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A18014 The plaine ma[ns] spirituall plough Containing the godly and spirituall husbandrie. Wherein euery Christian ought to be exercised, for the happie encrease of fruite, to eternall life. By I.C. preacher of the word. Carpenter, John, d. 1621. 1607 (1607) STC 4663; ESTC S118755 136,138 254

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that as the weakenesse of humane abilitie and slendernesse of mans witte coulde neuer of it selfe effect any thing of the meanest request The best commencements much lesse that which is of the noblest regard so also as wisdome reason and experience teach things well begun haue commonlie like successes and that the good beginnings are taken from the diuine grace wherein the greatest actions haue bene enabled with the semblable regard This when I also well weighed I thought it a matter most vnseemelie and nolesse sinful to aduenture this present worke without holy inuocation yea much I doubted lest that without this one thing I should not only transgresse in manie things but also setting the building not on the Rock with the wise man but with the foole on the sand the waight of the walles would haue fallen to the ground and so much the sooner for that the worke now endeuoured is both exceeding great and the degree therof excellent high The waight of the matter in hand vz Pietie for behold this is that which aptly concerneth the supreme magnificency of the most princely Ladie Pietie of whose right nobilitie I perswade euery man who hath been schooled either in the knowledge of God or of himselfe hath happilie heard and with whose laudable graces whosoeuer is truely adorned is both honored with God well commended of all good men And this I am sure ye will confesse together with me when yee shall aright vnderstand both the nature and vtilitie of this Soueraigne Princesse by her plaine description but the more when ye shall be moued to entertaine and embrace the sweete influences of her glorious vertues Now Pietie Cicer. in Re. tue li. 2. Aug. epist 22. ad Macedo if ye aske mee what I vnderstand by this word I answere not only that Philostorge or louing affection whereby a man loueth honoureth r●uerenceth gratifieth and dutifully regardeth his father mother brethren kindred Country and such as haue thereby well deserued according to the definition of the Philosophers but also that chiefly that most reuerend holy and true worship of the most high God Chris in ser De fide de lege and the true loue and right regard of dutie towards all men whose originall and fountaine the whole scriptures diuinely inspired haue drawne not from the nature wit abilitie or policie of sinfull man but from the verie spirit of truth as an influence of the highest heauens comprehended in the feare of God expressed in Faith Hope and Charitie hath his Mysterie exceeding great for vnder the same not onely God is manifested in the flesh as Paul the holie Apostle affirmeth 1. Tim. 3. but also there lye couched great safetie great wealth great vtilitie great glorie Thereof the auncient Hermes knowing the safetie protested that Lactan. li. 2. de Origine Erro cap. 16. Mia Phylake Eusebeia c. Pietie is that onely keeper or preser matrix of men for neither hath the wicked diuel nor yet Fate any maner power ouer the godly man for God deliuereth him from all euil therefore is Pietie or Godlines that one and onely good thing among men Next wee heare the Apostle to affirme that Pietie is great riches to them which are content with that which they haue thirdly he saith that this vertue is profitable to all things lastly that it hath for her end euerlasting life For in the true tenure of Pietie not only all the Creatures of God in the world but also all the treasures and rights of the kingdome of heauen are ours Therefore this is the same which beyond all other things he boldly commendeth as not only the best and most acceptable to God but the verie scope of all the holy Scriptures which are giuen to this end that men might belieue and in belieuing might haue eternall life in the name of the Sonne of God Loe such a thing haue I aduentured to haue at this time whose reuerence although I esteeme farre beyond mine abilitie and worthinesse yet vnder the feare of him who hath called me with an holy calling graunted me to knowe the secretes of this vertue and enabled me to declare his glorie in the middest of his congregation haue I so farre forth presumed yet not I but that diuine grace which worketh in mee Therefore let vs now with meeke heartes and due reuerence fall downe before his footstoole and faithfully lift vp our humble mindes vnto that heauenly Father frō whom this grace desendeth Let vs seeke him in a true faith and desire his gratious goodnes that in his diuine fauour mercy and louing affection towards vs through his sweete sonne our Sauiour he would respect our condition speede well our Plough and prosper all our godly endeuours that thereof plowing and sowing not to the flesh but to the spirit we may reape not of the flesh corruption but of the spirit life euerlasting for the high glory of his maiestie the soueraign benefit of his Church the perfect discharge of Christian dutie and the prosperitie of the elected Saints O most blessed father the God of glory A prayer for the good speed of Pieties Plough and king of all consolation we thy poore children oppressed with the intollerable burthen of sinne and scourged with miseries rod the guard of transgressions doe now here prostrate both our bodies and soules before thy foote-stoole Thou hast commanded vs to sowe for Righteousnesse Hos 10.12 and to reape according to Mercies measure to plough vp our fallow ground to seeke after thee in the happie time and to apply Pieties Plough in the true obseruation of godly dutie But alas ô father wee be so witlesse and weake as wee neither knowe how to vse the one nor are able to labour in the other nor can we be drawne from the idle market place into the happie field of the spirituall husbandry but by thy wisdome thy mercie and thy louing and gracious calling through thy most holy Messias our Sauiour For as no man commeth vnto thee but by thy Sonne so neither commeth any man to thy Sonne but whom thou drawest and thou drawest them no doubt by thy mercie Ier. 31.3 whom thou hast embraced with thine euerlasting loue Gen. 9.27 Therefore with righteous Noah wee beseech thee to perswade vs in thy mercies to enter Sichems Tabernacles Cant. 1.3 and heartily desire thee with thy holy Spowsesse to drawe vs forth after thee with a promise of our parts but assisted by thee that then wee will runne Call vs ô father effectually manure our worke without and prepare our mindes within Let it please thy good spirit to inspire our hearts thy power to enable our bodies thy grace to confirme our whole man to to thy holy will and pleasure and thy louing mercies to make vs meete for thy seruice that standing no longer ydle we may henceforth labour in thy field follow Pieties Plough and be wholy emploied in the heauenly
nos incipimus postea dei omnia adiuvamur Aug. in Psal 51. c. In euery good worke wee our selues doe not first begin the same and then afterward are assisted by the mercy of God but it is he that first inspireth both our faith and loue toward● him without any of our good deserts preceeding And seeing that this vertue as it is saide is a diuine motion inspired into mans heart I remember that Dauid praying to God for the same did first desire God Psal 51.10 to Create a newe heart within him As if he shuld say That which must steed me in this matter must come from aboue neither is there any thing in mine heart already that can be made to serue in this businesse therfore it is needfull not that my old heart be renewed but that I haue another heart not made or framed of the old but created to the which also ô Lord I beseech thee to renew within me thy spirit which I haue enioyed heretofore of thine especiall loue and fauour towards me Therefore although the Lord both commandeth and commendeth the labour and diligence of man as the meanes wherby he is willing to exhibite vs his graces yet doe all our labours and diligence nothing profit vs therin except there be both loue and grace in the Giuer that is in God who iustifieth and frameth mans heart to his Image and will for the sake of his sonne For this grace and mercy proceeding from that diuine loue doth euer preuent vs and go before our faith our loue our vertues our Iustice Yea this is the same whereby wee haue further engendred in our hearts and made able to apprehend that Iustice the which as a good Tree groweth and buddeth and beareth fruite namely all those godly vertues qualities and actions which are required of that man whom the Lord hath iustified And therefore in our iustification Two things in our Iusttification there is not onely the faith of the Belieuer but also the grace of him that iustifieth This meate our Sauiour when in his Doctrine he saide Ioh. 15. Without mee ye can doe nothing that is yee cannot bring fourth any manner fruite either healthfull or profitable neither are yee able to doe any good work acceptable to the Lord except ye belieue in me and by your faith remaine in me And hereof is it that when Saint Paul speaketh of mans iustification being very warie that nothing thereof be yeelded to mans workes or merits hee saith that we are iustified sometimes by grace sometimes by mercy sometimes by faith approaching grace for it is most certaine as Augustine saith againe that the grace is of him that calleth Ad Sympli g. 2. vocantis est Gratia c. Grace and faith and the good workes followe him which hath receiued that grace neither yet are the workes such as obtaine grace but such as proceede of grace And this he maketh plaine by a notable Simbole or similitude For the fire saith he scaldeth not that it may be hoate but therefore because it is hoate nor therefore runneth well the wheele that it may be round but for that it is already round So no man worketh well that hee may thereby receiue grace but therefore hee worketh well because hee hath already obtained it for how can he liue iustly which hath not bin iustified how can he liue holily who hath not bene sanctified So said Augustin alluding to the words of Christ First make the tree good and then the fruit will be good for a good man from the good treasure of his heart bringeth foorth that which is good but on the other side yee can not gather figges of thistles the euill man from the euill treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is euill and how can ye think or speake or do well when your selues are euill By this wee see that howsoeuer our aduersaries would that our perfect iustice should depend on our workes that no worke seeme it neuer so good before men is a perfect worke of Iustice except it be wrought by the person iustified Whereof it was saide that the very Prayers of the vngodly are turned into sin Neither may wee imagine No good worke but that which followeth grace that any work endeuour studie thought or Action is eyther acceptable to the lord or profitable for mans soule without this precedēt grace which proceedeth from the eternall loue of God in his sonne the Which we may explane by a familiar example though taken frō an heathen History without iust offence Valerius Maximus Valer. Max. Lib. 2. among his examples of memorable deeds maketh mention of one Liuius Torquatus Manlius a noble Consul of Rome and of his Son ● right valiant and couragious gentleman This gentleman saith he being of a couragious mind went forth with his men of Warre waged battaile against another Nation his fathers enemie but without his said fathers leaue fauor or know●edge and thereof got the victory and a famous conquest in the iudgement of all men who at his returne home praised his valiant exployt noble action with the highest applause the which they all hoped would not onely be confirmed but also tripled by his most noble father Howbeit Torquatus contrary both to their hope and his expectation did not onely presētly vnfold his great dislike of his son who aduentured to goe forth without his will consent and so in his disgrace but also al the action great exploit of his aduenture for he commanded him to be slaine for a sacrifice Satius iudicaus patrem forti filio quam patriam mili●ari disciplina carere Iudging it better that a father wanted such a valiant son then that the country should be depriued of her militarie discipline In like maner we should beware that we presume not to get credit with the Lord by any worke that we shall endeuour to doe without his grace good wil preuenting vs or to thinke that we can be righteous holy acceptable vnto him but that he first iustifie vs in his son And truly besides this memorable example the very experiment of mens dealing after the course of nature and reason informeth vs of those things The order of Noahs approbatiō Gen. 6.8.9 But passing by them let vs againe returne to those examples Testimonies of the holy Scriptures and therein first consider the method and order of the righteousnesse and approbation of holy Noah It is reported of him First that he found grace in the eyes of the Lord. Secondly that he was a righteous man Thirdly that he was perfect Fourthly that he walked with God In that he found grace are two things obserued First that the Lord louing him did fauour him next that hee gaue him faith wherby to finde and apprehend that diuine grace In that hee is saide to be righteous wee are taught that the Lord who had fauoured him and graunted him faith did also approue and
or treading out the corne wherein is pleasure as there is paine in ploughing But I will lay my yoke vpon her faire necke I will make Ephraim to ride Iudah shall plough and Iacob shall breake the cloddes or harrowe 3. A Christian mans action The third acceptation of the word we finde in the prophet Isaiah Isay 28. Shall the Ploughman plough all the day that he might sowe and that word so translated hath the Euangelist Two men shall be ploughing in the fielde Againe hee that goeth to the Plough and looketh backwarde is not fit for the Kingdome of God in the which speeches are noted the office and function of the true Christians with their continuance in the labours of the same But now concerning this coniunction and iniunction Plough or breake vp your fallowed or prepared land wee finde that Salomon in a certaine proverbiall speech conioyning both the words hath the like in effect Pr 24.27 Prepare thy work without and make ready thy things in the fielde as who should say play the good husband in the manuring dressing and culturing of thy land to auoid the inconuenience that followeth bad husbandry for I passed by the fielde of the slouthfull and by the vineyard of the man without vnderstanding and loe it was all growen ouer with thornes and nettles had couered the face therof the stone wall thereof was broken downe Luke 35. S. Iohn the Baptist endeuouring to perswade this good Husbandrie saith Euery valley shall be filled and euerie hill shal be brought lowe crooked things shal be made straight and the rough wayes shal be made smoothe all the which words are likewise metaphorical signifie what the Lord God required in them which should be prepared for the acceptation of the holie Messiah And the Lorde himselfe hath a Parable to the like effect of the sower which cast forth his seede into diuers kindes of earth whereof that onely receiued the seede to profit which was the good ground that is the same which was by this kinde of husbandrie well manured and prepared But whereas Salomon leaueth it in the bare metaphor The Metaphor expounded the others haue added an exposition as not onely for them then but also for vs to whom the Lord hath graunted to knowe the misteries of his kingdome Therefore Ieremie hauing taken vp this metaphor by and by expounds it thus Ier 4. Be yee circumcised to the Lorde and take away the foreskinnes of your hearts ye men of Iudah and inhabiters of Ierusalem lest my wrath come forth like fire and burne that none can quench it because of the wickednes of your inuentions And herein he teacheth amongst other those two things first what is meant by this land or ground Next what is the husbandrie theron required he would that we should by this groūd vnderstand not that naturall Element or ground accustomed to the materiall seede but the heart of man yea and by the figure Zenegdoché which vnder parte comprehendeth the whole the whole man The groūd is mans heart whose life conuersation and wayes before the Lord are commonlie iudged discerned by the co●stitution of the heart or thought the fountaine of all mans wordes actions and endeuours But the heart of man naturallie and without this tillage or fallowing is comparable to the thornie barraine and waste ground which neuerthelesse beeing circumcised Fallowed or circumcised that is fallowed and well manured is like vnto the good ground thereof called Gods hushandrie according to Paules speeches to the Corinthians after that they had bene occupied in the studie and practise of Pietie yee are Gods husbandry that is the hearts circumcised the land well manured and a people holie and well prepared for the Lord. Also Iohn the Baptist expoundeth the metaphor thus Prepare ye the Lordes way Repent Amend your liues and bring yee forth fruites worthie amendemēt of life And the Lord declaring the parable of the Sower and his field tells his Disciples that the good ground is He that heareth the word and vnderstandeth it which also beareth fruite bringeth forth some thirtie Mat. 13. some sixtie some an hundreth folde Although somtimes by a field is meant the World Mat. 1● and by the good seede Gods children yet here as he said by the Seed is meant the Word of God and by the field the persons to whom the same is preached by the which many be called but fewe that is those which are comparable to the good ground are perswaded So neither hath the prophet Hosey here left his Metaphor without his exposition when to the same hee added It is time to seeke the Lord. To seeke the Lorde is to sowe for righteousnes In the which words hee compareth all that whatsoeuer is before spoken of the good Ground for this comprehēdeth the hearing of the word the vnderstāding of the same Faith obedience Iustice Mercie Vertue Amendemēt Repentance the true conuersion of man vnto God By this therfore we gather that the Lord knoweth howe farre off the people of Israel were from the right practise of the wise and prouident husbandman in this point as that in steede of sowing for Righteousnes in the fallowed Land they sowed among the thornes and ploughed wickednes whereof ensued inquitie as pride couetousnes gluttony wrath enuie luxury crueltie and many other vngodlie fruites whereof the wrath of God enkindled was now ready to fall on them he did in his great mercie and long suffering yet endeuour by the ministery of his prophet to withdraw them from such their sinnes miseries and to allure them to Pietie and goodnesse by perswading in them that good * affection or passion of minde That is true repentance wherewith beeing deepelie touched in the bitter sense of the diuine wrath conceiued against them for their sinnes they might be heartily sorie loath their sinnes thirst after mercie hunger after righteousnesse and turne againe vnto the Lorde from whom they had bene estranged in the leaudnes of their mindes This is indeede the same which the Greekes vnderstood in their Metánoiá Metánoia but the Hebrews more fullie in their Thescubah noting with the former a renewing of the minde and with the latter a turning again into the way from whence a man had erred and is so much to say as the conuersion of a man vnto God not onlie in minde but also in bodie and in both wherein beeing truely mortified he might again be renewed and conformed vnto the Lord in holinesse and righteousnes Against this is directly opposed that Meschubah Mescubah or turning away as from God to the Diuell from all good to all euill wherin is found wickednes and destruction In a word the prophet by this exposition of the Metaphor preacheth true Repentance which hee knewe to be the onelie way to recouer those wandring persons and therfore most necessarie as that without it the sinner is not
Tribes called Israel or Ephraim from their obedience to the kings of Iudah vnto the time of Hezekiah king of Iudah Ieroboam the second the son of Ioash king of Israel beeing about threescore and tenne yeares they had euer erred sinned and gone astray that not only in manners but also in Religion nor could it be they should well liue whiles they serued not the Lord in his holie Religion nor was it possible that they could obtaine pardon of the Lord their God prosper so long as they continued in their grosse errors and sinnes and would neither repent nor seeke the way to returne home to him from whom they had estranged themselues through the filthines of their horrible abominatiōs In all this long time The diligēce of the Prophet Hoseah the godly and painfull Prophet labouring toyling among them as the good husbandman in a froward vncultured field ceased not but continued his calling and dutie with great diligence and regard and so much more laborious was his worke by how much the field was thwacked with thornes tares and noysome weeds For perusing the field The sinnes of the Israelites Hos 1. 2. 3. 7. hee found therein among many others the spirituall fornication as namely Idolatrie for they had forsaken the Lord God of Israel and hunted and followed after strange false gods as semblant to the Heathens whom the Lord had cast out before them He espied also in that field lying swearing blasphemie murther theft pollutiō of blood hypocrisie inconstancie vanitie infidelitie gluttony drunkennes luxurie vncleanesse To be briefe he perceiued amōg the Prophets the pride of Lions amōg the Priests the libertie of Leuiathā among the Rulers the crueltie of wolues amōg the people the rudenes of Behemoth in all estates conditions great enormities for the which hee was compelled by the Lords spirit not onely to accuse and reproue the people of Israel but also to threaten vengeance and destruction to the godlesse obstinate The promises of mercie mixed with threats of plagues Ezec. 18.23.32 and rebellious among them Howbeit hee hath not yet so accused reprooued and threatned them with vengeance and destruction but he mitigateth the rigour thereof with often and profitable Admonitions exhortations and sweete promises of grace mercy and prosperitie so as they would be contented to turn to the Lord and submit themselues vnto his will knowing that the will of his Lord and maister was that hee should not only threaten iudgements and plagues to the rebellious and obstinate but also to preach mercy pardon and peace to all them which faithfully and timely came home yeelding themselues vnto his correction by true repentance for thus saith the Lord the holie one of Israel Haue I any pleasure in the death of the vnrighteous And true it is that howsoeuer men through the frailtie of their nature ignorance feare or occasion offend the diuine maiestie and how fearcely soeuer the wrath of God is bent against sinners for their sinnes the which the Lord would that his seruants the holy Prophets should reproue and threaten to terrifie them from their audatious presumption in their sinne yet we are assured that the whole scripture doth euery where commend vnto vs the mercy of God yea euen in those things which seeme to expresse great seueritie for he threatneth men to this end that he might not punish them he punisheth them that he might not punish and destroy them for euer hee exhorteth them that hee might do them good and he doth them good that he might binde all men to himselfe and be beneficial for euer To passe ouer many other things what is greater then this that hee deliuered ouer his onely begotten Sonne to the death of the Crosse for such as are both sinners and his enemies behold both Iustice and mcrcie But that the Lords great mercy be not extended them in vaine the Prophet tels them that whereas of long time they had Ploughed wickednesse reapt iniquitie and eaten the fruit of lyes it is now required The Summe of the place that they sowe vnto themselues in Righteousnesse and reape according to the measure of Mercie Rom. 6.19 which is in effect so much as the Apostle exhorted to the Romanes saying As ye haue giuen your members seruants to vncleanes and to iniquitie to commit iniquitie so now giue your members seruāts to Righteousnes in holines and this wee may esteeme not only for a good counsaile but an especiall lawe prouided by the Lord which bindeth and constraineth all men of whatsoeuer estate or condition to the due regard of their duties and lawfull vocations in the feare diuine chiefely it recalleth them from their errors who haue as yet wandred in the vanitie of their mindes to the right seruice of the eternall God in the true vse of Pieties Plough without the which the lawe of God is contemned and mans saluation hindred Therefore wee should dutifully reuerence the one and carefully prouide for the other as whereby the Lord God may be well pleased and our selues benefited with good effect But this that wee may the better obserue it is meete that we both learne and consider wel of these two points contained within the first generall part viz. 1. In the exhortation to Pietie are three points First what it is which the Lord God requireth of our parts to be yeelded and performed Secondly what wayes and meanes hee woulde that wee should take to atchiue performe and effect the same That which is chiefely required is comprehended in two words Righteousnesse and Mercie The waies and meanes thereof are noted in certaine actions of husbandry As Sowe yee reape yee Plough yee And finally in the word Seeke yee the Lord. The Metaphor And here we may first obserue and consider that the place is not onely metaphorical vnder certaine termes and wordes of the husbandman but also enioyeth the apt exposition of the metaphor of either which wee shall speake in the second part of this diuision when we come to consider of the actions to be emploied about that chiuing of those two soueraigne graces being indeed the matter or subiect of those actions The labour and end Heere also are wee to consider that as all labours are not commended in a true Christian but those onely which are lawfull and to them enioyed by the diuine Lawe so neither is euery ende of their labours to be regarded but the same onely which is chiefely required by the Lord for his glory and the good of his Saints as we may fully perswade of this subiect for which they must sow according to which they must reape that appertaine to the Lord. For as the LORD in the beginning made a diuision betweene light and darkenesse and seperated his chosen from among maligne worldlings so would he that they should wholy abandon the world and the flesh and the diuell Gen. 1. with all their lustes and wholy
in the old Testament noteth not only that diuine motiō which is agreeable with the lawe of God which is enkindled of the spirit of God by the which a man resemble the image of God in the which he was created but the fear of God obedience to the Lawe holinesse integritie honestie goodnesse and grace and therefore as the Genus or generall voice of all vertues it hath beene rightly opposed to the Hebrew Reschayah or Greek Adikia that is Iniustice the generall voice of all malice transgression guiltinesse profanity impiety naughtinesse and vice Thus therefore the holy Psalmist placeth those two wordes opposite the one to the other Thou speaking to God Psal 45. louest Iustice or Righteousnesse and hatest Iniquitie or naughtinesse The same obserueth Saloman Iustice preserueth the vpright but Wickednesse ouerthroweth the sinner In which two places there is found a diuers acceptation and reward according to the diuersitie of the persons and their contrarie qualities God loueth the one hee hateth the other the one he saueth the other hee destroyeth for thus being contrarie in nature and qualitie they may not partake the like life and lot And as in those two wordes namely Iustice and Iniustice or Righteousnesse and wickednesse hath beene well obserued the oddes and difference betweene all vertue all vice so by two other words of the same rootes is set foorth the contrarietie betweene the persons in whom those contrarie qualities raigne and beare sway the first whereof hath the Hebrew Tzadic expounded by the Greeke Dicaios by the Latins Iustus and by vs translated A Iust or Righteous person Such as was Abel and Noah and Abraham and Lot and Zacharie and Elizabeth and Iames and other like who although as beeing men they were not free from originall guilt were neuerthelesse before manie others cloathed in the habite of vertue accepted with the Lorde approoued by an honest life before men and set forth for examples of imitation to the posteritie The second word is Raschay and is translated by the Apostle Adocamos that is vniust wicked vnquiet a troubler a seditious and damned person Such as was Cayne and Nimrod and Esau and Saul Iudas and their like whose iniquities and naughtie natures are depainted forth to be abandoned And of this contrarietie vnder those two wordes we haue many testimonies both in the old and new Testament Abraham speaking to the Lord touching the ouerthrow of the wicked Sodomites amongst whom as yet inhabited righteous Lot saide Gen. 18.23 And wilt thou destroy the lust with the vniust the righteous with the wicked And shall Catzadic Caraschay the righteous be as the wicked that be far from thee Dauid also in the Psalm by the same words makes the like common difference betweene those two contrary persons and their liues the which hauing described thus concludeth For the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous and the way of the vngodly shall perish Psal 1.6 Prou. 12. Vers 2.5.6 16.12.13 14.21 26. Eccle. 3.17 Salomon no lesse then nine times in one Chapter of his Prouerbs puts the like differēce vnder the same words betweene those vnlike persons And in his Preacher he saith I said in mine heart God shall iudge the righteous and the vngodly Finally to those two persons as to those of a farre contrary constitution nature qualitie and life the Sonne of God both applieth a farre contrary title and also to either of them giueth a contrary reward when to the one that is the Righteous hee saith Come yee blessed of my father receiue the kingdome prepared for you from the beginning of the world And to the other that is the wicked and vngodly hee saith Depart yee cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the Diuel and his Angels But hereof wee shall speake somewhat more in the combination of those two vertues Iustice and Mercy hereafter in place conuenient The holy man Iob speaking of this Vertue declareth what the same is with the true vse thereof in his owne person Iob. 29.14 I put on Iustice and it couered mee and iudgement was as a Roabe and Crowne For the godly being cloathed in this habite haue therein neither rent nor seame beeing artificially wrought and composed of many golden threedes as Faith Loue Charitie Hope Prudence Chastitie Diligence Liberalitie Mercy Goodnesse and other like the which in the Apocalips are called the pure raines of the Bride Apo. 19.8 and interpreted in the Plurall number the Iustifications of the Saints In regard hereof Noah was witnessed to be Isch tzadic tamim A man righteous and perfect Gen. 6.9 or righteous of perfections that is iust and mercifull in the which sense Christ calleth him a iust man which is a man of mercies The prophet Ezechiel Ezec. 18.5 describeth such a man generally in two points that is he forsaketh euill he doth that which is good and then soone after he numbreth vp certaine particular vertues alluding as to that of Dauid in the first and fifteene Psalmes And thus the wise Collectors of Salomons Ecclesiasts Gal. 12 13. hauing declared his contempt of the studies deuises and vanities of worldly men reduced all his particular sundry precepts touching mans righteousnes perfection vnto two general heads that is to say Fear God and keepe his commandements the which as they testifie is the whole dutie of a man as whereof hee is esteemed iust Noah was iust and walked with God Gen. 6. And this was notably expressed in that excellēt cōmendation which the holy Scriptures giue vnto that righteous man Noah before mentioned who hauing the habite of vertues walked with God which is so much to say as that he had conformed himselfe or applied himself in all things to the Lord the which may be well gathered of the word Hithhalech which being coniugated in the Hebrew Hithpael hath a reciprocall signification noteth that Noah dedicated consecrated applied and conformed himselfe vnto God that is in holines righteousnes and perfections Loe thus we see what is ment by the word Iustice or Righteousnesse Neuertheles as one thing ought to be considered with another that thereof wisedome may bee had wee must note This is not wrought of mans abilitie but by God that yet there is no righteousnesse no iustice no vertue no perfection nor any meet conformity of man to the diuine image that is either wrought or effected in man of mans owne witte wisedome studie industerie action or merite for thereof is man vtterly depriued seeing that euery man is a lyar a vaine thing and being a sinner hath euer neede of the grace and mercy of God but all the abilitie wisedome and sufficiencie of man and euery good gift commeth down from him that saith vnto his people I made thee that thou shouldest serue me that is God Almightie to whom belongeth the kingdome the power and the glory for euer For as the learned Doctor saith In omni opere bono non
our afflicted neighbour and helpe to relieue him with that which is our owne The which definitiō hath foure principall branches The first whereof is that Mercy is an affection of the minde against the opinion of them which place this vertue onely in externall actiōs For neither are those to be esteemed vertues which haue not their originall in the heart or minde of man Therefore as Wisedome saith Giue me thine hart So those Scribes and Pharises were reiected of the Lord and their workes reprobated because whiles they seemed to honour him with their lippes their hearts were farre away The next is that Mercy is that affection of the minde which condoleth that is sorroweth and lamenteth together with and for another Or as Augustine againe saide Aliena miseriae in nostr● corpore compassio the compassion of anothers misery in our owne bodies In such sort Ieremy pittieth and lamenteth the wretched condition of his people and Christ sorrowed together with Martha and Mary lamenting their brothers death Thirdly in this definition is found somewhat added of our beneuolence whereof our destressed neighbour might be relieued comforted or eased for it little helpes the afflicted that wee condole with him in his condition except that also we exhibite and bestowe somewhat whereof hee might hope for remedy or reliefe To this the Apostle perswading said we should remember the words of the Lord Iesus that it is better to giue then to receiue Acts. 20. Io. 6. Thus the Lord had not onely compassion on the people which wandred as sheepe without a shepheard but gaue them for their comfort the bread both for their soules and their bodies The fourth and last point is that we exhibite and bestowe on the afflicted for his cōfort not another mās goods but that which is our owne For if we take from one man giue to another we shall declare our selues cruell whiles we would seeme mercifull And thus should the good affection of the mercifull minde be expressed in those actions deedes which are not only called but are indeed the works of Mercie Gregorie Grego his 3. termes would that those works should be cōteined in Giuing counsailing teaching but Lyra Lyra 3. better comprehendeth them in the helping or releeuing others with our wealth with our workes and with our Counsaile But best of all our Lord Sauiour Christ perswading to this right excellent vertue Christ his 4. poynts of Mercie teacheth mē first to loue next to blesse thirdly to work fourthly to pray Yea Loue your enemies blesse them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for them which hurt you In another place be setteth downe foure other wordes to expresse this vertue Mat. 5.14 viz First Iudge not secondly condemne not thirdly forgiue Fourthly giue An● finally in an other place he produceth sixe brāches or works of Mercie in that saying to his Saints standing on his right hand As first I was hungrie ye gaue me meate 2. Thirstie ye gaue me drinke 3. Harbourles ye tooke me in 4. Naked ye cloathed me 5. Sick and ye visited me 6. A prisoner and ye comforted me To the which some others haue added one other work of mercie and made in all the number seuen aptly comprehended in this Monostich 7. workes of mercie Visito poto cibo redimo tego colligo condo that is To visite to giue drinke to feede to redeeme to cloath to harbour to burie But because this belong rather ●o th' externall action then to the minde there●ore may not fully expresse the whole vertue al●hough they declare her in the workes some o●hers combyning this latter with those former words of Christ doe gather both from th' one and ●he other fourteene branches of this tree 14. Branches of Mercies tree whereof ●euen may be applyed to the exercise of the body ●nd seuen to the affection of the minde and comprehended them all in this Tristich Voslio poto cibo tectum do visito soluo Comodo compatior converto dono remitto Arguo supplico consulo do quoque quodque talentum To cloath to giue to drinke to feede to harbour To visite to paye to lende to pitie to conuert To bestowe to remit to reprooue to beseech To counsaile to giue of whatsoeuer good thing I haue Now this must not be forgotten that as we may not vniustly take from one to bestowe in Almes on another so whiles wee endeuour to declare our good affections by our good works we haue a care to doe those works well Doe good works well least they loose their proper grace remembring this that when Christ spake of Almes and the workes of Mercy he aduised his Disciples to obserue three things As first a good affection secondly a conuenient handling thirdly a good end that is that first the heart and minde bee well constituted in loue faith and the Diuine feare next that the persons times places and occasions be duely regarded thirdly that the whole be referred to the glorie of God the good of our brethren and the discharge of prophane dutie the first whereof noteth heauenly wisedome the second godly discretion the the third gratefull obedience the beautifull ornaments of a faithfull and mercifull person Moreouer as the vertue Mercy is an affection of a condoling minde as that whereby man is touched or moued towards man it is requisite to consider with the semblable discretion to what kinde of persons this affection is extended To whom Mercy is extended As it was before saide that it respecteth the miserable condition of the wretched and afflicted person But there be which would constraine this Vertue or rather the effect of this Vertue to foure sorts as namely to the Poore the Righteous the Widowes the Elders respecting the poore for their pouertie the Righteous for their innocency the Widowes for their insufficiency the Elders for their reuerence Pro. 12.10 Against the which kind of persons the vnmercifull and cruell in all ages haue bent their furie and rage saying as in the Booke of Sapience Sap. 2. Let vs oppresse the Poore Let vs persecute the Righteous Let vs wring the Widowes and let vs not spare the hoare heads Gal. 6.10 But Saint Paul speaking of our good workes meaning no doubt the workes of mercy exhorteth vs to doe good to all men but chiefely to the houshold of faith wherein hee would that wee should extend the fruites of mercy especially to the godly but yet so that wee ought not neglect all others or withdraw our willingnesse of doing good vnto all that neede the same In the which no doubt hee had an eye to the Doctrine of his Maister who in his true exposition of the Lawe Mat. 5. 6. and 7. willeth that this goodnesse bee extended euen to our enemies as it is before remembred Loue your enemies Blesse them that curse you do good to them that hate you pray for them
which hate and persecute you Following therein the example of our heauenly father who maketh his Sunne to shine as well on the euill as on the good and giueth rayne both to the iust and vniust and is mercifull vnto all To this he addeth a reason For if ye loue and doe good to them that loue doe good to you what reward haue you doe not the Publicans euen the same To and for this wee haue also the examples of many good men as of Abraham whose good deedes Ghrist commendeth of Lot in Sodom of Noah in the old world of Moses in Egypt of Dauid in Israel of Nehemiah Neh. 1.4.5.6.15 in Iudeah And in the new Testament besides Zacharie Elizabeth Lydia Cornelius Labitha Anna Martha Mary Paul Stephen and such wee haue the most perfect example of the Lord Iesus himselfe who though God became and dyed for man to bring him to life euen then when man was sinfull and an enemy vnto him CHAP. V. The generall signification of the word Mercy AS the word Iustice or Righteousnesse before mentioned as so placed alone hath a very large signification comprehending as in one word the summe and habite of all vertues and so the whole dutie of a man euen so this Word Chesed or Mercy in the like sort accepted is extended to the same but yet so as that therein Iustice is declared and perfected For Mercy The mercy of God as it is applied to the Lord signifieth not onely his free remission and pardon of our sinnes as it is before saide but also all those good motions waies blessings graces and meanes which hee bestoweth vseth and applieth to the calling home redemption and preseruation of them whom in his eternall loue hee hath elected and predestinated to life in his sonne Iesus Thereof the Lord saith by the Prophet Ieremy I haue loued thee with an euerlasting loue therefore in Mercy haue I drawne thee Ier. 31.3 yea vnder this word and that most cōmonly in the holy Scriptures are signified all and singular those graces bounties benefits blessings and whatsoeuer good things the Lord our God of his meere loue fauour and good wil powreth forth and bestoweth on men being indeed the effect and fruite of his diuine and eternall loue to his Saints in Christ This word therefore vsed the holy Patriarch Iacob when returning from Mesopotamia and considering how rich and bountifull the Lord his God had bene vnto him in loue graces and manifold benefits far beyond all his deserts or worthines he confessed and saide Catóntimickol hachasadim Gen. 32.10 and 33.11 that is I am farre vnworthy all those Mercies This king Dauid very often acknowledged vnder the same word Chesed Of such a force is it as it is iustly applied vnto our good God whose mercy is said to comprehend all his workes In like manner the same being applied to man The mercy of man and especially to that duty which is required of man towards man signifieth not onely those particular Species or kinds of Iustice as humanitie benignitie beneuolence kindnesse gratitude or that Sogyn or affection of loue or that worke of mercy which wee call almes-deeds or pardon of trespasses or such like before mentioned as in any part or member therof but all and euery those louing affections godly wordes holy actions good deedes and commendable things whatsoeuer to the which a true Christian is worthily inuited perswaded and directed within that loue of his neighbours contained and commaunded in the second Table of the diuine Lawe and confirmed both by the Doctrine and example of our Lord Christ as that whereby true loue charitie is expressed performed perfected with effect The holy Psalmist speaking of the righteous man Psal 37.21 saith The Righteous is Mercifull as if this were the fruite which so good a tree yeelded he is Righteous Ergo he is mercifull or he is vnmercifull for he is righteous Therefore is the word taken for the very definition of Iustice Megaudes in 2. Tim. 2 Caiu in Hos 12. because that therein onely that generall vertue so often commanded and commended in the holy Scriptures is apparantly expressed and perfected as the cause by his effects The Apostles haue commonly for this word vsed Agape Loue or Charitie comprehending all the fruites of faith and mans whole dutie against the which is opposed a word which signifieth distraction cruelie vncharitablenesse vnmercifulnesse oppression spoyling and the effects of malice As it is saide of the olde world the earth was filled with crueltie Gen. 6. Pro 22. Psal 50. Mercy perfection Mat. 5 48 Luk. 6.36 The vngodly are cruell and pertakers with theeues robbers or oppressors Finally wee may obserue that in the Sermon of Christ Saint Luke calleth that Perfection which Saint Luke calleth Mercy yee shall therefore bee perfect as your father in heauen is perfect Be yee therefore mercifull as your father also is merciful By the which as he meaneth one thing so hee would that men vnder this word Mercy should bee perfect in all goodnesse though not in measure or quantitie yet of nature and qualitie like vnto God our heauenly father And to this are we inuited by the Prophet Hosey Hos 10 12 when he saith Reape ye according to the measure of mercy And by the Lord Iesus citing the Prophets words I wil haue mercy not sacrifice which is as if he said Mat. 9.13 and 12.7 All your sacrifices and oblations nothing please me whiles I finde you to bee cruell vncharitable and vnmercifull one towards another yea whiles I finde no goodnesse nor perfection in you conformable to the image of God But on the other side If yee doe iustly loue mercy humble your selues and walke with God Mich. 6.8 as Noah Enoch Abraham and others the godly and faithfull in their times haue done then will I accept your Sacrifices not onely with your Mercy but in regard thereof as the right effect of so good a cause And so much touching those two vertues Iustice and Mercy as either of the wordes are absolutely placed and so commonly accepted in the holy Scriptures CHAP. VI. 1. Of Iustice and Mercy conioyned 2. And of such their acceptation for the vse of Pietie AS we often find those two words Iustice and Mercy disioyned set a part so also wee finde them often conioyned the which after the first sight should seeme Hos 10 12 that the former signifie the thing required of man the latter the reward or benefite that man is to expect thereof Isay 55. as elsewhere it is said Let the vnrighteous man forsake his owne waies so shall the Lord be mercifull vnto him so the Lord should heere say by his Prophet Sowe to your selues for Righteousnes and then shall ye reape according to the measure of mercy Howbeit although I will not vtterly impugne that sense yet consenting with the best it is certaine that the Prophet as well here as
which is not found in or of himselfe towardes his acceptation and Iustice before God Moreouer this Treasure is not laid vp in the fraile nature of man Where Iustice dwelleth but in the strong habitacle of the person of Christ as both in his proper place there wher it findeth the greatest preseruation and safetie for our better benefit For when Adam had that in his possession Pro. 3. after his free will the subtle Serpent preuented him he was iustly depriued thereof in his sin As if the Lorde should thus haue said I will from henceforth take on my selfe the protection of this high Treasure as where it shal be full safe and surely defended from all danger of losse And therfore in●eed when he came in the flesh although he were mightily tempted and assaulted by the Enemie of mans soule he was not vanquished or ouercome ●ut being most strong he vanquished and subdu●d Satan and all his Angells to his power as wher●f he said The Prince of the world commeth Ioh 22 3● 14.30 16.14 and findeth nought in mee Againe Now is the iudgement of ●his world the Prince of this world is cast out Howbeit the faithfull neuer want nor are they denyed ●he benefit of this treasure whensoeuer they look vp vnto him and draw towards his Diuine Grace with their Faith as the Eagles hasten vnto their praye in and by the which they finde peace and rest vnto their soules howesoeuer they be tempted persecuted and afflicted in this miserable world Loe this is that former Iustice or Righteousnes to the which the Prophet directeth vs when hee saith Sow yee to yourselues for Righteousnes Whereof wee haue spoken more largely in our * A book● so intituled Acolastos Dialogu 7. vv and not vnworthy the reading of all true Christians with godly deliberation and like consideration CHAP. VII The second kinde of Iustice which is that of the second Table is comprehended in the worde Mercie and necessarilie followeth the former in due order THe other kind of Righteousnes required of men What is this kinde of Iustice and defined and set forth in the word Mercie is the very fruit or effect of the former and conteineth the summe of those vertues duties works of Charitie conteyned in the second table of the Law as it is before said and often times expressed in the works of Charitie Agape Luk. 1.74 This the holy man Zacharie calleth Holinesse when he saith that wee are deliuered from our enemies hand that wee should serue God in holines and righteousnes And St. Paul consenting thereto 1. Thess 1.3.4 saith This is the will of God euen your holines The same meant the Lord when he said Be ye holy for I am holie And Christ in one word called it perfection saying Mat. 3.48 Ye shal be perfect euen as your Father which is in heauen is perfect We may not either speak or think otherwise of this vertue Iustice Mercie then wee haue before in effect saide and considered therof sauing that wheras before we placed and accepted the same apart by it selfe here we place it together with the former vertue that is Iustice and accept it as the definition or effectuall fruit therof neither may we imagine that eyther this can be without that or that perfected without this When the Lord God had made Adam and set him in Paradise yet for that he had not this help the Lord pronounced him as vnperfect saying It is not good that the man should be alone Gen. 2. I will therefore make him an helpe like vnto him So doubtlesse although the Lord had iustified the beleeuer Acts. 13. and by the bloud of his Sonne wee be deliuered from all things from which by the lawe of Moses wee could not be iustified nor deliuered yet is it not the Lords will that we should be ydle in the fielde or market place but his will is that we should endeuour that which hee of vs requireth in his law though not to that perfection which is needefull the which wee cannot performe yet according to that measure of abilitie which he hath to that ende giuen vs. To this did Isaiah Isa 1.17 the Prophet invite the people when hee saide Learne to doe well seeke iudgement releeue the oppressed iudge the fatherles defend the widowes And Micheas Mich. 6. the Prophet saying Doe iustlie loue mercie This remembred Daniel Dan. 4. in his good counsaile to the king Nebucadnezar Cut off thy sins with righteousnes he addeth thine iniquities by mercy to the poore that is Change thy crueltie into mercie and where as thou art a man prophane be thou henceforth holy righteous To this would S. Iohn the Baptist perswade the Iewes Yee say ye are Abrahams children beleeuers but I would ye should doe the workes of the faithfull and bring forth fruits worthie amendment of life And S. Paul after that he had strongly confirmed the foundation of our Iustification by the diuine grace accepted by faith without any the deeds of the law that men might not imagine he condemned those works which proceeded from the iustified man hee omitted not to builde on that foundation the excellencie of such actions and works as necessarilie followe the iustified man as the effects vsually follow the causes therefore he saith I beseech you brethren by the mercifulnes of God Ro. 12.1 that ye offer vp your bodies a liuing Sacrifice holie acceptable vnto God which is your reasonable seruing of God And this Saint Iames Iam. 2. laboureth to perswade with many mighty argumēts to thē who thought that a bare faith had bin ynough for a mā to come to heauē although hee neuer trauailed in the way of life by any work because Paul had preached that a man was iustified before God by faith not by works Loe thus ought the perfect Thumim Thumim perfection integritie to be made answereable to the bright Vrim Vrim light or knowledge that righteousnes which is by Faith in Christ manifested in Mercie and that holinesse which proceedeth from the influence of the holy Spirit wherwith they be baptized which beleeue declared before men that men may see our good works and glorifie our Father which is in heauen And so haue we seen what the Lord God requireth of vs in these two words Righteousnes Mercy Note But heere I would not that any man should gather that because wee say that GOD requireth good workes therefore wee are able to doe those workes without Faith or can beleeue without his grace or can merit life with those our works seeing wee be all sinners and vnprofitable but so as those workes are as the effectes of good causes fruits of a good tree and notes of our faithfull obedience to the Diuine will which we must aime vnto and therein feeling our great imperfection depend on the merit of our heauēly Sauiour Iesus
of God and the benefit of men when the labourer in this husbandrie is furnished with those seuen former Vertues so well fitting his vocation and function But all those things shall by Gods grace be explaned in the place order of the proceeding of this heauenly Plough CHAP. IX What is meant by this that men must sowe for righteousnes and reape according to Mercie Wee must endeuour to perform that which is required of vs. AS the Prophet by these Metaphoricall wordes taken from Georgie and the common labours of husbandmen would teache what is required of vs in the spiritual husbandrie of the Lorde So thereby knowing what the will of God is and what shal be the end of our labours we should daily endeuour the practise of those things We must endeuour to performe that which is requi ed of vs. And therin with the husbandman let vs not omit at the seede time to manure and sowe our fields though with great labour like cost and afterward with all diligence to reape and gather the fruites of our labours with the true application and vse thereof as it shall be thought most conuenient for the glorie of God the discharge of our duties and the profit both of our selues and others in our seuerall functions and places Howbeit there bee Obiect which standing on their counterfait Corban as I said before produce the words of the Lord Iesus against those painfull endeuours of the true labourer saying Matth. 6.26 Be not carefull for your life what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink nor yet for your bodie what ye shall put on c. Beholde the fowles of the heauen for they sow not neither reape nor carie into the barnes yet your heauenlie Father feedeth them Are ye not much better then they Answer To the which although the laboures enioyned to men by the Lorde wherein they should be exercised not onely on the six daies in the week but also should walk whiles the twelue houers of the day lasteth the calling of labourers into the vineyard Muscul in Matth 6. Non dicie Christus propterea dico vobis ne labores pro victu c. were a sufficient answere yet for the better vnderstanding of the Lords meaning I gladly remēber the words of the godlie learned resoluing the doubt Christ saith not therfore I say vnto you that ye labour not for foode and cloathing but be ye not carefull hee forbiddeth not the labour but the carefulnes Paul saith to the Ephes 4. Let euery man labour with his hands that hee may haue what to giue to him that hath neede Againe Shall we nothing sowe nothing reape cary nothing into the barne he saith not so but by this he reproueth our incredulity or indeede the weakenes of our faith to whom although it be commanded of God that we should sowe reape plant and gather into the barnes that whereof wee may liue yet notwithstanding men haue neither that trust in God nor so much securitie as the fowles of the heauen which neither sowe nor reape nor bring into the barnes whereof to be sustained Therefore as it is said we must not be idle but industrious in our labours depend on the diuine grace without our excessiue carefulnes And here let vs not forget that which the Lord chiefly requireth namely Rihgteousnes To sowe for righteousnes for the which hee would wee should sowe and Mercie according to whose measure wee should reape that is to vse and practise those waies and meanes wherby we may obtaine the one perfo●me the other and expresse both the one the other in our charitable actions and godlie liues This is that sowing for Righteousnes that reaping after the measure of Mercie this is that hunger and thirst after Righteousnes whereof our Lord speaketh Iustice. Matth 5. wherein men hauing faith doe daylie desire studie endeuour and labour to praise and please God Mercie by walking in his wayes And this is that Symbole or token whereby we● expresse make knowen that Righteousnes of God Matth. 5. before men in the workes of Pietie For thus are men willed to measure out Righteousnesse in Mercie as whereof the Lord saide Doe Iustice and loue Mercie or execute Iustice by mercy The same which Daniel comprised in his good counsell giuen to the king of Babylon Cut off thy sinnes by Iustice thine iniquity by mercie meaning that he should alter and change the copie manner of his life that whereas before he was vnrighteous and thereby appeared as a sauage wilde beast cruell hard seuere and vnmercifull vnto his Subiects especially to the poore Iewes then vnder his captiuitie hee should now labour to become righteous as whereby he might embrace and declare humanitie gentlenes softenes benignitie mercie not only in word but in affection action good workes and all wayes and meanes And doubtles as there is not anie one thing commended and commanded vnto men by the Lord Vltra posse viri non vult Deus vlta requiri but with the lawfull wayes and meanes to be attained and performed so God willing we should liue he prepareth vs foode and willeth vs both to eat and vse it as the meanes of our life Againe too and for the same to be maintained hee would we should labour manure the soyle to sowe reape lay vp in the barne and that we should neither contemne nor neglect those lawfull waies and meanes offred but take and vse the the same To this purpose saith Christ I stand at the doore knock If any man wil open the doore to me I will come in vnto him Reuel 3. Wee knowe that Christ is able to enter in the gate beeing fast shut howbeit this he saith to stirre vs vp to vigilancie and to the studie of the workes of our vocation Christ is ready to enter into our hearts by his Spirit but hee would wee should open our hearts vnto him by our faith that wee should be prepared as Dauid wished to be when hee prayed for a newe heart Psalm 51. To this belongeth that which the Lord commandeth Seeke and ye shall finde Knock and it shal be opened vnto you So the talents being committed to our vse require a diligent trafficke and occupation for the increase Thus the Lord would that men hauing wisedome knowledge vnderstanding memory iudgement reason abilitie other ornaments as well of soule as bodie they should neither burie them nor restraine them but rightlie vse them And now as yee haue heretofore ploughed Iniquitie wherof ye haue reapte vngodlines haue beene ouermuch busied about the thinges of this life which are vaine transitorie directed by the wisedome of the serpent earthly sensuall and diuellish so it is required that henceforth yee turne another leafe and yet ye may not be ydle or exempted from labours but by the wisdome which is from aboue gentle easie to be intreated ful of mercie
pardoned of his sinne and so profitable as in the which hee findeth that timely both mercy life wherof also it is that those persons are said to sinne vnto death The sinne vnto death which cannot repent and they are said to be borne of God exempted from sinne which truely and timelie repent To the which we haue not onely manie Tstimonies as in the Prophets Isaiah Ezekiel Ieremy others but also most notable examples as of Dauid Solomon Manasses Magdalen Peter Paul and manie such who haue not onely taught that at what time soeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinne from the bottome of his heart the Lord doth pardon him but also haue sensiblie felt and proued the effect of the same In regard wherof the godly Fathers of the church haue both thought and spoken verie honourablie of this godlie vertue Among others the learned Chrysostome therof saith O Repentance which the Lord being mercifull doest remit sinnes openest the gate of Paradice healest the man contrite makest glad the sorrowfull recallest life from death restorest mans estate renuest honour giuest boldnes reformest the vertues fillest man with grace more aboundant And Cyprian Cyprian ó poenitētia quid de te Noutrefe ramus hath a very excellent praise therof O worthie Repentance what excellent or strange matter should I report of thee All things bound vp thou loosest All things loosed thou shuttest vp All aduerse things thou mittigatest all contrite things thou healest all things confused thou brightenest all things desperate thou cheerest And this is in deed that new life which necessarilie followeth that newe birthe wherof our Lord disputeth with Nichodemus Ioh 3. the which as the same Chrysostome saide is more glittering then golde brighter then the Sunne The repentant sinne not against the holie Ghost that which neither sinne quaileth nor defection ouercommeth nor desperation daunteth Wee neuer ●ead or found that anie man hath or may fall into ●hat damnable sinne against the holie Ghost to whom the Lorde giueth true Repentance as wee ●ightlie define it for albeeit that sinne be not rightly defined finall impenitencie but is indeede that Obstinate peruicacie or stubbornnesse vntill death The sinne-against the holy Ghost Heb. 6 4. 10.26 by the which a man not by ignorance nor by infirmitie nor by feare nor by an occasion but by a certaine determinate malice of minde is turned away from the doctrine of the Gospell and so persisting doeth hate and persecute the knowne trueth of the same yet because the Lord hath debarred them this noble Grace which sinne against the holy Sptrit many haue so defined it knowing that if the Lord in mercie would grant them true Repentance they could therewith be remitted liue Therefore the Lord hath bene willing that his people should be drawne therto by many perswasions arguments as by Isaiah Wash you make you cleane Let the vngodly man forsake his Own waies and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations and turne againe vnto the Lord. And by his Sonne hee saith Come vnto mee allye which trauaile be heauie laden and I will refresh you These and manie such comfortable wordes hath the Lorde vsed to them on whom hee is willing to shewe mercie and vnto them onely Io. 1. 3. he giueth that peerelesse vertue and therwithall grace and power to be made his children in the new birth and to honour him as thei● best Father in a righteous and honest life And from hēce are rightly gathered these generall motiues causes 1● Motiues to repentance● perswading men to the estimatio● desire of this thing whereof the first is the consideration of our owne condition being great daylie transgressours of the lawe of our heauenl● Father wherof we should be sory and amend our liues The second is the remēbrance of the Lords commandement which commandeth admonisheth vs to repentāce The third is the goodnes long suffering of God who allureth and daylie and hourelie wayteth for our returne vnto him The fourth is the diuers kindes of Calamities of this life wherwith as with a rodde our heauenly Father humbleth vs and assayeth to draw vs vnto him whiles we be negligent Fifthlie the vncertaintie of our liues knowing that death is certain but the time therof vncertaine neither after death is there place left vs to repent therfore we should not delaye nor neglect to take the opportunitie therof Sixtly the sodaine comming of the iudge in the most terrible and latter iudgement against impenitent sinners Seuenthly the paine eternall of them which liue and die without repentance Eightlie the consideration of the sweet comforts commodities which follow them which timelie repent Ninthlie the examples of them which haue returned vnto the Lord as Adam Dauid the Niniuites others who timely obtained mercie and saluation from the Lord who is so willing to forgiue them that returne vnto him Tenthly and lastly the fearfull exāples of the impenitent whō the Lord hath shut out frō his louing mercies as Cayn Esau Saul Iudas Diues in hell who sought for mercie but obtained it not By this we learne what is meant by Plowing and turning vp of the fallowed land for the soueraine Seede CHAP. XII The heart of man is likened vnto the Earth or Land both fallowed vnfallowed NOwe that wee may yet better vnderstand the Metaphor with profitable fruite let vs examine these two pointes First why Man or Mans heart is likened to the Earth or to the vnfallowed Land Man is likened to the Earth for 7. causes Next why the heart of the Godly man or repentāt sinner is likened to that Fallowed or tilled soyle As for the former wee find that man is called Earth and that his heart is comparable to the earth First because he was taken from the Earth into the which he shal againe returne Gen. 3. Secondlie by reason of his nature corrupt which is as the earth colde drie and therby barraine of all good thoughts godlie endeuours neither is the same easilie perswaded to goodnes but by the diuine grace therefore no lesse comparable to the Rocke or Stone as the prophet saith Amos. 6 1● Shall the horses runne on Rockes thar is on a barraine or hard land to plough for the sowing of Pietie Thirdlie for that as the earth is ponderous and tendeth downeward so man is weighed downe by the tight of his sinne yea in his corrupt nature hee hath for his centre the depth of hell whitherto hee daylie tendeth were he not sustained by the finger and mercy of God in Christ Fourthly as the earth hath many and diuers shapes and changes according to the diuersitie of the times seasons and constitutions of the aire so is mans heart and Man himselfe most vnconstāt wauering and reeling too fro now of one constitution then of another after the manifolde changes and chances of this life Fifthlie as the
prosecuting that which is commenced By this the Mariner Merchant passe ouer the daungerous Seas hoping to returne home with gaine The husbandman teareth vp his soile and laboureth hardlie in the field in Hope to gather the fruits of his trauailes The Father puts forth his Sonne in a farre Country at his great charge in hope hee will returne home a learned man By this the very Rebell sometimes yeelds himselfe to the Princes hand in hope of pardon the condemned man hopes for life the sick man seeing the Phisitian lookes for health to all men the greatest solace in the concourse of calamities is the Hope of an Alteration Nazian Eccl 9.4 whereof the wise man said To the liuing there is hope 3. Kind●● of Hope and therfore a liuing dogge is better then a dead Lyon By this are wee reteined in the full expectation of those things which are either promised or wished for And of this there be three kindes the first wherof is engendred of an Opinion the second of certaine Knowledge the third of Faith The Opinionate hope is either taken from the report of the worde of some others or from some particular examples or from the conceite of a mans owne minde and is indeede nothing but a bare perswasion and often prooued deceitfull and vaine The next is that which Experience hatcheth as whereby men hauing tried the causes by their effectes hope for the like to ensue againe The third springeth of Faith The vaine hope and beeing of affinitie to the seconde expecteth that which Faith assureth relying on Gods promises Againe that first kinde though but deceitfull and vaine hath drawen many men forth not onely to the contriuing of manie vnlawfull actions Gen. 3.1 but also to the aduenture of diuers sundry hard exploits the which Pindare considering said that manie a man it exalted whom vppon a sodaine it cast downe Heuah hearkening to the deceitfull words of the Serpent Act. 12. hoped that she should be made a Goddesse passing wise by eating of the forbidden fruit King Herod seeing that he preuailed in his purpose against Iames the brother of Iohn hee proceeded further and tooke Peter also hoping hee should haue had therein the like successe arguing thus I had my purpose on Iames Ergo I shall haue the like on Peter Gen. 4. Cayn conceyted so well of himselfe and of his actions that if Abel his brother were extinguished he hoped he should be the onely promised Seede of the woman the heire of the world and liue in all peace The like hope had Absalom against his Father Dauid 2 Sam. 15 Mat 2. So the other Herod hoped that in the murthering of the Innocent children hee should also murther Christ and ouerthrowe his kingdome But as the wise man saith Whiles the vngodly hope to haue a friend of vnrighteousnes Sap. 2.16 5.14 Iob. 8 9. Ia 1.10 they come to nought for the hope of the vngodly is like the drye thistle flower or dust which is blowē away of the winde ●ike a thinne scumme that is scattered abroade with the storme and as the smoke that the winde disperseth and as the remēbrance of him that passeth taryeth but for a day 2 The more certaine hope The second kinde of hope is more assured for that it is taken frō the certaine knowledge or experiēce of things as wherby mē of the same causes hope for the like effects as frō the fire heate from the water moisture from the Sunne light and from the night darknes So in things diuine and spirituall from Gods loue we expect grace vpon our true repentance the mercy of God Thus we hope as God is our Father and we are his children that hee will prouide for vs according to his good nature and his louing kindnes to others his children Thus Paul consolated the Corinthians 2. Cor 1.7 in their affliction Our hope saith he is stedfast concerning you in as much as we know that as yee are partakers of the sufferings yee shall also be partakers of the Consolation hee addeth for wee would not haue you ignorant of our afflictions c because wee should not trust in our selues but in God who deliuered vs from so great a death and thus hee would thereof conclude therefore hee wil also deliuer you who haue the same God for your Father who are professours of the same cause who are partakers of the same afflictions with vs. Thus the poore prodigall Sonne Luke 15. vpon certaine knowledge of his good Fathers nature and loue returned home hoping to finde the fruits thereof towards himselfe 1. King 20.32 Thus the Assyrians hauing experienced the mercifull heartes of the Kings of Israel came and submitted themselues to the King with halters on their neckes And thus the people hauing tried and found the great vertue of healing in the Lord Iesus and his Apostles came presēted their sick before him and them in hope of helpe Such arguments we finde aboundant as in the holy Scriptures so chiefly in Dauids Psalmes Psal 37. and sayings among the which that is notable where hee saith I haue bene yong and now I am old yet I neuer saw the righteous forsaken thereof he would conclude therefore I hope hee will not forsake me which am a righteous man in this that my sinnes are pardoned and I depend on him by my faith Againe hee saith The righteous man is mercifull As if hee wold argue This is a righteous man ergo I hope he will shew me mercy For I find it truly tried that from righteousnes issueth mercy This is a good hope and of neere affinitie with that which followeth 3. The best kinde of hope and chiefly he●e required which rising of a true faith in Iesus Christ is defined the sure expectation of those good things promised vs in the holy Gospel as namely remission of our sinnes the righteousnesse of Christ the gratious aide and help of God in all our afflictions the mitigation of our sorrowes and calamities a glorious victory ouer sinne and the diuell and the inheritance of life euerlasting according to the fore knowledge and good will of God in his Sonne Rom. 8. This is that which fortifieth patience perswadeth the verie groaning creature to abide serue vntill the day of the adoption of Gods children In this hope said Dauid I beleeue verily to see the goodnesse of God in the land of the liuing In the same said Iob Iob. ●4 I know that my Redeemer liueth and that I shal rise againe in the last day and shal be couered with my skinne Heb. 11 and shall see God In this the ancient fathers trauailed patiently towardes the Citie of the Saintes before they obtained the promises This is that Helmet of Saluation whereof St. Paul speaketh in the furniture of a true Christian Ephes 6 Omnium prorum spes c. and the only hope
for the institution of the people The third 3 Euangelists are such as are sent to some particular Churches to preach the Gospel vnto them The fourth 4 Pastors are diuinely called and appointed to take charge of the soules to them committed to feed them with spirituall food to administer the Sacraments The fift 5 Doctours are called to catechize teach the principles grounds of Religion The sixt were to execute the faculty of the Spirit against wicked deriders of discipline 6 Powers to correct such as contemned the plaine doctrine 7 Healers The seuenth are to heale and worke beyond the common course of nature in the prime of the Church thereby the sooner to confirme the faith and doctrine preached transferred at this time vnto such as beyond some others bountifull and zealous in the works of mercie do refresh and comfort others The eight 8 Helpers are appointed as Deacons or Ministers to regard the necessitie of the Church to helpe the poore Christians with a faithfull collection and distribution of goods The ninth are to rule and gouerne others 9 Gouernors after the grace and wisedome giuen them thereto in the ecclesiasticall policie 10 Linguistes The tenth haue the gift of tongues and grace of interpretation of tongues for the better edification of the Church Here we haue fiue yoke of Oxen. The Oxen are the Preachers c and why In a word the Oxen which ordinarily drawe on this Plough are the Preachers Ministers and faithfull disposers of the secrets of the word of God vnto the people as before it is said who are not vnaptly likened to Oxen for fiue chiefe respects that is First for their wisedome secondly for their authority thirdly for their continency fourthly for their strength fiftly for their vtility The wisedome appeareth in the eyes the authority in the hornes their continencie in their castracie their strength in their labours their vtilitie in their vse It is said in the Apocalyps 5. that the Lambe had seuen eyes which noted his great wisedome 1 Wisdome and perfection of knowledge But the Oxe hath but two eyes whereby as Isaiah saith he knoweth his owner is ready to obey him By these two eyes is signified knowledge of the Lordes Law and Commandements and a willing obedience to the same And againe here is the loue of God and the loue of man alluding to those two tables in the Lawe In a word here is both wisedome and the worke of wisedome in the Oxe Secondly the Lambe hath also seuen hornes which noteth the perfect power and authoritie 2 Authoritie of Christ But this Oxe hath but two hornes to note a double vocation wherof the one is within the other without from the which the Christian especially the Pastor Preacher Minister or Elder taketh his power and authoritie for how can he preach except he be sent Thirdly the Oxe is gelded by the which he is made more tame readie 3 Chastitie and subiect to his worke and yoke And of certaine spiritual Oxen we heare the Lord say There be some chaste Mat. 19.12 which were so borne of their mothers wombe and there be some chaste which be made chaste of men and there be some chaste which haue made themselues chaste for the kingdome of heauen For some are chaste by nature and some others are made chaste beeing gelded by men but these hauing subdued their appetites vse the gift of continenci● in the seruice of God for they are disposed by the holy Ghost to beare the yoke of Christ with meekenesse of minde by the ripenesse of repentance the quietnesse of conscience the worke of obedience the grauitie of their modest conuersation and christian modestie 4 Strength Fourthly the Oxe is ordained for labour and so the Husbandman vseth him in his fielde and plough In like maner the Elders and Ministers of the Word in their spirituall Husbandrie are not to stand idle but to labour as said the Apostles Wee are Gods Labourers yee are his Husbandry And this was the saying of the good husbandman to them whom hee found standing idle in the Market-place Why stand you here all the day idle goe and enter my Vineyard and labour and whatsoeuer is iust ye shall receiue Here is labour required neither may such imagine which take this charge on them that they are worthy their rewards without labour nor that they shall be holden guiltlesse before the Lord except they worke and labour for they be spirituall Oxen. 5 Vtilitie Fiftly the Oxe bringeth great vtilitie vnto the Husbandman As not onely in that it easeth him of the great labour of his hand in tilling the earth which the Lord cursed as Gen. 15.20 but also in treading out his corne in yeelding him plentie of graine in drawing for his carriages and lastly in submitting his life and body to him for his victualles So able is the faithfull Minister of the Gospell to boulte out and dispose the hidden graine of Gods mysteries vnto the people in yeelding him plentie of foode at all times by preaching the Word in season out of season yea and to offer vp his body vnto the Lord a sacrifice as the holy Marters haue done for the confirmatiō of the faith and better comfort of the Church Thus hauing perused the Oxen let vs now consider something more of their kinde of labour 2 The labor of the Oxen The Apostle citing that place of the law saith that the chiefe labour of the Oxe is to Tread out the Corne. Meaning such a labour as whereby the Husbandman is prouided for and furnished with that whereof hee liueth And indeede the labour of the spirituall Oxe is the treading out of the spirituall foode vnto the people The good Householder saith our Sauiour bringeth forth out of his treasure thinges new and olde To this he compareth the Preacher or preaching of the kingdome of heauen in the which the Lawe applied to the Gospell and as well iudgements from the one as mercies from the other declared vnto men the field of the Lord is fallowed and prepared and a great abundance of good fruites brought vnto them that labour the same Saint Paul writing to Timothy 1. Tim. 5.17 speaking of those Oxen whom he there calleth Elders for ●●●ir wisedome grauitie authoritie and digni●●●●ommendeth vnto them two especiall duties viz. First good gouernment next studie and doctrine The Elders saith he which rule well Elders that rule well are worthy of double honour especially they which labour in the Word and Doctrine By this Ruling he noteth a gouernment but by well ruling he noteth the manner thereof neither is it much regarded that men rule but that they rule well in their places thus ought the Minister to rule well the Church the which that he may the better perform he must learn first to gouern wel himselfe and next his owne family for hee that cannot doe that
XXXI A briefe viewe of Impieties Husbandrie contrarie to the former and first of the Land and Seede of Impietie THat wee may not bee preuented by Sathan and the guilefulnes of his assaults the deepnesse of whose deuices is bottomelesse and his lewde purpose euer opposite to the purpose diuine let vs not omit to obserue him to know his malice yea let vs well marke the nature and manner of his ploughing sowing harrowing and working in the field of this world and so take heede of him preuent him and by our faith in Christ and true labors in the Lord conquer ouerthrow abandon and cast him out as our most deadly enemie It is certaine that the Diuell hath a Plough The Diuel hath his Plough which is of Impietie wherewith howsoeuer hee pretends in shewe his full purpose is to destroy that which the Lorde God hath built roote and cast forth the good Seede from the the Lords land wherein to sowe Tares and to plough for sinne and vnrighteousnesse that he may reape after the measure of tirannie and crueltie on the earth And surely Why many men sowe and plough iniquitie what by meanes of his sophisticall argumentes or for that the waies of Impietie seeme pleasant to mans eye and lustfull to the flesh or for that the path of true Pietie is narrowe and painefull to the men of this life many men yea mightie men of the worlde haue rather chosen to plough with Impietie then with Pietie and therein to serue rather to the Diuell then to God Therefore haue wee placed here following a viewe of the diuels husbandrie in the world opposed to the former as whereby ye might behold and consider the contrary Image and order of either with their endes and rewardes Howbeit too and for this purpose that seeseeing the good with the commoditie thereof ye might loue and ensue it and knowing also that euill with the daunger and hurt thereof ye might warily eschue it And this the better to performe wee may consider in this impious Georgy to be abandoned three general points as 1 The Land and the Seed of Impietie 2 The Plough of Impietie 3 The Harrow of Impietie Although the Diuell goeth about like a ramping and roaring Lyon euer seeking whom hee may deuoure and euery day catcheth and swalloweth vp such as appertaine to his kingdome The subtiltie of the Diuell and therefore are liable to his power and tyrannie yet is hee not so willing to appeare as hee is in his owne likenesse beeing as ashamed of his owne vgly deformitie But therefore that hee might as well satisfie himselfe therein as beguile others he mustreth forth as an Angell of Light Isa 5. and therein endeuoureth to perswade that for a vertue which is a fowle vice to commend that for good which is euill and that for sweete which is most sower Thus the Diuel willing to deface the Plough of Pietie godly Georgy would by many subtil arguments and shifts enduce men to beleeue that Impieties Plough is the best that the tares sowen by him in the field are good corne that the soyle of sinfulnesse is the most healthsome land and that to sow for wickednesse to reape after the measure of cruelty is farre preferred before that sowing and reaping which the Lorde God hath prescribed in his word for his Saints But this is his guilefull engine to circumuent the ignorant and heedlesse to aduance the power of his royaltie and to blemish the glory of the heauenly Saints as wee shall the better see and consider after that wee haue perused the particular partes before mentioned for thereby shall the legerdemane of this craftie imitator bee found out and his practises preuented to the finall confusion of him and all his vngodly impes The Land of Impietie The Land of Impiety is not fallowed or well tilled ground of the Lords field but the vnfallowed vntilled and rude earth as that which is barren naught and all vnfit for the good seede Gen. 3. and beareth thornes thistles brambles tares such as naturally spring of euill and vncultured fields all vnprofitable and combersome to the husbandman This Salomon descried in the vineyard of the foolish and slouthfull man It was all growne ouer with thornes and nettles had couered the face thereof and the stone wall thereof was broken downe then he addeth Prou. 24.30 ●4 thy pouerty commeth as one that trauaileth by the way and thy necessitie like an armed man This rightly displaieth the malitious heart of olde Adam which is not apprehensiue of the things which are of the diuine Spirit nor is well cultured and prepared for the heauenly Seede and so neither for the fruit of righteousnesse The Seede sowen therein is either choked with thornes or trodden downe of men or deuoured of birds or ouer withered with the Sun and so is not fruitfull in good wo●kes as the Lord hath taught in the Gospell and therefore as also the Apostle saith is subiect to burning Of this nature was the heart of cursed Caine of Saul of Achitophel of Iudas of Simon Magus of Herod of the High Priests of the Iewes such as being hardened were euer obstinate rebellious against God hatefull to Christ his Apostles and Ministers and finally left without timely repentance perished in their sinnes without mercy as if it were vnpossible they could be renewed into repentance The Seede of Impietie The Seede of Impiety cast into this naughty ground is neither that soueraigne worde of God nor those heauenly vertues and motions of the Spirit but the noisome tares of the enuious as wicked and vngodly thoughts suggestions imaginations conceits studies and endeuours murthers thefts blasphemies lies adulteries enuie wrath pride gluttony sloth lecherie couetousnesse and many other like of which this earth is naturally capable and whereof springeth nothing else but that which being of the like nature is fit for the fire So saith our Sauiour the wicked man hauing receiued in those Seedes from that euill treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which euill is for wee may not expect Grapes to spring of thornes nor figges of thistles To this belong those wicked heresies sophistries schismes erroneous doctrines deceiueable opinions and godlesse counsailes broached and divulged in the Church by Antichrist and his members Hence also is that sowing of seditions and contentions among brethren and neighbours the seedes of Impietie whereof Salomon spake Prou. 22. the sowing of vaine winde and wickednesse mentioned by the Prophet Hoseah Hos 2. 10.13 Mat. 13. Gal. 6.8 Plato de voluptate the sowing of tares whereof Christ tells and the sowing in the flesh whereof growes corruption of the which Saint Paul disputed These be euill sowers and their seede fits both their hand and the soyle as mali falsis gaudent voluptatibus CHAP. XXXII 1. Of the Plough of Impietie 2. Of the Soole THe vngodly as it is saide haue also their Plough as wherein they