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A17051 The vvay to true peace and rest Deliuered at Edinborough in xvi. sermons: on the Lords Supper: Hezechiahs sicknesse: and other select Scriptures. By that reuerend & faithfull preacher of Gods word: Mr. Robert Bruce, for the present, minister of the Word in Scotland.; Sermons upon the sacrament of the Lords Supper Bruce, Robert, 1554-1631.; Bruce, Robert, 1554-1631. Sermons preached in the Kirk of Edinburgh. aut; I. H., fl. 1617.; Mitchell, S., fl. 1614. 1617 (1617) STC 3925; ESTC S105939 298,483 380

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question the Lord approueth Then the the lesson we gathered was this All office-bearers ought so to behaue thēselues in this life that in their death they may haue the testimony of a good conscience for it is not possible that the conscience can testifie well except in time he take vp a new trade of liuing except you keepe your hands free of other mens sinnes And therefore I exhorted all inferiour magistrates superiour and in speciall the supreme that the Lord by his spirit would so rule your conscience Sir that ye may keepe your selfe free from other mens iniquities Thus farre we proceeded in our last exercise Now followeth the comfort that the King being placed in this extremity did finde the Lord sendeth him comfort from heauen The forme and manner of the comfort is set downe in there verses which I haue read but the circumstances are more particularly set downe in the 2. King 20. chap. Alwayes this order is kept in these verses First in the 4. verse is set downe the circumstance of time when this comfort was offered and vpon the circumstance of time the circumstance of place where he was when he receiued this comfort may easilie be gatherd Besides this the persons the Author the giuer of this commission the Minister and bearer are noted Vnto this verse before that he come to the comfort he vseth a preface in the end of this preface there is a narration that the Lord had heard the kings prayer had seene his teares In the third place he propoundeth the comfort And last of all we haue the confirmation of this proposition by a wonderfull signe and miracle from heauen Then to come backe to the 4. verse he touched the circumstance of time very obscurely when the King receiued this comfort for it is said Then came the word of the Lord. This particle Then is relatiue to that time which is more chearely set downe in 2. King 20. This then is to be vnderstod when the Prophet was in the middle court when the word of the Lord came vnto him and commanded him to stay look how much space there was betwixt the Kings bed where he lay and the second hall as great space is there betwixt the denunciation the recalling thereof He was not as yet passed the second hall when the word of the Lord came vnto him and commanded him to go backe and to recall that same sentence in a moment with one mouth which before he pronounced now he commandeth him to pronounce the contrary This is a wonderfull change in such a suddainnes and vpon this suddainnes there are many notable things that offer themselues worthy of consideration First of this suddainnes marke this lesson we see how pithie and effectuall the prayer of the King hath bene this prayer is so effectuall that in a moment it moueth the great God to reuerse that same sentence which he had pronounced that which heauen nor earth nor any other creature was able to alter he maketh the prayer of his owne seruant to call backe Beside this his prayer purchased health of bodie length of dayes a sure and prosperous estate and afterward all this is confirmed by such a wonderfull miracle the like whereof was neuer seene nor heard of before Looke then if the prayers of the faithfull be not wondrous effectuall It is not possible that all these effects can flow of the pithinesse of prayer seeing there is nothing so weake in it selfe but it cometh of the free nature of God whose nature is to be mercifull and it is the nature of mercie to haue pitie vpon miserie This is the reason why our prayers are in an instant of time heard And here also we may learne how well God answers to the names that are giuen him Exod. 34.6 where he is called exceeding mercifull slow to anger readie to forgiue he vttereth himselfe to be a God of great compassion and exceeding in mercie toward vs in such sort that in an instant sometimes he granteth our requests The last thing that I marke vpon the suddainnes is the strict and entire coniunction that is betwixt the faithfull soule in earth on the one part and God in heauen on the other part This coniunction is so entire and strict that it maketh God as present to our prayers as if heauen and earth were ioyned together This coniunction maketh his Sonne Christ to be as neare in time of neede as if he had placed his throne of grace in the bed where we lie To prooue this ye see how speedily his prayer mounteth ye see how swiftly the answer returneth and with such celeritie all this matter is done as if there were no distance betwixt heauen and earth So the lesson is this The faithfull soule hath God as present as if heauen and earth were ioyned together There is no distance of place no distance of roome that can make God to consume time in doing of his will but where faith is it maketh him so present that incontinently we get our dispatch Craue not therefore ô Papist any other presence then this and examine not this presence by naturall reason for where faith hath place naturall reason must ceasse Examine not these things by reason of nature which are aboue nature Thus far concerning the circumstance of time Now of the circumstance of time I gather the circumstance of place where the King was when he receiued this comfort For if the Prophet was commanded to turne backe when he was in the second hall it behooueth the King to be at home lying on his owne bed And this by the way is a great signe of the fauour of God toward him that his sicknesse taketh him at home where he might be best eased without the trouble of others This is by the way Now as to the third circumstance The Author of the comfort no doubt was God for there is no good gift but it floweth from him The minister that he vsed is his owne Prophet He vseth the ministerie of his Prophet in applying of the comfort not that he was forced to vse the ministerie of man in doing of this thing but so it pleaseth the Lord to ingage and binde himselfe to his instruments that he will not worke beside them so it pleased him to binde him to his preached word that beside his word he will not worke And therefore he calleth his word a Sword a fire an hammer and an arrow and that from the diuerse effects that he worketh by his word As he bindeth him to his word so he willingly bindeth him to his seruants who are the Ministers of his word to worke by their ministerie In such sort that he will not be bound to the word pronounced by euery man and woman but by them whom he sendeth And therefore they are in an error who thinke that by their owne reading of the Scriptures in their priuate houses they are able to get as
city country are defiled with these vices procuring so farre as in them lieth an euill end to their owne soules It is a terrible thing to fall into the hands of God and yet so many as let them loose to these vic●s must fall into his hands For it cannot be but the wrath of God from heauen must be powred vpon such vngodlinesse And there is none who hath powred forth his loue and taken himselfe to these vices but surely ●xcept he be wonderfully preuented he shal perish in his sinne And this is not one of the least iudgements of God For Iohn 8. it is counted one of the most terrible iudgements when the Lord threatneth the Pharisies that they shall perish in their sinne If the word which is now sounded might haue bene able to haue called men backe surely it hath bene clearely and continually sounded but when I looke to the effects it appeareth well that this word hath bene sounded to the hardning of the greatest part and to seale vp their iudgement against the day of the Lords wrath which day they haue blotted out of their minds and put out of their knowledge that they should not see it The Lord nourish this light by his Spirit in vs whereby we may see that there is a heauen and that there is a hell that seeing the danger we may prease to eschue it and seeing the felicitie we may haste vs to embrace it Would God it were so Thus far for the first part of the similitude He goeth forward and he saith He hath cut him off from his beame or from the throombs that go about the beame as ye call them As if he would say after this manner As the Weauer doth cut off the web from the throombs of his beame so the Lord hath taken resolute purpose to cut off my life from his beame In this changing of the persons he letteth vs see a great discretion and knowledge in himselfe he ascribeth the cutting off to God but he taketh the cause to himselfe he ascribeth the chastisement to God but he taketh the sinne which is the cause of the chastisement to himselfe and he acknowledged God to haue his beginning in this worke and himselfe to haue his hand in it also he acknowledgeth God to be a doer as in all works God hath his working And there is no worke so abhominable as it floweth from the instrument but as it floweth from God it is both holy and iust So this wise King taketh the cause of his chastisement from God to himselfe Happie is he that in time condemneth and iudgeth himselfe that he may eschue the condemnation of God Thus far concerning the first part of our diuision Now in the end of this verse and of the verse following the King setteth downe the great furie and rage of his sicknesse It was a pestilent feauer and so the raging furie behooued to be exceeding great He vttereth the vehemency of his disease in the words following and he speaketh as if he would say after this manner If God hold on as he beginneth by the same sicknesse ere night he will make an end of me And in the verse following he saith I propound to my selfe and I looked for it That like a deuouring Lion he should bruise my bones he should bruise them shortly yea ere night For I take all this to be spoken on one day The words indeed the terrible disease of the bodie excepted vttereth more For it is not possible that so good a King could haue spoken so of God except he had felt some other thing then any distresse in his bodie So in vttering of these voyces he letteth vs see that he had the paines of soule and trouble of conscience ioyned with the disease of his bodie and that he felt God to be as it were a consuming fire it is not possible that he could haue vttered such voices of God as to call him a deuouring Lion except he felt another kinde of feuer then any naturall feuer Ye see Dauid when he is in the like extremitie of bodie and soule he crieth Psalme 6. that his bones are vexed and do quake for feare Of all the diseases that can come vpon any person no question the disease of the soule and conscience is the greatest And of all the diseases and troubles that ouertake the conscience no question this is the greater when with the sight of sinne which is enough and more then enough for any to sustaine when with this sight there is a feeling of the wrath of God ioyned O! then this sicknesse is insupportable when with the sight of sinne is ioyned a touch and feeling of the wrath of God Mercifull God if the horror be not exceeding great and terrible so t●at it is a wonderfull matter that the soule can stand vpon any assurance of faith but it should incōtinently run to desperation Yet it is true that there is neuer a one of the chiefe seruants of God but he hath had experience of this either lesse or more and he hath bene touched with the feeling of that hell which the reprobate shall haue in a full measure The ends why the Lord suffereth his deare children to be in such extremities are these to let them see expresly what Christ hath suffered while as he suffered the full weight of his Fathers wrath inflamed against their sinnes And not onely against their sinnes but also against the sinnes of all the elect He casteth them I say into this extremitie to let them see what Christ hath suffered for them how far they are bound to Christ and how precious that redemption purchased by his bloud should be vnto vs. For it is not possible that any man can make much of that benefite which they know not to be a benefit so it is not possible for you to make much of heauen except you haue had some taste of hell And therefore it is that he sendeth his seruants to heauen euen by the gates of hell to let them see that there was no conniuence betweene the Father and the Sonne For it might haue bene thought as many of the wicked thinke that there had bene a conniuence betweene God the Father and his Sonne Christ And therefore I say he letteth them taste of these distractions and pangs of hell that they may say I see he hath felt hell in another sort that hath redeemed vs from hell And where that I cannot sustaine this which is tempered in a small measure it hath bene a great burden indeed which our Sauiour hath sustained whilst he sustained hell for our sinnes and for the sinnes of the whole elect O then this exercise is to let them see how far they are bound to God The dissolute life of the prophane multitude letteth vs see clearely that there is neuer a one of them that haue knowne the meaning of this article and this is a sealed letter to manie of you all Therefore it is that
mouth Marke this That if it were not of Gods speciall grace and mercy that he giueth me an eye to perceiue him a mouth to receiue him I would refuse him as wel as they So this Argument holdeth not Christ is offered to all Ergo he is receiued of all Happy were they if they could receiue him Thus far for the 3. Argumēt What resteth now for the full vnderstanding of the Sacrament These things remaine That we vnderstand the Sacramentall speeches that are vsed in the Sacrament for we vse to speake of them God vseth to speake of them and the Ancients vse to speake of them We vse to say that the soule eateth the body of Christ and drinketh the bloud of Christ. These speeches would be opened to you how the soule is said to eate the body and drinke the bloud of Christ these speeches are Sacramentall yet ye are not the wiser but I will make it plaine by Gods grace They are Sacramentall what is that Ye know it is proper to the body to eate and drinke they are the proper actions of the body onely Now they are ascribed to the soule by a translation by a figuratiue manner of speaking That which is proper to the body is ascribed to the soule and it is said that the soule eateth and drinketh The eating of the soule doth resemble the eating of the body then the eating of the soule is no other thing but the applying of Christ to the soule to beleeue that he hath shed his bloud for me that he hath purchased remission of sinnes for me Wherefore then call you this an eating Thy body eateth when thou appliest the meate to thy mouth If then the eating of the body be no other thing but the applying of the meat to the mouth the eating of the soule is no other thing but the applying of the nourishment to the soule Then ye see what is meant by the eating and drinking of the soule no other thing but the applying of Christ to my soule and the applying of his death and passion to my soule and this is onely done by faith therefore he that lacked faith cannot eate Christ. Thus farre for the eating and drinking of the soule which are Sacramentall speeches There remaineth now of all these great things of al this doctrine which hath bin taught but this one lessō That thou learne to apply Christ rightly to thy soule Thou art a great Diuine if thou hast learned this wel for in the right application of Christ to the sick soule to the wounded conscience and diseased heart here begins the fountaine of all our felicity and the wel-spring of all our ioy And I will tell you what this application worketh Obserue what the presence of thy soule within thee suppose thou want Christ in thy soule doth to this earthly body to this lumpe of clay as by the presence of the soule it liueth it moueth it feeleth as the soule giueth to the body life mouing and senses that same very thing doth Christ vnto thy soule Hast thou once laid hold of and applyed him to thee As the soule quickens thy body so he quickens thy soule not with an earthly or temporall life but with the life which he liueth in heauen he makes thee to liue that same life which the Angels liue in heauen he maketh thee to moue not with worldly motions but with heauenly spirituall and celestiall motions Againe he inspires in thee not outward senses but heauenly senses he worketh in thee a spirituall feeling that in thine owne heart and conscience thou mayst find the effect of this word So by the coniunction of Christ with my soule get a thousand times greater benefits then the body doth by the soule for the body by the presence of the soule getteth onely an earthly and temporall life subiect to continuall misery but by the presence of Christ in my soule I see a blessed life l feele a blessed life and that same life takes daily more and more increase in me Then the ground of all our perfection and blessednesse standeth in this coniunction suppose thou mightest liue Methushelaes yeers and wert euer seeking yet if in the last houre thou get this coniunction thou must thinke thy trauell well bestowed thou hast gotten enough for if we haue obtained Christ we haue gotten al with him Then the applying of Christ to my soule is the fountaine of all my ioy felicity Now let vs see how we get this coniunction This is a spirituall coniunction a coniunction hard and difficult to be purchased obtained gotten of vs. How then is this coniunction brought about which are the meanes of this coniunction on Gods part and which are the means on our part to get Christ to put Christ in our soules and to make Christ one with vs There is one meanes on Gods part that helpeth vs vnto Christ and there is another on our part On Gods part there is the holy Spirit which offereth the body and bloud of Christ to vs and on our part there must be a meanes or else though he offer we will not receiue Therefore of necessity there must be faith in our soules to receiue that which the holy Spirit offers to receiue that heauenly food of the body and bloud of Christ which the holy Spirit offers Then faith and the holy Spirit are the two meanes of this spirituall and heauenly coniunction By these two meanes by faith and by the holy Spirit I get the body of Christ the body of Christ is mine and he is giuen to my soule Now here comes in the question How canst thou say that the body of Christ is giuen or deliuered to thee seeing the body of Christ is sitting at the right hand of God the Father and looke how great distance is betwixt heauen and earth as great distance is there betwixt the body of Christ and thy body how then say ye that the body of Christ is giuen to you The Papists vnderstand not this and therefore they imagine a grosse and carnall coniunction Except the Spirit of God reueale these things they cannot be vnderstood The Spirit of God must illuminate our mindes and be planted in all our hearts before we can come to the vnderstanding of this Then wouldest thou vnderstanding of this Then wouldest thou vnderstand how Christ is giuen thee This ground is true that the body of Christ is a● the right hand of the Father the bloud of Christ is at the right hand of the Father yet notwithstanding though there be as great distance betwixt my body and the body of Christ as is betwixt heauen and earth yet Christs body is giuen to me because I haue a title to his body giuen to me the right and title which is giuen to me of his body and bloud makes me to possesse his body and bloud The distance of the place hurteth not my title nor my right for if any of you haue a peece of Land
yet in setting foorth of this wonderfull iudgement and in the 8. verse he letteth vs see that this great and terrible iudgement was wrought by the power and force of God onely it was done extraordinarily from the heauen by himselfe onely So that the whole world saw the finger and hand of God in it Then in the beginning of this eight verse I say he maketh it knowne that he did it onely and in the end of the verse he letteth vs see what his iudgements wrought in the hearts of men In the 9. verse he letteth vs see the time when it was that it pleased him to worke it and to what end he wrought it In the 10. verse he letteth vs see whereunto the great furie and rage of the wicked serued and in the end of that verse he meeteth with an obiection which the Chur●h might haue made And in the last two verses is contained the conclusion of the Psalme Then to rerurne to the 8. verse in the beginning thereof the Prophet maketh it knowne that it was God onely that did this worke immediately without the imployment of any creature And therefore this manner of execution testified to the whole world that God onely was the chiefe doer of it Then the chiefe reason that moued God to do this extraordinarily and immediatly with his owne hand is this Although our God hath infinite wayes and as many meanes in his hand at all times ready to destroy his enemies yet such is the malice of man and the enuy of the Diuell that possesseth man to the glory of God that so long as God worketh his worke ordinarily and imployeth this or that instrument in doing of his worke so long man spoyleth God of his Glory and spoyleth him of a part of his praise So that man will sometime ascribe the glory to his owne industry and wit or to fortune or to one occasion or other so that ere they suffer God to haue his whole glory they will giue a part of it to any creature of the earth For this cause the Lord worketh extraordinarily and from heauen that the mouthes of all the world yea of the very enemies may be compelled to say and this confession must be wrung out of them that it is the finger of God that wrought this without the support of any creature After what sort he wrought this ouerthrow I wil not dispute in particular whether it were by lightning thunder earthquake vpon this I insist not The generall is sure and certaine that it was a worke that flowed from heauen immediatly Now he sayth in the end of the verse that this terrible iudgement brought forth two effects in the hearts of men First it brought forth a wonderfull feare and secondly it brought forth a great silence their tongues were taken from them The earth feared and was still By the earth the inhabitants of the earth is vnderstood or if we will hold vs in our particular the remanent of Senacheribs army is vnderstood I meane the remanent of the armie that were saued from the iudgement This remanent beganne to feare and be afraid with a terrible feare and the tongues of them that were so stout the night before held themselues quiet They that lifted and hoissed their armes the night before prouoked God as it were to the combat after the sight of this iudgement they haue their hands to seeke and they who boasted so much of their valiantnesse and filled the very earth with their blasphemies the night before when they saw this terrible iudgement were silent and had not a word to speake It is wonderfull the Lords manner of doing and proceeding is a hid manner of doing against his enemies and few perceiue the fashion of the bringing about of his iudgements For ye see he taketh his enemies in an instant at vnawares whilest a man is in the height of his pride he bereaueth him of his counsell he bereaueth him of his force and spoyleth him both of heart and hand in such sort that he hath no wit to deuise more then an Asse and hath not a hand to performe any more then if he wanted hands So he bereaueth him of his policy exquisite iudgement And how is this done It is by a blinde feare that he striketh them with he casteth them into such anguish and blindnesse of minde that they neither see God who is the striker nor can finde any way out but are cast into a desperate estate and vtter darkenesse remedilesse And so it commeth to passe that these miserable men lay violent hands on themselues thinking that the soule which now is in prison as it were will be in a better estate if it were out of the body but alas they are deceiued So I say the iudgement of God when it lighteth how long soeuer it be delayed terrible shall it be when it lighteth on the enemie It is a fearefull thing to cast our selues willingly into the hands of a consuming fire Therefore now seeing ye haue courses in hand ye should take good heede to your courses looke well about you and be diligent to know whether ye be on Gods side or against him Ye againe that are not practisers and meddle not with high matters take heede how ye walke in your owne calling Looke vnto your trade ye that are Merchants looke vnto your dealing ye that are Lawyers how croked or how straight ye are ye that are Lords and Iudges with what conscience ye proceed in your vocation and marke this Looke to his word looke what profite ye haue made of his word examine your calling by his word And if ye examine your calling by his word this way ye shall find the fruite or losse of your calling but if ye depend on the testimony of your conscience without the examination and rule of his word ye will be deceiued for many do this and say I am not troubled in conscience I am sure my conscience presseth me not when in the meane time they runne a wicked course trie not their calling by the blessed word of God but looke onely to the estate of their conscience which in such euill affaires flatters them they thinke themselues sure enough O but thou art deceiued and why Thy conscience may be deceiued as well as thou And how Thy conscience can giue thee no better warrant of thy doing neither to accuse nor to excuse but as she is informed So that if she be rightly informed she will giue thee a right warrant but if she be euilly informed she will giue thee as euill a warant and flatter thee So that of a slight informatiō she wil giue as slight a testimony There is no right information but that which proceedeth of the word therefore seeing now ye haue the word so clearely taught vnto you ye should trie and examine your callings by this word See what this word biddeth you do try in particular and say What warrant of
the praise of the Lord. Senacherib was compelled to say who list to reade that historie and it is said that his graue hath this superscription that he confessed it was the great God of heauen that fought against him Now heare ye at the same present what say the Spaniards They are compelled to say that it was the finger of the Lord the mightie hand of the God of Iacob that hath wrought this ouerthrow without the helpe of any creature So by these examples and manie moe ye see the veritie of this proposition God maketh the greatest rage and furie of his enemies to be the greatest matter of his praise Now in the end of the verse he meeteth an obiection which the Church might haue obiected For the Church in those dayes as the Church this day might haue said Although this victory of the Lords be strange and wonderfull yet he hath not slaine all For we vnderstand that the Lord shall not make all Christs enemies his footstoole vntill the last day And therefore seeing there is a remnant of them who are endued with that same restlesse spirit that their fo●efathers were before they cannot rest but still pursue and come against the Church of God For the spirit of the diuell although it possesse not all the enemies in a like measure yet they are all possessed with one sort and kind of spirit which possest their elder brother Cain to wit the spirit of persecution possesseth thē all where euer they be scattered And as Cain persecuted his brother Abel so we must looke to be persecuted of them as ye heare this spirit bursting forth in horrible effects which come to your eares our of Roan out of Paris and out of all those parts Ye heare there of the gr●at persecution and bloudie rage of the enemies which testifieth that they are possessed with that same spirit of persecution where with their elder brother Cain was possest So the Church seeing that the Lord hath not slaine all but that there is a remnant left who are endued with that same restlesse spirit of their predecessors she might haue said Who shall restraine the remnant of the rage of the enemies For although that here they be called a remnant yet in respect of vs they are not a remnant but an huge multitude Therefore seeing it is so that they are possessed with this spirit that will make them to conioyne their forces they will renew their assault and who shall restraine them The Prophet answers clearely in the name of God and biddeth the Church take no thought of their rage for he that had destroyed the roote would destroy the remnant the God of glorie that ouerthrew the maine armie would also restraine the remnant The Church hath no more adoe but to depend vpon the God of armies and he shall fight for her Now ye see how clearely and easily this matter applyeth it selfe Ye know how it is common in the mouthes of all men that this fleete which is perished is counted to haue come onely to haue scoured the waters and to haue espied the forces of the Queene of England there is a greater armie coming the second assault shall be made with greater courage and shall haue a better successe This is the cōmon obiection vpon this the weake ones of the Church may aske Who shall restraine this remnant and who shall oppose vnto this second assault The Prophet answereth the God of heauen shall restraine the second assault The mightie God of this Isle who hath shewed himselfe wonderfull from time to time in this countrey howsoeuer we be ingrate he shall restraine the second as he did the first So on our part we haue no more ado but to hold vs in the sight of God And this is euen a very great worke to hold vs in his eye for by bending vp of our eye to him we shall draw downe his mercifull eye to vs and so being guarded with his eye and being enuironed with his mercifull protection which is vnto vs a brasen wall the enemie shall neuer preuaile assaile when he pleaseth And this shall be done onely by holding vs in the sight of Gods eye Therefore so long as euery one of you in particular and this countrey in generall is able to hold themselues in the sight of his eye heauen and earth and all that is therein is not able to ouercome them But if thou build vp a parpan wall of thine own making betweene thee and him then not he onely but all his creature shall be fearefull to thee and ready to destroy thee For wherefore is it that some men are commonly so exceedingly affraid but only for want of an issue and we haue this issue of trouble onely in the sight of his eye So that if thou keepe God thou hast euer a sure issue O then the care of a Christian should be this to repent and sorrow for his sinnes past to demolish and cast downe this parpan wall of iniquitie that it grow no more but that by sobs and sighs peece by peece it may be demolished No question the more sinne is remooued the more we are in the sight of his eye and the more we see him the greater comfort shall we get all manner of waies There is no other way to be saued but by this Thus farre concerning the second part of our diuision Now in the third part which is in the last two verses he concludeth with a notable exhortation that seeing the God of heauen hath deserued so well of her she should shew her selfe thankfull The least thing that she can do is to praise the Name of God yea surely it is the least thing Therefore he saith Vow and performe your vowes Vow to testifie your thankfulnesse Performe your vowes to testifie your obedience and how readie ye are to serue so good a God By vowes here he vnderstandeth not these foolish vowes but the action of praise and t●anksgiuing for so oft as the Spirit of God maketh mention of vowes so oft he meaneth of vowes of thanksgiuing as ye may see clearely in this booke of the Psalmes as namely in the 50.55.60.61.65 and 66. Psalmes And to vow to thanke God it is a part of our dutie we are bound to it yea we haue our warrant for it And these sorts of vowes are very profitable for we haue two great benefits by them First they stirre vp confirme our faith For when a man is in any great extremitie and promiseth to be thankfull to God if he be deliuered it strengtheneth his faith and maketh him to looke the more for his deliuerie And againe when the deliuery is past that we are returned to our owne home if it were no more but for very shame keeping of the promise that we made we cannot but be thankful So these sorts of vowes are good ought to be vowed and performed but those vnlawfull vowes of the Papists haue no ground here Neither
in respect that faith is the ground whereupon all the rest depends and in respect that this fayth is such a Iewell as without the which it is not possible for any of you to please God without which all your deedes are abhomination before him without the which you are in the greatest miserie which miserie is so much the more terrible in that you are ignorant of it is it not good reason that ye know and vnderstand how this faith is first wrought and then nourished in your soules by the holy Spirit that seeing how it is created and the maner how it is brought about ye may examine your consciences and see whether ye may be in the faith or not My purpose was to haue insisted longer on this matter then this time will suffer Now therefore as time will permit and God shall giue grace I wil let you vnderstand how the holy Spirit imployes his trauaile in the heart and minde of man and what paines the holy Ghost taketh in creating and forming this Iewell of faith in your soules Yet before I enter this worke to let you see the trauailes of the Spirit of God in working of this fayth in your hearts it is necessarie and more then necessarie that ye vnderstand first your owne miserie and infirmitie and that ye know how the Lord was induced to recouer you out of your old estate and to recreate you who were lost by the fall of your father Adam Then to consider of this matter more deepely I offer to your remembrances this ground That man vniuersally and euery one particularly being corrupted and lost and that by our first fathers fall for if there were no more but that same first fault and sinne of his we are all of vs iustly condemned to a double death both of bodie soule for euer Man thus vniuersallie and particularlie being vtterlie lost without any hope at all of recouery left in his soule without any sense of the recouery of that former estate or repairing of that Image which he had lost through sinne long before he being I say lost by this sinne and left in this desperate estate in himselfe what doth God The euerliuing God onely wise whose waies are vnserchable hath found out a way how that man this way lost yet he may be saued herein he sought counsell from whom Not from any ●reature but he counselled with himselfe The persons of the Trinitie tooke counsell of themselues one God was moued to seeke counsell from himselfe onely moued in himselfe for he had not an externall principall without himselfe to induce him So he seeking this counsell at himselfe and being moued in himselfe thereto as Ephes. 1.9 what doth he When all men should haue died for euer it pleased him of his infinite mercy to select out of all and to elect a certaine number out of the lost race of Adam that should haue perished for euer In this his counsell and decree moued I say of himselfe and seeking counsell from himselfe onely he selects a certaine number out of this rotten race which certaine number he will haue sanctified he will haue iustified he will haue glorified And therefore to bring to passe the worke of their saluation what doth he He appoints his owne naturall sonne for he had but one naturall son he appoints the second person of the Trinity his owne naturall sonne God in power glory and maiestie as high as himselfe equall with God the father in all things he appoints him to worke this worke to bring to passe this worke of our redemption and eternall saluation This is but the mystery of it in some measure disclosed And therefore in the fulnes of time for he dispenseth all things according to his wisedome at such time as he appointed he makes his sonne to come downe to seise himselfe in the wombe of the Virgin to take on our flesh to take on the likenesse of sinne he tooke not on sin but he tooke on the likenes of sin What call I that likenes Our flesh is the likenesse of sinne he tooke on our flesh and nature the likenes of sinne which was perfectly sanctified the very moment of his conception in the very wombe of the Virgin He tooke on this flesh that in this flesh and nature sinne might be banished and cast out of vs for euer And whereas we should all of vs haue gone one-way for there was no exception of persons by nature Christ Iesus our sauiour hath elected vs and according as his Father in his secret election before the beginning of the world had elected vs the same Christ Iesus in his owne time calleth vs and maketh vs partakers of that saluation which he hath purchased and he repaires not onely that image which was lost in our forefather Adam he placeth vs not in a terrestriall paradise where Adam was placed at the beginning and what more could haue bene sought by vs but he giues vs a farre more excellent image then we lost he placeth vs in a more high and in a more celestiall paradise then we lost For so much the more heauenly is the paradise which he giues vs as the second Adam is more excellent then the first and as the Sonne of God and God himselfe is farre aboue any creature that euer was man or Angell Therefore it comes to passe that by the benefite of the second Adam Christ Iesus our Sauiour the Sonne of God whereas had we remained in that Image wherein our forefather was created we should haue setled our selues in the earth for euer we could not haue craued a better paradise then an earthlie paradise for earthlie tabernacles By benefit of the Son of God I say it cometh to passe that we are plucked vp out of the earth to the heauen and to a heauenly paradise And what haue we to do with heauen Are we not made of the earth to returne to the earth Becomes not an earthly paradise an earthly body Yet the Lord in his mercy sendeth downe his Sonne to draw vs vp out of the earth to the heauen This is so high a thing that it cannot be easily considered For this drawing of vs to a heauenly paradise is a thing more then could haue bene thought on That we should liue the life of Angels in heauen how could the heart of man thinke on this Yet it pleased the liuing Lord in the great riches and bowels of his mercie and in the exceeding greatnes of the power of his mercie towards vs the Apostle in that Epistle to the Ephesians cannot get words enough to expresse this he knowes not how to begin nor how to end when he speakes of the riches of that mercie and if ye looke well into that Epistle to the Ephesians ye shall finde more high and excellēt stiles giuen to the riches of that mercie in that Epistle then in any other part of the Scripture It pleased him I say of his owne mercie not to giue vs simply the
Image which we lost nor to leaue vs in this earth but it pleased him to giue vs a better Image and beside that to place vs in heauen there to remaine with him for euer Now resteth his mercie and grace here No But that this saluation which he hath alreadie purchased brought about by his Sonne our Sauiour Christ Iesus might be wholly accomplished hauing nothing wanting in it as he redeemed vs in his owne person perfectly so he makes this same redemption to come to our knowledge makes vs sure of it in our consciences and to this end what doth he As by his death he purchased our full redemption so he makes it knowne vnto vs he intimates it vnto vs by our inward calling letting vs both finde and feele in our hea●ts what he did in his body for vs. For our Lord when he makes his seruants to proclaime this redemption and to intimate it to our consciences he workes this Iewell of faith in our soules which assures vs that the Son of God hath died for vs. For what could it auaile vs to see our redemption to see our saluation and our life a farre off if a way were not found out and a hand and meanes giuen vnto vs whereby we may apprehend that saluation applie it to our selues What can it auaile a sicke man to see a drugge in an Apothecaries shop except he may haue it and apply it to his sicke bodie So to the end that this worke of our redemption and saluation may be fullie and freelie accomplished looke how freelie he hath giuen his onely Sonne to the death of the crosse for vs as freelie hath he found out this way and meanes and offered vs this hand whereby we may take hold on Christ apply him to our soules This meanes to conclude is faith There is not a way nor an instrument in the Scriptures of God whereby we can applie Christ to our soules but onelie the instrument of faith therefore faith cannot be enough commended Turne to faith and it will make thee turne to God and so conioyne thee with God and make all thine actions well pleasing vnto him There is no good action that we do though it seeme neuer so good before the world but it is abhomination before God if it be not done in faith and will further our condemnation hauing faith all the creatures of God are seruiceable vnto vs they must all conspire to the furtherance of the worke of our saluation As on the contrarie wanting faith there is none of the creatures of God but shall be enemies vnto vs and conspire to our damnation For faith conioynes vs with the God of heauen and makes vs heauenly This Iewell of faith seasons all the gifts and graces which God giueth vnto vs all the riches of the earth is of no value to my soule without faith And what auaileth it any man to haue all the knowledge and wisedome in the earth without faith For the diuell hath all this knowledge and is not the better What auaileth it me to conquer all the Monarches kingdomes and whole riches in the earth what can all these auaile my soule Nothing but accuse me if I want faith Therefore all the benefits and gifts of God without faith auaile nothing but to augment our mise●ie All the gifts and graces of God are abused without faith faith onely maketh thee to vse the benefits and graces of God rightly Faith only should be sought kept and entertained here in this life hauing faith all the rest of Gods graces are profitable vnto thee for this Iewell keepeth them all in order and maketh them all fruitfull whereas wanting this iewell there is nothing here on earth but it will testifie against thee Let vs then speake of this faith how it is wrought in you I take my ground out of the Euangelist Iohn 6.44 where our Sauiour saith No man can come to ●e except the Father which hath sent me draw him In the which words we see clearly that except we be drawne except we be compelled except we be thrust except of vnwilling we be made willing by God the father it is not possible for vs to come to his Sonne What is the reason of this that the Spirit of God must draw vs and make vs willing or euer we come to God Because by nature we are not onely wounded and lanced by sinne and iniquitie but as the Apostle sheweth Ephes. 2.1 We were wholly dead in trespasses and sinnes yea obse●ue how voide any dead bodie is of a naturall life so voide are our soules though they be liuing the naturall life so voide are they of the life of God of that heauenly and spirituall life whereunto we in this life do aspire vntill such time that the Spirit of God draw our hearts and minds that is quicken our hearts and minds No it is not a drawing as we commonly speake it is a very quickning of a dead thing It is a quickning of that thing which was void of the life of the Spirit Then except the Spirit of God draw vs that is quicken vs with that spirituall and heauenly life it is not possible for vs to come to heauen And except he nourish this life which he hath begun it is not possible that we can stand in this life So the Spirit of God is said to draw vs that is to begin this life in vs and by the same holy Spirit to continue and nourish this life in vs. Now by the drawing of the Spirit our soules are quickned and by the drawing of the Spirit I vnderstand no other thing but the framing and creating of faith in our soules which makes vs new creatures Now let vs see what order the Spirit of God keepeth in drawing vs and informing and creating this faith in our soules First of all I deuide the soule into no more parts then commonly it vseth to be deuided that is into the heart and the mind Our mind then being ● cloud of darknesse altogether blind naturally there being nothing in that mind of ours but vanitie error and ignorance whereby we vanish away can neuer long continue in any good resolution or purpose what doth the Spirit of God The first worke that euer the Spirit of God doth he taketh order with the mind and what doth he to the mind He banisheth darknesse he chaseth out vanitie and blindnesse that naturally lurketh in the mind and in stead of this darknesse he placeth in the mind a l●ght a celestial and heauenly light a light which is resident in Christ Iesus onely Then the Spirit chaseth out that cloud of mist and darknesse and placeth light in the mind And what worketh he by this light We getting sanctified vnderstanding incontinent he makes vs to see God not onely as he is God the Creator of the world but also as he is God the Redeemer and hath redeemed vs in his Sonne Christ Iesus Now before I obtaine this light
the haynous sins in the which by nature thou liest If he hath granted to thee ●n insight of thy selfe in some measure and on the other side if he hath granted thee the remedie and hath giuen thee an insight of the mercie of God in Christ Iesus if thou hast obtained an insight of the riches of his grace in Christ no doubt the holy Spirit hath begun a good worke in thee a worke which will bring forth repentance which in his owne time he will perfect So this is the first care which ye ought to haue and the first point wherein ye ought to examine your minds to see if there be any light in it whereby ye may know your miserie haue an insight of the free mercie of God in Christ Iesus This being done that thou findest a sight of these two in thy mind f●om thy mind go to thy heart and as thou hast tried thy mind so try thy heart And first examine thine heart if it be altered or not that the will of it be framed and bowed to Gods obedience that thy affection be turned into the life of God and be poured out on him as it was poured out on vanities on filthinesse and on the world before Trie whether the ground of thy heart and the fountaine from whence thy motions and affections proceede be sanctified or not for from a holy fountaine holy waters must distill from a holy fountaine holy motions holy cogitations and sanctified considerations must flow Trie then and examine your hearts if the Spirit of God hath wrought any such reformation as I speake of in your hearts or not And that ye may perceiue the working of the holy Spirit the better in your hearts and consciences for the holy Spirit hath his chiefe residence in your hearts I will declare vnto you the fi●st effect that euer the holy Spirit bringeth forth in the heart in framing it in mollifying it and in bowing it vnto the obedience of God You shall know the working of the holy Spirit by this effect namely if your minds see and behold what is ill see behold what is good perceiue and discerne your owne miserie and your sinnes which haue brought this misery vpon you and withall perceiue and behold the riches of the mercie of God in Christ Iesus If as your minds see these two your hearts be reformed and prepared to loue the sight of them and as you see in your minds the mercy of God and that in Christ if ye haue hearts to desire mercy if ye haue a thirsting and earnest desire to be partakers of mercy where this desire thirst is there the holy Spirit is he hath no doubt opened the heart On the other side if as thou seeest mercie thou seest thy misery if as thy mind seeth thy miserie it seeth also the fountaine from whence thy miserie floweth to wit from thine owne sinnes if then thy heart also hate this the holy Spirit is there if as thou seest sinne which is the cause of thy miserie with the eye which is giuen thee in the minde thou hatest this sinne with thy heart no question the holy Spirit is there And as thou hatest it if also thou sorrow for it for it is is not enough to hate it if thou lament not the committing of it and with a godly sorrow deplore it the holy Spirit is there And thirdly if with thy lamenting thou hast a care and a study to eschue that sin for what auailes it to lament if like a dogge returning to his vomite thou fall into that same gulfe againe Therefore where there is an hatred of sinne a sorrow for sinne a care and a studie to eschue sin no question the holy Spirit hath opened the heart and is working out that pretious instrument Obserue all this in a word all the operation of the holy Spirit and working in the heart and by this examine thine heart See and perceiue it the holy Spirit hath entred so farre in thee to worke in that hard hea●t of thine an earnest and a diligent studie a carefull solicitude continually to be reconciled with the great God whom thou hast offended Is there such a thing as a thirst as a desire to be at amity with him whom thou hast offended to be reconciled with the God of heauen whom thou hast offended by thy manifold transgressions where this care and studie of reconciliation is if this care studie of reconciliation be in the heart there is no doubt but the heart that thirsteth for this reconciliation is heartily content not onely to renounce sinne to renounce all the impieties that separated thee from God but the heart that is endued with this thirst will be heartily content to renounce it selfe to cast downe it selfe as stubbo●●e as it was before to cast downe it selfe at the feete of the mighty God and be wholly content at all times after to be ruled by his holy will Not to follow it owne lust it owne will and appetite as it did before but to resigne it selfe wholly into the hands of the mighty God to be ruled by his will at his pleasure and to obey his commands And except ye finde this disposition in your owne hearts to acquire your selues to renounce your selues it is a vaine thing for you to say that ye haue a thirst to be reconciled So the greater thirst of reconciliation that we haue and the more that the care study thereof groweth the greater that the apprehension of my misery of the deepe gulfes and very hels whereunto my soule is subiect increaseth in my soule the more earnest would I be to be reconciled And to be reconciled I would not stand for the renouncing of the lusts of my heart but I would renounce my heart the obedience of the will and desire why Because I see I must die for euer except the Lord reconcile himselfe with me I see the huge deepes oceans of all misery into the which I shall fall in the end except inmercie the Lord reconcile himselfe with me To eschue these miseries and inconueniences is there any question but the heart that hath any sense and is touched with them will most willingly endeuour to acquite it selfe Againe seeing the Lord hath taken paines to deliuer me out of the deepe miserie in the which I had drowned my selfe and hath purchased my redemption by so deere a price not with gold nor with siluer or any drosse of the earth but by such a wonderfull meanes by such a pretious price and rich ransome looking to the greatnesse of our misery and to the greatnesse of the price whereby he hath redeemed vs what heart is it but would willingly renounce it selfe to get a part of that redemption and to be deliuered out of that hell wherein we are presently and wherein we shall be in a greater measure hereafter except we be reconciled So th●n with this there is ioyned a disposition in the heart whereby the
in the institution and it is contained in these words This is my bodie The Promise craueth faith as the Command craueth obedience so the Promise craueth beliefe Therefore come not vnto the Sacrament except ye bring both faith and obedience with you If thou come not with a heart minding to ob●y Christ at the least more then thou wast wont to do thou comest vnto thy owne damnation And if thou bringest a heart void of faith thou comest vnto thine owne damnation So let euery one that cometh vnto the Sacrament bring with him a heart minding to do better that is to obey and belieue Christ better then he did in time past Except ye bring these two in some measure come not vnto the Sacrament for whatsoeuer thou doest except it flow from faith it can profite nothing Thus farre briefly concerning the word Now it will be demanded what neede is there that these Sacraments and seales should be annexed the word wherefore are they annexed seeing we get no more in the Sacrament then we get in the word and we get as much in the very simple word as we get in the Sacraments Seeing then we get no new thing in the Sacrament but the same thing which we get in the simple word wherefore is the Sacrament appointed to be hung vnto the word It is true certainly that we get no new thing in the Sacrament nor we get no other thing in the Sacrament then we get in the word for what more wouldest thou craue then to get the Sonne of God if thou get him well Thy heart cannot wish nor imagine a g●eater gift then to haue the Sonne of God who is King of heauen and earth therefore I say what n●w thing wouldest thou haue for if thou get him thou gettest all things with him thy heart cannot imagine a new thing besides him Wherefore then is the Sacrament appointed Not to get thee any new thing I say it is appointed to get thee that same thing better then thou hadst it in the word The Sacrament is appointed that we may take better hold of Christ then we could in the simple word that we may possesse Christ in our hearts and minds more fully and largely then we did before in the simple word That Christ might haue a larger space to make residence in our narrow hearts then he could haue by the hearing of the simple word and to possesse Christ more fully it is a better thing For suppose Christ be one thing in himselfe yet the better hold thou hast of him thou art the surer of his promise The Sacraments are appointed that I might haue him more fully in my soule that I might haue the bounds of it enlarged that he may make the better residence in me This no doubt is the cause wherefore these Seales are annexed to the euidence of the simple word They serue to this end also to seale vp and confirme the truth that is in the word for as the office of the Seale hung to the Euidence is not to confirme any other truth then that which is in the Euidence and though ye belieued the Euidence before yet by the Seales ye belieue it better euen so the Sacrament assures me of no other truth then is contained within the word yet because it is a seale annexed vnto the word it perswades me the better of the same for the more the outward senses are wakned the more is the inward heart and minde perswaded to belieue Now the Sacrament wakneth all the outward senses as the eye the hand and all the rest and the outward senses being mooued no quest●on the Spirit of God concurring therewith moues the heart the more The Sacraments are then annexed vnto the word to seale vp the truth contained in the word and to confirme it more and more in thy heart The word then is appointed to worke beliefe and the Sacrament is appointed to confirme you in this beliefe But except ye feele the truth of this inwardly in your hearts except ye haue your heart as ready as your mouth thinke not that any thing will auaile you All the seales in the world will not worke except the Spirit of God concurre and seale the same truth in your hearts which the Sacrament seales outwardly except he make cleere the sight of thy minde inwardly and worke a feeling in thy heart both word and Sacrament shall lose their fruite effect which they should haue All the Scriptures are full of this the whole Scriptures of God are but a slaying letter to you except the Spirit of God concurre to quicken inwardly Therefore your whole indeuour should be to prease to feele Christ inwardly in your hearts that finding him in your hearts and seeing him in your minds both word and Sacrament may be effectuall If not your soules remaine dead ye are not translated f●om that death wherein ye were conceiued Therefore all the study of Christians should be when they see the Sacraments and heare the word to labour to finde and feele in their hearts and minds that which they heare and see and this I call to finde Christ quick in your owne soules This cannot be except ye sanctifie his lodging for if all the corners of thy soule remaine a dunghill Christ cannot dwell there and therfore exept ye study for continuall growth in sanctification and seuer your selues from euery thing that seuers you from Christ it is not possible that he can liue or dwell in you This is a great lesson and it is not possible to do this except as I haue said a stronger come in and possesse vs and make vs to renounce our selues Then the seales had not bene annexed to the word except for our cause for there is no necessity on Gods part that God should either sweare or confirme by seales the thing t●at he hath spoken for his word is as good as any oath or seale But the necessity commeth of vs there is such a great weaknesse in vs that when he hath sworne and set his seales vnto his word we are as neere to belieue as if he had neuer spoken a word So to helpe our beliefe our weaknesse and inability that is in vs for we are so vnable by nature that we can belieue nothing but that which is of our selues and the more we leane vnto our selues the further we are from God I say to helpe this wonderfull weaknesse whereby we are ready to mistrust God in euery word he hath annexed his Sacraments and besides his Sacraments he sweares the things that concerne most our saluation As in the Priesthood of Christ Psal. 110.4 he will not speake onely but he sweares and that for our weaknesse and infirmities but yet if he abstract the ministery of his Spirit all these meanes will do no good Now the last thing is how the Sacrament is peruerted how we are defrauded of the fruit effect therof Two sorts of faults peruert the
supper a supper appointed for the increase of holinesse for the foode of the soule in holinesse to feede the soule vnto life euerlasting Not a supper appointed for the bellie for he had ended that supper that was appointed for the bellie or euer he began this Supper which was appointed for the soule A supper no doubt hauing respect to the circumstance of time by reason it was instituted in that very same time when they vsed to sup It is called also in the Bible The Table of the Lord. It is not called the Altar of the Lord but the Apostle calleth it a Table to sit at and not an Altar to stand at a Table to take and receiue at and not an Altar to offer at It is called also the Communion and participation of the bodie and bloud of Christ we haue these names giuen vnto it besides some others in the Scriptures of God The Ancients of the Latine and of the Greeke Churches gaue it sundrie names for sundry respects They called it a publike action this was a very generall name Sometimes they called it a thanksgiuing Sometimes they called it a banquet of loue and sometimes they gaue it one name sometimes another And at last in the declining estate of the Latin Church in the falling estate of the Romane Church this Sacrament began to be peruerted and with this decay there came in a peruerse name and they called it the Masse They trouble themselues much concerning the deriuation of this name sometime they seeke it from an Hebrew originall sometime from a Greeke and sometime from a Latine originall but it is plaine that the word is deriued from the Latine and it is a word which might haue bene tollerable when it was first instituted for no doubt the Sacrament at the first institution of this word was not then wholly peruerted but now in processe of time corruption hath preuailed so farre that it hath turned the Sacrament into a sacrifice and where we should take from the hand of God in Christ they make vs to giue This is plaine idolatrie and therefore whereas the word was tollerable before now it ought not to be tollerated any way it ought not to be suffered And certainly if we had eaten and drunke as oft the bodie and bloud of Christ in our soules as we haue eaten that bread and drunke that wine which are the signes of his bodie and bloud we would not haue suffered this word of the Masse much lesse the very action of it to be so rise in this Countrey But because we haue but played the counterfeits defrauded our soules of the bodie and bloud of Christ and tooke only the outward Sacrament therefore it is that our zeale decayeth therefore it is that our knowledge and light decayeth and for want of zeale loue and knowledge the word of the Masse is become customable vnto you not onely the word but the very action I will not runne out herein I onely tell you what cometh of the abuse of the hearing of the word what iudgements follow vpon the abuse of the receiuing of the Sacraments Now I come to the ends wherefore the Sacrament was appointed This Sacrament was instituted in the signes of Bread and Wine and was appointed chiefely for this end to represent our spirituall nouriture the full and perfect nouriture of our soules that as he who hath Bread Wine lacketh nothing for the full nourishment of his bodie so he or that soule which hath the participation of the bodie and bloud of Christ wanteth nothing for the full and perfect nourishment of the soule To represent this full and perfect nourishment the signes of Bread and Wine in the Sacrament were set downe and instituted The second end wherefore this Sacrament was instituted is this That we might testifie to the world and to the Princes of the world who are enemies to our profession that we might openly avow and testifie vnto them our Religion and our manner of worshipping in the which we avow and worship Christ and that we might also testifie our loue towards his members our brethren this is the second end wherefore it was instituted The third end wherefore it was instituted is this to serue for our speciall comfort and consolation to serue as a soueraigne medicine for all our spirituall diseases as we find our selues either readie to fall or prouoked to fall by the diuell the flesh or the world or after that we haue fallen and are put to flight by the diuell and would faine flie away from God God of his mercie and of his infinite pitie and bottomles compassion hath set vp this Sacrament as a signe on an high hill whereby it may be seene on euery side farre and neere to call all them againe that haue runne shamefully away and he clucks to them as a Henne doth to her chickens to gather them vnder the wings of his infinite mercie The fourth end wherefore this Sacrament was instituted is this that in this action we might thanke him for his benefits and render to him heartie thanks that he hath come downe so familiarly to vs bowed the heauens as it were and giuen vs the bodie and bloud of his owne Sonne that we might render vnto him heartie thanks and so sanctifie his benefits vnto vs for this thanksgiuing this Sacrament was also instituted Thus far concerning the ends briefely Now I come to the things contained in this Sacrament Ye see with your eyes there are corporall things visible things as the Bread and Wine There are againe hid from the eye of your bodie but present to the eye of your mind spirituall things heauenly and inward things both these are in the Sacrament The corporall visible and outward things are the things which are appointed to signifie the spirituall heauenly and inward things And why Nothing without a reason These corporall signes are appointed to signifie the spirituall things because we are corporall we are earthly bodies we haue our soule lodging within a carnall body in a tabernacle of clay a grosse tabernacle which cannot be wakened nor moued except by the things that are like to it selfe It cannot be induced to the consideration of heauenly things except by grosse temporall and corporall things If we had bene of the nature of the thing signified that as the thing signified is spirituall and heauenly so we had beene spirituall heauenly we had not needed a corporal thing so if the thing signified had bene as we are corporall earthly visible we had not needed a signe to leade vs to consider of it But because the thing signified is spirituall we are corporal therfore to bring vs vnto the sight of these spirituall things he vseth a corporall meanes an outward signe This is the reason wherfore these corporall signes are appointed to signifie the spirituall thing The spirituall thing in both the Sacraments is one and the selfe same Christ Iesus
lying in the farthest part of England if ye haue a good title to it the distance of the place cannot hurt your title so I say the distance of place hurts not my title and my right that I haue to Christ. But though he be sitting at the right hand of the Father yet the title and right that I haue to him makes him mine so that I may say truly this Christ is my property Then Christ is not made mine because I fetch him out of the heauens but he is mine because I haue a sure title and right to him and hauing a sure title and iust right to him the distance of place how farre soeuer it be can no wayes hurt my title nor right but where-euer he be he is mine because I haue a right and title to him Yea not onely haue I a title to him but this title is confirmed to me For as I get a title to him in the word and if I got not that title to him in the word I durst not come to the Sacrament so in the Sacracrament I get the confirmation of my title I get the Seale which confirmes my title Then to come to the point Christs body is sitting at the right hand of the Father and yet he is mine and is deliuered to me because I haue right to his body be it where it will he was borne for me giuen to mee and deliuered to me So distance of place hurts not the surety of my title as propinquity of place helpes not the surety of the same Though Christ would bow the heauens and touch thee with his body as he did Iudas yet this could not helpe thee for if thou hast not a title to him thou darest not call him thine So it is not the neerenesse nor proximity of place that maketh Christ mine It is onely the right that I haue to him I haue right to him onely by faith So by faith onely Christ is made mine But they thinke they haue gotten a great vantage of vs if we be so farre from Christ as the heauen is from the earth but this shall be answered by Gods grace I haue a title to his bodie his bodie is distant from my bodie yet his bodie is not distant from me that is from my soule I say his bodie and my soule are conioyned It is a strange ladder that will reach from the earth to the heauens yet let me tell you there is a cord that extendeth from the earth to the heauens and coupleth me and Christ together and this is onely true faith By true faith Christ though he be in the heauens is coupled and conioyned with me who am here on earth I will shew you this by a similitude Is not the bodie of the Sunne in the firmament It is impossible for you to touch the bodie of the Sunne yet the bodie of the Sunne and ye are conioyned How By those beames that shine on you by that light that shineth vpon you Why may not the bodie of Christ then though it be in the heauens be conioyned with me that am on earth namely by the beames by the light and gladnesse that floweth from his bodie My bodie and Christs bodie are conioyned by the vertue and power flowing from his bodie which vertue and power quickneth my dead soule maketh me to liue the life of Christ to begin to die to my selfe and euer the more I die to my selfe the more I liue to Christ. This coniunction now is the ground as I told you of all our felicitie and happinesse and I haue made it cleare to you at this time so far as God hath giuen me insight Alwaies ye see this coniunction is brought to passe by two speciall meanes by the holy Spirit by faith If there be no other meanes but these two what needest thou a carnall or a visible coniunction Faith is inuisible and the Spirit is inuisible therefore thou canst not see it nor take it vp with the eye of thy bodie The power of the holy Spirit is so subtile secret and inuisible that thou canst not perceiue it nor take it vp with the eye of the bodie and it will worke great effects in thy soule or euer thou perceiuest his working In respect therefore that the meanes of this coniunction are so subtill secret and spirituall why thinkest thou to get a sight of this coniunction with the eye of thy bodie why imaginest thou such a carnall coniunction as this which would do thee no good if thou hadst it Knowest thou not that the Spirit that coupleth vs and Christ is infinite so that it is as easie for the Spirit to couple vs and Christ how far distant soeuer we be as it is easie for our soules to couple our head and the feete of our bodies though they be distant Then seeing this coniunction is the ground and fountaine of all our happinesse and seeing this ground of happinesse is so substill and so spirituall what is your part Remoue all your outward senses remoue all your naturall motions remoue your naturall discourses and your naturall reason and follow the sight and information of the Spirit of God Craue that it would please him to illuminate your vnderstanding that by the light of his Spirit ye may see clearely the spirituall coniunction Except the eye of the Spirit be giuen you to perceiue this spirituall coniunction it is not possible that ye can get any insight in it But if the Lord of his mercie will bestow some measure of his holy Spirit vppon you out of question ye shall soone come to the vnderstanding of it and ye shall thinke the time happie that euer ye heard this word Except ye haue some part of this Spirit it is not possible that ye can be spirituall That which is borne of flesh and bloud will remaine flesh and bloud except the Spirit come in and make it spirituall Therefore ye must be borne againe of the Spirit ye must be borne in the bodie of Christ his Spirit must quicken you This is called the quickning and liuing Spirit of Christ by Iohn And so soone as the Spirit cometh what doth it It chaseth away darknesse out of the vnderstanding whereas before I knew not God now I see him not onely generally that he is a God but that he is my God in Christ. What more doth the holy Spirit It openeth the heart as well as the minde and what doth it there Those things whereon I bestowed the affections of my heart and imployed the loue of my soule are by the working of the holy Spirit made gall to me he maketh them venome to me and to be as deadly hated of me as poyson He worketh s●ch an inward disposition in my soule that he maketh me to turne and flie from those things whereon I imployed my loue before and to imploy it vpon God This is a great perfection Alwaies in some measure he make●h me to loue God better then any other thing
they passe to ouglier paines and greater torments Now all these torments and vglie paines which eate them vp mooue them not and except the Lord worke it they will neuer be moued he hath commanded all to heare his word and he hath promised to worke by his seruants who vtter his word and therefore I say these bloudie men and oppressors they ought to be here present that the Lord if it be possible by this meanes may call them backe by repentance that they may preuent that terrible iudgement whereof they haue but little feeling as yet But ere they go they will feele it better Now I come to the proposition and there I shall end he propoundeth the comfort shortly in three points two of them are according to the petition The third is more then he craued health of body agreeth to the petition prorogation of dayes agreeth to the petition a glorious estate a sure a prosperous estate came not in his minde and this also he getteth he not onely will deliuer him out the hands of Ashur but deliuer the whole Citie And this promise of a prosperous and ioyfull estate is more then he thought on or looked for Of this there might be many things marked but I leaue them And this only I obserue The Lord hauing to do with this King to make him thankfull in times comming he granteth him more then he sought and prouoketh him as it were after this manner saying What euer thou lackest seeke it of me Lackest thou health of bodie seeke it of me Lackest thou prorogation of dayes seeke it of me Lackest thou a sure glorious and prosperous estate seeke it of me There cannot be a more affable kinde of intreating then is betwixt God and the King he desireth him what euer he lackes to seeke it of him Except Kings humble them to honour God hold them in his continuall fauour it is not possible that they can look for these things of him But by the contrarie if Kings humble them to serue God hold them in his fauour there is no honour nor dignitie that he hath prouided for thē by birthright or otherwaies but if he see it serue to their good in despite of the world they shall haue it But if they fall from the seruice of God and cast themselues out of his fauour they shall lose dignitie birthright priuiledge of nature and all other things themselues beside Examples of this we haue in the Scriptures Cain being Adams eldest sonne and hauing the birth-right so long as he kept him in the fauour of God he was in hope of it but from time he lost the fauour of God by the slaughter of his brother Abel he was banished from the face of God and lost his birthright with all his inheritance Ismael in like manner was Abrahams eldest sonne yet because he was not in the fauour of God he gat no part of his inheritance Esau was his fathers eldest sonne yet because he fell from the fauour of God his brother was preferred to him his birthright helped him not Now the generall doctrine is this It is onely the fauour of God that maketh men to enioy priuiledges dignities or whatsoeuer they haue right to if they keepe the fauor of God it is not possible that they can be disappointed So the exhortation is easie vnto you Sir as your maiestie thinketh to possesse that which the Lord hath appointed for you so looke that you keepe you in the fauour of God There is no way to keepe the fauour of God but to purge your countrie of these two Idolatrie and bloud for vnder these I comprehend all the sinnes committed against the two tables Let this be done and it is not possible that ye can be disappointed of any thing that may serue for your wealth For it is the fauour of God that shall make you to enioy not onely your possessions but all other priuiledges that ye are borne to The Lord of his mercie worke it in your heart Sir that we may see this as an argument that ye are in his fauour when ye shall put to your hand to reforme this countrey and so make it knowne that ye feare God and loue his people This being done suppose men would be inconstant and lie yet God is not as man not as the sonne of man saith Balaam that he should lie Depend on him The Lord worke it in our hearts that we may earnestly craue it and obtaine it that your heart being established by grace ye may obey his holy will The Lord grant it for Christs sake to whom be all honour praise and glorie for now and euer Amen THE EIGHTH SERMON VPON ISAIAH CHAPTER 38. 7 And this signe shalt thou haue of the Lord that the Lord will do this thing that he hath spoken 8 Behold I bring againe the shadow of the degrees whereby it is gone downe in the diall of Achaz by the Sunne ten degrees backward so the Sunne returned by ten degrees by the which degrees it was gone downe 9 The writing of Hezechiah King of Iudah when he had bene sicke and was recouered of his sicknesse 10 I said in the cutting off of my dayes I shall go to the gates of the graue I am depriued of the residue of my yeares 11 I said I shall not see the Lord euen the Lord in the land of the liuing I shall see man no more among the inhabitants of the world IN our last lesson welbeloued in Christ Iesus we heard the manner and forme of the comfort that was offered by the Prophet vnto the sicke King we heard when this comfort was offered we heard where it was offered we heard the person that was the giuer we heard the person that was the bearer we heard the preface which the Lord vsed to make the King attentiue we heard the narratiue shortly and the parts o● the comfort propounded As to the circumstances we noted where the Prophet was when he receiued this commission he was in the middle court he was not as yet past the second hall when the word of the Lord bad him stay and go backe againe At this time he is commanded to recall his former sentence and with that same mouth to pronounce the quite contrarie No further distance is there betwixt the pronouncing of the one sentence and the other then is betwixt the Kings bed and the second hall Looke what space the Prophet spent in going betwixt the Kings bed and the second hall as great space is consumed betwixt the one sentence and the other Vpon the suddainnesse we marked sundrie notable things and first we marked the great force of the Kings prayer to wit his prayer is so effectuall that it maketh the Lord to recall his owne sentence in one instant of time That same thing which heauen and earth and all the creatures therein could not haue moued him to do that the prayer of his seruant
mirrour of the word is but a dim mirrour and a sealed letter to all men as Isaiah calleth it It cannot profite vs. Therefore there is no way to seeke God truely but in the mirrour of his owne word and Spirit coniunctly that is by the word piercing the eare and the Spirit piercing the heart The word to work outwardly and to pierce the eare and the Spirit to worke inwardlie an eye in the minde and to open adore in the heart Where this coniunct and ioyned working is it cometh to passe that the veile of ignorance is taken out of our mindes it cometh to passe that our hard hearts are mollified it cometh to passe that the filthines of our affectiōs are mortified it cometh to passe that our soules are renewed our conscience getteth this boldnesse that with ioy we dare open these mouthes of ours which otherwise we durst neuer open and call the Father of Iesus Christ Our Father This heauenly reuelation we haue by the working of the worde and Spirit coniunctly and still the more we get of the Spirit the more clearely we see him and the better know we our God Then let vs come to the matter by this heauenly reuelation of God by his word and by his Spirit it cometh to passe that God is well knowne in Iudah that is in his Church And of this good knowledge which is no other thing but faith againe it cometh to passe that his name is great in Israel that is that his name is greatly praised highly extolled and his remembrance is euer continually in memory in Israel By the name of God here God himselfe is vnderstood for in so many good effects as God vttereth himself toward his Church as many names he giueth to himselfe whereby he may be praised of her As for example when he promiseth vnto his Church freely grace and mercy his Church giueth him a name and calleth him mercifull When he keepeth his promises and vttereth himselfe a faithfull God to his Church his Church giueth him a name and calleth him a true God When he deliuereth his Church out of danger and sheweth himselfe a mighty God terrible against his enemies the Church giueth him a name and calleth him a potent God and so foorth in the rest of his effects So that by the name of God is vnderstood here God himselfe as God maketh himselfe to be known in his wonderful works and effects Then to take vp the doctrine of this first benefit we see this heauenly familiar reuelation of God only and no other thing maketh this God well knowne in Israel Of this heauenly and familiar reuelation springeth true knowledg which is no other thing but our iustifying faith and of this iustifying faith benefite of knowledge springeth a continuall praysing and louing of God for these two further others mutually the true knowledge of God and the true praysing of God God is well knowne in Iudah Therefore his name is greatly praised there So that it is not possible but that man who knoweth God rightlie must praise him truely God is not like our countrymen For many of our men where they are best knowne they are worst loued It is farre otherwise with God for where he is best knowne he is best loued And this loue can neuer be idle but must burst forth in praises and thanksegiuing of him whom it loueth For these two follow others mutually the true knowledge of God and the true praysing of God Now let vs see and let vs turne ouer this argument vpon our selues and see if the consequence be true in vs. This countrey no waies praiseth God nor magnifieth his name and therefore it followeth he was neuer well knowne here his name is not great in Scotland Therefore it is a sure token that his goodnes was neuer well felt in Scotland Surely if a multitude of benefites might haue moued vs to haue altered our taste we might long since haue tasted the sweetnesse If a multitude of miracles and many wonders might haue made him to haue bene knowne among vs there are more shewed to vs and more wonderfull then euer was shewed to Pharaoh But God knoweth what we haue profited both in our knowledge and in our feeling For as to our knowledge in our hearts whatsoeuer we professe in our mouthes for all that is come and gone we are for the most part asking with Pharaoh Who is the great Iehouah that we should obey him And on the other part we doubt as much of his Son the Sauiour of the world so that we are still asking with the blindeman Iohn 9. Who is the Lord that we should beleeue in him I say if marueilous or wonderous workes might haue moued vs to know praise him he hath shewed a worke lately which euen the more we heare of it it is the more marueilous And yet I am assured a great part of the circumstances that should aggrauate this matter are not as yet come to our knowledge We are assembled this day for that end and to praise him for this benefite that his name may be great in Edinborough The Lord grant that euery one of you in some measure may burst forth in thansgiuing that ye may answer to our expectation as God hath giuen you grace And on the other side accursed be he as he is accursed from the heauen that presenteth himselfe here to scorne God that cometh here and bringeth not his heart and minde ready prepared in some measure to praise him I stand not here vpon the degrees of preparation howsoeuer it be so it be true otherwise here I pronounce him accursed from the heauen that cometh not here to praise God in some measure Since these corporall Sacrifices ceassed in the which God was honoured there is no spirituall Sacrifice more acceptable to him then the Sacrifice of thanksgiuing For as to this Sacrifice it sanctifieth not onely our owne persons but the whole creatures appointed to the vse of our persons For that which is true in meate and drinke is true in all the rest of the creatures of God ye see by your experience dayly that your meate and drinke is made wholesome to your nourishment by thanksgiuing to God after dinner and supper and so oft as ye refresh your bodies This that is true in these creatures is true in all the rest of the benefits of God So this proposition abideth firme Thankfulnesse to God sanctifieth the whole benefits of God It is not possible but a good conscience must praise God in some measure A good conscience cannot cast off the memorie of God and his benefits altogether but in some measure it must praise him Therefore that we may possesse this great worke and benefite of our deliuerie in the mercie and fauour of God and with his blessing in a good conscience let vs in some measure giue him praise therefore Surely the longer ye looke in this benefit and the more ye weigh it
precious corner Albeit in this point among the rest we haue this petition to seeke at God that howsoeuer it be a stumbling stone vnto them it may remaine a sure foundation ground-stone to vs on the which we being builded as liuely stones may be an holy Temple to our Lord and that the Lord in time would preuent this vtter extermination which the diuell in his rage and members intend Thus farre concerning the particulars by iust proportion betwixt that singular deliuery from Senacherib and our deliuery from Spaine Now what resteth ye see in the 7. verse he is rauished in admiration of the great work and of this great benefit And what doeth he he bursteth forth in the pithy sentence Thou euen thou art terible as if he would say Thou only euen thou art terrible hast not any match or cōpanion For the proudest man in the earth he that is most high in his own conceit is not able to strike any such terror as to dash a man or stupifie his senses This terror is proper to God only it is he only that giueth the heart to men and spoyleth them of this heart when he pleaseth and casteth them into a dead sleepe Therefore this onely is proper to God And wherefore is it that he doubleth the Pronoune Thou thou but to testifie that it is he onely that is terrible He proueth this in the end of the verse how By an interrogation there saying Who is able to stand and abide in his presence if once his anger beginneth neuer so little to kindle Looke to the diuell what became of him from the time he presumed to make himselfe companion to him He was cast downe out of heauen perpetually Looke to Adam from the time he beganne to follow the wit of the diuell and presumed in himselfe he was cast out of Paradise And so there is no creature that can abide in the presence of God of it selfe For how is it possible that we that are stubble can abide in the presence of a consuming fire Is not stubble the mater of fyre euen so we that are conceiued in sinne borne in sinne and are but a masse of sinnes we are no more but as stubble is to the fyre so are we in the presence of God who is a consuming fire except we haur a sconce except we haue Christ Iesus to stand betwixt vs and him And therefore he is appointed to be a mediator and intercessor to stand betwixt vs and God the Father to make our prayers acceptable his merits step in betwixt the Father and vs his iustice couereth our wickednesse his purity couereth our impurity that vnder this couerture the Father may be well satisfied we may stand in his presence be defended from the diuel and all enemies Otherwise there is no creature able to stand in the presence of God What teacheth this vs It letteth vs see the great weaknesse infirmity of the creature in respect of the Creator Is not this a great weaknesse when the blessed Angels although they stand shal stand by grace yet they are not able to behold his countenance but must couer their faces with their wings how much more are other creatures vnable to stand in his presence And yet notwithstanding all this great infirmity which is in vs which are but wormes of the earth sinfull flesh will sometime forget it selfe so that in it owne conceit it will match it selfe with God and in his word despite him and prouoke him to the combat as it were as Iuliā did I haue heard of him that hath prouoked God to combat and it hath come to mine eares this is blasphemy If it be true that man is fallen into the hands of the liuing God And suppose he be delayed because the Lord is long suffering to try his repentance if he abuse the Lords patience that by blasphemies his wrath be nourished and his anger as it were with coales incensed heauy shall his end be Well it is an heauy thing that he is fallen into the hands of such a God Iest not with the maiesty of God whateuer ye do with flesh Indeed it is no new thing for flesh to misse-know it selfe and specially whilest he hath cast them into a reprobate sense and spoyled them not onely of supernaturall light but of naturall also Alas they know not what torments abideth them nor the terrible hell that is prepared for them except God preuent them in his mercy Indeed I wish that God may preuent them who vtter these blasphemies and if it be possible they may be reclaimed that their life may testifie their repentance And now to end this present exercise that I and so many of you as are to communicate may dresse vs to that Table let vs remember that he is onely terrible and seeing he only is terrible because he is onely Lord of body soule onely he hath power to saue and cast away And seeing it is so let vs feare and retyre our selues to him who is able to preserue and keepe both body and soule and sanctifie them throughout and present them blamelesse at that great day of the glorious appearing of Iesus Christ. To whom with the Father and the holy Ghost be all honour praise and glory both now and for euer Amen THE THIRTEENTH SERMON VPON THE 76. PSALME 8 Thou diddest cause thy iudgment to be heard from heauen therefore the earth feared and was still When thou O God arose to iudgement to helpe all the meeke of the earth Selah 10 Surely the rage of man shall turne to thy praise the remnant of the rage shalt thou restraine 11 Vow and performe vnto the Lord your God all ye that be round about him let them bring presents vnto him that ought to be feared 12 He shall cut off the spirit of Princes he is terrible to the Kings of the earth WE deuided welbeloued in Christ Iesus this Psalme in three parts In the first part there was propounded vnto you certaine benefits wherein the Lord sheweth himselfe exceeding mercifull and gracious to his Church The benefits wherein he sheweth himselfe so gracious were two namely The first and chiefe benefit wherein he sheweth himselfe exceeding mercifull to his Church was this that he had reuealed himselfe to her by a familiar and heauenly reuelation For why the Church knoweth not onely that which may be knowne of God by a generall knowledge which is common to the whole world but she knoweth that which may be knowne of God by a speciall knowledge heauenly reuelation and supernaturall light the which supernaturall light and heauenly reuelation maketh vs to be counted the children of the light and of the day Which supernaturall light seuereth vs from the rest of the world who are darknesse and the children of the night supernaturall light is proper to the Church onely so that there is none that can know God rightly but they who haue receiued of this
ought any wicked vowes ought to be kept vowes which are rashly vowed to be wickedly performed for in so doing they make a double fault First they do a fault in vowing rashly secondly they make a fault in performing their rash vow All these vowes are beside the warrant of the word we should promise to be thankfull to God and to performe Then the exhortation riseth vnto vs after the example of the Prophet here that seeing in this great benefit although we had neuer receiued moe benefits the Lord hath deserued so well of you ye ought euery one of you to frame your hearts to grow in thankfulnesse to him whereby he may grow in mercie and loue towards you and in hatred and anger towards his enemies And although ye be thankfull thinke not that ye deserue any thing for when ye haue done this ye cannot adde any thing to his estate ye enrich not God one whit It is not possible that he who is absolutely perfect of himselfe can neede any thing whereby his estate may be enriched yea suppose we adde nothing to his estate our best thanksgiuing is no waies acceptable to him but by way of grace if Christ Iesus step not in betwixt vs and him it is not possible that our persons or any action that floweth from our person can be acceptable vnto him Therefore it is onely by way of grace and mercie in Christ Iesus in whom he cannot be displeased with vs that our thankfulnesse is accepted by him So it is not for our merits as the Papists foolishly alledge nor by way of our deseruing that he accepteth of vs it is by way of mercie and grace that he alloweth of vs and our thankfulnesse Indeed he accepteth so of our thanksgiuing that vnlesse we praise him nothing can please him And therefore seeing all our actions are acceptable to him onely in his welbeloued let vs praise him in Christ. Ye see we will thanke him for meate and drinke after dinner and supper and why should ye not thanke him for the rest of the creatures As for this benefit of your deliuerie and preseruation both of Church countrey the Lord giue vs hearts to thanke him Now in the end of this verse he saith Let them bring presents to him that ought to be feared We haue no other presents to bring but this sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing which is called calues of the lips Psal. 51. Would God that this were truly giuen although not in such measure as is required Alwaies let vs bring these sacrifices and present them to him onely who is fearefull not onely to meane men but to the greatest Princes and Monarchs of the earth And how prooueth he this He prooueth this in the last verse where he saith He cutteth off the spirit of Princes that is he spoyleth them of their wit and force and last of all when it pleaseth him he spoyleth them of the life it selfe he taketh all from them euen from these same Princes that oppose themselues most against him he spoyleth them in an instant of heart hand and all forces and maketh them a spectacle to all nations Well they will not learne in time it is terrible for Princes to fall into his hands For when they fall into his hands he is not satisfied to spoile them both of heart and hand but after he hath spoiled them both of heart and hand he taketh the very life from them Senacherib found this for his owne sonnes laid hands on him slue him Our great men thinke they will eschue his hands There is no example or proclamation of iudgement that will make them leaue off from burning slaying and murther This is not looked to by the Councell and he who should punish this ouerseeth it and they that are inferiour magistrates ouersee it so that this land is so ouerwhelmed with sinne that it cannot be discharged vntill the great God himselfe doth it Terrible is he therefore to Kings looke how terrible Kings are to meane men farre more terrible is he to them The Kings of the earth at least since the Gospell began haue euer conspired to expell Christ out of the number of Kings and so to roote out his kingdom that he should not beare rule in the earth And this conclusion hath bene laid by them So by Kings here to whom he is terrible is to be vnderstood those mischieuous Kings that will not acknowledge Christ as King nor submit their scepter to his scepter but haue all conspired and assayed their forces to put him out of their number What profit they haue gotten of this time hath tried Ye see what the King of Spaine hath gained ye see what his predecessors gained And what followeth There is a secōd assault to be made and it is not possible but the second assault must be For the diuell must be euer like to himselfe So the second assault shall come in great rage he shall push at that same stone as he and his predecessors haue done oft before Is it sure that Spaine shall make the second assault It is sure and yonder argument letteth me see it for the spirit of the diuell cannot be at rest And what shall come of this The next thing that ye shall heare God shall cut off his life he that hath spoiled him first of his heart and hand shall spoyle him of all and so the second thing that ye shall heare the great Monarch of Spaine shall die And so he shall be disappointed in the second assault and all the kingdomes which are vnder the protection of this King shall be let loose For rather shall heauen and earth go together ere God suffer his Church to be rooted out if we remaine in any part of our obedience O then we ought earnestly to prepare vs to reuerence him who is onely fearefull For if they who haue the supreame place will not reuerence him he shall take their reuerence out of the hearts of men It is onely for Gods sake that they are reuerenced whosoeuer therefore honoureth not God he shall not honour him So we ought to honour God and giue him his due reuerence and his owne place that we reuerence no man nor the lawes of any man but God and for Gods cause And so honouring God God shall honour vs and extoll vs and that in the righteous merits of his Sonne To whom with the Father and the holy Spirit be all honour and praise both now and euer Amen THE FOVRTEENTH SERMON VPON THE 40. PSALME PREACHED IN THE time of publicke fast 1 I waited patiently for the Lord and he inclined vnto me and heard my crie 2 He brought me also out of the horrible pit out of the mirie clay and set my feete vpon the rocke and ordered my goings 3 And he hath put in my mouth a new song of praise vnto our God many shall see it and feare and shall trust in the Lord. 4 Blessed is the man that maketh
as sure of the promise as if the debt were already payed Hope againe maketh not the thing promised present but looketh on still vntill it be present and wayteth on continually vntill it possesse it and when it is obtained then faith and hope ceasse For what neede we saith the Apostle to hope for the thing we see or haue in our hand Now looke how sure our faith is as sure of necessity must our hope be A sure promise maketh a sure faith a slacke promise will neuer make a constant faith The promise of God is onely sure therefore the hope and faith that is grounded on God is onely sure This sure Hope liueth in this world by way of patience for impatiencie cutteth the pillars of hope Impatiency carieth vs to despaire and to lay violent hands on our selues So hope liueth by patience and patience by hope Now the matter of patience is trouble vpon trouble Affliction engendreth patience saith the Apostle Rom. 5. For a bed of ease is not a matter of patience a prosperous course is not a matter to assay our hope so trouble vpon trouble is the matter exercise of patience long putting off delay of things hoped for is the exercise of true patience Now of this deduction I gather one proposition That is a sure constant Christian hope which being exercised by trouble vpon trouble by long processe and delay of time yet remaineth constant Who euer is indued with such an hope he may wait on still he hath a sure and constant hope But so is this hope whereof we speake the hope of the gaine Therefore he had a Christian and sure hope For his troubles ye heard them the other day he was pursued by the treason of his sonne backbited by his seruants yet he abideth patiently Indeed sometime he bursteth forth through impatience but in an instant he took vp himselfe to testifie his long putting off and delay he sayth here In waiting I waited Then I say ye haue it prooued that Dauid had a sure firme and constant hope The surer that an anchor is and the more deepe it is fixed it will be the worse to plucke vp Let the storme rage as it pleaseth continue as it wil the anchor that is deeply fixed wil hardly be plukt vp The anchor of our soule sayth the Apostle is Hope Therfore the more sure deeply it is fixed it wil be the worse to pull vp Our whole study diligence care should be to see when in what place we should cast this anchor of hope Cast we our anchor on any man the storme shall not rise so soone but it shall vnloose Cast we it vpon any creature it can be no surer then the creature it selfe Therfore when the storme cometh it will rise vp In summe cast we it any where below vnder the cloudes it must vnloose in time of storme Then this anchor differs from other anchors it must enter within the veile and reach in in Sanctasanctorum It must take hold on Christ sitting at the right hand of his Father Th●re is no sure ground for our anchor except it enter within the veile And if we obtaine accesse that we enter within the veile there is no storme nor continuance of storme blow as it pleaseth that wil raise it vp consequently cause vs to make shipwra●ke of our soules ●he Lord of his mercy grant vnto euery one of vs vnderstanding that we may cast the Anchor of our hope aright As for the second thing concerning the exercise wherein he was exercised enduring his wayting on he noteth in the end of the ve●se that he was imployed in crying and in the last Psalme he was busied in praying sighing and sobbing enduring the time of his long wayting This was his exercise And if this exercise had not cōtinued it had not bene possible that his patience should haue continued By this exercise he entertaineth patience and by patience he entertaineth hope For as to this sighing and mourning it is no waies contrary to the nature of hope no more then ioy is for this mourning and sighing riseth of the long delay and absence of the thing hoped for as on the other part the ioy riseth of the approching and drawing neere in our expectations of the thing hoped for So this sighing crying and praying was his exercise and they are the onely meanes to purchase strength to stand and continue in hope As touching the third thing ye heare what end issue this long waiting of his tooke to wit a prosperous and a happy end The Lord enclined his eare to him and not onely enclined he his eare but granted him his hearts desire Vppon this ground I marke one or two things and so I shall go forward The first thing I would haue you to learne is this learne of Dauid your kinde of exercise in extremity of troubles Learne of Dauid the right meanes whereby ye may entertaine patience in greatest calamity The meanes that he setteth downe here are crying sighing lamenting and praying vnto God and in other parts of the Psalme he addeth also many other meanes though these be speciall And if thou wouldest do well in these great agonies thou shalt call to memory the examples of the seruants of God who haue passed the like straites If thou do well thou shalt call to memory the testimonies of the fauour of God shewed to thy selfe if thou hast felt any in thy life past If thou do wel thou shalt call to memory that the decree of the Lords election is vnchangeable call to memory that his power is omnipotent call to memory the singular workes of the Lord toward his Elect. Let this be thine exercise in trouble If this way thou be directed thou mayst be assured thou shalt obteyne that issue end that Dauid did Thus for the first lesson The second thing I marke here is this I see here that the Lord though he put off and delay the effect of his prayer and granteth not his desire at the first yet he heareth him I shall giue you a certaine argument whereby thou mayst know that the Lord heareth although he delay the effect of thy prayers Continuest thou in prayer hast thou this strength giuen thee to perseuer in suiting any thing Thou mayst be assured he heareth for this is an argument that he heareth thee for naturally our impatiency carieth vs to desperation Our lust is so great specially in spirituall troubles that we cannot continue in suiting When thou therefore continuest in suiting thou mayest be sure that this strength is furnished of God and cometh from heauen If thou haue strength he letteth thee see that he heareth thy prayer though he delay the effect and force thereof yet pray continually This doctrine is so necessary for the troubled conscience that I thinke it is the meetest bridle in the Scripture to restraine our impatiencie It is the meetest bit to hold vs in continuall
sweetnesse whereby I find his wrath pacified I find his furie pacified And were not this taste of mercie I would neuer turne vnto him But from the time that mine heart getteth a taste of his mercy a taste of that peace that passeth all vnderstanding wherby I find his wrath to be pacified the terrors of my conscience to be quieted the fire of his wrath to be quenched then I begin to turne to him to beleeue in him and to apply the promise of mercie in particular to my selfe which I durst in no wise do so long as I felt nothing but the fire of his wrath vpon my conscience Vpon this feeling I say ariseth the application and vpon the application riseth the turning vnto him So this feeling of wrath in order although not in time goeth before the turning vnto God The turning bringeth forth a ioy and gladnesse for mercy that he hath gotten this ioy bringeth forth a loue toward him As the other part bringeth forth an hatred of sin so this part bringeth forth a loue toward God This loue againe bringeth forth a care and studie to please him and this care and studie bringeth forth an appetite of reuenge and indignation against thy corruption so that thou wouldest be reuenged vpon thy corruption which made thee to sinne and offend against him And this part of repentance in respect of the great and manifold effects of it is called Viuification As the other part is called mortification so is this called viuification in respect the Spirit of God maketh a new creation in vs maketh vs vp as new creatures of old endeweth our hearts with new affections our soules with new qualities bringeth forth in vs liuing motions actions and cogitations which are called liuing because as they proceed from a liuing Spirit so they carie vs to life euerlasting They are called also liuing in respect of those dead actions which we brought forth in former times which were called dead not onely in respect that they flowed from the flesh that is from corruption but because they caried vs vnto the death of body and soule In this respect I call this part viuification others call it confession and it getteth this name in respect the soule that is quickned cannot but burst forth into the praise of God and glorifie him with a confession he cannot conceale the kindnesse of God done vnto him but he will confesse it before the world and proclaime the riches of the mercy of God that they may glorifie a common God and Father with him And this confession is the chiefest thing in the earth which the diuell endeuoureth most diligently to stay For as there is nothing in the earth whereby God is glorified more then by a sincere confession so there is nothing in the earth that the diuell trauelleth more to stay then this confesson in respect he seeth God so farre glorified by it The Lord desireth not the death of a sinner he seeketh not the slaughter of his creature he seeketh but the repairing of his owne glory and this he counteth to be done by a sincere confession of thy sinne Therefore it is I say that the diuell laboureth to stay this confession And to hold them from this confession he casteth in the shame of the world the estimation before men this inconuenience that inconuenience For this ye may perceiue of his craft that where shame is and shame should be indeed when the action is in doing there he maketh vs bold and stout But where no shame is and no shame can follow of it where God should be glorified by a confession his Church edified and men moued through their example to do the like there he casteth in shame and maketh them beleeue it is the most shamefull thing that euer they did and all this that the soule should not be saued but holden drowned in his snare for euer and euer Therefore men would be aduertised of this that they be not ashamed to glorifie God with an open confession As they are not ashamed to sinne publikely so they should not be ashamed to confesse it as publikely that God may be glorified Remember this This is not spoken for this Noble mans cause onely It is spoken for euery one of you that are in inferiour ranks that euery one of you may confesse your owne sinnes And seeing this is the craft of the diuell by the holding you backe that ye may damne your soules be ye as careful to win your soules by confessing your sinnes to the world The confession of Dauid Psal. 51. serueth it to his shame or to his honour No of all the deedes that euer he did it is counted in all ages the most notable and honorable deede So let not the diuell deceiue men in this poynt As to the kinde of repentance which proceedeth of desperation it is nothing wo●th it turneth not the heart nor the minde but this repen●ance which turneth the hearts of men proceedeth of the Spirit of Christ. So it is the Spirit of Christ that is the worker of this true dolor and conuersion As to the instruments which he vseth in working of it they are two First the Law next the Gospell He must first bring in the Law to bring vs to the acknowledging of our sinne For except the Law did threaten vs we would neuer come to the knowledge of our sinnes Then next he bringeth in the Gospell the promises of mercy and grace freely offered in Christ and through Christ to all them that beleeue So the Gospell cometh in the second roome By the Gospel he worketh faith after he hath wrought faith he draweth out exhortations out of the Law and out of the Gospell that according to the Law we may conforme our liues and obey the same in all time to come So the Law and the Gospell are the means whereby repentance is wrought in the soule of man exhortations out of the Law and Gospell are the meanes whereby a good life and conuersation is continued among men As to the Author he letteth vs see that this gift groweth not in our owne breasts nor it proceedeth not of our selues nor from any creature in heauen or earth but from God onely it is the gift of God giuen freely for Christ Iesus his sake For ye may consider with your selues and looke how impossible it was to make our selues the sonnes of men far more impossible it is for vs to make our selues the sons of God And by repentance we are made the children of God companions to the Angels and sonnes of light So that the second creation which is wrought in vs by the Spirit of repentance is a farre more great and excellent worke then our first creation in this world In this part of repentance whereby we are assured of the mercy of God as there is a caution in the other part to be obserued so there is a caution here to be taken heed of for our nature
not remained with any nation without error or heresie to long as he hath done with vs So that of all nations we may be counted most vnworthie for this entertainment which we giue to God it is not possible that he can continue his ●esidence with vs if he be handled after this sort For we all King Priest and people haue made defection from God Well the Lord will not wearie himselfe still with vs he will not vexe his righteous Spirit in offering pearles to dogs swine he cannot dwell here Now ye see he is beginning to giue a great part of this nation ouer to a strange delusion ye see by reason they loued not the truth he hath made them to prefer the leauen of the Pharisies to the truth and this is the righteous iudgement of God And whereunto see ye all things worke but vnto an vniuersall confusion So we haue this petition to desire of God That he in his mercie would preuent this vtter extermination which the confusion both in Church and policie visibly portendeth and that he would put it in the hearts of the Magistrates to set to their hand to disburthen the earth of this horrible confusion Now in the second part of this Psalme he testifieth that he made his residence at Shalem by a wonderfull miracle a worke wrought by himselfe onely Againe in the 4. verse we see the place noted where this ouerthrow was giuen As to the place he noteth it by an aduerbe of place There he brake pointing it out with his finger as it were It was done there where God dwelleth there where he hath chosen a lodging to himselfe there this notable ouerthrow was giuen Ye know this and nature hath taught it there is no man will be cast out of his dwelling place willingly but if they presume to cast him foorth he will stand to the defence of his lodging So when these men came to cast God out of his dwelling place he stood to the defence thereof I compared like with like and I shewed that this question flieth in all mens mouthes Where was yonder great ouerthrow giuen It is answered and will be answered about the coasts of the Lords dwelling place there yonder nauie perished They came to cast God out of his Isle but he stood to the defence thereof and shewed he was not ready to remooue And it is certaine there is no external force in the earth that can cast out God except we cast him out by our wicked liues diuellish conuersations he will neuer be cast foorth What great comfort commoditie we haue by this dwelling of God with vs iudge ye Would God he had good neighbourhood For suppose he maketh his residence with vs yet he getteth euill neighbourhood and greater vnquietnesse is not out of hell then he getteth on all sides Well I tell you it is not possible that the Lord can be dislodged by any externall force except we dislodge him by our wicked liues and conuersations he will neuer be dislodged And how farre we are gone forward in this worke the doings of this countrey clearely testifie Let vs see where he may rest where he may make his residence where the cries of murther and blood shall not amaze him Where shall he sit where the clamours of bloud the great complaints cries of oppression shall not astonish him What part is cleane let vs see without horrible blasphemies Wel how is it possible but this way we must lose God and losing God we lose all I shewed you the readie way to entertaine him was that seeing he hath chosen his dwelling place in the hearts and consciences of his owne it is not possible he can be entertained except we take vp a new fashion of doing The manner of doing that we ought to take vp is this Looke what reuerence thou bearest vnto any Prince or Magistrate in the earth externally let the like reuerence be giuen to God inwardly although there be no proportion betweene these two And if the externall reuerence which thou bearest vnto a man be of such force that it will make thee to compose thy gesture and refraine thy tongue that thou burst not foorth into euill speech which may offend him How much more ought the reuerence which we beare to God dwelling within vs by his holy Spirit make vs to refraine from euill thoughts and from wicked and filthie affections For the affections of the heart are as good language to God as the words of the mouth are to any Prince Then I say should not our third petition be this that the Lord would rule our hearts so by his presence that the cogitations thereof molest him not nor the canker of our affections disturbe him not If this be done then God shall make his residence with you Now after he hath noted the place in the 5. verse he enlargeth this worke by a notable comparison in the which he letteth vs see that there is no maiestie nor power in heauen or earth that can come neare in glorie maiestie or power to our great God that is there are no armes force counsell nor endeuour that can preuaile against God So the nations that haue God vpon their side haue moe with them then be against them Vpon this I desired you seeing we haue such an aduantage of the dwelling of God to prepare a cleane chamber where he may make his residence he maketh his residence onely in the hearts of his owne The heart is onely made cleane by faith therefore let vs beg faith that God may rest with vs and God being with vs the enemie shall find moe with vs then with them surprise vs when they will In the 6. and 7. verses he setteth downe more particularly the manner of this great ouerthrow after what sort how easily he accomplished this great worke he letteth vs see all this great victorie did cost him but a word it cost him no more trauell but he commanded the winds and the winds did vndoe them For the Lords rebukes are euer effectuall he proffereth not against his enemies but he layeth on S● this great victorie cost him not 14. or 15. yeares preparation it cost him not millions of gold and leuyings of men part in Spaine and part in the Low-countries it cost him but one word So it could not be that this worke which was so mightily easily done could haue bene done except the Lord had done it Thus farre we proceeded in our last lesson Now to come to our text After that he hath shewed in particular the manner of this deliuerie and letten vs see after what sort and how easily God hath done this worke and after he hath cried out Thou thou art terrible being rauished by the greatnesse of the worke and after that he hath shewed the great infirmitie and weakenesse of the creature so oft as it dare presume to oppose it selfe and match it selfe with the great Creator after he hath done this he insisteth
end that he may draw them by the hand to repentance And now seeing they haue abused the time of his sitting he is euen at the rising And assuredly the Lord shall rise to be reuenged vpon the iniquities of the great men of this Country whose sinnes do so abound And whereby know ye this By one argument which is infallible Examine by your owne wit and iudgement which ye haue of the booke of God and by your naturall iudgement Is it possible that the ground of this country is able to beare a greater birth of iniquitie both in Hie-land Low-land Is it possible that it can be heauier loaden with mischiefe in all corners then it is now Yea the ground must be disburdened of this iniquity where the Leiutenant whō God hath placed ouerseeth it and will not disburden the earth of her birth where the Magistrates that are inferiors neglect their duties of necessity he must extraordinarily from the heauen disburden the earth thereof And surely to let this passe if there were no more but these horrible confusions in all parts which no man can ouertake it appeareth that the Iudge of the world himselfe shall come downe shortly to disburden it And why Because I see all tokens that go immediatly before his cōming to be already passed faith is skarslie to be found yea no faith in promises much lesse faith in Christ Iesus For iniquity aboundeth so and there are so many confusions left vnouertaken by the Magistrate that it appeareth clearely ●he Iudge himselfe must needes come and that the Iudge of the world shall be the first that shall redresse this confusion And seeing it is so it becometh not vs to be idle for surely the time draweth neare And if the time shall be shortened for the elects cause now I thinke it shall be shortened for the cries of the poore of this land Therfore it is no time for vs to sleepe It is time for vs to prepare to go meete that great Iudge now whilst oyle is offered abundantly buy oyle to your lamps for so soone as the Trumpet blowes and that he is making homeward from the cloudes to his Fathers dwelling from whence he shall come it is no time to haue our oyle to seeke Now we haue this oyle of gladnesse freely offered Therfore it becometh you to prepare your selues that when he cometh whether it be at night or in the morning by night or by day he may not finde you vnawares These iniquities and wickednesse of the heart of man are so deepe that if the Ethnik might say iustlie that the labyrinths deceits of the hart of man are infinite how much more may we speak it hauing Ierem. his warrant who calleth it deepe and inscrutable aboue all things Ierem. 17. It is time therefore that we be busie in seeking the renewing breaking and humiliation of our hearts for the outward scarre suppose it appeareth to be whole where the inward is festered it auaileth nothing but maketh it to fester againe Therefore now it is time to study to haue your hearts broken for once they must be broken ere they be healed Once they must be low ere they be high For thine heart that was neuer touched with any sense of thine owne sinne and feeling of Gods iudgement knew neuer what the taste of mercy meant For there is no way to go to heauen but by the gates of hel Therefore it is time to beg of God that he would bring your hearts to that estate that ye may know your sin sorrow for it and that he may prepare your hearts so that ye may looke for the accomplishment of your happinesse in his coming And where the hart is so desirous of that day it may be welcome come when it will The Lord of heauen prepare your hearts It is not possible that this can be done O Lord except thou by the mighty power of thy Spirit humble them and hammer downe this naturall hardnes that is in them otherwise our hearts wil neuer giue obedience to thee Therfore O Lord worke it Now in the end of the verse he letteth vs see to what end the Lord rise and executed iudgment The chiefe cause that mooued him to rise was the poore and oppressed in all corners of the earth The great complaint and crie of the people in all countries was the cause why God did rise Examine then and try hath not God good cause to rise in this countrie I know wel there can not be more complaints of the poore in a countrie then in this so that it is no maruell but he rise and that suddainlie he is like vnto himselfe no was of before Then these great complaints and cries of the poore must make him to rise as ye haue it Psal. 12. And if they preuent no● his rising terrible shall it be to the wicked for euer with the saluation of his owne the destruction of his enemies is ioyned And out of these both saluation destruction he maketh himselfe to be glorified Then I would these bloudie men and oppressors that renowne themselues with shame and ignominie knew that the Lord will ris● and that shortly except they preuent him whereof I see no appearance In the tenth verse he letteth vs see to what purpose the great furie of these men serueth and in the beginning he letteth vs see it with a constant affirmation Surely surely the rage of men shall turne to his praise Their greatest rage and highest furie is the highest matter of the Lords praise That same fury and rage whereby they thinke to dishonour God and ouerwhelme his Church he turneth to the contrary and maketh out of that same furie his owne glorie and the deliuery of his Church to shine The Lord is a wonderfull workman he bringeth about his purpose in such sort that he can draw out light out of darknesse and bring forth his owne praise out of their greatest rage Haue ye not seene this from time to time hath he not made his greatest enemies to testifie it and drawne a confession out of their owne mouthes Ye reade in the historie of Iulian the Apostata when he was in his greatest rage and in the top of his fury prouoking Christ to the combat in that high rage whilest he draweth his weapon to strike our head he striketh himselfe and after he had giuen himselfe a deadly wound he bursteth foorth and saith at the last Thou hast won ô Galilean so out of his owne mouth the Lord drew a confession of this praise Ye reade in the 6. of Exod. of those inchanters that opposed themselues to Moses and Aaron and counterfeited all that they did vntill it came to the plague of Lice there they stand and say It is the finger of the Lord as if they would say This plague is done by the mightie hand and power of God onely we are not able to counterfeit it Here we see they are compelled out of their owne mouth to confesse