall in 't for health Ophyr's an outside Treasure and not Thine Digge here and soon be rich 'ts a Golden Mine Vpon the Sacraments in Generall Isa 17.11 Exod. 12.11 Iohn 3.5,6.35 ver THese Some and may more largly ta'ne make seaven But theirs is an odd sense the Scripture's even The New being but to old Testament reveal'd Whose Truths but with two Sacraments are seal'd These They save paine and charge the Churches Twinns With double Guard ensafing us from sinnes One Antidote against Originall T'other preservative ' gainst Actuall Restoratives for both the Churches wings With which each Lark of Heaven mounts and sings A
Pair of cleansing streames flow'd from the Side Of our deare Lord when on the Crosse he dy'd Even Christs two witnesses who though not slaine Yet slay our sinnes and fresh his Death againe Our Brace of Spies that from blest Canaan brings Newes of its cheering wines and fruitfull Springs A Mother hath but two Breasts Ours These are For spirituall Nutrition thriving fare The two Church dores open to who desire First leading into th' Body then the Quire The one a Spirituall Matriculation T'other such nourishment and Education Then not to Tantalize you on and Tast The Delicates of their Divine repast Vpon Holy Baptism Gen. 15.17.11 1 Cor. 1.16 1. The INDULGENCE CHRIST no hard Master our Indulgent Lord Now for harsh Sacraments doth milde afford No way ward Zippora need now upbraid Her Moses bloudinesse or be afraid Her Child's life cut together with his Skinne That Bloud 's turnd Water now but wash thy sinne His Yoake in deed is easie Burthen light Wear 't all Life's day and rest well at Death night 2. The LAVER To wash is ease but Thereby to doe good Faith must our Water mingle with Christs Bloud And then it takes out Staines of deepest dye And gives more then our own first Purity A Simon Magus else may be Baptiz'd And passe for a Disciple so disguis'd 'T is not the Water only but the Dove Moving upon 't doth the Soules Laver prove 3. The LISTING This is the Military Sacrament Giving to each Presse-money from Christs Tent Engaging us to warre ' gainst Sinne and Hell Such and so many Foes need guard us well Mind we our part 'o th Compact as Christ his Who the victorious Crowns with Grace and Blisse But who his Standard cowardly doth flye You know by Martiall Law deserves to dye But there 's a Chancery in our Leaders breast That who returns shall be a pardon'd Guest 4. The ARK This is Christs Ark as 't were while Flouds of Sinne Deluge the World to shroud his Servants in Even in his Churches armes then no time slip To have poore Soules imbarqued in this Ship Dispute not Infants Faith thou graft's thy Plant Though in its Youth and Winter it fruit want Commerce of Spirits goes not by age or acts Externall but where Gods free Grace affects And Christ most favour did to such dispence Schooling the Gravest to their Innocence Forbid not then these Sacramentall Rites To such as Jews admitted Christ invites His Ordinance and promise who neglect Are out of 's Arke and may the Floud expect And as for timely entrance Care be ta'ne So must there too that all i' th' Ship remain As Saint Paul caution'd for offences foule Cast Jonah's Lot on a bestormed Soul But after such a wrack no better plank Then deep Remorse to land on Safeties bank Vpon the Holy Eucharist 1 Cor. 11. John 6. 1. A FEAST TO thy Grand Houshold Th' art a bounteous Lord For all the World spreading an ample Board But specially for Man at whose feet all The severall Species in subjection fall Yet thine own Israel doe higher fare And Fellow-Commoners with Angels are The Rocks are broacht to quench their Thirst at wish They doubly Feast with first and second Dish And yet all these but figure in a mist The Viands thou preparest thine in Christ The former of thine Alm's-basket are fed But unto These Thou giv'st thy self for bread Bread thresh'd and ground to dust by Sinne and Jews As Staffe of life ' then let us this Bread use Walk with it all our wayes and 't will sustaine Our hearts from slips in Sinne from falls in paines The better Jacobs Staffe that guides to Heaven From whence this Feast the Feeder doth enliven As Grace before made Thee a welcome Guest So let Zeale waite and due praise close the Feast 2. The RANSOM Our life 's a warfare and our hellish Foes Too numerous and strong daily enclose Us in their fatall Nets insulting still Or'e us as Bond-slaves captiv'd to their will But Judah's Lyon by victorious power Free's his Sheep from those Wolves that would devoure Christ to our Rescue did descend This day And unto Heaven with him bore the Prey Nor are wee only Prisoners of Warre But of Debt also and ingag'd so farre That all we have or are can never free Our Soules be-dungeon'd to Eternity Yet cheere up drooping Wights he that essaid To Rescue you and did hath also paid The Price beleeve it farre beyond best Gold Your Debts and Forfeitures and this day told A Summe so great could not be understood Paid willingly too though as drops of Bloud Henceforth by double Ransome then His be Whose service is most perfect Liberty 3. An ANTIDOTE How sick doth Poyson swallow'd make the Heart Diffusing Venom into every part Within without all ulcered and thus The Serpents Teeth and Apple had serv'd us But here 's a soveraign Antidote made up Of rare Ingredients mixed in this Cup Of Bloud and Grace which who drinks heartily Shall be so Cur'a as live immortally 4. The CEMENT How should These mixt Tenacious Cement make To bind all in a Building should partake One Common Uniformity and grace Each other with proportion in its place This tyes Christs Members in a mutuall knot Never to be rescinded or forgot Unto their saving Head uniting all In Love and Duty both perpetuall Till He and They as in grace here below Above in Glory all one Body grow Vpon Holy Orders Or the Ministeriall Function 1 Cor. 9.11 1 Tim. 3.1 2 Cor. 2.16 1 Tim. 4.16 2 Cor. 4 7. Ch. 5.20 1 Tim. 5.17 VVHich the Worlds two main Burthens if you aske Truth saith the Kingly and the Priestly taske Both Heaven-born Functions but the last all fire They 'd need all Caution be who That aspire Indeed for Soule-cure who sufficient is It startles even a chief Apostle this What Atlas shoulders nay what Angels fit Thus to beare Heaven up and yet since it Is Both Gods acceptation and Decree This Treasure should in Earthen Vessels be We gratefully attend the Divine call And then in all obedience 'fore it fall But without That and signaliz'd by those Who rightly have the Keyes on 't to dispose We stirre nor Foot nor Hand least Uzzah-like Some suddaine Vengeance our presumption strike Must all your Arts and Plants mature with time And This which needs most leape into it's Prime Beware bold Flies that buzze about This flame Lest your proud wings being scorched in the same Your fond Icarian zeale at last fall down Into that Lake which Pride shall ever drown But you that by both Callings enter faire Snuffe your own Lights and take a watchfull care The Wearer doe not holy Vestments staine Or to your Master a dishonour gaine If undeserved Scandall doe you spoile Those Shafts to their own Shooters breasts recoyle Knowledge the Head the Heart crowns Holinesse Light and Perfection make up Aarons Dresse Spirituall and Corp'rall Charities With fervent Prayer's
his dayly Sacrifice Who must haue skill in Divine Surgery For Lions heart soft hand and Eagle's eye Both so searcht out and lance the putrid wound Whilest the bruis'd Spirit must be gently bound But what need I tell you what God requires Who read of Nadab and Abihu's fires Yet let me cheere your paines your Converts may Once shine as Heaven but you as Starres for aye Vpon the great Eclipse of the Sun Mar. 29. 1652. Math. 16.3 Acts 1.7 THough the Grand First Cause need no Instruments Yet Second He adopts to work Events By which though rare productions here are done Yet none for vig'rous Influence like the Sun Whose active vertue and strong operation Is even halfe Parent of our Generation His Trinity of Motion Light and Heat Effecting wonders too Changes so great That most things receive Detriment or Blisse According to his Approach or Recesse Sure then th' Eclipsing of his Fountain-beam Must be of sad Concernment to the streams And that as the degrees of restrain'd Light Most Dismall when most near a Totall Night Yet ther 's more in 't then our Star-gazers tell Christ is the Sun in Davids Paralell Ps 19. For all those friendly Qualities before And some sublimer Influences more Our very Light and Life that to both parts To Soul and Bodie Being Well-being imparts His distances set our passions degrees Our Sorrow Joy Feare Hope as he good sees Causing those different Seasons in our Soul With whom 't is Spring when he doth Sin controule And first plant Grace but when he draweth nigh With warmer beams 't is then her Summer high Rip'ning thereby those Plants of Grace so fast That brings a fruitfull Autumn too at last But when Sins angry Tropick Him recals A Frozen Winter then our Soule befals Our Consolations strait go Retrograde Then Sin and Judgment driving all the Trade So that we here Rejoyce all or do mourne According to his Absence or Returne If his Remotenesse then so fatall be How Direfull his Eelipse poor Soule to Thee When thy black Sins 'twixt Him and thee disclos'd With Satans aggravations interpos'd This is the terrible Eclipse I This That horrid houre and power of Darknesse is The t'other Nature or meane Arts can teach And scarse can voluntary Agents reach But This concernes no other and therein The prime parts chiefly Souls Eclips'd by Sin Wherein benighted though somtimes we mourne Yet let thy beams of Comfort too return And then though We more Frozen then the Pole Warm'd with thy Count'nance-Light shall soon be whole Away then with your Superstatious Fears Of that Eclipse which Naturall appears Nor startled be with the Bugbear-Praesage Of the praetending Wisards of the Age Whom if Men would observe as well i' th Misse As in their Hitts would their Delusions hisse Were not our Sins more likely Prophesies We might their Ridling Oracles despise But with an holy Terror guard your lives ' Gainst This which Souls of Divine light deprives Which if it happen totall ne'r returnes To light againe but still in darkness burnes Take Antidotes spirituall Sins lament And thereby true-ill-consequents prevent Nay then the beams of grace shall ne'r decline Till this bright Sun in glory on Thee shine Vpon the three Theologicall graces Faith Hope and Charity 1 Cor. 13. ult 1 Pet. 4.8 ALl Graces are presented in this Trine That make a Soule here and hereafter shine grace 1 Faith is the Magna Charta of our soules That our chiefe Evidence for Heaven inroules grace 2 Hope is the Anchor of each floating mind That in most stormy times doth safety find grace 3 And Charity 's the good Samaritan Befriending both parts of poore wounded Man grace 1 Faith is an Eaglet through the Sphears can pry And there the Son of righteousness descry grace 2 Hope like the dying man clincheth her Fist Upon the Promises fast holding Christ grace 3 While Charity more like the hand that lives In goodness trades amply receives and gives grace 1 Faith like the Stomack entertaines the food The Diet spirituall Christs flesh and bloud grace 2 While Hope the Faculty digestive acts And wholesome nourishment from thence extracts grace 3 But Charitie 's sublimer Chymick Arts Nutrition distributes to all the parts Though all co-operate in our Salvation Yet differ they in object and duration grace 1 Faith Promises and Threats both comprehends Knits past and Futures Origins and ends grace 2 Hope only at some Future good directs Her Ayme and that with patience too expects grace 3 Both those look up Love so and round about They first set forth but This holds longest out grace 1 Faith indeed like the Element of fire An Heaven-borne grace doth thither still aspire But once there Centred doth for ever rest Driving meane time but private Interest grace 2 Hope like the water hath its ebbs and flows Muddy or cleare as Sun'd or Clouded shows Whose fluid Optatives may more extend Yet This too 's some what of a Selfish end grace 3 But Charity 's diffusive free as Aire Whose upper Regions unto Heaven repaire Her lower embrace Earth a Grace o' th' way And of the Country both shall ne'r decay These to the Soule kind Presents needs would give And first Faith tenders her a Perspective Hope some flowre-buds and Fruit-blossoms doth bring But Charity 't is gives Perfection's Ring Vpon a Clock an Houre-glasse and a Watch. Iob. 8.9 Psa 102.11 Mat. 24.44 Luk. 12.39 TReble Monitions me thinks here we have Our life our Soule and Body too to save By guiding warning arming us for Grave Time is the measure of our life and see All these the measurers of that time be To God to man to thy selfe fit all three The Clock speakes loud how fast our time doth spend The Glasse our Frailty whispers as a friend The Watch saith vigilance yet both will mend Lament we by the Clock then mispent houres Ejecting Sins as sands through the Glass showr's And for the Future watch ' gainst who devours The order'd Clock bids Heart Tongue Hand agree The Glasse transparent hints fidelity The Watch shews low-pitch'd Soules wound up must be What oyle to Clocks such unto Hearts is Grace Sins are to Soules what stones are unto Glasse Watches and hearts long must not cleansing passe If bodies thinke Times be too swift a Rice Be Soules as Centerish and mend their Pace Till both haste home with equall speed and Grace When griefe or sicknesse clip the wings of Time Which slowly Creep's with Bodies that decline Let Soules the more in Contemplation climbe That when Times Path may be no longer Trod Bodies may rest in their own first abode And Soules returne unto their Fountaine God These are a Good man's use of all the Three Not Ensignes of Pride Cares or Vanity But Monitors of Sin Death Piety Vpon a passing Bell. Math 24.31 1 Cor. 15.52 HArk hark what noise is this a Passing Bell That doth our own Fate in an others
sent To every Part it 's Nourishment Not like Those whom Fond Appetite More then Concoction doth invite Having through ill Digestion The Rickets of Religion Her Head with Pious Notions Fraught Which Her mild Tongue discours'd and taught To all about her with an Eye Full of sweet humble Modesty To Good She ' had still an open Eare But most where the wise Charmers were Not like Some we now live Among Being Christians but in Ear and Tongue 'T was Her Great Care Reall to be And Uniforme in Piety Spotlesse from the Time-Vices Taint Whom God not Her self made a Saint Her Palate of such Temperance As was the Schoole of Abstinence Of Lovely Aspect sweet to all Candid Serene and Liberall Her Hands Compos'd of Charity And all Exacter Houswifery Her Book and Needle shar'd the Day And sweetly stole the Time away Yet for Her better Speed to Heaven She gave God two whole Dayes of seaven Besides his part of Each this She Which Crowned all did Constantly Her Foot no Novell Paths did Trace But in the good Old way kept Pace Untir'd Therein still finding rest Till of Eternity Possest This Gold-Finch of Her Family Scorning Earths Chaffe thus Soard on high Vertue and Beauty were at strife Which should most set Her out to Life Not Galba-Like where a faire Soule A Deform'd Body did enroule Nor yet like Specious Absolon Whose inside was Corruption But Her faire Structure and pure Mind Like those bright Golden Apples shin'd In Silver Pictures hung upon The Tents of Royall Solomon All Changes Stoutly She 'd partake And Welcome for the Senders sake So fixt that Full or Ebbing state Could nor depresse Her nor Elate Nor through all Turn's of Mortalls Wheele Did any more Contentment feele Thus did our Sublimated Friend In Christianity transcend And by faire consequence as Wife Was of a Correspondent life A Sarah Srongly Affectionate And as Respectfull to her Mate Right Hannah that did vow her Sonne To Heaven er'e Him thence Prayers wonne Wise Abigail which could controule All Passions with Her Prudent Soule And yet stout Hester like She proud To defend Truths or Persons Lov'd Like Happy Jacobs Lovely Mate Too-like her in her Teeming Fate One of th' Apostle's-Matron-Dresse Above Phantastick Garishnesse A very Dorcas for both Parts Of Pious Alms and Prudent Arts Therefore bewail'd like-her and Prais'd O could She too like Her be rais'd All these Examples to the Life Make up her Character as Wife But as a Step-Dame who can tell Me where to find a Paralell Prophaner Story yeildeth none And Sacred afford's only one One Naomi whose Worth and Fame Is Treasur'd in Her Comely Name Who indeed well deserv'd of Ruth For so advertising Her Youth Yet She propounded once to Part And 't was the Daughter would not start But this Indulgentest of Mothers Exceeded Her as She did Others Acting that speech where er'e Thou goe Or mak'st Abode I will doe so Thy God too shall be mine and I Desire with Thee to Live and Dye So that ' mongst most Affectionate Of Native Mothers seek Her Mate Such whose soft Nature Consort beares Both in their Childrens Smiles and Teares Whose Tenderlings are still well fed Yet better Taught and better Bred Who to their wholesome Nourishment Adde Educations Complement Who both in Health and Sicknesse can Act Tutresse and Physitian Not trusting Hyr'd or Borrow'd Care But their own Selves the Burthen Share And all this Constant to the Death Seald up with Prayers of latest Breath And such Diviner Counsell given As still guides Her dear Charge to Heaven When er'e Thou canst find such Another She She comes neerest to This Mother As Spanish Children they say Quake At mention of the Name of Drake English me thinks should Still'd and Tam'd Be when They hear this Mother nam'd who thus hath Purchased a mild Retaliation for her Child And sure They 'l under Curses dwell That with her Off-spring deale not well Whole Nature blushing as it were To see own Mother 's pass'd by Her Who Christneth that same Barbarous Name Of Step-Mother and mends their Fame And therefore justly so Admir'd Belov'd in Life in Death desir'd Lest all Relaps and Step-Dames prove As bad as er'e by Her Remove Remove alas a word of Paine To us of Loss to her of Gaine For from such Premises we know Can none but Good Conclusions Flow Her Sickness was but an Expresse Of Her Religious Healthinesse The Pious Groanes of Her Death Bed But Eccho's of a Life well Led The Grave an Embleme too may be Of Her Retyred Piety And Heaven it selfe the Church wherein She triumphs over Death and Sin She here Lying in a while did stay But in Heaven kept her Churching Day Now if Love Ground of Sorrow be Oh who to be so mourn'd as She If comfort yet Arise from Bliss Whose change to be so Joy'd in is Whose Life and Death did both Conspire Her speed to Saints and Angels Quire Where we shall once Re-meet and Sing Aeternall Hymns to Mercies King Meane time Deare Martha I shall pray And strive to follow the same way What in Caesar and Pompey were Great vices are great vertues here As Wife or Christian none Excel'd As step-mother none parallel'd And who Conceives not all This true Or Her or Vertue never Knew An Acrostick Epitaph M ary and Martha both were met in Thee As Act and Contemplation testifie Right Mary thy Soule Sought what did excell T hy Body still the Martha Busied well Having a while prov'd both with upright Heart A ll Mary now Th' hast chose the Better Part. Sprung from that Ancient Generous Finches Nest Pursu'dst with wings of vertue Heavenly rest And like a true Sparke of the Glorious Sphere Right upward tendedst untill fixed There Kind as in life to wonder so in Death Expiring but to Give an Other Breath The Recommendation of the Booke to himselfe multiplied Ed. and Sa. Sparke DEare pledges of my Love and hopes to you 'Bove all this Muse should be of welcome view As most ally'd and sprung from the same Head Surviving Monitors when Author dead Partners enough your losse of Mother mourne In their spirituall Teeming Rachels urne Who so many Benoni's hath left here That ever shall her Memory be deare Then though your Fate 's so cruell to deprive You doubly thus at once yet to revive Both in a sense againe here fixe your eyes And you may see their constant Pieties And though in this sense borne out of due time May here reflect on either in their Prime The Churches structure of Devotion To persons squar'd and Times proportion Her Feasts and Fasts freed from all just Complaints Commemorating not Adoring Saints And Piety I thinke 't is not a Crime As place and person To give dues to Time But sure Religion then must needs decay When as it's Christian Landmark's ta'ne away To you therefore that I might Propogate Something above fraile Natures brittle state A Christian Map o' th' world I somtime drew Where of both Globes you have an usefull view And for your further Guidance too you may Sarah and Hagar's History Survey But Chiefly This Peruse as Goshen Light To guide your steps in an Aegyptian Night Perhaps some others too as well as you May Deigne to take a profitable view And as some use by Jewels value more These Glories lost then while Injoy'd before Reflecting from your Duty naturall On their Matriculation spirituall And like the Method on 't or Matter told The one because 't is New the t'other Old And for all Sorts compos'd at least excuse My though no soaring yet high fixed Muse Then while the Age Reeles in false firing zeale This Book shall sober steady Truths Reveale At one side Scour'd from Rusty Heresies And Purg'd at other from wild Novelties Retaining Doctrine Primitve and cleane Reflecting on that Churches Golden meane Which like things Eminent had hardest Fate All Envying what they cannot Imitate Read then and Act this beaten Church way Tread And Sure to Heaven 't will you one day Lead FINIS