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A13339 The amendment of life comprised in fower bookes: faithfully translated according to the French coppie. Written by Master Iohn Taffin, minister of the word of God at Amsterdam.; Traicté de l'amendement de vie. English Taffin, Jean, 1529-1602. 1595 (1595) STC 23650; ESTC S118083 539,421 558

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is eyther naught or tendeth to euyll The reason to beguile and deceiue the lybertie to riotous licentiousnesse and other wantonnesse the eyes to see and beholde vanitie the heart to couet and thirst thereafter the handes to beate to strike and oppresse the feete to runne after sinne and wickednesse the tongue to backbite lie and blaspheme to bee short all the members are instrumentes of iniquitie Rom. 6.19 as Saint Paul tearmeth them 3 Heereby maye euerie man whatsoeuer hee bee perceiue and knowe that Christes exhortation saying Amend your liues stretcheth verie farre Also that manye are the vices that we are to amende especiallye considering howe Saint Paul admonisheth vs Rom. 8.13 Ehe 4.22 Col. 3.9 Math. 16.24 not to mortifie two or three members of this bodie of sin but the whole body as also to put of the olde man and as Iesus Christ saith to denie our selues In the deduction of this matter we will therefore deale somtimes with the names of the vertues which we are to put in practise and sometimes of the vices that wee are to shunne according as the names doo import some generalitie or do best fit our intent So shall euerie one vnderstand that the amenment of lyfe consisteth in the deniall of vice and contrariwise in the aduancement of vertue Of Loue and Charitie in generall Chap. 9. WE will begin with loue which hath two respects The first is to God Math. 22. 1. Iohn 4.19 Ephe. 2.4 Rom. 5.8 Iohn 3.16 as it is commanded that wee shoulde loue him with all our heart with all our strength and with all our mind The second to our neighbour whome wee ought to loue as our selues As for our loue to God the same as Saint Iohn saith proceedeth of his loue to vs We loue him because he first loued vs. He loued vs euen when we were dead in sinne when we were his enemies yea hee so loued vs that he gaue his onely begotten and welbeloued sonne to die for vs. This his incomprehensible loue toward vs doth therefore bind vs most feruently to loue him And in deed as a colde stone by liyng three or foure houres in the warme Sunne gathereth heate so this loue of God shining vpon our soules should kindle them in his loue 1. Ioh. 4.16 1. Ioh. 4.7 Iohn 13.33 August vpon Iohns gospel 1. Cor. 13 As for loue toward our neighbor we are the rather to desire it and to put it in practise because it is the marke of Gods children the disciples of Iesus Christ And therefore sayth Saint Iohn God is loue and he that loueth is borne of God and knoweth God And as all Gods children are the disciples of Christ Heereby also sayth Iesus Christ shall men know that ye are my disciples if ye loue one another as I haue loued you They that are not my disciples saith Saint Augustine in the person of Christ doo notwithstanding participate in many other my benefites They haue not only nature life sense reason and common preseruation among al mankind but also the gift of tongues the sacramentes prophesie knowledge faith to worke miracles distribution of their goods to the poore yea euen the giuing of their bodies to fire but because they haue no loue they are as sounding brasse and tinkling cimbals they are nothing It is not therefore by these my benefits Augustine in praise of charitie which euen they that are not my Disciples may also haue that men shall know you to be my Disciples but onely in this that ye loue one another Likewise a man may receiue the sacraments and yet be wicked but no man can haue loue and be wicked Not without reason therefore doth Saint Paul writing to the Galathians say Neither circumcision auaileth anything neither vncircumcision Cal 5.6 but faith which worketh by loue In which sentence the Apostle sheweth that in the kingdome of Christ the matter wherein we doe most testifie our faith which is of greatest accompt and whereto wee are especially to apply and giue our selues is loue Augustine in praise of charitie which also Saint Augustine calleth the fountaine of all goodnesse as couetousnesse is the roote of all euill 2 That this loue may be pure and true Augustine in his confessions Prosper in his sentences of Augustine it must so proceed from our loue of God that we may loue our neighbour in respect of that loue which we beare to God For as Saint Augustine saith we loue not God so much as we should if we loue any thing but him which we loue not for the loue of him and therefore in another place he saith Blessed is he that loueth God and his friend in God and his enemie for the loue of God Hereby are we to gather three points First that albeit some heathen may seeme to haue done workes of great charitie and loue yet was the same no true or liuely charitie which is proper and peculier to the children of God for they only doe know and loue God and their neighbours for Gods sake And indeed loue ought to proceed from a pure hart as both Paul and Peter doth teach By faith our harts are purified 1. Tim. 1.5 1. Pet. 1.22 Act. 15.9 None therefore but the faithfull haue true loue which proceedeth not from the loue of themselues but from their loue to God Secondly it appeareth in this that in vaine we boast that we loue God if wee loue not our neighbour for his sake This is it that Saint Iohn noteth saying If any man say I loue God and yet hate his brother the same is a lier For he that loueth not his brother whom he seeth 1. Ioh. 4.20 Rom 13 10 how can he loue God whom he seeth not And this commandement haue wee of him that he which loueth God loueth his brother also Thirdly hereby we vnderstand the truth of the saying of Saint Paul that Loue is the fulfilling of the law For if we cannot loue God vnlesse wee loue our neighbour neither our neighbour vnlesse our loue to him proceed of our loue towards God It must needes follow that louing our neighbour we also loue God and so fulfill the law which is comprehended in this That wee loue both God and our neighbour 3 The better that we may yet vnderstand what our loue ought to be we are diligently to note the commandement of God that we should loue our neighbor as our selfe and explane this duty by two very naturall and iust rules which necessarily doe ensue The first by this auncient prouerbe common euen among the heathen Lampridius in the life of Alexander Seuerus Do no otherwise by another then we would be done vnto Alexander Seuerus an Emperour endued with many excellent vertues had this sentence ordinarily in his mouth thereby reprouing such as wronged or iniuried others Yea in publishing any sentence of condemnation against transgressors he caused the same to be added as the ground thereof Doe no
otherwise to another then thou wouldest be done vnto To be short he had such a liking and so hartely embraced this sentence that he caused the same to be written and engrauen in his imperial pallace and in many publique works The other rule resteth in this which Iesus Christ commaundeth saying Mat. 7.21 Whatsoeuer yee would that men should doe to you euen so doe yee to them Now the loue of our selues importeth that men shoulde not only forbeare doing of vs hurt but also that they should do vs good Draco Licurgus Solon and other lawgiuers haue written and set foorth many good lawes whereby to maintaine man in equitie and vpright dealing many Philosophers haue written good bookes for the framing of the manners of men Yet all their great volumes their long discourses and the multitude of their lawes haue alwaies had great imperfections and tended as it were to the ordering but of the outward man and so in parte to make men hypocrites because they could neuer attaine to the knowledge of true Christian loue But God in one onely short sentence saying Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe hath comprehended the whole dutie of man one towarde another that they may liue together in al equitie peace loue and felicitie And thus may these two naturall rules Doe no otherwise to another then thou wouldest be doone vnto and Doe as yee woulde be doone vnto be sufficient commentaries vpon all Christian pollicie In this sence did Saint Paule iustly call this loue Col 3.14 the bond of all perfection And indeed if we would loue one another as our selues and declare our loue by these two naturall rules then should there bee among vs neither fraud iniurie wrong nor deceitfull dealing Then should all ambition pride couetousnesse enuie hatred euill speaking and other like passions cease We should see nothing but equitie peace concord 1. Cor. 13.4 loue reliefe and mutuall assistance And these fruites of loue doth Saint Paul note saying Loue suffereth long it is bountifull loue enuieth not loue doth not boast it selfe it is not puffed vp It disdaineth not it seeketh not her owne thinges it is not prouoked to anger it thinketh none euill It reioyceth not in iniquitie but reioyceth in the truth It suffereth all thinges it beleeueth all thinges It hopeth all thinges it endureth all things To be short if wee practise this loue we shall euen in this life beginne to tast the blessed estate of the kingdome of heauen whereto being lifted vp wee shall loue one another as our selues and reioyce at our neighbours good as at our owne Let vs alwaies therefore remember this commaundement that we loue our neighbour as our selues and hartely let vs endeuour to shew it by the practise of these two rules still harkening to nature who crieth saying Doe no otherwise to another then thou wouldest bee doone vnto And Doe as thou wouldest be done by 4 We are also farther to consider 1 Pet. 1.22 1 Pet. 4 8. that this loue must not bee colde but seruent not slacke but earnest and vehement as Saint Peter admonisheth vs. And that it may bee such it is requisite first that we hold nothing so deare or so precious as to bee alwayes readie to employ our selues for our neighbour yea euen to the spending of our liues Iohn 3.16 after the example of the loue that Iesus Christ shewed vnto vs as Saint Iohn sayth Hereby haue we knowen his loue that he gaue his life for vs. So are wee also to giue our liues for our brethren Secondly the heate and seruencie of our loue and charitie ought to bee such as might su●mount any thinge that shoulde quaile it as ingratitude hatred iniurie or vnworthienesse of our neighbours And indeede if wee must loue our neighbour for the loue of God If the Image God in him doth thereto binde vs. If being parcell of our flesh wee ought thereto to bee affected then notwithstanding whatsoeuer vnworthienesse bee in him yet God must not loose his right his image is not vtterly defaced Neither is that coniunction wherewith God bindeth vs together taken away Luk. 10.29 Therefore doth Iesus Christ by the parable of the Samaritan teach vs that euery one knowen vnknowen straunger yea euen an enemie as were the Samaritans to the Iewes is our neighbour whome wee must loue as our selues And so did Iesus Christ Mat. 5.43 correcting the false glose of the Pharisies expound it saying You haue heard that it hath beene saide Thou shalt loue thy neighbour and hate thine enemie But I saye vnto you loue your enemies And which is more hee willeth that wee shoulde testifie this loue not with our lippes only but also in deedes and workes by blessing those that curse vs by doing well to those that hate vs and by praying for those that molest and persecute vs. Exod. 23.4.5 5 This did Moses in his daies teach saying If thou meetest thy enemies Oxe or his Asse going astray thou shalt bring him to him againe Againe If thou see thy enemies Asse lying vnder his burden leaue thy busines that he may not rise alone yea leaue thy busines help him vp 1. Cor. 9.9 Or as others doe expound it See thou dost not forsake him vntill his master hath first forsaken him Careth God for beastes saith S. Paul That he should thus commend them to vs. Is it not rather hereby to shew vs what we are to doe to the person of our enemie sith we are bound to such a dutie to his Oxe or his Asse Rom. 12 20. as Saint Paul teacheth vs saying If thy enemie hungereth giue him meate If he thirst giue him drinke And because the practise hereof is very difficult Iesus Christ himselfe Mat. 5.45 the rather to induce vs to this dutie protesteth that In so doing we shall be the Children of his heauenly father who maketh his sunne to shine vpon both good and bad Mat. 5 46. and causeth his raine to fall vpon the righteous and the vnrighteous Hereby we gather that if our charitie be bound●d onely to our friendes and that we extend not the same euen to our enemies it is not the charitie of the children of God but as Iesus Christ addeth of publicans and infidels Also in workes and deedes if we shew not the loue that wee beare to our enemies it is in vaine for vs to protest that wee wish them no more hurt then to our selues or that wee loue them or wish as well to them as to our selues The holy historie expressely noteth that Absalom vsed no hard words to his brother Ammon who had defouled Thamar the said Absalons sister Yet loued he him not neither wished his good but in his hart nourished cruell hatred against him which hee finally declared by pro●●●●●g him trayterously to bee murthered And thus it appeareth that speaking neither well nor ill betokeneth hatred and mallice For loue can not but both speake wel and do well euen to
her enemies 6 This loue is the rather to bee esteemed and commended because the giftes of speaking with tongues working of miracles prophecying and such like are nothing without loue Yea which is more then al those gifts euen faith hope shal haue an end but loue as Saint Paul saith abideth for euer Albeit therefore that by faith and hope we be made heires of wonderfull ioy and felicitie yet is the effect and fruite of loue greater in this respect that thereby the ioy of our perticuler felicitie obtained by faith shall be infinitly doubled and encreased for euery of the electes sakes whom we shall then loue as our selues and whose felicitie will be vnto vs as great a comfort as our owne Thus wee see what loue is required at our hands and how much wee are to esteeme it Now if wee would examine our selues and trie our loue with the same which God requireth at our hands as is afore shewed we shal find that it cometh very short And indeed what man loueth his neighbour as himselfe and that for the loue of God Who doth not many times by his neighbour otherwise then himself would be done by Who dealeth with another as he would be delt by Who is resolued to giue his life for his brethren Who loueth his enemies as himselfe and in hart praieth for them If loue as is aforesaid suffereth long if it enuieth not if it seeketh not her owne if it thinketh none euil if the patience therof be such as that it endureth sustereth al things 1. Cor. 13 Then doth it sufficiently appeare that we do wrongfully boast our selues to be the children of God because his character cannot bee seene in vs which is loue or that in purpose to amend we doe not mislike our owne corruption When therefore we heare the holy Ghost say Amend your liues Let vs be assured that he doth admonish vs so to encrease in this loue that wee may loue God with all our harts and our neighbours as our selues and that to the same end these two naturall rules may continually sound in our eares and that our consciences by the same examining all our wordes and workes may bee our iudge to condemne whatsoeuer we shall peraduenture doe to others which we would not should be done to our selues and to reproue our want of loue when we do not that to him that we would haue done to our selues that so in amending whatsoeuer it shall find in vs not conformable to this loue we may dayly encrease therin and thereby more and more get printed in vs the Character of Gods children and of the true Disciples of Iesus Christ And now let vs proceed to another examination of our loue Of Almos and relieuing of the poore Chap 10. AMong other the testimonies of our loue and charitie the due reliefe of the poore is not the least And indeed in vaine doe we boast of charitie vnlesse we practise the same by relieuing the poore in their necessities Who so hath this worlds goods 1. Ioh. 3.17 saith Saint Iohn and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him Whereto hee addeth My children let vs not loue in word neither in tongue onely but indeed and in truth This dutie of loue did the Apostles of Iesus Christ so hartely commend that finding themselues to agree in the doctrine of the Gospell with S. Paul Gal. 2.10 2. Cor. 8.9 they commended nothing vnto him but to remember the poore And thereof was himselfe also very carefull as he doth affirme in his Epistle to the Galathians and did effectually shew the same in his second to the Corinthians As also it is not amisse to note that the last iudgement and sentence of felicitie or miserie shall bee pronounced in part vpon the performance or neglect of this dutie to the poore in affliction Mat. 25. 2 This reliefe of the poore is commonly tearmed Almes which word signifieth pitie and compassion The rather to teach vs that this reliefe must proceede of compassion through the feeling of their afflictions And this doth Esay declare saying If thou openest thy hart to the hungerie and satisfiest the needy soule thy light shall shine in darkenesse and thy darkenesse shall bee as the none day The word which the Prophet heere vseth Esa 58.10 signifieth as much as if wee should say if thou pullest forth thy heart to giue to him that hungreth therby teaching vs that true Almes importeth the opening communication of our harts by feeling the necessitie of others and therefore doth S. Augustine say Augustine his first booke of visit the sicke c. 3. 1. Cor. 13.3 that if our reliefe ministred to the poore proceedeth not of loue and compassion it neuer ascendeth into the presence of God Hereto may we also refer this sentence of S. Paul If we giue al that we haue to the poor haue no loue it profiteth not Yea saith a good auncient father In hart to take compassion of the poore is more then to giue them our goods for hee that giueth importeth externall things but hee that taketh compassion openeth and giueth his owne hart This compassion proceedeth of the vnion that God hath made betweene vs in that we all discending from Adam are as it were one body and one flesh As Esay exhorting vs to this compassion doth say Hide not thy self from thy owne flesh Esay 58.7 Heb. 1● 3● Which the Apostle also confirmeth saying Remember them that are in bondes as if ye were bound with them them that are in affliction as if ye were also afflicted in the body And indeed as Saint Paul saith This vnion should breede such a feeling of the weale or woe of the members of this body that wee should reioyce for the prosperitie of the one 1. Cor. 12.26 Rom. 12 15. 1. Cor. 12.25 1. Ioh. 3.17 and be sorrie for the miserie of the other and as in another place he saith that wee should weepe with them that weepe Otherwise as hee addeth there is no coniunction in the body but deuision partialitie And in that sence Saint Iohn denieth that ther is any loue in him who seeing the want and necessitie of his brother closeth vp his bowels by the bowels signifieng the compassion and mercy wherewith he should be moued at the sight of the pouertie of his brethren Iesus Christ also to assure vs that he will take compassion of vs whom we are persecuted for his name saith Act. 9 5. Zach. 2 8 Deut 32 10. that he is persecuted in vs that are the members of his body Yea he protesteth that who so toucheth vs toucheth the apple of his eye Therby declaring that as the apple of the eye is so tender that it may not be touched but with great griefe so the coniunction betweene him vs is such Psal 17.8 that he seeleth our afflictions therof taketh great
daie and that none of his posteritie should hue to bee an olde man Dauid also vsed too much lenitie as well to his sonne Ammon when hee had defloured his sister Thamar as also to Absalom when hee traiterously slew the sayd Ammon 2. Sam. 13 1. King 1.6 and to his sonne Adomah of whom the historie sayth that albeit Dauid dyd plainly see that contrarie to Gods will hee purposed to inuade the realme yet would hee not displease him But the death of Ammon the cursed conspiracie of Absalom against his own father together with the strange manner of his death and the death of Adomah were the most wretched fruites of his greate lenitie and conniuence to his children The lyke iudgement may wee note in the fathers of the children that scorned the Prophet Helizeus and vppon his curse were deuoured by Beares For it is like that theyr parents had not brought them vp●n due correction and chastisement In the historie of the Switzers we reade of a certaine tyrant whome vpon his condemnation his own father was appointed to execute that so by the author of his life he might come to his end also that the father might be somewhat punished for neglecting the instruction of his sonne 23 Yet is it not meant that parents vppon euery escape of theyr child should vse extreame rigor and seuerity for the same must be entermixed with discretion and gentlenes according to the nature of the child and the qualitie of the offence And in that sense saith Saint Paul Fathers prouoke not your children to wrath but bring them vp in instruction and information of the Lord. Againe Ephe. 6.4 Col. 3 2● Fathers prouoke not your children to anger least they be discouraged Vnto children naturally inclined to vertue praise for well doing and chiding when they doo amisse are more effectuall than rigorous intreatie For praise allureth them to vertue and chiding restraineth them from vice And therefore such must be according to the occasions somtimes praised and sometimes checked that if they bee too merry they may by a word be humbled or if they be too much daunted some commendation may reuiue them And herein we are to imitate nurses who sometimes making their babes to crie do immediatly giue them the breast to appease them againe 22 Againe parents or others that haue the bringing vp of youth are to require no more of them than they are able to do least they discourage them and make them to hate their studie or any other thing whereto they would bring them For it is loue that causeth vs to profit in our studies or exercises And therefore it is needful that children shoulde haue some time of recreation from their labours for our life consisteth and is diuided into exercise and rest as we see in the daie labour and in the night rest which doth styll accompanie the whole course of our life And this is it that an ancient man saith Rest is the sauce that maketh vs to relish our labour As also we vse to slack the strings of our bowes and lutes to make thē the stiffer to hold the better when we list to shoote or plaie Plants reasonably watered doo take heart and grow but too much moisture doth drowne and choake them euen so is it with the mindes of children Moderate exercise and labour aduanceth them to goodnesse but oppression dulleth and spoileth them 23 It is also the dutie of parents to maintaine their children in peace concord and amitie For if discord contention be dangerous and pernitious among all men how much rather between brethren sisters Likewise if it be hard quenching of stomacke and debate betweene those that are not conioyned in kindred it is far more difficult to reunite brethren because enmitie among them is mightie and strong like yron bars to keepe them asunder Neither is there anie thing more slipperie or of greater efficacie to subuert a family than dissention among brethren It is an olde saying Plutarch in his Apotheg By concord small things do grow but by discord great things come to nought And this is soonest found among brethren Scilurus who had fourscore children to induce them to liue together in peace concord did verie aptly represent vnto them the truth of this sentence thus He toke a sheafe of many arrowes offered it to each of his children one after another willing them to break it but they could not Then pulling forth the arrowes one by one they brake them all Euen thus sayd their father is it with you for so long as you remaine vnited and loue each other no man can hurt or break you but if once ye fall at iarre and strife euery man will destroy ouerthrow you This duetie of parents to keepe their children in peace louing concord did the Lacedemonians well vnderstand For when on a time two brethren fell at strife and contention Plut. in his Lacon Apotheg they punished both the father and mother because by good instruction they had not preuented or at the least presently appeased the dissention betweene their children 24 Againe how dangerous it is for parents to shew more loue affection to one child than to another except vpon great and iust cause the example of Iacobs childrē doth testifie For what was the originall of their enuie and crueltie executed against their brother Ioseph Moses saith that Iacob louing Ioseph better than his brethren Gen. 37.3 made him a partie coloured coate thereof they tooke occasion to hate him and to speake roughly vnto him Parents therefore to the end to preuent like inconueniences are to vse equalitie among theyr children so neere as may be whether in their ordinarie vsage or in the diuision of their goods For as all men naturally are inclined but too much to the loue of earthly goods so the vnequal sharing of the same doth oftentimes breed great braules and pernitious debate betweene brethren 25 Moreouer as children grow toward the state of matrimony it is meet that theyr parents should restrain them from all companie whereby they might be allured to the sinne of fornication For besides the hainousnes of the offence against God the incōueniences thereof depending are for the most parte verie pernitions If such mischiefes ensued between Thamar Ammon Dauids children how much rather are they to bee feared in the ouer familyar conuersation of those that are nothing a kin at the lest not so neere as they Gen. 34 Had Iacob kept in his daughter Dina and not suffered her to runne abroad to see the daughters of Sichem she had not beene rauished and desloured neither had that wicked and abhominable murther committed by her brethren bene perpetrated As also if the daughters of Silo had not gone to dancing the Beniamites had neuer rauished them Iud. 21.20 26 Among all remedies as Saint Paul teacheth marriage is one and in deede the parents that haue honestly matched their daughter
this commaundement is the more to bee noted because it is often repeated in the holy Scripture Now by this word Honor is signified the loue reuerence dutie obedience subiection entertainment and necessarie assistance that children owe to their parents As concerning the loue the summarie of the second Table comprehended in these wordes Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe doe manifestly confirme it For who can bee a neerer neighbour for the children to loue then the parents Besides that they are not to be loued onely as neighbours proceeding of Adam and Eue but also as fathers and mothers And therefore what an ingratitude is it not to loue those of whom next after God they haue their life and being together with many great and continuall benefites toward them Also the loue that parents doe beare to their children besides so many their labours sorrowes troubles and vexations should binde them reciprocally to loue them The sunne shining a while vpon the colde stones doth so heate them that they yeelde some warmth so albeit that children be as hard and colde as stones yet the experience and the dayly feeling of the loue of their parents towards them ought mightily to enflame their hartes to loue them againe Take away the beame from the sunne said a good old father and it wil not shine the springs from the riuer and it will drie vp the bough from the tree and it will wither the member from the body it will rot And so take from children their dutie to their parents and they are no longer children but brethren and companions with those vnto whom Iesus Christ said Yee are the children of the Deuill Plut. in his Agotheg of the Grecians 2 This loue ought especially to appeare in a certain care affection and desire to reioyce and content our parents For as we reade to this purpose Epaminondas said that of all the good and felicitie that euer happened him he neuer so much delighted in any as in his victorie ouer the Lacedemonians at Leuctria where he wonne the fielde while his father and mother yet liued Such was his loue to them that his singular contentation consisted in the pleasure that they would conceiue in the victorie of their sonne And that this his contentment consisted onely in his loue to his parents and not in couetize of vaine-glorie we may gather by his commendations published by Iustin who saith Iustin lib. 6. that it was a hard choise to discerne whether hee were an honester man or a better Captaine That in the exercise of any publike office hee neuer sought himselfe but the good of his countrie That he was not couetous either of glorie or of money These are notable commendations in a heathen Captaine God graunt that Christians may follow him and deserue the like His example doth declare that children ought so to loue their parents that their affection may tend to liue vertuously euen to reioyce them and to eschue euill least they should grieue them Prou. 10.1 And this is it that Salomon admonisheth saying A wise sonne maketh a glad father but a foolish sonne is an heauinesse to his mother Againe A foolish sonne is a griefe vnto his father and an heauinesse to her that bare him Prou. 17.25 3 This band of loue of parents should take place not onely toward such as are gentle and louing but also as Saint Peter saith 1. Pet. 2.18 of the duties of seruants to their masters euen toward such as bee rigorous For if wee ought to loue all the children of Adam euen those whome wee know not or our enemies and persecutors how much rather our parents albeit they should intreate vs roughly with rigour either in word or deede And indeede the principal cause still abideth namely that they bee our father and mother This ought children well to note to the ende that patiently bearing their reprehensions reproofes and in generall whatsoeuer their troublesome and sharpe affections they may still continue and declare their childe-like affection and loue And to that purpose remember the labour greefe anguish weeping sorrow and other troublesome cares that parentes doe abide for their children 4 This loue must be accompanied with reuerence and respect And to say the truth Mat 23.2 albeit the name of father belongeth properly vnto God as Iesus Christ said You haue but one father euen him that is in heauen Yet doth hee so impart it to those that haue begotten vs that they being called fathers doe beare the title and Image of God And this is it that bindeth children to respect and honor them and to testifie the same by their outwarde reuerence The Lacedemonians did so carefully accustome their children hereto that we reade of a good personage who had such respect to parents Plu. in his Lacon Apotheg that being demaunded wherfore at Sparta the young men did rise vp when their elders came in place hee aunswered To the ende that by honoring age they may learne and accustome themselues to reuerence their parentes Of this reuerence we haue a notable example in Salomon 1. King 2.19 He vnderstanding that his mother Bathseeba was comming to speake with him arose from his seat came to meet her bowed before her and set her vpon his right hand Neither could his greatnesse neither his Royal estate priuiledge him from this respect and honor due to his mother To this purpose we also reade a notable historie which may serue for an exposition of this matter As a certaine gouernour of Creet came with his father to the Philosopher Taurus finding there but one stoole readie Aul. Gellius lib. 2. c. 2. the father woulde haue had his sonne as a Romaine Magistrate to sit down but the Philosopher willed him as the father to sit downe and calling for another seate for the sonne said When the sonne doth execute his magistracie or publike office hee is greater then his father and must beare himselfe as a Magistrate not as a sonne But when he is out of place or execution of his office he must how highly soeuer he be aduaunced haue a respect and yeelde reuerence to his father But many times it falleth out otherwise For many children when they come to honor or wealth doe so despise their parentes if they bee of meaner calling then themselues that hardly they will acknowledge or call them father as if they were ashamed of them Decius the sonne of the Romaine Emperour Decius Valer. Max. l. 4 most liuely represented mans inclination to this vice and sought in his owne person to preuent it For when his father on a time saide that hee would inuest his sonne in the Diademe Imperiall his sonne refused it saying I feare least being Emperour I forget that I am a sonne Rather will I continue an obedient sonne then being an Emperour to neglect and forget the due honour that the sonne oweth to his Father Let my father commaunde and let my
thou not remember what Iesus Christ pronounced That it had beene better for thee that a milstone had beene hanged about thy necke Luke 17. 2. and thou haddest beene cast into the sea then to haue offended euen the least of these Thus doe wee see how mightely the communion in the holy Supper of the Lord should moue our hearts to deny euery thinge that beseemeth not the children of God and members of the Church of Christ and more and more to endeuour to amende our liues Luke ●● 19 1. Cor. 11.26 18 This holy Supper is also instituted to the end to celebrate it in the remembrance of Iesus Christ or as S. Paul saith to shew forth his death That is not only to report put men in mind that Christ is dead but also to represent vnto vs that he that dyed is the sonne of God and prince of glory Secondly that hee hath suffred not a simple death but euen such a death as was accursed in the law conioined with the terrible wrath of God Thirdly that he dyed not for the righteous and his frends but for sinners his enemies as our selues are all of vs by nature the Children of wrath Ephes 2.3 Can we then thus shew forth the death of Iesus Christ with our mouthes praise his great goodnesse mercie and loue towards vs which shineth therein yet in our workes prophane denie as it were euen spite him by liuing as men for whom Christ hath not dyed so in effect shew that sin liueth raigneth in vs which by the death of Christ whome we preach shold be mortified Let vs rather in eating the bread drinking the wine which lead vs to the death of Iesus Christ so relish and tast therein his goodnes and loue that our heartes may open our mouthes to declare this his death and that our hands and feet that is to say our works may agree herewith to the end in a holie harm onie to testifie by amendment of life the feeling of this in comprehensible benefite of his death whereof hee maketh vs pertakers in his holy supper to his praise and glorie 1 Cor. 10.17 19 Finally as loue is the fulfilling of the law and the marke of Gods children so is there nothing that can more mightely induce vs thereto then the vse of this holy supper And in deede as Saint Paule saith We that are many are but one bread one bodie for we are all partakers of one bread The bread made of many kernels is but one bread so we that communicate in the bread of the holy supper are but one bodie vnder one heade Iesus Christ There must therefore bee amonge vs such an vnion in thoughts minds and works such a feeling of the benefit of ioy and of the tribulation in sorrow such reliefe and support such equitie right such peace loue such help and succour as if there were but one liuing soule amonge vs all 1. Cor. 12.12 And this is it whereto S. Paule exhorteth vs saying As the body is one hath many members all the members of the body which is one though they be many yet are but one body so is Christ that is to say the Church vnited vnto the head Iesus Christ Neither is there as he saith in the same Chapter any deuision in a bodie but all the members haue like care one for another in somuch that if one of the members do suffer all the rest of the members do suffer with it and if one of the members be honoured all the rest do reioyce with it then he addeth Ye are the body of Christ the members thereof ech for your parts This seale therefore of our vnion should make vs to remember that which before was touched in the Chapter of charity or loue euen that we should not doe that to others which wee would not shoulde bee done to our selues also that we should so doe to others as we would be done vnto And as a great part of our amendement consisteth in the practise of the●e two rules so so often as wee do eate of the breade of the holy Supper let vs remember that that seale of our vnion doth bind vs to amend in any thing that dependeth vpon loue wherein consisteth the fulfillinge of the law as is aforesaid 20 Common prayers are also one part of the ministery And in the same ought euery one with hart and mind to accompany the mouth of the minister as if the whole congregation spake vnto God in him And what doe wee require in them Is it not that hee would vouchsafe to worke in vs all that he requireth of vs that wee may obey and please him Hereof then it followeth that the smale amendement that appeareth in vs is a manifest testimony that wee suffer the minister to speake alone to God and in our hartes haue no feeling of any desite or feruent affection to obtayne those graces that hee craueth of God for vs and consequently that we are ouertaken with hypocrisie and prophanation of the holy prayers Let vs therefore remember that we doe speak to God by the mouth of the minister and that we doe especially desire that hee would giue vs grace to amende that as our petition admonisheth vs of our obligation so being hearde wee may shew the fruit of our praiers in the amendment of our liues 21 To conclude the exercise of ecclesiasticall discipline is also a dependance of the holy ministerie And the principall ende thereof tendeth that euery member of the Church shold walke in the feare of God and that if any one goe astray he should bee brought backe into the way of saluation This doth euen already shew vs that wee are most desperately wicked if besides the documents exhortations reprehensions publicke admonitions we also despise reiect such as perticularly may be made vnto vs by those persons to whome God hath committed the care of our saluation by laying that burden vpon them When a man goeth astray in some forrest is it not a comfort to him to bee tould of his errour and taught the right way And when a man falleth into a ditch ready to be drowned is he not to thank him that pulleth him forth and saueth his life Surely this is the end and as it were the whole summe of this ecclesiastical discipline And because there bee some so hardened in wickednes that they dispise all admonitions and exhortations Iesus Christ hath giuen the Church authority to binde them denouncinge them to bee heathen and publicans that is men that haue no communion in the Church of Christ And this is it that he teacheth Mat. 18. 15. saying If thy brother trespasse against thee goe and tell him his fault betweene him thee alone If hee heare thee thou hast wonre thy brother But if he heare thee not take yet with thee one or two that by the mouth of two or three witnesses euery
and a winde that bloweth yet neuer see either A woman feeling the motions of the babe in her wombe beleeueth that she is with childe albeit she see it not 28 If they saie that experience teacheth them to beleeue all these thinges then let them renounce their blasphemie Who hath seene God that wee may beleeue him And let them beleeue that there is a God of whom they both see and feele such experience so certaine and mightie effects both in the world and in themselues as is afore shewed If they can beleeue that they haue eies and a forehead albeit they see them not but in a glasse let them also beleeue there is a God whose image they see ingrauen throughout this vniuersall world If being in a prison where they see but a glimpse of a Sun beame they neuertheles beleeue that the Sun is vp and shineth ouer the earth wherefore do they not likewise beleeue that there is a God that guideth the world when they are forced to feel no●e and confesse so many whole beams of his eternitie and prouidence shining in the world By discourse passing from the riuer to the fountain and from the fountain to the spring they beleeue that the riuer hath a spring why are they not likewise guided by theyr discourse from the creatures to the creator and author of the same from the so excellent frame of the world and from man to the master Architect and builder But it euidently appeareth that these people do malitiously sight against their owne consciences against their bodily senses and against al discourse of their vnderstanding to deny that there is a God by demanding Who hath seene him that they may beleeue 29 But this is the subtiltie and poison of the deuill By this selfe reason and argument doo they also conclude that they haue no soule that there be no deuils that there is no hel for of all this they see none this to the end that they may the more outragiously as beasts giue themselues ouer to the lusts and passions of their flesh without feare of God of deuill or of hell and so liue without remorse of conscience This truely is a cable and mightie cha●●e by the deuill bent to drawe them to all iniquitie and so to heape vp fierie mountaines of Gods terrible wrath against such monsters Rightly therefore haue we placed this as the chiefe and principall folly in man To beleeue there is no God For as it extinguisheth all feare of euill doing so doth it quench all affection to pietie loue holynes and patience To be briefe it is the verie meanes to transforme man not into a beast but into a deuill Let vs constantly therefore renounce this extreame folly and madnes yea let vs abhorre all such cogitations and beleeue that there is a God a creator and a redeemer who by his prouidence guideth the whole world and especially his Church Also that vndoubtedly he will punish all Atheists and other Infidels with incomprehensible torments to continue without end and that he will graunt to the faithfull lyfe comfort and eternall glorie Let the assurance and apprehension of this truth make vs to amend our liues so that by renouncing this folly which would cast vs headlong into hell thorough so horrible a blasphemie as to deny God we may bee better aduised and turne to the Lord increasing in faith and fructifying in all good workes all the daies of our life The second Folly To esteeme more of man than of God Chap. 3. WE haue alreadie spoken of those that deny God both in hart and mouth Now are we to intreate of the folly of these who professing the knowledge of God do deny him in their workes Tit. 1.16 as Saint Paul saith This folly resteth in those that esteem more of man than of God For to confesse God and yet to esteem lesse of him than of man is to denye him And this folly doth possesse many and proceedeth of this incredulity that confessing that there is a God they doo not apprehend his diuinitie that is that by his prouidence he guideth all thinges that hee is the soueraigne good and well dooing that he is holy that he hateth iniquitie that he is righteous and will punish it that hee is true and almightie to fulfil his promises and to execute his iudgements and in wisdome infinite This incredulitie and corruption procureth vs first to loue man more than God secondly to repose more confidence in man than in God thirdly to feare man more than God And these are three euident proofes most assured testimonies that we esteeme more of man than of God Also that confessing God with our mouths we denye him in our workes Now let vs proceede to the first proofe 2 Gods commandement as also ou● dutie doo import that wee should loue God with all our heart with all our strength with all our soule The reason Because he is God Secondly because he is our God Being God as he hath bin from all eternitie before the creation and redemption he is worthie to be loued infinitely in as much as he is our God our creator and our redeemer he deserueth that we should loue him for his incomprehensible benefites bestowed vpon vs. Neuertheles the common course of man doth euidently declare that we loue man more than God And in deed let the husband examine the loue he beareth to his wife the wife hers to her husband the parents their affection to their children and the children theirs to their parents and many others the loue that they beare to their carnall friends and they shall all find that they loue man more than God Let vs proceed to the proues We cannot abide that any man should speake euill of him whome wee loue so that if the husband heareth his wife euill spoken of or the wife her husband each of them grieueth at the iniuries cannot brooke them in quiet but when we heare God our father euil spoken of or blasphemed who is moued at it Who findeth himselfe so much grieued as to procure amends and prosecute punishment for the same Euery man reioyceth to heare his commendations whom hee loueth so that if in companie anie man speaketh of the vertues of our children of our father of our brother or of anie of our entire friends we reioyce and are gladde of it but euen in the same companie let anie man reade the praises of God set down in diuerse of the Psalmes namely in the 103.104.105.106 c. who thereby feeleth himselfe so touched to the quicke as in hart to reioyce and be glad therof We also are redy to talke of those whom we loue and do reioyce when others do minister occasion to speak of them which we will be sure to take hold of to prosecute but when we doo speake of God o● if in companie anie once chance to beginne how is his motion seconded or prosecuted nay rather how soone is it giuen
other side knoweth not Gods prouidence who seedeth succoureth and deliuereth him from many inconueniences dangers So he weeneth that by experience he findeth more helpe in man then in God therefore reposeth more trust in man then in God Hereof it commeth to passe that children leane rather to their father and mother thē to God That when the mother hath giuen her child his breakfast he is content and craueth not so much as may serue him for fiue or sixe daies after as looking that the shall giue him more the next day Wheras contrariwise albeit Iesus Christ hath taught vs at our heauenly father to craue our bread for one day yet wee would wish that he woulde euen this day giue vs prouision both of bread and clothes for al the daies of our life Thus the wise with her children liuing vpon her husbands labours is at rest But if he die in lue of trusting to God the husband of widowes father of Orphans she houleth and lamenteth as fearing hunger want Thus when a father hath purchased som pension for his childs life or hath commended him to some friend that hath promised to see to him as to his owne he departeth in more quiet in more confidence that his child is well prouided for then if he had cōmended him vnto almightie God who can neuer die whose loue to thi● child surmounteth all loue of man Thus a weake Prince being entred alliance with some strong mighty King thinketh him selfe more safe then if he were alyed with God who promiseth to be his protector and sauour Thus the seruant relieth vpon his master mistris for his food wages While we contrariwise seruing God are in continuall care for our sustenance and life vnlesse we haue a gage in hand namely goods and prouision requisite Thus we can be content to deliuer three or foure hundred pounds to some marchant vpon his bare letter in hope at the yeares end to receiue our mony againe with some profit yet can not find in our harts to trust God with ten crownes when he sendeth his children the brethren of Iesus Christ to aske them with promise that he wil answere for them returne them with great profit that shal continue for euer 11 If thou repliest that thou neuer seest God restore●d answere the fa●●th oftentimes in thy self who wilt not open thine eyes to see acknowledge that it is he who preserueth thee with his blessing encreaseth thy goods Moreouer is thy mony that thou lendest to man returned thee within three daies Canst thou not bee content to forbeare it a whole yeare And with God a thousand yeares are but as one day he is faithfull The time of his payment is peraduenture neerer then thou thinkest for thou knowest not whether thou shalt liue a yeare or perhaps a day But that is it that wee saide before Thou beheuest no more then thou seest Thou thinkest nothing good but what sauoreth of the flesh some small delay of payment maketh thee to thinke t●●t God is bank●out And being not acquainted with God● prouidence thou ●●●lest more in man then in God And so esteeming more of man then of God thou renounces● God But to the end to correct this folly acknowledge cōfesse that herby thou dost abolish al faith hope of things ●●●sible to come buriest vp Gods prouidence together with the daily experience of his care for vs wherin he sheweth himself our comm●●● 〈◊〉 father our protector sauour 12 Moreouer thou art to vnderstand that true cōfidence is groūded vpon three pillers Fri●● vpon assurance that God knoweth as well our necessities as the remedies requisite for the same secondly that he is able to help vs thirdly that he is willing If therfore anie of these three doo faile our trust is in vaine So contrarywise whosoeuer trusteth in him that knoweth his want and the remedie for the same and withall is both able and willing to deliuer him the same man is well grounded and cannot bee deceyued in his hope and expectation There is no certaintie in the power will or knowledge of man But God contrarywise in his infinite wisedome knoweth all things in his power can do all things and in his will will doo all things which he thinkes fit and conuenient for our good and saluation It is meere folly therfore to trust more in man than in God That we may then Amend let vs change our mindes and heereafter repose more trust in God than in man yea in God onely and not in man And to that end let vs remember how the holy Ghost curseth him that doth otherwise saying Cursed be the man that trusteth in man Iere 17.5 Psalme 1. and maketh flesh his arme hee shall be like the barren heath in the wildernes And contrarywise Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord. Hee shall be like a tree planted by the riuers of waters Psalme 146. that shall bring foorth her fruite in due season Put not your trust sayth Dauid in princes nor in the sonne of man for there is no helpe in him And why Because when they haue taken vppon them to helpe you God taketh away their breath and all their enterprises doo come to naught But thy God O Sion sayth hee liueth from generation to generation and therefore blessed is the man that hath God for his helpe whose hope is in the Lord. 13 Some men there are possessed with this double folly that albeit they trust in man yet will giue out that theyr trust is in God But they deceiue themselues for properly their trust dependeth vpon the pledges that God hath giuen them not vppon God As when they are well prouided for when they are gotten into a good trade of marchandise when they haue great reuenewes strong townes mightie armies fathers mothers husbandes and so foorth But in deed when these pledges and meanes doo faile them then is their trust in God gone then they weepe and lament then they feare and tremble To bee briefe all trust in God is laide aside he shall haue no more honour among them than vsurers haue among other men because they trusted the pawnes but not the men that deliuered them Let vs therefore learne euen without pawnes or pledges to put our trust in God Let vs depend onely vppon him and assure our selues of his helpe and succour when all mans helpe faileth Let vs remember that trusting in man more than in God and so esteeming more of man than of God we do renounce God yea we euen rob him of his diuinitie wherewith wee cloath man as Esay well noteth saying Esa 31.3 Wo vnto them that go downe vnto Egypt for helpe The Egyptians are men not God their horses are flesh and not spirite By the premises therefore it appeareth that we loue feare man more than God and that wee repose more confidence in man than in him and consequently that wee esteeme
owne and welbeloued Sonne Iesus Christ What mercy goodnesse and loue shineth in this redemption That he so loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne to the end that all that beleeue in him might not perish Ioh. 3.16 1. Ioh. 4.9 but haue life euerlasting What a seale of his truth in that notwithstanding the ingratitude and vnworthinesse of the world he yet in his appointed time sent the seed of the woman promised to our forefathers Gen. 3.15 to breake the Serpents head To be briefe what power shewed he in this redemption wrought by Iesus Christ Gal. 4.4 wherein he surmounted and ouercame the deuill sinne death and hell But what doth such an image of God so expressely represented before our eyes in the person of our Lord Iesus Christ accomplishing our redemption shoot at but to giue vs to vnderstand and earnestly to feele the wisedome holinesse righteousnesse mercy truth goodnesse loue and power of God the father of Iesus Christ That we might loue him put our trust in him cleane vnto him call vpon him acknowledging him to be the inexpuiseable fountaine of al goodnesse and so glorifie him And the rather because by this meanes we are reclaimed from death and euerlasting damnation we bee made the children of God through the same Iesus Christ and inheritors of his kingdome and glory Rightly therefore doe we say that the ende of our redemption shoulde tend to encrease our knowledge of God that we may glorifie him That it is the dutie whereto Saint Paul exhorteth vs saying You are bought for a price 1. Cor. 6.20 therfore glorifie God in your body in your spirit for they are Gods Also in another place Eph. 1.6 God hath chosē vs to him throgh Iesus Christ according to the good pleasure of his will to the praise of the glory of his grace 8 Ther is yet another consideration When Christ gaue sight to the blind raised the dead healed the sicke wrought other like miracles Mat. 9.8 Luk. 13.13 the same were so many testimonies seales of his diuinitie consequently arguments to induce men to glorifie him As he himselfe saith speaking of the sicknes of Lazarus This sicknes is not vnto death but for the glory of God Ioh. 11.4 that the sonne might be glorified therby For his raising frō death was a testimony of his diuine power But we al are naturally as concerning the soul dead in sin blind sicke of a hūdred diseases And as the soule is more excellēt thē the body so the illuminating restoring to life curing of the diseases of the soule are miracles more excellētly representing the deuine power grace then those of the body Of necessity therefore these miracles being performed in vs through faith in Iesus Christ do bind vs to glorifie him And how By effectual demonstration that where we were blind sicke dead in spirit we are now illuminated cured raised againe to life And indeed the motions affections holy works of Gods children being assured testimonies that in soule they be illuminated risen againe are the true meanes to glorifie God Contrariwise if we walk as men yet blind in the darknes of ignorance as men sicke polluted in vice corruption as men yet dead in sin We doo so much as in vs lieth abolish the miracles of Iesus Christ consequently his glory In this respect Saint Peter saith Haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles 1. Pet. 2 1● that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of the visitation Mat. 5.16 And in the same sence saith Iesus Christ Let your light so shine before men that seing your good works they may glorify God your father 9 But what argument is this to glorifie God in our holy conuersation good works Because as we haue before said shewed the same be testimonies effects of our spiritual resurrection consequently of Gods power goodnes mercy toward vs. Wherupon the ignorant seing that we who in the time of our ignorāce were dead in sin giuen ouer to all vice corruption since we were illuminated in the truth of the Gospell haue by this spiritual resurrection declared such an alteration in vs that now we are contrariwise become as it were new creatures walking in purenes holines loue may also glorifie God in two sorts First in this miraculous alteration that they see in vs as being a worke truely proceeding of the power and goodnes of God Secondly in this that by such miracles they be moued to allowe and embrace the same religion which we professe as being conuict that it is truely of God not of man Psal 65.1 To conclude where Dauid crieth out O God praise waiteth for thee in Sion He manifestly declareth vnto vs that they which be regenerate through the redemption in Iesus Christ are burgeses of Sion and members of the Church bound to praise God And also that we frustrate God of his dutie and expectation Psal 119 175 if we refer not out whole liues to his glory saying with Dauid O Lord let my soule liue that I may praise thee 10 The secōd principal end of our life should tend to attaine to life euer lasting John 3.16.17 And indeed In as much as God hath sent his Son into the world that the world through him might be saued that he so loued the world that he hath giuē his only begottē son to the end that al that beleue in him might not perish but haue life euerlasting It thereby appeareth that as the end of our redemption accomplished in Iesus Christ is the sauing of the elect so we that beleeue in him shoulde in all the course of our liues aime at this To bee saued by him Otherwyse wee doo so much as in vs lieth reuerse that excellent and wonderfull work of our redemption God hath created man without comparison more excellent than beasts yet if man be not saued nor attaineth to life euerlasting hee is much more miserable than the brute beast which passing ouer this life a great deale more easilye than man after death feeleth no euill and contrariwise the man which aimeth not at this lyfe euerlasting after all his calamities both bodily and ghostly tribulations in this life at his death entereth into incomprehensible and eternall torments If man who naturally desireth felicitie could comprehend the felicitie of such as attaine to the kingdom of heauen likewise the miserie and woe of those who at their decease doo passe into euerlasting death the very horror of the death of these wretches together with the soueraigne felicitie of the blessed would make him earnestly to couet after life euerlasting to esteeme this incomprehensible felicitie to be one of the principall endes of his lyfe Such therefore as doo neuer propound the kingdome of
heauen for the scope of theyr liues are no men but beasts for they neuer thinke their souls to be immortall they beleeue not that they must die neither doo they remember that after death there is a hell and eternall fire prepared for those who liuing heere doo neuer seeke after lyfe euerlasting Yea Mat. 16.26 VVhat doth it auaile a man saith our sauiour Iesus Christ to winne the whole world and to loose his owne soule Luke 9.23 This lyfe beeing vnto him a high waie to death and to a firie torment that shall neuer be quenched 11 Let vs not therefore make riches honour or other carnall commodities the leuell of our liues but let vs aime at the celestial and eternall life as Iesus Christ admonisheth vs saying Iohn 6.27 Labour not for the meate which perisheth but for the meate that endureth to euerlasting lyfe Againe Seeke first the kingdome of God and his righteousnes Mathew 6 33. and all other things shall be ministred vnto you But we cannot attaine to this eternall lyfe without the knowledge of God that wee may put our trust in him call vpon him in all our necessities obey his commandementes and with thankesgiuing acknowledge that all goodnes commeth from him And in deede wee cannot trust in God neither call vpon him vnlesse we bee assured of his wyll and power to helpe vs neither can we obey him with anie kindly obedience which consisteth in loue vnlesse we knowe how deeply we be bound both to loue and obey him as also we cannot acknowledge all goodnes to proceed from him vnlesse we knowe him to be the fountaine of all goodnesse This therefore must be the end of our life euen to increase in the knowledge of God that by reposing our confidence in him by calling vpon him by obeying him and by acknowledging him to bee the fountaine of all goodnesse wee may attaine to lyfe euerlasting 12 True it is that in the creation of heauen earth and in the conduct and gouernment thereof he reuealeth himselfe vnto vs maketh vs to feele that he is a God almighty al wise al good well dooing howbeit especiallye in Iesus Christ as is aforesayde doo we knowe God God I saie our God father and sauiour almightie wise holy righteous mercifull good and true And this is the knowledge wherein God is truely glorified and by the which wee obtaine life euerlasting as Iesus Christe himselfe doeth teach vs Iohn 17.1 saying Father the houre is come glorifie thy sonne that thy sonne also may glorifie thee As thou hast giuen him power ouer all flesh that he should giue eternall life to all them that thou hast giuen him And this is life eternall that they know thee to be the onely verie God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ. And in deed as when a man is loth to go out of his way it is requisite he shuld know both whether which waie to go so haue we both in Iesus Christ very God very man For in that he is God Augustine of the Citie of God li. 11. c. 2 and consequently life to him we must go in that he is man by him we must come vnto God and bee vnited with him that wee may obtaine life euerlasting And in that sense doth he call himselfe the way Iohn 14.6 the truth and the life If he be the life he is the place whether we must go if he be the way by him we must trauell to attaine to life euerlasting As also by calling himselfe the truth he teacheth vs that hee is the accomplishment and truth of al that afore time was figured touching life euerlasting the meanes to attaine to the same Thus the second principall end of our life should consist in knowing of God through his sonne Iesus Christe and knowing him to put our trust in him to call vppon him to obeye his commandementes and to acknowledge him to be the fountaine of all goodnesse that so wee may glorifie him and glorifying him attaine to life euerlasting 13 Moreouer the end of glorifying of God our saluation wyll be a ready meanes to make vs to liue according to God for it will be a continual aduertisement rule to bridle vs from al thoughts affections words and deeds contrarie to the glorie of God the saluation of our soules considering that beeing contrarie thereto they ouerthrow the two principall ends of our life 14 Now let vs come to the third end of our life which is to bee considered in the particular vocation of euerie man This ende ought not to bee our profite honor or other carnall commoditie but that in seruing of men we may serue God God the creator and redeemer can well inough preserue both our bodies souls without the ministery of men but thus far he honoreth vs as to vouchsafe to worke his workes by vs. 1. Tim. 4.16 And in this consideration doth he giue and hath giuen vs shepheards ministers of his word to the end as S. Paul saith to saue those that harken vnto them by illuminating their hearts creating saith in them by reforming them to obedience through the means of the holy ministery with the efficacy of his holy spirit blessing the labors of his seruants In this respect also vouchsafing there should be food for the body he hath appointed some to be husbandmen to til the earth some to be millers and some to be bakers For the furnishing vs of apparell that some should be shepheards some shearers of sheepe some carders some spinsters some weuers fullers diers tailers c. For the prouiding of vs of houses that some should be carpenters masons c. To be briefe that there should bee an infinit number of artificers and marchants whose function is to furnish all things requisite for the entertainment and maintenance of the bodie Hee also ordaineth kyngs princes and magistrates by their authoritie to keepe euery one within the compasse of his vocation and so to execute theyr office in the maintaining of the good and punishing the wicked Thus God fulfilleth his work will in the preseruation of our bodies saluation of our souls Col. 3.24 by the emploiment of men in his seruice euery one according to his vocation Neither is there so much as the bondman but doth serue God by seruing his Lord as S. Paul saith That by faithful seruice to their masters they serue the Lord. 15 Hereby it appeareth that the end of mans life ought to rest in the seruing of God by seruing of men in their vocation It doth not therefore consist onely herein that the artificer should get sufficient to maintaine his family the marchant to obtaine ric●es other men credit dignitie and carnall commodities For this is the seruing of our selues not of God albeit men for the most part do thus corrupt prophane their labors workes life liuing to another end than they ought And in
his counsels are faithfull and that all his commandements doe tend to our good and saluation 4 Our second enemie to whom we giue too much credit is the world By the world we vnderstand the common course of mankind which is to giue themselues to wickednesse regarding onely this present life without any care of the kingdome of heauen In respect hereof doth Saint Paul call the world wicked and S. Iohn saith That the whole world is set vpon iniquitie The same Apostle setteth before vs sundrie examples of the corruption and wickednesse of the world saying All that is in the world Gal. 1.4 1. Ioh. 5.19 2.16 as the lustes of the flesh the lusts of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the father of heauen By the lusts of the flesh he vnderstandeth a desire to liue at ease and delicately without caring for any thing but what may concerne the profit and commodities of this life By the lustes of the eyes he comprehendeth the vanitie of vnchast lookes brauerie pompe other superfluities And by pride ambition haughtinesse vaine confidence and selfe loue euermore conioyned with the contempt of others 5 This world is vnto vs a mightie and strong enemie in respect that being so corrupt and vicious it inuiteth and by the example thereof allureth vs to follow it and so to abandon our selues to the same corruptions wherein such is our folly we are readie to beleeue it And indeed experience sheweth how easily wee are drawne to confirme our selues ther to The ease of the flesh which some men doe enioy The lusts and pleasures wherein they do reioyce The riches that make them to be honored The reputation to be mightier then others with the banquets and sumpteous attire doe all make a faire shew whereby to flatter moue and allure vs to follow them And as euery one is readie to beleeue whatsoeuer he desireth so doe we easily suffer our selues to bee perswaded to follow this world whereto we are naturally enclined 6 That the Adamant draweth the yron vnto it is truly a secret of nature but for the world to draw vs there to is a matter as naturall as for the water of a riuer to runne downe the chanel as for a chariot to runne downe a steepe hill or seeing another yaune to yaune after him or hering another sing to fall on singing For being naturally giuen to the corruptions of the world we shall need no soliciting thereto the onely sight of the thing we loue is sufficient to hale vs forward yea euē to force vs. As the wanton harlot allureth her louer the bayte vpon the hooke the fish and the infected aire infecteth all that liue in it The worlde resembleth a violent streame that carieth away all such trees as haue taken no sufficient roote To bee briefe it falleth out with vs as with those that liue among colliers or millers who hardly can shunne defouling with collow or meale 7 And indeed it is but too common that where wee ought through our holy conuersation to allure the worldlings to follow vs contrariwise the world being stronger then we carieth vs away therewith Phil. 2.15 Whereas it were our parts to serue as burning lampes shining in the middest of a crooked peruerse generation wherby to withdraw the worldlings out of their blind crooked waies into the pathes of light truth saluation contraiwise the darkenesse of the world doth quench our light and cause vs to wander in the darkenes This doeth Chrisostome note saying If the good conuerse with the bad the good will sooner grow worse then the bad better also one scabbed sheepe wil sooner infect tenne cleane ones then the tenne cleane ones will cure one scabbed one Yet if we suffer our selues to bee so perswaded by the entisements of the world that after the examples of others we do but a little neglect the care of our soules that we may gather goods and that wee follow others in the lustes of the flesh in superfluitie of banquets and costly attire the golde the siluer the exquisite moueables the apparell and foode will be vnto vs so many fooles cappes vpon our heads crying out alowd that we are indeede very fooles that will beleeue our enemie Iam. ● 4 Ioh. 2.15 If then we purpose to Amend our liues we must be better aduised We must remember that we can not continue friendship both with the world and with God And that the loue of the world is enmitie with God so with S. Iohns exhortatiō conclude not to loue the world but wholy to resolue to leaue and forsake the counsell of the world which is our enemie and to beleeue the counsel of God our true perfect friend 8 Our third and principall enemie is the deuill Whome Iesus Christ doth therefore tearme the enemie which also this name Sathan doth signifie Mat. 13.28 thereby to aduertise vs to take heede of him And indeede all his counsels and endeuours doe tend to death and therefore is he also called a man-slaier and a murderer from the beginning and so did hee shew himselfe towardes our forefathers Ioh. 8.44 whē vnder colour of fauour to Eue he perswaded her to eate of the forbidden fruite of the tree of knowledge of good euil Gen. 3. Wherupon God euen then proclaimed as it were with the found of the trumpet open warre betweene Satan and vs saying Gen. 3.15 I will put enmitie betweene him and the seede of the woman If he durst presume to enter into the earthly Paradice to assault and deceaue our first fathers while they yet did beare the image of God Also if sence Mat. 4.1 Luk. 4.1 he durst be so bold as to follow Iesus Christ into the wildernes and there assault him with his temptations fortie daies fortie nights and lastly to make those three mightie assaults mentioned by the Euangelists are not we to looke that he will bee 1. Pet. 5.8 as Saint Peter saith as a roaring Lion round abount vs seeking whom he may deuour He also is so much the more dangerous an enemie because he is inuisible because he is neuer wearie of sighting 2. Cor. 11.14 because he can transforme himselfe into an Angell of light Ciprian in his tenth tract in zeale that hee may the more easily seduce and deceiue vs. Saint Ciprian expounding this place of Saint Peter saith The deuill setteth before our eyes entising pleasures that by the sight of them he may supplant our chastity He tempteth our eares with the sweetnes of musicke that by the hearing therof he may weaken our Christian strength By bitter woordes he mooueth our tongue to euill speaking and and by iniurious deedes prouoketh our handes to sight and slay he offereth vnrighteous gaine wherby to enduce vs to fraud and pernicious profit to kindle couetousnesse in our soules hee promiseth temporall honours whereby to defeate vs of Celestiall he sheweth falsehood that he may take
from vs all trueth To be briefe he practiseth cunning in time of peace and violence in persecution Is it not then extreame folly yea euen desperate rage to beleeue such an enemie 9 But you will saie who will bee so vnaduised as to aske or take counsell of him When speaketh hee vnto vs Euen when vnder the pretence of Gods prouidence hee giueth or offereth vnto thee ritches honour dignitie pleasures carnall commodities to bee briefe prosperitie in all thy affaires For thinkest thou that he will not propound with them the like condition as hee did to Iesus Christ when he said Mat. 4.9 All these will I giue thee if thou wilt worship me Indeede hee doth not alwaies speake so like a deuill But comming as a friende to serue thy turne and to please thee in thy desires thou shalt well finde that in effect he tempereth some poyson or pernitious counsell among either that thou shouldest dissemble the knowen truth yea euen renounce it or to neglect the holy ministry or to dispence in practises nothing agreeing with charitie equitie or vpright dealing yet couered with the cloke of custome iniquitie of the time which will not beare better dealing telling thee that if thou be a sheepe the wolfe will deuour thee that the simple are not to deale in the world and that thou must liue and houle with the wolues 10 Neither is this all he mixeth yet another poyson that is hee lifteth thee vp in thy wealth that he may make thee to trust therin to employ it in pleasure and superfluitie to forget that thou art a mortall mā In summe to imagine that thou needest not the help either of God or man On the other side for he can turne all into poyson he will take away thy goods and bring thee into pouertie he will molest thee with long and tedious sickenesse he will make thee a skorne vnto men Hereupon he will seeke to perswade thee that thou maist iustly murmure against God complaine of him forsake him reiect and euen driue him away when hee offereth himselfe as did the Gaderinites when they driue away Iesus Christ because of their hogges whome the deuils had carried head-long into the sea Mat. 8.34 yea which is the tipe of all mischiefe euen to curse God whereof the historie of Iob is a manifest mirrour Againe art thou a great sinner Hee will set before thee the rigour of Gods iustice to plunge thee in dispaire Dost thou trust in his mercy Iob. 1. Hee will prouoke thee to sinne vnder pretence of friendship both to God and thee alledging that Where sinne aboundeth grace doth more abound Also that one Peccaus before thou diest Rom. 5.20 will suffice for all If thou appliest thy selfe to walke vprightly in the feare of God he wil counsell thee to thinke thy selfe a Saint and of great merite in the sight of God Doth hee finde thee wel resolued in the doctrine of Gods prouidence as he found Iesus Christ Mat. 4. when he alledged that Man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that commeth out of the mouth of God He will sollicite thee to abuse it by tempting of God as he thought to haue surprised Iesus Christ when he exhorted him to cast himself from the toppe of the temple To be breefe his illusions and temptations are infinite 11 Now let vs marke the common course of men yea euen of many of those that professe the knowledge of God let vs iudge whether most of their workes be not euen so many examples witnessing that they beleeue and follow the counsell of their enemie Sathan let vs remember that al such thoughts imaginations motions affections and temptations afore mentioned be the counsels of our enemie Sathan That it is an extreame folly and madnesse for a man to beleeue his enemie that for the amending of our liues we must bee better aduised and beleeue him who is our true perfect friend euē our God who speaketh to vs in his holy Scriptures which onely doo containe assured holy healthsome counsell Of his loue towards vs we cannot doubt sith he hath giuen vs such a pledge as his sonne crucified for vs. He cannot neither will he lie or deceiue his children whome hee hath vndertaken to make blessed Let vs therfore oppose the counsels of Gods word against whatsoeuer the counsell of our enemies the world the flesh and the deuill Let vs followe the example of Dauid Psal 119.105 24.9 who protested that Gods worde was a light to his pathes that the testimonies of the Lord were his counsels that a young man shall amend his waie by walking according to the worde of God Let vs take heart in the example of Christ agaynst the illusions of the deuill and our other enemies Ephes 6.17 laying holde vpon the sworde of his spirite which is his word and with him let vs saie It is written It is written Psal 9.5 Let vs remember that Iesus Christ from God his father tooke the name of a counseller to aduertise vs that wee ought to receiue and beleeue his counsels onely Iosua 1. and not the counsels of our enemies the world the flesh and the deuill To bee briefe let vs put in practise the same which God in olde time enioyned to Iosua namely daie and night to reade and meditate vpon the booke of Gods lawe to liue after the contents of the same And so let vs assure our selues that according to his promise wee shall direct our course wiselye and prosper in all our attemptes Thus wee see that to the end to Amend our liues and hereafter to be better aduised we must beware of this Folly and neuer beleeue our enemies better than our friends The seuenth Folly To thinke our selues wise Chap. 8. THis seuenth folly sheweth man in all extremity and perfection to be a foole For being intangled in the sixe follyes afore mentioned many others he neuertheles thinketh himself wise and well aduised Among a hundred men that walke vp downe the streetes you shall not finde one that will bee contented to bee called foole or mad man but will thinke himselfe iniured for euery man desireth to be thought wise Yet they that beleeue not that there is a God they that esteeme better of man than of God they that thinke to liue euer and yet know not wherfore they liue they that iudge of mans felicity or misery by the outward shew they that beleeue their enemies rather than their friends Are not all these in thinking themselues wise euen perfect fooles yes and so haue we at large proued them 2 Yet may this folly be more generally considered in that man at the least for the most part thinketh himselfe to be but a man created for this temporall life and not a Christian beleeuing lyfe euerlasting For therof it falleth out that man being wise discreet and aduised as concerning the worlde yet a Christian foolish and senselesse
resolue least they should be knowen to be of the religion so loose their goods dignities otherworldly commodities Is not the soule more precious then the body Must we not haue more respect to the soule then to the body In a time of famine we can be content to sell al for bread rather then to die for hunger Gen. 47. Did not the Egyptians giue all their money their cattle and finally their possessions to Ioseph for corne Nay more then so we will euen snatch bread out of the fire And lastly if wee haue no other meanes wee can bee content to leaue countrey kinred and friends to trauaile into forrein countries to seek for food rather then to die for hunger But why do we not as much for our soules The famished soule cryeth out I must liue And is it not meere rashnesse to think to liue without food We must therfore forsake all for to obtaine the spirituall food of the woord we must euen wrest it from out the fire and persecution or els depart into some other countrey where it may be had freely And thereto doth Iesus Christ lead vs when he saith Labour not for the meat which perisheth but for the meat that endureth vnto euerlasting lyfe Should we call in question his promise who saith Seeke first the kingdom of God and his righteousnes and all other things shal be ministred vnto you Hath he not effectually declared vnto vs what care he taketh to feed those that follow him to heare his word Behold there were sower thousand besides women children that folowed him into the desert to heare his doctrine They knew not what to eate but Iesus Christ had a care thereof I am moued in compassion toward this multitude said he for three daies haue they been with me and haue nothing to eate and I will not send them away fasting least they faint by the way Herevpon he blessed seauen loaues and a few fishes and gaue vnto them so that they were all satisfied 14 Some scorners and blasphemers will say let God take care for the soule and I will take care for the bodie But contrarywise let vs say Let vs take such care for the soule as God hath commanded and he will care for the bodie as he hath promised Let his promise be vnto vs as the pitcher of oyle and the barrell of meale to the Widow of Sarepta that neuer wasted euen a more certain rent then the money in our purses or the goods in our houses What will it profit a man to win all the world and to loose his owne soule What a folly were it to buy a house for the bodie laying out so much therevpon that for want of goods the bodie so well housed must die for hunger Euen so what shall a man get by keeping his goods for to feed and cloath the bodie which is the house of the soule and in the mean time suffer the soule to pyne away and die for hunger Sith therefore the question now dependeth vpon the amendement of lyfe let vs resolue to frequent and heare the preaching of the Gospell and so to feed our soules with the word of God turning away our eyes from all incumbrances offered by the flesh and assuring our selues that we can catch no harme by obeying God and seeking food life and saluation for our soules 15 Others there are who albeit they may freely without danger frequent Sermons are neuertheles marueilous cold and negligent in that dutie who think it sufficient that they haue the liberty albeit they vse it not Such men respect only the commodities of the flesh the world They be prophane in their harts and deuoid of religion accompting of no other God but their riches neither religion Augustine of the manners of the Catholike Church but a care skill to purchase wealth to grow mightie in the land S. Austen rehearseth three degrees of woe He saith he that hath not that he loueth cannot be said to be blessed Neither he that hath that which he loueth if his loue be hurtful vnto him Neither he that hath that which is soueraignely good profitable if he loueth not that which he hath Now as we may to sample the first bring in those who louing the holy ministerie haue no meanes to come by it the second such as loue superstition Idolatrie and do enioy it so for the third among others we may place those that are in place where they may freely commodiously haue the vse of the holy ministerie of the word and sacraments but doe not loue it therefore doe either neglect it or peraduenture despise it These men shall incurre Gods double iudgement for contemning treading vnder foot the food of their soules the incomprehensible graces which God offereth vnto thē in the preaching of his word They be men that thinke not thēselues to be men for they liue as beastes that care only for the body and this life but make no accompt of the soule and life euerlasting If sometime they come to a Sermon it is but for a fashion because it is an honour to be of the religion But let them harken to Iesus Christ who crieth Amend your liues to that end meditat vpō that which we haue spoken that therby vnderstanding that the preaching of the word is ordained to build Gods house the body of Christ which is his Church to illuminate vs with the truth to strengthen vs in saith to reproue our vices to exhort vs to liue acording to God to comfort vs in our afflictions to bee short to saue vs That vnderstanding I say how profitable and necessarie it is they may awake from their giddinesse and take hart to heare diligently the Sermons to the glorie of God and the saluation of their soules Let them not thinke the time bestowed at Sermons to be lost as some doe but let them assuredly beleeue that they cannot better employ their time then in the preseruation of the life of their soules in encreasing the health of the same in strengthening their hearts against all temptations and mortal assaults in the more certaine apprehension of the kingdome of heauen the riches of the glorie prepared for the true disciples of Iesu Christ in glory euerlasting Of our duties to communicate in the holy sacraments Chap. 4. NOw let vs come to the sacraments As concerning baptisme in as much as among all Christians except the Anabaptistes the institution ordinance of Iesus Christ to baptiste children is obserued reseruing to another place the corruptiō of not knowing much lesse practising the vse of our baptisme wee will proceed to the supper The supper was ordained principally for two reasons The first As a mother hauing brought forth her litle one doth not forsake it but nurseth bringeth it vp So Christ hauing ordained baptisme to bee as a seale pledge of our spiritual new birth into his Church did institute
carried away or wasted himself would transport as much as he might into the towne and commit the custodie thereof to some friend euen so wee beeing aduertised of the daungers which dayly experience doth acquaint vs withall howe the man that this daie aboundeth in all prosperitie by to morow is made a begger let vs deliuer so much of our goods to the poor as conueniently we may before we loose all let vs by theyr handes transport at the least some part thereof into heauen and there deliuer it into the custodie of Iesus Christ who in the da●e of iudgement will restore it vs to our euerlasting ioy Secondly let vs doo good to the poore while wee liue here for as is aforesayde all that we giue in our life time shall remaine to vs for euer and what wee leaue at our death that wee loose Thirdly let vs doo it while the poore come among vs or that others do craue it in their name for we must thinke that then God maketh vs a signe to giue and whispereth in our eares saying Now is the time to doo well let not this occasionslip Thus wee see that dooing good to the poore while wee haue time and meanes wee shal giue them occasion to praise and blesse God and he acknowledging vs to bee his children wyll so faire fauour vs that in the great daie of the Lord standing at the right hand of Iesus Christ wee shall heare this blessed and comfortable speech directed vnto vs Come yee blessed of God my father inherite the kingdome of heauen prepared for you from the foundation of the world Math. 25.34 Of the dutie of the Poore 24 HEreto will wee adde some few instructions touching the duetie of the poore First as almightie God in commaunding the riche to relieue the necessitie of the poore and needie and for the same promising such great and euerlasting reward as is afore mentioned shoulde thereby so pierce and take possession of their harts as to constrain and make them both liberally and cheerfully to relieue them so are the poor therin to cōceiue a stedfast foundation of comfort as vnderstanding therby how carefull the Lord is for them who ordaineth men whom hee hath endued with wealth to be his seruants through whose ministration he will prouide for theyr necessities They are therefore to assure themselues that God doth not despise or neglect them but because in his wisdome he hath decreed that there shall bee both rich poor his will is to vse the rich in the releefe of the necessities of the poore When Iesus Christ to the end to induce the rich to performe their dueties did protest that whatsoeuer they did to the poore either in releeuing or in contemning them they did it to himselfe Could he more certainly assure them of helpe and releefe than by aduowing such releefe as they receiued as performed to himselfe and such contempt or deniall as was vsed in their behalfes as done to himselfe in theyr persons Coulde he declare anie greater care or affection to the poore than by recommending them to vs as his owne person Could hee more liuelie testifie how highly hee esteemeth or how heartely hee accepteth of theyr releefe than by bringing into his kingdome all those that haue releeued theyr necessities and by thrusting such into hell as haue despised them 25 If the poore doo call God their father can they doubt of his loue either that he louing them is not also willing to helpe them in theyr necessities Withall considering that by his Apostle he chargeth vs not to forget to doo good Heb. 13.16 and to distribute thereto adding that with such sacrifices he is pleased If a mother careth for her child before it be borne prouiding for it such things as may be necessarie when it commeth into the world thinke you that your heauenly father careth not to prouide for the necessities of his children alredy borne into the Church who do cal him father say vnto him Mat. 4.4 as it were by the mouth of Iesus Christ Giue vs this daie our daylie bread Surely there is no doubt but hee is wylling to releeue their necessities as also they may bee well assured of his power to doo it First in regard of that which Iesus Christ teacheth Man liueth not by bread onely but by euerie woorde that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Exo. 28.18 1. King 19.8 Mat. 4.2 They are to learne that euen without anie naturall or ordinarie meanes God can feed them only with his blessing the example whereof we haue in Moses Helias and Christ who liued forty daies without meate And in deed as he can when he purposeth to send a famine Leuit. 26 whereby to depriue man of the meanes to liue so take awaie the strength of bread 〈…〉 but eate a man neuer so much it shall not nourish him So can hee blesse euen one morsell of the bread that it shall yeld vs more sustenance than we ordinarily receiue of greater plentie He can so multiply it as he did in the wildernesses Math. 14.19 where he fedd fiue thousand men with fiue loaues Hee can prouide vs of foode as he fed his people in the desart for the space of fortie yeeres sending them Manna from heauen and as he did by them Deut. 8.3 Exod. 16.35 Deut. 8.4 1. King 17.14 1. King 17.6 so cause that our garments and shooes shall not weare or consume He can blesse our bread and oyle as he did for the widdow of Sarepta so that vsing that which we haue it shall not diminish To be short he can vse the seruice of Rauens to bring vs foode as hee did for Elias These testimonies examples of Gods will and power might assure the poore that God will prouide for their necessities to the ende that they in assurance of faith maye trust and depend vppon him onelie 26 By this assurance of Gods will and power they ought to bee stirred vp to praie vnto God that hee vouchsafe to prouide for theyr necessities and theyr praiers must proceed of faith For the will of God is that we begge of him whatsoeuer wee steadfastlye beleeue that he can and will giue vs. Rom 10 14 And in that respect it behoueth them to praie to God to touch the heartes of the rich and to moue them to charity and compassion that they may stretch forth theyr hands to releeue those that stand in need They are moreouer to vnderstand that as God hath ordained the office of deacons to prouide for their releefe acknowledging therin his wisdome goodnes they are diligently to praie vnto him to send such deacons as may be endued with giftes and graces requisite for such an office to preserue them vnder his protection to guide them wyth his holy spirit and to strengthen them that they may ouercome all labors and difficulties so that following their charge faithfully cheerfully they may by that means receiue as
loade our selues with prouision and as our way shortneth so to encrease our burden The shortnes of our life reproueth the large extent of our couetousnes There is no reason that wee shoulde take or carrie any great prouision for our iournie Cicero in his fourth Tusculan when the place that we go vnto is at hand But herein may we vnderstand how truely Cicero spake when he said that the disease that lurketh in the raines is tyed to the bowels and which waxing olde cannot be pulled vp is called couetousnesse 4 Yet is there nothing more pernicious or that engendreth greater corruption sin iniquitie and strange diseases then this cursed couetousnes which maketh a man to bee at enmity with God with his neighbour and with himselfe And this is it which we are first to note to the end we may vtterly renounce it and so mend our liues according to the commandement of our Sauiour Iesus Christ They that will be rich 1. Tim. 6.9.10 saith Saint Paule doe fall into temptations and snares and into many foolish and noysome lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction For the desire of money is the roote of all euill which while some lust after they erre from the faith and pierce themselues thorow with many sorowes Euen this only sentence might suffice to make vs to abhorre couetousnesse For because the tempter is euermore ready and at hand we daily pray to God that he lead vs not into temptation yet we still feed our couetousnes which drowneth vs therein The deuill doth dayly pitch his nettes to ouertake hale vs into hell and couetousnes causeth vs to stumble there into Moreouer it engendreth such folish noysome desires that they drown men in destructiō perdition And what may a man say more but euen terme it the roote of all euill therto ad that they which delight therein do fal from the faith which is the fulnes of all mischiefe To conclude As the fi●h swallowing the hook together with the baite is taken killed so couetous men do pierce thēselues thorow with a thousand sorowes which do entangle them in death euerlasting Couetousnesse therfore is as the fire the stithy Diogenes Plutarke in his Apotheg yea wher the deuill forgeth a thousand chaines of iniquity to pul men to hel a thousand fiery darts where with mortally to wound men by poysoning their harts with all vice As a certaine Ethnik in old time said Saint Bernard vpon the Canticles Sermon 39. that couetousnesse is the Metropolitan Citie of all corruption vice And S. Bernard compareth it to a Lady in a chariot whose wheeles are foure vices Cotempt of God Inhumanitie forgetfulnes of death faintnesse of hart or mistrust whose two horses are nigardlinesse and rauine and whose carter is desire to haue 5 To be short couetousnes resembleth a wicked mother bringing forth sundry wicked children Col. 3.5 enemies as is aforesaid both to God and man yea euen to him that harboureth norisheth them First S. Paul calleth the couetous man an Idolater couetousnes Idolatry but why Because the couetous man maketh siluer his God he reposeth more confidence in his riches then in God hee loueth siluer with his whole hart euē more thē God he forgetteth despiseth the seruice of God to the end to serue his owne couetousnes and desire to haue When his mony is in his coffer he thinketh himselfe more safe then through all Gods promises If by a banquerupt or otherwise hee loose some portion of money it doth more trouble and grieue him then to loose the kingdome of heauen by offending God he will without comparison be more sharpe set vpon getting of money then vpon calling vpon God or hearing his word Mat. 6.24 Luk. 16.13 Iesus Christ plainely protesteth that No man can serue two masters but he shall either hate the one and loue the other or he shall cleaue to the one and depise the other And the rather to shew whereof he speaketh he addeth that we cannot serue God and Mammon Can there be any greater iniquitie then to despise yea euen to hate God Yet let men flatter themselues as they list this is the cursed fruite of couetousnesse as Iesus Christ himselfe affirmeth And least any man should wrongfully complaine as thinking he might notwithstanding he were couetous yet loue God and serue him Christ who best knoweth the strength of man doth resolutely protest that No man can serue two masters And indeede when for loue of money thou doest that which God forbiddeth or neglectest that which he commandeth dost thou not despise God to please thy couetousnesse To steale other mens goods or to deceiue men by giuing counterfaite come for good is a villanous vice Mal 1.8 yet couetousnesse perswadeth men so to doe not onely to men but euen to God as the Prophet Malachie obiecteth to the Iewes that they offered for sacrifice the blinde the lame and the sicke beastes whereas by the law they were commanded to offer those that were found Againe that as theeues or sacriledgious persons they robbed God defrauding him in his tenthes What moued Iudas an Apostle to become a sacriledgious person in stealing money from the poore Also as the fulnes of al impietie to betray Mal 3.8 Iohn 12.6 Mat. 26.15 Chrisostome in his 9. Hom vpō Mathew sell and deliuer to the death for thirtie pence his master his Lord the sonne of God c 6 Now if the couetous man doth wrong and iniurie vnto God so doth hee also in sundrie sortes and manners to his neighbour Chrisostome calleth the couetous man an enemie to all men and indeede he hath infinite wicked cruell and lewd meanes to draw other mens substance into his owne purse without sparing of any imagining all others to be cast foorth for a pray that he may robbe and reaue at pleasure Ezech. 22.13 Ezechiell where he saith I haue smitten my hands vpon thy couetousnesse that thou hast vsed and vpon the bloud which haue bene in the midest of thee doth shew that mixing bloud with couetousnesse the same hath bred in him al crueltie and inhumanitie against his neighbour Iere. 22.17 As Ieremie also speaking to Ioachim king of Iuda doth note saying Thine eyes and thy hart are but onely for thy couetousnesse and for to shed innocent bloud and for oppression and wrong Whence came these corruptions which the Lord forbiddeth as deuouring of the poore with vsurie Exod. 22 25. Deut. 16 19 Leuit. 19.13 Deut. 27.25 Leuit. 19.35 Deut 25.13 taking giftes which blinde the eyes of the wise keeping away the wages from the hireling receiuing rewards to shed innocent bloud selling by false measures waights or counterfaite marchandise remouing the bounds or markes of their neighbours land to bee short treading our brethren vnderfoote Truely euen the roote of couetousnes bringeth forth these cursed fruites Were they not the fruits of couetousnes
seruest it but when God commaundeth thee thou hatest him This verily is a frantike rage in man thus to submit himselfe to couetousnes which engendreth so much vice and iniquitie making him an enemie both to God to men and to himselfe We are therefore so to abhorre it that it be not once named among vs Ephes 5.3 as Saint Paule doeth giue vs warning 10 Moreouer in as much as Auarice is a loue of siluer and a coueting of riches Let vs for a second remedie consider whether there bee anie ground or occasion why wee shoulde so loue them Mat. 13 22 or couet after them Iesus Christ saying that the deceitefulnesse of riches choaketh the good corne of Gods worde doeth thereby declare that they resemble a wanton strumpet such a one as by her beautye causing manie men to lust after her depriueth such as giue themselues to enioye her of all vertue honour and felicitie That they be like vnto wine which by the sweetnes and delicacie thereof allureth man to excessiue drinking yet with all taketh the man from the man that is to say his sences and reason frō him And indeed as the good corne of Gods word is a sanctified seed of saluation life so the falsehood and deceite of riches doth in such sort draw men to aboundance and with all to the peruerse vse of the same Luk. 16.9 that thereby this seede of saluation and life euerlasting is choked vp In another place our Lord Iesus Christ calleth thē riches of iniquitie either because they ordinarily doe spring from iniquitie or else that they do engender and bring foorth iniquitie Saint Paul writing to Timothie saith thus Charge them that are rich in the world 1. Tim. 6.17 that they bee not high minded and that they trust not in vncertaine riches Riches doe commonly breede pride arrogancie contempt of others pleasures pompe forgetfulnesse of God despising of eternall felicitie peruers confidence Basill in his Serm. against couetousnesse and other like plagues And this doth Basill signifie wher he saith that the mad man desireth nothing so much as to get water by reason of his excessiue distemperature yet is ther nothing that so much tormenteth him for the onely sight thereof is able to cast him into his fit and to trouble him and so it is with riches Euerie man longeth for them yet are they the onely things that encrease his longing trouble his mind and replenish his hart with passions When rich men saith Socrates will vse their riches they pollute them selues with pleasures and pride when they list to keepe them care consumeth them and eateth foorth their hearts when they labour to get them they grow wicked and full of all miserie Chrisostome verie fitly compareth them to wilde beastes whome a man can hardly take and when he hath them hee must take great care how to keepe them from doing hurt And in truth as he that walketh in the raine shall hardly escape wetting or hee that traueleth in the whote sunne eschew heate so is it almost vnpossible for a rich man to auoid vice and corruption by his riches Mark 10.23 And hereof speaketh Iesus Christ verie resolutely saying How hardly doe they that haue riches enter into the kingdome God True it is he afterwards expoundeth this speach saying Children how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the kingdome of God But then adding that It is more easie for a Camell to passe through a needles eye then for a rich man to enter into the kingdome of God Hee declareth how hardly a rich man can escape confidence in his riches and consequently enter into the kingdome of God Psal 62.11 And in this respect doth Dauid admonish vs when riches abound not to set our harts vpon the same 1. Tim. 6.17 as Saint Paul also preacheth to the rich that they should not put any trust in their riches 11 Riches do not only engender a false confidence in the same but become also a poyson to humilitie modestie courtesie and al other vertues which it transformeth into pride and arrogancie as the Apostle noteth in the place before aledged Some haue written that Bucephalus the horse of Alexander the great so long as hee was naked would suffer any man to backe him but if hee were once furnished with the royall Sadle Bridle and other furniture he grew so proud that no man might ride him but the king euen so many who in their pouertie were modest humble and vertuous by encrease of wealth haue chaunged their vertues into vice Plut. in the life of Phociō Thus we see that there is no lesse care and labour to beware that riches hurt not then sorrow and paine in getting them Thus did Phocion albeit a heathen man verie well vnderstand For when great Alexander sent him a linge sūme of mony asking him that brought the present what moued Alexander to send him such a present by the answere vnderstanding that it was in respect of the same of his vertue he refused it saying Let him leaue me as I am Wherin hee shewed what regard the vertuous man shoulde take least riches should chaunge him and make him vicious Plut. in his Laconicall Apotheg The Lacedemonians according to Licurgus Lawes expelled from among them all vnprofitable members as Cookes Players Sophisters and such like Also the vse of siluer and golde vsing no money but of yron so did vtterly banish couetousnes And so long as they obserued this discipline they remained not only vertuous but also inuincible to other nations And contrariwise as soone as forsaking Licurgus lawes they had opened a waie to wealth couetousnesse crept in who making them vicious deliuered them into the power of their enemies And indeede as these mountaines that containe mynes of golde and siluer are otherwise barren so they that haue riches and vaynes of golde and siluer are in their harts made vnprofitable to the seruice of God and man True it is Riches are Gods good creatures instruments of vertue to those that can well vse them as Saint Paul well noteth saying 1. Tim. 6. God giueth vs all things to enioy to doe good to be rich in good workes readie to distribute and communicate Laying vp in store for our selues and making a good foundation against the time to come Luk. 16.22 that wee may obtaine eternall life Neither doe wee simply condemne either the rich or their riches Poore Lazarus was receiued into the bosome of rich Abraham But the desire and possession of them is dangerous vnto man who naturally is enclined to peruert the vse of Gods good creatures To man they be so plenty as Suger fruite in the power libertie of a child as plesant wine to a drūkerd as a sword in a mad mans hand to vse rather to hurt thē to do good At the least it is euident that they can not make a man blessed
more able to with and temptations and a line of three twists is not so soone broken They are 〈◊〉 each to helpe vp other if either of them happen to 〈…〉 or sinne Wis 4. ● Two are better sayeth the same Salomon 〈…〉 they haue better wages for their labour And if they 〈…〉 will 〈◊〉 vp the other but wo vnto him that is alone for if he 〈…〉 lift him vp They ought also each to per●●●●● 〈…〉 to relieue the poore diligently to frequent 〈◊〉 to vse prayers and supplications and praise and thankesgiuings to the Lord to comfort each other in the time of affliction to be short either to exhort other to walke in the feare of God 〈◊〉 in all duties and exercises beseeming the children of God In this m●nner did that holy woman Elizeus hottesse exhort her husband to prepare a chamber for the prophet to lodge in Saint Paul also sayth 2. King 4 1● 1. Cor. ●4 ●● That women desirous to learne should question with theyr husbandes at home Whereby he sheweth that the husband ought to bee so instructed as hee maie bee readie to instruct his wyfe at home And in deede a heathen Philosopher in this sense sayth verie well Plutarch in the rules of marriage That the husband after the example of the Bee should euerie where gather euerie good instruction that he might be able to impart it to his wife and by hauing communication acquaint her therewith Thus sayeth hee maye the mindes of women well taught be wonne from vanitie to vertue 7 Other duties there are which be common both to the husband the wife as among the rest such as proceed of the vnion of marryage wherof God in the institution thereof sayde They are one flesh And Iesus Christ confyrmed saying Two shall bee one 〈◊〉 And therfore in Saint Marke hee addeth They are no more two but one flesh Gen 2.24 Math. 19. 5 Marke 10.8 And in deede if Eue being created of one of the ribbes of Adam was as parte of himselfe then is the wife also a parte of her husband and as the one halfe of himselfe And of this vn●●● and coniunction proceedeth the mutuall loue betweene man and wife For no man sayth Saint Paule hateth his owne flesh but loueth and cherisheth it And speaking to husbandes hee sayeth Husbandes loue your wiues Ephes 5.15 Titus 2.4 Eccle. 25.1 And writing to Titus hee commaundeth him to exhort the elder women to teach the younger to bee modest and to loue theyr husbandes Three thinges sayth Wisedome doo reioyce thee and with them am I beautifyed before God and men Vnitie of brethren loue of neighbours a man and wife that agree together But syth the foundation of this mutuall loue is the vnity of marriage wherby the husband and the wife are made one flesh the husbande as the head the wife as the bodie It followeth that this loue must bee stedfast not variable and that the vnion of marriage continue notwithstanding whatsoeuer befall either the husband or the wife Notwithstanding whatsoeuer complexions I saie natures infyrmities may appeare whatsoeuer sicknesse losse of goods iniuries griefes or other inconueniences that may arise yet so long as the foundation of loue that is the vnion of marriage doth continue so long must loue and affection remaine God commandeth vs to loue our neighbors as our selues because they be of our flesh Albeit therefore that hee contemne hate offend or wrong vs albeit he bee our enemie and in respect of himselfe deserueth not that wee should loue him yet because hee is of our flesh the foundation of loue remayning wee must loue him As also our sauiour Iesus Christ sayth Loue your enemies blesse those that curse you Mat. 5.44 doo good to those that hate you and praie for those that molest and persecute you Howe much rather ought they to put this in practise who by the bonde of marryage are made one flesh The rather because the vnion betweene man and wife is without comparison more straight and bindeth them each to loue other much more than the coniunction whereby man is vnited vnto his neighbour 8 But this is the mischiefe that in many their loue is not grounded vpon the vnion of marriage but vpon beautie riches other carnal and worldly considerations subiect to chang alteration and losse This corruption that respecteth beautie is olde and noted to bee among the causes of the floud The sonnes of God sayth Moses seeing the daughters of men were faire lusted after them Gen. 6. 2 toke them in marriage But in deed it is monie that maketh loue and riches ingender affection witnesse the experience of our daies Yet such loue resembleth onely a fire of straw which is but a blaze and is soone out vnles it be continued with great wood or other lyke substance Loue growing of beautie riches lust or anie other lyke slight vncertain and fraile grounds is soone lost and vanished vnlesse it be maintained with the consideration of this vnion of two in one flesh and the vertues thereto adioyned and therefore must euerie man thinke vpon this vnion in marriage that he may inioy nourish continue the loue that therof procedeth the rather because such loue is the nurse of cōcord that maketh marriage happy As contrariwise the want of this loue is the fountaine of strife quarelling debate and other like afflictions that conuert the paradise of marriage into a hell Augustine of baptisme of children Dissention between man and wife saith S Augustine is the trouble and ouerthrow of the householde They that will auoid such strife must therefore loue each other and especially they must haue care heereof when they are first married For as a vessell made of two peeces glewed together may at the first be easily broken but in time groweth strong so is it also wyth two persons that are glewed or ioyned together by the bond of marriage 9 This loue the mother of peace will ingender a care and dutie each to support other and so to practise the same which Saint Paul requireth in all beleeuers Ephes 4.31 that is To be gentle one to another friendly and each to forgiue other euen as God hath forgiuen vs through Christ Let the husband thinke that he hath married a daughter of Adam with all her infyrmities and likewise let the woman thinke that she hath not married an Angell but a child of Adam with his corruptions And so let them both resolue to beare that that cannot be soone amended Let not the bodie complaine of the head albeit it haue but one eie neither the head of the bodie albeit it be croked or mishapen Such defaultes doo neuer break vnion and loue betweene the head and the bodie neyther must the infirmities of the husband or the wife infringe the loue that procedeth of the vnion in marriage If the husband be giuen to brauling or the wife to chiding let them both beware
her owne workes praise her in the gates Of the perticular dutie of the husband to his wife Chap. 3. NOw let vs proceede to the perticular dutie of the husband to his wife First he is to vnderstand that albeit he be ordained to be her head yet must hee not tyrannize and torment her at his pleasure for such husbands are monsters in nature The creation of man doth sufficiently shew that al that is in the head as reason wisedome iudgement sight hearing and other the giftes and graces of God do tend to the conduct and happie guiding of the boby not to torment and cast it downe This dutie of a husband doth S. Paul note in the example of Iesus Christ saying Ephe. 5. 25. As Iesus Christ is the head of the Church Euen so is the husbande the head of the wife And how He is saith he the Sauiour of her body And thereof he taketh this exhortation Husbands loue your wiues euen as Iesus Christ loued his Church and gaue himselfe for it That hee might sanctifie and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word That he might make it a glorious Church not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should bee holy and without blame So ought men to loue their wiues as their owne bodies He that loueth his wife loueth himselfe for no man euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it euen as the Lord doth the Church It is therefore the dutie of the husband so to loue his wife that after the example of Iesus Christ hee labour not so hartely for any thing as to set his wife free from trouble and calamitie and to make her partaker in al his goodes and honor To bee short if the authoritie of the head be vnited with a loue of her that is his moytie he will neuer abuse his dominion But loue wil make his authoritie and power to serue to the b●nefit comfort and saluation of his wife 2 Of this fountaine of loue springeth the dutie of the husband to beare with the infirmities of his wife and not by and by to enter into bitternes and wrath Colos 3.16 as S. Paule also noteth saying Husbands loue your wiues and bee not bitter vnto them To the same ende also doth the admonition of S. Peter vnto husbands tend where he saith 1. Pet 3.7 Husbands dwell with your wiues as men of knowledge giuing honor vnto the woman as to the weaker vessell euen as they which are heires together of the grace of life that your praiers bee not interrupted This is a notable exhortation of S. Peter For by exhorting husbands to behaue themselues discreetly and with knowledge and wisedome toward their wiues hee requireth of them two thinges First that they neuer say nor doe any thing that may iustly offend their wiues as some there be who being prodigal great spenders or Idle and slacke in their businesse doe cause their wiues children to languish in pouertie Others who haunting tauernes doo consume that which should maintaine their familie Others who coming home drunke doe beate and vexe their wiues and as it were driue them into dispaire Others who by high and bitter speeches by threatning and other actions vnworthy a husband doe prouoke their wiues and so stirre vp such strife and debate as doe conuert the felicitie of marriage into an hell Sith therefore that the husband is head he ought in such wisedome reason and discreation to beare himselfe that he giue his wife no iust occasion of offence or prouocation yea he must remember that if the head be drunk the whole body is in danger of weake gouernment euen of lying in the myre Secondly that albeit the wife should minister iust cause of griefe displeasure yet that the husband should not thereof take occasion against his wiues infirmities or enter into bitternes taunts or trouble but discreetly and patiently beare with her that so they might quietly and louingly liue together 3 The hurt or weakenesse of any one member of the body prouoketh not the head to wrath or bitternes but rather to compassion and an inclination to help it And indeed whereas God hauing created woman the weaker vessell as S. Peter noteth did so ioyne her to man it was not to the end that he striuing with so frail a vessel shuld bruse breake it But that by gentle discreete entreatie he should quietly enioy the helpe that God hath giuen him Let him therefore after the counsell of S. Peter so respect her as one who albeit she be weake is neuertheles a profitable vessel for him as God himselfe in the creation of the woman hath pronounced 1. Pet. 3.7 Gen. 2.18 saying I will make him a helper Moreouer let him loue and honor her as one whom notwithanding the frailty of her sex God hath so honored Iesus Christ so loued that being together with man redeemed with his bloud she is together with her husband coheyre of life euerlasting A Christal glasse is a precious profitable vessel yet brittle euen so is the maried woman For albeit she be brittle yet is she profitable to her husband precious in the sight of God as a child of God member of Christ As therefore a man doth more carefully take heede of breaking such a glasse thē some earthen or tinne vessel the one being more base the other more strong so should the husband haue such regard of the frailty of his wife that he may beare with her entreate her with gentlenes discretion that he may vse her as a precious profitable vessel to his comfort ioy And in as much as praier is an excellent seruice that God requireth of vs the redy meanes to purchace his blessings let the husband discreetly beare with his wife 1. Pet. 3.7 least otherwise through their strife and contention their praiers as S. Peter saith might be letted and interrupted 4 Yet must we not say but the husband both may and ought to tel his wife of her infirmities that she may amend But here we are to enter into cōsideration of sundry points First he is especially to proue her offences against God As when Rachell said vnto Iacob Giue me children or els I die He reproued her of importunitie Gen. 30.1 saying Am I in Gods stead who hath withholden from thee the fruit of thy womb Also when Iobs wife said to her husband Iob. 2. ● Doest thou abide in thy integritie Curse God and die hee wisely reproued such a wicked speech saying Thou speakest as an vnwise womā What shall we receiue good at the hand of God not receiue euil Secondly that it be with gentlenes testimonie of good wil as Helcana delt with his wife Anna whē she mourned because she had no children 1. Sam. 1. And indeed it is meet that the husband should reproue his wife louingly rather by perswasion then by force
God loue of the world neglect of heauenly felicitie wil cry out for euerlasting vengeance against their parents so that if they account not their children as beasts without soul or if they loue them with the due loue belonging to parents let them declare their loue especially to the soule the Christian instruction whereof surmounteth all worldly treasure An ancient Philosopher said that hee could haue bin content to haue gone vp into the highest pinacle in the towne Crates Plut. in th● bringing vp of children thence to haue cried O fathers what meane you that imploy your whol indeuors to get riches why are ye so carelesse for the instructing of your children to whom ye leaue thē It is as if parents whē their childe were sicke to the death without prouiding for his health should prepare him new garments Some say it would be a great comfort for them in heauen to know their neere kindred consequently their children and this commeth of natural affection But might it not be a greater discomfort for them euē in their life time to see them go to hell for want of instruction T●e Lacedemonians were very careful to bring vp their children in vertue according to the lawes of Lycurgus their law giuer therby grew to this custome that if anie man committed anie trespasse it was lawfull for anie that sawe him freely to reproue him and it was a great reproch to mislike of such reprehension 13 Some charge their childrē to be dulwitted hard to be bowed or brought to vertue Albeit naturall inclination bee a great helpe to profiting yet exercise custome to do wel is a mightie meanes to bend and shape them that waie yea euen such that by experience wee finde this olde prouerbe true Vse ouercommeth nature And this dyd Lycurgus the Lacedemonian lawe giuer verie aptly demonstrate to his people Plut. in his Lacon Apot●eg Hee tooke two whelpes the one of a hunting kinde the other of a mastiffe that followed the kitchin Then dyd hee bring vp the mastiffe to the game and the hound to the kitchen Afterward meaning to make demonstration and so to perswade the people to his purpose hee caused them to bee assembled and brought forth his two dogs where setting downe a dish of pottage and withall casting off a hare the hound fell to the pottage the mastiffe followed the hare Behold then sayth he what it is of doctrine vse he that came of a hunting kind yet vsed to the kitchin followeth his pottage and the other come of a mastiffe following the kitchin being now vsed to the game followeth the hare The wheele-wright doth by strength bow his timber letting it he long in that bent it abideth crooked Barren ground wel tilled soyled and sown with good seed groweth fruitfull yeeldeth good increase Iron weareth with handling The water by continuall dropping weareth the stone Wilde beasts may bee tamed and wilde coltes by custome bee brought to the saddle and are content to bee lead by the bridle The Greekes named Manners by a word that signified Custome Thereby to declare that euen the dullest capacities may by instruction and custome bee fashioned to vertue As contrariwise the wit most inclined by nature to vertue may by bad instruction and the conuersion of the wicked be peruerted and grow vicious 14 Parents therefore are heerein to respect two pointes First to begin to frame and bend their children in their tender youth to vertue remembring that a seale entereth deepest into softest waxe Plato warneth mothers and nurses from telling foolish tales to theyr children least they infect theyr tender wits with folly astonishment Experience sheweth that children will sooner learn anie language by conuersation thā older folkes Also that the yonger the twigge is the sooner it is bent or made straight Secondly it is the parents duetie to restraine their children from haunting conuersing with such as bee vicious and peruerse And in deed we see that they doo soone learne villanous and vnseemely speeches and malitious and leaude actions wyth theyr corruptions and as the olde prouerbe sayth Halting with the lame they shal learne to halt A child that naturally speaketh well by conuersing with such as corrupt theyr speech shal degenerate and speake as badly Tie a young twigge that is crooked with a straight one that is stronger than it and in growing it wil become straight so continue when it is vndone And contrariwise a straight one tied to that which is crooked and stronger than it selfe will grow continue crooked 15 The Lacedemonians were maruellous carefull to prouide that their children should not be corrupted by euill companie And in regard thereof Plutarch in his Laconical● we reade that when Antipater demanded of them fiftie children for hostages one of their chiefe magistrates named Etheocles aduised thē not to condescend thereto least they being brought vp in the societie of such as were wholy giuen to pleasure and vice might peraduenture grow vicious and so bring home afterward to their countrie nothing but corruption and miserie and therupon in lieu of fiftie children they offred the double number of men and women and so of aged persons alreadie formed of strength and discretion to withstand vice and corruption Lastly when Antipater still vrged them to send their children and vsed great threates in case they should disobey they plainly answered saying Let him if he can require anie thing more grieuous than death for rather will we condiscend thereto than to send our children O wonderfull constancie and care to preserue their children from vice and corruption If the heathen had such regarde to this vertue importing the training vp of their children in the obseruatiō of the laws of a mortall man what a shame may it be vnto christian parents that are so negligent in bringing vp theyr children in the heauenly doctrine and forming theyr manners and behauiors to pietie and godlynes in the feare and obedience of God Moreouer by this example may parents take warning when they mean to put forth their children to anie trade or occupation eyther to learning carefully to see and enquire whether such as they thinke to place them withal be vertuous or endued with the fear of God In the admittance of a seruant the feare of some temporall or carnall inconuenience causeth thee to enquire of his or her truth or other qualities Therefore if thou committest a childe to the instruction of a master before thou enquirest of his vertues thou shewest that thou hast lesse care of corrupting or infecting thy child with vice than of some small incouenience that might happen by an vnthriftie seruant When thou buyest an earthen pot thou soundest vpon it to see whether it be broken least thou shoulde be deceiued in a small peece of monie yet doest thou not sound whether the master to whome thou committest thy child be vicious or vertuous albeit by putting him to one that is
no reputation took on him the forme of a seruant and was made like vnto man was found in shape as a man He humbled himselfe became obedient vnto death euē vnto the death of the crosse And therefore in obedience to parents children are to lay off all greatnes and excellencie whatsoeuer and to submit themselues to any rebuke yea euen to the shamefulest death rather then by contempt or disobedience to offend their parents And least any man should reply that ther is great difference between God the father and fathers according to the flesh Luk. 2.51 S. Luke noteth that Iesus Christ was subiect to his mother and to his supposed father Ioseph What greatnes then may there bee in children that should exempt them frō obedience to their parents sith Iesus Christ the prince of glory the king of kings and Lord of Lords because subiect and obedient to a poore man his putatiue father and to a mother of simple and meane calling 8 This obedience doth S. Paul commend vnto vs saying Col. 3.20 Ephe. 6.1 Children obey your parents in all things Adding this reason for that is acceptable to the Lord. And in that he saith in an other place It is right He taketh from children all reply For is there any child that will denie that he is not bound to do that which is right or that which is pleasing or acceptable vnto God Moses saith Leuit. 19.3 Euery of you shall stand in awe of his father and mother And in truth he that loueth his father and his mother feareth their displeasure As contrariwise he that reiecteth their precepts admonitions or reprehensions and so shaketh off the yoke of obedience subiection that obstinatly he may set himself to work wickednes sheweth that he despiseth the image of God that they beare treadeth vnder foot then authoritie ouer him Such children or rather monsters in nature are to looke for no other but Gods horrible iudgement against thē Prou. 30.17 And Salomon saith The eye that meeketh his father despiseth the instruction of his mother the Rauens of the vally shall picke it out and the young Eagles shall eate it Neither would God permit that such impietie shoulde escape without an expresse decree to put to death such children If any man saith Moses hath a sonne that is stubborne disobedient Deut. 21.18 which will not harken vnto the voice of his father vnto the voice of his mother they haue chastened him he would not obey them then shal his father and his mother take him bring him out vnto the elders of his Citie and vnto the gate of the place where hee dwelleth and shall say vnto the elders of his Citie This our sonne is stubborne and disobedient he wil not obey our admonitiō he is a riotor a drunkerd Then all the men of his Cittie shall stone him with stones vnto death so shalt thou take away euill from among you that all Israell may here it feare Behold how God by cōmanding that disobedient children should be rooted out willeth that all children should feare to disobey their parents least they might incur the like punishment For surely the disobedience of children is an assured token that God will roote them out As wee reade of the sonnes of Hely the high priest 1. Sam 2.25 who when their father reproued them for their iniquitie did not obey his voice because it is expresly set downe the Lord purposed to destroy them The very heathen haue euermore highly cōmended reuerence obedience vnto parents Among the rest The Lacedemonians published a law wherby it was lawfull for parents to make whom they would Plut. in Licur euen straungers their heires Therby to induce children to reuerence and obey their parentes 9 Yet must this subiection obedience be holy and not repugnant to the seruice of God So as obedience to parents be no disobedience to God Ephe. 6.1 And this doth S. Paul note saying Children obey your parents in the Lord that is to say according to the Lord or for the Lords sake therfore if parents cōmand any thing contrary to Gods glory or the saluation of the soul the children are in duty to practise the instruction of the Apostles Act. 4.19 who said Is it right in the sight of God that we obey you rather then him The law is comprehended in two Tables the summarie wherof doth import that we loue God and our neighbor But the loue of God goeth before Iesus Christ calleth it the first gretest commandement And therfore saith Mat. 22.38 Mat 10.37 He that loueth father or mother more then me is not worthie of me Gods cōmandement of obedience to parents doeth not abolish all difference betweene good euill neither bindeth children to disobey God the parents authoritie cannot priueledge their children to cōmit sin The well ordered child will alwaies agree with the law to abstaine from whatsoeuer is therein prohibited neither will he obey such cōmandements of his earthly father as are contrary to his heauenly father Yet are childrē in duty to loue honor obey their parents whatsoeuer euen Idolaters and wicked For as the loue of nature is not abolished by the wickednes of men for they still abide men so wicked Idolatrous parents remaining parents doe retaine the right of parents Prosper sentences out of Augustine and such are to be honored yea euen to command bee obeyed so long as they cōmand nothing prohibited by the heauēly father We must saith S. August so loue men that wee loue not their vices For to loue that which they are is one thing to hate that which they doe is another 10 Yet doth this word Honor cōprehend an other dutie of children to their parents That is to comfort them in their aduersities to relieue their want and to helpe and serue them in whatsoeuer they need at their childrēs hands neither shal they herein perform any more thē the payment of part of their debts whereto they are bound in cōsideration of the benefits that they first receiued from their parents This is the duty wherto S. Paul expresly exhorteth them saying If any widow haue children or childrē of her children let thē learne first to shew godlines toward their own house Tim. 54. to recompence their kindred for that is an honest thing acceptable before God Herein did Ioseph performe the duty of a child to his father brethrē Gen. 45.9 To whom when he greeued himselfe he saide make hast and get ye vp to my father and say vnto him thus saieth thy sonne Ioseph God hath made me Lord ouer all Egypt come therefore vnto me and make no tarying and thou shalt inhabite the land of Gosham shal the neere vnto me Thou thy children the children of thy children I wil relieue thee least thou shouldest perish for hunger thou
forget that Dauid putteth among his roiall verses the support of the good and the punishment destruction of the wicked Also that Salomon to the same purpose sayth Pro. 20.26 A wise king scattereth the wicked causeth the wheel to turne ouer them 48 But as there is great difference betweene iustice crueltie so this representation of the duetie of magistrates to punish vice and sin according as iustice requireth tendeth not to induce them to crueltie but to the execution of the iust iudgement and vengeance of God according to his holy lawes and commaundements For as for crueltie it is so much the more detestable as that there is nothing more against the nature of God Seneca of clemēcy to Nero and the coniunction that he hath constituted among men It is as Seneca sayth a vice not of man but of a wild beast and therefore it is to be abhorred and detested but especially by such as are not onely men but also the lieutenants and vicars of God least by crueltie they shoulde pollute and prophane the seate of his holy maiestie And they also who vpon ambition couetousnes wrath or anie other passion are moued and induced to this crueltie cannot but expect iudgement without mercy and consequently horrible and fearefull besides the hatred and feare of men and so leade a most miserable wretched life both in this world and in the world to come as by the examples of many tyrants from time to time we may euidently perceiue And Aristotle in his Politikes noteth that tyrannie can neuer holde out in one family to the fourth generation for in deede crueltie can haue no continuance and hee that is feared and dreaded of many doth also stand in feare and dread of many It breedeth rather feare in gouernment than power to gouerne the rather because that continuall seueritie taketh awaie authoritie besides it is most certaine and vndoubtedlye true as Iulius Caesar sayeth that the remembraunce of a passed crueltie is meruaylous and exceeding grieuous to olde age Seneca of Clemencie 49 This cruelty may be cōsidered three wais first when by death or otherwise hee is wronged that hath not deserued it As when Saul wrongfully charging Abimelech the priest of Nob 1. Sam. 2● of conspiring with Dauid against him caused him together wyth foure score and fiue priests that wore the Ephod to be murthered yea and which is more stroke wyth the edge of the swoord all the inhabitants of the towne men and women young and olde and all theyr cattell This was monstrous crueltie The lyke crueltye is set downe of Herod Math. 2.16 who seeking to slaie him whom the wise men reported to bee borne king of the Iewes put to death all the children that were in Bethleem and in all the borders round about from two yeeres old and vnder The second kind of crueltie consisteth in punishing transgressions excessiuely and wyth greater rigour than they deserue I call those men cruell sayth Seneca that hauing iust cause to punish doo obserue no measure in punishing Heereupon dyd God ordaine that if a wicked man had deserued stripes the Iudge shoulde in his presence cause him to bee beaten according to the hainousnes of the offence Deut. 25. ● to a certaine number of stripes but not aboue fortie The third resteth in this that some doo receiue pleasure and contentation in the euill and tormentes that others doo indure This doth Adonibezecke confesse of him selfe saying Iudg. 1.7 Ioseph in his Antiquit. l. 17 c. 9 Seuentie kings hauing the thumbes of their handes and of their feet cut off gathered bread vnder my table As also Herod seeing himselfe at the point of death knowing that the Iews would reioyce because of his cruelties exercised against them called the chiefest among them and shutting them vp in a great roome commanded that immediatly vpon his decease before there were any noise thereof they should all be slaine to the end the Iews might weepe and mourne at his death And among all tyrants Lucian Erasm in his Chiliads in this point the crueltie of Phaleris is to bee noted who caused fyre to bee put vnder a brasen bull so arteficially made that the partye there inclosed dying wyth heate and thorough angu●●h crying out yeelded not the voyce of a man but the roaring of a Bull. 50 Contrarywise Magistrates in punishing the trespasses and offences of theyr subiectes ought in themselues to apprehende the nature of parents chastising theyr children for so farre are they from reioycing therein that they doo it wyth griefe and such compassion that were it not in respect of Gods commaundement together wyth experience which teacheth that correction is euen profitable and necessarie for children they would neuer do it This may we note in Iosua who seeing that Acan was taken by lot as guiltie and culpable of Gods wrath against the people Ios 7.14 did neuerthelesse call him My sonne thereby shewing a fatherly affection to him and yet disobeyed not God but condemned him to death 51 This was a kinde of mercie which being generally considered Salust to Caesar enclineth the heart to gentlenesse and clemencie but wyth iudgement and discretion And this vertue is specially requyred in Magistrates for it engendereth loue and loue safetie And by experience wee haue euermore found that such as haue vsed gentlenesse and clemencie haue alwaies prospered and haue founde theyr verie enemies more righteous in theyr behalfe Pliny Epistle Lib. 8. Liuy Lib. 8. Seneca than Citizens haue beene to those that haue exercised crueltie ouer them And in deed of greater force is the peoples loue of the magistrate for the obtaining of anie thing than theyr feare and no dominion is more sure than the same that the subiectes like of Neyther can that long indure Plut. in the banquet of the 7. Sag. which the people doo hate Wee reade that the seuen Sages of Greece sitting all at a banquet beeing demanded what might make a king happie and purchase him glorie dyd all aunswere diuersely Solon sayde by changing the dominion of one into a popular gouernment By as If himselfe be the first in obeying his countrie laws Thales If by the course of nature he die an olde man Anacharsis If himselfe onely bee wise Cleobulus If hee repose not himselfe vpon his familiars Chilon If his mind runne not vpon worldly matters but vpon immortalitie If saith Pittacu● hee teach and accustome his subiects to liue in feare not of him but for him But nothing doth sooner engender feare not of the magistrate but for the magistrate than good will and clemencie for as too much crueltie and seueritie of a prince doeth make his subiects to feare him with hate so doeth generall good will and gentlenesse make them to loue him and to feare lea●● h●e should bee taken from them or incurre anie mishappe To c●nclude this purpose let all magistrates remember the aunswere of a Lacedemonian
may well and prosperously guide their subiects together with all other vertues requisite and perseuerance in their duties also Iames 8.17 the blessing of the father of light from whom come all good gifts and who onely is able to giue successe and happie issue to all their labours Secondly that they put in practise the commandement of God to Iosua Iosu 1.8 saying Let not this booke of the law depart out of thy mouth but meditate therein day and night that thou maist take heed to doo all that is written in the same for in so doing let them be assured that they shal prosper as the Lord addeth saying For then shalt thou make thy way prosperous then shalt thou haue good successe And in that sense let thē expect the performance of the same which God said to Samuel 1. Sam. 2.30 I wil honor those that honor me they that despise me shal be set at naught 71 Let them remember that two things are required in a prince or magistrate namely holines in time of peace and magnanimitie in wars in both discretiō Aurel. Vict. in his lyfe Polibius wherof the Emperor Tra●an shewed him selfe as a patterne for he was indued with both these vertues That two things maintaine the commonwealth Force and magnanimitie against enimies and concord among subiectes That the preseruation of the Princes estate consisteth first in the integritie of religion Secondly in the loue of the subiects That they which are in office of magistrates must as sayth great Cato vse soberlie their power authoritie Plutarch in his Apoth Plato in his comonwelth that they may stil vse it That that com-wealth is happie wherein euerie man obeyeth the prince and the prince obeyeth the lawe That the magistrate as the same Cato sayth must not tarrie for exhortation to gouerne iustly neither by exhortation bee mooued to beare himselfe vniustly That it is a calling both steadfast and to bee desired Polib l. 6 when euerie one in priuate doth liue in peace and holynesse and that iustice and mercie doo abide in publike persons That the prince must make his subiects to loue him and his enemies to feare him and as well to remember that he is a man Tacitus Annal. 11 Plinie in his Panegiricks Curtius l. 7. as that he is established ouer men That there is nothing so firme strong but is subiect to inconuenience and danger euen by the feeble and weake And to this purpose let them call to minde that great trees are long in growing but cut downe in an houre Let them not forget that they beare the image of God in regard of theyr office and are called Gods to the end they should neither speake nor doo anie thing vnworthie the maiestie of God Tacitus Let them beware of abating theyr authoritie either by too much lenitie or the peoples loue by like seueritie Let them not prefer the aduise of young Counsellors before the iudgement of the auncient and to that purpose make vse of the example of Roboam 2 Chro. 10 who by the contrarie alienated the ten Tribes of Israel and lost his dominion ouer them Let them neuer pronounce sentence in wrath neither vndertake anie thing in displeasure but remember the saying of Saint Iames Wrath in man fulfilleth not the iustice of God Let this saying of Saint Augustine bee printed in their heartes Iames 1 20 Augustine in the 13. a-abuses of degrees Degree 6. Three things are requisite in a gouernor Calling feare of him and loue towards him Calling is requisite to the end he may beare himselfe in a good conscience cheerefully yet if hee bee not both loued and feared he cannot subsist in his calling Let him therefore aduise himselfe to procure loue by benefites and aff●bilitie and ●eare by punishing wrong done not against himselfe but against the lawe 72 Let him consider of the titles that Iulius Pollux who was gouernor of the Emperor Comodus in his youth attributeth to the prince whome hee calleth father of the people gentle louing mercifull wise iust courteous couragious despising monie not subiect to passion but commaunding ouer himselfe ouercomming lust vsing reason quicke of conceit sober religious carefull for his subiectes constant no deceiuer adorned with authoritie readie in his affayres prouided to doo well slowe to reuenge affable gracious in speech open hearted a louer of the vertuous desyrous of peace valiant in warre an example of good manners to his subiects a maker of good lawes and an obseruer of the same Let him remember these wordes of Lewes the ninth lefte by his last will to his eldest sonne and successour Philip and are recorded in the chamber of accounts Be deuout in the seruice of God bee in heart pittifull and charitable to the poore and comfort them wyth thy good deedes keepe the good lawes of thy realme take no subsidies or releef of thy subiects but vpon vrgent necessitie and for the profite of thy common wealth vppon iust cause and voluntarily 73 Let them continually looke vpon the table of Ptolome Arsacides which the Emperour Marcus Aurelius found at Thebes an auncient towne of Aegypt and was alwayes layde at the kinges beds head when hee was chosen and by the sayde Marcus Aurelius at his death giuen as a singular treasure to his sonne Comodus This Table was written in Greeke Characters and contayned the protestations and sentences following I neuer exalted the proud rich man neyther hated the poore man that was iust I neuer denied iustice to the poore for his pouertie neither pardoned the wealthie for his riches I neuer benefited or gaue rewarde for affection neither punished vpon passion onely I neuer suffered euill to escape vnpunished neyther goodnesse vnrewarded I neuer committed the execution of manifest iustice to another neyther determined that which was difficult by my selfe alone I neuer denied iustice to him that asked it neither mercie to him that deserued it I neuer punished in anger neither promised benefite in mirth I was neuer carelesse in prosperitie neyther faint hearted in aduersitie I neuer dyd euill vpon mallice neither committed villanie for couetize I neuer opened my gate to the flatterer neither gaue eare to the backbiter I alwais sought to be loued of the good and feared of the wicked lastly I alwaies fauoured the poore that was able to doo little and God who was able to doo much fauoured me 74 To conclude wee will adde these short excellent sayinges of Saint Augustine Augustine of the degrees of abuse Degree 9. wherein he representeth vnto vs the duties of princes and magistrates The iustice of the king saith he is that he doo not wrongfully oppresse anie man by his power that he iudge without acceptance of persons betweene man and man that hee bee a defence to the straunger the fatherlesse and the widow that he suppresse theft punish adulterie exalt not the wicked maintain no quarrellers or lasciuious persons root out the
peruerse permit no murtherers or periured persons to liue that hee vpholde the Church feed the poore establish iust men in publike offices retaine ancient wise and discreet counsellers that in anie wise hee apply not himselfe to the superstitions of deuiners magitians and pythonicall spirites that he deferre his displeasure and defend his Countrie from his enemies with magnanimity and iustice that he repose his whole confidence in God that hee bee not puffed vp in prosperitie and with patience beare aduersitie that hee maintayne the Catholike faith and suffer not anie wickednes in his children that he allot certaine houres to praier vnto God and eate not but in due season for woe be to the earth where the gouernors doo arise early to eate These things sayth Saint Augustine doo minister prosperitie in this lyfe and doo leade the king to a better dominion euen to the celestiall and eternall kingdome Seeing therfore that our Lorde Iesus Christ exhorteth vs to amend our liues let all magistrates examining themselues by that which hath bin before spoken concerning their duties determine aduise themselues to amend such faultes as may be in them that they may imploy themselues to gouerne theyr subiects more and more in vertue wisedome and holynesse to the glorie of God and the benefit and saluation of themselues and their sayd subiects Of the dutie of Subiects to their Magistrates Chap. 7. NOw let vs proceede to the duetie of subiectes to their Magistrates As in the fifth commandement of the Lawe the word Father signifyeth all superiours that haue charge conduct and gouernment of others and consequently all Magistrates so the word Honour includeth all duties and offices wherein the subiects are bound to the superior powers And this doth Saint Peter confirme 1 Pet. 2.17 saying Honour the king Where this word Honor doth especially import loue reuerence subiection obedience assistance to conclude praiers and supplications for them As touching the first point that is to loue them God commaundeth it in his lawe for the summe of the second Table thereof importeth that wee loue our neighbour as our selues And if all men bee our neighbours how much rather the Magistrates who in the fiftth commandement are signified by the worde Father the rather to admonish vs that we ought to loue them as our fathers and in deed they be many times tearmed fathers of the people Moreouer if the image of God that resteth vppon all the children of Adam doth binde vs to loue them howe much rather are wee to loue those who besides the image common to all the rest of Adams brood haue yet one particular and most excellent portion therof in that they are as it were Gods lieutenants to gouerne his people and of the same doo beare the title of God I haue sayde yee are Gods and the children of the highest sayth the prophet Dauid Psalm 82.6 Agayne God sitteth in the assemblie of Gods he iudgeth in the midst of the Gods 2 This consideration bindeth vs to loue them albeit they discharge not their duties to theyr subiects For theyr faulte taketh not awaie the Image or priuiledge of God The king sayth Saint Augustine beareth the image of God and must therefore be honoured and loued If not in respect of his person yet for his calling and office howe much rather then shoulde the people loue theyr magistrats when they shew themselues to be the seruants of God for our good and as their office requireth to draw vs to liue a quiet and peaceable lyfe in all godlynes and honestie and so to make vs happie For were it not a monstrous and vnnaturall matter not to loue those by whose handes care wisedome power and authoritie God vouchsafeth to establish and preserue vs in a blessed estate both of bodie and soule 3 This image and title of God which they doo beare doth also admonish vs to reuerence and regarde them both in heart and minde in worde and worke For surely he that despiseth them despiseth God in them And that is one cause why hee forbyddeth backbiting of them saying Thou shalt not speake euill of the Iudge neither shalt thou curse the prince of thy people Exod. 22.28 And because many doo presume to murmure and backbite them as imagining that they shall neuer knowe of it Salomon warneth vs not to deceiue our selues in that point saying Curse not the king no not in thy thought for the foules of heauen shall carrie the voice Besides Preach 10.20 albeit the same bee kept secret from man yet God that heareth it wyll reuenge the wrong done to his maiestie Saint Peter and Saint Iude doo declare 2. Pet. 2.10 Iude. 8. that euen in theyr time there were some that contemned the superiour powers and dominions proude persons giuen ouer to theyr owne sense euen such as dyd not abhorre to reproue and controll authoritie And some there be in these our daies that shew themselues to haue bene their schollers for they maintaine that a faythfull man the childe of God cannot exercise the office of a magistrate especially as concerning the vse of the swoorde agaynst transgressours Doo not such men tread this holy ordinance of God vnder foote when they affyrme that superior power beseemeth none but the wicked and vnbeleeuers 4 Besides the loue and reuerence due vnto Magistrates we are also to yeeld vnto them subiection and obedience as Saint Paule admonisheth vs saying Let euerie soule bee subiect to the higher powers Rom. 13.1 for there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordained of God Whereupon hee also inferreth and that iustly that whosoeuer resisteth the magistrate resisteth the ordinance of God and they that resist shall bring vpon themselues iudgement The same Apostle writing to Titus Titus 3.1 sayth Put them in remembrance that they be subiect to principalities and powers and that they obey their gouernours And surely sith God hath printed in the person of the Magistrate the characters of his image and maiestie wee haue greate reason to beware of offending him And this wee reade of the people of Israel in the behalfe of Iosua That the Lord did magnifie him in the sight of all Israel and they feared him as they had done Moses all the daies of his life Iosua 4.14 This feare of offending the magistrate is grounded vpon two reasons first vpon the authoritie and power that God giueth him to punish such as are rebellious as the Apostle sayth If thou doest euill feare the magistrate for hee beareth not the swoorde for naught Rom. 13. 4. but is the minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Secondly because albeit hee were not armed with this power yet we ought to feare God who commaundeth vs to be obedient to the Magistrate and to bee subiect vnto him And this doth Saint Peter note saying Submit your selues vnto all manner ordinance of man 1. Pet. 2.3 Rom. 13. 5. for the Lordes
shoulder as the Prophet Sophony speaketh who by that similitude sheweth Sophany 3.9 that as they that ioyntly do beare the masse of a Ship or any other great peece of timber vpon their shoulders doe employe themselues in a ioynt labour and all tende to one selfe thing so the Pastors ought to be ioyned and vnited in the affaires of the Church of Christ that happely they may aduaunce and finish their worke to his glory 44 For the maintaining therefore of this so necessary peace and concord among the Pastors among other thinges it is requisite that they beare one with another and be not soddenly prouoked but be ready to pardon and to be recōciled in case the kingdome of Christ may thereby be aduanced S. Paul hearing that some preached Christ vpon contention and not sincerely Phil. ● 1● as weening to adde affliction to his bondes reioyced because therby Christ was preached We read of great enmitie betweene Seuerian and Chrisostome both Bishops Socrates in his Eccles Hist lib. 6. cap 11. which was augmented by a wicked slaunder of Serapion for he taking part with Chrisostom would not salute Seuerian as a Bishop Wherupon Seuerian in displeasure said If Serapion dye a Christian Christ was not made man Hereof did Serapion accuse Seuerian to Chrisostome as if hee had saide onely Christ was not made man whereupon Chrisostome driue him out of the towne but he was called againe by Eudoxia the Emperors wife who laboured diligently to reconcile thē this when she could not obtaine at the hands of Chrisostom she finally so followed the matter that her sonne Theodosius falling at his feete with many exhortations praiers and adiurations obtained that hee receaued Seuerian to reconciliation Now had there beene no enmity betweene them Serapion would haue saluted Seuerian as a Bishop Had Seuerian bene moderate he had not vsed such wordes Had Serapion borne with him hee had not vsed such a wicked slaunder against him and had not Chrisostom bene falsely incensed prouoked he would not haue driuen him away before he had knowen the truth nor yet would not haue beene so hardly entreated to be reconciled 45 For this time we will be content with this briefe deduction of the principall duties of the Ministers of the word exhorting them to employ themselues faithfully and in holines as also we do with them besides the premises to remember that the holye Apostle Saint Paul making as it were a summary or abstract of al that is to be required of a Bishop or a Pastor 1. Tim 13.2 doth ordeine that hee should bee vnreproueable as a guide in the house of God the husband of one wife not selfe willed watchfull sober modest harborous to strangers apt to teache not giuen to wyne no striker not giuen to filthy lucre but gentle no fighter not couetous one that loueth goodnes wise righteous Tit. 1.8 holy temperate holding fast the faithfull worde according to doctrine that he may be able to exhorte with holesome doctrine and improue them that say against it one that can rule his owne house honestlye 1. Tim. 3.4 hauing children vnder obedience with all reuerence for if any cannot rule his owne house how shall he care for the Church of God True it is that the Apostle heere teacheth what qualities doe beseeme him that is called vnto the ministerye yet withall hee teacheth all Pastors what vertues should be in them and what vices they ought to shunne for their happye employment in the Lords woorke Let them therefore to that purpose remember what in another place the same Apostle Saint Paul writeth to Timothy saying 2. Tim 4.5 1. Tim. 1.18 1. Tim. 6.4 Watch thou in all things suffer aduersitie doe the worke of an Euangelist make thy worke fully knowen Again Do the dutie of a good souldier with faith and a good conscience Again Shun questions and strife in words whereof commeth enuie strife raylings and surmises vaine disputations of men of corrupt mindes and destitute of truth 2. Tim. 1.12 2. Tim. ● 15 and accompt Godlynes a great gayne from such seperate thy selfe and followe after Godlynes righteousnesse faith loue patience and meekenesse fight the good fight of faith laye holde of eternall lyfe And againe Keepe the true patterne of the holesome wordes which thou hast hearde of me in faith and loue which is in Christ Iesus Againe Studye to shewe thy selfe approoued vnto God a woorkeman that needeth not to be ashamed deuiding the worde of truth aright Let such also as desire to employ themselues vertuouslye in holynesse and prosperously in this vocation read and continually meditate the exhortation of S. Act 20. Paul to the Elders that is to the Bishops and Pastors of Ephesus and generally all his Epistles but especially as S. Augustine of Christ doct lib. 4. cap. 16. Augustin doth expressely exhorte the three written to Timothy Titus whereout we haue taken the aduertisements before mentioned So shall they finde as well in his person as in his writings a most liuely and excellent patterne of all that is requisite for a true and faithfull Pastor To conclude that they may the more couragiously and constantly beare themselues let them also think vpon the promise of S. 1. Cor. 3. 8. Paul who saith Euery man shal be rewarded according to his labour and they as Daniel saith that winne most to righteousnesse Dan. 12.3 shall shine as starres for euer and euer Neither let them forget what S. Peter promiseth saying When the soueraigne shepheard shall appeare they shall receiue the incorruptible crowne of glory Now let vs goe on to the duties of the Church to her Pastors Of the duties of the Church to her Pastors and Ministers of the word of God Chap. 9. IN as much as the word Father mentioned in the fifth commandement of the law doth also include the Pastors and Ministers of Gods word it followeth that the word honor must comprehend the duties of the Church towards them and seing the said word honor signifieth the loue reuerence subiection and obedience with assistance in time of neede it therby appereth that the members of the Church are bound to doe these duties to their Pastors First to loue and beare them affection as also the dutye of this honoring is comprised in the summary of the second table of the law which containeth the loue to our neighbour And indeed if we ought to loue al men euen our enemies how much rather those whom God vseth for to beget vs to the Lord that we may be the children and heires of his heauenly and euerlasting kingdome Surely sith the soule is so excellent and the holye and euerlasting life so much to be desired wee cannot in truth sufficiently loue those good and faithfull Pastors Iohn 6 27. Fathers and nources of our soules that doe instruct vs in holinesse and lead vs to life euerlasting If we ought to labour not for the meat which perisheth
such meanes as God hath ordeined for the bringing of them to saluation God hath limited to euerye man the terme of his life but withall hee hath ordained and appointed that for the preseruing thereof he shall both eate and drinke If thou sayest that thou shalt of necessitie liue thy course that God hath prescribed and therefore that for the preseruation of thy life thou needest not to eate or drinke thou dost the●in directly fight and striue against the will and pleasure of God and this is temptation neither dost thou notwithstanding God hath decreed the time of thy life forbeare to eate or drinke Why then dost thou not the like for thy soule as hee therefore that should abstaine from foode and say that he neede it not to liue by should drawe to this end so they that saye that being elect they neede not beleeue the Gospell nor amend their liues for the atteyning to the kingdome of heauen do teach men to tempt God and reuersing his prouidence striuing against his will and so farre as in them lyeth abolishing the meanes and way to life and saluation doe drawe on to death and eternall damnation Which is more if any man aske the cause why some doe beleeue and amend their liues and others doe not the holy Ghost doth aunswere That it is election that maketh this difference so farre therefore are the elect from no neede of this holy life is they doe pretend that contrariwise holinesse and amendment of life is the token and fruit of their election Againe wherefore doe they say that if there be election the elect shal not need to liue in holinesse they doe this as is aforesaide onely by such an absurditie to proue that there is no election notwithstanding there be so many and euident testimonies therof in the word of God Iohn 10.27 Rom. 8.29 Act 13.48 and 28.24 Apoc 2.27 Mat. 20.16 Marc. 13.20 Eph. 1.4 Rom. 9.11 and 11.5 Phil 4 3. they do therfore vpon an imaginary absurdity which indeed is none reiect the expresse worde of God notwithstanding the same doth very well agree that both there are elect persons and that they cannot perish yet must liue neuerthelesse in holynes that is to say walke in the way that leadeth to saluation which is ordeined for them from before the beginning of the world And indeeed S. Paul affirmeth both the one and the other saying that God hath elected vs to the end we might be holy 6 Hauing thus discouered either the grosse ignorance or the malice and bad consciences of those that vse these allegations for the reiecting of the doctrine of Predestination we will now proue that there is nothing of greater efficacie to moue and enslame our harts to the amendment of life then the knowledge and feeling of our election First if we be elected to life eternall we are also elected to haue faith and consequently to amend our liues for those be the stayres and passage from election to glorification as S. Paul teacheth Rom. 8. The knowledge therefore of election to saluation bindeth vs to amend our liues that is to say to walke in that path whereby God vouchsafeth to lead the elect to the enioying of euerlasting life Eph. 1.4 God saith S. Paul hath elected vs in Iesus Christ before the foundation of the worlde that we might be holy and vnreproueable before him in loue Eph. 2.16 Againe We are the worke of Gods hands created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordeined that we should walk● in them Col. 3.12 Heereof also doth the same Apostle take occasion to exhorte the Colossians to amendment saying Now therefore as the elect of God and beloued put on tender kindnesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long suffering for bearing one another and forgiuing one another The like ground taketh S. Peter 1. Pet. 2.9 saying Ye are a chosen generation a royall priesthoode a holy nation a peculier people that yee should shew forth the vertues of him that hath called you out of darkenes into his merueilous light 7 What poore maiden is there who hearing that some king had among all other chosen her to be his sonnes wife and withall ordeined that to that end forsaking her parentes and kinsfolkes she shall come to him on foot in the midst of Winter would not willingly and readily leaue all and euen in Winter and on foot come to the King to finishe this great marriage as we reade of Dauid who hearing that Saul had chosen him to be his sonne in lawe by giuing him his daughter in mariage in case hee could bring him an hundred fore-skinnes of the Philistines ventured his life to the end by satisfying the Kings desire to be his sonne in law Euen so we vnderstanding and hauing witnesse that God hath chosen vs to be the spouse of his sonne Iesus Christ and coheires of his kingdome also that it is his will that forsaking the worlde and the fleshe we should walk through the path of good works in amendment of life to come to heauen there to accomplishe this happye mariage how feruently should we renounce the worlde the flesh and euery thing that contrarieth his will that we may the more speedily and cheerefully proceede in amendment of life and so performe this blessed mariage 8 Moreouer he that knoweth that there is an eternall felicitie replenished with all glory for the elect horrible condemnation with most fearefull torments prepared for the reprobate how happy would he think him selfe if God should send him an angell to assure him that he is of the number of the elect whose names are written in the booke of life But amendment of life is vnto vs as a message witnesse and seale of our election for as election is the cause and fountaine of amendment so doth amendment leade vs to our election as the effect to the cause the fruite to the tree or roote the brooke to the spring and the light to the Sunne How earnestly therefore ought we to labour to amend our liues and to encrease in sanctification to the end more and more to be assured of our election by the fruites of the same as also S. Peter after he hath exhorted vs to amendment of life and good works 2. Pet. 1.10 doth admonish vs to study by the same to make sure our election 9 But aboue all let vs consider the fountain of our election and that is the free loue goodnes and mercy of God towards vs. As S. Paul alleadging the authority of Malachy doth declare Malach. 1.2 For to shew that Iacob was chosen Esaw reiected in the person of God he saith I haue loued Iacob and hated Esaw Rom. 9.15 As also in the same consideration he alleadgeth this sentēce written by Moses Exod. 33. ●9 I wil shew mercie to whom I wil shew mercie And in the same sence are the elect tearmed the vessels of mercy but indeed Rom. 9.23 in as much
as God hath chosen vs from among so many others like vnto vs euen before the foundation of the worlde to an incomprehensible and eternall glory and felicitie Eph. 1.5 what might be the orignall and foundation that his free loue Eph. 1.5 his mercye his incomprehensible goodnes and the onely good pleasure of his will as S. Paul also saith That euen God himselfe hath chosen vs and predestinated to adopt vs to himselfe through Iesus Christ according to the good pleasure of his will If therfore we would diligently meditate and ponder that the cause that we are preserued from the horrible condemnation of the reprobate which dayly by our sinnes we doe deserue and assured of the possession of life and euerlasting glory without any our desert proceedeth of the only election of God grounded vpon his goodnes loue grace mercy and good pleasure how should it possibly be but that the remēbrance of our election should induce vs first to humble our selues in the sight of God Eph. 2. 3. and acknowledge that by nature we were the children of wrath as well as others as also that in vs there was neither worthinesse or merit that might moue God to elect vs but that only of his meer goodnes mercy loue he elected vs to life euerlasting Secondly this feeling of his loue and mercy toward vs shining in our election ought to kindle our harts and soules in the loue of God that they might euen burne in feruent loue toward him We loue God saith S. Iohn because hee firste loued vs. 1. Iohn 4.19 If the Sunne in his force shining vpon a stone can so heate the said stone that a man shal not be able to touch it with his hād how much rather shal we if we meditate vpon this loue toward vs in our election albeit we were as colde as marble be warmed and kindled to loue him with all our harts with all our strength and with all our mindes as himselfe hath also commaunded vs. Bernard in a tract of the loue of God 10 The cause saith S Bernard why we should loue him is God himselfe and the measure is to loue him beyond measure hee declareth that the diuinity in it selfe considered is worthye that we should loue it beyond measure how much then must we loue God when he communicateth to vs his loue goodnes mercy in electing vs to life euerlasting but if we loue God in such maner as our election that leadeth vs to his loue toward vs doth binde and admonishe vs we ought to studye to amend our liues in keeping his commandements as Iesus Christ requireth at our hands saying If ye loue me Luke 14.15 keepe my commaundements As also it is our duety to loue that which he loueth and willeth vs to loue and to hate that which he hateth and willeth vs to hate and this is the root of our bond to loue our neighbour for the loue of God and contrariwise not to loue the world Iames 4.4 because as the Apostle saith The loue of the world is enmity with God And for this cause must we also denye our selues and the flesh Rom. 8.7 because the affections thereof are repugnant to God yea euen for this must we be ready to forsake father mother Luke 14 26. goods and life it selfe for the loue of God for otherwise we are not worthy to be his 11 As in this loue to God and in all that we haue shewed to depend thereof the true amendment of life doth consist so doth it sufficiently appeare that there is not any more liuely or vehement argument to induce vs to amendment then the meditation and remembrance of our election and consequentlye of the loue of God towards vs which shineth in the same and this doth the Apostle Saint Paul writing to the Romains expressely confirme for in the 9.10 and 11. Chapters hauing at large entreated vpon predestination hee thereof doth in the beginning of the twelfth gather this vehement exhortation to amendment of life Rom. 12.1 I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that ye giue vp your bodyes a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable seruing of God And fashion not your selues like vnto this worlde but be ye changed by the renewing of your minde that ye may proue what is the good will of God acceptable and perfect He heere raiseth them vp to the consideration of the great mercies of God shining in their election to saluation thereby to giue them to vnderstand how deepelye it bindeth and should induce them to amendment of life So often therefore as we finde our selues slacke in the seruice of God or attempted to offend him let vs thinke vpon our election and the loue and mercye of God the spring and originall of the same that so we may be moued to loue God and to shew forth this loue by a carefull and continuall amendment of our liues 12 Moreouer the remembrance of our election ought to stirre vs vp incessantly to praise God First for the incomprehensible riches of the life and glory wherto we are elected Secondly by the apprehension of the horrible and eternall damnation of the reprobate wherefro election onely hath saued and preserued vs. The remembrance therfore of so great so wonderfull and meere incomprehensible a benefite thus doubly considered ought to rauish our soules and open our mouthes night day infinitly and vncessantly to praise God Besides if we consider the cursed state of the reprobate and meditate vpon the fire alwaies burning the woorme perpetually gnawing the darknes that shal be without end to be short the lamentations and gnashing of teeth proceeding of their anguish that shal be the wofull fruit of their sins the iust reward of their iniquities who can but detest the offending of God Men vse openly to execute the guiltye to the ende that others by the apprehension of their punishment may feare to commit the like transgressions let then the representation of the so wofull estate of the vessels of wrath burning in hell fire make vs to feare to commit any thing wherby to deserue like punishment 13 Again the knowledge of our election ought in vs to engender a stedfast assurance that we cannot perish My sheepe saith Iesus Christ Iohn 10.27 heare my voice and follow me and I giue vnto them life uerlasting None shall take them from me My father who hath giuen them vnto me is greater then them all and none is able to take them out of my Fathers hand Iohn 6.37 I and my Father are one Againe All that the father giueth me shal come vnto me and him that commeth to me I cast not away And this assurance is grounded first vpon the foreknowledge of God for he cannot be deceaued in the foreknowledge of that that is to come As indeed all is present in his sight yea euen more assuredly then are to vs those things that we
stil looke vpon Secondly vpon the eternall decree and vnchangeable will of God whereof the Prophet Esay maketh mention saying in the person of God My Counsell shall holde Esay 46.10 and I wil accomplish my pleasure Thirdly because he that hath elected vs to saluation and life hath withall ordained and prepared most certaine and requisite meanes vndoubtedly to lead vs to the enioying of the same S. Paul in a short sentence noteth these three foundations of the assurance of the elect to attain to life euerlasting Rom. 8.29 Those saith he which God knew before he also predestinated to be made like to the image of his sonne that he might be the first borne among many brethren And whome hee predestinated them he also called and whom he called them also he iustified and whom he iustifyed 2. Tim. 2.19 them he also glorifyed First he saith that God did know before that is from all eternity those whom he would saue Could he be deceaued God saith the Apostle in another place knoweth those that be his Secondly he saith that he had predestinated them to make them like to the image of his sonne His will and decree is it not vnchangeable Thirdly he sheweth that he hath ordeined for them all that is requisite to leade them to saluation saying that hee hath called iustified them And this is so certainly fulfilled in the elect that he speaketh of it as if it were already done and they already lifted vp into glory for hee saith not that hee will call hee will iustifie or hee will glorifie his elect but that hee hath called hee hath iustified and hath glorified them And least our infirmitye should shake vs he opposeth the power of God against al the enemies of the elect saying If God be with vs who shall be against vs As also to shew that they can wāt nothing he addeth He who spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also and withal he proceedeth saying If any man shall laye any thing to our charge God himselfe shall iustifie vs for that hee findeth in vs no cause of condemnation because that Christ died and rose again for vs. And in that he loueth his elect to shew that this loue the fountaine of all goodnesse Eph. 1.4 is stedfast and immutable concluding his speech he saith that whatsoeuer befall vs we may be certaine that we shall be more then conquerers through him that hath loued vs and who will loue vs constantly in Iesus Christ the sonne of his loue the true patterne piller and accomplishment of our electiō and in whom we are elected and not in our selues The elect therfore cannot possibly perish as Iesus Christ himselfe noteth Mat. 24.24 saying There shal be such assaults and temptations that euen the very elect if it were possible should be seduced therin manifestly declaring that it is vnpossible that they should be seduced or drawen to destruction The engendring therefore of an assured certaintye in vs 1. Cor. 9.26 that nothing can let vs but that finally we shall come to heauen is a most excellent fruit of this doctrine for as we can haue no greater consolation 1. Tim. 6.12 so is it an especiall encoragement vnto vs in all our assaults and combats knowing that we sight not as beating the ayer or doubtfully but the good fight of faith and that vndoubtedlye obtaining the victory we shal be crowned with eternal glory 1. Cor. 15.18 And this is it which should also augmente in vs a zeale and affection to suffer for the name of our Lord Iesus Christ to enlarge our goods to the poore Apoc. 14 13. feruently to employ our selues in all things that may tend to the glory of God and so to amend our liues as knowing assuredly that being elect our labours and workes shall not be in vaine in the sight of the Lord but shal as S. Iohn saith follow vs and be vnto vs a blessed encrease of ioye and glorye in his euerlasting kingdome 14 There is yet another notable fruit which some doe beate downe by maintaining that God offereth to all men saluation and life euerlasting and according as himselfe did foresee that some should accept it and beleeue and liue well so he did elect them to encrease in them his graces and to saue them And as for the others that should reiect the saluation offered and liue amisse he hath predestinated them to take from thē those graces that they had and so to reiect and damne them These men are possessed with two errors repugnant to the glory of God and the saluation of man Concerning the first which is the vniuersall calling of all men if thereby they vnderstand the creation and gouernement of the worlde God doth indeed inuite man to loue feare and praise him but as hee offereth vnto them neither Iesus Christ nor remission of sins so can it not be tearmed a calling to saluation and life euerlasting and thus the creation of the worlde is not a calling that may make man to be saued Eph. 2.12 and consequently elect and therfore all that haue had no other calling haue beene as Saint Paul saith of the Ephesians before the gospel was preached vnto them Strangers from the couenant of the promise out of Christ without hope and without God in this world Secondly if by the vniuersall calling they meane the preaching of the Gospel experience sheweth Act. 19.6.7 and the holy scripture sufficiently testifieth that there were and yet are many nations in the worlde to whom God hath not vouchsafed to direct his worde to call them as wee also read that God forbad Paul that he should not preach in Asia neither suffered him to goe to Bithinia and therefore it cannot be truely saide that this vocation was vniuersall and common to all men 2. Tim. 1.9 Thirdly there is a holy calling as S. Paul termeth it proceeding from the holy Ghost which is proper and peculier to the elect and not vniuersall Of the second Iesus Christ speaketh saying Many are called but few are chosen Mat. 20.16 Rom. 8.29 and S. Paul of the third saith Those whom God knew before and predestinated hath hee also called And whereas these men doe alleadge the saying of the Apostle that he will saue all because he addeth and they shall come to the knowledge of the truth it doth appeare that he there speaketh not of these nations 1. Tim. 2.4 to whom he would not haue his worde which containeth all truth preached Secondly the following of the text doth manifestly declare that S. Paul there m●●●eth not to speak of euery man but of all sortes of men as Magistrates and subjects rich poore wisemen and fooles because it is the will of God to saue of all callings The calling therefore that offereth saluation cannot bee spoken of all men in the worlde 15 By
the Tiryans Sydonians of whome Iesus Christ sayth If his vertues and miracles had beene done among them Math. 11.21 they woulde haue conuerted and amended their liues And therefore God should haue chosen them that they might not haue bene damned And contrariwise the saying in the booke of Wisedome that Enoch was taken awaie by death least mallice should haue corrupted his heart doth shew Wisdo 4.10 Gen. 5.24 that he should haue be●● reproued and condemned for the mallice foreseene wherewith hee might haue beene corrupted if hee had liued And thereof it must also followe that God had beene deceyued in foreseeing the thing that should neuer haue come to passe 19 As this error therefore which allotteth vnto man for the foundation of his election himselfe his free will and his woorkes doth diuerte him from the feeling and acknowledgement of the loue goodnesse grace good will and power of God and puffeth him vp in false and most pernitious opinion of his owne vertue and merites to his ouerthrow and destruction withall doth depriue God of his glorie so contrariwise the doctrine of election vnderstood and beleeued in manner as wee haue before declared doth teach and admonish vs to attribute the whole glorie of our saluation to one onely God incessantly to praise him to reuerence his power and infinite goodnesse wholy to depend vppon him and to walke in all humilitie confessing that in vs there is neither beginning nor preparation wherby God should be bound to choose and doo well by vs and therefore that all good namely our election is the pure gifte and free grace of the goodnes of God vnto vs. And to conclude This doctrine ingendereth in vs an assured certainty of our saluation infusing comfort and ioy into our harts with a zealous affection to consecrate our selues to the seruice of God with our whole hearts all the dayes of our liues 20 As for Gods prouidence the onely remembraunce that nothing befalleth vs but by the eternall will of him that hath elected vs in his sonne Iesus Christ ought to bring forth in vs many notable fruites First this doctrine teacheth vs to banish the prophane opinion of the heathen that imagined that all things came by fortune attributing to an idoll forged in theyr braines that thing which appertained onely to one God namely the euent of all that was done But as this is an intollerable idolatrie and sacriledge so representing theyr Goddesse fortune blinde they tooke awaie all feare of offending God and all desire to liue wel And in deede if all calamities and prosperities should befall man not by any conduct of prouidence iudgement or reason but by aduenture who would feare to doo euill for feare of correction and punishment Who would desire to liue well when hee should stande in doubte whether in well dooing hee shoulde bee blessed But when wee doo beleeue that all commeth by the prouidence of God who seeth all things and loueth righteousnesse and hateth iniquitie The onely remembrance that it is God that sendeth both good and euill will moue our heartes to feare correction punishment for doing euill and to hope for prosperitie and blessing in liuing in righteousnes and holines Thus will the knowledge of Gods prouidence stand vs in great stead to induce vs to amend our liues 21 The second fruit that groweth hereof is a true sanctification of the name of God For beleeuing all thinges to come of the will and prouidence of God all-wise all-righteous all-good and almightie euen euerie affliction calamitie that befalleth vs First the remēbrance that he is righteous wil breed humilitie as knowing that it is in iustice that he afflicteth vs for our sinnes So Mana●les king of Iuda 2. Chro. 33 being grieuously afflicted in prison was by this doctrine moued to acknowledge his sinnes and consequentlye to humble himselfe before God Dan. 9 So Daniel speaking of the captiuity of the Iewes in Babylon confessing the sinnes both of the people and of himselfe among other things sayth To vs O Lord belongeth confusion but thou art righteous In this sense doeth Ieremie reproue the children of Israel Iere. 8.6 for that in their affliction no man said What haue I done Not that God alwayes taketh occasion of our sinnes to punish vs but because hee neuer afflicteth vs wrongfully or before wee haue deserued it And therefore shoulde the knowledge that it is hee that afflicteth vs humble vs and make vs confesse that hee is righteous Thus also shall wee beware of murmuring against God and saie with the Prophet Dauid O Lorde I helde my peace and opened not my mouth for it is thou that haste done it 22 Which is more this doctrine will teach vs to sanctifie his name that we shall praise him euen in our afflictions And in deed beleeuing that this God that punisheth vs is good and a well dooer also that louing vs in Iesus Christ without comparison better than a carnall father can loue his children Secondly that vndoubtedly he willeth the thing that is to our health and profite beleeuing moreouer that he is almightie and so can doo what hee will Thirdly that beeing infinitely wiser than we hee better than our selues doth knowe wherein our good and saluation doeth consist This feeling I saie of his goodnesse loue power and wisedome will force vs to conclude that all the affliction that hee saieth vppon vs is to our profite and good albeit in the iudgement of the flesh we thinke otherwise This is a true sanctification of the name of God and induceth vs to loue him when we are thus assured by the goodnes loue power and wisedome of him that afflicteth vs that the same affliction is good and profitable for vs and renouncing the contrarie iudgement of our flesh wee doo praise blesse God in the same when our spirite shall find that to be good which our flesh thinketh to be bad and that our spirite shall make vs to praise God for that which maketh our flesh to weepe To this purpose is the example of Iob verie notable For hee Iob 1 when hee lost all his goods and children sayde The Lorde hath giuen and the Lord hath taken awaie blessed be his name Afterward being extremly tormented in bodie he sayd Iob. 2.1 If wee haue receiued good from the hande of God shall wee not receiue euill First hee acknowledged all his affliction to proceede from the will and prouidence of God Next he felt that God by whose prouidence he was afflicted is as is aforesaid all good all wise and almightie And therefore in this sanctification of Gods name he concluded that affliction was good and profitable And this was the cause and reason that he blessed God in his affliction 1. Thes 5.18 as also S. Paul admonisheth vs to yeld thanks vnto God in all things 23 Againe this doctrine teacheth vs not to regard man that afflicteth vs but God who vseth him for our affliction
place Exod. 20 I am the Lord thy God that hath brought thee out of the land of Egipt keepe my statutes and my lawes and doe them Again Leuit. 19.36 Prophane not the name of my holines for I will be sanstified among the children of Israel I am the Lord that do sanctifie you Leuit. 22.32 and that haue brought you out of the land of Egipt to be your God Moreouer he commandeth all parents to shew their children of this bond wherein they stand bound to obey his commaundements saying When thy sonne shal hereafter aske thee saying What mean these testimonies and ordinaunces and lawes Deut. 6.20 which the Lord our God hath commaunded you thou shalt say vnto thy sonne Wee were Pharaohs bondmen in Egipt but the Lord brought vs out of Egipt with a mighty hand And the Lord shewed signes and wonders great and euill vpon Egipt vpon Pharaoh and vpon all his householde before our eyes And brought vs out from thence to bring vs in and to giue vs the land which he sware vnto our fathers Therefore the Lord hath commaunded vs to doe all these ordinances and to feare the Lord our God that it may goe euer well with vs and that hee may preserue vs aliue as at this present Michens 6.1 And whereas their children in the dayes of Micheas did not walk according to this bond to obey Gods commandements he sharply reproueth their ingratitude saying My people what haue I done to thee or wherin haue I grieued thee Answer me for I haue caused thee to returne out of the lande of Egipt c. And this doth he alledge to shew that he had iust cause as the prophet declareth to take the mountains and the foundations of the earth to witnes and iudge of his iust complaint and accusation against the ingratitude and disobedience of his people 4 If the deliuery from the bondage of Egipt were iustly obiected to the people of Israel to remember them of their duetye to loue God and to walke in his holy ordinances how much rather ought this name Iesus by aduertizing vs of our deliuerye from the bondage and cursed tiranny of the deuil and out of the furnace of euerlasting fire make vs bonde and affectionate to the loue of Iesus and louing him with our whole harts to amend our liues according to his commaundement Zachary the Father of S. Iohn Baptist saith in his song that this was the oath that hee sware to their father Abraham Luke 1.73 that he would giue to his people That being deliuered out of the hands of their enemies they should serue him without feare in holines and righteousnes before him all the daies of their liues Here doth he speake of the deliuery which Iesus hath purchased for vs in sauing vs from the power of the deuill of hell and of all our other enemies What an ingratitude were it then in vs that the remembrance of this name Sauiour putting vs in minde of this happy deliuerance from the power of the deuil and other our enemies should not so kindle our harts as wholy to dedicate them to his seruice and to thinke our selues blessed if we could please and obey him in amending our liues 5 But this obligation will the more plainely appeare if we consider the reason of this name added by the Angell saying For hee shall saue his people from their sinnes Firste he sheweth that sinne is the way to destruction and death euerlasting Rom 6.23 as the Apostle Saint Paul saith The reward of sinne is death Now in as much as God is righteous it was expedient for our saluation that this Sauiour the righteous should by dying for vs satisfie for our sinnes Rom. 6.6 Rom 6. Col. 2.11 and as there is in vs besides the sinnes that dayly we haue and doe commit the olde man that is to say the vice and corruption the fountaine of the same so this Iesus crucified with him this olde man and corruption which Saint Paul so often tearmeth sinne and the body of sinne to the ende to mortifie him in vs and so to deliuer vs from him that through our transgressions we should no more fal into the pit of hel S. Paul writing to the Romains doth at large represent vnto vs these two benefits of Iesus the first tending to iustifie vs in the sight of God the other to testifie our iustification to the glorie of Iesus And therefore the same Apostle maketh as it were an inseparable coniunction of those two benefites saying Iesus Christ is made vnto vs wisedome 1. Cor. 1.30 and righteousnes and sanctification and redemption 6 The consideration of the first benefite That hee hath satisfied for our sinnes should most liuely kindle our heartes to loue him feruently and so in folowing his commandement to amend our liues If I should owe a man some notable summe of monie and not hauing wherewith to paie hee in compassion should acquite me the greater the debt were the greater cause should I haue the more should I be bound to loue and please him as Iesus Christ himselfe sayde vnto Simon Luke 7.40 But who is able to comprehend the greatnesse of the debt of our sinnes which this Sauiour hath paide for vs that they might not bee imputed vnto vs but bee quite discharged and blotted out How great therfore should our loue be towards him as also our care and feruent affection to obey him when he cōmandeth vs to amend or how much ought we to abhor the displeasing of him wherby we againe binde our selues to euerlasting death 7 As concerning the other benefite Inasmuch as hee hath wyth himselfe crucified our olde man and so put to death our vice and corruption What a madnesse were it in vs to reuiue nourish and maintaine these our Sauiours enemies and mortall poisons of our soules euen the souldiers of that infernall Pharaoh which labour agayne to plunge vs in the furnace of eternall fire If wee see a mad dogge euerie man laboreth to kill him and therefore what should wee thinke of him that should seeke to preserue him or after hee were dead to reuiue him againe if hee might Woulde not men thinke him to bee an enemye to mankinde yea euen worthy to bee rooted out and is not this sinne and corruption in man euen as badde as a madde dogge Are not the bitinges thereof deadly This madde dogge hath Iesus Christ slaine in crucifying him with himself that so hee might die in vs. Are not we therfore verie miserable wretches that will hearken to the world and the flesh and so reuiue nourish and maintain sinne in vs as delighting in the damnable bitings thereof which breede vnto vs euerlasting death Our olde man sayth Saint Paul was crucifyed with Iesus Christ to the end the bodie of sinne might bee extinguished Rom. 6.61 6. 8. that wee might no more serue vnto sinne Againe Beeing deliuered from sinne yee are made the seruants of
righteousnes What else haue wee therefore to doo but still to haue this name Iesus whereby wee bee aduertised that hee hath saued vs from our sinnes and consequently from eternall death before the eies of our vnderstanding that wee remembring that he hath withdrawen vs out of hell from eternall fire darknesse weeping and gnashing of teeth maye in heart bee feruently inflamed in his loue And that the remembrance that he hath paide so many deadly debts to discharge vs maye more and more inforce his loue Finally let the representation of the death of our olde man crucified with this Sauiour make vs so to abhorre sinne and corruption that we suffer it not to liue in vs to our owne death Thus shall the name Iesus beget in vs a feruent desire to loue him to please him and to obey his commaundement wherein hee willeth vs to amend our liues Acts 10.38 Luke 4.18 Esay 61.1 Iohn 1.16 1. Ioh. 2.27 8 Now let vs come to the title Christ. This name in Greeke as also the name Messias in Hebrue doeth signifie as much as if wee should saie Annointed And by this annointing is meant the fulnesse of the holie Ghost which he hath receiued as Saint Luke noteth and himselfe doth acknowledge where hee applieth to himselfe this saying of Esaie The spirite of the Lorde God is vpon mee for he hath annointed me He was fulfilled to the end wee might be partakers of his fulnesse as Saint Iohn saith who also speaketh of the holy Ghost saying The annointing that you haue receiued from him abideth in you 1. Cor. 3.16 and you need not to bee taught but as the same annointing teacheth you all thinges and it is true and is not lying and as it taught you yee shall abide in him Saint Paul calling vs the temples of God addeth this reason Rom. 8 9. that the holie Ghost dwelleth in vs. This name Christian deriued from Christ and proper to his disciples confirmeth the same For likewise as the same Apostle sayth They that haue not the spirite of Christ are not his But as there is no true or naturall fyre but yeeldeth heate or light so the holye Ghost cannot bee in vs wythout the feeling and shewing forth of effectes beseeming his holynesse And therefore this name Christ aduertising vs that wee are partakers of the annointing of his holy spirite should be vnto vs a mightie and liuely argument to amend our liues And this shall wee the better vnderstand by considering the names attributed to this spirite to represent vnto vs the effectes of the same 1. Pet. 5.2 First hee is called Holy because that of himselfe and in him selfe being holy euen in al perfection it is he that sanctifieth vs by separating vs from the common degree of other the children of Adam to the end we may be dedicated and consecrated to God Whereupon Saint Peter sayth that wee are elect through the prouidence of God in the sanctification of the spirite to obey and be sprinkled with the bloud of Iesus Christ And that as being made the children of God through faith we must be wholy renued Saint Paul teacheth vs that this commeth of the holy Ghost He sayth he that hath raised Iesus Christ from the dead Rom. 8.11 1. Cor. 15.45 shall quicken your mortall bodies with his spirit dwelling in you In this sense is he named the second Adam that proceeded from heauen in a quickning spirite For the Apostle compareth the spirituall life that Christ by his spirit imparteth to the beleeuers with the sensual life that men receiue from the first Adam And therefore we do in vaine boast of Christianitie and the spirit of Christ so long as we are not so renued as to haue nothing in common with the vnbeleeuers that dwell vnder the tirannie of the vncleane spirit which infecteth with all corruptions defilings all those that haue not the spirit of Christ 9 Particularly he is named the earnest pennie of our inheritance As when a man doth purchase an inheritance hee first giueth earnest that is some part of the monie promised Ephe. 1.14 that serueth as a beginning to the paiment of the total summe so God hauing redeemed vs by the bloud of Iesus Christ giueth the earnest penie of his holy spirit that is to saie a beginning of knowledge of the true God of sanctification of loue to God of righteousnes and of peace ioy in the holy spirit attending vntill he finish in vs the communication of that light ioy holynes and glory that we shal haue perfectly in heauen Whereby it appeareth that wee wrongfully boast our selues to be christiās annointed with the spirit of Christ so long as we be not indued at the least with some beginning of this heauenly light sanctification loue of God spiritual peace and ioy which are the earnest of the spirit do not indeuor daily to increse in these spirituall giftes and graces He is also called Water Esay 55.1 44.3 for of the holy Ghost doth Esaie speake saying Come vnto the waters all yee that thirst Againe I will poure my spirite vppon the thirstie and my riuers vpon the drie Then to expound the same he sayth I will poure forth my spirite vpon thy seede Heereby doth hee shewe vs that as raine with the moisture thereof fatteth the earth to make it fruitfull so doth the holy spirite with his inuisible grace make vs fruitfull to produce the fruites of righteousnes as Iesus Christ also declareth saying He that beleeueth in me Iohn 7.38 out of his belly shall flowe riuers of the water of life This saith S. Iohn he spake of the spirit that all they should receiue that beleeued in him As therefore if hearbs watered do stil continue drie we iustly saie they are dead so can we not aduow our selues to be Christians watered with the spirit of Christ so long as in sted of bearing fruit by amendement of life and giuing our selues to good workes we continue drie and withered 10 Sometimes hee is also called Water to signifie his power to purge and cleanse our filth and corruption as Ezechiel sayth I will poure vpon you cleane waters and yee shall bee cleansed Ezech. 36. 25 I will cleanse you from all your filthines and from your Gods of doung And will giue vnto you a new heart and will put into you a new spirite and I will take your stonie heart out of your flesh and will giue you a heart of flesh and I will put my spirit into you and cause you to walke in my statutes and to keepe my ordinances and you shall doo them But if we in lieu of amending our liues do abide in our filthinesse and corruption with stonie heartes and keepe not the ordinances of the Lord it is in vaine for vs to intitle our selues Christians watered with the holye waters of his spirit And because that by watering vs with the liquors of his graces hee maketh vs strong
and cheerefull in the seruice of God 1. Ioh. 2.20.27 of the effect heereof is the name of oyle and oyntment giuen vnto him How then can wee saie that we are annointed with the spirite of Christ so long as we doo not amend our slacknesse in the seruice of God growing forward in strength and disposition to imploy our selues cheerfully therein Luke 3.16 11 To conclude hee is called Fire for two considerations First because it is hee that refineth burneth and consumeth our vicious lusts which are as the superfluities and excrementes of our soules and on the other side it is hee that kindleth our heartes in the loue of God and feruent desire to serue and honor him But if we perceiue no effects of this fire of the holie Ghost in vs ●ourning consuming our vice and corruption that by amending our liues wee may growe in purenesse and holynes With what conscience can wee saie that the spirite of Christ is in vs As this spirit cannot be dead neither can it bring forth vicious or corrupt fruit Likewise if wee increase not in zeale and loue to God this want of the operation of the holy Ghost is an assured testimonie of that hee is not in vs Exod. 8.19 21.18 Luke 11.20 Luke 1.66 because wee feele not his fire heating vs in the loue of God Finally the holy Ghost is called the finger and hand of God because that by him hee exerciseth his vertue and that by his inspiration wee are regenerate into heauenly life that wee may no more bee driuen or lead by our selues but bee gouerned by his motion and operation If therefore wee denie not our owne wisedome and the affections of our flesh and so suffer our selues to bee guided and lead by the hand of the holy spirite wee doo wrongfully challenge the name of Christians and boast of the spirite of Christ dwelling in vs. Thus this name Christ aduertising vs that hee hath receiued the holie spirite to make vs partakers thereof according to the measure to euerie one ordained ought to bee vnto vs a mightie inducement and sharpe spurre to mooue vs to amendement of lyfe 12 This vnction of the holy spirite dyd our Lorde Iesus Christ receiue to the end to exercise three offices requisite to our saluation namely to be our king our Priest and our Prophet And this also to represent vnto vs how deeply this name Christ bindeth vs to amend our liues First for the office of king Iohn 18.36 If his kingdome be not of this world as himselfe confessed before Pilat but spiritual we are to correct our false imaginations that leade vs to seeke the world in his kingdome as looking that hee shoulde giue to his seruants great riches honorable offices and other carnall commodities For it is the part of the princes of this world to present earthly kingdoms to those that reuerence them Math. 4.9 but as for our king Iesus Christ hee willeth vs to seeke all the felicitie that hee promiseth in heauen And therefore when wee are persecuted or otherwise afflicted wee must correct this false opinion of thinking our selues miserable or that our king hath no care of vs For contrarywise afflictions should make vs to lifte vp our heartes to heauen the dwelling of our king where hee hath layed vp the treasures ioyes and glorie of his kingdome Secondly sith hee is our king that hee may raigne in vs wee are warned to forsake the worlde sinne and the deuill his enemies so that hee onely raigning in vs mortifying sinne may make vs to denie the world and strengthen vs against Sathan Let not sinne sayth Saint Paul raigne in you Rom. 6.13 Iohn 16.33 Rom. 16.20 Luke 1 74 to obey the lusts thereof And Iesus Christ sayth Bee of good cheere for I haue ouercome the world And the Apostle promiseth vs that God will tread downe sathan vnder our feet Thus this king hauing deliuered vs out of the handes of our enemies bindeth vs as Zacharie sayth Without feare to serue him in righteousnes and holynes all the dayes of our lyfe and so to amend Let vs also remember that the scepter of a good pastor is deliuered vnto him blessedly to guide his sheepe that shall heare his voyce Psalme 2. and by amendement followe him As also hee hath an iron rodde to bruse as a potters vessell all such as shall rebell against him Let vs therefore amend and renounce euerie thing whereat this king may be displeased that we may bee happily gouerned by the sheepehooke of our good shepheard and not brused wyth the iron rodde of this iust king that breaketh those that wythout amendement of lyfe doo continue in vnbeleefe and obstinate in their sinne The kingdome of Sathan from which Christ hath redeemed vs doth consist in darknesse infidelitie and bad conscience and all vice silthynesse and corruption Contrariwise the kingdom of Iesus Christ consisteth in light in knowledge of the true God and his sonne Iesus Christ in faith loue holynes patience and other like vertues These are the true effectes of the spirituall kingdome of Iesus Christ We must therefore effectually shew that wee are transported from the kingdome of Sathan to the kingdome of Iesus Christ But how By amending our liues and growing more and more in faith loue patience and holynesse to bee short in all good workes and vertues required in the subiects of this spirituall king Iesus Christ 13 The second office of Christ is to be our high Priest who offered himselfe a sacrifice vnto God that by his death hee myght satisfie his iustice and so reconcile vs to him Who is there then among vs that representing to himselfe that it is the welbeloued sonne of God and the prince of glorie that giueth himselfe not to a common death but euen to the shamefull and cursed death of the crosse together with the apprehension and feeling of the wrath and terrible indignation of God ingendering in his bodie horrible terrour and mortall anguish in his soule And all this for his enemyes by nature the children of wrath poore sinners and the bond men of Sathan What man is there I saie that meditating vpon these things shall not bee euen rauished in admiration of his incomprehensible loue towardes vs which loue Saint Paul doeth at large and verie often make mention of Is it possible that this name Christ Rom. 5 Ephes 2 representing vnto vs this priest thus offering himselfe in such a sacrifice for vs poore and abhominable sinners and consequently the apprehension of his incomprehensible loue towards vs should not rauish and force our verie soules to loue him wyth all our heartes our mindes and our strength and through feruent loue to obey his commandement of amendement and to abhorre to thinke saie or doo anie thing that may displease this Christ our high Priest 1. Cor. 16. 22 If anie man sayth the Apostle Saint Paul loue not the Lord Iesus Christ let him bee had
If God sayth hee spared not the Angels that had sinned but cast them downe into hell 2. Pet. 2.4 and deliuered them into the chaines of darknes to be kept vnto iudgement Neither spared the olde worlde but saued Noah the eight person a preacher of righteousnes and brought in the floud vpon the world of the vngodly And turned the cities of Sodome and Gomorrha into ashes condemned them ouerthrewe them and made them an example vnto them that afterward should liue vngodly and deliuered the iust Loth The Lord knoweth to deliuer the godly that honor him out of temptation and to reserue the vngodly vnto the daie of iudgement to be punished Saint Iude in stead of the example of the floud propoundeth the vengeance of God poured vpon the vnbeleeuing Israelites in the wildernesse Also Iude vers 5 making mention of the horrible punishment fallen vpon Sodome and Gomorrha sayth that they were set forth for an example and suffered the vengeance of eternall fire When therefore wee heare the threatnings of the liuing God by the mouth of his seruants let vs make hast to conuert to the Lord in amendement of lyfe lest by our obstinacie as Saint Paul sayth and our hearts not knowing howe to repent we heape vp wrath for the day of wrath Rom. 2.5 and of the manifestation of the iust iudgement of God who shall render to euerie man according to his workes 10 Inasmuch therefore as through our infirmitie albeit wee bee taught the waie to heauen and that we bee put in minde to walke in the same by representation of benefits receiued of promises of blessings to come yea euen of threatninges with the examples of vengeance we neuertheles cannot desist from offending of God and so from turning out of the waie of saluation and lyfe euerlasting The ministers of the word doo moreouer vse reprehensions reprouing our sinnes and offences thereby to reduce vs into the right waie and in respect of our slownesse to doo good and to amend our liues they also vse vehement exhortations yea they do euen praie adiure and intreate vs in the name of God to amend and to walke in the feare of God And where wee haue many no●some hinderances that trouble vs and quaile our courages 2. Thes 2.11 they do likewise propound vnto vs mightie consolations in the woorde of God to the end wee may cheerefully and constantly proceede in the waie of saluation What man therefore inioying the holy ministerie can excuse himselfe in the sight of God in case hee doo not constantly resolue to amend his lyfe and dayly to put the same in practise How horrible a iudgement shall he deserue that is so hardened in wickednesse and so tied in the chaines of Sathan that there is no light before his eyes no path to the waie of saluation no feeling of Gods benefites no remembrance of his promises no feare of his threatninges no apprehension of the examples of his vengeance no reprehension no exhortation no consolation that can bee of strength and sufficient to moue his heart to amend Be not these men then that remaine thus obstinate without amendement euen monsters in nature 11 Now as the administration of the Sacraments is one part of the holy ministery let vs first see how forcibly our Baptisme shuld moue vs to amend our liues Baptisme is the seale of the couenant of God comprehending especially two graces namely remission of sinnes our regeneration or spirituall renuing When the children of Christians therfore are baptised the same is as if God speaking by the mouthes of his ministers shoulde saie O my people acknowledge my great mercie and goodnesse towards these little babes they are conceiued in sinne borne in iniquity by nature the children of wrath yet doo I aduow them for mine their sinne a d corruption is washed awaie in the bloud of Iesus Christ I do●●nite and ioyne them vnto him to the end that being grafted into his death and resurrection they may bee regenerated theyr olde man bee mortified and themselues become newe creatures in my sight In them do I seale these graces whilest they be yet babes before they know me euen before they haue done anie good that so they may be acknowledged to bee meerely free to my glorie Is not this a great bond vnto children to binde them as they come to age to loue God who loued them before they knew him and to doo the dutie of children because hee aduowed them to be his children euen before they hadde done anie good Surelye loue should beget loue and loue feare to offend and feare to offend amendement of lyfe If by Baptisme wee bee regenerate and made the children of God are wee not bound to liue as the children of God and as it may beseem the holynes of such a father The kings children doo not apply theyr minds to handle crafts but to works fitting their greatnes much lesse then should the children of God applie themselues to the works of the darke Such as by Baptisme are recalled from death should doo no deadly works they that by Baptisme are incorporated into Iesus Christ ought so to be guided by his spirit that as it is the soule that worketh all the workes of the bodie so the spirit of Christ as it were the soule of this new man Iesus Christ being considered as vnited with his bodie there should be no motion thought worde or worke but such as should proceed from the spirite of Iesus Christ in all fulnesse dwelling in him and in vs his members according to the measure limited to euery one of vs. 12 Moreouer if by Baptisme we be grafted into Iesus Christ we must bring forth fruit worthie of Iesus Christ Iohn 15 5. Hee that dwelleth in me sayth he and I in him beareth much fruit If wee speake of trees experience teacheth vs that the signe that is thereinto grafted doth in such wise drawe awaie th● sappe and force thereof that it bringeth forth fruit according to it selfe kinde not after the kinde of the tree whereinto it is grafted but wyth Iesus Christe it is contrarie for they that are grafted in him doo in deede gather strength from him yet so that they alter their nature bring forth fruit not after the kinde of Adams children but of Iesus Christe into whom they are grafted And therefore as it were a monstrous matter to see an apple tree whereupon nothing had beene grafted beare acornes so is it as straunge and repugnaunt to reason that they who by Baptisme are ingrafted into Iesus Christ should not bring foorth the fruites of righteousnesse according to his kinde Lykewise if Baptisme bee a pledge of our regeneration of necessitie the workes and affections of our first generation according to the which we are full of corruption and wickednesse must cease and be mortified and now we must shew forth the fruits and effects of our regeneration in newnes of life sith by our baptisme our olde