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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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verse 7 this effect is both propounded and amplified propounded in those words The tryall of your faith amplified 1. by comparison with go●d tri●d in the f●rnace 2. by the event it will be found to praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. The second objection might be made thus Wee know not whether the former comforts belong to us to which the Apostle answers by giving three signes by which men may try themselves 1. The love of Christ whom they have not seene 2. Beleeving 3. The unspeakable and glorious joyes of the Holy Ghost verse 8. The end of all which is the salvation of their soules verse 9. Thus of the Prolepsis the testimonie of holy men fo●●owes where consider five things 1. Wh●●e s●●i fie In generall Prophets In speciall those Prophets which were app●●●●ed to testifie of the grace that should come unto us Christians 2. 〈…〉 prec●●●nes to furnish themselves for the knowledg of the things they testified They searched inquired diligently 3. The question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall 〈…〉 of salvation verse 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. The 〈…〉 them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the Holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow 5. The successe and that is that they were answered of God where observe two things 1. The manner of the giving the answer it was by revelation Unto whom it was revealed 2. The matter of the answer which concernes both Persons and Things The persons are considered negatively and so they were resolved that they themselves were not the men to whom those glories did belong and affirmatively that they did minister those things unto us Christians Now the things promised are not onely propounded but commended and that two wayes 1. By the glory of their efficient causes which were lesse principall the Apostles and more principall the Holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 2. By the adjunct respect of the Angels which things the Angels desire to looke into Hitherto of the consolation The exhortation followes from ver 13. to the end where observe 1. The things unto which they are exhorted verse 13. 2. The reasons by which the exhortation is inforced The things to which he doth exhort are three 1. The first concernes the renovation of the mind Girde up the loynes of your minde 2. The second concernes the moderation of life be sober 3. The third concernes the confirmation of their hope Trust perfectly upon the grace to be brought c. ver 13. The reasons follow and they are 6. in number taken from the consideration 1. Of the Image of God verses 14 15 16. 2. Of the judgement of God verse 17. 3. Of the redemption in Christ verses 18 19 20 21. 4. Of the relation to the godly verse 22. 5. Of the immortality of the soule verse 23. 6. And sixtly of the mortality of the body verses 24 25. The first reason taken from the Image of God is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children expounded two waies 1. by description 2. by testimonie By description 1. negatively shewing what they should sh●nne Not fashioning your selves to the lusts of your former ignorance ver 14. 2. He sets it out affirmatively both by shewing the patterne to be imitated viz the holinesse of him that called them and also the manner of imitation viz to be holy in all manner of conversation ver 15. In the testimonie two things are to bee noted 1. Whence the proofe was fetched in these words As it is written and 2. what was alledged viz Be yee holy as I am holy ver 16. The second reason is taken from the judgement of God where note 1. The proposition of the reason viz Hee that yee call upon as Father c. 2. The inference or use of the same viz Passe the time of your sojourning in feare In the proposition consider 1. Who shall be judge viz he that was called upon as a Father 2. How he shall judge viz without respect of persons 3. Whom he shall judge viz every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz according to their workes verse 17. The third reason is taken from the consideration of our redemption and this reason should move the more 1. Because all the precious things in the world could not redeeme man verse 18. 2. Because the deliverance from our vaine conversation was one of the maine ends of our redemption verse 18. 3. Because our redemption was effected by a matchlesse price viz the passion of Christ which is increased 1. In that it was a suffering even to the effusion of blood 2. that it was a suffering of one that was so infinitely pure without spot or blemish verse 19. 4. Because our redemption was ordained in Gods counsell ver 20. 5. Because the honor of manifesting Christ in the cleare preaching of the Gospell is done now to us Christians and not to the Fathers of old verse 20. 6. Because our redemption was ratified by God the Father and that two waies 1. By raising Christ from the dead 2. By giving him glory verse 21. 7. Because all this was done that our faith and hope might be in God verse 21. The fourth reason is taken from our relation to the godly ver 22. In which reason observe 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. An exhortation by way of use The proposition in it selfe properly concernes sanctification which is described 1. By the nature of it imported in the m●ta●horicall terme purified 2. The subject of it your soules 3. the forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it the spirit 5. The end of it which was brotherly love amplified by the property of it unfained The exhortation is therefore to love one another with a pure heart fervently The first reason is taken from the immortalitie of the soule which is considered two wayes 1. In respect of the fountaine of it which is the new birth 2. In respect of the meanes of it which is set downe 1. negatively not of corruptible seede 2. affirmatively where consider what the meanes is and by what it is What it is viz incorruptible seede By what it is the word which is praised for three things 1. It is of God 2 ●t liveth 3. It abideth for ever ver 23. The sixt reason is taken from the mortality of the body compared with the eternity of the word of God ver 24 25. Of the vanity of man ver 24 which is ●●th propounded and repeated propounded as it concernes either the person of man All flesh is grasse or the condition of man All the glory thereof is as the flower of grasse The rep●tition ●s it concerns both is in these words the grasse withereth and the flower falleth away The eternity of the word of God is propounded in
the contrary ibid. c. In what cases we may not be of one mind with the Church of Rome 678 W WArre Warfare Vide Fight The Christian condition is military 42 He must keepe a fivefold garison 43 Foure kinds of Warre against the soule 384 The flesh warres against the soule five wayes ibid. Why God doth suffer this Ware 385 Our armour in this Warre what 386 How we may get victorie in this Warre 387 Weake Priviledges of Weake Christians 229 Encouragement for Weake Christians 237 Well-doing Well-doing is the best way to stop the 〈◊〉 of wicked man ●65 Excellent uses of it ibid. How we are said to doe well 639 631 Reasons why we ought alwayes to be Well-doing 631 Whisperers Vide Bac●biters 216 217 Wicked Wickednesse What Wicked men in particular are not under mercie 354 God doth oft suffer his children to live among Wicked men 391 In what case we may converse with wickedmen 392 Wife Sixteene motives for Husbands and Wives to live together quietly in marriage 576 Five speciall causes of disorder betweene Husband and Wife 577 Why the Apostle is so large in setting down the Wives duty 579 Eight reasons of the Wives subjection 581 In what 582 How and in what cases not ibid. Particular sins of the Wife in case of subjection 583 What meanes a Wife must use to win her Husband 595 596 Chastity in marriage is specially charged on the Wife 596 How chaste wife may be discerned 597 Wherein Wives should shew their feare to their Husbands 601 602 What is a Wives best ornament 627 Obedience and reverence are a Wives ornaments 628 Will. The Will of God is first Personall secondly Essentiall First Legall secondly Evangelicall 451 Gods Word is his Will in two respects 452 The Will is the rule of our actions 452 Whether a Christian can exactly doe Gods Will 453 Winne Divers kinds of Winning 590 What a Minister must doe to win soules 591 To be won what it 〈◊〉 ibid. Why all are not won at once 592 By what meanes we may win wicked men in our conversation 594 Wise Wisedome Why many Wise men are rather confounders than founders in grace and goodnesse 296 How the ignorant may herein notwithstanding be supported 297 Five waye 's we should shew forth the Wisdome of Christ 329 What this Wisedome must not have in is ibid. Woman In what things a Woman is more fraile than man 643 Word How powerfull 55 Vide Scripture How many wayes sin hinders the growth of the Word 200 How to be desired 221 How our affections to it may be discerned 222 Other signes of it ibid. c. Impediments thereof both externall and internall 223 224 Meanes to get desire to it 225 How to preserve our desires to it 226 Foure motives of getting it 227 How farre wicked men may desire the Word 230 The sweetnesse of the Word 240 Rules for applying the Word aright 288 When and how a man is said to be offended at the Word 310 The Word must be the warrant for all our actions 422 Its praise 189 The only outward meanes to beget the seed of grace in us 190 Eight things needfull in us to heare the Word of God as the Word of God ibid. How the Word is said to live 191 Sixe wayes to shew the life of the Word in our conversation ibid. c. Gods Word should be our maine care 199 The power of the Word Preached 200 Workes How men shall be judged according to their Workes 129 130 How infants 130 How poore men 131 Manifold distinctions of Gods works 148 How wonderfull Gods Workes are 274 The uses of it 275 To be a Worker of iniquity signifies three things 397 Wherein Workes are good 398 Rules to be observed in doing good Works 399 400 The divers kinds of good Works 400 401 How any man that is not absolutely good can be said to doe good Workes 401 402 What Workes are good for 402 How a man may lose his Workes 403 What Works may and ought to bee shewed 404 We should by good workes silence the wicked 454 World Contempt of the World shewed in foure things 331 Worship Actions about Gods Worship of two sorts 432 433 Many defects in Gods Worship 548 Wrongs Reasons against righting Wrongs by our owne private revenge 498 We may not in some cases resist but endure Wrongs ibid. To suffer Wrongs is profitable ibid. Places of Scripture herein expounded occasionally GEnesis 10. ver 9. p. 428 Exodus 26. ver 8. p. 98 Leviticus 14. à ver 4. ad 32. p. 165 ad 173. Cap. 16. ver 12 13 17 p. 26 Numbers 19. à ver 1 2. ad 7. p. 23. Psalme 19. ver 10. p. 240 Psalme 119. ver 103. ibid. Psalme 145. ver 8 9. p. 32 Proverbs 15. ver 30. p. 447 448 Proverbs 22. ver 1. p. 447 Esay 53. ver 7. ibid. Jeremiah 11. ver 19. ibid. Matthew 16. ver 18. p. 250 John 1. ver 29. 36. 147 Acts 5. ver 10 28 29. p. 435 Acts 17. ver 30. p. 127 Romans 2. ver 10. p. 449 Romans 12. ver 3. p. 104 2 Cor. 2. ver 14 15. p. 241 Ephesians 4. ver 17 18. p. 458 1 Thess. 5. ver 15. p. 686 Hebrewes 4. ver 12. p. 55 Hebrewes 12. ver 9. p. 374 2 Epist. Johan ver 8. p. 593 FINIS Verse 1. PETER an Apostle of Iesus Chr to the strangers scattred throughout Pontus Galatia Capadocia Asia Bithinia Verse 2. Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinckling of the blood of Iesus Christ Grace unto you and peace be multiplied Verse 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which according to his aboundant me●cy hath begotten us a●aine unto a lively hope by the resurrecti●n of Jesus Christ from the dead Verse 4. To an inhe●●●ance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you Verse 5. Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time Verse 6. Wherein yee greatly rejoice though now for a season if neede be you are in heavinesse through manifold tentations Verse 7. That the tryall of your faith being much more precious then of gold that perisheth though it be tryed by the fire might be sound unto praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. Verse 8 Whom having not seene yee love in whom though now yee see him not yet beleeving yee rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory Verse 9. Receiving the end of your faith even the salvation of your soules Verse 10. Of which salvation the Prophets have inquired and searched diligently who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you Verse 11. Searching what or what manner of time the spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when it testified before hand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow Ver 12. Vnto whom
diligence There are three sorts of men Sathan doth in the Church bewitch 1. The first are they that will take no paines at all nor trouble themselves to study about their religion and what belongs to their soules 2. The second are they that though they will take some paines and study diligently yet it is in by-studies as matters of controversie or the generall knowledge of religion or matter that may fit them for discourse or the like 3. Now a third sort there are that will not be drawn aside from the needfullest studies as are repentance assurance order of life c. but their fault is that they study not these diligently For they soone give over and finish not their works either of mortification or sanctification or illumination or preparation for salvation And thus much of the 10. Verse Verse 11. Searching when or what manner of time the Spirit which testified of Christ which was in them c. THe particular subiect of their inquiry was to have found the time of those glories the holy Ghost foretold should follow the sufferings of CHRIST Foure sorts of men have inquired about times and the manner of times For there is the observation 1. of the curious 2. of the weak 3. of the superstitious 4. of the wise 1 Curious men search into times prohibited and restrained from them They inquire what God did before he made the world and in what yeare and day Christ shall come to Iudgement with such like 2 The weake Christian many times is too busie about time as in his distresse his thoughts runne about the time of his deliverance and with impatience he asks How long when hee ought not to limit God but live by faith and leave the time unto God 3 The superstitious are imployed in observing time such were the Galathians of whom Paul was afraid This was their humour they did observe dayes and times not commanded of God but prescribed and kept afoot by the inventions of men 4 Now in the last place the wise observe time and thus they observe time necessarily or arbitrarily Necessarily they observe the seasons and opportunities of Gods grace and so not to observe time is a great offence Ier. 8.7 Luke 9. Mat. 16.3 Arbitrary they enquire after time as the circumstance of some great things wherein there appeareth some glory of God and good to the soule Thus the Prophets here enquire about the time of Gods manifestation of the great grace he promised to the Church Three things may be noted out of these words 1 That the times and seasons of all things are known unto God else the Prophets would not have searched but that it was a received principle that all the times of all things are set and knowne to God 2 That the Lord is many times loth to discover the precise time of his mercy as for a long time he would not let it be known when Christ should come so it was ab●ut the calling of the Gentiles and so it is about the time of our going to heaven For if it should be farre off men would grow the more impatient with their present condition and by this meanes God tries the faith and patience and obedience of his people and thus are blessings more admired and welcome when they doe come and by works of preparation the happinesse of the Elect is greatly furthered But is it not uncomfortable to be ignorant of the time when God will shew his mercy It is not for 1 The time is infallibly set by God 2 The Lord hath chosen and appointed the fittest time 3 The Lord is precise in keeping his time 3 The third Observation is that when the circumstance of time is not of absolute necessitie for our good to be knowne we must be sober and temperate and enquire with all humilitie we may learne this of the Prophets about salvation it selfe they are said to enquire diligently but about the time it is barely said they searched Thus of the third thing 4 The fourth thing is the Occasion which was an inspiration of the holy Ghost which testified of Christs sufferings and strange glories should follow after So that the efficient cause of the inspiration was the holy Ghost which was in them The finall cause was to testifie or beare witnesse The subject matter of this inspiration was twofold 1 Of the sufferings of Christ. 2 Of the glories should follow The Spirit that was in them Note that he saith not the Spirit of God but the Spirit of Christ so the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Sonne Gal. 4.6 He may be called the Spirit of Christ because he is given by Christ and because he is given to the members of Christ and because he should be especially manifested in the times under Christ and because it did especially reveale Christ and chiefly because it was essentially ioyned unto Christ and did proceed of Him and the Father from all eternitie Now for the use hereof Here is both Information and Consolation We may be informed here that the doctrine of the Trinitie was not unknowne in the Church of the Jewes in that we see that the Spirit of God was called the Spirit of Christ. As for that place in Act. 19. where some say they had not heard whether there were a holy Ghost or no It is to be understood of the extraordinary gifts of the holy Ghost which at the time of the conversion of many did fall upon them and not of the nature of the holy Ghost This doctrine also may comfort us greatly for whereas it it the office of the holy Ghost to mortifie the deeds of the flesh to lead us into all truth to be a comforter to beare witnesse unto our spirits to help us when we know not how to pray as we ought c. This doctrine I say may greatly incourageus to beg the holy Ghost and to beleeve our help therein seeing hee is sent of Christ and is at his disposing that dyed for us and gave himselfe for us how shall he not then give us his holy Spirit also if we aske it of him Further hence we may note that the Spirit of God is the onely immediate fountaine and originall of all Prophesies concerning times and things to come The Oracles of the Gentiles were but eyther delusions under ambiguous sentences or but coniectures or else when they did foretell aright they were permitted of God for the further hardning of the people eyther from Scripture or other revelation to foretell As for the Sibyls that prophesied of Christ c. it is no absurditie to grant that they were stirred up by the holy Ghost to prophesie of Christ among the Gentiles c. Verse 12. Vnto whom it was revealed that not unto themselves but unto us they should minister the things which are now shewed unto you by them which have preached unto you the Gospell by the holy Ghost sent down from heaven the which things the Angels desire
had informed themselves in some good sufficiency of knowledge herein and therefore they might not neglect his exhortation that might be proved by such a known reason For as much This word notes a dependance with the doctrine of the former reason and shewes that these reasons are linked in a chaine you cannot pull the one but you draw the other also And from hence wee may note 1. The sacred combination of holy truth in the mysteries of religion they hang all as in one chain● and 〈…〉 as in one body there is a wonderfull agreement amongst them they point one to another whereas in the writings of men by reason of their imperfection they are oftentimes discording not from other men but from themselves also their assertions sound as if they were afraid one of another or ready to fight one against another 2. That the right knowledge of Christs first comming to redeeme us serves generally to inflame our hearts to a desire after and care of his second comming to judge us For by his first comming 1. We know he hath satisfied for our sins and therefore need not feare the sentence of condemnation or Gods anger 2. We know how dearly he paid for our sins and therefore we should for ever hate sinne 3. We know that he cannot but doe us honor then since for our sakes he himselfe was judged on earth and did shed his owne bloud for us 4. We know that at that day we shall be fully redeemed and receive all the inheritance prepared for us What shall I say if this his first comming were so full of love pitty care grace and profit for us how then should we long for his second comming when he shall give himselfe not for us but to us for our eternall delight and happinesse The Use may be for tryall of the truth of our faith in his first comming if we can stirre us up with care and cheerfulnesse to provide for his second comming then we doe effectually beleeve it else it is very doubtfull whether we doe indeed know Christ crucified Thus of the coherence the insinuation followes Yee know From hence foure things may be noted 1. That we may be profitably put in mind of the things wee know yea we need to be put in mind of them for thereby wee may know things the better and more fully but especially wee need it for the use of knowledge This is true in rebu●es for sinne in consolations in affliction in directions for our lives and as here in the doctrine of the mysteries of our religion they and we know the doctrine of redemption perhaps but the powerfull use of that doctrine we are altogether wanting in besides what we know we know but in part The Use is for great reproofe of those vaine persons that neglect hearing reading admonition c. upon pretence they know it already if that were true yet this doctrine shewes we need to be put in mind even in the things we know yea wise men will receive commandments yea and rebukes too Prov. 9. It is a discreet commendable charity sometimes the better to perswade and winne affection to insinuate the praises of others as here the Apostle so did Paul to Agrippa Act. 26.3 It is certaine that by nature we are pleased highly with others opinions of our knowledge and contrariwise the a●pe●sion or ignorance is wonderfull hatefull there be some sins that vexe us more then others to have them imputed as lying and divers others so ignorance the devill knew this well in Eves case the intimation of ignorance made her ruine her selfe and her prosterity and so doth the devill still What makes many goe to hell for want of direction how to be saved even this they will not have their ignorance seene What makes many leap from the cradle of religion to the throne of censure so as to think themselves fit to judge whole Nations when troops of learned men are extreamly toyled with advising Is it not this opinion of knowledge Now as the devill useth it for hurt so may the godly make advantage of the weaknesse of our natures herein the better to direct us to good 3. Of all doctrines we must be sure to know the doctrine of our redemption for this is the most fundamentall doctrine of all others It is impossible to be saved without the knowledge of this 2. Of all doctrines this is most clearly taught in Scripture 3. Of all doctrines wee have most need of this against the discomforts of temptations infirmities afflictions and death it selfe 4. This most exalts the glory of Gods grace and mercy and all others are in a manner built upon this 5. Lastly this hath exceeding great force to perswade us to holinesse of life for it both shews us to whom wee belong and what reason we have to obey him and withall implyes how vile we are in our selves First so labour for knowledge herein that thou mistrust thy own nature and the policie of the devill even the slower thou findest thy disposition to it the more strive after it let not the devill rob thee of this knowledge above all other We are not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold In these words is contained the first principall point namely the invalidity of all earthly things to redeeme us they containe the disabling of the riches of this world and as the words lye two things are said against the treasures of this world First that we are not redeemed by them Secondly that they are corruptible things That they cannot redeeme the soule of man is evident 1. By proofe Psal. 49.6 7. 2. By experience we see wicked men abound in these things and yet goe to hell Psal. 17. ult 73.12 Eccles. 9.11 3. This may appeare by a distribution of the parts of redemption for they cannot appease Gods anger Prov. 11.4 they cannot restraine the devils power they cannot buy us a righteousnesse answerable to that the law requires they cannot be a ransome to keepe the soule from hell Iob 29.9 19 20. they cannot cover our imperfect work● they cannot buy us a better nature but rather choke the word of God Mat. 13. and make men carelesse of repentance and conceited of the●●elves and wilfull to entertaine sinne Prov. 28.11 Hosea 12.8 and drowne men in noysome lusts 1 Tim. 6.9 yea how hard is it for a rich man to enter into the Kingdome of heaven Mat. 19. Lastly they cannot make us immortall Iam. 1.10 11. Thus it is cleare they cannot redeeme us For the second they are corruptible This is manifest Solomon saith they have wings Prov. ●7 they vanish subject to violence or vanity Mat. 6.13 yea many times they goe away with an ill loose it may be the ruine of the owners Iob 20.18 Eccles. 5. Ier. 17.11 nor can they goe with their owners when death comes Psal. 49.17 The Use may be 1. For information It should raise the price of true grace and
Psal. 31.22 Secondly this should teach us to looke to our faith and to provide for the daily use of it to live by it that if it might be we might be so ready and prepared that Christ when hee came at any time might find us so doing Now that we might attaine unto this daily use of our faith divers rules must be observed 1. We must be more afraid of doubts and cavils against our faith making conscience of unbeliefe to avoid it as a grievous sinne and to see manifest reason from the Word before we doubt 2. We must more study the promises of God and shake off the slaggishnesse of our natures especially wee should be more carefull to attend upon the carefull application of them 3. We should speedily run to Christ when we find any disease or neglect in our faith whose glory it is to be the finisher of our faith 4. We should often think of those that have been examples of much faith that have been full of faith Heb. 11. 12.1 5. We should watch against all things that might slacken our love to the meanes For it is certaine the love of the means is strong like death 6. If we find we have offended God let us not goe long without humiliation but quickly run and confesse our sins and not be quiet till we be reconciled It is dangerous to defer our repentance and neglect our communion with God long 7. Especially we should study for businesse to be imployed in well-doing in our generall or particular calling 1 Cor. 15.18 Hitherto of the sixt point Who raised him from the dead and gave him glory These words containe the seventh motive in the doctrine of redemption namely the ratification of it God himselfe was pleased after an admirable manner to ratifie the work of our redemption and therefore it should much work upon us for holinesse of life Now God ratified it two waies First by raising Christ from the dead Secondly by giving him glory in heaven 1. Of the resurrection of Christ from the dead divers things may be here noted 1. That Christ was amongst the dead this may shew the hatefulnesse of sin when Christ became a surety for it it divided his soule from his body and chased him downe among the dead Hath Christ been among the dead then let us beleeve him in all the comforts he hath taught us against death For he speaks by experience we may trust what he saies for he hath been there himselfe 2. Therefore dead men have a being it were good for us so to live as we may have comfort in our being after death For Christ found a world of dead men with whom he was after his death 3. How worthy is Christ to be loved that thus adventured himselfe for us how is it meet he should reap of the travailes of his soule 2. That Christ was raised from the dead Therefore it is not impossible for dead men to rise we see the proofe of it in Christ Secondly we should never be out of hope in the desperatest afflictions if we were brought as low as ever Christ was 3. God raised Christ from the dead Therefore it is wonderfull evident that our debt is paid in that the creditor came himselfe and set open the prison doore and released our surety especially in the time of distresse wee should know that God doth not require our debts at our hands For he hath hereby acknowledged ful payment by our Saviour and we did owe nothing but unto God Secondly this imports that the righteous God may sometime forsake us for a time and leave us to our thinking in unmedicinable distresses so as we should cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and yet hee will returne speedily to our succour and put to the proofe of his greatest power rather then abandon those whom he loves 4. That the resurrection of Christ is a great wonder therefore it is here mentioned as a marvellous course that God held in the ratification of our redemption The Use is Therefore cursed be those mockers that scoffe at the resurrection of the dead and let us glory in the faith knowing the victory of our Messias as also that the time will come that God will glorifie us also before men and Angels by mising our bodies also from the grave Rom. 8.11 1 Thes. 4.14 5. God lookes we should be specially affected with his glory in this great work of raising Christ from the dead The Use is Therefore let us be humbled before the Lord for the deadnesse of our spirits and slownesse of our hearts and beg of him pardon and the renting of the cursed vaile of ignorance that lets us from beholding the great glory of God herein 6. Lastly we see that the exaltation of Christ stands of two parts viz. Resurrection and Glorification and that all works of humiliation ended with his comming out of the sepulchre And thus of his resurrection And gave him glory This is the second part of the ratification The glory God gave unto Christ shewes that he is fully pleased with him and that Christ hath perfectly paid our ransome Quest. What glory did God give unto Christ upon his death for us Answ. Great and greatly to be praised and admired For 1. He assigned him all the honour of a triumph is his ascension when ●ee led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men Eph. 4.7 Col. 2.15 2. He removed from him all infirmities both of body and mind 3. He gave him all power in heaven and earth even preeminence in all things Mat. 28. Col. 1.18 For he made him 1. Prince of Angels Col. 2.10 2. Head of the Church Col. 1.18 3. Heire of all things Heb. 1.3 4. Iugde of the world Act. 17.30 4. He assigned him his owne best house to dwell in and that with equall honour with himselfe at his right hand in heaven 5. He bestowed all the Elect upon him Ioh. 17. 6. He commanded all creatures to worship him This was the grace of adoration Phil. 2.10 7. He gave him promise to grant whatsoever he asked Psal. 2.8 9. 8. He proscribed all his enemies and undertooke to make them his footstoole Psal. 110.1 The Use may be first for consolation All these honours done to Christ may assure us of our reconciliation with God and that our redemption is accomplished and it may encourage us to goe unto God trusting in his mediation for God can deny him nothing yea his glory is our glory The crowne is set upon our head when Christ is exalted and therefore being his members we should rejoyce as if it had beene done to us and the rather when he appeares we shall appeare with him in glory Col. 3.4 Secondly in all affliction it should teach us to live by faith and with patience to run the race that is set before us thinking upon the end of our faith the salvation of our soules which
then when we are dejected in the true feeling o● our owne unworthiness God will give grace to the humble And further wee must get an appetite or affection to the word For the full stomacke loatheth an hony-combe but to the hungry soule every little thing is sweet Proverbs 27.7 and lastly we must take heed that wee marre not our tastes before we come as they doe that have sweetned their mouthes with wickedness and spoyled their rellish with the pleasures of beloved sinnes Iob 20.12 Such as live in the delight of secret corruptions even th●y that account stoln waters sweet may be the guests of Hell but Gods guests they are not onely they that overcome eate of the hidden Manna Rev. 2. Secondly when we have found hony let us eate it Prov. 20.13 That is if the Lord be gracious unto us in his word let us with all care receive it into our hearts and with all affection make use of it Lose not thy precious oportunitie Thirdly it should teach us in all our griefes and bitterness to make our recourse to the word to comfort and sweeten our hearts against our feares and sorrowes For at this feast God wipes away all teares from our eyes Esay 35.6 8. Fourthly the sweetnes of the word when we feele it should satisfie us yea satisfie us abundantly Wee should give so much glory to Gods goodnesse as to make it the abundant satisfaction of our hearts Psal. 36.6 Fiftly Yea further we should labour to shew this sweet savour of the word in our conversations by mercy to the distressed by gracious communication by our contentation and by all well-doing that the perfume of Gods grace in us may allure and affect others that the very places where wee come may savour of our goodnesse even after wee are gone Sixtly we should bee alwaies praising of God for the good things of his Sanctuary acknowledging all to come from his free grace without our deserts Psal. 84.4 entertaining his presence with all possible admiration saying with the Psalmist O Lord how excellent is thy goodnesse Psal. 36.9 Seventhly wee should pray God to continue his goodnesse to them that know him and to vouchsafe us the favour to dwell for ever in his house Psalm 36.11 Eighthly and constantly the experience hereof should set us a longing our soules should long for the courts of Gods house and our hearts cry for the daily bread in Sion and we should constantly walke from strength to strength till we appear● before God in Sion Psalm 84 and the rather because besides the sweetnesse there is a plentifull reward in keeping Gods word Psalm 19.20 Secondly from hence we may be informed in two especiall things 1. Concerning the happinesse of the godly in this life notwithstanding all their afflictions and sorrowes Thou seest their distresses but thou seest not their comforts The stranger doth not meddle with their joyes Oh how great is the goodnesse of God in giving his people to drink out of the rivers of the pleasures in his house when he makes their eies to see the light in his light Psal. 36.8 9. Psal. 65.4 2. Concerning the office of Gods Ministers They are the perfumers of the world the Church is the perfuming-pan and preaching is the fire that heats it and the Scriptures are the sweet-waters Or the Church is the mortar preaching the pestle and the promises of God in Christ are the sweet spices which being beaten yeeld a heavenly and supernaturall smell in the soules of the godly hearers 2 Cor. 2.14 15. But then Ministers must take heed they corrupt not Gods VVord and see to it that their preaching be in sincerity and as of God and in the sight of God in Christ and with demonstration of the truth to mens consciences 2 Cor. 2.17 else any Preacher will not serve the turne And in both these respects Ministers have reason to cry out with the Apostle Oh! who is sufficient for these things If every Sermon must leave so sweet a savour behind it in the hearts of the hearers and in the nostrils of God too who can bee without the speciall assistance of God fit for these things Lastly this may serve for singular reproofe and terror to the wicked and that in divers respects First for such as are mockers and call sweet sowre that is speake evill of the good word of God Secondly for the miserable neglect of that they should account the life of their life Alas whither shall we goe or what is this miserable and wretched life if we want the sweet comforts of the word To dwell without the word is to dwell in the parched places of the wildernesse and this Ministery is the more dangerous in such or to such as are daily invited and have all things ready made and yet will not inwardly obey Gods calling nor profit by the meanes but find excuses to shift off the invitation of God How justly may that curse be inflicted upon them these men shall never taste of my supper Luke 14.17 c. 24. Thus much of the second doctrine Doct. 3. The third doctrine out of these words may be this that such as find a true taste of the sweetness of God in his VVord may conceive hopefully that their soules doe and shall prosper and growe There is no doubt to be made of our growth if once we come to feele the sweetnesse of the VVord For the clearer understanding of this doctrine I must answer two questions Quest. First what this true taste is Secondly whether this taste may not be in wicked men Answ. For the first A true taste of the sweetnesse of the VVord and Gods graciousnesse in it may bee knowne both by the cause and by the effects The cause of this taste is faith for by faith onely doth the soule taste Or that thing that raiseth so sweet a rellish in our hearts is a perswasion in particular of the graciousnesse of God to us even of that graciousnes which the VVord doth discover The effects of this taste are three For first it revives the heart and raiseth it from the dead and frames it to bee a new creature working an unsained change in the heart of man from the world and sinne to the care of Gods glory and salvation of their owne soules and thus it is called A savour of life unto life 2 Cor. 2.15 Secondly it sesleth in the heart an estimation of the VVord and spirituall things and the assurance of Gods favour of all earthly things in the world Phil. 3.9 Psal. 84.10 Thirdly this taste workes a heavenly kind of contentment in the heart so as the godly when they have found this are abundantly satisfied they have enough Psal. 36.10 and 95.4 For the second question concerning wicked men and their rellishing of the sweetnesse of the VVord I say two things First that the most wicked men are without spirituall senses and finde no more taste in God or his VVord than in the VVhite of
and immortall created of God and united to the body and indued with the admirable faculties of vegetation sense and reason to this end principally that God might be of man truly acknowledged and duly worshipped Every branch of this description containes an excellent commendation of the soule and should much affect us with admiration of Gods workmanship and his love to us in making us such excellent creatures and withall it should breed in us the care which the Apostle here cals for of avoiding all things that might defile our precious soules The soule is the abridgement of the invisible world as the body is the abridgement of the visible world man is rightly said to be a little world God made man last and in man made an Epitome of all the former workes For all things meet in man who consists of a substance partly corporeall and partly spirituall For all things which God created besides man are either such creatures as are discerned by sense being bodily or such creatures as are removed from sense being spirituall as the Angels Now I say man may resemble both sorts of creatures the visible in his body and the invisible in his soule Now the former description of the soule of man doth commend the soule for seven things First that it is a substance Secondly that it is incorporeall Thirdly that it is immortall and cannot die Fourthly that it is created of God immediately Fifthly that it is joyned to the body after a wonderfull manner Sixthly that it hath these excellent faculties Seventhly that hereby man hath honour to know God and his workes which all other creatures in this visible world want The first thing then to be enquired after is what the soule is in respect of the being of it And this I must answer first by removing from the consideration of it what it is not First the soule is not the harmony or right temper of the harmonies of the body as Galen that great Physician is said to affirme which appeares evidently by these reasons 1 That then every body in which the harmonies or foure elements are tempered should have a soule in it and so stones should have soules yea such as man hath indued with reason c. And therefore simply the soule cannot be the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or temperature of the elements or humors 2 It is apparent that the soule governes the excesses which arise from the humours of the body as a man that by temper is apt to be angry or heated yet hath something within him which bridles this anger notwithstanding the heat of his body 3 If the soule were nothing else but the temperament of the humors then it were but a meere accident in that it can bee present or absent as the corruption of the body but wee see that cannot bee For remove the soule from the body and it ceaseth to be a living body 4 By Scripture it is evident that when the body was formed the soule as a thing distinct from it was infused into it by God himselfe Gen. 2.7 Secondly the soule is not a power force or facultie infused into the body by which it is able to live or move or worke For then removing the body from it it cannot subsist whereas wee shall prove afterwards that the soule will subsist without the body and therefore cannot be an accident in the body or a power onely of the body Besides the soule is the subject of vertues and vices of sciences and arts Now no accident can be so Thirdly the soule is not the life of man that is apparent in Scripture when a difference is put betweene the soule and life as what soule shall be blessed in life So 2 Sam. 11.11 By thy life and the life of thy soule The soule then is a substance of it selfe put within us by God distinct from the body this may be evidently proved First God after he had made the body is said to breath into it the breath of life to note that his soule was a substance distinct of it selfe Secondly because it can subsist without the body as is apparent in the soule of Abraham Lazarus and Dives Luk. 16. And of the soule of the theefe on the crosse it is said This day thou shalt be with mee in Paradise Thirdly God is said to have formed the Spirit in the midst of man so it is a substance of it selfe Note he saith in him not of him Fourthly those words of David and Christ prove it Into thy hands I commit my spirit the body being committed to the earth there remained a substance delivered to God Fifthly that place of Ecclesiast Chap. 12. is most plaine The body returnes to dust and the Spirit to God that gave it therefore there is in man a Spirit which returnes to God Sixtly Paul desires to be desolved and to bee with Christ so there was a substance which should enjoy the presence of Christ Phil. 1.23 The second thing to be proved is that the soule is incorporeall It is joyned to the body but it is no body it informeth the matter of man which is his body but it is without matter it selfe it is immateriall it is wholly a spirituall substance It is not a bodily substance no not a most subtile or pure body but altogether incorporeall This is a high doctrine and shewes the soule to be an admirable kind of sustance Now that the soule is void of matter and is no bodily substance may be plainly proved though not easily explicated First it is expresly said to be a Spirit now spirits are not flesh and bones or any like bodily substance Psal. 31.6 Eccles. 12.7 and Zach. 12.1 It is reckoned one of the wonders of Gods creation that he made in man a spirit Secondly the soule is after the Image of God and hath imprinted upon it the similitude of the goodnesse wisdome and holinesse of God Now it were not like God if it were a body nor were it capeable of such habits which can be stamped upon meere naturall or bodily things Thirdly the soule performeth those actions which depend not upon the body and are done without bodily instruments for it understandeth and willeth Fourthly if the soule were a body then it must be corpus animatum or inanimatum but to say it is without life is sense-lesse because it enlives and animates the body and to say it is animatum enlived it selfe it must then be so by some other body All which the same questions might be asked and so run into an infinite The third thing is that the soule is invisible This shewes the transcendencie of the nature of it and experience in all men proves this for who ever saw a soule Obj. The soule of Dives in hell saw the soule of Abraham and Lazarus and Iohn saw the soules of those that suffered for the testimony of Jesus Revel 20.4 Sol. These soules were seene by the eyes of understanding not
savours God hath caused to arise from divers of his creatures and to avoid things by savour noysome to the body Fifthly and touching though it be the most stupid sense yet is it of great use for the safety of the body All these senses are as a guard for the body and as Intelligencers for the Soule Thus of the outward senses The soule worketh likewise inward senses upon and by the body and the generall use of these inward senses is to receive and lay up what is brought unto them by the outward senses for the outward senses are like servants that trade abroad and get together the images of divers things which they carry with them home to the inward senses Now there are three inward senses 1 The common Sense 2 The Phantasie 3 The Memory And these are lodged in three severall roomes or little cells in the braine First the common sense lieth in the former part of the head and containes all that store by which all the outward senses are furnished For spirits fetch the vigour of each sense from this the common sense As the lines that goe to the circumference meet all in the Center so doe all the outward senses meet in the common sense And hither likewise are all the formes of things taken by the outward senses brought and distinguished Secondly the phantasie is lodged in the middle part of the braine where as in a shop it takes in the Images of things brought to the common sense and there formes them more exactly and oftentimes makes new after an admirable manner by thinking and then after it hath separated what it likes not it delivers the rest over to the memory which is lodged in the hinder part of the braine which is as it were the treasurie to keepe what the Phantasie as a Judge hath sentenced to her keeping the common sense being but as the doore-keeper unto the Phantasie And these three senses differ in the ability to receive and keepe the impression of the images of things brought to them For the common sense is seated in the more soft part of the braine and so not able to keepe them long as waxe over-soft doth not long keepe the impression of the seale The pantasie is placed in a harder part of the braine and therefore keepes the impression longer But the memory is placed in the hardest part of all and behind in the head further off from the concourse and trouble of the outward senses and by reason of the stifnesse of the braine it keepes the impression longest Now that naturall heat with the animall spirits is like a fire to keepe the braine soft in the degrees thereof that it may receive the impression as hot water the waxe fit to be marked Thus of the senses But before I passe from them it is profitable to note certaine things which befall the senses for the good of the body and soule and that is the binding and loosing of the senses For God hath so tempered the state of the senses in man that they should neither alwaies rest nor alwaies worke Hence from their resting comes sleepe and from their working comes waking or watching We make when the senses are loose sleep when the soule binds them up both are thus wrought when the vegetative power wants helpe for concoction of the meate the naturall heate is sent from the senses to dispatch that worke and then we sleepe and when that is done the heat returnes to the senses and tickles them and so they awake But it is to be observed that though in sleepe the common sense and so the outward senses are all bound yet the phantasie and memory doe not cease but being now freed from the attendance upon the intelligences of them or the outward senses as if they were at more liberty they are exercised more freely and often fall to new forming and compounding of the images brought in before by the common sense and so erect a new frame of things which are vented and expressed by dreaming In which a secret and admirable working of God by the soule may appeare if wee consider the strange things are fashioned in our imagination in our sleepe yea the reasonable soule in sleepe comes into this shop of the phantasie and there doth strange workes which as I said are vented in our dreames in which we finde as effectuall use of reason as we had waking Thus of the soule as it worketh apprehension Now followeth it to consider how the soule workes motion upon the body It is out of all doubt that motion in the body is from the soule For of it selfe it is but a dead lump as it shewes it selfe to be when the soule is gone out of it Now the soule gives unto the body a threefold motion First the vitall motion Secondly the motion of appetite Thirdly the motion from place to place The vitall motion given to the body by the soule is wrought two wayes both by the pulse and by breathing both of absolute necessity to preserve life in the body The motion of pulse is begunne at the heart which is made continually to beat by the soule which beating of the heart begets those sparkles which wee call vitall spirits arising out of the finest of the blood which spirits are carried by the pulse thorow the arteries and they shine in the whole body according as their passages are more or lesse open Breathing is another strange motion of the soule in the body by which both aire is fetcht in continually for the cooling of naturall heat in the heart and other members and the spirits refreshed and also the grosse and more smoakie spirits are exhaled out of the breast Thus of the vitall motion The motion of appetite is a contrary commanding motion in the creature by which hee is inclined to take to him such things from without as hee conceives good and needfull for him and so likewise to avoid things hurtfull and so the soule begets divers appetites and desires as the desire after food which we call hunger and thirst and the desire after procreation and the appetites we call affections or passions so farre forth as they are seated upon the body and exercised by instruments in the body such as in generall breed sorrow or pleasure or passivenesse in us such as are joy griefe anger and the rest c. It were too difficult and too tedious for popular reaching to shew in particular and distinctly how the soule admirably worketh about each of these The motion from place to place is the last and this is a strong worke of the soule driving on the body to the motion of the whole or of some part of the body The body cannot remove it selfe but it is of the soule that it is stirred up and downe for when the soule is gone it can move no longer And in vain were appetites or desires given to the creatures if this motion from place to place were not given because
3.9 Phil. 2.2 3. 5. Men miserably neglect thankfulnesse to God for the good they receive daily from his mercies Col. 3.17 6. Many faile publikely and shamefully in want of care to come time enough to Gods service Zech. 8.21 Esay 60.8 In these things Christians should be admonished to mind their wayes and their workes and to strive to walke as becommeth the Gospel and the death of Christ that they may hold fast the light of the truth and shew out better the glory of a Christian life And thus of living to righteousnesse Now followes the third forme of speech By whose stripes we are healed The healing of our sicknesses is reckoned as another fruit of the Passion of Christ or else it is the same with the former exprest in other words These words then are borrowed from the Prophet Esay ch 53.5 who doth chiefely understand the spirituall healing of our soules of our sins as the coherence shewes in the Prophet but yet the Evangelist saith Mat. 8.17 and understands of the healing of our bodies also And therefore I consider of the death of Christ both in respect of soule and body And first as this healing is referred to the soule divers Doctrines may be observed Doct. 1. The soules of all men are diseased by nature even the very soules of the Elect are so till they be healed by Christ. The soule is diseased divers wayes especially by sorrowes and sins it is the disease by sin is here meant Quest. It would be inquired how the soule comes to be sick of these diseases and why sin is called sicknesse in the soule Ans. This spirituall sicknesse comes into the soule by propagation Adam hath infected all his posterity and every man hath increased the diseases of his nature by his owne wilfull transgressions Now sin is called sicknesse because it doth worke that upon the soule which sicknesse doth upon the body for sin hath weakned the strength of the soule in all the faculties of it which all men may discerne and observe in themselves by nature Besides it causeth spottednesse and deformity in the soule as sicknesse doth in the body and therefore sin was likened to the leprosie in the Law Further it often causeth pain and torment in the soule as wounds and diseases do in the body for there is no peace to the wicked especially when God fighteth against them with his terrours Besides it will cause the death of the soule as sicknesse will of the body if it be not helped and so men are said to be dead in sins Use. The Use may be to shew the fearfull negligence of worlds of people that are exceeding carefull to help their bodies to health but never think of the poore soule that lieth lamentably full of diseases And withall it shewes that all wicked men are men of ill natures because their dispositions are all diseased though there be degrees of ill nature or of this evill in men natures as there is difference of sicknesses in mens bodies And godly men should be compassionate when they see the grievous diseases in the natures and lives of other men remembering that they also were by nature subject to the same diseases as well as they Doct. 2. The diseases in the soules of men by nature are very grievous which is here also implied in that God was faine to send his owne Son to help and heale us Now that the diseases of mens soules are so grievous may appeare many wayes First because such a multitude of men are infected not some one person in the whole world in the body of mankind not on some part but from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot all full of sores and diseases There is no man that sinneth not and so no man that is not sick and that is the reason why men feare the pestilence because it makes so many sicke Secondly because the soule of man by nature is sicke of a multitude of diseases at once for even sin is a sicknesse and so our sicknesses are innumerable because our sins are so And hence it is that in Scripture so many metaphors are used to expresse the sicknesse of the soule as leprosie wounds plagues poyson gall c. Thirdly because the disease lieth in the soule it selfe Of diseases those are most mortall that get into the spirits and doe most enfeeble man how much more when it is in the soule Fourthly because in respect of our selves our sins or our diseases are incurable we can give our selves no remedy that can help us Ier. 30. Fiftly because in the Colledge of spirituall Physicians there is scarce one of a thousand that can help the poore soule out of these diseases Iob 33. Sixtly because there be but certaine seasons onely in which men can be healed as it was with the lame man at the poole of Bethesda and if men misse these seasons they are in danger to dye of these sicknesses There be seasons of grace and dayes of salvation and men must not harden their hearts while it is called To day Use. The Use should be to awaken wicked men to a serious consideration of their danger and at length to thinke of helpe for their soules being thus diseased as they would doe for their bodies if they were desperately sicke Ob. We feele no such diseases in our soules Sol. First wicked men have a kinde of spirituall lethargie upon them and so are in grievous danger but by reason of their spirituall sleepinesse they feele it not Secondly though they feele not their diseases now they shall doe hereafter and then thinke what a paine it will be unto them when God awakens them whether they will or no. It may be it will be in this life as it was with Cain and Iudas and then a wounded spirit will ake so who can beare it Thirdly the matter is not altogether so easie with wicked men as they pretend f●r they doe feele so much as may shew they are very sicke Sometimes they feele their consciences galling and paining them at the very heart for the time and what are the passions and perturbations of their soules but as so many fits of●a Feaver And that they are grievously sicke may appeare by the want of their spirituall senses they can hardly see or heare any thing Besides they may know they are sicke by the potions of afflictions which God gives them who doth nothing in vaine Doct. 3. That in Christ the diseases of our soules may be healed Esay 53.5 Mal. 4.2 Luke 4.18 He is a sure Physician for our soules God hath undertaken it that he will cure and heale us he challengeth it as a glory to himselfe which he executes by Christ Iob 5.17 18. Deut. 32.39 Now in as much as our diseases may be healed by Christ and that he is our Physician appointed by God we may gather many arguments of great comfort even from hence that he is the Physician First because
here rendred a Bishop was a tearme given to watch-men and spies and over-seers of works and sometimes to any sort of Rulers In the Apostles time it seemes the tearme was impropriated and given onely to Ministers that had charge of soules For the Apostles appointing certaine men to looke to the bodies of Christians which they tearmed Deacons they appointed other eminent men to looke to the soules of Christians whom they termed Bishops as appeares Phil. 1.1 Acts 20.28 In the time of the Apostles the terme suffered yet a more strict impropriation and was given to some especiall Ministers that had charge not onely of the people but also of the Clergy and in time in some Churches unto these choice men of the Ministery were added the titles of Barons jurisdiction and power of censures sole power of ordination and the like In this place the Apostle gives the terme of Bishop to Christ as the first and principall Overseer of our soules to whom the charge of their originall doth belong Secondly we must note that Christ is not said to be a Bishop of our soules but the Bishop of our soules which imports that he is such a Bishop as there is no other like unto him That charge that Christ hath of our soules he hath it alone There is no Bishop like to Christ our Bishop for 1. There is no good Bishop but he for he died for the soules he hath charge of and so doe not other Bishops And whereas other Bishops may bee unrebukeable in respect of men sometimes he is unrebukeable in respect of God and men too never any Bishop lived so well or did so much good or loved good men and promoted Gods cause so much as hee 2. No other Bishop can instruct the flocke as he doth For hee can make his people profit because he teacheth inwardly whereas they can teach onely outwardly and hee instructs all his flocke and makes them all to know God from the greatest to the lowest of them which no other Bishop can doe 3. He is the onely Bishop because all other Bishops m● give accounts to him 1. Pet. 5.3 4. Hee is the universall Bishop of all soules other Bishops ●●ve their particular charges or Churches but he hath the charge of all the flockes under heaven all Parishes are within his charge 5. All other Bishops have their ordination from him they have no authority but what they receive from him Acts 20.28 6. Because no other Bishop can take the absolute charge of our soules they are not able to keepe us our soules have many diseases which they cannot cure and are assaulted with many adversaries which they cannot resist 7. Because hee is a heavenly Bishop they are but earthly and divers parts of his office he executes in heaven whereas other Bishops can doe nothing for us but on earth 8. Because hee is the onely Law-maker the onely Law-giver to our soules other Bishops can make no Lawes but by his authority Iam. 4.11 9. Because the other Bishops may require goodnesse in their flocks but cannot make them good he can make all his people righteous he is the Lord and their very righteousnesse Ier. 23.6 10. Other Bishops die and leave their flockes unprovided but hee lives ever and never forsakes his Church but is with them to the end of the world Mat. 28. ult Thirdly who are the charge of Christ Not all that are found in the charges of other Bishops he will not stand to our division of Parishes he counts by Election and righteousnesse all that the Father hath given him are his charge and none else The coherence shews they are onely penitent sinners Fourthly the happinesse of such as are under his charge which must needs be great O! It is a great comfort to a poore sinner to know that Christ hath a charge of his soule for he shall be sure that Christ will feed his soule and nourish it up by his Ordinances and will keep him to eternall life and use him with all tendernesse and compassion A bruised Reed he will not breake and the smoaking Flaxe he will not quench The particulars are metaphorically handled before in the consideration of the benefits we receive from Christ as a Shepheard Uses The Uses follow and so First for information and so first we may here take occasion to thinke of the preciousnesse of our soules for as they' are made of better stuffe than all this visible world being spirits and were redeemed with a greater price than would have beene laid downe to redeeme this whole world so it here appeareth because God sets his owne Son to tend our soules which should make us make more reckoning of them and not be so carelesse of them It were an ill bargaine to win the whole world and lose our owne soules Secondly in that he takes charge of our soules it imports that his Kingdome is not of this world and that he leaveth our bodies and outward estates to the charge of the Kings and Rulers of the earth he claimes himselfe chiefly the charge of our soules Thirdly in spirituall things it is imported that we are to be subjected to such as have the over-sight of us onely so far forth as they command us in the Lord and not otherwise Other Bishops have their power subordinate to Christ and must in all things see to it that they doe nothing against Christ. We are subject first and originally to Christ the charge of our soules properly belongs unto him Fourthly we may here see what need our soules have of looking to if they were not in great danger and subject to many diseases and necessities Christ had never taken such a peculiar charge of them Fiftly it imports the abject estate of all grosse offenders for if Christ be the Bishop of soules they cannot belong to his charge For wise and godly men as much as lieth in them cast out notorious offenders and protest against them and therefore will Christ much more cast off and refuse all such servants of the Divell and the World and Antichrist as will not beare his yoke Sixtly it imports that all Bishops must have ordination from him and therefore such as cannot shew their calling from Jesus Christ are plants which he will root out Use 2. Secondly for consolation to all the godly All that have committed their soules to him may rest upon it that he is able to keepe them till the day of his comming 1 Tim. 1.2 They shall never be lost none can take them out of his hand Iohn 10.29 It is the will of God that none of them should be lacking Iohn 6. And therefore they may comfort themselves with those words of the Apostle Nothing shall ever be able to separate us from the love of God Rom. 8. ult Use 3. Thirdly for instruction and so it should teach us to take chiefe care of our soules For from his office we may learne that he accounts our soules to be the chiefe
called 272 Wherein it exceeds all other writings ibid. Servants Service How we are to serve God 473 Who are rejected from the number of Gods Servants 474 It is an excellent freedome to be a Servant of God 475 Their prerogatives ibid. Servants are of divers sorts 486 For what cause Servitude came in ibid. How a godly Servant may comfort himselfe in his estate 488 They must be subject three wayes 490 Helps in their subjection ibid. They are to shew their feare of God in their callings 492 Their feare towards their Masters shewed divers wayes 493 Sheep Signes of a lost Sheep 557 Hopes of returning 558 Motives to returne 559 The time when the number and meanes 560 The maner and signes of returning 561 The lets 562 Shepherd What attributes are given to Christ as a Shepherd 563 564 He is the one true great and good Shepherd 564 The happinesse of such as live under this Shepherd appeares in ten things 565 Shew Seven wayes whereby we may offend by outward Shewes 333 Motives to the Shew of vertue 334 Sicknesse Vide Healing How it comes into the soule 548 The Sicknesse of the soule grievous many wayes 549 Why many feele not the Sicknesse of the soule ibid. Silence To put to Silence is diversly accepted 455 Sin Sixe wayes by which one mans Sin is derived on another 141 How many wayes Sin hinders the growth of the word 200 A man may be said to make Sin many wayes 522 523 How Christ had no Sin 524 Inwhat respect Christ bare our Sins 531 His sufferings fitted to our Sins 532 Men are said to be alive in Sin many wayes 535 Their miserie great that so doe ibid. Sinner To be a worker of Iniquitie what and three wayes manifested 397 Sion The Church is like Mount Sion in many respects 276 How the Citizens of this City may be knowne 277 Their speciall priviledges 279 Sober Sobrietie A fixefold Sobrietie 104 Sojourners Vide Saints and Strangers 4 5 132 Soule What it is 76 Soule taken many wayes 367 Its description ibid. Seven things considerable in it ibid. c. It is a substance but not bodily 368 It is immortall 369 Its originall 371 Anima non est ex traduce 372 God creates the Soule 373 374 Objections against it answered 374 375 Of the union of the Soule with the body 376 Shewed by many similies 377 By what band the Soule is bound to the body ibid. The faculties of the Soule 378 Its five senses 379 The inward senses three 380 The Soule gives to the body a threefold motion 311 The facultie of reason in the Soule and wherein it excells 382 The end of its creation 383 Foure kinds of warre against the Soule 384 The Flesh wars against the Soule five wayes ibid. How the Soule comes to be diseased 548 The sicknesse of the Soule grievous many wayes 149 Many feele it not ibid. The Soule synechdochically signifieth the whole man 17● Speaking Vide Evill-speaking and Report Spirit What need our Spirit● have to be sanctified ●5 In what its sanctification consisteth ibid. Eight things belong thereto 16 Why the Spirit is called the Holy Ghost 93 Why the Holy Spirit ibid. Sprinkling The meaning of that ceremonie of Sprinkling Christs bloud 22 A fourefold legall Sprinkling 22 23 c. The manifold passages of Sprinkling the Passeover opened 25 26 Statutes God hath foure Statute books 149 Foure praises of those Statutes ibid. Stone How Christ is said to be first a Stone secondly a living Stone 249 250 This Stone disallowed how and by whom 251 252 Wicked men compared to Stones in many respects 258 So the godly also ibid. Reasons why we ought to be lively Stones 259 That Christ is laid as a foundation Stone imports many things 276 A corner Stone 282 Elect and precious ibid. Strangers Who and why man is a Stranger even in five respects 3 4 The Elect are Strangers 4 And in foureteene things they should be like Strangers 4 5 The word Stranger literally and mystically taken 132 Prettie allusions from Israels being in Egypt 132 c. We should carry our selves as Strangers 364 Submission The Submission which belongs to Princes and Magistrates hath sixe things in it 425 Objections against this Submission answered 427 Suffer The markes of such as truely suffer with Christ 315 Divers wayes of Suffering 514 Christ Suffered for us in divers respects 517 518 His Sufferings were for our examples 519 Ten things to be followed by the examples of Christs Sufferings 521 Christs Sufferings 〈…〉 532 He suffered in his body and soule 533 Why he suffered on a tree 534 T TAbernacle Christ hath a fivefold Tabernacle 261 A godly man like a Tabernacle in many respects 262 Excellent uses hereof 263 Taste What will bring us unto a good Taste of Gods goodnesse 239 240 Our true Taste is seene both by the causes and effects 241 Wherein the Taste of the godly and wicked differ 242 How far the Taste of the wicked may goe 243 The uses of it 243 244 We can have but a Taste of Gods sweetnesse in this life 244 The uses of it ibid. The true causes of the want of Taste to the Word 245 When we have tasted of it we must not lose our Appetite 246 Temptation Foure sorts of it 57 Sathan tempts five wayes 58 Thirteene degrees of it ibid. c. How Sathans Temptations differ from our owne concupiscence 59 60 Comforts against Temptation 60 Twelve rules in Temptation 61 God tempts man sixe wayes 62 Seven wayes in affliction 62 63 Testimonie The Scripture is our sure Testimonie and thence how our Testaments are to be fetcht 124 125 Time Times Foure sorts of men have enquired about Times 1. The curious 2. The weake 3. The superstitious 4. The wise 83 Tradition The word is taken five waies 89 90 How many wayes children are infected by the Tradition of their fathers 142 Why those Traditions should be so infectious ibid. c. Trust. Five things pertaining to a perfect Trust 105 Nine wayes to shew our Trust 108 Truth What it is 175 What it is to obey the Truth how 176 V VAine-glory Wherein it is seene 512 Verily The word oft used in Scripture and that for three speciall causes 150 151 How many wayes we shew forth the Verilies of Christ 332 333 Why the Verilies that are in us are called Christs Verilies 334 Vertue How the word is taken in the Originall 327 Nine Vertues in Christ which we should shew forth 329 Vertue and Grace are a Christians best riches 618 Vessell The word Vessell diversly taken 642 Visit Visitation Men are said to visit diversly 412 So God also ibid. c. First in judgement 413 Secondly in mercy 414 Signes of such as he visits in mercy 415 What glorious things the day of Visitation brings forth 419 Uncleannesse Two waies contracted 25 Unitie Of Unitie in mind or judgement 674 675 Helpes thereto 676 Aggravations against discord in opinion 677 Many ill causes of
he is not more unperfect in generation than any other creature for First the Virgin Mary did beare Christ-man in her wombe and Christ-man is said to be of the seed of the Virgin and yet his soule was created of God as hath beene shewed before Secondly though there bee some dissimilitude in the generation of man and of a beast yet it doth not follow that man is more unperfect As for instance The bea●t begets his young and brings him forth strong covered with a hide able to feed himselfe presently full of leaping and other actions But man brings forth an Infant weake crying naked unable to feed it selfe What is man therefore more unperfect No for the perfection of generation doth not consist of these things or in these things For here man excels all other living creatures in the world in generation because he is Gods instrument for the begetting of a body fit to be united to such a soule God also doth hereby commend the generation of man and dignifie it that he is pleased so to worke in mans generation as he doth not in any other creature vouchsafing to give unto mans generation such an admirable soule to his body For therefore was the creation of the first man more excellent than the creation of other creatures because God having framed his body of the dust of the earth did infuse such a soule into him Object 3. It is a peevish objection that some make thus If God create the soule in all men then when any is borne of Adulterie God should cooperate with the adulterer and so be either the author or the approver of sinne that will give the soule to such a wicked generation Sol. Some answer thus That God is not the author or approver because out of evill he onely workes good for his owne glory Others answer That God onely cooperates with the action not with the sinne of the action or the evill of the action or the evill which is in the will of the agents But the best answer is theirs that answer by a similitude thus The earth hath received her nature and vigour from God to nourish and bring forth the seede that is cast into it without difference whether the seed be lawfully taken out of the barne or stolne by fraud The stolne graine doth not cease to grow in the earth nor is it to be expected that nature should cast out such seed and yet the earth doth not justifie the action of him that stole the graine so is it with God that workes according to the grounds of nature and his owne decree and providence Hee is not to bee blamed for the evill of the action when hee workes according to the rules of nature and will glorifie himselfe by raising a frame of good out of that which by men was ill done Object 4. Wee see that children resemble the vertues or vices of their parents and therefore as from the bodies of their parents they receive a likenesse to them in body so is it that from their soules they receive this similitude of their vertues or vices Solut. Experience shewes that this is not alwaies true For many children have no resemblance in them of their parents qualities Secondly where this is true it is not because their soules are derived from the soules of their parents but they have it from the bodies of their parents For the soule after suffers from the sympathie with the bodie as by reason of certaine humours in the bodies of parents that incite wrath or griefe or lust or the like may come infection to the child but not from their soules Thirdly rather the argument may be retorted upon them that in asmuch as the soules of all children are not like in qualities to the soules of their parents that therefore they receive not their soules from their parents Ob. 5. Gen. 9. Lev. 17. The soule is said to bee in the blood Now it is evident that the blood is from the parents Solut. The soule is in the blood but how By the effect of it which is life otherwise the soule is neither devoured in the blood nor depends upon it in it selfe Ob. 6. It is said Gen. 2. That God rested from all his workes Now if hee did daily create new soules then he rested not from all his workes but continues creation still Solut. The meaning of Moses cannot be that God rested simply from all creation For then it must needs follow too that the soule of Christ was not created but propagated which cannot be true But his meaning is that hee rested from creation of things in specie hee made no more new sorts of things That hinders not creation in individuo which is a worke of God preserving those sorts he had made at the first by creating successively a new supply as in this case of the soules of men That God did not rest absolutely is plaine by the words of our Saviour Christ My Father worketh hitherto and I worke Ioh. 5. Hitherto of the originall of the soule The union of the soule with the body followes which is a consideration of no lesse difficulty than the former no lesse needfull to be knowne no lesse certaine That it is united to the body so as to make it one man is apparent by the words of God in the creation Hee breathed into him the breath of lives and so Adam became a living soule Hee became then a man or a living creature distinct from other creatures upon his conjunction of the soule with the body And by this union with the body doth the spirit of man differ from the Angels who are spirits separate and such as exist without relation to a body whereas the soule of man in the creation of it and the disposition of it also tends unto this conjunction with the body and doth not fully exercise it selfe living without the body and that is the reason why man is not absolutely perfect after death in his soule till the day of judgement For though the soule doe enjoy an estate free from sinne or paine or misery yet two of the faculties of the soule are without exercise till it be united againe to the body viz. the faculties of vegetation and sense which cannot be exercised but in the body The manner how the soule is united to the body is full of difficulty to expresse The question is whether the soule worke upon the body from without and so is by that meanes joyned to it or whether it be placed in the body and worke there and from thence This latter is the truth for the soule doth not worke from without which I shew by a comparison The light and the eye are joyned together in seeing But how The light from without extends it selfe to the eye and so is joyned to it so is not the soule joyned to the body but is seated within the body which appeares so partly by experience for we may all perceive that our thoughts
reason will affections c. do discover themselves within us and it is manifest that God infused the soule not upon the body but into the body seating it within us The soule then is within the body and so joyned to it But how Divines have sought out divers similitudes to expresse their mindes And first to shew how it is not joyned First not as water and the vessell that holds it are joyned by contact or touching one another for the soule is not a bodily substance and therefore cannot be joyned by touching nor doe the water and vessell make one thing as the soule and body do one man nor do they worke together as the soule and body do for the water doth all the worke thereof in watering or clensing without the vessell Secondly not by mixture as water and wine are mingled together For things mingled cea●e to be what they were for there is no longer water nor wine now they are mingled nor is the soule materiall to suffer such a mingling Thirdly not as the heat of the fire is united to the water when the water is heated for though the heat be joyned to the water as the former yet it is but an accidentall forme and they are one by accident not per se. Thirdly not as the voyce is in the aire for though the voice be dispersed abroad the aire and doth likewise carry something to the understanding besides the sound yet doth not this reach to expresse the union of the soule with the body For the voice is not the forme of the aire nor is it conceived in the aire without the breaking of the aire and besides it presently vanisheth whereas the soule is a substance and doth not easily depart out of the body Fifthly nor as the Mariner is in the shippe with the Governer for the dispatch of his journey for though the body bee as a tabernacle wherein the soule dwells yet that similitude doth not expresse this union because the soule and body make one thing whereas the ship and the Mariner do not make one thing but are two distinct sorts of things yea the soule and body are soone that by sympathie what one suffers the other feeles whereas the wounding of the Mariner is not the tearing of the ship or contrariwise There are two similitudes that doe more neerly reach this secret The first is of Christ. For as God and man make one Christ so the soule and body make one man But I will not meddle with the breaking open of that dreadfull mysterie The other is of the light of the Sun in the aire for there are many things in this comparison doe fitly resemble this divine light which is our soules as they are joyned to our bodies 1 This light doth fitly resemble the soule because it is a thing that cannot be corrupted or divided 2 This light doth so pierce into and penetrate the aire that they are both made one and are not separated so doth the soule the body 3 The light and the aire though joyned together are not confounded or mingled together for the light remaineth light and the aire the aire so is it in this union betweene the soule and the body 4 The light is so in the aire that the aire being smitten yet the light is not touched nor divided nor carried about as the are is so doth the soule remaine unpierced though the body bee wounded and fall yea and die too 5 As the light is onely from the Sunne so is the soule onely from God 6 As the aire without the light is as it were dead because it is darke and cold and will putrefie so is the body without the soule 7 As no man can shew by what bands the light is fastned to the aire so is it extreamly difficult to shew how the soule is fastened to the body This similitude we see doth in many things fit this case but yet not fully For the light is not the essentiall forme of the aire onely this comparison doth in many things sati●fie the question in that it shewes that the soule is in the body by penetration or immeation as they call it it pierceth thorow the whole body Onely we must take heed of two things First that wee imagine not the soule to be in the body as in a place or as contained of it For the soule cannot bee circumscribed by the measure of a place wee may not imagine that the soule is just as bigge as the body and no bigger For though it bee true that the soule is in the body and the whole soule too yet it is not contained there as bodies be contained in their places for rather the soule sustaineth the body Secondly God is said to be in us and so is the soule but not alike For God is in us by his vertue and grace and operation but not as our former whereas the soule is the forme of the body and both make one man Quest. But some one will say Can it not be shewed by what band the soule is tied to the body Answ. Some Divines and Philosophers undertake to determine that and say that God hath created in the body of a man a certaine humour which is fitted for this union and so they say the soule is united to the body by the vitall spirits which are of nature mixt partly corporeall and partly spirituall For as those vitall spirits doe consist for the matter of them of the radicall heat and moisture in man so they are corporeall and as they have an unexpressable nimblenesse in working or sparkling in the body so they draw neere to the nature of the soule and by these vitall spirits thus enlived are the soule and body joyned together Quest. There yet remaineth another question and that is Where the soule resides in the body in what place is it centred Answ. The most say that the whole soule is in the whole body and the whole soule in every part of the body Others say it is a vaine question seeing the soule is not in the body as in a place For it cannot be measured by length breadth or depth but it is in the body as the essentiall forme is in the matter which cannot be locally Others say that the soule is seated in one principall place of the body as the chiefe palace and seat of residence and is in all other parts by diffusion of vertues through the instruments thereunto fitted and placed of purpose by God in the framing of the body and thus the soule reasons in the head wills and affects in the heart sees in the eyes c. The chiefest mansion of the soule seemes to be in the heart because it is the last that dies in us Hitherto of the union of the soule with the body The faculties of the soule follow There are three faculties or powers of the soule by which it workes or there are three things which the soule effects viz. 1 Vegetation 2 Sense 3 Reason