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A00945 Certaine very proper, and most profitable similies wherein sundrie, and very many, most foule vices, and dangerous sinnes, of all sorts, are so plainly laid open, and displaied in their kindes, and so pointed at with the finger of God, ... Collected by Anthonie Fletcher, minister of the word of God, ... This present yeere of our happines 1595. Fletcher, Anthonie. 1595 (1595) STC 11053; ESTC S116009 166,265 184

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out that men seeing their constancie in the loue of God may glorifie their father which as in heauen S. 79. P. 34. The good agreement and well hanging togither of the in 〈…〉 creatures of God in this world though differing in natures and the apt placing of the whole may very well teach vs that there is a mightie creator a great gouernor and a wise preseruer of all these things S. 80. P. 34. 35. The cause of the sinnes and iniquities which man committeth is in himselfe euen as the tree is in the kernell and the herbe in the seede Self loue is a perilous and common theefe ranging and robbing in euerie place it maketh men fooles and doth put out their eies and yet is welcome to all S. 81. Pag. 35. They that be godly are most easily moued to do good vpon any occasion offered the troubles and afflictions of their brethren are to them as if they were their owne if they do but heare of anie distressed they by and by cast with themselues how to do them good such be good though few S. 82. P. 36. A good christian though he be heere vpon the earth in bodie in affect and desire he is in heauen S. 83. P. 36. Gods children despise those things which vnto the worldlings seeme very precious not earth but heauen hath their harts S. 84. P. 36. As he that walketh vpon coards fastened on high had need to looke to his footing so it behooueth vs to be very carefull where we place our affections For there be two that daily striue for them God calleth and sathan allureth Sathan doth keepe a continual siege against all vertue to kill it if he can euen when it is a hatching in the hart of man S. 85. P. 36. 37. Many men haue calling but they answere it not knowledge but they practise it not words but they worke not such are compared to the ostridge that hath wings and flyeth not S. 86 P. 38. All that be aduanced into places of high dignitie are not the best men though some be very good yet some seeke more their own praise and profit than gods glory but that is not to follow Christ S. 87. P. 38. 39. The greatest highest and best seruice that man can do vnto God for the comfort of his ownesoule and his happines in the world to come is his due obedience vnto the word of God S. 88. P. 39. 40. That man perisheth for euer and goeth to hell is mans owne fault not the Lords the Lord is no more to be blamed for mans destruction then the smith that made for thee som instrument of iron or steele is to be blamed if thou wilt suffer it to growe rustie and cankered the smith made not rustines neither God thee to sinne S. 89. P. 40. The children of God vnderstāding by the word that this world and all that is in it is meere vanitie they haue their felicitie ioie and comfort in knowing of the word and doing of the will of God S. 90. P. 40. The Indian adamant which in hardnes doth excell all other stones is said to be mollified with the warme bloud of a goate But the hart of man hardned with continuance and custome of sinne will not be mollified with the bloude of the immaculate lambe Christ Iesus S. 91. P. 41. Though the world intreat vs vnkindly and be daily harming vs yet we must no more giue ouer doing good then the sunne giueth ouer shining though many clouds do continually couer it S. 92. P. 42. Vertues lot is to be enuied to finde very colde intertainment if any at all with the men of this world and yet for all that the seruants of God will neuer be wearie of well doing S 93 P. 42. Mans hart being quiet and not troubled with horrors nor distempered with feares wil plainly shew a man what he is so that he may easily know himselfe but being tossed with terrors and ouerwhelmed with feares it cannot do so S. 94. P. 42. A flatterer to see to is honest Cato but in experience cruell Nero and therefore verie fitly compared to a scorpion S 95. P. 43. There be many dissemblers and smooth tongued flatterers in the world that will euen stroke as it were mens humors and dispositions with words as soft as oyle and so sweet as honie and al to creepe within them that at the length they may worke their wo and destruction S. 96. P. 43. As a candle that it may giue light to others is consumed it selfe and salt that it may draw corruptiō out of flesh keepe it sweet and wholesome for mans body is all to brused broken and wasted it selfe So euerie christian man and especially teachers of others ought to spare no labour to do good to others and to win some soules to God if it please him to blesse their labours S. 97. P. 43. The saylers g●o●on called the mar●iners needle lockt shut vp or kept in a ●offer of gold siluer wood or whatsoeuer will euer stil looke towards the north pole So right christians which are throughly resolued concerning their saluation and euerlasting life will neuer turne from Christ but haue their harts and minds still fixed in him come wealth or want sicknes or health libertie or imprisonment life or death S. 98. P. 43. 44. A christian will not haue two loues one for himselfe and an other for his neighbour but will loue his neighbour with one the same loue wherewith he loueth himselfe S. 99. P. 44. 45. The soule of man so long as it is in bondage vnto the bodie it seeketh onelie the bodies pleasures and delights but hauing once recouered that seruitude and brought the bodie to be subiect vnto it then it seeketh no longer the peace pleasure ease and rest of the bodie but now being freed from that bondage and restored to it selfe it seeketh it owne peace rest health and happines for euer S. 99. P. 44. 45. That man is in a wofull case that hath his head vnder the girdle of this world he shal neuer find any rest peace or quietnes Put no trust in the world if thou dost it will deceaue thee and giue thee quid pro quo that is a mischiefe in stead of a pleasure promised The going out of this world to a christian is like a safe sure hauē to a man that hath bin very long and dangerously tossed in a most troublesome and perilous sea S. 100. P. 45. 46. A corrupted iusticer or iudge by the vertue of a precious stone or some other rich iewell bestowed vpon him freely will make a bad matter go for good and a very iust cause go for nought Yea for a good round sum of money though it be in an old leather purse he will now and then sell iudgement break the necke of iustice Where this corruption and abuse is it breedeth this slaunderous report of the law which is good Par●is cornis
that it may giue good season and a swéete sauour vnto meates So a true Christian especially one aduaunced to dignitie and placed in authoritie should spare no labor but euen breake himselfe with studie and care and vndergo any paines to do good to profite many and to win some soules to God Such men indeede hath Christ appointed to be the light of the world and the salt of the earth They ought to be full of loue to God and man They should liue as strangers vpon the earth They should haue no acquaintance with pride couetousnes ambition emulation and such other sinnes of the world EVen as the sailers gnomon or rule which is commonly called the marriners néedle doth alwaies looke towards the north pole and will euer turne towards the same howsoeuer thou shalt place it which is maruellous in that instrument and néedle whereby the marriners do know the course of the winds Euenso euery Christian man ought to direct the eies of his minde and the waies of his hart to Christ He is our north pole and that fixed and constant north star whereby we ought all to be gouerned he is our hope and our trust he is all our strength whereupon we must still relie And as the gnomon doth euer behold the north star whether it be closed and shut vp in a cofer of golde siluer or wood neuer losing his nature so a right Christian man whether he abound in wealth or be pinched with pouertie whether he be of high or lowe degrée in this world ought continually to haue his faith and hope surely built and grounded vpon Christ and to haue his hart and minde fast fixed and setled in him and to follow him through thick and thin through fire and water through wars and peace through hunger cold through friends and foes through a thousand perils and dangers through the surges and waues of enuie malice hatred euill spéeches railing sentences contempt of the world flesh and diuell and euen in death it selfe be it neuer so bitter cruell and tyrannical neuer to lose the sight and view of Christ neuer to giue ouer our faith hope and trust in him Let vs followe the counsell of the holy Ghost which saith Put me as a signe vpon thy hart as if he should say Set me in thy hart in stéede of a marke whereat all thy thoughts words and works may be leuelled Put out of thy hart the marke of the world and place me there as the end vnto the which all thy purposes may tend vpon whom all thy cares may be cast and in whom thou maist rest thy soule in all peace A woonderfull gnomon and most excellent sailing néedle was that noble king and famous prophet of God Dauid when he said I set the Lord alwaies before mine eies for he is at my right hand that I shall not be mooued Therefore saith he my hart reioiced my toong was glad and my flesh shall rest in hope And the Apostle saith Let vs run toward the fight that is set before vs looking still vpon Iesus the author and finisher of our faith who hauing ioy set before him indured the crosse God giue vs grace continually to lift vp our harts and mindes our hand and eies to Christ Iesus and as Augustine saith To behold stedfastly our head AS all riuers of waters go into the sea bicause they came out of it and as Salomon saith All riuers and flouds returne to the place whence they came So let vs go and towards our God with all our harts strength and powers bicause we came out from him and were created of him Let vs therefore looke vpon him with the eies of a stedfast and constant faith grounded vpon his word let vs behold his glorie and the blessednes of his saints and let vs conceiue in our harts and soules an vnfained loue to him and let vs not haue two loues one for our selues and another for our neighbors but let vs loue them and our selues both with one and the same loue which may kindle and inflame our harts and mindes throughout with an earnest desire of immortalitie and that heauenly Ierusalem That we may say with the prophet O my soule returne vnto thy rest for the Lord hath done well to thée or as it may be translated bicause the Lord hath restored thée to thy selfe As if he should say O my soule when thou didst serue thy bodie and wast in bondage to it it was no maruell that thou didst séeke the pleasures thereof but now séeing thou art thine owne bicause the Lord hath restored thée to thy selfe séeke not anothers pleasure but thine owne séeke thine owne rest and not the rest of thy bodie of the flesh of the world séeke God delight in him flie vnto him and rest thy selfe in him put all thy cares griefs sorrowes in his loue and swéete comfort thinke of eternall blessednes presse it and print it surely in thy selfe This is thy spirituall rest this is thine own and only delight restored vnto thée by the benefit and bountifulnes of God THere is nothing liker vnto the world than the sea For as it floweth and ebbeth and all the waues thereof at the length fall into the earth So this world is neuer quiet it extolleth some and casteth downe others but all the vanities of it are ended in the graue If the sea lie open to many dangers how perilous then is the world if the sea be troubled with strange stormes with what tempests then is the world tossed If they that serue by sea are neuer without great perils how much more then the seruants of the world They whose heads are vnder the girdle of the world are continually shot at with the darts of enuie hatred and malice and are euer couered as it were with cloudes and stormes of a thousand cares How many are slaues to pride how many are dirtie drudges to couetousnes how many are consumed in substance soules and bodies by foule and filthie lecherie How many are deuoured and swallowed vp quicke of sorrowes and gréefes of hart and minde And doth not too much ioy and reioicing in worldly trifles kill some Many die laughing but mo sorrowing some with eating and drinking too much and many through want of sufficient giue the world adew Some grudge and whine bicause they haue many children and some are malcontent bicause they haue none some grudge not bicause they haue many but bicause they haue bad ones some boast of their beauties and some mourne for their blacknes Many desire to liue long but few to liue well All would be rulers and few will be ruled What then shall we thinke of this world Truly I thinke of it as of a thing most dangerous and most vaine and the going out of it is to me as the shore is to a man that hath trauelled far and long by sea and hath béene dangerously tossed with the surges and waues of
all idle slothfulnes in the matters of God and our saluation and to fill our harts full of vnfained loue to himselfe aboue all things and to our neighbors as to our selues and for his owne sake euen to our enimies that sathan our sworne enimie that soule flie of hell may neuer finde so much as one chinke or chap where through he may créepe into our harts Amen Amen AS in a true perfect and certaine clocke the whéeles being tempered and in equall and due proportion diuided do performe their courses and do keepe their seuerall compasses without iarring or differing one from another euenly and alike so that one moouing the others are mooued and one standing the rest are still and stir not so that though they be many in number in frame fashion and agréement they are but one Euen so in a Christian commonwealth there ought to be one and the selfesame will and so great a concord and likenes of mindes reconciled and drawen togither by vertue it selfe and so inseparably linked one to another with the infringible band of sincere loue in Christ that though in bodies they be infinite and innumerable yet in vnanimitie consent and good agréement in the Lord Iesu they should be all as one man This is that vnitie and brotherly loue which God himselfe so highly commendeth in the mouth of his prophet saying Behold how good and how ioyfull a thing it is brethren to dwell euen togither c. To this end came our sauiour Christ that I may vse the words of Zacharie euen to guide and direct our feete into the way of peace And the holy Apostle doth admonish vs to kéepe the vnitie of the spirit in the band of peace And to the Romanes he saith The kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnes and peace Againe is not that example of our sweete sauiour woorthie of all men to be imbraced and imitated Simon saith Christ to Peter of whom do the kings of the earth take tribute or poll mony of their children or of strangers Peter answered Of strangers then said Iesus Then are the children frée Neuertheles saith Christ least we should offend them go thy way to the sea c. and pay for thée and me Lo● to auoid offence and to preserue peace what our sauiour Christ himselfe was contented to do euen that he néeded not and was frée from Much to blame therefore are all they and far from following the steps of Christ which séeke not by all meanes lawfull and possible to maintaine the vnitie and peace of the church of Christ The enimies of this peace are very intolerable men The Lord by his prophet calleth them wicked and vngodly men There is no peace to the vngodly And Salomon doth number them among the enimies of God which do sowe discord and dissention among brethren EVen as the spirit of man doth not strengthen the members of the body vnlesse they be fast and surely ioined togither So the holy Ghost doth not reuiue and comfort the members of the Church when they fall away and will not continue in league and fellowship with the seruants of God Longer than they are fast bound and knit to the congregation of Gods people in loue and peace in Christ the holy Ghost doth minister no strength no consolation no comfort vnto them There remaineth nothing else in such men but a numnesse and an extreme blindnes in heauenly things And whiles in their arrogancie and pride they forsake and condemne the church of God bicause they cannot draw it into subiection to their fond and fantasticall humors they become of men diuels incarnate AS the pilote of a ship without the shine of sunne or moone cannot take the hauen of any land So a man without the light of grace can neuer attaine to the hauen of glorie but howsoeuer he persuadeth himselfe that he casteth his anchor in a place of safetie it falleth out in the end that he casteth it vpon a rocke where there is no hope of saluation AN eagle so long as hir yoong ones be not very flidge and throughly feathered she doth not suffer them to go out of the nest and to flie abroad but after they be perfectly winged in the beautie strength of their feathers she throwes them out of the nest that they may flie and exercise their wings and feathers and vse them to the end wherfore they haue them Euen so our sauiour Christ that heauenly eagle after his resurrectiō commanded his disciples to stay at Ierusalem as it were in a nest and not to depart thence vntill in the day of Pentecost he had filled them with the grace of the holy Ghost then he commanded them that passing through the world and traueling through diuers coasts of the earth they should publish abroad and spread far and neare the Gospell of his kingdome This example of Christ is followed at this day to the great comfort and benefit of Christ his church when godly Archministers lay not their hands vpon any to admit them to be laborers in the Lords vineyard nor to do the office of a minister vntill they finde them sufficiently learned and well furnished with gifts and graces from God so far as they be able to discerne and iudge EVen as the eagle hauing hir yoong ones shut vp in the nest although she flieth excéeding high pearseth the loftie aire yet she withdraweth not hir eies from hir yoong ones but still beholdeth them and they also crying after their maner with their stretched out necks do looke after hir Euen so the Lord Iesus ascending into heauen did behold his disciples and they also hungring and thirsting after him did fasten their eies vpon him and did not lose the sight of him vntill he pearsed and broke open the heauens and entred into the presence of his father And although they were diuided from him in body yet in hart and minde they followed him still And Iesus that heauenly eagle séeing from heauen a fierce and cruell hauke preparing to destroy his nest and to kill his yoong ones he on the other side prepared himselfe and came against the hawke ouerthrew him and laid him prostrate vpon the ground The hawke was Saule who that I may speake as the scripture speaketh breathing out threatnings and slaughter against the disciples and seruants of the Lord he went vnto the high priest and desired letters of him to Damascus against all the Christians that he should finde there c. but the Lord Iesus did hurle him against the ground and gaue him for meate vnto his church and to the yoong ones of his nest whom he sought to destroy who now being called Paul doth recreate and refresh the whole church of God with holy most heauenly doctrine Behold how the lord hath euer prouided well for his nest that is his church his saints and seruants And this is our comfort in all
his hand an angling rod and with a baited hooke fishing in an obscure and troubled riuer although he doth not sée the fish rush vpon the baite yet he perceiueth very well that the fish is taken and hanged vpon the hooke bicause the corke or barke of his fishing line is pulled downe and hid vnder the water So sathan that most subtle and wilte fisher although he séeth not our thoughts being in the secrets and bottomes of our harts yet notwithstanding by outward signes he many times doth know them as by our words For out of the aboundance of the hart the mouth speaketh by our actions and by the gestures of our bodies For Christ himselfe affirmeth That out of our harts do come euill and wicked thoughts And Salomon in his Prouerbes doth number among those things which God hateth An hart that is fraught with euill thoughts Héere hence may most easily be gathered that all our euill thoughts do not come vnto vs from without neither are wrought in vs nor stirred vp altogither by sathan but that they come and créepe out of our owne corruption And so by outward signes and tokens comming to the knowledge of our enimie the deuill he neuer ceaseth with infinite temptations of all sorts to do his greatest indeuour to drawe the same cogitations of our harts into most dangerous and damnable practise if the Lord of his mercie and goodnes shall not giue vs true repentance and the assistance of his spirit wherby we may auoide his snares and escape his traps Which thing the Lorde grant vs. Amen AS the smith doth not make himselfe the hote coles that be in his forge but doth blowe the fire with bellowes and so the coles are kindled and made hot and firie So the diuell doth blowe and inflame those dangerous and wicked cogitations which are conceiued in our harts and minds with the bellowes of great and manifold temptations and so laboring to kindle the fire of all iniquitie he ministreth nourishment to all our wicked and damnable purposes For the hart of man is like vnto a smithes forge his euill and bad cogitations are hote burning coles he that doth blowe the bellowes to make them to burne vp and to consume both our soules and bodies is the diuell that ancient enimie of our happines and saluation It is to be lamented verily and with bitter tear●s and blubbering eies to be bewailed that such pestilent cogitations and deadly thoughts should be nouzeled and nourished in our harts and soules which do kill both bodie soule for euer euen as the frie of vipers in comming to light do kill their dams most miserably EVen as a begger doth couer and hide those parts of his body which be whole sound and perfect and doth open and shew abroad those parts or members which be ●ore wounded maimed lame putrified and rotten to mooue the harts and mindes of passers by and of all that shall behold him the rather to pitie him and to minister vnto him some reléefe and comfort Euen so we that be poore and miserable sinners in this world must not bring before the Lord our God our owne merits good déeds or vertues as able and sufficient to win the fauour and loue of God and to cléere vs of our sinnes and transgressions but we must most willingly with harts that be rent and torne with gréefe and sorrow for our misdéedes and heinous offences done and committed against the maiestie of God open bring foorth and lay before him the botches of our soules the corruption of our natures and the putrifaction and rottennes of our sinnes and iniquities that we may obtaine at Gods hand ease and comfort to our soules and consciences his great mercie and frée remission for all our rebellions sinnes and wickednesses through Iesus Christ our Lord. AS they which do dig mettals out of the earth do not contemne nor despise the least gobbets and peeces that they espie but take all but especially if they finde by digging a veine of gold they leaue no way vnsought but with all care and diligence they looke about them and do dig the gold and earth togither and most diligently do saue and kéepe the same Euen so ought we to deale in the holy word of God we must passe ouer nothing therein lightly nor despise one word of all the sacred and diuine scriptures but eagerly and earnestly to do our best and greatest indeuors yea and to call and to crie most mightily to the Lord to aide assist and enable vs to dig out of the same word whatsoeuer is requisite and necessarie for the saluation of our soules and eternall life It is not earth and gold mixt togither it is all most pure and throughly tried yea it is purer by a thousand degrées than any golde that hath béene tried seauen times in the fire The prophet affirmeth that it is better than thousands of gold and siluer AS the sea doth cast to shore shell fishes of al sorts wéedes and many other things and not long after doth sup vp receiue deuoure and cast into the depth the same againe Euen so this world doth now thrust vs out of fauour and by and by receiueth vs againe and when we thinke our selues to be vpon a very safe shore and that we haue leisure and time to rest vs and to meditate vpon some woorthie and excellent things euen then we finde our selues deceiued and are tossed among the waues of infinite troubles and are swallowed vp of innumerable calamities bicause many things that we neuer thought of haue preuented vs and the flickerings and false promises of this cosoning world haue deceiued our hope and disappointed our expectation AS a weake and brittle wal is easily cast downe and ouerthrowen with euery engine but an huge fense a mightie strong wall and a tower that is firme and fensed on euery side doth stand surely and endureth the force that commeth against it without yéelding staggering or falling insomuch that the enimies that seeke to ouerthrow it are driuen and constrained to vse warlike engins and policies yea and to batter and shake it with engins torments and ordinances of wars which will send and throw out stones weapons bullets and pellets of iron and lead Euen so sathan doth most easily ouerthrow with euery light temptation fraile and weake men which are not well setled in vertue nor grounded in godlines nor armed with the holy word and spirit of God but to win and ouercome if he could men that are furnished with a strong and liuely faith and such as are staied and do relie vpon the Lords protection and loue he vseth sundrie subtilties and most dangerous and forcible temptations He that tempted our sauiour Christ will neither spare any man nor meanes to destroie vs if he can bring to passe and effect his purposes The Lord kéepe and defend vs from his craft subtiltie and force and so strengthen vs with the holy
CERTAINE VERY PROPER AND MOST PROFITABLE SIMILIES wherein sundrie and very many most foule vices and dangerous sinnes of all sorts are so plainly laid open and displaied in their kindes and so pointed at with the finger of God in his sacred and holy Scriptures to signifie his wrath and indignation belonging vnto them that the Christian Reader being seasoned with the spirit of grace and hauing God before his eies will be very fearfull euen in loue that he beareth to God to pollute and to defile his hart his mind his mouth or hands with any such forbidden things And also manie very notable vertues with their due commendations so liuely and truly expressed according to the holy word that the godly Reader being of a Christian inclination will be mightily inflamed with a loue vnto them Collected by Anthonie Fletcher minister of the word of God in vnfained loue in the Lord Iesu to do the best and all that he can to pleasure and to profite all those that desire to know the Lords waies and to walke in the same This present yeere of our happines 1595. Psalme 128. Blessed is euery one that feareth the Lord and walketh in his waies Printed at London by Iohn Iackson for Isaac Bing To the Right honorable Earle and vertuous Lord the Lord GILBERT TAVLBVT Earle of Shrewsburie and Knight of the noble order of the gartar Grace mercie and peace through Christ Iesus with increase of honor health and all happinesse c. BEing very desirous Right honorable in the feare of God to do good and to profit among all at the least some especially of the weakest sort whose neede of helpe in heauenly things that they may see both vertue and vice and learne to imbrace the one and to auoide the other is exceeding great I haue ventured to take a little paine to collect and to bestowe some labour to gather togither a little booke of Similies to testifie my loue in Christ Iesu to all the seruants of God and haue presumed to dedicate the same vnto your Honor not doubting but that as it may do good and profit very manie concerning the knowledge of God and of his iudgements due to sinne so your Honor will accordingly receiue the same in good part and be as glad to be a patrone to any true seruice to God as any man in the world is or can be able to offer and to performe it Your Honors continuall and faithfull care to do good to your natiue countrie your vnfained and most hartie zeale in fauouring true religion your very good liking and loue towards all that feare the Lorde your misliking of vice and loue to vertue your readinesse to do good to all both for their bodies and soules and to hurt none These things I say haue giuen me this boldnes vnder your Honors protection to publish and to send abroad this my little labour as a poore token of my good will and loue in Christ towards all the seruants and children of God nothing doubting but that for your Honors sake it will be the better welcome to all that feare God and with the greater diligence read imbraced and imitated of all And I my selfe the more incouraged to labour heerafter and to thinke no pains great whatsoeuer I am able to vndergoe and to indure to profite others to increase knowledge in the ignorant and to further the saluation of all men Againe the remembrance of that most vertuous and godlie Ladie Ladie Marie your Honors good and gracious sister wife to the very worshipful and good Knight sir George Sauill when I was preacher in Wakefield to me and to all that feare God a most Christian friende did euen seeme to warrant me though I am vnknowen to your Honour that you are readier to further than I am to perform any good worke Lastly the readinesse to knowe God and their obedience vnto the highest and almightie that I found in those gracious branches sweete virgins and most towarde Ladies your Honors owne daughters when I being preacher at Clerkenwell they were with that vertuous gracious and very religious gentlewoman somtimes mother to hir Maiesties Maides of honor and my very worshipful friend mistresse Winfield hath giuen me great comfort to thrust out this little booke of mine vnder your Honors protection to do good to them that you and I both do loue as I assure my selfe in Christ Iesu Thus without troubling your Honor any longer I beseech the Almightie to blesse your Honors selfe the honorable and godlie Ladie your wife your Ladie daughters and all that appertaine to your Honor if they appertain to God This 22. of May 1595. Your Honors most humble to command in Christ Iesu during this temporall life Anthonie Fletcher preacher of the word of God A paterne of a cursed tree and the fruite and end of the same WHen the sonne of God the redeemer of the world Christ Iesus was heere below vpon the earth so truelie in his bodie as we be now in our bodies sauing that he was cleere and free from all corruption of sinne and as he walked being pinched with hunger did espie a goodlie fig tree which with the faire greene and flourishing leaues did offer vnto him some hope of releefe and comming to it finding it fruitlesse and being disappointed of his hope he cursed it and commanded that it should be cut downe and cast into the fire If he dealt so with trees that did beare no fruite at all we may warrant and assure our selues that he will curse cut downe and cast into the fire that neuer shall be quenched euery tree that is euerie man that bringeth foorth such fruits as this tree beareth If the Lord his curse belongeth to a barren tree that beareth no fruit much more doth it belong to those trees which bring foorth bad fruites If trees that are vnprofitable bicause they beare nothing but leaues are fitter for the fire then to trouble the earth then much more those trees that are so heauie loden and so full of poyson that a man cannot touch one twig of them but it killeth his soule and bodie for euer Such a tree is euerie one that beareth such fruites in his life and manners as this tree doth No good Christian therefore will delight please himselfe with the shadow of such a tree neither build his nest in any part or branch of it but rather will do his greatest indeuor to pull it downe Do thou good Christian thy best and be sure the Lorde will take thy part And howsoeuer earthlie iusticers let slip their parts and forget to do their duties the Lord will neuer forget nor let slip his part Heere thou seest Iustice hath fastened his coard to the top of the tree and Veritie is hacking at the roote betweene them both to ouerthrowe it Now if thou louest righteousnes and art a friende to truth take their parts in this busines pull downe with Iustice and strike with Veritie lend
whatsoeuer ye do else do all to the glorie of God AS a thicke wood and goodly groue giuing great shadowe very pleasant to behold doth delight the eies of the beholders so greatly with the varietie and thicknes of florishing trées and pleasant plants that it séemeth to be ordained onely for pleasures sake and yet within is full of poisonful serpents rauening wolues and other wilde hurtfull and cruell beasts Euen so an hypocrite when outwardly he séemeth holy and to be wel furnished with the ornaments of all sorts of vertues doth please well and delight much the eies of his beholders but within him there lurketh pride couetousnes enuie and all maner wickednesses like wilde and cruell beasts walking and wandring in the wood of his hart So that whiles he séemeth to be that he is not neither will be that he séemeth his exercise is to séeke whose house he may deuoure whose goodes he may gripe whose credit he may cracke whose name he may blemish and whose honest disposition and godly simplicity he may most abuse In the hypocrite this is verified Fained sanctitie is double iniquitie So that I speake with reuerence if any be a knaue the hypocrite is more if some may serue for one he may well stand for two Hypocrisie is a subtill euill a secret poison a lurking venome a painting and counterfetting of vertue a moath of holines In mine opinion there be no woorse men liuing than hypocrites be for when they purpose most to deceiue they handle the matter so and do so paint themselues with counterfet colour that you would thinke them to be very vertuous and godly disposed AS a flint smitten against iron or stéele doth driue out sparks of fire So godly meditations of heauenly things draw out of hard harts some warmnes and as it were fire of the loue of God The prophet Dauid had experience thereof when he said My hart wareth warme within me and in my meditation a fire was kindled That soule which shall be replenished with vertues and shal take pleasure in the contemplation of heauenly things shall no doubt haue most swift and speedie wings and shall be called most woorthily Auis petens alta se à terrae laqueis eripiens A bird that mounteth on high and pearseth the clouds fréeing hir selfe from the traps and snares of the earth Such was the soule of the prophet when he said My soule is euen as a bird escaped out of the snare of the hunter Let vs whiles it is to day and we may flie be lifted vp towards our God and forgetting the vaine things of the earth which are behinde vs and preasing with all our powers to the things aboue and neuer satisfied with the loue of God and the desire of heauen let vs boldly go forward and stretch out our selues to the reward of the high calling of God in Christ Iesu our Lord. For the things of this world haue euer béene false and at the length haue deceiued their louers and déerest friends EVen as he that hath a sonne which is in good and perfect health and a seruant that is excéeding sicke dealeth more roughly and seuerely with his sonne than with his seruant not bicause he loueth his seruant more than his sonne but bicause he would if it might be restore his sicke seruant to his former health but his sonne whom he loueth most déerely he reprooueth checketh taunteth and correcteth Euen so our God somtimes afflicteth his déere children whom he most tenderly loueth and doth suffer them to be exercised with wants with wéepings and wailings with sighes and sorrowfull sobs with hunger and cold with nakednes and want of harbour with heauines of hart and vexation of soule with sicknes of bodie and want of libertie and with a thousand other calamities and cares and in the meane time suffereth the wicked and vngodlie ones of the world to want nothing he giueth them health wealth and libertie worldly honor and dignitie and what not meaning and purposing by these meanes if the fault be not in themselues to bring them to knowe to feare to honor and to serue him by whose prouidence and appointment they haue and enioy all those good blessings and so be cured and healed of the sores and sicknes of their soules The holy men and seruants of God haue euer béene wel experienced in the Lords chastenings Ieremie the prophet saith to God Thou hast chastened me O Lord and I am corrected And the Apostle saith Whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he correcteth euery sonne that he receiueth Againe Let vs reioice in tribulations And to the Galathians God forbid that I should reioice but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ whereby the world is crucified vnto me and I to the world by the crosse vnderstand the afflictions of Christ wherewith the Apostle was exercised for Christs sake For this must euer be true All that will liue godly in Christ Iesu shall suffer persecution So that the troubles and afflictions of this life are not reiections maledictions and the curses of God but rather and most truly infallible signes of his grace and true tokens of his loue and mercies toward vs. Blessed are they saith truth it self that suffer persecution for righteousnes sake AS the skilfull pearle seller and cunning lapidarie doth willingly suffer the Indian diamond or adamant to be smitten and st●ooken with great and weightie blowes bicause he knoweth well that the hammer and anuill will sooner be bruised than the diamond or adamant will be broken So our most wise God yea onely wisedome it selfe suffereth men of excellent vertues of vnquenchable loue charitie and inuincible constancie to fall into diuers temptations and to be plunged déepe into manifold miseries bicause he will haue their inward graces to breake out and so shine before men that they seeing the constancie of his saints may glorifie God which is in heauen For he is sure that they be constant and that nothing can separate them from the loue of God Ioseph was imprisoned in Egypt Ieremie in Iudea Ezechiel in Chaldea and Iohn Baptist by wicked Herod and yet all these and infinite others did neuer shrinke from God but as they liued in him so they died in him and are exalted vp on high and shall dwell in his tabernacle and rest in the hill of his holines for euer and euer And so shall we do if we will be as they were AS when thou séest a great and goodly citie consisting of many and sundry sorts of men some of great reputation and very many of smal estimation some exceeding rich and infinite others extremely poore some in their fresh and florishing youth and some crooked with old age where all these though among themselues selues they be diuers and sundrie do liue in great concord and agrée well togither and are kept all within the bounds and limits of good and godly discipline thou wilt
in the defence of his truth The Lorde roote out all hypocrisie and conuert or subuert all hypocrites AS great flouds and swelling riuers when they ouerflowe their chanels and do breake through their bankes by reason of their raging and violent streames and so spread and run abroad can not fill and couer the fieldes with water but they hurt corne or grasse or what so else is in their waie So great riches mightie powers and high dignities when they growe and increase in wicked and vngodly men do not spread abroade and run ouer the fieldes and limites of common wealthes but they do much harme to wit they polle and pill away the riches and substance of the séely weake and poore men they fill their diches I meane their purses with the blood of innocents they build their honors and establish their dignities vpon the disgrace and the oppression of the saints and seruants of God And whatsoeuer is in their waie and to their liking they carrie it with them by hooke or crooke by right or wronge they care not who wéepe so they laugh who be emptie so they be full who be vndone so they be aduanced Héere hence come slaughters and murthers Thus are many brought into great calamities and miseries But they that do these things to others do hurt themselues most For whiles they hurt others in their bodies goods or names they kill their owne soules AS a man much mooued with anger and far out of frame through indignation and wrath intending to kill his brother should throw at him precious stones goodly pearles and rich iewels should not damnifie nor hurt his brother bicause he woulde gather them vp kéepe them and inrich himselfe with them Euen so tyrants disposed to kill and with fire and sword to put to death the saints and true seruants of God which do excell in true piety and vnfained loue to God and man do torment them with diuers sorts and sundrie kinds of most cruell martyrdome of which things the children of God are glad and do reioice and grow stronger and richer in Christ being throughly armed with a godly patience they do take and beare them most quietly for God his sake without murmuring or grudging euen as their crosse wherewith most willingly they follow their Lord and sauiour Christ and do account such tortures inestimable riches and themselues happie that they be thought woorthie to suffer such things for the truth sake and in the Lords quarell Such euer haue béene all the martyrs of Christ that when they haue béene haled and dragged to most cruell torments and tyrannicall executions they haue taken and imbraced them most cheerefully as though they were rich and delicate banquets AS precious iewels made of most pure gold wrought cunningly curiouslie with great workmanship the néerer thou shalt come vnto them and the more stedfastly and cléerely thou shalt behold them the finer the brauer and more excellent thou wilt iudge them Euen so as thou shalt come néerer in vnderstanding and knowledge vnto the secrets and mysteries of God conteined in his written word and with the greater puritie of minde the more strength of faith and the brighter light of the grace of God thou shalt looke into them the profounder the déeper the more diuine and heauenly yea and the more comfortable to thy soule will they séeme and appéere vnto thée euery day Insomuch that thou wilt iudge thy selfe to haue béen little better then blinde and to haue séene nothing as thou ought in the mysteries of the diuine word And thou wilt make haste to crie vnto the Lorde with the prophet Open mine eies O Lord and I shall sée and consider the woonderfull things of thy lawe But that man that trusting to his owne gifts wit and learning and hath his hart and minde bewitched with this worlde and poysoned with sinne taking pleasure in those things which the Lord hath forbidden will go about to pearce into the most holie worde and to search out the secrets of the great and most highe God he shall lose his labour open his vanitie misse the marke he shot at and die in the blindnes wherein he liued and so passe hence to his owne destruction the iust reward of his presumption be he neuer so wittie skilfull and learned Through thy commandements saith the Lords prophet I am wiser then all my enimies learneder then my teachers and better experienced then the ancient men of the worlde Therefore true wisedome the best learning and heauenly experience is gotten and had out of the lawe of God by the inward working of the holie Ghost in our harts and minds The Almightie vouchsafe to write his lawes and statutes in all our harts that therby we may be wise against flesh this inchaunting world sin and sathan AS the hauke is then lost when trusting to hir wings shée riseth and mounteth too high So then do vaine men fall far from God when with their owne wit reason and wisedome onely and alone they will vnderstande the déepe misteries of God as though the counsels and wisedome of Gods eternal maiestie might and could be comprehended with the reason wit of man The Apostle his counsell is holie and good be not too high minded but feare AS they that haue cléere and sound eies do easilie indure the bright light of the sunne wherewith eies that be sore and diseased are greatly offended So vertuous and godly men are illuminated and woonderfully cléered in their vnderstanding and the eies of their minds with the diuine and heauenly light of the word of him that saith I am the light of the world wherwith the wicked and vngodly are highly offended in so much that they hate the light and loue darknes more then it And so growing blinder and blinder euery day at the length they fall and tumble downe headlong into the insaciable pit of eternall destruction AS a pot full of swéete liquor if it be made hote and boyled vpon the fire will driue away flies that they will not come néere it but if it be cold the flies will by and by go into it and it will receiue them and they will corrupt and consume it Euen so the hart of man if it be inflamed with a true and sincere loue of God will not receiue into it those dangerous temptations which are continually flying about it but wil remooue and driue them far off and giue no place vnto them but if by reason of slothfull idlenes in heauenly things and for want of a godly courage it grow cold in the loue of the Lord then is it obuious and wide open to all temptations it barreth out none it receiueth all none are reiected be they neuer so wicked all are imbraced intertained and welcome Then is it a receptacle of all abominations as idolatrie blasphemie murther adulterie and whatsoeuer is wicked mischeeuous and damnable The Lord therefore vouchsafe to take from vs
Ghost that we may passe through and breake in péeces all his snares VVE must not thinke that those men are forsaken of God which are much and continually exercised with diuers temptations for euen as a man that hath two sonnes the one an earnest louer of vertue strong in bodie and of a mightie courage the other depraued and of crooked disposition inclined to effeminate pleasures and wanton delights weake in bodie and of little or no courage The first he sendeth out to wars and doth aduenture him in perils and dangers of all sorts that he may exercise and acquaint him with the labours troubles and toiles of the world the other he cockereth and maketh too much of him he suffereth him to haue all things at his wil he is kept at home and as it were dandled vpon his mothers lap But at the last he that in all his affaires and dangerous aduentures did in euerie point quit himselfe like a man of great valure and noble courage receiued togither with great praise and deserued honor a most high and noble reward but he that was pampered and cockered at home had neither praise reward nor honor Euen so our heauenly father doth leade men that are strong and constant in faith through diuers and sundrie perils and dangers and doth drawe them as it were with his owne hande through bitter anguishes great perplexities and very narow streightes of calamities miseries and temptations and doth continuallie exercise them with fearefull cumbats against the enimies of their soules and through many and great labours infinite sturdie storms and bitter blasts doth strengthen and confirm them in vertue and godlines But the frayle and wicked men of the worlde and such as be méere naturall without any delight or comfort in his word and are no whit seasoned nor chéered with the dewes of his grace and his most blessed spirit he permitteth them to be in great prosperitie and to haue all things at their will and pleasure without smarting sighing sobbing and groning for wante or lacke of any thing that their harts can deuise or desire but at the length in the end of the day they that haue striuen harde and fought manfully and haue in battell ouercomed the flesh the world and the deuill shall be receiued into endlesse saluation euerlasting life and eternall glory And they which haue laid downe their heads and slept in the bosoms of worldy pleasures and haue slumbred in foule and filthie idlenes neuer caring nor thinking what will follow nor remembring the dreadful day of iudgment when the wicked shal heare their damnation denounced by Christ they I say shall be vtterly condemned reprobated and cast into euerlasting and endlesse miseries Then shall most plainly be séene and felt the losse that fleshly pleasures bring and the profite of crosses caried and borne for Christs sake AS wheate or other graine laide vp and kept in a garner cellar or chamber if it be not stirred and dressed often with a shouell or van will be full of corruption lose the swéete sauour ware vnholesome for mans body and will be consumed of wéeuels And apparel or garments being laid vp in a presse or other place if they be not much shaken and tossed will be eaten spoyled with mothes Euen so men if they be not tried with temptations and throughly exercised with calamities and miseries will be very quickly monstrously corrupted and will grow to be so rotten in all maner of sin and iniquitie that they will shrinke and fall quite from the Lord. But being well prooued canuased and throughly tried with many crosses afflictions and troubles one following in the necke of an other they become the firmer stronger and more constant in the faith feare and loue of God and so manfully fighting and courageouslie ouercomming the aduersaries and enimies of their soules they shall at the length be crowned with an euerlasting crowne of eternall glory The which crowne they onely shall haue saith the apostle which do striue lawfully And in another place he saith God is faithful and will not suffer you to be tempted aboue that which you are able to beare c. But in this case it is requisite that we be well furnished with the armour of God bicause our enimies do diuers and sundry waies assaile vs and most mightily impugne and fight against vs tryeng vs somtimes with one thing and somtimes with another So that if we be not clothed with the armour of righteousnes on the right hand and on the left we shall neuer be able to quit our selues against them I meane the world flesh and deuill our professed mortall and sworne enimies AS bées when they striue togither and are stirred vp through some vehement motion with throwing of dust are brought into order and appeased euen so men when they are tossed and tormented with troublesome broiles perturbations and passions if they would remember dust whereinto of necessitie they must be turned and neuer forget death which they shal neuer be able to escape they would easily be staied pacified and quieted and woulde represse and kéepe within compasse their stragling lusts and vnrulie appetites which cannot indure to be tamed nor ruled by reason AS a tree the more déepely it is rooted in the earth the taller it groweth and mounteth the higher So a man the more humble and lowly that he is the more and higher doth the Lord exalt him And as a trée set vpon the top of a mountaine is mightily shaken and easily rent vp by the rootes with euery blustering blast and storme of winde Euen so man in this world the more and higher he is exalted the more and greater dangers is he subiect vnto The holie virgine did perceiue and sée these things to be most true He hath saith she put downe the mightie from their seate and hath exalted the humble and méeke And the apostle saith God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble lowly Séeing therefore that we be compared to trées by Christ himselfe in his holy Gospell it behooueth vs to haue déepe and strong rootes of true and vnfained humilitie and in consideration of our frailtie and weaknes to set and place our selues in the bottom of the lowe valley of the knowledge of our owne misery That no tempests nor stormes may remooue and roote vs out That no vanitie may destroy vs No ambition trouble vs No gréedie couetousnes torment vs Nor any occasion whatsoeuer may possibly draw vs from the lowlines and humilitie of our harts and minds from the comtempt of the worlde and from a true and sincere loue of honesty and godlines A building is so much the firmer and stronger as the foundation groundworke of the same is laid lower and deeper The groundworke of Christian philosophie is vnfained humilitie and the déeper that the same is laid and setled in our harts the surer and more permanent will the building of our
thing that is right For he that instructeth others with wholesome doctrine and doth so staine and blemish himselfe with vile and naughtie v●●es that his life and doctrine be opposite and cleane contrary the one to the other so that it is séene and perceiued of all that there is no agréement betwéene them he is like vnto a sieue or a boulter wherewith meale is sifted or boulted which sendeth foorth the finest floure and best of the wheate and kéepeth the bran and woorst to it selfe The Lord coupleth togither in the priestes of the old law Doctrine and Truth regarding both their teaching and liuing He is a true and trustie teacher which doth himselfe that same that he teacheth The disciples of the Pharysies could espie so much though they loued it not when they said to Christ We know that thou art true and that thou teachest the way of God truely They confesse though with a wicked purpose that he did not onelie teach but also liue after the truth Wherein all christians ought to imitate Christ WHen in mans body the hart doth not impart vnto the members the vitall spirits but the arteries are stopt and shut vp and the blood forsaketh the veines it is a signe of death That man is either already dead or else he will die shortly Euen so when kings and princes of the earth are tyrannicall towards their loyall subiects withdrawing from them pittie mercy loue and liberalitie it threatneth and doth prognosticate the ruine of their kingdomes But through the mercy clemencie and loue of princes their kingdomes do mightily florish and the princes themselues do inioy great tranquillitie securitie and peace God put thankfulnes into the harts of all the true and faithfull subiects of England and else where within hir Maiesties dominions for our most gratious dread soueraigne Quéene Elizabeth for certainly that saieng of Salomon in his Prouerbes was neuer more truely verified in anie king or Quéene since the foundation of England then it hath béene in hir highnes Mercie and truth do kéepe the king and with clemency the kings throne is strengthened and established So all the worlde must be faine to saie Mercie and truth do kéepe good Quéene Elizabeth and clemencie doth strengthen hir throne Hir highnes doth that same that Artaxerxes speaketh of himselfe in the booke of Ester When saith he I did rule and gouerne many nations and had brought the whole world vnder my dominion I would not abuse the greatnes of my power but would gouerne my subiects with clemencie and lenitie All the world must néedes confesse the same of hir Maiestie towards all hir subiects Hir seate hath alwaies béene inuironed and compassed about with mercy which as Hieronimus saith doth lift man vp to Godward All the world is not able to lay to hir highnes charge so much as one dram of crueltie which as the same author affirmeth doth cast man downe to hell ward Euen as among the pretie swéete Bées that Bée onely which leadeth and ruleth all the rest either hath no sting or at the least doth not vse it So clemencie and mercy agréeth with none more in al the world then with a prince God giue grace to all hir Maiesties subiects so loyally louingly obediently and faithfullie to beare and behaue themselues that the mighty God of Israell may affoorde vs hir Maiesties life happy raigne chearefull countenance many yéeres Amen For in the chéerefulnes of hir countenuance is life INgratitude is a thing that the Lord could neuer abide It is a scorching winde that drieth vp the fountaines of piety and the streames of grace Whereas euery thing that is weighty and heauie tendeth and preaseth downward yet notwithstanding the cloudes that are full of water and swelled with moisture do ascend vpward bicause the sunne taketh them from the earth and with his force draweth them vp on high Which being lifted vp in the aire are gathered togither and thickened and so do couer and hide the brightnes of the sunne by whose helpe and attraction they were taken and caried vp but notwithstanding their malice they being dispersed and scattered abroad the sun that conquerer and ouercommer of darknes thrusteth through his beams breaketh the cloudes and giueth light with his shine Euen so the Israelites when they lay in Egypt a long time in obscuritie thraldome bondage and slauerie to Pharao and his people and were euen nailed as it were to the earth of all contempt and crueltie were then taken vp and set in great and high dignitie by the sunne of righteousnes but afterward they went about to obscure and extinguish the brightnes and light of God himself by whose benefit they had gotten that honor and dignitie which they had a●d without whom they were nothing but bond slaues of miserie and wretchednes but séeing they were like foule blacke cloudes they were dispersed scattered and vanished away And the glorie of Christ against their wils in spite of them togither with the brightnes of his name did break out and shine abroad and giue light throughout all the world I would to God that this ingratitude and vnthankfulnes had neuer a corner in England nor in any English hart it hath pleased the almightie by his faithfull seruant Elizabeth by his owne grace Quéene of England to deliuer our countrie from no lesse bondage thraldome and seruitude than he did the Israelites by Moses and Aaron and yet we finde to too manie that haue béen bred in England and owe their liues to hir highnes to murmure no lesse against hir happines than the Israelites did against the lords seruants Moses and Aaron The seruitude and slauerie of the Israelites was not greater nor woorse vnder Pharao that tyrant in Egypt than the bondage of England was vnder the Pope neither ought we to be lesse thankfull for our deliuerie from the slauerie of Rome than they should haue béen if they had well remembred themselues from the slauerie of Egypt We read in the booke of Wisdome that the hope of the vnthankfull man shall waste and consume like winters ice c. And t●…e Dauid the prophet saith O my soule praise the Lord and forget not all his benefits The Lord grant that we neuer forget any of the Lords benefits and that we may euer be thankfull to his diuine maiestie for the great benefit that he hath bestowed vpon England in his most faithfull seruant Elizabeth by his owne prouidence and appointment our most gratious Quéene and soueraigne whose life health and happines O Lord continue long Amen Amen Amen EVen as a moth or worme doth not bréede in the Cedar being a goodly and odoriferous trée alwaies fresh and florishing the wood whereof doth not rot So enuie is not bred in the hart of a wise and vertuous man but in the minde of a man that is wicked and vngodly and is gréeued and tormented at the happines and welfare of other men
For in the booke of Wisdome they are produced speaking these words What good hath our pride done vs And what profite hath the pompe of our riches brought vs All these things are gone away like a shadow and as a poste that hasteth by Let vs therefore set our harts and mindes and bend we our whole desires to heauenly things And let vs make no account of earthly transitorie fraile and the deceitfull things of this old withered and ruinous world For if we will déepely consider and carefully thinke of that happines which is laid vp in store in heauen with God the father through Iesus Christ for all them that do beléeue liue and die in Christ we will not giue our selues to the spéeches of rude ignorant and vngodly people neither will we hunt or hauke after the vaine reports and idle praises and commendations of men nor yet put any trust in any thing that man can do But we will aspire and draw néere vnto that God of ours which is for euer whom no processe nor continuance of time wasteth nor consumeth Of whom the prophet speaketh plainly Thou O Lord shalt indure for euer all other things shall waxe old as doth a garment and as a vesture shalt thou change them and they shall be changed But thou art the same and thy yéeres shall not faile And the Lorde himselfe saith to Moses I am that I am And he saide Thus shalt thou say to the children of Israell I am hath sent me vnto you As if he should say He that euer hath béene is and euer shall be whose eternitie is not comprehended within any limites or bounds hath sent me vnto you If then worldy things do much mooue vs which are of no such strength but that in processe of time they are weakned and cleane consumed if I saie that which is of no stabilitie in this life but is sodainly broken and perisheth or at the least by little and little decaieth groweth out of remembrance and is quite forgotten is woont to stir vs vp to take great paines and to vndergo almost intollerable toyles through manifold perils and dangers Why then not much rather yea and a great deale more are we not stirred vp and mooued by him that is for euer to vndergo and to indure the like or if néede be greater paines by many degrées whose promise and maner it is to giue to all those that in truth and singlenes of hart do loue him immortall rewards and to bestow and place them in euerlasting blisse in his owne kingdome with his owne and onely most déere sonne euen Christ Iesu our onely sufficient and alone Sauiour and redéemer God giue vs grace and the assistance of his holie spirit that we may withdrawe our harts mindes and affections from all those vaine and transitorie things which are subiect to ruin rottennes and consumption and that we may set them surely vpon our God follow him and obey him according to his owne will in his written word Amen AS the excellent and noble hauke called a faulken vpon the fist of the fouler séeing a pray flieng on high doth by and by spread hir wings and offer to breake the strings wherewith she is holden and to be gone after the praie but if she be hooded she neither séeth the pray nor is any whit mooued Euen so man whose nature far excelleth all other liuing creatures thinking vpon the things that are aboue in heauen with God and with the eies of his minde beholding eternall blisse and endlesse felicitie he is inflamed and pricked with a great and woonderfull desire to attaine vnto the same but if he be hooded with ignorance spirituall blindnes and a loue of this worlde he will neuer be touched with any heauenly motion nor any whit mooued with any right loue to God nor once turne so much as one eie of his minde towards heauen nor God That most noble faulken I meane the most famous and kingly prophet Dauid being rapt and as it were rauished with an vnspeakable loue and desire to heauen and God did sing this song Euen as the Hart desireth the water brookes so doth my soule long after thée O God My soule is a thirst for God yea euen for the liuing God When shall I come to appéere before the presence of God And the holy apostle being very desirous to flie out of the bands of the body and to shake them off said thus Christ is to me life and death is to me aduantage And immediately after he saith that he hath a great desire to depart and to be with Christ And such ought the desire of all good Christians to be God grant it may be such Amen AS they which haue great néede of water do make haste to come to the fountaine or well where water is to be had but hauing drawne the water and filled their vessels do depart and turne their backs to the fountaine which hath supplied their want satisfied their desires So very many when they be compassed round with perils and dangers and are beset on euery side with afflictions and troubles then they flie apace to the fountaine of grace mercy but when they haue obteined the water of comfort then they do despise that flowing spring of liuing water which complaineth of their vnkindnes by the prophet Ieremie saieng They haue forsaken me the fountaine of the water of life There be to too many of all sorts and degrées in the world which when they are in the straightes of calamities and miserie will with all possible spéede flie and run vnto God and will power out before him many deuout and feruent praiers vpon their bare knées with teares trickling and streaming downe their chéekes and will vse the name of Christ in hope for his sake to be the sooner reléeued bicause as the holy Ghost saith He is the propitiatiō and attonement for our sins by faith in his blood and they will implore and beg the mercy and helpe of God with most lamentable shrikes and gréeuous grones but so soone as they perceiue that God is a God of pittie compassion and mercy and do finde and féele themselues to be lightened and eased of their gréefes they by and by forsake God turne their backs vpon him shake off all obedience and returne to their old vomits and practise their former foule sins with greater gréedines them before And when they should be most mindfull of gods benefits bestowed vpon them then do they vtterly forget him But it is the part and dutie of euery good christian if he once dedicate and betake himselfe to the seruice of God to procéed and to go forward from vertue to vertue and from grace to grace and not to turne the Lords precepts and commandements behind him when indéed he ought to be most thankfull for his louing kindnes and fauor which he hath found and receiued So much doth the Lorde signifie by the prophet
to attende vpon his pleasure and to waite on his will he would haue vs not in part but wholy to giue them vnto him and without the hart he will receiue and take in good part at our hands and lips nothing But we on the otherside giue nothing lesse to God then our harts What is it that cannot and may not command our harts and haue them at pleasure sooner then Christ Iesus that with the death of his owne hart gaue life to our bodies and soules If the worlde do but a little smile vpon vs and giue vs but an alluring looke and a faire though a false word we will by and by follow it and bestow vpon it all our attendance If the diuell himselfe can make vs beléeue that we shall either haue profite or pleasure by doing his wil our harts mindes wils and all are readier for him then for Iesus Christ O matchles yea monstrous madnes they that séeke our destruction can sooner with a pleasant looke then Christ with the giuing of his life for vs haue vs at commandement Christ would haue vs to mortifie our earthly members as fornication vncleannes inordinate affections euill concupiscence and couetousnes which is idolatrie But who doth not nourish pamper and cherish all these The Lord woulde haue our conuersation in heauen but we are altogither earthly and carnally minded The Lord would haue our féete to stand within the gates of Ierusalem but we loue rather to be trampling the stréetes of Egypt Babylon and Sodom The holie ghost would haue vs to fight a good fight to finish our course after the will of God and to kéepe the faith not onely in words but also in life and déedes Indéed we are apt and ready to fight for worldly promotion honor dignitie reuenues and riches but for heauen and heauenly things we will neuer striue take no paines nor once trouble our selues we will haue i● with ease and all maner of pleasure or else not at all farewell it The courses we take héere in this life are very bad and the end vnlesse we repent is like to be woorst of all And whiles we haue no care to kéepe good consciences it is vnpossible for vs to kéepe faith Let stande before vs Christ and sathan the one pointing vs to heauen and eternall felicitie but the way to it ful of troubles gréefes and sorrowes the other pointing to hell but the way to it ful of delicates pleasures and daintie delights and let God call and the diuell call and I speake it with gréefe of hart the diuell is like to haue the greater number to follow him for those short pleasures and Christ but a fewe to follow him bicause they must go loden with crosses Daily experience doth teach vs no lesse when all our actions are carnall haue onely but a little outward shew and no taste at all of true godlines nor so much as any rellish of the spirit and loue of Christ Some will abstaine from the committing of many grosse sins now and then and yet not that I feare greatly in any true and sincere loue to God but either for feare of shame and punishment in this worlde or else feare of vengeance in the world to come which both are vnprofitable for the Lord hath no pleasure in forced seruice he will haue it voluntarie with the hart and procéeding of loue not of a seruile feare otherwise it shall be numbred with the rest of our sinnes This doth greatly condemne vs that though we do not such things our selues yet we can without trouble of conscience gréefe of hart or vexation of minde sée and heare the Lords name blasphemed his saboth vnhalowed idolatrie committed parents dishonored whooredome theft murder and couetousnes commonly vsed and all the lawes of God vtterly contemned and it shall neuer offend the greatest number so much as a thorne in a foote or a blaine vpon a finger What other thing is this but to forsake God in the plaine field and to be afeard to serue him in truth and sinceritie least we should thereby purchase mans displeasure Vnlesse therefore we learne to serue him better in more truth with greater zeale and singlenes of hart we haue nothing else to looke for but that he will forsake vs both in this worlde leauing vs destitute of his assistance that our enimies may pray vpon vs and also in the world to come in giuing out against vs his malediction curse wo and sentence of death The Lord make vs new creatures and giue an vnfained loue of himselfe déepe roote in our harts drawing after it a chéerefull obedience to his sacred word and the selfe same to our brethren wherwith we loue our selues so that all be in God that we may escape dangers in both the worlds that when death that inexorable executioner shall do his office we may arriue at the safe and happy hauen of Gods euerlasting kingdome purchased and paide for by Christ and kept in store for all those that beléeue aright and shall liue and die in him But alas the most part of vs as yet vntill it shall please the almightie to inrich vs be like proud beggers which not being woorth one farthing will boast of great wealth So many brag of great holines but haue none and of great faith as though they could remooue mountaines out of their places and yet know not what true faith is How fearful a saieng is that of Christ When the sonne of man shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead do you thinke that he shal finde any faith vpon the earth As if he should saie he shall finde very little howsoeuer now all perswade themselues that they be faithfull inough The Lorde amende vs for we haue receiued great and infinite good things from the Lords hand both for our bodies and soules but in giuing thanks we are like to the nine leapers mentioned in the Gospell which neuer turned backe to thanke God for their healing The Lord hath poured vpon vs infinite dewes of his swéet and blessed word and yet still we continue to be those drie trées to whom his curse cutting down and casting into the fire belongeth The Lord grant that with all spéede we may turne from our sinnes to righteousnes and holynes of life that God may turne his anger from vs and his fauor towards vs Amen MArcus Antoninus with an oration that he made vpon the death of Caesar is said to haue greatly delighted the people of Rome and that he mooued very many of them to shed great store of bitter teares when he put them in remembrance of the great benefits which they had frō time to time receiued of Caesar withal did shew them Caesars garment wherin his enimies Cassius Brutus had slaine him all full of blood whereat they were so mightily mooued that they expulsed the homicides out of the citie so that they durst not if they woulde liue any
man which the holy Ghost the author of all light and the onely light it selfe hath chosen to be his owne seate and holy habitation Error cannot flowe from the fountaine of wisdome neither is it possible that a line of wickednes should be drawne from the one a centre of all goodnes the fruits of death cannot growe out of the tree of life these are vnpossible things And on the other side where the holy spirit of grace and might hath not place and possession there is no good thing to be found bicause the author of goodnes is not there S. 170. P. 87. and 88. Calamitie patiently borne doth availe very much for the aduancing of the praise of true vertue and vnfained holines S. 171. P. 88 It is mans onely safetie to keepe himselfe neare vnto God for when he shaketh off the gouernment of Gods word and with his sins and iniquities diuideth himselfe from the Lord then commeth his danger he cannot but fall into the hands of sathan hell and destruction S. 172. P. 88. Sorrowes troubles afflictions and vexations are in the children of God the armour and badges of Christ S. 173. P. 89. Howsoeuer God dealeth with men yet he is all one there is no change nor any shadow of change in him the change is in our selues not in the Lord. When we liuing in his feare faith and loue do inioy the light of his countenance his blessing spirituall and temporal if at any time he turne his face from vs and shall take away the comforts of our soules bodies it is bicause we are changed not he S. 174. P. 89. Man must be verie carefull and haue in himselfe at the least a desire that something may be in him to mooue the Lord to grant that vnto him that he craueth or looketh for at his hand as if he will haue the Lord to be mercifull he must vse mercy towards others if he would haue him to be a good father to him he must shew himself an obedient child c. S. 175. P. 89. 90. 91. Diuers and sundry names giuen to Christ to expresse his nature and his disposition toward man S. 175. P. 91. Though a man be neuer so barren bad without any good thing in him yet if the word of the Lord once take hold of his hart and finde any rooting there it will draw him by degrees to the nature of it selfe and make him very fruitfull S. 176. P. 91. A man may boldly inueigh against the sinnes of others when he hath amended his owne amisses and very likely he shall be salt to others when himselfe is seasoned S. 177. P. 92. Although vertue and godlines seeme vnto the wicked very bitter and vn●auorie and all vice and naughtines swee●e and well sauoring they are very vnwilling that the gardens of their harts should be weeded euill things drawne out of them or that any good should be planted in them yet the ministers of the word must still do their office and dutie S. 178. P. 93. 94. The holy ghost doth ●●e to call men and women the sonnes and daughters of them whose maners and conditions they follow not of their naturall parents when they follow not their footesteps S 179. P. 94. Men very honorablie borne and comming of honorable parents being themselues naked that is without vertues and honorable actes do iustly deserue the losse of their titles honor and dignitie and whiles they degenerate from their noble parents of whose honor they brag they are fitly and rightlie compared to Aesops ●ay S. 180. P. 95. Euen as in a threshing place chaffe will be aboue wheat not bicause it is the better but bicause it is the lighter so amongst men they that be vaine and haue nothing in them but pride vainglory and a false opinion of themselues will thrust foorth themselues before those that haue a far greater weight of vertue and iust deserts then they haue but on the otherside the humble man will euer take the lowest place and be well contented with the least account in this world S. 181. P. 96. Whosoeuer will enter the gate to go into that most stately and princely house of the kingdome of heauen must bowe down humble himselfe and stoupe lowe otherwise he breake his head be driuen backward and neuer get in for pride is pestilent sicknes it deuideth a man from God from himselfe and from his neighbour and doth disperse and distract him into infinite euils and innumerable vices S. 182. P. 97. Rioting excesse and fulnes of meate and drinke doth make mens bodies vnapt to all good and holy exercises and very prone and apt to all sinne and wickednes S. 183. P. 98. A cable rope being singled into threads whereof it was made may be drawn through the eie of a needle and a rich man diuiding his riches as God hath appointed and commanded him may enter into the kingdom of heauen S. 184. 105. P 98. 99. A rustie iron key hanging at a whip coard or at a thong of leather which will open the doore and let a man go into an house where is gold and great riches is better then a k●i● of golde tied to a string or lace of silke and siluer which will not open the locke S. 186. P. 100. 101. Idlenes is a schoolemaster and a teacher of all mischiefes and doth extinguish all vertues in man but godlie and holy exercises are very profitable do much good increase vertue in all that vse them S. 187. P. 102. Vngodly rich men haue a vaile or couering before their eies birde lime in their wings and fetters about their feete that they cannot see the kingdome of God they cannot mooue one feather of a wing towardes heauen nor set one foote before another towards euerlasting life and yet they be merie now but their sorrow is not far off S. 188. P. 102. 103. 104. The higher that proud and vaine men do clymbe the fowler the more mischieuous is their fall Vanitie pompe and pride are very bad and naughtie feathers which christians ought not to suffer to growe in their wings but to pull them out and to cast them into the dust S. 189. P. 104. What difference soeuer is amōg men now whiles they liue in the world death at the length hauing don his office will make them all so equall and alike that the dust of princes and poore men of rich men beggers of the learned and vnlearned of those that are wise and of the foolish being all mingled togither they can no more be discerned and knowne one from another then the ashes of one tree can be deuided from the ashes of another being both burnt togither in one furnace S. 190. P. 104. 105. Very many in this world being without the feare of God do liue in great pompe al pleasures fulnes of great riches and wealth at will and are highly esteemed during their life whose woes and sorrowes do then begin