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A25383 Apospasmatia sacra, or, A collection of posthumous and orphan lectures delivered at St. Pauls and St. Giles his church / by the Right Honourable and Reverend Father in God, Lancelot Andrews ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1657 (1657) Wing A3125; ESTC R2104 798,302 742

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heat nor the cold but after the fall they were passible and then they made them garments Nakednesse opposite to Ornamentum Again Nakednesse is taken against ornament with costly apparel which is to please the eye as it is a● large described in Esay 3. 18 c. But Adam and Eve needed not the beauty of apparel they needed not the silk of the silk-worm nor the wool of Sheep not the skins of rare beasts nor any cloth of gold nor any needle work the softest raiment and the richest apparel would have been no grace but a disgrace to Adam in Paradise he was naked and yet the robe of righteousnesse was his attire when Christ was transfigured upon the mount Thabor his face did shine as the Sunne and his clothes were white as the light Matthew 17. 2. Christ was bright as the Sunne For that Adam and Eve were conversant with God they had that brightnesse which passed the glorie of the richest apparel their brightnesse was like the shining of the Sunne if the Sunne were covered with velvet it were no grace but a blemish to the Sunne and if Adam had been adorned in rich attire it would have disgraced the bright shining beams of his innocence And though that Adam by his disobedience lost this his brightnesse and we also lost it by his transgression innocencie and the robe of righteousnesse was their garment but after they were apparelled with shame But by Christ Jesus we look to be restored to the first state of Paradise to be covered with the robe of righteousnesse Esay 61. 10. then this corruptible body shall put on incorruption and this mortall shall put on immortality 1 Cor. 15. 53. then shall the just men shine as the Sunne in the Kingdome of their Father Matthew 13. 43. then shall our beauty be without blemish our minde shall be upright our glorie unspeakable Then as it in Esay 24. 23. the Moon shall be abashed and the Sunne ashamed when God shall reign in Sion and glorie shall be before his Saints Why Man created naked For what cause they were created naked and were not clothed The Fathers answer that there is a resemblance between nakednesse and innocencie Nakednesse is to be bare from outward clothing Innocencie is to be bare from inward naughtinesse and there is a resemblance between deceit and a covering or mask there be those that have a shew of Godlinesse yet have they denied the power thereof 2 Tim. 3. 5. there be those that cover their deceit with the hood of 〈◊〉 as Peter speaketh and with the cloak of shame as Paul speaketh in 2 Cor. 4. 2. they cover their craftinesse Let then our minds and thoughts be innocent let them be naked from all kinde of wickednesse for as Paul speaketh in Hebrews 4. 13. God discerneth the thoughts and intents of the heart neither is there any Creature which is not manifest in his sight all things are naked and open to his eyes Innocencie to Adam and Eve was a glorious garment the robe of righteousnesse was their attire the man that went down from Jerusalem to Jericho in Luke 10. 30. and fell among theeves was robbed of rayment and was wounded to death which is the case of Mankinde after the fall was restored by the tender compassion of Christ the true Samaritane to be apparelled in the glorie and rayment of righteousnesse They were not 〈◊〉 The second thing is the state of the soul they were not ashamed they were not confounded their soul was not troubled In Revel 19. 8. the wite of the Lamb which is the Church shall be arrayed in pure fine limaen and the fine linnen is the righteousnesse of the Saints their thoughts were honest their soul at rest but the disquiet of the soul is by passions and perturbations Yet God at the first did create in Adam and Eve affections as in 〈◊〉 5. 22. Love joy peace long suffering gentlenesse meeknesse temperance which are the fruits of the spirit Adam had joy and love which were his 〈◊〉 affections and as the train to wait upon his original righteousnesse but the corosive affections which are in Man is shame grief 〈◊〉 c. which are the fruits of the Divell and of the flesh these 〈◊〉 the Divels Sergeants to arrest Man God himself after the 〈◊〉 would have these to be in us to punish us and to tyrannize over us As the Jebusites which were in Jerusalem as a scourge to them the which was called the Citie of the Jebusites Joshah 23. 7. and 18. 28. shame and sinne doe scourge us with whips not heard their stripes are worse than of an iron scourge as a Father saith well peccata nos surdo vulnere verberant The original hath and they were not confounded So long as sinne hath shame in his cheeks 〈◊〉 is counted a virtue to be 〈◊〉 in Paradise was accounted to be an evill and the least evill it is now If this small blemish shame were not to be found in Paradise then greater offences were not for shame is called primitiae peccati the first fruit of sinne and after shame came fear as it is in chap. 3. 8. and after fear sorrow seized upon Man This word of confounding is taken from a troubled vessel where the lees being stirred doe 〈◊〉 up to the top and shame we see bringeth a great part of the blood of the heart to the face When Adam and Eve had transgressed they then were ashamed and covered their shame chap. 3. 7. and men cover their faces that are ashamed after shame seized upon man his peace was dishonored his bleslednesse was taken away if a man now be innocent we doe say he is not ashamed and thus and that very well the School-men doe reason If the steps of sinne as shame be not found in man then the fruits of sinne are not in him the fruit of sinne is shame and the end thereof is death as it is in Romans 6. 21. see Proverbs 28. 14. that after shame a man hardneth his heart and becommeth shamelesse but after that comes punishment Esay 24. Shame fear sorrow are the Divels Livery it is the Divell that doth cloath Man with shame as with a garment But innocencie and righteousnesse are Gods plants God made Man without sinne without shame Now of these two joyntly They were naked and yet they were not ashamed They wanted shame he saith not and he felt no want of apparel And Austin saith well upon these words of Moses Non laudat 〈◊〉 sed innocentiam mentis for in that he was not ashamed he was innocent and he that sinneth not hath noe cause to be ashamed and now if a man have committed a fault and shameth not we call him impudent But if he be innocent and shameth not we say not that he is impudent but that he is couragious and confident for the wicked flyeth when none pursueth but the righteous are bold and confident as a Lyon Proverbs 28. 1.
what I have said Thus the devill magnifyeth his word and her sense that so by the eating and seeing his dixit might receive their Sentence of allowance Thus much may serve for the withdrawing of Eve from her beleefe by a matter of sense Seeing Now for the manner of alurement Shee seeing the Tree was good for meate and pleasant to the eyes though the eare by hearing of excellency and knowledge doe move her yet hearing these things doth but warme her desire and concupiscence to transgress it is the eye and the beholding of the pleasant fruit which setteth the concupiscence on fire to eate thereof It is the eye that maketh the heart like a bakers Oven that maketh concupiscence to burne as a flame of fire Osee 7. 6. Seeing moveth much more than hearing when we tell you of the joyes of Heaven which are inestimable of the paynes of hell which are intollerable by our speeches you are nothing moved but if you might see with your eyes the joyes of Heaven you would be enamoured of them might you see the paynes and torments of hell which sinners have you would abhorre sin and tremble at the torments Eve was moved more by seeing than by hearing In chap. 45. 28. Jacob was moved with joy to heare the report of his sonnes that Joseph was alive but yet he beleeved them not but when he saw the chariots which Joseph had sent to carry him then he was revived and he said My sonne Joseph is yet alive it was the seeing of the 〈◊〉 not the saying of Israel that made Jacob say descendam videbo illum antequam morior that kindled his desire to say I will goe and see Joseph before I die The desire of the buyer and of the seller is moved by the sight the buyer is desirous of the ware not because the seller sayeth it is good but for that he seeth and discerneth the goodness of the cloth or other thing by his eye and the seller is moved the more when he seeth ready money laid forth before his eyes seeing in things lawfull is much more effectual than hearing and seeing is much more dangerous than hearing of things unlawfull the Serpent thinketh he cannot bring his temptation to full effect unlesse he bringeth her videre lignum and therefore the Serpents petition as it were to Eve is but this I will not bid you so much as touch the Tree nor eate only vide ne comedito Heare me what I shall say doe but behold how pleasant the fruit is and see if you can abstain it is expedient to see that which we may not eate and to know sin that we may avoid it But seeing the Tree is an occasion to eate of the fruit the occasion of sinne which is the seeing of the fruit is to be cut off hearing was an occasion to make Eves heart proud and beholding the Tree caused her haughtie lookes and as it is Prov. 21. 4. A haughtie looke and a proud heart is the plowing of sinne they had liberty to stand or to fall but we must not use our libertie as an occasion to sinne Galat. 5. 13. S. Chrysostome upon that place saith That not only sinne but the desire and the occasion of sinne by all means is to be cut off Though that the seeing the forbidden Tree were not semen peccati the sowing of sinne yet it is like plowing of sin it is a meanes to perswade us to eate by seeing to take an occasion to offend without regard of Gods commandement not being warie when we have forsworne sinne if we retaine the occasion of sin we may easily be caused to sinne Exod. 10. 7. Pharaoh was content the Israelites should depart yet he would have their beasts remain behinde which were an occasion of offence neither sin nor occasion of sin must be left but must be cut off the eye is an occasion to desire and a means to discover 〈◊〉 There are two waies to convey sinne into us by the eare and by the eye and there are two waies to discover sinne the mouth and the eye because the eye is a way both in the conveyance and in the discoverie of sinne therefore say the Fathers God hath placed lachrymas the teares of 〈◊〉 which are the blood of the soule and by the eyes the yellow-Jaundis is discovered by the eyes wherethey doe insinuate That the eye is the broker to all sinne In chap. 6. 2. for that the children of God did see the daughters of men to be farre they tooke unto them wives of all they liked And chap. 10. 13. Lot lifted up his eyes and for that he saw the playne of Jordane was well watred and very fruitfull he chose it for his dwelling It is the eye that provoketh to lust and to pleasure it is the eye that provoketh to 〈◊〉 Ahab desired Naboths Vineyard because he saw it did adjoyn to his pallace He that beholdeth the clouds and observeth the windes shall nor sow nor reap Preach 11. 4. The eye is a mean to make the man idle seeing provoketh to covetousnesse Joshua 7. 21. Achan by his seeing among the specil a goodly Babylonish garment and a wedge of gold he covered them and took them Sathan when he saw that Eves concupiscence was loose he knew she would easily yeeld to the temptation if she might but see the fruit the jaundise of concupiseence might be perceived in her eyes In 1 Sam. 18. 9. When Saul saw how David was esteemed it is there said that he had one eye on David as if he looked asquint in that he looked on David with a learing eye for that he envyed and hated David So a learing eye is the jaundise of a dogged nature He that winketh with the eye worketh sorrow Prov. 10. 10. for often a fair countenance covereth a mischievous heart So in such an eye is the jaundise of deceit Salomon Prov. 30. 13. there are those whose eyes are haughtie and whose eye lids are lifted up There is the jaundise of pride Esay 30. 16. the daughters of Sion are said to walk with wandring eyes wherein is the jaundise of lust Prov. 17. 24. The eyes of a fool are in the corners of the world saith Salomon By such a foolish eye you may know the jaundise of foolishnesse An unchaste eye is the signe of an unchaste heart The Devil saith a Father well by the eye conveyeth the nose of his bellows to set her even in a fire to eat of the fruit Visus solet excitare somnientem quod incautus aspicit invitus despicit he that unwarily beholdeth the fruit perforce shall look into it They served the Lord at first in fear and 〈◊〉 in trembling Psal. 2. 11. But the seeing the fruit did not only stirre up but also increased sinne Amos his continuall seeing of his sister did increase his love to Thamar and when sinne is banished away yet seeing recalleth sinne And therefore that all may be well not only
the Corinthians the thirteenth chapter would that we should attribute it to sorrow for sin that it was because his sacrifice pleased not God but it is not that godly sorrow but the worldly sorrow that bringeth destruction of body and soul. The carefulnesse of Cains sorrow must be considered by the cause and effect of it Sense of evill the object of sorrow If God be the cause of his sorrow it is not to be commended for although the sense of evill be the natural object of sorrow yet God may be the matter of sorrow As if some good befall our enemie then we have just cause of sorrow but if good befall our brother the law of Nature and Gods law will not suffer us to be sorry for that But to be sorry for the good of our brother that commeth without any detriment or hurt to us that is intollerable and can be no just cause of sorrow and therefore Cain in that he conceiveth sorrow for the good that came to his Brother without his hurt is guilty of a worldly sorrow that is to be condemned The effect of his sorrow may be of two sorts First If he were sory to the end he might punish and be 〈◊〉 of himself for his carelesness in Gods service Godly sorrow then it was a godly sorrow and worthy commendation but if insteed of working revenge upon himself for doing ill it makes him persecute his brother for doing good then it is no good sorrow Secondly If it were such a sorrow as did provoke him to emulation as Gods purpose in receiving the Gentils that 〈◊〉 was to provoke the Jewes to follow their faith the eleventh chapter of the Romans and the eleventh verse then it was a godly sorrow but if it be such a sorrow as makes him worse then it is no good sorrow If we examine Cains sorrow we shall finde first it was 〈◊〉 and therefore evill for if God know not the cause as appeares in that he asks why art thou sorry then no doubt he had no cause to be sorry If we come to the supposed cause of his sorrow it was not any evill that happened on his part for then he would have sought to remove it but the cause of his sorrow was good not the good of an enemie for then it were tollerable but 〈…〉 bonum innoxium such as was not hurtfull to him therefore it was an 〈◊〉 sorrow For the effect of Cains sorrow godly sorrow doth vindicare malum in se the second to the Corinthians the seventh chapter verse the eleventh it hath two effects 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not only a grief of heart for sinne committed but a taking of revenge for the same as it makes a man sorry for the sin past so it makes him carefull and zealous of himself for the time to come and this makes the sorrow of repentance acceptable to God Sorrow of envy but the sorrow of envy is no such sorrow Cain was not grieved for that he had not served God as he ought neither took he envy of himself but he doth the more hurt for through envy he slew his brother the first epistle of John and the first chapter so farre was he from being provoked by his example to good Secondly where the effect of godly sorrow is to doe lesse evill and more grod he did not chasten his body and bring it under the first to the Corinthians and the ninth chapter but he proceeded de malo in pejus the first to Timothy and the third chapter The goodnsse of Abels sacrifice did not provoke him to doe good but to doe hurt Why slaies he his brother because his brothers works were good and his own evill the first of John the third chapter and the twelfth verse The Wise man sa th anger is cruel and wrath is raging but who can stand before envy the twenty seventh of the Proverbs and the fourth verse Envy and 〈◊〉 is joyned with murther where anger and envy take place there is nothing but murther therefore they are joyned together the first of the Romans and the twenty ninth verse the fifth of the Galatians and the twenty first verse Examples and this is plain in Esau who so soon as he maligned Jacob for the birthright and blessing vowed to kill him Genesis the twenty seventh This was the effect of the envy of the Sonnes of Jacob against their brother Joseph Genesis the thirty seventh so because David was respected of the people more than Saul of whom they sang David hath slain his ten thousand and Saul but a thousand Saul was moved to envy and sought to make him away the first of Samuel the eighteenth chapter and the seventh and eighth verses And the cause why the Jewes put Christ to death was propter invidiam the twenty sixth of Matthew the eighteenth verse Envy stayeth not it self till it bringeth forth murther and therefore is to be condemned and avoided Envy the daughter of Pride and self-love Touching the originall of envy which as we see is accompanied with such effects it is the daughter of pride and self-love a drop of that poyson where with the Serpent at the first infected Eve and which Adam received from her and was derived from them both to their posterity by means whereof there are as the Apostle saith certain blinde and absurd men the second to the Thessalonians and the third chapter indeed beasts in shape of men so blinded with the love of themselves that they think no man should be respected more tham they they think themselves the only men in the world the twenty first of Job and the first and take to themselves that which God only challengefh to himself Isaiah the fourty ninth ego sum non est praeter me The absurdity of Cain thorough envy and self love was so much that he perswaded himself God ought to respect him though he did never so ill and that he 〈◊〉 not to respect Abel how well soever he did he thought Abel ought not to be better nor offer to God a better facrifice than he But if any man may lawfully strive to please God he is not rightly offended with Abel because he laboured to doe God the best service he could Cains displeasure against Abel was in respect of his good service wherein we see that verified which the Wise-man saith that there are some which fret against the Lord the ninteenth of the Proverbs and the third verse as Jonas to whom the Lord said doest thou well to be angry the fourth of Jonas and the fourth verse but the absurdity of this passion against God is more absurd for as the Rebells spake of Moses in the sixt chapter of Numbers will he put out this peoples eyes so he seeks to take away Gods justice in that he thinks much that God doth regard the good service of Abel We cannot take away his justice no
of John the second chapter and second verse The law hath two parts Punishment and Reward We by our sinnes have made our selves guilty of the punishment and of the curse that is threatned against them that continue not in all things 〈◊〉 the third chapter But he stands as a Mediator between the punishment and us and 〈◊〉 shed his bload as a ransome for our sinnes the first epistle to Timothie the second chapter and so hath cancelled the hand-writing 〈◊〉 against us and taken away the malediction that was 〈◊〉 us Collossians the second chapter and for the reward which we should have deserved fac hoc vives howsoever we have debarred our selves of it yet he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephesians the first chapter and hath bought and purchased life for us He is a Mediator and Intercessor on our parts to God propter 〈◊〉 peccati defectum meriti by his innocencie and righteousnesse he hath purchased that for us which we could not deserve for our sinnes This is to be an Intercessor which intercession is performed in all Religions by Prayer and Oblation By prayer Christ is our Intercessor For he sits at the right hand of God and makes intercession for us Romans the eight chapter not for the godly only but for his enemics Father forgive them Luke the twenty third chapter as it was foretold of him He shall pray for the transgressors Isaiah the fifty third chapter And he prayed not only for forgivenesse of sinnes but for the turning away of punishments due to sinne which was the cause that he offered up supplications to God with strong cries Hebrews the fift chapter and the ●eventh verse He prayed that the holy Ghost might be given to his Disciples John the fourteenth chapter 〈…〉 of the Father that the holy Ghost being given Sathan might not 〈…〉 them from the faith Luke the twenty second chapter Lastly That we may be partakers of glory with him John the sevententh chapter and be where he is As he prayeth for us so he makes 〈…〉 supplyeth the impersections of of our prayers and makes them acceptable to God Canticles the eighth chapter 〈◊〉 me audire vocem tuam that is I will take upon me to obtain for you that which you cannot Secondly for Oblation As Samuel did 〈◊〉 only pray to God for the People but did himself take a 〈…〉 and after 〈…〉 for the People the first book of Samuel the seventh chapter So Christ as our Intercessor to God not only by prayer but by oblation he was an oblation offered in the morning 〈…〉 was presented to God his Father that he would for us yeeld obedience to the Law 〈…〉 his death was an evening oblation he was not only the 〈…〉 first fruit of the corne but became the vine in his death by 〈◊〉 his blood And as he not only prayeth but giveth 〈…〉 so he doth not only offer for us but give 〈…〉 the Prophet foretold That whom he should 〈…〉 offerings of the people should be acceptable 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 and the fourth verse Our prayers and oblations 〈…〉 ●…ctions And whereas God appointed that the 〈…〉 be purified should offer to God a young 〈…〉 Leviticus the twelfth chapter to 〈…〉 up himself to God tanquam agnum immaculatum yet 〈◊〉 columbam gementem if not innocencie of life yet repentance and sorrow for sinnes But because we cannot present either a Lamb or a Dove neither innocencie of life nor true sorrow for sinnes therefore Christs oblation doth supply the defect of our imperfections We cannot offer up such tears for sinne as we ought therefore the strong cries and tears which he offered Hebrews the fift chapter the seventh verse stand between God and us Because the agonie and grief of our heart is cold and dead therefore the agonie that he indured when he sweat water and blood is a suppliant Luke the twenty second chapter So he is both an oblation for us and supplyeth the imperfections of our oblations He having offred up himself to God as a Lamb 〈◊〉 and without spot the first epistle of Peter the first chapter and the nineteenth verse hath appeased the wrath of God his Father and procured his favour for us and keeps away the malice and rage of Satan from us Victori dabo edere ex arbore illa vitae quae est in medio Paradisi Dei Revel 2. 7. Febr. 4. 1598. A PLACE of Scipture purposely chosen that we might not depart from the consideration of those things wherein we have been occupied heretofore and yet such as may fitly be applyed for our instruction in the Sacrament of the body and blood of Christ for though we be now in the Revelations yet are we not gone from the third chapter of Genesis wherein we learned that Adam was sent out of the Garden and kept from the tree of life Affinity of the Tree of life and of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper And for the businesse we intend there is a great affinity between the tree of life which God set in Paradise as a quickning means for the coutinuance of life in Adam if he had continued in his first state and the Sacrament of Christs body and blood for as I told you the causes of that Scripture gives man a hope of restitution to Paradise and 〈◊〉 tree of life which is acquifitis novi juris And that restitution is performed in this place There was an Angel set to forbid Adam accesse to the tree of life which was a sight dreadfull for that he was armed with a firie sword But here we have comfort that he that makes this promise of restitution is an Angel as well armed viz. with a two edged sword Apocalyps the first chapter and the sixteenth verse Whose eyes were as a flame of fire Apocalyps the second chapter and the eighteenth verse So there is a resemblance between the partie that here gives licence to come to the tree of life and the other that forbid to come to it The one threatned with a sword the other promiseth to the persons that keep the condition here expressed That they shall out of the tree of life The point is next how these shall prevail But if we consider how the Angels or Seraphins 〈◊〉 the sixt chapter and the second verse in that they hid their faces before the Lord of 〈◊〉 which was Christ whose glory was 〈◊〉 shewed John the twelfth chapter and Cherubins 〈◊〉 the tenth chapter doe 〈◊〉 this Angel and cast their crowns down before him as the blessed spirits doe 〈◊〉 the fift chapter it is like he shall prevail for the one is the sword but of a ministring spirit Hebrews the first chapter but this is the promise of the Lord of life and glory Acts the third chapter and the first 〈◊〉 to the 〈◊〉 the second chapter But the chief point to be inquired is How the holy Ghost agreeth with himself that man being debarred of the tree of life is
disquieted the heart also wherein it resteth is disquieted For the words of the wise are as goads and pricks Ecclesiastes the twelfth chapter and Matthew the fift chapter as salt and mustard seed Matthew the thirteenth chapter as wine To a putrified sore Luke the tenth chapter So that whether we respect the old or new Testament we see the words have this 〈◊〉 to disquiet sinne especially such words as Peter spake to his Auditors out of the Prophet Joel where he sheweth that as Christ hath a day of resurrection which is past whereby he gave his Apostles those gifts of the spirit so he hath another day which is the featfull and great day of Judgement when the word of the Rulers shall not be enough for them that have killed the Lord of life though they promised to serve them harmlesse Matthew the twenty eighth chapter For here they shall give an account of their cruelty to Christ. And thirdly whereas he moveth them to repentance First In this consideration of the day of Judgement Secondly of the sinne they committed that they slue and crucified Christ Thirdl of the grievousnesse of their sinne that he was the sonne of God whom they dealt thus with and every sinne hath a sting but especially 〈◊〉 For the remembrance of it stings the conscience so as it cannot be quiet Now in that they not only committed murther but murthered such a one as was both a holy and just one Acts the third 〈◊〉 and the blessed sonne of God this could not but 〈◊〉 their hearts as we see the remembrance of the day of Judgement is such a thing as made Felix tremble Acts the twenty fourth chapter And when we hear of the Judgement to come it should bring out of us these questions Jeremiah the eighth chapter and the sixt verse Quid feci and Isaiah the fifty seventh chapter and the fourth verse Cui 〈◊〉 upon whom have you gaped To consider not only the sinne we have committed but the person against whom that it is God of all 〈◊〉 stie and power And Matthew the twenty first chapter Quid faciam that is he considers of the Judgments of God which belong to us For these so grievous sinnes these are means to prick our hearts at the hearing of the word But yet we say though the word of God hath this nature yet except the work of the spirit doe concur with the word the conscience is seared the first epistle to Timothy and the fourth chapter and cannot be touched with any thing The soul is possessed with the gangrene that is without life and feeling so that it hath no sense be it pricked never so deeply the second 〈◊〉 to Timothie the first chapter but he that feels himself pricked in heart for his sinnes may assure himself his conscience is not feared but both a heart of flesh easily to be touched with sorrow for sinne and that his soul is not dead in sinne but liveth spiritually In the Question we have to observe First that this compunction made him speak for as the Wise-man saith Qui pungit cor educit sermonem So here when they were pricked they said Men and Brethren as if the holy 〈◊〉 should say if a man say nothing after he is pricked it is nature compunction For if when men are moved inwardly with a feeling of their sinnes for all that they say nothing nor seek direction of them that are skilfull they doe smother and detein the truth Romans the first chapter Secondly We must observe what they said and that was Quid faciemus what shall we doe A first the People then the 〈◊〉 and after the Publicans said to S John the 〈◊〉 Luke the third chapter which is the second thing to be noted that as true compunction is not dumb so not 〈◊〉 but would be doing somthing they say not What shall we say but What shall we doe Quid faciemus as if the same spirit which pricked their hearts had also taught them that something must be done The like question did St. Paul make being pricked Domine quid vis me facere Acts the ninth chapter and the sixt verse So the Angel said to Cornelius Goe to Joppa and Simon shall tell thee what thou oughtest to doe Acts the tenth chapter So said the Jayler to the Apostles Acts the sixteenth chapter What shall I doe that I may be saved I and my houshold and that I may be rid of the pricking of my conscience For as compunction must not be silant so neither must it be idle or unfruitfull in the knowledg of the Lord the second epistle of Peter the first chapter Thirdly Observe after what manner they said What shall we doe and that was not as Cain and Judas said Genesis the fourth chapter and Matthew the twenty seventh chapter Their what to doe Quid faciemus was a note of desparation Nor as the P arisees said desparately in their sury and rage What shall we doe John the eleventh chapter If such have their sinnes laid before them their hearts will not be pricked but cleave asunder as they to whom St. Stephen 〈◊〉 Acts the eighth chapter The heart may be cast down with too much grief so as a man shall say with Cain My sinne is greater than can be forgiven or else moved with malice and be pricked so as they will prick again as they that being pricked with the reproof of the Prophet 〈◊〉 Let us sting him with our tongues as he hath stung our hearts Jeremiah the eighteenth chapter and the eighteenth verse for this is the effect which the word of God hath in many that are wicked But that which Peters Auditors say is spoken in heavinesse and a desire to have sinne that doth disquiet them that which the Apostle calleth the sin that doth so easily beset us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebrews the twelfth and the first verse taken from them This their heavinesse makes them conformable to Christ and therefore is commendable in them For it is Gods will that such as shall be saved be made 〈◊〉 to the Image of his sonne Romans the eighth chapter and the twenty ninth verse for Christ was pierced not only with a bodily spear in his side but with grief of soul And as he suffered of compassion over us so we must suffer in compassion with him Out of that which the ancient Fathers observe in Sorrow we have five things to note First That something may be done as a remedy against sinne For albeit we have sinned never 〈…〉 yet there is hope tamen adhuc spes est Esdras the tenth chapter and the second verse there is hope of some means to be used which if it be done as Ezechiel the eighteenth chapter privata vestra non 〈…〉 Domine scandalum Secondly By that which they say is to be gathered that as something may be done so it ought to be done that the terror of minde being removed we may be assured of the favour and grace of
to doe to him is to bruise his head in pieces which we shall be able to doe in him that strengthneth us Phil. 4. That which he will doe to us 〈◊〉 that he will bruise our heel therefore we are to take heed of him By the Serpents head is meant the first suggestion whereby he stirreth us up to sinne which albeit in the beginning it were strong when he tempted Eve yet since the promise Christ hath weakned it nothwithstanding as Christ resisted the first suggestion Matth. 4. so must we after his example begin at the weakest part even at the first suggestions and provocations which seem to us to be nothing which the Prophet signified by the children of Babel which he would have dashed to the stones Psal. 137. In that respect it is that the Church would have the little Foxes destroyed that hurt the Vines Cant. 2. 12. And the Prophets counsel is That we 〈◊〉 upon the Cockatrice egge lest it 〈◊〉 a Serpent Isaiah 59. The Fathers out of Adams temptation 〈◊〉 four degrees of our spiritual 〈◊〉 The Man the Woman the Serpent the Tree By Man they understood reason by the Woman the sensuality and carnall affections of our mindes by the Serpent the Devil by the Tree the occasion Concerning which as it is good counsel to hear this spoken Command Eve so it is better counsel Take heed of the Serpent and thou shall be safe but if thou doe not look upon the tree thou shalt be safer For if we avoid the occasion of sinne then shall not our concupiscence be stirred up but he that maketh no conscience to 〈◊〉 the occasion he loveth danger and as the Wise man saith he shall perish therein The 〈◊〉 if it be lightly touched will sting and prick but if it be crushed hard in a mans hand it looseth the power So if we dally with sinne it will sting us but if we bruise the very head of it that is the first motions then it shall not hurt us Thus did Christ Matth. 4. and thus he would have us doe likewise Jacob being stirred up by his mother to seek the blessing of his father and to counterfeit the person of his brother answered That he durst not last instead of a blessing he should procure acurse Gen. 27. 12. Joseph being solicited to uncleannesse by his Mistris answered How can I 〈…〉 Gen. 39. Thus with the consideration of Gods curse and of his benefits towards us must we tread the head of the Serpent But if we be ready to make league with hell and death Isaiah 28. that is to 〈◊〉 to the suggestions of Satan If instead of treading him under feet we tread under foot the blood of Christ by which we are sanctified Hebrews 10. if where we should labour to wound the Devil we doe heal his wounds with sweet words Jer. 6. then are we faire from that spiritual enmity that God requireth and doe deprive our selves of the promise of victory This not bruising of the Serpents head will cause another contrition For that man that for lack of grace doth not tread down concupiscence and make it subject to the spirit of God shall be fain to grinde his own heart and to break it as he should have broken the Serpents head for one of them must of necessity be performed either the Serpents head must be bruised and broken or else our own heart must be broken with sorrow and grief for sinne which is that acceptable sacrifice which God doth not despise Psal. 51. Secondly Touching that which the Devil doth to us we are taught here That though he be grievously wounded yet he will not give over but make warre with the Womans seed forever If he could he would be at the head but because he cannot he begins at the heel and by little and little layeth men down all along upon the ground that so he may poyson the head Thus he circumventeth men to make them fall 2 Cor. 1. We must therefore chiefly look to that part which he aimeth at most and that is the heel and in that regard it behoveth us to have our feet shod with the 〈◊〉 of the Gospel Ephes. 6. 15. The heel hath three considerations First Calcem 〈◊〉 Secondly actionis Thirdly vitae The heel of our soul is the lowest part thereof which toucheth the earth that is as the Apostle terms them our fleshly lusts 1 Pet. 2. 11. and our worldly lusts Titus 2. 12. These affections are as it were the feet whereupon our souls doe walk for the affections are the feet of the soul and minde which if they be corrupt they cause the soul to sinne therefore the Prophet complaineth That the wickednesse of his heels compasseth him Psal. 49. 5. meaning the corrupt lusts and affections of his heart For as the cold wherewith we are troubled in our head is first taken in our feet so the corruption of our opinion and understanding proceeds from our corrupt affections Secondly The heel of our actions is the end for which we doe them wherein we must be carefull that all we doe be done for Gods glory and not for our own praise this is it which our Saviour reproveth in the Scribes and 〈◊〉 They did good works they fasted prayed and gave almes but the end of all that they did was not good for they did it to be praised of men Matth. 6. For it is the Devils policie if he cannot hinder good actions yet to corrupt mens minds so as they shall not refer that which they doe to Gods glory which is the right end and only thing we should aim at but to their own praise and commendation among men Therefore we must beware for what end we doe any thing be it never so good namely that it be reserred to Gods glory according to the Apostles rule 1 Cor. 10. otherwise it not only loseth commendation but becommeth sinfull how goodly a shew soever it carry outwardly for whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14. Thirdly By the heel in the tird and last sense we understand the end of our life For at that time when all action is past the Devil knowing that he hath but a little time to practise his malice against us doth then most of all rage against us Apoc. 12. Therefore even then especially we must oppose our selves against him that he doe not venom and poyson our heel that is when we are ready to depart this life to give us the overthrow to drive us to desperation and make us to despair of Gods favour Thus we see his desire is and will be either to corrupt our affections that we shall desire that which is evil Or if we doe good he will poyson the end of our actions so as we shall not seek Gods glory but our own praise Lastly When we come to the end of our life then he will be busie to weaken our faith and to overcome us by taking from us all other spiritual graces And not only in these but he will hurt us in our goods and good name And we must be content to suffer these things at his hands that he may not hurt our souls Exod. 4. 3. We must not think it strange if we suffer detriment in temporal things so that he doe us no hurt spiritually to the overthrow of our souls FINIS
sinne but the occasion of sinne must be removed the inside and the outside must be taken away and therefore David Psal. 119. 20. saith not only iniquitatem 〈◊〉 viam iniquitatis move à me Domine take from me O Lord the way of iniquity The Seer is active the 〈◊〉 is passive say the Fathers which was her yeelding to 〈◊〉 behold the tree who telleth Eve as it were you have libertie to see and to have your eyes to wander about the world God himself Numb 15. 39. would have them have fringes upon the border of their garments that even by looking of them they might remember all the commandements of the Lord This is Jobs protestation in Job 31. 7. that he hath not walked after his eye he hath not accomplished the lust of his eye The eye enticeth the heart to sinne By apparel the eye is inticed to pride which as the Fathers call it is vexillum superbiae the standard of pride nidus luxuriae the nest of lasciviousnesse And by the standard of pride thinking to be as Gods and by the nest of laseiviousnesse we are drawn to beleeve the words of Sathan and to sacrifice unto the Serpent If Abraham in chap. 19. 28 looking toward Sodom and Gomorrha did behold and see the smoak of the Land as of a furnace it was because he was not commanded to the contrarie But in 17. verse of the same chapter Lot might not look back upon Sodom which was full of vain pleasures for he was forbidden to look behind we must rather suspect our infirmitie with Lot than think to look and to be constant as Abraham Better it is not to behold the pleasure of the 〈◊〉 because it was forbidden than by beholding it to fall from her obedience Let not us look upon vain pleasures least we fall with Eve It is the counsell of our Saviour in Mat. 〈◊〉 29. If thy eye cause thee to offend pull it out and cast it from thee he meaneth that we should pull away vanitie and wantonnesse from our eyes and that we should refrain our eyes from beholding vain pleasures For faith a Father very well nisi tu caveas unlesse thou be carefull of thy eye hereafter thou wouldest have wished that he had meant the pulling out of the eye it self that so by not seeing vanitie and by losing thy eye thy whole body might be delivered from Hell torments The ancient Fathers doe observe out of Acts 5. 3. that by the eye Sathan filled the heart of Annanias and Saphira to conceale the monie he had for his 〈◊〉 It is the eye that maketh a meet soyl in the heart to entertain sinne but we must not entertain sinne nor retain the occasion of transgression Quum ergo videretur mulieri bonum esse fructum arboris illius in cibum gratissimam esse illam oculis ac desiderabilem esse arboris fructum ad habendum intelligentiam accepit de fructu ejus comedit c. Verse 6. Novemb. 25. 1591. THis last temptation as I told you was of the sense which by the eye allured Eve to eate that God had said you shall not eat at all for seeing the tree made her take the fruit and taste thereof by the sense supposing to have been as Gods and to attain knowledge Our Saviour Christ in Luke 17. 32. biddeth us to remember Lots wife who looked back to Sodom Gen. 19. 26. But he that secketh by the sense to save the soul shall lose 〈◊〉 So we must from hence remember not to look upon the tree least we eat of the fruit Now we will consider the object which she saw which is said to be the Tree the properties of which Tree are said to be three fold good for meat pleasant to behold and to be desired to get knowledge In this triplicitie first is the meat Secondly is the delight of the eyes Thirdly it is to be desired to get knowledge Which triplicitie first for the meat we doe reduce to the good that is profitable The delight of the eyes to the good whieh is pleasant And that it is to be desired for knowledge we doe reduce to morall good as it is in Prov. 19. 8. Here are all the Bonums utile jucundum and honestum Every man standeth upon three faculties the one is Vegitative the other Sensitive and the third is Reasonable Now by the three kindes of good of bonum utile jucundum and honestum he tempteth severally each of these faculties The faculty Vegitative whereby man liveth is allured in that it is said to be good for meat The facultie Sensitive of the sense is tempted for that by the second the eye which is the very chief of all the senses by the pleasure of the fruit is allured And for the third facultie which is reasonable he had this inticement That the reason should be advanced and should have greater knowledge In 1 John 2. 16. these are the three inticements of the world The first is concupiscence of the flesh or carnall pleasure The second is lust of the eyes which is the wantonnesse of the looks The third is the pride of life or ambition and with these was Eve inticed as eye service pleaseth men Coloss. 3. 22. so pleasure delighteth the eye here the lifting up the eye to be as Gods and the curiositie of knowledge the one is the pride of sense the other is the pride of reason She supposed that in the tree there was not only utile and delectabile but even omne desiderabile what ever good might be desired She took this tree to be as the Pandora of the Heathen wherein were all the gifts and graces to be desired to be found And by the eating of this tree so adorned with all things she accounted to be Mistrisse of all pleasure of all knowledge Good for meat First It was good for meat True it is that man must have meat to preserve life cibus enim habet umbr am naturae nostrae meat hath the shadow of our nature we are bound in a statute and strong band by meat to save and preserve nature this is the band of necessitie which he hath bestowed not only to eate of one tree but he had the varietie of all And though God had allowed him many more trees than ever he could eate of yet he will be looking upon the only tree God hath reserved to himself yet must she needs desire to taste of fructus vetitus the forbidden fruit She is so dainty mouthed that she must needs eat thereof though even with a curse she were forbidden it thinking because it was forbidden it would be more pleasant for as Salomon saith stolne waters are sweet and hid bread is pleasant Proverbs 9. 17. It is a general fault of all Mankinde to desire to eat or to have that is forbidden or that we ought not In 1 Chron. 11. 17. David longed to drink of the waters of the well of Bethlehem which were the
shall see the nature of sinne that sinne bringeth sinne unlesse it be extinguished by repentance for Austin saith well of sinne Quod nisi deleatur duplicatur which unlesse it be extinguished it is doubled In Esay 14. 29. the Prophet saith That out of the Serpents root shall come a Cockatrice and from the Cockatrice egge shall come a firie flying Serpent and here from the Serpents malice came Eves sinne and from Eves sinne came Mans fall the Serpents temptation brought forth Eves disobedience and that Cockatrice egge hatched Adams downfall and so they were both robbed of their righteousnesse This is their discending from Jerusalem to Jericho Luke 10. 30. Rebellion with sinne Againe after the woman hath eaten this her giving of the fruit to her husband to eate is a further circumstance in the nature of sinne to add rebellion unto sinne for the devill will not only seduce the woman but by her will seduce man for he draweth also the mighty by his power Job 24. 22. The Serpent will destroy both the weak and the strong the foolish and the wise The sociablenesse of sinnes Thirdly Sinne will be associate for the sinner will try the righteous if he will offend that even here Adam may be as deep a sinner as her self for indeed good fellowship is not so apparently seen as among sinners for they joyn hand in hand manum in manu saith Salomon Prov. 16. 5. They doe consult in heart and make a league against the Lord Psal. 83. 5.6 The Ishmaelites and Moabites c. Sinners are as thornes folded one in the other Nahum 1. 10. This is the sociablenesse of sinne Sinne infectious Fourthly it is hence observed that sinne is infectious The Serpent he infected Eve with his breath of craft and maliciousnesse made her beleeve him and eat of the fruit and she being infected her self infected him This is called Pollution He that toucheth pitch is defiled She went not only out of the way her self but she caused many to fall from the Law Malach. 2. 9. her word did fret as a canker as Paul speaketh 2 Tim. 2. 17. for sinne is contagious it poysoned Eve and Adam also See 1 Tim. 1. 6. Austin upon this saith well That if God strook blind the soul of Eve she could not see her own miserie from her originall righteousnesse The Serpent gave and Eve gave the fruit The Serpent gave to Eve and Eve gave to Adam the same material fruit but not with like affection She in giving to Adam of the fruit thinks she doth him an especial favour and that whereof he needs not fear for though by the giving him the same she take away from him original righteousnesse the favour and fear of God yet she accounteth that she makes him a great reward But this her reward may well be compared to the present of Ehud Judges 3. 16. who presented Eglon the King of Moab with a curious made dagger wherewith after he killed him The Apple wherewith Eve presented Adam was his destruction but yet as I said she did it not with the minde of the Serpent for he caused her to eat of a malicious minde knowing it would be her bane Yet Eve she gave it to Adam of a good affection not of any malicious intent 2. Means that women seduce men Now the means wherewith she induceth man to bring him to eate are of two sorts which are the two means that women use to seduce men withall both are by the voice as you may see in 17. verse following Adam obeyed the voyce of his wife so that it should seem that she used some oration to perswade him blanditiarum verba 1. Flatterie and flatterring words 1 King 11. 4. The idolatrous wives of Salomon turned his heart to Idolatrie blanditiis by their flatterie And here Eve saith to Adam as it were thus You may see that I have eaten and find the fruit to be pleasant I have eaten and yet I am living and thus with a protestation of love she wisheth Adam that he would eate Adam in the mean while as a Father saith well stood in doubt either to eat or not to eat inter preces uxoris cōminationes Creatoris between the prayer of his wife and the threats of his Creator God had said in the day they did eat thereof they should die he saw she had eaten and yet was living Salomons wives blanditiis by flatterie overcame Salomon 2. Importunity The other thing wherewith women overcome men is Importunity It was this that Delilah used to overthrow Sampson she was importunate with him continually and therefore he told her all his heart Jud. 16. 16. So that these are the two means wherewith woman overcommeth man namely blanditiis importunitatibus by flatterie and importunitie And he did eat Now it followeth to speak of Adams sinne And he did eat In the 17 verse of this chapter God curseth man because he had obeyed the voice of his wife and for that he had eaten of the tree whereof God had commanded him that he should not eat whereby you see that not only the giver of the forbidden fruit but the taker thereof also both the perswader and the consenter to sinne deserve death The manner how he consented is in this with her Adam he came to her not she to him say the Fathers For although God had created Man in uprightnesse though he were placed by God in Paradise and though Gods love to man were shewed in making Eve to be his help yet he gave no eare to the speeches of Gods love nor to his threats but rather hearkned unto Eve and her allurements The woman hereby is convicted of carelesnesse and the man of negligence in that he permitteth her to wander from him where she pleaseth but the woman must not depart no not a little lest she fall A third thing is Eve and Adams curiositie of this tree they would eat it to try what virtue was in it they would try a conclusion if they should eat thereof whether they should dye as God had said or be as Gods knowing good or evill Moses commanded That there should be no manna reserved till the morning yet Exodus 16. 20. some there were that would try conclusions that obeyed not Moses but reserved it till the morning and it was full of worms and it stank Again as it appeareth in that chapter to try conclusions some there were contrarie to Moses words that upon the Sabbath day went forth to gather Manna Paul 2 Cor. 11. 3. saith I fear lest as the Serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty so your mindes should be corrupt from the simplicitie that is in Christ. In Adam his body from his soul his sense from his reason should not have swerved Eve beleeved not God but the Serpent Adam beleeved not God but Eve Paul Coloss. 2. 7. would have us rooted and builded in Christ and stablished in the faith But the
But here on the contrarie part Adam exalted himself he became even disobedient unto the death the everlasting death of body and soul could not withhold him The motive to sinne was small and 〈◊〉 the retentive was great and terrible 4 The manner The fourth circumstance is the manner of sinne It was citò factum soon committed Peters denyall was ad vocem ancillulae at the 〈◊〉 of a sillie made Adams transgression was without delay at the voice of his wife 5. The Place The fifth circumstance is of the place It was in Paradise that he was polluted But though Lucifer were the most glorious in the Heavens yet for his pride God sent him headlong from the Heavens Man was Monarch of the earth all in Paradise were at his command yet for his disobedience God sent him out of Paradise 6. The Time The sixt circumstance is of the time He was servent in obedience in the beginning but he continued not therein many dayes time as a file filed away his righteousnesse he sell in the beginning 7. The Punishment The seventh circumstance is of some notable hurt aliquod damnum that should come to man by his disobedience whereby both God and man are damnified It before while he was righteous he were in the image of God for in the likenesse of God was Adam made chap. 5. 1 then surely by mans disobedience Gods Image in man was defaced Adam who was now unrighteous was no more like God who was only righteous and 〈◊〉 of Wisdome but Adam as David speaks Psal. 73. 22. was foolish and ignorant he was even as a beast before God and his sinne was not only his own confusion but the ruine of us all of all mankinde It is Christ Jesus that will make our sinnes and iniquities to be no more remembred Heb. 10. 17. It was the transgression of Adam that brought grave jugum super 〈◊〉 a grievous burthen to all the world from this sinne came all sinnes hence came the heap of all evill The Fathers say that Omnia 〈◊〉 sunt appendices 〈◊〉 all misehief doth depend upon this disobedience of Adam and they say that because this is the greatest sinne it deserveth the greatest punishment The ancient Divines consider a difference in Eves sinne and in Adams sinne Eve she sinned in three respects First In hearing Gods name reproachfully blasphemed Secondly In that she heard this blasphemie not from the mouth of an Angell of light but from a paultry and abject Worm And lastly In that she became scandalum a means to slander God and seduce Man Adams sinne is seen in three other respects First The man was stronger and yet he was seduced by the weaker Secondly Man was made as the womans head and therefore when he heard her say she had eaten when he did see her offer him of the forbidden fruit it was his part to have reproved her Thirdly the root of nature was in him not in her yet the corruption of all came by Eve unto Adam and from both to us all which hearing the words of the Serpent and the Woman which seeing the pleasant fruit which eating of the forbidden tree did bring the punishment and death of body and soul to all men living The Remedy But the remedy for this so vile and 〈◊〉 a sinne and the redresse of this punishment is by the promised seed our Saviour Christ born of a Woman It was our Saviour that for the flattering 〈◊〉 of Adam heard all reproaches Adam beheld the fruit which was pleasant in his eyes Christ he was buffetted about the eyes Adam took the tree in his hand Christ was fastned to the tree for the stretching out of Adams hands to take of the fruit his hands were stretehed out and nailed upon the crosse Adams eating of this pleasant fruit was 〈◊〉 by his eating of bitter gall and sharp Vinegar according to that Psal. 69. 21. They gave him gall in his meat and in his thirst they gave him vinegar to drink Man had his side pearced but Christ had his heart opened All these things did God doe to deliver us out of that miserie whereinto by Adams sinne Mankinde had fallen who shall deliver me from the body of this death but God through Jesus Christ. In Ezechiel 3. 3. they that shall eat the roll that God shall give them it shall be in the mouth as honie In beleeving Christs name we shall have life John 20. 31. If then we eat of the forbidden tree eat not of the promise which we have in Christ we shall dye the death both body and soul shall be tormented We must not say Quid mihi tecum Christe Christ what have I to doe with thee but we must receive him that is our Redeemer In the 〈◊〉 we must therein eat of the bread which is his body Mat. 26. 26. who brake the bread in his Supper and offred his body on the Cross Christ through suffering death tasted death for all men that through affliction the Prince of our salvation might be consecrated Heb. 2. 10. And by our faith in him death shall be to us but as the tasting of the poyson which death shall not swallow up our soul though our body dye our soul shal live for ever But the sinners that eat of the tree that commit wickedness if they repent not shal be cast into endless afflictions As by Adam we all eat of the forbidden tree in the mid'st of the Garden in the beginning of the bible so by Christ the blessed shall eat of the tree of life in the mi'dst of the heavenly Paradise wherein there are twelve manner of fruits and the leavs thereof doe serve to heal all the Nations of the Earth Rev. 22. 2. The leaves of this tree in the end of the Bible will serve for medicine here in this life but after this life ended this tree of life shall fill us all with 〈◊〉 joy and glorie everlasting Which God of his infinite mercy grant c. Amen Tunc aperuerunt sese oculi amborum noveruntque se nudos esse consutis foliis ficulneis fecerunt sibi subligacula Gen 3. 7. January 25. 1591. THE opening the eys of our first Parents by which they saw that they were made naked which was the former part was sent from God that they seeing that sin which was against God was a losse of their glory which is called bonum utile and that instead thereof brought unto them nakednesse shame and confusion which was against bonum honestum and also that it did cast them into that distresse and anguish of minde that they could not tell what to doe or finde to cover their shame but figg leaves which was against bonum jucundum which opening of the eyes comming from God was to this end that by seeing this they might return to their own hearts Esay 46. 8. and enquire as Esay willeth them 5. 19. wherefore they had done this and transgressed Gods
holy laws that seeing their sinne against God they might confesse it so have pardon and forgiveness For it is not in Gods Court as it is in the Courts of men where the way to confess the fault and fact is the way to be condemned but with God the only way to be absolved and acquitted from sin is truly and unfainedly to confess our sins unto him this is the end why God in mercy doth send to them the opening of their eyes that they might see their sin it began to prevail that we may see the effect it had of them for though as yet the nobleness of their nature was such that they feared nor for there was yet no fear to them yet we see they were ashamed by it were driven to seek a covering to hide that shame with all but that effect of their seeing and shame was not good for whereas it should have made them return penitently to God from sin which was so shamefull they instead of turning to their own hearts and to God doe run to the figge tree leaves to make them coverings withall and so this Counsell of God in sending their signe was disanulled and perverted from turning to God to stepping to the figge tree And so whereas God appointed and sent the opening of their eyes for their good and conversion the Devill doth cause it by this means to turn to their greater destruction By which we see how the Devill and sin doth infatuate men and make them foolish and ignorant how to doe that which should be for their good and salvation but as the Prophet saith Jer. 4. 22. The Devill and sin whetteth their wits making them very sharpe wise to doe evill to hinder their salvation and to make them coverings and excuses to conceale cloak and colour their sin withall at this we are very good and have a present invention to coynelyes and excuses but we are dull and blockish to prevent the danger which sin doth bring This practise of the Serpent we see in this in that Adam goeth not to a tree of small or narrow leaves which were not fit for his purpose but to the figge tree which in that country as Pliny reporteth have leaves instar peltae Amazonum as broad as a Target and therefore most meete to make a covering withall Then besides their present sharpness in choosing the fittest matter to make this covering we 〈◊〉 in the next place their ingenious art and invention in that on such a suddain without study they are able to sowe and peice them together so that they did serve insteed of breeches to hide that nakednesse withall this we are able to doe of our own natural inclination sine Magistro which disposition of our corrupt nature we see by experience in all men even untill this day for doe we not see wicked men given over to all evill which in any good matters are very dull blockish and in Religion very senselesse and rude yet in this to be very ingenious and witty to invent divers excuses to hide and colour their sinnes withall herein their wit and art never faileth them but ever serveth them well wherefore of us may the Prophet also say Jer. 4. 22. they are wise to doe evill but to doe well they have no understanding The second default that Adam and Eve made in this was that the devill taketh up the whole roome of their hearts with the care and consideration of their bodily defects not regarding the spiritual nakedness and shame of their faults The third is in that they seeing their nakedness doe not seeke to take away the cause of the shame of their sinne but the effect which is their nakednesse and shame which is as if a man seeing and knowing himselfe to be sick should not seeke to remove the cause of his disease but the Symptomata and outward accidents thereof as if a man should only be carefull to take away the pimples of his face which are but outward accidents of his disease and never regard to remove the heat of the Liver which is the inward cause thereof and this is the third offence quia dolebat cur abat dedecus peccati non peccatum his care was only to be rid and acquitted of the shame of sinne and not of sinne it self Fourthly if this nakednesse which they see be so evill and so odious then this also is another fault of theirs quia nolunt tollere sed tegunt eam for indeed their desire should not be so much to cover as to care it but their care è contra is non curare sed velare and this is the nature of men now a daies in their distresses to seeke involucra non remedia that is maskes to cover and hide not meanes to care and remedy their soul offences The last and sift is that vanity of this covering of the fig tree leaf for as Saint Ambrose saith Wilt thou needes have a covering of thine owne seeking and making to hide thy sinfull nakednesse then thou art foolish and mad to goe to the fig-tree for leaves thou shouldest rather have gone to the Rocks and Mountains and cryed to them Cover us Ose 10. 8. for they are thicker and more able to cover or if thou wilt needes have it of leaves why wentst thou not to the Tree of Life whose leaves are said Revel 22. 2. to serve for medicine to cure and heale withall ☜ This then was another fault in that they rather went not to the Tree of mercy Christ Jesus but to their own Tree of hypocrisie or why went they not to the Olive Tree because that seemeth to be a tree of mercy Gen. 8. 11. for the Dove bringing a branch of that shewed that Gods anger was appeased and was a signe of mercy or else why did they not make a covering of that of which the mercy fear was made One of the Fathers saith I have heard indeede Esay 38. 21. that a cluster of figges had a virtue to cover heale but as for the leaves of that tree they quickly fade and fall away to nothing Esay 34. 4. or though the substance of the leaf could endure yet the thread wherewith they are sewed together would not hold but be broken when God doth teare them off the 13. of Ezekiel the 20. and the 21. and then where will be their covering which they have made But of all the rest the greatest fault of all was in that they rested quietly and securely in this vain covering which they had made saying pax pax tush all is well enough we are safe and neede not feare and in this secure carelesnesse they continued untill the evening This made St. Augustine say I suspect this garment and covering for it seemeth to be a fit reward for their eating the forbidden fruit that after they had eaten that fruit they should have for their labor a handfull of fig-leaves What fruit had you of your sin whereof
his hand and vengeance which are thus afraid at the sound of his steps and voice But if Adam and Eve doe and needs will 〈…〉 will they 〈◊〉 surely from the presence of God and is not God their only life joy comfort hope and help in this miserie see then by the craft of Sathan and sinne they are willed to 〈◊〉 from their life health liberty and hope of all the good they have that so the Devill might be sure that they should perish in their sin To conclude we see into what miserie man is fallen for a little vain pleasure of sinne which lasted but the space while the apple was chewed in their mouthes but that vain short delight being vanished and gone now remain their extreme miseries for ever except the mercy of God provide a remedy For first we see it brought on them nakedness and shame Secondly blindness and senselesness that they could not see their shame and sin Thirdly the worme of conscience when they saw it for as a garment breedeth a moth which will destroy it so doth sinne breed his gnawing worm which will torment and destroy sinners Fourthly when it was seen it brought on them confusion of face without Fiftly a horrible feare and trembling of the heart within Sixtly to avoid and cover it it taught them the folly and fondness of vain hypocrisie with figge leaves to cover it Seventhly and lastly it brake out into a desparate madness and frenzie in that sinne and Sathan perswaded them that they must flie from God and hide themselves from him as without hope of his mercy And therefore we see now that they had lodged themselves in the brakes and thickets of the shrubs and bushes but all in vain as we shall see hereafter for that which they had made their Castle and Covert to lodge hide and keep themselves safe God maketh to be as it were their Goal and Prison out of which he will bring them to judgement and to the Barre to be araigned as we shall see in the next verse Inclamavit autem Jehova Deus Adamum dixit ei Vbi es Gen. 3. 9. Februry 1. 1591. THE whole course of Gods proceeding in this judgment is called by the Fathers Spectaculum clementiae divinae dementiae humanae a spectacle and clear view on the one side of the loving kindness of God and on the other part of the foolish blindness of man All this verse as the ancient Writers term it is as the voice of an Archangell crying before the first Judgment 1 Thess. 4. 16. for as at the last day of generall judgment shall first an Archangell be sent out with a voice of a Trumpet to scite and summon all flesh to arise out of their graves in which sinne hath hid and lodged them till then So we see at the first Judgment of man before God beginneth he first sendeth out a voice calling and crying to Adam and Eve to arise out of their prison and to appear before God to receive according to their deserts and works for God did usually use the voice and ministerie of Angels by whom he did commonly speak unto men as Gen. 16. 8. God spake unto Agar by the voice of an Angel and that voice by which God spake was the voice of an Angell Deut. 5. 22. 26. and that also John 12. 28. 29. And the reason why God speaketh to men by the ministerie of Angels is because his voice is not proportionable to our hearing and weak eares it is farre above our reach and therefore he speaketh by Angels framing their voice more fit and agreeable to our nature and thus generally of the words of this verse More particularly we are to observe two parts first that God did call to Adam Secondly the effect or contents of his calling The first is a proclamation the other the tenor and substance thereof The matter and contents of his calling is judiciall but as Gods song over is as well of mercy as of judgment Psal 101. 1. and his works of bountifulness as of severity and justice Rom. 11. 22. so will we proceed in the handling and declaring of this his speech first shewing his mercie therein and then speaking of them as they declare and set out his severity and justice Touching his mercy which he remembreth in judgement the matter thereof here contained is two sold First as Gods mercy hath been seen in these four points In sparing them In making them see their sinne In sending his Messengers to them And in comming himself to them First point So this is the first point and a degree of mercie above and beyond all in that as he came so he 〈…〉 to speak and talk with him which I doubt not to make the fist degree and step of further mercy These things considered that every use and action of God doth set out a new mercy unto man is a verifying of the gracious saying of our Saviour Christ Matth. 23. 37. quoties te congregare volui ut gallina pullos suos sed noluisti And this is a fault in Adam that he did not first goe to seek the Lord and crie to him ubi estu domine rather than God should come to him and say ubi es Adam or when he had perceived that God was walking towards him first This is his second fault that he did not prepare himself with fear and humility to meet the Lord and fall down low before his foot-stool for Shemey in policie saw it best when he had offended David and heard that he was comming into his Country again first to make haste to runne and meet him with submission and humility that so he might procure grace and pardon as indeed he did 2 Sam. 19. 19. 20. but Adam insteed of crying to God as David did de profundis doth betake himself to flying and therefore God as a friend pittying his estate doth pursue and follow him in his flight and speaketh to him in his silence and so preventeth him every way that he may be saved And all this is done to him to set down to us that men might be moved hereby to say as David doth I will sing of the loving kindness and mercy of the Lord my tongue shall ever be talking of his praise Psal. 149. 1. and that we might consess with thankfulness that his mercie is above all his works Psal. 59. 16. The second generall point is the tenor and contents of the voice and proclamation where we must note that this question ubi es is not vox ignorantis sed increpantis tamen clementis Dei For the tenor of the words doth savor much of mercy for when God had found Adam all hid he breaketh not out into the cruell and bitter invective as Shemei did 2 Sam. 16. 7. Come forth come forth thou murtherer and wicked one c. Which severe voice man deserved and God in mercy might have justly used but God according to his goodnesse
his credit and have his reputation and not to lose one jot of that But Davids confession is 〈◊〉 otherwise for he not only confesseth plainly against himself saying to Nathan I have sinned but also he maketh a Psalm of it and setteth this preface to it or caused it to be set before it A Psalm of David to shew his repentance after the Prophet had rebuked him As if he should not stick to shame himself in this world that he might be without blame in the world to come And indeed it is a perfect signe of an humble and a good mind when one can say from his heart let me bear the shame and punishment of my sinne as a fatherly correction in this life onely O Lord pardon and forgive me that I may escape thy wrath and Judgment in the life to come He that can be content thus to doe is one of a good humble and contrite heart But Sauls spirit of hypocrisie will not confesse his fault unlesse he may keepe his credit and avoid the shame and discredit of evill in this world Thus we see that as the same humor and Teacher was to them both So Eve shapeth her excusive answer by Adams patterne which went before For as Eve taught Adam to sin after the patern and example of her deed so to quit it now we see here that Adam taught Eve how to excuse and cloake her sinne according to the paterne which he had set and shewed her before Here he endeth his Lectures in St. Pauls Church and those which follow he preached in the Parish Church of St. Giles without Cripplegate LECTURES Preached in the Parish Church of St. GILES without Cripplegate LONDON Quapropter dixit Jehova Deus Serpenti illi Cùm feceris istud maledictus esto prae omni jumento prae omni bestia agri super ventrem tuum ito pulverem comedito omnibus diebus vitae tuae Gen. 3. 14. June 18. 1598. THE third Chapter of this first book of Moses containeth only matter of the Fall of Adam the first man and it may well be divided into two parts First his falling into sinne Secondly his falling into misery the fruit of sinne In the former are two things to be considered first his temptation to sinne from the first verse to the fifth Secondly his committing of the act and sinne it self verse 6. And upon these two stand and depend his falling into sinne The other part which is his falling into miserie beginneth at the seventh verse and continueth to the end of the Chapter and is divided into his Judgement and the execution of the Judgement The Judgement of our first Parents beginneth at the 7. verse and continueth to the 22. the execution of it from the 22. verse to the end of the chapter In the Judgement are two parts the Tryall and Sentence the Tryall went before from the seventh verse to the thirteenth the Sentence beginneth at this verse read unto you and continueth to the 22. following The sentence is exceeding worthy the meditation of all men in respect of the contents of it for that as it setteth down the mother or original curse from whence all other curses proceed as those Levit. 26. Deut. 28. which are nothing else but a laying out in special and particular of that which is here So likewise as the Lord is said in wrath to remember mercy Hab. 3. 2. it contains also the blessing yea that great blessing in respect whereof all other blessings in the Scriptures are but glasses to behold this blessing for you have in the sentence of this Curse as the bitternesse of Gods wrath so the consideration of the goodnesse of Gods promise which the Apostle calls the most great and 〈◊〉 promise 2 Pet. 1. 4. whereby we are made partakers of the divine nature The sentence is threefold as the persons arraigned are three that is against the Serpent the Woman and against Adam wherein generally we are first to note the exact course and order of Justice that is kept in the Sentence and Tryall The order is this First against the Serpent as the principall Author in the 14. and 15. verse following Secondly Against the Woman by good and due order because as the Apostle puts us in minde 1 Tim. 2. the Woman was first in the transgression and it hath a double respect for whereas Adam sinned only in receiving it of her but she both sinned and caused him to sinne therefore the second sentence is against Eve in the 16. verse the third against Adam in the 17 18 19. verses following The second thing generally is this that albeit there are three Sentences against three parties yet not all alike or of one scantling but there is a great and main difference between them For it being the rule of Justice that the punishment be proportioned according to the offence as Deut. 25. ut pro mensura peccati sit poenarum modus And that there be a difference put in having compassion as Jude speaks in his Epistle verse 22. Therefore their offences standing upon diverse degrees one that is the Serpent being fraudis inventor the other giving their assent the one being the deceiver the other deceived and seduced there is great difference to be made whether a man fall by himself or by another for to cause others to sinne is a farre greater sinne than for a man to sinne himself alone The first punishment and Sentence sets down the difference of Judgment which God useth here There is the punishment consignatorie called Virga that is Moses rod and another punishment when the rod becomes a Serpent for the Serpent that is not to chastise but to denounce a punishment of cutting off In such a case the chastisement of the partie is not sought because there is no hope of amendment but a correction 〈◊〉 of others and therefore the Sentence of punishment is greater against the Serpent the Author of this mischief than against the other A third thing general is As an order and difference is kept so an Analogie and proportion is well kept in setting down of the Sentence for in as much as we finde it was the sinne of the Serpent in himself his pride in lifting up himself into Gods seat as the rule of Justice is that contraries be punished with contraries so nothing was more analogicall than for his pride to be thrown down with extreme abjection and humiliation therefore his punishment is to goe upon his bellie and eat the dust And as in the second person because it was pleasure that caused the Woman to sinne for seeing the Apple was fair to the eye and good for meat she was lead to eat of it and therefore this pleasure of her is punished with pain And in the third For as much as Adams crime is set down two wayes first loving his own ease too much and not able to resist the temptation of the Woman alluring him his punishment saith Augustine for
as thou usest to doe unto those that love thy name And to imitate We must imitate them that by faith have pleased God we must have both the faith and offerings of Abel and Abraham and unto these we must add that our offerings come not from us agre in fine dierum but that they be primitiae they may not be the leanest of our sheep but the fattest The offerings of Wordlings but if we examine the faith and offerings of the world we shall finde the greatest part goe the way of Cain they offer in sine dierum and without any choice the vilest things they have and many are worse than Cain for whereas he offered many desire such a Religion wherein they may come before God with empty hands they would offer a sacrifice that cost them nothing the second of Samuel the twenty fourth chapter and the twenty fourth verse the first to the Corinthians the ninth chapter and there is another degree of men that content themselves with pirituall scrifices some will be content to add vitulos labiorum that is not only conceive som good meditations for a time but hear a Sermon praise God with a Psalm but as for a real oblation they bring none But this was not Abels faith his was an offering faith if we will be saved as he was we must bring his faith to God and shew the effects of it Fides and obtulit must not be severed for that is abomination Examination of offerings If our offerings be in fine dierum if they be the meanest things we have then they are 〈◊〉 sera rejectionis oblationes We must consider and ballance that which we offer to God with that which we offer to our bellie whom wee make our God as it is in the third chapter to the Philippians and that we offer to our backs in the first Epistle to Timothie the second chapter and the ninth verse in costly apparell If therefore we have been slack and unwilling to offer to God Note we must henceforth offer more franckly and pray that God would continue this purpose in our hearts to offer to him in the first book of Chronicles the twenty ninth chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse because this is a savour and smelleth well and is acceptable to God Philippians the fourth chapter and the seventeenth verse If we will have the true faith it must be that faith that doth worke by love in the fift chapter to the Galatians and the sixt verse that it be like Abrahams faith which did cooperare operibus in the second of James and the twenty second verse and such a faith as hath joyned to it love and all other virtues in the second of Peter the first chapter and the second and third verses For where there is great faith there will be great sacrifices and oblations in the eighth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians Qnapropter accensa est ira Kajini valde cecidit vultus ejus Gen 4 5. May 6. 1599. IN which words as we see the originall taint and corruption that came into our nature by the disobedience of man breaketh forth for here originall sinne sheweth it self first in Cain in whom we see that verified which the Apostle affirmeth of all men that there is a spirit in us that lusteth after envy in the fourth chapter of James and the fift verse For here the envy of Cain is manifest in that he is angry because God did approve Abel's sacrifice and respected not his This envic and malice of his proceeded from the Devill who is called the envious man Matthew the thirteenth chapter and the nineteenth verse for that he soweth envy and all other vices in the hearts of men There went another sinne before envy For where Abels sacrifice was done in faith and therefore respected we have shewed that Cain offered only to please men and consequently whatsoever he did was hypocrisie which albeit it goe before his envy yet it is only in the heart But the first sinne that shewed it self outwardly was his malice and envy against his brother where we are to note the proceeding of sinne Envy beginneth with Hypocrisie First He began with hypocrisie within Hatred followeth and then follows hatred and envy without Breach of faith to God causeth breach of charity to men for if shipwrack be made of faith towards God charity towards men will not long be unbroken If the end of the promise which is faith in the blessed seed of the Woman be not regarded the end of the commandement which is love in the first epistle to Timothie the first chapter and the fift verse will little be respected For as Saint John saith This command we have from him That he which loveth God should love his brother also But he which loveth not his brother which he seeth how shall he love God which he hath not seen the first epistle of John and the fouth chapter In the words themselves there are two things expressed First a heavinesse or anger conceived Secondly the abating of his countenance that is Cains sinne in an inward imposthume and an outward jaundise But in the first we are to marke It is not said he was displeased or angrie but wrath and exceeding wrath the inward infection was come to a suppuration It was not envy only but also hatred which made him proceed to the murthering of his brother the first epistle of John the third chapter Note The heart heavie it is distempered If we inquire why he was heavy We shall finde that to be for that his heart was distempered either against God or his brother either against him that did respect or against him that was respected Heavinesse the first fruit of sinne The first passion or affection of our nature mentioned in Scripture as we see is heavinesse which is the first fruit of sinne and of it self is neither to be condemned nor commended for ex peccam 〈◊〉 tristitia And as the worm cats out the timber wherein it was bred so sadnesse being bred of sinne is the bane of sinne for there are two sorrows in the second epistle to the Corinthians and the second chapter Tristitia secundum Deum tristitia secundum seculum The Godly sorrow is commendable for it brings forth repentance but the worldly sorrow causeth nothing but death and eternall destruction If Cain was sorry because he offered not his sacrifice in faith as Abel did he is not to be blamed but his sorrow was a worldly sorrow and therefore to be condemned As the King said to Nehemlah Why is thy countenance sad seeing thou art not sick this is nothing but sorrow of heart Nehemiah the second chapter and the second verse So where we see Cain heavy and his countenance cast down we may gather that he is disquieted and sorrowfull for 〈◊〉 and charity whose property is to think the best the first epistle to
more than his providence for as he seeth the sacrifice of both so in justice he respects the good and rejects the evill Cain said as the wicked doe in their heart God doth not regard Psalm the tenth but if Cain desires that God should not regard Abel nor his good service he desires a thing unpossible for God is not unjust to forget the labour of our love Hebrews the sixt and the tenth verse Shall I justifie the wicked ballance and the bag of deceitfull weights the sixt chapter of Micha and the eleventh verse therefore whether we respect God or Abel this cause of Cains sorrow is unjust and his envy is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And therefore whereas other sinnes are punished only in the world to come and have pleasure in this life as if that future punishment were not sufficient for envy The envious man is a torment to him self God takes order that it shall have punishment in this life for the envious man is a torment to himself as the Wise man saith the fourteenth of the Proverbs and the thirtieth invidia est putredo ossium The degrees of Cains heaviness were that he was iratus valdè It was not one of the first degrees of anger which the Philosophers call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There are passions which are no sinne at all as in the fourth chapter of the Ephesians irascimini nolite peccare and the Lord saith dost thou well to be angrie Jonas the third chapter meaning there is some anger that is good so there is an anger that is no sin for the first motions of anger are not so hainous for the nature of men cannot keep away these passions no more than birds may be kept from lighting upon trees The Preacher saith Ecclesiastes the seventh chapter and the eleventh verse ira nidificat in sina 〈◊〉 whereupon one saith that although anger will light upon our nature whether we will or no yet we may keep it from making a nest in our hearts and so long it is no sinne therefore Cains sin is great in respect it was not only without a just cause but for that he suffered anger to rest in his heart Note The tongue the trumpet of the minde The falling down of his countenance is a fruit of the abundance of his heart as our Saviour Christ saith Matthew the twelfth chapter and the thirty fourth verse ex abundantia cordis os loquitur the tongue is the trumpet of the minde The countenance the glass of our affections and the countenance is the glass wherein we may behold the affections of the heart as the Preacher saith heaviness will appear in the countenance Examples so it did in Labans countenance Genesis the thirty first chapter no lesse than it doth here in Cain so in the Bretheren of Joseph Genesis the thirty seventh chapter Hatred cannot speak peaceable in so much as they could not speak peaceably to him so Saul ever after looked asquint on David after he conceived displeasure at him the first of Samuel and the eighteenth chapter Pride of heart appeares by proud looks so the Scripture sheweth that the pride of the heart appeares in the countenance by the proud look the one hundred and first Psalm and the high looks Proverbs the sixth chapter the adulterous minde is shewed by eyes full of adultery the second of Peter and the second chapter Countenance cast down a sign of ill when the minde imagineth evill then the light of the countenance is turned into darkness and the countenance which should be upright is changed in ruinam vultûs with casting down of the countenance because it is both an effect and sign of ill and the Apostle willeth that we abstain from any appearance of ill the first to the Thessalonians and the fifth chapter therefore we are to avoid it tristitia vultûs est hostilis tessara the outward badge and token of some inward evill conceived in the heart abscedendum est non 〈◊〉 a malo sed ab omni specie mali For the conclusion as we have already once seen the way what it is that we might not follow it Jude the eleventh verse so here again we are to consider his way which is of three sorts Note First not to rest and be content with that which God will have come to pass he was displeased because God respected Abel and not him Be content when God respected and contrary whereas he should have said with Eli the first of Samuel and the third chapter Deus est faciet quod bonum videtur in occulis ejus and with David the one hundred and ninteenth Psalm and the seventy fifth verse I know Lord thy judgments are right and that of very faithfulness thou hast afflicted me but to stomack God for any of his doings is a thing that every one must avoid that will not walk in Cains way Fret not thy self because of the ungodly saith the Prophet Psalm the thirty seventh and the first we may not think much that God doth respect the wicked and blesse them with temporall blessings much lesse are we to repine at the good of the godly Fret not at the prosperity of the wicked The Prophet affirmeth that he was offended at the prosperity of the wicked in so much as he said I have cleansed my heart in vain and washed my hands in innocency Psalm the thirty seventh he could not tell what to think of it till he went to the 〈◊〉 and there he learned that albeit they flourish in the world yet he sets them in slippery places that they may fall down to their distruction therefore we may not fret our selves considering that those things prove to Gods providence This was Davids meditation on the Sabbath Psalm the ninty second and the sixt and seventh verses That albeit the unwise know it not and fools doe not understand so much yet he was assured that when the wicked did grow as the grosse and all the Workers of wickedness did flourish then they should perish so that we have no just cause to be displeased with God if he respect the wicked seeing it is for his hurt but if he respect Abel and his good service we are to be glad When righteous men are in authority then the people rejoyce Proverbs the twentieth chapter and the second verse 〈◊〉 it is he joy of the world that the godly are respected of God and enjoy his favourable countenance and he that will not follow Cains way must confidere virtuti suae alienae non invidere Some rise not by virtue but by others fall when men doe not labour to exalt themselves by their own virtue but rise up by the fall of others that is Cains way which we must carefully avoid as we will ascape the wrath of God Thirdly the example of Abels good service and the favour which God vouchsafeth to
a condemning of his action because it is a foolish thing to doe that which hath no good reason to be rendred to warrant the doing of it Therefore God divideth the sense into two parts either the reason must be in God or in Abel in God for favouring him or in Abel because favoured of God Now God in the former part hath acquitted himself saying If thou dost well shalt not thou be accepted for behold I am just and will regard thy well doing therefore thou hast no cause to be grieved for that Or else thou shalt be rewarded according to justice and that in bounty and liberality which is by ancient Fathers grounded upon the words of God to Abraham Fear not for I will be thine exceeding great reward Genesis the fifteenth chapter and the first verse that is If thou dost well thou shalt be 〈◊〉 be rewarded for it but if thou dost not well thou hast no cause to be grieved neither for as I am just and will talk with thee one day thou shalt hear of it so yet my justice is full of mercy I intend not presenly to take thee by the throat but give thee space to repent 〈◊〉 shall but lye at thy dore so that not only Gods justice 〈◊〉 herein but his mercy is exceeding great and mixed with justice If God took order that after his sinne committed Cain should 〈◊〉 by and by come to judgement but should have time first to 〈◊〉 himself of it this is matter of comfort that no man should despair by and by when he hath sinned far that God is a 〈…〉 God and would not the death of sinner and therefore giveth him time to repent This sheweth that God gave him no cause of grief There remains that the grief must be conceived against Abel because God so much respected him but so the sense is as if God should say Cain art thou grieved for Abels good and fearest he should grow insolent by the favour I have shewed him and so he should despise and thou shouldst be vile in his eyes If Abel have offended thee why his desire shall be subject to thee but that is no cause why thou shouldst be grieved for he being the Child of grace doth not affect any such manner of superiority as thou fearest but is as modest and as humble as he was before and so thou hast no reason of impatiencie against him And not only that first but this second that God shewed plainly that it is his will that in and by the sin committed no man should lose any priviledge which of right is due to him and which before hee had and every motion in a Superior to sinne doth not discharge him of his authority Which is contrary to that false opinion and censure of them which thinke that even Princes themselves after sinne committed lose all their prerogative and supremacy of government which they had before and that their Subjects are not bound to doe their service any longer to them but that ever after their allegiance shall cease which is false and contrary to all reason and not Gods intent and will here For as in the chapter before after Adam had sinned yet Eve was still subject to him so the same God saith and ratifieth here that Cain though he had thus sinned both against God and his brother yet being the elder and first born and so before Abel so there should be a superiority and dominion that he should still retain by nature And it is Gods assertion that that superiority should be reteined still and that Abel should not seek to be his Superior neither did he That was the prerogative which Cain had before Abel as the elder But to yeeld this obedience hath been the continuall practise of all the Saints and Children of God King Saul was a wicked man yet David rebelled not against him because he knew him to be the Lords annointed so the Prophet Jeremy saith of Nebuchadnezar a wicked King that he will visite the Nation and Kingdome that will not serve him the twenty seventh chapter of Jeremiah and the ninth verse and for the new Testament both Paul and Peter confess the same Paul in the first to Timothy the second chapter and the second verse and Peter in the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the fourteenth verse doe will that duty and allegiance be given to the higher powers not only if they be good but though they be Tyrants and wicked Princes that fear not God And it is it that God saith by Job Job the thirty fourth chapter and the thirtieth verse that by him the Hypocrite reigneth that is for their sinnes God will send wicked Princes and Cain shall bear rule over Abel God doth not only alledg that thus it was but thus he would have it This Government thus by God established in the beginning was by David Jeremy Paul Peter Job and all the rest of the Patriarchs and Saints of God confessed and allowed So that if we regard Abel either in respect of himself or his demeanour towards Cain or we respect Gods goodness herein no just cause can be of grief neither was it Gods will that Abel should resist neither doth he any such thing and so indeed there was no just cause why Cain should fear it or be grieved And this may suffice for the first which I will shut up with this Caveat of instruction 〈◊〉 Our own sinne of malice and envy is cause of our grief that for as much as the grief of malice and envy cannot be 〈◊〉 from God who is just nor from Abel who is mild and modest then it remains that it came from Cain himself whom God repeats four times together in the words of this Text thou and thee and so he must return to his own heart and remember how his own sinne is cause of his grief as God himself speaketh by Isaiah the fourty sixth chapter and the eighth verse Remember thus and be ashamed bring it again to minde you transgressors Note And for the new Testament Luke the fifteenth chapter the prodigall Sonne when he came to himself confessed his own unworthiness and said Father I have sinned which is another main point of Divinity established from the beginning that as God saith Hosea the fifteenth and the ninth perditio tua ex te Israel salus autem ex me so our well doing or ill doing is cause of our regarding or destruction so saith James no man is tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of ill neither doth he tempt any man but every one is tempted of his own concupiscence James the first chapter and the thirteenth verse So that from the first we have this Doctrine that if God be judged he is innocent and if Abel there is no fault in him and to come to Cain he is in all the fault But now if we come about and say it is not meant of the person but of the things that is
and waking A third distinction is peccatum cubans and vigilans that is sinne sleeping and lying still and sinne waking that is the temptation of sinne before and while it is committed and then the remorse after The fourth and last distinction is that which 〈◊〉 a difference between the Children of God and of the Devill between the reprobate and the regenerate that in the godly there is peccatum 〈◊〉 but not dominans sin ruleth but reigneth not from hence is grounded that which the Prophet saith in the nineteenth Psalm Keep thy servant from presumptuous sinnes and in the one hundred and nineteenth Psalm Direct my steps that no iniquitie have dominion over me so the Apostle in the sixth chapter to the Romans Let not sinne reigne in your mortall bodies yet he confesseth in the seventh chapter to the Romans that sinne dwelleth in him By which we may see plainly what it meaneth for sinne would command a mans body his eye foot and hand yea set all the parts of his body a work about that it 〈◊〉 But that party when sinne biddeth him 〈◊〉 and goe 〈◊〉 still when sinne biddeth him stretch out his hand can clasp it close when sinne biddeth him delight his eye can shut it close when sinne biddeth take to heart and one doth with sighs shake it off he that when sin commeth running shutteth the dore against it avoideth all provocations in such a one there is peccatum currens but not dominans That is for the division and the difference between these two sorts of persons But secondly we have a main foundation which the ancient Fathers and Doctors ground upon the thirteene verses of the third chapter where God useth the same words to the woman that he useth to Cain here Why hast thou done this And the Woman said The Serpent beguiled me It sheweth that the proceding of Cains sinne was as the first sinne was for the Serpent first shewed her the fruit and she did eat and then after she shewed it to Adam and it pleasing his sight he likewise did eat This is the proceeding of sinne from the Serpent to Eve from her to Adam and so here the presuming of reason in Cain contrary to reason was as that in Eve and Adam and therefore as after God said to the woman Thy desire shall be subject to thy husbands and he shall rule over thee so here he saith Cain shall bear rule over sin and the same shall befall in mans sensuality that is his lusts and concupiscence which befell his uper part which is his reason alluring him and drawing him to sinne Therefore they call the understanding and reason which is the uper part of the soul Adam and the lower part that is the affection Eve The desire and pleasure of sinne that is the apple and sinne is as the Serpent As this is grounded upon the speech of God so is it upon the similitude and manner of sinne whereby man is caught as a fish with the bait in the first chapter of James for reason taketh the bait first Such a proceeding is in all sinne and there is no other temptation to sinne now then there was in the beginning to Adam and Eve Thus much for our state and duty arising by way of instruction and exhortation to behave our selves so as sinne get not the rule over us I come now to the last in these words But thou shalt bear rule over it Wherein we ask How shall this be fulfilled can we give to nature that power and freewill nay it is plain we cannot neither is Gods intent so to doe for we are not able of our selves as from our selves to think a good thought as it is in the second to the Corinthians the third chapter and the third verse for we have all been as an unclean thing all our righteousnesse is like a filthy cloth in the sixty fourth chapter of Isaiah and the sixth verse so that he that hath no more in him than the strength of nature is as he that followeth the steps of an harlot whose case is like to the oxe that goeth to the slaughter as it is in the seventh chapter of the Proverbs Therefore it is not to be desired neither is it in our strength to doe it for where God saith Tee shall rule over it Is our strength able to doe thus No. Further as Moses said in the 30. of Deuteronomie and the 14. that Gods meaning in giving him the Law was not that he could doe it or should of himself but it was verbum fidei the word was as near to thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart to doe it This word is the word of promise as Paul expoundeth it in the tenth chapter to the Romans The means to rule sinne is as near thee as sinne is Say not in thy heart who shall goe up into heaven the means is the word of faith which assureth thee of Christ the promised seed who shall for thee break the head of the Serpent as it is in the third chapter of Genesis and give thee the victorie over sinne for else this doctrine had been false if that promise had not gone before then there is Christ without whom we can doe nothing but sinne as himself speaketh Sine me nihil potestis facere in the fifteenth chapter of John the fifth verse It is he that giveth repentance in the second 〈◊〉 to Timothie the second chapter by whom they come 〈◊〉 amendment 〈◊〉 of the snare of the Devill And therefore as the Apostle saith Wee must be strong in the Lord that we may be able to resist in the sixth chapter to the Ephesians For we are able to doe all things in him that strengthneth us as it is in the fourth chapter to the Philippians that is by the strength of his grace enabling us For the performance whereof we must sue to him and begge it at his hands by prayer And that is the meaning of the words that we should ire ad Dominum ut in Domino dominemur 〈◊〉 must goe to him that hath trod upon the bead os the Serpent and overcome the power of Hell Sinne and Death and he shall tread down Sat an under 〈◊〉 feet in the sixteenth chapter to the Romans and the twentieth verse In the one hunderd and tenth Psalme He shall bear rule over his enemies then he may justly bid us bear rule over sinne seeing he is both able and milling to help us There is no man hath set it down more excellently than St. Gregory who saith Justus Deus instat praecepto quia cùm instat ptaecepto praecurrit auxilio so that if a man can remember what Christ hath done how that he which hath broken the Serpents head will give us power to bear rule over sinne as he is able so will he if we be earnest suitors to him for 〈◊〉 give us grace and strength whereby to resist temptations of sinne So saith the Apostle in the second to
second in this verse ut si peccasset poeniteat The first speech was as the Apostle speaks in the first to the Corinthians the tenth chapter qui stat videat ne cadat but now that he is fallen he speaks again ut resurgat poeniteat Jeremiah the eighth chapter and the fourth verse Shall they fall and not arise both which effects of Gods goodness the Prophet noteth in these words Psalm the one hundred and fourty fifth and the fourteenth verse Note The Lord upholdeth them that are ready to fall and lifteth up them that are down Gods mercy Secondly his long suffering appeares in that post tot scelera after that he hath sinned both against God and himself very grievously and against his Brother yet God ceaseth not to call him to repentance and whereas the Lord saith For three transgressions and for four I will not turn Amos the first chapter and the sixt verse yet when Cain hath sinned not three or four times but five or six and addeth transgression to transgression yet still he continueth to be mercfull to him if he would accept of it as Job sheweth God speaketh once and twice and man seeth it not in dreams and visions of the night then he opens their eares by correcting them Loe all those things will God work twice or thrice with a man that he may turn back his soul from the pit Job the thirty third chapter and the twenty ninth verse Thirdly to long suffering we may add patience in that God speaks to him non increpando sed interrogando medici instar potius quam judicis and so we see Gods intent in asking the question is an intent of mercy that by his goodnesse long suffering and patience he might have drawn Cain to repentance had he not in the hardness of his heart heaped up wrath for himself against the day of wrath Romans the second chapter Secondly for Gods justice shewed in this Question the advised proceeding of God in the matter of Cain and Abel is a pattern for all Judges how to proceed in judgment namely that albeit they know the party accused be guilty of the fact yet they may not proceed against him till they have made him confesse the fact which was the purpose of God with Cain for so he dealt with our first Parents in that first judgment He knew Adam had eaten of the tree and yet he asketh Hast thou eaten in the third chapter so he dealt with Sarah Genesis the eighteenth chapter and the fifteenth verse Secondly from Gods example they are taught to proceed with favour not with a headlong and furious spirit but with the spirit of meekness as Joshua with Achan Joshua the seventh My Sonne give the Lord glory and confess so the Apostle willeth Galatians the sixt chapter If any be overtaken restore him in spiritu 〈◊〉 Thirdly from hence they have a good ground to make inquiry and examinafor the shedder of blood not only upon the finding of a dead body but if the party be missing as God for that Abel was not present examineth Cain where he is and what is become of him Now followeth Cains Answer wherein first generally two things offer themselves The 〈◊〉 of sinne First the nature of sinne is set out unto us which is to draw men from one sinne to another for so Cain was drawn from hypocrisie to envy from envy to murther from murther to hardness of heart and so to defend and excuse his sinneThis the Prophet calleth a twisting of sinne when he saith of sins that they weave the spiders web Isaiah the fiftly ninth chapter and the fifth verse sinne is like fire-bushes or thorns that are folden one within another Nahum the first chapter and the tenth verse it is like the disease called the canker which fretteth in the first to Timothy the second chapter even so sinne maketh men to proceed unto more ungodliness and to goe from one sinne to another Of this we have a plain example in Cain and not in him only but even in David the the Servant of God who after he yeelded to one sinne stayed not there but proceeded to the committing of another in the second of Samuel and the eleventh chapter Secondly we are to consider the hiding of sinne that it is such a thing as desires to be concealed and not to be disclosed So it was with Adam in the matters of concupiscence and in Cain in the matter of revenge both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lust and wrath are such things as we would have concealed and not come to the hearing of all men Note that is we have in us not only sinfull souls but guilefull spirits Psalm the thirty second Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and in whose soul there is no guil The Prophets meaning is that we doe not only sinne against God but we would beguile God in hiding our sinnes from him if it were possible as if we were other manner of persons than indeed we be and as if we were altogether free from those sinnes which God seeth we have committed Therefore we are to know that as confession is the dore to repentance Hiding of sinne shutteth the dore of repentance so the hiding of sinne is the damming up of the dore of repentance for 〈◊〉 we will have favour at Gods hand we must confesse our sinnes but if we say we have no sinne we deceive our selvse whereby we see that sinne is a thing to be avoided Secondly that it is unlawfull in that whosoever committeth sinne doth that which he dare not avouch or acknowledge for the Apostle saith Romans the fourteenth chapter Blessed is he which doth not allow in his act that which he covers for many allow and approve of that in their actions which in word they dare not but condemn They which commit murther as Cain or adultery whether it be lust of revenge or the lust of uncleanness howsoever they yeeld to it in the practises of their life yet they cannot justifie it by word of mouth be they never so wicked whether they will or no their consciences will make them confesse they have done that they ought not to have done Adam and Eve made a confession of their fault though it were with excusing themselves by laying the fault one upon another but in Cain we finde not only an excusing of it but an obstinate denying of it In which regard his sinne is of a greater last and scantling than Adam's and hereby he 〈◊〉 himself not to be of Adam but ex maligno illo John the third chapter and the twelfth verse Of the Answer there are three parts First Abnegatio veritatis in these words I know not Secondly Abnegatio charitatis in that he denyeth that he is his Brothers keeper Thirdly Abnegatio humilitatis in that without all modesty he answereth by a question Am I my Brothers keeper For the first In saying he knoweth
crieth for vengeance for as the Prophet saith Our strength is in silence and quietness Isaiah the thirtieth chapter Though we possess our souls in patience as Christ willeth Luke the twenty first chapter yet God will say mihi vindicta Deuteronomie the thirty second chapter and as I am Judge of the world so I will be revenged of them that doe wrong Therefore the Apostle willeth not to seek revenge because God challengeth that as a thing proper to himself Romans the twelfth chapter Hebrews the tenth chapter taceat os loquitur sanguis which is a point necessary to be urged and teacheth us that we need not to be Gods remembrancers in this point for the revenge of injury Our teares and sighs crie for vengeance for as he heareth the voice of blood so the voice of our weeping and teares Psalm the fifty sixt and the eighth verse he heareth the sighes and griefs of the heart Psalm the thirty eighth and the ninth verse and the inward desire of the heart though it be not uttered Exodus the fourteenth chapter and the fifteenth verse as in Moses Note Therefore Job saith terra ne operiat meum sanguinem neque clamores meos intercipiat Job the tenth chapter and if he keep a vessel to put our teares in much more may we perswade our selves that our blood is pretious in his sight Psalm the one hundred and sixteenth and the fifteenth verse which point ministreth great comfort to them that suffer wrong Secondly Hence we learn what is the nature of sinne before the Holy Ghost called it 〈◊〉 cubans that is sinne fast asleep but here is peccatum clamans not only sinne awake but crying out and warning for sinne 〈◊〉 gently at the first but after it will pull a man by the throat Even as the Devill is tentator Matthew the fourth chapter he tempteth men to sinne by all the pleasant means he can and when he hath prevailed with them then he is accusator fratrum Apoc. the twelfth chapter Sinne is like the wife of Potiphar which tempted Joseph by all fair means to folly and as if he had been guilty did first accuse him Genesis the thirty ninth chapter And as one answered Joab when he would have had him smite Absalom If I had done it it would have been the danger of my life yea thou thy self which 〈◊〉 me to doe it wouldest have been the first that should accuse me in the second book of Samuel the eighteenth chapter and the thirteenth verse so sinne hath no sooner with its deceitfulnesse allured a man to doe evill but it will straight way call to God for vengeance against him Which thing ought to make it odious in the eyes of all men Though Abel complain not Cain 〈◊〉 not and Adam accuse not yet we cannot so escape for our own sinne is as a Serjeant that will finde us out Numbers the thirty second chapter and the twenty third verse and when it hath found us as a Goalor it will hold and binde us with cords Proverbs the fifth chapter and the twenty second verse And as the Prophet speaketh in the second chapter of Habakkuk and the eleventh verse The stone out of the wall and the beam out of the timber shall cry to God for vengeance upon 〈◊〉 though the poor whose faces they have ground say nothing Esay the third chapter and the fifteenth verse Touching which pursuit of sinne the Wise-man saith in the tenth chapter of Ecclesiastes Curse not the King no not in thy thought neither curse the rich in thy bed-chamber for the fowls of heaven shall disclose it Yea a mans own spirit will make him to confesse his own sinne and if all means fail yet the stones in the street will cry for vengeance And we see that there is vox non solùm oris sed operis as the Prophet speaketh of Gods works that the very heavens have a voyce wherewith they doe enarrare gloriam Dei Psalm the ninteenth And therefore the Heathen say Res ipsa loquitur Which as it ministreth fear to Cain and to the wicked so comfort to the Godly For if as we see in Cain sinne have a voyce to plead before God against a man Good works crie to God then no doubt but the good works that a man doth will speak to God for him and are remembrancers to put God in minde to be gracious unto him As God heareth rears and putteth them in a bottle as he heareth sighes and inward desires of the heart which speak to him the Almes that Cornelius gave had a voyce to plead unto God for him so that of a heathen he was made a Christian Acts the tenth chapter For as the concupiscence of evill is sinne so the very desire of good is a virtue that pleaseth God And if the taking away of a mans life doe pull down the vengeance of God then the saving of a mans life or of his soul will be a forcible means to procure Gods favour To conclude The last point to be observed from hence is That if the blood of Abel had a voyce to speak unto God then the blood of Christ Jesus must needs have a more powerfull voyce because it speaketh better things than the blood of Abel Hebrews the twelfth chapter and the twenty fourth verse for the blood of Abel cryed for Justice but Christ's blood cryeth for Mercy If when we doe evill it will plead to God for vengeance then if wee doe any good work much more shall it speak to God for us And God as he is inclined to mercy rather than to vengeance will rather hear the voyce of our good works than of evill because our good works speak better things than our wicked actions Nunc itaque tu maledictus esto exsul ab ista terra quae aperuit os suum ad excipiendum sanguinem fratris tui è manu tua Quum humum ipsam colueris ne pergito edere vim suam tibi vagus infestus agitationibus esto in terra Gen. 4. 11.12 Aug. 26. 1599. IN these two verses is contained the sentence pronounced by God against Cain for God having performed that which the Holy Ghost telleth us in the thirty third chapter of Job and the twenty ninth verse that God will deal twice or thrice with a man that he may turn back his soul from the pit First in his examination Where is thy Brother Abel Secondly in his second question What hast thou done Thirdly in laying open before Cain his sinne Behold the voyce of thy Brothers blood cryeth to me Having spared him for three 〈◊〉 he will no longer bear with him but proceedeth to sentence against him for the fourth in the first of Amos and the third verse shewing that as he gave sentence against Adam confessing to assure us that we may proceed likewise upon confession so we may doe in case of conviction And that it is a good ground to pronounce sentence not only
punishment of sinne in the Margent the sinne it self which is the primarie signification of the word And they that turn it punishment for sinne doe thereby expresse Cain's murmuring against God They that turn it for sinne doe shew Cain's desparation I rather follow that in the Margent viz. that the sense is thus My sinne is greater than can be pardoned First because punishment of sinne Secondly because the Hebrews expound it so Thirdly for that all the old Fathers read it so Fourthly for that there is no mention of the third person Lastly because the full sense is comprehended in the next verse So that we are to take it thus That Cain being examined and hearing the sentence pronounced by God upon him breakes forth into this complaint My sinne is greater than can be forgiven In which words generally wee see a new Cain for no man would imagine that Cain who a little before answered God so presumptuously would submit himself so gently that he which said I know not where my brother is would now upon the sudden confess his fact that he that before was so bold should now become so dejected in the sight of his sinne he that had shewed himself a gyant should so suddenly become a Peasant but it is not Cains case only but the case of all his progenie For Pharaoh that so proudly and boldly said in the fifth chapter of Exodus and the second verse Who is the Lord that I should hear his voice I know not the Lord after doth acknowledge the Lord and submit himself to him in the ninth chapter of Exodus and the twenty seventh verse I have now sinned the Lord is righteous but I and my people are wicked Pray thou to the Lord that there be no more thunders Saul having committed a very grievous transgression against God doth notwithstanding very boldly say to Samuel in the first of Samuel the fifteenth chapter and thirteenth verse I have fulfilled the commandement of the Lord but a litle after verse the thirtieth he submitteth himself I have sinned but honour mee And Judas the perfect example of Cain albeit he had purposed to deliver his Master into the hands of the Scribes and Pharisees is as bold to deny that he had any such intent as any as it is in the twenty sixth chapter of Matthew and the twenty fifth verse but after the deed done we see he is touched with remorse for it and said in the twenty seventh chapter of Matthew and the fourth verse I have sinned betraying the innocent blood This is a strange metamorphosis and it is expedient that we mark this new stile That when a man sees Cain's offering he may say with the Prophet in the fift chapter of Jeremiah and the thirty first verse Quid fiet in novissimo For if our case were as Cains was that no man should stand in our way but presently we might be revenged of him without danger it were a thing to be liked but wee see Cain himself doth not escape unpunished Who would not desire to be in their case of whom Job speakes in the twenty first chapter of Job and the seventh verse If their flourishing estate would hold which live and wax old and grow in wealth their seed is established in his sight and his generation before their eyes But that which maketh their condition miserable is that which followeth in the thirteenth verse They spend their dayes in wealth and suddenly they goe down to the grave The Prophet confesseth he was greatly disquieted at the prosperity of the wicked till he went to the Sanctuarie of God for there he understood their end that they are set in slipperie places Psalm the seventy third So albeit Cain had the dominion over his brother and slew him thinking none would call him to account for it yet wee see at length he acknowledgeth his sinne and affirmeth it to be so great as that it can have no pardon Wherefore if we will judge rightly of Cain whom we have heard before what he was we must not stay there but read on forward and see what he is now For we must judge of the wicked by their deed of them our Saviour Christ saith in the 12. chapter of Matthew Their end is worse than their beginning Before his sin lay still and his condemnation slept And thus it is with the wicked that while they are asleep in sinne they will believe nothing nor give credit to any word of God Wherefore we see a plain example in Lot's sons in law in the nienteenth chapter of Genesis and the fourteenth verse when he told them the Lord would destroy the City he seemed to them to be som jester And when sinne awaketh and damnation sleepeth no longer then it is a matter of earnest it maketh Cain to cry out My sinne is greater than can be pardoned And howsoever Esau contemn his Birth-right yet when he seeks it cannot be had again it maketh him weep bitterly Genesis the twenty fifth chapter and Hebrews the twelfth chapter So that albeit at the first they see not the inconvenience and danger of sinne yet in novissimo Jeremiah the thirtieth chapter and the twenty fourth verse at the last day they shall understand it plainly Touching the words themselves here is a confession though it be faulty for true confession hath prayer joyned with it as the Prophet having made confession of his sinne saith For this cause I prayed Psalm the thirty second And Peter to Simon Magus Pray if the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee in the eighth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles and the twenty second verse but this confession hath no prayer and therefore is faulty But to speak so much of it as is good in his confession First he confesseth his sinne not every sinne but his crooked and perverse sinne such as Job speaketh of in his thirty third chapter and the twenty seventh verse I have sinned and perverted righteousness Again in that he saith his sinne is great he sheweth that he felt the weight of it and doth not 〈◊〉 it and make it lesse than it is This confession is well but only for two exceptions that are easily taken against it First that which Chrysostome maketh That it was too late for it should have stood in the eighth verse for as the Wise-man saith in the eighteenth chapter of the Proverbs and the seventeenth verse Justus in principio sermonis accusator sui And as the fathers read in the fourty third chapter of Isaiah and the twenty sixth verse Die tu iniquitates prior ut justificeris for we may not foreslow the time but seek the Lord while he may he found Isaiah the fifty fift chapter Secondly because albeit it be said of repentance Siver a nunquam sera yet si sera rarò vera if it be late it is seldom true And this confession of Cain as it is no true confession for that it was long deferred so chiefly for
that it was a confession without any petition or prayer for pardon and he made no prayer because he had no hope and no hope for that he wanted faith We must therefore beware that we deferre not our confession and repentance but speedily return to God for that is the cause that he bears with us he might presently consume us after we have sinned but he spareth us for repentance as the Prophet speaketh in the thirtieth chapter of Isaiah Expectat Deus ut miseriatur and his mercy is extended to all sinners upon condition of repentance Albeit Nebuchadnezzar were a grievous sinner yet the Prophet telleth him in the fourth chapter of Daniel if he break off his sinnes by righteous dealing and his iniquities by mercy to the poor Erit sanatio erroris And the Prophet to them that had given themselves to Idolatrie saith If you turn your iniquitie shall not be to your destruction Ezekiel the eighteenth chapter and the thirtieth verse Therefore the Godly man saith Wee have trespassed against God wee have taken strange wayes yet now there is hope in Israel for this Exodus the tenth chapter and second verse Which is a point very materiall for if hope of mercy and forgivenesse be cut off sinners will fall into their case that said desperatly in the eighteenth chapter of Jeremiah and the twelfth verse We will walk in the stubbornesse of our hearts or else as the Apostle speaketh They will be swallowed up of too much heavinesse in the first epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter that is without hope of mercy men fall into desperate hardness of heart or into desperate fear sorrow so as they cannot be comforted And this is it which the Devill desires to the end he may bring this to pass As in the beginning he took exception against one tree charged God with niggardliness envy albeit he could not charge God for all the trees of the Garden in the third chapter of Genesis and the fift verse so albeit it be impossible for the Devill to perswade Cain that God will not forgive sinnes because in as much as if God be extream to mark what is done 〈◊〉 and enter into judgement no man can be justified in his sight Psalm the one hundered and thirtieth and Psalm the one hundred fourty third therefore he must needs forgive sinnes unlesse he will shew that he hath made all men for nought Psalm the eighty ninth yet he tels him that howsoever sinnes may be forgiven yet Cain's sinne cannot be pardoned He tels Cain that a 〈◊〉 there of his Brother and such a one as denyeth the deed with such presumptuous and proud answers cannot have pardon But the error of Cain stands herein not that he is perswaded that his sin is great for murther no doubt is a great sinne but that he thinketh it so great as it could not be pardoned as if Gods mercy were not great enough for his sinne were it never so great Cain's error then as we see is Major iniquitas quàm propitiatio Which error God doth most of all detest First for that it doth prejudice his Power as if he that is Almighty were not able to pardon the sinnes of wicked men Secondly It doth prejudice his truth for God affirmeth of himself That he forgiveth iniquity transgression and sinne Exodus the thirty fourth chapter and the seventh verse which is the sinne that Cain speaketh of here The Prophet saith of God in the one hundred and thirtieth Psalme He shall deliver Israel from all his sinnes He hath shut up all under sinne that he may have mercy over all Romans the eleventh chapter And as he came into the world to save sinners so primos peecatorum in the first epistle to Timothie the first chapter and the sixteenth verse This Cain could not be ignorant of having heard of the promise which God made That the seed of the woman should break the Serpents head that is as we have shewed the head and chief sinne that the Devill can infect the soul of man withall Thirdly This error doth derogate from his goodnesse which makes it more odious to God for Gods mercy hath a preeminece above his justice Psalme the one hundred fourty fifth his mercy is above all his workes And as the Apostle saith in the second chapter of James Mercy triumpheth over Justice Therefore the sin against Gods Mercy is more grievous Again It is the more odious in Gods eyes because it takes from him the Glory of his Mercy which is essentiall and naturall in God for his Justice groweth out of man and he is said to be just not so much in regard of himself as in respect of his dealing towards men in that he rewardeth the good and punisheth the bad But as for Mercy it is naturally in him and a part of his Essence But his Justice commeth from without for when men provoke him by their sinnes then he saith Isaiah the twenty eighth chapter and the seventeenth verse Judgment will I lay to the rule and righteousness to the ballance Therefore if we conceive of God as a hard Lord whereas we see he is ready to forgive ten thousand talents to his Servants Matthew the eighteenth chapter or think him to be a hard Father whereas he is most kinde to naughty and unthrifty Sons Luke the fifteenth chapter We doe derogate against his mercie and goodness who in respect of his naturall inclination to mercy is called mercy Psalm the fifty ninth and the seventeenth verse wherefore as the Apostle said to the Jewes Acts the thirteenth chapter and the fourty sixt verse Seeing you have put the word of God from you and judged your selves unworthy of eternall life so if any man by taking an 〈◊〉 opinion of Gods mercy doe put it from him and judge himself unworthy of mercy there is no hope that he shall ever obtain forgiveness but he must either fall into that desparare hardness of heart that is mentioned Jeremiah the eighteenth chapter or else be continually tormented with a wounded spirit Proverbs the eighteenth chapter and be swallowed up of heaviness in the second to the Corinthians the second chapter Touching Cains conceit it is certain if his sinne cannot be pardoned it is either in regard of the sinne it self or of Gods justice but neither of these are any such hindrance that they ought to draw us to that which Cain saith Touching sinne it is not a thing impossible to obtain pardon for it First Because sinne is the work of a Creature which is finite and therefore can doe nothing but that which is finite But God is infinite and of his greatness there is no end psalm the one hundred and fourty sift And therefore look how much God is greater than man so great is his power to thew mercy and consequently it is not possible that his mercy should be overcome of our sinne and miserie Secondly peccatum hominis est infirmitas hominis that is sinne
his Sentence and therefore as Christ saith Luke the thirteenth chapter Except 〈◊〉 repent ye shall all likewise 〈◊〉 so all threathings in the Scripture goe with this condition The soul that sinneth it shall die except it repent Ezekiel the eighteenth chapter and he that calls his brother fool is in danger of hell fire except he 〈◊〉 Matthew the fifth chapter and the twenty second verse So that the justice of God is no hndrance but that the most grievous sinner that is may obtain forgiveness if he repent and because Cain repented not therefore he is excluded from the remission of sinnes The point that remains is That we consider 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the second to the Corinthians the second chapter the devises and fetches which the enemie of our Salvation useth to work our destruction for when sinne is to be committed he brings them to presumption and albeit God hath threatned plagues for such and such sinnes yet he perswades a man as Peter did Christ in the sixteenth chapter of Matthew Non fiet haec tibi that is before sinne is committed but when finne is finished and the Devill hath that he would have then he laboureth to bring men into desperation saying it must needs be and they cannot avoid the wrath and judgements of God In the reading of the old Testament he layeth a vail over the hearts of men as it was with the Jews that by the Law they might not see the grievousnesse of sinne and so avoid the danger of it in the second epistle to the Corinthians and the third chapter but when he hath entised men to commit sinne then he blindeth their eyes that the light of the Gospell whereby they are assured of the forgivenesse of sinnes and of the mercy of God in Christ should not shine into their hearts in the second to the Corinthians the fourth chapter he will neither let them see the grievousnesse of sinne before they commit it nor behold the mercy of God after it is committed Which mercy of God is so generally offered to all sorts that even murtherers lyars albeit they be grievous sinners cannot despair of mercy for we see both David and Peter obtained pardon and none are debarred but only they that say Quid nobis tecum Jesu Nazarene in the first chapter of Mark and the twenty fourth verse That which excluded the Devill himself from mercy was this desperate fear for as Augustine saith Obstinatione suâ non enormitate sceleris Daemon est Daemon Even so Cain the Child of the Devill seemeth to say thus much in this his confession I desire no pardon at thy hands O God because I see the greatness of my offence is greater than thy mercy For Cain we see what befell him because as the Prophet speaketh Noluit intelligere ut bene ageret Psalm the thirty sixt because he had no care to doe as God would have him therefore God gave him up to the lusts of his own heart and as the Apostle speaketh in the second to the Thessalonians the second chapter and the tenth verse because when God spake to him he believed not the truth that he might be saved God sent him strange delusions that he should believe the Devils lyes who preached to him and perswaded him after he had sinned that his sinne was greater than Gods mercy for if Pharaoh first harden his own heart Exodus the eighth chapter and the thirty second verse it is just that God harden his heart so as he shall not hearken to his ministers Exodus the ninth chapter and the twelfth verse But because the Prophet complaineth that while he would have healed Israel then the iniquitie of Ephraim was discovered and the wickednesse of Samaria Hosea the seventh chapter Therefore we must be heedfull that while we seek to cure desperation we make not a way to presumption for that is the great sinne against which the Prophet prayeth in the ninteenth Psalme Keep thy servant from presumptuous sinnes so shall I be clear from the great sinne This was the sinne of Cain and we must beware that we walk not in his way as Jude counselleth Quia è nimiâ spe presumptio is the high way to desperation therefore when we know Gods will as Cain did we must seek no faither nor follow our own wisdom It was Sauls sinne he would be wiser than either Samuel or the Lord himself for being commanded to destroy the Amalekites with all they had Saul as if God knew not what he did takes upon him to spare the best things in the first book of Samuel the fifteenth chapter this was his presumption We must beware saith Moses in the twenty ninth chapter of Deuteronomie and the ninteenth verse That when we hear the words of the curses and the punishments which God threatneth against the transgressors of his Law That wee doe not blesse our selves in our hearts saying I shall have peace though I walk after the stubbornness of mine own heart thus adding 〈◊〉 to thirst It we will not despaire we must fear for so did Job and therefore he saith Timor meus spes mea in the fourth chapter of Job and thesixth verse The fear he had and felt when he was about to sinne wrought in him an assured hope and assurance of Gods favour and that fear made him say Etiamsi 〈◊〉 sperabo in eum Job the thirteenth chapter That fear is a means of hope the Apostle S. Peter sheweth for having said that he would have all men to hope perfectly in the first of Peter the first chapter and the thirteenth verse he expresseth the means how they shall attainto this perfect hope that is by passing their conversation in fear verse the seventeenth This course did not Cain take but contrariwise when he heard God tell him that if he did evill sinne lay at the dore he for all that blesseth himself in his heart and said I shall doe well enough though I walk after the stubbornnesse of mine own heart and kill Abel my Brother contrary to Gods commandements En expellis me hodie à superficie istius terrae ut à facie tua abscondam me cumque vagus sim infestus agitationibus in terra si ullus fuerit qui me inveniat interficiet me Gen. 4. 14. Septemb. 9. 1599. CAINS speech to God as we see stands upon two parts one touching his sinne in the thirteenth verse the other concerning his punishment in this verse which also contains two parts First a meer repetition of the sentence given upon him in the eleventh verse Secondly an addition which Cain himself makes That now whosoever should finde him should kill him which is his chief complaint For the first part When sentence is passed upon any person God requireth two things First Agnitionem culpae whereunto two things belong That 〈◊〉 Promissio poenitentiae as Ezekiah promiseth That he will walk all the dayes of his life in the bitternesse of
he doth not his case is like the case of Esau Genesis the twenty fift chapter he cared not for his Birth-right no more did Cain take any care for the presence of God but thought it a matter not worthy to be reckoned of Secondly We see that Cain goeth not out against his will nor tarries till God send him out of his presence as he sent Adam and Eve out of Paradise setting a Cherubim to keep the way Genesis the third chapter there was no such execution or warrant from God for Cain but he first casts out himself whereby we see it was an hypocriticall complaint that he made that he was cast out from the presence of God verse the fourteenth in that he goeth out of himself without any violence offered to him A Child will not at the first bidding go out of his Fathers presence though in his anger he threaten him no more should Cain he should have been of Jacobs minde Genesis the thirty second chapter I will not let thee goe till I have a blessing But we see Cain doth of himself voluntarily leave Gods presence which sheweth plainly that the cause of Cains grief was not Gods displeasure but his punishment laid by God upon him and not the spirituall part of his punishent but the earthly Thirdly the casting out of Gods presence was threatned as a punishment and therefore ought to be born patiently but to make poenam excommunicationis crimen apostasiae is a great aggravation of his sinne that is to take occasion by the censure of the Church to bring in Schisme is a grievous aggravation of the offence But as we have seen that Cain was the first Author of heresie for that he thought any thing would serve Gods turn the 〈◊〉 and meanest things were good enough to offer to him whereas Abel offereth the best he could finde so he is the first that brings up Schism and Apostacy for the Sentence is not executed upon him but through an evil heart of unbelief as the Apostle speaks Hebrews the third chapter He doth depart of himself from the living God Soe we have these three things in his departure First It is not upon any just 〈◊〉 It is voluntary Thirdly He departs so as he makes the penalty of his sinne the matter of a greater sinne Secondly Touching his removing to remove of it self is not evill but in regard of the place from whence if with Abraham we depart from a country of Idolatry as from Ur or as Lot from Sodom a City full of all sinne or with the Hebrewes out of a place of vexation and cruelty such a departure is good but to depart from a good place that makes the motion evill but for Cain to depart out of the presence of God is all one as if the sick person should leave the Physitian St. Peter indeed in great astonishment said to Christ exi a 〈…〉 enim sum but after being better advised when Christ said 〈◊〉 ye also goe away his answer is John the sixth chapter and the sixty eighth verse Domine ad quem ibimus tu habes verba 〈◊〉 vitae whereupon Augustine saith Lord if thou 〈◊〉 have me depart from thee shew me such another as thou art otherwise I will not leave thee till thou receive me into thy favour This presence of God was some certain place of Gods appearance as the place whither he went was a country by Paradise called the Land of Nod. Therefore the place whither he went being a locall motion the place from which he departed must needs be likewise locall From this place of Gods presence Cain went out to dwell in the land of Nod. The effect of which words is after set down in one word for the place wherein God appeared to Jacob when he slept was called Bethel Genesis the twenty eighth chapter the same place also is called Penuel Genesis the thirty second chapter and the thirtieth verse so that the place of Gods appearance was some one piece of the earth where the Altar was upon which Cain and Abel offered their sacrifices where God did usually appear Even as we also have an Altar Hebrews the thirteenth chapter where we have Christs presence as he affirmeth that where two or three be gathered together in his name he is present among them Matthew the eighteenth chapter like as they that come together to hear the word are said to be present before God that is in the presence of God Acts the tenth chapter The point that wee are to gather hence for our instruction is That we concieve of the Church and place of Gods presence as we doe of the place of the Princes presence for we reverence such places though the Prince be absent so ought we to reverence the places of Gods presence though we have no visible apparition of his presence for such places are his rest for ever where he promiseth to dwell Psalme the one hundred thirty second They are also his footstoole and therefore are to be reverenced As Psalm the ninty ninth Fall down before his footstool for he is holy Therefore to depart from the Church is to depart from Gods presence no lesse than Cain did But Gods will is we should not depart out of the place of his presence no more than we would out of the presence of his favour and we must make a conscience how we goe out of such places because God is not mocked When men have no religion it is said of them Psalm the fourteenth They call not upon God as for the preaching of the word they count it onus Domini Jeremie the twenty third chapter It is as tedious to them to hear sermons as to carry burthens upon their backs And for the spirituall food offered in the Sacraments it is to them as Manna was to the Israelites A light meat which their soul loatheth Numbers the eleventh chapter And as for the Church and Congregation of the faithfull the opinion that the world hath of them is very mean as the Prophet saith in the thirtieth chapter of Jeremiah This is Sion whom no man seeketh after But they that are so affected towards the service of God and the places of his presence are animales spiritum non habentes as Jude calleth them they have no favour in such things and therefore they care not for them but like Cain doe goe out of them and make no reckoning Of whom the Apostle saith truly in the first epistler of John the second chapter and the ninteenth verse They went out from us yet 〈◊〉 de nobis that is they were not the members of the 〈◊〉 for then they should have selt them when they went For those things that are not members of the body may easily be taken away as the hairs of the head and the nayles but take away any member of the boby and it will be painfull Therefore they that depart willingly from the Church and place of Gods presence are not members but
excrements of the mysticall body The place whither he depaited was The land of Nod. As it is said of Cain that he went out so so also of St. Peter but for a diverse end Peter went out and wept bitierly Matthew the twenty sixt chapter and the last verse but Cain went not out to bewail his sinne as Peter did but to settle himself in some other place Cain's terminus ad quem is he land of Nod which is situate towards the east side of Eden Where in two things First The place it self Secondly The situation For the place it sell There are of the Interpreters that take it to be no certain land from the word Nod which signifieth to wander as if the meaning were that Cain according to the sentence that he should be a 〈◊〉 and exile went out to wander from one place to another But that cannot be in as much as Nod is said to be a land on the east side of Paradise It is further said that being there he built him a City not that he stayed there for he was alwayes removing and fleeting from one place to another It was before the deluge so called of Cain whose state of life was to wander up and down but 〈◊〉 was called Babel And it is said to be castward toward Eden Wherefore by the framing of his journy to that place which carrieth the name of pleasure it appeares that Cain did not settle himself to repentance for then he should have gone into the Valley of Achor Hosea the second chapter Or into the valley of tears Psalme the eighty fourth that is as far from Eden as he could because a place of pleasure is unfit to repent in He that will repent must get him into the wildernesse alone and there bewail his sins He could not goe to Eden for there was an Angel set with a shaking sword to keep the way of the tree of life Genesis the third chapter but toward the east side of Eden So we see Cains purpose was not Gods purpose The purpose of God in allowing unto Cain life was that he might have time to repent But Cains purpose is that he may plant himself on earth and enjoy pleasures These are the wayes to the which there belongeth a woe as the Apostle sheweth Jude the eleventh verse The sinne of pleasure which is Cains sinne The sinne of gain which was Babylon's sinne and the sinne of ambition which was the sinne of Korah These are the three wayes of the world The lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and pride of life in the first of Saint John the second chapter Which are not of the Father but of the world Where it is said he went to the side of Paradise the Holy Ghost giveth us to understand that Cain may 〈◊〉 set himself in some kinde of 〈◊〉 delight but not in Paradise it self that is in no true and sound delight Again Whereas Cain being now fallen from hope of eternall and spirituall things takes his journey to the east we see he is the first of those that are content even for to enjoy the warmnesse of the sunne to leave the presence of God and for to get a little pleasure for a time will forgoe that which is incorruptible and indures for ever Such men are like those whom the Prophet 〈◊〉 in the eighth chapter of Ezekiel and the sixteenth verse having their backs toward the temple and their faces to the sun rising to worship the sunne Even so Cain by leaving Gods presence doth give over eternall things and seeks for temporall And so we see what is Cains error both in departing from Gods presence and in removing to this place Adam and Eve and Seth which then represented the Church were upon the west side of Eden Cain and his crue keeps in the east side that is the wicked have the better part in the things of this life for their portion is in this life Psalme the seventeenth but the portion of the godly is not in the pleasure of this life but in the land of the living where they have laid up for them things which eye hath not seen the ear hath not heard nor mans heart conceived in the first epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter The wicked in their life time receive pleasure but after indure everlasting pain but the godly that sufer affliction in this world shall in the world to come be comforted as it is in the sixteenth chapter of Luke From hence we learn That we must not depart from Gods presence as Cain did without just cause If we doe it must be to bewail our sinnes with bitter tears as St. Peter If we goe from Gods presence we shall finde the land of Nod that is a place that shall afford us no contentation or rest It shall be with us as it was with Agar to whom the Angell said in the sixteenth chapter of Genesis and the eighteenth verse Whence comest thou and whither goost thou So we shall be in continuall motion and never have rest First Because we can never in this wicked world attain to any perfection of pleasure our desires are never satisfied for it is true of all men as one saith quando habent quod voluerunt non habent quod volunt Secondly Because they are all their life in fear of death Hebrews the second chapter We see our state represented in Jonah when he fled from the presence of the Lord he thought he should have come to Tarshish but he found himself in the land of Nod that is of thraldome and misery being tossed on the Sea Jonah the first chapter and the third verse for Gods presence is Seth's land that is a land of foundation it is the Country of Noah for it giveth rest it is the City of Salem that is of peace But if we leave Gods presence we shall not finde any land of foundation rest or peace If as Jeremy willeth We stand upon the old wayes and ask for the good wayes and walk therein Jeremiah the sixt chapter and the sixteenth verse if as Christ bids us We take up the yoke and learn of him we shall 〈…〉 to our souls 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter but if we 〈…〉 Cains Country we shall have no rest day not night 〈◊〉 the sixteenth chapter and the thirteenth verse As for peace the prophet saith non est pax impiis dicit dominus Isaiah the fifty seventh chapter that is seeing they will depart from Gods 〈◊〉 they 〈…〉 Cains Land for they are as the raging Sea which is 〈…〉 and as the 〈◊〉 in the water never rest but shoot by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wicked of the world we see this working they desire 〈…〉 more For he that 〈◊〉 silver shall not be satisfied with 〈…〉 astes the fifth chapter and the 〈◊〉 they never finde any 〈…〉 cause their desire can never be satisfied Wherefore as Cains Land was Nod so Nimrod Cains Successor had 〈◊〉 for his Country that is confusion and
chastity are a full comprehension of the duty of sanctification which God willeth us to perform And as Cains sinne stands first in the story so it is first in nature for a Child before he be able to speak one word will by his sower face shew that he hath a revenging spirit But in this story of Lamech we must observe a farther thing for it standeth upon two parts First in the ninteenth verse is shewed not only that he was infected with a spirit of uncleanness but also verse the twenty third a contemptuous and insolent spirit which is a degree beyond Cain for there he braggeth of his sinne and contemneth God and his Judgments as if he should not be revenged of him for it For when a sinner is not only possessed and infected with malice and envy in his heart and with lust in his reins but braggs of his sin in contempt of God and his Judgments then he is at the height of sinne Peccator cum in profundum venerit contemnit Thus where there are but three faculties of the soul all are corrupted by the infection of the Serpent as for reason it was corrupted in Adam when the Serpent perswaded him that he should be like God and the angry part was corrupted in Cain when he was stirred up to kill his Brother without all cause Thirdly the will and the coveting part was corrupted in Lamech so as neither the bond of nature nor the will of God which is a spirituall bond could keep in order but he will shew his uncleanness When not only Adam looseth faith and Cain charity but Lamech chastity then is sinne at the height In the first verse there is a genealogie of four discents wherein there is no matter of great edification Howbeit as when mens Fields and Closes are laid out all must not be taken up for pasture but a little way must be left whereby every man may pass to his own ground so in the Scripture there must be a passage from one storie to another And as in the body for that there are a great many lymbs and parts they must of necessity be compacted one with another by the help of the sinews so both in prophane Writers and in the Scripture many things are set down to shew the dependance that one story hath with another which otherwise would not seem so necessary Even so the shewing how Cain is joyned with Lamech which is done in this verse is very necessary Secondly There is a farther matter in this heaping of names besides the continuance of the story for it would have seemed strange that the Scripture doth make mention of Lamech and his wicked course unless it were withall shewed from whence he came But in setting down that Lamech is of the posterity of wicked Cain no man will marvell that he doe expresse the manners of Cains Besides that we may not think that this heaping of words is vain for as the Fathers note there is no name in Scripture without profitable consideration for howsoever men that deal in woods and base mettals care not to let chips and parings fall from them yet as they that work in gold and Silver will not lose the least parings The like is to be done in reading the word For it is pure as silver that hath been purified seven times Psalm the twelfth More to be desired than gold Psalm the ninteenth therefore we must have this conceit of it that whatsoever seemeth to be superfluous in the word of God hath great value both for faith and life For Isidor saith est in nominibus sacris sua theologia and as Jerome saith in nominibus sacrae Scripturae insculpuntur mysteria Therefore the Apostle saith That the Sonne of God is more excellent than the Angels in as much as he hath a more excellent name than they Hebrews the first chapter and the fourth verse so when the blinde man is sent to wash himself in Shilo John the ninth chapter and the seventh verse The word signifying sent importeth that he could not be purified by that water unless he was sent so in the names of holy Scripture we see as Jerome saith there are ingraven mysteries Now we give names to our Children ad placitum but in the old Testament the Fathers gave names of set purpose with great advise so we see Eve giveth a reason why she called her Sonne Cain Genesis the fourth chapter and the first verse so is there a reason of Seths name Genesis the fourth chapter and the twenty fift verse of Noah the Sonne of Lamech Genesis the fift chapter and the twenty ninth verse of Isaack and Jacob and all the Patriarches The reason why they had this regard in giving of names are reduced to two First in those that are the Children of the godly their names are a kinde of Prophesie concerning the disposition of the Childe which choice of names their Fathers made for that being endued with the spirit of God they foresaw the disposition of their Children On the other side the wicked and the reprobate cannot prophesie yet their names are specula paternae affectionis as the names of godly Children are prophesies puerilis indolis That it is thus in these names we shall observe an encounter made between the seed of Cain and the seed of Seth which as they were of a contrary disposition so gave their Children contrary names Cain called his Sonne Enoch that is dedicated to the pleasure of the world but Seths Sonne is called Enosh that is sorrowfull Genesis the fift chapter On the one side there was Cain on the other Kenan Irad on the one side Jerad on the other Methushael and Methushelah by which names the seed and posterity of godly Sheth shew a contrary affection and such as differeth from the wicked and the seed of Cain as appeareth by the signification of their names Touching the opposition that appeares to be between the generation of Seth and the posteritie of Cain Enochs name who was Cains Sonne signifieth dedication and there is one of the Children of God called by the same name Genesis the fifth chapter and the ninteenth verse but Seths Enoch as Jude saith was the seventh from Adam verse the fourteenth that is one dedicated to the seventh or Sabbath day one that gave himself wholly to the service and worship of God but Cains Enoch was the first and next to Cain that is one dedicated to the first day which is a working day to shew that he was one that gave himself to the affaires of this life that sought to be mighty on earth And this difference of affection holds to this day for all men are followers either of the first or second Enoch The next of Cain is called Irad that is Lord of a City the same that Herod signifieth wherein we see his ambitious spirit that he was such a one as sought to be great in the world And as Jeroboam when he was not able to maintain
like 〈◊〉 Psalm the fourty ninth so we see their earthly felicity turne 〈…〉 miserie Therefore we must not dedicate our selves wholy to the world as Lamech we may not desire to be of that absolute power and force that no man shall be able to resist We may not only seek to delight our selves with musick to drink wine in bolls Amos the sixt chapter and the sixt verse That was it that Cains Enoch desired we must have respect to the second Enoch and so desire to be well in this world that we may also be well in the next world that as he is in heaven in glory so we may be in glory with him The beginning of worldly mens desire is Cain that is the getting in of wealth the end is Naomi that is pleasure and enjoying of it that was the course of the covetous rich man Luke the twelfth chapter I will pull down Barns and set up bigger and gather my corn thither and then say to my soul thou hast enough take thy pleasure but as Naomi was turned into Mara so this pleasure is turned into bitternesse Ruth the first chapter The pleasure which worldly men enjoy here is turned into the dreadfull torments of the world to come On the other side the generation of the godly begins with Enosh Genesis the fift chapter and the sixt verse and ends in Noah Genesis the fift chapter and the twenty ninth verse that is their beginning is sorrow but end in rest as the 〈◊〉 saith Psalm the one hundred twenty sixt They that sow in teares shall reap in joy the end of wicked mens pleasure is bitterness but the godly after sorrow are made partakers of rest in the evill day Therefore as the Scripture hath a use for correction and instruction so here not only they are corrected that follow the generation of the wicked posterity of Cain but we are instructed to follow the generation of the godly Tum dixit Lemec suis uxoribus O Hada Tzilla audite vocem meam uxores Lemeci auribus percipite Sermonem meum nam virum interfecero ad vulnus meum etiam adolescentem ad tumicem meum Cum septuplo sit vindicandus Kajin utique Lemec septuagies septies tanto Gen. 4. 23.24 Januar. 20. 1599. IN Lamech who was the seventh from Adam by the line of Cain the Holy Ghost propounds the example of a perfect wicked man as in Enoch the seventh from Adam by the line of Seth he sets out the pattern of a man perfectly righteous Concerning Lamech we heard his name is an oppressor First of chastity by violating Gods institution making three in one flesh where God saith two shall be one flesh and then of charity by proclaiming to the world that no man should hurt him but he should die for it So that where there are two wayes that overthrow that excellent virtue of love and charity that joyns man to God we see that Lamech by turning love into fleshly lust and charity into hatred and revenge gives the world an example of both In both he justifieth Cain as the Prophet saith of Juda That she justifieth Samaria and Sodom because she exceedeth them in their abominations Ezekiel the sixteenth chapter and the fifty first verse for Cain was content with one Wife but Lamech gave the reins to lust so as he took two and though Cain murthered Abel his brother yet he adds not murther to murther as Lamech did who saith That first he slew a man in his wound and then a young man in his hurt but to these two he adds that which the Wise-man calls profundum malitiae that is contempt Proverbs the eighteenth chapter and the third verse For then is a man come to the depth of wickedness when he contemnes God and his word and this is it which the Sonne of God calls the depth of Satan Revelations the second chapter the twenty fourth verse for he scoffs at Gods words which he spake concerning Cain verse the fifteenth saying If Cain shall be avenged seven fold truly Lamech seventy times seven fold verse the twenty fourth Secondly We doe not consider this by it self which Lamech did but we consider him as by this sinne he became the corrupter of mankinde so as it may be said of him that he made the whole world to sinne as Jeroboam made Israel to sinne for he was the first that brought in the sinne of uncleanness and cruelty which are as the Prophet speaks Psalm the eighteenth and the fift verse Torrentes Belial that is the floods of wickedness which brought destruction upon the old world Genesis the sixt chapter For as one saith there was priùs eluvio vitiorum before there was any deluge of waters for so the Holy Ghost witnesseth that the wickednesse of man was great upon earth and the earth was filled with cruelty and all flesh had corrupted his way and all this proceeded from his example for he gave the world a pattern to give the reins to lusts and make no conscience of bloodshed which brought destruction upon them Thirdly When as he had contrary to Gods Ordinance taken two Wives Adah and Zillah the one that set her felicity on painting of her face like Jezabel in the second of the Kings the tenth chapter the other to be to him as Herodias was to Herod Matthew the fourteenth chapter When God for all this spared Lamech and did not punish him as he deserved but rather blessed him with Children and earthly prosperity yet he is not any thing the better for Gods mercy but growes from one sinne to another till his sin became as the Apostle speaketh Romans the seventh chapter Out of measure sinfull and till the chief sinne appear in him which is even the head of the Serpent In whom we finde that verified which the Preacher saith Ecclesiastes the eighth chapter and the eleventh verse that if God presently punish any sinne he is counted cruel But when sentence against an evill work is not executed speedily then the hearts of the children of men are fully set to doe evil as the Apostle also sheweth That whereas Gods patience and long-suffering should lead us to repentance the wicked abuse his goodness and take occasion thereby to add sinne to sinne and so to heap up wrath for themselves against the day of wrath Romans the second chapter and the fourth and fist verses The discovering of these sinnes is plainly opened in this oration which Lamech makes to his Wives for sinne discloseth it self two wayes either by Cains way that is by the eye or countenance as Cain when his heart grew malicious shewed it presently in his countenance verse the fifteenth or else Lamechs way that is by the some or froth of the mouth for we see here according to Christs rule Matthew the twelfth chapter That Lamechs mouth speaketh from the abundance of his heart for the tongue is the Trumpet of the minde and as a Galilean may be known by
have not only the Cole that touched the Altar but the Altar it selfe even the Sacrifice of Christs death represented in the Supper by partaking whereof our sins are taken away Secondly the Word or invisible grace The word of comfort whereby the inward Grace is preached unto us is that the Angell said to the Prophet Loe this hath touched thy lips and thine iniquity shall bee taken away and thy sinnes purged concerning which wee finde that the Leper was cured of his Leprosie not only by the word but by the touching of Christ but the Centurian said only but speake the word and thy servant shall bee whole Mat. the eighth chapter and the eighth verse so hee can doe what he will with his only word It pleased God to take away the Prophet sinnes by touching his lips And albeit he can take away our sins without touching of bread or wine if he will yet in the councell of his will he commendeth unto us the sacramentall partaking of his body and blood It is his will that our sins shall be taken away by the outward act of the sacrament The reason is not only in regard of our selves which consist of body and soul and therefore have need both of bodily and Ghostly meanes to assure us of our Salvation but in regard of Christ himself who is the burning Cole Forever since God ordained that Christ should take our nature and aptare sibi corpus in the tenth chapter to the Hebrewes and the fifth verse that so he might worke our Reconciliation As Christ became himself a man having a bodily substance so his actions were bodily As in the Hypostasis of the Sun there is both the Humane and Divine nature so the Sacrament is of an Heavenly and Earthly nature As he hath taken our body to himself so he honoureth bodily things that by them we should have our sinnes taken away from us By one bodily sacrament he taketh away the affection unto sin that is naturally planted in us By another bodily Sacrament he taketh away the habituall sins and the actuall transgressions which proceed from the corruption of our nature And here we have matter offered us of faith that as he used the touching of a cole to assure the Prophet that his sins were taken away so in the Sacrament he doth so elevate a peice of bread and a litle wine and make them of such power that they are able to take away our sinnes And this maketh for Gods glory not only to beleeve that God can work our Salvation without any outward means by the inward Grace of his Spirit but also that he can so elevate the meanest of his creatures not only the hemme of a garment but even a strawe if he see it good shall be powerfull enough to save us from our sinnes As Christ himself is spirituall and bodily so he taketh away our sinnes by means not only spirituall but bodily as in the Sacrament For if there be a cleansing power in the Word as Christ speaketh in the fifteenth chapter of John and the third verse If in prayer as Peter sheweth to Simon Magus Pray to God that if it be possible the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee in the eighth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles and the twenty second verse If in shewing mercy and giving almes sinnes shall be forgiven as Salomon saith in the sixteenth chapter of the Proverbs and the sixth verse Per misericordiam purgantur peccata much more in the Sacrament wherein both the word and prayer and the works of mercy doe concurre to the cleansing of sinners from their sinnes Whereas the Seraphim did not take the coale in his mouth but with tongues and applied it not to the Prophets care but to his tongue We learn that it is not the hearing of a sermon that can cleanse us from sinne but we must 〈◊〉 of the bodily element appointed to represent the invisible grace of God It is true that meditation privately had will kindle a fire in the hearts of many in the thirty ninth Psalm and the third verse And the word as it is a fire Jeremie the twenty third chapter and the twenty ninth verse will also kindle a man and heat him inwardly But because in the Sacrament all those doe meete together therefore nothing is so availeable to take away sinne as the touching of bread and wine with our lips The effect The effect of this touching followeth wherein we are to consider First the efficacy of this action Secondly the certainty that as sure as this coale hath touched thy lips so surely are thy sinnes taken away Thirdly the speede that so soon as the coale touched presently sinne was taken away and purged The efficacie standeth of the removing or taking away of sinne and of the purging away of sinne The taking away and purging of sinnes have two uses Some have their sinnes taken away but not purged for something remaineth behinde Some have Adams sigge leaves to hide sinne that it shall not appeare for a time but have not Hezekiah his plaister to heal it in the thirty eighth chapter of Isaiah and the one and twentieth verse But by the touching of this Coal that is of the body and blood of Christ we are assured that our sinnes are not only covered but quite taken away as with a plaister as the Lord speaks I have put away thy transgressions like a cloud and thy sins as a mist Isaiah the fourty fourth and the twenty second verse whereby the Lord sheweth that our sinnes are scattered and come to nothing when it pleaseth him to take them away The other sense gathered from the word purging is that God doth no forgive our sinnes as an earthly Judge 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 or so that he 〈◊〉 away with his 〈◊〉 without any 〈…〉 shewed him 〈◊〉 that he likewise becometh favourable unto 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 to doe us all the good he 〈◊〉 If 〈◊〉 can obtain 〈◊〉 pardon at the hands of temp orall Judges it is all they 〈◊〉 looke for but they never come to any preferment But God doth dor only give us 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 as he doth pard on out sinnes so 〈◊〉 he 〈◊〉 loving and kinde to us Christ doth not only take us away from God that he should not proceed to punish us for our 〈◊〉 but offers us up to God as an acceptable sacrafice as Peter 〈◊〉 Christ once suffered for sinnes the just for the unjust that he might offer us up to God in the first of Peter the third chapter and the eighteenth verse for as the wiseman saith Take the drosse from the silver 〈◊〉 shall proceed a vessel for the refiner Proverbs the twenty fift and the fourth verse So after sinne is taken away from us our nature is most acceptable to God because there remaineth nothing but his own nature Secondly for the certainty As thou hast a perfect sense of the touching of this coal so certainly are thy sinnes taken away
glory And this was the first sinne that came into the soul of the woman and as the Philosopher saith that the heart is primum vivens ultimum moriens so vain glory as it first took possession in the heart of man so it is last and with most difficulty dispossessed So that when a man hath mortified all his lusts and subdued all sinnes yet pride and the desire of glory revives again And whereas the sinnes of the world are three The lust of the 〈◊〉 The lust of the eyes and pride of life the first Epistle of John the 〈…〉 chapter and the sixteenth verse The sinne of pride is such a one as doth not only corrupt all virtues but 〈◊〉 all other sinnes and prevails against them for gluttony or the lust of the 〈◊〉 is come under the power of pride So as men take a pride in excesse of meat whereas gluttony would be contented with a sittle for the belly is sooner filled than the eye satisfied Secondly For Covetousnesse What makes men to exceed in the cares of getting riches but only pride and desire of glorie For knowing that the borrower is a servant to the lender Proverbs the tenth chapter and all things obey money Preacher the tenth chapter In respect of the excellencie of wealth they are so covetous that albeit they have more than enough yet they still gather together that they may have all men in subjection to them so hard it is to suppresse the desire of vain glory And the harder because where other sinnes be resting upon a man this sinne comes creeping upon him and flattereth him as a thing most agreeable to his nature Howbeit it is to be avoided with all heedfulness for it comes from good things as the root Secondly A man is proud oftentimes even of humilitie not only when they outwardly humble themselves with fasting but also when they are inwardly humbled Joel the second chapter Secondly it is the harder because it comes with a colour and shew of reason for it is Gods will that we should not only doe good works but that it should be done openly as Christ saith to shine and to be seen of men sic splendeat lux Matthew the fifth chapter and the sixteenth verse both that God may be glorified by us and that we may give good example to others But not withstanding we must beware that we doe them not to purchase praise to our selves How to avoid vain glory pride c. and other fins by meditation and prayer Secondly The question of ignorance is How we should avoid this desire of glorie which is so bred in us The answer to this doubt is By medition and prayer For as God hath laid this Curse upon the earth That it should bring forth thorns and thistles of it self but if we will have any good of it we must bestow labour upon it So this curse is laid upon our soules that good things will not come into our mindes without diligent meditation but pride and such sinnes will take place of themselves without any further trouble Wherefore as to avoid all temptations we must occupie our selves in godly meditation as Augustine saith Semper te Diabolus inveniat occupatum so there are speciall meditations for the avoiding of pride and the desire of vain glory First To think of the uncertainty of worldly glorie that Christ that to day should have been crowned King by the Jews was the next day crucified by them Secondly Of the emptinesse and vacuity of it as that all the glory that Haman had did not content him when he had received but one little disgrace by Mordechai Esther the fifth chapter Thirdly of the punishment of this sinne for whereas he spares other sinnes if he see withall some token of goodnesse so as he will quench the smoaking flax Isaiah the fourty second chapter he will not defer his judgements from the Hypocrites and ambitious but will withdraw his graces from them here and punish them eternally in the world to come Fourthly We should think of our own hearts if we doe good without regard of mens praise Fiftly Of our own inability how little we are able to doe of our selves except God move our hearts and work in us both to will and to doe Philippians the second chapter and the thirteenth verse that so we may ascribe the praise of all our good deeds to him as the only author of them These meditations will kindle a sire in us that we shall have a desire to speak as Psalm the thirty ninth as the Prophet having considered that God did command us to keep his testimonies saith presently O that my wayes were so directed that I might keep them 〈◊〉 the hundred and nineteenth But as by those 〈…〉 desire to avoid that which we are forbidden so unto our desire we must add resolution 〈◊〉 the nine and 〈◊〉 I said I 〈…〉 to my 〈◊〉 Dixi 〈…〉 The other means is 〈◊〉 For when we have done all we can to avoid this 〈◊〉 by our 〈◊〉 meditations yet that will not serve till we cry for Gods 〈…〉 strengthen us and help us for vain is the help of 〈…〉 the 〈◊〉 and eighth So though the Apostle doe will the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put on the 〈◊〉 of God yet he saith the chief 〈…〉 fight with the Devil is prayer Ephesians the sixt chapter For except the 〈◊〉 keep the City the watch-men watch in vain Psalme the hundred twenty seventh We must not only say the general prayer which 〈◊〉 all 〈◊〉 Lead us not into temptation 〈◊〉 particularly against this 〈◊〉 say with David Psalme the thirty sixt 〈◊〉 not the 〈◊〉 of pride come 〈◊〉 me And Psalme the hundred and fourteenth Not to us O Lord not to us but to thy name give the praise The 〈◊〉 is For then 〈◊〉 shall 〈◊〉 your 〈◊〉 As before to doe good was the good corn that is to be sown but to doe 〈◊〉 〈…〉 seen is the tares that must be plucked up So the perswasion is thus to be taken Doe good works sincerely and ye shall have a reward though not in this world but if ye doe them in 〈◊〉 to 〈…〉 ye shall lose your reward When the holy Ghost implyeth that our good works shall have a reward and so perswadeth us to the 〈◊〉 of them He 〈◊〉 to our infirmity for there are 〈…〉 causes to move us to doe good As the shedding of Christs blood whereby he redeemed us to himself to be 〈◊〉 of good works Titus the second chapter and the fourteenth verse But because he knows whereof we be made and that we are weak he 〈◊〉 us with hope of reward and herein he hath regard Non ad gloriam operis sed ad zelum operantis of the reward of works done in sincerity heretofore Of these that are done in hypocrisie note two things First How true it is that they lose their reward Concerning which howsoever Hypocrites have a reward in this world yet they have not 〈◊〉
not to exhort them Again Christ might only have exhorted them and not used any reproof but he in wisdome thinks it meet first to reprove them for their fault and then to shew them how to amend it Pride is the cause why many good exhortations have no successe While men think it needlesse they should be rebuked they are like the proud Pharisees that despised the counsel of God Luke the seventh chapter and the thirtiech verse But Christ to make manifest to them that they need counsel doth first shew them their hypocrisie We are ready to justifie our selves in all things our corruption is such that we are ignorant of our own sinnes which made the Prophet to say Cleanse 〈◊〉 from my secret sinnes Psalm the nineteenth We take them to be no sinnes wherein we greatly offend God Whereupon the Prophet saith Cor hominis 〈◊〉 est Jeremiah the seventeenth chapter only God being greater than our heart knoweth all things and is able to discover all our sinnes the first epistle of John the third chapter Therefore we are to pray to God to open our eyes that we may see the necessity of 〈◊〉 The people that followed Christ shewed two zeals One was to make him King The other to seek him but both proceeded from one cause because he fed them Christ saw both these Zeals The one he rejected utterly and would not be made King But he corrects the other zeal he forbids them not to seek him but wills them to seek him for this end That from him they may receive the bread that endures to life everlasting The reason why Christ would not be honoured was of two sorts First For that is a slender honor to honor God for temporal things for as the Israelites did honor God while he fed them with bread from Heaven and gave them water out of the rocks but so soon as they wanted either of them then they murmured So when God continueth his temporal blessings upon men so long he shall be heard but when his benefits ceaseth then his honor ceaseth Therefore he rejecteth this honour partly in regard of his own self but chiefly for our cause For howsoever it be less honourable for Christ to be honoured for outward blessings yet the chief cause why he rejecteth it is because it is lesse profitable for us They were desirous of temporal blessings which he did bestow upon them But yet he is desirous to 〈◊〉 upon them spiritual blessings which as they are better for them so desires greater honor The exhortation ariseth out of the reproof which is concluded in it The matter of it is reduced to six points First 〈…〉 Secondly Et 〈…〉 Thirdly 〈◊〉 est 〈…〉 Fourthly Et 〈◊〉 hic non 〈◊〉 Fiftly That 〈◊〉 is to be 〈◊〉 which 〈◊〉 for ever Sixtly This 〈…〉 to be 〈◊〉 only in the 〈◊〉 of man for it is he whom God the Father hath sealed For the first point Whereas there are two significations of life the one life it self or the substance the other the joy of life which is the life of life the bread of both these lives doth perish that which keepeth and maintaineth the substance of life doth 〈◊〉 For 〈◊〉 the Israelites did eat Manna which was the 〈◊〉 of Angels yet of them Christ saith 〈…〉 of it but 〈…〉 the sixt chapter for when God takes away the staffe and strength of bread it hath no more power to preserve life So that man liveth not by bread of it self for it perisheth Whereas bread hath two powers the one to satisfie the hungry stomach the other to restore the body being weak we see it loseth both these powers the power of satisfying doth not continue for though a man satisfie himself never so much with it to day yet to morrow he will crave more and his stomach will waxe emptie As for the power to restore albeit during health it strengthneth mans heart yet if once sicknesse come it hath no power to restore strength Secondly Whatsoever maintains the joyes of life that perisheth also for the world passeth away and the fashion thereof the first epistle to the Corinthians the seventh chapter and the first epistle of John the second chapter and whatsoever may make mans life joyfull The pleasures of this life which are the causes of our joy are transitory and though they could continue with us yet we our selves must passe away and leave them yea even while we may take the pleasures of this world yet old age will approach and the dayes wherein we shall say I have no pleasure in them Ecclesiastes the twelfth chapter and the first verse Secondly Though this bread decay yet our Saviour telleth us that men are so foolish they gave themselves wholly to seek it And that this is true will appear if we look upon our actions either civil or religious If we consider either the care we take for this life or the diligence we use in Gods service Of the first care we have an example in Martha against inordinate care of this life Our Saviour rebuketh Martha who was troubled about many things Luke the tenth chapter and so we doe rise so early and take such pains for this life Psalm one hundred twenty seven that is the service of Baal was more painfull than the service of the true God So we take more pains in the service of the three Gods of this world the first epistle of John the second chapter than of the true good The same appears if we consider our care in matters of Religion Wherein we must confesse that our special joyes are in the things of this life and for the bread of it These men whom Christ here reproveth were not about their Trades but occupied in a matter of Religion then to hear Christ and to see his miracles and yet we see that under colour of sowing to the spirit they did but sow to the flesh and make provision for the same Galatians the sixt chapter And howbeit Maries part be the better and the actions of religion more excellent than the actions of this life yet they seek their own things and not the things that are Gods Thirdly There is a bread that doth not perish Christ commends the care of spiritual things under them four First negatively Labour not for that bread which perisheth Secondly affirmatively Labour for that which endureth This life doth not last for ever but after this life there is another life which shall be everlasting And as it is a life so there is a food for it which we must labour for without which we shall not attain to that life no more then we can continue in life here unlesse we have the food appointed for it Apudte fons vitae Psalm the thirty sixt and with him is fulnesse of joy Psalm the sixteenth Now we have the one life and the joyes of it out of the consideration of the Creature but then we shall have life and joy from God the Creator who
nature so with his name He is wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the Prince of Peace Isaiah the ninth chapter Thirdly With his miracles For he raiseth the dead and quickneth whom he will no lesse than the Father John the fift chapter and the twenty first verse Fourthly Because exception was taken against his miracles For they said that he did them by Belzebub Matthew the twelfth chapter therefore he is further sealed with a voyce from Heaven saying This is he in whom I am well pleased heare ye him Matthew the seventeenth chapter not only whom he commands but where he promiseth to refresh them that come to him Matthew the eleventh chapter Fiftly He hath sealed him with the spirit The spirit of the Lord is upon me Luke the fourth chapter And that not only rests John the third chapter the three and thirtieth and four and thirtieth verses content with receiving the spirit for himself but with a power to give it to his So that by his intercession with God the Father He sent down the spirit upon the Apostles Acts the second chapter Being thus sealed by God he is able to nourish us by his flesh crucified for us unto eternall life if he give us grace to lay hold of it by faith Dixit igitur eis Videte cavete ab avaritia nec enim cujusquam vita ex iis quae ipsi suppetunt in eo sita est ut redundet Luke 12. 15. Novemb. 26. 1598. HERE Christ gives two commandements to covetous men First To discern and see the sinne of covetousnesse Secondly To beware of it Against the latter of them as against every other Commandement the corrupt nature of man makes two questions First of Rebellion Why should we beware Secondly of Ignorance How shall we beware The former question is resolved three wayes First We must beware of it because the sinne of 〈◊〉 is hardly avoided the desire of having aboundance is so rooted in the hearts of all men Secondly Because as it is hardly avoided so it is a sinne very hainous in Gods fight being committed howsoever we perswade our 〈◊〉 that those sinnes are the least that are naturally planted in us Thirdly Because whereas men may repent for other sinned they can hardly repent of this For other immoderate desires doe cease by two means either 〈◊〉 they are satisfied or else when death doth approach 〈◊〉 doth yield to neither of these means for the more that riches increase the more doth his covetous desire increase and the 〈◊〉 that death is the more doth a covetous man imbrace his riches and still covet more Touching the second question Though we be perswaded that we ought to avoid this sinne yet we know not how How to avoid 〈◊〉 and therefore we ask How shall we avoid it The word of God appoints 〈◊〉 three means First Trust in God Secondly Prayer against the sinne Thirdly Meditations concerning the same The first means Trust in God First it is a good way for the avoiding of 〈◊〉 to trust in God for that is a thing that the heart of a covetous man will not set himself against He will in no wise follow the counsell of the Philosopher which teacheth That to avoid covetousnesse a man must give himself to the actions of prodigality he would rather hear how he might get money than how to spend that he hath But if he be advised to put his trust in God he will not be against that as a thing which is not so contrary to his sinne as prodigality But this means doth the Scripture inculcate Trust not in uncertain riches the first epistle to Timothy and the sixt chapter If riches increase set not your hearts upon them Psalm the sixty second Riches avail not in the day of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nam per det in die ira Proverbs the eleventh chapter and the fourth verse Let not the rich man glory in his riches 〈◊〉 the ninth chapter and the twenty third verse As the Scripture exhorts us not to trust in riches so it sets forth examples of them that in vain put their trust therein For this is the man that took not God for his strength but trusted in the multitude of his riches Psalme the fifty second But of confidence in God it speaketh thus It is better to 〈◊〉 in the Lord than to put confidence in man Psalm one hundred eighteen O Lord of hosts blessed is the man that putteth his trust in 〈…〉 the eighty fourth Our father 's trusted in thee and thou didest deliver them Psalme the twenty second and the fourth verse The 〈◊〉 shall hunger but such 〈◊〉 trust in the Lord shall want 〈◊〉 good things 〈◊〉 the thirty fourth and the tenth verse A horse is 〈◊〉 thing to 〈…〉 man but the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him and trust in 〈◊〉 Psalme the thirty third and the seventeenth verse To deliver their souls from death and to feed them in the time of 〈◊〉 After that a man hath admitted this opinion which is so confirmed by Scripture then there is cause to perswade him for the 〈◊〉 gives two commands in the first to Timothy the sixt chapter and the seventeenth verse Charge the rich of this world not to trust in 〈…〉 but in the living God and to distributs To 〈◊〉 them That the cause why men doe not distribute is for want of trust in God They could be content to sow good works but they look up and fear a cloud of poverty will come upon them and they shall want themselves which would not be if they did trust in God but men give more trust to the uncertainty of riches than to the certainty of Gods promise To help this error our Saviour saith Care 〈◊〉 for your heavenly Father knoweth that you need all these things Matthew the sixt chapter and the thirty second verse And the Apostle saith Let your conversation be without 〈◊〉 for God 〈◊〉 said I will not leave thee nor for sake thee Hebrews the thirteenth chapter and the fift verse If we were perswaded that he that seeks to obtain Gods favour by doing good works layeth up a better 〈◊〉 for the time to come than he that heaps up riches the first epistle to Timothy the sixt chapter and the nineteenth verse it would make us use this means for the avoiding of 〈◊〉 For be a man never so rich in this world and never so honourable yet his glorie shall not goe with him Psalm the fourty ninth and the seventeenth verse But their works follow them opera 〈…〉 Apoc the fourteenth chapter and the thirteenth verse Therefore it were good for us rather to respect and provide for the time to come And as it is good for the life to come so for this life present For a little that the righteous hath is better than great riches of the ungodly Psalme the thirty seventh and the sixteenth verse And Godlinesse hath promise of this life and that which is
to come the first epistle to Timothie the fourth chapter and the eight verse Again to trust in God and not in riches is a better foundation not for our selves only but for our posterity I never saw the righteous for saken nor 〈◊〉 seed begging their bread Psalm the thirty seventh and the twenty fift verse The seed of the righteous is blessed Psalme one hundred and twelve and the second verse The second mean Prayer The second means to avoid this sinne is Prayer either with a moderate desire to pray with Salomon Proverbs the thirtieth chapter That God will give neither poverty nor riches or with David Psalme the hundred and nineteenth Incline my heart is thy Laws and not to 〈◊〉 And this is a good means such as a covetous man will 〈◊〉 admit For howsoever the sinne of covetousnesse be rooted in the heart of man yet when he considers the danger that he is in by the same he will pray that he were not covetous And howsoever the Apostle saith The prayer of a righteous man availeth mush if it be servent Oratia 〈◊〉 pravales James the fift chapter and the sixteenth verse yet God will sometime hear the prayer of a wicked man if it be not servent yet if it be offered up often it will not be in vain not by the violence or weight but by often rising up as the water that often falls makes the stone hollow The prayers of wicked men are turned into sinne if they be ordained to sinne Psalme the hundred and ninth and the seventh verse And God doth not hear them that ask to spend upon their lusts James the fourth chapter and the third verse But when wicked men pray against sinee and seek for grace to destroy sinne in them God doth not reject these prayers For Christ will not 〈◊〉 the smoking 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 flashing of such destics in the 〈◊〉 of coverous men enough they be not so vehement as the prayers of righteous men Mathew the twelfth chapter Christ did not quench the small desire that was in 〈◊〉 at the first but accepted of it so that it grew to be a desire of shewing greater works of liberality Luke 19. The third 〈◊〉 The third means is Meditation Every covetous 〈…〉 these flashing desires in his heart that he were not to covetous As 〈◊〉 though he lived wickedly yet desired to dyethe death of the righteous But that those desires may be constant they 〈◊〉 wife from meditation which will stitre them up often For so they will be 〈…〉 ad meridiem Proverbs the fourth chapter and the eighteenth verte Whereas otherwise they are as the sudden flash of lightning that doth no sooner appear but is presontly gone Therefore that he may avoid this sinne the covetous man among all his thoughts of vanity I will goe to the Citie and buy and fell 〈◊〉 the fourth chapter I will pull down any barus and make greater I will act and drink Luke the twelfth chapter must 〈◊〉 these true thoughts which only keeps him from it First he must think of the means whereby he obtains riches Secondly of riches what it is to be rich and what riches are That he may consider of the means of getting riches as he ought he must think first To how many cares he is brought with the desire of being rich how infinite and 〈◊〉 his 〈◊〉 are that they are like 〈◊〉 he hath 〈◊〉 sooner rid himself of one care but another ariseth in his heart For when a man hath enough yet still he hath his cares They that want meat and drink doe but say What shall we eat and 〈◊〉 At 〈◊〉 the sixt chapter and the rich men that have to eat and drink are also car 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 more and to enlarge 〈◊〉 banos to receive more Lake the twelfth chapter therefore the Apostle saith well They that will be 〈◊〉 pearct themselves with many sorrows the 〈◊〉 epistle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the sixt chapter Secondly to how many sinnes the 〈◊〉 man doth end anger his soul while to gather riches he sticketh not to sinne against God by oppression by deceit by peryury swearing and 〈…〉 Thirdly to how many judgments and 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 he is subject by means of these sinnes even while he is in this life 〈◊〉 That by means of his 〈◊〉 he is like no 〈◊〉 forever A sorrow 〈◊〉 to every sinne For whereas there is a sorrow due to every sinne which 〈◊〉 by repentance is remitted and 〈…〉 at the 〈◊〉 of God The sinne of the covetous man is so 〈◊〉 in him 〈◊〉 he cannot be sorry for it the more he hath the more he still desiteth and the neerer he is to death the more 〈…〉 his 〈◊〉 of covetousnesse Of restitution Without it no remission If he will be truly penitent for 〈◊〉 he must make restitution as 〈◊〉 Luke the nineteenth chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nisi 〈◊〉 non 〈…〉 But this is that which makes a 〈◊〉 mans sinne 〈◊〉 before God That he cannot make restitution which notwithstanding must be made and other sinnes require no restitution therefore Christ 〈◊〉 well That it is as hard for a rich man to enter into the Kingdome of Heaven as for a Camel to passe through the eye of a needle Matthew the nineteenth chapter When the young man was willed to sell all he had and to give to the poor he was very sore grieved so loath are they to restore that which they have unjustly gotten together But howsoever the Doctrine of restitution is durus serme yet it is sanus sermo The consideration of these four things that doe accompany the greedy desire of getting riches will make a man to avoid this sinne if he think upon them throughly Uncertainty of riches evils they bring The second observation is touching riches wealth it self If thou consider how deceitfull and uncertain a thing riches is for which thou hast brought thy self to so many inconveniences and such infinite cares so many grievous sinnes to so many judgements of God daily hanging over our heads for the same and into such difficulty of 〈◊〉 it will make thee avoid it therefore our Saviour calls riches deceitfull Matthew the thirteenth chapter and the twenty second verse And the Apostle saith they are uncertain vanity the first epistle to Timothie the sixt chapter The reason is because he that hath them to day may lose them to morrow and though they make mans life comfortable for a while yet they cannot prolong life The reason is because our life doth not stand in the aboundance of wealth In which words the holy Ghost gives them leave to imagine that if they be covetous they shall be wealthy and rich howbeit it is not any means that the covetous man can use that will make him wealthy for which of you by taking thought Proverbs the twenty second chapter and Matthew the sixt chapter The blessing of the Lord maketh rich Sola 〈◊〉 Domini Proverbs the tenth chapter
between them If ye love me saith Christ keep my commandements John the fifteenth chapter And the Preacher Seek for the mysterie of faith as in a pure conscience the first epistle of Timothy and the third chapter For they that put away a good conscience make shipwrack of faith the first epistle of Timos thie the first chapter and the nineteenth verse The Gentils did know God but did not glorifie him as God They knew the truth but did detinere veritatem in injustitiâ Romans the first chapter As they held knowledge so they should not withhold it from others but should have made manifest the same that others might have known God which because they did not God gave them over to be darkned in their understanding We must manifest our knowledge by doing some good works for he that hath knowledge and is not carefull to be fruitfull in the knowledge of Christ is in the half way to be blinded for when men receive not the love of the truth that they may be saved God will send them the efficacie of error that they may beleeve lies the second epistle to the Thessalonians the second chapter and the eleventh verse This knowledge is but a shew of knowledge and not the power of it If any man think he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing as he ought to know it the second epistle to the Corintbians the eighth chapter and the seventh verse This knowledge is like that which John Baptist speaketh of Matthew the third chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Think not to say with your selves c. rest not in this knowledge The rule of true knowledge is when it is accompanied with holinesse of life as he speaks If any man love God he is known of him the first epistle to the Corinthians the eighth chapter and the third verse The virtue that openeth mens eyes to make them see is wisdome So he that hath no care of virtue is not wise for the fear of God is wisdome and to depart from evill is understanding Job the twenty eighth chapter And to fear God is the beginning of wisdome Proverbs the first chapter The Art of sowing is of pollicy so is buying and selling But the Kingdom of God is likened to the traffique of a Merchant man and to the sowing of seed Matthew the thirteenth chapter To teach us that to our knowledge we must ad spiritual wisdom without which we are blinde and ignorant He that is blinde nescit quò vadit John the twelfth chapter He considers not how he lives whether he be in the way that leadeth to life or to death he knows not what shall come to him after this life Incedit tanquam Bos He goeth as an Oxe to the slaughter Proverbs the seventh chapter But he that to knowledge adds godlinesse and holinesse of life he knoweth whither he goeth That it shall goe well with him at the last Ecclesiastes the eighth chapter and the twelfth verse So saith the Prophet Marke the righteous and thou shalt see his end is peace at the last Psalme the thirty seventh and the thirty seventh verse Secondly He is not only blinde but cannot see a farre off Two things are said to be a farre off things Spiritual and eternall and he that hath not these Christia virtues cannot see a farre off neither in things spiritual nor eternall For the first The favour of the world makes a man commit many sinnes but the favour of God keeps him from sinne Worldly pleasures make a man commit many sinnes but the pleasure of the life to come and the joyes of the holy Ghost make a man forbear sinne Secondly For things eternall the evill estate of the wicked is very bad be his temporal estate never so good therefore they are to consider what God will doe in the end thereof Quod fiat in fine Jeremiah the fift chapter and the thirty first verse The least pleasure that the wicked have in this life brings poenas inferni And howsoever Godly men be subject to miseries in this life yet their eternal estate is most happy I know that it shall goe well with them at the last Isaiah the third chapter and the tenth verse He hath forgotten that he was purged Wherein we are to consider First How true this is There are so many perswasions arising from the benefit of the purging of our sinnes that it is confest that he hath forgotten that he was purged that is not carefull to obtain these virtues First That God passeth over the time of our former ignorance Acts the seventeenth chapter Admonishesh us now to repentance That it is enough that we have spent the time past of our life the first epistle of Peter the fourth chapter The consideration of this should make us to become holy The Prophet saith When thou hast enlarged my heart I will runne the way of thy commandements Psalme the hundred nineteenth But what doth enlarge our hearts so much as that all our former sinnes are washed away in the blood of Christ That now we shall runne the way and race of holinesse not in the spirit of fear but of adoption Romans the eighth chapter Not as servants but as children in obedience to God our father we need not to fear the curse of the Law which Christ hath delivered us from Galatians the third chapter Only we may look for temporal plagues if we sinne against God Psalm the eighty ninth Secondly If we consider how we are purged the which would perswade us hereunto that is Not by corruptible things as silver and gold but with the blood of Christ the first epistle of Peter the second chapter But with the blood of Christ not a prophane and common blood Hebrews the tenth chapter but a pretious blood Thirdly If we consider the end of our purging which is not to continue in sin but as Christ saith I will refresh you that you may take my yoke upon you and be obedient unto me Matthew the eleventh chapter The father purgeth the branches that they may bring forth more fruit John the fifteenth chapter And Christ gave himself for us that he might purge us to be zealous of good works Titus the second chapter and the fourteenth verse Whereby we see it is true That he which hath not care of holinesse hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sinnes Secondly We are to consider how evill a thing it is to forget the purging of our former sinnes which we shall perceive if we consider what a benefit it is to have them cleansed When Gods benefits upon us are fresh they somwhat affect us for a time but we presently forget them And we are sorie for our sinnes while they are fresh and newly committed and feel the plague of God upon us so that we can say with David I have sinned and done wickealy in the second of Samuel and the twenty fourth chapter but the remembrance of them soon departeth away But howsoever we forget them yet
God will remember them and punish them to the third and fourth generation Exodus the twentieth chapter His patience towards us whereby he would draw us to repentance makes us think him like our selves that he doth forget our old sinnes as we doe but he will set them before us and 〈◊〉 us for them Psalm the fiftieth Gen. 4 7. If thou do'st evil thy sinne lyeth at the dore and thou art to look for Gods plagues for evil shall haunt the wicked Psalm 140. 11. Our forgetfulnesse of sinne is Gods remembrance The brethren of Joseph were for a while touched with their sinne committed against their brother but when they had forgotten it then did God remember it and brought trouble upon them for it as they themselves consessed The sinne which Simcon and Levi committed was an old sinne the thirty fourth chapter of Genesis but God remembred it and put in Jacobs heart to curse them for it Genesis the fourty ninth chapter so did God remember the old sinne of 〈◊〉 committed against the Israelites and punished it in the first booke of Samuel and the fifteenth chapter so the sinne of Saul in killing the 〈◊〉 which was old was punished with a famine the second booke of Samuel and the one and twentith chapter so Job saith God will plague the old man for the sinne of his youth so that his 〈◊〉 shall be full of 〈◊〉 and shall ly down with him in the dust Job the twentieth chapter and the eleventh verse therefore David prayeth Remember not the sinnes of my youth the twenty fift Psalme and the Church prayeth That ancient sinnes might be forgiven We have sinned with our Fathers Psalm the one hundred and 〈◊〉 Remember not our old sinnes And because we are by nature inclined to forget them which we commit in our youth and have been committed in former time by our Fathers therefore we must beware that we provoke not God to punish us for them When the wicked Servant forgat his old debt which his Lord forgave him and began again to deal cruelly with his fellow this forgetfulness made God to reverse his purgation 〈◊〉 the eighteenth chapter so we must remember that God forgave our old sinnes for this remembrance is profitable to us as out of darkness God brings light so out of the remembrance of former sinnes he can make us to avoid sinnes to come Note The sinfull woman when she remembred that Christ had forgiven her many sins was provoked thereby to love him much Luke the seventh chapter and when Paul remembred that he had been a persecuter of the Church of God and a blood-shedder and that his sinne was purged it made him carefull to walk in holiness of life so as he laboured more than all the Apostles in the first to the Corinthians and the fifteenth chapter wherefore seeing the remembrance of sinnes past is so good it must needs be hurtfull to our our own souls and prejudiciall to Gods glory to forget that our former sinnes were purged by the blood of Christ. Abrahamus Pater ille vester gestivit videre diem istum meum vidit c. Job 8. 56. Decemb. 31. 1598. THEY are the words of our Saviour Christ and therefore true because uttered by him that is the truth it self Wherein affirming of Abraham that he desired to see his day that is the day of his Nativity He sheweth that Abraham was a true Christian and solemnized the same Feast which we now celebrate in remembrance of Christs birth already past which was then to come when he rejoyced And this is matter of comfort unto all men That the service which they offer to God is no new kinde of service but as ancient as Abraham and the rest of the Fathers of whom it is said That they 〈◊〉 to be saved by the Grace of Christ as well as we Acts the fifteenth chapter and the eleventh verse So sai hold Jacob Lord I have looked for thy Jesus Genesis the fourty ninth chapter and the eighteenth verse And the Prophet saith Exultabo in Jesu meo Habakkuk the third chapter and the eighteenth verse Of this day the Prophet saith This is the day which the Lord hath made let us rejoyce and be glad in it Psalme the hundred and eighteenth In this day we are to rejoyce as in a day of Harvest and as in a day of Victory Isaiah the ninth chapter and the third verse So that all the Prophets that were since Abraham desired to see this day of Christs birth no lesse than he The occasion of these words uttered by Christ was that the Jews boasted that they were Abrahams children But Christ tells them they doe foolishly considering they did degenerate from Abraham and were not like him for they had neither Abrahams works nor his faith Abraham desired to see my day and longed for it though he lived long before me but ye despise me you grieve to see me but he would have been glad to see me as you doe he defined to see me and when he saw me with a lively faith he rejoyced to shew what account he made of me but ye make no reckoning of me but 〈◊〉 me Wherein we are to consider three points Abraham's desire to see Christ the sight he had of him and the great joy he conceived when hee saw him which three may be reduced to Abraham's faith and love The sight which Abraham had of Christ's day is the vision of his faith which faith of his is environed with two most pregnant effects of care that is a desire to see Christ and joy after he had 〈◊〉 him for in temporall things whatsoever men most love that they doe not only desire to have but when they obtein it they rejoyce Who will shew us any good that is the desire whereby men testifie this love to earthly blessings of corne and oyle and wine and when they have abundance of these things then they have joy of them though it bee not like the joy of heart which the light of Gods countenance bringeth to the faithfull as it is in the fourth Psalme But in spirituall things Zacheus to testifie his love to Christ did not only desire to see him but when Christ told him hee would dine at his house he came downe and received him joyfully Luke the ninteenth chapter and the fifth verse Abraham's desire offereth three things to bee considered First What hedesired to see that is Christ's day Secondly the desire it selfe hee leaped for joy Thirdly the reason of this great desire For the first hee desired to see the day of Christ which receiveth three senses either the day of his Deitie as Hierom expounds it or the day of his Passion as Chrysostome or the day of his Nativitie as Ireneus interprets it for any of these are sufficient matter of desire as Christ tells his disciples Luke the seventeenth chapter and the two and twentith verse But as Augustine saith that day of
faith by means whereof that was made present to Abraham which otherwise was absent The fathers by faith beheld this promise afarre off Hebrews the 〈◊〉 chapter and the seventh 〈◊〉 c. And were as sure of them as if they were performed Thirdly He rejoyced It is said that God gave charge touching the Patriarchs and ancient Fathers Nolite tangere unctos 〈◊〉 Psalm the hundred and fift and the fifteenth verse Which 〈◊〉 was Abraham who was 〈◊〉 with the oyle of gladnesse Psalm the fourty fift By which the conceived joy when by faith he saw the day of Christs 〈◊〉 Here we are to inquire of the matter and words of this joy The 〈◊〉 and cause of Abrahams joy was deliverance which is a great cause of joy When the Lord brought again the captivity then was our mouth filled with laughter Psalme the hundred twenty sixt So Abraham 〈◊〉 to think that he was delivered from being dust and 〈◊〉 that now be might say with David They 〈◊〉 not leave my 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 nor suffer me to see 〈◊〉 Psalm the sixteenth and the tenth 〈◊〉 Secondly He rejoyced considering that by means of Christ his 〈◊〉 he should not only 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 which is death of body For dust thou art and to dust 〈…〉 Genesis the third chapter And the death of the soul which is the 〈◊〉 of 〈…〉 the sixt chapter But should have 〈…〉 and that not temporal but spiritual in 〈…〉 the first chapter and the third verse For as the 〈…〉 they 〈…〉 not earthly blessings but heavenly For 〈…〉 had been mindfull of earthly blessings They had 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 and had 〈…〉 them Hebrews the 〈◊〉 chapter and the 〈…〉 But the matter of Abrahams joy was the hope of a 〈◊〉 blessing 〈◊〉 Christ. This God 〈◊〉 when he promised That his seed should not only be as the dust of the earth which is an earthly 〈…〉 the thirteenth chapter but As the starres of Heaven Genesis the fifteenth chapter By which is meant the blessing of Heaven This blessing was That he should enjoy those things which the eye bath not seen the first epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter and the ninth verse Thirdly That this blessing should come to him per semen suum not by a strange or foraign means this did increase Abrahams joy to think quod Servator Abrahae est semen Abrahae And that he whom David called his Lord was his sonne Matthew the twenty second chapter Fourthly His joy was the greater considering that this benefit was not appropriated to the Jews only that were of the stock of Abraham but that in him all Nations should be blessed not only he and all his children but as many as were to be blessed should obtain this blessednesse in him So say the Angels that the birth of Christ is matter of the Peoples joy because it belongs to all People Luke the second chapter That in this life all that are blessed with faithfull Abraham Galatians the third chapter And after this life shall be blessed by being received into Abrahams bosome Luke the sixteenth chapter For the manner of his joy As his desiring sight was spiritual so his joy is not carnal as ours but spiritual We desire to see the feast of Christs nativity and we joy when it comes but in a carnal manner but it must be spiritual as Mary saith My spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour Luke the second chapter There is a joy of the countenance which is outward but the true joy is of the heart and conscience To desire Christs dayes before he come and to joy when he is come are the true touchstones of our love to him When our Parents heard God was come they hid themselves Genesis the third chapter So he that is in state of sinne desires not Gods comming or presence neither rejoyce at it They say Let the holy one of Israel cease from before us Isaiah the thirtieth chapter and the eleventh verse So farre are they off from desiring his comming And for joying when he is come they will say with the Gergasites Depart out of our Coasts Matthew the eighth chapter and the thirty fourth verse But contrariwise the godly to testifie their desire say Break the Heavens and come down Psalme the hundred fourty fourth 〈◊〉 So for joy The hope that is deferred makes the heart to faint but when it comes it is as a tree of life Proverbs the thirteenth chapter and the twelfth verse Therefore we must proceed from desire to sight and by it as also by our joy we conceive at the day of Christs birth we may examine whether we be the children of Abraham and so may conceive hope to be partakers of blessing with him But if we rejoyce as the carnal Israelites did of whom it is said The People sat down to eat and drink and rose up to play Exodus the thirty second chapter and the sixt verse If we testifie our joy by eating and drinking that is no true joy Our 〈◊〉 day shall be 〈◊〉 Malachie the second chapter This joy is the Heathens joy whose hearts are filled with food and 〈◊〉 Acts the fourteenth chapter They eate cakes and drink wine and make themselves 〈◊〉 therewith Jeremiah the fourty fourth chapter But that is not Abrahams joy it is spiritual wherein is blessednesse For blessed are the People that can rejoyce in thee Psalm the eighty ninth We must learn to rejovce a right at the day of Christs birth If we will rejoyce as Abraham did we must pray with David Remember me Lord that I may see the 〈◊〉 of thy chosen and bee glad with thy people and give thanks with thine inheritance Psalm the hundred and sixt and the fourth and fift verses Abraham knew a day would come that should take away all his earthly joy and therefore desired the day of Christs birth which might make him to rejoyce in 〈…〉 the fift chapter And rejoyce in afflictions the first epistle of Peter and the fourth chapter such a joy as na man shall take away John the sixteenth chapter As we must rejoyce at this day of Christ after Abrahams example so Christ hath a second day wherein he will give to every man according to his works Romans the second chapter If we rejoyce at this day when it comes and desire it If we love the glorious comming of Christ the second epistle to Timothy and the fourth verse If we look for the appearing of the just God Titus the second chapter and the twelfth verse then shall we shew our selves the Children of Abraham Of that day to see it he saith it shall be matter of joy Lift up your heads Luke the twenty sixt chapter and the twenty first verse For your redemption draweth neer To others matter of sorrow They shall hide them in the rocks Revelations the third chapter but we must say with David I remembred thy judgements and received comfort Psalme the hundred and ninteenth Principes populorum congregantur
which inward desire of revenge must likewise be overcome as the Apostle willeth Romans the twelfth chapter Avenge not your selves sed vince malum bono we must overcome the evil of our fleshly lusts and desires of revenge with the grace of mortification and patience 2. Extra Secondly The seed of the Serpent is without us for there are filii Belial of whom were those to whom Christ said John the eight chapter You are of your Father the Devil Such as will doe mischief for doing well such enemies are men of corrupt mindes and understandings that are destitute of the truth and are bold to say that gain is godlinesse from which we must separate our selves the first epistle to Timothy the sixt chapter and the fift verse And if we overcome in this warre then we shall be partakers of this promise But who overcommeth in this warre and who can say he is a conqueror in this battall The Apostle saith That he that sinneth is overcome of sinne and brought into bondage of the sinne the second epistle of Peter the second chapter and the nineteenth verse Therefore where the promise is here made only to him that overcommeth we must see if the Scripture offereth more graces James the fourth chapter and the sixt verse And if we look into Apocalyps the second chapter and the fift verse we shall finde there he that makes this promise offers more graces that is Remember from whence thou art fallen and repent and doe thy first works D●… victoria So there are two victories the first is continere a peccato the other is paenitere de peccato If we cannot get this victory over the Serpent that he doe not cause us to sinne at all yet if we so farre overcome him that sinne reign not in our mortal bodies Romans the sixt chapter and the twelfth verse if we wound his head which was promised Genesis the third chapter and the fifteenth verse so as though he cause us to sinne yet he get not the head or set up his throne in our hearts then we are to hope that we shall be 〈◊〉 of this promise if we return from whence we are fallen and repent us of the sinnes we have committed and doe the first works then no doubt we shall be restored to our first estate and Christ shall give us a new right in the tree of life But he that either fighteth not at all but is at a league with Hell and hath made a Covenant with death Isaiah the twenty eighth chapter he that will deny sinne nothing but will fulfill the lusts of the flesh or if he fight yet he fight not lawfully nor strive to overcome but is content to follow every temptation as an oxe led to the slaughter Proverbs the seventh chapter and not only so but put stumbling blocks before himself which may make him fall Ezekiel the fourteenth chapter and use all means that he may be overcome And if having fallen they labour not to get the victory after by repenting of his former sinnes and doing the first works then they have no part in this first promise Men may draw neer to the holy mysterie of Christs body and blood and snatch at the tree of life but Christ gives it not except they be such as overcome either by the grace of abstinencie from sinne or of repentance and sorrow for sinne They may be partakers of the tree of life de 〈◊〉 but not de jure The bread of life is to them as the bread of wrong Proverbs the fourth chapter and the seventeenth verse and the bread of deceit which shall in the end fill their mouths with gravell Proverbs the twentieth chapter So both the promise and condition are touched But the question is How we shall overcome that we learn Apocalyps the twelfth chapter where the Saints are said to overcome the great dragon the old Serpent with the blood of the Lambe Which blood hath two uses First that which the Apostle calls the sprinkling of the blood of 〈◊〉 Christ the first epistle of Peter the first chapter and the second verse Secondly That by receiving the cup of blessing we are partakers of the blood of Christ the first epistle to the Corinthians the tenth chapter and the sixteenth verse So that in these words is a reciprocation vincenti ut comedat comedenti ut vincat dabo edere the body and blood of Christ is the fruit of that tree of life which the Apostle speaks of the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the twenty fourth verse That he bare our sinnes in his body upon the tree Of which fruit whosoever are partakers in the Sacrament when it is ministred to them doe receive power to overcome that so they may eate of the tree of eternal life For in this Sacrament we have both a means of victory and a pledge of our reward that is the life of grace begun in us here to assure us of a glorious life in the world to come Every tree must have a root and the root of that tree which Christ speaks of is here in this Sacrament for in it is sown in the hearts of the receivers as it were a kernel which in time shoots forth and becomes a tree for as there was a death of the soul by sinne before God inflicted a death of the body so answerable to that first death of sinne there must be in us a life of grace which is the root of that tree from whence we shall in due time receive the life of glory In this sacrament the tree of the life of Grace is town in us that is a measure of grace wrought in our hearts by the power of Gods spirit by which we shall at length attain to eate of that tree which shall convey unto us the life of glory As there are two trees of life so we must have a double Paradise We must have liberty to be of the Paradise on earth that is the Church Militant which is called hortus conclusus Canticles the second chapter before we can be received into the heavenly Paradise that is the Church Triumphant So there is a plain analogie between those As when we are dead in sinnes and in the uncircumcision of the flesh Colossians the second chapter and the thirteenth verse we receive the life of grace by the sprinkling of the blood of Christ in baptism so when we are fallen from the life of grace and are restrained from the life of God Ephesians the fourth chapter and eighteenth verse and dead in trespasses and sinnes Ephesians the second chapter then we obtain victory against sinne and death by the blood of the Lamb being drunk in the Sacrament Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the eleventh verse For if the material tree of life in Paradise received such influence from God Genesis the third chapter that being dead in it felse it had power to convey the natural life of our Parents while they eat of
between faith and natural affection which he felt when he was commanded to offer up his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and those agonies which David selt in his own heart Psalm the fourty second Why art thou so heavy O my soul Psalm the seventy seventh and the eighty ninth verse These Combats and spiritual Battails were more grievous to David than those which he fought with the Philistims with Saul or any other outward enemies whatsoever The Battails fought between these two parties are in Scripture four The first is that which in the beginning was fought between them that when the one said Isaiah the fourteenth chapter and the thirteenth verse ascendam the other went down when the one said I will sit they said he should stand Daniel the seventh chapter when the Dragon said I will be like the most high the other said Michael who is like God The second is that which Jude speaketh of that there was a conflict between Michael the Archangel and the Devil about the doad body of Moses verse 9. The third is mentioned in Daniel the tenth chapter the thirteenth verse where when the Church was in thraldom and captivity under the Persians and Chaldeans the Dragon would have kept them still in bondage but Michael fought for their 〈◊〉 The fourth Batrail is that which is here fought by Michael for a full deliverance of the Church for we see the Dragon stood before the woman that was ready to be delivered that he might devour the child verse the seventh And because he was taken up unto God the Dragon persecuted the woman And for that he could not prevail against her he made warre with her seed Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the thirteenth verse that is with them that keep the commandements of God For if the Devil fought with Michael for Moses body being dead de 〈◊〉 Jude the ninth verse much more will he fight for Christ being borne If he warre against the Synagogue of the Jews much more against the Church of Christ consisting both of Jews and Gentils And as the Angels offer fight for the one so will they for the other For it is plain that the Angels are first in arms when any injury is offered either to the Child or the Woman or to her seed What this Battail was between the Dragon and the Child the opinion of the Church is That albeit the Devils by their creation were glorious Angels yet they might be content not to presume so farre as to be like the most high but after the manifold wisdome of God was made known by the Church unto principalities and powers Ephesians the third chapter and the tenth verse that is when they saw it was Gods will that the Child born of our flesh and taken out of the earth was taken up into Heaven to the throne of God This was it that stirred them up to battail For howsoever they be constrained to submit themselves to God yet they cannot abide to honour a peece of clay And albeit they could not be equal with God yet they would retain a superiority above men which thing being not granted them they are incensed against Christ They think it a great indignity howsoever they have done service to men tanquam Domini as things pertaining to the Lord that now they should doe service to men tanquam Domino But this they are inforced to perform to Christ who is exalted in his Humanity and in as much as Christ hath taken our nature they must adore our nature This is that which the Dragon and his Angels would not yeeld unto But they prevail not in this fight Again the consideration of this which the Apostle 〈◊〉 That God spared not the Angels that sinned the second epistle of Peter the second chapter Angelis peccantibus non pepercit may greatly provoke the Angels to battail That albeit he spared not the Angels that sinned yet he will spare men when they sinne this is a great assault But that is more Nusquam Angelos assumpsit sed semen 〈…〉 Hebrews the second chapter and the sixteenth verse That he will not grace the names of Angels as to assume their nature but prefers the nature of man and that they must adore that person that is be come man this might be a 〈◊〉 remptation As also that which the Apostle affirms the first epistle to the Corinthians the sixt chapter and the third vorse That the nature of man shall judge Angels this might greatly offend them And the Dragon and his Angels will no doubt suggest these thoughts into Michael and his Angels but yet they 〈…〉 The more high and honourable any spirit is the lesse can it 〈◊〉 any indignity And seeing the Angels are such honourable spirits they must needs take it very ill that not only mans nature is exalted above theirs but that they mult doe service unto men not as things pertaining to the Lord but as to the Lord himself This must needs offend them That when they sinne they finde no favour but if man sinne he is spared That when the Sonne of God doth manifest himself to the world he doth not vouchsafe the Angels so much honour as to assume their nature but takes the seed of Abraham and that he will in the last time make men judges of Angels In this manner did the Dragon and his Angels oppose themselves against Michael and his Angels but we see how he doth resist all these temptations and assaults and therefore this battail is worthy to be kept in remembrance The Conquest followeth Wherein we see that in steed of perswading Michael and his Angels that they should not look at the mysterie of Christs Incarnation we see the Angels are content 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first epistle of Peter the first chapter the eleventh and twelfth verses to stoop down to look into those things that concern Christ. Whereas they were perswaded to turn their backs on Christ we see they all fall down and worship him Hebrews the first chapter and sixt verse They all acknowledge Worthy is the Lamb to receive power riches honour and glory and majesty praise and honor and glorie to him that sitteth on the throne and to the Lamb for evermore Apocalyps the fift chapter the twelfth and thirteenth verses And instead of exalting themselves they are ready to offer battail to them that perswade them hereunto as Davids heart was more inclined to Joab than his wicked sonne Absolom which made him make Joab a means for his restoring into his fathers favour So God is more inclined to be mercifull to men that sinne than to Angels and that is it that makes the Angels submit themselves to the nature of men So that they see Christ vouchsafeth to call us Bretheren Matthew the twenty fift chapter and the fourtieth verse so they are glad to claim brotherhood of us Apocalyps the twenty second chapter as the Angel said to John I am one of thy brethren In as much as God exalts the male
in their works 〈◊〉 the first chapter and the sixteenth verse There are diverse sorts of comming First We are said to come to Christ in Baptisme Mark the tenth chapter Sinete parvalos venire ad me Secondly In Prayer for as Augustine saith Preeibus non passibus iter ad Deum Thirdly In the hearing of the word so many reforced and came to Christ Luke the fifteenth chapter and the first verse And we likewise come to Christ when we come to hear his Ministers for he that heareth him heareth us Luke the tenth chapter Fourthly By Repentance as Luke the fifteenth chapter I will goe to my Father But Christ receiveth none of these but that we come to him as he is panis vitae when we come to Christ as he offers himself in the Sacrament to be the lively food of our souls when we come to the same and doe it in the remembrance of his death And there is reason why both we should come to Christ and he should receive us comming First There is reason we should come to Christ in regard of our sinnes already past For we have need of a Sacrifice both in respect of the grinding and upbraiding of our consciences for the sinnes we have committed and by reason of the punishment we have deserved by them This sacrifice we are put in minde of in this Sacrament That Christ hath offered himself to God an 〈◊〉 and sacrifice of a sweet smelling favour wherein we have planted in our hearts the passive grace of God for the 〈◊〉 of our consciences against sinne past by the taking of the cup of Salvation which makes us say 〈◊〉 into thy rest O my soul Psalm the hundred and sixteenth and for the turning away of deserved punishment as the blood of the Paschal Lamb sprinkled upon the dores saved the 〈◊〉 from destroying Exodus the the twelfth chapter So in this true passover we receive the blood of the immaculate Lamb Christ to assure us of peace with God and to deliver us from the destroying Angel As the Heathen had their Altar whereon they offered to their gods so we have an Altar that is the Lords Table where we celebiate the remembrance of that obiation once made by Christ Hebrews the thirteenth chapter and the twelfth verse In respect of sinne to come likewise we have need to come to Christ for thereby there is wrought in us active grace whereby we are enabled to resist sinne For the endowing of our 〈◊〉 with much strength Psalm the hundred thirty eighth and with much power from above is here performed unto us that come aright Luke the twenty fourth chapter And therefore the 〈◊〉 would have us to 〈◊〉 our hearts with grace the spiritual food and not with meat 〈◊〉 the thirteenth chapter For by this means we shall be made 〈◊〉 both to indure the 〈◊〉 of sinne and to be 〈◊〉 over 〈◊〉 and our own corruptions Thirdly For that the eating of the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 and the drinking of the blood is a pledge of our 〈◊〉 up at the 〈◊〉 day verse the fifty fourth and that after this 〈◊〉 we which come to the Lords Supper shall be invited to the supper of the Lamb of which it is said Apocalyps the nineteenth chapter and the ninth verse blessed are they which are called to the Lambs supper Again it is reason Christ should receive us in two sorts First In respect of the communicants or commers for there is no man ever in better state and more disposed to be received than at the celebration of this Sacrament If a contrite spirit for sinne can set a man in state to be received of Christ man is most contrite and broken in heart at this time If Christ will then receive us when he may dwell in our hearts by faith Ephesians the third chapter at this time is our faith at the highest for when we have the body and blood of Christ in our hands then it makes us say with Thomas John the twentieth chapter Domine mi Deus mi If prayer made with 〈◊〉 and confidence may move Christ at any time to receive we never have more confidence in prayer than at that time then is the love of God most of all shed in our hearts by the holy Ghost Romans the fift chapter and the fift verse by which we are received not only to give for no man is to appear empty but also to forgive as Christ willeth That remembring our brethren hath ought against us we leave our gift and be reconciled Matthew the fift chapter If at any one time more than other Christ be more ready to receive then is he maximè receptivus Secondly In respect of the action it self which is a memorial of that sacrifice which he offered at his death to God for sins Then he received the thief that said Lord remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdome Luke the twenty third chapter Then he prayed for his 〈◊〉 Father forgive them Therefore there is a great congruity that now much more he must be carefull to us and receive us when we celebrate the remembrance of his goodnesse and mercie But the chief point is that in the Sacrament Christ himself is received and therefore it is very fit that he which is to be received be ready to receive them that come to him The second Condition is touching the Fathers gift All that my Father giveth Which is a limitation For as many pressed upon Christ but there was but one that tou hed that was the woman healed of her issue of blood Luke the eight chapter and the fourty fift verse so many come to the Lords Table but to the end they may be received they must be known by this mark he must be datus à Patre tractus doctus John the sixt chapter the fourty fourth and fourty fift verses There are that are dati ab hominibus or as the Apostle speaks the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the thirteenth verse ab human â ordinatione that is the most part come not being given or drawn of the Father but compelled by man Their fear is taught by mens precepts Matthew the fifteenth chapter and Isaiah the twenty ninth chapter Again there are that have a shew of Godlinesse the first epistle to Timothie the third chapter Such come not upon any motion of Gods spirit that they feel in themselves but for fashions sake They will not be seen to refuse the order of the Church but doe as others doe but they that are given to Christ of God are such as come of conscience knowing they ought to performe this duty of thankfulnesse to God such as hunger and thirst after the right cousnesse of Christ the spiritual food of their souls in conscience of their own unworthinesse and ill deservings and therefore seek for righteousnesse in him with as great desire as for bodily food they that come with such an earnest inclination as given and drawn of the
willingly will come as often as they may and not like those that swell with pride and say another time will serve as well as now as Davids servants said to Naball in the first book of Samuel the twenty fift chapter We come now in a good time for thou makest a feast and art in case to relieve us another time peradventure thou wilt not be so prepared So men ought to take the opportunity and to say in their selves Now is the time of the celebration of Gods mercy and loving kindnesse Now we receive Christ and therefore there is great hope that if we come he will receive us Now we celebrate the memory of his death when he was content to receive the thief that came unto him and therefore it is most likely that he will receive us if we come to him But if we come not now happily we shall not be received when we would It is Christs will That they which are given him of the Father be with him where he is and may behold his glory John the seventeenth chapter and the twenty fourth verse Therefore it stands us upon to come to Christ that he may receive us to be one with him in the life of grace and partakers with him in his Kingdom of glory Qui verò haec audierunt compuncti sunt corde dixerunt ad Petrum ac reliquos Apostolos Quid faciemus viri fratres Petrus autem ait ad eos Resipiscite c. Act. 2. 37. April 12. 1600. OUR Saviour Christ promised Peter Acts the fift chapter to make him a fisher of men and 〈◊〉 the thirteenth chapter That the 〈…〉 of Heaven is like a 〈…〉 which catcheth fish of all 〈…〉 The first casting forth of this act and 〈…〉 draught that Peter had is by 〈…〉 these verses And the draught which he made was 〈…〉 souls verse the fourty first If we 〈◊〉 of what 〈◊〉 They were 〈◊〉 souls of them that killed the Sonne of God and 〈…〉 the spirit of God whom they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 〈…〉 holy Ghost to 〈◊〉 verse the 〈…〉 These men are full of new 〈◊〉 Which when we advisedly consider it cannot but be matter First Of great comfort Teaching us that albeit we be great sinners as the Jews that put the sonne of God to death yet there is a quid faciemus what to doe that is a hope of remission of sinnes Secondly Of instruction touching the means That if we repent and be pricked in heart with the consideration of our sinnes as they were we shall attain this mercie which they received First St. Luke sets down the Sermon of Peter Secondly The sruit and effect of it As the Sermon it self propounds the death and Resurrection of Christ so in the effect that followed of it we see the means how we are made partakers of his death and Resurrection and that is set down in these two verses which contain a question and an answer In the question is to be observed First the cause of it that is the compunction of their hearts Secondly the cause of that compunction and that was the hearing of Peters Sermon Touching this effect which Peters Sermon wrought in the hearts of his hearers it is compuncti sunt corde Wherein note two things First the work it self Secondly the part wherein of the work it self it is said they were pricked Wherein first we are to observe That the first work of the spirit and operation of the word is compunction of heart howbeit the word being the word of glad tidings and comfort it is strange it should have any such operation but that Christ hath foretold the same John the sixteenth chapter When the comforter comes he shall reprove the world of sinne Now reproof is a thing that enters into the heart as Proverbs the twelfth chapter and the eighteenth verse There is that speaketh words like the prickings of a sword and as Christ gave warning before hand so now when the holy Ghost was given we see that Peters hearers are reproved and pricked in their consciences that they dealt so cruelly with Christ. As this 〈◊〉 the Elect of God so there is another spirit called by the same name of pricking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romans the eleventh chapter and the eighth verse that is the spirit of slumber which shews it self upon those that shall not be saved Touching the manner of this operation we see it is not a tickling or itching but a pricking and that no light one but such as pearced deeply into their hearts and caused them to cry Whereby we see it is not the speaking of fair words saying with the false Prophets Jeremiah the twenty third chapter The Lord hath said ye shall have peace it is not that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romans the sixteenth chapter and the eighteenth verse that makes this effect but this speaking The part wherein this work was wrought was the heart as Luke the twenty fourth chapter they burned in their hearts and 〈◊〉 the second chapter and the fourteenth verse I will speak to their hearts So it was 〈◊〉 of the eares in the second 〈◊〉 to Timot hie the 〈◊〉 chapter or of the brain that they felt but a 〈◊〉 of the very 〈◊〉 and so should we be affected at the hearing of the word As 〈…〉 is pricked in the flesh is disquieted till he have remedy so should the consideration of our sinnes disquiet us and make us seek for cure This is our duty from their example and it is a good signe of distinction to shew us whether we be of the number of those that shall be saved whether of the good fish that shall be gathered together or the bad fish that shall be cast out Matthew the thirteenth chapter and the fourty eighth verse So if we pertain to God we shall feel this pricking at our hearts after we have heard the word The cause of this compunction is his auditis that is they had heard a speech of St. Peter which did disquiet them till they asked counsel of Peter and the rest The word of God of its own nature hath no such operation for the Patriarch Job saith Job the twenty third chapter It was agreeable to him as his appointedfood And David Psalm the nineteenth saith The Commanaements of the Lordrejoyceth the heart and is sweeter than the honey and the honey-combe But yet it hath this effect in regard that it meeteth with that which is an enemy to our Salvation that is sinne the deputy of 〈◊〉 as the word is Gods 〈◊〉 Without the Law sinne is dead but when the Commandement came sinne revived Romans the seventh chapter and the eighth verse for sinne is a sting the first epistle to the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter which lyeth dead so long as it is not reproved But when it is reproved by the commandement of God then it reviveth and stings the heart it makes men have a conscience of sinne Hebrews the tenth chapter and when sinne is
God Thirdly They shew they are ready to doe it not like those of whom the Prophet saith I know when I have shewed you what you should doe you will not doe it Jeremiah the fourty third But these are ready to doe whatsoever shall be appointed as a remedy for them Fourthly As they are ready 〈…〉 they confesse their ignorance that of themselves they know not how to rid themselves from sinne As the 〈◊〉 said Acts the 〈◊〉 chapter How can I understand without an Interpreter Fiftly They seek to Peter and the other 〈◊〉 because God had lately 〈◊〉 them with the grace of his spirit and consequently were skilfull and could tell them what to doe and therefore they are bound 〈◊〉 commit themselves to them as to their Physitian to doe whatsoever they shall 〈◊〉 be for the cure of their souls So that if there be any that being in 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 doe for all that either think that nothing can or that nothing ought to be done but shall say desparately Jeremiah the eighteenth chapter or as if it were not needfull to be done shall 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 if or think they know well enough what to doe without 〈◊〉 contrary to the Apostles opinion in the first epistle to the 〈◊〉 the twelfth chapter Are all Apostles For though first we say 〈◊〉 We 〈◊〉 we all have knowledge the first epistle to the 〈◊〉 the eighth chapter and the first verse yet after he saith every one hath not knowledge and therefore must ask counsell of those that can give it or else shall refuse to be directed by such as doe know therefore are not like to be eased of the sting of conscience but shall for ever have the worm of conscience gnawing them and ever be disquieted The Apostles answer to this question is in the fifty eighth verse Resipiscite c. that is there is something to be done which is an argument of the great Mercy of God and the virtue and power of the Sacrifice of Christ notwithstanding the greatnesse of their sinnes Here are two things set down First By way of precept Repent and be baptized Secondly Things by Christs promises Yee shall have your sinnes forgiven and receive the gift of the Holy Ghost First Peter prescribes them what to doe and so shewes that their 〈◊〉 are remitted which is a signe of Gods great mercy though their sinnes were grievous For he that shall offend his better a man of some credit can hardly hope for pardon much losse if he offend the Prince or some noble Person But these offend the Majesty of God himself which doth farre exceed the Majesty of earthly Princes For of Christ the elect Sonne of God they said in the twenty sixth chapter of Matthew His blood be upon us and they wrought despight to the Spirit of Grace Hebrews the tenth chapter when they blaspheme the Holy Ghost accusing them of drunkennesse which were inspired with the Holy Spirit Acts the second chapter and the thirteenth verse Yet the Apostle telleth these grievous sinners there is hope of forgivenesse that to them which are yet scarce cold from the slaughter of the Sonne of God there is a remedy to help them Wherein the Apostle followeth the rule which Christ had before given the Apostles in the twenty fourth chapter of Luke To preach repentance and remission of sinnes to mankinde beginning at Jerusalem If the doctrine of remission of sinnes be first to be preached to them among whom Christ was crucified much more to the ends of the world and that likes us well But secondly He tells us what we must doe he saith not you shall live to doe nothing but repent and be baptized It is not enough to be pricked in the heart for sinne past but we must doe something And he speaks first by way of precept Repent and that is rest not in that passive part but know that when you are pricked in your hearts repentance must be shewed in your life Wherewithall he sheweth that compunction is not repentance for here to these that were already pricked he saith Repent and 〈◊〉 the thirty first chapter After I converted I repented so in the third chapter of the Acts of the Apostles Repent and turn that your sinnes may be done away so it was given in charge to St. Paul Acts the twenty sixth chapter Repent and turne and doe workes worthy of eternall life So these men shewed forth these workes for as followeth they were devout and liberall distributing to all as they had need the principall actions either removing of the ill that is sinne which did disquiet their consciences or the positive benefit that is the gift of the Holy Ghost which should work in them the fruits of the spirit meeknesse patience Galatians 5. and be unto them an earnest and pledge of their Redemption and Salvation in the second epistle to the Corinthians the first chapter and the fifth verse Ephesians the first chapter and the thirteenth verse Tum alter ad alterum dixerunt Nonne cor nostrum ardebat in nobis dum loqueretur nobis in via dum adaperiret nobis Stripturas Luke 24. 32. April 20. 1600. WHICH is another or second passion that commeth unto men at the preaching of the word for as Acts the second chapter and the thirty seventh verse there were some that suffered a pricking at the heart upon the hearing of the word so here are others that suffer an inflaming or burding in the heart For if we look in verse the twenty first these two disciples with whom Christ travelled were dead in spirit and cold in faith before the word was spoken for they confessed nos autem 〈◊〉 But after our Saviour Christ had spoken with them and opened the Scriptures their hope revived and their hearts waxed warme Which as it is a fruit and effect of the word in the hearts of the hearers so is it a 〈◊〉 signe and argument of the efficacy and operation of Christ which he 〈◊〉 in the ministry of the word as the 〈◊〉 speakes in the second 〈◊〉 to the 〈◊〉 and the thirteenth chapter 〈…〉 in me 〈…〉 so when we feel this burning in our hearts it is a great comfort to us and a signe that Christ speakes in 〈◊〉 and we must in such a case pray to God that he will establish in 〈…〉 things 〈◊〉 he bath begun Psalm the sixty eighth if it work 〈…〉 effect in us we must suspect our selves and pray that we may have a 〈…〉 of the word when wee hear 〈◊〉 that whereas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 the second chapter of the Acts of the 〈◊〉 had a pricking at 〈◊〉 hearts and those of Christ fels a 〈◊〉 we may be in the number of those hearers and not of those of whom the 〈…〉 in the sixth chapter of 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 verse 〈…〉 eyes but see not eares but such as are heavy and 〈…〉 heart so as though they 〈◊〉 yet they 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 not converi and be 〈◊〉 Which is a
first epistle to the Corinthians the eleventh chapter The prayers of all the just are available but specially of the elders therefore send for them James the fift chapter A Serjeant Constable or Scrivener by virtue of his office may doe that which a greater man cannot doe so the prayer of a person called to that holy function may prevail more The Priests are appointed to offer up prayers and the calves of the lips Hosea the fourteenth chapter So Genesis the twentieth chapter Abraham is a Prophet and shall pray for thee Leviticus the sixt chapter and the seventh verse he shall pray for thee Orabit pro eo Sacerdos Therefore Hezekiah saith Lift up thou thy prayers Isaiah the thirty eighth chapter And Saint James saith in his fift chapter The prayer of faith made by the Elders shall save the sick The prayer of the just avails much but especially of the elders and Priests for to such a grace is given as in the first epistle to the Corinthians and the fifteenth chapter Gratia data est 〈◊〉 and this grace is not in vain Secondly But it must be oratio cum statione Phinehas stood up and prayed For as in the first epistle to the Corinthians and the eleventh chapter of a woman uncovered judge whether it be a comely thing to sit still in prayer All things in the Church must be done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first epistle to the Corinthians the fourteenth chapter We must please and serve God etiam habitu corporis The Angels of God stood before God Job the first chapter The Cherubims stood and hid their faces Isaiah the sixt chapter And millions of Angels stood before the seat Daniel the seventh chapter Therefore we must conclude our sitting is not pleasing to God Sedentes orare extra Discipulum est The other sense is the execution or judgement And it hath a good relation to sinnes They prayed and wept Numbers the twenty fift chapter but that prevailed not till Phinehas executed vengeance upon the sinne but the vengeance being performed by Phinehas the plague ceased verse the eighth So then the wrath of God will cease if people cease to sinne or if Phinehas the Magistrate begin to punish sinne in the people For punishment is of two sorts First Every man in himself is to punish sinne as David smit his heart in the second book of Samuel the twenty fift chapter and the twenty fourth verse and the first epistle to the Corinthians the eleventh chapter judge your selves But if not Moses the Magistrate must take vengeance of sinne for if he will not God himself will set his face against that Magistrate Leviticus the twentieth chapter When the people look not at him that strikes them but to natural causes then shall the hand of God be stretched out still Isaiah the ninth chapter and the thirteenth verse The wrath of God for our sinnes being the cause of this plague we must appease him with prayer and repentance If we fail to doe this the devotion of the Priest and the zeal of the Magistrate must look to it else the plague cannot but still increase Amen Amen Addenda Vae vobis Legis interpretibus quoniam sustulistis Clavem cognitionis ipsi non introstis eos qui introibant prohibuistis Luke 11. 52. Octob. 13. 1590. Place this in the beginning of the book next before the Sermon upon Gen. 1. 1. For this was the Bishops first Lecture in Saint Pauls preached as an Introduction to his following discourse upon the four first chapters of Genesis KNOWLEDGE of 〈◊〉 things is compared by our Saviour Christ to a Key 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter of Luke and the 〈◊〉 second 〈◊〉 as being a thing necessary both to 〈…〉 in this life the way we should walk in 〈◊〉 the second chapter the tenth and 〈…〉 as also for the entrance into the 〈…〉 of 〈…〉 the life to come For which cause holy men in 〈◊〉 have 〈…〉 to this kinde of knowledge Jeremiah the 〈…〉 chapter 〈◊〉 the thirty fourth verse and these have made it 〈◊〉 delight 〈◊〉 the fifty eighth chapter and the thirteenth verse and prefer it before their daily food Job the twenty third chapter and esteem it above all treasures Proverbs the second chapter and the fourth verse But such as are ignorant and know not these thing 〈◊〉 biddeth to goe out and dwell among beasts Cant the first chapter and the seventh verse as if they were not worthy the company of men and therefore Christ weepeth for them Luke the 〈…〉 chapter as if their case were most 〈◊〉 which knew not that they ought Wherefore God hath given 〈◊〉 means and wayes by which we may come to knowledge The one is the 〈◊〉 of the World by the view of his Creatures 〈…〉 hearing of his word by the Ministry of Men. These two are the two great leaves of this gate and way to Heaven which that 〈◊〉 of knowledge must unlock and set wide open that so we may 〈◊〉 enter therein Which two means are spoken of and 〈◊〉 unto us in Psalm the nineteenth the first and the 〈…〉 And St. Paul beginneth his epistle to the Romans with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first chapter the sixteenth and twentieth verses and it was his order in preaching and teaching men the knowledge of God 〈◊〉 at 〈◊〉 Acts the seventeenth chapter and the twenty third verse These are as it were the two great books of God which he would have known and read of all men For as his written word is called a scroll Ezekiel the third chapter and the second verse so is the frame of the world 〈◊〉 a book or scroll Isaiah the thirty fourth chapter and the fourth verse God spake once and twice saith David Psalm the sixty second and the eleventh verse Once he 〈◊〉 Job by the view of his Creatures Job the thirty eighth chapter and again he spake to Moses on Mount Sinai shewing his will Exodus 20. 1. These then being the two effectual means to attain to knowledge there is no place in the Scripture nor any book therein that doth more lively expresse them both than this book of Genesis which we have in hand For it setteth out to us the word of God by which all things were made fiet and the Word by which all things are increased 〈◊〉 multiplicamini and the word by which all men were corrupted non moriemini and the word whereby all are restored conteret caput Serpentis which is the word of Promise and of Faith We are willed to enquire for the old and good 〈…〉 〈◊〉 sixt chapter and sixteenth verse Christ warranteth that 〈◊〉 sheweth us both Matthew the sixteenth chapter the seventh and eighth verses It is the ancientest in time for it beginneth with the very beginning It is first in order and in place in the 〈◊〉 of Gods book and therefore I have thought it good to enquire of this way Some doe give this reason why John of all other is called the Divine
called a Serpent of creeping but other beasts though they have their brests between their leggs yet they doe not creep as the Serpent doth Another question is How this creeping can be a punishment to the Serpent seeing from the beginning they were created without feet The solution is That that which was natural before the fall after the fall became a punishment Nakednesse before the fall was no matter of shame for The man and his wife were naked and were not ashamed Genesis the second chapter and the twenty fift verse but since the fall it is a disgrace to be naked So now the creeping of Serpents is a signe of Gods 〈◊〉 inflicted upon visible Serpents because of the sinnes of him that is invisible whereas in the beginning it was no punishment Another question is How the third part of this Sentence is verified of the visible Serpent That he eats dust For one Prophet saith of him To the Serpent dust shall be his meat Isaiah the sixty fift chapter and the twenty fift verse And another saith The Serpent lick the dust Michah the seventh chapter and the seventeenth verse and yet in the Creation Moses recordeth that the Serpent hath the like food that other Creatures have of whom God saith To every beast of the earth fowl of the aire and to every creeping thing upon earth I have given every green hearb for meat Genesis the first chapter and the tenth verse The answer is That whereas at the first the Serpent had food in common with other beasts now he is excommunicated and is appointed only to feed upon the dust not upon the earth for that hath a moisture and so is apt to nourish but God did not allot unto him so much but only to feed upon the dust which is dry and altogether without moisture So that all men may evidently see both by the motion and feeding of the Serpent that the Curse of God is upon him because the Devil that old Serpent did use him as a means to perswade man to sinne against God As for the invisible Serpent these punishments pronounced by God are verified in him also but not literally for he hath no 〈◊〉 of body and therefore cannot creep but as he is a spirit so we must judge and discern spiritual things spiritually the first epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter for he hath a spiritual brest and belly he hath a spiritual creeping and feeding For his moving we are first to consider the motion as it offereth it self First It is the basest and vilest motion that is to signifie unto us that the dejection of the Devil is a more 〈◊〉 dejection and overthrow than any can be For where at the first he was an Angel of light appointed to be a Minister in Heaven now he is cast down into the deepest Hell and is there occupied in all base and vile service Now he doth busie himself in nothing so much as how to work wickednesse and to destroy the souls of men Of this dejection our Saviour speaks I saw Satan as it were lightning fall down from Heaven Luke the tenth chapter and the eighteenth verse And of him to his shame it is said How art thou fallen from Heaven that said I will ascend into Heaven and exalt my throne above the starres of God Isaiah the fourteenth chapter and the twelfth verse For it is a great shame for a Prince and noble person that hath been occupied in matters of State to be thrust into the Kitchen to be a drudge So is it with the Devil the invisible Serpent who having been before a Minister in Heaven doth now creep upon earth and compasse it Job the first chapter And as Christ saith He walks through dry places Luke the eleventh chapter and the twenty fourth verse that is he delights to be in souls that are defiled with all manner of sinne and if he cannot be received there he will enter into the Swine Matthew the eighth chapter And then doth he creep when he makes men to minde earthly things Philippians the third chapter and the second verse As this word sheweth that the reward of pride is and shall be basenesse so from his creeping we are taught what is his fraud and deceitfulnesse These things that have feet and goe cannot move without some noyse but the way of the 〈◊〉 doth passe mans understanding for that it leaveth no impression Proverbs the thirtieth chapter In this sense the Apostle saith Some false brethren have crept in Galatians the second chapter and the fourth verse and these creep into widows houses the second epistle to Timothy the third chapter This kinde of creeping is nothing else but a privy kinde of beguiling and deceiving such as we finde to have been used by the Devill the second epistle to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter Therefore we must have a special regard of the Devil when he comes to us in this manner for then is he more to be feared than when he seeks about like a roaring Lyon whom to devour the first epistle of Peter the fift chapter and the third verse The Devil is said to creep to signifie thus much That as creeping things doe not fly about our heads nor keep even pase with us so the old Serpent is alwaies aiming at our lowest part as it were at the heel tempting us by sensuality to the sinne of uncleannesse and intemperance Secondly We are to consider the manner of this motion which is expressed by the original word to be upon the brest and belly whereby we have shewed to us two main 〈◊〉 For when he creeps upon his brest by the listing up of himself he brings the temptation of the brest that is he would have us 〈◊〉 up with pride and exalt our selves When he creeps upon his belly he tempts us to desire the forbidden fruit and apple that was so goodly and pleasant to look upon and under this is comprehended both the sinnes of 〈◊〉 and lust In this manner we are to observe the means whereby he perswades men to these sinnes In the breast is the heart and when he labours to take the possession of the heart by corrupting our inward thoughts then he creeps upon his brest And his creeping upon his 〈◊〉 betokens the actual accomplishment of sinne So we see that albeit the Devil be a spirit yet by a spiritual analogie he creeps upon his breast and belly no lesse than the visile Serpent Thirdly After the casting down of Pride we come to consider the sinne of Lust and the punishment laid upon it which is To eate the dust The invisible Serpent doth not eate only corporally but spiritually he may be said to eate for in spiritual matters there is a thing answerable to eating We say in regard of the delight we take in somthing this is meat and drink to us And so the Holy Ghost also speaks I esteem of thy word above my appointed food Job the twenty third chapter
we can doe is to bruise his head And many are so 〈◊〉 from that that they fetch balmes and oyntments to heal his head so soon as it is wounded Instead of treading him under our 〈◊〉 many doe tread under their feet the Law and word of God as Samuel speaks in the first book of Samuel the fifteenth chapter and the twenty third verse and tread under feet the blood of the Covenant Hebrews the tenth chapter and the twenty ninth verse which God appoints as a means to 〈◊〉 us in this fight By nature we are enemies to God and to the crosse of Christ Philippians the third chapter and the eighteenth verse except God vouchasafe us the benefit of this promise and make this enmity between the Devil and us We see this enmity was fulfilled between the Devil and Christ that was the seed of the woman for they say What have we to doe with thee Jesus Matthew the eighth chapter and the twenty ninth verse and between him and the wicked Jews which were of the Serpents seed which said to Christ Behold a glutton and a wine drinker a friend to Publicans and sinners Matthew the eleventh chapter and the nineteenth verse And thus still the Devill and his generation doe oppose themselves against Christ and the faithfull that are born anew of the immortal seed of the word the first epistle of Peter the first chapter and the twenty third verse But as for the ungodly the Devil doth never disturb them for in them the strong armed man bath 〈◊〉 full possession so as all that he hath is in peace Luke the eleventh chapter and the twenty second verse And the Devil doth no sooner hold up his hand to them but they are ready to doe whatsoever he will But he that hath not his part in this hostility and spiritual conflict with the Serpent shall have no part in the promise of victory which is made to the godly Hoc conteret tibi caput tu autem conteres buic calcaneum Gen. 3. 15. Aug 10. 1598. IN this last part of the Curse pronounced by God upon the Serpent there are two points First a proclaiming of warre Secondly a promise of Victory the summe whereof is the breaking of the Serpents head as the holy Ghost speaks here or as the Apostle saith in the first epistle of John and the third chapter the loosing of the works of the Devil In the proclaiming of enmity we have to consider First the enmity it self Secondly the persons between whom it shall be Touching the enmity we shewed first That it is kindly that preposterous love and amity should end in hatred and mortal enmity as it fell out between the Serpent and the woman Secondly That God is the author of this enmity who saith of himself I will put enmity Whereupon we gather That as God is the stirrer up of all affections so especially of that hatred which is between good and evil 〈◊〉 and error between Babel and Sion the Tents of the godly and the wicked as they are opposed in the eighty fourt Psalm And therefore as it is Christs rule That no man should separate that which God hath joyned Matthew the nineteenth chapter so where God promiseth that he will 〈◊〉 the wicked and the godly let no man seek to conjoyn them nor make peace when his will is there should be mortal hatred and warre The persons are the Woman and the Serpent By the Woman is meant not Eve as she is the mother of them that dye but the Church which is signified by her in regard whereof she is called The mother of the living Genesis the third chapter and the twentieth verse As allo the bodily Serpent is not meant but the Devil that old Serpent The first thing then to be noted in the persons is That as there is naturally a hatred between the Woman and the visible Serpent so God threatneth this as a punishment to be laid upon the Devil That there shall be continual warre and harred between him and the Church Secondly This enmity shall not be for a time for he contents not himself to say I will put enmity between thee and the Woman but that it shall continue between their seed that is it shall be hereditary to abide till the worlds end so long as God hath a Church By the seed of the Woman is understood the faithfull that are born and begotten in the Church which is the mother of us all Galatians the fourth chapter By the Serpents seed is meant the wicked whom Christ calls Serpents and a generation of Vipers Matthew the twenty third chapter and the thirty third verse Thirdly It shall be no light harred but deadly and mortal for it shall proceed to grinde one another to powder The hatred which the Church beareth towards the Devil is such as shall break his head in peeces as an earthen vessel is broken so that it shall not be fit for any use not so much as to fetch fire in any peece of it Isaiah the thirtieth chapter and the fourteenth verse Wherefore touching this former part As it is a great punishment for a proud man to have them set before him whom he thinks to be farre under him so for as much as the Devil hold us captive at his will the second epistle to Timothy and the second chapter it is a grievous curse which God layeth upon him that we shall not only be set at libetry from him but have the mastery over him and trample him under our feet Secondly for our selves As it is a blessing for a man not to be deceived of him whom he thinks to be his friend so God vouchsafeth us a great blessing in that he promiseh to ftirre up in us a hatred against sinne and the Devil so that we shall not make a league with hell nor an agreement with death Isaiah the twenty eighth chapter but shall still be at enmity with him Contrari wise if we make truce with the Devil and please our selves in our sinnes then are we accursed and like the fool that laugheth when he is lead to the Stocks to receive correction Proverbs the seventh chapter Thirdly It is a general Prophecie That if God 〈◊〉 not enmity between us and the Serpent in this life he will set enmity between us and himself in the life to come so that we shall say How have we hated instruction and our hearts despised correction proverbs the fift chapter and the twelfth verse Sinne goeth down sweetly but in the end it will bite like a Serpent Proverbs the twenty third chapter and the thirty second verse Thus we see that because we did abuse that general peace that was between us and the Creatures God hath thought it necessary to stirr up war between us so that we shall have the Devil an adversary to us And as he tempted us to evil so we shall still be enemies to him God indeed might easily have destroyed the Devil for causing us