A SERMON PREACHED at
Winsor before the Kings Maiestie, the
11. day of Septem. 1604.
MATTH. 4.4.
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
CHRIST our SAVIOVR came into the world, to dissolue the workes of the Deuill. Now how throughly hee would afterward destroy the deuill, and all his workes, he gaue a cast, as it were, in this his first encounter. Wherein we
[Page 2] may note, what great difference there is betweene the first Adam, and the second. The first Adam was in Paradise, a place of all abundance and pleasure: the second Adam in the desart, a place of all scarcitie and want. The first was full, and so the lesse needed to eate the forbidden fruit: the second fasting, and so the easilier drawne to make himselfe meate. Yet the first, though he were in Paradise, and full, when his wife intised him to eate the apple, tooke it, and ate it: but the second, though he were in the desart, and fasting a long time, when the deuill enticed him to turne stones into bread, would not yeeld to him, but said,
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Howbeit as Christ herein was contrary to Adam; so he agreeth very well with Iob. Holy Iob was vpon a dunghill: Christ was in the desart. Iob had fasted seauen dayes, and seauen nights: Christ had fasted fortie dayes and fortie nights. Iob when his wife enticed him to curse God and die, would not▪ but said; Thou speakest like a
[...]
[Page 3] woman: Christ when the tempter enticed him, not to curse God and die, but to distrust God rather then he should die, would not, but said,
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euerie word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Where, before we goe any further, it will not be amisse to assoyle one question, Why our blessed Sauiour at his mothers request turned water into wine, and yet at the deuills request would not turne stones into bread? But the answer is easie enough. This beginning of miracles, saies S. Iohn, did Iesus at Cana in Galile, and his Disciples beleeued in him. Two ends therefore did hee propound to himselfe in working that miracle. The encrease of his owne glorie, and his disciples faith. Now here, neither of these two ends could be attained: For how should hee not haue disgraced his glorie, if hee had shewed any vaine glorie? If thou bee the Sonne of God, sayes the Tempter, commaund that these stones bee made bread. So that his temptation tended onely to this end, to make the Sonne of God vain-glorious. Againe, how could
[Page 4] we haue beene perswaded by him, if he had beene perswaded by the deuill? For he might haue seemed to haue done this miracle not onely by the deuils appointment, but by his power. The summe is this therefore, To conuert any poore soule vnto God, or to make a sonne of God, he would haue done it; vaine-gloriously to shew himselfe the Sonne of God, he would not doe it; but said,
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
The word
man is very materiall: As if hee should haue said Any ordinarie man liueth not by the bread; but by the power, & strength, and as the Prophet calleth it, the staffe of bread, which God giueth it. Now if he that is but a bare man, liueth rather by the blessing of God, then by the bread; much lesse need I presume vpon vnlawfull meanes, that am both man and God. Againe, wee must obserue, that by
The word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God, we are not to vnderstand the written will or word of God, but the secret counsell and decree of God, in preseruing
[Page 5] and sustaining his creatures: For example, if the word haue gone out of Gods mouth, and if God haue set it downe, and said it, that I shall liue as well without bread, as with bread, so it shall be. Or if God in his prouidence haue prouided, that a stone shal nourish mee as well as bread, then I shall not need to distrust his goodnesse, or to vse vnlawfull meanes for my releife. For,
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
There are two places of Scripture, which are fit Commentaries vpon this text.
cap 9. v. 2
[...]. The first is written in Ecclesiastes: I returned, saies Salomon, and I sawe vnder the sunne, that the race is not to the swift: not the battell to the strong: nor yet bread to the wise: nor also riches to men of vnderstanding: neither yet fauour to men of knowledge.
First, saith the Preacher, The race is not to the swift.
2. Sam. 2.1
[...].
Asahel was a
[...] swift of foot as a roebuck, yet
Abner met with him, smote him vnder the fift rib, & slew him. So that the swiftest that is, may sometimes bee ouertaken. It is not in
[Page 6] him that willeth,
Rom 9.16. or in him that runneth, but in God that sheweth mercie,
Nec currentis, Nec volentis, saies S.
Paul: but a noble man giues it for his word,
Nec vol
[...]tis, nec volantis: It is not in him that willeth, or in him that runneth, yea though hee can runne as fast as a bird can flie; but in God that sheweth mercie. Therefore man getteth not the race by swiftnes onely, but by the mercy of God:
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Secondly, saith the Preacher, The battell is not to the strong.
Golia
[...]
[...] a mightie strong gyant: His height w
[...] sixe cubits,
1. Sam. 17.5. and a hand breadth: he had an helmet of brasse vpon his head, and a brigandine vpon his bodie: and the weight of his brigandine was fiue thousand shekels of brasse. He had bootes of brasse vpon his legs: & a sheild of brasse vpon his shoulders. And the shaft of his speare was like a weauers beame: and his speare head weighed sixe hundred shekels of yron: & one bearing a she
[...] went before him. Wherefore
[...] you is all this furniture so particularly
[Page 7] set downe? Wherefore, say you? Many to shew, how great strength, the Lord if the word haue proceeded out of his mouth, can ouercome with weakenesse. For so little Dauid confesseth;
ver. 45. Thou commest to me, saith he, with a sword, and with a speare, and with a sheild, but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of hosts. This name of the Lord of hosts, this mightie word proceeding out of Gods mouth, stroke the stroke. Euen as holy Dauid humbly confesseth, saying, We got not the victorie by our owne sword,
Psal. 4
[...].9. neither was it our arme that did saue vs: but thy right hand, O Lord, and thine arme, and the light of thy countenance, because thou hadst a fauour vnto vs. So that man getteth not the battel by strength onely, but by the fauour of God:
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Thirdly, saith the Preacher, Bread is not to the wise. One would thinke him but a simple wise man, that cannot by his wisdome prouide himselfe bread, that is, sufficient maintenance for his estate. Yet thus is falleth out oftentimes.
[Page 8] The prodigall child was wise enough:
Luk. 15.17. Beeing but the yonger brother, he handled the matter so, as that he got of his father an equall portion of goods with the elder brother. But what came all his wisdome to in the ende? Forsooth as length he was driuen to such shifts, that for want of bread he was faine to eate husks with the hogges. And then hee said, How many hired seruants in my fathers house haue bread enough, and I starue here for hunger? Thus falleth it out many times with thē, that are wise to follow their owne pleasures, and not to serue God. But with the seruants of God it is not so. Therefore saith the Princely Prophet, I haue beene young, and now am old: yet did I neuer see the righteous forsaken, nor their seed begging their bread. So that man getteth not bread by wisdome onely, and when he hath gotten bread,
Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Fourthly, saith the preacher, Riches are not to men of vnderstanding. That rich man in the Gospell wanted
[...] greatly any vnderstanding. Wh
[...]
[...]
[Page 9] had so much riches,
Luk. 12.10. that he could not tell what to doe with them, he resolued to pull downe his olde barnes which were too little, and to build bigger. But what saide the answer of God? Thou foole, this night shal they take away thy foule from thee, and then, whose shall thy goods be? Wherfore be that thoght himselfe of great vnderstanding before, is here declared to bee foole, and a poore foole also, hauing not so much as his soule left to helpe him. The losse whereof can not be recompenced and counteruailed with winning the whole world. A mans life then doth not consist in the aboundance of those things which he possesseth. But the louing kindnesse of the Lord is better then riches,
Psal. 63.4. Prou. 10. better then liuing, yea better then life it selfe. For in God onely we liue: And only the blessing of God maketh a man rich. Whereupon we may conclude, that man getteth not riches by vnderstanding only, but by the blessing of God: Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Lastly, saith the Preacher, Fauour is
[Page 10] not to men of knowledge. It seemeth that a man of knowledge and learning should obtaine fauour and acceptance, wheresoeuer he becommeth. But it is not so. Oftentimes, either he getteth none, or else he looseth that which he hath gotten.
Haman a man of great knowledge,
Ester 7.10. and authoritie, and fauour with his Prince. Yet because he abused this fauour to the oppression of Gods people, and of true religion, therefore he lost it. And that mischeife which he imagined against others, lighted vpon his owne pate. Indeede when God hath appointed any one to be a notable instrument of his glorie, either in Church or Common-wealth, then sodainly the Lord giueth him extraordinary fauour. So he gaue Ioseph fauour with King Pharao: so he gauē Mardocheus fauour with King Assuerus. For fauour and promotion commeth neither from the East, nor from the West, nor from the North, nor from the South, but God i
[...] is which setteth vp one, and casteth downe an other. He, as the blessed Virgin singeth in her Magnificat,
Luk 52. casteth downe the mighty from their se
[...]s, and
[Page 11] exalteth the humble and meeke. Wherfore man getteth not fauour by knowledge onely, but by the fauour of God. Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
This doctrine teacheth vs, that if we haue gotten the race, gotten the battel, gotten bread, gotten riches, gotten fauour, we should not ascribe these things to our owne sacrifices, to our owne strength, to our owne wisedome, to our own vnderstanding, to our own knowledge, but to the grace of God, and the blessed word proceeding out of his mouth. Thus the Prophet exhorteth, saying, Let not he wise man glorie in his wisedome, nor the strong man in his strength, but let him that gloried glory in this, that he knoweth the Lord. Now no man knoweth the Lord, but hee which knoweth that all good successe he hath in any thing, commeth of the Lord. And thus much for the first place of Scripture, which is a commentarie vpon this text. Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
[Page 12]The second place of Scripture is written in the Prophet
Hagge.
cap. 1.6. Ye haue so wen much, and bring in little: ye eat, but you haue not enough: ye drinke, but ye are not filled: ye cloth you, but ye are not warme: and he that earneth wages, putteth the wages into a broken bagge.
First, saith the Prophet, Ye haue sowed much, and bring in little. Almightie God for the sin of the people makes many times the heauens brasse, and the earth iron. So that neither the heauens droppeth downe seasonable showres, neither doth the earth bring forth her encrease. When one came to a
[...]e
[...]e of twenty measures, there were but te
[...], saith this our Prophet:
cap. 2.17. when one came to the winepresse for to drawe out fifty vessels out of the presse, there were but twentie. This is to sowe much, and bring in little, to look for twenty measures, and finde but tenne: to looke for fiftie vessels, and find but twentie. On the other side, holy Isaac sowing in the land of King Abimeleck,
Gen. 26.12. gained euery yeare an hundred fold: so mightily sait
[...] the Scripture, did the Lord blesse
[...]. For except the Lord build the
[...],
[Page 13] they labour but in vaine that build it: and except the Lord till the field and sow the seede, they labour but in vaine that sowe it. Paul planteth, Apollo watereth, but God giueth the encrease: which is true not onely in the spirituall watering of the word, but also in naturall planting and sowing seede. So that man bringeth not much in by sowing onely, but by the encrease which God giueth. Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Secondly, saith the Prophet, Ye eate, but ye haue not inough. Many there are which want for no eating▪ but like that rich glutton fare deliciously euery day: yet it is smally seene by them. But as those seuen leane kine hauing deuoured the seuen far,
Gen. 42.21. were neuer a whit the fuller; so these. Wheras holy
Daniel hauing nothing to eat but poore pulse, nothing to drinke but cold water, looked more cheerefully and beautifully, then any of the children which did eate of the portion of the kings meate. And that the Eunuch saw well enough,
Dan. 1.15. and confessed at the tenne daies ends. Therefore a
[Page 14] little thing which the righteous inioyeth,
Psal. 37.
[...]6. is better then great riches of the wicked.
Prou. 15.16. Better is a little with the feare of the Lord, then great treasure & trouble therewith.
Prou. 17.1. Better is a dry morsell if peace be with it, then a house full of sacrifices with si
[...]ife. Better is a dinner of greene hearbes where loue is,
Prou. 15.17. then a stawled oxe and hatred therewith. In conclusion then, Man hath not enough by eating onely, but by the peace and loue of God. Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Thirdly saith the Prophet, Ye drink▪ but ye are not filled. Many consume, & as we say, drinke down their whole patrimony. Like the horseleach they euer say, Giue, giue: like the man in the Gospell, that had the dropsie, they drinke still, and the more they drinke the more they list. Committing in the meane season two sinnes, forsaking God the fountaine of liuing waters, & digging to themselues pittes that can hold no waters.
Ier. 2.13. On the other side,
Elias, when as the Angel brought him a cake ba
[...] on the harth, and a pot of water, was
[Page 15] so fully satisfied with these, that hee went in the strength of this meate and drinke forty daies vnto Oreb the mount of God.
1. Reg. 19.6. Could such a small pittance of bread and water of it selfe sustaine him so long? No marrie. What was the matter then? The word that proceeded out of Gods mouth had appointed so, that one cruse of water should suffice him all that time. Whereby we see, that man is not filled with drinking onely: Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Fourthly,
Commentar. in c. Reg. 1. saith the Prophet, Yea cloth you, but you are not warme.
Peter Martyr sheweth, that clothing doth keepe the bodie warme two waies: By keeping in the naturall heat of the bodie: and by keeping out the accidentall cold of the ayre. Now though this be the propertie of cloathing, yet God as it pleaseth him, can suspend the effect of it. Whereupon he saith, I will take a way my corne in the time thereof, and my wine in the season thereof,
Hos. 2.9. and I wil deliuer my wooll and my flaxe. Signifying, that euen when the corne is
[Page 16] come to the ripenesse, and the wine now readie to be drunken, God will depriue them of it. But especially we must marke that he sai's, I will deli
[...]es my wooll and my flaxe:
Liberabo lanam meam, &c linum meum. whereby
[...] teacheth vs, that God hath as it we
[...] if I may so say, bound all his creat
[...] prentises to vs, to preserue vs, and serue vs, if we serue him. But in case we serue him not, then the creatures are deliuered, and are bound no more to serue vs. The wool and the flax contrary to their nature will not serue our turne, if we contrarie to grace rebell against God. Whereas Iohn Baptist hauing a garment of Camels haire, and a girdle of leather about his loynes, was well enough. This leather serued him to as good vse as flaxe, and the Camels haire kept him as warme as wool. Man therefore is not warme by cloathing onely, but by vertue of God annexed to the clothing. Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Lastly, saith the Prophet, Hee that earneth wages, putteth the wages
[...] a broken bagge. We see in the world
[Page 17] many men haue great fees, great offices, great reuenues, and yet can scarse keep themselues out of debt. Other some, haue but very small wages, and yet
[...]aintaine themselues well inough, and
[...]elpe their poore friends also. Onely the word that proceedeth out of Gods mouth, makes this difference. As we may see in Iudas. Who indeed earned wages, but seeing it was the wages of vnrighteousnesse, therefore it run out of the bagge as fast as it was put in: For first, when he had it he could not hold it in his hands, but brought it backe againe, saying,
Matth. 27.5. I haue sinned in betraying innocent blood. Then himselfe went and made away himselfe, and that which is feareful but once to name or mention, all his bowells gushed out: There is a broken bagge. But the Patriarch Iacob, earning wages verie hardly, to wit, seruing fourteene yeares for his vncles daughters, and sixe years for his lambs, in all twentie yeares, in the ende filled his bagge full. And though Laban changed his wages ten times, yet he could not one time change that blessing of god, which was alwaies
[Page 16]
[...]
[Page 17]
[...]
[Page 18] vpon him. And though he allotted his nephew only the spotted lambs, which commonly were verie fewe to his wages, yet the word proceeding so out of Gods mouth, this prooued an infinite gaine vnto him. Wherupon the blessed Patriarke humbleth himselfe in tru
[...] humility and thankfulnesse to God,
Gen. 3
[...].10. and saith, O Lord, I am not worthie of the least of al thy mercies: for with my staffe came I ouer this Iordan, but now doe I returne with two troups. O that we had such good soules, such thankefull hearts in vs, as that euery one of vs would in like sort confesse and acknowledge his owne vnworthinesse, and the wonderfull worth and wealth of Gods mercie. O Lord, sai's he, I am not worthy of the least, or I am lesser then the least of all thy mercies. He makes no mention of his owne paines and trauailes, though they had beene very great in that long seruice, but onely of the mercies of God. These were the only cause that his bagge was so full. Wherefore man filleth not his bagge by earning wages onely, but by the mercies of God, Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery
[Page 19] word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
This teacheth vs, that whether we sow, or eate, or drinke, or cloath vs, or earne wages, we must do all to the glo
[...]ie of God. And all we doe to the glorie of God, when we referre the glory of all we doe to God. Not sacrificing to our own yarne, as the Prophet speaketh, or kissing our owne hand: but kissing the sonne, and offring vp to him only the sacrifices of praise and thanksgiuing at whose hand we receiue all good things. For it is not our painfull sowing that giues vs a plentifull crop: not our eating that feedeth vs: not our drinking that satisfieth vs: not our clothes that warme vs: not our earning wages that filleth our bagge: but the good word that proceedeth out of Gods mouth, which blessed all these things vnto vs. Therefore as we must not begin any of these without gracesaying, so must we not end any of them without thanksgiuing. And thus much for the second place of Scripture, which is a commentarie vpon the text: Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery
[Page 20] word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
To make good vse then of all that hath beene spoken, I shall desire you to obserue foure points. First, that God can worke great matters with small meanes. Thus saith our Lord; When I brake the fiue lo
[...]es among fiue thousands,
Mat.
[...].
[...]. how many baskets full of broken meate tooke ye vp? they said vnto him, Twelue. And when I brake seauen among fowre thousand, how many baskets of the leauings of broken meate tooke ye vp? and they said, Seauen. Certainely there is no reason in the world that seauen loaues should satisfie fowre thousand; and much lesse, that fiue loaues fiue thousand. But Christ hauing giuen thanks and blessed the bread, did that by the might of the word proceeding out of his mouth, which by the naturall power and condition of the bread could neuer haue beene done. Therefore also he repeateth it, and questioneth with his disciples about it. That by their confession and report, all the Church afterwards might bele
[...]e, that God can worke great matters with
[Page 21] small means, & that Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Secondly, that God can work strong matters with weake meanes. What a strong violent matter is it, to pull the soule of any one sinner out of the bottome of hell, and out of the
[...]awes of destruction? yet this God doth. But how doth he it? This strong matter, howe doth he worke it? By the weakest means that may be. Wee haue this treasure, saith the Apostle,
2. Cor 6.7. in earthen vessells, that the excellēcy of that power might be of God, and not of vs. O marueilous words, That the excellencie of that power might be of God, and not of vs. For if Angels were sent to preach vnto vs, it might be thought, that the conuersion of sinners consisted in the excellencie of the Angels ministrie, not in the power of Gods word. Now simple and sinnefull men, such as our selues are, no better then earthen vessels, bringing such a treasure vnto vs, the excellencie of this worke must needs be wholly ascribed to God. And as it is in spirituall foode, so it is in corporall. It is not the
[Page 22] teacher, but the doctrine taught: or ra
[...]her not the doctrine
[...]ar
[...]ly taught neither, but the diuine operation of Gods spirit working with the word which cō uerteth the soule. And so it is not the bread onely, but the blessing of Gods grace vpon the bread which sustaineth our life. Thus God can worke strong matters with weake meanes; and Ma
[...] liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Thirdly, that God can worke some matters with no meanes. When King Asa sawe himselfe ouer pressed with the multitude of his enemies,
2. Chr. 14.11. he praied th
[...] to God: O Lord, it is all one with thee, to saue with many, or with no power. If he had said with many, or with a small power, it would haue beene plaine. But with many, or with no power, is verie wonderfull. Or rather it is no wonder at all, seeing it is spoken of God, with whom it is a very ordinary matter to saue, not onely as well with a small or a weak power, as with a great or a strong power, but also as well with no power, as with some power. It is a good carpenter,
[Page 23] who hauing crooked and rough timber put into his hands, can hew it and make it fit for the building. Onely the creator of all it is which can worke, hauing no matter at all to worke vpon. The ordinarie meanes for plants and hearbs to growe by, is raine: Yet God prouided for Adam plants and herbes before euer it had rained.
Gen. 2.5. The vsuall meanes for light is the sunne. Howbeit God created light before he made the sunne.
Gen. 1.3. Light the first day, the sunne the fourth day. We see then that God is tied to no meanes. God can saue with no power, as wel as with some power: God can giue vs hearbs with no raine, as wel as with some raine: God can giue vs light without any sunne, as well as with the sunne: God can feede vs if it please him, as well with no bread as with bread. Therefore God can worke some matters with no meanes; and so Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Fourthly, that God can worke othersome matters with contrarie meanes. He can not onely shewe vs light without
[Page 24] any sunne,
1. Cor. 4.6. but also bring light out of darkenesse. So our Sauiour, when hee went about to cure him that was borne blind,
Iohn 9.6. tempered spittle and clay, and put it vpon his eyes. This plaister seemes more likely to put out his eyes which sees, then to cure his eyes who is blind. Yet this is the power of the word proceeding out of Gods mouth. So the Prophet Elizeus,
2. Reg. 4.40. when colloquintida was put into the pot, by casting in a little meale into it, made of tanke poyson a wholesome broth. So, when the Israelites wanted bread in the desert, God sent them Manna from heauen; & Moses said vnto them, This is the bread which the Lord hath giuen you to eate.
Exod. 16.25. Many things here were contrary to nature. One thing especially, that the dew which made the manna, fell in the morning, whereas other dew vseth to fall in the euening, and ascend in the morning. Therefore Moses putteth Israel in mind of this strange miracle afterward;
Deut. 8.3. God made thee hungry, and fed thee with Mann
[...], saith hee, which thou knewest not, neither did thy fathers knowe it, that hee might teach them that man liueth
[Page 25] not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord, doth a man liue. Christs answer then to the tempter is, as if hee should haue said; I want now bread in the desart, as long agoe the Israelites wanted it. But God by his word prouided for them. Therefore I need not incroach vpon vnlawfull meanes, but depending still vpon his prouidence, I shal neuer want. For God can worke great matters with small meanes, strong matters with weake meanes, many matters with no meanes, and some matters with contrary means. So that Man liueth not by bread onely, but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
And yet this is no doctrine of idlenesse and securitie neither. As we must not by diffidence or distrust in God, vse vnlawfull meanes: so we must not by presuming vpon God, neglect lawfull meanes. That we be not too distrustfull we are sent to the lillie; and yet that we be not too negligent, we are sent to the ant. S.
Paul knewe right well,
Act.
[...]7. neither he nor any of his company should bee cast away in that shipwracke; yet for
[Page 26] all that, he did not lay him downe vpon a pillowe and sleepe, but hee vsed all good meanes for the safety of the companie. Hee cast out the wheat and the tackling of the ship: he loosed the r
[...]dder bands, and hoysed vp the main saile. And when the ship was splitted, he perswaded some by bords, and other by other peices of the ship to swim safe to land.
Then was a fire in Winsor towne. The more to blame were they yesternight, which when they might
[...]e done good, stood by still and looked on. As though it were a disparagement, or rather it were not a very honourable part for any to help in a common daunger? Or as though the fire which was kindled by negligence, should haue beene extinguished with negligence also. Yea, rather the Lord did by this fire, chastise the negligence of some, that he might stirre vp the diligence of all. No lesse blame worthie was the whole towne, which standing so neere the royal presence of the Kings Maiestie and the Queenes Maiestie, yet was vtterly vnprouided of all helpe in this case. No buckets, no hookes, no ladders, no axes, could be gotten;
[...]o
[Page 27] carpenters could bee heard of, which might haue done most good at such a time. So that if the mightie and mercifull word proceeding out of the mouth of God, had not helped in necessity and time of neede, suddainly caulming and stilling the wind, euen at that very instant, which had beene busie all the day before, no question it had growne to a farre greater dammage and danger. But I am ill aduised to meddle with these things. I make no doubt but order will be taken, though I hold my peace, that hereafter the towne for all such casualties be better prouided. Therefo
[...]e here I ende. God for his mercie sake grant, that neither by too much presuming confidence we may neglect the lawfull meanes; nor yet by too much distrusting diffidence wee may vse vnlawfull meanes; but that depending vpon thy prouidence, O Lord, we may diligently follow the workes of our calling, and so continually receiue a blessing from thee thorough Iesus Christ: to whome with the Father, and the holy Ghost, be all praise, and glorie, now and euermore. Amen.
FINIS.
A SERMON PREACHED at
Hampton Court before the Kings Maiestie, the
23. day of Septem. 1604.
2. COR. 4.17.
The momentarie lightnes of our affliction, worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall waight of glory.
2. Pet. 3.
SAint
Peter foretelleth that some should peruer
[...] S. Pauls Epistles to their owne d
[...]na
[...]ion. Such are they of the Church of Rome. Among other places of S. Pauls Epistles, they doe notably peruert this. For out of
[Page 29] that the Apostle saith, Affliction worketh glory; they endeauour to conclude, that the patience of the Saints, and other their vertues, merit euerlasting life. But first the word, To worke, is very generall, and signifieth not onely causes properly so named, but also any antecedent, though it be but an adiunct, or an accident. Againe, the Apostles words elsewhere are these:
Rom. 8.18. I suppose that the afflictions of this life, are not worthy of the glorie which shall be reuealed. Wherefore they might haue done well, to choose some indifferent construction which would haue reconciled both these places together, rather then to embrace such an exposition of the one, as doth iustle, nay quite thrust out the other. S. Bernard doth thus, saying,
Via regni. non causa regnandi. that good workes, are not any cause meriting a kingdome, but onely a way directing to a kingdome. For seeing they are no cause, neither haue any correspondence, or proportion in them in respect of the glorie to come, therefore the Apostle saith, The afflictions of this life are not worthy the glory that will be reuealed. And yet againe, because
[Page 30] the possessing of our soules in patience, is a way directly tending to the saluation both of our soules & bodies, therefore hee saith, The momentarie lightnesse of our afflicton worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall weight of glory. To which our Sauiour subscribeth in these words, The gate is straight, and the way narrowe which leadeth vnto life. This straightnesse therefore and narrownesse of affliction, is not a cause which deserueth, but a gate or a way which leadeth vnto l
[...]e. So in an other place we haue, that by many tribulations wee must enter into the kingdome of heauen. Not by many tribulations, no nor by any tribulations, we must merit heauen, but by many tribulations as by a gate or way, wee must enter into the kingdome of heauen. And in this sense S. Paul sayes, The momentarie lightnesse of our affliction worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall waight of glory.
But now though this sentence doe not confirme any Popish error, yet it doth excellently comfort any distressed and afflicted. For it exhorteth vs to be
[Page 31] patient in all afflictions, and that for foure reasons. The two first drawn from the nature of our affliction, the two last from the nature of that glorie which shal be the reward of our affliction. The first is, because our affliction is momentarie: the second because our affliction is light: the third, because our glorie shall be eternall, yea surpassing eternal: the fourth, because our glorie shall bee weightie, exceeding waightie. And therefore hee saith, The momentarie lightnesse of our affliction, worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall waight of glorie.
I need not here make any Apologie for my selfe, not yet render any reason, why I discourse of pouertie, before the rich; of affliction, before those that are euery way flourishing.
Mv L. Almner, Bishop Wa
[...]on vpon these words; The poore man
[...] dayes are alwayes euill. Prou. 1
[...].15. This point was cleared so reuerently and so learnedly of late in this high presence, that I am sure it must needes bee yet well remembred. Certainely though ye haue not beene afflicted heretofore, neither are at this time, yet beeing men, yet may be hereafter. Wherefore it is not amisse, that we all learne the doctrine
[Page 32] of patience in tribulation. Partly that we may be more thankefull to God, if hitherto we haue not beene afflicted and plagued like other men: Partly that if any time of affliction happen hereafter, as any greife, any losse, any sicknes, or such like, we may be prepared aforehand, and as it were armed with patience to endure it. For the momentarie lightnesse of our affliction, worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall w
[...]ight of glory.
First, our affliction is momentary
[...] sai's Eucherius.
Nihil est magnum re, quod breue tempore Nothing is of great
[...]mportance, which is of small cōtinuance. Now our whole life is very short. What is our life,
Iam 4.14. saith S. Iames? It is a vapour which for a time appeareth, but anon after vanisheth away. Therefore saith the Prophet,
Psal. 56.
[...]. O Lord, thou knowest my life, as it is in the Septuagint: but as it is in the Hebrewe, Thou knowest my flitting. And therefore seeing our whole life is but a vapour, or a flitting, certenly our afflictions which are all comprised within the compasse of this life, must needes be much more momentary. All affliction, as the Apostle writeth,
Heb. 12.11.
[Page 33] for the presēt seemeth not to be ioyous but greiuous; but afterward it bringeth forth the quiet fruits of righteousnesse to them that are exercised thereby. He saith not that affliction is, but that it seemeth to be. So that affliction seemeth to be one thing, and is indeede an other. It seemeth to be greiuous, it is indeed ioyous: it seemeth to be troublesome, it is indeede comfortable: it seemeth to be long and tedious, it is indeede momentary and short. Euen as God himselfe determineth this matter; for a moment,
Esa 54 8. saith he, in mine anger, for a little season haue I hid my face from you; but in euerlasting mercy will I turne vnto you againe. That we should not doubt of this doctrine, he redoubles the promise, for a moment, for little season.
Psal. 30.6. Therefore the Princely Prophet say's plainly. Heauines may endure for a night, but ioy commeth in the morning. As the two Angels then that came to Lot log'd with him for a night,
Gen. 19.2. and when they had dispatch't their errand, went away in the morning: so afflictions, which are the Angels or the messengers of God. God
[Page 34] sendeth afflictions to doe an errand vnto vs, to tell vs, we forget God, we forget our selues, wee are too proud, too selfe conceited, and such like: and when they haue said as they were bod, then presently they are gone. Whereupon we read, that the spirit of life returned into the two witnesses which had beene slaine by the beast,
Reu 11.11. after three dayes and an halfe. Why after three dayes and an halfe? To teach vs, that affliction and persecution may perhaps tyranize ouer vs three dayes and an halfe, but they shall not fill vp the whole sowre dayes.
Matth. 24.22. For the elects sake those dayes shall be shortened. Agreeable to that which Iohn Baptist begunne his preaching with, Repent; for the kingdome of heauen is at hand.
Matth. 3.2. Repent, that's a matter of mortification and
[...]ffliction to the flesh. For the kingdom of heauen is at hand, That's a matter of comfort and ioy.
Reuel. 22.
[...]2. So our Sauiour, Behold I come quickly, and my reward with mee: if Christ will come quickly, then affliction will be gone quickly. Thus momentarie is our affliction: For our whole life is short, much more then the afflictions
[Page 35] of this life: affliction is greiuous but for the present: heauines endureth but for a night: persecution lasteth but three dayes and an halfe: the kingdome of heauen is at hand, therefore deliuerance is at hand: Christ will o
[...] the quickly, therefore affliction will be gone quickly. Wherefore seeing our affliction is so momentarie, let vs be patient in affliction: For the momentarie lightnesse of our affliction worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall waight of glory.
Secondly, our affliction is light. Almighty God setting forth his owne excellencie, saith, Who hath measured the heauens with his span,
Esa. 40.12. and the waters with his fist? By the heauens are meant the diuine blessings of God; by the waters, afflictions & woes. Those he measureth with his span, which is a longer measure: these with his fist, which is a shorter measure. So that the Lord is as I may say a rhetoritian, verie plentifull and copious in his blessings; he measureth them with his spanne: But he is a logitian, more short and sparing in his afflictions,
Psal. 75.9. these he measureth with his fist. For in the hand of the Lord there
[Page 36] is a cuppe, the wine is redde, and full mixt, he powreth out of the same: as for the dregges thereof, the wicked of the earth doe drinke them vp. First, we drinke not this cup onely full of redde wine, that
[...] of the wrath and indignation of God, but mixt with diners comforts otherwise. Then besides we meddle not with the dregges. Vpon the vngodly he shal raigne snares, fire, & brimstone, storme, and tempest, this shall be their portion to drinke. We drinke only a little of the vppermost. And therefore he saith, God powreth out of the same. That after we haue suffered a
[...] dicum, as S. Peter speaketh,
1. Pet. 5.20. we may then enter into glorie. According to King Dauid his prayer, Comfort vs, O Lord, now for the time wherein thou hast afflicted vs, and for the daies wherin we haue seene euill. Hierome noteth, that hauing first said wherein thou hast afflicted vs; he expounds it after by these words,
Psal. 90.15. wherein we haue seene euill. Therefore that which
Acteon wished,
Velle
[...]que videre, non etia
[...] sentire. Ouid. that he might see only his
[...]ounds hunting, and not feele it, that happeneth indeede to vs. Our affliction is, not
[Page 37] a feeling of euill neare at hand, but onely a feeling of it a farre off. A
[...] the Persian Kings children in their minority, if they had committed a fault, were not corrected themselues, but onely sawe some of meaner birth chastised before them: so God teacheth vs to take heed, rather by other mens, then by our owne harmes. And looke how Abraham laid nothing but wood vpon his sonne Isaac, carrying the knife and the fire himselfe: after the same sort dealeth our heauenly father with vs. He laieth vpon vs wood without a knife. The Phisitian saith, that is the best exercise which is
ad ruborem, non ad sudor
[...]m, refreshing the spirits and stirring vp the blood a little, but not putting a man into any great sweat. But the Diuine may say, that is the best affliction, which is
ad sudorem, non ad sanguinem. Therefore God laieth vpon vs wood
ad sudorē, to make vs sweat,
Gen. 3.19. In the sweat of thy browes shalt thou eat thy bread; not a knife
ad sanguinem,
Heb. 12.4. to make vs bleed, Ye haue not yet resisted vnto blood. God laieth vpon vs wood without fire. Now wood without fire, is not greatly dangerous.
[Page 38] Or say he lay vpon vs both wood and fire: yet the voice of the Lord deuideth the flame of fire. For in the flame of fire naturally there is heate and light. But notwithstanding the omnipotent voice of the Lord deuideth these, one from the other. As the cursed in hell shew, and the elect vpon earth. I am tormented in the flame, saith
Diues. Theres heat but no light. Contrariwise the three children in the furnace shined as Angels for light, but were so farre from heat, that no one haire of their
[...]ead, or of their apparell perished. When
Moses saw a bush burning and not consumed, he saide, I will goe, and see this great vision. A great vision indeede. There was a flame of fire. Els how was the bush burning? There was light. Els how did Moses see it? There was no heat.
Exod. 3.2. Els how was not the bush consumed? Yet in euery faithfull one afflicted you may see this great vision. The voice of the Lord in his affliction, as in the flame of fire,
Psal. 97.11. diuideth the heat from the light. So that he is not consumed by the heat, (nay rather his infirmities and carnall concupiscences are consumed
[Page 39] thereby) but onely illuminated by the light. According to that, Onely vexation giueth vnderstanding. And in an other place, Light is sprung vp to the righteous, and ioy to them that are true of heart. Thus ye see how tenderly our deare father dealeth with vs, He laieth either no fire at all vpon vs, or else no burning fire for heat, but onely a blasing fire for light. To make short. Many hands (as we say) make light worke. Now wee haue many comparteners and fellowes which make the labour of our affliction light. First, all creatures sigh and grone with vs;
Rom 8.22. Then, all the faithfull beare one an others burthens,
Gal. 6. and so fulfill the lawe of God. Thirdly, the good Angels haue a charge giuen them of vs,
Psal. 91.11. that we hurt not our foot at any time against a stone. Next,
Psal. 55.23. God the father biddeth vs cast our burthen vpon him, and promiseth to nourish vs. Fiftly, the holy Ghost helpeth our infirmities,
Rom. 8.19. and helpeth them euen when we are readie to be oppressed by them. Lastly, God the sonne setteth to his hand likewise, and saith,
Matth. 11.10. Come vnto me all ye that labour
[Page 40] and are heauie loaden, and I will refresh you: take my yoake vpon you; for my yoake is easie, and my burthen is light. As if he should haue said, To drawe in the yoake without me, would be a hard matter; and to beare the burthen without me, would be aboue our strength: but if you come to me, if you drawe and beare with me, I will refresh you; For my yoake is easie, and my burthen is light. Thus light is our affliction. For God measureth to vs the water with his fist, which is the shorter measure: he causeth vs to drink of the cup on otherwise but as it is mixt with many comforts: he maketh vs not swallow vp the lees of it, but onely a little
modicum of the vppermost: he laieth affliction vpon vs, which is rather a seeing, then a feeling of euill: he laieth wood vpon vs to exercise vs, but neither a knife to cut vs not yet fire to burne vs. Lastly, we haue many fellowes in our affliction which make it light. All creatures: all the faithfull: all the good angels: God the father: God the holy Ghost: God the Sonne, who saith, My yoake is easie▪ and my burden is light. Wherefore seeing
[Page 41] our affliction is so many waies light, we must be patient in all affliction; For the momentarie lightnesse of our affliction worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall waight of glorie.
Thirdly, our glorie is eternall, yea, surpassing eternal. The glorie we looke for is called a kingdome. Of which the Princely Prophet saith thus;
Psal. 145.13. Thy kingdome is an euerlasting kingdome, and thy dominion endureth throughout all ages.
Origen in Can 42. Whereupon
Origen noteth, that as there is a holy, and a holy of holyes; as a saboth, and a saboth of saboths; as a heauen, and a heauen of heauens; as a song, and a song of songs: so there is an age, and an age of ages. And againe, as that which is not onely a holy, but also a holy of holies, is the holiest place of all; as that which is not onely a saboth, but also a saboth of saboths, is the perfectest rest of all; as that which is not onely a heauen, but also a heauen of heauens, is the highest heauen of all; as that which is not onely a song, but also a song of songs, is the excellentest song of all: so that which is not onely an age, but also an age of ages, and especially,
[Page 42] as the Psalmist speaketh, an age of all ages, is the most infinite eternitie of all. Which seeing it is attributed to the kingdome of Christ, beeing likewise the kingdome of all true Christians, it followeth that our glorie is surpassing eternall. Whereupon
Prosper noteth, that that which
Virgil writeth of
Augustus Caesar,
De promiss & praedict. He hath giuen vs an Empire without ende;
Imperium
[...]ine fine dedit. may much more fitly be applyed to Christ. For though
Augustus raigned very long, aboue fiftie yeares, yet at length his gouernment as all other earthly kingdomes, was determined. But of our heauenly King only the angel Gabriel said most truely, Of his kingdome there shall be no end.
Luk. 1.53. Of his kingdome there shall be no end. Now this glorie is as well called a crowne, as a kingdome. And this crowne,
2. Pet. 1.14. as S. Peter saith, is vndefiled, which neuer fadeth away. The Greeke words which S. Peter vseth,
[...]. are Latine words also: and they are not onely appellatiues, beeing the epithites of th
[...] crowne, but also propers, the one the proper name of a stone, the other of a flower.
Isidorus Etimolog. l. 16. c. 4. For
Isidore writeth there is a precious stone called
Amiantus, which
[Page 43] though it be neuer so much soyled, yet it can neuer at all bee blemished. And beeing cast into the fire, it is taken out still more bright and cleane. Also
Clemens writeth, that there is a flower called
Amarantus,
Alexandrin. Pedagog. l. 1. c. 8. which beeing a long time hung vp in the house, yet still is fresh and greene. To both which, the stone and the flower, the Apostle, as I am verily perswaded, alludeth in this place. As if hee should haue said, The crowne which yee shall receiue, shall be studded with the stone Amiantus, which cannot be defiled; and it shall be garnished with the flower Amarantus, which alwayes is fresh and neuer fades away: ye shall receiue a crowne vndefiled, and that neuer fades away. Which as Beda noteth, was in
[...]inuated in the crowne round about the Arke of the Testament. For in a circle there is neither beginning nor ending. Or rather euery where there is a beginning, euery where an ending; and so no where any beginning or ending. To shew that the patient also shall haue a crowne set vpon their head
per circuitum, running round in a circle, and neuer comming
[Page 44] to any end of eternitie. Well, our glorie is called also a treasure. Three kind of treasures there are: A treasure in hel: a treasure in earth: a treasure in heauen. That in hell is a treasure of torments: that in earth is a treasure of snow: that in heauen is a treasure of eternitie. For the first,
Iam. 51.3. S. Iames sayes; Go to now you rich men, weepe and howle for the miseries that shall come vpon you; your riches are corrupt, and your garments are moath-eaten: your gold and siluer is cankred, and the rust of them shall bee a witnesse against you, and shall eate your flesh as it were fire: Yee haue heaped vp treasure for the last dayes. Here's a treasure in hell. Which to be a treasure of torments the Apostle prooueth, saying,
Rom. 2.5. Thou after thy hardnesse, and heart that cannot repent, treasurest vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath. A treasure of wrath and of torments. From which God for the deare blood of his Sonne sake deliuer vs euery one. The second is a treasure in earth. Of which our Sauiour saith;
Matth. 6.19. Lay not vp treasures for your selues vpon earth, where the moath and canker corrupt,
[Page 45] and where theeues dig through and steale. And this is a treasure of snowe. For S. Gregorie vpon those words of Iob;
Qui ingreditur in thesauros ninis. Who entreth into the treasures of snowe; she weth that earthly treasures are treasures of snow. You see little children what paines they take to rake and scrape snowe together to make a snowe-ball: right so, they that scrape together the treasure of this world, haue but a snowe-ball of it; as soone as the sunne shineth, and God breatheth vpon it, and so entreth into it, by and by it comes to nothing. The third, is a treasure in heauen. Concerning which our Sauiour saith,
Mark. 10.20. Lay vp for your selues treasures in heauen, where are bagges that neuer waxe old. Now this is a treasure of eternitie. And therefore the Christians of the Primitiue Church, suffered with ioy the spoyling of their goods,
Heb 10.24. knowing that they had in heauen a better, and a more enduring substance. They contemned all treasures of snow in respect of this substance. For they haue no substance, neither are simply good, though they bee called goods, but melt away as snowe:
[Page 46] this is a better, and a more enduring substance; yea most enduring, a surpassing eternall waight of glorie. Thus ye see how eternall our glorie is. It is a kingdome: a crowne: a treasure. And this kingdome is an euerlasting kingdome: this crowne is an incorruptible crowne: this treasure is an eternall treasure. And therefore seeing our glorie is so surpassing eternall, we must be patient in all affliction. For the momentarie lightnesse of our affliction, worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternall waight of glorie.
Fourthly, our glorie is waightie, yea exceeding waightie. The glorie to come, by some resemblances is shewed to be eternall, by other to be waightie. First, to this purpose it is compared to wine. Touching which our Sauiour saith,
Mark. 14.15. Hereafter will I not drinke with you of the fruite of the vine, till I drinke it newe with you in my fathers kingdome. Now how waightie this wine shalbe, appeareth in that the spies bringing clusters of grapes out of Canaan, carried them vpon a poale on their shoulders.
Numb. 13.24. To shewe, in the celestiall
[Page 47] Canaan what waightie glorie there shall be. So when our Lord turned water into wine, he commanded to fill the vessels to the toppe. These vessels topfull of wine,
Ioh 27. doe signifie at the marriage of the Lamb, that the patient shall haue a full reward:
1 Ioh. 8. pressed downe, shaken together, running ouer. So that euerie one of them may say, My cuppe doth ouerflowe.
Psal. 13. Againe our glorie is compared to a peny. Now in a peny we consider fowre things. The image: the superscription: the sound: the waight. So our Sauiour when they shewed him a peny, asked whose image and superscription it was. First, then for the image, Christ shall change our vile bodies,
Phil. 3.21. that they may be like the glorious bodie of his Sonne: that as wee haue borne the image of the earthly, so we may beare the image of the heauenly. For the superscriptiō, our Sauiour saith; To him that ouercommeth will I giue a white stone,
Reuel. 2.17. and in it a name written, which no man knoweth but he that receiueth it. As a Prince seeing his name vpon a peice of coine, knoweth it is of his owne mint: so euery patient Christian
[Page 48] seeing his owne name in this white stone, which is a token of honour, knoweth it properly belongeth to himselfe. For the sound, the Psal
[...]ist saith, Blessed are they that dwell in thy house, they shall alwayes praise thee. This shal be the sound of the peny continually, the praise of God. As the foure and twentie Elders, neuer ceased day, nor night,
Reuel. 1.8. to sing, Holy, holy, holy, to him that is, and was, and is to come. Fourthly, for the waight, the shekel of the Sanctuarie was twise as waighty as the common shekel: in like manner our glorie shall be as the shekel of the Sanctuarie, exceeding massie and waightie. But what speake I of wine? What of a peny? God himselfe shall be our glory. According to that;
Psal. 3.3. Thou art my glorie and the lifter vp of my head. As if hee should haue said, Affliction would make me cast downe my countenance, and hold downe my head like a bulrush
[...] but the remembrance of this that tho
[...] art my glory, makes me lift vp my head. So say's God to Abraham;
Gen. 15.1. Feare not Abraham, I am thy buckler, and thy exceeding great reward. I am thy burkler
[Page 49] to latch those blowes which affliction would lay vpon thee: and thy exceeding great reward, blessing thee with exceeding waighty glory. For they that shall enioy this glorie, shall see God. Agreeable to that of our Lord;
Matth. 5.8. Blessed are the pure in spirit, for they shall see God. And how shall they see God? Not standing behind the lattisse, or looking out of a window,
2. Cor. 13.12. that is darkly and obscurely, but face to face, talking with him familiarly as one friend doth to an other. O ioy aboue all ioyes! O glorie that passeth all vnderstanding! when we see the amiable and gracious countenance of our Lord reconciled to vs by Christ. Doubtlesse if the Queene of Saba thought her selfe happie, for hearing the wisedome of Salomon, and seeing the riches of his house, and the order of his seruants: then much more shall we be happy, when we shall see the glory, and heare the wisedome of the Father, not as the preachers shewe it out of the word, but as our owne eies shall behold it in heauen. O how blessed shall we thinke our selues then, that by any paines, by any afflictions we haue
[Page 50] at length attained to such waighty glorie. For this glorie is wine r
[...]ing ouer; is a pony waighty according to the shekell of the Sanctuarie; is the blessed sight and fruition of God himselfe. Wherefore considering how waightie our glorie is, we must be patient in all affliction. For the momentarie lightnes of our affliction, worketh vs a surpassing exceeding eternal waight of glory.
Compare then the affliction on the one side, with the glory on the other side: the shortnes of the affliction, with the eternity of the glory, the lightnes of the affliction, with the waightinesse of the glory. And then be content for an eternall glorie to suffer momentarie affliction: for waightie glory to suffer light affliction. The Stoicks if their greife were either momentary or light, cared for no more: for if it were short, they cared not how heauie it were: againe, if it were light, they cared not how long it were. Our affliction is both momentarie and light. One helpe was sufficient for them: we haue two for
[...]ayling. A starke shame
[...]hereless
[...] would be for vs, if heathens & pagans,
[Page 51] hauing fewer meanes then wee haue, should shew greater patience then we shew. But the Scriptures affoard vs yet more forceable inducements. Iacob being in loue with Rachell, serued for her first seuen yeares, and afterward seauen yeares more, in all fourteene; and these many yeares seemed to him but a fewe dayes. O deere Lord, that we had thy grace to loue thy eternall waightie glorie, but as well as many a man hath done a mortall earthly creature. Then
[...]o doubt many years of afflictiō would seeme to vs but a few dayes: heauy burthens of affliction would seeme to vs very sweet and light. Christ Iesus for the ioy that was set before him, indured the crosse, and despised the shame, and now sitteth at the right hand of the throne of God. Questionlesse, beloued, the crosse of Christ was tedious and long; the shame that he suffred was heauy and vntollerable. Yet this crosse seemed but momentarie to him, and this shame seemed but light vnto him, in comparison of the ioy that was set before him, and of the eternall waightie glory which he hath now attained sitting
[Page 52] at the right hand of the throne of God. To the which plate of honour and worship, we beseech thee▪ O louing Lord, to bring vs, after all the afflictions of this wretched world; not for our owne deserts of merits, but for the merit of that crosse which Christ endured, of that shame which Christ despised. To whom for his crosse, be all praise, for his shame, be all glory; together with the Father, and the holy Ghost, now and euermore, Amen.
FINIS.
A SERMON PREACHED before the KINGS Maiesty lying at the Lord
SAYES house, called Broughton, besides Banb
[...]ris, the
2 ▪ day of Septem. 1604.
ROM. 8.31.
If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
THese words contain a most magnificent and triumphant conclusion arising out of the former discourse. For the Apostle hauing before prooued, that man is iustified only by the free grace and mercy of Christ
[Page 54] without any merit and desert of good workers, at length concludeth in the beginning of this chapter, Therfore there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus: and so likewise here, If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
Maximilian the Emperour
[...]o admired this sentence,
Nathan Citraeus in Iteneratio that he caused it to be set in letters of checker worke vpon a table at which he vsed to dine and
[...], that hauing it so often in his eye, hee might alwaies haue it in minde also:
[...] Deus pro nobis, quis contranos? If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
The truth of it is so apparant, that it hath bin made a common watchword, not of Christians onely, but euen of heathenish souldiers. Out word is Immanuel, that is,
Esa. 8.3. by interpretation, God with vs. And some of the auncient Romanes vsed likewise in their wartes this watchword,
Vegetius l. 3. c. 3
Nobis
[...]um Deus, God with vs. For indeede, if we be of the colledge and societie of Immanuel, and if God be on our side, we shall be sure to preuaile. If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
Damascene saith well according to
[Page 55] the Scripture,
[...]. Dama
[...]c
[...]n.
[...] Cyril. Mierosol. Our God is aboue all Gods. And so likewise Cyrill, The power of our God is aboue all power. Therefore, if that power be on our side which is aboue all power, and that God which is aboue all Gods, nothing can hurt vs; If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
S. Austin sheweth out of the verse immediately going before,
De verbis Apostoli Ser. 16 Deus pro nobis ve praedestinaret no
[...]. that foure especiall waies God is with vs. God is with vs, in that he hath predestinated vs: God is with vs, in that he hath called vs: God is with vs, in that he hath iustified vs: God is with vs, in that he hath glorified vs.
Innocentius the third,
In eo m
[...]n. Apostolerunt, serm
[...]. Hostis conta nos inferior homo. sheweth out of the words consequently following after, that fowre speciall enemies are against vs. The inferiour enemy against vs, is man: the exteriour enemy against vs, is the world; the interiour enemy against vs, is the flesh: the superiour enemy against vs is the Deuil. So that whereas the Apostle sai's here, If God be with vs, who can be against vs? It is all one, as if hee should haue said; If God haue predestinated vs, what can man doe against vs? If God haue
[Page 56] called vs, what can the world do against vs? If God haue iustified vs, what can the flesh doe against vs? If God haue glorified vs, what can the deuill doe against vs? If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
The first enemy against vs, is man.
Homo homidi lupus.
Aut deus, aut damon. And an other prouerbe saith, Either a god or a deuill. For to say nothing, that no time is freed, so place priuiledged, no degree secured, no torment vnpractised, onely this I will touch, that no age is exempted. But the crueltie of man rageth, not only vpon the old after they are buried, but also vpon the young before they are borne. Thus saith the Lord, For three transgressions and for foure, I will not turne vnto Moab, because they digged vp the bones of the king of Edom, and burnt them to lime. The king of Edom was a wicked man, yet God detested so this vnnaturall and barbarous cruelty of the
Moabits toward the dead, that for this especially he would not be reconciled to them. The like ensamples haue not wanted in our land, & almost in our time.
Tracie two yeares, &
Wickliffe
[Page 57] two and fortie yeares after hee was buried, was digged vp. So euen of late they vsed
Martin Bucer, and
Paulus Phagius in Cambridge, and
Peter Martyrs wife in Oxford. Such cruell m
[...]n, if they had as great power ouer these holy Martyrs soules, as they had ouer their bodies, doubtles they would haue puld them out of heauen. For as long as they had a finger, or a fobre, or a bone, or a peice of a bone is the graue, they neuer left mining and digging, till they had rooted it out. So that at the least wise we may say of them with the Psalmist, The dead bodies of thy seruants,
Psal. 79.2. O Lord, haue they giuen to bee meate to the foules of the aire, and the flesh of thy Saints to the beasts of the field. Now the crueltie of man against man, as it endeth not when life endeth: so it beginneth before life beginneth. For not onely Esau that cruell and cursed reprobate, strugled and wraf
[...]led with his brother Iacob in their mothers wombe: but also
[...]e Ammonites ript vp the women of
[...]lead beeing great with child,
Amos 1.13. Lamen
[...].20. and the Babylonians caused the wom
[...]n of Ierusalem to eate their
[Page 58] owne fruit, and their children of a span long. And not long agoe in the Isle of Garnsey, when a faithful woman (whose name need not here to be rehearsed) while she was burning at the stake,
Perotine Massy was deliuered of a goodly man-child, some were so hard-hearted, to fling him back againe into the fire, there to be
[...]rthered, as they meant it, but in deede martyred with his mother. O blessed babe! Because there is no roome for him so the inne, as soone as hee is borne, hee is laide in a maunger. Nay, because there is no roome for him in any one corner of all the world, by and by he is baptized with the holy Ghost, and with fire. O blessed, I say againe, blessed babe! Before thou art lapped in swadling clothes, thou art crowned with martyrdome: & before thou fully breathest in the breath of life, thou happily breathest out thine innocent soule
[...] God. But
[...]ie vpon such beastly and cruell murthers. Out vpon such deuillish and fiendish tormentors. These Saints? these Catholikes? who are Soythians, if these be Saints? who are Canibals, if these be Catholikse? which holding
[Page 59] it as an article of their faith, that all children dying without baptisme, are damned, yet wittingly did put this innocent child to death before he was baptized. And therefore as they made the mother suffer the most vntollerable paines of childbirth and martyrdome both together's so, they verily thought and beleeued, they flung the infant also body and soule into an earthly fire, and into hell fire all at once. This is the crueltie of man. He would, if he could, pull some out of heauen after they are buried, and thrust some into hel before they are borne.
But God hath predestinated vs. And not only before we were borne,
Ephes. 1.4. but also before the world was created, hath chosen vs in Christ. Euen as Christ shall say at the last day, Come ye blessed of my Father,
Matth. 25.34. inherit the kingdome of heauen prepared for you before the foundations of the world. For looke how carefully parents prouide for their children,
Prim
[...]sius in a Tim.
[...]. 1. in illa Ante tempora secularia. Arator. Do
[...] prius tempora dedit. and put them in their will before they are borne: so God giues vs the grace to liue with him, before he giue vs time to liue here. Euen as the Sonne
[Page 60] saith, Feare not little
[...]ock: for it is your Fathers will to giue you a kingdome. And the father himselfe, I euen I am he that comfort you: who
[...] thou then that fearest a mortall ma
[...], who fadeth away as grasse? Therefore euery couragious Christian may comfort his heart in God, and say with the Pr
[...]y Prophet, The Lord is my light and my saluation, whome then shall I feare? the Lord is the strength of my life, of whō then shall I be afraid? when the wicked euen mine enemies and my foes, come vpon me to eat vp my flesh, they stumbled and fell. Though an hoast of men were laid against me, yet shall not my heart be afraid, & though there rose vp warre against me, yet wil I put my
[...] in him. I will not be afraid of ten thousand of the people, that haue set themselues against me round about. Yea, though I walke thorough the valley of the shadow of death, yet will I feare no euill:
[...]or thou, O Lord, art with me, thy rod and thy staffe they comfort me. So that I may boldly say, The Lord is my helper; neither will I feare what
[...] can doe vnto me. The Lord of hoaste
[Page 61] with vs, the God of Iacob is our refuge. And if the Lord of hosts haue predestinated vs vnto life, what can man doe against vs? what before we liue? what while we liue? what after we liue? If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
The second enemie against vs is the world. Which assaileth vs as well by aduersitie,
Qusd est mundus, nisi agon plenus cetraminum? as by prosperitie. What is the world, saith S.
Ambrose, but a race or a course full of trials & troubles? It is a field, wherein is little corne, but much cockle. It is a garden, wherein are few roses, but many thornes. Yet these thornes of aduersitie doe not so much oftentimes endanger vs, as the baites of prosperitie.
Mundus peririculosior est blandus quam mol
[...]stu
[...], & magis cauendus, eunse
[...]lli
[...]t diligi, qa
[...]m cum ad monet cogit
(que)
[...]ontemni. Epist. 144. The world is more dangerous, saith S.
Austin, when it flattereth, then when it threateneth: and is more to be feared, when it allureth vs to loue it, then when it enforceth vs to contemn it. For euen as Iudas by a kisse betrayed his master: so the world is a very Iudas. It meaneth most falsly, when it embraceth most friendly. Wherefore the Apostle saith thus of Demas; Demas hath forsaken vs, and imbraced this present world. So that the immoderate embracing
[Page 62] of this world, is a flat forsaking of Christ and his Gospel. Vnskilful swimmers, when they begin to sinke, if they catch hold of weeds in the bottom.
Qui mundum amploctuntur similes sunt illis, qui submerguntur in aquis. Bern. de Adnent, setm. 1. the faster they hold, the surer they are drowned: & in like sort they that shake hands with the world, and embrace the pleasures and prosperitie thereof most greedily, plunge themselues most deeply into destruction.
But God hath called vs. And therefore neither aduersitie nor prosperitie can hurt vs. Maruell not, saith our Sa
[...]iour, though the world hate you. It hated me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would loue you, but because you are not of the world, but I haue chosen you out of the world, therefore doth the world hate you. Well, as the world hateth vs▪ so we
[...] must hate it againe. As it contemneth vs, so we must contemne it againe. According to that of S.
Paul, The world is crucified to me, and I vnto the world. I am crucified to the world, that is, The world contemnes me: the world is crucified to mee, that is, I contemne the world. The world contemnes me,
[...] I
[Page 63] contemne it.
Moral. senn. 10. c. 2. Qui nihil habet in mundo quod appetat, nihil est quod de mundo pertimesent Cyprian. Quis ei de secullo metus est, cui in seculo deus tutor est▪ For as Gregory sayes, He that hath nothing that he loues in the world, hath nothing to feare of the world. And Cyprian, What neede he to feare the world, who hath God his protector, his tutor, his defendour in the world? He that is of God ouercommeth the world. And this is our victorie whereby we ouercome the world, euen our faith. Whereupon our Sauiour saies, Be of good comfort, I haue ouercome the world: and behold I am with you euen vnto the ende of the world. So that the world, and the trouble we shall haue in the world, shall haue an ende: but the comfort we haue in God, shall haue no end: Behold, I am with you, saith he. And if God be with vs, and haue called vs out of the world, what can the world doe against vs? If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
The third enemie against vs, is the flesh.
Prou. 30.22. Salomon saith, this is one thing which maketh the earth euen tremble, when a seruant beginneth to beare rule. The flesh is, and ought to be a seruant. Yet it beareth rule in the vnregenerate. Yea it striueth to beare rule, and beginneth
[Page 64] to beare rule, euen in the godly. A mans enemies are they of his owne house. It is mine owne familiar, friend, that lifteth vp his heele against me. This familiar friend was
Paul much troubled withal, when be said; I see an other law in my members,
Rom. 7. rebelling against my minde, and leading mee captiue vnto death. And Lot, who beeing a iust man, that could not be ouercome with all the sinnes of Sodom, by immoderate drinking of wine fell to follie. And Samson, who otherwise impregnable, yet yeelded to Dalila. Therefore in the
[...] it lieth, which striueth to lay our honour in the dust.
But God hath iustified vs. And hauing iustified vs, in some measure also hath begunne to sanctifie vs. So that the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh, in so much as we cannot doe as we would. Not onely the flesh against the spirit: but also the spirit against the flesh. So that we cannot doe as wee would. For if wee would serue god so holily as the angels, we can not, because the flesh insteth against the spirit: againe, if we would
[Page 65] sinne with full consent of will so brutishly as the wicked doe, we cannot, because the spirit lusteth against the flesh. But euen as
Cast
[...]r and
Pollux liue by turnes, one one day, an other an other, so the flesh and the spirit preuailing. sometimes one, sometimes an other, make mixt actions. So that neither can our good actions iustifie vs, because in them the flesh lusteth against the spirit: nor yet can our ill actions condemn vs, because in thē the spirit lusteth against the flesh. For now that Sara is mortified, her wombe is dead, and it ceaseth to be with her after the manner of women. Now that Iacob hath wrestled with God, his thigh is shrunk vp. Now that Paul is conuerted, he chastiseth his bodie, and bringeth it into subiection. Now that the blessed virgin is freely beloued, she keepeth her selfe within, and knoweth no man. And therefore sai'
[...] the Angel, Haile Mary, freely beloued, the Lord is with thee. But the blessed Virgin fearing, the Angel added; Feare not Mary, for thou hast found
[...]our with God. As if he should haue said, Feare not the Angel of the Lord,
[Page 66] seeing the Lord of the Angell is with thee. Thou hast found fauour with God, to haue the fruit of thy flesh, the Sauiour of thy soule. So that if God haue a fauour vnto vs, and haue iustified vs in Christ, what can the flesh doe against vs? The spirit will not let it doe as it would. For if God be with vs, who can be against vs?
The fourth enemy against vs is the deuill. And he is the worst enemy of all. Therefore sai's the Apostle, we haue not to fight with flesh and blood, but with principalities and powers, and with the Prince of darknes that rule
[...] in the ayre. This Prince warreth against vs two waies. By persecutions, and perswasions. For the first, he is described in the Reuelation to ride vpon a blacke and a redde horse. The blacknes of the horse sheweth how terrible the Deuill is, the reddenesse, how bloodie. Neither doth he come single, but seauen of them at once possesse Mary Magdalen.
Luk. 8.
[...]. Neither doe they onely fight against vs beeing aliue, but the Deuill fought with Michel the Arkeangel for the
[...] cie of Moses when he was dead.
Iude. Neither
[Page 67] doe they terribly set vpon vs to get our bodies onely, but our soules also. Especially, they doe this at the day of death, and will doe more dilligently at the day of iudgement. Now their perswasions are yet more dangerous then their threatnings. When they come to vs in the shape not of an vnclean spirit, but of an angel of light. Thus Satan did set vpon the first Adam,
Gen. 3. Hath God indeed commanded you not to eate of the tree? He makes a question of it. And, if ye eate, you shall be as Gods knowing good and euill. A faire promise, but a contrarie performance. So he did set vpon the second Adam;
Matth. 4. All these things will I giue thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me. He would hire Christ, and giue him good wages to serue him: which would haue depriued our Sauiour of his eternall glory.
But God hath glorified vs. It is not now to be doubted whether Satan shal preuaile against vs or not, but it is most sure he shall not. He hath glorified vs, saith S. Paul. Though the possession of it be to come, yet the assurance of it is past. Euen as our Lord auoucheth in
[Page 68] an other place, Hee that beleeueth in me, hath passed from death to life. Not shall passe, but hath passed. So S. Paul, He hath made vs sit with himselfe in heauenly places aboue. Not hee will make, but he hath. Therefore Chrysostome writeth very resolutely, Onely in one point I am proud,
[...]. and very proud, namely in renouncing, and denying the deuill. Hee is indeede a strong man. But yet a stronger then he hath thrust him out, & spoiled him of all his goods. He is a roaring lyon. But the lyon of the tribe of Iuda, hath ouercome him. Hee is an olde serpent, almost of sixe thousand yeares standing and experience. But Christ the new serpent, prefigured in the brasen serpent, hath been too cunning for him. Therefore though he seeke to winnow Peter as come i
[...] sifted, yet no danger; Christ hath prayed for
Peter, that his faith should not faile. Where by the way, we may marke the difference betweene Christ and the tempter. Christ hath his fanne in his hand and fanneth vs; the tempter hath his siue in his hand, and sifteth vs. Now a fanne casteth out the worst, and keepeth
[Page 69] in the best: a fine keepeth in the worst, and casteth out the best. Right so Christ in his trialls purgeth chaffe and corruption out of vs, nourisheth and increaseth his graces in vs. Contrariwise the deuill, if there be any il thing in vs, that he confirmeth, if faith or any good thing else, that he weakeneth. But Christ hath prayed for vs, yea doth still at the right hand of the father make intercession and request for vs, that our faith should not faile. So that all Sathans power, yea the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against vs. In like manner, S. Paul beeing buffered by the angel of Satan, prayed that he might bee deliuered. The answer of God was, My grace is sufficient for thee. Whether Satan buffet vs, or not buffet vs, still the grace of God shal suffice vs, Much more his glory who hath glorified vs. For God doth giue both grace and glory, and no good thing wil he withold from them that liue a godly life.
Pone me iuxtatr, & cuius
[...] is manus pugnet contra me. Therefore euery child of God may triumph with Iob, saying Stand thou beside me, and let any mans hand fight against me. For if God be on our side, what can the Deuill
[Page 70] doe against vs? If God be with vs, who can be against vs?
Nazianzen makes a good conclusion, This only is a fearefull thing to feare any thing more then God, Feare God, and feare nothing else:
[...] feare not God, and feare euery thing. For in the feare of the Lord is the confidence of courage. Because sai's
Gregoria, be that in a chast and filiall feare,
Quitimore castro Deo subije
[...] tur, &c. Gregor. is subiected to God, by a hopefull kind of boldnesse is aboue all saue God. But he that feareth not the Lord may be annoyed by any thing. Mice were too strong for the Philistims, and lice for the Egyptians. So that if God be against vs, who can be with vs? But if God be with vs, who can be against vs? Now certainly God is with vs. Doe you doubt of this? Then consider how that all great pot
[...]rates of the world, who of late were some of them scarse our good freinds, doe now earnestly desire to bee made partakers of our peace. What doe I speake of men? The very heauen, & the elements, and this so seasonable haruest,
An. 1604. such as hath not been knowne, if one may take any gesse by these outward things, doe
[Page 71] plainely declare that God is now with vs, & purposeth to power out his blessings and benefits most abundantly vpon vs. Nothing then remaineth, but that as God is with vs, so we labour to be with God. And as S. Peter admonisheth vs, make our election sure by faith and good workes, liuing soberly, vprightly, and godly in this present world. That so we may feare no cruelty of man, no misery of the world, no entisements, of the flesh, no terrors of the deuill, but in all these things may bee more then conquerours, assuring our selues, that if God be with vs, nothing can be against vs. Which that it may be so, God graunt for Iesus Christs sake, to whome with the Father, and the holy Ghost, be all honour and glory, now and euermore, Amen.
Blessed are they that heare the word of God, and keepe it.
The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ, and the Ioue of God, and the fellowship of the holy Ghost, be with vs, that nothing may be against vs, this day and euermore, Amen.
FINIS.
A SERMON PREACHED at the Court at
Whitehall. March 10. 1598.
IOHN 20.27.
After said he to Thomas, Put thy finger here, and see my hands, and put forth thy hand, and put it into my side, and bee not faithlesse, but faithfull.
OVr blessed Sauiour Iesus Christ hath his wounds yet to be seene in his body for foure causes. First, to approoue his resurrection: secondly, to appease his Father: thirdly, to confound his enemies: fourthly, to comfort his friends. After said he to Thomas, Put thy finger here, and see my hands, and put forth thy hand, and put it into my side, and be not faithles,
[Page 73] but faithfull.
The first cause why Christ hath his wounds yet to be seene in his body, is to approoue his resurrection. When Iacobs children told him, saying, Ioseph is yet aliue, his heart failed, and he beleeued them not, but as soone as he saw the chariots, which were sent for him, by and by his spirit reuiued, and he said, I haue enough,
Gen. 4
[...].28. Ioseph my sonne is yet aliue. In like manner, when the Disciples said to Thomas, we haue seene the Lord, he beleeued them not; but nowe that hee beholdeth Christs glorious wounds, the triumphant tokens of his victorie, and the chariots, as I may say, whereby we are with Elias carried vp into heauen, he confesseth indeede that Christ is risen againe; and that the true Ioseph is yet aliue.
Io
[...]. 11.4. Euen as Anna seeing that spaniell cōming homeward, which went forth with her sonne at the first, knew certainely that her sonne Tobias himselfe was not farre off, but followed immediately after: so Thomas, seeing those wounds in Christ which accompanied him to his graue, knew assuredly, that no other body was risen againe,
[Page 74] but onely the very selfe same body of Christ, which was buried. S. Peter, beeing brought out of prison by an Angel, went forth with to the house of Marie,
Act. 12.14. where knocking and calling to get in, a maiden named Rhode, before euer she sawe him▪ knewe him by his voice. And although they that were within tolde her she wist not what she said, yet shee still constantly affirmed it was none other but he. Christs rising out of the graue was as strange, as Peters deliuerance out of prison: the rowling away of the stone as strange, as the opening of the yron gate. And
[...]lbeit Thomas was not so forward as Rhode to know Christ by his voice, when he said, Peace bee vnto you, yet as soone as Christ tooke him by the hand, and shew'd hi
[...] his side, he made no more doubts, but presently beleeued. For if
Pr
[...]tog
[...]s seeing but a little line drawne in
[...] table, k
[...]ewe straightwaies it was
Ap
[...]lles doing whome he had neuer seene:
Plin. lib. 35. c. 10 how much more easily then might Thomas know Christ, seeing not onely one line, but very many lines, yea whole pictures of his passion, and of his r
[...]surrection,
[Page 75] in his head, in his hands, in his side, in his feete? When King Arthurs bodie was taken vp somewhat more then sixe hundred yeares after his death,
Stow pag. 61. it was knowne to be his by nothing so much, as by the prints of
[...]enne seuerall wounds which appeared in his sk
[...]ll. Christ our King, who did ouercome death, could likewise, if it had pleased him, haue quite and cleane defaced and abolished all the markes of death. Neuerthelesse as at his transfiguration he shewed Peter, Iames, and Iohn, the signes of immortalitie in his bodie, which was then mortall; so here contrariwise at his resurrection; he sheweth Thomas the signes of mortalitie in his bodie, which is now immortall. That he and all we might vndoubtedly confesse, that though they perhaps might bee deceiued in King Arthurs bodie, yet we can neuer be deceiued, so long as we beleeue, that the very same body of Christ, which in Golgotha the place of dead mens skuls was wounded from top to toe, and put to death for vs, is now risen again from death to life. Euen as King Alexanders
[Page 76] stagges were knowne a hundred yeares together,
Plin. l. 8. c. 32. by those golden collars which by the kings commandement were put about their necks; so much more might Thomas know Christ by his wounds, which were as a comly ornament to his head, and as chaines vnto his necke, we also when we preach the resurrection of Christ, preach no other thing, but that which we haue heard, which we haue seen with our eies, which we haue looked vpon, and our hands haue handled of the word of life. Socrates in his Ecclesiasticall historie writeth, that Athanasius beeing accused by one Ian
[...] to haue killed Arsenius, and after to haue cut off his hand, that he might vse it to magick and sorcerie, cleared himselfe notably of this slander. Hauing by good happe found out Arsenius, who lay hid for the nonce, hee brought him before the Co
[...]ncel of Tyrus, and there asked his accuser, whether hee euer knew Arsenius or no? He answered, yes. Then Athanasius called him forth, with his hands couered vnder his cloake, and turning vp the one side of his cloak
[...] ▪ shewed them one of his hands. And
[Page 77] when most men surmised,
lib. 1. c.
[...]1. that th' other hand at least wise was cut off, Athanasius without any more ado casteth vp the other side of his cloake, and sheweth the second hand, saying, You see Arsenius hath two hands, now let mine accuser shewe you the place where the third hand was cut-off. Christs case was euen almost the same. Hee was thought by some to be quite dead and gone. But Thomas seeing those very hands of his which were nailed to the crosse, acknowledgeth, that this our brother was dead, and is aliue againe, was lost, and is found.
Ios. 2.18. For if the spies that were sent to view Iericho, knewe Rahabs house from all the rest, by a red thread, which hung out of the windowe: how much more easily then might Thomas knowe Christ, especially seeing Rahabs house was a figure of Christs bodie; the windowe a signe of the wound in his side; the red thread a figure of the streame of blood issuing out of that wound? When Vlysses had beene long from home, no man almost at his returne knewe him, yet Euriclea his nurse espying by chance the marke of a wound in
[Page 78] his foote, which he got by hunting the wild boare,
Hom. Ody. 9. by and by made him known to his friends. In like manner Thomas, beholding the wounds not of Christs feete onely, but also of his whole body, beleeueth verily, though the wilde boare out of the wood stroke fore at him that he might fall, yet that he hath nowe recouered himselfe, and is risen and returned home againe. Euen as the wisemen knewe Christ was borne, by the starre which appeared in the East,
Matth. 2.9. and knewe also where he lay when he was borne, by the standing of that star directly ouer against him: so Thomas, not by one starre, but by many starres, which notwithstanding are more beautifull and bright then all the starres of heauen, knoweth and confesseth that the true sunne of righteousnesse is now risen, and shineth ouer all the earth. Thus these blessed wounds witnesse and approoue the resurrection of Christ. For now Iacob knowes Ioseph by his chariots: Anna knows Tobias by his spaniel: Rhode knowes Peter by his voice:
Protogenes knowes
Apelles by his line
[...] Arthurs body is knowne by his
[...]
[Page 79] King Alexanders stagges are known by their collars: Iannes knowes Arsenius by his hands: the spies knowes Rahabs house by the red thred: Euryclea knows Vlysses by the mark in his foote: the wisemen know Christ is borne by the starre that stands ouer him: Thomas knowes Christ is risen againe by the starres that appeare in him. As if our Sauiour should haue said thus to his Disciple; Thomas, I wo
[...] well what thou saidst, Except I see in his hands the print of the nayles, and put my finger into the print of the nayles, and put my hand into his side▪ I will not beleeue. Well, if this be all, thou shalt haue thy desire. I that suffred the Iewes to peirce my hands and my side, will not denie thee to see and touch them. Come therfore, I giue thee good leaue. Doe as thou saidst, Put thy finger here, and see my hands, and put forth thy hand, and put it into my side, and bee not faithlesse, but faithfull. So much for the first cause, which is to approoue his resurrection.
The second cause why Christ hath his wounds yet to be seene in his body,
[Page 80] is to appease his Father. Almighty God was once ready to haue destroyed the Israelites,
Psal. 1
[...]0.23. had not Moses his chosen stood before him in the g
[...]ppe. Moses as he was a mediator betweene God and the people, was a singular type of the Messias to come. And standing
[...] gap, he did as it were point to Christ. For when our Sauiours side was wounded, then indeed there was a great gap, and a great breach made, by which all wee that beleeue in him may escape. Therefore Moses his standing before the Lord in the gap, did signifie as S. Bernard noteth,
[...]e
[...]. 59. in Cant. that Christ making intercession before his Father for vs, should alwaies stand in the gap, & shew how he himselfe was broken vpon the crosse, and as I may say, troden downe for our redemption. That poore creeple also which begged at the beautiful gate of the temple,
Act. 3.
[...]. teacheth vs what he continually doth, who when he was rich, became poore for our sakes. The Temple is his body, which after it had beene destroied, was built vp againe in three daies. The beautifull gate of this Temple, is the pretious wound in his side, of
[Page 81] which the Psalmist saies, This is the gate of the righteous, the iust shall enter in by it. Therefore as that poore creeple, lying at the beautifull gate of the temple, was healed by S. Peter; so Christ lying at the beautifull gate of his
[...] body, shewing his most greiuous,
[...] yet most glorious sufferings and torments, appeaseth his fathers wrath, and obtaineth whatsoeuer he intreateth of him. King Ezekias hauing receiued rayling letters from Senacherib, went vp to the temple,
Esa 37.1
[...]. and spread the letters before the Lord, and praied, saying, Open thine eyes, O Lord, and see and heare all the words of Senacherib, who hath sent to blaspheme the liuing God. No Ezekias was euer more taunted and reuiled, more scorned and reproached, then he who was counted the shame of men, and the out-cast of the people. Wherefore now he spreadeth forth, and laieth open, not onely the blasphemous words, which were vttered against him, but also the dolorous wounds and gashes which w
[...]re giuen him, that so he may put out the hand-writing that was against vs, and appease his father,
[Page 82] and throughly reconcile him to vs. And looke how king Salomon,
1. Reg 8.22. when hee praied for the people, stood before the altar, and stretched out his hands toward heauen: in semblable wise Christ, who is farre greater then Salomon, standeth euermore beside the altar of his crosse, and stretcheth out his beskarred and wounded hands towards the throne of his heauenly father, that hee may mooue him to haue pitie and compassion of his people.
Pel
[...]pid
[...]s a noble Grecian, skirmished with the Lacedemonians against the Arcadians, vntill such time as beeing hurt in seaue
[...] places, he fell downe at last for dead. Then presently Epaminondas stepping forth bestrid him, and fought to defend his bodie, he alone against many, till beeing sore cut on his arme with a sword, and thrust into the breast with a pike, he was euen readie to giue ouer. But at that very instant, Agesipolis king of the Lacedemonians came with the other point of the battell in a happy howre,
Plutarch. in Pelopida initio. and saued both their liues when they were past all hope. If we would apply this story to our purpose now in
[Page 83] hand, we must make, man like Pelopidas, Christ like Epaminondas, God like Agesipolis. Since the ouerthrow of Adam, who went downe from Ierusalem to Ierico, how euery man hath beene wounded, not onely with Pelopidas in seauen places of his body, but euen in all the parts and powers of his soule, each one knoweth best by experience in himselfe. But Christ hath sheilded vs with his grace, and fought for vs; not till he was with Epaminondas cut on his arme with a sword, and thrust into the breast with a pike; but that which is in a manner all one, till his hands were goared with nayles, and his side thrust thorough with a speare. Wherefore God the father with Agesipolis seeing him in the work of his mediation, fight still for vs, clothed euen now in heauen with a garment dipt in blood, can not be angry either with him, or with vs, but when we are dead in sinne, quickneth vs together in him by whose grace we are saued, and raised vs vp, and maketh vs for his sake sit in the heauenly places aboue. Marcus Seruilius a valiant Romane, who had fought three and
[Page 84] twenty combates of life and death in his owne person, and had alwaies slaine as many of his enemies as challeng'd him man to man; when as the people of Rome resisted Paulus Emilius triumph,
Plutarch in Paulo A
[...]melio fine. stood vp and made an oration in his behalfe. In the midst whereof he cast open his gowne, and shewed before them the infinite skarves and cut
[...] he had receiued vpon his breast. The sight of which so preuailed with the people, that they all agreed in one, and graunted Emilius triumph. After the same fashion, Christ hath spoiled
[...] cipalities and powers, and hath made a shew of them openly, and hath triumphed ouer them in his crosse, ye
[...] and yet now beareth about in his bodie the markes and tokens of this triumph, that a finall agreement and attonement being made betweene God and vs, by his onely mediation and meanes: we also may be more then conquerours in him that loueth vs, and may euery one of vs say with Saint Paul, Now thanks be vnto God, which alwaies maketh vs to triumph in Christ. Among other ornaments of the Sanctuarie, there was
[Page 85] a golden censer full of holes, by which the sweete odours fumed forth, when Aaron once a yeare burnt incense therin. No other high Priest doe we acknowledge but Christ the true Aaron,
Heb.
[...].4. who hath not entred into any Sanctuarie made with hands, but into heauen it selfe. And his golden censer is his own body, which through the wounds that are in it as through chinks or holes, su
[...]eth forth alwaies a pleasing and a sweete
[...]auour in the nosthrils of his father. The signe of the couenant which God made with Noah was a rainebowe in the cloud. And indeede that is a sure token vnto vs, that the world shall neuer be drowned againe with a generall flood of water,
Gen. 9 16. as it was in Noahs time. But the rainebowe which assureth vs we shall neuer be drowned in the pit of euerlasting perdition, is no such thing. Why may some man say, what is it? Mane it is the blood of Christ, which maketh as it w
[...]re, a rainebow in his side. For the other rainebow is but a transitorie signe, which shall passe away with the cloudes and with the world. But this rainebowe, whereof the other
[Page 86] is but a shadow, shall continue for euer in the sight of God, as the author to the Hebrewes sai's, that Christ is entred into heauen,
vt appareat nunc vultui Dei pro nobis, to appeare now in the fight of God for vs. Therefore S. Iohn in the Reuelation witnesseth, that he sawe a doore open in heauen, aud a rainebow round about the throne of God. Hee sawe a doore open in heauen, to teach vs that we can haue no accesse vnto the Father, but by Christ, neither yet by Christ simply, but as he is crucified, and hath set open a doore in his side for vs to enter by him. He sawe a rainebowe round about the throne of God, to teach vs that the throne of God would be altogether a throne of iustice, a throne of wrath, a throne of anger and indignation, were it not that the blood of Christ, spinning out as I may say still liuely and freshly in the sight of his father, maketh a rainbowe round about his throne, putteth him in minde of his couenant, appeaseth his displeasure, and so maketh his throne to all vs that loue him,
Gen. 30.37. a throne of grace, a throne of compassion, a throne of fauour and mercie
[Page 87] in Christ. We read that Iacob pilled certaine rods, which beeing laid in the watering troughes before the sheepe, made them bring forth such lambes, as afterward fell to his own share. So likewise if we sinne, wee haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the righteous, and he is the propitiation for our sinnes. The marke of the roddes in his wounds laid open in the sight of God, ingendreth and breedeth in him a loue and a liking toward vs, so that he conceiueth well of vs, and seuereth vs as good sheepe from the goates, and in the blood of the lambe is pleased and appeased, and satisfied for our sinnes. This blood is the blood of sprinkling,
Heb. 12.24. which speaketh better things then that of Abel. For Abels blood vpon earth cryed out once for vengeance, but Christs blood in heauen cries continually for mercie. One deepe calleth another, because of the noise of the water pipes. Christs woundes are the watering troughs and the water-pipes, by which all graces flowe vnto vs. So that one deepe calleth an other, because of the noise of the water pipes; because the
[Page 88] wounds of Christ make a continuall noise in the eares of his father, and the depth of the extreame misery which he was in vpon earth, calleth for the depth of Gods bottomlesse and infinite mercy in heauen. Thus these holy wounds of Christ pacifie and appease his father. For now Moyses standing in the gappe sues for pardon: the poore creeple lying at the beautifull gate, begg's an almes: Ezechias spreading open his letters, makes his supplication: Salomon stretching out his hands, offers vp his prayer: Epaminondas being wounded, mooues Ag
[...]sipolis to saue Pelopidas: Seruilius discouering his wounds, perswades the people to grant Emilius triumph. Aaron burning incense in his golden censer, perfumeth the whole Sanctuarie: Noah pointing to his rainebowe, putteth God in mind of his promise: Iacob laying forth his roddes, make most of the lambes his owne: Abel holding vp his blood, cals and cries for mercie: Christ shewing his hands and his side appeaseth his father. As if our Sauiour should say thus vnto his Father, O my louing father,
[Page 89] looke vpon the face of thine annointed, looke vpon the hands, looke vpon the side of thine annointed. The hands of thine anointed, how cruelly they are mangled, the side of thine annointed, bow wofully it is wounded. Behold, and see, if there be any sorrowe like to my sorrow. These hands can signifie what exceeding sorrow I haue suffered: this side can shew that I haue humbled my selfe, and haue been obedient vnto death, euen vnto the death of the crosse. Therefore, O my deare father, Put thy finger here, and see my hands; and put forth thy hand, and put it into my side, and as thou art not faithlesse, but faithfull, so be not mercilesse, but mercifull for my sake, and pitifull to thy people. So much for the second cause, which is to appease his Father.
The third cause, why Christ hath his wounds yet to be seene in his bodie, is to confound his enemies. When Saint Paul the Apostle before his conuersion persecuted the Church of God, Christ called to him from heauen, and said, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? Who art thou Lord, saies Saul? I am,
[Page 90] saies Christ, Iesus of Nazareth, whom thou persecutest. Alluding to the title of his crosse, which was, Iesus of Nazareth, King of the Iewes. At which words, Saul both trembling and astonished, said, Lord, what wilt then haue me do?
Act. 22.8. Now if Saul, who repented him afterward of his persecuting Christ, stood so astonished, when he heard but a peice of the title vpon his crosse, how
[...]he
[...] shall all they bee astonished, how shall they be confounded, which without any repentance or remorse of conscience, persecute Christ continually, when at the latter day, not onely the title written ouer his head, but euen the verie print of the wounds in his hands and side, shall rise vp in iudgement to condemne them? When like as Ioseph said to his brethren, I am Ioseph your brother, whom you sold into Egypt: so Christ shall say vnto them, I am Iesus of Nazareth, whom you persecuted and put to death? Wonderfull indeed is the feare and confusion of a wicked conscience. After that Herod had beheaded Iohn Baptist, he imagined stil he saw and heard that holy head, showting
[Page 91] and crying out against him.
Mark. 6.16. Whereupon hearing the fame of Iesus, hee said not as others said, It is Elias, or, It is one of the Prophets: but, It is Iohn, saies he whome I beheaded, he is risen from the dead. Saying, whome I beheaded, hee confesseth not his fault in true repentance, but onely with his owne mouth beareth witnesse of his owne wickednesse. In so much as that may be said to him, which Dauid said to the Amalakite, who brought him newes of Sauls death: Thine owne mouth testifieth against thee, saying, I haue slaine the Lords anointed. Now if the remembrance of this cruell act, so vexed and disquieted Herod day and night, that hee could take no rest for it, but still, thought waking, and dream'd sleeping, Iohn Baptist was risen againe, to be reuenged of him; how then shall they be affrighted, how shall they be confounded, which haue not beheaded Iohn, but crucified Christ, yea and crucifie him continually with their sins, when at the resurrection of all flesh, they shal see him whom they haue peirced, and w
[...]ing their hands, and weep and waile
[Page 92] before him? Scipio appointed his sepulchre to bee so placed, as his image standing vpon it, might looke directly toward Africa, that beeing dead hee might still be a terror to the Carthaginians: after the same sort, the Prophet Esay prophesying of Christ, saith, In that day the roote of Iesse shall stand vp for a signe vnto the people, and euen his sepulchre shall be glorious.
Et erat schulchrum eius gloriosum. So that as the bodie of Cadwallo an auncient king of the Brittaines, being embalmed and dressed with sweete confections,
Hollinshed. was put into a brasen image, and set vpon a brasen horse ouer Ludgate, for a terrour to the Saxons: in semblable sort he that is called Faithfull and true shall sit vpon a white horse, and out of his mouth shall proceede a sharpe sword, wherewith he shall smite and slay the heathen. The sword wherewith Dauid hackt off Golias head,
1. Sam 21.9. after he had wrested it out of his hand, was kept in the Tabernacle, wrapt in a cloath behind the Ephod. Which when Abimelech the Priest brought forth, Dauid said, There is none to that, giue it me. Christ also did conquer death euen with th
[...]se
[Page 93] weapons and armour wherewith death assaul
[...]ed him. And hee keepeth still a memoriall of his conquest in the tabernacle of his body. That as the Philistims were afraid, when they sawe Dauid figh
[...]ing in the field with that sword: so all Christs enemies may bee confounded; when they shall see the signe of the sonne of man appearing in the clouds with power and great glorie. It was a strange miracle that of Aarons rodde which budded. Therfore the Lord said vnto Moses,
Numb. 7.10. Bring Aarons rod againe before the testimonie to bee kept for a token to the rebellious children. The bodie of Christ was a greene tree before it was crucified. After being dead, it was clung and drie like Aarons rod. But it budded, when as the third day it rose againe. Therefore it is kept stil for a token to the rebellious children. That as Aaron conuinced the murmuring Israelites, and confirmed the authority of his priesthood by the budding of his rodde, which otherwise was but a dead and a drie thing: so Christ may confound his enemies, when he shall shew such flourishing glorie, such excellent
[Page 94] maiestie in his bodie, which hath yet in it the tokens and the marks of death. It is reported that Zisca, the valiant captaine of the Bohemians, commaunded that after his decease his skinne should be fleed from his bodie to make a drum which they should vse in their battels, affirming that as soone as the Hungarians,
Fox Act. or any other their enemies should heare the sound of that drumme, they would not abide, but take their flight. And surely euery battel of the warriour is with noyse, & with tumbling of ga
[...] ments in blood, but this battell, wherein Christ shall tread Satan and all his enemies vnder his feete, shall bee with burning and consuming of fire. So that no drum can be more terrible then the last trumpet shal be, when the Lord Iesus shall shewe himselfe from heauen with his mightie Angels, and shall so come downe with the very same mark
[...] and sears in his skin, as the men of Galilie saw him ascending vp. They which dispatched noble Iulius Caesar in the senate house, did set a good face of the matter a while,
Dion. l. 44. till Antonius the next day shew'd his robe in the market place
[Page 95] all bloody, cut and full of holes, as his enemies had left it. Then the people were so incensed and enraged against them, that they made the best of them al glad to hide their heads. The Romanes said, We haue no King, and therefore they slewe Caesar: the Iewes said, We haue no King but Caesar, and therefore they slew Christ. But at the day of iudgment, what shall Christ say?
Those mine enemies, which would not that I should raigne ouer them, bring hither, and slay them before me. Then not onely the angels, but all creatures shall be ready to execute vengeance on these murtherers, when they shall see the robe of Christ washt in wine, and his garment in the blood of grapes.
Gen. 38.20. When Thamar Iudahs daughter in law was accused for committing folly in Israel, she sent to her father in law, saying, Looke I pray thee whose these are, the signet and the staffe. Iuda by and by knew them, and said, She is more righteous then I. And so shall Christs enemies be enforced to confesse him more righteous then thē selues, yea they shall be quite confounded, when they shall see how they
[Page 96] haue abused him, when they shall see the marks, which their signet and staffe haue made, their signet in his hands, and their staffe in his side. The Prophet Daniel recordeth, that while Balthazar was drinking wine in the golden vessels,
Dan. 5.6. which he had taken out of the Temple, there appeared fingers of a mans hand that wrote vpon the w
[...]ll, and the King saw the
[...] of the hand that wrote. Then his co
[...]tenance was changed, and his thoughts troubled him, so that the
[...] of his
[...] were loosed, and his knees smote one against an other. In this case of Balthazar wee may consider the state of the wicked, what it shalbe at the last day: when they shal see the fingers and the palmes of Christs hands, which they haue so pitifully wounded, writing down their doome, they shall tremble euery ioyn
[...] of them, and be at their wits ends; and they shall say to the mountaines,
[...]al on vs; and to the rocks, Couer vs, and hide vs from the presence of him that fitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lambe. Thus these victorious wounds of Christ shall confront and
[Page 97] confound his enemies. As Saul was astonished, when he heard Iesus of Nazareth calling to him: as Herod was affrighted when he thought Iohn Baptist was risen againe: as the Carthagineans were troubled, when they sawe Sciplo's sepulchre: as the Saxons were terrified, when they saw Cadwallo's Image: as the Philistims were afraid whē they saw
[...] sword: as the Israelits were appaled, when they sawe Aarons rod: as the Hungarians were daunted, when they saw Zisca's drum: as the Romanes were dasht, when they saw Caesars robe: as Iuda was ashamed when he sawe Thamars signet and staffe: as Balthazar was amazed when hee sawe the hand writing vpon the wall. So shall Christs enemies be confounded, when they shall see his hands and his side. As if our Sauiour should say thus to euery one of his enemies, Thou enemie of all righteousnesse, Many things many times hast thou done against me, and hitherto haue I held my tongue; but now will I reprooue thee, and in before thee the things that thou hast done. Thou art the man, thou art the
[Page 98] man, that didst murther me, and put me to a most shamefull death. Denie it if thou darst.
Verendum, n
[...] illan: vocem in iudicio suo ad vasa iniquitatis prolaturus sit, fer digitum tuum hue. Caesar hom. 23. Denie it if thou canst. These are thy marks which are yet to be seene in my hands. This deadly wound is thy doing, which is yet to be seene in my side. Therefore thine owne eyes shall giue euidence, and thine owne conscience shall giue sentence against thee. See now whether I say true or no. Look what thou hast done. Put thy finger here, and see my hands, and put forth thy hand, and put it into my side, and as thou art not faithfull, but faithlesse, so looke for no mercie at my hands, but for shame and euerlasting confusion. So much for the third cause, which is to confound his enemies.
The fourth cause, why Christ hath his wounds yet to be seene in his body, is to comfort his friends. Almighty God in the old law appointed cities of refuge, whether they which had sinned vnwillingly might flie and be safe,
Num. 35.23. if they staied in any of them till the death of the high Priest. Our high Priest can yet plainly prooue by his hands & side, that once he died for vs. Whether then
[Page 99] should we flie, sinnefull soules; whether should we flie for succour and comfort but to Christ? His wounds only are the cities of refuge, wherein we are safe and secure, according to that of the Psalmist, The high hills are a refuge for the wilde goates, and so are the stony rocks for the conies. O blessed be these high hills, blessed be these stony rocks, which protect & defend vs, yea though we haue willingly sinned, not onely against the furie of man, and the rage of the world, but also against the terrible and dreadfull displeasure of Almighty God. Therefore our Sauiour speakes to his Spouse in this sort,
Can. 2.14. My doue thou art in the holes of the rocke, in the secret place of the staires, shew me thy sight, let me heare thy voice. Insinuating, that the Church dares neither be seene nor heard of God, except she be in the holes of the rocke, and in the secret places of the staires. The rocke, is Christ. The staires also and the ladder, whereby Iacob climb's vp to heauen is Christ. So that the doue, which is the Church, lying hid in the holes of this rocke, and in the secret places of these
[Page 100] staires, dreadeth nothing but with great boldnes, why doe I say boldnesse? yea with great ioy, with great comfort, sheweth her selfe to God, and speaketh vnto him. Here the sparrow findeth her a house, and the swallow a nest, where shee may lay her young, euen thine Altar, that is thy wounds, whereby thou didst offer vp thy selfe, as a sacrifice for our sinnes, euen thine altars, O Lord of hosts, my King, and my God. When Elias flying from Achab came to Bee
[...] sheba, he sate downe vnder a iuniper tree, and desired that he might die. A iuniper tree maketh the hoatest coale,
Fabiolae Ma
[...]s. 15. and the coolest shadow of any tree. The coale is so hot, that if it be rackt vp in ashes of the same, it continueth vnextinguished by the space of a whole years. Therefore whereas we read in the hundred and twentieth Psalme, With hot burning coales; it is in the Hebrew, as S. Hierom noteth, with Iuniper coales. Which prooueth that Iuniper coales be the most hot burning coales that are. Now the coale is not so hot, but the shadowe is as coole. Insomuch as the only shadow of the Iuniper tree, slaieth
[Page 101] and killeth serpents. Therefore Elias seeking to rest himselfe where he might be safest from serpents, and other daungerr, sat downe vnder a iuniper tree, and desired that hee might die: For hee thought he could neuer with the sparrow finde him a house, and with the swallow make him a nest in a better place, thē where he was ouershadowed with that Iuniper tree, which shadowed out the tree of the Crosse of Christ. Of which the Church sai's, Vnder his shadowe had I delight, and sat downe, and his fruite was sweete vnto my mouth. So that if Simeon holding the child in his armes, desired to die, how much more blessedly then might Elias haue departed now in peace, when as beeing wearied with the world, he was shadowed with the tree of life; and not onely held the child in his armes, but also was held himselfe as a child in the wounded and naked armes of Christ. Notably also doth the storie of Noah declare what singular comfort the faithfull finde in Christs woundes. For onely Noah saued all; onely Christ redeameth all,
Gen. 6.16. Noah signified rest: Christ is
[Page 102] our rest and peace. Noah saued all by the wood of the Ark: Christ red
[...]emeth all by the tree of the crosse. Noah was tossed vp and downe vpon the waters: Christ saith to his father, Thou hast brought all thy waues vpon me. Noah saued all by the doore in the side of the arke: Christ redeemeth all by the door
[...] in the side of his bodie. Noah the fortieth day after the decreasing of the flood opened the windowe: Christ the fortieth day after his resurrectiō, ascendeth vp and openeth heauen, Lo ye, how all things agree together. None but Noah, none but Christ: Noahs rest, Christs peace: Noahs arke, Christs crosse: Noahs water, Christs woe: Noahs doore, Christs side: Noahs windowe, Christs kingdome. The Prophet Hose foretelleth, that Ephraim shall flie away like a bird. This is fulfilled not only in Ephraim, but euen in all mankind. All haue gone astray; all haue flowen away from God: as a hau
[...]e which takes a check and giues ouer her pray: wherefore Christ holding out his wounded, and bloody hands, as meat to reclaime vs, calleth vs as it were, and saith. Returne,
[Page 103] returne, O Shulamite, returne; returne,
Can. 6 12. that we may behold thee. Prudentius writeth, that when
Asclepiades commaunded the tormentors to strike
Romanus on the mouth, the meeke martyr answered, I thanke thee, O captaine, that thou hast opened vnto me many mouthes, whereby I may preach my Lord and Sauiour:
Tot ecce laudant or a, quot sunt vulnera, Looke howe many wounds I haue, so many mouthes I haue, to praise and laud the Lord. And looke how many wounds Christ hath, so many mouthes he hath to call vs to himselfe, so many lures he hath to make our soule flie for comfort onely vnto him. Manna was a most comfortable meate, which God gaue the Israelites. It was like to coriander seede, and the tost of it was like vnto wafers made with honey.
Exod. 16.32. This our holy Sauiour applieth to himselfe. For when the Capernites said, Our fathers did eate Manna in the desert, Iesus answered, Your fathers did eate Manna in the wildernesse, and are dead. I am the liuing bread, which came downe from heauen. Therefore as then there was a golden
[Page 104] pot of Manna kept in the Tabernacle, that the posteritie might see the bread wherewith the Lord fed them, so there is yet a golden pot of Manna kept in heauen,
Bernard de amor. dei. c. 2. that the faithfull in all ages may tast and see how sweete the Lord is, which feedeth them with his owne body and blood, the least droppe whereof, though it be as small as a
[...] and or seede, yet it is as sweet as a wafer made with honey. Hard it is to giues reason wherefore Christ, when he came to the citie of Sichar in Samari
[...],
[...] was Iacobs well, sate downe vpon the well about the sixt houre. But certainly he did this, not so much for himselfe as for vs. That hereby we might learne when the sunne is hotest about the
[...] houre of the day, whē we are most exercised with afflictions, when we are
[...] rest grieued for our sins, alwaies to haue recourse vnto Christ, alwaies to see with the King into the wineselles alwaies to sit downe vpon Iacobs well.
Ioh. 4.6. Of which the Prophet Zacharie sai
[...]s, In that day there shall be a fountaine opened to the house of Dauid, and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem, for sinne and
[Page 105] for vncleanenesse.
In omnibus aduersitatibus n
[...] inueni tam essicax remedium quam vulnera Christi. Manu. 22. Whereupon S. Austin saith verie diuinely, In all aduersities, saies he, I could neuer yet find any remedie so comfortable and so effectuall, as the wounds of Christ. Christ is not vnlike to the poole in Ierusalem,
Ioh. 5.1. called Bethesda, hauing fiue porches, which being troubled by an angel, healed any man that went first into it, what soeuer disease he had. Bethesda signifieth the house of effusion or powring out, in which house Christ dwelt when he powred out his blood and his soule for our saluation. Therefore he alone is the angel, which came downe at a certaine season, into the poole, and troubled the water: because when the fulnes of time was come, he came into the world to be troubled himselfe, and to be crucified, that he might heale not onely that one man which had been diseased eight a
[...]d thirtie yeares, but euen all mankinde, with the troubled water and blood which issued out of his side. So that there is nothing so comfortable for sicke and sinnefull men, as to fit in the seates and porches of this poole. Wonderfull are the words of the Prophet
[Page 106] concerning Christ, He shall seede his flocke like a shepheard,
Esa. 40.11 he shall gather the lambs with his armes, had
[...] thē in his bosom. Which was profigur'd in the high Priest, who did beare vp with his shoulders a breast pla
[...]e, wherin were the names of the twelue tribes, written in twelue precious stones. That which the shepheard doth with his armes and bosom: that which the high Priest doth with his shoulders &
[...] that doth Christ with his hands and side. He is the good shepheard, which bringeth home the lost
[...] vpon
[...] shoulders. Yea he writeth the
[...] of all his sheepe in his precious wounds, which are the precious stones vpon his breast-plate, that both declare his loue to vs. & also allure vs to loue him. This makes Dauid say in great
[...], The Lord is my shepheard, ther
[...] can I lacke nothing. He shall feeded
[...] in a greene pasture, and lead men forth beside the waters of comfort. For
[...] henne gathereth her brood vnder her wings: so God gathereth his children together.
Deut 30.11. And as an eagle stirreth vp her nest, flotereth ouer her birds, taken
[Page 107] them, and beareth them on her wings: so Christ, carrieth vs vp in his hands to the high places of the earth, and causeth vs to sucke bonie out of the stone, and oyle out of the hard rock. Butheius an excellent painter, painted an eagle carrying Ganimedes into heauen, so nicely and tenderly, that her talents did not
[...] him, but onely beare him vp. And in like sort, Christ beareth vs vp in his hands, that we dash no
[...] our foot against a stone; yea his right hand is vnder our head,
quis Dominus supponit ma. num suam. and his le
[...]t hand doth embrace vt, so ther though we should fal, yet we cannot be hurt, because the Lord stayeth and supporteth vs with his hand. Therefore S. Chrysostome giues vs good counsell, not to haue iayes eyes but eagles eyes, that wee may behold these hands of Christ, and see his side in the Sacrament. For indeede as often as we celebrate the memorie of our Lords death, Christ our Sauiour, deliuering the bread and the cuppe by his minister, saith in a sort to euerie faithful receiuer, Put thy finger here, and see my hands, and put forth thy hand, and put it into my side, and be not faithlesse, but
[Page 108] faithfull. But yet we shall not alwaies drinke of this fruit of the vine. The time will come, when we shall drinke a new kinde of wine in Christs kingdome. Wherefore he saies, As often as y
[...] shall eate this bread, and drinke this cup, you shall sh
[...]w the Lords death til he
[...]. Till he come. Declaring hereby, that when he is come, his death shall bee shewed an other way. Namely, by his wounds, which alwaies he sheweth to his
[...]. Euen as we sing in that heauenly Hymne or Psalme, The humble suit of a sinner▪ Whose blo
[...]dy wou
[...]d
[...] are yet to see, though not with mortall eye, yet doe thy Saints behold them all, and so I trust shall I. O how vnspeakeably doe
[...]he Saints
[...], how gloriously also shall we triumph! when we shall see Christ in his kingdome, and behold those blessed wounds of his, whereby he hath purchased so many, and so great good things for vs? This is the new wine, which we shall drinke. This is the Eucharist of the Angels: the food of the Elect: the spirit
[...] of the Saints. For wheresoeuer the dead bodie is, thither shall the eagles refer.
[Page 109] And we that with eagles wings flie vp by faith into heauen, shall euer resort to this dead bodie, and we shal vnsatiably desire to feede our eyes, and our soules with the sight of Christ, who was once dead, and euen now hath in his bodie those skarres which continue the memorie of his death, that in all eternitie it may neuer be forgotten. Thus these heauenly wounds of Christ delight and comfort his friends. As the cities of refuge, which saue the sinner: as the holes of the rock, which defend the doue; as the shadow of the iuniper tree, which reuiueth the wearied; as the doore of the Arke, which preserueth the world: as the lure of the
[...]oule, which calleth home the Shulamite: as the pot of Manna, which nourisheth the Israelite: as the well of Iacob, which refresheth the thirstie: as the poole of Bethesda, which healeth the sicke: as the armes of the shepheard, which gather his lambs: as the wings of the eagle, which beare vp her birds. So doe the hands and side of Christ comfort his friends. As if our Sauiour should say thus to euery one of his friends, Can a mother forget her
[Page 110] child, and not haue compassion on the son of her wombe? though they should forget, yet would not I forget thee. Behold, I haue grauen thee vpon the palmes of my hands. Here I haue still in my hands that price of thy redemption, which I paid for thee, so that no man can take thee out of my hands. Yea I haue written and sealed thy saluation in my side. A speare is the penne: my blood is the inke: my body is the p
[...] per. Here thou maist see the bowels of my compassion, thorough the wounds of my passion. Assure thy selfe therfore, assure thy selfe of my loue, of my good will, of my fauour for euer. Make no doubt of it. If thou doubt any thing, Put thy finger here, and see my hands, and put forth thy hand, and put it into my side, and be not faithlesse, but faithful. So much for the fourth cause, which is to comfort his friends.
You see then, blessed Christians, you see how these causes of Christs wounds differ one from an other. The first cause, to approoue his resurrection, was, but neither is, nor shall bee. The second cause, to appease his Father was
[Page 111] and is, but shall not be. The third cause, to confound his enemies, neither was, nor is, but shall be. The fourth cause, to comfort his friends, both was, and is, and shall be. So that Christs wounds, did serue, to approoue his resurrection, onely between his resurrection, and his ascension: doe serue to appease his Father, onely between his ascension, and his second comming: shall serue to confound his enemies, onely at the day of iudgement: did, doe, and shall serue, to comfort his friends, for euer. Wherfore though wee be neuer so great sinners, yet let vs neuer despaire of the grace and mercie of Christ. His hands are still stretched out to embrace vs, his side is alwaies open to receiue vs. Therefore let vs creepe low, and come humbly to him, that wee may with the woman in the Gospel, touch but the hemme of his garment; nay that we may with S. Iohn, leane vpon his blessed bosome; yea that we may with S. Thomas in this place, put our fingers into his hands, and our hands into his side. And euen as Constantine the great vsed to kisse that eye of Paphnutius which was boared out in
[Page 112] Maximinus time, and the Iayler in the Acts, washed S. Pauls stripes and vvound
[...]: so let vs kisse the Sonne least he bee angry, and honour his holy vvounds, vvich are the precious
[...] vvherevvith he hath healed vs, and restored vs to euerlasting life. To the vvhich vve beseech thee, O good Lord to bring vs, not for our ovvne deferrs or merits, but for the tender bovvels of Christ Iesus loue and mercie tovvard vs, to vvhom vvith the Father, and the holy Ghost, bee all honour and praise both novv and for euermore, Amen.
FINIS.
MATTH. 5. V. 19. He that both doeth and teacheth, the same shall be called great in the kingdome of heauen.
BEloued in our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ, It is a verie monstrous thing, that any man should haue more tongues then hand
[...]. For God hath giuen vs two hands, and but one tongue, that we might doe much, and say but little. Yet many say so much and do so little, as though they had two tongues, and but one hand: nay, three tongues and neuer a hand. Insomuch as that may be aptly applied to them,
[...] which
Pandulphus said to some in his time: You say much, but you doe little; you say well, but you doe ill: againe, you doe little, but you say much: you doe ill, but you say well. Such as these (which do either worse then they teach, or else lesse then they teach: teaching
[Page 114] others to doe well, and to do much, but doing no whit themselues) may be resembled to diuerse things. To a wherstone, which being blunt it selfe, makes a knife sharpe. To a painter, which being deformed himselfe, makes a picture faire. To a signe, which beeing weather-beaten and hanging without it selfe, directs passengers into the Inne. To a bell, which beeing deafe and hearing not it selfe, calls the people into the Church to heare. To a nightingale▪ which beeing restles and sitting vpon a thorne her selfe, brings others by her singing into a sweete sle
[...]pe. To a goldsmith, which beeing beggerly and hauing not one peice of plate to vse himselfe, hath store for others which he shewes and sells in his shoppe. Lastly, to a ridiculous actor in the citie of Smyrna, which pronouncing;
ô coelum, O heauen, pointed with his finger toward the ground: which when
Polemo the cheifest man in the place sawe, he could abide to stay no longer, but went from the company in a chase, saying, This
[...]oole hath made a solecisme with his ha
[...] hee hath spoken false Latine w
[...] his
[Page 115] hand. Such are all they, which teach one thing and do another: which teach well, and doe ill. They are like a blunt whe
[...]stone: a deformed painter: a weather-beaten signe: a deafe bell: a restles nightingale: a beggerly goldsmith: a ridiculous actor, which pronounceth the heauen, and pointeth to the earth. But he that sitteth in the heauen, shall laugh all such to scorne, the Lord shall haue them in derision, and hisse them off from the stage. Because howsoeuer they haue the heauen commonly at their tongues ende, yet they haue the earth continually at their fingers ende. So that they speake false Latine with their hand; nay that which is worse, they speake false Diuinitie with their hand. Whereas we might easily auoide all such irregularitie, & make true congruity betweene the tongue and the hand, if we would make this text of holy Scripture, the rule of our whole life. For then, I assure you, we should euery one of vs play our parts so well, that in the end, the tragedie of this wofull life beeing once finished, we should haue an applause and a
plaudite of the whole
[Page 116] theatre, not onely of men and Angels, but euen of God himselfe, who doth alwaies behold vs. Wherefore out of these fewe words, let vs obserue these two parts.
Diuision. The first negatiue, what must not be: neither Pastor nor people must teach one thing and doe another: That must not be. The second affirmatiue, what must be: both Past
[...]r and people must doe that themselues, which they teach others to doe. That must be. For He that both doth and teacheth, the same, shall be called great in the kingdome of heauen.
First, that the Pastor must not teach one thing and doe another, appeareth in the fourth of Leuiticus.
Leu. 4.20. Where almighty God appointeth the selfe same sacrifice should be offered for the sinne of the Priest, which is offered for the sinne of the whole people. So that all the people may better sinne, though it be a thousand times, then the Priest may sinne though it be but once. For the people sinning, offend onely by their sinne:
Exod. 4. but the Priest sinning offendeth more by his example, then by his sinne. Therefore Moses beeing comm
[...]ded
[Page 117] by throwing downe his rod,
Exod 7. to worke miracles, deliuered it to Aaaon, To signifie, that especially it belongeth to him to doe somewhat himselfe, whose duty is to teach others. Whereupon also our Sauiour giues vs a caueat, to beware of false Prophets, because they say and do not.
Matth. 23.3. They say one thing, and doe another. They bind heauie burthens which they tie vpon other mens backes,
Luk. 1
[...].
[...]6. but touch not those burdens themselues, so much as with the least of their fin
[...]ers. So that that which was fondly and falsly said of Christ,
Matth. 27.42. He saued others, himselfe he cannot saue: may be fitly & truly said of these▪ They saue others, themselues they cannot saue. Whereas the Apostle making Timothy an example for all ministers to follow, writeth thus to him; Take heed to thy selfe,
1. Tim.
[...].16. and to doctrine: for in doing so, thou shalt both saue thy selfe, and them that heare th
[...]e. By taking keede to thy doctrine, thou shalt saue them that heare thee: by taking heede to thy selfe, thou shalt saue thy selfe. Otherwise if thou take heede to thy doctrine, and not to thy selfe, thou m
[...]est well saue others that heare thee,
[Page 118] but thy selfe thou canst not saue. Thou maiest well preach to others, but thou shalt be sure to prooue a cast-away thy selfe.
1. Cor. 9.17. For when two pray, if the one blesse, and the other curse, whose prayer will God heare? And is it not then much more dangerous, when out of one and the selfe same mouth commeth both blessing and cursing? When one and the selfe same Minister,
Iam. 3.10. teacheth well, whereby the people are blessed, and yet doth ill, whereby he himselfe is accursed? Is it not likely that God will rather respect his cursed doing to p
[...] nish it, then regard his
[...] teaching to praise it? Certainly the Psal
[...]ist puts the matter out of all doubt, where he saies,
Psal. 8.2. That God will surely cast away, God will reiect, God will destroy the enemy and the auenger. The enemie and the auenger: Who is he? He that is an enemy to Gods glorie in that he doth ill, and yet would seeme to be an auenger, to be a maintainer, to be a defender of Gods glory, in that he teacheth well, he is the enemy and the auenger. And such an one as this, which is indeede an enemie, and yet would
[Page 119] seeme to bee an auenger, which is indeed a foe, and yet would seeme to be a friend, which doth indeed ill, and yet would seeme to teach well, such an one I say, will God destroy. To the wicked thus saith the Lord. Why doest thou preach my lawes,
Psal. 50.16. and take my statutes in thy mouth, whereas thou hatest to be thy selfe reformed by them, and hast cast my words behinde thee? By thine owne mouth,
Luk. 19.22. by thine owne confession I will condemne thee, thou naughtie, thou lewd seruant.
Iob. 15.6. Thine owne words shall accuse thee, and not I, yea thine owne lips shall beare witn
[...]sse against thee. For why goest thou about to take a little moate out of thy brothers eye,
Matth. 7.5. and doest not first cast out that great beame which is in thine owne eye? Why goest thou to other mens houses, and priest into other mens matters,
Mark. 5.
[...]6. and doest not first go to thine owne house, and see that all bee well in thine owne heart? What meanest thou to doe? Thou that teachest others, doest thou not teach thy selfe?
Rom. 2.
[...]1. Thou that preachest a mā should not steale, dost thou steale? If thou be a preacher, then preach to
[Page 120] thy selfe as well as others. If thou be a Physitian,
Luk. 4.13. then cure thy selfe as well as others. Seeing indeed as Hierome writeth, he is too nice and to daintie a Physitian,
Deliearus magister est, qui ple
[...]o ventre dispúta
[...] de i
[...] iunio. either for the body or els for the soule, which prescribeth fa
[...]ing to others, and is sicke of a surfet himselfe. Wherefore the godly Pastor must not prescribe fasting to others and be sicke of a surfe
[...] himselfe: he must not teach one thing and doe an other. For not be that onely teacheth, but He that both doth and teacheth, the same shall be called great in the kingdome of heauen.
Now the people also are forbidden to teach one thing and doe an other, as well as the Pastor. For all Christians must imitate the example of Christ. And for Christ S. Iohn tells vs, that he was full of grace and truth.
Ioh. 1.14. The fulnesse of his truth, made him teach well: of his grace,
1. Pet. 2.22. doe well. Saint Peter likewise, that hee did no sinne, neither was there guile found in his mouth. Many haue no guilt found in their mouthes, which notwithstanding
[...] sinne. But euen as Christ had neither
[Page 121] guile in his teaching, not yet sinne in his doing: so wee that are Christians must neither deceiue others by teaching guilfully, nor yet deceiue our selues by doing sinnefully. For wee knowe that not euery one that saith,
Matth. 7.21. Lord, Lord, shall be saued. Neither yet euery one that saith, The Temple of the Lord,
Ier. 7.4. the Temple of the Lord, shall be blessed. Seeing oftentimes a man, the nearer he is to the Temple of the Lord, the further hee is from the Lord of the Temple. Therefore as that figtree was accursed, which did beare leaues and no fruit:
Mark. 21.14. so shall euery man be accursed which beareth leaues without fruit. I meane a flourish of teaching, without any fruit of doing. Yea such a man being once accursed, shall be euer tormented. For knowing his masters will,
Luk. 12 47. nay knowing it so well, that he is able to teach it others also, and yet doing it not himselfe, he shall be beaten with many stripes. Chrysostome saith, that drunken men haue both strings wherewith their tongues are tied,
[...]. so that they can teach nothing well; and also strings wherewith their hands are tied, so that
[Page 122] they can doe nothing well. They are both tongueti'de,
Mark. 7.35. and handti'de. But such as knowe their masters wil, and do it not, are worse then drunken men. For though the string of their tongue bee loose, as that stammerers in the Gospell was, so that they can teach wel enough: yet the string of their hand is not loose, their hand is still bound vp in their bosome, as that loyterers in the Prouerbs is,
Prou. 26.15. so that they can doe nothing well. Therfore they draw neere to God with their tongues,
Ier. 12.1. but are far from him with their reines. Yea they are so farre from comming to him with th
[...]ir hearts, that they neuer come neere him so much as with their hands. But though they haue the smooth tongue of Iacob, which teacheth well;
Gen. 27.22. yet they haue the rough hand of Esau, which doth ill. Such doe not touch Christ, but throng Christ. They touch Christ, as the good woman did,
Luk. 8 45. which follow him, and come neere vnto him by well doing. They throng Christ, as the rest of the people did, which oppresse and ouerwhelme him with a multitude of words, without any matter or manner of doing; which are
[Page 123] as wells without water,
1. Pet. 2.17. or as clouds without raine. Such as the Prophet Ieremie speaketh, doe steale Gods word▪ They haue not onely false and lying tongues,
Furantur verba. Ier. 23.30. but also filching and stealing tongues. For teaching well, and doing ill, their teaching doth not become them, it doth not beseeme them, it doth not belong vnto them. It is strange that a man should steale with his tongue: euen as it is strange also, that a man should speake with his hand. Yet as I noted before, that these speak false construction with their hand: so now I note that these steale true construction with their tongue. They steale their words, I say, howsoeuer otherwise they be most true, who as Austin writeth, would seeme to be righteous in that they teach the words of God,
Qui boni volunt videri loquendo quae dei sunt, cum mali sint, faciendo quae sua sunt. August. whereas indeed they are vnrighteous, in that they doe the works of the deuill. Wherefore we that are a holy people, must not teach the words of God, and doe the workes of the deuil; we must not teach one thing, and doe an other. For not hee that only teacheth, but Hee that both doth and teacheth, the same shall be called
[Page 124] great in the kingdome of heauen.
Thus much for the first part negatiue, what must not be. Neither Pastor nor people, must teach one thing, and doe another. That must not be.
The second part affirmatiue followeth, what must be. Both Pastor and people must do that themselues which they teach others to doe. That must be. First, for the Pastor he hath two kind of garments.
[...]xod. 28.4. A brestplate, and an Ephod. The breast-plate shewes that hee must haue science to teach: the Ephod shewes that hee must haue conscience to doe that which hee teach
[...]th. And in the verie breastplate it selfe is written, not onely Vrim, but also Thummim. Vrim signifies light.
Exod. 28.30. Thummim signifies perfection. To prooue that the Pastor, must not onely be the light of the world, but also the salt of the earth: not onely a light of direction in his teaching, but also a patterne of perfection in his doing. For euen as the snuffers of the tabernacle were made of pure gold: so Preachers which should purge and dresse,
Exod. 25 38. and cleare others that they may burne-out brightly, must be made of
[Page 125] pure gold, that by doing well they may also shine themselues. Hence it is that the Priest hath out of the sacrifices for his share,
Num. 8.18. the shake-breast & the right sho
[...]lder. The shake-breast puts him in mind of teaching well: the right shoulder puts him in mind of doing well. That great Prophet Elias is called, The horseman and the Chariot of Israel. A horseman directs the chariot,
2 Reg 1.12. and keeps it in the right way: a chariot goes in the right way it selfe. And so a Minister must not onely as a horseman direct others, and set them in the right way, but also as a chariot, he most follow a good course, and walke in the right way himselfe. He must be both the horseman, that teacheth, & the chariot that doth; both the horseman and the chariot of Israel. Therefore he hath vpon the fringes of his vesture pomgrana
[...], and bels. Many preachers are full of bells which make a great ringing and gingling,
Exod 39.25. but because they haue not pomgranats as well as bels, therefore all the noise that they make is but as sounding brasse or as a tinckling cymball. For the godly
[...] must not only say wel, and sound
[Page 126] out the word of the Lord to others clearely as a bell, but also hee must doe well, and as a pomgranate be fruitfulll himselfe and full of good workes.
Exod. 26.37. Euen as the pillers of the Tabernacle were made of Shittim wood, and ouerlaid with pure gold: so preachers (which are called in the Epistle to the Galatians the pillers of the Church) must not onely be ouerlaid outwardly with pure gold, teaching the word of God purely, but also they must doe as they say, and inwardly bee made of Shittim wood, which neuer corrupteth, neuer rotteth, hauing no cor
[...]uption, no rottennes
[...]e in their liues. Hereupon our Lord, speaking to his Prophet saies, Lift vp thy voice as a trumpet. Diuers things there are which sound louder then a trumpet; The sea, the thunder, or such like. Yet he saies not, Lift vp thy voice as the sea▪ or lift vp thy voice as the thunder, but lift vp thy voice as a trumpet.
Esa. 58.1. Because a trumpeter when he sounds his trumpet, he windes it with his mouth, and holds it vp with his hands: and so a Preacher, which is a spirituall trumpeter, must not onely by teaching well,
[Page 127] sound forth the word of life with his mouth, but also by doing well hee must support it, & hold it vp with his hands. And then doth he lift vp his voice as a trumpet. Those mysticall beasts in Ezekiel,
Ezec. 1.8. which S. Gregorie vnderstandeth to be the Ministers of the Church, had hands vnder their wings. Many Preachers are full of feathers, and can soare aloft in a speculatiue kind of discour
[...]ing: but if you should search for hand
[...] vnder their wings, perhaps you should scarse finde many times so much as halfe a hand amongst them. But the godly Pastor must haue not onely wings of high wisedome and knowledge, but also hands vnder his wings to doe that which he knoweth.
Mal. 2.7. For as the Prophet Malachie witnesseth, The Priests lips should keepe knowledge. He saies not, they should babble or vtter knowledge to others, and haue no care to keepe it themselues. But hauing deliuered it to others, they must as well as others obserue and doe it themselues. And then indeede may their lips rightly be said to keepe knowledge. For euen as they which repaired the walls of Ierusalem,
[Page 128] held a sword in one hand, and wrought with the other:
Neh. 4.17. so Preachers which by winning soules repaire and build vp the walls of the heauenly Ierusalem, must not onely hold the sword of the spirit, which is the word of God in one hand, but also they must labour with the other hand. Else they shall pull downe and destroy rather then build vp. But if they doe as fast as they say, then they shall build apace, and edifie very much. Therefore Saint Paul exhorteth Timothie to shew himselfe a workeman, which needeth not to be ashamed,
2. Tim. 2.15. diuiding the word of God aright▪ Hee must not onely be a word-man, but also a work-man. He must not onely hold a sword in one hand, to diuide the word of God aright, but also labour with the other hand, and DOE his best to shew himselfe a workeman which neede not be asham'd. And the same Apostle exhorteth the same Timothy againe, to shew the true patterne of wholesome words.
2. Tim 1.13. Holesome words is sound teaching: the true patterne of holesome words, is well doing. So that he shews the true patterne of wholesome words,
[Page 129] which patternes & samples his teaching by
doing, making them both matches & paires, so that (as Marke the Eremite speaketh) a man may easily read all his sermons, and all his exhortations to others, written downe as it were, and expressed in the lines of his own life. And thus must euery faithfull preacher doe. He must haue not only a brest-plate, but also an Ephod; he must haue written in this brest-plate, not onely Vrim, but also Thummim: he must be like the snuffers of the tabernacle, not only purging others, but also made of pure gold himselfe: hee must haue for his share of the sacrifices not onely the shake-brest, but also the right shoulder: he must be as Elias was, not onely the horseman, but also the chariot of Israel: hee must haue vpon the fringes of his vesture, not onely bells, but also pomgranats: hee must be like the pillers of the tabernacle, not only ouerlai'd outwardly with gold, but also inwardly made of Shittim woode: hee must not onely lift vp his voice, but also lift it vp as a trumpet: he must not onely haue wings, but
[...] hands vnder his wings: he must not
[Page 130] onely with his lippes vtter knowledge to others, but also keepe knowledge himselfe: hee must not onely hold a sword in one hand, but also labour with the other hand: he must not onely deuide the word of God aright, but also shewe himselfe a workeman which neede not be ashamed: he must not onely deliuer holesome words, but also shewe the true patterne of holesome words, which is a godly life. The summe is this: The faithfull Pastor must not onely teach well, but also DOE well. He that both doth and teacheth, the same shall be called great in the kingdome of heauen.
Now the people likewise are commanded to DOE that themselues, which they teach others to doe, as well as the Pastor.
Gen. 23.19. We read that Abraham buried Sarah in the caue of Macpelah, that is in a double sepulchre. Hee that burieth his minde in knowledge onely, without any care of practise, he buries Sarah in a single sepulchre: but he that buries his minde as well in the practise and feeling of religion (which is all in all) as in the knowledge and vnderstanding
[Page 131] of it, he buries Sarah in a double sepulchre. And so must all we doe which are the true children of Abraham. For then with Abraham burying our spirit in a double sepulchre, we shall with Elizeus haue a double spirit. A spirit that as well
doeth, as teacheth. God appointed Moses to make a lauer with a base or a foote.
Exod. 30.18. Now the word
Labium, signifies as well a lippe, as a lauer. So that the lauer which washeth must haue a base, and the lippe which teacheth must haue a foote. Otherwise if teaching doe not stand vpon
doing as vpon a foote, then surely it is footelesse, and so consequently it is bootelesse, and altogether vnprofitable.
Iob. 31.36. Holy Iob saies thus, Though mine aduersarie should write a booke against me, would not I take it vpon my shoulder, and bind it as
[...] crowne vnto me? That which he saith of his aduersaries booke, may not altogether vnfitly bee applied to Gods booke, which we must studie, not so much that we may bind it to our head, or beare it in our memorie to teach it, as that we may beare it vpon our shoulders to DOE it. Then shall it be euery
[Page] way a crowne vnto vs. Simeon the sonne of Onias was as a faire Oliue tree that is fruitfull,
Ecclus. 50.20. and as a Cypres tree, which groweth
[...]p to the clouds. A Cypres tree is high but barren: an Oliue tree is fruitfull but lowe. So a Christian must, not onely as a Cypres tree reach vp to the clouds, by a high gift in teaching, but also hee must as an oliue tree bring forth the oyle of mercy, and be euery way fruitfull in doing. Then he shall be like Simeon, neither low nor barren. But though he be an oliue, yet he shall be as high as the cypres tree▪ and though he be a cypres, yet he shall be as fruitfull as the oliue tree. Noah is appointed to make a windowe in the toppe of the Arke,
Gen. 6.16. and a doore in the side of it; A windowe is for the eye onely to looke out; a doore is for the whole bodie to goe out. And in like manner a godly man, must not haue a windowe for contemplation as Daniel had, who said his praiers thrice a day looking out of his chamber windowe; but also he must haue a doore for action as Abraham had, who entertained his guests about the heat of the day fitting
[Page] in his tent doore. At the windowe of contemplation he must meditate and looke to his teaching; at the dore of action hee must goe forth to his doing.
Leuit 11.4. Threfore by the olde lawe all those beasts are accounted vnclean that chew the cud, but diuide not the hoofe; which lawe was not made for beasts, but for men. To admonish vs, that all they are vncleane in the sight of God, which chewe the cudde by meditating of his word to teach it, and yet diuide not the hoofe by following the same to doe it. When Gedion went to warre against the Madianites,
Iud. 7.6. he sent home againe those souldiers which kneeled down to lappe water, and tooke those only with him, which lapt out of their hands. Because indeede they are not fit to be soldiours in Christs campe, which haue mouthes to say somewhat, but no hands to do any thing. For if they haue no hands to helpe themselues, much lesse to hurt their enemies. And looke how these Souldiers did put their hands to their mouth; in like sort the wise woman putteth her fingers to the distaffe. Now there is a great resemblance
[Page] betweene the distaffe and the tongue. For as a thread either longer or shorter is spun off from the distaffe; so from the tongue a speach. Therefore he may be said to put his fingers to the distaffe,
Prou. 31.19. which puts his doing to his teaching, and doeth that which hee teacheth. Our Sauiour speaking to his Spouse, saies thus, Let me see thy sight, let me heare thy voice. As if he should say, Let me not onely heare a voice of of thy teaching, but also see a fight of thy doing. Let me see thy sight, let me heare thy voice.
Eum eligas magistrum quem magis ad
[...]iteris cum videas, quam cum audias. Whereupon Senec
[...] saies fitly, Be sure thou imitate him aboue all other, whome thou maist admire more when thou seest his sight, then when thou hearest his voice. So Paul wisheth the Philippians to follow those things which they had heard of him,
Phil. 4.9. and seene in him. His teaching they had heard of him: his doing they had seene in him.
Act. 7.22. So Moses was mightie in words, and in deedes: Not mighty in words, and weake, or no body in deedes: but mighty in both, in words and in deedes,
Numb. 7.8. in teaching, and in doing. So Aarons rod brought forth blossomes,
[Page] and almonds. Now as almonds are the fruit of blossomes: in like sort doing is the fruit of teaching. So the Baptist was a shining, and a burning light,
Ioh 5.
[...]5. He shined in knowledge, which made him able to teach well, hee burned in zeale, which made him willing to doe well. So Dauid saies, Establish me with thy free spirit,
Psal 51.12. then shall I teach thy way vnto the wicked. He did not onely teach others the way of God, but also he was established with the free spirit of God to
doe well himselfe. So Titus was an example of good workes,
Tit. 2.7. and vncorrupt doctrine. Vncorrupt doctrine is teaching well: good workes is doing well. How then was he an example of good workes, and vncorrupt doctrine? Clemens Alexandrinus makes the answer. Teaching as he did, and doing as he taught, he was an example of good workes and vncorrupt doctrine. And so must euery one be which is the sincere seruant of God. He must with Abraham bury Sarah not onely in a sepulchre, but also in a double sepulchre: he must with Moses make him, not onely a lauer, but also
[Page 136] a base: hee must with Iob, not onely bind the book to his head, but also beare it vpon his shoulders: he must with Simeon, not only be a cypres tree, but also an oliue tree; he must with Noah make him not only a window, but also a dore: he must with those cleane beasts, not onely chewe the cudde, but also diuide the hoofe: he must with those valiant Soldiers, not only bow down his knees, but also lift vp his hands to lap water: he must with the wise woman, not only haue a distaffe, but also puts his fingers to it: he must with the Church, not onely let Christ heare his voice, but also let him see his sight: euē as Pauls excellent vertues were not only heard of him, but also seen in him; euē as
Moses was mightie, not only in words, but also in deeds: euen as Aarons rod did beare not onely blossoms, but also almonds: euen as
Iohn Baptist was a light, not onely shining, but also burning: euē as king Dauid was a prophet, not only teaching others, but also established with grace himself: euen as Titus was an example, not onely of vncorrupt doctrine, but also of good workes. The summe of all is this: The
[Page 137] sincere seruant of God, must not onely teach well, but also DOE well. For He that both doeth and teacheth, the same shall bee called great in the kingdome of heauen.
Now then, beloued, let vs blush, and be ashamed, that euen the verie Gentiles should goe before vs in this point. So
[...]iades a heathen man could say thus much, Better done then said. A good thing if thou knowe it, doe it. It is written of Iulius Caesar, that he neuer said to his souldiers,
Ite, but
Venite: he neuer said, Goe ye yonder, but Come ye hither, I will goe with you; nay, I will go before you. And so saves our heauenly Captaine and conquerour Iesus Christ, not
Ite, but
Venite, Come vnto me all ye that labour, and learne of me, because I am meeke and humble in heart. Hee saies not, because I talke of my humilitie, but because I am humble, because I shewe the practise of it continually in my selfe. I (saies he) came downe from heauen to earth, I left my Fathers bosome, and tooke a traytors kisse, to teach all men true humilitie. Therefore there is no teacher to me, there is no
[Page 138] master to me: Learne of me, because I am meeke and humble in heart. This kind of instruction both by teaching, and by doing, is that two-edged sword which proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lambe. For tell me I pray you (if it be no trouble to you) tell me, what is the reason thinke you, why so many Preachers in their Churches, so many masters in their families, seeke to redresse abuses, striue against sinnes, and yet preuaile so little, but onely because they fight not with this two-edged sword, but with a backsword: the sword which they fight withall is very sharpe, and cuts deepe on the teaching-side, but it is blunt and hath no edge at all on the doing side. Whereas if we would fight against vngodlines with this two-edged sword, both by teaching and doing, we should soone cut downe sinne in such sort, as it should neuer bee able to stand out against vs. Therefore Dauid beeing readie to reforme many things, among his people, saies in one of the Psalmes,
Bonitatem & scientiam doceme. O Lord giue me goodnesse, & knowledge. Goodnes, that I may do well, and Knowledge, that I may teach
[Page 139] well. For I am sure (saies he) that all my teaching without doing, all my knowledge without goodnes, is to no purpose. Therfore, O Lord, giue me goodnes and knowledge. But first goodnes, and then knowledge. Because indeede, one heartfull of goodnesse, is worth an hundred headfulls of knowledge: one handfull of doing, is worth an hundred tongue-fuls of teaching. For what is the hand els, but the very seale of the tongue? So that as a writing is not pleadable by the law of man without seales, no more is a word warrantable by the law of God, without works. And therefore if they which serue the beast, receiue the marke of the beast, not onely in their foreheads, but also in their hands: how much more then ought we which serue the liuing God, to receiue the marke of God, not onely in our foreheads by open professing of him, but also in our hands by faithful practising that which we professe. Therefore it is an vsuall phrase well-nigh in all the Prophets to say, The word of the Lord by the hand of Amos, by the hand of Zacharie, or such like; I know indeede
[Page 140] it is an Hebrewe phrase, where the hand of the Prophet signifieth the ministerie of the Prophet. But yet this phrase may giue vs thus much to vnderstand, that if the Prophets deale so, as euery word of God passed not only thorough their mouthes, but also through their hands, that when we also must so deale in hearing and handling the word of God, as we may bring vnto God, sayes Agapetus, not onely a profering of words, but also an offering of works. Wherefore deare brethren, let your light so shine before men, that they not onely hearing your good words, but also seeing your good works, may glorifie your Father which is in heauen. For then I assure you, if we glorifie our Father which is in heauen, he will glorifie vs his children which are vpon earth, and in the ende make vs great in the kingdome of heauen. O remember therefore that golden saying in the Scripture,
Psal. 111.16. The feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisedome, a good vnderstanding haue all they that doe thereafter, the praise of it endureth for euer. A good vnderstanding haue
[Page 141] all they that doe thereafter? Why so? Because an ill vnderstanding haue all they that doe not thereafter. They that haue vnderstanding, and doe not thereafter, that is, according to it, haue an ill vnderstanding. But they that haue vnderstanding, and doe thereafter according to it, haue a good vnderstanding. A good vnderstanding haue all they that doe thereafter: the praise of it endureth for euer. It shall be eternally rewarded. O how richly are the Apostles rewarded, how highly are they nowe honoured in heauen, because when they were vpon earth, they had a good vnderstanding. They had clouen tongues.
Act. 2.3. Clouen tongues? What's that? I'le tell you. Doe you not see how our hands are clouen and diuided into fingers; So were the Apostles tongues. They (in a manner, if I may so say) had fingers vpon their tongues, as well as we haue vpon our hands. It was but a word and a worke with them. They had no sooner taught others any good thing (as O Lord what good thing did they not teach vs all) but by and by they were readie to practise it, and to performe
[Page 142] it themselues. Therefore they are alreadie great in the kingdome of heauen, yea, and much more shall be. The twelue Apostles shall sit vpon twelue thrones, iudging the twelue tribes of Israel. And if we can happily obtaine so much grace and goodnesse of God, as that we may haue a care and a conscience as well to doe as to teach, then as sure as God's in heauen, wee likewise shall be great in the kingdome of heauen. We shall be installed with Christ and his Apostles, in the throne of glory, when we shall heare him say vnto vs, Come yee blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdome of heauen prepared for you. For ye haue not onely professed, but practised: ye haue not onely taught well, but wrought well: yee haue not onely said well, but done well, therfore now you shall be great in the kingdom of heauen. To the which kingdome of heauen, we beseech thee, O Lord, to bring vs, euen for Iesus Christs sake. Amen.
FINIS.
A SERMON PREACHED before the Kings Maiestie at Draytonin Northhamptonshire. August. 6. 1605.
PSAL. 132.18.
As for his enemies I shall cloath them with shame; but vpon himselfe shall his Crown flourish.
THe Royal Prophet hauing setled himselfe in his kingdome according to his owne desire; and besides hauing after many wandrings to and fro, at length brought backe the Arke againe to Ierusalem; maketh here his most zealous
[Page 144] and deuout prayer to God for the continuance of his fauour both to the Church and Common-wealth committed to his gouernement. Returne, O Lord, to thy resting place, saies hee, thou
v. 8. & deinceps. and the Arke of thy strength. Let thy Priests be cloathed with righteousnesse, and let thy Saints sing with ioyfulnesse. For thy seruant Dauids sake turne not away the face of thine anointed. Now that he might apparantly see how neere the Lord is to all them that call vpon him in faithfulnesse and truth, he waiteth not long for an answer, but carries it away with him before he depart: For to Dauids petition, Returne, O Lord, vnto thy resting place, thou, and the arke of thy strength; Gods answer is this,
v. 14. & deinceps. This shall be my resting place, here will I dwell, for I haue a delight therein. I will blesse her victualls with increase, and will satisfie her poore with bread. To Dauids petition, Let thy Priests be cloathed with righteousnesse, and let thy Saints sing with ioyfulnesse; Gods answer is this, I will cloath her Priests with saluation, and her Saints shall reioyce and sing. Lastly,
[Page 145] to Dauids petition; For thy seruant Dauids sake turne not away the face of thine annointed: Gods answer is this; There shall I make the horne of Dauid flourish, I, I haue ordained a light for mine annointed. As for his enemies, I shall cloath them with shame: but vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish. As if he should haue said; Turne away the face of mine annointed? Nay, that will I neuer doe, I will indeede turne away the face of the enemies of mine annointed. Their face shall be couered with confusion, and cloathed with shame: But contrariwise, I haue ordained a light for mine annointed. He euer shall haue a light in his face, and a crowne vpon his head. As for his enemies, I shall cloth them with shame: but vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish.
These words are principally to be vnderstood of Christ. For neuer were any so clothed with shame as his enemies the cursed Iewes which murthered him. There citie was sacked, not one stone of it beeing left vpon another, and they themselues as stubble or chaffe were
[Page 146] scattered ouer the face of the earth. So that they are the very shame of men, and the out-cast of all people. Insomuch as when we would signifie we hate a man deadly, indeede we commonly vse to say, we hate them worse then a Iewe. On the other side, Christ is so exalted now, that all power is giuen him in heauen and earth, yea God hath giuen him a name aboue all names, that at the most sweete and most excellent name of
Iesus, euerie knee and euery heart also might doe obeys
[...]nce. And as the Apostle prooueth out of the eight Psalme, the Lord now after all his dolorous paines and torments, hath crowned him with honour and glorie. Neuerthelesse in a secondarie sort, this promise may be applied also to Dauid, who was a notable type of Christ; and so consequently to euery faithfull successor of Dauid, which is Christs vicegerent and lieftenant vpon earth. For yee know what was the the ende of all Dauids enemies: Absolon his disobedient sonne hung vp by the goldy lockes of pride. Achitophel his trayterous Counsellor made
[Page 147] away himselfe. Shemei, a reuiler of him, and a derractor from him, in his gray haires put to shamefull death. The same may be said of the rest. But holy Dauid himselfe could neuer be ouercome. For though many enemies, specially Antiochus Epiphanes, bent all their force, to the very vttermost, to roote out Dauids posteritie, and to destroy Gods people; yet maugre their heads and their hearts, Dauids crowne yet flourished and continued in his stocke, till at the length the sonne of Dauid came into the world; of whom the Angel Gabriel spake to the blessed virgin Marie in this sort;
Luk. 1.32. He shall be great, and shall be called the sonne of the most High; and the Lord God shall giue him the throne of his Father Dauid, and he shall be ruler ouer the house of Iacob, and of his kingdome shall be no ende. Now if this Scripture be so notably verified in Dauid, bee hauing faithfully serued in his time, and beeing now by the will of God dead: no reason but that we may vnderstand it also generally of euery holy one of God, which treadeth in Dauids steps,
[Page 148] going in and out before Gods people. As for his enemies, I shall cloath them with shame; but vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish.
Here are two parts. His enemies; himselfe. His enemies, first shall haue shame; secondly shall be cloathed with shame. Himselfe, first shal haue a crown: secondly shal haue a flourishing crown. As for his enemies I shall cloath them with shame; but vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish.
The shame which the Lord God assureth Dauid shall light vpon his enemies, is a very droadfull iudgement against them. Nicetas saies plainely; No punishment so greiuous as shame. And Nazianzene yet more expressely; Better were a man die right out, then still liue in repro
[...]ch and shame. This, diuerse valiant worthies haue shewed to be true, ridding themselues voluntarily of their life, that so they might be rid of their shame. Aiax beeing readie to dispatch himselfe, vsed these as his last words; No greife doth so cut the very heart of a generous and magnanimous man, as shame and reproach.
[Page 149] What should I speake of any more Grecians, or Romanes, as of Brutus, Cassius, Antonius, Cato Vricensis, and such others? In Scripture we haue a plaine proofe. Mighty Sampson, beeing about to pull the whole house vpon his owne head,
Iudg. 16.18. saide thus: O Lord God I pray thee strengthen me at this time onely, that I may be at once auenged of the Philistims, for my two eies. Hee desired rather once to die valiantly, then long to liue wretchedly. For as Saint Ambrose writing of Samson, saith,
Viuere & mori naturae functic:
[...]udibrio esse probro ducitur. Epist. yo. For a man to liue, or die, is naturall: but for a man to liue in shame and contempt, and to be made a laughing stocke of his Enemies, is such a matter, as no well bred and noble minded man that hath any courage, or stomacke in him, can euer digest it. Yet the Lord God promiseth Dauid his anointed, that shame shall be the reward of all his enemies; shame I say which is a great deale worse then death it selfe. As for his enemies, saies he, I shall cloath them with shame.
Secondly, they shall be clothed with shame. To be cloathed is an Hebrewe
[Page 150] phrase, signifying to haue any thing vnseparably cast vpon one. And it is taken both in the better and in the worser part. As a little before; I cloath her Priests with saluation: that is, I will furnish Syons Priests with such indowments and graces from aboue, which they shall be as it were inuested into; that both by their life and doctrine, they shal still further the saluation both of themselues; and of them which heare them. Contrariwise, in this place I will cloath them with shame; That is, shame shall so vnseparably accompany them, that as wheresoeuer a man goeth, he carrieth his cloathes with him; so wheresoeuer they goe, they shall carrie their shame with them. And that which is strangest of all; they which are ashamed, vse to cloath or couer their shame, and then thinke themselues well enough. But Dauids enemies shall be so shamed, that euen the verie couering of their shame, shall be a discouering of it; and the cloathing or cloaking of their ignominie, shall be nothing else but a girding of it more closely and more vnseparably vnto
[Page 151] them. So the Prophet speaketh elsewhere,
Psal. 35.26. Let them be put to confusion and shame together, that reioyce at mine hurt. Let them be cloathed with rebuke and dishonour, that lift vp themselues against me. O Lord God, say Amen to it; let it be euen so, O Lord, Let them be clothed with rebuke and dishonour that lift vp themselues against thine annointed. And againe,
Psal. 109.19. Let shame be vnto him as a cloake that he hath vpon him, and as the girdle that he is alwaies girdled withall. And yet againe,
vers. 19. Let mine aduersaries be cloathed with shame, and let them couer themselues with their owne confusion as with a cloake.
But to leaue the word, and come to the matter. The enemies of Dauid shall be clothed with shame three waies: In their owne conscience; In the world; In the day of iudgement.
Touching their owne conscience, S. Austin saies well,
Omnis in ordinatus affectus est sibimetipfi poena. All vnordinate desires, as none are more vnordinate then trayterous and rebellious enterprises, carrie in themselues that bane which poysons and punishes them at the last.
[Page 152] Whereupon the Prophet saies,
Psal. 57.2. Hide me, O Lord, vnder the shadow of thy wings, vntill iniquitie be ouerpast, as the Septuagint translate it. But wee read it, Vntill this tyrannie be ouerpast. And others transla
[...]e it, Vntill this Calamitie, or this Miserie be ouerpast. Which indifferent acceptation of the Hebrew word, sheweth that nothing doth so tyrannize ouer the conscience, nothing is such a calamitie and misery to the minde, as iniquity and sinne. Iudas after he had betraied his Lord and Master, was so confounded in his owne conscience, that he cryed out and said,
Matth. 27.4. I haue sinned, in betraying innocent blood.
Proditer Casca, vile traytour: if his blood be innocent, then thy conscience is guilty. And if thou canst confesse thou hast sinned, when it is too late, why diddest thou not take heede of sinning when t'was time? I haue sinned saies he, sinned in betraying innocent blood. A thousand hells could not haue more tormented him, then this desperate sorrowe, and extreame shame wherewith his conscience was cloathed, tearing his bowels
[Page 153] whilst he was aliue, and powring them out when he died.
Now as for shame in the world, we reade
Gen. 4.5. that God did set a marke vpon Cain the murtherer of the iust Habel; and so consequently the ring-leader of all Dauids enemies. Therefore as when men see a wolfe or a foxe, or any such h
[...]rtfull beast in the forest, they set all their dogs vpon him; so the enemies of the Lords annointed, beeing burnt as it were and branded with the markes of shame, are howted and hunted wheresoeuer they goe. One example at this time shall suffice. Maxentius a wicked rebell against his own Lord the famous Emperour Constantine the great, deuised to haue a bridge made with cockebo
[...]tes chained together ouer a riuer neere Rome, thinking to traine the Emperour that way, and there to drowne them in the riuer. But God so wrought for his chosen seruant, that the enemie himselfe beeing compelled to flie that way, was taken in that pit which he digged for others. And so as Pharaoh was cloathed with shame in the open viewe and fight of all the world, when he and
[Page 154] all his host were drowned in the redde sea, after the same fashion Maxentius was drest,
Lastly, touching shame in the day of iudgement, Dauids enemies at that day shall stand before the tribunall
[...]ate of Christ, beeing naked in all respec
[...]else, but onely couered with their owne shame. Then they shall be vexed with horrible feare
Sapien. 5.2., and cloathed with confusion; whereas the righteous shall bee cloathed with incorruption;
2. Cor. 15. yea though in this life with the rich glutton,
Luk. 16.19. they haue beene cloathed with purple, and fine linnen, yet then their attire shall be dishonour, and their garment shall bee shame. Thus will the Lord cloath the enemies of his anointed with shame; cloath them in their owne conscience; cloath them in the world, cloath them in the day of iudgement. As for his enemies I shall cloath them with shame; But vpon himselfe shal his crowne flourish.
The one halfe of this Sermon is now past, the other shall be as soon dispacht. But vpon him shal his crowne flourish.
First, himselfe shall haue a crowne.
[Page 155] Tertullian
In libro de corona
[...]ilitis. reporteth out of Diodorus Siculus, that the first that euer ware a crowne was Iupiter. The soldiers gaue him a royall crowne for a reward of his victorie and triumph ouer the Titans. Hereupon Iupiters Priest
Act. 14.13. brought buls and crownes to the gates of Listra, and would there haue sacrificed to Paul. Afterward, when Gods people the Israelites would needs haue a King, as other nations had round about them; then their Kings would needs haue crownes also, as other Kings had round about them. Hence we reade, that Dauid hauing vanquished the King of Rabbath,
1. Chron.
[...]0.2. tooke the crowne from off his head, and found it the waight of a talent of gold, with precious stones in it; and set it vpon his owne head. Though indeede long before that the
2. Sam. 1.10. Amalakite brought him a crowne, which he tooke from Sauls head when he slew him.
So that the thing God promiseth is this: that any crown which king Dauid should get, either by conquest, or by succession, or by any other iust title, should still flourish more and more. Some there are in the world which to
[Page 156] be sure of outward ornaments enough, will needes weare a triple crowne, Others haue beene vnwilling to weare that one which they might.
Ca
[...]tus, that wa
[...] absolute King almost of fi
[...]e kingdomes somewhat before the conquest, vpon a time in his progresse riding neare the Thames, lighted and sat downe before the shoare. Then as it were to try a conclusion, he commanded the water beeing now ready to ari
[...]e againe and to flow, not to come
[...] neerer him. But the water keeping his naturall course, came still vp higher and higher, til it began to wet him. Whereupon turning to his Nobles, which were about him, You call mee (saies he) your King and Master, and so indeede I am; and yet loe yee, I cannot commaund so much as this little streame, but do what I can, that will do still as it list. Whereupon presently he posted to Westminster, and resigned his crowne to the crucifixe there; neither could be euer
[...] this be perswaded to weare it any more. Now as the pride of that man of sinne, which sits vnder the signe of the triple crowne, is too intollerable: so on the
[Page 157] contrarie part, this was too much nicenesse in Canutus. Seeing, it followeth not, because he could not command the sea and the waters, as Christ did, and therefore he might not weare a crown. For neither doth Christ himselfe in heauen weare such a crown as Kings of the earth doe. But the truth is this, that royaltie and maiestie, which is essentiall to God, hee is content to communicate to his holy ones, and to his anointed, by participation and grace. Therefore the Lords anointed, which is as it were his fauourite, may very well do all these three things at once; weare the crowne which God giueth; and yet detest the pride which God abhorreth; and still admire the Maiestie which God inioyeth: So that the Lord promising his seruant Dauid a crowne, promiseth him wealth, wisedome, renowne, dignitie, prosperitie; in one word, all royalties belonging to a crowne. But vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish.
Secondly, he shall haue a flourishing crowne. Flourishing is metaphorically attributed to a crowne. As in the next verse before. There shall I make the
[Page 158] horne of Dauid to flourish. A metaphor taken from those goodly creatures, as stagges, and such like; whose cheifest beauty and strength consisteth in their hornes, especially when they budde and branch abroad. So in these words, But vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish. A plaine allusion to those flowres which either continually, or else a very long time, keepe fresh and greene. Besids at the first, kings crowns were not made of gold and pearles, as I told you of Dauids crowne, but onely of greene oken leaues, as that of Iupiters, or else of some other branches or flowres, as others. The Lord then meaning that Dauids kingdome should be established for euer, and that his lasting glorie should still growe greene, he maketh this louing promise vnto him; But vpon himselfe shall his crown flourish. How flourishing beautifull flowers are, consider but the Lillie, and you shall soone perceiue. Marke (saies our Sauiour)
Matth. 5.24. how the lillies of the field doe growe, they labour not, neither doe they spinne, yee doe I say vnto you, that euen Salomon in all his
[Page 159] royaltie was not cloathed like one of these. Now if God so cloath the flowers of the field, which growe to day, and to morrow are cast into the ouen, how much more shall he cloath Dauids enemies with shame: but vpon himselfe make his crowne flourish? For euen as in Salomons Temple, fiue candlesticks at the right side, and fiue at the left standing before the Oracle, and being made for matter of pure gold, for forme with branches and flowers, did well nigh dazil the eyes of any that entered into the Temple
1 Reg. 7.
[...]9.; so the Lord here giues his word, that the Kings crowne shall euer flourish in the house of our God, disparkling and displaying those rayes of Maiestie: those beames of beautie, which shall amaze the world, and be a wonder as well to Angels as to men. Wherefore, as I said euen nowe of his enemies shame, that it should be threefold: so here I repeat the same againe of his crownes flourishing: His crowne shall flourish in his owne conscience: in the world: in the day of iudgement. Touching his owne conscience, the blessed Apostle
[Page 160] calleth the Philippians his ioy, and a crowne
Phil. 4.1.. And to the Thessalonians hee writeth thus, What
1. Thes. 2.19.20 is our hope, or ioy, or crowne of reioycing? Are not euen you it, in the presence of our Lord Iesus Christ at his comming? yes, yee are our glorie and ioy: Now, if this precious vessell of honour reioyced in nothing so much, as in the testimonie of his conscience, that in simplicitie and godly purenesse, and not in fleshly wisedome, but by the grace of God, hee had his conuersation in the world, the power of Gods spirit working still most mightily by his ministerie to the conuersion of the world to Christ: how much more shall the Lords anointed haue his conscience crowned with flourishing ioy, with comfort, with content, with heauenly peace, when he shall remember, that not onely for matters of religion and Gods true seruice, hee hath beene and still is with Saint Paul profitable to the Church; but also is a strong bulwark and a tower of defence to maintaine euen the outward felicitie and prosperitie of Gods people; yea the very particular right,
[Page 161] wealth, life of euery one of them; all this I say, and a 100, things more, when he considereth, what a great and a glorious instrument he hath beene euery way of Gods glory: O Lord God what a heauen shall he haue in his heart? what a sweet paradise of pleasure in his soule? what security? what assurance of Christs loue? what a confident and vndaunted hope of eternall glory? what a flourishing crowne of reioycing shall he haue men in his very conscience? vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish. Touching the world, our holy Prophet speaking to God, though in the third person, yet of himselfe saies, Thou hast preuented him with liberall blessings, and hast set a crown of pure gold vpon his head. His honour is great in thy salvation, glory and great worship hast thou laid vpon him. Now that crowne which is of gold, yea of pure gold, must needes be very flourishing euen in the viewe and face of the world. Neither is this to be vnderstood of Dauids person onely, but euen of his posterity in all ages to come. How was he himselfe crowned with conquests and victories ouer
[Page 162] his enemies? How was his sonne Salomon crowned with riches, with wisedome, with same & glory i
[...] the whole world? which flourishing of
[...] soone, as of a noble branch, graced in a
[...]ner the
[...]etie roo
[...]e of Dauid himselfe. For, as his worthi
[...] sonne teacheth, Childrens children are the
[...]ed one of the elders,
Prou 17.6. and the glory of the children
[...]re their fathers. Therefore, as children may
[...]ustly glorie of the renowne of their fathers vertue and honour: so the excellent father is in a sort crowned with happinesse in this world, when he sees his childrens children like to grow vp and flourish after him. But vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish. Lastly, touching the day of iudgement then, then shall all the righteous flourish, when as hauing beene faithfull vnto the death, they shall receiue the crowne of life. A crowne as S. Peter calleth it immortall and vndefiled,
1. Pet. 1.4. and that fadeth not away. Denying that euer it fadeth away, he affirmeth that it euer flourisheth. I would here be bold, if I might doe it without offence, as I hope I may, to shew you one goodly
[Page 163] cluster of grape
[...] of vhe land of Canaan, a land flowing with milke and honie, whether you are now going, before you enter into it.
D. Thomas Bodleius, qui plur
[...] mis & pulcherrimis libris Oxoniensem bibliothecam instruxit. A worthie and ver
[...]us gentleman▪ whom I neede not name in this place, because, no doubt many ages will name him, and renowne him hereafter, giueth for his armes three crownes with this posey,
Quarta perennis erit. As if he should say, these three crownes, which I beare in my coat, are but the difference of my house and gentry, but
Quarta perennis erit: the fourth crowne which I look for in heauen shall be euerlasting and immortall. That
[...]ourth, though it bee but one crowne, yet shall be worth all those three crowns, yea three thousand more such as these are; The fourth shall be eternall. Now, if he, and we that are such a
[...] he no question is, faithfull to God, and loyal to the chosen seruant of God, may well hope for a most flourishing incorruptible crowne of glory, then much more may Dau
[...]d himselfe reioyce in God his Sauiour, and say,
Quinta aut sexta perennis erit: The fift, or the fixt shall bee eter
[...]all. This crowne
[Page 164] which God of his grace with his owne right hand and his holy arme
[...] vpon mine head, is indeede (thankes and praise hee giuen vote the s
[...]me God) a very flourishing crowne flourishing in mine owne conscience: flourishing in the world, both for my person, and for my posteritie; But it is nothing, in respect of that flourishing crowne which I shall receiue at the day of iudgement. For the
Psal.
[...].
[...]2. iust shall flourish like a palme tree, and shal grow like
[...] Cedar in Lebanon. Such as hee planted in the house of the Lord, shall flourish in the courts of our God. And then indeede shall this bountifull promise of God be most fully performed, But vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish. As for his enemies, I shall cloath them with shame, but vpon himselfe shall his crowne flourish.
To drawe then to an
[...]ode: it may seeme very strange, that Dauid had any enemies. Yet, o
[...] of these words. As for his enemies, I shall cloath them with shame; it may be well gathered that some he had. What? had Dauid? meeke Dauid? Lord remember Dauid, and all
[Page 165] h
[...] meekenesse, saies he, in the beginning of this Psalme. He was the kindest, and the meekest man aliue. Ween hee had his mortall foe at a vantage, and at a dead lift, as we say, and might haue nailed him fast to the ground with his speare: he onely did cut off a lap of his garment, to shewe, that when he might haue hurt him, hee would not.
Posse, &
[...]olle,
[...]obile. Yet this meeke Dauid, patient Dauid, mercifull Dauid, valiant and victorious Dauid, holy Dauid, had enemies. Wherefore you most honourable and blessed seruants of God, you that excell in vertue, if you haue some enemies, thinke not strange of it. For, if you had nothing in you:
[...] feare of God, no reuerēce towards his word, no loue and loyaltie towards your Soueraigne, no for
[...]itude, no temperance, no good thing in you; yee might perhaps walke on long enough, and no man enuie you, no man malig
[...]e you, or malice you. But because God hath inspired you with his principall spirit, and endewed you with speciall great graces aboue your fellowes; therefore
[...]oth your aduersarie the Deuil, the old
[Page 166] enemie of all goodnes and vertue, who is ready to burst to see you doe so well: he, I say, doth bestirre himselfe, and raise vp enemies against you. But (O blessed be our good Lord) what a wonderfull comfort and incouragement haue all you; what a horrible terrour & affrightment haue all your enemies, in this text? For the holy Ghost saies not, They shall be clothed, or you shall cloth them: but I, euen I shal cloth them with shame. It is impossible, saies he, that you should alwaies be armed at all points, circumspect at all places, vigilant at all times, prouided at all occasions, to preuent the mischieuous practises of your diuillish enemies. No counsell of man, no policie, no wisedome, no wit, can foresee their barbarous vndertakings and complottes, to escape them. But in heauen, in heauen there is an eye, an hand there is in heauen: an eye to desery them, and an hand to persecute and punish them: both an eye and an hand to deliuer you from dannger, and to cloath them with shame. Therefore, saith he, Cast your care vpon mee; let me alone with them, your
[Page 167] perill is my perill, your case my case: Ile pay them that they haue deserued: He take the quarrell into mine owne hands: He trimme them well enough. As for your enemies, I shall cloath them with shame. Remēber I pray you, beloued, though indeede, they haue made themselues worthie neuer to be remembred, or once to be mentioned i
[...] our mouthes any more: yet remember, I say, to their egregious dishonour & reproch, how those are now clothed with shame, who were the first cause of the solemnizing, or as I may say, of the sanctifying of this present day for the day of the weeke, and of yesterday for the day of the moneth, & of the twelue moneth, with so holy an exercise? How odious? how execrable is their very name vnto vs? what true hearted loyall subiect, such as I am sure all are here, doth not detest them, hate them, loath them, as a road, or as a viper, or as some hidious mishapen monster: and curse the very day wherein such a rebellious generation, and such a trayterous blood were borne? Certainly, my good brethren, if the mercie of God, which
[Page 168] is incomprehensible, did not giue them grace, at the l
[...]st gaspe to repe
[...]t, and crie to God for pardon: as they are cloathed with shame in this world, so shall they bee much more in the world to come. And as we hold them for no better then cursed creatures, so shall the Lord at last, say vnto them, Goe ye cursed into euerlasting fire. So let it
[...], O Lord, euen so to all the enemies of
[...] anointed, either open of secret, so
[...] be to them: As for his enemies, do them, thou, O Lord, thine owne selfe, do them cloath them with shame.
But vpon himselfe doth his Crowne flourish.
These words,
vpon himselfe, either
[...] altogether impertinent and super
[...] ous, or else they are very important
[...] materiall. For it had beene sufficient to haue said; As for his enemies I shall cloath them with shame
[...] as for hi
[...] selfe, his crowne shall flourish. It is
[...] greatly necessarie, as it should seeme to say, his crowne shall flourish vpon himselfe. Yet the Lord in his gracious
[...] swer vnto Dauide praier, thought good to put in this as a supernume
[...]
[Page 169] word, ouer and besides the necessitie of the sentence: to teach the good King, and vs all likewise, a very notable lesson. Namely, that he would blesse the crowne, the dignitie, the flourishing estate of his louing ser
[...]ant, not onely in his owne person and his posteritie; in this world, and in the world to come, as I haue shewed alreadie; but also from a lesser
[...]ight of glorie, still to a greater and greater. Vpon himselfe, sai
[...]s he, shall his crowne flourish. For not onely is shall be flourishing, as Dauid left it, at the day of his departure to God, but after his dissolution and death: as fast as his bodie corrupteth in the earth, so fast shall his crowne encrease still in heauen. Trust me, truely, I speake i
[...] before the liuing Lord, and this high presence, all the whole Church which shall be edified so saluation, by Dauids blessed and godly gouernement, euen after his death, shal yet suffer his crown neuer to die, but shall continually keep in fresh and greene. Yes, as euery one brought to the building of the
[...]bernacle, and to the reedifying of the temple, such as they were able: so I assure you, I
[Page 170] speake now a great word, euerie particular subiect, that is faithfull to God, and to his Prince; as he go
[...]h on forward to God, by the peace, and by the religion which hee hath enioyed vnder his Prince▪ so he shall still beautifie and decke Dauids crowne; & one shal bring a white rose; an other shall bring a red rose, and adde it to the
[...] that so vpon himselfe still his crowne may
[...] rish, the white rose and the redde rose, that are in the crowne alreadie, beeing euer made more and more fragrant and flourishing. O Christ, what a crowne is this? And what will it growe to
[...] more in the end? You that are mightie Kings and Potentates vpon earth, haue indeede great cares and continuall busines in your head
[...]; but yet vouchsase I pray you to
[...]earken a little, what I shall say vnto you. You watch oftentimes ouer vs, when we are asleep our selues. You care for our peace, when it is not
[...] our power to further it; you procuring good to Sion, and prosperitie to Ierusalem, yet many times enioy the least part of it your selues. But no force▪ Take this still for your comfort. Wee that
[Page 171] cannot all our liues long doe the hundreth part of that good, which you doe euery houre, shall haue nothing so flourishing a crowne as you shal haue. Vpon you, vpon you shall euerlasting peace rest, vpō you shal the glory of Gods maiestie shine, vpon you, vpon you shall your crowne flourish. Which the Lord of his mercy grant, I most humbly beseech him for Iesus Christs sake: that as Dauids crowne euer flourished, till the first comming of Christ; so our gracious Kings crowne may euer flourish, till the second comming of Christ; and then, that afterward for euer his royall Maiestie may be royally crowned with eternall life: thorough the same our deare Sauiour Iesus Christ: To whom with the Father and the holy Ghost, bee all honour and glory, power and praise, dignitie and dominion, now and euermore. Amen.
FINIS.
A SERMON PREACHED before the Kings Maiestie that day he entred into
Oxford, at
Woodstock
[...], August 27. 1605.
LVK. 8.15.
But that which fell in good ground, are they which with a good, and a very good heart, heare the word, and keepe it, and bring forth to fruit with patience.
IN this Parable of the sower, are 4. grounds mentioned. Whereof three are badde, and onely one good. Namely, they which with a good and a very good heart, heare the word, and keep
[Page 173] it, and bring forth fruite with patience. Almightie God powreth out his benefites no lesse plentiously then continually vpon vs: yet wee can make no requitall: our goodnesse cannot reach to God. The onely thing that we can doe for him, is to loue and honour his word. Whereupon King Dauid thought it a death vnto him,
Psal. 132. that beeing banished from his people, he could not go
[...] vp to the house of the Lord, with the voice of ioy and gladnesse, among such as keepe holy day. And on the other side he said; I reioyced when they said vnto me, We will goe vp into the house of the Lord.
Esa. 2.3. The Prophet Esay likewise, foretelling what alacri
[...]ie and good will should be in the Gentiles after they were conuerted to Christ, saith thus; It shall be in the last dayes, that many people shall goe and say; Come, and 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. Looke how it is in the health of the body,
Chrysost. hom. 4. in Gen. and so it is in the state of the soule. If a man haue a good appetite, and a
[Page 174] stomacke to his meate, t'is a signe he is well in health: in like sort, if a man bee content to follow Christ for the loaues to fil his bellie, and care not for the food of his soule; questionlesse all is not well betweene God and him; but if he haue a longing and a hungring desire of the word, then indeede his heart is vpright in the sight of God. For as S. Au
[...]e
[...] noteth well;
August. tract. 4
[...]. in Iohan. Si sermo meus caperetur, caperet. Nun sie est sermo Dei, & sie esse debet fidelibus sicut pis
[...]i hamus. Tum capit quando capitur. Nec sit captis iniuria: Ad salurem enim, non ad perniciem capiuntur. Heb. 13.17. if the word of God be taken by vs, it will take vs. Seeing the word of God so is, and so ought to be, vnto the faithfull, as a hooke is to fish. Then it takes, when it is taken. Neither are they which are taken hurt by it. For they are not caught to bee kil'd, but to be drawne out of the damnation of this world, and to be translated to the libertie and glorie of the children of God. Wherefore as fishers take most delight in angling, when they see the fish bite quickly and greedily: so if you would put life into your Preachers, which are called fishers of men, that they may preach the word with ioy, not with griefe, you must shewe by your countenance, by your attention, by your reuerence, by all your outward behauiour,
[Page 175] that you desire n
[...]ng so much as to bite at this sweete baite, that so you may be drawne by the Father to Christ. For they onely are good ground as we haue it here, which with a good, and a very good heart, heare the word, and keepe it, and bring forth fruit with patience.
Here are three properties of good ground set downe. All opposite to the three bad grounds mentioned before. First, they that are good ground, heare the word with a good heart; contrarie to the ground on the high wayes side, which when they haue heard, let the deuil take the word out of their hearts, & so they heare not with a good heart. Secondly, they keepe the word with a very good heart; contrarie to the stonie ground, which for a while receiue the word with ioy, but in time of temptation they fall away, and so they keepe not the word with a verie good heart. Thirdly, they bring foorth fruit with patience; contrarie to the thornie ground, which after their departure are choaked with cares, and bring no fruit, and so doe not (as it
[Page 176] is said here that the good ground doth) bring forth fruit with patience. But that which fell in good ground are they, which with a good, and a very good heart, heare the word, and keepe it, and bring forth fruit with patience.
The first propertie of the good ground is this, that they heare the word with a good heart. The two Disciples going to Emaus,
Luk. 24. when Christ was departed from them, said thus one to another; Did not our hearts burne within vs, when he talked with vs by the way, & opened to vs the Scripture? O Beloued, now you are busied in hearing the word, Christ talketh to you, and you are in the right way to heauen. Therefore that wee may heare with a good heart, we must feele in our hearts that burning of which the Disciples say, Did not our hearts burne within vs, when he talked with vs by the way? For so the Spirituall spouse confesseth of her selfe,
Ca
[...]t. 5.4. My beloued put his hand to the hole of the doore, and my heart was affectioned towards him. And againes My soule melted when my beloued spake. Now Christ puts his hand to
[Page 177] the hole of the doore, desiring himselfe to enter, and vs to repent: now our beloued speaketh to vs out of his word. So that we cannot be good ground, except our heart be affectioned, and our soule melt towards him. When the blessed Virgin saluted her cousin Elizabeth,
Luk. 1.44. she felt the babe spring in her wombe for ioy. Certainely Beloued, you haue euery one of you a babe in your hearts, euen the child Iesus, which is formed and fashioned in you. This babe we must feele euen to skip & spring in our hearts for ioy, if we would assure our selues that wee be good ground, and heare with a good heart. Neither must we only reioyce, but also feare. Serue the Lord with gladnesse, and reioyce before him with trembling,
Psal. 2. saies the Psalmist. We read that when the Almightie vttered his voice,
Ezek. 5.24. the foure beasts, whereby are meant the Angels, let fall their wings. Where are then our plumes of pride, our feathers whereby wee flie so high in an opinion of our owne knowledge and wisedome? why are they not all let downe, that we may wholly submit our selues to the Lord, to bee
[Page 178] taught and directed by his word? Remember I pray you what good Cornelius said. I know well there was neuer more reuerent hearing of the word in the Court▪ then at this day, yet that which is very well alreadie must so be commended, as that which may be better and better, be euermore enforced. Therefore as I was about to say, remember what the Captaine Cornelius said to S. Peter, when he was readie to preach vnto him; Now, saies he, are we all here present before the Lord,
Act. 10.33. to heare all things that are commaunded thee of God: O that we had this good heart to consider, when we heare a sermon, that we stand not before a man, but
coram domino, before the Lord. Th
[...] we should heare the word, not as the word of man, but as it is indeede the word of God. Then, we should put a difference between other things which perhaps shortly we shall heare, either to recreate the mind or sharpen the wit, or for state and maiestie, or for some other earthly purpose, and betweene this engrafted word, which is able to
[...] our soules. It is strange, what is repo
[...]d
[Page 179] of Constantine the great in this kinde. Eusebius writeth of him that when diuine seruice was said,
De vi
[...]â Constan. lib
[...]. cap. 17. & cap. 33. he would helpe the minister to begin the prayers, and to read the verses of the Psalmes enterchangeable. And when there was a Sermon, if any place of speciall importance were alleadged, that he would turne his Bible, to imprint the place in his minde the better both by hearing & seeing it, He addeth besides, that the Emperour many times beeing as it were rauished with those things which he heard, rose vp sodainely out of his throne & chaire of estate, and would stand a long while to heare more diligently, and though they which were next him did put him in minde to remember himselfe, yet he heard the word so attentiuely, that he would not heare them. How wonderfully do
[...] this confound vs, that are farre inferiour euery way, when wee heare and see that Emperours, and mighty Kings and Potentates of the world, shew such a good heart in hearing the word, & we in the meane time haue lumpish and dull spirits & affections, and are neuer a whit mooued? Certainly
[Page 180] ye honourable children of God, now Christ talketh with vs by the way, therefore let our hearts burne within vs: now Christ putteth his hand to the hole of the doore, therefore let ou
[...] hearts be affectioned to word him know our welbeloued speaketh, therefore let our soules melt: now the blessed virgin; yea a greater then the virgin, then
[...]he virgins Sonne, saluteth vs, and with
[...] vs all haile out of his word, therefore let the babe spring in our heart fol ioy: now the Almighty vttereth his voice, therefore let our wings fall downe, and let vs wholly submit our selues to be taught of God. Euen as Cornelius the Centurion thought when he heard Peter preach, that he stood not before a man, but before the Lord: and Constantine the Emperour could neuer satis
[...]ie himselfe with reuerent attention of his good heart to the word. Then indeede shall we be good ground as all they are which with a good, and a verie good heart heare the word, and keepe it, and bring forth fruit with patience.
The second property of the good ground is this, that they keep the word
[Page 181] with a very good heart. In our English translation it is read thus, with a good and an honest heart.
Corde be
[...] & optimo. Vulga. But I follow the vulgar Latin, which readeth thus; With a good and a very good heart. And I referr
[...] the good heart to hearing, the uery good heart to keeping: As if the words stood thus; Which with a good heart, heare the word, and with a very
[...]ood heart keep it, and bring forth fruit with patience. To the matter then: It is to no purpose that the seede be sowne▪ except it be couered in the earth. Neither that the word be heard. except it be kept.
Psal. 119. Therefore saith the Prophet, In my heart haue I hidde thy word, that I may not sinne against thee. So that to keep the word with a very good heart, is to hide and couer this holy seede in the fallow grounds of our heart, beeing plowed vp by the preaching of the Gospel. Whereupon the kingdom of heauen is likened to a treasure hid in a field. And this very field is a faithfull heart, which keepeth and hideth in it selfe the word, which is the direct way to the kingdome of heauen. According to that of our Sauiour. The
[Page 182] kingdome of heauen is within you.
Matth. 13.52. Yea a faithfull heart, not onely is a field wherin is a treasure, but also is itselfe a treasure, wherein are both old and new things. For euerie Scribe which is taught vnto the kingdome of heauen, is like vnto a housholder, which bringeth forth out of his treasure things both new and old. His heart is filled with a treasure of comforts, gathered out of the olde and new Testament.
Prou. 13.52. The wife woman, by whome is meant the spouse of Christ, keepes her candle a light all the night long.
[...] apperiat Clem. August. de ciuit. dei lib. 21. c. 6. Clemens vnderstandeth this
[...]ight to be the heart, and he calleth the meditations of holy men, candles that neuer goe out. S. Austin writeth among the Pagans in the temple of Venus, there was a candle which was called, vnextinguishable; whether this be true or no of Venus temple it is vncertaine, only Austins report we haue for it; but without all doubt in euery faithfull hearer and keeper of the word who is the temple of the holy Ghost, there is this candle or light that neuer goes out.
Psal. 19. For so we read, that the word of the Lord illuminateth the he
[...]t:
[Page 183] there's the light. And that this light goes not out at any time appeareth by that which is written else-where: O Lord, how doe I loue thy sta
[...]utes, they are my meditation continuosly?
Psal. 129. In the old lawe those creatures onely were accompted cleane, which did chew the end. No otherwise shall we be accōpted vncleane in the sight of God, if we chew not the end as it were, and ruminate, and meditate of those things which we haue heard out of the word. For euen as it is not auaileable to eate, except the meat be inwardly digested and diuided to all the parts of the bodie: so hearing is vnprofitable, vnlesse the word heard be kept in minde and memorie, and shewed and set forth in all the parts of our life. Therefore they of Berraea were esteemed more noble then they of Thessalonica, because they after Paul had preached to them, conferred among themselues, and searched the Scriptures, not onely to see whether the Apostles doctrine were warrantable by the word, but also to confirme their owne memory, and exercise their meditation in the Lawe of
[Page 184] God. Now then ye holy ones of God if we would be good ground indeede, as the Patriarch Iacob
[...]ted his sonne Iosephs dreames;
Gen. 37.11. so let vs not only
[...]eare, but also
[...] the word. For this is proper to the child of God, to haue the law of his God in his heart. Not noted in writing tables, or written in tables of stone, but noted & written in the flesh
[...] tables of the heart. And
[...] as the holy virgin kept all those sayings,
Luk. 2.1
[...]. & po
[...] dered them in her heart, which
[...] by the Shepheards reported and published abro
[...]d concerning her sonne Iesus▪ in like manner they that are wise will heare, nay they will ponder and keep
[...] those things which they haue heard, that so they may the better vnderstand the louing kindnesse of the Lord. Especially seeing those things which we heare are no dreames, but vnsearchable mysteries of our
[...] on: neither are we that publish and preach them, such shepheards as the Angell spake vnto, but we are appointed to watch ouer the flocke which Christ hath bought with his blo
[...]d. Therefore if you would shewe yourselues
[Page 185] to bee good ground, your verie good heart must bee as a field that hath a treasure hid in it: yea it must be as a treasure it selfe, that hath olde and new things hid in it: it must bee as a candle, that neuer goes out: and as a cleane creature that neuer leaues chewing the cudde: euen as Iacob noted his sonnes dreames, and the blessed virgin kept the shepheards sayings, and pondered them in her heart. For they onely are good ground which with a good, and a verie good heart, heare the word, and keepe it, and bring forth fruit with patience.
The third propertie of the good ground is this, that they bring foorth fruit with patience. Good ground is like a good tree. For indeede good ground will make a good tree. Now a good tree bringeth forth good fruite. And the blessed man which meditateth day and night in Gods law
[...],
Psal. 1. is like a tree planted by the waters side, which bringeth forth his fruit in due season. So that it is not enough for the word to goe in at one eare and out at the other, but it must goe in at both eares, by reuerent and religious hearing, and settle
[Page 186] deepely into the heart by faithfull and diligent keeping, and lastly, goe out at both hands, by bringing foorth fruite with patience.
Ecclus. 50.16. Simeon the son of Onius was a faire Oliue tree, that is fruitfull, and as a Cypres tree which groweth vp to the cloudes. A cypres tree is high, but barren: an oliue is fruitfull but low. So
[...] Christian, must not onely as cypres tree, re
[...]th vp to the cloud: by meditation of high mysteries in the word, but also he must as an oliue tree, bring forth fruit with patience. Then he shal be like Simeon, neither low, nor barren. But though he be an oliue, yet he shall be as high as the cypres tree: and though he bee a cypresse yet he shall be as fruitfull as the oliue tree.
Gen. 6.16. Noah is commanded to make a windowe in the toppe of the Arke, and a doore in the side of it. A windowe is for the eye to look out, a doore is for the whole bodie to goe out. And in like manner hee that would be good ground, must not onely make him a window for contemplation, as Daniel did, at which hee prayed thrice a day, but also a doore for acti
[...], as Abraham did, at which he fat
[...]
[...]
[Page 187] a day. At the windowe of contemplation be must meditate, with a very good heart to keepe the word: at the doore of action he must go out to bring forth fruite with patience. The Lord also commanded
Moses to make a l
[...]uer with a base or with a foote. Now the Latine word
Labi
[...] signifies as well a lip,
Exod. 30.38. as sla
[...]er. So that the l
[...]er which w
[...]sheth
[...] a base: and the lip which v
[...]tereth great knowledge, must haue a foot to walke according to it. Otherwise if knowledge doe not stand vpon doing, and vpon fructifying as vpon a foote, then questionles it is footles, & so consequently it is bootlesse, and the
[...] wanting a base is altogether vnprofitable. The Prophet Isaiah is willed to lift vp his voice like a trumpet.
Esa. 58.
[...]. Many things sound louder then a trumpet, as the sea, the thunder, and such like. Yet he saies not; Lift vp thy voice as the sea, or lift vp thy voice as the thunder; but lift vp thy voice as a trumpet. Why so? Because a trumpeter when hee sounds his trumpet, he windes it with his mouth, and holds it vp with his hand. And so euery faithfull heart, which is as it were
[Page 188] a spirituall trumpet to sound out the praises of God; must not onely report them with his mouth, but also support them with his hand. And then indeede holding vp the word of life with his hand, and bringing forth the fruit therof with patience, hee shall lift vp his voice like a trumpet. The Patriarch Abraham buried Sarah in the caue of Macpelah,
Gen. 23.1
[...]. that is, in a double sepulchre, H
[...] that buries his mind
[...] in knowledge onely, without any care of bringing forth fruit, be buries Sarah in a single sepulchre, as Philo Iuda
[...] doth alleg
[...] rize vpon his storie; but he that burieth his minde as well in the performance and practise of religion (which is all in all) as in the knowledge and vnderstanding of it, he buries Sarah in a double sepulchre. And so must all we doe, which are the true children of Abraham. For then with Abraham burying our spirit in a double sepulchre, we shal with Elizeus haue a double spirit. A spirit that heareth the word with a verie good heart, and with patience bringeth forth fruite. Neither is this addition (with patience) altogether to be omitted.
[Page 189] For though a man cannot heare the word without patience, nor keepe the word without patience, yet patience is neuer so requisite, as in bringing forth fruit according to the word which wee haue heard, and kept. Wherefore the holy Ghost saith;
Heb. 10.36. Ye haue neede of patience, that after yee haue done the will of God, yee may receiue the promise. He saies not, After ye haue heard it with your eare, or kept it with your memorie: but after yee haue done the will of God, and brought forth the fruit thereof, yee may receiue the promise. For wherefore did not the stony ground bring forth fruite, but onely for want of patience. They receiued the word with ioy, and seemed to haue very good hearts for a time; but in time of temptation for want of patience they fel away. Wherefore did not the thornie ground bring forth fruit, but onely for want of patience? After their departure wanting patience to digest their greifes, they were choked with cares, and so brought forth no fruit. Therefore as a good field must endure many a cold frost & snow, and hard weather in the winter time,
[Page 190] before it can yeed a fruitfull croppe in Summer: semblably he that would bee good ground, must possesse his soule in much patience, and continually endure yea euen manfully reiect all the motions of his flesh, all the allurements of the world, all the temptations of the deuill, whereby he may bee hindered from bringing forth the fruit of good life, according to the holy will and word of God. Hee must like a good tree, bring forth good fruite; hee must with Simeon be not onely high as the cypresse, but also fruitfull as the oliue: he must with Noah make him, not onely a windowe for contemplation, but also a doore for action; hee must with Moses, make him a lauer with a base the must with Esay lift vp his voice like a trumpet; he must with Abraham burie Sarah in a double sepulchre: in one word, he must alwaies bring forth fruit with patience. For they onely are good ground, which with a good, and a very good heart, heare the word, and keep it, and bring forth fruit with patience.
To conclude then, It is not greatly needefull to exhort you with a good
[Page 191] heart to heare the word. Neuer heretofore such diligent hearing in the Court, as now a dayes. I dare be bold to say it; All the Preachers in England, in very many yeares by all their exhortations, could neuer haue done halfe so much good in this kind, as the onely, holy, and happie example hath done, which we see euery day before our eies. Neither need ye be greatly put in mind to keepe in mind the word heard. Memorie yee haue enough, vnderstanding enough, knowledge enough, learning enough: When you haue heard a Sermon, you can remember and repeat, and carrie away, and keepe much of it. But this, this is the thing which I must call vpon my selfe, and vpon all you to thinke of, to wit, that we bring forth the fruit of the word in patience, in temperance, and in all other vertues of a sanctified life. For that Samaritan woman did not fill her pitcher at the wall, to spill it by the way, but to carrie it home full of water, and there to vse it as occasion serued. Here where the word is preached, is the well of liuing water, flowing forth to eternall life. But this water we must carry away with vs, and
[Page 192] keepe it to wash and purge our consciences, to cleanse our wayes, to water the roots of Gods graces in vs continually, that we may b
[...]ing forth s
[...] with patience. Rachel also, that other holy woman did not desire the mand
[...] so much to hold it in her hand,
[...] to s
[...]ell to it, as to be made
[...]p
[...]
[...] to bring forth the fruite of her
[...] To teach vs, that wee must not
[...] so much to knowe the word, the
[...]
[...] may subtilly dispute or discourse o
[...] to practise it that wee may shewe the fruite of it in the amendement of our liues. Therefore King Dauid being readie to redresse diuers things among his people, saith in one of the Psalmes▪ O Lord, teach me goodnesse, and knowledge: knowledge, that I may keep thy word; and goodnesse that I may shewe the fruit of it. For I am sure, saies he, that all my keeping without s
[...]nctifying all my knowledge without goodnesse, is to no purpose. Wherefore, O Lord, giue me goodnesse and knowledge. But first goodnesse and then knowledge. Because indeede a little goodnesse, though it bee neuer so small, is better then all
[Page 193] knowledge, though neuer so great. One handfull of goodnesse is worth
[...]n hundred headfulls of knowledge. For the feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisedome, a good vnderstanding haue all
[...] that doe thereafter, the praise of it endureth for euer. A good vnderstanding haue all they that doe thereafter.
[...]? Because an ill vnderstanding
[...]oe all they that doe not thereafter.
[...]ey that haue vnderstanding, and doe
[...] thereafter, that is, bring not forth fruit according to it, they haue an ill vnderstanding. But they that haue vnderstanding, and doe thereafter, and lead their life according to it, such haue a good vnderstanding. The praise of these shall endure for euer. O how highly shal Christ praise you, how richly shall hee reward you, if you haue a conscionable care to expresse his vertues, and to be transformed as it were into the obedience of his word? Then he shall say vnto you; Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdome of heauen. For ye haue not onely heard my word, and kept it as farre as knowledge goes, but also ye haue practised it, and fructified therby.
[Page 194] I was in prison, and ye visited me; I was harbourles, and ye lodged the▪ I was hungry, and yee gaue me meate. These and such other haue bin the good fruites, which haue followed you
[...] hearing and keeping of my word. Theirfore now yee shall bee praised for your weldoing, and for euer ye shall be blessed for your fruit-bearing. Which God graunt to vs all for Iesus Christ his sake, to whom with the father, and the holy Ghost, be all honour and glory, power and praise, dignity and dominion, now and euermore. Amen.
FINIS.
A FVNERALL SERMON Preached in S. MARIES.
May 10. 1605.
PSAL. 32.7.
Surely in the flood of many waters they shall not come neere him.
THe principall scope of the Prophet in this place is to prooue, that the righteousnes, and so the blessednes of man, consisteth only in the free forgiuenesse of his sinnes, and gratious imputation of Christs merits. His argument may be framed thus; That which the whole Church and euery godly man
[Page 196] therein hath euer especially praied for in all afflictions and troubles, that is happinesse▪ But for remission of sinnes euery godly man will pray in time of tribulation: Therefore this is the felicity of the faithfull. To confirme this reason more fully he setteth down, first, the circumstances going before the praye
[...]; For this shall euerie
[...] that is godly make his praier vnto thee in a ti
[...] when thou maist bee found. Then, the forme of the prayer it selfe; Thou art a place to hide me in, thou shalt preserue mee from trouble, thou shalt compasse me about with songs of deliuerance. Lastly, the effect following the prayer; Surely in the flood of many waters they shall not come neere him.
Prayer is the true sacrifice of faith▪ The efficacie whereof is briefly, bu
[...] pithily set downe to the Hebrewes. God I haue spoken else-where
[...] largely of this point. Now but a word onely to make a
[...]e entrance into this sermon. Take it therefore
[...]. The effects of prayer heretofore haue beene wonderfull. Praier hath set downe
[...]-sto
[...]es from heauen, to ouercome fiue
[Page 197] Kings with their armies. Prayer hath shut vp the windowes of heauen, that it should not raine, and againe hath opened them that the earth might giue her increase. Prayer hath staied the swift course of the sonne, and caused it to go backward fifteene degrees. Prayer hath held Gods hands that hee could not
[...]ike when he was readie to plague his people. Prayer without any other helpe or meanes hath throwne downe the strong walles of Iericho. Prayer hath deuided the sea, that the floods thereof could not come neere the Israelites. In this place it deliuereth the faithfull man from all the dangers of the world. Surely in the flood of many waters they shal not come neere him.
The summe is this; That no calamities of this world, no troubles of this life, no terrours of death, no guiltinesse of sinne, can be so great, but that a godly man by meanes of his faith and felicitie in Christ shall wade out of them well enough, For howsoeuer other things goe, still he shall haue such a solace in his soule, such a comfort in his conscience, such a heauen in his heart,
[Page 198] knowing himselfe reconciled to God, and iustified by faith, that Surely in the flood of many waters they shall not come neere him.
Which, that it may the better appeare, I shall desire you to obserue two things. The daunger: the deliuerance. The danger is in these words; I
[...] the flood of many waters. Where the tribulations that the godly man is subiect to in this life, are likened, First to waters: then to many waters: thirdly, to a flood of many waters; In the flood of many waters. The deliuerance is in these words; Surely they shall not come neere him. Where the deliuerance of the godly man hath three degrees also. First they shall not come neare: secondly him, they shall not come neere him: then Surely, surely they shall not come neere him. Surely in the flood of many waters, they shall not come neere him.
First, the afflictions of the faithful are likened to waters. Fire and water haue no mercy we say. But of the two water is the worst. For any fire may be qu
[...]c
[...] ed with water, but the force of water, if
[Page 199] it begins to be violent, cannot by any power of man be resisted. Canutus who was King of England,
Polyd. lib. 7. Scotland, Denmarke, Norway, & a great part of Sue
[...]i
[...] all at once, sitting at a low water vpon the Thames shoare, commanded the water not to come neare him. But notwithstanding his commandement, the water returning and flowing againe, as
[...] in Ezekiel which came to the ankles,
Ezech. 47.2. then to the knees, and yet higher to the necke, so neuer left rising till it came vp neare him and wet him. Then turning about to his noble men that were there attendant on him, he said, You call me your Soueraigne Lord and Master, and yet I cannot command this little channell of water to keep a loofe off from me. Whereupon he went immediatly to Westminster, and with his owne hands set his Crowne vpon the Crucifix there, and could neuer be perswaded after to weare it vpon his owne head. This experience that Canutus so mightie a King made, doth directly prooue, that no man but God onely can set barres and doores against the water and say;
Iob. 38.11. Hitherto shalt tho
[...] come, but
[Page 200] no further, and here shalt thou stay thy proud waues. The afflictions of the righteous therefore beeing
[...]ere compared to waters, must needes
[...]e very violent. For thus the Psalmist
[...]ith, Thine indignation lyeth hard on me,
Psal. 88.8. and thou hast vexed mee with all thy waues. And God himselfe; I will p
[...]re out my wrath vpon thee, as water. So that the securitie and felicitie of the faithfull man is inuincible. He may be often in daunger of tribulations as of great waues or waters,
Hos. 5.10. but they shall neuer ouerwhel
[...]e him; Surely in the flood of many waters they shall not come neere him.
But these our tribulations which are waters, are also many waters. Our common prouerb is, Seldome comes sorrow alone. But as waters come rouling and wauing many together: so the miseries of this life.
Ezeck. 2.10. The Prophet Ezekiel saw the roule of a booke written within and without, and there was written therein, Lamentations, and singing, and woe. The booke is written within and without,
[...]o shew that many are the troubles of the righteous, both inward
[Page 201] and outward. And it is two to one if any thing befall vs, it is rather an ill happe, then a good happe. Seeing for one singing, there is in the booke a double sorrowing, lamentations, and woe. Or if it be read as some translate it;
Et scriptura in eo erat lamentarionum, lugub
[...]is
(que) carmin
[...]s, & vae. Tremel. Lamentations, and mourning, and woe; then it is yet more plaine, that in this world many troubles as many waters come one in the neck
[...] of an other, no earthly ioy,
[...] comfort comming betweene. This the good King greatly complaineth of,
Psal. 4
[...].7. One deepe calleth another, because of the noyse of the water-pipes, all thy floods and stormes haue gone ouer me. And Iob,
Iob. 16.14. hee hath giuen me
[...] one wound vpon an other, and hee hath runne vpon me as a gyant. And Saint Paul,
Philip. 2.37. though in one place he write, God shewed mercie toward him, that hee should not haue sorrowe vpon sorrow, yet oftentimes elsewhere he speaketh of his owne manifold dangers.
2. Cor. 11.26. I suffered thrice shipwracke, saies he; night and day haue I bin in the deepe sea: In iourneying I was often, in perills of waters, in perills of robbers, in perills of mine owne nation, in perills among the Gentiles,
[Page 202] in perills in the citie, in perills in the wildernesse, in perills in the sea, in perills among false brethren. Th
[...]s we see how many waters the godly m
[...]n is subiect to in this life. For one thy hee hath at least two sorrowes, if hee
[...] no more: one deepe calleth an other; one wound bringeth another: hee hath sorrow vpon sorrow; perils vpon perils; Many waters; many dangers: Neuerthelesse, Surely in the flood of many waters, they shall not come neere him.
Thirdly, the daungers of this life, are as a flood. The very naming and mentioning of flood must needes
[...]e very terrible, euer since Noahs flood destroyed the whole world. For euen as a horse or a mule of whome the Prophet a little after speaketh in this Psalm,
vers. 9. hauing beene once well lashed with a whip, doth euer after feare, if he heare but the bel which is tied to the whippe: so man since the world was so well s
[...]oured and scourged with a flood, could neuer almost abide either to talke or thinke of it. Now though our whole life be nothing else but a flood of many waters, yet nothing in the world may
[Page 203] more fitly be so called, then our going our of the world. This indeede bringeth with it a flood of many waters, and an Ocean sea of infinite cares. Aristotle writeth, that nothing is so terrible as death, which Antiochus feeling sensibly in himselfe,
1. Mac. 6.11. cryeth out thus, Oh into what aduersitie am I come, and into what floods of miserie am I now fallen? He addeth the reason an on after; For I must die with great sorrow in a strange land. What speake I of a wicked tyrant? Holy men often are in great perplexitie at the time of their departure.
Hier. in vita
[...]ius S. Hierō writeth of Hilarion, that beeing ready to giue vp the ghost, he said thus to his soule; Goe forth my soule, why fearest thou? goe forth, why tremblest thou? Thou hast serued Christ almost these threescore and ten yeares, and dost thou now feare death? Christ himselfe also feeling that hee was compassed about with the sorrowes of death, beganne to be afraid, and to be in great heauinesse, and he said moreouer,
Mark. 14.33. My soule is very heauie euen to the death. I know well Christ was afraid without sinne, nay, with great comfort. For hee prayeth
[Page 204] thus, Not as I will, but as thou wilt. And againe, Into thy hands I commit my spirit. This then was his comfort, that the Iewes could doe nothing in putting him to death, but as S. Peter testifieth, that onely which his Father bo
[...] by his counsell and will hath decreed, and by his hand hath ordained. Hilarion also that holy ancient Father, comforteth himselfe with this, that hee had s
[...]d Christ almost seauentie yeares. O
[...] children of God haue had other comforts; and all haue this, that both in life and in death they are happy in Christ. Howbeit seeing many holy Christians, and euen Christ himselfe feared death, it remaineth that death simply and in it selfe considered, is a flood of many waters. But yet the faithfull man euen in death is out of all danger. Surely in the floods of many waters, they shall not come neere him.
Thus much for the first part which is the danger; In the flood of many waters. The second part followeth, which is the deliuerance: Surely, they shall not come neere him.
First, they shall not come neere.
[Page 205] They, that is, The waters shall not come neere. The holy Church and euerie member thereof is likened to a house built vpon a rocke.
Matth. 7.
[...]5. Vpon which though the winds blow, and the floods beate, yet it cannot be throwne downe, because it is built vpon a rocke. So that the floods which shake it, can neuer come neere it to ouerthrowe it. The s
[...]me may be said of the ship couered with waters. It might well floa
[...]e, but it could neuer be drowned. For as soon as the Disciples cryed vpon Christ to saue them,
Matth. 8.24. presently there followed a great calme. Therefore Luther when his life was sought of all the world in a manner,
Psal. 46.1. translated the Psalme
Deus noster refugium, into dumb meeter, and caused it to be sung in all the reformed Churches. God is our hope and strength a very present helpe in trouble. Therefore will we not feare though the earth be mooued, and though the hills be caried into the midst of the sea. Though the waues thereof rage and swell: and though the mounta
[...] shake at the tempest of the same. S. Peter the Apostle began to sinke, but he sunke not
[Page 206] right downe. Christ was ready at hand to helpe him. For as soone as he sawe himselfe in present perill and danger, forthwith he cryed, Master, saue me. Saue me,
Psal. 69 1. O God for the waters are co
[...] in euen vnto my soule. I sticke fast in the deepe mire where no ground is;
and 16. I am come into deepe waters; so that the floods runne ouer me. Take me out of the mire that I sinke not, and out of the deepe waters. Let not the water
[...] drowne me, neither let the deep swallow me vp: & let not the pit shut
[...] mouth vpon me. S. Paul likewise suffered shipwrack, but lost not by it one haire of his head.
Act. 17.34. Wherby we may see the absurdity of the Papists. They would prooue that iustifying grace may bee lost, because some haue made shipwracke of faith. but if we should graunt them that the Apostle speaketh of iustifying not of historicall faith,
1. Tim. 1.19. yet we haue the help of a second answer. To wit, that shipwrack is one thing, and drowning an other. Therefore faith which is wrackt is not by and by drowned. For it may happen to suffer shipwracke as S. Paul did, and swimme out safe to the shore. But this
[...]
[Page 207] but a touch by the way. Meane season we see how safe and secure the faithfull man is in Christ. He is a house to which the floods may come neere to shake it, but neuer to throwe it downe; he is a ship, which the waues may come neere to tosse it, but neuer to turne it ouer; euen as Saint Peter beganne to sinke, but still kept vp his head: and Saint Paul s
[...]ffered shippewracke, but was not a haire the worse for it. Surely in the flood of many waters, they shall not come neere him.
Secondly, him. They shall not come neere him. This word must in no case be omitted. It helpeth vs to answer a verie strong obiection. For it may bee said, Many holy men haue lost their goods, haue suffered great torments in their bodie, haue beene troubled also in minde; how then did not the floods of many waters come neere them? The word
Him helpes vs to answer. The verie Philosophers themselues reckoned their goods pertained no more to them, then, be it spoken with reuerence and regard, the parings of their nayles. Zeno hearing newes he had lost all he
[Page 208] had by sea,
Rene facis fortuna cum ad pallium nos compellis. said onely thus: Thou hast done verie wel Fortune to leaue me nothing but my cloake▪ An other called Anaxarchus, whom as Nicocre
[...] the tyrant commanded he should be
[...] to death in a morter, spake thus to the executioner; Beate and bray as long as thou wilt Anaxarchus his bagge or sachell (so he called his owne body) but Anaxarchus thou cansts not touch. Yet these making so smal reckoning of their goods and bodie, set their mind
[...] notwithstanding at a high rate.
Mens cuinsque is est quisque. The minde of a man, is himselfe, say they. Hence it is that Iulius Caesar, when Amyclas the Pilot was greatly afraid of the tempest, spake to him thus, What meanest thou to feare base fellow, doest thou not know thou carriest Caesar, with thee? As if he should say,
Caesarem ve
[...]is. Caesars bodie may well bee drowned, as any other man
[...] may, but his minde, his magnanimity, his valour, his fortitude, can neuer be drowned. Thus farre w
[...]nt Philosophie: But Diuinitie goeth a degree further. For Philosophy defineth Him, that is a man, by his reason, and the morall vertues of the minde; But Diuinitie
[Page 209] defineth a Christian man by his faith, and his coniunction thereby with Christ. Excellently saith Saint Austin: Whence com's it that the soule dieth?
Tract. 49 in Iohan. Vnde mors in animâ
[...] quia non est fides. Vnde mors in corpore
[...] quia non est ibi anima. Ergo animae tuae anima fides est. Because faith is not in it. Whence that the bodie dieth: Because a soule is not in it. Therefore the soule of thy soule is faith. So that if we would know what is a faithfull man, we must define Him, not by his naturall soule, as he is resonable, but by the soule of his soule, which is his faith. And when we easily answer the obiection, that a flood may come neere a faithfull mans goods▪ neere his bodie, neere his reasonable soule, but to his faith, that is to Him, it can neuer come neere. For if you speake of the life and essence of him, that it is faith, the Prophet also witnesseth,
Abacuck. The iust shall liue by faith.
Gal. 2.20. And the Apostle, Now I liue not, but Christ liueth in me, but that I liue, I liue by faith in the sonne of God; who loued mee, and gaue himselfe for me. And he that was wiser then all the Philosophers, determineth this point thus; The summe of the matter when yee haue heard all is this;
Eccles. 12.23. Feare God, and keepe his commandements;
[Page 210] for this is all of man. All of man, what's that. All of man which will hold out against all floods of many waters: For the goods of man may be gotten away by forged cauillation: the bodie of man may be weakened by sickenesse: the soule of man, and the faculties thereof, as memorie, witte, and such like, may be impaired by age, but faith in Christ, the feare of God, a care to keepe his commaundements, is all of man, which no floods, either in life or in death can ouer-whelme. All of man wherein man ought to imploy himselfe while he is aliue, and without which, man is but vanitie when he is dead, but with which, man both in life and death is most blessed. For if this be the summe of all, then of any thing but this there is no reckoning at all to be made.
Matth. 16.18. I haue praied for thee, saith our Sauiour, that thy faith should not faile, and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against thee. For loue is strong as death:
Can. 8.7. iealousie is cruell as the graue: the coales thereof are fierie coales, and a vehement flame. Much water cannot quench loue, neither
[Page 211] can the floods drowne it. Euen as Paul also glorieth,
Rom. 8. that nothing can separate him from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus. Wherefore seeing the godly man is so inuincible, that neither the gates of hell, nor the flood-gates of many waters, can preuaile against him; Surely in the flood of many waters, they shall not come neere him.
In the last place must be considered the asseueration, Surely. For if both liuing and dying my felicity be most certaine in Christ, and yet I knowe not so much, what comfort can I gather thereby? Now in all aduersities this is my greatest ioy, that the fauour of God which is most constant in it selfe, is fully assured also to me. For, I know that my reedeemer liueth. And if I be iudged, I know I shall be found righteous. And I know whome I haue beleeued, and I am sure. In one word, I am Surely perswaded, that neither life, nor death, nor any thing els can separate vs frō Christ. Nay in all the flood of waters wee shall be more then conquerours.
Rom. 8.37. They shall not come neere to conquer vs. But rather
[Page 212] we shall conquer them. Yea that which is strangest of all, Surely we shall be more then conquerers ouer them. Though an hoast of men were laid against me,
Psal.
[...]7.3. yet shall not my heart be afraid: and though there rose vp warre against me, yet will I put my trust in it. Not in him, as it is ill translated in the English, but in it; that is, In the verie warre it selfe, I will not feare. Nay I will be of good hope. Yea Surely in the very warre will I hope and trust. For euen as a building made arch-wise, the more waight is laide vpon it, the more strong still it is: so the more force and strength is brought against me, the greater triumph & victorie I shall haue. Therefore I will not be afraid of tenne thousand of the people,
Psal. 3.7. that haue set themselues against me round about. For a thousand of them shall fall at my side, and ten thousand at my right hand, but they shall not come neere mee. The Arke in the flood was not drowned,
Gen. 7.18. as other things were, but floated vpon the waters. Yea the higher the waters encreased, the higher Surely for that did the Arke still arise. Likewise the redde
[Page 213] sea did not hinder the Israelites passage,
Exod. 14.22. but opened an easie way to them. Yea Surely it was moreouer as a wall to backe them against all their enemies. The words of Saint Iames are verie plaine:
Iam. 1.2. My brethren, count it exceeding ioy when you fall into diuers temptations. Tentation of it selfe doth vexe and disquiet a man. But to the godly it is a ioy. As we read els where, That they which are iustified by faith haue peace: nay, haue easie accesse to God, and great ioy in tribulations. But the Apostle adding,
Rom. 5. that this ioy is not common or ordinarie, but Surely exceeding ioy, raiseth vp the amplification as high as may be. Whereunto, S. Paul also accordeth; We are afflicted on euery side,
2. Cor. 4 9. yet we are not in distresse: in pouertie, but not ouercome of pouertie; wee are persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but we perish not. Here he prooueth directly, that the flood commeth not neere the faithfull. But where is the Surely? It followeth in the same epistle; As dying, and behold we liue: as chastened, and yet not killed:
2. Cor. 6.20. as sorrowing, and yet alwaies reioycing: as poore, and
[Page 214] yet making others rich: as hauing nothing, and yet possessing all things. O the securitie and felicitie of the faithfull! For his faith maketh life of death; ioy of sorrowe: riches of pouertie. What shall I say more, or what would you haue me say more? then as the Apostle saies? It makes all things of nothing. As hauing nothing saies he, and yet possessing all things. But the special thing to be noted i
[...] this sentence is, As dying, and behold we liue. For they import, that death is no death, but As it were death, an image, or a shadowe of death: beeing indeede life, and Surely a better life and more immortall then we had here. Therefore he saies, Behold we liue, to shewe that by death the faithfull liue a life wherein there is some great specialty and excellencie worthy indeed to be beholded & regarded. As if he should say; Behold we liue, Behold we liue a more happie life, then euer we liued in our life. Saint Augustin often commēdeth the saying of his master S. Ambrose when he was readie to die. Speaking to Stilico and others about his bed; I haue not liued so
[Page 215] among you,
Non ita vixi inter vos. ve me pudea
[...] vinerenet mori time
[...], quia bonum dominum
[...]o
[...] Pontius in fine vitae eius. saith he, that I am ashamed to liue longer if it please God: and yet again I am not afraid to die, because we haue a good Lord. He doth not say, Mine owne goodnesse puts me out of feare, but Gods goodnesse. This goodnesse of God makes me quiet in my conscience, and secure in soule, readie to embrace death whensoeuer it commeth. Wherefore, Surely is fitly added. For afflictions as waters doe not ouercome the faithfull. Nay they come not neere him. But contra
[...]iwise the faithfull conquereth afflictions. Yea, Surely hee is in them all more then a conquerour. In warre he is not afraid. Rather he greatly hopeth. And Surely euen in the verie warre he hopeth. The flood of waters commeth not neere to drowne the Arke, but lift it vp. And so much the higher Surely the arke still riseth, as the flood riseth. The sea staieth not the Israelites passage. It is a dry land for them to march on. As a wall moreouer to backe them Surely against all their enemies. Tentation not onely is no matter of sorrowe, but also on the other side of ioy, & Surely of great ioy.
[Page 216] Death is no death, but a life, and Surely such a life, as only of it we may say, Behold we liue. So happie both in life and death is the faithfull man: Surely in the flood of many waters, they shall not come neere him.
To conclude then; No calamitie or aduersitie can possibly disseuer that coniunction which faith maketh of euerie godly man with Christ. For feeling the remission of his sinnes assured and sealed vnto him, hee contemneth not onely the workes of the world, and dismaiments of his conscience, but euen the verie feares and terrours of death. This our deare brother M. Edward Liuely, who now resteth in the Lord, lead a life which in a manner was nothing els but a continuall flood of many waters. Neuer out of suits of law, neuer-ceasing disquieters of his study. His goods distrained, and his cattell driuen off his ground, as Iobs was. His deare wife beeing not so well able to beare so great a flood as he, euen for verie sorow presently died. A lamentable and ruefull case. So many children to hang vpon his hand, for which he had neuer
[Page 217] maintenance, neither yet now had stay, his wife being gone. Well, but that sorrowfull time was blowne ouer. He was appointed to be one of the cheifest translators. And as soone as it was knowne how farre in this trauaile hee did more then any of the rest, hee was very well prouided for in respect of liuing. For which my L. his Grace of Canterburie now liuing, is much to bee reuerenced and honoured. But beeing so well to passe both for himselfe, and for his children, sodainely he fell sicke. He was taken with an ague and a squinsey both together. And the more vsual that was, the lesse dangerous was this accompted, but the euent shewes the contrary. For the squinsey beeing both by himselfe and his friends not greatly regarded, within foure dayes tooke away his life. These were many waters, and diuerse tribulations. Besides a thousand more, which I cannot now stand to repeate. Yet he carried himselfe so in life and death, as these waters seemed not once to come neere him. He was professour of the Hebrewe tongue in this Vniuersitie thirtie yeares. (As his father
[Page 218] in law D. Larkyn had been professor of Physicke fiue or sixe and thirtie yeares.) Which tongue, howsoeuer some account of it, yet ought to be preferred before all the rest. For it is the auncientest, the shortest, the plainest of all. A great part of wisedome, as Plato sheweth,
In Cratylo. is the knowledge of true Etymologies. These in other tongues are vncertaine, in this taking out of the naturall qualities of euery thing that is named. In so much as when any man hath found out the Hebrewe Etymology, then he neede seeke no further. Besides, all the Scripture written before the birth of Christ, except a fewe chapters of Daniel and Ezra, were written in Hebrewe. And the Rabbins themselues, though they haue no small number of fables and lies in them, yet diuers things they haue notwithstanding fit for the opening of the olde Testament. Therefore though a man cannot reade the Rabbins, yet vnlesse he can vnderstand handsomely well the Hebrewe text; he is compted but a maimed, or as it were but halfe a Diuine, especially in this learned age. Lastly, diuerse learned
[Page 219] men are of opinion, to whome I very willingly assent, that the holy tongue which was spoken in Paradise, shall be eternally vsed in the heauenly Paradise, where the Saints shall euer extoll and praise God. But this worthy Professor deceased, got him great credit, as well by the continuance, as by the holinesse of his profession. For he was not a Professor for one or two yeares, as others are;
In Itineratio. Pag. 444. but full thirty yeares together. Nathan Cytraeus writeth, that in Prage an Vniuersitie of Bohemia, where Iohn Hus, and Hierome of Prage professed, that they that haue continued Professours for the space of twentie yeares together, are created Earles and Dukes both together. And therefore their style is to bee called
Illustres, whereas they which are singly and simply, but onely either Earles or Dukes, are called
Spectabiles. Neither maketh it any matter that they haue no reuenewes, to maintaine Earldomes or Dukedoms. For they haue the title notwithstanding, euen as Suffragans haue of Bishoppes. Our good Brother hauing no such profit or dignitie propounded
[Page 220] vnto him, but contenting himselfe with his stipend, spent halfe his life in this place. For hee was vpon threescore yeares old when he died. He wrote a book of Annotations vpon the first fiue small Prophets, dedicated to that great patron of learning and learned men, Sir
Francis Walsingham. Wherin diuerse speeches and phrases of the Prophets are compared with the like, in Poets and Oratours both Greeke and Latine, and many notes neither vnpleasant nor vnprofitable to bee read, are set out of the Rabbins. But in mine opinion he took greatest pains in his Chronologie, which he dedicated to Doctor Iohn Whitgift, the reuerend late Archbishop of Canterbury. This booke indeede is full of hidden learning, and sheweth infinite reading in stories. I asked him within this little while, whether hee had written no more bookes, He told me he had, but printed no more because hee had no time to peruse and perfect them for other businesse. Now by businesse he meant, I weene especially his studie and care to performe well his taske in the translation. Wherein
[Page 221] how excellently he was imployed, all they can witnes who were ioyned with him in that labour. For though they be the verie flower of the Vniuersitie for knowledge of the tongues, yet they will not be ashamed to confesse, that no one man of their companie, if not by other respects, yet at least wise for long experience and exercise in this kinde, was to be compared with him. For indeede he was so desirous that this businesse begunne by the commaundement of our most gracious Soueraigne King
Iames, should bee brought to a happie ende; that oftentimes in many mens hearings, hee protested hee had rather die, then be any way negligent herein, Which as some thinke by all likelihood came indeede so to passe. To wit, that too earnest study and paines about the translation, hastened his death, and brought it on sooner. Now as he liued so, in his profession, in his writings, in his translating, as though all the floods of many waters had neuer comn' neare him: euen so also he died. During the short time of his sickenesse, hee carried himselfe, as alwaies before, humbly,
[Page 222] mildly, quietly, constantly. One of his louing friends standing by his bed, and saying; M. Liuely, I pray God you may haue patience, and hope, and especially faith vnto the ende. He lifting vp his hands said heartily and cheerefully, Amen. Little he vsed to speake, and more he could not say, for the paine and impediment of his squinsey. Which though it made a speedie ende of him, as the apoplexy did of the good Emperour Valentinian, yet how could any death be sodaine to him, whose whole life was nothing els but a meditation of death, and whom the Lord whensoeuer he came, might finde doing his dutie? Wherefore no reason wee should lament his departure out of this world. He liued blessedly, he died blessedly in the Lord. Rather, you Reuerend and learned Vniuersitie-men, lament for this, that you haue lost so famous a Professour, and so worthy a writer. Lament you translatours, beeing now depriued of him, who no lesse by his owne merit and desert, then by the priuiledge of his place, was to order and ouersee all your trauailes. Lament you poore orphans,
[Page 223]
[...] poore children of you, which he left
[...] him, as Christ
[...] left eleuen Disciples bere
[...] of your kinde and deare Father, destitute of necessaries for your mai
[...]enance, to seeke of all helpe and
[...] but onely (as poore folkes vse to speak) such as God, and good friends shal pro
[...]ide. L
[...]ent, lament all of you, of the To
[...]ne, as well as of the V
[...]ersitie, because our Schoole hath lost s
[...]ch a singular ornament of this age, because our Churches haue lost such a faithfull and syncere seruant of Christ. Questionlesse, as it should seeme by the taking away of this man, almightie God is greatly angry with vs all for our sinnes. Christ Iesus our Master, as though he meant no more to care for vs, seemeth to lie fast a sleepe in the ship, while we most miserably in the flood of many waters are tormoiled and tossed. Wherfore let vs in time crie aloud, and awake him with our prayers. Or rather indeede he is not a sleepe, but awake alreadie. We haue awaked him, not with our prayers, but with our sinnes. Our sinnes haue cried vp to heauen. And
[Page 224] the Lord beeing awaked, as a gyant comes forth against vs, and as a mighty man refreshed with wine. For not onely those are waters which are in the chanell, or in the sea: but as waters are here vnderstood, euen those fires are waters, those fires I say, which very lately awaked vs at midnight, and affrighted vs at noone day; which raged on the South-side, and anone after on the North-side of the Towne. It was but a fewe mens losse, but it was all mens warning. And what? shall we make nothing of this,
The plague, the small pocks, and the squinsey. that one kind of disease deuoureth vp the Townesmen;
[...]n other the schollers? This is now the tenth course of Schollers, which within this month hath beene brought foorth to buriall, not one of them dying of the plague; whereas heretofore if one or two schollers haue died in a whole year out of all Colledges, it hath beene accounted a great matter. This and such like grieuous iudgements, beloued, doe plainely declare, that the Lord beeing awaked with the cry of our sinnes, is greiuously displeased and offended at vs. Wherefore let vs nowe at the
[Page 225] length in the name of God, rowse vp our selues, and awake out of our deadly sinnes. Let this that our holy brother did so sodainly in a manner fall asleepe, be a loud O yes, as it were to awake vs all. Let euerie one of vs, amend one, iudge one, accuse one, condemne one, that we be not all condemned of the Lord. Let euery one of vs I beseech you crie vp to heauen for mercie, and say
[...]ith Dauid, I haue sinned and done wickedly. Or with Ionas; Take me, for I know that for my sake this great tempest is vpon you. Then our most mercifull father shall blesse vs all, as he hath done this holy Saint, both in our life and in our death, by the pardoning of our offences, & couering all our sinnes, with the bowels and blood of Christ. And though in this world we be euer subiect to a flood of many waters, yet hee shall drawe vs still out of many waters, as hee did Moses. Surely in the floode of many waters, no more then they did to Ionas, they shall not come neare vs. Neither onely shall we be safe in the flood of death, but also in the flood of the day of iudgement. For
[Page 236] that also is a flood, and a terrible fearefull one too. To wit, not of water, but of fire. As it was in the dayes of Noah: so shall it be at the comming of the son of man. In the first flood they which had not an arke, ranne vp to the toppes of houses, to the toppes of trees, to the toppes of mountaines; because they desired to hold vp their heads aboue the still rising raging water. In the second, they which are not found in Christ, shall say to the mountaines, Fall vpon vs: and to the Caues, Cauer vs, and hide vs from the wrath of the Lambe. Then they shall be glad to creepe into euerie hol
[...] and corner that they may auoide the b
[...]rning of fire. But we that confesse our sinnes, and forsake the same, shall lift our heads to no other mountaine, but to Christ from whom commeth our saluation; we shall desire to be couered with no other rocke, but onely with that out of which came the blood and water of life. For neuer did Noahs flood so clean wash away all wicked men from the face of the earth, as the blood of Christ shall purge vs from all our sinnes, and present vs blamelesse before the face of
[Page 237] our father, onely if we be faithfull vnto death. For then the next thing is felicity, and the crowne of life. Which God for his mercie sake graunt vs all, that as we make no doubt, but this our holy brother now triumpheth with Christ, so all and euery one of vs, after we haue waded through this world as a flood of many waters, may inherit that kingdome of glory, which our louing Lord Iesus hath purchased for vs with his deare blood: to whom with the Father, and the Holy Ghost, be all honour and glory, now and for euermore: Amen.
FINIS.
A SERMON PREACHED at
Whitehall before the KING on Twesday after L
[...] Sunday. 1604.
2. COR. 3.18.
But all we, with open face, behold as in a glasse the glorie of the Lord, and
[...] transformed into the same image, from glory to glorie, as by the spirit of the Lord.
THe old Testament, and the new Testament, in summe and substance, are all one. Christ Iesus the very summe and substance of them both, in himselfe is one and the same yesterday,
Heb. 13.
[...]. and to day, and for
[...] uer. Those mysticall wheeles, which Ezekiel
[Page 229]
Ezek. 1.16. sees in a vision
[...] are one within an other. After the same sort, there is Gospell in the lawe, and there is law in the Gospell. One wheele is within another: one testament is within an other. For neither is the lawe so full of threatnings, but that it hath some comforts in it: neither is the Gospell so full of comforts, but that it hath some threatnings in it. So that the lawe, is nothing else but a threatening gospel; and the gospel, is nothing else, but a comfortable law. The two cherubims,
Exod.
[...]5.
[...]. which shadow the mercie-seat, haue their faces one toward another. In like manner, the two testaments which shadow out Christ the true mercieseat vnto vs, haue their faces one toward another. For the old Testament looketh forward toward the new, which is come: and the newe testament looketh backeward, toward the old, which is past. Those glorious seraphims
Esa. 6.3. which sing, Holy, Holy, Holy, doe call to one another. So the lawe and the Gospel, lauding him alone, which is the holy one of God, doe call to one another. Behold the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of
[Page 230] the world. There the lawe calls to the gospell, when Iohn commends Christ. Among them that haue beene borne of women, there hath not risen a greater, then the Baptist. Here on the other side, the Gospell calls to the lawe, when Christ cōmends Iohn. Whereupon also commending his spouse
Can. 4.5., he saies, Thy two breasts are like two young
[...]oes, that are twins, feeding among the lillies. The two breasts of the Church are the two testaments; out of which we that are the children of the church, s
[...]k the pure milke of the word of God. These testaments feede among the lillies. Because they treate and discourse especially of Christ, who saies, I am the lilly of the valleyes. These testaments also are like two young roes, that are twins. Because twins, (as we reade of Hippocrates twins) when they goe, they goe together, when they feede, they feede together. And after the same fashion, the two testaments, beeing the two breasts of the Church, goe together, and feede together, like two young roes that are twins, feeding among the lillies. The Prophet Zacharie
[Page 231]
Zach. 4.12. sees in a vsiion, two oliue trees which thorough two golden pipes, emptie themselues into the golden candlesticke. This golden candlesticke, shining continually, and giuing light to euery one that came into the tabernacle was a figure of that light which lighteneth euery one that commeth into the world. And euen as the light of that candlesticke, was alwaies maintained onely with the oyle, which dropping from the oliue trees, and distilling thorough the golden pipes, was conueyed into it: so, Christ shineth in our hearts, onely by the light of his word, and the two testaments, are, as it were, two golden pipes, flowing forth, and streaming both together, whereby the oyle of all gladnesse and goodnesse is powred into vs. Wherefore, it is manifest, that the old testament and the newe testament, as Ezechiels wheeles, are one within another. Yea moreouer, as those cherubins, they looke one toward an other: as those seraphims, they sing one to an other: as those young roes, they feede both together: as those golden pipes, they flowe forth both together.
[Page 232] And therefore, as there are two cherubims, and yet but one obiect that they both looke vpon, which is the mercie-seate; as there are two seraphims, and yet but one song that they both sing, which is the holy; as there are two roes, and yet but one food that they both feede vpon, which is the lillie: as there are two pipes, and yet but one vessell that they both flow into, which is the golden candlesticke: so, there are two testaments, and yet but one summe and substance of them both, which is Christ. Christ the onely Mercy seat; the onely Holy; the onely Lillie; the onely golden Candlesticke.
But now, though these two Testamēts agree together thus in Christ, whom S. Paul calleth,
Eph. 1.10.
[...], the rec
[...]pitulatiō, or the abridgmēt of them both; yet, if it will please you to confides the diuerse dispensation of them, you shall in this whole verse obserue six differences betweene them. And euery difference, is a dignitie. Euery difference of the Gospel from the law, is a dignity of the Gospel aboue the law.
The first difference is in these words,
[Page 233]
But all we. In the time of the olde Testament, very few did behold the glorie of the Lord. When the Law was giuen, onely Moses might come vp to the top of the mount, al the people stood below Which custome continued euen vntill the comming of Christ. For when incense was offered,
Luk. 1.10. onely Zachary went into the temple, all the multitude stood without. But suppose more men then Moses or Zachary did at that time behold the glorie of the Lord, yet certainly more nations then the Iewes did not behold it. The Iewes onely were Gods peculiar people. As for the Gentiles, they were suffred to walke in their own wayes. The Lord shewed his word vnto Iacob, his statutes & ordinances vnto Israel. He dealt not so with any other nation, neither had the heathen knowledge of his lawe: which likewise continued euen vntil the comming of Christ. For when a woman of Canaan cryed to our Sauiour, saying, Haue mercy on me; he answered her, I am not sent but to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel. Yea, not onely hee himselfe denyed mercy to the Gentils, but also he charged
[Page 234] his disciples for a time to shewe no mercy vnto them. Goe not into the way of the Gentiles, saies he,
Matth. 10.5. and into the cities of the Samaritans enter yee not. But go rather to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel. So that it was but one man onely among all the people, namely Moses, or Zacharie; or, to take it at the very highest, it was but one people onely among all nations,
[...] ly the Iewes, or the Israelites, which did in the time of the old Testament behold the glorie of the Lord.
But all we, now
all we, with open
[...]ce behold as in a gl
[...]sse the glorie of the Lord. Then they did sing,
Psal. 76.
Notus in Iada
[...] deus, In Iewry is God knowne, his name is great in Israel. But now we sing
Psal. 117.
Landate dominum omnes gentes, O praise the Lord
all ye heathen, praise him
all ye nations. Then, no vncircumcised stronger might eate the Passeouer,
Exod 12 45. onely those might eate it, which were borne in the land. But now,
all we that are otherwise strangers from the commonwealth of Israel haue an altar
Heb. 1
[...].10.
[...]. Vide Theodor. in Exod. quest. 24. and being circumcised with circūcisio
[...]
[...]de without hands, we may
all of vs eat the
[Page 235] Easter-lambe, which hath beene slaine for vs. Then the name of Christ was as an oyntment kept close in an alabaster box, the sauour whereof perfumed onely a part of the house.
Vnguentum effusum. But now, it is as an ointment powred out
Can. 1.2. Christi nomen ante eius aduentum in Israel populo quasi in vase aliquo claudebatur, Ambr., the sweete smel whereof perfumeth
all the house of God. Then, the doctrin of saluation was preached onely in the secret places of Palestina, which was but a corner of the world. But now, it is as it were, proclaimed vpon the tops of the houses
Luk. 12.3., and published ouer
all the whole earth. Then, onely the asse vsed to the yoke, the Iew vsed to the yoke of the law, was broght vnto Christ. But now hee hath ridden into Ierusalem, vpon the asses foale
Matth, 21.7., and hee hath made all the Gentiles, which were before like vntaimed colts, tractable & obedient, and seruiceable to himselfe. Then, onely naturall branches which were the Iewes, did by faith take roote downward, and by charity beare fruit vpward. But now, wild branches are grafted into the right oliue tree
Rom. 11.17., and
all the Gentiles are incorporated into the bodie of Christ.
Therefore that is now most true
[Page 236] which our Sauiour saies concerning his Church,
Can. 6.8. The Queenes and the concubines haue praysed her. The Queenes are the Iewes, whom Christ of old had espoused to himselfe. The concubines are the Gentiles: which though heretofore they haue runne a whoring after strange gods, as the Prophet speaketh, yet now they are faithfull vnto Christ. So that, not onely the Queenes, but also the Concubines praise the Church, yea
all generations doe call her blessed▪ Which is the cause, why Salomon also had three hundred queenes, and
[...] hundred concubines
1. Reg. 11.3.. Not so much to satisfie his owne fancy, at
[...]o signifie Gods pleasure. Namely, that there should be seuen in the time of the Gospel, to three in the time of the Law, seauen to three, which should loue the true Salomon Christ Iesus. And that, not only three hundred persons among the Iewes, but also seauen hundred nations among the Gentiles, yea
all the Nations of the earth, should at length bee ioyned to Christ. Now Salomon, not onely by the multitude of his concubines (and likewise by marrying
[Page 237] Pharaohs daughter) did foreshewe the calling of the Gentiles; but much more
1. Reg. 5.
[...]by requesting Hiram King of Tyrus, to helpe him build the Temple. For none but Israelites did meddle with building the tabernacle; whereas Sidonians, and diuerse other Gentiles, did helpe to build the Temple. Which did mystically insinuate a further thing. To wit, that though the synagogue of the Iewes did consist onely of Israelites, yet the Sydonians, and all other nations, should one day come together, and put to their helping hand, to edifie and build vp the Church of Christ: Euen as the Father of Salomon prophesied of it long before,
Psal. 72.10. Vide Ambros. de vocat. gent. lib. 2. c. 1. & Cyril. contr. Iulian. l. 8. The Kings of Tarsis and the Isler shall giue presents, the Kings of Arabia and Saba shall bring gifts.
All people shall fall downe before him,
all nations shall doe him seruice. We read
Numb. 33.9. that the Israelites remooued their tents from Marah, and came to Elim, where they found twelue fountaines of water, and seauentie palme trees. All the while they were in Marah, which signifieth bitternes, they saw no fountaine, no palme tree. But when they
[Page 238] came to Elim, which signifieth rams, then they found twelue fountaines and seauentie palme trees. This iourney of the Israelites did intimate thus much: That the Church of Christ should neuer leaue iourneying on forward, till it came from Marah to Elim. That is, from the Iewes, whose mouthes are full of cursing and bitternes, to the Gentiles, which are the true flocke and sheep sold of Christ. Here, the Church findeth twelue fountaines, and seauenty palme trees,
Non dubium quin de d
[...]o decim apostolis sermo sit, de quorum fontibus deriuatae aquae, otius mu
[...] di siccitatem tigant. Hier. Epist. ad Fabiol. M
[...]. twelue Apostles, and seauentie Disciples. Which twelue Apostles, as twelue fountaines, haue flowed more generally ouer the face of
all the earth to renewe it, then Noahs flood did to destroy it. And the seauenty Disciples, as seauentie palme trees, haue flourished and spread thēselues ouer
all the world, so that, as the Psalmist speaketh,
Psal 80.10. The bills are couered with the shadowe of them, and the boughs thereof are like the goodly Cedar trees. Almightie God commaunded Moses to make 12. cakes, which should be set continually vpon the table of shewbread, yet so as they should be changed euery Sabbath
[Page 239] day
Leuit.
[...]4.8.. These twelue cakes did prefigure the twelue Apostles
Beda de taber. lib 1. cap. 7., and all those disciples of Christ, which continually
shew to his people the
bread of life, that is, the word of God. Now these twelue cakes are changed, when as the twelue fountaines, and the seauentie palme trees, are changed into twelue Apostles and seauentie Disciples. That so, Gods promise to his Church may bee fulfilled, which is this,
Psal. 15.17. Constitues eos principes super omn
[...]m terram. De Apostolis dictum est. Veique & de nobis, qui loca apostolorum minoribus reuera meritis, sed maioribus consolationibus obtinomus. Arnulfus in set in Conc. Turonens p 65. In steed of thy fathers thou shalt haue children, whome thou maist make Princes in
all lands. As if in other words he should haue saide, Thy shewbread shall bee changed. For instead of thy twelue fountaines, and thy seauentie palme trees, thou shalt haue twelue Apostles & seauentie Disciples, whom thou maist make Princes in
all lands. To this mysterie of the twelue fountaines, is answerable that which is written of the twelue oxen
2. Chron. 4.4.. The molten sea did stand vpon twelue oxen, whereof three looked toward the North, and three looked toward the West, and three looked toward the South, and three looked toward the East. The great caldron was
[Page 240] called a molten sea, because it did foreshew the depth of the twelue Apostles doctrine, which flowing from them, as from twelue fountaines, did make, as it were, a maine sea. This sea did stand vpon twelue oxen, that is, as Saint Paul doth interpret it
1. Cor. 9.10. Duodecim bones, duodecim Apostoli sunt. Beda de temp. Salom c. 10., vpon twelue Apostles. Which in that they looked fowre waies, East, West, North, and South, they did teach all nations
Potest intelligi quod quatuor facies ro
[...]a habeat, propter hoc quod scriptura sacra per gratiam predicationis extensa in quatour mundi partes innoruit. Gregor in Ezech. Hom.. And in that they looked three and three together, they did represent the blessed Trinitie. Not only teaching
all nations, but also in that sea of water baptizing them, in the name of the Father, and of the Sonne, and of the holy Ghost. Wherefore, though the two kine which carried the Arke, wherein were the tables of the Law, went straight, and kept one path, turning neither to the right hand nor to the left
1. Sam. 6.12. ▪ Yet these twelue oxen, which carried the molten sea, signifying the doctrine of the Gospell, went not straight, neither kept one path, but turned into the way of the Gentiles; yea, they looked all manner of waies, East, West, North, and South. And those two kyne stood
[Page 241] still and lowed no more, when they came to the field of Iosua, dwelling in Bethshemesh, that is, in the house of the sunne. To note, that all the ki
[...]e, and calues, and sacrifices, and ceremonies of the old law were to cease, and stand still, when they came to Iesus, which is the true Iosua, dwelling in heauen, which is the true Bethshemesh. But these twelue oxen, were so farre from leauing off, either to goe, or to low, when they came to Christ, that euen then, they went much faster, and lowed much lowder, so that now their sound is gone out into
all lands, and their words into the ends of the world; and in them hath God set Bethshemesh, that is, a house or a tabernacle for the sunne. Therefore as the materiall sunne, thorough the twelue signes in the Zodiake, goeth forth from the vttermost parts of the heauen, and runneth about to the end of it againe
P
[...]. 19.
[...].: in like sort, the spirituall Sonne of righteousnesse, by the twelue Apostles, as by twelue signes, hath beene burne round about the world, that he might be not onely the glorie of his people Israel, but also
[Page 240]
[...]
[Page 241]
[...]
[Page 242] a light to lighten the Gentiles, and that all,
all the ends of the earth might see the saluation of our God. Truth it is, touching the Synagogue of the Iewes, Christ saith,
Can. 4.
[...]2. My sister, my spouse is as a garden enclosed, and as a fountaine sealed vp. For as Saint Ierome writeth
Terra à Dan vsque Beersabee via c
[...]ntu
[...] sexaginta millium in longum spa
[...]io tenditu
[...] Ep. ad Dard., the whole countrie of Iewrie where the Iewes dwelt, lying betweene Dan and Beersabee, was
[...]carce a hundred and three-score mile long. So that it might well be likened, to a garden enclosed, and to a fountaine sealed vp. But now, this sealed fountaine hath beene turned into a springing well, since the twelue fountaines haue flowed ouer
all the earth: and, this enclosed garden hath beene turned into an open field, since the twelue oxen haue plowed the field of
all the whole world. Therefore now Christ saith of himselfe,
Can. 2.2 Ego sum flos campi. I am a flower of the feild. And so likewise to his spouse;
Can. 7.11. Come my welbeloued, let vs go forth into the field, let vs remaine in the villages. For though before his passion he was apprehended in a gardē, yet at his passion he was crucified without the gate
Heb. 13.12.. To signifie, that he would
[Page 243] be, no
[...] only a garden-flower, but also a feild-flower; & that he would remaine, not only for the saluation of the Iewes within the city of Ierusalē, but also for the saluation of the Gentils without the gate of the citie, in
all the villages round about. Nabuchadnezzar
Dan. 2.35. saw in a vision a stone cut without hands, which became a great mountaine, and filled
all the whole earth. This stone cut without hands, is Christ begotten of a pure Virgin, without the companie of man. Who was indeede a verie little stone, or, as I may say, but a sparke at the first. Wherefore the Iewes for his pouertie and humilitie despised and refused him. But now this poore little stone which the builders refused, is become the head-stone in the corner, and it is made a great mountaine, which filleth
all the whole earth. According to the prophesie of Esay;
cap. 2. v. 2. It shall be in the last daies, that the mountaine of the house of the Lord shall be prepared in the toppe of the mountaines, and shall be exalted aboue the hills, and
all nations shall flow vnto it. So that now Christ, which is the head corner stone, may be fitly called
[Page 244] the second Adara. The Greeke letters of which name, as S. Cyprian
Oportuit vt ex quatuor cardinibus orbis terrae nomen in te portare
[...] Adam. Tract. de Si
[...]a & Sion. initio. writeth, do seuerally signifie
al the quarters of the earth. A
[...], the East:
[...], the West: A▪ againe,
[...], the North M.
[...], the South. According to the promise of God vnto Abraham,
Gen. 28.14. Thy seed shalbe as the dust of the earth: (that is, as the first Adam was made of the dust of the earth: so thy seede, which is Christ the second Adam, shall be dispersed as d
[...]st ouer
all the earth.) Thy seede shall be as the dust of the earth; and thou shal spread abroad, (as a great mountaine,) to the East, and to the West, and to the North, and to the South; and in thee, and in thy seed, shall
all the families of the earth bee blessed. The Iewish Synagogue speaketh in this sort,
Ca
[...]. 6.11. Anima meaconcarba
[...]it me, propter quadrigas Aminadab. My soule troubleth me, for the chariots of Aminadab. Aminadab
[...]ignifieth a willing, or an obedient people. Such are the faithfull Gentiles. Of whom God saith,
Psal. 18.44. A people which I haue not knowne shall serue mee. As soone as they heare of me they shall obey me. But the strange children shall dissemble with mee. The strange children
[Page 245] shal faile, and be afraid out of their prisons. Though God haue beene a louing father to the Iewes, yet they dissemble, and are strange children to him. Contrariwise, though God haue not knowne the Gentiles, yet they doe knowe and serue him. Therefore the obstinate Iewes repining and grudging that the Gentiles are called, say euerie one of them,
Anima mea conturbaui
[...] me, My soule troubleth me, thorough enuy, malice, blindnes, and disobedience. Because they faile, and are afraid out of their prisons. On the other side, the obedient Gentiles, beeing called to this liberty of the sonnes of God, lie not in any prisons, but ride in the chariots of Amminadab, Because, as soone as they heare of God, they willingly obey him. Which is implied, in that a man of Cyrene, named Simon
Matth.
[...]
[...]2. Vt talifacto praefignaretu
[...] gen
[...]ium fides. Leo de Pa
[...].
[...]o.
[...]., did carrie the crosse of Christ. A man of Cyrene, is a Gentile: Simon signifieth hearing and obeying. Therefore, a man of Cyrene named Simon carrying the crosse, is a faithfull Gentile, which as soone as he heareth of God, doth willingly obey him. For now God hath
[Page 246] perswaded Iapheth to dwell in the tents of Shem
Gen. 9 2
[...].. That is, he hath perswaded the Gentiles comming of Iapheth to embrace that obedience vnto Christ, which the Iewes comming of Shem haue refused. This is the reason, why the Hebrew Scriptures are translated into Greek, and Latine, and
all other languages. To shew, that Iapheth doth now dwell in the tents of Shem. And that those oracles, which before were appropriated to the Iewes
Rom. 3.2., are now imparted vnto
all the Gentiles. So that the prophesie of the Patriarke Iacob is now also fulfilled, who saith,
Gen 49.21. Nepthaly shal be as a Hind let loose, giuing goodly words. For Christ did first preach in the land of Nepthaly among the Iews
Matth. 4.13.. But seeing the Iewes would not obey him, therefore he hath turned to the Gentiles
Act. 13.46.. And so Nepthalie is as a hind let loose, giuing goodly words. Because Christ, who first preached in Nepthalie, is not now any longer in prison among the Iewes; but, as a hind let loose, leaping by the mountaines, and skipping by the hills
Can. 2.8., so he hath run swiftly ouer
all the world
Psal. 147.15.; and
[Page 247] with his goodly words, with his gratious words, he hath perswaded Iapheth and
all the Gentiles, to dwell in the tents of Shem, and to ride in the chariots of Amminadab. These chariots of Amminadab are called in Latine,
Quadrigae, because each of them is drawne with foure horses. Which very aptly befitteth the doctrine of the Gospel. For, as Caluin noteth in the Epistle before his Harmonie, God hath of set purpose ordained, that the Gospel should be written by foure Euangelists, that so he might make a triumphant chariot for his sonne
Vide
[...]ur consuli
[...] deus quasi triumph
[...]lem curt
[...]m filio suo para
[...]e, vnde to
[...] fidelium populo conspieu
[...]s appare at▪ Infine Epistolae.. Which beeing drawne with fowre horses, and running vpon fowre wheels, might quickly passe ouer
all the earth, and so shew the glory of the Lord, vnto all his Church. Wherefore, the Church is like a graine of mustard seede
Matth. 23.
[...]., which is indeede the least of all seedes, but when it is grown, it is the greatest among hearbs, and it is a tree, so that the birds of the aire come and build in the branches thereof. Thus the congregation of Christ riseth from small beginnings, to great proceedings. And though at the first, it was
[Page 248] but a seede, yea but a graine, yet new it is growne to be an hearb, yea to be a tree; where in
all the birds of the aire
Ezec. 17.23.,
all the faithfull in the world, doe make their neasts.
Therefore the church of Christ may be compared also to the Samarit
[...]ns inne
Luk. 10.34.. For that inne is called in greeke
[...], because it receiueth and lodgeth all strangers that come: So the church lodgeth
all pilgrims vpon earth.
[...] Theophyl
[...]ct. p. 26
[...]. g
[...]abulum ecelesia est; vnde & in stabulo dominus natus est Emis. Do. 1
[...] ▪ post Pen. In the Synagogue there was not lodging for all. For then it was said,
Deut. 23.2. The Ammonites and the Moabites shal not enter into the congregation of the Lord: But now, Christ is borne in an inne
Luk. 2.
[...].. To signifie, that in the Church there is lodging for
all. For Christ is the host: the Church the inne: the crosse is the signe. Harken to the Host which is Christ, and you shall heare him say, Come vnto me
all you that labour and trauaile, and I will refresh you: I will bring you into the wineseller
Can.
[...].4., yea I will suppe with you, and you with me
Reu 3.10.. Go into the inne which is the Church, and there you shall finde Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and
all na
[...]ions
[Page 249] vnder heauen, staied with flagons, and comforted with apples
C
[...]n. 2.5.; yea, refreshed and filled with new wine
Act. 2.5.. Looke vp to the signe, which is the crosse, and you shall see diuerse things. First, you shall see one crowne of thornes. To shew, that the earth is the Lords, and
all that therein is, the round world, and they that dwell therein. For the roundnes of the crowne doth declare the large dominion of him that is crowned. Namely, that his dominion is from the one sea to the other, and from the flood vnto the worlds end
Psal. 52.8.. Secondly, you shall see two hands. To shew, that God is, not the God of the Iewes onely, but of the Gentiles also
Rom. 3.
[...]9.. For not only one hand, but both his hands, are fast nayled and stretched-out. The one to the one theife, the other to the other theife; the one to the Iewes, the other to the Gentiles, that he may embrace all that loue him. Thirdly, you shall see three tongues. To shew, that Christ, is not the King of the Hebrewes onely, but of the Greci
[...]ns, and the Latins also. For his title,
Iesus of Nazareth King of the Iewes, is written in Hebrew, Greeke,
[Page 250] and Latine. That at the most sweet and most excellent name of Iesus euerie knee may bowe, and
all tongues may confesse, that Iesus Christ is the
Phil. 2.11. Lord. Fourthly, you shall see fowre quarters of the crosse. To shew, by the fowre quarters of the crosse, the fowre quarters of the world. For God is no accepter of persons, but in euery quarter and countrie, he that feareth him, is accepted with him. Therefore also Christs garments
Ioh. 16 23. were diuided into fowre parts. Because, out of what quarter or part soeuer we come of
all the fowre parts of the world, if we be naked, Christ hath garments to cloath vs, if we bee harbourles, Christ hath roome to lodge vs. Euen as he himselfe saies,
All that the Father giueth mee, shall come to mee, and whosoeuer commeth to me,
Non eijciam for as, I will not turne him out of doores. Wherefore whether we respect the host; or the hosts inne; or the innes signe; and about the signe it selfe, whether we respect one crown; or two hands; or three tongues; or fower quarters; euery of these doth plainely shew, that now in the Church there is
[Page 251] lodging for
all, and so consequently that the Church may bee compared to the Samaritans inne. It may be compared likewise to S
[...]lomons troupe of horses
Can. 1.8.. For S
[...]lomons troupe of horses was kept in fowre thousand stables, ten and ten in a stable
2. Chr. 9.1.; so that hee had in his whole troupe fourtie thousand horses
1. Reg 4.16.; which were either bought by
1. Reg. 10.28. him, or els
[...] brought to him
2. Chr. 9.24. out of
all countries. So the Apostles, as we may reade in the Acts, brought by one sermon 3. thousand soules
Act. 2 41., brought by an other sermon fiue thousand soules to Christ
Act. 4.4.; and so euery day, out of
all countries and kinreds
Reuel. 7.9., there are added to the Church by infinite and innumerable multitudes
Dan.
[...].14., such as shall be saued. It may be compared to S. Peters sheete
Act. 10.12.. For in Peters sheete, were
all sort of beasts, fowre footed beasts of the earth, and wild beasts, creeping things, and foules of the heauen. So, in the Church there are
all manner of men, Circumcised and vncircumcised, Barbarians and Sythians
Colloss. 3.1
[...].. It may be compared to Noahs Arke
Gen. 7.14.. For there came to Noah into his Arke all kind of creatures, cleane
[Page 250]
[...]
[Page 251]
[...]
[Page 252] and vncleane, male and female. So there commeth to Christ into his Church,
all manner of men, Iewes and Grecians, bond and free
1. Cor. 12.13.. It may be compared to S. Iames his net
Luk. 5.10.. For that ne
[...]e had corke aboue to make it swimme, and ledde belowe to make it sinke, that it might take
all sorts of fishes. So, the Church hath diuerse fishers of men, some that teach slightly and superficially, some againe that teach more deeply and profoundly, that
all manner of men may bee taught
Ioh. 6.45., and caught
Matth. 13.47., and drawne vnto Christ.
Lastly, it may bee compared to King Assuerus his feast
Est 1.5.. For that feast entertained
all kinde of guests, seauen dayes together, in the court of the garden of the Kings Pallace. So, in the Church, the Lord of hosts hath made vnto
all manner of men, a feast of fat things, euen a feast of fined wines, to vse the Prophet Esais
Esay▪
[...]5.6. words, and fat things full of marrow, of wines fined and purified. Before that this
[...]east was prepared, the oxen and fatlings killed, and euery thing else prouided, all men were not bidden. But nowe that Christ hath bin killed, he keepeth, as I
[Page 253] may say, open house
Prou. 9.2., and sendeth his seruants into the high wayes
Luk. 14.23., to gather together
all that euer they find. Yea his seruants haue not onely bidden
all that they could find in the hie-waies, but also they haue crost the seas, and called the very furthermost
Esa. 60 9. Ilands of
all the world, to behold the glory of the Lord. Blessed. O blessed bee the Lord for his vnspeakable mercies towards this Iland, now far more flourishing then euer it was, in which we liue. For, alas, in the time of the olde Testament, who was there, I pray you, in this whole Monarchie, at least wise that euer wee could read or heare of, which had any true knowledge of God? S. Ierom in the end of his dialogue against the Pelagians, writeth thus,
Vsque ad aduentum Christ
[...], Brittannia fertilis prouincia tyrannorum, & Sto
[...]icae gentes, omnes
(que) vsque ad Oceanum per circul
[...] bar b
[...]rae na
[...]i
[...]er, Moysen Prophetas
(que) ignorabunt. Vntill the very comming of Christ, saies he, the Prouince of Brittain, which hath bin oftentimes gouerned by tyrants, and the Scottish people, and all the nations round about the Ocean sea, were vtterly ignorant of Moses and the Prophets. So that then, by the testimonie of S. Ierome, all our religion was superstition: al our church-seruice was, Idolatrie; all our Priests,
[Page 254] were Paynims: all our gods were idols. Then there was in Scotland, the temple of Mars: in Cornewall, the temple of Mercurie: in Bangor in Wales, the temple of Minerua
Stow Annal. in vita Morgani.: in Malden in Essex, the temple of Victoria
Camden. Brittan in Essexi
[...] ▪; in Bath, the temple of Apollo: in Leycester, the temple of Ianus: in Yorke, where Peters is now, the temple of Bellona
Stow Annal, in vita Bladud & Leiteregnum, & Seue
[...]i imperat.: in London, where Pauls is now, the temple of Diana
Iuellus in tractat. de sac
[...]is Scrip pag. 129.. Therefore it is very likely, that they esteemed as highly then of the goddesse Diana in London, as they did in Ephesus
Act. 19.28.. And that, as they cryed there,
Great is Diana of the Ephesians: so they cried here,
[...]reat is Diana of the Lō diners. Euen no more then three and fiftie yeares before the incarnation of Christ, when Iulius Caesar came out of France into England, so absurd and senslesse were the people of this Land, that in stead of the true and euerliuing God, they serued these heathenish and abominable idols, Mars, Mercurie, Minerua, Victoria, Apollo, Ianus, Bellona, Diana, & such like. And not long after, to wit,
an. Christ. 180. King Lucius being first christened himselfe, forthwith established
[Page 255] religion, in this whol kingdom. But thanks, thankes bee to God, in the time of the newe Testament, three and fiftie yeares after the incarnation of Christ: when Ioseph of Arimathea come out of France into Englād, many in this Realme of blind and ignorant P
[...]gans, became very zealous and sincere Christians. For Saint Philip the Apostle, after hee had preached the Gospel thorough-out
all France, at length sent Ioseph of Arimathea hither into England. Who when he had conuerted very many to the faith, died in this Land, and hee that had buried the bodie of Christ, was buried in Glascenburie himselfe
Gildas lib. de victor. Aurel. Em.. Also Simon Zelotes an other Apostle, after he had preached the Gospell thoroughout
all Mauritania, at length came ouer into England. Who when he had declared likewise to vs the doctrine of Christ crucified, was in the end crucified himselfe, and buried here in Brittaine
Ni
[...]ep l. 2
c. 40. About this time Aristobulus one of the seauentie Disciples,
Doroth in synops c. 23. whom Saint Paul mentioneth in his Epistle to the Romans
Rom. 16.10., was a reuerend and a renowned Biship in this
[Page 256] Land. Also,
Claudia a noble English Ladie
Martial. Epigrama
[...]at. lib. 4., whom S. Paul mentioneth in his second Epistle to Timothie
2. Tim. 4.21., was here amongst vs a famous Professour of the faith. Since which time, though the ciuil state hath bin o
[...]ten turn'd vpside downe, by the Romans, by the Saxons, by the Danes, by the Normans; ye
[...] the Gospel of Christ, hath neuer vtterly failed, or bin taken from vs. This the holy Fathers of the church, which haue liued in the ages next-ensuing, doe declare.
Tertul
[...]ian, who liued
Ann. 200. writeth thus,
Aduers
[...]uda c. 3. Hispaniarum omnes termini, & Galliarum diuersae nation
[...]s, & Brittannorum in a coessa Romanis loca Christo vero subdita.
All the coasts of Spaine, and diuers parts of France, and many places of
Brittaine, which the Romanes could neuer subdue with their sword, Christ hath subdued with his word.
Origen, who liued
Ann. 260. writeth thus,
Hom. 4. in Ezech. Qua
[...]do terra Brittanniae ante aduentum Christi in vnius dei consen
[...] religionem▪ Nunc veroò vniuersa terra cu
[...] l
[...]titia ela
[...]at ad dominum. Did the Ile of
Brittaine before the cō ming of Christ euer acknowledge the faith of one God? No. But yet now,
all that countrey singeth ioyfully vnto the Lord. Constantine the great, the glorie of all the Emperours, borne here in England, and of English blood, who liued
Ann. 306. writeth in an Epistle thus,
So
[...]. l. 2. c. 9. Whatsoeuer custome is of force in
all
[Page 257] the Churches of Egypt, Spaine, France, and
Brittaine, looke that the same be likewise ratified among you. S. Chrysostome, who liued
An. 405. writeth thus,
Hom.
[...]8. in 2. Cor. In all places wheresoeuer you goe into any Church, whether it be of the Mores, or of the Persians, or euen of the verie Iles▪ of
Brittaine, you may heare Iohn Baptist preaching. S. Hierome, who liued
Ann. 420. writeth thus,
Epist. ad
[...] g
[...]ium. Anno. 500. Columbanus in Anglia, Palladiu
[...]in Sco
[...]is, Patric
[...]u
[...] in Hib
[...]r
[...]ia floruit. The Frenchmen, the
Englishmen, they of Africa, they of Persia, and
all barbarous nations, worship one Christ, and obserue one rule of religion. Theodoret, who liued
Ann. 450. writeth thus,
Aduers. Grae. lib 9. the blessed Apostles haue induced the
Englishmen, the Danes, the Saxons, in one word,
all people and countries, to embrace the doctrine of Christ. Gregorie the great who liued
Ann. 605. writeth thus,
Epist l.
[...]. c. 58. Who can sufficiently expresse, how glad
all the faithfull are, for that the
Englishmen haue forsaken the darkenesse of their errours, and haue againe receiued, the light of the Gospell.
Beda, who liued
Ann. 730. writeth thus,
Hist. l. 1. c. 1. England at this
[Page 258] present, is inhabited by
Englishmen, Brittaines, Scots, Picts, and Romanes, all which, though they speake fiue tongues, yet they professe but one faith. Thus you see, how the Gospel of Christ, hauing beene first planted in this land by Ioseph of Arima
[...]he
[...], and Simon Zelotes, (in whose time Aristobulus and Claudia, and not long after King Lucius also liued) hath ouer since continued amongst vs; as testifieth, Tertullian, Origen, Constantine the great, Athanasius, Chrysostome, Hierome, Theodoret, Gregorie, Bed
[...], and many more which might here haue beene
Vide praet
[...]r caete
[...]o
[...], vitam Bernardi l 2 c. 7. & Bernard de confide
[...] ▪ l. 3. alleadged.
Loe yee then, ye blessed and belo
[...]ed of the Lord. Lo yee, and marke it well I beseech you, how farre the new Testament, excelleth the olde. In the time of the old Testament, they did sing onely,
Notus in Iudaea deus: but now, we sing also,
Lauda
[...]e dominum omnes gentes. Then they that were borne in the Land onely might eate the Passeouer: but now, we that are strangers also, may eate the Easter
[Page 259] lambe. Then the name of Christ was onely, as an oyntment kept in an alabaster box: but now, it is also, as an oyntment powred out. Then the doctrine of Saluation, was onely preached in secret places: but now, it is also preached vpon the tops of houses. Then, the old asse onely, was brought vnto Christ: but now, the young foale also, obedient vnto him. Then naturall branches only, did prosper and flourish: but now, wild branches also, are gra
[...]ted into the oliue tree. Then, the Queenes onely, did praise the Church: but now, the concubines also, do call her blessed. Then, Israelites onely, did build the tabernacle: but now, Sidonians also, doe helpe to build the Temple. Then, they pitched their tents onely in Marah, where was neither fountaine nor palmtree: but now, we pitch in Elim, where there are twelue fountains, and seuentie palme trees. Then, the two kine which carried the Arke, looked onely one way: but now, the twelue oxen which carrie the molten sea, looke euery way, East, West, North, and South. Then, Christ was a flower, growing
[Page 260] onely in the little garden of Iudea: but now, he is a flower, flourishing in the wide field of
all the world. Then, Christ was onely a little stone, cut without hands: but now, bee is a great huge mountaine, which filleth
all the earth. Then, the Church of Christ was, as it were, in prison, beeing tied and bound onely to one place: but now, it pos
[...]eth ouer
all places riding and triumphing in the chariots of Aminadab. Then, the Church of Christ was onely a small graine of mustard-seede: which is lesser then any other seede, but now, it spreadeth abroad as a mightie bigge tree, wherein
all the birds of the aire do make their nests. So that, the Church of Christ, now in the time of the new Testament, is like the Samaritans i
[...]
[...] which lodgeth all passengers: It is
[...] Salomons troupe of hourses, which commeth out of
all countries. It is
[...] Saint Peters sheere, which in foul
[...]th,
all sort of beasts. It is like Noahs arke, which receiueth
all kind of creatures. It is like Saint Iames his net, which catcheth
all sort of fishes. All's fish, that comes to this net. It is like King Assu
[...] rus
[Page 261] feast, which entertaineth
all kind of guests. To this feast
all we that will come are well-come. Not some fewe Iewes onely,
But all we: euen all we Brittaines,
all we Isay, with open face, behold as in a glasse the glory of the Lord. This is the first difference, betweene the Law and the Gospel, in these words,
But all we.
FINIS.