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A03465 The historie of Adam, or the foure-fold state of man, vvell formed in his creation, deformed in his corruption, reformed in Grace, and perfected in glory. By Mr. Henry Holland, late preacher at Saint Brides Church in London Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603.; Topsell, Edward, 1572-1625? 1606 (1606) STC 13587; ESTC S104152 275,758 386

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earth confer Act. 28.25 Esay 6.8.9 The fourth and Last branch what God is this can hee best teach thee who discribes himselfe vnto vs in termes and words fitting our capacitie on this manner Exod 3.14 I am that I am say vnto the children of Israell I am hath sent me vnto you Exod. 34.5.6.7 The Lord proclaimed the name of the Lord saying The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gracious slow to anger and abundant in goodnesse and truth reseruing mercie for thousands forgiuing iniquitie and transgression and sinne and not making the wicked innocent visiting the iniquitie of the fathers vpon the children and vpon childrens children vnto the third and fourth generations Quest 54. What is the second point of obedience here commaunded Ans To loue the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy Soule and with all thy * Or thought Deut. 6.4.5 Mat. 22.37 Luke 10.37 Cant. 8.6.7 minde and with all thy strength Mar. 12.30 To submit my selfe in all powers of my soule and parts of my body vnto Iehoua and to make more account of him and his will then of all the wicked yea then of mine owne saluation if they could come in question and comparison together The Lord in that Scripture so often repeted first would haue vs banish and endeuour to cast forth continually all things contrary to his lawe that our mindes may not think of them nor our affections desire nor our hearts embrace and entertaine them Secondly when wee doe him any seruice hee would haue vs to doe it with such cheerefulnesse as that no part of vs within or without sit idle but that wee striue with all our might to expresse the good affection of our hearts in his seruice The minde must discerne him the soule desire him the heart must receiue him and lodge him 1. Thes 5.25 for thou must loue thy neighbour as thy selfe but God aboue thy selfe neuer prize him and his loue with any thing Motiues to stir vp our hearts to loue God are these Reasons to moue vs to loue God First for that his loue is the onely fountaine and first cause of all our happinesse Ephe. 1.4 The first cause of our election The first cause of our creation Psal 8. The first cause of our redemption Ioh. 3.16 The first cause of our vocation Rom. 8.29 The first cause of our adoption iustification and sanctification Rom. 8.15 Ephe. 1.13 The fountaine and first cause of our loue for we loue him because his loue is shed into our hearts Rom. 5.4.5 and wee loue him because hee loued vs first 1. Ioh. 4.19 Quest 55. What vndoubted signes bee there of the true loue of God Ans First loue must issue out of a cleare heart from a good conscience and from faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 So that if a man find himselfe to haue these three in any good measure hee may bee well assured his loue to God is sound for before that faith purge the heart Act. 15.9 and bring to our consciences a discharge from our sins in the blood of Christ Heb. 9.14 we can neuer truely loue God When Maries sins were so giuen her shee burneth in loue towards Christ and would signifie her loue by all meanes possibly that shee can Luke 7.47 for which cause Christ gaue this testimonie of her many sinnes are forgiuen her the true marke whereof is this shee loued much Secondly the infallible mark of our loue to God is our loue to his word Prou 2.1.6 Psal 119.11 Luk ● 19 59. Luk● 8. Act. 16. This saith Christ If any man loue me he will keep my word and my father will loue him and wee will come and dwell with him he that loueth not mee keepeth not my word Iohn 14.23 Thirdly this word wee must not onely keepe vnto our selues Luk. 22.32 but carefully labour to communicate the same vnto others to draw others to serue the Lord specially vnto our children and familie Deut. 6.5.6.7 These words which I command thee this day Exod 12.26 Gen. 18 19. Iosh 24 15. 1. Cor. 31.2 Rom. 2.18 Heb. 5.11.12 shall be in thine hart and thou shalt rehearse them continually vnto thy children thou shalt talk of thē when thou tarriest in thine house and as thou walkest by the way and whē thou lyest down when thou risest vp otherwise in blind families men loue their horses better then their children Fourthly a fourth vndoubted signe wee loue God is the loue of our brethren 1. Iohn 3.14 We know we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren he that loueth not his brethren abideth in death 1. Iohn 4.19.20 If any man say I loue God and hate his brother he is a lyer for how can he that loueth not his brother whom hee hath seene loue God whom hee hath not seene Fiftly to reioyce to think of Christ and to talke of Christ Gal. 6.14.15 Sixtly to desire Christs presence aboue all things and to mourne for his absence Can. 5.6 Seauently to loue all things that appertaine vnto him and his seruice Eightly to esteeme greatly of Gods graces 1. Cor. 2.2 Phil. 3.8.9 Ninthly to call vpon his name with boldnesse and with a good conscience Heb. 10.19.22 and Chapter 4.16 Quest 56. What is the third branch of obedience required in this Law Ans Trust in God and an holy affiance proceeding from a liuely faith in Iesus Christ Ephe. 3.12 Wee must know God that wee may beleeue in him and loue him wee must beleeue in him and loue him before wee can assuredly trust in him and rest and wait vpon his prouidence and holy will A man is said truely to trust in God when hauing a comfortable perswasion and answere by Gods spirit of the pardon of sinnes and grace in Christ Iesus Psal 37.2.3.4.5.6.7 delighteth in the Lord studying to please him committing and commending all his affaires vnto God waiting patiently on the Lord in all dangers because he seeth his goodnesse in Christ and his almightie power to deliuer him and the signes and marks of this holy affiance and trust in God are these First to doe good Psal 37.3 hee is bountifull and good to many for he is well assured God will repay it againe Psal 112. Iob. 21.22 Secondly to delight in the Lord. Psal 37.4 looke what friend wee know best loue best and trust most in him wee delight most Thirdly hope followeth also this holy affiance and trust in God and this is a quiet expectation of helpe from God in all future euents Psal 37.5 deuolue thy way that is thine affaires on the Lord and trust in him and he will bring it to passe for patience is the daughter of God and faith which bringeth quietnesse if not cheerefulnesse in present euils Contrary to this hope are to seeke to vnlawfull meanes in troubles as Saul did 1. Sam. 28. and Ahaziah to witchcraft 2. King 1.2.3 and those distrustfull cares forbidden by Christ Mat.
watchfulnesse and sobrietie that so the whole man may bee seruisable to God and men and for this the wise Phisition is appointed of God to direct vs. 1. Chro. 15. And here we bee commanded to attend Gods ordinance in phisicke for the restoring and repairing of our health beeing lost first praying for the pardon of sinnes Iohn 5.5 and reconciliation with God that so his blessing may bee vpon the meanes which hereunto by his good prouidence he hath appointed Mat. 9.2 2. Chron. 16.12 A louing tender heart Thirdly louing tendernesse of heart to our brethren and all mercifulnesse is here commanded purge the heart of all anger and crueltie and bee filled with bowels of compassion This heart was in Ioseph Gen. 43.30 his bowels were inflamed towards his brethren This heart was in Moses Num. 12.3 Exod. 32. This heart was in Christ Mat. 9.36 This heart had Paul Rom. 9.2.5 for thus he testifieth of himselfe I am moued towards you with the bowels of Christ or of compassion Phil. 1.8.9 This heart is knowne by these markes following First it reioyceth in the good and prosperitie of other men Rom. 12.15 Secondly it mournes for the miseries of men Esay 24.16 Psal 119.136 Thrirdly it is ready to help Io. 20.15 most chreerefully and willingly 2. Cor. 8.3 without delay Prou. 3.28 Fourthly this heart is not lightly offended nor offending Phil. 1.9 but ready to pardon many offences Eph. 4.32 Fiftly this heart is carefull to auoid all occasions of offence Gen. 13.8 euen with the losse of his owne right Mat. 17.26 Sixtly this heart ouercomes euill with goodnesse Rom. 12.21 and with patience 1. Cor. 13.4 couering infirmities with the garment of compassion Prou. 17.9 Fourthly A louing cheerful countenance is required the louing countenance must testifiie of the affections of our hearts a soure countenance is the brand of an hypocrite and of an euill heart then a cheerfull countenance must attend the mercifull and good heart Mat. 6.16 and it is seemely in the godly for a cheerfull heart causeth a good cheerefull countenance Prou. 15.13 and they allow all true ioyes Iob with his graue and cheerfull countenance cheered many hearts Chap. 29.24 All godlesse men are cheered vp and comforted with false ioyes the true beeleeuer onely knowes that the kingdome of heauen is righteousnes peace and ioy in the holy Ghost And yet this cheerfull countenance may not want grauitie and sobrietie for laughter is a signe of folly Sirach 19.27 Eccles. 2.2 Iobs smiling gaue none occasion of offence Chap. 29.24 If I laughed on them they beleeued it not Mercifulnesse and wisedome in the gouernment of the tongue for by my cheerefulnesse I gaue them none occasion of libertie vnto sinne Neither did they cause the light of my countenance to fall they were so afraid to offend me Fiftly Mercie and loue must bee manifested in the tongue by good speeches first soft wise and louing answeres Prou. 15.1 Secondly in being the mouth of the poore widow fatherlesse and stranger in iudgement When the eare heard mee it blessed me and when the eye saw me it gaue witnes vnto mee And againe ver 21. Vnto me men gaue eare and waited and held their tongue at my counsell Iob. 29.11 Iob againe testifieth of his loue in these words I deliuered the poore that cryed and the fatherlesse and him that had none to help him the blessing of him that was ready to perish call vpon me and I caused the widowes heart to reioyce Thirdly in blessing and praising God and in prayer for our brethren Mat. 5. Fourthly in feeding and winning soules by holy admonishion Prou. 12.10 Our mercifulnesse must appeare in our actions Sixtly Our mercifulnesse and loue must not onely be in word but also in our deeds and actions for euery man shall bee iudged according to his works Mat. 25.41 Es 58.10 And yet Saint Iohn proceedeth further saying that we must not onely relieue them with our goods but also if need require for the good of the Church wee must bee ready to lay downe our liues for our brethren 1. Ioh. 3.16 But Christ would haue our loue also manifested to our enemies as in words so in deeds Mat. 5.44 and 48. doe good euen to your enemies Mercifulnesse manifested by other vertues Seauenthly our mercifulnesse and loue is manifested also in the Church and must bee by these vertues following First there must bee in vs a sound vprightnesse and puritie of minde which as it cannot abide the neighbour to be vniustly blamed by any sinister dealings so it can not hide his sinnes and faults for his good when occasion is offered of Christian admonition Leu. 19.17 Secondly by gentlenesse which is to refraine our selues from reuenge when iust cause of offence is giuen vs as Dauid to Shemei 2. Sam. 16. Thirdly by liberalitie which is a mercifull and free distribution with iudgement giuing to euery man according to their speciall wants Psal 112.4 Fourthly by friendship which is a good will beetweene two equalls to performe all duties of loue the one to the other True friendship is a fruite of Godlinesse seasoned with good affection confirmed with grauitie and sobrietie preserued with constancie proued by sympathie and continued with mutuall pledges of loue in all well doing Fiftly by concord and consent of mindes this stirreth vs vp to all beneuolence and causeth a carefull respect of all superiours inferiours and equals gladding the hearts of men as it were with a milde sweete and comfortable harmonie Examination of the Conscience First here must bee a carefull examination of the heart and conscience for if the murtherer lye fast bound vnder the curse and condemnation of God and was neuer as yet translated from death to life and next that hee which hateth his brother is a murtherer then it standeth euery man in hand to search faithfully his owne heart and if there thou findest any crueltie anger enuie hatred wrath mallice or any such Serpents bred and harbored in thee thy conscience cries guiltie and this Law condemnes thee Secondly examine thy selfe with what crueltie and inhumanitie thou hast abused the good creatures of God how improuident and carelesse thou hast beene for the life of man and beast if thy conscience herein plead guiltie this Law condemnes thee Thirdly examine thy selfe how negligently thou hast respected the state and life of thy soule how carelesse for thy saluation and the meanes of it and with what sinnes of intemperancie and incontinency thou hast impaired the health and shortened the life of thy bodie if thy conscience crie guiltie this Law condemnes thee Fourthly examine thy self whether thou hast been a scornfull Ishmaell or a dogged bitter Nabal with any euill gesture countenance or otherwise disgracing or greeuing any man if thy conscience plead guiltie this Law condemnes thee Fiftly inquire also how thou hast offended God in the sinnes of the tongue as in bitter words railing reuiling backbiting slandering clamors
recouered then this for a fallen witnesse is like an hammer a Sword and sharpe Arrow Prou. 25.18 which wound so dangerously as that few so wounded can be preserued with life And that if thou takest away a mans good name thou dost not onely hurt his heart and life but thou makest him also vnprofitable to many which bee to receiue good by him In giuing testimonie euer remēber these foure poynts first set God and his truth before thy face and remember thou standest in his presēce who searcheth harts Ps 129. Secondly away with affections feare loue and hatred cast thou far from thee Thirdly consider well the cause and matter and not the person of any man Fourthly doe neither adde nor detract from the matter bee it good or euill Secondly the Lord here condemneth all such his vicegerents as peruert iudgement and iustice And here to waigh rightly the greatnesse of this sinne first wee are to remember that God is the Lord of all iustice and true iudgement wherefore their sinne is great if they which occupie his place and stand in his steade peruert iustice and iudgement in his name such corrupt Seruants prouoke him greatly which defile the Lords throne and holy seate of iustice Secondly his great charge ought euer to bee remembred Leu. 19.15 Yee shall not doe vniustly in iudgement for this cause make diligent inquisition Deut. 19.16 Doe as Iob did Chap. 29.12 He sought out the truth and pluckt out the pray out of the vnrighteous mans teeth And take heede of gifts for they blinde the eyes of the wise and peruert the words of the righteous Exod. 23.6.7.8 Quest 148. Proceed to the affirmatiue part Ans First here the Lord chargeth vs that wee haue a religious care for the gaining and preseruation of our owne good name Phillip 4.8 and estimation in his Church and among his people hereof hee warneth vs often in many Scriptures how precious a blessing our good name is A good name is better then a sweet oyntment it comforteth the heart of him which hath it it increaseth marrow and fatnesse in his bones Prou. 22.1 and 15.30 And againe The righteous shall be had in an euerlasting remembrance Psal 112.6 And the memorie of the iust shall be blessed but the wicked shall rot Prou. 10.7 And Salomon assureth vs it is more to be valued then great riches and the price of it is aboue siluer and gold Prou. 22.1 And assuredly the faithfull haue so esteemed it in all ages and seruing God in faith and feare obtained such a name as make them shine like starres and pearles to their great honour before God men and Angels Heb. 11.2 And we are to remember that this grace being lost the best works of men haue lost their grace crowne and credit Gen. 34.30 A good name may not vnfitly be thus described It is a good report for walking in faith and godlinesse with God Description in loue sobrietie and iustice before men without reproofe First that this grace is obtained by faith in Iesus Christ Heb. 11. ver 2. and 39. are cleere proofes Next that this oyntment is compounded of other vertues richly prized with God and his people is no lesse manifest by the testimonie of the same spirit If a good name then must bee purchased by faith and a vertuous conuersation then the first step to it must bee this first to auoid grose sinnes for it is impossible that we should haue faith to please God if wee haue neuer repented vs of dead workes Heb. 6.1 if wee liue and lie in sinne against knowledge and conscience Next wee must also carefully auoide light sinnes as the world accounts them for that is true which Salomon speaketh Like as dead flyes cause to stinck and putrifie the oyntment of the Apothecarie so doth a little folly him that is in estimation for wisedome and for glory Thirdly wee must also with no lesse watchfulnesse auoyde all occasions of sinne in our selues and all occasions of euill reports against our selues The second step to a good name is to bee rich in faith and good workes for they which shall endeuour to honour God in both Mat. 5.16 God will honour them Deu. 26.19 1. Sam. 2.30 Secondly the Lord giueth vs here a speciall charge to speake the truth in all affaires and occasions of this life but then most heedefully when wee are called into his presence into the assemby of Gods into the place of iudgement and iustice which is a type on earth of Gods throne in heauen Zach. 8.16.17 Thirdly here to keepe vs in the obedience of this Law wee must bee mindefull of these rules following First to reioyce when wee heare well of any mans good name and fame Rom. 1.8 Secondly to shew all curtesie and loue to others by countenance word and action Tit. 3.2 Thirdly to giue all doubtfull reports of our brethren the best interpretation 1. Cor. 13.7 Fourthly to reiect all euill reports and flying tales tending to disgrace any man Prou. 25.23 Fiftly to couer infirmities what may bee Prou. 10.12 Sixtly to bee euer plaine and simple without colour or sucke or fraude in any matter 2. Cor. 1.12 Examination of the Conscience First inquire diligently how thy heart is affected towards other men specially thine acquaintance whether thou dost inwardly in heart carry any hard conceits and euill surmises against any man whether in obseruing other folks words and deedes thou hast wrested and constrained them to the worse part if thy consceince plead guiltie this Law condemnes thee Secondly whether thou hast enuied maligned or beene grieued in heart for the graces of God on other men Psal 37. or for their wellfare and prosperitie or whether thou hast wished in heart the downe-fall or disgrace of any man if thy conscience pleads guiltie this Law condemnes thee Thirdly whether thou hast discouered thy neighbours infirmities or any of his secrets to his griefe shame and disgrace or whether thou hast by any sinister meanes gone about to learne the secrets of other men with any purpose to lay them open to their disgrace if thy conscience pleads guiltie this law condemnes thee Fourthly whether thou hast sought by foolish iesting mocking taunting or gibing any way to disgrace other men or to impaire the credit countenance of any by such vaine courses if thy conscience pleads giuiltie this law condemnes thee Fiftly whether by smoothing soothing flattering speeches thou hast hardned any man in his sinnes or extenuated grose sins as light faults if thy conscience pleads guiltie this law condemnes thee Sixtly whether thou hast spoken any vntruth or lye to the disgrace of any man or dissembled the truth or not vttered and maintained it when and as often as iust occasion was offred for the vpholding of any mans credit if thy conscience pleads guiltie this law condemnes thee Seauenthly whether thou hast purposely and wittingly depraued the good speeches or the good proceedings of any man or prouoked others
11. Chapter to the Hebrewes that all the Fathers martyrs and godly men dead before Christ which subdued kingdomes quenched the violence of the fire stopped the mouthes of Lyons and wrought righteousnesse and obtained the promises are ascended into glory And touching the vse of this title I will omit it leauing euery one to the particular application of it to himselfe Thirdly and lastly I might adde vnto these the great supper the Lambes mariage the time of refreshing and many other such titles but I spare them and will adde onely this one which is Saint Pauls Rom. 6. ver 23. The gift of God is life eternall through Iesus Christ our Lord so that there it is called life eternall Quest 64. I pray you open vnto mee that terme aboue the residue Ans Life is the thread whereupon all our estates depend for which not onely the reasonable man laboureth but also the brute beasts yea euery mans bloud heart braine liuer arteries spirits and veines desire to retaine life for by vertue of life wee mooue that is eate drink ride play labour runne loue hate desire obtaine and doe all things and for the life wee beg craue spend worke trauaile endure torments medicines ambustions searings sawings and many other miseries Et si vita transitus tantum diligitur quomodo diligeretur si permaneret If the life that is transitory bee thus much loued how would it bee loued if it were permanent and constant First therefore by life we vnderstand a perfect life without annoyance wherein the soule liueth not onely in a corner of his castle and light shineth out but of the window or the Sunne sheweth weakely but that euery sence be absolute the eye to see and not to bee dazeled with any obiect the eare to heare both the lowest and lowdest voyce the heart and affections to desire loue hate delight know and possesse without feare want care ignorance cumberance or any interruption and generally there must bee wanting all that wee call the punishment of sinne for they are parts of death and therefore enemies to life But the iust must liue in most resplendent manner They must not bee tireable with labour nor weake nor heauy nor dull nor want any part but life is perfect and therefore they must bee able to leape ouer any wall to passe in at any doore to ouercome any beast or aduersary and finally to shew all the spirit and noble parts together and not successiuely And this was it which was signified by the Lord. Reue. 21.5 He shall wipe away all teares euery sorrow and cause of lamentation is a kind of death contrary to the true acception of life and enuy killeth the bones An other thing which belongeth to our glorified estate is the perfect knowledge that wee shall then haue of the inuisible God for wee now heare of many things but cannot come to their assurance otherwise then by a liuely faith but then wee shall see face to face the former parts of God and know perfectly all those things whereof wee are now ignorant But this limitation that wee must not thinke to know the diuinitie in perfection for that is infinite and we are vtterly vncapeable of that accomplished maiestie in so large manner as it is in it selfe There is a story of a certaine man which promised to tell what God was and all that euer hee was another to shew him his vanitie went to the sea side and digged three small pits along the same in his presence not telling what was his intention but onely desired him to consider what hee was doing At last they being made this man that could declare all that the diuinitie was asked him for what cause hee made those three holes or small pits hee receiued answere I make them said the labourer to empty all the water of the sea into these three whereat the great learned man laughed that there should bee such a doult in the world as could imagine so impossible a thing and shewed him his folly then sayd the other if I bee so foolish to endeauour to emptie all the water out of the sea into these three pits or holes how much more foolish art thou to vndertake a demonstration of the infinite maiestie of God which is greater then the sea higher then the heauens broader then from East to West and euery way insearchable So indeede it is sufficient that wee shall bee filled with the knowledge of God so much as wee are capeable of and are able to receiue for a barrell cannot containe a tonne nor an ell cannot reach a mile The Prophets widdow had all the vessels shee brough filled with oyle and so shall wee bee filled with the knowledge of him in his kingdome for this knowledge Iohn 17.3 is life eternall when there shall bee no language but wee shall bee able to interprete it no reason or riddle but wee shall be able to open and vnfold it no question or obiection but to answere it no article of religion but to beleeue embrace it no darke saying in the holy word of God but wee shall vnderstand it and nothing straunge in nature or any naturall thing but wee shall discusse and declare it like as Iotham could his owne riddle Lord how doe wee labour and trauaile euen in the greatest matters of the world without certaine knowledge especially of God wee grope at noone dayes and with all our candels and lanthornes wee cannot see him but in a glasse but then shall wee know his loue his mercy his iustice his wisdome his strength his wrath his riches his honour and his sauing health Quest 65. But as wee shall know God so perfectly whom wee neuer saw in perfection so I would gladly know whether we shall know one another in the next life and take acquaintance to our mutuall ioy as here friends doe which meete after long absence Ans I thinke there need not bee any question of this mater but rather wee should labour to know the meanes of comming to heauen then trouble our heads about the glory and ioyes wee shall receiue there what a vaine thing is it for a merchant to boast what things hee will doe at Ierusalem when hee commeth thither and in the meane time hath neither ship nor money nor knowledge of the way nor any necessary prouision to carry him to Ierusalem so it fareth with them that make these questions whom they shall know whether their old friends and acquaintance what talke and conference of worldly passed matters O fooles first of all learne how to come thither and bee assured of the right way then shalt thou not need to care for any other matter I will neuer trouble my selfe about two things first about the fashion colour and brokennesse of my carkeise in the graue without skin without forme without life secondly about the friends and acquaintance I shall haue in heauen till I come there But to satisfie this question least any part of heauenly glory
to doe the like or allowed and approued or defended this practice in any man if thy conscience pleads guiltie this Law condemnes thee Eightly whether thou hast amplified the faults of any man his words or actions making them more grieuous then they were that thereby the person might bee more odious and vile before men if thy conscience pleads guiltie this law condemnes thee Ninthly whether thou hast at any time by slanders and false reports sought to insinuate thy selfe into the fauours of any man to the ouerthrow disgrace or hurt of any man if thy conscience pleads guiltie this Law condemnes thee Tenthly whether thou hast or dost accustome thy selfe idlie or vainely to walke about to know learne and carrie and tell tales and newes if thy conscience pleads guiltie this Law condemnes thee Eleauenthly whether thou hast receiued approued intertained Calumniations Libels false reports against any person if thy conscience pleads guiltie this Law condemnes thee Twelfthly whether thou hast spoken any vntruth in place of iudgement for then thy sin is the greater or hast brought any complaint or crime beefore the higher power or into any place of iustice to the hurt of any man and not for the iust and good causes which could not otherwise bee cured and amended if thy conscience pleads guilty this Law condemnes thee Thirteenth inquire all such as occupie the seats of iudgement and iustice as Iudges Aduocates and such like whether they make diligent inquisition for the truth whether they haue receiued gifts or for any respect patronized knowen euill causes acquited felonious persons or condemned the innocent or expounded the Law against knowledge and conscience to the hurt of any man or giuen sentence without any good care of the right force of hearing and examining proofes and testimonies if for any such cause thy conscience plead guiltie this Law condemnes thee Fourteenth inquire whether being a Notary or Scricbe thou hast in any writings added or detracted any thing to the obscuring or corrupting of any good cause or truth in hand to the breding of errour or any contention among men if thy conscience pleads guiltie this Law condemnes thee Fifteenth Inquire with what care and conscience thou hast labored and endeuored to purchase for thy selfe a good name credit and estimation among gods people or hauing a good name for to preserue or being lost or impaired by thine owne or other mens default how thou hast sought by good meanes to repaire it if thou hast neglected these things thy conscience pleads guilty and this law condemnes thee Sixteenth and lastly inquire whether thou dost not studie with all courtesie and loue with all plainnesse and simplicitie to liue and conuerse with men to the good of others to the hurt of no man if thy conscience accuse thee of any negligence or vnfaithfulnesse in procuring grace to any man according to his iust desert when it lyes in thy power to doe it thy conscience pleads guiltie and this law condemns thee The Tenth Law Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours House thou shalt not couet thy neighbours Wife nor his Man-seruant nor hid Oxe nor his Asse nor any thing that is his Question 149. I Pray you giue vs first some generall view of this Law Answere It plainly appeareth by this Law that the loue of God and of our neighbour and not selfe loue is the keeping of the Commandements and that hee liueth best and most holy that so much as may bee liueth and traueleth most for the good of other men and that no man liueth worse and more wickedly then he that liueth and traueleth most for him selfe The Scope of this Law is to humble vs with the sight of our naturall corruption and infection and to banish out of the heart all lusts contrary to the rules of pietie and loue and to cause vs to entertaine with minde and heart all good thoughts godly meditations and desires tending to gods glory and the good of men That wee the better see into this Law to our profit and good let vs follow this order first inquire the sence of the words next to consider the matter what is condemned and commanded in this Law and lastly let vs consider the excellencie of this Law how it differeth from the other nine Commandements and can not well bee knowen much lesse practised of any but of the beleeuer and the man truely renued by the spirit of grace First the Sence Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours house The Apostle expounds these words 1. Cor. 13. ver 5. when hee saith that loue thinketh none euill much lesse desires the hurt of the neighbour in any thing that is his House Wife c These specials are named because the thoughts of mens hearts doe most runne vpon these things which dailie meet vs in this life And by these the Lord condemnes all vaine desires and wandring thoughts of the like kinde whatsoeuer Secondlie what this Law condemneth and commandeth The tenth Law first condemneth in vs first our owne nature as vncleane and accursed Eph. 2.3 for that wee are altogether polluted with that originall corruption which by propagation hath ouerspred and infected all man kinde Rom. 5.12 Secondly for our vncleane lusts thoughts and secret motions which bee in our hearts either proceed from that corruption which hath poysoned our whole nature or be iniected into vs by Sathan or bee kindled by Sathan and our owne flesh both conspiring as it were for our perdition Thirdly for the want of originall iustice and integritie Secondly it commandeth vs first to labour with God and in all the holie meanes he hath giuen vs for a pure and cleane a Tit. 1.15 1. Tim. 1.15 heart or as Saint Peter speaketh that wee may bee pertakers of a Godlie b 2. Pet. 1.4 or diuine nature Secondly to endeuour that our hearts at all times and in all places may bee filled with good motions c Deu. 6.5 Luke 10 27. good thoughts good desires towards God and men Thirdly to crucifie d Gal. 5.24 Rom. 7.22 1. Pet. 2.9.10.11 and to fight all the daies of our life against the flesh with the affections and lusts Quest 150. Now proceede to giue vs a more speciall and cleare sight of the first euill condemned in this Law Ans First here I say then that this Law condemnes our verie nature as vncleane and that hitherto the Lord hath by the former Lawes but cut downe the branches now he smites downe the roote and whole bodie of sinne That our whole nature is infected First God himselfe testifieth whose spirit in his seruants speakes on this manner Iob. 14 4. Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse And againe Chap. 15.14.15.16 What is man that he should bee cleane and hee that is borne of a woman that he should be iust Behold he found no stedfastnesse in his Saints yea the Heauens are not cleane in his sight how much more is man abhominable and filthie which drincketh
say sought vnto Christ to bee purged and healed of thy running sores or rather when Christ hath cryed in thine eares Prou. 1. Reue. 3. and offred himselfe vnto thee thou hast not hardned thine heart and resisted the heauenly calling of God and the motions of his holy spirit if thy conscience herein pleades guiltie this law condemnes thee Sixtly inquire with what inward affections and loue thou hast sought the good of thy neighbour for if in procuring his good thou hast labored but in the outward as is for forme sake and to bee seene of men and not with inward affection thy conscience pleads gultie and this law condemnes thee Seauenthly inquire what holy thoughts what Godly meditations what profitable and pertinent discourses of minde concerning God and Godlinesse thou hast how thou hast diuided thy times reseruing a good portion dailie for the exercises of godlinesse to bee spent specially in holy meditations and praiers for if these holy exercises bee wanting thy conscience pleads guiltie and this Law condemnes thee Quest 153. Thus farre haue wee seene the sence and meaning of the decalouge what the Lord commendeth and what hee condemneth in his people and how far this most holie Law excelleth all the Lawes of men Now proceede yet a little further and tell mee first how and in what sence this Law is said to bee abrogate by the Messias Ans The Iewes had three distinct kindes of Lawes giuen them of the Lord The Ceremoniall the Iudiciall and the Morall The Ceremoniall did serue the infancie and pedagogie of the old Church Heb. 1.1 for the Lord by shadowes and pictures of heauenly things in diuerse formes and measures manifested his will vnto his people Of these the Prophets testified they should haue an end and cease at the comming of Christ for wee neede not the picture when the bodie is present Daniell 9.27 The complement of his prophecie wee see in the practise of the Apostles Act. 15.9 and ver 28.29 And the Apostle assureth vs they were but shadowes of things to come and the bodie or substance of them was to bee found in Christ Heb. 7 and 10. Chapter Col. 2.16 The Iudiciall Lawes so farre as they respect that kingdome onelie began and ended with it but so farre as they haue a common equitie concerning the good of all mankinde they binde all kingdomes throughout all generations The morall Law is not abrogate nor neuer shall cease to the worlds end The curse onely annexed thereunto is abrogate to all such as are found to be in Christ for there is no condemnation to any one of them Rom. 8.1 And whereas the Apostle saith wee are freed from the Law and bee vnder grace Rom. 6.14 Hee doth plainely expresse himselfe that hee meaneth not that wee are exempted from the obedience of the Law morall but onely from the curse of it for so hee speaketh Gal. 3. Christ hath freed vs from the curse of the Law for that hee was made a curse for vs. And as touching our holie obedience to it This is the end of all Gods fauours vpon vs 1. Iohn 3.6.8 and the cause wherefore Christ hath losened vs from the bands of the Diuell sinne and death that wee might serue him in holinesse and true righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Luke 1. Quest 154. How may the true Christian performe obedience to the morall Law acceptable vnto God Ans The question is not who can or how wee may worke perfect righteousnesse for if any could worke perfect righteousnesse the Apostle would soone conclude that for such Christ died in vaine Gal. 2.21 But how a man may serue and please God in the obedience of this Law the answere is in and through Iesus Christ more distinctly in the true seruant of God these things are required first Iohn 3. Ephe. 4.18 that the spirit of grace and regeneration haue quickned him and put the life of God in him for before this grace hee is reputed of God as dead Eph. 2.1 and a dead man can not work the workes of God beefore his first repentance and freedome from dead works Iob. 6.2 Secondly if after grace receiued this man fall to sinne against God hee must recouer the former state againe by renuing his repentance beefore that in any worke hee can please God This is cleare in Dauid who during his continuance in sinne and before his humiliation Psal 51. could not please God The third point required in vs to make vs fit to serue God is a singular delight in the Law of God this also is commended vnto vs in Dauids practise Psal 1.2 and 119. ver 14.16.24.47.92 The fourth poynt is faith in Christ for without it all is but sinne Rom. 14.23 Faith will finde an allowance for euerie thought and iudge it by the word and desire an exceptance for euery thing in Christ The fift point is earnest prayer vnto God that he would renue our strength by a new supplie of grace The verie Apostles desire others to bee mindefull for them in this dutie that they may more faithfully serue Christ in the ministrie of the Gospell Ephes 6.14 Col. 4.3 Heb. 13.27 2. Thes 3.1 Quest 155. What are the speciall vses of the Morall Law Ans First we learne thereby the originall iustice and perfection of our first parents for they could obserue it and contrarily wee see by our natiue and inherent corruption for there is as it were a Law and poyson rather in our members continually rebelling against the Law of God Secondly it is a glasse for vs whereby wee may daylie view and beewaile our deformitie that beeing so humbled wee may runne to Christ Rom. 7.7 and 3.20 Gal. 3. Thirdly By it also the faithfull must bee directed as by a lanterne in euery good way to serue God in soule spirit and body in thought word and deed Psal 119. Fourthly it forewarneth vs also of iudgement and the fearefull condemnation that shall fall vpon the world that is as many as are without Christ for that they lye fast bound vnder the curse of the Law Deut. 27.26 Gal. 3.10 Quest 256. Now proceed and tell me what the curse of the Law is and how wee be freed from it Ans The Curse due vnto man-kinde by the Law of God for sinne implieth in it a three fold death First a death in sinne noted Ephe. 2.1 Secondly the death and mortalitie of the bodie which by creation was immortall as the soule Gen. 3.15 Thirdly the death of body and soule in hell torments or that finall separation from the presence of God 2. The. 1.7.8.9 commonly called the second death The third part of the Historie of man or of the reformed Adam or man in Christ renued by the Gospell restored to Grace and preserued to Glorie Question 1. IF man by nature bee so miserable and so deformed as wee haue seene by the Historie of his fall by the fearefull consequents of his apostacie and lastly most
view of all their sinnes which apertaine to this apostacie or contumacie as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5. Ans The first sinne is vnbeleefe shee begins in the first entrance into the conference to doubt of the truth of Gods holy word ver 2. Secondly to b 2. to cōtinue a conference with Sathan disputing against the knowen truth against our consciences continue conference with the arch-enemie of God blaspheming the Lord and oppugning his holy truth Thirdly c 3. Curiositie Curiositie they seeke after strange knowledge not contented with Gods holy word ver 5. Fourthly d 4. Pride Pride they desired greater glory and to haue some greater excellency or to bee like the Lord himselfe in glory ver 5. Fiftly e 5. Cōtumacie manifest rebelliō against knowledge conscience manifest Contumacie they proceede to the breach of his Law against their knowledge and conscience ver 6. Sixtly they f 6. To preferre Sathan or to beleeue lies reiect the truth preferre Sathan and his lies beefore God and his holy truth ve 6. Seuenthly they are g 7. vnthankfulnesse vnthankfull vnto God for the manifold and inspeakable pledges of his fauour and loue towards them Eightly they sinne * 8. Presumption presumptuously a When any childe of God falleth into any foule sin against God against his knowledge conscience as Dauid into adultry he falleth into many sins together presuming to bee so highly in Gods fauour that hee would not so afflict them for their transgression Ninthly and lastly after a full resolution in great presumption they proceed to the b 9. The practise of the treasō in committing the outward act practise of this high treason against God and did eate against Gods manifest charge of the forbidden fruite and so murthered themselues and their posteritie Quest 15. Now tell me what were the consequents of this c Verse 7. rebellion or contumacie as the Apostle speaketh of our first Parents Ans They beecame forthwith the children of wrath and of death By sinne they became subiect to all the euils of this life and the euerlasting curse of God after death So the Law speaketh Gen. Chap. 2.17 So the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5.12 So the euent speaketh by sundry effects as after shall appeare Quest 16. What is death Gen. 5. ver 7.8 Ans A separation from the comfortable presence grace loue and fauour of God both in this life and life to come a state contrary in all respects to that first state of his excellencie Quest 17. How many kindes of death are mentioned in Scripture 3. kinde euill Ans Foure first death in sin the forerunner and messenger of the second death Rom. 6.2 Ephe. 2.1 the state of all vnregenerate Secondly death vnto sinne Rom. 6.2 the state of the regenerate Thirdly the naturall death of the body called a dissolution 2 Tim. 4.6 Fourthly death eternall or the second death 2. Thes 1.9 Reuel 20.6 Gen 3.8.9.10 c. Quest 18. And were our first parents after their transgression subiect to these three kindes of death Ans Yea first they beecame dead in sinne as appeares from the 7. verse to the 19. by the effects of sinne in them their nakednesse their shame their deformitie their feare and trembling their hiding of themselues their couering of sin with all their might vtterly ignorant how to please God all which are markes of an eulll conscience or of a man dead in sinne Secondly for the naturall death or dissolution in the first death the decree is here manifested and recorded which was neuer yet repeated ver 19. Heb. 9.28 Thirdly they came also by sinne vnder the heauie curse of God for the second death against the which the Gospell concerning their mediator and redeemer Iesus Christ is preached vnto them Gen. 3.15 and Gal. 3.8 Quest 19. How doth the Lord preach the Gospell and offer the meanes of reconsiliation and repentance vnto our first Parents Ans First the Lord to awake them gaue them some visible signe of his presence verse 8. Secondly but when his presence did but amaze them he spake distinctly and called them in a speciall manner to accounts ver 9. Thirdly hee ript vp their hearts and set their sins in order beefore them Note the great goodnesse and patience of God in the conuersion of sinners verse 11. Psal 50. to driue them to the full confession of them by two questions or arguments as thus first who told thee of this nakednesse where there was none to tell thee or cause thee to sin but thy selfe Secondly I see by thy trembling thou hast broken my Law for where there is no feeling of sinne there is no contrition no confession no remission Quest 20. Where are now all the gifts of nature and free will How forward findeth the Lord our first Parents to repent them of their apostacie Ans Adam had no strength at all to reclaime himselfe nor to attend Gods voyce when God beganne to reclaime him to repentance as appeares by these arguments First like a man in a feuer cries onely of his heate so all his thoughts run vpon his nakednesse and shame Gen. 3. ver 10. vtterly vnmindeful of Gods free mercie that as yet hath kept him from hell and euerlasting perdicion Secondly hee seekes by all meanes to couer and lessen his sinne and regards not how iniurious hee is to God and man Faemina Verse 12. Contrary before Gen. 2.23 first to the woman This woman that is this foolish vaine woman is cause of my sinne secondly hee saith God gaue her and sent her to him as the cause of his ruine and destruction Verse 12. Note these degrees in an extorted and involuntary confession Thirdly hee comes to an extorted and confused confession I did eate that is I haue eaten indeed but as being seduced I wot not well how nor of what tree So the woman hid her sinne in like maner And thus doe all the sonnes of Adam when God in mercie sends them meanes of repentance a 1. Non feci first they denie stoutly that they haue sinned b 2. Feci quidē sed bene feci secōdly they ad impudently being vrged I haue done so indeed and haue I not well done c 3. Si male non multum male thirdly if their fact bee conuinced to bee a sinne they answere if it bee sinne it is not so hainous nor so great a sinne d 4 Non mala intentione fourthly and if yet they bee further vrged as touching the greatnesse of their sinne they say their purpose and intention was not so euill e 5. Aliena suatione fiftly and lastly if their intention and purpose bee manifested they confesse they haue sinned but being lured perswaded and occasioned by others but when a man seeketh sufferage by excuse hee misseth his pardon Quest 21. And how did the Lord proceed to worke in them a true
faith and vnfained repentance Gal. 3. Ans By preaching Christ and his Gospell vnto them that is by preaching their euerlasting freedome and deliuerance by the mediator Iesus Christ the true seede of the woman which is here promised should bruse the serpents head For as the woman alone was the first organ of the Diuell to bring in sinne to Adam and her owne euerlasting perdition with all their posteritie so the woman without the meanes of man became the organ of the holy Ghost to saue her selfe and the man with all their posteritie Where wee may note how true repentance is an effect of the spirit proceeding from faith and the Gospell First the Gospell of Christ is manifested to the sinner then some generall faith and grace to receiue it is wrought in the heart by the holy Ghost then followes a true * Mat. 5.2.3.4.5.6 Psal 31.5 humiliation a Psal 51. contrition and confession and so the pardon of sinne is sealed b Eph. 1.14 by the spirit of adoption Quest 22. And how did the Lord proceede with our first Parents after their repentance and true humiliation before him Ans Hee tels them that now hauing escaped the second death they must for their further humiliation beare and suffer many temporall chasticements in this life because of the great pride and corruption which is now by this rebellion and fall setled in them The woman should haue many sorrowes but specially in the concepion bearing birth and education of children The man many griefes and afflictions in this life and both in his ordinarie calling and in the end be turned to dust vnto the day of the resurrection Quest 23. What vse learne we here to make of our afflictions Ans First in them and by them to bee truely humbled assuring our selues they bee good for vs and proceed from our fathers loue Secondly euer to acknowledge that when we be afflicted it is Gods inspeakable goodnesse that they be temporall here and not according to our deserts eternall in hell The afflictions of this life to the Godly are but gentle crosses but curses to the wicked Thirdly In all thine afflictions remember thou art but as it were a little galled in the heele but Sathan brused in his head and that the God of peace will not leaue vs till hee beate him vnder our feet Rom. 16. Fourthly in the view and consideration of the frame of heauen and earth to remember how sinne is the cause of all confusion and euill on earth and the cause that heauen and earth haue lost their first glory and beautie Quest 24. What meanes the Lord by casting them forth out of that Paradise fensing the place with Angels and a fiery sword An. He meanes not that if they could find the tree of life the fruit of it might restore them to their former state for no Symbole can or could euer confer any such geare but the Lord knowing how prone wee bee by nature to hypocrisie and superstition to seeke vnto the creatures and to forget the creator hee willeth him hence forth to depend vpon his word and prouidence and to liue by faith in the Sonne of God not to trust any lying spirits any more but to waite onely on the liuing God and for this see more in maister Perkins on the Creede pag. 83. to 94. The third way to know the miserie of man without Christ by two speciall consequents of that apostacie the dominion of Sathan and sin in this present world Question 25. THus far shall suffice concerning this historie now let vs heare what may be said concerning the principal consequents effects of that apostacie Answere They are two which wee are specially to consider First the dominion of Sathan Ephe. 2. Chap. 2. the dominion of sinne Rom. 5. and both these are called Rom. 12.32 the state of vnbeleefe Quest 26. Tell me first what speciall arguments can you ground vpon the 2. Chapter to the Ephesians to demonstrate the miserie of man without Christ Ans The greatest part of this Chapter tendeth principally to that end one speciall conclusion touching this matter we haue in hand which may bee hence gathered is this Sathan and all wicked spirits our deadly enemies are of great strength and power to hurt vs Verse 1. working effectually by suggestion as a blasting contagious spirit or winde Vers in all the deformed and blinde Adams of this world hauing all men without exception in the Church and without in subiection before they bee quickned by the Gospell and holy spirit of Iesus Christ Ephe. 2.1.2.3.4.5 If here then wee would know what the deformed Adam or what the miserie of man without Christ is We haue the spirit of Christ answering vs What the deformed Adam is or the man without Christ hee is a man dead in sinnes and trespasses walking according to the course of this world after Sathan which spiritually and inuisibly worketh in him all rebellion and disobedience to the holy reuealed will of God causing him to dwell and delight in the lusts of the flesh and to follow and fulfill the will of the flesh and of the minde Quest 27. I pray you let vs heare some thing of Sathans power to hurt vs without Christ for that some feare him too much and some nothing at all Ans The power of Sathan and wicked spirits against vs may bee knowen and is manifested vnto vs in the Scripture by three speciall arguments first by their names secondly by their great knowledge and long experience in this world thirdly by their euill art and works which they haue wrought in all ages First the wicked spirits which fight against vs and which haue all vnbeleeuers in bondage are called by sundry significant names for our instruction in the olde and new Testament In the old Testament they are called by these names first the a 2. Cor. 11.3 Serpent because by the Serpent Sathan first deceiued man Secondly the wicked spirits are called b Shegnir in Leu 17.7 Goates and c Sheg in Deu. 32.17 Cowes because they did appeare vnto witches and Idolaters in this forme thirdly the name d Iob. 1 6. Zach. 3.2 3. Sathan which signifieth a deadly enemie fourthly they bee called lying e 1. King 22.22 Ioh. 8.43 Spirits because they teach lyes and fill men with errour fiftly spirits of f Hos 4.12 fornication of couetousnesse of ielousie of giddinesse of vncleannesse g Es 19.14 because these be their workes in vnbeleeuers Tibi nomina mille mille nocendi artes Luke 11.21 Ioh. 14.30.16.11 Heb. 2.14 In the New Testament ye haue these names First That Tempter Mat. 4. Secondly That euill one Mat. 13.16 Thirdly That enemie Mat. 13. ver 17. beecause hee is a speciall tempter the Father of all euill and our arch-enemie Fourthly that strong man armed beecasue hee keepeth such possession of vnbeleeuers Fiftly The Prince of this world and of death because the
concerning it in the Old and in the New Testament Mat. 18.16 If thy brother * Sinne against thee offend thee goe and tell him his sinne betweene thee and him alone if he heare thee thou hast won thy brother Here wee bee to note two things first a rule that a brother must reproue a brother for priuate sinnes priuately and our brothers offence must be knowne and manifest vnto vs that we may giue him no causelesse or vniust reproofe for that is dangerous next a reason is added to performe this dut●e if he heare thee thou hast wonne thy brother that is if he reforme what is amisse by priuate admonition then art thou the Lords instrument to keepe him from perdicion and thou dost saue his soule from death Iames. 5.20 Secondly of this dutie speakes Saint Iude ver 20.21.22.23 But yee beloued edifie your selues in your most holy faith praying in the holy Ghost and keepe your selues in the loue of God loking for the mercie of our Lord Iesus Christ vnto eternall life and haue compassion of some in putting difference and others saue with feare pulling them out of the fire and hate the garment spotted with the flesh This Scripture teacheth vs first to performe this dutie to brethren not to strangers secondly that when we reproue we labour also to instruct and to edifie such brethren in the faith of Christ thirdly that we adde feruent prayer to our priuate admonition Fourthly that wee watch carefully one of vs ouer an other Fiftly that wee labour for the spirit of iudgement to discerne betweene such as sinne of infirmitie and them which sinne of pride and malice Sixtly that we reproue the weake with all compassion and lenitie Seauenthly that we deale more roughly and seuerely with the proud Eightly that such as will admonish must bee vnspotted and blamelesse Thirdly of this dutie speakes Saint Paul to the Galathians 6. Chap ver 1. Brethren if a man be fallen by occasion into any fault ye which are spirituall restore such a one with the spirit of meeknesse considering thy self least thou also be tempted Here againe we be taught first that this dutie is to be practised onely among brethren Secondly there is no exception of brethren of any degree or condiciō whatsoeuer but if he offend hee must beare a priuate admonition Thirdly that we must discerne what kinde of sinne and in what maner our brother is fallen whether hee bee preoccupied by men or Angels and so fallen by occasion into any fault or resting and lying in a sinne not beefore manifested Fourthly that a Christian reproofe must bee performed with the spirit of meekenesse Fiftly that a Godly wise admonition is by good art and skill to cure and to restore a member fallen and loosed out of ioynt into his right place againe Sixtly the argument annexed to performe this cure with the spirit of lenitie and loue is this consider well thy selfe it may bee thou maist also be tempted and fall in the like manner Fourthly againe of the same dutie writes the same Apostle to the Hebrues the 3. Chap. ver 12. Take heed brethren least there bee in any of you an euill hart and vnbeeleeuing to fall away from the liuing God but exhort one another daily while it is called to day least any of you bee hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Here note againe first euery brother offending must be admonished Secondly any brother may fall without Gods speciall grace and the watchfulnesse of the godly brethren into most dangerous sinnes and so by degrees into apostacie Thirdly admonition must bee continued throughout the whole course of our life Fiftly againe to the Thessalonians 2. Epistle 3.14.15 ver hee writes on this manner If any man obey not our saying note him with a letter and keepe no company with him that hee may bee ashamed yet count him not as an enemie but admonish him as a brother This Scripture is principally to bee vnderstood of the publike censures of the Church yet it commendeth vnto vs greatly as well priuate as publike admonition and teacheth vs that we may not conuerse with brethren when they fall away from the holy canons of apostolicall doctrine either to bee vicious in life or hereticall or schismaticall in iudgement Sixtly to all these places of the new Testament wee may adde this one place of the old Psal 141.5 Let the righteous smite me for that is a benefite and let him reproue me and it shall be a precious oyle that shall not break mine head for within a while I shall euen pray in their miseries or rather as Tremelius quò amplius fecerit eò amplius erit oratio mea in malis eorum id est quaecunque mala ab eis feram eò magis grato animo pro eis precabor Where note first the godly christian must delight in admonition and remember that the wounds of a louer are faithfull and the kisses of an enemie vnpleasant Secondly hee that will recouer another by admonition he must be a righteous man himselfe and of good report in the Church of God Thirdly an admonition is as a sharpe corrosiue to our corruption smiting lancing and piercing deepely but by degrees it will appeare a most soueraigne balme to cure euen very rotten and festered vlcers in vs. Fourthly the Godly being admonished seeke vnto God by heartie and vnfained prayers and thanksgiuing for themselues and their brethren which haue done this cure vpon them Quest 97. Now describe this dutie of christian admonition according to the Scriptures Ans Christian admonition is a holy action performed by a brother proceeding from faith loue tending to awake and cure any brother offending carefully respecting the rules of pietie and the qualitie of the offence First wee say that an admonition is either priuate or publike Secondly for persons admonishing and reprouing Persons admonishing it is cleere this dutie appertaines to all degrees and states of men superiours inferiours equals carefully respecting the rules of faith and godlinesse as after shall bee shewed Thirdly the person admonished Persons admonished wee see by the consent of all the Scriptures hee must euer bee our brother professing with vs the Gospell of Christ no stranger wee haue nothing to doe to iugde or censure or to admonish them which are without 1. Cor. 5.12 Fourthly wee must account euery one a brother Who a brother which makes in the visible Church the same profession with vs being accepted into the same couenant with vs sealing it with the Sacrament of Baptisme according to Christs holy institution making profession with vs to renounce the Diuell the world and the flesh and promising to liue in faith and obedience of the Gospell of Iesus Christ The first distinction of brethren Fiftly euery brother is eyther true or false Sixtly true brethren are such and so to bee accounted as professe the faith of Christ and in all singlenes and vprightnesse of heart walke before men euer
He lift vp his eyes and looked and lo three men stood by him and when he saw them he ran to meet them from the tent doore and bowed himselfe to the ground This Salomon a King performeth to his mother 1. King 2.19 Bathshebah went vnto the King to speak vnto him for Adonijah And the King rose to meet her and bowed himselfe vnto her Thirdly to vncouer the head beefore the auncient 1. Cor. 11.9.10 Fourthly to bow the knee before them for so doth Salomon to his mother and Abraham to the Angels supposing they were but men Fiftly to giue them the better place in all meetings for this the Apostle teacheth Rom. 12.10 Luke 14.7.8.9.10.11 In giuing honour go one before another Eph. 5.21 Submit your selues one to another in the feare of God And this wee see practised by Salomon 1. King 2.19 He caused a seat to be set for the Kings mother and she sate at his right hand And this reuerend regard of superioritie was in Ioseph and his brethren the Patriarches in Egipt to the great admiration of the Egiptians Gen. 43.33 Ioseph sate by himselfe and they sate before him the eldest according to his age and the youngest according to his youth and the Egiptians marueled among themselues Sixtly to giue the elder the first place of speaking So doth Elihu teach by his owne example Iob. 32.6 I am yong in years and ye are auncient therefore I doubted and was afraid to shew mine opinion and ver 16. he addeth When I had waited for they spake not but stood still and answered no more then answered I in my turne Seauenthly to giue titles to all persons according to their place of honour to the honourable of reuerence to the reuerend 1. Pet. 3.6 Sarah obayed Abraham and called him Lord. 1. Sam. 1.14 Annah answered Eli saying nay my Lord I am a woman troubled in spirit Eightly to honour them for their calling and office for wee are bound in conscience to performe these duties and not for ciuilitie or manners sake Ninthly to obey them in all things which they command vs according to the diuine rules of pietie and iustice Tenthly with thankfulnesse and with cheerefulnesse and diligence in all seruice all which points we may obserue in Eleazar that faithfull seruant of Abraham Gen. 24. chap. Quest 110. And what be the duties common to all superiours Iob. 31.13 2. King 5.13 Ans First to loue and tender the state and welfare of their inferiours as the naturall Parents doe their naturall children Tit. 2.2 Heb. 12 1.13.7.6.12 1. Pet. 5.3 1. Pet 3 1.2.3 Secondly to bee examples of all pietie sobrietie and iustice and to goe euer beefore them as good presidents for their imitation in all the holy exercises of religion that they may say with Iob. chap. 29.8 The young men saw me and hid themselues and the aged arose and stood vp Quest 111. What bee the generall sinnes of inferiours against superiours and of superiours to their inferiours Ans The common sinnes of inferiours be these First to hate them for their calling as a number of popish protestants or carnall Gospellers doe the ministers of the Gospell for their calling sake Secondly to ascribe vnto them more honour then is due vnto them as the people did to Herod after his glorious Oration they shouted crying The voice of God and not of man Act. 12.21.22 Thirdly to aggrauate and to discouer their infirmities and weakenesse as Cham did to his father Noah Gen. 9.22 Fourthly to flatter them in their sinnes as the young Sycophants did Rehoboam whose counsell hee followed to his ruine 1. King 12.14.15 or not to admonish them in loue if need require The common sinnes of Superiours bee these First to neglect their duties to their inferiours which concerne either their soules or bodies their welfare in this life and their saluation in the life to come Secondly not to correct the lesser sinnes by admonitions and censures nor the greater by more speciall chasticements Quest 112. Now let vs come to the speciall duties of superiours and inferiours in the priuate familie and first of parents and children Ans First the first dutie following the order of nature is of the mother that with all care and conscience shee indeuour the preseruation of the life of her childe euen from the first conception in her wombe albeit shee endure many sorrowes as Gods speciall chasticements for her good till it bee borne and come to yeares of strength A barren wombe better then a barren brest Wherefore here a speciall dutie lying on the mother is the nourishing of her owne children with her owne brests if the Lord shall graunt her that good blessing first for that the holy Ghost accounts this one good note of a Godly matrone 1. Tim. 5.10 She is well reported of for good works next is added if she haue nourished her children Secondly the examples of holy women must bee followed whose daughters religious mothers are said to bee when they doe well and doe performe duties 1. Pet. 3.6 But Sarah gaue suck to her owne sonne Isaach Gen. 21.7 albeit shee had many women in her family which might haue eased her of that dutie The like wee read of that godly woman Annah the mother of Samuel 1. Sam. 1.29 And of the blessed Virgin Mary the mother of Christ Luke 2.12 Instruction is required also in the mother 2. Tim. 1.5 3.15 This then ought religious Matrons to respect carefully and the rather for that this is the principall dutie that God requires at their hands when hee saith 1. Tim. 2.15 Notwithstanding all their sinnes through bearing of children they shall be saued if they continue in faith and loue and holinesse with modestie Foure pearles to adorne godly Matrons A second dutie which specially concernes the husband as head is to prouide for the family for the maintenance of wife and children 1. Tim. 5.8 If there be any that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith and is worse then an Infidell This care and conscience we finde in Iacob when hee answereth Laban of his faithfull seruice hee addeth these words I haue serued thee long and thou art become rich through my diligence and faithfulnes now when shall I trauell for mine owne house also Gen. 30. ver 30. A third dutie common to both Parents is this to catechize instruct and to bring vp their children in the instruction and information of the Lord. That this dutie concernes father and mother ioyntly appeares Prou. 30.17 Againe the charge of God is great and to bee considered Deu. 4.9 Take heed vnto thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently that thou forget not the things which thine eyes haue seene and that they depart not out of thine heart all the dayes of thy life but teach them thy sonnes and thy sonnes sonnes Deu. 6.6 These words which I command thee this day shall be in thine
heart and thou shalt rehearse them continually vnto thy children and shalt talke of them when thou tarriest in thine house and as thou walkest by the way and when thou lyest downe and when thou risest vp To this charge agree the words of the Apostle Eph. 6.4 Fathers prouoke not your children to wrath but bring them vp in instruction and information of the Lord. Examples are Bathshebath Prou. 31. and Ennice and Lois 2. Tim. 1.5.3.15 A fourth dutie of parents is to correct and chastice their Children with wisedome and moderation euer considering they punish their owne corruption in them which they first gaue and calling vpon God in spirit feruently for a blessing vpon their chastetisements To warne vs of this dutie let vs often set before vs these Scriptures Pro. 3 12.13.24 Heb. 12 7.23.13.14 Pro. 22.15 Foolishnesse is bound vp in the hart of a child but the rod of correctiō shall driue it away from him therefore inure children to do things rather to please God then for flattering or for guifts Prou. 13.24 He that spareth his rod hateth his sonne but he that loueth him chasteneth him betime And that parents may haue a noble example herein for imitation it is said that the Lord correcteth him whom he loueth euen as the father doth the child in whom he delighteth Prou. 3.12 A fift dutie of parents is the good education of their children as in Gods faith and feare principally so in good arts carefully that they may beecome profitable members in Church and common wealth for this is the Lords charge Pro. 22.6 Teach a child in the trade of his way and when he is old he shall not depart from it at the least let them learne to read and write A sixt dutie of parents to children is that hauing brought vp their children in such sobrietie and chastitie as beecommeth the Saints of God when they come to yeares to make choice for them and to aduise them to keepe their vessells alwayes in holinesse and honour both in the single state and in the married life and at this time specially to allow for their maintenance more or lesse according to that portion which God hath giuen them This godly care for the mariage and maintenance of children wee see in Abraham Gen. 24.1.2 and in Isaac and Rebecca Gen. 27.46 and Cha. 26.35 and in Naomi Ruth 3.1.2.3 A seauenth dutie is such children as the Lord shall giue thee to consecrate them to the Lord with a holy desire they be his and doe him seruice as Hamah did Samuel and it may bee Ennice did Timothie God specially requireth the first borne An eight dutie is with all conuenient speede to prouide they may be baptized in the publike congregation in the presence of speciall and faithfull witnesses Esay 8.2 Sinnes of Parents forbidden in this Law are these First to bee improuident and not to respect the welfare of children in this life Secondly to cark and care for their bodies and to suffer their soules to rot in sinne * Crates in Plutarch saith We may well cry against foolish parents from the tops of hilles with great cares doe they prouide for their children but respect not for honestie vertue what they shall bee Heathen men could see this as a common sinne in Parents and condemne it Thirdly to bring them vp in loosenesse pride idlenesse and wantonnesse and wantonnesse ends in wickednesse as Eli did Sophin and Phiceha and as Dauid did Absalon and Adonijah their wanntonnesse did end in wickednesse to the no small griefe of his heart a 1. Sam. 1. 2. Chapters for the one at his death hee sorrowed and wept bitterly of the other it is said And his father would not displease him from his child-hood 1. King 1.6 wherefore here wee must euer remember that Prouerb If thou smitest hee shall not dye Fourthly ouer seuerely without iudgement to prouoke them to anger by vniust or vnmeasurable chasticements in words or stripes Eph. 6.4 Quest 113 What be the duties of children to Parents commanded in this Law Ans This precept speaketh vnto children as it were face to face as being most prone to the breach of this Law for children bee more ready to forget Parents and their duties then Parents to forget children and therefore the Lord to meete with this corruption giueth the first charge vnto children to performe all duties of honour to their Parents The first dutie of Children to Parents and the root of all the rest is a cheerefull reuerence which is a speciall grace well tempered with loue and feare An example for this dutie wee haue in Ioseph who when hee met his aged father Iacob Gen. 46.29 presented himselfe vnto him with reuerence and to testifie his affection and loue he fell vpon his neck and wept vpon his neck a good while The second dutie implyed in the word Honour as the Apostle interpreteth Eph. 6.1 is obedience Children obay your Parents in the Lord. Examples of true obedience commanded iustly in Scripture are these Isaac to Abraham Gen. 22. the sonnes of Ionadab the sonne of Rechab Ier. 35.14 And of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ of whom it is written that hee followed his mother Marie and his supposed father Ioseph and was subiect vnto them Luke 2.51 The third dutie to helpe their infirmities and to prouide for their Parents when they are old Of this dutie the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 5.4 in these words But if any widow haue children or nephewes let them first learne to shew godlinesse toward their owne house and to recompence their kindred for this is an honest thing and acceptable before God The practice of this dutie wee finde in good Ioseph most carefully supplying his old fathers wants prouiding for his brethren Ge. 45.9 and among Birds for the Storke when she is old keepes her nest continually and the young prouide for her hence is it the Apostle cals children without naturall affections 2. Tim. 3.3 A heathen woman had a daughter that nourished her with her brest in prison when all persons were forbidden to releaue her Valerius Mar. lib. 5. Cap. 4. Plin. lib. 13. cap. 23. The fourth dutie here commanded is to beare with and to couer the infirmities of parents so much as in vs lyeth and so farre as Gods honour and Law will permit vs. The practise of this wee see in Sem and Iapheth who couered their naked father when cursed Cham discouered him Ge. 9.23 and Ionathan bare patiently the threats of his bitter and bloudy father Saul 1. Sam. 19.3.4 Quest 114. Now rehearse breefly the contrary sinnes here condemned Ans First cursing of Parents is a most detestable sinne and here condemned The Lord pronounceth him accursed that curseth his Parents Deut. 27.16 and by the Law of God among the Iewes he was to die for it Leu. 20.9 Exo. 21.17 Secondly to smite father or mother is a most greeuous sinne and heere condemned This sinner was by Gods law
conscience toward God endure griefe suffering wrongfully for what praise is it if when yee bee buffeted for your faults ye take it patiently But and if when yee doe well ye suffer wrong and take it patiently this is acceptable to God for hereunto ye are called for Christ also suffered for vs leauing vs an example that we should follow his steps who did no sinne neither was guile found in his mouth who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe when he suffered he threatned not but committed it to him that iudgeth righteously Iacob and Ioseph followed this Scripture as beeing written by Gods holy spirit in their hearts The Sinnes here forbidden are these The first foule sinne here condemned is eye seruice contrary to simplicity and truth desiring to please men but not in singlenesse of heart Col. 3.22 Eph. 6.5 The Second sinne of Seruants is to answere againe in reprehensions and admonitions Tit. 2.9.10 The third sinne is to reiect admonitions to refuse and to resist the authoritie and corrections of their gouernours as Agar and Onesimus Gen. 16.6 Epistle to Philemon Fourthly by fraud or theft to conuay away their masters goods or by negligence to become vnprofitable drones in their Maisters seruice Such were Zibah 2. Sam. 16.4 and Onesimus it is like before his conuersion Fiftly to obay them in things vnlawfull as when Sauls men refused to obay and serue their Maisters tyranny Doeg the Edomite was very forward to imbrue his hands in the bloud of most innocent and holy Priests 1. Sam. 22. Quest 117. I pray you adde something of the duties and sins of the Fathers in Common wealth and in the Church that is of such as gouerne in the Magistracie Ans First Exod. 18.21 it is required in the Magistrate that hee bee a man of wisedome that is that hee haue knowledge to rule and to to performe the duties which belong to his place and calling for as in other arts hee is not straight way a good Artificer which is a good man so much more in this waightie calling Secondly they must bee prudent men or men of experience for like as in other Arts men must not trust their generall knowledge and wisedome which haue not had tryall and experience of their profession so much more in this calling it is needefull that a man well experienced in those matters that are incident to this calling Thirdly they must be men of courage for his knowledge and experience cannot profit him when hee is to performe and execute the duties of his calling if eyther hee feare the rebukes of Superiours or the hatred and reports of his inferiours Fourthly he must bee a man seruing God this will serue to tēper all his gifts courage if it passe the bounds of knowledge and experience proues a rash boldnesse and wanting Gods feare wee see it often end in oppression Fiftly the Lord requireth that they deale truly first cōcerning themselues they must see that in word and deed they be found such examples vnto others as loue truth and sincirity Next they must carefully search all matters they are to deale in concerning their calling that they may giue righteous iudgement as the case requireth This they must do and haue no respect of persons Sixtly they must hate all filthy gaine and desire of riches and rewards for rewards blinde the eyes of the prudent and stop the eares of the righteous Deut. 1.13 Seauenthly and lastly a good Magistrate must bee a man well knowne and reputed and reported among gods people for wisedome for experience for courage for the feare of God Duties of spirituall Fathers and their Children for vpright dealing for the hatred of couetousnesse If they bee not knowne to bee such they can not haue that credit and reuerence among the people which is due to their place and calling And this the Apostle requireth in Gods Ministers that they haue also a good report euen of them that are without Sinnes here condemned are in election of Magistrates to respect riches and fauour of men and to neglect the former vertues and speciall marks of Christian Magistrates Examination of the Conscience Superiours First let all Superiours of all places and callings well examine themselues in and by this Law how they loue and tender their inferiours as Parents doe their Children how they go in and out before them in all pietie sobrietie and iustice if any such neglect these duties his conscience pleads guiltie and hee is subiect to the malediction of this Law Inferiours Secondly let all inferiours examine themselues with what care and conscience they haue respected the generall duties of this Law as to honour the aged the Magistrate the Minister and to performe vnto them all the generall duties beefore prescribed if they plead want of knowledge or of conscience they are guiltie and bound vp to the curse of this Law The naturall Mother Thirdly let the naturall Mother here inquire with what tendernesse and loue she hath respected the life of her child in her wombe whether shee hath nurced it with her owne brests hauing strength and meanes giuen her of God herevnto if thou hast neglected this dutie thy conscience cries guiltie and this Law condemnes thee The naturall Father Fourthly let the naturall Father here inquire with what care and conscience hee prouides for his familie in a lawfull calling with what wisedome and iudgement he rules his wife with what pietie and religion hee doth instruct his family whether hee suffer his children to grow vp in idlenesse and wantonnesse whether hee hath not more regarded their bodies then their soules whether they bee trayned in an honest course and calling if thou dost not respect these duties thy conscience cries guiltie and this Law condemnes thee Fiftly The naturall Children let the naturall children here inquire with what cheerefull reuerence and feare and obedience they haue honoured their Parents how they haue respected and couered their infirmities and prouided for their wants if thou bee of this number and hast neglected these duties thy conscience cryes guilty and this Law condemnes thee Sixtly inquire whether thou hast at any time by cursing mocking reuiling or smiting dishonored thy parēts or whether hast thou desired their death for any cause whatsoeuer or hast contēned their lawfull charge or hast married without their consent if these or any of these sins bee found in thee thy conscience cryes guilty and this Law condemnes thee Seauenthly Masters gouernours of Families inquire with what care and conscience thou hast taught and catechised thy Seruants what example of pietie good life thou hast giuen them how thou hast recompensed their labours with what mercifulnesse and tendernesse thou hast respected their wants with what moderation in correction and admonition thou hast ruled them if thou hast neglected these duties thy conscience cryes guiltie and this Law condemnes thee Eightly let Seruants inquire with what submission of mind Seruants
with what feare and trembling with what simplicitie and faithfulnesse of hart they obey and serue their Maisters with what meeknesse of spirit they receiue their admonitions and corrections how they hate eye seruice answering againe fraud theft and to obay their Maisters in things vnlawfull if in any of these thy conscience cries guiltie this Law condemnes thee Ninthly let Magistrates examine well themselues Magistrates how they enter their callings without gifts to discharge them wisdome iudgement courage and the rest before specified what Lawes and Decrees they haue enacted for Religion and Iustice how they haue respected equitie and truth in iudgement how they redresse enormities and sinnes according to their authoritie and place if in any of these thy conscience pleads guiltie this Law condemnes thee Tenthly Subiects must examine themselues how they haue obayed the Magistrates with what conscience they haue construed and obeyed the Lawes and Statutes of the Land whether they haue prayed for their Gouernours and haue patiently borne the wicked set ouer them of God for their chastisement euery subiect not respecting these duties his conscience pleads guiltie The sixt Law Question 118. THe sixt Law is this Thou shalt not murther what is the meaning of this Law what duties bee here commanded and what sinnes are forbiden Ans First these two Lawes following fitly follow one an other first for that the one is often the cause of the other Adultry and Intemperancie breed many quarrels and murthers secondly for that Adultrie or defiling of a mans wife is next in degree to the sinne of Murther thirdly for that a heart full of compassion and loue and a chast heart goe euer together Againe the Lord is large in the fiue former commandements but short heare first because the light of nature is not so darkned in vs concerning these as in the former therefore hee vseth most words where most need is secondly for that wee are more hardly drawne to the obedidience of the first Table thirdly for that the obseruation of the first Table puts a new life into vs for the obseruation of the second The Heathen were very blinde concerning God neither did they know the depth of these Lawes of the second Table Our Lord and Sauiour Christ is the best expositor and preacher of this Law who himselfe expoundeth it in these words Mat. 5.21.22 Ye haue heard that it was said vnto them of old time Thou shalt not kill but whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement But I say vnto you whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly shall be culpable of iudgement And whosoeuer saith vnto his brother Raca shall be worthy to be punished by the counsell And whosoeuer shall say foole shall be worthy to be punished with hell fire In this exposition of our Sauiour Christ wee may learne many things but first generally let vs obserue these two things First how hee doth taxe and reprehend the pharisaicall glosse and interpretation of this Law Their interpretation was onely of the externall act of murther saying whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement and this exposition of externall murther they vrge by authoritie of the auncients saying that thus the learned Fathers vnderstoode this Law saying you haue heard that is by Scribes and Pharises sitting in Moses seate by Auncients that is old Rabbies and Teachers culpable of iudgement saying whosoeuer killeth wittingly or vnwittingly willingly or vnwillingly he shall bee apprehended and adiudged in iudgement whereby is meant the inferiour courts of iustice which were kept in all parts of Iewrie and here they did qualifie and corrupt iustice and lessen punishments often contrary to Law Wee see by these few examples how corrupt the iudgement was of the Iewish Rabbines as Mat. 15. and how Christ cals them back to the Law and Prophets Thus by degrees the Fathers since Christ fell from the Gospell at last came the Schoole men and set vp Antichrist Secondly hee giueth vs his owne true interpretation of the Law where hee teacheth vs clearely that there are three kinds of murther worthy of three kindes of iudgements or punishments First the murther of the heart which is anger vnaduised for all anger is not condemned There is a Godly anger in christian zeale the whetstone of fortitude this murther to say no more is worthy your iudgement that is your correction and punishment yee doe inflict in inferiour courts Secondly the murther of the fierce countenance with addicion of some foolish word in contempt with an euill gesture and behauiour of countenance mouth tongue head hand or such like Now for this contempt of thy brother saith Christ to say no more of this kinde of murther it is worthy to bee punished by a * This Court was for the greater offences here he meaneth the synedrion in Ierusalem a court of seauentie two iudges counsell that is in an open consistorie euen in your highest courts Thirdly the next kinde of murther which the Pharises and world count light and small is the murther of the tongue whosoeuer saith Christ shall reprochfully call his brother a foole this man I tell you deserues euen the torments of hell Wee see then by the words of the best interpreter what the scope of this Law is namely the preseruation of the life and person of man for this Law striketh at the root of cruelty a sinne deepely setled in the corrupt heart of man The meaning of this Law in few words is this Thou shalt not any way greeue offend or hurt thy neighbour in his person part or whole soule or body Neither shalt thou omit any dutie of mercy or labour of loue for the good comfort health peace and welfare and continuall preseruation and saluation of thy neighbour during life And that this interpretation must be of inward sinnes as well as of outward contrary to the Pharises the Disciple testifieth with his Master saying 1. Iohn 3. He that hateth his brother is a murtherer And God being a spirit his Law must needs be spirituall for the restraining not onely of the hand but also of the heart Wherefore it is euident that in this Law the Lord would cut downe all the causes occasions and secret roots of cruelty which grow in our corrupt nature The Lord would haue our fallow ground plowed and the secret thorns of hatred and mallice digged vp for that these imbred euills are deepely rooted in vs. Quest 119. Set downe a short summe of the speciall sins forbidden and vertues commaunded in this Law Ans The generall sinnes here condemned are these for this respecteth all creatures first want of humanitie or any cruell vsage of any of the creatures for this cause the godly is said to haue respect to the life of his beast Prou. 12.10 secondly want of a prouident fore-sight to preuent dangers which may be hurtfull to man or beast The speciall sinnes here condemned are these either crueltie against our selues first soule murther as to neglect
those things which concerne saluation secondly to neglect those things which concerne the temporall state and health of body or minde thirdly actuall selfe-murther condemned of the heathen Or crueltie against our brethren in these speciall branches first of anger Secondly of a despitefull countenance and gesture thirdly an open repoach and crueltie of the tongue fourthly actuall murther of the hand which is the more greeuous the more bands of loue we break specialls here are first the murther of children by the naturall parents secondly the murther of parents by the naturall children thirdly the murther of brethren fourthly the murthering of any christian fiftly the murthering of an heathen Now what God commandeth first generally we be commanded to cherish all pittie and compassion in our harts towards man and beast Secondly all speciall duties and signes of loue and mercie are these first to looke well to our harts that we bee tender hearted and mercifull towards all men secondly to looke well to our outward beehauiour that in our countenance and gesture wee bee louing kind and mercifull vnto men Thirdly to looke well to the good vsage of the tongue thereby to benefit all men fourthly to looke wel to the hand that wee bee ready to reach forth blessings and good things to other men as the Lord hath inabled vs. Quest 120. Now let vs heare of the branches of the negatiue part in order An. The first is inhumanitie and crueltie against any of the creatures as against brute beasts all the euillvsage of them is here condēned this is one of the sins of the last times 2. Tim. 3.3 Rom. 1.30 he that is cruell to beasts will not spare the life of man when occasion is offered wee are commaunded to helpe our enemies asse Exod. 22.5 Deut. 22.6 Wee see this in Balaam who in great rage would haue slain the poore Asse when the Angell would haue slaine him and that most iustly his heart is discouered in his bloudy counsell against Gods people which Balack with all speede put in practise Num. 22. and 23. chap. God condemneth this brutish fiercenesse 2. Tim. 3.3 Ob. but we kill them dayly An. By permission since the floud Gen. 9. and therefore when we feed on the flesh of any creature wee ought to remember Gods free mercy and how sinne hath weakened our bodies which before were kept strong and beautifull onely with the fruits of the earth Secondly the Lord here condemnes all want of prouident care to preuent all dangers and euills which may be hurtfull to the life of man or beast for this cause the Lord commaunded battlements on houses to preuent dangers that men might walke safely on the house tops as the custome was in Iewrie Deut. 21.8 for this cause the goring Oxe must be stoned to death and not eaten Exod. 22.28.30 And this is the Lords care in commaunding that no pits bee left vncouered Exod. 22.33 The same may be said of rayling of bridges and of the mending of high wayes that man and beast may trauell safely without feare Thirdly next there bee three branches or kindes of crueltie against our selues here condemned in this Law And these must be first considered for if the loue of man towards himselfe be the line and rule of his loue towards other men hee that is cruell to himselfe can not bee mercifull to other men 1. Soule-murther First of this crueltie the first branch is Soule-murther Soule-murther is when a man carks and cares continually for his carkasse and neglects the state and life of the Soule his Soule lies dead in sinne Eph. 2.1 and feeles it not wants the life of God and hee knowes it not There is a necessarie diet and foode for the Soule which if yee neglect and denie the Lord cries in his word that yee kill the Soule or bee Soule-murtherers Hosh 4.6 Idle Ministers are soule-murtherers Prou. 29.18 My people perish for want of instruction and knowledge Prou. 10.21 The words of the righteous feed many Iob 23.12 Thy word is better vnto mee then mine ordinary foode for this cause the Lord complaines also against negligent Priests and Prophets Ezech. 34.3 Yee feed not the sheepe but kill them that are fed meaning by others Secondly the second branch of this crueltie against our selues is when by any sinne or sinnes we bee enemies to our owne health and so to our life and herein three speciall kindes are condemned for that by experience they be found dayly to shorten the daies and life of man All intemperancy impaires health The first kinde is all intemperancy which deuoures patrimonies brings in all excesse reueling and vncleannesse for sinnes be linked and grow vp together what a number of filthie diseases doth whoredome alone breed in men according to the Apostles doctrine and the common experience wherefore wee iustly conclude against these sinners they are cruell and vnmercifull to themselues for hearts bee eaten vp with this care the second secret enemy of a mans life is that biting eating consuming and distracting care which Christ condemneth Mat. 6. This care with the sorrowes which follow it be very euill against this Salomon warneth vs saying Prou. 17.22 a ioyfull heart causeth good health but a sorrowfull minde dryeth vp the bones The third secret enemy of a mans health and life is an improuident care for foode and raiment idlenesse slouthfulnesse condemned 1. Tim. 5. Prou. 6.6 and 10.26 Eccles. 37.11 Thirdly the third kinde of crueltie against a man himselfe is the highest kinde of crueltie that can bee named against the naturall life Actuall selfe-murther and this is actuall selfe-murther when a man laies violent hands on his owne life and imbrewes his hands in his owne bloud First such bloudy executioners bee greatly iniurious to God and men The Lord hath set forth such in his word as terrible examples for all ages to behold accounting them as monsters to terrifie all men from such vnnaturall practises as Saul Achitophel Iudas and the like Secondly the godly in extreeme sorrowes would neuer seek to end their paine on this wise as these did for they were well assured such an end was a beginning and the entrance into euerlasting sorrowes Here men must not respect the examples of Pagans nor any suggestiōs of Sathan to the contrary Dauid rores for very griefe of heart Psal 32.5 Hezekiah chattered as a Bird and could not speak for anguish of mind Es 38. Iob desired to be strangled cha 8.13 but they ouer came all their sorrowes by the spirit of faith and patience Thirdly and lastly we be not our owne but Christs 1. Cor. 6.19 Fourthly in the fourth place we be to consider of the speciall branches kinds of crueltie against other men condemned in this Law And here the first kinde is the inward and secret murther of the heart Murther of the heart beecause this is the fountaine and head-spring of all the rest out of the hart proceed euill thoughts murther
lies bound hand and foote in a darke dungeon and the keeper sets open the prison doore takes off his irons and bids him come forth If hee refuse and and say hee is well may it not bee said hee is mad and who will pittie him in that case This is the state of all impenitents and contemners of the Gospell Secondly it is said also that then hee gaue gifts to his Church as Kings doe in their triumph and his gifts were these Apostles and Prophets and Euangelists for the first planting and founding of his Church Catholike Pastors and Teachers for the propagation of the same and for the gathering of his Elect to the worlds end If these were Christs principall blessings which Christ gaue his Church in his ascention and so richly and highly to bee accounted as being destinate and sent for so great a work as the building of the body of Christ which is his Church on earth Eph. 4.12 then they doe not beleeue rightly and truely the ascention of Christ that so basely and vilely esteeme the sacred ministry and preaching of the Gospell of Christ and the administration of his Sacraments as Atheists and Papists and all carnall Gospellers doe Thirdly like as our iustification is ascribed vnto his resurrection and merit of the same so our proceeding in grace and perseuerance may truely be attributed to his ascention to heauen and intercession there for vs. Ioh. 17. And like as he could neuer haue risen in that body wherein he was accursed for vs vnlesse he had been acquited and iustified from all our sinnes so much lesse could hee haue ascended into the highest heauens if hee had not beene pure from all our spots imputed vnto him his ascention is a cleere euidence of his righteousnesse Iohn 16.9.10 and consequently of our righteousnesse in him and by him for which these Articles are sweetly knit together for the confirmation of our faith touching our free iustification by Christ Rom 8.33.34 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen it is God that iustifieth who shall condemne it is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God and meketh request for vs. Wherefore euer remember to reiect the doctrine of Antichrist who teacheth that Christ by his death did mirit our iustification but wee once iustified doe further merit our saluation Whereas thou seest here not onely the beginning but also the continuance yea the accomplishment of the whole worke of our saluation in our vocation iustification sanctification and glorification is wholy and onely to be ascribed to the merit of Christ Fourthly wee receiue also by his ascention a confirmation touching our ascention into heauen for in beleeuing the one wee beleeue the other for the head and members must goe together Wee bee not now coldly to looke for heauen but by a liuely hope to possesse it for that we possesse it in our head already For this cause it is written Eph. 2.6 That God hath made vs to sit together in heauenly places in Christ Hee hath there a pledge for vs euen our flesh and we againe by his ascention haue receiued from him an heauenly pledge euen his spirit Iohn 6.7 I tell you the truth it is expedient for you that I goe away Eph. 1.13.14 for if I goe not away the Comforter will not come vnto you 2. Cor. 1.22 Hee hath sealed vs and giuen vs the earnest of our spirits in our hearts Duties following this particular faith are these First that our conuersation be in heauen where Christ is Phil. 3 10. Our hearts our thoughts our words our workes our whole conuersation must bee such as if we conuersed already with the Angels in the highest heauens Secondly if we beleeue we be possest of heauen in Christ wee must striue to enter into him with all holy contention of spirit vsing the meanes he hath appointed that wee may come vnto him with all the good speede wee can If wee be assured of this purchase made for vs by his bloud wee must passe through all dangers to come vnto him and vnto it and not contend to get in our selues but also endeuour to bring with vs all wee can specially all such as God by neere bands of loue hath knit vnto vs as our wines children c. prouiding as much as in vs lyeth that they may bee with vs heires together of the same grace of life 1. Pet. 3.7 Thirdly in all greuances of body and minde seeke to no meanes for ease but onely to the comforter and the meanes hee hath appointed and ordained in the word If thou beleeuest the ascention of Christ remember this was one end of his ascention to send downe the holy Ghost to worke more effectually and comfortably in the hearts of his Children And therefore endeuour in and by the word and Sacraments to bee comforted by him in all afflictions of this life Quest 46. Proceede on to the third degree of his exaltation doe you beleeue that hee sitteth at the right hand of God the Father almightie first explaine your meaning and proue this Article by the scripture Ans I doe so on this manner first for the sence of the words here set downe whereas it is sayd that he sitteth at the right hand of the Father I say here is a borrowed speech from Princes and Kings who set their cheefe Rulers by them and their best friends Mat. 20.21.22 1. King 2.19 Like as therefore men doe with others to whom they graunt or giue equall honour or that which is next to themselues they are wont to place them at their right hand and this they doe that they may testifie their great honour and loue vnto them so the Lord would haue vs to vnderstand that hee who hath neither right hand nor left hand for hee is infinite hath giuen vnto his Sonne very God and man such inspeakable glory and maiestie that hee sitteth now as on a throne of exceeding glory in the highest heauens executing the offices both of his kingdome and priesthood And whereas it is added The Father God Almightie here note the person of whom Christ God and man receiued all this aduancement and glory of his kingdome namely his Father to whom he is equall notwithstanding in respect of his person yet inferiour in respect of one nature Secondly for the vndoubted truth of this Article of my faith I finde it as all the former manifested to the Fathers as Psal 110.1 The Lord said vnto my Lord sit thou at my right hand that is raigne as king and rule as cheefe Lord so the best expositor testifieth 1. Cor. 15.25 * Luk. 24.26 Act. 5.31 Eph. 1.20 Phil. 2.9 vntill I make thine enemies thy foote-stoole The Lord sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech And this prophecie is accomplished as the Euangelists and Apostles haue testified for Saint Marke hee
the vile Confer Mat. 3. Ier. 15. by the fame of his Gospell preached so will he by his owne immediate voyce and ministry of his Angels make a finall separation in that day betweene the one and the other The sheepe which heard his voyce and testified their faith by their innocency like lambes they shall stand on the right hand They which contrarilie testified their vnbeleefe by their lasciuiousnesse and lusts like Goates shall be set on his left hand Ezech. 34.18 Seauenthly euery mans particular cause shall bee tryed beefore this Iudge by the euidence which his workes shall giue with him or against him 2. Cor. 5.10 Wee must all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ that euery man may receiue the things which are done in his body according to that he hath done whether it bee good or euill Here the better to assure vs of the truth and certaintie of the Lords proceeding of his particularizing of al things in this action the holy Ghost telleth vs that the Lord hath as it were bookes of record to manifest all and euery work of man and his bookes bee three in number First his booke of prouidence which is the knowledge of all particular things past present and to come Psal 136.16 Secondly his booke of iudgement which is diuided as it were into two parts first his prescience knowing euery thing far more euidently then wee know any thing recorded in a booke before our eyes secondly the second part of the booke of iudgement is the conscience of euery man standing beefore him which shall then bee so qualified by the great power of God that it shall bee able to record and testifie so much of all his particulars as shall serue to testifie his faith and iustification by Christ or his most iust condemnation without Christ The third booke is the booke of life which is the eternall decree of God concerning the saluation of his elect by Christ whose names bee so written in this booke that they being as gods precious pearles can neuer bee lost Of this booke read Esa 4.3 and Exod. 32.32 And of this distinction of bookes Reuel 20.12 And I saw the dead both great and small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened which is the booke of life and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes according to their works And after that mens works are made manifest by these bookes then must they bee tryed whether they be good or euill the Gentiles and Iewes that neuer heard of Christ by the Law of nature which shall proue them inexcusable Rom. 2.12.16 The rest that haue heard shall bee tryed by the Law and Gospell Rom. 2.16 The word of God shall serue as a bill of inditement for the iust condemnation of all such as haue contemned the Law Gospell of Iesus Christ Ioh. 12.48 for the sentence of the Iudge in the last day of generall iudgement shall bee nothing else but a manifestation and declaration of the sentence pronounced and published before by the ministry and preaching of the Gospell touching the iustification and condemnation of euery particular person Eightly after the manifestation of all things and that euery particular conscience sees his blessed iustification by Christ or his iust condemnation by vnbeleefe and for his woorkes then the Iudge shall proceede to his definitiue sentence and this is two-fold The first is pronounced to the Elect in these words Mat. 25.34 Come yee blessed of my Father inherit the kingdome prepared for you from the beginning of the world This sentence is full of affection and loue most sweete and most comfortable recommending the free grace of God their election their adoption and blessednesse in Christ and not their workes for the causes of their saluation and then he addeth the euidence of their Faith by the workes of mercy which they haue done to his members here on earth I was hungry The principall works of men are those which are done to the pore members of Christ Gal. 6.10 and yee gaue me to eate c. The answere of the Saints saying when saw wee thee hungry c. argues that they were far from vaine glory in their works or seeking any iustification by them and Christs last words to them in as much as you did it to the least of these my brethren c. giues vs an infallible argument of Gods child which is not to loue because wee are loued againe but to loue for Christs sake and the liuing members of Christ because wee see his picture and image in them renued this is a speciall grace of God and of this loue speakes Dauid Psal 16. 1. Ioh. 3 chap. All my delight is in thy saints which are in the earth The second sentence pronounced against the reprobate is goe yee cursed into hell fire prepared for the Diuell and his angels for I was hungry and yee gaue me no meate c. in which sentence are contained a heape of woes present and to come For the present what can bee more woefull then to see so many admitted into the kingdome of God and yet themselues shut out and excluded yea peraduenture to see such as they haue hated and disdained and refused to giue any honour vnto as when the rich man shall see Lazarus receiued by God into the kingdome of heauen whom hee vouchsafed not to sit among his seruants and that which is more to see themselues separated haled tugged by an innumerable sort of oughly Deuils out of the presence not onely of God but of their fathers mothers wiues husbands children friends louers and acquaintance who shall de●ide and laugh at them forgetting all bands and obligations of nature and reioyce at the execution of God his iustice in their condemnation so that no eye either of God or man shall pittie them nor no teares prayers suites cries yellings or mournings can bee heard or preuaile with him which is their Iudge nor one to mediate or speake for them to reuerse or stay iudgement but needes without mercy without stay without any farewell they shall be presently cast downe to the endlesse easelesse and remedilesse torments of hell Neuer was there poore wretch that was condemned at the tribunall of mortall iudgement to bee compared to this estate for there the conclusion of the Iudges sentence is Lord haue mercie vpon thy soule but here the Lord himselfe shall not onely not shew any token of mercie or louing countenance but also with a voyce surpassing any thunderclap to bee heard in all heauen earth and hell curse them bodies and soules to the pit of hell for euermore And if this were all the present woe yet were not the case so heauie for besides this what guilt of conscience what biting enuie what horrour of minde what distraction what murmuring against the Lord what cursing of themselues their day of birth and father and mother what remembrance
should bee omitted which may bee gathered out of the word of God therefore I say that wee shall know one another more inwardly more outwardly more truely and more comfortably then euer wee did in the world and that I will manifest foure wayes First wee shall know God as hath beene prooued and the knowledge wee shall haue of God shall bee more then all the knowledge that euer wee conceiued of men so then if the ioyes of heauen by the direction of Angels or through the knowledge of the Gospell which wee haue attained vnto in this present world and doe carry with vs out of the vvorld through the goodnes of the holy Ghost do shew vnto vs the person and things that we neuer saw or knew in this life then I beleeue much more that vve shall know againe fathers mothers brethren sisters vvife husband children and friends vvhom vve did know and vvith vvhom vvee did conuerse in this present vvorld for in nothing must our knowledge bee empared but bettered in all things and as society is not comfortable vvithout familiar acquaintance God forbid that any man should thinke this to bee vvanting in the heauenly estate yea as there are places in heauen as vvell as in earth God hath sorted and placed kindred and countries together and this made Dauid to say speaking of his child 2. Sam. 13. I shall goe to him and hee shall not come to mee vvhereby hee meant his owne death and ascending into heauen vvhither his little infant was gone before Secondly we shall know one another at the last day and after the resurrection beecause vvee shall know those holy men which were neuer knowen to vs in this world for if Saint Peter Saint Iohn and Saint Iames did know Moses and Elias at the transfiguration of Christ which were dead at the least sixe hundred yeares before their time and if the iust men which rose againe at the death and resurrection of Christ and appeared to many in the holy citie after their resurrection were knowen to their friends and acquaintance then I conclude that we shall know one another confer one vvith another and also them whom vvee neuer knew in this world and not by face onely or in progresse of time one after another but also by name and sodainely so as we shall be able to say this vvas Dauid this was Saint Peter this was holy Abraham this the widdow of Sareptha this the good sonne of Ieroboam this my father this my sonne this my vvife this my pastour and occasioner of my saluation And therefore if this delight thee good Christian reader then I beseech thee lay hold on thy saluation and that if thou recouer in thy next life thy lost fame goods health members dignitie and quietnesse doe not thinke that thou shalt loose thy acquaintance for euer and euer or that heauens ioyes do not stand in societie and mutuall conference and comforts one with another Thirdly I am confirmed in this opinion because in the parable of Diues and Lazarus the rich man in torments is said to know Abraham and Lazarus and Abraham to know him in hell fire Now then if the damned know those that are saued and if Abraham knew him that was damned being a Iewe and of his owne posterity borne long after his death because hee calleth him sonne then I know that the glorified shall know more and that they shall see the wicked plagued before their eyes to the increase of their ioy for it is a true saying Et memoria culpa visio infernalis damnarum poenae ad laetitiam facient that is both the remembrance of their owne sinne and the sight of the hellish punishment inflicted vpon the damned shall helpe forward their pleasures Fourthly and lastly the end of saluation is the perfection of all the ioy that euer entered into the heart of man and an addition of that which neuer entered For that saith the Apostle which neuer entered into the heart of man hath God prepared for the Elect but this affection is common in the hearts of men to desire the sight knowledge and conference with their friends yea euery man prayeth at his departure from his acquaintance farewell and if wee meete not on earth God send vs to meete in heauen which by a long continued tradition from the father to the sonne by an auncient and true perswasion of their heauenly coniunction amitie and familiaritie to bee renued and continued for euermore at the renuing and resurrection of the flesh And indeede this word Life vvhereupon wee entreat doth iustifie so much without enforcement for is it not true that life is maintained by friends familiaritie and acquaintance not onely by encreasing our new friends but by keeping our old and therefore heauen cannot want this happinesse but that therein the mother shall know the infant and child of her wombe and the scholler his master vvhich brought him to heauen Oh therefore sit downe vvith thy selfe vvhosoeuer thou be that hearest or readest this and remember all thy friends that be dead and with the Lord yea all the innumerable troupes of iust and perfect men compare them with those that now thou hast liuing and compare also their inequall estates and thou shalt finde them aboue innumerable these a few those glorified these humbled those able to preuaile with God these scarce able to get the fauor of men those passed through the worlds dangers miseries and enormities without perishing these sayling in the middest of perils and therefore ready to bee ouerturned and in hazard of destruction and in a word those despising all earthly kingdomes because they are enriched with greater matters these carking and caring moyling and labouring for a litle corner in this life Therefore hast thee hast thee to bee prepared for that societie the Lord tarrieth thy prouision and amendement the end of thy race is set and appointed so soone as thou hast finished thy labour thou shalt come to thy iourneyes end and therefore desire to bee loosed and to be with Christ and all his members Another propertie of the life to come is the perfection of loue which shall bee in all his seruants for then they shall loue God more then themselues that is perfectly and without measure now this loue of God is stronger then all the affections of man for by this loue they loue one another more then euer themselues as much as euer and God more then themselues and one another For this cause the loue of God neuer dyeth for faith and hope decrease and decay and there shall bee a time when there shall bee no vse either of faith or hope but loue shall encrase and continue for euermore wherof Saint Augustine writing vpon the 37. Psalme saith thus Quae erunt autem ò amator dei delitiae tuae O louer of God what shall bee thy delights when all shall be delighted in the multitude of peace thy gold shall bee peace thy siluer shall bee peace thy
inheritance shall bee peace thy life shall bee peace thy God shall bee peace and whatsoeuer thou desirest shall bee peace Here in this world thy gold cannot bee siluer thy siluer cannot bee bread thy bread cannot bee wine and thy light cannot bee thy meate but there the Lord shall be all vnto thee thou shalt eate him that thou maiest not hunger thou shalt drinke him that thou maiest not thirst thou shalt bee illightened by him that thou maiest not bee blinde thou shalt bee sustained by him that thou maiest not faint hee shall possesse the wholy which is all in all Thou shalt not there feele any misery because with him through thy loue thou shalt possesse all Thou shalt haue all and hee shall haue all because thou and hee shall bee one Thus far Saint Austen Another propertie of this life is the change of bodies and alteration or rather vtter abolishing of all inglorious infirmities and weaknesse for it is said Phil. 4.23 our bodies shall be like his glorious body and what is the fashion of his body you may read Reu. 14. his head and haires white as wooll or snow and his eyes were as a flame of fire and his feete like vnto fine brasse c. It shal be incorruptible and neuer change immortall and neuer dye spirituall and liue of it selfe without corporeall helpes nothing shall rise against the soule of a man no fraitly no want no hunger thirst or cold no heate wearinesse or indigence no contention and brawling no not that trouble arising in euery one in the kingdome of grace Sollicita cautela vitandi inimici diligendi both of auoiding and louing his enemie Of this estate a learned father discourseth in this manner When this mortall hath put on immortalitie there shall bee no opposition by diabolicall pollicy no euill or condemned heresie no impietie of infidels but in those tabernacles of the righteous shall bee nothing but reioycing and exultation because they are made the citizens of that city which is supernall eternall and free which is not couered with darkenesse shadowed with night wasted with continuance and age nor yet hath any need of the glittering light of the Sunne there shall not the Moone shine the Starres shew no candle lighted no lampe burning for the diuine light shall lighten it the Sunne of righteousnesse and the true light shall shine vpon it the inaccessible and incomprehensible light which is not inclosed in any place nor ended in any time shineth vpon that heauenly Ierusalem the mother of vs all which with her children the sons of light the sons of the day the sonnes by adoption the sons of God shall be glorified in the same for euer and euer Fiftly and lastly they shall be in heauen not onely in vnspeakable ioy but also seruing God in that life for there is no life nor ioy in any life without the seruice of God and therefore our sauiour told vs to doe his fathers will was his meate that is the staffe of his life and his ioy Now the Saints in heauen shall both ioy and doe nothing but praise him for all their time shall bee a Saboth appropriated to serue him and sing his praises for euermore Esay 66.23 and indeede this must sinke deepe into our hearts in this life not onely for our instruction what wee shall doe in another world but also to stirre vs vp in this life to serue God because therein we ioyne with the Saints in heauen and the Church in earth is pertaker with the triumphant glorified soules in the kingdome of Maiestie and for this cause in our dayly prayers wee pray Thy will bee done in earth as it is in heauen But to returne to the ioy our ioy shall bee there all of the Creatour and not of the creature none shall take it away for wee shall bee out of danger of loosing our happinesse and therefore better then the Angels now but ioy taken any where else and compared to this is but sorrow sweetnesse but paine and bitternesse comlinesse but black and ougly filthinesse and delights but troablesome noysomnesse Of which estate Saint Ciprian in his sermon of mortalitie maketh this meditation Wee accompt Paradise our countrie and wee haue already gotten the Patriarches to bee our Parents oh why doe wee not runne and make hast home into our country and salute our parents there expecteth vs a great number of deare friends of parents brethren sonnes sisters mothers and acquaintance I say a great number expecteth vs which are already secured of their owne glory and are carefull for ours Oh to come into their sight and mutually to embrace them how great shall bee their and our glory both together what shall bee the pleasure of those celestiall kingdomes where the feare of death ceaseth and wee assured to liue eternally what is that highest and perpetuall felicitie there are crowned the Godly fellowship of the Apostles the great number of Prophets the innumerable troupes of Martyrs There doe virgins triumph which by the vigour of the spirit haue gotten victory of all concupiscence and liued in chastitie there shall they see the mercifull rewarded who wrought righteousnesse by their feeding clothing and cherishing the poore although for the obeying of Christ they haue forsaken their owne patrimonie And to conclude with the words of Saint Austen wee can more easily tell what is not in heauen then what is for wee are not able to tell how great a good God is and yet we are not permitted to hold our peace and therefore wee cannot tell and yet for ioy wee cannot hold our peace then whether wee speake or say nothing wee shall reioyce exceedingly This is their reward to see God to liue with God to liue of God to bee of God to bee in God to bee for God which is the cheefest good And where as is the cheefest good there shall bee the cheefest felicitie cheefest pleasure true libertie perfect charitie eternall securitie secure eternitie there is the true reioycing all knowledge all beautie and all blessednesse there is peace pietie goodnesse light vertue honestie sweetenesse concord rest praise glory and life eternall concerning which pray gentle Reader that Christ would say to thee and mee Come ye blessed of my Father receiue the kingdome thy Masters ioy prepared for you before the worlds beginning Quest 66. But you haue rehearsed out of Saint Paul that this life is eternall and the gift of God How can it bee the gift of God seeing it is the reward of righteousnesse Ans Indeede as it is the full promise of God it is a gift but as it is the hire and recompence of a good life it is a reward and euery way it commeth from the free and voluntary gift of God for if it came any other way woe were it to vs which are able to doe so little for so great a crowne wee cannot buy it we cannot steale it as Iacob did his fathers blessing but it must bee giuen vs not from or by man but by the Lord which giueth plentifully and casteth no man in the teeth And this is a comfort where withall I will end this discourse for by it I conceiue that the kingdome of heauen shall be bestowed equally both vpon poore and rich for it is a gift and no man can challenge more in that gift then an other none can bee nearer then other Euery place of the earth standeth in equall distance from heauen and euery man and woman are alike capeable of eternall life the wise and foolish virgins stood in the same way and place to expect the same bridegroome Therefore seeing all must be bound to God for these benefits let vs not iudge any that in our opinion seeme to bee far from grace for the Lords gifts and graces are without repentance and hee that is able to call them to graffe them and to winne them will cloth their naked soules with comfort His desire is to binde men vnto him for it and therefore let not any man dispaire of their saluation nor enuy them if the Lord call them to heauen at the last gaspe as hee did the good theefe vpon the Crosse FINIS