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A07666 A mappe of mans mortalitie Clearely manifesting the originall of death, with the nature, fruits, and effects thereof, both to the vnregenerate, and elect children of God. Diuided into three bookes; and published for the furtherance of the wise in practise, the humbling of the strong in conceit, and for the comfort and confirmation of weake Christians, against the combat of death, that they may wisely and seasonably be prepared against the same. Whereunto are annexed two consolatory sermons, for afflicted Christians, in their greatest conflicts. By Iohn Moore, minister of the word of God, at Shearsbie in Leicester-shire. Moore, John, d. 1619. 1617 (1617) STC 18057; ESTC S112851 257,806 358

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rageth and is as restlesse as the troubled sea If hee be poore hee liueth in trauell if rich hee is proud and licentions c. The Sea changeth not but when the windes turne contrary vnto it but mans life whatsoeuer the weather and seasons are eyther calme or windy is continually troubled with alterations and stormes No man is contented with his owne estate but desireth to exchange it with another The King feeleth the weight of the Crowne and desireth to be a subiect for his safety the Subiect not content to be ruled would be a King c. Thus men vexe themselues and like vnto sicke men doe nothing else but tosse and tumble vpon their beds thinking to finde the better ease and rest and yet are deceiued seeing the cause of disquietnesse is within themselues which is their griefe and disease Great and heauy is the yoake of the Sonnes of men from the day of their birth till the day of their death the mother of all Therefore Bernard was not afraid to say that he thought this life little better then the life of hell were it not for the hope to attaine and come to the Kingdome of heauen Wee liue here as in an Ocean Sea of troubles wherein wee can see no firme land one waue falling vpon another ere the former haue wrought all his malice and spight Mischiefes striue for places as if they feared to loose their roomes if they hasted not So many good things as wee haue so many euill threaten their losse and depriuation besides many reall and positiue euils that afflict vs. Our life is lent vs as a ship to transport vs to the hauen of rest From the Cradle to the Graue we liue as it were vpon the stormy Sea neuer long quiet and at rest but troubled and tossed with the troublesome waues of this world which is a sea of hurtfull bitternesse it hath many waues of tribulations and tempests of temptations Men are here floating like fishes following and swallowing many hurtfull baites to their bane and destruction nay deuouring one another as the greater fishes doe the small It is a Sea swelling with pride blewish with enuy deepe and profound in couetousnesse no Plummet being able to sound the bottome of it casting out all that commeth in the way through excessiue miscarriage hauing a mercilesse man to swallow vp all it can get with insatiable oppression very dangerous to saile in by reason of the pernitious rockes of Desperation and Presumption lofty through the reciprocall waues of mens passions ebbing and flowing in inconstancie terrible salt through sinne very brynish are the waters thereof not to be brooked of Gods Children As in the sea are all sorts of fishes and that great Leuiathan that hath his pastime therein so there be in this world men of all natures and affections Wee can name no creatures of inclination neuer so cruell filthy and abhominable but here will be a copesmate of like qualitie and condition amongst the crowd and company of men This transitory world is a dungeon of ill sauours where vertue is poysoned with the puddle-water of vice where ranckor and despight chiefely raigne and all goodnesse is ouerwhelmed with malice where Heresie is an handmaide to sugred Hypocrisie where smooth hatred hidden ambition smiling enuy and wicked tyranny shrowd themselues Our life is encountred with capitall enemies Paine Care and Sorrow Paine bids the body battell Care continueth the skirmish and Sorrow giueth the victory This life is but a borrowed dreame of pleasure a vision of ioy a pageant of transitory delights What should I speake of the shortnesse and swiftnesse of the same It is like a Post saith Iob swiftly galloping away yet sometime hee that rideth so fast resteth and breatheth but our dayes passe away still without ceasing till wee come to our graues Our dayes passe away as the Barke of hasty messengers A ship is not made to rest but continually to sayle thorow the tempestuous sea and to set forward to the long desired hauen So are we not created to rest but to labour as the bird is made to flye vntill by Death wee be brought home to our happy Port of rest As the ship passeth thorow the Sea not leauing so much as any tracke in the waues so our life goes away swiftly and scarce leaues any signe thereof A ship is subiect to many dangers for it may be suncke by the least leake it may be ouerwhelmed with the waues it may be shiuered against the rockes it may perish by tempests it may be spoyled by Pirats so is our life subiect to many perils and may be taken from vs by a thousand dangers Our dayes flye away like an arrow and wee are kept vnder as a fogge chased by the Sunne beames and beaten downe by the heate thereof When the Sunne is at the highest the shadowes are the shortest but when it beginnes to decline and set then the shadowes well-neare change euery moment vntill they slip away with the darknesse that ensues So the dayes of all men passe away as a shadow at night which appeares the longest when it is nearest to an end Our dayes goe as an Eagle to her prey and what are men but the prey of Death which soareth after vs with an open mouth to deuoure vs Wee are as flowers and grasse and why doe wee not thinke when wee walke in the fields that Death in the hand of God is like vnto a Sythe in the hand of a labourer attending to cut vs downe euery houre Wee gather flowers in our garden and they fade presently and though wee leaue them there they wither before the euening and doe wee thinke to flourish alwayes and to haue our Spring-time continuall in this world Our dayes slide away like the winde and fayle without hope our bodies ebbe and turne backe like the course of waters all the time which thou seest flyes away with the time it selfe Nothing remaines of all that wee see Euen I while I am now writing that all things are changed am changed my selfe See therefore our folly that wee should so dearely loue a thing that so quickely leaues vs for euery moment of this life is the death of the other There is nothing in vs that will not by and by be dead onely our sinnes liue yea reuiue and grow young againe in despight of Nature Our Spring is fading our Lampe is wasting and the tyde of our life is drawing by degrees to a very low ebbe Whatsoeuer we doe our wheele whirles about apace and we must learne to know that euery one of vs hath a poore soule to saue And not to forget the cares of this life How doe they swarme about vs like the Flyes of Egypt Of all the plagues this was most loathsome for they neuer suffered men to rest but the more they were beaten off the more they came vpon them so of all miseries and vexations of mortall men this is
borne a man and not an Angell Death is the common road-way of all the world there is no by-paths any nearer or nearer way no not for Kings and Emperours themselues What worlds of men are gone before vs yea how many thousands out of one field How many Crownes and Scepters lye pyled vp at the gates of Death Men are here as in a voyage the which wee must one day finish yesterday we came into this vale of teares and to morrow if our Maker will we shall goe out One goes before another followes one man rots in the graue and makes it empty that he which is yet aliue may haue place therein Or if we should continue here long yet can wee not escape for that all mortall men are enclosed in Deaths Parke Whether wee goe softly or runne swiftly whether wee dye willingly or end our dayes grudgingly when the appointed time is come wee must yeeld our selues to the Law of Death Doe wee flye Death yet followes vs and catcheth vs behinde in retyring backe shee approacheth neare vs turning from her shee surpriseth vs sodainely and ceaseth not like a greedy Beare and hungry Lyon vntill shee hath broken our bones and torne our flesh in sunder Death equally drags away all men which haue beene are or shall be We are distinguished by times but made equall in the Issue Some are sent before others come after but all goe the same way without exception In all these reuolutions of humane things there is nothing certaine but Death and yet euery one complaineth of that which neuer yet failed any Wee dye hourely and as we grow our life decreaseth for what is the beginning of Youth but the death of Infancie the entrance of Manhood but the end of Youth and what is the beginning of to morrow but the death of to day Wee are no sooner entered into the earth but wee are constrained to returne to the earth againe as it were from one sepulchre to another euen from the wombe to a beginning to liue and die together so as the most part of the time Death giues vs no warning but by the blow it selfe Many thinke they neuer dye but when they yeeld vp the last gaspe of Death but if wee marke it wee dye euery day and moment for our very liuing as I said is a continuall dying wee no sooner set a step into life but wee enter a step into death Of our life all the time past is dead the present liues and dyes at once and the future likewise shall perish The time past is no more the future is not yet the present onely is and no more This whole life I say is but a death It is like a candle lighted in our bodies in one the winde maketh it melt away in another blowes it cleane out ere halfe it be burned in others it endureth vnto the end but looke how much soeuer it shineth so much it burneth her shining is her burning her light a vanishing smoake her last fire her last wyke and her last drop of moysture So is it in the life of man his life and death are all one But how should man be ignorant of his death vnto whom all creatures and actions preach his mortalitie We see it by experience that all earthly things haue their end our yeares are limited God hath measured out our months the daies of our liues are dated how long wee haue to liue so that the first lesson that we haue to learne is to think of our end We see that the longest day passeth and the night succeedeth how Sommer followeth Winter and Winter Sommer the Sunne hath both his rising and his setting his shining and his shading the Spring couers and cloathes the ground with fruits Sommer ripeneth them Haruest gathers them and Winter spends them Thus one thing followes another and both one and another passe swiftly to their end The generation of one thing is the destruction of another and the death of one thing is the life of another First is our generation then our conception after comes our birth in wonderfull weakenesse The cradle at the first is our castle when we are crept out of that we come to a little strength yet long is the time ere we come to our ripenesse And here behold we neuer continue in one state for as our strength increased at the first so by little and little it diminisheth at the last as Youth succeedeth childehood and age youth so childehood youth and age haue all their end Wee see by obseruation that the freshest and sweetest flower soone fadeth our garments waxe olde be they neuer so gay our buildings become ruinous be they neuer so stately and as our life is vpholden by the death of Gods creatures so death shall be the end as well of vs as of them The Sunne towards his setting and the Moone towards her wayning haue dimmer beames and light And this is the vniuersall sentence of the world and Gods decree which needes must stand that all things flourishing shall fade all things of force and might shall be feebled all great things lessened and so by little and little being weakened shall at the last dissolue into the first substance and matter whereof it came as the cloudes in the skie into dewes and showers Ice and Snow into water all earthly things that are of the earth shall turne to earth againe and they that are of the waters shall turne into the sea So shall Adam being dust to dust againe returne with all his brood The law of Nature established amongst all nations and people of the world is this that all men come into the world with condition to retire out of it againe He is no great man saith one that thinketh it a great matter for Trees and stones to fall and for mortall men to die I knew saith Anaxagoras hauing intelligence of the death of his sonne that hee was mortall and subiect to die For as it is impossible for any man to die that liued not before so none can possibly liue that shall not die hereafter Our life is as a garment that weares of it selfe and by it selfe for we weare out our life in liuing the more we liue the lesse we haue to liue and still approach nearer death whatsoeuer we are cloathed with is a mortall and perishing merchandise our garments weare vpon our backs and we in our garments they are eaten with mothes and wee with time So in our meates as in a looking-glasse we may learne our owne mortalitie for let vs put our hand into the dish and what doe we take but the foode of a dead thing which is either the flesh of beasts or of birds or of fishes with which foode wee so long fill our bodies vntill they themselues be meate for wormes All this we see by experience we feele it and we taste it daily we see death as it were before our eyes we feele it betwixt our teeth and yet can wee
effectuall Ieremie perplexed in the dungeon called sighed and cryed vnto God Hearken O Lord vnto me saith Dauid and answere I mourne in my prayer and make a noyse It maketh men to cry as a woman in trauell Demaund now and behold if Man trauell with childe Wherefore doe I behold euery man with his hands on his loynes as a Woman in her trauell and all faces are turned into palenesse It forceth very infidels to humble themselues as Pharaoh Ahab c. See the variety of Gods punishments before he can make his people yeeld yet in the end their vncircumcised hearts shall be humbled and they shall pray for their sinne reason 1 Afflictions and troubles doe breake and tame the stoutnesse and pride of mans heart and nature maketh them to melt and relent who may know by woefull experience that God will not cease from punishing till they leaue their sinning God still addeth seauen plagues to seauen increasing the number and the greatnesse till his children be turned vnto him and be throughly humbled So in Amos he sends his iudgements successiuely because they returned not vnto him So he saith he will returne to his place and not be found vntill they seeke him and amend and God affirmeth that he will enter into iudgement with Ierusalem because she saith I haue not sinned reason 2 Secondly being blinded in our affections they make vs to see and know our selues before I was troubled I went wrong In my prosperity I said I shall neuer be moued Ephraim in presperitie was as an vntamed and wanton Calfe not wonted to the yoake but by chasticements afterwards repenting and being conuerted and instructed I smote my selfe saith Ephraim vpon my thigh I was ashamed and confounded because I did beare the reproach of my youth reason 3 Thirdly by afflictions wee may see the anger and vengeance of God against sinne flaming as an vnquenchable fire and burning to the bottome of hell and in them we proue our owne weakenesse not able to vndergoe or endure them Take away thy plague from me for I am consumed by the stroak of thy hand Therefore Dauid prayeth God not to rebuke him in his anger nor to chastise him in his wrath vse 1 The vse whereof is that wee heare the rod and who hath appointed it That we take notice of Gods iudgements in acknowledging the authour and the end thereof that we humble our selues and meete our God that wee pray for patience and strength to vndergoe trialls and seeing our weakenes to run to God for aide Againe it maketh much for our comfort that afflictions vse 2 are so good and profitable as the effects thereof declare When they are sanctified vnto vs they heale our sinfull nature as a good salue that is laide to the sore they recouer the sicknesse of our soules as good physicke cures the disease Thus they proue as wholsome medicines and fatherly chasticements to amend and reforme Gods elect They are meanes to make vs to know our selues and the corruption of our nature that needeth such violent remedies Wee are readie with Adam to hide our sinnes As malefactors on a racke and vnhappy Schollers in a Schoole are forced to acknowledge their faultes so God by affliction wresteth out a confession of sinne and resolution of amendment in his Children Thus God doth scowre and clense away the drosse and drowsinesse of our nature and so rowseth and raiseth vp our dead hearts to earnest and faithfull prayers that it turnes them to cryings sighings and groanings that cannot be expressed Calling vpon Gods name he heard his voyce doctrine 7 Gods children neuer pray in vaine but are heard and helped of God in their greatest afflictions I called vpon thy name O Lord out of the low dungeon thou hast heard my voyce I called vnto the Lord in my trouble and he heard me See the proofes and reasons hereof with the vses in doctrine the first c. Thou hast heard my voyce That is heretofore thou doctrine 8 hast regarded mee when I prayed therefore heare mee still The experience of Gods loue in our former deliuerances out of dangers ought still to encourage vs to resort vnto him when the like or greater troubles shall assaile vs. Thou hast set me at liberty when I was in distresse haue mercy vpon mee and hearken vnto my prayer That God had deliuered Dauid from the Lyon and the Beare was the speciall motiue and incouragement vnto him to incounter with Goliah and his best assurance to conquere and ouercome him So the church cheareth her selfe in her great ruins and afflictions hoping to be redeemed againe from the captiuity of Babilon O arme of the Lord rise vp as in old time in the generations of the world Art not thou the same that hast cut Rahab and wounded the Dragon Art not thou the same which hast dryed the Sea even the waters of the great deepe making the depth of the Sea a way for the redeemed to passe ouer Thus they speake of their deliuerance from Egipt which is called Rahab putting some part of the Land for the whole and the people therein contained meaning also by the Dragon that tyrant Pharaoh dwelling in the middest of the floudes as Ezekiell speaketh hyding himselfe in the Riuer Nylus and as Paul calleth Nero a Lyon so here is Pharaoh termed a Dragon to expresse the qualitie of Tyrants Thus with the remembrance of that eminent deliuerance out of Egipt they comfort their hearts and cherish their hopes to bee freed from the present captiuity for what shall hinder God from bringing them out of Babylon more then it did the freeing of their forefathers from the slauery of Egipt God is still the same without change or alteration his nature and condition is euer to bee gratious and ready to forgiue he is faithfull and will not deceiue his people his power and will are neuer weakened his truth and promise shall abide for euer Hath he said and shall not he doe it or hath hee done it and cannot hee doe the same againe Feare it not for GOD is constant and vnchangeable in his nature doctrine 7 Which doctrine serueth for the instruction of all Gods children in the variety and continuance of their tryals and afflictions being voyde of present comfort they must remember the times past and thinke of former deliuerances as the ancient Church of GOD hath vsed to doe who still called to minde what they had heard with their eares what their Fathers had tolde them of GODS workes in their dayes in the olde time how GOD had driuen out the heathen and planted them in how hee had destroyed the Nations and caused them to grow and so hee concludeth that they will praise God continually and confesse his name for euer This also reproueth the peruersenes of our nature and vse 2
not cast our accompt that we must die There is no action without pause no warre without truce the weary workeman hath his day of rest Musicke hath her stops the Scriuen or his points we do not alwayes eate and drinke we doe not alwaies walke nor sleepe yea we doe not alwaies breath although we cannot liue without breathing but concerning our life there is no truce no pause no rest no delay but hourely yea euery moment in all places and actions we hasten to our end Whether we eate or drinke or sleepe or wake or goe or stand still the course of our life runnes out as the houre-glasse and neuer rests till it hath finished his course They which come hereafter shall march vpon our graues as we doe now vpon the sepulchers of our fathers they shall remaine in our houses as we doe now in theirs that were before vs they shall possesse our goods our lands our gold and siluer our Iewels and treasuries as we at this day enioy theirs whom we haue succeeded But I will hasten to an end though the experience be endlesse which confirmeth this point One rufully thus exclaimeth of Death How quickly and sodainely stealest thou vpon vs how secret are thy paths and waies how doubtfull is thy houre how vniuersall is thy kingdome The mighty cannot escape thy hands the wise cannot hide themselues from thee and the strong are weakened before thy face Thou accountest no man rich for that no man is able to pay the ransome for his life Thou goest euery where thou searchest euery where and thou art euery where Thou witherest the hearbes thou wastest the windes thou corruptest the aire thou dryest the waters thou changest the ages thou alterest the water and suppest vp the sea All things doe decrease and diminish but thou still remainest and raignest in the world Thou art the hammer that alwaies striketh the sword that neuer blunteth the snare that alwayes catcheth Thou art the prison whereinto euery man entreth thou art the sea wherein euery one drowneth thou art the paine that euery one suffereth O cruell Death thou snatchest vs away in our ripest age thou many times interruptest our best affaires thou robbest vs in one houre of all the gaines we euer got Thou cuttest off succession of kinreds and families thou bereauest kingdomes of their naturall heires thou fillest the world with widowes and orphanes thou breakest off the studies of the learnedst Clearks thou ouerthrowest the finest wits and best conceits in the ripest age thou ioynest the end with the beginning without giuing place to the middle thou art such a meanes as God neuer created but thy comming was by the Diuels enuie and malice Now that wee may profit by this experience of our mortall estate and not forget our selues so grosely vpon euery occasion as we doe it is necessary to haue this holy Meditation still fixed in our mindes that since we liue moue and haue our being of God that therefore our liues are not our owne but lent vs for a time we must remember that we are borne to die and must liue to die for the forgetfulnesse of Death and hope of long life makes vs so secure and carelesse as that we desire no other heauen but earth Many make a couenant with Death and clap hands with the graue hoping thereby to escape or for a time to solace themselues in the forgetfulnesse of their latter end and so bathe themselues in their fleshly pleasures and wallow like fatted Swine in the filthy stie of all vncleanenesse still following things apparant to their eyes and neuer regarding the time to come till death preuent them on a sodaine and summon them to appeare before their Iudge So it commeth to passe that as they liued wickedly they die most fearefully their hope is as the winde and their confidence like the cobwebbe Death is a terrour and a torment both to their soule and body and this is the reason they haue not learned to die Death is strange vnto them he seemes an vgly monster they dare not once behold him True it is that Death in it owne nature as partly wee haue heard is most terrible to behold that the horror thereof amazeth all our senses yet he that is armed with faith is well assured that it is sent for his profit to be as his hackney to carry and conuey him from earth to heauen from paine to pleasure from misery vexation griefe and woe to endlesse mirth melody and ioyes vnspeakeable with God for euer And seeing the sentence of death is gone forth against vs and that our soules remaine in our bodies attending the day of execution let vs detest to heare of our former wicked life as prisoners condemned to die and humble our selues in prayer vnto God reprouing the vanities of this wicked world and aduertising our friends and familiars to doe the like c. CHAP. VII Of the miserable life and wretched state of man by the meanes of Sinne and Death INfinite are the miseries of mortall men their sinne brought in a sea of euils and iust is Iobs complaint that man borne of a woman is full of wretchednesse from the day of his birth till the day of his death a whole armie of euils besiege him Tormented he is in his soule and afflicted in his body in euery part from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foote he is full of infirmities sores and maladies no place is free The first day of the life of man is a beginning of conflicts Our ingresse and egresse and whole progresse of life is set about with seuerall signes of sorrow The tender babe new borne and not yet able to speake saith Augustine doth by his teares prophesie and foretell the manifold sorrowes that are incident to this miserable life of man We enter this life with teares we passe it in toyle and end it in sorrow and torment Great and little rich and poore not one in the whole world that can pleade immunitie from this condition Life and misery saith one are as two twinnes which were borne together and must die together From the wombe to our winding-sheete our life is a warfare vpon earth no age no condition of life no day no night but brings his enemy with him as well against the man of an hundred yeares olde as against the babe new borne How full of ignorance is the time of our infancie how light and wanton are wee growing to be striplings how rash and headlong in the time of our youth how heauy and vnweildy when we come to olde age What is an infant but a bruit beast in the shape of a man and what is a young youth but as it were a wilde vntamed Asse-colt vnbridled and what is an aged heauy and crooked old man but euen a sacke and fardell stuffed with griefes and diseases He is forsaken of the world his kinsfolk friends and acquaintance his owne members and
of victorie to all the true Israelites of God He hath fought the fight and got the conquest for vs that being deliuered from our enemies wee may serue him without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Faith sheweth to Christian Souldiers the blood of Christ to whet them on in their spirituall warfare to win the field as the blood of Grapes and Mulberries shewed to the Elephants in warre prouoke them to fight For Christians indeede ouercome through the blood of the Lambe By the righteousnesse of Christ alone apprehended by faith we are reconciled vnto God hee hath paid our debts by suffering Death and satisfying the Law who is the end of the Law and the Prophets But they that giue neuer so little to their owne deseruings in the worke of their redemption doe wrongfully keepe to themselues the praise of grace passing by them as if a wall should say it bringeth forth light when it receiueth it through a window We are of our selues but diuels and sathans euen aduersaries to God enemies to his Lawes and foes of all vertues neither is there any other difference betwixt vs and them but the onely pittie and gracious fauour of God our Father The grace of Christ must be our onely cloathing before the iudgement seate of God for there is nothing in vs that can please and content him but onely his goodnesse in Christ that he hath put within vs. Much it is I grant which wickednesse hath deserued yet farre much more it is which the loue of my redeemer challengeth For though great be mine vnrighteousnesse yet is the righteousnesse of my redeemer greater Because how much God is better then man by so much is my wickednesse inferiour to his goodnesse both in qualitie and quantitie For what hath man committed which the Sonne of God made man hath not redeemed Surely had wee the knowledge and power of the holy Angels yet could our amends be nothing correspondent to thy mercy and goodnesse and were all our members conuerted into tongues yet could we neuer extoll thee sufficiently All our strength is in humilitie the humble man is an vnmoueable rocke built vpon Christ There is none so hard to be healed as hee that thinketh himselfe to be whole such a one careth not for the Physitian nor keeping of good diet Men commonly ioyne with their equals in riches dignity and greatnesse But God which is the soueraigne maiestie and height it selfe consorts himselfe with none but those that be poore and meeke It is best therefore before our God to confesse our selues banckrupts and as the prouerbe is to lay the keyes vnder the dore forsaking all when it commeth to satisfie God In this we should resemble the couetous men who alwaies thinke themselues poore what riches so euer they haue because they still more regard what they desire then what they haue God pardoneth where he loueth and he is mercifull where he hath iust cause to hate so that he is mercifull and hateth not he pardoneth and loueth where he findeth a fault and seeth who hath neede of compassion that both he and we may be knowne hee by his mercy we by our desart that to him might all praise be giuen and we when we would reioyce might reioyce onely in the Lord. If I wholly owe my selfe to my God for my first making what shall I then further giue him for my reforming and new making after I was marred with sinne In the first he gaue me to my selfe in the second himselfe to me and giuing himselfe to me he restored me againe to my selfe therefore both giuen and restored I owe my selfe to God for my selfe and shall be indebted still What therefore shall I render to the Lord for himselfe For although I should giue my selfe a thousand times what am I to God that redeemed mee and wholly gaue himselfe for my sinnes and saluation Christs power is made perfect in our weakenesse for where the flesh carrieth a confidence in it selfe there is no roome for the spirit of God for the spirit onely helpeth those that be infirme Christ is a Physitian to those that be sicke As all waters come from the sea as from the well-head and returne thither againe boyling out of the vaines of the earth so God sending out the streames of his law into our hearts it must euen from the very bottome of of our hearts returne to him againe for wee haue nothing but what we haue receiued Christ is all things to vs that haue nothing he is our bread being hungry our drinke being thirstie our light being blinde our health being sicke the life of our desires the heauen of our mindes a guide to our wandring steppes our succour in necessitie all in all things to be beleeuers As life is conueied from the heart through the vaines to all the vitall parts so is saluation from the Father through Christ to all his liuing members As out of Eden went a riuer to water the garden which being deriued into foure heads compassed the whole world so out of heauen flowed the streame of Gods mercie in and through our Sauiour Christ whose graces deriued diuersely cause all the earth to be filled with his glorie Christ is a mutuall helpe to the Father and to vs. He is a hand to the Father by which he reacheth vs and a hand to vs by which we reach him The Fathers mouth by which he speaketh to vs and our mouth to the Father by which we speake to him Our God is a consuming fire without Christ our vaile wee cannot endure him For what is our miserie but to meete with his maiestie except it be onely in the temple of mercie which mercies seate all is Christ As then our words are messengers of our mindes and semblance of our soules to parley with our friends so is Christ the Sonne of God the image of the Father and mouth to instruct his dearest Saints and not onely a mouth to speake by but an eye to see by and the foote-way to goe by Christ is the life of the world and the heire of all things without whom I can possesse nothing that is good either in grace or glory Hee is the true Salt Eliza threw in to sweeten the bitter waters of Iericho Hee hath healed this water Death shall no more come thereof to men nor barrennesse to the ground And for the Law it now leadeth vs out of our tents as Moses brought the people to trembling Sinai It bringeth vs from rest and quietnesse and haileth vs before the iudgement seate of God to receiue his wrath and sentence of condemnation for our sinnes Then wee are affraid with the poore Israelites and cry let not the Lord speake vnto vs least we die but speake thou O Moses as a mediatour speake thou O Christ When we flie to Christ Moses and his law vanisheth away so that his
Diuell World and Flesh c. For so it would proue our ouerthrow and destruction they being vnto vs so many traitours and irreconcileable murtherers It would be worse for vs then for the silly Sheepe to make peace with the Wolues Neither yet can we flee and so get from them for the Diuell will pursue vs into euery place with his whole armies and huge hoasts of his olde tryed and trayned Souldiers to inuade vs within vs are our corrupt affections and couetous lusts as his hirelings And wheresoeuer we become in this life these our enemies will finde vs out therefore we must fight or be foyled wee must ouercome or be conquered This warre resembles the battels of the Israelites against the Kings and inhabitants of Canaan they must destroy them peace they might not make or admit them tributaries yet Gods people were commanded not to feare them nor to retire into Egypt therefore of necessitie they must fight to ouercome them True it is considering our owne nature that wee haue iust cause to feare so strong and mighty enemies but as God in old time encouraged Iosuah that he should not be affraide in assuring him of his presence so must we manfully stand in this combat and in Christ our true Iosuah and captaine Iesus wee shall be more then conquerours And as the Diuill with his armies maketh war against all mankinde so especially he fighteth against Christ the section 3 head and his faithfull members The woman with her Son he seeketh to drowne and ouerwhelme with a flood sea of temptations As Sathan tempted Christ when hee was baptised and filled with the holy Ghost so will hee still pursue the best Christians which haue receiued of God the greatest graces and gifts As Theeues rob not beggers but rich men and Pyrats pursue those Ships the most that are of dearest prise so the Diuell would make a prey of such especially as are furnished with faith and other heauenly pearles of greatest value In any commotion whom doe rebels most indeauour to kill and spoyle but those especially that are faithfull to their Prince and will fight for their Country Now the Diuell is a rebell in the Lords kingdome whom then will hee most trouble but the godly which are Gods faithfull souldiers to fight his battels against him He that will raigne with Christ in heauen must ouercome the Diuell on earth The Diuell is a Peripateticke saith one alwaies walking section 4 and going about seeking whom he may ensnare and all is fish that comes to his net Our hearts being as deepe riuers and the Diuell being no more able to discerne the thoughts thereof then the Angler can descry what fish is in the water for the secrets of all hearts are onely knowne to God hee baiteth a hooke for vs and by the going downe of the line he knoweth we are sped If he see any couetously giuen he setteth riches before him if any be ambitious he offereth titles and preferments c. He hath manifold nets of temptations sometimes besetting vs with vaine pleasures and sometimes incirkling vs with inordinate sorrow and care now fetching vs in with feare and anone pricking vs forward with pride and presumption As he findeth vs affected so he fitteth his baites and by our ready and greedy apprehension of his temptations he effecteth our destruction And as a cunning Fisher knowing how to hold the fish he hath hooked he will giue them line and libertie but yet they shall walke no further then he list that he may draw them backe againe at his pleasure as the childe playeth with the bird tyed by the legge not suffering her to flye but the length of the thread Therefore the baite that he layeth for vs being our bane let vs not come within the length of his line or within the compasse of his nets Let Gods word rather be our baite and hooke to catch vs which being taken taketh vs and happy is he that is taken therewith no to his slaughter with the fish but to the saluation of his soule with the faithfull section 5 The Diuell wayeth well our old wants the course of our cares the fashion of our affections and out of the nature of our qualities worketh his malignities like a subtile Souldier trayned vp in the warres that layeth siege to that place of the wall that is weakest He obserueth our infirmities and taketh aduantage of them As a man when he would strike fire out of a flint marketh which end of it is fittest for the stroake of the Iron that it may sparkle the sooner So this subtile Serpent obserueth that affection that leaneth to sinne and that he smiteth with his iron of temptation that a sparke of our consent thereunto being added the flame of sinne may sooner be kindled to consume the whole man Hee seeth euery ones complection and so accordingly applyeth his temptation One man is giuen to solace another to sorrow one to feare another to pride c. Let vs therefore be as wise for our saluation as hee is wily to worke our damnation Sathan by worldly baites and sleights leadeth many thousand sinners blindefold to perdition as a Faulken or carryeth his Hawkes quietly on his fist being hooded which otherwise he could not so easily doe if they had they se and sight of their eyes And as Sathan assayleth vs all the dayes of our life section 6 so is hee and will be most busie at the houre of death who dealeth as Tenants doe when their Leases are ready to expire then they racke and take all things to the vtmost they make money of any commoditie they scrape to themselues by hooke and by crooke whatsoeuer they can so fareth it with Sathan The time of death is the last houre of the world and then hee playeth reakes hee ruffleth it apace as though hee were wood And no maruell why hee taketh the greatest aduantage at our death for then hee must ouercome at that instant or not at all then his rage is great because his time is short Thus being acquainted with Sathans wylinesse and watchfulnesse to doe vs hurt especially at our latter end let vs now further display his manner of fight in the field and his Souldiers and weapons that hee imployeth in this warre against vs. Now the Diuell in his Plea against vs for our iust condemnation section 7 and death bringeth in the Law euen the most righteous Law of God which man hath transgressed and by transgression thereof challengeth to hold him in his kingdome From whence he thus reasoneth against our saluation Whosoeuer breaketh the Law of God shall dye the death But euery man hath broken the Law of God Therefore shall euery man dye the death And by the vertue of the Law saith Sathan I will hold him in death The Law is according to Gods nature good holy and righteous and therefore the death of man ponounced by the Law is iust and his condemnation
time is but short they weepe as they wept not and so likewise they square out their mirth that nothing may long stay them in their trauell or much either allure or disturbe them As Trauellers therefore that haue a long iourney to goe prepare for the speedy and happy expedition thereof so must Christians saith one make ready the chariots of good consciences the horses of feruent prayer the oyle of holinesse for their Lampes the sword of the spirit which is the word of God and the shield of faith that so they may resist and ouercome all their enemies and constantly proceede to their iournyes end Inquire and you shall scarse finde out one faithfull man section 3 to haue had sound ioy or contentment in this world All his promises saith a Father are lyings like the false Prophets of Ahab his oathes manifest periuries of Iesabels false witnesses The loue of the world is like Dalilahs to Sampson his friendship a Iudas kisse his imbracing the deceiptfull murdering of Ioab his wine is gall his meate venemous poyson He that doubteth let him stand a farre off and view the world for they that approach neare can neither see God nor know themselues and hee shall see with Abraham a filthy smoake ascending from the world as it were from Sodome ready to strangle him if he flie not from it This deceitfull world saith one is like to wretched Laban which promised poore Iacob faire Rahel for his seauen yeeres seruice and in the end deceiued him with bleare-eyed Leah Like vnto Saul that promised Merab to Dauid yet must he be pleased with Micoll or goe without And what false and faire promises doth it daily make of long life health wealth and promotion and yet cuts some off in the midst of their daies and bringeth others to beggerie and disgrace Goe ye if it were possible ouer the whole world behold Countries and view Prouinces looke into Cities and harken at the doores and windowes of priuate houses of Princes Pallaces secret chambers c. and you shall heare and see nothing but lamentable complaints one for that he hath lost another for that he hath not wonne a third for that he is not satisfied ten thousands for that they are deceiued of the world Can there be a greater deceit then to promise renowne and memoriall as the world doth to her followers and yet to forget them as soone as they are dead Who doth remember now one of many thousands that haue beene famous Captaines Souldiers Counsellours Dukes Earles Lords Ladies Kings Queenes and mighty monarches in the world hath not their memory perished with their sound and is not their remembrance as ashes vnder foote section 4 The shewes of the world are glorious in appearance but when they come to the proofe they are in effect as light as feathers when they come to waight they are but smoake when they come to opening they are but rags The propertie of the world is to blinde those that come to her that they cannot know their owne estate euen as a Rauen that first picketh out the eyes of a sheepe to dassell her from seeing what way to escape her tyrannie To be short it hath all the deceits all the dissimulations all the flatteries all the treasons that possibly can be deuised It hateth them that loue it it deceiueth them that trust it it afflicteth them that serue it it forgetteth them most that trauell for it damneth them that follow it It will requite vs as Nabal did Dauid Who is the Sonne of Ishai that I should know him c. This whole world is nothing else but a maine Ocean Sea of infinite troubles and calamities and scarsely cansts thou finde any house in all this land of Egypt free from sighing mourning griefe and sorrowes Wherefore seeing this world is such a thing as it is so vaine so deceitfull so troublesome and so dangerous seeing section 5 it is a professed enemie to Christ and Christians and therefore excommunicate and damned to the pit of Hell since it is an Arke of trauell a Schoole of vanities a seate of deceit a laberinth of horrour since it is nothing else but a barren wildernesse a stonie field a dyrtie swines-sty a tempestuous Sea a groue of thornes a medow full of Scorpions a flourishing garden without fruit a dungeon of Serpents and poysonable Basiliskes Seeing it is a foundation of miseries a vaile of teares a fained fable a delectable fancie Seeing as S. Augustine speaketh the ioy of this world hath nothing else but false delights true asperitie certaine sorrow vncertaine pleasure trauelsome labour fearefull rest grieuous miserie vaine hope of felicitie Since it hath nothing in it saith Chrisostome but teares shame repentance reproach sadnesse negligence labours terrours sicknesse sin and death it selfe Since the worlds repose is full of anguish his securitie without foundation his feares without cause his trauels without fruit his sorrowes without profit his desires without successe his hope without reward his mirth without continuāce his miseries without remedies Seeing these a thousād thousand euils more are in it no one good thing can be had from it who would be deceiued with this vizard or allured with this vanitie hereafter who would be staied from the noble seruice of God by the loue of so fond a trifle as this world is If the world were our proper Element as the water for section 6 Fish we had more reason to be so worldly minded but seeing Christ hath said ye are not of the world for the loue of Christ we must forsake the world as Mathew his gainefull receipt of custome when he was called away It is commodious to the life of the Fish to liue wholly in the water but it is hurtfull to the soule of man to be giuen wholly to the world For to get worldly gaine the body would faine liue but the desire of heauenly glory must make it glad to die Worldly cares make a man very vnresty with himselfe but the comforts of Gods spirit are a Supersede as to them all and giue him his absolute quietus est So that as the holy Ghost filleth the house so grace peace and ioy in the holy Ghost fulfilleth the heart And as he that walketh in the warme Sun neuer desireth the light of the Moone so he that walketh in the way to heauen will neuer so much respect his affaires vpon earth The world rather feedeth then slacketh our appetites as Oyle doth the fire Man laboureth to labour and careth to take care plowing vpon the rockes and rowling euery stone for his gaine and is neuer at rest likened by one to a people in Africa that are at warres with the winde section 7 But all creatures haue their rest from God He is God of all saith Bernard not that all things are of his nature but because of him by him and in him all
holy life heauenly conuersation chearefull death and blessed daparture of the faithfull redeemed by Christ section 1 GOds children now being redeemed from Sinne and Death and truely vnited to Christ by his spirit whom they apprehend by an vnfained faith cannot chuse but shew forth the fruits of this their high calling to the glory of him that hath chosen them And being partakers of the diuine nature they flye from the corruptions of the world and giue all diligence to ioyne vertue with their faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindenesse and with brotherly kindenesse loue and these things being among them and abounding will keepe them from being idle and vnfruitfull The grace of God to them appeareth not in vaine but teacheth them to denie all vngodlinesse and worldly lusts to liue soberly righteously godly in this present world c. and being risen with Christ from the graue of corruption they euery day more and more seeke those things which are aboue setting their affections where Christ sitteth and not on the things that are on the earth for they are dead to the world and their true life is hid with God in Christ therefore they labour to be holy as he that hath called them to his kingdome and glory is holy They daily imploy themselues in reading and meditating of the word of God in prayer and religious exercises of holy deuotion loathing still this world and sinfull life daily growing to be spirituall and heauenly hauing their affections and zeale inflamed with the loue of God They say with Augustine O Lord I delight to heare of thee to talke of thee to write of thee to deuise of thee and in my heart to print whatsoeuer I learne of thee So must wee walke in these holy paths with all Gods Saints Godly deuotion and holy meditations saith one are section 2 as brine and pickle to keepe and preserue this corruptible flesh of ours from the euill scent that breedeth in our nature by originall sinne They are as faggots and firebrands that enkindle and inflame the loue of God in our hearts And as the fish out of the water die forthwith and the drops of raine distilling from the clouds vpon the ground doe quickly dry and drench vp and the fire without fuell is soone extinguished So our faith and loue c. without these sanctified meanes doe suddenly decrease They are as precious perfumes burnt in a polluted house and sick-mans chamber The sweet incense of prayer and the sauory smell of that odorifferous balme of a liuely faith and effectuall knowledge of God purge and clense the corruption of our liues and vncleane desires God hath chosen vs to be his glorious temple in whom hee dwelleth by his spirit therefore wee must haue our hearts purified by faith and clense our selues from all filthinesse and vncleanenesse both of bodies and soules and so adorne the place of his presence and habitation with all vertue and holinesse Hee that destroyeth the Temple of God him will God destroy for the Temple of God is holy which you are Saint Peter willeth vs to gird vp the loynes of our mindes teaching vs that as they which weare long garments when they come in the foule wayes doe take and gird them vp lest they should tag in the way So we whose mindes and affections doe traile as it were vpon the earth trudging through this foule and filthy world must heaue them vp towards heauen lest they should touch the damnable filth of sinne and wickednesse It is in vaine to boast of iustification without the vnfained sanctification of Gods spirit For as there can be no fire section 3 without warmth and light so neither can God by his spirit be in vs of with any of vs but he will also purifie vs from vice and corruption therefore wee must follow peace and holinesse without the which no man can see the Lord. Christ hath crucified our old man and put to death our vice and corruption and shall wee reuiue the same Shall we maintaine our Sauiours enemies and giue life againe to these deadly poysons of our soules If wee will be Burgesses of heauen we must be strangers to the earth Where is the house of our Father but in heauen and there dwelleth our eldest brother Iesus Christ and all our christian friends and kindred Heauen then is our true Country and on earth we are but trauellers section 4 When Moses had conuersed with God but fortie daies vpon the Mount-Oliue at his comming downe his face shined and glistered with heauenly glory So must we beholding in a mirror the glory of our Lord Iesus Christ in his word and Gospell as it were with open face and not with a vaile as did Moses be changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord. If I say but this short time while we liue we be conuersant in heauen by our most holy faith and fruits thereof in all holy affections thoughts words and meditations we shall in the end become heauenly and spirituall both in word and deede As wee see by experience when a country-man hath beene trayned vp sometime in the Court he forgetteth his clownish kinde of life and becommeth a Courtier Let vs therefore leaue the speaches habit fashions and manners of this wicked world wherein we liue and inure our selues with the customes and course of the court of Heauen Let all our thoughts words and communication testifie that in spirit wee are already there section 5 Christ Iesus whom all true Christians haue put on by baptisme as a garment is a most royall robe of grace holinesse and sanctification and shall we be so sloathfull to traile and trample him in the dyrt of filthinesse and sinne or putting him off to put on the vile and spotted garment of the flesh by following the lusts thereof When winter is once ouer the nearer that the Sunne draweth vnto vs the more doth the earth being warmed with the heate thereof fructifie and increase and the longer the daies are the more worke we may doe euen so the nearer the kingdome of heauen doth approach vnto vs by the comming of Iesus Christ the sonne of righteousnesse or the nearer we draw to death the more we should be inflamed in the loue of God and all good workes As the Sunne beames doe come to the earth and yet are in the region from whence they are sent so the mindes and soules of Gods children though conuersant in the earth are truely seated and setled with God in heauen from whence they came Let vaine-glorious worldlings who with the Camaelion section 6 liue by the ayre and therefore are alwaies found gaping and who haue with the Moone but a borrowed light in the world and no true light of
and sell our birth-right and blessing for Esaus broath Men looke vnto pleasures as they are comming to them not as they are going from them when they are wont to leaue trouble and vexation behinde for the sting of the Scorpion is in his tayle Wee sell our hearts to the world for very chaffe and God offers vs millions for them nay to haue our custome hee giues vs an assay of merchandise peace of conscience and ioy of the holy Ghost Who would not traffique with so good a Chapman that meanes no other but to doe vs good indeed and will giue vs heauen when we haue giuen him our hearts who is in heauen As all the waters of the Riuer runne into the Sea so all worldly delights finish their course in the salt brine sea of sorrowes The peaceable dayes of the wicked their immunitie from the rod their dancing to the Instruments of Musicke haue their present period and in a moment they goe downe to hell Such lusty-guts in the prime of their pride and raging madnesse are sure of a Iudgement The gurmandizing Epicure holloweth not so loud whilst hee walloweth in his sensuall life as the Swine in their styes but hee shall howle as much when hee is in hell It was but a dumpish delight that Saul tasted in his mad melancholy moode in the sweet notes of Dauid sung vpon the harpe We must mistrust worldly benefits and baits couering section 8 the hooke for the fish we must not feede so hungerly on then their pleasings are leasings and their friendships fallacies they are as false witnesses against thy soule such as Iezabell suborned to kil innocent Naboth After the manner of Egyptian theeues they imbrace vs that they may slay vs They are as goblets of gold sugered with poyson This deceiptful Dalilah of delights speaketh thee faire but in the end she will bereaue thee of thy strength of thy sight yea of thy selfe These waspes flye about thy eares and make thee musicke but euermore they sting ere they part Sorrow and repentance is the best end of pleasure paine is yet worse but the worst of all is despaire How much better is it for thee to want a little hony then to be swolne vp with a venemous sting Wee must vse them without trust and want them without griefe still thinking while we haue them that we possesse a benefit with a charge If crosses once befall vs the comfort of riches flie from vs like vermine from a house on fire leauing vs to our ruine But he that hath placed his refuge aboue is sure that the ground of his comfort cannot be matched with any earthly sorrow cannot be moued with any worldly thought but is infinitely aboue all hazards Let the world tosse and tumble how it list as euer it doth the rest of Gods children is pitched aloft aboue the spheare of changable mortalitie O the broken reede of humane confidence who euer trusted in friends that euer could trust to himselfe who was euer more discontented then the wealthy Friends may be false wealth cannot but be deceitfull trust thou therefore to that which if thou wouldest cannot faile thee The Elephant being coursed casteth her precious tooth section 9 and so escapeth so must we forsake the flesh and dearest friends the world greatest pleasures to be with Christ If men forsake their own will submit themselues to Gods what can be hard But if we follow our owne appetites and delicate nicenesse reiecting Gods pleasure what can be easie Therefore not ours but thy will be done God hath a care ouer vs our life is in his hand yet scarce the hundreth man hath this fastned in his heart for euery one searcheth a way and meanes to saue his life as though there were no power and care in God And yet in his hands are the issues of death Death seemeth to consume all things but God deliuereth out of that deuouring gulfe whom he pleaseth therefore let vs leaue it at his pleasure either to deliuer vs from present danger or to take vs to a better life A wise man ought alwaies to keepe himselfe from sorrow section 11 and inordinate care for this worldly and transitory life and the things thereof Not to doe as the Doue which breeding her Pidgeons about the house maketh them familiar with the same And albeit they are monthly taken from her and killed yet she returneth to her old nest and breedeth young againe Worldly fauours honours temporall goods c. are but as bals of snow which by the beames of the Sunne dissolue and come to nothing What cost doe wee bestow vpon the haires of our head and beard which when the Barber once clippeth off are despised and swept away A man should neuer trust this foolish life it is but as a fire kindled on the coales which consuming it selfe giueth heate to others God hath made the beasts with their faces towards the earth thither they looke for from thence they haue their life and reliefe but man is erected with two standards with his head face and breast to looke to heauen Let not our hearts therefore differ from our faces haue not thy face aboue and thy heart below but lift vp thy heart as thou professest lest thou lie to the Church before God and his Angels section 12 The pouertie of a Christian doth forerunne the riches which he hath in heauen The loue of the world is an exemption from the life of God the allurements thereof are like the crying of a Lapwing that traineth vs the furthest from that we seeke The pompe of the world is like a blazing Starre that dreadeth the minde by presaging ruine and the temptations to pleasure are like canded worm-wood that coosen the taste and kill the stomacke To be vnknowne in the world we neede not care so be it we be in credit with God for hee that is great with God shall haue quietnesse in earth and blessednesse in heauen When it ceased to be with Sara saith one after the manner of the world she conceiued Isaac the Sonne of promise her exceeding ioy so when our worldly desires once wither heauenly will ensue Let vs therefore care little for the world that careth so little for vs. Let vs crosse saile and turne another way vnto our long home and looked-for abode from a life subiect vnto death to a deathlesse life euen as neare as wee can with a still and peaceable passage Am I contemned of the world it is inough for me that section 13 I am honoured of God of both I cannot the world would loue me more if I were lesse friends with God He is vnworthy of Gods fauour that cannot thinke it happinesse enough without the worlds The diuell playeth the Host in this world and will serue our turne with any delights that flesh desireth but he noteth all in a booke and at the day of reckoning which is our death it will be to our cost if
holy assemblies I was glad when they said vnto me we will goe to the house of the Lord So was it prophecied of the Christian Church that many people should goe and say Come let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lord to the house of the God of Iacob and he will teach vs his wayes and we will walke in his pathes Who are these that flie like a clowd and as Doues to their windowes Noting not onely the greatnesse of the number but diligence and zeale of such as should come to Christ and receiue his doctrine And Christ said That from the time of Iohn Baptist hitherto the Kingdome of Heauen suffereth violence and the violent take it by force Thus the zeale of Gods house should eate vs vp Which serueth also to confute and reproue all such as vse 2 are backward and carelesse in this necessary dutie being idle and vaine in their excuses or reasons to hinder their zeale and loue to the world any feare the least danger and worldly businesse doth put them off there is a Lyon in the way they shall be had in derision or called into question for their forwardnesse or at least be censured for hypocrites Some haue their Oxen to prooue their Farme to see their Wife to marry all these yet are inuited to come to the Feast though vnworthy of the same therefore God will fill his house with any others then with such euen those that sit in the high way and vnder hedges the most basest and vilest of men shall enter before them and be saued euen whores and Harlots shall sooner be receaued then those that seeme children of thy kingdome God will raise vp to Abraham sonnes of stones rather then these viperous serpents shall haue the name of his seed Againe many Atheists say It is in vaine to serue vse 3 God and what profit is it that wee haue kept his commaundements and that wee haue walked humbly before the Lord of hostes Therefore they count the proud blessed euen they that worke wickednesse are set vp and they that tempt God yea they are deliuered But the Lord hearkened and heard it and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and thought vpon his name They sayd also vnto God Depart from vs for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Who is the Almighty that wee should serue him And what profit should we haue if we should pray vnto him But let the counsell of the wicked be farre from me saith Iob who esteemed of the words of his mouth more then his appoynted foode And as for those and such like Atheists God will diuide their liues in his wrath They shall be as stubble before the winde and as the chaffe that the storme carryeth away So euery one derided Ieremie and daily scorned his ministery The word of the Lord was made a reproach daily they mocked him All his familiers watched for his halting saying It may be he is deceiued but his persecutors shall be ouerthrowne and not preuaile and their euerlasting shame shall neuer be forgotten So they talked of Ezekiell in derision by the wals in the dores of their houses Come I pray you heare what is the word that commeth from the Lord So they come and sit before him and heard his words but they will not doe them for with their mouths they make ieasts and thou art vnto them a ieasting song But then shall they know that I am the Lord when I haue layd the Land desolate and waste because of all their abhominations that they haue committed And when this commeth to passe for loe it will come then shall they know that a Prophet hath beene among them But Pearles are not to bee cast among Swine And such Gaderens are more worthy and meete to haue the company of diuels then the presence of Christ and preaching of his word I had perished in my afflictions except they law had beene doctrine 4 my delight We may learne also from hence that the best men and excellentest Creatures are not able of themselues to stand and continue vpright in their tryals and temptations without GODS speciall prouidence and prouision in the meanes Dauid a man after Gods owne heart possessed with his spirit and hauing a large portion of his grace was yet ready to perish in his afflictions had he not beene supported Nay Adam himselfe in his innocency created most excellently according to Gods owne image had no sooner entred into Eden that Garden of pleasures and Paradise of happinesse but sodainely forfeited his estate by Sathans temptations Who can but admire the fearefull fall of Salomon wanting neither wisedome nor wealth nor any meanes else as one would haue thought that God or the world could affoord him yet see whither he was falling euen to the gates and gulfe of hell from whence he had neuer returned had not the hand and powerfull arme of God retyred and reclaimed him by an extraordinary conuersion and repentance But come wee from Men to Angels when GOD had once left them to themselues though their condition with other Creatures was incomparable could not yet keepe their standing and estate but fell from Heauen to Hell and so of heauenly Angels became infernall Diuels But to come to the tryall of afflictions which is more proper to this place how soone are the best men crushed and broken with the burden thereof and who is able to beare off the blowes of Gods displeasure Iob was valiant in his sufferings and very patient for a time Yet marke how wonderfully he is distempered in his passions and taketh on Cursing the day and night of his conception and birth with the Mid-wife and Messengers yea all the Instruments helpes and meanes of his comming into the world Why dyed I not in the birth Why perished I not when I came out of the wombe Why did the knees preuent mee And why did I sucke the brests Why was I not hid as an vntimely birth either as infants that haue not seene the light For my sighing commeth before I eate and my roarings are powred out like water The arrowes of the Almightie are in me the venim whereof doth drinke vp my spirit and the terrours of god fight against me What power haue I that I should endure Is my strength the strength of stones or is my flesh of brasse Am I a sea or a Whale-fish that thou keepest mee in ward Remember I pray thee that thou hast made mee as the clay and wilt thou bring mee to dust againe Who can expresse Dauids distractions and fearefull convulsions as it were both in body and soule able to haue diuided both of them from God had not his grace preuented him and his powerfull spirit preserued him Euery where in the Psalmes we may see the