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A36518 Totum hominis, or, The decalogue in three words, viz. justice, mercy and humility being a sermon upon Micah 6th vers. 8th, preached in the Cathedral of St. Peters, York, upon Monday the 15th day of March, 1668/9 before the Right Honourable Baron Turner and Baron Rainsford, the Right Worshipful Sr. Jo. Armitage, Bart. ... / by Sam. Drake, D.D. ... Drake, Samuel, 1622-1679. 1670 (1670) Wing D2134; ESTC R20477 16,528 32

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TOTVM HOMINIS OR THE DECALOGUE IN Three Words Viz Justice Mercy and Humility BEING A SERMON Upon Micah 6th Vers 8th Preached in the Cathedral of St. Peters York upon Monday the 15th day of March 1668 9 before the Right Honourable Baron Turner and Baron Rainsford The Right Worshipful St Jo. Armitage Bart. being then High Sheriff of Yorkshire By SAM DRAKE D. D. Vicar of Pontefract and sometime Fellow of St. John's Col. Camb. London Printed for William Grantham at the Black Bear in St. Pauls Church-yard near the little North Door 1670. TO THE TRULY VERTUOUS And RELIGIOUS LADY THE LADY MARGARET ARMITAGE Wife to Sir JOHN ARMITAGE of Kirklees Baronet MADAM THe best Guard being Innocency and this Sermon wanting Protection Where shall it find more of Safety because where more of Purity then in Your Breast Whil'st I am Pleading my Gracious Soveraigns Just Power I fear not but your loyal Husband will Espouse my Quarrel and Patronize my Sermon And I hope your pitty will not see this Perish Treating of those Vertues and Graces that have such an Assimilation to Your Self I here present You Madam with a small Glass but broken from the Chrystalline Heaven wherein you may see the Body of Divinity the Glory of the Lord and what Glory he would put upon you Therein God presents to you as rich a Triple-Offering as the Wise Men of the East did to his only Son Gold Frankincense and Myrthe A Bevy of Rich Jewels which the Indies are ignorant of nor is Arabia so happy as to Parallel The Ruby of Justice the Pearl of Mercy and the Emerald of Humility Thus the true Christian is blazon'd May these Vertues then by the Sanctification of the Spirit be as a Collar of SS to Adorn your Neck May these unpolisht Lines intended as an enlargement thereon be subservient to your Devotions and Closetted in your Pious and Discerning Breast so shall you be all Glorious within and the King of Heaven shall take pleasure in your Spiritual Beauty In my Prayers I may not forget your Two vertuous Daughters may Madam Margaret and Madam Catharine deserve the stile of Jemima and Kesia two of Holy Jobs Daughters for the Light of Divine Truth in them and the Perfume of Godliness Residing at London you have the Glory of Art and Nature in your Eye but the Ornament of a Meek and quiet spirit in Gods sight is of greater Price Some New City-Modes may differ much from this and one from another but I assure you after this Manner in the Old Time Holy Women who trusted in God adorned themselves And if you will be but so just to your own self as to Peruse and still Practise Gods Holy Precepts so Merciful to Me as to Pardon this Presumption you Crown the Hopes and Desires of MADAM Your Most Humbly Devoted Servant S. D. Micah 6th Vers 8th He hath shewed thee O Man what is good And What doth the Lord require of thee But to do Justly to love Mercy and to walk Humbly with thy God WHen the Prophet Micah observ'd how the Formal Jew doted upon his Shadowy Ceremony he presseth the Substantial Duty of Justice upon him In Aram Dei Justitia imponatur Let Justice be put upon thy Heart the Altar Offer Mercy rather then Sacrifice And if by Humility thou make thy self a whole Burnt-Offering consuming thy former Glorious Self in that Holy Conflagration How much more Acceptable will this be then the Fat of Rams In like manner when I take notice that some Novelists of this Age of ours have been so wholly given to Platonick Speculations Ayery Notions and Fond-affected Expressions who would be accounted Religious though they have lost their Decalogue in their Pretended Creed and Morall-Honesty in the Refinedness of their Faith I hope it will not be unsuitable if I according to this Prophets Method press these Primitive Practical Duties of Justice Mercy and Humility in the Language of my Text. Thus then God having cleared himself from those unworthy Aspersions of a hard Master which some undutiful Servants would have fixed upon him in the soft Language in the third Verse of this Chapter O my People What have I done unto thee and Wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me and then by a short Epitome of his long continued signal Favours Tacitly tax'd here as plainly elsewhere the Ingrateful Hypocritical and Formal Pretences of that Jewish Nation Vers 5. O my People Remember now what Balack King of Moab consulted c. At the sixth Verse they make their Reply Wherewith shall I come before the Lord saith Israel and how my self before the high God If the Lord would be appeased with thousands of Rams or ten thousands of Rivers of Oyl these Impossible things I would attempt yea even unlawful ones The First-born for my Transgression and the Fruit of my Body for the Sin of my Soul this would I give for an Attonement And indeed any thing of that People God might sooner have had then a broken heart The Prophet now comes to make Gods Rejoynder in my Text Away with such flourishing Pretences you do but shuffle and trifle with God you need not now begin to ask the way to Zion with your faces thitherwards you need not make so much Question what will please him He hath spoke his mind freely and his Commands are fair writ he hath shewed thee O man what is good Thee O man If man should be taken for the Magistrate as Gen. 43. 11. Carry down the man the Ruler Joseph a Present and in other places then the Errand is in the Prophets language to thee O Captain Truth is if a man in power will walk in darkness some puny advantages he hath to deal perversely but if he will but eye the light of the word he shall find all these obviated in my Text What is it the Lord requires lest he should be injurious to do justice lest he should be cruel to love mercy lest he should be frivolously imperious to walk humbly And because the name of Adam being so low man rather affects that of Geber a Gilded Hillock nay to be accounted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Prophet seems to check him thus Pride gets nothing but a slight from Reason and a worse sure from Religion shall the Gloe-worm vye with the Sun shall the Subject strut it in the face of his Soveraign Walk humbly 't is with thy God If there be many by-wayes the night dark or our Guide blind we may easily fall into a ditch but here 's a light set up in the Text and that from the Father of lights He hath shewed And thee O man It seems a particular Ray is order'd to reach every single person He hath chalked out the way the good old way this do and live Thee O man Though spoken by the word in general as much concerns us as if directed to every individual God as I may so say talks with every person immediately ayming to
have done against the commands nor what mercy they have neglected to do according to the Commandment Therefore the Error of their ways they understand not they will not repent and so are without hope 'T is for a Lamentation that too many sit still in darkness and in the shadow of death but then where 's the fault hath God barricado'd up the way of knowledge or left himself without a wi●ness who cries behold me behold me to a Nation that seeks not after him True an evil eye cannot behold that which is good a coveting eye cannot love Justice a cruel eye will not love mercy nor a proud eye humility but the reason of all that is their own false glass These evil beasts or beastly Lusts have devoured the man I would speak to If our Doctrine be hid 't is hid to them that are lost eternally if not temporally for besides that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that sacred Manuscript which is writ by the finger of God himself in the heart of man the Quakers Scripture of God within us the Bible of Gods own Printing there as they style it Remember St. Austins Tolle Lege he points us to a more legible Book the Gleanings of this Book is better than the Vintage of all other so that you need not now cry to us as the Disciples of John the Baptist Master what shall we do God hath gone before you in a fiery Pillar what 's writ in the Law how readest thou To the Law and to the Testimony all their words that speak not according to this they have no light in them but are benighted souls The Word is nigh you in your eye he that runs may read in our mouthes the Word hath gone through the world nay into your hearts convincingly Nor is it an Oriental Tradition or a Rabinical Dream only handed to us by unfaithful Ecchoes and imperfect rebounds no ridling Oracles are our rule but a revealed Word there he hath shewed the O man Omnis Scriptura est mensa Sapientiae there you may feast your selves saith Origen and Ireneus in his third Book says Ostentationes quae sunt in Scripturis non possunt ostendi nisi ex Scripturis never so lovely or beneficial sights The Devil hath his Showes the whole world and the glory thereof but our best way is to wink when he offers the object Here 's a sight man is made spectator of so good that 't is worthy of Gods own eye being an Emanation from himself The vail is taken off from the face of Divine Truth and you may love it for the beauty your selves behold in it And as he gives his Word to shine without so he gives his Spirit to shine within that the light of the Spirit might apprehend the light of the Word here are shewings indeed Barren fruitless Cutiosities he hath not shewn but necessaries to salvation are clearly reveal'd the Form of sound words and the truth which is after godliness these rich Mines are bared The way of Duty is plain who so is wise may understand these things then shall you know if you follow after to know the Lord. Light is come into the world and we live in the Goshen of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be our salutation welcoming these Irradiations Ignorance is now wilful work if men will either read or hear they need not be filthy he hath shewed them a cleansing Fountain Walk in the light then and when with Solomen you have considered these empty and shadowy Lights below where we can scarce find any thing worth a glance then lift up your gates and your hearts that the King of Glory may come in with the goodly Train of his revealed Truths Open your souls to these Heavenly Visions and warm them in these eve●lasting Sun-beams Times of former Ignorance so call'd because of glimmering discoverings comparatively God is said to wink at but after the Sun of Righteousness himself hath arisen with healing in his wings now he looks broad upon sinners chastising them with his beams for sins though small as Atomes You may have darkness in the day if you shut your windows O why do you not open your eyes and discern why do you act in the choicest points of Religion out of blind and implicit Principles Sons of light will not do so but in his light they will eye eternal light O how hath the Truth suffered betwixt the over-prying Socinian and the blind obedient I would neither have you burn your wings by over near approaches to this light nor yet wink at Noon Above all O take heed of withholding truth in unrighteousness after these shewings Thou requirest obedience Da quod jubes said St. Austin jube quod vis Surely if our Piety be not prevail'd upon by the reverence of this He in my Text the Author yet the excellency of the Imposition doth so recommend it to our reason that we must put off the best part of our Nature to evacuate the force of our Religion We have a Law and by that Law we ought to walk true Lex non valet nisi promulgata but this great King hath sent out his Proclamations He hath so shewed thee And least man should appeal from him as a severe Lawgiver he appeals to himself What is it the Lord requireth but that which is good so good that Justice and Mercy are Gods own attributes By his Prophet Ezekiel God takes it hainously and well he may that man should question his wayes by whom all things are ponder'd and who doth all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the Counsel of his Will with mature deliberation being Equity himself by way of challenge therefore are not my wayes equal And shall not the Judge of Heaven and Earth do right And though he give not account of his matters he is not bound to it Job 33. 13. Yet what is it Come now let us reason together saith the Lord Are they not the cords of man and the bands of love Hosea 11. 4. That I would draw you in by By downy perswasions not iron compulsions What are you afraid of these golden chains they are not Fetters for your feet but Bracelets for your necks Vices are chargeable but Vertue is free and you are wooed to it in a winning way Origen in his fourth book Contra Celsum breaks out thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Though it be mutual to Men and Beasts to catch and be catch'd yet there is a great deal of difference Ratione an violentia Now we are fetcht over with no rushing wind or imperious sowerness but with gales of grace They are ignoble disingenious spirits that are not won over by such wayes The Sacrifices under the Law were seasoned with salt which mystically denotes discretion and the Gospel is the best Rationale in the world Let me therefore court you to the duties of the Text by St. Pauls Suada Rom 12. 1. 'T is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Reasonable Service the
awaken every single soul to his duty Let us water our own Field by cutting a passage from the common River inferring with David when God at large saith seek ye my face Let every one subsume thy face Lord will I seek But what is it the Lord hath shewed thee what is good This is an extensive word what is seasonable what is delectable what is profitable The Apostle Philip. 4. 8. comments upon the word Whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are honest lovely and of good report The all seeing eye enlightning the understanding shews thee what is good for thy will to make choice of If thou beest not so generous as to make choice of vertue for its innate splendor yet surely so prudent thou wilt be to make thy election of that which is good for thine own sake Self-love will constrain thee to this as well as Gods Command And what I pray is it the Lord requires but to do justly So good that 't is a miracle man should need a Mandate for the acting of it or a Law-giver to require it Gregory Nazienzen calls man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an heavenly Statue of which no man was the Artificer and so may I call my Text. Justice Mercy and Humility these rich glories of the Soul are fit materials for a superstructure that may reach Heaven The language of the Text speaks it of no humane extraction The Precepts are so excellent and refin'd so agreeable to the spiritual part of our temper so apt to clense and sublimate the drossy part of man that they are even proportion'd to feast our Souls There is such a Facultas Deo Analoga an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Plato styles it betwixt this Law I am sure and the Soul that the Affections are necessitated to strike in i' th' Chorus Such a commanding Beauty man cannot chuse but be enamoured with its Rays the words like so many Philtres charming us into an holy obedience the very sound of them like Davids Harp may drive away the evil spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are Love-tokens left with the Sons of men to engage their affections to him Two of them be in the representations of Himself Upon such an account St. Chrysostome in his 12th and 13th Oration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words it thus concerning his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There needs no Oratory to allure men to these we need not heap up Arguments to convince you of their equity What need of an Interpreter to acquaint you with Gods meaning in them They have such proportion with our reason there is such a Magnetick power in the good that is offer'd to us as may well attract every rational being Such an intrinsick lovelyness and native fairness in them that 't is no eclipse or diminution of the liberty of the first being to say he could not but require them Since he hath created the World there must be Justice and Mercy too to preserve it else men would swallow down each other as greater Fish devour the less To the Question then the wicked put Psal 4. 6. Who will shew us any good our Prophet may make answer in the Text by just merciful actions God will put more joy in our hearts then when their Corn and Wine and Oyl their goods increased True if critically we distinguish none is good but one that is God but Vertue being the way to the Author of Vertue we must use the Stream of Justice to come to the Just one and the Rivulet of Mercy till we come to the Fountain of it Thus we love lower Excellencies because they lead to higher as we value gold Oar when we find it on the top of the earth because it leads to the Mine it self And if one poor spark of Vertue be so to be loved for its self as Justice much more is that infinite Rock of Orient and most shining Vertue to be loved in God The Text then is an Answer to the Question verse the 7th wherewith shall I come before the Lord And in opposition to their formal he offers a real way of pleasing God Do justly c. In which three words you have the two Tables of the Law all the second Table duties are comprehended in the former part of the Text Justice and Mercy and the sum of the first Table duties in the later and walk humbly that is notwithstanding you could plead exact equity towards the rich repeating Samuels Challenge and melting Charity towards the Poor yet still you have need of the Righteousness of a Saviour and the Mercy of our God therefore walk humbly Let 's take a Landscaip of the words though many through wilful ignorance or contempt pretend they know not the way of Duty yet God hath not left them in a dark Apocrypha but he hath vouchsaf'd a clear Apocalypse He hath shewed And though even earthly Princes think it below them to render a reason of their Decrees yet that men may be convinc'd of the equity of his proceedings that they are such as flow naturally from an enlightned soul if violence be not offered to it he appeals what is it the Lord requires 'T is plain also by the gradation of the language that whosoever pretends piety towards God must be sure to be a strict observer of Justice amongst his Brethren The foundation of all is laid in doing justly Yet in Mantissam over and besides Justice which is a due to all there is another Duty which though no humane Law can reach us if we act not up unto for whoever was impleaded for not relieving the Poor What Barr could Dives be brought unto though he withheld his goods from Lazarus to whom yet the Wise man saith they are due yet Gods Law requires even an office of mercy where an object of pity is tender'd therefore my Text adds to love Mercy And though we know the way and acknowledge the equity of it endeavouring to please God by a sttict heart towards Justice and an enlarged hand to Charity except God be our God and so actions perform'd as fruits of faith they are not acceptable my Text saith he must be thy God To the Duties of the second Table we must joyn Duties of the first These things ought ye to have done but by no means leave the main undone To walk humbly Neither yet will it suffice soberly to take the imployments upon us which God injoynes and humbly to manage them for a start only but with a steddy constant perseverence to the end This is call'd in my Text walking with God More distinctly First man pretends ignorance but God saith he hath shew'd 'T is not to be denyed but many lye still in darkness their foolish hearts blinded so that they cannot understand spiritual things savingly discerning spirits they have not they cannot order their speeches or their persons as they should They neither know the affirmative nor Negative part of their duty they neither see what injustice they
Saepe ipsa nostra Justitia ad examen divinae Justitiae deducta Injustitia est sordet in districtione Judicis quod fulget in estimatione operantis Our best Gold will scarce hold out weight in the Ballance of the Sanctuary Much care therefore should we have in our evenness of Justice Davids Justice was as large as his Dominions 2 Sam. to all his People Let Judgement run down like water and Righteousness like a mighty stream that toucheth every door equally No Fractus no Windings and a sameness as in water towards all as Justice must wet the head so down it must run to the skirts of the Garment like the Sun it rejoyceth as a Giant to run his course Sol non alius diviti alius Pauperi citius Solem à Caelo quam Justitiam a Fabritio His beams are equally shed abroad Laws are made without respect of persons and when they are so executed then 't is an honour to the Distributer and a Happiness to the People That this may be done Praecipitancy must be avoided I will go down now and see saith the Judge Omniscient concerning Sodom The Eternal God takes time to teach Man to weigh matters A Cause may like the Israelites Cloud look bright enough on the one side and yet Aegyptian-darkness on the other Si Judicas cognosce and when the Cause is ponder'd the fear of man must be banish'd A Magistrate is Pudore Blanditiis Metu major saith Isiodore Pilate stumbled at this Stone If thou let this Man go thou art not Caesars Friend said the Jews down falls his Courage at this word and he lost three Friends thereby God Caesar and his Conscience The Ensign of the Law-giving-Tribe was a Lion and with these Salomons Throne was supported Phineas was a Man of a Noble Spirit and the Contempt of Families could not terrifie Job When the Magistrate is valiant for the Truth O how becoming is that Spirit of Power But VVhat went you out for to see a Reed shaken with every wind alass such a one is not worth looking on he that doth Justice must not be flexible upon the Account of any Relation or Reward Affections may pervert Judgment When the Object is too near the eye that Approximation and Vicinity is a prejudice to the sight Justice is the Souls Serenity a kind of Stoical Apathy I may say as Aristotle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is a pure Intellect not onely without a Sensitive part but without a Will pure Judgement without Affections All have an equal Interest in it and Priviledge by it Non Sanguinis necessitudo sed virtutis Cognatio proximos facit saith St. Ambrose So that the Magistrate must be Speculum non Coloratum a Glass not prejudiced not prepossest with any Tincture as unconcern'd as the Glass It was the Commendation of the Tribe of Levi Deut. 33. 8. That he said of his Father I know thee not What Had these Levites lost Natural Affections No but they knew not their nearest Relations so as to be partial in the Execution of Gods Commands Iustitia non novit patrem non novit matrem veritatem novit personam non accipit Deum imitatur 'T is a great piece of the Magistrates Knowledge to be Ignorant of his Acquaintance lest they should Byass him or his Affections Exit personam judicis quisquis amicum induit saith Cicero A noble Resolution that was of Saul had it been well grounded 1 Sam. 14. 24. 39. Had he done well in Adjuring the People he had done eminently well in resolving not to spare his own Son Jonathan Personal Relations must not sway in Publick Concerns Though Coniah was as a Signet upon my right hand yet should he be pluckt thence And as the Provocation of the dearest Relation must be hazarded rather then that of God and the Conscience so much more light in the Ballance should a Gift be Hugo in his Homilies calls this Fatuam Reverentiam alicui exhibitam non causa debita sed propter Vtilitatem 'T is below a generous Soul and may Judas his Quid dabitis never receive other Answer then St. Pauls Silence Felix looked that he should have given him Money but his expectation was frustate Lyranus hath a Note I cannot here pass for there is as great a temptation to a Christian to favour a poor man in his cause out of tender comiseration as there is in hopes from the rich yet this must not be done neither saith he ne forte motu pietatis indiscretae condescenderis ei in prejudicium justiciae These are the chiefest Remora's of the Ship of Justice but the remembrance of your names and places will break through these pitiful retards I have said ye are Gods saith God himself of you If really you would be so let your hearts be cloathed with Zeal as your bodies with Scarlet which is an Emblem of it The Magistrate is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lex loquens quid vanae sine moribus leges proficiunt Be greater then by your example than your office This puts life into the Law when you are the transcript of it without which it is but a dead Letter Holiness gives boldness God looks for such men to stand in the Gap and make up the breaches of Justice Such as eyeing the day of the Righteous Judge are timerous with a Laban or a Doeg to abuse their power as knowing they are call'd Shields of the Earth to whom power is given principally for protection not vexation or ruine of others Nemo prudens punit quia peccatum est saith Seneca sed ne peccetur Revocari enim praeterita non possunt futura prohibentur 't is not in the power of punishment to recall what is past but to prevent what is possible the reaching 'T is in exemplum that Israel might hear and fear and do no more so presumptuously Lest man should mistake the ground of his power as if it was given him to march Agrippa like 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Text tells him of another design that God hath and therefore he backs his power with a precept of pity Love mercy Non mihi sed populo said Adrian the Emperour and the Philosophers words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hoc Reges habent munificum ingens prodesse miseris saith Seneca The Apostle calls the Magistrate a Minister for good and was it not for this addition of Mercy even Justice it self might be suspected for Cruelty We must then do justice so as that we must love mercy also Justice is a debt upon Mans account Mercy is Gods over-measure One of the Kings of France said to a Woman who on her knees beg'd justice of him Rise up or beg mercy for I owe thee justice Man punisheth if we be not just but God punisheth if we be not merciful his wayes are not as our wayes nor his thoughts as our thoughts he hath many supererogating moreovers And love Mercy And now that I have shewed how Justice