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A18707 The true trauaile of all faithfull Christians, hovve to escape the daungers of the vvicked vvorld VVhereunto is added a christian exercise for priuate housholders. Chub, William. 1585 (1585) STC 5211; ESTC S117145 53,782 143

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Snayle Man compared to a Snayle who in his nature hath these thrée properties hee is slowe in going blinde in sight defileth the way that he goeth in for commonly you shall sée hys trace Euen so mankind in going any the wayes that a mā should trauell in namely the way of godlines of truth of fayth of honesty of mercy of loue of equity which are the onely wayes we shoulde treade in thys world we finde him wholly to bée very slowe and slacke in his pace and touching his sight euen as he hath lame legs to tread his pathes euen a snailes pace so hath hee blinde eyes to see the same pathes as they ought to bee séene and behold but rather in hys slowe and blind trauell defileth his passage either with ignoraunce pride whoredome enuye theft murther or some one filthye sinne or other In so much that if man doo but account the wandring motions of hys mynde the wylling consents of his hart and the wicked actions of hys body hée shall in himselfe beholde such a filthy account as if with a conscience and consideration he looke backe and be hold but the trauell of a fewe dayes I wyll not say many yéeres peraduenture he shall be ashamed to beholde hys defiled pathes and the steppes that hée hath left behind him so filthy O Lorde howe many desires arise in the concupisence of mans flesh howe many wicked wyshes spring out from the bad affection of his hart howe many vanities haue taken possession in his eyes and howe many felons are written in hys bloddy handes how many bright daies hée hath occupyed in drousie sléepe to wander in the darke night howe hée hath obeyed sathan refused his swéete sauiour Howe he hath followed fables and refused the comfortable counsell of the Gospell howe he hath turned hys eyes from hys poore afflicted brethren and followed the wicked crewe of infidells how he hath shut vp his compassion from the poore and opened his liberality to drunkards wantons and light persons what greater losse of nobilitie cane there be then to refuse the glorious company of heauen yea euen that swéete Christ himselfe and to be conuersant with sathan hys crew what greater deformity then to flee from the protection of the almighty to be subiecto eyther to the flesh or to the world and what greater shame then to cast of the iewels of honesty and godlines and to be bankerupt with the infidels of thys worlde not able to boast of one good work no not so much as delighted with one godly thought God himselfe hath proclaimed all his seruice to be doone in the open light and open places and in all congregations namely faith loue charity pitty patience equity the preaching of hys word the vsing of his Sacraments insomuch that he that is hys seruaunt in these thinges may boldly knocke his breast and say Hic murus aheneus esto nil conscere sibi Horace E●isto 1. nulla impallescere culpa To know no guiltines and to blush at no offence is a brasen wall on the otherside sathan shutteth vp all hys workes in hugger munger he wyll haue none of the come in light as for example the théefe the whoremonger the drunkard and euery euill dooer wyl not be knowne of his action neyther committe any of these wycked offences in the sight of the worlde but secretelie and in feare of daunger yet notwithstanding such is the folly of thys world and the peruersnes of mans nature that notwithstanding that light be come into the worlde Iohn 3.19 yet men loue darknes more then light because theyr déedes are euill Thus you sée the whole state of man described and his lyfe to consist of a weake substaunce his estate in mysery and his honour cast downe to the grounde A prayer O Eternall God and most mercifull father who of thine owne goodnes haste vouchsafed to frame vs of a vile substance made vs to thine owne similitude and likenes and didst set our first parents Adam and Eue in the pleasant Paradise and didst crown them with innocency immortality which they lost by their disobedience plucking vpō thēselues their posterity thy iust curse by the which wee alwayes in this transitorye world sauour of sin sorrowe death yet thou of thy goodnes O Lord forgetting thy wrath and remembring thy mercy didst giue vs thy sonne Iesus Christ to restore vs againe to our estate and bring vs againe into thy fauour who hath already entred the gates taken possession for vs in thy heauenly Paradise where wee shall bee assured of euerlasting comfort ioy and blessednes Vouchsafe O Lorde wee humbly beseech thee to comfort our harts with thy holy spirite and open our vnderstandings with the continuall preaching of thy holy worde that we may truely acknowledge thee to be our onely creator preseruer and redeemer and that we may so viewe and behold our owne lamentable estate and hauing our owne insufficiencie alwaies b●fore our eyes may alwayes flee to thee for succour graunt O Lord that wee may so acknowledge our owne weakenes that we bee not caryed away with vaine pompe nor fed with filthy pleasure and lust nor drawen away by the allurements of the world but may alwaies settle a firme confidēce in thee which art the only stay gage of our frayle and casuall estate for thy sonne Iesus Christ his sake our onely mediatour and aduocate Amen ¶ Howe Sinne doth alwayes budde forth and grow in our nature and how it is nourished and encreased in our flesh ●p 2. SIthence the fall of Adam there is a certaine defect and corruption of nature in man by the which hée is prone and ready to commit sin and neuer able fully to satisfie the Lawe of God this corruptnes lieth hidden and taketh roote in that nature of ours which procéeded from Adam and buddeth or breaketh foorth by the thoughts and wyll of the hart béeing enclined vnto euill euen in the whole course of our life en 8.21 as God himselfe sayd The imagination of mans hart is euill euen from hys youth Although we sée in youth no such apparant showe of sin as wée doo in ryper yéeres yet that euil which is called originall or inhabiting dooth assuredly so remaine that sometime is séene anger reuenge vntruth in them and then concupiscence which sticketh in nature from the beginning and aptnes to sin dooth appeare euerye day more and more euen as age dooth encrease and then as S. Iames fayth Ia. 1 14.1● He is drawen away by his owne concupiscence and is enticed then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth foorth sinne and sinne when it is finished bringeth foorth death Sinne it selfe is found in our corrupt nature but the order and encreasing thereof is séene in the maturitye and ripenes of yéeres Touching the first sinne and simple sin which is called Originall The prophet speaketh Psal 51.5 Behold I was shapen in wickednes and in sinne
the holy Ghost We receyue an inward féeling quickening and stirring vp of our mindes That whereas the fleshe sinne death and Sathan do séeke dayly to suppresse vs and burthen vs with manye miseries infirmities and leade vs euen vnto the gate of desperation the holye Ghost doth certifie our spirite that we are gods children he will preserue vs that the gates of hell shall not preuaile Question Why then fayth is a knowledge and an assuraunce sent from God to vs and nothing els It requireth nothing in vs Aunswere Yes It is a louing consent and embrasing of the same knowledge and assuraunce on our part yea and doth require in vs a framing of our selues agréeable to all those dueties and seruices as are expressed in the worde of God and as do become good Christians Question VVhat benefite haue you by fayth Aunswere By fayth we are iustified that is we are accepted of God as righteous because of his sonne Iesus Christe and shal be restored agayne into his fauour and haue the felowship of the blessed saintes in euerlasting ioye and blisse Question If then by faith we are iustified we neede not good workes Aunswere Fayth onely doth iustifie but this woord onelie doth not exclude good works For fayth is not a perfect faith vnlesse it be of it selfe fuller of good workes so that fayth and the workes procéeding from that fayth are not diuers but one As a trée and his twiggs or lymmes is but all a trée and such a fayth is accepted and knowen to God And yet many deceyue man For the hippocrite may do good works and yet haue no fayth so likewise fayth it selfe generally is not allowed For the Diuelles beléeue and yet they tremble that maketh their fayth to be nothing woorth Wherefore we must neither iudge nor learne faith by imagination vnlesse it procéede from the woorde of of God For that fayth which is sowen in our hearts by the holy Ghost and watred by the same spirite cannot stād as an idle and fr●●tlesse trée but bringeth foorth abundance of fruite for wée may not thinke that the gyftes of the holy ghost wherof faith is the chiefest are barren but fruitfull Question Then by your comparison and meaning vnlesse God water the tree which he him selfe hath graffed There is no fruit so that in him is all and he is all in all what neede heere anie thing to be required in vs Aunswere We are likened to good trées not too badde for our capacitie not for a captiousnes for in vs there is affection reason and will which are not in trées therefore we should gouerne and direct our selues according vnto the rule of fayth Euen as the ship-maister coming with his vessell on the Seas letteth not the ship to runne whether shée list but looketh to the North starre and is guided by the windes and with all diligence and care auoydeth the sandes and the Rockes and yet all this is in gods handes And so we may reason infinitely God doth sende vs abundance of Corne and victualls but we receiue it order it and vse it or els we maye starue Question What good workes be there best knowen and seene in a perfect faith Aunswere Many both spiritual temporal the spiritual works are loue prayer patiēce in affliction hearing and daylie exercising of gods holye woorde vsing the Sacraments and such lyke The temporall workes are generally to do good to all men to giue Almes to Fast to pittie the poore and helpe their necessities to do equitie and iustice to vse our selues honestly faythfully and orderly in obedience to our Prince Maiestrates Parents and superiours Question Then if we haue fayth we neede no more but to leaue of by the same Aunswere If we haue a good father it is ynough but we may not leaue of by the same for as the lyfe of man is not mayntayned by one meale and as he ought not afterward to be carelesse for his maintenaunce but to haue a care for the daylie prouision thereof Euen so should he alwayes mayntaine and strengthen fayth that it might liue vnto lyfe for in our corrupt nature it may weaken and sterue if the fleshe or the enemies reigning in the flesh shoulde haue the vpper hand A spirituall thing cannot be maintayned with a carnall thing although it be mayntained in a carnall thing fayth being a spirituall thing may not be mayntayned neyther with vs nor of vs but in vs and that thing or thinges that are agréeable to the proprietie of fayth is the sufficient maynteynaunce our nature is not agréeable to the propertie of fayth and therefore our nature cannot be the maintenance and vnlesse this fayth be maynteyned it will be ouergrowen with the wéeds of the flesh and so wil dye and then we perish with it Question What is the true maintenaunce of fayth Aunswere The exercising of gods holy word continuall prayer and vsing the Sacramentes Question How shall we exercise gods worde Aunswere Not onely by reading it but by hearing learned preachers to expounde it and not by hearing it expounded but by vnderstanding it whē it is expounded and not onely by hearing and vnderstanding it but afterward by applying and vsing it vnto the honour of God and our euerlasting comfort and reformation Question How shall we praye Aunswere Not with the lipps but with our hart not ignorauntly 1. Co. 14.15 but with vnderstanding hauing alwayes in the very bottome of our harte the sorrofulnesse of our sinne and the ioyfulnesse of Gods mercy shaking of the one with defiance neuer to put it on agayne and embracing the other with affiaunce alwayes to holde it fast Psal 25.1.2 lifting vpp our hartes chéerefully and beléeuing verely that the Lord doth heare vs when we call vnto hym and wyll helpe vs. Question vvhy should we pray continually Aunswere Luke 21.36 Ro. 12.11.12 Eph. 6.18.19 Mat. 26.41 1. Pet 5.8 Because we are so commaunded and for that our enimies do cōtinually hang about vs and tempt vs and séeke euery day and euery houre to bring vs to destruction both of body and soule Question Should we pray but for our selues onelye and for none els Aunswere Yes we ought to pray one for an other Acts. 7.60 Ex. 23.11 Acts. 12.5 Nu. 47.48 aswel our enimies as our fréends that the vertue and force of the prayer which shall procéede from the mouth of the godly may extend aswell vnto the vngodly for their amendement as also to the oppressed for their ease and also to the néedefull for their helpe Question Ought we to pray for the deade Aunswere No. Question vvhye Aunswere Their estate is not such as néedeth our prayers for God in his secret wisedome hath elected whom he wyll and his determination will he not alter wherefore those which are appoynted to saluation cannot be in better state by our praiers and those that are damned can we not redéeme by our praiers vnlesse we will make our praiers of greater
Which ioyes as S. Paul sayeth although our hartes cannot conceiue yet let our harts beléeue those vnspeakeable ioyes and although the worthinesse and excellency of the place be such as we may dispayre of in our owne iudgement because of our great vnworthines and the multitude of sinnes yet if we beléeue that Christ is that sonne of the liuing God and that he hath payed the ransome for our sinnes and that he hath nayled our sinnes to his crosse also if we turne vnto him loue him and obey him with all our hart with all our minde and with all our soule then will he assuredly bring vs vnto that place of consolation as he sayeth in Iohn And though I goe to prepare a place for you Iohn 14 3 I will come agayne and receyue you vnto my selfe that where I am there might ye be also Ma. 19.28.29 Also the Euangelist Mathewe sayth And Iesus sayde vnto them verely I say vnto you that when the sonne of man shal sit in the throne of his maiesty ye which followed me in the regeneration shall sit also vpon the twelue thrones and iudge the twelue tribes of Israell And who so euer shall forsake houses or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or childrē or lāds for my names sake he shall receiue an hundred folde more and shall inherite euerlasting life These wordes are not spoken by a mortall man who may lye and deceyue but they are spoken by the very sonne of God hym selfe whose word shal stand and endure for euer tyme shall not chaunge it nor age shall not weare it out And furthermore forasmuch as the nature of mā is desirous to be resolued whether wée shall know one another after this lyfe I thought good to answere briefely that as our state shal be farre better so shall also our knowledge be farre clearer for in this world we are the more ignoraunt our sences deceyued by reasō of a corruption But in the world to come when we shal be chaunged into an incorruptible estate then our sences shal be much more clearer and we shall know farre the better and let vs be thus perswaded that that worlde is a world of knowledge not of ignoraunce as our sauiour Christ him selfe sayth vnto the chiefe priest that would knowe whether he were Christ the sōne of God or no He answeared thou haste sayde it neuerthelesse I say vnto you hereafter shall ye sée the sonne of man sitting at the right hand of the power of God Mat. 26 24. and comming in the cloudes of heauen which is to no purpose that they sée his sitting and his comming vnlesse they know it and yet he speaketh this vnto the wicked Iewes that did crucifie him that they should sée it know it Much more assuredly shall the righteous sée him and knowe him The Apostle Paul touching this matter sayth 1. Cor. 13.12 Nowe we sée through a glasse darkely but then shal we sée face to face Now I knowe in part but then shall I know euen as I am knowen So that now what remayneth more comfortable to the godly and to them that thirst after Christ Iesu then to go to a place after this life replenished with all ioye comforte consolation and euerlasting lyfe vnto the which also our sauiour christ Iesus shall conducte vs by his mightie power and in the which is all fulnes of knowledge perfection of a blessed state The God of all blessing and comforte for his sonne Christ Iesus his sake spéedely bring vs vnto that celestiall ioye peaceable estate To whome both with the holy ghost be all glory dominion and power now and for euer So be it A Prayer O Mercifull God the king of all creatures and gouernour of all thinges which of thy mercy and goodnes didest bring thy people out of Egipt from the bondage of Pharo and didest conducte them through the red sea into the comfortable land of Canaā we beseech thee of thy accustomed mercy deliuer vs frō the bondage of sinne the tiranny of Sathan and the persecution of the world and conduct vs vnto the heauenly Ierusalem the onely Canaan of our euerlasting inheritaunce where we may raigne in eternall felicitie with thee and the sonne Iesus Christ to whome both with the holy Ghost be all honour and glory now and for euer Amen FINIS A Christian exercise for priuate Housholders Question WHat doo you chiefely professe Aunswere Christianitie Question What is the badge of a Christian Aunswere Fayth Question VVhat is fayth Aunswere The verye same thing that cannot playnely be expressed in wordes for it is aboue the reach of man and therfore not vnder the reason of man Howe beit we may giue eche to other intelligence of it by wordes out of the Scripture and by the deedes of the godly which is that it is the séede of assured reconciliation sowen by God in our heartes for his sonne Iesus Christ his sake to stirre vs to comfort and to bind vs to obedience to giue vs a true certificate in our consciences that we are called againe to be the children of God and that we are ingraffed into the body of his sonne Iesus Christ and to be his members So that although fayth be such a thing as is giuen ●●om aboue as a seale of gods mercy Yet it is required here be low of vs as a talent of assuraunce and knowledge Luke 19. receiued of him to be increased by vs. Question What doth fayth woorke in vs Aunswere The knowledge of God the assuraunce of our redemption and the consolation of conscience through the holy Ghost Question Let me vnderstand at large your meaning by this Aunswere By the knowledge of God we learne that he is our creator our gouernour and defender in all necessities daungers And as he hath a speciall care daylie to prouide for our bodies in giuing the plentifulnesse of the earth so are we perswaded that he hath a more care for our soules to preserue them to be honorable ornaments in his heauenly mansion Furthermore by this knowledge we confesse hym to be the Almightie God to whom all honour ought to be attributed of thinges in heauen and thinges in earth whereby we abandon all Idolatrie and superstition as meere inuention of man and as perswasions of Sathan to delude men and deface the knowledge of the high and mightie God whom we worship as our maker and acknowledge to be our defendour in all euilles ghostly and bodyly By the assuraunce of our redemption we are perswaded that Christ Iesus hath payed the ransome of our sins and is the sufficient sacrifice to appease gods wrath and hath for all the church fulfilled the whole lawe hath vanquished death sinne and hel and hath don all that for vs which is required of vs so that in hym God is well pleased and by hym the gats of heauen are opened and euerlasting life is promised By the consolation of the conscience through