Be Wise as serpents but 〈◊〉 as Dous. LXXX SERMONS PREACHED BY THAT LEARNED AND REVEREND DIVINE JOHN DONNE D R IN DIVINITY LATE DEANE OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF S T PAUL'S LONDON. LXXX SERMONS PREACHED BY THAT LEARNED AND REVEREND DIVINE, JOHN DONNE, Dr IN DIVINITY, Late Deane of the Cathedral Church of S. PAUL'S London. LONDON, Printed for RICHARD ROYSTON, in Ivy-lane, and RICHARD MARRIOT in S. Dunstan's Churchyard in Fleetstreet. MDCXL. TO HIS MOST SACRED MAJESTY, CHARLES, BY THE GRACE OF GOD, KING OF GREAT BRITAIN, FRANCE AND IRELAND, Defender of the Faith, etc. Most dread and gracious Sovereign, IN this rumour of War I am bold to present to your sacred Majesty the fruits of Peace, first planted by the hand of your most Royal Father, then ripened by the same gracious influence, and since no less cherished and protected by your Majesty's especial favour vouchsafed to the Author in so many indulgent testimonies of your good acceptance of his service: Which grace from your Majesty, as he was known to acknowledge with much comfort whilst he lived, so will it give now some excuse to the presumption of this Dedication, since those friends of his, who think any thing of his worthy to outlive him, could not preserve their piety to him, without taking leave to inscribe the same with your Majesty's sacred Name, that so they may at once give so fair a hope of a long continuance both to these Works of his, and to his gratitude, of which they humbly desire this Book may last to be some Monument. I shall not presume in this place to say much of these Sermons; only this, They who have been conversant in the Works of the holiest men of all times, cannot but acknowledge in these the same spirit with which they writ; reasonable Demonstrations every where in the subjects comprehensible by reason: as for those things which cannot be comprehended by our reason alone, they are not where made easier to faith then here; and for the other part of our nature, which consists in our Passions, and in our Affections, they are here raised, and laid, and governed, and disposed, in a manner, according to the Will of the Author. The Doctrine it self which is taught here, is Primitively Christian; The Fathers are every where here consulted, with reverence, but Apostolical Writings only appealed to as the last Rule of Faith. Lastly, such is the conjuncture here of zeal and discretion, that whilst it is the main scope of the Author in these Discourses, that Glory be given to God, this is accompanied every where with a scrupulous care and endeavour, that Peace be likewise settled amongst men. The leave and encouragement I have had for the publishing these Sermons from the Person most entrusted by your Majesty in the government of the Church, and most highly dignified in it, I think I ought in this place to mention for his honour, that they who receive any benefit from hence, may know in part to whom to acknowledge it; and that this, what ever it is, is owing to him to whom they stand otherwise so deeply engaged for his providence and care (next under your Majesty) over the Truth, and Peace, and Dignity of the Church of England, for which he will not want lasting acknowledgements amongst Wise and Good Men. And now having with all humbleness commended these Sermons to your sacred Majesty, from the memory of the Author, your Servant, from the nature and piety of the Work itself, and lastly, from the encouragement I have had to give it this light, did I not fear to add to my presumption, I should in this place take leave to express the propriety betwixt your Majesty's royal Virtues, and the tribute of such an Offering and acknowledgement as this; A Work of Devotion to the most exemplarily pious Prince; a Work of moderated, and discreet zeal, to the Person of the most governed affections, in the midst of the greatest power; a Work of deep-sighted knowledge, to the most discerning spirit; a Work of a strict doctrine, to the most severe imposer upon himself; and a Work of a charitable doctrine, to the most indulgent Master of others: But I dare not enter into this Argument, these excellencies requiring rather veneration, then admitting any possible equal expression; and therefore with my prayer for your Majesty's long and happy reign over us, I humbly ask pardon for this presumption of Your Majesty's most humble and most dutiful Subject, Jo: DONNE. THE LIFE AND DEATH OF Dr DONNE, LATE DEANE OF St PAUL'S LONDON. IF that great Master of Language and Art, Sir Henry Wootton, Provost of Eton College, (lately deceased) had lived to see the publication of these Sermons, he had presented the world with the Author's life exactly written. It was a Work worthy his undertaking, and he fit to undertake it; betwixt whom and our Author, there was such a friendship contracted in their youths, that nothing but death could force the separation. And though their bodies were divided, that learned Knights love followed his friend's fame beyond the forgetful grave, which he testified by entreating me (whom he acquainted with his design) to inquire of certain particulars that concerned it: Not doubting but my knowledge of the Author, and love to his memory, would make my diligence useful. I did prepare them in a readiness to be augmented, and rectified by his powerful pen; but then death prevented his intentions. When I heard that sad news, and likewise that these Sermons were to be published without the Author's life, (which I thought was rare) indignation or grief (I know not whether) transported me so far, that I re-viewed my forsaken Collections, and resolved the world should see the best picture of the Author that my artless Pencil (guided by the hand of Truth) could present to it. If I be demanded, as once Pompey's poor Bondman was, Plutarch. (whilst he was alone on the Sea shore gathering the pieces of an old Boat to burn the body of his dead Master) What art thou that preparest the funerals of Pompey the great? Who I am that so officiously set the Author's memory on fire? I hope the question hath in it more of wonder than disdain. Wonder indeed the Reader may, that I (who profess myself artless) should presume with my faint light to show forth his life, whose very name makes it illustrious; but be this to the disadvantage of the person represented, certain I am, it is much to the advantage of the beholder; who shall see the Author's picture in a natural dress, which ought to beget faith in what is spoken, for he that wants skill to deceive, may safely be trusted. And though it may be my fortune to fall under some censures for this undertaking, yet I am pleased in a belief I have, that if the Author's glorious spirit (which is now in heaven) can have the leisure to look down, and see his meanest friend in the midst of his officious duty, he will not disdain my well meaning sacrifice to his memory. For whilst his conversation made me (and many others) happy below, I know his humility and gentleness was eminent: And I have heard Divines say, those virtues that are but sparks on earth, become great and glorious flames in heaven. He was borne in LONDON, of good and virtuous Parents; And though his own learning and other multiplied merits, may justly seem sufficient to dignify both himself and posterity; yet Reader be pleased to know, that his Father was masculinely and lineally descended from a very ancient Family in Wales, where many of his name now live, that have and deserve great reputation in that Country. By his Mother he was descended from the Family of the famous Sir Thomas More, sometimes Lord Chancellor of England; and also from that worthy and laborious Judge Rastall, who left behind him the vast Statutes of the Laws of this Kingdom, most exactly abridged. He had his first breeding in his Father's house, where a private Tutor had the care of him, till he was nine years of age; he was then sent to the University of Oxford, having at that time a command of the French and Latin Tongues, when others can scarce speak their own. There he remained in Hart Hall, (having for the advancement of his studies, Tutors in several Sciences to instruct him) till time made him capable, and his learning expressed in many public Exercises, declared him fit to receive his first Degree in the Schools, which he forbore by advice from his friends, who being of the Romish persuasion, were conscionably averse to some parts of the Oath, always tendered and taken at those times. About the fourteenth year of his age, he was transplanted from Oxford to Cambridge, where (that he might receive nourishment from both soils) he stayed till his seventeenth year. All which time he was a most laborious Student, often changing his studies, but endeavouring to take no Degree for the reasons formerly mentioned. About his seventeenth year he was removed to London, and entered into Lincoln's Inn, with an intent to study the Law, where he gave great testimonies of wit, learning, and improvement in that profession, which never served him for any use, but only for ornament. His Father died before his admission into that Society, and (being a Merchant) left him his Portion in money (which was 3000. li.) His Mother, and those to whose care he was committed, were watchful to improve his knowledge, and to that end appointed him there also Tutors in several Sciences, as the Mathematics and others, to attend and instruct him. But with these Arts they were advised to instill certain particular principles of the Romish Church, of which those Tutors (though secretly) professed themselves to be members. They had almost obliged him to their faith, having for their advantage, besides their opportunity, the example of his most dear and pious Parents, which was a powerful persuasion, and did work upon him, as he professeth in his PREFACE to his Pseudo-Martyr. He was now entered into the nineteenth year of his age, and being unresolved in his Religion, (though his youth and strength promised him a long life) yet he thought it necessary to rectify all scruples which concerned that: And therefore waving the Law, and betrothing himself to no art or profession, that might justly denominate him, he began to survey the body of Divinity, controverted between the Reformed and Roman Church. Preface to Pseudo-Martyr. And as God's blessed Spirit did then awaken him to the search, and in that industry did never forsake him, (they be his own words) So he calls the same Spirit to witness to his Protestation, that in that search and disquisition he proceeded with humility and diffidence in himself, by the safest way of frequent Prayers, and indifferent affection to both parties. And indeed, Truth had too much light about her, to be hid from so sharp an Inquirer; and he had too much ingenuity, not to acknowledge he had seen her. Being to undertake this search, he believed the learned Cardinal Bellarmine to be the best defender of the Roman cause: and therefore undertook the examination of his reasons. The cause was weighty, and wilful delays had been inexcusable towards God and his own conscience; he therefore proceeded with all moderate haste; And before he entered into the twentieth year of his age, did show the Dean of Gloucester all the Cardinals Works marked with many weighty Observations under his own hand, which Works were bequeathed by him at his death as a Legacy to a most dear friend. About the twentieth year of his age, he resolved to travel; And the Earl of Essex going to Cales, and after the Island voyages, he took the advantage of those opportunities, waited upon his Lordship, and saw the expeditions of those happy and unhappy employments. But he returned not into England, till he had stayed a convenient time, first in Italy, and then in Spain, where he made many useful Observations of those Countries, their Laws, and Government, and returned into England perfect in their Languages. Not long after his return, that exemplary pattern of gravity and wisdom, the Lord Elsmore, Lord Keeper of the great Seal, and after Chancellor of England, taking notice of his Learning, Languages, and other abilities, and much affecting both his person and condition, received him to be his chief Secretary, supposing it might be an Introduction to some more weighty employment in the State, for which his Lordship often protested he thought him very fit. Nor did his Lordship account him so much to be his servant, as to forget he had been his friend; and to testify it, he used him always with much courtesy, appointing him a place at his own Table, unto which he esteemed his company and discourse a great ornament. He continued that employment with much love and approbation, being daily useful (and not mercenary) to his friends, for the space of five years: In which time, he (I dare not say unfortunately) fell into such a liking, as (with her approbation) increased into a love with a young Gentlewoman, who lived in that Family, Niece to the Lady Elsmore, Daughter to Sir George More, Chancellor of the Garter, and Lieutenant of the Tower. Sir George had some immation of their increasing love, and the better to prevent it, did remove his Daughter to his own house, but too late, by reason of some faithful promises interchangeably passed, and inviolably to be kept between them. Their love (a passion, which of all other Mankind is least able to command, and wherein most errors are committed) was in them so powerful, that they resolved, and did marry without the approbation of those friends that might justly claim an interest in the advising and disposing of them. Being married, the news was (in favour to M. Donne, and with his allowance) by the Right Honourable Henry then Earl of Northumberland, secretly and certainly intimated to Sir George More, to whom it was so immeasurably unwelcome, that (as though his passion of anger and inconsideration should exceed theirs of love and error) he engaged his sister the Lady Elsmore to join with him to procure her Lord to discharge M. Donne the place he held under his Lordship. And although Sir George were remembered that Errors might be over-punisht, and therefore was desired to forbear, till second considerations had cleared some scruples, yet he was restless until his suit was granted, and the punishment executed; The Lord Chancellor then (at M. Donnes' dismission) protesting, he thought him a Secretary fit for a King than a Subject. But this physic of M. Donnes' dismission was not strong enough to purge out all Sir George his choler, who was not satisfied, till M. Donne, and his Compupill in Cambridge that married him, M. Samuel Brooke, (who was after D. in D. and Master of Trinity College in that University) and his brother M. Christopher Brook of Lincoln's Inn, (who gave M. Donne his Wife, and witnessed the Marriage) were all committed to several Prisons. M. Donne was first enlarged, who neither gave rest to his body, his brain, nor any friend, in whom he might hope to have any interest, until he had procured the enlargement of his two imprisoned friends. He was now at liberty, but his days were still cloudy, and being past this trouble, others did still multiply, for his Wife (to her extreme sorrow) was detained from him. Genes. 29. And though with jacob, he endured not a hard service for her, yet he lost a good one, and was forced to get possession of her by a long suit in Law, which proved very chargeable, and more troublesome. It was not long, but that Time and M. Donnes' behaviour (which when it would entice, had a strange kind of irresistible art) had so dispassioned his Father in Law, That as the world had approved his Daughter's choice, so he also could not choose but see a more than ordinary merit in his new Son, which melted him into so much remorse, that he secretly laboured his son's restauration into his place, using his own, and his sister's power, but with no success; The Lord Chancellor replying, That although he was unfeignedly sorry for what he had done, yet it stood not with his credit to discharge and re-admit servants, at the request of passionate Petitioners. Within a short time, Sir George appeared to be so far reconciled, as to wish their happiness; (or say so) And being asked for his paternal blessing, did not deny it; but refused to contribute any means that might conduce to their livelihood. M. Donnes Portion was the greatest part spent in many and chargeable travels, the rest disbursed in some few Books, and dear bought experience; he out of all employment, that might yield a support for himself and Wife, who had been curiously and plentifully educated; his nature generous, and he accustomed to confer, not to receive courtesies. These and other considerations, but chief that his dear Wife was to bear a part in his sufferings, surrounded him with many and sad thoughts, and some apparent apprehensions of want. But his sorrow was lessened, and his wants prevented by the seasonable courtesies of their noble Kinsman Sir Francis waly of Pirford, who entreated them to a co-habitation with him; where they remained with very much freedom to themselves, and equal content to him for many years. And as their charge increased, (she had yearly a child) so did his love and bounty. With him they continued till his death: a little before which time Sir Francis was so happy as to make a perfect reconciliation betwixt that good man Sir George More and his forsaken son and daughter, Sir George then giving Bond to pay M. Donne 800 l. at a certain day as a Portion with his wife, and to pay him for their maintenance 20. l. quarterly, (as the Interest of it) until the said Portion were paid. Most of those years that he lived with Sir Francis, he studied the Civil and Canon Laws: In which he acquired such a perfection as was judged to hold some proportion with many, who had made that study the employment of their whole life. Sir Francis being dead, and that happy family dissolved, M. Donne took a house at Micham (near unto Croyden in Surrey) where his wife and family remained constantly: and for himself (having occasions to be often in London) he took lodgings near unto Whitehall, where he was frequently visited by men of greatest learning and judgement in this Kingdom; his company being loved, and much desired by many of the Nobility of this Nation, who used him in their counsels of greatest considerations. Nor did our own Nobility only favour him, but his acquaintance and friendship was usually sought for by most Ambassadors of foreign Nations, and by many other strangers, whose learning or employment occasioned their stay in this Kingdom. He was much importuned by friends to make his residence in London, which he could not do, having settled his dear wife and children at Micham, whither he often retired himself, and then studied incessantly some Points of Controversy. But at last the persuasion of friends was so powerful, as to cause the removal of himself and family to London; where that honourable Gentleman Sir Robert Drury assigned him a very convenient house rent-free, next his own in Drury-lane, and was also a daily cherisher of his studies, and such a friend as sympathised with him and his, in their joy and sorrow. Divers of the Nobility were watchful and solicitous to the King for some preferment for him. His Majesty had formerly both known, and much valued him, and had given him some hopes of a State employment, being much pleased that M. Donne attended him, especially at his meals, where there was usually many deep discourses of Learning, and often friendly disputes of Religion betwixt the King and those Divines whose places required their attendance on his Majesty: Particularly, the Right Reverend Bishop Montague, than Deane of the Chapel, (who was the publisher of the eloquent and learned Works of his Majesty) and the most learned Doctor Andrew's, than his Majesty's Almoner, and at his death Bishop of Winchester. About this time grew many disputes in England, that concerned the Oath of Supremacy and Allegiance, in which the King had appeared and engaged himself by his public writings now extant. And his Majesty occasionally talking with M. Donne concerning many of those Arguments urged by the Romanists, apprehended such a validity and clearness in his answers, that he commanded him to state the Points, and bring his Reasons to him in writing; to which he presently applied himself, and within six weeks brought them to his Majesty fairly written under his own hand, as they be now printed in his Pseudo-Martyr. When the King had read and considered that Book, he persuaded M. Donne to enter into the Ministry, to which he appeared (and was) un-inclinable, apprehending it (such was his mistaking modesty) too weighty for his abilities. But from that time, though many friends mediated with his Majesty to prefer him to some civil employment, (to which his education had apted him) yet the King denied their requests, and (having a discerning spirit) replied, I know M. Donne is a learned man, an excellent Divine, and will prove a powerful Preacher. After that, as he professeth * In his Devotions, Expost. 8. , the King descended almost to a solicitation of him to enter into sacred Orders, which though he denied not, he deferred for the space of three years: All which time he applied himself to an incessant study of textual Divinity, and attained a greater perfection in the learned Languages, Greek and Hebrew. Forwardness and inconsideration could not in him (as in many others) argue an insufficiency; for he considered long, and had many strifes within himself concerning the strictness of life, and competency of learning required in such as enter into sacred Orders: And doubtless (considering his own demerits) did with meek Moses humbly ask God, Who am I? And if he had consulted with flesh and blood, he had not put his hand to that holy plough: But God who is able to prevail, wrestled with him, as the Angel did with jacob, Gen. 32. and marked him for his own, marked him with a blessing, a blessing of obedience to the motions of his blessed Spirit; And then as he had formerly asked God humbly with Moses, Who am I? So now (being inspired with the apprehension of God's mercies) he did ask King David's thankful question, Lord who am I that thou art so mindful of me? So mindful of me as to lead me for more than forty years through a wilderness of the many temptations and various turn of a dangerous life? So mindful as to move the learnedst of Kings to descend to move me to serve at thine Altar? So merciful to me as to move my heart to embrace this holy motion? Thy motions I will embrace, take the cup of salvation, call upon thy Name, and preach thy Gospel. Such strifes as these S. Augustine had when S. Ambrose endeavoured his conversion to Christianity, with which he confesseth he acquainted his dear friend Alippius. Our learned Author (a man fit to write after no mean Copy) did the like; and declaring his intentions to his dear friend D. King the then worthy Bishop of London, (who was Chaplain to the Lord Chancellor in the time of his being his Lordship's Secretary) That Reverend Bishop most gladly received the news, and with all convenient speed ordained him Deacon and Priest. Now the English Church had gained a second S. Augustine, for I think none was so like him before his conversion, none so like S. Ambrose after it. And if his youth had the infirmities of the one Father, his age had the excellencies of the other, the learning and holiness of both. Now all his studies (which were occasionally diffused) were concentred in Divinity; Now he had a new calling, new thoughts, new employment for his wit and eloquence. Now all his earthly affections were changed into divine love, and all the faculties of his soul were engaged in the conversion of others, in preaching glad tidings, remission to repenting sinners, and peace to each troubled soul: To this he applied himself with all care and diligence; and such a change was wrought in him, Psal. 84. that he was gladder to be a doorkeeper in the house of God, then to enjoy any temporal employment. Presently after he entered into his holy Profession, the King made him his Chaplain in Ordinary, and gave him other encouragements, promising to take a particular care of him. And though his long familiarity with persons of greatest quality was such as might have given some men boldness enough to have preached to any eminent Auditory; yet his modesty was such, that he could not be persuaded to it, but went usually to preach in some private Churches, in Villages near London, till his Majesty appointed him a day to preach to him. And though his Majesty and others expected much from him, yet he was so happy (which few are) as to satisfy and exceed their expectations: preaching the Word so, as shown he was possessed with those joys that he laboured to distil into others: A Preacher in earnest, weeping sometimes for his Auditory, sometimes with them, always preaching to himself, like an Angel from a cloud, though in none: carrying some (as S. Paul was) to heaven, in holy raptures; enticing others, by a sacred art and courtship, to amend their lives; and all this with a most particular grace, and un-imitable fashion of speaking. That Summer, the same month in which he was ordained Priest, (and made the King's Chaplain) his Majesty (going his Progress) was entreated to receive an entertainment in the University of Cambridge, and M. Donne attending his Majesty there, his Majesty was pleased to recommend him to be made Doctor in Divinity, Doctor Harsnet (after Archbishop of York) being then their Vicechancellor, who knowing him to be the Author of the Pseudo-Martyr, did propose it to the University, and they presently granted it, expressing a gladness they had an occasion to entitle and write him Theits. His abilities and industry in his profession were so eminent, and he so much loved by many persons of quality, that within one year after his entrance into Sacred Orders, he had fourteen Advowsons' of several Benefices sent unto him; but they (being in the Country) could not draw him from his long loved friends and London, to which he had a natural inclination, having received his birth and breeding in it: desiring rather some preferment that might fix him to an employment in that place. Immediately after his return from Cambridge, his wife died, leaving him a man of an unsettled estate: And (having buried five) the careful father of seven children then living, to whom he made a voluntary promise (being then but forty two years of age) never to bring them under the subjection of a Stepmother: which promise he most faithfully kept, burying with his tears all his sublunary joys in his most dear and deserving Wives grave, living a most retired and solitary life. In this retiredness, he was importuned by the grave Benchers of Lincoln's Inn, (once the friends of his youth) to accept of their Lecture, which (by reason of M. Gatakers removal) was then void; of which he accepted, being glad to renew his intermitted friendship with them, whom he so much loved, and where he had been a Saul, (not so far as to persecute Christianity, yet in his irregular youth to neglect the practice of it) to become a Paul, and preach salvation to his brethren. Nor did he preach only, but as S. Paul advised his Corinthians to be followers of him as he was of Christ; so he also was an ocular direction to them by a holy and harmless conversation. Their love to him was expressed many ways; for (besides the fair lodgings that were provided and furnished for him) other courtesies were daily accumulated, so many, and so freely, as though they meant their gratitude (if possible) should exceed, or at least equal his merit. In this love-strife of desert and liberality, they continued for the space of three years, he constantly and faithfully preaching, they liberally requiting him. About which time the Emperor of Germany died, and the Palsgrave was elected and crowned King of Bohemia, the unhappy beginning of much trouble in those Kingdoms. King james, whose Motto, Beati Pacifici, did truly his disposition, endeavoured to compose the differences of that discomposed State, and to that end sent the Earl of Carlisle, (than Viscount Doncaster) his Ambassador to those unsettled Princes, and (by a special command from his Majesty) D. Donne was appointed to attend the Embassage of the said Earl to the Prince of the Union: For which the Earl (that had long known and loved him) was most glad: So were many of the Doctor's friends, who feared his studies, Gen. 47. and sadness for his wife's death, would as jacob says, make his days few, and (respecting his bodily health) evil too. At his going, he left his friends of Lincoln's Inn, and they him with many reluctations; For though he could not say, as S. Paul to his Ephesians, Behold, you to whom I have preached the kingdom of God, shall henceforth see my face no more; yet he (being in a Consumption) questioned it, and they feared it, considering his troubled mind, which, with the help of his un-intermitted studies, hastened the decays of his weak body; But God turned it to the best, for this employment did not only divert him from those serious studies and sad thoughts, but gave him a new and true occasion of joy, to be an eyewitness of the health of his honoured Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia, in a foreign Land, (who having formerly known him a Courtier) was most glad to see him in a Canonical habit, and more glad to be an earwitness of his most excellent and powerful preaching. Within fourteen months he returned to his friends of Lincoln's Inn, with his sorrows much moderated, and his health improved. About a year after his return from Germany, Dr Carry was made Bishop of Exeter, and by his removal, the Deanery of S. Paul's being vacant, the King appointed Doctor Donne to wait on him at dinner the next day; And his Majesty (being set down) before he eat any meat, said (after his pleasant manner) Doctor Donne, I have invited you to dinner, And though you sit not down with me, yet I will carve to you of a dish that I know you love; you love London well, I do therefore make you Deane of Paul's, take your meat home to your study, say grace, and much good may it do you. Immediately after he came to his Deanery, he employed workmen to repair the Chapel belonging to his house; Psal. 132. Suffering (as holy David once vowed) his eyes and temples to take no rest, until he had first beautified the house of God. The next quarter following, when his Father in Law Sir George More, who now admired and dearly loved him, came to pay him the conditioned sum of twenty pound, he denied to receive it, And said to his Father, Gen. 45. (as good jacob said when he beard joseph his son lived) It is enough, you have been kind to me, and careful of mine, I am, I thank my God, provided for, and will receive this money no longer; And not long after freely gave up his bond of eight hundred pound. Presently after he was settled in his Deanery, the Vicarage of S. Dunstan's in London fell to him by the death of Doctor White, The advowson being formerly given to him by the right Honourable Richard Earl of Dorset a little before his death, And confirmed to him by his Brother the right Honourable Edward Earl of Dorset that now lives. By these and another Ecclesiastical Endowment (which fell to him about the same time) he was enabled to be charitable to the poor, and to make such provision for his Children, that at his death they were not left scandalous to his profession and quality. The next Parliament following he was chosen Prolocutor to the Convocation, and about that time, by the appointment of his Majesty, (his gracious Master) did preach many occasional Sermons: All which he performed not only with the approbation, but to the admiration of the representative body of the Clergy of this Kingdom. He was once (and but once) clouded with the King's displeasure; It was about this time, occasioned by some malicious whisperer, which assured the King Doctor Donne had preached a Sermon that implied a dislike of his government, particularly of his late Directions that the Evening Lectures on Sundays, should be turned into Catechising, expounding the Commandments, Belief, and Lords Prayer. His Majesty was the more inclinable to believe this, for that about the same time a person of the Nobility of great note in the Kingdom, and favour with the King (whom his Majesty knew Doctor Donne loved very much) was discarded the Court, and presently after committed to prison, which begot many rumours in the multitude. The King suffered not the Sun to set, till he had searched out the truth of this report, but sent presently for Doctor Donne, and required his answer to the accusation: which was so satisfactory, That the King said he was glad he rested not under that suspicion. Doctor Donne protested his answer was faithful and free from all Collusion. And therefore begged of his Majesty, that he might not rise (being then kneeling) before he had (as in like cases he always had from God) some assurance that he stood clear and fair in his Majesty's opinion. The King with his own hand, did, or offered to raise him from his knees, and protested he was truly satisfied, that he was an honest man, and loved him. Presently his Majesty called some Lords of his Council into his Chamber, and said with much earnestness, My Doctor is an honest man; And my Lords, I was never more joyed in anything that I have done, then in making him a Divine. He was made Deane in the fiftieth year of his age; And in the fifty fourth year, a dangerous sickness seized him, which turned to a spotted Fever, and ended in a Cough, that inclined him to a Consumption. But God (as job thankfully acknowledgeth) preserved his spirit, keeping his intellectuals as clear and perfect, as when that sickness first seized his body. And as his health increased, so did his thankfulness, testified in his book of Devotions, A book that may not unfitly be called, A composition of holy Ecstasies, occasioned, and appliable to the Emergencies of that sickness, which book (being Meditations in his sickness) he writ on his sick bed; herein imitating the holy Patriarches, Gen. 12.7.8. Gen. 28.18. who were wont in that place to build their Altars where they had received their blessing. This sickness brought him to the gates of death, and he saw the grave so ready to devour him, that he calls his recovery supernatural. But God restored his health, and continued it until the fifty-ninth year of his life. And then in August 1630. being with his daughter Mistress Harvy at Abrey-Hatch in Essex, he fell into a Fever, which with the help of his constant infirmity, vapours from the spleen, hastened him into so visible a Consumption, that his beholders might say (as S. Paul of himself) he dies daily, And he might say with job, Job 30.15. Job. 7.3. My welfare passeth away as a cloud; The days of affliction have taken hold of me. And weary nights are appointed for me. This sickness continued long, not only weakening, but wearing him so much, that my desire is, he may now take some rest: And that thou judge it no impertinent digression (before I speak of his death) to look bacl with me upon some observations of his life, which (while a gentle slumber seizes him) may (I hope fitly) exercise thy Consideration. His marriage was the remarkable error of his life, which (though he had a wit apt enough, and very able to maintain paradoxes; And though his wives competent years, and other reasons might be justly urged to moderate a severe censure; yet) he never seemed to justify, and doubtless had repent it, if God had not blest them with a mutual, and so cordial an affection, as in the midst of their sufferings made their bread of sorrow taste more pleasantly than the banquet of fools. The recreations of his youth were Poetry, in which he was so happy, as if nature with all her varieties had been made to exercise his great wit, and high fancy. And in those pieces which were carelessly scattered in his younger days (most of them being written before the twentieth year of his age) it may appear by his choice Metaphors, that all the Arts joined to assist him with their utmost skill. It is a truth, that in his penitential years, viewing some of those pieces loosely scattered in his youth, he wished they had been abortive, or so short-lived, that he had witnessed their funerals: But though he was no friend to them, he was not so fall'n out with heavenly Poetry, as to forsake it, no not in his declining age, witnessed then by many divine Sonnets, and other high, holy, and harmonious composures; yea even on his former sick bed, he wrote this heavenly Hymn, expressing the great joy he then had in the assurance of God's mercy to him. A Hymn to God the Father. Will't thou forgive that sin where I begun, Which was my sin, though it were done before? Wilt thou forgive that sin through which I run; And do run still, though still I do deplore? When thou hast done, thou hast not done, For I have more. Wilt thou forgive that sin which I have won Others to sin, and made my sin their door? Wilt thou forgive that sin which I did shun A year or two, but wallowed in, a score? When thou hast done, thou hast not done, For I have more. I have a sin of fear, that when I have spun My last thread, I shall perish on the shore; But swear by thyself, that at my death thy Son Shall shine as he shines now, and heretofore; And, having done that, thou hast done, I fear no more. And on this (which was his Deathbed) writ another Hymn which bears this Title, A Hymn to God my God in my sickness. If these fall under the censure of a soul whose too much mixture with earth makes it unfit to judge of these high illuminations, let him know, that many devout and learned men have thought the soul of holy Prudentius was most refined, when not many days before his death, he charged it to present his God each morning with a new and spiritual Song; justified by the examples of King David, and the good King Hezekias, who upon the renovation of his years, paid his grateful vows to God, in a royal hymn, Esay 38. which he concludes in these words, The Lord was ready to save, therefore we will sing my songs to the stringed instruments, all the days of our life, in the Temple of my God. The later part of his life was a continued study, Saturdays only excepted, which he usually spent in visiting friends, and resting himself under the weary burden of his week's Meditations; And he gave himself this rest, that thereby he might be refreshed and enabled to do the work of the day following, not negligently, but with courage and cheerfulness. Nor was his age only so industrious, but in his most unsettled youth he was (being in health) never known to be in bed after four of the clock in the morning nor usually out of his chamber till ten; and employed that time constantly (if not more) in his Study. Which, if it seem strange, may gain belief by the visible fruits of his labours: some of which remain to testify what is here written: for he left the resultance of 1400. Authors, most of them analyzed with his own hand; He left sixscore Sermons also, all writ with his own hand; A large and laborious Treatise concerning Self-murder, called Biathanatose, wherein all the Laws violated by that act, are diligently survayed, and judiciously censured; A Treatise written in his youth, which alone might declare him then, not only perfect in the Civil and Canon Law, but in many other such studies and arguments as enter not into the consideration of many professed Scholars, that labour to be thought learned Clerks, and to know all things. Nor were these only found in his Study, but all businesses that past of any public consequence in this or any of our neighbour Kingdoms, he abbreviated either in Latin, or in the Language of the Nation, and kept them by him for a memorial. So he did the Copies of divers Letters and Cases of Conscience that had concerned his friends, (with his solutions) and divers other businesses of importance, all particularly and methodically digested by himself. He did prepare to leave the world before life left him, making his Will when no faculty of his soul was dampt or defective by sickness, or he surprised by sudden apprehension of death; But with mature deliberation, expressing himself an impartial Father, by making his children's Portions equal; a constant lover of his friends, by particular Legacies, discreetly chosen, and fitly bequeathed them; And full of charity to the poor, and many others, who by his long continued bounty might entitle themselves His almes-people. For all these he made provision, so largely, as having six children, might to some appear more than proportionable to his estate. The Reader may think the particulars tedious, but I hope not impertinent, that I present him with the beginning and conclusion of his last Will. IN the name of the blessed and glorious Trinity, Amen. I john Donne, by the mercy of Christ jesus, and the calling of the Church of England, Priest, being at this time in good and perfect understanding, (praised be God therefore) do hereby make my last Will and Testament in manner and form following. First, I give my gracious God an entire sacrifice of body and soul, with my most humble thanks for that assurance which his blessed Spirit imprints in me now of the salvation of the one, and of the resurrection of the other; And for that constant and cheerful resolution which the same Spirit established in me, to live and die in the Religion now professed in the Church of England: In expectation of that Resurrection I desire my body may be buried (in the most private manner that may be) in that place of S. Paul's Church London, that the now Residentiaries have at my request assigned for that purpose, etc. And this my last Will and Testament made in the fear of God, (whose merit I humbly beg, and constantly rely upon in jesus Christ) and in perfect love and charity with all the world, whose pardon I ask from the lowest of my servants to the highest of my Superiors. Written all with mine own hand, and my name subscribed to every Page, being five in number. Nor was his charity expressed only at his death, but in his life, by a cheerful and frequent visitation of friends, whose minds were dejected, or fortunes necessitous. And he redeemed many out of Prison that lay for small debts, or for their fees; He was a continual giver to poor Scholars, both of this, and foreign Nations; (besides what he gave with his own hand) he usually sent a servant to all the Prisons in London, to distribute his charity, at all festival times in the year. He gave 100 l. at one time to a Gentleman that he had formerly known live plentifully, and was then decayed in his estate. He was a happy Reconciler of of differences in many Families of his friends and kindred, who had such faith in his judgement and impartiality, that he scarce ever advised them to any thing in vain. He was (even to her death) a most dutiful son to his Mother, careful to provide for her supportation, of which she had been destitute, but that God raised him up to prevent her necessities; who having sucked in the Religion of the Roman Church with her mother's milk, (or presently after it) spent her estate in foreign Countries, to enjoy a liberty in it, and died in his house but three months before him. And to the end it may appear how just a Steward he was of his Lord and Master's Revenue, I have thought fit to let the Reader know, that after his entrance into his Deanery, as he numbered his years, and (at the foot of a private account, to which God and Angels only were witnesses with him) computed first his Revenue, than his expenses, than what was given to the poor and pious uses, lastly, what rested for him and for his, he blessed each years poor remainder with a thankful Prayer; which for that they discover a more than common devotion, the Reader shall partake some of them in his own words. 1624. So all is that remains of these two years 1625. So all is that remains of these two years Deo Opt. Max. benigno Largitori, à me, & ab iis quibus haec à me reservantur, gloria, & gratia in aeternum. Amen. 1626. So that this year God hath blessed me and mine with Multiplicatae sunt super nos misericordiae tuae Domine. Da Domine, ut quae ex immensa bonitate tua nobis elargiri dignatus sis, in quorumcunque manus devenerint, in tuam semper cedant gloriam. Amen. 1628. In fine horum sex annorum manet 1629. Quid habeo, quod non accepi à Domino? Largiatur etiam, ut quae largitus est, sua iterum fiant bono eorum usu, ut quemadmodum, nec officiis hujus mundi, nec loci, in quo me posuit, dignitati, nec servis, nec egenis, in toto hujus anni curriculo, mihi conscius sum, me defuisse, ita ut libert, quibus quae supersunt, supersunt, grato animo ea accipiant, & beneficum Authorem recognoscant. Amen. But I return from my digression. We left the Author sick in Essex, where he was forced to spend most of that Winter, by reason of his disability to remove from thence. And having never during almost twenty years, omitted his personal attendance on his Majesty, in his monthly service. Nor being ever left out of the number of Lent Preachers. And in January following, there being a general report that he was dead, that report occasioned this Letter to a familiar friend. SIR, THis advantage you and my other friends have by my frequent fevers, that I am so much the oftener at the gates of heaven; And this advantage by the solitude and close imprisonment that they reduce me to after, that I am so much the oftener at my Prayers, in which I shall never leave out your happiness; And I doubt not but amongst his other blessings, God will add some one to you for my Prayers. A man would be almost content to die, (if there were no other benefit in death) to hear of so much sorrow, and so much good testimony from good men, as I (God be blessed for it) did upon the report of my death: Yet I perceive it went not through all; For one writ to me, that some (and he said of my friends) conceived I was not so ill as I pretended, but withdrew myself to live at ease, discharged of preaching. It is an unfriendly, and (God knows) an ungrounded interpretation; for I have always been sorrier when I could not preach, than any could be they could not hear me. It hath been my desire (and God may be pleased to grant it) that I might die in the Pulpit; If not that, yet that I might take my death in the Pulpit, that is, die the sooner by occasion of those labours. Sir, I hope to see you presently after Candlemas, about which time will fall my Lent Sermon at Court, except my Lord Chamberlain believe me to be dead, and leave me out: For as long as I live, and am not speechless, I would not willingly decline that service. I have better leisure to write, than you to read, yet I would not willingly oppress you with too much Letter: God bless you and your son, as I wish January 7. 1630. Your poor friend and servant in Christ Jesus, john Donne. Before that month ended, he was appointed to preach upon his old constant day, the first Friday in Lent, he had notice of it; and having in his sickness prepared for the employment as he had long thirsted for it. So resolving his weakness should not hinder his journey, he came to London some few days before his day appointed. Being come, many of his friends (who with sorrow saw his sickness had left him only so much flesh as did cover his bones) doubted his strength to perform that task: And therefore persuaded him from undertaking it, assuring him however, it was like to shorten his days: But he passionately denied their requests, saying, He would not doubt, that God who in many weaknesses had assisted him with an unexpected strength, would now withdraw it in his last employment, professing a holy ambition to perform that sacred Work. And when (to the amazement of some beholders) he appeared in the Pulpit, many thought he presented himself, not to preach mortification by a living voice, but mortality by a decayed body, and dying face. And doubtless many did secretly ask that question in Ezekiel, Do these bones live? Ezek. 37.3. Or can that soul organise that tongue to speak so long time as the sand in that glass will move towards its centre, and measure out an hour of this dying man's unspent life? Doubtless it cannot. Yet after some faint pauses in his zealous Prayer, his strong desires enabled his weak body to discharge his memory of his preconceived Meditations which were of dying; The Text being, To God the Lord belong the issues from death. Many that saw his tears, and heard his hollow voice, professing they thought the Text Prophetically chosen, and that D. Donne had preached his own Funeral Sermon. Being full of joy that God had enabled him to perform this desired duty, he hastened to his house, out of which he never moved, until like S. Stephen, Acts 8. He was carried by devout men to his grave: And the next day after his Sermon, his spirits being much spent, and he indisposed to discourse, a friend asked him, Why are you sad? To whom he replied after this manner, I am not sad; I am in a serious contemplation of the mercies of my God to me; And now I plainly see, it was his hand that prevented me from all temporal employment. And I see it was his will that I should never settle nor thrive until I entered into the Ministry, in which I have now lived almost twenty years, (I hope to his glory) and by which (I most humbly thank him) I have been enabled to requite most of those friends that shown me kindness when my fortunes were low. And (as it hath occasioned the expression of my gratitude) I thank God, most of them have stood in need of my requital. I have been useful and comfortable to my good Father in Law Sir George More, whose patience God hath been pleased to exercise by many temporal crosses. I have maintained my own Mother, whom it hath pleased God after a plentiful fortune in her former times, to bring to a great decay in her very old age. I have quieted the consciences of many that groaned under the burden of a wounded spirit, whose Prayers I hope are available for me. I cannot plead innocence of life, (especially of my youth) but I am to be judged by a merciful God, who hath given me (even at this time) some testimonies by his holy Spirit, that I am of the number of his Elect. I am full of joy, and shall die in peace. Upon Monday following, he took his last leave of his beloved Study, and being hourly sensible of his decay, retired himself into his bedchamber: and that week sent (at several times) for many of his most considerable friends, of whom he took a solemn and deliberate Farewell, commending to their considerations some sentences particularly useful for the regulation of their lives, and dismissed them (as * Gen. 49. jacob did his sons) with a spiritual benediction. The Sunday following, he appointed his servants, that if there were any worldly business undone, that concerned them or himself, it should be prepared against Saturday next; for after that day he would not mix his thoughts with any thing that concerned the world. Nor ever did. Now he had nothing to do but die; To do which, he stood in need of no more time, for he had long studied it, and to such a perfection, that in a former sickness he called God to witness, Devot. Prayer 23. he was that minute prepared to deliver his soul into his hands, if that minute God would accept of his dissolution. In that sickness he begged of his God, (the God of constancy) to be preserved in that estate for ever. And his patiented expectation to have his immortal soul disrobed from her garment of mortality, makes me confident he now had a modest assurance, that his prayers were then heard, and his petition granted. He lay fifteen days earnestly expecting his hourly change; And in the last hour of his last day, (as his body melted away, and vapoured into spirit) his soul having (I verily believe) some revelation of the Beatifical Vision, he said, I were miserable, if I might not die: And after those words, closed many periods of his faint breath with these words, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done. His speech which had long been his faithful servant, remained with him till his last minute; and then forsook him, not to serve another master, but died before him, for that it was useless to him, who now conversed with God on earth, (as Angels are said to do in heaven) only by thoughts and looks. Being speechless, he did (as S. Stephen) look steadfastly towards heaven, till he saw the Son of God standing at the right hand of his Father; And being satisfied with this blessed sight, (as his soul ascended, and his last breath departed from him) he closed his own eyes, and then disposed his hands and body into such a posture, as required no alteration by those that came to shroud him. Thus variable, thus virtuous was the life, thus memorable, thus exemplary was the death of this most excellent man. He was buried in S. Paul's Church, in that place which he had appointed for that use, some years before his death, and by which he passed daily to his devotions. But not buried privately, though he desired it; For (besides an unnumbered number of others) many persons of Nobility and eminency, who did love and honour him in his life, did show it at his Funeral, by a voluntary and very sad attendance of his body to the grave. To which (after his burial) some mournful friends repaired: And as Alexander the Great did to the grave of the famous Achilles, Plutarch. so they strewed his with curious and costly flowers. Which course they (who were never yet known) continued each morning and evening for divers days, not ceasing till the stones that were taken up in that Church to give his body admission into the cold earth, (now his bed of rest) were again by the Mason's art leveled and firmed, as they had been formerly, and his place of burial undistinguishable to common view. Nor was this (though not usual) all the honour done to his reverend ashes; for by some good body, (who, 'tis like thought his memory ought to be perpetuated) there was 100 marks sent to his two faithful friends * D. Henry King. D. Mountfort. and Executors, (the person that sent it, not yet known, they look not for a reward on earth) towards the making of a Monument for him, which I think is as lively a representation, as in dead marble can be made of him. HE was of stature moderately tall; of a strait and equally proportioned body, to which all his words and actions gave an unexpressible addition of comeliness. His aspect was cheerful, and such as gave a silent testimony of a clear knowing soul, and of a conscience at peace with itself. His melting eye shown he had a soft heart, full of noble pity, of too brave a spirit to offer injuries, and too much a Christian, not to pardon them in others. His fancy was un-imitable high, equalled by his great wit, both being made useful by a commanding judgement. His mind was liberal, and unwearied in the search of knowledge, with which his vigorous soul is now satisfied, and employed in a continual praise of that God that first breathed it into his active body, which once was a Temple of the holy Ghost, and is now become a small quantity of Christian dust. But I shall see it re-inanimated. Iz: Wa: JOHANNES DONNE SAC: THEOL: PROFESSOR, POST VARIA STUDIA, QVIBUS AB ANNIS TENERRIMIS FIDELITER, NEC INFELICITER, INCUBUIT, INSTINCTU ET IMPULSU SPIR: S ti: MONITU ET HORTATU REGIS JACOBI, ORDINES SACROS AMPLEXUS Aᵒ: SUI JESUS 1614 ET SUAE AETATIS 42. DECANATU HUJUS ECCLESIAE INDUTUS XXVII. NOVEMBRIS 1621. EXUTUS MORTE ULTIMO DIE MARTII. 1631. Hic licet in Occiduo Cinere Aspicit Eum Cujus Nomen est ORIENS. A Table directing to the several Texts of SCRIPTURE, handled by the Author in this BOOK. SERM. I. COLOS. 1.19, 20. For it pleased the Father, that in him should all fullness dwell; And having made peace through the blood of his Cross, by Him, to reconcile all things to himself, by Him, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven. page 1 SERM. II. ESAIAH. 7.14. Therefore the Lord shall give you a sign; Behold, a Virgin shall conceive, and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel. pa. 11 SERM. III. GALAT. 4.4, & 5. But when the fullness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the Law, to redeem them that were under the Law, that we might receive the adoption of Sons. pa. 20 SERM. IV. LUKE 2.29. & 30. Lord now lettest thou thy servant departed in peace, according to thy word: For mine eyes have seen thy salvation. pa. 29. SERM. V. EXOD. 4.13. O my Lord, send I pray thee, by the hand of him whom thou wilt send. pa. 39 SERM. VI Lord, who hath believed our report? pa. 52 SERM. VII. JOHN 10.10. I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly. pa. 62 SERM. VIII. MAT. 5.16. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. pa. 77 SERM. IX. ROM. 13.7. Render therefore to all men their deuce. pa. 86 SERM. X. ROM. 12.20. Therefore if thine enemy hunger feed him, if he thirst give him drink; for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head. pa. 96 SERM. XI. MAT. 9.2. And jesus seeing their faith, said unto the sick of the palsy, My son, be of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee. pa. 102 SERM. XII. MAT. 5.2. Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. pa. 112 SERM. XIII. JOB 16. ver. 17, 18, 19 Not for any injustice in my hands: Also my prayer is pure. O earth, cover thou not my blood; and let my cry have no place. Also now behold, my Witness is in heaven, and my Record is on high. pa. 127 SERM. XIV. AMOS 5.18. Woe unto you, that desire the day of the Lord: what have ye to do with it? the day of the Lord is darkness, and not light. pa. 136 SERM. XV. 1 COR 15.26. The last Enemy that shall be destroyed, is Death. pa. 144 SERM. XVI. JOHN 11.35. jesus wept. pa. 153 SERM. XVII. MAT. 19.17. And he said unto him, Why callest thou me Good? There is none Good but One; that is, God. pa. 163 SERM. XVIII. ACTS 2.36. Therefore let all the house of Israel know assuredly, That God hath made that same jesus, whom ye have crucified, both Lord and Christ. pa. 175 SERM. XIX. APOC. 20.6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection. pa. 183 SERM. XX. JOHN 5.28, 29. Marvel not at this; for the hour is coming, in the which, all that are in the graves, shall hear his voice; And shall come forth, they that have done good, unto the Resurrection of life; And they that have done evil, unto the Resurrection of damnation. pa. 192 SERM. XXI. 1 COR. 15.29. Else what shall they do that are baptised for dead? If the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptised for dead? pa. 120 SERM. XXII. HEB. 11.35. Women received their dead raised to life again: And others were tortured, not accepting a deliverance, that they might obtain a better Resurrection. pa. 213 SERM. XXIII. 1 COR. 13.12. For now we see through a glass darkly, But than face to face; Now I know in part, But then I shall know, even as also I am known. pa. 224 SERM. XXIV. JOB 4.18. Behold, he put no trust in his Servants, and his Angels he charged with folly. pa. 233 SERM. XXV. MAT. 28.6. He is not here, for he is risen, as he said; Come, See the place where the Lord lay. pa. 242 SERM. XXVI. 1 THES. 4.17. Then we which are alive, and remain, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air; and so shall we be ever with the lord pa. 254 SERM. XXVII. PSAL. 89.47. What man is he that liveth, and shall not see death? pa. 267 SERM. XXVIII. & XXIX. JOHN 14.26. But the Comforter, which is the holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my Name, He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you. pa. 277. & 286 SERM. XXX. JOHN 14.20. At that day shall ye know, That I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you. pa. 294 SERM. XXXI. GEN. 1.2. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. pa. 303 SERM. XXXII. 1 COR. 12.3. Also no man can say, that jesus is the Lord, but by the holy Ghost. p. 312 SERM. XXXIII. ACTS. 10.44. While Peter yet spoke these words, the holy Ghost fell on all them, which heard the Word. pa. 321 SERM. XXXIV. ROM. 8.16. The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God. pa. 332 SERM. XXXV. MAT. 12.31. Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men; But the Blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men. pa. 341 SERM. XXXVI. & XXXVII. JOHN 16.8, 9, 10, 11. And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgement. Of sin, because ye believe not on me. Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more. Of judgement, because the Prince of this world is judged. pa. 351. & 361 SERM. XXXVIII. 2 COR. 1.3. Blessed be God, even the Father of our Lord jesus Christ, the Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort. pa. 375 SERM. XXXIX. 1 PET. 1.17. And if ye call on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man's works, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear. pa. 384 SERM. XL. 1 COR. 16.22. If any man love not the Lord jesus Christ, let him be Anathema, Maranatha. pa. 393 SERM. XLI. PSAL. 2.12. Kiss the Son, lest he be angry. pa. 403 SERM. XLII. GEN. 18.25. Shall not the judge of all the Earth do right? pa. 412 SERM. XLIII. MAT. 3.17. And lo, A voice came from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. pa. 423 SERM. XLIV. REV. 4.8. And the four Beasts had each of them six wings about him, and they were full of eyes within; And they rest not day and night, saying, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come. pa. 432 SERM. XLV. APOC. 7.2, 3. And I saw another Angel ascending from the East, which had the seal of the living God, and he cried with a loud voice to the four Angels, to whom power was given to hurt the Earth, and the Sea, saying, Hurt ye not the Earth, neither the Sea, neither the Trees, till we have sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads. pa. 445 SERM. XLVI. ACTS 9.4. And he fell to the earth, and heard a voice, saying, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? pa. 459 SERM. XLVII. ACTS 20.25. And now, Behold, I know, that all ye among whom I have gone preaching the kingdom of God, shall see my face no more. pa. 468 SERM. XLVIII. ACTS 28.6. They changed their minds, and said, That he was a God. pa. 476 SERM. XLIX. ACTS 23.6, 7. But when Paul perceived that one part were Sadduces, and the other Pharisees, he cried out in the Council, Men and Brethren, I am a Pharisee, and the son of a Pharisee; Of the hope and resurrection of the dead I am called in question. And when he had so said, there arose a dissension between the Pharisees and the Sadduces, and the multitude was divided. pa. 487 SERM. L. PSAL. 6.1. O Lord, Rebuke me not in thine anger, neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure. pa. 499 SERM. LI. PSAL. 6.2, 3. Have mercy upon me, O Lord, for I am weak; O Lord, heal me, for my bones are vexed: My soul is also sore vexed; But thou, O Lord, how long? pa. 209 SERM. LII. & LIII. PSAL. 6.4, 5. Return, O Lord; Deliver my soul; O Lord save me, for thy mercy's sake. For in death there is no remembrance of thee; and in the grave, who shall give thee thanks? pa. 522. & pa. 530 SERM. LIV. PSAL. 6.6, 7. I am weary with my groaning; All the night make I my bed to swim, I water my couch with my tears. Mine eye is consumed because of grief; It waxeth old, because of all mine enemies. pa. 535 SERM. LV. PSAL. 6.8, 9, 10. Depart from me, all ye workers of iniquity; for the Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping. The Lord hath heard my supplication; the Lord will receive my prayer. Let all mine enemies be ashamed and sore vexed: let them return and be ashamed suddenly. pa. 548 SERM. LVI. PSAL. 32.1, 2. Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered; Blessed is the man, unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile. pa. 560 SERM. LVII. PSAL. 32.3, 4. When I kept silence, my bones waxed old, through my roaring all the day long. For day and night thy hand was heavy upon me; my moisture is turned into the drought of Summer. Selah. pa. 571 SERM. LVIII. PSAL. 32.5. I acknowledged my sin unto thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord, and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. pa. 582 SERM. LIX. PSAL. 32.6. For this shall every one that is godly prey unto thee, in a time when thou mayest be found; surely in the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh unto him. pa. 592 SERM. LX. PSAL. 32.7. Thou art my hiding place; Thou shalt preserve me from trouble; Thou shalt compass me about with songs of deliverance. pa. 601 SERM. LXI. PSAL. 32.8. I will instruct thee, and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go, I will guide thee with mine eye. pa. 609 SERM. LXII. PSAL. 32.9. Be not as the Horse, or the Mule, which have no understanding; whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle, lest they come near unto thee. p. 619 SERM. LXIII. PSAL. 32.10, 11. Many sorrows shall be to the wicked; But he that trusteth in the Lord, Mercy shall compass him about. Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice ye righteous; And shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart. pa. 629 SERM. LXIV. PSAL. 51.7. Purge me with Hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. pa. 639 SERM. LXV. PSAL. 62.9. Surely men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie; To be laid in the balance, they are altogether lighter than vanity. pa. 643 SERM. LXVI. PSAL. 63.7. Because thou hast been my help, Therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice. pa. 663 SERM. LXVII. PSAL. 64.10. And all the upright in heart shall glory. pa. 673 SERM. LXVIII. PSAL. 65.5. By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us, O God of our salvation; who art the confidence of all the ends of the earth, and of them that are a far off upon the Sea. pa. 683 SERM. LXIX. PSAL. 66.3. Say unto God, How terrible art thou in thy works! Through the greatness of thy Power shall thine Enemies submit themselves unto thee. pa. 695 SERM. LXX. PROV. 25.16. Hast thou found Honey? eat so much as is sufficient for thee, lest thou be filled therewith, and vomit it. 709 SERM. LXXI. & LXXII. MAT. 4.18, 19, 20. And jesus walking by the Sea of Galilee, saw two brethren, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the Sea, (for they were fishers.) And he saith unto them, Fellow me, and I will make you fishers of men. And they straightway left their nets and followed him. pa. 717. & 726 SERM. LXXIII. JOHN 14.2. In my Father's house are many Mansions; If it were not so, I would have told you. pa. 737 SERM. LXXIV. PSAL. 144.15. Blessed are the people that be so; Yea blessed are the people, whose God is the lord pa. 749 SERM. LXXV. ESAY 32.8. But the liberal deviseth liberal things, and by liberal things he shall stand. pa. 758 SERM. LXXVI. MARK 16.16. He that believeth not, shall be damned. pa. 766 SERM. LXXVII. & LXXVIII. 1 COR. 15.29. Else, what shall they do which are baptised for the dead? if the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptised for the dead? pa. 777. & 790 SERM. LXXIX. PSAL. 90.14. O satisfy us early with thy mercy, that we may rejoice and be glad all our days. pa. 803 SERM. LXXX. JOHN 11.21. Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died. pa. 816 NOVEMB. 29. 1639. Imprimatur, THO: BROUN. SERMONS Preached upon Christmas-day. SERMON I. PREACHED AT St. PAUL'S, upon Christmas day. 1622. Coloss. 1.19, 20. For, it pleased the Father, that in him should all fullness dwell; And, having made peace through the blood of his Cross, by Him, to reconcile all things to himself, by Him, whether they be things in Earth, or things in heaven. THE whole journey of a Christian is in these words; and therefore we were better set out early, then ride too fast; better enter presently into the parts, then be forced to pass thorough them too hastily. First then we consider the Collation and Reference of the Text, and then the Illation, and Inference thereof. For, the Text looks back to all that was said from the twelfth verse. For, the first word of the text, [For] which is a particle of connexion, as well as of argumentation, is a seal of all that was said from that place. And then, the Text looks forward to the 23 ver. where all these blessings are sealed to us, with that Condition, If ye continue settled in the Gospel. This is the Collation, the Reference of the text; for the Illation, and Inference, the first clause thereof, [For, it pleased the Father, that in him should all fullness dwell] presents a double Instruction; First, that we are not bound to accept matters of Religion, merely without all reason, and probable inducements; And secondly, with what modesty we are to proceed, and in what bounds we are to limit that inquisition, that search of Reason in matters of that nature. When the Apostle presents to us here, the great mystery of our reconciliation to God, he, in whose power it was not to infuse faith into every reader of his Epistle, proceeds by reason. He tells us, V 13. That the Father hath translated us into the Kingdom of his dear Son, the Son of his love. That were well, if we were sure of it; If our consciences did not accuse us, and suggest to us our own unworthiness, and thereby an impossibility of being so translated. Why not, says the Apostle, V 14. there is no such impossibility now, For, Now we have Redemption, and forgiveness of sins. Who should procure us that? If a man sin against God, who shall plead for him? What man is able to mediate, 1 Sam. 2.25. and stand in the gap between God and man? You say true, says the Apostle, no man is able to do it; and therefore, He that is the Image of the invisible God, V 15. he by whom all things were created, and by whom all things consist, he hath done it. Hath God reconciled me to God; And reconciled me by way of satisfaction? (for, that I know his justice requires) What could God pay for me? What could God suffer? God himself could not; V 18. and therefore God hath taken a body that could. And as he is the Head of that body, he is passable, so he may suffer; And, as he is the first born of the dead, he did suffer; so that he was defective in nothing; not in Power, as God, not in passibility, as man; for, Complacuit; It pleased the Father, that in him, All fullness (a full capacity to all purposes) should dwell. Thus fare we are to trace the reason of our redemption, intimated in that first word, For. And then, we are to limit and determine our reason in the next, Quia complacuit, because it was his will, his pleasure to proceed so, and no otherwise. Christ himself goes no farther than so, Mat. 11.25. in a case of much strangeness, That God had hid his mysteries from the wise, and revealed them unto babes; This was a strange course, but Ita est, quia, Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in thy sight. I would feign be able to prove to myself that my redemption is accomplished; and therefore I search the Scriptures; and I grow sure that Christ hath redeemed the world; and I search the Scriptures again, to find what marks are upon them, that are of the participation of that Redemption, and I grow to a religious, and modest assurance, that those marks are upon me. I find reasons to prove to me, that God does love my soul; but why God should love men better than his own Son, or why God should love me better than other men, I must end in the reason of the text, Quia complacuit, and in the reason of Christ himself, Ita est, quia, It is so, O Father, because thy good pleasure was it should be so. To pass then from the Collation and Reference, Divisio. by which, the text hath his Cohaerence with the precedent, and subsequent passages, and the Illation and Inference, by which you have seen the general doctrine, That reason is not to be excluded in religion, but yet to be tenderly and modestly pressed, we have here the Person that redeemed us, and his Qualification for that great office, (That all fullness should dwell in him.) And then we have the Pacification, and the Means thereof, (Peace was made through the blood of his Cross) And then, the Effect, the application of all this, to them, for whom it was wrought, (That all things in earth and heaven, might be reconciled to God by him.) In the qualification of the person, we find plenitudinem, fullness, and omnem plenitudinem, all fullness; and omnem plenitudinem inhabitantem, all fullness dwelling, permanent. And yet, even this dwelling fullness, even in this person Christ Jesus, by no title of merit in himself, but only quia complacuit, because it pleased the Father it should be so. In the pacification, (which is our second part) (Peace was made, by the blood of his Cross) we shall see first, quod bellum, what the war was, and then quae pax, what the peace is, and lastly quis modus, how this peace was made, which was strange; per sanguinem, by blood; to save blood, and yet by blood. And per sanguinem ejus, by his blood, his, who was victoriously to triumph in this peace; and per sanguinem Crucis ejus, by the blood of his Cross, that is his death; the blood of his Circumcision, the blood of his Agony, the blood of his scourging was not enough; It must be, and so it was the blood of his Cross; And these pieces constitute our second part, the Pacification: And then in the third, the Application, (That all things might be reconciled to God,) we shall see first, what this Reconciliation is, and then how it extends to all things on earth, (which we might think were not capable of it;) and all things in heaven, (which we might think stood in no need of it.) And in these three parts, The person and his qualification, The thing itself, The Pacification, The effect of this, The Reconciliation, the Application, we shall determine all. First, 1. Part. Plenitudo. In the person that redeems us we find fullness. And there had need be so; for, he found our measure full of sin towards God, and Gods measure full of anger towards us; for our parts, as when a River swells, at first it will find out all the channels, or lower parts of the bank, and enter there, but after a while it covers, and overflows the whole field, and all is water without distinction; so, though we be naturally channels of concupiscencies, (for there sin gins, and as water runs naturally in the veins and bowels of the earth, Gen. 6.5. so run concupiscencies naturally in our bowels) yet, when every imagination of the thoughts of our heart, is only evil continually; Then, (as it did there) it induces a flood, a deluge, our concupiscence swells above all channels, and actually overflows all; It hath found an issue at the ear, we delight in the defamation of others; and an issue at the eye, Psal. 50.18. Psal. 12.4. If we see a thief, we run with him; we concur in the plots of supplanting and destroying other men; It hath found an issue in the tongue, Our lips are our own, who is Lord over us? We speak freely; seditious speeches against superiors, obscene and scurrile speeches against one another, profane and blasphemous speeches against God himself, are grown to be good jests, and marks of wit, and arguments of spirit. It finds an issue at our hands, they give way to oppression, by giving bribes; and an issue at our feet, They are swift to shed blood; and so by custom, sin overflows all, Omnia pontus, all our ways are sea, all our works are sin. This is our fullness, original sin filled us, actual sin presses down the measure, and habitual sins heap it up. And then God's measure of anger was full too; from the beginning he was a jealous God, and that should have made us careful of our behaviour, that a jealous eye watched over us. But because we see in the world, that jealous persons are oftenest deceived, because that distemper disorders them, so as that they see nothing clearly, and it puts the greater desire in the other, to deceive, because it is some kind of Victory, and Triumph to deceive a jealous, and watchful person, therefore we have hoped to go beyond God too, and his jealousy. But he is jealous of his honour, jealous of his jealousy, he will not have his jealousy despised, nor forgotten, for therefore he visits upon the children, to the third and fourth generation; when therefore the spirit of jealousy was come upon him, Numb. 5.14. and that he had prepared that water of bitterness, which was to rot our bowels, that is, when God had bend all his bows, drawn forth, and whetted all his swords, when he was justly provoked, to execute all the Judgements denounced in all the Prophets, upon all mankind, when man's measure was full of sin, and Gods measure full of wrath, then was the fullness of time, and yet then Complacuit, It pleased the Father, that there should be another fullness to overflow all these, in Christ Jesus. But what fullness is that? Omnis plenitudo, all fullness. And this was only in Christ. Omnis plenitudo. 2 Reg. 2.9. Acts 6.5. Acts 9.36. Elias had a great portion of the spirit: but, but a portion. Elizaeus sees that that portion will not serve him, and therefore he asks a double portion of that spirit; but still but portions. Stephen is full of faith; a blessed fullness, where there is no corner for Infidelity, nor for doubt, for scruple, nor irresolution. Dorcas is full of good works; a fullness above faith; for there must be faith, before there can be good works; so that they are above faith, as the tree is above the root, and as the fruit is above the tree. The Virgin Mary is full of Grace; and Grace is a fullness above both; above faith and works too, for that is the means to preserve both; That we fall not from our faith, Eccles. 10.1. and that dead flies corrupt not our ointment, that worldly mixtures do not vitiate our best works, and the memory of past sins, dead sins, do not beget new sins in us, is the operation of Grace. The seven Deacons were full of the Holy Ghost, and of Wisdom; Acts 6.3. full of Religion towards God, and full of such wisdom as might advance it towards men; full of zeal, and full of knowledge; full of truth, and full of discretion too. And these were plenitudines, fullness, but they were not all, Omnis plenitudo, all fullness. I shall be as full as St. Paul, in heaven; I shall have as full a vessel, but not so full a Cellar; I shall be as full, but I shall not have so much to fill. Christ only hath an infinite content, and capacity, an infinite room and receipt, and then an infinite fullness; omnem capacitatem, and omnem plenitudinem; He would receive as much as could be infused, and there was as much infused, as he could receive. But what shall we say? Deus adimplendus; was Christ God before, and are these accessary, supplementary, additional fullness to be put to him? A fullness to be added to God? To make him a competent person to redeem man, something was to be added to Christ, though he were God; wherein we see to our inexpressible confusion of face, and consternation of spirit, the incomprehensibleness of man's sin, that even to God himself, there was required something else than God, before we could be redeemed; there was a fullness to be added to God, for this work, to make it omnem plenitudinem, for Christ was God before; there was that fullness; but God was not Christ before; there lacked that fullness. Not disputing therefore, what other ways God might have taken for our redemption, but giving him all possible thanks for that way which his goodness hath chosen, by the way of satisfying his justice, (for, howsoever I would be glad to be discharged of my debts any way, yet certainly, I should think myself more beholden to that man, who would be content to pay my debt for me, then to him that should entreat my creditor to forgive me my debt) for this work, to make Christ able to pay this debt, there was something to be added to him. First, he must pay it in such money as was lent; in the nature and flesh of man; for man had sinned, and man must pay. And then it was lent in such money as was coined even with the Image of God; man was made according to his Image: That Image being defaced, in a new Mint, in the womb of the Blessed Virgin, there was new money coined; The Image of the invisible God, the second person in the Trinity, was imprinted into the humane nature. And then, that there might be omnis plenitudo, all fullness, as God, for the payment of this debt, sent down the Bullion, and the stamp, that is, God to be conceived in man, and as he provided the Mint, the womb of the Blessed Virgin, so hath he provided an Exchequer, where this money is issued; that is his Church, where his merits should be applied to the discharge of particular consciences. Coloss. 2.9. So that here is one fullness, that in this person dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily. Here is another fullness, that this person fulfilled all righteousness, and satisfied the Justice of God by his suffering; Thren. 1.12. non est dolor sicut, there was no sorrow like unto his sorrow; It was so full that it exceeded all others. And then there is a third fullness, the Church, Eph. 1.23. (which is his body, the fullness of him, that filleth all in all) perfect God, there is the fullness of his dignity; perfect man, there is the fullness of his passibility; and a perfect Church, there is the fullness of the distribution of his mercies, and merits to us. And this is omnis plenitudo, all fullness; which yet is farther extended in the next word, Inhabitavit, It pleased the Father, that all fullness should dwell in him. The Holy Ghost appeared in the Dove, Inhabitavit. Remigius. but he did not dwell in it. The Holy Ghost hath dwelled in holy men, but not thus; So, as that ancient Bishop expresses it, Habitavit in Salomone per sapientiam, He dwelled in Solomon, in the spirit of wisdom; in joseph, in the spirit of chastity; in Moses, in the spirit of meekness; but in Christo, in plenitudine, in Christ, in all fullness. Now this fullness is not fully expressed in the Hypostatical union of the two natures; God and Man in the person of Christ. For, (concerning the divine Nature) here was not a dram of glory in this union. This was a strange fullness, for it was a fullness of emptiness; It was all Humiliation, all exinanition, all evacuation of himself, by his obedience to the death of the Cross. But when it was done, Ne evacuaretur Crux Christi, 1 Cor. 1.17. (as the Apostle speaks in another case) lest the Cross of Christ should be evacuated, and made of none effect, he came to make this fullness perfect, by instituting and establishing a Church; Esay 1. ult. The spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, says the Prophet, of Christ. There is a fullness in general, for his qualification; The Spirit of the Lord; but what kind of spirit? It follows, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of Counsel, and Power, the Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord; we see, the spirit that must rest upon Christ, is the Spirit in those beams, in those functions, in those operations, 〈…〉 as conduce to government, that is, Wisdom, and Counsel, and Power. So that this is Christ's fullness, that he is in a continual administration of his Church; in which he flows over upon us his Ministers; Joh. 1.16. (for, of his fullness have all we received, and grace for grace: that is, power by his grace, to derive grace upon the Congregation;) And so, of his fullness, all the Congregation receives too; and receives in that full measure, That they are filled with all the fullness of God; Eph. 3.19. that is, all the fullness that was in both his natures, united in one person, when the fullness of the Deity dwelled in him bodily, all the merits of that person, are derived upon us, in his Word, Sacraments, in his Church; which Church being to continue to the end, it is most properly said habitavit, in him, (in him, as head of the Church) all fullness, all means of salvation, dwell, and are to be had permanently, constantly, infallibly. Now how came Christ by all this fullness, Complacuit. this superlative fullness in himself, this derivative fullness upon us? That his merits should be able to build, and furnish such a house, to raise and rectify such a Church, acceptable to God, in which all fullness should dwell to the world's end? It was only because complacuit, it pleased God (for this personal name of the Father (It pleased the Father) is but added suppletorily by our Translators, and is not in the Original) It pleased God to give him wherewithal, to enable him so fare, for, this complacuit, is, (as we say in the School,) vox beneplaciti, it expresses only the good will and love of God, without contemplation or foresight of any goodness in man; Catharin. nam hac posita plenitudine exorta sunt merita: First, we are to consider this fullness to have been in Christ, and then, from this fullness arose his merits; we can consider no merit in Christ himself before, whereby he should merit this fullness; for, this fullness was in him, before he merited any thing; and but for this fullness, he had not so merited. August. Ille homo, ut in unitatem filii Dei assumeretur, unde meruit? How did that man, (says St. Augustine speaking of Christ, as of the son of man) how did that man merit to be united in one person, with the eternal Son of God? Quid egit ante? Quid credidit? What had he done? nay, what had he believed? Had he either faith, or works, before that union of both natures? If then in Christ Jesus himself, there were no praevisa merita, That God's foresight, that he would use this fullness well, did not work in God, as a cause to give him this fullness, but because he had it of the free gift of God, therefore he did use it well, and meritoriously, shall any of us be so frivolous, in so important a matter, as to think that God gave us our measure of grace, or our measure of Sanctification, because he foresaw that we would heap up that measure, and employ that talon profitably? What canst thou imagine, he could foresee in thee? A propenseness, a disposition to goodness, when his grace should come? Either there is no such propenseness, no such disposition in thee, or, if there be, even that propenseness and disposition to the good use of grace, is grace, it is an effect of former grace, and his grace wrought, before he saw any such propenseness, any such disposition; Grace was first, and his grace is his, it is none of thine. To end this point, and this part, non est discipulus supra magistrum; The fullness of Christ himself was rooted in the complacuit, It pleased the Father; (nothing else wrought in the nature of a Cause) and therefore that measure of that fullness, which is derived upon us, from him, (our vocation, our justification, our sanctification) are much more so; we have them, quia complacuit, because it hath pleased him freely to give them; God himself could see nothing in us, till he of his own goodness, put it into us. And so we have gone as fare, as our first part carries us, in those two branches, and the fruits which we have gathered from thence; First, those general doctrines, that reason is not to be excluded in matters of religion; and then, that reason in all those cases, is to be limited, with the quia complacuit, merely in the good pleasure of God. In which first part, you have also had, the qualification of the person, that came this day, to establish Redemption for us, that in Him there was fullness, (infinite capacity, and infinite infusion,) and all fullness, defective in nothing, (impassable and yet passable, perfect God, and perfect man) and this fullness dwelling in Him, in Him as he is Head of the Church, that is, visible, sensible means of salvation to every soul in his Church; And so we pass to our second part, from this Qualification of the person, (It pleased the Father that in him all fullness should dwell) to the Pacification itself, for which it pleased the Father to do all this, that Peace might be made through the blood of his Cross. In this Part, St. chrysostom hath made our steps, our branches. It is much, says he, 2 Part. that God would admit any peace; magis, per sanguinem, more, that for peace he should require effusion of blood; magis, quod per ejus, more, that it must be His blood, his that was injured, his that was to triumph; Et adhuc magis, quod per sanguinem Crucis ejus; That it must be by the blood of his Cross, his heart blood, his death; and yet this was the case; He made Peace through the blood of his Cross. There was then a war before, and a heavy war; for, the Lord of hosts was our enemy; and what can all our musters come to, Bellum ante. if the Lord of Hosts, of all Hosts have raised his forces against us? There was a heavy war denounced in the Inimicitias ponam, when God raised a war between the Devil, Gen. 3.15. and us. For, if we could consider God to stand neutral in that war, and meddle with neither side, yet we were in a desperate case, to be put to fight against Powers and Principalities, against the Devil. How much more, when God, the Lord of Hosts, is the Lord even of that Host too? when God presses the Devil, and makes the Devil his Soldier, to fight his battles, and directs his arrows, and his bullets, and makes his approaches, and his attempts effectual upon us. That which is fallen upon the Jews now, Basil. for their sin against Christ, that there is not in all the world, a Soldier of their race, not a Jew in the world that bears arms, is true of all mankind for their sin against God; there is not a Soldier amongst them, able to hurt his spiritual enemy or defend himself. It is a strange war, where there are not two sides; and yet that is our case; for, God uses the Devil against us, and the Devil uses us against one another; nay, he uses every one of us, against ourselves; so that God, and the Devil, and we, are all in one Army, and all for our destruction; we have a war, and yet there is but one Army, and we only are the Country that is fed upon, and wasted; From God to the Devil we have not one friend, and yet, as though we lacked enemies, we fight with one another in inhuman Duels; Vbi morimur homicidae, Ad milites Templa: Ser. 1. 〈◊〉 (as St. Bernard expresses it powerfully and elegantly) that in those Duels and Combats, he that is murdered dies a murderer, because he would have been one; Occisor laethaliter peccat, occisus aeternaliter perit; He that comes alive out of the field comes a dead man, because he comes a deadly sinner, and he that remains dead in the field, is gone into an everlasting death. So that by this inhuman effusion of one another's blood, we maintain a war against God himself, and we provoke him to that which he expresses in Esay, My sword shall be bathed in heaven; Inebriabitur sanguine, Esay 34.5. The sword of the Lord shall be made drunk with blood; Their land shall be soaked with blood, and their dust made fat with fatness. The same quarrel, which God hath against particular men, and particular Nations, for particular sins, God hath against all Mankind, for Adam's sin. And there is the war. But what is the peace, and how are we included in that? That is our second and next disquisition, That peace might be made. A man must not presently think himself included in this peace, Pax. because he feels no effects of this war. If God draw none of his swords of war, or famine, or pestilence, upon thee, (no outward war,) If God raise not a rebellion in thyself, nor fight against thee with thine own affections, in colluctations between the flesh, and the spirit; The war may last, Gellius. for all this. Induciarum tempore, bellum manet, licet pugna cesset; Though there be no blow stricken, the war remains in the time of Truce. But thy case is not so good; here is no Truce, no cessation, but a continual preparation to a fiercer war. All this while that thou enjoyest this imaginary security, the Enemy digs insensibly under ground, all this while he undermines thee, and will blow thee up at last more irrecoverably, then if he had battered thee with outward calamities all that time. So any State may be abused with a false peace present, or with a fruitless expectation of a future peace. But in this text, there is true peace, and peace already made; present peace, and and safe peace. Bernard. Pax non promissa, sed missa, (says St. Bernard, in his musical and harmonious cadences,) not promised, but already sent; non dilata, sed data, not treated, but concluded; Non prophetata, sed praesentata, not prophesied, but actually established. There is the presentness thereof; And then, made by him, who lacked nothing for the making of a safe peace; Esay 9.6. For, after his Names of Counsellor, and of the Mighty God; he is called, for the consummation of all, princeps pacis; A Counsellor, There is his wisdom, A mighty God, There is his Power: and this Counsellor, This Mighty God, this wise, and this powerful Prince, hath undertaken to make our peace; But how, that is next, per sanguinem, Peace being made by blood. Is effusion of blood the way of peace? Per sanguinem. effusion of blood may make them from whom blood is so abundantly drawn, glad of peace, because they are thereby reduced to a weakness. But in our wars, such a weakness puts us farther off from peace, and puts more fierceness in the Enemy. But here, mercy and truth are met together; God would be true to his own Justice, (blood was forfeited, and he would have blood) and God would be merciful to us, he would make us the stronger by drawing blood, and by drawing our best blood, Gen. 34. the blood of Christ Jesus. Simeon and Levi, when they meditated their revenge for the rape committed upon their sister, when they pretended peace, yet they required a little blood: They would have the Sichemites circumcised: but when they had opened a vein, they made them bleed to death; when they were under the soreness of Circumcision, they slew them all. God's justice required blood, but that blood is not spilt, but poured from that head to our hearts, into the veins, and wounds of our own souls: There was blood shed, but no blood lost. Before the Law was thoroughly established, when Moses came down from God, and deprehended the people, in that Idolatry to the Calf, before he would present himself as a Mediator between God and them, Exod. 32.28. & 32. for that sin, he prepares a sacrifice of blood, in the execution of three thousand of those Idolaters, and after that he came to his vehement prayer, in their behalf. And in the strength of the Law, Heb. 9 22. all things were purged with blood, and without blood there is no remission. Whether we place the reason of this in God's Justice, which required blood, or whether we place it in the conveniency, that blood being ordinarily received to be sedes animae, the seat and residence of the soul; The soul, for which, that expiation was to be, could not be better represented, nor purified, then in the state, and seat of the soul, in blood; or whether we shut up ourselves in an humble sobriety, to inquire into the reasons of God's actions, thus we see it was, no peace, no remission, but in blood. Nor is that so strange, as that which follows in the next place, per sanguinem ejus, by his blood. Before, Per sanguinem ejus. Psal. 50.10. under the Law, it was in sanguine hircorum, & vitulorum; In the blood of Goats, and Bullocks; here it is in sanguine ejus, in his blood. Not his, as he claims all the beasts of the forest, all the cattle upon a thousand hills, and all the fowls of the mountains to be his; not his, as he says of Gold and Silver, The Silver is mine, and the Gold is mine; Hag. 2.8. not his, as he is Lord, and proprietary of all, by Creation; so all blood is his; no nor his, as the blood of all the Martyrs was his blood, (which is a near relation and consanguinity) but his so, as it was the precious blood of his body, the seat of his soul, the matter of his spirits, the knot of his life, This blood he shed for me; and I have blood to shed for him too, though he call me not to the trial, nor to the glory of Martyrdom. Sanguis animae meae voluntas mea, The blood of my soul is my will; Bern. Scindatur vena ferro compunctionis, open a vein with that knife, remorse, compunction, ut si non sensus, certe consensus peccati effluat, That though thou canst not bleed out all motions to sin, thou mayst all consent thereunto. Noli esse nimium justus; noli sapere plus quam oportet; St. Bernard makes this use of those Counsels, Be not righteous overmuch, nor be not overwise, Ecces. 7.16. Cui putas venae parcendum, si justitia & sapientia egent minutione, what vein mayst thou spare, if thou must open those two veins, righteousness, and wisdom? If they may be superfluously abundant, if thou must bleed out some of thy Righteousness, and some of thy wisdom, cui venae parcendum, at what vein must thou not bleed? Tostat. in Levit. fo. 45. D. Now in all sacrifices, where blood was to be offered, the fat was to be offered to. If thou wilt sacrifice the blood of thy soul, (as St. Bernard calls the will) sacrifice the fat too; If thou give over thy purpose of continuing in thy sin, give over the memory of it, and give over all that thou possessest unjustly, and corruptly got by that sin; else thou keepest the fat from God, though thou give him the blood. If God had given over at his second day's work, we had had no sun, no seasons; If at his fift, we had had no being; If at the sixth, no Sabbath; but by proceeding to the seventh, we are all, and we have all. Naaman, 2 Reg. 5.14. who was out of the covenant, yet, by washing in Jordan seven times, was cured of his leprosy; seven times did it even in him, but less did not. Tostat. in Levit. 4. q. 16. The Priest in the Law used a sevenfold sprinkling of blood upon the Altar; and we observe a sevenfold shedding of blood in Christ; In his Circumcision, and in his Agony, in his fulfilling of that Prophecy; gen as vellicantibus, I gave my cheeks to them, that plucked off the hair, and in his scourging; Esay 50.6. in his crowning, and in his nailing, and lastly, in the piercing of his side. These seven channels hath the blood of thy Saviour found. Pour out the blood of thy soul, sacrifice thy stubborn and rebellious will seven times too; seven times, that is, every day; and seven times every day; for so often a just man falleth; And then, Prov. 24.16. how low must that man lie at last, if he fall so often, and never rise upon any fall? and therefore raise thyself as often, and as soon as thou fallest. jericho would not fall, Jos. 6. but by being compassed seven days, and seven times in one day. Compass thyself, comprehend thyself, seven times, many times, and thou shalt have thy loss of blood supplied with better blood, with a true sense of that peace, which he hath already made, and made by blood, and by his own blood, and by the blood of his Cross, which is the last branch of this second part. Greater love hath no man, then to lay down his life for his friend, yet he that said so, Crux. Joh. 15.13. did more than so, more than lay down his life, (for he exposed it to violences, and torments) and all that for his enemies. But doth not the necessity diminish the love? where a testament is, there must also of necessity be the death of the testator: Heb. 9.16. was there then a necessity in Christ's dying? simply a necessity of coaction there was not; such as is in the death of other men, natural, or violent by the hand of Justice. There was nothing more arbitrary, more voluntary, more spontaneous than all that Christ did for man. And if you could consider a time, before the contract between the Father, and him, had passed, for the redemption of man by his death, we might say, that then there was no necessity upon Christ, that he must die; But because that contract was from all eternity, Luc. 24.26. supposing that contract, that this peace was to be made by his death, there entered the oportuit pati, That Christ ought to suffer all these things, and to enter into his glory. And so, as for his death, so for the manner of his death, (by the Cross) it was not of absolute necessity, and yet it was not by casualty neither, not because he was to suffer in that Nation, which did ordinarily punish such Malefactors, (such as he was accused to be) seditious persons, with that manner of death, but all this proceeded ex pacto, thus the contract led it, to this he was obedient, obedient unto death, and unto the death of the Cross. Phil. 2.8. By blood, and not only by coming into this world, and assuming our nature, (which humiliation was an act of infinite value) and not by the blood of his Circumcision or Agony, but blood to death, and by no gentler, nor nobler death, than the death of the Cross, was this peace to be made by him. Though then one drop of his blood had been enough to have redeemed infinite worlds, if it had been so contracted, and so applied, yet he gave us, a morning shower of his blood in his Circumcision, and an evening shower at his passion, and a shower after Sunset, in the piercing of his side. And though any death had been an incomprehensible ransom, for the Lord of life to have given, for the children of death, yet he refused not the death of the Cross; The Cross, to which a bitter curse was nailed by Moses, Deut. 21 23. from the beginning, he that is hanged, is, (not only accursed of God, as our Translation hath it,) but he is the curse of God, (as it is in the Original) not accursed, but a curse; not a simple curse, but the curse of God. And by the Cross, which besides the Infamy, was so painful a death, as that many men languished many days upon it, before they died: And by his blood of this torture, and this shame, this painful, and this ignominious death, was this peace made. In our great work of crucifying ourselves to the world too, it is not enough to bleed the drops of a Circumcision, that is, to cut off some excessive, and notorious practice of sin; nor to bleed the drops of an Agony, to enter into a conflict and colluctation of the flesh and the spirit, whether we were not better trust in God's mercy, for our continuance in that sin, then lose all that pleasure and profit, which that sin brings us; nor enough to bleed the drops of scourging, to be lashed with viperous, and venomous tongues by contumelies, and slanders; nor to bleed the drops of Thorns, to have Thorns and scruples enter into our consciences, with spiritual afflictions; but we must be content to bleed the streams of nayling to those Crosses, to continue in them all our lives, if God see that necessary for our confirmation; and, if men will pierce and wound us after our deaths in our good name, yea, if they will slander our Resurrection, (as they did Christ's) if they will say, that it is impossible God should have mercy upon such a man, impossible that a man of so bad life, and so sad and comfortless a death, should have a joyful Resurrection, here is our comfort, as that piercing of Christ's side was after the Consummatum est, after his passion ended, and therefore put him to no pain, as that slander of his Resurrection, was after that glorious triumph; He was risen and had showed himself before, and therefore it diminished not his power: so all these posthume wounds, and slanders after my death, after my God and my Soul shall have passed that Dialogue, Veni Domine jesu, and euge bone serve, That I shall have said upon my deathbed, Come Lord Jesus, come quickly, and he shall have said, Well done good and faithful servant, enter into thy Master's joy, when I shall have said to him, In manus tuas Domine, Into thy hands O Lord I commend my spirit, And he to me, Hodie mecum eris in paradiso, This day, this minute thou shalt be, now thou art with me in Paradise, when this shall be my state, God shall hear their slanders and maledictions, and write them all down, but not in my book, but in theirs, and there they shall meet them at Judgement, amongst their own sins, to their everlasting confusion, and find me in possession of that peace, made by blood, made by his blood, made by the blood of his Cross, which were all the pieces laid out for this second part, with which we have done; and pass from the qualification of the person, (It pleased the Father that in him all fullness should dwell) which was our first part, and the Pacification, and the way thereof, (by the blood of his Cross to make peace) which was our second, to the Reconciliation itself, and the Application thereof to all to whom that Reconciliation appertains, That all things, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven, might be reconciled unto him. All this was done; 3. Part. He, in whom it pleased the Father, that this fullness should dwell, had made this peace by the blood of his Cross, and yet, after all this, the Apostle comes upon that Ambassage, 2 Cor. 5.20. We pray ye, in Christ's stead, that ye be reconciled to God; So that this Reconciliation in the Text, is a subsequent thing to this peace. The general peace is made by Christ's death, as a general pardon is given at the Kings coming; The Application of this peace is in the Church, as the suing out of the pardon, is in the Office. joab made Absaloms' peace with his Father; Bring the young man again, says David to joab; 2 Sam. 14.22.2.28.24.16. but yet he was not reconciled to him, so as that he saw his face in two year. God hath sounded a Retreat to the Battle, As I live, saith the Lord, I would not the death of a sinner; He hath said to the destroyer, It is enough, stay now thy hand; He is pacified in Christ; and he hath bound the enemy in chains. Now let us labour for our Reconciliation; for all things are reconciled to him, in Christ, that is, offered a way of reconciliation. All things in heaven and earth, says the Apostle. And that is so large, as that Origen needed not to have extended it to Hell too, Origen. and conceive out of this place, a possibility, that the Devils themselves shall come to a Reconciliation with God. But to all in Heaven and Earth it appertains. Consider we how. First then, there is a reconciliation of them in heaven to God, In coelis. and then of them on earth to God, and then of them in heaven, and them in earth, to one another, by the blood of his Cross. If we consider them in heaven, to be those who are gone up to heaven from this world by death, they had the same reconciliation as we; Animae. either by reaching the hand of faith forward, to lay hold upon Christ before he came, (which was the case of all under the Law;) or by reaching back that hand, to lay hold upon all that he had done and suffered, when he was come, (which is the case of those that are dead before us in the profession of the Gospel.) All that are in heaven, and were upon earth, are reconciled one way, by application of Christ in the Church; so that, though they be now in heaven, yet they had their reconciliation here upon earth. But if we consider those who are in heaven, and have been so from the first minute of their creation, Angels, why have they, or how have they any reconciliation? How needed they any, and then, how is this of Christ applied unto them? They needed a confirmation; for the Angels were created in blessedness, but not in perfect blessedness; They might fall, they did fall. To those that fell, can appertain no reconciliation; no more than to those that die in their sins; for Quod homini mors, Angelis casus; August. The fall of the Angels wrought upon them, as the death of a man does upon him; They are both equally incapable of change to better. But to those Angels that stood, their standing being of grace, and their confirmation being not one transient act in God done at once, but a continual succession, and emanation of daily grace, belongs this reconciliation by Christ, because all matter of grace, and where any deficiency is to be supplied, whether by way of reparation, as in man, or by way of confirmation, as in Angels, proceeds from the Cross, from the Merits of Christ. They are so reconciled then, as that they are extra lapsus periculum, out of the danger of falling; but yet this stability, this infallibility is not yet indelibly imprinted in their natures; yet the Angels might fall, if this reconciler did not sustain them; for, if those words reperit in Angelis iniquitatem, that God found folly, Job 4.18. (weakness, infirmity) in his Angels, be to be understood of the good Angels, that stand confirmed, (as procul dubio de diabolo intelligi non potest, Calvin. without all doubt they cannot be understood of the ill Angels) the best service of the best Angels, devested of that successive grace, that supports them, if God should exacta rigorous account of it, could not be acceptable in the sight of God; So the Angels have a pacification, and a reconciliation, lest they should fall. Thus things in heaven are reconciled to God by Christ; and things on earth too. In terra. First the creature, as S. Paul speaks; that is, other creatures than men. For, at the general resurrection, (which is rooted in the resurrection of Christ, and so hath relation to him) the creature shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption, Rom. 8.21. into the glorious liberty of the children of God; for which, the whole creation groans, and travails in pain yet. This deliverance then from this bondage, the whole creature hath by Christ, and that is their reconciliation. And then are we reconciled by the blood of his Cross, when having crucified ourselves by a true repentance, we receive the seal of reconciliation, in his blood in the Sacrament. But the most proper, and most literal sense of these words, is, that all things in heaven and earth, be reconciled to God, (that is, to his glory, to a fit disposition to glorify him) by being reconciled to another, in Christ; that in him, as head of the Church, they in heaven, and we upon earth, be united together as one body in the Communion of Saints. For, this text hath a conformity, and a harmony with that to the Ephesians, and in sense, as well as in words, is the same, Ephes. 1.10. That God might gather together in one, all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth, even in him; where the word which we translate (to gather) doth properly signify recapitulare, to bring all things to their first head, to Gods first purpose; which was, that Angels, and men, united in Christ Jesus, might glorify him eternally in the Kingdom of heaven. Then are things in heaven restored and reconciled, (says S. Augustine) Cum quod ex Angelis lapsum est, ex hominibus redditur, when good men have repaired the ruin of the bad Angels, and filled their places. And then are things on earth restored, and reconciled, Cum praedestinati à corruptionis vetustate renovantur, when Gods elect children are delivered from the corruptions of this world, to which, even they are subject here. Gregor. Cum humiliati homines redeunt, unde Apostatae superbiendo ceciderunt, when men by humility are exalted, to those places from which Angels fell by pride, then are all things in heaven and earth reconciled in Christ. The blood of the sacrifices was brought by the high priest, Tostat. in Levit. 16. in sanctum sanctorum, into the place of greatest holiness; but it was brought but once, in festo expiationis, in the feast of expiation; but, in the other parts of the Temple, it was sprinkled every day. The blood of the Cross of Christ Jesus hath had his effect in sancto sanctorum, even in the highest heavens, in supplying their places that fell, in confirming them that stood, and in uniting us and them, in himself, as Head of all. In the other parts of the Temple it is to be sprinkled daily. Here, in the militant Church upon earth, there is still a reconciliation to be made; not only toward one another, in the band of charity, but in ourselves. In ourselves we may find things in heaven, and things on earth to reconcile. There is a heavenly zeal, but if it be not reconciled to discretion, there is a heavenly purity, but if it be not reconciled to the bearing of one another's infirmities, there is a heavenly liberty, but if it be not reconciled to a care, for the prevention of scandal, All things in our heaven, and our earth are not reconciled in Christ. In a word, till the flesh and the spirit be reconciled, this reconciliation is not accomplished. For, neither spirit, nor flesh must be destroyed in us; a spiritual man is not all spirit, he is a man still. But than is flesh and spirit reconciled in Christ, when in all the faculties of the soul, and all the organs of the body we glorify him in this world; for then, in the next world we shall be glorified by him, and with him, in soul, and in body too, where we shall be thoroughly reconciled to one another, no suits, no controversies; and thoroughly to the Angels; Mat. 22.30. Luc. 20.36. when we shall not only be sieut Angeli, as the Angels in some one property, but aequales Angelis, equal to the Angels in all, for, Non erunt duae societates Angelorum & hominum, Men and Angels shall not make two companies, sed omnium beatitudo erit, uni adhaerere Deo, August. this shall be the blessedness of them both, to be united in one head, Christ Jesus. And these reconcilings are reconcilings enough; for these are all that are in heaven and earth. If you will reconcile things in heaven, and earth, with things in hell, that is a reconciling out of this Text. If you will mingle the service of God, and the service of this world, there is no reconciling of God and Mammon in this Text. If you will mingle a true religion, and a false religion, there is no reconciling of God and Belial in this Text. For the adhering of persons born within the Church of Rome, to the Church of Rome, our law says nothing to them if they come; But for reconciling to the Church of Rome, by persons born within the Allegiance of the King, or for persuading of men to be so reconciled, our law hath called by an infamous and Capital name of Treason, and yet every Tavern, and Ordinary is full of such Traitors. Every place from jest to earnest is filled with them; from the very stage to the deathbed; At a Comedy they will persuade you, as you sit, as you laugh, And in your sickness they will persuade you, as you lie, as you die. And not only in the bed of sickness, but in the bed of wantonness they persuade too; and there may be examples of women, that have thought it a fit way to gain a soul, by prostituting themselves, and by entertaining unlawful love, with a purpose to convert a servant, which is somewhat a strange Topique, to draw arguments of religion from. Let me see a Dominican and a Jesuit reconciled, in doctrinal papistry, for freewill and predestination, Let me see a French papist and an Italian papist reconciled in State-papistry, for the Pope's jurisdiction, Let me see the Jesuits, and the secular priests reconciled in England, and when they are reconciled to one another, let them press reconciliation to their Church. To end all, Those men have their bodies from the earth, and they have their souls from heaven; and so all things in earth and heaven are reconciled: but they have their Doctrine from the Devil; and for things in hell, there is no peace made, and with things in hell, there is no reconciliation to be had by the blood of his Cross, except we will tread that blood under our feet, and make a mock of Christ Jesus, and crucify the Lord of Life again. SERMON II. Preached at Paul's, upon Christmas Day, in the Evening. 1624. ESAIAH. 7.14. Part of the first Lesson, that Evening. Therefore the Lord shall give you a sign; Behold, a Virgin shall conceive, and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel. SAint Bernard spent his consideration upon three remarkable conjunctions, this Day. First, a Conjunction of God, and Man in one person, Christ Jesus; Then a conjunction of the incompatible Titles, Maid and Mother, in one blessed woman, the blessed Virgin Mary: And thirdly a conjunction of Faith, and the Reason of man, that so believes, and comprehends those two conjunctions. Let us accompany these three with another strange conjunction, in the first word of this Text, Propterea, Therefore; for that joins the anger of God, and his mercy together. God chides and rebukes the King Achaz by the Prophet, he is angry with him, and Therefore, says the Text, because he is angry he will give him a sign, a seal of mercy, Therefore the Lord shall give you a sign, Behold, a Virgin, etc. This Therefore, shall therefore be a first part of this Exercise, That God takes any occasion to show mercy; And a second shall be, The particular way of his mercy, declared here, Divisie. The Lord shall give you a sign; And then a third and last, what this sign was, Behold, a Virgin, etc. In these three parts, we shall walk by these steps; Having made our entrance into the first, with that general consideration, that God's mercy is always in season, upon that station, upon that height we shall look into the particular occasions of God's mercy here, what this King Achaz had done to alien God, and to avert his mercy, and in those two branches we shall determine that part. In the second, we shall also first make this general entrance, That God persists in his own ways, goes forward with his own purposes, And then what his way, and his purpose here was, he would give them a sign: and farther we shall not extend that second part. In the third we have more steps to make; First, what this sign is in general, it is, that there is a Redeemer given. And then how, thus; First, Virgo concipiet, a Virgin shall conceive, she shall be a Virgin then; And Virgo pariet, a Virgin shall bring forth, she shall be a Virgin then; And Pariet filium, she shall bear a Son, and therefore he is of her substance, not only man, but man of her; And this Virgin shall call this Son Immanuel, God with us, that is, God and Man in one person. Though the Angel at the Conception tell joseph, That he shall call his name Jesus, Mat. 1.21. and tell Mary herself, that she shall call his name Jesus, Luc. 1.31. yet the blessed Virgin herself shall have a further reach, a clearer illustration, She shall call his name Immanuel, God with us: Others were called jesus, josuah was so, divers others were so; but, in the Scriptures there was never any but Christ called Immanuel. Though jesus signify a Saviour, joseph was able to call this child jesus, upon a more peculiar reason, and way of salvation then others who had that name, because they had saved the people from present calamities, and imminent dangers; for, the Angel told joseph, that he should therefore be called jesus, because he should save the people from their sins; and so, no josuah, no other jesus was a jesus. But the blessed Virgin saw more than this; not only that he should be such a jesus as should save them from their sins, but she saw the manner how, that he should be Immanuel, God with us, God and man in one person; That so, being Man, he might suffer, and being God, that should give an infinite value to his sufferings, according to the contract passed between the Father and him; and so he should be jesus, a Saviour, a Saviour from sin, and this by this way and means. And then that all this should be established, and declared by an infallible sign, with this Ecce, Behold; That whosoever can call upon God by that name Immanuel, that is, confess Christ to be come in the flesh, that Man shall have an Ecce, a light, a sign, a token, an assurance that this Immanuel, this Jesus, this Saviour belongs unto him, and he shall be able to say, Ecce, Behold, mine eyes have seen thy salvation. We begin with that which is elder than our beginning, 1 Part. Psal. 101.1. and shall over-live our end, The mercy of God. I will sing of thy mercy and judgement, says David; when we fix ourselves upon the meditation and modulation of the mercy of God, even his judgements cannot put us out of tune, but we shall sing, and be cheerful, even in them. As God made grass for beasts, before he made beasts, and beasts for man, before he made man: As in that first generation, the Creation, so in the regeneration, our re-creating, he gins with that which was necessary for that which follows, Mercy before Judgement. Nay, to say that mercy was first, is but to post-date mercy; to prefer mercy but so, is to diminish mercy; The names of first or last derogate from it, for first and last are but rags of time, and his mercy hath no relation to time, no limitation in time, it is not first, nor last, but eternal, everlasting; Let the Devil make me so far desperate as to conceive a time when there was no mercy, and he hath made me so far an Atheist, as to conceive a time when there was no God; if I despoil him of his mercy, any one minute, and say, now God hath no mercy, for that minute I discontinue his very Godhead, and his being. Later Grammarians have wrung the name of mercy out of misery; Misericordia praesumit miseriam, say these, there could be no subsequent mercy, if there were no precedent misery; But the true root of the word mercy, through all the Prophets, is Racham, and Racham is diligere, to love; as long as there hath been love (and God is love) there hath been mercy: And mercy considered externally, and in the practice and in the effect, began not at the helping of man, when man was fallen and become miserable, but at the making of man, when man was nothing. So then, here we consider not mercy as it is radically in God, and an essential attribute of his, but productively in us, as it is an action, a working upon us, and that more especially, as God takes all occasions to exercise that action, and to shed that mercy upon us: for particular mercies are feathers of his wings, and that prayer, Lord let thy mercy lighten upon us, as our trust is in thee, is our birdlime; particular mercies are that cloud of Quails which hovered over the host of Israel, and that prayer, Lord let thy mercy lighten upon us, is our net to catch, our Gomer to fill of those Quails. The air is not so full of Moats, of Atoms, as the Church is of Mercies; and as we can suck in no part of air, but we take in those Moats, those Atoms; so here in the Congregation we cannot suck in a word from the preacher, we cannot speak, we cannot sigh a prayer to God, but that that whole breath and air is made of mercy. But we call not upon you from this Text, to consider Gods ordinary mercy, that which he exhibites to all in the ministry of his Church; nor his miraculous mercy, his extraordinary deliverances of States and Churches; but we call upon particular Consciences, by occasion of this Text, to call to mind God's occasional mercies to them; such mercies as a regenerate man will call mercies, though a natural man would call them accidents, or occurrences, or contingencies; A man wakes at midnight full of unclean thoughts, and he hears a passing Bell; this is an occasional mercy, if he call that his own knell, and consider how unfit he was to be called out of the world then, how unready to receive that voice, Fool, this night they shall fetch away thy soul. The adulterer, whose eye waits for the twilight, goes forth, and casts his eyes upon forbidden houses, and would enter, and sees a Lord have mercy upon us upon the door; this is an occasional mercy, if this bring him to know that they who lie sick of the plague within, pass through a furnace, but by God's grace, to heaven; and he without, carries his own furnace to hell, his lustful loins to everlasting perdition. What an occasional mercy had Balaam, when his Ass Catechised him? What an occasional mercy had one Thief, when the other catechised him so, Art not thou afraid being under the same condemnation? What an occasional mercy had all they that saw that, when the Devil himself fought for the name of Jesus, and wounded the sons of Sceva for exorcising in the name of Jesus, Act. 19.14. with that indignation, with that increpation, jesus we know, and Paul we know, but who are ye? If I should declare what God hath done (done occasionally) for my soul, where he instructed me for fear of falling, where he raised me when I was fallen, perchance you would rather fix your thoughts upon my illness, and wonder at that, then at God's goodness, and glorify him in that; rather wonder at my sins, then at his mercies, rather consider how ill a man I was, then how good a God he is. If I should inquire upon what occasion God elected me, and writ my name in the book of Life, I should sooner be afraid that it were not so, then find a reason why it should be so. God made Sun and Moon to distinguish seasons, and day, and night, and we cannot have the fruits of the earth but in their seasons: But God hath made no decree to distinguish the seasons of his mercies; In paradise, the fruits were ripe, the first minute, and in heaven it is always Autumn, his mercies are ever in their maturity. We ask panem quetidianum, our daily bread, and God never says you should have come yesterday, he never says you must again to morrow, but to day if you will hear his voice, to day he will hear you. If some King of the earth have so large an extent of Dominion, in North, and South, as that he hath Winter and Summer together in his Dominions, so large an extent East and West, as that he hath day and night together in his Dominions, much more hath God mercy and judgement together: He brought light out of darkness, not out of a lesser light; he can bring thy Summer out of Winter, though thou have no Spring; though in the ways of fortune, or understanding, or conscience, thou have been benighted till now, wintered and frozen, clouded and eclipsed, damped and benumbed, smothered and stupefied till now, now God comes to thee, not as in the dawning of the day, not as in the bud of the spring, but as the Sun at noon to illustrate all shadows, as the sheaves in harvest, to fill all penuries, all occasions invite his mercies, and all times are his seasons. If it were not thus in general, it would never have been so in this particular, in our case, Achaz case. in the Text, in King Achaz; If God did not seek occasion to do good to all, he would never have found occasion to do good to King Achaz. Subjects are to look upon the faults of Princes, with the spectacles of obedience, and reverence, to their place, and persons; little and dark spectacles, and so their faults, and errors are to appear little, and excusable to them; God's perspective glass, his spectacle is the whole world; he looks not upon the Sun, in his sphere only, but as he works upon the whole earth: And he looks upon Kings, not only what harm they do at home, but what harm they occasion abroad; & through that spectacle, the faults of Princes, in God's eye, are multiplied, fare above those of private men. Achaz had such faults, and yet God sought occasion of Mercy. jotham, his Father, is called a good King, and yet all Idolatry was not removed in his time, and he was a good King, for all that. Achaz is called ill, both because himself sacrificed Idolatrously, (And the King was a commanding person) And because he made the Priest Vriah to do so, (And the Priest was an exemplar person) And because he made his Son commit the abominations of the heathen; (And the actions of the King's Son pierce far in leading others.) Achaz had these faults, and yet God fought occasion of mercy. If the evening sky be red, Mat. 16.2. you promise yourselves a fair day, says Christ; you would not do so if the evening were black and cloudy: when you see the fields white with corn, you say harvest is ready; Joh. 4.35. Esay 1.19. you would not do so if they were white with frost. If ye consent, and obey, you shall eat the good things of the Land, says God in the Prophet; shall ye do so if you refuse, and rebel? Achaz did, and yet God sought occasion of mercy. There arise diseases for which there is no probatum est, in all the books of Physicians; There is scarce any sin of which we have not had experiments of God's mercies; He concludes with no sin, excludes no occasion, precludes no person: And so we have done with our first part, God's general disposition, for the Rule, declared in Achaz case for the example. Our second part consists of a Rule, and an Example too: 2 Part. The Rule, That God goes forward in his own ways, proceeds, as he begun, in mercy; The Example, what his proceeding, what his subsequent mercy to Achaz was. One of the most convenient Hieroglyphics of God, is a Circle; and a Circle is endless; whom God loves, he loves to the end: and not only to their own end, to their death, but to his end, and his end is, that he might love them still. His hailstones, and his thunderbolts, and his showers of blood (emblems and instruments of his Judgements) fall down in a direct line, and affect and strike some one person, or place: His Sun, and Moon, and Stars, (Emblems and Instruments of his Blessings) move circularly, and communicate themselves to all. His Church is his chariot; in that, he moves more gloriously, then in the Sun; as much more, as his begotten Son exceeds his created Sun, and his Son of glory, and of his right hand, the Sun of the firmament; and this Church, his chariot, moves in that communicable motion, circularly; It began in the East, it came to us, and is passing now, shining out now, in the farthest West. As the Sun does not set to any Nation, but withdraw itself, and return again; God, in the exercise of his mercy, does not set to thy soul, though he benight it with an affliction. Remember that our Saviour Christ himself, in many actions and passions of our humane nature, and infirmities, smothered that Divinity, and suffered it not to work, but yet it was always in him, and wrought most powerfully in the deepest danger; when he was absolutely dead, it raised him again: If Christ slumbered the Godhead in himself, The mercy of God may be slumbered, it may be hidden from his servants, but it cannot be taken away, and in the greatest necessities, it shall break out. The Blessed Virgin was overshadowed, but it was with the Holy Ghost that overshadowed her: Thine understanding, thy conscience may be so too, and yet it may be the work of the Holy Ghost, who moves in thy darkness, and will bring light even out of that, knowledge out of thine ignorance, clearness out of thy scruples, and consolation out of thy Dejection of Spirit. God is thy portion, says David; David does not speak so narrowly, so penuriously, as to say, God hath given thee thy portion, and thou must look for no more; but, God is thy portion, and as long as he is God, he hath more to give, and as long as thou art his, thou hast more to receive. Thou canst not have so good a Title, to a subsequent blessing, as a former blessing; where thou art an ancient tenant, thou wilt look to be preferred before a stranger; and that is thy title to God's future mercies, if thou have been formerly accustomed to them. The Sun is not weary with six thousand years shining; God cannot be weary of doing good; And therefore never say, God hath given me these and these temporal things, and I have scattered them wastefully, surely he will give me no more; These and these spiritual graces, and I have neglected them, abused them, surely he will give me no more; For, for things created, we have instruments to measure them; we know the compass of a Meridian, and the depth of a Diameter of the Earth, and we know this, even of the uppermost sphere in the heavens: But when we come to the Throne of God himself, the Orb of the Saints, and Angels that see his face, and the virtues, and powers that flow from thence, we have no balance to weigh them, no instruments to measure them, no hearts to conceive them: So, for temporal things, we know the most that man can have; for we know all the world; but for God's mercy, and his spiritual graces, as that language in which God spoke, the Hebrew, hath no superlative, so, that which he promises, in all that he hath spoken, his mercy hath no superlative; he shows no mercy, which you can call his Greatest Mercy, his Mercy is never at the highest; whatsoever he hath done for thy soul, or for any other, in applying himself to it, he can exceed that. Only he can raise a Tower, whose top shall reach to heaven: The Basis of the highest building is but the Earth; But though thou be but a Tabernacle of Earth, God shall raise thee piece by piece, into a spiritual building; And after one Story of Creation, and another of Vocation, and another of Sanctification, he shall bring thee up, to meet thyself, in the bosom of thy God, where thou wast at first, in an eternal election: God is a circle himself, and he will make thee one; Go not thou about to square either circle, to bring that which is equal in itself, to Angles, and Corners, into dark and sad suspicions of God, or of thyself, that God can give, or that thou canst receive no more Mercy, than thou hast had already. This then is the course of God's mercy, Signum. He proceeds as he begun, which was the first branch of this second part; It is always in motion, and always moving towards All, always perpendicular, right over every one of us, and always circular, always communicable to all; And then the particular beam of this Mercy, shed upon Achaz here in our Text, is, Dabit signum, The Lord shall give you a sign. It is a great Degree of Mercy, that he affords us signs. A natural man is not made of Reason alone, but of Reason, and Sense: A Regenerate man is not made of Faith alone, but of Faith and Reason; and Signs, external things, assist us all. In the Creation, it was part of the office of the Sun and Moon, to be significative; he created them for signs, as well as for seasons: he directed the Jews to Christ, by signs, by sacrifices, and Sacraments, and ceremonies; and he entertains us with Christ, by the same means to; we know where to find Christ; In his House, in his Church; And we know at what sign he dwells; where the Word is rightly Preached, and the Sacraments duly administered. Calvin. It is truly, and wisely said, Sic habenda fides verbo Dei, ut subsidia minimè contemnamus; We must so fare satisfy ourselves, with the word of God, as that we despise not those other subsidiary helps, which God in his Church hath afforded us: which is true (as of Sacraments especially) so of other Sacramental, and Ritual, and Ceremonial things, which assist the working of the Sacraments, though they infuse no power into the Sacraments. For, therefore does the Prophet say, V 13. when Achaz refused a sign, Is it a small thing to weary (or disobey) men, but that you will weary (disobey) God himself? He disobeyes God, in the way of contumacy, who refuses his signs, his outward assistances, his ceremonies which are induced by his authority, derived from him, upon men, in his Church, and so made a part, or a help, of his ordinary service, as Sacraments, and Sacramental things are. There are signs of another sort, not fixed by God's Ordinance, but signs which particular men, have sometimes desired at God's hand, for a farther manifestation of God's will, in which, it is not, otherwise, already fully manifested, and revealed. For, to seek such signs, in things which are sufficiently declared by God, or to seek them, with a resolution, That I will leave a duty undone, except I receive a sign, this is to tempt God, and to seek a way to excuse myself, for not doing that, which I was bound to do, by the strength of an old commandment, and ought not to look for a new sign. But the greatest fault in this kind, is, that if God, of his abundant goodness, do give me a sign, for my clearer directions, and I resist that sign, I dispute against that sign, I turn it another way, upon nature, upon fortune, upon mistaking, that so I may go mine own way, and not be bound, by believing that sign to be from God, to go that way, to which God by that sign calls me. And this was Achaz case; God spoke unto him, and said, V 11. Ask a sign (that he would deliver him, from the enemy, that besieged Jerusalem) and he said, I will not ask a sign, nor tempt God; For, though St. Augustine, and some with him, ascribe this refusal of Achaz, to a religious modesty, yet St. Hierome, and with him, the greatest party, justly impute this, for a fault to Achaz: both because the sign was offered him from God, and not sought by himself, (which is the case that is most subject to error) And because the Prophet, who understood God's mind, and the King's mind to, taketh knowledge of it, as of a great fault, In this, thou hast contemned, and wearied, not Man but God. For, though there be but a few cases, in which we may put God to give a sign, (for Christ calls the Pharisees an evil, and an adulterous generation, therefore, Mat. 12.39. Exod. 4. because they sought a sign) yet God gave Moses a sign, of a Rod changed into a Serpent, and a sign of good flesh changed into leprous, and leprous into good, unasked: And after, Abraham asks a sign, whereby shall I know, that I shall inherit the land? Gen. 15.8. Jud. 6.36. and God gave him a sign. So Gideon, in a modest timorousness asks a sign, and presses God to a second sign: First, he would have all the dew upon the fleece, and then, none of the dew upon the fleece. God does give signs, and when he does so, he gives also irradiations, illustrations of the understanding, that they may be discerned to be his signs; and when they are so, it is but a pretended modesty, to say, we will not tempt God to ask a sign, we will not trouble God to tell us whether this be a sign or no, but against all significations from God, go on, as though all were but natural accidents. God gives signs rectè petentibus, to them that ask them upon due grounds, (so to Abraham, so to Gideon) And it is too long for this time, to put cases, when a man may or may not put God to a sign; He gives signs also Non petentibus, without being asked, to illustrate the case, and to confirm the person, and so he did to Moses. Both these are high expressions of his mercy; for what binds God, to begin with man, and give him a sign before he ask; or to wait upon man, and give it him, when he asks? But the highest of all, is, to persever in his mercy so far, as to give a sign, though upon the offer thereof, it be refused; And that is Achaz case: Ask ye, says God, And, I will not, says Achaz, and then, It is not Quamvis, for all that, though thou refuse, but it is Propterea, Therefore, because thou refusest, The Lord himself shall give thee a sign. His fault is carried thus high: Because he had treasure to pay an army, because he had contracted with the Assyrians to assist him with men, therefore he refuses the assistance offered by the Prophet from God, and would feign go his own ways, and yet would have a religious pretext, He will not tempt God. Nay his fault is carried thus much higher, That which we read, Non tentabo, I will not tempt, is in the Original, Nasas; and Nasas is non Extollam, non glorificabo, I will not glorify God so much, that is, I will not be beholden to God for this victory, I will not take him into the league for this action, I will do it of myself: And yet, (and then, who shall doubt of the largeness of God's mercy?) God proceeds in his purpose: Ask a sign, will ye not? Therefore the Lord shall give you a sign: Because you will do nothing for yourself, the Lord shall do all; which is so transcendent a mercy, as that, howsoever God afforded it to Achaz here, we can promise it to no man hereafter. We are come to our third part, 3. Part. which is more peculiar to this Day: It is, first, what the sign is in general, And then, some more particular circumstances, Behold a Virgin shall conceive, etc. In general then, the sign that God gives Achaz and his company, is, That there shall be a Messiah, a Redeemer given. Now, how is this future thing, (There shall be a Messiah) a sign of their present deliverance from that siege? First, In the notion of the Prophet, it was not a future thing; for, as in Gods own sight, so in their sight, Esay 3.6. to whom he opens himself, future things are present. So this Prophet says, Puer datus, filius natus, unto us a child is borne, unto us a Son is given: He was not given, he was not borne in six hundred years after that; but such is the clearness of a Prophet's sight, such is the infallibility of Gods declared purpose. So then, if the Prophet could have made the King believe, with such an assuredness, as if he had seen it done, that God would give a deliverance, to all mankind, by a Messiah, that had been sign enough, evidence enough to have argued thereupon, That God who had done so much a greater work, would also give him a deliverance from that enemy, that pressed him then: If I can fix myself, with the strength of faith, upon that which God hath done for man; I cannot doubt of his mercy, in any distress: If I lack a sign, I seek no other but this, That God was made man for me; which the Church and Church-writers, have well expressed by the word Incarnation, for that acknowledges, and denotes, that God was made my flesh: It were not so strange, that he who is spirit, should be made my spirit, my soul, but he was made my flesh: Therefore have the Fathers delighted themselves, in the variation of that word; so far, as that Hilary calls it Corporationem, That God assumed my Body; And Damascen calls it Inhumanationem, That God became this man, soul and body; And Irenaeus calls it Adunationem, and Nysen Contemperationem, A mingling, says one, an uniting, says the other, of two, of God and man, in one person. Shall I ask, what needs all this? what needed God to have put himself to this? I may say with S. Augustine, Alio modo poterat Deus nos liberare, sed si aliter faceret, similiter vestrae stultitiae displiceret: What other way soever God had taken for our salvation, our curiosity would no more have been satisfied in that way, than in this: But God having chosen the way of Redemption, which was the way of Justice, God could do no otherwise: Si homo non vicisset inimicum hominis, non justè victus esset inimicus, says Irenaeus; As, if a man should get a battle by the power of the Devil, without fight, this were not a just victory; so, if God, in man's behalf, had conquered the devil, without man, without dying, it had not been a just conquest. I must not ask why God took this way, to Incarnate his Son; And shall I ask how this was done? I do not ask how Rheubarb, or how Aloes came by this, or this virtue, to purge this, or this humour in my body: In talibus rebus, tota ratio facti, est potentia facientis: Even in natural things, all the reason of all that is done, August. is the power, and the will of him, who infused that virtue into that creature. And therefore much more, when we come to these supernatural points, such as this birth of Christ, we embrace S. Basils' modesty, and abstinence, Nativitas ista silentio honoretur, This mystery is not so well celebrated, with our words, and discourse, as with a holy silence, and meditation: Immo potius ne cogitationibus permittatur, Nay, (says that Father) there may be danger in giving ourselves leave, to think or study too much of it. Ne dixer is quando, says he, praeteri hanc interrogationem: Ask not thyself overcuriously, when this mystery was accomplished; be not over-vehement, over-peremptory, (so far, as to the perplexing of thine own reason and understanding, or so far, as to the despising of the reasons of other men) in calculating the time, the day or hour of this nativity: Praeteri hanc interrogationem, pass over this question, in good time, and with convenient satisfaction, Quando, when Christ was borne; But noli inquirere Quomodo, (says S. Basil still) never come to that question, how it was done, cum ad hoc nihil sit quod responderi possit, for God hath given us no faculties to comprehend it, no way to answer it. That's enough, which we have in S. john, Every spirit, that confesses, that jesus is come in the flesh, is of God: 1 joh. 4.2. for, since it was a coming of jesus, jesus was before; so he was God; and since he came in the flesh, he is now made man; And, that God and Man, are so met, is a sign to me, that God, and I, shall never be parted. This is the sign in general; That God hath had such a care of all men, Virgo. is a sign to me, That he hath a care of me: But then there are signs of this sign; Divers; All these; A Virgin shall conceive, A Virgin shall bring forth, Bring forth a Son, And (whatsoever have been prophesied before) she shall call his name Immanuel. First, a Virgin shall be a mother, which is a very particular sign, and was seen but once. That which Gellius, and Pliny say, that a Virgin had a child, almost 200. years before Christ, that which Genebrard says, that the like fell out in France, in his time, are not within our faith, and they are without our reason; our faith stoops not down to them, and our Reason reaches not up to them; of this Virgin in our text, If that be true, which Aquinas citys out of the Roman story, that in the times of Constantine and Irene, upon a dead body found in a sepulchre, there was found this inscription, in a plate of gold, Christus nascetur ex Virgin, & ego credo in eum, Christ shall be borne of a Virgin, and I believe in that Christ, with this addition, in that inscription, O Sol, sub Irenae, & Constantini temporibus, iterum me videbis, Though I be now buried from the sight of the sun, yet in Constantine's time, the sun shall see me again; If this be true, yet our ground is not upon such testimony; If God had not said it, I would never have believed it. And therefore I must have leave to doubt of that which some of the Roman Casuists have delivered, That a Virgin may continue a virgin upon earth, and receive the particular dignity of a Virgin in Heaven, and yet have a child, by the insinuation and practice of the Devil; so that there shall be a father, and a mother, and yet both they Virgins. That this Mother, in our text, was a Virgin, is a peculiar, a singular sign, given, as such, by God; never done but then; and it is a singular testimony, how acceptable to God, that state of virginity is; He does not dishonour physic, that magnifies health; nor does he dishonour marriage, that praises Virginity; let them embrace that state, that can; and certainly, many more might do it, then do, if they would try whether they could, or no; and if they would follow S. Cyprians way, Virgo non tantum esse, sed & intelligi esse debet, & credi: It is not enough for a virgin to be a virgin in her own knowledge, but she must govern herself so, as that others may see, that she is one, and see, that she hath a desire, and a disposition, to continue so still; Ita, ut nemo, cum virginem viderit, dubitet an sit virgo, says that Father, She must appear in such garments, in such language, and in such motions, (for, as a wife may wear other clothes, so she may speak other words, than a virgin may do) as they that see her, may not question, nor dispute, whether she be a maid or no. The word in the Text, is derived à latendo, from retiring, from privateness: And Tertullian, who makes the note, notes withal, that Ipsa concupiscentia non latendi, non est pudica, The very concupiscence of conversation, and visits, is not chaste: Studium placendi, publicatione sui, periclitatur, says the same Author: Curious dress are for public eyes; and the Virgin that desires to publish herself, is weary of that state: It is usefully added by him, Dum percutitur oculis alienis, frons duratur, & pudor teritur, the eyes of others, that strike upon her, (if she be willing to stand out that battery) dry up that blood, that should blush, and wear out that chastity, which should be preserved. So precious is virginity in God's eye, as that he looks upon that, with a more jealous eye, than upon other states. This blessed Mother of God, in our text, was a Virgin: when? Virgo concipiet, Contepit. says our Text, A Virgin shall conceive, when she conceived, she was a Virgin. There are three Heresies; all noted by S. Augustine that impeach the virginity of this most blessed Woman: The Cerinthians said she conceived by ordinary generation; jovinian said, she was delivered by ordinary means; And Helvidius said, she had children after: All against all the world besides themselves, and against one another. For the first, that is enough which S. Basil says, that if the word Virgin in our text signified no more but adolescentulam, a young woman (as they pretend) it had been an impertinent, an absurd thing for the Prophet to have made that a sign, and a wonder, that a young woman should have a child. This is enough, but that is abundantly enough, that S. Matthew, who spoke with the same spirit that Esay did, says in a word, which can admit no misinterpretation, That that was fulfilled which Esay had said, A Virgin shall conceive; Mat. 1.23. S. Matthews word without question, is a Virgin, and not a young woman, and S. Matthew took Esaies' word to be so too; and S. Matthew (at least he that spoke in S. Matthew) did not, could not mistake, and mistake himself, for it was one and the same Holy Ghost that spoke both. Ps. 21. Christ says therefore of himself, vermis sum, I am a worm, but says S. Ambrose, vermis de Manna, a worm out of a pure substance, a holy Man, from a blessed Virgin; Virgo concepit, she was a Virgin then, then when she had conceived. She was so to, In partu. In partu, then when she was delivered; jovinian denied that: A better than he (Tertullian) denied it: Virgo quantum à viro, non quantum à partu, says he, she was such a Virgin as knew no man, not such a Virgin as needed no midwife: Virgo concepit, says he, in partu nupsit, a Virgin in her conception, but a wife in the deliverance of her Son. Let that be wrapped up amongst Tertullia's errors, he had many; The text clears it, A virgin shall conceive, a virgin shall bear a Son: The Apostles Creed clears it, says S. August: when it says, Born of the Virgin Mary; and S. Ambrose clears it, when he says, with such indignation, De via iniquitat is produntur dicere, virgo concepit, sed non virgo generavit, It is said, that there are some men so impious, as to deny that she remained a Virgin at the birth of her Son: S. Ambrose wondered there should be, scarce believed it to be any other than a rumour, or a slander, that there could be any so impious, as to deny that: Cramerus. And yet there have been some so impious, as to charge Calvin, with that impiety, with denying her to be a Virgin then; It is true, he makes it not a matter of faith, to defend her perpetual virginity; but that's not this case, of her Virginity in her Deliverance: And even of that, (of her perpetual virginity) he says thus, Nemo unquam quaestionem movebit, nisi curiofus, nemo pertinaciter insistet, nisi contentiosus rixator; He is overcurious, that will make any doubt of it; but no man will persist in the denial of it, but a contentious wrangler; And in that very point, S. Basil says fully as much, as Calvin. But, at his birth, and after his birth, there is evidence enough in this text, A Virgin shall conceive, A Virgin shall bring forth, A Virgin shall call him Immanuel, In all those future, and subsequent Acts, still it is the same person, and in the same condition. Pariet, Filium. & pariet filium, She shall bring forth a Son; If a Son, then of the substance of his Mother; that the Anabaptists deny; But had it not been so, Christ had not been true Man, and then, man were yet unredeemed. He is her Son, but not her ward; his Father cannot die: Her Son, but yet he asked her no leave, to stay at Jerusalem, nor to dispute with the Doctors, nor to go about his Father's work: His settling of Religion, his governing the Church, his dispensing of his graces, is not by warrant from her: They that call upon the Bishop of Rome, in that voice, Impera Regibus, command Kings and Emperors, admit of that voice, Imperafilio, to her, that she should command her Sonno. The natural obedience of children to Parents, holds not in such civil things, as are public; A woman may be a Queen-Dowager, and yet a subject; The blessed Virgin Mary may be in a high rank, Luk. 1.28. and yet no Sovereign; Blessed art thou amongst women, says the Angel to her; Amongst women, above women; but not above any person of the Trinity, that she should command her Son. Luther was awake, and risen, but he was not ready; He had seen light, and looked toward it, but yet saw not so clearly by it, then, when he said, That the blessed Virgin was of a middle condition, between Christ, and man; that man hath his conception, and his quickening (by the infusion of the soul) in original sin; that Christ had it in neither, no sin in his conception, none in his inanimation, in the infusion of his soul; But, says Luther, howsoever it were at the conception, certainly at the inanimation, at the quickening, she was preserved from original sin. Now, what needs this? may I not say, that I had rather be redeemed by Christ Jesus then be innocent? rather be beholden to Christ's death, for my salvation, then to Adam's standing in his innocence. Epiphanius said enough, Par detrimentum afferunt religioni, they hurt Religion as much, that ascribe too little, to the blessed Virgin, as they who ascribe too much; much is due to her, and this amongst the rest, That she had so clear notions, above all others, what kind of person, her Son was, that as Adam gave names, according to natures, so the Prophet here leaves it to her, to name her Son, according to his office, She shall call his name Immanuel. We told you at first, Immanuel. that both joseph and Mary, were told by the Angel, that his name was to be Jesus, and we told you also, that others, besides him, had been called by that name of Jesus: but, as, though others were called Jesus, (for josuah is called so, Heb. 4.8. If jesus had given them rest; that is, If josuah had etc. And the son of josedech is called so, throughout the Prophet Aggai) yet there is observed a difference in the pointing, and founding of those names, from this our Jesus: so though other women were called Mary, as well as the blessed Virgin, yet the Evangelists, evermore make a difference, between her name, and the other Maries; for Her they call Mariam, and the rest Maria. Now this Jesus, in this person, is a real, an actual Saviour, he that hath already really, and actually accomplished our salvation; But the blessed Virgin had a clearer illustration, than all that; for she only knew, or she knew best, the capacity, in which he could be a Saviour, that is, as he is Immanuel, God with us; for she, and she only knew, that he was the Son of God, and not of natural generation by man. How much is enwrapped in this name Immanuel, and how little time to unfold it? I am afraid none at all; A minute will serve to repeat that which S. Bernard says, and a day, a life will not serve to comprehend it; (for to comprehend is not to know a thing, as far as I can know it, but to know it as far, as that thing can be known; and so only God, can comprehend God.) Immanuel est verbuminfans, says the Father; He is the ancient of days, and yet in minority; he is the Word itself, and yet speechless; he that is All, that all the Prophets spoke of, cannot speak: He adds more, He is Puer sapiens, but a child, and yet wiser than the elders, wiser in the Cradle, than they in the Chair: He is more, Deus lactens, God, at whose breasts all creatures suck, sucking at his Mother's breast, and such a Mother, as is a maid. Immanuel is God with us; it is not we with God: God seeks us, comes to us, before we to him: And it is God with us, in that notion, in that termination, El, which is Deus fortis, The powerful God; not only i● infirmity, as when he died in our nature, but as he is Deus fortis, able and ready to assist, and deliver us, in all encumbrances; so he is with us; And with us, usque ad consummationem, till the end of the world, in his Word, and in the Sacraments: for, though I may not say, as some have said, That by the word of Consecration, Cornelius. in the administration of the Sacrament, Christ is so infallibly produced, as that, if Christ had never been incarnate before, yet, at the pronouncing of those words of consecration, he must necessarily be incarnate then, yet I may say, that God is as effectually present, with every worthy receiver, as that he is not more effectually present with the Saints in Heaven. And this is that, which is intimated in that word, which we seposed at first, Ecce. for the last of all, Ecce, Behold; Behold, a Virgin shall conceive etc. God does not furnish a room, and leave it dark; he sets up lights in it; his first care was, that his benefits should be seen; he made light first, and then creatures, to be seen by that light: He sheds himself from my mouth, upon the whole auditory here; he pours himself from my hand, to all the Communicants at the table; I can say to you all here, The grace of our Lord jesus Christ be with you, and remain with you all; I can say to them all there, The Body of our Lord jesus Christ which was given for you, preserve you to everlasting life: I can bring it so near; but only the worthy hearer, and the worthy receiver, can call this Lord, this Jesus, this Christ, Immanuel, God with us; only that Virgin soul, devirginated in the blood of Adam, but restored in the blood of the Lamb, hath this Ecce, this testimony, this assurance, that God is with him; they that have this Ecce, this testimony, in a rectified conscience, are Godfathers to this child Jesus, and may call him Immanuel, God with us; for, as no man can deceive God, so God can deceive no man; God cannot live in the dark himself, neither can he leave those, who are his, in the dark: If he be with thee, he will make thee see, that he is with thee; and never go out of thy sight, till he have brought thee, where thou canst never go out of his. SERMON III. Preached upon Christmas day, at S. Paul's, 1625. GALAT. 4.4. & 5. But when the fullness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the Law, to redeem them that were under the Law, that we might receive the adoption of Sons. WE are met here to celebrate the generation of Christ Jesus; Esay 53.8. but Generationem ejus quis enarrabit, says the Prophet, who shall declare his generation, his age? For, for his essential generation, be which he is the Son of God, the Angels, who are almost 6000. years elder than we, are no nearer to that generation of his, then if they had been made but yesterday: Eternity hath no such distinctions, no limits, no periods, no seasons, no months, no years, no days; Methusalem, who was so long lived, was no elder in respect of eternity, than David's son by Berseba, that died the first week. The first Fiat in the Creation of Adam, and the last note of the blowing of the Trumpets to judgement, (though there be between these (as it is ordinarily received) 2000 years of nature, between the Creation, and the giving of the Law by Moses, and 2000 years of the Law between that, and the coming of Christ, and 2000 years of Grace and Gospel between Christ first, and his second coming) yet this Creation and this Judgement are not a minute asunder in respect of eternity, which hath no minutes. Whence then arises all our vexation and labour, all our anxieties and anguishes, all our suits and plead, for long leases, for many lives, for many years purchase in this world, when, if we be in our way to the eternal King of the eternal kingdom, Christ Jesus, all we are not yet, all the world shall never be a minute old; Generationem ejus quis enarrabit, what tongue can declare, what heart can conceive his generation which was so long before any heart or tongue was made? But we come not now to consider that eternal generation, not Christ merely as the Son of God, but the Son of Mary too: And that generation the Holy Ghost hath told us, was in the fullness of time: When the fullness of time was come, God sent forth, etc. In which words, Divisio. we have these three considerations; First, the time of Christ's coming, and that was the fullness of time; And then, the manner of his coming, which is expressed in two degrees of humiliation, one, that he was made of a woman, the other, that he was made under the Law; And then, the third part is the purpose of his coming, which also was twofold; for first, he came to redeem them who were under the Law, All; And secondly he came, that we (we the elect of God in him) might receive adoption; When the fullness of time was come, etc. For the full consideration of this fullness of time, 〈◊〉. we shall first consider this fullness in respect of the Jews, and then in respect of all Nations, and lastly in respect of ourselves: The Jews might have seen the fullness of time, the Gentiles did (in some measure) see it, and we must (if we will have any benefit by it) see it too. It is an observation of S. Cyril, That none of the Saints of God, nor such as were noted to be exemplarily religious, and sanctified men did ever celebrate with any festival solemnity, their own birthday. Pharaoh celebrated his own Nativity, 〈◊〉 40.22. but who would make Pharaoh his example? and besides, he polluted that festival with the blood of one of his servants. Herod celebrated his Nativity, but who would think it an honour to be like Herod? and besides, he polluted that festival with the blood of john Baptist. But the just contemplation of the miseries and calamities of this life, into which our birthday is the door, and the entrance, is so far from giving any just occasion of a festival, as it hath often transported the best disposed Saints and servants of God to a distemper, to a malediction, and cursing of their birthday. 〈…〉 Cursed be the day wherein I was born, and let not that day wherein my mother bore me be blessed. Let the day perish wherein I was born, let that day be darkness, Job 3. and let not God regard it from above. How much misery is presaged to us, when we come so generally weeping into the world, that, perchance, in the whole body of history we read but of one child, Zoroaster, that laughed at his birth: What miserable revolutions and changes, what downfals, what break-necks, and precipitations may we justly think ourselves ordained to, if we consider, that in our coming into this world out of our mother's womb, we do not make account that a child comes right, except it come with the head forward, and thereby prefigure that headlong falling into calamities which it must suffer after? Though therefore the days of the Martyrs, which are for our example celebrated in the Christian Church, be ordinarily called natalitia Martyrum, the birthday of the Martyrs, yet that is not intended of their birth in this world, but of their birth in the next; when, by death their souls were new delivered of their prisons here, and they newly born into the kingdom of heaven; that day, upon that reason, the day of their death was called their birthday, and celebrated in the Church by that name. Only to Christ Jesus, the fullness of time was at his birth; not because he also had not a painful life to pass through, but because the work of our redemption was an entire work, and all that Christ said, or did, or suffered, concurred to our salvation, as well his mother's swathing him in little clouts, as josephs' shrouding him in a funeral sheet; as well his cold lying in the Manger, as his cold dying upon the Cross; as well the puer natus, as the consummatum est; as well his birth, as his death is said to have been the fullness of time. First we consider it to have been so to the Jews; for this was that fullness, Indeic. in which all the prophecies concerning the Messiah, were exactly fulfilled; Dan. 2. Hagg. 2. Mich. 5. Esay 7. That he must come whilst the Monarchy of Rome flourished; And before the Temple of Jerusalem was destroyed; That he must be born in Bethlem; That he must be born of a Virgin; His person, his actions, his passion so distinctly prophesied, so exactly accomplished, as no word being left unfulfilled, this must necessarily be a fullness of time. So fully was the time of the Messiah coming, come, that though some of the Jews say now, that there is no certain time revealed in the Scriptures when the Messiah shall come, and others of them say, that there was a time determined, and revealed, and that this time was the time, but by reason of their great sins he did not come at his time, yet when they examine their own supputations, they are so convinced with that evidence, that this was that fullness of time, that now they express a kind of conditional acknowledgement of it, by this barbarous and inhuman custom of theirs, that they always keep in readiness the blood of some Christian, with which they anoint the body of any that dies amongst them, with these words, if Jesus Christ were the Messiah, then may the blood of this Christian avail thee to salvation: So that by their doubt, and their employed consent, in this action, this was the fullness of time, when Christ Jesus did come, that the Messiah should come. It was so to the Jews, and it was so to the Gentiles too; Gontibus. It filled those wise men which dwelled so far in the East, that they followed the star from thence to Jerusalem. Herod was so full of it, that he filled the Country with streams of innocent blood, and lest he should spare that one innocent child, killed all. The two Emperors of Rome, Vespasian and Domitian were so full of it, that in jealousy of a Messiah to come then, from that race, they took special care for the destruction of all, of the posterity of David. All the whole people were so full of it, that divers false-Messiahs, Barcocab, and Moses of Crete, and others risen up, and drew, and deceived the people, as if they had been the Messiah, because that was ordinarily known, and received to be the time of his coming. And the Devil himself was so full of it, as that in his Oracles he gave that answer, That an Hebrew child should be God over all gods, and brought the Emperor to erect an Altar, to this Messiah Christ Jesus, though he knew not what he did. This was the fullness that filled Jew and Gentile, Kings and Philosophers, strangers and inhabitants, counterfeits and devils to the expectation of a Messiah; and when comes this fullness of time to us, that we feel this Messiah born in ourselves? In this fullness, in this coming of our Saviour into us, Nobis. we should find a threefold fullness in ourselves; we should find a fullness of nature (because not only of spiritual, but of natural and temporal things, all the right which we have in this world, is in, and for, and by Christ, for so we end all our prayers of all sorts, with that clause, per Dominum nostrum jesum Christum, Grant this O Lord, for our Lord and Saviour Christ jesus sake.) And we should find a fullness of grace, a daily sense of improvement growth in grace, a filling of all former vacuities, a supplying of all emptinesses in our souls, till we came to Stephen's fullness, Acts 6.3. ver. 5. & 8. Full of the holy Ghost and wisdom, and full of the holy Ghost and Faith, and full of faith and power: And so we should come to find a fullness of glory, that is an apprehension and inchoation of heaven in this life; for the glory of the next world, is not in the measure of that glory, but in the measure of my capacity; it is not that I shall have as much as any soul hath, but that I shall have as much as my soul can receive; it is not in an equality with the rest, but in a fullness in myself; And so, as I shall have a fullness of nature, that is, such an ability and such a use of natural faculties, and such a portion of the natural things of this world as shall serve to fill up God's purpose in me: And as I shall have a fullness of grace, that is, such a measure of grace as shall make me discern a tentation, and resist a tentation, or at least repent it, if I have not effectually resisted it, so even here, I shall have a fullness of glory, that is, as much of that glory as a way-faring soul is capable of in this world; All these fullness I shall have, if I can find and feel in myself this birth of Christ. His eternal birth in heaven is unexpressible, where he was born without a mother; His birth on earth is unexpressible too, where he was born without a father; but thou shalt feel the joy of his third birth in thy soul, most inexpressible this day, where he is born this day (if thou wilt) without father or mother; that is, without any former, or any other reason then his own mere goodness that should beget that love in him towards thee, and without any matter or merit in thee which should enable thee to conceive him. He had a heavenly birth, by which he was the eternal Son of God, and without that he had not been a person able to redeem thee; He had a humane birth, by which he was the Son of Mary, and without that he had not been sensible in himself of thine infirmities, and necessities; but, this day (if thou wilt) he hath a spiritual birth in thy soul, without which, both his divine, and his humane birth are utterly unprofitable to thee, and thou art no better than if there had never been Son of God in heaven, nor Son of Mary upon earth. Even the Stork in the air knoweth her appointed time, Jer. 8. and the Turtle, and the Crane, and the Swallow observe the time of their coming, but my people knoweth not the judgements of the Lord. For, if you do know your time, you know that now is your fullness of time; This is your particular Christmas-day; when, if you be but as careful to cleanse your souls, as you are your houses, if you will but follow that counsel of S. Augustine, Quicquid non vis inveniri in domo tua, non inveniat Deus in anima tua, That uncleanness which you would be loath your neighbour should find in your houses, let not God nor his Angels find in your souls, Christ Jesus is certainly born. and will as certainly grow up in your souls. We pass from this, 2 Part. to our second part, The manner of his coming; where we proposed two degrees of Christ's humiliation, That he was made of a woman, and made under the Law. In the first alone, are two degrees too, that he takes the name of the Son of a woman, and wanes the glorious name of the Son of God; And then, that he takes the name of the son of a woman, Mulieris non Dei. and wanes the miraculous name of the son of a Virgin. For the first; Christ ever refers himself to his Father; As he says, The Father which sent me, Joh. 12. gave me a commandment what I should say, and what I should speak, so, for all that which he did or suffered, Joh. 4. Joh. 16. he says, My meat is to do his will that sent me, and to finish his work: And so, though he say, I am come out from the Father, and am come into the world; yet, be where he will, still, Ego & pater unum sumus, He and his Father were all one. But divesting that glory, or slumbering it in his flesh, till the Father glorify him again with that glory, which he had with him from the beginning, in his Ascension, he humbles himself here to that addition, The Son of a woman, made of a woman. Christ waned the glorious Name of Son of God, Non Virgins. and the miraculous Name of Son of a Virgin to; which is not omitted to draw into doubt, the perpetual Virginity of the Blessed Virgin, the Mother of Christ; she is not called a woman, as though she were not a Maid; when it is said, Joseph knew her not, donec peperit, till she brought forth her Son, this did not imply his knowledge of her after, no more, than when God says to Christ, donec ponam, sit at my right hand, till I make thine enemies thy footstool, that imports, that Christ should remove from his right hand after: For, here is a perpetual donec in both places; for evermore the ancient Expositors have understood that place of Ezekiel, Ezek. 44.2. to be intended of the perpetual Virginity of Mary, This gate shall be shut, and shall not be opened, and no man shall enter by it. Solomon hath an exclamation, Is there any thing whereof a man may say, Behold this is new? and he answers himself immediately before, There is no new thing under the Sun. But behold here is a greater than Solomon, and he says now in action, by being borne of a Virgin, as he had said, long before, in Prophecy, The Lord hath created a new thing upon earth, a woman shall compass a man. Jer. 31. If this had been spoken of such a woman, as were no Maid, this had been no new thing: As it was, it was without example, and without natural reason; si ratio reddi posset, (says St. Bernard) non esset mirabile, si exempla haberemus, non esset singular; If there were reason for it, it were no miracle, if there were precedents for it, it were not singular; and God intended both, that it should be a miracle, and that it should be done but once; we see in Nature, trees do bud out, and there is an emission, and emanation of flowers, and fruits, without any help of man, or any act done by him, to that tree; we read in Genesis, That the earth had produced all plants and herbs, before either any rain fell upon it, or any man tilled it. And these are good helps, and illustrations to us, after we have believed that a Virgin brought forth a Son; but nothing deduced out of nature, could prove this at first, to any man, except he believed it before. And therefore blessed be God, that hath given us that strength, which the Egyptian Midwives said the women of Israel had, that they brought forth children, without the help of Midwives: That we can humbly believe these mysteries of our religion, by faith, without the hand, and help of Reason; Si nondum mens idonea, abstrusa investigare, sine haesitatione credantur, says St. Augustine, In things which are not subject to any faculty of ours, to be discerned by reason, there is a present exercise of our faith. As we know it to be true, that the bush, in which God spoke to Moses, was full of fire, and did burn, but not consume, because God hath said so, in his book, but yet we do not know, how that was done: so we know, (by the same evidence) that the Mother of our Saviour, was a Virgin; but for the manner of this Mystery, we rest upon Epiphanius Rule, Quaecunque dicit Deus, credamus quòd sint; quomodo, Soli Deo cognitum: whatsoever God, in his word, says, was done, let us believe it to be done; how it was done, as we know that God knows, so we are content not to inquire more than it hath been his pleasure to communicate to us. She was then, and she was always a Virgin; but because this Text is of his Humiliation, he leaves that Name that proceeds from miracle, and descends to that lower name of nature, Made of a woman. The Spirit of God foresaw, that the issue between the Church, and the Heretics would not be Virgin or no Virgin, but whether Christ were made of a woman. Some Heretics did question the first; The Helvidians denied her perpetual Virginity: But that Heresy, and some others that opposed her Virginity, vanished in a short time. But the Manichees, that lasted long, and spread fare in the old times, and the Anabaptists, which abound yet, deny that Christ was made of a woman; They say, that Christ passed through her, as water through a Pipe, but took nothing of her substance; and then, if he took not the nature of mankind, he hath not redeemed mankind. And therefore in that Prophecy of jeremy, that Christ should be borne, and in this Gospel, in our Text, that Christ was borne, the Holy Ghost mainttaines and continues that phrase, Made of a woman: And where he gins to express his Divinity in miracles, Joh. 2. at the marriage in Cana, there Christ himself calls her, by no other name, Woman, what have I to do with thee? And when he had drawn all his miracles to a glorious consummatum est, upon the Cross, he calls her there, by that name too, Woman, behold thy Son. Joh. 19 Here then was no such curious insisting upon Styles and Titles, and names of Dignities, no unkindness, no displeasure taken; if one should leave out a Right Honourable, or Right Worshipful, or an addition of an Office or Dignity; The powerfulness of Christ's birth, consists in this, That he is made of God; The miraculousness of Christ's birth, consisted in this, that he was made of a Virgin, and yet the Prophet and the Apostle, two principal Secretaries of the Holy Ghost, present him with this addition, made of a woman. Christ had one privilege in his birth, which never any Prince had, or shall have, that is, that he chose what Mother he would have, and might have been borne of what woman he would have chosen. And in this large and universal chouce, though he chose a woman full of grace to be his Mother, yet that he might give spiritual comfort to all sorts of women, first to those, who should be unjustly suspected, and insimulated of sin and incontinency, when indeed they were innocent, he was content to come of a Mother, who should be subject to that suspicion, and whom her husband should think to be with child, before he married her, and thereupon purpose to put her away; And then, Mat. 1. to fill those women, who had been guilty of that sin, with relief in their consciences against the wrath of God, and with reparation of their reputation and good name in the world, it was his unsearchable will and pleasure, that in all that Genealogy, and pedigree, which he, and his spirit hath inspired the Evangelists to record of his Ancestors, there is not one woman named, of whom Christ is descended, who is not dangerously noted in the Scriptures, to have had some aspersion of incontinence upon her; as both St. Hierome, and St. Ambrose, and St. chrysostom observes, of Thamar, of Berseba, and of Ruth also. So then, Christ Jesus who came only for the relief of sinners, is content to be known to have come, not only of poor parents, but of a sinful race; and though he exempted his Blessed Mother, more than any, from sin, yet he is now content to be born again of sinful Mothers: In that soul, that accuses itself most of sin; In that soul, that calls now to mind, (with remorse, and not with delight) the several times, and places, and ways, wherein she hath offended God; In that soul that acknowledgeth itself to have been a sink of uncleanness, a Tabernacle, a Synagogue of Satan; In that soul, that hath been as it were possessed with Mary magdalen's seven Devils, yea with him, whose name was Legion, with all Devils; In that sinful soul would Christ Jesus fain be born, this day, and make that soul, his Mother, that he might be a regeneration to that soul. We cannot afford Christ, such a birth in us, as he had, to be born of a Virgin; for every one of us well-nigh hath married himself to some particular sin, some beloved sin, that he can hardly divorce himself from; nay, no man keeps his faith, to that one sin, that he hath married himself to, but mingles himself with other sins also. Though Covetousness, whom he loves, as the wife of his bosom, have made him rich, yet he will commit adultery with another sin, with Ambition; and he will part, even with those riches, for Honour: Though Ambition be his wife, his married sin, yet he will commit adultery with another sin, with Licentiousness, and he will endanger his Honour, to fulfil his Lust; Ambition may be his wife, but Lust is his Concubine. We abandon all spiritual chastity; all virginity, we marry our particular sins, Ezech. 16. and then we divide our loves with other sins too: Thou hast multiplied thy fornications, and yet art not satisfied, is a complaint, that reaches us all, in spiritual fornications, and goes very fare, in carnal. And yet, for all this, we are capable of this Conception, Christ may be borne in us, for all this: As God said unto the Prophet, Take thee a wife of fornications, and children of fornications; so is Christ Jesus content to take our souls, though too often mothers of fornications: As long as we are united, and incorporated in his beloved Spouse, the Church, conform ourselves to her, grow up in her, harken to his word in her, feed upon his Sacraments in her, acknowledge a seal of reconciliation, by the absolution of the Minister in her, so long, (how unclean soever we have been, if we abhor and forsake our uncleanness now) we participate of the chastity of that Spouse of his, the Church, and in her, are made capable of this conception of Christ Jesus, and so, it is as true this hour of us, as it was when the Apostle spoke these words, This is the fullness of time, when God sent his Son, etc. Now you remember, Sub lege. that in this second part, (the manner of Christ's coming) we proposed two degrees of humiliation; One which we have handled, in a double respect, as he is made, filius mulieris, non Dei, the son of a woman, and not the Son of God; the other, as he is filius mulieris, non Virgins, The son of a woman, and not called the son of a Virgin. The second remains, that he was sub lege, under the law; now, this phrase, to be under the law, is not always so narrowly limited in the Scriptures, as to signify only the law of Moses; for, so, only the Jews were under the law, and so, Christ's coming for them, who were under the law, his Death, and Merits should belong only to the Jews. But St. Augustine observes, that when Christ sent the message of his birth, to the wise men, in the East, by a star, and to the shepherds, about Bethlem, by an Angel, In pastoribus, judaei; in magis, Gentes vocatae; The Jews had their calling in that manifestation to the shepherds, and the Gentiles in that, to the wise men in the East. But besides that Christ did submit himself, to all the weight even of the Ceremonial law of Moses, he was under a heavyer law, then that, under that lex decreti, the contract and covenant with God the Father, under that oportuit pati, This he ought to suffer, before he could enter into glory. So that his being under the law, may be accounted not a part of his Humiliation, as his being made of a woman was, but rather the whole history, and frame of his humiliation, All that concerns his obedience, even to that law, which the Father had laid upon him; for, the life and death of Christ, from the Ave Maria, to the consummatum est, from his coming into this World, in his Conception, to his transmigration upon the Cross, was all under this law, heavier than any law, that any man is under, the law of the contract, and covenant between the Father, and him. Though therefore we may think, judging by the law of reason, that since Christ came to gather a Church, and to draw the world to him, it would more have advanced that purpose of his, to have been borne at Rome, where the seat of the Empire, and the confluence of all Nations, was, then in jury, and (if he would offer the Gospel first to the Jews) better to have been borne at jerusalem, where all the outward, public, solemn worship of the Jews was, then at obscure Bethlem, and in Bethlem, in some better place than in an Inn, in a Stable, in a Manger; though we may think thus, in the law of reason, yet, non cogitationes meae cogitationes vestrae, says God in the Prophet, Esay 55. My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor my laws your laws, for I am sub lege decreti, under another manner of law, then falls within your reading, under an obedience to that covenant, which hath passed between my Father, and me, and by those Degrees, and no other way, was my humiliation, for your Redemption, to be expressed. Though we may think in the law of Reason, that his work of propagating the Gospel, would have gone better forward, if he had taken for his Apostles, some Tully's, or Hortensii, or Senecaes', great, and persuading Orators, in stead of his Peter, and john, and Matthew, and those Fishermen, and tentmakers, and toll-gatherers; Though we might think in reason, and in piety too, that when he would humble himself to take our salvation into his care, it had been enough, to have been under the law of Moses, to live innocently, and righteously, without shedding of his blood; If he would shed blood, it might have been enough to have done so in the Circumcision, and scourging, without dying; If he would die, it might have been enough to have died some less accursed, and less ignominious death, than the death of the Cross; though we might reasonably enough, and piously enough, think thus, yet, non cogitationes vestrae, cogitationes meae, says the Lord, your way is not my way, your law is not my law; for, Christ was sub lege decreti, and thus, as he did, and no other way, it became him to fulfil all righteousness, that is, all that Decree of God, which he had accepted, and acknowledged as Righteous. He was so much under Moses law, as he would be: so much under that law, as that he suffered that law, to be wrested against him, and to be pretended to be broken by him, and to be indicted, and condemned by that law. The Jews pressed that law, non sins veneficum vivere, Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live, Exod. 22. when they attributed all his glorious miracles, to the power of the devil: and the Romans were incensed against him, for treason, and sedition, as though he aliened and withdrew the people from Caesar. But he was under a heavyer law, then Jews or Romans, the Law of his Father, and his own eternal Decree, so fare, as that he came to that sense of the weight thereof, Eli, Eli, My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me? and was never delivered from the burden of this law, till he pleaded the performance of all conditions between his Father, and him, and delivered up all the evidence thereof, in those words, In manus tuas, Into thy hands, O Lord I give my spirit, and so presented both the righteousness of his soul, which had fulfilled the law, and the soul itself, which was under the law. He died in Execution, and so discharged all; And so we have done with our second part, The manner of his coming. We are come now, in our Order, to our third part, The purpose of Christ's coming; 3. Part. and in that we consider two objects, that Christ had, and two subjects to work upon, two kinds of work, and two kinds of persons; First, to Redeem, and then to Adopt; Those are his works, his objects; And then, To redeem those that were under the law, that is, all, but to Adopt those whom he had chosen, us; And those are the persons, the subjects, that he works upon, by his coming. First then, (to begin with the persons) those of the first kind, Sub lege. those that were under the Law: for them, (as we told you before) the law must not be so narrowly restrained here, as to be intended only of Moses Law, for Christ's purpose was not only upon the Jews; for else, Naaman the Syrian, by whom God fought great battles, 2 Reg. 5. before he was cured of his leprosy, and who, when he was cured, was so zealous of the worship of the true God, that he would needs carry holy earth, to make Altars of, from the place, where the Prophet dwelled: And else, job, who though he were of the land of Hus, hath good testimony of being an upright and just man, and one that feared God; And else, the Widow of Sarepta, 1. Reg. 17. whose meal, and oil God preserved unwasted, and whose dead son, God raised again, at the prayer of Eliah; All these, and all others, whom the searching Spirit of God, seals to his service, in all the corners of the earth, because they are strangers in the land of Israel, should not be under the Law, and so should have no profit by Christ's being made under the Law, if the Law should be understood, only of the Law of Moses. And therefore to be under the Law, signifies here, thus much, To be a debtor to the law of nature, to have a testimony in our hearts and consciences, that there lies a law upon us, which we have no power in ourselves to perform; that to those laws, To love God with all our powers, and to love our neighbour as ourselves, and to do, as we would be done to, we find ourselves naturally bound, and yet we find ourselves naturally unable to perform them, and so to need the assistance of another, which must be Christ Jesus, to perform them for us; And so, all men, Jews and Gentiles are under the Law, because naturally they feel a law upon them, which they break. And therefore wheresoever our power becomes defective, in the performance of this law, if our will be not defective too, if we come not to say, God hath given us an impossible Law, and therefore it is lost labour, to go about to perform it, or God hath given us another to perform this Law for us, and therefore nothing is required at our hands; If we abstain from these quarrels to the law, and these murmur at our own infirmity, we shall find, that the fullness of time is this day come, this day Christ is come to all that are under the Law, that is, to all mankind; to all, because all are unable to perform that Law, which they all see, by the light of nature to lie upon them. These than be the persons of the first kind, Redemit. All, all the world; Dilexit mundum, God so loved the world, that he gave his Son for it, for all the world; And, accordingly, venit salvare mundum, the obedience of the Son, was as large as the love of the Father, He came to save all the world, and he did save all the world; God would have all men, and Christ did save all men. It is therefore fearfully (and scarce allowably said) that Christ did contrary to his Father's will, when he called those to grace, of whom he knew his Father's pleasure to be, that they should have no grace; It is fearfully and dangerously said, Absurdum non esse, Deum interdum falsa loqui, & falsum loquenti credendum, that it is not absurd to say, (that is, that it may truly be said) that God does sometimes speak untruly, and that we are bound to believe God, when he does so: for, if we consider the sovereign balm of our souls, the blood of Christ Jesus, there is enough for all the world, if we consider the application of this physic, by the Ministers of Christ Jesus in the Church, he hath given us that spreading Commission, To go and preach to every creature, we are bid to offer, to apply, to minister this to all the world: Christ hath excommunicated no Nation, no shire, no house, no man: He gives none of his Ministers leave to say to any man, thou art not Redeemed, he gives no wounded nor afflicted conscience leave, to say to itself, I am not Redeemed. There may be meat enough brought into the house, for all the house, though some be so weak, as they cannot, (which is the case of the Gentiles) some so stubborn, as they will not eat, (which is the case of the carnal man, though in the Christian Church.) He came to all, There are the persons, and to Redeem all, there is his errand; but how to Redeem? S. Hierome says, Gentes non Redimuntur, sed emuntur: The Gentiles, says he, are not properly Christ's, by way of Redeeming, but by an absolute purchase: To which purpose those words are also applied, which the Apostle says to the Corinthians, 1 Cor. 6.20. Ye are bought with a price, S. Hieroms meaning therein, is, that if we compare the Jews and the Gentiles, though God permitted the Jews, in punishment of their rebellions, to be captivated by the devil in Idolatries, yet the Jews were but as in a mortgage, for they had been Gods peculiar people before; But the Gentiles were as the devil's inheritance, for God had never claimed them, nor owned them for his; and therefore God says to Christ, Ps. 2.8. Postula à me, Ask of me, and I will give thee the nations for thine inheritance; as though they were not his yet, or not his by that title, as the Jews were. So that, in S. Hieromes construction, the Jews, which were God's people before, were properly Redeemed, the Gentiles, to whom God made no title before, are rather bought, then redeemed. But, Nullum tempus occurrit Regi, against the King of Kings there runs no prescription; no man can divest his Allegiance to his Prince, and say he will be subject no longer; And therefore, since the Gentiles, were his by his first title of Creation, (for, it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves, nor the devil neither) when all we, by our general revolt, and prevarication, (as we were all collectively in Adam's loins) came to be under that law, morte morieris, Thou shalt die the death, when Christ came in the fullness of time, and delivered us from the sharpest, and heaviest clause of that Law, which is the second death, than he Redeemed us properly, because, (though not by the same title of Covenant, as the Jews were) yet we were his, and sold over to his enemy. These than were the persons, All, (none can say that he did not need him, none can say, that he may not have him) And this was his first work, to Redeem, to vindicate them from the usurper, to deliver them from the intruder, to emancipate them from the tyrant, to cancel the covenant between hell, and them, and restore them so far to their liberty, as that they might come to their first Master, if they would; this was Redeeming. But in his other work, which is Adoption, and where the persons were more particular, Adoptio. not all, but we, Christ hath taken us to him, in a straighter and more peculiar title, then Redeeming. For, A servando Servi, men who were, by another man's valour, saved and redeemed from the enemy, or from present death, they became thereby, servants to him that saved and redeemed them: Redemption makes us (who were but subjects before, for all are so, by creation) servants; but it is but servants; but Adoption makes us, who are thus made servants by Redemption, son's 〈◊〉 for, Adoption is verbum forense, though it be a word which the Holy Ghost takes, yet he takes it from a civil use, and signification, in which, it expresses in divers circumstances, our Adoption into the state of God's children. First, he that adopted another, must by that law, be a man, who had no children of his own; And this was God's case towards us; He had no children of his own, we were all filii irae, The children of wrath, not one of us could be said to be the child of God, by nature, if we had not had this Adoption in Christ. Secondly, he, who, Eph. ●. by that law, might Adopt, must be a Man, who had had, or naturally might have had children; for an Infant under years, or a man, who by nature was disabled from having children, could not Adopt another; And this was God's case towards us too; for God had had children without Adoption; for by our creation in Innocence, we were the sons of God till we died all in one transgression, and lost all right, and all life, and all means of regaining it, but by this way of Adoption in Christ Jesus. Again, no man might adopt an elder man than himself; and so, our Father by Adoption, is not only Antiquus dierum, The ancient of Days, but Antiquior diebus ancienter than any Days, before Time was; he is (as Damascene forces himself to express it) Super-principale principium, the Beginning, and the first Beginning, and before the first beginning; He is, says he, aeternus, and prae-aeternus, Eternal, and elder than any eternity, that we can take into our imagination. So likewise no man might adopt a man of better quality than himself, and here, we are so far from comparing, as that we cannot comprehend his greatness, and his goodness, of whom, and to whom, S. Augustin says well, Quid mihi es? If I shall go about to declare thy goodness, not to the world in general, but Quid mihi es, how good thou art to me, Miserere ut loquar, says he, I must have more of thy goodness, to be able to tell thy former goodness, Be merciful unto me again, that I may be thereby able to declare how merciful thou wast to me before, except thou speak in me, I cannot declare what thou hast done for me. Lastly, no man might be adopted, into any other degree of kindred, but into the name, and right of a son; he could not be an adopted Brother, nor cousin, nor nephew: And this is especially our dignity; we have the Spirit of Adoption, whereby we cry Abba, Father. So that, as here is a fullness of time in the text, so there is a fullness of persons, All, and a fullness of the work belonging to them, Redeeming, Emancipation, delivering from the chains of Satan, (we were his by Creation, we sold ourselves for nothing, and he redeemed us, without money, that is, Esa. 52. without any cost of ours) but because for all this general Redemption, we may turn from him, and submit ourselves to other services, therefore he hath Adopted us, drawn into his family and into his more especial care, those who are chosen by him, to be his. Now that Redemption reached to all, there was enough for all; this dispensation of that Redemption, this Adoption reaches only to us, all this is done, That we might receive the Adoption of Sons. But who are this We? why, they are the elect of God. But who are they, Nos. who are these elect? Qui timidè rogat, docet negare: If a man ask me with a diffidence, Can I be the adopted son of God, that have rebelled against him, in all my affections, that have trodden upon his Commandments, in all mine actions, that have divorced myself from him, in preferring the love of his creatures before himself, that have murmured at his corrections, and thought them too much, that have undervalved his benefits, and thought them too little, that have abandoned, and prostituted my body, his Temple, to all uncleanness, and my spirit to indevotion, and contempt of his Ordinances; can I be the adopted son of God, that have done this? Ne timidè rogues, ask me not this, with a diffidence and distrust in God's mercy, as if thou thoughtst with Cain thy iniquities were greater than could be forgiven; But ask me with that holy confidence, which belongs to a true convert, Am not I, who, though I am never without sin, yet am never without hearty remorse and repentance for my sins; though the weakness of my flesh sometimes betray me, the strength of his Spirit still recovers me; though my body be under the paw of that lion, that seeks whom he may devour, yet the lion of Judah raises again and upholds my soul; though I wound my Saviour with many sins, yet all these, be they never so many, I strive against, I lament, confess, and forsake as fare as I am able. Am not I the child of God, and his adopted son in this state? Roga fidenter, ask me with a holy confidence in thine and my God, & doces affirmare, thy very question gives me mine answer to thee, thou teachest me to say, thou art; God himself teaches me to say so, by his Apostle, The foundation of God is sure, and this is the Seal, God knoweth who are his, and let them that call upon his name, depart from all iniquity: He that departs so far, as to repent former sins, and shut up the ways, which he knows in his conscience, do lead him into tentations, he is of this quorum, one of us, one of them, who are adopted by Christ, to be the sons of God. I am of this quorum, if I preach the Gospel sincerely, and live thereafter, (for he preaches twice a day, that follows his own doctrine, and does as he says) And you are of this quorum, if you preach over the Sermons which you hear, to your own souls in your meditation, to your families in your relation, to the world in your conversation. If you come to this place, to meet the Spirit of God, and not to meet one another, If you have sat in this place, with a delight in the Word of God, and not in the words of any speaker, If you go out of this place, in such a disposition, as that, if you should meet the last Trumpets at the gates, and Christ Jesus in the clouds, you would not entreat him to go back, and stay another year: To enwrap all in one, if you have a religious and sober assurance, that you are his, and walk according to your belief, you are his, and, as the fullness of time, so the fullness of grace is come upon you, and you are not only within the first commission, of those who were under the Law, and so Redeemed, but of this quorum who are selected out of them, the adopted sons of that God, who never disinherits those that forsake not him. SERMON iv Preached at S. Paul's upon Christmas day. 1626. LUKE. 2.29, & 30. Lord now lettest thou thy servant departed in peace, according to thy word: For mine eyes have seen thy salvation. THe whole life of Christ was a continual Passion; others die Martyrs, but Christ was born a Martyr. He found a Golgatha, (where he was crucified) even in Bethlem, where he was born; For, to his tenderness then, the straws were almost as sharp as the thorns after; and the Manger as uneasy at first, as his Cross at last. His birth and his death were but one continual act, and his Christmas-day and his Good Friday, are but the evening and morning of one and the same day. And as even his birth, is his death, so every action and passage that manifests Christ to us, is his birth; for, Epiphany is manifestation; And therefore, though the Church do now call Twelf-day Epiphany, because upon that day Christ was manifested to the Gentiles, in those Wise men who came then to worship him, yet the Ancient Church called this day, (the day of Christ's birth) the Epiphany, because this day Christ was manifested to the world, by being born this day. Every manifestation of Christ to the world, to the Church, to a particular soul, is an Epiphany, a Christmas-day. Now there is no where a more evident manifestation of Christ, then in that which induced this text, Lord now lettest thou thy servant, etc. It had been revealed to Simeon (whose words these are) that he should see Christ before he died; And actually, and really, substantially, essentially, bodily, presentially, personally he does see him; so it is Simeons' Epiphany, Simeons Christmas-day. So also this day, in which we commemorate and celebrate the general Epiphany, the manifestation of Christ to the whole world in his birth, all we, we, who besides our interest in the universal Epiphany and manifestation employed in the very day, have this day received the Body and Blood of Christ in his holy and blessed Sacrament, have had another Epiphany, another Christmas-day, another manifestation and application of Christ to ourselves; And as the Church prepares our devotion before Christmas-day, with four Sundays in Advent, which brings Christ nearer and nearer unto us, and remembers us that he is coming, and then continues that remembrance again, with the celebration of other festivals with it, and after it, as S. Stephen, S. john, and the rest that follow; so for this birth of Christ, in your particular souls, for this Epiphany, this Christmas-day, this manifestation of Christ which you have had in the most blessed Sacrament this day, as you were prepared before by that which was said before, so it belongs to the through celebration of the day, and to the dignity of that mysterious act, and to the blessedness of worthy, and the danger of unworthy Receivers, to press that evidence in your behalf, and to enable you by a farther examination of yourselves, to departed in peace, because your eyes have seen his salvation. To be able to conclude to you selves, that because you have had a Christmas-day, a manifestation of Christ's birth in your souls, by the Sacrament, you shall have a whole Good-Friday, a crucifying, and a consummatum est, a measure of corrections, and joy in those corrections, tentations, and the issue with the tentation; And that you shall have a Resurrection, and an Ascension, an inchoation, and an unremovable possession of heaven itself in this world. Make good your Christmas day, that Christ by a worthy receiving of the Sacrament, be born in you, and he that died for you, will live with you all the year, and all the years of your lives, and inspire into you, and receive from you at the last gasp, this blessed acclamation, Lord now lettest thou thy servant, etc. The end of all digestions, Divisio. and concoctions is assimilation, that that meat may become our body. The end of all consideration of all the actions of such leading and exemplar men, as Simeon was, is assimilation too; That we may be like that man. Therefore we shall make it a first part, to take a picture, to give a character of this man, to consider how Simeon was qualified and prepared, matured and disposed to that confidence, that he could desire to departed in peace, intimated in that first word, Now; now, that all that I look for is accomplished; And farther expressed in the first word of the other clause, For, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation; Now, now the time is fulfilled; For, for mine eyes have seen. And then enters the second part, what is the greatest happiness that can be well wished in this world, by a man well prepared, is, that he may departed in peace; Lord now lettest thou, etc. And all the way, in every step that we make, in his light, (in Simeons' light) we shall see light; we shall consider, that that preparation, and disposition, and acquiescence, which Simeon had in his Epiphany, in his visible seeing of Christ then, is offered to us in this Epiphany, in this manifestation and application of Christ in the Sacrament; And that therefore every penitent, and devout, and reverend, and worthy receiver, hath had in that holy action his Now, there are all things accomplished to him, and his For, for his eyes have seen his salvation; and so may be content, nay glad to departed in peace. In the first part then, 1 Part. in which we collect some marks, and qualities in Simeon which prepared him to a quiet death, qualities appliable to us in that capacity, as we are ●●tred for the Sacrament, Praesentatio. (for in that way only, we shall walk throughout this exercise) we consider first, the action itself, what was done at this time. At this time our Saviour Christ, according to the Law, by which all the first born were to be presented to God in the Temple, at a certain time after their birth, was presented to God in the Temple, and there acknowledged to be his; And then, bought of him again by his parents, at a certain price prescribed in the Law. A Lord could not exhibit his Son to his Tenants, and say, this is your Landlord; nor a King his Son to his Subjects, and say, this is your Prince; but first he was to be tendered to God; his they were all; He that is not Gods first, is not truly his Kings, nor his own. And then God does not sell him back again to his parents, at a racked, at an improved price; He sells a Lord, or a King back again to the world, as cheap as a Yeoman, he takes one and the same price for all; God made all Mankind of one blood, and with one blood, the blood of his Son, he bought all Mankind again: At one price, and upon the same conditions, he hath delivered over all into this world; Tantummodo crede, and then fac hoc, & vives, is the price of all; Believe, and live well: More he asks not, less he takes not for any man, upon any pretence of any unconditioned decree. At the time of this presentation, there were to be offered a pair of Turtles, or a pair of Pigeons. Columbae. The Sacrifice was indifferent; Turtles that live solitarily, and Pigeons, that live sociably, were all one to God. God in Christ may be had in an active, and sociable life, denoted in the Pigeon, and in the solitary and contemplative life, denoted in the Turtle; Let not Westminster despise the Church, nor the Church the Exchange, nor the Exchange and trade despise Arms; God in Christ may be had in every lawful calling. And then, the Pigeon was an emblem of fecundity, and fruitfulness in marriage; And the Turtle may be an Emblem of chaste widowhood; for, I think we find no Bigamy in the Turtle. But in these Sacrifices we find no Emblem of a natural, or of a vowed barrenness: Nothing that countenances a vowed virginity, to the dishonour or undervaluing of marriage. Thus was our Saviour presented to God; And in this especially was that fulfilled, Agg. 2.9. The glory of the later house shall be greater than the glory of the former; The later Temple exceeded the former in this, that the Lord, the God of this house, was in the house bodily, as one of the congregation; And the little body of a sucking child, was a Chapel in that Temple, infinitely more glorious than the Temple itself. How was the joy of Noah at the return of the Dove into the Ark, multiplied upon Simeon at the bringing of this Dove into the Temple? At how cheap a price was Christ tumbled up and down in this world? It does almost take off our pious scorn of the low price, at which judas sold him, to consider that his Father sold him to the world for nothing; and then, when he had him again, by this new title of primogeniture and presentation, he sold him to the world again, if not for a Turtle, or for a Pigeon, yet at most for 5. shekels, which at most is but 10. shillings. And yet you have had him cheaper than that, to day in the Sacrament: whom hath Christ cost 5. shekels there? As Christ was presented to God in the Temple, so is he presented to God in the Sacrament; not sucking, but bleeding. And God gives him back again to thee. And at what price? upon this exchange; Take his first born, Christ Jesus, and give him thine. Who is thine? Cor primogenitum, says S. August: The heart is the first part of the body that lives; Give him that; And then, as it is in nature, it shall be in grace too, the last part that dies; for it shall never die; Joh, 6.50. If a man eat the bread that cometh down from heaven, he shall not die, says Christ. If a man in exchange of his heart receive Christ Jesus himself, he can no more die then Christ Jesus himself can die. That which Eschines said to Socrates, admits a fair accommodation here; He saw every body give Socrates some present, and he said, Because I have nothing else to give, I will give thee myself. Do so, says Socrates, and I will give thee back again to thyself, better than when I received thee. If thou have truly given thyself to him in the Sacrament, God hath given thee thyself back, so much mended, as that thou hast received thyself and him too; Thyself, in a holy liberty, to walk in the world in a calling, and himself, in giving a blessing upon all the works of thy calling, and imprinting in thee a holy desire to do all those works to his glory. And so having thus far made this profit of these circumstances in the action itself, appliable to us as receivers of the Sacrament, that as the child Jesus was first presented to God in the Temple, so for your children, (the children of your bodies, and the children of your minds, and the children of your hands, all your actions, and intentions) that you direct them first upon God, and God in the Temple, that is, God manifested in the Church, before you assign them, or determine them upon any other worldly courses, and then, that as God returned Christ as all other children, at a certain price, so God delivers man upon certain, and upon the same conditions: He comes not into the world, nor he comes not to the Sacrament, as to a Lottery, where perchance he may draw Salvation, but it is ten to one he misses, but upon these few and easy conditions, Believe, & Love, he may be sure: And then also, that the Sacrifice, Pigeons, or Turtles was indifferent, so it were offered to God, for any honest calling, is acceptable to God, if God's glory be intended in it; That of marriage and of widowhood we have some typical intimations in the Law, in the Pigeon, and in the Turtle, but of a vow of virginity, begun in the parents for their temporal ends, and forced upon their children, for those ends, we have no shadow at all; That Christ who was sold after by judas for a little money, was sold in this presentation by his Father, for less, and yet for less than that to us, this day in the Sacrament. Having made these uses of these circumstances in the action itself, we passeion now, to the consideration of some such qualities, and dispositions of this person, Simeon, as may be appliable to us in our having received the Sacrament. First then, we receive it, though not literally, and expressly in the story, Senex. yet by convenient implication there, and by general tradition from all, that Simeon was now come to a great age, a very old Man. For so S. August. argues, That God raised up two witnesses for Christ in the Temple; one of each Sex; and both of much reverence for age; Anna, whose age is expressed, and Simeon, who is recommended in the same respect, says that Father, for age too. And Nicephorus, and others with him, make him very old; as it is likely he was, if he were, as Pet: Galatinus makes him, the son of Rabbi Hillel, Hillel the master of Gamaliel, the master of S. Paul. So then we accept him; A person in a reverend age. Even in nature Age was the centre of reverence; the channel, the valley, to which all reverence flowed; temporal jurisdiction, and spiritual jurisdiction, the Magistracy, and the Priesthood were appropriated to the eldest; almost in all vulgar languages, the name of a Lord, or magistrate, hath no other derivation then so, an Elder; Senior noster, is a word that passes freely, through the authors of the middle age, for our Lord, or our King; and the same derivation hath the name of Priest, in a holy language, Presbyter an Elder. So evermore in the course of the Scripture all counsel, and all government is placed in the Elders; and all the service of God is expressed so, even in heaven too, by the four and twenty Elders. Apoc. 4.9. Thy Creator will be remembered in the days of thy youth; but God hath had longer experience of that man, and longer conversation with that man, who is come to a holy age. That wise King, who could carry nothing to a higher pitch in any comparison, then to a Crown, says, Age is a crown of glory, Prov. 16.31. when it is found in the ways of the righteous; but in the ways of righteousness, no blessing is a blessing; and in the ways of righteousness, wealth may be a crown of our labours, and health may be a crown of our temperance, but age is the crown of glory, of reverence; ●hat crown, the crown of reverence, the Lord the righteous Judge hath reserved to that day, the day of our age, because our age is the seal of our constancy, and perseverance. In this blessed age, Simeon was thus dignified, admitted to this Epiphany, this manifestation of Christ. And, to be admitted to thy Epiphany, and manifestation of Christ in the Sacrament, thou must put off the young man, and put on the old. God, to whose Table thou art called, is represented as Antiquus Dierum, the ancient of Days; and his Guests must be of mortified affections; He must be crucified to the world, that will receive him, that was crucified for the world; the lusts of youth, the voluptuousness of youth, the revengefulness of youth, must have a holy damp, and a religious stupidity shed upon them, that come thither. Nay, it is not enough to be suddenly old, to have sad, and mortified thoughts then; no, nor to be suddenly dead, to renounce the world then, that hour, that morning, but quatriduani sitis, you should have been dead three days, as Lazarus; you should have passed an Examination, an accusation, a condemnation of yourselves, divers days before ye came to that Table. God was most glorified in the raising of Lazarus, when he was long dead, and putrified; God is most glorified in giving a resurrection to him, that hath been longest dead; that is, longest in the Contemplation of his own sinful and spiritual putrefaction. For, he that stinks most in his own, by true contrition, is the best perfume to God's nostrils, and a conscience troubled in itself, is Odour quietis, as Noah's sacrifice was, a savour of rest to God. This assistance we have to the exaltation of our devotion, from that circumstance, that Simeon was an old man; Sacerdos. we have another from another, that he was a Priest, and in that notion and capacity, the better fitted for this Epiphany, this Christmas, this Manifestation of Christ. We have not this neither in the letter of the story; no, nor so constantly in Tradition, that he was a Priest, as that he was an old man: But it is rooted in Antiquity too; In Athanasius, in St. Cyrill, in Epiphanius, in others, who argue, and infer it fairly and conveniently, out of some Priestly acts, which Simeon seems to have done in the Temple, (as the taking of Christ in his arms, which belongs to the Priest, and the blessing of God, which is the to God, in the behalf of the congregation, and then the blessing of the people, in the behalf of God, which are acts peculiar to the Priest.) Accepting him in that quality, a Priest, we consider, that as the King takes it worse in his household servants, then in his Subjects at large, if they go not his ways, so they who dwell in God's house, whose livelihood grows out of the revenue of his Church, and whose service lies within the walls of his Church, are most inexcusable, if they have not a continual Epiphany, a continual Manifestation of Christ: All men should look towards God, but the Priest should never look off from God. And, at the Sacrament every man is a Priest. I had rather that were not said, (which yet a very Reverend Divine says) That this Simeon might be aliquis plebeius homo, Calvin. some ordinary common man, that was in the Temple at that time, when Christ was brought. He, who is of another sub-division, Chemnicius. (though in the reformed Church too) collects piously, that God chose extraordinary men, to give testimony of his Son; Nicodemus a great Magistrate, Gamaliel a great Doctor, jairus a Ruler in the Synagogue, and this Simeon, in probability, pregnant enough, a Priest. But was that any great Addition to him, if he were so? For holiness, certainly it was; But for outward dignity, and respect, it was so too, Josephus. amongst them. In omni Natione, certum aliquod Nobilitatis argumentum. Every Nation hath some particular way of ennobling, and some particular evidence, and declaration of Nobility: Arms for a great part, is that in Spain; and Merchandise in some States in Italy; and learning in France, where besides the very many preferments by the Church, in which, some other Nation may be equal to them, there are more preferments, by other ways of learning, especially of Judicature, then in any other Nation. All Nations, says josephus, had some peculiar way, and amongst the Jews, says he, Priesthood was that way; A Priest was, even for civil privileges, a Gentleman. Therefore hath the Apostle, not knighted, nor ennobled, but crowned every good soul, with that style, Regale Sacerdotium, That they are a Royal Priesthood; To be Royal without Priesthood, seemed not to him Dignity enough. Consider then, that to come to the Communion Table, is to take Orders; Every man should come to that Altar, as holy as the Priest, Erasmus. for there he is a Priest: And, Sacer dotem nemo agit, qui libenter aliud est, quam Sacerdos: No man is truly a Priest, which is any thing else besides a Priest; that is, that entangles himself in any other business, so, as that that hinders his function in his Priesthood. No man comes to the Sacrament well, that is sorry he is there; that is, whom the penalty of the law, or observation of neighbours, or any collateral respect brings thither. There thou art a Priest, though thou be'st but a layman at home; And then, no man that hath taken Orders, can deprive himself, or divest his Orders, when he will: Thou art bound to continue in the same holiness after, in which thou presentest thyself at that Table. As the sails of a ship when they are spread and swollen, and the way that the ship makes, shows me the wind, where it is, though the wind itself be an invisible thing; so thy actions to morrow, and the life that thou leadest all the year, will show me, with what mind thou camest to the Sacrament, to day, though only God, and not I, can see thy mind. Live in remembrance, that thou wast a Priest to day; (for no man hath received Christ, that hath not sacrificed himself.) And live, as though thou wert a Priest still; and then I say, with Sidonius Apollinaris, Malo Sacerdotalem virum, quam Sacerdotem, I had rather have one man that lives as a Priest should do, than a hundred Priests that live not so. A worthy Receiver shall rise in Judgement against an unworthy Giver: Christ shall be the Sacrifice still, and thou the Priest, that camest but to receive, because thou hast sacrificed thyself; and he the judas, that pretended to be the Priest, because he hath betrald Christ to himself, and as much as lay in him, evacuated the Sacrament, and made it of none effect to thee. It is farther added for his honour, and for his competency, and fitness for this Epiphany, justus. V 25. to see his Saviour, that he was justus, a just, and righteous man. This is a legal Righteousness; a Righteousness, in which St. Paul says, he was unreproachable; that is, in the sight of all the world. And this Righteousness, even this outward righteousness, he must bring with him that comes to this Epiphany, to this Manifestation, and Application of his Saviour, to him, in the Sacrament: It must stand well between him, and all the world. If thou bring thy gift to the Altar, says Christ, Mat. 5.23. (if thou bring thyself to the Altar, says our case) and there remember'st that thy brother hath aught against thee, (it was ill done, not to remember it before; but if thou remember it then) Go thy way, says Christ, first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come, and offer thy gift; that is, offer thyself for that sacrifice: Better come a month after, with a clear, then kneel it out then with a perplexed conscience. It is, If thy brother have aught against thee; how little soever: If thou have but scandalised him, though thou have not injured him, yet venture not upon this holy action, till thou have satisfied him. Thou mayst be good; good so, as that thou hast intended no ill to him: He may be good too; good so, as that he wishes no ill to thee. And yet some negligence and remissness in thee, may have struck upon a weakness and a tenderness in him, so as that he may be come, to think uncharitably of thee; and though this uncharitableness be his fault, and not thine, yet the negligence that occasioned it, was thine: Satisfy him; and that rectifies both; it redeems thy negligence, it recovers his weakness. Till that be done, neither of you are fit for this holy action; God neither accepts that man, that is negligent of his actions, and cares not what others think, nor him that is over-easy to be scandalised, and misinterpret actions, otherwise indifferent: For, to them who study not this righteousness, to stand upright in the good opinions of good men, as God says, Why takest thou my word into thy mouth, so Christ shall say, to the shaking of that conscience, why takest thou my Body, and Blood into thy hand? This must be done; He must be just, righteous in the eyes of men; Timoratus. though more seem to be employed in his other character, that he was Timoratus, which we translate Devout: In the former, his object was man, though godly men; here it is God himself: Man must be respected, but God especially. And this devotion is well placed in fear; for Basis verbi est timor sanctus, says St. Augustine; and it is excellently said, if this be his meaning, That whatsoever I promise myself out of the word of God, yet the Basis upon which that promise stands, is my fear of God: If my fear of God fall, the word of God, so fare as it is a promise to me, falls to. Tertullian intends the same thing, when he says, fundamentum salutis timor; Though I have a holy confidence of my salvation, yet the foundation of this confidence is a modest, and a tender, and a reverential fear, that I am not diligent enough in the performance of those conditions which are required to the establishing of it; for this Eulabeia, which St. Hierome translates Timoratum, and we translate Devout, is a middle disposition between a Pharisaical superstition, and a negligent irreverence, and profanation of God's Ordinance. I come not with this Eulabeia, with Simeons' disposition, to my Epiphany, to my receiving of my Saviour; if I think that Bread, my God, and superstitiously adore it, for that is Pharisaical, and carnal; neither do I bring that disposition thither, if I think God no otherwise present there, then in his own other Ordinances, and so refuse such postures, and actions of reverence, as are required to testify outwardly mine inward devotion; for these may well consist together, I am sure I receive him effectually, when I look upon his Mercy; I am afraid I do not receive him worthily, when I look upon mine own unworthiness. We cannot pursue this Anatomy of good old Simeon, this Just, and Devout Priest, so fare, as to show you all his parts, and the use of them all, in particular. His example, and the characters that are upon him, are our Alphabet. I shall only have time to name the rest of those characters; you must spell them, and put them into their syllables; you must form them, and put them into their words; you must compose them, and put them into their Syntaxis, and sentences; that is, you must pursue the imitation, that when I have told you what he was, you may present yourselves to God, such as he was. He was one that had the Holy Ghost upon him, Spiritus Sancius. says that Story. The testimony given before, that he was justus, & Timoratus, righteous, and fearing God, was evidence enough, that the Holy Ghost was upon him. This addition is a testimony of a more particular presence, and operation of the Holy Ghost, in some certain way; and the way is agreed by all, to be, In dono Prophetiae, the Holy Ghost was upon him, in the spirit of Prophecy, so, as that he made him, at that time, a Prophet. Thou art a Prophet upon thyself, when thou comest to the Communion; Thou art able to foretell, and to pronounce upon thyself, what thou shalt be for ever; Upon thy disposition then, thou mayst conclude thine eternal state; Rom. 2.9. then thou knowest which part of St. Paul's distribution falls upon thee; whether that tribulations and anguish upon every soul of man, that doth evil; Or that, But glory, and honour, and peace to every man, that worketh good. Thou art this Prophet; silence not this Prophet; do not chide thy conscience for chiding thee; Stone not this Prophet; do not petrify, and harden thy conscience against these holy suggestions: Say not with Ahab to the Prophet, Hast thou found me out, O mine enemy? when an unrepented sin comes to thy memory then, be not thou sorry that thou remember'st it then, nor do not say, I would this sin had not troubled me now, I would I had not remembered it till to morrow; For, in that action, first, in Thesi, for the Rule, thou art a Preacher to thyself, 1 Cor. 11.20. and thou hast thy. Text in St. Paul, He that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself; And then in Hypothesi, for the application to the particular case, thou art a Prophet to thyself; Thou that knowest in thyself, what thou dost then, canst say to thyself, what thou shalt suffer after, if thou do ill. There are more Elements in the making up of this man; many more. He waited, says his story; Expectavit. He gave God his leisure. Simeon had informed himself, out of Daniel, and the other Prophets, that the time of the Messiah coming was near: As Daniel had informed himself out of jeremy, and the other Prophets, that the time of the Deliverance from Babylon, was near: Both waited patiently, and yet both prayed for the accelerating of that, which they waited for; Daniel for the Deliverance, Simeon for the Epiphany. Those consist well enough, patiently to attend God's time, and yet earnestly to solicit the hastening of that time; for that time is God's time, to which, our prayers have brought God; as that price was God's price for Sodom, to which Abraham's solicitation brought God, Esay 45.9. and not the first fifty. That Prophet that says, Woe unto him that striveth with his Maker, that is, that presses God before his time, says also, for all that, Oh that thou wouldst rend the heavens, Esay 64.1. and come down. When thou comest to this seal of thy peace, the Sacrament, pray that God will give thee that light, that may direct and establish thee, in necessary and fundamental things; that is, the light of faith to see, that the Body and Blood of Christ, is applied to thee, in that action; But for the manner, how the Body and Blood of Christ is there, wait his leisure, if he have not yet manifested that to thee: Grieve not at that, wonder not at that, press not for that; for he hath not manifested that, not the way, not the manner of his presence in the Sacrament, to the Church. A peremptory prejudice upon other men's opinions, that no opinion but thine can be true, in the doctrine of the Sacrament, and an un charitable condemning of other men, or other Churches that may be of another persuasion than thou art, in the matter of the Sacrament, may frustrate and disappoint thee of all that benefit, which thou mightst have, by an humble receiving thereof, if thou wouldst excercise thy faith only, here, and leave thy passion at home, and refer thy reason, and disputation to the School. He waited, says the story; And he waited for the consolation of Israel. Israel. It is not an appropriating of hopes, or possessions of those hopes, to himself; but a charitable desire, of a communication of this consolation, upon all the Israel of God. Therefore is the Sacrament a Communion; Therefore is the Church, which is built of us, 1. Pet. 2.5. Gregor. Built of lively stones: And in such buildings, as stones do, Vnusquisque portat alterum, & portatur ab altero: Every stone is supported by another, and supports another. As thou wouldst be well interpreted by others, interpret others well; and, as when thou comest to heaven, the joy, and the glory of every soul, shall be thy glory, and thy joy; so when thou comest to the porch of the Triumphant Church, the door of heaven, the Communion table, desire that that joy, which thou feelest in thy soul then, may then be communicated to every communicant there. To this purpose, to testify his devotion to the communion of Saints, Templum. Simeon came into the Temple, says the story; to do a holy work, in a holy place. When we say, that God is no accepter of persons, we do not mean, but that they which are within his Covenant, and they that have preserved the seals of his grace, are more acceptable to him, than they which are not, or have not. When we say, that God is not tied to places, we must not mean, but that God is otherwise present, and works otherwise, in places consecrated to his service, then in every profane place. When I pray in my chamber, I build a Temple there, that hour; And, that minute, when I cast out a prayer, in the street, I build a Temple there; And when my soul prays without any voice, my very body is then a Temple: And God, who knows what I am doing in these actions, erecting these Temples, he comes to them and prospers, and blesses my devotions; and shall not I come to his Temple, where he is always resident? My chamber were no Temple, my body were no Temple, except God came to it; but whether I come hither, or no, this will be God's Temple: I may lose by my absence; He gains nothing by my coming. He that hath a cause to be heard, will not go to Smithfield, nor he that hath cat-tail to buy or sell, to Westminster; He that hath bargains to make, or news to tell, should not come to do that at Church; nor he that hath prayers to make, walk in the fields for his devotions. If I have a great friend, though in cases of necessity, as sickness, or other restraints, he will vouchsafe to visit me, yet I must make my fuits to him at home, at his own house. In cases of necessity, Christ in the Sacrament, vouchsafes to come home to me; And the Court is where the King is; his blessings are with his Ordinances, wheresoever: But the place to which he hath invited me, is his house. He that made the great Supper in the Gospel, called in new guests; but he sent out no meat to them, who had been invited, and might have come, and came not. Chamber-prayers, single, or with your family, Chamber-Sermons, Sermons read over there, and Chamber-Sacraments, administered in necessity there, are blessed assistants, and supplements; they are as the alms at the gate, but the feast is within; they are as a cock of water without, but the Cistern is within; habenti dabitur; he that hath a handful of devotion at home, shall have his devotion multiplied to a Gomer here; for when he is become a part of the Congregation, he is joint-tenant with them, and the devotion of all the Congregation, and the blessings upon all the Congregation, are his blessings, and his devotions. He came to a holy place, and he came by a holy motion, by the Spirit, In Spiritu. says his Evidence, without holiness, no man shall see God; not so well, without holiness of the place; but not there neither, if he trust only to the holiness of the place, and bring no holiness with him. Between that fearful occasion of coming to Church, which S. Augustine confesses and laments, That they came to make wanton bargains with their eyes, and met there, because they could meet no whereelse; and that more fearful occasion of coming, when they came only to elude the Law, and proceeding in their treacherous and traitorous religion in their heart, and yet communicating with us, draw God himself into their conspiracies, and to mock us, make a mock of God, and his religion too: between these two, this licentious coming, and this treacherous coming, there are many come to Church, come for company, for observation, for music: And all these indispositions are ill at prayers; there they are unwholesome, but at the Sacrament, deadly: He that brings any collateral respect to prayers, loses the benefit of the prayers of the Congregation; and he that brings that to a Sermon, loses the blessing of God's ordinance in that Sermon; he hears but the Logic, or the Retorique, or the Ethique, or the poetry of the Sermon, but the Sermon of the Sermon he hears not; but he that brings this disposition to the Sacrament, ends not in the loss of a benefit, but he acquires, and procures his own damnation. All that we consider in Simeon, Viderunt oculi. and apply from Simeon, to a worthy receiver of the Sacrament, is how he was fitted to departed in peace. All those pieces, which we have named, conduce to that: but all those are collected into that one, which remains yet, Viderunt oculi, that his eyes had seen that salvation; for that was the accomplishment and fulfilling of God's Word, According to thy word; All that God had said, should be done, was done; for, as it is said, v. 26. It was revealed unto him, by the holy Ghost, that he should not see death, before he had seen the Lords Christ, and now his eyes had seen that Salvation. Abraham saw this before; but, but with the eye of faith; and yet rejoiced to see it so, he was glad even of that. Simeon saw it before this time; then, when he was illustrated with that Revelation, he saw it; but, but with the eye of hope; of such hope Abraham had no such ground; no particular hope, no promise, that he should see the Messiah in his time; Simeon had, and yet he waited, he attended God's leisure; But hope deferred maketh the heart sick, Prov. 13.12. (says Solomon) but when the desire comes, it is a tree of life. His desire was come; he saw his salvation. Perchance not so, as S. Cyprian seems to take it, That till this time Simeon was blind, and upon this presentation of Christ in the Temple, came to his sight again, and so saw this Salvation: for, I think, no one Author, but S. Cyprian, says so, that Simeon was blind till now, and now restored to sight; And I may ease S. Cyprian too, of that singularity; for it is enough, and abundantly evident, that that book in which that is said (which is, Altercatio jasonis & papisci de Messia) cannot possibly be S. Cyprians. But with his bodily eyes, open to other objects before, he saw the Lords Salvation, and his Salvation; the Lords, as it came from the Lord, and his, as it was appliable to him. He saw it, according to his word; that is, so far, as God had promised, he should see it. He saw not, how, that God, which was in this Child, & which was this child, was the Son of God; The manner of that eternal Generation he saw not. He saw not how this Son of God became man in a Virgin's womb, whom no man knew; The manner of this Incarnation he saw not: for this eternal Generation, and this miraculous Incarnation, fell not within that Secundùm verbum, according to thy Word; God had promised Simeon nothing concerning those mysteries: But Christum Domini, the Lords Salvation, and his Salvation, that is, the person who was all that (which was all, that was within the word, and the promise) Simeon saw, and saw with bodily eyes. Beloved, in the blessed, and glorious, and mysterious Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ Jesus, thou seest Christum Domini, the Lords Salvation, and thy Salvation, and that, thus far with bodily eyes; That Bread which thou seest after the Consecration, is not the same bread, which was presented before; not that it is Transubstantiated to another substance, for it is bread still, (which is the heretical Riddle of the Roman Church, and satins sophistry, to dishonour miracles, by the assiduity and frequency, and multiplicity of them) but that it is severed, and appropriated by God, in that Ordinance to another use; It is other Bread, so, as a Judge is another man, upon the bench, than he is at home, in his own house. In the Roman Church, they multiply, and extend miracles, till the miracle itself crack, and become none, but vanish into nothing, as boy's bubbles, (which were but bubbles before, at best) by an overblowing become nothing: Nay they constitute such miracles, as do not only destroy the nature of the miracle, but destroy him, that should do that miracle, even God himself: for, nothing proceeds farther to the destroying of God, then to make God do contradictory things; for, contradictions have falsehood, and so imply impotency, and infirmity in God. There cannot be a deeper Atheism, then to impute contradictions to God; neither doth any one thing so overcharge God with contradictions, as the Transubstantiation of the Roman Church. There must be a Body there, and yet no where; In no place, and yet in every place, where there is a consecration. The Bread and the Wine must nourish the body, nay, the bread and the wine may poison a body, and yet there is no bread, nor wine there. They multiply miracles, and they give not over, till they make God unable to do a miracle, till they make him a contradictory, that is, an impotent God. And therefore Luther infers well, that since miracles are so easy and cheap, and obvious to them, as they have induced a miraculous transubstantiation, they might have done well to have procured one miracle more, a trans-accidentation, that since the substance is changed, the accidents might have been changed too; and since there is no bread, there might be no dimensions, no colour, no nourishing, no other qualities of bread neither; for, these remaining, there is rather an annihilation of God, in making him no God by being a contradictory God, than an annihilation of the Bread, by making that, which was formerly bread, God himself, by that way of Transubstantiation. But yet, though this bread be not so transubstantiated, we refuse not the words of the Fathers, in which they have expressed themselves in this Mystery: Not Irenaeus his est corpus, that that bread is his body now; Not Tertullias fecit corpus, that that bread is made his body, which was not so before; Not S. Cyprians mutatus, that that bread is changed; Not Damascens supernaturaliter mutatus, that that bread is not only changed so in the use, as when at the King's table certain portions of bread are made bread of Essay, to pass over every dish, whether for safety or for Majesty; not only so civilly changed, but changed supernaturally; no nor Theophylacts transformatus est; (which seems to be the word that goes farthest of all) for this transforming, cannot be intended of the outward form and fashion, for that is not changed; but be it of that internal form, which is the very essence and nature of the bread, so it is transformed, so the bread hath received a new form, a new essence, a new nature, because whereas the nature of bread is but to nourish the body, the nature of this bread now is to nourish the soul. And therefore, Cum non dubitavit Dominus dicere, hoc est corpus meum, August. cum signum daret corporis, Since Christ forbore not to say, This is my body, when he gave the sign of his body, why should we forbear to say of that bread, this is Christ's body, which is the Sacrament of his body. You would have said at noon, this light is the Sun, and you will say now, this light is the Candle; That light was not the Sun, this light is not the Candle, but it is that portion of air which the Sun did then, and which the Candle doth now enlighten. We say the Sacramental bread is the body of Christ, because God hath shed his Ordinance upon it, and made it of another nature in the use, though not in the substance; Almost 600. years ago, the Roman Church made Berengarius swear, sensualiter tangitur, frangitur, teritur corpus Christ's, That the body of Christ was sensibly handled, and broken, and chewed. They are ashamed of that now, and have mollified it with many modifications; and God knows whether 100 years hence they will not be as much ashamed of their Transubstantiation, and see as much unnatural absurdity in their Trent Canon, or Lateran Cano●●, ●s they do in Berengarius oath. As they that deny the body of Christ to be in the Sacrament, lose their footing in departing from their ground, the express Scriptures; so they that will assign a particular manner, how that body is there, have no footing, no ground at all, no Scripture to Anchor upon: And so, diving in a bottomless sea, they pop sometimes above water to take breath, to appear to say something, and then snatch at a lose preposition, that swims upon the face of the waters; and so the Roman Church hath catched a Trans, and others a Con, and a Sub, and an In, and varied their poetry into a Transubstantiation, and a Consubstantiation, and the rest, and rhymed themselves beyond reason, into absurdities, and heresies, and by a young figure of similiter cadens, they are fallen alike into error, though the errors that they are fallen into, be not of a like nature, nor danger. We offer to go no farther, then according to his Word; In the Sacrament our eyes see his salvation, according to that, so far, as that hath manifested unto us, and in that light we depart in peace, without scruple in our own, without offence to other men's consciences. Having thus seen Simeon in these his Dimensions, with these holy impressions, 2 Part. these blessed characters upon him; first, ¹ A man in a reverend age, & then, ² In a holy function and calling, and with that, ³ Righteous in the eyes of men, and withal, ⁴ Devout in the eyes of God, ⁵ And made a Prophet upon himself by the holy Ghost, ⁶ still waiting God's time, and his leisure, ⁷ And in that, desiring that his joy might be spread upon the whole Israel of God, ⁸ Frequenting holy places, the Temple, ⁹ And that upon holy motions, and there, 10 seeing the salvation of the Lord, that is, Discerning the application of salvation in the Ordinances of the Church, 11 And lastly, contenting himself with so much therein, as was according to his word, and not enquiring farther than God had been pleased to reveal; and having reflected all these several beams upon every worthy Receiver of the Sacrament, the whole Choir of such worthy receivers may join with Simeon in this Antiphon, Nunc Dimittis, Lord now lettest thou thy servant departed in peace, etc. S. Ambrose reads not this place as we do, Nunc dimittis, but Nunc dimitte; not, Lord thou dost so; but, Lord do so; and so he gives it the form of a prayer; and implies not only a patience, and a contentedness, but a desire, and an ambition that he might die; at least such an indifferency, and equanimity as Israel had, when he had seen joseph, Gen. 46.30. Now let me die, since I have seen thy face; after he had seen his face, the next face that he desired to see, was the face of God. For, howsoever there may be some disorder, some irregularity, in S. Paul's Anathema pro fratribus, that he desired to be separated from Christ, rather than his brethren should, (that may scarce be drawn into consequence, or made a wish for us to imitate) yet to S. Paul's Cupio dissolvi, to an express, and to a deliberate desire, to be dissolved here, and to be united to Christ in heaven, (still with a primary relation to the glory of God, and a reservation of the will of God) a godly, a rectified and a well-disposed man may safely come. And so, (I know not upon what grounds) Nicephorus fayes, Simeon did wish, and had his wish; he prayed that he might die, and actually he did die then. Neither can a man at any time be fit to make and obtain this wish, then when his eyes have seen his salvation in the Sacrament. At least, make this an argument of your having been worthy receivers thereof, that you are in Aequilibri●o, in an evenness, in an indifferency, in an equanimity, whether ye die this night or no. For, howsoever S. Ambrose seem to make it a direct prayer, that he might die, he intends but such an equanimity, such an indifferency; Quasi servus nonrefugit vitae obsequium, & quasi sapiem lucrum mortis amplectitur, says that Father; Simeon is so good a servant, as that he is content to serve his old master still, in his old place, in this world, but yet, he is so good a husband too, as that he sees what a gainer he might be, if he might be made free by death. If thou desire not death, (that is the case of very few, to do so in a rectified conscience, and without distemper) if thou be'st not equally disposed towards death (that should be the case of all; and yet we are far from condemning all that are not come to that equanimity) yet if thou now fear death inordinately, I should fear that thine eyes have not seen thy salvation to day; who can fear the darkness of death, that hath had the light of this world, and of the next too? who can fear death this night, that hath had the Lord of life in his hand to day? It is a question of consternation, a question that should strike him, that should answer it, dumb (as Christ's question, Amice, quomodo intrasti? Friend, how camest in hither? did him to whom that was said) which Origen asks in this case, When wilt thou dare to go out of this world, if thou darest not go now, when Christ Jesus hath taken thee by the hand to lead thee out? This then is truly to departed in peace, In pace. by the Gospel of peace, to the God of peace. My body is my prison; and I would be so obedient to the Law, as not to break prison; I would not hasten my death by starving, or macerating this body: But if this prison be burnt down by continual fevers, or blown down with continual vapours, would any man be so in love with that ground upon which that prison stood, as to desire rather to stay there, then to go home? Our prisons are fallen, our bodies are dead to many former uses; Our palate dead in a tastlesnesse; Our stomach dead in an indigestiblenesse; our feet dead in a lameness, and our invention in a dulness, and our memory in a forgetfulness; and yet, as a man that should love the ground, where his prison stood, we love this clay, that was a body in the days of our youth, and but our prison then, when it was at best; we abhor the graves of our bodies; and the body, which, in the best vigour thereof, Gen. 40. was but the grave of the soul, we overlove. Pharaohs Butler, and his Baker went both out of prison in a day; and in both cases, joseph, in the interpretation of their dreams, calls that, (their very discharge out of prison) a lifting up of their heads, a kind of preferment: Death raises every man alike, so far, as that it delivers every man from his prison, from the encumbrances of this body: both Baker and Butler were delivered of their prison; but they passed into divers states after, one to the restitution of his place, the other to an ignominious execution. Of thy prison thou shalt be delivered whether thou wilt or no; thou must die; Fool, this night thy soul may be taken from thee; and then, what thou shalt be to morrow, prophecy upon thyself, by that which thou hast done to day; If thou didst departed from that Table in peace, thou canst departed from this world in peace. And the peace of that Table is, to come to it in pace desiderii, with a contented mind, and with an enjoying of those temporal blessings which thou hast, without macerating thyself, without usurping upon others, without murmuring at God; And to be at that Table, in pace cogitationum, in the peace of the Church, without the spirit of contradiction, or inquisition, without uncharitableness towards others, without curiosity in thyself: And then to come from that Table in pace domestica, with a bosom peace, in thine own Conscience, in that seal of thy reconciliation, in that Sacrament; that so, riding at that Anchor, and in that calm whether God enlarge thy voyage, by enlarging thy life, or put thee into the harbour, by the breath, by the breathlesnesse of Death, either way, East or West, thou mayst departed in peace, according to his word, that is, as he shall be pleased to manifest his pleasure upon thee. SERMON V Preached at Paul's, upon Christmas Day. 1627. EXOD. 4.13. O my Lord, send I pray thee, by the hand of him whom thou wilt send. IT hath been suspiciously doubted, more than that, freely disputed, more than that too, absolutely denied, that Christ was born the five and twentieth of December, that this is Christmas-day: yet for all these doubts, and disputations, and denials, we forbear not, with the whole Church of God, constantly and confidently to celebrate this for his Day. It hath been doubted, and disputed, and denied too, that this Text, O my Lord, send I pray thee, by the hand of him, whom thou wilt send, hath any relation to the sending of the Messiah, to the coming of Christ, to Christmas-day; yet we forbear not to wait upon the ancient Fathers, and as they said, to say, that Moses having received a commandment from God, to undertake that great employment of delivering the children of Israel from the oppressions of Pharaoh in Egypt, and having excused himself by some other modest and pious pretences, at last, when God pressed the employment still upon him, he determines all in this, O my Lord, send I pray thee, by the hand of him, whom thou wilt send, or, (as it is in our Margin) when thou shouldest send. It is a work, next to the great work of the redemption of the whole world, to redeem Israel out of Egypt; And therefore do both works at once, put both into one hand, and mitte quem missurus es, send him, whom I know, thou wilt send, him, whom pursuing thine own decree, thou shouldest send, send Christ, send him now, to redeem Israel from Egypt. These words then (though some have made that interpretation of them, and truly, not without a fair appearance, and probability, and verisimilitude) do not necessarily imply a slackness in Moses zeal, that he desired not affectionately, and earnestly the deliverance of his Nation from the pressures of Egypt; nor do they imply any diffidence, or distrust, that God could not, or would not endow him with faculties fit for that employment; But, as a thoughtful man, a pensive, a considerative man, that stands still for a while, with his eyes fixed upon the ground, before his feet, when he casts up his head, hath presently, instantly the Sun, or the heavens for his object, he sees not a tree, nor a house, nor a steeple by the way, but as soon as his eye is departed from the earth where it was long fixed, the next thing he sees is the Sun or the heavens; so when Moses had fixed himself long upon the consideration of his own insufficiency for this service, when he took his eye from that low piece of ground, Himself, considered as he was then, he fell upon no tree, no house, no steeple, no such consideration as this, God may endow me, improve me, exalt me, enable me, qualify me with faculties fit for this service, but his first object was that which presented an infallibility with it, Christ Jesus himself, the Messiah himself, and the first petition that he offers to God is this, O my Lord send I pray thee, by the hand of him whom thou wilt send. For me, as I am, I am altogether unfit; when thou shalt be pleased to work upon me, thou wilt find me but stone, hard to receive thy holy impressions, and then but snow, easy to melt, and lose those holy forms again: There must be labour laid, and perchance labour lost upon me; but put the business into a safe had, and under an infallible instrument, and Mitte quem missurus es, send him whom, I know, thou wilt send, him, whom, pursuing thine own decree, thou shouldest send, send him, send Christ now. As much as Paradise exceeded all the places of the earth, Divisie. do the Scriptures of God exceed Paradise. In the midst of Paradise grew the Tree of knowledge, and the tree of life: In this Paradise, the Scripture, every word is both those Trees; there is Life and Knowledge in every word of the Word of God. That Germane jehovae, as the Prophet Esay calls Christ, that Offspring of Jehova, that Bud, that Blossom, that fruit of God himself, the Son of God, the Messiah, the Redeemer, Christ Jesus, grows upon every tree in this Paradise, the Scripture; for Christ was the occasion before, and is the consummation after, 1 john 5.13. of all Scripture. This have I written (says S. john,) and so say all the Penmen of the holy Ghost, in all that they have written, This have we written, that ye may know that ye have eternal life. Knowledge and life grows upon every tree in this Paradise, upon every word in this Book, because upon every Tree here, upon every word, grows Christ himself, in some relation. From this Branch, this Text, O my Lord send, I pray thee by the hand of him, whom thou wilt send, we shall not so much stand, to gather here and there an Apple, that is, to consider some particular words of the Text itself, as endeavour to shake the whole tree, that is, the Context, and coherence and dependence of the words: for, since all that passed between God and Moses in this affair, and negotiation, Gods employing of Moses, and Moses presenting his excuses to God, and Gods taking of all those excuses, determines in our Text, in our Text is the whole story, virtually and radically employed; And therefore, by just occasion thereof, we shall consider first, That though for the ordinary duties of our callings, arising out of the evidence of express Scriptures, we are allowed no haesitation, no disputation, whether we will do them or no; but they require a present, and an exact execution thereof: yet in extraordinary cases, and in such actions as are not laid upon us, by any former and permanent notification thereof in Scripture, such as was Moses case here, to undertake the deliverance of Israel from Egypt; in such cases, not only some haesitation, some deliberation, some consultation in ourselves, but some expostulation with God himself, may be excusable in us. We shall therefore see, that Moses did excuse himself four ways; And how God was pleased to join issue with him in all four, and to cast him, and overcome him in them all: And when we come to consider his fift, which is rather a Diversion upon another, than an Excuse in himself, and yet, is that, which is most literally in our Text, O my Lord send, I pray thee, by the hand of him, whom thou wilt send, because this was a thing which God had reserved wholly to himself, The sending of Christ: we shall see, that God would not have been pressed for that, but, (as it follows immediately, and is also a bough of this tree, that is, grows out of this Text) God was angry; But yet (as we shall see in the due place) it was but such an anger, as ended in an Instruction, rather than in an Increpation; and in an Encouragement, rather than in a Desertion, for he established Moses in a resolution to undertake the work, by joining his brother Aaron in commission with him. So then, we have shaked the tree, that is, resolved and analyzed the Context, of all which, the Text itself is the root, and the seal. And, as we have presented to your sight, we shall farther offer to your taste, and digestion, and rumination, these particular fruits; First, that ordinary Duties require a present execution; Secondly, that in Extraordinary, God allows a Deliberation, and requires not an implicit, a blind obedience: And in a third place, we shall give you those four circumstances, that accompanied, or constituted Moses deliberation, and Gods removing of those four impediments: And in a fourth ●oome, that Consultation or Diversion, The sending of Christ: And in that, How God was affected with it, He was angry: angry that Moses would offer to look into those things, which he had locked up in his secret counsels, such as that sending of Christ, which he intended: But yet, not angry so, as that he left Moses unsatisfied, or un-accommodated for the main business, but settled him in a holy and cheerful readiness to obey his commandment. And through all these particulars, we shall pass, with as much clearness, as the weight, and as much shortness, as the number will permit. First then, our first Consideration constitutes that Proposition, Ordinary Duties, Ordinary Duties. arising out of the Evidence of God's Word, require a present Execution. There are Duties that bind us semper, and Adsemper, as our Casuists speak; we are Always bound to do them, and bound to do them Always; that is, Always to produce Actus elicitos, Determinate acts, Successive and Consecutive acts, conformable to those Duties; whereas in some other Duties, we are only bound to an Habitual disposition, to do them in such and such necessary cases; And those Actions of the later sort, fall in Genere Deliberativo, we may consider Circumstances, before we fall under a necessity of doing them; that is, of doing them Then, or doing them Thus: Of which kind, even those great duties of Praying, and Fasting are; for we are always bound to Pray, and always bound to Fast; but not bound to fast always, nor always to pray. But for Actions of the first kind, such as are the worshipping of God, and the not worshipping of Images; such as are the sanctifying of God's Sabbaths, and the not blaspheming of his Name, which arise out of clear and evident commands of God; they admit no Deliberation, but require a present Execution. Therefore as S. Stephen saw Christ, standing at the right hand of his Father, (a posture that denotes first a readiness to survey, and take knowledge of our distresses, and then a readiness to proceed, and come forth to our assistance) so in our Liturgy, in our Service, in the Congregation, we stand up at the profession of the Creed, at the rehearsing the Articles of our Faith, thereby to declare to God, and his Church, our readiness to stand to, and our readiness to proceed in that Profession. The commendation which is given of Andrew, and Peter for obeying Christ's call, Mark 1.18. lies not so much in the Reliquerunt retia, that they left their nets, as in the Protinus reliquerunt, that forthwith, immediately, without farther deliberation, they left their nets, the means of their livelihood, and followed Christ. The Lord and his Spirit hath anointed us to preach, Esay 61.1. says the Prophet Esay: To preach what? Acceptabilem annum, to preach the acceptable year of the Lord. All the year long the Lord stands with his arms open to embrace you, and all the year long we pray you in Christ's stead, that you would be reconciled to God. 2 Cor. 5.20. Psal. 95.8. But yet, God would feign reduce it to a narrower compass of time, H●die si vocem ejus audieritis, that you would hear his voice to day, and not harden your hearts to day: And to a narrower compass than that, Dabitur in illa hora, says Christ, Luk. 12.12. The holy Ghost shall teach you in that hour: In this hour the holy Ghost offers himself unto you: And to a narrower compass than an hour, Beati qui nunc esuritis, qui nunc fletis, Luk. 6.21. Blessed are ye that hunger now, and that mourn now, that put not off years, nor days, nor hours, but come to a sense of your sins, and of the means of reconciliation to God, now, this minute. And therefore, when ye read, justa pondera, just weights, and Just balances, Levit. 19.36. and just measures, a just Hin, and a just Ephah shall ye have, I am the Lord your God, Do not you say, so I will hereafter, I will come to just weights and measures, and to deal uprightly in the world, as soon as I have made a fortune, established a state, raised a competency for wife and children, but yet I must do as other men do; Levit. 23. when you read Remember that you keep holy the Sabbath day, (and by the way, remember that God hath called his other holy days, and holy convocations, Sabbaths too) remember that you celebrate his Sabbaths by your presence here, do not you say, so I will if I can rise time enough, if I can dine soon enough; when you read, swear not at all, do not you say, Matt. 5.34. no more I would but that I live amongst men that will not believe me without swearing, and laugh at me if I did not swear; for duties of this kind, permanent and constant duties arising out of the evidence of God's word, such as just and true dealing with men, such as keeping Gods Sabbaths, such as not blaspheming his name, have no latitude about them, no conditions in them; they have no circumstance, but are all substance, no apparel, but are all body, no body, but are all soul, no matter, but are all form; They are not in Genere deliberativo, they admit no deliberation, but require an immediate, and an exact execution. But then, for extraordinary things, things that have not their evidence in the word of God formerly revealed unto us, whether we consider matters of Doctrine, Extraordinary. and new opinions, or matter of Practice, and new commands, from what depth of learning soever that new opinion seem to us to rise, or from height of Power soever that new-Command seem to fall, it is still in genere deliberativo, still we are allowed, nay still we are commanded to deliberate, Melch. Canus. to doubt, to consider, before we execute. As a good Author in the Roman Church, says, Perniciosius est Ecclesiae, It is more dangerous to the Church, to accept an Apocryphal book for Canonical, then to reject a Canonical book for Apocryphal: so may it be more dangerous, to do some things, which to a distempered man may seem to be commanded by God, then to forbear some things, which are truly commanded by him. God had rather that himself should be suspected, then that a false god should be admitted. The easiness of admitting Revelations, and Visions, and Apparitions of spirits, and Purgatory souls in the Roman Church; And then, the overbending, and super-exaltation of zeal, and the captivity to the private spirit, which some have fallen into, that have not been content to consist in moderate, and middle ways in the Reformed Church; this easiness of admitting imaginary apparitions of spirits in the Papist, and this easiness of submitting to the private spirit, in the Schismatic, hath produced effects equally mischievous: Melancholy being made the seat of Religion on the one side, Basil. by the Papist, and Frenzy on the other side, by the Schismatic. Multi, prae studio immoderato intendi in contrarium aberrarunt à medio, was the observation and the complaint of that Father in his time, and his prophecy of ours; That many times, an over-vehement bending into some way of our own choosing, does not only withdraw us from the left hand way, the way of superstition, and Idolatry, from which we should all draw, but from the middle way too, in which we should stand, and walk. And then, Leo. the danger is thus great, facile in omnia flagitia impulit, quos religione decepit diabolus; As God doth, the devil also doth make Zeal and Religion his instrument. And in other tentations, the devil is but a serpent; but in this, when he makes zeal and religion his instrument, he is a Lyon. As long as the devil doth but say, Do this, or thou wilt live a fool, and die a beggar; Do this, or thou canst not live in this world, the devil is but a devil, he plays but a devil's part, a liar, a seducer; But when the devil comes to say, Do this, or thou canst not live in the next world, thou canst not be saved, here the devil pretends to be God, here he acts God's part, and so prevails the more powerfully upon us. And then, when men are so mis-transported, either in opinions, or in actions, with this private spirit, and inordinate zeal, Quibus non potest auferre fidem, aufert charitatem, says the same Father, Though the devil hath not quenched faith in that man himself, yet he hath quenched that man's charity towards other men; Though that man might be saved, in that opinion which he holds, because (perchance) that opinion destroys no fundamental point, yet his salvation is shrewdly shaked, and endangered, in his uncharitable thinking, that no body can be saved that thinks otherwise. And as it works thus to an uncharitableness in private, so doth it to turbulence, and sedition in the public. Of which, Eusebius. we have a pregnant, and an aplyable example in the life of Constantine the Emperor; In his time, there arose some new questions, and new opinions in some points of Religion; the Emperor writ alike to both parties, thus: De rebus ejusmodi, nec omnino rogetis, nec rogati respondeatis: Do you move no questions, in such things, yourselves; and if any other do, yet be not you too forward, to write, so much as against them. What questions doth he mean? That is expressed, Quas nulla lex, Canonve Ecclesiasticus necessario praescribit; Such questions, as are not evidently declared, and more than evidently declared, necessarily enjoined by some law, some rule, some Canon of the Church: Disturb not the peace of the Church, upon Inferences, and Consequences, but deal only upon those things, which are evidently declared in the Articles, and necessarily enjoined by the Church. And yet, though that Emperor declared himself on neither side, nor did any act in favour of either side, yet because he did not declare himself on their side, those promovers of these new opinions, Eo pervenere, (says that Author) ut imagines Imperatoris violarint, They came as far as they could, to violate the person of the Emperor, for they violated and defaced his statues, his images, his pictures, the ensigns of his power and honour; And in this insolency they continued (says that Author) even after the Emperor had silenced both parties; when he, by his express Edict, had forbidden both sides to write, the promovers of the new opinions would write. Still such men think, that whatsoever they think, is not only true in itself, but necessary for salvation to every man; whereas new opinions, that may vary from the Scriptures; new commands, that may vary from the Church, are still in Genere deliberativo, they admit, they require Deliberation. Blind and implicit faith shall not save us in matter of Doctrine, nor blind and implicit obedience, in matter of practice; neither is there any faith so blind, and implicit, as to believe those imaginary apparitions of spirits, nor any obedience so blind and implicit, as to obey our own private spirit, and distempered zeal. Truly, I should hope better of their salvation, who in the first darker times, doubted of the Revelations of St. john, then of theirs, who in these clear and evident times, accept, and enjoin, and magnify, so much as they do in the Roman Church, the Revelations of St. Brigid: And I should rather accompany them, who out of their charitable moderation, do believe, that some Christians, though possessed with some errors, may be saved, then them, who out of their passionate severity, first call every difference from themselves, an error; and then every error, damnable; and do not only pronounce, that none that holds any such error, can be saved, but that no man, though he hold none of those errors himself, can be saved, if he think any man can be saved, that holds them. And so we have done with those two propofitions, which are the walls upon which our whole frame is to be laid; That ordinary duties require a present execution, that was our first: but extraordinary admit deliberation, that was our second Consideration; And now our third is, to consider Moses case in particular, as it was an example of both. As Moses was an example of the present performance of an evident duty, Moses case. we carry you back, to the former chapter, where this root, this Text is first laid, that is, this employment first begun to be notified. There ver. 4. God calls Moses, and he calls him by name, V 4. and by name twice, Moses, Moses. Of this, Moses could not be ignorant; and therefore he comes to a present discharge of this duty to a present answer, ecce adsum, Lord, here I am. This is the advantage of innocence above guiltiness; God called Adam in Paradise, and he called him by name, and with a particular inquisition, Adam, ubies? Adam, where art thou? And Adam hide himself; God calls Moses, and Moses answers. He that is used to hear God, at home, in his conscience, and in his ears, at Church; and used to answer God, in both places, at home in his private meditations, and in public devotions at Church; he that is used to hear, and used to answer God thus, shall be glad to hear him, in his last voice, in his Angel's Trumpets, and to that voice, Surgite qui dormitis, Arise thou that sleepest in the dust, and stand up to Judgement, as he shall have invested the righteousness of Christ Jesus, he shall answer in the very words of Christ Jesus; I am he that liveth, and was dead, and behold I am alive, for evermore, Amen. Apoc. 1.18. In this evident duty then, Moses permitted himself no liberty; God called, and he answered instantly; He answered in action, as well as in words; and, indeed, that is our loudest, and most musical answer, to answer God, in deed, in action. So Moses did; He came, V 5. he hastened to the place, where God spoke. It is one good argument of piety, to love the place where God speaks, the house of his presence. But yet Moses received an inhibition from God there, a ne appropies, Come not too near, too close to this place. God loves that we should come to him here, in his house; but God would not have us press too close upon him here; we must not be too familiar, too fellowly, too homely with God, here at home, in his house, nor loath to uncover our head, or bow our knee at his name. When God proceeded farther with Moses, and comes to say, descendi ut liberem, V 8. I am come down to deliver Israel from Egypt, (which was the first intimation that God gave of that purpose) Moses likes that well enough, opposes nothing to that, that God would be pleased to think of some course for delivering of Israel, and enable some Instrument for that work; for that is, for the most part God's descending, and his coming down, to put his power instrumentally, ministerially, into the hand of another; General things, and remote things do not much affect us; Moses says nothing to God's general proposition; That he was come down to deliver Israel, but when God comes to that particular, veni erg● ut mittamte, Come therefore that I may send thee, him into Egypt, V 9, 10. Moses to Pharaoh, this was a Rock in his Sea, and a Remora upon his Ship, a Hill in his way, and a Snake in his path. Some light, that this was about the time, when Israel should be delivered, there was before. Moses takes knowledge, Gen. 15.16. that God had promised Abraham, that after four generations, they should come back; and the four generations were come about. Some light, that Moses should be the man, by whom they should be delivered, it seems there was before; for upon that history which is in the second chapter of this book, that Moses flew an Egyptian who oppressed one of his Countrymen, Exod. 2.13. St. Stephen, Acts 7.25. in his own Funeral Sermon, says, That Moses, in that act supposed, his brethren would have understood, how that God, by his hand would deliver them, but they understood it not. So that it seems some such thing had gone out in voice, some revelation, some intimation, some emanation of some kind of light there had been, by which they might have understood it, though they did not. But when Moses remembers now, that that succeeded not, that they apprehended not the offer of his service then, and that he was now grown to be eighty years old, and that forty of that eighty had been spent in an obscure, in a Shepherd's life, and that he must now be sent, not only to work upon that people, who shown no forwardness towards him then, and might absolutely have forgotten him now, but upon Pharaoh himself, this created in Moses this haesitation, this deliberation; perchance not without some tincture of infirmity, but fare from any degree of impiety; perchance not without some expostulation with God, but fare from any reluctation against God. Consider Abraham; Abraham the Father of the faithful; of whom, as the Apostle says, that he hoped beyond hope, we may say, that he believed beyond faith, for, (as he says) he followed God, not knowing whither he led him; Abraham came to another manner of expostulation with God, Gen. 18.22. in the behalf of Sodom; He says to God, wilt thou destroy the righteous with the wicked? Absit, be that fare from thee; and he repeats it Absit, be that fare from thee; and he pleads it with God, Shall not the judge of all the earth do right? Now as St. Paul says of Esay, Esay was bold when he said thus and thus; so we may say of Abraham, Abraham was bold, when he could conceive such an imagination, that God would destroy the righteous with the wicked, or that the Judge of all the earth should not do right; yet Abraham is not blamed for this. Consider St. Peter's proceeding with Christ; Mat. 16.23. he comes to a rebuking of Christ, and to a more vehement absit, Lord be this far from thee, this shall not be unto thee, speaking of his going up to Jerusalem, upon which journey dependeth the whole work of our redemption. And though S. Peter incurred an increpation from Christ, yet that which he did, was rooted in love, and piety, though it were mixed with inconsideration. S. Peter went farther than Abraham, but Abraham farthen then Moses; As therefore that first Revelation, which Moses may seem to have received, when he was forty years before this, in Egypt, did not so bind him, to a present prosecution of that work of their deliverance, but that, upon occasion he did withdraw himself from Egypt, and continue from thence, in a forty year's absence; so neither did this intimation, which he received from God now, so bind him up, but that he might piously present his own unfitness for that employment; for it does not so much imply a denial to undertake the service, as a petition, that God would super-endow him, with parts, and faculties, fit for that service; It is fare from that stubborn sons non ibo, I will not go to work in that Vineyard; But it is only this, except God do somewhat for me before Lgoe, I shall be very unfit to go: And that any Ambassador may say to his Prince, any Minister of State to his Master, any Messenger of God to God himself. And therefore good occasion of doctrines of edification offering itself from that consideration, we shall insist a little, upon each of his excuses, though they be four. His first prospect that he looks upon in himself, Quis ego. his first object, that by way of objection he makes to God, is himself, and his own unworthiness. To consider others, is but to travail: to be at home, is to consider ourselves: upon others we can look, but in obliqne lines; only upon ourselves, in direct. Man is but earth; 'tis true; but earth is the centre. That man who dwells upon himself, who is always conversant in himself, rests in his true centre. Man is a celestial creature too, a heavenly creature; and that man that dwells upon himself, that hath his conversation in himself, hath his conversation in heaven, If you weigh any thing in a scale, the greater it is, the lower it sinks; as you grow greater and greater in the eyes of the world, sink lower and lower in your own. If thou ask thyself Quis ego, what am I? and be'st able to answer thyself, why now I am a man of title, of honour, of place, of power, of possessions, a man fit for a Chronicle, a man considerable in the Herald's Office, go to the Herald's Office, the sphere and element of Honour, and thou shalt find those men as busy there, about the consideration of Funerals, as about the consideration of Creations; thou shalt find that office to be as well the Grave, as the Cradle of Honour; And thou shalt find in that Office as many Records of attainted families, and escheated families, and empoverished and forgotten, and obliterate families, as of families newly erected and presently celebrated. In what height soever, any of you that sit here, stand at home, there is some other in some higher station than yours, that weighs you down: And he that stands in the highest of subordinate heights, nay in the highest supreme height in this world, is weighed down, by that, which is nothing; for what is any Monarch to the whole world? and the whole world is but that; but what? but nothing. What man amongst us looks Moses way, first upon himself; perchance enough do so; but who looks Moses way, and by Moses light? first upon himself, and in himself, first upon his own insufficiencies; what man amongst us, that is named to any place, by the good opinion of others, or that calls upon others, and begs, and buys their good opinion for that place, gins at Moses, Quis ego? What am I? where have I studied and practised sufficiently before, that I should fill such or such a place of Judicature? Quis ego? What am I? where have I served, and laboured, and preached in inferior places of the Church, that I should fill fuch or a such a place of Dignity or prelacy there? Quis ego? What am I? where have I seen and encountered, and discomfited the enemy, that I should fill such or such a place of Command in an army? There is not an Abraham left to say, Pulvis & Cinis, O my Lord, I am but dust and ashes; not a jacob left to say, Non sum dignus, O my Lord I am not worthy of the least of these preferments; not a David left to say, Canis mortuies, & pulex, O my Lord I am but a dead dog, and a flea; But every man is vapoured up into air; and, as the air can, he thinks he can fill any place: Every man is under that complicated disease, and that riddling distemper, not to be content with the most, and yet to be proud of the least thing he hath; that when he looks upon men, he dispises them, because he is some kind of Officer, and when he looks upon God, he murmurs at him, because he made him not a King. But if man will not come to his Quis ego? who am I? to a due consideration of himself, God will come to his Quis tu? who art thou? and to his Amice quomodo intrasti? friend how came you in? To every man that comes in by undue means, God shall say, as first to us, in our profession, what hadst thou to do, to take my word into thy mouth? so to others in theirs, what hadst thou to do, to take my sword into thy hand? Only to those who are little in their own eyes, shall God say, as Christ said to his Church, Noli timere, fear not little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the Kingdom. It is not called a Kingdom, but the Kingdom; that Kingdom, which alone, Luk. 12.32. is worth all the kingdoms that the devil shown Christ, The Kingdom of Heaven. Be but a worm and no man, as David speaks even in the person of Christ; Ps. 22.7. find thyself trodden under foot, and under thine own foot, that is, depressed in thine own estimation, and God shall raise thee with that supportation, Fear not thou worm of jacob, Esay 41.14. ye men of Israel. Be but worms and no more, in your own eyes, and God shall make you men, be but men and no more in your own eyes, and GOD shall make you the men of his Israel. This was Moses way; not a running away from God, but a turning into himself; not a reluctation against God, but a consideration of himself. For, though the lazy man's Quis ego, shall not profit him, when he shall say, what am I? I am but one man, I can do nothing alone, and so leave all reformation un-attempted in his place, because others will ●●●orme nothing in theirs; (for, that which David says, Ps. 50.18. If thou sawest a thief, Currebas, thou didst rise and run with him, is not much worse, than when thou seest a lazy man, to lie down and sleep with him) Though this man's Quis ego, what am I? shall not profit him, for it is but the voice of prevarication, in the ordinary duties of his calling, yet in Moses case, in every undertaking of a new action, this examination, this exinanition of ourselves is acceptable in the fight of God. And therefore Calvin says justly of this particular, in Moses case, Non modo culpa vacare, sed laude dignum puto, that Moses in this his proceeding with God, was so far from deserving blame, that he deserved much praise. And so it seems, God himself interpreted it, and accepted it; for first, for his way, he gives him that assurance, Certainly I will be with thee; V 12. and then for the end, and the effect too, he directs him thus, when thou hast brought forth the people out of Egypt (as, certainly this people thou shalt bring from thence) then shall they serve God upon this Mountain. And further we may not carry the consideration of Moses first excuse, arising out of the contemplation of his own insufficiency, in general. The second doubt and difficulty that Moses makes to himself, and presents to God, Quod nomeu? V 13. Euseb. l. 6. c. 3. is this, that he was not able to tell them to whom he was sent, his name that sent him. When I am come to them, says Moses to God, and shall say, thou hast sent me, and they shall say, what is his Name, what shall I say unto them? In Eusebius his history, A Tyrant, a persecutor, asks a martyr, Artalus, in the midst of his torments, in scorn and contempt, What is your God's name? you pretend a necessity of worshipping a new God, your God, but what shall we call your God, what is your God's name? And the Martyr answered, Qui plures sunt, nominibus decernuntur, qui unus est, nomine non indiget: You who worship many Gods, need many names to distinguish your Gods by; we, who know but one God, need no other name of God, but God; we who worship the only true God, need not the semigods, nor the sesqui-gods of the Roman Church; not their semigods, their halfgods, men beatified, but not sanctified; made private gods, but not public gods; chamber-gods, but not Church-gods; nor any sesqui-god, any that must be more than God, and receive appeals from God, and reverse the decrees of God, which they make the office of the Virgin Mary, whom no man can honour too much, that makes her not God, and they dishonour most, that make her so much more. But yet, some names, some notifications of God, no doubt the Jews had: Moses says here, that he would tell them, that the God of their Fathers had sent him; which was a name of specification, and distinction of this GOD, from all the gods of the Gentiles. But in this place, Moses desires such a name of God, as might not only intimate to them to whom he was sent, a great power in that Prince that sent him, but might also intimate a great privacy, and confidence in him that was sent; A name, by which he might be known, to know more of that God, than other men knew; for, nothing advances a business more, than when he that is employed, is believed to know the mind, and to have the heart of him, that sends him. Therefore God gives Moses a cipher; God declares to Moses, his bosom name, his viscerall name, his radical, his fundamental name, the name of his Essence, Qui sum, I am; Go, and tell them, that he whose name is I am, hath sent thee. It is true, that literally in the Original, this name is conceived in the future; it is there, Qui ero, I that shall be. But this present acceptation, I am, hath passed through all Translators, and all Commentors, and Fathers, and Counsels, and Schools, and the whole Church of God rests in it. Piscator. And I know but one, (who is of the Reformation, and of the most rigid sub-division in the Reformation, and who hath many other singularities besides this) that will needs translate this name, Qui eram, I was. Howsoever, all intent, that this is a name that denotes Essence, Being: Being is the name of God, and of God only: for, of every other creature, Plato says well, Ejus nomen est potius non esse; The name of the Creator is, I am, but of every creature rather, I am not, I am nothing. He considers it, and concludes it, in the best, and noblest of creatures, Man; for, he, as well as the rest, plus habet non entis, quam entis; Man hath more privatives, than positives in him; Man hath but his own being; Man hath not the being of an Angel, nor the being of a lion; God hath all in a kind of eminence more excellently than the kinds themselves, only his name is I am. Plato pursues this consideration usefully; Habuit ante aeternum non esse, Man had an eternal not being before; that is, before the creation; for those infinite millions of millions of generations before the Creation, there was a God, whose name was I am; but till within these six thousand years, Man was not, there was not man. And so says Plato, Haberet aeternum non esse, 〈◊〉 Man had an eternal not being before the Creation; so he would have another eternal not-being after his dissolution by death, in soul, as well as in body, if God did not preserve that being, which he hath imprinted in both, in both. And jam dum est, says he, As man had one eternal not being before, and would have another after, so for that being which he seems to have here now, it is a continual declination into a not being, because he is in continual change, and mutation, quae desinit in non esse, as he says well; Every change and mutation bends to a not being, because in every change, it comes to a not being that which it was before; only the name of God is I am. In which name, God gave Moses, and does give us who are also his Ambassadors, so much knowledge of himself, as that we may tell you, though not what God is, yet, that God is; God, in the notification of this name, sends us sufficiently instructed, to establish you in the assurance of an everlasting, and an ever-ready God, but not to scatter you with unnecessary speculations, and impertinencies concerning this God. He is no fit messenger between God and his Church, that knows not God's name; that is, how God hath notified, and manifested himself to man. God hath manifested himself to man in Christ; and manifested Christ in the Scriptures; and manifested the Scriptures in the Church; the name of God is the notification of God; how God will be called by man, and that is, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; and how God will be called upon by man, that is, that all our prayers to God be directed in, and through, and by, and for Christ Jesus. If we know the name of God, Qui sum, I am, that is, believe Christ Jesus, whom we worship to have been from all eternity, to be God; and then for more particular points, believe those Doctrines, quae sunt, which are, that is, Quae sunt ubique, & semper, as Lyrinensis says, which have been always believed, and always believed to have been necessary to be believed as articles of Faith, through the whole Catholic Church, if we know the name of God thus, we have our Commission, and our qualification in that Gospel, Go, and teach all Nations, Mat. 28.19. and baptise in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the holy Ghost; that is the name of God to a Christian, the Trinity. And lest that Commission so delivered in the general and fundamental manner, professing the Trinity, should not seem enough, it is repeated and paraphrased in the verse following, Teach them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you. First there is a Teaching; good life itself is but a commentary, an exposition upon our preaching; that which is first laid upon us is preaching; and then teach them to observe, that is, to practise; breed them not in an opinion that such a faith as is without works is enough; and teach them to observe All; For, for matter of practice, He that breaks one Law is guilty of all, and he that thinks to serve God by way of compensation, that is, to recompense God by doing one duty, for the omission of another, sins even in that, in which he thinks he serves God; and for matter of belief, he that believes not all, solvit jesum, as S. john speaks, he takes Jesus in pieces, and after the Jews have crucified him, he dissects him, and makes him an Anatomy. We must therefore teach all; but than it is but all, which Christ hath commanded us; additional and traditional doctrines of the Papist, speculative and dazzling, riddling and entangling perplexities of the School, passionate, and uncharitable wranglings of Controverters, these fall not in Moses Commission, nor ours, who participate of his; we are to deliver to you by the Ordinance of God, Preaching, The name of God, that is, how God hath manifested himself to man, and how God will be called upon by man, That God is your God in Christ, if you receive Christ in the Scriptures, applied in the Church. And farther we carry not our consideration upon this second excuse of Moses, in which (as in the former, he considered his insufficiency in the general) he considers it in this, that he had not studied, he had not acquired, he had not sought the knowledge of those Mysteries which appertained to that calling, employed in that, that he did not know God's name. His third excuse, which induces a great discouragement, Non eloquens. arises out of a defect in nature, whereas the former is rather of art, and study, and consideration; and to be naturally defective in those faculties, which are essential and necessary to that work, which is under our hand, is a great discouragement. Lameness is not always an insupportable calamity; but for Mephibosheth to have been hindered by lameness then, when he should have received favour from the King, and settled his inheritance, this was a heavy affliction. Lowness of stature is no insupportable thing; but when Zacheus came with such a desire to see Christ, then to be disappointed by reason of his lowness, this might affect him. It is not always insupportable to lack the assistance of a servant, or a friend; But when the Angel hath troubled the water, and made it medicinal for him that is first put in and no more, then to have lain many years in expectation, and still to lack a servant, or a friend to do that office, this is a misery. And this was Moses case; God will send him upon a service, that consisted much in persuasion, and good speech, and he says, O my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither heretofore, nor since thou hast spoken to thy servant. Ver. 10. Where we see, there is some degree of eloquence required in the delivery of God's Messages. There are not so eloquent Books in the world, as the Scriptures; neither should a man come to any kind of handling of them with uncircumcised lips, as Moses speaks, or with an extemporal and irreverent, or over-homely and vulgar language. Prov. 16.1. The preparation of the heart is of the Lord, says Solomon; but it is not only that; The preparation of the heart, and the answer of the tongue is of the Lord. To conceive good things for the glory of God, and to express them to the edification of God's people, is a double blessing of God. Therefore does Hester form and institute her prayer to God so, Ester 14.12. Give me boldness, O Lord of all power; but she extends her prayer farther, And give me eloquent speech in my mouth. And the want of this in a natural defect, and unreadiness of speech discouraged Moses. And when God recompenses, and supplies this defect in Moses, he does it but thus, I will be with thy mouth, and I will teach thee what thou shalt say. Still it is Moses that must say it; still Moses mouth that must utter it. Beloved, it is the general Ordinance of God, of whom, as we have received mercy, we have received the Ministry, and it is the particular grace of God that inanimates our labours, and makes them effectual upon you; All that is not of our planting, nor watering, but of God that gives the increase; But yet we must labour to get, and labour to improve such learning, and such language, and such other abilities as may best become that service; for the natural want of one of these, retarded Moses from a present acceptation of God's employment. And so truly, should put any man, that puts himself, or puts his son upon this profession, upon that consideration, whether he have such natural parts as will admit acquisitions, and superedifications fit for that calling. And farther we carry not Moses third excuse, raised out of a natural defect, non sum eloquens, I am not eloquent enough. The fourth is a shrewd discouragement: Non credent. In the first verse of this Chapter, He answered and said, but behold, they will not believe me; when I have told them thy name, how thou hast manifested thyself to them, and in what name they must call upon thee, Behold, they will not believe me; And this is the saddest discouragement that can fall upon the Minister and Messenger of God, not to be believed. God found this, and complained of it at first, Num. 14.11. Esay 53.1. John 12.38. Quousque non credent? how long will it be ere this people believe? they will never believe. The Prophet Esay foresaw this; Quis credidit? Lord who hath believed our report? No man doth, no man will believe us. S. john found this prophecy of Esay fulfilled even then, when Christ in person was preaching, and working of Miracles; then says that Evangelist, Rom. 10.16. was that of Esay fulfilled, They believed not his report. And S. Paul saw it performed amongst the Gentiles, as well as S. john amongst the Jews, Lord who hath believed our report? Christ hath said himself, and Christ hath bidden us say, Qui non crediderit, damnabitur, He that believes not, shall be damned: And yet, Lord who hath believed our report? There cannot fall a sadder discouragement upon the Messenger of God, than not to be believed. How loath we find the blessed Fathers of the Primitive Church, to lack company at their Sermons? How earnestly Leo, in one of his Anniversary Sermons, complains of multitudes, and thrusts at Plays, and Masks, and of a thinness, and scarcity, and solitude at Church? How glad they were to draw men thither? And then how much they endeavoured, to hold them in a disposition of harkening unto them, when they had them? Sometimes with observing them with phrases of humiliation; So Damascene professes himself Minimum servum Ecclesiae, Damascen. the meanest and unworthiest servant to that Congregation. So Leo presents himself, Leo. August. Ad vestra paratus obsequia, Ready to do all obsequious service to that Congregation: And so S. Augustine, In hoc vobis servimus, we shall do this congregation the best service, in handling this point thus. Sometimes they did it so, by submitting themselves to the Congregation, in phrases of humiliation; and sometimes, by taking knowledge of the pious, and devout behaviour of the congregation, even in their Sermons, Leo. and thanking them for it; As Leo does too, Quod non tacito honorastis affectu, That they did countenance that which was said, with a holy murmur, with a religious whispering, and with an ocular applause, with fixing their eyes upon the Preacher, and with turning their eyes upon one another; for those outward declarations were much, very much in use in those times. And though in the excess of such outward declarations, Chrysost. S. Chrysost: complain of them, Non Theatrum Ecclesia, My masters, what mean you, the Church is not a Theatre, Quae mihi istorum plausuum utilitas? what get I by these plaudites, & acclamations? I had rather have one soul, than all these hands and eyes: yet it is easy to observe, in the general proceeding of those blessed Fathers, that they had a holy delight to be heard, August. and to be heard with delight. For, Nemo flectitur, qui molestè audit; No man profits by a Sermon, that hears with pain, or weariness. Therefore S. Chrysoslome awakes his drowsy Auditory with that alarm, Chrysost. His quae jam dicuntur, etc. Harken, I pray you now, says he; for, Non rem vulgarem pollicemur, It is no ordinary matter that I shall tell you: and having so awakened them, he keeps them awake, with such Doctrines as he thought fittest for their edification. And to the same purpose, August. S. Augustine does not only profess of himself, Non praetermitto istos numeros clausularum, That he studied at home, to make his language sweet, and harmonious, and acceptable to God's people, but he believes also, that S. Paul himself, and all the Apostles, had a delight, and a complacency, and a holy melting of the bowels, when the congregation liked their preaching: The Fathers were glad to be heard, glad to be liked, and glad to be understood too; for, therefore doth Damascen repeat, almost verbatim, Damase. that great Sermon of his De Imaginibus, a second time, because (as he assigns the reason) he was not throughly understood, in the first preaching thereof; Nehem. 8. And therefore doth Ezra extend himself so far, as to preach from morning (as it is in the Original, from the light) till noon, that by giving himself that compass, he might carry every point in a clearness, as he went. Now if these blessed Fathers, these Angels of the Church, these Archangels of the Primitive Church, were thus affected, if they were not frequented, but neglected for other entertainments; or if they were not harkened to, when they were heard, but heard perfunctorily, fragmentarily, here and there a rag, a piece of a sentence; Or if they were not understood, because they that heard were scattered, and distracted with other thoughts, and so withdrawn from their observation; or if they were not liked, because the Auditory had some precontracts upon other Preachers, that they liked better; how may we think, that those holy and blessed spirits were troubled, if they were not believed? This destroys and demolishes the whole body of our building; this evacuates the whole function of our Ministry, if we lose our credibility; if we may not be believed; if the Church conceive a jealousy, that we preach to serve turns; And therefore vae per quem, and vae per quos; woe unto that man (if any such man there should ever be) that gives just occasion of such a jealousy, that he preaches to serve turns; And woe to them (who abound every where) who entertain such jealousies, where no just occasion is offered, but misinterpret the faithful labours of Gods true servants, and think every thing done to serve turns, that doth not agree with their distemper, in the likeness of zeal. The Fathers were sorry if they were not heard, if they were not understood, if they were not liked; But the saddest discouragement of all, is the Non credent, if we be not believed. And farther we carry not our Consideration upon Moses four excuses; of which the first was, in Contemplation of his own insufficiency in general; The second, in that particular, of not having furnished himself with additions necessary for that service; The third, because he had a defect in natural faculties; and the last, for the indisposition of them, to whom he was to go. But then the fift, which is not so much an excuse, as a petition, (O my Lord, Mitte quem missurus. send I pray thee, by the hand of him whom thou wilt send) tastes of most vehemence, and, as it may seem, of some passion in Moses. He says first, Quis ego? I am not worthy of this employment; That's true; but thou art able to qualify me for it; and that objection is taken away. Quod nomen? I know not thy name, how thou wilt be called, and how thou wilt be called upon by men; I have not studied that: But thou hast revealed unto me the knowledge of fundamental doctrines, necessary for salvation, and that objection is removed. Non facundus, I am not eloquent, not of ready speech, defective in those natural faculties; But the spirit of eloquence, and the irresistibleness of persuasion is in that mouth, in which thou speakest: and that excuse is taken away too. Non credent; I know their stubbornness, to whom I go, they will not believe me; But thou hast put the power of Miracles into my hands, as well as knowledge into my heart; God makes sometimes a plain and simple man's good life, as powerful, as the eloquentest Sermon. All this I acknowledge, says Moses; But yet, O Lord, when thou shalt have done all this, in me, and in them, made me worthy by thy power, taught me thy Name by thy grace, infused a perswasibility into them, and a perswasivenesse into me, by thy Spirit, yet there is One who is to be sent, One whom I know thou wilt send, One, whom, pursuing thine own Decree, thou shouldst send, One, whose shooe-latchet I shall not be worthy to untie then, when thou shalt have multiplied all these qualifications upon me, and therefore, O my Lord, send, I pray thee, by his hand, send him, send Christ now. So then, with the ancient Fathers, with justin Martyr, with S. Basil, with Tertullian, with more, many, very many more, we may safely take this to be a supplication, That God would be pleased to hasten the coming of the Messiah. Of our later writers, Calvin departs from the Ancients herein, so fare, as to say, nimis coacta, it seems somewhat a forced, somewhat an unnatural sense, to interpret these words of the coming of Christ; but he proceeds no farther. But another, of the same sub-division, is, (as he uses to be) more assured, more confident; and he says, Piscator. est omnimoda & praecisa recusatio; It is an absolute refusal in Moses, to obey the commandment of God: And that truly, needed not to have been said. Now, when we consider the exposition in the Roman Church, Tostat. when their great Bishop, (I mean their great writing Bishop) departs from the Ancients, & does not understand these words of the coming of Christ, Pererius. a Jesuit is so bold with that Bishop, (their order forbids them to be Bishops, but not to be Controllers over Bishops) as to tell him, levis objectio, that he departs from a good foundation, Eugubinus. the Fathers, and that upon a light reason. And when another Author in that Church proceeds farther, to so much vehemence, so much violence, as to say, that it is not only an incommodious, but a superstitious sense, to interpret these words of the coming of Christ, Peterius. Cornelius. two Jesuits correct him, almost in the same words, (for in the ways of contumely and defamation, they agree well) and say, audacter obstrepit, he does but saucily bark, and kick against the ancient Fathers, quibus ipse, says Pererius, to whom himself is not to be compared, neither for learning in himself, nor for place and dignity in the Church, nor for sanctity and holiness of life in the world. They may be as bold with one another, as they please; Indeed they are so used to uncharitable phrases towards all others, as sometimes they cannot spare one another. For our part, we lay no such imputations upon any of our later men, that accept not that sense of these words, but yet, we cannot doubt of leave to accompany the Fathers in that Exposition, that these words, O my Lord, send I pray thee, by the hand of him, whom thou wilt send, are a petition, and not a reluctation against God. And that, not as Lyra takes them; Lyra takes them to be a petition, and not a reluctation; but a petition of Moses, that he would send Aaron; That, if he would send any, he should send a man of better parts, and abilities, than himself; and this is a rare modesty, when a man is named for any place, to become suitor for another to that place; Moses was the meekest man upon earth; but this was not his meaning here. Nor as Rabbi Solomon takes it; he takes it for a Petition, and no reluctation; but, a Petition, that God would send josuah; For, (says that Rabbi) Moses had had a Revelation, that josuah, and not he, should be the man, that should bring that People into the Land of Promise; and therefore, since josuah was to have the honour of the action, Moses would have laid the burden upon him too; but this makes Moses a more fashionall, a more particular, a more selfe-considering man, for his own estimation, than he was. But, with the Ancients, and later devout men, we piously believe Moses in these words to have extended his Devotion towards his Nation, and the whole world together, Ferus. as fare, as one of them hath extended the Exposition; quid prodest ex Egypto exire, & in peccatis manere, says he; what shall they be the better, for coming out of the pressures of Egypt, if they must remain still, under the oppression of a sinful conscience? And that must be their case, if thou send but a Moses, and not a Christ to their succour. Quid Pharaonem essugere, & non Diabolum, says he; what shall they get, in being delivered from Pharaoh, if they be not delivered from the Devil? Intrare in terram promissam, & none in coelum? What preferment is it, to dwell in a good Land, and to be banished out of heaven? And this will be their case, if thou send but a Moses, and not a Christ, for their deliverance. He carries it from them, to God himself: Quid unum populum è servitute temporali liberare, & totum genus humanum relinquere sub potestate Diaboli? What glory will it be to thee, O God, who studiest thine own glory, to deliver one Nation from a temporal bondage, and leave all Mankind under everlasting condemnation? And that must be the case of all, if thou send but a Moses, and not a Christ; Moses, may, by thine abundant goodness, do some good; but there is one, one appointed to be sent, that will do all which Moses should do, better than Moses, and infinitely more than Moses can do, or, of himself, so much as wish to be done; and therefore send him, send him now, to do all together: And so these words are a Petition, and no Reluctation, though some men have taken them so; and a Petition for the sending of Christ, and no Aaron, no josuah, no other man; though some have taken so too. Yet we do not deliver Moses from all infirmity herein; Iratus Deus. Exod. 32.32. no nor from all error, and mistaking; no more than we do in that other prayer of his, deal me, pardon this people, or blot my name out of thy Book, where Moses capitulated too narrrowly, and upon too strict conditions with God. Therefore, in this place, it follows presently upon this prayer, That God was angry with him. Unseasonable prayers, though because they may be rooted in piety, they may be, in some sort, excusable in him that makes them, yet may be unacceptable to God. S. August. prayed for a dead Mother, Monica; and S. Ambrose prayed for a dead Master, Theodesi●s; God forbidden we should condemn Augustine or Ambrose of impiety in doing so; But God forbidden we should make Augustine or Ambrose his example, our rule to do so still. This sending of Christ, which Moses solicits here, was the Arcanit Dei; It was one of the secrets of his State, and of his government; It was one of his bosom Counsels, and Cabinet Decrees: One of those reserved cases, which he had communicated to no man; as the day of Christ's second coming, his coming to Judgement, is now; which God hath communicated to no man; as the clear understanding of the state of the dead, who are departed this life, God hath imparted to no man; nor some circumstances of time, and place, and person in Antichrist; God hath revealed these to no man, not to his whole Church; These are acts of his Regality, and of his Prerogative; and as Princes say of their Prerogative, nolumus disputari, we will not have it disputed, nor called into question, so for these Reserved cases, and unrevealed Counsels of God, such as was the first coming of Christ in Moses time, and such as is the second coming of Christ, now in our time, God would not be importuned. God meant to give the children of Israel a King, from the beginning; we presume he meant it, because it is the best blessing of all forms of government: And we see he meant it, because long before, he established Laws, by which, Deut. 17. they should govern themselves, in their choosing their King, and by which, their King should govern them, when he was chosen; yet God was angry, when they importuned him for a King, at such a time, and upon such terms, as he intended not to do it. But now, because in Moses case, though there were not a present obedience, yet there was no disobedience, the fault being no greater, the anger was not great neither; and therefore we may safely say with Rupertus, that the iratus fuit, was but non propitius fuit; God was so angry, as that he did not grant, nor accept Moses petition, nor entertain any farther discourse with him, concerning the sending of Christ; In Abraham's solicitation, in the behalf of Sodom, it is said, that God went not away, as long as Abraham had any thing to say; But here, God was so fare angry, as to break off Moses discourse: But his anger was not so much an Increpation, that he had said any thing, as an Instruction that he should say no more of God's unrevealed purposes. Therefore God does not continue his anger, so as to discontinue his work. Tamen consolidat. It was but a catechistical anger, such an anger as S. Bernard begs at God's hands, Irascaris mihi Domine, O Lord, be angry with me, and leave me not to myself; thou hast an anger, that instructs in the way; but thou hast a heavy indignation, that confounds, and exterminates in the end. Therefore our prayer in the Litany, is not, O Lord be never angry with us; but, O Lord, be not angry with us, for ever. David was a man according to God's heart; yet, no doubt, but God was angry with David, for the matter of Vriah, as himself calls it. God was not angry with Moses so, as that he gave over his purpose of delivering Israel, or of delivering Israel by him, and him established in a cheerful assurance to undertake it; for in the same breath, in the same words, V 14. in the same verse, wherein his anger is expressed, his Benignity, and his Benevolence is expressed also; for there he says, Is not Aaron thy Brother; I know he can speak well; and also, behold, he cometh forth to meet thee: God had laid it so, that Moses should be settled this way, by having so able a man, and then, a man in whom he might be so confident, as a brother, joined in commission with him. Slide we in this note by the way; God loves not singularity: God binds us to nothing, that was never said but by one: As God loves Sympathy, God loves Symphony; God loves a compassion and fellow-feeling of others miseries, that is Sympathy, and God loves Harmony, and fellow believing of others Doctrines, that is Symphony: No one man alone makes a Church; no one Church alone makes a Catholic Church. Christ sent his own Disciples by couples, two and two: And Aquinas says out of his observation, Monachus solus est Daemon solitarius: Though naturally a Monk must love retiredness, yet a single Monk, a Monk always alone, says he, is plotting some singular mischief. Deus qui habitat in nobis, etiam nos custodiet ex nobis, is excellently said by that excellent Father: August. God that dwells in us, will sustain the building, and repair the building out of ourselves; that is, he will make us Tutelar Angels to one another; and a holy, and reverential respect to one another, in good conversation, shall keep us from many sinful actions, which we would commit if we were alone. So then, God was not so angry, nor angry so with Moses, as that he did not pursue his first purpose upon him, of sending him, & sending him so, as might best speed, & advance his Negotiation. And therefore, as Moses praying for Christ's first coming, which was one of Gods reserved cases, and an act of his regality, and Prerogative, though he had not that prayer granted, yet was not left unsatisfied, nor unaccommodated by God, so, (which is the end, that we drive all to) when the calamities; and distresses of this life oppress us, and we pray for the second coming of Christ, in the consummation of all, in glory, though, because this second coming of Christ, is one of Gods Reserved cases, and an act of his Regality, and Prerogative, he do not grant that, that Christ do not come so; yet, in his blessed Spirit, he will come to us, in an assurance, that when he shall come so, in judgement, we in his right, shall stand upright even in that Judgement: And, if in extraordinary distresses, we pray for extraordinary reliefs, though extraordinary helps, and miracles be Reserved cases, and acts of his Regality, and Prerogative; yet, as he remembers his mercies, of old, he will remember his miracles of old too, (and as his mercies are new every morning, his miracles shall be new every morning too; and all that he did in eighty eight, in the last Centutry, he shall do (if we need it) in twenty eight, in this Century;) And though he may be angry with our prayers, as they are but verbal prayers, and not accompanied with actions of obedience, yet he will not be angry with us for ever, but re-establish at home, zeal to our present Religion, and good correspondence, and affections of all parts to one another, and our power, and our honour, in foreign Nations. Amen. SERMON VI Preached at S. Paul's, upon Christmas Day. 1628. Lord, who hath believed our report? Domine, quis credidit auditui nostro? I Have named to you no book, no chapter, no verse, where these words are written: But I forbore not out of forgetfulness, nor out of singularity, but out of perplexity rather, because these words are written, in more than one, in more than two places of the Bible. In your ordinary conversation, and communication with other men, I am sure you have all observed, that many men have certain forms of speech, certain interjections, certain suppletory phrases, which fall often upon their tongue, and which they repeat almost in every sentence; and; for the most part, impertinently; and then, when that phrase conduces nothing to that which they would say; but rather disorders and discomposes the sentence, and confounds, or troubles the hearer. And this, which some do out of slackness, and in-observance, and infirmity, many men, God knows, do out of impiety; many men have certain suppletory Oaths, with which they fill up their Discourse, then, when they are not only not the better believed, but the worse understood for those blasphemous interjections. Now, this, which you may thus observe, in men, sometimes out of infirmity, sometimes out of impiety, out of an accommodation and communicablenesse of himself to man, out of desire, and a study, to shed himself the more familiarly, and to infuse himself the more powerfully into man, you may observe even in the holy Ghost in himself, in the Scriptures, which are the discourse and communication of God with man; There are certain idioms, certain forms of speech, certain propositions, which the holy Ghost repeats several times, upon several occasions in the Scriptures. It is so in the instrumental Authors of the particular Books of the Bible; There are certain forms of speech, certain characters, upon which I would pronounce, That's Moses, and not David, that's job, and not Solomon, that's Esay and not jeremy. How often does Moses repeat his Vivit Dominus, and Ego vivo, As the Lord liveth, and As I live, saith the Lord? How often does Solomon repeat his vanitas vanitatum, All is vanity? How often does our blessed Saviour repeat his Amen, Amen? and, in another sense, than others had used that word before him; so often, as that you may reckon it thirty times, in one Evangelist; so often, as that that may not inconveniently be thought some reason, why S. john called Christ by that name, Amen, Rev. 3.14. Thus saith Amen, He whose name is Amen. How often does S. Paul, (especial in his Epistles to Timothy, and to Titus) repeat that phrase Fidelis Sermo, This is a true, and faithful saying? And how often, his juratory caution, Coram Domino, before the Lord; As God is my witness? And as it is thus for particular persons, and particular phrases, that they are often repeated; so are there certain whole sentences, certain entire propositions, which the holy Ghost does often repeat in the Scripture. And, except we except that proposition, of which S. Peick makes his use, That God is no accepter of persons, Act. 10.34. (for that is repeated in very many places, that every where, upon every occasion, every man might be remembered of that, that God is no accepter of persons; Take heed how you presume upon your own knowledge, or your actions, for God is no accepter of persons; Take heed how you condemn another man for an Heretic, because he believes not just as you believe; or for a Reprobate, because he lives not just as you live, for God is no accepter of persons; Take heed how you rely wholly upon the outward means, that you are wrapped in the covenant, that you are bred in a reformed Church, for God is no accepter of persons) except you will except this proposition, I scarce remember any other that is so often repeated in the Scriptures, as this which is our Text, Lord, who hath believed our report? For, it is first in the Prophet Esay. There the Prophet is in holy throws, and pangs, Esay 53.1. and agonies, till he be delivered of that prophecy, the coming of the Messiah; the incarnation of Christ Jesus, and yet is put to this exclamation, Domine, quis credidit? Lord who hath believed our report? And then you have these words in the Gospel of S. john; John 12.38. where we are not put upon the consideration of a future Christ in prophecy, but the Evangelist exhibits Christ in person, actually, really, visibly, evidently, doing great works, executing great judgements, multiplying great Miracles; and yet put to the application of this exclamation, Domine, quis credidit? Lord, who hath believed this report? And then you have these words also in S. Paul, Rom. 10.16. where we do not consider a prophecy of a future Christ, nor a history of a present Christ, but an application of that whole Christ to every soul, in the fetling of a Church, in that concatenation of means for the infusion of faith expressed in that Chapter, sending, and preaching, and hearing; and yet for all these powerful and familiar assistances, Domine, quis crodidit? Lord, who hath believed that report? So that now beloved, you cannot say that you have a Text without a place; for you have three places for this Text: you have it in the great Prophet, in Esay, in the great Evangelist, in S. john; and in the great Apostle, in S. Paul. And because in all three places, the words minister useful doctrine of edification, we shall, by yours and the times leave, consider the words in all three places. In all three, the words are a sad and a serious expostulation of the Minister of God, with God himself, that his Means and his Ordinances powerfully committed to him, being faithfully transmitted by him to the people, were nevertheless fruitless, and ineffectual. I do Lord as thou biddest me, says the Prophet Esay; I prophesy, I foretell the coming of the Messiah, the incarnation of thy Son for the salvation of the world, and I know that none of them that hear me, can imagine or conceive any other way for the redemption of the world, by fatisfaction to thy Justice, but this, and yet, Domine quis credidit? Lord who hath believed my report? I do Lord as thou biddest me, says Christ himself in S. john; I come in person, I glorify thy name, I do thy will, I preach thy Gospel, I confirm my doctrine with evident Miracles, and I seal those Seals, I confirm those Miracles with my Blood; and yet, Quis credidit? Lord who hath believed my report? I do Lord as thou biddest me, says every one of us, who, as we have received mercy, have received the Ministry; I obey the inward calling of the Spirit, I accept the outward calling of the Church; furnished, and established with both these, I come into the world, I preach absolution of sins to every repentant Soul, I offer the seals of reconciliation to every contrite spirit; and yet, Domine quis credidit? Lord who hath believed my report? Indeed it is a sad contemplation, and must necessarily produce a serious and a vehement expostulation, when the predictions of Gods future judgements (so we shall find the case to have been in the words in Esay) when the execution of God's present judgements, (so we shall find the case to have been in the words in S. john) when the Ordinances of God, for the relief of any soul, in any judgement, in his Church, are not believed. To say I believe you not, amounts to a lie; Not to believe God's warnings before, not to believe Gods present judgements, not to believe that God hath established a way to come to him in all distresses, this is to give God the lie; and with this is the world charged in this Text, Lord who hath believed our report? First then, 1 Part. Esay 53.1. where we find these words first, the Prophet reproaches their unbelief, and hardness of heart, in this, that they did not believe future things, future calamities, future judgements; for that is intended in that place. For, though this 53. of Esay be the continuation, and the consummation of that doctrine which the Prophet began to propose in the Chapter immediately preceding, which is, the coming of the Messiah (in general, the comfortablest doctrine that could be proposed) though this Chapter be especially that place, upon which S. Hierome grounds that Eulogy of Esay, that Esay was rather an Evangelist than a Prophet, because of his particular declaration of Christ in this Chapter; though upon this Chapter our Expositors sometimes say, that as we cite the Gospel according to S. Matthew, and the Gospel according to S. john, so here we may say, the Gospel according to the Prophet Esay; yet though this be a prophecy of the coming of Christ, and so, the comfortablest doctrine that can be proposed in the general, and in the end, and fruit of that coming, yet it is a prophecy of the exinanition of Christ, of the evacuation of Christ, of the inglorious and ignominious estate, the calamitous, and contumelious estate of Christ: Their Messiah they should have; but that Messiah should be reputed a Malefactor, and as a Malefactor crucified; Which miseries, and calamities being to fall upon him, for them, they ought to have been as sensible, and as much affected with those miseries to be endured for them, as if they had been to have fallen upon themselves. The later Jews and their Rabbins since the dispersion, do not, will not believe this prophecy of miseries, and calamities to belong to their Messiah. Ver. 2. They do not, they will not believe, that that which is said, That there is no form, no beauty, no comeliness in him, so that men should long for him before, or desire to look upon him after, should have any reference to their Messiah, whom they expect in all outward splendour and glory; Nor that that which is added there, That he should be despised, and rejected of men, a man of sorrows, and acquainted with griefs, should belong to him, in whose proceed in this world, they look for continual Victories and Triumphs. But they will needs understand these miseries, and calamities prophesied here, to be those calamities, and those miseries, which have fallen, and dwelled upon their Nation, ever since their dispersion after Christ's death. Now let it be but such a prophecy as that; take it either way; The Christian way, a prophecy of calamities upon the Messiah for them; or the Jews way, of calamities upon them for the Messiah; still it is a prophecy of future calamities, future judgements, of which they ought to have been sensible, and with which they ought to have been affected, and were not: And so that's their charge, they did not believe the Prophet's report, they were not moved with God's judgements denounced upon them, by those Prophets. Now, was this so heinous, not to believe a Prophet? The office and function of a Prophet, Propheta. in the time of the Law, was not so evident, nor so ordinary an office, as the office of the Priest and Minister in the Gospel now is; There was not a constant, an ordinary, a visible calling in the Church, to the office of a Prophet. Neither the highpriest, nor the Ecclesiastical Consistory, the Synedrium, did by any imposition of hands, or other Collation, or Declaration, give Orders to any man so, as that thereby that man was made a Prophet. I know some men, of much industry, and perspicacy too, in searching into those Scriptures, the sense whereof is not obvious to every man, have thought that the Prophets had an outward and a constant declaration of their Calling. 1 Reg. 19.15. And they think it proved, by that which is said to Eliah, when God commands him to anoint Hazael K. of Syria, & to anoint jehu K. of Israel, & to anoint Elisha Prophet in his own room: Therefore, say they, the Prophet had as much evidence of his Calling, as the Minister hath, for that unction was as evident a thing, as our Imposition of hands is. And it is true, it was so, where it was actually, and really executed. But then, nothing is more evident, then that this word Meshiach, which signifies Anointing, is not restrained to that very action, a real unction, but frequently transferred, & communicated in a Scripture use, to every kind of Declaration of any Election, any Institution, any Inauguration, any Investiture of any person to any place; And, less than that, of any appropriation, any application of any thing to any particular use. Any appointing was an anointing; As in particular (for many other places) where S. Hierome reads, Arripite clypeos, buckle your shields; Esay 21.5. To you, which was an alarm to them, to arm, the original hath it, and so hath our translation, Anoint your shields; to apply them to their right use, was called an Anointing. And when God calls Cyrus, the King of Persia, Vnctum suum, his Anointed; it were weakly, and improperly argued from that word, that Cyrus' King of Persia, was literally, actually, anointed; for that unction was peculiar to the Kings of Israel; but Cyrus was the anointed of the Lord, that is, declared and avowed by the Lord, to be his chosen Instrument. Neither could Eliah, literally execute this commandment, for anointing Hasael King of Syria; for Hasael the King of Syria could not be anointed by the Prophet of the Lord, for such unction was peculiar to the Kings of Israel. And for the Kings of Israel themselves, their own Rabbins tell us, that they were not ordinarily anointed, but only in those cases, where there arose some question, and difference, about the succession; as in Solomon's case; there, because Adoniah pretended to the succession; 1 Reg. 1. to make all the more sure, David proceeded with a solemnity, and appointed an anointing of Solomon, which, otherwise, say their Rabbins, had not been done. But howsoever it may have been for their Kings, there seems to be a plain distinction between them, and the Prophets in the Psalm, for this evidence of unction; Touch not mine Anointed, says God there: Ps. 105.15. They, they that were Anointed, constitute one rank, one classis; and then follows, And do my Prophets no harm: They, they who were not Anointed, the Prophets, constitute another classis, another rank. So that then an internal, a spiritual unction the Prophets had, that is, an application, an appropriation to that office from God, but a constant, an evident calling to that function, by any external act of the Church, they had not, but it was an extraordinary office, and imposed immediately by God; and therefore the people might seem the more excusable, if they did not believe a Prophet presently, because the office of the Prophet did not carry with it, such a manifestation by any thing evidently done upon him, and visible to them, that by that, that man must be a Prophet. But, as God clothes himself with light, as with a garment; so God clothes, and apparels his works with light too: for, frustra fecisset, says S. Ambrose, God had made creatures to no purpose, if he had not made light to see them by. Therefore when God does any extraordinary work, he accompanies that work with anextraordinary light, by which, he for whose instruction God does that work, may know that work to be his. So when he sent his Prophets to his people, he accompanied their mission, with an effectual light, and evidence, by which, that people did acknowledge in their own hearts, that that man was sent by God to them. Therefore they called that man at first, Roeh, videntem, a Seer, one whom they acknowledged to have been admitted to the sight of God, in the declaration of his will to them: for so we have it in Samuel, He that is now called a Prophet, 1 Sam. 9.9. was before time called a Seer. And then that addition of the name of a Prophet, gave them a farther qualification; for, Nabi, which is a Prophet, is from Niba; and Niba, is venire facio, to cause, to make a thing to come to pass. So that a Prophet was not only praefator, but praefactor; He did not only presage, but preordain; that is, there was such an infallibility, such an inevitableness in that which he had said, as that his very saying of it, seemed to them some kind of cause of the accomplishing thereof. For, hence it is, that we have that phrase so often in the new Testament, This and this was thus and thus done, that such and such a Prophecy might be fulfilled: They never went to that height, that such or such a secret purpose, or unrevealed Decree of God might be fulfilled; but they rested in the Declaration which God had made in his Church, and were satisfied in the execution of his Decrees, in his visible Ordinances. Therefore the increpation which the Prophet lays upon the people here, (Lord, who hath believed our report) is not, that they did not believe those Prophets to be Prophets, (for though that were an extraordinary office, yet it was accompanied with an extraordinary light) neither was it, that they did not believe that those things which were prophesied by them, should come to pass, (for they believed that man to be Roeh, a Seer, one that had seen the Counsels of God concerning them; And they believed him to be Nabi, venire facientem, one upon whose word they might as infallibly rely, as upon a cause, for an effect;) But this was the sin of this people, this was the sorrow of this Prophet, that they did not believe these predictions to belong to them, they did not believe that these judgements would fall out in their time. In one word, present security was their sin. And was that so heinous? So heinous, as that that is it, with which God was so highly incensed, Esay 28.14. and with which he meant so deeply to affect his people, in that considerable passage, in that remarkable, and vehement place, where he expostulates thus with them; Hear ye scornful men, (ye that make a jest, a scorn of future judgements) Hear ye scornful men, that rule this people, (says God there) (you that have a power over the affections of the people in the Pulpit, and can persuade what you will, or a power over the wills of the people in your place, and can command what you will) you that tell them (says the Prophet there) we have made a covenant with death, and are at an agreement with hell, (fear you nothing, let us alone; ambitious Princes shall turn their forces another way, antichristian plots shall be practised in other nations) you that tell them (says he) when the overflowing scourge shall pass through, it shall not come to you, (howsoever superstition be established in other places, howsoever prevailing armies be multiplied elsewhere, yet you shall have your religion, & your peace still; for we have made a covenant with death, & with hell, we are at an agreement) Hear ye scornful men, (says God) you that put this scorn upon my predictions, your covenant with death shall be disannulled, Esay 28.18. and your agreement with death shall not stand, (the fair promises of others to you, your own promises to yourselves shall deceive you) and the overflowing scourge shall pass through, Esay 28.19. through you all, for, you, (you scornful men) shall be trodden down by it; and, (as it follows there, in an elegant, and a vehement expression) it shall be a vexation, only to understand the report: You that would not believe the report of the Prophet, that for these and these sins, such and such Judgements should fall upon you, shall be confounded even with the report, the noise, the news, how this overslowing scourge hath passed through your neighbours round about you; how much more with the sense, when you yourselves shall be trodden down by it? There is scarce any of the Prophets, in which, God does not drive home this increpation of their security, Ezek. 12.22. and insensibleness of future calamities. As in Esay, so in Ezechiel God says, what is that Proverb which ye have in the Land of Israel? (it was, it seems, in every man's mouth, proverbially spoken by all) what was it? This, The days are prolonged, and every vision fails; V 27. The vision which he says, is for many days to come, and he prophesieth of the times afar off. But, (says God there) In your days, O rebellious house, will I say the word, and perform it: Not say it in our days, and perform it upon our children; but God will speak, and strike together, we shall hear him, and feel him at once, if we be not seriously affected with his predictions. The same way God goes in jeremy, Jer. 7.23. as in Esay, and in Ezechiel. I have sent unto you all my servants, the Prophets, (says God there) God hath no other servants, to this purpose, but his Prophets: If your dangers have been, by God's appointment, preached to you, God hath done. You must not, as Dives did, in the behalf of his brethren, look for. Messengers from the state of the dead; you must not stay for instruction, nor for amendment, till you be Pro mortuis, 1 Cor. 15. (as the Apostle speaks) as good as dead, ready to die; you must not stay till a Judgement fall, and then presume of understanding by that vexation, or of repentance by that affliction; for, this is to hearken after Messengers, from the state of the dead, to think of nothing till we be ready to join with them; But as Abraham says there to Dives, Thy brethren have the Law, and the Prophets, and that is enough, that is all, so God says here, I have sent them all my servants, the Prophets; that is enough, that is all: especially, when, (as God adds there) He hath risen early, and sent his Prophets, that is, given us warning time enough, before the calamity come near our own gates. But when they rejected, and despised all his Prophecies, and denunciations of future Judgements, V 29. then follows the sentence, the final, and fearful sentence. The Lord hath forsaken, and rejected them; Them; whom? as it follows in the sentence, The Lord hath forsaken, and rejected the generation of his wrath; The generation of his wrath? There is more horror, more consternation in that manner of expressing that rejection, then in the rejection itself; There is an insupportable weight, in that word. His wrath; but even that is infinitely aggravated in the other, The generation of his wrath. God hath forgot that Israel is his Son, Exod. 4.22. and his first borne; So he avowed him to be in Moses commission to Pharaoh. God hath forgot that He rebuked Kings for his sake; that he testifies to have done in his behalf, Psal. 105.15. Gal. 3.29. in David; God hath forgot that they were heirs according to the promise; that is their dignification in the Apostle; forgot that they were the apple of his own eye, Deut. 32.10. Agg. 2.23. Jer. 31.20. that they were as the signet upon his own hand; forgot that Ephraim is his dear Son, that he is a pleasing child, a child for whom his bowels were troubled; God hath forgot all these paternities, all these filiations, all these incorporating, all these inviscerations of Israel into his own bosom, and Israel is become the generation of his wrath. Not the subject of his wrath; A people upon whom God would exercise some one act of indignation, in a temporal calamity, as captivity, or so; or multiply acts of indignation, in one kind, as adding of penury or sickness to their captivity; nor is it only a multiplying of the kinds of calamity, as the aggravating of temporal calamities with spiritual, oppression of body and state, with sadness of heart, and dejection of spirit; for all these, as many as they are, are determined in this life; but that which God threatens, is, that he will for their grievous sins, multiply lives upon them, and make them immortal for immortal torments; They shall be a generation of his wrath; they shall die in this world, in his displeasure, and receive a new birth, a new generation in the world to come, in a new capacity of new miseries; they shall die in the next world, every minute, in the privation of the sight of God, and every minute receive a new generation, a new birth, a new capacity of real and sensible torments. When God hath sent all his servants, the Prophets, and so done all that is necessary for premonition, and risen early to send those Prophets, warned them time enough, to avoid the danger, and they are not affected with the sense of these predictions, God shall make them, us, any State, any Church, the generation of his wrath, God shall forget his former paternities, and our former filiations; forget his mercies exhibited to us in the reformation of Religion, in the preservation of our State, in the augmenting and adorning of our Church, and after all this, make us the generation of his wrath. And this may well be conceived to be the lamentable state deplored in this text, as the words are considered in their first place, the Prophet Esay, Lord, who hath believed our report. But this is brought nearer to us, in the second place, as we have the words in S. john; where we do not consider things in a remote distance, john 12.38. but Christ was in a personal and actual exercise of his works of power, and sovereignty, and yet the Evangelist comes to this, Lord, who hath believed this report? That's true in a great part, which Irenaeus says, Prophetiae antequam effectum habent, 2 Part. aenigmata sunt, & ambiguitates hominibus, That prophecies till they come to be fulfilled, are but clouds in the eyes, and riddles in the understanding of men. So, many particulars, concerning the calling of the Jews, concerning the time, and place, and person, and duration, and actions of Antichrist, concerning the general Judgement, and other things, that lie yet, as an Embryon, as a child in the mother's womb, emboweled in the womb of prophecy, are yet but as clouds in the eyes, as riddles in the understandings of the learnedst men. Daniel himself, found that which he found in the Prophet jeremy, concerning the deliverance of Israel from Babylon, to be wrapped up in such a cloud, as that it is fairly collected by some, that Daniel himself at that time, did not clearly understand the Prophet jeremy. But these clouds, for the most part, arise in us, out of our curiosity, that we will needs know the time, when these prophecies shall be fulfilled; when the Jews shall be called, when Antichrist shall be fully manifested, when the day of Judgement shall be: And so, for such questions as these, Christ enwraps not only his Apostles, but himself in a cloud; for, that cloud which he casts upon them, Non est vestrum, It belongs not to you, to know times, and seasons, he spreads upon himself also, Non est meum, It belongs not to me, not to me, as the Son of man, to know when the day of Judgement shall be. But for that use of a prophecy, that the prediction of a future Judgement should induce a present repentance, that was never an enigmatical, a cloudy doctrine, but manifest to all, in all prophecies of that kind. But this, this commination of future judgements, for present repentance, wrought not upon these men; but, Psal. 55.19. Eccles. 8.11. because they have no changes, therefore they fear not God: And, because sentence against an evil work, is not executed speedily, therefore their hearts are fully set in them, to do evil. But now, in the manifestation of Christ, they saw evident changes; changes, and revolutions in the highest sphere; they saw a new King, and they heard strangers proclaim him; foreign Kings do not send Ambassadors to congratulate, but come in person, to do their homage, and ask their audience in that style, Where is he that is borne King of the jews? not an elective, not an arbitrary, not a conditional, a provisional King, but an hereditary, a natural King, Born King of the jews. They hear strangers proclaim him, Mat. 2.2. and they proclaim him themselves, in that act of Recognition, in that acclamatory Hosanna, in this Chapter, Blessed is the King of Israel, that cometh in the name of the Lord. v. 13. Mat. 2.3. They saw changes; changes with which Herod was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him. And they saw sentence executed; for, as soon as Christ manifested himself, john Baptist says, Now, Mat. 3.10. Mat. 3.12. now that Christ declares himself, the axe is laid unto the root of the tree, and now, says he, His fan is in his hand, and he will purge his floor. And this sentence he executed, this regal power he exercised, not only after that Recognition of his subjects, in their Hosannaes' in this chapter, (for, upon that, he did go into the Temple, and cast out the buyers, and sellers) but some years before that, at his first manifestation of himself, and soon after john Baptists Now, john 2.3. now is the axe laid to the root of the Tree, did Christ execute this sentence, not only to drive, but to scourge them out, that profaned the Temple; which was the second miracle, that we ascribe to Christ. Indeed all his miracles were so many acts, not only of his regal power over some men, but of his absolute prerogative, over the whole frame, and body of nature. Nor can we conceive how the beholders of those miracles, could argue to themselves, otherwise then thus; The winds and seas obey this man, for when he suffers them, the winds roar, and when he whispers a silence to them, they are silenced; The Devils and unclean spirits obey him; for when he suffers it, they preach his glory, and when he refuses honour from so dishonourable mouths, they are silent. Death itself obeys him; for, when he will, death withholds his hand from closing that man's eye, that lies upon his last gasp, and the last stroke of his bell, and he does not die; and, when he will, death withdraws his hand from him, who had been four days in his possession, and redelivers Lazarus to a new life. This they saw; and could they choose but say, the wind, and the sea, the devil, and unclean spirits, and death itself obeys this man, how shall we stand before this man, this King, this God? yet for all this voice, this loud voice of miracles, (for when S. chrysostom says, Omni tuba clarior per opera demonstratio, Every good work hath the voice of a trumpet, every miracle hath the voice of thunder,) for all this loud voice, (as it is said in the verse before the text, Though he had done so many miracles before them, yet they believed not on him) it is feign to come to that, Quis credidit, Lord who hath believed this report? The first of those great names which were given to Christ, Esay 9.6. in the Prophet Esay, was Mirabilis, The wonderful, The supernatural man, the man that works miracles; for, of the Apostles it is said, by them, great miracles were wrought, but God wrought those miracles, by them. Christ wrought his miracles himself; And his Birth, and his Life, and Death, and Resurrection, and Ascension, were all complicated, and elemented of miracles. If he fasted himself, he did that miraculously; and it was with a miracle, when he feasted others. He healed many that were sick of divers diseases, Mark. 1.34. Mat. 9.35. and cast out many Devils, says S. Mark; And S. Matthew carries it a great deal farther, He went about all the Cities, and villages, healing every sickness, and every disease among the people. Therefore Christ makes that, (the evidence of his miracles) the issue between them, If these mighty works had been done in Tyre and Sidon, Mat. 11.21. john 15.22. Tyre and Sidon would have repent; And therefore he places their inexcusableness in that, If I had not come, and spoken to them, they had had no sin; Nay, if I had not spoken to them, in this loud voice, the voice of miracles, they might have had some cloak for their fin, but now they have none, says Christ in that place; And, beloved, are not we inexcusable in that degree? Have not we seen changes, and seen judgements executed, and seen miraculous deliverances, and yet Domine quis credidit? Lord who hath believed these reports? I would we could but take aright a mistaken translation, and make that use that is offered us in others error. The vulgar Edition, the translation of the Roman Church, reads that place, in the 77. Psalm and 11. verse thus, Nunc caepi, says David, Now I have taken out my lesson the right way, now I have laid hold upon God by the right handle, Nunc caepi, Now I have all that I need to have; what is it? This; Haec mutatio dextrae Dei, this is to take out my lesson aright, to understand God truly, and to know, & acknowledge, that this change which I see, is an act of the right hand of God, and that it is a judgement, and not an accident. O, beloved, that we would not be afraid of giving God too much glory; not afraid of putting God into too much heart; or of making God too imperious over us, by acknowledging, that Haec mutatio dextrae Dei, that all our changes are acts of the right hand of God, and come from him. But we are not only subject to the Prophet's increpation, Quis credit, that we do not believe God's warnings of future judgements, but to the Evangelists increpation, in the person of Christ, Quis credidit? we do not believe present judgements to be judgements. An invincible navy hath been sent against us, and defeated, and we sacrifice to a casual storm for that; we say the winds delivered us. A powder treason hath been plotted, and discovered, and we sacrifice to a casual letter for that; we say, the letter delivered us. A devouring plague hath reigned, and gone out again, and we sacrifice to an early frost for that; we say, the cold weather delivered us. Domestic encumbrances, personal infirmities, sadness of heart, dejection of spirit oppresses us, and then wears out, and passes over, and we sacrifice for that, to wine, and strong drink, to music, to Comedies, to conversation, and to all jobs miserable comforters; we say, it was but a melancholic fit, and good company hath delivered us of it. But when God himself says, There is no evil done in the City, but I do it, we may be bold to say, there is no good done in the world but he does it. The very calamities are from him; the deliverance from those calamities much more. All comes from God's hand; and from his hand, by way of hand-writing, by way of letter, and instruction to us. And therefore to ascribe things wholly to nature, to fortune, to power, to second causes, this is to mistake the hand, not to know God's hand; But to acknowledge it to be God's hand, and not to read it, to say that it is Gods doing, and not to consider, what God intends in it, is as much a slighting of God, as the other. Now, in every such letter, in every judgement, God writes to the King; but it becomes not me to open the King's letter, nor to prescribe the King his interpretation of that judgement. In every such letter, in every judgement God writes to the State; but I will not open their letter, nor prescribe them their interpretation of that judgement; God, who of his goodness hath vouchsafed to write unto them in these letters, of his abundant goodness interprets himself to their religious hearts. But then, in every such letter in every judgement, God writes to me too; and that letter I will open, and read that letter; I will take knowledge that it is God's hand to me, and I will study the will of God to me in that letter; and I will write back again to my God and return him an answer, in the amendment of my life, and give him my reformation for his information. Else I am fallen lower than under the Prophet's increpation, non credidi, I have not believed comminations of future judgements, under Christ's increpation too, non credidi, I do not believe judgements to be judgements, or (which is as dangerous an ignorance) not to be instructive judgements, medicinal and catechistical judgements to me. And this may well be the explication, at least, the application and accommodation of these words, Lord who hath believed our report, in those places, the Prophet Esay, and the Evangelist S. john. There remains only the third place, where we have these words in the Apostle S. Paul, and in them, there, do not consider, a prophecy of a future Christ, Rom. 10.16. as in Esay, nor a history of a present Christ, as in S. john, but we consider an application of all, prophecy, and history, all that was foretold of Christ, all that was done and suffered by Christ, in this, that there is a Church instituted by Christ, endowed with means of reconciling us to God, what judgements soever our sins have drawn God to threaten against us, or to inflict upon us; and yet for all these offers, of all these helps, the Minister is put to this sad expostulation, Domine, quis credidit? Lord, who hath believed our report? Here then the Apostles expostulation with God, and increpation upon the people, may usefully be conceived to be thus carried; from the light and notification of God, 3. Part. which we have in nature, to a clearer light, which we have in the Law and Prophets, and then a clearer than that in the Gospel, and a clearer, at least a nearer than that, in the Church. First then, even the natural man is inexcusable (says this Apostle) if he do not see the invisible God in the visible creature; inexcusable, if he do not read the law written in his own heart. But then, Quis credidit auditui suo? who hath believed his own report? who does read the Law written in his own heart? who does come home to Church to himself, or hearken to the motions of his own spirit, what he should do, or what will become of him, if he do still as he hath done? or who reads the history of his own conscience, what he hath done, and the judgements that belong to those former actions? Therefore we have a clearer light than this; Firmiorem propheticum sermonem, says S. Peter, We have a more sure word of the Prophets; that is, 2 Pet. 1.19. as S. Augustine reads that place, clariorem, a more manifest, a more evident declaration in the Prophets, then in nature, of the will of God towards man, and his rewarding the obedient, and rejecting the disobedient to that will. But then, Quis credidit auditui prophetico, who hath believed the report of the Prophet, so far, as to be so moved and affected with a prophecy, as to suspect himself, and apply that prophecy to himself, and to say this judgement of his belongs to this sin of mine? Therefore we have a clearer light than this; God, Heb. 1.1. who at sundry times, and in divers manners, spoke to the Fathers by the Prophets, hath in these last days spoke to us by his Son, says the Apostle; He spoke personally, and he spoke aloud, in the declaration of Miracles; But, Quis credidit auditui filii? who believed even his report? did they not call his preaching sedition, and call his Miracles conjuring? Therefore we have a clearer, that is, a nearer light than the written Gospel, that is, the Church. For, the principal intention in Christ's Miracles, even in the purpose of God, was but thereby to create and constitute, and establish an assurance, that he that did those Miracles, was the right man, the true Messiah, that Son of God, who was made man for the redemption and ransom of the whole world. But then, that which was to give them their best assistance, that that was to supply all, by that way, to apply this general redemption to every particular soul, that was the establishing of a Church, of a visible and constant, and permanent means of salvation, by his Ordinances there, usque ad consummationem, till the end of the world. And this is done, says this Apostle here; Christ is come, and gone, and come again; Born, and dead, and risen again; Ascended, and sat at the right hand of his Father in our nature, and descended again in his Spirit, the Holy Ghost; that Holy Ghost hath sent us, us the Apostles; we have made Bishops; they have made Priests and Deacons; and so that body, that family, that household of the faithful, Ver. 14. by their Ministry is made up. 'Tis true, says the Apostle here, Men cannot be saved without calling upon God; nor call upon him acceptably without Faith; nor believe truly without Hearing; nor hear profitably without Preaching; nor preach avowably, and with a blessing, without sending; All this is true says our Apostle in this place; but all this is done; such a sending, such a preaching, such a hearing is established; For, Ver. 19 I ask but this, says he, Have they not heard? Yes verily, their sound went into all the earth, and their words unto the end of the world; And, for myself, says he, I have strived to preach the Gospel, Rom. 15.20. where Christ was not named; that is, to carry the Church farther than the rest had carried it, and now all is done, says the Apostle. So that here is the case, if the natural man say, alas they are but dark notions of God which I have in nature; if the Jew say, alas they are but remote and ambiguous things which I have of Christ in the Prophets; If the slack and historical Christian say, alas they are but general things, done for the whole world indifferently, and not applied to me, which I read in the Gospel, to this natural man, to this Jew, to this slack Christian, we present an established Church, a Church endowed with a power, to open the wounds of Christ Jesus to receive every wounded soul, to spread the balm of his blood upon every bleeding heart; A Church that makes this general Christ particular to every Christian, that makes the Saviour of the world, thy Saviour, and my Saviour; that offers the original sinner Baptism for that; and the actual sinner, the body and blood of Christ Jesus for that; a Church that mollifies, and entenders, and shivers the presumptuous sinner with denouncing the judgements of God, and then, consolidates and establishes the diffident soul with the promises of his Gospel; a Church, in contemplation whereof, God may say, Quid potui Vineae, what could I do more for my people than I have done? first to send mine only Son to die for the whole world, and then to spread a Church over the whole world, by which that death of his might be life to every soul. This we preach, this we propose, according to that commission put into our hands, Ite, praedicate, Go, and preach the Gospel to every creature, and yet, Domine, quis credidit? Lord, who hath believed our report? In this then, the Apostle and this Text, places the inflexible, the incorrigible stiffness of man's disobedience, in this he seals up his inexcusableness, his irrecoverableness, first, that he is not afraid of future judgements, because they are remote; then, that he does not believe present judgements to be judgements, because he can make shift to call them by a milder name, accidents, and not judgements, and can assign some natural, or moral, or casual reason for them. But especially in this, that he does not believe a perpetual presence of Christ in his Church, he does not believe an Ordinance of means, by which, all burdens of bodily infirmities, of crosses in fortune, of dejection of spirit, and of the primary cause of all these, that is, sin itself may be taken off, or made easy unto him; he does not believe a Church. Now, as in our former part we were bound to know God's hand, and then bound to read it, to acknowledge a judgement to be a judgement, and then to consider what God intended in that judgement, so here we are bound to know the true Church, and then to know what the true Church proposes to us. The true Church is that, where the word is truly preached, and the Sacraments duly administered. But it is the Word, the Word inspired by the holy Ghost; not Apocryphal, not Decretal, not Traditional, not Additionall supplements; and it is the Sacraments, Sacraments instituted by Christ himself, and not those super-numerary sacraments, those posthume, postnati sacraments, that have been multiplied after: and then, that which the true Church proposes, is, all that is truly necessary to salvation, and nothing but that, in that quality, as necessary. So that Problematical points, of which, either side may be true, & in which, neither side is fundamentally necessary to salvation, those marginal & interlineary notes, that are not of the body of the text, opinions raised out of singularity, in some one man, and then maintained out of partiality, and affection to that man, these problematical things should not be called the Doctrine of the Church, nor lay obligations upon men's consciences; They should not disturb the general peace, they should not extinguish particular charity towards one another. The Act then, that God requires of us, is to believe: so the words carry it in all the three places: The Object, the next, the nearest Object of this Belief, is made the Church; that is, to believe that God hath established means for the application of Christ's death, to all, in all Christian Congregations. All things are possible to him that believeth, Mar. 9 23. saith our Saviour; In the Word, and Sacraments, there is Salvation to every soul, that believes there is so: As on the other side, we have from the same mouth, and the same pen, He that believeth not, is damned. Faith then being the root of all, Mar. 16.16. and God having vouchsafed to plant this root, this faith, here in his terrestrial paradise, and not in heaven; in the manifest ministry of the Gospel, and not in a secret and unrevealed purpose, (for, faith comes by hearing, and hearing by preaching, which are things executed and transacted here in the Church) be thou content with those means which God hath ordained, and take thy faith in those means, and believe it to be influxus suasorius, that it is an influence from God, but an influence that works in thee by way of persuasion, and not of compulsion; It convinces thee, but it doth not constrain thee: It is, as S. Augustine says excellently, Vocatio congrua, it is the voice of God to thee: but, his voice then, when thou art fit to hear, and answer that voice; not fitted by any exaltation of thine own natural faculties, before the coming of grace; nor fitted by a good husbanding of God's former grace, so as in rigour of justice to merit an increase of grace, but fitted by his preventing, his auxiliant, his concomitant grace, grace exhibited to thee, at that time when he calls thee: for, so says that Father, Sic eum vocat, quo modo seit ei congruere, ut vocantem non respuat: God calls him then, when he knows he will not resist his calling; But he doth not say, then, when he cannot resist; that needs not be said. But, as there is podus glcriae, as the Apostle speaks, an eternal weight of glory, which man's understanding cannot comprehend; so there is Pondus gratiae, a certain weight of grace, that God lays upon that soul, which shall be his, under which that soul shall not easily bend itself any way from God. This then is the sum of this whole Catechism, which these words, in these three places do constitute: First, that we be truly affected with God's forewarnings, and say there, Domine credo, Lord I believe that report, I believe that judgement to be denounced against my sin: And then, that we be duly affected with present changes, and say there, Domine credo, Lord I believe that report, I believe this judgement to come from thee, and to be a letter of thy hand; Lord enlighten others to interpret it aright, for thy more public glory, and me, for my particular reformation. And then, lastly, to be sincerely, and seriously affected with the Ordinances of his Church, and to rest in them, for the means of our salvation; and to say there, Domine credo, Lord I believe this report, I believe that I cannot be saved without believing, nor believe without hearing. And therefore, whatsoever thou hast decreed to thyself above in heaven, give me a holy assiduity of indevor, and peace of conscience, in the execution of thy Decrees here; And let thy Spirit bear witness with my spirit, that I am of the number of thine elect, because I love the beauty of thy house, because I captivate mine understanding to thine Ordinances, because I subdue my will to obey thine, because I find thy Son Christ Jesus made mine, in the preaching of thy word, and myself made his, in the administration of his Sacraments. And keep me ever in the arms, and bosom of that Church, which without any tincture, any mixture, any leaven of superstition, or Idolatry, affords me all that is necessary to salvation, and obtrudes nothing, enforces nothing to be believed, by any Determination, or Article of hers that is not so. And be this enough for the Explication, and Application, and Complication of these words, in all these three places. SERMON VII. Preached upon Christmas day. JOHN 10.10. I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly. THe Church celebrates this day, the Birth of our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, blessed for ever; And though it fall amongst the shortest days in the year, yet of all the Festivals in the year, it is the longest: It is a day that consists of twelve days; A day not measured by the natural and ordinary motion of the Sun, but by a supernatural and extraordinary Star, which appeared to the Wisemen of the East, this day, and brought them to Christ, at Bethlem, upon Twelve day. That day, Twelve day, the Church now calls the Epiphany; The ancient Church called this day (Christmas day) the Epiphany. Both days together, and all the days between, This day, when Christ was manifested to the Jews, in the Shepherds by the Angels, and Twelve day, when Christ was manifested to the Gentiles in those Wisemen of the East, make up the Epiphany, that is, the manifestation of God to man. And as this day is in such a respect a longer day than others, so, if we make longer hours in this day, then in other days; if I extend this Sermon, if you extend your Devotion, or your Patience, beyond the ordinary time, it is but a due, and a just celebration of the Day, and some accommodation to the Text, for, I am come, as he, in whose Name and Power I came, came; and he tells you, that He came that you might have life, and might have it more abundantly. God, who vouchsafed to be made Man for man, for man vouchsafes also to do all the offices of man toward man. Mal. 2.10. He is our Father, for he made us: Of what? Of clay; So God is Figulus, Esay 45.9. Rom. 9.21. Gen. 1.27. Gen. 3.21. Gen. 1.29. so in the Prophet; so in the Apostle, God is our Potter. God stamped his Image upon us, and so God is Statuarius, our Minter, our Statuary. God clothed us, and so is vestiarius; he hath opened his wardrobe unto us. God gave us all the fruits of the earth to eat, and so is oeconomus, our Steward. God pours his oil, and his wine into our wounds, Luke 10. 1 Cor. 3.6. Acts 20.32. Psal. 127.1. Mat. 4.19. and so is Medicus, and Vicinus, that Physician, that Neighbour, that Samaritan intended in the Parable. God plants us, and waters, and weeds us, and gives the increase; and so God is Hortulanus, our Gardener. God builds us up into a Church, and so God is Architectus, our Architect, our Builder; God watches the City when it is built; and so God is Speculator, our Sentinel. God fishes for men, (for all his johns, and his Andrews, and his Peter, are but the nets that he fishes withal) God is the fisher of men; And here, in this Chapter, God in Christ is our Shepherd. The book of job is a representation of God, in a Tragique-Comedy, lamentable beginnings comfortably ended: The book of the Canticles is a representation of God in Christ, as a Bridegroom in a Marriage-song, in an Epithalamion: God in Christ is represented to us, in divers forms, in divers places, and this Chapter is his Pastoral. The Lord is our Shepherd, and so called, in more places, then by any other name; and in this Chapter, exhibits some of the offices of a good Shepherd. Be pleased to taste a few of them. First, he says, The good Shepherd comes in at the door, Joh. 10.1. the right way. If he come in at the window, that is, always clamber after preferment; If he come in at vaults, and cellars, that is, by clandestine, and secret contracts with his Patron, he comes not the right way: When he is in the right way, Ver. 3. His sheep hear his voice: first there is a voice, He is heard; Ignorance doth not silence him, nor laziness, nor abundance of preferment; nor indiscreet, and distempered zeal does not silence him; (for to induce, or occasion a silencing upon ourselves, is as ill as the ignorant, or the lazy silence) There is a voice, and (says that Text) is is his voice, not always another in his room; for (as it is added in the next verse) The sheep know his voice, which they could not do, if they heard it not often, V 4. if they were not used to it. And then, for the best testimony, and consummation of all, he says, The good Shepherd gives his life for his sheep. Every good Shepherd gives his life, V 11. that is, spends his life, wears out his life for his sheep: of which this may be one good argument, That there are not so many crazy, so many sickly men; men that so soon grow old in any profession, as in ours. But in this, Christ is our Shepherd in a more peculiar, and more incommunicable way, that he is Pastor humani generis, & esca; first, Maxinus. that he feeds not one Parish, nor one Diocese, but humanum genus, all Mankind, the whole world, and then feeds us so, as that he is both our Pastor, and our Pasture, he feeds us, and feeds us with himself, for, His flesh is meat indeed, and his blood is drink indeed. Joh. 6. Lro. And therefore Honour telebratur totius gregis, per annua festa pastoris: As often as wecome to celebrate the coming of this Shepherd, in giving that honour, we receive an honour, because that is a declaration, that we are the sheep of that pasture, and the body of that head. And so much being not impertinently said, for the connexion of the words, and their complication with the day, pass we now to the more particular distribution and explication thereof, I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly. In these words, our parts will be three; for, first we must consider the Persons, Divisie. The Shepherd and the sheep, God and Man, Him and Them, Them indefinitely, all them, all men, I came, says Christ, I alone, that they, all they might have life: And secondly we consider the action itself; as it is wrapped up in this word, veni, I came; for, that is first, that he who was always omnipresent, every where before, did yet study a new way of coming, & communicating himself with man, veni, I came, that is, novo modo veni, I came by a new way; And then, that he, who fed his former stock but with Prophecies, and promises, that he would come, feeds us now with actual performances, with his real presence, and the exhibition of himself. And lastly we shall consider the end, the purpose, the benefit of his coming, which is life: And first, ut daret, that he might give life, bring life, offer life to the world, (which is one mercy) and then, ut haberent, that we might have it, embrace it, possess it, (which is another) and, after both, a greater than both, that we might have this life abundantiùs, more abundantly; which is, first, abundantiùs illis, more abundantly than other men of this world, and then abundantiùs ipsis, more abundantly than we ourselves had it in this world, in the world to come; for, therefore he came, that we might have life, and might have it more abundantly. First then, in our first part, we consider the Persons, The Shepherd and the Sheep, 1 Part. Person. Him and Them, God and Man; of which Persons, the one for his Greatness, God, the other for his littleness, man, can scarce fall under any consideration. What eye can fix itself upon East and West at once? And he must see more than East and West, that sees God, for God spreads infinitely beyond both: God alone is all; not only all that is, but all that is not, all that might be, if he would have it be. God is too large, too immense, and then man is too narrow, too little to be considered; for, who can fix his eye upon an Atom? and he must see a less thing than an Atom, that sees man, for man is nothing. First, for the incomprehensibleness of God, the understanding of man, Deus. hath a limited, a determined latitude; it is an intelligence able to move that Sphere which it is fixed to, but could not move a greater: I can comprehend naturam naturatam, created nature, but for that natura naturans, God himself, the understanding of man cannot comprehend. I can see the Sun in a lookingglass, but the nature, and the whole working of the Sun I cannot see in that glass. I can see God in the creature, but the nature, the essence, the secret purposes of God, I cannot see there. There is defatigatio in intellectualibus, says the saddest and soundest of the Hebrew Rabbins, R. Moses. the soul may be tired, as well as the body, and the understanding dazzled, as well as the eye. It is a good note of the same Rabbi, upon those words of Solomon, fill not thyself with honey, lest thou vomit it, that it is not said, that if thou be'st cloyed with it, thou mayst be distasted, Pro. 25.16. disaffected towards it after, but thou mayst vomit it, and a vomit works so, as that it does not only bring up that which was then, but that also which was formerly taken. Curious men busy themselves so much upon speculative subtleties, as that they desert, and abandon the solid foundations of Religion, and that is a dangerous vomit; To search so fare into the nature, and unrevealed purposes of God, as to forget the nature, and duties of man, this is a shrewd surfeit, though of honey, and a dangerous vomit. It is not needful for thee, to see the things that are in secret, says the wife man; nonindiges, Ecclus. 3.23. thou needest not that knowledge: Thou mayst do well enough in this world, and be Gods good servant, and do well enough in the next world, and be a glorious Saint, and yet never search into God's secrets. Ps. 65.1. Te decet Hymnus, (so the vulgar reads that place) To thee, O Lord, belong our Hymns, our Psalms, our Praises, our cheerful acclamations; and conformably to that, we translate it, Praise waiteth for thee, O God in Zion: But if we will take it according to the Original, it must be, Tibi silentium laus est, Thy praise, O Lord, consists in silence: That that man praises God best, that says least of him; of him, that is of his nature, of his essence, of his unrevealed will, and secret purposes. O that men would praise the Lord, is David's provocation to us all, but how? O that men would praise the Lord, and declare his wondrous works to the sons of men! but not to go about to declare his unrevealed Decrees, or secret purposes, is as good a way of praising him, as the other. And therefore, O that men would praise the Lord, so, forbear his Majesty, when he is retired into himself, in his Decrees, and magnify his Majesty, as he manifests himself to us, in the execution of those Decrees; of which, this in our Text is a great one, that he that is infinitely more than all, descended to him, that is infinitely less than nothing; which is the other person whom we are to consider in this part, ille illis, I to them, God to us. The Hebrew Doctors almost every where repeat that adage of theirs, lex loquitur linguam filiorum hominum, Illis. God speaks men's language, that is, the Holy Ghost in the Scriptures descends to the capacity and understanding of man, and so presents God in the faculties of the mind of man, and in the lineaments of the body of man. But yet, say they, there is never brain, nor liver, nor spleen; nor any other inward part ascribed to God, but only the heart. God is all heart, and that whole heart, that inexhaustible fountain of love, is directed wholly upon man. And then, though in the Scriptures, those bodily lineaments, head and feet, and hands, and eyes, and ears be ascribed to God, God is never said to have shoulders; for, say they, shoulders are the subjects of burdens, and therein the figures of patience, and so God is all shoulder, all patience; he hears patiently, he sees patiently, he speaks patiently, he dies patiently: And is there a patience beyond that? In Christ there is, he suffers patiently a quotidian Crucifying; we kill the Lord of Life every day, every day we make a mock of Christ Jesus, and tread the blood of the Covenant under our feet every day: And as though all his passion, and blood, and wounds, and heart, were spent by our former oaths, and blasphemies, we crucify him daily by our daily sins, that we might have new blood, and heart, and wounds to swear by; and all this he suffers patiently, and after all this, ille illis, to this man, this God comes. He to us, God to man; all to nothing: for upon that we insist first, as the first disproportion between us, Illis, qui nihil. Esay. 40.15. and so the first exaltation of his mercy towards us. Man is, says the Prophet Esay, Quasi stilla situlae, As a drop upon the bucket. Man is not all that, not so much as that, as a drop upon the bucket, but quasi, something, some little thing towards it; and what is a drop upon the bucket, to a river, to a sea, to the waters above the firmament? Man to God? Man is, says the same Prophet in the same place, Quasi momenntum staterae; we translate it, As small dust upon the balance: Man is not all that, not that small grain of dust; but quasi, some little thing towards it: And what can a grain of dust work in governing the balance? What is man that God should be mindful of him? Vanity seems to be the lightest thing, that the Holy Ghost could name; and when he had named that, he says, and says, and says, often, very, very often, All is vanity. But when he comes to weigh man with vanity itself, he finds man lighter than vanity: Take, says he, Ps. 62.9. great men, and mean men altogether, and altogether they are lighter than vanity. When that great Apostle says of himself, that he was in nothing behind the very chiefest of the Apostles, 2 Cor. 12.11. and yet, for all that, says he was nothing; who can think himself any thing, for being a Giant in proportion, a Magistrate in power, a Rabbi in learning, an Oracle in Counsel? Let man be something; how poor, and inconsiderable a rag of this world, L. 1. de rerum generatione. is man? Man, whom Paracelsus would have undertaken to have made, in a Limbeck, in a Furnace: Man, who, if they were altogether, all the men, that ever were, and are, and shall be, would not have the power of one Angel in them all, whereas all the Angels, (who, in the School are conceived to be more in number, then, not only all the Species, but all the individuals of this lower world) have not in them all, the power of one finger of God's hand: Man, of whom when David had said, (as the lowest diminution that he could put upon him) I am a worm and no man, He might have gone lower, Ps. 22.6. and said, I am a man and no worm; for man is so much less than a worm, as that worms of his own production, shall feed upon his dead body in the grave, and an immortal worm gnaw his conscience in the torments of hell. And then, if that which God, and God in the counsel and concurrence, and cooperation of the whole Trinity hath made thee, Man, be nothing, canst thou be proud of that, or think that any thing which the King hath made thee, a Lord, or which thy wife hath made thee, Rich, or which thy riches have made thee, an Officer? As job says of impertinent comforters, miserable comforters, so I say of these Creations, miserable creations are they all. Only as thou mayst be a new creature in Christ Jesus, thou mayst be something; for that's a nobler, and a harder creation than the first; when God had a clod of red earth in his hand, to make me in Adam, he had more towards his end, then when he hath me, an unregenerate, and rebellious soul, to make a new creature in Christ Jesus. And yet Ille illis, to this man comes this God, God that is infinitely more than all, to man that is infinitely less than nothing, which was our first disproportion, and the first exaltation of his mercy; and the next is, Ille illis, Illis qui hosts, that this God came to this man, then when this man was a professed enemy to this God. Si contrarium Deo quaeras nihilest, says S. Augustine. If thou ask me what is contrary to God, I cannot say, that any thing is so; for, whatsoever is any thing, hath a being, Illis qui Hosts. and whatsoever hath so, hath in that very being some affinity with God, some assimilation to God; so that nothing is contrary to God. If thou ask me, Quis hostis, who is an enemy to GOD, I cannot say that of any thing in this World, but man. That viper that flew at Saint Paul, was not therein an enemy to GOD; Acts 28. that viper did not direct itself upon S. Paul, as S. Paul was a useful, and a necessary instrument of Christ; But S. Paul himself was a direct enemy to Christ himself, Tu me, thou persecutest me, says Christ himself unto him. And if we be not all enemies to God in such a direct opposition, as that we sin therefore because that sin violates the majesty of God, (and yet truly every habitual, and deliberated sin amounts to almost as much, because in every such sin, we seem to try conclusions, whether God can see a sin, or be affected with a sin, or can, or cares to punish a sin, as though we doubted whether God were a present God, or a pure God, or a powerful God, and so consequently whether there be any God or no) If we be not all enemies to God, in this kind, yet in adhering to the enemy we are enemies; In our prevarications, and easy betrayings, and surrendering of ourselves to the enemy of his kingdom, satan, we are his enemies. For small wages, and ill paid pensions we serve him; and lest any man should flatter and delude himself, in saying, I have my wages, and my reward before hand, my pleasures in this life, the punishment, (if ever) not till the next, The Apostle destroys that dream, with that question of confusion, What fruit had you then in those things, Rom 6.21. of which you are now ashamed? Certainly sin is not a gainful way; without doubt more men are impoverished, and beggared by sinful courses, then enriched; what fruit had they? says the Apostle, and sin cannot be the way of honour, for we dare not avow our sins, but are ashamed of them, when they are done; fruitlesness, unprofitableness before, shame and dishonour after, and yet for these we are enemies to God; and yet for all this God comes to us; Ille illis, the Lord of Hosts, to naked and disarmed man, the God of peace to this enemy of God. Some men will continue kind, where they find a thankful reciver, Luke 6.35. but God is kind to the unthankful, says Christ himself. There may be found a man that will die for his friend, says he; but God died for his enemies: Then when ye were enemies, you were reconciled to God by the death of his Son. To come so in-gloriously, he that is infinitely more than all, to him that is infinitely less than nothing, (that was our first disproportion, and the first axaltatation of his mercy) to come, (shall we venture to say so) so self proditoriously, as to betray himself and deliver himself to his enemies, (that was our second) is equalled, at least, in a third, ille illis, he to them, that is unus omnibus, 2 Cor. 5.14. he alone for the salvation of all men, as it is expressly said, for this word in our Text, they, hath no limitation, I came, I alone, that they, all they might be the better. Some of the ancient Fathers, delivering the mercies of God, so, Illis omnibus. as the articles of our Church enjoin them to be delivered, that is, generally, as they are delivered in the Scriptures, have delivered them so over-generally, that they have seemed loath to think the devil himself excluded from all benefit of Christ's coming. Some of the later Authors in the Roman Church, (who, as pious as they pretend to be towards the Fathers, are apt to discover the nakedness of the Fathers, than we are) have noted in justin Martyr, and in Epiphanius, and in Clement of Alexandria, and in Oecumenius, (and Oecumenius is no single Father, but Pater patratus, a manifold Father, a complicated father, a Father that collected Fathers) and even in S. Jerome himself, and S. Ambrose too, some inclinations towards that opinion, that the devil retaining still his faculty of free will, is therefore capable of repentance, and so of benefit by this coming of Christ; And those Authors of the Roman Church, that modify the matter, and excuse the Fathers herein, excuse them no other way but this, that though that opinion and doctrine of those Fathers, be not true in itself, yet it was never condemned by any Council, nor by any ancient Father. So very far, did very many go in enlarging the mercies of God in Christ, to all. But waving this over-large extension and profusion thereof, and directing it upon a more possible, and a more credible object, that is, Man; S. Cyril of Alexandria, speaking of the possibility of the salvation of all men, says, by way of objection to himself, Omnes non credunt, How can all be saved since all do not believe? but, says he, Because actually they do not believe, is it therefore impossible they should believe? And for actual belief, says he, though all do not, yet so many do, utfacilè qui pereant, superent, that, by God's goodness, more are saved, then lost, says that Father of tender and large bowels, Moses. S. Cyril. And howsoever he may seem too tender, and too large herein, yet it is a good piece of counsel, which that Rabbi whom I named before, gives, Ne redarguas ca falsitatis, de quorum contrariis nulla est demonstratio, Be not aptto call any opinion false, or heretical, or damnable, the contrary whereof cannot be evidently proved. And for this particular, the general possibility of salvation, all agree that the merit of Christ Jesus is sufficient for all. Whether this all-sufficiency grow ex intrinseca ratione formali, out of the very nature of the merit, the dignity of the person being considered, or grow ex pacto, & acceptatione, out of the acceptation of the Father, and the contract between him and the Son, for that, let the Thomists, and the Scotists, in the Roman Church wrangle. All agree, that there is enough done for all. And would God receive enough for all, and then, exclude some, of himself, without any relation, any consideration of sin? God forbidden. Man is called by divers names, names of lowness enough, in the Scriptures; But, by the name of Enosh, Enosh that signifies mere misery, Man is never called in the Scriptures, till after the fall of Adam. Only sin after, and not any ill purpose in God before, made man miserable. The manner of expressing the mercy of God, in the frame and course of Scriptures, expresses evermore the largeness of that mercy. Very often, in the Scriptures, you shall find the person suddenly changed; and when God shall have said in the beginning of a sentence, I will show mercy unto them, them, as though he spoke of others, presently, in the same sentence, he will say, my loving kindness will I not draw from thee; not from thee, not from them, not from any; that so whensoever thou hearest of God's mercy proposed to them, to others, thou mightest believe that mercy to be meant to thee, and whensoever they, others hear that mercy proposed to thee, they might believe it to be meant to them. And so much may, to good purpose, be observed out of some other parts of this Chapter, in another translation. In the third verse it is said, His sheep hear his voice, In the Arabic tranflation it is Oves audit, His sheep in the plural, does hear, in the singular. God is a plural God, and offers himself to all, collectively; God is a singular God, and offers himself to every man, distributively. So also is it said there, Nominibus suo, He calls his sheep by their names; It is names in the plural, and theirs, in the singular: whatsoever God proposes to any, he intends to all. In which contemplation, S. Augustine breaks out into that holy exclamation, O bone omnipotens qui sic cur as unumquemque nostrûm, tanquam solum cures, & sic omnes tamquam singulos, O good and mighty God, who art as loving to every man, as to all mankind, and meanest as well to all mankind, as to any man. Be pleased to make your use of this note, for the better imprinting of this largeness of God's mercy. Moses desires of God, Exod. 33.13. V 18. V 19 that he would show him Vias suas, His ways, his proceed, his deal with men; that which he calls after, Gloriam suam, His glory, how he glorifies himself upon man, God promises him in the next verse, that he will show him Omne bonum, All his goodness, Exod. 346. God hath no way towards man but goodness, God glorifies himself in nothing upon man, but in his own goodness. And therefore when God comes to the performance of this promise, in the next Chapter, he shows him his way, and his glory, and his goodness, in showing him that he is a merciful God, a gracious God, a long-suffering God, a God that forgives sins and iniquities, and (as the Hebrew Doctors note) there are thirteen attributes, thirteen denotations of God specified in that place, and of all those thirteen, there is but one that tastes of judgement, (That he will punish the sins of Fathers upon Children.) All the other twelve are merely, wholly mercy; such a proportion hath his mercy above his justice, such a proportion, as that there is no cause in him, if all men be not partakers of it. Shall we say, (says S. Cyril) Melius agriculturam non exerceri, si quae nocent tolli non possunt, It were better there were no tillage, than that weeds should grow, Melius non creasse, better that God had made no men, then that so many should be damned. God made none to be damned; And therefore though some would expunge out of our Litany, that Rogation, that Petition, That thou wouldst have mercy upon all men; as though it were contrary to God's purpose to have mercy upon all men; yet S. Augustine enlarges his charity too far, Libera nos Domine, qui jam invocamus te, deliver us O Lord, who do now call upon thee, Et libera eos qui nondum invocant, ut invocent te, & liberes eos, and deliver them who do not yet call upon thee, that they may call upon thee, and be farther delivered by thee. But it is time to pass from this first part, the consideration of the Persons, Ille Illis, that God who is infinitely more then All, would come to man who is infinitely less than nothing; that God who is the God of peace, would come to man his professed enemy; that God, the only Son of God, would come to the relief of man, of all men, to our second general part, the action itself, so far as it is enwrapped in this word, Veni, I came; I came that they might have life. Through this second part, veni, I came, we must pass apace; because, upon the third, 2 Part. the end of his coming, (that they might have life) we must necessarily insist sometime. In this therefore, we make but two steps; And this the first, that that God who is omnipresent, always every where, in love to man, studied a new way of coming, of communicating himself to man; veni, I came, novo modo, so as I was never with man before. The rule is worth the repeating, lex loquitur linguam filiorum hominum, God speaks man's language, that is, so, as that he would be understood by man. Therefore to God, who always fills all places, are there divers Positions, and Motions, and Transitions ascribed in Scriptures. In divers places is God said to sit; Sedet Rex, The Lord sitteth King for ever. Howsoever the Kings of the earth be troubled, and raised, Psal. 29.10. and thrown down again, and troubled, and raised, and thrown down by him, yet the Lord sitteth King for ever. Habitat in Coelis, says David, Psal. 102.13. and yet sedet in circulis terrae, says Esay, The Lord dwelleth in the heavens, and yet he sits upon the compass of this earth: Where no earthquake shakes his seat; Esay 40.22. for sedet in confusione (as one Translation reads that place, Psal. 29.10.) The Lord sitteth upon the flood, (so we read it) what confusions soever disorder the world, what floods soever surround and overflow the world, the Lord sits safe. Other phrases there are of like denotation. Esay 26.21. Exit de loco, Behold the Lord cometh out of his place; that is, he produces, and brings to light, things which he kept secret before. And so, Revertar ad locum, I will go, Hose. 5.15. and return to my place; that is, I will withdraw the light of my countenance, my presence, my providence from them. So that heaven is his place, and then is he said to come to us, when he manifests himself unto us in any new manner of working. In such a sense was God come to us, when he said, I lift up my hands to heaven, and say, I live for ever. Deut. 52.40. Where was God when he lifted up his hands to heaven? Here, here upon earth, with us, in his Church, for our assurance, and our establishment, making that protestation (denoted in the lifting up of his hands to heaven) that he lived for ever, that he was the everliving God, and that therefore we need fear nothing. God is so omnipresent, as that the Ubiquitary will needs have the body of God every where: so omnipresent, as that the Stancarist will needs have God not only to be in every thing, but to be every thing, that God is an Angelin an Angel, and a stone in a stone, and a straw in a straw. But God is truly so omnipresent, as that he is with us before he comes to us: Q●id peto ut venias in me, August. qui non essem, si non esses in me? why do I pray that thou wouldst come into me, who could not only not pray, but could not be, if thou wert not in me before? But his coming in this Text, is a new act of particular mercy, and therefore a new way of coming. What way? by assuming our nature in the blessed Virgin. That that Paradoxa virgo, (as Amelberga the wife of one of the Earls of Flanders, who lived continently even in marriage, and is therefore called Paradoxa virgo, a Virgin beyond opinion) that this most blessed Virgin Mary should not only have a Son, (for Manes, the Patriarch of that great Sect of Heretics, the Manichees, boasted himself to be the son of a Virgin, and some casuists in the Roman Church have ventured to say, that by the practice and intervention of the devil there may be a child, and yet both parents, father and mother remain Virgins) But that this Son of this blessed Virgin, should also be the Son of the eternal God, this is such a coming of him who was here before, as that if it had not arisen in his own goodness, no man would ever have thought of it, no man might ever have wished, or prayed for such a coming, that the only Son of God should come to die for all the sons of men. August. For Aliud est hîc esse, aliud hîc tibi esse; It is one thing for God to be here in the world, another thing to be come hither for thy sake, born of a woman for thy salvation. And this is the first act of his mercy wrapped up in this word, Veni, I came, I who was always present, studied a new way of coming, I who never went from thee, came again to thee. The other act of his mercy enwrapped in this word, Veni actu. veni, I came, is this, that he that came to the old world but in promises, and prophecies, and figures, is actually, really, personally, and presentially come to us; of which difference, that man will have the best sense, who languishes under the heavy expectation of a reversion, in office, or inheritance, or hath felt the joy of coming to the actual possession of such a reversion. Christ was the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world; appointed for a Sacrifice from that first promise of a Messiah in Paradise long before that; from all eternity. For, whensoever the election of the elect was, (date it when you will) Christ was at that election; and not only as the second person in the Trinity, as God, but Christ considered as man, and as the propitiation and sacrifice for man; for whosoever was elected, was elected in Christ. Christ was always come in God's purpose; and early come in God's promise; and continually coming in the succession of the Prophets; with such a confidence, as that one of them says, Esay 9.6. Puer datus, filius natus, A child is given unto us, a Son is born unto us; Born and given already; because the purpose of God, in which he was born, cannot be disappointed; the promise of God, by which he was given, cannot be frustrated; the Prophets of God, by whom he was presented, cannot be mistaken. But yet, still it was a future thing. Christ is often called the Expectation of the world; but it was all that while, but an Expectation, but a reversion of a future thing. So God fed that old world with expectation of future things, as that that very name by which God notified himself most to that people, Exod. 3.14. in his commission by Moses to Pharaoh, was a future name; howsoever our Translations and Expositions run upon the present, as though God had said Qui sum, my name is I am, yet in truth it is Qui ero, my name is I shall be. They had evidences enough that God was; but God was pleased to establish in them an assurance that he would be so still; and not only be so still as he was then; but that he would be so with them hereafter as he was never yet, he would be Immanuel, God with us so, as that God and man should be one person. It was then a fair assurance, and a blessed comfort which the children of Israel had in that of Zechary, Zech. 9.9. Ecce venit rex, Rejoice ye daughters of Zion, and shout ye daughters of jerusalem, Behold thy King cometh riding unto thee, upon an Ass. But yet this assurance, though delivered as in the present, produced not those acclamations, Mat. 21.9. and recognitions, and Hosannaes', and Hosanna in the highest, to the Son of David, as his personal, and actual, and visible riding into Jerusalem upon Palme-Sunday did. Amougst the Jews there was light enough to discern this future blessing, this coming of Christ; but they durst not open it, nor publish it to others. We see the Jews would die in defence of any part of their Law, were it but the Ceremonial; were it but for the not eating of Swine's flesh; what unsufferable torments suffered the seven brothers in the Maccabees, for that? But yet we never find that any of them died, or exposed themselves to the danger, or to the dignity of Martyrdom for this Doctrine of the Messiah, this future coming of Christ. Nay, we find that the Septuagint, who first translated the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek, for King Ptolemy, disguised divers places thereof, and departed from the Original, rather than propose this future coming of the Son of God to the interpretation of the world. A little Candle they had for themselves, but they durst not light another's Candle at it. So also some of the more speculative Philosophers had got some beams of this light, but because they saw it would not be believed, De verarelg. cap. 4. they let it alone, they said little of it. Hence is it that S. Augustine says, si Platonici reviviscerent, if Plato and his Disciples should rise from the dead, and come now into our streets, and see those great Congregations, which thrust and throng every Sabbath, and every day of holy convocation, to the worship of our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, Hoc fortasse dicerent, This it is likely they would say, says he, Haec sunt, quae populis persuadere non ausi, consaetudini cessimus, This is that religion, which because it consisted so much in future things, we durst not propose to the people, but were fain to leave them to those present, and sensible, and visible things, to which they had been accustomed before, lest when we had shaked them in their old religion, we should not be able to settle, and establish them in the new; And, as in civil government, a Tyranny is better than an Anarchy, a hard King better than none, so when we consider religions, Idolatry is better than Atheism, and superstition better than profaneness. Not that the Idolater shall any more be saved then the Atheist; but that the Idolater having been accustomed to some sense and worship of God (of God in his estimation) is therefore apt to receive religious impressions, than the Atheist is. In this then consists this second act of Christ's mercy to us in this word veni, I am actually, really, personally, presentially come, that those types and figures and sacrifices, which represented Christ to the old world, were not more visible to the eye, more palpable to the hand, more obvious to the very bodily senses, that Christ himself hath been since to us. Therefore S. john does not only rest in that, That which was from the beginning, 1 John 1.1. (Christ was always in purpose, in prophecy, in promise) nor in that, That which we have heard, (the world heard of Christ long before they saw him) but he proceeds to that, That which we have seen, and looked upon with our eyes, and handled with our hands, that declare we unto you. So that we are now delivered from that jealousy that possessed those Septuagint, those Translators, that they durst not speak plain, and delivered from that suspicion that possessed Plato, and his disciples, that the people were incapable of that doctrine. We know that Christ is come, and we avow it, and we preach it, and we affirm, that it is not only as impious, and irreligious a thing, but as senseless, and as absurd a thing to deny that the Son of God hath redeemed the world, as to deny that God hath created the world; and that he is as formally, and as gloriously a Martyr that dies for this Article, The Son of God is come, as he that dies for this, There is a God. And these two acts of his mercy, enwrapped in this one word, veni, I came, (first, that he who is always present, out of an abundant love to man, studied a new way of coming, and then, that he who was but betrothed to the old world by way of promise, is married to us by an actual coming) will be farther explicated to us, in that, which only remains and constitutes our third, and last part, the end and purpose of his coming, That they might have life, and might have it more abundantly. And though this last part put forth many handles, we can but take them by the hand, and shake them by the hand, that is, open them, and so leave them. First then in this last part, we consider the gift itself, the treasure, Life, 3. Part. Vita. That they might have life. Now life is the character by which Christ specificates and denominates himself; Life is his very name, and that name by which he consummates all his other names, I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life; John 14.6. And therefore does Peter justly and bitterly upbraid the Jews with that, Ye desired a murderer, (an enemy to life) to be granted unto you, and killed the Prince of Life. Acts 3.14. It is an honour to any thing that it may be sworn by; by vulgar and trivial things men might not swear, Jer. 5.7. How shall I pardon them this? says God, They have sworn by things that are not gods. And therefore God, who in so many places professes to swear by himself, and of whom the Apostle says, Heb. 6.13. That because he could swear by no greater, he swore by himself, because he could propose no greater thing in himself, no clearer notion of himself then life, (for his life is his eternity, and his eternity is himself) does therefore through all the Law and the Prophets still swear in that form, Vivo ego, vivit Dominus, As I live, saith the Lord, and as the Lord liveth; still he swears by his own life; As that solemn Oath which is mentioned in Daniel, is conceived in that form too, He lift up his right hand and his left hand to heaven, Dan. 12.7. and swore by him that liveth for ever; that is, by God, and God in that notion as he is life. All that the Queen and the Council could wish and apprecate to the King, was but that, Life, In sempiternum vive, vive in aeternum, O King live for ever. God is life, Dan. 5. and would not the death of any. We are not sure that stones have not life; stones may have life; neither (to speak humanely) is it unreasonably thought by them, that thought the whole world to be inanimated by one soul, and to be one entire living creature; and in that respect does S. Augustine prefer a fly before the Sun, 1 Tim. 5.6. because a fly hath life, and the Sun hath not. This is the worst that the Apostle says of the young wanton widow, That if she live in pleasure, she is dead whilst she lives. So is that Magistrate that studies nothing but his own honour, and dignity in his place, dead in his place; And that Priest that studies nothing but his own ease, and profit, dead in his living; And that Judge that dares not condemn a guilty person, And (which is the bolder transgression) dares condemn the innocent, deader upon the Bench, than the Prisoner at the Bar; God hath included all that is good, Dcut. 30.15. in the name of Life, and all that is ill in the name of Death, when he says, See, I have set before thee Vitam & Bonum, Life and Good, Mortem & Malum, Death and Evil. This is the reward proposed to our faith, Hab. 2.4. justus fide sua vivit, To live by our faith: And this is the reward proposed to our works, Fac hoc & vives, to live by our works; All is life. And this fullness, this consummation of happiness, Life, and the life of life, spiritual life, and the exaltation of spiritual life, eternal life, is the end of Christ's coming, I came that they might have life. And first, daret. ut daret, that he might give life, bring life into the world, that there might be life to be had, that the world might be redeemed from that loss, which S. Augustine says it was fall'n into, Perdidimus possibilitatem boni, That we had all lost all possibility of life. For, the heaven and the earth, and all that the Poet would call Chaos, was not a deader lump before the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters, than Mankind was, before the influence of Christ's coming wrought upon it. But now that God so loved the world, as that he gave his Son, now that the Son so loved the world, as that he gave himself, Psal. 19.6. as David says of the Sun of the firmament, the father of nature, Nihit absconditum, there is nothing hid from the heat thereof; so we say of this Son of God, the Father of the faithful in a far higher sense, than Abraham was called so, Nihilabsconditum, there is nothing hid from him, no place, no person excluded from the benefit of his coming. The Son hath paid, the Father hath received enough for all; not in fingle money, for the discharge of thy lesser debts, thy idle words, thy wanton thoughts, thy unchaste looks, but in massy talents, to discharge thy crying debts, the clamours of those poor whom thou hast oppressed, and thy thundering debts, those blasphemies by which thou hast torn that Father that made thee, that Son that redeemed thee, that boly Ghost that would comfort thee. 1 Reg. 5. There is enough given; but then, as Hiram sent materials sufficient for the building of the Temple, but there was something else to be done, for the fitting, and placing thereof; so there is life enough brought into the world, for all the world, by the death of Christ, but then there is something else to be done for the application of this life to particular persons, intended in this word in our Text, ut haberent, I came that they might have life. There is Air enough in the world, haberent. to give breath to every thing, though every thing do not breath. If a tree, or a stone do not breathe, it is not because it wants air, but because it wants means to receive it, or to return it. All eggs are not hatched that the hen sits upon; Matt. 23.37. neither could Christ himself get all the chickens that were hatched, to come, and to stay under his wings. That man that is blind, or that will wink, shall see no more sun upon S. Barnabies day, then upon S. Lucy's; no more in the summer, then in the winter solstice. Psal. 130.7. And therefore as there is copiosa redemptio, a plentiful redemption brought into the world by the death of Christ, so (as S. Paul found it in his particular conversion) there is copiosa lux, Acts 22.6. a great & a powerful light exhibited to us, that we might see, and lay hold of this life, in the Ordinances of the Church, in the Confessions, and Absolutions, and Services, and Sermons, and Sacraments of the Church: Christ came ut daret, that he might bring life into the world, by his death, and then he instituted his Church, ut haberent, that by the means thereof this life might be infused into us, and infused so, as the last word of our Text delivers it, Abundantiùs, I came, that they might have life more abundantly. Dignaris Domine, Abundantiùs. August. ut eyes, quibus debita dimittis, te, promissionibus tuis, debitorem facias; This, O Lord, is thine abundant proceeding; First thou forgivest me my debt to thee, and then thou makest thyself a debtor to me by thy large promises; and after all, performest those promises more largely than thou madest them. Indeed, God can do nothing scantly, penuriously, singly. Even his maledictions, (to which God is ever loath to come) his first commination was plural, it was death, and death upon death, Morte morieris. Death may be plural; but this benediction of life cannot admit a singular; Chajim, which is the word for life, hath no singular number. This is the difference between God's Mercy, and his Judgements, that sometimes his Judgements may be plural, complicated, enwrapped in one another, but his Mercies are always so, and cannot be otherwise; he gives them abundantiùs, more abundantly. More abundantly then to whom? Illis, gentibus. The natural man hath the Image of God imprinted in his soul; eternity is God himself, man hath not that, not eternity; but the Image of eternity, that is Immortality, a post eternity there is in the soul of man. And then, man is all soul in Moses expression; For, he does not say that man had, Gen. 2.7. but that man was a living soul. So that the natural man hath life more abundantly than any other creature, (howsoever Oaks, and Crows, and Hearts may be said to outlive him) because he hath a life after this life. But Christ came to give life more abundantly than this. That he did, when he came to the Jews in promises, in Types, and Figures, and Sacrifices: Illis, Iudaeis. He gave life more abundantly to the Jew, then to the Gentile, because he gave him better means to preserve that life, better means to illustrate that Image of God in his soul, that is, to make his Immortality Immortal happiness, (for otherwise our Immortality were our greatest curse) better means to conform himself to God, by having a particular Law for the direction of all his actions, which the Gentiles had not. For, therein especially consisted the abundant favour of God to the Jews, as it is expressed by Moses, Unto what Nation are their gods come so near unto them, as the Lord our God is come unto us? And in what consisted this nearness? In this, What Nation hath Laws and Statutes so righteous as we have? God gave man life more abundantly than other creatures, because he gave him Immortality; God gave the Jews life more abundantly than other men, by giving them a Law to make their Immortality Immortal happiness, and yet there is a further abundantiùs, Christ came to give us, us Christians, life more abundantly then Gentile, or Jew. justin Martyr denies, that ever any understood the true God, till Christ came. Illis, Christianis. He goes upon the same ground that S. Paul does, Whilst you were without Christ, you were without God; that is, without such an evidence, such a manifestation, such an assurance of God, as faith requires, or as produces faith. For, the Ceremonial Laws of the Jews cast as many shadows as it did lights, and burdened them in easing them. Whereas the Christian Religion, is; as Greg. Nazianz. says, Simplex & nuda, nisi prauè in artem difficilimam converteretur: It is a plain, an easy, a perspicuous truth, but that the perverse and uncharitable wranglings of passionate and froward men, have made Religion a hard, an intricate, and a perplexed art; so that now, that Religion, which carnal and worldly men, have, by an ill life, discredited, and made hard to be believed, the passion, and perverseness of Schoolmen, by Controversies, hath made hard to be understood. Whereas the Christian Religion, is of itself jugumsuave, a sweet, and an easy yoke, and verbum abbreviatum, an abridgement and a contracted doctrine; for, where the Jews had all abridged in decem verba (as Moses calls the ten Commandments, ten words) the Christian hath all abridged in duo verba, into two words, love God, love thy neighbour. So Christ hath given us, us Christians life abundantiùs, more abundantly then to the Gen tile, or to the Jew; but there is a farther abundance yet; all this is but abundantiùs illis, more abundantly then to others, but Christ hath given us life abundantiùs ipsis, more abundantly then to ourselves. That is, in the Christian Church, Abundantiùs ipsis. he hath given us means to be better to day then yesterday, and to morrow then to day. That grace which God offers us in the Church, does not only fill that capacity, which we have, but give us a greater capacity than we had: And it is an abuse of God's grace, not to emprove it, or not to procure such farther grace, as that present grace makes us capable of. As it is an improvident, and dangerous thing to spend upon the stock, so is it to rely upon that portion of grace, which I think I had in my election, or that measure of Sanctification, which I came to in my last sickness. Christ gives us life abundantiùs illis, better means of eternal life then to Gentile or Jew, and abundantiùs ipsis; better, that is, nearer assurance, in our growth of grace, and increase of Sanctification every day, then in the consideration of any thing done by God, in our behalf, heretofore. Now, with these abundances (in which, we exceed illos, and ipsos, Ecclesta. others and ourselves) Christ comes to us, in this, that he hath constituted, and established a Church; and therefore we consider his abundant proceeding in that work. From this day, in which, the first stone of that building, the Church, was laid, (for, though the foundations of the Church were laid in Eternity, yet, that was under ground, the first stone above ground, that is, the manifestation of God's purpose to the world was laid this day, in Christ's birth) from this day, the Incarnation of Christ, (for, of all those names, by which the ancients design this day, Christmas day, Athanasius calling it the Substantiation of Christ; Tertullian, the Incorporation of Christ; Damascen, the Humanation of Christ; Of all those fifty names, which are collected out of the Fathers, for this day, most concur in that name, The Incarnation of Christ) from this day, God proceeded so abundantly in enlarging his Church, as that, within two hundred years, Tertullian was able to say, Ipsa hospitalia aegrorum, The very hospitals of the Christians are more and more sumptuously built, and more richly endowed, than the very Temples of the Idols, or then the Palaces of Idolatrous Princes. And still abundantiùs, not to compare only with Idolaters, but with the Jews themselves, and with them, in that wherein they magnified themselves most, their Temple. That Church, which justinian the Emperor built at Constantinople, and dedicated to Sophia, to the wisdom of God, (and the wisdom of God is Christ, Christ is the Power of God, and the Wisdom of God, 1 Cor. 1.24) is found by them, who have written that story, in bigness, and in beauty, to have exceeded Solomon's Temple: Though in that, there were employed for many years, thirty thousand Carpenters, and forty thousand Masons, and (other endowments of rich vessel being proportionable to it) more than twenty thousand Bowls, and Goblets of gold, and silver, yet justinian's Church at Constantinople exceeded that: Unto the riches of this wisdom of God, Christ Jesus, flowed all the treasure of the World, and upon this Wisdom of God, Christ Jesus, waited all the wisdom of the World. For, at that time, when Christ came into the world, was learning at that height, as that accounting from Cicero and Virgil, (two great Masters in two great kinds) to the two Pliny's, (which may shut up one age) we may reckon in that one state, under whose government Christ was born, Rome, Psal. 118.24. seven or eight score Authors, more than ever they had before or after. This is the day which the Lord hath made, we will rejoice, and be glad in it. And as Constantine ordained, that upon this day, the Church should burn no Oil, but Balsamum in her Lamps, so let us ever celebrate this day, with a thankful acknowledgement, that Christ, who is unctus Domini, The Anointed of the Lord, hath anointed us with the Oil of gladness above our fellows, and given us life more abundantly than others, in making us partakers of these means of salvation in his Church. But I bring it closer than so; now, and here, within these walls, and at this hour, comes Christ unto you, in the offer of this abundance; and with what penuriousness, penuriousness of devotion, penuriousness of reverence do you meet him here? Deus stetit, says David, Psal. 82.1. God standeth in the Congregation; does God stand there, and wilt thou sit? sit, and never kneel? I would speak so, as the congregation should not know whom I mean; but so, as that they whom it concerns, might know I mean them; I would speak: for, I must say, that there come some persons to this Church, and persons of example to many that come with them, of whom, (excepting some few, who must therefore have their praise from us, as, no doubt, they have their thanks and blessings from God) I never saw Master nor servant kneel, at his coming into this Church, or at any part of divine service. David had such a zeal to God's service, as that he was content to be thought a fool, for his humility towards the Ark. S. Paul was content to be thought mad; so was our blessed Saviour himself, not only by his enemies, but by his own friends and kinsfolk. John 10.20. Mar. 3.21. Indeed, the root of that word Tehillim, which is the name of the Psalms, and of all cheerful and hearty service of God, is Halal, and Halal is Insanire, To fall mad; And, if humility in the service of God here, be madness, I would more of us were more out of our wits, than we are; I would all our Churches were, to that purpose, Bedlams. S. Hieroms rule is not only frequenter orandum, to come often to prayers, but Flexo corpore orandum, to declare an inward humiliation by an outward. As our coming to Church is a testification, a profession of our religion, to testify our fall in Adam, the Church appoints us to fall upon our knees; and to testify our Resurrection in Christ Jesus, Just. Mar. the Church hath appointed certain times, to stand: But no man is so left to his liberty, as never to kneel. Genuflexio est peccatorum, kneeling is the sinner's posture; if thou come hither in the quality of a sinner, (and, if thou do not so, what dost thou here, the whole need not the Physician) put thyself into the posture of a sinner, kneel. We are very far from enjoining any one constant form to be always observed by all men; we only direct you, by that good rule of S. Bernard, Habe reverentiam Deo, ut quod pluris est ei tribuas. Do but remember, with what reverence thou camest into thy Master's presence, when thou wast a servant, with what reverence thou camest to the Council table, or to the King's presence, if thou have been called occasionally to those high places; and Quod plur is est, such reverence, as thou gavest to them there, be content to afford to God here. That Sacrifice that struggled at the Altar, the Ancients would not accept for a Sacrifice; But Caesar would not forbear a sacrifice for struggling, but sacrificed it for all that. He that struggles, and murmurs at this instruction, this increpation, is the less fit for a sacrifice to God, for that; But the zeal that I bear to God's house, puts so much of Caesar's courage into me, as, for all that struggling, to say now, and to repeat as often as I see that irreverence continued, to the most impatient struggler, Deus stetit, God stands in the Congregation, and wilt thou sit; sit, and never kneel? Venite, says David, Let us come hither, let us be here; what to do? Venite adoremus, Ps. 95.6. Let us come and worship; How? will not the heart serve? no; Adoremus & procidamus, Let us fall down, and kneel before the Lord our Maker. Humiliation is the beginning of sanctification; and as without this, without holiness, no man shall see God, though he poor whole nights upon the Bible; so without that, without humility, no man shall hear God speak to his soul, though he hear three two-houres Sermons every day. But if God bring thee to that humiliation of soul and body here, he will emprove, and advance thy sanctification abundantiùs, more abundantly, and when he hath brought it to the best perfection, that this life is capable of, he will provide another abundantiùs, another manner of abundance in the life to come; which is the last beating of the pulse of this text, the last panting of the breath thereof, our anhelation, and panting after the joys, and glory, and eternity of the kingdom of Heaven; of which, though, for the most part, I use to dismiss you, with saying something, yet it is always little that I can say thereof; at this time, but this, that if all the joys of all the Martyrs, from Abel t● him that groans now in the Inquisition, were condensed into one body of joy, (and certainly the joys that the Martyrs felt at their deaths, would make up a far greater body, than their sorrows would do,) (for though it be said of our great Martyr, or great Witness, Apoc. 1.5. (as S. john calls Christ Jesus) to whom, all other Martyrs are but sub-martyrs, witnesses that testify his testimony, Non dolour sicut dolor ejus, there was never sorrow like unto his sorrow, Lam. 3.12. Heb. 12.2. it is also true, Non gaudium sicut gaudium ejus, There was never joy like unto that joy which was set before him, when he endured the cross;) If I had all this joy of all these Martyrs, (which would, no doubt, be such a joy, as would work a liquefaction, a melting of my bowels) yet I shall have it abundantiùs, a joy more abundant, then even this superlative joy, in the world to come. What a dim vespers of a glorious festival, what a poor halfe-holyday, is Methusalems' nine hundred years, to eternity? what a poor account hath that man made, that says, this land hath been in my name, and in my Ancestors from the Conquest? what a yesterday is that? not six hundred years. If I could believe the transmigration of souls, and think that my soul had been successively in some creature or other, since the Creation, what a yesterday is that? not six thousand years. What a yesterday for the past, what a to morrow for the future, is any term, that can be comprehendred in Cipher or Counters? But as, how abundant a life soever any man hath in this world for temporal abundances, I have life more abundantly than he, if I have the spiritual life of grace, so what measure soever I have of this spiritual life of grace, in this world, I shall have that more abundantly in Heaven, for there, my term shall be a term for three lives; for those three, that as long as the Father, and the Son, and the holy Ghost live, I shall not die. And to this glorious Son of God, and the most almighty Father, etc. SERMONS Preached upon Candlemas-day. SERMON VIII. Preached upon Candlemas Day. MAT. 5.16. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. EIther of the names of this day, were Text enough for a Sermon, Purification, or Candlemas. Join we them together, and raise we only this one note from both, that all true purification is in the light; corner purity, clandestine purity, conventicle purity is not purity. Christ gave himself for us, Tit. 2.14. says the Apostle, that he might purify to himself a peculiar people. How shall this purification appear? It follows; They shall be zealous of good works; They shall not wrangle about faith and works, but be actually zealous of goods works. For, purification was accompanied with an oblation, something was to be given; A Lamb, a Dove, Levit. 12.6. a Turtle; All, emblems of mildness; true purity is mild, meek, humble, and to despise and undervalue others, is an inseparable mark of false purity. The oblation of this day's purification is light: so the day names it, Candlemas-day, so your custom celebrates it, with many lights. Now, when God received lights into his Tabernacle, he received none of Tallow, (the Ox hath horns) he received none of Wax, (the Bee hath his sting) but he received only lamps of oil. And, though from many fruits and berries they pressed oil, yet God admitted no oil into the service of the Church, but only of the Olive; the Olive, the emblem of peace. Our purification is with an oblation, our oblation is light, our light is good works; our peace is rather to exhort you to them, then to institute any solemn, or other then occasional comparison between faith and them. Every good work hath faith for the root; but every faith hath not good works for the fruit thereof. And it is observable, that in all this great Sermon of our Saviour's in the Mount, (which possesseth this, and the two next Chapters) there is no mention of faith, by way of persuasion or exhortation thereunto, but the whole Sermon is spent upon good works. For, good works presuppose faith; Mat. 6.30. and therefore he concludes that they had but little faith, because they were so solicitous about the things of this world, O ye of little faith. And as Christ concludes an unstedfastness in their faith, out of their solicitude for this world, so may the world justly conclude an establishment in their faith, if they see them exercise themselves in the works of mercy, and so let their light shine before men, that they may see their good works, and glorify their Father which is in heaven. These are words spoken by our Saviour to his Disciples in the Mount; Divisio. a treasure deposited in those disciples, but in those disciples, as depositaries for us; an Oracle uttered to those disciples, but through those disciples to us; Paradise conveyed to those disciples, but to those disciples, as feoffees in trust for us; to every one of us, in them (from him, that rides with his hundreds of Torches, to him that crawls with his rush-candle) our Saviour says, Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, etc. The words have two parts; so must our explication of them; first a precept, Sic luceat, (Let your light so shine before men) and then the reason, the purpose, the end, the effect, ut videant, (that men may see your good works, and etc.) From the first bough will divers branches spring, and divers from the other; all of good taste and nourishment, if we might stay to press the fruits thereof. We cannot; yet, in the first we shall insist a while upon each of these three; First, the light itself, what that is, Sic luceat lux, Let your light so shine; And then, secondly, what this propriety is, lux vestra, (let your light shine, yours;) And last what this emanation of this light upon others is, coram hominibus, (let your light shine before men.) The second part, which is the reason, or the effect of this precept, ut videant, (that men may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven) abounds in particular considerations; and I should weary you, if I should make you stand all the while under so heavy a load, as to charge your memories with all those particulars, so long before I come to handle them. Reserving them therefore to their due time, anon, proceed we now to the three branches of our first part, first the light in itself, than the propriety in us, lastly, the emanation upon others, Let your light so shine before men. First, 1 Part. Lux. John 1.9. for the light itself, There is a light that lighteneth every man that cometh into the world. And, even this universal light is Christ, says S. john, (He was that light that lighteth every man that cometh into the world.) And this universal enunciation, (He lighteneth every man) moved S. Cyril to take this light for the light of nature, and natural reason. John 1.3. Colos. 1.16. For even nature and natural reason is from Christ. All things were made by him, says S. john, even nature itself. And, By him, and for him, all things visible, and invisible were created, says the Apostle. And therefore our latter men of the Reformation, are not to be blamed, who for the most part, pursuing S. Cyrils interpretation, interpret this universal light, that lighteneth every man, to be the light of nature. Divers others of the Fathers take this universal light (because Christ is said to be this light) to be Baptism. For, in the primitive Church, as the Nativity of Christ was called the Epiphany, Manifestation, so Baptism was called Illumination. And so, Christ lightens every man that comes into the world, (that is, into the Christian world) by that Sacrament of Illumination, Baptism. S. Augustine brought the exposition of that universal proposition into a narrow room; That he enlightened all that came into the world, that is, all that were enlightened in the world, were enlightened by him; there was no other light; and so he makes this light to be the light of faith, and the light of effectual grace, which all have not, but they that have, have it from Christ. Now which of these lights is intended in our Text, Let you light shine out? is it of the light of nature, at our coming into the world, or the light of Baptism, and that general grace that accompanies all God's Ordinances, at our coming into the Church, or the light of faith, and particular grace, sealing our adoption, and spiritual filiation there? Properly, our light is none of these three; and yet it is truly, all; for our light is the light of good works; and that light proceeds from all the other three, and so is all those, and then it goes beyond all three, and so is none of them. It proceeds from all; for, if we consider the first light, the light of nature, Ephes. 2.10. in our creation, We are (says the Apostle) his workmanship, created in Christ jesus unto good works. So that we were all made for that, for good works; even the natural man, by that first light. Consider it in the second light, in baptism; there we die in Christ, and are buried in Christ, and rise in Christ, and in him we are new creatures, and with him we make a covenant in baptism, for holiness of life, which is the body of good works. Consider the third, that of faith, and as every thing in nature is, so faith is perfected by working; Jam. 2.26. for, faith is dead, without breath, without spirit, if it be without works. So, this light is in all those lights; we are created, we are baptised, we are adopted for good works; and it is beyond them all, even that of faith; for, though faith have a pre-eminence, because works grow out of it, and so faith (as the root) is first, yet works have the pre-eminence thus, both that they include faith in them, and that they dilate, and diffuse, and spread themselves more declaratorily, than faith doth. Therefore, as our Saviour said to some that asked him, John 6.28. What shall we do that we might work the work of God? (you see their mind was upon works, something they were sure was to be done) This is the work of God, that ye believe in him whom he hath sent, and so refers them to faith, so to another that asks him, What shall I do, that I may have eternal life? Mat. 19.16. (all go upon that, that something there must be done, works there must be) Christ says, Keep the Commandments, and so refers him to works. He hath showed thee O man, what is good, Mic. 6.8. and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to show mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? This then is the light that lighteth every man that goes out of the world, good works; for, their works follow them. Their works; they shall be theirs, Apoc. 14.13. even after their death; which is our second branch in this first part, the propriety, lux vestra, let your light shine. I cannot always call the works that I do, my works; for sometimes God works them, Proprietas vestra. Esay 28.21. and sometimes the devil: Sometimes God works his own work, The Lord will do his work, his strange work, and bring to pass his act, his strange act. Sometimes he works my works, Thou Lord hast wrought all our works in us. In us, and in all things else, Esay 26.12. 1 Cor. 12.6. Ephes. 1.11. Esay 43.13. Rom. 7.15. Operatur omnia in omnibus, he worketh all in all. And all this in all these, Secundum consilium voluntatis suae, After the counsel of his own will; for, I will work, and who shall let it? But for all this his general working, his enemy works in us too. That which I do, I allow not, says the Apostle; nay, I know it not; for, says he, what I hate, that I do. And, if I do that I would not do, it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. Yet, ver. 20. for all this divers, this contrary working, as S. Augustine says of the faculty of the will, Nihil tam nostrum, quam voluntas, there is nothing so much our own, as our will before we work, August. so there is nothing so much our own, as our works, after they are done. They stick to us, they cleave to us; whether as fomentations to nourish us, or as corrasives, to gnaw upon us, that lies in the nature of the work; but ours they are; and upon us our works work. Our good works are more ours, than our faith is ôurs. Our faith is ours as we have received it, our work is ours, as we have done it. Faith is ours, as we are possessors of it, the work ours, as we are doers, actors in it. Faith is ours, as our goods are ours, works, as our children are ours. And therefore when the Prophet Habakkuk says, Fide sua, Hab. 2.4. The just shall live by his faith, that particle His, is a word of possession, not a word of Acquisition; That God hath infused that faith into him, and so it is his, not that he hath produced that faith in himself. His faith must save him, his own, and not another's, not his parent's faith, though he be the son of holy parents, not the Church's faith, (if he be of years) though he be within the covenant, but his own personal faith; yet not his so, as that it grew in him, or was produced in him, by him, by any plantation, Rom. 1.17. Gal. 3.11. Heb. 10.36. or semination of his own. And therefore S. Paul in citing that place of Habakkuk (as he doth cite it three several times) in all those places leaves out that particle of propriety; and acquisition, his, and still says, The just shall live by faith, and he says no more. And when our blessed Saviour says to the woman with the bloody issue, Fides tua, Daughter, Mar. 5.34. thy faith hath made thee whole, it was said then, when he had seen that woman come trembling and fall down at his feet; he saw outward declarations of her faith, he saw works. And so, in divers of those places, where Christ repeats that, fides tua, thy faith, we find it added, jesus videns fidem, jesus seeing their faith. With what eyes? he looked upon them with his humane eyes, not his divine; he saw not (that is, considered not at that time) their hearts, but their outward declarations, and proceeding as a good man would, out of their good works concludes faith. Velle & nolle nostrum est, to assent or to disassent is our own; Hieron. we may choose which we will do; Ipsumque quod nostrum est, sine Dei miseratione nostrum non est; But though this faculty be ours, it is ours, but because God hath imprinted it in us. So that still to will, as well as to do, to believe, as well as to work, is all from God; but yet they are from God in a divers manner, and a divers respect; and certainly our works are more ours then our faith is, and man concurres otherwise in the acting and perpetration of a good work, than he doth in the reception and admission of faith. Sed quae non fecimus ipsi, says the Poet; and he was Vates, a Prophet in saying so, Vix ea nostra voco; nothing is ours, but that which we have done ourselves; and all that is ours. And though Christ refer us often to belief, in this life, because he would be sure to plant, and fasten safely that which is the only true root of all, that is, faith, yet when he comes to Judgement, in the next life, all his proceeding is grounded upon works, and he judges us by our fruits. So then, God gives us faith, immediately from himself, and out of that faith, he produces good works, instrumentally, by us, so, as that those works are otherwise ours, than that faith is. And this the propriety, lux vestra, let your light shine, which we proposed for the second branch in this first part, that God vouchsafes to afford us an interest, in the working of our salvation; And than our third branch is, the emanation of this light, from us, to others, Coram hominibus, let your light shine before men. There was a particular Holiday amongst the heathen, Luceat, Emanatio. that bore the name of this day, Accensio luminum, Candlemas day; A superstitious multiplying of Lamps, and Torches in Divine Service. Lactant. This superstition Lactantius reproves, elegantly, and bitterly. Num mentis suae compos putandus est? can we think that man in his wits, that offers to God, the Father, and Fountain, the Author and Giver of all light, a Candle for an Oblation, for a Sacrifice, for a New-year's gift? contempletur, says he; Let that man but consider seriously the Sun, and he will see, that that God who could spare him so glorious a light as the Sun, Tertul. needs not his Candle. And therefore says Tertullian, (reprehending the same superstition) Lucernis diem non infringimus, we do not cut off, we do not shorten our days, by setting up lights at noon, nor induce, nor force, nor make night before it comes. I would not be understood to condemn all use of candles by day, in Divine Service, nor all Churches that have or do use them; For, so, I might condemn even the Primitive Church, in her pure and innocent estate. And therefore, that which Lactantius, almost three hundred years after Christ, says of those Lights, and that which Tertullian, almost a hundred years before Lactantius, says, in reprehension thereof, must necessarily be understood of the abuse, and imitation of the Gentiles therein; for, that the thing itself, was in use, before either of their times, I think, admits little question. About Lactantius time, fell the Eliberitan Council; and then the use, and the abuse was evident. For, in the thirty fourth Canon of that Council, it is forbidden to set up Candles in the Churchyard: And, the reason that is added, declares the abuse, Non sunt enim inquietandi spiritus sidelium, That the souls of the Saints departed should not be troubled. Now the setting up of lights could not trouble them; but these lights were accompanied with superstitious Invocations, with magical Incantations, and with howl and ejulations, which they had learned from the Gentiles, and with these, the souls of the dead, were, in those times, thought to be affected, and disquieted. It is in this Ceremony of lights, as it is in other Ceremonies: They may be good in their Institution, and grow ill in their practice. So did many things, which the Christian Church received from the Gentiles, in a harmless innocency, degenerate after, into as pestilent superstition there, as amongst the Gentiles themselves. For, ceremonies, which were received, but for the instruction, and edification of the weaker sort of people, were made real parts of the service of God, and meritorious sacrifices. To those ceremonies, which were received as signa commonefacientia, helps to excite, and awaken devotion, was attributed an operation, and an effectual power, even to the ceremony itself; and they were not practised, as they should, significatiuè, but effectiuè, not as things which should signify to the people higher mysteries, but as things as powerful, and effectual in themselves, as the greatest Mysteries of all, the Sacraments themselves. So lights were received in the Primitive Church, to signify to the people, that God, the Father of lights, was otherwise present in that place, then in any other, and then, men came to offer lights by way of sacrifice to God; And so, that which was providently intended for man, who indeed needed such helps, was turned upon God, as though he were to be supplied by us. But what then? Because things good in their institution, may be depraved in their practice, Ergonè nihil ceremoniarum rudioribus dabitur, Calv. Instit. l. 4. c. 10. § 14. ad juvandam eorum imperitiam? Shall therefore the people be denied all ceremonies, for the assistance of their weakness? Id ego non dico; I say not so, says he. Omnino illis utile esse sentio hoc genus adminiculi; I think these kinds of helps to be very behooveful for them; Tantum hîc contendo, all that I strive for, is but Moderation; and that Moderation he places very discreetly in this, That these ceremonies may be few in number; That they may be easy for observation; That they may be clearly understood in their signification; we must not therefore be hasty in condemning particular ceremonies: For, in so doing, in this ceremony of lights, we may condemn the Primitive Church, that did use them, and we condemn a great and Noble part of the reformed Church, which doth use them at this day. These superstitious lights, are not the lights we call for here, sic luceat, let your light shine out; but lux vestra, your light, the light of good works; let that shine out. Truly, this carrying, and diffusing of light to others is so blessed a thing, as that though Lucifer, (whose name signifies the carrying of light) be now an odious name, an infamous name, applied only to the Devil, yet a great Bishop in the Primitive Church abstained not from that name, forbore not that name, Lucifer Talaritanus; that he might carry about him, in his name, a remembrancer, far lucem, to carry light to others, he was content with that name, Lucifer. God had made light the first day, and yet he made many lights after. One light of thine shines out in our eyes, thy profession of Christ; let us see more lights, works worthy of that profession. God calls the Sun, and the Moon too, Gen. 1.16. Great lights, because though there be greater in the Firmament, they appear greatest to us; those works of ours are greatest in the sight of God, that are greatest in the sight of men, that are most beneficial, most exemplary, and conduce most to the promoving of others to glorify God. To such rich men, as produce no light at all, August. (not works) that of S. Angustine is appliable, cimexes sunt, they are as these worms, or flies, the cimexes, qui vivi mordent, mortui foetent, They by't, and suck a man, whilst they live, and they stink pestilently, and offend so, when they are dead. The actions of such rich men are mischievous whilst they live, and their memory odious when they are dead. But all rich men are not such, to be absolutely without all light. But then they may have light, (a determined purpose to do some good works) and yet this light not shine out. No man can more properly be said to hid his light under a bushel, (which because Christ says, (in the verse before our Text) no man does, certainly not man should do) than he, who hath disposed some part of his estate to pious uses, but hides it in his will, and locks up that will in his cabinet; For, in this case, though there be light, yet it does not shine out. Your gold, and your silver is cankered, says S. james, and the rust of them shall be a witness, James 5.3. and shall eat your flesh, as it were fire. He does not say the gold and the silver itself, as reproving the ill getting of it, but the rust, the hiding, the concealing thereof, shall be this witness against thee, this executioner upon thee. That man dies in an ill state, of whose faith we have had no evidence, till, after his death, his executors meet, and open his Will, and then publish some Legacies to pious uses: And we had no evidence before, if he had done no good before. For, show me thy faith without thy works, James. 2.18 says the Apostle; and he proposes it, as an impossible thing, impossible to show it, impossible to have it. And therefore, as good works are our own, so are they never so properly our own, as when they are done with our own hands; for this is the true shining of our light, the emanation from us, upon others. And so have you the three pieces, which constitute our first part, the precept, Let your light shine before men; The light itself, not the light of nature, nor of Baptism, nor of Adoption, but the light of good works; And then the Appropriation of this light, how these works are ours, though the goodness thereof be only from God; And lastly the emanation of this light upon others; which cannot well be said to be an emanation of our light, of light from us, except it be whilst we are we, that is, alive. And so we pass to those many particulars, which frame our second part, the reason, and the end of this, That men may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. In this end, our beginning is, ut videant, that men may see it. The apparitions in old times, were evermore accompanied with lights; but they were private lights; 2. Part. videant. such an old woman, or such a child saw a light; but non videbant homines, it did not shine out, so that men might see this light. We have a story delivered by a very pious man, Cantiprat. l. 1. c. 9 and of the truth whereof he seems to be very well assured, that one Conradus a devout Priest, had such an illustration, such an irradiation, such a coruscation, such a light at the tops of those fingers, which he used in the consecration of the Sacrament, as that by that light of his fingers ends, he could have read in the night, as well as by so many Candles; But this was but a private light, & non viderunt homines, It did not shine out, Epist. 205. ad Cyrill: Jerosolym. so that men might see it. Blessed S. Augustine reports, (if that Epistle be S. Augustine's) that when himself was writing to S. Hierome, to know his opinion of the measure and quality of the Joy, and Glory of Heaven, suddenly in his Chamber there appeared ineffabile lumen, says he, an unspeakable, an unexpressible light, nostr is invisum temporibus, such a light as our times never saw, and out of that light issued this voice, Hieronymi anima sum, I am the soul of that Hierome to whom thou art writing, who this hour died at Bethlem, and am come from thence to thee, etc. But this was but a private light, and whatsoever S. Augustine saw, (who was not easily deceived, nor would deceive others) non videbant homines, this light did not shine so, as that men might see it. Here, in our Text, there is a light required that men may see. Those lights of their apparitions we cannot see; There is a light of ours, which our adversaries may see, and will not; which is truly the light of this Text, the light of good works. Though our zeal to good works shine out assiduously, day by day in our Sermons, and shine out powerfully in the Homilies of our Church, composed expressly to that purpose, and shine out actually in our many sumptuous buildings, and rich endowments, (in which works, we of this Kingdom, in this last Century, since the Reformation of Religion, have perhaps exceeded our Fathers, in any one hundred of years, whilst they lived under the Roman persuasion) yet still they cry out, we are enemies of this light, and abhor good works. As I have heard them, in some obscure places abroad, Preach, that here in England, we had not only no true Church, no true Priesthood, no true Sacraments, but that we have no material Churches, no holy Convocations, no observing of Sundays, or Holy days, no places to serve God in; so I have heard them Preach, that we do not only not advance, but that we cry down, and discredit, and dissuade, and discountenance the doctrine of good works. It is enough to say to them, as the Angel said to the Devil, Increpet te Dominus, The Lord rebuke thee. jude 9 And the Lord does rebuke them, in enabling us to proceed in these pious works, which, with so notorious falsehood they deny; And we do rebuke them, Heb. 10.24. the best and most powerful way, in that, (as the Apostle says) we consider one another, (consider the necessities of others) and provoke one another to love, and good works. But then, if this be God's end in our good works, ut videant homines, that men may see them, Mat. 6.1. why is Christ so earnest, in this very sermon as to say, Take heed you do not your alms before men, to be seen of them? Is there no contradiction in these? far from it; The intent of both precepts together make up this doctrine, That we do them not therefore, not to that end, that men may see them. So far we must come, that men must see them, but we must not rest there; for, it is but Sic luceat, Let your light shine out so, it is not, let it shine out therefore; Our doing of good works must have a farther end, than the knowledge of men, as we shall see, towards our end, anon. Men must see them then, Opera. and see them to be works, videant opera, That they may see your works: which is a word that implies difficulty, and pain, and labour, and is accompanied with some loathness, with some colluctation. Do such works, for God's sake, as are hard for thee to do. In such a word does God deliver his Commandment of the Sabbath; not that word, which in that language signifies ordinary and easy works, but servile and laborious works, toilsome and gainful works, those works thou mayst not do upon the Sabbath. But those works, in the virtue of the precept of this text, thou must do in the sight of men; those that are hard for thee to do. David would not consecrate nor offer unto God, 2. Sam. 24.24. that which cost him nothing; first he would buy Araunahs' threshing floor at a valuable price, and then he would dedicate it to God. To give old , past wearing, to the poor, is not so good a work as to make new for them. Mar. 12.42. To give a little of your superfluities, not so acceptable as the widow's gift, that gave all. To give a poor soul a farthing at that door, where you give a Player a shilling, is not equal dealing; Amos 8.6. for, this is to give God quisquilias frumenti, The refuse of the wheat. But do thou some such things, as are truly works in our sense, such as are against the nature, and ordinary practice of worldly men to do; some things, by which they may see, that thou dost prefer God before honour, and wife, and children, and hadst rather build, and endow some place, for God's service, then pour out money to multiply titles of honour upon thyself, or enlarge jointures, and portions, to an unnecessary, and unmeasurable proportion, when there is enough done before. Let men see that that thou dost, Opera Bona. to be a work, qualified with some difficulty in the doing, and then those works, to be good works, Videant opera bona, that they may see your good works. They are not good works how magnificent soever, if they be not directed to good ends. A superstitious end, or a seditious end vitiates the best work. Great contributions have been raised, and great sums given, to build, and endow Seminaries, and schools, and Colleges in foreign parts; but that hath a superstitious end. Great contributions have been raised, and great sums given at home, for the maintenance of such refractory persons, as by opposing the government and discipline of the Church, have drawn upon themselves, silencings, and suspensions, and deprivations; but that hath a seditious end. But, give so, as in a rectified conscience, and not a distempered zeal, (a rectified conscience is that, that hath the testimony and approbation of most good men, in a succession of times, and not to rely occasionally upon one or a few men of the separation, for the present) give so, as thou mayst sincerely say, God gave me this, to give thus, and so it is a good work. So it must be, A work (something of some importance) and a good work, (not depraved with an ill end) and then your work, videant opera vestra, That they may see your good works. They are not your works, if that that you give be not your own. Nor is it your own, Opera bona v●stra. if it were ill gotten at first. How long soever it have been possessed, or how often soever it have been transformed, from money to ware, from ware to land, from land to office, from office to honour, the money, the ware, the land, the office, the honour is none of thine, if, in thy knowledge, it were ill gotten at first. Zacheus, in S. Luke, Luke 19.8. gives half his goods to the poor; but it is half of his, his own; for there might be goods in his house, which were none of his. Therefore in the same instrument, he passes that scrutiny, If I have taken any thing unjustly, I restore him fourfold. First let that that was ill gotten, be deducted, and restored, and then, of the rest, which is truly thine own, give cheerfully. When Moses says, that our years are three score and ten, Psal. 90.20. if we deduct from that term, all the hours of our unnecessary sleep, of superfluous sit at feasts, of curiosity in dressing, of largeness in recreations, of plotting, and compassing of vanities, or sins, scarce any man of chreescore and ten, would be ten years old, when he dies. If we should deal so with worldly men's estates, (defalse unjust get) it would abridge and attenuate many a swelling Inventory. Till this defalcation, this scrutiny be made, that you know what's your own, what's other men's, as your Tomb shall be but a monument of your rotten bones, how much gold or marble soever be bestowed upon it, so that Hospital, that free-school, that College that you shall build, and endow, will be but a monument of your bribery, your extortion, your oppression; and God, who will not be in debt, (though he own you nothing that built it) may be pleased to give the reward of all that, to them, from whom that which was spent upon it, was unjustly taken; for, Prov. 13.22. The wealth of the sinner is laid up for the righteous, says Solomon. The sinner may do pious works, and the righteous may be rewarded for them; the world may think of one founder, and God knows another. That which is enjoined in the name of light here, is works, (not trifles) and good works, (made good by the good ends they are directed to) and then your works (done out of that which is truly your own) and by seeing this light, men will be moved to glorify your Father which is in Heaven; which is the true end of all; that men may see them, but see them therefore, To glorify your Father which is in Heaven. He does not say, that by seeing your good works, Patrem, non Filios. men shall glorify your sons upon earth. And yet truly, even that part of the reward, and retribution is worth a great deal of your cost, and your alms; that God shall establish your posterity in the world, and in the good opinion of good men. As you have your estates, you have your children from God too. As it is David's recognition, Dominus pars haereditatis meae, Psal. 16.5. Gen. 4.1. The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance, so the Possedi virum à Domino, was Eves Recognition upon the birth of her first son, Cain, I have gotten, I possess a man from the Lord. Now that that man that thou possessest from the Lord, thy son, may possess that land that thou possessest from the Lord, it behoves thee to be righteous; for so, (by that righteousness) thou becomest a foundation for posterity, Prov. 10.25. Prov. 13.9. Prov. 14.23. (The righteous is an everlasting foundation) his light, (his good works) shall be a cheerful light unto him; (for, The light of the righteous rejoiceth him.) They shall be so in this life, and, He shall have hope in his death, saith Solomon; that is, hope for himself in another world, & hope of his posterity in this world; for, says he, He leaveth an inheritance to his children's children; that is, an inheritance, Prov. 23.22. out of which he hath taken, and restored all that was unjustly got from men, and taken a bountiful part, which he hath offered to God in pious uses, that the rest may descend free from all claims, and encumbrances upon his children's children. Psal. 37.26. The righteous is merciful, and dareth, says David. Merciful as his Father in Heaven is merciful; that is, in perpetual, not transitory endowments, (for, God did not set up his lights, his Sun, and his Moon for a day, but for ever, and such should our light, or good works be too.) He is merciful, and he dareth; to whom? for to the poor he giveth; he looks for no return from them, for they are the waters upon which he casts his bread. Yet he dareth; Eccles. 11.1. Prov. 19.17. He that hath pity on the poor, dareth to the Lord. The righteous is merciful and dareth, and then, (as David adds there) His seed is blessed. Blessed in this (which follows there) that he shall inherit the land, Psal. 37.29. Psal. 112.4. and dwell therein for ever, (which he ratifies again, Surely he shall not be moved for ever; that is, he shall never be moved, in his posterity) And as he is blessed that way, blessed in the establishment of his possession upon his children's children, so is he blessed in this, that his honour, and good name shall be poured out as a fragrant oil upon his posterity, Ibid. The righteous shall be had in everlasting remembrance. Their memory shall be always alive, Prov. 10.7. Prov. 11.30. and always fresh in their posterity, when The name of the wicked shall rot. So then, the fruit of the righteous is the tree of life, says Solomon; that is, the righteous shall produce plants, that shall grow up, and flourish; so his posterity shall be a tree of life to many generations; Prov. 17.6. and then, The glory of children are their Fathers, says that wise King; As Fathers receive comfort from good children, so children receive glory from good parents; in this are children glorified, that they had righteous Fathers, that lent unto the Lord. So that, (to recollect these pieces) it is no small reward that God affords you, if men, seeing your good works, glorify, that is, esteem, and respect, and love, and honour your children upon earth. But it is not only that; your good works shall be an occasion of carrying glory upon the right object, They shall glorify your Father, which is in heaven. It is not the Father which is in Heaven; Non Patrem. that they should glorify God, as the common Father of all, by creation. For, for that they need not your light, your good works; The Heavens declare the glory of God, Psal. 19.1. says David; that is, glorify him in an acknowledgement, that he is the Father of them, Deut. 32.6. and of all other things by creation. Is not he thy Father? hath he not made thee? is an interrogatory ministered by Moses, to which all things must answer with the Prophet Malachi, Malac. 2.10. yes, He is our Father, for he hath made us. But that's not the paternity of this text, as God is Father of us all by creation. Nor as he is a Father of some in a more particular consideration, in giving them large portions, great patrimonies in this world; for, thus, he may be my Father and yet disinherit me; he may give me plenty of temporal blessings, and withhold from me spiritual, and eternal blessings. Now, to see this, men need not your light, your good works; for, they see daily, That he maketh his sun to shine on the evil, Mat. 5.45. and on the good; and causeth it to rain on the just, and the unjust; He feeds Goats as well as Sheep, he gives the wicked temporal blessings, as well as the righteous. These than are not the paternities of our text, that men, by this occasion, glorify God as the Father of all men by creation, nor as the Father of all rich men, by their large patrimonies, not as he is the Father, not as he is a Father, but as he is your Father, as he is made yours, as he is become yours, by that particular grace of using the temporal blessings which he hath given you, to his glory, in letting your light shine before men. For, it were better God disinherited us so, as to give us nothing, then that he gave us not the grace to use that that he gave us, well: without this, all his bread were stone, Mat. 7.9. and all his fishes serpents, all his temporal liberality malediction. How much happier had that man been, that hath wasted thousands in play, in riot, in wantonness, in sinful excesses, if his parents had left him no more at first, than he hath left himself at last? How much nearer to a kingdom in Heaven had he been, if he had been borne a beggar here? Nay, though he have done no ill, (of such excessive kinds) how much happier had he been, if he had had nothing left him, if he have done no good? There cannot be a more fearful commination upon man, nor a more dangerous dereliction from God, Ps. 50.8. & 12. then when God says, I will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices; Though thou offer none, I care not, I'll never tell thee of it, nor reprove thee for it, I will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices. And when he says, (as he does there) If I be hungry I will not tell thee; I will not awake thy charity, I will not excite thee, not provoke thee, with any occasion of feeding me, in feeding the poor. When God shall say to me, I care not whether you come to Church or no, whether you pray or no, repent or no, confess, receive or no, this is a fearful dereliction; so is it, when he says to a rich man, I care not whether your light shine out, or no; whether men see your good works or no; I can provide for my glory other ways. For, certainly God hath not determined his purpose, and his glory so much in that, to make some men rich that the poor might be relieved, (for, that ends in bodily relief) as in this, that he hath made some men poor, whereby the rich might have occasion to exercise their charity; for, that reaches to spiritual happiness; for which use, the poor do not so much need the rich, as the rich need the poor; the poor may better be saved without the rich, than the rich without the poor. But when men shall see, that that God, who is the Father of us all, by creating us, and the father of all the rich, by enriching them, is also become your father, yours by adoption, yours by infusion of that particular grace, to do good with your goods, then are you made blessed instruments of that which God seeks here, his glory, They shall glorify your father which is in heaven. Glory is so inseparable to God, as that God himself is called Glory, They changed their Glory into the similitude of an Ox; Their glory, their true God into an inglorious Idol. Gloria. Psal. 106.20. Psal. 85.10. That glory may dwell in our land, says he; that is, that God may dwell therein. The first end of letting our light to shine before men, is, that they may know God's proceed; but, the last end to which all conduces, is, that God may have glory. Whatsoever God did first in his own bosom, in his own decree, (what that was, contentious men will needs wrangle) whatsoever that first act was, God's last end in that first act of his was his own glory. And therefore to impute any inglorious or ignoble thing to God, comes too near blasphemy. And be any man who hath any sense or taste of nobleness, or honour, judge, whether there be any glory in the destruction of those creatures whom they have raised, till those persons have deserved ill at their hands, and in some way have damnified them, or dishonoured them. Nor can God propose that for glory, to destroy man till he find cause in man. Now, this glory, to which Christ bends all in this Text, (that men by seeing your good works, might glorify your Father) consists especially in these two declarations, Commemoration, and Imitation; a due celebration of former founders and benefactors, and a pious proceeding according to such precedents, is this glorifying of God. When God calls himself so often, The God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of jacob, Gloria ex Commemoratione. Ezech. 14.14. God would have the world remember, that Abraham, Isaac, and jacob were extraordinary men, memorable men. When God says, Though these three men, Noah, Daniel, and job were here, they should not deliver this people, God would have it known, that Noah, Daniel, and job were memorable men, and able to do much with him. When the Holy Ghost is so careful to give men their additions, Gen. 4.20. That jabal was the father of such as dwell in Tents, & keep Cattles, & jubal the father of Harpers, and Organists, and Tubal-Cain of all Gravers in Brass and Iron. And when he presents with so many particularities every piece of work, that Hiram of Tyre wrought in Brass for the furnishing of Solomon's Temple, 1 Reg. 7.13. God certainly is not afraid that his honour will be diminished, in the honourable mentioning of such men as have benefited the world by public good works. The wise man seems to settle himself upon that meditation; let us now praise famous men, says he, Ecclus. 44.1. and our fathers that begot us; and so he institutes a solemn commemoration, and gives a catalogue of Enoch, and Abraham, and Moses, and Aaron, and so many more, as possess six Chapters; nor doth he ever end the meditation till he end his book; so was he fixed upon the commemoration of good men; Heb. 11. as S. Paul likewise feeds and delights himself in the like meditation, even from Abel. It is therefore a wretched impotency, not to endure the commemoration, and honourable mentioning of our Founders and Benefactors. God hath delivered us, and our Church, from those straits, in which, some Churches of the Reformation have thought themselves to be, when they have made Canons, That there should be no Bell rung, no dole given, no mention made of the dead at any Funeral, lest that should savour of superstition. The Holy Ghost hath taught us the difference between praising the dead, and praying for the dead, between commemorating of Saints, and invocating of Saints. We understand what David means, when he says, This honour have all his Saints, and what S. Paul means, Psal. 149.9. 1 Tim. 1.17. when he says, Unto the only wise God be honour, and glory, for ever and ever. God is honoured in due honour given to his Saints, and glorified in the commemoration of those good men whose light hath so shined out before men, that they have seen their good works. But then he is glorified more, in our imitation, then in our commemoration. Herein is my Father glorified, (says Christ) that ye bear much fruit. Gloria ex Imitatione. john 15.8. Mar. 4.20. The seed sowed in good ground, bore some an hundred fold, the least thirty. The seed (in this case) is the example that is before you, of those good men, whose light hath shined out so, that you have seen their good works. Let this seed, these good examples bring forth hundreds, and sixties, and thirty in you, much fruit; for herein is your Father glorified, that you bear much fruit. Of which plentiful increase, I am afraid there is one great hindrance that passes through many of you, that is, that when your Will lies by you, in which some little lamp of this light is set up, something given to God in pious uses, if a Ship miscarry, if a Debtor break, if your state be any way impaired, the first that suffers, the first that is blotted out of the Will, is God and his Legacy; and if your estates increase, portions increase, and perchance other legacies, but God's portion and legacy stands at a stay. Christ left two uses of his passion; application and imitation. He suffered for us, 1 Pet. 2.22. says the Apostle; for us, that is, that we might make his death ours, apply his death, and then (as it follows there) he left us an example. So Christ gives us two uses of the Reformation of Religion; first, the doctrine, how to do good works without relying upon them, as meritorious; and then example, many, very many men (and more by much, in some kinds of charity since the Reformation of Religion, than before) even in this City, whose light hath shined out before you, and you have seen their good works. That as this noble City hath justly acquired the reputation and the testimony of all who have had occasion to consider their deal in that kind, that they deal most faithfully, most justly, most providently, in all things which are committed to their trust for pious uses, from others, not only in a full employment of that which was given, but in an improvement thereof, and then an employment of that improvement to the same pious use, so every man in his particular may propose to himself, some of those blessed examples which have risen amongst yourselves, and follow that, and exceed that; That as your lights are Torches, and not petty Candles, and your Torches better than others Torches, so he also may be a larger example to others, than others have been to him, for, Herein is your Father glorified, if you bear much fruit, and that is the end of all, that we all do, That men seeing it, may glorify our Father which is in heaven. SERMON IX. Preached upon Candlemas day. ROM. 13.7. Render therefore to all men their deuce. The Text being part of the Epistle of that day, that year. THe largeness of this short Text consists in that word, Therefore; therefore because you have been so particularly taught your particular duties, therefore perform them, therefore practise them, Reddite omnibus debita, Render therefore to every man his due. The Philosopher might seem to have contracted as large a law, into a few words, in his suum cuique, as the Holy Ghost had done in his Reddite omnibus, if it were not for this, Therefore; for that carries our consideration over the whole Epistle. This Epistle particularising all duties, which appertain ad pietatem erga Deum, to our religious worship of God, ad charitatem erga proximum, to charitable offices towards one another, and ad sanctimoniam propriam, to a sanctification and holiness of life in ourselves. You have seen a list of your debts, says the Apostle, (and that men deeply indebted are loath to do) you have seen what you own God, what you own yourselves, and what you own the world, Reddite ergo omnibus debita, be therefore behind hand with none of these, but render unto all their deuce: For, our debts here are not restrained to those that are mentioned in the following part of this verse, Tribute, and Custom, and Fear, and Honour, but it is the knot that ties up all, and this Text in this verse, is the same that gins the next verse also; Reddite debita omnibus, Render to all men their deuce, and Nemini quicquam debeas, Own nothing to any man, is all one: It is farther than many use to come, to know what they own; since I have brought you so far, says our Apostle, Render to all men their deuce. It is one degree of thrift, Divisio. (but for the most part it comes late) to bring our debts into as few hands as we can. Our debt here we cannot bring into fewer than these three, to God, to our Neighbour, to ourselves. Consider our debts to God, to be our sins, and so we dare not come to a reckoning with him, but we discharge ourselves entirely upon our surety, our Saviour Christ Jesus: but yet of that debt we must pay an acknowledgement, an interest (as it were) of praise, for all that we have, and of prayer for all that we would have, and these are our debts to God. Consider our debts to man, and our creditors are persons above us, and persons below us, superiors, and inferiors; and to superiors (who are the persons of whom this Text, or this verse, is most literally intended) we are debtors first in matter of substance, expressed here, in those words Tribute, and Custom; and in matter of ceremony, expressed here, in those words, Fear, and Honour. And to our inferiors, we are debtors for counsel to direct them, and for relief in compassion of their sufferings. And then to come to our third sort of creditors, to ourselves, we own ourselves some debts which are to be tendered at noon, which are to be paid in our best strength and prosperity, in the course of our lives; and some which are to be tendered at night, at our Sunset, at our deaths: Reddite ergo omnibus, Render therefore to all their deuce. For your first debt, to God, we bring you to Church; this is no place to arrest in; but yet the Spirit of God calls upon you for those debts, praise him in his holy place, and pray to him in his house, which is the house of prayer. For your debts of the second kind, to other men, for those to superiors, we send you to Court; for those to inferiors, we send you to Hospitals, and prisons; and though Courts and prisons be ill paying places, yet pay you your debts of substance, and of ceremony, of tribute, and of honour, at Court; and your debt of counsel and relief to those that need them, in the darkest corners. And for you third kind of debts, debts to yourselves, make even with yourselves all the way in your lives, lest your payment prove too heavy, and you break, and your hearts break, when you come to see that you cannot do that upon your deathbed: Reddite omnibus, Render to all, to God, to man, to yourselves, their deuce. To begin then with our beginning, our debts to God; 1 Part. Deo. if we take that definition of of debts, which arises out of the sound of the word, Debere est de alio habere, a man owes all that which he hath received of another, we are debtors of all that we have, and all that we are, to God; our well being, and our very being is from him. If we take that definition of debt, Debere est jure aliquo teneri ad dandum aut faciendum aliquid, To owe, is to be bound by some Law, to give something, or to do something to some person; The Law of Nature in our hearts, the Law of the Creature in our eyes, the Law of the Word in our ears, provokes us to give and to do something to that God, who hath given and done all to us; and more than giving or doing, hath suffered so much for us. What then is the payment which we are to make? First, Glory, Praise: For, in all his works, Laus. God still proposed to himself, his Glory. Those men who will needs be of God's Cabinet Counsel, and pronounce what God did first, what was his first Decree, and the first clause in that Decree, those men who will needs know, and then publish God's secrets, (And, by the way, that, which sometimes it may concern us to know, yet it may be a Libel to publish it) Those mysteries, which, for the opposing and countermining stubborn, and perverse Heresies, it may concern us, in Counsels and Synods, and other fit places, to argue, and to clear, it may be an injury to God, and against his Crown, and Dignity, in breaking the peace of the Church, to publish and divulge to every popular auditory, and every itching ear, and thereby perplex the consciences of weak men, or offer contentious men, that which is their food, and delight, disputation; These men, I say, though they differ, in their order, whether God's Decree of Reprobation and Salvation, were before his Decree of Creation, (for some place it before, and some after) yet all, on all sides agree in this, That God's first purpose was his own glory; that was his first Decree, by what degrees soever he proceeded to the execution of that Decree. And so in the great and incomprehensible work of our Salvation, when that was uttered in the mouth of Angels to the Shepherds, that Ambassage began with a Gloria in excelsis, There was Peace upon earth, and there was good will towards men, but first there was Glory to God on high. And though to correct Heretical and Schismatical men, amongst whom, some would express themselves in God's service, in one manner, and some in another, to the endangering of Doctrine, and to the confusion of Order, and thereupon some would say, in the Church-Service, Gloria Patri, in Filio, per Spiritum Sanctum, Glory be to the Father, in the Son, by the Holy Ghost; And some Gloria Patri per Filium, Glory be to the Father by the Son; And some Gloria Patri, & Filio, per Spiritum Sanctum, Glory be to the Father, and the Son, by the Holy Ghost; Though to prevent the danger of these divers forms of service, the Church came to determine all, in that one, Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, yet we see out of the forms of the Heretics themselves, still so fare as they conceived the Godhead to extend, so fare they extended Glory, in that holy acclamation; those who believed not the Son to be God, or the Holy Ghost not to be God, left out Glory, when they came to their Persons; but to him that is God, in all confessions, Glory appertains. Now Glory is, Clara cum laude notitia, says S. Ambrose: It is an evident knowledge, and acknowledgement of God, by which, others come to know him too; which acknowledgement is well called a recognition, for it is a second, a ruminated, a reflected knowledge: Beasts do remember, but they do not remember that they remember; they do not reflect upon it, which is that that constitutes memory: Every carnal and natural man knows God, but the acknowledgement, the recognition, the manifestation of the greatness and goodness of God, accompanied with praise of him for that, this appertains to the godly man, and this constitutes glory. If God have delivered me from a sickness, and I do not glorify him for that, that is, make others know his goodness to me, my sickness is but changed to a spiritual apoplexy, to a lethargy, to a stupefaction. If God have delivered us from destruction in the bowels of the Sea, in an Invasion, and from destruction in the bowels of the earth, in the Powder-treason, and we grow faint in the publication of our thanks for this deliverance, our punishment is but aggravated, for we shall be destroyed both for those old sins which induced those attempts of those destructions, and for this later and greater sin, of forgetting those deliverances; God requires nothing else; but he requires that, Glory and Praise. And that book of the Scriptures, of which, S. Basil says, That if all the other parts of Scripture could perish, yet out of that book alone, we might have enough for all uses, for Catechising, for Preaching, for Disputing; That whole Book, which contains all subjects that appertain to Religion, is called altogether Sepher Tehillim, The Book of praises, for all our Religion is Praise. And of that Book every particular Psalm is appointed by the Church, and continued at least for a thousand and two hundred years, to be shut up with that humble and glorious acclamation. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; O that men would therefore praise the Lord, and declare the wonderful works that he doth for the sons of men! Nil quisquam debet nisi quod turpe est, non reddere, says the Law: It is Turpe, an infamous and ignominious thing, not to pay debt; And, infamous and ignominious, are heavy and reproachful words in the Law; and the Gospel would add to that Turpe, Impium: It is not only an infamous but an impious, an irreligious thing, not to pay debts. As in debts, the State, and the Judge is my security, they undertake I shall be paid, or they execute Judgement; so, consider ourselves as Christians, God is my security, and he will punish where I am defrauded. Either thou owest God nothing, (And then, if thou own him nothing, from whom, or from what hath shestollen that face, that is fair; or he that estate, that is rich; or that office, that commands others; or that learning, and those orders and commission, that preaches to others; or they their souls, that understand me now? If you own nothing, from whom had you all these, all this?) Or if thou dost owe, Turpe est, Impium est, It is an unworthy, it is an unhonest, it is an irreligious thing, not to pay him, in that money, which his own Spirit mints, and coins in thee, and of his own bullion too, praise and thanksgiving. Not to pay him then, when he himself gives thee the money that must pay him, the Spirit of Thankfulness, falls under all the reproaches, that Law or Gospel can inflict in any names. How many men have we seen molder and crumble away great estates, and yet pay no debts? It is all our cases: What Poems, and what Orations we make, how industrious, and witty we are, to over-praise men, and never give God his due praise? Nay how often is the Pulpit itself, made the shop, and the Theatre of praise upon present men, and God left out? How often is that called a Sermon, that speaks more of Great men, Psal. 148.2. then of our great God? Laudate eum omnes Augeli ejus, laudate eum omnes virtutes ejus; David calls upon the Angels, and all the Host of Heaven, to praise God, and in the Roman Church, they will employ willingly all their praise upon the Angels, and the Host of Heaven itself; and this is not reddere debitum; here is money enough spent, but no debt paid; praise enough given, but not to the true God. Ver. 10. Laudate eum ligna fructifera, & universa pecora, & volucres pennatae, says David there; David calls upon fruits, and fowl, and cattle to praise God, and we praise, and set forth our lands, and fruits, and fowl, and cattle, with all Hyperbolical praises; and this is not reddere debitum, no payment of a debt, where it is due. Laudate eum juvenes, & senes, & virgins, says David too; He calls upon old men, and young men, and virgins, to praise the Lord, and we spend all our praises, upon young men, which are growing up in favour, or upon old men, who have the government in their hands, or upon maidens, towards whom our affections have transported us, and all this is no payment of the debt of praise. Laudate eum Reges terrae, Principes & omnes judices; V 11. He calls upon Kings, and Judges, and Magistrates to praise God, and we employ all our praise upon the actions of those persons themselves. Beloved, God cannot be flattered, he cannot be over-praised, we can speak nothing Hyperbolically of God: But he cannot be mocked neither; He will not be told, I have praised thee, in praising thy creature, which is thine Image; would that discharge any of my debt to a Merchant, to tell him, that I had bestowed as much, or more money than my debt, upon his picture? Though Princes, and Judges, and Magistrates be pictures, and Images of God, though beauty, and riches, and honour, and power, and favour, be, in a proportion, so too, yet, as I bought not that Merchant's picture, because it was his, or for love of him, but because it was a good piece, and of a good Master's hand, and a good house-ornament; so though I spend my nights, and days, and thoughts, and spirits, and words, and preaching, and writing, upon Princes, and Judges, and Magistrates, and persons of estimation, and their praise, yet my intention determines in that use which I have of their favour, and respects not the glory of God in them; and when I have spent myself to the last farthing, my lungs to the last breath, my wit to the last Metaphor, my tongue to the last syllable, I have not paid a farthing of my debt to God; I have not praised him, but I have praised them, till not only myself, but even they, whom I have so mispraised, are the worse in the sight of God, for my over-praising; I have flattered them, and they have taken occasion by that, to think that their faults are not discerned, and so they have proceeded in them. This is then our first debt to God, glory and praise, which is, (as we said out of S. Ambrose) a manifestation of God's blessing to us: for it is not towards God as it is towards great persons, under whom we have risen, that we should be afraid to let the world know, how rich we are, lest they that raised us, should borrow of us, or draw us into bands for them: God requires nothing but the glory, the manifestation, that by knowing what he hath done for thee, others may know what to hope, and what to pray for, at his hands: In our debts to God, the noverint universi, is the quietus est, our publishing of them, to his praise and glory, is his acquittance and discharge for them. Our other debt to God is Prayer, for that also is due to him, and him only; For, Oratio. August. Si quod petendum est petis, sed non à quo petendum est, impius es: If we direct our prayers to any, even for temporal things, as to the Authors of those benefits, we may pour out as many prayers, as would have paid that debt, if they had been rightly placed, but yet by such a payment, our debt is grown a debt of a higher nature, a sin. This is a circumstance, nay, an essential difference peculiar to our debts to God, that we do not pay them, except we contract more; we grow best out of debt, by growing farther in debt; by praying for more, we pay our former debt. Domus med Domus Orationis, my house, says God, is a house of prayer; for this use, and purpose, he built himself a house upon earth; He had praise and glory in heaven before, but for Prayer he erected a house here, his Church. All the world is his Exchequer, he gives in all; from every creature, from Heaven, and Sea, and Land, and all the inhabitants of all them, wereceive benefits; But the Church is his Court of Requests, there he receives our petitions, there we receive his answers. It is true that neither is that house only for prayer, nor prayer only for that house: Christ, in his person, consecrated that place, the Temple, by Preaching too: And for prayer elsewhere, Christ did much accustom himself to private prayer: But in him, who was truly Head of the Church, the whole Church was; Christ alone, was a Congregation, he was the Catholic Church. But when we meet in God's house, though, by occasion, there be no Sermon, yet if we meet to pray, we pay our debt, we do our duty; so do we not, if we meet at a Sermon, without prayer. The Church is the house of prayer, so, as that upon occasion, preaching may be left out, but never a house of preaching, so, as that Prayer may be left out. And for the debt of prayer, God will not be paid, with money of our own coining, (with sudden, extemporal, inconsiderate prayer) but with currant money, that bears the King's Image, and inscription; The Church of God, by his Ordinance, hath fet his stamp, upon a Liturgy and Service, for his house. Audit Deus in cord cogitantis, quod nec ipse audit, qui cogitat, says S. Bernard: God hears the very first motions of a man's heart, which, that man, till he proceed to a farther consideration, doth not hear, not feel, not deprehend in himself. That soul, that is accustomed to direct herself to God, upon every occasion, that, as a flower at Sunrising, conceives a sense of God, in every beam of his, and spreads and dilates itself towards him, in a thankfulness, in every small blessing that he sheds upon her; that soul, that as a flower at the Suns declining, contracts and gathers in, and shuts up herself, as though she had received a blow, when soever she hears her Saviour wounded by a oath, or blasphemy, or execration; that soul, who, whatsoever string be strucken in her, base or triple, her high or her low estate, is ever tuned toward God, that soul prays sometimes when it does not know that it prays. I hear that man name God, and ask him what said you, and perchance he cannot tell; but I remember, that he casts forth some of those ejaculationes animae, (as S. August: calls them) some of those darts of a devout soul, which, though they have not particular deliberations, and be not formal prayers, yet they are the indicia, pregnant evidences and blessed fruits of a religious custom; much more is it true, which S. Bernard says there, of them, Deus audit, God hears that voice of the heart, which the heart itself hears not, that is, at first considers not. Those occasional and transitory prayers, and those fixed and stationary prayers, for which, many times, we bind ourselves to private prayer at such a time, are payments of this debt, in such pieces, and in such sums, as God, no doubt, accepts at our hands. But yet the solemn days of payment, are the Sabbaths of the Lord, and the place of this payment, is the house of the Lord, where, as Tertullian expresses it, Agmine facto, we muster our forces together, and besiege God; that is, not taking up every tattered fellow, every sudden rag or fragment of speech, that rises from our tongue, or our affections, but mustering up those words, which the Church hath levied for that service, in the Confessions, and Absolutions, and Collects, and Litanies of the Church, we pay this debt, and we receive our acquittance. First, we must be sure to pray, where we may be sure to speed, and only God can give. It is a strange thing, says justin Martyr, to pray to Esculapius or to Apollo for health, as Gods thereof, Qui apud Chironem medicinam didicerunt; when they who pray to them, may know, to whom those gods were beholden for all their medicines, and of whom they learned all their physic: why should they not rather pray to their Masters, then to them? why should Apollo, Chiroes' scholar, and not Chiro, Apollo's Master, be the god of physic? why should I pray to S. George for victory, when I may go to the Lord of Hosts, Almighty God himself; or consult with a Seargeant, or Corporall, when I may go to the General? Or to another Saint for peace, when I may go to the Prince of peace Christ Jesus? Why should I pray to Saint Nicolas for a fair passage at Sea, when he that rebuked the storm, is nearer me than S. Nicolas? why should I pray to S. Antony for my hogs, when he that gave the devil leave to drown the Gergesens whole heard of hogs, did not do that by S. Antony's leave, nor by putting a caveat or prae-non-obstante in his monopoly of preserving hogs? I know not where to find S. Petronilla when I have an ague, nor S. Apollonia, when I have the toothache, nor S. Liberius, when I have the stone: I know not whether they can hear me in Heaven, or no; Our Adversaries will not say, that all Saints in Heaven hear all that is said on earth: I know not whether they be in Heaven, or no: our Adversaries will not say, that the Pope may not err, in a matter of fact, and so may canonize a Traitor for a Saint: I know not whether those Saints were ever upon earth or no; our Adversaries will not say, that all their Legends were really, historically true, but that many of them, are holy, but yet symbolical inventions, to figure out not what was truly done before, but what we should endeavour to do now. I know my Redeemer liveth, and I know where he is; and no man knows, where he is not. He is our Creditor, to him we must pray. But for what? we may find in some respects a better model of prayer in heathen, and unchristian Rome, then in superstitious Rome. There we find their prayer to have been, Aut innocentiam des nobis, aut maturam poenitentiam; preserve us O Lord, in an innocence, or afford us a speedy repentance: And as we find that there was in that State a public Officer, Conditor precum, that made their Collects, and prayers for public use, so we find in their prayers, that which may make us ashamed; At first, for many years, their prayer was, res populi Romani ampliores facerent, that their Gods would enlarge their State; after that, it was, res perpetuò incolumes servarent, that their Gods would preserve, and establish them, in that State; And after, Vota nuncupata, si res eo stetissent statu; They vowed their service, and their sacrifice to God, upon condition that he should keep them always in that State, and not otherwise. So far therefore they may be our example, that they contented themselves with a competency, but not, that they made themselves Judges of that competency. We come to God's house to pay a debt, and our debt is, to confess that we can have from none but him, nor desire from him any more, than he is pleased to give. We come now to our second sort of Creditors, 2 Part. to whom we are commanded to render their deuce; to men: And of them, to our Superiors first, and then to our Inferiors. For, that with which, the Apostle enters into this Chapter, Omnis anima, Let every soul be subject to the higher powers, S. chrysostom applies Ad Prophetam, & Euangelistam, though he were a Prophet; or an Evangelist; S. Bernard, Ad Episcopum, & Archiepiscopum, though a Bishop, or Archbishop, (for, though they be as spiritual meteors between Heaven, and earth, and stand between God and us, yet they are subject to that jurisdiction, which God hath given man over man, though they were in an extraordinary calling, (the Prophets were so) yet they were subject to an ordinary jurisdiction;) And Theophylact, and Theodoret both, apply it ad Monachum & Fratrem, to Monks and Friars; though they seem to be gone out of the world, yet to this entendment, of being subject to higher powers, they are all within the world, no Cloister, no Cathedral Church, no profession, no dignity is a sanctuary, a privileged place from the payment of this debt. Here is a Quo warranto to be brought against all, and what exception can be pleaded to this Omnis anima, let every soul be subject? The Anabaptist would not pay this debt, he acknowledges no Magistrate, and yet john Baptist did, who submitted himself to Herod; The Jesuit will not pay this debt, he acknowledges no secular Magistrate, and yet Christ Jesus did, who submitted himself to Pilate; Nemo secularior Pilato, cui adstitit Dominus judicandus, says S. Bernard, there was never a more secular Judge than Pilate, and yet the Lord of life was judged to death by him. We cannot enlarge this consideration to all our Creditors, in these debts, Princeps. not to all Superiors, natural, as Parents, and civil, as Magistrates, and Ecclesiastical, as Prelates, and that which is mixed of all, matrimonial, from the wife to the husband, and therefore we contract it to the root of all, the Sovereign; And to him we consider first a Real, Realis. and substantial, and then a circumstantial and ceremonial debt. The substantial debt is paid in a faithful, in a ready and cheerful paying of those debts, those Tributes, and Customs, (as the Apostle calls them here) which belong to the King, and he that makes no conscience in defrauding the public, he that withholds part of this debt, whensoever he can, he would pay that which he pays, in counterfeit money, if he durst: he that deceives, because he sees he can scape with that deceit, he would coin too, if he saw too, that he could scape for that coining. A principal reason that makes coining and adulterating of money capital in all states, is not so much because he that coins usurps the Prince's authority, (for every coiner is not a pretender to the Crown) nor because he diminishes the Prince's majesty, (for what is the Prince the worse in that his face is stamped by another in base mettle, then when that is done by himself, or when his face is graved in any stone that is not precious?) as because he that coins, injuries the public: and no man injuries the public more, than he, who defrauds him, who is God's steward for the public, the King. In matter of and apparel, God wrought a miracle in private men's cases, in continuing and enlarging the children of Israel's in the wilderness: In matter of meat he wrought a miracle in private men's behalf too, in feeding so many, with so few loafes, and fishes; and so he did for drink too, in a miraculous providing of wine at the Marriage; for, meat, and drink, and are things necessary for every man: But because money is not so, if these other things may otherwise be had, (as some nations have lived, by permutation of commodities, without money) therefore God never wrought a miracle in matter of money, in any private man's case; But because money is the most necessary of all, to the public, to the Prince, therefore he wrought a miracle for that; and for that, only then, when that money was to be employed upon tribute to Caesar; Mat. 17.27. no miracle in matter of money but for tribute. As it is a sign of subjection to see a man stand bare headed, so it may be a declination towards a worse condition, to see a State bore headed, to see the Prince, the Head, kept bare, by being either defrauded of that which is ordinarily due to him, or denied that which becomes also due in the payment, though it were extraordinarily given in the grant. But I am not here, to deal upon affections, but consciences, and but so far upon them, in this point, as they find themselves in a rectified, and well examined conscience, to have been enemies to the public, by having defrauded that, by any means, of that which was truly due to it. And to bring that into consideration, which is little considered, that as it is a greater sin to defraud the public, then to defraud any private person, so doth the assisting of the public lay a greater obligation upon us, than the assisting of any other, by private alms. The other debt from us to men, Ceremonialis. and of them to Superiors, and of them principally to the Sovereign, we called ceremonial; And the Apostle, in that which follows in this verse, refers chiefly to that, in those words, Fear, and Honour, for it consists especially in those things, wherein, by outward reverence, we contribute to the maintenance, and upholding of the dignity of the Prince; and of these outward ceremonial things hath God always professed himself to be most jealous. And, (if I mistake not, as I may easily do, in things so far removed out of my way) when in your judicial proceed in criminal causes, you make the greatest offences to be against the Crown and Dignity, in the first, (the Crown) you intent the essential part, and in the other, (the Dignity) the ceremonial, the Honour, and Reverence, and Reputation of the Prince. God gave his very Essence to his Son, he was very God of very God; But when this Son of his became man, that which God says in general, my Honour will I give to no man, reaches so far to the Son of God himself, as that the honour due to God, is not to be given to the body, not to the manhood of Christ Jesus himself. How very great a part of the Law of God was ceremonial? and how very heavy punishments were ordained for the breakers even of those Ceremonies? Colos. 2.17. Melancton. The Sabbaths themselves, S. Paul puts amongst Ceremonies: And that man, who assisted the Reformation of Religion, with as much learning, and modesty, as any, defines the Commandment of the Sabbath well, to be Morale praeceptum, de Ceremoniali, That though the Commandment be moral, and bind all men for ever, yet that which is commanded in that moral Commandment, is in itself Ceremonial; for, indeed, all that which we call by the general name of Religion, as it is the outward worship of God, is Ceremonial, and there is nothing more moral, then that some ceremonial things there must be. Now, as these Ceremonial things are due to God himself, so are they to them, to whom God hath imparted his name, in saying they are Gods. We shall not read in any secular or profane story, of greater humility and reverence in subjects to their Princes, then in the book of God, to the Kings there. What phrases of abjecting themselves, in respect of the Prince, can exceed David's humble expressing of himself to Saul? Or daniel's magnifying the King, when he calls him King of Kings? And certainly some of the best, and most religious of Christian Emperors took to themselves so great Titles, in their stile, as can be excused no other way, but because their Predecessors had done so, there lay a necessity upon them, to keep this ceremonial respect and dignity, at the same height, because upon the Ceremonial, much of the Essential depends too. And therefore God pierces to the root, to the heart, when he forbids an irreverent, or unrespective thought of the Prince, Eccles. 10.20. for, says he, Those that have wings, shall declare the matter; God employs so many Informers, as Angels; It is not an office unworthy of the Angels of Heaven, much less of any other Angels of the Church, (no, not though it be delivered by way of confession) to discover any disloyal purposes; though in other cases, by our own Canons, that seal of Confession lay justly a strong obligation upon us, and God gives Angels an ability, a faculty, which in their nature they have not, that is, to know thoughts, for this purpose, for the discovery of such irreverent, and disloyal hearts. Angels do not know thoughts naturally, yet to this purpose they shall know thoughts, says God. Moral men should not discover the secrets of friends, we should not discover the things we receive in confession; but when it comes to matter of disloyalty, all moral seals, and all Ecclesiastical seals lose their obligation. The foot of this account, the total sum of this Ceremonial debt to Superiors, is, that due respect be given to every man, in his place; for when young men think it the only argument of a good spirit, to behave themselves fellowly, and frowardly to great persons, those greater persons in time, take away their respect from Princes, and at last, (for in the chain of order, every link depends upon one another) God loses the respect and honour due to him; private men lessen their respect of Magistrates, and Magistrates of Princes, and Princes and all, of God. And therefore, that which S. chrysostom says of the highest rank, Non putes Christian a philosophiae dignitatem laedi, reaches to all sorts, Let no man think that he departs from the dignity of a Christian, in attributing to every man that which appertains to the dignity of his place. I speak not all this, as though a man should lose the substance for the ceremony, that that man, whose place it is to advise and counsel, should be so ceremonious with his superior, as to concur with him in the allowance of all his errors. Caput meum conquassatum est (it is an expostulation of S. Bernard's) My head is bruised, corrupted, putrified, (he speaks it of his head, his superior, a Bishop) Et jam sanguine ebulliente, putaverim esse tegendum, now my head runs down with blood, can I think to cover it? Quicquid apposuero, cruentabitur, whatsoever I lay to it will be bloody too; if I dissemble, or cover his faults, his blood will fall upon me, and I shall have part of his sins. Every wife hath a superior at home, so hath every child, and every servant, and every man a superjour some where, in some respect, that is, in a spiritual respect: for so, not only the King, but the highest spiritual person hath a superior for absolution. And to this superior respectively, every man owes a ceremonial respect, as a debt, though this debt be not so far, as to accompany him, or to encourage him in his ill purposes, for that is too high a ceremony, and too transcendent a compliment, to be damned for his sake, by concurring with my superior in his sins. And then, they whose office it is to direct, even their superiors, by their counsel, (as that office may in cases belong to a wife, to a child, to a servant, as job professes it was in his family) have also a ceremonial duty in that duty, which is, to do even that, with sweetness, with respect, with reverence. It was a better rule in so high a business, than a man would look for at a Friars hands, which S. Bernard hath, Absque prudentia & benevolentia, non sunt perfecta consilia: No man is a good Counsellor, for all his wisdom, and for all his liberty of speech, except he love the person whom he counsels: If he do not wish him well, as well as tell him his faults, he is rather a Satirist, and a Calumniator, and seeks to vent his own wisdom, and to exercise his authority, than a good Counsellor. And therefore, says that Father, before Christ took Peter into that high place, he asked him, and asked him thrice, Amas me? Lovest thou me? He would be sure of his love to him first, before he preferred him; Vix in multitudine hominum, unum reperio, in utraque gratia consummatum, says he still: Not one man amongst a thousand, that is both able to give counsel to great persons, and then doth that office out of love to that person, but rather to let others see his ability in himself, or his authority and power over that person, and so upon pretence of counselling, opens his weaknesses to the knowledge, and to the contempt of other men; as David's wife, when he had danced (as she thought) undecently before the Ark, spoke freely enough, with liberty enough, but it was with scorn, and contempt: And this is in no sort any payment of this ceremonial debt, which is, (that the foundations, and the substance being preserved, that is, the glory of God, and moral, and religious truths being kept inviolate) to think, and say, and do, those things which may conduce to the estimation, and dignity of his superior. Now this hath led us to our other list of humane creditors, that is, our inferiors, Inferiores. and to render to them also their deuce; for, to them we said at beginning, there was due, counsel, if they were weak in understanding; and there was due, relief, if they were weak in their fortunes. For the first, there are some persons in so high place in this world, as that they can owe nothing to any temporal superior, for they have none: But there is none so low in this world, but he hath some lower than he is, to pay this debt of counsel and advise to: at least the debt of prayer for him, if he will not receive the debt of counsel to him. But in this place (for haste) we contract ourselves to the debt of relief to the poor: Amongst whom, we may consider one sort of poor whom we ourselves have made poor, and damnified, and then our debt is Restitution, and another sort, whom God, for reasons unknown to us hath made poor, and there our debt is Alms. For the first of these (those whom thou hast damnified and made poor) thou needst not come to the Apostles question of the blind man, Did this man sin or his parents, that he is born blind? Did this man waste himself in house-keeping, or in play, or in wantonness, that he is become poor? Neither he sinned, nor his parents, says Christ; neither excess, nor play, nor wantonness hath undone this man, but thy prevarication in his cause, thy extortion, thy oppression: And now he starves, and thou huntest after a popular reputation of a good housekeeper with his meat; now he freezes in nakedness, and thy train shines in liveries out of his Wardrobe; every Constable is ready to lay hold upon him for a rogue, and thy son is Knighted with his money. Sileat licèt fama, non silet fames, says good and holy Bernard, fame may be silent, but famine will not: perchance the world knows not this, or is weary of speaking of it, but those poor wretches that starve by thy oppression, know it, and cry out in his hearing, where thine own conscience accompanies them, and cries out with them against thee. Pay this debt, this debt of restitution, and pay it quickly; for nothing perishes, nothing decays an estate more, nothing consumes, nothing enfeebles a soul more, then to let a great debt run on long. But if they be poor of Gods making, Eleemosyna. and not of thine (as they are to thee, if thou know not why, or how they are become poor) (for though God have inflicted poverty upon them for their sins, that is a secret between God and them, that which God hath revealed to thee, is their poverty, and not their sins) than thou owest them a debt of alms, though not restitution: though thou have nothing in thy hands which was theirs, yet thou hast something which should be theirs; nothing perchance which thou hast taken from them, but something certainly which thou hast received from God for them; and in that sense S. Bernard says truly, in the behalf, and in the person of the poor, to wasteful men, Nostrum est quod effunditis, you are prodigal, there is one fault; but than you are prodigal of that which is not your own, but ours, and that is a greater; and then we whose goods you wast, are poor and miserable, and that is the greatest fault of all. Nobis crudeliter subtrahitur, quod inaniter expenditis, whatsoever you spend wantonly and vainly upon yourselves, or sinfully upon others, is cruelly and bloodily drawn out of our bowels, and worse than so, sacrilegiously too, because we are the Temples of the Holy Ghost: If not properly taken away because we had it not, yet unjustly and cruelly withheld and kept away, because we should have it, say those poor souls to these wasteful prodigals in that devout and persuasive mouth of S. Bernard. Here is a double misery, of which you, you that are prodigals are authors, Vos vanitando peritis, nos spoliando perimitis, In this prodigality you waste yourselves, even your souls, and you rob us; you leave us naked in the cold, and you cast yourselves into dark and tormenting fire. So that whether they be poor of Gods making, or poor of your making, Reddite debitum, pay the debt you own, to the one by alms, to the other by restitution. We descend now to our last creditors, 3. Part. Nos. ourselves. It is a good rule of S. Bernard, Qui ad sui mensuram proximum diligit, seipsum diligere norit, since we are commanded to love our neighbour, as ourselves, we must be sure to love ourselves so as we should do, or else we proceed by a wrong, and a crooked rule. So to give some guess of our ability, and of our willingness, to pay our debts to God, and our debts to man, we must consider what we own, Rom. 1.14. and how we pay ourselves. Thou art a debtor (as S. Paul says of himself) to the Greek, and to the Barbarian, to the wise, and to the unwise; And thou thyself art amongst some of these; wise and learned in the best art, though thou know not a letter, rich and mighty in the best treasure, though thou possess not a penny, if thou pay these debts duly, (for as God tells us we may buy without money, so we may pay debts without money) and then ignorant and unlettered, in the midst of thy library and languages, and poor and beggarly in the midst of thy coffers and rentals, if thou call not thyself to this account, for his debt to himself alone, is debt enough to oppress any man. Solus mihi servandus, says S. Bernard, I am Bishop over no man but myself, I have no larger Diocese than mine own person, no man's debts to pay but mine own, nor any man to pay them to, but to myself, Solus tamen mihi sum scandalo, yet I am scandalised in myself, I have brought an ill name upon myself, to be an ill pay master to mine own soul; Solus taedio, though I have no creditor to disappoint but myself, yet I am grown a gedious, and dilatory man to myself, I have taken longer and longer days with myself, and still put off my repentances, from sickness to sickness, Solus taedio; solus oneri, I am a burden to myself, I have over-burdened myself even with collateral security, with entering into new bands, with new vows upon my repentances, new contracts, new stipulations, new protestations to my God, which I have forfeited also, solus oneri; and solus periculo, I am become a dangerous man to myself, I dare not trust myself alone, though I abstain from my former sinful company, yet custom of sin hath made me a tentation to myself, and I sin where no tentation offers itself: Solus mihi servandus, I have no body to save, says S. Bernard in his Cloister, but myself, and I cannot do that, but I damn myself alone. Begin therefore to pay these debts to thyself betimes; for, as we told you at beginning, some you are to tender at noon, some at evening. Even at your noon and warmest Sunshine of prosperity, you own yourselves a true information, how you came by that prosperity, who gave it you, and why he gave it. Judg. 9.7. Let not the Olive boast of her own fatness, nor the Figtree of her own sweetness, nor the Vine of her own fruitfulness, for we were all but Brambles. Let no man say, I could not miss a fortune, for I have studied all my youth; How many men have studied more nights, than he hath done hours, and studied themselves blind, and mad in the Mathematics, & yet withers in beggary in a corner? Let him never add, But I studied in a useful and gainful profession; How many have done so too, and yet never compassed the favour of a Judge? And how many that have had all that, have struck upon a Rock, even at full Sea, and perished there? In their Grandfathers & great Grandfathers, in a few generations, whosoever is greatest now, must say, With this staff came I over Jordan; nay, without any staff came I over Jordan, for he had in them at first, a beginning of nothing. As for spiritual happiness, Non volentis, nec currentis, sed miserentis Dei, It is not in him that would run, nor in him that doth, but only in God that prospers his course; so for the things of this world, it is in vain to rise early, and to lie down late, and to eat the bread of sorrow, for, nisi Dominus aedificaverit, nisi Dominus custodierit, except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain; except the Lord keep the City, the watchman waketh but in vain. Come not therefore to say, I studied more than my fellows, and therefore am richer than my fellows, but say, God that gave me my contemplations at first, gave me my practice after, and hath given me his blessing now. How many men have worn their brains upon other studies, and spent their time and themselves therein? how many men have studied more in thine own profession, and yet, for diffidence in themselves, or some disfavour from others, have not had thy practice? How many men have been equal to thee, in study, in practice, and in getting too, and yet upon a wanton confidence, that that world would always last, or upon the burden of many children, and an expensive breeding of them, or for other reasons, which God hath found in his ways, are left upon the sand at last, in a low fortune? whilst the Sun shines upon thee in all these, pay thyself the debt, of knowing whence, and why all this came, for else thou canst not know how much, or how little is thine, nor thou canst not come to restore that which is none of thine, but unjustly wrung from others. Pay therefore this debt of surveying thine estate, and then pay thyself thine own too, by a cheerful enjoying and using that which is truly thine, and do not deny nor defraud thyself of those things which are thine, and so become a wretched debtor, to thy back, or to thy belly, as though the world had not enough, or God knew not what were enough for thee. Pay this debt to thyself of looking into thy debts, of surveying, of severing, of serving thyself with that which is truly thine, at thy noon, in the best of thy fortune, and in the strength of thine understanding; that when thou comest to pay thy other, thy last debt to thyself, which is, to open a door out of this world, by the dissolution of body and soul, thou have not all thy money to tell over when the Sun is ready to set, all the account to make of every bag of money, and of every quillet of land, whose it is, and whether it be his that looks for it from thee, or his from whom it was taken by thee; whether it belong to thine heir, that weeps joyful tears behind the curtain, or belong to him that weeps true, and bloody tears, in the hole in a prison. There will come a time, when that land that thou leavest shall not be his land, when it shall be no bodies land, when it shall be no land, for the earth must perish; there will be a time when there shall be no Manors; no Acres in the world, and yet there shall lie Manors and Acres upon thy soul, when land shall be no more, when time shall be no more, and thou pass away, not into the land of the living, but of eternal death. Then the Accuser will be ready to interline the schedules of thy debts, thy sins, and infert false debts, by abusing an over-tendernesse, which may be in thy conscience then, in thy last sickness, in thy deathbed: Then he will be ready to add a cipher more to thy debts, and make hundreds thousands, and abuse the faintness which may be in thy conscience then, in thy last sickness, in thy deathbed. Then he will be ready to abuse even thy confidence in God, and bring thee to think, that as a Pirate ventures boldly home, though all that he hath be stolen, if he be rich enough to bribe for a pardon; so, howsoever those families perish whom thou hast ruined, and those whole parishes whom thou hast depopulated, thy soul may go confidently home too, if thou bribe God then, with an Hospital or a Fellowship in a College, or a Legacy to any pious use in appearance, and in the eye of the world. Pay thyself therefore this debt, that is, make up thine account all the way, for when that voice comes, Luk. 16.2. Red rationem, Give up an account of thy Stewardship, it is not, go home now, and make up thy account perfect; but now, now deliver up thine account; if it be perfect, it is well, if it be not, here is no longer day, for jam non poteris villicare, now thou canst be no longer Steward, Esay 38.1. now thou hast no more to do with thyself. Here the voice is not in the word to Ezekiah, Dispone domui, put thy house in order, for, morieris, thou shalt die; For, there God had a gracious purpose, to give him a longer term, but here it is, fool, this night, repetunt, not they shall, but they do fetch away thy soul, and then what is become of that To morrow, which thou hadst imagined and promised to thyself, for the payment of this debt, of this repentance? Be just therefore to thyself all the way, pay thyself, and take acquittances of thyself, all the way, which is only done under the seal, and in the testimony of a rectified conscience. Let thine own conscience be thine evidence, and thy Rolls, and not the opinion of others: Non tutum planè, sed stultum, ibi thesaurum tuum recondere, ubi non vales resumere, cum volueris, says Saint Bernard. It is not providently done, to lock thy treasure in a chest, of which thou hast no key, and to which thou hast no access: Si ponis in os meum jam non in tua, sed mea potestate est, ut te laudare, vel tibi derogare possim: If thou build thy reputation upon my report, it is now in my power, not in thine, whether thou shalt be good or bad, honourable or infamous: Sanum vas, & inconcussum, conscientia, a good conscience is a sweet vessel, and a strong; Quicquid in ea reposueris, servabit vivo, & defuncto restituet: Whatsoever thou layest up in that, shall serve thee all thy life, and after; and that shall be thine acquittance, and discharge, atthy last payment, in manustuas, when thou returnest thy spirit, into his hands that gave it: And then reddidisti debita omnibus, thou shalt have rendered to all their deuce, when thou hast given the King, Honour; the poor, alms; thyself, peace; and God thy soul. SERMON X. Preached upon Candlemas Day. ROM. 12.20. Therefore if thine enemy hunger feed him, if he thirst give him drink; for, in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head. IT falls out, I know not how, but, I take it from the instinct of the Holy Ghost, and from the Prophetical spirit residing in the Church of God, that those Scriptures which are appointed to be read in the Church, all these days, (for I take no other this Term) do evermore afford, and offer us Texts, that direct us to patience, as though these times had especial need of those instructions. And truly so they have; for though God have so fare spared us as yet, as to give us no exercise of patience in any afflictions, inflicted upon ourselves, yet, as the heart aches if the head do, nay, if the foot ache, the heart aches too; so all that profess the name of Christ Jesus aright, making up but one body, we are but dead members of that body, if we be not affected with the distempers of the most remote parts thereof. That man says but faintly, that he is heart-whole, that is macerated with the Gout, or lacerated with the Stone; It is not a heart, but a stone grown into that form, that feels no pain, till the pain seize the very substance thereof. How much and how often S. Paul delights himself with that sociable syllable, Sin, Con, Conregnare, and Convificare, and Consedere, of Reigning together, 2 Tim. 2.12. Eph. 2.1, 6. and living, and quickening together: As much also doth God delight in it, from us, when we express it in a Conformity, and Compunction, and Compassion, and Condolency, and (as it is but a little before the Text) in weeping with them that weep. Our patience therefore being actually exercised in the miseries of our brethren round about us, and probably threatened in the aims and plots of our adversaries upon us, though I hunt not after them, yet I decline not such Texts, as may direct our thoughts upon duties of that kind. This Text does so; for the circle of this Epistle of S. Paul, this precious ring, being made of that golden Doctrine, That Justification is by faith, and being enamelled with that beautiful Doctrine of good works too, in which enamelled Ring, as a precious stone in the midst thereof, there is set, the glorious Doctrine of our Election, by God's eternal Predestination, our Text falls in that part, which concerns obedience, holy life, good works; which, when both the Doctrines, that of Justification by faith, and that of Predestination have suffered controversy, hath been by all sides embraced, and accepted; that there is no faith, which the Angels in heaven, or the Church upon earth, or our own consciences can take knowledge of, without good works. Of which good works, and the degrees of obedience, of patience, it is a great one; and a hard one that is enjoined in this Text; for whereas S. Augustine observes six degrees, six steps in our behaviour towards our enemies, whereof the first is nolle laedere, to be loath to hurt any man by way of provocation, not to begin; And a second, nolle amplius quam laesus laedere, That if another provoke him, yet what power soever he have, he would return no more upon his enemy, than his enemy had cast upon him, he would not exceed in his revenge; And a third, velle minus, not to do so much as he suffered, but in a less proportion, only to show some sense of the injury; And then another is, nolle laedere licet laesus, to return no revenge at all, though he have been provoked by an injury; And a higher than that, par atum se exhibere ut amplius laedatur, to turn the other cheek, when he is smitten, and open himself to farther injuries; That which is in this Text, is the sixth step, and the highest of all, laedenti benefacere, to do good to him, of whom we have received evil, If thine enemy hunger, to feed him, if he thirst, to give him drink; for in so, etc. The Text is a building of stone, and that bound in with bars of Iron: Divisio. fundamental Doctrine, in point of manners, in itself, and yet buttressed, and established with reasons too, therefore, and for; Therefore feed thine enemy; For, in so doing, thou shalt heap coals. This therefore, confirms the precedent Doctrine, and this For, confirms that confirmation. But all the words of God are Yea, and Amen, and therefore we need not insist upon reasons, to ratify or establish them. Our parts shall be but two; Mandatum, and Emolumentum; first the Commandment, (for we dare not call it by so indifferent a name, as an Evangelicall Counsel that we may choose whether we will do or no; It is a Commandment, do good to thine enemy) And secondly, the benefit that we receive by that benefit, we heap coals upon his head. Each part will have divers branches: for, in the Commandment, we shall first look upon the person, to which God directs us, inimicus, though he be an enemy, and inimicus tuus, though he be thine enemy; but yet it is but tuus, thine enemy; It is not simply inimicus homo, the Devil, nor inimicus vester, a spreading enemy, an enemy to the State, nor inimicus Dei, an enemy to Religion; And from the person, we shall pass to the duty, Ciba, and Da aquam, feed, and give drink, in which, all kinds of reliefs are employed: But that is, si esurierit, if he be hungry; There is no wanton nor superfluous pampering of our enemy required, but so much as may preserve the man, and not nourish the enmity. In these considerations we shall determine our first part; and our second in these; First, that God takes nothing from us, without recompense; nothing for nothing; he seals his Commandment with a powerful reason, promise of reward: And then, the reward specified here, arises from the enemy himself; And that reward is, That thou shalt cast coals of fire upon his head; and congeres, accumulabis, Thou shalt heap coals of fire upon him. It is not ill said by a Jesuit, of these words, Sententia magis Euangelica, quàm Mosaica; 1. Part. Mandatum. Peltanus. This Text, that enjoins benefits upon our enemies, is fit for the Gospel, then for the Law, fit for the new, then for the old Testament; and yet it is tam Mosaica, quam Euangelica, to show that it is Universal, Catholic, Moral Doctrine, appertaining to Jew, Prov. 25.21. and Christian, and all, this Text is in the old Testament, as well as in the new. In the mouth of two witnesses is this truth established, in the mouth of a Prophet, and in the mouth of an Apostle, Solomon had said it before, and S. Paul says it here, If thine enemy hunger, feed him, if he thirst, etc. Your Senecaes' and your Plutarch's have taught you an art, how to make profit of enemies, because as flatterers dilate a man, and make him live the more negligently, because he is sure of good interpretations of his worst actions; So a man's enemies contract him, and shut him up, and make him live the more watchfully, because he is sure to be calumniated even in his best actions: But this is a lesson above Seneca, and Plutarch, reserved for Solomon, and Saint Paul, to make profit by conferring and placing benefits upon enemies: And that is our first branch, Though he be an enemy. S. Augustine citys, Et si inimieus. and approves that saying of the moral Philosopher, Omnes odit, qui malos odit, he that hates ill men, hates all men, for if a man will love none but honest men, where shall he find any exercise, any object of his love? So if a man will hold friendship with none, nor do offices of society to none, but to good natured, and gentle, and supple, and sociable men, he shall leave very necessary businesses undone. The frowardest and perversest man may be good ad hoc, for such or such a particular use. By good company and good usage, that is, by being mingled with other simples, and ingredients, the very flesh of a Viper, is made an Antidote: A Viper loses not his place in Physic, because he is poison; a Magistrate ceases not to be a Magistrate, because he is an ill man; much less does a man cease to be a man, and so to have a title to those duties, which are rooted in nature, because he is of an ill disposition. God makes his Sun to shine upon the good, Mat. 5.45. and upon the bad, and sendeth rain upon the just, and upon the unjust. God hath made of one blood all mankind: how unkindly then, how unmanly is it to draw blood? We come too soon to the name of enemy, and we carry it too fare: Plaintiff and Defendant in a matter of Trespass, must be enemies: Disputers in a problematical matter of Controversy, that concerns not foundations, must be enemies; And then all enmity must imply an irreconcileablenesse, once enemies may never be friends again: we come too soon to the name, and we stand too long upon the thing; for there are offices and duties even to an enemy; and that, though an enemy in as high a Degree, as the word imports here, osor, a hater, and osor tuus, such an enemy as hates thee, which is our next Branch. We use to say, Tuus. that those benefits are longest remembered, which are public, and common; and those injuries, which are private, and personal: But truly in both, the private, and personal makes the greatest impression. For, if a man have benefitted the public, with a College, with an Hospital, with any perpetual endowment, yet he that comes after to receive the benefit of any such place, for the most part determines his thankfulness upon that person, who brought him thither, and reflects little upon the founder, or those that are descended from him. And so it is in injuries, and violences too, we hate men more for personal, then for national injuries; more, if he have taken my Ship, then if he have attempted my Country. We should be more sensible of the public, but because private and personal things do affect us most, the Commandment here goes to the particular.; Though he be thine enemy, and hate thee. If you love them that love you, Luk. 6.34. and lend to them that pay you, what thanks have you? Truly not much: Publicans do the same, says S. Matthew; Sinners do the same, says S. Luke: But love you your enemies; Mat. 5.22. For, in the same place, where Christ puts all those cases, If a man have been angry with his Brother, If a man have said Racha to his Brother, if he have called his Brother Fool, he ends all with that, Agree with thine adversary; Though he be thine adversary, yet he is thy Brother. If he have damnified thee, calumniated thee, pardon him. If he have done that to another, thou hast no power to pardon him; Herein only thou hast exercise of greatness and goodness too, If he be thine enemy, thou and thou only canst pardon him; and herein only thou hast a Supremacy, and a Prerogative to show. So far then, Non vester. the text goes literally, do good to an enemy; to thine enemy; and literally, no farther: It does not say to a State, Si Inimicus vester, It does not bind us to favour, or further a public enemy; It does not bind the Magistrate to favour Thiefs and Murderers at land, nor Pirates at Sea, who are truly Inimici nostri, our enemies even as we are men, enemies to mankind. It does not bind Societies and Corporations Ecclesiastical or Civil, to sink under such enemies, as would dissolve them or impair them in their privileges; for such are not only Inimici vestri, but Vestrorum, enemies of you, and yours, of those that succeed you: And all men are bound to transfer their jurisdictions and privileges, in the same integrity, in which they received them, without any prevarication. In such cases it is true, that Corporations have no souls, that is, they are not bound to such a tenderness of conscience; for there are divers laws in this doctrine of patience, that bind particular men, that do not bind States and Societies, under those penalties. Much less does the Commandment bind us to the Inimicus homo, which is the devil, Inimicus homo. to farther him, by fuelling and advancing his tentations, by high diet, wanton company, or licentious discourse; and so, upon pretence of maintaining our health, Luk. 10.19. or our cheerfulness, invite occasions of sin. S. Hierome tells us of one sense, in which we should favour that enemy, the devil, and that in this text, we are commanded to do so: Benevolus est erga Diabolum, says he, he is the devils best friend, that resists him; for by our yielding to the devils tentations, wesubmit him to greater torments, then, if he missed of his purpose upon us, he should suffer. But between this enemy and us, God himself hath set such an enmity, that, as no man may separate those whom God hath joined, Gen. 3.15. so no man may join those whom God hath separated; God created not this enmity in the devil; he began it in himself; but God created an enmity in us, against him; and, upon no collateral conditions, may we be reconciled to him, in admitting any of his superstitions. It is not then Inimicus vester, the common enemy, the enemy of the State; less, Inimicus homo, the spiritual enemy of Mankind, the devil; lest of all, Inimicus Dei, they who oppose God, (so, as God can be opposed) in his servants who profess his truth. David durst not have put himself upon that issue with God, (Do not I hate them, Psal. 139.21. that hate thee) if he had been subject to that increpation, which the Prophet jehu laid upon jehoshaphat, Shouldst thou help the ungodly, and love them, that hate the Lord? 2 Chron. 19.2. But David had the testimony of his conscience, that he hated them, with a perfect hatred: which, though it may admit that interpretation, that it is De perfectione virtutis, that his perfect hatred, was a hatred becoming a perfect man, a charitable hatred; yet it is De perfectione intentionis, a perfect hatred is a vehement hatred, and so the Chalde paraphrase expresses it, Odio consummato, a hatred to which nothing can be added; Hilar. Odio religioso, with a religious hatred; not only that religion may consist with it, but that Religion cannot subsist without it; a hatred that gives the tincture, and the stamp to Religion itself. The imputation that lies upon them, who do not hate those that hate God, is sufficiently expressed in S. Gregory; He saw how little temporisers and worldly men, were moved with the word Impiety, and ungodliness, and therefore he waves that; He saw they preferred the estimation of wisdom before and above piety, and therefore he says not Impium est, but stultum est, si illis placere quaerimus, quos non placere domino scimus: It is a foolish thing, to endeavour to be acceptable to them, who, in our own knowledge, do not endeavour to be acceptable to God. But yet, Beloved, even in those enemies, that thus hate God, Solomon's rule hath place, There is a time to hate, and a time to love. Though the person be the same, Eccles. 3.8. De singularit. Cleric. the affection may vary. As S. Cyprian says, (if that book be not rather origen's, than Cyprians, for it is attributed to both) Ama foeminas inter Sacra solennia, Love a woman at Church, (that is, love her coming to Church,) (though, as S. Augustine in his time did, we, in our times may complain of wanton meetings there) But Odio habe in communione privata, Hate, that is, forbear women in private conversation; so, for those that hate God in the truth of his Gospel, and content themselves with an Idolatrous Religion, we love them at Church, we would be glad to see them here, and though they come not hither, we love them so far, as that we pray for them; and we love them in our studies so far, as we may rectify them by our labours; But we hate them in our Convocations, where we oppose Canons against their Doctrines, and we hate them in our Consultations, where we make laws to defend us from their malice, and we hate them in our bedchambers, where they make children Idolaters, and perchance make the children themselves. We acknowledge with S. Augustine, Perfectio odii est in charitate, the perfect hatred consists with charity, Cum nec propter vitia homines oderimus, nec vitia propter homines amemut; when the greatness of the men brings us not to love their religion, nor the illness of their Religion, to hate the men. Moses, in that place, is S. Augustine's example, whom he proposes, Orabat & occidebat, he prayed for the Idolaters, and he slew them; he hated, says he, Iniquitatem, quam puniebat, that sin which he punished, and he loved Humanitatem, pro qua or abat, that nature, as they were men, for whom he prayed: for, that, says he, is perfectum odium, quod facti sunt diligere, quod fecerunt, odiisse, to love them as they are creatures, to hate them as they are Traitors. Thus much love is due to any enemy, that if God be pleased to advance him, De ejus profectu non dejiciamur, says S. Gregory, His advancement do not deject us, to a murmuring against God, or to a diffidence in God; And that when God, in his time, shall cast him down again, Congaudeamus justitiae judicis, condoleamus miseriae pereuntis, We may both congratulate the justice of God, and yet condole the misery of that person, upon whom that judgement is justly fallen: for, though Inimicus vester, the enemy that maligns the State, and Inimicus Dei, the enemy that opposes our religion, be not so far within this text, as that we are bound to feed them, or to do them good; yet there are scarce any enemies, with whom we may not live peaceably, and to whom we may not wish charitably. We have done with all, Ciba. which was intended and proposed of the person; we come to the duty expressed in this text, Ciba, feed him, and give him drink. Here, there might be use in noting the largeness, the fullness, the abundance of the Gospel, above the law: Not only in that the blessings of God are presented in the Old Testament, in the name of Milk and Honey, and Oil, and Wine, (all temporal things) and in the New Testament, in the name of Joy, and Glory, (things, in a manner spiritual,) But that also, in the Old Testament, the best things are limited, and measured unto them; a Gomer of Manna, and no more, Mat. 25.21. Heb. 12.2. john 15.11. john 16.21. for the best man, whereas for the joy of the Gospel, we shall enter In Gandium Domini, Into our Master's joy, and be made partakers with Christ Jesus, of that joy, for which he endured the Cross; And here, in this world, Gaudium meum erit, says Christ, My joy shall be in you; in what measure? Implebitar, says he, Your joy shall be full; How long? for ever; Nemo tollet, your joy shall no man take from you. And such as the Joy is, such is the glory too: Eph. 1.18. 2 Cor. 4.17. 1 Pet. 5.4. How precious? Divitiae Gloria, The Riches of the Glory of his Inheritance; How much? Pondus gloriae, A weight of glory; How long? Immarcescibilis Corona, A crown of Glory, that never fadeth: We might, I say, take occasion of making this comparison, between the Old, and the New Testament, out of this Text, because this charity, enjoined here, in this text, to our enemy, in that place, from whence this text is taken, in the Proverbs, is but Lachem, and Maiim, Bread, and Water; But here, in S. Paul, it is in words of better signification, feed him, give him drink. But indeed, the words, at the narrowest, (as it is but bread and water) signify whatsoever is necessary for the relief of him, that stands in need. And if we be enjoined so much to our enemy, how inexcusable are those Datores cyminibiles (as the Canonists call them) that give Mint, and Cummin for alms, a root that their Hogs will not, a broth that their Dogs will not eat. Remember in thy charity, the times, and the proportions of thy Saviour; After his Death, in the wound in his side, he poured out water, and blood, which represented both Sacraments, and so was a bountiful Dole: provide in thy life, to do good after thy death, and it shall be welcome, even in the eyes of God, then: But remember too, that this dole at his death, was not the first alms that he gave; his water was his white money, and his blood was his gold, and he poured out both together in his agony, and severally in his weeping, and being scourged for thee. What proportion of relief is due to him, that is thy brother in Nature, thy brother in Nation, thy brother in Religion, if meat and drink, and in that, whatsoever is necessary to his sustentation, be due to thine enemy? But all this bountiful charity, Si esurierit. is Si esurierit, si sitit, If he be hungry, if he be thirsty. To the King, who bears the care and the charge of the public, we are bound to give, Antequam esuriat, Antequam sitias, before he be overtaken with dangerous, and dishonourable, and less remediable necessities: not only substantial wants, upon which our safety depends, but circumstantial and ceremonial wants, upon which his Dignity, and Majesty depends, are always to be, not only supplied, but prevented. But our enemy must be in hunger, and thirst, that is, reduced to the state, as he may not become our enemy again, by that which we give, before we are bound, by this text, to give any thing. No doubt but the Church of Rome hungers still for the money of this land, upon which they fed so luxuriantly heretofore: and no doubt but those men, whom they shall at any time animate, will thirst for the blood of this land, which they have sought before; but this is not the hunger, and the thirst of the enemy, which we must feed: The Commandment goes not so far, as to feed that enemy, that may thereby be a more powerful enemy; But yet, thus far, truly, it does go, deny no office of civility, of peace, of commerce, of charity to any, only therefore, because he hath been heretofore an enemy. There remains nothing of those two branches, which constitute our first part, 2. Part. the person, that is, an en●●● reduced to a better disposition; and the duty, that is, to relieve him, with things necessary for that state: And for the second part, we must stop upon those steps laid down at first, of which the first was, That God takes nothing for nothing, he gives a Reward. When God took that great proportion of Sheep and Oxen out of his subjects goods in the State of Israel, for Sacrifice, that proportion, which would have kept divers King's houses, and would have victualled divers navies, perchance no man could say, I have this, or this benefit, for this, or this Sacrifice; but yet could any man say, God hath taken a Sacrifice for nothing? Where we have Peace, and Justice, and Protection, can any man say, he gives any thing for nothing? When God says, If I were hungry, I would not tell thee, that's not intended, which Tertullian says, Psal. 50.12. Scriptum est, Deus non esuriet nec sitiet, It is written, God shall neither hunger nor thirst, (for, first, Tertullias memory failed him, there is no such sentence in all the Scripture, as he citys there; And then God does hunger and thirst, in this sense, in the members of his mystical body,) neither is that only intended in that place of the Psalm (though Cassiodore take it so) That if God in his poor Saints, were hungry, he could provide them, without telling thee; but it is, If I were hungry, I need not tell thee; for, Psal. 24.1. The earth is the Lords, and the fullness thereof, and they that dwell therein. God does not always bind himself to declare his hunger, his thirst, his pressing occasions, to use the goods of his subjects, but as the Lord gives, so the Lord takes, where and when he will: But yet, as God transfuses a measure of this Right and power of taking, into them, of whom he hath said, you are Gods, so he transfuses this goodness too, which is in himself, that he takes nothing for nothing; He promises here a reward, and a reward arising from the enemy, which puts a greater encouragement upon us, to do it; Super caput ejus, In so doing, thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head. God is the Lord of Hosts, and in this Text, Ex Inimicis. he makes the seat of the war in the enemy's Country, and enriches his servants Ex manubiis, out of the spoil of the enemy; In caput ejus, It shall fall upon his head. Though all men that go to the war, go not upon those just reasons deliberated before in themselves, which are 〈◊〉 defence of a just cause, the obedience to a lawful Commandment, yet of those that do go without those conscientiense deliberations, none goes therefore, because he may have room in an Hospital, or relief by a pension, when he comes home lame, but because he may get something, by going into a fat country, and against a rich enemy; Though honour may seem to feed upon blows, and dangers, men go cheerfully against an enemy, from whom something is to be got; for, profit is a good salve to knocks, a good Cere-cloth to bruises, and a good Balsamum to wounds. God therefore here raises the reward out of the enemy, feed him, and thou shalt gain by it. But yet the profit that God promises by the enemy here, is rather that we shall gain a soul, than any temporal gain; rather that we shall make that enemy a better man, then that we shall make him a weaker enemy: God respects his spiritual good, as we shall see in that phrase, which is our last branch, Congeres carbones, Thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head. It is true that S. chrysostom (and not he alone) takes this phrase to imply a Revenge: Carbones. that God's judgements shall be the more vehement upon such ungrateful persons, Et terrebuntur beneficiis, the good turns that thou hast done to them, shall be a scourge and a terror to their consciences. This sense is not inconvenient; but it is too narrow: The Holy Ghost hath taken so large a Metaphor, as implies more than that. It implies the divers offices, and effects of fire; all this; That if he have any gold, any pure metal in him, this fire of this kindness will purge out the dross, & there is a friend made. If he be nothing but straw and stubble, combustible still, still ready to take fire against thee, this fire which Gods breath shall blow, will consume him, and burn him out, and there is an enemy marred: If he have any tenderness any way, this fire will mollify him towards thee; Nimis durus animus, says S. Augustine, he is a very hard hearted man, Qui si ultro dilectionem non vult impendere, etiam nolit rependere, Who, though he will not requite thy love, yet will not acknowledge it. If he be wax, he melts with this fire; and if he be clay, he hardens with it, and then thou wilt arm thyself against that pellet. Thus much good, Origen. God intends to the enemy, in this phrase, that it is pia vindicta si resipiscant, we have taken a blessed revenge upon our enemies, if our charitable applying of ourselves to them, may bring them to apply themselves to God, and to glorify him: si benefaciendo cicuremus, says S. Hierome, if we can tame a wild beast by sitting up with him, and reduce an enemy by offices of friendship, it is well. 〈◊〉 much good God intends him in this phrase, and so much good he intends us, that, si non incendant, if these coals do not purge him, Aben Ezra. Levi Gherson. si non injiciant pudorem, if they do not kindle a shame in him, to have offended one that hath deserved so well, yet this fire gives thee light to see him clearly, and to run away from him, and to assure thee, that he, whom so many benefits cannot reconcile, is irreconcilable. SERMON XI. Preached upon Candlemas day. MAT. 9.2. And jesus seeing their faith, said unto the sick of the palsy, My son, be of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee. IN these words, Divisio. and by occasion of them, we shall present to you these two general considerations; first upon what occasion Christ did that which he did, and then what it was that he did. And in the first, we shall see first some occasions that were remote, but yet conduce to the Miracle itself; some circumstances of time, and place, and some such dispositions, and then the more immediate occasion, the disposition of those persons who presented this sick man to Christ; and there we shall see first, that Faith was the occasion of all, for without faith it is impossible to please God, and without pleasing of God, it is impossible to have remission of sins. It was fides, and fides illorum, their faith, all their faith; for, though in the faith of others there be an assistance, yet without a personal faith in himself, no man of ripe age comes so far, as to the forgiveness of sins; And then, this faith of them all, was fides visa, a faith that was seen; Christ saw their faith, and he saw it as man, it was a faith expressed, and declared in actions: And yet, when all was done, it is but cum vidit, it is not quia vidit, Christ did it When he saw, not Because he saw their faith, that was not the principle and primary cause of his mercy, for the mercy of God is all, and above all; it is the effect and it is the cause too, there is no cause of his mercy, but his mercy. And when we come in the second part, to consider what in his mercy he did, we shall see first, that he establishes him, and comforts him with a gracious acceptation, with that gracious appellation, Fili, Son: He doth not disavow him, he doth not disinherit him; and then, he doth not wound him, whom God had stricken; he doth not flay him, whom God had scourged; he doth not salt him, whom God had flayed; he doth not add affliction to affliction, he doth not shake, but settle that faith which he had with more, Confide fili, My son be of good cheer; and then he seals all with that assurance, Dimittuntur peccata, Thy sins are forgiven thee; In which, first he catechises this patiented, and gives him all these lessons, first that he gives before we ask, for he that was brought, they who brought him had asked nothing in his behalf, when Christ unasked, enlarged himself towards them, Dat prius, God gives before we ask, that is first; And then Dat meliora, God gives better things than we ask, All that all they meant to ask, was but bodily health, and Christ gave him spiritual; and the third lesson was, that sin was the cause of bodily sickness, and that therefore he ought to have sought his spiritual recovery before his bodily health: and then, after he had thus rectified him, by this Catechism, employed in those few words, Thy sins are forgiven thee, he takes occasion by this act, to rectify the bystanders too, which were the Pharisees, who did not believe Christ to be God: For, for proof of that, first he takes knowledge of their inward thoughts, not expressed by any act or word, which none but God could do; And then he restores the patiented to bodily health, only by his word, without any natural means applied, which none but God could do neither. And into fewer particulars than these, this pregnant and abundant Text is not easily contracted. First then to begin with the Branches of the first part, of which the first was, 1 Part. to consider some, somewhat more remote circumstances, and occasions conducing to this miracle, we cannot avoid the making of some use of the Time, when it was done: It was done, when Christ had dispossessed those two men of furious, and raging Devils, amongst the Gergesens; at what time, Mar. 8. ult. because Christ had been an occasion of drowning their herd of swine, the whole City came out to meet him, but not with a thankful reverence, and acclamation, but their procession was, to beseech him to departed out of their coasts: They had rather have had their Legion of Devils still, then have lost their hogs; and since Christ's presence was an occasion of impairing their temporal substance, they were glad to be rid of him. We need not put on spectacles to search Maps for this Land of the Gergesens; God knows we dwell in it; Non quaerimus jesum propter jesum, (which was a Prophetical complaint by S. August.) we love the profession of Christ only so far, as that profession conduces to our temporal ends. We seek him not at the Cross; there most of his friends left him; but we are content to embrace him, where the Kings of the East bring him presents of Gold, and Myrrh, and Frankincense, that we may participate of those: we seek him not in the hundred and thirtieth Psalm, where, though there be plenty, yet it is but copiosa redemtio, plentiful redemption, plenty of that that comes not yet; but in the twenty fourth Psalm we are glad to meet him, where he proclaims Domini terra, & plenitudo ejus, The earth is the Lords, and the fullness thereof, that our portion therein may be plenteous: We care not for him in S. Peter's Hospital, where he excuses himself, Aurum & argentum non habeo, Silver and gold have I none; but in the Prophet Haggais Exchequer we do, where he makes that claim, Aurum meum, All the gold and all the silver is mine. Scarce any Son is Protestant enough, to stand out a rebuke of his Father, or any Servant of his Master, or any Officer of his Prince, if that Father, or Master, or Prince would be, or would have him be a Papist; But, as though the different forms of Religion, were but the fashions of the garment, and not the stuff, we put on, and we put off Religion, as we would do a Livery, to testify our respect to him, whom we serve, and (miserable Gergesens) had rather take in that Devil again, of which we have been dispossessed three or fourscore years since, then lose another hog, in departing with any part of our pleasures or profits; Non quaerimus jesum propter jesum, we profess not Jesus, for his, but for our own sakes. But we pass from the circumstance of the time, to a second, that though Christ thus despised by the Gergesens, did, in his Justice, depart from them; yet, as the Sea gains in one place, what it loses in another, his abundant mercy builds up more in Capernaum, than his Justice throws down amongst the Gergesens: Because they drove him away, in Judgement he went from them, but in Mercy he went to the others, who had not entreated him to come. Apply this also; And, wretched Gergesen, if thou have entreated Christ to go from thee, for loss of thy hogs, that when thou hast found the Preaching of Christ, or the sting of thy conscience whet thereby, to hinder thee in growing rich so hastily as thou wouldst, or trouble thee, in following thy pleasures so fully as thou wouldst, thou hast made shift to divest, and put off Christ, and sear up thy conscience, yet christ comes into his Capernaum now, that sent not for him; he comes into thy soul now, who camest not hither to meet him, but to celebrate the day, by this ordinary, and fashionall meeting; to thee he comes, as into Capernaum, to preach his own Gospel, and to work his miracles upon thee. And it is a high mercy in Christ, that he will thus surprise thy soul, that he will thus waylay thy conscience, that what collateral respect soever brought thee hither, yet when he hath thee here, he will make thee see that thou art in his house, and he will speak to thee, and he will be heard by thee, and he will be answered from thee; and though thou thoughtest not of him, when thou camest hither, yet he will send thee away, full of the love of him, full of comforts from him. But we pass also from this, Mat 9.1. to a third circumstance, that when he came to Capernaum, he is said to have come into his own City; not Nazareth, where he was borne, but Capernaum where he dwelled, and preached, is called his own City. Thou art not a Christian, because thou wast borne in a Christian Kingdom, and borne within the Covenant, and borne of Christian Parents, but because thou hast dwelled in the Christian Church, and performed the duties presented to thee there. Again, Capernaum was his own City, but yet Christ went forth of Capernaum, to many other places. I take the application of this, from you, to ourselves; Christ fixes no man by his example so to one Church, as that no occasion may make his absence from thence excusable. But yet when Christ did go from Capernaum, he went to do his Father's will, and that, which he was sent for. Nothing but preaching the Gospel, and edifying God's Church, is an excuse for such an absence; for, Vaesi non Euangelizaverit, if he neither preach at Capernaum, nor to the Gergesens, neither at home, nor abroad, woe be unto him: If I be at home, but to take my tithes; If I be abroad, but to take the air, woe be unto me. But we must not stop long upon these circumstances; we end all of this kind, in this one, that when Christ had undertaken that great work of the Conversion of the world, by the Word, and Sacraments, to show that the word was at that time the more powerful means of those two, (for Sacraments were instituted by Christ, as subsidiary things, in a great part, for our infirmity, who stand in need of such visible and sensible assistances) Christ preached the Christian Doctrine, long before he instituted the Sacraments; But yet, though these two permanent Sacraments, Baptism, and the Supper were not so soon instituted, Christ always descended so much to man's infirmity, as to accompany the preaching of the Word, with certain transitory, and occasional Sacraments; for miracles are transitory and occasional Sacraments, as they are visible signs of invisible grace, though not seals thereof; Christ's purpose in every miracle was, that by that work, they should see Grace to be offered unto them. Now this history, from whence this Text is taken, gins, and ends with the principal means, with preaching; for, as S. Mark relates it, Mark 2.2. he was in the act of preaching, when this cure was done; And in S. Matthew, Mat. 9.35. after all was done, he went about the Cities, and Villages, preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom: And then between, S. Matthew here, records five of his transitory and occasional Sacraments, five miracles, of which every one, well considered, (as the petitions of Abraham did upon God) may justly be thought to have gained more and more, upon his Auditory. First, this paralytique man in our Text, who is Sarcinasibi, overloaded with himself, he cannot stand under his own burden, he is cadaver animatum; It is true, he hath a soul, but a soul in a sack, it hath no Limbs, no Organs to move, this Paralytique, this living dead man, this dead and buried man, buried in himself, is instantly cured, and recovered. But the Palsy was a sudden sickness; what could he do, upon an inveterate disease? He cured the woman that had had the bloody issue twelve years, V 20. by only touching the hem of his garment. After, he extends his miraculous power to two at once, he cures two blind men. V 27. But all these, though not by such means merely, yet in nature, and in art might be possible, Palsies, and Issues, and Blindnesses have been cured: but he went farther than ever art pretended to go; V 24. He raised the Ruler's Daughter to life, then when he was laughed to scorn, for going about to do it. And lastly to show his Power, as over sickness, and over death, so over hell itself, he cast out the Devil out of the dumb man, in some such extraordinary manner, as that the multitude marvailed, V 33. and said, It was never so seen in Israel. This than was his way, and this must be ours, and it must be your way too. Christ preached, and he wrought great works, and he preached again; It is not enough in us to preach, and in you to hear, except both do and practice, that which is said, and heard; Neither may we, though we have done all this, give over, for every day produces new tentations, and therefore needs new assistances. And so we pass from these more remote, to that which is our second Branch of this first part, the immediate occasion of Christ's doing this miracle, When jesus saw their faith. Here then, the occasion of all that ensued, was faith; for, without faith, Fides. Heb. 11.6. it is impossible to please God; Where you may be pleased to admit some use of this note, (for it is not a mere Grammatical curiosity to note it) that it is not said in those words of S. Paul, It is impossible to please God, or impossible to please him, (which is with relation to God, as our Translation hath it,) but it is merely, simply, only, impossible to please, and no more, impossible to please any worth pleasing; but if we take away our faith in God, God will take away the protection of Angels, the favour of Princes, the obedience of children, the respect of servants, the assistance of friends, the society of neighbours; God shall make us unpleasing to all; without faith it is impossible to please any, but such, as we shall repent to have made ourselves pleasing companions unto. When our Saviour Christ perfected the Apostles Commission, and set his last seal to it, after his Resurrection, he never modifies, never mollifies their instructions, with any milder phrase than this, He that believeth not, shall be damned. It is not, that he shall be in danger of a Council; Mark 16.16. no, nor in danger of hell fire: It is not, that it were better a Millstone were tied about his neck, and he cast into the Sea: It is not, that it will go hard with him at the last day: It is not, that it shall be easier to Tyre, and Sidon, then to him; For he is not bound to believe, but that Tyre, and Sidon, and he too, may do well enough: Here is no modification, no mollification, no reservation; roundly, and irrevocably, Christ Jesus himself, after his Resurrection, says, Qui non crediderit, he that believeth not, shall be damned. If the Judge must come to a sentence of condemnation, upon any person of great quality in the Kingdom, that Judge must not say, Your Lordship must pass out of this world, nor, your Lordship must be beheaded; but he must tell them plainly, You must be carried to the place of execution and there hanged. Christ Jesus hath given us the Commission and the sentence there; Go into all the world, preach the Gospel to every creature; And then, the sentence follows upon those that will not receive it, He that believeth not, shall be damned. These men then, who prevailed so fare upon Christ, brought faith; though not an explicit faith of all those articles, which we, who from the beginning have been Catechised in all those points, are bound to have, yet a constant assurance that Christ could, and that he would relieve this distressed person, in which assurance, there was enwrapped an implicit faith even of the Messiah, that could remove all occasions of sickness, even sin itself. There was faith in the case; but in whom? Whose faith was it, Illorum. that Christ had respect to? To whom hath that Illorum in the Text, their faith, reference? There can be no question, but that it hath reference to those four friends, that brought this sick man in his bed, to Christ: For, else it could not have been spoken in the plural, and called their faith. And certainly S. Ambrose does not inconveniently make that particular an argument of God's greatness and goodness, of his magnificence, and munificence, Magnus Dominus, qui aliorum meritis, aliis ignostit; This is the large and plentiful mercy of God, that for one man's sake, he forgives another. This joash acknowledged in the person of Elisha; when Elisha was sick, the King came down to him, and wept over his face, 2 Reg. 13.14. and said, O my Father, my Father, the Chariot of Israel, and the horse men thereof. Here were all the forces of Israel mustered upon one sick bed, the whole strength of Israel consisted in the goodness of that one man. The Angel said to Paul, when they were in an evident and imminent danger of shipwreck, Act. 27.24. God hath given thee all them that sail with thee; He spared them, not for their own sakes, but for Paul's. God gave those passengers to Paul so, as he had given Paul himself before to Stephen; Si Stephanus non sic orasset, Paulum hodiè Ecclesia non haberet, says S. Augustine; If Paul had not been enwrapped in those prayers, which Stephen made for his persecutors, the Church had lost the benefit of all Paul's labours; and if God had not given Paul the lives of all those passengers in that Ship, they had all perished. For the righteousness of a few, (if those few could have been found) God would have spared the whole City of Sodom: Gen. 18. And when God's fury was kindled upon the Cities of that Country, God remembered Abraham, Gen. 19.29. says that story, and he delivered Lot: And when he delivered Jerusalem from Sennacherib, he takes his servant David by the hand, he puts his servant David into Commission with himself, and he says, I will defend this City, and save it, for mine own sake, 2 Reg. 19.34. and for my servant David's sake. Quantus murus Patriae vir justus, is a holy exclamation of S. Ambrose, What a Wall to any Town, what a Sea to any Island, what a Navy to any Sea, what an Admiral to any Navy, is a good man! Apply thyself therefore, and make thy conversation with good men, and get their love, and that shall be an armour of proof to thee. When Saint Augustine's Mother lamented the ill courses that her son took in his youth, still that Priest, to whom she imparted her sorrows, said, Filius istarum lacrymarum, non potest perire; That Son, for whom so good a Mother hath shed so many tears, cannot perish: He put it not upon that issue, filius Dci, the elect child of God, the son of predestination cannot perish, for at that time, that name was either no name, or would scarce have seemed to have belonged to S. Augustine, but the child of these tears, of this devotion cannot be lost. Mat. 8.13. Christ said to the Centurion, fiat sicut credidisti, Go thy way, and as thou believest, so be it done unto thee, and his servant was healed in the selfsame hour: The master believed, and the servant was healed. Little knowest thou, what thou hast received at God's hands, by the prayers of the Saints in heaven, that enwrap thee in their general prayers for the Militant Church. Little knowest thou, what the public prayers of the Congregation, what the private prayers of particular devout friends, that lament thy carelessness, and negligence in praying for thyself, have wrung and extorted out of God's hands, in their charitable importunity for thee. And therefore, at last, make thyself fit to do for others, that which others, when thou wast unfit to do thyself that office, have done for thee, in assisting thee with their prayers. If thou meet thine enemy's Ox, Exod. 23 4, 5. or Ass going astray, (says the Law) thou shalt surely bring it back to him again: If thou see the Ass of him that hateth thee, lying under his burden, and wouldst forbear to help him, thou shalt surely help him. Estnè Deo cura de Bobus, is the Apostles question, Hath God care of Oxen? of other men's Oxen? How much more of his own Sheep? And therefore if thou see one of his Sheep, one of thy fellow Christians, strayed into sins of infirmity, and negligent of himself, join him with thine own soul, in thy prayers to God. Relieve him, (if that be that which he needs) with thy prayers for him, and relieve him, (if his wants be of another kind) according to his prayers to thee. Cur apud te homo Collega non valeat, says S. Ambrose, why should not he that is thy Colleague, thy fellow-man, as good a man, that is as much a man as thou, made of the same blood, and redeemed with the same blood as thou art, why should not he prevail with thee, so fare as to the obtaining of an alms, Cum apud Deum, servus, & interveniendi meritum, & jus habe at impetrandi, when some fellow-servant of thine, hath had that interest in God, as by his intercession, and prayers to advance thy salvation? wilt not thou save the life of another man that prays to thee, when perchance thy soul hath been saved by another man, that prayed for thee? Well then; Ejus. Christ had respect to their faith, that brought this sick man to him. Consuetudo est miserecordis Dei, It is Gods ordinary way, (says S. Chysost.) hunc honorem dare servis suis, ut propter eos salventur & alii, to afford this honour to his servants, that for their sakes he saves others. But neither this which we say now out of S. Crhysostome, nor that which we said before out of S. Ambrose, nor all that we might multiply out of the other Fathers, doth exclude the faith of that particular man, who is to be saved. It is true, that in this particular case, S. Hierome says, Non vidit fidem ejus qui offer ebatur, sed corum qui offerebant, That Christ did not respect his faith that was brought, but only theirs that brought him; but except S. Hierome be to be understood so, that Christ did not first respect his faith, but theirs, we must departed from him, to S. chrysostom, Neque enim se portari sustinuisset, He would neither have put himself, nor them, to so many difficulties, as he did, if he had not had a faith, that is, a constant assurance in this means of his recovery. And therefore the Rule may be best given thus; That God gives worldly blessings, bodily health, deliverance from dangers, and the like, to some men, in contemplation of others, though themselves never thought of it, all the examples which we have touched upon, convince abundantly. That God gives spiritual blessings to Infants, presented according to his Ordinance, in Baptism, in Contemplation of the faith of their Parents, or of the Church, or of their sureties, without any actual faith in the Infant, is probable enough, credible enough. But take it as our case is, de adultis, in a man who is come to the use of his own reason, and discretion, so God never saves any man, for the faith of another, otherwise then thus, that the faithful man may pray for the conversion of an unfaithful, who does not know, nor, if he did, would be content to be prayed for, and God, for his sake that prays, may be pleased to work upon the other; but before that man comes to the Dimittuntur peccata, that his sins are forgiven, that man comes to have faith in himself. justus in fide sua vivit; there is no life without faith, nor In fide aliena, Habak. 2.4. no such life as constitutes Righteousness, without a personal faith of our own. So that this fides illorum, in our Text, this that is called their faith, hath reference to the sick man himself, as well as to them that brought him. And then, in Him, and in Them, it was fides visa, faith, which, by an ouvert act, Visae. was declared, and made evident. For, Christ, who was now to convey into that company the knowledge that he was the Messiah, which Messiah was to be God, and Man, as afterwards for their conviction, who would not believe him to be God, he shown that he knew their inward thoughts, and did some other things, which none but God could do; so here, for the better edification of men, he required such a faith, as might be evident to men. For, though Christ could have seen their faith, by looking into their hearts, yet to think, that here he saw it by that power of his Divinity, nimis coactum videtur, It is too narrow, and too forced an interpretation of the place, says Calvin. They then, that is, all they declared their faith, their assurance, that Christ could, and would help him. It was good evidence of a strength of faith in him, that in a disease, very little capable of cure, then when he had so fare resolved, and slackened his sinews, that he could endure no posture but his bed, he suffered himself to be put to so many incommodities. It was good evidence of a strength of faith in them, that they could believe that Christ would not reject them for that importunity of troubling him, and the congregation, in the midst of a Sermon; That when they saw, that they who came only to hear, could not get near the door, they should think to get in, with that load, that offensive spectacle; That they should ever conceive, or go about to execute, or be suffered to execute such a plot, as without the leave of Christ, (if Christ preached this Sermon in his own house, as some take it to have been done) or without the Master's leave, in whose house soever it was, they should first untile or open, and then break through the floor, and so let down, their miserable burden: That they should have an apprehension, that it was not fit for them to stay, till the Sermon were done, and the company parted, but that it was likeliest to conduce to the glory of God, that Preaching, and working might go together, this was evidence, this was argument of strength of faith in them. Take therefore their example, not to defer that assistance, which thou art able to give to another. Ne dic as assistam cr as, says S. Gregory, do not say, I will help thee to morrow; Ne quid inter propositum, & beneficium intercedat; Perchance that poor soul may not need thee to morrow, perchance thou mayst have nothing to give to morrow, perchance there shall be no such day, as to morrow, and so thou hast lost that opportunity of thy charity, which God offered thee, to day: Vnica beneficentia est, quae moram non admittit, only that is charity, that is given presently. But yet, when all was done, when there was faith, and faith in them all, Cum, non quiae. and faith declared in their outward works, yet Christ is not said to have done this miracle, quia sides, but cum fides, not Because he saw, but only When he saw their faith. Let us transfer none of that, which belongs to God, to ourselves: when we do our duties, (but when do we go about to begin to do any part of any of them?) we are unprofitable servants: When God does work in us, are we saved by that work, as by the cause, when there is another cause of the work itself? When the ground brings forth good corn, yet that ground becomes not fit for our food: When a man hath brought forth good fruits, yet that man is not thereby made worthy of heaven. Not faith itself (and yet faith is of somewhat a deeper dye, and tincture, than any works) is any such cause of our salvation. A beggars believing that I will give him an alms, is no cause of my charity: My believing that Christ will have mercy upon me, is no cause of Christ's mercy; for what proportion hath my temporary faith, with my everlasting salvation? But yet, though it work not as a cause, though it be not qui a vidit, because he saw it, yet cum videt, when Christ finds this faith, according to that gracious Covenant, and Contract which he hath made with us, that wheresoever, and whensoever he finds faith, he will enlarge his mercy, finding that in this patiented, he expressed his mercy, in that which constitutes our second part, Fili confide, my son be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee. Where we see first, 2 Part. our Saviour. Christ opening the bowels of compassion to him, and receiving him so, as if he had issued out of his bowels, and from his loins, in that gracious appellation, Fili, my Son. He does not call him brother; for greater enmity can be no where, then is often expressed to have been between brethren; for in that degree, and distance, enmity amongst men began in Cain, and Abel, and was pursued in many pairs of brethren after, in Sacred and in secular story. He does not call him friend; that name, even in Christ's own mouth, is not always accompanied with good entertainment: Amice, Mat. 22.12. quomodo intrasti, says he, Friend, how came you in? and he bound him hand and foot, and cast him into outer darkness. He does not call him son of Abraham, which might give him an interest in all the promises, but he gives him a present Adoption, and so a present fruition of all, Fili, my Son. His Son, and not his Son in law; he loads him not with the encumbrances, and halfe-impossibilities of the Law, but he seals to him the whole Gospel, in the remission of sins. His Son, and not his disinherited son, as the Jews were, but his Son, upon whom he settled his ancient Inheritance, his eternal election, and his new purchase, which he came now into the world to make with his blood. His Son, and not his prodigal son, to whom Christ imputes no wastfulnesse of his former graces, but gives him a general release, and Quietus est, in the forgiveness of sins. All that Christ asks of his Sons, is, Fili da mihi cor, My Son give me thy heart; and till God give us that, we cannot give it him; and therefore in this Son he creates a new heart, he infuses a new courage, he establishes a new confidence, in the next word, Fili confide, My Son be of good cheer. Christ then does not stay so long wrestling with this man's faith, Confide. and shaking it, and trying whether it were fast rooted, as he did with that Woman in the Gospel, who came after him, Mat. 15.22. in her daughter's behalf, crying, Have mercy upon me O Lord, thou Son of David, for Christ gave not that woman one word; when her importunity made his Disciples speak to him, he said no more, but that he was not sent to such as she; This was far, very far from a Confide filia, Daughter be of good cheer: But yet, this put her not oft, but (as it follows) She followed, and worshipped him, and said, O Lord help me: And all this prevailed no farther with him, but to give such an answer, as was more uncomfortable, than a silence, It is not fit to take the children's bread, and cast it unto dogs. She denies not that, she contradicts him not; she says, Truth Lord, It is not fit to take the children's bread, and to cast it unto dogs, and Truth Lord, I am one of those dogs; but yet she persevers in her holy importunity, and in her good ill-manners, and says, Yet the Dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from the Master's table: And then, and not till then comes Jesus to that, O Woman, great is thy faith, be it unto thee, even as thou wilt; and her Daughter was healed. But all this, at last, was but a bodily restitution, here was no Dimittuntur peccata in the case, no declaration of forgiveness of sins: But with this man in our Text, Christ goes farther, and comes sooner to an end; He exercises him with no disputation, he leaves no room for any diffidence, but at first word establishes him, and then builds upon him. Now beloved, which way soever of these two God have taken with thee, whether the longer, or the shorter way, bless thou the Lord, praise him, and magnify him for that. If God have settled and strengthened thy faith early, early in thy youth heretofore, early at the beginning of a Sermon now, A day is as a thousand years with God, a minute is as six thousand years with God, that which God hath not done upon the Nations, upon the Gentiles, in six thousand years, never since the Creation, which is, to reduce them to the knowledge, and application of the Messiah, Christ Jesus, that he hath done upon thee, in an instant. If he have carried thee about the longer way, if he have exposed thee to scruples, and perplexities, and storms in thine understanding, or conscience, yet in the midst of the tempest, the soft air, that he is said to come in, shall breathe into thee; in the midst of those clouds, his Son shall shine upon thee; In the midst of that flood he shall put out his Rainbow, his seal that thou shalt not drown, his Sacrament of fair weather to come, and as it was to the Thief, thy Cross shall be thine Altar, and thy Faith shall be thy Sacrifice. Whether he accomplish his worke-upon thee soon or late, he shall never leave thee all the way, without this Confide fili, a holy confidence, that thou art his, which shall carry thee to the Dimittuntur peccata, to the peace of conscience, in the remission of sins. In which two words, we noted unto you, that Christ hath instituted a Catechism, an Instruction for this new Convertite, and adopted Son of his; in which, the first lesson that is therein employed, is, Antequam rogetur, That God is more forward to give, Antequam rogetur. than man to ask: It is not said that the sick man, or his company in his behalf, said any thing to Christ, but Christ speaks first to them. If God have touched thee here, didst thou ask that at his hands? Didst thou pray before thou camest hither, that he would touch thy heart here? perchance thou didst: But when thou wast brought to thy Baptism, didst thou ask any thing at God's hands then? But those that brought thee, that presented thee, did; They did in thy Baptism; but at thine election, then when God writing down the names of all the Elect, in the book of Life, how camest thou in? who brought thee in then? Didst thou ask any thing at God's hands then, when thou thyself wast not at all? Dat prius, that's the first lesson in this Catechism, God gives before we ask, Meliora. and then Dat meliora rogatis, God gives better things, than we ask; They intended to ask but bodily health, and Christ gave spiritual, he gave Remission of sins. And what gained he by that? why, Beati quorum remissae iniquitates, Blessed are they, whose sins are forgiven. But what is Blessedness? Any more than a confident expectation of a good state in the next world? Yes; Blessedness includes all that can be asked or conceived in the next world, and in this too. Christ in his Sermon of blessedness, says first, Blessed are they, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven; and after, Blessed are they, Mat. 5.3. & 5. for they shall in her it the earth; Again, Blessed, for they shall obtain mercy; and, Blessed for they shall be filled: Remission of sins is blessedness, and as Godliness hath the promise of this world, and the next, so blessedness hath the performance of both: He that hath peace in the remission of sins, is blessed already, and shall have those blessings infinitely multiplied in the world to come. The farthest that Christ goes in the expressing of the affections of a natural Father here, is, That if his Son ask bread, he will not give him a stone; Luk. 11.12. and if he ask a Fish, he will not give him a Scorpion; He will not give him worse than he asked; But it is the peculiar bounty of this Father, who adopted this Son, to give more, and better, spiritual for temporal. Another lesson, which Christ was pleased to propose to this new Convertite, Causa morborum. in this Catechism, was, to inform him, That sins were the true causes of all bodily diseases. Diseases and bodily afflictions are sometimes inflicted by God Ad poenam, non ad purgationem, Not to purge or purify the soul of that man, by that affliction, but to bring him by the rack to the gallows, through temporary afflictions here, to everlasting torments hereafter; As judas his hanging, and Herod's being eaten with worms, Acts 12. was their entrance into that place, where they are yet. Sometimes diseases and afflictions are inflicted only, or principally to manifest the glory of God, in the removing thereof; So Christ says of that man, that was borne blind, that neither he himself had sinned, John 5. nor bore the sins of his parents, but he was borne blind to present an occasion of doing a miracle. Sometimes they are inflicted Ad humiliationem, for our future humiliation; So S. Paul says of himself, That lest he should be exalted above measure, 2 Cor. 12.7. by the abundance of Revelations, he had that Stimulum carnis, That vexation of the flesh, that messenger of Satan, to humble him. And then, sometimes they are inflicted for trial, and farther declaration of your conformity to Gods will, as upon job. But howsoever there be divers particular causes, for the diseases and afflictions of particular men, the first cause of death, and sickness, and all infirmities upon mankind in general, was sin; and it would not be hard for every particular man, almost, to find it in his own case too, to assign his fever to such a surfeit, or his consumption to such an intemperance. And therefore to break that circle, in which we compass, and immure, and imprison ourselves, That as sinne begot diseases, so diseases begot more sins, impatience and murmuring at God's corrections, Christ gins to shake this circle, in the right way to break it, in the right link, that is, first to remove the sin, which occasioned the disease; for, till that be done, a man is in no better case, then, (as the Prophet expresses it) If he should fly from a Lion, Amos 5.19. and a Bear met him, or if he should lean upon a wall, and a Serpent bitten him. What ease were it, to be delivered of a palsy, of slack and dissolved sinews, and remain under the tyranny of a lustful heart, of licentious eyes, of slack and dissolute speech and conversation? What ease to be delivered of the putrefaction of a wound in my body, and meet a murder in my conscience, done, or intended, or desired upon my neighbour? To be delivered of a fever in my spirits, and to have my spirit troubled with the guiltiness of an adultery? To be delivered of Cramps, and Coliques, and Convulsions in my joints and sinews, and suffer in my soul all these, from my oppressions, and extortions, by which I have ground the face of the poor. It is but lost labour, and cost, to give a man a precious cordial, when he hath a thorn in his foot, or an arrow in his flesh; for, as long as the sin, which is the cause of the sickness, remains, Deterius sequetur, A worse thing will follow; we may be rid of a Fever, and the Pestilence will follow, rid of the Cramp, and a Gout will follow, rid of sickness, and Death, eternal death will follow. That which our Saviour prescribes is, Noli peccare ampliùs, sinne no more; first, non ampliùs, sin no more sins, take heed of gravid sins, of pregnant sins, of sins of concomitance, and concatentation, that chain and induce more sins after, as David's idleness did adultery, and that murder, & the loss of the Lords Army, and Honour, in the blaspheming of his name, Noli ampliùs, sin no more, no such sin as induces more; And Noli ampliùs, sinne no more, that is, sin thy own sin, thy beloved sin, no more times over; And still Noli ampliùs, sin not that sin which thou hast given over in thy practice, in thy memory, by a sinful delight in remembering it; And again, Noli ampliùs, sin not over thy former sins, by holding in thy possession; such things as were corruptly gotten, by any such former practices: for, Deterius sequetur, a worse thing will follow, A Tertian will be a Quartan, and a Quartan a Hectic, and a Hectic a Consumption, and a Consumption without a consummation, that shall never consume itself, nor consume thee to an unsensibleness of torment. And then after these three lessons in this Catechism, Sanitas spiritualis. That God gives before we ask, That he gives better than we ask, That he informs us in the true cause of sickness, sin, He involves a tacit, nay he expresses an express rebuke, and increpation, and in beginning at the Dimittuntur peccata, at the forgiveness of sins, tells him in his ear, that his spiritual health should have been preferred before his bodily, and the cure of his soul before his Palsy; that first the Priest should have been, and then the Physician might be consulted. That which Christ does to his new adopted Son here, the Wiseman says to his Son, Ecclus. 38.9. My Son, in thy sickness be not negligent; But wherein is his diligence required, or to be expressed? in that, which follows, Pray unto the Lord, and he will make thee whole; But upon what conditions, or what preparations? Leave off from sin, order thy hands aright, and cleanse thy heart from all wickedness. Is this all? needs there no declaration, no testimony of this? Yes, Give a sweet savour, and a memorial of fine flower, and make a fat offering, as not being; that is, as though thou wert dead: Give, and give that which thou givest in thy life time, as not being. And when all this is piously, and religiously done, thou hast repent, restored, amended, and given to pious uses, Then, says he there, give place to the Physician, for the Lord hath created him. For if we proceed otherwise, if we begin with the Physician, Physic is a curse; He that sinneth before his Maker, V 15. let him fall into the hands of the Physician, says the Wiseman there: It is not, Let him come into the hands of the Physician, as though that were a curse, but let him fall, let him cast and throw himself into his hands, and rely upon natural means, and leave out all consideration of his other, and worse disease, and the supernatural Physic for that. 2. Chron. 16. Asa had had a great deliverance from God, when the Prophet Hanani asked him, Were not the Ethiopians, and the Lubins a huge Host? but because after this deliverance, he relied upon the King of Syria, and not upon God, the Judgement is, From henceforth thou shalt have wars: That was a sickness upon the State, & then he fell sick in his own person, and in that sickness, says that story, He sought not to the Lord, but to the Physician, and then he died. To the Lord and then to the Physician had been the right way; If to the Physician and then to the Lord, though this had been out of the right way, yet he might have returned to it: But it was to the Physician, and not to the Lord, and then he died. Omnipotenti medico nullus languor insanabilis, says S. Ambrose, there is but one Almighty; and none but the Almighty can cure all diseases, because he only can cure diseases in the root, that is, in the forgiveness of sins. We are almost at an end; when we had thus Catechised his Convertite, thus rectified his patient, Scribae & Pharisci. he turns upon them, who beheld all this, and were scandalised with his words, the Scribes and Pharisees; And because they were scandalised only in this, that he being but man, undertook the office of God, to forgive sins, he declares himself to them, to be God. Christ would not leave, even malice itself unsatisfied; And therefore do not thou think thyself Christian enough, for having an innocence in thyself, but be content to descend to the infirmities, and to the very malice of other men, and to give the world satisfaction; Nec paratum habeas illud ètrivio, (says S. Hierome) do not arm thyself with that vulgar, and trivial saying, Sufficit mihi conscientia mea, nec curo quid loquantur homines, It suffices me, that mine own conscience is clear, and I care not what all the world says; thou must care what the world says, and thinks; Christ himself had that respect even towards the Scribes, and Pharisees. For, first he declared himself to be God, in that he took knowledge of their thoughts; for they had said nothing, and he says to them, why reason you thus in your hearts? and they themselves did not, could not deny, but that those words of Solomon appertained only to God, 2 Chron. 6.30. Thou only knowest the hearts of the children of men, And those of jeremy, The heart is deceitful above all things, Jer. 17.9. and desperately wicked, who can know it? I the Lord search the heart, and I try the reins. Let the School dispute infinitely, (for he that will not content himself with means of salvation, till all School points be reconciled, will come too late) let Scotus and his Herd think, That Angels, and separate souls have a natural power to understand thoughts, though God for his particular glory restrain the exercise of that power in them, (as in the Roman Church, Priests have a power to forgive all sins, though the Pope restrain that power in reserved cases; And the Cardinals by their Creation, have a voice in the Consistory, but that the Pope for a certain time inhibites them to give voice) And let Aquinas present his arguments to the contrary, That those spirits have no natural power to know thoughts; we seek no farther, but that Christ Jesus himself thought it argument enough to convince the Scribes and Pharisees, and prove himself God, by knowing their thoughts. Eadem Majestate & potentia, says S. Hierome, Since you see I proceed as God, in knowing your thoughts, why believe you not, that I may forgive his sins as God too? And then, in the last act he joins both together; he satisfies the patiented, Dat sanitatem. and he satisfies the beholders too: he gives him his first desire, bodily health; He bids him take up his bed and walk, and he doth it; and he shows them that he is God, by doing that, which (as it appears in the Story) was harder in their opinion, than remission of sins, which was, to cure and recover a diseased man, only by his word, without any natural, or second means. And therefore since all the world shakes in a palsy of wars, and rumours of wars, since we are sure, that Christ's Vicar in this case will come to his Dimitmittuntur peccata, to send his Bulls, and Indulgences, and Crociatars for the maintenance of his part, in that cause, let us also, who are to do the duties of private men, to obey and not to direct, by presenting our diseased and paralytique souls to Christ Jesus, now, when he in the Ministry of his unworthiest servant is preaching unto you, by untiling the house, by removing all disguises, and palliations of our former sins, by true confession, and hearty detestation, let us endeavour to bring him to his Dimittuntur peccata, to forgive us all those sins, which are the true causes of all our palsies, and slacknesses in his service; and so, without limiting him, or his great Vicegerents, and Lieutenants, the way, or the time to beg of him, that he will imprint in them, such counsels and such resolutions, as his wisdom knows best to conduce to his glory, and the maintenance of his Gospel. Amen. SERMON XII. Preached upon Candlemas day. MAT. 5.2. Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. THe Church, which is the Daughter of God, and Spouse of Christ, celebrates this day, the Purification of the blessed Virgin, the Mother of God: And she celebrates this day by the name, vulgarly, of Candlemas day. It is dies luminarium, the day of lights; The Church took the occasion of doing so, from the Gentiles; At this time of the year, about the beginning of February, they celebrated the feast of Februus, which is their Pluto; And, because that was the God of darkness, they solemnised it, with a multiplicity of Lights. The Church of God, in the outward and ceremonial part of his worship, did not disdain the ceremonies of the Gentiles; Men who are so severe, as to condemn, and to remove from the Church, whatsoever was in use amongst the Gentiles before, may, before they are ware, become Surveyors, and Controllers upon Christ himself, in the institution of his greatest seals: for Baptism, which is the Sacrament of purification by washing in water, and the very Sacrament of the Supper itself, religious eating, and drinking in the Temple, were in use amongst the Gentiles too. It is a perverse way, rather to abolish Things and Names, (for vehement zeal will work upon Names as well as Things) because they have been abused, then to reduce them to their right use. We dealt in the reformation of Religion, as Christ did in the institution thereof; He found ceremonies amongst the Gentiles, and he took them in, not because he found them there, but because the Gentiles had received them from the Jews, as they had their washings, and their religious meetings to eat and drink in the Temple, from the Jews Passeover. Christ borrowed nothing of the Gentiles, but he took his own where he found it: Those ceremonies, which himself had instituted in the first Church of the Jews, and the Gentiles had purloined, and profaned, and corrupted after, he returned to a good use again. And so did we in the Reformation, in some ceremonies which had been of use in the Primitive Church, and depraved and corrupted in the Roman. For the solemnising of this Day, Candlemas-day, when the Church did admit Candles into the Church, as the Gentiles did, it was not upon the reason of the Gentiles, who worshipped therein the God of darkness, Februus, Pluto; but because he who was the light of the world, was this day presented and brought into the Temple, the Church admitted lights. The Church would signify, that as we are to walk in the light, so we are to receive our light from the Church, and to receive Christ, and our knowledge of him, so as Christ hath notified himself to us. So it is a day of purification to us, and a day of lights, and so our Text fits the Day, Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. In these words we shall consider first, Divisie. Qui sint, who they are, that are brought into consideration, that are put into the balance, and they are mundi cord, such as are pure of heart; And secondly, Quid sint, what they come to be, and it is Beati, blessed are the pure in heart; And lastly, Vnde, from whence this blessedness accrues and arises unto them, and in what it consists, and that is, Videbunt Deum, blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. Gen. 6.5. Ask me wherein these men differ from other men, and it is in this main difference, Mundi cord, that whereas every imagination of the thought of man's heart, is only evil continually, They are pure of heart. Ask me what they get by that, They get this main purchase, Beati, That which all the books of all the Philosophers could never teach them so much as what it was, that is true Blessedness; That their pocket book, their Manual, their bosom book, their conscience, doth not only show them, but give them, not only declare it to them, but possess them of it. Ask me how long this Blessedness shall last, because all those Blessednesses which Philosophers have imagined, as honour, and health, and profit, and pleasure, and the like, have evaporated and vanished away, this shall last for ever; Videbunt Deum, they shall see God, and they shall no more see an end of their seeing God, than an end of his being God: Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. These than are our three parts; first the Price, mundities cordis, cleanness, and cleanness of heart; Secondly, the Purchase, Beati, Blessedness, and present possession of blessedness, Blessed are they; And then thirdly, the Habendum, the term, Everlastingness, because it consists in the enjoying of him who is everlasting, They shall see God. These arise out of the Text; but from whence arises the Text itself? The Text itself is a piece of a Sermon, of that blessed Sermon of our Saviour's, which is called the Sermon of Beatitudes. So that we shall make it a part apart, to consider the Sermon from which this Text is taken, before we dilate the Text itself into a Sermon: for there will arise some useful observations, out of these three doubts, first Quae concio, what this Sermon itself was; and then Quibus, to what Auditory it was preached; And lastly, Quomodo, in what manner Christ preached this Sermon: And these three, the Sermon, the Auditory, the disposition of the Preacher, will also be three branches of this, which we shall make our first part, before we come to the other three of the Text itself. First then, there is this doubt made of this Sermon altogether, 1 Part. whether this Sermon which S. Matthew records here, be the same Sermon which S. Luke mentions in his sixth Chapter, or whether they were preached at several times; The greater part of the ancients (but yet not all) take them to be several Sermons; The greater part of the later men (and yet not all neither) take them to be but one and the same Sermon. If it be so, if both be but one Sermon, this may be justly considered, that since S. Luke remembers but a few passages, and a few parts of that Sermon, in respect of S. Matthew, (for S. Matthews relation is large and particular, and S. Luke's more brief and summary) they that come to hear Sermons, and would make benefit by them, by a subsequent meditation, must not think themselves frustrated of their purposes, if they do not understand all, or not remember all the Sermon. Scarce any Sermon is so preached, or so intended, as that all works upon all, or all belongs unto all. The Lord and his Spirit puts into the Preachers mouth, a judgement against oppression, against extortion, against usury, and he utters that judgement. But perchance thou hast no lands to rack tenants, no office to grind suitors, no money to devour a debtor by usury, and so that passage of the Sermon, bend against oppression, or extortion, or usury, concerns not thee, affects not thee. But next to thee there may sit an oppressor, or extortioner, or usurer, and he needed that, and by God's grace receives benefit by that, which found nothing to work upon in thee. And then thy turn comes after, and God speaks to thy soul, in a discovery of those sins to which thou art inclined; and then he gives thy neighbour (who was pinched, and brought to a remorse before) that refreshing which thou hadst before, that is, a thankful acknowledgement, that though he be subject to other sins, yet God hath preserved him from that particular. God directs the tongue of his Ministers, as he doth his showers of rain: They fall upon the face of a large compass of earth, when as all that earth did not need that rain. The whole Congregation is, oftentimes, in common entendment, conformable, and well settled in all matters of Doctrine, and all matters of Discipline. And yet God directs us sometimes to extend our discourse (perchance with a zeal and a vehemence, which may seem unnecessary, and impertinent, because all in the Church are presumed to be of one mind) in the proof of our doctrine against Papists, or of our discipline against Non-conformitans. For, God's eye sees, in what seat there sits, or in what corner there stands some one man that wavers in matters of Doctrine, and inclines to hearken after a Seducer, a Jesuit, or a Semi-Jesuit, a practising Papist, or a Sesqui-Jesuit, a Jesuited Lady; And God's eye sees in what seat there sits, or in what corner there stands some weak soul that is scandalised, with some Ceremony, or part of our Discipline, and in danger of falling from the unity of the Church: And for the refreshing of that one span of ground, God let's fall a whole shower of rain; for the rectifying of that one soul, God pours out the Meditations of the Preacher, into such a subject, as perchance doth little concern the rest of the Congregation. S. Matthew relates Christ's Sermon at large, and S. Luke but briefly, and yet S. Luke remembers some things that S. Matthew had left out. If thou remember not all that was presented to thy faith, all the Citations of places of Scriptures, nor all that was presented to thy reason, all the deducements, and inferences of the Schools, nor all that was presented to thy spiritual delight, all the sentences of ornament produced out of the Fathers, yet if thou remember that which concerned thy sin, and thy soul, if thou meditate upon that, apply that, thou hast brought away all the Sermon, all that was intended by the Holy Ghost to be preached to thee. And if thou have done so, as at a donative at a Coronation, or other solemnity, when money is thrown among the people, though thou light but upon one shilling of that money, thou canst not think that all the rest is lost, but that some others are the richer for it, though thou be'st not; so if thou remember, or apply, or understand but one part of the Sermon, do not think all the rest to have been idly, or unnecessarily, or impertinently spoken, for thou broughtest a fever, and hast had thy Julips, another brought a fainting, and a diffident spirit, and must have his Cordials. Thus then, if S. Luke's Sermon be the same that S. Matthews was, we see by S. Luke's manner of repeating it, That a Sermon may be well remembered, and well applied, though all the parts thereof be not so. And then, if these were divers Sermons, and so preached by Christ, at several times, there arises also this consideration, That Christ did not, and therefore we need not forbear to preach the same particular Doctrines, or to handle the same particular points, which we, or others, in that place, have handled before: A preachers end is not a gathering of fame to himself, but a gathering of souls to God; and his way is not novelty, but edification. If we consider the Sermon in Saint Matthew, and the Sermon in S. Luke, the purpose and the scope of both, the matter and the form of both, the body and the parts of both, the phrase and the language of both, is for the most part the same, and yet Christ forbore not to preach it twice. This excuses no man's ignorance, that is not able to preach seasonably, and to break, and distribute the bread of life according to the emergent necessities of that Congregation, at that time; Nor it excuses no man's laziness, that will not employ his whole time upon his calling; Nor any man's vainglory, and ostentation, who having made a Pie of Plums, without meat, offers it to sale in every Market, and having made an Oration of Flowers, and Figures, and Phrases without strength, sings it over in every Pulpit: It excuses no man's ignorance, nor laziness, nor vainglory, but yet it reproaches their itching and curious ears, to whom any repetition of the same things is irk some and fastidious. You may have heard an answer of an Epigrammatist appliable to this purpose; When he read his Epigrams in an Auditory, one of the hearers stopped him, and said, Did not I hear an Epigram to this purpose from you, last year? Yes, says he, it is like you did; but is not that vice still in you this year, which last years Epigram reprehended? If your curiosity bring you to say to any Preacher, Did not I hear this Point thus handled in your Sermon, last year? Yes, must he say, and so you must next year again, till it appear in your amendment, that you did hear it. The Devil maintains a War good cheap, if he may fight with the same sword, and we may not defend with the same buckler; If he can tempt a Son with his Father's covetousness, and a Daughter with her Mother's wantonness, if he need not vary the sin, nor the tentation, must we vary our Doctrine? This is indeed to put new Wine into old vessels, new Doctrine into ears, Cant. 7.13. and hearts not disburdened of old sins. We say, as the Spouse says, Vetera & nova, we prepare old and new, all that may any way serve your holy taste, and conduce to your spiritual nourishment; And he is not a Preacher sufficiently learned, that must of necessity preach the same things again, but he is not a Preacher sufficiently discreet neither, that for bears any thing therefore, because himself, or another in that place, hath handled that before. Christ himself varied his Sermon very little, if this in S. Matthew, and that in S. Luke, were divers Sermons. The second doubt which is made about this Sermon, and which ministers to us occasion of another kind of observations, Quibus. is the Auditory, to whom Christ preached this Sermon. For first, as this Evangelist reports it, it seems to have been Concio ad Clerum, a Sermon Preached to them who had taken Degrees in Christ's School, and followed him, V 1. and not ad populum, to the promiscuous, and vulgar people; for he says, That Christ seeing the multitude, went up into a mountain, and thither his Disciples came, and to them he Preached. And then, as S. Luke reports, though the Sermon seem principally to be directed to the Disciples, yet it was in the presence and hearing of all; for he says, Christ came down, and stood in the plain, and a great multitude of people about him. Luke 6.17. Both must be done; we must preach in the Mountain, and preach in the plain too; preach to the learned, and preach to the simple too; preach to the Court, and preach to the Country too. Only when we preach in the mountain, they in the plain must not calumniate us, and say, This man goes up to Jerusalem, he will be heard by none but Princes, and great persons, as though it were out of affectation, and not in discharge of our duty, that we do preach there: And when we preach on the plain, they of the mountain must not say, This man may serve for a mean Auditory, for a simple Congregation, for a Country Church, as though the sitting of ourselves to the capacity, and the edification of such persons, were out of ignorance, or laziness, and not a performance of our duties, as well as the other. Christ preached on the mountain, and he preached in the plain; he hath his Church in both; and they that preach in both, or either, for his glory, and not their own vainglory, have his Example for their Action. To make the like use of the other difficulty, Quomedo. arising out of the several relation of this Sermon, which is Quomodo, in what manner, in what position of body Christ preached this Sermon, by this Evangelist it seems that Christ preached sitting, and by the other, V 1. Luke 6.17. that he preached standing. Now, for the most part, Christ did preach sitting. When he preached in the Synagogue of Nazareth, and took that Text, out of Esay, Luk. 4.16. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, etc. He stood up to read, (says the story) and then he closed the Book, and sat down to preach. So also when he came down from the Mount of Olives into the Temple, he sat down there and taught them. And so Christ himself professes, John 8.2. that it was his ordinary custom to do; For, when they came to apprehend him, he said, Are ye come out, as against a Thief? I sat daily with you, teaching in the Temple, Mat. 26.55. and ye laid no hold on me. And according to this custom of his, they who came to great place, and dignity in ●●e Church, did ordinarily preach sitting too; and therefore their Churches were called Cathedral, because they preached sitting in chairs. Why then will such men, as in all actious of Divine Service, pretend to limit every thing precisely to the pattern of Christ himself, to do just as he did, and no otherwise, why will they admit any other position of the body, in preaching, then sitting, since, ut plurimùm, at least, for the most part, Christ did preach sitting? Or if Christ did both sit, and stand, why will they not acknowledge, that all positions of the body, that are reverend, are indifferent in themselves, in the service of God; and being so, why will they not admit that position of the body, which being indifferent in itself, is by the just command of lawful authority, made necessary to them, that is, kneeling at the Sacrament? They who resuse it, pretend but two Reasons; First, because Christ at the institution thereof, did not use that position of kneeling, but sitting; Secondly, because they might scandalise others, or enter a false belief into others, who should see them kneel, that they kneeled in such adoration thereof, as the Papists do. But for the first, who refer all (in their desire) to the practice of Christ himself herein, it cannot be a clear case, In what position of body Christ did institute this Sacrament. There was at that time, a civil Supper, the ordinary household Supper, and there was a legal Supper, the eating of the Passeover, and then this Sacramental Supper, of a new institution; And it is clear, that Christ did not continue one position all this while, but he arose and did some actions between; Neither could that position of body, which they used at the Table, for their civil Supper, and natural refection, be properly called a sitting, for it was rather a lying, a reclining, a leaning upon a bed; And let it be exactly a sitting, and let that sitting run through all the three Suppers, yet how will that position of sitting, justify that Canon, which hath passed in a Synod amongst out neighbours, Liberum est stando, sedendo, eundo, coenam celebrare, non autem geniculando? Harmoma Synod. Belg. de Coena. Art. 8. How will standing, or walking, be any more maintainable than kneeling, by Christ's example? and yet they say, sitting, or walking, or standing, they may receive, but kneeling they must not: But this, I presume that particular Synod did not declare by way of Doctrine, to bind other Churches, but enjoined a Discipline for their own. Now, for the danger of scandalising others, all that come to Church, and are of our profession in Religion, are sufficiently catechised, and informed of the reason of our kneeling, and that we are therein fare from the Adoration of the Roman Practice. It is a complaint often made, and often to be repeated, that one of the greatest illusions, and impostures of the Roman Church, is, That the Book-Doctrine, of their learned men, and the ordinary practice of their people agree not. They know the people do commit Idolatry, in their manner of adoring the Bread in the Sacrament, and they never preach against this error of the people, nor tell them wherein that Idolatry lies; It is true, that in their Books of Controversies, which the people could not understand, if they might read them, nor may read them, if they could understand them, in those books they proceed upon safer grounds; There they say, that when a man adores the Sacrament, he must be sure, that he carry not his thoughts upon any thing that he sees, not only not upon Bread and Wine, (for, that they must not believe to be there, whatsoever they see or taste) but not upon those species and apparences of Bread and Wine, which they seem to see, but he must carry all his thoughts upon the person of Christ, who is there, though he see him not; for, otherwise, say they, if he should adore that which he sees, he should commit Idolatry. Now, if the people were acquainted with this Doctrine, and could possibly observe it, the danger were not so great, in that Adoration of the Sacrament. Much less is there in our kneeling, who, as we acknowledge, that God is present every where, yet otherwise present to us, when we throw ourselves down before him in devotion, and prayer in our Chamber, than he is in the Market, or in the street, and otherwise in the Congregation, at Public prayer, then at private prayer in our Chamber; so weacknowledge, that he is otherwise present at the Sacrament, then at any other act of Divine Service. That which Christ's Example left indifferent, the Authority of that Church, in which God hath given thee thy station, may make necessary to thee; Though not absolutely necessary, and Ratione medii, that none can be saved that do not kneel at the Sacrament, therefore because they do not kneel, yet necessary Ratione praecepti, as it is enjoined by lawful authority, and to resist lawful authority, is a disobedience, that may endanger any man's salvation. Now from this Sermon, 2. Part. which gave us our Text, we pass to the Text, which must give us our Sermon, the particular Branches of the Text itself, which we proposed at first, for our second part. And there, our first is, Qui sint, who they be, that are brought into consideration, Mundi cord, those that are pure of heart; first pure, and then, pure of heart. In the purest times of the Primitive Church, there crept in false opinions of purity; we find two sorts of Puritans then; The Catharists, and the Cathari; the Catharists were purifying Puritans, and the Cathari were purified Puritans: The first thought no creatures pure for man's use, till they were sanctified by them; and thereupon they induced certain charms, and forms of Purification, too detestable to be named amongst Christians. And then the Cathari, the purified Puritans thought no men pure but themselves, and themselves so pure, as that they left out that petition out of the Lords prayer, Dimitte nobis, forgive us our trespasses, for they thought they had trespassed in nothing. They have a third state of Puritans above these, in the Roman Church; where they say that a man come to such a state of purity in this life, as that he shall be abstracted, not only a passionibus, from all inordinateness of affections and passions, but a phantasmatibus, from apprehending any thing by those lazy degrees of the senses, and the fantasy, and discourse, and reading, and meditation, and conversation, but they shall come to such a familiarity with God, as that they shall know all by immediate Revelation; They mean, (and, indeed, some of them say) that a man come to that purity in this life, as that in this life, he shall be in possession of that very Beatifical vision, which is the state of glory in heaven; In which purity, they say also, that a man may not only be empty of all sin, but he may be too full of God's presence, over-fraighted with his grace, so fare, that (as they make Philip Nerius, the Founder of their last Order, their example) they shall be put to that exclamation, Recede à me Domine, O Lord depart farther from me, and withdraw some of this grace, which thou pourest upon me. And then besides these three imaginary and illusory purities, The Catharists that think no things pure, The Cathari that think no men pure but themselves, and the Super-cathari, in the Roman Church, that think these men as pure, as the Saints, who are in possession of the sight of God in heaven, there is a true purity, which will not serve our turns, which is a partial purity, that pureness, that cleanness, that innocency, to which David so often refers himself, in his religious and humble expostulations with God, judge me, and deal with me, according to my righteousness, and mine innocency, and cleanness of heart, and hands, says David; that is, as I am innocent, and guiltless, in that particular, which Saul imputes to me, and persecutes me for. For, this pureness, which is this mark of the Saints of God, is not partial, but universal; it is not a figleaf, that covers one spot of nakedness, but an entire garment, a cleanness in all our actions. We say sometimes, and not altogether improperly, that a man walks clean, if in a foul way, he contract but a few spots of dirt; but yet this is not an absolute cleanness. A house is not clean, except Cobwebs be swept down; A man is not clean, except he remove the lightest and slightest occasions of provocation. It is the speech of the greatest to the greatest, of Christ to the Church, Capite vulpeculas, Take us the little Foxes, for they devour the Vine. It is not a cropping, a pilling, a retarding of the growth of the Vine that is threatened, but a devouring, though but from little Foxes. It is not so desperate a state, to have thy soul attempted by that Lion, that seeks whom he may devour, (for then, in great and apparent sins, thou wilt be occasioned to call upon the Lion of the tribe of Juda, to thine assistance) as it is to have thy soul eaten up by vermin, by the custom and habit of small sins. God punished the Egyptians with little things, with Hailstones, and Frogs, and Grasshoppers; and Pharaohs Conjurers, that counterfeited all Moses greater works, failed in the least, in the making of louse. A man may stand a great tentation, and satisfy himself in that, and think he hath done enough in the way of spiritual valour, and then fall as irrecoverably under the custom of small. I were as good lie under a millstone, as under a hill of sand; for howsoever I might have blown away every grain of sand, if I had watched it, as it fell, yet when it is a hill, I cannot blow it, nor shove it away: and when I shall think to say to God, I have done no great sins, God shall not proceed with me, by weight, but by measure, nor ask how much, but how long I have sinned. And though I may have done thus much towards this purity, as that, for a good time, I have discontinued my sin, yet if my heart be still set upon the delight, and enjoying of that which was got by my former sins, though I be not that dog that returns to his vomit, yet I am still that Sow, that wallows in her mire; though I do not thrust my hands into new dirt, yet the old dirt is still baked upon my hands; though mine own do not defile me again, as job speaks, job. 2.22. (though I do not relapse to the practice of mine old sin) yet I have none of Ieremies Nitre, and Soap, none of jobs Snow-water, to wash me clean, except I come to Restitution. As long as the heart is set upon things sinfully got, thou sinnest over those year's sins, every day: thou art not come to the purity of this text, for it is pure, and pure in heart. But can any man come to that pureness? to have a heart pure from all foulness? Cord. job 14.4. Prov. 20. can a man be borne so? Who can bring a clean thing out of filthiness, is jobs unanswerable question? can any man make it clean, of himself? Who can say, I have made clean my heart? is Solomon's unanswerable question. Beloved, when such questions as these, are asked in the Scriptures, How can? who can do this? Sometimes they import an absolute impossibility, It cannot be done by any means; And sometimes they import but a difficulty, It can hardly be done, it can be done but some one way. When the Prophet says, Quid proderit sculptile? What good can an Idol, or an Idolatrous Religion do us? Habak. 2. It shall not help us in soul, in reputation, in preferment, it will deceive us every way, it is absolutely impossible, that an Idol, or an Idolatrous Religion should do us any good. But then when David says, Domine quis habitabit, Lord who shall ascend to thy Tabernacle, Psal. 15.2. and dwell in thy holy hill? David does not mean that there is no possibility of ascending thither, or dwelling there, though it be hard clambering thither, & hard holding there; And therefore when the Prophet says, Quis sapiens, & intelliget haec, Hos. 14.8. Who is so wise as to find out this way, he places this cleanness, which we inquire after, in Wisdom. What is Wisdom? we may content ourselves, with that old definition of Wisdom, that it is Rerum humanarum, & divinarum scientia; The Wisdom that accomplishes this cleanness, is the knowledge, the right valuation of this world, and of the next; To be able to compare the joys of heaven, and the pleasures of this world, and the gain of the one, with the loss of the other, this is the way to this cleanness of the heart; because that heart that considers, and examines, what it takes in, will take in no foul, no infectious thing. 1 Thes. 4.7. God hath not called us to uncleanness, but to holiness, says the Apostle. If we be in the ways of uncleanness, God hath not called us thither: We may slip into them, by the infirmity of our nature; or we may run into them by a custom of sin; we may be drawn into them, by the inordinateness of our affections; or we may be driven into them, by fear of losing the favour of those great Persons, upon whom we depend, and so accompany, or assist them in their sins. So we may slip, and run, and be drawn, and be driven, but we are not called, not called by God, into any sin; not called by any Decree of God; not by any profession or calling; not by any complexion, or constitution, to a necessity of committing any sin; All sin is from ourselves: But if we be in the ways of holiness, it is God that called us thither, we have not brought ourselves. God calls us by his Ordinance, and Ministry in the Church; But when God hath called us thither, we may see, what he expects from us, by that which the Apostle says, 2 Cor. 7.1. Let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness; that is, let us employ that faculty, that is in ourselves, let us be appliable and supple, easy and ductile, in those ways, to which God hath called us. Since God, by breeding us in the Christian Church, and in the knowledge of his word, by putting that balance into our hand, to try heavenly, and earthly things, by which we may distinguish Lepram à non lepra, what is a leprous and sinful, what is an indifferent, and clean action, let us be content to put the ware, and the weights into the balance, that is, to bring all objects, and all actions to a consideration, and to an examination, by that trial, before we set our hearts upon them: for God leaves no man, with whom he hath proceeded so far, as to breed him in the Christian Church, without a power to do that, to discern his own actions, if he do not wink. Upon those word, Gen. 26.18. Isaac digged the Wells of water, which they had digged in the days of Abraham, Homil. 13. in Gen. and the Philistims had stopped, Origen extends this power far, though not very confidently; Fortè in uniuscuiusque nostrûm anima, says he; perchance in every one of our souls, there is this Well of the water of Life, and this power to open it: whether origen's Nostrûm, our soul, be intended by him of us, as we are men, or of us, as we are Christians, I pronounce not; but divide it; In all us, as we are natural men, there is this Well of water of Life, Abraham digged it at first, The Father of the faithful our heavenly Abraham, infused it into us all at first in Adam, from whom, as we have the Image of God, though defaced, so we have this Well of water though stopped up; But then the Philistims having stopped this well, (Satan by sin having barred it up) the power of opening it again is not in the natural man; but Isaac digs them again, Isaac who is Filius laetitiae, the Son of Joy, our Isaac, our Jesus, he opens them again, to all that receive him according to his Ordinance in his Church, he hath given this power, of keeping open in themselves, this Well of Life, these means of Salvation: Peccata tua alios inducunt colores, says Origen in the same place; Thy sins cover the Image of God with other Images, Images of Beauty, of Honour, of Pleasure, so that sometimes thou dost not discern the Image of God, in thy soul, but yet there it is: sometimes thou fillest this Well with other waters, with tears of hypocrisy, to deceive, or tears of lamentation for worldly crosses, but yet such a Well, such a power to assist thine own salvation, there is in thee: Mulier drachmam invenit, non extrinsecus, sed in doom; The Woman who had lost her piece of silver, found it not without doors, but within; It was In domo mundata, when her house was made clean, but it was within the house, and within her own house. Make clean thy house, by the assistances, which Christ affords thee in his Church, and thou shalt never fail finding of that within thee, which shall save thee: Not that it grows in thee naturally, or that thou canst produce it of thyself, but that God hath bound himself by his holy Covenant, to perfect his work, in every man, that works with him. So then in repenting of former sins, in breaking off the practice of those sins, in restoring whatsoever was gotten by those sins, in precluding all relapses, by a diligent survey and examination of particular actions, this is this cleanness, this purity of heart, which constitutes our first branch of this part; And the second is the Purchase, what we get by it, which is Blessedness, Blessed are the pure in heart. In this, Beatue. we make two steps, Blessedness, and the present possession of this Blessedness. Now, to this purpose, it is a good Rule that S. Bernard gives, and a good way that he goes: Cui quaeque res sapiunt prout sunt, is sapiens est, says he: He that tastes, and apprehends all things in their proper and natural taste, he that takes all things aright as they are, Is sapiens est, nothing distastes him, nothing altars him, he is wise. If he take the riches of this world to be in their nature, indifferent, neither good, nor bad in themselves, but to receive their denomination in their use, If he take long life to be naturally an effect of a good constitution, and temperament of the body, and a good husbanding of that temper by temperance, If he take sickness to be a declination and disorder thereof, and so other calamities to be the declination of their power, or their favour, in whose protection he trusted, than he takes all these things, prout sunt, as they are, in their right taste, and Is sapiens est, he that takes things so, is morally wise. But thus far, S. Bernard does but tell us, Quis sapiens, who is wise; but then, Cui ipsa sapientia sapit, prout est, is beatus, He that tastes this Wisdom itself aright, he only is Blessed. Now to taste this moral Wisdom aright, to make the right use of that, is to direct all that knowledge upon heavenly things. To understand the wretchedness of this world, is to be wise, but to make this wisdom apprehend a happiness in the next world, that is to be blessed. If I can digest the want of Riches, the want of Health, the want of Reputation, out of this consideration, that good men want these, as well as bad, this is moral Wisdom, and a natural man may be as wise, herein, as I. But if I can make this Wisdom carry me to a higher contemplation, That God hath cast these wants upon me, to draw me the more easily to him, and to see, that in all likelihood, my disposition being considered, more wealth, more health, more preferment would have retarded me, and slackened my pace in his service, than this Wisdom, that is, this use of this moral Wisdom, hath made me blessed; and to this Blessedness, a natural man cannot come. This Blessedness then, is Congeries bonorum, A concurrence, a confluence, an accumulation of all that is Good; And he that is Mundus cord, pure of heart, safe in a rectified conscience, hath that. Not that every thing, that hath Aliquam rationem boni, any tincture, or name of Good in it, (as Riches, and Health, and Honour) must necessarily fall upon every man, that is, good, and pure of heart; (for, for the most part, such men want these more than any other men.) But because even those things, which have in them, Aliquam rationem mali, some tincture, and name of ill, (as sickness of body, or vexation of spirit) shall be good to them, because they shall advance them in their way to God; therefore are they blessed, as Blessedness is Congeries bonorum, the accumulation of all that is good, because nothing can put on the nature of ill, to them. And though Blessedness seem to be but an expectative, a reversion reserved to the next life, yet so blessed are they in this testimony of a rectified conscience, which is this purity of heart, as that they have this blessedness in a present possession, Blessed are the pure in heart; they are now, they are already Blessed. The farthest that any of the Philosophers went in the discovery of Blessedness, Nunc. was but to come to that, Nemo ante obitum, to pronounce that no man could be called Blessed before his death; not that they had found what kind of better Blessedness they went to after their death, but that still till death they were sure, every man was subject to new miseries, and interruptions of any thing which they could have called Blessedness. The Christian Philosophy goes farther; It shows us a perfecter Blessedness than they conceived for the next life, and it imparts that Blessedness to this life also: The pure in heart are blessed already, not only comparatively, that they are in a better way of Blessedness, than others are, but actually in a present possession of it: for this world and the next world, are not, to the pure in heart, two houses, but two rooms, a Gallery to pass through, and a Lodging to rest in, in the same House, which are both under one roof, Christ Jesus; The Militant and the Triumphant, are not two Churches, but this the Porch, and that the Chancel of the same Church, which are under one Head, Christ Jesus; so the Joy, and the sense of Salvation, which the pure in heart have here, is not a joy severed from the Joy of Heaven, but a Joy that gins in us here, and continueth, and accompanies us thither, and there flows on, and dilates itself to an infinite expansion, (so, as if you should touch one corn of powder in a train, and that train should carry fire into a whole City, from the beginning it was one and the same fire) though the fullness of the glory thereof be reserved to that which is expressed in the last branch, Videbunt Deum, They shall see God; for, as S. Bernard notes, when the Church is highliest extolled for her Beauty, yet it is but Pulcherrima inter mulieres, The fairest amongst women, that is, says he, Inter animas terrenas, non autem inter Angelicas beatitudines, She is not compared with her own state in Heaven, she shall have a better state in that State, than she hath here; So when john Baptists Office is highliest extolled, that he is called The greatest Prophet, it is but Inter natos mulierum, Amongst the sons of women, he is not compared with the Son of God. So this Blessedness appropriated to the pure in heart, gives a present assurance of future joy, and a present inchoation of that now, though the plenary consummation thereof be respited, till we see God. And first videbunt & non contremiscent; Videbunt Deum. This is a Blessedness, they shall see God, and be glad to see him; see him in Judgement, and be able to stand in Judgement in his sight; They shall see him, and never trouble the hills to fall upon them, nor call the mountains to cover them; upon them he shall not steal as a thief in the night, but because he hath used to stand at their door, and knock, and enter, they shall look for his coming, and be glad of it. First they come to a true valuation of this world, in S. Paul's Omnia stercora, Phil. 3.8. I count all things but Dung, but loss, for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ jesus my Lord; When they have found the true value of worldly things, they will come to something worth the getting, they will come to S. Paul's way of Gain, Mors lucrum, that to die is gain and advantage: Phil. 1.21. When they know that, they will conceive a religious covetousness of that, and so come to S. Paul's Cupio dissolvi, to desire to be dissolved, and to be with Christ: When they have entertained that Desire, they will declare it, make a petition, a suit for it, with a Veni Domine jesu, Come Lord jesus, come quickly; and they shall have a holy and modest, but yet an infallible assurance of this answer to their petition; Venite benedicti, Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the foundations of the world; Mat. 26.34. So Videbunt & non contremiscent, by this acquainting themselves, and accustoming themselves to his presence, in all their actions, and meditations in this life, they shall see him, and be glad to see him, even in Judgement, in the next. But the seeing of God principally intended in this place, is that Visio beatifica, to see God so, as that that very seeing makes the seer Blessed, They are Blessed therefore, because they see him; And that is videre Essentiam, to see the very Essence and nature of God. For, that we shall see God in his Essence, is evident enough by that place of the Apostle, 1 John 3.2. Now we are the Sons of God, (that is, now by this purity of heart, and testimony of a rectified conscience, we are so) And it doth not yet appear what we shall be, (that is, there are degrees of glory reserved for us, that yet do not appear to our understanding, we cannot conceive them) But we know, that when he shall appear, we shall be like him, (that is, receive incorruption and glory in our bodies, as he hath done) And then the reason given there, of that, is, For we shall see him, sicuti est, as he is, in his Essence; All our Beatification, and Glorification in our bodies consists in this, that we shall see him sicuti est, 1 Cor. 13.12. as he is, in his Essence. Then says S. Paul, I shall know, even as I am known, Essentially. But whether then, in the resurrection, and glorification of the body, God in his Essence be to be seen with those eyes which the body shall then have, is yet, and hath been long a question. The Scripture goes no farther, then to S. john's Sicuti est, I shall see him as he is, and to S. Paul's Cognoscam, I shall know him as I am known; but with what eyes I shall see him, (without any perplexing curiosities) we will look a little into the Fathers, and into the School, and conclude so, as may best advance our edification. For the Fathers, it may be sufficient to insist upon S. Augustine; not because he is always to be preferred before all, but because in this point, he hath best collected all that were before him, and is best followed of all that come after. S. Augustine had written against a Bishop who was of the Sect of the Anthropomorphits, whose Heresy was that God had a Body; and in opposition of him, S. Augustine had said, Istius corporis oculos nec videre Deum, nec visuros, That God was so far from having a Body, that our bodily eyes, howsoever glorified, should never see God. In that Treatise S. Augustine had been very bitter against that Bishop, and being warned of it, in another Epistle to another Bishop, Fortunatianus, he reputes, and retracts his bitterness, but his opinion, his doctrine, That our bodily eyes should never see God, S. Augustine never retracted. He professes ingenuously, Long tolerabilius corpori arrogare, quàm Deo derogare, That he could be more easily brought to attribute so much too much to the body of man, as to say that with these bodily eyes he should see God, then to derogate so much from God, as to say that he had a body that might be seen; but because he saw that one might follow on the other, he denied both, and did no more believe that man's eyes should see God, then that God had a body to be seen. And this negative opinion of his, S. Augustine builds upon S. Ambrose, and upon S. Hierome too, who seem to deny that the Angels themselves see the Essence of God; and upon Athanasius, who, against the Arrians opinion, That God the Father only was invisible, but the Son, (who was not equal to the Father) and the Holy Ghost, (who was not equal to the Son) might be seen, argues and maintains, that the whole Trinity is equal in itself, and equally invisible to us. So doth he also assist himself with that of Nazianzen, Quando Deus visus, salva sua invisibilitate visus, howsoever God be said to have been seen, it is said in some such sense, as that even then when he was seen, he was invisible. He might have added Chrysostom's testimony too, Ipsum quod Deus est, nec Angeli viderunt, nec Archangeli; Neither Angel nor Archangel did ever see that Nature, which is the very Essence of God: And he might have added Areopagita too, who expresses it with equal elegancy and vehemency, Dei nec sententia est, nec ratio, nec opinio, nec sensus, nec phantasia: If we bring the very Nature and Essence of God into question, we can give no judgement upon it, (non sententia) we can make no probable discourse of it, (non ratio) we can frame no likely opinion, or conjecture in it, (non opinio) we cannot prepare ourselves with any thing which hath fallen under our senses, (non sensus) nor with any thing which we can bring studiously, or which can fall casually into our fancy, or imagination, (non phantasia.) And upon the whole matter, and all the evidence, he joins in this verdict with S. Hierome, Tunc cernitur, cum invisibilis creditur; God is best seen by us, when we confess that he cannot be seen of us. S. Augustine denies not, That our eyes shall be spiritual eyes, but in what proportion spiritual, or to what particular use spiritual, he will not pretend to know: Vtrum in simplicitatem spiritus cedat, it a ut totus homo jam sit spiritus, whether the body of man shall be so attenuated and rarified, as that the whole man shall become spirit, Aut animam adjuvet corpus ad videndum, whether the body shall contribute and assist the faculties of the soul, as in this life it doth, Fateor me non alicubi legisse, quod existimarem sufficere, ad docendum, aut ad discendum, says that blessed and sober Father, I confess I never read any thing that I thought sufficient to rectify mine own judgement, much less to change another's: But to all those places of Scripture, which are to this purpose, That the Angels see the face of God, and that we shall be like the Angels, and see God face to face, he answers well, Fancies Dei ea est, qua Deus innotescit nobis, That is the face of God to us all, by which God is known and manifested to us; in which sense, Reason is the face of God to the natural man, the Law to the Jew, and the Gospel to us; and such a sight of God, doth no more put such a power of seeing in our bodily eyes, than it puts a face upon God: We shall see God face to face, and yet God shall have no face to be seen, nor we bodily eyes to see him by: For, Non legi, That, I have not read, says he; This, says he, I have read, Regi incorruptibili, & invisibili, Unto the King eternal, immortal, invisible, etc. Neither dare I, says S. Augustine, 1 Tim. 1.17. sever those things which the Spirit of God hath joined, dicam incorruptibilem quidem in saecula saeculorum, invisibilem autem in hoc saeculo, I dare not say that God is immortal in this world, and in the next world too, but invisible in this world only, and visible in the next, for the Holy Ghost hath pronounced him invisible, as far as immortal. Si rogas, says he, if you press me, Cannot God then be seen? Yes, I confess he can. If you ask me, how? Cum vult, & sicuti vult, He may be seen when he will, and how he will. If you pursue it, can he not be seen in his Essence? yes, he can; If you proceed farther, and ask me how again? I can say no more, says he, than Christ says, Erimus sicut Angeli, we shall be like the Angels, and we shall see God, so as the Angels do, but they see him not with bodily eyes, nor as an object, which is that that S. Ambrose, and S. Hicrome, and S. chrysostom intent, when they deny that the Angels see the Essence of God, that is, they see him not otherwise then by understanding him. All agree in this resolution, Solus Deus videt cor, & solum cor videt Deum, Only God can see the heart of man and only the heart of man can see God: For, in this world, our bodily eyes do not see bodies, they see but colours and dimensions, they see not bodies; much less shall our eyes, though spiritual, see spirits in heaven; least of all, that Spirit, in comparison of of whom, Angels, and our spirits are but gross bodies. So far the Fathers lead us towards a determination herein; and thus far the School; Nulla visio naturalis in terris; Here, in this life, neither the eyes, nor the mind of the most subtle, and most sanctified man can see the Essence of God: Nulla visio corporalis in coelis, The bodily eyes of no man, in the highest stare of glorification in heaven, can see the Essence of God: Nulla visio comprehensiva omnino, That faculty of man, which shall see the Essence of God in heaven, yet shall not comprehend that Essence; for to comprehend, is not to know a thing, as well as I can know it, but to know it as well as that thing can be known; and so only God himself can see, and know, that is, comprehend God. To end all, in the whole body of the Scriptures we have no light, that our bodily eyes shall be so enlightened in the Resurrection, Job 19.26. as to see the Essence of God; For, when job says, In carne mea, In my flesh I shall see God, and Oculi mei videbunt, Mine eyes shall see God, (if these words must necessarily be understood of the last Resurrection, which some Expositors deny, and Calvin in particular, understands them of a particular resurrection from that calamity which lay upon job at that time, and of his confidence that God would raise him again, even in this life) yet howsoever, and to which resurrection soever you refer them, the words must be understood thus, In my flesh, that is, when my soul shall reassume this flesh in the Resurrection, In that flesh I shall see God; he doth not say, That flesh shall, but He, in that flesh, shall. So when he adds Oculi mei, Mine eyes shall do it, he intends Oculos internos, of which the Apostle speaks, The eyes of your understanding being enlightened. Ephes. 1.18. So then, a faculty to see him so, in his Essence, with bodily eyes, we find not in Scripture; But yet in the Scriptures we do find, that we shall see him so, Sicuti est, As he is, in his Essence; How? It is a safe answer which S. Augustine gives in all such questions, Meliùs affirmamus, de quibus minimè dubitamus, Only those things are safely affirmed, and resolved, which admit no doubt: This hath never admitted any doubt, but that our soul, and her faculties shall be so exalted in that state of glory, as that in those internal faculties of the soul, so exalted, we shall see the very Essence of God, which no measure of the light of grace, communicated to any, the most fanctified man here, doth effect, but only the light of glory there shall. And therefore this being clear, that in the faculties of our souls we shall see him, Restat ut de illa visione secundum interiorem hominem certissimi simus, says that blessed and sober Father, As our reason is satisfied that the Saints in heaven shall see God so, so let our consciences be satisfied, that we have an interest in that state, and that we in particular shall come to that sight of God; Et cor mundum ad illam visionem praeparemus, Let us not abuse ourselves with false assurances, nor rest in any other, than this, that we have made clean, and pure our very hearts, for only such shall see God. Omnis meridies diluculum habuit, (as the same Father continues this Meditation) The brightest non had a faint twilight, and break of day; The sight of God which we shall have in heaven, must have a Diluculum, a break of day here; If we will see his face there, we must see it in some beams here: And to that purpose, Visus per omnes sensus recurrit, (as S. Augustine hath collected out of several places of Scripture) Every sense is called sight, for there is Odora & vide, and Gusta & vide, Taste and See how sweet, and Smell and See what a savour of life the Lord is; Apoc. 1.12. Luke 24.39. So S. john turned about, To see a voice, There Hearing was Sight; And so our Saviour Christ says, Palpate & videte, and there Feeling is Seeing. All things concur to this Seeing, and therefore in all the works of your senses, and in all your other faculties, See ye the Lord; Hear him in his word, and so see him; Speak to him in your prayers, and so see him; Touch him in his Sacrament, and so see him; Present holy and religious actions unto him, and so see him. David's heart was towards Absalon, 2 Sam. 14. says that Story: joab saw that, and, as every man will be forward to further persons growing in favour, (for so it should be done to him, whom the King will honour) joah plotted and effected Absalon's return, but yet Absalon saw not the King's face in two years. Beloved in Christ Jesus, the heart of your gracious God is set upon you; and we his servants have told you so, and brought you thus near him, into his Court, into his house, into the Church, but yet we cannot get you to see his face, to come to that tenderness of conscience, as to remember and consider, that all your most secret actions are done in his sight and his presence; Caesar's face, and Caesar's inscription you can see; The face of the Prince in his coin you can rise before the Sun to see, and sit up till midnight to see; but if you do not see the face of God upon every piece of that money too, all that money is counterfeit; If Christ have not brought that fish to the hook, Mat. 17.25. that brings the money in the mouth, (as he did to Peter) that money is ill fished for; If nourishing of suits, and love of contention amongst others, for your own gain have brought it, 〈◊〉 12.14. 〈◊〉 24.3. it is out of the way of that counsel, Fellow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see God. This is the generation of them that seek him, that seek thy face, O jacob; Innocens manibus, & mundus cord, either such an innocence, as never fouled the hands, or such an innocency as hath washed them clean again, such an innocency as hath kept you from corrupt getting, or such an innocency as hath restored us, by restoring that, which was corruptly got. It is testified of Solomon, 1 King. 10.24. That he exceeded all the Kings of the Earth, for Wisdom, and for Riches, and all the Earth sought the face of Solomon; A greater than Solomon is here, for Wisdom, and Riches; your wisdom is foolishness, and your riches beggary, if you see not the face of this Solomon; If either you have studied, or practised, or judged, when his back is towards you, that is, if you have not done all, as in his presence. You are in his presence now; go not out of it, when you go from hence. Amor rerum terrenarum, viscus pennarum spiritualium; August. God hath given you the wings of Doves, and the eyes of Eagles to see him now, in this place; If in returning from this place, you return to your former ways of pleasure or profit, this is a breaking of those Doves wings, and a ceiling of those eagle's eyes. Coge cor tuum cogitare divina, compelle, urge, says that Father; Here, in the Church, thou canst not choose but see God, and raise thy heart towards him: But when thou art returned to thy several distractions, that vanities shall pull thine eyes, and obtrectation, and libellous defamation of others shall pull thine ears, and profit shall pull thy hands, then Coge, compelle, urge. force and compel thy heart, and press, even in that thrust of tentations, to see God. What God is in his Essence, or what our sight of the Essence of God shall be in the next world, dispute not too curiously, determine nor too peremptorily; Cogitans de Deo, si finivisti, Deus non est, is excellently said by S. Augustine: If thou begin to think, what the Essence of God is, and canst bring that thought to an end, thou hast mistaken it; whensoever thou canst say, Deus est, this is God, or God is this, non est Deus, that is not God, God is not that, for he is more, infinitely more than that. But, non potes dicere, Deus est, thou art not able to say, This is God, God is this; Saltem dicas, hoc Deus non est; Be able to say, This is not God, God is not this: The belly is not God; Mammon is not God; Mauzzim, the God of Forces, Oppression, is not God; Belphegor, Licentiousness, is not God: Howsoever God sees me, to my confusion, yet I do not see God, when I am sacrificing to these, which are not Gods. Let us begin at that which is nearest us, within us, pureness of heart, and from thence receive the testimony of God's Privy Seal, the impression of his Spirit, that we are Blessed; and that leads us to the Great Seal, the full fruition of all; we shall see God, there, where he shall make us drink of the Rivers of his pleasures; There is fullness, plenty; Psal. 36.8. but lest it should be a Feast of one day, or of a few, as it is said, they are rivers, so it is added, with thee is the Fountain of life; An abundant river, to convey, and a perpetual spring, to feed, and continue that river: And then, wherein appears all this? In this, for in thy light we shall see light; In seeing God, we shall see all that concerns us, and see it always; No night to determine that day, no cloud to overcast it. We end all, with S. Augustine's devout exclamation, Deus bone, qui erunt illi oculi! Glorious God, what kind of eyes shall they be! Quam decori! quam sereni! How bright eyes, and how well set! Quam valentes! quam constantes! How strong eyes, and how durable! Quid arbitremur? quid aestimemus? quid loquemur? What quality, what value, what name shall we give to those eyes? Occurrunt verba quotidiana & sordidata vilissimis rebus; I would say something of the beauty and glory of these eyes, and can find no words, but such, as I myself have misused in lower things. Our best expressing of it, is to express a desire to come to it, for there only we shall learn what to call it. That so, we may go the Apostles way, to his end, That being made free from sin, Rom. 6.22 and become servants to God, we may have our fruit unto holiness, and then, the End, life everlasting. SERMONS Preached in LENT. SERMON XIII. Preached in Lent, To the KING. April 20. 1630. JOB 16. v. 17, 18, 19 Not for any injustice in my hands: Also my prayer is pure. O earth cover not thou my blood; and let my cry have no place. Also now behold, my Witness is in heaven, and my Record is on high. Jobs friends (as, in civility we are feign to call them, because they came upon a civil pretence, to visit him, and to comfort him) had now done speaking. It was long before they would have done. Andivi frequenter talia, says job to them, v. 2. I have often heard such things as you say, they are not new to me; and therefore, Onerosi consolatores, Miserable comforters, troublesome comforters are ye all, old and new. But, Numquid finem habebunt verba ventosa, says he, Shall your windy words, your empty, your eyrie, v. 3. your frothy words have any end? Now they have an end. Eliphas ends his charge in the last, and in this Chapter job gins to answer for himself. But how? By a middle way. job does not justify himself; but yet he does not prevaricate, he does not betray his Innocence neither. For there may be a pusillanimity even towards God; A man may over-clog his own conscience, and belie himself in his confessions, out of a distempered jealousy, and suspicion of God's purposes upon him; job does not so. Many men have troubled themselves more, how the soul comes into man, then how it goes out; They wrangle, whether it comes in by Infusion from God, or by Propagation from parents, and never consider, whether it shall return to Him that made it, or to him that marred it, to Him that gave it, or to him that corrupted it. So, many of our Expositors upon this Book of job, have spent themselves upon the Person, and the Place, and the Time, who job was, when job was, where job was, and whether there were ever any such person as job, or no; and have passed over too slightly the senses, and doctrines of the Book. S. Gregory hath, (to good use) given us many Morals, (as he calls them) upon this Book, but, truly, not many Literals, for, for the most part, he bends all the sufferings of job figuratively, mystically upon Christ. Origen, who (except S. Gregory) hath written most of this Book; and yet gone but a little way into the book neither, doth never pretend much literalnesse in his expositions, so that we are not to look for that at origen's hands. We must not therefore refuse the assistance of later men, in the exposition of this Text, Not for any Injustice in my hands, etc. In this Chapter, and before this text, we have jobs Anatomy, jobs Sceleton, the ruins to which he was reduced. In the eighth verse he takes knowledge, That God had filled him with leanness and wrinkles, and that those wrinkles, and that leanness were witnesses against him, and, That they that hated him, had torn him in pieces, in the ninth verse. In the eleventh verse, That God had delivered him over to the ungodly, and, That God himself had shaked him in pieces, and set him up as a mark to shoot at, in the twelfe verse, That God had cleft his reins, and poured out his gall upon the ground, in the thirteenth verse, and in the fourteenth, That he broke him, breach after breach, and run over him as a Giant, and at last, in the sixteenth verse, That foulness was upon his face, and the shadow of death upon his eyelids. Now, let me ask in jobs behalf God's question to Ezekiel, Putasnè vivent ossaista? Dost thou belceve that these bones can live? Ezek. 37.2. Can this Anatomy, this Sceleton, these ruins, this rubbish of job speak? It can, it does in this Text, Not for any Injustice in my hands, etc. And, in these words, it delivers us, first, The confidence of a godly man; Do God what he will, say ye what ye will, That because I am more afflicted then other men, therefore I am guilty of more heinous sins then other men, yet I know, that whatsoever Gods end be in this proceeding, It is not for any Injustice in my hands, Also my prayer is pure. Secondly, it delivers us that kind of infirm anguish, and indignation, that halfedistemper, that expostulation with God, which sometimes comes to an excess even in good and godly men, O earth cover not thou my blood, and let my cry have no place; I desire not that any thing should be concealed or disguised, let all that ever I have done be written in my forehead, and read by all men. And then thirdly and lastly, it delivers us the foundation of his confidence, and the recovery from this his infirmity, and from his excess in the manner of expressing it, if he have been overbold therein, My Witness is in heaven, and my Record is on high; God is his Witness, that that which they charge him with, is false, That that which he says in his own discharge (in that sense that he says it) is true; And in these three, jobs Protestation, Not guilty, jobs Manifest, I would all the world knew all, jobs Establishment, and consolidation, My Witness is in Heaven; in these three branches, and in some fruits, which, in passing, we shall gather from them, we shall determine all that appertains to these words. I remember S. Gregory, 1. Part. in handling one text, professes, that he will endeavour to handle it so, ejus altitudo non sic fieret nescientibus cognita, ut esset scientibus onerosa; So, as that the weakest understanding might comprehend the highest points, and the highest understanding not be weary to hear ordinary doctrines so delivered. Indeed it is a good art, to deliver deep points in a holy plainness, and plain points in a holy delightfulness: for, many times, one part of our auditory understands us not, when we have done, and so they are weary; and another part understands us before we begun, and so they are weary. To day, my humble petition must be, That you will be content to hear plain things plainly delivered. Of which, be this the first, That job found himself under the oppression, and calumny of that misinterpretation, that Kings themselves, and States, and Churches have not escaped. The tower of Siloe fell and slew them, Luk. 13.4. therefore they were the greater sinners in Jerusalem; this man prospers not in the world, Therefore he proceeds not in the fear of God; the heir wastes the estate, therefore the estate was ill gotten, are hasty conclusions in private affairs. Treasures are empty, therefore there are unnecessary wastes; Discontented persons murmur, therefore things are ill carried; our neighbours prosper by Action, therefore we perish by not appearing, are hasty conclusions in State affairs. This man is affected when he hears a blasphemous oath; and when he looks upon the general liberty of sinning; therefore he is a Puritan; That man loves the ancient forms, and Doctrines, and Disciplines of the Church, and retains, and delights in the reverend names of Priest, and Altar, and Sacrifice, therefore he is a Papist, are hasty conclusions in Church affairs. When we do fall under these misinterpretations, and ill applications of God's proceed, V 4. we may say with job, I also could speak, as you do; if your soul were in my soul's stead, I could heap up words against you, and shake my head at you, conclude desperately, speak scornfully of you. But I will not; yet I will not betray myself, I will make my protestation, what end soever God propose to himself in this his proceeding, It is not for any injustice in my hands, Also my prayer is pure. In these two, Manus. cleanness of hands, pureness of Prayer, are all religious duties comprehended: for clean hands denote justice and righteousness towards men, and pure prayer Devotion, and the service and worship of God. job protests for both. Therefore does Origen say of job, Certè puto, quod & audeo dicere, I do verily believe, and therefore may be bold to say, that for constancy and fidelity towards God, job did exceed, Non solum homines, sed & ipsos Angelos, Not only men, but Angels themselves; for, says Origen, job did not only suffer Absque culpa, without being guilty of those things to which his afflictions were imputed, but he suffered Cum gratiarum actionibus, he said grace when he had no meat, when God gave him Stones for Bread, and Scorpions for Fish; he praised God as much for the affliction itself, as for his former, or his subsequent benefits and blessings. Not that job was merely innocent, but that he was guilty of no such things, as might confer those conclusions, which, from his afflictions, his enemies raised. Job 9.20. If I justify myself, says job, Mine own mouth shall condemn me; Every self-justification is a self-condemnation; when I give judgement for myself, I am therein a witness against myself. If I say I am perfect, says he in the same place, even that proves me perverse; If I say I never go out of the way, I am out then, and therefore because I say so: I have sinned, says he, What shall I do unto thee O thou preserver of men? Job 7.2. job felt the hand of destruction upon him, and he felt the hand of preservation too; and it was all one hand; This is God's Method, and his alone, to preserve by destroying. Men of this world do sometimes repair, and recompense those men whom they have oppressed before, but this is an after recompense; God's first intention even when he destroys is to preserve, as a Physicians first intention, in the most distasteful physic, is health; even God's demolitions are superedifications, his Anatomies, his dissections are so many re-compactings, so many resurrections; God winds us off the Skein, that he may wove us up into the whole piece, and he cuts us out of the whole piece into pieces, that he may make us up into a whole garment. But for all these humiliations, and confessions, job doth not wave his protestation; Job. 27.6. My righteousness I hold fast, and my heart shall not reproach me as long as I live. Not that I shall never sin, but never leave any sin unrepented; And then, my heart cannot reproach me of a repent sin, without reproaching God himself. The Sun must not set upon my anger; Ephes. 4.24. much less will I let the Sun set upon the anger of God towards me, or sleep in an unrepeted sin. Every night's sleep is a Nunc dimittis; then the Lord lets his servant departed in peace. Thy lying down is a valediction, a parting, a taking leave, (shall I say so?) a shaking hands with God; and, when thou shakest hands with God, let those hands be clean. Enter into thy grave, thy metaphorical, thy quotidian grave, thy bed, as thou entredstinto the Church at first, by Water, by Baptism; Re-baptise thyself every night, in jobs Snow water, in holy tears that may cool the inordinate lusts of thy heart, Job 9.30. and withhold unclean abuses of those hands even in that thy grave, thy Bed; And evermore remember jobs fear and jealouste in that place, That when he had washed himself in Snow water, Abominabuntur me vestimenta mea, Mine own clothes will make me foul again. Thy flesh is thy clothes; and to this mischievous purpose of fouling thy hands with thine own clothes, thou hast most clothes on when thou art naked; Then, in that nakedness, thou art in most danger of fouling thy hands with thine own clothes. Miserable man! that couldst have no use of hands, nor any other organ of sense, if there were no other creature but thyself, & yet, if there were no other creature but thyself, couldst sin upon thyself, and foul thy hands with thine own hands. How much more then, if thou strike with those hands, by oppression in thy office, or shut up those hands, and that which is due to another, in them? Sleep with clean hands, either kept clean all day, by integrity; or washed clean, at night, by repentance; and whensoever thou wakest, though all jobs messengers thunder about thee, and all jobs friends multiply misinterpretations against thee, yet jobs protestation shall be thy protestation, what end soever God have in this proceeding, It is not for any injustice in my hands, and the other part of his protestation too, Also my prayer is pure. As clean hands denote all righteousness towards man, Oratio. so do pure prayers all devotion, and worship, and service of God. For, we are of the household of the faithful, and the service which we are to do, as his household servants, is prayer; for, his house is the house of prayer. And therein only is it possible to us, to fulfil that Commandment, pray continually, that continually, in all our familiar actions, we may serve God, glorify God, (whether we eat or drink, we may do it to his glory) and every glorifying, every thanksgiving, is prayer; there cannot be a more effectual prayer for future, than a thankful acknowledgement of former benefits. Petitc, & dabitur; How often is that repeated in the Gospel, and in the Epistles? Ask, and it shall be given ye; no grant without prayer, no denial upon prayer. It must be prayer, and my prayer; Also my prayer is pure. Oratio mea. I must not rely upon the prayers of others; not of Angels; Though they be Ministerial spirits, and not only to God himself, but between God and Man, and so, as they present our prayers, no doubt pour out their own for us too, yet we must not rely upon the prayers of Angels. Nor of Saints; Though they have a more personal, and experimental sense of our miseries then Angels have, we must not rely upon the prayers of Saints. No, nor upon the prayers of the Congregation, though we see, and hear them pray, except we make ourselves parts of the Congregation, by true devotion, as well as by personal presence. It must be mine own prayer, and no prayer is so truly, or so properly mine, as that that the Church hath delivered and recommended to me. In sudden and unpremeditate prayer, I am not always I; and when I am not myself, my prayer is not my prayer. Passions and affections sometimes, sometimes bodily infirmities, and sometimes a vain desire of being eloquent in prayer, aliens me, withdraws me from myself, and then that prayer is not my prayer. Though that prayer which Luther is said to have said upon his deathbed, Oremus pro Domine Deo nostro jesu Christo, Let us pray for our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, may admit a good sense, because Christ being (as S. Augustine says often) Caput & Corpus, both the Head and the Body, as he is the Body, the Church, subject to so many pressures, he had need to be prayed for; yet, his state being considered at that time, almost at the last gasp, he being scarce he, that prayer can scarce be called his prayer. In that African Council, in which S. Augustine was present, to remedy the abuse of various forms of Prayers, which divers Churches assumed, it was decreed that no prayers should be received in the Church, but such as were composed, or approved by the Council. We have proceeded so too; No prayers received for public use, but those that are delivered by public authority; and so, they become My prayers. As the Law of the Land is my Law, and I have an inheritance in it, so the prayers of the Church are my prayers, and I have an interest in them, because I am a Son of that family. My Baptism is mine, and my Absolution is mine, because the Church hath given them to me, and so are her prayers mine. You would scarce thank a man for an extemporal Elegy, or Epigram, or Panegyrique in your praise, if it cost the Poet, or the Orator no pains. God will scarce hearken to sudden, inconsidered, irreverent prayers. Men will study even for Compliments; and Princes and Ambassadors will not speak to one another, without thinking what they will say. Let not us put God to speak to us so, (Preaching is Gods speaking to us) Let not us speak to God so, (Praying is our speaking to God) not extemporally, unadvisedly, inconsiderately. Prayer must be my prayer; and Quid habeo quod non accepi? Even in this kind, what have I that I have not received? I have received my prayer altogether, as a bundle of Myrrh, in that prayer which I have received from my Saviour, and then I have received it appropriated to me, and apportioned to my particular necessities, and sacrifices, by the piety and wisdom of the Church; so it is my prayer, and, as jobs prayer was, pure prayer, Also my prayer is pure. The Holy Ghost hath so marshaled and disposed the qualifications of Prayer in this place, Pura. as that there is no pure prayer without clean hands. The lifting up of hands was the gesture of prayer, even among the heathen, Manibus supplex or are supinis. Amongst the Jews, Prayer, and the lifting up of hands, was one and the same thing, Let the lifting up of my hands be an evening Sacrifice; Psal. 141.2. Exed. 17.11. And, longer than Moses hands were lifted up, his prayer had no effect. All this, perchance therefore especially, that this lifting up of my hands, brings them into my sight; then I can see them, and see whether they be clean, or no, and consider, that if I see impurity in my hands, God sees impurity in my Prayer. Can I think to receive ease from God with that hand that oppresses another? Mercy from God with that hand that exercises cruelty upon another? Or Bounty from God with that hand that withholds right from another? Prayer is our hand, but it must be a clean hand, pure prayer. That Emperor whom no religion would lose, Constantine, (for, the heathen deified him, and the Christians canonised him, They made him a god, and we came as near as we could, we made him a Saint) that Emperor was coined Praying. Other Emperors were coined Triumphing, in Chariots, or preparing for Triumphs, in Battles, and Victories, but he, Constantine, in that posture, Kneeling, Praying. He knew his coin would pass through every family; and to every family he desired to be an example of piety; Every piece of single money was a Catechism, and testified to every Subject all this, surely he will graciously receive my Petition, and look graciously upon me, when I kneel, for, behold he knelt to, and he exhibits petitions to that God, from whom he acknowledges, that he needs as much as I can from him. And yet this Symbolical, and catechistical coin of Constantine's, was not so convincing, nor so irrefragable a testimony of his piety, (for Constantine might be coined praying, and yet never pray) as when we see as great a Prince as he, actually, really, personally, daily, duly at prayer with us. To end this branch, let not thy prayer be lucrative, nor vindicative, pray not for temporal superfluities, pray not for the confusion of them that differ from thee in opinion, or in manners, but condition thy prayer, inanimate thy prayer with the glory of God, and thine own everlasting happiness, and the edification of others, and this prayer is jobs prayer, pure prayer. And farther we enlarge not his Protestation, My hands are clean, I do no man wrong; my prayer is pure, I mock not God. But because continuing under so great afflictions, men would not believe this, he proceeds, perchance to some excess, and inconsiderateness, in desiring a manifestation of all his actions, O Earth, cover not thou my blood, and let my cry have no place. Difference of Expositions makes us stop here, upon this inquisition, in what affection job spoke this. Whether this were merely an adjuration of the earth, 2 Part. not to cover his blood, but that his miseries, and the cry thereof might pass, and be transferred over all the world; or whether it had the nature of an imprecation upon himself, That he wished, or admitted against himself, that which is against the nature of every man to admit, that is, to have all that ever he had done, published, declared, manifested to all the world. S. Gregory, according to his manner, through all this book, which is, to apply all jobs sufferings to Christ, and to make job some kind of type of Christ, makes no more of this, but that it is an adjuration of the earth, in the person and behalf of Christ, not to suck in, or smother his blood, but that it might be notified, and communicated to all the world. And truly, this is a good use, but it cannot be said to be a good sense of the place, because it cannot consist with the rest of the words. Amongst our later men, Cajetan, (and he, from a Rabbi of the Jews, Aben Ezra) takes this to be an adjuration of the Earth, as Gregory does, but not, as Gregory does, in the person of Christ, but of job himself; That job adjures the earth, not to cover his blood, that is, not to cover the shedding of his blood, not to conspire with the malice of his enemies so much, as to deny him burial when he was dead, that they which trod him down alive, might not triumph over him after his death, or conclude that God did certainly forsake him alive, since he continued these declarations against him, when he was dead. And this also may have good use, but yet it is too narrow, and too shallow, to be the sense of this phrase, this elegancy, this vehemency of the Holy Ghost, in the mouth of job. S. chrysostom, I think, was the first that gave light to the sense of this place. He says, that such men, as are (as they think) over-punished, have naturally a desire, that the world knew their faults; that so, by comparing their faults with their punishments, there might arise some pity and commiseration of their state. And, surely, this, that chrysostom says, is true, and natural; for, if two men were to be executed together, by one kind of death, the one for stealing a Sheep, (perchance in hunger) the other for killing his Father, certainly, he that had but stolen the Sheep, would be sorry the world should think their cases alike, or that he had killed a Father too. And in such an affection job says, I am so far from being guilty of those things that are imputed to me, that I would be content, that all that ever I have done, were known to all the world. This light, which S. Chrysost. gave to this place, shined not out, (I think) till the Reformation; for, I have not observed any Author, between chrysostom and the Reformation, that hath taken knowledge of this interpretation; nor any of the Reformation, as from him, from chrysostom. But, since our Authors of the Reformation, have somewhat generally pursued that sense, (Calvin hath done so, and so Tremellius, and so Piscator, and many, many more) now, one Author of the Roman Church, (one as curious and diligent in interpreting obscure places of Scripture, as any amongst them, and then more bold and confident in departing from their vulgar, and frivolous, and impertinent interpretations of Scriptures, than any amongst them) the Capuchin Bolduc, hath also pursued that sense. That sense is, that in this adjuration, or imprecation, O Earth cover not thou my blood; Blood is not literally bodily blood, but spiritual blood, the blood of the soul, exhausted by many, and heinous sins, such as they insimulated job of. For, in this signification, is that word, Blood, often taken in the Scriptures. When God says, when you stretch forth your hands, Esay 1.15. Psal. 51.14. they are full of blood, there blood is all manner of rapine, of oppression, of concussion, of violence. When David prays to be delivered from blood-guiltiness, it is not intended only, of an actual shedding of blood, for, it is in the Original, à sanguinibus, in the plural; other crimes than the actual shedding of blood, are bloody crimes. Ezech 7.23. Therefore, says one Prophet, the land is full of bloody crimes; And, another, blood toucheth blood, Hosea 4.2. whom the Chalde Paraprase expresses aright, Aggregant peccata peccatis, blood toucheth blood, when sin induces sin. Which place of Hosea, S. Gregory interprets too, then blood touches blood, cum ante oculos Dei, adjunctis peccatis cruentatur anima; Then God sees a soul in her blood, when she wounds and wounds herself again, with variation of divers, or iteration of the same sins. This then being thus established, that blood in this Text, is the blood of the soul, exhausted by sin, (for every sin is an incision of the soul, a Lancination, a Phlebotomy, a letting of the soul blood, and then, a delight in sin, is a going with open veins into a warm bath, and bleeding to death) This will be the force of jobs Admiration, or Imprecation, O Earth cover not thou my blood, I am content to stand as naked now, as I shall do at the day of Judgement, when all men shall see all men's actions, I desire no disguise, I deny, I excuse, I extenuate nothing that ever I did, I would mine enemies knew my worst, that they might study some other reason of Gods thus proceeding with me, than those heinous sins, which, from these afflictions, they will necessarily conclude against me. But had job been able to have stood out this trial? Was job so innocent, as that he need not care, though all the world knew all? Perchance there may have been some excess, some inordinateness in his manner of his expressing it; we cannot excuse the vehemence of some holy men, in such expressions. We cannot say, that there was no excess in Moses his Deal me, Pardon this people, or blot my name out of thy book; or that there was no excess in S. Paul's Anathema pro fratribus, That he wished to be accursed, to be separated from Christ for his brethren. But for job, we shall not need this excuse; for, either we may restrain his words to those sins, which they imputed to him, and then they have but the nature of that protestation, which David made so often to God, judge me, O Lord, according to my righteousness, according to mine innocency, according to the cleanness of my hands; which was not spoken by David simply, but respectively, not of all his sins, but of those which Saul pursued him for: Or, if we enlarge jobs words generally to all his sins, we must consider them to be spoken after his repentance, and reconciliation to God thereupon; If they knew, (may job have said) how it stood between God and my soul, how earnestly I have repent, how fully he hath forgiven, they would never say, these afflictions proceeded from those sins. And truly, so may I, so may every soul say, that is rectified, refreshed, restored, reestablished by the seals of God's pardon, and his mercy, so the world would take knowledge of the consequences of my sins, as well as of the sins themselves, and read my leaves on both sides, and hear the second part of my story, as well as the first; so the world would look upon my temporal calamities, the bodily sicknesses, and the penuriousness of my fortune contracted by my sins, and upon my spiritual calamities, dejections of spirit, sadness of heart, declinations towards a diffidence and distrust in the mercy of God, and then, when the world sees me in this agony and bloody sweat, in this agony and bloody sweat would also see the Angels of heaven ministering comforts unto me; so they would consider me in my Peccavi, and God in his Transtulit, Me in my earnest Confessions, God in his powerful Absolutions, Me drawn out of one Sea of blood, the blood of mine own soul, and cast into another Sea, the bottomless Sea of the blood of Christ Jesus; so they would know as well what God hath done for my soul, as what my soul and body have done against my God; so they would read me throughout, and look upon me altogether, I would join with job, in his confident adjuration, O Earth cover not thou my blood; Let all the world know all the sins of my youth, and of mine age too, and I would not doubt, but God should receive more glory, and the world more benefit, then if I had never sinned. This is that that exalts jobs confidence, he was guilty of nothing, that is, no such thing as they concluded upon, of nothing absolutely, because he had repent all. And from this, his confidence rises to a higher pitch than this, Nec clamour, O Earth cover not thou my blood, and let my cry have no place. What means job in this? Doubtful Expositors make us doubt too. Some have said, Clamour. that job desires his cry might have no place, that is, no termination, no resting place, but that his just complaint might be heard over all the world; Stunnica the Augustinian interprets it so. Some have said, that he intends by his cry, his crying sins, that they might have no place, that is, no hiding place, but that his greatest sins, and secret sins might be brought to light; Bolduc the Capuchin interprets it so; according to that use of the word Clamour, God looked for righteousness, & ecce clamorem, behold a cry; that is, Esay 5.7. sins crying in the ears of God. But there is more than so, in this phrase, in this elegancy, in this vehemency of the Holy Ghost in jobs mouth, Let my cry have no place. In the former part, (jobs Protestation) he considered God and man; righteousness towards man in clean hands, and, in pure prayers, devotion towards God. In this part, (his Manifest) he pursues the same method, he considers man, and God; Though men knew all my sins, that should not trouble me, says he, (and that we have considered) yea, though my cry find no place, no place with God, that should not trouble me; I should be content that God should seem not to hear my prayers, but that he laid me open to that ill interpretation of wicked men, Tush, he prays, but the Lord hears him not, he cries, but God relieves him not. And yet, when wilt thou relieve me, O thou reliever of men, if not upon my cries, upon my prayers? Yet, S. Augustine hath repeated that, more than once, more than twice, Non est magnum exaudiri ad voluntatem, non est magnum; Be not overjoyed when God grants thee thy prayer. Exauditi ad voluntatem Daemons, says that Father, The Devil had his prayer granted, when he had leave to enter into the Herd of Swine; And so he had (says he, exemplifying in our present example) when he obtained power from God against job. But all this aggravated the Devil's punishment; so may it do thine, to have some prayers granted. And, as that must not overjoy thee, if it be, so if thy prayer be not granted, it must not deject thee. God suffered S. Paul to pray, and pray and pray, yet, after his thrice praying, granted him not that he prayed for. God suffered that si possibile, if it be possiblle, and that Transeat calix, Let this Cup pass, to pass from Christ himself, yet he granted it not. But, in many of these cases, a man does easilier satisfy his own mind, than other men. If God grant me not my prayer, I recover quickly, and I lay hold upon the horns of that Altar, and ride safely at that Anchor, God saw that that which I prayed for, was not so good for him, nor so good for me. But when the world shall come to say, Where is now your Religion, where is your Reformation? do not all other Rivers, as well as the Tiber, or the Poe, does not the Seine, and the Rhine, and the Maene too, begin to ebb back, and to empty itself in the Sea of Rome? why should not your Thames do so, as well as these other Rivers? Where is now your Religion, your Reformation? Were not you as good run in the same channel as others do? This is a shrewd tentation, and induces opprobrious conclusions from malicious enemies, when our cries have no place, our religious service no present acceptation, our prayers no speedy return from God. But yet because even in this, God may propose farther glory to himself, more benefit to me, and more edification even to them, at last, who, at first, made ill constructions of his proceed, I admit, as job admits, O Earth cover not thou my blood, (let all the world see all my faults) and let my cry have no place, (let them imagine that God hath forsaken me, and does not hear my prayers;) my satisfaction, my acquiescence arises not out of their opinion, and interpretation, that must not be my trial, but testis in coelis, My witness is in heaven, and my record is on high, which is our third, and last Consideration. We must do in this last, as we have done in our former two parts, crack a shell, 3 Part. to taste the kernel, clear the words, to gain the Doctrine. I am ever willing to assist that observation, That the books of Scripture are the eloquentest books in the world, that every word in them hath his weight and value, his taste and verdure. And therefore must not blame those Translators, nor those Expositors, who have, with a particular elegancy, varied the words in this last clause of the Text, my witness, and my record. The oldest Latin Translation received this variation, and the last Latin, even Tremellius himself, (as close as he sticks to the Hebrew) retains this variation, Testis, and Conscius. And that collection, which hath been made upon this variation, is not without use, that conscius may be spoken de interno, that God will bear witness to my inward conscience; and testis, de externo, that God will, in his time, testify to the world in my behalf. But other places of Scripture will more advance that observation of the elegancy thereof, than this; for in this, the two words signify but one and the same thing, it is but witness, and witness, and no more. Not that it is easy to find in Hebrew (nor, perchance, in any language) two words so absolutely Synonymous, as to signify the same thing, without any difference, but that the two words in our Text are not both of one language, not both Hebrew. For, the first word, Gned, is an Hebrew word, but the other, Sahad, is Syriaque; and both signify alike, Levit. 5.1. and equally, testem, a witness. He that hears the voice of swearing, and is a witness, says Moses, in the first word of our Text; and then the Chalde Paraphrase, intending the same thing, expresses it in the other word, Sahad. So in the contract between Laban and Jacob, Gen. 31.47. Laban calls that heap of stones, which he had erected, jegar-sehadutha, by an extraction from the last word of our Text, Sahad; Jacob calls it, by the first word: And the reason is given in the body of the Text itself, in the vulgat Edition, (though how it got thither, we know not, for, in the Original it is not) Vterque juxta proprietatem lingua suae; Laban spoke in his language, Syriaque, Jacob spoke in his, Hebrew, and both called that heap of stones, a witness. Now, our bestowing this little time upon the clearing of the words, hath saved us much more time; for, by this means we have shortened this clause of our Text, and all that we are to consider, is but this, My witness is in heaven. And truly, that is enough; I care not though all the world knew all my faults, I care not what they conclude of Gods not granting my prayers, my witness is in heaven. To be condemned unjustly amongst men, to be ill interpreted in the acts of my Religion, is a heavy case; but yet, I have a relief in all this, my witness is in heaven. The first comfort is, Quia in Coelis. Quia in Coelis, because he, whom I rely upon, is in heaven. For, that is the foundation and Basis upon which our Saviour erects that prayer, which he hath recommended unto us, Qui es in coelis, Our Father, which art in heaven; when I lay hold upon him there, in heaven, I pursue cheerfully and confidently all the other petitions, for daily bread, for forgiveness of sins, for deliverance from tentations; from, and for all. Psal. 〈◊〉 Acts. 〈◊〉 Est in coelis, he is in heaven, and then Sedet in coelis, be sits in heaven; That as I see him in that posture that Stephen saw him, standing at the right hand of the Father, and so, in procinctu, in a readiness, in a willingness to come to my succour, so I might contemplate him in a judiciary posture, in a potestative, a sovereign posture, sitting, and consider him as able, as willing to relieve me. He is in heaven, and he sits in heaven, and then habitat in coelis, he dwells in heaven, Psal. 113.5. he is, and he is always there. Baal's Priests could not always find him at home; jobs God, and our God is never abroad. He dwells in the heavens, and, (as it is expressed there) In excelsis, he dwells on high; so high, that, (as it is there added) God humbles himself, to behold the things that are in heaven. With what amazedness must we consider the humiliation of God, in descending to the earth, lower than so, to hell, when even his descending unto heaven, is a humiliation? God humbles himself, when he beholds any thing lower than himself, though Cherubins, though Seraphins, though the humane nature, the body of his own, and only eternal Son; and yet he beholds, considers, studies us, worms of the earth, and no men. This then is jobs, Testis. and our first comfort, Quia in coelis, because he is in heaven, and sits in heaven, and dwells in heaven, in the highest heaven, and so, sees all things. But then, if God see, and say nothing, David apprehends that for a most dangerous condition; and therefore he says, Psal. 28.1. Psal. 1ST. 1. Be not silent, O Lord, lest if thou be silent, I perish. And again, Hold not thy peace, O God of my praise, for the mouth of the wicked is opened against me: And, Lord, let thy mercy be as forward as their malice. And therefore, as God, from that height, sees all, (and the strictest examination that we put upon any Witness, is, that if he pretend to testify any thing upon his knowledge, we ask, how he came by that knowledge, and if he be oculatus testis, a Witness that saw it, this is good evidence) as God is to this purpose, all eye, and sees all, so for our farther comfort, he descends to the office of being a Witness, There is a Witness in heaven. But then, Testis meus. God may be a Witness, and yet not my Witness, and in that, there is small comfort, 〈◊〉 29.22. if God be a Witness on my adversaries side, a Witness against me. Even I know, and am a Witness, saith the Lord; that is, a Witness of the sins, which I know by thee. Job 10.27. And that is that which job, with so much tenderness apprehended, Thou renewest thy witnesses against me; Thou sentest a witness against me, in the Sabaeans, upon my servants; and then, thou renewedst that witness in the Caldaeans upon my cattles; and then, thou renewedst that, in thy storms and tempests, upon my children. All this while God was a Witness, but not his witness, but a witness on his adversaries side. Now, if our own heart, our own conscience condemn us, this is shrewd evidence, says S. john; 1 john 3.20 for mine own conscience, single, is a thousand witnesses against me. But then, (says the Apostle there) God is greater than the heart; for, (says he) he knows all things; He knows circumstances of sin, as well as substance; and, that, we seldom know, seldom take knowledge of. If then mine own heart be a thousand, God, that is greater, is ten thousand witnesses, if he witness against me. But if he be my Witness, a Witness for me, as he always multiplies in his ways of mercy, he is thousands of thousands, millions of millions of witnesses in my behalf, for there is no condemation, no possible condemnation, Rom. 8.1. to them that are in him; not, if every grain of dust upon the earth were an Achitophel, and gave counsel against me, not if every sand upon the shore were a Rabshakeh, and railed against me, not if every atom in the air were a Satan, an Adversary, an Accuser, not if every drop in the Sea, were an Abaddon, an Apollyon, a Destroyer, there could be no condemuation, if he be my Witness. If he be my Witness, he proceeds thus in my behalf, his Spirit bears witness with my spirit, for mine inward assurance, that I stand established in his favour, and, either by an actual deliverance, or by some such declaration, as shall preserve me from fainting, if I be not actually delivered, he gives a farther testimony in my behalf. For, he is in Heaven, and he sits in Heaven, and he dwells in Heaven, in the highest Heaven, and sees all, and is a Witness, and my Witness; there is the largeness of our comfort. But will all this come home to jobs end and purpose; Iude●. That he need not care though all men knew all his faults, he need not care though God passed over his prayers, because God is his Witness; what declarations soever he had in himself, would the world believe, that God testified in his behalf, when they saw his calamities multiplied upon him, and his prayers neglected? If they will not, herein lies his, and our final comfort, That he that is my Witness, is in the highest Heaven, there is no person above him, and therefore He that is my Witness, is my Judge too. I shall not be tried by an arbitrary Court, where it may be wisdom enough, to follow a wise leader, and think as he thinks. I shall not be tried by a Jury, that had rather I suffered, than they fasted, rather I lost my life, than they lost a meal. Nor tried by Peers, where Honour shall be the Bible. But I shall be tried by the King himself, than which no man can propose a Nobler trial, and that King shall be the King of Kings too; for, He, V 5. who in the first of the Revelation, is called The faithful Witness, is, in the same place, called The Prince of the Kings of the earth; and, as he is there produced as a Witness, so, Acts 10 42. john 5.22. He is ordained to be the judge of the quick and the dedd, and so, All judgement is committed to him. He that is my Witness, is my Judge, and the same person is my Jesus, my Saviour, my Redeemer; He that hath taken my nature, He that hath given me his blood. So that he is my Witness, in his own cause, and my Judge, but of his own Title, and will, in me, preserve himself; He will not let that nature, that he hath invested, perish, nor that treasure, which he hath poured out for me, his blood, be ineffectual. My Witness is in Heaven, my Judge is in Heaven; my Redeemer is in Heaven, and in them, who are but One, I have not only a constant hope, that I shall be there too, but an evident assurance, that I am there already, in his Person. Go then in this peace, That you always study to preserve this testification of the Spirit of God, by outward evidences of Sanctification. You are naturally composed of four Elements, and three of those four are evident, and unquestioned; The fourth Element, the element of Fire, is a more litigious element, more problematical, more disputable. Every good man, every true Christian, in his Metaphysics, (for, in a regenerate man, all is Metaphysical, supernatural) hath four Elements also; and three of those four are declared in this text. First, a good Name, the good opinion of good men, for honest dealing in the world, and religious discharge of duties towards God, That there be no injustice in our hands, Also that our prayer be pure. A second Element is a good conscience in myself, That either a holy wariness before, or a holy repentance after, settle me so in God, as that I care not though all the world knew all my faults. And a third element is, my Hope in God, that my Witness which is in Heaven, will testify for me, as a witness in my behalf, here, or acquit me, as a merciful Judge, hereafter. Now, there may be a fourth Element, an Infallibility of final perseverance, grounded upon the eternal knowledge of God; but this is, as the Element of fire, which may be, but is not, at least, is not so discernible, so demonstrable as the rest. And therefore, as men argue of the Element of fire, that whereas the other elements produce creatures in such abundance, The Earth such herds of Cattles, the Waters such shoals of Fish, the Air such flocks of Birds, it is no unreasonable thing, to stop upon this consideration, whether there should be an element of fire, more spacious, and comprehensive than all the rest, and yet produce no Creatures; so, if thy pretended Element of Infallibility produce no creatures, no good works, no holy actions, thou mayst justly doubt there is no such element in thee. In all doubts that arise in thee, still it will be a good rule, to choose that now, which thou wouldst choose upon thy deathbed. If a tentation to Beauty, to Riches, to Honour, be proposed to thee, upon such, and such conditions, consider whether thou wouldst accept that, upon those conditions, upon thy deathbed, when thou must part with them, in a few minutes. So, when thou doubtest, in what thou shouldst place thy assurance in God, think seriously, whether thou shalt not have more comfort then, upon thy deathbed, in being able to say, I have finished my course, I have fought a good fight, I have fulfilled the sufferings of Christ in my flesh, I have clothed him when he was naked, and fed him when he was poor, then in any other thing, that thou mayest conceive God to have done for thee; And do all the way, as thou wouldst do then; prove thy element of fire, by the creatures it produces, prove thine election by thy sanctification; for that is the right method, and shall deliver thee over, infallibly, to everlasting glory at last, Amen. SERMON XIV. Preached at , March 3. 1619. AMOS 5.18. Woe unto you, that desire the day of the Lord: what have ye to do with it? the day of the Lord is darkness and not light. FOr the presenting of the woes and judgements of God, denounced by the Prophets against Judah and Israel, and the extending and applying them to others, involved in the same sins as Judah and Israel were, Solomon seems to have given us somewhat a clear direction; Prov. 9.8. Reprove not a scorner lest he hate thee, Rebuke a wise man and he will love thee. But how if the wiseman and this scorner be all in one man, all one person? If the wiseman of this world be come to take S. Paul so literally at his word, as to think scornfully that preaching is indeed but the foolishness of preaching, and that as the Church is within the State, so preaching is a part of State government, flexible to the present occasions of time, appliable to the present dispositions of men; This fell upon this Prophet in this prophecy, Amos 7.10. Amasias the Priest of Bethel informed the King that Amos meddled with matters of State, and that the Land was not able to bear his words, and to Amos himself he says, Eat thy bread in someother place, but prophecy here no more, for this is the King's Chapel, Amos 23. and the King's Court; Amos replies, I was no Prophet nor the son of a Prophet, but in an other course, and the Lord took me and said unto me, Go and Prophecy to my People. Though we find no Amasiah no misinterpreting Priest here, (we are fare from that, because we are far from having a jeroboam to our King as he had, easy to give ear, easy to give credit to false informations) yet every man that comes with God's Message hither, brings a little Amasiah of his own, in his own bosom, a little wisperer in his own heart, that tells him, This is the King's Chapel, and it is the King's Court, and these woes and judgements, and the denouncers and proclaimers of them are not so acceptable here. But we must have our own Amos, aswell as our Amasias, this answer to this suggestion, I was no Prophet, and the Lord took me and bade me prophecy. What shall I do? And besides, since the woe in this Text is not S. john's woe? his iterated, his multiplied woe, Vae, vae, vae habitantibus terram, Apoc. 8.13. a woe of desolation upon the whole world (for God loves this world, as the work of his own hands, as the subject of his providence, as the Scene of his glory, as the Garden-plot that is watered by the Blood of his Son:) Since the Woe in this Text is not Esaies' woe, Vae genti peccatrici, Esay 1.4. an increpation and commination upon our whole Nation (for God hath not come so near to any Nation, and dealt so well with any Nation as with ours:) Since the Woe in this Text is not Ezekiels Woe, Ezek. 24●. Vae Civitati sanguinum, an imputation of injustice or oppression, and consequently of a malediction laid upon the whole City (for God hath carried his woes upon other Cities, Vae Chorasin, vae Bethsaida; God hath laid his heavy hand of war and other calamities upon other Cities, that this City might see herself and her calamities long before in that glass, and so avoid them:) Since the Woe in this Text, is not the Prophets other woe, Ezek. 44.6. Ios. 24.15. Vae domui, not a woe upon any family (for when any man in his family comes to Ioshua's protestation, Ego & domus mea, As for me and my house we will serve the Lord, the Lord comes to his protestation, In mille generationes, Esay 28.1. I will show mercy to thee and thy house for a thousand generations:) Since the Woe in this Text, is not Esaies' woe again, Vae Coronae, (for, the same Prophet tells us of what affection they are, that they are Idolaters, persons inclined to an idolatrous and superstitious Religion, and fret themselves, Esay 8. 2●. and curse the King and their God; we know that the Prophets Vae Coronae in that place is Vae Coronae superbiae, and the crown and height of Pride is in him, who hath set himself above all that is called God. Christian Princes know that if their Crowns were but so as they seem (all gold) they should be but so much the heavier for being all gold; but they are but Crowns of thorns gilded, specious cares, glorious troubles, and therefore no subject of pride:) To contract this, since the Woe in this Text, is no State woe, nor Church woe, for it is not ezechiel's Vae Pastoribus insipientibus, which cannot feed their flock, Ezek. 23.3. jer. 23.1. nor Ieremies Vae Pastoribus disperdentibus, Woe unto those lazy Shepherds, which do not feed their flock but suffer them to scatter: Snce the Woe in this Text is not a woe upon the whole World, nor upon the whole Nation, nor upon the whole City, nor upon any whole Family, nor upon any whole rank or calling of men, when I have asked with Solomon, Cui vae? to whom belongs this woe? I must answer with S. Paul, Vae mihi, Prov. 23.19. 1 Cor. 9.16. woe unto me if I do not tell them to whom it belongs. And therefore since in spiritual things especially charity gins with itself, I shall transfer this Vae from myself, by laying it upon them, whom your own conscience shall find it to belong unto; Vae desiderantibus diem Domini; Woe be unto them that desire the day of the Lord, etc. But yet if these words can be narrow in respect of persons, it is strange, for in respect of the sins that they are directed upon, they have a great compass; they reach from that high fin of Presumption, and contempt, and deriding the day of the Lord, the judgements of God, and they pass through the sin of Hypocrisy, when we make shift to make the world, and to make ourselves believe that we are in good case towards God, and would be glad that the day of the Lord, the day of judgement would come now; and then they come down to the deepest sin, the sin of Desperation, of an unnatural valuing of this life, when overwhelmed with the burden of other sins, or with God's punishment for them; men grow to a murmuring weariness of this life, and to an impatient desire, and perchance to a practice of their own ends: In the first acceptation, the day of the Lord is the day of his Judgements and afflictions in this life; In the second, the day of the Lord is the day of the general judgement; And in the third, the day of the Lord, is that Crepusculum that twilight between the two lives, or rather that Meridies noctis, as the Poet calls it, that noon of night, the hour of our death and transmigration out of this world. And if any desire any of these days of the Lord, out of any of these indispositions, out of presumption, out of hypocrisy, out of desperation, he falls within the compass of this Text, and from him we cannot take off this Vae desiderantibus. First then the Prophet directs himself most literally upon the first sin of Presumption. They were come to say, 1 Part. that in truth whatsoever the Prophet declaimed in the streets, there was no such thing as Dies Domini, any purpose in God to bring such heavy judgements upon them; to the Prophets themselves they were come to say, You yourselves live parched and macerated in a starved and penurious fortune, and therefore you cry out that all we must die of famine too, you yourselves have not a foot of land a 'mong all the Tribes, & therefore you cry out that all the Tribes must be carried into another Land in Captivity. That which you call the Day of the Lord is come upon you, beggary, and nakedness, and hunger, contempt, and affliction, and imprisonment is come upon you, and therefore you will needs extend this day upon the whole State, but desideramus, we would fain see any such thing come to pass, we would fain see God go about to do any such thing, as that the State should not be wise enough to prevent him. To see a Prophet neglected, because he will not flatter, to see him despised below, because he is neglected above, to see him injured, insulted upon, and really damnified, because he is despised, All this is dies mundi, and not dies Domini, it is the ordinary course of the world, and no extraordinary day of the Lord, but that there should be such a stupor and consternation of mind and conscience as you talk of, and that that should be so expressed in the countenance, Lam. 4.7. that they which had been purer than snow, whiter than milk, redder than Rubies, smother than Saphires, should not only be, as in other cases, pale with a sudden fear, but blacker in face then a coal, as the Prophet says there, that they should not be able to set a good face upon their miseries, nor disguise them with a confident countenance, that there should be such a consternation of countenance and conscience, and then such an excommunication of Church and State, as that the whole body of the children of Israel should be without King, Hos. 3.4. without Sacrifice, without Ephod, without Terafim, Desideramus, We would fain see such a time, we would fain see such a God as were so much too hard for us. They had seen such a God before, they had known that that God had formerly brought all the people upon the face of the earth so near to an annihilation, so near to a new creation, as to be but eight persons in the general flood, they had seen that God to have brought their own numerous, and multitudinous Nation, their 600000. men that came out of Egypt to that paucity, as that but two of them are recorded to enter into the land of promise, And could they doubt what that God could do, or would do upon them? Or as jeremy saith, Jer. 12. Can they belie the Lord, and say it is not he? neither shall evil come upon us, or shall we see sword and famine? God expressed his anger thrice upon this people, in their State, in their form of government, First he expressed it in giving them a King, for though that be the best form of government in itself, yet for that people at that time, God saw it not to be the fittest, and so it was extorted from him, and he gave them their King in anger. Secondly, he expressed his anger in giving them two Kings in the desection of the ten Tribes, and division of the two Kingdoms. Thirdly, he expressed his anger in leaving them without any King after this Captivity which was prophesied here. Now of those 6000. years, which are vulgarly esteemed to be the age and term of this world, 3000. were passed before the division of the Kingdom, and presently upon the division, they argued à divisibili ad corruptibile, whatsoever may be broken and divided may come to nothing. It is the devil's way to come to destruction by breaking of unions. There was a contract between God and job, because job loved and feared him, and there the devil attempts to draw away the head from the union, God from job, with that suggestion, Doth job serve thee for nothing? Dost thou get any thing by this union? or doth not job serve himself upon thee? There was a natural, an essential, an eternal union between the Father and the Son in the Trinity, and the devil sought to break that. If he could break the union in the Godhead, he saw not why he might not destroy the Godhead. The devil was Logician good enough, Omne divisibile corruptibile, whatsoever may be broken, may be annihilated. And the devil was Papist good enough, Schisma aequipollet haeresi, Whosoever is a Schismatic, departed from the obedience of the Roman Church, is easily brought within compass of heresy too, because it is a matter of faith to affirm a necessity of such an obedience. And therefore the devil attempts to make that Schism in the Trinity, with that, Si filius Deys, Make these stone's bread, If thou be'st the Son of God, cast thyself down from this Pinnacle, that is, do something of thyself, exceed thy commission, and never attend so punctually all thy directions from thy Father. In jobs case he would draw the head from the union; In Christ's case he would alienate the Son from the Father, because division is the fore runner (and alas, but a little way the forerunner) of destruction. And therefore assoon as that Kingdom was come to a division between ten and two Tribes, between a King of Judah, and a King of Israel, presently upon it, and in the compass of a very short time arose all those Prophets that prophesied of a destruction; assoon as they saw a division, they foresaw a destruction. And therefore when God had showed before what he could do, and declared by his Prophets then what he would do, Vae desiderantibus, Woe unto them that say, Esay 5.18. Let him make speed and hasten his work, that we may see it: That is, that are yet confident that no such thing shall fall upon us, and confident with a scorn, 2 Pet. 3.4. and fulfil that which the Apostle saith, There shall come in the latter day's scoffers, saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning at the Creation. But God shall answer their scorn with scorn, as in Ezekiel, Son of man, Ezek. 12.22. What is that Proverb which you have in the Land of Israel, saying, The days are prolonged, and every vision fails? That is, the Prophets talk of great calamities, but we are safe enough, Tell them (says the Lord) I will make their proverb to cease, I will speak and it shall come to pass; in your days, O rebellious house, will I say the word, and per-form it. And therefore ut quid vobis? what should you pretend to desire that day? what can ye get by that day? Because you have made a covenant with death, and are at an agreement with hell, when that Invadens flagellum, (as the Prophet with an elegant horror, if they can consist, expresses it) when that overflowing scourge shall pass through, shall it not come to you? Why? Esay 20.15. who are you? have you thought of it before hand, considered it, digested it, and resolved, that in the worst that can fall, your vocal constancy, and your humane valour shall sustain you from all dejection of spirit? what judgement of God soever shall fall upon you, whensoever this dies Domini shall break out upon you, you have light in yourselves, and by that light you shall see light, and pass through all incommodities. Be not deceived, this day of the Lord is darkness and not light, the first blast, the first breath of his indignation blows out thy candle, extinguishes all thy Wisdom, all thy Counsels, all thy Philosophical sentences, disorders thy Seneca, thy Plutarch, thy Tacitus, and all thy premeditations; for the sword of the Lord is a two-edged sword, it cuts bodily, and it cuts ghostly, it cuts temporally, and it cuts spiritually, it cuts off all worldly relief from others, and it cuts off all Christian patience, and good interpretation of God's correction in thine own heart. quid vobis? what can you get by that day? can you imagine that though you have been benighted under your own obduration and security before, yet when this day of the Lord, the day of affliction shall come, afflictio dabit intellectum, the day will bring light of itself, the affliction will give understanding, and it will be time enough to see the danger and the remedy both at once, and to turn to God by that light, which that affliction shall give? Be not deceived, dies Domini tenebrae, this day of the Lord will be darkness and not light. God hath made two great lights for man, the Sun, and the Moon; God doth manifest himself two ways to man, by prosperity, and adversity; but if there were no Sun, there would be no light in the Moon neither; If there be no sense of God in thy greatness, in thy abundance, it is a dark time to seek him in the clouds of affliction, and heaviness of heart. Experience teacheth us, that if we be reading any book in the evening, if the twilight surprise us, and it grows dark, yet we can read longer in that book which we were in before, then if we took a new book of another subject into our hands: If we have been accustomed to the contemplation of God in the Sunshine of prosperity, we shall see him better in the night of misery, then if we began but then, Vae desiderantibus. If you seem to desire that day of the Lord, because you do not believe that that day will come, or because you believe that when that day comes, it will be time enough to rectify yourselves, then, Vi quod vobis? this day shall be good for nothing to either of you, for to both you it shall be darkness, and not light. The days which God made for man were darkness, and then light, still the evening and the morning made up the day. The day which the Lord shall bring upon secure and carnal men, is darkness without light, judgements without any beams of mercy shine through them, such judgements, as if we will consider the vehemency of them, we shall find them expressed in such an extraordinary height, as scarce anywhere else in jercmy, Men shall ask one of another if they be in labour, whether they travel with child. jer. 3●. 7. Wherefore do I see every man with his hands on his loins, as a woman in travel? Alas, because that day is great, and none is like it. This is the unexpected and unconsidered strangeness of that day, if we consider the vehemency, and if we consider the suddenness, the speed of bringing that day upon secure man. That is intimated very sufficiently in another story of the same Prophet, that when he had said to the Prophet Hananiah, Jer 28.16. That he should die within a year, when God saith, his judgements shall come shortly, if then we consider the vehemency, or the nearness of the day of the Lord, the day of his visitation, we shall be glad to say with that Prophet, jer. 17.16. As for me I have not desired that woeful day thou knowest, that is, I have neither doubted but that there shall be such a day, nor I have not put off my repentance to that day, for what can that do good to either of those dispositions, when to them it shall be darkness, and not light? Now this Woe of this Prophet thus denounced against contemptuous scorners of the day of the Lord, 2 Part. as that day signifies afflictions in this life, have had no subject to work upon this congregation (as by God's grace there is none of that distemper here) it is a piece of a Sermon well lost; and God be blessed that it hath had no use, that no body needed it. But as the Woe is denounced in the second acceptation against Hypocrites, so it is a chain-shot, and in every congregation takes whole ranks, and here Dies Domini is the last day of Judgement, and the desire in the Text is not, as before, a denying that any such day should be, but it is an hypocritical pretence, that we have so well performed our duties, as that we should be glad if that day would come, and then the darkness of the Text is everlasting condemnation. For this day of the Lord then, the last day of judgement, consider only, or reflect only upon these three circumstances: First, there is Lex violata, a law given to thee and broken by thee. Secondly, there is Testis prolatus, Evidence produced against thee, and confessed by thee. And then there is Sententia lata, A judgement given against thee, and executed upon thee. For the Law first, when that Law is To love God with all thy power, not to scatter thy love upon any other creature, when the Law is not to do, not to covet any ill, wilt thou say this Law doth not concern me, because it is impossible in itself, for this coveting, this first concupiscence is not in a man's own power? Why, this Law was possible to man, when it was given to man, for it was naturally imprinted in the heart of man, when man was in his state of innocency, and then it was possible, and the impossibility that is grown into it since, is by man's own fault. Man by breaking the Law, hath made the Law impossible, and himself inexcusable; wilt thou say with that man in the Gospel, Omnia haec à juventute, I have kept all this Law from my youth? From thy youth? remember thy youth well, and what Law thou keptst then, and thou wilt find it to be another Law, Lex in membris, A Law of the flesh warring against the Law of the mind, nay thou wilt find that thou didst never maintain a war against that Law of the flesh, but wast glad that thou camest to the obedience of that Law so soon, and art sorry thou canst follow that Law no longer. This is the Law, and wilt thou put this to trial? Wilt thou say who can prove it? Who comes in to give evidence against me? All those whom thy solicitations have overcome, and who have overcome thy solicitations, good and bad, friends and enemies, Wives and Mistresses, persons most incompatible, and contrary, here shall join together, and be of the Jury. If S. Paul's case were so far thy case, as that thou wert in righteousness unblameable, no man, no woman able to testify against thee, yet when the records of all thoughts shall be laid open, and a retired and obscure man shall appear to have been as ambitious in his Cloister, as a pretending man at the Court, and a retired woman in her chamber, appear to be as licentious as a prostitute woman in the Stews, when the heart shall be laid open, and this laid open too, that some sins of the heart are the greatest sins of all (as Infidelity, the greatest sin of all, is rooted in the heart) and sin produced to action, is but a dilatation of that sin, and all dilatation is some degree of extenuation, (The body sometimes grows weary of acting some sin, but the heart never grows weary of contriving of sin.) When this shall be that Law, and this the Evidence, what can be the Sentence, but that, Itemaledicti, Go ye accursed into ever lasting fire? where it is not as in the form of our judgement here, You shall be carried to the place of execution, but Ite, Go, our own consciences shall be our executioners, and precipitate us into that condemnation. It is not a Captivity of Babylon for 70. years, (and yet 70. years is the time of man's life, and why might not so many year's punishment, expiate so many years sinful pleasure?) but it is 70. millions of millions of generations, for they shall live so long in hell, as God himself in heaven; It is not an imprisonment during the King's pleasure, but during the King's displeasure, whom nothing can please nor reconcile, after he shall have made up that account with his Son, and told him, These be all you died for, these be all you purchased, these be all whom I am bound to save for your sake, for the rest, their portion is everlasting destruction. Under this law, under this evidence, under this sentence, vae desiderantibus, woe to them that pretend to desire this day of the Lord, as though by their own outward righteousness, they could stand upright in this judgement. Woe to them that say, Let God come when he will, it shall go hard, but he shall find me at Church, I hear three or four Sermons a week; he shall find me in my Discipline and Mortification, I fast twice a week; he shall find me in my Stewardship and Dispensation, I give tithes of all that I possess. When Ezechias shown the Ambassadors of Babylon all his Treasure and his Armour, the malediction of the Prophet fell upon it, that all that Treasure and Armour which he had so gloriously showed, should be transported to them, to whom he had showed it, into Babylon. He that publishes his good works to the world, they are carried into the world, and that is his reward. Not that there is not a good use of letting our light shine before men too; for when S. Paul says, If I yet please men, Gal. 1.10. I should not be the servant of Christ; and when he saith, I do please all men in all things: S. Austin found no difficulty in reconciling those two; Navem quaero, says he, said & patriam, When I go to the Haven to hire a Ship, it is for the love I have to my Country; When I declare my faith by my works to men, it is for the love I bear to the glory of God; but if I desire the Lords day upon confidence in these works, vae scirpo, as job expresses it, woe unto me poor rush, Job 8.16. for (says he) the rush is green till the Sun come, that is, says Gregory upon that place, donec divina districtio in judicio candeat, till the fire of the judgement examine our works, they may have some verdure, some colour, but vae desiderantibus, woe unto them that put themselves unto that judgement for their works sake. For ut quid vobis? to what end is it for you? If your hypocritical security could hold out to the last, if you could delude the world at the last gasp, if those that stand about you then could be brought to say, he went away like a Lamb, alas the Lamb of God went not away so, the Lamb of God had his colluctations, disputations, expostulations, apprehensions of God's indignation upon him then: This security, call it by a worse name, stupidity, is not a lying down like a Lamb, but a lying down like Issachers' Ass between two burdens, for two greater burdens cannot be, than sin, and the senselessness of sin. quid vobis? what will ye do at that day, which shall be darkness and not light? God dwells in luce inaccessibili, 1 Tim. 6.16. in such light as no man by the light of nature can comprehend here, but when that light of grace which was shed upon thee here, should have brought thee at last to that inaccessible light, than thou must be cast in tenebras exteriores, Mat. 8.12. into darkness, and darkness without the Kingdom of heaven. And if the darkness of this world, which was but a darkness of our making, could not comprehend the light, when Christ in his person, brought the light and offered repentance, certainly in that outward darkness of the next world, the darkness which God hath made for punishment, they shall see nothing, neither intramittendo, nor extramittendo, neither by receiving offer of grace from heaven, nor in the disposition to pray for grace in hell. For as at our inanimation in our Mother's womb, our immortal soul when it comes, swallows up the other souls of vegetation, and of sense, which were in us before; so at this our regeneration in the next world, the light of glory shall swallow up the light of grace. To as many as shall be within, there will need no grace to supply defects, nor eschew dangers, because there we shall have neither defects nor dangers. There shall be no night, no need of candle, Apoc. 22.5. nor of Sun, for the Lord shall give them light, and they shall reign for ever and ever. There shall be no such light of grace, as shall work repentance to them that are in the light of glory; neither could they that are in outward darkness, comprehend the light of grace, if it could flow out upon them. First, you did the works of darkness, says the Apostle, Rom. 13.12. and then that custom, that practice brought you to love darkness better than light; and then as the Prince of darkness delights to transform himself into an Angel of light; john 3. so by your hypocrisy you pretend a light of grace, when you are darkness itself, and therefore, at quid vobis? what will you get by that day which is darkness and not light? Now as this Woe and commination of our Prophet had one aim, 3. Part. to beat down their scorn which derided the judgements of God in this world, and a second aim to beat down their confidence, that thought themselves of themselves able to stand in God's judgements in the next world; so it hath a third mark better than these two, it hath an aim upon them in whom a weariness of this life, when God's corrections are upon them, or some other mistaking of their own estate and case, works an overhasty and impatient desire of death, and in this sense and acceptation, the day of the Lord is the day of our death and transmigration out of this world, and the darkness is still everlasting darkness. Now for this we take our lesson in job, job. 7.1. Vita militia, man's life is a warfare; man might have lived at peace, Greg. he himself chose a rebellious war, and now quod volens expetiit nolens portat, that war which he willingly embarked himself in at first, though it be against his will now, he must go through with. In job we have our lesson, and in S. Paul we have our Law, Eph 63. Take ye the whole armour of God, that ye may be able having done all to stand; that is, that having overcome one temptation, you may stand in battle against the next, for it is not adoloscentia militia, but vita; that we should think to triumph if we had overcome the heat and intemperance of youth, but we must fight it out to our lives end. And then we have the reward of this lesson, and of this law limited, nemo coronatur, no man is crowned, except he fight according to this law that is, 2 Tim. 2.5. he persever to the end. And as we have our lesson in job, our rule and reward in the Apostle, who were both great Commanders in the warfare; Mat. 26.38. so we have our example in our great General, Christ Jesus, Who though his soul were heavy, and heavy unto death, though he had a baptism to be baptised with, & coarctabatur, he was straightened, and in pain till it were accomplished, and though he had power to lay down his soul, john 10.18. and take it up again, and no man else could take it from him, yet he sought it out to the last hour, and till his hour came, he would not prevent it, nor lay down his soul. Vae desiderantibus, woe unto them that desire any other end of God's correction, but what he hath ordained and appointed, for ut quid vobis? what shall you get by choosing your own ways? Tenebrae & non lux; They shall pass out of this world, in this inward darkness of melancholy, and dejection of spirit, into the outward darkness, which is an everlasting exclusion from the Father of lights, and from the Kingdom of joy; their case is well expressed in the next verse to our Text, they shall fly from a Lion, and a Bear shall meet them, they shall lean on a wall, and a Serpent shall by't them; they shall end this life by a miserable and hasty death, and out of that death shall grow an immortal life in torments, which no weariness, nor desire, nor practice can ever bring to an end. And here in this acceptation of these words, this vae falls directly upon them who colouring and apparelling treason in martyrdom, expose their lives to the danger of the Law, Scribanius. & embrace death; these of whom one of their own society saith, that the Scevolaes', the Caves, the Porciaes', the Cleopatra's of the old time, were nothing to the Jesuits, for saith he, they could die once, but they lacked courage ad multas mortes; perchance he means, that after those men were once in danger of the Law, and forfeited their lives by one coming, they could come again and again, as often as the plentiful mercy of their King would send them away, Rapiunt mortem spontanea irruptione, says he to their glory, they are voluntary and violent pursuers of their own death, and as he expresses it, Crederes morbo adesos, Baron. Martyr●●. 29. Decemb. you would think that the desire of death is a disease in them; A graver man than he mistakes their case and cause of death as much, you are (saith he, encouraging those of our Nation to the pursuit of death) in sacris septis ad martyrium saginati, fed up and fattened here for martyrdom, & Sacramento sanguinem spospondistis, they have taken an oath that they will be hanged, but that he in whom (as his great pattern God himself) mercy is above all his works, out of his abundant sweetness makes them perjured when they have so Tworne and vowed their own ruin. But those that send them, give not the lives of these men so freely, so cheaply as they pretend. But as in dry Pumps, men pour in a little water, that they may pump up more; so they are content to drop in a little blood of imaginary, but traitorous Martyrs, that, by that at last they may draw up at last the royal blood of Princes, and the loyal blood of Subjects; vae desiderantibus, woe to them that are made thus ambitious of their own ruin, ut quid vobis? Tenebrae & non lux, you are kept in darkness in this world, and sent into darkness from heaven into the next, and so your ambition, ad multas mortes, shall be satisfied, you die more than one death, morte moriemini, this death delivers you to another, from which you shall never be delivered. We have now past through these three acceptations of these words, Conclusion. which have fall'n into the contemplation, and meditation of the Ancients in their Expositions of this Text; as this dark day of the Lord, signifies his judgements upon Atheistical scorners in this world, as it signifies his last irrevocable, and irremediable judgements upon hypocritical relyers upon their own righteousness in the next world, and between both, as it signifies their uncomfortable passage out of this life, who bring their death inordinately upon themselves; and we shall shut up all with one signification more of the Lords day, That, that is the Lords day, of which the whole Lent is the Vigil, and the Eve. All this time of mortification; and our often meeting in this place to hear of our mortality, and our immortality, which are the two real Texts, and Subjects of all our Sermons; All this time is the Eve of the Resurrection of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. That is the Lords day, when all our mortification, and dejection of spirit, and humbling of our souls, shall be abundantly exalted in his resurrection, and when all our fasts and abstinence shall be abundantly recompensed in the participation of his body & his blood in the Sacrament; God's Chancery is always open, and his seal works always; at all time's remission of sins may be sealed to a penitent soul in the Sacrament. That clause which the Chancellors had in their Patents under the Roman Emperors, praerogativamgerat conscientiae nostrae, is in our commission too, for God hath put his conscience into his Church, & whose sins are remitted there, are remitted in heaven at all times; but yet dies Domini, the Lords resurrection is as the full Term, a more general application of this seal of reconciliation: But vae desiderantibus, woe unto them that desire that day, only because they would have these days of preaching, and prayer, and fasting, and trouble some preparation past and gone. Vae desiderantibus, woe unto them who desire that day, only, that by rece●●ing the Sacrament day, that they might delude the world, as though they were not of a contrary religion in their heart; vae desiderantibus, woe unto them who present themselves that day without such a preparation as becomes so fearful and mystesious an action, upon any carnal or collateral respects. Before that day of the Lord comes, comes the day of his crucifying; before you come to that day, if you come not to a crucifying of yourselves to the world, and the world to you, ut quid vobis? what shall you get by that day? you shall profane that day, and the Author of it, as to make that day of Christ's triumph, the triumph of Satan, and to make even that body and blood of Christ Jesus, Vehiculum Satanae, his Chariot to enter into you, as he did into judas. That day of the Lord will be darkness and not light, and that darkness will be, that you shall not discern the Lords body, you shall scatter all your thoughts upon wrangling and controversies, de modo, how the Lords body can be there, and you shall not discern by the effects, nor in your own conscience, that the Lords body is there at all. But you shall take it to be only an obedience to civil or Ecclesiastical constitutions, or only a testimony of outward conformity, which should be signaculum & viaticum, a seal of pardon for past sins, and a provision of grace against future. But he that is well prepared for this, strips himself of all these vae desiderantibus, of all these comminations that belong to carnal desires, and he shall be as Daniel was, vir desideriorum, a man of chaste and heavenly desires only; he shall desire that day of the Lord, as that day signifies affliction here, with David, Psal. 119.17. Bonum est mihi quòd humiliasti me, I am mended by my sickness, enriched by my poverty; and strengthened by my weakness; and with S. Bern. desire, Irascar is mihi Domine, O Lord be angry with me, for if thou chidest me not, thou considerest me not, if I taste no bitterness, I have no Physic; If thou correct me not, I am not thy son: And he shall desire that day of the Lord, as that day signifies, the last judgement, with the desire of the Martyrs under the Altar, Vsquequo Domine? How long, O Lord, ere thou execute judgement? And he shall desire this day of the Lord, as this day is the day of his own death, with S. Paul's desire, Cupio dissolvi, I desire to be dissolved, and to be with Christ. And when this day of the Lord, as it is the day of the Lords resurrection shall come, his soul shall be satified as with marrow, and with fatness, in the body and blood of his Saviour, and in the participation of all his merits, as entirely, as if all that Christ Jesus hath said, and done, and suffered, had been said, and done, and suffered for his soul alone. Enlarge our days, O Lord, to that blessed day, prepare us before that day, seal to us at that day, ratify to us after that day, all the days of our life, an assurance in that Kingdom, which thy Son our Saviour hath purchased for us, with the inestimable price of his incorruptible blood, To which glorious Son of God, etc. SERMON XV. Preached at , March 8. 1621. 1 COR. 15.26. The last Enemy that shall be destroyed, is Death. THis is a Text of the Resurrection, and it is not Easter yet; but it is Easter Eve; All Lent, is but the Vigil, the Eve of Easter: to so long a Festival as never shall end, the Resurrection, we may well begin the Eve betimes. Forty years long was God grieved for that Generation which he loved; let us be content to humble ourselves forty days, to be fit for that glory which we expect. In the Book of God there are many Songs; there is but one Lamentation: And that one Song of Solomon, nay some one of David's hundred and fifty Psalms, is longer than the whole book of Lamentations. Make way to an everlasting Easter by a short Lent, to an undeterminable glory, by a temporary humiliation. You must weep these tears, tears of contrition, tears of mortification, before God will wipe all tears from your eyes; You must die this death, this death of the righteous, the death to sin, before this last enemy, Death, shallbe destroyed in you, and you made partakers of everlasting life in soul and body too. Our division shall be but a short, Divisio. and our whole exercise but a larger paraphrase upon the words. The words imply first, That the Kingdom of Christ, which must be perfected, must be accomplished, (because all things must be subdued unto him) is not yet perfected, not accomplished yet. Why? what lacks it? It lacks the bodies of Men, which yet lie under the dominion of another. When we shall also see by that Metaphor which the Holy Ghost chooseth to express that in, which is that there is Host, and so Militia, an enemy, and a war, and therefore that Kingdom is not perfected, that he places perfect happiness, and perfect glory, in perfect peace. But then how far is any State consisting of many men, how far the state, and condition of any one man in particular, from this perfect peace? How truly a warfare is this life, if the Kingdom of Heaven itself, have not this peace in perfection? And it hath it not, Quia hostis, because there is an enemy: though that enemy shall not overthrow it, yet because it plots, and works, and machinates, and would overthrow it, this is a defect in that peace. Who then is this enemy? An enemy that may thus far think himself equal to God, that as no man ever saw God, and lived; so no man ever saw this enemy and lived, for it is Death; And in this may think himself in number superior to God, that many men live who shall never see God; But Quis homo, is David's question, which was never answered, Is there any man that lives, and shall not see death? An enemy that is so well victualled against man, as that he cannot want as long as there are men, for he feeds upon man himself. And so well armed against Man, as that he cannot want Munition, while there are men, for he fights with our weapons, our own faculties, nay our calamities, yea our own pleasures are our death. And therefore he is Novissimus hostis, saith the Text, The last enemy. We have other Enemies; Satan about us, sin within us; but the power of both those, this enemy shall destroy; but when they are destroyed, he shall retain a hostile, and triumphant dominion over us. But Vsque quo Domine? How long O Lord? for ever? No, Abolebitur: we see this Enemy all the way, and all the way we feel him; but we shall see him destroyed; Abolebitur. But how? or when? At, and by the resurrection of our bodies: for as upon my expiration, my transmigration from hence, as soon as my soul enters into Heaven, I shall be able to say to the Angels, I am of the same stuff as you, spirit, and spirit, and therefore let me stand with you, and look upon the face of your God, and my God, so at the Resurrection of this body, I shall be able to say to the Angel of the great Council, the Son of God, Christ Jesus himself, I am of the same stuff as you, Body and body, Flesh and flesh, and therefore let me sit down with you, at the right hand of the Father in an everlasting security from this last enemy, who is now destroyed, death. And in these seven steps we shall pass apace, and yet clearly through this paraphrase. We begin with this; Vestig. 1. Quia desunt Corpora. That the Kingdom of Heaven hath not all that it must have to a consummate perfection, till it have bodies too. In those infinite millions of millions of generations, in which the holy, blessed, and glorious Trinity enjoyed themselves one another, and no more, they thought not their glory so perfect, but that it might receive an addition from creatures; and therefore they made a world, a material world, a corporeal world, they would have bodies. In that noble part of that world which Moses calls the Firmament, that great expansion from God's chair to his footstool, from Heaven to earth, there was a defect, which God did not supply that day, nor the next, but the fourth day, he did; for that day he made those bodies, those great, and lightsome bodies, the Sun, and Moon, and Stars, and placed them in the Firmament. So also the Heaven of Heavens, the Presence Chamber of God himself, expects the presence of our bodies. No State upon earth, can subsist without those bodies, Men of their own. For men that are supplied from others, may either in necessity, or in indignation, be withdrawn, and so that State which stood upon foreign legs, sinks. Let the head be gold, Dan. 2.31. and the arms silver, and the belly brass, if the feet be clay, Men that may slip, and molder away, all is but an Image, all is but a dream of an Image: for foreign helps are rather crutches than legs. There must be bodies, Men, and able bodies, able men; Men that eat the good things of the land, their own figs and olives; Men not macerated with extortions: They are glorified bodies that make up the kingdom of Heaven; bodies that partake of the good of the State, that make up the State. Bodies, able bodies, and lastly, bodies inanimated with one soul: one vegetative soul, all must be sensible and compassionate of one another's misery; and especially the Immortal soul, one supreme soul, one Religion. For as God hath made us under good Princes, a great example of all that, Abundance of Men, Men that live like men, men united in one Religion, so we need not go fare for an example of a slippery, and uncertain being, where they must stand upon others men's men, and must over-load all men with exactions, and distortions, and convulsions, and earthquakes in the multiplicity of Religions. The Kingdom of Heaven must have bodies; Kingdoms of the earth must have them; and if upon the earth thou be'st in the way to Heaven, thou must have a body too, a body of thine own, a body in thy possession: for thy body hath thee, and not thou it, if thy body tyrannize over thee. If thou canst not withdraw thine eye from an object of tentation, or withhold thy hand from subscribing against thy conscience, nor turn thine ear from a popular, and seditious Libel, what hast thou towards a man? Thou hast no soul, nay thou hast no body: There is a body, but thou hast it not, it is not thine, it is not in thy power. Thy body will rebel against thee even in a sin: It will not perform a sin, when, and where thou wouldst have it. Much more will it rebel against any good work, till thou have imprinted Stigmata jesu, Gal. 6.17. The Marks of the Lord jesus, which were but exemplar in him, but are essential, and necessary to thee, abstinencies, and such discreet disciplines, and mortifications, as may subdue that body to thee, and make it thine: for till then it is but thine enemy, and maintains a war against thee; and war, and enemy is the Metaphor which the holy Ghost hath taken here to express a want, a kind of imperfectness even in Heaven itself. Bellum Symbolum mali. As peace is of all goodness, so war is an emblem, a Hieroglyphique, of all misery; And that is our second step in this paraphrase. If the feet of them that preach peace, be beautiful, (And, Vestig. 2. Pax & bellum. O how beautiful are the feet of them that preach peace? The Prophet Isaiah asks the question, 52.7. And the Prophet Nahum asks it, 1.15. and the Apostle S. Paul asks it, Rom. 10.15. They all ask it, but none answers it) who shall answer us, if we ask, How beautiful is his face, who is the Author of this peace, when we shall see that in the glory of Heaven, the Centre of all true peace? It was the inheritance of Christ Jesus upon the earth, he had it at his birth, he brought it with him, Glory be to God on high, peace upon earth. Luke 2.14. Colos. 1.20. It was his purchase upon earth, He made peace (indeed he bought peace) through the blood of his Cross. It was his Testament, john 14.27. when he went from earth; Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you. Divide with him in that blessed Inheritance, partake with him in that blessed Purchase, every thyself with that blessed Legacy, his Peace. Let the whole world be in thy consideration as one house; and then consider in that, in the peaceful harmony of creatures, in the peaceful succession, and connexion of causes, and effects, the peace of Nature. Let this Kingdom, where God hath blessed thee with a being, be the Gallery, the best room of that house, and consider in the two walls of that Gallery, the Church and the State, the peace of a royal, and a religious Wisdom; Let thine own family be a Cabinet in this Gallery, and find in all the boxes thereof, in the several duties of Wife, and Children, and servants, the peace of virtue, and of the father and mother of all virtues, active discretion, passive obedience; and then lastly, let thine own bosom be the secret box, and reserve in this Cabinet, and then the best Jewel in the best Cabinet, and that in the best Gallery of the best house that can be had, peace with the Creature, peace in the Church, peace in the State, peace in thy house, peace in thy heart, is a fair Model, and a lovely design even of the heavenly Jerusalem which is Visio pacis, where there is no object but peace. And therefore the holy Ghost to intimate to us, that happy perfectness, which we shall have at last, and not till then, chooses the Metaphor of an enemy, and enmity, to avert us from looking for true peace from any thing that presents itself in the way. Neither truly could the holy Ghost imprint more horror by any word, then that which intimates war, as the word enemy does. It is but a little way that the Poet hath got in description of war, jam seges est, that now, that place is ploughed where the great City stood: for it is not so great a depopulation to translate a City from Merchants to husbandmen, from shops to ploughs, as it is from many Husbandmen to one Shepherd, and yet that hath been often done. And all that, at most, is but a depopulation, it is not a devastation, that Troy was ploughed. But, when the Prophet Isaiah comes to the devastation, to the extermination of a war, Esay 7.23. he expresses it first thus; Where there were a thousand Vineyards at a cheap rate, all the land become briers and thorns: That is much; but there is more, Esay 13.13. The earth shall be removed out of her place; that Land, that Nation, shall no more be called that Nation, nor that Land: But, yet more than that too; Not only, not that people, Esay 13.19. but no oath shall ever inhabit it. It shall never be inhabited from generation to generation, neither shall Shepherds be there; Not only no Merchant, nor Husbandman, but no depopulator: none but Owls, and Ostriches, and Satyrs, Indeed God knows what, Ochim, and Ziim, words which truly we cannot translate. In a word, 2 Sam. 24.13. the horror of War is best discerned in the company he keeps, in his associates. And when the Prophet God brought War into the presence of David, there came with him Famine, and Pestilence. And when Famine entered, we see the effects; It brought Mothers to eat their Children of a span long; that is, as some Expositors take it, to take medicines to procure abortions, to cast their Children, that they might have Children to eat. And when War's other companion, the Pestilence entered, we see the effects of that too: In less than half the time that it was threatened for, it devoured threescore and ten thousand of David's men; and yet for all the vehemence, the violence, the impetuousness of this Pestilence, David chose this Pestilence rather than a War. Militia and Malitia, are words of so near a sound, as that the vulgat Edition takes them as one. For where the Prophet speaking of the miseries that Jerusalem had suffered, says, Finita militia ejus, Esay 42.2. Let her warfare be at an end, they read, Finita malitia ejus, Let her misery be at an end; War and Misery is all one thing. But is there any of this in heaven? Even the Saints in heaven lack something of the consummation of their happiness, Quia hostis, because they have an enemy. And that is our third and next step. Michael and his Angels fought against the devil and his Angels; though that war ended in victory, Vest. 3. Quia Hostis. yet (taking that war, as divers Expositors do, for the fall of Angels) that Kingdom lost so many inhabitants, as that all the souls of all that shall be saved, shall but fill up the places of them that fell, and so make that Kingdom but as well as it was before that war: So ill effects accompany even the most victorious war. There is no war in heaven, yet all is not well, because there is an enemy; for that enemy would kindle a war again, but that he remembers how ill he sped last time he did so. It is not an enemy that invades neither, but only detains: he detains the bodies of the Saints which are in heaven, and therefore is an enemy to the Kingdom of Christ; He that detains the souls of men in Superstition, he that detains the hearts and allegiance of Subjects in an haesitation, a vacillation, an irresolution, where they shall fix them, whether upon their Sovereign, or a foreign power, he is in the notion, and acceptation of enemy in this Text; an enemy, though no hostile act be done. It is not a war, it is but an enemy; not an invading, but a detaining enemy; and then this enemy is but one enemy, and yet he troubles, and retards the consummation of that Kingdom. Antichrist alone is enemy enough; but never carry this consideration beyond thyself. As long as there remains in thee one sin, or the sinful gain of that one sin, so long there is one enemy, and where there is one enemy, there is no peace. Gardeners that husband their ground to the best advantage, sow all their seeds in such order, one under another, that their Garden is always full of that which is then in season. If thou sin with that providence, with that seasonableness, that all thy spring, thy youth be spent in wantonness, all thy Summer, thy middle-age in ambition, and the ways of preferment, and thy Autumn, thy Winter in indevotion and covetousness, though thou have no farther taste of licentiousness, in thy middle-age, thou hast thy satiety in that sin, nor of ambition in thy last years, thou hast accumulated titles of honour, yet all the way thou hast had one enemy, and therefore never any perfect peace. But who is this one enemy in this Text? As long as we put it off, and as loath as we are to look this enemy in the face, yet we must, though it be Death. And this is Vestigium quartum, The fourth and next step in this paraphrase. Surge & descend in domum figuli, says the Prophet jeremy, that is, Mors. Jer. 18.2. say the Expositors, to the consideration of thy Mortality. It is Surge, descend, Arise and go down: A descent with an ascension: Our grave is upward, and our heart is upon jacobs' Ladder, in the way, and nearer to heaven. Our daily Funerals are some Emblems of that; for though we be laid down in the earth after, yet we are lifted up upon men's shoulders before. We rise in the descent to death, and so we do in the descent to the contemplation of it. In all the Potter's house, is there one vessel made of better stuff than clay? There is his matter. And of all forms, a Circle is the perfectest, and art thou loath to make up that Circle, with returning to the earth again? Thou must, though thou be loath. Fortasse, says S. Augustine, That word of contingency, of casualty, Perchance, In omnibus ferme rebus, praeterquam in morte locum habet: It hath room in all humane actions excepting death. He makes his example thus: such a man is married; where he would, or at least where he must, where his parents, or his Guardian will have him; shall he have Children? Fortasse, says he, They are a young couple, perchance they shall: And shall those Children be sons? Fortasse, they are of a strong constitution, perchance they shall: And shall those sons live to be men? Fortasse, they are from healthy parents, perchance they shall: And when they have lived to be men, shall they be good men? Such as good men may be glad they may live? Fortasse, still; They are of virtuous parents, it may be they shall: But when they are come to that Morientur, shall those good men die? here, says that Father, the Fortasse vanishes; here it is omnino, certè, sine dubitatione; infallibly, inevitably, irrecoverably they must die. Doth not man die even in his birth? The breaking of prison is death, and what is our birth, but a breaking of prison? Assoon as we were clothed by God, our very apparel was an Emblem of death. In the skins of dead beasts, he covered the skins of dying men. Assoon as God set us on work, our very occupation was an Emblem of death; It was to dig the earth; not to dig pitfalls for other men, but graves for ourselves. Hath any man here forgot to day, that yesterday is dead? And the Bell tolls for to day, and will ring out anon; and for as much of every one of us, as appertains to this day. Quotidiè morimur, & tamen nos esse aeternos putamus, says S. Hierome; We die every day, and we die all the day long; and because we are notabsolutely dead, we call that an eternity, an eternity of dying: And is there comfort in that state? why, that is the state of hell itself, Eternal dying, and not dead. But for this there is enough said, by the Moral man; (that we may respite divine proofs, for divine points anon, for our several Resurrections) for this death is merely natural, and it is enough that the moral man says, Mors lex, tributum, officium mortalium. First it is lex, you were born under that law, upon that condition to die: Sencea. so it is a rebellious thing not to be content to die, it opposes the Law. Then it is Tributum, an imposition which nature the Queen of this world lays upon us, and which she will take, when and where se lift; here a young man, there an old man, herea happy, there a miserable man; And so itis a seditious thing not to be content to die, it opposes the prerogative. And lastly, it is Officium, men are to have rheir turns, to take their time, and then to give way by death to successors; and so it is Incivile, inofficiosum, not to be content to die, it opposes the frame and form of government. It comes equally to us all, and makes us all equal when it comes. The eshes of an Oak in the Chimney, are no Epitaph of that Oak, to tell me how high or how large that was; It tells me not what flocks it sheltered while it stood, nor what men it hurt when it fell. The dust of great persons graves is speechless too, it says nothing, it distinguishes nothing: As soon the dust of a wretch whom thou wouldst not, as of a Prince whom thou couldst not look upon, will trouble thine eyes, if the wind blow it thither; and when a whirlwind hath blown the dust of the Churchyard into the Church, and the man sweeps out the dust of the Church into the Churchyard, who will undertake to sift those dusts again, and to pronounce, This is the Patrician, this is the noble flower, and this the yeomanly, this the Plebeian bran. Sois the death of jesabel (jeabel was a Queen) expressed; They shall not say, this is jesabel; not only not wonder that it is, not pity that it should be, but they shall not say, they shall not know, This is jesabel. It comes to all, to all alike; but not alike welcome to all. To die too willingly, out ofimpatience to wish, or out of violence to hasten death, or to die too unwillingly, to murmur at God's purpose reveled by age, or by sickness, are equal distempers; and to harbour a disobedient loathness all the way, or to entertain it at last, argues but an irreligious ignorance; An ignorance, that death is in nature but Expiratio, a breathing out, and we do that every minute; An ignorance that God himself took a day to rest in, and a good man's grave is his Sabbath; An ignorance that Abel the best of those whom we can compare with him, was the first that died. Howsoever, whensoever, all times are Gods times: Vocantur obni ne diutiús vexentur á noxiis, mali ne diutiús bonos persequantur, God calls the good to take them from their dangers, and God takes the bad to take them from their trumph. And therefore neither grudge that thou goest, nor that worse stay, for God can make his profit of both; Aut ideo vivit ut corrigatur, aut utper allum bonus exerceatur; God reprieves him to mend him, or to make another better by his exercise; and not to exult in the misery of another, but to glorify God in the ways of his justice, let him know, Quantumcunque seró, subitó ex hac óitatollitur, qui finem praevidere nescivit: How long soever he live, how long soever he lie sick, that man dies a sudden death, who never thought of it, If we consider death in S. Paul's Statutum est, It is decreed that all men must die, there death is indifferent; If we consider it in his Mori lucrum, that is an advantage to die, there death is good; and so much the vulgat Edition seems to intimate, when (Deut. 30. 19) whereas we read, I have set before you life and death, that reads it, Vitam & honum, Life and that which is good. If then death be at the worst indifferent, and to the good, good, how is it Host, an enemy to the Kingdom of Christ? for that also is Vestigium quintum, the fift and next step in this paraphrase. First God did not make death, says the Wiseman, And therefore S. Augustine makes a reasonable prayer to God, Ne permittas Domine quod nonfecisti, dominari Creaturae quam fecisti; Suffer not O Lord, death, whom thou didst not make, to have dominion over me whom thou didst. Whence then came death? The same Wiseman hath showed us the father, Through envy of the devil, came death into the world; and a wiser than he, the holy Ghost himself hath showed us the Mother, By sin came death into the world. But yet if God have naturalised death, taken death into the number of his servants, and made Death his Commissioner to punish sin, and he do but that, how is Death an enemy? First, he was an enemy in invading Christ, who was not in his Commission, because he had no sin; and still he is an enemy, because still he adheres to the enemy. Death hangs upon the edge of every persecutors sword; and upon the sting of every calumniators, and accusers tongue. In the Bull of Phalaris, in the Bulls of Basan, in the Bulls of Babylon, the shrewdest Bulls of all, in temporal, in spiritual persecutions, ever since God put an enmity between Man, and the Serpent, from the time of Cain who began in a murder, to the time of Antichrist, who proceeds in Massacres, Death hath adhered to the enemy, and so is an enemy. Death hath a Commission, Stipendium peccati mors est, The reward of sin Death, but where God gives a Supersedeas, upon that Commission, Vivo Ego, nolo mortem, As I live saith the Lord, I would have no sinner die, not die the second death, yet Death proceeds to that execution: And where as the enemy, whom he adheres to, Serpent himself, hath power but In calcaneo, upon the heel, the lower, the mortal part, the body of man, Death is come up into our windows, saith the Prophet, into our best lights, Jer. 9.21. our understandings, and benights us there, either with ignorance, before sin, or with senselessness after: And a Sheriff that should burn him, who were condemned to be hanged, were a murderer, though that man must have died: To come in by the door, by the way of sickness upon the body, is, but to come in at the window by the way of sin, is not death's Commission; God opens not that window. So then he is an enemy, for they that adhere to the enemy are enemies: And adhering is not only a present subministration of supply to the enemy (for that death doth not) but it is also a disposition to assist the enemy, then when he shall be strong enough to make benefit of that assistance. And so death adheres; when sin and Satan have weakened body and mind, death enters upon both. And in that respect he is Vltimus hostis, the last enemy, and that is Sextum vestigium, our sixth and next step in this paraphrase. Death is the last, and in that respect the worst enemy. In an enemy, Novisssns●s hostis. that appears at first, when we are or may be provided against him, there is some of that, which we call Honour: but in the enemy that reserves himself unto the last, and attends our weak estate, there is more danger. Keep it, where I intent it, in that which is my sphere, the Conscience: If mine enemy meet me betimes in my youth, in an object of tentation, (so josephs' enemy met him in Putifars Wife) yet if I do not adhere to this enemy, dwell upon a delightful meditation of that sin, if I do not fuel, and foment that sin, assist and encourage that sin, by high diet, wanton discourse, other provocation, I shall have reason on my side, and I shall have grace on my side, and I shall have the History of thousand that have perished by that sin, on my side; Even Spitals will give me soldiers to fight for me, by their miserable example against that sin; nay perchance sometimes the virtue of that woman, whom I solicit, will assist me. But when I lie under the hands of that enemy, that hath reserved himself to the last, to my last bed, then when I shall be able to stir no limb in any other measure then a Fever or a Palsy shall shake them, when everlasting darkness shall have an inchoation in the present dimness of mine eyes, and the everlasting gnashing in the present chattering of my teeth, and the everlasting worm in the present gnawing of the Agonies of my body, and anguishs of my mind, when the last enemy shall watch my remedilsse body, and my desconsolate soul there, there, where not the Physician, in his way, perchance not the Priist in high, shall be able to give any assistance, And when he hath sported himself with my misery upon that stage, my deathbed, shall shift the Scene, and throw me from that bed, into the grave, and there triumph over me, God knows, how many generations, till the Redeemer, my Redeemer, the Redeemer of all me, body, aswell as soul, come again; As death is Novissimus hostis, the enemy which watches me, at my last weakness, and shall hold me, when I shall be no more, till that Angel come, Who shall say, and swear that time shall be no more, in that consideration, in that apprehension, he is the powerfullest, the fearefulest enemy; and yet evern there this enemy Abolebitur, he shall be destroyed, which is, Septimum vestigium, our seventh and last step in this paraphrase. This destruction, this abolition of this last enemy, is by the Resurrection; Abolebieur. for the Text is part of an argument for the Resurrection. And truly, it is a fair intimation, and testimony of an everlasting end in that state of the Resurrection (that no time shall end it) that we have it presented to us in all the parts of time; in the past, in the present, and in the future. We had a Resurrection in prophecy; we have a Resurrection in the present working of God's Spirit; we shall have a Resurrection in the final consummation. The Prophet speaks in the furture, He will swallow up death in victory, there it is Abolebit: Esay 25.8. All the Erangelists speak historically, of matter of fact, in them it is Abolevit. And here in this Apostle, it is in the present, Aboletur, now he is destroyed. And this exhibites unto us a threefold occasion of advancing our devotion, in considering a threefold Resurrection; First, a Resurrection from dejections and calamities in this world, a Temporary Resurrection; Secondly, a Resurrection from sin, a Spiritual Resurrection; and then a Resurrection; Secondly, a Resurrection. A calamitate; When the Prophets speak of a Resurrection in the old Testament, 1. A calamitate. for the most part their principal intention is, upon a temporal restitution from calamities that oppress them then. Neither doth Calvin carry those emphatical words, which are so often cited for a proof of the last Resurrection: Job 19.25. That he knows his Redeemer lives, that he knows he shall stand the last man upon earth, that though his body be destroyed, yet in his flesh and with his eyes he shall see God, to any higher sense than so, that how low soeve he be brought, to what desperate state soever he be reducedin the eyes of the world, yet he assures himself of a Resurrection, a reparation, a restitution to his former bodily health, and worldly fortune which he had before, And such a Resurrection we all know job had. In that famous, and most considerable prophetical vision which God exhibited to Ezekiel, where God set the Prophet in a valley of very many, and very dry bones, and invites the several joints to knit again, ties them with their old sinews, and ligaments, clothes them in their old flest, wraps them in their old skin, and calls life into them again, Gods, principal intention in that vision was thereby to give them an assurance of a Resurrection from their present calamity, not but that there is also good evidence of the last Resurrection in that vision too; Thus far God argues with them áre nota; from that which they knew before, the final Resurrection, he assures them that which they knew not till then, a present Resurrection from those pressures: Remember by this vision that which you all know already, that at last I shall reunite the dead, and dry bones of all men in a general Resurrection: And them if you remember, if you consider, if you look upon that, can you doubt, but that I who can do that, can also recollect you, from your present desperation, and give you a Resurrection to your former temporal happiness? And this truly arises pregnantly, necessarily out of the Prophet's answer; God asks him there, Son of man, cna these bones live? And he answers, Domine tu nósti, O Lord God thou knowest. The Prophet answers according to God's intention in the question. If that had been for their living in the last Resurrection, Ezekiel would have answered God as Martha answered Christ, John 11.24. when he said, Thy brother Lazarus shall rise again; I know that he shall rise again at the Resurrection at the last day; but when the question was, whether men so macerated, so scattered in this world, could have a Resurrection to their former temprorall happiness, here, that puts the Prophet to his Domine tu nósti, It is in thy breast to proposeit, itis in thy hand to execute it, whether thou do it, or do it not, thy name be glorified; It falls not within our conjecture, which way it shall please thee to take for this Resurrection, Domine tu nósti, Thou Lord, and thou only knowest; Which is also the sense of those words, Heb. 11.35. Others were tortured, and accepted not a deliverance, that they might obtain a better Resurrection: A present deliverance had been a Resurrection, but to be the more sure of a better hereafter, they less respected that; According to that of our Saviour, Mat. 10.39. He that finds high life, shall lose it; He that fixeth himself too earnestly upon this Resurrection, shall lose a better. This is then the prophetical Resurrection for the future, but a future in this world; That if Rulers take counsel against the Lord, the Lord shall have their counsel in derision; If they take arms against the Lord, the Lord shall break their Bows, and cut their Spears in sunder; Psal. 2.4. If they hisse, and gnash their teeth, and say, we have swallowed him up; If we be made their byword, their parable, their proverb, their libel, the theme and burden of their songs, as job complains, yet whatsoever fall upon me, dmage, distress, scorn, or Hostis ultimus, death itself, that death which we consider here, death of possessions, death of estimation, death of health, death of contentment, yet Abolebitur, it sahll be destroyed in a Resurrection, in the return of the light of God's countenance upon me even in this world. And this is the first Resurrection. But this first Resurrection, 2. Apeecatis. which is but from temporal calamities, doth so little concern a true and established Christian, whether it come or no, (for still jobs Basis is his Basis, and his Centre, Etiamsi occiderit, though he kill me, kill me, kill me, in all these several deaths, and give me no Resurrection in this world, yet I will trust in him) as that, as though this first resurrection were no resurrection, not to be numbered among the rersurrections, S. john calls that which we call the second, which is from sin, the first resurrection: Blessed and holy is be, who hath part in the firstresurrection: And this resurrection, Christimplies, Apoe. 20.6. John 5.25. when he says, Verily, verily, I say unto you, the hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the ovyce of the Son of God; and they that hear it shall live: That is, by the voice of the word of life, the Gospel of repentance, they shall have a spiritual resurrection to a new life. S. Austin and Lactantius both were so hard in believing the roundness of the earth, that they thought that those homines pencils, as they call them, those men that hang upon the other cheek of the face of the earth, those Antipodes, whose feet are directly against ours, must necessarily fall from the earth, if the earth be round. But whither should they fall? If they fall, they must fall upwards, for heaven is above them too as it is to us. So if the spiritual Antipodes of this world, the Sons of God, that walk with feet opposed in ways contrary to the sons of men, shall be said to fall, when they fall to repentance, to mortification, to a religious negligence, and contempt of the pleasures of this life, truly their fall is up wards, they fall towards heaven, God gives breath unto the people upon the earth, says the Prophet, Et spiritum his, qui calcant illam. Esay 45.5 Our Translation carries that no farther, but that God gives breath to people upon the earth, and spirit to them that walk thereon; But Irenaeus makes a useful difference between afflatus and spiritus, that God gives breath to all upon earth, but his spirit only to them, who tread in a religious scorn upon earthly things. Is it not a strange phrase of the Apostle, Mortify your members; fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affections? He does not say, mortify your members against those sins, Col. 3.5. but he calls those very sins, the members of our bodies, as though we were elemented and compacted of nothing but sin, till we come to this resurrection, this mortification, which is indeed our vivification; Till we bear in our body, the dying of our Lord jesus, that the life also of jesus may be made manifest in our body. 2 Cor. 4.10. God may give the other resurrection from worldly misery, and not give this. A widow may be rescued from the sorrow and solitariness of that state, by having a plentiful fortune; there she hath one resurrection; but the widow that liveth in pleasure, is dead while she lives; 1 Tim. 5.6. she hath no second resurrection; and so in that sense, even this Chapel may be a Churchyard, men may stand, and sit, and kneel, and yet be dead; and any Chamber alone may be a Golgotha, a place of dead men's bones, of men not come to this resurrection, which is the renunciation of their beloved sin. It was inhumanely said by Vitellius, upon the death of Otho, when he walkedin the field of carcases, where the battle was fought; O how sweet a perfume is a dead enemy! But it is a divine saying to thy soul, O what a savour of life, unto life, is the death of a beloved sin! What an Angelical comfort was that to joseph and Mary in Egypt, after the death of Herod, Arise, for they are dead, that sought the child's life! Mat. 2.20. And even that comfort is multiplied upon thy soul, when the Spirit of God says to thee, Arise come to this resurrection: for that Herod, that sin, that sought the life, the everlasting life of this child, the child of God, thy soul, is dead, dead by repentance, dead by mortification. The highest cruelty that story relates, or Poets imagine, is when a persecutor will not afford a miserable man death, not be so merciful to him, as to take his life. Thou hast made thy sin, thy soul, thy life; inanimated all thy actions, all thy purposes with that sin. Miserere animatuae, be so merciful to thyself, as to take away that life by mortification, by repentance, and thou art come to this Resurrection: and thugh a man may have the former resurrection, and not this, peace in his fortune, and yet not peace in his conscience, yet whosoever hath this second, hath an infallible seal of the third resurrection too, to a fullness of glory in body, as well as in soul. For Spiritus maturam efficit carnem & capacem incorruptelae; this resurrection by the spirit, Irenaeus. mellowes the body of man, and makes that capable of everlasting glory, which is the last weapon, by which the last enemy death, shall be destroyed; A morte. Upon that pious ground that all Scriptures were written for us, as we are Christians, that all Scriptures conduce to the proof of Christ, and of the Christian state, 3. A morte. it is the ordinary manner of the Fathers to make all that David speaks historically of himself, and all that the Prophet speaks futurely of the Jews, if those place may be referred to Christ, to refer them to Christ primarily, and but by reflection, and in a second consideration upon David or upon the Jews, Thereupon do the Father (truly I think more generally more unanimely then in any other place of Scripture) take that place of Ezekile which we spoke of before, to be primarily intended of the last resurrection, & but secundarily of the Jews restitution. But Gasper Sanctius a learned Jesuit, (that is not so rare, but an ingenuous Jesuit too) though he be bound by the Council Trent to interpret Scriptures according to the Fathers, yet he here ackowledges the whole truth, that God's purpose was to prove, by that which they did know, which was the general resurrection, that which they knew not, their temporal restitution. Tertullian is vehement at first, but after, more supple, Allegoricae Scripturae, says he, resurrectionem subradiant aliae, aliae determinant: Some figurative places of Scripture, do intimate a resurrection, and some manifest it; and of those manifest places he takes this vision of Ezekiel to be one. But he comes after to this, Sat & corporum, & rerum, & meánihilinterest; let it sighnifie a temporal resurrection, so it may signify the general resurrection of our bodies too, says he, and I am well satisfied; and then the truth satisfies him, for it doth signify both. It is true that Tertullian says, De vacuo similitudo non competit; If the vision be but a comparison, if there were no such thing as a resurrection, the comparison did not hold. De nullo par abola non convenit, says he, and truly; If there were no resurrection to which that Parable might have relation, it were no Parable. All that is true; but there was a resurrection always known to them, always believed by them, and that made their present resurrection from that calamity, the more easy, the more intelligible, the more credible, the more discernible to them. Let therefore God's method, be thy method; fix thyself firmly upon that belief of the penerall resurrection, and thou wilt never doubt of either of the particular resurrections, either from sin, by God's grace, or from worldly calamities, by God's power. For that last resurrection is the ground of all. By that Verévicta mors, says Irenaeus, this Last enemy, death, is truly destroyed, because his last spoil, the body, is taken out of his hands. The same body, eadem ovis, (as the same Father notes) Christ did not fetch another sheep to the flock, in the place of that which was lost, but the same sheep: God shall not give me another, abetter body at the resurrection, but the same body made better; for Sinon haberet caro salvari, neutiquam verbum Dei caro factum fuisset, If the flesh of man were not to be saved, Idem. the Anchor of salvation would never have taken the flesh of man upon him. The punishment that God laid upon Adam, In dolore & in sudore, In sweat, and in sorrow sbalt thou eat thy bread, is but Donecreverteris, till man return to dust: but when Man is returned to dust, Gen. 3.17. God returns to the remembrance of that promise, Awake and sing yethat dwell in the dust. A mercy already exhibited to us, in the person of our Saviour Christ Jesus, Esay 26.19. in whom, Per primitias benedixit campo, (says S. chrysostom) as God by taking a handful for the first Fruits, gave ablessing to the wholw field; so he hath sealed the bodies of all mankind to his glory, by pre-assuming the body of Christ to that glory. For by that there is now Commercium inter Coelum & terram; there is a Trade driven, a Staple established between Heaven and earth; Bernard. Ibi caronostra, hic Spiritus ejus; Thither have we sent our flest, and hither hath he sent his Spirti. This is the last abolition of this enemy, Death; for after this, the bodies of the Saints he cannot touch, the bodes of the damned he cannot kill, and if he could, he were not therein their enemy, but their friend. This is that blessed and glorious State, of which, when all the Apostles met to make the Creed, they could say no more, but Credo Resurrectionem, I heleeve the Resurrection of the body; and when those two Reverend Fathers, to whom it belongs, shall come to speak of it, upon the day proper for it, in this place, and if all the Bishops, that ever met in Counsels should meet them here, they could but second the Apostles Credo, with their Anathema, We believe, and woe be unto them that do not believe the Resurrection of the body; but in gong about to express it, the lips of an Angel would be uncircumcised lips, and the tongue of an Archangel would stammer. I offer not therefore at it: but in respect of, and with relation to that blessed State, according to the doctrine, and practise of our Church, we do pray for the dead; for the militant Church upon earth, and the trimphant Church in Heaven, and the whole Catholic Church in Heaveen, and earth; we do pray that God will be pleased to hasten that Kingdom, that we with all others departed in the true Faith of his holy Name, may have this perfect consummation, both of body and soul, in his everlasting glory, Amen. SERMON XVI. preached at , the first Friday in Lent. 1622. JOHN 11.35. jesus wept. I Am now but upon the Compassion of Christ. There is much difference between his Compassion and his Passion, as much as between the men that are to handle them here. But Lacryma pass, ionis Chrisi est vicaria: August. A great personage may speak of his Passion, of his blood; My vicargae is to speak of his Compassion and his tears. Let me chafe the wax, and melt your souls in a bath of his Tears now, Let him set to the great Seal of his effectual passion, in his blood, then. It is a Common place I know to speak of tears: I would you knew as well, it were a common practice, to shed them. Though it be not so, yet bring S. Bernard's, patience, Libenter audiam, qui non sibi plausum, sed mihi planctum moveat; be willing to hear him, that seeks not your acclamation to himself, but your humiliation to his and your God; not to make you praise with them that praise, but to make you weep with them that weep, And jesus wept. The Masorites (the Masorites are the Critics upon the Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament) cnnot tell us, who divided the Chapters of the Old Testament into verses; Neither can any other tell us, who did it in the New Testament. Whoever did it seems to have stopped in an amazement in this Text, and by making an entire verse of these two words, jesus wept, and no more, to intimate that there needs no more for the exalting of our devotion to a competent height, then to consider, how, and where, and when, and why jesus wept. There is not a shorter verse in the Bible, not a larger Text. There is another as short; Semper gaudete, Rejoice evermore, and of that holy Joy, 1 Thes. 5.16. I may have leave to speak here hereafter, more seasonably, in a more Festival time, by my ordinary service. This is the season of general Compunction, of general Mortification, and no man privileged, for jesus wept. In that Letter which Lentulus in said to have written to the Senate of Rome, Divisi●. in which he gives some Characters of Christ, he says, That Christ was never seen to laugh, but to weep often. Now in what number he limits his often, or upon what testimony he grounds him number, we know not. We take knowledgethat he wept thrice. He wept here, when he mourned with them that mourned for Lazarus; He wept again, when he drew near to Jerusalem, and looked upon that City; And he wept a third time in his Passion. There is but one Evangelist, but this, S. john, that tells us of these first tears, the rest say nothing of them; There is but one Evangelist, S. Luke, Luke 19.41. Hcb. 5.7. that tells us of his second tears, the rest speak not of those; There is no Evangelist, but there is an Apostle that tells us of his third tears, S. Paul says, That in the days of his flesh, be offered up prayers with strong cries, and tears; And those tears, Expositors of all sides refer to his Passion, though some to his Agony in the Garden, some to his Passion on the Corsse; and these in my opinion most fitly; because those words of S. Paul belong to the declaration of the Priesthood, and of the Sacrifice of Christ; and for that function of his, the Cross was the Altar; and therefore to the Cross we fix those third tears. The first were Humane tears, the second were Prophetical, the third were Pontifical, appertaining to the Sarifice. The first were shed in a Condolency of a humane and natural calamity fallen upon one family; Lazarus was dead: The second were shed in Contemplation of future calamity upon a Nation; Jerusalem was to be destroyed: The third, in Contemplation of sin, and the everlasting punishments due to sin, and to such sinners, as would make no benefit of that Sacrifice, which he offered in offering himself. His friend was dead, and then Jesus wept; He justified natural affectins and such offices of piety: Jerusalem was tobe destroyed, and then Jesus wept; He commiserated public and national calamities, though a private person: His very giving of himself for sin, was to become to a great many ineffectual; and than Jsus wept; He declared how indelible the natural stain of sin is, that not such sweat as high, such tears, such blood as his could absolutely wash it out of man's nature. The tears of the text are as a Spring, a Well. belonging to onehoushold the Sisters of Lazarus: The tears over Jerusalem, are as a River belonging to a whole Country: The tears upon the Cross, are as the Sea belonging to all the world; and though literally there fall no more into our text, than the Spring, yet because the Spring flows into the River, and the River into the Sea, and that wheresoever we find that Jesus wept, we find our Text, (for our Text is but that, jisus wept) therefore by the leave and light of his blessed Spirit, we shall look upon those lovely, those heavenly eye, through this glass of his own tears, in all these three lines, as he wept here over Lazarus, as he wept there over Jerusalem, as he wept upon the Cross over all us. For so often Jesus wept. Fitst then, 1 Part. Humanitus. Jesus wept Hum●nitus, he took a necessary occasion to show that he was true Man. He was now in hand with the greatest Miracle that ever he did, the raising of Lazarus, so long dead. Can we but do so in our spiritual raising, what a blessed harvest were that? What a comfort to find one man here to day, raised from his spiritual death, this day twelvemonth? Christ did it every year, and every year he improved his Miracle, Mat. 9.25. In the first year, he raised the Governors' Daughter: se was newly dead, and as yetin the house. In the beginning of sin, and whilst in the house, in the house of God, in the Church, in a glad obedience to God's Ordinances and Institutions there, for the reparation and resuscitation of dead souls, the work is not so hard. In his second year, Luke 7.15. Christ raised the Widow's Son; and him he found without, ready to be buried. In a man grown cold and stiff in sin, impenetrable, inflexible by denouncing the Judgements of God, almost buried in a stupidity, and insensibleness of his being dead, there is more difficulty. But in his third year, Christ raised this Lazarus; he had been long dead, and buried, and in probability, puttrified after four days. This Miracle Christ meant to make a pregnant proof of the Resurrection, which was his principal intention therein. For, the greatest arguments against the Resurrection, being for the most part of this kind, when a Fish eats a man, and another man eats that fish, or when one man eats another, how shall both these men rise again? when a body is resolved in the grave to the first principles, or is passed into other substances, the case is somewhat near the same; and therefore Christ would work upon a body near that state, abody putrified. And truly, in our srirituall raising of the dead, to raise a sinner putrified in his own earth, resolved in his own dung, especially that hath passed many transformations, from shape to shape, from sin to sin, (high hath been a Salamander and lived in the fire, in the fire successvely, in the fire of lust in his youth, and in his age in the fire of Ambition; and then he hath been a Serpent, a Fish, and lived in the waters., in the water successively, in the troubled water of sedition in his youth, and in his age in the cold waters of indevotion) how shall we raise this Salamander and this Serpent, when this Serpent and this Salamander is all one person, and must have contrary music to charm him, contrary physic to cure him? To raise a man resolved into divers substances, scattered into divers forms of several sins, is the greatest work. And there. fore this Miracle (which implied that) S. Basil calls Miraculum in Miraculo, a pregnant, a double Miracle. For here is Mortuus redivivus, A dead man lives; that had been done before; but Alligatus ambulat, says Basil; he that is settered, and manacled, and tied with many difficulties, he walks. And therefore as this Miracle raised him most estmation, so (for they ever accompany one another) it raised him most envy: Envy that extended beyond him, to Lazarus himself, who had done nothing; john 12.10 and yet, The chief Priests consulted how they might put Lizarus to death, because by reason of him, many believed in jesus. A disease, a distemper, a danger which no time shall ever be free from, that whereforer there is a coldness, a disaffection to God's Cause, those who are any way occasionally instrumenta of God's glory, August. sahll find cold affection. If they killed Lazarus, had not Christ done enough to let them see that he could raise him again? for Caeca sevitia, sialiud videtur mertuus, aliud occisus; It was a blind malice, if they thought, that Christ could raise a man naturally dead, and could not if he were violently killed. This then being his greatest Miracle, preparing the hardest Article of the Creed, the Resurrection of the body, as the Miracle itself declared sufficiently his Divinity, that nature, so in this declaration that he was God, he would declare that he was man too, and therefore jesus wept. He wept as man doth weep, and he wept as a man may weep; Noninordinaté. Bernard. job 10.4. for these tears were Testes naturae, non Indices diffidentiae, They declared him to be true man, but no distrustful, no inordinate man. In job there is a question asked of God, Hast thou eyes of flesh, and dost thou see, as man sees? Let this question be directed to God manifested in Christ, and Christ will weep out an answer to that question, I have eyes of flesh, and I do weep as man weeps. Not as sinful man, not as s man, that had het fall his bridle, by which he should trune his horse: Not as a man that were cast from the rudder, by which he should steer his Ship: Not as a man that had lost his interest and power in his affections, and passions: Christ wept not so. Christ mingt go farther that way, than any other man: Christ might ungirt himself, and give more scope and liberty to his passions, than any other man: both because he had no Original sin within, to drive him, no inordinate love without to draw him, when his affections were moved; which all other men have. God says to the Jews, That they had wept in his ears; God had heard them weep: Numb. 11.18. but for what, and how? they wept for flesh. There was a tincture, there was a deep dye of murmuring in their tears. Christ goes as far in the passion, in his agony, and he comes to a passionate deprecation, in his Tristis anima, and in the Si possibile, and in the Transeat calix. But as all these passions were sanctified in the root, from which no bitter leaf, no crooked twig could spring, so they were instantly washed with his Veruntamen, a present and a full submitting of all to God's pleasure, Yet not my will O Father, but thine be done. It will not be safe for any man to come so near an excess of passions, as he may find some good men in the Scriptures to have done: That because he hears Moses say to God, Deal me, Blot my name out of the book of life, Therefore he may say, God damn me, or I renounce God. It is not safe for a man to expose himself to a tentation, because he hath seen another pass through it. Every man may know his own Bias, and to what sin that diverts him: The beauty of the person, the opportunity of the place, the importunity of the party, being his Mistress, could not shake josephs' constancy. There is one such example, of one that resisted a strong tentation: But then there are in one place, two men together, that sinned upon their own bodies, Her and Onan, Gen. 46. ●2. then when no tentation was offered, nay when a remedy against tentation was ministered to them. Some man may be chaster in the Stews, than another in the Church; and some man will sin more in his dreams, than another in his discourse. Every man must know how much water his own vessel draws, and not to think to sail over, wheresoever he hath seen anothe (he knows not with how much labour) shove over: No nor to adventure so far, as he may have reason to be confident in his own strength: For thugh he may be safe in himself, yet he may sinin anogher, if by his indiscreet, and improvident example, another be scandalised. Christ was always safe; He was led of the Spirit: Mat. 4.1. of what spirit? his own Spirit: Led willingly into the wilderness, to be tempted of the devil. No other man might do that; but he who was able to say to the Sun, Siste sol, was able to say to Satan, Siste Lucifer. Christ in another place gave such scope to his affections, and to others interpretations of his actions, that his frineds and kinsfolds thught him mad, besides himself: But all this while, Christ had his own actions, and passions, and their interpretations in his own power: he could do what he would. Here in our Text, Jesus was troubled, and he groaned; and vehemently, and often, his affections were stirred: but as in a clan glass, if water be stirred and troubled, though it may conceive a little light froth, yet it contracts no foulness in that clean galsse, the affections of Christ were moved, but so: in that holy vessel they would contract no foulness, no declination towards inordinateness. But then every Christian is not a Christ; and therefore as he that would fast forty days, as Christ did, might starve; and he that would whip Merchants out of the Temple, as Christ did, might be knocked down in the Temple; So he knowing his own inclinations, or but the general ill inclination of all mankind, as he is infected with Original sin, should converse so much with publicans and sinners, might participate of their sins. The rule is, we must avoid inordinateness of affections; but when we come to examples of that rule, ourselves well understood by ourselves, must be our own exaples; for it is not always good to go too far, as some good men have gone before. Now though Christ were fare from both, Non Apathes. yet he came nearer to an excess of passion, then to an indolency, to a senselessness, to a privation of natural affections. inordinateness of affections may sometimes make some men like some beasts; but indolency, absence, emptiness, privation of affections, makes any man at all times, like stones, like dirt. In novissimis, saith S. Peter, In the last, that is, in the worst days, in the dregs, and lees, and tartar of sin, then shall come men, lovers of themselves; and that is ill enough in man; for that is an affection peculiar to God, to love himself. Non speciale vitium, sed radix omnium vitiorum, says the School in the mouth of Aquinas: self. love cannot be called a distinct sin, but the root of all sins. It is true that justin Martyr says, Philosophanti finis est Deo assimilari, The end of Christian Philosophy is to be wise like God; but not in this, to love ourselves; for the greatest sin that ever was, and that upon which even the blood of Christ Jesus hath not wrought, the sin of Angels was that, Similis ero Altissimo, to be like God. To love ourselves, to be satisfied in ourselves, to find an omni-sufficiency in ourselves, is an intrusion, an usurpation upon God: And even God himself who had that omni-sufficiency in himself, conceived a conveniency for his glory, to draw a Circumference about that Centre, Creatures about himself, and to shed forth lines of love upon all them, and not to love himself alone. Self-love in man sinks deep: but yet you see, the Apostle in his order, casts the other sin lower, that is, into a worse place, To be without natural affections. S. Augustine extends these natural affections, to Religious affections, because they are natural to a supernatural man, to a regenerate man, who naturally loves those, that are of the household of the faithful, that profess the same truth of Religion: and not to be affected with their distresses, when Religion itself is distressed, in them, is impiety. He extends these affections to Moral affections; the love of Eminent and Heroical virtues in any man: we ought to be affected with the fall of such men. And he extends them to civil affections, the love of friends; not to be moved in their behalf, is argument enough that we do not much love them. For our case in the Text, These men whom Jesus found weeping, and wept with them, were none of his kindred: They were Neighbours, and Christ had had a conversation, and contracted a friendship in that Family; V 5. He loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus, says the Story: and he would let the world see that he loved them: for so the Jews argued that saw him weep, V 36. Behold how he loved them; without outward declarations, who can conclude an inward love? to assure that, jesus wept. To an inordinateness of affections it never came; to a natural tenderness it did; and so far as to tears; Laerymae. and than who needs be ashamed of weeping? Look away far from me, for I will weep bitterly, says Jerusalem in Esay. But look upon me, says Christ in the Lamentations, Behold and see if ever there were any sorrow, any tears like mine: Not like his in value, but in the root as they proceeded from natural affection, they were tears of imitation, and we may, we must weep tears like his tears. They scourged him, they crowned him, they nailed him, they pierced him, and then blood came; but he shed tears voluntarily, and without violence: The blood came from their ill, but the tears from his own good nature: The blood was drawn, the tears were given. We call it a childish thing to weep, and a womanish; and perchance we mean worse in that then in the childish; for therein we may mean falsehood to be mingled with weakness. Christ made it an argument of his being man, to weep, for though the lineaments of man's body, eyes and ears, hands and feet, be ascribed to God in the Scriptures, though the affections of man's mind be ascribed to him, (even sorrow, nay Repentance itself, is attributed to God) I do not remember that ever God is said to have wept: It is for man. And when God shall come to that last Act in the glorifying of Man, when he promises, to wipe all tears from his eyes, what shall God have to do with that eye that never wept? He wept out of a nuturall tenderness in general; and he wept now out of a particular occasion. What was that? Quia mortuus, because Lazarus was dead. We stride over many steps at once; waive many such considerable circumstances as these; Lazarus his friend was dead, therefore he wept, Lazarus, the staff and sustentatio of that family was dead, he upon whom his Sisters relied, was dead, therefore he wept. But I stop only upon this one step, Quia mortuus, that he was dead. Now a good man is not the worse for dying, that is true and capable of a good sense, because he is established in a better world: but yet when he is gone out of this world he is none of us, he is no longer a man. The stronger opinion in the School, is, That Christ himself, when he lay dead in the grave, was not man. Though the God head never departed from the Carcase, (there was no divorce of that Hypostatical union) yet because the Humane soul was departed from it, he was not man. Hugo de S. Victor. who thinks otherwise, that Christ was a man then, thinks so upon a weak ground: He thinks, that because the soul is the form of man, the soul is man; and that therefore the soul remaining, the man remains. But it is not the soul, but the union of the soul, that makes the man. The Master of the Sentences, Peter Lombard, that thinks so too, that Christ was then a man, thinks so upon as weak a ground: He thinks that it is enough to constitute a man, that there be a soul and body, though that soul and body be not united; but still it is the union that makes the man: And therefore when he is disunited, dead, he is none of us, he is no man; and therefore we weep how well soever he be. Abraham was loath to let go his wife, though the King had her: A man hath a natural loathness to let go his friend, though God take him to him. S. Augustine says, that he knew well enough, that his mother was in heaven; and S. Ambrose, that he knew well enough that his master Theodosius the emperor was in heaven, but because they saw not in what state they were, they thought that something might be asked at God's hands in their behalf; and so out of a humane and pious officiousness, in a devotion perchance indigested, uncocted, and retaining yet some crudities, some irresolutions, they strayed into prayers for them after they were dead. Lazarus his sisters made no doubt of their brother's salvation; they believed his soul to be in a good estate: And for his body, they told Christ, Lord we know that he shall rise at the last day: And yet they wept. Here, in this world, we who stay, lack those who are gone out of it: we know they shall never come to us; and when we shall go to them, whether we shall know them or no, we dispute. They who think that it conduces to the perfection of happiness in heaven, that we should know one another, think piously if they think we shall. For, as for the maintenance of public peace, States, and Churches, may think diversely in points of Religion, that are not fundamental, and yet both be true and Orthodoxal Churches; so for the exaltation of private devotion in points that are not fundamental, divers men may think diversely, and both be equally good Christians. Whether we shall know them there, or no, is problematical and equal; that we shall not till then, is dogmatic and certain: Therefore we weep. I know there are Philosophers that will not let us weep, nor lament the death of any: And I know that in the Scriptures there are rules, and that there are instructions conveyed in that example, that David left mourning as soon as the child was dead; And I know that there are Authors of a middle nature, above the Philosophers, and below the Scriptures, the Apocryphal books, and I know it is said there, Comfort thyself, for thou-shalt do him no good that is dead, Ecclus. 38.6. Et teipsum pessimabis (as the vulgat reads it) thou shalt make thyself worse and worse, in the worst degree. But yet all this is but of inordinate lamentation; for in the same place, the same Wise man says, My Son, let thy tears fall down over the dead; weep bitterly and make great moan, as he is worthy. When our Saviour Christ had uttered his consummatum est, all was finished, and their rage could do him no more harm, when he had uttered his In manus tuas, he had delivered and God had received his soul, yet how did the whole frame of nature mourn in Eclipses, and tremble in earthquakes, and dissolve and shed in pieces in the opening of the Temple, Quia mortuus, because he was dead. Truly, to see the hand of a great and mighty Monarch, that hand that hath governed the civil sword, the sword of Justice at home, and drawn and sheathed the foreign sword, the sword of war abroad, to see that hand lie dead, and not be able to nip or fillip away one of his own worms (and then Quis homo, what man, though he be one of those men, of whom God hath said, Ye are gods, yet Quis homo, what man is there that lives, and shall not see death?) To see the brain of a great and religious Counsellor (and God bless all from making, all from calling any great that is not religious) to see that brain that produced means to becalm gusts at Council tables, storms in Parliaments, tempests in popular commotions, to see that brain produce nothing but swarms of worms and no Proclamation to disperse them; To see a reverend Prelate that hath resisted Heretics & Schismatics all his life, fall like one of them by death, & perchance be called one of them when he is dead. To recollect all, to see great men made no men, to be sure that they shall never come to us, not to be sure, that we shall know them when we come to them, to see the Lieutenants and Images of God, Kings, the sinews of the State, religious Counsellors, the spirit of the Church, zealous Prelates, And then to see vulgar, lgnorant, wicked, and facinorous men thrown all by one hand of death, into one Cart, into one common Tide-boate, one Hospital, one Almeshouse, one Prison, the grave, in whose dust no man can say, This is the King, this is the Slave, this is the Bishop, this is the Heretic, this is the Counsellor, this is the Fool, even this miserable equality of so unequal persons, by so foul a hand, is the subject of this lamentation, even Quia mortuus, because Lazarus was dead, jesus wept. He wept even in that respect, Quia non abhibita media. Quia mortuus, and he wept in this respect too, Quia non adhibita media, because those means which in appearance might have saved his life, by his default were not used, for when he came to the house, one sister, Martha says to him, Lord if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died; and then the other sister, Mary says so too, Lord if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died: They all cry out, that he who only, only by coming, might have saved his life, would not come. Our Saviour knew in himself that he abstained to better purpose, and to the farther glory of God: for when he heard of his death, he said to his Disciples, I am glad for your sakes that I was not there. Christ had certain reserved purposes which conduced to a better establishing of their faith, and to a better advancing of God's Kingdom, the working of that miracle. But yet because others were able to say to him, it was in you to have saved him, and he did not, even this Quia non adhibita media, affected him; and jesus wept. He wept, Etsi quatriduanus, Etsi quatriduanus. though they said unto him, He hath been four days dead, and stinks. Christ doth not say, there is no such matter, he doth not stink; but though he do, my friend shall not lack my help. Good friends, useful friends though they may commit some errors, and though for some misbehaviours they may stink in our nostrils, must not be derelicted, abandoned to themselves. Many a son, many a good heir, finds an ill air from his Father; his Father's life stinks in the nostrils of all the world, and he hears every where exclamations upon his Father's usury, and extortion, and oppression: yet it becomes him by a betterlife, and by all other means to rectify and redeem his Father's fame. Quatriduanus est, is no plea for my negligence in my family; to say, My son, or my servant hath proceeded so far in ill courses, that now it is to no purpose to go about to reform him, because Quatriduanus est. Quatriduanus est, is no plea in my pastoral charge, to say that seducers, and practisers, and persuaders, and solicitors for superstition, enter so boldly into every family, that now it is to no purpose to preach religious wariness, religious discretion, religious constancy. Quatriduanus est, is no plea for my Usury, for my Simony; to say, I do but as all the world doth, and hath used to do a long time. To preach there where reprehension of growing sin is acceptable, is to preach in season; where it is not acceptable, it is out of season; but yet we must preach in season, and out of season too. And when men are so refractory, as that they forbear to hear, or hear and resist our preaching, we must pray; and where they despise or forbidden our praying, we must lament them, we must weep: Quatriduanus erat, Lazarus was far spent, yet jesus wept. He wept, Etsisuscitandus. Though he knew that Lazarus were to be restored, and raised to life again. for as he meant to declare a great good will to him at last, so he would utter some by the way; he would do a great miracle for him, as he was a mighty God; but he would weep for him too, as he was a good natured man. Truly it is no very charitable disposition, if I give all at my death to others, if I keep all all my life to myself. For how many families have we seen shaked, ruined by this distemper, that though the Father mean to alien nothing of the inheritance from the Son at his death, yet because he affords him not a competent maintenance in his life, he submits his Son to an encumbring of his fame with ignominious shift, and an encumbring of the estare with irrecoverable debts. I may mean to feast a man plentifully at Christmas, and that man may starve before in Lent: Great persons may think it in their power to give life to persons and actions by their benefits, when they will, and before that will be up and ready, both may become incapable of their benefits. Jesus would not give this family, whom he pretended to love, occasion of jealousy, of suspicion, that he neglected them; and therefore though he came not presently to that great work, which he intended tended at last, yet he left them not comfortless by the way, jesus wept. And so (that we may reserve some minutes for the rest) we end this part, applying to every man that blessed exclamation of S. Ambrose, Ad monumentum hoc digner is accedere Domine jesu, Lord Jesus be pleased to come to this grave, to weep over this dead Lazarus, this soul in this body: And though I come not to a present rising, a present deliverance from the power of all sin, yet if I can feel the dew of thy tears upon me, if I can discern the eye of the compassion bend towards me, I have comfort all the way, and that comfort will flow into an infallibility in the end. And be this the end of this part, to which we are come by these steps. jesus wept, That as he shown himself to be God, he might appear to be man too: he wept not in ordinately; but he came nearer excess than indolency: He wept because he was dead; and because all means for life had not been used; he wept, though he were far spent; and he wept, though he meant to raise him again. We pass now from his humane to his prophetical tears, from Jesus weeping in contemplation of a natural calamity fallen upon one family, Lazarus was dead, 2 Part. to his weeping in contemplation of a Nationall calamity foreseen upon a whole people; Jerusalem was to be destroyed. His former tears had sOme of the spirit of prophecy in them; for therefore says Epiphanius, Christ wept there, because he foresaw how little use the Jews would make of that miracle, his humane tears were prophetical, and his prophetical tears are humane too, they rise from good affections to that people. And therefore the same Author says, That because they thought it an uncomely thing for Christ to weep for any temporal thing, some men have expunged and removed that verse out of S. Luke's Gospel, That Jesus when he saw that City, wept: But he is willing to be proposed, and to stand for ever for an example of weeping in contemplation of public calamities; Therefore jesuswept. He wept first, Inter acclamationes, in the midst of the congratulations and acclamations of the people, then when the whole multitude of his Disciples cried out, Vivat Rex, Inter accla. mationes. Luke 19.38. Blessed be the King, that comes in the name of the Lord, Jesus wept. When Herod took to himself the name of the Lord, when he admitted that gross flattery, It is a God and not a man that speaks, It was no wonder that present occasion of lamentation fell upon him. But in the best times, and under the best Prince, (first, such is the natural mutability of all worldly things; and then (and that especially) such is the infiniteness, and enormousnesse of our rebellious sin) then is ever just occasion of fear of worse, and so of tears. Every man is but a sponge, and but a sponge filled with tears: and whether you lay your right hand or your left upon a full sponge, it will weep. Whether God lay his left hand, temporal calamities, or his right hand, temporal prosperity; even that temporal prosperity comes always accompanied with so much anxiety in ourselves, so much uncertainty in itself, and so much envy in others, as that that man who abounds most, that sponge shall weep. Jesus wept, Inter acclamationes, when all went we enough with him; Inter judicia. to show the slipperiness of worldly happiness, and then he wept Inter judicia; then when himself was in the act of denouncing judgements upon them, Jesus wept, To show with how ill a will he inflicted those judgements, and that themselves, and not he, had drawn those judgements upon them. How often do the Prophets repeat that phrase, Onus visionis, O the burden of the judgements that I have seen upon this, and this people! It was a burden that pressed tears from the Prophet Esay, I will water thee with my tears, Esay 16.9. O Heshbon: when he must pronounce judgements upon her, he could not but weep over her. No Prophet so tender as Christ, nor so compassionate; and therefore he never takes rod into his hand, but with tears in his eyes. Alas, did God lack a footstool, that he should make man only to tread and trample upon? Did God lack glory, and could have it no other way, but by creating man therefore, to afflict him temporally here, and eternally hereafter? whatsoever Christ weeps for in the way of his mercy, it is likely he was displeased with it in the way of his Justice: If he weep for it, he had rather it were not so. If then those judgements upon Jerusalem were only from his own primary, and positive, and absolute Decree, without any respect to their sins, could he be displeased with his owneact, or weep and lament that which only himself had done? would God ask rael? if God lay open to that answer, We die therefore, because you have killed us; Jerusalem salem would not judge herself, therefore Christ judged her; Jerusalem would not weep for herself, and therefore Jesus wept; but in those tears of his, he shown, that he had rather her own tears had averted, and washed away those judgements. He wept, cum appropinquavit, says the Text there, when jesus came near the City and saw it Cum appropinquavit. then he wept; not till then. If we will not come near the miseries of our brethren, if we will not see them, we will never weep over them, never be affected towards them. It was cum ille, Non cumilli. not cumilli, when Christ himself, not when his Disciples, his followers, who could do Jerusalem no good, took knowledge of it. It was not cum illi, nor it was not cum illa, not when those judgements drew near; It is not said so; neither is there any time limited in the Text, when those judgements were to fall upon Jerusalem; it is only said generally, indefinitely, these days shall come upon her. And yet Christ did not ease himself upon that, that those calamities were remote and fare off, but though they were so, and not to fall till after his death, yet he lamented future calamities then, than Jesus wept. Many such little Brooks as these fall into this River, the consideration of Christ's Prophetical tears; but let it be enough to have sprinkled these drops out of the River; That Jesus, though a private person, wept in contemplation of public calamities; That he wept in the best times, foreseeing worse; That he wept in their miseries, because he was no Author of them: That he wept not till he took their miseries into his consideration: And he did weep a good time, before those miseries fell upon them. There remain yet his third tears, his pontifical tears, which accompany his sacrifice; Those tears we called the Sea, but a Sea which must now be bounded with a very little sand. To sail apace through this Sea; 3. Part. these tears, the tears of his Cross, were expressed by that inestimable weight, the sins of all the world. If all the body were eye, argues the Apostle in another place; why, here all the body was eye; every poor of his body made an eye by tears of blood, and every inch of his body made an eye by their bloody scourges. And if Christ's looking upon Peter, made Peter weep, shall not his looking upon us here, with tears in his eyes, such tears in such eyes, springs of tears, rivers of tears, seas of tears make us weep too? Peter who wept under the weight of his particular sin, wept bitterly: how bitterly wept Christ under the weight of all the sins of all the world? In the first tears. Christ humane tears (those we called a spring) we fetched water at one house, we condoled a private calamity in another; Lazarus was dead. In his second tears, his Prophetical tears, we went to the condoling of a whole Nation; and those we called a River. In these third tears, his pontifical tears, tears for sin, for all sins (those we call a Sea) here is Mare liberum, a Sea free and open to all; Every man may sail home, home to himself, and lament his own sins there. I am fare from concluding all to be impenitent, that do not actually weep and shed tears; I know there are constitutions, complexions, that do not afford them. And yet the worst Epithet, which the best Poet could fix upon Pluto himself, was to call him Illachrymabilis, a person that could not weep. But to weep for other things, and not to weep for sin, or if not to tears, yet not to come to that tenderness, to that melting, to that thawing, that resolving of the bowels which good souls feel; this is a sponge (I said before, every man is a sponge) this is a sponge dried up into a Pumice stone; the lightness, the hollowness of a sponge is there still, but (as the Pumice is) dried the Aetna's of lust, of ambition, of other flames in this world. I have but three words to say of these tears of this weeping. What it is, what it is for, what it does; the nature, the use, the benefit of these tears, is all. And in the first, I forbear to insist upon S. Basils' Metaphor, Lachrymae sudor animi male sani; Sin is my sickness, the blood of Christ Jesus is my Bezoar, tears is the sweat that that produceth. I forbear Greg. Nyssens metaphor too, Lachryma sanguis cordis defoecatus; Tears are out best blood, so agitated, so ventilated, so purified, so rarified into spirits, as that thereby I become Idem spiritus, one spirit with my God. That is large enough, and embraces all, which S. Gregory says, That man weeps truly, that soul sheds true tears, that considers seriously, first, ubi fuit in innocentia, the blessed state which man was in, in his integrity at first, ubifuit; and then considers, ubi est in tentationibus, the weak estate that man is in now, in the midst of tentations, where, if he had no more, himself were tentation too much, ubi est; and yet considers farther, ubi erit, in gehenna, the insupportable, and for all that, the inevitable, theirreparable, and for all that, undeterminable torments of hell, ubi erit; and lastly, ubi non erit, in coelis, the unexpressible joy and glory which he loses in heaven, ubi non erit, where he shall never be. These four to consider seriously, where man was, where he is, where he shall be, where he shall never be, are four such Rivers, as constitute a Paradise. And as a ground may be a weeping ground, though it have no running River, no constant spring, no gathering of waters in it; so a soul that can pour out itself into these religious considerations, may be a weeping soul, though it have a dry eye: This weeping then is but a true sorrow, (that was our first) and then, what this true sorrow is given us for, and that is our next Consideration. As water is in nature a thing indifferent, in may give life, Ad quid. (so the first livin things that were, were in the water) and it may destroy life, (so all things living upon the earth, were destroyed in the water) but yet though water may, though it have done good and bad, yet water does now one good office, which no ill quality that is in it can equal, it washes our souls in Bap? isme; so though there be good tears and bad tears, tears that wash away sin, and tears that are sin, yet all tears have this degree of good in them, that they are all some kind of argument of good nature, of a tender heart; and the Holy Ghost loves to work in Wax, and not in Marble. I hope that is but merely Poetical which the Poet says, Discunt lachrymare decenter; that some study to weep with a good grace; Quoque volunt plorant empore, quoquemode, they make use and advantage of their tears, and weep when they will. But of those who weep not when they would, but when they would not, do half employ their tears upon thatfor which God hath given them that sacrifice upon sin. God made the Firmament, which he called Heaven, after it had divided the waters: After we have distinguished our tears, natural from spiritual, worldly from heavenly, then there is a Firmament established in us, than there is a heaven opened to us: and truly, to cast Pearls before Swine, will scarce be better resembled, then to shed tears which resemble pearls for worldly losses. Are there examples of menopassionately enamoured upon age? or if upon age, upon deformity? If there be example of that, are they not examples of scorn too? do not all others laugh at their tears? and yet such is our passionate doting upon this world. Mundi facies, says S. Augustine, (and even S. Augustine himself hath scarce said any thing more pathetically) tanta rerani labe contrita, ut etiam speciem seductionis amiserit: The face of the whold world is so defaced, so wrinkled, so ruined, so deformed, as that man might be trusted with this world, and there is no jealousy, no suspicion that this world should be able to minister any occasion of tentation to man: Speciem seductionis amisit. And yet, Qui in seipso aruit, in nobis floret, says S. Gregory, as wittily as S. Augustine, (as it is easy to be witty, easy to extend an Epigram to a Satire, and a Satire to an Invective, in declaiming against this world) that world which finds itself truly in an Autumn, in itself, finds itself in a spring, in our imaginations. Labenti haeremus, says that Father; Et cum labentem sistere non possumus, cum ipso labimur; The world passes away, and yet we cleave to it; and when we cannot stay it from passing away, we pass away with it. To mourn passionately for the love of this world, which is decrepit, and upon the deathbed, or imoderately for the death of any that is passed out of this world, is not the right use of tears. That hath good use which Chrysologus notes, that when Christ was told of Lazarus death, he said he was glad; when he came to raise him to life, than he wept: for though his Disciples gained by it, (they were confirmed by a Miracle) though the family gained by it, (they had their Lazarus again) yet Lazarus himself lost by it, by being re-imprisoned, re-committed, re-submitted to the manifold incommodities of this world. When our Saviour Christ forbade the women to weep for him, it was becausethere was nothing in him, for tears to work upon; no sin: Ordinem flendi docuit, says S. Bernard, Christ did not absolutely forbid tears, but regulate and order their tears, that they might weep in the right place; first for sin. David wept for Absalon; He might imagine, that he died in sin, he wept not for the Child by Bathsheba, he could not suspect so much danger in that. Exitus aquarum, says David, Rivers of waters ran down from mine eyes, why? Quia illi, Because they, who are they? not other men, Psal. 119.136. as it is ordinarily taken; but Quia illi, Because mine own eyes (so Hilary, and Ambrose, and August take it) have not kept thy Laws: As the calamities of others, so the sins of others may, but our own sins must be the object of our sorrow. Thou shalt offer to me, says God, Exod. 22.19. the first of thy ripe fruits, and of thy liquors, as our Translation hath it: The word in the Original ginall is Vedingnacha, lachrymarum, and of thy tears: Thy first tears must be to God for sin: The second and third may be to nature and civility, and such secular offices. But Liquore ad lippitudinem apto quisquamne ad pedes lavandos abutetur? It is S. Chrysostom's exclamation and admiration, will and wash his feet in water for sore eyes? will any man embalm the Carcase of the world, which he treads under foot, with those tears which should embalm his soul? Did joseph of Arimathea bestow any of his perfumes (though he brought a superfluous quantity, a hundred pound weight for one body) yet did he bestow any upon the body of either of the Thiefs? Tears are true sorrow, that you heard before; True sorrow is for sin, that you have heard now; All that remains is how this sorrow works, what is does. The Fathers have infinitely delighted themselves in this descant, the blessed effect of holy tears. Quid operantur. He amongst them that reemembers us, that in the old Law all Sacrifices were washed, he means, That our best sacrifice, even prayer itself, receives an improvement, a dignity, by being washed in tears. He that remembers us, that if any room of out house be on fire, we run for water, means that in all tentations, we should have recourse to tears. He that tells us, that money being put into a basin, is seen at a farther distance, if there be water in the basin, then if it be empty, means also, that our most precious devotions receive an addition, a multiplication by holy tears. S. Bernard means all that they all mean in that, Cor lachrymas nesciens durum, impurum, A hard heart is a foul heart. Would you shut up the devil in his own channel, his channel of brimstone, and make that worse? S. hierom tells the way, Plus tua lachryma, etc. Thy tears torment him more than the fires of hell; will you needs have holy water? truly, true tears are the holiest water. Mend eza. in 1. Sam. And for Purgatory, it is liberally confessed by a Jesuit, Non minùs efficax, etc. One tear will do thee as much good, as all the flames of Purgatory. We have said more than once, that man is a sponge; And in Codice scripta, all our sins are written in God's Book, says S. chrysostom: If there I can fill my sponge with tears, and so wipe out all my sins out of that Book, it is a blessed use of the Sponge. I might stand upon this, the manifold benefits of godly tears, long: so long, as till you wept, and wept for sin; and that might be very long. I contract all to this one, which is all: To how many blessednesses must these tears, this godly sorrow reach by the way, when as it reaches to the very extreme, to that which is opposed to it, to Joy? for godly sorrow is Joy. job 10.20. The words in job are in the Vulgat, Dimitte meut plang am dolorem meum: Lord spare me a while that I may lament my lamentable estate: and so ordinarily the Expositors that follow that Translation, make their use of them. But yet it is in the Original, Lord spare me a while, that I may take comfort: That which one calls lamenting, the other calls rejoicing: To conceive true sorrow and true joy, are things not only contiguous, but continual; they do not only touch and follow one another in a certain succession, Joy assuredly after sorrow, but they consist together, they are all one, Joy and Sorrow. My tears have been my meat day and night, Psal. 42.3. says David: not that he had no other meat, but that none relished so well. Mendoza. It is a Grammatical note of a Jesuit, (I do not tell you it is true; I have almost toll you that it is not true, by telling you whose it is, but that it is but a Grammatical note) That when it is said Tempus cantus, The time offinging is come, it might as well be rendered out of the Hebrew, Cant. 2.12. Tempus plorationis, The time of weeping is come; 2 Sam. 22.50. And when it is said, Nomini tuo cantabo, Lord I will sing unto thy Name, it might be as well rendered out of the Hebrew, Plorabo, I will weep, I will sacrifice my tears unto thy Name. So equal, so indifferent a thing is it, when we come to godly sorrow, whether we call it sorrow or joy, weeping or singing. To end all, to weep for sin is not a damp of melancholy, to sigh for sin, is not a vapour of the spleen, but as Monicaes Confessor said still unto her, in the behalf of her Son S. Augustine, filius istarum lachrymarum, the son of these tears cnnot perish; so wash thyself in these three examplar baths of Christ's tears, in his humane tears, and be tenderly affected with humane accidents, in his Prophetical tears, and avert as much as in thee lieth, the calamities imminent upon others, but especially in his pontifical tears, tears for sin, and I am thy Confessor, non ego, sed Dominus; not I, but the spirit of God himself is thy Confessor, and he absolves thee, filius istarum lachrymarum, the soul bathed in these tears cannot perish: for this is trina immer sio, that threefold dipping which was used in the Primitive Church in baptism. And in this baptism, thou takest a new Christian name, thou who wast but a Christian, art now a regenerate Christian; and as Naaman the Leper came cleaner out of Jordan, than he was before his leprosy, (for his flesh came as the flesh of a child) so there shall be better evidence in this baptism of thy repentance, then in thy first baptism; better in thyself, for than thou hadst no sense of thy own estate, in this thou hast: And thou shalt have better evidence from others too; for howsoever some others will dispute, whether all children which die after Baptism, be certainly saved or no, it never fell into doubt or disputation, whether all that die truly repentant, be saved or no. Weep these tears truly, and God shall perform to thee, first that promise which he makes in Esay, The Lord shall wipe all tears from thy face, Esay 25. all that are fallen by any occasion of calamity here, in the militant Church; and he shall perform that promise which he makes in the Revelation, Revel. 7.17. The Lord shall wipe all tears from thine eyes, that is, dry up the fountain of tears; remove all occasion of tears hereafter, in the triumphant Church. SERMON XVII. Preached at , March 4. 1624. MAT. 19.17. And he said unto him, Why callest thou me Good? There is none Good but One; that is, God. THat which God commanded by his Word, to be done at some times (that we should humble our souls by fasting) the same God tommands by his Church, to be done now: In the Scriptures you have Praeceptum, The thing itself, What; In the Church, you have the Nunt, The time, When. The Scriptures are God's Voice; The Church is his Echo; a redoubling, a repeating of some particular syllables, and accents of the same voice. And as we hearken with some earnestness, and some admiration at an Echo, when perchance we do not understand the voice that occasioned that Echo; so do the obedient children of God apply themselves to the Echo of his Church, when perchance otherwise, they would less understand the voice of God, in his Scriptures, if that voice were not so redoubled unto them. This fasting then, thus enjoined by God, for the general, in his Word, and thus limited to this Time, for the particular, in his Church, is indeed but a continuation of a great Feast: Where, the first course (that which we begin to serve in now) is Manna, food of Angels, plentiful, frequent preaching; but the second course, is the very body and blood of Christ Jesus, shed for us, and given to us, in that blessed Sacrament, of which himself makes us worthy receivers at that time. Now, as the end of all bodily eating, is Assimilation, that after all other concoctions, that meat may be made Idem corpus, the same body that I am; so the end of all spiritual eating, is Assimilation too, That after all Hearing, and all Receiving, I may be made Idem spiritus cum Domino, the same spirit, that my God is: for, though it be good to Hear, good to Receive, good to Meditate, yet, (if we speak effectually, and consummatively) why call we these good? there is nothing good but One, that is, Assimilation to God; In which perfect and consummative sense, Christ says to this Man, in this Text, Why callest thou me good? there is none good but one, that is God. The words are part of a Dialogue, of a Conference, between Christ, Divisio. and a man who proposed a question to him; to whom Christ makes an answer by way of another question, Why callest thou me good, etc. In the words, and by occasion of them, we consider the Text, the Context, and the Pretext: Not as three equal parts of the Building; but the Context, as the situation and Prospect of the house, The Pretext, as the Access and entrance to the house, And then the Text itself, as the House itself, as the body of the building: In a word, In the Text, the Words; In the Context, the Occasion of the words; In the Pretext, the Pretence, the purpose, the disposition of him who gave the occasion. We begin with the Context; 1 Part. Context. the situation, the prospect; how it stands, how it is butted, how it is bounded; to what it relates, with what it is connected. And in that, we are no farther curious, but only to note this, that the Text stands in that Story, where a man comes to Christ, inquires the way to Heaven, believes himself to be in that way already, and (when he hears of nothing, but keeping the Commandments) believes himself to be fargone in that way; But when he is told also, that there belongs to it a departing with his Riches, his beloved Riches, he breaks off the conference, he separates himself from Christ; for, (says the Story) This Man had great possessions. And to this purpose, (to separate us from Christ) the poorest amongst us, hath great possessions. He corners of the streets, as well as he that sits upon carpets, in the Region of perfumes, he that is ground and trod to dirt, with obloquy, and contempt, as well as he that is built up every day, a story and story higher with additions of Honour, Every man hath some such possessions as possess him, some such affections as weigh down Christ Jesus, and separate him from Him, rather than from those affections, those possessions. Scarce any sinner but comes sometimes to Christ, in the language of the man in this Text, Good Master what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life? And if Christ would go no farther with such men, but to say to the Adulterer, Do not thou give thy money to usury; no more to the penurious Usurer, but, Do not thou wast thyself in superfluous and expensive feasting; If Christ would proceed no farther, but to say to the needy person, that had no money, Do not thou buy preferment; or to the ambitious person that soars up after all, Do not thou forsake thyself, deject thyself, undervalue thyself, In all these cases, the Adulterer and the Usurer, The needy and the ambitious man, would all say with the man in the Text, All these things have we done from our youth. But when Christ proceeds to a Vade, & vend, to departed with their possessions, that which they possess, that which possesses them, this changes the case. There are some sins so rooted, so riveted in men, so incorporated, so consubstantiated in the soul, by habitual custom, as that those sins have contracted the nature of Ancient possessions. As men call Manners by their names, so sins have taken names from men, and from places; Simon Magus gave the name to a sin, and so did gehazi, and Sodom did so: There are sins that run in Names, in Families, in Blood; Hereditary sins, entailed sins; and men do almost prove their Gentry by those sins, and are scarce believed to be rightly borne, if they have not those sins; These are great possessions, and men do much more easily part with Christ, then with these sins. But then there are less sins, light sins, vanities; and yet even these come to possess us, and separate us from Christ. How many men negiect this ordinary means of their Salvation, the coming to these Exercises, not because their undoing lies on it, or their discountenancing; but merely out of levity, of vanity, of nothing; they know not what to do else, and yet do not this. You hear of one man that was drowned in a vessel of Wine; but how many thousands in ordinary water? And he was no more drowned in that precious liquor, than they in that common water. A gad of steel does no more choke a man, than a feather, than a hair; Men perish with whispering sins, nay with silent sins, sins that never tell the conscience they are sins, as often as with crying sins: And in hell there shall meet as many men, that never thought what was sin, as that spent all their thoughts in the compass of sin; as many, who in a slack in consideration, never cast a thought upon that place, as that by searing their conscience, overcame the sense and fear of the place. Great sins are great possessions; but levitieses and vanities possess us too; and men had rather part with Christ, then with any possessions; which is all we will note out of this first part, The Context, the situation, and prospect of the house, the coherence and connexion of the Text. The second part, 2 Part. Pretext. is the pretext; that is the pretence, the purpose, the disposition of him that moved this question to Christ, and occasioned this answer. Upon which we make this stop, because it hath been variously apprehended by the Expositors; for some think he came in an humble disposition to learn of Christ, and others think he came in a Pharisaical confidence in himself, with which Epiphanius first, and then S. Jerome charge him. But in such doubtful cases in other men's actions, when it appears not evidently, whether it were well, or ill done, where the balance is even, always put you in your charity, and that will turn the scale the best way. Things which are in themselves, but mis-interpretable, do not you presently misinterpret, you allow some grains to your gold, before you call it light: allow some infirmities to any man, before you call him ill. For this man in the Text, venit, says this Evangelist, he came to Christ, he came of himself. S. Peter himself came not so. S. Peter came not, till his brother Andrew brought him: none of the twelve Apostles came to Christ so, they came not, till Christ called them: Here, we hear of no calling, no inviting, no mention of any motion towards him, no intimation of any intimation to him, and yet he came. Blessed are they that come to Christ Jesus, before any collateral respects draw them, before the Laws compel them, before calamities drive them to him: He only comes hither, that comes voluntarily, and is glad he is here; He that comes so, as that he had rather he were away, is not here. Venit, says our Evangelist, of this man: And then, says S. Mark, Mark. 10.17. handling the same story, Venit procurrens, He came running. nicodemus came not so, Nicodemus durst not avow his coming; and therefore he came creeping, and he came softly, and he came seldom, and he came by night. Blessed are they who make haste to Christ, and publish their zeal to the encouragement of others: For, let no man promise himself a religious constancy in the time of his trial, that doth not his part in establishing the religious constancy of other men. Of all proofs, Demonstration is the powerfullest: when I have just reason to think my superious would have it thus, this is Music to my soul; When I hear them say they would have it thus, this is Rhetoric to my soul; When I see their Laws enjoin it to be thus, this is Logic to my soul; but when I see them actually, really, clearly, constantly do thus, this is a Demonstration to my soul, and Demonstration is the powerfullest proof: The eloquence of inferiors is in words, the eloquence of superiors is in action. He came to Christ; he ran to him; and when he was come, as S. Mark relates it, He fell upon his knees to Christ. He stood not then Pharisaically upon his own legs, his own merits, though he had been a diligent observer of the Commandments before. Blessed are they, who bring the testimony of a form zeal to God's service, and yet make that no excuse for their present, or future slacknesst; The benefit of our former goodness is, that that enables us to be the better still: for, as all example is powerful upon us, so our own example most of all; in this case we are most immediately bound by ourselves; still to be so good, as we ourselves have been before: There was a time when I was nothing; but there shall never be any time, when I shall be nothing; and therefore I am most to respect the future. The good services that a man hath done to God by pen, or sword, are wings, and they exalt him if he would go forward; but they are weights and depress him, and aggravate his condemnation, if his presumption upon the merit of those former services, retard him for the future. This man had done well, but he stood not upon that; he kneeled to Christ, and he said to him, Magister bone, Good master. He was no ignorant man, and yet he acknowledged that he had somewhat more to learn of Christ, than he knew yet. Blessed are they that inanimate all their knowledge, consummate all in Christ Jesus. The University is a Paradise, Rivers of knowledge are there, Arts and Sciences flow from thence. Counsel Tables are Horti conclusi, (as it is said in the Canticles) Gardens that are walled in, and they are Fontes signati, Wells that are sealed up; bottomless depths of unsearchable Counsels there. But those Aquae quietudinum, which the Prophet speaks of, The waters of rest, they flow à magistro bono, from this good master, and flow into him again; All knowledge that gins not, and ends not with his glory, is but a giddy, but a vertiginous circle, but an elaborate and exquisite ignorance. He would learn of him, and what? Quid boni faciam, What good thing shall I do? Blessed are they that bring their knowledge into practice; and blessed again, that crown their former practice with future perseverance. This was his disposition that came; His, though he were a youn man; (for so he is said to be, in the 22. ver.) and young men are not ofter so forward in such ways. I remember one of the Panegyriques celebrates & magnifies one of the Roman Emperors for? is, that he would marry when he was young; that he would so soon confine and limit his pleasures, so soon determine his affections in one person. When a young man comes to Christ, Christ receives him with an extraordinary welcome; well intimated though he were young; and he came though he were Vnus è principibus, (for so he is qualified in S. Luke) A principal man, a great man; as we translate it, One of the Rulers: Luke 18.18. for so he is a real and a personal answer and instance to that scornful question of the Pharisees, Nunquid è principibus, Do any of the Rulers, any great men, believe in Christ? It is true that the Holy Ghost doth say, 1 Cor. 1.26. Non multi nobiles, few noble men come to heaven. Not out of Panigorola, the Bishop of Asti, his reason, Pauci quia pauci, There cannot come many noble men to heaven, because there are not many upon earth; for many times there are many. In calm and peaceable times, the large favours of indulgent Princes, in active and stirring times, the merit and the fortune of forward men, do often enlarge the number. But such is often the corrupt inordinateness of greatness, that it only carries them so much beyond other men, but not so much nearer to God; It only sets men at a farther, not God at a nearer distance to them; but because they are come to be called gods, they think they have no farther to go to God, but to themselves. But God is the God of the Mountains, 1 King. 20.28. Esay 40.12. as well as of the Valleys: Great and small are equal, and equally nothing in his sight: for, when all the world is In pugillo, in God's fist, (as the Prophet speaks) who can say then, This is the Ant, this is the Elephant? Our conversation should be in heaven; and if we look upon the men of this world, as from heaven, as if we looked upon this world itself, from thence, the hills would be no hills, but all one flat and equal plain; so are all men, one kind of dust. Records of nobility are only from the book of Life, and your preferment is your interest in a place at the right hand of God. But yet, when those men whom God hath raised in this world, take him in their arms, and raise him too, though God cannot be exalted above himself, yet he is content to call this a raising, and to thank them for it. Therefore when this man, a man of this rank came to him, Mar. 10.21. jesus beheld him, says the Gospel, and he loved him, and he said, one thing thou lackest; God knows, he lacked many things; but because he had that one, zeal to him, Christ doth not reproach to him his other defects: God pardons great men many errors, for that one good affection, a general zeal to his glory, and his cause. His disposition then, (though it have seemed suspicious, and questionable to some) was so good, as that it hath afforded us these good considerations. If it were not so good as these circumstances promise, yet it affords us another as good consideration, That how bad soever it were, Christ Jesus refused him not, when he came to him. When he enquired of Christ after salvation, Christ doth not say, There is no salvation for thee, thou Viper, thou Hypocrite, thou Pharisee, I have locked an iron door of predestination between salvation and thee; when he enquired of him, what he should do to be sure of heaven, Christ doth not say, There is no such art, no such way, no such assurance here; but you must look into the eternal decree of Election first, and see whether that stand for you or no: But Christ teaches him the true method of this art: for, when he says to him, Why callest thou me good? There is none good but God, he only directs him in the way to that end, which he did indeed, or pretended to seek. And this direction of his, this method is our third part; In which, (having already seen in the first, the Context) the situation and prospect of the house, that is, the coherence and occasion of the words, And in the second, (the Pretext) the access and entrance to the house, that is, the pretence and purpose of him that occasioned the words, you may now be pleased to look farther into the house itself, and to see how that is built; that is, by what method Christ builds up, and edifies this new disciple of his; which is the principal scope and intention of the Text, and that, to which all the rest did somewhat necessarily prepare the way. Our Saviour Christ thus undertaking the farther rectifying of this thus disposed disciple, 3. Part. by a fair method leads him to the true end; Good ends, and by good ways, consummate goodness. Now Christ's answer to this man is diversely read: We read it, (as you have heard) why callest thou me good? The vulgat Edition in the Roman Church, reads it thus, Quid me interrogas de bono? Why dost thou question me concerning goodness? Which is true? That which answers the Original; and it can admit no question, but that ours doth so. But yet, Origen, to be sure, in his eighth Tractate upon this Gospel, reads it both ways: And S. Augustine, in his 63. Chap. of the second book De consensu Evangelist arum, thinks it may very well be believed, that Christ did say both: That when this man called him good master, Christ said then, There was none good but God; and that when this man asked him, what good thing he should do, than Christ said, Why dost thou ask me, me whom thou thinkest to be but a mere man, what is goodness? There is none good but God; If thou look to understand goodness from man, thou must look out such a man as is God too. So that this was Christ's method, by these holy insinuations, by these approaches, and degrees, to bring this man to a knowledge, that he was very God, and so the Messiah that was expected. Nihil est falsitas, August. nisi cum esse putatur, quod non est: All error consists in this, that we take things to be less or more, other than they are. Christ was pleased to redeem this man from this error, and bring him to know truly what he was, that he was God. Christ therefore doth not rebuke this man, by any denying that he himself was good; for Christ doth assume that addition to himself, I am the good Shepherd. Neither doth God forbid, that those good parts which are in men, should be celebrated with condign praise. We see that God, as soon as he saw that any thing was good, he said so, he uttered it, he declared it, first of the Light, and then of other creatures: God would be no author, no example of smothering the due praise of good actions. For, surely that man hath no zeal to goodness in himself, that affords no praise to goodness in other men. But Christ's purpose was also, that this praise, this recognition, this testimony of his goodness, might be carried higher, and referred to the only true author of it, to God. So the Priests and the Elders come to judith, and they say to her, Judith 15.8. Thou art the exaltation of Jerusalem, thou art the great glory of Israel, thou art the rejoicing of our Nation, thou hast done all these things by thy hand; And all this was true of judith, and due to judith; and such recognitions, and such acclamations God requires of such people, as have received such benefits by such instruments: For as there is Treason, and petty-treason, so there is Sacrilege, and petty-sacriledge; and petty-sacriledge is to rob Princes and great persons of their just praise. But then, as we must confer this upon them, so must they, and we, and all transfer all upon God: for so judith proceeds there, with her Priests and Elders, Begin unto my God, with Timbrels, sing unto the Lord with Cymbals, exalt him, and call upon his name. So likewise Elizabeth magnifies the blessed Virgin Mary, Blessed art thou amongst women: And this was true of her, and due to her; Luke 1.42. and she takes it to herself, when she says there, From henceforth all Generations shall call me blessed; but first, she had carried it higher, to the highest, My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit doth rejoice in God my Saviour. In a word, Christ forbids not this man to call him good, but he directs him to know in what capacity that attribute of goodness belonged to him, as he was God: That when this man believed before that Christ was good, and learned from him now, that none was good but God, he might by a farther concoction, a farther rumination, a farther meditation of this, come in due time to know that Christ was God; And this was his Method. Now this leads us into two rich and fragrant fields; this sets us upon the two Hemispheres of the world; the Western Hemisphere, the land of Gold, and Treasure, and the Eastern Hemisphere, the land of Spices and Perfumes; for this puts us upon both these considerations, first, That nothing is Essentially good, but God, (and there is the land of Gold, centrical Gold, viscerall Gold, gremiall Gold, Gold in the Matrice and womb of God, that is, Essential goodness in God himself) and then upon this consideration too, That this Essential goodness of God is so diffusive, so spreading, as that there is nothing in the world, that doth not participate of that goodness; and there is the land of Spices and Perfumes, the dilatation of God's goodness. So that now both these propositions are true, First, That there is nothing in this world good, and then this also, That there is nothing ill: As, amongst the Fathers, it is in a good sense, as truly said, Deus non est Ens, Deus non est substantia, God is no Essence, God is no substance, (for fear of imprisoning God in a predicament) as it is said by others of the Fathers, that there is no other Essence, no other Substance but God. First then, there is nothing good but God: neither can I conceive any thing in God, that concerns me so much as his goodness; for, by that I know him, and for that I love him. I know him by that, for, as Damascen says, primarium Dei nomen, Bonitas; God first name, that is, the first way by which God notified himself to man, was Goodness; for out of his goodness he made him. His name of Jehova we admire with a reverence; but we cannot express that name: not only not in the signification of it, but not confidently, not assuredly in the sound thereof; we are not sure that we should call it Jehova; not sure that any man did call it Jehova a hundred years ago. But, August. ineffabili dulcedine teneor cum audio, Bonus Dominus; I am, not transported with astonishment, as at his name of Jehova, but replenished with all sweetness, established with all soundness, when I hear of my God in that name, my good God. By that I know him, and for that I love him: For, the object of my understanding is truth; but the object of my love, my affection, my desire, is goodness. If my understanding be defective, in many cases, faith will supply it; if I believe it, I am as well satisfied, as if I knew it; but nothing supplies, nor fills, nor satisfies the desire of man, on this side of God; Every man hath something to love, and desire, till he determine it in God; because God only hath Imminuibilem bonitatem, as they render Dyonisius the Areopagite, an inexhaustible goodness; a sea that no land can suck in, a land that no sea can swallow up, a forest that no fire can waste, a fire that no water can quench. Aug. He is so good, goodness so, as that he is Causa bonorum, & quae in nos, & quae in nobis, the cause of all good either received by us, or conceived in us; of all, either prepared externally for us, Idem. or produced internally in us. In a word, he is Bonum caetera bona colorans, & amabilia reddens, it is his goodness, that gilds and enamels all the good persons, or good actions in this world. There is none good but God; and quale bonum ille, says that Father, what kind of goodness God is, this doth sufficiently declare, Quòd nulli ab co recedenti bene sit, That no man that ever went from him, went by good way, or came to good end; There is none good but God; there is centrical, viscerall, gremiall gold, goodness in the root, in the tree of goodness, God. Now, Arbour bona, bonos fructus, says Christ; If the tree be good, the fruit is good too. The tree is God; What are the fruits of this tree? What are the offspring of God? S. Ambr. tells us, Angeli & homines, & virtutes eorum; Angels and men, and the good parts, and good actions of Angels and men, are the fruit of this tree, they grow from God. Angels, as they fell, Adam, as he fell, the sins of Angels and men, are not fruits of this tree, they grow not radically, not primarily from God. Nihil in se habet Deus semi-plenum, says Damascen: God is no half-god, no fragmentary God; he is an entire God, and not made of remnants; not good only so, as that he hath no room for ill in himself, but good so too, as that he hath no room for any ill will towards any man; no man's damnation, no man's sin, grows radically from this tree. When God had made all, says Tertullian, he blessed all; Maledicere non norat, quia nec malefacere, says he: God could no more mean ill, then do ill; God can no more make me sin, than sin himself. It is the fool that says, There is no God, says David; And it is the other fool, says S. Basil, that says, God produces any ill; par precii scelus, quia negat Deum bonum; It is as impiously done, to deny God to be entirely good, as to deny him to be God. For, we see the Manichees, and the Marcionites, and such other Heretics in the Primitive Church, would rather admit, and constitute two Gods, a good God, and a bad God, then be drawn to think, that he that was the good God indeed, could produce any ill of himself, or mean any ill to any man, that had done none. And therefore even from Plato himself, some Christians might learn more moderation in expressing themselves in this point; Plato says, Creavit quia bonus, therefore did God create us, that he might be good to us; and then he adds, Bono nunquam inest invidia, certainly that God, that made us out of his goodness, does not now envy us that goodness which he hath communicated to us; certainly he does not wish us worse, that so he might more justly damn us, and therefore compel us, by any positive decree, to sin, to justify his desire of damning us: Much less did this good God hate us, or mean ill to us, before he made us, and made us only therefore, that he might have glory in our destruction. There is nothing good but God, there is nothing but goodness in God. How abusively then do men call the things of this world, Goods? They may as well call them (so they do in their hearts) Gods, as Goods; for there is none good but God. But how much more abusively do they force the world, that call them Bona quia beant, Goods because they make us good, blessed, happy? In which sense, Seneca uses the word shrewdly, Insolens malum beata uxor, a good wife, a blessed wife, says he, that is, a wife that brings a great estate, is an insolent mischief. If we do but cast our eye upon that title in the Law, Bonorum, and De bonis, of Goods, we shall easily see, what poor things they make shift to call Goods. And if we consider (if it deserve a consideration) how great a difference their Lawyers make (Baldus makes that, and others with him) between Bonorum possessio, and possessio bonorum, that one should amount to a right and propriety in the goods, and the other but to a sequestration of such goods, we may easily see, that they can scarce tell what to call, or where to place such Goods. Health, and strength, and stature, and comeliness, must be called Goods, though but of the body; The body itself is in the substance itself, but dust; these are but the accidents of that dust, and yet they must be Goods. Land, and Money, & honour must be called Goods, though but of fortune; Fortune herself, is but such an Idol, as that S. Aug. was ashamed ever to have named her in his works, and therefore reputes it in his Retractations; herself is but an Idol, and an Idol is nothing these, but the accidents of that nothing, and yet they must be Goods. Are they such Goods, as make him necessarily good that hath them? Or such, as no man can be good, that is without them? How many men make themselves miserable, because they want these Goods? And how many men have been made miserable by others, because they had them? Except thou see the face of God upon all thy money, as well as the face of the King, the hand of God to all thy Patents, as well as the hand of the King, God's Amen, as well as the Kings fiat, to all thy creations, all these reach not to the title of Goods, for there is none good but God. Nothing in this world; not if thou couldst have it all; carry it higher, to the highest, to heaven; heaven itself were not good, without God. For, in the School, very many and very great men, have thought and taught, That the humane nature of Christ, though united Hypostatically to the Divine Nature, was not merely by that Union, impeccable, but might have sinned, if besides that Union, God had not infused, and super-induced other graces, of which other graces, the Beatifical vision, the present sight of the face and Essence of God, was one: Because, (say they) Christ had from his Conception, in his Humane Nature, that Beatifical Vision of God, which we shall have in the state of Glory, therefore he could not sin. This Beatifical Vision, say they, which Christ had here, and which, (as they suppose, and not improbably, in the problematical way of the School) God, of his absolute power, might have withheld, and yet the Hypostatical Union have remained perfect; (for, say they, the two Natures, Humane & Divine, might have been so united, and yet the Humane not have so seen the Divine) This Beatifical Vision, this sight of God, was the Cause, or Seal, or Consummation of Christ's Perfection, and impeccability in his Humane Nature. Much more is this Beatifical Vision, this sight of God in Heaven, the Cause or Consummation of all the joys and glory which we shall receive in that place: for howsoever they dispute, whether that kind of Blessedness consist in seeing God, formaliter, or causaliter, that is, whether I shall see all things in God, as in a glass, in which the species of all things are, or whether I shall see all things, by God, as by the benefit of a light, which shall discover all things to me, yet they all agree, (though they differ de modo, of the manner, how) that howsoever it be, the substance of the Blessedness is in this, that I shall see God: Blessed are the pure in heart, says Christ, for they shall see God; If they should not see God, they were not blessed. And therefore they who place children that die unbaptised, in a room, where though they feel no torment, yet they shall never see God, durst never call that room a part of heaven, but of hell rather; Though there be no torment, yet, if they see not God, it is hell. There is nothing good in this life, nothing in the next, without God, that is, without sight and fruition of the face, and presence of God; which is that, which S. Augustine intends, when he says, Secutio Dei est appetitus Beatitatis, consecutio Beatitas; our looking towards God, is the way to Blessedness, but Blessedness itself is only the sight of God himself. That therefore thou mayst begin thy heaven here, put thyself in the sight of God, put God in thy sight, in every particular action. We cannot come to the body of the Sun, but we can use the light of the Sun many ways: we cannot come to God himself here, but yet here we can see him by many manifestations: so many, as that S. Augustine, in his 20. Chapt. De moribus Ecclesiae Catholicae, hath collected aright places of Scripture, where every one of our senses is called a Seeing; there is a Gustate & videte, and audite, and palpate; tasting, and hearing, and feeling, and all, to this purpose, are called seeing; In all our senses, in our faculties, we may see God if we will: God sees us at midnight; he sees us, then, when we had rather he looked off. If we see him so, it is a blessed interview. How would he that were come abroad at midnight, to do a mischief, sneak away, if he saw the watch? what a damp must it necessarily cast upon any sinner, in the nearest approach to his sin, if he can see God? See him before thou sinnest; then he looks lovingly: After the sin, remember how fain Adam would have hid himself from God: He that goes one step out of God's sight, is loath to come into it again: If you will sit at the right hand of God hereafter, you must walk with God here; So Abraham, so Enoch walked with God, Gen. 5.25. and God took him. God knows, God takes not every man that dies: God says to the rich secure man, Fool, this night they shall fetch away thy soul; but he does not tell him who. That then you be no strangers to God then, see him now; and remember, that his last judgement is expressed in that word, Nescio vos, I know you not; not to be known by God, is damnation; and God knows no man there, with whom he was not acquainted here. There is none good but God; the fruition of that God, is in seeing him; The way to see him there, is to look towards him here. And so we have gone as far as the first of our two propositions carried us, That in this world there is nothing good. The other that remains, is, That there is nothing ill; that this goodness of God is so spread over all, (all actions, all persons) as that there is nothing ill. Seneca, whom Tertullian calls still Senecam nostram, our Seneca, that is, that Christian Seneca, as though he had read that of S Paul, (between whom and him, it hath been thought, there passed Epistles) Quid habes, quod non accepisti? what hast thou, that thou hast not received from God? and meant to say more than that, says quid non dedit? what is there, that were good for thee, that God hath not given thee? And he, whom they call so often Platonem Hebraeorum, the Jews Plato, that is, Philo judaeus, says well, Nihil boni sterile creavit Deus; God hath made nothing, in which he hath not imprinted, and from which he hath not produced some good: He follows it so far, (and justly) as to say, that God does good, where that good does no good: He takes his examples from Gods raining in the Sea; that rain does no good in the Sea: And from Gods producing fresh springs in the desert Land, where, not only no beasts come to drink, but where the very salt tide overflows the fresh spring. He might have added an example from Paradise, that God would plant such a garden, for so few hours; that God would provide man such a dwelling, when he knew he would not dwell a day in it. And he might have added an example from the Light too; That God would create light, and say it was good, then when it could be good for nothing, for there was nothing made to see it, nor to be seen by it: so forward, so early was God, in diffusing his goodness. Of every particular thing. God said it was good, and of all together, that it was very good; there was, there is nothing ill. For, when it is ordinarily inquired in the School, whether any thing be essentially good, it is safely answered there, that if by essentially we mean independantly, so good as that it can subsist of itself, without dependence upon, or relation to any other thing, so there is nothing essentially good: But if by essentially good, we mean that whose essence, and being is good, so every thing is essentially good. And therefore when the Manichees pressed S. August. with that, Vnde malum? If there be not an ill God, as well as a good, unde malum, from whom, or from whence proceed all that ill that is in the world? S. Aug. says, Vnde malum? Quid malum? From whence comes evil? Why, what is there, that you can call evil? I know no such thing; so that, if there be such a God, that God hath no creature. For, as poisons conduce to Physic, and discord to Music, so those two kinds of evil, into which we contract all others, are of good use, that is, malum poenae, the evil of punishment, affliction, adversity, and malum culpae, even sin itself, from which, the punishment flows. Be pleased to stop a little, upon each of these. First, malum poenae, affliction, poverty, sickness, imprisonment, banishment, and such, are not evil. The blood of Christ Jesus only is my cordial; that restores me, repairs me; but affliction is my Physic; that purges, that cleanses me. Hostiliter se opponit medicus, says Tertullian, The Physician comes in like an enemy, with a knife to lance, with fire to cauterize, but opponit se morbo, he is but an enemy to the disease, he means the patient no harm; no more does God to me, in all his medicinal corrections. But how if these afflictions hang long upon me? If they do so, that is Aegrotantium animarum diaeta; Clem. Alex. God enters into another course of Physic, and finds it better for me to spend my disease by a diet; and long sicknesses are such diets: God will recover my soul by a consumption of the body, and establish everlasting health, by long sickness. Howsoever, let God's corrections go as high as they can go in this world, Etsi novum videtur, quod dicere volo, says Origen, dicam tamen; Though it be strange that I will say, I will say it, Etiam bonitas Dei est, qui dicitur faror ejus; That which we call the anger of God, the wrath of God, the fury of God, is the goodness of God. Correct me not O Lord, in thy wrath, says David; but, rather than leave me uncorrected, correct me any way. We call God, Just, and we call him Merciful, according to our present taste of God, and use of God, Civil. Alex. Cum unicam habeat affectionem Deus, nempe bonitatem, when as God hath but one affection in himself, that is, goodness, nor but one purpose upon us, that is, to do us good. So then, this which we call Malum poenae, Affliction, Adversity, is not evil; That which occasions this, Malum culpae, sin itself, is not evil; not evil so, as that it should make us incapable of this diffusive goodness of God. You know, I presume, in what sense we say in the School, Malum nihil, and Peccatum nihil, that evil is nothing, sin is nothing; that is, it hath no reality, it is no created substance, it is but a privation, as a shadow is, as sickness is; so it is nothing. It is wittily argued by Boethius, God can do all things; God cannot sin; Therefore sin is nothing. But it is strongly argued by S. Augustin, If there be any thing naturally evil, it must necessarily be contrary to that which is naturally good; and that is God. Now, Contraria aequalia, says he; whatsoever things are contrary to one another, are equal to one another; so, if we make any thing naturally evil, we shall slide into the Manichees error, to make an Evil God. So fare doth the School follow this, as that there, one Archbishop of Canterbury, out of another, that is, Bradwardin out of Anselme, pronounces it Haereticum esse dicere, Malum esse aliquid, To say that any thing is naturally evil, is an heresy. But if I cannot find a foundation for my comfort, in this subtlety of the School, That sin is nothing, (no such thing as was created or induced by God, much less forced upon me by him, in any coactive Decree) yet I can raise a second step for my consolation in this, that be sin what it will in the nature thereof, yet my sin shall conduce and cooperate to my good. So joseph says to his Brethren, You thought evil against me, Gen. 51.20. but God meant it unto good: which is not only good to joseph, who was no partaker in the evil, but good even to them, who meant nothing but evil. And therefore, as Origen said, Etsi novum, Though it be strangely said, yet I say it, That God's anger is good; so says S. Augustine, Audeo dicere, Though it be boldly said, yet I must say it, Vtile esse cadere in aliquod manifestum peccatum, Many sinners would never have been saved, if they had not committed some greater sin at last, then before; for, the punishment of that sin, hath brought them to a remorse of all their other sins formerly neglected. If neither of these will serve my turn, neither that sin is nothing in itself, and therefore not put upon me by God, nor that my sin, having occasioned my repentance, hath done me good, and established me in a better state with God, than I was in before that sin, yet this shall fully rectify me, and assure my consolation, that in a pious sense I may say, Christ Jesus is the sinner, and not I. For, though in the two and twentieth Session of the Council of Basil, that proposition were condemned as scandalous, in the mouth of a Bishop of Nazareth, Augustinus de Roma, Christus quotidie peccat, That Christ does sin every day, yet Gregory Nazianzen expresses the same intention, in equivalent terms, when he says, Quamdiu inobediens ego, tamdiu, quantum ad me attinet, inobediens Christus: As long as I sin, for so much as concerns me, me, who am incorporated in Christ, me, who by my true repentance have discharged myself upon Christ, Christ is the sinner, even in the sight, and justice of his Father, and not I. And as this consideration, That the goodness of God, in Christ, is thus spread upon all persons, and all actions, takes me off from my aptness to misinterpret other men's actions, not to be hasty to call indifferent things, sins, not to call hardness of access in great Persons, pride, not to call sociableness of conversation in women, prostitution, not to call accommodation of Civil businesses in States, prevarication, or dereliction and abandoning of God, and toleration of Religion; as it takes me off from this misinterpreting of others; so, for myself, it puts me upon an ability, to chide, and yet to cheer my soul, with those words of David, O my Soul, why art thou so sad? why art thou so disquieted within me? Since sin is nothing, no such thing as is forced upon thee by God, by which thy damnation should be inevitable, or thy reconciliation impossible, since of what nature soever sin be in itself, thy sins being truly repent, have advanced, and emproved thy state in the favour of God, since thy sin, being by that repentance discharged upon Christ, Christ is now the sinner, and not thou, O my Soul, why art thou so sad? why art thou disquieted within me? And this consideration of God's goodness, thus derived upon me, and made mine in Christ, ratifies and establishes such a holy confidence in me, as that all the moral constancy in the world, is but a bulrush, to this bulwark; and therefore, we end all, with that historical, but yet useful note, That that Duke of Burgundy, who was surnamed Carolus Audax, Charles the Bold, was Son to that Duke, who was surnamed Bonus, The Good Duke; A Good one produced a Bold one: True confidence proceeds only out of true Goodness: for, The wicked shall fly, Prov. 28.1. when no man pursueth, but the righteous are bold as a Lion. This constancy, and this confidence, and upon this ground, Holy courage in a holy fear of him, Almighty God infuse and imprint in you all, for his Son Christ Jesus sake. And to this glorious Son of God, etc. SERMONS Preached upon EASTER-DAY. SERMON XVIII. Preached at S. Paul's, in the Evening, upon Easter-day. 1623. ACTS 2.36. Part of the second Lesson of that Evening Prayer. Therefore let all the house of Israel know assuredly, That God hath made that same jesus, whom ye have crucified, both Lord, and Christ. THe first word of the Text, must be the last part of the Sermon, Divisio. Therefore; Therefore let all know it. Here is something necessary to be known, And the Means by which we are to know it; And these will be our two parts; Scientia, & Modus, Knowledge, and the way to it; For, Qui testatur de scientia, testatur de modo scientiae, is a good rule, in all Laws, He that will testify any thing upon his knowledge, must declare how he came by that knowledge. So then, what we must conclude, and upon what premises, what we must resolve, and what must lead us to that resolution, are our two stages, our two resting places: And to those two, our several steps are these; In the first, Let all the house of Israel know, etc. we shall consider first, The Manner of S. Peter, (for the Text is part of a Sermon of S. Peter's) in imprinting this Knowledge in his Auditory; which is, first, in that Compellation of love and honour, Domus Israel, The house of Israel: But yet, when he hath raised them to a sense of their dignity, in that attribute, he doth not pamper them with an over-value of them, he lets them know their worst, as well as their best, Though you be the house of Israel, yet it is you that have crucified Christ Jesus, That jesus, whom ye have crucified; And from this his Manner of preparing them, we shall pass to the Matter that he proposes to them: When he had remembered them what God had done for them (You are the house of Israel) and what they had done against God, (You have crucified that jesus) He imparts a blessed message to them all, Let all know it: Let them know it, and know it assuredly; He exhibits it to their reason, to their natural understanding, And what? The greatest mystery, the entire mystery of our salvation, That that jesus is both Lord, and Christ; But he is made so; Made so by God; Made both; Made Christ, that is, anointed, embalmed, preserved from corruption, even in the grave, And made Lord by his triumph, and by being made Head of the Church, in the Resurrection, and in the Ascension: And so, that which is the last step of our first stage, (That that jesus is made Lord, as well as he is made Christ) enters us upon our second stage, The means by which we are to know, and prove all this to ourselves; Therefore, says the Text, let all know it; wherefore? why, because God hath raised him, after you had crucified him; Because God hath loosed the bands of death, Ver. 23, 24, 25, 26, 27. because it was impossible that he should be holden by death; Because David's prophecy of a deliverance from the grave is fulfilled in him, Therefore let all know this to be thus. So that the Resurrection of Christ is argument enough to prove, that Christ is made Lord of all; And if he be Lord, he hath Subjects, that do as he does; And so his Resurrection is become an argument, and an assurance of our Resurrection too; and that is as far as we shall go in our second part, That first Christ's Resurrection is proof enough to us of his Dominion, if he be risen, he is Lord, and then his Dominion is proof enough to us of our Resurrection, if he be Lord, Lord of us, we shall rise too: And when we have paced, and passed through all these steps, we shall in some measure have solemnised this day of the Resurrection of Christ; and in some measure have made it the day of our Resurrection too. First then, 1. Part. Domus Israel. the Apostle applies himself to his Auditory, in a fair, in a gentle manner; he gives them their Titles, Domus Israel, The house of Israel. We have a word now denizened, and brought into familiar use amongst us, Compliment; and for the most part, in an ill sense; so it is, when the heart of the speaker doth not answer his tongue; but God forbidden but a true heart, and a fair tongue might very well consist together: As virtue itself receives an addition, by being in a fair body, so do good intentions of the heart, by being expressed in fair language. That man aggravates his condemnation, that gives me good words, and means ill; but he gives me a rich Jewel, and in a fair Cabinet, he gives me precious wine, and in a clean glass, that intends well, and expresses his good intentions well too. If I believe a fair speaker, I have comfort a little while, though he deceive me, but a froward and peremptory refuser, unsaddles me at first. I remember a vulgar Spanish Author, who writes, the josephina, the life of joseph, the husband of the blessed Virgin Mary, who moving that question, why that Virgin is never called by any style of Majesty, or Honour in the Scriptures, he says, That if after the declaring of her to be the Mother of God, he had added any other Title, the Holy Ghost had not been a good Courtier, (as his very word is) nor exercised in good language, and he thinks that had been a defect in the Holy Ghost in himself. He means surely the same that Epiphanius doth, That in naming the Saints of God, and especially the blessed Virgin, we should always give them the best Titles that are appliable to them; Epiphan. Haeres. 78. Quis unquam ausus, (says he) proffer nomen Mariae, & non statim addidit virgo? Who ever durst utter the name of that Mary, without that addition of incomparable honour, The Virgin Mary? That Spanish Author need not be suspicious of the Holy Ghost in that kind, that he is no good Courtier so; for in all the books of the world, you shall never read so civil language, nor so fair expressions of themselves to one another, as in the Bible: When Abraham shall call himself dust, and ashes, (and indeed if the Son of God were a worm and no man, what was Abraham?) If God shall call this Abraham, this Dust, this Worm of the dust, The friend of God, (and all friendship implies a parity, an equality in something;) when David shall call himself a flea, and a dead dog, even in respect of Saul, and God shall call David, A man according to his own heart, when God shall call us, The Apple of his own eye, The Seal upon his own right hand, who would go farther for an Example, or farther than that example for a Rule, of fair accesses, of civil approaches, of sweet and honourable entrances into the affections of them with whom they were to deal? Especially is this manner necessary in men of our profession; Not to break a bruised reed, nor to quench smoking flax, not to avert any, from a will to hear, by any frowardness, any morosity, any defrauding them of their due praise, and due titles; but to accompany this blessed Apostle, in this way of his discreet, and religious insinuation, to call them Men of judea, ver. 14. and Men of Israel, ver. 22. and Men and Brethren, ver. 29. and here Domus Israel, the ancientest house, the honourablest house, the lastingest house in the world, The house of Israel. He takes from them nothing that is due, Accusat tamen. that would but exasperate; He is civil, but his civility doth not amount to a flattery, as though the cause of God needed them, or God must be beholding to them, or God must pay for it, or smart for it, if they were not pleased. And therefore, though he do give them their titles, Apertè illis imputat crucifixionem Christi, says S. chrysostom, Plainly and without disguise he imputes and puts home to them, the crucifying of Christ; how honourably soever they were descended, he lays that murder close to their Consciences, You, you house of Israel have crucified the Lord jesus. There is a great deal of difference between Shimeis' vociferations against David; 2 Sam. 16.5. Thou man of blood, thou man of Belial, And nathan's proceeding with David; and yet Nathan forbore not to tell him, 2 Sam. 12.7. Thou art the man, Thou hast despised the Lord, Thou hast killed Vriah, Thou hast taken his wife. It is one thing to sow pillows under the elbows of Kings, (flatterers do so) another thing to pull the chair from under the King, and popular and seditious men do so. Where Inferiors insult over their Superiors, we tell them, Christi Domini, they are the Lords anointed, and the Lord hath said, Touch not mine anointed; And when such Superiors insult over the Lord himself, and think themselves Gods without limitation, as the God of heaven is, when they do so, we must tell them they do so, Etsi Christi Domini, though you be the Lords anointed, yet you crucify the anointed Lord: for this was S. Peter's method, though his successor will not be bound by it. When he hath carried the matter thus evenly between them, (I do not deny, Omnes. but you are the House of Israel, you cannot deny but you have crucified the Lord Jesus; you are heirs of a great deal of honour, but you are guilty of a shrewd fault too) stand or fall to your Master, your Master hath dealt thus mercifully with you all, that to you all, all, he sends a message, Sciant omnes, Let all the house of Israel know this. Needs the house of Israel know any thing? Needs there any learning in persons of Honour? We know, this characterizes, this distinguishes some whole Nations; In one Nation it is almost a scorn for a gentleman to be learned, in another almost every gentleman, is conveniently, and in some measure, learned. But I enlarge not myself, I pretend not to comprehend Nationall virtues, or Nationall vices. For this knowledge, which is proclaimed here, which is, the knowledge that the true Messiah is come, and that there is no other to be expected, is such a knowledge, as that even the house of Israel itself, is without a Foundation, if it be without this knowledge. Is there any house, that needs no reparations? Is there a house of Israel, (let it be the Library, the depositary of the Oracles of God, a true Church, that hath the true word of the true God, let it be the house fed with Manna, that hath the true administration of the true Sacraments of Christ Jesus) is there any such house, that needs not a farther knowledge, that there are always thiefs about that house, that would rob us of that Word, and of those Sacraments? The Holy Ghost is a Dove, and the Dove couples, pairs, is not alone; Take heed of singular, of schismatical opinions; & what is more singular, more schismatical, then when all Religion is confined in one man's breast? The Dove is animal sociale, a sociable creature, and not singular; and the Holy Ghost is that; And Christ is a Sheep, animal gregale, they flock together: Embrace thou those truths, which the whole flock of Christ Jesus, the whole Christian Church, hath from the beginning acknowledged to be truths, and truths necessary to salvation; for, for other Traditional, and Conditional, and Occasional, and Collateral, and Circumstantial points, for Almanac Divinity, that changes with the season, with the time, and Meridional Divinity, calculated to the height of such a place, and Lunary Divinity, that ebbs and flows, and State Divinity, that obeys affections of persons, Domus Israel, the true Church of God, had need of a continual succession of light, a contival assistance of the Spirit of God, and of her own industry, to know those things that belong to her peace. And therefore let no Church, no man, think that he hath done enough, or knows enough. If the Devil thought so too, we might the better think so: but since we see, that he is in continual practice against us, let us be in a continual diligence, and watchfulness, to countermine him. We are domus Israel, the house of Israel, and it is a great measure of knowledge, that God hath afforded us; but if every Pastor look into his Parish, and every Master into his own Family, and see what is practising there, sciat domus Israel, let all our Israel know, that there is more knowledge, and more wisdom necessary; Be every man fare from calumniating his Superiors, for that mercy which is used towards them that are fallen, but be every man as far from remitting, or slackening his diligence, for the preserving of them, that are not fallen. The wisest must know more, though you be domus Israel, the house of Israel already; Crucifixistis. and then, Etsi Crucifixistis, though you have crucified the Lord Jesus, you may know it, sciant omnes, let all know it. S. Paul says once, If they had known it, they would not have crucified the Lord of life; but he never says, if they have crucified the Lord of life, 1 Cor. 2.8. they are excluded from knowledge. I mean no more, but that the mercy of God in manifesting and applying himself to us, is above all our sins. No man knows enough; what measure of tentations soever he have now, he may have tentations, through which, this knowledge, and this grace, will not carry him; and therefore he must proceed from grace to grace. So no man hath sinned so deeply, but that God offers himself to him yet; Sciant omnes, the wisest man hath ever something to learn, he must not presume; the sinfullest man hath God ever ready to teach him, he must not despair. Now the universality of this mercy, Sciant. hath God enlarged, and extended very fare, in that he proposes it, even to our knowledge, Sciant, let all know it. It is not only credant, let all believe it; for the infusing of faith, is not in our power: but God hath put it in our power to satisfy their reason, and to chafe that wax, to which he himself vouchsafes to set to the great seal of faith. And that S. Hierome takes to be most properly his Commission, Tentemus animas, quae deficiunt a fide, nature alibus rationibus adjuvare; Let us endeavour to assist them, who are weak in faith, with the strength of reason. And truly it is very well worthy of a serious consideration, that whereas all the Articles of our Creed, are objects of faith, so, as that we are bound to receive them de fide, as matters of faith, yet God hath left that, out of which, all these Articles are to be deduced, and proved, (that is, the Scripture) to humane arguments; It is not an Article of the Creed, to believe these, and these Books, to be, or not to be Canonical Scripture; but our arguments for the Scripture are humane arguments, proportioned to the reason of a natural man. God does not seal in water, in the fluid and transitory imaginations, and opinions of men; we never set the seal of faith to them; But in Wax, in the rectified reason of man, that reason that is ductile, and flexible, and pliant, to the impressions that are naturally proportioned unto it, God sets to his seal of faith. They are not continual, but they are contiguous, they flow not from one another, but they touch one another, they are not both of a piece, but they enwrap one another, Faith and Reason. Faith itself, by the Prophet Esay is called knowledge; Esay 53.11. By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many, says God of Christ; that is, by that knowledge, that men shall have of him. So Zechary expresses it at the Circumcision of john Baptist, That he was to give knowledge of salvation, Luke 1.77. for the remission of sins. As therefore it is not enough for us, in our profession to tell you, Qui non crediderit, damnabitur, Except you believe all this, you shall be damned, without we execute that Commission before, Ite praedicate, go and preach, work upon their affections, satisfy their reason; so it is not enough for you, to rest in an imaginary faith, and easiness in believing, except you know also what, and why, and how you come to that belief. Implicit believers, ignorant believers, the adversary may swallow; but the understanding believer, he must chaw, and pick bones, before he come to assimilate him, and make him like himself. The implicit believer stands in an open field, and the enemy will ride over him easily; the understanding believer, is in a fenced town, and he hath outworks to lose, before the town be pressed; that is, reasons to be answered, before his faith be shaked, and he will sell himself dear, and lose himself by inches, if he be sold or lost at last; and therefore sciant omnes, let all men know, that is, endeavour to inform themselves, to understand. That particular, jesum. that general particular, (if we may so say, for it includes all) which all were to know, is, that the same Jesus, whom they Crucified, was exalted above them all. Suppose an impossibility; (S. Paul does so, when he says to the Galatians, If an Angel from heaven should preach any other Gospel; for that is impossible;) If we could have been in Paradise, and seen God take a clod of red earth, and make that wretched clod of contemptible earth, such a body as should be fit to receive his breath, an immortal soul, fit to be the house of the second person in the Trinity, for God the Son to dwell in bodily; fit to be the Temple for the third person, for the Holy Ghost, should we not have wondered more, then at the production of all other creatures? It is more, that the same Jesus, whom they had crucified, is exalted thus, to sit in that despised flesh, at the right hand of our glorious God; that all their spitting should but macerate him, and dissolve him to a better mould, a better plaster; that all their buffet should but knead him, and press him into a better form; that all their scoffs, and contumelies should be prophecies; that that Ecce Rex, Behold your King; and that Rex judaeorum, This is the King of the jews, which words, they who spoke them, thought to be lies, in their own mouths, should become truths, and he be truly the King, not of the Jews only, but of all Nations too; that their nailing him upon the Cross, should be a settling of him upon an everlasting Throne; and their lifting him up upon the Cross, a waiting upon him, so fare upon his way to heaven, that this Jesus, whom they had thus evacuated, thus crucified, should be thus exalted, was a subject of infinite admiration, but mixed with infinite confusion too. Wretched Blasphemer of the name of Jesus, that Jesus, whom thou crucifiest, and treadest under thy feet, in that oath, is thus exalted. Unclean Adulterer, that Jesus, whom thou crucifiest, in stretching out those forbidden arms in a strange bed, thou that beheadest thyself, castest off thy Head; Christ Jesus, that thou mightst make thy body, the body of a Harlot, that Jesus, whom thou defilest there, is exalted. Let several sinners pass this through their several sins, and remember with wonder, but with confusion too, that that Jesus, whom they have crucified, is exalted above all. How fare exalted? Three steps, which carry him above S. Paul's third heaven: Factus. He is Lord, and he is Christ, and he is made so by God; God hath made him both Lord and Christ. We return up these steps, as they lie, and take the lowest first: Fecit Deus, God made him so: Nature did not make him so, no, not if we consider him in that Nature, wherein he consists of two Natures, God, and Man. We place in the School, (for the most part) the infinite Merit of Christ Jesus (that his one act of dying once, should be a sufficient satisfaction to God, in his Justice, for all the sins of all men) we place it, I say, rather in pacto, then in persona, rather that this contract was thus made between the Father, and the Son, then that, whatsoever that person, thus consisting of God and Man, should do, should, only in respect of the person, be of an infinite value, and extension, to that purpose; for then, any act of his, his Incarnation, his Circumcision, any had been sufficient for our Redemption, without his death. But fecit Deus, God made him that, that he is; The contract between the Father and him, that all that he did, should be done so, and to that purpose, that way, and to that end, this is that, that hath exalted him, and us in him. If then, not the subtlety, and curiosity, but the wisdom of the School, and of the Church of God, have justly found it most commodious, to place all the mysteries of our Religion, in pacto, rather than in persona, in the Covenant, rather than in the person, though a person of incomprehensible value, let us also, in applying to ourselves those mysteries of our Religion, still adhaerere pactis, and not personis, still rely upon the Covenant of God, with man, revealed in his word, and not upon the person of any man: Not upon the persons of Martyrs, as if they had done more than they needed for themselves, and might relieve us, with their supererogations; for, if they may work for us, they may believe for us; and justus fide sua vivet, says the Prophet, Habak. 2.4. The righteous shall live by his own faith. Not upon that person, who hath made himself supernumerary, and a Controller upon the three persons in the Trinity, the Bishop of Rome; not upon the consideration of accidents upon persons, when God suffers some to fall, who would have advanced his cause, and some to be advanced, who would have thrown down his cause, but let us ever dwell in pacto, and in the fecit Deus, this Covenant God hath made in his word, and in this we rest. It is God then, not nature, not his nature that made him; And what? Christ; Christus. Christ is anointed: And then Mary Magdalen made him Christ, for she anointed him before his death; And joseph of Arimathea made him Christ, for he anointed him, and embalmed him, after his death. But her anointing before, kept him not from death, nor his anointing after, would not have kept him from putrefaction in the grave, if God had not in a fare other manner, made him Christ, anointed him praeconsortibus, above his fellows. God hath anointed him, embalmed him, enwrapped him in the leaves of the Prophets, That his flesh should not see corruption in the grave, That the flames of hell should not take hold of him, nor sing him there; so anointed him, as that, in his Humane nature, He is ascended into heaven, and set down at the right hand of God; For, de eo quod ex Maria est, Petrus loquitur, says S. Basil, That making of him Christ, that is, that anointing which S. Peter speaks of in this place, is the dignifying of his humane nature, that was anointed, that was consecrated, that was glorified in heaven. But he had a higher step than that; God made this jesus, Christ, and he made him Lord; Dominus. He brought him to heaven, in his own person, in his humane nature; so he shall all us; but when we shall be all there, he only shall be Lord of all. And if there should be no other bodies in heaven, then his, yet, yet now he is Lord of all, as he is Head of the Church. Ask of me, says his Father, and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, Psal. 2.8. and the utter most parts of the Earth for thy possession. And, as it is added, ver. 6. I have set my King upon my holy hill of Zion; So he hath made him Lord, Head of the Jews, and of the Gentiles too, of Zion, and of the Nations also; He hath consecrated his person, raised his humane nature, to the glorious region of blessed Spirits, to Heaven, and he hath dignified him with an office, made him Lord, Head of the Church, not only of Jews, and Gentiles upon earth, but of the Militant and Triumphant Church too. Our two general parts were Scientia, 2. Part. & modus, what we must all know, and by what we must know it. Our knowledge is, this Exaltation of Jesus; and our means is implied, in the first word of the Text, Therefore. Therefore, Therefore because he is raised from the Dead; for to that Resurrection, expressed in three, or four several phrases before the Text, is this Text, and this Exaltation referred; Christ was delivered for our sins, raised for our justification, and upon that depends all. Christ's descending into hell, and his Resurrection, in our Creed, make but one Article, and in our Creed we believe them both alike: Quis nisi Infidelis negaverit, apud inferos fuisse Christum? says S. Augustine; Who but an Infidel, will deny Christ's descending into hell? And if he believe that to be a limb of the article of the Resurrection, His descent into hell, must rather be an inchoation of his triumph, than a consummation of his Exinanition, The first step of his Exaltation there, rather than the last step of his Passion upon the Cross: But the Declaration, the Manifestation, that which admits no disputation, was his Resurrection. Factus, id est, declaratus per Resurrectionem, says S. Cyrill, He was made Christ, and Lord, that is, declared evidently to be so, 1 Cor. 1.20. by his Resurrection; As there is the like phrase, in S. Paul, God hath made the wisdom of this world, foolishness, that is, declared it to be so. And therefore it is imputed to be a crucifying of the Lord Jesus again, Heb. 6.6. Non credere eum, post mortem, immortalem, Not to believe, that now after his having overcome death in his Resurrection, he is in an immortal, and in a glorious state in heaven. For when the Apostle argues thus, 1 Cor. 15.14. If Christ be not risen, then is our preaching in vain, and your faith in vain, he implies the contrary too, If you believe the Resurrection, we have preached to good purpose: Mortuum esse Christum, August. pagani credunt; resurrexisse propria fides Christianorum: The Heathen confess Christ's death; To believe his Resurrection, is the proper character of a Christian: for the first stone of the Christian faith, was laid in this article of the Resurrection; In the Resurrection only was the first promise performed, Ipse conteret, He shall bruise the Serpent's head; for, in this, he triumphed over Death, and Hell; And the last stone of our faith, is laid in the same article too, that is, the day of Judgement; of a day of Judgement God hath given an assurance unto all men (says S. Paul at Athens) In that he hath raised Christ jesus from the dead. Acts 17.31. In this Christ makes up his circle; in this he is truly Alpha and Omega, His coming in Paradise in a promise, his coming to Judgement in the clouds, are tied together in the Resurrection: And therefore all the Gospel, all our preaching, is contracted to that one text, To bear witness of the Resurrection; only for that, Acts 1.22. was there need of a new Apostle, There was a necessity of one to be chosen in judas room, to be a witness of the Resurrection; Non ait caeterorum, sed tantùm Resurrectionis, says S. chrysostom, He does not say, to bear witness of the other articles, but only of the Resurrection; he charges him with no more instructions, he needs no more, in his Commission, but to preach the Resurrection: Athan. for in that, Trophaeum de morte excitavit, & indubitatum reddidit corruptionem deletam: Here is a retreat from the whole warfare, here is a Trophy erected upon the last enemy; The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death, and here is the death of that enemy, in the Resurrection. And therefore, to all those who importuned him for a sign, Christ still turns upon the Resurrection. john 2.38. Mat. 12.38. The Jews pressed him in general, Quod signum, What sign showest thou unto us? and he answers, Destroy this Temple, (this body) and in three days I will raise it. In another place, the Scribes and the Pharisees join, Master we would see a sign from thee, and he tells them, There shall be no sign, but the sign of the Prophet jonas; who was a type of the Resurrection. And then the Pharisees, and Sadduces join; now they were bitter enemies to one another; but, as Tertullian says, Semper inter duos latrones crucifixus Christus, It was always Christ's case to be crucified between two Thiefs; So these, though enemies join in this vexation, They ask a sign, as the rest, and, as to the rest, Christ gives that answer of jonas. So that Christ himself determines all, sums up all in this one Article, the Resurrection. Now, Nos. if the Resurrection of this Jesus, have made him, not only Christ, Anointed and consecrated in Heaven, in his own person, but made him Lord, than he hath Subjects, upon whom that dominion, and that power works, and so we have assurance of a resurrection in him too. That he is made Lord of us by his Resurrection, is rooted in prophecy; It pleased the Lord to bruise him, says the Prophet Esay; But he shall see his seed, Esay 53.10. and he shall prolong his days; that is, he shall see those that are regenerate in him, live with him, forever. It is rooted in prophecy, and it spreads forth in the Gospel. To this end, says the Apostle, Christ died, and rose, that he might be Lord of the dead, and of the living. Now, Rom. 14.9. Gregor. what kind of Lord, if he had no subjects? Cum videmus caput super aquas, when the head is above water, will any imagine the body to be drowned? What a perverse consideration were it, to imagine a live head, and dead members? Or, consider our bodies in ourselves, and Our bodies are Temples of the Holy Ghost; and shall the Temples of the holy Ghost lie for ever, for ever, buried in their rubbish? They shall not; for, the day of Judgement, is the day of Regeneration, as it is called in the Gospel; Mat. 19.28. August. Quia caro nostra ita generabitur per incorruptionem, sicut anima per fidem: Because our body shall be regenerated by glory there, as our souls are by faith here. Therefore, Tertul. calls the Resurrection, Exemplum spei nostrae, The Original, out of which we copy out our hope; and Clavem sepulchrorū nostrorum, How hard soever my grave be locked, yet with that key, with the application of the Resurrection of Christ Jesus, it will open; And they are all names, which express this well, which Tertullian gives Christ, Vadem, obsidem, fidejussorem resurrectionis nostrae, That he is the pledge, the hostage, the surety of our Resurrection: So doth that also which is said in the School, Sicut Adam forma morientium, Theoph. it a Christus forma resurgentium; Without Adam, there had been no such thing as death, without Christ, no such thing as a Resurrection: But ascendit ille effractor, (as the Prophet speaks) The breaker is gone up before, and they have passed through the gate, that is, assuredly, Mich. 2.13. infallibly, they shall pass. But what needs all this heat, all this animosity, all this vehemence, about the Resurrection? May not man be happy enough in heaven, though his body never come thither? upon what will ye ground the Resurrection? upon the Omnipotence of God? Asylum haereticorum est Omnipotentia Dei, (which was well said, and often repeated amongst the Ancients) The Omnipotence of God, hath always been the Sanctuary of Heretics, that is, always their refuge, in all their incredible doctrines, God is able to do it, can do it. You confess, the Resurrection is a miracle; And miracles are not to be multiplied, nor imagined without necessity; and what necessity of bodies in Heaven? Beloved, we make the ground and foundation of the Resurrection, to be, not merely the Omnipotency of God, for God will not do all, that he can do: but the ground is, Omnipotens voluntas Dei revelata, The Almighty will of God revealed by him, to us: And therefore Christ joins both these together, Erratis, Ye err, Mat. 22.29. not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God; that is, not considering the power of God, as it is revealed in the Scriptures: for there is our foundation of this Doctrine: we know, out of the Omnipotence of God, it may be; and we know out of the Scriptures it must be: That works upon our faith, this upon our reason; That it is man that must be saved, man that must be damned; and to constitute a man, there must be a body, as well as a soul. Nay, the Immortality of the soul, will not so well lie in proof, without a resuming of the body. For, upon those words of the Apostle, If there were no Resurrection, we were the miserablest of all men, the School reasons reasonably; Naturally the soul and body are united, when they are separated by Death, it is contrary to nature, which nature still affects this union; and consequently the soul is the less perfect, for this separation; and it is not likely, that the perfect natural state of the soul, which is, to be united to the body, should last but three or four score years, and, in most, much less, and the unperfect state, that in the separation, should last eternally, for ever: so that either the body must be believed to live again, or the soul believed to die. Never therefore dispute against thine own happiness; never say, God asks the heart, that is, the soul, and therefore rewards the soul, or punishes the soul, and hath no respect to the body; Nec auferamus cogitationes a collegio carnis, says Tertullian, Never go about to separate the thoughts of the heart, from the college, from the fellowship of the body; Siquidem in carne, & cum carne, & per carnem agitur, quicquid ab anima agitur, All that the soul does, it does in, and with, and by the body. And therefore, (says he also) Caro abluitur, ut anima emaculetur, The body is washed in baptism, but it is that the soul might be made clean; Caro ungitur, ut anima consecretur, In all unctions, whether that which was then in use in Baptism, or that which was in use at our transmigration, and passage out of this world, the body was anointed, that the soul might be consecrated; Caro signatur, (says Tertullian still) ut anima muniatur; The body is signed with the Cross, that the soul might be armed against tentations; And again, Caro de Corpore Christi vescitur, ut anima de Deo saginetur; My body received the body of Christ, that my soul might partake of his merits. He extends it into many particulars, and sums up all thus, Non possunt in mercede separari, quae opera conjungunt, These two, Body, and Soul, cannot be separated for ever, which, whilst they are together, concur in all that either of them do. Never think it presumption, says S. Gregory, Sperare in te, quod in se exhibuit Deus homo, To hope for that in thyself, which God admitted, when he took thy nature upon him. And God hath made it, says he, more easy than so, for thee, to believe it, because not only Christ himself, but such men, as thou art, did rise at the Resurrection of Christ. And therefore when our bodies are dissolved and liquefied in the Sea, putrified in the earth, resolved to ashes in the fire, macerated in the air, Velut in vasa sua transfunditur caro nostra, Tertul. make account that all the world is God's cabinet, and water, and earth, and fire, and air, are the proper boxes, in which God lays up our bodies, for the Resurrection. Curiously to dispute against our own Resurrection, is seditiously to dispute against the dominion of Jesus; who is not made Lord by the Resurrection, if he have no subjects to follow him in the same way. We believe him to be Lord, therefore let us believe his, and our Resurrection. This blessed day, Ille. john 2.19. john 10.17. which we celebrate now, he risen: he risen so, as none before did, none after, ever shall rise; He rose; others are but raised: Destroy this Temple, says he, and I will raise it; I, without employing any other Architect. I lay down my life, says he: the Jews could not have killed him, when he was alive; If he were alive here now, the Jesuits could not kill him here now; except his being made Christ, and Lord, an anointed King, have made him more open to them. I have a power to lay it down, says he, and I have a power to take it up again. This day, Nos. john 2.3. we celebrate his Resurrection; this day let us celebrate our own: Our own, not our one Resurrection, for we need many. Upon those words of our Saviour to Nicodemus, Oportet denuo nasci, speaking of the necessity of Baptism, Non solum denuo, sed tertiò nasci oportet, says S. Bernard, He must be born again, and again; again by baptism, for Original sin, and for actual sin, again by repentance; Infoelix homo ego, & miser abilis casus, says he, cui non sufficit una regeneratio! Miserable man that I am, and miserable condition that I am fallen into, whom one regeneration will not serve! So is it a miserable death that hath swallowed us, whom one Resurrection will serve. We need three, but if we have not two, we were as good be without one. There is a Resurrection from worldly calamities, a resurrection from sin, and a resurrection from the grave. First, Exod. 10.17. 1 Cor. 15.31. Psal. 41.8. from calamities; for, as dangers are called death, (Pharaoh calls the plague of Locusts, a death, Entreat the Lord your God, that he may take from me, this death only, And so S. Paul says, in his dangers, I die daily) So is the deliverance from danger called a Resurrection: It is the hope of the wicked upon the godly, Now that he lieth, he shall rise no more; that is, Now that he is dead in misery, he shall have no resurrection in this world. Now, this resurrection God does not always give to his servants, neither is this resurrection the measure of God's love of man, whether he do raise him from worldly calamities or no. The second is the resurrection from sin; Apec. 20.5. and therefore, this S. john calls The first Resurrection, as though the other, whether we rise from worldly calamities, or no, were not to be reckoned. Anima spiritualiter cadit, & spiritualiter resurget, says S. Augustine, Since we are sure, there is a spiritual death of the soul, let us make sure a spiritual resurrection too. Audacter dicam, says S. Hierome, I say confidently, Cum omnia posset Deus, suscitare Virginem post ruinam, non potest; Howsoever God can do all things, he cannot restore a Virgin, that is fallen from it, to virginity again. He cannot do this in the body, but God is a Spirit, and hath reserved more power, upon the spirit and soul, then upon the body, and therefore Audacter dicam, I may say, with the same assurance, that S. Hierome does, No soul hath so prostituted herself, so multiplied her fornications; but that God can make her a virgin again, and give her, even the chastity of Christ himself. Fulfil therefore that which Christ says, john 5.25. The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live: Be this that hour, be this thy first Resurrection. Bless Gods present goodness, for this now; and attend God's leisure, for the other Resurrection hereafter. 1 Cor. 15.20. He that is the first fruits of them that slept, Christ Jesus is awake; he dies no more, he sleeps no more. Sacrificium pro te fuit, sed à te accepit, August. quod pro te obtulit: He offered a Sacrifice for thee, but he had that from thee, that he offered for thee: Primitiae fuit, sed tuae primitiae; He was the first fruits, but the first fruits of thy Corn: Spera in te futurum, quod praecess it in primitiis tuis: Doubt not of having that in the whole Crop, which thou hast already in thy first fruits; that is, to have that in thyself, which thou hast in thy Saviour. And what glory soever thou hast had in this world, Glory inherited from noble Ancestors, Glory acquired by merit and service, Glory purchased by money, and observation, what glory of beauty and proportion, what glory of health and strength soever thou hast had in this house of clay, The glory of the later house, Hag. 2.9. shall be greater than of the former. To this glory, the God of this glory, by glorious or inglorious ways, such as may most advance his own glory, bring us in his time, for his Son Christ Jesus sake. Amen. SERMON XIX. Preached at S. Paul's, upon Easter-day, in the Evening. 1624. APOC. 20.6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection. IN the first book of the Scriptures, that of Genesis, there is danger in departing from the letter; In this last book, this of the Revelation, there is as much danger in adhering too close to the letter. The literal sense is always to be preserved; but the literal sense is not always to be discerned: for the literal sense is not always that, which the very Letter and Grammar of the place presents, as where it is literally said, That Christ is a Vine, and literally, That his flesh is bread, and literally, That the new jerusalem is thus situated, thus built, thus furnished: But the literal sense of every place, is the principal intention of the Holy Ghost, in that place: And his principal intention in many places, is to express things by allegories, by figures; so that in many places of Scripture, a figurative sense is the literal sense, and more in this book then in any other. As then to departed from the literal sense, that sense which the very letter presents, in the book of Genesis, is dangerous, because if we do so there, we have no history of the Creation of the world in any other place to stick to; so to bind ourselves to such a literal sense in this book, will take from us the consolation of many spiritual happinesses, and bury us in the carnal things of this world. The first error of being too allegorical in Genesis, transported divers of the ancients beyond the certain evidence of truth, and the second error of being too literal in this book, fixed many, very many, very ancient, very learned, upon an evident falsehood; which was, that because here is mention of a first Resurrection, and of reigning with Christ a thousand years after that first Resurrection, There should be to all the Saints of God, a state of happiness in this world, after Christ's coming, for a thousand years; In which happy state, though some of them have limited themselves in spiritual things, that they should enjoy a kind of conversation with Christ, and an impeccability, and a quiet serving of God without any reluctations, or concupiscences; or persecutions; yet others have dreamt on, and enlarged their dreams to an enjoying of all these worldly happinesses, which they, being formerly persecuted, did formerly want in this world, and then should have them for a thousand years together in recompense. And even this branch of that error, of possessing the things of this world, so long, in this world, did very many, and very good, and very great men, whose names are in honour, and justly in the Church of God, in those first times stray into; and flattered themselves with an imaginary intimation of some such thing, in these words, Blessed and holy is he, that hath part in the first Resurrection. Thus far then the text is literal, Divisio. That this Resurrection in the text, is different from the general Resurrection. The first differs from the last: And thus far it is figurative, allegorical, mystical, that it is a spiritual Resurrection, that is intended. But wherein spiritual? or of what spiritual Resurrection? In the figurative exposition of those places of Scripture, which require that way oft to be figuratively expounded, that Expositor is not to be blamed, who not destroying the literal sense, proposes such a figurative sense, as may exalt our devotion, and advance our edification; And as no one of those Expositors did ill, in proposing one such sense, so neither do those Expositors ill, who with those limitations, that it destroy not the literal sense, that it violate not the analogy of faith, that it advance devotion, do propose another and another such sense. So doth that preacher well also, who to the same end, and within the same limit, makes his use of both, of all those expositions; because all may stand, and it is not evident in such figurative speeches, which is the literal, that is, the principal intention of the Holy Ghost. Of these words of this first Resurrection (which is not the last, of the body, but a spiritual Resurrection) there are three expositions authorized by persons of good note in the Church. Alcazar. First, that this first Resurrection, is a Resurrection from that low estate, to which persecution had brought the Church; and so it belongs to this whole State, and Church, August. & nostri. and Blessed are we who have our part in this first Resurrection. Secondly, that it is a Resurrection from the death of sin, of actual, and habitual sin; so it belongs to every particular penitent soul; and Blessed art thou, blessed am I, if we have part in this first Resurrection. And then thirdly, because after this Resurrection, it is said, That we shall reign with Christ a thousand years, Ribera. (which is a certain for an uncertain, a limited, for a long time) it hath also been taken for the state of the soul in heaven, after it is parted from the body by death; for though the soul cannot be said properly to have a Resurrection, because properly it cannot die, yet to be thus delivered from the danger of a second death, by future sin, to be removed from the distance, and latitude, and possibility of tentations in this world, is by very good Expositors called a Resurrection; and so it belongs to all them who are departed in the Lord; Blessed and holy is he that hath part in this first Resurrection. And then the occasion of the day, which we celebrate now, being the Resurrection of our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, invites me to propose a fourth sense, or rather use of the words; not indeed as an exposition of the words, but as a convenient exaltation of our devotion; which is, that this first Resurrection should be the first fruits of the dead; The first Rising, is the first Riser, Christ Jesus: for as Christ says of himself, that He is the Resurrection, so he is the first Resurrection, the root of the Resurrection. He upon whom our Resurrection, all ours, all our kinds of Resurrections are founded; and so it belongs to State and Church, and particular persons, alive, and dead; Blessed and holy is he that hath part in this first Resurrection. And these four considerations of the words; A Resurrection from persecution, by deliverance; a Resurrection from sin, by grace; a Resurrection from tentation to sin, by the way of death, to the glory of heaven; and all these, in the first Resurrection, in him that is the root of all, in Christ Jesus, These four steps, these four passages, these four transitions will be our quarter Clock, for this hour's exercise. First then, 1. Part. From persecution. we consider this first Resurrection, to be a Resurrection from a persecution for religion, for the profession of the Gospel, to a forward glorious passage of the Gospel. And so a learned Expositor in the Roman Church carries the exposition of this whole place (though not indeed the ordinary way, yet truly not incommodiously, not improperly) upon that deliverance, which God afforded his Church, from those great persecutions, which had otherwise supplanted her, in her first planting, in the primitive times. Then says he (and in part well towards the letter of the place) The devil was chained for a thousand years, and then we began to reign with Christ for a thousand years; reckoning the time from that time, when God destroyed Idolatry more fully, and gave peace and rest, and free exercise of the Christian religion, under the Christian Emperors, till Antichrist in the height of his rage shall come, and let this thousand year's prisoner Satan lose, and so interrupt our thousand year's reign with Christ, with new persecutions. In that persecution was the death of the Church, in the eye of the world; In that deliverance by Christian Emperors was the Resurrection of the Church; And in Gods protecting her ever since is the chaining up of the devil, and our reigning with Christ for those thousand years. And truly, beloved, if we consider the low, the very low estate of Christians in those persecutions, tried ten times in the fire, ten several and distinct persecutions, in which ten persecutions, God may seem to have had a mind to deal eavenly with the world, and to lay as much upon his people whom he would try then, as he had laid upon others, for his people before, and so to equal the ten plagues of Egypt, in ten persecutions, in the primitive Church; if we consider that low, that very low estate, we may justly call their deliverance a Resurrection. For as God said to Jerusalem, I found thee in thy blood, and washed thee, so Christ Jesus found the Church, the Christian Church in her blood, and washed her, and wiped her; washed her in his own blood, which washes white, and wiped her with the garments of his own righteousness, that she might be acceptable in the sight of God, and then wiped all tears from her eyes, took away all occasions of complaint, and lamentation, that she might be glorious in the eyes of man, and cheerful in her own; such was her Resurrection. We wonder, and justly, at the effusion, at the pouring out of blood, in the sacrifices of the old Law; that that little country scarce bigger than some three of our Shires, should spend more cattle in some few day's sacrifice at some solemnities, and every year in the sacrifices of the whole year, than perchance this kingdom could give to any use. Seas of blood, and yet but brooks, tuns of blood, and yet but basons, compared with the sacrifices, the sacrifices of the blood of men, in the persecutions of the Primitive Church. For every Ox of the Jew, the Christian spent a man, and for every Sheep and Lamb, a Mother and her child; and for every heard of cattle, sometimes a town of Inhabitants, sometimes a Legion of Soldiers, all martyred at once; so that they did not stand to fill their Martyrologies with names, but with numbers, they had not room to say, such a day, such a Bishop, such a day, such a General, but the day of 500 the day of 5000. Martyrs, and the martyrdom of a City, or the Martyrdom of an Army; This was not a red Sea, such as the Jews passed, a Sinus, a Creek, an Arm, an Inlet, a gut of a Sea, but a red Ocean, that overflowed, and surrounded all parts; and from the depth of this Sea God raised them; and such was their Resurrection. Such, as that they which suffered, lay, and bled with more ease, than the executioner stood and sweat; and embraced the fire more fervently, than he blew it; and many times had this triumph in their death, that even the executioner himself, was in the act of execution converted to Christ, and executed with them; such was their Resurrection. When the State of the Jews was in that depression, in that conculcation, in that consternation, in that extermination in the captivity of Babylon, as that God presents it to the Prophet in that Vision, in the field of dry bones, so, Fili hominis, Son of man, as thou art a reasonable man, dost thou think these bones can live, that these men can ever be re-collected to make up a Nation? The Prophet saith, Domine tu scis, Lord thou knowest; which is, not only thou knowest whether they can, or no, but thou knowest clearly they can; thou canst make them up of bones again, for thou madest those bones of earth before. If God had called in the Angels to the making of man at first, and as he said to the Prophet, Fili hominis, Son of man, as thou art a reasonable man, so he had said to them, Filii Dei, as you are the Sons of God, illumined by his face, do you think, that this clod of red earth can make a man, a man that shall be equal to you, in one of his parts, in his soul, and yet then shall have such another part, as that he, whom all you worship, my essential Son shall assume, and invest that part himself, can that man made of that body, and that soul, be made of this clod of earth? Those Angels would have said, Domine tu scis, Lord thou must needs know, how to make as good creatures as us of earth, who madest us of that which is infinitely less than earth, of nothing, before. To induce, to facilitate these apprehensions, there were some precedents, some such thing had been done before. But when the Church was newly conceived, and then lay like the egg of a Dove, and a Giant's foot over it, like a worm, like an ant, and hill upon hill whelmed upon it, nay, like a grain of corn between the upper and lower Millstone, ground to dust between Tyrant's and Heretics, when as she bled in her Cradle, in those children whom Herod slew, so she bled upon her crutches, in those decrepit men whom former persecutions and tortures had creepled before, when East and West joined hands to crush her, and hands, and brains, joined execution to consultation to annihilate her; in this wane of the Moon, God gave her an instant fullness; in this exinanition, instant glory; in this grave, an instant Resurrection. But beloved, the expressing the pressing of their depressions, does but chafe the Wax; the Printing of the seal, is the reducing to your memory, your own case: and not that point in your case, as you were for a few years under a sensible persecution of fire, and prisons; that was the least part of your persecution; for it is a cheap purchase of heaven, if we may have it for dying; Mat. 13.44. To sell all we have to buy that field where we know the treasure is, is not so hard, as not to know it; To part with all, for the great Pearl, not so hard a bargain, as not to know that such a Pearl there might have been had; we could not say heaven was kept from us, when we might have it for a Faggot, and when even our enemies helped us to it: but your greater affliction was, as you were long before, in an insensibleness, you thought yourselves well enough, and yet were under a worse persecution of ignorance, and of superstition, when you, in your Fathers, were so fare from expecting a resurrection, as that you did not know your low estate, or that you needed a Resurrection; And yet God gave you a Resurrection from it, a reformation of it. Now, who have their parts in this first resurrection? or upon what conditions have you it? We see in the fourth verse, They that are beheaded for the witness of jesus; that is, that are ready to be so, when the glory of Jesus shall require that testimony. In the mean time, as it follows there, They that have not worshipped the Beast; that is, not applied the Honour, and the Allegiance due to their Sovereign, to any foreign State; nor the Honour due to God, that is, infallibility, to another Prelate; That have not worshipped the Beast, nor his Image, says the Text; that is, that have not been transported with vain imaginations of his power, and his growth upon us here, which hath been so diligently Painted, and Printed, and Preached, and set out in the promises, and practices of his Instruments, to delude slack, and easy persons: And then, as it is added there, That have not received his mark upon their foreheads; That is, not declared themselves Romanists apparently; nor in their hands, says the Text; that is, which have not underhand sold their secret endeavours, though not their public profession, to the advancement of his cause. These men, who are ready to be beheaded for Christ, and have not worshipped the Beast, nor the Image of the Beast, nor received his mark upon their foreheads, nor in their hands, these have their parts in this first resurrection. These are blessed, and holy, says our Text; Blessed, because they have means to be holy, in this resurrection; For the Lamb hath unclasped the book; the Scriptures are open; which way to holiness, our Fathers lacked; And then, our blessedness is, that we shall reign a thousand years with Christ; Now since this first resurrection, since the reformation we have reigned so with Christ, but 100 years: But if we persist in a good use of it, our posterity shall add the cipher, and make that 100 1000 even to the time, when Christ Jesus shall come again, and as he hath given us the first, so shall give us the last resurrection; and to that come Lord Jesus, come quickly; and till that, continue this. This is the first resurrection, 2 Part. Apeccato. in the first acceptation, a resurrection from persecution, and a peaceable enjoying of the Gospel: And in a second, it is a resurrection from sin; and so it hath a more particular appropriation to every person. Aug. So S. Augustine takes this place, and with him many of the Fathers, and with them, many of the sons of the Fathers, better sons of the Fathers, than the Roman Church will confess them to be, or then they are themselves, The Expositors of the Reformed Church. They, for the most part, with S. Augustine, take this first resurrection, to be a resurrection from sin. Inter abjectos abjectissimus peccator: Grego: No man falls lower, than he that falls into a course of sin; Sin is a fall; It is not only a deviation, a turning out of the way, upon the right, or the left hand, but it is a sinking, a falling: In the other case, of going out of the way, a man may stand upon the way, and inquire, and then proceed in the way, if he be right, or to the way, if he be wrong; But when he is fallen, and lies still, he proceeds no farther, inquires no farther. To be too apt to conceive scruples in matters of religion, stops, and retards a man in the way; to mistake some points in the truth of religion, puts a man for that time in a wrong way; But to fall into a course of sin, this makes him unsensible of any end, that he hath to go to, of any way that he hath to go by. God hath not removed man, not withdrawn man from this Earth; he hath not given him the Air to fly in, as to Birds, nor Spheres to move in, as to Sun and Moon; he hath left him upon the Earth; and not only to tread upon it, as in contempt, or in mere Dominion, but to walk upon it, in the discharge of the duties of his calling; and so to be conversant with the Earth, is not a falling. But as when man was nothing but earth, nothing but a body, he lay flat upon the earth, his mouth kissed the earth, his hands embraced the earth, his eyes respected the earth; And then God breathed the breath of life into him, and that raised him so fare from the earth, as that only one part of his body, (the soles of his feet) touches it, And yet man, so raised by God, by sin fell lower to the earth again, then before, from the face of the earth, to the womb, to the bowels, to the grave; So God, finding the whole man, as low as he found Adam's body then, fallen in Original sin, yet erects us by a new breath of life, in the Sacrament of Baptism, and yet we fall lower than before we were raised, from Original into Actual, into Habitual sins; So low, as that we think not, that we need, know not, that there is a resurrection; and that is the wonderful, that is the fearful fall. Though those words, Quomodo cecidisti de Coelo, Lucifer, Esay 14.12. How art thou fallen from heaven O Lucifer, the Son of the morning? be ordinarily applied to the fall of the Angels, yet it is evident, that they are literally spoken of the fall of a man: It deserves wonder, more than pity, that man, whom God had raised, to so Noble a height in him, should fall so low from him. Man was borne to love; he was made in the love of God; but then man falls in love; when he grows in love with the creature, he falls in love: As we are bid to honour the Physician, and to use the Physician, but yet it is said in the same Chapter, Ecclus. 38.1. V 15. He that sinneth before his Maker, let him fall into the hands of the Physician; It is a blessing to use him, it is a curse to rely upon him, so it is a blessing to glorify God, in the right use of his creatures, but to grow in love with them, is a fall: For we love nothing that is so good as ourselves; Beauty, Riches, Honour, is not so good as man; Man capable of grace here, of glory hereafter. Nay as those things, which we love, in their nature, are worse than we which love them, so in our loving them, we endeavour to make them worse than they in their own nature are; by overloving the beauty of the body, we corrupt the soul, by overloving honour, and riches, we deflect, and detort these things, which are not in their nature ill, to ill uses, and make them serve our ill purposes: Man falls, as a fall of waters, that throws down, and corrupts all that it embraces. Nay beloved, when a man hath used those wings, which God hath given him, and raised himself to some height in religious knowledge, and religious practice, Acts 29.9. as Eutichus, out of a desire to hear Paul preach, was got up into a Chamber, and up into a window of that Chamber, and yet falling asleep, fell down dead; so we may fall into a security of our present state, into a pride of our knowledge, or of our purity, and so fall lower, than they, who never came to our height. So much need have we of a resurrection. So sin is a fall, and every man is afraid of falling, even from his temporal station; M●rs. Clem. Alex. more afraid of falling, then of not being raised. And Qui peccat, quatenus peccat, fit seipso deterior: In every sin a man falls from that degree which himself had before; In every sin, he is dishonoured, he is not so good a man, as he was; impoverished, he hath not so great a portion of grace as he had; Infatuated, he hath not so much of the true wisdom of the fear of God, as he had; disarmed, he hath not that interest and confidence in the love of God, that he had: and deformed, he hath not so lively a representation of the Image of God as before. In every sin, we become prodigals, but in the habit of sin, we become bankrupts, afraid to come to an account. A fall is a fearful thing, that needs a raising, a help; but sin is a death, and that needs a resurrection; and a resurrection is as great a work, as the very Creation itself. It is death in semine, in the root, it produces, it brings forth death; It is death in arbore, in the body, in itself; death is a divorce, and so is sin; and it is death in fructu, in the fruit thereof; sin plants spiritual death, and this death produces more sin, Obduration, Impenitence, and the like. Be pleased to return, and cast one half thought upon each of these: Sin is the root of death; Death by sin entered, and death passed upon all men, for all men have sinned. Rom. 5.12. It is death because we shall die for it. But it is death in itself, We are dead already, dead in it; Thou hast a name, that thou livest, and art dead, was spoken to a whole Church. Apoc. 3.1. It is not evidence enough, to prove that thou art alive, to say, I saw thee at a Sermon; that spirit, that knows thy spirit, he that knows whether thou wert moved by a Sermon, melted by a Sermon, mended by a Sermon, he knows whether thou be alive or no. That which had wont to be said, That dead men walked in Churches, is too true; Men walk out a Sermon, or walk out after a Sermon, as ill as they walked in; they have a name that they live, john 5.25. and are dead: But the hour is come, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God: That is, at these hours they may hear, if they will, and till they do hear, they are dead. Sin is the root of death, the body of death, and then it is the fruit of death. August. S. Augustine confesses of himself, that he was Allisus intra parietes in celebritate solemnitatum tuarum, that in great meetings upon solemn days, in the Church, there, within the walls of God's house, Egit negotium procurandi fructus mortis, he was not buying and selling doves, but buying and selling souls, by wanton looks, cheapening and making the bargain of the fruits of death, as himself expresses it. Sin is the root, and the tree, and the fruit of death; The mother of death, death itself, and the daughter of death; and from this death, this threefold death, death past in our past sins, present death in our present in sensibleness of sin, future death in those sins, with which sins God will punish our former, and present sins, (if he proceed merely in justice) God affords us this first resurrection. How? Resurrectio. Thus. Death is the Divorce of body and soul; Resurrection is the Reunion of body and soul: And in this spiritual death, and resurrection, which we consider now, and which is all determined in the soul itself, Grace is the soul of the soul, and so the departing of grace, is the death, and the returning of grace is the resurrection of this sinful soul. But how? By what way, what means? Consider Adam; Adam was made to enjoy an immortality in his body; He induced death upon himself: And then, as God having made Marriage for a remedy against uncleanness, intemperate men make even Marriage itself an occasion of more uncleanness, then if they had never married; so man having induced and created death, by sin, God takes death, and makes it a means of the glorifying of his body, in heaven. God did not induce death, death was not in his purpose; Cyril. Alex. but veluti medium opportunum, quo vas confractum rursus fingeretur, As a means, whereby a broken vessel might be made up again, God took death, and made it serve for that purpose, That men by the grave might be translated to heaven. So then, to the resurrection of the body, there is an ordinary way, The grave; To the resurrection of the soul, there is an ordinary way too, The Church. In the grave, the body that must be there prepared for the last resurrection, hath worms that eat upon it: In the Church, the soul that comes to this first resurrection, must have worms, The worm, the sting, the remorse, the compunction of Conscience; In those that have no part in this first resurrection, the worm of conscience shall never die, but gnaw on, to desperation; but those that have not this worm of conscience, this remorse, this compunction, shall never live. In the grave, which is the furnace, which ripens the body for the last resurrection, there is a putrefaction of the body, and an ill savour: In the Church, the womb where my soul must be mellowed for this first resurrection, my soul, which hath the savour of death in it, as it is leavened throughout with sin, must stink in my nostrils, and I come to a detestation of all those sins, which have putrified her. And I must not be afraid to accuse myself, to condemn myself, to humble myself, lest I become a scorn to men; Augus●. Nemo me derideat ab eo medico aegrum sanari, à quo sibi praestitum est ne aegrotaret, Let no man despise me, or wonder at me, that I am so humbled under the hand of God, or that I fly to God as to my Physician when I am sick, since the same God that hath recovered me as my Physician when I was sick, hath been his Physician too, and kept him from being sick, who, but for that Physician, had been as ill as I was: At least he must be his Physician, if ever he come to be sick, and come to know that he is sick, and come to a right desire to be well. Spiritual death was before bodily; sin before the wages of sin; God hath provided a resurrection for both deaths, but first for the first; This is the first resurrection, Reconciliation to God, and the returning of the soul of our soul, Grace, in his Church, by his Word, and his seals there. Now every repentance is not a resurrection; It is rather a waking out of a dream, than a rising to a new life: Nay it is rather a startling in our sleep, than any awaking at all, Ephes. 5.14. Esay ●0. 1. to have a sudden remorse, a sudden flash, and no constant perseverance. Awake thou that sleepest, says the Apostle, out of the Prophet: First awake, come to a sense of thy state; and then arise from the dead, says he, from the practice of dead works; and then, Christ shall give thee light: life, and strength to walk in new ways. It is a long work, and hath many steps; Awake, arise, and walk, and therefore set out betimes; At the last day, in those, which shall be found alive upon the earth, we say there shall be a sudden death, and a sudden resurrection; In raptu, in transitu, in ictu oculi, In an instant, in the twinkling of an eye; but do not thou trust to have this first Resurrection In raptu, in transitu, in ictu oculi, In thy last passage upon thy deathbed, when the twinkling of the eye, must be the closing of thine eyes: But as we assign to glorified bodies after the last Resurrection, certain Dotes, (as we call them in the School) certain Endowments, so labour thou to find those endowments, in thy soul here, if thou be'st come to this first Resurrection. Amongst those Endowments we assign Subtilitatem, Agilitatem; The glorified body is become more subtle, more nimble, not encumbered, not disable for any motion, that it would make; So hath that soul, which is come to this first Resurrection, by grace, a spiritual agility, a holy nimbleness in it, that it can slide by tentations, and pass through tentations, and never be polluted; follow a calling, without taking infection, by the ordinary tentations of that calling. So have those glorified bodies Claritatem, a brightness upon them, from the face of God; and so have these souls, which are come to this first resurrection, a sun in themselves, an inherent light, by which they can presently distinguish between action and action; what must, what may, what must not be done. But of all the endowments of the glorified body, we consider most, Impassibilitatem, That that body shall suffer nothing; and is sure that it shall suffer nothing. And that which answers that endowment of the body most in this soul, that is come to this first resurrection, is as the Apostle speaks, That neither persecution, sickness, nor death, Rom. 8. shall separate her from Christ jesus. In Heaven we do not say, that our bodies shall divest their mortality, so, as that naturally they could not die; for they shall have a composition still; and every compounded thing may perish: but they shall be so assured, and with such a preservation, as they shall always know they shall never die. S. Augustine says well, Aug. Assit motio, absit fatigatio, assit potestas vescendi, absit necessitas esuriendi; They have in their nature a mortality, and yet be immortal; a possibility and an impossibility of dying, with those two divers relations, one to nature, the other to preservation, will consist together. So in this soul, that hath this first Resurrection from sin, by grace, a conscience of her own infirmity, that she may relapse, and yet a testimony of the powerfulness of God's Spirit, that easily she shall not relapse, may consist well together. But the last seal of this holy confidence is reserved for that, which is the third acceptation of this first Resurrection; not from persecutions in this world, nor from sin in this world, but from all possibility of falling back into sin, in the world to come; and to this, have divers Expositors referred these words, this first resurrection. Blessed and holy is he, that hath part in this first Resurrection. Now, a Resurrection of the soul, seems an improper, an impertinent, an improbable, 3 Part. an impossible form of speech; for, Resurrection implies death, and the soul does not die in her passage to Heaven. And therefore Damascen makes account, De ortho. sid. l. 4. c. ult. that he hath sufficiently proved the Resurrection of the body (which seems so incredible) if he could prove any Resurrection; if there be any Resurrection at all, says he, it must be of the body, for the soul cannot die, therefore not rise. Yet have not those Fathers, nor those Expositors, who have in this text, acknowledged a Resurrection of the soul, mistaken nor miscalled the matter. Take Damascens own definition of Resurrection: Resurrectio est ejus quod cecidit secunda surrectio: A Resurrection is a second rising to that state, from which any thing is formerly fallen. Now though by death, the soul do not fall into any such state, as that it can complain, (for what can that lack, which God fills?) yet by death, the soul falls from that, for which it was infused, and poured into man at first; that is, to be the form of that body, the King of that Kingdom; and therefore, when in the general Resurrection, the soul returns to that state, for which it was created, and to which it hath had an affection, and a desire, even in the fullness of the Joys of Heaven, then, when the soul returns to her office, to make up the man, because the whole man hath, therefore the soul hath a Resurrection; not from death, but from a deprivation of her former state; that state, which she was made for, and is ever inclined to. But that is the last Resurrection; and so the soul hath part even in that last Resurrection; But we are in hand with the first Resurrection of the soul; and that is, when that soul, which was at first breathed from God, and hath long suffered a banishment, a close imprisonment in this body, returns to God again; The returning of the soul to him, from whom it proceeded at first, is a Resurrection of the soul. Here then especially, I feel the straightness of time; two considerations open themselves together, of such a largeness, as all the time from Moses his In principio, when time began, to the Angels Affidavit, in this book, That shall say and swear, that time shall be no more, were too narrow to contemplate these two Hemispheres of Man, this Evening, and Morning of Man's everlasting day; The miseries of man, in this banishment, in this imprisonment, in this grave of the soul, the body, And the glory, and exaltation of that soul in her Resurrection to Heaven. That soul, which being borne free, is made a slave to this body, by coming to it; It must act, but what this body will give it leave to act, according to the Organs, which this body affords it; and if the body be lame in any limb, the soul must be lame in her operation, in that limb too; It must do, but what the body will have it do, and then it must suffer, whatsoever that body puts it to, or whatsoever any others will put that body to: If the body oppress itself with Melancholy, the soul must be sad; and if other men oppress the body with injury, the soul must be sad too; Consider, (it is too immense a thing to consider it) reflect but one thought, but upon this one thing in the soul, here, and hereafter, In her grave, the body, and in her Resurrection in Heaven; That is the knowledge of the soul. Here says S. Augustine, when the soul considers the things of this world, Non veritate certior, sed consuetudine securior; She rests upon such things as she is not sure are true, but such as she sees, are ordinarily received and accepted for truths: so that the end of her knowledge is not Truth, but opinion, and the way, not Inquisition, but ease: But says he, when she proceeds in this life, to search into heavenly things, Verberatur luce veritatis, The beams of that light are too strong for her, and they sink her, and cast her down, Et ad familiaritatem tenebrarum suarum, non electione sed fatigatione convertitur; and so she returns to her own darkness, because she is most familiar, and best acquainted with it; Non electione, not because she loves ignorance, but because she is weary of the trouble of seeking out the truth, and so swallows even any Religion to escape the pain of debating, and disputing; and in this laziness she sleeps out her lease, her term of life, in this death, in this grave, in this body. But then in her Resurrection, her measure is enlarged, and filled at once; There she reads without spelling, and knows without thinking, and concludes without arguing; she is at the end of her race, without running; In her triumph, without fight; In her Haven, without sailing: A freeman, without any prenticeship; at full years, without any wardship; and a Doctor, without any proceeding: She knows truly, and easily, and immediately, and entirely, and everlastingly; Nothing left out at first, nothing worn out at last, that conduces to her happiness. What a death is this life? what a resurrection is this death? For though this world be a sea, yet (which is most strange) our Harbour is larger than the sea; Heaven infinitely larger than this world. For, though that be not true, which Origen is said to say, That at last all shall be saved, nor that evident, which Cyril of Alexandria says, That without doubt the number of them that are saved, is far greater than of them that perish, yet surely the number of them, with whom we shall have communion in Heaven, is greater than ever lived at once upon the face of the earth: And of those who lived in our time, how few did we know? and of those whom we did know, how few did we care much for? In Heaven we shall have Communion of Joy and Glory with all, Aug. always; Vbi non intrat inimicus, nec amicus exit, Where never any man shall come in that loves us not, nor go from us that does. Beloved, I think you could be content to hear, I could be content to speak of this Resurrection, our glorious state, by the low way of the grave, till God by that gate of earth, let us in at the other of precious Stones. And blessed and holy is he, who in a rectified conscience desires that resurrection now. But we shall not departed far from this consideration, by departing into our last branch, or conclusion, That this first Resurrection may also be understood to be the first riser Christ Jesus; and Blessed and holy is he that hath part in that first Resurrection. This first Resurrection is then without any detorting, 4 Part. any violence, very appliable to Christ himself, who was Primitiae dormientium, in that, that action, That he rosc again, he is become (says the Apostle) the first fruits of them that sleep: 1 Cor. 15.20. Hier. in Mat. 27.52. He did rise, and rise first; others rose with him, none before him: for S. Hierome taking the words as he finds them in that Evangelist, makes this note, That though the graves were opened, at the instant of Christ's death, (death was overcome, the City opened the gates) yet the bodies did not rise till after Christ's Resurrection. For, for such Resurrections as are spoken of, That women received their dead raised to life again, Heb. 11.35. and such as are recorded in the old and new Testament, they were all unperfect and temporary resurrections, such, as S. Hierome says of them all, Resurgebant iterum morituri; They were but reprieved, not pardoned; Hier. They had a Resurrection to life, but yet a Resurrection to another death. Christ is the first Resurrection; others were raised; but he only risen; they by a foreign, and extrinsique, he by his own power. But we call him not the first, in that respect only; for so he was not only the first, but the only; he alone arose by his own power; but with relation to all our future Resurrections, he is the first Resurrection. First, If Christ be not raised, your faith is in vain, 1 Cor. 15.17. says the Apostle; You have a vain faith if you believe in a dead man. He might be true Man, though he remained in death; but it concerns you to believe, that he was the Son of God too; And he was declared to be the Son of God, Rom. 11.4. by the Resurrection from the dead. That was the declaration of himself, his Justification; he was justified by the Spirit, when he was proved to be God, by raising himself. But thus our Justification is also in his Resurrection. For, He was raised from the dead, for our justification: how for ours? Rom. 4. ult. That we should be also in the likeness of his Resurrection. What is that? that he hath told us before; Our Resurrection in Christ is, that we should walk in newness of life. Rom. 6.4. So that then Christ is the first Resurrection, first, Efficiently, the only cause of his own Resurrection; First, Meritoriously, the only cause of our Resurrection; first, Exemplarily, the only pattern, how we should rise, and how we should walk, when we are up; and therefore, Blessed and happy are we, if we refer all our resurrections to this first Resurrection Christ Jesus. For as job said of Comforters, so miserable Resurrections are they all without him. If therefore thou need and seek this first Resurrection, in the first acceptation, a Resurrection from persecutions, and calamities, as they oppress thee here, have thy recourse to him, to Christ. Remember that at the death of Christ, there were earthquakes; the whole earth trembled; There were rendings of the Temple; Schisms, Convulsions, distractions in the Church will be: But then, the graves opened in the midst of those commotions; Then when thou thinkest thyself swallowed, and buried in affliction, as the Angel did his, Christ Jesus shall remove thy grave stone, and give thee a resurrection; but if thou think to remove it by thine own wit, thine own power, or the favour of potent Friends, Digitus Dei non est hic, The hand of God is not in all this, and the stone shall lie still upon thee, till thou putrify into desperation, and thou shalt have no part in this first Resurrection. If thou need, and seek this first resurrection, in the second acceptation, from the fearful death of heinous sin, have thy recourse to him, to Christ Jesus, & remember the weight of the sins that lay upon him: All thy sins, and all thy Fathers, and all thy children's sins, all those sins that did induce the first flood, and shall induce the last fire upon this world; All those sins, which that we might take example by them to scape them, are recorded, and which, lest we should take example by them, to imitate them, are left unrecorded; all sins, of all ages, all sexes, all places, all times, all callings, sins heavy in their substance, sins aggravated by their circumstances, all kinds of sins, and all particular sins of every kind, were upon him, upon Christ Jesus; and yet he raised his holy Head, his royal Head, though under thorns, yet crowned with those thorns, and triumphed in this first Resurrection: and his body was not left in the Grave, nor his soul in Hell. Christ's first tongue was a tongue that might be heard, He spoke to the Shepherds by Angels; His second tongue was a Star, a tongue which might be seen; He spoke to the Wisemen of the East by that. Harken after him these two ways; As he speaks to thine ear, (and to thy soul, by it) in the preaching of his Word, as he speaks to thine eye, (and so to thy soul by that) in the exhibiting of his Sacraments: And thou shalt have thy part in this first Resurrection. But if thou think to overcome this death, this sense of sin, by diversions, by worldly delights, by mirth, and music, and society, or by good works, with a confidence of merit in them, or with a relation to God himself, but not as God hath manifested himself to thee, not in Christ Jesus, The stone shall lie still upon thee, till thou putrify into desperation, and then hast thou no part in this first Resurrection. If thou desire this first Resurrection in the third acceptation, as S. Paul did, To be dissolved, and to be with Christ, go Christ's way to that also. He desired that glory that thou dost; and he could have laid down his soul when he would; but he stayed his hour, says the Gospel. He could have ascended immediately, immediately in time, yet he stayed to descend into hell first; and he could have ascended immediately of himself, by going up, yet he stayed till he was taken up. Thou hast no such power of thine own soul and life, not for the time, not for the means of coming to this first Resurrection by death; Stay therefore patiently, stay cheerfully God's leisure till he call; but not so over-chearfully, as to be loath to go when he calls. Relief in persecution by power, reconciliation in sin by grace, dissolution, and transmigration to heaven by death, are all within this first Resurrection: But that which is before them all, is Christ Jesus. And therefore, as all that the natural man promises himself without God, is impious, so all that we promise ourselves, though by God, without Christ, is frivolous. God, who hath spoken to us by his Son, works upon us by his Son too; He was our Creation, he was our Redemption, he is our Resurrection. And that man trades in the world without money, and goes out of the world without recommendation, that leaves out Christ Jesus. To be a good Moral man, and refer all to the law of Nature in our hearts, is but Diluculum, The dawning of the day; To be a godly man, and refer all to God, is but Crepusculum, A twilight; But the Meridional brightness, the glorious noon, and height, is to be a Christian, to pretend to no spiritual, no temporal blessing, but for, and by, and through, and in our only Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus; for he is this first Resurrection, and Blessed and holy is he, that hath part in this first Resurrection. SERMON XX. Preached at S. Paul's, in the Evening, upon Easter-day. 1625. JOHN 5.28, 29. Marvel not at this; for the hour is coming, in the which, all that are in the graves, shall hear his voice; And shall come forth, They that have done good, unto the Resurrection of Life; And they that have done evil, unto the Resurrection of Damnation. AS the Sun works diversely, according to the divers disposition of the subject, (for the Sun melts wax, and it hardens clay) so do the good actions of good men: upon good men they work a virtuous emulation, a noble and a holy desire to imitate, upon bad men they work a vicious, and impotent envy, a desire to disgrace, and calumniate. And the more the good is that is done, and the more it works upon good men, the more it disaffects the bad: for so the Pharisees express their rancour and malignity against Christ, J●●n 11.48. in this Gospel, If we let him thus alone, all men will believe in him; And that they foresaw would destroy them in their reputation. And therefore they enlarged their malice, beyond Christ himself, to him, upon whom Christ had wrought a Miracle, John 12.10. to Lazarus, They consulted to put him to death, because by reason of him, many believed in jesus. Our Text leads us to another example of this impotency in envious men; Christ, in this Chapter had, by his only word, cured a man that had been eight and thirty years infirm; and he had done this work upon the Sabbath. They envied the work in the substance, but they quarrel the circumstance; And they envy Christ, but they turn upon the man, who was more obnoxious to them; and they tell him, John 5. ●●. That it was not lawful for him to carry his bed that day. He discharges himself upon Christ; I dispute not with you concerning the Law; This satisfies me, He that made me whole, Ve●. ●. bade me take up my bed and walk. Thereupon they put him to find out Jesus; And when he could not find Jesus, Jesus found him, and in his behalf offers himself to the Pharisees. Then they direct themselves upon him, and (as the Gospel says) They sought to slay him, because he had done this upon the Sabbath: And, V 16. as the patiented had discharged himself upon Christ, Christ discharges himself upon his Father; doth it displease you that I work upon the Sabbath? be angry with God, be angry with the Father, for the Father works when I work. V 17. V 18. And then this they take worse than his working of Miracles, or his working upon the Sabbath, That he would say, that God was his Father; And therefore in the averring of that, that so important point, That God was his Father, Christ grows into a holy vehemence, and earnestness, and he repeats his usual oath, Verily, verily, three several times: First, ver. 19 That whatsoever the Father doth, He, the Son, doth also, And then ver. 24. He that believeth on me, and him that sent me, hath life everlasting. And then again, ver. 25. The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear it shall live. At this, that the dead should live, they marvelled; But because he knew that they were men more affected with things concerning the body, then spiritual things, as in another story, when they wondered that he would pretend to forgive sins, because he knew, that they thought it a greater matter to bid that man that had the Palsy, take up his bed and walk, then to forgive him his sins, therefore he took that way which was hardest in their opinion, he did bid him take up his bed and walk; So here, when they wondered at his speaking of a spiritual Resurrection, to hear him say, that at his preaching, the dead (that is, men spiritually dead in their sins) should rise again, to them who more respected the body, and did less believe a real Resurrection of the body, than a figurative Resurrection of the soul, he proceeds to that which was, in their apprehension, the more difficult, Marvel not at this, says he, here in our Text; not at that spiritual Resurrection by preaching, for the hour is coming, in the which, all that are in the graves, etc. and so he establishes the Resurrection of the body. That than which Christ affirms and avows, is, That he is the Son of God; Divisio. and that is the first thing, that ever was done in Heaven, The eternal generation of the Son: that, by which, he proves this, to these men, is, That by him, there shall be a resurrection of the body; and that is the last thing, that shall be done in Heaven, for, after that, there is nothing, but an even continuance in equal glory. Before that, says he, that is, before the resurrection of the body, there shall be another resurrection, a spiritual resurrection of the soul from sin; but that shall be, by ordinary means, by Preaching, and Sacraments, and it shall be accomplished every day; but fix not upon that, determine not your thoughts upon that, marvel not at that, make that no cause of extraordinary wonder, but make it ordinary to you, feel it, and find the effect thereof in your souls, as often as you hear, as often as you receive, and thereby provide for another resurrection, For, the hour is coming, in which, all that are in their graves, etc. Where we must necessarily make thus many steps, though but short ones. First, the dignity of the Resurrection, marvel at nothing so much, as at this, nothing is so marvelous, so wonderful as this; And secondly, the approach of the Resurrection, The hour is coming; And thirdly, The generality, All that are in the graves; And then the instrument of the resurrection, The voice of Christ, that shall be heard; And lastly, the divers end of the resurrection, They shall come forth, they that have done good, etc. God hath a care of the Body of man, that is first; And he defers it not, that is next; And he extends it to all, that is a third; And a fourth is, That he does that last act, by him, by whom he did the first, The Creation, and all between, the Redemption, that is, by his Son, by Christ; And then the last is, that this is an everlasting separation and divorce of the good and the bad, The bad shall never be able to receive good from the Good, nor to do harm to the Good, after that. First then, Christ says, Ne miremini, Marvel not at this, Ne miremini. not at your spiritual resurrection, not that a Sermon should work upon man, not that a Sacrament should comfort a man, make it not a miracle, nor an extraordinary thing, by hearing to come to repentance, and so to such a resurrection. For though S. Augustine say, That to convert a man from sin, is as great a miracle, as Creation, yet S. August. speaks that of a man's first conversion, in which the man himself does nothing, but God all; Then he is made of nothing; but after God hath renewed him, and proposed ordinary means in the Church still to work upon him, he must not look for miraculous working, but make Gods ordinary means, ordinary to him. This is Panis quotidianus, The daily bread which God gives you, as often as you meet here, according to his Ordinances; Ne miremini, stand not to wonder, as though you were not sure, but come to enjoy God's goodness, in his ordinary way here. But it is, Hoc. Ne miremini hoc, Wonder not at this; but yet, there are things, which we may wonder at. Nil admirari, is but the Philosopher's wisdom; He thinks it a weakness, to wonder at any thing, That any thing should be strange to him: But Christian Philosophy that is rooted in humility, tells us, in the mouth of Clement of Alexand. Principium veritatis est res admirari, The first step to faith, is to wonder, to stand, and consider with a holy admiration, the ways and proceed of God with man: for, Admiration, wonder, stands as in the midst, between knowledge and faith, and hath an eye towards both. If I know a thing, or believe a thing, I do no longer wonder: but when I find that I have reason to stop upon the consideration of a thing, so, as that I see enough to induce admiration, to make me wonder, I come by that step, and God leads me by that hand, to a knowledge, if it be of a natural or civil thing, or to a faith, if it be of a supernatural, and spiritual thing. And therefore be content to wonder at this, That God would have such a care to dignify, and to crown, and to associate to his own everlasting presence, the body of man. God himself is a Spirit, and heaven is his place; my soul is a spirit, and so proportioned to that place; That God, or Angels, or our Souls, which are all Spirits, should be in heaven, Ne miremini, never wonder at that. But since we wonder, and justly, that some late Philosophers have removed the whole earth from the Centre, and carried it up, and placed it in one of the Spheres of heaven, That this clod of earth, this body of ours should be carried up to the highest heaven, placed in the eye of God, set down at the right hand of God, Miremini hoc, wonder at this; That God, all Spirit, served with Spirits, associated to Spirits, should have such an affection, such a love to this body, this earthly body, this deserves this wonder. The Father was pleased to breathe into this body, at first, in the Creation; The Son was pleased to assume this body himself, after, in the Redemption; The Holy Ghost is pleased to consecrate this body, and make it his Temple, by his sanctisication; In that Faciamus hominem, Let us, all us, make man, that consuitation of the whole Trinity in making man, is exercised even upon this lower part of man, the dignifying of his body. So far, as that amongst the ancient Fathers, very many of them, are very various, and irresolved, which way to pronounce, and very many of them clear in the negative, in that point, That the soul of man comes not to the presence of God, but remains in some out-places till the Resurrection of the body: That observation, that consideration of the love of God, to the body of man, withdrew them into that error, That the soul itself should lack the glory of heaven, till the body were become capable of that glory too. They therefore oppose God in his purpose of dignifying the body of man, first, who violate, and mangle this body, which is the Organ in which God breathes; And they also which pollute and defile this body, in which Christ Jesus is apparelled; and they likewise who profane this body, which the Holy Ghost, as the high Priest, inhabits, and consecrates. Trangressors in the first kind, that put God's Organ out of tune, that discompose, and tear the body of man with violence, are those inhuman persecutors, who with racks, and tortures, and prisons, and fires, and exquisite inquisitions, throw down the bodies of the true Gods true servants, to the Idolatrous worship of their imaginary Gods; that torture men into hell, and carry them through the inquisition into damnation. S. Augustine moves a question, and institutes a disputation, and carries it somewhat problematically, whether torture be to be admitted at all, or no. That presents a fair probability, which he says against it: we presume, says he, that an innocent man should be able to hold his tongue in torture; That is no part of our purpose in torture, says he, that he that is innocent, should accuse himself, by confession, in torture. And, if an innocent man be able to do so, why should we not think, that a guilty man, who shall save his life, by holding his tongue in torture, should be able to do so? And then, where is the use of torture? Res fragilis, & periculosa quaestio, says that Lawyer, who is esteemed the law, alone, Ulpian: It is a slippery trial, and uncertain, to convince by torture: For, many times, says S. Augustine again, Innocens luit pro incerto scelere certissimas poenas, He that is yet but questioned, whether he be guilty or no, before that be known, is, without all question, miserably tortured. And whereas, many times, the passion of the Judge, and the covetousness of the Judge, and the ambition of the Judge, are calamities heavy enough, upon a man, that is accused, in this case of torture, Ignorantia judicis est calamitas plerumque innocentis, says that Father, for the most part, even the ignorance of the Judge, is the greatest calamity of him that is accused: If the Judge knew that he were innocent, he should suffer nothing; If he knew he were guilty, he should not suffer torture; but because the Judge is ignorant, and knows nothing, therefore the Prisoner must be racked, and tortured, and mangled, says that Father. There is a whole Epistle in S. Hierome, full of heavenly meditation, and of curious expressions: It is his forty ninth Epistle, Ad Innocentium: where a young man tortured for suspicion of adultery with a certain woman, ut compendio cruciatus vitaret, says he, for his ease, and to abridge his torment, and that he might thereby procure and compass a present death, confessed the adultery, though false: His confession was made evidence against the woman: and she makes that protestation, Tu testis Domine jesu, Thou Lord Jesus be my Witness, Non ideo me negare velle, ne peream, sed ideo mentiri nolle, ne peccem: I do not deny the fact for fear of death, but I dare not belie myself, nor betray mine innocence, for fear of sinning, and offending the God of Truth; And, as it follows in that story, though no torture could draw any Confession, any accusation from her, she was condemned; and one Executioner had three blows at her with a Sword, and another four, and yet she could not be killed. And therefore, because Story abounds with Examples of this kind, how uncertain a way of trial, and conviction, torture is, though S. Augustine would not say, that torture was unlawful, yet he says, It behoves every Judge to make that prayer, Erue me Domine à necessitatibus meis, If there be some cases, in which the Judge must necessarily proceed to torture; O Lord, deliver me, from having any such case brought before me. But what use soever there may be for torture, for Confession, in the Inquisition they torture for a denial, for the denial of God, and for the renouncing of the truth of his Gospel: As men of great place, think it concerns their honour, to do above that which they suffer, to make their revenges, not only equal, but greater than their injuries; so the Roman Church thinks it necessary to her greatness, to inflict more tortures now, then were inflicted upon her in the Primitive Church; as though it were a just revenge, for the tortures she received then, for being Christian, to torture better Christians then herself, for being so. In which tortures, the Inquisition hath found one way, to escape the general clamour of the world against them, which is to torture to that height, that few survive, or come abroad after, to publish, how they have been tortured. And these, first, oppose God's purpose, in the making, and preserving, and dignifying the body of man. Transgressor's herein, in the second kind, are they, that defile the garment of Christ Jesus, the body in which he hath vouchsafed to invest and enwrap himself, and so apparel a Harlot in Christ's , and make that body, which is his, hers. That Christ should take my body, though defiled with fornication, and make it his, is strange; but that I, in fornication, should take Christ's body, and make it hers, is more. Know ye not, 1 Cor. 6.15. V 16. says the Apostle, that your bodies are the members of Christ? And again, Know you not, that he that is joined to a harlot, is one body? Some of the Roman Emperors, made it treason, to carry a Ring, that had their picture engraved in it, to any place in the house, of low Office. What Name can we give to that sin, to make the body of Christ, the body of a harlot? And yet, the Apostle there, as taking knowledge, that we loved ourselves better than Christ, changes the edge of his argument, and argues thus, ver. 18. He that committeth fornication, sinneth against his own body; If ye will be bold with Christ's body, yet favour your own: No man ever hated his own body; and yet, no outward enemy is able so to macerate our body, as our own licentiousness. Christ, who took all our bodily infirmities upon him, Hunger, and Thirst, and Sweat, and Cold, took no bodily deformities upon him, he took not a lame, a blind, a crooked body; and we, by our intemperance, and licentiousness, deform that body which is his, all these ways. The licentious man, most of any, studies bodily handsomeness, to be comely, and gracious, and acceptable, and yet, soon of any, deforms, and destroys it, and makes that loathsome to all, which all his care was to make amiable: And so they oppose God's purpose of dignifying the body. Transgressor's in a third kind are they, that sacrilegiously profane the Temple of the Holy Ghost, by neglecting the respect and duties, belonging to the dead bodies of God's Saints, in a decent and comely accompanying them to convenient Funerals. Heirs and Executors are oftentimes defective in these offices, and pretend better employments of that, which would be, (say they) vainly spent so. But remember you, of whom (in much such a case) that is said in S. john, John 12.6. This he said, not because he cared for the poor, but because he was a Thief, and had the bag, and bore that which was put therein: This Executors say, not because they intent pious uses, but because they bear, and bear away the bags. Generally, thy opinion must be no rule for other men's actions; neither in these cases of Funerals, must thou call all too much, which is more then enough; That woman's Ointment poured upon Christ's feet, that hundred pound weight of perfumes to embalm his one body, was more then enough, necessarily enough; yet it was not too much, for the dignity of that person, nor for the testimony of their zeal, who did it, in so abundant manner. Now, as in all these three ways, men may oppose the purpose of God, in dignifying the body, so in concurring with God's purpose, for the dignifying thereof, a man may exceed, and go beyond God's purpose, in all three. God would not have the body torn, and mangled with tortures, in those cases; but then, he would not have it pampered with wanton delicacies, nor varnished with foreign complexion. It is ill, when it is not our own heart, that appears in our words; it is ill too, when it is not our own blood, that appears in our cheeks; It may do some ill offices of blood, it may tempt, but it gives over, when it should do a good office of blood, it cannot blush. If when they are filling the wrinkles, and graves of their face, they would remember, that there is another grave, that calls for a filling with the whole body, so, even their pride would flow into a mortification. God would not have us put on a sad countenance, nor disfigure our face, not in our fastings, and other disciplines; God would not have us mar his work; nor God would not have us go about to do his last work, which he hath reserved to himself in heaven, here upon earth, that is, to glorify our bodies, with such additions here, as though we would need no glorification there. So also in the second way of giving due respect to the body of man, a man may exceed God's purpose. God would not have the body corrupted and attenuated, shrunk and deformed with incontinency, and licentiousness; But God would not have that sparing of the body, to dishonour, or undervalue, or forbear marriage, nor to frustrate that, which was one of God's purposes, in the institution of marriage, procreation of children. Marriage without possibility of children, lacks one half of God's purpose in the institution of marriage; for, the third reason of marriage, after the other two, (which too were, for a Helper, and for Children) which is, that marriage should be for a Remedy, that third came in after; for at the time of the institution of marriage, man was not fallen into any inordinate concupiscencies, and so, at that time, needed no remedy. Marriage without possibility of children, lacks one of God's two reasons for children; but marriage with a contract against children, or a practice against children, is not (says S. Augustine) a marriage, but a solemn, an avowed, a daily Adultery. To choose to be ill in the sight of God, rather than to look ill, in the sight of men, is a perverse, and a poisonous Physic. The sin of Er, and Onan, in married men; the sin of procured abortions, in married women, do, in many cases, equal, in some, exceed, the sin of Adultery; To rob a husband, or a wife, of a future child, may be in the wife, or husband, as great a sin, as to bring a supposititious, or a spurious child, into the Father's inheritance. God would not have the comeliness, the handsomeness of the body defaced by incontinency, and intemperance, but he would not have the care of that comeliness, and handsomeness frustrate his purpose of children in marriage. And as in those two, (Good would not have the body tortured, nor mangled, God would not have the body deformed by licentiousness) so, in his third respect to man's body, God would not have the bodies of his dead Saints neglected, God's purpose may be exceeded too. God's purpose therein is, that all men should be Decently; and Honourable persons, Honourably buried; but his purpose herein is exceeded, when any rag of their skin, or chip of their bones, or lock of their hair, is kept for a Relic, and made an Universal balm, and Amulet, and Antidote, against all temporal, and all spiritual diseases, and calamities, not only against the rage of a Fever, but of hell itself. What their counterfeit Relics may do, against their counterfeit hell, against their Purgatory, I know not: That powerful, and precious, and only Relic, which is given to us, against hell itself, is only the Communion of the body, and blood of Christ Jesus, left to us by him, and preserved for us, in his Church, though his body be removed out of our sight. To end this, Miramini hoc, marvel at this, at the wonderful love of God to the body of man, and thou wilt favour it so, as not to macerate thine own body, with uncommanded and inhuman flagellations, and whip, nor afflict their bodies, who are in thy charge, with inordinate labour; thou wilt not dishonour this body, as it is Christ's body, nor deform it, as it is thine own, with intemperance, but thou wilt behave thyself towards it so, as towards one, whom it hath pleased the King to honour, with a resurrection, (which was our first) and not to defer that resurrection long, which is our next step, Venit hora, The hour is coming. Non talem Deum tuum putes, qualis nec tu debes esse, is excellently said by S. Augustine: Venit hora. Never presume upon any other disposition in God, than such as thou findest in thine own heart, that thou art bound to have in thyself; for we find in our hearts, a band of conformity, and assimilation to God, that is, to be as like God as we can. Therefore whatsoever thou findest thyself bound to do to another, thou mayst expect at God's hand. Thou art bound to help up another that is fallen, therefore thou mayst assure thyself, that God will give thee a Resurrection: so, thou findest in thy heart, that the soul of an alms, the soul of a benefit, that that gives it life, is the speedy, the present doing of it; Therefore thou mayst be sure, that God will make speed to save thee, that he will not long defer this thy resurrection, horavenit. S. Augustine comparing the former resurrection, which is the spiritual resurrection of the soul, ver. 25. with this in the Text, which is the resurrection of the body, observes, that there Christ says, hora venit, & nunc est, the hour is coming, and now is; because in every private inspiration of the Holy Ghost, in every Sermon, in every meeting of the Congregation, the dead may hear, and live; nunc est, they may do it now. But that in this resurrection in the Text, the resurrection of the body, it is not said, nunc est, that the hour is now; for, the Son of Man who says it, (as he is the Son of Man) knows not when it shall be; But he says Hora venit, It is coming, and coming apace, and coming quickly, shortly. As soon as God had made man, he gave him his patent, Dominamini, Dominion over the Creature; As soon as Man was fallen, God gave him the promise of a Messiah; And of his second coming, himself says, Ecce, venio citò, Behold, I come speedily: Venit, he comes, he is upon the way; and Ecce, venit, Behold, he comes, he is within sight, you may see him in his forerunning tokens; and Ecce citò, as little way as he hath to go, he makes haste, And there is a Jesuit that makes the haste so great, as that he says, Maldon. Howsoever S. Augustine make use of that note, that it is not said in the Text, Nunc est, That the hour of the Resurrection is now, yet he does believe, that Christ did say so, though the Evangelist left it out. We need not say so; we do not; so much less liberty do we take in departing from the Fathers, than the Roman Authors do: But yet, so as S. john speaks, Hora novissima, This is the last time, (Now there are many Antichrists, 1 Joh. 2.18. whereby we know that this is the last time) And so, as S. Peter speaks, 2 Pet. 3.8. Be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day: So as this Nunc may signify Vltimum statum, The last course of times, the time not of Nature, nor of Law, but of Grace; so we admit that addition in this Resurrection too, Hora venit, & nunc est, The hour is coming, and now is, because there are no other means to be hereafter instituted for the attaining of a happy Resurrection, than those that now are established in the Church, especially at a man's death, may we very properly say, Nunc est, Now is the Resurrection come to him, not only because the last Judgement is involved in the first, (for that Judgement which passeth upon every man at his death, stands for ever without Repeal, or Appeal, or Error) but because after the death of the Body, there is no more to be done with the Body, till the Resurrection; for as we say of an Arrow, that it is over shot, it is gone, it is beyond the mark, though it be not come to the mark yet, because there is no more to be done to it till it be; so we may say, that he that is come to death, is come to his Resurrection, because he hath not another step to make, another foot to go, another minute to count, till he be at the Resurrection. The Resurrection then, being the Coronation of man, his Death, and lying down in the grave, is his enthroning, his sitting down in that chair, where he is to receive that Crown. As then the Martyrs, under the Altar, though in heaven, yet do cry out for the Resurrection; so let us, in this miserable life, submit ourselves cheerfully to the hand of God, in death, since till that death we cannot have this Resurrection, and the first thing that we shall do after this death, is to rise again. To the child that is now borne, we may say, Hora venit, The day of his Resurrection is coming; To him that is old, we may say, The hour is come; but to him that is dead, The minute is come, because to him there are no more minutes till it do come. Miremini hoc, Omnes. Marvel at this, at the descent of God's love, He loves the Body of Man, And Miremini hoc, Marvel at his speed, He makes haste to express this love, Hora venit, And then Miremini hoc, Marvel at the Generality, it reaches to all, all that are in the Grave; All that are in the graves shall hear his voice, etc. God hath made the Body as a House for the soul, till he call her out, and he hath made the Grave as a House for the body, till he call it up. The misery, and poor estate that Christ submitted himself unto for man, Mat 8.20. was not determined in that, That foxes had holes, but he not where to lay his head, while he lived; but he had no grave that he could claim, when he was dead. It is some discontinuance of the Communion of Saints, if I may not be buried with the Saints of God. Every man that hath not devested Humanity, hath a desire to have his bones lie at rest, and we cannot provide for that so well, any way, as to bury them in Consecrated places, which are, in common entendment, safest from profane violences. Even that respect, that his bones might lie at rest, seems to have moved one Prophet, 1 King. 13.31. to enjoin his Sons, to bury him, in the Sepulchre, where the other Prophet was buried. He knew that josiah would burn the bones of all the other graves, upon the Altar of Bethel, as was prophesied; and he presumed that he would spare the bones of that Prophet, and so his bones should be safe, if they were mingled with the other. Deut. 34.6. God expressed his love to Moses, in that particular, That he buried him; And, to deliver, and remove him, from the violence of any that loved him not, and so might dishonour his memory, and from the superstition of any that over-loved him, and so might over-honour his memory, God buried him in secret. In more than one place doth David complain, That there was none to bury God's Saints; And the Dignity that is promised here in the Text, is appropriated to them, who are in the graves, who are buried. But then, was that general? Is it simply, plainly, literally of them, and them only, who are in graves, who are buried? Shall none enjoy a Resurrection, that have not enjoyed a Grave? Still I say, it is a comfort to a dying man, it is an honour to his memory, it is a discharge of a duty in his friends, it is a piece of the Communion of Saints, to have a consecrated grave: But the word here is, In monumentis, All that are in Monuments; that is, in Receptacles of Bodies, of what kind soever they be: wheresoever the hand of God lays up a dead Body, Psal. 34.20. that place is the Receptacle, so the monument, so the grave of that Body. God keeps all the bones of the righteous, so that none of them are broken: Though they be trod to dust in our sight, they are entire in his, because he can bid them be whole again in an instant. Some Nations burned their dead, there the fire is the grave; some drowned their dead, there the sea is the grave; and some hung them up upon trees, and there the air is their grave: Some Nations eat their dead themselves, and some maintained dogs to eat the dead; Herod. Strabo. and as they called those dogs, Canes Sepulchrales, sepulchral dogs, so those men were sepulchral men, those men and those dogs were graves. Death and hell shall deliver up their dead, Ap●c. 20.13. says S. john: That is, the whole state, and mansion of the dead, shall be emptied: The state of the dead is their grave, and upon all that are in this state, shall the testimony of God's love, to the body of man, fall; And that is the Generality, All that are in the grave, etc. Our next step is, Audient. The Instrument, the Means, by which, this, first so speedy, and then so general love of God, to man, to man in his lowest part, his body, is accomplished unto him; These, All these, All these that are in graves, in all these kinds of graves, shall hear his voice, and that is the Means. First, whose voice? That is expressed immediately before, The Son of man. In the other Resurrection, in that of the dead soul, ver. 25. there it is said, The dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God. In this, which is the Resurrection to Judgement, it is The Son of man. The former Resurrection (that of a sinner to repentance by preaching) is wrought by a plain, and ordinary means here in the Church; where you do but hear a man in a Pew, read prayers, and pronounce Absolution, and a man in a Pulpit preach a Sermon, and a man at a Table consecrate, and administer a Sacrament; And because all this, though it be the power of life, and the means of your spiritual resurrection, is wrought by the Ministry of man, who might be contemptible in your eye, therefore the whole work is referred to God, and not the son of man, but the Son of God, is said to do it. In this Resurrection of the Text, which is a Resurrection to Judgement, and to an account with God, that God whom we have displeased, exasperated, violated, wounded in the whole course of our life, lest we should be terrified, and dejected at the presence of that God, the whole work is referred to the Son of Man, which hath himself formerly felt all our infirmities, and hath had as sad a soul at the approach of death, as bitter a Cup in the form of Death, as heavy a fear of Gods forsaking him in the agony of death, as we can have: And for sin itself, I would not, I do not extenuate my sin, but let me have fallen, not seven times a day, but seventy seven times a minute, yet what are my sins, to all those sins that were upon Christ? The sins of all men, and all women, and all children, the sins of all Nations, all the East and West, and all the North and South, the sins of all times and ages, of Nature, of Law, of Grace, the sins of all natures, sins of the body, and sins of the mind, the sins of all growth, and all extentions, thoughts, and words, and acts, and habits, and delight, and glory, and contempt, and the very sin of boasting, nay of our belying ourselves in sin; All these sins, past, present and future, were at once upon Christ, and in that depth of sin, mine are but a drop to his Ocean; In that treasure of sin, mine are but single money to his Talon; And therefore, that I might come with a holy reverence to his Ordinance, in this place, though it be but in the Ministry of man, that first Resurrection is attributed to the Son of God, to give a dignity to that Ministry of man, which otherwise might have been undervalved, that thereby we might have a consolation, and a cheerfulness towards it; It is He, that is, the Son of God, and the Son of man, Christ; which remembers us alfo, that all that belongs to the expressing of the Law of God to man, must be received by us, who profess ourselves Christians, in, and by, and for, and through Christ. We use to ascribe the Creation to the Father, but the Father created by the Word, and his Word, is his Son, Christ; When he prepared the Heavens, I was there, (says Christ, Prov. 8.27. of himself in the person of Wisdom) and when he appointed the foundations of the earth, than was I by him, as one brought up with him; It is not, as one brought in to him, or brought in by him, but with him; one as old, that is, as eternal, as much God as he. We use to ascribe Sanctification to the Holy Ghost; But the Holy Ghost sanctifies in the Church, And the Church was purchased by the blood of Christ, and Christ remains Head of the Church, usque in consummationem, till the end of the world. I look upon every blessing that God affords me, and I consider whether it be temporal, or spiritual; and that distinguishes the metal; the temporal is my silver, and the spiritual is my Gold; but then I look again upon the Inscription, Cujus Imago, whose Image, whose inscription it bears, and whose Name; and except I have it, in, and for, and by Christ Jesus, Temporal, and Spiritual things too, are but imaginary, but illusory shadows; for God conveys himself to us, no other way, but in Christ. The benefit then in our Text, the Resurrection, is by him; but it is limited thus, Christum. It is by hearing him, They that are in their Graves shall hear, etc. So it is in the other Resurrection too, the spiritual resurrection. v. 25. There, they must hear him, that will live. In both resurrections, That in the Church, now, by Grace, And that in the Grave hereafter, by Power, it is said, They shall hear him. They shall, which seems to imply a necessity, though not a coaction; But that necessity, not of equal force, not equally irresistible in both: In the Grave, They shall; Though they be dead, and senseless as the dust, (for they are dust itself) though they bring no concurrence, no cooperation, They shall hear, that is, They shall not choose but hear. In the other resurrection, which is, in the Church, by Grace, in God's Ordinance, They shall hear too, that is, There shall be a voice uttered so, as that they may hear, if they will, but not whether they will or no, as in the other case, in the grave. Therefore when God expresses his gathering of his Church, in this world, it is Sibilabo & congregabo, I will hisse, or chirp for them, Zecha. 10.8. and so gather them: He whispers in the voice of the Spirit, and he speaks a little louder, in the voice of a man; Let the man be a Boanerges, a Son of thunder, never so powerful a speaker, yet no thunder is heard over all the world. Mat. 24.31. But for the voice that shall be heard at the Resurrection, He shall send his Angels, with a great sound of a Trumpet; A great sound, such as may be made by a Trumpet, such as an Angel, all his Angels can make in a Trumpet, and more than all that, 1 Thes. 4.16. The Lord himself shall descend from Heaven, and that, with a shout, and with the voice of an Archangel, that is, says S. Ambrose, of Christ himself, And in the Trumpet of God, that is also, Christ himself. So then, you have the Person, Christ; The means, A Voice, And the powerfulness of that voice, in the Name of an Archangel, which is named but once more in all the Scriptures: And therefore, let no man, that hath an holy anhelation and panting after the Resurrection, suspect that he shall sleep in the dust, for ever; for, this is a voice, that will be heard, he must rise. Let no man, who because he hath made his course of life like a beast, would therefore be content his state in death might be like a beast too, hope that he shall sleep in the dust, for ever, for this is a voice, that must be heard, And all that hear shall come forth, they that have done good, etc. He shall come forth; Procedent. even he that hath done ill, and would not, shall come forth. You may have seen moral men, you may have seen impious men, go in confidently enough: not affrighted with death, not terrified with a grave; but when you shall see them come forth again, you shall see them in another complexion. That man that died so, with that confidence, thought death his end; It ends his seventy years, but it gins his seventy millions of generations of torments, even to his body, and he never thought of that: Indeed, judicii, nisi qui vitae aeternae praedestinatus est, non potest reminisci, says S. Ambrose, No man can, no man dares think upon the last Judgement, but he that can think upon it with comfort, he that is predestinated to eternal life. Even the best, are sometimes shaked with the consideration of the Resurrection, because it is impossible to separate the consideration of the Resurrection, from the consideration of the Judgement; and the terrors of that may abate the joy of the other: Sieve comedo●sive bibo, says S. Hierom, Whether I eat, or drink, still me thinks I hear this sound, Surgite mortui, & venite ad judicium, Arise you dead, and come to Judgement: When it calls me up from death, I am glad, when it calls me to Judgement, that impairs my joy. Can I think that God will not take a strict account; or, can I be without fear, if I think he will? Non expavescere requisiturum est dicere, non requiret, is excellently said by S. Bernard, If I can put off all fear of that Judgement, I have put off all imagination, that any such Judgement shall be. But, when I begin this fear, in this life, here, I end this fear, in my death, and pass away cheerfully: But the wicked begin this fear, when the Trumpet sounds to the Resurrection, and then shall never end it; but, as a man condemned to be half hanged, and then quartered, hath a fearful addition in his quartering after, and yet had no ease in his hanging before; so they that have done ill, when they have had their hanging, when they have suffered in soul, the torments of Hell, from the day of their death, to the day of Judgement, shall come to that day with fear, as to an addition to that, which yet, was infinite before. And therefore the vulgat Edition hath rendered this well, Procedent, They shall proceed, they shall go farther and farther in torment. But this is not the object of our speculation, Con●lusio. the subject of our meditation, now: we proposed this Text, for the Contemplation of God's love to man, and therefore we rather comfort ourselves with that branch, and refresh ourselves with the shadow of that, That they who have done good, shall come forth unto the Resurrection of life. Alas, the others shall live as long as they; Lucifer is as immortal as Michael, and judas as immortal as S. Peter: August. But Vita damnatorum, mors est, That which we call immortality in the damned, is but a continual dying; howsoever it must be called life, it hath all the qualities of death, saving the ease, and the end, which death hath, and damnation hath not. They must come forth; they that have done evil, must do so too: Neither can stay in their house, their grave; for, their house (though that house should be the sea) shall be burnt down; all the world dissolved with fire. But then, They who have done evil, shall pass from that fire, into a farther heat, without light, They who have done good, into a farther light, without heat. But fix upon the Conditions, and perform them; They must have done Good; To have known Good, to have believed it, to have intended it, nay to have preached it to others, will not serve, They must have done good. They must be rooted in faith, and then bring forth fruit, and fruit in season; and then is the season of doing good, when another needs that good at thy hands. God gives the evening rain, but he gave the morning rain before; A good man gives at his death, but he gives in his life time too. To them belongs this Resurrection of the body to life; upon which, since our Text inclines us to marvel rather than to discourse, I will not venture to say with David, Narrabo omnia mirabilia tua, I will show all thy wondrous works, Psal. 9.2. Psal. 105.5. Psal. 119 18. (an Angel's tongue could not show them) but I will say with him, Mementote mirabilium, Remember the marvellous works he hath done, And by that, God will open your eyes, that you may behold the wondrous things that he will do: Remember with thankfulness the several resurrections that he hath given you; from superstition and ignorance, in which, you, in your Fathers lay dead; from sin, and a love of sin, in which, you, in the days of your youth, lay dead; from sadness, and dejection of spirit, in which, you, in your worldly crosses, or spiritual tentations, lay dead; And assure yourself, that that God that loves to perfect his own works, when you shall lie dead in your graves, will give you that Resurrection to life, which he hath promised to all them that do good, and will extend to all them, who having done evil, do yet truly repent the evil they have done. SERMON XXI. The first Sermon upon this Text, Preached at S. Paul's, in the Evening, upon Easter-day. 1626. 1 COR. 15.29. Else what shall they do that are baptised for dead? If the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptised for dead? O Dit Dominus qui festum Domini unum putat diem, says Origen; God hates that man that thinks any of his Holy days last but one day; That is, that never thinks of a Resurrection, but upon Easter-day. I have therefore proposed words unto you, which will not be determined this day; That so, when at any other time, we return to the handling of then, we may also return to the meditation of the Resurrection. To which we may best give a beginning this day, in which we celebrate the Resurrection of our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus: A●d in his one Resurrection, all those several kinds of Resurrections which appertain unto us, because howsoever these words have received divers good expositions from divers good Expositors, and received one perverse exposition from our adversaries in the Roman Church, who have detorted and deflected them, to the maintenance of their Purgatory, yet all agree, that these words are an argument for the Resurrection, and therefore proper to this day. And yet this day we shall not so much inquire, wherein, and in what sense the words are an argument of the Resurrection, as enjoy the assurance that they are so; not so much distribute the Text into an explication of the particular words (which is, as the Mintage and Coining of gold into several lesser pieces) as to lay up the whole wedge, and ingot of Gold all at once in you, that is, the precious assurance of your glorious Resurrection. In establishing whereof, we shall this day, make but this short passage, Divisio. by these two steps: Glory in the end, And Grace in the way; The Glory of our bodies, in the last Resurrection then, And the Grace upon our souls, in their present Resurrection now. For as we do not dig for gold merely and only for treasure, but to dispense and issue it also, for present provision and use, not only for the future, but for the present too; So we do not gather the doctrine of the Resurrection only for that dignity which the body shall receive in the Triumphant, but also for the consolation which thereby our souls may receive in the Militant Church. And therefore, as in our first part, which will be, By what means the knowledge and assurance of the Resurrection of the body accrues to us, we shall see, that though it be presented by Reason before, and illustrated by Reason after, yet the root and foundation thereof is in Faith; though Reason may chafe the wax, yet Faith imprints the seal, (for the Resurrection is not a conclusion out of natural Reason, but it is an article of supernatural Faith; and though you assent to me now, speaking of the Resurrection, yet that is not out of my Logic, nor out of my Rhetoric, but out of that Character, and Ordinance which God hath imprinted in me, in the power and efficacy whereof, I speak unto you, as often as I speak out of this place.) As, I say we determine our first part in this, How the assurance of this Resurrection accrues to us, so when we descend to our second part, That is the consolation which we receive whilst we are In via, here upon our way in this world, out of the contemplation of that Resurrection to glory, which we shall have In patria, at home in heaven, and how these two Resurrections are arguments and evidences of one another, we shall look upon some correspondencies, and resemblances between natural death, and spiritual death by sin, and between the glorious Resurrection of the body, and the gracious Resurrection of the soul, that so having brought bodily death and bodily Resurrection, and spiritual death and spiritual Resurrection, by their comparison into your consideration, you may anon departed somewhat the better edified in both, and so enjoy your present Resurrection of the soul, by Grace, with more certainty, and expect the future Resurrection of the body to glory, with the more alacrity and cheerfulness. Though therefore we may hereafter take just occasion of entering into a war, 1. Part. in vindicating and redeeming these words, seized and seduced by our adversaries, to testify for their Purgatory, yet this day being a day of peace and reconciliation with God and man, we begin with peace, with that wherein all agree, That these words (Else what shall they do that are baptised for dead? If the dead rise not at all, why are they baptised for dead?) must necessarily receive such an Exposition, as must be an argument for the Resurrection; This baptism pro mortuis, for dead, must be such a baptism as must prove that, the Resurrection. For, that the Apostle repeats twice in these few words; Else, (says he) that is, if there be no Resurrection, why are men thus baptised? And again, if the dead rise not, why are men thus baptised? Indeed the whole Chapter is a continual argument for the Resurrection; from the beginning thereof to the 35. ver. he handles the An sit, whether there be a Resurrection, or no; For, if that be denied, or doubted in the root, in the person of Christ, whether he be risen or no, the whole frame of our religion falls, and every man will be apt (and justly apt) to ask that question which the Indian King asked, when he had been catechised so far in the articles of our Christian religion, as to come to the suffered, and crucified, and dead, and buried, impatient of proceeding any farther, and so losing the consolation of the Resurrection, he asked only, Is your God dead, and buried? then let me return to the worship of the Sun, for I am sure the Sun will not die; If Christ be dead and buried, that is, continue in the state of death, and of the grave, without a Resurrection, where shall a Christian look for life? Therefore the Apostle handles, and establishes that first, that assurance, A Resurrection there is. From thence he raises and pursues a second question De modo; But some man will say, says he, How are the dead raised up, and with what body come they forth? And in these questions, De modo, there is more exercise of reason and of discourse: for, many times, The matter is matter of faith, when the manner is not so, but considerable, and triable by reason; Many times, for the matter, we are all bound, and bound upon salvation, to think alike; But for the manner, we may think diversely, without forfeiture of salvation, or impeachment of discretion; For, he is not presently an indiscreet man, that differs in opinion from another man that is discreet, in things that fall under opinion. Absit superstito, Ge●son hoc est superflua religio, says a moderate man of the Roman Church; This is truly superstition, to bring more under the necessity of being believed, than God hath brought in his Scriptures; superfluous religion, says he, is superstition; Remove that, and then (as he adds there) Contradictoria, quorum utrumque probabile, credi possunt, Where two contrary opinions are both probable, they may be embraced, and believed by two men, and those two be both learned, and discreet, and pious, and zealous men. And this consideration should keep men from that precipitation, of imprinting the odious and scandalous names of Sects, or Sectaries upon other men who may differ from them, and from others with them, in some opinions. Probability leads me in my assent, and I think thus; Let me allow another man his probability too, and let him think his way, in things that are not fundamental. They that do not believe alike, in all circumstances of the manner of the Resurrection, may all, by God's goodness, meet there, and have their parts in the glory thereof, if their own uncharitableness do not hinder them: And he that may have been in the right opinion, may sooner miss heaven, than he that was in the wrong, if he come uncharitably to condemn or contemn the other: for, in such cases, humility, and love of peace, may, in the sight of God, excuse and recompense many errors, and mistake. And after these, of the Matter, of the Manner of the Resurrection, the Apostle proceeds to a third question, of their state and condition, whom Christ shall find alive upon Earth, at his second coming; and of them he says only this, Ecce, mysterium vobis dico, Behold, I tell you a mystery, a secret, we shall not all sleep, that is, not die so, as that we shall rest any time in the grave, but we shall all be changed, that is, receive such an immutation, as that we shall have a sudden dissolution of body and soul, which is a true death, and a sudden reunion of body and soul, which is a true resurrection, in an instant, in the twinkling of an eye. Thus careful, and thus particular is the Apostle, that the knowledge of the resurrection might be derived unto us. Now of these three questions, which he raises and pursues; first, whether there be a Resurrection, than what manner of Resurrection, and then what kind of Resu rrection they shall have that live to the day of Judgement, our Text enters into the first; For, for the first, That a resurrection there is, the Apostle opens several Topiques, to prove it; One is, from our Head, and Pattern, and Example, Christ Jesus: For so he argues first, If the dead be not raised, than Christ is not raised; As sure as the head is, V 16. so sure the body is raised. And then another Topique, from whence he produces arguments, is, the absurd consequences, and illations, that would follow, if there were no resurrection. Of that kind one is, Nos miserrimi, If in this life only we have hops in Christ, V 19 we are of all men the most miserable; Why? because in this life we suffer persecution for this profession. And another is, Edamus & bibamus, Let us eat and drink, for to morrow we shall die; V 32. What needs this abstinence, and this severe denying ourselves, the conveniencies of this life, if all end in this life? And lastly, in the same kind, follows this Text, Si omnino mortui non excitentur, If the dead rise not at all, why are they baptised for dead? And by all these ways doth the Apostle convey this knowledge of the Resurrection. But would all these ways serve? Resurrectio, mysterium. would all this satisfy that Inquisition which we have brought, how this assurance of the Resurrection accrues to us? Would any of these reasons, or would all these reasons convince a man, who were not at all prepossessed, and preoccupated with a belief of the resurrection, with an assurance thereof? The resurrection was always a mystery in itself; Sacrum secretum, a holy secret, and above the search of reason. For there are secrets and mysteries of two kinds, as the School presents them; some things are so, Quia quaedam interposita, Because, though the thing be near enough unto me, yet something is interposed between me, and it, and so I cannot see it: And somethings are so, Quia longè seposita, because they are at so remote a distance, as that, though nothing be interposed, yet my sight cannot extend to them. In the first sense, the Sacraments are mysteries, because though the grace therein be near me, yet there is Velamen interpositum, there is visible figure, a sensible sign, and seal, between me, and that grace, which is exhibited to me in the Sacrament: In the second sense, the resurrection is a mystery, because it is so fare removed, as that it concerns our state and condition in the next world; For man sleepeth, and riseth not; Job. 14.12. he shall not wake again, nor be raised from his sleep, till the heavens be no more; that is, not till the dissolution of all. So then, the knowledge of the resurrection in itself, is a mystery, Resurrectio Christ's, mysterium. removed out of the Sphere, and latitude of reason; And, (to consider this remoteness farther) though the knowledge of Christ Resurrection, be nearer us, than our own, (for first we know his, because from his we argue and conclude our own, as the Apostle institutes his argument, If the dead rise not, Christ is not risen) yet even the Resurrection of Christ, V 16. was so far from being clear and obvious to the best, and the best illumined understandings, as that, though Christ himself had spoken often of his Resurrection, to his Disciples, and Apostles, yet they did not clearly, throughly, (scarce at all) understand his Resurrection. When Christ said to the Jews promiscuously, Solvite Templum hoc, Destroy this Temple, and in three days I will raise it; I wonder not that they, blinded with their own malice, discerned no resurrection in that saying, but applied it to that Temple, which was forty six years in building; For, till the resurrection was really accomplished, and actually performed, the Apostles themselves understood not the Resurrection. Then, when Christ was risen from the dead, and that those two great Apostles, Peter, and john, had been at the Sepulchre, and received from thence so much evidence, as convinced them, and prevailed upon them, then, and not till then, they began to understand the resurrection; for, John 22.9. till then, (says the Text expressly there) they knew not the Scriptures, that he must rise from the dead. And truly, Etiam post Resurrectionem. if we take a holy liberty, (as piously we may) to consider Christ's bodily actions after his resurrection, they were not such, as without admitting any opposition, might induce a necessity of confessing a resurrection. For, though he exhibited himself to their eyes to be seen, and to their ears to be heard, and to their fingers to be felt, though he eat with them, and did many other actions of a living body, yet, as the Angels in the old Testament, did the like actions, in those bodies which they had assumed; so might Christ have done all these, in such a body, though that which was buried in the Sepulchre, had had no resurrection. It is true, that Christ confirmed his Resurrection, Multis argumentis, as the vulgat reads that place; Acts 1.3. with many infallible tokens, says our former Translation, with many infallible proofs, says our later; But still all these arguments, and tokens, and proofs wrought by way of confirmation, something was otherwise imprinted in them, and established by a former apprehension of faith, and these arguments, and tokens, and proofs confirmed it. For, the reasons for the resurrection, do not convince a natural man at all, neither do they so convince a Christian, but that there is more left to his faith, and he believes something beyond and above his reason. The resurrection in itself, Resurrectio nostra, mysterium. Christ's Resurrection, though it be clearer than ours, Christ's Resurrection, even after it was actually accomplished, was still a mystery, out of the compass of reason; And then, as it was above our reason, so, howsoever it be out proof, and our pattern for our resurrection, yet it is above our imitation. For our resurrection shall not be like his. Omnes alii suscitati, Christus solus resurrexit, says S. Bernard; All we shall be raised from the dead, only Christ arose from the dead. We shall be raised by a power working upon us, he risen by a power inherent, and resident in himself. And yet, though in this respect, our resurrection be more open to the proof of reason, than the resurrection of Christ, (for that which hath least miracle in it, is most open to reason; and therefore a natural man would easilier believe that God might raise a dead man, then that a dead man should be God, and so able to raise himself, which was Christ's case, for the Godhead of Christ was as much united to his dead body in the grave, as it was to his soul in Paradise, or to his whole person consisting of body and soul, before, or after his death and resurrection) Though, in this respect, I say, our resurrection be more open to reason, because it hath less of the miracle in it, yet when we come to assign reasons, even for our resurrection, (as we see Athanagoras hath undertaken, with a great deal of wit, and learning, and confidence, in his Apology for the Christians, to the Emperor, within 155. years after Christ; and the Schoolmen make account, that they have brought it nearer to the understanding, nay even to the very sense, by producing some such things, as even in nature, do not only resemble, but (as they apprehend) evict a resurrection) yet when all is done, and all the reasons of Athenogaras, and the School, and of S. Paul himself, are weighed, they determine all in this, that they are fair, and pregnant, and convenient illustrations of that which was believed before; and that they have force, and power to incline to an assent, and to create and beget such a probability, as a discreet, and sad, and constant man might rest in, and submit to. But yet, we shall find also, that though no man may speak a word, or conceive a thought against the resurrection, because for the matter, we are absolutely and expressly concluded by the Scriptures, yet a man may speak probably, and dangerously against any particulur argument, that is produced for the resurrection. We believe it immediately, entirely, cheafully, undisputably, because we see it expressly delivered by the Holy Ghost; And we embrace thankfully, that sweetness, and that fullness of that blessed Spirit, that as he lays an obligation upon our faith, by delivering the article positively to us, so he is also pleased to accompany that Article, with reasons and arguments proportionable to our reason and understanding: for though those reasons do not so conclude us, as that nothing might be said to the contrary, or nothing doubted after, yet the Holy Ghost having first begotten the faith of this Article, Per ea augescit fides, & pinguescit, (as Luther speaks in another case) By those reasons and arguments, and illustrations, that faith is nourished and maintained in a good habitude and constitution. And of that kind are all the reasons brought by S. Paul here; Argumentae apostles. The matter is positively delivered by him, and so apprehended by us, and his reasons (as we said before) issue out of two Topiques; Be pleased to look upon both. The first is our pattern, Christ Jesus: He is risen, therefore we shall. In which, though I have a fair illustration and consolation in that, The Head is risen, therefore the Body shall, yet this reaches not to make my Resurrection like his, for I shall not rise as he did. And then from his other Topique, his reasons rise thus: If there be no Resurrection, we that suffer thus much for the prefession of Christ, are the miserablest men in the world. Why so? have not all Philosophers had Scholars, and all Heretics Disciples, and all great Men flatterers, and every private man affections? And hath there not been as much suffered by occasion of these, as S. Paul argues upon here, and yet no imagination, no expectation of a resurrection? Leave out the consideration of Philosophers, many of which suffered more than the Turks do, and yet the Turks suffer infinitely more, in their Mortifications, than the Papists do; Leave out the Heretics, which were so hungry of suffering, that if they could not provoke others to kill them, they would kill themselves; Leave out the pressures of our own affections, and concupiscencies, and yet the covetous man is in a continual starving, and the licentious man in a continual Consumption; Take only into your consideration, the miserable vexation of the flatterer, and humourer, and dependant upon great persons, that their time is not their own, nor their words their own; their joys are not their own, nay their sorrows are not their own; they might not smile if they would, nor they may not sigh when they would, they must do all according to another's mind, and yet they must not know his mind; consider this, and you cannot say, but that there is as much suffered in the world, as this upon which S. Paul argues, by them who place not their consolation, nor their retribution in the hope of a resurrection. He argues farther, Edamus & bibamus, If there be no resurrection, let us dissolve ourselves into the pleasures of this world, and enjoy them; Why so too? Have we not stories full of exemplar men, that might be our patterns for sobriety, and continency, and denying themselves the sweetnesses of this life, and yet never placed Consolation, nor Retribution upon a Resurrection? Would not S. Paul's own Pondus gloriae, That there is an exceeding weight of eternal glory attending our afflictions, serve our turn, though that were determined in the salvation of the soul, though there were no resurrection of the body? It is strongly and wisely said by Aquinas, Derogant fidei Christianae rationes non cogentes; To offer reasons for any Article of faith, which will not convince a man therein, derogates from the dignity of that Article. Therefore we must consider S. Paul's reasons as they were intended; to Christians, that had received the Article of the Resurrection into their faith before; And then, as God gave Adam a body immediately from himself, but then maintained and nourished that body by other means; so the holy Ghost by S. Paul gives the article of the Resurrection to our faith positively, and then enables us to declare to our own consciences, and to other men's understandings, that we believe no impossible thing, in believing the Resurrection: for as it is the candle that lights me, but yet I take a lantern to defend that candle from the wind; so my faith assures me of the Resurrection, but these reasons and illustrations assist that faith. And so we have done with our first part, How this assurance accrues unto us, and pass in order to the other, The consolation which we have from this resurrection of the body, not only in itself, but as it gives us a sense of the spiritual resurrection of our souls from sin, by Grace. We are assured then of a Resurrection, and we see how that assurance grows. 2. Part. But of what? Of all, Body and soul too; For, Quod cadit, resurgit, says S. Hierome, All that is fall'n, receives a resurrection; and that is suppositum, says the School, that is, The person, the whole man, not taken in pieces, soul alone, or body alone, but both. For as Damascen expresses the same that S. Hierome intends, Resurrectio est ejus quod cecidit iterata surrectio, The Resurrection is a new rising of that which fell; and Man fell. A man is not saved, a sinner is not redeemed, I am not received into heaven, if my body be left out; The soul and the body concurred to the making of a sinner, and body and soul must concur to the making of a Saint. So it is in the last Resurrection, so it is in the first, which we consider now, by Grace from sin; And therefore we receive into comparison, Triplicem casum, a threefold fall, and a threefold resurrection, as in the natural and bodily death, so in the spiritual death of the soul also: For first, in natural death, there is Casus in separationem, The man, the person falls into a separation, a divorce of body and soul; and the resurrection from this fall is by Reunion, the soul and body are reunited at the last day. A second fall in natural death, is Casus in dissolutionem, The dead body falls by putrefaction into a dissolution, into atoms and grains of dust; and the resurrection from this fall, is by Re-efformation: God shall re-compact and re-compile those atoms and grains of dust, into that Body, which was before: And then a third fall in natural death, is Casus in Dispersionem, This man being fall'n into a divorce of body and soul, this body being fall'n into a dissolution of dust, this dust falls into a dispersion, and is scattered unsensibly, undiscernibly upon the face of the earth; and the resurrection from this death, is by way of Re-collection; God shall recall and recollect all these Atoms, and grains of dust, and re-compact that body, and reunite that soul, and so that resurrection is accomplished: And these three falls, Into a Divorce, into a Separation, into a Dispersion; And these three Resurrections, By Reunion, by Re-efformation, by Re-collecting, we shall also find in our present state, The spiritual death of the soul by sin. First then, Casus in separationem. the first fall in the spiritual death, is the divorce of body and soul; That whereas God hath made the body to be the Organ of the soul, and the soul to be the breath of that Organ, and bound them to a mutual relation to one another, Man sometimes withdraws the soul from the body, by neglecting the duties of this life, for imaginary speculations; and oftener withdraws the body from the soul, which should be subject to the soul, but does maintain a war; and should be a wife to the soul, and does stand out in a divorce. Now the Resurrection, Resurrectie a casu in separationem. from this first fall into a Divorce, is, seriously and wisely, that is, both piously and civilly to consider, that Man is not a soul alone, but a body too; That man is not placed in this world only for speculation; He is not sent into this world to live out of it, but to live in it; Adam was not put into Paradise, only in that Paradise to contemplate the future Paradise, but to dress and to keep the present; God did not breathe a soul towards him, but into him; Not in an obsession, but a possession; Not to travail for knowledge abroad, but to direct him by counsel at home; Not for ecstasies, but for an inherence; for when it was come to that, in S. Paul, we see it is called a rapture, he was not in his proper station, nor his proper motion; He was transported into the third heaven: but as long as we are in our dwelling upon earth, though we must love God with all our soul, yet it is not with our soul alone; Our body also must testify and express our love, not only in a reverential humiliation thereof, in the dispositions, and postures, and motions, and actions of the body, when we present ourselves at God's Service, in his house, but in the discharge of our bodily duties, and the sociable offices of our callings, towards one another: Not to run away from that Service of God, by hiding ourselves in a superstitious Monastery, or in a secular Monastery, in our own house, by an unprofitable retiredness, and absenting ourselves from the necessary businesses of this world: Not to avoid a Calling, by taking none: Not to make void a Calling, by neglecting the due offices thereof. In a word, To understand, and to perform in the best measure we can, the duties of the body and of the soul, this is the resurrection from the first fall, The fall into a divorce of body and soul. And for the advancing of this knowledge, and the facilitating of this performance of these duties, be pleased a little to stop upon the consideration of both, both of Spiritual and Divine, and then of secular and sociable duties, so far as concerns this subject in hand. First for the duties of the soul, Officium animae. God was never out of Christ's sight; He was always with him, always within him, always he himself; yet Christ, at some times, applied himself in a nearer distance, and stricter way of prayer to God then at other times. Christ's whole life was a continual abstinence, a perpetual sobriety, yet Christ proposed, and proportioned a certain time, and a certain number of days for a particular fast, upon particular occasion. This is the harmony, this is the resurrection of a Christian, in this respect, That his soul be always so fixed upon God, as that he do nothing but with relation to his glory principally, and habitually; That he think of God, at all times, but that, besides that, he sepose some times, to think of nothing but God: That he pray continually, so far, as to say nothing, to wish nothing, that he would not be content God should hear, but that, besides that, he sepose certain fixed times for private prayer in his chamber, and for public prayer in the Congregation. For, though it be not where expressly written, that Christ did pray in the Congregation, or in company, yet, all that Christ did, is not written; and it is written, that he went often into the Temples, and into the Synagogues; and it is written, that even the Pharisee, and the Publican, that went to those places, went thither to pray. But howsoever, Christ was never so alone, but that if he were not in the Church, the Church was in him; All Christians were in him, as all Men were in Adam. This then is our first Resurrection, for the duty that belongs to the soul, Officium corporis. That the soul do at all times think upon God, and at some times think upon nothing but him; And for that, which in this respect belongs to the body, That we neither enlarge, and pamper it so, nor so adorn and paint it, as though the soul required a spacious, and specious palace to dwell in. Of that excess, Porphyry, who loved not Christ nor Christians, said well, out of mere Morality, That this enormous fattening and enlarging our bodies by excessive diet, was but a shoveling of more and more fat earth upon our souls to bury them deeper: Dum corpus augemus, mortaliores efficimur, says he, The more we grow, the more mortal we make ourselves, and the greater sacrifice we provide for death, when we gather so much flesh: with that elegancy speaks he, speaking out of Nature, and with this simplicity and homeliness speaks S. Hierom, speaking out of Grace, Qui Christum desiderat, & illo pane vescitur, de quàm preciesis cibis stercus conficiat, non quaerit, He that can relish Christ, and feed upon that Bread of life, will not be so diligent to make precious dung, and curious excrements, to spend his purse, or his wit, in that, which being taken into him, must pass by so ignoble a way from him. The flesh that God hath given us, is affliction enough; but the flesh that the devil gives us, is affliction upon affliction; and to that, there belongs a woe. Per tenuitatem assimilamur Deo, says the same Author; The attenuation, the slenderness, the deliverance of the body from the encumbrance of much flesh, gives us some assimilation, some conformity to God, and his Angels; The less flesh we carry, the liker we are to them, who have none: That is still, the less flesh of our own making: for, for that flesh, which God, and his instrument, Nature, hath given us, in what measure, or proportion soever, that does not oppress us, to this purpose, neither shall that be laid to our charge; but the flesh that we have built up by curious diet, by meats of provocation, and witty sauces, or by a slothful and drowsy negligence of the works of our calling. All flesh is sinful flesh; sinful so, as that it is the mother of sin, it occasions sin, natural flesh is so; But this artificial flesh of our own making, is sinful so, as that it is also the daughter of sin; It is, indeed, the punishment of former sins, and the occasion of future. The soul than requires not so large, so vast a house of sinful flesh, to dwell in: Macerationes corporis. But yet on the other side, we may not by inordinate abstinencies, by indiscreet fastings, by inhuman flagellations, by unnatural macerations, and such Disciplines, as God doth not command, nor authorise, so whither, and shrink, and contract the body, as though the soul were sent into it, as into a prison, or into fetters, and manacles, to wring, and pinch, and torture it. Nihil interest, says S. Hierome, It is all one whether thou kill thyself at one blow, or be long in doing it, if thou do it. All one, whether thou fall upon thine own sword, or starve thyself with such a fasting, as thou discernest to induce that effect: for, says he, Descendit a dignitate viri, & not as insaniae incurrit. He departs from that dignity, which God hath imprinted in man, in giving him the use, and the dominion over his creatures, and he gives the world just occasion to think him mad; And, as Tertullian adds; Respuit datorem, qui datum deserit, He that does not use a benefit, reproaches the Benefactor, and he is ungrateful to God, that does not accept at his hands the use of his blessings. Therefore is it accepted as a good interpretation, which is made of Christ's determining his fast in forty days, Ne sui homicida videretur, Lest if he continued it longer, he might have seemed to have killed himself, by being the author of his own death; And so do they interpret aright his Esuriit, That then he began to be hungry, that he began to languish, to faint, to find a detriment in his body; for else, a fasting when a man is not hungry, is no fasting; but then he gave over fasting, when he found the state of his body impaired by fasting. And therefore those mad doctrines, (so S. Hierom calls them, Notas insaniae habent) yea those devilish doctrines, (so S. Paul calls them) that forbidden certain meats, and that make un-commanded macerations of the body, meritorious, that upon a supposititious story, of an Ermit that lived 22. years, Abbasll sperg. without eating any thing at all, And upon an impertinent example of their S. Francis, that kept three Lents in the year, which they extol, and magnify in S. Francis, and S. Hierom condemned, and detested in the Montanists, who did so too, have built up those Carthusian Rules, That though it appear that that, and nothing but that, would save the patient's life, yet he may not eat flesh, that is a Carthusian, And have brought into estimation those Apocryphal and bastardly Canons which they father upon the Apostles, That a man must rather starve, then receive food from the hand of a person excommunicate, or otherwise detected of any mortal sin; And that all that can be done with the alms of such a person, is, that it be spent in wood and coals and other fuel, that so, (as the subtle philosophy of their Canon is) it may be burnt, and consumed by fire; for, to save a man's life, it must not be spent upon meat or drink, or such sustentation: These Doctrines are not the Doctrines of this Resurrection, by which, man considered in Composito, as he consists of soul and body, by a sober and temperate life, makes his body obsequious, and serviceable to his soul, but yet leaves his soul a body to work in, and an Organ to praise God upon, both in a devout humiliation of his body, in God's service, and in a bodily performance of the duties of some calling; for this is our first Resurrection A casu separationis, from having fall'n into a separation of body and soul, for they must serve God jointly together, because God having joined them, man may not separate them, but as God shall reunite them at the last Resurrection, so must we, in our Resurrections in this life; And farther we extend not this Resurrection, from this separation, this divorce. The second fall of man in natural death, Casus in dissolutionem. is Casus in dissolutionem, The man being fallen into a divorce of soul and body, the body falls by putrefaction into a dissolution of dust; and the Resurrection from this fall, is, a re-efformation, when God shall recompact that dust into that body. This fall, and this resurrection we have in our spiritual death too: for we fall into daily customs, and continual habits of those sins, and we become not only as that Lazarus in the parable, to have sores upon us, but as that Lazarus in the Gospel, that was dead; Domine jam faetemus, & quatriduani sumus, Lord we stink in thy nostrils, and we have been buried four days; All the four changes of our life, Infancy, Youth, Middle Age, and Old, have been spent and worn out in a continual, and uninterrupted course of sin. In which, we shall best consider our fall, and best prepare our Resurrection, by looking from whence we are fallen, and by what steps; and they are three. First, Nardus nostra. Cant. 1.12. Perdidimus nardum nostram, We have lost the sweet savour of our own Spikenard; for so the Spouse says, Nardus mea dedit odorem suum: My Spikenard hath given forth her sweet savour. There was a time, when we had a Spikenard, and a sweet savour of our own, when our own Natural faculties, in that state as God infused them, in Adam, had a power to apprehend, and lay hold upon the graces of God. Man hath a reasonable soul capable of God's grace, so hath no creature but man; man hath natural faculties, which may be employed by God in his service, so hath no creature but man. Only man was made so, as that he might be better; whereas all other creatures were but to consist in that degree of goodness, in which they entered. Miserable fall! Only man was made to mend, and only man does grow worse; Only man was made capable of a spiritual sovereignty, and only man hath enthralled, and mancipated himself to a spiritual slavery. And Perdidimus possibilitatem boni, August. We have lost that good and all possibility of recovering it, by ourselves, in losing Nardum nostram, The savour of our Spikenard, the life, and vigour of our natural faculties, to supernatural uses. For though the soul be Forma hominis, it is but Materia Dei; The soul may be the form of man, for without that, Man is but a carcase; But the soul is but the matter upon which God works; for, except our soul receive another soul, and be inanimated with Grace, even the soul itself, is but a carcase. And for this, we have lost Nardum nostram, The odour, the verdure, the vigour of those powers, in possession whereof God put us into this world. But there is a step in our fall, lower than this. We have not only lost Nardum nostram, Vnguentum Domini. The use of our own faculties, in original sin, But we have lost also Vnguentum Domini, The sweet savour, and the holy perfume of that ointment which the Lord hath poured out upon us. For, Cant. 1.3. as the Spouse says in the same Chapter, Oleum effusum nomen ejus, His name is an ointment poured out upon us; The name of Christ hath been shed upon us all in our baptism, and that hath made us Christians; And the merits and promises of Christ have been shed upon us all, in the preaching of his word, and that hath declared us to be Christians; The ointment is super caput, super barbam, super oram vestimenti, as David speaks; It is fallen upon the Head, Psal. 133.2. we have had, and have religious Princes; And upon the Beard, the Beard of Aaron, we have had, and have (no Time, no Church ever more, ever so much) a religious Clergy, vigilancy in the Superior, laboriousness in the Inferior Clergy; And it is fallen upon the Skirts of the garment, the love, the desire, the hunger of hearing is fallen upon the lowest, and upon all our Congregations, Oleum effusum nomen ejus, his Name, and his Ordinance is poured out upon us all; but, as the Spouse says there, Adolescentulae dilexerunt te, Only the virgins have loved thee; And where are those Virgins? which of us have preserved that virginity, that integrity? which of us hath not married himself to some particular sin? which of us hath not multiplied his fornications, and yet is not satisfied? we have all lost Nardum nostram, that which we had at first in Adam, and that which hath been offered us since in Christ. And this is our second step in this fall; But there is a lower than this. We come to lose Odorem agri, The sweet savour of the field itself. Oder agri. Gen. 27.27. As Isaac said of his Son, The smell of my Son is as the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed, So the Lord of heaven, as he smelled a savour of Rest from the Sacrifice of Noah, may have smelled from us the savour of medicinal herbs, of Remorse, and Repentance, and Contrition, and Detestation of former sins, And the savour of odoriferous, and fragrant, and aromatical herbs, works worthy of Repentance, amendment of life, edification of others, and zeal to his glory, and yet we may relapse into former sins, or fall into new, and come to savour only of the earth, in a worldly covetousness, or to savour of the flesh, in a licentious filthiness; We may have received the good seed, and dured for a while, as S. Matthew expresses Christ's words; Received it, and Believed it for a while, as S. Luke expresses them, Mat. 13.18. Luke 8.13. and then departed from the goodness which Gods grace had formerly wrought in us, and from the Grace of God itself. Now to this lamentable state, belong those fearful words of the Apostle, That for a man that sins thus, there remaineth no more sacrifice; And those also, in another place, Heb. 10.2. Heb. 6.4. That for such a man it is impossible, impossible to be renewed. Some of the Fathers, out of a holy tenderness, and compassion, have mollified this impossibile with a difficile; It is impossible, say they, that is, it is very hard; very hard for him that hath been in God's service, and is run away, to return to it again. For, as Tertullian says elegantly in that case, judicatò pronunciavit, That sinner, says he, hath proceeded solemnly, and judicially, and hath heard what both sides could say, what grace could say, and what sin, what God could say, and what Satan, and now he hath decreed the cause against Grace and against God, and declared the other side to be in the right, because he hath applied himself to the other side. But there is more in this Impossibile, then Difficile: It is not only hard, but truly impossible: So, as it is impossible for God to lie, (so the Apostle speaks) so as it is impossible to take away sin by the blood of Bulls and Goats, (so he speaks) so as it is impossible to please God without faith, (so he speaks) so impossible is it for this man to be renewed. Cap. 6. Cap. 10. Cap. 11. Impossibile est, non spears quod impossibile, says chrysostom, It is impossible, never hope for that which is impossible. For (as that Father exalts this impossibility) Non dixit, non decet, non prodest, non licet; God hath not said, it becomes not the majesty, and the constancy of my proceed to renew such a man; he says not so, non decet; He doth not say, it conduces not to my ends, nor to my manner of government, it would not be good for the public, for the Church, for the rest of my servants, who might be scandalised if I should exact so much as I do at their hands, and renew such a man; He says not so, non prodest; He doth not say, non licet; I cannot do it in justice, it cannot consist with my Laws, and my Edicts, by which I have proclaimed, That with the froward I will grow froward, and harden their hearts that oppose themselves against me; He doth not say so, non licet; for to all these (it stands not with my ways, non decet; or it conduces not to my ends, non prodest; or it consists not with my justice, non licet) mercy would still present dispensations; but it is expressly, directly impossibile, impossible. It is true, that the hardness of this saying, put the Fathers to hard Expositions. The greater part by much, of them who find themselves put to a necessity of admitting an impossibility, (for as I told you before, some of them mollify and supple the impossibility into a difficulty) place the impossibility in this, That it is impossible for such a man to be renewed by baptism, as he was renewed before: for in those Primitive times, though they excluded not children, yet the greatest part of them who were baptised, were such as understood their case, persons of discretion, such as had spent many months, many times many years, in studying and in practising the Christian religion, and then were baptised; and if these men (say those Fathers) fell after this, it was impossible to be renewed that way, impossible that they should have a second baptism: And it is scarce mannerly, scarce safe to departed from so many as meet in this interpretation of this impossibility; for they all intent that which S. chrysostom expresses most plainly, Dixit impossibile, ut in desperationem induceret; The Apostle says it is impossible, that he might bring us before hand into a kind of desperation; A desperation of this kind, That there was absolutely no hope of a possibility of renewing, as they were renewed before, that is, by baptism. But because at this time when the Apostle writ, that question, which troubled the Church so much after, in S. Cyprians time, of Rebaptisation, was not moved at all, neither doth it appear, nor is it likely, that any that fell so, put his hopes upon renewing by a second baptism; there is something else in this Impossibility then so. And that in one word is, That the falling intended here, is not a falling à nardo nostra, from the savour of our own Spikenard, the good use of our own faculties, lost in Original sin, nor a falling Abbess unguento Domini, that though the perfume an Incense of the name of Christ, and the offer of his merits be shed upon us here, that doth not restrain us from falling into some sins, But this falling is, as it is expressed, a falling away, away from Christ in all his Ordinances; an undervaluing, a despising of those means which he hath established for the renewing of a broken soul, which is the making a mock of the Son of God, and the treading the blood of the Covenant under foot. When Christ hath ordained but one way for the renewing of a soul, The conveyance of his merits, in preaching the word, and the sealing thereof, in applying the Sacraments, to that man that is fallen so, as to refuse that, as it is impossible to live, if a man refuse to eat, Impossible to recover, if a man refuse Physic, so it is Impossible for him to be renewed, because God hath notified to us but one way, and he refuses that. So this is a true Impossibility, and yet limited too; for though it be impossible to us, by any means imparted to us, or to our dispensing, and stewardship, yet shall any thing be impossible to God? God forbidden; For, even from this death, and this depth there is a Resurrection. As from the loss of our Spikenard, Rosurrectio. our natural faculties in original sin, we have a resurrection in baptisine, And from the loss of the ointment of the Lord, the offer of his Graces, in these meetings, and the falling into some actual sins, for all that assistance, we have a resurrection in the other Sacrament; So when we have lost the savour of the field, those degrees of goodness, and holiness which we had, and had declared before, when we are fallen from all present sense of the means of a resurrection, yet there may be a resurrection wrapped up in the good purposes of God upon that man, which, unless he will himself, shall not be frustrated, not evacuated, not disappointed. Though he have foetorem pro Odour, Esay 3.24. as the Prophet speaks, That in stead of the sweet savour, which his former holy life exhaled and breathed up, he be come now to stink in the sight of the Church, (and howsoever God may have a good savour from his own work, from those holy purposes which he hath upon him, which lie in God's bosom, yet from his present sins, and from the present testimony and evidence that the Church gives against him, as a present sinner, he must necessarily stink in the nostrils of God too) yet, as in the Resurrection of the body, it shall come, when we shall not know of it, So when this poor dead, put rified soul hath no sense of it, and perchance, little or no disposition towards it, the efficacy of God's purpose shall break out, and work in him a resurrection: And this S. chrysostom takes to be intended in that which is said in the same place to the Hebrews, That that earth which drinketh in the rain, Heb. 6. and bringeth forth nothing but Briers, is Maledicto proxima, nearest to be accursed, That man is nearest to be a Reprobate; But yet, says he, Vides quantam habet consolationem, We apprehend a blessed consolation in this, That it is said, near a curse, near reprobation, and no worse; for, Qui propè est, procul esse potcrit, says he, That soul which is but near destruction, may weather that mischief, and grow to be far from it, and out of danger of it. It is true, this man hath lost his paratum cor meum; he cannot say, his heart is prepared; Psal. 57.7. that he hath lost in original sin; This man hath lost his Confirmatum cor meum, Psal. 112.7. he cannot say, his heart is est ablished; that hath been offered him in these exercises, but it hath not prevailed upon him. He hath lost his variis odoribus delectatum cor, Prov. 27.9. the delight which his heart heretofore had in the savour of the field, in those good actions, in which formerly he exercised himself, and now is fall'n from: But yet there may be cor novum, Psal. 51.10. a new heart, a heart which is yet in God's bosom, and shall be transplanted into his; A duplicate, an exemplification of God's secret purpose to be manifested, and revealed by the Spirit of God, in his good time, upon him. And this may work, Chr●sost. In insigni & vehementi mutatione, in such an evidence, and demonstration of itself, as he shall know it to be that, because it shall not work as a Circumcision, but as an Excision, not as a lopping off, but as a rooting up, not by mending him, but by making him a new creature; He shall not grow less riotous than before, for so a sentence in the Star-Chamber, or any other Criminal Court for a riot, might be a resurrection to him; nor less voluptuous, for so, poverty in his Fortune, or insipidnesse and tastlesnesse in his palate might be a resurrection to him; Nor less licentious, for so age or sickness, nor less quarrelsome, for so blows, and oppression might be a resurrection to him. But when in a rectified understanding he can but apprehend, that such a resurrection there may be, nay there is for him; it shall grow up to a holy confidence, established by the sensible effects thereof, that he shall not only discontinue his former acts, and divest his former habits of sin, but produce acts, and build up habits, contrary to his former habits, and former acts, for this is the resurrection from this second fall, In dissolutionem, into the dissolution of particular sins. Now, after all this, there is in natural death, a third fall, casus in dispersionem, In dispersionem. the man is fallen in separationem, into a divorce of body and soul, the body is fallen in dissolutionem, to putrefaction, and dissolution in dust, and then this dust is fallen in dispersionem, into a dispersion, and scattering over the earth, as God threatens, Comminuam in pulverem, I will break the wicked as small as dust, and scatter them with the wind; Psal. 18. For after such a scattering, no power, but of God only can recollect those grains of dust, and re-compact them into a body, and re-inanimate them into a man. And such a state, such a dispersion, doth the heart and soul of an habitual sinner undergo; For, Pro. 17.24. as the eyes of a fool are in the corners of the earth, so is the heart and soul of a sinner. The wanton and licentious man, sighs out his soul, weeps out his soul, swears out his soul, in every place, where his lust, or his custom, or the glory of victory, in overcoming, and deluding, puts him upon such solicitations. In the corrupt taker, his soul goes out, that it may leave him unsensible of his sin, and not trouble him in his corrupt bargain; and in a corrupt giver, ambitious of preferment, his soul goes out with his money, which he loves well, but not so well as his preferment: This year his soul and his money goes out upon one office, and next year, more soul, and more money upon another; He knows how his money will come in again; for they will bring it, that have need of his corruptness in his offices; But where will this man find his soul, thus scattered upon every woman corruptly won, upon every office corruptly usurped, upon every quillet corruptly bought, upon every fee corruptly taken? Thus it is, when a soul is scattered upon the daily practice of any one predominant, and habitual sin; but when it is indifferently scattered upon all, how much more is it so? In him, that swallows sins in the world, as he would do meats at a feast; passes through every dish, and never asks Physician the nature, the quality, the danger, the offence of any dish: That baits at every sin that rises, and pours himself into every sinful mould he meets: That knows not when he began to spend his soul, nor where, nor upon what sin he laid it out; no, nor whether he have, whether ever he had any soul, or no; but hath lost his soul so long ago, in rusty, and in incoherent sins, (not sins that produced one another, as in David's case (and yet that is a fearful state, that concatenation of sins, that pedigree of sins) but in sins which he embraces, merely out of an easiness to sin, and not out of a love, no, nor out of a tentation to that sin in particular) that in these incoherent sins hath so scattered his soul, as that he hath not soul enough left, to seek out the rest. And therefore David makes it the Title of the whole Psalm, Domine ne disperdas, O Lord do not scatter us: Psal. 58. And he gins to express his sense of God's Judgements, in the next Psalm, so, O Lord thou hast cast us out, thou hast scattered us, turn again unto us; for even from this aversion, there may be conversion, and from this last and lowest fall, a resurrection. But how? In the general resurrection upon natural death, God shall work upon this dispersion of our scattered dust, as in the first fall, which is the Divorce, by way of Reunion, and in the second, which is Putrefaction, by way of Re-efformation; so in this third, which is Dispersion, by way of Re-collection; where man's buried flesh hath brought forth grass, and that grass fed beasts, and those beasts fed men, and those men fed other men, God that knows in which Box of his Cabinet all this seed Pearl lies, in what corner of the world every atom, every grain of every man's dust sleeps, shall recollect that dust, and then recompact that body, and then re-inanimate that man, and that is the accomplishment of all. In this resurrection, from this Dilpersion and scattering in sin, the way is by Recollection too: That this sinner recollect himself, and his own history, his own annals, his own journals, and call to mind where he lost his way, and with what tenderness of conscience, and holy startling he entered into some sins at first, in which he is seared up now, and whereas his triumph should have been, in a victory over the flesh, he is come to a triumph in his victory over the spirit of God, and glories in having overcome the Holy Ghost, and brought his conscience to an unsensibleness of sin: If he can recollect himself thus, and cast up his account so, If he can say to God, Lord, we have sold ourselves for nothing, he shall hear God say to him, as he does there in the Prophet, You have sold yourselves for nothing, Esay 52.3. and you shall be redeemed without money. But how is this recollecting wrought? God hath intimated the way, Ezek. 37. in that vision to the Prophet Ezekiel: He brings the Prophet into a field of dead bones, and dry bones, sicca vehementer, (as it is said there) as dry as this dust which we speak of: And he asks him, fili hominis, thou that art but the son of man, and must judge humanely, Putasne vivent ossa ista? Dost thou think that these bones can live? The Prophet answers, Domine tu nosti, thou Lord, who knowest whose names are written in the Book of Life, and whose are not; whose bones are wrapped up in the Decree of thy Election, and whose are not, knowest whether these bones can live, or no; for, but in the efficacy and power of that Decree, they cannot. Yes, they shall, says God Almighty; and they shall live by this means, Dices eyes, Thou shalt say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord: As dry, as desperate, as irremediable as they are in themselves, God shall send his servants unto them, and they shall hear them: And, as it is added in that place, Prophetante me, factus sonitus, & commotio, As I Prophesied, there was a noise and a shaking; As whilst Peter spoke, The Holy Ghost fell upon all them that heard the word; So whilst the Messengers of God speak in the presence of such sinners, there shall be a noise, and a commotion, a horror of their former sins, a wonder how they could provoke so patiented, and so powerful a God, a sinking down under the weight of God's Judgements, a flying up to the apprehension of his mercies, and this noise and commotion in their souls, shall be settled with that Gospel in that Prophet, Dabo super vos nervos, I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath into you, and you shall live, and ye shall know that I am the Lord; God shall restore them to life, and more, to strength, and more, to beauty, and comeliness, acceptable to himself in Christ Jesus. Your way is Recollecting; gather yourselves into the Congregation, and Communion of Saints in these places; gather your sins into your memory, and pour them out in humble confessions, to that God, whom they have wounded; Gather the crumbs under his Table, lay hold upon the gracious promises, which by our Ministry he lets fall upon the Congregation now; and gather the seals of those promises, whensoever, in a rectified conscience, his Spirit bears witness with your spirit, that you may be worthy receivers of him in his Sacrament; and this recollecting shall be your resurrection. Beatus qui habet partem, Ap●● 20.6 says S. john, Blessed is he that hath part in the first Resurrection, for on such the second death hath no power. He that rises to this Judgement of recollecting, and of judging himself, shall rise with a cheerfulness, and stand with a confidence, when Christ Jesus shall come in the second: Au● And, Quando exacturus est in secundo, quod dedit in primo, when Christ shall call for an account, in that second judgement, how he hath husbanded those graces, which he gave him; for the first, he shall make his possession of this first resurrection, his title, and his evidence to the second. When thy body, which hath been subject to all kinds of destruction here; to the destruction of a Flood, in Catarrhs, and Rheums, and Dropsies, and such distillations, to the destruction of a fire, in Fevers, and Frenzies, and such conflagrations, shall be removed safely and gloriously above all such distempers, and malignant impressions, and body and soul so united, as if both were one spirit in itself, and God so united to both, as that thou shalt be the same spirit with God. God began the first World, but upon two, Adam and Eve: The second world, after the Flood, he began upon a greater stock, upon eight reserved in the Ark; But when he establishes the last and everlasting world in the last Resurrection, he shall admit such a number, as that none of us who are here now, none that is, or hath, or shall be upon the face of the earth, shall be denied in that Resurrection, if he have truly felt this; for Grace accepted, is the infallible earnest of Glory. SERMON XXII. Preached at S. Paul's, upon Easter-day. 1627. HEB. 11.35. Women received their dead raised to life again: And others were tortured, not accepting a deliverance, that they might obtain a better Resurrection. MErcy is God's right hand, with that God gives all; Faith is man's right hand, with that man takes all. David, Psal. 136. opens, and enlarges this right hand of God, in pouring out his blessings, plentifully, abundantly, manifoldly there. And in this Chapter, the Apostle opens, and enlarges this right hand of man, by laying hold upon those mercies of God, plentifully, abundantly, manifoldly, by faith here. There, David pours down the mercies. of God, in repeating, and re-repeating that phrase, For his mercy endureth for ever; And here, S. Paul carries up man to heaven, by repeating, and re-repeating the blessings which man hath attained by faith; By faith Abel sacrificed, By faith Enoch walked with God, By faith Noah built an Ark, etc. And as in that Psalm, God's mercies are expressed two ways, First in the good that God did for his servants, He remembered them in their low estate, Ver 23. Ver. 24. for his mercy endureth for ever: And then again, He redeemed them from their enemies, for his mercy endureth for ever: And then also, in the evil that he brought upon their enemies, He slew famous Kings, for his mercy endureth for ever: And then, He gave their land for an heritage, for his mercy endureth for ever. So in this Chapter, the Apostle declares the benefits of faith, two ways also: First, how faith enriches us, and accommodates us in the ways of prosperity, By faith Abraham went to a place which he received for an inheritance: And so, By faith Sarah received strength to conceive seed: Ver. 8. Ver. 11. Ver. 34. And then, how faith sustains, and establishes us in the ways of adversity, By faith they stopped the mouths of Lions, by faith they quenched the violence of fire, by faith they escaped the edge of the sword, in the verse immediately before the Text. And in this verse, which is our Text, the Apostle hath collected both; The benefits which they received by faith, Women received their dead raised to life again, And then, the holy courage which was infused by Faith, in their persecutions, Others were tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might receive a better Resurrection. And because both these have relation, evidently, pregnantly to the Resurrection, (for their benefit was, that the Women received their dead by a Resurrection, And their courage in their persecution was, That they should receive a better Resurrection) therefore the whole meditation is proper to this day, in which we celebrate all Resurrections in the Root, in the Resurrection of the First fruits of the dead, our Lord and Saviour Christ jesus. Our Parts are two; How plentifully God gives to the faithful, Divisio. Women receive their dead raised to life again, And how patiently the faithful suffer God's corrections, Others were tortured not accepting, etc. Though they be both large considerations, (Benefits by Faith, Patience in the Faithful) yet we shall contain ourselves in those particulars which are expressed, or necessarily employed in the Text itself. And so in the first place we shall see first, The extraordinary consolation in Gods extraordinary Mercies, in his miraculous Deliverances, such as this, Women received their dead raised to life again, And secondly we shall seethe examples, to which the Apostle refers here, What women had had their dead restored to life again; And then, lastly, in that part, That this affection of joy, in having their dead restored to life again, being put in the weaker sex, in women only, we may argue conveniently from thence, That the strength of a true and just joy lies not in that, but that our virility, our holy manhood, our religious strength consists in a faithful assurance, that we have already a blessed communion with these Saints of God, though they be dead, and we alive; And that we shall have hereafter a glorious Association with them in the Resurrection, though we never receive our dead raised to life again in this world. And in those three considerations, we shall determine that first part. And then, in the other, The Patience of the Faithful, Others were tortured, etc. we shall first look into the examples which the Apostle refers to; who they were that were thus tortured: And secondly, the height and exaltation of their patience, They would not accept a deliverance: And lastly, the ground upon which their Anchor was cast, what established their patience, That they might obtain a better Resurrection. First then, 1 Part. for that Blessedness, which we need not be afraid, nor abstain from calling the Recompense, the Reward, the Retribution of the faithful, (for as we consider Death to grow out of Disobedience, and Life out of Obedience to the Law, as properly as Death is the wages of sin, Life is the wages of Righteousness) If I be asked, what it is wherein this Recompense, this Reward, this Retribution consists, if I must be put to my Special Plea, I must say it is, in that of the Apostle, Omnia cooperantur in bonum, That nothing can befall the faithful, that does not conduce to his good, and advance his happiness: For he shall not only find S. Paul's Mori lucrum, That he shall be the better for dying, if he must die; but he shall find S. Augustine's Vtile cadere, He shall be the better for sinning, if he have sinned; So the better, as that by a repentance after that sin, he shall find himself established in a nearer, and safer distance with God, than he was in that security, which he had before that sin. But the Title, and the Plea of the faithful to this Recompense, extends farther than so; It is not only, that nothing, how evil soever in the nature thereof, shall be evil to them; but that all that is Good, is theirs; properly theirs, Psal. 34.9. theirs peculiarly. There is no want to them that fear the Lord, says David; The young Lions do lack, and suffer hunger, but they that seek the Lord, shall not want any good thing. The Infidel hath no pretence upon the next world, none at all; No nor so clear a Title to any thing in this world, but that we dispute in the School, whether Infidels have any true dominion, any true propriety in any thing which they possess here; And whether there be not an inherent right in the Christians, to plant Christianity in any part of the Dominions of the Infidels, and consequently, to despoil them even of their possession, if they oppose such Plantations, so established, and such propagations of the Christian Religion. For though we may not begin at the dispossessing, and displanting of the native and natural Inhabitant, (for so we proceed but as men against men, and upon such equal terms, we have no right to take any men's possessions from them) yet, when pursuing that Right, which resides in the Christian, we have established such a Plantation, if they supplant that, we may supplant them, say our Schools, and our Casuists; For in that case, we proceed not as men against men; not by God's Common Law, which is equal to all men; that is, the Law of Nature; but we proceed by his higher Law, by his Prerogative, as Christians against Infidels, and then, it is God that proceeds against them, by men, and not those men, of themselves, to serve their own Ambitions, or their other secular ends. 1 Cor. 3.20. All things are yours, says the Apostle; By what Right? You are Christ's, says he, And Christ is Gods; Thus is a Title conveyed to us, All things are Gods, God hath put all things under Christ's feet; And he under ours, as we are Christians. And then, as the general profession of Christ, entitles us to a general Title of the world, (for the World belongs to the Faithful; and Christians, as Christians, and no more, are Fideles, Faithful in respect of Infidels) so those Christians that come to that more particular, more active, more operative faith, which the Apostle speaks of in all this Chapter, come also to a more particular reward, and recompense, and retribution at God's hands; God does not only give them the natural blessings of this World, to which they have an inherent right, as they are general Christians, but as they are thus faithful Christians, he gives them supernatural blessings, he enlarges himself even to Miracles, in their behalf; Which is a second consideration; First God opens himself in nature, and temporal blessings, to the general Christian, but to the Faithful, in Grace, exalted even to the height of Miracle. In this, we consider first, That there is nothing dearer to God than a Miracle. Miracula. There is nothing that God hath established in a constant course of nature, and which therefore is done every day, but would seem a Miracle, and exercise our admiration, if it were done but once; Nay, the ordinary things in Nature, would be greater miracles, than the extraordinary, which we admire most, if they were done but once; The standing still of the Sun, for josuahs' use, was not, in itself, so wonderful a thing, as that so vast and immense a body as the Sun, should run so many miles, in a minute; The motion of the Sun were a greater wonder than the standing still, if all were to begin again; And only the daily doing takes off the admiration. But then God having, as it were, concluded himself in a course of nature, and written down in the book of Creatures, Thus and thus all things shall be carried, though he glorify himself sometimes, in doing a miracle, yet there is in every miracle, a silent chiding of the world, and a reprehension of them, who require, or who need miracles. Therefore hath God reserved to himself the power of Miracles, as a Prerogative; For the devil does no miracles; the devil and his instruments, do but hasten Nature, or hinder nature, antedate Nature, or postdate Nature, bring things sooner to pass, or retard them; And howsoever they pretend to oppose nature, yet still it is but upon nature, and but by natural means, that they work; only God shakes the whole frame of Nature in pieces, and in a miracle, proceeds so, as if there were no Creation yet accomplished, no course of Nature yet established. Facit mirabilia magnasolus, says David; Psal. 136.4. There are Mirabilia parva, some lesser wonders, that the devil and his Instruments, Pharaohs Sorcerers, can do; But when it comes to Mirabilia magna, Great wonders, so great, as that they amount to the nature of a Miracle, Facit solus, God, and God only does them. And amongst these, and amongst the greatest of these, is the raising of the Dead, and therefore we make it a particular consideration, the extraordinary Joy in that case, when Women received their dead raised to life again. We know the dishonour, and the infamy that lay upon barrenness, among the Jews; Mortui. how wives deplored, and lamented that. When God is pleased to take away that impediment of barrenness, and to give children, we know the misery, and desolation of orbity, when Parents are deprived of those children, by death; And by the measure of that sorrow, which follows barrenness, or orbity, we may proportion that joy, which accompanies Gods miraculous blessings, when Women receive their dead naised to life again. In all the secular, and profane Writers in the world, in the whole body of Story, you shall not find such an expressing of the misery of a famine, as that of the Holy Ghost in the Lamentations; That women eat Palmares silios; We translate it, Lament. 2.20. Their children of a span long; that is, that they procured abortions and untimely births of those children, which were in their bodies, that they might have so much flesh to eat. As that is proposed for the greatest misery, that ever was, women to destroy their children so, so is this for the highest accumulation of Joy, to have dead children brought to life again. When we hear S. Augustine in his Confessions, lament so passionately the death of his Son, and insist so affectionately, upon the Pregnancy, and Forwardness of that Son; though that Son if he had lived, must have lived a continual evidence, and monument of his sin, (for, for all his Son, S. Augustine was not married man) yet what may we think, S. Augustine would have given, though it had been to have been cut out of his own life, to have had that Son restored to life again? Measure it but by the Joy, which we have, in recovering a sick child, from the hands, and jaws, and gates of death; Measure it but by that delight which we have, when we see our Garden recovered from the death of Winter. men's curiosities have carried them to unlawful desires of communication with the Dead; as in saul's case towards Samuel. But if with a good conscience, and without that horror, which is likely to accompany such a communication with the Dead, a man might have the conversation of a friend, that had been dead, and had seen the other World; As Dives thought no Preacher so powerful to work upon his Brethren, as one sent from the Dead, so certainly all the Travellers in the World, if we could hear them all, all the Libraries in the world, if we could read them all, could not tell us so much, as that friend, returned from the dead, which had seen the other World. But wayving that consideration, because as we know not, what kind of remembrance of this world, God leaves us in the next, when he translates us thither, so neither do we know, what kind of remembrance of that world, God would leave in that man, whom he should re-translate into this, we fix only upon the examples intended in our Text, who these joyful Women were, that received their Dead raised to life again, which is our second Branch of this first part; for with those three considerations, which constituted our first Branch, we have done, That God gives us this World, as we are general Christians; And, as we are Faithful Christians, Miracles; And, the greatest of Miracles, The raising of the Dead. In the second Branch, Mulieres. we have two Considerations; first, what kind of Women these were, and then, who they were; first, their Qualities, and then, their Persons. We have occasion to stop upon the first, because Aquinas in his Exposition of this Text, tells us, there are some Expositors, who take this word, Women, in this place, to be intended, not of Mothers, but of Wives; And then, because the Apostle says here, that Women received their dead, that is, say they, Wives received their dead Husbands, raised to life again, and received them, as Husbands, that is, cohabited with them as Husbands, therefore they conclude, says Aquinas, that Death itself does not dissolve the band of Marriage; and consequently, that all other Marriages, all super-inductions, even after Death, are unlawful. Let me say but one word, of the Word, and a word or two of the Matter itself, and I shall pass to the other Consideration, The Women whom the Apostle proposes for his examples. The word, Vxores. Women, taken alone, signifies the whole sex, women in general, When it is contracted to a particular signification, in any Author, it follows the circumstances, and the coherence of that place, in that Author; and by those a man shall easily discern, of what kind of Women, that word is intended in that place. In this place, the Apostle works upon his Brethren, the Hebrews, by such examples, as were within their own knowledge, and their own stories, throughout all this Chapter. And in those stories of theirs, we have no example, of any Wife, that had her dead Husband restored to her; but of Mothers that had their Children raised to life, we have. So that this word, Women, must signify here, Mothers, and not Wives, as Aquinas Expositors mis-imagined. And for the matter itself, Nuptiae iteratae. that is, second or oftner-iterated Marriages, the dis-approving of them, entered very soon into some Heretics, in the Primitive Church. For the eighth Canon of that great Council of Nice, (which is one of the indubitable Canons) forbids, by name, Catharos, The Puritans of those Times, to be received by the Church, except they would be content to receive the Sacrament with persons that had been twice married; which, before they would not do. It entered soon into some Heretics, and it entered soon, and went far, in some holy and reverend Men, and some Assemblies, that had, and had justly, the name, and form of Counsels. For, in the Council of Neo-Caesarea, which was before the Nicen Council, in the seventh Canon, there are somewhat shrewd aspersions laid upon second Marriages. And certainly, the Roman Church cannot be denied, to come too near this dis-approving of second Marriages. For though they will not speak plain, (they love not that, because they get more by keeping things in suspense) yet plainly they forbidden the Benediction at second Marriages. Valeat quantnm valere potest; Let them do as well as they can, with their second Marriage, Let them marry De bene esse, At all adventures; but they will afford no Blessing to a second, as to a first Marriage. And though they will not shut the Church doors against all such, yet they will shut up all Church functions against all such. No such Person as hath married twice, or married once, one that hath married twice, can be received to the dignity of Orders, in their Church. And though some of the Fathers pared somewhat too near the quick in this point, yet it was not as in the Roman Church, to lay snares, and spread nets for gain, and profit, and to forbid only therefore, that they might have market for their Dispensations; neither was it to fix, and appropriate sanctity, only in Ecclesiastical persons, who only must not marry twice, but out of a tender sense, and earnest love to Continency, and out of a holy indignation, that men tumbled and wallowed so licentiously, so promiscuously, so indifferently, so inconsiderately in all ways of incontinency, those blessed Fathers admitted in themselves a super-zealous, an over-vehement animosity in this point. But yet S. Jerome himself, though he remember with a holy scorn, Ep. add Ager's. chiam. that when he was at Rome in the assistance of Pope Damasus (as his word is, Cum juvarem) he saw a man that had buried twenty wives, marry a wife, that buried twenty two husbands, Apolog. ad Pamnach. yet for the matter, and in seriousness, he says plainly enough, Non damno Bigamos, imo nec Trigamos, nec si dici potest octogamos, I condemn no man for marrying two, or three, or if he have a mind to it, eight wives. And so also in his former Epistle, Abjicimus de Ecclesia Digamos? absit; God forbidden we should deny any Church assistance to any, for twice marrying; but yet, says that blessed Father, Monogamos ad continentiam provocamus; Let me have leave to persuade them who have been married, and are at liberty, to continency, now at last. Those Fathers departed not from the Apostles Nubat in Domino, Let them marry in the Lord; but they would fain bring the Lord to the making of every marriage, and not only the world, and worldly respects. For the Lord himself, who honoured marriage, even with the first fruits of his miracles, yet persuades continency, Mat. 19.22. He that is able to receive it, let him receive it. The fault which those Fathers did, and we may reprehend, is, that men do not try whether they be able to receive it or no; In all Treaties of marriage, in all Contracts for Portion, and Jointure, who ever ask their children, who ever ask themselves, whether they can live continently or no? Or what trial, what experiment can have been made of this, in Cradle-marriages? Marriage was given for a remedy; but not before any appearance of a danger. And given for Physic, but not before any appearance of a disease. And do any Parents lay up a medicine against the falling sickness, for their newborn children, because those children may have the falling sickness? The peace of neighbouring States, the uniting of great Families for good ends, may present just occasions of departing from severe rules. I only intent, as I take most of those Fathers to have done, to leave all persons to their Christian liberty, as the Lord hath done; and yet, as the Lord hath done too, to persuade them to consider themselves, and those who are theirs, how far they need the use of that Liberty, and not to exceed that. And thus much Aquinas Expositors, who would needs understand the Women in this Text, to be Wives, have occasioned us to say in this point. In our order proposed, we pass now to the other consideration, who these women were whom the Apostle makes his Examples, for they are but two, and may soon be considered. The first is the Widow of Zareptha, in whose house Elias the Prophet sojourned. 1 King. 17. She was a Widow, and a poor Widow, and might need the labour, or the providence of a husband in that respect: Yet she solicits not, nor Elias endeavours not the raising of her dead husband to life again. A Widow, that is, A Widow indeed, 1 Tim. 5.3. (as the Apostle speaks) may have in that state of such a Widowhood, more assistances towards the next world, than she should have for this, by taking another husband. For, for that Widow, Quae in tumulo mariti, sepeliit voluptates, Who hath buried all her affections towards this world, in her husband's grave, the Apostle in that place, ordains honour, Hieron. Honour Widows, that are Widows indeed. And when he says Honour, and speaks of poor Widows, he speaks not of such honour as such poor souls are incapable of, but of that Honour, which that word signifies ordinarily in the Scriptures, Qui non tam in salutationibus, quam in elecmosynis, says S. chrysostom, which rather consists in Alms, and Relief, then in Salutations, and Reverences, or such respects. For so (as S. Jerome notes in particular) when we are commanded to honour our Parents, it is intended we should relieve and maintain our Parents, if they be decayed. And such honour the Apostle persuades to be given, and such honour God will provide, that is, Peace in the possession of their estate, if they have any estate; and relief from others, if they have none, for Widows, that are Widows indeed. In which qualification of theirs, that they be Widows indeed, Ver. 9 we may well take in that addition which the Apostle makes, That she have been the wise of one man. For though we make not that an only, or an essential Character of a Widow indeed, to have had but one husband, yet we note, as Calvin doth, that the Church received Widows, in years, therefore, Quia timendum erat, ne ad novas nuptias aspirarent, because the Church feared that they would marry again. And certainly, if the Church feared they would, the Church had rather they would not. It is (as Calvin adds there) Pignus continentiae, & pudoris (though Calvin were no man to be suspected, to countenance the perverseness of the Roman Church, in defaming, or undervaluing marriage. yet he says so) it is a good Pawn, and Evidence of Continency, to have rested in one husband. This Widow of Zareptha then, importunes not the Prophet to restore her dead husband; She bears her widow's estate well enough; but for her dead Son she doth importune him; in the agony and vehemence of a Passion, she says, at her first encounter with the Prophet, V 18. Quid mihi, & tibi? What have I to do with thee? She doth almost renounce the means; In irregular passion, a disconsolate soul comes to say, what have I to do with Prayers, with Sermons, with Sacraments, I see that God hath forsaken me: but yet she collects herself; What have I to do with thee, O thou man of God? When she confesses him to be the man of God, she doth not renounce him; When we consider the means, to be means ordained by God, we find comfort in them. Yet she cannot contain the bitterness of her passion; Art thou come unto me, to call my sin to remembrance, and to kill my Son? She implies thus much; Shall my soul never be at peace? Shall no repentance from my heart, no absolution from thy mouth, make me sure that God hath forgiven and forgotten my sins? But when I have received all Seals of Reconciliation, will God still punish those sins which he pretends to have forgiven, and punish them with so high a hand, as the taking away of my only Child? And we may see an exaltation of this woman's passion, not only in the loss, but in the recovery of her child too. For when she had received her child alive, she comes to that passionate acclamation, Now by this I know that thou art a man of God, and that the word of the Lord in thy mouth, is truth; V 14. As though, if this had not been done, she would not have believed that. How then says our Apostle in this Text, That this woman received her dead Son by faith, when she declares this inordinateness, this dis-composednesse, and fluctuation of passion? This question made S. chrysostom refer this faith that the Apostle speaks of, to the Prophet that raised the child, and not to the mother; For she seems to him to have had none. And so the Syriack translates this place, Reddiderunt, not Acceperunt; By faith, They, that is, the Prophets restored the dead, not By faith, They, that is, the mothers received their dead. But God forbidden that natural affections, even in an exaltation, and vehement expressing thereof, should be thought to destroy faith; God forbidden that I should conclude an extermination of faith, in Moses Deal me, Pardon this people, or blot my name out of thy Book; or in S. Paul's Anathema pro fratribus, That he desired to be separated from Christ, rather than his brethren should; or in job, or in jeremy, or in jonas, when they expostulate, and chide with God himself, out of a weariness of their lives; or in the Lord of Life himself, Christ Jesus, when he came to an quid dereliquisti? To an apprehension that God had forsaken him upon the Cross. God that could restore her cold child, could keep his child, her faith, alive in those hot embers of Passion. So God did; But he did it thus; The child was taken from the mother's warm and soft bosom, and carried to the Prophet's hard and cold bed. Beloved, we die in our delicacies, and revive not, but in afflictions; In abundancies, the blow of death meets us, and the breath of life, in misery, and tribulation. God puts himself to the cost of one of his greatest Miracles, for her Faith; He raises her child to life; And then, he makes up his own work; he continues with that child, and makes him a good man; There are men, whom, even Miracles will not improve; but this child (we will not dispute it, Pro●●m. in jonam. but accept it from S. Jerome, who relates it) became a Prophet. It was that very jonas, whom God employed to Ninive; in which Service, he gave some signs whose Son he was, and how much of his mother's passion he inherited in his vehement expostulations with God. Be this than our doctrinal instruction for this first example, the Widow of Zareptha; first, that God thinks nothing too dear for his faithful Children; not his great Treasure, not his Miracles; And then God preserves this faith of theirs, in contemplation of which only, he bestows this Treasure, this Miracle, in the midst of the storms of natural affections, and the tempest of distempered passions; and then lastly, that he proceeds, and goes on in his own goodness; Here he makes a Carcase a Man, and then that man a Prophet; Every day he makes a dead soul, a soul again, and then that soul, a Saint. The other example in this point, is that Shunamite, 2 Reg. 4. whose dead son Elisha restored to life. In the beginning of that Chapter, you hear of another Widow; A certain woman, of the wives of the sons of the Prophets, cried unto Elisha, Thy servant my husband is dead; And truly a Widow of one of the sons of the Prophets, a Churchman's Widow, was like enough, to be poor enough; And yet, the Prophet doth not turn upon that way, either to restore her dead husband, or to provide her another husband; but only inquires how she was left; and finding her in poor estate, and in debt, provides her means to pay her debts, and to bring up her children, and to that purpose, procures a miracle from God, in the abundant increase of her oil; but he troubles not God for her old, or for a new husband. But our example, to which the Apostle in our Text refers himself, is not this Widow in the beginning, but that Mother, in the body of the Chapter, who having, by Elisha's prayers, obtained a Son of God, after she was past hope, and that Son being dead in her lap, in her also, (as in the former example) we may consider, how Passion and Faith may consist together: She asks her husband leave, V 22. That she might run to the Prophet; her zeal, her passionate zeal hastened her, she would run, but not without her husband's leave. As S. Jerome forbids a Lady, to suffer her daughter, to go to what Churches she would, so may there be indiscretion at least, to suffer wives to go to what meetings (though holy Convocations) they will; she does not harbour in her house, a person dangerous to the Public State, or to her husband's private state, nor a person likely to solicit her chastity, though in a Prophet's name; We may find women, that may have occasion of going to Confession, for something that their Confessors may have done to them. In this woman's case, there was no disguise; She would feign go, and run; but not without her husband's knowledge, and allowance. Her husband asks her, Why she would go to the Prophet, then, being neither Sabbath, V 23. nor new Moon? He acknowledges, that God is likelier to confer blessings upon Sabbaths, and new Moons, upon some days, rather than other; That all days are not alike with God, then, when he, by his ordinance, hath put a difference between them. And he acknowledges too, that though the Sabbath be the principal of those days which God hath seposed for his especial working, yet there are new Moons too; there are other Holidays, for holy Convocations, and for his Divine and Public Worship, besides the Sabbath. But this was neither Sabbath, nor new Moon, neither Sunday, nor Holiday; Why would she go upon that day? Beloved, though for public meetings, in public places, the Sabbaths, and Holidays be the proper days, yet for conference, and counsel, and other assistances from the Prophets, and Ministers of God, all times are seasonable, all days are Sabbaths. She goes to the Prophet; she presses with so much passion, and so much faith too, and so good success, (for she had her dead son restored unto her) that as from the other, so from this example arises this, That in a heart absolutely surrendered to God, vehement expostulation with God, and yet full submission to God, and a quiet acquiescence in God; A storm of affections in nature, and yet a settled calm, and a fast anchorage in grace, a suspicion, and a jealousy, and yet an assurance, and a confidence in God, may well consist together: In the same instant that Christ said, Si possibile, he said Veruntamen too; though he desired that that cup might pass, yet he desired not, that his desire should be satisfied. In the same instant that the Martyrs under the Altar say, Vsque quò Domine, How long Lord before thou execute judgement? they see, that he does execute judgement every day, in their behalf. All jealousy in God, does not destroy our assurance in him; nor all diffidence, our confidence; nor all fear, our faith. These women had these natural weaknesses, that is, this strength of affections, and passions, and yet by this faith, these women received their dead, raised to life again. But yet, (which is a last consideration, Foeminile. and our conclusion of this part) this being thus put only in women, in the weaker sex, that they desired, that they rejoiced in this resuscitation of the dead, may well intimate thus much unto us, that our virility, our holy manhood, our true and religious strength, consists in the assurance, that though death have divided us, and though we never receive our dead raised to life again in this world, yet we do live together already, in a holy Communion of Saints, and shall live together for ever, hereafter, in a glorious Resurrection of bodies. Little know we, how little a way a soul hath to go to heaven, when it departs from the body; Whether it must pass locally, through Moon, and Sun, and Firmament, (and if all that must be done, all that may be done, in less time than I have proposed the doubt in) or whether that soul find new light in the same room, and be not carried into any other, but that the glory of heaven be diffused over all, I know not, I dispute not, I inquire not. Without disputing, or enquiring, I know, that when Christ says, That God is not the God of the dead, he says that to assure me, that those whom I call dead, are alive. And when the Apostle tells me, That God is not ashamed to be called the God of the dead, Heb. 11.16. he tells me that to assure me, That God's servants lose nothing by dying. He was but a Heathen that said, Menander. Thrace's. If God love a man, juvenis tollitur, He takes him young out of this world; And they were but Heathens, that observed that custom, To put on mourning when their sons were born, and to feast and triumph when they died. But thus much we may learn from these Heathens, That if the dead, and we, be not upon one floor, nor under one story, yet we are under one roof. We think not a friend lost, because he is gone into another room, nor because he is gone into another Land; And into another world, no man is gone; for that Heaven, which God created, and this world, is all one world. If I had fixed a Son in Court, or married a daughter into a plentiful Fortune, I were satisfied for that son and that daughter. Shall I not be so, when the King of Heaven hath taken that son to himself, and married himself to that daughter, for ever? I spend none of my Faith, I exercise none of my Hope, in this, that I shall have my dead raised to life again. This is the faith that sustains me, when I lose by the death of others, or when I suffer by living in misery myself, That the dead, and we, are now all in one Church, and at the resurrection, shall be all in one Quire. But that is the resurrection which belongs to our other part; That resurrection which we have handled, though it were a resurrection from death, yet it was to death too; for those that were raised again, died again. But the Resurrection which we are to speak of, is forever; They that rise then, shall see death no more, for it is (says our Text) A better Resurrection. That which we did in the other part, 2 Part. in the last branch thereof, in this part we shall do in the first; First we shall consider the examples, from which the Apostle deduceth this encouragement, and faithful constancy, upon those Hebrews, to whom he directs this Epistle. Though, as he says in the beginning of the next Chapter, he were compassed about with a Cloud of witnesses, and so might have proposed examples from the Authentic Scriptures, and the Histories of the Bible, yet we accept that direction, which our Translators have given us, in the Marginal Concordance of their Translation, That the Apostle, in this Text, intends, and so refers to that Story, which is 2 Maccab. 7.7. To that Story also doth Aquinas refer this place; But Aquinas may have had a mind, to do that service to the Roman Church, to make the Apostle cite an Apocryphal Story, though the Apostle meant it not. It may be so in Aquinas; He might have such a mind, such a meaning. But surely Beza had no such meaning, Calvin had no such mind; and yet both Calvin, and Beza refer this Text to that Story. Though it be said, says Calvin, that jeremy was stoned to death, and Esay sawed to death, Non dubito, quin illas persecutiones designet, quae sub Antiocho, I doubt not, says he, but that the Apostle intends those persecutions, which the Maccabees suffered under Antiochus. So then, there may be good use made of an Apocryphal Book. It always was, and always will be impossible, for our adversaries of the Roman Church, to establish that, which they have so long endeavoured, that is, to make the Apocryphal Books equal to the Canonical. It is true, that before there was any occasion of jealousy, or suspicion, that there would be new Articles of faith coined, and those new Articles authorized, and countenanced out of the Apocryphal Books, the blessed Fathers in the Primitive Church, afforded honourable names, and made fair and noble mention of those Books. So they have called them Sacred; and more than that, Divine; and more than that too, Canonical Books; and more than all that, by the general name of Scripture, and Holy Writ. But the Holy Ghost, who foresaw the danger, though those blessed Fathers themselves did not, hath shed, and dropped, even in their writings, many evidences, to prove, in what sense they called those Books by those names, and in what distance they always held them, from those Books, which are purely, and positively, and to all purposes, and in all senses, Sacred, and Divine, and Canonical, and simply Scripture, and simply, Holy Writ. Of this there is no doubt in the Fathers before S. Augustine: For all they proposed these Books, as Canon's morum, non sidei, Canonical, that is, Regular, for applying our manners, and conversation to the Articles of Faith; but not Canonical, for the establishing those Articles; Canonical for edification, but not for foundation. And even in the later Roman Church, we have a good Author that gives us a good rule, Caje●an. Ne turberis novity, Let no young Student be troubled, when he hears these Books, by some of the Fathers, called Canonical, for, they are so, says he, in their sense, Regulares ad aedificationem, Good Canons, good Rules for matter of manners, and conversation. And this distinction, says that Author, will serve to rectify, not only what the Fathers afore S. Augustine, (for they speak clearly enough) but what S. Augustine himself, and some Counsels have said of this matter. But yet, this difference gives no occasion to an elimination, to an extermination of these Books, which we call Apocryphal. And therefore, when in a late foreign Synod, that Nation, where that Synod was gathered, would needs dispute, whether the Apocryphal Books should not be utterly left out of the Bible; And, not effecting that, yet determined, that those Books should be removed from their old place, where they had ever stood, that is, after the Books of the Old Testament, Exteri se excusari petierunt, Sessio 10. (say the Acts of that Synod) Those that came to that Synod, from other places, desire to be excused, from assenting to the displacing of those Apocryphal Books. For, in that place, (as we see by Athanasius) they prescribe; For, though they be not Canonical, says he, yet they are Ejusdem veteris Instrumenti libri, Books that belong to the Old Testament, that is, (at least) to the elucidation, and clearing of many places in the Old Testament. And that the Ancient Fathers thought these Books worthy of their particular consideration, must necessarily be more than evident to him that reads S. Chrysostom's Homily, or Leo his Sermon upon this very part of that Book of the Maccab: to which the Apostle refers in this Text; that is, to that which the seven Brethren there, suffered for a better Resurrection. And if we take in the testimony of the Reformation, divers great and learned men, have interpreted these Books, by their particular Commentaries. Osyander hath done so, and done it, with a protestation, that divers great Divines entreated him to do it. Conrade: Pellicanus hath done so too; Who, lest these Books should seem to be undervalved, in the name of Apocryphal, says, that it is fit to call them Libros Ecclesiasticos, rather Ecclesiastical, then Apocryphal Books. And of the first of these two books of the Maccab: he says freely, Reverà, Divini Spiritus instigatione, No doubt, but the holy Ghost moved some holy man to write this Book; because, says he, by it, many places of they Prophets are the better understood, and without that Book, (which is a great addition of dignity) Ecclesiastica eruditio perfecta non fuisset, The Church had not been so well enabled, to give perfect instruction in the Ecclesiastical Story. Therefore he calls it Piissimum Catholicae Ecclesiae institutum, A most holy Institution of the Catholic Church, that those Books were read in the Church; And, if that Custom had been every where continued, Non tot errores increvissent, So many errors had not grown in the Reformed Church, says that Author. And to descend to practise, at this day we see, that in many Churches of the Reformation, their Preachers never forbear, to preach upon Texts taken out of the Apocryphal Books. We discern clearly, and as earnestly we detest the mischievous purposes of our Adversaries, in magnifying these Apocryphal Books; It is not, principally, that they would have these Books as good as Scriptures; but, because they would have Scriptures, no better than these Books: That so, when it should appear, that these Books were weak books, and the Scriptures no better than they, their own Traditions might be as good as either. But, as their impiety is inexcusable, that thus over-value them, so is their singularity too, that depress these books too fare; of which, the Apostle himself makes this use, not to establish Articles of Faith, but to establish the Hebrews in the Articles of Faith, by examples, deduced from this Book. The example then, to which the Apostle leads them, is that Story of a Mother, and her seven Sons, which in one day suffered death, by exquisite torments, rather than break that Law of their God, which the King pressed them to break, though but a Ceremonial Law. Now, as Leo says, in his Sermon upon their day, (for the Christian Church kept a day, in memory of the martyrdom of these seven Maccabees, though they were but Jew's) Gravant audita, nisi suscipiantur imitanda; It is a pain to hear the good that others have done, except we have some desire to imitate them, in doing the like. The Panegyricke said well, Onerosum est, succederebono Principi; That King, that comes after a good Predecessor, hath a shrewd burden upon him; because all the World can compare him with the last King; and all the world will look, that he should be as good a King, as his immediate Predecessor, whom they all remember, was. So Gravant audita, It will trouble you to hear, what these Maccabees, which S. Paul speaks of, suffered for the Law of their God, but you are weary of it, and would be glad we would give over talking of them, except you have a desire to imitate them. And if you have that, you are glad to hear more, and more of them; and, from this Apostle here, you may. For he makes two uses of their example; First, that though they were tortured, they would not accept a deliverance, And then, that they put on that resolution, That they might obtain a better Resurrection. What they suffered, hath exercised all our Grammarians, and all our Philologers, and all our Antiquaries, that have enquired into the Racks, and Tortures of those times. We translate it roundly, They were tortured. And S. Paul's word implies a torture of that kind, that their bodies were extended, and racked, as upon a drum, and then beaten with staves. What the torture, intended in that word, was, we know not. But in the Story itself, to which he refers, in the Maccab: you have all these divers tortures; Cutting out of tongues, and cutting off of hands, and feet, and macerating in hot Cauldrons, and pulling off the skin of their heads, with their hair; And yet they would not accept a deliverance. Ver. 24. Was it offered them? Expressly it was. The King promises, and swears to one of them, that he would make him Rich, and Happy, and his Friend, and trust him with his affairs, if he would apply himself to his desires; and yet he would not accept this deliverance. This is that which S. August: says, Sunt qui patienter moriuntur, There may be many found, that die without any distemper, without any impatience, that suffer patiently enough; But then, Sunt qui patienter vivunt, & delectabiliter moriuntur; There are others, whose life exercises all their patience, so that it is a pain to them (though they endure it patiently) to live. But they could die, not only patiently, but cheerfully; They are not only content, if they must, but glad if they may die, when they may die so, as that thereby, They may obtain a better Resurrection. And this was the case of these Martyrs, whom the Apostle here proposes to the imitation of the Hebrews. They put all upon that issue, A better Resurrection. So the second Brother says to the King, Ver. 9 Thou, like a Fury, takest us out of this life; but the King of the World, shall raise us up, who have died for his Law, unto everlasting life. Here lay his hope; That that which died, that which could die, his body, should be raised again. So the third Brother proceeded; Ver. 11. He held out his hands, and said, These I had from Heaven; and, for his Laws, I despise them; and from him, I hope to receive them again. There was his hope; a restitution of the same hands, in the Resurrection. And so the fourth Brother; Ver. 14. It is good, being put to death, by men, to look for hope, from God. Hope of what? To be raised up again by him; There was his hope. And he thought he could not speak more bitterly to that Tyrant, then to tell him, As for thee, thou shalt have no Resurrection unto life. And so the Mother established herself too; To her Sons she says, I gave you not life in my womb, Ver. 22. but doubtless the Creator that did, will, of his mercy, give you life again. The soul needed not life again, for the soul never died; the body that died, Ver. 29. did; Therefore her hope was in a Resurrection. And to her youngest Son she said, Be worthy of thy Brethren, Take thy death, that I may receive thee again, in mercy, with thy Brethren. All their establishment, all their expectation, all their issue was, That they might obtain a better Resurrection. Now what was this that they qualified and dignified by that addition, The better Resurrection? Is it called better, in that it is better than this life, and determined in that comparison, and degree of betterness, and no more? Is it better than those honours, and preferments which that King offered them, and determined in that comparison, and no more? Or better than other men shall have at the last day, (for all men shall have a Resurrection) and determined in that? Or, as S. chrysostom takes it, is it but a better Resurrection then that in the former part of this Text, where dead children are restored to their mother's alive again? Is it but a better Resurrection in some of these senses? Surely better in a higher sense than any of these; It is a supereminent degree of glory, a larger measure of glory, than every man, who in a general happiness, is made partaker of the Resurrection of the righteous, is made partaker of. Beloved, There is nothing so little in heaven, as that we can express it; But if we could tell you the fullness of a soul there, what that fullness is; the infiniteness of that glory there, how far that infiniteness goes; the Eternity of that happiness there, how long that happiness lasts; if we could make you know all this, yet this Better Resurrection is a heaping, even of that Fullness, and an enlarging, even of that Infiniteness, and an extension, even of that eternity of happiness; For, all these, this Fullness, this Infiniteness, this Eternity are in all the Resurrections of the Righteous, and this is a better Resurrection; We may almost say, it is something more than Heaven; for, all that have any Resurrection to life, have all heaven; And something more than God; for, all that have any Resurrection to life, have all God; and yet these shall have a better Resurrection. Amorous soul, ambitious soul, covetous soul, voluptuous soul, what wouldst thou have in heaven? What doth thy holy amorousness, thy holy covetousness, thy holy ambition, and voluptuousness most carry thy desire upon? Call it what thou wilt; think it what thou canst; think it something that thou canst not think; and all this thou shalt have, if thou have any Resurrection unto life; and yet there is a Better Resurrection. When I consider what I was in my parents loins (a substance unworthy of a word, unworthy of a thought) when I consider what I am now, (a Volume of diseases bound up together, a dry cynder, if I look for natural, for radical moisture, and yet a Sponge, a bottle of overflowing Rheums, if I consider accidental; an aged child, a gray-headed Infant, and but the ghost of mine own youth) When I consider what I shall be at last, by the hand of death, in my grave, (first, but Putrefaction, and then, not so much as Putrefaction, I shall not be able to send forth so much as an ill air, not any air at all, but shall be all insipid, tastlesse, savourlesse dust; for a while, all worms, and after a while, not so much as worms, sordid, senseless, nameless dust) When I consider the past, and present, and future state of this body, in this world, I am able to conceive, able to express the worst that can befall it in nature, and the worst that can be inflicted upon it by man, of fortune; But the least degree of glory that God hath prepared for that body in heaven, I am not able to express, not able to conceive. That man comes with a Barley corn in his hand, to measure the compass of the Firmament, (and when will he have done that work, by that way?) he comes with a grain of dust in his scales, to weigh the whole body of the world, (and when will he have done that work, that way?) that bids his heart imagine, or his language declare, or his wit compare the least degree of the glory of any good man's Resurrection; And yet, there is a Better Resurrection. A Better Resurrection reserved for them, and appropriated to them That fulfil the sufferings of Christ, in their flesh, by Martyrdom, and so become witnesses to that Conveyance which he hath sealed with his blood, by shedding their blood; and glorify him upon earth (as far as it is possible for man) by the same way that he hath glorified them in heaven; and are admitted to such a conformity with Christ, as that (if we may have leave to express it so) they have died for one another. Neither is this Martyrdom, and so this Better Resurrection, appropriated to a real, and actual, and absolute dying for Christ; but every suffering of ours, by which suffering, he may be glorified, is a degree of Martyrdom, and so a degree of improving, and bettering our Resurrection. For as S. Jerome says, That chastity is a perpetual Martyrdom, So every war maintained by us, against our own desires, is a Martyrdom too. In a word, to do good for God's glory, brings us to a Good, but to suffer for his glory, brings us to a Better Resurrection; And, to suffer patiently, brings us to a Good, but to suffer cheerfully, and more than that, thankfully, brings us to a Better Resurrection. If all the torments of all the afflicted men, from Abel, to that soul that groans in the Inquisition, or that gasps upon his deathbed, at this minute, were upon one man at once, all that had no proportion to the least torment of hell; nay if all the torments which all the damned in hell have suffered, from Cain to this minute, were at once upon one soul, so, as that soul for all that might know that those torments should have an end, though after a thousand millions of millions of Generations, all that would have no proportion to any of the torments of hell; because, the extension of those torments, and their everlastingness, hath more of the nature of torment, and of the nature of hell in it, than the intenseness, and the vehemency thereof can have. So, if all the joys, of all the men that have had all their hearts desires, were con-centred in one heart, all that would not be as a spark in his Chimney, to the general conflagration of the whole world, in respect of the least joy, that that soul is made partaker of, that departs from this world, immediately after a pardon received, and reconciliation sealed to him, for all his sins; No doubt but he shall have a good Resurrection; But then, we cannot doubt neither, but that to him that hath been careful in all his ways, and yet crossed in all his ways, to him whose daily bread hath been affliction, and yet is satisfied as with marrow, and with fatness, with that bread of affliction, and not only contented in, but glad of that affliction, no doubt but to him is reserved a Better Resurrection; Every Resurrection is more than we can think, but this is more than that more. Almighty God inform us, and reveal unto us, what this Better Resurrection is, by possessing us of it; And make the hastening to it, one degree of addition in it. Come Lord Jesus, come quickly to the consummation of that Kingdom which thou hast purchased for us, with inestimable price of thine incorruptible blood. Amen. SERMON XXIII. Preached at S. Paul's, for Easter-day. 1628. 1 COR. 13.12. For now we see through a Glass darkly, But than face to face; Now I know in part, But then I shall know, even as also I am known. THese two terms in our Text, Nunc and Tunc, Now and Then, Now in a glass, Then face to face, Now in part, Then in perfection, these two secular terms, of which, one designs the whole Age of this world from the Creation, to the dissolution thereof (for, all that is comprehended in this word, Now) And the other designs the everlastingness of the next world, (for that incomprehensibleness is comprehended in the other word, Then) These two words, that design two such Ages, are now met in one Day; in this Day, in which we celebrate all Resurrections in the root, in the Resurrection of our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, blessed for ever. For the first Term, Now (Now in a glass, now in part) is intended most especially of that very act, which we do now at this present, that is, of the Ministry of the Gospel, of declaring God in his Ordinance, of Preaching his word; (Now, in this Ministry of his Gospel, we see in a glass, we know in part) And then the Then, the time of seeing face to face, and knowing as we are known, is intended of that time, which we celebrate this day, the day of Resurrection, the day of Judgement, the day of the actual possession of the next life. So that this day, this whole Scripture is fulfilled in your ears; for now, (now in this Preaching) you have some sight, and then, (Then when that day comes, which (in the first root thereof) we celebrate this day) you shall have a perfect sight of all; Now we see through a glass, etc. That therefore you may the better know him, Divisio. when you come to see him face to face, then, by having seen him in a glass now, and that your seeing him now in his Ordinance, may prepare you to see him then in his Essence, proceed we thus in the handling of these words. First, That there is nothing brought into comparison, into consideration, nothing put into the balance, but the sight of God, the knowledge of God; It is not called a better sight, nor a better knowledge, but there is no other sight, no other knowledge proposed, or mentioned, or intimated, or imagined but this; All other sight is blindness, all other knowledge is ignorance; And then we shall see how there is a twofold sight of God, and a twofold knowledge of God proposed to us here; A sight, and a knowledge here in this life, and another manner of sight, and another manner of knowledge in the life to come: For, here we see God In speculo, in a glass, that is, by reflection, And here we know God In aenigmate, says our Text, Darkly, (so we translate it) that is, by obscure representations, and therefore it is called a Knowledge but in part; But in heaven, our sight is face to face, And our knowledge is to know, as we are known. For our sight of God here, our Theatre, the place where we sit and see him, is the whole world, the whole house and frame of nature, and our medium, our glass, is the Book of Creatures, and our light, by which we see him, is the light of Natural Reason. And then, for our knowledge of God here, our Place, our Academy, our University is the Church, our medium, is the Ordinance of God in his Church, Preaching, and Sacraments; and our light is the light of faith. Thus we shall find it to be, for our sight, and for our knowledge of God here. But for our sight of God in heaven, our place, our Sphere is heaven itself, our medium is the Patefaction, the Manifestation, the Revelation of God himself, and our light is the light of Glory. And then, for our knowledge of God there, God himself is All; God himself is the place, we see Him, in Him; God is our medium, we see Him, by him; God is our light; not a light which is His, but a light which is He; not a light which flows from him, no, nor a light which is in him, but that light which is He himself. Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord, O Father of lights, that in thy light we may see light, that now we see this through this thy glass, thine Ordinance, and, by the good of this, hereafter face to face. The sight is so much the Noblest of all the senses, as that it is all the senses. Visio. As the reasonable soul of man, when it enters, becomes all the soul of man, and he hath no longer a vegetative, and a sensitive soul, but all is that one reasonable soul; so, says S. Aug. (and he exemplifies it, by several pregnant places of Scripture) Visus per omnes sensus recurrit, Aug. All the senses are called Seeing; as there is videre & audire, S. john turned to see the sound; Apoc. 1. Psal. 34.9. and there is Gustate, & videte, Taste, and see, how sweet the Lord is; And so of the rest of the senses, all is sight. Employ then this noblest sense upon the noblest object, see God; see God in every thing, and then thou needst not take off thine eye from Beauty, from Riches, from Honour, from any thing. S. Paul speaks here of a divers seeing of God. Of seeing God in a glass, and seeing God face to face; but of not seeing God at all, the Apostle speaks not at all. When Christ took the blind man by the hand, Mark 8.23. though he had then begun his cure upon him, yet he asked him, if he saw aught: Something he was sure he saw; but it was a question whether it were to be called a sight, for he saw men but as trees. The natural man sees Beauty, and Riches, and Honour, but yet it is a question whether he sees them or no, because he sees them, but as a snare. But he that sees God in them, sees them to be beams and evidences of that Beauty, that Wealth, that Honour, that is in God, that is God himself. The other blind man that importuned Christ, Mark 10.46. jesus thou Son of David have mercy on me, when Christ asked him, What wilt thou, that I shall do unto thee? Had presently that answer, Lord that I may receive my sight; And we may easily think, that if Christ had asked him a second question, What wouldst thou see, when thou hast received thy sight, he would have answered, Lord I would see thee; For when he had his sight, and Christ said to him, Go thy way, he had no way to go from Christ, but, as the Text says there, He followed him. All that he cared for, was seeing, all that he cared to see, was Christ. Whether he would see a Peace or a War, may be a Statesman's Problem; whether he would see plenty or scarcity of some commodity, may be a Merchant's Problem; whether he would see Rome, or Spain grow in greatness, may be a Jesuits Problem; But whether I had not rather see God then any thing, is no problematical matter. All sight is blindness, that was our first; all knowledge is Ignorance, till we come to God, that is our next Consideration. The first act of the will, is love, says the School; for till the will love, till it would have something, it is not a will. But then, Amare nisi nota non possumus; Scientia. Aug. It is impossible to love any thing till we know it: First our Understanding must present it as Verum, as a Known truth, and then our Will embraces it as Bonum, as Good, and worthy to be loved. Therefore the Philosopher concludes easily, as a thing that admits no contradiction. That naturally, all men desire to know, that they may love. But then, as the addition of an honest man, varies the signification, with the profession, and calling of the man, (for he is a honest man at Court, that oppresses no man with his power; and at the Exchange he is the honest man, that keeps his word; and in an Army, the Valiant man is the honest man) so the Addition of learned and understanding, varies with the man: The Divine, the Physician, the Lawyer are not qualified, nor denominated by the same kind of learning. But yet, as it is for honesty, there is no honest man at Court, or Exchange, or Army, if he believe not in God; so there is no knowledge in the Physician, nor Lawyer, if he know not God. Neither does any man know God, except he know him so, as God hath made himself known, that is, In Christ. Therefore, as S. Paul desires to know nothing else, so let no man pretend to know any thing, but Christ Crucified; that is, Crucified for him, made his. In the eighth verse of this Chapt. he says, Prophecy shall fail, and Tongues shall fail, and Knowledge shall vanish; but this knowledge of God in Christ made mine, by being Crucified for me, shall dwell with me for ever. And so from this general consideration, All sight is blindness, all knowledge is ignorance, but of God, we pass to the particular Consideration of that twofold sight and knowledge of God expressed in this Text, Now we see through a glass, etc. First then we consider, 2. Part. Visio. (before we come to our knowledge of God) our sight of God in this world, and that is, says our Apostle, In speculo, we see as in a glass. But how do we see in a glass? Truly, that is not easily determined. The old Writers in the Optics said, That when we see a thing in a glass, we see not the thing itself, but a representation only; All the later men say, we do see the thing itself, but not by direct, but by reflected beams. It is a useless labour for the present, to reconcile them. This may well consist with both, That as that which we see in a glass, assures us, that such a thing there is, (for we cannot see a dream in a glass, nor a fancy, nor a Chimaera) so this sight of God, which our Apostle says we have in a glass, is enough to assure us, that a God there is. This glass is better than the water; The water gives a crookedness, and false dimensions to things that it shows; as we see by an Oar when we row a Boat, and as the Poet describes a wry and distorted face, Qui faciem sub aqua Phoebe natant is habes, That he looked like a man that swom under water. But in the glass, which the Apostle intends, we may see God directly, that is, see directly that there is a God. And therefore S. Cyrils addition in this Text, is a Diminution; Videmus quasi in fumo, says he, we see God as in a smoke; we see him better than so; for it is a true sight of God, though it be not a perfect sight, which we have this way. This way, our Theatre, where we sit to see God, is the whole frame of nature; our medium, our glass in which we see him, is the Creature; and our light by which we see him, is Natural Reason. Aquinas calls this Theatre, Theatrum, Mundus. where we sit and see God, the whole world; And David compasses the world, and finds God every where, and says at last, Whither shall I fly from thy presence? Psal. 138.8. If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there; At Babel they thought to build to heaven; but did any men ever pretend to get above heaven? above the power of winds, or the impression of other malignant Meteors, some high hills are got: But can any man get above the power of God? If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the Sea, there thy right hand shall hold me, and lead me. If we sail to the waters above the Firmament, it is so too. Nay, take a place, which God never made, a place which grew out of our sins, that is Hell, yet, If we make our bed in hell, God is there too. It is a woeful Inn, to make our bed in, Hell; and so much the more woeful, as it is more than an Inn; an everlasting dwelling: But even there God is; and so much more strangely then in any other place, because he is there, without any emanation of any beam of comfort from him, who is the God of all consolation, or any beam of light from him, who is the Father of all lights. In a word, whether we be in the Eastern parts of the world, from whom the truth of Religion is passed, or in the Western, to which it is not yet come; whether we be in the darkness of ignorance, or darkness of the works of darkness, or darkness of oppression of spirit in sadness, The world is the Theatre that represents God, and every where every man may, nay must see him. The whole frame of the world is the Theatre, Medium, Creatura. and every creature the stage, the medium, the glass in which we may see God. Moses made the Laver in the Tabernacle, of the looking glasses of women: Exod. 38.8. Scarce can you imagine a vainer thing (except you will except the vain lookers on, in that action) than the looking-glasses of women; and yet Moses brought the looking-glasses of women to a religious use, to show them that came in, the spots of dirt, which they had taken by the way, that they might wash themselves clean before they passed any farther. There is not so poor a creature but may be thy glass to see God in. The greatest flat glass that can be made, cannot represent any thing greater than it is: If every gnat that flies were an Archangel, all that could but tell me, that there is a God; and the poorest worm that creeps, tells me that. If I should ask the Basilisk, how camest thou by those kill eyes, he would tell me, Thy God made me so; And if I should ask the Slowworm, how camest thou to be without eyes, he would tell me, Thy God made me so. The Cedar is no better a glass to see God in, than the Hyssop upon the wall; all things that are, are equally removed from being nothing; and whatsoever hath any being, is by that very being, a glass in which we see God, who is the root, and the fountain of all being. The whole frame of nature is the Theatre, the whole Volume of creatures is the glass, and the light of nature, reason, is our light, which is another Circumstance. Of those words, john 1.9. That was the true light, Lux rationi●. that lighteth every man that cometh into the World, the slackest sense that they can admit, giveth light enough to see God by. If we spare S. Chrysostom's sense, That that light, is the light of the Gospel, and of Grace, and that that light, considered in itself, and without opposition in us, does enlighten, that is, would enlighten, every man, if that man did not wink at that light; If we forbear S. Augustine's sense, That light enlightens every man, that is, every man that is enlightened, is enlightened by that light; If we take but S. Cyrils' sense, that this light is the light of natural Reason, which, without all question, enlighteneth every man that comes into the world, yet have we light enough to see God by that light, in the Theatre of Nature, and in the glass of Creatures. God affords no man the comfort, the false comfort of Atheism: He will not allow a pretending Atheist the power to flatter himself, so far, as seriously to think there is no God. He must pull out his own eyes, and see no creature, before he can say, he sees no God; He must be no man, and quench his reasonable soul, before he can say to himself, there is no God. The difference between the Reason of man, and the Instinct of the beast is this, That the beast does but know, but the man knows that he knows. The bestial Atheist will pretend that he knows there is no God; but he cannot say, that he knows, that he knows it; for, his knowledge will not stand the battery of an argument from another, nor of a ratiocination from himself. He dares not ask himself, who is it that I pray to, in a sudden danger, if there be no God? Nay he dares not ask, who is it that I swear by, in a sudden passion, if there be no God? Whom do I tremble at, and sweat under, at midnight, and whom do I curse by next morning, if there be no God? It is safely said in the School, Media perfecta ad quae ordinantur, How weak soever those means which are ordained by God, seem to be, and be indeed in themselves, yet they are strong enough to those ends and purposes, for which God ordained them. And so, for such a sight of God, as we take the Apostle to intent here, which is, to see that there is a God, The frame of Nature, the whole World is our Theatre, the book of Creatures is our Medium, our glass, and natural reason is light enough. But then, for the other degree, the other notification of God, which is, The knowing of God, though that also be first to be considered in this world, the means is of a higher nature, then served for the sight of God; and yet, whilst we are in this World, it is but In aenigmate, in an obscure Riddle, a representation, darkly, and in part, as we translate it. As the glass which we spoke of before, was proposed to the sense, Scientia Dei. and so we might see God, that is, see that there is a God, This anigma that is spoken of now, this dark similitude, and comparison, is proposed to our faith, and so far we know God, that is, Believe in God in this life, but by aenigmaes, by dark representations, and allusions. Therefore says S. Augustine, that Moses saw God, in that conversation which he had with him in the Mount, Sevocatus ab omni corporis sensu, Removed from all benefit and assistance of bodily senses, (He needed not that Glass, the help of the Creature) And more than so, Ab omni significativo aenigmate Spiritus, Removed from all allusions, or similitudes, or representations of God, which might bring God to the understanding, and so to the belief; Moses knew God by a more immediate working, than either sense, or understanding, or faith. Therefore says that Father, Per speculum & aenigma, by this which the Apostle calls a glass, and this which he calls aenigma, a dark representation Intelliguntur omnia accommodata ad notificandum Deum, He understands all things by which God hath notified himself to man: By the Glass, to his Reason, by the aenigma to his faith. And so, for this knowing of God, by way of Believing in him, (as for seeing him, our Theatre was the world, the Creature was our glass, and Reason was our light) Our Academy to learn this knowledge, is the Church, our Medium is the Ordinance and Institution of Christ in his Church, and our light is the light of faith, in the application of those Ordinances in that Church. This place then where we take our degrees in this knowledge of God, our Academy, our University for that, Academia, Ecclesia. is the Church; for, though, as there may be some few examples given, of men that have grown learned, who never studied at University; so there may be some examples of men enlightened by God, and yet not within that covenant which constitutes the Church; yet the ordinary place for Degrees is the University, and the ordinary place for Illumination in the knowledge of God, is the Church. There fore did God, who ever intended to have his Kingdom of Heaven well peopled, so powerfully, so miraculously enlarge his way to it, The Church, that it prospered as a wood, which no felling, no stubbing, could destroy. We find in the Acts of the Church, five thousand Martyrs executed in a day; Acts 4.4. And we find in the Acts of the Apostles five thousand brought to the Church, by one Sermon; still our Christen were equal to our burials at least. Therefore when Christ says to the Church, Luke 12.32. Fear not little flock, it was not Quia de magnominuitur, sed quia de pusillo crescit, says Chrysologus, Not because it should fall from great to little, but rise from little to great. Such care had Christ of the growth thereof; and then such care of the establishment, and power thereof, as that the first time, that ever he names the Church, Mat. 16.18. he invests it with an assurance of perpetuity, Upon this Rock will I build my Church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it; Therein is denoted the strength and stability of the Church in itself, and then the power and authority of the Church upon others, in those often directions, Dic Ecclesiae, complain to the Church, and consult with the Church, and then Audi Ecclesiam, Hearken to the Church, be judged by the Church; hear not them, that hear not the Church; And then Ejice de Ecclesia, let them that disobey the Church, be cast out of the Church. In all which, we are forbidden private Conventicles, private Spirits, private Opinions. For, as S. Augustine says well, Psal. 49. (and he citys it from another whom he names not, Quidam dixit) If a wall stand single, not joined to any other wall, he that makes a door through the wall, and passes through that door, Adhuc foris est, for all this is without still, Nam domus nonest, One wall makes not a house; One opinion makes not Catholic Doctrine, one man makes not a Church; for this knowledge of God, the Church is our Academy, there we must be bred; and there we may be bred all our lives, and yet learn nothing. Therefore, as we must be there, so there we must use the means; And the means in the Church, are the Ordinances, and Institutions of the Church. The most powerful means is the Scripture; Medium, Institutie. But the Scripture in the Church. Not that we are discouraged from reading the Scripture at home: God forbidden we should think any Christian family to be out of the Church. At home, the holy Ghost is with thee in the reading of the Scriptures; But there he is with thee as a Remembrancer, (The Holy Ghost shall bring to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you, says our Saviour) Here, john 14.26. in the Church, he is with thee, as a Doctor to teach thee; First learn at Church and then meditate at home, Receive the seed by hearing the Scriptures interpreted here, and water it by returning to those places at home. When Christ bids you Search the Scriptures, he means you should go to them, who have a warrant to search; A warrant in their Calling. To know which are Scriptures, To know what the holy Ghost says in the Scriptures, apply thyself to the Church. Not that the Church is a Judge above the Scriptures, (for the power, and the Commission which the Church hath, it hath from the Scriptures) but the Church is a Judge above thee, which are the Scriptures, and what is the sense of the Holy Ghost in them. So then thy means are the Scriptures; That is thy evidence: but then this evidence must be sealed to thee in the Sacraments, and delivered to thee in Preaching, and so sealed and delivered to thee in the presence of competent witnesses, the Congregation. When S. Paul was carried up In raptu, 2 Cor. 12.4. in an ecstasy, into Paradise, that which he gained by this powerful way of teaching, is not expressed in a Vidit, but an Audivit, It is not said that he saw, but that he heard unspeakable things. The eye is the devil's door, before the ear: for, though he do enter at the ear, by wanton discourse, yet he was at the eye be fore; we see, before we talk dangerously. But the ear is the Holy Ghosts first door, He assists us with Ritual and Ceremonial things, which we see in the Church; but Ceremonies have their right use, when their right use hath first been taught by preaching. Therefore to hearing does the Apostle apply faith; And, as the Church is our Academy, and our Medium the Ordinances of the Church, so the light by which we see this, that is, know God so, as to make him our God, is faith; and that is our other Consideration in this part. Those Heretics, against whom S. chrysostom, and others of the Father's writ, Lumen, fides. The Anomaei, were inexcusable in this, that they said, They were able to know God in this life, as well as God knew himself; But in this more especially lay their impiety, that they said, They were able to do all this by the light of Nature, without Faith. By the light of Nature, in the Theatre of the World, by the Medium of Creatures, we see God; but to know God, by believing, not only Him, but in Him, is only in the Academy of the Church, only through the Medium of the Ordinances there, and only by the light of Faith. The Schooledoes ordinarily design four ways of knowing God; and they make the first of these four ways, to be by faith; but then, by faith they mean no more but an assent, that there is a God; which is but that, which in our former Considerations we called The seeing of God; and which indeed needs not faith; for the light of Nature will serve for that, to see God so. They make their second way Contemplation, that is, An union of God in this life; which is truly the same thing that we mean by Faith: for we do not call an assent to the Gospel, faith, but faith is the application of the Gospel to ourselves; not an assent that Christ died, but an assurance that Christ died for all. Their third way of knowing God is by Apparition; as when God appeared to the Patriarches and others in fire, in Angels, or otherwise; And their fourth way is per apertam visionem, by his clear manifestation of himself in heaven. Their first way, by assenting only, and their third way of apparition, are weak and uncertain ways. The other two, present Faith, and future Vision, are safe ways, but admit this difference, That that of future Vision, is gratiae consummantis, such a knowledge of God, as when it is once had can never be lost nor diminished, But knowledge by faith in this world, is Gratiae communis, it is an effect and fruit of that Grace which God shed upon the whole communion of Saints, that is, upon all those who in this Academy, the Church, do embrace the Medium, that is, the Ordinances of the Church; And this knowledge of God, by this faith, may be diminished, and increased; for it is but In aenigmate, says our Text, darkly, obscurely; Clearly in respect of the natural man, but yet but obscurely in respect of that knowledge of God which we shall have in heaven; for, says the Apostle, As long as we walk by faith, and not by sight, we are absent from the Lord. 2 Cor. 5.6. Faith is a blessed presence, but compared with heavenly vision, it is but an absence; though it create and constitute in us a possibility, a probability, a kind of certainty of salvation, yet that faith, which the best Christian hath, is not so far beyond that sight of God which the natural man hath, as that sight of God which I shall have in heaven, is above that faith which we have now in the highest exaltation. Therefore there belongs a consideration to that which is added by our Apostle here, That the knowledge which I have of God here (even by faith, through the ordinances of the Church) is but a knowledge in part. Now I know in part. That which we call in part, the Syriack translates Modicum ex multis; Ex parte. Though we know by faith, yet, for all that faith, it is but a little of a great deal that we know yet, because, though faith be good evidence, yet faith is but the evidence of things not seen; Heb. 11.1. And there is better evidence of them, when they are seen. For, if we consider the object, we cannot believe so much of God, nor of our happiness in him, as we shall see then. For, when it is said, that the heart comprehends it not, certainly faith comprehends it not neither: And if we consider the manner, faith itself is but darkness in respect of the vision of God in heaven: For, those words of the Prophet, I will search jerusalem with Candles, are spoken of the times of the Christian Church, Zeph. 1.12. and of the best men in the Christian Church; yet they shall be searched with Candles, some darkness shall be found in them. To the Galatians well instructed, and well established, Gal. 4.9. the Apostle says, Now, after ye have known God, or rather are known of God; The best knowledge that we have of God here, even by faith, is rather that he knows us, then that we know him. And in this Text, it is in his own person, that the Apostle puts the instance, Now I, (I, an Apostle, taught by Christ himself) know but in part. And therefore, as S. Augustine saith, Sunt quasi cunabula charitatis Dei, quibus diligimus proximum, The love which we bear to our neighbour is but as the Infancy, but as the Cradle of that love which we bear to God; so that sight of God which we have In speculo, in the Glass, that is, in nature, is but Cunabula fidei, but the infancy, but the cradle of that knowledge which we have in faith, and yet that knowledge which we have in faith, is but Cunabula visionis, the infancy and cradle of that knowledge which we shall have when we come to see God face to face. Faith is infinitely above nature, infinitely above works, even above those works which faith itself produces, as parents are to children, & the tree to the fruit: But yet faith is as much below vision, and seeing God face to face. And therefore, though we ascribe willingly to faith, more than we can express, yet let no man think himself so infallibly safe, because he finds that he believes in God, as he shall be when he sees God; The faithfullest man in the Church must say, Domine adauge, Lord increase my faith; He that is least in the kingdom of heaven, shall never be put to that. All the world is but Speculum, a glass, in which we see God; The Church itself, and that which the Ordinance of the Church begets in us, faith itself, is but aenigma, a dark representation of God to us, till we come to that state, To see God face to face, and to know, as also we are known. Now, Calum, Sphaera. as for the sight of God here, our Theatre was the world, our Medium and glass was the creature, and our light was reason, And then for our knowledge of God here, our Academy was the Church, our Medium the Ordinances of the Church, and our Light the light of faith, so we consider the same Terms, first, for the sight of God, and then for the knowledge of God in the next life. First, the Sphere, the place where we shall see him, is heaven; He that asks me what heaven is, means not to hear me, but to silence me; He knows I cannot tell him; When I meet him there, I shall be able to tell him, and then he will be as able to tell me; yet than we shall be but able to tell one another, This, this that we enjoy is heaven, but the tongues of Angels, the tongues of glorified Saints, shall not be able to express what that heaven is; for, even in heaven our faculties shall be finite. Heaven is not a place that was created; for, all place that was created, shall be dissolved. God did not plant a Paradise for himself, and remove to that, as he planted a Paradise for Adam, and removed him to that; But God is still where he was before the world was made. And in that place, where there are more Suns than there are Stars in the Firmament, (for all the Saints are Suns) And more light in another Sun, The Sun of righteousness, the Son of Glory, the Son of God, then in all them, in that illustration, that emanation, that effusion of beams of glory, which began not to shine 6000. years ago, but 6000. millions of millions ago, had been 6000. millions of millions before that, in those eternal, in those uncreated heavens, shall we see God. This is our Sphere, Medium, Revelatio sui. and that which we are fain to call our place; and then our Medium, our way to see him is Patefactio sui, Gods laying himself open, his manifestation, his revelation, his evisceration, and emboweling of himself to us, there. Doth God never afford this patefaction, this manifestation of himself in his Essence, to any in this life? We cannot answer yea, nor no, without offending a great part in the School, so many affirm, so many deny, that God hath been seen in his Essence in this life. There are that say, That it is fere de fide, little less than an article of faith, that it hath been done; And Aquinas denies it so absolutely, as that his Followers interpret him de absoluta potentia, That God by his absolute power cannot make a man, remaining a mortal man, and under the definition of a mortal man, capable of seeing his Essence; as we may truly say, that God cannot make a beast, remaining in that nature, capable of grace, or glory. S. Augustine speaking of discourses that passed between his mother, and him, not long before her death, says; Perambulavimus cuncta mortalia, & ipsum coelum, We talked ourselves above this earth, and above all the heavens; Venimus in mentes nostras, & transcendimus eas, We came to the consideration of our own minds, and our own souls, and we got above our own souls; that is, to the consideration of that place where our souls should be for ever; and we could consider God then, but then we could not see God in his Essence. As it may be fairly argued that Christ suffered not the very torments of very hell, because it is essential to the torments of hell, to be eternal, They were not torments of hell, if they received an end; So is it fairly argued too, That neither Adam in his ecstasy in Paradise, nor Moses in his conversation in the Mount, nor the other Apostles in the Transfiguration of Christ, nor S. Paul in his rapture to the third heavens, saw the Essence of God, because he that is admitted to that sight of God, can never look off, nor lose that sight again. Only in heaven shall God proceed to this patefaction, this manifestation, this revelation of himself; And that by the light of glory. The light of glory is such a light, as that our Schoolmen dare not say confidently, Lux Cloris. That every beam of it, is not all of it. When some of them say, That some souls see some things in God, and others, others, because all have not the same measure of the light of glory, the rest cry down that opinion, and say, that as the Essence of God is indivisible, and he that sees any of it, sees all of it, so is the light of glory communicated entirely to every blessed soul. God made light first, and three days after, that light became a Sun, a more glorious Light: God gave me the light of Nature, when I quickened in my mother's womb by receiving a reasonable soul; and God gave me the light of faith, when I quickened in my second mother's womb, the Church, by receiving my baptism; but in my third day, when my mortality shall put on immortality, he shall give me the light of glory, by which I shall see himself. To this light of glory, the light of honour is but a glow-worm; and majesty itself but a twilight; The Cherubims and Seraphims are but Candles; and that Gospel itself, which the Apostle calls the glorious Gospel, but a Star of the least magnitude. And if I cannot tell, what to call this light, by which I shall see it, what shall I call that which I shall see by it, The Essence of God himself? and yet there is something else than this sight of God, intended in that which remains, I shall not only see God face to face, but I shall know him, (which, as you have seen all the way, is above sight) and know him, even as also I am known. In this Consideration, God alone is all; in all the former there was a place, Deus omnia solus. and a means, and a light; here, for this perfect knowledge of God, God is all those. Then, sales the Apostle, God shall be all in all. Hic agit omnia in omnibus, says S. Hierome; 1 Cor. 15.28. Here God does all in all; but here he does all by Instruments; even in the infusing of faith, he works by the Ministry of the Gospel: But there he shall be all in all, do all in all, immediately by himself; for, Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to God, even the Father. Ver. 24. His Kingdom is the administration of his Church, by his Ordinances in the Church. At the resurrection there shall be an end of that Kingdom; no more Church; no more working upon men, by preaching, but God himself shall be all in all. Ministri quasi larvae Dei, says Luther. It may be somewhat too familiarly, too vulgarly said, but usefully; The ministry of the Gospel is but as God's Vizard; for, by such a liberty the Apostle here calls it aenigma, a riddle; or, (as Luther says too) God's picture; but in the Resurrection, God shall put of that Vizard, and turn away that picture, and show his own face. Therefore is it said, That in heaven there is no Temple, but God himself is the Temple; God is Service, Apoc. 21.22. August. and Music, and Psalm, and Sermon, and Sacrament, and all. Erit vita de verbo sine verbo; We shall live upon the word, and hear never a word; live upon him, who being the word, was made flesh, the eternal Son of God. Hîc nonest omnia in omnibus, Hieron. sed pars in singulis: Here God is not all in all; where he is at all in any man, that man is well; In Solomone sapientia, says that Father; It was well with Solomon, because God was wisdom with him, and patience in job, and faith in Peter, and zeal in Paul, but there was something in all these, which God was not. But in heaven he shall be so all in all, Idem. singuli sanctorum omnes virtutes habeant, that every soul shall have every perfection in itself; and the perfection of these perfections shall be, that their sight shall be face to face, and their knowledge as they are known. Since S. Augustine calls it a debt, a double debt, a debt because she asked it, Facie ad faciem. a debt because he promised it, to give, even a woman, Paulina, satisfaction in that high point, and mystery, how we should see God face to face in heaven, it cannot be unfit in this congregation, to ask and answer some short questions concerning that. Is it always a declaration of favour when God shows his face? No. I will set my face against that soul, Levit. 17.10. that eateth blood, and cut him off. But when there is light joined with it, it is a declaration of favour; This was the blessing that God taught Moses for Aaron, to bless the people with, The Lord make his face to shine upon thee, and be gracious to thee. Numb. 6.25. And there we shall see him face to face, by the light of his countenance, which is the light of glory. What shall we see, by seeing him so, face to face? not to enlarge ourselves into Gregory's wild speculation, Qui videt videntem omnia, oninia videt, because we shall see him that sees all things, we shall see all things in him, (for then we should see the thoughts of men) rest we in the testimony of a safer witness, a Council, Senon. In speculo Divinit at is quicquid eorum intersit illucescet; In that glass we shall see, whatsoever we can be the better for seeing. First, all things that they believed here, they shall see there; and therefore, Discamus in terris, Hicron. quorum scicntia nobiscum perseveret in Caelis, let us meditate upon no other things on earth, than we would be glad to think on in heaven; and this consideration would put many frivolous, and many fond thoughts out of our mind, if men and women would love another but so, as that love might last in heaven. This than we shall get, concerning ourselves, by seeing God face to face; but what concerning God? nothing but the sight of the humanity of Christ, which only is visible to the eye. So Theodoret, so some others have thought; but that answers not the sicutiest; and we know we shall see God, (not only the body of Christ) as he is in his Essence. Why? did all that are said to have seen God face to face, fee his Essence? no. In earth God assumed some material things to appear in, and is said to have been seen face to face, when he was seen in those assumed forms. But in heaven there is no material thing to be assumed, and if God be seen face to face there, he is seen in his Essence. S. Augustine sums it up fully, In Psal 36.10. upon those words, In lumine tuo, In thy light we shall see light, Te scilicet in te, we shall see thee in thee; that is, says he, face to face. And then, cognitus. what is it to know him, as we are known? First, is that it, which is intended here, That we shall know God so as we are known? It is not expressed in the Text so: It is only that we shall know so; not, that we shall know God so. But the frame, and context of the place, hath drawn that unanime exposition from all, that it is meant of our knowledge of God then. A comprehensive knowledge of God it cannot be; To comprehend is to know a thing as well as that thing can be known; and we can never know God so, but that he will know himself better: Our knowledge cannot be so dilated, nor God condensed, and contracted so, as that we can know him that way, comprehensively. It cannot be such a knowledge of God, as God hath of himself, nor as God hath of us; For God comprehends us, and all this world, and all the worlds that he could have made, and himself. But it is Nota similitudinis, non aequalitatis; As God knows me, so I shall know God; but I shall not know God so, as God knows me. It is not quantum, but sicut; not as much, but as truly; as the fire does as truly shine, as the Sun shines, though it shine not out so fare, nor to so many purposes. So then, I shall know God so, as that there shall be nothing in me, to hinder me from knowing God; which cannot be said of the nature of man, though regenerate, upon earth, no, nor of the nature of an Angel in heaven, left to itself, till both have received a super-illustration from the light of Glory. And so it shall be a knowledge so like his knowledge, as it shall produce a love, like his love, and we shall love him, as he loves us. For, as S. chrysostom, and the rest of the Fathers, whom Oecumenius hath compacted, interpret it, Cognoscam practicè, idest, accurrendo, I shall know him, Aug. that is, embrace him, adhere to him. Qualis sine fine festivitas! what a Holiday shall this be, which no working day shall ever follow! By knowing, and loving the unchangeable, the immutable God, Mutabimur in immutabilitatem, we shall be changed into an unchangeableness, says that Father, that never said any thing but extraordinarily. He says more, Idem. Dei praesentia si in inferno appareret, If God could be seen, and known in hell, hell in an instant would be heaven. How many heavens are there in heaven? how is heaven multiplied to every soul in heaven, where infinite other happinesses are crowned with this, this fight, and this knowledge of God there? And how shall all those heavens be renewed to us every day, Qui non mir abimur hodiè, Idem. that shall be as glad to see, and to know God, millions of ages after every days seeing and knowing, as the first hour of looking upon his face. And as this seeing, and this knowing of God crownes all other joys, and glories, even in heaven, so this very crown is crowned; 2 Pet. 1.4. There grows from this a higher glory, which is, participes erimus Divinae naturae, (words, of which Luther says, that both Testaments afford none equal to them) That we shall be made partakers of the Divine nature; Immortal as the Father, righteous as the Son, and full of all comfort as the Holy Ghost. Let me dismiss you, with an easy request of S. Augustine; Fieri non potest ut seipsum non diligat, qui Deum diligit; That man does not love God, that loves not himself; do but love yourselves: Imo solus se diligere novit, qui Deum diligit, Only that man that loves God, hath the art to love himself; do but love yourselves; for if he love God, he would live eternally with him, and, if he desire that, and endeavour it earnestly, he does truly love himself, and not otherwise. And he loves himself, who by seeing God in the Theatre of the world, and in the glass of the creature, by the light of reason, and knowing God in the Academy of the Church, by the Ordinances thereof, through the light of faith, endeavours to see God in heaven, by the manifestation of himself, through the light of Glory, and to know God himself, in himself, and by himself, as he is all in all; Contemplatively, by knowing as he is known, and Practically, by loving, as he is loved. SERMON XXIV. Preached upon Easter-day. 1629. JOB 4.18. Rehold, he put no trust in his Servants, And his Angels he charged with folly. WE celebrate this day, the Resurrection of our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, Blessed for ever; and in His, all ours; All, that is, the Resurrection of all Persons; All, that is, the Resurrection of all kinds, whether the Resurrection from calamities in this world, ezechiel's Resurrection, where God says to him, Putasne vivent? Son of man dost thou think, Ezek. 8.6. these scattered Bones can live again? or the Resurrection from sin, S. john's Resurrection, Apo. 20.5. 1 Cor. 15. Blessed is he that hath his part in the first Resurrection: Or of the Resurrection to Glory, S. Paul's Resurrection, that is, more argued, and more particularly established, by that Apostle, then by the rest. This Resurrection to glory, is the consummation of all the others; therefore we look especially at this; and in this, our qualification in this state of glory, is thus expressed by our Saviour Christ himself, Erimus sicut Angeli, In the Resurrection, Luke 20.36. we shall be as the Angels. And that we might not flatter ourselves in a dream of a better estate, than the Angels have, in this text we have an intimation, what their state and condition is, Behold, he put no trust in his Servants, and his Angels he charged with folly. In our handling of these words, these shall be our two parts; De quibus, and De quo; Divisio. Of whom these words are spoken, and then of what; First, what is positively said, and then, what is consequently inferred; what proposed, and what concluded; what of the Angels, and then, what of us, who shall be like the Angels. In the first, the Persons of whom these words are spoken, because, though our Interpreters vary in opinions, yet even from their various opinions, there arise good instructions, we shall rather Problematically inquire, then Dogmatically establish, first, whether these words were spoken of Angels, or no; whether this word Angel, in this text, be not (as it is in many other places of Scriptures, and in the nature of the Word itself) communicable to other servants, and other messengers than those, whom ordinarily we intent, when we say Angels; and then secondly, if the words be spoken of Angels, then, whether of Good or Bad Angels, of those which stand now, or those which fell at first; and again, if of those that stand, than what degree of perfection they have, and what that which we use to call their Confirmation, is, how it accrues to them, and how it works in them, if even of them it be said, Behold, he put no trust in his Servants, and his Angels he charged with folly. In our second part, what was inferred upon these premises, what was concluded out of these propositions, what reflected upon us, by this assimilation of ours to the Angels, because it is a matter of much weight, we shall first, in our entrance into that part, consider the weight of the testimony, in the Person that gives it; for it is not job himself that speaks these words; It is but one of his friends; but Elephaz, but the Temanite, a Gentile, a stranger from the Covenant and the Church of God, and yet his words are part of the Word of God. And then for the matter that is inferred, from our assimilation to the state of Angels, will be fairly collected, that if those Angels stand, but by the support of Grace, & not by any thing inseparably inhering in their nature, when we are at our best, in heaven, we shall do but so neither; much less whilst we are upon earth, have we in us any impossibility of falling, by any thing already done for us; Our standing is merely from the grace of God, and therefore let no man ascribe any thing to himself; and Let him that standeth take heed lest he fall; for, God hath done no more for the best of us, here nor hereafter, then for those Angels, and of them we hear here, He put no trust in his Servants, and his Angels he charged with folly. First then, 1 Part. An Angeli. for our first Disquisition, in our first part, De quibus, the persons of whom these words are spoken. Amongst all our Expositors of this book of job, (which are very many) and amongst all Authors, Ancient and Modern, which have had occasion in their Sermons and Tractates to reflect upon this text, (which are many more, infinite) I have never observed more than one, that denies these words to be spoken of Angels, or that there is any mention, any intention, any intimation of Angels, in these words. And, (which is the greater wonder) this one single man, who thus departs from all, and prefers himself above all, is no Jesuit neither; It is but a Capuccin, but Bolduc upon this Book of job, and yet he adventures to say, That that Person of whom it is said in this text, He put no trust in his Servants, and He charged his Angels with folly, is not God; and that they of whom it is said, He trusted not his Servants, and his Angels he charged with folly, are not Angels; But that all that Eliphaz intended in all this passage of job, was no more but this, That no great Person must trust in any kind of Greatness, particularly not in great retinues, and dependences, of many servants, and powerful instruments, for that was jobs own case, and yet he lost them all. The doctrine truly is good; neither should I suddenly condemn his singularity, if it were well grounded. For, though in the exposition of Scriptures, singularity always carry a suspicion with it, singularity is Indicium, (as we say in the Law) some kind of evidence, It is Semi-probatio, a kind of halfe-proofe against that man, that holds an opinion, or induces an interpretation different from all other men; yet as these which we call Indicia, in the Law, work but so, as that they may bring a man to his oath, or, in some cases, to the rack, and to torture, but are not, alone sufficient to condemn him; So if we find this singularity in any man, we take from thence just occasion to question and sift him, and his Doctrine, the more narrowly, but not only upon that, presently to condemn him. For this was S. Augustine's case; S. Augustine induced new Doctrines, in divers very important points, different from all that had written before him; but, upon due examination, for all his singularity, the Church hath found reason to adhere to him, in those points, ever since his reasons prevailed. In our single Capuccins case here in our text, it is not so. And therefore here we must continue that complaint, which we are often put to make, of the iniquity of the Roman Church to us; If the Fathers seem to agree in any point, wherein we differ from them, they cry out, we depart from the Fathers; If we adhere to the Fathers, in any point, in which they differ from them, than they cry out, we forsake the Church; Still they press us with their Trent-Canon, You must interpret Scriptures according to the unanime consent of the Fathers, and yet they suffer a single Capuccin of their own, to departed from the Fathers, and Sons, from the Ancient and Modern Expositors in their own Church, And, I may add, from the Holy Ghost too, from the evident purpose and meaning of the place, in more places, than any Author, whom I have seen, and in this, more than in any other place, when he says, with such assurance, that in these words, He put no trust in his Servants, and his Angels he charged with folly, there is no mennon, no intention of God, or Angels, but it is only spoken of men, of the infidelity of servants, and of the insecurity of Masters relying upon such dependencies. We take this then, And Angelis Bo●●. as All do, All, (for this single Capuccin makes no considerable exception, more than a molehill to the roundness of the earth) to be spoken of Angels, which was our first problem and disquisition; And our second is, being spoken of Angels, of what Angels they are spoken, Good or Bad, of those that fell, or those that stood. Here we meet with the same rub as before, singularity. For, amongst all our Expositors upon this book, I have not observed any other then Calvin, to interpret this place, of the good Angels, of those that stand confirmed in grace. Not that Calvin is to be left alone, in that opinion, as though he were the only man, that thought that the good Angels, considered in themselves, might be defective in the offices committed unto them by God; for, it is evident that Origen in divers of his Homilies upon the book of Numbers, in his twentieth, and twenty two, and four, and twenty sixth, and in his thirteenth Homily upon S. Luke, And as evident that S. Hierom himself upon the first verse of the sixth Chapter of Micheas, thought and taught, That those good Angels whom God appoints for the tuition of certain men, and certain places, in this world, shall give an account at the day of Judgement, of the execution of their office, whether the men committed to them, have not fallen sometimes by their fault, and their dereliction; for so does he (and not he only) understand that place, That we shall judge the Angels; 1 Cor. 6.3. As also those words in the beginning of the Revelation, which S. john is commanded by Christ, to write to the Angels of certain Churches, that Father, S. Hierom interprets not only of figurative, and Metaphorical Angels, the Bishops of those Churches, but literally of the Angels of Heaven. So then Calvin is from any singularity in that, That the good Angels considered in themselves, may be defective; but because he may be singular in interpreting this Text, of good Angels, (as for aught I have observed he is) this singularity of his, may be a just reason of suspending our assent, but not a just reason presently to condemn his exposition. The Church must beas just to him, as it was to S. Augustine, that is, to examine his grounds. And truly, his ground is fair; his ground is firm. It is this, that though this seem to derogato from the honour of Angels, that being confirmed, they should be subject to weakness, yet, says he, we must not pervert, nor force any place of Scripture, for the honour of the Angels. For indeed, the perverting, and forcing of Scriptures, for the over-honouring of Saints, hath induced a chain of Heresies in the Roman Church. And that this is a forcing of Scripture, to understand this Text of fallen Angels, Calvin argues rationally, That those Angels which are spoken of here, are called the servants of God; And devils are but his slaves, not his servants; They execute his will, but against their will; Good Angels are the servants of God; Nor shall we easily find that Title, The servant of God, applied to ill persons in the Scriptures. Therefore, (as he notes usefully) God doth not charge Angels in this Text, with rebellion, or obstination, or any heinous crime, but only with folly, weakness, infirmity, from which, in all degrees, none but God himself can be free. Though therefore there be no such necessity of accepting this exposition, as should produce that confident asseveration which he comes to, Dubium non est, It can admit no doubt, but this place must be thus understood, (for, by his favour, it may admit a doubt) yet neither is there any such newness in it, (because it is grounded upon Truth, and all Truth is ancient) but that it may very well be received; And therefore, as the sense that is most fit to advance his purpose that speaks it, (which is one principal thing to be considered in every place) as the sense that most conduces to Eliphaz his end, and to prove that which he intends to job, without laying obligation upon any to think so, or imputation upon any that doth not think so, we accept this interpretation of these words; that they are spoken of Angels, (which was our first) and of good Angels, (which was our second disquifition) and now proceed to our third, what their confirmation is, and how it works, if for all that, God put no trust in those servants, but charged those Angels with folly. That Moses did speak nothing of the fall, or of the confirmation of Angels, Confirmati●. may justly seem a convenient reason to think, that he meant to speak nothing of the creation of Angels neither. If Moses had intended to have told us of the creation of Angels, he would have told us of their fall, and confirmation too; as having told us so particularly of the making of man, he tells us as particularly of the fall of man, and the restitution of man, by the promise of a Messiah in Paradise. And therefore, that the Angels are wrapped up in that word of Moses, The Heavens, and that they were made when the heavens were made, or that they are wrapped up in that word of Moses, The Light, and that they were made, when Light was made, is all but conjectural, & cloudy: Neither doth any article of that Creed, which we call the Apostles, direct us upon any consideration of Angels. That they were created long before this world, all the Greek Fathers of the Eastern Church did constandy think; And in the Western Church, amongst the Latin Fathers, S. Jerome himself was so clear in it, as to say, Sex millia, nostri orbis, nondum implentur anni, Our world is not yet six thousand years old, Et quantas aternitates, quantas saeculorum origines, says that Father, what infinite revolutions of ages, what infinite eternities, did the Powers, and Principalities, and Thrones, and Angels of God, serve God in before? Theodoret that thinks not so, thinks it not against any article of Faith, to think that it was so. Aquinas, that thinks not so, will not call it an error, to think so, out of a reverence to Athanasius, and Nazianzen, who did think so; for that is an indelible character, which S. Jerome hath imprinted printed upon those two Fathers, That no man ever durst impute error to Athanasius, or Nazianzen. Therefore S. Augustine says moderately, and with that discreet and charitable temper which becomes every man, in matters that are not fundamental, volet, unusquisq accipiat; I forbidden no man, says he, either opinion, That the Angels were made before the world, or with it; Dum non Deo coaeternos, & de vera foelicitate securos non ambigat; Only this I forbidden him, that he do not believe the Angels to be coeternal with God; For, if they were never made, but subsist of themselves, than they are God, If they be not creatures, they are Creators; And then, this I forbidden him too, says he, That he do not think the Angels now in any danger of falling. So that S. Augustine makes this, matter of faith, That the Angels cannot fall; Nor hath S. Augustine any adversary in that point; we only inquire how they acquired this Infallibility, and assurance in their station. For, if they were made so long before this world, and fell when this world was made, since they that had stood so long, fell then, why may not they that stand yet, fall now? They are supported and established by a confirmation, says the School; And that is our present and ordinary answer; and it is enough; But how, or when was this confirmation sealed upon them, or how doth it work in them, if God do not yet trust these servants, but charge these Angels with folly? That the Angels were created Viatores, Viatores. and not Beati, in a possibility of everlasting blessedness, but not in actual possession of it, admits no doubt, because some of them did actually fall. Of whom S. Augustine says, Beatae vitae dulcedinem nongustaverunt, nec fastidiverunt acceptam; The Angels had not already fed upon Manna, and then were weary of that; Non ex eo quod acceperant, ceciderunt, sed ex eo, quod, si subdi Deo voluissent, accepissent, They fell not from that which they were come to, but from that, to which, if they had applied themselves to God, they should have come. So that then, they were not created in a state of blessedness, but in a way to it; and there was in them Pinguedo spiritus (as S. Jerome says elegantly) they were mere spirits; In O●●am. but if we compare them with God, there was a certain fleshliness, says he, a certain fatness, a slipprinesse of falling into a worse state, for any thing that was in their nature; and the nature of those that fell, and those that stood, is all one, neither is their nature that do stand, changed by the benefit of their confirmation. Hence is it, that the Fathers are both so evident, and so concurrent in that assertion, That an Angel is a spirit, Gratiâ, & non Naturà immortalitatem suscipiens, Damasc. Just. Mart. that is, Immortal, but Immortal by additional Grace, and not by Nature. Take it in the eldest; Immortalitas eorum ex aliena voluntate pendet, they have an Immortality, but dependant upon the will of another. And agreeably to them another, cyril Alex. Quia ortum habuerunt, occidere possunt, Because the Angels were produced of nothing, they may be reduced to nothing; for, Solus Deus naturaliter immortalis, says that Father, Only God is immortal in himself, and by nature. And bring it from the elder to later Fathers, still we shall meet that which was said before by them, and S. Bernard says after, Non creati, sed facti immortales, they were not created at first, but made immortal after. Which S. Hierome carries even to a spiritual death, the death of sin; Licèt non peccent, peccati tamen sunt capaces, says he; though Angels do not sin, if they were left to themselves, they might fin; As S. Ambrose expresses the same thing elegantly, Non in praejudicium trahas, you must not draw that into consequence, nor conclude so, Non moritur Gabriel, Vriel, Raphael non moritur, That the Angel Gabriel doth not die, Raphael, Vriel doth not die, therefore an Angel, and considered in his own nature, cannot die; for such an impossibility of dying, as in the soul of man, all agree to be in Angels; for, We shall be like the Angels, which cannot die, says Christ. But how this Immortality, and Infallibility accrues to them, and works in them, is still under our disquisition, since In these his servants God puts no trust, but charges these Angels with folly. We have in the Ecclesiastical Story, An. Christi 512. a story of Alamandurus, a King of the Saracens, who having been converted, and baptised, and catechised in the true faith, was after attempted by some Bishops in his Court, of the Eutychian heresy. The Eutychian heresy was, That the divine nature in Christ, the Godhead, suffered aswell as the Humane; and the good King, providing a Packet of Intelligence to be delivered him, or something to be whispered in his ear in the presence of those heretical Bishops, upon reading thereof he told them, that he had received news, That Michael the Archangel was dead; And when those Bishops rejected that with a scorn, Alas Sir, Gabriel cannot die, Angels cannot die, The King replied, if an Angel cannot die, if an Angel be impassable, why would you make me believe, that the Godhead itself, the Divine Nature suffered in Christ? So we see, that the piety of a religious King was able to maintain his holy station, even against the real practices of heretical Court Bishops. A pious and religious King should not easily be suspected of that levity, to hearken to impious and heretical motions, though there were good evidence, that that were practised upon him; much less, when the fears in himself, and in those which should practise upon him, are but imaginary, and proceed, (as by God's grace they do) rather out of zeal that it may not be so, then out of evidence that it is so. Zeal distempered, (and God knows, zeal is not always well tempered) will think an Alamandurus, a constant and impregnable King, easily shaked; and zeal distempered will think an Athanasius, a Nazianzen, an Eutychian Bishop. Woe, when God's sword is in the Devil's hand! zeal is God's sword; uncharitableness is the Devils. When God gave a flaming sword to the Cherubims in Paradise, they make good that place, but that sword killed no body, wounded no body. God gives good men zeal; zeal to make good their station, zeal to conserve the integrity and the sincerity of Religion, but this zeal should not wound, not defame any man. Faith comes by hearing, by hearing Sermons, and God sends us many of them; Charity goes out by hearing, by hearing rumours, and the Devil sends many of them. God continue our faith, and restore our charity. That Angels are impassable, that they cannot sin, that they cannot die, all say; but that, if they were left to themselves, without the support of additional grace, they might do both; not only the Ancient Fathers, but, both the first School, from Damascen, and the middle School, from Lombard, and the later School, (if we except only those Authors that have writ since the Lateran Council, I mean the later Lateran Council, in our Father's times, (under Leo the tenth) in which Council, it was first determined, that the soul of man (and consequently Angels) was immortal by nature) do weigh down the scale on that side, That God does not so trust in those servants, nor so discharge them, of all weakness, but that they might fall, but for this support of grace, which is their Confirmation. Now how is this conferred upon them? In Christ certainly; In Christ the Father reconciled to himself all things in earth, In Christo. Coloss. 1.12. and in heaven. How? Not as a Redeemer; for those that fell, and thereby needed a redemption, never were, never shall be redeemed; but as a Mediator, an Intercessor in their behalf, that those that do stand, may stand for ever. For, therefore, says S. Augustine, do the Angels refuse sacrifice at our hands, Quia & ipsis nohiscum sacrificium norunt, Because they know that there is one sacrifice offered to God, for them, and for us too, that is Christ Jesus, a propitiation for them, and us; For us, by way of redemption; for them, by way of Mediation, and Intercession. In such a sense, as S. Augustine confesses that God had forgiven him the sins he never did, because but for his grace he should have done them, the Angels are well said to have received a reconciliation in Christ, because, but for his mediation, they might have fallen into God's displeasure. Upon those words, that God shown Adam his judgements, Quae judicia? says that Bishop Catharinus, Eech●. 27.12. what judgements did God show Adam? judicia pessimorum spirituum, says he, the better to contain Adam in his duty, God declared to him, the judgement that he had executed upon those disobedient Angels. So that, as Adam, if he had made a right use of God's grace, had been immortal in his body, and yet not immortal then, by nature, as our bodies in the state of glory in the resurrection, shall be immortal, and yet not immortal then by nature; so no Angel, after this Confirmation, (that is, the mediation of Christ applied to him) shall fall: For, Quis Catholicus ignorat, Aug. nullum novum Diabolum ex bonis Angelis futurum? Who can pretend to be a Catholic, and believe, that ever there shall be any new Devil from amongst the good Angels? And yet, by the way, many of the Ancient Father's thought that those words, That the sons of God saw the daughters of men to be fair, and fell in love with them, were meant of good Angels, who fell in love with those women, that were committed to their charge, and that they sinned in so doing, and that they never returned to heaven, but fell to the first fallen Angels: So that those Fathers have more then implied a possibility of falling into sin, and punishment for sin, in the good Angels. But this none says now; nor with any probability ever did. It is enough that they stand confirmed, confirmed by the grace of God in Christ Jesus; so that now, being in possession of the sight of God, and the light of G●ry, their understanding is perfectly illustrated, so that they can apprehend nothing erroneously, and therefore their will is perfectly rectified, so that they can desire nothing irregularly, and therefore they cannot sin, and therefore they cannot die; for all sin is from the perverseness of the will, and all disorder in the will from error in the understanding; In heaven they are, and we, by our assimilation to them, shall be free from both, and impeccable, and impassable, by the continual grace of God; Though if they, or we were left to ourselves, even there, God could put no trust in his servants, nor leave his Angels uncharged with folly. And so we have done with the pieces, which constitute our first part, De quibus, of whom these words are spoken; First, that they were spoken of Angels, rejecting that single Capuccin, who only denies it; and then, of good Angels, accepting calvin's interpretation, because, though he be singular in applying this Text to that Doctrine, yet in the Doctrine itself, he hath authority enough, and fair reasons for the Text itself; and lastly, how that which we call Confirmation in those Angels accrewes to them, and how it works in them. And so we pass to our second Part, what is inferred upon these premises, what concluded upon these propositions, what by our assimilation to Angels, reflects upon us. And here, 2. Part. Testis Eliphaz. because the matter is of much consideration, we proposed first to be considered, the weight and validity of the testimony, in the person of him that gives it; for many times the credit of the testimony depends much upon the credit of the witness. And here, it is not job himself, it is but Eliphaz, Eliphaz the Temanite, an Alien, a stranger to the Covenant, and Church of God. But surely no greater a stranger, than those secular Poets, whose sentences S. Paul citys not only in his Epistles, but in his Sermons too. Certainly not so great a stranger, as the Devil, and yet in how many places of Scripture, are words spoken by the Devil himself inserted into the Scriptures, and thereby, so fare made the word of God, as that the word of God, the Bible, were not perfect norintire to us, if we had not those words of those Poets, those words of the Devil himself in it? How can I doubt but that God can draw good out of ill, and make even some sin of mine, some occasion of my salvation, when the God of truth can make the word of the father of lies, his word? There is but one place in all this Book of job cited in the New Testament; Job 5.13. that is, He taketh the wise in their own craft; and those words are not spoken by job himself, but by this very friend of job, this Eliphaz, that speaks in our Text; 1 Cor. 3.19. and yet they are cited, in the phrase, and manner, in which holy Scripture is ordinarily cited, It is written, says the Apostle there, and so the Holy Ghost, that spoke in S. Paul, hath canonised the words spoken by Eliphaz. But besides the credit which these words have, Visio. à posteriori, that they are after inserted into the word of God, (which is another manner of credit, and authentiquenesse, then that which the Canonists speak of, that when any sentence of a Father is cited, and inserted into a Decretal Epistle of a Pope, or any part of the Canon Law, that sentence is thereby made authentical, and canonical) these words have their credit à priori, for, before be spoke them to job, he received them in a vision from God. I had a vision in the night, Ver. 12. says he, and fear, and trembling came upon me, and a spirit stood before me, and I heard this voice. Neither is there any necessity, no nor reason, to charge Eliphaz with a false relation, or counterfeiting a revelation from God, which he had not had, as some Expositors have done. For, howsoever in some argumentations, and applyings of things to jobs particular case, we may find some errors in Eliphaz, in modo probandi, in the manner of his proceeding, yet we shall not find him to proceed upon false grounds; and therefore, we believe Eliphaz to have received this that he says, from God, in a vision, and for the instruction of a man, more in God's favour then himself, of job. Balaam had the reputation of a great Wizard, and yet God made his Ass wiser than he, and able to instruct and catechise him. Generally we are to receive our instructions from Gods established Ordinances, from his ordinary means afforded to us, in his Church: And where those means, sufficient in themselves, are duly exhibited to us, we are not to hearken after revelations, nor to believe every thing, that may have some such appearance, to be a revelation. But yet, we are not so to conclude God in his Law, as that he should have no Prerogative, nor so to bind him up in his Ordinances, as that he never can, or never does work by an extraordinary way of revelation. Neither must the profusion of miracles, the prodigality and prostitution of miracles in the Roman Church, (where miracles for every natural disease may be had, at some Shrine, or miracle-shop, better cheap, than a Medicine, a Drugge, a Simple at an Apothecaries) bring us to deny, or distrust all miracles, done by God upon extraordinary causes, and to important purposes. Eliphaz was a profane person, and yet received a Vision from God, and for the instruction of job himself. What was it? we see ver. 17. Shall mortal man be more just than God, Quid. shall a man be more pure than his Maker? Why? Did this Doctrine need this solemnity, this preparation, that Eliphaz gives it, v. 8. That it was a thing told him in secret, and such a secret, that he was able to comprehend but a little at once of it? Is there any such incomprehensibleness, any such difficulty in this Doctrine, That no mortal man is more just than God, no man more pure than his Maker, but that the shallowest capacity may receive it, and the shortest memory retain it? Needs this a Revelation, an extraordinary conveyance? For the general knowledge it does not; Every man will say, he knows mortal man cannot be more just than God, nor any man purer than his Maker; But, for the particular consideration it does. Every justifying a sin, is a making mortal man more just than God; when I come to say, With what justice can God punish a nights, or an hour's sin, with everlasting torments? Every murmuring at God's corrections is a making man purer than God; when I come to say, Does not God departed farther from the purity of his nature, when he is an angry, and a vindicative God, than I from mine, when I am an amorous, or wanton man? We that are but mortal men, must not think, says Eliphaz, to make ourselves purer than our Maker; for, they, who in their nature, are much purer than we, the Angels, are fare short of that, for, God put no trust in those servants, and those Angels he charged with folly. So then, though Eliphaz his premises reach to the Angels, and their state, his inference and his last purpose falls upon us, who, by God's goodness, become capable of succession into the place of the Angels that are fallen, and of an association, and assimilation to those Angels that stand. And our assimilation is this, That as they have in their station, we also shall have in ours, a faithful certitude, that we shall never fall out of the arms and bosom of our gracious God. But then, there arises to us a sweeter relish in considering this stability, this perpetuity, this infallibility to consist in the continual succession, and supply of grace, then in any one act, which God hath done for them, or us. I conceive a more effectual delight, when I consider God to have so wrought the confirmation of Angels, that he hath taken them into a state of glory, and a fruition of his sight, and to perpetuate that state unto them, perpetually superinfuses upon them more and more beams of that glory, then if I should consider God to have confirmed them, with such a measure of grace, at once, as that he could not withdraw, or they could forfeit that grace. For, as there is no doubt made by the Fathers, nor by the School, but that that light which the Apostles saw at the Transfiguration of Christ, was that very light of glory, which they see now in Heaven, and yet they lost the sight of that light again; so is there no violation of any Article of our Faith, if we concur in opinion with them, who say, That S. Paul in his ecstasy, in his rapture into the third heaven, did see that very light of glory, which constitutes the Beatifical Vision, and yet did lose that light again. Truly to me, this consideration, That as his mercy is new every morning, so his grace is renewed to me every minute, That it is not by yesterday grace that I live now, but that I have Panem quotidianum, and Panem horarium, My daily bread, my hourly bread, in a continual succession of his grace, That the eye of God is open upon me, though I wink at his light, and watches over me, though I sleep, That God makes these returns to my soul, and so studies me in every change, this consideration, infuses a sweeter verdure, and imprints a more cheerful tincture upon my soul, than any taste of any one Act, done at once, can minister unto me. God made the Angels all of one natural condition, in nature all alike; and God gave them all such grace, as that thereby they might have stood; and to them that used that grace aright, he gave a farther, a continual succession of grace, and that is their Confirmation; Not that they cannot, but that they shall not fall; not that they are safe in themselves, but by God's preservation safe; for, otherwise, He puts no trust in those Servants, and those Angels he charges with folly. This is our case too; ours that are under the blessed Election, and good purpose of God upon us; if we do not fall from him, it is not of ourselves; for left to ourselves, we should: For, john 5. so S. Augustine interprets those words of our Saviour, Pater operatur, My Father worketh still; God hath not accomplished his work upon us, in one Act, though an Election; but he works in our Vocation, and he works in our Justification, and in our Sanctification he works still. And, if God himself be not so come to his Sabbath, and his rest in us, but that he works upon us still for all that Election, shall any man think to have such a Sabbath, such a rest, in that Election, as shall slacken our endeavour, to make sure our Salvation, and not work as God works, to his ends in us? Hence than we banish all self-subsistence, all attributing of any power, to any faculty of our own; either by preoperation, in any natural or moral disposing of ourselves, before Gods preventing grace dispose us, or by such a cooperation, as should put God and man in Commission together, or make grace and nature Colleagues in the work, or that God should do one half, and man the other; or any such post-operation, That I should think to proceed in the ways of godliness, by virtue of God's former grace, without imploring, and obtaining more, in a continual succession of his concomitant grace, for every particular action: In Christ I can do all things; I need no more but him; without Christ, I can do nothing; not only not have him, but not know that I need him; for I am not better than those Angels, of whom it is said, He put no trust in those Servants, and those Angels he charged with folly. And as we banish from hence all self-subsistence, all opinion of standing by ourselves, so do we also all impeccability, and all impossibility of falling in ourselves, or in any thing, that God hath already done for us, if he should discontinue his future grace, and leave us to our former stock. They that were raised from death to life again, Dorcas, Lazarus, and the rest, were subject to sin, in that new life, which was given them. They that are quickened by the soul of the soul, Election itself, are subject to sin, for all that. God sees the sins of the Elect, and sees their sins to be sins; and in his Ephemerideses, his journals, he writes them down, under that Title, sins, and he reads them every day, in that book, as such; and they grow greater and greater in his sight, till our repentance have washed them out of his sight. Casuists will say, that though a dead man raised to life again, be not bound to his former marriage, yet he is bound to that Religion, that he had invested in Baptism, and bound to his former religious vows, and the same obedience to Superiors as before. We were all dead in Adam; and he that is raised again, even by Election, though he be not so married to the world, as others are, not so in love with sin, not so under the dominion of sin, yet he is as much bound to an obedience to the Will of God declared in his Law, and may no more presume of a liberty of sinning before, nor of an impunity of sin after, than he that pretends no such Election, to confide in. Prospe●. For, this is excellently said, to be the working of our election, by Prosper, the Disciple of S. Augustine's Doctrines, and the Echo of his words, fiat permanendi voluntaria, foelixque necessitas, That our assurance of salvation by perseverance, is necessary, and yet voluntary; Consider it in God's purpose, easily it cannot, consider it in ourselves, it might be resisted. For we are no better than those Angels, and, In those servants he put no trust, and those Angels he charged with folly. But such as they are, Numerus. ●●● 130.7. we shall be: And, since with the Lord there is Copiosa Redemptio, Plenteous Redemption, that overflowing mercy of our God, those super-superlative Merits of our Saviour, that plenteous Redemption, may hold even in this particular blessedness, in our assimilation to them, That as, though there fell great numbers of Angels, yet great, and greater than they that fell, stood, So though The way to Heaven be narrow, and the gate straight, (which is said by Christ, to excite our industry, and are rather an expression arising out of his mercy, lest we should slacken our holy endeavours, than any intimidation, or commination) (for though the way be narrow, and the gate straight, yet the room is spacious enough within) why, by this plenteous redemption, may we not hope, 〈◊〉 12. ●. that many more than are excluded, shall enter there? Those words, The dragon's tail drew the third part of the stars from Heaven, the Fathers generally interpret of the fall of Angels with Lucifer; and it was but a third part; And by God's grace, whose mercy is overflowing, whose merits are super-abundant, with whom there is plenteous redemption, the serpent gets no farther upon us. I know some say, that this third part of the stars, is meant of eminent persons, illustrated and assisted with the best means of salvation, and, if a third of them, how many meanlier furnished, fall? But, those that we can consider to be best provided of means of salvation, nextto these, are Christians in general; and so may this plenteous Redemption be well hoped to work, that but a third part of them, of Christians, shall perish; and then the God of this plenteous Redemption having promised us, that the Christian Religion shall be carried over all the world, still the number of those that shall be saved is enlarged. Apply to thyself that which S. Cyril says of the Angels, Tristaris, quia aliqui vitam amiserunt? Does it grieve thee, that any are fallen? At plures meliorem statum apud Deum obtinent, Let this comfort thee, even in the application thereof to thyself, that more stood then fell. As Elisha said to his servant, in a danger of surprisal, Fear not, 2 King 6.16. for they that be with us, are more than they that are with them, so, if a suspicion of the paucity of them that shall be saved, make thee afraid, look up upon this overflowing mercy of thy God, this super-abundant merit of thy Saviour, this plenteous Redemption, and thou mayst find, find in a fair credulity, and in a well regulated hope, more with thee, then with them that perish. Live so, in such a warfare with tentations, in such a colluctation with thy concupiscences, in such a jealousy, and suspicion of thine indifferent, nay, of thy best actions, as though there were but one man to be saved, and thou wouldst be that one; But live and die in such a sense of this plenteous Redemption of thy God, as though neither thou, nor any could lose salvation, except he doubted of it. I doubt not of mine own salvation; and in whom can I have so much occasion of doubt, as in myself? When I come to heaven, shall I be able to say to any there, Lord! how got you hither? Was any man less likely to come thither then I? There is not only an Only God in heaven; But a Father, a Son, a Holy Ghost in that God; which are names of a plurality, and sociable relations, conversable notions. There is not only one Angel, a Gabriel; But to thee all Angels cry alond; and Cherubin, and Seraphim, are plural terminations; many Cherubs, many Seraphs in heaven. There is not only one Monarchal Apostle, a Peter, but The glorious company of the Apostles praise thee. There is not only a Proto-Martyr, a Stephen, but The noble army of Martyrs praise thee. Who ever amongst our Fathers, thought of any other way to the Moluccaes', or to China, then by the Promontory of Good hope? Yet another way opened itself to Magellan; a Straight; it is true; but yet a way thither; and who knows yet, whether there may not be a North-East, and a North-West way thither, besides? Go thou to heaven, in an humble thankfulness to God, and holy cheerfulness, in that way that God hath manifested to thee; and do not pronounce too bitterly, too desperately, that every man is in an error, that thinks not just as thou thinkest, or in no way, that is not in thy way. God found folly, weakness in his Angels, yet more stood than fell; God finds weakness, wickedness in us, yet he came to call, not the righteous, but sinners to repentance; and who, that comes in that capacity, a Repentant sinner, can be shut out, or denied his part in this Resurrection? The key of David opens, and no man shuts. The Son of David, is the key of David, Christ Jesus; He hath opened heaven for us all; let no man shut out himself, by diffidence in God's mercy, nor shut out any other man, by overvaluing his own purity, in respect of others. But forbearing all lacerations, and tearings, and wound of one another, with bitter invectives, all exasperations by odious names of subdivision, let us all study, first the redintegration of that body, of which Christ Jesus hath declared himself to be the head, the whole Christian Church, and pray that he would, and hope that he will enlarge the means of salvation to those, who have not yet been made partakers of it. That so, he that called the gates of heaven straight, may say to those gates, Psal. 24.7. Elevamini portae aeternales, Be ye lifted up, ye eternal gates, and be ye enlarged, that as the King of glory himself is entered into you, for the farther glory of the King of glory, not only that hundred and four and forty thousand of the Tribes of the children of Israel, but that multitude which is spoken or in that place, which no man can number, of all Nations, and Kindred's, Apoc. 7.19. and People, and friends, may enter with that acclamation, Salvation to our God, which sitteth upon the Throne, and to the Lamb for ever. And unto this City of the living God, Heb. 12.22, 23, 24. the heavenly jerusalem, and to the innumerable company of Angels, to the general assembly, and Church of the first b●●n, which are written in heaven, and to God the judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaks better things then that of Abel, Blessed God bring us all, for thy Son's sake, and by the operation of thy Spirit. Amen. SERMON XXV. Preached at S. Paul's, upon Easter-day. 1630. MAT. 28.6. He is not here, for he is risen, as he said; Come, See the place where the Lord lay. THese are words spoken by an Angel of heaven, to certain devout Women, who, not yet considering the Resurrection of Christ, came with a pious intention to do an office of respect, and civil honour to the body of their Master, which they meant to embalm in the Monument where they thought to find it. How great a compass God went in this act of the Resurrection? Here was God, the God of life, dead in a grave, And here was man, a dead man, risen out of the grave; Here are Angels of heaven employed in so low an office, as to catechise Women, and Women employed in so high an office, as to catechise the Apostles. I chose this verse out of the body of the Story of the Resurrection, because in this verse the act of Christ's rising, (which we celebrate this day) is expressly mentioned, Surrexit enim, for he is risen: Which word stands as a Candle, that shows itself, and all about it, and will minister occasion of illustrating your understanding, of establishing your faith, of exalting your devotion in some other things about the Resurrection, then fall literally within the words of this verse. For, from this verse we must necessarily reflect, both upon the persons (they to whom, and they by whom the words were spoken) and upon the occasion given. I shall not therefore now stand to divide the words into their parts and branches, at my first entering into them, but handle them, as I shall meet them again anon, springing out, and growing up from the body of the Story; for the Context is our Text, and the whole Resurrection is the work of the day, though it be virtually, implicitly contracted into this verse, He is not here, for he is risen, as he said; Come, and see the place where the Lord lay. Our first consideration is upon the persons; Mulieres. and those we find to be Angelical women, and Evangelicall Angels: Angels made Evangelists, to preach the Gospel of the Resurrection, Mal. 3.1. Apoc. 1.20. and Women made Angels, (so as john Baptist is called an Angel, and so as the seven Bishops are called Angels) that is, Instructers of the Church; And to recompense that observation, that never good Angel appeared in the likeness of woman, here are good women made Angels, that is, Messengers, publishers of the greatest mysteries of our Religion. For, howsoever some men out of a petulancy and wantonness of wit, and out of the extravagancy of Paradoxes, and such singularities, have called the faculties, and abilities of women in question, even in the root thereof, in the reasonable and immortal soul, yet that one thing alone hath been enough to create a doubt, (almost an assurance in the negative) whether S. Ambroses Commentaries upon the Epistles of S. Paul, be truly his or no, that in that book there is a doubt made, whether the woman were created according to God's Image; Therefore, because that doubt is made in that book, the book itself is suspected not to have had so great, so grave, so constant an author as S. Ambrose was; No author of gravity, of piety, of conversation in the Scriptures could admit that doubt, whether woman were created in the Image of God, that is, in possession of a reasonable and an immortal soul. The faculties and abilities of the soul appear best in affairs of State, and in Ecclesiastical affairs; in matter of government, and in matter of religion; and in neither of these are we without examples of able women. For, for State affairs, and matter of government, our age hath given us such a Queen, as scarce any former King hath equalled; And in the Venetian Story, I remember, that certain Matrons of that City were sent by Commission, in quality of Ambassadors, to an Empress with whom that State had occasion to treat; And in the Stories of the Eastern parts of the World, it is said to be in ordinary practice to send women for Ambassadors. And then, in matters of Religion, women have evermore had a great hand, though sometimes on the left, as well as on the right hand. Sometimes their abundant wealth, sometimes their personal affections to some Churchmen, sometimes their irregular and indiscreet zeal hath made them great assistants of great Heretics; as S. Hierome tells us of Helena to Simon Magus, Hieror. and so was Lucilia to Donatus, so another to Mahomet, and others to others. But so have they been also great instruments for the advancing of true Religion, as S. Paul testifies in their behalf, at Thessolonica, Of the chief women, not a few; Great, and Many. For, Acts 17.4. many times women have the proxies of greater persons than themselves, in their bosoms; many times women have voices, where they should have none; many times the voices of great men, in the greatest of Civil, or Ecclesiastical Assemblies, have been in the power and disposition of women. Hence is it, that in the old Epistles of the Bishops of Rome, when they needed the Court, (as, at first they needed Courts as much, as they brought Courts to need them at last) we find as many letters of those Popes to the Emperor's Wives, and the Emperor's Mothers, and Sisters, and women of other names, and interests in the Emperor's favours and affections, as to the Emperors themselves. S. Hierome writ many letters to divers holy Ladies; for the most part, all of one stock and kindred; and a stock and kindred so religious, as that I remember, the good old man says, That if jupiter were their Cousin, of their kindred, he believes jupiter would be a Christian; he would leave being such a God as he was, to be their fellow-servant to the true God. Now if women were brought up according to S. Hieromes instructions in those letters, that by seven years of age, they should be able to say the Psalms without book; That as they grew in years, they should proceed in the knowledge of Scriptures, That they should love the Service of God at Church, but not sine Matre, not go to Church when they would, but when their Mother could go with them, Nec quaererent celebritatem Ecclesiarum, They should not always go to the greatest Churches, and where the most famous Preachers drew most company; If women have submitted themselves to as good an education as men, God forbidden their sex should prejudice them, for being examples to others. Their sex? no, nor their sins neither: for, it is S. Hieromes note, That of all those women, that are named in Christ's pedigree in the Gospel, there is not one, (his only Blessed Virgin-Mother excepted) upon whom there is not some suspicious note of incontinency. Of such women did Christ vouchsafe to come; He came of woman so, as that he came of nothing but woman; of woman, and not of man. Neither do we read of any woman in the Gospel, that assisted the persecutors of Christ, or furthered his afflictions; Even Pilat's wife dissuaded it. Woman, as well as man, was made after the Image of God, in the Creation; and in the Resurrection, when we shall rise such as we were here, her sex shall not diminish her glory: Of which, she receives one fair beam, and inchoation in this Text, that the purpose of God, is, even by the ministry of Angel s, communicated to women. But what women? for, their preparation, their disposition is in this Text too; such women, as were not only devout, but sedulous, diligent, constant, perseverant in their devotion; To such women God communicated himself; which is another Consideration in these persons. As our Saviour Christ was pleased, that one of these women should be celebrated by name, for another act upon him, Marry Magdalen, Maria. and that wheresoever his Gospel was preached, her act should be remembered, so the rest, with her, are worthy to be known and celebrated by their names; Therefore we consider, Quae, and quails; first who they were, and then what they were; their names first, and then their conditions. Bodin de repub. l. 6. c. 4. There is an Historical relation, and observation, That though there be divers Kingdoms in Europe, in which the Crowns may fall upon women, yet, for some ages, they did not, and when they did, it was much at one time, and all upon women of one name, Mary. It was so with us in England, and in Scotland it was so; so in Denmark, and in Hungary it was so too; all four, Maries. Though regularly women should not preach, yet when these Legati à latere, these Angels from heaven did give Orders to women, and made them Apostles to the Apostles, the Commission was to women of that name, Marry; for, though our Expositors dispute whether the Blessed Virgin Mary were there then, when this passed at the Sepulchre, yet of Mary Magdalen, and Mary the Mother of james, there can be no doubt. Indeed it is a Noble, and a Comprehensive name, Mary. It is the name of woman, in general; Gen. 2.23. For, when Adam says of Eve, She shall be called Woman, in the Arabic Translation, there is this name, She shall be called Mary; and the Arabic is, perchance, a dialect of the Hebrew. But in pure, and Original Hebrew, the word signifies Exaltation, and whatsoever is best in the kind thereof. This is the name of that sister of Aaron, Exod. 15.20. and Moses, that with her Choir of women assisted at that Eucharistical sacrifice, that Triumphant song of Thanksgiving, upon the destruction, the subversion, the submersion of Egypt, in the Red Sea. Her name was Miriam; and Miriam and Mary is the same name in women, as josuah and jesus is the same name to men. The word denotes Greatness, not only in Power, but in Wisdom, and Learning too; and so signifies often Prophets, and Doctors; and so falls fitliest upon these blessed women, who, in that sense, were all made Maries, Messengers, Apostles to the Apostles; in which sense, even those women were made Maries, (that is, Messengers of the Resurrection) who, no doubt, had other names of their own. There was amongst them, the wife of Chusa, a great man in Herod's Court, Luke 8.3. & 24.10. his Steward; and her name was joanna, joane. So that here was truly a Pope joane, a woman of that name, above the greatest men in the Church. For the dignity of the Papacy, they venture to say, that whosoever was S. Peter's Successor in the Bishopric of Rome, was above any of the Apostles, that over-lived Peter; as S. john did; Here was a woman, a Pope joane, Superior to S. Peter himself, and able to teach him. But though we found just reason to celebrate these women by name, we meant not to stay upon that circumstance; we shut it up with this prayer, That that blessing which God gave to these Maries, which was, to know more of Christ, than their former teachers knew, he will also be pleased to give to the greatest of that name amongst us, That she may know more of Christ, than her first teachers knew. And we pass on, from the Names, to the Conditions of these women. And first we consider their sedulity; sedulity, that admits no intermission, no interruption, no discontinuance, Saeduls. no tepidity, no indifferency in religious offices. Consider we therefore their sedulity if we can. I say, if we can; because if a man should sit down at a Beehive, or at an Ant-hill, and determine to watch such an Ant, or such a Bee, in the working thereof, he would find that Bee, or that Ant so sedulous, so serious, so various, so concurrent with others, so contributory to others, as that he would quickly lose his marks, and his sight of that Ant, or that Bee; So if we fix our consideration upon these devout women, and the sedulity of their devotion, so as the several Evangelists present it unto us, we may easily lose our sight, and hardly know which was which, or, at what time she or she came to the Sepulchre. They came in the end of the Sabbath, as it begun to dawn, Mat. 28.1. towards the first day of the week, says S. Matthew; They came very early in the morning, upon the first day of the week, Mark 16.1. Luke 24.1. John 20.1. the Sun being then risen, says S. Mark; They prepared their Spices, and rested the Sabbath, and came early the next day, says S. Luke; They came the first day, when it was yet dark, says S. john. From Friday Evening, till Sunday morning they were sedulous, Ath●nas. busy upon this service; so sedulous, as that Athanasius thinks these women came four several times to the Sepulchre, and that the four Evangelists have relation to their four come; Hierome. and S. Hierome argues upon this seeming variety in the Evangelists, thus, Non mendacii signum, sed sedulae visitationis officium, This variety argues no uncertainty in the Evangelists, but testifies the sedulity of those women they speak of; Dum crebrò abeunt & recurrunt, says he, whilst they make many accesses, and returns, Nec patiuntur à Sepulchro diu, aut longiùs abesse, and cannot endure to be fare distant, or long absent from their devout exercise. Beloved, true devotion is a serious, a sedulous, an impatient thing. He that said in the Gospel, Luke 18.11. I fast twice a week, was but a Pharisee; He that can reckon his devout actions, is no better; He that can tell how often he hath thought upon God to day, hath not thought upon him often enough. It is S. Augustine's holy Circle, to pray, that we may hear Sermons profitably, and to hear Sermons that we learn to pray acceptably. Devotion is no Marginal note, no interlineary gloss, no Parenthesis that may be left out; It is no occasional thing, no conditional thing; I will go, if I like the Preacher, if the place, if the company, if the weather; but it is of the body of the Text, and lays upon us an Obligation of fervour and of continuance. This we have in this example of these, not only Evangelicall, but Euangelisticall (preaching) women; And thus much more, that as they were sedulous and diligent after, so they were early, and begun betimes; for, howsoever the Evangelists may seem to vary, in the point of time, when they came, they all agree they came early, which is another exaltation of Devotion. They were women of quality, and means. They came with Christ from Galilee, Mant. and they came upon their own charges; and more than so; for, says the text, Luke 8.3. They ministered to Christ of their substance. Women of quality may be up and ready early enough for God's service, if they will. If they be not, let them but seriously ask themselves that question, whether upon no other occasion, no entertainment, no visit, no letter to or from another, they could have made more haste; And if they find they could, I must say in that case, as Tertullian said, They have put God and that man into the balance, and weighed them together, and found God too light. That Mighty, that weighty, that ponderous God, that blasts a State with a breath, that melts a Church with a look, that molders a world with a touch, that God is weighed down with that man; That man, whose errand, if it be but conversation, is vanity, but, if it be sin, is nothing, weighs down God. The world will needs think one of these Maries, (Magdalen) to have been guilty of such entertainments as these, of Incontinency, and of that in the lowest (that is, the highest) kind, Prostitution; perchance she was; But, I would there were that necessity of thinking so, that because she was a Woman, and is called a sinner, therefore that must be her sin, as though they were capable of no other sin; Alas, it is not so. There may be women, whom even another sin, the sin of Pride, and overvaluation of themselves may have kept from that sin, and yet may well be called sinners too; There may be found women, whom only their scorn of others, hath kept honest, and yet are sinners, though not in that sin. But yet, even this woman; Marry Magdalen, be her sin what you will, came early to Christ; early, as soon as he afforded her any light. Christ says, in the person of Wisdom, I love them that love me, and they that seek me early, Prov. 8.17. shall find me; And a good soul will echo back that return of David, O God, thou art my God, Psal. 63.1. early will I seek thee; my soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh longeth for thee; and double that echo with Esay, With my soul have I desired thee in the night, with my spirit with in me, Esay 26.9. will I seek thee early. Now, what is this early seeking of God. First, there is a general rule given by Solomon, Eccles. 12.1. Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth; submit thyself to a religious discipline betimes. But then, in that there is a Now inserted into that rule of solomon's, (Remember Now thy Creator, in the days of thy youth,) there is an intimation, that there is a youth in our age, and an earliness acceptable to God, in every action; we seek him early, if we seek him at the beginning of every undertaking. If I awake at midnight, and embrace God in mine arms, that is, receive God into my thoughts, and pursue those meditations, by such a having had God in my company, I may have frustrated many tentations that would have attempted me, and perchance prevailed upon me, if I had been alone, for solitude is one of the devils scenes; and, I am afraid there are persons that sin oftener alone, then in company; but that man is not alone that hath God in his sight, in his thought. Thou preventedst me with the blessings of goodness, says David to God. Psal. 21.3. I come not early enough to God, if I stay till his blessings in a prosperous fortune prevent me, and lead me to God; I should come before that. The days of affliction have prevented me, job 30.27. says job. I come not early enough to God, if I stay till his Judgements prevent me, and whip me to him; I should come before that. But, if I prevent the night watches, Psal. 119.147. and the dawning of the morning, If in the morning my prayer prevent thee O God, Psal. 88.13. (which is a high expression of david's, That I should wake before God wakes, and even prevent his preventing grace, before it be declared in any outward act, that day) If before blessing or cross fall upon me, I surrender myself entirely unto thee, and say, Lord here I lie, make thou these sheets my sheets of penance, in inflicting a long sickness, or my winding sheet, in delivering me over to present death, Here I lie, make thou this bed mine Altar, and bind me to it in the cords of decrepitness, and bedridnesse, or throw me off of it into the grave and dust of expectation, Here I lie, do thou choose whether I shall see any to morrow in this world, or begin my eternal day, this night, Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done; when I seek God, merely for love of him, and his glory, without relation to his benefits or to his corrections, this is that early seeking, which we consider in those blessed Women, whose sedulity and earnestness, when they were come, and acceleration and earliness, in their coming, having already considered, pass we now to the Ad quid, to what purpose, and with what intention they came, for in that alone, there are divers exaltations of their devotion. In the first verse of this Chapter it is said, Ad quid. They came to see the Sepulchre; Even to see the Sepulchre was an act of love, and every act of love to Christ, is Devotion. There is a love that will make one kiss the case of a picture, though it be shut; There is a love that will melt one's bowels, if he do but pass over, or pass by the grave of his dead friend. But their end was not only to see the Sepulchre, but to see whether the Sepulchre were in such state, as that they might come to their end, which was, To embalm their Master's body. But this was done before; and done to their knowledge; for, that all the Evangelists testify; Luke 23.55. particularly, S. Luke, The women followed, and beheld the Sepulchre, and how the body was laid. How, that is, how abundantly it was embalmed by Nicodemus. How, that is, how decently and orderly it was wound and bound up, according to the manner of the Jews funerals. What then intended these women to do more than was done already? That cannot be well admitted, Theophy. Gen. 50.1. which Theophylact says, That as jacobs' body was embalmed forty days in Egypt, so they intended to re-embalme our Saviour's body, formerly embalmed by Nicodemus. For, that was only done upon such bodies as were exenterated and emboweled, and then filled up, and plastered about with spices and gums, to preserve them from putrefaction, when they were to be carried into remote parts; But of these re-embalmings and post-unctions after the body had been laid in the Sepulchre, I know not, who may have read of them; I have not. Neither seems it to have been possible in this case; not possible for these women to have come to the body of Chrrist. For, if that be the true winding sheet of Christ which is kept in Savoy, it appears, that that sheet stuck so close to his body, as that it did, and does still retain the dimensions of his body, and the impressions and signatures of every wound that he had received in his body. So that it would have been no easy matter for those women to have pulled off that sheet, if it had had no other glue, no other gum, but his own precious blood to hold it; Chiffletius de Linters Sepulchr. cap. 25. But, if (as their more wary Authors say) Christ's body were carried lose, in that sheet, which is showed in Savoy, from the Cross to the Sepulchre, and then taken out of that sheet, and embalmed by Nicodemus, and wrapped up in other linen, upon those spices and gums which he bestowed upon it, and then buried according to the manner of the jews, whose manner it was to swath the bodies of the dead, john 11.44. just as we swath the bodies of children, all over, (for, so Lazarus came out bound hand and foot with grave-cloathes) how could it fall into the imagination of these women, that they could come to embalm the body of Christ, so swathed, so wound, so bound up, as that body was; for, certainly, it was the body, and not the grave-cloathes that they meant to embalm. Truly I have often wondered, that amongst our very many Expositors of the Gospels, (which I can pronounce of some scores) no one hath touched upon this doubt. They all make good use of their piety, and devout officiousness towards their dead Master, but of the impossibility of coming to that body, and of the irregularity, and impertinency of undertaking that, and proceeding so far in that, which could not possibly be done, I find no mention. Chrysolog. What shall be said of this? That may be said, which Chrysologus says, (though not of this, for of this none says any thing) Saeva passionis procella turbaverat, That a bitter storm of passion and consternation, had so disordered them, as that no faculty of theirs performed the right function; Calvin And that which Calvin says, of the same case, which Chrysologus intends, Prae fervore caecutiebant, Vehemence and earnestness had discomposed them, amazed them, amuzed them so, as that they discerned nothing clearly, did nothing orderly. This, these, and some other Authors say, of some other inconsiderations in these Women, particularly, of the removing of the stone of the Sepulchre. For, they had prepared their gums, and they were come upon their way, before they ever thought of that. Mark 16.3. Then they stop, and say to one another, Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the Sepulchre; we never thought of that. So also did they fall under the rebuke and increpation of the Angel for another supine inconsideration; Luke 24.5. Mat 16.16. Acts 3.15. john 5.26. john 1.4. john 6.35. john 11.25. Quid quaeritis vivum? Why seek ye the living amongst the dead? Why him, who is The Son of the living God? Why him, who is The Prince of life? Why him, Who hath life in himself? Why him who is Life itself? Why him, who is The Bread of life to us? Why him, who is this life and the next too, (I am the life, and the Resurrection) Why him, who by his death hath made you a path of life, Psal. 16.11. (Thou wilt show me the path of life) Why seek ye the living among the dead? What makes you think of arming him with your gums against putrefaction, who had told you before, that he was not subject to putrefaction, but would rise again. So also in such another inconsideration we may deprehend one of these women, Marry Magdalen; when the Angel had told her at the Sepulchre, He is not here, for he is risin, as he said, yet when she came to Peter, she said nothing of the Resurrection, John 20.2 never thought of that, but poured herself out in that lamentation, Tulerunt Dominum, They have taken away the Lord out of the Sepulchre, & we know not where they have laid him; Whereas if she had considered it advisedly, she must necessarily have known from the Angel's words, that no man had taken away the Lord, that no man had laid him any where else, but that by his own power he was risen again. But as in this storm of passion they left Christ's promise, That he would rise, unconsidered, & left the rolling of the stone from the door of the Sepulchre, unconsidered, so in this storm they also left unconsidered the impossibility of coming to Christ's body to do that office; Their devotion was awake, their consideration was in a slumber. But what though? Did they therefore lose all benefit of their ploughs and devout intention? That is another, and our next Consideration. As Luther says, that if the marriage bed be kept undefiled, that is, Fructus bujus pietatis. from strange persons, and from such sins as are opposed against the very purpose of marriage, God pardons Maritales ineptias, some levitieses, and half-wantonnesses in married folks; so Calvin says of our present case, Deus non impat at, Because these good women were transported with a zealous piety towards Christ, God did not impure this in consideration unto them. For, though zeal without discretion produce ill effects, yet not so ill as discretion without zeal, worldly wisdom without Religion, for that is an evident preferring of thy worldly safety before the glory of God. When Moses makes that prayer to God in a holy fury and excess, Deal me, If thou wilt not forgive their sin, blot me I pray thee, Exod. 32.32. Rom. 5.3. out of the book thou hast written, (which was the excess of S. Paul too, in his Anathema; I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ, for my brethren) God proceeds not to any sharper rebuke toward Moses, than this. Take heed what you say in your inconsiderate prayer, you may sin in a prayer, and, Whosoever hath sinned against me, (says God there) him will I blot out of my book; yet it concerns but others, take heed you draw it not upon yourselves. And such a charitable interpretation it becomes us to give of those prayers for the dead, which we find in the ancient Fathers; August. Anrbros. In S. Augustine for his mother Monica, in S. Anbrose for his Master Theodosius; They prayed inconsiderately, and upon consideration they retracted their prayers; at least, gave such Expositions of them, as that then they were no prayers, but vehement, and indeed, exorbitant declarations of piety mixed with passion. And so beloved, behoves it thee to do in thine own behalf, if at any time having cast thyself into the posture of prayer, upon thy knees, and entered into thy prayer thou have found thyself withdrawn, transported, strayed into some deviations, and by-thoughts; Thou must not think all that devotion lost; much less, that prayer to be turned into sin; for, God, who hath put all thy tears into his Bottle, all thy words into his Register, all thy sighs into his bosom, will also spread that zeal with which thou enterdst into thy prayer, over thy whole prayer, and where that (thine own zeal) is too short, Christ Jesus himself will spread his prayer over thine, and say, Give him, O Father, that which he hath asked faithfully in my name, and, where he hath fallen into any deviations or negligences, Father forgive him, though he knew not what he said. In our case in hand, for all their inconsideration, their misgovernment, their mistaking, the Angel doth not forbear to comfort them; Nolite timere, says he, Do not ye fear. In illis perseveret pavor, in quibus permanet incredulitas, says S. Hierome, Hieron, in the person of this Angel to these women; I cannot blame ye, if ye fear; such unexpected changes, such violent earthquakes, such unnatural darknesses and eclipses, such renting of the Temple, such cleaving of grave-stones may well occasion fear in you, but recollect yourselves, In illis perseveret, Let them continue in fear, who continue in unbelief, and have no God to comfort themselves in. Cur vos pertimescitis, qui vestros concives videtis, (says S. Gregory also, in, and to the same persons) Let those mercenary soldiers, Greger who are hired to watch the Sepulchre, fear, and never recover, Cur vos, why should you fear, who see none but us, Concives, your fellow-Citizens, in the City, and service of God, if your conversation be in heaven, as it is, if ye do truly seek that Jesus, who is risen from hence, that he might go thither? And as though this comfort from the Angel were not enough, he multiplies this comfort in person unto them; he meets them, and says, Ver. 9 Avete, first salutes them, and then enlarges himself unto them; as long as the root of their actions was piety and zeal, he casts no cloud of discouragement upon them, Hieron. he occasions no jealousy or suspicion of his good purpose towards them, in them, but he maintains and exalts their holy confidence. Peccata non nocent, ubi non placent; Even our sins are forgiven, when we leave delighting in them; much more our inconsiderations, and mistake, when we recollect, and rectify ourselves. For, all this withholds not the Angel from proceeding to a farther establishment of these devout, though weak women, in other particulars arising out of the very words, Non est hic, He is not here, for he is risen. Non hic per praesentiam carnis, Non hic. qui, per praesentiam Majestatis nusquam abest; He is not here, Gregor. so as you thought to have found him here; so, as that you may anoint and embalm his body, he is not here: But, so as the secret sinner would wish him away, God is away no where. Job 24.15. Psal. 11.2. No adulterer that hath waited for the twilight, no whispering Calumniator that hath shot his arrow of slander In occulto, and wounded the righteous in secret, can say, Non est hic, God is not here, God sees not this. For even in the ways of death and hell (in all thy sinful courses) though God be a God of pure eyes and cannot behold evil, he sees thee. Psal. 139.8. He sees thee in thy way thither, and when thou shalt make thy bed in hell, that is, enter into that perpetual prison, there will he be, felt though not seen. But could the Angel intent this for a comfort to these women, Non est hic, He is not here? Alas, might these poor souls say, we see that well enough, He is not here, but, where is he? From this arises the occasion of theirs, and all our comfort, Surrexit enim, He is not here, for he is risen. First; Enim. this For, (for he is risen) this particle of argumentation, the Angel opposes prophetically, and by way of prevention, both against that heresy of Rome, That the body of Christ may be in divers places at once, by the way of Transubstantiation, and against that dream of the Ubiquetaries, That the body of Christ must necessarily be in all places at once, by communication of the divine Nature. For, if the Angel argue fairly, logically, sincerely, (He is not here, for he is risen) then there is no necessity, there is no possibility of this omni-presence, or this multi-presence, for then the Angel's argument might have been denied, and they might have replied, What though he be risen, he may be here too, for he may be in divers places; But the Angel concludes us in this for, He cannot be here, for he is risen; Because he is risen, he cannot be here in the Sepulchre, so, as that you may embalm his body, Because he is ascended, he cannot be here, here in the Sacrament, so, as you may break or eat that body. But is there such a comfort exhibited in this Surrexit, Surrexit. he is risen, as may recompense the discomfort that arises from the Non est hic, That he is not here? Abundantly, superabundantly there is; in these two channels and derivations of comfort; First, that he in whom we had placed our comfort, and our hope, is, by this his rising, declared to be the Son of God. Acts 13.33 God hath fulfilled his promise, in that he hath raised jesus from the dead, as it is written in the second Psalm, says S. Paul in his Sermon at Antioch. Now, what is written in that Psalm, which S. Paul citys there, to our present purpose? This; Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee. But is not this Hodie genui, This this days begetting intended rather of the eternal filiation & generation of the Son of God, then of this day's work, the Resurrection? Those words of that Psalm may well admit that interpretation, Hilar. and so many have taken them. But, with S. Hilary, most of the ancients have applied them to the Resurrection, as the application of S. Paul himself directly binds us to do, That the Hodie genui, This day's generation, is this day's manifestation that Christ was the Son of God. Calvin. Calvin enlarges it farther; That every declaration of the Son by the Father, is a generation of the Son: So his baptism, and the voice then, so his Transfiguration, and the voice then, Mat. 3.17. Mat. 17.3. were each of them, a Hodie genui, a generation of the Son that day. But especially (says Calvin) do those words of the Psalm belong to this day, because the Resurrection was the most evident actual declaration that Christ was the Son of God, Rom. 1.4. for, He was declared to be the Son of God by the Resurrection from the dead, says the Apostle expressly. But how? wherein was he declared? There were others that were raised from the dead by Prophets in the old Testament, by Christ and his Apostles in the new, and yet not thereby declared to be such Sons of God, Essential Sons; no nor any Sons of God, not Sons by adoption; for we are not sure that all those that were miraculously raised from the dead, were effectually saved at last. Therefore the comfort in our case is in that word of the Angel, Surrexit, He is risen; For so all our Translators, and Expositors do constantly carry it, not in a Suscitatus (as all the rest are) That he was raised, but in this Surrexit, He is risen, risen of himself. For so he testifies of himself, Destroy this Temple, and in three days Ego suscitabo, I will raise it up again; John 2.19 Not that the Father should, but that he would; so also, Ego pono, and Ego sumo, says Christ, I lay down, and I take again my soul; Not that it is given, or taken by another. John 10.17. Nyssen. And therefore Gregory Nyssen suspects, that for the infirmity of the then hearers, the Apostles thought it scarce safe, to express it often in that phrase, He risen, or He raised himself, and therefore, for the most part, return to the Suscitatus est, that He was raised, lest weak hearers might be scandalised with that, that a dead man had raised himself of his own power. And therefore the Angel in this place enlarges the comfort to these devout women, in a full measure, when he opens himself in that word Surrexit, He is risen, risen of himself. This then is one piece of our evidence, and the foundation of all, Nos. that we cannot be deceived, because he, in whom we trust, is, by this his own rising, declared to be the Son of God; And another, and a powerful comfort is this, Rom. 4.25. 2 Cor. 4.14. That he being risen for our justification, we are also risen in him. He that raised the Lord jesus, shall raise us up also by the same jesus. He shall; there is our assurance; but that is not all; for there is a con-resuscitavit, Ephes. 2.6. He hath quickened us together, and raised us together, and made us to sit together in heavenly places; not together with one another, but together with Christ. There is our comfort collected from this surrexit, He is risen, equivalent to the discomfort of the non est hîc, he is not here; That this his rising declares him to be the Son of God, who therefore can, and will, and to be that Jesus, an actual Redeemer, and therefore hath already raised us. To what? To that renovation, to that new creation, which is so excellently expressed by Severianus, as makes us sorry we have no more of his; Mutatur ordorerum, Severianus. The whole frame and course of nature is changed; Sepulchrum non mortuum, sed mortem devorat, The grave, (now, since Christ's Resurrection, and ours in him) does not bury the dead man, but death himself; My Bell tolls for death, and my Bell rings out for death, and not for me that die; for I live, even in death; but death dies in me, and hath no more power over me. I was crucified with Christ upon Friday, says Chrysologus, Et hodiè resurgo, Chrysologus. to day I risen with him again; Et gloria resurrection is sepelivit injuriam morientis, The ingloriousness of having been buried in the dust, is recompensed in the glory I rise to, Liber inter mortuos; that which David says, and, (by S. Augustine's application) of Christ, Psal. 88.5. August. is true of me too; Christ was, and I am Liber inter mortuos, free amongst the dead, undetainable in the state of death. For, says S. Peter, It was not possible he should be holden of it. Acts 2.24. Not possible for Christ, because of the prediction of so many Prophets, whose words had an infallibility in them; not possible especially, because of the Union of the Divine Nature: Not possible for me neither, because God hath afforded me the marks of his Election, and thereby made me partaker of the Divine Nature too. 2 Pet. 1.4. But yet these things might, perchance, not fall into the consideration of these women; They did not; but they might, they should have done; for, as the Angel tells them here, Christ had told them of this before; Sicut dixit, he is risen, as he said. Even the Angel himself refers himself to the word; Sicut dixit; Sicut dixit. The Angel himself desires not to be believed, but as he grounds himself upon the word, sicut dixit. Let therefore no Angel of the Church, not that super-Arch-angell of the Roman Church, proceed upon an ipse dixit, upon his own pectoral word, and determination, for the Angel here refers us to the sicut dixit, the former word. God will be content that we doubt, and suspend our assent to any revelation, if it do not concern some duty delivered in Scripture before; And to any miracle, if it do not conduce to the proof of some thing commanded in Scripture before. Sicut dixit, is an Angelical issue, As he said. But, how often soever Christ had spoken of this Resurrection to others, Vobie. these women might be ignorant of it. For, all that is said, even by Christ himself, is not said to all; nor is all, written for all, that is written by the Holy Ghost. No man must suspect that he knows not enough for salvation, if he understand not all places of Scripture. But yet these women could not well be ignorant of this, because being Disciples and followers of Christ, though Christ had never spoken of the Resurrection to them, they were likely to have heard of it from them, to whom Christ had spoken of it. It was Cleophas his question to Christ, (though he knew him not then to be so, when they went together to Emaus) Art thou only a stranger in jerusalem? that is, hast thou been at Jerusalem, and is this, Luke 24.16. The death of Christ, strange to thee? So may we say to any that professes Christianity; Art thou in the Christian Church, and is this, The Resurrection of Christ, strange to thee? Are there any amongst us, that thrust to Forenoons, and Afternoon's Sermons, that pant after high, and un-understandable Doctrines, of the secret purposes of God, and know not this, the fundamental points of Doctrine? Even these women's ignorance, though they were in the number of the Disciples of Christ, makes us afraid, that some such there may be; and therefore blessed be they that have set on foot that blessed way of Catechising, that after great professions, we may not be ignorant of small things. These things these women might have learned of others, who were to instruct them. Luke 24. ●●. But for their better assurance, the Angel tells them here, that Christ himself had told them of this before; Remember, says he, how Christ spoke to you whilst he was with you in Galilee. We observe, that Christ spoke to his Disciples, of his Resurrection, five times in the Gospel; Now, these women could not be present at any of the five but one, which was the third; Mat. 17.22. And, before that, it is evident that they had applied themselves to Christ, and ministered unto him. The Angel than remembers them, what Christ said to them there. Luke 24.6. It was this; The Son of man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and Crucified, and the third day, rise again; And they remembered his words, says the Text there; Then they remembered them, when they heard of them again; but not till then. Which gives me just occasion to note first the perverse tenderness, and the supercilious, and fastidious delicacy of those men, that can abide no repetitions, nor endure to hear any thing which they have heard before; when as even these things which Christ himself had preached to these women, in Galilee, had been lost, if this Angel had not preached them over again to them at Jerusalem; Remember how he spoke to you, says he to them. And why shouldst thou be loath to hear those things which thou hast heard before, when, till thou heardst them again, thou didst not know, that is, not consider that ever thou hadst heard them? So have we here also just occasion to note their impertinent curiosity, who though the sense be never so well observed, call every thing a salfification, if the place be not rightly cyphard, or the word exactly cited; and magnify one another for great Text men, though they understand no Text, because they cite Book, and Chapter, and Verse, and Words aright; whereas in this place, the Angel refers the women to Christ's words, and they remember that Christ spoke those words, and yet if we compare the places, Mat. 17.22. Luke 24.6. (that where Christ speaks the words, and that where the Angel repeats them) though the sense be entirely the same, yet the words are not altogether so. Thus the Angel erects them in the consternation; Remember what was promised, that in three days he would rise; The third day is come, and he is risen, as he said; and, that your senses may be exercised as well as your faith, Come and see the place, where the Lord lay. Even the Angel calls Christ Lord; Dominus Angeli. Heb. 1.6. and his Lord; for, the Lord, (and the Angel calls him so) is Lord of all, of men, and Angels. When God brings his Soninto the world, (says the Apostle) he says, let all the Angels of God worship him. And when God caries his Son out of the world, by the way of the Cross, they have just cause to worship him too, Col●●●. 1.20. for, By the blood of his Cross are all things reconciled to God, both things in earth, and things in heaven, Men and Angels. Therefore did an Angel minister to Christ before he was, Luke 1. Mat. 1. Luke 2. Mat. 4. Luke 22. Acts 1.10. in the Annunciation to his blessed Mother, that he should be; And an Angel to his imaginary Father joseph, before he was born; And a Choir of Angels to the Shepherds at his birth; An Angel after his tentation, And in his Agony, and Bloody-sweat, more Angels; Angels at his last step, at his Ascension, and here, at his Resurrection Angels minister unto him. The Angels of heaven acknowledged Christ to be their Lord. In the beginning some of the Angels would be Similes Altissimo, like to the most High; But what a transcendent, what a super-diabolicall, what a prae-Luciferian pride is his, that will be supra Altissimum, 2 Thes. 2.4. superior to God; That not only exalteth himself above all that is called God, (Kings are called Gods, and this Arch-Monarch exalts himself above all Kings) but above God literally, and in that wherein God hath especially manifested himself to be God, to us, that is in prescribing us a Law, how he will be obeyed; for, in dispensing with this Law, and adding to, and withdrawing from this law, he exalts himself above God, as our Lawgiver. And, (as it is also said there) He exalteth himself, and opposeth himself against God. There is no trusting of such neighbours, as are got above us in power. This man of sin hath made himself superior to God, and then, an enemy to God; for God is Truth, and he opposes him in that, for he is heresy and falsehood; and God is Love, and he opposes him in that, for he is envy, and hatred, and malice, and sedition, and invasion, and rebellion. The Angel confesses Christ to be The Lord, his Lord, Dominus mortuus. and he confesses him to be so then when he lay dead in the grave, Come, seethe place where the Lord lay. A West Indian King having been well wrought upon for his Conversion to the Christian Religion, and having digested the former Articles, when he came to that, He was crucified, dead, and buried, had no longer patience, but said, If your God be dead and buried, leave me to my old god, the Sun, for the Sun will not die. But if he would have proceeded to the Article of the Resurrection, he should have seen, that even then, when he lay dead, he was GOD still; Then, when he was no Man, he was GOD still; Nay, then when he was no man, he was God, and Man, in this true sense, That though the body and soul were divorced from one another, and that during that divorce, he were no man, (for it is the union of body and soul that makes a man) yet the Godhead was not divided from either of these constitutive parts of man, body or soul. Psal. 22.7. 1 Cor. 4.13. jer. 19.8. Even then, when a man is no man, he may be a Christian; when I am a worm and no man, when I am the offscouring of the world, when I am the reproach, the proverb, the hissing of men, yet, as my Saviour, when he lay in the grave, was the same Christ, so in this grave of oppression and persecution, I am the same Christian, as in my Baptism. Let nothing therefore that can fall upon thee, despoil thee of the dignity and constancy of a Christian; howsoever thou be severed from those things, which thou makest account do make thee up, severed from a wife by divorce, from a child by death, from goods by fire, or water, from an office by just, or by unjust displeasure, (which is the heavier but the happier case) yet never think thyself severed from thy Head Christ Jesus, nor from being a lively member of his body. job 30.29. Though thou be a brother of Dragons and a companion of Owls, Though thy Harp be turned into mourning, and thine Organ into the voice of them that weep, nay, Though the Lord kill thee, yet trust in him. job 13.15. Thy Saviour when he lay dead in the grave, was still the same Lord, Thou, when thou art enwrapped, and interred in confusion, art still the same Christian. To this meditation the Angel carries us, in keeping up Christ's style at the highest, then when he was at the lowest, And to some other particulars he carries these Women, in that which remains, Come and see the place. It is not nothing, certainly not merely nothing, Locus Sacer. that God does so often direct us to frequent his Sanctuary, and his holy places. Not nothing, that Solomon, into that Instrument which passed between God and him, for the Consecration of the Temple, inserted that Covenant, That not only they which came to that Temple, but they, 1 King. 8. who being necessarily absent, prayed towards the Temple, might be heard; which is, (not inconveniently) assigned for a reason of Ezechias his turning to the wall to pray, in his sick bed, Esay 38.2. Dan. 6.12. and of daniel's opening of his windows, when he prayed in his private chamber, because, in so doing, they looked towards Jerusalem, where the Temple was. When Naaman being recovered from his bodily leprosy, recovered from his spiritual leprosy too, and resolved to worship none but the true God, he was loath to worship the true God, 2 King. 5.17. in an unholy place, and therefore desired some of that earth to build an Altar upon. Pharaoh was come to be content that Moses and his people should sacrifice to their true God, Exod. 8.25. so they would sacrifice in Egypt; But, Moses durst not accept of those conditions. Pharaoh grew content that they should go out of Egypt to Sacrifice, so they would not go far, Ver. 28. but keep within his limits; but Moses durst not accept those conditions; nor any conditions less than those, in which God had determined him, which was, Exod. 3.18. To go three day's journey into the Wilderness. We know that God is alike in all places, but he does not work in all places alike; God works otherwise in the Church, then in an Army; and diversely in his divers Ordinances in the Church; God works otherwise in Prayer then in Preaching, and otherwise in the Sacraments then in either; and otherwise in the later, then in the first Sacrament. The power is the same, and the end is the same, but the way is not so. Athanasius, scarce three hundred years after Christ, found the Church in possession of that Custom (and he takes knowledge of it, A hanas. 9.37. as of a precept from the Apostles themselves) That the Congregation should pray towards the East, to testify (says that Father) their desire of returning to the Country, which they had lost, Paradise. Places of profane and secular use should not be made equal with holy places; nor should holy actions, and motions, and gestures, and positions of the body in divine service, be submitted to scorn and derision. They have their use; either in a real exaltation of Devotion, or for a peaceable conservation of uniformity, and decency, or for a reverential obedience to lawful Authority; and any of these is enough, to authorise things in their use, which in themselves and in their own nature are indifferent. And though the principal purpose of the Angel, in showing these women the place, were to assure them, that Christ was risen, yet may there also be an intimation of the help and assistance that we receive from holy places, in this their Ecce locus, Come, and see the place. But this is fare, Perogrinationes. very very far from that superstitious fixing of God to the freehold, which they have induced in the Roman Church, and upon which, they have super-induced their meritorious Pilgrimages to certain places. Consider a little the Pilgrimage of these Pilgrimages, how they have gone on. Innocent the third, in the Lateran Council, about four hundred years since, gave free pardon of all sins to all men, that went or contributed to the recovery of the holy land. Now these expeditions were not with any hope of recovering that land, but principally to carry the powerfullest persons, and the activest spirits into those remote parts, that so these parts might be left the more open to the Inundation of that Sea of Rome, and the invasions of that Bishop. After this, these Indulgences were enlarged, and communicated to all that went to Jerusalem, not only as Soldiers, but as Pilgrims. And, after that by Boniface the eighths' liberality the way was shortened, and they had as much that came but to Rome, as they that went to Jerusalem. As, a little before, by Clement the sixth, there was a power given to every man, that went such a Pilgrimage, to deliver four souls out of Purgatory, which he would, and a commandment given to the Angels of Heaven, to carry their souls that died in that Pilgrimage, immediately to Heaven, without touching upon Purgatory. These abuses made that learned and devout Man, Gerson. Gerson, the Chancellor of Paris, in his time, (as, let them deny it with what stiffness they will, nothing is more demonstrable, nor more evidently demonstrated, Then that in all times, some great men amongst themselves have opposed their Superstitions) This, I say, made Gerson say, (though he durst say no more) Abnegare non possumus, None of us all can deny, but that many things are induced upon colour of Religion, quorum sanctior esset omissio, which he shall be more holy that forbears, than he that performs them. In detestation of this local and stationary salvation of these meritorious pilgrimages to certain places, some of the blessed Fathers spoke much, long before they were come to that enormous abuse, in which the later times exceeded. S. Hierom had occasion to say much of it, by a solicitation from Polinus, Epist. 13. and he says this, Quanti hodieportant funera sua? How many men carry Sepulchers to the Sepulchre, when they carry themselves to Jerusalem? Non Hierosolymis vixisse, says he, To have lived well at Jerusalem is praiseworthy, but not to have lived there. Non audeo concludere, I dare not shut up that God, whom the Heavens cannot contain, in a corner of the earth; and Jerusalem is but so. Et de Britannia, & de Hierosolymis aequaliter patet aula coelestis, Heaven is as near England, (says S. Hierom) as it is to Jerusalem. And Christ, (says he) was then in Jerusalem, in that holy place, when he said, Abeamus hinc, john 14.31. Let us go from hence; as holy as the place was, he made haste out of it; for, (as that Father adds) it is a place full of mutinous Soldiers, of licentious prostitutes, of Players and Jesters; and these are the elements of the holiness of that place. Gregory Nyssen (in the same time with Hierom) had a particular occasion to deliver his opinion of these pilgrimages to Jerusalem; Nyssen. for he had been there himself, though not as a Pilgrim. Sunt aliqui, There are some that make it a part of Religion, to have been at Jerusalem, Sin praeter praeceptum Domini, But, says he, if Christ never commanded it, (that is his Rule) I know not what can justify that man, that makes himself the Rule of his Religion. Christ never called that, Blessedness, says he, to have been at Jerusalem, nor ever called this Jerusalem the way to Heaven; why any man should do so, when Christ did not, Qui mentem habet, consideret, (says that Father) Let him that is not distracted, consider. Nay, says he, there is not only no certain profit, but evident danger to a chaste soul, in the unchaste conversation of those Pilgrims, and he exemplifies, and particularizes wherein; but we forbear that. Shall I be asked then, why I went to Jerusalem? says that Father; I went into those parts out of necessity, says he, being called to a Council held in those parts; And, being so near, I was chosen as an Arbitrator between some Churches, which were then at variance, which differences were to be composed at Jerusalem, and so I went thither. Howsoever, let no man be encouraged to go thither for my being there, (for I was never the better Christian for having been there) but let every man think and believe me to be the more competent witness, and judge of the dangers, because I saw them. I believed that Christ was risen, before I saw the empty Sepulchre; And though (I thank God for it) I lost none of my faith at Jerusalem, yet I increased it not there. Si perversè vivas; live Christianly, or thou art as far from Christ in the Sepulchre, and from all benefit of his Resurrection, as they that were hired to watch the Sepulchre, and to seal the Sepulchre to prevent the Resurrection, or as if he that lay in the Sepulchre had never died. Chrysost. When we have remembered you of that which S. chrysostom (of the same time with Jerome and Nyssen) says, That there were some so vain, as to go to Arabia to kiss that dunghill where job sat to be visited by his impertinent friends, you have testimony enough, concurrence enough for the detestation of these hypocritical Pilgrimages, and the manifold superstitions that grow from this tree; and grew to a far greater inexcusableness, when all was transferred to Rome, where, both the Indulgences were larger, and the pestilent infections of the place more contagious then at Jerusalem. Now, to bind up our sheaf, and lay it so upon you, that you may easily carry it, Conclusio. you have seen, That women, though weak, are capable of religious offices; No understanding so weak, but it may believe, no body so weak, but it may do something in some calling. You have seen too, that these women were early in their religious work, they begun betimes; we have but one Parable that tells us, that they that came late to the labour were as well rewarded as the earliest. So have you also seen, that as they were early and forward, so were they earnest, and sedulous; Cursed be he that doth the work of God (that is, any godly work) negligently. You have likewise seen upon what their devotion was carried; upon things which could not entirely be done; yet God accepted their devotion; where the root and substance of the work is piety, God pretermits many times errors in circumstance. You have heard the Angel's information to them, Non hîc, that Christ was not there, and yet comfort in that; God raises comfort out of all things, even out of discomfort itself to the godly. You have heard the reason added, Quia surrexit, for he is risen; And if this be a good reason, there is no Transubstantiation, no Ubiquitisme, for then Christ might have been there, though he were risen. He is risen, not only raised, and therefore the Son of God; and risen for our Instification, therefore we are risen in him. And this, Sicut dixit, As he had said before; No word is certain, not in the mouth of an Angel, but as it is referred to the former word of God. And it is Sicut dixit vobis, As he had said to you; Though all Scriptures be not proposed to all, and Gods secret purposes proposed to none, yet the fundamental doctrines of the Christian faith are proposed to all, the weakest of all, These women had heard Christ. Him, this Angel calls The Lord, His Lord; How rebellious is that man of sin, that makes Christ his servant, and pretence of religion his instrument? He avows him to be the Lord, then when he lay dead in the grave; Be truly a Christian, and in the grave of persecution, in the grave of putrefaction thou shalt retain the same name, and even thy dust shall be Christian dust. And lastly, for the establishment of their comfort, the Angel directs them to consider the place, Ecce locus, not to incline them to superstitious pilgrimages, but yet to a holy reverence, and estimation of places consecrated to God's service. And if these Meditations have raised you from the bed of sin, in any holy purpose, this is one of your Resurrections, and you have kept your Easter-day well. To which, he, whose name is Amen, say Amen, our blessed Saviour Christ Jesus, in the power of his Father, and in the operation of his Spirit. SERMON XXVI. Preached upon Easter-day. 1 THES. 4.17. Then we which are alive, and remain, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air; and so shall we be ever with the Lord. IN this Epistle, our Apostle (according to his manner in all his Epistles) first establishes those to whom he writes, in those matters of faith, in which he had formerly instructed them; and then, rectifies them in matter of manners, of holiness of life, and the ways and fruits of sanctification. In this last part of this Chapter, he involves, he wraps up both together; a Fundamental point, the Resurrection of the dead, and then, an instruction for manners arising out of that, That they mourn not intemperately for the dead, as they do (saith he) which have no hope of seeing them again, who are gone. For we know, that they which are gone, are gone but into another room of the same house, (this world, and the next, do but make up God a house) they are gone but into another Pew of the same Church, (the Militant and the Triumphant do but make up God a Church.) Ver. 14. If we believe that jesus died, and risen again (says our Apostle) even so, them also, which sleep in jesus, will God bring with him: with him; For, howsoever they have lain ingloriously in the dust all this while, all this while they have been with God, and he shall bring them with him. But the Thessalonians were not so hard in believing the Resurrection, 1 Cor. 15.35. as curious in enquiring the order of the Resurrection. And as among the Corinthians some inquired de modo, How are the dead raised, and with what body do they come? So among the Thessalonians some inquired, de Ordine, in what order, for precedency, shall the last scene of this last act of man, be transacted? What difference between them that were dead thousands of years before, and them whom Christ shall find alive at his second coming? Them the Apostle satisfies; We that are alive, shall not prevent them that are asleep, we shall not enter into heaven before them; The dead in Christ shall first rise, says he; and then, (than enters our Text) Then we which are alive, and remain, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air, and so shall be ever with the Lord. Then. Divisie. When? This Then in our text, is an apprehensive, and a comprehensive word. It reaches to, and lays hold upon that which the Apostle says before the text, in the fifteenth and sixteenth verses. Then, when the dead in Christ are first risen, and risen by Christ's coming down from heaven, in clamore, in a shout, in the voice of the Archangel, and in the Trumpet of God, Then, when that is done, We that are alive, and remain, shall be wrought upon, and all being joined in one body, They, and we together, shall be caught up in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air, and so shall we be ever with the Lord. So that, in these words we shall have three things to consider, which will constitute three parts in this exercise. First, the raising of those that were dead before. Secondly, the changing of them who are alive then; And lastly, our union in our exaltation, and possession of the kingdom of God, We, together with them, shall be caught up. Neither of these three parts will be swallowed down in a generality; There must pass a Mastication, a re-division into more particular branches upon them all. For, in the first, which the first word of our Text, Then induces, which is the raising of them who were dead before, we shall consider first, That the dead are not forgotten, though they have dwelled long in the house of forgetfulness, nor lost, though they have lain long in the dust of dispersion, nor neglected, nor deferred, that others might be preferred before them, which shall be alive then, for, says the Apostle, We shall not prevent them, but they shall rise first; How shall they rise? For, that is also a second consideration, induced by our first word. Then, Then when they shall be raised in virtute Christi, in the power of Christ, for, says the Text, The Lord himself shall descend from heaven to raise them. And how shall he exercise, how shall he execute, and declare his power in their raising? It shall be In clamore, with a shout, and in the voice of the Archangel, and the Trumpet of God. And in these three Branches, That the dead shall rise first, That they shall rise in the power of Christ, That that power shall be thus expressed, In a shout, in the voice of the Archangel, in the Trumpet of God, we shall determine that first Part. When that is done, and done so, we shall be wrought upon, We that are alive and remain then; where we shall first see, that some shall be alive, and remain then, when Christ comes, And then consider their state and condition, how they being then clothed with bodies of corruption shall be capable of that present entrance into glory; and in that disquisition we shall end our second Part. And then, in our third and last part, The glorious Union of these two Armies, Those which were dead, and those which are alive, we shall consider first, That here is no mention at all, of any Resurrection of the wicked, but only of them that sleep in Christ; They shall rise; And then, those that are to partake of this glory, are thus proceeded with; They are caught up, Rapiuntur; Caught up in the Clouds, In Nubibus; Exalted into the Air, In Aera; There to meet the Lord, Obviam Domino; And so to be with the Lord for ever. We shall be, and be with the Lord, and be with the Lord for ever; which are blessed and glorious gradations, if we may have time to insist upon them; which we may best hope for this day of all others; for, this day, we have two days in one. This day both God's Sons arose; The Sun of his Firmament, and the Son of his bosom. And if one Sun do set upon us, the other will stay, as long as our devotion last. God went not from Abraham, till Abraham had no more to say; Gen. 18. ult. No more will Christ from us. First then, for our first Branch of our first part, the rising of the dead, 1 Part. the first man that was laid in the dust of the earth, Abel, loses nothing by lying so long there; He loses nothing, that men of later ages gain; For, if we live to the coming of Christ to Judgement, we shall not prevent them, we shall have no precedency of them, that were dead ages before. No man is superannuated in the grave, that he is too old to enter into heaven, where the Master of the house is The ancient of days. No man is bedrid with age in the grave, that he cannot rise. It is not with God, as it is with man; we do, but God does not forget the dead; and, as long as God is with them, they are with him. Psal. 56.9. As he puts all thy tears into his bottles, so he puts all the grains of thy dust into his Cabinet, and the winds that scatter, the waters that wash them away, carry them not out of his sight. He remembers that we are but dust; but dust then when we lie in the grave; Psal. 103.14. and yet he remembers us. But his memory goes farther than so, He remembers that we were but dust alive, at our best; They die, says David, and they return to their own dust. It is not an entering into a new state, when they die, but a returning to their old, They return to dust; Psal. 104.29. And it is not to that dust which is cast upon them, in the grave, (for that may be another man's dust) but to that dust which they carried about them in their bodies, They return, and to dust; and to their own dust. Nor is dust so inglorious a thing, but that God gives a dignity to dust, when he admits it into comparison to express the multiplication, the accumulation of his blessings upon Abraham, I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth; not for weakness, Gen. 13.16. but for infiniteness; And so, to the same purpose of expressing greatness, Balaam uses this Metaphor of dust, Who can count the dust of jacob, and the number of the fourth part of Israel? Numb. 23.10. Neither does Abraham think it any diminution to lie in the dust of the earth, when he is dead, for he professes that he walks in the dust of the earth, in himself, whilst he is aliye, Gen. 18.27. I have taken upon me to speak to the Lord being but dust. And when David seems to fear the dust of death, (lighten mine eyes, lest they sleep the sleep of death) it is not that he suspects any detriment to himself by death, that he shall be the worse by dying, Psal, 13.1. but that God may lose of his glory, when (as he adds there) the enemy shall say, we have prevailed against him. For, as in the Primitive Church, those that seem prayers for the dead, at Funerals, are, indeed, but thanksgivings to God, in their behalf that are departed; so, as often as David expresses himself in that Pathetical manner, Awake, O Lord, why sleepest thou? arise, Psal. 44.23. and cast us not off for ever, it is a thanksgiving that he hath not, and a prayer that he would not forget them. When he says, Will God be favourable no more? he means, Psal. 77.7. I am sure he will. Is his mercy clean gone for ever? Doth his promise fail for ever? Hath God forgot to be gracious? Hath he shut up his mercy in anger? All these imply a kind of confidence that he hath not. And, as it is in that Resurrection of which David speaks most literally in those places, (that is, The Resurrection from the calamities and oppressions of this world) so is it in the Resurrection from the dust of the grave too; Psal. 22.15. & 19 Thou hast brought me to the dust of the grave; but, be not thou fare from me; That is, when thou shalt bring me to the dust of the grave, thou wilt not be fare from me. And, when he says, (in appearance) by way of expostulation, Psal. 39.10. and jealousy, and suspicion, Will God show wonders to the dead? shall the dead arise and praise him? shall his loving kindness be declared in the grave, or his faishfulnesse in destruction? All these passionate interrogatories, and vehement expostulations may safely be resolved into these Doctrinal propositions, Yes, God will show wonders to the dead, The dead shall rise and praise him, His loving kindness shall be declared in the grave, Psal. 74.19. and his faithfulness in destruction. For, God will not forget the Congregation of his poor for ever. The poor of this world, are our poor; Gods poor are they that lie in the dust, the dust of the grave, the dead; of whom, God hath a greater Congregation under ground, then of the living upon the face of the earth; And, God will not forget the congregation of his poor for ever. Finitus est eorum pulvis; That which we translate, Their Extortioner is at an end, Esay 16.4. their Oppressor is at an end, is in S. Hierome, Their dust is at an end; that is, there comes a time, when the dust of the grave shall oppress them no longer. When? Truly, that time is virtually, and in an infallibility come already; as those other words of the same Prophet, may admit an accommodation in the person of Christ, Esay 26.19. Thy dead men shall live; When? Together with my dead body they shall rise. Consider, by occasion of those words, a promise, long before Christ's Resurrection, that all they which slept in Christ should rise in him, with my dead body they shall rise; And then consider the performance of this promise in the Apostle, Eph. 2.6. Consurrexerunt, together with Christ, all that slept in him, (nay, all that fell asleep since he waked, all that died since he risen) did arise. Virtually, and infallibly they did. And, for the actual accomplishment of this Resurrection in every individual person, they that were laid in the grave in the first ages, lose no time. For, there is no time of entering into heaven, till the Lord come to fetch us; And then, they that are dead, shall be so fare from being pretermitted, as that they shall first be raised before any thing be done upon us. But how shall they be raised, by what power? (for that is a second Consideration induced also by this first word of our Text, Then, when the Lord shall have descended from heaven to raise them; Then when they are raised, In virtute Christi, in the virtue and power of Christ. Then, In virtute Christi. Mat. 13.43. (says our blessed Saviour, speaking of the Resurrection) then, shall the righteous shine forth as the Sun; And wheresoever we are called the Sun, compared, assimilated to the Sun, Christ is our Zodiac; In him we move, from the beginning to the end of our Circle. And therefore, as the last point of our Circle, our resurrection determines in him, in Christ; so, the first point of our Circle, our first adoption began in him, in Christ too. And, if I were adopted in Christ, (in Christ who is a Redeemer of sinners) I was adopted in the condition, and in the consideration of a sinner, and such a sinner as should, as would lay hold upon this Christ, this Redeemer. Christ is the Resurrection; so Christ is the Adoption; If there be a Resurrection in him, there were some dead before; If there bean Adoption in him, there are some sinners before. The first look that God casts upon us, is in Christ, and therefore the first consideration that he takes of us, is, as we are sinners; He adopts none but penitent sinners, he reproves none but impenitent sinners. In him also the dead are raised; that is, in that power, which he was raised by, The power of God. For, still that phrase is ingeminated, iterated, multiplied, Suscitavit Deus, Mat. 28.6. suscitatus à Deo, God raised Christ from the dead, and Christ was raised from the dead by God. And when it is said by the Angel to the women, Surrexit, He is risen, (risen of himself, as the word sounds) And when by those two which went with Christ to Emaus, Luke 24.34. it is said at their return to Jerusalem, to the eleven Apostles, surrex it verè, He is risen indeed, (risen of himself, as the word sounds) yet that phrase and expression, He is risen, if there were no more in it, but that expression, and that phrase, would not conclude Christ's rising to have been in virtute propria, in his own power. For, of Dorcas who was raised from the dead, A●● 9. 4●. 〈◊〉 11. it is said, Resedit, she sat up, and of Lazarus, Prodiit, he came forth; and yet, these actions thus ascribed to themselves, were done in virtute aliena, in the power of another. Christ's Resurrection was not so, In virtute aliena, in the power of another, if you consider his whole person, God and Man, but it was aliena à filio Mariae; Christ as the Son of Mary risen not by his own power. It was by his own; but his own, because he was God, as well as man. Nor could all the Magic in the world have raised him sooner, than by that his power, (his, as God) he (that is, that person, God and man) was pleased to rise. So sits he now at the right hand of his Father in heaven; nor can all the Consecrations of the Roman Priests either remove him from thence, or multiply him to a bodily being any where else, till his time of coming to Judgement, come. Then, and not till then, The Lord himself shall descend from heaven, in clamore, says the Text, in a shout, with the voice of the Archangel, and with the Trumpet of God, which circumstances constitute our third, and last Branch of this first Part, The dead shall rise first, They shall rise in the power of Christ, (therefore Christ is God; for Christ himself risen in the power of God) and that power shall be thus declared, In a shout, in the voice of the Archangel, in the Trumpet of God. The dead hear not Thunder, nor feel they an Earth quake. In clamore. If the Canon batter that Church walls, in which they lie buried, it wakes not them, nor does it shake or affect them, if that dust, which they are, be thrown out, but yet there is a voice, which the dead shall hear; The dead shall hear, the voice of the Son of God, john 5.25. (says the Son of God himself) and they that hear shall live; And that is the voice of our Text. It is here called a clamour, a vociferation, a shout, and varied by our Translators, and Expositors, according to the origination of the word, to be clamour hortatorius, and suasorius, and jussorins, A voice that carries with it a penetration, (all shall hear it) and a persuasion, (all shall believe it, and be glad of it) and a power, a command, (all shall obey it.) Since that voice at the Creation, Fiat, Let there be a world, was never heard such a voice as this, Surgite mortui, Arise ye dead. That was spoken to that that was merely nothing, and this to them, who in themselves shall have no cooperation, no concurrence to the hearing or answering this voice. The power of this voice is exalted in that it is said to be the voice of the Archangel. In voce Archangeli. Though legions of Angels, millions of Angels shall be employed about the Resurrection, to recollect their scattered dust, and recompact their ruined bodies, yet those bodies so recompact, shall not be able to hear a voice. They shall be then but such bodies, as they were when they were laid down in the grave, when, though they were entire bodies, they could not hear the voice of the mourner. But this voice of the Archangel shall enable them to hear; The Archangel shall re-infuse the several souls into their bodies, and so they shall hear that voice, Surgite mortui, Arise ye that were dead, and they shall arise. And here we are eased of that disputation, whether there be many Archangels, or no, for, if there be but one, yet this in our text, is he, for, it is not said, In the voice of An Archangel, but of The Archangel; if not the Only, yet he who comprehends them all, Colos. 1.16. and in whom they all consist, Christ Jesus. And then, the power of this voice is exalted to the highest in the last word, that it is, Tuba Dei. Tuba Dei, The Trumpet of God. For, that is an Hebraisme, and in that language, it constitutes a superlative, to add the name of God to any thing. As in saul's case, when David surprised him, in his dead sleep, it is said, that Sopor Domini, 2 Sam. 26.12. The sleep of the Lord was upon him, that is, the heaviest, the deadest sleep that could be imagined, so here, The Trumpet of God is the loudest voice that we conceive God to speak in. All these pieces, that it is In clamore, In a cry, in a shout, that it is In the voice of the Archangel, that it is In the Trumpet of God, make up this Conclusion, That all Resurrections from the dead, must be from the voice of God, and from his loud voice; In clamore. It must be so, even in thy first Resurrection, thy resurrection from sin, by grace here; here, thou needest the voice of God, and his loud voice. And therefore, though thou think thou hear sometimes God's sibilations, (as the Prophet Zechary speaks) Gods soft and whispering voice, (in ward remorses of thine own; and motions of the Spirit of God to thy spirit) yet think not thy spiritual resurrection accomplished, till, in this place, thou hear his loud voice; Till thou hear Christ descending from Heaven, (as the text says) that is, working in his Church; Till thou hear him In clamore, in this cry, in this shout, in this voice of Penetration, of persuasion, of power, that is, till thou feel in thyself in this place a liquefaction, a colliquation, a melting of thy bowels under the commination of the Judgements of God upon thy sin, and the application of his mercy to thy Repentance. And then, In voce Archangeli. this thou must hear In voce Archangeli, In the voice of the Archangel. S. john in the beginning of the Revelation, calls every Governor of a Church an Angel. And much respect and reverence, much faith, and credit behoves it thee to give to thine Angel, to the Pastor of that Church, in which God hath given thee thy station; for, he is thine Angel, Mal. 2.7. thy Tutelar, thy guardian Angel. Men should seek the Law at the mouth of the Priest, says God in Malachi; (of that Priest that is set over him) For, the lips of the Priest, (of every Priest, to whom the souls of others are committed) should preserve knowledge, should be able to instruct and rectify his flock, Quia Angelus Domini Exercituum, because every such Priest is the Angel of the Lord of Hosts. Harken thou therefore, to that Angel, thine Angel. But here thou art directed above thine Angel to the Archangel. Acts 20.28. Ephes. 5.23. Now, not the governor of any particular Church, but he Who hath purchased the whole Church with his blood, He who only is head of the whole Church, Christ Jesus, is this Archangel; Hear him. It is the voice of the Archangel, (that is, the trne and sincere word of God) that must raise thee from the death of sin, to the life of grace. If therefore any Angel differ from the Archangel, and preach other than the true and sincere word of God, Gal. 1.8. Anathema, says the Apostle, let that Angel be accursed. And take thou heed of over-affecting, overvaluing the gifts of any man so, as that thou take the voice of an Angel, for the voice of the Archangel, any thing that that man says, for the word of God. Yet thou must hear this voice of the Archangel in the Trumpet of God. In Tuba Dei. The Trumpet of God is his loudest Instrument; and his loudest Instrument is his public Ordinance in the Church; Prayer, Preaching, and Sacraments; Hear him in these, In all these; come not to hear him in the Sermon alone, but come to him in Prayer, and in the Sacrament too. For, except the voice come in the Trumpet of God, (that is, in the public Ordinance of his Church) thou canst not know it to be the voice of the Archangel. Pretended services of God, in schismatical Conventicles, are not in the Trumpet of God, and therefore not the voice of the Archangel, and so, not the means ordained for thy spiritual resurrection. And, as our last resurrection from the grave, is rooted in the personal resurrection of Christ, 1 Cor. 15.17. (For, if Christ be not raised from the dead, we are yet in our sins, (says the Apostle) But why so? Because, to deliver us from sin, Christ was to destroy all our enemies; Now, the last enemy is Death; and last time that Death and Christ met, (upon the Cross) Death overcame him, and therefore, except he be risen from the power of Death, we are yet in our sins) as we root our last resurrection in the person of Christ, so do we our first resurrection in him, in his word, exhibited in his Ordinance, for, that is the voice of the Archangel in the Trumpet of God. And as the Apostle says here, Ver. 15. This we say unto you, by the word of the Lord, that thus the last resurrection shall be accomplished by Christ himself, so, this we say to you, by the Word of the Lord, (by the harmony of all the Scriptures) thus, and no other way, By the pure word of God, delivered and applied by his public Ordinance, by Hearing, and Believing, and Practising, under the Seals of the Church, the Sacraments, is your first resurrection from sin, by grace, accomplished. So have you then those three branches, which constitute our first part; That they that are dead before us, shall not be prevented by us, but they shall rise first; That they shall be raised by the power of Christ, that is, the power of God in Christ; That that power, working to their resurrection shall be declared in a mighty voice, the voice of the Archangel, in the Trumpet of God. And then, then when they who were formerly dead, are first raised, and raised by this Power, and this power thus declared, then shall we, we who shall be then alive and remain, be wrought upon; which is our second, and our next general part. When the Apostle says here, 2. Part. Nos. Nos qui vivimus, We that are alive, and remain, would he not be thought to speak this of himself, and the Thessalonians to whom he writes? Do not the words import that? That he, and they should live till Christ's coming to Judgement? Some certainly had taken him so; But he complains that he was mistaken; We beseech you brethren, 2 Thes. 2.2. be not soon shaken in mind, nor troubled, by word or letter, as from us, that the day of the Lord is at hand; so at hand, as that we determine it in our days, in our life. So that the Apostle speaks here, but Hypothetically; he does but put a case, That if it should be God's pleasure to continue them in the world, till the coming of his Son Christ Jesus, thus and thus they should be proceeded withal; for, thus and thus shall they be proceeded with, says he, that shall then be alive. Our blessed Saviour hath such a manner of speech, of an ambiguous sense, in S. Matthew, Mat. 16.28. That there were some standing there, that should not taste of death, till they saw the Son of man coming in his Kingdom. And this might give them just occasion to think, that that Kingdom into which the Judgement shall enter us, was at hand; For, the words which Christ spoke immediately before those, were evidently, undeniably spoken of that last, and everlasting kingdom of glory, The Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father, with his Angels, etc. Then follows, Some standing here shall live to see this. And yet Christ did not speak this of that last kingdom of glory; but either he spoke it of that manifestation of that kingdom which was showed to some of them, (to Peter, and james, and john) in the Transfiguration of Christ, (for the Transfiguration was a representation of the kingdom of glory) or else he spoke it of that inchoation of the kingdom of glory, which shined out in the kingdom of grace, which all the Apostles lived to see, in the personal coming of the Holy Ghost, and in his powerful working in the conversion of Nations in their life time. And this is an inexpressible comfort to us, That our blessed Saviour thus mingles his Kingdoms, that he makes the Kingdom of Grace, and the Kingdom of Glory, all one; the Church, and Heaven all one; and assures us, That if we see him In hoc speculo, in this his Glass, in his Ordinance, in his Kingdom of Grace, we have already begun to see him fancy ad faciem, face to face, in his Kingdom of Glory; If we see him Sicuti manifestatur, as he looks in his Word, and Sacraments, in his Kingdom of Grace, we have begun to see him, Sicuti est, As he is, in his Essence, in the Kingdom of Glory; And when we pray, Thy Kingdom come; and mean but the Kingdom of Grace, he gives us more than we ask, an inchoative comprehension of the Kingdom of Glory, in this life. This is his inexpressible mercy, that he mingles his Kingdoms, and where he gives one, gives both. So is there also a fair beam of comfort exhibited to us in this Text, That the number reserved for that Kingdom of Glory, is no small number. For though David said, The Lord looked down from heaven, and saw not one that did good, no not one, Psal. 14.2. (there it is less than a few) though when the times had better means to be better, when Christ preached personally upon the earth, when one Centurion had but replied to Christ, Sir, Mat. 8.10. you need not trouble yourself to go to my house, if you do but say the word here, my servant will be well, Christ said in his behalf, Verily I have not found so great faith, no not in Israel; When Christ makes so much of this single grain of Mustardseed, this little faith, as to prefer it before all the faith of Israel, surely faith went very low in Israel at that time, Nay, when Christ himself says, speaking of his last coming, after so many ages preaching of the Gospel, When the Son of man comes, shall he find faith upon earth, Luk. 18.8. any faith? We have I say, a blessed beam of comfort shining out of this text, that it is no small number that is reserved for that Kingdom; For, whether the Apostle speak this of himself and the Thessalonians, or of others, he speaks not as of a few, but that by Christ's having preached the narrowness of the way, and the straightness of the gate, our holy industry and endeavour is so much exalted, (which was Christ's principal end in taking those Metaphors of narrow ways, and straight gates, not to make any man suspect an impossibility of entering, but to be the more industrious and endeavorous in seeking it) that as he hath sent workmen in plenty, (abundant preaching) so he shall return a plentiful harvest, a glorious addition to his Kingdom, both of those which slept in him before, and of those which shall be then alive, fit, all together, to be caught up in the clouds to meet him, and be with him for ever; for these two armies imply no small number. Now, of the condition of these men, who shall be then alive, and how being clothed in bodies of corruption, they become capable of the glory of this text, in our first distribution, we proposed that for a particular consideration, and the other branch of this second part, and to that, in that order, we are come now. I scarce know a place of Scripture, more diversely read, Immutabimur. and consequently more variously interpreted then that place, which should most enlighten us, in this consideration presently under our hands; which is that place to the Corinthians, 1 Cor. 15.51. Non omnes dormiemus, We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed. The Apostle professes there to deliver us a mystery, (Behold, I show you a mystery) but Translators and Expositors have multiplied mystical clouds upon the words. S. chrysostom reads these words as we do, Chrysost. Non dormiemus, We shall not all sleep, but thereupon he argues, and concludes, that we shall not all die. The common reading of the ancients is contrary to that, Omnes dormiemus, sed non, etc. We shall all sleep, but we shall not all be changed. The vulgat Edition in the Roman Church differs from both, and as much from the original, as from either, Omnes resurgemus, We shall all rise again, but we shall not all be changed. S. Hierome examines the two readings, and then leaves the reader to his choice, as a thing indifferent. S. Augustine doth so too, and concludes aquè Catholicos esse, That they are as good Catholics that read it the one way, as the other. But howsoever, that which S. chrysostom collects upon his reading, may not be maintained. He reads as we do; and without all doubt aright, We shall not all sleep; But what then? Therefore shall we not all die? To sleep there, is to rest in the grave, to continue in the state of the dead, and so we shall not all sleep, not continue in the state of the dead. But yet, Statutum est, says the Apostle, Heb. 9.27. as verily as Christ was once offered to bear our sins, so verily is it appointed to every man once to die; Rom. 5.12. And, as verily as by one man, sin entered into the world, and death by sin, so verily death passed upon all men, for that all men have sinned; So the Apostle institutes the comparison, so he constitutes the doctrine, in those two places of Scripture, As verily as Christ died for all, all shall die, As verily as every man sins, every man shall die. In that change then, which we who are then alive, shall receive, (for though we shall not all sleep, we shall all be changed) we shall have a present dissolution of body and soul, and that is truly a death, and a present redintegration of the same body and the same soul, and that is truly a Resurrection; we shall die, and be alive again, before another could consider that we were dead; but yet this shall not be done in an absolute instant; some succession of time, though undiscernible there is. It shall be done In raptu, in a rapture; but even in a rapture there is a motion, a transition from one to another place. It shall be done says he, In ictuoculi, In the twinkling of an eye; But even in the twinkling of an eye, there is a shutting of the eyelids, and an opening of them again; Neither of these is done in an absolute instant, but requires some succession of time. The Apostle, in the Resurrection in our text, constitutes a Prius, something to be done first, and something after; first those that were dead in Christ shall rise first, and then, Then when that is done, after that, not all at once, we that are alive shall be wrought upon, we shall be changed, our change comes after their rising; so in our change there is a Prius too, first we shall be dissolved, (so we die) and then we shall be re-compact, (so we rise again) This is the difference, they that sleep in the grave, put off, and departed with the very substance of the body, it is no longer flesh, but dust, they that are changed at the last day, put off, and departed with, only the qualities of the body, as mortality and corruption; It is still the same body, without resolving into dust, but the first step that it makes, is into glory. Now transfer this to the spiritual Resurrection of thy soul by grace, here. Here, Grace works not that Resurrection upon thy soul, in an absolute instant. And therefore suspect not Gods gracious purpose upon thee, if thou be'st not presently, throughly recovered. God could have made all the world in one day, and so have come sooner to his Sabbath, his rest; but he wrought more, to give us an example of labour, and of patience, in attending his leisure in our second Creation, this Resurrection from sin, as we did in our first Creation, when we were not made till the sixth day. But remember too, that the last Resurrection, from death, is to be transacted quickly, speedily; And in thy first, thy spiritual Resurrection from sin, make haste. The last is to be done In raptu, in a rapture; Let this rapture in the first Resurrection be, to tear thyself from that company and conversation that leads thee into tentation. The last is to be done Inictu oculi, In the twinkling of an eye; Let that, in thy first Resurrection be, The shutting of thine eyes from looking upon things in things, upon creatures in creatures, upon beauty in that face that misleads thee, or upon honour in that place that possesses thee; And let the opening of thine eyes be, to look upon God in every object, to represent to thyself the beauty of his holiness, and the honour of his service in every action. And in this rapture, and in this twinkling of an eye, will thy Resurrection soon, though not suddenly, speedily, though not instantly be accomplished. And if God take thee out of the world, before thou think it throughly accomplished, yet he shall call thine inchoation, consummation, thine endeavour, performance, and thy desire, effect. For all God's works are entire, and done in him, at once, and perfect as soon as begun; And this spiritual Resurrection is his work, and therefore quickened even in the Conception, and borne even in the quickening, and grown up even in the birth, that is, perfected in the eyes of God, as soon as it is seriously intended in our heart. And farther we carry not your consideration upon those two Branches which constitute our second Part, That some shall be alive at Christ's coming, That they that are alive, shall receive such a change, as shall be a true death, and a true Resurrection, And so shall be caught up into the Clouds, to meet the Lord in the Air, and so be with the Lord for ever; which are the Circumstances of our third, and last Part. In this last part, we proposed it for the first Consideration, 3 Part. Resurrectio justorum. that the Apostle determines the Consideration of the Resurrection in those two, Them, and Us, They that slept in Christ, and We that expect the coming of Christ. Of any Resurrection of the wicked, here is no mention. Not that there is not one; but that the resurrection of the wicked conduced not to the Apostles purpose, which was to minister comfort in the loss of the dead, because they were to come again, and to meet the Lord, and to be with him for ever; whereas, in the Resurrection of the wicked, who are only to rise, that they may fall lower, there is no argument of comfort. And therefore our Saviour Christ determines his Commission in that, This is the Father's will that sent me, John 6.39. that of all which he hath given me, I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the last day. This was his not losing, if it were raised again; but, he hath only them in charge to raise at the last day, whom the Father had given him; given him so, as that they were to be with him for ever; for others he never mentions. And upon this, much, very much depends. For, Chiliasts. this forbearing to mention the resurrection of the wicked with the righteous, gave occasion to many in the Primitive Church, to imagine a twofold, a former and a later Resurrection; which was furthered by their mistaking of those words in S. john, Apoc. 20.6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection; which words, being intended of the Resurrection from sin, by grace, in this life, the Chiliasts, the Millenarians, interpreted of this Resurrection in our Text, That at Christ's coming, the righteous should rise, and live a thousand years, (as S. john says) in all temporal abundances, with Christ here, in recompense of those temporal calamities, and oppressions, which here they had suffered; and then, after those thousand years, so spent with Christ, in temporal abundances, should follow the resurrection of the wicked; and then the wicked, and the righteous should be disposed and distributed and settled in those Mansions, in which they should remain for ever. And of this error, (as very many of the Fathers persisted in it to the end) S. Augustine himself had a touch, and a tincture, at beginning. And this error, S. Hierome also, (though truly, I think, S. Hierome was never touched with it himself) out of a reverence to those many, and great men, that were, (Irenaeus, Tertullian, Lactantius, and the rest) would never call an Heresy, nor an Error, nor by any sharper name, than an opinion, which is no word of heavy detestation. And as those blessed Fathers of tender bowels, Pagani. enlarged themselves in this distribution, and apportioning the mercy of God, that it consisted best with the nature of his mercy, that as his Saints had suffered temporal calamities in this world, in this world they should be recompensed with temporal abundances, so did they enlarge this mercy farther, and carry it even to the Gentiles, to the Pagans that had no knowledge of Christ in any established Church. You shall not find a Trumegistus, a Numa Pompilius, a Plato, a Socrates, for whose salvation you shall not find some Father, or some Ancient and Reverend Author, an Advocate. In which liberality of God's mercy, those tender Fathers proceed partly upon that rule, That in Trismegistus, and in the rest, they find evident impressions, and testimonies, that they knew the Son of God, and knew the Trinity; and then, say they, why should not these good men, believing a Trinity, be saved? and partly they go upon that rule, which goes through so many of the Fathers, Facienti quod in se est, That to that man who does as much as he can, by the light of nature, God never denies grace; and then, say they, why should not these men that do so be saved? And, upon this ground, S. Dionyse, the Areopagite says, That from the beginning of the world, God hath called some men of all Nations, and of all sorts, by the ministry of Angels, though not by the ministry of the Church. To me, to whom God hath revealed his Son, in a Gospel, by a Church, there can be no way of salvation, but by applying that Son of God, by that Gospel, in that Church. Nor is there any other foundation for any, nor other name by which any can be saved, but the name of Jesus. But how this foundation is presented, and how this name of Jesus is notified to them, amongst whom there is no Gospel preached, no Church established, I am not curious in enquiring. I know God can be as merciful as those tender Fathers present him to be; and I would be as charitable as they are. And therefore humbly embracing that manifestation of his Son, which he hath afforded me, I leave God, to his unsearchable ways of working upon others, without farther inquisition. Neither did those tender Fathers then, Angeli lopsi in Coelis. (much less the School after) consist in carrying this overflowing, and inexhaustible mercy of God, upon his Saints, after their Resurrection, in temporal abundances, nor upon the Gentiles, who had no solemn, nor clear knowledge of Christ, Psal. 138.2. Psal. 17.7. (which is Magnificare misericordiam, to magnify, to extend, to stretch the mercy of God) but, Mirificant misericordiam, (as David also speaks) they stretch this mercy miraculously, for, they carry this mercy even to hell itself. For, first, for the Angels that fell in heaven, from the time that they committed their first sin, to the time that they were cast down into hell, they whom we call the more subtle part of the School, say, That In illa mo●● la, during that space, between their falling into their sin, and their expulsion from heaven, the Angels might have repent, and been restored, for, so long, say they, those Angels were but in statu viatorum, in the state and condition of persons, as yet upon their way, (as all men are, as long as they are alive) and not In termino, in their last, and determined station. And that which is so often cited out of Damascen, concerning the fall of Angels, Quod hominibus mors est, Angelis casus, That as death works upon man, and concludes him, and makes him impenitible for ever, so works the fall upon the Angels, and concludes them for ever too, they interpret to have been intended by Damascen, not of the Angels fall in heaven, but their fall from heaven; for, till then, they were not, say they, Intermino, in their last state, and, so, not impenitible. Apoc. 12.7. And those Ancients, which expound that battle in heaven, between Michael and the Dragon, and their several Angels, to have been fought at that time, after their fall, and between Lucifer's rebellion, and his expulsion, (as the Ancients abound much in that sense of that place) argue rationally, That that battle, (what kind of battle soever it were) must necessarily have spent some time. They conceive it to have been a battle of Disputation, of Argumentation, of Persuasion; and that those good Angels which are so glad of our Conversion, would have been infinitely glad to have reduced their rebellious brethren to their obedience. And, during that time, (which could not be a sudden instant) they were not Inadeptivi gratiae, Hiesolom. incapable of repentance, and of mercy. S. Cyril comes towards it, comes near it; nay, if it be well observed, goes beyond it; Of God's longanimity and patience toward man, (says he) we have in part spoken; Quanta ille Angelis condonaverit, nescimus; how great transgressions he hath forgiven in the Angels, we know not; only this we know, says he, Solus qui peccdre non possit Iesus est, There is none impeccable, none that cannot sin, Man nor Angel, but only Christ Jesus. Nay after the expulsion of the Angels, Angels lapsi in Infernum. not only after their fall in Heaven, but their fall from Heaven, many of the Ancients seem loath to exclude all ways of God's mercy, even from hell itself. De statu moti, sed non irremediabiliter moti, says Origen, The Angels are fallen, fallen even into hell, but not so irrecoverably fallen, Institutionibus bonorum Angelorum non possint restitui, But that by the counsel and labour of the good Angels, they may be restored again. Origen is thought to be single, singular in this doctrine, Eph. 3.10. but he is not. Even S. Ambrose, interpreting that place, That S. Paul says He was made a Minister of the Gospel, innotesceret, to the intent that the wisdom of God, might by the Church, be made known to Powers and Principalities, interprets it of fallen Angels; That they, the fallen Angels might receive benefit by the preaching of the Gospel in the Church. Prudentius says not so, but this he does say, That upon this day, when our blessed Saviour arose from hell, Poenarum celebres sub Styge feriae, And, Suppliciis mitibus, Ne forvent solito flumina sulphur, Some relaxation, some ease in their torments, at some time, some very good men have imagined, even in hell. And more than that; they have not absolutely cried down (for, so much it deserves) that fable of Traian; That after that Emperor had been some time in hell, yet, upon the prayers of Pope Gregory, he was removed to Heaven. 〈…〉 Nay, more than that; (for, that was but of one man) But, an Author of our age, and much esteemed in the Roman Church, delivers as his own opinion, (and thinks he hath the subtler part of the School on his side) That that, which is so often said, (from hell there is no redemption) is only to be understood of them, whom God sends to hell, as to their last place; to them, certainly there is no redemption. But, says he, God may send souls of the heathen, who had not the benefit of any Christian Church, and yet were good moral men, to burn out certain errors, or ignorances', or sins in hell, and then remove them to Heaven; for, for so long time, they are but Viatores, they are but in their way, and not concluded. Beloved, that we might have something in the balance to weigh down the curelty, and the petulancy, and the pertinacy of those men, who in these later times have so attenuated the mercy of God, as that they have almost brought it to nothing, (for there is no mercy where there is no misery, and they place all mercy to have been given at once, and that, before man was fallen into misery by sin, or before man was made) and have pronounced, that God never meant to show mercy to all them, nor but to a very few of them, to whom he pretended to offer it, that we might have something in the balance to weigh against these unmerciful men, I have stayed thus long upon these overmercifull men, that have carried mercy upon the Saints of God, in temporal abundances after the Resurrection, and upon the Heathen who never heard Gospel preached, and upon the Angels fallen in Heaven, and upon those Angels fallen from Heaven into hell, and upon the souls of men there, not only in the ease of their torments, but in their translation from thence to Heaven. That so our later men might see, that the Ancients thought God so far from beginning at Hate, (That God should first, for his glory, hate some, and then make them that he might execute his hate upon them) as that they thought god implacable, inexorable, irreconciliable to none; therefore to these unmerciful, have we opposed these overmercifull men. But yet, to them we must say, Numquid Deus indiget mendacio vestro, job 13.7. ut pro eo Ioquamini dolos? Shall we lie for God, or speak deceitfully for him? deceive your souls, with over-extending his mercy? we may derive mercy from hell, though we carry not mercy to hell. Gehenna non solum eorum, qui puniendi, causa facta, Origen. sed & eorum, qui salvandi; Hell was not only made for their sakes, who were to suffer in it, but for theirs, who were to be warned by it; and so there is mercy in hell. Cooperatur regno, says S. chrysostom, elegantly, Hell hath a co-operation with Heaven, Chrysost. It works upon us, in the advancement of our Salvation, as well as Heaven; Nec saevitiaeres est, sed misericordiae, Hell is not a monument of God's cruelty, but of his mercy, Et nisi fuisset intentata gehenna, in gehennam omnes cecidissemus, If we were not told of hell, we should all fall into hell; and, so there is mercy in hell. And therefore, says the same Father, Out of an unspeakable wisdom, and Fatherly care, (as Fathers will speak loudest to their Children, and look angerliest, and make the greatest rods, when they intent not the severest correction) Christus saepius gehennam comminatus est, quam regnum pollicitus, Christ in his Gospel, hath oftener threatened us with hell, then promised us Heaven. We are bound to praise God, says he, as much for driving Adam out of Paradise, as for placing him there, Et agere gratias tam progehenna, quam pro regno, And to give him thanks, as well for hell, as for Heaven. For, whether he cauterise or foment, whether he draw blood, or apply Cordials, he is the same Physician, and seeks but one end, (our spiritual health) by his divers ways. For us, who by this notification of hell, escape hell, Psal. 118.17. We shall not die, but live; that is, not die so, but that we shall live again; Therefore is death called a sleep, (Lazarus sleepeth, says Christ.) And Coemiteria are Dormitoria, john 11.11. Churchyards are our beds. And in those beds, (and in all other beds of death) (for, the dead have their beds in the Sea too, and sleep even in the restless motion thereof) the voice of the Archangel, and the Trumpet of God shall awake them that slept in Christ before, and they and we shall be united in one body; for, as our Apostle says here, Heb. 11.39. We shall not prevent them, so he says also, That they shall not be made perfect without us. Though we live to see Christ, we shall not prevent them, though they have attended Christ five thousand years in the grave, they shall not prevent us, but united in one body, Rapiemur, They and we shall be caught, etc. Rapiemur, We shall be caught up. This is a true Rapture, Rapiemur. in which we do nothing ourselves. Our last act towards Christ, is as our first; In the first act of our Conversion we do nothing; nothing in this last act, our Resurrection, but Rapimur, we are caught. In everything, the more there is left to ourselves, the worse it is done; that that God does entirely, is entirely good. S. Paul had a Rapture too; He was caught up into Paradise; 2 Cor. 12.4. but whether in the body, or out of the body, he cannot tell. We can tell, that this Rapture of ours, shall be in body and soul, in the whole man. Man is but a vapour; but a glorious, and a blessed vapour, when he is attracted, and caught up by this Sun, the Son of Man, the Son of God. O what a blessed alleviation possesses that man! and to what a blessed levity, (if without levity we may so speak) to what a cheerful lightness of spirit is he come, that comes newly from Confession, and with the seal of Absolution upon him! Then, when nothing troubles his conscience, then, when he hath disburdened his soul of all that lay heavy upon it, then, when if his Confessor should unjustly reveal it to any other, yet God will never speak of it more to his conscience, not upbraid him with it, not reproach him for it, what a blessed alleviation, what a holy cheerfulness of spirit is that man come to? How much more in the endowments which we shall receive in the Rapture of this text, where we do not only divest all sins past, (as in Confession) but all possibility of future sins; and put on, not only incorruption, but incorruptibleness; not only impeccancy, but impeccability. And, to be invested with this endowment, Rapiemur, We shall be caught up, and Rapiemur in Nubibus, We shall be caught up in the Clouds. We take a Sar to be the thickest, In Nubibus. and so the impurest, and ignoblest part of that sphere; and yet, by the illustration of the Sun, it becomes a glorious star. Clouds are but the beds, and wombs of distempered and malignant impressions, of vapours, and exhalations, and the furnaces of Lightnings and of Thunder; yet by the presence of Christ, and his employment, these clouds are made glorious Chariots to bring him and his Saints together. Psal. 135.7. Those Vapours and Clouds which David speaks of, S. Augustin interprets of the Ministers of the Church; that they are those Clouds. Those Ministers may have clouds in their understanding and knowledge, (some may be less learned than others) and clouds in their elocution & utterance, (some may have an unacceptable deliverance) and clouds in their aspect, and countenance, (some may have an unpleasing presence) and clouds in their respect and maintenance, (some may be oppressed in their fortunes) but still they are such clouds as are sent by Christ to bring thee up to him. And as the Children of Israel received direction and benefit, Exod. 13.21. as well by the Pillar of Cloud, as by the Pillar of Fire, so do the Children of God in the Church, as well by Preachers of inferior gifts, as by higher. In Nubibus; Christ does not come in a Chariot, and send Carts for us. Acts 1.11. He comes as he went; This same jesus, which is taken up from you into Heaven, shall so come, in like manner as ye have seen him go into Heaven, say the Angels at his Ascension. Luk. 24.50. In what manner did they see him go? He was taken up, and a Cloud received him out of their sight. So he went, so he shall return, so we shall be taken up, In the Clouds, to meet him in the Air. The Transfiguration of Christ was not acted upon so high a Scene, In aëra. as this our access to Christ shall be. That hill was not so high, nor so near to the Heaven of Heavens, as this region of the air shall be. Nor was the Transfiguration so eminent a manifestation of the glory of Christ, as this his coming in the air to Judgement shall be. And yet Peter that saw but that, Mat. 17.14. desired no more, but thought it happiness enough to be there, and there to fix their Tabernacles. But in this our meeting of Christ in the air, we shall see more than they saw in the Transfiguration, and yet be but in the way of seeing more, than we see in the air then; we shall be presently well, and yet improving. The King's presence makes a Village the Court; but he that hath service to do at Court, would be glad to find it in a lodgeable and convenient place. I can build a Church in my bosom; I can serve God in my heart, and never cloth my prayer in words. God is often said to hear, and answer in the Scriptures, when they to whom he speaks, have said nothing. I can build a Church at my bed's side; when I prostrate myself in humble prayer there, I do so. I can praise God cheerfully in my Chapel, cheerfully in my parish Church, as David says, Psal. 26.12. In Ecclesiis, plurally, In the Congregations, In every Congregation will I bless the Lord; But yet, I find the highest exaltations, and the noblest elevations of my devotion, Psal. 35.18. when I give thanks in the great Congregation, and praise him among much people, for, so me thinks, I come nearer and nearer to the Communion of Saints in Heaven. Apoc. 21.22. Where it is therefore said that there is no Temple, (I saw no Temple in Heaven) because all Heaven is a Temple, And because the Lord God Almighty, and the Lamb, (who fill all Heaven) are, Obviam Domino. (as S. john says there) the Temple thereof. So far towards that, as into the Air, this text carries us, Obviam Domino, To meet the Lord. The Lord requires no more, not so much at our hands, as he does for us. When he is come from the right hand of his Father in heaven, into the air to meet us, he is come farther than we are to go from the grave to meet him. But we have met the Lord in many a lower place; in many unclean actions have we met the Lord in our own hearts, and said to ourselves, Surely the Lord is here, and sees us, Gen. ●9. 9. and (with joseph) How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against my God? and yet have proceeded, gone forward in the accomplishment of that sin. But there it was Obviam jesu, Obviam Christo, We met a jesus, We met a Christ, a God of mercy, who forgave us those sins. Here in our text, it is Obviam Domino, We must meet the Lord; He invests here no other name but that; He hath laid aside his Christ, and his jesus, names of Mercy, and Redemption, and Salvation, and comes only in the name of power, The Lord, The Judge of quick and dead. In which Judgement he shows no mercy; All his mercy is exercised in this life; and he that hath not received his portion of that mercy before his death, shall never receive any. There he judges only by our works, Whom hast thou fed, whom hast thou clothed? Then in judgement we meet the Lord, the Lord of power, and the last time that ever we shall meet a jesus, a Christ, a God of mercy, is upon our deathbed; but there we shall meet him so, as that when we meet him in another name, The Lord, in the air, yet by the benefit of the former mercy received from jesus, We shall be with the Lord for ever. First Erimus, We shall Be, we shall have a Being. Erimus. There is nothing more contrary to God, and his proceed, than annihilation, to Be nothing, Do nothing, Think nothing. It is not so high a step, to raise the poor out of the dust, Psal. 113.7. and to lift the needy from the dunghill, and set him with Princes, To make a King of a Beggar is not so much, as to make a Worm of nothing. Whatsoever God hath made thee since, yet his greatest work upon thee, was, that he made thee; and howsoever he extend his bounty in preferring thee, yet his greatest largeness, is, in preserving thee in thy Being And therefore his own name of Majesty, is Jehovah, which denotes his Essence, his Being. And it is usefully moved, and safely resolved in the School, that the devil himself cannot deliberately wish himself nothing. Suddenly a man may wish himself nothing, because that seems to deliver him from the sense of his present misery; but deliberately he cannot; because whatsoever a man wishes, must be something better than he hath yet; and whatsoever is better, is not nothing. Nihil contrarium Deo, August. There is nothing truly contrary to God; To do nothing, is contrary to his working; but contrary to his nature, contrary to his Essence there is nothing. For whatsoever is any thing, even in that Being, and therefore because it is, hath a conformity to God, and an affinity with God, who is Being, Essence itself. In him we have our Being, says the Apostle. Act. 17.28. But here it is more than so; not only In illo, but Cum illo, not only In him, but With him, not only in his Providence, but in his Presence. The Hypocrite hath a Being, and, in God, but it is not with God, Cum illc. Esay 29.13. Qua cor long, With his lips he honours God, but removes his heart far from him. And God sends him after his heart, that he may keep him at that distance, (as S. Gregory reads and interprets that place of Esay) Redite praevaricatores ad cor, Return O sinners, follow your own heart, Esay 46.8. and then I am sure you and I shall never meet. Our Saviour Christ delivers this distance plainly, Discedite à me, Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire. Mat. 25.42. Where the first part of the sentence is incomparably the heaviest, the departing worse than the fire; the intenseness of that fire, the air of that brimstone, the anguish of that worm, the discord of that howling, and gnashing of teeth, is no comparable, no considerable part of the torment, in respect of the privation of the sight of God, the banishment from the presence of God, an absolute hopelessness, an utter impossibility of ever coming to that, which sustains the miserable in this world, that though I see no Sun here, I shall see the Son of God there. The Hypocrite shall not do so; we shall Be, and Be with him, and Be with him for ever; which is the last thing that doth fall under ours, or can fall under any consideration. Of S. Hierome, S. Augustine says, Quae Hicronymus neseivit, Semper. nullus hominum unquam seivit; That that S. Hierome knew not, no man ever knew. And S. Cyril, to whom S. Augustine said that, said also to S. Augustine, in magnifying of S. Hierome, That when a Catholic Priest disputed with an Heretic, and cited a passage of S. Hierome, and the Heretic said Hierome lied, instantly he was struck dumb; yet of this last and everlasting joy and glory of heaven, in the fruition of God, S. Hierome would adventure to say nothing, no not then, when he was devested of his mortal body, dead; for, as soon as he died at Bethlem, he came instantly to Hippo, S. Augustine's Bishopric, and though he told him, Hieronymi anima sum, I am the soul of that Hierome, to whom thou art now writing about the joys and glory of heaven, yet he said no more of that, but this, Quid quaeris brevi immittere vasculo totum mare? Canst thou hope to pour the whole Sea into a thimble, or to take the whole world into thy hand? And yet, that is easier, then to comprehend the joy and the glory of heaven in this life. Nor is there any thing, that makes this more incomprehensible, than this Semper in our text, the Eternity thereof, That we shall be with him for ever. For, this Eternity, this Everlastingness is not only incomprehensible to us in this life, but even in heaven we can never know it experimentally; and all knowledge in heaven is experimental; As all knowledge in this world is causal, (we know a thing, if we know the cause thereof) so the knowledge in heaven, is effectual, experimental, we know it, because we have found it to be so. The endowments of the blessed, (those which the School calls Dotes beatorum) are ordinarily delivered to be these three, Visio, Dilectio, Fruitio, The sight of God, the love of God, and the fruition, the enjoying, the possessing of God. Now, as no man can know what it is to see God in heaven, but by an experimental and actual seeing of him there, nor what it is to love God there, but by such an actual and experimental love of him, nor what it is to enjoy and possess God, but by an actual enjoying, and an experimental possessing of him, So can no man tell what the eternity, and everlastingness of all these, is, till he have passed through that eternity, and that everlastingness; and that he can never do; for, if it could be passed through, than it were not eternity. How barren a thing is Arithmetic? (and yet Arithmetic will tell you, how many single grains of sand, will fill this hollow Vault to the Firmament) How empty a thing is Rhetoric? (and yet Rherorique will make absent and remote things present to your understanding) How weak a thing is Poetry? (and yet Poetry is a counterfeit Creation, and makes things that are not, as though they were) How infirm, how impotent are all assistances, if they be put to express this Eternity? The best help that I can assign you, is, to use well Aeternum vestrum, your own Eternity; as S. Gregory calls our whole course of this life, Aeternum nostrum, our Eternity; Aequum est, ut qui in aeterno suo peccaverit, in aeterno Dei puniatur, says he; It is but justice, that he that hath sinned out his own Eternity, should suffer out God's Eternity. So, if you suffer out your own Eternity, in submitting yourselves to God, in the whole course of your life, in surrendering your will entirely to his, and glorifying of him in a constant patience, under all your tribulations, It is a righteous thing with God, (says our Apostle, in his other Epistle to these Thessalonians) To recompense tribulation to them that trouble you, 2 Thess. 1.6. and to you, that are troubled rest with us, says he there; with us, who shall be caught up in the Clouds, to meet the Lord in the Air, and so shall be with the Lord for ever. Amen. SERMON XXVII. Preached to the LL. upon Easter-day, at the Communion, The KING being then dangerously sick at Newmarket. PSAL. 89.47. What man is he that liveth, and shall not see death? AT first, God gave the judgement of death upon man, when he should transgress, absolutely, Morte morieris, Thou shalt surely die: The woman in her Dialogue with the Serpent, she mollifies it, Ne fortè moriamur, perchance, if we eat, we may die; and then the Devil is as peremptory on the other side, Nequaquam moriemini, do what you will, surely you shall not die; And now God in this Text comes to his reply, Quis est homo, shall they not die? Give me but one instance, but one exception to this rule, What man is he that liveth, and shall not see death? Let no man, no woman, no devil offer a Ne fortè, (perchance we may die) much less a Nequaquam, (surely we shall not die) except he be provided of an answer to this question, except he can give an instance against this general, except he can produce that man's name, and history, that hath lived, and shall not see death. We are all conceived in close Prison; in our Mother's wombs, we are close Prisoners all; when we are borne, we are borne but to the liberty of the house; Prisoners still, though within larger walls; and then all our life is but a going out to the place of Execution, to death. Now was there ever any man seen to sleep in the Cart, between Newgate, and Tyburn? between the Prison, and the place of Execution, does any man sleep? And we sleep all the way; from the womb to the grave we are never throughly awake; but pass on with such dreams, and imaginations as these, I may live as well, as another, and why should I die, rather than another? but awake, and tell me, says this Text, Quis homo? who is that other that thou talkest of? What man is he that liveth, and shall not see death? In these words, we shall first, for our general humiliation, consider the unanswerableness of this question, There is no man that lives, and shall not see death. Secondly, we shall see, how that modification of Eve may stand, fortè moriemur, how there may be a probable answer made to this question, that it is like enough, that there are some men that live, and shall not see death: And thirdly, we shall find that truly spoken, which the Devil spoke deceitfully then, we shall find the Nequaquam verified, we shall find a direct, and full answer to this question; we shall find a man that lives, and shall not see death, our Lord, and Saviour Christ Jesus, of whom both S. Augustine, and S. Hierome, do take this question to be principally asked, and this Text to be principally intended. Ask me this question then, of all the sons of men, generally guilty of original sin, Quis homo, and I am speechless, I can make no answer; Ask me this question of those men, which shall be alive upon earth at the last day, when Christ comes to judgement, Quis homo, and I can make a probable answer; fort moriemur, perchance they shall die; It is a problematical matter, and we say nothing too peremptorily. Ask me this question without relation to original sin, Quis homo, and then I will answer directly, fully, confidently, Ecce homo, there was a man that lived, and was not subject to death by the law, neither did he actually die so, but that he fulfilled the rest of this verse; Eruit animam de inferno, by his own power, he delivered his soul from the hand of the grave. From the first, this lesson rises, General doctrines must be generally delivered, All men must die: From the second, this lesson, Collateral, an unrevealed doctrines must be soberly delivered, How we shall be changed at the last day, we know not so clearly: From the third, this lesson arises, Conditional Doctrines must be conditionally delivered, If we be dead with him, we shall be raised with him. First then, 1. Part. Quis homo? for the generality, Those other degrees of punishment, which God inflicted upon Adam, and Eve, and in them upon us, were as absolutely, and illimitedly pronounced, as this of death, and yet we see, they are many ways extended, or contracted; To man it was said, In sudore vultus, In the sweat of thy brows, thou shalt eat thy bread, and how many men never sweat, till they sweat with eating? To the woman it was said, Thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee: and how many women have no desire to their husbands, how many overrule them? Hunger, and thirst, and weariness, and sickness are denounced upon all, and yet if you ask me Quis homo? What is that man that hungers and thirsts not, that labours not, that sickens not? I can tell you of many, that never felt any of these; but contract the question to that one of death, Quis homo? What man is he that shall not taste death? And I know none. Whether we consider the Summer Solstice, when the day is sixteen hours, and the night but eight, or the Winter Solstice, when the night is sixteen hours, and the day but eight, still all is but twenty four hours, and still the evening and morning make but a day: The Patriarches in the old Testament had their Summer day, long lives; we are in the Winter, short lived; but Quis homo? Which of them, or us come not to our night in death? If we consider violent deaths, casual deaths, it is almost a scornful thing to see, with what wantonness, and sportfulness, death plays with us; We have seen a man Canon proof in the time of War, and slain with his own Pistol in the time of peace: We have seen a man recovered after his drowning, and live to hang himself. But for that one kind of death, which is general, (though nothing be in truth more against nature then dissolution, and corruption, which is death) we are come to call that death, natural death, than which, indeed, nothing is more unnatural; The generality makes it natural; Moses says, that Man's age is seventy, Psal. 90.10. and eighty is labour and pain; and yet himself was more than eighty, and in a good state, and habitude when he said so. No length, no strength enables us to answer this Quis homo? What man? etc. Take a flat Map, a Globe in plano, and here is East, and there is West, as far asunder as two points can be put: but reduce this flat Map to roundness, which is the true form, and then East and West touch one another, and are all one: So consider man's life aright, to be a Circle, Pulvis es, & in pulverem rever●eris, Dust thou art, and to dust thou must return; Nudus egressus, Job 1. Nudus revertar, Naked I came, and naked I must go; In this, the circle, the two points meet, the womb and the grave are but one point, they make but one station, there is but a step from that to this. This brought in that custom amongst the Greek Emperors, that ever at the day of their Coronation, they were presented with several sorts of Marble, that they might then bespeak their Tomb. And this brought in that Custom into the Primitive Church, that they called the Martyr's days, wherein they suffered, Natalitia Martyrum, their birth days; birth, and death is all one. Their death was a birth to them into another life, into the glory of God; It ended one Circle, and created another; for immortality, and eternity is a Circle too; not a Circle where two points meet, but a Circle made at once; This life is a Circle, made with a Compass, that passes from point to point; That life is a Circle stamped with a print, an endless, and perfect Circle, as soon as it gins. Of this Circle, the Mathematician is our great and good God; The other Circle we make up ourselves; we bring the Cradle, and Grave together by a course of nature. Every man does; There Gheber, says the Original; It is not Ishe, which is the first name of man, in the Scriptures, and signifies nothing but a sound; a voice, a word, a Musical air dies, and evaporates, what wonder if man, that is but Ishe, a sound, die too? It is not Adam, which is another name of man, and signifies nothing but red earth; Let it be earth red with blood, (with that murder which we have done upon ourselves) let it be earth red with blushing, (so the word is used in the Original) with a conscience of our own infirmity, what wonder if man, that is but Adam, guilty of this self-murder in himself, guilty of this inborn frailty in himself, die too? It is not Enos, which is also a third name of man, and signifies nothing but a wretched and miserable creature; what wonder if man, that is but earth, that is a burden to his Neighbours, to his friends, to his kindred, to himself, to whom all others, and to whom himself desires death, what wonder if he die? But this question is framed upon none of these names; Not Ishe, not Adam, not Enos; but it is Mi Gheber, Quis vir; which is the word always signifying a man accomplished in all excellencies, a man accompanied with all advantages; fame, and good opinion justly conceived, keeps him from being Ishe, a mere sound, standing only upon popular acclamation; Innocency and integrity keeps him from being Adam, red earth, from bleeding, or blushing at any thing he hath done; That holy and Religious Art of Arts, which S. Paul professed, That he knew how to want, and how to abound, keeps him from being Enos, miserable or wretched in any fortune; He is Gheber, a great Man, and a good Man, a happy Man, and a holy Man, and yet There Gheber, Quis homo, this man must see death. And therefore we will carry this question a little higher, from Quis homo, to Quis deorum, Which of the gods have not seen death? Ask it of those, who are Gods by participation of God's power, of those of whom God says, Ego dixi, dii est is, and God answers for them, and of them, and to them, You shall die like men; Ask it of those gods, who are gods by imputation, whom Creatures have created, whom Men have made gods, the gods of the Heathen, and do we not know, where all these gods died? Sometimes divers places dispute, who hath their tombs; but do not they deny their godhead in confessing their tombs? do they not all answer, that they cannot answer this text, There Gheber, Quis homo, What man, Quis deorum, What god of man's making hath not seen death? As justin martyr asks that question, Why should I pray to Apollo or Esculapius for health, Qui apud Chironem medicinam didicerunt, when I know who taught them all that they knew? so why should I look for Immortality from such or such a god, whose grave I find for a witness, that he himself is dead? Nay, carry this question higher than so, from this Quis homo, to quid homo, what is there in the nature and essence of Man, free from death? The whole man is not, for the dissolution of body and soul is death. The body is not; I shall as soon find an immortal Rose, an eternal Flower, as an immortal body. And for the Immortality of the Soul, It is safelier said to be immortal, by preservation, then immortal by nature; That God keeps it from dying, then, that it cannot die. We magnify God in an humble and faithful acknowledgement of the immortality of our souls, but if we ask, quid homo, what is there in the nature of Man, that should keep him from death, even in that point, the question is not easily answered. It is every man's case then; every man dies; Videbit. and though it may perchance be but a mere Hebraisme to say, that every man shall see death, perchance it amounts to no more, but to that phrase, Gustare mortem, To taste death, yet thus much may be implied in it too, That as every man must die, so every man may see, that he must die; as it cannot be avoided, so it may be understood. A beast dies, but he does not see death; S. Basil says, he saw an Ox weep for the death of his yoke-fellow; Basil orat. de Morte. but S. Basil might mistake the occasion of that Ox's tears. Many men die too, and yet do not see death; The approaches of death amaze them, and stupefy them; they feel no colluctation with Powers, and Principalities, upon their death bed; that is true; they feel no terrors in their consciences, no apprehensions of Judgement, upon their death bed; that is true; and this we call going away like a Lamb. But the Lamb of God had a sorrowful sense of death; His soul was heavy unto death, and he had an apprehension, that his Father had forsaken him; And in this text, the Chalde Paraphrase expresses it thus, Videbit Angelum mortis, he shall see a Messenger, a forerunner, a power of Death, an executioner of Death, he shall see something with horror, though not such as shall shake his moral, or his Christian constancy. So that this Videbunt, They shall see, implies also a Viderunt, they have seen, that is, they have used to see death, to observe a death in the decay of themselves, and of every creature, and of the whole World. Almost fourteen hundred years ago, Cyprian ad Demetrianum. S. Cyprian writing against Demetrianus, who imputed all the wars, and deaths, and unseasonablenesses of that time, to the contempt, and irreligion of the Christians, that they were the cause of all those ills, because they would not worship their Gods, Cyprian imputes all those distempers to the age of the whole World; Canos videmus in pueris, says he, We see Children borne gray-headed; Capilli deficiunt, antequam crescant, Their hair is changed, before it be grown. Nec aetas in senectute desinit, sed incipit asenectute, We do not die with age, but we are borne old. Many of us have seen Death in our particular selves; in many of those steps, in which the moral Man expresses it; Seneca. We have seen Mortem infantiae, pueritiam, The death of infancy in youth; and Pueritiae, adolescentiam, and the death of youth in our middle age; And at last we shall see Mortem senectutis, mortem ipsam, the death of age in death itself. But yet after that, a step farther than that Moral man went, Mortem mortis in morte jesu, We shall see the death of Death itself in the death of Christ. As we could not be clothed at first, in Paradise, till some Creatures were dead, (for we were clothed in beasts skins) so we cannot be clothed in Heaven, but in his garment who died for us. This Videbunt, this future sight of Death implies a viderunt, they have seen, they have studied Death in every Book, in every Creature; and it implies a Vident, they do presently see death in every object, They see the hourglass running to the death of the hour; They see the death of some profane thoughts in themselves, by the entrance of some Religious thought of compunction, and conversion to God; and then they see the death of that Religious thought, by an inundation of new profane thoughts, that overflow those. As Christ says, that as often as we eat the Sacramental Bread, we should remember his Death, so as often, as we eat ordinary bread, we may remember our death; Bern. Aug. for even hunger and thirst, are diseases; they are Mors quotidiana, a daily death, and if they lasted long, would kill us. In every object and subject, we all have, and do, and shall see death; not to our comfort as an end of misery, not only as such a misery in itself, as the Philosopher takes it to be, Mors omnium miseriarum, That Death is the death of all misery, because it destroys and dissolves our being; Prov. 16.14. but as it is Stipendium peccati, The reward of sin; That as Solomon says, Indignatio Regis nuncius mortis, The wrath of the King, is as a messenger of Death, so Mors nuncius indignationis Regis, We see in Death a testimony, that our Heavenly King is angry; for, but for his indignation against our sins, we should not die. And this death, as it is Malum, ill, (for if ye weigh it in the Philosopher's balance; it is an annihilation of our present being, and if ye weigh it in the Divine Balance, it is a seal of God's anger against sin) so this death is general; of this, this question there is no answer, Quis homo, What man, etc. We pass then from the Morte moriemini, 2 Part. to the fortè moriemini, from the generality and the unescapablenesse of death, from this question, as it admits no answer, to the Fortè moriemini, perchance we shall die; that is, to the question as it may admit a probable answer. Of which, we said at first, that in such questions, nothing becomes a Christian better then sobriety; to make a true difference between problematical, and dogmatic points, between upper buildings, and foundations, between collateral doctrines, and Doctrines in the right line: Aug. for fundamental things, Sine haesitatione credantur, They must be believed without disputing; there is no more to be done for them, but believing; for things that are not so, we are to weigh them in two balances, in the balance of Analogy, and in the balance of scandal: we must hold them so, as may be analogal, proportionable, agreeable to the Articles of our Faith, and we must hold them so, as our brother be not justly offended, nor scandalised by them; we must weigh them with faith, for our own strength, and we must weigh them with charity, for others weakness. Certainly nothing endangers a Church more, then to draw indifferent things to be necessary; I mean of a primary necessity, of a necessity to be believed De fide, not a secondary necessity, a necessity to be performed and practised for obedience: Without doubt, the Roman Church reputes now, and sees now that she should better have preserved herself, if they had not denied so many particular things, which were indifferently and problematically disputed before, to be had necessarily De fide, in the Council of Trent. Taking then this Text for a problem, Quis homo, What man lives, and shall not see Death? we answer, It may be that those Men, whom Christ shall find upon the earth alive, at his return to Judge the World, shall die then, and it may be they shall but be changed, and not die. That Christ shall judge quick and dead, is a fundamental thing; we hear it in S. Peter's Sermon, Acts 10.42. to Cornelius and his company, and we say it every day in the Creed, He shall judge the quick and the dead. But though we do not take the quick and the dead, August. Chrys. as Augustine and chrysostom do, for the Righteous which lived in faith, and the unrighteous, which were dead in sin, Though we do not take the quick and the dead, as Ruffinus and others do, for the soul and the body, (He shall judge the soul, which was always alive, and he shall the body, which was dead for a time) though we take the words (as becomes us best) literally, yet the letter does not conclude, but that they, whom Christ shall find alive upon earth, shall have a present and sudden dissolution, and a present and sudden reunion of body and soul again. Saint Paul says, Behold I show you a mystery; Therefore it is not a clear case, and presently, 1 Cor. 15.51. and peremptorily determined; but what is it? We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed. But whether this sleeping be spoke of death itself, and exclude that, that we shall not die, or whether this sleep be spoke of a rest in the grave, and exclude that, we shall not be buried, and remain in death, that may be a mystery still. S. Paul says too, 1 Thes. 4.17. The dead in Christ shall rise first; Then we which are alive, and remain, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air. But whether that may not still be true, that S. Augustine says, that there shall be Mors in raptu, August. An instant and sudden dis-union, and reunion of body and soul, which is death, who can tell? So on the other side, when it is said to him, in whom all we were, to Adam, Pulvis es, Dust thou art, Gen. 3.19. 1 Cor. 15.22. Rom. 5.12. and into dust thou shalt return, when it is said, In Adam all die, when it is said, Death passed upon all men, for all have sinned, Why may not all those sentences of Scripture, which imply a necessity of dying, admit that restriction, Nisi dies judicii naturae cursum immutet, Pet. Mar. We shall all die, except those, in whom the coming of Christ shall change the course of Nature. Consider the Scriptures then, and we shall be absolutely concluded neither way; Consider Authority, and we shall find the Fatherrs for the most part one way, and the School for the most part another; Take later men, and all those in the Roman Church; Then Cajetan thinks, that they shall not die, and Catharin is so peremptory, Cajetan. Catharinus. that they shall, as that he says of the other opinion, Falsam esse confidenter asserimus, & contra Scripturas sat is manifestas, & omnino sine ratione; It is false, and against Scriptures, and reason, saith he; Take later men, and all those in the reformed Church; Calvin. and Calvin says, Quia aboletur prior natura, censetur species mortis, sed non migrabit anima à corpore: S. Paul calls it death, because it is a destruction of the former Being; but it is not truly death, saith Calvin; and Luther saith, Luther. That S. Paul's purpose in that place is only to show the suddenness of Christ's coming to Judgement, Non autem inficiatur omnes morituros; nam dormire, est sepeliri: But S. Paul doth not deny, but that all shall die; for that sleeping which he speaks of, is burial; and all shall die, though all shall not be buried, saith Luther. Take then that which is certain; It is certain, a judgement thou must pass: If thy close and cautelous proceeding have saved thee from all informations in the Exchequer, thy clearness of thy title from all Courts at Common Law, thy moderation from the Chancery, and Star-Chamber, If height of thy place, and Authority, have saved thee, even from the tongues of men, so that ill men dare not slander thy actions, nor good men dare not discover thy actions, no not to thyself, All those judgements, and all the judgements of the world, are but interlocutory judgements; There is a final judgement, In judicantes & judicatos, against Prisoners and Judges too, where all shallbe judged again; Datum est omne judicium, All judgement is given to the Son of man, John 5. and upon all the sons of men must his judgement pass. A judgement is certain, and the uncertainty of this judgement is certain too; perchance God will put off thy judgement; thou shalt not die yet; but who knows whether God in his mercy, do put off this judgement, till these good motions which his blessed Spirit inspires into thee now, may take root, and receive growth, and bring forth fruit, or whether he put it off, for a heavier judgement, to let thee see, by thy departing from these good motions, and returning to thy former sins, after a remorse conceived against those sins, that thou art inexcusable even to thyself, and thy condemnation is just, even to thine own conscience. So perchance God will bring this judgement upon thee now; now thou mayst die; but whether God will bring that judgement upon thee now, in mercy, whilst his Graces, in his Ordinance of preaching, work some tenderness in thee, and gives thee some preparation, some fitness, some courage to say, Veni Domine jesu, Come Lord jesus, come quickly, come now, or whether he will come now in judgement, because all this can work no tenderness in thee, who can tell? Thou hearest the word of God preached, as thou hearest an Oration, with some gladness in thyself, if thou canst hear him, and never be moved by his Oratory; thou thinkest it a degree of wisdom, to be above persuasion; and when thou art told, that he that fears God, fears nothing else, thou thinkest thyself more valiant than so, if thou fear not God neither; Whether or why God defers, or hastens the judgement, we know not; This is certain, this all S. Paul's places collineate to, this all the Fathers, and all the School, all the Cajetans, and all the Catherine's, all the Luther's, and all the Calvins agree in, A judgement must be, and it must be In ictu oculi, In the twinkling of an eye, and Fur in nocte, A thief in the night. Make the question, Quis homo? What man is he that liveth, and shall not pass this judgement? or, what man is he that liveth, and knows when this judgement shall be? So it is a Nemo scit, A question without an answer; but ask it, as in the text, Quis homo? Who liveth, and shall not die? so it is a problematical matter; and in such things as are problematical, if thou love the peace of Zion, be not too inquisitive to know, nor too vehement, when thou thinkest thou dost know it. Come then to ask this question, 3. Part. not problematically, (as it is contracted to them that shall live in the last days) nor peremptorily of man, (as he is subject to original sin) but at large, so, as the question may include Christ himself, and then to that Quis homo? What man is he? We answer directly, here is the man that shall not see death; And of him principally, August. and literally, S. Augustine (as we said before) takes this question to be framed; quaeras, dictum, non ut desperes, saith he, this question is moved, to move thee to seek out, and to have thy recourse to that man which is the Lord of Life, not to make thee despair, that there is no such man, in whose self, and in whom, for all us, there is Redemption from death: For, says he, this question is an exception to that which was said before the text; which is, Wherefore hast thou made all men in vain? Consider it better, says the Holy Ghost, here, and it will not prove so; Man is not made in vain at first, though he do die now; for, Perditio tua ex te, This death proceeds from man himself; and Quare moriemini domus Israel? Why will ye die, o house of Israel? God made not death, ●ap. 1.13. neither hath he pleasure in the destruction of the living; The Wise man says it, and the true God swears it, As I live saith the Lord, I would not the death of a sinner. God did not create man in vain then, though he die; not in vain, for since he will needs die, God receives glory even by his death, in the execution of his justice; not in vain neither, because though he be dead, God hath provided him a Redeemer from death, in his mercy; Man is not created in vain at all; nor all men, so near vanity as to die; for here is one man, God and Man Christ Jesus, which liveth, and shall not see death. And conformable to S. Augustine's purpose, 〈◊〉 speaks S. Hierome too, Scio quòd nullus homo carneus evadet, sed novi Deum sub velamento carnis latentem; I know there is no man but shall die; but I know where there is a God clothed in man's flesh, and that person cannot die. But did not Christ die then? Shall we join with any of those Heretics, which brought Christ upon the stage to play a part, and say he was born, or lived, or died, In phantasmate, In appearance only, and representation; God forbidden; so all men were created in vain indeed, if we had not a regeneration in his true death. Where is the contract between him, and his Father, that Oportuit pati, All this Christ ought to suffer, and so enter into glory: Is that contract void, and of none effect? Must he not die? Where is the ratification of that contract in all the Prophets? 〈◊〉 53.4.9. Where is Esays Verè languores nostros tulit, Surely he hath born our sorrows; and, he made his grave with the wicked in his death; Is the ratification of the Prophets canceled? Shall he not, must he not die? Where is the consummation, and the testification of all this? Where is the Gospel, Consummatum est? And he bowed his head, and gave up the ghost? Is that fabulous? Did he not die? How stands the validity of that contract, Christ must die; the dignity of those Prophecies, Christ will die; the truth of the Gospel, Christ did die, with this answer to this question, Here is a man that liveth and shall not see death? Very well; For though Christ Jesus did truly die, so as was contracted, so as was prophesied, so as was related, yet he did not die so, as was intended in this question, so as other natural men do die. For first, Christ died because he would die; other men admitted to the dignity of Martyrdom, are willing to die; but they die by the torments of the Executioners, they cannot bid their souls go out, and say, now I will die. And this was Christ's case: 〈◊〉 10.15. It was not only, I lay down my life for my sheep, but he says also, No man can take away my soul; And, I have power to lay it down; And De facto, he did lay it down, he did die, before the torments could have extorted his soul from him; Many crucified men lived many days upon the Cross; The thiefs were alive, long after Christ was dead; and therefore Pilate wondered, that he was already dead. His soul did not leave his body by force, 〈…〉 but because he would, and when he would, and how he would; Thus far then first, this is an answer to this question, Quis homo? Christ did not die naturally, nor violently, as all others do, but only voluntarily. Again, the penalty of death appertaining only to them, who were derived from Adam by carnal, and sinful generation, Christ Jesus being conceived miraculously of a Virgin, by the over-shadowing of the Holy Ghost, was not subject to the Law of death; and therefore in his person, it is a true answer to this Quis homo? Here is a man, that shall not see death, that is, he need not see death, he hath not incurred God's displeasure, he is not involved in a general rebellion, and therefore is not involved in the general mortality, not included in the general penalty. He needed not have died by the rigour of any Law, all we must; he could not die by the malice, or force of any Executioner, all we must; at least by nature's general Executioners, Age, and Sickness; And then, when out of his own pleasure, and to advance our salvation, he would die, yet he died so, as that though there were a dis-union of body and soul, (which is truly death) yet there remained a Nobler, and faster union, then that of body and soul, the Hypostatical Union of the Godhead, not only to his soul, but to his body too; so that even in his death, both parts were still, not only inhabited by, but united to the Godhead itself; and in respect of that inseparable Union, we may answer to this question, Quis homo? Here is a man that shall not see death, that is, he shall see no separation of that, which is incomparably, and incomprehensibly, a better soul than his soul, the Godhead shall not be separated from his body. But, that which is indeed the most direct, and literal answer, to this question, is, That whereas the death in this Text, is intended of such a death, as hath Dominion over us, and from which we have no power to raise ourselves, we may truly, and fully answer to his Quis homo? here is a man, that shall never see death so, but that he shall even in the jaws, and teeth of death, and in the bowels and womb of the grave, and in the sink, and furnace of hell itself, retain an Almighty power, and an effectual purpose, to deliver his soul from death, by a glorious, a victorious, and a Triumphant Resurrection: So it is true, Christ Josus died, else none of us could live; but yet he died not so, as is intended in this question; Not by the necessity of any Law, not by the violence of any Executioner, not by the separation of his best soul, (if we may so call it) the Godhead, nor by such a separation of his natural, and humane soul, as that he would not, or could not, or did not resume it again. If then this question had been asked of Angels at first, Quis Angelus? what Angel is that, that stands, and shall not fall? though as many of those Angels, as were disposed to that answer, Erimus similes Altissimo, We will be like God, and stand of ourselves, without any dependence upon him, did fall, yet otherwise they might have answered the question fairly, All we may stand, if we will; If this question had been asked of Adam in Paradise, Quis homo? though when he hearkened to her, who had hearkened to that voice, Erit is sicut Dii, You shall be as Gods, he fell too, yet otherwise, he might have answered the question fairly so, I may live, and not die, if I will; so, if this question be asked of us now, as the question implies the general penalty, as it considers us only as the sons of Adam, we have no other answer, but that by Adam sin entered upon all, and death by sin upon all; as it implies the state of them only, whom Christ at his second coming shall find upon earth, we have no other answer but a modest, non liquet, we are not sure, whether we shall die then, or no; we are only sure, it shall be so, as most conduces to our good, and God's glory; but as the question implies us to be members of our Head, Christ Jesus, as it was a true answer in him, it is true in every one of us, adopted in him, Here is a man that liveth, and shall not see death. Death and life are in the power of the tongue, says Solomon, in another sense; Prov. 18.21. and in this sense too, If my tongue, suggested by my heart, and by my heart rooted in faith, can say, Non moriar, non moriar; If I can say, (and my conscience do not tell me, that I belie mine own state) if I can say, That the blood of my Saviour runs in my veins, That the breath of his Spirit quickens all my purposes, that all my deaths have their Resurrection, all my sins their remorses, all my rebellions their reconciliations, I will hearken no more after this question, as it is intended de morte naturali, of a natural death, I know I must die that death, what care I? nor de morte spirituali, the death of sin, I know I do, and shall die so; why despair I? but I will find out another death, mortem raptus, 2 Cor. 12. a death of rapture, Acts 9 Greg. and of ecstasy, that death which S. Paul died more than once, The death which S. Gregory speaks of, Divina contemplatio quoddam sepulchrum animae, The contemplation of God, and heaven, is a kind of burial, and Sepulchre, and rest of the soul; and in this death of rapture, and ecstasy, in this death of the Contemplation of my interest in my Saviour, I shall find myself, and all my sins interred, and entombed in his wounds, and like a Lily in Paradise, out of red earth, I shall see my soul rise out of his blade, in a candour, and in an innocence, contracted there, acceptable in the sight of his Father. Though I have been dead, 1 Tim. 5.6. in the delight of sin, so that that of S. Paul, That a Widow that liveth in pleasure, is dead while she liveth, be true of my soul, that so, viduatur, gratiâ mortuâ, when Christ is dead, not for the soul, but in the soul, that the soul hath no sense of Christ, Viduatur anima, the soul is a Widow, and no Dowager, she hath lost her husband, and hath nothing from him; Esay 28.15. yea though I have made a Covenant with death, and have been at an agreement with hell, and in a vain confidence have said to myself, that when the overflowing scourge shall pass through, it shall not come to me, yet God shall annul that covenant, he shall bring that scourge, that is, some medicinal correction upon me, and so give me a participation of all the stripes of his son; he shall give me a sweat, that is, some horror, and religious fear, and so give me a participation of his Agony; he shall give me a diet, perchance want, and penury, and so a participation of his fasting; and if he draw blood, if he kill me, all this shall be but Mors raptus, a death of rapture towards him, into a heavenly, and assured Contemplation, that I have a part in all his passion, yea such an entire interest in his whole passion, as though all that he did, or suffered, had been done, and suffered for my soul alone; 2 Cor. 6.9. Quasi moriens, & ecce vivo: some show of death I shall have, for I shall sin; and some show of death again, for I shall have a dissolution of this Tabernacle; Sed ecce vivo, still the Lord of life will keep me alive, and that with an Ecce, Behold, I live; that is, he will declare, and manifest my blessed state to me; I shall not sit in the shadow of death; no nor I shall not sit in darkness; his gracious purpose shall evermore be upon me, and I shall ever discern that gracious purpose of his; I shall not die, nor I shall not doubt that I shall; If I be dead within doors, (If I have sinned in my heart) why, Suscitavit in domo, Mar. 9.23. Christ gave a Resurrection to the Ruler's daughter within doors, in the house; If I be dead in the gate, (If I have sinned in the gates of my soul) in mine Eyes, Luke 7.11. or Ears, or Hands, in actual sins, why, Suscitavit in porta, Christ gave a Resurrection to the young man at the gate of Naim. If I be dead in the grave, (in customary, and habitual sins) why, John 11. Suscitavit in Sepulchro, Christ gave a Resurrection to Lazarus in the grave too. If God give me mortem raptus, a death of rapture, of ecstasy, of fervent Contemplation of Christ Jesus, a Transfusion, a Transplantation, a Transmigration, a Transmutation into him, (for good digestion brings always assimilation, certainly, if I come to a true meditation upon Christ, I come to a conformity with Christ) this is principally that Pretiosa mors Sanctorum, Psal. 116.15. Precious in the sight of the Lord, is the death of his Saints, by which they are dead and buried, and risen again in Christ Jesus: precious is that death, by which we apply that precious blood to ourselves, and grow strong enough by it, to meet David's question, Quis homo? what man? with Christ's answer, Ego homo, I am the man, in whom whosoever abideth, shall not see death. SERMONS Preached upon WHITSUNDAY. SERMON XXVIII. Preached at S. Paul's, upon Whitsunday. 1627. JOHN 14.26. But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my Name, He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you. THis day is this Scripture fulfilled in your cares, saith our Saviour Christ, having read for his Text, that place of Esay, Esay 61.1. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me. And that day which we celebrate now, was another Scripture fulfilled in their ears, and in their eyes too; For all Christ's promises are Scripture; They have all the Infallibility of Scripture; And Christ had promised, that that Spirit which was upon him, when he preached, should also be shed upon all his Apostles. And upon this day he performed that promise, when, Acts 2.1. They being all with one accord, in one place, there came a sound from heaven, as of a rushing mighty wind, and filled the house, and there appeared unto them cloven tongues, like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them, and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost. And this very particular day, in which we now commemorate, and celebrate that performance of Christ's promise, in that Mission of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles, are all these Scriptures performed again, in our ears, and eyes, and in our hearts; For in all those Congregations that meet this day, to this purpose, every Preacher hath so much of this Unction (which Unction is Christ) upon him, as that the Spirit of the Lord is upon him, and hath anointed him to that service; And every Congregation, and every good person in the Congregation, hath so much of the Apostle upon him, as that he feels This Spirit of the Lord, this Holy Ghost, as he is this cloven tongue, that sets one stem in his ear, and the other in his heart, one stem in his faith, and the other in his manners, one stem in his present obedience, and another in his perseverance, one to rectify him in the errors of life, another to establish him in the agonies of death; For the Holy Ghost, as he is a Cloven tongue, opens as a Compass, that reaches over all our Map, over all our World, from our East to our West, from our birth to our death, from our cradle to our grave, and directs us for all things, to all persons, in all places, and at all times; The Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my Name, he shall teach you all things, etc. The blessed Spirit of God then, the Holy Ghost, the third person in the Trinity, Divisio. (and yet, not Third so, as that either Second or First, Son or Father, were one minute before him in that Co-eternity, that enwraps them all alike) this Holy Ghost is here designed by Christ, in his Person, and in his Operation; Who he is, and what he does; From whence he comes, and why he comes; And these two, He, and His office, will constitute our two parts in this text. In the first of which, (which will be the exercise of this day) we shall direct you upon these several Considerations: First, that the Person designed for this Mission, and true Consolation, is the Holy Ghost; You shall not be without comfort, says Christ; But mistake not false comforts for true, nor deceitful comforters for faithful; It is the Holy Ghost, or it is none; His Comfort, or no comfort, Him the Father will send, sais Christ, in a second branch; though the Holy Ghost be God, equal to the Father, and so have all Missions, and Commissions in his own hand, yet he applies himself, accommodates himself to order, and he comes when he hath a Mission from the Father: and this Father, says Christ, (which is a third branch in this part) sends him in my name; Though he have as good interest in the name of Adonai, which is all our Powerful name, and in the name of Ieh●vah, which is all our Essential name, as I, or my Father have, (the holy Ghost is as much Adonai, and as much Ichovah, as we are) yet he is sent in my Name, that is, to proceed in my way, to perfect my work, and to accomplish that Redemption, by way of Application, which I had wrought, by way of Satisfaction. And then lastly, that which qualifies him for this Mission, for this Employment, is his Title, and Addition in this Text, That he is the Comforter; Uncomfortable doctrines (of a primary impossibility of Salvation, to any man, And that impossibility originally rooted in God, and in Gods hating of that man, and hating of that man, not only before he was a sinful man, but before he was any man at all, not only before an actual making, but before any intention to make him in God's mind; That God cannot save that man, because he meant to damn him, before he meant to make him) are not the way, in which the Holy Ghost is sent by the Father, in the Sons Name; For they that sent him, and he that comes, intent all that is done, in that capacity, as he is a Comforter, as he is the Comforter. And this is the Person, and this will be the extent of our first part; It is the Holy Ghost; No deceiving Spirit. He, though as high as the Highest, respects order, attends a Mission, stays till he be sent. And thirdly, he comes in another's name, in another's way, to perfect another's work. And he does all, in the quality and denomination of a Comforter, not establishing, not countenancing any uncomfortable Doctrines. First then, 1. Part. Spiritus sanctus. the Person into whose hands this whole work is here recommended, is the Holy Ghost, The Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost. The manifestation of the mysterle of the Trinity was reserved for Christ. Some intimations in the Old, but the publication only in the New Testament; Some irradiations in the Law, but the illustration only in the Gospel; Some emanation of beams, as of the Sun before it is got above the Horizon, in the Prophets, but the glorious proceeding thereof, and the attaining to a Meridianall height, only in the Evangelists. And then, the doctrine of the Trinity, thus reserved for the time of the Gospel, at that time was thus declared; So God loved the World, as that he sent his Son; So the Son loved the World, as that he would come into it, and die for it; So the Holy Ghost loved the World, as that he would dwell in it, and enable men, in his Ministry, and by his gifts, to apply this mercy of the Father, and this merit of the Son, to particular souls, and to whole Congregations. The mercy of the Father, that he would study such a way for the Redemption of our souls, as the death of his only Son, (a way which no man would ever have thought of, of himself, nor might have prayed for, if he could have imagined it) this Mercy of the Father is the object of our Thankfulness. The Merit of the Son, That into a man but of our nature, and equal to us in infirmities, there should be superinfused such another nature, such a divinity, as that any act of that Person, so composed of those two natures, should be even in the rigour of Justice, a sufficient ransom for all the sins of all the World, is the object of our admiration. But the object of our consolation (which is the subject of this Text) is this, That the Holy Ghost, by his presence, and by inanimating the Ordinances of Christ, in the Ministry of the Gospel, applies this mercy, and this merit to me, to thee, to every soul that answers his motions. In that Contract that past between Solomon and Hiram, for commerce and trade between their Nations, 1 K●●g. 5. That Solomon should send him Corn and Oil, and Hiram should send him Cedar, and other rich materials for Building, that people of God received an honour, and an assurance, in that present Contract, for future trade and commerce. So did the World, in that Contract, which passed between the Father and the Son, That the Father should send down God, and the World should deliver up Man, The nature of Man to be assumed by that Son, and so a Redemption should be wrought after, in the fullness of Time. And then, in the performance of this Contract, when Hiram sent down those rich materials from Libanon to the Sea, and by Sea in Floats, to the place assigned, Ver. 9 where Solomon received them, that people of God received a real profit, in that actual performance of that, which was but in contract before. So did the World too, when in the fullness of Time, and in the place assigned by God in the Prophet Micah, which was Bethlem, the Son of God came in our flesh, and after died for us; His Blood was the Substance, the Materials of our ransom, and actually, and really delivered, and deposited for us; which was the performance of the former Contract between his Father, and him. But than was the dignity of that people of God accomplished, when those rich Materials, so sent, were really employed in the building of the Temple; when the Altar, and the Oracle, were clothed with that Gold; when the Cherubin, and the Olive-Trees, and the other Figures were made of that rich stuff, which was provided; when certain chief Officers, and three thousand three hundred under-Officers, Ver. 15. Ver. 14. were appointed to oversee the Work, and ten thousand that attended by monthly courses, and seven score & ten thousand, that were always resident upon the Work. And so is our comfort accomplished to us, when the Holy Ghost distributes these materials, the Blood, and the Merits of Christ, upon several Congregations, and that by his higher Officers, Reverend and Vigilant Bishops, and others that have part in the Government of the Church, and then, by those, who like Solomon's ten thousand, performed the service by monthly courses, and those, who like his seven score and ten thousand, are always resident upon fixed places, that salvation of souls, so decreed at first by the Father, and so accomplished after by the Son, is, by the Holy Ghost, shed, and spread upon particular men. When, as the world began in a community, that every thing was every bodies, but improved itself, to a propriety, and came to a Meum & Tuum, that every man knew his own; so, that which is Salus Domini, The Salvation of the Lord, as it is in the first Decree, and that which is Salus Mundi, The Salvation of the World, as it is in the accomplishment of the Decree by Christ, may be Mea, & Tua, My Salvation, and thy Salvation, as it is applied by the Holy Ghost, in the Ministry of the Church. Salvation in the Decree, is as the Bezoar stone in the maw of that creature; there it grows. Salvation in Christ's death, is as that Bezoar in the Merchants, or Apothecary's provision; But salvation in the Church, in the distribution, and application thereof, by the Holy Ghost, is as that Bezoar working in my veins, expelling my peccant humours, and rectifying my former defects. The last work, the Seal, and Consummation of all, is of the Holy Ghost. And therefore, as the Manifestation of the whole Trinity seems to have been reserved for Christ, so Christ seems to have reserved the Manifestation of the Holy Ghost, for his last Doctrine. For this is the last Sermon that Christ preached; And this is a Sermon recorded only by that last Evangelist, who, as he considered the Divine Nature of Christ, more than the rest did, and so took it higher, so did he also consider the future state, and succession of the Church, more than the rest did, and so carried it lower. For, S. john was a Prophet, as well as an Evangelist. Therefore in this last, and lasting Evangelist, and in this last Sermon, Christ declares this last work, in this world, that is, the Consummation of our Redemption, in the application of the Holy Ghost. For herein consists our comfort, that it is He, the Holy Ghost, that ministers this comfort. Christ had told them before, that there should be a Comforter sent; Ver. 16. But he did not tell them then, that that Comforter was the Holy Ghost. Here he does; at last he does; and he ends all in that; that we might end and determine our comfort in that too, This God gives me, by the Holy Ghost. For we mistake false comforts for true. We comfort ourselves in things, that come not at all from God; in things which are but vanities, and conduce not all to any true comfort. And we comfort ourselves in things, which, though they do come from God, yet are not signed, nor sealed by the Holy Ghost. For, Wealth, and Honour, and Power, and Favour, are of God; but we have but stolen them from God, or received them by the hand of the Devil, if we be come to them by ill means. And if we have them from the hand of God, by having acquired them by good means, yet if we make them occasions of sin, in the ill use of them after, we lose the comfort of the Holy Ghost, which requires the testimony of a rectified conscience, that all was well got, and is well used. Therefore as Christ puts the Origination of our Redemption upon the Father, (I came but to do my Father's will) and as he takes the execution of that Decree upon himself, (I am the way, and the truth, and the life, and the Resurrection; I am all) so he puts the comfort of all, upon the Holy Ghost: Discomfort, and Disconsolation, Sadness and Dejection, Damnation, and Damnation aggravated, and this aggravated Damnation multiplied upon that soul, that finds no comfort in the Holy Ghost. If I have no Adventure in an East-Indian Return, though I be not the richer, yet neither am I poorer than I was, for that. But if I have no comfort from the Holy Ghost, I am worse, then if all mankind had been left in the Putrefaction of Adam's loins, and in the condemnation of Adam's sin. For then, I should have had but my equal part in the common misery; But now having had that extraordinary favour, of an offer of the Holy Ghost, if I feel no comfort in that, I must have an extraordinary condemnation. The Father came near me, when he breathed the breath of life into me, and gave me my flesh. The Son came near me, when he took my flesh upon him, and laid down his life for me. The Holy Ghost is always near me, always with me; with me now, if now I shed any drops of his dew, his Manna upon you; With me anon, if anon I turn any thing that I say to you now, to good nourishment in myself then, and do then, as I say now; With me when I eat, or drink, to say Grace at my meal, and to bless God's Blessings to me; With me in my sleep, to keep out the Tempter from the fancy, and imagination, which is his proper Scene, and Sphere, That he triumph not in that, in such dreams as may be effects of sin, or causes of sin, or sins themselves. The Father is a Propitious Person; The Son is a Meritorious Person; The Holy Ghost is a Familiar Person; The Heavens must open, to show me the Son of Man at the right hand of the Father, as they did to Steven; But if I do but open my heart to myself, I may see the Holy Ghost there, and in him, all that the Father hath Thought and Decreed, all that the Son hath Said and Done, and Suffered for the whole World, made mine. Accustom yourselves therefore to the Contemplation, to the Meditation of this Blessed Person of the glorious Trinity; Keep up that holy cheerfulness, which Christ makes the Ballast of a Christian, and his Fraight too, to give him a rich Return in the Heavenly Jerusalem. Be always comforted; and always determine your comfort in the Holy Ghost; For that is Christ's promise here, in this first Branch, A Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost; And Him (says our second Branch) the Father shall send. There was a Mission of the Son, Missio. God sent his Son. There was a Mission of the Holy Ghost; This day God sent the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost. But between these two Missions, that of the Son, and this of the holy Ghost, we consider this difference, that the first, the sending of the Son, was without any merit preceding; There could be nothing but the mere mercy of God, to move God to send his Son. Man was so far from meriting that, that (as we said before) he could not, nor might, if he could, have wished it. But for this second Mission, the sending of the holy Ghost, there was a preceding merit. Christ, by his dying had merited, that mankind, who by the fall of Adam, had lost, (as S. August. speaks) Possibilitatem boni, All possibility of Redintegration, should, not only be restored to a possibility of Salvation, but that actually, that that was done, should be pursued farther, and that by this Mission, and Operation of the holy Ghost, actually, really, effectually, men should be saved. So that, as the work of our Redemption falls under our consideration, that is, not in the Decree, but in the execution of the Decree, in this Mission of the holy Ghost into the World, Man hath so far an interest, (not any particular man, but Man, as all Mankind was in Christ) as that we may truly say, The holy Ghost was due to us. Lu●● 24. And as Christ said of himself, Nun haec oportuit pati? Ought not Christ to suffer all this? Was not Christ bound to all this, by the Contract between him and his Father? to which Contract himself had a Privity; it was his own Act; He signed it; He sealed it; so we may say, Nun hunc oportuit mitti? Ought not the holy Ghost to be sent? Had not Christ merited that the holy Ghost should be sent, to perfect the work of the Redemption? So that, in such a respect, and in such a holy and devout sense we may say, that the holy Ghost is more ours, then either of the other Persons of the Trinity; Because, though Christ be so ours, as that he is ourselves, the same nature, and flesh, and blood, The holy Ghost is so ours, as that we, we in Christ, Christ in our nature merited the holy Ghost, purchased the holy Ghost, bought the holy Ghost; Which is a sanctified Simony, and hath a fair, and a pious truth in it, We, we in Christ, Christ in our nature, bought the holy Ghost, that is, merited the holy Ghost. Christ then was so sent, A Patre. as that, till we consider the Contract, (which was his own Act) there was not Oportuit pati, no obligation upon him, that he must have been sent. The Holy Ghost was so sent, as that the Merit of Christ, (of Christ, who was Man, as well as God) which was the Act of another, required, and deserved that he should be sent. Therefore he was sent A Patre, By the Father. Now, not so by the Father, as not by the Son too; For, there is an Ego mittam, If I depart, I will send him unto you. But, john 16.7. clean through Christ's History, in all his proceed, still you may observe, that he ascribes all that he does, as to his Superior, to his Father; though in one Capacity, as he was God, he were equal to the Father, yet to declare the meekness and the humility of his Soul, still he makes his recourse to his inferior state, and to his lower nature, and still ascribes all to his Father: Thouh he might say, and do say there, I will send him, yet every where, the Father enters; I will send him, says he; Whom? Luke 24.49. I will send the Promise of my Father. Still the Father hath all the glory, and Christ sinks down to his inferior state, and lower nature. In the World it is far otherwise; Here, men for the most part, do all things according to their greatest capacity; If they be Bishops, if they be Counsellors, if they be Justices, nay if they be but Constables, they will do every thing according to that capacity; As though that authority, confined to certain places, limited in certain persons, and determined in certain times, gave them always the same power, in all actions; And, because to some purposes he may be my superior, he will be my equal no where in nothing. Christ still withdrew himself to his lower capacity; And, howsoever worldly men engross the thanks of the world to themselves, Christ cast all the honour of all the benefits that he bestowed upon others, upon his Father; And in his Veruntamen, (Yet not my will, but thine O Father be done) He humbled himself, as low as David in his Non nobis Dominc, Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto thy Name be all glory given. They would have made him King; He would not; and Judge, to divide the Inheritance; and he would not. He sent the Holy Ghost; And yet, he says, I will pray the Father to send him. So the Holy Ghost was sent by them both; Father and Son; But not so, as that he was subject to a joint command of both, or to a divers command of either, or that he came unwillingly, or had not a hand even in his own sending. But, howsoever he were perfect God, and had alwales an absolute power in himself, and had ever a desire to assist the salvation of man, yet he submitted himself to the Order of the Decree; He disordered nothing, prevented nothing, anticipated nothing, but stayed, till all that which lay upon Christ, from his Incarnation, to his Ascension, was executed, and then in the due and appointed time, issued his Mission. It is a blessed Termination, Mission; It determines and ends many words in our Language; Missio. as Permission, Commission, Remission, and others, which may afford good instruction, that as the Holy Ghost, did for his, so we may be content to stay God's leisure, for all those Missions. A consideration, which, I presume, S. Bernard, who evermore embraced all occasions of exalting devotion from the melodious fall of words, would not have let pass; Nor S. Augustine, for all his holy and reverend gravity, would have thought Nimis juvenile, Too light a consideration to have insisted upon. And therefore I may have leave, to stay your meditations a little, upon this Termination, these Missions. You may have a Permission; Many things are with some circumstances Permitted, Permissio. Mat. 19.8. which yet in discretion are better forborn. Moses permitted divorces, but that was for the hardness of their hearts; and Christ withdrew that Permission. S. Paul says, he had a Permission; Liberty to forbear working with his own hands, 1 Cor. 9.6. and so to live upon the Church; but yet he did not. What Permission soever thou have, by which thou mayst lawfully ease thyself, yet forbear, till thou see, that the glory of God, and the good of other men, may be more advanced by the use, then by the forbearance of that indulgence, and that Permission, and afford not thyself all the liberty that is afforded thee, but in such cases. The Holy Ghost stayed so for his Mission; so stay thou for the exercise of thy Permission. Thou mayst have a Commission too; In that of the Peace, Commissio. in that for Ecclesiastical causes, thou mayst have part. But be not hasty in the execution of these Commissions; Come to an Inquisition upon another man; so as thou wouldst wish God to inquire into thee. Satan had a Commission upon job; but he procured it so indirectly, on his part, by false suggestions against him, and executed it so uncharitably, as that he was as guilty of wrong and oppression, as if he had had no Commission. Thou canst not assist in the execution of those Commissions, of which thou art, till thou have taken the oaths of Supremacy, and of Allegiance to thy Sovereign. Do it not, till thou have sworn all that, to thy Super-soveraigne, to thy God, That in all thy proceed, his glory, and his will, and not thine own passion, or their purposes, upon whom thou dependest, shall be thy rule. The holy Ghost stayed for his Mission; stay thou for thy Commission, till it be sealed over again in thine own bosom; sealed on one side, with a clearness of understanding, and on the other, with a rectitude of conscience; that thou know what thou shouldst do, and do that. There is also a Remission; Remissio. a Remission of sins. It is an Article of Faith, therefore believe it. Believe it originally, and meritoriously in Christ; and believe it instrumentally, and ministerially in the power, constituted by Christ, in the Church. But believe it not too hastily, in the execution and in the application thereof to thine own case. A transitory sin, a sin that spent a few minutes in the doing thereof, was by the penitential Canons, (which were the rule of the Primitive Church) punished with many year's penance. And dost thou think, to have Remission of thy seventy year's sins, for one sigh, one groan, then, when that sigh, and that groan may be more in contemplation of the torment due to that sin, then for the sin itself; Nay more, that thou canst sinne that sin no longer, then for that sin? Hast thou sought thy Remission at the Church, that is, August. in God's Ordinances established in the Church? In qua remittuntur, extra quam non remittuntur peccata, In which Ordinances, there is an Infallibility of Remission, upon true repentance, and in a contempt or neglect of which Ordinances, all Repentance is illusory, and all Remission but imaginary. Hieron. For, Quodammodo ante diem judicii, judicant, God refers causes to the Church, to be prepared, and mature there, before the great Hearing; and so, hath given the Church a Power to judge, before the day of Judgement. And therefore, August. Nemo sibi dicat, occultè ago, apud Deum ago, Let no man say, I repent in secret; God sees that I repent; It was scarce in secret, that thou didst sin; and wilt thou repent but in secret? At least let us know thy repentance by the amendment of thy life, and we shall not much press the knowing of it any other way. Only remember that the holy Ghost stayed for his Mission; Presume not thou of thy Remission, till thou have done, not only something towards it, that might induce it from God, that is, Repentance, but something by it, that may testify it to man, that is, amendment of life. There is a Manumission also, Manumission. an emancipation, an enfranchisement from the tyranny, from the thraldom of sin. That which some Saints of God, particularly S. Paul, have importuned at God's hand, so vehemently, so impatiently, as he did, to be delivered from the messenger of Satan, and from the provocations of the flesh, expressed with that passion, O wretched man that I am, Rom. 7.22. who shall deliver me from the body of this death? He comes immediately there to a thanksgiving, I thank God, through jesus Christ our Lord; But his thanksgiving was not for a Manumission; he had not received a deliverance from the power, and oppresssion of tentation; But he had here, as he had every where, an intimation from the Spirit of God, of that Gratia mea sufficit, That God would be as watchful over him with his grace, as the Devil could be with his tentations. And if thou come to no farther Manumission than this, in this life, that is, to be delivered, though not from tentations by his power, yet in tentations, by his grace, or by his mercy, after tentations have prevailed upon thee, attend God's leisure for thy farther Manumission, for the holy Ghost stayed for his Mission. There falls lastly into this harmonious consort, Dismissio. occasioned by this Mission of the Holy Ghost, a Dismission; A dismissing out of this world; Not only in Simeons Nunc dimittis, To be content that we might, but in S. Paul's Cupio dissolvi, To have a desire that we might be dissolved, and be with Christ. But, whether the encumbrances of this World, Psal. 120.5. extort from thee David's groan, Heu mihi! Woe is me, that I so journey so long here! Or a slipperiness contracted by former habits of sin, make every thing a tentation to thee, so that thou canst not perform jobs covenant with thine eyes, of not looking upon a maid, nor stop at Christ's period, which is, Look, but do not lust, but that every thing is a tentation to thee, and to be out of this haile-shot, this batrery of tentations, thou wouldst feign come to a dismission, to a dissolution, to a transmigration, Or whether a vehement desire of the fruition of the presence and face of God in Heaven, constitute this longing in thee, yet all these reasons arise in thyself, and determine in thyself, and are referred but to thine own ease, and to thine own happiness, and not primarily, to the glory of God, and therefore, since the Holy Ghost stayed for his Mission, stay thou for thy Dismission too. Gather up these scattered ears, and bind up this lose sheaf; Recollect these pieces of this branch. The Holy Ghost was sent by the Son, but the Son, in his exemplar humility, ascribes all to the Father. The Holy Ghost had absolute power to come at his pleasure, but he stayed the order of the Decree, and God's leisure for his Mission. Do thou so too, for thy Permission, exercise not all thy liberty; And for thy Commission, execute not all thy authority; And for thy Remission, presume not upon thy pardon too soon; And for thy Manumission, hope not for an exemption from tentations, till death; And for thy Dismission, practise not, nay wish not thy death, only in respect of thine own ease, no, nor only in respect of thine own salvation. In this act of the Holy Ghost, That he stayed his Mission, we have one instruction, that we rely not upon ourselves, but accommodate ourselves to the disposition of others; And then another in the next, That the Father should send him in the Son's name, The Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my Name. The Holy Ghost comes not so in another's name, as that he hath not a full interest, In nomine meo. in all the names of Power, and of Wisdom, and of Essence itself, that are attributed to God. For (not to extend to the particular attributes) the Radical name, the name of Essence, That name, The name, jehovah, is given to the Holy Ghost. jehovah says to Esay, Go, and tell this people, this and this. And then S. Paul making use of those words in the Acts, says, Well said the Holy Ghost by the Prophet Esay; So that Isaiah jehovah, Esay 6.9. Acts 28.5. is S. Paul's Holy Ghost. And yet, the Holy Ghost being in possession of the highest names, and of the highest power employed in those names, comes in the name of another. How much more than may the powerfullest men upon earth, the greatest Magistrates, the greatest Monarches, (who though they be by God himself called gods, are but representative gods, but metaphorical gods, and God knows, sometimes but ungodly gods) confess, that they are sent in another's name, inanimated with another's power, and least of all, their own, or made that that they are, for themselves? How much more are we, we considered in nature, and not in office, men and not Magistrates, Worms and not men, Serpents and not Worms, (For we are (as S. chrysostom speaks) Spontanei daemons, Serpents in our own bosoms, devils in our own loins) bond to confess, that all the faculties of our soul, are in us, In nomine alieno, In the name of another? That will, which we call Freewill, is so far from being ours, as that not only that Freedom, but that Will itself is from another, from God. Not only the rectitude of the faculty, but the faculty itself is his. Nay, though God have no part in the perverseness and the obliquity of my will, but that that perverseness, and that obliquity are entirely mine own, yet I could not have that perverseness, and that obliquity, but from him, so far, as that that faculty, in which my perverseness works, is his, and I could not have that perverse will from myself, if I had not that will itself from God first. And that very perverseness, and obliquity of the will, is so much his, as that, though it were not his, but mine, in the making, yet when it is made by me, he makes it his; that is, he makes it his instrument, and makes his use of it, so far, as to suffer it to flow out into a greater sin, or to determine in a lesser sin, then at first I, in my perverseness, intended. When I intended but an approach to a sin, and meant to stop there, to punish that exposing of myself to tentation, God suffers me to proceed to the act of that sin; And when I intent the act itself, God interrupts me, and cuts me off, by some intervening occasion, and determines me upon some approach to that sin, that by going so far in the way of that sin, I might see mine own infirmity, and see the power of his mercy, that I went no farther. The faculties of my soul are his, and the substance of my soul is his too; And yet, as I pervert the faculties, I subvert the substance; I damnify the faculties, but I damn the substance itself. It would taste of uncharitableness, to cast more coals of fire upon the devil himself, then are upon him in hell now; Or not to assist him with our prayers, if it were not declared to us, that he is incapable of mercy. If the devil were now but under the guiltiness of that sin which he committed at first, and not under such an execution of judgement for that sin, as induced, or at least declared an obstination, an obduration, a desperation, and impenitibleness, if the devil were but as the worst sinner in this world can be, but In via, and not In exilio, In the way to destruction, and not under destruction it self, we might pray for the devil himself. And these poor souls of ours, these glorious souls of ours, none of ours, but Gods own souls, which now at worst, God loves better than ever he did the devil when he was at best, when he was an Angel uncorrupted, and better than he doth those Angels which stand uncorrupted still, (for he hath not taken the nature of Angels, but our nature upon him) we think those souls our own, to do what we list with, and when we have usurped them, we damn them. As Pirates take other men's subjects, and then make them slaves, we usurp the faculties of the soul, and call the will ours, we usurp the soul itself, and call it ours, and then deliver all to everlasting bondage. Would the King suffer his picture to be used, as we use the Image of God in our souls? or his Hall to be used, as we use the Temple of the Holy Ghost, our Bodies? We have nothing but that which we have received; and when we come to think that our own, we have not that; For God will take all from that man, that sacrifices to his own nets. When thou comest to Church, come in another's name: When thou givest an Alms, give it in another's name; that is, feel all thy devotion, and all thy charity to come from God; For, if it be not in his name, it will be in a worse; Thy devotion will contract the name of hypocrisy, and thine Alms the name of Vain-glory. The Holy Ghost came in another's name, in Christ's name; but not so, as Montanus, the Father of the Montanists, came in the Holy Ghosts name. Montanus said he was the Holy Ghost; The Holy Ghost did not pretend to be Christ. There is a man, the man of sin, at Rome, that pretends to be Christ, to all uses. And I would he would be content with that, and stop there, and not be a Hyper-Christus, Above Christ, more than Christ. I would he would no more trouble the peace of Christendom, no more occasion the assassinating of Christian Princes, no more bind the Christian liberty, in forbidding Meats, and Marriage, no more slacken and dissolve Christian bands, by Dispensations, and Indulgences, than Christ did. But if he will needs be more, if he will needs have an addition to the name of Christ, let him take heed of that addition, which some are apt enough to give him, however he deserve it, that he is Antichrist. Now in what sense the Holy Ghost is said to have come in the name of Christ, S. Basil gives us one interpretation; that is, that one principal name of Christ belongs to the Holy Ghost. For Christ is Verbum, The Word, and so is the Holy Ghost, says that Father, Quia interpres filii, sicut filius patris, Because as the Son manifested the Father, so the Holy Ghost manifests the Son; S. Augustine gives another sense; Societas Patris & Filii, est Spiritus Sanctus, The Holy Ghost is the union of the Father and the Son. As the body is not the man, nor the soul is not the man, but the union of the soul and body, by those spirits, through which, the soul exercises her faculties in the Organs of the body, makes up the man; so the union of the Father and Son to one another, and of both to us, by the Holy Ghost, makes up the body of the Christian Religion. And so, this interpretation of S. Augustine, comes near to the fullness, in what sense the Holy Ghost came in Christ's name. John 17.12. For when Christ says, I am come in my Father's name, that was, to execute his Decree, to fulfil his Will, for the salvation of man, by dying; so when Christ says here, the Holy Ghost shall come in my name, that is, to perfect my work, to collect and to govern that Church, in which my salvation, by way of satisfaction, may be appropriated to particular souls by way of application. And for this purpose, to do this in Christ's name, his own name is Paracletus, The Comforter, which is our last circumstance, The Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost. The Comforter is an Evangelicall name. The Comforter. Athanasius notes, that the Holy Ghost is never called Paracletus, The Comforter, in the old Testament. He is called Spiritus Dei, The Spirit of God, in the beginning of Genesis; And he is called Spiritus sanctus, The holy Spirit, and Spiritus principalis, The principal Spirit, in divers places of the Psalms, but never Paracletus, never the Comforter. A reason of that may well be, first, that the state of the Law needed not comfort; and then also, that the Law itself afforded not comfort, so there was no Comforter. Their Law was not opposed by any enemies, as enemies to their Law. If they had not (by that warrant which they had from God) invaded the possession of their neighbours, or grown too great to continue good neighbours, their neighbours had not envied them that Law. So that in the state of the Law, in that respect, they were well enough, and needed no Comforter. Whereas the Gospel, as it was sowed in our Saviour's blood, so it grew up in blood, for divers hundreds of years; and therefore needed the sustentation, and the assurance of a Comforter. And then, for the substance of the Law, it was Lex interficiens, non perficiens, says S. Augustine, A Law that told them what was sin, and punished them if they did sin, but could not confer Remission for sin; which was a uncomfortable case. Whereas the Gospel, and the Dispensation of the Gospel in the Church, by the Holy Ghost, is Grace, Mercy, Comfort, all the way, and in the end. Therefore Christ, v. 17. calls the Holy Ghost, Spiritum veritatis, The Spirit of truth; In which he opposes him, and prefers him, above all the remedies, and all the comforts of the Law. Not that the Holy Ghost in the Law, did not speak truth, but that he did not speak all the truth, in the Law. Origen expresses it well, The Types and Figures of the Law, were true Figures, and true Types of Christ, in the Gospel; but Christ, and his Gospel is the truth itself, prefigured in those Types. Therefore the Holy Ghost, is Paracletus, The Comforter, in the Gospel, which he was not in the Law. In the Records, and Stories, and so in the Coins, and Medals of the Roman Emperors, we see, that even then, when they had gotten the possession of the name of Emperors, yet they forbore not to add to their style, the name of Consul, and the name of Pontifex maximus; still they would be called Consuls, which was an acceptable name to the people, and High-Priests, which carried a reverence towards all the world. Where Christ himself is called by a name appliable to none but Christ, by a name implying the whole nature, and merit of Christ, that is, The Propitiation of the sins of the whole world, 1 John 2.2. yet there, in that place, he is called by the name of this Text too, Paracletus, the Comforter. He would not forbear that sweet, that acceptable, that appliable name, that name that concerns us most, and establishes us best, Paracletus, the Comforter. And yet, he does not take that name, in that full, and whole sense, in which himself gives it to the Holy Ghost here. For there it is said of Christ, If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father; There, Paracletus, though placed upon Christ, is but an Advocate; But here, Christ sends Paracletum, in a more entire, and a more internal, and more viscerall sense, A Comforter. Upon which Comforter, Christ imprints these two marks of dignity, First, The Father shall send you another Comforter; Another, than myself. For, Ver. 16. howsoever Christ were the Fountain of comfort, yet there were many dams, many ounces, many talents of discomfort mingled, in that their Comforter was first to departed from them by death, and being restored to them again by a Resurrection, was to departed again, by another Transmigration, by an Ascension. And therefore the second mark by which Christ dignifies this Comforter, is, That he shall abide with us for ever. And in the performance of that promise, he is here with you now. And therefore, as we begun with those words of Esay, which our Saviour applied to himself, The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me, Esay 61.1. to bind up the broken hearted, and to comfort all them that mourn; So the Spirit of the Lord is upon all us of his Ministry, in that Commandment of his, in the same Prophet, Consolamini, Esay 40.1. consolamini, Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, and speak comfortably unto jerusalem. Receive the Holy Ghost, all ye that are the Israel of the Lord, in that Doctrine of comfort, that God is so fare from having hated any of you, before he made you, as that he hates none of you now; not for the sins of your Parents; not for the sins of your persons; not for the sins of your youth; not for your yesterdays, not for your yester-nights sins; not for that highest provocation of all, your unworthy receiving his Son this day. Only consider, that Comfort presumes Sadness. Sin does not make you incapable of comfort; but insensibleness of sin does. In great buildings, the Turrets are high in the Air; but the Foundations are deep in the Earth. The Comforts of the Holy Ghost work so, as that only that soul is exalted, which was dejected. As in this place, where you stand, there bodies lie in the earth, whose souls are in heaven; so from this place, you carry away so much of the true comfort of the Holy Ghost, as you have true sorrow, and sadness for your sins here. Almighty God erect this building upon this Foundation; Such a Comfort, as may not be Presumption, upon such a Sorrow, as may not be Diffidence in him. And to him alone, but in three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, be ascribed all Honour, etc. SERMON XXIX. Preached at S. Paul's upon Whitsunday. 1628. JOHN 14.26. But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my Name, He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you. WE Eipasse from the Person to his working; we come from his coming, to his operation, from his Mission, and Commission, to his Executing thereof, from the Consideration, who he is, to what he does. His Specification, his Character, his Title, Paracletus, The Comforter, passes through all. Therefore our first comfort is, Docebimur, we shall be Taught, He shall teach you; As we consider ourselves, The Disciples of the Holy Ghost, so it is a mere teaching, for, we, in ourselves are merely ignorant; But when we consider the things we are to be taught, so it is but a remembering, a refreshing of those things, which Christ in the time of his conversation in this world, had taught before; He shall bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you. These two then, The comfort in the Action, (we shall be Taught) and the comfort in the Way and Manner, (we shall not be subject to new Doctrines, but taught by remembering, by establishing us in things formerly Fundamentally laid) will be our two parts at this time. And in each of these, these our steps; First. in the first we shall consider the persons, that is, the Disciples, who were to learn; not only they who were so, when Christ spoke the words, but we, All, who to the end of the world, shall seek and receive knowledge from him; Vos, ye; first Vos ignorantes, you who are naturally ignorant, and know nothing, so as you should know it of yourselves, (which is one Discomfort) And yet, Vos, ye, Vos appetentes, you that by nature have a desire to know, (which is another Discomfort, To have a desire, and no means to perform it) Vos docebimini, ye, ye that are ignorant, and know nothing; ye, ye that are hungry of knowledge, and have nothing to satisfy that hunger, ye shall be fed, ye shall be taught; (which is one comfort) And then Ille docebit, He shall teach you, He, who cannot only infuse true, and full knowledge in every capacity that he finds, but dilate that capacity where he finds it, yea create it, where he finds none, The Holy Ghost, who is not only A Comforter, but The Comforter, and not only so, but Comfort itself, He shall teach you; And in these we shall determine our first Part. In our second Part, The Way and Manner of this Teaching, (By bringing to our remembrance all things whatsoever Christ had said unto us) there is a great largeness, but yet there is a limitation of those things which we are to learn of the Holy Ghost; for they are Omnia, All things whatsoever Christ hath taught before; But then, Sola ea, Only those things which Christ had taught before, and not new Additaments in the name of the Holy Ghost. Now this largeness extending itself to the whole body of the Christian Religion, (for Christ taught all that) all that being not reducible to that part of an hour, which will be left for this exercise, as fittest for the celebration of the day in which we arenow, we shall bind ourselves to that particular consideration, what the Holy Ghost, being come from the Father, in Christ's Name, that is, Pursuing Christ's Doctrine, hath taught us of Himself, concerning Himself; That so ye may first see some insolences and injuries offered to the Holy Ghost by some ancient Heretics, and some of later times, by the Church of Rome; For, truly, it is hard to name, or to imagine any one sin, nearer to that emphatical sin, that superlative sin, The sin against the Holy Ghost, than some offers of Doctrines, concerning the Holy Ghost, that have been obtruded, though not established, and some that have been absolutely established in that Church. And when we shall have delivered the Holy Ghost out of their hands, we shall also deliver him into yours, so as that you may feel him to shed himself upon you all here, and to accompany you all home, with a holy peace, and in a blessed calm, in testifying to your souls, that He, that Comforter, who is the holy Ghost, whom the Father hath sent in his Son's name, hath taught you all things, that is, awakened your memories, to the consideration of all that is necessary to your present establishment. And to these divers particulars, which thus constitute our two general parts, in their order thus proposed, we shall now proceed. As when our Saviour Christ received that confession of all the Disciples, 1 Part. in the mouth of S. Peter, Thou art Christ, the Son of the living God, Christ replied thereunto some things, Mat. 16.18. which had a more special, and a more personal respect to Peter, then to the rest, yet were intended of the rest too; so when Christ in this text, promises the Comforter, he does that most immediately, and most personally to them, to whom he then spoke, but he intends it to us also, and the holy Ghost shall teach us: us, that are in ourselves Ignorant, Ignorantes. which is our first Discomfort. The Schools have made so many Divisions, and subdivisions, and re-devisions, and post-divisions of Ignorance, that there goes as much learning to understand ignorance, as knowledge. One, much elder than all they, & elder (as some will have it) than any but some of the first Secretaries of the Holy Ghost in the Bible, that is Trismegistus, hath said as much as all, Nequitia animae Ignorantia, Ignorance is not only the drowsiness, the silliness, but the wickedness of the soul: Not only dis-estimation in this world, and damnification here, but damnation in the next world, proceeds from ignorance. And yet, here in this world, knowledge is but as the earth, and ignorance as the Sea; there is more sea than earth, more ignorance than knowledge; and as if the sea do gain in one place, it loses in another, so is it with knowledge too; if new things be found out, as many, and as good, that were known before, are forgotten and lost. What Anatomist knows the body of man thoroughly, or what Casuist the soul? What Politician knows the distemper of the State thoroughly; or what Master, the disorders of his own family? Prince's glory in Arcanis, that they have secrets which no man shall know, and, God knows, they have hearts which they know not themselves; Thoughts and purposes indigested fall upon them and surprise them. It is so in natural, in moral, in civil things; we are ignorant of more things than we know; And it is so in divine and supernatural things too; for, for them, the Scripture is our only light, and of the Scripture, S. Augustine professes, Plur a se nescire quam scire, That there are more places of Scripture, that he does not, then that he does understand. Hell is darkness; & the way to it, is the cloud of Ignorance; hell itself is but condensed Ignorance, multiplied Ignorance. To that, David ascribes all the distempers of the world, They do not know, neither will they understand, they walk on in darkness; and therefore, Psal. 82.5. (as he adds there) All the foundations of all the earth are out of course. He that had made the most absolute conquest of Ignorance in this world, Solomon, is the best Judge of it, the best Counsellor against it; and he says, As thou knowest not how thy bones grew in thy Mother, Eccles. 11.5. even so thou knowest not the works of God, who worketh all. We are all equally Ignorant of all, of natural, of spiritual things. What though? This; That man knoweth not his time, Eccles. 9.12. but is snared in an evil time, If he knew his time, no time would be evil unto him. Yet though he know not the present time, but let that pass inconsiderately, yet if he consider the future, he may recover. But he does not that, he cannot do that; Eccles. 10.14. Man cannot tell what shall be, says Solomon; But may he not learn? No. For, who can tell him? says he there. For, he knows not how to go to the City; In vulgar, in trivial things, he is ignorant of his end, and ignorant of his way. Bene facere nesciverunt, says the Prophet, jer. 4.22. They have no knowledge to do good; and what follows? Erubescere nescierunt, They are not ashamed when they have done evil. Nesciunt cujus spiritus sunt; Luke 9.15. It was Christ's increpation upon his own Disciples, They knew not of what spirit they were, They discerned not between a zealous and a vindicative spirit. Nescitis quid petatis, was Christ's increpation upon his Disciples too, You know not what you ask. And yet this Nequitia animae, Mat. 20.22. this wickedness of the soul, this pestilence of the soul, Ignorance, have men ventured to call The mother of devotion. But miserable Comforters are they, in respect of the Comforter, the Holy Ghost: for, as that Cum perver so perverteris, is spoken of God, Psal. 18.27. That God will learn of the froward, to be froward, so God will learn of the ignorant, to be ignorant; ignorant of us; and to those that do not study him here, he will say hereafter, Nescio vos, I know not you. This then is our first discomfort, of ourselves we are ignorant; and yet there is a greater vexation than this, that naturally we have a desire of knowledge, and naturally no means to attain to it. Ignorance may be said to work, Appetentes. as an in-appetency in the stomach, and as an insipidnesse, a tastlesnesse in the palate; But the desire of knowledge, without means to attain to it, is as a hunger in a dearth, or in a wilderness. Ignorance is a kind of slumbering, or stupidity, but this desire without means, is a continual racking, a continual pressing; a far greater vexation, and torment; ignorance may work as a Lethargy, but this desire as a frenzy. Esay 37.3. This is the day of trouble, (says Ezechias in the bitterness and passion of his soul) and of rebuke, and of blasphemy, for the Children are come to the birth, and there is not strength to bring them forth. To a barrenness, that is, never to have conceived, there belonged, amongst that people, a kind of shame and contempt, (and that is our case in ignonorance, which is the barrenness of the soul) But to come to the throws of Childbirth, and then not to have strength, or not to have help to be delivered, that is the dangerous, that is the deadly torment; and that represents our soul, in this desire of knowledge, without means to attain to it. And yet, this vexation no man can divest; It is an hereditary, a natural impression in man; every man naturally, says the Philosopher, desires to know, to learn. And yet, nature that imprinted that desire in every man, hath not given every man, not any man, in nature, means to satisfy that desire; for, even by nature man hath a desire to know supernatural things. Solomon was extended with this desire of knowledge, 1 King. 3.11. but he found no satisfaction, till upon petition, and contracting all his desires into that One, Dan. 9.23. he obtained it of God. Daniel was Virro desideriorum, A man composed of desires, Dan. 10.2. and of solicitude: He professes that he mourned three full weeks, He eat no pleasant bread, Ver. 8. neither came flesh or wine into his mouth, nor oil upon his body; His comeliness was turned into corruption, and he retained no strength, till God by his Angel satisfied his desire of knowledge. Consider the anxiety and torture, under which that Eunuch was in the Chariot, Acts 8. till he was taught the meaning of the Prophet Esay. And consider the way that God took; God sent an Angel, and that Angel sent Philip to him. Instruction is from God, but yet by the Ministry of man, Philip asks him, Dost thou understand? He would have a confession of his impotency from himself. Alas, How can I, says he, except some man shouldguide me? And Philip guides him; and then how soon he comes to that holy cheerfulness, Ver. 36. and dilatation of the soul, I believe that jesus is the Son of God, Hieron. and, See, here is water, what doth hinder me, that I be baptised? Nec sanctior sum hoc Eunucho, nec studiosior, says S. Hierom of himself; I cannot have more desire to learn than he had; yet, in myself, I have no more means neither; and therefore must be under the same pain, till the same hand, the hand of God relieve me. The soul of man cannot be considered under a thicker cloud, than Ignorance, nor under a heavier weight, then desire of knowledge. And therefore, for our deliverance in both, our Saviour Christ here comforts us with The Comforter; you, you that are in the darkness of Ignorance, you, you that are under the oppression of a hunger of knowledge, you shall be satisfied, for, He that comes from my Father, in my name, He shall teach you. That which the Vulgat reads, Doeebit. Eccles. 6.9. Desider are quod nescias, To desire to know that which thou knowest not yet, our Translation calls, The wand'ring of the desire, and in the Original it is, The walking, the pilgrimage of the Soul; the rest lesnesse, and irresolution of the Soul. And when man is taught that which he desired to know, than the Soul is brought home, and laid to rest. Desire is the travail, knowledge is the Inn; desire is the wheel, knowledge is the bed of the Soul. Therefore we affect society and conversation to know present things; Therefore we assist ourselves with History, to know things past, and with Astrology, and sometimes with worse Arts, to know future things. The name of Master, of Teacher, that passes through the Scripture, is Rabbi, and Rabbi in the root thereof signifies, Magnum, and Multum; It is a word that denotes Greatness; And truly no man should be greater in our eyes, nor be thought to have laid greater obligations upon us, Esay 19.20. than he that hath taught us. When Christ is promised thus, The Lord shall send them a Saviour, and a Great one, there is this word Rabbi: The Lord shall send them a Saviour, which shall be Rabbi a great Teacher; Christ was a Saviour, as he paid God a ransom for all; As he made man capable of this Salvation, he was this Rabbi, this Teacher; and in this capacity, did those two Disciples of john Baptist, who first applied themselves to Christ, apply themselves, Magister ubi habitas? Master, John 1.38. where dwellest thou? where may we come to School to thee? where may we be taught by thee? S. Paul hath showed us the duty of all true disciples, in the practice of the Galatians; You received me as an Angel of God, even as Christ jesus, and I bear you record, Gal. 4.14. that if it had been possible, you would have plucked out your own eyes, and have given them to me. I thank him that brings me a candle, when it grows dark, and him that assists me with a spectacle, when my sight grows old; But to him that hath given the eyes of my soul, light and spectacles, how much a greater debtor am I? I will not dispute against nature, nor natural affections, nor dispute against Allegiance, nor civil obligations, nor dispute against gratitude, nor retribution of Benefits; But I willingly pronounce, that I cannot owe more to any Benefactor, to my Father, to my Prince, than I do to them that have taught me; nor can there be a deeper ingratitude, then to turn thy face from that man, or from his children, that hath taught thee. This Christ presents for the first Comfort, Doccbimini, You are ignorant, but that cloud shall be dispersed, you would learn, but have no help, but that defect shall be supplied, you shall be taught: And then, this comfort shall be exalted to you, in the person of the Teacher, Ille docebit, He whom the Father will send in my name, He shall teach you. Quintilian requires no more of a Schoolmaster, but that either he be learned, Ille. or do not think himself to be so, if he be not: Because if he over-value himself, he will admit no Usher, no assistant. Here we have a master that is both absolute in himself, and yet undertaken for by others too; The Father sends him, and in the Son's name, that is, to perfect the Sons work. Tertullian (a man of adventurous language) calls him Tertium numen divinitatis, & tertium nomen majestatis: The Holy Ghost hath but a third place, but the same Godhead, but a third name, yet the same Majesty, as the first, The Father, or the second, The Son. Porphyry that denied the Trinity, is convinced by S. Cyril, to have established a Trinity, because he acknowledged first Deum summum, and then, Conditorem omnium, and after them, Animam mundi; One that is a supreme God, One that was the Creator of all things, and One that quickens and inanimates all, and is the soul of the whole world: And this soul of the world is the Holy Ghost, who doth that office to the soul of every Christian, which the soul itself doth to every natural man, informs him, directs him, instructs him, makes him be that he is, and do that he doth. And therefore as Tertullian calls Christ by the Holy Ghosts name, (for he calls Christ Spiritum Dei, because, as the office of our spirits is to unite the body and the soul, so Christ hath united God and man in one Emanuel) S. Basil gives the Holy Ghost Christ's name, for he calls the Holy Ghost Verbum Dei, The word of God, because he undertakes the Pedagogy of the soul, to be the soul's Schoolmaster, and to teach it as much of God as concerns it, that is, Christ crucified. Therefore when the Holy Ghost was first sent, he was sent but to testify of Christ; At Christ's Baptism (which was his first sending) he was sent but to establish an assurance, and a belief, that that Christ was the Son of God, in whom he was well pleased; And this he did but as a witness, not as a Teacher; for the voice that wrought this, and taught this, came not from the Dove, not from the Holy Ghost, but from above; The Holy Ghost said nothing then. But when the Holy Ghost in performance of Christ's promise in this Text, was sent as a Teacher, than he came in the form of Tongues, and they that received him, were thereby presently enabled to speak to others. This therefore is the coming, and this is the teaching of the Holy Ghost, Acts 2.3. promised and intended in this Text, and performed upon this Day, that he by his power enables and authorises other men to teach thee; That he establishes a Church, and Ordinances, and a Ministry, by which thou mayst be taught how to apply Christ's Merits to thy soul. He needed not to have invested, and taken the form of a Tongue, if he would have had thee think it enough to hear the Spirit at home, alone; but to let thee see, that his way of teaching should be the ministry of men, he came in that organ of speech, the Tongue. And therefore learn thou by hearing, what he says: And that that he says, he says here; here in his Ordinance. And therefore hear what he hath declared, inquire not what he hath decreed; Hear what he hath said, there, where he hath spoken, ask not what he meant in his unrevealed will, of things whereof he hath said nothing; For they that do so, mistake God's mind often. God protests, It never came into my mind, that they should sin thus; God never did it, God never meant it, that any should sin necessarily, jer. 32.35. without a willing concurrence in themselves, or be damned necessarily, without relation to sin willingly committed. Therefore is S. Augustine vehement in that expostulation, Quis tam stultè curiosus est, qui filium suum mittat in scholam, ut quid magister cogitat, discat? Doth any man put his son to school, to learn what his Master thinks? The Holy Ghost is sent to Teach; he teaches by speaking; he speaks by his Ordinance, and Institution in his Church. All knowledge, and all zeal, that is not kindled by him, by the Holy Ghost, and kindled here, at first is all smoke, and then all flame; Zeal without the Holy Ghost, is at first, cloudy ignorance, all smoke; and after, all crackling and clambering flame, Schismatical rage, and distemper. Here we, we that are naturally ignorant, we, we that are naturally hungry of knowledge, are taught, a free School is opened unto us, and taught by him, by the Holy Ghost speaking in his Delegates, in his Ministers; (which were the pieces that constituted our first part) And the second, to which we are now come, is the manner of the Holy Ghosts coming, and teaching in his Ordinance, that is, by remembering, He shall bring to your remembrance, etc. They had wont to call Pictures in the Church, 2 Part. Reminiscentia. the layman's book, because in them, he that could not read at all, might read much. The ignorantest man that is, even he that cannot read a Picture, even a blind man, hath a better book in himself; In his own memory he may read many a history of God's goodness to him. Quid ab initio, How it was in the beginning, is Christ's Method; To determine things according to former precedents; And truly the Memory is oftener the Holy Ghosts Pulpit that he preaches in, than the Understanding. How many here would not understand me, or not rest in that which they heard, if I should spend the rest of this hour in repeating, and reconciling that which divers authors have spoken diversely of the manner of Christ's presence in the Sacrament, or the manner of Christ's descent into Hell, or the manner of the concurrence, and joynt-working of the grace of God, and the freewill of man, in men's actions? But is there any man amongst us that is not capable of this Catechism, Remember to morrow but those good thoughts which you have had within this hour, since you came hither now: Remember at your last hour, to be but as good as you are this minute; I would scarce ask more in any man's behalf, then that he would always be as good, as at some times he is; If he would never sink below himself, I would less care, though he did not exceed himself: If he would remember his own holy purposes at best, he would never forget God; If he would remember the comfort he had in having overcome such a tentation yesterday, he would not be overcome by that tentation to day. The Memory is as the conclusion of a Syllogism, which being inferred upon true propositions, cannot be denied: He that remembers God's former blessings, concludes infallibly upon his future. Therefore Christ places the comfort of this Comforter, the Holy Ghost, in this, that he shall work upon that pregnant faculty, the Memory; He shall bring things to your remembrance; And then, Omnia, All those things which I have said unto you. Christ gave the Holy Ghost to the Apostles, Omnia. Mat. 18.18. John 20.22. John 15.15. when he gave them the power of absolution in his life time. He gave them the Holy Ghost more powerfully, when after his Resurrection, He breathed on them, and said, Receive ye the Holy Ghost. He opened himself to them, in a large fullness, when he said, All things that I have heard of my Father, I have made known unto you; But in a greater largeness than that, when upon this day, according to the promise of this Text, the holy Ghost was sent unto them; for this was in the behalf of others. And upon this fullness, out of Tertullian it is argued, Nihilignorarunt, crgo nihil non docuerunt, As the Apostles were taught all things by Christ, so they taught the Church all things. There is then the sphere, and the compass, and the date of our knowledge; not what was thought or taught in the tenth, or fourteenth Century: but what was taught in Christ, and in the Apostles time. Christ taught all things to his Apostles, and the Holy Ghost brought all things to their remembrance that he had taught them, that they might teach them to others, and so it is derived to us. But it is Omnia & Sola; Sola. John 15.26. It is All, but it is Only those things. He shall testify of me, saith Christ concerning the Holy Ghost; Now the office of him that testifies, of a witness, is to say all the truth, but nothing but the truth. When the Roman Church charges us, not that all is not truth, which we teach, but that we do not teach all the truth, And we charge them, not that they do not teach all the truth, but that all is not truth that they teach, so that they charge us with a defective, we them with a superfluous religion, our case is the safer, because all that we affirm, is by confession of all parts true, but that which they have added, requires proof, and the proof lies on their side; and it rests yet unproved. And certainly many an Indian, who is begun to be catechised, and dies, is saved, before he come to believe all that we believe; But whether any be saved that believe more than we believe, and believe it as equally fundamental, and equally necessary to salvation, with that which we from the express word of God do believe, is a Problem, not easily answered, not safely affirmed. Truly I had rather put my salvation upon some of those ancient Creeds, which want some of the Articles of our Creed, (as the Nicene Creed doth, and so doth Athanasius) then upon the Trent Creed, that hath as many more Articles as ours hath. The office of the Holy Ghost himself, the Spirit of all comfort, is but to bring those things to remembrance, which Christ taught, and no more. They are many; too many, for many revolutions of an hourglass. Spiritus Sanctus. Therefore we proposed at first, That when we should come to this Branch, for the proper celebration of the day, we would only touch some things, which the Holy Ghost had taught of himself, that so we might detect, and detest such things, as some ancient, and some later Heretics had said of the Holy Ghost. Now those things which the ancient Heretics have said, are sufficiently gainsaid by the ancient Fathers. The Montanists said the Holy Ghost was in Christ, and in the Apostles, but in a fare higher exaltation in Montanus, then in either; but Tertullian opposed that. Manes was more insolent than the Montanist, for he avowed himself to be the Holy Ghost, and S. Augustine overthrew that. Hierarchas was more modest than so, and did but say, That Melchisedech was the Holy Ghost, and S. Cyprian would not endure that. The Arrians said the Holy Ghost was but Creatura Creaturae, made by the Son, which Son himself was but made in time, and not eternally begotten by the Father; but Liberius, and many of the Fathers opposed that; as a whole general Council did Macedonius, when he refreshed many Errors formerly condemned, concerning the Holy Ghost; and few of these have had any Resurrection, any repulullation, or appeared again in these later days. But in these later times, two new Heresies have arisen concerning the Holy Ghost. About four hundred years since, Euangelium Spiritus Sancti. came out that famous infamous Book in the Roman Church, which they called Euangelium Spiritus Sancti, The Gospel of the Holy Ghost; in which, was pretended, That as God the Father had had his time in the government of the Church, in the Law, And God the Son his time, in the Gospel, so the Holy Ghost was to have his time; and his time was to begin within fifty years after the publishing of that Gospel, and to last to the end of the world; and therefore it was called Euangelium aeternum, The everlasting Gospel. By this Gospel, the Gospel of Christ was absolutely abrogated, and the power of governing the Church, according to the Gospel of Christ, utterly evacuated; for, it was therein taught, that only the literal sense of the Gospel had been committed to them, who had thus long governed in the name of the Church, but the spiritual and mystical sense was reserved to the Holy Ghost, and that now the Holy Ghost would set that on foot: And so, (which was the principal intention in that plot) they would have brought all Doctrine, and all Discipline, all Government into the Cloister, into their religious Orders, and overthrown the Hierarchy of the Church, of Bishops, and Priests, and Deacons, and Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, and brought all into Monasteries. He that first opposed this Book was Waldo, he that gave the name to that great Body, that great power of Men, who attempted the Reformation of the Church, and were called the Waldenses, who were especially defamed, and especially persecuted for this, that they put themselves in the gap, and made themselves a Bank, against this torrent, this inundation, this impetuousness, this multiplicy of Friars, and Monks, that surrounded the world in those times. And when this Book could not be dissembled, and being full of blasphemy against Christ, was necessarily brought into agitation, yet all that was done by them, who had the government of the Church in their hands then, was but this, That this Book, this Gospel of the Holy Ghost should be suppressed and smothered, but without any noise, or discredit; and the Book which was writ against it, should be solemnly, publicly, infamously burnt. And so they kindled a War in Heaven, greater than that in the Revelation, Rev. 12.7. where Michael and his Angels fought against the Dragon, and his Angels; For, here they brought God the Son into the field, against God the Holy Ghost, and made the Holy Ghost divest, dethrone, disseise, and dispossess the Son of his Government. Now when they could not advance that Heresy, Scrinium pectoris. when they could not bring the Holy Ghost to that greatness, when they could not make him King to their purposes, that is, King over Christ, They are come to an Heresy clean contrary to that Heresy, that is, to imprison the Holy Ghost, And since they could not make him King over Christ himself, they have made him a Prisoner, and a slaue to Christ's Vicar, and shut him up there, In scrinio pectoris, (as they call it) in that close imprisonment, in the breast and bosom of one man, that Bishop: And so, the Holy Ghost is no longer a Dove, a Dove in the Ark, a Dove with an Olive-Branch, a Messenger of peace, but now the Holy Ghost is in a Bull, in Bulls worse than Phalaris his Bull, Bulls of Excommunication, Bulls of Rebellion, and Deposition, and Assassinates of Christian Princes. The Holy Ghost is no longer Omni-present, Psal. 139.7. as in David's time, (Wither shall I goefrom thy Spirit?) but he is only there, whither he shall be sent from Rome in a Cloak-bagge, and upon a Post-horse, as it was often complained in the Council of Trent. The Holy Ghost is no longer Omniscient, to know all at once, 1 Cor. 2.10 .. as in S. Paul's time, when the Spirit of God searched all things, yea the deep things of God, but as a Sea-captain receives a Ticket, to be opened when he comes to such a height, and thereby to direct his future course, so the Holy Ghost is appointed to ask the Pope's Nuntio, his Legate, what he shall declare to be truth. So the Holy Ghost was sent into this Kingdom, by Leo the tenth, with his Legate, that brought the Bull of Declaration for Hcnry the eights Divorce; but the Holy Ghost might not know of it, that is, not take knowledge of it, not declare it to be a Divorce, till some other conditions were performed by the King, which being never performed, the Holy Ghost remained in the case of a new created Cardinal, o'er clauso, he had novoyce; and so the Divorce, though past all debatements, and all consents, and all determinations at Rome, was no Divorce, because he that sent the Holy Ghost from Rome, forbade him to publish and declare it. So that the style of the Court is altered from the Apostles time; Acts 15.28. Then it was, Visum est Spiritui Sancto, & nobis, It seemed good to the Holy Ghost, and to us; First to the Holy Ghost, before others; and when it is brought to others, it is to us, to others in the plural, to many others. But now it is Visum est mihi, & Spiritui Sancto, It seems good unto me, to one man alone; and when it does so, it shall seem good to the Holy Ghost too. And of these two Heretical violences to the Holy Ghost, we complain against that Church, first, that they put the Holy Ghost in a Rebellion against the Son of God, from whom he proceeds; And then, (as for the most part, the end of them, who pretend right to a Kingdom, and cannot prove it, is to lie in Prison) That they have imprisoned the Holy Ghost in one man's breast, and not suffered that wind to breathe where it will, as Christ promised the Holy Ghost should do: For neither did the Holy Ghost bring any such thing to their remembrance, as though Christ had taught any such Doctrine, neither can they that teach it, come nearer the sin, The unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost, than thus to make him a supplanter of Christ, or supplanted by Antichrist. But we hold you no longer in this ill Air, Charismata Spiritus. blasphemous and irksome contumelies against the Holy Ghost: we promised at first, to dismiss you at last, in a perfume, with the breath of the Holy Ghost upon you; and that is, to excite you to a rectified sense, and knowledge, August. that he offers himself unto you, and is received by you. Fancies Dei est, qua nobis innotescit; That is always the face of God to us, by which God vouchsafes to manifest himself to us: So, his Ordinance in the Church, is his face. And Lux Dei, qua nobis illucescit, The light of God to us, is that light by which he shines upon us; Lex Dei, Lux Dei, his word, in his Church. And then, the Evidence, the Seal, the Witness of all, that this face which I see by this light, is directed upon me for my comfort, is, The Testimony of the Holy Ghost, when that Spirit bears witness with our spirit, that he is in us. And therefore in his blessed Name, and in the participation of his power, I say to you all, Accipite Spiritum sanctum, Receive ye the holy Ghost. Not that I can give it you, 2 Cor. 3.5. but I can tell you, that he offers to give himself to you all. Our sufficiency is of God, says the Apostle; Acknowledge you a sufficiency in us, a sufficient power to be in the Ministry; for, (as the Apostle adds) He hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament: Not able only in faculties and gifts requisite for that function, (those faculties and gifts, whether of nature, or of acquisition, be, in as great measure, in some that have not that function) but able, by his powerful Ordinance, (as it is also added there) to minister, not the letter, (not the letter only) but The Spirit, the Spirit of the New Testament, that is, the holy Ghost to you. Therefore as God said to Moses, I will come down, Numb. 11.17 and talk with thee, and I will take of the Spirit which is upon thee, and put it upon them, God, in his Spirit does come down to us in his Ministry, and talk with us, his Ministers at home, that is, assist us in our Meditations, and lucubrations, and preparations, for this service here, and then, here, in this place, he takes of that Spirit from us, and sheds upon you, imparts the gifts of the holy Ghost to you also, and makes the holy Ghost as much yours, by your hearing, as he made him ours, by our study: Be not deceived by the letter, by the phrase of that place; God does not say there, that he will take of the Spirit from us, and give it you, that is, fill you with it, and leave us without it; but he will take of that Spirit, that is, impart that Spirit so to you, as that by us, and our present Ministry, he will give you that that shall be sufficient for you, to day, and yet call you to us again in his Ordinance, another day. Learn as much as you can every day, and never think that you have learned so much, as that you have no more need of a Teacher; for though you need no more of that man, (you may be perchance as learned as he) yet you need more of that Ordinance: We give you the holy Ghost then, when we open your eyes to see his offers. Those words of the Apostle, Ourselves have the first fruits of the Spirit, Rom. 8.23. S. Ambrose interprets so, Ourselves, we the Ministers of God, have the first fruits of the Spirit, the pre-possession, the pre-inhabitation, but not the sole possession, nor sole inhabitation of the Holy Ghost; but we have grace for grace, the Spirit therefore, to shed the Spirit upon you; that that precious Ointment, Psal. 133.2. (the Holy Ghost is this Unction) which was poured upon the Head, upon Christ, may run down, upon Aaron's beard, and from those grey, and grave, and reverend hairs of his Ministers, may also go down to the skirts of his garments, to every one of you, who do not only make up the garment, that is, the visible, but the mystical body itself of Christ Jesus. Ver. 3. The dew of Hermon descends upon the mountains of Zion; But the waters that fall upon the mountains, fall into the valleys too from thence; The Holy Ghost falls, through us, upon you also, so, as that you may, so, as that you must find it in yourselves. The Holy Ghost was the first Person, that was declared in the Creation, The Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters, Gen. 1.2. that was the first motion. This is eternal life, to know God, and him whom he sent, Christ jesus. But this you cannot do, but by him whom they both sent, the Holy Ghost; 1 Cor. 12.3. No man can say, that jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost. john Baptist who was to baptise Christ, was filled with the holy Ghost from the womb. You, who were baptised in Christ, were filled, (in your measure) with the holy Ghost, from that womb, from the time that the Church conceived you in Baptism. And therefore, as the Twelve said to the multitude, Acts 6.3. Look ye among ye seven men full of the holy Ghost, So we say to the whole Congregation, Look every man to himself, that he be one of the seven, one of that infinite number, which the holy Ghost offers to fall upon; That as ye were baptised in the holy Ghost, and as your bodies are Temples of the holy Ghost, so your souls may be Priests of the holy Ghost, and you, altogether a lively and reasonable sacrifice to God, in the holy Ghost. Eph. 1.13. That as you have been sealed with the holy Spirit of promise, you may find in yourselves the performance of that promise, find the seal of that promise, in your love to the Scriptures; for, (as S. chrysostom argues usefully) Christ gave the Apostles no Scriptures, but he gave them the holy Ghost in stead of Scriptures; But to us, who are weaker, he hath given both, The holy Ghost in the Scriptures; and, if we neglect either, we have neither; If we trust to a private spirit, and call that the holy Ghost, without Scripture, or to the Scriptures without the holy Ghost, that is, without him, there, where he hath promised to be, in his Ordinance, in his Church, we have not the seal of that Promise, the holy Ghost. Find then that promise in your holy love, and sober study of the Scriptures, and find the performance, the fruits thereof in your conversation, and then you have an Autumn better than any worldly Spring, A vintage, a gathering of those blessed fruits, Gal. 5.22. The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance; where (by the way) these are not called severally the fruits of the Spirit, as though they were so many several fruits, which might be had one without another, but collectively, all together, they are called the fruit; It is not Love alone, nor Joy alone, no nor Faith alone, that is the fruit of the holy Ghost; Love; but not love alone, but that love, when between the holy Ghost and you, you can joy in that love, and not repent it; Joy, but not joy alone, but that joy, when between the holy Ghost and you, you can find peace in that joy, that you be not the sadder after, for having been so merry before, this, these, these and all the rest together are the fruit of the holy Ghost; and therefore labour to have them all, or you lack all. And then lastly, as we pursuing God's Ordinance, have been able to say to you Accipite Spiritum sanctum, Behold the holy Ghost in yourselves, behold he appeared to you, when he moved you to come hither, behold he appeared to you, as often as he hath opened the window of the Ark, your hearts, to take in this Dove, this hour, so we may say unto you, as we say in the School, There is an infusion of the holy Ghost; liquor is infused into a vessel, if that vessel hold it, though it do but cover the bottom and no more: The holy Ghost is infused into you, if he have made any entry, if he cover any part, if he have taken hold of any corrupt affection. There is also a diffusion of the holy Ghost; Liquor is diffused into a vessel, when it fills all the parts of the vessel, and leaves no emptiness, no dryness: The holy Ghost is diffused into you, if he overspread you, and possess you all, and rectify all your perversnesses. But then, in the School, we have also an effusion of the holy Ghost; And liquor is effused then, when it so fills the vessel, as that that overflows, to the benefit of them, who will participate thereof. Receive therefore the holy Ghost, so, as that the holy Ghost may overflow, flow from your example, to the edification of others; That you may go home, and say to your children, receive ye the holy Ghost, in the Spirit of contentment, and acquiescence, and thankfulness to God, and me, in that portion that I can leave you, And say to your servants, receive ye the holy Ghost, in the spirit of obedience, and fidelity, And say to your neigh bours, receive ye the holy Ghost, in the spirit of peace and quiemesse, And say to your Creditors, receive ye the holy Ghost in the spirit of patience, and tenderness, and compassion, and for bearing, And to your debtors, receive ye the holy Ghost in the spirit of industry, and labour in your calling. You see, Preaching itself, even the Preaching of Christ himself, had been lost, if the holy Ghost had not brought all those things to their remembrance. And if the holy Ghost do bring these things, which we preach to your remembrance, you are also made fishers of men, and Apostles, and (as the Prophet speaks) Salvatores mundi, Obad. 1.21. men that assist the salvation of the world, by the best way of preaching, an exemplar life, and holy convesation. Amen. SERMON XXX. Preached upon Whitsunday. Part of the Gospel of the Day. JOHN 14.20. At that day shall ye know, That I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you. THe two Volumes of the Scriptures are justly, and properly called two Testaments, for they are Testatio Mentis, The attestation, the declaration of the will and pleasure of God, how it pleased him to be served under the Law, and how in the state of the Gospel. But to speak according to the ordinary acceptation of the word, the Testament, that is, The last Will of Christ Jesus, is this speech, this declaration of his, to his Apostles, of which this text is a part. For, it was spoken, as at his Deathbed, his last Supper: And it was before his Agony in the garden, so that (if we should consider him as a mere man) there was no inordinateness, no irregularity in his affection; It was testified with sufficient witnesses, and it was sealed in blood, in the Institution of the Sacrament. By this Will then, as a rich, and abundant, Ver. 3. and liberal Testator, having given them so great a Legacy, as a place in the kingdom of heaven, yet he adds a codicil, he gives more, he gives them the evidence by which they should maintain their right to that kingdom, that is, the testimony of the Spirit, The Comforter, the Holy Ghost, whom he promises to send to them; Ver. 16. And still more and more abundant, he promises them, that that assurance of their right shall not be taken from them, till he himself return again to give them an everlasting possession, That he may receive us unto himself, and that where he is, we may also be. The main Legacy, Ver. 3. the body of the gift is before: That which is given in this Text, is part of that evidence by which it appears to us that we have right, and by which that right is maintained, and that is knowledge, that knowledge which we have of our interest in God, and his kingdom here; At that day ye shall know, etc. And in the giving of this, we shall consider, first, the Legacy itself, this knowledge, Cognoscetis, Ye shall know; And secondly, the time when this Legacy grows due to us, In illo die, At that day ye shall know; And thirdly, how much of this treasure is devised to us, what portion of this heavenly knowledge is bequeathed to us, and that is in three great sums, in three great mysteries; First, ye shall know the mystery of the Trinity, of distinct persons in the Godhead; Ego in patre, That I am in my Father; And then the mystery of the Incarnation of God, who took our flesh, Vos in me, That you are in me; And lastly, the mystery and working of our Redemption, in our Sanctification, Ego in vobis, That Christ (by his Spirit, the Holy Ghost) is in us. Nequitia animae ignoratio, says Trismegistus; 1. Part. Cognoscetis. He doth not say it is the infirmity of the soul, or the impotency of the soul, but the iniquity, the wickedness of the soul consists in this, that we are ignorant of those ways, and those ends, upon which we should direct, and by which we should govern our purposes: And if ignorance be the corruption, and dissolution, certainly knowledge is the redintegration, and consolidation of the soul. From this corruption, from this ignorance God delivered his people at first, in some measure, by the Law; that is, he gave them thereby a way to get out of this ignorance; he put them to School; Lex Paedagogus, says the Apostle, The Law was their Schoolmaster. But in the state of the Gospel, in the shedding of the beams, of the streams of his grace in the blood of Christ Jesus we are graduates, and have proceeded so far, as to a manifestation of things already done, and so our faith is brought in a great part, to consist in matter of fact, and that which was but matter of prophecy to them (in the old Testament, they knew not when it should be done) to us in the New, is matter of History, and we know when it was done: In the old times God led his people, sometimes with clouds, sometimes with fire, some lights they had, but some hidings, some withdrawings of those lights too, the mysteries of their salvation were not fully revealed unto them: To us, all is holy fire, all is evident light, all is in the Epiphany, in the manifestation of Christ, and in the presence of the Holy Ghost, who is delivered over to us, to remain with us, Vsque ad consummationem, Till the end of the world. God hath buried & hidden from us the body of Moses; he hath removed that cloud, that veil, the ceremony, the letter of the Law. Yea he hath hidden that which benighted us more, and kept us in more ignorance of him, our infinite sins, which are clouds of witnesses to our Consciences, he hath hidden them in the wounds of his Son our Saviour, so that there remains nothing but clearness, evident clearness; The Gospel being brought to us all, in that Christ is actually and really come, and Christ being brought to me, in that he is appliable in the Church to every particular soul; so that this Legacy that is given in this text, is not only in a possibility, and in a probability, and in a verisimilitude, but in an assurance, and in an infallibility, in a knowledge, we know it is thus, and thus. We shall therefore consider this knowledge, first, as it is opposed to ignorance, secondly, as it is opposed to inconsideration, and thirdly, as it is opposed to conclealing, to smothering: First, we must have it, and then we must know that we have it, and after that we must publish it, and declare it, so that others may know that we know it. Now, Ignorantia. as there is a profitable, a wholesome, a learned ignorance, which is a modest, and a reverend abstinence from searching into those secrets which God hath not revealed in his word, (whereupon S. Augustine says usefully, Libenter ignoremus, quae ignorare nos vult Deus, Let not us desire to know that which God hath no will to reveal) So also there is an unprofitable, an infectious, indeed an ignorant knowledge, which puffes, and swells us up: that, of which the Prophet says, Stultus factus est omnis homo, à scientia; Jer. 12. Every man's knowledge makes him a fool, when it makes him undervalue, and despise another. And this is one strange and incurable effect of this opinion of wit and knowledge, that whereas every man murmurs, and says to himself, such a man hath more land than I, more money than I, more custom, more practice than I, (when perchance, in truth it is not so) yet every man thinks, that he hath more wit, more knowledge than all the world beside, when, God knows, it is very far from being so. When the Prophet in that place, calls this confident believer in his own wisdom, Fool, he hath therein fastened upon him a name of the greatest reproach to man, which the Holy Ghost, in the mouth of a Prophet, could choose; As it appears best in those gradations which Christ makes, Mat. 5.22. where, Whosoever is angry, is made culpable of judgement, whosoever says Racha, (that is, expresses his anger in any contumelious speech) is subject to a Council, but whosoever shall say, Fool, shall be worthy to be punished in hell fire. For, by calling him Fool, says S. chrysostom there, he takes from him that understanding, by which he is a man, and so, says he, despoiles him of all interest in the creature, in this life, and all interest in God, in the life to come. It is the deepest indignation, the highest abomination that job in his anguish conceived, job 19 Stulti despiciebant me, They that are but fools themselves, despised me; And after that again, They are the children of fools, and yet I am their song, and their talk: And in that comparison which God himself instituted, and proposed in Deuteronomie, They have moved me to jealousy, Deut. 30. with that which is not God, and I will move them to jealousy, with those who are no people, I will provoke them to anger with a foolish Nation, God intimates so much, That a Fool is no more a man, than an Idol is a God. Now this foolishness which we speak of, against which God gives us this Legacy of knowledge, is not that bluntness, that dulness, that narrowness of understanding, which is opposed to sharpness of wit, or readiness of expressing, and delivering any matter, for very many very devout and godly men, lack that sharpness, and that readiness, and yet have a good portion of spiritual wisdom, and knowledge. Neither is this foolishness, that weakness, or inability, to amass and gather together particulars, as they have fallen out in former times, and in our times, and thereby to judge of future occurrences by former precedents, (which is the wisdom of Statesmen, and of civil contemplation, to build up a body of knowledge, from reading stories, or observing actions) for this wisdom Solomon calls vanity, and vexation; Nor is this foolishness, that precipitation, that over-earnestnesse, that animosity, that heat which some men have, and which is opposed to discretion; for sometimes zeal itself hath such a heat, and such a precipitation in it, and yet that zeal may not be absolutely condemned, but may be sometimes of some use; The dull man, the weak man, the hasty man is not this fool, Prov. 28. but (as the Wiseman, who knew best, hath told us,) The fool is he that trusteth in his own heart. And therefore, against this foolishness of trusting in our own hearts, of confiding, and relying upon our own plots and devices, and from sacrificing to our own nets, (as the Prophet Habakkuk speaks) from this attributing of all to our own industry, from this ignorance, that all blessings, spiritual and temporal too, proceed from God, and from God only, and from God manifested in Christ, and from Christ explicated in the Scriptures, and from the Scriptures applied in the Church, (which is the sum of all religion) God hath given us this Legacy of knowledge, Cognoscetis, At that day you shall know, as knowledge is opposed to ignorance. As it is opposed to inconsideration, Inconsideratio. it is a great work that it doth too: for, as God hath made himself like man in many things, in taking upon him, in Scriptures, our lineaments and proportion, our affections and passions, our apparel and garments, so hath God made himself like man, in this also, that as man doth, so he also takes it worse to be neglected, then to be really injured; Some of our sins do not offend God so much, as our inconsideration, a stupid passing him over, as though that we did, that which we had, that which we were, appertained not to him, had no emanation from him, no dependence upon him. As God says in the Prophet, of lame, and blemished, and unperfect Sacrifices, Offer it unto any of your Princes, and see if they will accept it at your hands; So I say to them that pass their lives thus inconsiderately, Offer that to any of your Princes, any of your Superiors; Dares an officer that receives instructions from his Prince, when he leaves his commandments unperformed, say, I never thought of it? Dares a Subject, a Servant, a Son say so? Now beloved, this knowledge, as it is opposed to inconsideration, is in this, that God by breeding us in the visible Church, multiplies unto us so many helps and assistances in the word preached, in the Sacraments, in other Sacramental, and Ritual, and Ceremonial things, which are auxiliary, subsidiary reliefs, and refresh to our consideration, as that it is almost impossible to fall into this inconsideration. Here God shows this inconsiderate man, his book of creatures, which he may run and read; that is, he may go forward in his vocation, and yet see that every creature calls him to a consideration of God. Every Ant that he sees, asks him, Where had I this providence, and industry? Every flower that he sees, asks him, Where had I this beauty, this fragrancy, this medicinal virtue in me? Every creature calls him to consider, what great things God hath done in little subjects. But God opens to him also, here in his Church, his Book of Scriptures, and in that Book, every word cries out to him; every merciful promise cries to him, Why am I here, to meet thee, to wait upon thee, to perform God's purpose towards thee, if thou never consider me, never apply me to thyself? Every judgement of his anger cries out, Why am I here, if thou respect me not. if thou make not thy profit, of performing those conditions, which are annexed to those judgements, and which thou mightest perform, if thou wouldst consider it? Yea, here God opens another book to him, his manual, his bosom, his pocket book, his Vade Mecum, the Abridgement of all Nature, and all Law, his own heart, and conscience: And this book, though he shut it up, and clasp it never so hard, yet it will sometimes burst open of itself; though he interline it with other studies, and knowledges, yet the Text itself, in the book itself, the testimonies of the conscience, will shine through and appear: Though he load it, and choke it with Commentaries and questions, that is, perplex it with Circumstances, and Disputations, yet the matter itself, which is imprinted there, will present itself: yea, though he tear some leaves out of the Book, that is, wilfully, yea studiously forget some sins that he hath done, and discontinue the reading of this book, the survey and consideration of his conscience, for some time, yet he cannot lose, he cannot cast away this book, that is so in him, as that it is himself, and evermore calls upon him, to deliver him from this inconsideration, by this open and plentiful Library, which he carries about him. Consider, beloved, the great danger of this inconsideration, by remembering, That even that only perfect man, Christ Jesus, who had that great way of making him a perfect man, as that he was perfect God too, even in that act of deepest devotion, in his prayer in the garden, by permitting himself, out of that humane infirmity, which he was pleased to admit in himself, (though fare from sin) to pass one petition in that prayer, without a debated and considered will, in his Transeat Calix, If it be possible, let this Cup pass, he was put to a re-consideration, and to correct his Prayer, Veruntamen, Yet not my will, but thine be done. And if than our best acts of praying, and hearing, need such an exact consideration, consider the richness, and benefit of this Legacy, knowledge, as this knowledge is opposed to inconsideration. It is also opposed to concealing and smothering; Occultatio. It must be published to the benefit of others. Paulùm sepultae distat inertiae celata virtus, says the Poet; Virtue that is never produced into action, is scarce worthy of that name. For that is it, which the Apostle, in his Epistle to that Church, which was in philemon's house, Philem. 6. doth so much praise God for, That the fellowship of thy faith may be made fruitful, and that whatsoever good thing is in you through jesus Christ, may be known: That according to the nature of goodness, and to the root of goodness, God himself, this knowledge of God may be communicated, and transfused, and shed, and spread, and derived, and digested upon others. And therefore certainly, as the Philosopher said of civil actions, Etiam simulare Philosophiam, Philosophia est, That it was some degree of wisdom, to be able to seem wise; so, though it be no degree of religion, to seem religious, yet even that may be a way of reducing others, and perchance themselves: when a man makes a public, an outward show of being religious, by coming ordinarily to Church, and doing those outward duties, though this be hypocrisy in him, yet sometimes other men receive profit by his example, and are religious in earnest, and, sometimes, Appropinquat & nescit, (as S. Augustine confesses that it was his case, when he came out of curiosity, and not out of devotion, to hear S. Ambrose preach) what respect soever brought that man hither, yet when God finds him here, in his house, he takes hold of his conscience, and shows himself to him, though he came not to see him. And if God do thus produce good out of the hypocrite, and work good in him, much more will he provide a plentiful harvest, by their labours, who having received this knowledge from God, assist their weaker brethren, both by the Example of their lives, and the comfort of their Doctrine. This knowledge then, 2. Part. In die. which to work the intended effect in us, is thus opposed to ignorance, and to inconsideration, and to concealing, (which were the pieces that constitute our first Part) in the second Part, which is the time when this Legacy accrues to us, is to be given us, In die illo, at that day, At that day shall ye know, etc. It is the illumination, the illustration of our hearts, and therefore well referred to the Day; The word itself affords cheerfulness. For when God inflicted that great plague, to kill all the firstborn in Egypt, Exod. 12. Luke 20. that was done at Midnight: And when God would intimate both deaths at once, spiritual, and temporal, he says, O fool, this night they will fetch away thy soul. Against all supply of knowledge, he calls him fool; and against all sense of comfort in the day, he threatens night. It was In die, Illo. and In die illo, in the day, and at a certain day, and at a short day. For, after Christ had made his Will at this supper, & given strength to his Will, by his death, and proved his Will by his Resurrection, and left the Church possessed of his estate, by his Ascension, within ten days after that, he poured out this Legacy of knowledge. For, though some take this day mentioned in the Text, Calvin. to be Tanqnam unius diei tenor, à dato Spiritu, ad Resurrectionem; from the first giving of the Holy Ghost, to the Resurrection; And others take this day, Osiand. to be from his Resurrection, to the end of his second Conversation upon earth, till his Ascension; and S. Augustine refer it, Ad perfectam visionem in Coelis, to the perfect fruition of the sight of God in Heaven, yet the most useful, and best followed acceptation is, This Day of the coming of the Holy Ghost. That day we celebrate this day; and we can never find the Christian Church (so fare as we can judge by the evidence of Story) to have been without this festival day. The reason of all Festivals in the Church, was, and is, Ne volumine temporum, ingrata subrepat oblivio, August. Lest after many ages involved, and wrapped up in one another, God's particular benefits should be involved, and wrapped up in unthankfulness. And the benefits received this day, were such, as should never be forgotten: for, without this day, all the rest had been evacuated, and uneffectuall: If the Apostles by the coming of the Holy Ghost had not been established in an infallibility in themselves, and in an ability, to deal with all Nations, by the benefit of tongues, the benefit of Christ's passion had not been derived upon all Nations. And therefore, to This day, and to Easter-day, all public Baptisms, in the Primitive Church, were reserved; None were baptised (except in cases of necessity) but upon one of these two days: for, as there is an Exaltation, a Resurrection given us in Baptism, represented by Easter; so there belongs to us a confirmation, an establishing of grace, and the increase thereof, represented in Pentecost, in the coming of the Holy Ghost. As the Jews had an Easter in the memory of their deliverance from Egypt, and a Pentecost in the memory of the Law given at Mout Sinai; So at Easter we celebrate the memory of that glorious Passeover, when Christ passed from the grave, and hell, in his Resurrection, and at this Feast of Pentecost we celebrate his giving of the Law to all Nations, and his investing and possessing himself of his Kingdom, the Church: for this is Festum Adoptionis, as S. chrysostom calls it; The cheerful feast of our Adoption, in which, the Holy Ghost conveying the Son of God to us, enables us to be the Sons of God, and to cry Abba, Father. This then is that day, Acts 2. when the Apostles being with one accord, and in one place, (that is, in one faith, and in one profession of that faith, not only without Heresy, but without Schism too) the Holy Ghost as a mighty wind, filled them all, and gave them utterance; As a wind, to note a powerful working; And he filled them, to note the abundance; And he gave them utterance, to infer that which we spoke of before, The Communication of that knowledge, which they had received, to others. This was that Spirit, whom it concerned the Apostles so much to have, as that Christ himself must go from them, to send him to them; If I go not away, says Christ, the Comforter will not come to you. How great a comfort must this necessarily be, which must so abundantly recompense the loss of such a comfort; as the presence of Christ was? This is that Spirit, who though he were to be sent by the Father, and sent by the Son, yet he comes not as a Messenger from a Superior, for he was always equal to Father and Son: But the Father sent him, and the Son sent him, as a tree sends forth blossoms, and as those blossoms send forth a sweet smell, and as the Sun sends forth beams, by an emanation from itself; He is Spiritus quem nemo interpretari potest, says S. chrysostom; he hath him not, that doth not see he hath him, nor is any man without him, who, in a rectified conscience, thinks he hath him: Illo Prophetae illustrantur, Illo idiotae condiuntur, says the same Father, The Prophets, as high as their calling was, saw nothing without this Spirit, and with this Spirit, a simple man understands the Prophets. And therefore doth S. Basil attribute that to the Holy Ghost, which seems to be peculiar to the Son; he calls him Verbum Dei, because says he, Spiritus interpres Filii, sicut Filius Patris, As the Son hath revealed to us the will of the Father, and so is the Word of God to us, so the Holy Ghost applies the promises, and the merits of the Son to us, and so is the Word of God to us too, and enables us to come to God, in that voice of his blessed Servant, S. Augustine, O Deus, secretissime, & patentissime, Though nothing be more mysterious than the knowledge of God in the Trinity, yet nothing is more manifest unto us, then, by the light of this person, the Holy Ghost, so much of both the other Persons, as is necessary for our Salvation, is. Now, it is not only to the Apostles, that the Holy Ghost is descended this day, but, as S. Chrysostom says of the Annunciation, Non ad unam tantùm animam, It is not only to one Person, that the Angel said then, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and overshadow thee, but, says he, that Holy Ghost hath said, Super omnem, joel 2. I will pour out myself upon all men, so I say of this day, This day, if you be all in this place, (concentred, united here in one Faith, and one Religion) If you be of one accord, (that is, in perfect charity) The Holy Ghost shall fill you all (according to your measure, and his purpose) and give you utterance, in your lives and conversations. Qui ita vacat orationibus, Origen. ut dignus fiat illo vehementi Spiritu, semper habet diem Pentecostes: He that-loves the exercise of prayer so earnestly, as that in prayer he feels this vehemence of the Holy Ghost, that man dwells in an everlasting Whitsunday: for so he does, he hath it always, that ever had it aright: Oditeos Deus, qui unam putant diem, festum Domini; God hates that man, says Origen also, that celebrates any Holiday of his, but one day: that never thinks of the Incarnation of Christ, but upon Christmas-day, nor upon his Passion, and Resurrection, but upon Easter, and Good-friday. If you deal so with your souls, as with your bodies, and as you cloth yourselves with your best habits to day, but return again to your ordinary apparel to morrow: so for this day, or this hour, you divest the thought of your sins, but return after to your vomit, you have not celebrated this day of Pentecost; you have not been truly in this place, for your hearts have been visiting your profits, or pleasures; you have not been here with one accord, you have not truly and sincerely joined with the Communion of Saints; Christ hath sent no Comforter to you this day, neither will he send any, till you be better prepared for him. But if you have brought your sins hither in your memory, and leave them here in the blood of your Saviour, always flowing in his Church, and ready to receive them, if you be come to that heavenly knowledge, that there is no comfort but in him, and in him abundant consolation, than you are this day capable of this great Legacy, this knowledge, which is all the Christian Religion, That Christ is in the Father, and you in him, and he in you. We are now come to our third part, Our portion in this Legacy, 3 Part. the measure of the knowledge of these mysteries, which we are to receive: of which, S. chrysostom says well, Scientiae magnum argumentum est, nolle omnia scire, It is a good argument, that that man knows much, who desires not to know all; In pursuing true knowledge, he is gone a good way, that knows where to give over. When that great Manichean Felix would needs prove to S. Augustine, that Manes was the holy Ghost, because it was said that the holy Ghost should teach all truths, and that Manes did so, because he taught many things that they were ignorant of before, concerning the frame, and motion, and nature of the heavens and their stars, S. Augustine answered, Spiritus sanctus facit Christianos, non Mathematicos, The Holy Ghost makes us christian's, not Mathematicians. If any man think, by having his station at Court, that it is enough for him to have studied that one book, and that if in that book, The knowledge of the Court, he be come to an apprehension, by what means and persons businesses are likeliest to be carried, If he by his foresight have provided perspective glasses, to see objects a far off, and can make Almanacs for next year, and tell how matters will fall out then, and think that so he hath received his portion, as much knowledge as he needs, Spiritus sanctus facit Christianos, non Politicos, He must remember that the Holy Ghost makes Christians, and not Politians. So if a man have a good foundation of a fortune from his Parents, and think that all his study must be, to proceed in that, and still to add a Cipher more to his accounts, to make ten, hundreds, and hundreds, thousands, Spiritus sanctus facit Christianos, non Arithmeticos, The Holy Ghost makes Christians, and not such Arithmeticians. If men who desire a change in Religion, and yet think it a great wisdom, to disguise that desire, and to temporise, lest they should be made less able to effect their purposes, if they should manifest themselves; but yet hope to see that transmutation of Religion, from that copper, which they esteem ours to be, to that gold, which, (perchance for the venality thereof) they esteem theirs: If others, who are also working in the fire, (though not in the fire of envy and of powder, yet in the fire of an indiscreet zeal, and though they pretend not to change the substance of the metal, the body of our Religion, yet they labour to blow away much of the ceremony, and circumstances, which are Vehicula, and Adminicula, if not Habitacula Religionis, They are, though not the very fuel, yet the bellows of Religion) If these men, I say, of either kind, They who call all differing from themselves, Error, and all error damnable; or they, who, as Tertullian expresses their humour, and indisposition prophetically, Qui vocant prostrationem Disciplinae, simplicitatem, which call the abolishing and extermination of all Discipline and Ceremony, pureness and holiness; If they think they have received their portion of this legacy, their measure of true knowledge, in labouring only to accuse, and reform, and refine others, Spiritus sanctus facit Christianos, non Chymistas, The holy Ghost makes men Christians, and not Alchemists. To contract this, If a man know ways enough to disguise all his sins, If no Exchequer take hold of his usurious contracts, no High Commission of his licentiousness, no Star-chamber of his misdemeanours, If he will not to sleep, till he can hold up his eyes no longer, for fear his sins should meet him in his bed, and vex his conscience there, If he will not come to the Sacrament, but at that time of the year, when Laws compel him, or good company invite him, or other civil respects and reasons provoke him, If he have avoydances, to hid his sins from others, and from himself too, by such disguise, This is all but Deceptio visus, a blinding of his own internal eyes, and Spirtus sanctus facit Christianos, non Circulatores, The Holy Ghost makes men Christians, and not Jugglers. This knowledge then which we speak of, is to know the end and the way, Heaven and Christ, The Kingdom to which he is gone, and the means which he hath taught us to follow. Now, in all our ways, in all our journeys, a moderate pace brings a man most surely to his journey's end, and so doth a sober knowledge in matters of Divinity, and in the mysteries of Religion. And therefore the Fathers say, that this coming of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles, this day, though it were a vehement coming, did not give them all kind of knowledge, a knowledge of particular Arts, and Sciences; But he gave them knowledge enough for their present work, and withal a faithful confidence, that if at any time, they should have to do, with learned Heathens, with Philosophers, the Holy Ghost would either instantly furnish them, with such knowledge, as they had not before, (as we see in many relations in the Ecclesiastical Story, That men spoke upon the sudden, in divers cases, otherwise, then in any reason their education could promise or afford) or else he would blunt the sharpness of the Adversaries weapons, and cast a damp upon their understandings, as we see he did in the Council of Nice, when after many disputations, amongst the great Men of great estimation, the weakest Man in the Council risen up, and he, o● whom his own party were afraid, lest his discourse should disadvantage the cause, overthrew, and converted, that great Advocate, and defender of Arius, whom all the rest could never shake; for though this man said no more than other men had said, yet God at this time disposed the understanding, and the abilities of the Adversaries, otherwise then before; sometimes God will have glory, in arming his friends, sometimes in disarming his enemies, sometimes in exalting our abilities, and sometimes in evacuating or enfeebling theirs. And so, as the Apostles were, as many of us, as celebrate this day, as they did, are filled with the Holy Ghost, that is, with so much knowledge, as is necessary to God's purpose in us. Enough for ourselves, if we be private men, and enough for others, if we have charge of others: private men shall have knowledge enough where to seek for more, and the Priest shall have enough to communicate his knowledge to others. And though this knowledge were delivered to the Apostles, as from a print, from a stamp, all at once, and to us, but as by writing, letter after letter, syllable after syllable, by Catechisms, chismes, and Sermons, yet both are such knowledges, as are sufficient for each. As the glory of heaven shall fall upon us all, and though we be not all of equal measure, and capacity, yet we shall be equally full of that glory; so the way to that glory, this knowledge, shall be manifest to us all, and infallible to us all, though we do not all know alike; The simplest soul that hears me, shall know the way of his salvation, as well as the greatest of those Fathers, whom he hears me cite; And upon us all (so disposed) the holy Ghost shall fall, as he did here, in fire, and In tongues; In fire, to inflame us in a religious zeal, and in Tongues, to utter that in confession, and in profession, that is, to glorify God, both in our words, and in our actions. This then is our portion in this Legacy, A sober seeking after those points of knowledge which are necessary for our salvation, and these, in this text, Christ derived into these three, That I am in my Father, That you are in me, That I am in you. The first of these is the knowledge of distinction of persons, and so of the Trinity. Ego in Paetre. Trinitas. Principale munus scientiae est, cognoscere Trinitatem, saith Origen: The principal use and office of my knowledge, is to know the Trinity; for, to know an unity in the Godhead, that there is but one God, natural reason serves our turn: & to know a creation of the world of nothing, reason serves us too; we know by reason, that either neither of them is infinite, if there be two Gods, (and then neither of them can be God) or if both be infinite, (which is an impossibility) one of them is superfluous, because whatsoever is infinite, can alone extend to all. So also we can collect infallibly, that if the world were not made of nothing, yet that of which the world shall be pretended to have been made of, must have been made of nothing, or else it must be something eternal, and untreated; & whatsoever is so, must necessarily be God itself. To be sure of those two, an unity in the Godhead, and a creation of the world, I need no Scriptures; but to know this distinction of Persons, That the Son is in the Father, I need the Scriptures, and I need more than the Scriptures, I need this Pentecost, this coming, this illustration of the holy Ghost, to inspire a right understanding of these Scriptures into me. For, if this knowledge might be had without Scriptures, why should not the heathen believe the Trinity, as well as I, since they lack no natural faculties which Christians have? And if the Scriptures themselves, without the operation of the holy Ghost, should bring this clearness, why should not the Jews and the Arians conform themselves to this doctrine of the Trinity, as well as I, since they accept those Scriptures, out of which I provethe Trinity to mine own conscience? We must then attend his working in us; we must not admit such a vexation of spirit, as either to vex our spirit, or the Spirit of God; by enquiring farther than he hath been pleased to reveal. If you consider that Christ says here, You shall know That I am in the Father, and doth not say, You shall know How I am in the Father, and this to his Apostles themselves, and to the Apostles after they were to be filled with the holy Ghost, which should teach them all truth, it will out off many perplexing questions, and impertinent answers which have been produced for the expressing of the manner of this generation, and of the distinction of the persons in the Trinity; you shall know That it is, you shall not ask How it is. It is enough for a happy subject to enjoy the sweetness of a peaceable government, though he know not Arcana Imperii, The ways by which the Prince governs; So is it for a Christian to enjoy the working of God's grace, in a faithful believing the mysteries of Religion, though he inquire not into God's bedchamber, nor seek into his unrevealed Decrees. It is Odiosa & exitialis vocula, Quomodo, says Luther, A hateful, a damnable Monosyllable, How, How God doth this or that: for, if a man come to the boldness of proposing such a question to himself, he will not give over till he find some answer: and then, others will not be content with his answer, but every man will have a several one. When the Church fell upon the Quomodo in the Sacrament, How, in what manner the body of Christ was there, we see what an inconvenient answer it fell upon, That it was done by Transubstantiation; That satisfied not, (as there was no reason it should) And then they fell upon others, In, Sub, and Come, and none could, none can give satisfaction. And so also have our times, by ask Quomodo, How Christ descended into Hell, produced so many answers, as that some have thought it no Article at all, some have thought that it is all one thing to have descended into hell, and to have ascended into heaven, and that it amounts to no more, than a departing into the state of the dead. But Servate depositum, Make much of that knowledge which the holy Ghost hath trusted you withal, and believe the rest. No man knows how his soul came into him; whether there by infusion from God, or by generation from Parents, no man knows so, but that strong arguments will be produced on the other side; And yet no man doubts but he hath a soul. No man knows so, as that strong arguments may not be brought on the other side, how he sees, whether by reception of species from without, or by emission of beams from within; And yet no man doubts whether he see or no. The holy Ghost shall tell you, when he tells you the most that ever he shall tell you, in that behalf, That the Son is in the Father, but he will not tell you how. Our second portion in this Legacy of knowledge, Incarnatio. is, That we are in Christ; And this is the mystery of the Incarnation. For since the devil had so surprised us all, as to take mankind all in one lump, in a corner, in Adam's loins, and poisoned us all there in the fountain, in the root, Christ, to deliver us as entirely, took all mankind upon him, and so took every one of us, and the nature, and the infirmities, and the sins, and the punishment of every singular man. So that the same pretence which the devil hath against every one of us, you are mine, for you sinned in Adam, we have also for our discharge, we are delivered, for we paid our debt in Christ Jesus. In all his tentations, send him to look upon the Records of that process, of Christ's passion, and he shall find there, the names of all the faithful recorded: That such a day, that day when Christ died, I, and you, and all that shall be saved, suffered, died, and were crucified, and in Christ Jesus satisfied God the Father, for those infinite sins which we had committed: And now, Second death, which is damnation, hath no more title to any of the true members of his mystical body, than corruption upon natural, or violent death, could have upon the members of his natural body. The assurance of this grows from the third part of this knowledge, Redemptio. That Christ is in us; for that is such a knowledge of Christ's general Redemption of mankind, as that it is also an application of it to us in particular. For, for his Incarnation, by which we are in him, Cyril. that may have given a dignity to our humane nature; But Quae beneficiorum magnitudo fuisset erganoes, si hominem solummodo, quem assumpserat, salvaret? What great benefit (how ever the dignity had been great to all mankind) had mankind had, if Christ had saved no more than that one person whom he assumed? The largeness and bounty of Christ is, to give us of his best treasure, knowledge, and to give us most at last, To know Christ in me. For, to know that he is in his Father, this may serve me to convince another, that denies the Trinity; To know that we are in Christ, so as that he took our nature, this may show me an honour done to us, more than the Angels; But what gets a lame wretch at the pool, how sovereign soever the water be, if no body put him in? What gets a naked beggar by knowing that a dead man hath left much to pious uses, if the Executors take no knowledge of him? What get I by my knowledge of Christ in the Father, and of us in Christ so, if I find not Christ in me? How then is Christ in us? Here the question De modo, How it is, is lawful: for, he hath revealed it to us. It is, by our obedience to his inspiration, and by our reverend use of those visible means, which he hath ordained in his Church, his Word and Sacraments: As our flesh is in him, by his participation thereof, so his flesh is in us, by our communication thereof; And so is his divinity in us, by making us partakers of his divine nature, and by making us one spirit with himself, which he doth at this Pentecost, that is, whensoever the holy Ghost visits us with his effectual grace: for this is an union, in which, Christ in his purpose hath married himself to our souls, inseparably, and Sine solutione vinculi, Without any intention of divorce on his part: But if we will separate him à mensa & toro, If either we take the bed of licentiousness, or the board of voluptuousness, or if when we eat or drink, or sleep or wake, we do not all to the glory of God, if we separate, he will divorce. If then we be thus come to this knowledge, let us make Ex scientia conscientiam, Enlarge science into conscience: for, Conscientia est Syllogismus practicus, Conscience is a Syllogism that comes to a conclusion; Then only hath a man true knowledge, when he can conclude in his own conscience, that his practice, and conversation hath expressed it. Who will believe that we know there is a ditch, and know the danger of falling into it, and drowning in it, if he see us run headlong towards it, and fall into it, and continue in it? Who can believe, that he that separates himself from Christ, by continuing in his sin, hath any knowledge, or sense, or evidence, or testimony of Christ's being in him? As Christ proceeds by enlarging thy knowledge, and making thee wiser and wiser, so enlarge thy testimony of it, by growing better and better, and let him that is holy, be more holy. If thou have passed over the first heats of the day, the wantonnesses of youth, and the second heat, the fire of ambition, if these be quenched in thee, by preventing venting grace, or by repenting grace, be more and more holy, for thine age will meet another sin of covetousness, or of indevotion, that needs as much resistance. God stayed not in any less degree of knowledge towards thee, then in bringing himself to thee; Do not thou stay by the way neither; not in the consideration of God alone, for that Coeli enarrant, all creatures declare it; stay not at the Trinity; Every coming to Church, nay thy first being brought to Church, at thy Baptism, is, and was a profession of that; stay not at the Incarnation; That the Devil knows, and testifies; But come to know that Christ is in thee, and express that knowledge in a sanctified life: For though he be in us all, in the work of his Redemption, so as that he hath poured out balm enough in his blood, to spread over all mankind, yet only he can enjoy the cheerfulness of this unction, and the inseparablenesse of this union, who, (as S. Augustine pursues this contemplation) Habet in memoria, & servat in vita, who always remembers that he stands in the presence of Christ, and behaves himself worthy of that glorious presence; Qui habet in Sermonibus, & servat in operibus, That hath Christ always at his tongue's end, and always at his finger's ends, that loves to discourse of him, and to act his discourses; Que habet audiendo, & servat faciendo, That hears Gods will here in his house, and does his will at home in his own house; Qui habet faciendo, & servat perseverando, who having done well from the beginning, persevers in well doing to the end, he, and he only shall find Christ in him. SERMON XXXI. Preached at S. Paul's, upon Whitsunday. 1629. GEN. 1.2. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. THe Church of God celebrates this day the third Person of the Holy, Blessed, and Glorious Trinity, The Holy Ghost. The Holy Ghost is the God, the Spirit of Comfort; A Comforter; not one amongst others, but the Comforter; not the principal, but the entire, the only Comforter; and more than all that, The Comfort itself. That is an attribute of the Holy Ghost, Comfort; And then the office of the Holy Ghost is to gather, to establish, to illumine, to govern that Church which the Son of God, from whom together with the Father, the Holy Ghost proceeds, hath purchased with his blood. So that, as the Holy Ghost is the Comforter, so is this Comfort exhibited by him to us, and exercised by him upon us, in this especially, that he hath gathered us, established us, illumined us, and does govern us, as members of that body, of which Christ Jesus is the Head; that he hath brought us, and bred us, and fed us with the means of salvation, in his application of the merits of Christ to our souls, in the Ordinances of the Church. In this Text is the first mention of this Third Person of the Trinity; And it is the first mention of any distinct Person in the Godhead; In the first verse, there is an intimation of the Trinity, in that Bara Elohim, That Gods, Gods in the plural are said to have made heaven, and earth; And then, as the Church after having celebrated the memory of All Saints, together in that one day, which we call All Saint's day, gins in the celebration of particular Saints, first with Saint Andrew, who first of any applied himself to Christ out of Saint john Baptists School after Christ's Baptism; so Moses having given us an intimation of God, and the three Persons altogether in that Bara Eloim, before, gives us first notice of this Person, the Holy Ghost, in particular, because he applies to us the Mercies of the Father, and the Merits of the Son, and moves upon the face of the waters, and actuates, and fecundates our souls, and generates that knowledge, and that comfort, which we have in the knowledge of God. Now the moving of the Holy Ghost upon the face of the waters in this Text, cannot be literally understood of his working upon man; for man was not yet made; but when man is made, that is, made the man of God in Christ; there, in that new Creation the Holy Ghost gins again, with a new moving upon the face of the waters in the Sacrament of Baptism, which is the Conception of a Christian in the womb of the Church. Therefore we shall consider these words, And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters; first, literally in the first, and then spiritually in the second Creation; first how the Holy Ghost moved upon the face of the Waters in making this world for us, And then how he moves upon the face of the Waters again, in making us for the other world. In which two several parts we shall consider these three terms in our Text, both in the Macrocosm, and Microcosm, the Great and the Lesser world, man extended in the world, and the world contracted, and abridged into man; first, Quid Spiritus Dei? what this Power, or this Person, which is here called the Spirit of God, is, for whether it be a Power, or a Person, hath been diversely disputed; And secondly, Quid ferebatur? what this Action, which is here called a Moving, was; for whether a Motion, or a Rest, an Agitation, or an Incubation, of that Power, or that Person, hath been disputed too; And lastly, Quid super faciem aquarum? what the subject of this Action, the face of the waters, was; for, whether it were a stirring, and an awakening of a power that was naturally in those waters, to produce creatures, or whether it were an infusing a new power, which till then those waters had not, hath likewise been disputed. And in these three, the Person, the Action, the Subject, considered twice over, in the Creation first, and in our regeneration in the Christian Church after, we shall determine all that is necessary for the literal, and for the spiritual sense of these words, And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. First then, 1 Part. Aug Con. 11.2 undertaking the consideration of the literal sense, and after, of the spiritual, we join with S. Augustine, Sint castae deliciae meae Scripturae tuae; Lord I love to be conversant in thy Scriptures, let my conversation with thy Scriptures be a chaste conversation; that I discover no nakedness therein; offer not to touch any thing in thy Scriptures, but that, that thou hast vouchsafed to unmask, and manifest unto me: Nec fallar in eyes, nec fallam ex eye; Lord, let not me mistake the meaning of thy Scriptures, nor misled others, Ibid. by imputing a false sense to them. Non frustra scribuntur, says he; Lord, thou hast writ nothing to no purpose; thou wouldst be understood in all: But not in all, by all men, at all times; Confiteor tibi quicquid invenero in libris tuis; Lord, I acknowledge that I receive from thee, whatsoever I understand in thy word; for else I do not understand it. This that blessed Father meditates upon the word of God; he speaks of this beginning of the Book of Genesis; and he speaks lamenting, Scripsit Moses & abiit, a little Moses hath said, C. 3. and alas he is gone; Si hic esset, tonerem eum, & per te rogarem, If Moses were here, I would hold him here, and beg of him, for thy sake to tell me thy meaning in his words, of this Creation. But says he, since I cannot speak with Moses, Te, quo plenus vera dixit, Veritas, rogo, I beg of thee who art Truth itself, as thou enabledst him to utter it, enable me to understand what he hath said. So difficult a thing seemed it to that intelligent Father, to understand this history, this mystery of the Creation. But yet though he found; that divers senses offered themselves, he did not doubt of finding the Truth: C. 18. For, Deus meus lumen oculorum meorum in occulto, says he, O my God, the light of mine eyes, in this dark inquisition, since divers senses, arise out of these words, and all true, Quid mihi obest, si alindego sensero, quam sensit alius, eum sensisse, qui scripsit? What hurt follows, though I follow another sense, than some other man takes to be Moses sense? for his may be a true fence, and so may mine, and neither be Moses his. C. 30. He passes from prayer, and protestation, to counsel, and direction; In diversitate sententiarum verarum, concordiam pariat ipsa veritas, Where divers senses arise, and all true, (that is, that none of them oppose the truth) let truth agree them. But what is Truth? God; And what is God? Charity; Therefore let Charity reconcile such differences. 1.12. C. 30. Legitimè lege ut amur, says he, let us use the Law lawfully; Let us use our liberty of reading Scriptures according to the Law of liberty; that is, charitably to leave others to their liberty, if they but differ from us, and not differ from Fundamental Truths. Si quis quaerat ex me, quid horum Moses senserit, If any man ask me, which of these, which may be all true, Moses meant, Non sum sermones isti●●onfessiones, Lord, says he, Ibid. This that I say is not said by way of Confession, as I intent it should, if I do not freely confess, that I cannot tell, which Moses meant; But yet I can tell, that this that I take to be his meaning is true; and that is enough. Let him that finds a true sense of any place, rejoice in it, Let him that does not beg it of thee, Vtquid mihi molest us est? Why should any man press me, to give him the true sense of Moses here, or of the holy Ghost, in any dark place of Scripture? Ego illuminem ullum hominen, venientem in mundum? 1.13. C. 10. says he; Is that said of me, that I am the light, that enlightened every man, any man, john 1.9. that comes into this world? So far I will go, says he, so far will we, in his modesty and humility accompany him, as still to propose, Quod luce veritatis, quod fruge utilitatis excellit, such a sense as agrees with other Truths, that are evident in other places of Scripture, and such a sense as may conduce most to edisication. For to those two, does that heavenly Father reduce the four Elements, that make up a right exposition of Scripture; which are, first, the glory of God, such a sense as may most advance it; secondly, the analogy of faith, such a sense as may violate no confessed Article of Religion; and thirdly, exaltation of devotion, such a sense, as may carry us most powerfully upon the apprehension of the next life; and lastly, extension of charity, such a sense, as may best hold us in peace, or reconcile us, if we differ from one another. And within these limits we shall contain ourselves, The glory of God, the analogy of faith, the exaltation of devotion, the extension of charity. In all the rest, that belongs to the explication or application, to the literal, or spiritual sense of these words, And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters, to which, having stopped a little upon this general consideration, the exposition of dark places, we pass now. Within these rules we proceed to inquire, who this Spirit of God is, or what it is; Spiritus. whether a Power, or a Person. The Jews who are afraid of the Truth, lest they should meet evidences of the doctrine of the Trinity, and so of the Messiah, the Son of God, if they should admit any spiritual sense, admit none, but cleave so close to the letter, as that to them the Scripture becomes Litter a occidens, A kill Letter, and the savour of death unto death. They therefore, in this Spirit of God are so far from admitting any Person, that is, God, as they admit no extraordinary operation, or virtue proceeding from God in this place; but they take the word here (as in many other places of Scripture it does) to signify only a wind, and then that that addition of the name of God (The Spirit of God) which is in their Language a denotation of a vehemency, of a high degree, of a superlative, (as when it is said of Saul, Sopor Domini, A sleep of God was upon him, it is intended of a deep, a dead sleep) enforces, induces no more but that a very strong wind blew upon the face of the waters, and so in a great part dried them up. And this opinion I should let fly away with the wind, if only the Jews had said it. But Theodoret hath said it too, and therefore we afford it so much answer, That it is a strange anticipation, that Wind, which is a mixed Meteor, to the making whereof, divers occasions concur with exhalations, should be thus imagined, before any of these causes of Winds were created, or produced, and that there should be an effect before a cause, is somewhat irregular. In Lapland, the Witches are said to sell winds to all passengers; but that is but to turn those winds that Nature does produce, which way they will; but in our case, the Jews, and they that follow them, dream winds, before any winds, or cause of winds was created; The Spirit of God here cannot be the Wind. It cannot be that neither, which some great men in the Christian Church have imagined it to be; Operatio Dei, The power of God working upon the waters, (so some) or, Efficientia Dei, A power by God infused into the waters; so others. August. And to that S. Augustine comes so near, as to say once in the negative, Spiritus Dei hic, res dei est, sed non ipse Deut est, The Spirit of God in this place is something proceeding from God, but it is not God himself; And once in the affirmative, Posse esse vitalem creaturam, quâ universus mundus movetur; That this Spirit of God may be that universal power, which sustains, and inanimates the whole world, which the Platoniques have called the Soul of the world, and others intent by the name of Nature, and we do well, if we call The providence of God. Spiritus Sanctus. But there is more of God, in this Action, than the Instrument of God, Nature, or the Viceroy of God, Providence; for as the person of God, the Son was in the Incarnation, so the person of God, the Holy Ghost was in this Action; though far from that manner of becoming one and the same thing with the waters, which was done in the Incarnation of Christ, who became therein perfect man. That this word the Spirit of God, is intended of the Person of the Holy Ghost, in other places of Scripture, is evident, undeniable, unquestionable, and that therefore it may be so taken here. Where it is said, The Spirit of God shall rest upon him, Esay 11.2. (upon the Messiah) where it is said by himself, The Lord and his Spirit is upon me, And, the Lord and his Spirit hath anointed me, there it is certainly, and therefore here it may be probably spoken of the Holy Ghost personally. It is no impossible sense, it implies no contradiction; It is no inconvenient sense, it offends no other article; it is no new sense; nor can we assign any time, when it was a new sense: Basil. The eldest Fathers adhere to it, as the ancientest interpretation. Saint Basil says not only, Constantissimè asseverandum est, We must constantly maintain that interpretation, (for all that might be his own opinion) not only therefore, Quia verius est, (for that might be, but because he found it to be the common opinion of those times) but Quia à majoribus nostris approbatum, because it is accepted for the true sense, by the Ancients; The Ancients, says that ancient Father Basil; which reason prevails upon S. Ambrose too, Ambrose. Nos cum sanctorum, & fidelium sententia congruentes, We believe, and believe it, because the Ancients believed it to be so, that this is spoken generally of the Holy Ghost. Hieron. S. Basil, and S. Ambrose assume it, as granted, S. Hierom disputes it, argues, concludes it, Vivificator, ergo Conditor, ergo Deus; This Spirit of God gave life, therefore this Spirit was a Creator; therefore God. S. Augustine prints his seal deep; Secundùm quod ego intelligere possum, ita est, as far as my understanding can reach, it is so; and his understanding reached far. But he adds, Nec ullomodo, etc. Neither can it possibly be otherwise. Tertui. Cypt. We cannot tell, whether that Poem which is called Genesis, be Tertullias, or Cyprians; It hath been thought an honour to the learnedest of the Fathers, to have been the Author of a good Poem; In that Poem this text is paraphrased thus, Immensusque Deus super aequora vastameabat; God, God personally moved upon the waters. Truly the later School is (as they have used it) a more Poetical part of divinity, than any of the Poems of the Fathers are, (take in Lactantius his Poem of the Phoenix, and all the rest) and for the School, there Aquinas says, Secundùm Sanctos, intelligimus Spiritum sanctum, As the holy Fathers have done, we also understand this personally of the Holy Ghost. To end this, these words do not afford such an argument for the Trinity, or the third Person thereof, the Holy Ghost, as is strong enough to convert, or convince a Jew, because it may have another sense; but we, who by God's abundant goodness have otherwise an assurance, Psal. 104.30. job 26.13. and faith in this doctrine, acknowledge all those other places, Thou sendest forth thy Spirit, and they are created, By his spirit he hath garnished the Heavens, and the rest of that kind, to be all but echoes from this voice, returns from job, and from David, and the rest, of this doctrine of all comfort, first, and betimes delivered from Moses, that there is a distinct person in the Godhead, whose attribute is goodness, whose office is application, whose way is comfort. And so we pass from our first, That it is not only the Power of God, but the Person of God, To the second, in this branch, His Action, Ferebatur. The Action of the Spirit of God, Ferebatur. the Holy Ghost, in this place, is expressed in a word, of a double, and very divers signification; for it signifies motion, and it signifies rest. And therefore, Psal. 139.2. as S. Augustine argues upon those words of David, Thou knowest my down sitting, and my uprising, That God knew all that he did, between his down sitting and his uprising; So in this word which signifies the Holy Ghosts first motion, and his last rest, we comprehend all that was done in the production, and creation of the Creatures. Deut. 32.11. Hier. This word, we translate, As the Eagle fluttereth over her young ones, so it is a word of Motion; And S. Hierom upon our Text expresses it by Incubabat, to sit upon her young ones, to hatch them, or to preserve them, so it is a word of rest. And so, the Jews take this word to signify, Cyprian. properly the birds hatching of eggs. S. Cyprian unites the two significations well, Spiritus sanctus dabat aquis motum, & limitem; The Holy Ghost enabled the waters to move, and appointed how, and how far they should move. The beginnings, and the ways, and the ends, must proceed from God, and from God the Holy Ghost: That is, by those means, and those declarations, by which God doth manifest himself to us, for that is the office of the holy Ghost, to manifest and apply God to us. Now the word in our Text is not truly Ferebatur, The Spirit moved, which denotes a thing past; but the word is Movens, Moving, a Participle of the present; So that we ascribe first Gods manifestation of himself in the creation, and then the continual manifestation of himself in his providence, to the holy Ghost; for God had two purposes in the creation, sint, ut maneant, That the creature should be, and be still; August. That it should exist at first, and subsist after; Be made, and made permanent. God did not mean that Paradise should have been of so small use when he made it; he made it for a perpetual habitation for man. God did not mean that man should be the subject of his wrath when he made him; he made him to take pleasure in, and to shed glory upon him. The holy Ghost moves, he is the first author; the holy Ghost perpetuates, settles, establishes, he is our rest, and acquiescence, and centre; Beginning, Way, End, all is in this word, Recaph; The Spirit of God moved, and rested. And upon what? And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. S. Augustine observing aright, That at this time, of which this Text is spoken, Fancies aquarum. The waters enwrapped all the whole substance, the whole matter, of which all things were to be created, all was surrounded with the waters, all was emboweled, and enwombed in the waters; And so the holy Ghost moving, and resting upon the face of the waters, moved, and rested, did his office upon the whole Mass of the world, and so produced all that was produced; and this admits no contradiction, no doubt, but that thus the thing was done, and that this, this word implies. But whether the holy Ghost wrought this production of the several creatures, by himself, or whether he infused, and imprinted a natural power in the waters, and all the substance under the waters, to produce creatures naturally of themselves, hath received some doubt. It need not: for the work ascribed to the holy Ghost here, is not the working by nature, but the creating of nature; Not what nature did after, but how nature herself was created at first. In this action, this moving, and resting upon the face of the waters, (that is, all involved in the waters) the Spirit of God, the holy Ghost, hatched, produced then all those creatures; For no power infused into the waters, or earth then, could have enabled that earth, then to have produced Trees with ripe fruits, in an instant, nor the waters to have brought forth Whales, in their growth, in an instant. The Spirit of God produced them then, and established and conserveses ever since, that seminal power which we call nature, to produce all creatures (then first made by himself) in a perpetual Succession. And so have you these words, And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters, literally, historically: And now these three terms, The Spirit of God, Moved, Upon the face of the waters, You are also to receive in a spiritual sense, in the second world, the Christian Church: The Person, the Action, the Subject, the holy Ghost, and him moving, and moving upon the waters, in our regeneration. Here, as before, our first Term, and Consideration, is the name, The Spirit of God; 2. Part. Spiritus sanctus. And here God knows, we know too many, even amongst the outward professors of the Christian religion, that in this name, The Spirit of God, take knowledge only of a power of God, and not of a person of God; They say it is the working of God, but not God working. Mira profunditas eloquiorum tuorum; The waters in the creation, Aug. Confess. 12. c. 14. were not so deep as the word of God, that delivers that creation. Ecce, ante nos superficies blandiens pueris, says that Father; We, we that are but babes in understanding, as long as we are but natural men, see the superficies, the top, the face, the outside of these waters, Sed mira profunditas, Deus meus, mira profunditas, But it is an infinite depth, Lord my God, an infinite depth to come to the bottom. The bottom is, to profess, and to feel the distinct working of the three distinct persons of the Trinity, Father, Son, and holy Ghost. Rara anima, quae cum de illa loquitur, sciat quid loquatur, Not one man, C. 30. not one Christian amongst a thousand, who when he speaks of the Trinity, knows what he himself means. Natural men will write of lands of Pigmies, and of lands of giants; and writ of Phoenixes, and of Unicorns; But yet advisedly they do not believe, (at least confidently they do not know) that there are such Giants, or such Pigmies, such Unicorns or Phoenixes in the world. Christians speak continually of the Trinity, and the holy Ghost, but alas, advisedly, they know not what they mean in those names. The most know nothing, for want of consideration; They that have considered it enough, and spent thoughts enough upon the Trinity, to know as much as needs be known thereof, Contendunt & dimicant, C. 11. & nemo sine pace vidit istam visionem, They dispute, and they wrangle, and they scratch, and wound one another's reputations, and they assist the common enemy of Christianity by their uncharitable differences, Et sine pace, And without peace, and mildness, and love, and charity, no man comes to know the holy Ghost, who is the God of peace, Id. l. 11.2. & 22. and the God of love. Da quod amo; amo enim, nam & hoc tu dedisti; I am loath to part from this father, and he is loath to be parted from, for he says this in more than one place; Lord thou hast enamoured me, made me in love; let me enjoy that that I love; That is, the holy Ghost: That as I feel the power of God (which sense, is a gift of the holy Ghost) I may without disputing rest in the belief of that person of the Trinity, that that Spirit of God, that moves upon these waters, is not only the power, but a person in the Godhead. This is the person, Ferebatur. without whom there is no Father, no Son of God to me, the holy Ghost. And his action, his operation is expressed in this word, Ferebatur, The Spirit of God moved; Which word, as before, is here also a comprehensive word, and denotes both motion, and rest; beginnings, and ways, and ends. We may best consider the motion, the stirring of the holy Ghost in zeal, and the rest of the holy Ghost in moderation; If we be without zeal, we have not the motion; If we be without moderation, we have not the rest, the peace of the holy Ghost. The moving of the holy Ghost upon me, is, as the moving of the mind of an Artificer, upon that piece of work that is then under his hand. A Jeweller, if he would make a jewel to answer the form of any flower, or any other figure, his mind goes along with his hand, nay prevents his hand, and he thinks in himself, a Ruby will conduce best to the expressing of this, and an Emeraud of this. The holy Ghost undertakes every man amongst us, and would make every man fit for God's service, in some way, in some profession; and the holy Ghost sees, that one man profits most by one way, another by another, and moves their zeal to pursue those ways, and those means, by which, in a rectified conscience, they find most profit. And except a man have this sense, what doth him most good, and a desire to pursue that, the holy Ghost doth not move, nor stir up a zeal in him. But then if God do afford him the benefit of these his Ordinances, in a competent measure for him, and he will not be satisfied with Manna, but will needs have Quails, that is, cannot make one meal of Prayers, except he have a Sermon, nor satisfied with his Gomer of Manna, (with those Prayers which are appointed in the Church) nor satisfied with those Quails which God sends, (the preaching of solid and fundamental doctrines) but must have birds of Paradise, unrevealed mysteries out of Gods own bosom preached unto him, howsoever the holy Ghost may seem to have moved, yet he doth not rest upon him; and from the beginning, the office and operation of the holy Ghost was double; He moved, and rested upon the waters in the creation; he came, and tarried still upon Christ in his Baptism: He moves us to a zeal of laying hold upon the means of salvation which God offers us in the Church; and he settles us in a peaceful conscience, that by having well used those means, we are made his. A holy hunger and thirst of the Word and Sacraments, a remorse, and compunction for former sins, a zeal to promove the cause, and glory of God, by word, and deed, this is the motion of the holy Ghost: And then, to content myself with God's measure of temporal blessings, and for spiritual, that I do serve God faithfully in that calling which I lawfully profess, as far as that calling will admit, (for he, upon whose hand-labour the sustentation of his family depends, may offend God in running after many working days Sermons) This peace of conscience, this acquiescence of having done that that belongs to me, this is the rest of the Spirit of God. And this motion, and this rest is said to be done Super faciem, And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters, which is our last consideration. In the moving of the Spirit of God upon the waters, Fancies aquarum. we told you before, it was disputed, whether the Holy Ghost did immediately produce those creatures of himself, or whether he did fecundate, and inanimate, and enable those substances, (the water, and all contained under the waters) to produce creatures in their divers specifications. In this moving of the Spirit of God upon the waters, in our regeneration, it hath also been much disputed, How the Holy Ghost works, in producing man's supernatural actions; whether so immediately, as that it be altogether without dependence, or relation to any faculty in man, or man himself have some concurrence, and co-operation therein. There we found, that in the first creation, God wrought otherwise for the production of creatures, than he does now; At first he did it immediately, entirely, by himself; Now, he hath delegated, and substituted nature, and imprinted a natural power in every thing to produce the like. So in the first act of man's Conversion, God may be conceived to work otherwise, then in his subsequent holy actions; for in the first, man cannot be conceived to do any thing, in the rest he may: not that in the rest God does not all; but that God finds a better disposition, and souplenesse, and maturity, and mellowing, to concur with his motion in that man, who hath formerly been accustomed to a sense, and good use of his former graces, then in him, who in his first conversion, receives, but then, the first motions of his grace. But yet, even in the first creation, the Spirit of God did not move upon that nothing, which was before God made heaven and earth: But he moved upon the waters; though those waters had nothing in themselves, to answer his motion, yet he had waters to move upon: Though our faculties have nothing in themselves to answer the motions of the Spirit of God, yet upon our faculties the Spirit of God works; And as out of those waters, those creatures did proceed, though not from those waters, so out of our faculties, though not from our faculties, do our good actions proceed too. All in all, is from the love of God; but there is something for God to love; There is a man, there is a soul in that man, there is a will in that soul; and God is in love with this man, and this soul, and this will, Aug. & would have it. Non amor ita egenus & indigus, ut rebus quas diligit subjiciatur, says S. Aug. excellently: The love of God to us is not so poor a love, as our love to one another; that his love to us should make him subject to us, as ours does to them whom we love; but Superfertur, says that Father, and our Text, he moves above us; He loves us, but with a Powerful, a Majestical, an Imperial, a Commanding love; He offers those, whom he makes his, his grace; but so, as he sometimes will not be denied. So the Spirit moves spiritually upon the waters; He comes to the waters, to our natural faculties; but he moves above those waters, He inclines, he governs, he commands those faculties; And this his motion, upon those waters, we may usefully consider, in some divers applications and assimilations of water, to man, and the divers uses thereof towards man. We will name but a few; Baptism, and Sin, and Tribulation, and Death, are called in the Scripture, by that name, Waters; and we shall only illustrate that consideration, how this Spirit of God, moves upon these Waters, Baptism, Sin, Tribulation, and Death, and we have done. The water of Baptism, is the water that runs through all the Fathers; Baptismus. All the Fathers that had occasion to dive, or dip in these waters (to say any thing of them) make these first waters, in the Creation, the figure of baptism. Tertul. There Tertullian makes the water, Primam sedem Spiritus Sancti, The progress, and the settled house, The voyage, and the harbour, The circumference, and the centre of the Holy Ghost: And therefore S. Hierome calls these waters, Matrem Mundi, The Mother of the World; Hieron. and this in the figure of Baptism. Nascentem Mundum in figura Baptismi parturiebat, The waters brought forth the whole World, were delivered of the whole World, as a Mother is delivered of a child; and this, In figura Baptismi, To fore-shew, that the waters also should bring forth the Church; That the Church of God should be borne of the Sacrament of Baptism: So says Damascen, Damase. Basil. And he establishes it with better authority than his own, Hoc Divinus asseruit Basilius, says he, This Divine Basil said, Hoc factum, quia per Spiritum Sanctum, & aquam voluit renovare hominem; The Spirit of God wrought upon the waters in the Creation, because he meant to do so after, in the regeneration of man. And therefore Pristinam sedem recognoscens conquiescit, Terrul. Till the Holy Ghost have moved upon our children in Baptism, let us not think all done, that belongs to those children; And when the Holy Ghost hath moved upon those waters, so, in Baptism, let us not doubt of his power and effect upon all those children that die so. We know no means how those waters could have produced a Menow, a Shrimp, without the Spirit of God had moved upon them; and by this motion of the Spirit of God, we know they produce Whales, and Leviathans. We know no ordinary means of any saving grace for a child, but Baptism; neither are we to doubt of the fullness of salvation, in them that have received it. And for ourselves, Mergimur, & emergimus, Aug. In Baptism we are sunk under water, and then raised above the water again; which was the manner of baptising in the Christian Church, by immersion, and not by aspersion, till of late times: Affectus, & ameres, says he, our corrupt affections, Idem. and our inordinate love of this world is that, that is to be drowned in us; Amor securitatis, A love of peace, and holy assurance, and acquiescence in God's Ordinance, is that that lifts us above water. Therefore that Father puts all upon the due consideration of our Baptism: And as S. Hierome says, Hier. Certainly he that thinks upon the last Judgement advisedly, cannot sin then, Aug. So he that says with S. Augustine, Procede in confessionc, fides mea, Let me make every day to God, this confession, Domine Deus meus, Sancte, Sancte, Sancte Domine Deus meus, O Lord my God, O Holy, Holy, Holy Lord my God; In nomine tuo Baptizatus sum, I consider that I was baptised in thy name, and what thou promisedst me, and what I promised thee then, and can I sin this sin? can this sin stand with those conditions, those stipulations which passed between us then? The Spirit of God is motion, the Spirit of God is rest too; And in the due consideration of Baptism, a true Christian is moved, and settled too; moved to a sense of the breach of his conditions, settled in the sense of the Mercy of his God, in the Merits of his Christ, upon his godly sorrow. So these waters are the waters of Baptism. Sin also is called by that name in the Scriptures, Aquae peccatum. Water. The great whore sitteth upon many waters; she sits upon them, as upon Eggs, and hatches Cockatrices, venomous and stinging sins; Apoc. 17. Aqum. and yet pleasing, though venomous; which is the worst of sin, that it destroys, and yet delights; for though they be called waters, yet that is said also, That the inhabitants of the earth were made drunk with the wine. Ver. 2. Sin is wine at first, so fare as to allure, to intoxicate: It is water at last, so fare as to suffocate, to strangle. Christ Jesus way is to change water into wine; sorrow into joy: The Devil's way is to change wine into water; pleasure, and but false pleasure neither, into true bitterness. The waterish wine, which is spoken of there, and called fornication, is idolatry, and the like. And in such a respect, Jer. 2.18. God says to his people, What hast thou to do in the way of Egypt? In the way of Egypt we cannot choose but have something to do; some conversation with men of an Idolatrous religion, we must needs have. But yet, What hast thou to do in the way of Egypt, to drink of the waters of Sihor? Or what hast thou to do in the ways of Assyria, to drink the waters of the River? Though we be bound to a peaceable conversation with men of an Idolatrous persuasion, we are not bound to take in, to drink, to taste their errors. For this facility, and this indifferency to accompany men of divers religions, in the acts of their religion, Ver. 13. this multiplicity will end in a nullity, and we shall hue to ourselves Cisterns, broken Cisterns, that can hold no water; We shall scatter one religion into many, and those many shall vanish into none. Praise we God therefore, that the Spirit of God hath so moved upon these waters; these sinful waters of superstition and idolatry, wherein our forefather's were overwhelmed; that they have not swelled over us; Ecclus. 43.20. For, then the cold Northwind blows, and the water is congealed into Ice; Affliction overtakes us, damps us, stupifies us, and we find no Religion to comfort us. Affliction is as often expressed in this word, Tribulatio. Esay 43.2. Waters, as sin. When thou passest through waters I will be with thee, and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee. But then, the Spirit of God moves upon these waters too; and grace against sin, and deliverance from affliction, is as often expressed in waters, as either. Where God takes another Metaphor for judgement, Ezek. 36.5. Ver. 25. yet he continues that of water for his mercy; In the fire of my jealousy have I spoken against them, (speaking of enemies; but then speaking of Israel) I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and you shall be clean. This is his way, and this is his measure; He sprinkles enough at first to make us clean; even the sprinkling of Baptism cleanses us from original sin; but then he sets open the windows of heaven, and he enlarges his Floodgates, Esay 44.3. I will pour out water upon the thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground: To them that thirst after him, he gives grace for grace; that is, present grace for an earnest of future grace; of subsequent grace, and concomitant grace, and auxiliant grace, and effectual grace; grace in more forms, more notions, and in more operations, than the School itself can tell how to name. Thus the Spirit of God moves upon our waters. Mat. 14. By faith Peter walked upon the waters; so we prevent occasions of tentation to sin, and sink not in them, but walk above them. By godly exercises we swim through waters; so the Centurion commanded that they that could swim, Acts 27.43. should cast themselves into the sea; Men exercised in holiness, can meet a tentation, or tribulation in the face, and not be shaked with it; weaker men, men that cannot swim, must be more wary of exposing themselves to dangers of tentation; A Court does some man no harm, when another finds tentation in a Hermitage. By repentance we sail through waters; by the assistance of God's ordinances in his Church, (which Church is the Ark) we attain the harbour, peace of conscience, after a sin; But this Ark, this help of the Church we must have. God can save from dangers, though a man went to Sea without art, Sine rate, says the Vulgat, without a Ship. Wisd. 14.4. But God would not that the work of his Wisdom should be idle; God hath given man Prudentiam navifactivam, says our Holkot upon that place, and he would have that wisdom exercised. God can save without Preaching, and Absolution, and Sacraments, but he would not have his Ordinance neglected. To end all with the end of all, Death comes to us in the name, Mors. 2 Sam. 14.14. and notion of waters too, in the Scriptures. The Widow of Tekoah said to David in the behalf of Absalon, by the Counsel of joab, The water of death overslowes all; We must needs die, says she, and are as water spilt upon the ground, which cannot be gathered up again: yet God devices means, that his banished, be not expelled from him. So the Spirit of God moves upon the face of these waters, the Spirit of life upon the danger of death. Consider the love, more than love, the study, more than study, the diligence of God; he devices means, that his banished, those whom sins, or death had banished, be not expelled from him. I sinned upon the strength of my youth, and God devised a means to reclaim me, an enfeebling sickness. I relapsed after my recovery, and God devised a means, an irrecoverable, a helpless Consumption to reclaim me; That affliction grew heavy upon me, and weighed me down even to a diffidence in God's mercy, and God devised a means, the comfort of the Angel of his Church, his Minister, The comfort of the Angel of the great Counsel, the body and blood of his Son Christ Jesus, at my transmigration. Yet he lets his correction proceed to death; I do die of that sickness, and God devices a means, that I, though banished, banished into the grave, shall not be expelled from him, a glorious Resurrection. We must needs die and be as water spilt upon the ground, but yet God devices means, that his banished shall not be expelled from him. And this is the motion, and this is the Rest of the Spirit of God upon those waters in this spiritual sense of these words, He brings us to a desire of Baptism, he settles us in the sense of the obligation first, and then of the benefits of Baptism. He suffers us to go into the way of tentations, (for Coluber in via, and every calling hath particular tentations) and then he settles us, by his preventing, or his subsequent grace. He moves, in submitting us to tribulation, he settles us in finding, that our tribulations, do best of all conform us to his Son Christ Jesus. He moves in removing us by the hand of Death, and he settles us in an assurance, That it is he that now lets his Servants depart in peace; And he, who as he doth presently lay our souls in that safe Cabinet, the Bosom of Abraham, so he keeps an eye upon every grain, and atom of our dust, whither soever it be blown, and keeps a room at his own right hand for that body, when that shall be reunited in a blessed Resurrection; And so The Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. SERM. XXXII. Preached upon Whitsunday. 1 COR. 12.3. Also no man can say, that jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost. WE read that in the Tribe of Benjamin, judg. 20.16. which is, by interpretation Filius dextrae, The Son of the right hand, there were seven hundred left-handed Men, that could sling stones at a hair's breadth, and not fail. S. Paul was of that Tribe; and though he were from the beginning, in the purpose of God, Filius dextrae, A man ordained to be a dextrous Instrument of his glory, yet he was for a time a left-handed man, and took sinister ways, and in those ways, a good markman, a laborious and exquisite persecutor of God's Church; And therefore it is, that Tertullian says of him, Paulum mihi etiam Genesis olim repromisit, I had a promise of Paul in Moses; Gen 49. Then, when Moses said, jacob blessed Benjamin thus, Benjamin shall ravin as a Wolf, In the morning he shall devour the prey, and at night he shall divide the spoilc, that is, At the beginning Paul shall scatter the flock of Christ, but at last, he shall gather, and reunite the Nations to his service: Acts 9.1. Chrysost. As he had breathed threaten, and slaughter against the Disciples of the Lord, so he became Os orbi sufficiens, A mouth loud enough for all the world to hear: And as he had drawn and sucked the blood of Christ's mystical body, the Church, so, in that proportion that God enabled him to, he recompensed that damage, Colos. 1.14. by effusion of his own blood, He fulfilled the sufferings of Christ, in his flesh, as himself says, to the Colossians; And then he bequeathed to all posterity these Epistles, which are, as S. Augustine calls them, Vbera Ecclesia, The Paps, the Breasts, the Udders of the Church, Numb. 13.24. And which are, as that cluster of Grapes of the Land of Canaan, which was borne by two; for here, every couple, every pair, may have their load, Jew and Gentile, Learned and Ignorant, Man and Wife, Master and Servant, Father and Children, Prince and People, Counsel and Client, how distinct soever they think their callings to be towards the world, yet here every pair must equally submit their necks to this sweet and easy yoke, of confessing Jesus to be the Lord, and acknowledging that Confession to proceed from the working of the Holy Ghost, for No man can say, that jesus is the Lord, without the Holy Ghost. In which words, Divisio. these shall be the three things, that we will consider now; first, The general impotency of man, in spiritual duties, Nemo potest, no man can do this, no man can do any thing; secondly, How, and what those spiritual duties are expressed to be, It is a profession of Jesus to be the Lord, to say it, to declare it; And thirdly, the means of repairing this natural impotency, and rectifying this natural obliquity in man, That man by the Holy Ghost may be enabled to do this spiritual duty, to profess sincerely Jesus to be the Lord. In the first we shall see first, the universality of this flood, the generality of our loss in Adam, Nemo, none, not one, hath any, any power; which notes their blasphemy, that exempt any person from the infection of sin: And secondly, we shall see the impotency, the infirmity where it lies, It is in homine, no man; which notes their blasphemy, that say, Man may be saved by his natural faculties, as he is man: And thirdly, by just occasion of that word, Potest, he can, he is able, we shall see also the laziness of man, which, though he can do nothing effectually and primarily, yet he does not so much as he might do; And in those three, we shall determine our first part. In the second, what this spiritual duty, wherein we are all so impotent, is, It is first, an outward act, a profession; not that an outward act is enough, but that the inward affection alone is not enough neither; To think it, to believe it, is not enough, but we must say it, profess it: And what? why, first, That Jesus is; not only assent to the history, and matter of fact, that Jesus was, and did all that is reported, and recorded of him, but that he is still that which he pretended to be; Caesar is not Caesar still, nor Alexander, Alexander; But Jesus is Jesus still, and shall be for ever. This we must profess, That he is; And then, That he is the Lord; He was not sent hither as the greatest of the Prophets, nor as the greatest of the Priests; His work consists not only in having preached to us, and instructed us, nor in having sacrificed himself, thereby to be an example to us, to walk in those ways after him; but he is Lord, he purchased a Dominion, he bought us with his Blood, He is Lord; And lastly, he is The Lord, not only the Lord Paramount, the highest Lord, but The Lord, the only Lord, no other hath a Lordship in our souls, no other hath any part in the saving of them, but he: And so far we must necessarily enlarge our second consideration. And in the third part, which is, That this cannot be done but by the holy Ghost, we shall see, that in that But, is first employed an exclusion of all means but one; And therefore that one must necessarily be hard to be compassed, The knowledge and discerning of the holy Ghost, is a difficult thing; And yet, as this But hath an exclusion of all means but one, so it hath an inclusion, an admission, an allowance of that one, It is a necessary duty; nothing can effect it, but the having of the holy Ghost, and therefore the holy Ghost may be had: And in those two points, The hardness of it, And the possibility of it, will our last consideration be employed. For the first branch of the first part, The generality, that reaches to us all, 1. Part. Generalitas. and to us all over; to all our persons, and to all our faculties; Perdidimus per peccatum, bonum possibilitatis, says S. Augustine, We have lost our possession, and our possibility of recovering, by Adam's sin. Adam at his best had but a possibility of standing; we are fallen from that, and from all possibility of rising by any power derived from him: We have not only by this fall broke our arms, or our legs, but our necks; not ourselves, not any other man can raise us; Every thing hath in it, as Physicians use to call it, Naturale Balsamum, A natural Balsamum, which, if any wound or hurt which that creature hath received, be kept clean from extrinsique putrefaction, will heal of itself. We are so far from that natural Balsamum, as that we have a natural poison in us, Original sin: for that, original sin, (as it hath relation to God, as all sin is a violating of God) God being the God of mercy, and the God of life, because it deprives us of both those, of mercy, and of life, in opposition to mercy, Ephes. 2.3. Rom. 5.12. it is called anger and wrath (We are all by nature the children of wrath) And in opposition to life, it is called death, Death enters by sin, and death is gone over all men; And as original sin hath relation to our souls, It is called that indelible foulness, and uncleanness which God discovers in us all, Jer. 2.22. (Though thou wash thee with nitre, and take thee much soap, yet thine iniquity is marked before me, saith the Lord) And which every man finds in himself, as job did, If I wash myself in Snow-water, Job 9 and purge my hands never so clean, yet mine own clothes shall make me filthy. As it hath relation to our bodies, so it is not only called Lex carnis, A law which the flesh cannot disobey, And Lex in membris, A law written and imprinted naturally in our bodies, and inseparably inherent there, but it is a law that hath got Posse comitatus, All our strength, and munition into her own hands, all our powers, and faculties to execute her purposes against us, and (as the Apostle expresses it fully) Hath force in our members, to bring forth fruits unto death. Rom. 7.5. Consider our original weakness, as God looks upon it, so it is inexcusable sin; consider it, as our souls suffer by it, so it is an indelible foulness; consider it as our bodies contribute to it, and harbour it, and retain it, and so it is an unquenchable fire, and a brand of hell itself; It hath banished me out of myself, It is no more I that do any thing, but sin that dwelleth in me: It doth not only dwell, but reign in these mortal bodies; not only reign, but tyrannize, and lead us captives under the law of sin, which is in our members. Ver. 23. So that we have utterly lost Bonum possibilitatis, for as men, we are out of all possibility, not only of that victorious, and triumphant gratulation and acclamation to ourselves, as for a delivery, I thank God through jesus Christ, but we cannot come to that sense of our misery, Ver. ult. as to cry out in the Apostles words, immediately preceding, O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this death? Now as this death hath invaded every part and faculty of man, understanding, and will, and all, (for though original sin seem to be contracted without our will, yet Sicut omnium natura, ita omnium voluntates fuere originaliter in Adam, says S. Augustine, As the whole nature of mankind, and so of every particular man, was in Adam, so also were the faculties, and so the will of every particular man in him) so this death hath invaded every particular man; Death went over all men, for as much as all men had sinned. And therefore they that do blasphemously exempt some persons from sin, they set them not above the Law, but without the Law: They outlaw them, in taking from them the benefit of the new Law, the Gospel, and of the author of that Law, Christ Jesus, who came a Physician to the sick, and was sent only to save sinners; for them that are none, it is well that they need no Redeemer, for if they did, they could have no part in ours, for he came only to redeem sinners, and they are none. God brought his Son out of Egypt, not out of Goshen in Egypt; not out of a privileged place in Egypt, but out of Egypt; God brought his Son Christ Jesus out of the Virgin Mary without sin, but he brought not her so, out of her mother. If they might be believed that the blessed Virgin, and john Baptist, and the Prophet jeremy were without all sin, they would go about at last to make us believe, that Ignatius were so too. For us, in the highest of our sanctification, still let us press with that, Dimitte nobis debita nostra, O Lord forgive us our trespasses, and confess that we needed forgiveness, even for the sins which we have not done; Dimissa fateor, & quae mea sponte feci, & quae te duce, non feci, says S. Augustine, I confess I need thy mercy, both for the sins which I have done, and for those, which if thy grace had not restrained me, I should have done. And therefore if another think he hath scaped those sins that I have committed, August. Non me derideat ab eo medico aegrum sanari, à quoei praestitum ne aegrotaret; Let him not despise me, who am recovered, since it is the same physician who hath wrought upon us both, though by a divers method, for he hath preserved him, and he hath recovered me: for, for himself, we say still with the same Father, Perdiderat bonum possibilitatis, As well he as I, had lost all possibility of standing, or rising after our fall. This was our first branch, Quid homo potest. The universal impotency; And our second is, That this is In homine, In man, no man (as man) can make this profession, That jesus is the Lord: and therefore, we consider first, wherein, and how far man is disabled. In every Age, some men have attributed to the power of nature, more than a natural man can do, and yet no man doth so much as a natural man might do. For the over-valuing of nature, and her power, there are impressions in the Fathers themselves, which (whether misunderstood by the Readers, or by the Authors) have led and prevailed much. When justin Martyr says, Ratio pro fide Graecis & Barbaris, That rectified reason did the same office in the Gentiles, as faith did in the Christians; when Clement says, Philosophia per sese justi. ficavit Graecos, That the Gentiles to whom the Law and Gospel was not communicated, were justified by their Philosophy; when chrysostom says, Satis fuit Gentibus abstinuisse ab Idololatria, It was sufficient for the Gentiles, if they did not worship false gods, though they understood not the true; when S. Augustine says, Rectè facis, nihil quaerere ampliùs, quàm quod docet ratio, He doth well that seeks no farther, than his reason leads them, these impressions in the Fathers have transported later men farther; so far, as that Andradius in the Roman Church, saves all honest Philosophers, that lived morally well without Christ: And Tostatus takes all impediments out of their way, That original sin is absolutely remitted to them, In prima bona operatione in charitate, In their first good moral work that they do. So that they are in an easier way than we, who are but Christians; for in the opinion of Tostatus himself, and that whole Church, we cannot be delivered from original sin, but by baptism; nothing less than a Sacrament would deliver us from original sin, and any good work shall deliver any of the Gentiles so disposed. In all ages, in all Churches, there have been men, who have been Ingrati gratiae, as S. Augustine calls them, that have been unthanfull to the grace of God, and attributed that to nature, Act. 17.26. which belonged to grace. But we have an universal conclusion, God hath made of one blood all mankind, And no man can adopt himself into the family of God; man is excluded, and all power in man, and all assistance from man; neither your own reason, nor the reason of your Masters, whom you rely upon, can raise you to this knowledge: for, Esay 31.3. Aegyptus homo, non Deus, The Egyptians are men, and not Gods, and their horses are flesh, and not spirit; and when the Lord shall stretch out his hand, the helper shall fall, and he that is helped shall fall, and they shall fall together. The Atheist and all his Philosophy, Helper and he that is Helped, Horse and Man, Nature and Art, Reason mounted and advanced upon Learning, shall never be able to leap over, or break through this wall, No man, no natural man can do any thing towards a supernatural work. This was our second Branch, Quid homo facit. That too much is ordinarily attributed by man to man, And our third is, That too little is done by any man, and that is worse than the other. When Nabuchadnezzar had made his Image of gold of sixty Cubits, it had been a madness in him, not to have celebrated the Dedication thereof, with all the pomp, and solemnity that he did: To have gone so fare, and not to have made it serve his farther uses, had been a strange impertinence. So is it a strange contemplation, to see a man set up a golden Image, to attribute even Divinity to our nature, and to imagine it to be able to do, whatsoever the grace of God can do, and yet with this Angelical nature, with this celestial soul, to contribute less to the glory of God, than an Ant, or a plant, or a stone. As the counsel of the Philosopher Epictetus directs thee, if thou take any new action in hand, consider what Socrates would do in that case; that is, dispose thyself therein, according to the example, and precedent of some wise man: So if thou wilt take this new action in hand, (that which is new, but should be ordinary unto thee) if thou wilt take a view of thy sins that are past, do but consider, if ever thou didst any sin, which Socrates, or Seneca would not have forborn. And whatsoever thou seest another can do, by the power of that reason, and that persuasion which thou art able to minister, who art not able to infuse faith, nor inspire grace into him, but must work by thy reason, and upon his reason, why shouldest not thou be as powerful upon thyself, and as strong in thine own behalf, and obey that counsel from thyself, which thou thinkest another man mad, if he do not obey, when thou givest it? Why shouldest thou pretend Reason, why another should forbear any particular sin, and not present that Reason to thyself, or not obey it? To love the Scriptures of God better than any other book; to love the house of God better than any other Court; to love the Communion of Saints better than any other Conversation; to study to know the revealed will of God, rather than the secrets of any Princes; to consider the direct purposes of God against his enemies, rather than the sinister supplantations of pretenders to places in Court; briefly to Read, to Hear, to Believe the Bible, is a work within the ability of nature, within the power of a moral man. He that attributes more to nature, he that allows her any ability of disposing herself before hand, without prevention of grace, or concurrence and co-operation after, without continual assistance of particular graces, he sets up an Idol, and magnifies nature beyond that which appertains unto her. But he that goes not so fare as this, That the reason of man, and his natural faculties, are the Instruments and Organs that God works in by his grace, howsoever he may in discourse and in argument exalt nature, howsoever he may so give too much to her, yet he does not so much with her, as he might do: He hath made her a Giant, and then, as though he were afraid of her, he runs away from her: He will not do that which is in his power, and yet he thinks it is in his power to repent when he lists, and when he lists to apply the merits of Christ to himself, and to do all those duties which are employed in our next Part, To say that jesus is the Lord. In this, our first duty is an outward act, Dicere, to profess Christ Jesus. 2. Part. Dicere. Rom. 1.16. Luke 9.26. Non erubesco, says S. Paul, I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ jesus, for it is the power of God unto salvation: And, Qui erubuerit, says Christ, Whosoever shall be ashamed of me, and of my word, of him shall the Son of Man be ashamed, when he shall come in glory. This is a necessary duty, but is it the duty of this place? for here it is not non vult, but non potest; not that he is loath to profess Jesus, but that he is not able to do it. We see that some could say that, and say it aloud, preach it, and yet without the Holy Ghost; Some (says the Apostle) preach Christ through envy and strife, Philem. 15. supposing to add more afflictions unto my bands. Which may well be, that some Jews and Gentiles, to exasperate the State against Paul, feigned themselves also to be converted to his religion, because when they had made him odious by drawing off others, they who pretended to have been drawn by him, could always save themselves with recanting, and renouncing their new profession: So they could say Dominum jesum, That jesus was the Lord, and never mean it. And of those twelve whom Christ chose to preach, judas was one, of whom Christ says, John 6.70. Have I not chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil? So that this devil judas, and that devil that made him a devil, the devil himself, could say as much as this, jesus I know, Acts 19.15. Luke 4.41. and Paul I know; They said it, they cried it, Thou art the Christ, the Son of God, and that incessantly, Till jesus rebuked them, and suffered them not to say, That they knew him to be The Christ. But besides that, even this confessing of Christ, is not Sine omni impulsu Spiritus sancti, Altogether without any motion of the holy Ghost (for the holy Ghost, even in these cases, had a purpose to draw testimonies for Christ, out of the mouths of his adversaries) this is not the professing required here; When Tiberius had a purpose to canonize Christ Jesus, and to admit him into the number of the Roman Gods, and to make him beholden to him for that honour, he therefore proposed it to the Senate, that so that honour, which Jesus should have, might be derived from him, And when the Senate had an inclination of themselves to have done Christ that honour, but yet forbore it, because the intimation came not from themselves, but from the Emperor, who still wrought and gained upon their privileges, neither of these, though they meant collaterally and obliquely to do Christ an honour, neither of them did say jesum Dominum, that is, profess Jesus, so as is intended here, for they had their own ends, and their own honours principally in Contemplation. There is first an open profession of the tongue required; And therefore the Holy Ghost descended in fiery tongues, Et lingua propria Spiritui Sancto, says S. Gregory, The tongue is the fittest Instrument for the Holy Ghost to work upon, and to work by; Qui magnam habet cognationem cum Verbo, says he, The Son of God is the Word, and the Holy Ghost proceeds from him, And because that faith that unites us to God, is expressed in the tongue, howsoever the heart be the centre in which the Holy Ghost rests, the tongue is the Sphere, in which he moves: And therefore, says S. Cyril, as God set the Cherubin with a fiery sword, to keep us out of Paradise, so he hath set the Holy Ghost in fiery tongues to let us in again. As long as john Baptist was unborn, Zachary was dumb; when he was borne, Zachary spoke; Christ is not borne in us, we are not regenerate in him, if we delight not to speak of his wondrous mercies, and infinite goodness to the sons of men; as soon as he is borne in us, his Spirit speaks in us, and by us; in which, our first profession is jesum esse, That Jesus is, That there is a Jesus. This is to profess with Esay, jesus. Esay 4.2. That he is Germane jehovae, The Bud of the Lord, The Blossom of God himself; for this Profession is a two-edged sword; for it wounds the Arians on one side, That Jesus is Jehovah, (because that is the name that signifies the very Essence of God) And then it wounds the Jews on the other side, because if Jesus be Germane jehovae, The Bud, the Blossom, the Offspring of God, then there is a plurality of Persons, Father and Son in the Godhead. So that it is a Compendiary and Summary Abridgement, and Catechism of all our Religion, to profess that Jesus is, for that is a profession of his everlasting Essence, that is, his Godhead. It hath been denied that he was such as he was pretended to be, that is, borne of a Virgin; for the first Heretics of all, Gerinthus, and Ebion, who occasioned S. john's Gospel, affirmed him to be a mere man, made by ordinary generation, between joseph and Mary. It hath been denied, that he was such a man, as those Heretics allowed him to be, for Apelles his Heresy was, That he made himself a Body out of the Elements, as he came down from Heaven, through them. It hath been denied, that he had any Body at all; Cerdon and Martion said, That he lived and died, but in Phantasmate, in appearance, and only in a form and shape of a Body assumed; but, in truth, no Body, that did live or die, but did only appear, and vanish. It hath been denied that that Body which he had, though a true and a natural Body did suffer, for Basilides said, That when he was led to Execution, and that on the way, the Cross was laid upon Simon of Cyren, Christ cast a mist before their eyes, by which they took Simon for him, and crucified Simon, Christ having withdrawn himself invisibly from them, as at other times he had done. It hath been denied, (though he had a true Body, and suffered truly therein) that he hath any Body now in Heaven, or shall return with any, for he that said he made his Body of the Elements as he came down from Heaven, says also that he resolved that Body into those Elements again, at his return. It hath been denied, That he was, That he is, That he shall be; but this Profession, that Jesus is, includes all, for, He of whom that is always true, Est, He is, He is Eternal, and He that is Eternal, is God: This is therefore a Profession of the Godhead of Christ Jesus. Now, Dominus; A Lord. in the next, as we profess him to be Dominus, A Lord, we profess him to be God and man, we behold him as he is a mixed person, and so made fit to be the Messiah, the Anointed high Priest, King of that Church, which he hath purchased with his blood, And the anointed King of that Kingdom which he hath conquered with his Cross. As he is Germane jehovae, The offspring of Jehovah, so he must necessarily be Jehovah; & that is the name, which is evermore translated The Lord; So also as he is Jehovah, which is the fountain of all Essence and of all Being, so he is Lord, by his interest, and his concurrence, in our Creation; It is a devoute exercise of the soul, to consider, how absolute a Lord he is, by this Title of Creation; If the King give a man a Creation by a new Title, the King found before in that man, some virtuous and fit disposition, some preparation, some object, some subject of his favour. The King gives Creations to men, whom the Universities, or other Societies had prepared; They Created persons whom other lower Schools had prepared; At lowest, he that deals upon him first, finds a man, begotten and prepared by Parents, upon whom he may work. But remember thy Creator, that called thee, when thou wast not, as though thou hadst been, and brought thee out of nothing; which is a condition (if we may call it a condition, to be nothing, not to be) farther removed from Heaven, than hell itself: Who is the Lord of life, and breathed this life into thee, and swears by that eternal life, which he is, that he would have this life of thine immortal, As I live, saith the Lord, I would not the death of a sinner. This Contemplation of Jesus, as a Lord, by Creating us, is a devout, and an humble Contemplation; but to contemplate him as Lord by Redeeming us, and breeding us in a Church, where that Redemption is applied to us, this is a devout, and a glorious Contemplation. As he is Lord over that which his Father gave him, (his Father gave him all power in Heaven and in earth, and Omne judicium, His Father put all Judgement into his hands, all judiciary and all military power was his; He was Lord Judge, and Lord of Hosts) As he is Lord over his own purchase, Quod acquisivit sanguine, Acts 20.28. That Church which he purchased with his own blood: So he is more than the Heretics of our time have made him, That he was but sent as a principal Prophet to explain the Law, and make that clear to us in a Gospel; Or as a Priest, to sacrifice himself, but not for a Ransom, not for a Satisfaction, but only for a lively example, thereby to incline us to suffer for God's glory, and for the edification of one another. If we call him Dominum, A Lord, we call him Messiam, Vnctum, Regem, anointed with the oil of gladness by the Holy Ghost, to be a cheerful conqueror of the world, and the grave, and sin, and hell, and anointed in his own blood, to be a Lord in the administration of that Church, which he hath so purchased. This is to say that Jesus is a Lord; To profess that he is a person so qualified, in his being composed of God and Man, that he was able to give sufficient for the whole world, and did give it, and so is Lord of it. When we say jesus est, That Jesus is, There we confess his eternity, and therein, Dominus. The Lord. his Godhead: when we say jesus Dominus, that he is a Lord, therein we confess a dominion which he hath purchased; And when we say jesum Dominum, so, as that we profess him to be the Lord, Then we confess a vigilancy, a superintendency, a residence, and a permanency of Christ, in his Dominion, in his Church, to the world's end. If he be the Lord, in his Church, there is no other that rules with him, there is no other that rules for him. The temporal Magistrate is not so Lord, as that Christ and he are Colleagues, or fellow-Consuls, that if he command against Christ, he should be as soon obeyed as Christ; for a Magistrate is a Lord, and Christ is the Lord, a Magistrate is a Lord to us, but Christ is the Lord to him, and to us, and to all, None rules with him, none rules for him; Christ needs no Vicar, he is no nonresident; He is nearer to all particular Churches at God's right hand; then the Bishop of Rome, at his left. Direct lines, direct beams does always warm better, and produce their effects more powerfully, then obliqne beams do; The influence of Christ Jesus directly from Heaven upon the Church, hath a truer operation, than the obliqne and collateral reflections from Rome: Christ is not so far off, by being above the Clouds, as the Bishop of Rome is, by being beyond the Hills. Dicimus Dominum jesum, we say that Jesus is the Lord, and we refuse all power upon earth, that will be Lord with him, as though he needed a Coadjutor, or Lord for him, as though he were absent from us. To conclude this second part, To say that jesus is the Lord, is to confess him to be God from everlasting, and to have been made man in the fullness of time, and to govern still that Church, which he hath purchased with his blood, and that therefore he looks that we direct all our particular actions to his glory. For this voice, wherein thou sayest Dominus jesus, The Lord jesus, must be, as the voice of the Seraphim in Esay, Esay 6.2. thrice repeated, Sanctus, sanctus, sanctus, Holy, holy, holy; our hearts must say it, and our tongue, and our hands too, or else we have not said it. For when a man will make Jesus his companion, and be sometimes with him, and sometimes with the world, and not direct all things principally towards him; when he will make Jesus his servant, that is, proceed in all things, upon the strength of his outward profession, upon the colour, and pretence, and advantage of Religion, and devotion, would this man be thought to have said jesum Dominum, Luke 6.46. That jesus is the Lord? Why call ye me Lord, Lord, and do not the things I speak to you? says Christ; Christ places a tongue in the hands; Actions speak; and Omni tuba clarior per opera Demonstratio, says S. chrysostom, There is not only a tongue, but a Trumpet, in every good work. When Christ sees a disposition in his hearers, to do according unto their professing, john 13.14. then only he gives allowance to that that they say, Dicitis me Dominum, & bene dicitis, You call me Lord, and you do well in doing so, do ye therefore, as I have done to you. To call him Lord, is to contemplate his Kingdom of power, to feel his Kingdom of grace, to wish his Kingdom of glory. It is not a Domine usque quò, john 11.21. Lord how long before the Consummation come, as though we were weary of our warfare: It not a Domine si fuisses, Lord if thou hadst been here, our brother had not died, as Martha said of Lazarus, as though, as soon as we suffer any worldly calamity, we should think Christ to be absent from us, in his power, or in his care of us; It is not a Domine vis mandemus, Luke 9.54. Lord wilt thou that we command fire from Heaven to consume these Samaritans, as though we would serve the Lord no longer, than he would revenge his own and our quarrel; for, (that we may come to our last part) to that fiery question of the Apostles, Christ answered, You know not of what spirit you are; It is not the Spirit of God, it is not the Holy Ghost, which makes you call Jesus the Lord only to serve your own ends, and purposes; and No man can say, that jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost. For this Part, 3 Part. Difficultas. we proposed only two Considerations, first that this But, excluding all means but one, that one must therefore necessarily be difficult, and secondly that that But, admitting one means, that one must therefore necessarily be possible; so that there is a difficulty, but yet a possibility in having this working by the Holy Ghost. For the first, of those heretical words of Fanstus the Manichaean, That in the Trinity, the Father dwelled In illa luce inaccessibili, In that light which none can attain to, And the Son of God dwelled in this created light, whose fountain and root is the Planet of the Sun, And the Holy Ghost dwelled in the Air, and other parts illumined by the Sun, we may make this good use, that for the knowledge of the Holy Ghost, we have not so present, so evident light in reason, as for the knowledge of the other blessed Persons of the glorious Trinity. For, for the Son, because he assumed our nature, and lived and died with us, we conceive certain bodily impressions, and notions of him; and then naturally, and necessarily, as soon as we hear of a Son, we conceive a Father too. But the knowledge of the Holy Ghost is not so evident, neither do we bend our thoughts upon the consideration of the Holy Ghost, so much as we ought to do. The Arians enwrapped him in double clouds of darkness, when they called him Creaturam Creaturae; That Christ himself, from whom (say they) the Holy Ghost had his Creation, was but a Creature, and not God, and so the Holy Ghost, the Creature of a Creature. And Maximus ille Gigas, (as Saint Bernard calls Plato) That Giant in all kind of Learning, Plato, never stopped at any knowledge, till he came to consider the holy Ghost: Vnum inveni, quod cuncta operatur, I have (says Plato) found One, who made all things; Et unum per quod cuncta efficiuntur, And I have found another, by whom all things were made; Tertium autem non potui invenire, A Third, besides those two, I could never find. Though all the mysteries of the Trinity be things equally easy to faith, when God infuses that, yet to our reason, (even as reason serves faith, and presents things to that) things are not so equal, but that S. Basil himself saw, that the eternal generation of the Son, was too hard for Reason; but yet it is in the proceeding of the Holy Ghost, that he clearly professes his ignorance: Si cuncta putarem nostra cogitatione posse comprehendi, vererer fortè ignorantiam profiteri, If I thought that all things might be known by man, I should be as much afraid, and ashamed, as another man, to be ignorant; but, says he, since we all see, that there are many things whereof we are ignorant, Cur non de Spiritu sancto, absque rubore, ignorantiam faterer? Why should I be ashamed to confess mine ignorance in many things concerning the Holy Ghost? There is then a difficulty, no less than an impossibility, Possibilitas. in searching after the Holy Ghost, but it is in those things which appertain not to us; But in others, there is a possibility, a facility and easiness. For, there are two processions of the holy Ghost, Aeterna, and Temporaria, his proceeding from the Father, and the Son, and his proceeding into us. The first we shall never understand, if we read all the books of the world, The other we shall not choose but understand, if we study our own consciences. In the first, the darkness, and difficulty is recompensed in this, That though it be hard to find any thing, yet it is but little that we are to seek; It is only to find that there is a holy Ghost, proceeding from Father, and Son; for in searching farther, the danger is noted by S. Basil, to be thus great, Qui quomodo interrogas, & ubi ut in loco, & quando ut in tempore, interrogabis; If thou give thy curiosity the liberty to ask How the holy Ghost proceeded, thou wilt ask where it was done, as though there were several rooms, and distinct places, in that which is infinite, And thou wilt ask when it was done, as though there were pieces of time, in that which is eternal: Et quaeres, non ut fidem, sed ut infidelitatem invenias, (which is excellently added by that Father) The end of thy enquiring will not be, that thou mightest find any thing to establish thy belief, but to find something that might excuse thine unbelief; All thy curious questions are not in hope that thou shalt receive satisfaction, but in hope that the weakness of the answer may justify thy infidelity. Thus it is, if we will be over curious in the first, the eternal proceeding of the Holy Ghost. In the other, the proceeding of the holy Ghost into us, we are to consider, that as in our natural persons, the body and soul do not make a perfect man, except they be united, except our spirits (which are the active part of the blood) do fit this body, and soul for one another's working;; So, though the body of our religion may seem to be determined in these two, our Creation, which is commonly attributed to the Father, Tanquam fonti Deitatis, As the fountain of the Godhead, (for Christ is God of God) And our Redemption, which belongs to the Son, yet for this body there is a spirit, that is, the holy Ghost, that takes this man, upon whom the Father hath wrought by Creation, and the Son included within his Redemption, and he works in him a Vocation, a Justification, and a sanctification, and leads him from that Esse, which the Father gave him in the Creation, And that Bene esse which he hath in being admitted into the body of his Son, the visible Church, and Congregation, to an Optimè esse, to that perfection, which is an assurance of the inhabitation of this Spirit in him, and an inchoation of eternal blessedness here, by a heavenly and sanctified conversation, without which Spirit No man can say, that jesus is the Lord, because he is not otherwise in a perfect obedience to him, if he embrace not the means ordained by him in his Church. So that this Spirit disposes, and dispenses, distributes, and disperses, and orders all the power of the Father, and all the wisdom of the Son, and all the graces of God. It is a Centre to all; So S. Bernard says upon those words of the Apostle, We approve ourselves as the Ministers of God; But by what? By watching, by fasting, by suffering, by the holy Ghost, by love unfeigned. Vide, tanquam omnia ordinantem, quomodo in medio virtutum, sicut cor in medio corporis, constituit Spiritum Sanctum: As the heart is in the midst of the body, so between these virtues of fasting and suffering before, and love unfeigned after, the Apostle places the holy Ghost, who only gives life and soul to all Moral, and all Theological virtues. And as S. Bernard observes that in particular men, so doth S. Augustine of the whole Church; Quoth in corpore nostro anima, id in corpore Christi, Ecclesia, Spiritus Sanctus; That office which the soul performs to our body, the holy Ghost performs in the body of Christ, which is the Church. And therefore since the holy Ghost is thus necessary, and thus near, as at the Creation the whole Trinity was intimated in that plural word, Elohim, creavit Dii, but no person of the Trinity is distinctly named in the Creation, but the holy Ghost, The Spirit of God moved upon the waters, As the holy Ghost was first conveyed to our knowledge in the Creation, so in our Regeneration, by which we are new creatures, though our Creation, and our Redemption be religious subjects of our continual meditation, yet let us be sure to hold this that is nearest us, to keep a near, a familiar, and daily acquaintance, and conversation with the holy Ghost, and to be watchful to cherish his light, and working in us. Homines docent quaerere, solus ipse, qui docet invenire, habere, frui; Bernard. Men can teach us ways how to find somethings; The Pilot how to find a Land, The Astronomer how to find a Star; Men can teach us ways how to find God, The natural man in the book of creatures, The Moral man in an exemplar life, The Jew in the Law, The Christian in general in the Gospel, But Solus ipse, qui docet invenire, habere, frui, Only the holy Ghost enables us to find God so, as to make him ours, and to enjoy him. 1 Cor. 2.14. First you must get more light than nature gives, for, The natural man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit: When that light is so mended, that you have some sparks of faith, jud. 19 you must also leave the works of the flesh, For, Fleshly men have not the Spirit: When the Spirit offers itself in approaches, Resist it not, as Stephen accuses them to have done, Ephes. 4.32. Act. 7. When it hath prevailed, and sealed you to God, Grieve not the holy Spirit, by whom ye are sealed unto Redemption. For this preventing the Spirit, by trusting to nature, and morality, this infecting the Spirit, by living ill in a good profession, this grieving of the Spirit, 1 Thes. 5. by neglecting his operations, induces the last desperate work of Quenching the Spirit, which is a smothering, a suffocating of that light, by a final obduration. Spiritus ubi vult spirat, john 3.8. says our Saviour Christ; which S. Augustine, (and indeed most of the Fathers) interpret of the holy Ghost, and not of the wind, though it may also properly enough admit that interpretation too. But The holy Ghost, says he, breathes where it pleases him; Et vocem ejus audis, says Christ, You hear the voice of the holy Ghost; for, (says S. Augustine upon those words of Christ) Sonat psalmus, vox est Spiritus sancti, When you hear a Psalm sung, you hear the voice of the holy Ghost; Sonat Euangelium, sonat sermo Divinus, You hear the Gospel read, you hear a Sermon preached, still you hear the voice of the holy Ghost; And yet, as Christ says in that place, Nescis unde venit, Thou knowest not from whence that voice comes, Thou canst find nothing in thyself, why the holy Ghost should delight to entertain thee, and hold discourse with thee, in so familiar, and so frequent, and so importunate a speaking to thee; Nescis unde venit, Thou knowest not from whence all this goodness comes, but merely from his goodness; So also, as Christ adds there, Nescis quò vadat, Thou knowest not whither it goes, how long it will last and go with thee. If thou carry him to dark and foul corners, if thou carry him back to those sins, of which, since he began to speak to thee, at this time, thou hast felt some remorse, some detestation, he will not go with thee, he will give thee over. But as long as he, The Spirit of God, by your cherishing of him, stays with you, when Jesus shall say to you, (in your consciences) Quid vos dicitis? Whom do you say that I am? You can say jesus Dominus, We say, we profess, That thou art jesus, and that jesus is the Lord: If he proceed, Si Dominus, ubi timor? If I be Lord, where is my fear? You shall show your fear of him, even in your confidence in him, In timore Domini, fiducia fortitudinis, In the fear of the Lord, is an assured strength: You shall not only say jesum Dominum, profess Jesus to be the Lord, but Veni Domine jesu, You shall invite, and solicit Jesus to a speedy judgement, and be able, in his right, to stand upright in that judgement. This you have, if you have this Spirit; and you may have this Spirit, Acts 10. if you resist it not, now; For, As when Peter spoke, the holy Ghost fell upon all that heard, So in the Ministry of his weaker instruments, he conveys, and diffuses, and seals his gifts upon all, which come well disposed to the receiving of him, in his Ordinance. SERM. XXXIII. Preached upon Whitsunday. ACTS 10.44. While Peter yet spoke these words, the Holy Ghost fell on all them, which heard the word. Part of the second Lesson of that day. THat which served for an argument amongst the Jews, to diminish, and undervalue Christ, Have any of the Rulers believed in him? John 7.48. had no force amongst the Gentiles, for amongst them, the first persons that are recorded to have applied themselves to the profession of the Christian Religion, were Rulers, Persons of place, and quality: Sunè propter hoc Dignitates positae sunt, ut major pietas ostendatur, says S. chrysostom, This is the true reason why men are Ennobled, why men are raised, why men are enriched, that they might glorify God the more, by that eminency; This is truly to be a good Student, Scrutari Scripturas, To search the Scriptures, in which is eternal life: This is truly to be called to the Bar, to be Crucified with Christ Jesus: And to be called to the Bench, to have part in his Resurrection, and reign in glory with him: and to be a Judge, to judge thyself, that thou be'st not judged to condemnation, by Christ Jesus: Offices and Titles, and Dignities, make thee, in the eye, and tongue of the world, a better man; be truly a better man, between God and thee, for them, and they are well placed. Those Pyramids and Obelisces, which were raised up on high, in the Air, but supported nothing, were vain testimonies of the frivolousness, and impertinency of those men that raised them; But when we see Pillars stand, we presume that something is to be placed upon them. They, who by their rank and place, are pillars of the State, and pillars of the Church, if Christ and his glory be not raised higher by them, then by other men, put God's building most out of frame, and most discompose God's purposes, of any others. And therefore S. chrysostom hath noted usefully, That the first of the Gentiles, which was converted to Christianity, was that Eunuch, Acts 8.27. which was Treasurer to the Queen of Aethiopia; And the second was this Centurion, in whose house S. Peter preached this fruitful Sermon, at which, While Peter yet spoke these words, the Holy Ghost fell upon all them that heard the word. Our Parts will be two; first some Circumstances that preceded this act, Divisio. this miraculous descent and infusion of the Holy Ghost, And then the Act, the Descent itself. In the first, we shall consider first, the time, it was when Peter was speaking, when God's Ordinance was then in executing, preaching; And secondly, what made way to this descent of the Holy Ghost, that is, what Peter was speaking, and preaching, These words, true and necessary Doctrine; And here also we shall touch a little, the place, and the Auditory, Cornelius, and his family. When from hence we shall descend to the second Part, The descent of the Holy Ghost, we shall look first, (so as it may become us) upon the Person, (the third Person in the holy, blessed, and glotions Trinity) And then upon his action, as it is expressed here, Cecidit, He fell; As of Christ it is said, Deliciae ejus cum filiis hominum, His delight is to be with the sons of men, And, (to speak humanely, a perverse delight, for it was to be with the worst men, with Publicans & sinners) so, (to speak humanely) the Holy Ghost had an extraordinary, a perverse ambition, to go downwards, to enlarge himself, in his working, by falling; He fell: And then, he fell so, as a shower of rain falls, that does not lie in those round drops in which it falls, but diffuses, and spreads and enlarges itself, He fell upon all; But then, it was because all heard, They came not to see a new action, preaching, not a new Preacher, Peter, nor to see one another at a Sermon, He fell upon all that heard; where also, I think, it will not be impertinent, to make this note, That Peter is said to have spoke these words, but they, on whom the holy Ghost fell, are said to have heard The word; It is not Many words, long Sermons, nor good words, witty and eloquent Sermons that induce the holy Ghost, for all these are words of men; and howsoever the whole Sermon is the Ordinance of God, the whole Sermon is not the word of God: But when all the good gifts of men are modestly employed, and humbly received, as vehicuia Spiritus, as S. Augustine calls them, The chariots of the holy Ghost, as means afforded by God, to convey the word of life into us, in Those words we hear The word, and there the word and the Spirit go together, as in our case in the Text, While Peter yet spoke those words, the holy Ghost fell upon all them that heard The word. 1 Part. Tempus. When we come then to consider in the first place, the Time of this miracle, we may easily see that verified in S. Peter's proceeding, which S. Ambrose says, Nescit tarda molimina Spiritus sancti gratia, The holy Ghost cannot go a slow pace; It is the devil in the serpent that creeps, but the holy Ghost in the Dove flies: And then, in the proceeding with the Centurion, we may see that verified which Leo says, Vbi Deus Magister, quàm citò discitur? Where God teaches, how fast a godly man learns? Christ did almost all his miracles in an instant, without dilatory circumstances; Christ says to the man sick of the palsy, Mark 2.11. Tolle grabatum, Take up thy bed and walk, and immediately he did so: To the deaf man he says, Mark 7.34. Ephphatha, Be thine ears opened, and instantly they were opened: He says to the woman with the issue of blood, Mark 5.34. Esto sana à plagatua, and she was not only well immediately upon that, but she was well before, when she had but touched the hem of his garment. Upon him who had lain in his infirmity thirty eight years, at the pool, Christ makes a little stop; but it was no longer then to try his disposition with that question, John 5.5. Mark 8. Vis sanus fieri? Christ was sure what his answer would be; and as soon as he gives that answer, immediately he recovered. Where Christ seems to have stayed longest, which was upon the blind man, yet at his first touch, that man saw men walk, though not distinctly, but at the second touch he saw perfectly. As Christ proceeds in his miracles, Chrysost. so doth the holy Ghost in his powerful instructions. It is true, Scientiae sunt profectus, There is a growth in knowledge, and we overcome ignorances' by degrees, and by succession of more and more light: Christ himself grew in knowledge, as well as in stature: But this is in the way of experimental knowledge, by study, by conversation, by other acquisitions. But when the holy Ghost takes a man into his school, he deals not with him, as a Painter, which makes an eye, and an ear, and a lip, and passes his pencil an hundred times over every muscle, and every hair, and so in many sit makes up one man, but he deals as a Printer, that in one strain delivers a whole story. We see that in this example of S. Peter, S. Peter had conceived a doubt, whether it were lawful for him to preach the Gospel to any of the Gentiles, because they were not within the Covenant; This was the sanus fieri, This very scruple was the voice and question of God in him: to come to a doubt, and to a debatement in any religious duty, is the voice of God in our conscience: Would you know the truth? Doubt, and then you will inquire: And facile solutionem accipit anima, quae prius dubitavit, says S. Chrysost. As no man resolves of any thing wisely, firmly, safely, of which he never doubted, never debated, so neither doth God withdraw a resolution from any man, that doubts with an humble purpose to settle his own faith, and not with a wrangling purpose to shake another man's. Ver. 11. God rectifies Peter's doubt immediately, and he rectifies it fully; he presents him a Book, and a Commentary, the Text, and the Exposition: He lets down a sheet from heaven with all kind of beasts and fowls, and tells him, that Nothing is unclean, and he tells him by the same spirit, Ver. 19 that there were three men below to ask for him, who were sent by God to apply that visible Parable, and that God meant, in saying Nothing was unclean, that the Gentiles generally, and in particular, this Centurion Cornelius, were not incapable of the Gospel, nor unfit for his Ministry. And though Peter had been very hungry; and would feign have eaten, as appears in the tenth verse, yet after he received this instruction, we hear no more mention of his desire to eat; but, as his Master had said, Cibus meus est, My meat is to do my Father's will that sent me, so his meat was to do him good that sent for him, and so he made haste to go with those Messengers. The time than was, Cum locutus when Peter thus prepared by the Holy Ghost, was to prepare others for the Holy Ghost, and therefore it was, Cum locutus, When he spoke, that is, preached to them. For, Si adsit palatum fidei, cui sapiat mel Dei, says S. Augustine, To him who hath a spiritual taste, no honey is so sweet, as the word of God preached according to his Ordinance. If a man taste a little of this honey at his rod's end, as jonathan did, 1 Sam. 14.27. though he think his eyes enlightened, as jonathan did, he may be in jonathans' case, I did but taste a little honey with my rod, Et ecce, morior, and behold, I die. If a man read the Scriptures a little, superficially, perfunctorily, his eyes seem straightways enlightened, and he thinks he sees every thing that he had preconceived, and fore-imagined in himself, as clear as the Sun, in the Scriptures: He can find flesh in the Sacrament, without bread, because he finds Hoc est Corpus meum, This is my Body, and he will take no more of that honey, no more of those places of Scripture, where Christ says, Ego vitis, and Ego porta, that he is a Vine, and that he is a Gate, as literally as he seems to say, that that is his Body. So also he can find wormwood in this honey, because he finds in this Scripture, Stipendium peccati mors est, that The reward of sin is death, and he will take no more of that honey, not the Quandocunque, That at what time soever a sinner reputes, he shall have mercy. As the Essential word of God, the Son of God, is Light of light, So the written Word of God is light of light too, one place of Scripture takes light of another: and if thou wilt read so, and hear so, as thine own affections transport, and misled thee; If when a corrupt confidence in thine own strength possesses thee, thou read only those passages, Quare moriemini, domus Israel? Why will ye die, O house of Israel? and conclude out of that, that thou hast such a free will of thine own, as that thou canst give life to thyself, when thou wilt; If when a vicious dejection of spirit, and a hellish melancholy, and declination towards desperation possesses thee, thou read only those passages, Impossibile est, That it is impossible, that he that falls, after he hath been enlightened, should be renewed again; And if thou hear Sermons so, as that thou art glad, when those sins are declamed against, which thou art free from, but wouldst hear no more, wouldst not have thine own sin touched upon, though all reading, and all hearing be honey, yet if thou take so little of this honey, jonathans' case will be thy case, Ecce, morieris, thou wilt die of that honey; for the Scriptures are made to agree with one another, but not to agree to thy particular taste and humour. But yet, the counsel is good, on the other side too, Hast thou found honey? Prov. 25.16. eat so much thereof as is sufficient for thee, lest thou be filled therewith, and vomit it. Content thyself with reading those parts of Scriptures, which are clear, and edify, and perplex not thyself with Prophecies not yet performed; and content thyself with hearing those Sermons, which rectify thee In credendis, and Inagendis, in all those things, which thou art bound to believe, and bound to practise, and run not after those Men, who pretend to know those things, which God hath not revealed to his Church. Too little, or too much of this honey, of this reading, and of this hearing, may be unwholesome: God hath chosen ways of mediocrity; He Redeemed us not, by God alone, nor by man alone, but by him, who was both. He instructs us not, by the Holy Ghost alone, without the Ministry of man, nor by the Minister alone, without the assistance of the Holy Ghost. An Angel appeared to Cornelius, but that Angel bid him send for Peter: The Holy Ghost visits us, and disposes us, but yet the Holy Ghost sends us to the Ministry of man: Non dedignatur docere per hominem, qui dignatus est esse homo, says S. Augustine; He that came to us, as Man, is content that we go to men, for our instruction. Preaching is the ordinary means; that which S. Peter wrought upon them, was, Cum locutus, when he had, and because he had preached unto them. And it was also Dum locutus est, Whilst he yet spoke those words; Dum locutus. Non permittit Spiritus absolvi Sermonem, says S. chrysostom; The Holy Ghost did not leave them to future meditations, to future conferences, he did not stay till they told one another after the Sermon, That it was a learned Sermon, a conscientious Sermon, a useful Sermon, but whilst the Preacher yet spoke, the Holy Ghost spoke to their particular consciences. And as a Gardener takes every bough of a young tree, or of a Vine, and leads them, and places them against a wall, where they may have most advantage, and so produce, most, and best fruit: So the Holy Ghost leads and places the words, and sentences of the Preacher, one upon an Usurer, another upon an Adulterer, another upon an ambitious person, another upon an active or passive Briber, when the Preacher knows of no Usurer, no Adulterer, no ambitious person, no Briber active or passive, in the Congregation. Nay, it is not only whilst he was yet speaking, but, as S. Peter himself reports the same Story, in the next Chapter, Ver. 15. As I began to speak, the Holy Ghost fell upon them. Perchance in the beginning of a Sermon, the reprehension of the Preacher falls not upon me, it is not come to me; But, when as the duties of the Preacher are expressed by the Apostle, 2 Tim. 4.2. to be these three, To reprove, or convince by argument, to settle truths, to overthrow errors; And to exhort, to rectify our manners; And to rebuke, to denounce God's Judgements upon the refractory; whatsoever he says the two first ways, by Convincing, and by Exhorting, all that belongs to all, from the beginning; And for that which he shall say, the third way, by way of Rebuking, As I know at midnight, that the Sun will break out upon me to morrow, though I know not how it works upon those places, where it shines then, So, though I know not how the rebukes of the Preacher work upon their consciences, whose sins he rebukes at the beginning; yet I must make account that he will meet with my sin too; & if he do not meet with my present sin; that sin which is my second wife, that sin which I have married now, (not after a divorce from my former sin, so, as that I have put away that sin, but after the death of that sin, which sickness or poverty hath made me unable to continue in) yet if he bend himself upon that sin, which hath been my sin, or may be my sin, I must be sensible that the Holy Ghost hath offered himself to me, whilst he yet speaks, and ever since he began to speak; And, Cum locutus, Because Preaching is the ordinary means, and, Dum locutus, Because the Holy Ghost intends all for my edification, I must embrace and entertain the Holy Ghost, who exhibits himself to me, from the beginning, and not say, This concerns not me; for whatsoever the Preacher can say of God's mercy in Christ Jesus to any man, all that belongs to me, for no man hath received more of that, than I may do; And whatsoever the Preacher can say of sin, all the way, all that belongs to me, for no man hath ever done any sin, which I should not have done, if God had left me to myself, and to mine own perverseness towards sin, and to mine own insatiableness in sin. It was then, Hac verba. when he preached, and whilst he preached, and as soon as he preached, but when, and whilst, and as soon as he preached Thus, thus as is expressed here, Whilst he spoke these words: In which, we shall only touch, but not much insist upon, his manner first, and then his matter; And for his manner, we consider only here, his preparation, Ver. 29. and no other circumstance. Though S. Peter say to them, when he came, I ask therefore, for what intent you have sent for me, yet God had intimated to him before, That it was to Preach the Gospel to the Gentiles; And therefore some time of meditation he had; Though in such a person as S. Peter, so filled with all gifts necessary for his function, and to such persons as Cornelius was, who needed but Catechising in the rudiments of the Gospel, much preparation needed not. The case was often of the same sort, after, in the Primitive Church; The persons were very able, and the people very ignorant; and therefore it is easy to observe a far greater frequency of Preaching amongst the Ancient Fathers, then ordinarily, men that love ease, will apprehend. We see evidently in S. Augustine's hundred forty fourth Sermon De Tempore, And in S. Ambroses forty fourth Sermon De sancto Latrone, And in S. Bernard's twelve Sermons upon one Psalm, that all these blessed and Reverend Fathers, preached more than one day, divers days together, without intermission: And we may see in S. Basils' second Homily upon the six day's work, that he preached in the afternoon; And so, by occasion of his often preaching, it seems by his second Homily De Baptismo, that he preached sometimes extemporally. But of all this, the reason is as evident as the fact, The Preachers were able to say much, The people were capable but of little: And where it was not so, the Clergy often assisted themselves with one another's labours; as S. Cyrils' Sermons were studied without book, and preached over again to their several Congregations, by almost all the Bishops of the Eastern Church. Sometimes we may see Texts extended to very many Sermons, and sometimes Texts taken of that extent and largeness, as only a paraphrase upon the Text would make the Sermon; for we may see by S. Augustine's tenth Sermon De verbis Apostoli, that they took sometimes the Epistle and Gospel of the day, and the Psalm before the Sermon for their text. But in these our times, when the curiosity, (allow it a better name, for truly, God be blessed for it, it deserves a better name) when the capacity of the people requires matter of more labour, as there is not the same necessity, so there is not the same possibility of that assiduous, and that sudden preaching. No man will think that we have abler Preachers than the Primitive Church had; no man will doubt, but that we have learneder, and more capable auditories, and congregations then their were. The Apostles were not negligent, when they mended their nets: A preacher is not negligent, if he prepare for another Sermon, after he hath made one; nor a hearer is not negligent, if he meditate upon one Sermon, though he hear not another within three hours after. S. Peter's Sermon was not extemporal; neither if it had (his person, and the quality of the hearers, being compared with our times) had that been any precedent, or pattern for our times, to do the like. But yet, Beloved, since our times are such, as are overtaken with another necessity, that our adversaries dare come, Cum locutus est, As soon as the Preacher hath done, and meet the people coming out of the Church, and deride the Preacher, and offer an answer to any thing that hath been said; since they are come to come to Church with us, and Dum locutus est, Then when the Preacher is speaking, to say to him, that sits next him, That is false, that is heretical; since they are come to join with us at the Communion, so that it is hard to find out the judas, and if you do find him, he dares answer, Your Minister is no Priest, and so your Bread and Wine no Sacrament, and therefore I care not how much of it I take; since they are come to boast, that with all our assiduity of preaching, we cannot keep men from them; since it is thus, as we were always bound by Christ's example, To gather you as a hen gathers her chickens, (to call you often to this assembling of yourselves) so are we now much more bound to hid and cover you, as a hen doth her chickens, and because there is a Kite hover in every corner, (a seducer lurking in every company) to defend and arm you, with more and more instructions against their insinuations. And if they deride us, for often preaching, and call us fools for that, as David said, He would be more vile, he would Dance more, So let us be more fools, in this foolishness of preaching, and preach more. If they think us mad, since we are mad for our souls, (as the Apostle speaks) let us be more mad; Let him that hath preached once, do it twice, and him that hath preached twice, do it thrice. But yet, not this, by coming to a negligent, and extemporal manner of preaching, but we will be content to take so many hours from our rest, that we, with you, may rest the safelier in Abraham's bosom, and so many more hours from our meat, that we, with you, may the more surely eat, and drink with the Lamb, in the kingdom of heaven. Christ hath undertaken, that his word shall not pass away, but he hath not undertaken that it shall not pass from us: There is a Ne exeas munaum served upon the world, The Gospel cannot go, nor be driven out of the world, till the end of the world; but there is not a Ne exeas regnum, The Gospel may go out of this, or any Kingdom, if they flacken in the doing of those things which God hath ordained for the means of keeping it, that is, a zealous, and yet a discreet; a sober, and yet a learned assiduity in preaching. Thus far then we have been justly carried, in consideration of this circumstance in the manner of his preaching, his preparation; In descending to the next, which is the matter of his Sermon, we see much of that in his Text. S. Peter took his Text here, Res. ver. 34. out of Deuteronomy, of a truth I perceive, that God is no respecter of persons. Where, Deut. 10.17. because the words are not precisely the same in Deuteronomy, as they are in this Text, we find just occasion to note, That neither Christ in his preaching, nor the holy Ghost in penning the Scriptures of the new Testament, were so curious as our times, in citing Chapters and Verses, or such distinctions, no nor in citing the very, very words of the places. Heb. 4.4. There is a sentence cited thus indefinitely, It is written in a certain place, without more particular note: And, to pass over many, conducing to that purpose, if we consider that one place in the Prophet Esay, (Make the heart of this people fat, Esay 6.20. make their eyes heavy, and shut them, lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their hearts, and convert, and be healed) and consider the same place, as it is cited six several times in the new Testament, we shall see, that they stood not upon such exact quotations, and citing of the very words. But to that purpose, for which S. Peter had taken that text, he follows his text. Now, Beloved, I do not go about to include S. Peter's whole Sermon into one branch, of one part, of one of mine: Only I refresh to your memories, that which I presume you have often read in this Story, and this Chapter, that though S. Peter say, That God is no such accepter of persons, Ver. 35.36. but that in every Nation, he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him, yet it is upon this ground, Christ Jesus is Lord of all; And, (as it is, ver. 42.) He hath commanded us to preach; that is, he hath established a Church, and therein, visible means of salvation; And then, this is our general text, the subject of all our Sermons, That through his name, Ver. 43 whosoever believeth in him shall have remission of sins. So that this is all that we dare avow concerning salvation, that howsoever God may afford salvation to some in all nations, yet he hath manifested to us no way of conveying salvation to them, but by the manifeltation of Christ Jesus in his Ordinance of preaching. And such a manifestation of Christ, had God here ordained for this Centurion Cornelius. But why for him? I do not ask reasons of God's mercy to particular men, for if I would do so, when should I find a reason, why he hath showed mercy to me? But yet, Audite omnes, Chrysoft. qui in Militia estis, & Regibus assistitis, All that serve in Wars, or Courts, may find something to imitate in this Centurion: He was a devout man; A Soldier, and yet devout; God forbidden they were so incompatible, as that courage, and devotion might not consist: A man that feared God; A Soldier's profession is fearlessness; And only he that fears God, fears nothing else: He and all his house; A Soldier, yet kept a house, and did not always wander; He kept his house in good order, and with good means: He gave much alms; Though Arms be an expensive profession for outward splendour, yet hereserved for alms, much alms: And he prayed to God always; Though Arms require much time for the duties thereof, yet he could pray at those times; In his Trenches, at the Assault, or at the defence of a Breach, he could pray: All this the holy Ghost testifies of him together, ver. 2. And this was his general disposition; and then, those who came from him to Peter, add this, That he had a good report amongst all the Nation of the jews, ver. 22. And this to a stranger, (for the Jews loved not strangers) and one that served the State, in such a place, as that he could not choose but be heavy to the Jews, was hard to have. And then, himself, when Peter comes to him, adds thus much more, That this first mercy of God in having sent his Angel, and that farther mercy, that that Angel named a man, and then that man came, was exhibited to him, then, when he was fasting. Ver. 30 And then, this man, thus humbled and macerated by fasting, thus souple and entendered with the fear of God, thus burnt up and calcined with zeal and devotion, thus united to God by continual prayer, thus tributary to God by giving alms, thus exemplar in himself at home, to lead all his house, and thus diffusive of himself to others abroad, to gain the love of good men, this man prostrates himself to Peter at his coming, in such an over-reverentiall manner, as Peter durst not accept, but took him up, Ver. 26. and said, I myself am also a man; Sudden devotion comes quickly near superstition. This is a misery, which our time hath been well acquainted with, and had much experience of, and which grows upon us still, That when men have been mellowed with the fear of God, and by heavy corrections, and calamities, brought to a greater rendernesse of conscience then before, in that distemper of melancholy, and inordinate sadness, they have been easiliest seduced and withdrawn to a superstitious and Idolatrous religion. I speak this, because from the highest to the lowest place, there are Sentinels planted in every corner, to watch all advantages, and if a man lose his preferment at Court, or lose his child at home, or lose any such thing as affects him much, and imprints a deep sadness for the loss thereof, they work upon that sadness, to make him a Papist. When men have lived long from God, they never think they come near enough to him, except they go beyond him; because they have never offered to come to him before, now when they would come, they imagine God to be so hard of access, that there is no coming to him, but by the intervention, and intercession of Saints; and they think that that Church, in which they have lived ill, cannot be a good Church; whereas, if they would accustom themselves in a daily performing of Christian duties, to an ordinary presence of God, Religion would not be such a stranger, nor devotion such an Ague unto them. But when Peter had rectified Cornelius, in this mistaking, in this over-valuing of any person, and then saw Cornclius his disposition, who had brought materials to erect a Church in his house, by calling his kinsmen, and his friends together to hear Peter, Peter spoke those words, Which whilst he yet spoke, the holy Ghost fell upon all them that heard the word. And so we are fallen into our second part. In this, 2. Part. the first Consideration falls upon the person that fell: And as the Trinity is the most mysterious piece of our Religion, and hardest to be comprehended, So in the Trinity, the Holy Ghost is the most mysterious person, and hardest to be expressed. We are called the household of God, and the family of the faithful; and therefore out of a contemplation, and ordinary acquaintance with the parts of families, we are apt to conceive any such thing in God himself, as we see in a family. We seem not to go so fare out of our way of reason, to believe a father, and a son, because father and son are pieces of families: nor in believing Christ and his Church, because husband and wife are pieces of families. We go not so fare in believing Gods working upon us, either by ministering spirits from above, or by his spiritual ministers here upon earth, for master and servants are pieces of families. But does there arise any such thing, out of any of these couples, Father and Son, Husband and Wife, Master and Servant, as should come from them, and they be no whit before neither? Is there any thing in natural or civil families, that should assist our understanding to apprehend this, That in heaven there should be a Holy Spirit, so, as that the Father, and the Son, being all Spirit, and all Holy, and all Holiness, there should be another Holy Spirit, which had all their Essential holiness in him, and another holiness too, Sanctitatem Sanctificantem, a holiness, that should make us holy? It was a hard work for the Apostles, and their successors, at first, to draw the Godhead, into one, into an unity: when the Gentiles had been long accustomed to make every power and attribute of God, and to make every remarkable creature of God a several God, and so to worship God in a multiplicity of Gods, it was a great work to limit, and determine their superstitious, and superfluous devotion in one God. But when all these lines were brought into one centre, not to let that centre rest, but to draw lines out of that again, and bring more persons into that one centrical Godhead, this was hard forreason to digest: But yet to have extended that from that unity, to a duality, was not so much, as to a triplicity. And thereupon, though the Arians would never be brought to confess an equality between the Son and the Father, they were much farther from confessing it in the Holy Ghost: They made, says S. Augustine, Filium creaturam, Haeres. 49. The Son, they accounted to be but a creature; but they made the Holy Ghost Creaturam Creaturae, not only a Creature, and no God, but not a Creature of Gods, but a Creature, a Messenger of the son, who was himself (with them) but a Creature. But these mysteries are not to be chawed by reason, but to be swallowed by faith; we professed three persons in one God, in the simplicity of our infancy, at our baptism, and we have sealed that contract, in the other Sacrament often since; and this is eternal life to die in that belief. There are three that bear witness in heaven, The Father, the Word, 1 John 5.7. and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one; And in that testimony we rest, that there is a Holy Ghost, and in the testimony of this text, that this Holy Ghost falls down upon all that hear the word of God. Now, it is as wonderful that this Holy Ghost should fall down from heaven, Cecidit. Esay 14.12. as that he should be in heaven. Quomodo cecidisti? How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, thou son of the morning? was a question asked by the Prophet, of him, who was so fallen, as that he shall never return again. But the Holy Ghost, (as mysterious in his actions, as in his Essential, or in his Personal being) fell so from heaven, as that he remained in heaven, even then when he was fallen. This Dove sent from heaven, Gen 8.7. did more than that Dove, which was sent out of the Ark; That went and came, but was not in both places at once; Noah could not have showed that Dove to his sons and daughters, in the Ark, then, when the Dove was flown out: But now, when this Dove, the Holy Ghost, fell upon these men, at Peter's Sermon, Stephen, who was then come up to heaven, saw the same Dove, the same Holy Ghost, whom they, whom he had left upon the earth, felt upon the earth then: As if the Holy Ghost fall upon any in this Congregation now, now the Saints of God see that Holy Ghost in heaven, whom they that are here, feel falling upon them here. In all his workings, the Holy Ghost descends, for there is nothing above him. There is a third heaven; but no such third heaven, as is above the heaven of heavens, above the seat and residence of the Holy Ghost: so that whatsoever he doth, is a descent, a diminution, a humiliation, and an act of mercy, because it is a Communication of himself, to a person inferior to himself. But there is more in this Text, than a descent. When the Holy Ghost came upon Christ himself, after his Baptism, there it is said, He descended: Though Christ as the Son of God, were equal to him, and so it was no descent for the Holy Ghost to come to him, yet because Christ had a nature upon him, in which he was not equal to the Holy Ghost, here was a double descent in the Holy Ghost, That he who dwells with the Father and the Son, In luce inaccessibili, In light inaccessible, and too bright to be seen, would descend in a visible form, to be seen by men, And that he descended and wrought upon a mortal man, though that man were Christ. Christ also had a double descending too; He descended to be a man, and he descended to be no man; He descended to live amongst us, and he descended to die amongst us; He descended to the earth, and he descended to hell: Every operation of every person of the holy, and blessed, and glorious Trinity, is a Descending; But here the Holy Ghost is said to have fallen, which denotes a more earnest communicating of himself, a throwing, a pouring out of himself, upon those, upon whom he falls: He falls as a fall of waters, that covers that it falls upon; as a Hawk upon a prey, it desires and it will possess that it falls upon; as an Army into a Country, it Conquers, and it Governs where it falls. The Holy Ghost falls, but fare otherwise, Mat. 21.44. upon the ungodly. Whosoever shall fall upon this stone, shall be broken, but upon whomsocver this stone shall fall, it will grind him to powder. Indeed, he falls upon him so, as hail falls upon him; he falls upon him so, as he falls from him, and leaves him in an obduration, and impenitibleness, and in an irrecoverable ruin of him, that hath formorly despised, and despighted the Holy Ghost. But when the Holy Ghost falls not thus in the nature of a stone, but puts on the nature of a Dove, and a Dove with an Olive-branch, and that in the Ark, that is, testimonies of our peace, and reconciliation to God, in his Church, he falls as that kind of lightning, which melts swords, and hurts not scabbards; the Holy Ghost shall melt thy soul, and not hurt thy body; he shall give thee spiritual blessings, and saving graces, under the temporal seals of bodily health, and prosperity in this world: He shall let thee see, that thou art the child of God, in the obedience of thy children to thee, And that thou art the servant of God, in the faithfulness of thy servants to thee, And that thou standest in the favour of God, bythe favour of thy superiors to thee; he shall fall upon thy soul, and not wound thy body, give thee spiritual prosperity, and yet not by worldly adversity, and evermore and refresh thy soul, & yet evermore keep thee in his Sunshine, and the light of his countenance. But there is more than this, in this falling of the Holy Ghost, in this Text. For, it was not such a particular insinuation of the Holy Ghost, as that he conveyed himself into those particular men, for their particular good, and salvation, and determined there; but such a powerful, and diffusive falling, as made his presence, and his power in them, to work upon others also. So when he came upon Christ, it was not to add any thing to Christ, but to inform others, that that was Christ: So when Christ breathed his spirit into the Apostles, it was not merely to infuse salvation into them, but it was especially to seal to them that Patent, that Commission, Quorum remiseritis, That others might receive remission of sins, by their power. So the Holy Ghost fell upon these men here, for the benefit of others, that thereby a great doubt might be removed, a great scruple devested, a great disputation extinguished, whether it were lawful to preach the Gospel to the Gentiles, Ver. 2. or no; for, as we see in the next Chapter, Peter himself was reproved of the Jews, for this that he had done: and therefore, God ratified, and gave testimony to this service of his, by this miraculous falling of the Holy Ghost, as S. Augustine makes the reason of this falling, very justly to have been; so then, this falling of the Holy Ghost, was not properly, or not merely an infusing of justifying grace, but an infusing of such gifts, as might edify others: for, S. Peter speaking of this very action, in the next Chapter, Ver. 15. fayes, The Holy Ghost fell on them, as on us, in the beginning; Which was, when he fell upon them, as this day. This doth not imply Graduum aequalitatem, an equal measure of the same gifts, as the Apostles had, who were to pass over the whole world, and work upon all men, But it implies Doni identitatem, it was the same miraculous expressing of the presence, and working of the Holy Ghost, for the confirmation of Peter, that the Gentiles might be preached unto, and for the consolation of the Gentiles, that they might be enabled to preach to one another: for so it is expressly said in this Chapter, Ver. 46. That they heard these men speak with divers tongues; they that heard the Preacher, were made partakers of the same gifts that the Preacher had; A good hearer becomes a good Preacher, that is, able to edify others. It it true, that these men were not to be literally Preachers, as the Apostles (upon whom the Holy Ghost fell, as upon them) were, and therefore the gift of tongues may seem not to have been so necessary to them. But it is not only the Preacher, that hath use of the tongue, for the edification of God's people, but in all our discourses, and conferences with one another, we snould preach his glory, his goodness, his power, that every man might speak one another's language, and preach to one another's conscience; that when I accuse myself, and confess mine infirmities to another man, that man may understand, that there is, in that confession of mine, a Sermon, and a rebuke, and a reprehension to him, if he be guilty of the same sin; Nay, if he be guilty of a sin contrary to mine. For, as in that language in which God spoke, the Hebrew, the same root will take in words of a contrary signification, (as the word of jobs wife signifies blessing and cursing too) so the covetous man that hears me confess my prodigality, should argue to himself, If prodigality, which howsoever it hurt a particular person, yet spreads money abroad, which is the right and natural use of money, be so heavy a sin, how heavy is my covetousness, which, besides that it keeps me all the way in as much penuriousness, as the prodigal man brings himself to at last, is also a public sin, because it emprisons that money which should be at liberty, and employed in a free course abroad? And so also when I declare to another, the spiritual and temporal blessings which God hath bestowed upon me, he may be raised to a thankful remembrance, that he hath received all that from God also. This is not the use of having learned divers tongues, to be able to talk of the wars with Durch Captains, or of trade with a French Merchant, or of State with a Spanish Agent, or of pleasure with an Italian Epicure; It is not to entertain discourse with strangers, but to bring strangers to a better knowledge of God, in that way, wherein we, by his Ordinance, do worship and ferve him. Now this place is ill detorted by the Roman Church, for the confirmation of their Sacrament of Confirmation: That because the Holy Ghost fell upon men, at another time then at Baptism, therefore there is a less perfect giving of the Holy Ghost, in Baptism. It is too forward a triumph in him, who says of this place, Pamclius Annot. in Cypr. Epist. 72. Locus insignis ad assertionem Sacramenti manus impositionis: That is an evident place for Confirmation of the Sacrament of Confirmation: It is true, that S. Cyprian says there, That a man is not truly sanctified, Nisi utroque Sacramento nascatur, Except he be regenerate by both Sacraments: And he tells us what those two Sacraments are, Aqua & Spiritus, Water and the Spirit, That except a man have both these seals, inward and outward, he is not safe: And S. Cyprian requires (and usefully truly) an outward declaration of this inward seal, of this giving of the Holy Ghost: For, he instances expressly in this, which was done in this Text, That there was both Baptism, and a giving of the Holy Ghost. Neither would S. Cyprian forbear the use of Confirmation, because it was also in use amongst some Heretics, Quia Novatianus facere audet, non putabimus nos esse faciendum? Cypr. Epist. 72. Shall we give over a good custom, because the Novatians do the like? Quia Novatianus extra Ecclesiam, vendicat sibi veritatis imaginem, relinquemus Ecclesiae veritatem? Shall the Church forbear any of those customs, which were induced to good purposes, because some Heretics, in a false Church, have counterfeited them, or corrupted them? And therefore, says that Father, It was so in the Apostles time, Et nunc quoque apud nos geritur, We continue it so in our time, That they who are Baptised, Signaculo Dominico consummentur, That they may have a ratification, a consummation in this seal of the Holy Ghost: Which was not in the Primitive Church (as in the later Roman Church) a confirmation of Baptism, so, as that that Sacrament should be but a halfe-Sacrament, but it was a Confirmation of Christians, with an increase of grace, when they came to such years, as they were naturally exposed to some tentations. Our Church acknowledges the trueuse of this Confirmation; for, in the first Collect in the office of Confirmation, it confesses, that that child is already regenerated by water and the holy Ghost; and prays only for farther strength: And having like a good mother, taught us the right use of it, than our Church, like a supreme Commander too, enjoins expressly, that none be admitted to the Communion, till they have received their Confirmation. And though this injunction be not in rigour and exactness pursued and executed, yet it is very necessary that the purpose thereof should be maintained; That is, that none should be received to the Communion, till they had given an account of their faith and proficiency. For, he is but an interpretative, but a presumptive Christian, who, because he is so old, ventures upon the Sacrament. A beard does not make a man fit for the Sacrament, nor a Husband, a woman: a man may be a great officer in the State, and a woman may be a grandmother in the family, and yet not be fit for that Sacrament, if they have never considered more in it, but only to do as others do. The Church enjoins a precedent Confirmation; where that is not, we require yet a precedent Examination, before any be admitted, at first, to the Sacrament. This was then the effectual working of the Holy Ghost, Super omnes. Non spiravit, He did not only breathe upon them, and try whether they would receive the savour of life unto life, or no: Non sibilavit, He did not only whisper unto them, and try whether they had a disposition to hear, and answer; Non incubabat, He did not only hover over them, and sit upon them, to try what he could hatch, and produce out of them; Non descendit, He did not only descend towards them, and try whether they would reach out their hand to receive him; But Cecidit, He fell, so, as that he possessed them, enwrapped them, invested them with a penetrating, with a powerful force; And so, he fell upon them All. As we have read of some Generals, in secular story, that in great Services have knighted their whole Army, So the Holy Ghost Sanctifies, and Canonizes' whole Congregations. They are too good husbands, and too thrifty of God's grace, too sparing of the Holy Ghost; that restrain Gods general propositions, Venite omnes, Let all come, and Vult omnes salvos, God would have all men saved, so particularly, as to say, that when God lays All, he means some of all sorts, some Men, some Women, some Jews, some Gentiles, some rich, some poor, but he does not mean, as he seems to say, simply All. Yes; God does mean, simply All, so as that no man can say to another, God means not thee, no man can say to himself, God means not me. Nefas est dicere, Deum aliquid, nisi bonum praedestinare; It is modestly said by S. Augustine, and more were immodesty; There is no predestination in God, but to good. And therefore it is Durus sermo, They are hard words, to say, That God predestinated some, not only Ad damnationem, but Ad causas damnationis, Not only to damnation because they sinned, but to a necessity of sinning, that they might the more justly be damned; And to say, That God rejected some Odio libero, Out of a hate, that arose primarily in himself, against those persons, before those persons were created, (so much as in God's intention) and not out of any hate of their sins, which he foresaw. Beloved, we are to take in no other knowledge of God's Decrees, but by the execution thereof; How should we know any Decree in God, of the creation of Man, according to his Image, but by the execution? Because I see that Man is created so, as I conceive to be intended in this phrase, After his Image, I believe that he Decreed to Create him so: because God does nothing extemporally, but according to his own most holy, and eternal preconceptions, and Ideas, and Decrees. So, we know his Decree of Election, and Reprobation, by the execution; And how is that? Does God ever say, that any shall be saved or damned, without relation, without condition, without doing, (in the Old Testament) and, in the New Testament, without believing in Christ Jesus? If faith in Christ Jesus be in the Execution of the Decree, faith in Christ Jesus was in the Decree itself too. Christ wept for the imminent calamities, temporal, and spiritual, which hung over Jerusalem; And Lacrymae Legati doloris, says S. Cyprian, Tears are the Ambassadors of sorrow; And they are Sanguis animi vulnerati, says S. Augustine, Tears are the blood of a wounded soul; And would Christ bleed out of a wounded soul, and weep out of a sad heart, for that, which himself, and only himself, by an absolute Decree, Luke 7.32. had made necessary and inevitable? The Scribes and Pharisees rejected the Counsel of God, says S. Luke: In this new language we must say, They fulfilled the Counsel of God, if positively, and primarily, and absolutely, God's determinate Counsel were, that they should do so. But this is not God's Counsel upon any, to be so far the Author of sin, as to impose such a necessity of sinning, as arises not out of his own will. Perditio nostra ex nobis, Our destruction is from our own sin, and the Devil that infuses it; not from God, or any ill purpose in him that enforces us. The blood of Christ was shed for all that will apply it, And the Holy Ghost is willing to fall, with the sprinkling of that blood, upon all that do not resist him; And that is, as follows in our text, Qui audiunt, The Holy Ghost fell upon all that heard. Faith in Christ is in the Execution of God's Decree, Qui audiunt. and Hearing is the means of this faith: And the proposition is not the less general, if it except them, who will not be included in it, if the Holy Ghost fall not on them, who will not come to hear. Let no man think that he hath heard enough, and needs no more; why did the Holy Ghost furnish his Church with four Evangelists, if it were enough to read one? And yet every one of the four, hath enough for salvation, if God's abundant care had not enriched the Church with more: Those Nations which never heard of Christ, or of Evangelist, shall rise up in judgement against us, and though they perish themselves, thus far aggravate our condemnation, as to say, you had four Evangelists, and have not believed, if we had had any one of them, we would have been saved. It is the glory of God's Word, not that it is come, but that it shall remain for ever: It is the glory of a Christian, not that he hath heard, but that he desires to hear still. Are the Angels weary of looking upon that face of God, which they looked upon yesterday? Or are Saints weary of singing that song, which they sung to God's glory yesterday? And is not that Alleluiah, that song which is their morning and evening sacrifice, and which shall be their song, world without end, called still A new song? Be not you weary of hearing those things which you have heard from others before: Do not say, if I had known this, I would not have come, for I have heard all this before; since thou never thoughtest of it since that former hearing, till thou heardst it again now, thou didst not know that thou hadst heard it before. gideon's Fleece, jud. 6.35. that had all the dew of heaven in itself alone, and all about it dry, one day, next day was all dry in itself, though all about it had received the dew: He that hath heard, and believed, may lose his knowledge, and his faith too, if he will hear no more. They say there is a way of castration, in cutting off the ears: There are certain veins behind the ears, which, if they be cut, disable a man from generation. The Ears are the Aqueducts of the water of life; and if we cut off those, that is, intermit our ordinary course of hearing, this is a castration of the soul, the soul becomes an Eunuch, and we grow to a rust, to a moss, to a barrenness, without fruit, without propagation. If then God have placed thee under such a Pastor, as presents thee variety, bless God, who enlarges himself, to afford thee that spiritual delight, in that variety; even for the satisfaction of that holy curiosity of thine. If he have placed thee under one, who often repeats, and often remembers thee of the same things, bless God even for that, that in that he hath let thee see, that the Christian Religion is Verbum abbreviatum, A contracted doctrine, and that they are but a few things which are necessary to salvation, and therefore be not loath to hear them often. Our errand hither then, is not to see; but much lesse not to be able to see, to sleep: Verbum. It is not to talk, but much less to snort: It is to hear, and to hear all the words of the Preacher, but, to hear in those words, the Word, that Word which is the soul of all that is said, and is the true Physic of all their souls that hear. The Word was made flesh; that is, assumed flesh; but yet the Godhead was not that flesh. The Word of God is made a Sermon, that is, a Text is dilated, diffused into a Sermon; but that whole Sermon is not the word of God. But yet all the Sermon is the Ordinance of God. Delight thyself in the Lord, and he will give thee thy hearts desire; Take a delight in God's Ordinance, in man's preaching, and thou wilt find God's Word in that. To end all in that Metaphor which we mentioned at beginning, As the word of God is as honey, so says Solomon, Pleasant words are as the honey comb: Prov. 16.24. And when the pleasant words of God's servants have conveyed the saving word of God himself into thy soul, then mayst thou say with Christ to the Spouse, I have eaten my honey comb with my honey, Cant. 5.1. mine understanding is enlightened with the words of the Preacher, and my faith is strengthened with the word of God; I glorify God much in the gifts of the man, but I glorify God much more in the gifts of his grace; I am glad I have heard him, but I am gladder I have heard God in him; I am happy that I have heard those words, but thrice happy, that in those words, I have heard the Word; Blessed be thou that camest in the name of the Lord, but blessed be the Lord, that is come to me in thee; Let me remember how the Preacher said it, but let me remember rather what he said. And beloved, all the best of us all, all that all together, all the days of our life shall be able to say unto you, is but this, That if ye will hear the same Jesus, in the same Gospel, by the same Ordinance, and not seek an imaginary Jesus, in an illusory sacrifice, in another Church, If you will hear so, as you have contracted with God in your Baptism, The holy Ghost shall fall upon you, whilst you hear, here in the house of God, and the holy Ghost shall accompany you home to your own houses, and make your domestic peace there, a type of your union with God in heaven; and make your eating and drinking there, a type of the abundance, and fullness of heaven; and make every days rising to you there, a type of your joyful Resurrection to heaven; and every night's rest, a type of your eternal Sabbath; and your very dreams, prayers, and meditations, and sacrifices to Almighty God. SERM. XXXIV. Preached upon Whitsunday. ROM. 8.16. The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God. I Take these words, to take occasion by them, to say something of the holy Ghost: Our order proposed at first, requires it, and our Text affords it. Since we speak by Him, let us love to speak of Him, and to speak for Him: but in both, to speak with Him, that is, so, as he hath spoken of himself to us in the Scriptures. God will be visited, but he will not be importuned; He will be looked upon, but he will not be pried into. A man may flatter the best man; If he do not believe himself, when he speaks well of another, and when he praises him, though that which he says of him be true, yet he flatters; So an Atheist, that temporises, and serves the company, and seems to assent, flatters. A man may flatter the Saints in heaven, if he attribute to them that which is not theirs; and so a Papist flatters. A man may flatter God himself; If upon pretence of magnifying God's mercy, he will say with Origen, That God at last will have mercy upon the devil, he flatters. So, though God be our business, we may be too busy with God; and though God be infinite, we may go beyond God, when we conceive, or speak otherwise of God, than God hath revealed unto us. By his own light therefore we shall look upon him; and with that reverence, and modesty, that That Spirit may bear witness to our spirit, that we are the children of God. That which we shall say of these words, Divisio. will best be conceived, and retained best, if we handle them thus; That whereas Christ hath bidden us to judge ourselves, that we be not judged, to admit a trial here, lest we incur a condemnation hereafter, This text is a good part of that trial, of that judicial proceeding. For, here are first, two persons that are able to say much, The Spirit itself, and Our spirit; And secondly, their office, their service, They bear witness; And thirdly, their testimony, That we are the children of God; And these will be our three parts. The first will have two branches, because there are two persons, The Spirit, and Our spirit; And the second, two branches, They witness, and They witness together, for so the word is; And the third also two branches, They testify of us, their testimony concerns us, and they testify well of us, That we are the children of God. The persons are without exception, the Spirit of God cannot be deceived, and the spirit of man will not deceive himself: Their proceeding is Legal, and fair, they do not libel, they do not whisper, they do not calumniate; They testify, and they agree in their testimony: And lastly, the case is not argued so, as amongst practisers at the Law, that thereby, by the light of that they may after give Counsel to another in the like, but the testimony concerns ourselves, it is our own case, The verdict upon the testimony of the Spirit, and our spirit, is upon ourselves, whatsoever it be; And, blessed be the Father, in the Son, by the Holy Ghost, The verdict is, That we are the children of God. The Spirit beareth, etc. First then, 1 Part. a slackness, a supineness, in consideration of the divers significations of this word Spirit, hath occasioned divers errors, when the word hath been intended in one sense, and taken in another. All the significations will fall into these four, for these four are very large; It is spoken of God, or of Angels, or of men, or of inferior creatures. And first, of God, it is spoken sometimes Essentially, sometimes Personally. God is a Spirit, john 4.24. Esay 31.3. and they that worship him, must worship him in spirit and truth. So also, The Egyptians are men, and not God, and their horse's flesh, and not spirit; For, if they were God, they were Spirit. So, God altogether, and considered in his Essence, is a Spirit: but when the word Spir it is spoken, not essentially of all, but personally of one, than that word designeth Spiritum sonctum, The holy Ghost: Go and baptise, Mar. 28.19. In the name of the Father, and Son, & Spiritus sancti, and the holy Ghost. And as of God, so of Angels also it is spoken in two respects; of good Angels, Sent forth to minister for them, Heb. 1.14. 1 King 22.22. Hosea 4.12. Esay 19.3. that shall be heirs of salvation, And evil Angels, The lying Spirit, that would deceive the King by the Prophet; The Spirit of Whoredom, spiritual whoredom, when the people ask counsel of their stocks, And Spiritus vertiginis, The spirit of giddiness, of perversities, (as we translate it) which the Lord doth mingle amongst the people, in his judgement. Of man also, is this word Spirit, spoken two ways; The Spirit is sometimes the soul, Psal. 31.5. Into thy hands I commend my Spirit, sometimes it signifies those animal spirits, which conserve us in strength, and vigour, The poison of God's arrows drinketh up my spirit; And also, Job. 6.4. Luke 1.47. the superior faculties of the soul in a regenerate man, as there, My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit rejoiceth in God my Saviour, And then lastly, of inferior creatures it is taken two ways too, of living creatures, The God of the spirits of all flesh; Numb. 16.22. Ezek. 1.21. and of creatures without life, (other than a metaphorical life) as of the wind often, and of Ezckiels' wheels, The Spirit of life was in the wheels. Now in this first Branch of this first Part of our Text, it is not of Angels, nor of men, nor of other creatures, but of God, and not of God Essentially, but Personally, that is, of the Holy Ghost. Origen says, Antecessores nostri, The Ancients before him had made this note, That where we find the word Spirit without any addition, it is always intended of the Holy Ghost. Before him, and after him, they stuck much to that note; for S. Hierome makes it too, and produces many examples thereof; but yet it will not hold in all. Didymus of Alexandria, though borne blind, in this light saw light, and writ so of the Holy Ghost, as S. Hierome thought that work worthy of his Translation; And he gives this note, That wheresoever the Apostles intent the Holy Ghost, they add to the word Spirit, Sanctus, Holy Spirit, or at least the Article The, The Spirit. And this note hath good use too, but yet it is not universally true. If we supply these notes with this, That whensoever any such thing is said of the Spirit, as cannot consist with the Divine nature, there it is not meant of the Holy Ghost, but of his gifts, or of his working; (as, when it is said, The Holy Ghost was not yet, (for his person was always) And where it is said, john 7.39. 1 The fl. 5.19. Quench not the Holy Ghost (for the Holy Ghost himself cannot be quenched) we have enough for our present purpose. Here, it is Spirit without any addition, and therefore fittest to be taken for the Holy Ghost; And it is Spirit, with that emphatical article, The, The Spirit, and in that respect also fittest to be so taken. And though it be fittest to understand the Holy Ghost here, not of his person, but his operation, yet it gives just occasion to look piously, and to consider modestly, who, and what this person is, that doth thus work upon us. And to that purpose, we shall touch upon four things: First, His Universality, He is All, He is God; Secondly, His Singularity, He is One, One Person; Thirdly, His root from whence he proceeded, Father and Son; And fourthly, His growth; his emanation, his manner of proceeding; for our order proposed at first, leading us now to speak of this third person of the Trinity, it will be almost necessary, to stop a little upon each of these. First then, the Spirit mentioned here, the Holy Ghost is God, and if so, Deus. equal to Father and Son, and all that is God. He is God, because the Essential name of God is attributed to him; He is called Jehovah; jebovah says to Esay, Go and tell this people, Esay 6.9. Acts 28.29. etc. And S. Paul making use of these words, in the Acts, he says, Well spoke the Holy Ghost, by the Prophet Esay. The Essential name of God is attributed to him, and the Essential Attributes of God. He is Eternal; so is none but God; where we hear of the making of every thing else, in the general Creation, we hear that the Spirit of God moved, Gen. 1.2. but never that the Spirit was made. He is every where; so is none but God; Psal. 139.7. 1 Cor. 2.10. whither shall Igoe from thy Spirit? He knows all things; so doth none but God; The Spirit searcheth all things, yca the deep things of God. He hath the name of God, the Attributes of God, and he does the works of God. Is our Creator, our Maker, God? job 33.4. The Spirit of God hath mademe. Is he that can change the whole Creation, and frame of nature, in doing miracles, God? The Spirit lead the Israelites miraculously through the wilderness. Esay 63.14. Esay 48.16. Will the calling and the sending of the Prophets, show him to be God? The Lord God, and his Spirit hath sent me. Is it argument enough for his Godhead, Esay 61.1. Luke 4.18. that he sent Christ himself? Christ himself applies to himself that, The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, and hath anointed me to preach. Acts 1.16. john 16.13. He foretold future things, The Holy Ghost by the mouth of David spoke before, says S. Peter. He establishes present things, The Spirit of truth guides into all truth. And he does this, by ways proper only to God; for, our illumination is his, He shall receive of me, Ver. 14. 1 Cor. 6.11. john 3.5. john 16.8. (says Christ) and show it you. Our Justification is his; Ye are justified, in the name of the Lord jesus, by the Spirit of God. Our regeneration is his; There is a necessity of being borne again of Water, and the Spirit. The holy sense of our natural wretchedness is his; For, It is he, that reproves the world of Sin, of Righteousness, of judgement. The sense oftrue comfort is his; Acts 9.31. The Churches were multiplied in the comforts of the Holy Ghost. All from the Creation to the Resurrection, and the Resurrection itself, is his; Rom. 8.11. The Spirit of him that raised jesus from the dead, shall quicken your mortal bodies, by the same Spirit. 2 Cor. 1.22. Eph. 1.13. john 4.14. Mat. 3.11. Zach. 12.10. Heb. 1.9. Rom. 8.26. He is Arrha, The earnest that God gives to them now, to whom he will give all hereafter. He is Sigillum, that seal of our evidence, You are sealed with that holy Spirit of promise. He is the water, which whosoever drinks, shall never thirst, when Christ hath given it; And he is that fire, with which Christ baptises, who baptises with fire, and with the Holy Ghost. He is Spiritus precum, The Spirit of grace, and supplication; And he is Oleum laetitiae, The oil of gladness, that anoints us, when we have prayed. He is our Advocate, He maketh intercession for us, with groan which cannot be uttered; And when our groan under the calamities of this world, are uttered without remedy, he is that Paracletus, john 16.7. The Comforter, who when Christ himself seems to be gone from us, comes to us; who is, (as Tertullian expresses it, elegantly enough, but not largely enough) Dei Villicus, & Vicaria vis Christi, The Vicegerent of Christ, and the Steward of God; but he is more, much more, infinitely more, for he is God himself. All that which S. john intends, in the seven Spirits, which are about the Throne, is in this One, in this only Spirit, August. 1 Cor. 12.4. who is Vnicus & septiformis, solus & multiplex; One and yet seven, that is infinite; for, Though there be diversity of gifts, yet there is but one Spirit. He is God, because the essential name of God is his; Therefore let us call upon his name: And because the Attributes of God are his; Therefore let us attribute to him, All Might, Majesty, Dominion, Power, and Glory: And he is God, because the Works of God are his; 1 Cor. 6.17. Therefore let us cooperate, and work with this Spirit, and we shall be the same Spirit with him. He is God, Persona. That was our first step, and our second is, that he is a distinct Person in the Godhead. He is not Virtus à Deo in homine exaltata, Not the highest and powerfullest working of God in man; Not Afflatus Divinus, The breathing of God into the soul of man; These are low expressions; for they are all but Dona, Charismata, The gifts of the Holy Ghost, not the Holy Ghost himself: But he is a distinct person, as the taking of the shape of a Dove, and the shape of fiery tongues do declare, which are acts of a distinct person. It is not the Power of the King, that signs a pardon, but his Person. When the power of the Government was in two Persons, in the two Consuls at Rome, yet the several acts were done by their several Persons. Wilt thou ask me, What needs these three Persons? Is there any thing in the three Persons, that is not in the one God? Yes, The Father, the Son, the Holy Ghost, falls not in the bare consideration of that one God. Wilt thou say, What if they do not? What lack we if we have one Almighty God? Though that God had no Son, nor they two, no Holy Ghost? We lacked our redemption; we lacked all our direction; we lacked the revealed will of God, the Scriptures; we have not God, if we have him not, as he hath delivered himself; and he hath done that in the Scriptures; and we embrace him, as we find him there; and we find him there, to be one God in three Persons, and the Holy Ghost to be one of those three; and in them we rest. He is one; Ex filio. but one that proceeds from two, from the Father, and from the Son. Some in the Greek Church, in later times, denied the proceeding of the Holy Ghost from the Son; but this was especially a jealousy in terms; They thought that to make him proceed from two, were to make duo principia, two roots, two beginnings from whence the Holy Ghost should proceed, and that might not be admitted, for the Father, and the Son are but one cause of the Holy Ghost, (if we may use that word, Cause, in this mystery.) And therefore it is as suspiciously, and as dangerously said by the Master of the Sentences, and by the later School, That the Holy Ghost proceeds Minùs Principaliter, Not so radically from the Son, as from the Father; for, in this action, The Father and the Son are but one root, and the Holy Ghost equally from both: In the generation of the Son, the Father is in order before the Son, but in the procession of the holy Ghost, he is not so. He is from both; for where he is first named, he is called Spiritus Elohim, The Spirit of Gods, in the plural. In this Chapter, in the ninth verse, Gen. 1.2. he is the Spirit of the Son, If any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his; And so in the Apostle, God hath sent the Spirit of his Son into your hearts. God sent him, and Christ sent him, Gal. 4.6. john 16.17. john 20.22. If I depart, I will send the Comforter unto you. He sent him after he went, and he gave him when he was here, He breathed upon his Apostles, and said, Receive ye the holy Ghost. So he is of both. But by what manner comes he from them? By proceeding. Processio. That is a very general word; for, Creation is proceeding, and so is Generation too: Creatures proceed from God, and so doth God the Son proceed from God the Father; what is this proceeding of the holy Ghost, that is not Creation, nor Generation? Nazianz. Exponant cur & quomodo Spiritus pulsat in arteriis, & tum in processionem Spiritus sancti inquirant: When they are able clearly, and with full satisfaction to tell themselves how and from whence that spirit proceeds, which beats in their pulse, let them inquire how this Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son. And let them think till they be mad, and speak till they behoarce, and read till they be blind, and write till they be lame, they must end with S. Augustine, Distinguere inter Processioncm, & Generationem, nescio, non valeo, non sufficio, I cannot distinguish, I cannot assign a difference between this Generation, and this Proceeding. We use to say, they differ principio, That the Son is from the Father alone, the holy Ghost from both: but when this is said, that must be said too, That both Father and Son are but one beginning. We use to say, They differ ordine, because the Son is the second, and the holy Ghost the third person; but the second was not before the third in time, nor is above him in dignity. There is processio corporalis, such a bodily proceeding, as that that which proceeds is utterly another thing then that from which it proceeds: frogs proceed (perchance) of air, and mice of dust, and worms of carcases; and they resemble not that air, that dust, those carcases that produced them. There is also processio Metaphysica, when thoughts proceed out of the mind; but those thoughts remain still in the mind within, and have no separate subsistence in themselves: And then there is processio Hyperphysica, which is this which we seek and find in our souls, but not in our tongues, a proceeding of the holy Ghost so from Father and Son, as that he remains a subsistence alone, a distinct person of himself. This is as far as the School can reach, Ortu, qui relationis est, non est àse; Actu, qui personae est, per se subsistit: Consider him in his proceeding, so he must necessarily have a relation to another, Consider him actually in his person, so he subsists of himself. And De modo, for the manner of his proceeding, we need, we can say but this, As the Son proceeds per modu intellectus, (so as the mind of man conceives a thought) so the holy Ghost proceeds per modum voluntatis; when the mind hath produced a thought, that mind, and that discourse and ratiocination produce a will; first our understanding is settled, and that understanding leads our will. And nearer than this (though God knows this be far off) we cannot go, to the proceeding of the holy Ghost. This then is The Spirit, The third person in the Trinity, but the first person in our Text, Spiritus noster. The other is our spirit, The Spirit beareth witness with our spirit. I told you before, that amongst the manifold acceptations of the word spirit, as it hath relation particularly to man, it is either the soul itself, or the vital spirits, (the thin and active parts of the blood) or the superior faculties of the soul, in a regenerate man; & that is our spirit in this place. So S. Paul distinguishes soul and spirit, Heb. 4.12. The word of God pierces to the dividing asunder soul and spirit; where The soul is that which inanimates the body, and enables the organs of the senses to see and hear; The spirit is that which enables the soul to see God, and to hear his Gospel. The samephrase hath the same use in another place, 1 Thes. 5.25. Calvin. I pray God your spirit, and soul, and body may be preserved blameless: Where it is not so absurdly said, (though a very great man call it an absurd exposition) That the soul, Anima, is that, qua animales homines, (as the Apostle calls them) that by which men are men, natural men, carnal men, And the spirit is the spirit of Regeneration, by which man is a new creature, a spiritual man, But that, that Expositor himself hath said enough to our present purpose, The soul is the seat of Affections, The spirit is rectified Reason. It is true, this Reason is the Sovereign, these Affections are the Officers, this Body is the Executioner: Reason authorises, Affections command, the Body executes: And when we conceive in our mind, desire in our heart, perform in our body nothing that displeases God, then have we had benefit of S. Paul's prayer, That in body, and soul, and spirit we may be blameless. In sum, we need seek no farther for a word to express this spirit, but that which is familiar to us, The Conscience: Rem. 9.1. A rectified conscience is this spirit; My conscience bearing me witness, says the Apostle: And so we have both the persons in this judicial proceeding; The Spirit is the holy Ghost; Our spirit is our Conscience: And now their office is to testify, to bear witness, which is our second general part, The Spirit bears witness, etc. To be a witness, 2 Part. is not an unworthy office for the holy Ghost himself: Heretics in their pestilent doctrines, Tyrant's in their bloody persecutions, call God himself so often, so far into question, as that he needs strong and pregnant testimony to acquit him. First, against Heretics, we see the whole Scripture is but a Testament; and Testamentum is Testatio mentis, it is but an attestation, a proof what the will of God is: And therefore when Tertullian deprehended himself to have slipped into another word, and to have called the Bible Instrumentum, he retracts and corrects himself thus, Magìs usui est dicere Testamentum quàm Instrumentum, It is more proper to call the Scripture a Testament, than a Conveyance or Covenant: All the Bible is Testament, Attestation, Declaration, Proof, Apoc. 11.2. Evidence of the will of God to man. And those two witnesses spoken of in the Revelation, are very conveniently, very probably interpreted to be the two Testaments; And to the Scriptures Christ himself refers the Jews, john 5.39. Search them, for they bear witness of me. The word of God written by the holy Ghost is a witness, and so the holy Ghost is a witness against Heretics. Against Tyrant's and Persecuters, the office of a witness is an honourable office too; for that which we call more passionately, and more gloriously Martyrdom, is but Testimony; A Martyr is nothing but a Witness. He that pledges Christ in his own wine, in his own cup, in blood; He that washes away his sins in a second Baptism, and hath found a lawful way of Rebaptising, even in blood; He that waters the Prophets ploughing, and the Apostles sowing with blood; He that can be content to bleed as long as a Tyrant can foam, or an Executioner sweat; He that is pickled, nay embalmed in blood, salted with fire, and preserved in his own ashes; He that (to contract all, nay to enlarge beyond all) suffers in the Inquisition, when his body is upon the rack, when the rags are in his throat, when the boots are upon his legs, when the splinters are under his nails, if in those agonies he have the vigour to say, I suffer this to show what my Saviour suffered, must yet make this difference, He suffered as a Saviour, I suffer but as a witness. But yet to him that suffers as a Martyr, as a witness, a crown is reserved; It is a happy and a harmonious meeting in Stephen's martyrdom; Proto-martyr, and Stephanus; that the first Martyr for Christ should have a Crown in his name. Such a blessed meeting there is in joash his Coronation, Posuit super eum Diadema & Testimonium, 2 King. 11.12. They put the Crown upon his head, and the Testimony; that is, The Law, which testified, That as he had the Crown from God, so he had it with a witness, with an obligation, that his Government, his life, and (if need were) his death should testify his zeal to him that gave him that Crown. Thus the holy Ghost himself is a witness against Heretics in the word; and those men who are full of the holy Ghost, (as Stephen was) are witnesses against persecution, in action, in passion. At this time, and by occasion of these words, we consider principally the first, The testification of the holy Ghost himself; and therein we consider thus much more, That a witness ever testifies of some matter of fact, of something done before; The holy Ghost, the Spirit here, (as we shall see anon) witnesses that we are the children of God. Now if a Witness prove that I am a Tenant to such Land, or Lord of it, I do not become Lord nor Tenant by this Witness, but his testimony proves that I was so before. I have therefore a former right to be the child of God, that is, The eternal Election of God in Christ Jesus. Christ Jesus could as well have disobeyed his Father, and said, I will not go, or disappointed his Father, and said, I will not go yet, as he could have dis-furnished his Father, and said, He would not redeem me. The holy Ghost bears witness, that is, he pleads, he produces that eternal Decree for my Election. And upon such Evidence shall I give sentence against myself? Chrysost. Si testaretur Angelus, vel Archangelus, posset quisquam addubitare? I should not doubt the testimony of an Angel, or Archangel, and yet Angels and Archangels, all sorts of Angels were deceivers in the Serpent. And therefore the Apostle presents it (though impossible in itself) as a thing that might fall into our misapprehension: Gal. 1.8. If we, (that is, the Apostles) or if an Angel from heaven preach any other Gospel, Anathema sit, let him be accursed. But Quando Deus testatur, quis locus relinquitur dubitationi? when God testifies to me, it is a rebellious sin to doubt: And therefore how hyperbolically soever S. Paul argue there, If Apostles, If Angels teach the contrary, teach false Doctrine, it never entered into his argument (though an argument ab Impossibili) to say, If God should teach, or testify false doctrine. Though then there be a former evidence for my being the child of God, a Decree in heaven, yet it is not enough that there is such a Record, but it must be produced, it must be pleaded, it must be testified to be that, it must have the witness of the Spirit, and by that, Innotescit, though it do not become my Election then, it makes my election appear then, and though it be not Introductory, it is Declaratory. The Root is in the Decree, the first fruits are in the testimony of the Spirit; but even that spirit will not be testis singularis, he will not be heard alone, and single, but it is Cum spiritu nostro, The Spirit testifies with our spirit, etc. The holy Ghost will fulfil his own law, In ore duorum, In the mouth of two witnesses. Cum spiriou nostro. Sometimes our spirit bears witness of somethings appertaining to the next world, without the testimony of the holy Ghost. Tertullian in that excellent Book of his, De testimonio Animae. Of the testimony which the soul of man gives of itself to itself, where he speaks of the soul of a natural, an unregenerate man, gives us just occasion to stop a little upon that consideration. If, says he, we for our Religion produce your own Authors against you, (he speaks to natural men, secular Philosophers) and show you out of them, what Passions, what Vices even they impute to those whom you have made your Gods, than you say, they were but Poetae vani, Those Authors were but vain, and frivolous Poets: But when those Authors speak any thing which sound against our Religion, than they are Philosophers, and reverend and classic Authors. And therefore, says he, I will draw no witness from them, Perversae foelicitatis, quibus in falso potiùs creditur, quàm in vero, Because they have this perverse, this left-handed happiness, to be believed when they lie, better than when they say true. Novum testimonium adduco, says he; I wayve all them, and I call upon a new witness: A witness, Omni literaturi notius, Moore legible than any Character, than any text hand, for it is the intimation of mine own soul, and conscience; and Omni Editione vulgatius, Moore public, more conspicuous than any Edition, any impression of any Author, for Editions may be called in, but who can call in the testimony of his own soul? He proceeds, Te simplicem, & Idioticum compello, I require but a simple, an unlearned soul, Qualem te habent, qui te solam habent, Such a soul, as that man hath, who hath nothing but a soul, no learning; Imperitia tua mibiopus est, quoniam aliquantulae peritiae tuae nemo credit; I shall have the more use of thy testimony, the more ignorant thou art, for, in such cases, Art is suspicious, and from them who are able to prove any thing, we believe nothing; And therefore, says he, Nolo Academiis, bibliothecis instructam, I call not a soul made in an University, or nursed in a Library, but let this soul come now, as it came to me in my Mother's womb, an inartificial, an unexperienced soul; And then, (to contract Tertullia's Contemplation) he proceeds to show the notions of the Christian Religion, which are in such a soul naturally, and which his spirit, that is, his rectified reason, rectified but by nature, is able to infuse into him. And certainly, some of that, which is proved by the testimony mentioned in this text, is proved by the testimony of our own natural soul, in that Poet whom the Apostle citys, that said, Genus ejus, We are the offspring of God. Acts 17.28. So then our spirit bears witness sometimes when the Spirit does not; that is, Nature testifies some things, without addition of particular grace: And then the Spirit, the Holy Ghost oftentimes testifies, when ours does not: How often stands he at the door, and knocks? How often spreads he his wings, to gather us, as a Hen her chickens? How often presents he to us the power of God in the mouth of the Preacher, and we bear witness to one another of the wit and of the eloquence of the Preacher, and no more? How often he bears witness, that such an action is odious in the sight of God, and our spirit bears witness, that it is acceptable, profitable, honourable in the sight of man? How often he bears witness, for God's Judgements, and our spirit deposes for mercy, by presumption, and how often he testifies for mercy, and our spirit swears for Judgement, in desperation? But when the Spirit, and our spirit agree in their testimony, That he hath spoke comfortably to my soul, and my soul hath apprehended comfort by that speech, That, (to use Christ's similitude) He hath piped, and we have danced, He hath showed me my Saviour, and my Spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour, He deposes for the Decree of my Election, and I depose for the seals and marks of that Decree, These two witnesses, The Spirit, and My spirit, induce a third witness, the world itself, to testify that which is the testimony of this text, That I am the child of God. And so we pass from the two former parts, The persons, The Spirit, and our spirit, And their office, to witness, and to agree in their witness, and we are fallen into our third part, The Testimony itself, That we are the Children of God. This part hath also two branches; 3. Part. First, That the Testimony concerns ourselves, We are; And then, That that which we are is this, We are the Children of God. And in the first branch, there will be two twiggs, two sub-considerations; ¹ We, A personal appropriation of the grace of God to ourselves, ² We are, we are now, a present possession of those Graces. First, consider we the Consolation in the particle of appropriation, We. In the great Ant-hill of the whole world, I am an Ant; I have my part in the Creation, I am a Creature; But there are ignoble Creatures. God comes nearer; In the great field of clay, of red earth, that man was made of, & mankind, I am a clod; I am a man, I have my part in the Humanity; But Man was worse than annihilated again. When satan in that serpent was come, as Hercules with his club into a potter's shop, and had broke all the vessels, destroyed all mankind, And the gracious promise of a Messiah to redeem all mankind, was shed and spread upon all, I had my drop of that dew of Heaven, my spark of that fire of heaven, in the universal promise, in which I was involved; But this promise was appropriated after, in a particular Covenant, to one people, to the Jews, to the seed of Abraham. But for all that I have my portion there; for all that profess Christ Jesus are by a spiritual engrafting, and transmigration, and transplantation, in and of that stock, and that seed of Abraham; and I am one of those. But then, of those who do profess Christ Jesus, some grovel still in the superstitions they were fallen into, and some are raised, by God's good grace, out of them; and I am one of those; God hath afforded me my station, in that Church, which is departed from Babylon. Now, all this while, my soul is in a cheerful progress; when I consider what God did for Goshen in Egypt, for a little park in the midst of a forest; what he did for Jury, in the midst of enemies, as a shire that should stand out against a Kingdom round about it: How many Sancerraes he hath delivered from famines, how many Genevaes' from plots, and machinations against her; all this while my soul is in a progress: But I am at home, when I consider Bulls of excommunications, and solicitations of Rebellions, and pistols, and poisons, and the discoveries of those; There is our Nos, We, testimonies that we are in the favour, and care of God; We, our Nation, we, our Church; There I am at home; but I am in my Cabinet at home, when I consider, what God hath done for me, and my soul; There is the Ego, the particular, the individual, I. This appropriation is the consolation, We are; But who are they? or how are we of them? Testimonium est clamor ipse, says S. chrysostom to our great advantage, Even this, that we are able to cry Abba, Ver. 15. Father, by the Spirit of Adoption, is this testimony, that we are his Children; if we can truly do that, that testifies for us. The Spirit testifies two ways; Directly, expressly, personally, Luke 5.20. as in that, Man, thy sins are forgiven thee, And so to David by Nathan, Transtulit, The Lord hath taken away thy sin; And then he testifies, Per indicia, by constant marks, and infallible evidences. We are not to look for the first, for it is a kind of Revelation, nor are we to doubt of the second, for the marks are infallible. And therefore, as S. Augustine said of the Manichees, concerning the Scriptures, Insani sunt adversus Antidotum, quo sani esse possunt, They are enraged against that, which only can cure them of their rage, that was, the Scriptures; so there are men, which will still be in ignorance of that which might cure them of their ignorance, because they will not labour to find in themselves, the marks and seals of those who are ordained to salvation, they will needs think, that no man can have any such testimony. They say, Sumus. It is true, there is a blessed comfort, in this appropriation, if we could be sure of it; They may; we are; we are already in possession of it. The marks of our spiritual filiation, are less subject to error, then of temporal. Shall the Mother's honesty be the Evidence? Alas, we have some such examples of their falsehood, as will discredit any argument, built merely upon their truth. He is like the Father; Is that the evidence? Imagination may imprint those Characters: He hath his land; A supposititious child may have that. Spiritual marks are not so fallible as these: They have so much in them, as creates even a knowledge, 1 john 3.2. john 5.19. Now we are the Sons of God, and we know that we shall be like him; And we know, that we are of God. Is all this but a conjectural knowledge, but a moral certitude? No tincture of faith in it? Can I acquire, and must I bring Certitudinem fidei, an assurance out of faith, That a Council cannot err; And then, such another faithful assurance, That the Council of Trent was a true council; And then another, That the Council of Trent did truly and duly proceed in all ways essential to the truth of a Council, in constituting their Decree against this doctrine? And may I not bring this assurance of faith to S. Paul, and S. john when they say the contrary? Is not S. Paul's sumus, and S. john's scimus, as good a ground for our faith, as the servile and mercenary voices of a herd of new pensionary Bishops, shovelled together at Trent for that purpose, are for the contrary? A particular Bishop in the Roman Church, citys an universal Bishop, Catarinus. a Pope himself in this point, and he says well, Legem credendi statuit lex supplicandi, Whatsoever we may pray for, we may, we must believe Certitudine fidei, With an assurance of faith; If I may pray, and say Pater noster, if I may call God Father, I may believe with a faithful assurance, that I am the child of God. Stet invicta Pauli sententia, Idem. Let the Apostles doctrine, says that Bishop, remain unshaked; Et velut sagitta, says he, This doctrine, as an arrow shot at them, will put out their eyes that think to see beyond S. Paul. It is true, says that Bishop, there are differences, Inter Catholicos, Amongst Catholics themselves in this point; And then, why do they charge us, whom they defame, by the name of Heretics, with beginning this doctrine, which was amongst themselves before we were at all, if they did date us aright? Attestatur spiritus, & ei damus fidem, & inde certi sumus, says that Bishop: The holy Ghost bears witness, and our spirit with him, and thereby we are sure: but, says he, they will needs make a doubt whether this be a knowledge out of faith; which doubt, says he, Secum fert absurditatem, There is an absurdity, a contradiction in the very doubt: Ex Spiritu sancto, & humana? Is it a knowledge from the holy Ghost, and is it not a divine knowledge then? But, say they, (as that Bishop presses their objections) The holy Ghost doth not make them know, that it is the holy Ghost that assures them; This is, says he, as absurd as the other; For, Nisi se testantem insinuet, non testatur, Except he make them discern, that he is a witness, he is no witness to them: He ends it thus, Sustinere coguntur quod excidit; and that is indeed their case, in very many things controverted; Then when it conduced to their advantage in argument, or to their profit in purse, such and such things fell from them, and now that opposition is made against such say of theirs, their profit lies at stake, and their reputation too, to make good, and to maintain that which they have once, how undiscreetly soever, said. Some of their severest later men, even of their Jesuits, acknowledges that we may know ourselves to be the children of God, with as good a knowledge, as that there is a Rome, or a Constantinople, And such an assurance as delivers them from all fear that they shall fall away; Vegas, Pererius. and is not this more than that assurance which we take to ourselves? We give no such assurance as may occasion security, or slackness in the service of God, and they give such an assurance as may remove all fear and suspicion of falling from God. It was truly good counsel in S. Gregory, when, writing to one of the Empresses bedchamber, a religious Lady of his own name, who had written to him, that she should never leave importuning him, till he sent her word, that he had received a revelation from God that she was saved: for, says he, Rem difficilem postulas, & inutilem, It is a hard matter you require, and an impertinent, and useless matter: for I am not a man worthy to receive revelations, and besides, such a revelation as you require, might make you too secure: And Mater negligentiae solet esse securitas, (says he) Such a security might make you negligent in those duties which should make sure your salvation. S. Augustine felt the witness of The Spirit, but not of his spirit, when he stood out so many solicitations of the holy Ghost, and deferred, and put off the outward means, his Baptism. In that state, when he had a disposition to Baptism, he says of himself, Inferbui exultando, sed inhorrui timendo; Still I had a fervent joy in me, because I saw the way to thee, and intended to put myself into that way, but yet, because I was not yet in it, I had a trembling, a jealousy, a suspicion of myself. Insinuati sunt mihi in profundo nutus tui, In that half darkness, in that twilight I discerned thine eye to be upon me; Et gaudens in fide, laudavi nomen tuum, And this, says he, created a kind of faith, a confidence in me, and this induced an inward joy, and that produced a praising of thy goodness, Sed ea fides securum me non esse sinebat, But all this did not imprint, and establish that security, that assurance which I found as soon as I came to the outward seals, and marks, and testimonies of thine inseparable presence with me, in thy Baptism, and other Ordinances. S. Bernard puts the marks of as much assurance, as we teach, in these words of our Saviour, Surge, tolle grabatum, & ambula, Arise, Take up thy bed, and walk. Surge ad divina, Raise thy thoughts upon the next world; Tolle corpus, ut non te ferat, sed tu illud, Take up thy body, bring thy body into thy power, that thou govern it, and not it thee; And then, Ambula, non retrospicias, Walk on, proceed forward, and look not bacl with a delight upon thy former sins: Remigius. And a great deal an elder man than Bernard, expresses it well, Bene viventibus perhibet testimonium, quòd jam sumus filii Dei, To him that lives according to a right faith, the Spirit testifies that he is now the child of God, Et quòd talia faciendo, perseverabimus in ea filiatione, He carries this testimony thus much farther, That if we endeavour to continue in that course, we shall continue in that state, of being the children of God, and never be cast off, never disinherited. Herein is our assurance, an election there is; The Spirit bears witness to our spirit, that it is ours; We testify this in a holy life; and the Church of God, and the whole world joins in this testimony, That we are the children of God; which is our last branch, and conclusion of all. The holy Ghost could not express more danger to a man, then when he calls him Filium saeculi, Luk. 16.18. Ephes. 5.6. Acts 13.10. The child of this world; Nor a worse disposition, then when he calls him, Filium diffidentiae, The child of diffidence, and distrust in God; Nor a worse pursuer of that ill disposition, then when he calls him Filium diaboli, (as S. Peter calls Elymas) The child of the devil; Nor a worse possessing of the devil, then when he calls him Filium perditionis, John 17. Mat. 23.15. The child of perdition; Nor a worse execution of all this, then when he calls him Filium gehennae, The child of hell: The child of this world, The child of desperation, The child of the devil, The child of perdition, The child of hell, is a high expressing, a deep aggravating of his damnation; That his damation is not only his purchase, as he hath acquired it, but it is his inheritance, he is the child of damnation. So is it also a high exaltation, when the holy Ghost draws our Pedigree from any good thing, and calls us the children of that: john 12.36. Mat. 9.15. As, when he calls us Filios lucis, The children of light, that we have seen the daystar arise, when he calls us Filios sponsi, The children of the bride-chamber, begot in lawful marriage upon the true Church, these are fair approaches to the highest title of all, to be Filii Dei, The children of God; And not children of God, Per filiationem vestigii, (so every creature is a child of God) by having an Image, and impression of God, in the very Being thereof, but children so, as that we are heirs, and heirs so, as that we are Coheirs with Christ, as it follows in the next verse, and is employed in this name, Children of God. Heirs of heaven, which is not a Gavelkinde, every son, every man alike; but it is an universal primogeniture, every man full, so full, as that every man hath all, in such measure, as that there is nothing in heaven, which any man in heaven wants. Heirs of the joys of heaven; Joy in a continual dilatation of thy heart, to receive augmentation of that which is infinite, in the accumulation of essential and accidental joy. Joy in a continual melting of indissoluble bowels, in joyful, and yet compassionate beholding thy Saviour; Rejoicing at thy being there, and almost lamenting (in a kind of affection, which we can call by no name) that thou couldst not come thither, but by those wounds, which are still wounds, though wounds glorified. Heirs of the joy, and heirs of the glory of heaven; where if thou look down, and see Kings fight for Crowns, thou canst look off as easily, as from boys at stoolball for points here; And from Kings triumphing after victories, as easily, as a Philosopher from a Pageant of children here. Where thou shalt not be subject to any other title of Dominion in others, but jesus of Nazareth King of the jews, nor ambitious of any other title in thyself, but that which thou possessest, To be the child of God. Heirs of joy, heirs of glory, and heirs of the eternity of heaven; Where, in the possession of this joy, and this glory, The Angels which were there almost 6000. years before thee, and so prescribe, and those souls which shall come at Christ's last coming, and so enter but then, shall not survive thee, but they, and thou, and all, shall live as long as he that gives you all that life, as God himself. Heirs to heaven, and coheirs with Christ: There is much to be said of that circumstance; but who shall say it? I that should say it, have said ill of it already, in calling it a Circumstance. To be coheirs with Christ, is that Essential salvation itself; and to that he entitled us, when after his Resurrection he said of us, John 20.17. Go tell my brethren that I am gone. When he was but borne of a woman, and submitted to the law, when in his minority, he was but a Carpenter, and at full age, but a Preacher, when they accused him in general, that he was a Malefactor, or else they would not have delivered him, John 18.30. but they knew not the name of his fault, when a fault of secular cognizance was objected to him, that he moved sedition, that he denied tribute, And then a fault of Ecclesiastical cognizance, that he spoke against the Law, and against the Temple, when Barrabas a seditious murderer was preferred before him, and saved, and yet two thiefs left to accompany him, in his torment and death, in these diminutions of Christ, there was no great honour, no great cause why any man should have any great desire to be of his kindred; to be brother, or coheir to his Cross. But if to be his brethren, when he had begun his triumph in his Resurrection, were a high dignity, what is it to be coheirs with him in heaven, after his Ascension? But these are inexpressible, unconceivable things; bring it bacl to that which is nearest us; to those seals and marks which we have in this life; That by a holy, a sanctified passage through this life, and out of this life, from our first seal in Baptism, to our last seal upon our deathbed, The Spirit may bear witness to our spirit, that we are the children of God. Amen. SERM. XXXV. Preached upon Whitsunday. MAT. 12.31. Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men; But the blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men. AS when a Merchant hath a fair and large, a deep and open Sea, into that Harbour to which he is bound with his Merchandise, it were an impertinent thing for him, to sound, and search for lands, and rocks, and cliffs, which threaten irreparable shipwreck; so we being bound to the heavenly City, the new Jerusalem, by the spacious and bottomless Sea, the blood of Christ Jesus, having that large Sea opened unto us, in the beginning of this Text, All manner of sin, and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men, It may seem an impertinent diversion, to turn into that little Creek, nay upon that desperate, and irrecoverable rock, The blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven to men. But there must be Discoverers, as well as Merchants; for the security of Merchants, who by storm and tempest, or other accidents, may be cast upon those sands, and rocks, if they be not known, they must be known. So though we fail on, with a merry gale and full sails, with the breath of the holy Ghost in the first Part, All manner of sin, and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men, yet we shall not leave out the discovery of that fearful and ruinating rock too, But the blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men. I would divide the Text, and fewer Parts than two, we cannot make, and this Text hath scarce two Parts: The whole Text is a conveyance; it is true; but there is a little Proviso at the end: The whole Text is a rule; it is true; but there is an exception at the end; The whole text is a Royal Palace; it is true; but there is a Sewar, a Vault behind it; Christ had said all, that of himself he would have said, when he said the first part, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven to men, But the iniquity of the Pharisees extorted thus much more, But the blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men: The first part is the sentence, the proposition, and the sense is perfect in that, All manner of sin, etc. The last part is but a Parenthesis, which Christ had rather might have been left out, but the Pharisees, and their perverseness inserted, But the blasphemy, etc. But since it deserves, and requires our consideration, as well, that the mercy of God can have any stop, any rub, determine any where, as that it can extend, and spread itself so fare, as it doth in this text, let us make them two parts: And in the first consider with comfort, the largeness, the expansion of God's mercy, that there is but one sin, that it reacheth not to; And in the second let us consider with fear, and trembling, that there is one sin, so swelling, so high, as that even the mercy of God does not reach to it. And in the first we shall proceed thus, in the magnifying God's mercy, first, in the first term, Sin, we shall see that sin is even a wound, a violence upon God; and then Omne peccatum, Every sin is so; and nothing is so various, so divers as sin; and even that sin, that amounts to Blasphemy, a sin not only conceived in the thought, but expressed in contumelious words; and those contumelious and blasphemous words uttered against the Son, (for so it is expressed in the very next verse) All this shall be forgiven: But yet it is in futuro, They shall be: No man's sins are forgiven him, then when he sins them; but by repentance they shall be forgiven; forgiven unto men; that is, first, unto any man, and then, unto none but men; for the sin of the Angels shall never be forgiven: And these will be the Branches of the first Part. And in the second Part, we shall look as fare as this text occasions it, upon that debated sin, the sin against the holy Ghost, and the irremissiblenesse of that; of which Part, we shall derive and raise the particular Branches anon, when we come to handle them. First then, 1 Part. Peccatum. for the first term, Sin, we use to ask in the School, whether any action of man's can have rationem demeriti, whether it can be said to offend God, or to deserve ill of God: for whatsoever does so, must have some proportion with God. With things which are inanimate, things that have no will, and so no good nor bad purpose, as dust, or the wind, or such, a man cannot properly be so offended, as to say that they deserve ill of him. With those things which have no use, no command of their will, as children, and fools, and mad men, it is so too; And then, there is no creature so poor, so childish, so impotent in respect of man, as the best man is in respect of God: How then can he sin, that is, offend, that is, deserve ill of him? The question begun not in the School; job 35.6. It was asked before of job: If thou sinnest, what dost thou against him? or if thy transgressions be multiplied, what dost thou unto him? Thy wickedness may hurt a man as thou art; but what is it to God? for, as Gregory says upon that place, Humana impietas ci nocet, quem pervertendo inquinat, Our sins hurt them, whom our example leads into tentation; but our sins cannot draw God to be accessary to our sins, or to make him sin with us. Our sin cannot hurt him so; nor hurt him directly any way; not his person: But his Subjects, whom he hath taken into his protection, it may; His Law, which he hath given for direction, it may; His Honour, of which he is jealous, which Honour consists much in our honouring of him, it may. Wherein is a King's Person violated, by coining a false penny, or counterfeiting a seal? and yet this is Treason. God cannot be rob, he cannot be damnified; whatsoever is taken from him (and there is a sacrilege in all unjust take) wheresoever it be laid, he sees it, and it is still in his possession, and in his house, and in his hands. God cannot be rob, nor God cannot be violated, he cannot be wounded, for he hath no limbs. But God is Vltimis fin is, The end to which we all go, and his Law is the way to that end; And transilire lineam, to transgress that Law, to leave that way, is a neglecting of him: and even negligences, and pretermissions, and slight, are as great offences, as actual injuries. So God is communis Pater, the Father of all creatures; and so the abuse of the creature reflects upon God, as the injuries done to the children, do upon the Parents. If then we can sin so against God, as we can against the King, and against the Law, and against Propriety, and against Parents; we have ways enough of sinning against God. Sin is not therefore so absolutely nothing, as that it is (in no consideration) other than a privation, only Absentia recti, and nothing at all in itself: but, not to enter farther into that inextricable point, we rest in this, that sin is Actus inordinatus, It is not only an obliquity, a privation, but it is an action deprived of that rectitude, which it should have; It does not only want that rectitude, but it should have that rectitude, and therefore hath a sinful want. We shall not dare to call sin merely, absolutely nothing, if we consider either the punishment due to sin, or the pardon of that punishment, or the price of that pardon. The punishment is everlasting; why should I believe it to be so? Os domini locutum, The mouth of the Lord hath said it. But why should it be so? Gregor. justum est ut qui in suo aeter no peccavit contra Deum, in Dei aeterno puniatur, It is but justice, that he that sins in his eternity, should be punished in God's eternity: Now to sin in our eternity, is to sin as long as we live, and if we could live eternally, to desire to sin eternally. God can cut off our eternity, he can shorten our life; If we could cut off his eternity, and quench hell, our punishment were not eternal. We consider sin to be Quoddam infinitum; as it is an aversion from God, who is infinite goodness, it is an infinite thing: and as it is a turning upon the Creature, it is finite, and determined; for all pleasure taken in the creature, is so: and accordingly sin hath a finite, and an infinite punishment: That which we call Poenam sensus, The torment which we feel, is not infinite; (otherwise, then by duration) for that torment is not equal in all the damned, and that which is infinite must necessarily be equal; but that which we call Poenam damni, The everlasting loss of the sight of the everliving God, that is infinite, and alike, and equal in all the damned. Sin is something then, if we consider the punishment; and so it is, if we consider our deliverance from this punishment: That which God could not pardon in the way of justice without satisfaction, that for which nothing could be a satisfaction, but the life of all men, or of one man worth all, the Son of God, that that tore the Son out of the arms of his Father, in the Quid dereliquisti, when he cried out, why hast thou forsaken me? That which imprinted in him, who was anointed with the Oil of gladness above his fellows, a deadly heaviness, in his Tristis anima, when his soul was heavy unto death, That which had power to open Heaven in his descent hither, and to open hell, in his descent thither, to open the womb of the Virgin in his Incarnation, and the womb of the Earth in his Resurrection, that which could change the frame of Nature in Miracles, and the God of Nature in becoming Man, that that deserved that punishment, that that needed that ransom (say the School men what they will of privations) cannot be merely, absolutely nothing, but the greatest thing that can be conceived, and yet that shall be forgiven. That, and all that; Sin, and all sin: And there is not so much of any thing in the world, Omne. as of sin. Every virtue hath two extremes, two vices opposed to it; there is two to one; But Abraham's task was an easy task to tell the stars of Heaven; so it were to tell the sands, or hairs, or atoms, in respect of telling but our own sins. And will God say to me, Confide Fili, My Son, be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee? Mat. 9.2. Does he mean all my sins? He knows what original sin is, and I do not; and will he forgive me sin in that root, and sin in the branches, original sin, and actual sin too? He knows my secret sins, and I do not; will he forgive my manifest sins, and those sins too? He knows my relapses into sins repent; and will he forgive my faint repentances, and my rebellious relapses after them? will his mercy dive into my heart, and forgive my sinful thoughts there, and shed upon my lips, and forgive my blasphemous words there, and bathe the members of this body, and forgive mine unclean actions there? will he contract himself into himself, and meet me there, and forgive my sins against himself, And scatter himself upon the world, and forgive my sins against my neighbour, and emprison himself in me, and forgive my sins against myself? Will he forgive those sins, wherein my practice hath exceeded my Parents, and those wherein my example hath misled my children? Will he forgive that dim sight which I have of sin now, when sins scarce appear to be sins unto me, and will he forgive that overquick sight, when I shall see my sins through Satan's multiplying glass of desperation, when I shall think them greater than his mercy, upon my death bed? In that he said all, he left out nothing, Heb. 2.8. is the Apostles argument: and, he is not almighty, if he cannot; his mercy endures not for ever, if he do not forgive all. Sin, and all sin, even blasphemy: now blasphemy is not restrained to God alone; Blasphemia. other persons besides God, other things, besides persons, may be blasphemed. 1 Tim. 6.1. jude 8, 10. The word of God, the Doctrine, Religion may be blasphemed. Magistracy and Dignities may be blasphemed. Nay, Omnia quae ignorant, says that Apostle, They blaspheme all things which they know not. And for persons, the Apostle takes it to his own person, 1 Cor. 4.13. Being blasphemed, yet we entreat; and he communicates it to all men, Neminem blasphemate, Tit. 3.2. Blaspheme no man. Blasphemy, as it is a contumelious speech, derogating from any man, that good that is in him, or attributing to any man, that ill that is not in him, may be fastened upon any man. For the most part it is understood a sin against God, and that directly; and here, by the manner of Christ expressing himself, it is made the greatest sin; All sin, even blasphemy. And yet, a drunkard that cannot name God, will spew out a blasphemy against God: A child that cannot spell God, will stammer out a blasphemy against God: If we smart, we blaspheme God, and we blaspheme him if we be tickled; If I lose at play, I blaspheme, and if my fellow lose, he blasphemes, so that God is always sure to be a loser. An Usurer can show me his bags, and an Extortioner his houses, the fruits, the revenues of his sin; but where will the blasphemer show me his blasphemy, or what he hath got by it? The licentious man hath had his love in his arms, and the envious man hath had his enemy in the dust, but wherein hath the blasphemer hurt God? In the School we put it for the consummation of the torment of the damned, Aquin. 221. q. 13. ar. 4. that at the Resurrection, they shall have bodies, and so be able, even verbally, to blaspheme God; herein we exceed the Devil already, that we can speak blaspemously. There is a rebellious part of the body, that Adam covered with fig leaves, that hath damned many a wretched soul; but yet, I think, not more than the tongue; And therefore the whole torment that Dives suffered in hell, Luke 16.24. is expressed in that part, Father Abraham, have mercy upon me, and send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue. The Jews that crucified God, will not sound the name of God, and we for whom he was Crucified, belch him out in our surfeits, and foam him out in our fury: An Impertinent sin, without occasion before, and an unprofitable sin, without recompense after, and an incorrigible sin too; for, almost what Father dares chide his son for blasphemy, that may not tell him, Sir I learned it of you? or what Master his servant, that cannot lay the same recrimination upon him? How much then do we need this extent of God's mercy, that he will forgive sin, and all sin, and even this sin of blasphemy, and (which is also another addition) blasphemy against the Son. This emphatical addition arises out of the connexion in the next verse, In filium. A word, (that is, a blasphemous word) against the Son, shall be forgiven. And here we carry not the word Son so high, as that the Son should be the eternal Son of God, Though words spoken against the eternal Son of God by many bitter and blasphemous Heretics have been forgiven: God forbidden that all the Photinians who thought that Christ was not at all, till he was borne of the Virgin Mary, That all the Nativitarians, that thought he was from all eternity with God, but yet was not the Son of God, That all the Arians, that thought him the Son of God, but yet not essentially, not by nature, but by grace and adoption, God forbidden that all these should be damned, and because they once spoke against the Son, therefore they never repent, or were not received upon repentance. We carry not the word, Son, so high, as to be the eternal Son of God, for it is in the text, Filius hominis, The Son of Man; And, in that acceptation, we do not mean it, of all blasphemies that have been spoken of Christ, as the Son of man, that is, of Christ invested in the humane nature; though blasphemies in that kind have been forgiven too: God forbidden that all the Arians, that thought Christ so much the Son of Man as that he took a humane body, but not so much, as that he took a humane soul, but that the Godhead itself (such a Godhead as they allowed him) was his soul; God forbidden that all the Anabaptists that confess he took a body, but not a body of the substance of the Virgin; That all the Carpocratians, that thought only his soul, and not his body ascended into Heaven, God forbidden all these should be damned, and never called to repentance, or not admitted upon it: There were fearful blasphemies against the Son, as the Son of God, and as the Son of Man, against his Divine, and against his Humane Nature, and those, in some of them, by God's grace forgiven too. But here we consider him only as the Son of Man, merely as Man; but as such a Man, so good a Man, as to calumniate him, to blaspheme him, was an inexcusable sin. To say of him, who had fasted forty days and forty nights, Mat. 11.19. Mar. 12.14. Ecce homo vorax, Behold a man gluttonous, and a wine-bibber, To say of him, of whom themselves had said elsewhere, Master, we know that thou art true, and carest for no man, that he was a friend of Publicans and sinners, That this man who was The Prince of Peace, Heb. 12.3. should endure such contradiction, This was an inexcusable sin. If any man therefore have had his good intentions misconstrued, his zeal to assist Gods bleeding and fainting cause, called Innovation, his proceeding by ways good in themselves, to ends good in themselves, called Indiscretion, let him be content to forgive them, any Calumniator, against himself, who is but a worm and no man, since God himself forgave them against Christ, who was so Filius hominis, The Son of Man, as that he was the Son of God too. There is then forgiveness for sin, for all sin, even for blasphemy, Infuturo. for blasphemy against the Son, but it is Infuturo remittetur, It shall be forgiven. It is not Remittebatur, It was forgiven; Let no man antedate his pardon, and say, His sins were forgiven in an Eternal Decree, and that no man that hath his name in the book of life, hath the addition, sinner; that if he were there from the beginning, from the beginning he was no sinner. It is not, in such a sense, Remittebatur, It was forgiven; nor it is not Remittitur, that even then, when the sin is committed, it is forgiven, whether the sinner think of it or no, That God sees not the sins of his Children, That God was no more affected with David's adultery, or his murder, than an indulgent Father is to see his child do some witty waggish thing, or some sportful shrewd turn. It is but Remittetur, Any sin shall be, that is, may be forgiven, if the means required by God, and ordained by him, be entertained. If I take into my contemplation, the Majesty of God, and the ugliness of sin, If I divest myself of all that was sinfully got, and invest myself in the righteousness of Christ Jesus, (for else I am ill suited, and if I cloth myself in Mammon, the righteousness of Christ is no Cloak for that doublet) If I come to God's Church for my absolution, and the seal of that reconciliation, the blessed Sacrament, Remittetur, by those means ordained by God any sin shall be forgiven me. But if I rely upon the Remittebatur, That I had my Quietus est before hand, in the eternal Decree, or in the Remittuntur, and so shut mine eyes, in an opinion that God hath shut his, and sees not the sins of his children, I change God's Grammar, and I induce a dangerous solecism, for, it is not They were forgiven before they were committed, nor They are forgiven in the committing, but, They shall be, by using the means ordained by God, they may be; And so, They shall be forgiven unto men, says the Text, and that is, first, unto every man. The Kings of the earth are fair and glorious resemblances of the King of heaven; Omni homini they are beams of that Sun, Tapers of that Torch, they are like gods, they are gods: The Lord killeth and maketh alive, He bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up: 1 Sam. 2.6. This is the Lord of heaven; The Lords anointed, Kings of the earth do so too; They have the dispensation of judgement, and of mercy, they execute, and they pardon: But yet, with this difference amongst many other, that Kings of the earth (for the most part, and the best, most) bind themselves with an oath, not to pardon some offences; The King of heaven swears, and swears by himself, That there is no sinner but he can, and would pardon. At first, Illuminat omnem hominem, He is the true light, John 1.9. which lighteneth every man that cometh into the world; Let that light (because many do interpret that place so) let that be but that natural light, which only man, and every man hath; yet that light makes him capable of the supernatural light of grace; for if he had not that reasonable soul, he could not have grace; and even by this natural light, he is able to see the invisible God, in the visible creature, and is inexcusable if he do not so. But because this light is (though not put out) brought to a dimness, by man's first fall, Therefore john Baptist came to bear witness of that light, that all men, through him, might believe: Ver. 7. God raises up a john Baptist in every man; every man finds a testimony in himself, that he draws curtains between the light and him; that he runs into corners from that light; that he doth not make that use of those helps which God hath afforded him, as he might. Thus God hath mercy upon all before, by way of prevention; thus he enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world: but, because for all this men do stumble, even at noon, God hath given Collyrium, an Eyesalve to all, Apoc. 3.18. by which they may mend their eyesight; He hath opened a pool of Bethesda to all, where not only he that comes at first, but he that comes even at last, he that comes washed with the water of Baptism in his infancy, and he that comes washed with the tears of Repentance in his age, may receive health and cleanness; For, the Font at first, and the deathbed at last, are Cisterns from this pool, and all men, and at all times, may wash therein: And from this power, and this love of God, is derived both that Catholic promise, Quandocunque, At what time soever a sinner reputes, And that Catholic and extensive Commission, Quorum remiseritis, Whose sins soever you remit, shall be remitted. All men were in Adam; because the whole nature, mankind, was in him; and then, can any be without sin? All men were in Christ too, because the whole nature, mankind, was in him; and then, can any man be excluded from a possibility of mercy? There were whole Sects, whole bodies of Heretics, that denied the communication of God's grace to others; The Cathari denied that any man had it but themselves: The Novatians denied that any man could have it again, after he had once lost it, by any deadly sin committed after Baptism, But there was never any Sect that denied it to themselves, no Sect of despairing men. We have some somewhere sprinkled; One in the old Testament, Cain, and one in the new, judas, and one in the Ecclesiastic Story, julian; but no body, no Sect of despairing men. And therefore he that abandons himself to this sin of desperation, sins with the least reason of any, for he prefers his sin above God's mercy, and he sins with the fewest examples of any, for God hath diffused this light, with an evidence to all, That all sins may be forgiven unto men, that is, unto all men; and then, herein also is God's mercy to man magnified, that it is to man, that is, only to man. Nothing can fall into this comparison, Non Angelis but Angels; and Angels shall not be forgiven: We shall be like the Angels, we shall participate of their glory which stand; But the Angels shall never be like us; never return to mercy, after they are fallen. They were Primogeniti Dei, God's first born, and yet disinherited; and disinherited without any power, at least, without purpose of revocation, without annuities, without pensions, without any present supply, without any future hope. When the Angels were made, and when they fell, we dispute; but when they shall return, falls not into question. Howsoever Origen vary in himself, or howsoever he fell under that jealousy, or misinterpretation, that he thought the devil should be saved at last, I am sure his books that are extant, have pregnant and abundant testimony of their everlasting, and irreparable condemnation. To judge by our evidence, the evidence of Scriptures, for their sin, and the evidence of our conscience, for ours, there is none of us that hath not sinned more than any of them at first; and yet Christ hath not taken the nature of Angels, but of man, and redeemed us, jude 6. having reserved them in everlasting chains, under darkness: How long? Unto the judgement of the great day, says that Apostle; And is it but till then, then to have an end? Alas no; It is not until that day, but unto that day; not that that day shall end or ease their torments which they have, but inflict accidental torments, which they have not yet; That is, an utter evacuation of that power of seducing, which, till that day come, they shall have leave to exercise upon the sons of men: To that are they reserved, and we to that glory, which they have lost, and lost for ever; and upon us, is that prayer of the Apostle fallen effectually, Ver. 2. Mercy, and peace, and love is multiplied unto us; for, sin, and all sin, blasphemy, and blasphemy against the Son, shall be, that is, is not, nor was not, but may be forgiven to men, to all men, to none but men; And so we pass to our second part. In this second part, 2. Part. Divisio. which seems to present a bank even to this Sea, this infinite Sea of the blood of Christ Jesus; And an Horizon even to this heaven of heavens, to the mercy of God, we shall proceed thus: First, we shall inquire, but modestly, what that blasphemy, which is commonly called The sin against the holy Ghost, is: And secondly, how, and wherein it is irremissible, that it shall never be forgiven: And then thirdly, upon what places of Scripture it is grounded; amongst which, if this text do not constitute and establish that sin, The sin against the holy Ghost, yet we shall find, that that sin which is directly intended in this text, is a branch of that sin, The sin against the holy Ghost: And therefore we shall take just occasion from thence, to arm you with some instructions against those ways which lead into that irrecoverable destruction, into that irremissible sin: for though the sin itself be not so evident, yet the limbs of the sin, and the ways to the sin, are plain enough. S. Augustine says, Quid. There is no question in the Scripture harder than this, what this sin is: And S. Ambrose gives some reason of the difficulty in this, Sicut una divinitas, una offensa: As there is but one Godhead, so there is no sin against God (and all sin is so) but it is against the whole Trinity: and that is true; but as there are certain attributes proper to every several person of the Trinity, so there are certain sins, more directly against the several attributes and properties of those persons, and in such a consideration, against the persons themselves. Of which there are divers sins against power, and they are principally against the Father; for to the Father we attribute power; and divers sins against wisdom, and wisdom we attribute to the Son; and divers against goodness, and love, and these we attribute to the holy Ghost. Of those against the holy Ghost, considered in that attribute of goodness, and of love, the place to speak, will be in our conclusion. But for this particular sin, The sin against the holy Ghost, as hard as S. Augustine makes it, and justly, yet he says too, Exercere nos voluit difficultate quaestionis, non decipere falsitate sententiae, God would exercise us with a hard question, but he would not deceive us with a false opinion: Quid sit quaeri voluit, non negari; God would have us modestly inquire what it is, not peremptorily deny that there is any such sin. It is (for the most part) agreed, that it is a total falling away from the Gospel of Christ Jesus formerly acknowledged and professed, into a verbal calumniating, and a real persecuting of that Gospel, with a deliberate purpose to continue so to the end, and actually to do so, to persevere till then, and then to pass away in that disposition. It falls only upon the professors of the Gospel, and it is total, and it is practical, and it is deliberate, and it is final. Here we have that sin, but, by God's grace, that sinner no where. It is therefore somewhat early, somewhat forwardly pronounced, though by a reverend man, Certum reprobationis signum, in spiritum blasphemia, That it is an infallible assurance, Calvin. that that man is a Reprobate that blasphemes the holy Ghost. For, whatsoever is an infallible sign, must be notorious to us; If we must know another thing by that, as a sign, we must know that thing which is our sign, in itself: And can we know what this blaspheming of the holy Ghost is? Did we ever hear any man say, or see any man do any thing against the holy Ghost, of whom we might say upon that word, or upon that action, This man can never repent, never be received to mercy? And yet, says he, Tenendum est, quod qui exciderint, nunquam resurgent; We are bound to hold, that they who fall so, shall never rise again. I presume, he grounded himself in that severe judgement of his, upon such places, as that to the Romans, Rom. 1.18. When they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind: That that is the ordinary way of God's justice, to withdraw his Spirit from that man that blasphemes his Spirit; but S. Paul blasphemed, and S. Peter blasphemed, and yet were not divorced from God. S. Augustine's rule is good; not to judge of this sin, and this sinner especially, but à posteriori, from his end, from his departing out of this world. Neither though I do see an ill life, sealed with an ill death, dare I be too forward in this judgement. He was not a Christian in profession, but worse than he are called Christians, that said, Qui pius est, summè Philosophatur; The charitable man is the great Philosopher; Trismeg. and it is charity not to suspect the state of a dead man. Consider in how sudden a minute the holy Ghost hath sometimes wrought upon thee; and hope that he hath done so upon another. It is a moderation to be embraced, that Peter Martyr leads us to: The Primitive Church had the spirit of discerning spirits; we have not; And therefore, though by way of definition, we may say, This is that sin, yet by way of demonstration, let us say of no man, This is that sinner: I may say of no man, This sin in thee is irremissible. Now, in considering this word, Irremissible, That it cannot be forgiven, we find it to be a word, rather usurped by the School, then expressed in the Scriptures: Irremissibilitas. for in all those three Evangelists, where this fearful denunciation is interminated, still it is in a phrase, of somewhat more mildness, than so; It is, It shall not be forgiven, It is not, it cannot be forgiven: It is an irremission, it is not an irremissiblenesse. Absolutely there is not an impossibility, and irremissiblenesse on God's part: but yet some kind of impossibility there is on his part, and on ours too. For, if he could forgive this sin, he would; or else, his power were above his mercy; and his mercy is above all his works. But God can do nothing that implies contradiction; and God having declared, by what means only his mercy and forgiveness shall be conveyed to man, God should contradict himself, if he should give forgiveness to them, who will fully exclude those means of mercy. And therefore it were not boldly, nor irreverently said, That God could not give grace to a beast, nor mercy to the Devil, because either they are naturally destitute, or have wilfully despoiled themselves of the capacity of grace, and mercy. When we consider, that God the Father, whom, as the root of all, we consider principally in the Creation, created man in a possibility, and ability, to persist in that goodness, in which he created him, And consider that God the Son came, and wrought a reconciliation for man to God, and so brought in a treasure, in the nature thereof, a sufficient ransom for all the world, but then a man knows not this, or believes not this, otherwise then Historically, Morally, Civilly, and so evacuates, and shakes off God the Son, And then consider that the holy Ghost comes, and presents means of applying all this, and making the general satisfaction of Christ, reach and spread itself upon my soul, in particular, in the preaching of the Word, in the seals of the Sacraments, in the absolution of the Church, and I preclude the ways, and shut up myself against the holy Ghost, and so evacuate him, and shake him off, when I have resisted Father, Son, and holy Ghost, is there a fourth person in the Godhead to work upon me? If I blaspheme, that is, deliberately pronounce against the holy Ghost, my sin is irremissible therefore, because there is no body left to forgive it, nor way left, wherein forgiveness should work upon me; So fare it is irremissible on God's part, and on mine too. And then, take it there, in that state of irremissiblenesse, and consider seriously the fearfulness of it. Mat. 5.22. I have been angry; and then, (as Christ tells me) I have been in danger of a judgement; but in judgement, I may have counsel, I may be heard; I have said Racha, expressed my anger and so been in danger of a Council; but a Council does but consult, what punishment is fit to be inflicted; and so long there is hope of mitigation, and commutation of penance; But I have said fatue, I have called my brother fool, and so am in danger of hell fire. August. Chrysost. In the first, there is Ira, an inward commotion, an irregular distemper; In the second, there is Ira & vox; In the first it is but Ira carnis, non animi, It is but my passion, it is not I that am angry, but in the second I have suffered my passion to vent and utter itself; but in the third, there is Ira, vox & vituperatio, A distemper within, a declaration to evil example without, and an injury and defamation to a third person, and this exalts the offence to the height: But then when this third Person comes to be the third Person in the Trinity, the Holy Ghost, in all the other cases, there is danger, danger of judgement, danger of a Council, danger of hell, but here is irremissiblenesse, hell itself, and no avoiding of hell, no cooling in hell, no deliverance from hell; Irremissible; Those hands that reached to the ends of the world, in creating it, & span the world in preserving it, and stretched over all in redeeming it, those hands have I manacled, that they cannot open unto me: That tenderness that is affected to all, have I damped, retarded that proneness, stupefied that alacrity, confounded that voice, diverted those eyes, that are naturally disposed to all: And all this, Irremissibly, for ever; not, though he would, but because he will not show mercy; not, though I would, but because I cannot ask mercy: And therefore beware all approaches towards that sin, from which there is no returning, no redemption. We are come now, In quibus Script. in our order, to our third and last Branch of this last Part, That this Doctrine of a sin against the Holy Ghost, is not a dream of the Schoolmen, though they have spoken many things frivolously of it, but grounded in evident places of Scriptures: Amongst which, we look especially, how fare this Text conduces to that Doctrine. There are two places ordinarily cited, which seem directly to concern this sin; and two others, which to me seem not to do so. Those of the first kind, are both in the Epistle to the Hebrews: Heb. 6.4. There the Apostle says, For those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, If they fall away, it is impossible to renew them by repentance. Now, if final impenitence had been added, there could have been no question, but that this must be The sin against the Holy Ghost; And because the Apostle speaks of such a total falling away, as precludes all way of repentance, it includes final impenitence, and so makes up that sin. The other place from which it rises most pregnantly, Heb. 10.29. is, Of how sore a punishment shall they be thought worthy, who have trodden under foot the Son of God, and have done despite unto the Spirit of grace? Ver. 26. As he had said before, If we sin wilfully, after we have received the knowledge of truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of judgement, and fiery indignation. But yet, though from these places, there arises evidence, that such a sin there is, as naturally shuts out repentance, and so is thereby irremissible, yet there arise no marks, by which I can say, This man is such a sinner; not though he himself would swear to me, that he were so now, and that he would continue so, till death. The other places that do not so directly concern this sin, and yet are sometimes used in this affair, 1 john 5.16. are, one in S. john, and this text another. That in S. john is, There is a sin unto death, I do not say, that he shall pray for it. It is true, that the Master of the Sentences, and from him, many of the School, and many of our later Interpreters too, do understand this, of the sin against the Holy Ghost, because we are (almost) forbidden to pray for it; but yet we are not absolutely forbidden, in that we are not bidden. And if we were forbidden, when God says to jeremy, Pray not thou for this people, neither lift up cry, jer. 7.16. nor prayer for them, neither make intercession to me, for I will not hear thee, And again, jer. 11.14. Pray not for them, for I will not hear them, Not them, though they should come to pray for themselves, God forbidden that we should therefore say, that all that people had committed the sin against the Holy Ghost. And for this particular place of S. john, that answer may suffice, which very good Divines have given, Pray not for them, is indeed pray not with them, admit them to no part in the public prayers of the Congregation, but if they sin a sin unto death, a notorious, an inexcusable sin, let them be persons excommunicated to thee. For the words in this text, which seem to many appliable to that great sin, it is not clear, it is not much probable, that they can be so applied. Take the words invested in their circumstance, in the context and coherence, and it will appear evident. Christ speaks this to the Pharisees, upon occasion of that which they had said to him, and of him before, and he carries it, intends it no farther. That appears by the first word of out text, Propterea, Therefore I say unto you; Therefore, that is, Because you have used such words unto me. And S. Mark makes it more clear, He said this to them, because they said, Mark 3.30. He had an unclean spirit; because they said he did his Miracles by the power of the Devil. Now, this was certainly a sin against the Holy Ghost, so far, as that it was distinguished from the sins against the Son of Man; But it was not the sin against the Holy Ghost; for, Christ being a mixed person, God and Man, did some things, in which his Divinity had nothing to do, but were only actions of a mere natural man, and when they slandered him in these, they blasphemed the Son of Man. Some things he did in the power of his God head, in which his humanity contributed nothing; as all his Miracles; and when they attributed these works to the Devil, they blasphemed the Holy Ghost. And therefore S. Augustine says, That Christ in this place, did not so much accuse the Pharisees, that they had already incurred the sin of the Holy Ghost, they might at last fall into The sin, that impenitible, and therefore irremissible sin. But that sin, this could not be, because the Pharisees had not embraced the Gospel before, and so this could not be a falling from the Gospel, in them: Neither does it appear to have continued to a final impenitence; so far from it, as that S. Chrysost. makes no doubt, but that some of these Pharisees did repent upon Christ's admonition. Now, beloved, since we see by this collation of places, that it is not safe to say of any man, he is this sinner, nor very constantly agreed upon, what is this sin, but yet we are sure, that such a sin there is, that captivates even God himself, and takes from him the exercise of his mercy, and casts a dumbness, a speechlessness upon the Church itself, that she may not pray for such a sinner; and since we see, that Christ, with so much earnestness, rebukes the Pharisees for this sin in the text, because it was a limb of that sin, and conduced to it, let us use all religious diligence, to keep ourselves in a safe distance from it. To which purpose, be pleased to cast a particular, but short and transitory glance, upon some such sins, as therefore, because they conduce to that, are sometimes called sins against the holy Ghost. Sins against Power, (that is the Father's Attribute) sins of infirmity are easily forgiven; sins against Wisdom, (that is the Sons Attribute) sins of Ignorance are easily forgiven; but sins against Goodness, (that is the Holy Ghosts Attribute,) sins of an hard and ill nature are hardly forgiven: Not at all, when it comes to be The sin; not easily, when they are Those sins, those that conduce to it, and are branches of it. For branches, the Schoolmen have named three couples, which they have called sins against the Holy Ghost, because naturally they shut out those means by which the Holy Ghost might work upon us. The first couple is, presumption and desperation; for presumption takes away the fear of God, and desperation the love of God. And then, they name Impenitence, and hardness of heart; for Impenitence removes all sorrow for sins past, and hardness of heart all tenderness towards future tentations. And lastly, they name The resisting of a truth acknowledged before, and the envying of other men, who have made better use of God's grace than we have done; for this resisting of a Truth, is a shutting up of ourselves against it, and this envying of others, is a sorrow, that that Truth should prevail upon them. And truly (to reflect a very little upon these three couples again) To presume upon God, that God cannot damn me eternally in the next world, for a few half-houres in this; what is a fornication, or what is an Idolatay to God? what is a jest, or a ballad, or a libel to a King? Or to despair, that God will not save me, how well soever I live, after a sin? what is a tear, what is a sigh, what is a prayer to God? what is a petition to a King? To be impenitent, senseless of sins past; I passed yesterday in riot, and yesternight in wantonness, and yet I hear of some place, some office, some good fortune fallen to me to day; To be hardened against future sins; shall I forbear some company, because that company leads me into tentation? Why, that very tentation will lead me to preferment; To forsake the truth formerly professed, because the times are changed, and wiser men than I change with them; To envy and hate another, another State, another Church, another man, because they stand out in defence of the truth, (for, if they would change, I might have the better colour, the better excuse of changing too) all these are shrewd and slippery approaches towards the sin against the Holy Ghost, and therefore the Schoolmen have called all these six, (not without just reason, and good use) by that heavy name. And some of the Fathers have extended it farther, then to these six. S. Bernard, in particular, says, Nolle obedire, To resist lawful Authority; And another, Simulata poenitentia, To delude God with relapses, & counterfeit repentances; and another also, Omne schisma, All schismatical renting of the peace of the Church, All these they call in that sense, Sins against the Holy Ghost. Now, all sins against the Holy Ghost, are not irremissible. Stephen told his persecutors, Acts 7.51.60. They resisted the Holy Ghost, and yet he prayed for them. But because these sins may, and ordinarily do come to that sin, stop betimes. David was far from the murder of Vriah, when he did but look upon his Wife, as she was bathing. A man is far from defying the holy Ghost, when he does but neglect him; and yet David did come, and he will come to the bottom quickly. It may make some impression in you, to tell, and to apply a short story. In a great Schism at Rome, Ladislaus took that occasion to debauch and corrupt some of the Nobility; It was discerned; and then, to those seven Governors, whom they had before, whom they called Sapientes, Wise men, they added seven more, and called them Bonos, Good men, honest men, and relied, and confided in them. Goodness is the Attribute of the Holy Ghost; If you have Greatness, you may seem to have some of the Father, for Power is his: If you have Wisdom, you may seem to have some of the Son, for that is his: If you have Goodness, you have the Holy Ghost, who shall lead you into all truth. And Goodness is, To be good and easy in receiving his impressions, and good and constant in retaining them, and good and diffusive in deriving them upon others: To embrace the Gospel, to hold fast the Gospel, to propagate the Gospel, this is the goodness of the Holy Ghost. And to resist the entrance of the Gospel, to abandon it after we have professed it, to forsake them, whom we should assist and secure in the maintenance of it, This is to departed from the goodness of the Holy Ghost: and by these sins against him, to come too near the sin, the irremissible sin, in which the calamities of this world shall enwrap us, and deliver us over to the everlasting condemnation of the next. This is as much as these words do justly occasion us to say of that sin; and into a more curious search thereof, it is not holy sobriety to pierce. SERM. XXXVI. Preached upon Whitsunday. JOHN 16.8, 9, 10, 11. And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgement. Of sin, because ye belceve not on me. Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more. Of judgement, because the Prince of this world is judged. OUr Panis quotidianus, Our daily bread, is that judge sacrificium, That daily sacrifice of meditating upon God; Our Panis hodiernus, This day's bread, is to meditate upon the holy Ghost. To day if ye will hear his voice, to day ye are with him in Paradise; For, wheresoever the holy Ghost is, Luk. 23.43. he creates a Paradise. The day is not passed yet; As our Saviour said to Peter, Hodie, in nocte hac, Mar. 14.10. This day, even in this night thou shalt deny me, so, Hodie in nocte hac, Even now, though evening, the dayspring from on high visits you, Esay 38.8. God carries back the shadow of your Sundial, as to Hezechias; And now God brings you to the beginning of this day, if now you take knowledge, that he is come, who, when he comes, Reproves the world of sin, etc. The solemnity of the day requires, Divisio. and the method of the words offers for our first consideration, the Person; who is not named in our text, but designed by a most emphatical denotation, Ille, He, He who is all, and doth all. But the word hath relation to a name, proper to the holy Ghost: for, in the verse immediately preceding, our Saviour tells his disciples, That he will send them the Comforter. So, forbearing all other mysterious considerations of the holy Ghost, we receive him in that notion, and function in which Christ sends him, The Comforter. And therefore, in this capacity, as The Comforter, we must consider his action, Arguet, He shall reprove; Reprove, and yet Comfort; nay, therefore comfort, because reprove: And then the subject of his action, Mundum, The world, the whole world; no part left unreproved, yet no part left without comfort: And after that, what he reproves the world of; That multiplies; Of sin, of righteousness, of judgement. Can there be comfort in reproof for sin? Or can there lie a reproof upon righteousness, or upon judgement? Very justly; Though the evidence seem at first, as strange as the crime; for, though that be good evidence against the sin of the world, That they believe not in Christ, (Of sin, because ye believe not on me) yet to be Reproved of righteousness, because Christ goes to his Father, and they see him no more, And to be Reproved of judgement, because the Prince of this world is judged, this seems strange, and yet this must be done, and done to our comfort; For, this must be done, Cum venerit, Then when the holy Ghost, and he in that function, as the Comforter, is come, is present, is working. Beloved, Reproofs upon others without charity, rather to defame them, then amend them, Reproofs upon thyself, without showing mercy to thine own soul, diffidences, and jealousies, and suspicions of God, either that he hated thee before thy sin, or hates thee irremediably, irreconciliably, irrecoverably, irreparably for thy sin, These are Reproofs, but they are absent spiritu, In the absence of the holy Ghost, before he comes, or when he is gone; When he comes, and stays, He shall reprove, and reprove all the world, and all the world of those errors, sin, and righteousness, and judgement, and those errors upon those evidences, Of sin, because ye believe not on me, etc. But, in all this proceeding he shall never divest the nature of a Comforter; In that capacity he is sent, in that he comes, and works. I doubt I shall see an end of my hour, and your patience, before I shall have passed those branches, which appertain most properly to the celebration of this day, the Person, the Comforter, his action, Reproof, the subject thereof, the world, and the Time, Cum venerit, When he comes. The indictment, of what the accusation is, and the evidence, how it is proved, may exercise your devotion at other times. Acts 2.2. This day, the holy Ghost is said to have come suddenly, and therefore in that pace we proceed, and make haste to the consideration of the Person, Ille, When he, He the holy Ghost, the Comforter, is come. Ille, Spiritus sanctus. Gen. 3.15. Ille alone, He, is an emphatical denotation; for to this purpose Ille and Ipse is all one; And then, you know the Emphasis of that Ipse; Ipse conteret, He or It shall bruise the Serpent's head, denotes the Messiah, though there be no Messiah named: This Ipse is so emphatical a denotation, as that the Church of Rome, and the Church of God strives for it; for they will needs read it Ipsa, and so refer our salvation, in the bruising of the Serpent's head, to the Virgin Mary; we refer it according to the truth of the doctrine, and of the letter, to Christ himself, and therefore read it Ipse, Herald If there were no more but that in David, Psal. 100.3. Rom. 8.16. It is He that hath made us, every man would conclude, that that He is God. And if S. Paul had said Ipse alone, and not Ipse spiritus, That He, and not He the Spirit bears witness with our spirit, every spirit would have understood this to be the holy Spirit, the holy Ghost. If in our text there had been no more, but such a denotation of a person that should speak to the hearts of all the world, that that I'll, that He would proceed thus, we must necessarily have seen an Almighty power in that denotation; But because that denotation might have carried terror in it, being taken alone, therefore we are not left to that, but have a relation to a former name, and specification of the holy Ghost, The Comforter. For the establishment of Christ's divinity, Esay 9.6. Christ is called The mighty God; for his relation to us, he hath divers names. As we were all In massa damnata, Forfeited, lost, he is Redemptor, Esay 59.20. A Redeemer, for that that is past, The Redeemer shall come to Zion, says the Prophet, Job 19.2. and so job saw His Redeemer, one that should redeem him from those miseries that oppressed him. As Christ was pleased to provide for the future, so he is, Salvator, Mat. 1.21. A Saviour, Therefore the Angel gave him that name jesus, For he shall save his people from their sins. So, because to this purpose Christ consists of two natures, God and man, he is called our Mediator, 1 Tim. 2.5. There is one Mediator between God and man, the man Christ jesus. Because he presents those merits which are his, as ours, and in our behalf, he is called an Advocate, 1 John 2.1. Rom. 2.6. Acts 10.42. 1 Cor. 12.3. If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, jesus Christ the righteous. And because every man is to expect according to his actions, he is called the Judge, We testify that it is he, that is ordained of God to be the judge of quick and dead. Now, for Christ's first name, which is the root of all, which is, The mighty God, No man can say that jesus is the Lord, but by the holy Ghost; And there is our first comfort, in knowing that Christ is God; for, he were an Intruder for that which is past, no Redeemer, he were a weak Saviour for the future, an insufficient Mediator, a silenced Advocate, and a Judge that might be misinformed, if he were not God. And though he were God, he might be all these to my discomfort, if there were not a holy Ghost to make all these offices comfortable unto me. To be a Redeemer and not a Saviour, is but to pay my debts, and leave me nothing to live on. To be a Mediator, a person capable by his composition of two natures, to intercede between God and man, and not to be my Advocate, is but to be a good Counsellor, but not of counsel with me; To be a Judge of quick and dead, and to proceed out of outward evidence, and not out of his bosom mercy, is but an acceleration of my conviction; I were better lie in Prison still, then appear at that Assize; better lie in the dust of the grave for ever, then come to that judgement. But, as there is men's in anima, There is a mind in the soul, and every man hath a soul, but every man hath not a mind, that is, a Consideration, an Actuation, an Application of the faculties of the soul to particulars; so there is Spiritus in Spiritu, a Holy Ghost in all the holy offices of Christ, which offices, being, in a great part, directed upon the whole world, are made comfortable to me, by being, by this holy Spirit, turned upon me, and appropriated to me; for so, even that name of Christ, which might most make me afraid, 〈◊〉. The name of Judge, becomes a comfort to me. To this purpose does S. Baesil call the holy Ghost, Verbum Dei, quia interpres filii: The Son of God is the word of God, because he manifests the Father, and the Holy Ghost is the word of God, because he applies the Son. Esay 62.11. Christ comes with that loud Proclamation, Ecce auditum fecit, Behold the Lord hath proclaimed it, to the end of the world, Ecce Salvator, and Ecce Merces, Behold his Salvation, Behold thy Reward, (This is his publication in the manifest Ordinances of the Church) And then the Holy Ghost whispers to thy soul, as thou standest in the Congregation, in that voice that he promises, Sibilabo populum meum, I will hisse, Zach. 10.8. I will whisper to my people by soft and inward inspirations. Christ came to tell us all, That to as many as received him, he gave power to become the Sons of God, john 1.12. The Holy Ghost comes to tell thee, that thou art one of them. The Holy Ghost is therefore Legatus, and Legatum Christi, He is Christ's Ambassador sent unto us, and he is his Legacy bequeathed unto us by his Will; his Will made of force by his death, and proved by his Ascension. Now, when those days were come, that the Bridegroom was to be taken from them, Christ Jesus to be removed from their personal sight, and conversation, and therefore even the children of the marriage Chamber were to mourn, and fast; Mat. 9.15. Cant. when that Church that mourned, and lamented his absence, when she was but his Spouse, must necessarily mourn now in a more vehement manner, when she was to be, (in some sense) his Widow; when that Shepherd was not only to be smitten, and so the flock dispersed, Mat. 26.21. (this was done in his passion) but he was to be taken away, in his Ascension; what a powerful Comforter had that need to be, that should be able to recompense the absence of Christ Jesus himself, and to infuse comfort into his Orphans, the children of his marriage Chamber, into his Widow, the desolate, and disconsolate Church, into his flock, his amazed, his distressed, and, (as we may, properly enough, say in this case) his beheaded Apostles and Disciples? Quantus ergo Deus, qui dat Deum? Aug. Less than God could not minister this comfort; How great a God is he, that sends a God to comfort us? and how powerful a Comforter he, who is not only sent by God, but is God? Therefore does the Apostle enlarge, and dilate, and delight his soul upon this comfort, Blessed be God, 2 Cor. 1.3. even the Father of our Lord jesus Christ, the Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort, who comforteth us in all our tribulations, that we may be able to comfort them which are in any affliction, by that comfort, wherewith ourselves are comforted of God. The Apostle was loath to departed from the word, Comfort; And therefore, as God, because he could swear by no greater, Heb. 6.13. swore by himself, So, because there is no stronger adjuration, than the comfort itself, to move you to accept this comfort, as the Apostle did, so we entreat you by that, If there be any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellow ship of the Spirit, if any bowels, Phil. 2.1. and mercy, Lay hold upon this true comfort, the coming of the Holy Ghost, and say to all the deceitful comforts of this world, not only Vanè consolati est is, Zach. 10.2. Job 16.2. Your comforts are frivolous, but Onerosi consolatores, Your comforts are burdensome; there is not only a disappointing of hopes, but an aggravating of sin, in entertaining the comforts of this world. As Barnabas, that is, Filius consolationis, The son of consolation, that he might be capable of this comfort, devested himself of all worldly possessions, so, as such sons, Acts 4.36. Suck and be satisfied, at the breasts of this consolation, that you may milk out, Esay 66.11. Ver. 13. and be delighted with the abundance of his glory; And as one whom his mother comforteth, so will I comfort you, and you shall be comforted in jerusalem. Heaven is Glory, and heaven is Joy; we cannot tell which most; we cannot separate them; and this comfort is joy in the Holy Ghost. This makes all jobs states alike; as rich in the first Chapter of his Book, where all is suddenly lost, as in the last, where all is abundantly restored. This Consolation from the Holy Ghost makes my midnight noon, mine Executionera Physician, a stake and pile of Faggots, a Bonfire of triumph; this consolation makes a satire, and Slander, and Libel against me, a Panegyrique, and an Elegy in my praise; It makes a Tolle an Ave, a Valerio an Euge, a Crucifige an Hosanna; It makes my deathbed, a marriage-bed, And my Passing-Bell, an Epithalamion. In this notion therefore we receive this Person, and in this notion we consider his proceeding, Ille, He, He the Comforter, shall reprove. This word, that is here translated To reprove, Arguere, Arguet. hath a double use and signification in the Scriptures. First to reprehend, to rebuke, to correct, with Authority, with Severity; So David, Ne in furore arguas me, O Lord rebuke me not in thine dnger: Psal. 6.1. And secondly, to convince, to prove, to make a thing evident, by undeniable inferences, and necessary consequences; So, in the instructions of God's Ministers, the first is To reprove, 2 Ti● and then To rebuke; So that reproving is an act of a milder sense, then rebuking is. Augu●● S. Augustine interprets these words twice in his Works; and in the first place he follows the first signification of the word, That the Holy Ghost should proceed, when he came, by power, by severity against the world. But though that sense will stand well with the first act of this Reproof, (That he shall Reprove, that is, reprehend the world of sin) yet it will not seem so properly said, To reprehend the world of Righteousness, or of Judgement; for how is Righteousness, and Judgement the subject of reprehension? Therefore S. Augustine himself in the other place, where he handles these words, embraces the second sense, Hoc est arguere mundum, ostendere vera esse, quae non credidit; This is to reprove the world, to convince the world of her errors, and mistake; And so (scarce any excepted) do all the Ancient Expositors take it, according to that, All things are reproved of the light, Ephes. 5.13. and so made manifest; The light does not reprehend them, not rebuke them, not chide, not upbraid them; but to declare them, to manifest them, to make the world see clearly what they are, this is to reprove. That reproving then, Elenchus. which is warrantable by the Holy Ghost, is not a sharp increpation, a bitter proceeding, proceeding only out of power, and authority, but by enlightening, and informing, and convincing the understanding. The signification of this word, which the Holy Ghost uses here for reproof, Elenchos, is best deduced, and manifested to us, by the Philosopher who had so much use of the word, who expresses it thus, Elenchus est Syllogismus contra contraria opinantem; A reproof, is a proof, a proof by way of argument, against another man, who holds a contrary opinion. All the pieces must be laid together: For, first it must be against an opinion, and then an opinion contrary to truth, and then such an opinion held, insisted upon, maintained, and after all this, the reproof must lie in argument, not in force, not in violence. First it must come so fare, Opinio. as to be an opinion; which is a middle station, between ignorance, and knowledge; for knowledge excludes all doubting, all hesitation; opinion does not so; but opinion excludes indifferency, and equanimity; I am rather inclined to one side then another, Lactant. Bernard. when I am of either opinion. Id opinatur quisque quod nescit: A man may have an opinion that a thing is so, and yet not know it. S. Bernard proposes three ways for our apprehending Divine things; first, understanding, which relies upon reason; faith, which relies upon supreme Authority; and opinion, which relies upon probability, and verisimilitude. Now there may arise in some man, some mistake, some mis-apprehensions of the sense of a place of Scripture, there may arise some scruple in a case of conscience, there may arise some inclinations to some person, of whose integrity and ability I have otherwise had experience, there may arise some Paradoxical imaginations in myself, and yet these never attain to the settledness of an opinion, but they float in the fancy, and are but waking dreams; and such imaginations, and fancies, and dreams, receive too much honour in the things, and too much favour in the persons, if they be reproved, or questioned, or condemned, or disputed against. For, often times, even a condemnation nourishes the pride of the author of an opinion; and besides, begets a dangerous compassion, in spectators and hearers; and then, from pitying his pressures and sufferings, who is condemned, men come out of that pity, to excuse his opinions; and from excusing them, to incline towards them; And so that which was but straw at first, by being thus blown by vehement disputation, sets fire upon timber, and draws men of more learning and authority to side, and mingle themselves in these impertinencies. Every fancy should not be so much as reproved, disputed against, or called in question. As it must not be only a fancy, Contra. an imagination, but an opinion, (in which, though there be not a Certò, yet there is a Potiùs, Though I be not sure, yet I do rather think it) so we consider Contraria opinantem, That it must be an opinion contrary to something that we are sure of; that is, to some received article, or to some evident religious duty; contrary to religion, as religion is matter of faith, or as religion is matter of obedience, to lawful Authority. Though fancies grow to be opinions, that men come to think they have reasons for their opinions, and to know they have other men on their side, in those opinions; yet, as long as these are but opinions of a little too much, or a little too little, in matter of Ceremony and Circumstance, as long as they are but deflectings, and deviations upon collateral matters, no foundation shaked, no cornerstone displaced, as long as they are but preteritions, not contradictions, but omissions, not usurpations, they are not worthy of a reproof, of a conviction, and there may be more danger than profit in bringing them into an over-vehement agitation. Those men whose end is schism, and sedition, and distraction, are brought so near their own ends, and the accomplishment of their own desires, if they can draw other men together by the ears: As some have all they desire, if they can make other men drunk, so have these if they can make sober men wrangle. They must be Opinions, not fancies, and they must have a contrariety, Tenenda. an opposition to certain truths, and then they must be held, persisted in, before it be fit to give a reproof, either by calling in question, or by confutation. As some men are said to have told a lie so often, as that at last, they believe it themselves, so a man admits sometimes an opinion to lodge so long, as that Transit in intellectum, It fastens upon his understanding, Bernard. and that that he did but think before, now he seems to himself to know it, and he believes it. And then, Fides si habet haesitationem, infirma est, Idem. As that faith that admits a scruple is weak, and so, without scruple he comes peremptorily to believe it. But so, Opinio si habet assertionem, temeraria est, When that which is but an opinion comes to be published and avowed for a certain, and a necessary truth, than it becomes dangerous; And that grows apace; for scarcely does any man believe an opinion to be true, but he hath a certain appetite and itch to infuse it into others too. Now when these pieces meet, when these atoms make up a body, a body of Error, Syllogismus. that it come to an Opinion, a halfe-assurance, and that in some thing contrary to foundations, and that it be held stiffly, publicly persisted in, then enters this reproof; but yet even then reproof is but Syllogismus, it is but an argument, it is but convincing, it is not destroying; it is not an Inquisition, a prison, a sword, an axe, a halter, a fire; It is a syllogism, not a syllogism, whose major is this, Others, your Ancestors believed it, and the minor this, We that are your Superiors believe it, Ergo you must, or else be banished or burnt. With such syllogisms the Arians abounded, where they prevailed in the Primitive Church, and this is the Logic of the Inquisition of Rome. But our syllogism must be a syllogism within our Author's definition, when out of some things which are agreed on all sides, other things that are controverted, are made evident and manifest. Hell is presented to us by fire, but fire without light: Heaven by light, and light without any ill effect of fire in it. Where there is nothing but an Accuser, (perchance not that) and fire, citation and excommunication, here is Satan, (who is an Accuser, but an invisible one) and here is Hell itself, a devilish and a dark proceeding. But when they, to whom this reproof belongs, take Christ's way, not to tread out smoking flax, that a poor soul, misled by ignorant zeal, and so easily combustible and apt to take fire, be not trodden down with too much power, and passion, when they do not break a bruised reed, that is, not terrify a distracted conscience, which perchance a long ill conversation with schismatical company, and a spiritual melancholy, and overtender sense of sin hath cast too low before, then does this reproof work aright, when it is brought in with light before fire, with convenient instruction, and not hasty condemnation. We may well call this Viam Christi, and Viam Spiritus sancti, Christ's way, and the Holy Ghosts way, for he had need be a very good Christian, and a very sanctified man, that can walk in that way; Perfectorum est, nihil in peccatore odisse praeter peccata: August. He that hates nothing in an Heretic, or in a schismatic, but the Schism, or the Heresy, He that sets bounds to that sea, and hath said to his affections, and humane passions, Stay there, go no farther, hath got far in the steps of Christian perfection. The slipperiness, the precipitation is so great on the other side, that commonly we begin to hate the person first, and then grow glad, when he grows guilty of any thing worthy our hate; and we make God himself the Devil's instrument, when we pretend zeal to his service, in these reproofs and corrections, and serve only our own impotent passion, and inordinate ambition. For therein Plerumque cum tibi videris odisse inimicum, fratrem odisti, August. & nescis; Thou thinkest or pretend●●t to hate an enemy, and hatest thine own brother, and knowest it not; Thou knowest not, considerest not, that he, by good usage and instruction, might have been made thy Brother, a fellow-member in the Visible Church, by outward conformity, and in the Invisible too, by inward. Cyprian. Etiam fictilia vasa confringere, Domino soli concessum, If thou be a vessel of gold or silver, and that other of clay, thou of a clear, and rectified, he of a dark and perverted understanding, yet even vessels of clay are only in the power of that Potter's hand that made them, or bought them, to break, and no bodies else: Still, as long as it is possible, proceed we with the moderation of that blessed Father, Sic peccata Haereticorum compesce, ut sint quos poeniteat peccasse, August. Take not away the subject of the error, (the perverseness of the man) so, as that thou take away the subject of repentance, the man himself; If thou require fruit, leave a tree; If thou wouldst have him repent, take not away his life, says he. We see the leisurely pace that God's Justice walks in: Dan 4.24. When Daniel had told Nabuchadnezzar his danger, yea the Decree of God upon him, (as he calls it) yet he told him a way how to revoke it; by works of mercy to the poor, and breaking off his sins; And after all this, he had a years space to consider himself, Dan 26. before the judgement was executed upon him. But now beloved, Voluntas perversa. all that we have said, or can be said to this purpose, conduces but to this, That though this reproof, which the Holy Ghost leads us to, be rather in convincing the understanding by argument, and other persuasions then by extending our power to the destruction of the person, yet this hath a modification, how it must be, and a determination where it must end, for, there are cases in which we may, we must go farther. For, for the understanding, we know how to work upon that; we know what arguments have prevailed upon us, with what arguments we have prevailed upon others, and those we can use: so far, nihil habeant contra, & si non assentiantur, That though they will not be of our mind, yet they shall have nothing to say against it. So far we can go upon that faculty, the understanding. But the will of man is so irregular, so unlimited a thing, as that no man hath a bridle upon another's will, no man can undertake nor promise for that; no Creature hath that faculty but man, yet no man understands that faculty. It hath been the exercise of a thousand wits, it hath been the subject, yea the knot and perplexity of a thousand disputations, to find out, what it is that determines, that concludes the will of man so, as that it assents thereunto. For, if that were absolutely true which some have said, (and yet perchance that is as far as any have gone) that Ultimus actus intellectus est voluntas, That the last act of the Understanding is the Will, than all our labour were still to work upon the Understanding, and when that were rectified, the Will must follow. But it is not so; As we feel in ourselves that we do many sins, which our understanding, and the soul of our understanding, our conscience, tells us we should not do, so we see many others persist in errors, after manifest convincing, after all reproof which can be directed upon the understanding. When therefore those errors which are to be reproved, are in that faculty, which is not subject to this reproof by argument, in a perverted will, because this wilful stubbornness is always accompanied with pride, with singularity, with faction, with schism, with sedition, we must remember the way which the Holy Ghost hath directed us in, Eccles. 10.16. If the iron be blunt, we must either put to more strength, or whet the edge. Now, when the fault is in the perverseness of the will, we can put to no more strength, no argument serves to overcome that; And therefore the holy Ghost hath admitted another way, To whet the iron; Gal. 5.12. And in that way does the Apostle say, utinam abscindantur, I would they were even cut off which trouble you. There is an incorrigibility, in which, when the reproof cannot lead the will, it must draw blood; which is, where pretences of Religion are made, and Treasons, and Rebellions, and Invasions, and Massacres of people, and Assassinate's of Princes practised. And this is a reproof (which, as we shall see of the rest in the following branches is) from the Holy Ghost, in his function in this text, as he is a Comforter; This therefore is our comfort, That our Church was never negligent in reproving the Adversary, but hath from time to time strenuously and confidently maintained her truths against all oppositions, to the satisfying of any understanding, though not to the reducing of some perverse wills. So Gregor: de Valentia professes of our arguments, I confess these reasons would conclude my understanding, Nisi didicissem captivare intellectum meum ad intellectum Ecclesiae, But that I have learned to captivate my understanding to the understanding of the Church, and, say what they will, to believe as the Church of Rome believes; which is Maldonats' profession too, upon divers of calvin's arguments, This argument would prevail upon me, but that he was an Heretic that found it. So that here is our comfort, we have gone so far in this way of Reproof, nihil habeant contra, etsi nobiscum non sentiant. This is our comfort, that as some of the greatest Divines in foreign parts, so also, in our Church at home, some of the greatest Prelates, who have been traduced to favour Rome, have written the most solidly and effectually against the heresies of Rome of any other. But it must be a comfort upon them that are reproved. And this is their comfort, that the State never drew drop of blood for Religion; But then, this is our comfort still, that where their perverseness shall endanger either Church or State, both the State and Church may, by the holy Ghosts direction, and will return to those means which God allows them for their preservation, that is, To whet the edge of the Iron, in execution of the laws. And so we pass from our second consideration, The Action, Reproof, to the subject of Reproof, The world, He shall reprove the world. It is no wonder that this word Mundus should have a larger signification than other words, for it contains all, embraces, comprehends all: But there is no word in Scripture, Mundus. that hath not only not so large, but so divers a signification, for it signifies things contrary to one another. It signifies commonly, and primarily, the whole frame of the world; and more particularly all mankind; and oftentimes only wicked men; and sometimes only good men, As Dilexit mundum, God loved the world, John 3.16. John 4.42. Rom. 11.15. And Hic est verè salvator mundi, This is the Christ, the Saviour of the world; And Reconciliatio mundi, The casting away of the jews, is the reconciliation of the world: The Jews were a part of the world, but not of this world. Now in every sense, the world may well be said to be subject to the reproof of God, as reproof is a rebuke: for He rebuked the wind, Luk. 8.14. Psal. 106.17. Gen. 3.17. Psal. 105.14. and it was quiet; And, He rebuked the red Sea, and it was dried up; He rebuked the earth bitterly in that Maledicta terra, for Adam's punishment, Cursed be the ground for thy sake; And for the noblest part of earth, man, and the noblest part of men, Kings, He rebuked even Kings for their sakes, and said, Touch not mine anointed. But this is not the rebuke of our Text; for ours is a rebuke of comfort, even to them that are rebuked; Whereas the angry rebuke of God carries heavy effects with it. Increpat, & fugiunt, Esay 17.13. God shall rebuke them, and they shall fly far off; He shall chide them out of his presence, and they shall never return to it. Increpasti superbos, & maledicti isti: Thou hast rebuked the proud, Psal. 119.21. and thy rebuke hath wrought upon them as a Malediction, not physic, but poison; As it is in another Psalm, Increpasti, & periit, Thou hast rebuked them, and they perished. Psal. 9.6. In these cases, there is a working of the holy Ghost; and that, as the holy Ghost is a Comforter; for it is a comfort to them, for whose deliverances God executes these judgements upon others, that they are executed; but we consider a rebuke, a reproof that ministers comfort even to them upon whom it falls; and so in that sense, we shall see that this Comforter reproves the world, in all those significations of the world which we named before. As the world is the whole frame of the world, God hath put into it a reproof, Mundus magnus. a rebuke, lest it should seem eternal, which is, a sensible decay and age in the whole frame of the world, and every piece thereof. The seasons of the year irregular and distempered; the Sun fainter, and languishing; men less in stature, and shorter-lived. No addition, but only every year, new sorts, new species of worms, and flies, and sicknesses, which argue more and more putrefaction of which they are engendered. And the Angels of heaven, which did so familiarly converse with men in the beginning of the world, though they may not be doubted to perform to us still their ministerial assistances, yet they seem so far to have deserted this world, as that they do not appear to us, as they did to those our Fathers. S. Cyprian observed this in his time, when writing to Demetrianus, Cyprian. who imputed all those calamities which afflicted the world then, to the impiety of the Christians who would not join with them in the worship of their gods, Cyprian went no farther for the cause of these calamities, but Ad senescentem mundum, To the age and impotency of the whole world; And therefore, says he, Imputent senes Christianis, quòd minùs valeant in senectutem; Old men were best accuse Christians, that they are more sickly in their age, than they were in their youth; Is the fault in our religion, or in their decay? Canos in pueris videmus, nec aetas in senectute desinit, sed incipit à senectute; We see grey hairs in children, and we do not die old, and yet we are borne old. Lest the world (as the world signifies the whole frame of the world) should glorify itself, or flatter, and abuse us with an opinion of eternity, we may admit usefully (though we do not conclude peremptorily) this observation to be true, that there is a reproof, a rebuke born in it, a sensible decay and mortality of the whole world. But is this a reproof agreeable to our Text? A reproof that carries comfort with it? Consolatio. Rom. 8.19. Comfort to the world itself, that it is not eternal? Truly it is; As S. Paul hath most pathetically expressed it; The creature (that is, the world) is in anearnest expectation, The creature waiteth, The whole creation groaneth, and traveleth in pain. Therefore the creature (that is, the world) receives a perfect comfort, in being delivered at last, and an inchoative comfort, in knowing now, that it shall be delivered; From what? From subjection to vanity, Ver. 20. & 21. from the bondage of corruption; That whereas the world is now subject to mutability and corruption, at the Resurrection it shall no longer be so, but in that measure, and in that degree which it is capable of, Ver. 21. It shall enter into the glorious liberty of the children of God, that is, be as free from corruption, or change in that state, wherein it shall be glorified, Esay 30.26. 2 Pet. 3.13. as the Saints shall be in the glory of their state; for, The light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun, and the light of the Sun shall be sevenfold; And there shall be new heavens, and new earth; Which is a state, that this world could not attain to, if it were eternally to last, in that condition, in which it is now, a condition subject to vanity, impotency, corruption, and therefore there is a comfort in this reproof, even to this world, That it is not eternal; This world is the happier for that. As the world, Mundus, homines. Mat. 18.7. in a second sense, signifies all the men of the world, (so it is, Woe unto the world, because of offences) There is a reproof born in every man; which reproof is an uncontrollable sense, and an unresistible remorse, and chiding of himself inwardly, when he is about to sin, and a horror of the Majesty of God, whom, when he is alone, he is forced (and forced by himself) to fear, and to believe, though he would fain make the world believe, that he did not believe in God, but lived at peace, and subsisted of himself, without being beholding to God. For, as in nature, heavy things will ascend, and light descend rather than admit a vacuity, so in religion, the devil will get into God's room, rather than the heart of man shall be without the opinion of God; There is no Atheist; They that oppose the true, do yet worship a false god; and he that says there is no God, doth for all that, set up some God to himself. Every man hath this reproof borne in him, that he doth ill, that he offends a God, that he breaks a law when he sins. Consolatio. And this reproof is a reproof within our Text, for it hath this comfort with it, That howsoever some men labour to overcome the natural tenderness of the conscience, and so triumph over their own ruin, and rejoice when they can sleep, and wake again without any noise in their conscience, or sense of sin, yet, in truth this candle cannot be blown out, this remorse cannot be overcome; But were it not a greater comfort to me if I could overcome it? No. For though this remorse (which is but a natural impression, and common to all men) be not grace, yet this remorse, which is the natural reproof of the soul, is that, that grace works upon. Grace doth not ordinarily work upon the stiffness of the soul, upon the silence, upon the frowardness, upon the averseness of the soul, but when the soul is souple and mellowed, and feels this reproof, this remorse in itself, that reproof, that remorse becomes as the matter, and grace enters as the form, that becomes the body, and grace becomes the soul; and that is the comfort of this natural reproof of the world, that is, of every man: First, that it will not be quenched in itself, and then, that ordinarily it induces a nobler light than itself, which is effectual and true Repentance. As the world, in a third sense, Mundus, mali. Heb. 11.7. 2 Pet. 2.5. signifies only the wicked world (so it is, Noah in preparing an Ark, condemned the world; And so, God spared not the old world) That world, the world of the wicked suffer many reproofs, many rebukes in their hearts, which they will not discover, because they envy God that glory. We read of divers great actors in the first persecutions of the Christians, who being fearfully tormented in body and soul, at their deaths, took care only, that the Christians might not know what they suffered, lest they should receive comfort, and their God glory therein. Certainly Herod would have been more affected, if he had thought that we should have known how his pride was punished with those sudden worms, Acts 12.23. then with the punishment itself. This is a self-reproofe; even in this, though he will not suffer it to break out to the edification of others, there is some kind of chiding himself for some thing misdone. But is there any comfort in this reproof? Consolatio. Truly, beloved, I can hardly speak comfortably of such a man, after he is dead, that dies in such a disaffection, loath that God should receive glory, or his servant's edification by these judgements. But even with such a man, if I assisted at his deathbed, I would proceed with a hope to infuse comfort, even from that disaffection of his: As long as I saw him in any acknowledgement (though a negligent, nay though a malignant, a despiteful acknowledgement) of God, as long as I found him loath that God should receive glory, even from that loathness, from that reproof, from that acknowledgement, That there is a God to whom glory is due, I would hope to draw him to glorify that God before his last gasp; My zeal should last as long as his wife's officiousness, or his children's, or friends, or servants obsequiousness, or the solicitude of his Physicians should; as long as there were breath, they would minister some help; as long as there were any sense of God, I would hope to do some good. And so much comfort may arise even out of this reproof of the world, as the world is only the wicked world. In the last sense, the world signifies the Saints, the Elect, the good men of the world, Mundus, sancti. John 14.31. John 17.21. believing and persevering men. Of those Christ says, The world shall know that I love the Father; And, That the world may believe that thou hast sent me. And this world, that is, the godliest of this world, have many reproofs, many corrections upon them. That outwardly they are the prey of the wicked, and inwardly have that Stimulum carnis, which is the devil's Solicitor, and round about them they see nothing but profanation of his word, mis-imployment of his works, his creatures, misconstructions of his actions, his judgements, blasphemy of his name, negligence and undervaluation of his Sacraments, violation of his Sabbaths, and holy convocations. O what a bitter reproof, what a manifest evidence of the infirmity, nay of the malignity of man, is this, (if it be put home, and throughly considered) That even the goodness of man gets to no higher a degree, but to have been the occasion of the greatest ill, the greatest cruelty that ever was done, the crucifying of the Lord of life! The better a man is, the more he concurred towards being the cause of Christ's death; which is a strange, but a true and a pious consideration. Dilexit mundum, He loved the world, and he came to save the world; That is, most especially, and effectually, those that should believe in him, in the world, and live according to that belief, and die according to that life. If there had been no such, Christ had not died, never been crucified. So that impenitent men, misbelieving men have not put Christ to death, but it is we, we whom he loves, we that love him, that have crucified him. In what rank then, of opposition against Christ, shall we place our sins, since even our faith and good works have been so fare the cause why Christ died, that, but for the salvation of such men, Believers, Workers, Perseverers, Christ had not died? This then is the reproof of the world, that is, of the Saints of God in the world, Psal. 84.10. that though I had rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God, I must dwell in the tents of wickedness, That though my zeal consume me, because mine enemies have forgotten thy words, Psal. 119.138. I must stay amongst them that have forgotten thy words; But this, and all other reproofs, that arise in the godly, (that we may still keep up that consideration, that he that reproves us, is The Comforter) have this comfort in them, that these faults that I endure in others, God hath either pardoned in me, or kept from me: and that though this world be wicked, yet when I shall come to the next world, I shall find Noah, that had been drunk; and Lot, Gen. 9.21. Gen. 19.33. Numb. 11.11. that had been incestuous; and Moses, that murmured at God's proceed; and job, and jeremy, and jonas, impatient, even to imprecations against themselves; Christ's own Disciples ambitious of worldly preferment; his Apostles forsaking him, his great Apostle forswearing him; And Mary Magdalen that had been, I know not what sinner; and David that had been all; I leave none so ill in this world, but I may carry one that was, or find some that had been as ill as they, in heaven; and that blood of Christ Jesus, which hath brought them thither, is offered to them that are here, who may be successors in their repentance, as they are in their sins. And so have you all intended for the Person, the Comforter, and the Action, Reproof, and the Subject, the World; remains only (that for which there remains but a little time) the Time, Cum venerit, When the Comforter comes he will proceed thus. We use to note three Advents, three come of Christ. Cum venerit An Advent of Humiliation, when he came in the flesh; an Advent of glory, when he shall come to judgement; and between these an Advent of grace, in his gracious working in us, in this life; and this middlemost Advent of Christ, is the Advent of the Holy Ghost, in this text; when Christ works in us, the Holy Ghost comes to us. And so powerful is his coming, that whereas he that sent him, Christ Jesus himself, Came unto his own, and his own received him not; John 1.11. The Holy Ghost never comes to his own but they receive him; for, only by receiving him, they are his own; for, besides his title of Creation, by which we are all his, with the Father, and the Son, as there is a particular title accrued to the Son by Redemption, so is there to the Holy Ghost, of certain persons, upon whom he sheds the comfort of his application. The Holy Ghost picks out and chooses whom he will; Spirat ubi vult; perchance me that speak; perchance him that hears; perchance him that shut his eyes yesternight, and opened them this morning in the guiltiness of sin, and reputes it now: perchance him that hath been in the meditation of an usurious contract, of an ambitious supplantation, of a licentious solicitation, since he came hither into God's house, and deprehends himself in that sinful purpose now. This is his Advent, this is his Pentecost. As he came this day with a Manifestation, so, if he come into thee this evening, he comes with a Declaration, a Declaration in operation. Pater meus usque modo operatur, & ego operor, John 5.17. My Father works even now, and I work, was Christ's answer, when he was accused to have broken the Sabbath day; that the Father wrought that day as well as he. So also Christ assigns other reasons of working upon the Sabbath; Luke 14.5. Cujus Bos, Whose Ox is in danger, Mat. 12.3, 5. and the owner will not relieve him? Nun legistis, Have ye not read how David eaten the Shewbread? And Anon legistis, Did not the Priests break the Sabbath, in their service in the Temple? But the Sabbath is the Holy Ghosts greatest working day: The Holy Ghost works more upon the Sunday, than all the week. In other days, he picks and chooses; but upon these days of holy Convocation, I am surer that God speaks to me, Tertul. then at home, in any private inspiration. For, as the Congregation besieges God in public prayers, Agmine facto, so the Holy Ghost casts a net over the whole Congregation, in this Ordinance of preaching, and catches all that break not out. If he be come into thee, he is come to reprove thee; to make thee reprove thyself; But do that, Cum vencrit, when the Holy Ghost is come. If thou have been slack in the outward acts of Religion, and findest that thou art the worse thought of amongst men, for that respect, & the more open to some penal Laws, for those omissions, and for these reasons only beginnest to correct, and reprove thyself, this is a reproof, Antequam Spiritus vener it, before the Holy Ghost is come into thee, or hath breathed upon thee, and inanimated thine actions. If the powerfulness, and the piercing of the mercies of thy Saviour, have sometimes, in the preaching thereof, entendered and melted thy heart, and yet upon the confidence of the readiness, and easiness of that mercy, thou return to thy vomit, to the re-pursuite of those halfe-repented sins, and thinkest it time enough to go forward upon thy deathbed, this is a reproof Postquam abierit Spiritus, After the Holy Ghost is departed from thee. If the burden of thy sins oppress thee, if thou be'st ready to cast thyself from the Pinnacle of the Temple, from the participation of the comforts afforded thee in the Absolution, and Sacraments of the Church, If this appear to thee in a kind of humility, and reverence to the Majesty of God, That thou darest not come into his sight, not to his table, not to speak to him in prayer, whom thou hast so infinitely offended, this is a reproof, Cum Spiritus Sanctus simulatur, when the Holy Ghost is counterfeited, when Satan is transformed into an Angel of light, and makes thy dismayed conscience believe, that that affection, which is truly a higher Treason against God, than all thy other sins, (which is, a diffident suspecting of God's mercy) is such a reverend fear, and trembling as he looks for. Reprove thyself; but do it by convincing, not by a downright stupefaction of the conscience; but by a consideration of the nature of thy sin, and a contemplation of the infinite proportion between God and thee, and so between that sin and the mercy of God; for, thou canst not be so absolutely, so entirely, so essentially sinful, as God is absolutely, and entirely, and essentially merciful. Do what thou canst, there is still some goodness in thee; that nature that God made, is good still: Do God what he will, he cannot strip himself, not divest himself of mercy. If thou couldst do as much as God can pardon, thou wert a Manichaean God, a God of evil, as infinite as the God of goodness is. Do it, Cum venerit Spiritus, when the Holy Ghost pleads on thy side; not cum venerit homo, not when man's reason argues for thee, and says, It were injustice in God, to punish one for another, the soul for the body: Much less Come venerit inimicus homo, when the Devil pleads, and pleads against thee, that thy sins are greater than God can forgive. Reprove any overbold presumption, that God cannot forsake thee, with remembering who it was that said, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Even Christ himself could apprehend a dereliction. Reprove any distrust in God, with remembering to whom it was said, Hodiè mecum eris in Paradiso; Even the thief himself, who never saw him, never met him, but at both their executions, was carried up with him, the first day of his acquaintance. If either thy cheerfulness, or thy sadness be conceived of the Holy Ghost, there is a good ground of thy Noli timere, fear neither. So the Angel proceeded with joseph, Fear not to take Marry, for that which is conceived in her, is of the Holy Ghost. Fear not thou, that a cheerfulness and alacrity in using Gods blessings, fear not that a moderate delight in music, in conversation, in recreations, shall be imputed to thee for a fault, for, it is conceived by the Holy Ghost, and is the offspring of a peaceful conscience. Embrace therefore his working, Qui omnia opera nostra operatus est nobis, Thou, O Lord, hast wrought all our works in us; Esay 26.12. And whose working none shall be able to frustrate in us; Operabitur, & quis avertit? Esay 43.13. I will work, and who shall let it? And as the Son concurred with the Father, and the Holy Ghost with the Son, in working in our behalf, so Operemur & nos, let us also work out our Salvation with fear and trembling, by reproving the errors in our understanding, and the perversenesses of our conversation, that way, in which the Holy Ghost is our guide, by reproving, that is, chiding and convincing the conscience, but still with comfort, that is, steadfast application of the merits of Christ Jesus. SERM. XXXVII. Preached upon Whitsunday. JOHN 16.8, 9, 10, 11. And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgement. Of sin, because ye believe not on me. Of righteousness, because I go to my Father, and ye see me no more. Of judgement, because the Prince of this world is judged. IN a former Sermon upon these words, we have established this, That the Person whom our Saviour promises here, being by himself promised, in the verse before the text, in the name and quality of The Comforter, All that this Person is to do in this text, is to be done so, as the World, upon which it is to be done, may receive comfort in it. Therefore this word, Reproof admitting a double signification, one by way of authority, as it is a rebuke, an increpation, the other as it is a convincing by argument, by way of instruction, and information, because the first way cannot be applied to all the parts of this text, and to all that the Holy Ghost is to do upon the world, (for, howsoever he may rebuke the world of sin, he cannot be said to rebuke it of righteousness, and of judgement) according to S. Augustine's later interpretation of these words, (for in one place of his works, he takes this word, Reproof, in the harder sense, for rebuke, but in another, in the milder) we have and must pursue the second signification of the word, That the Holy Ghost shall reprove the world of sin, of righteousness, of judgement, by convincing the world, by making the world confess and acknowledge all that that the Holy Ghost intends in all these. And this manifestation, and this conviction in these three, will be our parts. In the first of which, That the Holy Ghost shall Reprove, that is, convince, the world of sin, we shall first look how all the world is under sin; and then, whether the Holy Ghost, being come, have convinced all the world, made all the world see that it is so; and in these two inquisitions, we shall determine that first branch. For the first, (for, of the other two we shall reach you the boughs anon, 1 Part. Mundus sub peccato. when you come to gather the fruit, and lay open the particulars, then when we come to handle them) That all the world is under sin, and knows it not, (for this Reproof, Elenchus, is, (says the Philosopher) Syllogismus contra contraria opinantem, An argument against him that is of a contrary opinion) we condole first the misery of this Ignorance, for, August. Quid miserius misero, non miser ante seipsum? What misery can be so great, as to be ignorant, insensible of our own misery? Every act done in such an ignorance as we might overcome, is a new sin; And it is not only a new practice from the Devil, but it is a new punishment from God; August. jussisti Domine, & sic est, ut poena sit sibi omnis inordinatus animus, Every sinner is an Executioner upon himself; and he is so by God's appointment, who punishes former sins with future. This then is the miserable state of the world, It might know, and does not, that it is wholly under an inundation, a deluge of sin. For, sin is a transgression of some Law, which, he that sins may know himself to be bound by: For, if any man could be exempt from all Law, he were impeccable, he could not sin; And if he could not possibly have any knowledge of the Law, it were no Law to him. Now under the transgression of what Law lies all the World? Lex Humana. For the positive Laws of the States in which we live, a man may keep them, according to the intention of them that made those Laws; which is all that is required in any humane Law; (to keep it, if not according to the letter, yet according to the intention of the Lawmaker) Nay it is not only possible, Seneca. but easy to do so; Angusta innocentia ad legem bonum esse, (says the moral man's holy Ghost, Seneca) It is but a narrow and a shallow honesty, to be no honester than the Law forces him to be. Thus then, in violating the Laws of the State, all the World is not under sin. If we pass from Laws merely humane, Ceremonialia. (though, in truth, scarce any just Law is so, merely humane, for God, that commands obedience to humane Laws, hath a hand in the making of them) to those ceremonial, and judicial Laws, which the Jews received immediately from God, (in which respect they may be called divine Laws, though they were but local and but temporary) which were in such a number, as that, though penal Laws in some States be so many, and so heavy, as that they serve only for snares, and springes upon the people, yet they are not where equal to the ceremonial and judicial Laws, Psal. ●. 6. which lay upon the Jews; yet even for these Laws S. Paul says of himself, That touching that righteousness which is in the Law, he was blameless. Thus therefore (in violating ceremonial or judicial Laws) all the World is not under sin, both because all the World was not bound by that Law, and some in the World did keep it. But in two other respects it is; Lex Naturae. first, That there is a Law of Nature that passes through all the World, a Law in the heart; and of the breach of this, no man can be always ignorant. As every man hath a devil in himself, Chrysost. Spontaneum Daemonem, A Devil of his own making, some particular sin that transports him, so every man hath a kind of God in himself, such a conscience, as sometimes reproves him. Carry we this consideration a little higher, and we may see herein, some verification, at least, some useful application of origen's extreme error. Origen. He thought, that at last, after infinite revolutions, (as all other substances should be) even the Devil himself should be (as it were) sucked and swallowed into God, and there should remain nothing at last, (as there was nothing else at first) but only God; (not by an annihilation of the Creature, that any thing should come to nothing, but by this absorption, by a transmigration of all Creatures into God, that God should be all, and all should be God) So in our case, That which is the sinner's devil, becomes his God; That very sin which hath possessed him, by the excess of that sin, or, by some loss, or pain, or shame following that sin, occasions that reproof and remorse, that withdraws him from that sin. So all the world is under sin, because they have a Law in themselves, and a light in themselves. And it is so in a second respect, Originale peecatum. Esay 1.4. Wisd. 2.23. That all being derived from Adam, Adam's sin is derived upon all. Only that one man, that was not naturally deduced from Adam, Christ Jesus, was guilty of no sin; All others are subject to that malediction, Vae genti peccatrici, Woe to this sinful World. God made man Inexterminabilem, says the Wiseman, undisseisible, unexpellible; such, as he could not be thrust out of his Immortality, whether he would or no: August. for, that was man's first immortality, Posse non mori, That he needed not have died. When man killed himself, and threw upon all his posterity the morte morieris, that we must die, and that Death is Stipendium peccati, The wages of sin, and that Anima quae peccaverit, Ezech. 18.4. ipsa morietur, that That soul, and only that soul that sins, shall die, Since we see the punishment fall upon all, we are sure the fault cleaves to all too; all do die, therefore all do sin. And though this Original sin that overflows us all, may in some sense be called peccatum involuntarium, a sin without any elicit act of the Will, (for so it must needs be in Children) and so properly no sin, yet as all our other faculties were, August. so omnium voluntates in Adam, all our wills were in Adam, and we sinned wilfully, when he did so, and so Original sin is a voluntary sin: Our will is poisoned in the fountain; and, as soon as our will is able to exercise any election, we are willing to sin, as soon as we can, and sorry we can sin no sooner, and sorry no longer: we are willing before the Devil is willing, and willing after the Devil is weary, and seek occasions of tentation, when he presents none. And so, as the breach of the Law of Nature, and as the deluge of Original sin hath surrounded the whole world, the whole world is under sin. That all the world is so, requires not much proof: But then, does the Holy Ghost, An arguat. Spiritus sanctus? by his coming, reprove, that is, convince the whole world, that it is so? The Holy Ghost is able to do it, and he hath good cause to do it; But does he do it? Is this Cum venerit, when he comes, come? Is he come to this purpose, to make all the world know their sinful condition? God knows they know it not. Howsoever they may have some knowledge of the breach of the Law of Nature, yet they have no knowledge of any remedy after, and so lack all comfort; and therefore this is no knowledge from the Holy Ghost, from the Comforter. And for the knowledge of Original sin, which lies more heavy upon them then upon us, (who have the ease of Baptism, which slackens, and weakens Original sin in us) they are so fare from knowing, that that sin is derived from Adam, as that they do not know, that they themselves are derived from Adam; not that there is such a sin, not that there was such an Adam. How then doth the Holy Ghost, who is come according to Christ's promise, according to his promise, Reprove, that is, Convince the world of sin, since this (being to be done by the Holy Ghost) implies a knowledge of Christ, and a way of comfort in the doing thereof? This one word Arguet, He shall reprove, convince, admits three acceptations. First, Antequam abierit. in the future, as it is here presented, He shall; and so the Cum venerit, When he comes, signifies Antequam abierit, Before he departs. He came at Pentecost, and presently set on foot his Commission, by the Apostles, to reprove, convince the world of sin, and hath proceeded ever since, by their successors, in reducing Nation after Nation; and, before the consummation of the world, before he retire, to rest eternally in the bosom of the Father and the Son, from whom he proceeded, he shall reprove the whole world of sin, that is, bring them to a knowledge, That in the breach of the law of nature, and in the guiltiness of original sin, they are all under a burden, which none of them all, of themselves, can discharge. This work S. Paul seems to hasten sooner: Rom. 10.18. To convince the Jews of their infidelity, he argues thus, Have not they heard the Gospel? They, that is, the Gentiles; and if They, much more You; And that They had heard it, he proves by the application of those words, In omnem terram, Psal. 19.3. Their voice is gone through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world, That is, the voice of the Apostles, in the preaching of the Gospel. Hence grew that distraction, and perplexity which we find in the Fathers, Whether it could be truly said, that the Gospel had been preached over all the world in those times. If we number the Fathers, most are of that opinion, That before the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem, this was fulfilled. Of those that think the contrary, some proceed upon reasons ill grounded; particularly Origen; Quid de Britannis & Germanis, Origen. qui nec adhuc audierunt verbum Euangelii? What shall we say of Britanny, and Germany, who have not heard of the Gospel yet? For, before origen's time, (though Origen were 1400. years since) in what darkness soever he mistook us to be, we had a blessed and a glorious discovery of the Gospel of Christ Jesus in this Island. S. Hierome, Hierom. who denies this universal preaching of the Gospel before the destruction of the Temple, yet doubts not but that the fulfilling of that prophecy was then in action, and in a great forwardness; I am completum, aut brevi ternimus complendum; Already we see it performed, says he; Or, at least so earnestly pursued, as that it must necessarily, very soon be performed: Nec puto aliquam remanere gentem, quae Christi nomen ignor at; I do not think, (says that Father, more than 1200. years since) that there is any nation that hath not heard of Christ; Et quanquam non habuerit praedicatorem, ex viciais, etc. If they have not had express Preachers themselves, yet from their neighbours they have had some Echoes of this voice, some reflections of this light. The later Divines, and the School, that find not this early, and general preaching over the world, to lie in proof, proceed to a more safe way, That there was then Odour Euangelii, A sweet savour of the Gospel issued, though it were not yet arrived to all parts: As if a plentiful and diffusive perfume were set up in a house, we would say The house were perfumed, though that perfume were not yet come to every corner of the house. But not to thrust the world into so narrow a strait, as it is, when a Decree is said to have gone out from Augustus, Luk. 2.1. Acts 2.5. to tax all the world, (for this was but the Roman world) Nor, That there were men dwelling at jerusalem, devout men, of every nation under heaven, (for, this was but of nations discovered, and traded withal then) nor, when S. Paul says, Rom. 11.18. Mat. 24.14. That the faith of the Romans was published to the world, (for that was as far as he had gone) those words of our Saviour, This Gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world, for a witness to all nations, and then shall the end come, have evermore, by all, Ancient and Modern, Fathers and School, Preachers and Writers, Expositors and Controverters, been literally understood, that before the end of the world, the Gospel shall be actually, really, evidently, efectually preached to all nations; and so, Cum venerit, When the holy Ghost comes, that is, Antequam abierit, Before he go, he shall reprove, convince the whole world of sin, and this, as he is a Comforter, by accompanying their knowledge of sin, with the knowledge of the Gospel, for the remission of sins. It agrees with the nature of goodness to be so diffusive, communicable to all. It agrees with the nature of God, Gen. 7.11. who is goodness, That as all the fountains of the great Deep were broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened, and so came the flood over all, so there should be Diluvium Spiritus, A flowing out of the holy Ghost upon all, Joel. 2.28. Esay 2.2. Joh. 3.8. as he promises, Effundam, I will pour it out upon all, and Diluvium gentium, That all nations should flow up unto him. For, this Spirit, Spirat ubi vult, Breathes where it pleases him; and though a natural wind cannot blow East and West, North and South together, this Spirit at once breathes upon the most contrary dispositions, upon the presuming, and upon the despairing sinner; and, in an instant can denizen and naturalise that soul that was an alien to the Covenant, Impale and inlay that soul that was bred upon the Common, amongst the Gentiles, transform that soul, which was a Goat, into a Sheep, unite that soul which was a lost sheep to the fold again, shine upon that soul that sits in darkness, and in the shadow of death, and so melt and pour out that soul that yet understands nothing of the Divine nature, nor of the Spirit of God, that it shall become partaker of the Divine nature, 2 Pet. 1.4. 1 Cor. 6.17. and be the same Spirit with the Lord. When Christ took our flesh, he had not all his Ancestors of the Covenant; he was pleased to come of Ruth, a Moabite, a poor stranger; As he came, so will the holy Ghost go to strangers also. Shall any man murmur, or draw into disputation, why this Spirit doth not breath in all nations at once? or why not sooner than it doth in some? Doth this Spirit fall and rest upon every soul in this Congregation now? May not one man find that he receives him now, and suffer him to go away again? May not another who felt no motion of him now, recollect himself at home, and remember something then, which hath been said now, to the quickening of this Spirit in him there? Since the holy Ghost visits us so, successively, not all at once, not all with an equal establishment, we may safely embrace that acceptation of this word Arguet, He shall, he will, Antequam abierit, Before the end come, Reprove, convince the whole world of sin, by this his way, the way of comfort, the preaching of the Gospel. And that is the first acceptation thereof. The second acceptation of the word is in the present; Arguit. not Arguet, He shall, but Arguit, He doth, now he doth reprove all the world. As when the Devil confessed Christ in the Gospel, as when Judas, (who was the Devil's Devil, for, he had sold Christ to the Chiefe-Priests, Mat. 26.14. before Satan entered into him after the Sop, john 13.27.) professed this Gospel, this was not Sine omni impulsu Spiritus Sancti, Altogether without the motion of the Holy Ghost, who had his ends, and his purposes therein, to draw testimonies for Christ out of the mouths of his adversaries; so when a natural man comes to be displeased with his own actions, and to discern sin in them, though his natural faculties be the Instruments in these actions, yet the Holy Ghost sets this Instrument in tune, and makes all that is music and harmony in the faculties of this natural man. At Ephesus S. Paul found certain Disciples which were baptised, and when he asked them, Whether they had received the Holy Ghost, Acts 19.2. they said, That they had not so much as heard that there was a Holy Ghost. So certainly, infinite numbers of men, in those unconverted Nations have the Holy Ghost working in them, though they have never so much as heard that there is a Holy Ghost. When we see any man do any work well, that belongs to the hand, to write, to carve, to play, to do any mechanic office well, do we determine mine our consideration only upon the Instrument, the hand, do we only say, he hath a good, a fit, a well disposed hand for such a work, or do we not rather raise our contemplation to the soul, and her faculties, which enable that hand to do that work? So certainly when a moral man hath any reproof, any sense of sin in himself, the holy Ghost is the intelligence that moves in that sphere, and becomes the soul of his soul, and works that in him primarily, of which, natural faculties, or philosophical instructions, are but ministerial instruments and suppletory assistances after. And not only in the beginning of good actions, but in the prosecution of some evil, the holy Ghost hath an interest, though we discern him not: In the disposing of our sins, the holy Ghost hath a working thus, That when we intended some mischievous sin to morrow, a less sin, some sin of pleasure meets us, and takes hold of us, and diverts us from our first purpose, and so the holy Ghost rescues us from one sin, by suffering us to fall into another. What action soever hath any degree of good, what action soever hath any less evil in it then otherwise it would have had, hath received a working of the holy Ghost, though that man upon whom he hath wrought, knew not his working, nor his name. As we think that we have the differences of seasons, of Winter and Summer, by the natural motion of the Sun, but yet it is not truly by that natural motion, but by a contrary motion of a higher sphere, which draws the Sun against his natural course; (for, if the Sun were left to himself, we should not have these seasons) so if the soul and conscience of a mere natural man have any of these reproofs, and remorses, though perchance fear, or shame, or sickness, or penalties of law, yea though a weariness, and excess of the sin itself, may seem to him to be the thing that reproves him, and that occasions this remorse, because it is the most immediate, and therefore most discernible; yet there is Digitus Dei, The hand of God, and spiritus Spiritus sancti, The breath of the holy Ghost, in all this, who, as a liberal almes-giver sends to persons, that never know who sends, works upon persons, who never know who works. So the holy Ghost reproves all the world of sin; that is, all the reproof, which even the natural man hath, (and every man hath some at sometimes) is from the holy Ghost; and, as in the former sense, the Cum venerit, When he eomes, was Antequam abierit, before he goes, so here the Cum venerit, is Quia adest, because he is always present, and always working. And then there is a third acceptation, where the Arguet is not in the future, Operatus est. That he shall do it, nor in the present, Arguit, That he doth it now in every natural man, but it is in the time past, Arguit. He hath done it, done it already. And here in this sense, it is not that the holy Ghost shall bring the Gospel before the end, to all Nations, that is, Antequam abierit, Nor that the holy Ghost doth exalt the natural faculties of every man in all his good actions, that is, Quia semper adest, but it is, that he hath infused and imprinted in all their hearts, whom he hath called effectually to the participation of the means of salvation in the true Church, a constant and infallible assurance, that all the world, that is, all the rest of the world which hath not embraced those helps, lies unrecoverably (by any other means then these which we have embraced) under sin, under the weight, the condemnation of sin. So that the comfort of this reproof (as all the reproofs of the holy Ghost in this Text, are given by him in that quality, as he is The Comforter) is not directly, and simply, and presently upon all the world indeed, but upon those whom the holy Ghost hath taken out of this world, to his world in this world, that is, to the Christian Church, them he Reproves, that is Convinces them, establishes, delivers them from all scruples, that they have taken the right way, that they, and only they, are delivered, and all the world beside are still under sin. When the Holy Ghost hath brought us into the Ark from whence we may see all the world without, sprawling and gasping in the flood, (the flood of sinful courses in the world, and of the anger of God) when we can see this violent flood, (the anger of God) break in at windows, and there devour the licentious man in his sinful embracements, and make his bed of wantonness his deathbed; when we can see this flood (the anger of God) swell as fast as the ambitious man swells, and pursue him through all his titles, and and at last suddenly, and violently wash him away in his own blood, not always in a vulgar, but sometimes in an ignominious death; when we shall see this flood (the flood of the anger of God) overflow the valley of the voluptuous man's gardens, and orchards, and follow him into his Arbours, and Mounts, and Terasses, and carry him from thence into a bottomless Sea, which no Plummet can sound, (no heavy sadness relieve him) no anchor take hold of, (no repentance stay his tempested and weatherbeaten conscience) when we find ourselves in this Ark, where we have first taken in the fresh water of Baptism, and then the Bread, and Wine, and Flesh, of the Body and Blood of Christ Jesus, Then are we reproved, forbidden all scruple, then are we convinced, That as the twelve Apostles shall sit upon twelve seats, and judge the twelve Tribes at the last day; So doth the Holy Ghost make us Judges of all the world now, and inables us to pronounce that sentence, That all but they, who have sincerely accepted the Christian Religion, are still sub peccato, under sin, and without remedy. For we must not weigh God with leaden, or iron, or stone weights, how much land, or metal, or riches he gives one man more than another, but how much grace in the use of these, or how much patience in the want, or in the loss of these, we have above others. When we come to say, Hi in curribus, Hi in equis, Psal. 20.7. nos autem in nomine Domini Dei nostri invocabimus, Some trust in chariots, and some in horses, Ver. 8. but we will remember the name of the Lord our God; Ipsi obligati sunt, & ceciderunt, nos autem surreximus, & erecti sumus, They are brought down and fallen, but we are risen, and stand upright. Obligati sunt, & ceciderunt, They are pinioned and falle●, fettered, and manacled, and so fallen; fallen and there must lie: Nos autem erecti, We are risen, and enabled to stand, now we are up. When we need not fear the mighty, nor envy the rich, Quia signatum super nos lumen vultus tui Domine, Because the light of thy countenance O Lord, Ver. 7. is (not only shed, but) lifted up upon us, Quia dedisti laetitiam in cord nostro, Because thou hast put gladness in our heart, more than in the time that their corn and their wine increased; when we can thus compare the Christian Church with other States, and spiritual blessings with temporal, then hath the Holy Ghost throughly reproved us, that is, absolutely convinced us, that there is no other foundation but Christ, no other name for salvation but Jesus, and that all the world but the true professors of that name, are still under sin, under the guiltiness of sin. And these be the three acceptations of this word, Arguet, He shall carry the Gospel to all before the end, Arguit, He does work upon the faculties of the natural man every minute, and Arguit again, He hath manifested to us, that that they who go not the same way, perish. And so we pass to the second Reproof and Conviction, He shall reprove the world, De justitia, Of righteousness. This word, 2 Part. Dejustitia. justificare, To justify, may be well considered three ways; First as it is verbum vulgar, as it hath an ordinary and common use; And then as it is verbum forense, as it hath a civil and a legal use; And lastly, as it is verbum Ecclesiasticum, as it hath a Church use, as it hath been used amongst Divines. The first way, To justify, is to aver, and maintain any thing to be true, as we ordinarily say to that purpose, I will justify it; Psal. 19.9. and in that sense the Psalmist says, justificata judicia Domini in semetipso, The judgements of the Lord justify themselves, prove themselves to be just: And in this sense men are said to justify God, Luke 7.29. The Pharisees and Lawyers rejected the counsel of God, but all the people, and the Publicans justified God, that is, testified for him. In the second way, as it is a judicial word, To justify is only a verdict of Not guilty, and a Judgement entered upon that, That there is not evidence enough against him, and therefore he is justified, that is, Prov. 17.14. acquitted. In this sense is the word in the Proverbs, He that justifieth the wicked, and he that condemneth the just, even they both are an abomination to the Lord. Now neither of these two ways are we justified; we cannot be averred to be just; God himself cannot say so of us; Exod. 23.7. of us, as we are we: Non justificabo impium, I will not justify the wicked. God will not say it, God cannot do it; A wicked man cannot be, he cannot, by God, be said to be just; they are incompatible, contradictory things. Nor the second way neither; consider us standing in judgement before God, no man can be acquitted for want of evidence; Psal. 143.2. Enter not into judgement with thy servant, for, in thy sight shall none that liveth be justified. For, if we had another soul to give the Devil, to bribe him, to give no evidence against this, if we had another iron to sear up our consciences against giving of evidence against ourselves then, yet who can take out of God's hands those examinations, and those evidences, which he hath registered exactly, as often as we have thought, or said, or done any thing offensive to him? It is therefore only in the third sense of this word, as it is Verbum Ecclesiasticum, A word which S. Paul, and the other Scriptures, and the Church, and Ecclesiastical Writers have used to express our Righteousness, our Justification by: And that is only by the way of pardon, and remission of sins, sealed to us in the blood of Christ Jesus; that what kind of sinners soever we were before, yet that is applied to us, Such and such you were before, But ye are justified by the name of the Lord jesus, and by the Spirit of our God. 1 Cor. 6 11. Now the reproof of the World, the convincing of the World, the bringing of the World to the knowledge, that as they are all sub peccato, under sin, by the sin of another, so there is a righteousness of another, that must prevail for all their Pardons, this reproof, this convincing, this instruction of the World is thus wrought: That the whole World consisting of Jews and Gentiles, when the Holy Ghost had done enough for the convincing of both these, enough for the overthrowing of all arguments, which could either be brought by the Jew for the righteousness of the Law, or by the Gentile for the righteousness of Works, (all which is abundantly done by the Holy Ghost, in the Epistles of S. Paul, and other Scriptures) when the Holy Ghost had possessed the Church of God, of these all-sufficient Scriptures, Then the promise of Christ was performed, and then, though all the world were not presently converted, yet it was presently convinced by the Holy Ghost, because the Holy Ghost had provided in those Scriptures, of which he is the Author, that nothing could be said in the World's behalf, for any other Righteousness, then by way of pardon in the blood of Christ. Thus much the Holy Ghost tells us; And if we will search after more than he is pleased to tell us, that is to rack the Holy Ghost, to over-labour him, to examine him upon such Intergatories, as belongs not to us, to minister unto him. Curious men are not content to know, That our debt is paid by Christ, but they will know farther, whether Christ have paid it with his own hands, or given us money to pay it ourselves; whether his Righteousness, before it do us any good, be not first made ours by Imputation, or by Inhesion; They must know whose money, and then what money, Gold or Silver, whether his active obedience in fulfilling the Law, or his passive obedience in shedding his blood. But all the Commission of the Holy Ghost here, is, To reprove the World of righteousness, To convince all Sects in the World, that shall constitute any other righteousness, than a free pardon by the incorruptible, and invaluable, and inexhaustible blood of Christ Jesus. By that pardon, his Righteousness is ours: How it is made so, or by what name we shall call our title, or estate, or interest in his Righteousness, let us not inquire. The terms of satisfaction in Christ, of acceptation in the Father, of imputation to us, or inhesion in us, are all pious and religious phrases, and something they express; but yet none of these, Satisfaction, Acceptation, Imputation, Inhesion, will reach home to satisfy them, that will needs inquire, Quo modo, by what means Christ's Righteousness is made ours. This is as far as we need go, Ad eundem modum justi sumus coram Deo, quo cor am eo Christus fuit peccator, So as God made Christ sin for us, 2 Cor. 5.21. we are made the righteousness of God in him: so; but how was that? He that can find no comfort in this Doctrine, till he find How Christ was made sin, and we righteousness, till he can express Quo modo, robs himself of a great deal of peaceful refreshing, which his conscience might receive, in tasting the thing itself in a holy and humble simplicity, without vexing his own, or other men's consciences, or troubling the peace of the Church with impertinent and inextricable curiosities. Those questions are not so impertinent, but they are in a great part unnecessary, which are moved about the cause of our righteousness, our justification. Alas, let us be content that God is the cause, and seek no other. We must never slacken that protestation, That good works are no cause of our justification. But we must always keep up a right signification of that word, Cause. For, Faith itself is no cause; no such cause, as that I can merit Heaven, by faith. What do I merit of the King, by believing that he is the undoubted Heir to all his Dominions, or by believing that he governs well, if I live not in obedience to his Laws. If it were possible to believe aright, and yet live ill, my faith should do me no good. The best faith is not worth Heaven; The value of it grows Ex pacto, That God hath made that Covenant, that Contract, Crede & vives, only believe and thou shalt be safe. Faith is but one of those things, which in several senses are said to justify us. It is truly saîd of God, Deus solus justificat, God only justifies us; Efficienter, nothing can effect it, nothing can work towards it, but only the mere goodness of God. And it is truly said of Christ, Christus solus justificat, Christ only justifies us; Materialiter, nothing enters into the substance and body of the ransom for our sins, but the obedience of Christ. It is also truly said, Sola fides justificat, Only faith justifies us; Instrumentaliter, nothing apprehends, nothing applies the merit of Christ to thee, but thy faith. And lastly it is as truly said, Sola opera justificant, Only our works justify us; Declaratoriè, Only thy good life can assure thy conscience, and the World, that thou art justified. As the efficient justification, the gracious purpose of God had done us no good, without the material satisfaction, the death of Christ had followed; And as that material satisfaction, the death of Christ would do me no good, without the instrumental justification, the apprehension by faith; so neither would this profit without the declaratory justification, by which all is pleaded and established. God enters not into our material justification, that is only Christ's; Christ enters not into our instrumental justification, that is only faiths; Faith enters not into our declaratory justification, (for faith is secret) and declaration belongs to works. Neither of these can be said to justify us alone, so, as that we may take the chain in pieces, and think to be justified by any one link thereof; by God without Christ, by Christ without faith, or by faith without works; And yet every one of these justifies us alone, so, as that none of the rest enter into that way and that means, by which any of these are said to justify us. Consider we then ourselves, as men fallen down into a dark and deep pit; and justification as a chain, consisting of these four links, to be let down to us, and let us take hold of that link that is next us, A good life, and keep a fast and inseparable hold upon that; for though in that sense of which we spoke, Fides justificat sola, Only faith do justify, yet it is not true in any sense, Fides est sola, that there is any faith, where there is nothing but faith. God comes downward to us; but we must go upward to God; not to get above him in his unrevealed Decrees, but to go up towards him, in laying hold upon that lowest link; that as the holy Ghost shall reprove, that is, convince the world, that there is no other righteousness but that of Christ, so he may enable you to pass a judgement upon yourselves, and to testify to the world that you have apprehended that righteousness; Which is that that is principally intended in the third and last part, That the holy Ghost, 3. Part. when he comes, shall reprove the World, as of sin, & of rightcousness, so of judgement. After those two convictions of the World, that is, Jew, and Gentile, first, that they are all under sin, and so in a state of condemnation; And secondly, that there is no righteousness, no justification to be had to the Jew by the Law, nor to the Gentile in Nature, but that there is Righteousness, and Justification enough for all the world, Jew, and Gentile in Christ; In the third place, the Holy Ghost is to reprove, that is, still to convince the world, to acquaint the world with this mystery, That there is a means settled to convey this Righteousness of Christ upon the World, and then an account to be taken of them, who do not lay hold upon this means; for, both these are intended in this word judgement, He shall reprove them, prove to them this double signification of judgement; first, that there is a judgement of order, of rectitude, of government, to which purpose he hath established the Church; And then a judgement of account, and of sentence, and beatification upon them, who did; and malediction upon them who did not apply themselves to the first judgement, that is, to those orderly ways and means of embracing Christ's righteousness, Wi●d. 11.20. which were offered them in the Church. God hath ordered all things in measure, 1 Cor. 14.42. and number, and weight; Let all things be done decently and in order for, God is the God of order, and not of confusion. And this order, is this judgement; The Court, the Tribunal, the Judgement seat, in which all men's consciences and actions must be regulated and ordered, the Church. The perfectest order was Innocency; that first integrity in which God made all. All was disordered by sin: For, in sin, and the author of sin, Satan, there is no order, no conformity; nothing but disorder, and confusion. Though the School do generally acknowledge a distinction of orders in the ministering Spirits of Heaven, now, Angels and Archangels, and others, yet they dispute, and doubt, and (in a great part) deny that this distinction of orders was before the fall of those Angels; for, they confess this distribution into orders, to have been upon their submission, and recognition of God's government, which recognition was their very confirmation, and after that they could not fall. And though those fallen Angels, the Devils, concur in an unan me consent to ruin us, Hi●ron. (for, Bellum Daemonum, summa pax hominum) we should agree better, if devils did fall out, yet this is not such a peace, such an unity, as gives them any peace, or relaxation, or intermission of anguish, but, as they are the Authors of our confusion, so they are in a continual confusion themselves. There is no order in the Author of sin; and therefore the God of order cannot, directly nor indirectly, positively nor consecutively, be the Author of sin. There is no order in sin itself. The nature, the definition of sin, is disorder. Dectum, factum, August. concupitum contra legem; God hath ordered a law, and sin is an act; if we cannot do that, it is a word; if we dare not do that, it is a desire against that law. Forma peccati, deformitas; we can assign sin no other form, but deformity. So that our affecting of any thing, as our end, which God hath not proposed for our end; or our affecting of true ends, by any other ways than he hath proposed, this is a disordering of God's providence, as much as we can, and so a sin. For the School resolves conveniently, probably, that that first sin that ever was committed, (that peccatum praegnans, peccatum prolificum, That womb and matrice of all sins that have been committed since) The sin of the Angels, it was a disorder, an obliquity, a deformity, not in not going to the right end, (for, Illud quaesiverunt, ad quod pervenissent, si stetissent, says Aquinas out of S. August. They desired no more than they were made for, and should have come to, if they had stood) but their sin was in affecting a right end a wrong way, in desiring to come to their appointed perfection by themselves, to subsist of themselves, & to be independent, without any farther need of God, for that was their desire, To be like the most High, To depend upon nothing, but be all-sufficient to themselves. So they disordered God's purpose; and when they had once broke that chain, when they had once put that harmony out of tune, than came in disorder, discord, confusion, and that is sin. God's work is perfect; How appears that? For all his ways are judgement, Deut. 32.4. says Moses in his victorious song. This is Perfection, That he hath established an order, a judgement. Which is not only that order which S. Augustine defines, Ordo est, August. per quem omnia aguntur, quae Deus constituit, The order and the judgement by which God governs the world, according to his purpose, (which judgement is Providence) But (as the same Father says in the same book) it is Ordo, quem si tenueris in vita, perdacet ad Deum, It is an order and a judgement which he hath manifested to thee, (for the order and judgement of his providence, he doth not always manifest) by obedience to which order and judgement, thou mayst be saved. The same Father speaking of this order and judgement of providence, says, Nihil ordini contrarium, Nothing can be contrary to that order; He is in a holy rapture transported with that consideration, That even disorders are within God's order; There is in the order and judgement of his providence an admission, a permission of disorders: This unsearchable proceeding of God, carries him to that passionate exclamation, O sipossem dicere quod vellem! O that I were able to express myself! Rogue, ubi ubi estis verba, suecurrite; Where, where are those words which I had wont to have at command? why do ye not serve me, help me now? Now, when I would declare this, Bona & mala sunt in ordine, That even disorders are done in order, that even our sins some way or other fall within the providence of God. But that is not the order, nor judgement which the holy Ghost is sent to manifest to the world. The holy Ghost works best upon them, which search least into God's secret judgements and proceed. But the order and judgement we speak of, is an order, a judgement-seate established, by which, every man, howsoever oppressed with the burden of sin, may, in the application of the promises of the Gospel by the Ordinance of preaching, and in the seals thereof in the participation of the Sacraments, be assured, that he hath received his Absolution, his Remission, his Pardon, and is restored to the innocency of his Baptism, nay to the integrity which Adam had before the fall, nay to the righteousness of Christ Jesus himself. In the creation God took red earth, and then breathed a soul into it: When Christ came to a second creation, to make a Church, he took earth, men, red earth, men made partakers of his blood; (for, Ecclesiam quaesivit, & acquisivit, Bernard. He desired a Church, and he purchased a Church; but by a blessed way of Simony; Add medium acquisitionis, Sanguine acquisivit, Acts 20.28. He purchased a Church with his own blood) And when he had made this body, in calling his Apostles, than he breathed the soul into them, his Spirit, and that made up all: Quod insufflavit Dominus Apostolis, & dixit, August. Accipite Spiritum sanctum, Ecclesiae potestas collata est, Then when Christ breathed that Spirit into them, he constituted the Church. And this power of Remission of sins, is that order, and that judgement which Christ himself calls by the name of the most orderly frame in this, or the next world, A Kingdom, Dispono vobis regnum, Luk. 22.29. I appoint unto you a Kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me. Now, Faciunt favos & vespa, faciunt Ecclesias & Marcionitae, As Wasps make combs, Tertul. but empty ones, so do Heretics Churches, but frivolous ones, ineffectual ones. And, as we told you before, That errors and disorders are as well in ways, as inends, so may we deprive ourselves of the benefit of this judgement, The Church, as well in circumstances, as in substances, as well in opposing discipline, as doctrine. The holy Ghost reprovc●thee, convinces thee, of judgement, that is, offers thee the knowledge that such a Church there is; A Jordan to wash thine original leprosy in Baptism; A City upon a mountain, to enlighten thee in the works of darkness; a continual application of all that Christ Jesus said, and did, and suffered, to thee. Let no soul say, she can have all this at God's hands immediately, and never trouble the Church; That she can pass her pardon between God and her, without all these formalities, by a secret repentance. It is true, beloved, a true repentance is never frustrate: But yet, if thou wilt think thyself a little Church, a Church to thyself, because thou hast heard it said, That thou art a little world, a world in thyself, that figurative, that metaphorical representation shall not save thee. Though thou be'st a world to thyself, yet if thou have no more corn, nor oil, nor milk, then grows in thyself, or flows from thyself, thou wilt starve; Though thou be a Church in thy fancy, if thou have no more seals of grace, no more absolution of sin, Grego. than thou canst give thyself, thou wilt perish. Per solam Ecclesiam sacrificium libenter accipit Deus: Thou mayst be a Sacrifice in thy chamber, but God receives a Sacrifice more cheerfully at Church. Sola, quae pro errantibus fiducialiter intercedit, Only the Church hath the nature of a surety; Howsoever God may take thine own word at home, yet he accepts the Church in thy behalf, as better security. Join therefore ever with the Communion of Saints; August. Et cum membrum sis ejus corporis, quod loquitur omnibus linguis, crede te omnibus linguis loqui, Whilst thou art a member of that Congregation, that speaks to God with a thousand tongues, believe that thou speakest to God with all those tongues. And though thou know thine own prayers unworthy to come up to God, because thou liftest up to him an eye, which is but now withdrawn from a licentious glancing, and hands which are guilty yet of unrepented uncleannesses, a tongue that hath but lately blasphemed God, a heart which even now breaks the walls of this house of God, and steps home, or runs abroad upon the memory, or upon the new plotting of pleasurable or profitable purposes, though this make thee think thine own prayers uneffectuall, yet believe that some honester man than thyself stands by thee, and that when he prays with thee, he prays for thee; and that, if there be one righteous man in the Congregation, thou art made the more acceptable to God by his prayers; and make that benefit of this reproof, this conviction of the holy Ghost, That he convinces thee De judicio, assures thee of an orderly Church established for thy relief, and that the application of thyself to this judgement, The Church, shall enable thee to stand upright in that other judgement, the last judgement, which is also enwrapped in the signification of this word of our Text, judgement, and is the conclusion for this day. As God begun all with judgement, judicium finale. Sap. 11. (for he made all things in measure, number, and weight) as he proceeded with judgement, in erecting a judicial seat for our direction, and correction, the Church, so he shall end all with judgement, The final, and general judgement, at the Resurrection; which he that believes not, believes nothing; not God; for, Heb. 11.6. He that cometh to God (that makes any step towards him) must believe, Deum remuner atorem, God, and God in that notion, as he is a Rewarder; Therefore there is judgement. But was this work left for the Holy Ghost? Did not the natural man that knew no Holy Ghost, know this? Truly, all their fabulous Divinity, all their Mythology, their Minos, and their Rhadamanthus, tasted of such a notion, as a judgement. And yet the first planters of the Christian Religion found it hardest to fix this root of all other articles, That Christ should come again to judgement. Miserable and froward men! They would believe it in their fables, and would not believe it in the Scriptures; They would believe it in the nine Muses, and would not believe it in the twelve Apostles; They would believe it by Apollo, and they would not believe it by the Holy Ghost; They would be saved Poetically, and fantastically, and would not reasonably, and spiritually; By Copies, and not by Originals; by counterfeit things at first deduced by their Authors, out of our Scriptures, Tertul. and yet not by the word of God himself. Which Tertullian apprehends and reprehends in his time, when he says, Praescribimus adulteris nostris, We prescribe above them, which sergeant our doctrine, for we had it before them, and they have but rags, and those torn from us. Fabulae immissaes, quae fidem infirmarent veritatis; They have brought part of our Scriptures into their Fables, that all the rest might seem but Fables too. Gehennam praedicantes & iudicium, ridemur, decachinnamur, They laugh at us when we preach of hell, and judgement, Et tamen Elysii campi fidem praeoccupaverunt, And yet they will needs be believed when they talk of their Elysian fields. Fideliora nostra, quorum imagines fidem inveniunt, Is it not safer trusting to our substance, than their shadows; To our doctrine of the judgement, in the Scriptures, than their allusions in their Poets? So far Tertullian considers this; But to say the truth, and all the truth, Howsoever the Gentiles had some glimmering of a judgement, that is, an account to be made of our actions after this life, yet of this judgement which we speak of now, which is a general Judgement of all together, And that judgement to be executed by Christ, and to be accompanied with a Resurrection of the body, of this, the Gentiles had no intimation, this was left wholly for the holy Ghost to manifest. And of this, all the world hath received a full convincing from him, because he hath delivered to the world those Scriptures, which do so abundantly, so irrefragably establish it. And therefore, Ecclus. 7.36. Bernard. Memorare novissima & non peccabis; Remember the end, and thou shalt never do amiss. Non dicitur memorare primordia, aut media; If thou remember the first reproof, that all are under sin, that may give occasion of excusing, or extenuating, How could I avoid that, that all men do? If thou remember the second reproof, That there is a righteousness communicable to all that sin, that may occasion so bold a confidence, Since I may have so easy a pardon, what haste of giving over yet? But Memorare novissima, consider that there is a judgement, and that that judgement is the last thing that God hath to do with man, consider this, and thou wilt not sin, not love sin, not do the same sins to morrow thou didst yesterday, as though this judgement were never the nearer, but that as a thousand years are as one day with God, so thy threescore years should be as one night with thee, one continual sleep in the practice of thy beloved sin. Thou wilt not think so, if thou remember this judgement. Now, in respect of the time after this judgement, (which is Eternity) the time between this and it cannot be a minute; and therefore think thyself at that Tribunal, that judgement now: Where thou shalt not only ●●are all thy sinful works, and words, and thoughts repeated, which thou thyself hadst utterly forgot, but thou shalt hear thy good works, thine alms, thy coming to Church, thy hearing of Sermons given in evidence against thee, because they had hypocrisy mingled in them; yea thou shalt find even thy repentance to condemn thee, because thou madest that but a door to a relapse. There thou shalt see, to thine inexpressible terror, some others cast down into hell, for thy sins; for those sins which they would not have done, but upon thy provocation. There thou shalt see some that occasioned thy sins, and accompanied thee in them, and sinned them in a greater measure than thou didst, taken up into heaven, because in the way, they remembered the end, and thou shalt sink under a less weight, because thou never lookedst towards him that would have eased thee of it. Bernard. Quis non cogitans haec in desperationis rotetur abyssum? Who can once think of this and not be tumbled into desperation? But who can think of it twice, maturely, and by the Holy Ghost, and not find comfort in it, when the same light that shows me the judgement, shows me the Judge too? Knowing therefore the terrors of the Lord, we persuade men; 1 Cor. 5.15. but knowing the comforts too, we importune men to this consideration, That as God precedes with judgement in this world, to give the issue with the tentation, and competent strength with the affliction, as the Wiseman expresses it, Wisd. 12.21. That God punishes his enemies with deliberation, and requesting, (as our former Translation had it) and then with how great circumspection will he judge his children? So he gives us a holy hope, That as he hath accepted us in this first judgement, the Church, and made us partakers of the Word and Sacraments there, So he will bring us with comfort to that place, which no tongue but the tongue of S. Paul, and that moved by the Holy Ghost, could describe, and which he does describe so gloriously, and so pathetically, You are come unto Mount Zion, Heb. 12.22. and to the City of the living God, The heavenly jerusalem, And to an innumerable company of Angels, To the general Assembly and Church of the first borne, which are written in heaven, and to God the judge of all, and to jesus the Mediator of the new Covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaks better things than the blood of Abel. And into this blessed and inseparable society, The Father of lights, and God of all comfort, give you an admission now, and an irremoveable possession hereafter, for his only Sons only sake, and by the working of his blessed Spirit, whom he sends to work in you, This reproof of Sin, of Righteousness, and of judgement. Amen. SERMONS Preached upon Trinity-Sunday. SERM. XXXVIII. Preached upon Trinity-Sunday. 2 COR. 1.3. Blessed be God, even the Father of our Lord jesus Christ, the Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort. THere was never Army composed of so many several Nations, the Tower of Babel itself, in the confusion of tongues, gave not so many several sounds as are uttered and mustered against God, and his Religion. The Atheist denies God; for, though David call it a foolish thing to do so, (The fool hath said it in his heart) And though David speak it in the singular number, The fool, as though there were not many so very fools, as to say, and to say in their heart, There is no God, yet some such fools there are, that say it in their very heart, and have made shift to think so indeed; But for such fools as say it in their actions, that is, that live as though there were no God, Stultorum plena sunt omnia; We have seen fools in the Court, and fools in the Cloister, fools that take no calling, and fools in all callings that can be taken, fools that hear, and fools that preach, fools at general Counsels, and fools at Councell-tables, Stultorum plena sunt omnia, such fools as deny God, so far, as to leave him out, are not in David's singular number, but superabound in every profession: So that David's manner of expressing it, is not so much singular, as though there were but one, or few such fools, but emphatical, because that fool, that any way denies God, is the fool, the veriest fool of all kinds of foolishness. Now, as God himself, so his religion amongst us hath many enemies; Enemies that deny God, as Atheists; And enemies that multiply gods, that make many gods, as Idolaters; And enemies that deny those divers persons in the Godhead, which they should confess, The Trinity, as Jews and Turks: So in his Religion, and outward worship, we have enemies that deny God his House, that deny us any Church, any Sacrament, any Priesthood, any Salvation, as Papists; And enemies that deny God's house any furniture, any stuff, any beauty, any ornament, any order, as non-Conformitans; And enemies that are glad to see God's house richly furnished for a while, that they may come to the spoil thereof, as sacrilegious usurpers of God's part. But for Atheistical enemies, I call not upon them here, to answer me; Let them answer their own terrors, and horrors alone at midnight, and tell themselves whence that proceeds, if there be no God. For Papistical enemies, I call not upon them to answer me; Let them answer our Laws as well as our Preaching, because theirs is a religion mixed as well of Treason, as of Idolatry. For our refractory, and schismatical enemies, I call not upon them to answer me neither; Let them answer the Church of God, in what nation, in what age was there ever seen a Church, of that form, that they have dreamt, and believe their own dream? And for our sacrilegious enemies, let them answer out of the body of Story, and give one example of prosperity upon sacrilege. But leaving all these to that which hath heretofore, or may hereafter be said of them, I have bend my meditations, for those days, which this Term will afford, upon that, which is the character and mark of all Christians in general, The Trinity, the three Persons in one God; not by way of subtle disputation, as to persons that doubted, but by way of godly declaration, as to persons disposed to make use of it; not as though I feared your faith needed it, nor as though I hoped I could make your reason comprehend it, but because I presume, that the consideration of God the Father, and his Power, and the sins directed against God, in that notion, as the Father; and the consideration of God the Son, and his Wisdom, and the sins against God, in that apprehension, the Son; and the consideration of God the Holy Ghost, and his Goodness, and the sins against God, in that acceptation, may conduce, as much, at least, to our edification, as any Doctrine, more controverted. And of the first glorious person of this blessed Trinity, the Almighty Father, is this Text, Blessed be God, etc. In these words, Divisio. the Apostle having tasted, having been fed with the sense of the power, and of the mercies of God, in his gracious deliverance, delivers a short Catechism of all our duties: So short, as that there is but one action, Benedicamus, Let us bless; Nor but one object to direct that blessing upon, Benedicamus Deum, Let us bless God. It is but one God, to exclude an Idolatrous multiplicity of Gods, But it is one God notified and manifested to us, in a triplicity of persons; of which, the first is literally expressed here, That he is a Father. And him we consider In Paternitate aeterna, As he is the eternal Father, Even the Father of our Lord jesus Christ, says our Text; And then In Paternitate interna, as we have the Spirit of Adoption, by which we cry, Abba, Father; As he is Pater miserationum, The Father of mercies; And as he expresses these mercies, by the seal and demonstration of comfort, as he is the God of comfort, and Totius consolationis, Of all comfort. Receive the sum of this, and all that arises from it, in this short Paraphrase; The duty required of a Christian, is Blessing, Praise, Thanksgiving; To whom? To God, to God only, to the only God. There is but one; But this one God is such● tree, as hath divers boughs to shadow and refresh thee, divers branches to shed fruit upon thee, divers arms to spread out, and reach, and embrace thee. And here he visits thee as a Father: From all eternity a Father of Christ jesus, and now thy Father in him in that which thou needest most, A Father of mercy, when thou wast in misery; And a God of comfort, when thou foundest no comfort in this world, And a God of all comfort, even of spiritual comfort, in the anguishs, and distresses of thy conscience. Blessed be God, even the Father, etc. First then, 1 Part. Benedictus. the duty which God, by this Apostle, requires of man, is a duty arising out of that, which God hath wrought upon him: It is not a consideration, a contemplation of God sitting in heaven, but of God working upon the earth; not in the making of his eternal Decree there, but in the execution of those Decrees here; not in saying, God knows who are his, and therefore they cannot fail, but in saying in a rectified conscience, God, by his ordinary marks, hath let me know that I am his, and therefore I look to my ways, that I do not fall. S. Paul out of a religious sense what God had done for him, comes to this duty, to bless him. There is not a better Grammar to learn, then to learn how to bless God, and therefore it may be no levity, to use some Grammar terms herein. God blesses man Datiuè, He gives good to him; man blesses God Optatiuè, He wishes well to him; and he blesses him Vocatiuè, He speaks well of him. For, though towards God, as well as towards man, 1 Sam. 25.27. 2 King 5.15. real actions are called blessings, (so Abigail called the present which she brought to David, A blessing, and so Naaman called that which he offered to Elisha, A blessing) though real sacrifices to God, and his cause, sacrifices of Alms, sacrifices of Arms, sacrifices of Money, sacrifices of Sermons, advancing a good public cause, may come under the name of blessing, yet the word here, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is properly a blessing in speech, in discourse, in conference, in words, in praise, in thanks. The dead do not praise thee, says David; The dead (men civilly dead, allegorically dead, dead and buried in an useless silence, in a Cloister, or College, may praise God, but not in words of edification, as it is required here, and they are but dead, and do not praise God so; and God is not the God of the dead, but of the living, of those that delight to praise and bless God, and to declare his goodness. We represent the Angels to ourselves, and to the world with wings, they are able to fly; and yet when jacob saw them aseending and descending, Gen. 28.12. even those winged Angels had a Ladder, they went by degrees: There is an immediate blessing of God, by the heart, but God requires the tongue too, because that spreads and diffuses his glory upon others too. Calici benedictionis benedicimus, says the Apostle, The cup which we bless, 1 Cor. 10.16. is a cup of blessing; When we have blessed it, according to Christ's holy institution, than it derives holy blessings upon us; and when we bless God according to his Commandment, he blesses us according to his promise, and our desire. Exod. 6.12. jer. 1.6. When God employed Moses, and when he employed jeremy, Moses and jeremy had no excuse, but the unreadiness of their tongues; he that hath a tongue disposed to God's service, that will speak all he can, and dares speak all he should to the glory of God, is fit for all. james 3.5. As S. james says, The tongue is but a little member, but beasteth great things; so truly, as little as it is, it does great things towards our salvation. The Son of God, is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, verbum, The word; God made us with his word, and with our words we make God so fare, as that we make up the mystical body of Christ Jesus with our prayers, with our whole liturgy, and we make the natural body of Christ Jesus appliable to our souls, by the words of Consecration in the Sacrament, and our souls apprehensive, and capable of that body, by the word Preached. Bless him therefore in speaking to him, in your prayers: Bless him in speaking with him, in assenting, in answering that which he says to you in his word: And bless him in speaking of him, in telling one another the good things that he hath done abundantly for you. I will bless the Lord at all times, says David. Psal. 34.2. Is it at all times, says S. Augustine, Cum circumfluunt omnia, at all times, when God blesses me with temporal prosperity? Cum minus nascuntur, cum nata dilabuntur, says that Father, when thy gain ceases for the present, when that that thou hadst formerly got, wastes and perishes, and threatens penury for the future, still bless thou the Lord, Quia ille dat, ille tollit, sed seipsum à benedicente se non tollit; The Lord gives, and the Lord takes away, but the Lord never takes away himself from him that delights in blessing his name. Bless, praise, speak; there is the duty, and we have done with that which was our first Part: And bless thou God, which is our second Part, and a Part derived into many Branches. Blessed be God, even, etc. Here first we see the object of our praises, whom we must bless, Benedict us sit Deus, 2 Part. Deum solum. God. First, Solus Deus, God only, that is, God and not man, and then Deus solus, the only God, that is God, and not many Gods. God only, and not man; not that we may not bless, and wish well to one another, for there is a blessing from God, belongs to that, Benedicam benedicentibus tibi, says God to Abraham, Gen. 12.3. I will bless them that bless thee: Neither is it that we may not bless, that is, give due praise to one another; for as the vices and sins of great persons are not smothered in the Scriptures, so their virtues, and good deeds are published with praise. Noah's drunkenness, and Lot's incest is not disguised, jobs righteousness and holy patience is not concealed neither; Rom 13.3. Do that which is good, says the Apostle, and thou shalt have praise for the same. Neither is it that we may not bless, that is, pray for one another, of what sort soever; for we are commanded to do that, for our superiors; inferiors may bless superiors too; Nor that we should not bless, that is, pray to one another, in petitioning and supplicating our superiors for those things which are committed to their dispensation; Luke 18.5. for the importunate suitor, the widow, is not blamed in the Gospel for her importunity to the Judge; It is true, the Judge is blamed, for withholding Justice, till importunity extorted it. But to bless, by praise, or prayer, the man without relation to God, that is, the man, and not God in the man, to determine the glory in the person, without contributing thereby to the glory of God, this is a manner of blessing accursed here, because blessing is radically, fundamentally, originally, here reserved to God, to God only, Benedictus sit Deus, God be blessed. For, properly, truly none is to be thus blessed by us, but he upon whom we may depend and rely: and can we depend and rely upon man? upon what man? upon Princes? As far as we can look for examples, round about us, in our next neighbours, and in France, and in Spain, and farther, we have seen in our age Kings discarded, and we have seen in some of them, the discarded cards taken in again, and win the game. Upon what man wilt thou rely? upon great persons in favour with Princes? Have we not seen often, that the bedchambers of Kings have backdoors into prisons, and that the end of that greatness hath been, but to have a greater Jury to condemn them? wilt thou rely upon the Prophet, he can teach thee; or upon thy Brother, he does love thee; or upon thy Son, he should love thee; or the Wife of thy bosom, she will say she loves thee; or upon thy Friend, Deut. 13. he is as thine own soul? yet Moses puts a case when thou must departed from all these, not consent, no not conceal, not pardon, no not reprieve, Thou shalt surely kill him, says Moses, even this Prophet, this Brother, this Son, this Wife may incline thee to the service of other Gods; Thou canst not rely, and therefore do not bless, not with praise, not with prayer and dependence upon him, That Prophet, by what name or title soever he be called; that Brother, how willingly soever he divide the inheritance with thee; that Son, how dutiful soever in civil things; that Wife, how careful soever of her own honour, and thy children; that Friend, how free soever of his favours, and of his secrets, that inclines thee to other Gods, or to other service of the true God, then is true. Greatness is not the object of this blessing, for Greatness is often eclipsed by the way, and at last certainly extinguished in death, and swallowed in the grave. Goodness, as it is moral, is not the object of this blessing; but bless God only; God in the root, in himself, or God exemplified, and manifested in godly men; bless God in them, in whom he appears, and in them who appear for him, and so thou dost bless solum Deum, God only. This thou must do, Deus solus. Bless God only, not man, and then the only God, not other gods. For, this was the wretched and penurious narrowness to which the Gentiles were reduced, that being unable to consider God entirely, they broke God in pieces, and crumbled, and scattered God into as many several gods, as there are Powers in God, nay almost into as many several gods, as there are Creatures from God; and more than that, as many gods as they could fancy or imagine in making Chimeras of their own, for not only that which was not God, but that which was not at all, was made a God. And then, as in narrow channels that cannot contain the water, the water overflows, and yet that water that does so over flow, flies out and spreads to such a shallowness, as will not bear a Boat to any use; so when by this narrowness in the Gentiles, God had overflown this bank, this limitation of God in an unity, all the rest was too shallow to bear any such notion, any such consideration of God, as appertained to him: They could not think him an Omnipotent God, when if one God would not, another would, nor an Infinite God, when they had appeals from one God to another; and without Omnipotence, and without Infiniteness they could not truly conceive a God. They had cantoned a glorious Monarchy into petty States, that could not subsist of themselves, nor assist another, and so imagined a God for every state and every action, that a man must have applied himself to one God when he shipped, and when he landed to another, and if he travailed farther, change his God by the way, as often as he changed coins, or post-horses. Deut. 6.4. But, Hear O Israel, the Lord thy God is one God. As though this were all that were to be heard, all that were to be learned, they are called to hear, and then there is no more said but that, The Lord thy God is one God. There are men that will say and swear, they do not mean to make God the Author of sin; but yet when they say, That God made man therefore, that he might have something to damn, and that he made him sin therefore, that he might have something to damn him for, truly they come too near making God the Author of sin, for all their modest protestation of abstaining. So there are men that will say and swear, they do not mean to make Saints Gods; but yet when they will ask the same things at Saints hands, which they do at Gods, and in the same phrase and manner of expression, when they will pray the Virgin Mary to assist her Son, nay to command her Son, and make her a Chancellor to mitigate his common Law, truly they come too near making more Gods then one. And so do we too, when we give particular sins dominion over us; Quot vitia, tot Deos recentes, says Hierom: As the Apostle says Covetousness is Idolatry, so, says that Father, is voluptuousness, and licentiousness, and every habitual sin. Non alienum says God, Thou shalt have no other God but me, But, Quis similis, says God too, Who is like me? He will have nothing made like him, not made so like a God as they make their Saints, nor made so like a God, as we make our sins. We think one King Sovereign enough, and one friend counsellor enough, and one Wife helper enough, and he is strangely insatiable, that thinks not one God, God enough: especially, since when thou hast called this God what thou canst, H●●●r. he is more than thou hast said of him. Cum definitur, ipse sua definitione crescit; When thou hast defined him to be the God of justice, and tremblest, he is more than that, he is the God of mercy too, and gives thee comfort. When thou hast defined him to be all eye, He sees all thy sins, he is more than that, he is all patience, and covers all thy sins. And though he be in his nature incomprehensible, and inaccessible in his light, yet this is his infinite largeness, that being thus infinitely One, he hath manifested himself to us in three Persons, to be the more easily discerned by us, and the more closely and effectually applied to us. Now these notions that we have of God, as a Father, as a Son, as a Holy Ghost, Trinitas. as a Spirit working in us, are so many handles by which we may take hold of God, and so many breasts, by which we may suck such a knowledge of God, as that by it we may grow up into him. And as we cannot take hold of a torch by the light, but by the staff we may; so though we cannot take hold of God, as God, who is incomprehensible, and inapprehensible, yet as a Father, as a Son, as a Spirit, dwelling in us, we can. There is nothing in Nature that can fully represent and bring home the notion of the Trinity to us. There is an elder book in the World than the Scriptures; It is not well said, in the World, for it is the World itself, the whole book of Creatures; And indeed the Scriptures are but a paraphrase, but a comment, but an illustration of that book of Creatures. And therefore, though the Scriptures only deliver us the doctrine of the Trinity, clearly, yet there are some impressions, some obumbrations of it, in Nature too. Take but one in ourselves, in the soul. The understanding of man (that is as the Father) begets discourse, ratiocination, and that is as the Son; and out of these two proceed conclusions, and that is as the Holy Ghost. Such as these there are many, many sprinkled in the School, many scattered in the Fathers, but, God knows, poor and faint expressions of the Trinity. But yet, Praemisit Deus naturam magistram, Tertul. submissurus & prophetiam, Though God meant to give us degrees in the University, that is, increase of knowledge in his Scriptures after, yet he gave us a pedagogy, he sent us to School in Nature before; faciliùs credas prophetiae discipulus naturae, That coming out of that School, thou mightest profit the better in that University, having well considered Nature, thou mightest be established in the Scriptures. He is therefore inexcusable, that considers not God in the Creature, that coming into a fair Garden, says only, Here is a good Gardiner, and not, Here is a good God; and when he sees any great change, says only, This is a strange accident, and not, a strange Judgement. Hence is it, that in the books of the Platonique Philosophers, and in others, much ancienter than they, (if the books of Hermes Trismegistus and others, be as ancient as is pretended in their behalf) we find as clear expressing of the Trinity, as in the Old Testament, at least; And hence is it, that in the Talmud of the Jews, and in the Alcoran of the Turks, though they both oppose the Trinity, yet when they handle not that point, there fall often from them, as clear confessions of the three Persons, as from any of the elder of those Philosophers, who were altogether disinterested in that Controversy. But because God is seen Per creaturas, ut per speculum, per verbum ut per lucem, Aleus. In the creature, and in nature, but by reflection, In the Word, and in the Scriptures, directly, we rest in the knowledge which we have of the plurality of the persons, in the Scriptures; And because we are not now in a Congregation that doubts it, nor in a place to multiply testimonies, we content ourselves (being already possessed with the belief thereof) with this illustration from the old Testament, That the name of our one God, is expressed in the plural number, in that place, which we mentioned before, where it is said, Deut. 6.4. The Lord thy God is one God, that is, Elohim, unus Dii, one Gods. And though as much as that seem to be said by God to Moses, Eris Aaroni in Elohim, Thou shalt be as Gods to Aaron; Exod. 4.16. Yet that was because Moses was to represent God, all God, all the Persons in God, and therefore it might as well be spoken plurally of Moses, so, as of God. But because it is said, Gods appeared unto jacob; And again, Dii Sancti ipse est, He is the Holy Gods; Gen. 35.7. Ios. 24.19. job 35.10. Gen. 1.26. Gen. 3 22. And so also, Vbi Deus factores mei? Where is God my Makers? And God says of himself, Faciamus hominem, and Factus est sicut unus ex nobis, God says, Let us make man, and he says, Man is become as one of us, We embrace humbly, and thankfully, and profitably, this, shall we call it Effigiationem ansarum, This making out of handles? Or Protuberationem mammarum, This swelling out of breasts? Or Germinationem gemmarum, This putting forth of buds, and blossoms, and fruits, by which we may apprehend, and see, and taste God himself, so as his wisdom hath chosen to communicate himself to us, in the notion and manifestation of divers persons? Of which in this Text, we lay hold on him, by the first handle, by the name of Father. Blessed be God, even the Father, etc. Now we consider in God, Pater Essentialiter. a twofold Paternity, a twofold Fatherhood: One, as he is Father to others, another as to us. And the first is twofold too: One essentially, by which he is a Father by Creation, and so the name of Father belongs to all the three Persons in the Trinity, Eph. 4.6. for, There is one God, and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all, Which is spoken of God gathered into his Essence, and not diffused into persons. Esay 9.6. In which sense, the Son of God, Christ Jesus, is called Father, Unto us a Son is given, and his name shall be The Everlasting Father: And to this Father, even to the Son of God, Mat. 9.2. in this sense, are the faithful made sons, Son, be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee, Mark 5.34. says Christ to the Paralytique, And Daughter, thy faith hath made thee whole, says he to the woman with the bloody issue; Thus Christ is a Father; And thus Per filiationem vestigii, By that impression of God, which is in the very being of every creature, job 38.28. God, that is, the whole Trinity, is the Father of every creature, as in job, Quis pluviae Pater? Hath the rain a Father? or who hath begotten the drops of dew? And so in the Prophet, Mal. 2.10. Have we not all one Father? hath not one God created us? But the second Paternity is more mysterious in itself, and more precious to us, as he is a Father, not by Creation, but by Generation, Even the Father of our Lord jesus Christ. Now, Personaliter. Generationem istam quis enarrabit? who shall declare this generation? who shall tell us how it was? who was there to fee it? Since the firstborn of all creatures, the Angels, Esay 53.8. who are almost six thousand years old, (and much elder in the opinion of many of the Fathers, who think the Angels to have been created long before the general Creation) since, I say, these Angels are but in their swathing clouts, but in their cradle, in respect of this eternal generation, who was present? Quis enarrabit? who shall tell us how it was? who shall tell us when it was, when it was so long before any time was, as that, when time shall be no more, and that, after an end of time, we shall have lived infinite millions of millions of generations in heaven, yet this generation of the Son of God, was as long before that immortal life, as that Immortality, and Everlastingness shall be after this life? It cannot be expressed, nor conceived how long our life shall be after, nor how long this generation was before. This is that Father, Nazian. that hath a Son, and yet is no elder than that Son, for he is à Patre, but not Post Patrem, but so from the Father, as he is not after the Father: He hath from him Principium Originale, Biel. but not Initiale, A root from whence he sprung, but no spring-time, when he sprung out of that root. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord jesus Christ. Wherefore blessed? Quia potuit? Because he could have a Son? Non generavit potentia, sed natura; God did not beget this Son because he had always a power to do so; for then, if this Son had ever been but in Potentia, only in such a condition, as that he might have been, than this had not been an eternal generation, for if there were a time, when only he might have been, at that time he was not. He is not blessed then because cause he could, is he blessed (that is, to be blessed by us) because he would beget this Son? Non generavit voluntate, sed natura: God did not beget this Son, then when he would, that is, had a will to do so, for, if his will determined it, now I will do it, then till that, there had been no Son, and so this generation had not been eternal neither. But when it was, or how it was, Turatiocinare, ego mirer, says S. Augustine, Let others discourse it, let me admire it; Tu disputa, ego credam, Let others dispute it, let me believe it. And when all is done, you have done disputing, and I have done wondering, that that brings it nearer than either, is this, That there is a Paternity, notby Creation, by which Christ and the Holy Ghost are Fathers too, nor by generation, by which God is, though inexpressibly, the Father even of our Lord Jesus Christ, but by Adoption, as in Christ Jesus, he is Father of us all, notified in the next appellation, Pater miserationum, The Father of mercies. In this alone, Pater. we discern the whole Trinity; here is the Father, and here is Mercy, which mercy is in the Son; And the effect of this mercy, is the Spirit of Adoption, by which also we cry, Rem. 8.15. Abba, Father too. When Christ would pierce into his Father, and melt those bowels of compassion, he enters with that word, Abba, Father, All things are possible to thee; Mark 14.36. take away this Cup from me. When Christ apprehended an absence, a dereliction on God's part, he calls not upon him by this name, not My Father, but My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Mat. 27.37. But when he would incline him to mercy, mercy to others, mercy to enemies, he comes in that name, wherein he could be denied nothing, Father; Father forgive them, they know not what they do. He is the Lord of Hosts; Luke 23.24. There he scatters us in thunder, transports us in tempests, enwraps us in confusion, astonishes us with stupefaction, and consternation; The Lord of Hosts, but yet the Father of mercies, There he receives us into his own bowels, fills our emptiness, with the blood of his own Son, and incorporates us in him; The Lord of Hosts, but the Father of mercy. Sometimes our natural Fathers die, before they can gather any state to leave us, but he is the immortal Father, and all things that are, as soon as they were, were his. Sometimes our natural Fathers live to waste, and dissipate that state which was left them, to be left us: but this is the Father, out of whose hands, and possession nothing can be removed, and who gives inestimably, and yet remains inexhaustible. Sometimes our natural Fathers live to need us, and to live upon us: but this is that Father whom we need every minute, and requires nothing of us, but that poor rent of Benedictus sit, Blessed, praised, glorified be this Father. This Father of mercies, of mercies in the plural; David calls God, Miserationum. Psal. 59.17. Numb. 14.19. Psal. 51.1. Misericordiam suam, His mercy; all at once: God is the God of my mercy: God is all ours, and all mercy. Pardon this people, says Moses, Secundùm magnitudinem misericordiae, According to the greatness of thy mercy. Pardon me, says David, Have mercy upon me, Secùndum multitudinem misericordiarum, According to the multitude of thy mercies: His mercy, in largeness, in number, extends over all; It was his mercy that we were made, and it is his mercy that we are not consumed. David calls his mercy, Multiplicatam, and Mirificatam, Psal. 17.7. Psal. 31.22. It is manifold, and it is marvellous, miraculous: Show thy marvellous loving kindness; and therefore David in several places, carries it Super judicium, above his judgements, Super Coelos, above the heavens, Super omnia opera, above all his works. And for the multitude of his mercies, (for we are now upon the consideration of the plurality thereof, Pater miserationum, Father of mercies) put together that which David says, Psal. 89.50. Vbi misericordiae tuae antiquae? Where are thy ancient mercies? His mercy is as Ancient, as the Ancient of days, who is God himself, And that which another Prophet says, Omni mane, His mercies are new every morning, And put between these two, between God's former, and his future mercies, his present mercy, in bringing thee this minute to the consideration of them, and thou hast found Multiplicatam, and Mirificatam, manifold, and wondrous mercy. But carry thy thoughts upon these three Branches of his mercy, and it will be enough. First, that upon Adam's fall, and all ours in him, he himself would think of such a way of mercy, as from Adam, to that man whom Christ shall find alive at the last day, no man would ever have thought of, that is, that to show mercy to his enemies, he would deliver his own, his only, his beloved Son, to shame, to torments, to death: That he would plant German jehovae in semine mulieris, The blossom, the branch of God, in the seed of the woman: This mercy, in that first promise of that Messiah, was such a mercy, as not only none could have undertaken, but none could have imagined but God himself: And in this promise, we were conceived In visceribus Patris, In the bowels of this Father of mercies. In these bowels, in the womb of this promise we lay four thousand years; The blood with which we were fed then, was the blood of the Sacrifices, and the quickening which we had there, was an inanimation, by the often refreshing of this promise of that Messiah in the Prophets. But in the fullness of time, that infallible promise came to an actual performance, Christ came in the flesh, and so, Venimus ad partum, In his birth we were borne; and that was the second mercy; in the promise, in the performance, he is Pater miserationum, Father of mercies. And then there is a third mercy, as great, That he having sent his Son, and having re-assumed him into heaven again, he hath sent his Holy Spirit to govern his Church, and so becomes a Father to us, in that Adoption, in the application of Christ to us, by the Holy Ghost; and this as that which is intended in the last word, Deus totius Consolationis, The God of all Comfort. I may know that there is a Messiah promised, and yet be without comfort, Consolatio. in a fruitless expectation; The Jews are so in their dispersion. When the Jews will still post-date the come of Christ, when some of them say, There was no certain time of his coming designed by the Prophets; And others, There was a time, but God for their sins prorogued it; And others again, God kept his word, the Messiah did come when it was promised he should come, but for their sins, he conceals himself from Manifestation; when the Jews will postdate his first coming, and the Papists will antedate his second coming, in a coming that cannot become him, That he comes, even to his Saints in torment, before he comes in glory, That when he comes to them at their dissolution, at their death, he comes not to take them to Heaven, but to cast them into one part of hell, That the best comfort which a good man can have at his death, is but Purgatory, Miserable comforters are they all. How fair a beam of the joys of Heaven is true comfort in this life? If I know the mercies of God exhibited to others, and feel them not in myself, I am not of David's Church, Psal. 59.1. not of his Choir, I cannot sing of the mercies of God: I may see them, and I may sigh to see the mercies of God determined in others, and not extended to me; but I cannot sing of the mercies of God, if I find no mercy. But when I come to that, Psal. 94.19. Consolationes tuae laetificaverunt, In the multitude of my thoughts within me, thy comforts delight my soul, than the true Comforter is descended upon me, and the Holy Ghost hath over-shadowed me, Mat. 5.4. and all that shall be borne of me, and proceed from me, shall be holy. Blessed are they that mourn, says Christ: But the blessedness is not in the mourning, but because they shall be comforted. Blessed am I in the sense of my sins, and in the sorrow for them, but blessed therefore, because this sorrow leads me to my reconciliation to God, and the consolation of his Spirit. Whereas, if I sink in this sorrow, in this dejection of spirit, though it were Wine in the beginning, it is lees, and tartar in the end; Inordinate sorrow grows into sinful melancholy, and that melancholy, into an irrecoverable desperation. The Wisemen of the East, by a less light, found a greater, by a Star, they found the Son of glory, Christ Jesus: But by darkness, nothing: By the beams of comfort in this life, we come to the body of the Sun, by the Rivers, to the Ocean, by the cheerfulness of heart here, to the brightness, to the fullness of joy hereafter. For, beloved, Salvation itself being so often presented to us in the names of Glory, and of Joy, we cannot think that the way to that glory is a sordid life affected here, an obscure, a beggarly, a negligent abandoning of all ways of preferment, or riches, or estimation in this World, for the glory of Heaven shines down in these beams hither; Neither can men think, that the way to the joys of Heaven, is a joyless severeness, a rigid austerity; for as God loves a cheerful giver, so he loves a cheerful taker, that takes hold of his mercies and his comforts with a cheerful heart, not only without grudging, that they are no more, but without jealousy and suspicion that they are not so much, or not enough. But they must be his comforts that we take in, Deus. God's comforts. For, to this purpose, the Apostle varies the phrase; It was The Father of mercies; To represent to us gentleness, kindness, favour, it was enough to bring it in the name of Father; But this Comfort, a power to erect and settle a tottering, a dejected soul, an overthrown, a bruised, a broken, a trodden, a ground, a battered, an evaporated, an annihilated spirit, this is an act of such might, as requires the assurance, the presence of God. God knows, all men receive not comforts, when other men think they do, nor are all things comforts to them, which we present, and mean should be so. Your Father may leave you his inheritance, and little knows he the little comfort you have in this, because it is not left to you, but to those Creditors to whom you have engaged it. Your Wife is officious to you in your sickness, and little knows she, that even that officiousness of hers then, and that kindness, aggravates that discomfort, which lies upon thy soul, for those injuries which thou hadst formerly multiplied against her, in the bosom of strange women. Except the God of comfort give it, in that seal, in peace of conscience, Nec intus, nec subtus, nec circa te occurrit consolatio, says S. Bernard; Non subtus, not from below thee, from the reverence and acclamation of thy inferiors; Non circa, not from about thee, when all places, all preferments are within thy reach, so that thou mayst lay thy hand, and set thy foot where thou wilt; Non intus, not from within thee, though thou have an inward testimony of a moral constancy, in all afflictions that can fall, yet not from below thee, not from about thee, not from within thee, but from above must come thy comfort, or it is mistaken. S. chrysostom notes, and Areopagita had noted it before him, Ex beneficiis acceptis nomina Deo affingimus, We give God names according to the nature of the benefits which he hath given us: So when God had given David victory in the wars, by the exercise of his power, then Fortitudo mea, Psal. 18.2. Psal. 27.1. and firmamentum, The Lord is my Rock, and my Castle: When God discovered the plots and practices of his enemies to him, then Dominus illuminatio, The Lord is my light, and my salvation. So whensoever thou takest in any comfort, be sure that thou have it from him that can give it; for this God is Deus totius consolationis, The God of all comfort. Preciosa divina consolatio, nec omnino tribuitur admittentibus alienam: Totius. Bernard● The comforts of God are of a precious nature, and they lose their value, by being mingled with base comforts, as gold does with allay. Sometimes we make up a sum of gold, with silver, but does any man bind up farthing tokens, with a bag of gold? Spiritual comforts which have always God's stamp upon them, are his gold, and temporal comforts, when they have his stamp upon them, are his silver, but comforts of our own coining, are counterfeit, are copper. Because I am weary of solitariness, I will seek company, and my company shall be, to make my body the body of a harlot: Because I am drowsy, I will be kept awake, with the obscenities and scurrilities of a Comedy, or the drums and ejulations of a Tragedy: I will smother and suffocate sorrow, with hill upon hill, course after course at a voluptuous feast, and drown sorrow in excess of Wine, and call that sickness, health; and all this is no comfort, for God is the God of all comfort, and this is not of God. We cannot say with any colour, as Esau said to jacob, Hast thou but one blessing, my Father? Gen. 17.38. for he is the God of all blessings, and hath given every one of us, many more than one. But yet Christ hath given us an abridgement, Vnum est necessarium, Luke 10.42. there is but one only thing necessary, And David, in Christ, took knowledge of that before, when he said, Vnum petii, One thing have I desired of the Lord, What is that one thing? All in one; Psal. 27.4. That I may dwell in the house of the Lord (not be a stranger from his Covenant) all the days of my life, (not disseised, not excommunicate out of that house) To behold the beauty of the Lord, (not the beauty of the place only) but to inquire in his Temple, (by the advancement and advantage of outward things, to find out him) And so I shall have true comforts, outward, and inward, because in both, I shall find him, who is the God of all comfort. jacob thought he had lost joseph his Son, And all his Sons, Gen. 37.35. and all his Daughters risen up to comfort him, Et noluit consolationem, says the Text, He would not be comforted, because he thought him dead. Rachel wept for her children and would not be comforted, Mat. 2.18. because they were not. But what ailest thou? Is there any thing of which thou canst say, It is not? perchance it is, but thou hast it not: If thou hast him, that hath it, thou hast it. Hast thou not wealth, but poverty rather, not honour, but contempt rather, not health, but daily summons of Death rather yet? Non omnia possidet, cui omnia cooperantur in bonum, Bernard. If thy poverty, thy disgrace, thy sickness have brought thee the nearer to God, thou hast all those things, which thou thinkest thou wantest, because thou hast the best use of them. 1 Cor. 3.23. All things are yours, says the Apostle; why? by what title? For you are Christ's, and Christ is Gods. Carry back your comfort to the root, and bring that comfort to the fruit, and confess, that God who is both, is the God of all comfort. Fellow God in the execution of this good purpose upon thee, to thy Vocation, and hear him, who hath left East, and West, and North, and South, in their dimness, and dumbness, and deafness, and hath called thee to a participation of himself in his Church. Go on with him to thy justification, That when in the congregation one sits at thy right hand, and believes but historically (It may be as true which is said of Christ, as of William the Conqueror, and as of julius Caesar) and another at thy left hand, and believes Christ but civilly, (It was a Religion well invented, and keeps people well in order) and thou between them believest it to salvation in an applying faith; proceed a step farther, to feel this fire burning out, thy faith declared in works, thy justification grown into sanctification, And then thou wilt be upon the last stair of all, That great day of thy glorification will break out even in this life, and either in the possessing of the good things of this world, thou shalt see the glory, and in possessing the comforts of this World, see the joy of Heaven, or else, (which is another of his ways) in the want of all these, thou shalt have more comfort than others have, or perchance, than thou shouldest have in the possessing of them: for he is the God of all comfort, and of all the ways of comfort; And therefore, Blessed be God, even the Father, etc. SERM. XXXIX. Preached upon Trinity-Sunday. 1 PET. 1.17. And if ye call on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man's works, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear. YOu may remember, that I proposed to exercise your devotions and religious meditations in these exercises, with words which might present to you, first the several persons in the Trinity, and the benefits which we receive, in receiving God in those distinct notions of Father, Son, and holy Ghost; And then with other words which might present those sins, and the danger of those sins which are most particularly opposed against those several persons. Of the first, concerning the person of the Father, we spoke last, and of the other, concerning sins against the Father, these words will occasion us to speak now. It is well noted upon those words of David, Psal. 51.1. Have mercy upon me, O God, that the word is Elohim, which is Gods in the plural, Have mercy upon me, O Gods: for David, though he conceived not divers Gods, yet he knew three divers persons in that one God, and he knew that by that sin which he lamented in that Psalm, that peccatum complicatum, that manifold sin, that sin that enwrapped so many sins, he had offended all those three persons. For whereas we consider principally in the Father, Potestatem, Power, and in the Son Sapientiam, Wisdom, and in the holy Ghost Bonitatem, Goodness, David had sinned against the Father, in his notion, In potestate, in abusing his power, and kingly authority, to a mischievous and bloody end in the murder of Vriah: And he had sinned against the Son, in his notion, In sapientia, in depraving and detorting true wisdom into craft and treachery: And he had sinned against the holy Ghost in his notion, In bonitate, when he would not be content with the goodness and piety of Vriah, who refused to take the eases of his own house, and the pleasure of his wife's bosom, as long as God himself in his army lodged in Tents, and stood in the face of the Enemy. Sins against the Father then, we consider especially to be such as are In potestate, Either in a neglect of God's Power over us, or in an abuse of that power which we have from God over others; and of one branch of that power, particularly of Judgement, is this Text principally intended, If ye call on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth, etc. In the words we shall insist but upon two parts, Divisio. First, A Counsel, which in the Apostles mouth is a commandment; And then a Reason, an inducement, which in the Apostles mouth is a forcible, an unresistible argument. The Counsel, that is, The commandment, is, If ye call on the Father, fear him, stand in fear of him; And the reason, that is, the Argument, is, The name of Father implies a great power over you, therefore fear him; And amongst other powers, a power of judging you, of calling you to an account, therefore fear him: In which Judgement, this Judge accepts no persons, but judges his sons as his servants, and therefore fear him: And then, he judges, not upon words, outward professions, but upon works, actions, according to every man's works, and therefore fear him: And then as on his part he shall certainly call you to judgement when you go hence, so on your part, certainly it cannot be long before you go hence, for your time is but a sojourning here, it is not a dwelling, And yet it is a sojourning here, it is not a posting, a gliding through the world, but such a stay, as upon it our everlasting dwelling depends; And therefore that we may make up this circle, and end as we begun, with the fear of God, pass that time, that is, all that time, in fear; In fear of neglecting and undervaluing, or of over-tempting that great power which is in the Father, And in fear of abusing those limnes, and branches, and beams of that power which he hath communicated to thee, in giving thee power and authority any way over others; for these, To neglect the power of the Father, or To abuse that power which the Father hath given thee over others, are sins against the Father, who is power. If ye call on the Father, etc. First then, for the first part, the Counsel, Si invocatis, If ye call on the Father, In timore, 1. Part. Do it in fear, The Counsel hath not a voluntary Condition, and arbitrary in ourselves annexed to it; If you call, then fear, does not import, If you do not call, you need not fear; It does not import, That if you profess a particular form of Religion, you are bound to obey that Church, but if you do not, but have fancied a religion to yourself without precedent, Or a way to salvation without any particular religion, Or a way out of the world without any salvation or damnation, but a going out like a candle, if you can think thus you need not fear, This is not the meaning of this If in this place, If you call on the Father, etc. But this If implies a wonder, an impossibility, that any man should deny God to be the Father: If the author, the inventor of any thing useful for this life be called the father of that invention, by the holy Ghost himself, Gen. 4.20. jabal was the father of such as dwell in Tents, and Tubal his brother the father of Music, And so Horace calls Ennius the father of one kind of Poem: how absolutely is God our Father, who (may I say?) invented us, made us, found us out in the depth, and darkness of nothing at all? He is Pater, and Pater luminum, Father, and Father of lights, of all kinds of lights. Lux lucifica, jam. 1.17. as S. Augustine expresses it, The light from which all the lights which we have, whether of nature, or grace, or glory, have their emanation. Take these Lights of which God is said to be the Father, to be the Angels, (so some of the Fathers take it, and so S. Paul calls them Angels of light; And so Nazianzen calls them Secundos splendores primi splendoris administros, 2 Cor. 11.14. second lights that serve the first light) Or take these Lights of which God is said to be the Father to be the Ministers of the Gospel, the Angels of the Church, (so some Fathers take them too, and so Christ says to them, in the Apostles, Mat. 5.14. You are the light of the world) Or take these Lights to be those faithful servants of God, who have received an illustration in themselves, and a coruscation towards others, who by having lived in the presence of God, in the household of his faithful, in the true Church, are become, as john Baptist was, burning and shining lamps, (as S. Paul says of the faithful, Phil. 2.15. You shine as lights in this world, And as Moses had contracted a glorious shining in his face, by his conversation with God) Or take this light to be a fainter light than that, (and yet that which S. james doth most literally intent in that place) The light of natural understanding, That which Pliny calls serenitatem animi, when the mind of man, dis-encumbred of all Eclipses, and all clouds of passion, or inordinate love of earthly things, is enlightened so far, as to discern God in nature; Or take this light to be but the light of a shadow, (for umbrae non sunt tenebrae, sed densior lux, shadows are not darknesses, shadows are but a grosser kind of light) Take it to be that shadow, that design, that delineation, that obumbration of God, which the creatures of God exhibit to us, that which Pliny calls Coelilaetitiam, when the heavens, and all that they embrace, in an openness and cheerfulness of countenance, manifest God unto us; Take these Lights of which S. james speaks, in any apprehension, any way, Angels of heaven who are ministering spirits, Angels of the Church, who are spiritual Ministers, Take it for the light of faith from hearing, the light of reason from discoursing, or the light flowing from the creature to us, by contemplation, and observation of nature, Every way, by every light we see, that he is Pater luminum, the Father of lights; all these lights are from him, and by all these lights we see that he is A Father, and Our Father. So that as the Apostle uses this phrase in another place, Si opertum Euangelium, 2 Cor. 4.3. If the Gospel be hid, with wonder and admiration, Is it possible, can it be that this Gospel should be hid? So it is here, Si invocatis, If ye call God Father, that is, as it is certain you do, as it is impossible but you should, because you cannot ascribe to any but him, your Being, your preservation in that Being, your exaltation in that Being to a well-Being, in the possession of all temporal, and spiritual conveniencies, And then there is thus much more force in this particle Si, If, which is (as you have seen) Si concessionis, non dubitationis, an If that implies a confession and acknowledgement, not a hesitation or a doubt, That it is also Si progressionis, Si conclusionis, an If that carries you farther, and that concludes you at last, If you do it, that is, Since you do it, Since you do call God Father, since you have passed that act of Recognition, since not only by having been produced by nature, but by having been regenerated by the Gospel, you confess God to be your Father, and your Father in his Son, in Christ Jesus: Since you make that profession, Of his own will begat he us, james 1.18. with the word of Truth, If you call him Father, since you call him Father, thus, go on farther, Timete, Fear him; If ye call him Father, fear him, etc. Now, Timete. for this fear of God, which is the beginning of wisdom, and the end of wisdom too, we are a little too wise, at least, too subtle, sometimes in distinguishing too narrowly between a filial fear, and a servile fear, as though this filial fear were nothing but a reverend love of God, as he is good, and not a doubt and suspicion of incurring those evils, Prov. 8.13. that are punishments, or that produce punishments. The fear of the Lord is to hate evil, It is a holy detestation of that evil which is Malum culpae, The evil of sin, and it is a holy trembling under a tender apprehension of that other evil, which we call Malum poenae, The evil of punishment for sin. God presents to us the joys of heaven often to draw us, Origen. and as often the torments of hell to avert us. Origen says aright, As Abraham had two sons, one of a Bondwoman, another of a Free, but yet both sons of Abraham; so God is served by two fears, and the later fear, the fear of future torment, is not the perfect fear, but yet even that fear is the servant, and instrument of God too. Quis tam insensatus; Chrysost. Who can so absolutely divest all sense, Qui non fluctuante Civitate, imminente naufragio, But that when the whole City is in a combustion and commotion, or when the Ship that he is in, strikes desperately and irrecoverably upon a rock, he is otherwise affected toward God then, then when every day, in a quietness and calm of holy affections, he hears a Sermon? Gehennae timor (says the same Father) regni nos affert coronam, Gen. 15.12. Exod. 3.6. Even the fear of hell gets us heaven. Upon Abraham there fell A horror of great darkness, And Moses hide his face, for he was afraid to look upon God. And that way, towards that dejected look, does God bend his countenance; Upon this man will I look, Esay 66.12. even to him that is poor, and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word. As there are both impressions in security, vicious and virtuous, good and bad, so there are both in fear also. There is a wicked security in the wicked, by which they make shift to put off all Providence in God, and to think God like themselves, indifferent what becomes of this world; There is an ill security in the godly, when for the time, in their prosperity, they grow ill husbands of God's graces, and negligent of his mercies; In my prosperity (says David himself, Psal. 30.6. of himself) I said, I shall not be moved. And there is a security of the faithful, a constant persuasion, grounded upon those marks, which God, in his Word, hath set upon that state, That neither height, nor depth, nor any creature shall separate us from God: But yet this security is never discharged of that fear, which he that said that, 1 Cor. 9.27. Phil. 2.12. 1 Cor. 10.12. had in himself, I keep under my body, lest when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway; And which he persuades other, how safe soever they were, Work out your salvation with fear and trembling, And Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall. As then there is a vicious, an evil security; and that holy security which is good, is not without fear: so there is no fear of God, though it have some servility, (so fare, as servility imports but a fear of punishment) but it is good. August. For, Timor est amor inchoativus, The love of God gins in fear, and then Amor est timor consummatus, The fear of God ends in love; 1 s●l. 2.11. which David intends when he says, Rejoice with trembling; Conceive no such fear as excludes spiritual joy, conceive no such assurance, as excludes an humble and reverential fear. There is fear of God too narrow, when we think every natural cross, every worldly accident to be a judgement of God, and a testimony of his indignation, which the Poet (not altogether in an ill sense) calls a disease of the soul, Quo morbo mentem concusse? timore deorum; He imagines a man may be sick of the fear of God, that is, not distinguish between natural accidents, and immediate judgements of God; between ordinary declarations of his power, and extraordinary declarations of his anger. There is also a fear of God too large, too fare extended, when for a false fear of offending God, I dare not offend those men, who pretend to come in his name, and so captivate my conscience to the traditions and inventions of men, as to the word, and law of God. And there is a fear of God conceived, which never quickens, but putrifies in the womb before inanimation; the fear and trembling of the Devil, and men whom he possesses, desperate of the mercies of God. But there is a fear acceptable to God, and yet hath in it, a trembling, a horror, a consternation, an astonishment, an apprehension of God's dereliction for a time. The Law was given in thundering, Exod. 20.20. and lightning, and the people were afraid. How proceeds Moses with them? Fear not, says he, for God is come to prove you, that his fear might be before your faces. Here is a fear not, that is, fear not with despair, nor with diffidence, but yet therefore, That you may fear the Law; for, in this place, the very Law itself (which is given to direct them) is called fear; As in another place, God himself is called fear, (as he is in other places called love too) jacob swore by the Fear of his Father Isaac; that is, Gen. 32.53. by him whom his Father Isaac feared, as the Chalde Paraphrase rightly expresses it. Briefly, this is the difference between Fearfulness, and Fear, (for sow are fain to call Timiditatem and Timorem) Timidity, Fearfulness, is a fear, where no cause of fear is; and there is no cause of fear, where man and man only threatens on one side, and God commands on the other: Fear not, thou worm of jacob, I will help thee, Es●y 41.14. Heb. 11.23. saith the Lord thy redeemer, the Holy one of Israel. Moses Parents had overcome this fearfulness: They hide him, says the Text, Et non metucrunt Edictum Regis, They feared not the Proclamation of the King, Because it was directly, and evidently, and undisputably against the manifest will of God. Queen Esther had overcome this fearfulness; she had fasted, and prayed, and used all prescribed and all possible means, and then she entered the King's Chamber, against the Proclamation, with that necessary resolution, Si peream, peream, If I perish, Esther 4.16. I perish; Not upon a disobedient, not upon a desperate undertaking, but in a rectified conscience, and well established opinion, that either that Law was not intended to forbid her, who was his Wife, or that the King was not rightly informed, in that bloody command, which he had given for the execution of all her Countrymen. And for those who do not overcome this fearfulness, that is, that fear where no cause of fear is, (and there is no cause of fear, where God's cause is by godly ways promoved, though we do not always discern the ways, by which this is done) for those men that frame imaginary fears to themselves, to the withdrawing or discouraging of other in the service of God, we see where such men are ranked by the Holy Ghost, when S. john says, The unbelieving, the murderer, the whoremonger, the sorcerer, the idolater, Apoc. 21.8; shall have their portion in the lake of brimstone, which is the second death: We fee who leads them all into this irrecoverable precipitation, The fearful, that is, he that believes not God in his promises, that distrusts God in his own cause, as soon as he seems to open us to any danger; or distrusts God's instruments, as soon as they go another way, than he would have them go. To end this, there is no love of God without fear, no Law of God, no God himself without fear; And here, as in very many other places of Scripture, the fear of God is our whole Religion, the whole service of God; for here, Fear him, includes Worship him, reverence him, obey him. Which Counsel or Commandment, though it need no reason, no argument, yet the Apostle does pursue with an argument, and that constitutes our second Part. Now the Apostles arguments grow out of a double root; 2 Part. One argument is drawn from God, another from man. From God, thus implied, If God be a Father, fear him, for naturally we acknowledge the power of a Father to be great over his children, and consequently the reverend fear of the children great towards him. The Father had Potestatem vitae & necis, A power over the life of his child, he might have killed his child; but that the child should kill his Father, it never entered into the provision of any Law, and it was long before it fell into the suspicion of any Lawmaker. Romulus in his Laws, called every manslaughter Parricidium, because it was Paris occisio, He had killed a man, a Peer, a creature equal to himself; but for Parricide in the later sense, when Parricide is Patricide, the kill of a Father, it came not into the jealousy of Romulus' Law, nor into the heart or hand of any man there, in six hundred years after: Cum lege coeperunt, Seneca. & facinus poena monstravit, says their Moral man: That sin began not, till the Law forbade it, and only the punishment ordained for it, shown that there might be such a thing. He that curseth Father or Mother, shall surely die, says Moses; Exod. 21.17. Deut. 21.18. And he that is but stubborn towards them, shall die too. The dutiful love of children to Parents is so rooted in nature, that Demosthenes says, it is against the impressions and against the Law of nature, for any child ever to love that man, that hath done execution upon his Father, though by way of Justice: And this natural Obligation is not conditioned with the limitations of a good or a bad Father, Natura te non bono patri, sed patri conciliavit, Epictetus. says that little great Philosopher, Nature hath not bound thee to thy father, as he is a good Father, but merely as he is thy Father. Now for the power of Fathers over their children, by the Law of Nations, that is, the general practice of Civil States, the Father had power upon the life of his child; It fell away by discontinuance, in a great part, and after was abrogated by particular Laws, but yet, by a connivance admitted in some cases too. For, as in Nature man is Microcosmus, a little World, so in nature, a family is a little State, a little Commonwealth, and what power the Magistrate hath in that, Aristor. the Father hath in this. Ipsum regnum suaptenatura imperium est paternum, The power of a King, if it be kept within the bounds of the nature of that Office, Tertul. is only to be a Father to his people: And, Gratius est nomen pietatis, quam potestatis, Authority is presented in a more acceptable name, when I am called a Father, then when I am called a Master; and therefore, says Seneca, our Ancestors mollified it thus, invidiam Dominis, contumcliam servis detraherent, That there might accrue no envy to the Master for so great a title, nor contempt upon the servant for so low a title, they called the Master Patremfamilias', The Father of a household, and they called the servants, familiares, parts and pieces of the family. So that in the name of Father they understand all power; and the first Law that passed amongst the Romans against Parricides, L. Pompeia. was Contra interfectores Patrum & Dominorum; They were made equal, Fathers and Sovereigns: And in the Law of God itself, Honour thy Father, we see all the honour, and fear, and reverence that belongs to the Magistrate, is conveyed in that name, in that person, the Father is all; as in the State of that people, before they came to be settled, both the Civil part of the Government, and the Spiritual part, was all in the Father, that Father was King and Priest over all that family. Present God to thyself then as a Father, and thou wilt fear him; and take knowledge, that the Son might not sue the Father; Enter no action against God why he made thee not richer, nor wiser, nor fairer; no nor why he elects, or refuses, without respect of good or bad works; But take knowledge too, that when by the Law, the Father might punish the Son with death, he might not kill his Son before he was passed three years in age, before he was come to some demonstration of an ill, and rebellious nature, and disposition: Whatsoever God may do of his absolute Power, believe that he will not execute that power upon thee to thy condemnation, till thine actual sins have made thee incapable of his love: What he may do, dispute not, but be sure he will do thee no harm if thou fear him, as a Father. Now to bring that nearer to you, Sacerdotalis. which principally we intended, which is, the consideration and precaution of those sins, which violate this Power of God, notified in this name of Father, we consider a threefold emanation or exercise of Power in this Father, by occasion of a threefold repeating of this part of the Text, in the Scripture. The words are weighty, always at the bottom; for we have these words in the last of the Prophets, in Malachi, and in the last of the Evangelists, in john, And here in this Apostle, we have them of the last Judgement. Mal. 1.6. In Malachi he says, A Son honoureth his Father, if then I be a Father, where is my honour? This God speaks there to the Priest, to the Levite; Exod. 32.29. for, the Tribe of Levi, had before, (as Moses bade them) consecrated their hands to God, and punished by a zealous execution, the Idolatry of the golden Calf; and for this service, God fastened the Priesthood upon them. But when they came in Malachies time, to connive at Idolatry itself, God, who was himself the root of the Priesthood, and had trusted them with it, and they had abused that trust, and the Priesthood, Then when the Prophet was become a fool, Hose. 9.7. and the spiritual Man, mad, or (as S. Hierom reads it) Arreptitius, that is, possessed by others, God first of all turns upon the Priest himself, rebukes the Priest, interminates his judgement upon the Priest, for God is our high Priest. And therefore fear this Father in that notion, in that apprehension, as a Priest, as thy high Priest, that refuses or receives thy sacrifices, as he finds them conditioned; and if he look narrowly, is able to find some spot in thy purest Lamb, some sin in thy holiest action, some deviation in thy prayer, some ostentation in thine alms, some vain glory in thy Preaching, some hypocrisy in thy hearing, some concealing in thy confessions, some reservation in thy restitutions, some relapses in thy reconciliations: since thou callest him Father, fear him as thy high Priest: So the words have their force in Malachi, and they appertain Ad potestatem Sacerdotalem, To the power of the Priest, despise not that. And then, Civilis. john 8.42. in the second place, which is in S. john, Christ says, If God were your Father, you would love me: And this Christ speaks to the Pharisees, and to them, not as Sectaries in Religion, but as to persons in Authority, and command in the State, as to Rulers, to Governors, to Magistrates: So Christ says to Pilate, john 19.11. Rom. 13.11. Thou couldst have no power at all against me, except it were given thee from above: And so S. Paul, There is no power but of God, The powers that be, be ordained of God. Christ then charges the Pharisees, that they having the secular Power in their hands, they went about to kill him, when he was doing the will of his Father, who is the root, as of Priesthood, so of all Civil power, and Magistracy also. Fear this Father then, as the Civil Sword, the Sword of Justice is in his hand. He can open thee to the malicious prosecutions of adversaries, and submit thee to the penalties of those Laws, which, in truth, thou hast never transgressed: Thy Fathers, thy Grandfathers have sinned against him, and thou hast been but reprieved for two sessions, for two generations, and now mayest come to execution. Thou hast sinned thyself, and hast repent, and hast had thy pardon sealed in the Sacrament; but thy pardon was clogged with an Ita quòd se bene gerat, Thou wast bound to the peace by that pardon, and hast broken that peace since, in a relapse, and so fallest under execution for thine old sins: God cuts off men by unsearchable ways and means; and therefore fear this Father as a Sovereign, as a Magistrate, for that use this word in S. john may have. In Malachi we consider him in his supreme spiritual power, judiciaria. and in S. john in his supreme temporal power; And in this Text, this Father is presented in a power, which includes both, in a judiciary power, as a Judge, as our Judge, our Judge at the last day, beyond all Appeal; And (as this Apostle S. Peter, is said by Clement, who is said to have been his successor at Rome, to have said) Quis peccare poterit, etc. Who could commit any sin at any time, if at all times he had his eye fixed upon this last Judgement? We have seen purses cut at the Sessions, and at Executions, but the Cutpurse did not see the Judge look upon him: we see men sin over those sins to day, for which Judgement was inflicted but yesterday, but surely they do not see then that the Judge sees them. Rom. 2.5. Thou treasurest up wrath, says the Apostle, against the day of wrath, and revelation of the judgement of God: There is no Revelation of the day of Judgement, no sense of any such day, till the very day itself overtake him, and swallow him. Represent God to thyself as such a Judge, as S. chrysostom says, That whosoever considers him so, as that Judge, and that day, as a day of irrevocable judgement, Gehennae poenam tolerare malit, quàm adverso Deo stare, He will even think it an ease to be thrown down into hell out of the presence of God, rather than to stand long in the presence, and stand under the indignation of that incensed Judge: The Ite maledicti will be less than the Surgite qui dormitis. And there is the miserable perplexity, Latere impossibils, Apparere intolerabile, Bernard. To be hid from this Judge is impossible, and to appear before him, intolerable: for he comes invested with those two flames of confusion, (which are our two next branches in the Text) first, He respects no persons, Then, He judges according to works: Without respect of persons, etc. Nine or ten several times it is repeated in the Scriptures, and, I think, Acceptor personarum. no one entire proposition so often, That God is no accepter of persons. It is spoken by Moses, that they who are conversant in the Law might see it, and spoken in the Chronicles, that they might see it who are conversant in State-affairs, and spoken in job, that men in afflictions might not mis-imagine a partiality in God: It is spoken to the Gentiles, by the Apostle of the Gentiles, S. Paul, severally; To the Romans, to the Galatians, to the Ephesians, to the Colossians: And spoken by the chief Apostle, S. Peter, both in a private Sermon in Cornelius his house, and now in this Catholic Epistle written to all the world, that all the world, and all the inhabitants thereof might know, That God is no accepter of persons: And lest all this should not be all, it is spoken twice in the Apocryphal books; and though we know not assuredly by whom, yet we know to whom, To all that exercise any judiciary power under God, it belongs to know, That God is no accepter of persons. In divers of those places, this also is added, Nor receiver of Rewards; whether that be added as an equal thing, That it is as great a sin to accept persons, as to accept rewards, Or as a concomitancy, they go together, He that will accept persons, will accept rewards, Or as an Identity, It is the same thing to accept persons, and to accept rewards, because the preferment which I look for from a person in place, is as much a reward, as money from a person rich in treasure; whether of these it be, I dispute not: Clearly there is a Bribery in my love to another, and in my fear of another there is a Bribery too: There is a bribery in a poor man's tears, if that decline me from justice, as well as in the rich man's Plate, and Hang, and Coach, and Horses. Let no man therefore think to present his complexion to God for an excuse, and say, My choler with which my constitution abounded, and which I could not remedy, inclined me to wrath, and so to blood; My Melancholy inclined me to sadness, and so to Desperation, as though thy sins were medicinal sins, sins to vent humours. Let no man say, I am continent enough all the year, but the spring works upon me, and inflames my concupiscencies, as though thy sins were seasonable and anniversary sins. Make not thy Calling the occasion of thy sin, as though thy sin were a Mystery, and an Occupation; Nor thy place, thy station, thy office the occasion of thy sin, as though thy sin were an Heir-loome, or furniture, or fixed to the freehold of that place: for this one proposition, God is no accepter of persons, is so often repeated, that all circumstances of Dispositions, and Callings, Ambros. and time, and place might be involved in it. Nulla descretio personarum, sed morum; God discerns not, that is, distinguishes not Persons, but Actions, for, He judgeth according to every man's works, which is our next Branch. Now this judging according to works, Opera. excludes not the heart, nor the heart of the heart, the soul of the soul, Faith. God requires the heart, My son give me thy heart; He will have it, but he will have it by gift; and those Deeds of Gift must be testified; and the testimony of the heart is in the hand, the testimony of faith is in works. If one give me a timber tree for my house, I know not whether the root be mine or no, whether I may stub it by that gift: but if he give me a fruit tree for mine Orchard, he intends me the root too; for else I cannot transplant it, nor receive fruit by it: God judges according to the work, that is, Root and fruit, faith and work; That is the work; And then he judges according unto Thy work; The works of Other men, the Actions and the Passions of the blessed Martyrs, and Saints in the Primitive Church, works of Supererogation are not thy works. It were a strange pretence to health, that when thy Physician had prescribed thee a bitter potion, and came for an account how it had wrought upon thee, thou shouldst say, My brother hath taken twice as much as you prescribed for me, but I took none, Or if he ordained six ounces of blood to be taken from thee, to say, My Grandfather bled twelve. God shall judge according to The work, that is, The nature of the work, and according to Thy work, The propriety of the work: Thee, who art a Protestant, he shall judge by thine own work, and not by S. Stephens, or S. Peter's; and thee, who art a Papist, he shall judge by thine own work, and not by S. Campians, or S. Garnets', as meritorious as thou thinkest them. And therefore if God be thy Father, and in that title have sovereign power over thee, A power spiritual, as Highpriest of thy soul, that discerns thy sacrifices; A power Civil, and draws the sword of Justice against thee, when he will; A power judiciary, and judges without accepting persons, and without error in apprehending thy works, If he be a Father thus, fear him, for these are the reasons of fear, on his part, and then fear him, for this reason on thy part, That this time which thou art to stay here, first, is But a sojourning, it is no more, but yet it is a sojourning, it is no less, Pass the time of your sojourning here, etc. When there is a long time to the Assizes, Incolatus. there may be some hope of taking off, or of smothering Evidence, or working upon the Judge, or preparing for a pardon: Or if it were a great booty, a great possession which we had gotten, even that might buy out our peace. But this world is no such thing, neither for the extent that we have in it, It is but little that the greatest hath, nor for the time that we have in it; In both respects it is but a sojourning, Gen. 47.6. Heb. 13.14. it is but a pilgrimage, says jacob, And But the days of my pilgrimage; Every one of them quickly at an end, and all of them quickly reckoned. Here we have no continuing City; first, no City, no such large being, and then no continuing at all, it is but a sojourning. The word in the Text is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, we have but a parish, we are but parishioners in this world, and they that labour to purchase whole shires, usurp more than their portion; and yet what is a great Shire in a little Map? Here we are but Viatores, Passengers, way-faring men; This life is but the highway, and thou canst not build thy hopes here; Nay, to be buried in the high way is no good mark; and therefore bury not thyself, thy labours, thy affections upon this world. What the Prophet says to thy Saviour, (O the hope of Israel, 〈◊〉. 14.7. the Saviour thereof in time of trouble, why shouldest thou be a stranger in the land, and as a wayfaring man, that turns aside to tarry for a night?) say thou to thy soul, Sincethou art a stranger in the land, a wayfaring man, turned aside to tarry for a night, since the night is past, Arise and departed, for here is not thy rest; Mic. 2.10. prepare for another place, and fear him whom thou callest Father, and who is shortly to be thy judge; for here thou art no more than a sojourner; but yet remember withal that thou art so much, Thou art a sojourner. This life is not a Parenthesis, a Parenthesis that belongs not to the sense, Incolatus. a Parenthesis that might be left out, as well as put in. More depends upon this life then so: upon every minute of this life, depend millions of years in the next, and I shall be glorified eternally, or eternally lost, for my good or ill use of God's grace offered to me this hour. Therefore where the Apostle says of this life, Peregrinamur à Domino, 2 Cor. 5.6. We are absent from the Lord, yet he says, We are at home in the body: This world is so much our home, as that he that is not at home now, he that hath not his conversation in heaven here, shall never get home. And therefore even in this Text, our former Translation calls it Dwelling; That which we read now, pass the time of your sojourning, we did read then, pass the time of your dwelling; for this, where we are now, is the suburb of the great City, the porch of the triumphant Church, and the Grange, or Country house of the same Landlord, belonging to his heavenly Palace, in the heavenly Jerusalem. Be it but a sojourning, yet thou must pay God something for thy sojourning, pay God his rent of praise and prayer; And be it but a sojourning, yet thou art bound to it for a time; Though thou sigh with David, Heu mihi, quia prolongatus incolatus, Psal. 120.5. woe is me that I sojourn so long here, Though the miseries of thy life make thy life seem long, yet thou must stay out that time, which he, who took thee in, appointed, and by no practice, no not so much as by a deliberate wish, or unconditioned prayer, seek to be delivered of it: Because thy time here is such a sojourning as is quickly atan end, and yet such a sojourning as is never at an end, (for our endless state depends upon this) fear him, who shall so certainly, and so soon be a just Judge of it; fear him, in abstaining from those sins which are directed upon his power; which are, principally, (as we intimated at the beginning, and with which we shall make an end) first, The negligence of his power upon thee, And then, the abuse of his power communicated to thee over others. First then, the sin directed against the Father, Negligentia. whom we consider to be the root and centre of all power, is, when as some men have thought the soul of man to be nothing but a resultance of the temperament and constitution of the body of man, and no infusion from God, so they think that power, by which the world is governed, is but a resultance of the consent, and the voice of the people, who are content, for their ease to be so governed, and no particular Ordinance of God: It is an undervaluing, a false conception, a misapprehension of those beams of power, which God from himself sheds upon those, whom himself calls Gods in this World. We sin then against the Father, when we undervalue God in his Priest. God hath made no step in that perverse way of the Roman Church, to prefer, so as they do, the Priest before the King; yet, speaking in two several places, of the dignity of his people, first, as Jews, then as Christians, he says in one place, They shall be a Kingdom, and a Kingdom of Priests; and he says in the other, Esay 19.6. 1 Pet. 2.9. They shall be Sacerdotium, and Regale Sacerdotium, Priests, and royal Priests: In one place, the King, in the other, the Priest mentioned first, and in both places, both involved in one another: The blessings from both are so great, as that the Holy Ghost expresses them by one another mutually. Num. 1. Oleaster. When God commands his people to be numbered in every Tribe, one moves this question, Why in all other Tribes he numbered but from twenty years upward, and in the Tribe of Levi from a month upward? Agnosce sacerdos, says he, quanti te Deus tuus fecerit, Take knowledge, thou who art the Priest of the high God, what a value God hath set upon thee, that whereas he takes other servants for other affairs, when they are men, fit to do him service, he took thee to the Priesthood in thy cradle, in thine infancy. How much more then, when the Priest is not Sacerdos infans, A Priest that cannot or does not speak; but continues watchful in meditating, and assiduous in uttering, powerfully, and yet modestly, the things that concern your salvation, ought you to abstain from violating the power of God the Father, in dis-esteeming his power thus planted in the Priest? So also do we sin against the Father, the root of power, Civilis. in conceiving amiss of the power of the Civil Magistrate: Whether where God is pleased to represent his unity, in one Person, in a King; or to express it in a plurality of persons, in divers Governors, When God says, Per me Reges regnant, By me King's reign; There the Per, is not a Permission, but a Commission, It is not, That they reign by my Sufferance, but they reign by mine Ordinance. A King is not a King, because he is a good King, nor leaves being a King, Rom. 13.5. as soon as he leaves being good. All is well summed by the Apostle, You must needs be subject, not only for wrath, but also for conscience sake. But then the greatest danger of sinning against the Father, judiciaria. in this notion of power, is, if you conceive not aright of his Judiciary power, of that judgement, which he executes, not by Priests, nor by Kings upon earth, but by his own Son Christ Jesus in heaven. For, not to be astonished at the Contemplation of that judgement, where there shall be Information, Examination, Publication, Hearing, Judgement, and Execution in a minute; where they that never believed, till they heard me, may be taken in, and I that Preached and wrought their salvation, may be left out; where those wounds which my Saviour received upon earth, for me, shall be shut up against me, and those wounds which my blasphemies have made in his glorified body, shall bleed out indignation, upon sight of me, the murderer, not to think upon, not to tremble at this judgement, is the highest sin against the Father, and his power, in the undervaluing of it. But there is a sin against this power too, Abusus. in abusing that portion of that power, which God hath deposited in thee. Art thou a Priest, and expectest the reverence due to that holy calling? Ambr Ep. 6. ad Iren. Be holy in in that calling. Quomodo potest observari à populo, qui nihil habet secretum à populo? How can the people reverence him, whom they see to be but just one of them? Quid in te miretur, si sua in te recognoscit? If they find no more in thee, then in one another, what should they admire in thee? Si quae in se erubescit, in te, quem reverendum arbitratur, offendit? If they discern those infirmities in thee, which they are ashamed of in themselves, where is there any object, any subject, any exercise of their reverence? psal. 52.1. Art thou great in Civil Power? Quid gloriaris in malo, quiae potens es? Why boastest thou thyself in mischief, O mighty man? Hast thou a great body therefore, because thou shouldest stand heavy upon thine own feet, and make them ache? Or a great power therefore, because thou shouldest oppress them that are under thee? use thy power justly, Jes. 1. ●. and call it the voice of allegiance when the people say to thee, as to josua, All that thou commandest us, we will doc, and whither soever thou sendest us, we will go: Abuse that power to oppression, and thou canst not call that the voice of sedition, in which, Peter and the other Apostles joined together, Acts 5.29. We ought to obey God rather then man. Hast thou any judicial place in this world? here there belongs more fear than in the rest: Some things God hath done in Christ as a Priest in this world, some things as a King, But when Christ should have been a Judge in civil causes, he declined that, he would not divide the Inheritance, and in criminal causes he did so too, he would not condemn the Adulteress. So that for thy example in judgement, thou art referred to that which is not come yet, to that, to which thou must come, The last, the everlasting judgement. Weigh thine affections there, and then, and think there stands before thee now, a prisoner so affected, as thou shalt be then. Weigh the mercy of thy Judge then, and think there is such mercy required in thy judgement now. Be but able to say, God be such to me at the last day, as I am to his people this day, and for that day's justice in thy public calling, God may be pleased to cover many sins of infirmity. And so you have all that we intended in this exercise to present unto you, The first person of the Trinity, God the Father, in his Attribute of power, Almighty, and those sins, which, as fare as this Text leads us, are directed upon him in that notion of Father. The next day the Son will rise. SERM. XL. Preached upon Trinity-Sunday. 1 COR. 16.22. If any man love not the Lord jesus Christ, let him be Anathema, Maranatha. CHrist is not defined, not designed by any name, by any word so often, as by that very word, The Word, Sermo, Speech. In man there are three kinds of speech; Sermo innatus, That inward speech, which the thought of man reflecting upon itself produces within, He thinks something; And then Sermo illatus, A speech of inference, that speech which is occasioned in him by outward things, from which he draws conclusions, and determins; And lastly, Sermo prolatus, That speech by which he manifests himself to other men. We consider also three kinds of speech in God; and Christ is all three. There is Sermo innatus; His eternal, his natural word, which God produced out of himself, which is the generatiof the second Person in the Trinity; And then there is Sermo illatus, His word occasioned by the fall of Adam, which is his Decree of sending Christ, as a Redeemer; And there is also Sermo prolatus, His speech of manifestation and application of Christ, which are his Scriptures. The first word is Christ, the second, the Decree, is for Christ, the third, the Scripture, is of Christ. Let the word be Christ, so he is God; Let the word be for Christ, for his coming hither, so he is man; Let the word be of Christ, so the Scriptures make this God and man ours. Now If in all these, if in any of these apprehensions, any man love not the Lord jesus Christ, let him be Anathema, Maranatha. By most of those, who, from the perverseness of Heretics, Divisio. have taken occasion to prove the Deity of Christ, this text hath been cited; and therefore I take it now, when in my course proposed, I am to speak of the second Person in the Trinity; but, (as I said of the first Person, the Father) not as in the School, but in the Church, not in a Chair, but in a Pulpit, not to a Congregation that required proof, in a thing doubted, but edification, upon a foundation received; not as though any of us would dispute, whether Jesus Christ were the Lord, but that all of us would join in that Excommunication, If any man love not the Lord jesus Christ, let him be, etc. Let this then be the frame that this exercise shall stand upon. We have three parts; The person upon whom our Religious worship is to be directed, The Lord jesus Christ: And secondly, we have the expression and the limitation of that worship, as fare as it is expressed here, Love the Lord jesus Christ: And lastly, we have the imprecation upon them that do not, If any man do not, let him be Anathema, Maranatha. In the first we have Verbum naturale, verbum innatum, As he is the essential word, The Lord, a name proper only to God; And then Verbum conceptum, verbum illatum, God's Decree upon consideration of man's misery, that Christ should be a Redeemer, for to that intent he is Christus, Anointed to that purpose; And lastly, Verbum prolatum, verbum manifestatum, That this Christ becomes jesus, That this Decree is executed, that this person thus anointed for this office, is become an actual Saviour; So the Lord is made Christ, and Christ is made jesus. In the second Part we shall find another argument for his Deity, for there is such a love required towards the Lord jesus Christ, as appertains to God only; And lastly, we shall have the indeterminable, and indispensable excommunication of them, who though they pretend to love the Lord, (God in an universal notion) yet do not love the Lord jesus Christ, God, in this apprehension of a Saviour; and, If any man love not, etc. First then, in the first branch of the first part, in that name of our Saviour, The Lord, 1 Part. Dominus. we apprehend the eternal Word of God, the Son of God, the second Person in the Trinity: for, He is Persona producta, Begotten by another, and therefore cannot be the first; And he is Persona spirans, a Person out of whom, with the Father, another Person, that is, the Holy Ghost proceeds, and therefore cannot be the last Person, and there are but three, Nazian. and so he necessarily the second. Shall we hope to comprehend this by reason? Quid magni haberet Dei generatio, si angusti is intellectus tui comprehenderetur? How small a thing were this mystery of Heaven, if it could be shut in, in so narrow a piece of the earth, Idem. as thy heart? Qui tuam ipsius generationem vel in totum nescis, vel dicere sit pudor, Thou that knowest nothing of thine own begetting, or art ashamed to speak that little that thou dost know of it, wilt not thou be ashamed to offer to express the eternal generation of the Son of God? It is true, De modo, How it was done, our reason cannot, but De facto, that it was done, our reason may be satisfied. We believe nothing with a moral faith, till something have wrought upon our reason, and vanquished that, and made it assent and subscribe. Our divine faith requires evidence too, and hath it abundantly; for, the works of God are not so good evidence to my reason, as the Word of God is to my faith; The Sun shining is not so good a proof that it is day, as the Word of God, the Scripture is, that that which is commanded there, is a duty. The root of our belief that Christ is God, is in the Scriptures, but we consider it spread into three branches, ¹ The evident Word itself, that Christ is God; ² The real declaration thereof in his manifold Miracles; ³ The conclusions that arise to our understanding; thus illumined by the Scriptures, thus established by his miracles. In every mouth, Ex Scriptures. in every pen of the Scriptures, that delivers any truth, the Holy Ghost speaks, and therefore whatsoever is said by any there, is the testimony of the Holy Ghost, for the Deity of Christ. And from the Father we have this testimony, that he is his Son, Mat. 3. ult. Heb. 1.8. This is my beloved Son, And this testimony that his Son is God, Unto his Son he saith, Thy Throne, O God, is for ever and ever. The Holy Ghost testifies, and his Father, and himself; Apoc. 1.8. and his testimony is true, I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning, and the ending, saith the Lord, which is, which was, and which is to come, the Almighty. He testifies with his Father; Apoc. 22.16. and then, their Angels and his Apostles testify with him, I jesus have sent mine Angels, to testify unto you these things in the Church, That I am the Root, and the Offspring of David, not the offspring only, but the root too, and therefore was before David. God and his Angels in Heaven testify it, And visible Angels upon earth, his Apostles, Acts 20.28. God hath purchased his Church, with his own blood, says S. Paul; He who shed his blood for his Church, was God; and no false God, no mortal God, as the gods of the Nations were, 1 john 5.20. Tit. 2.13. but, This is the true God, and cternall life; and then, no small God, no particular God, as the Gods of the Nations were too, but, We look for the glorious appearing of our great God, our Saviour Christ jesus: God, that is, God in all the Persons, Angels, that is, Angels in all their acceptations, Angels of Heaven, Angels of the Church, Angels excommunicate from both, the fallen Angels, Devils themselves, testify his Godhead, Mar. 3.11. Unclean Spirits fell down before him, and cried, Thou art the Son of God. This is the testimony of his Word; Miracula. the testimony of his Works, are his Miracles. That his Apostles did Miracles in his name, Acts 3.16. was a testimony of his Deity. His name, through faith in his Name, hath made this man strong, says S. Peter, at the raising of the Cripple. But that he did Miracles in his own Name, by his own Power, is a nearer testimony; Belssed be the Lord God of Israel, Psal. 72.18. says David, Qui facit Mirabilia solus, Which doth his Miracles alone, without deriving power from any other, or without using an other instrument for his Power. Epipha. For, Mutare naturam, nisi qui Dominus naturae est, non potest: Whosoever is able to change the course of nature, is the Lord of nature; And he that is so, made it; & he that made it, Tertul. that created it, is God. Nay, Plus est, it is more to change the course of Nature, then to make it; for, in the Creation, there was no reluctation of the Creature, for there was no Creature, but to divert Nature out of her settled course, is a conquest upon a resisting adversary, and powerful in a prescription. The Recedat Mare, Let the Sea go back, and the Sistat Sol, Let the Sun stand still, met with some kind of opposition in Nature, but in the Fiat Mare, and Fiat Sol, Let there be a Sea, and a Sun, God met with no opposition, no Nature, August. he met with nothing. And therefore, Interrogemus Miracula, quid nobis de Christo loquantur, Let us ask his Miracles, and they will make us understand Christ; Habent enim si intelligantur, linguam suam, If we understand them, that is, If we would understand them, they speak loud enough, and plain enough. In his Miraculous birth of a Virgin, In his Miraculous disputation with Doctors at twelve years of age, in his fasting, in his invisibility, in his walking upon the Sea, in his reassuming his body in the Resurrection, Christ spoke, in himself, in the language of Miracles. So also had they a loud and a plain voice, in other men; In his Miraculous curing the sick, raising the dead, dispossessing the Devil, Christ spoke, in other men, in the language of Miracles. And he did so also, as in himself, and in other men, so in other things; In the miraculous change of Water into Wine, in the drying up of the Figtree, In feeding five thousand with five loaves, in shutting up the Sun in darkness, and opening the graves of the Dead to light, in bringing plenty of Fish to the Net, and in putting money into the mouth of a Fish at the Angle, Christ spoke in all these Creatures, in the language of Miracles. So the Scriptures testify of his Deity, and so do his Miracles, and so do those Conclusions which arise from thence, though we consider but that one, which is expressed in this part of the Text, that he is the Lord, If any love not the Lord, etc. We reason thus, God gives not his glory to others, Dominus. and his glory is in his Essential Name, and in his Attributes; and to whomsoever he gives them, because they cannot be given from God, he who hath them, is God. Of these, none is so peculiar to him, as the name of jehova; the name, which for reverence, the Jews forbore to sound, and in the room thereof ever sounded, Adonai, and Adonai, is Dominus, the name of this Text, The Lord; Christ by being the Lord thus, is Jehovah, and if Jehovah, God. It is Tertullia's observation, Et ss Pater sit, & dicatur Dominus, & Filius sit, & dicatur Deus, That though the Father be the Lord, and be called the Lord, and though the Son be God, and be called God, yet, says he, the manner of the Holy Ghost in the New Testament, is, to call the Father God, and the Son the Lord. He is Lord with the Father, as he was Con-creator, his Colleague in the Creation; But for that Dominion and Lordship which he hath by his Purchase, by his Passion, Calcavit solus, I'll trod the Winepress alone, not only no man, but no Person of the Trinity, redeemed us, by suffering for us, but he. For the ordinary appellation of Lord in the New Testament, which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it is but a name of Civility, not only no name implying Divine worship, but not implying any distinction of rank or degree amongst men. Marry Magdalen speaks of Christ, and speaks to the Gardener, (as she thought) and both in one and the same word; it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Dominus, Lord, to both: when she says, They have taken away my Lord, meaning Christ, john 20.15. and when she says to the Gardener, Sir, if thou hast borne him hence, it is the same word too. But all that reaches not to the style of this Text, The Lord, for here The Lord, is God; 1 Cor. 12.3. And no man can say, that jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost. All that was written in the Scriptures, all that was established by Miracles, all that is deduced by reason, conduces to this, determines in this, That every tongue should confess, that jesus Christ is the Lord; in which essential name, the name of his nature, he is first proposed, as the object of our love. Now this Lord, Lord for ever, is become that which he was not for ever, Christus. (otherwise then in a secondary consideration) that is, Christ, which implies a person prepared, and sitted, and anointed to a peculiar Office in this World. And can the Lord, the everliving Lord, the Son of God, the only Son of God, God himself have any preferment? preferment by an Office in this World? Was it a preferment to Dionysius, who was before in that height over men, to become a schoolmaster over boys? Were it a preferment to the King's Son, to be made governor over a Beehive, or overseer over an Ant-hill? And men, nay Mankind is no more, not that, not a Beehive, not an Ant-hill, compared to this Person, who being the Lord, would become Christ. As he was the Lord, we considered him as God, and that there is a God, natural reason can comprehend; As he is Christ, we consider him God and Man, and such a Person, natural reason (not rooted in the Scriptures, not illustrated by the Scriptures) cannot comprehend; Man will much easilier believe the Lord, that is, God, than Christ, that is, God and Man in one Person. Christ then is the style, the title of his Office; Non Nomen, sed Appellatio, Tertul. Christ is not his Name, but his Addition. Vnctus significatur, says he, & unctus non magis nomen, quam vestitus, calceatus; Christ signifies but anointed, and anointed is no more a Name, then apparelled, or shod, is a name: So, as he was apparelled in our flesh, and his apparel died red in his own blood, so as he was shod to tread the Winepress for us, So he was Christ. That it is Nomen Sacramenti, as S. Aug. calls it, A mystery, is easily agreed to: for all the mysteries of all the Religions in the World, are but Milk in respect of this Bone, but Catechisms in respect of this School-point, but Alphabets in respect of this hard Style, God and Man in one person. That it is Nomen Sacramenti, as Augustine says, is easy; but that it is Nuncupatio potestatis, as Lactantius calls it, is somewhat strange, that it is an office of power, a title of honour: for the Creator to become a Creature, and the Lord of life the object of death, nay the seat of death, in whom death did sojourn three days, can Lactantius call this a declaration of power? is this Nuncupatio potestatis, a title of honour? Beloved, he does, and he may; for it was so: for, it was an Anointing; Exod. 29.7. Christas is unctus; and unction was the Consecration of Priests, Thou shalt take the anointing Oil, and pour it upon his head. The Mitre (as you may see there) was upon his head then; but then there was a Crown upon the Mitre; There is a power above the Priest, the regal power; not above the function of the Priest, but above the person of the Priest; 1 Sam. 10.1. & 24. But Unction was the Consecration of Kings too; Samuel saluted Saul with a kiss, and all the people shouted, and said, God save the King; but, Is it not, says Samuel, because the Lord hath anointed thee, to be captain over his inheritance? Kings were above Priests; and in extraordinary cases, God raised Prophets above Kings; for there is no ordinary power above them: But Unction was the Consecration of these Prophets too; Elisha was anointed to be Prophet in Elias room; and such a Prophet as should have use of the Sword: 1 Reg. 19.16, 17. Him that escapes the Sword of Hazael, (Hazael was King of Syria) shall the Sword of jehu slay, and him that escapes the Sword of jehu (jehu was King of Israel) shall the Sword of Elisha slay. In all these, in Priests who were above the people, in Kings, who (in matter of Government) were above the Priests, in Prophets, who (in those limited cases expressed by God, and for that time, wherein God gave them that extraordinary employment) were above Kings, The Unction imprinted their Consecration, they were all Christ's, and in them all, thereby, was that Nuncupatio potestatis, which Lactantius mentions; Unction, Anointing was an addition and title of honour: Psal. 109. Psal. 2.6. Deut. 18. Much more in our Christ, who alone was all three; A Priest after the Order of Melchizedek; A King set upon the holy hill of Zion; And a Prophet, The Lord thy God will raise up a Prophet, unto him shall ye hearken: And besides all this threefold Unction, Humanitas uncta Divinitate; He had all the unctions that all the other had, and this, which none other had; In him the Humanity was Consecrated, anointed with the Divinity itself. So then, Nazian: Cyrill. Psal. 95.7. unio unctio, The hypostatical union of the Godhead to the humane nature, is his Conception, made him Christ: for, oleo laetitia perfusus in union, Then, in that union of the two natures, did God anoint him with the oil of gladness above his fellows. There was an addition, something gained, something to be glad of; and, to him, as he was God, The Lord, so nothing could be added; If he were glad above his fellows, it was in that respect wherein he had fellows, and as God, as The Lord, he had none; so that still, as he was made Man, he became this Christ. In which his being made Man, if we should not consider the last and principal purpose, which was to redeem man, if we leave out his part, yet it were object enough for our wonder, and subject enough for our praise and thanksgiving, to consider the dignity, that the nature of man received in that union, wherein this Lord was thus made this Christ, for, the Godhead did not swallow up the manhood; but man, that nature remained still; The greater kingdom did not swallow the less, but the less had that great addition, which it had not before, and retained the dignities and privileges which it had before too. Damasc. Christus est nomen personae, non naturae, The name of Christ denotes one person, but not one nature: neither is Christ so composed of those two natures, as a man is composed of Elements; for man is thereby made a third thing, and is not now any of those Elements; you cannot call man's body fire or air, or earth or water, though all four be in his composition: But Christ is so made of God and Man, as that he is Man still, for all the glory of the Deity, and God still, for all the infirmity of the manhood: Idem. Divinum miraculis lucet, humanum contumeliis afficitur: In this one Christ, both appear; The Godhead bursts out, as the Sun out of a cloud, and shines forth gloriously in miracles, even the raising of the dead, and the humane nature is submitted to contempt and to torment, even to the admitting of death in his own bosom; sed tamen ipsius sunt tum miraculae, Idem. tum supplicia, but still, both he that raises the dead, and he that dies himself, is one Christ, his is the glory of the Miracles, and the contempt and torment is his too. This is that mysterious person, who is singularis, and yet not individuus; singularis, There never was, never shall be any such, but we cannot call him Individual, Idem. as every other particular man is, because Christitatis non est Genus, there is no genus nor species of Christ's; it is not a name, which, so (as the name belongs to our Christ, that is, by being anointed with the divine nature) can be communicated to any other, as the name of Man, may to every Individual Man. Christ is not that Spectrum, that Damascene speaks of, nor that Electrum that Tertullian speaks of; not Spectrum, so as that the two natures should but imaginarily be united, and only to amaze and astonish us, that we could not tell what to call it, what to make of it, a spectre, an apparition, a phantasma, for he was a Real person. Neither was he Tertullia's Electrum, a third metal made of two other metals, but a person so made of God and Man, as that, in that person, God and Man, are in their natures still distinguished. He is Germane Davidis, jere. 23.5. Isa. 4.2. in one Prophet, The branch, the Offspring of David; And he is Germane jehovae, The Branch, the Offspring of God, of the Lord, in another: When this Germane Davidis, the Son of Man would do miracles, than he was Germane jehovae, he reflected to that stock into which the Humanity was engrafted, to his Godhead; And when this Germane jehovae, the Son of God, would endure humane miseries, he reflected to that stock, to that humanity, in which he had invested, and incorporated himself. This person, 1 Cor. 15.3. Tertul. this Christ died for our sins, says S. Paul; but says he, He died according to the Scriptures; Non sine onere pronunciat Christum mortuum; The Apostle thought it a hard, a heavy, an incredible thing to say that this person, this Christ, this Man and God, was dead, And therefore, duritiam molliret, & scandalum auditoris everteret, That he might mollify the hardness of that saying, and defend the hearer from being scandalised with that saying, Adjecit, secundùm scripturas, He adds this, Christ is dead, according to the Scriptures: If the Scriptures had not told us that Christ should die, and told us again, that Christ did die, it were hard to conceive, how this person, in whom the Godhead dwelled bodily, should be submitted to death. But therein principally is he Christus, as he was capable of dying. As he was Verbum naturale, and innatum, The natural and essential word of God, He hath his first name in the text, He is the Lord: As he is verbum illatum, and Conceptum, A person upon whom there is a Decree and a Commission, that he shall be a person capable to redeem Man by death, he hath this second name in the text, He is Christ; As he is The Lord, he cannot die; As he is Christ (under the Decree) he cannot choose but die; But as he is jesus, He is dead already, and that is his other, his third, his last name in this Text, If any man love not &c. We have inverted a little, the order of these names, or titles in the Text; jesus. because the Name of Christ, is in the order of nature, before the name of jesus, as the Commission is before the Execution of the Commission. And, in other places of Scripture, to let us see, how both the capacity of doing it, and the actual doing of it, belongs only to this person, the Holy Ghost seems to convey a spiritual delight to us, in turning and transposing the Names every way; sometimes jesus alone, and Christ alone, sometimes jesus Christ, and sometimes Christ jesus, that every way we might be sure of him. Now we consider him, as jesus, a real, an actual Saviour. And this was his Name; The Angel said to his Mother, Thou shalt call his name jesus, for he shall save his people; And we say to you, Call upon this name jesus, for he hath saved his people; for, Rom. 8.1. Now there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ jesus: As he was verbum conceptum, and illatum, The word which the Trinity uttered amongst themselves, so he was decreed to come in that place, The Lord of the vineyard (that is, Almighty God seeing the misery of Man, Luk. 20.13. to be otherwise irremediable) The Lord of the vineyard said, what shall I do? I will send my beloved Son; it may be, they will reverence him when they see him. But did they reverence him, when they saw him? This sending made him Christ, a person, whom, though the Son of God, they might see: They did see him; but then, says that Gospel, they drew him out and killed him. And this he knew before he came, and yet came, and herein was jesus, a real, an actual, a zealous Saviour, even of them that slew him: And in this (with piety and reverence) we may be bold to say, that even the Son of God, was filius prodigus, that poured out his blood even for his Enemies; but rather in that acclamation of the prodigal child's Father, This my son was dead, and is alive again, he was lost, and is found. For, but for this desire of our salvation, why should he who was the Lord, be ambitious of that Name, the name of jesus, which was not Tam expectabile apud judaeos nomen, Tertull. no such name as was in any especial estimation amongst the jews: for, we see in joscphus, divers men of that name, of no great honour, of no good conversation. But because the name implies salvation, josua, who had another name before, Idem. Cum in hujus sacramenti imagine parabatur, when he was prepared as a Type of this jesus, to be a Saviour, a Deliverer of the people, Etiam nominis Dominici inaugur atus est figurae, & jesus cognominatus, than he was canonised with that name of salvation, and called josuae, which is jesus. The Lord then, the Son of God, had a Sitio in heaven, as well as upon the Cross; He thirsted our salvation there; and in the midst of the fellowship of the Father from whom he came, and of the Holy Ghost, who came from him and the Father, and all the Angels, who came (by a lower way) from them all, he desired the conversation of Man, for Man's sake; He that was God The Lord, became Christ, a man, and he that was Christ, became jesus, no man, a dead man, to save man: To save man, all ways, in all his parts, And to save all men, in all parts of the world: To save his soul from hell, where we should have felt pains, and yet been dead, then when we felt them; and seen horrid spectacles, and yet been in darkness and blindness, then when we saw them; And suffered unsufferable torments, & yet have told over innumerable ages in suffering them: To save this soul from that hell, and to fill that capacity which it hath, and give it a capacity which it hath not, to comprehend the joys and glory of Heaven, this Christ became jesus. To save this body from the condemnation of everlasting corruption, where the worms that we breed are our betters, because they have a life, where the dust of dead Kings is blown into the street, and the dust of the street blown into the River, and the muddy River tumbled into the Sea, and the Sea remaunded into all the veins and channels of the earth; to save this body from everlasting dissolution, dispersion, dissipation, and to make it in a glorious Resurrection, not only a Temple of the holy Ghost, but a Companion of the holy Ghost in the kingdom of heaven, This Christ became this jesus. To save this man, body and soul together, from the punishments due to his former sins, and to save him from falling into future sins by the assistance of his Word preached, and his Sacrrments administered in the Church, which he purchased by his blood, is this person, The Lord, the Christ, become this jesus, this Saviour. To save so, All ways, In soul, in body, in both; And also to save all men. For, to exclude others from that Kingdom, is a tyranny, an usurpation; and to exclude thyself, is a sinful, and a rebellious melancholy. But as melancholy in the body is the hardest humour to be purged, so is the melancholy in the soul, the distrust of thy salvation too. Flashes of presumption a calamity will quench, but clouds of desperation calamities thicken upon us; But even in this inordinate dejection thou exaltest thyself above God, and makest thy worst better than his best, thy sins larger than his mercy. Christ hath a Greek name, and an Hebrew name; Christ is Greek, jesus is Hebrew; He had commission to save all nations, and he hath saved all; Thou givest him another Hebrew name, and another Greek, Apoc. 9.11. when thou makest his name Abaddon, and Apollyon, a Destroyer; when thou wilt not apprehend him as a Saviour, and love him so; which is our second Part, in our order proposed at first, If any man love not, etc. In the former part, 2 Part. we found it to be one argument for the Deity of Christ, That he was jehovah, The Lord; we have another here, That this great branch, nay this very root of all divine worship due to God, is required to be exhibited to this person, That is, Love, Cicero. If any man love not, etc. If any man could see Virtue with his eye, he would be in love with her: Christ Jesus hath been seen so: Quod vidimus, says the Apostle, That which we have seen with our eyes, we preach to you, and therefore If any man love not, etc. If he love him not with that love which implies a Confession, that the Lord Jesus is God, Levit. 10.12. That is, if he love him not with all his heart, and all his power: What doth the Lord thy God require of thee? To love him with all thy heart, and all thy soul. God forbids us not a love of the Creature, proportionable to the good that that creature can do us: To love fire as it warms me, and meat as it feeds me, and a wife as she helps me; But because God does all this, in all these several instruments, God alone is centrically, radically, directly to be loved, and the creature with a love reflected, and derived from him; And Christ to be loved with the love due to God himself: Mat. 10.37. He that loveth father or mother, son or daughter more than me, is not worthy of me, says Christ himself. If then we love him so, as we love God, entirely, we confess him to be the Lord; And if we love him so, as he hath loved us, we confess him to be Christ jesus: And we consider his love to us (for the present) in these two demonstrations of it, first Dilexit in finem, As he loved, so he loved to the end; And then Posuit animam, Greater love there is not, then to die for one, and he did that. Our Saviour Christ forsook not Peter, when Peter forsook him: In finem. because he loved him, he loved him to the end. Love thou Christ to the end; To His end, and to Thy end. Finem Domini vidistis, says S. james, You have seen the end of the Lord; That is, 1 〈◊〉 5.11. says August. to what end the Lord came; His way was contempt and misery, and his end was shame and death: Love him there. Thy love is not required only in the Hosannas of Christ, when Christ is magnified, and his Gospel advanced, and men preferred for loving it: No, nor only in the Transfiguration of Christ, when Christ appears to thee in some particular beams, and manifestation of his glory; but love him in his Crucifigatur, then when it is a scornful thing to love him, And love him in the Nunquid & tu? when thou must pass that examination, Wert not thou one of them? john 18.25, 26. And in the Nun ego te vidi? if witnesses come in against thee for the love of Christ, love him when it is a suspicious thing, a dangerous thing to love him; And love him not only in spiritual transfigurations, when he visits thy soul with glorious consolations, but even in his inward eclipses, when he withholds his comforts, and withdraws his cheerfulness, even when he makes as though he loved not thee, love him. Love him, all the way, to his end, and to thy end too, to the laying down of thy life for him. Love him then in the laying down of the pleasures of this life for him, Mortificatio. and love him in the laying down of the life itself, if his love need that testimony. Of the first case, of crucifying himself to the world, Epist. 39 S. Augustine had occasion to say much to a young Gentleman, young, and noble, and rich, and (which is not, in such persons, an ordinary tentation, but where it is, it is a shrewd one) as he was young, and noble, and rich, so he was learned in other learn, and upon that strength withdrew, and kept off from Christ. It was Licentius, to whom S. Augustine writes his 39 Epistle. He had sent to S. Augustine a handsome Elegy of his making, in which Poem he had said as much of the vanity and deceivableness of this world, as S. Augustine could have looked for, or, perchance, have said in a Homily; And he ends his Elegy thus, Hoc opus, ut jubeas, All this concerning this world I know already, Do you but tell me, do you command me, what I shall do. jubebit Augustinus conservo suo? says that sensible and blessed Father: Shall I, shall Augustine command his fellow-servant? Et non plang at potiùs frustra juberc Dominum? Must not Augustine rather lament that the Lord hath commanded thee, and is not obeyed? Wouldst thou hear me? Canst thou pretend that? Exaudi teipsum, Durissime, Immanissime, Surdissime; Thou that art inoxorable against the persuasions of thine own soul, Hard against the tenderness of thine own heart, Deaf against the charms of thine own Verses, canst thou pretend a willingness to be led by me? Quam animam, quod ingenium non licet immolare Deo nostro? How well disposed a soul, how high pitched a wit is taken out of my hands, that I may not sacrifice that soul, that I may not direct that wit upon our God, because, with all these good parts, thou turnest upon the pleasures of this world? Mentiuntur, moriuntur, in mortem trahunt: Do not speak out of wit, nor out of a love to elegant expressions, nor do not speak in jest of the dangerous vanities of this world; Mentiuntur, they are false, they perform not their promises; Moriuntur, they are transitory, they stay not with thee; and In mortem trahunt, they die, and they die of the infection, and they transfuse the venom into thee, and thou diest with them: Non dicit verum, nisi veritas, & Christus veritas, Nothing will deal truly with thee but the Truth itself, and only Christ Jesus is this Truth. He follows it thus much farther, Si calicem aureum invenisses in terrae, If thou foundest a chalice of gold in the earth, so good a heart as thine would say, Surely this belongs to the Church, and surely thou wouldst give it to the Church: Accepisti à Deo ingenium spiritualiter aureum, God hath given thee a wit, an understanding, not of the gold of Ophir, but of the gold of the heavenly Jerusalem, Et in illo, Satanae propinas teipsum? In that chalice once consecrated to God, wilt thou drink a health to the devil, and drink a health to him in thine own blood, in making thy wit, thy learning, thy good parts advance his kingdom? He ends all thus, Miserearis jam mei, si tibi viluisti, If thou undervalue thyself, if thou think not thyself worth hearing, if thou follow not thine own counsels, yet miserearis mei, Have mercy upon me, me, whose charge it is to bring others to heaven, me, who shall not be received there, if I bring no body with me; be content to go with me, that way, which by the inspiration of the holy Ghost I do show, and that way, which by the conduct of the holy Ghost I would fain go. All bends to this, First, love Christ so far as to lay down the pleasures of this life for him, and so far, as to lay down the life itself for him. Christ did so for thee: Martyrium. and his blessed Servants the Martyrs, in the Primitive Church, did so for him, and thee; for his glory, for thy example. Can there be any ill, any loss, in giving thy life for him? Is it not a part of the reward itself, the honour to suffer for him? Muk 10.30. When Christ says, Whosoever loses any thing for my sake, and the Gospels, he shall have a hundred fold in houses, and lands, with persecutions, we need not limit that clause of the Promise, (with persecutions) to be, That in the midst of persecutions, God will give us temporal blessings, but that in the midst of temporal blessings, God will give us persecutions; that it shall be a part of his mercy, to be delivered from the danger of being puffed up by those temporal abundances, by having a mixture of adversity and persecutions; and then, Tertul. what ill, what loss, is there in laying down this life for him? Quid hoc mali est, quod martyrialis mali, non habet timorem, pudorem, tergiversationem, poenitentiam, deplorationem? What kind of evil is this, which when it came to the highest, Ad malum martyriale, to martyrdom, to death, did neither imprint in our holy predecessors in the Primitive Church, Timorem, any fear that it would come; not Tergiversationem, any recanting lest it should come; nor Pudorem, any shame when it was come; nor Poenitentiam, any repentance that they would suffer it to come; nor Deplorationem, any lamentation by their heirs, and Executors, because they lost all, when it was come? Quid mali? What kind of evil can I call this, in laying down my life, for this Lord of life, Cujus reus gaudet, Idem. when those Martyrs called that guiltiness a joy, Cujus accusatio votum, and the accusation a satisfaction, Cujus poena foelicitas, and the suffering perfect happiness? Love thy neighbour as thyself, is the farthest of that Commandment; but love God above thyself; for, indeed, in doing so thou dost but love thyself still: Remember that thy soul is thyself; and as if that be lost, nothing is gained, so if that be gained, nothing is lost, whatsoever become of this life. Love him then, Dominus. as he is presented to thee here; Love the Lord, love Christ, love jesus. If when thou lookest upon him as the Lord, thou findest frowns and wrinkles in his face, apprehensions of him, as of a Judge, and occasions of fear, do not run away from him, in that apprehension; look upon him in that angle, in that line awhile, and that fear shall bring thee to love; and as he is Lord, thou shalt see him in the beauty and loveliness of his creatures, in the order and succession of causes, and effects, and in that harmony and music of the peace between him, and thy foul: As he is the Lord, thou wilt fear him, but no man fears God truly, but that that fear ends in love. Love him as he is the Lord, Christus. that would have nothing perish, that he hath made; And love him as he is Christ, that hath made himself man too, that thou mightest not perish: Love him as the Lord that could show mercy; and love him as Christ, who is that way of mercy, which the Lord hath chosen. Return again, and again to that mysterious person, Christ; And let me tell you, that though the Fathers never forbore to call the blessed Virgin Mary, Deiparam, the Mother of God, yet in Damascens time, they would not admit that name, Christiparam, that she was the Mother of Christ: Not that there is any reason to deny her that name now; but because then, that great Heretic, Nestorius, to avoid that name, in which the rest agreed, Deiparam, (for he thought not Christ to be God) invented a new name, Christiparam: Though it be true in itself, that that blessed Virgin is Christipara, yet because it was the invention of an Heretic, and a fundamental Heretic, who though he thought Christ to be anointed by the Holy Ghost above his fellows, yet did not believe him to be God, Damascen, and his Age, refused that addition to the blessed Virgin; So reverently were they affected, so jealously were they enamoured of that name, Christ, the name which employed his Unction, his Commission, the Decree, by which he was made a Person, able to redeem thy soul: And in that contemplation, say with Andrew, to his brother Peter, Invenimus Messiam; I have found the Messiah; I could find no means of salvation in myself, nay, no such means to direct God upon, by my prayer, or by a wish, as he hath taken; but God himself hath found a way, a Messiah; His Son shall be made man; And Inveni Messiam, I have found him, and found, that he, who by his Inearnation, was made able to save me, (so he was Christ) by his actual passion, hath saved me, and so I love him as jesus. Christ loved Stephen all the way, jesus. for all the way Stephen was disposed to Christ's glory, but in the agony of death (death suffered for him) Christ expressed his love most, in opening the windows, Acts 7.56. the curtains of heaven itself, to see Stephen die, and to show himself to Stephen. I love my Saviour as he is The Lord, He that studies my salvation; And as Christ, made a person able to work my salvation; but when I see him in the third notion, jesus, accomplishing my salvation, by an actual death, I see those hands stretched out, that stretched out the heavens, and those feet racked, to which they that racked them are footstools; I hear him, from whom his nearest friends fled, pray for his enemies, and him, whom his Father forsook, not forsake his brethren; I see him that this body with his creatures, or else it would whither, and this soul with his Righteousness, or else it would perish, hang naked upon the Cross; And him that hath, him that is, the Fountain of the water of life, cry out, He thirsts, when that voice overtakes me, in my cross ways in the world, Is it nothing to you, all you that pass by? Lament. 1.12. Behold, and see, if there by any sorrow, like unto my sorrow, which is done unto me, wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me, in the day of his fierce anger; When I conceit, when I contemplate my Saviour thus, I love the Lord, and there is a reverend adoration in that love, I love Christ, and there is a mysterious admiration in that love, but I love jesus, and there is a tender compassion in that love, and I am content to suffer with him, and to suffer for him, rather than see any diminution of his glory, by my prevarication. And he that loves not thus, that loves not the Lord God, and God manifested in Christ, Anathema, Maranatha, which is our next, and our last Part. Whether this Anathema be denounced by the Apostle, by way of Imprecation, 3 Part. Imprecatio. that he wished it so, or pronounced by way of excommunication, That others should esteem them so, and avoid them, as such persons, is sometimes debated amongst us in our books. If the Apostle say it by way of Imprecation, if it sound so, you are to remember first, That many things are spoken by the Prophets in the Scriptures, which sound as imprecations, as execrations, which are indeed but prophecies; They seem to be spoken in the spirit of anger, when they are in truth, but in the spirit of prophecy. So, in very many places of the Psalms, David seems to wish heavy calamities upon his and God's enemies, when it is but a declaration of those judgements of God, which he prophetically foresees to be imminent upon them: They seem Imprecations, and are but Prophecies; and such, we, who have not this Spirit of Prophecy, nor foresight of God's ways, may not venture upon. If they be truly Imprecations, you are to remember also, that the Prophets and Apostles had in them a power extraordinary, and in execution of that power, might do that, which every private man may not do: So the Prophets rebuked, so they punished Kings. So a 2 King. 2.24. Elizeus called in the Bears to devour the boys; And so b 2 Kings 1. Elias called down fire to devour the Captains; So S. Peter killed c Acts 5. Ananias, and Sapphira with his word; And d Acts 13.8. so S. Paul stroke Elymas the Sorcerer with blindness. But upon Imprecations of this kind, we as private men, or as public persons, but limited by our Commission, may not adventure neither. But take the Prophets or the Apostles in their highest Authority, yet in an over-vehement zeal, they may have done some things some times not warrantable in themselves, many times many things, not to be imitated by us. In Moses his passionate vehemency, Deal me, Exod. 32.32. If thou wilt not forgive them, blot me out of thy book, And in the Apostles inconfiderate zeal to his brethren, Optabam Anathema esse, I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ; Rom. 9.3. In james and john's impatience of their Masters being neglected by the Samaritans, when they drew from Christ that rebuke, You know not of what spirit you are; In these, Luke 9.55. and such as these, there may be something, wherein even these men cannot be excused, but very much wherein we may not follow them, nor do as they did, nor say as they said. Since there is a possibility, a facility, a proclivity of erring herein, and so many conditions and circumstances required, to make an Imprecation just and lawful, the best way is to forbear them, or to be very sparing in them. But we rather take this in the Text, Excommunicatio. to be an Excommunication denounced by the Apostle, than an Imprecation: So Christ himself, If he will not hear the Church, let him be to thee as a Heathen, or a Publican; That is, Have no conversation with him. So says the Apostle, speaking of an Angel, Anathema, If any man, if we ourselves, Gal. 1.9. if an Angel from heaven, preach any other Gospel, let him be accursed. Now the Excommunication is in the Anathema, and the aggravating thereof in the other words, Maranatha. The word Anathema had two significations; They are expressed thus, Quod Deo dicatum, Just. Mart. Quod à Deo per vitium alienatum; That which for some excellency in it, was separated from the use of man, to the service of God, or that which for some great fault in it, was separated from God and man too. Ab illo abstinebant tanquam Deo dicatum, Ab hoc recedebant, Chrysost. tanquam à Deo abalienatum: From the first kind, men abstained, because they were consecrated to God, and from the other, because they were aliened from God; and in that last sense, irreligious men, such as love not the Lord Jesus Christ, are Anathema, aliened from God. Amongst the Druids, with the Heathen, they excommunicated Malefactors, and no man might relieve him in any necessity, no man might answer him in any action: And so amongst the Jews, the Esseni, who were in special estimation for sanctity, excommunicated irreligious persons, and the persons so excommunicated starved in the streets and fields. By the light of nature, by the light of grace, we should separate ourselves from irreligious, and from idolatrous persons; and that with that earnestness, which the Apostle expresses in the last words, Maran Atha. In the practice of the Primitive Church, Maran Atha. by those Canons, which we call The Apostles Canons, and those which we call The penitential Canons, we see there were different penances inflicted upon different faults, and there were, very early, relaxations of penances, Indulgences; and there were reservations of cases; in some any Priest, in some a Bishop only might dispense. It is so in our Church still; Impugners of the Supremacy are excommunicated, and not restored but by the Archbishop: Impugners of the Common prayer Book excommunicated too, but may be restored by the Bishop of the place: Impugners of our Religion declared in the Articles, reserved to the Archbishop: Impugners of Ceremonies restored when they repent, and no Bishop named: Authors of Schism reserved to the Archbishop; maintainers of Schismatics, referred but to repentance; And so maintainers of Conventicles, to the Archbishop; maintainers of Constitutions made in Conventicles, to their repentance. There was ever, there is yet a reserving of certain cases, and a relaxation or aggravating of Ecclesiastical censures, for their weight, and for their time: and, because Not to love the Lord jesus Christ was the greatest, the Apostle inflicts this heaviest Excommunication, Maran Atha. The word seems to be a Proverbial word amongst the Jews after their return, and vulgarly spoken by them, and so the Apostle takes it, out of common use of speech: Maran, is Dominus, The Lord, and Athan is Venit, He comes: Not so truly, in the very exactness of Hebrew rules, and terminations, but so amongst them then, when their language was much depraved: Dan. 4.16. Deut. 33.2. but, in ancienter times, we have the word Mara for Dominus, and the word Atha for Venit; And so Anathema, Maran Atha will be, Let him that loveth not the Lord jesus Christ, be as an accursed person to you, even till the Lord come. S. Hierom seems to understand this, Dominus venit, That the Lord is come; come already, come in the flesh; Superfluum, says he, odiis pertinacibus contendere adversus eum, qui jam venit; It is superabundant perverseness, to resist Christ now; Now that he hath appeared already, and established to himself a Kingdom in this world. And so S. chrysostom seems to take it too; Christ is come already, says he, Et jam nulla potest excusatio non diligentibus eum; If any excuse could be pretended before, yet since Christ is come, none can be: Si opertum, says the Apostle, If our Gospel be hid now, it is hid from them who are lost; that is, they are lost from whom it is hid. But that is not all, that is intended by the Apostle, in this place. It is not only a censorious speech, It is a shame for them, and an inexcusable thing in them, if they do not love the Lord Jesus Christ, but it is a judiciary speech, thus much more, since they do not love the Lord, The Lord judge them when he comes; I, says the Apostle, take away none of his mercy, when he comes, but I will have nothing to do with them, till he comes; to me, he shall be Anathema, Maran Atha, separated from me, till then; then, the Lord who shows mercy in minutes, do his will upon him. Our former Translation had it thus, Let him be had in execration, and excommunicated till death; In death, Lord have mercy upon him; till death, I will not live with him. To end all, If a man love not the Lord, if he love not God, which is, which was, and which is to come, what will please him? whom will he love? If he love the Lord, and love not Christ, and so love a God in general, but lay no hold upon a particular way of his salvation, Sine Christo, sine Deo, says the Apostle to the Ephesians, when ye were without Christ, Eph. 2.12. ye were without God; A non-Christian, is an Atheist in that sense of the Apostle. If any man find a Christ, a Saviour of the World, but find not a jesus, an actual Saviour, 1 john 2.22. that this Jesus hath saved him, Who is a liar, says another Apostle, but he that denieth that jesus is the Christ? 1 john 5.1. And (as he says after) Whosoever believeth that jesus is the Christ, is borne of God. From the presumptuous Atheist, that believes no God, from the reserved Atheist, that believes no God manifested in Christ, from the melancholic Atheist that believes no Jesus applied to him, from him of no Religion, from him of no Christian Religion, from him that errs fundamentally in the Christian Religion, the Apostle enjoins a separation, not till clouds of persecution come, and then join, not till beams of preferment come, and then join, not till Laws may have been slumbered some years, and then join, not till the parties grow somewhat near an equality, and then join, but Maran Atha, donec Dominus venit, till the Lord come to his declaration in judgement, If any man love not the Lord jesus Christ, let him be accursed. Amen. SERM. XLI. Preached upon Trinity-Sunday. PSAL. 2.12. Kiss the Son, lest he be angry. WHether we shall call it a repeating again in us, of that which God had done before to Israel, or call it a performing of that in us, which God promised by way of Prophecy to Israel, that is certainly afforded to us by God, which is spoken by the Prophet of Israel, Hos. 11.4. God doth draw us with the cords of a man, and with bands of love: with the cords of a man, the man Christ Jesus, the Son of God, and with the bands of love, the band and seal of love, a holy kiss, Kiss the Son, lest he be angry. No man comes to God, except the Father draw him; The Father draws no man, but by the Son; and the Son receives none, but by love, and this cement and glue, of a zealous and a reverential love, a holy kiss; Kiss the Son, etc. The parts upon which, for the enlightening of your understandings, Divisio. and assistance of your memories, we shall insist, are two: first our duty, than our danger; The first is an expression of love, Kiss the Son; the second is an impression of fear, lest he be angry. In the first we shall proceed thus: we shall consider first The object of this love, the Person, the second Person in the Trinity, The Son; The rather, because that consideration will clear the Translation; for, in no one place of Scripture, do Translations differ more, then in this Text; and the Roman Translation and ours differ so much, as that they have but Apprehendite disciplinam, Embrace knowledge, where we have, (as you heard) Kiss the Son. From the Person, The Son, we shall pass to the act, Osculamini, Kiss the Son; In which we shall see, That since this is an act, which licentious men have depraved, (carnal men do it, and treacherous men do it; judas (and not only judas) have betrayed by a kiss) and yet God commands this, and expresses love in this, Every thing that hath, or may be abused, must not therefore be abandoned; the turning of a thing out of the way, is not a taking of that thing away, but good things deflected to ill uses, by some, may be by others reduced to their first goodness. And then in a third branch of this first part, we shall consider, and magnify the goodness of God, that hath brought us into this distance, that we may Kiss the Son, that the expressing of this love lies in our hands, and that, whereas the love of the Church, in the Old Testament, even in the Canticle, went no farther but to the Osculetur me, O that he would kiss me with the kisses of his mouth! now, Cant. 1.1. in the Christian Church, and in the visitation of a Christian soul, he hath invited us, enabled us to kiss him, for he is presentially amongst us: And this will lead us to conclude that first part, with an earnest persuasion, and exhortation to kiss the Son, with all those affections, which we shall there find to be expressed in the Scriptures, in that testimony of true love, a holy kiss. But then, lest that persuasion by love should not be effectual, and powerful enough to us, we shall descend from that duty, to the danger, from love, to fear, Lest he be angry; And therein see first, that God, who is love, can be angry; And then, that this God who is angry here, is the Son of God, He that hath done so much for us, and therefore in Justice may be angry; He that is our Judge, and therefore in reason, we are to fear his anger: And then, in a third branch, we shall see, how easily this anger departs, a kiss removes it, Do it, lest he be angry; And then lastly, we shall inquire, what does anger him; and there consider, That as we attribute power to the Father, and so, sins against power (the undervaluing of God's power in the Magistrate over us, or the abusing of God's power, in ourselves, over others) were sins against the Father; so wisdom being the attribute of the Son, ignorance, which is so far under wisdom, and curiosity, which carries us beyond wisdom, will be sins against the Son. Our first branch in our first part, 1 Part. Persona, Filius. directs us upon him, who is first and last, and yesterday and to day, and the same for ever; The Son of God, Osculamini filium, Kiss the Son. Where the Translations differ as much, as in any one passage. The Chalde paraphrase (which is, for the most part, good evidence) and the translation of the Septuagint, (which adds much weight) and the currant of the Fathers (which is of importance too) do all read this place, Apprehendite disciplinam, Embrace knowledge, and not Osculamini filium, Kiss the son. Of the later men in the Roman Church, divers read it as we do, Osculamini, and some farther, Amplectimini, Embrace the son. Amongst the Jews, Rab. Solomon reads it, Armanini disciplina, Arm yourselves with knowledge; And another modern man, reads it, Osculamini pactum, Kiss the Covenant; And, Adorate frumentum, Adore the Corn, and thereby carries it from the pacification of Christ in heaven, to the adoration of the bread in the Sacrament. Clearly, and without exception, even from Bellarmine himself, according to the Original Hebrew, it ought to be read, as we read it, Kiss the Son. Now very many, very learned, and very zealous men of our times, have been very vehement against that Translation of the Roman Church, though it be strengthened, by the Chalde, by the Septuagint, and by the Fathers, in this place. The reason of the vehemence in this place, is not because that sense, which that translation presents, may not be admitted; no, nor that it does not reach home, to that which is intended in ours, Kiss the Son: for, since the doctrine of the Son of God, had been established in the verses before, to say now, Apprehendite disciplinam, lay hold upon that Doctrine; That doctrine which was delivered before, is, in effect the same thing, as, Kiss the Son. So Luther, when he takes, and follows that translation of that Church, says, Nostra translatio, ad verbum, nihil est, ad sensum propriissima; That translation, if we consider the very words only, is far from the Original, but if we regard the sense, it is most proper. And so also Calvin admits; Take it which way you will, Idem manet sensus, Pelican. the sense is all one. And therefore another Author in the Reformation says, In re dubia, malim vetustissimo interpreti crederc, since upon the whole matter it is doubtful, or indifferent, I would not departed, says he, from that Translation, which is most ancient. The case then being thus, that that sense may be admitted, and admitted so as that it establish the same doctrine that ours does, why are our late men so very vehement against it? Truly, upon very just reason: for, when those former reverend men were so moderate as to admit that translation in this place; The Church of Rome, had not then put such a sanctity, such a reverence, such a singularity, and pre-eminence, and supremacy, such a Noli me tangere, upon that Translation; It had the estimation then of a very reverend Translation, and compared with any other Translations, than the best. But when in the Council of Trent they came to make it as Authentical, to prefer it before the Originals themselves, to decide all matters of Controversy by it alone, and to make the doing so, matter of faith, and heresy, in any thing to departed from that Translation, than came these later men justly to charge it with those errors, wherein, by their own confessions, it hath departed from the Original; Not that these men meant to discredit that Translation so, as that it should not still retain the estimation of a good and useful Translation, but to avoid that danger, that it should be made matter of faith, to be bound to one Translation; or that any Translation should be preferred before the Original. And so truly it is, in many other things, besides the translation. They say S. Peter was at Rome; and all moderate men went along with them; S. Peter was at Rome. But when upon S. Peter's personal being at Rome, they came to build their universal supremacy over all the Church, and so to erect matter of faith upon matter of fact, than later men came to deny, that it could be proved out of Scripture, that Peter was at Rome; So the Ancients spoke of many Sacraments, so they did of Purgatory, so they did of many things controverted now; when as they, then, never suspected that so impious a fence would have been put upon their words, nor those opinions and doctrines so mischievously advanced, as they have been since. If they would have let their translation have remained such a translation, we would not have declined it; since they will have all trials made by it, we rather accept the Original; and that is in this place, Osculamini filium, Kiss the Son. The person then (which was our first Consideration) is the Son; Osculamini. The testimony of our love to this person, is this Kiss, Osculamini: where we see, that God calls upon us, and enjoins unto us, such an outward act, as hath been diversely depraved, and vitiated before amongst men. God gives no countenance to that distempered humour, to that distorted rule; It hath been ill used, and therefore it may not be used. Sacred and secular Stories abound with examples of the treacherous Kiss; Let the Scriptures be our limits. joabs' compliment with Amasa; Art thou in health, my brother? ended in this; 2 Sam. 20.9. He took him with the right hand, as to kiss him, and killed him. Enlarge your thoughts a little upon judas case; judas was of those, who had tasted of the word of God, Heb. 6.5. and the powers of the world to come; He had lived in the Conversation, in the Pedagogy, in the Discipline of Christ; yet he sold Christ; and sold him at a low price, as every man that is so unprovident, as to offer a thing to sale, shall do; and he stayed not till they came to him, with, What will you take for your Master? but he went to them, with, What will you give me for Christ? yet Christ admits him, admits him to supper, and after all this, calls him friend; for, after all this, Christ had done two, perchance three offices of a friend to judas; He washed his feet; and, perchance, he gave him the Sacrament with the rest; and by assigning the sop for a particular mark, he let him see, that he knew he was a traitor, which might have been enough to have reclaimed him, It did not; but he proceeded in his treason, and in the most mischievous and treacherous performing of it, tobetray him with a kiss; He gave them a sign, whomsoever I shall kiss, the same is he: Mat. 26.48. Dat signum osculi, cum veneno Diaboli, says Hierome, He kisses with a biting kiss, and conveys treason in a testimony of love. It is an Apophthegm of Luther's, Mali tyranni, haeretiei pejores, falsi fratres pessimi: A persecutor is ill; but he that persuades me to any thing, which might submit me to the persecutors rage, is worse; but he that hath persuaded me, and then betrays me, is worst of all. Mic. 7.6. Act. 20.30. When all that happens, when a man's enemies are the men of his own house, when amongst ourselves men arise, and draw away the Disciples, remember that judas defamed this kiss before, he kissed his Master, and so betrayed him. Homo sum, & inter homines vivo, says S. Augustine, I am but a man myself, and I look but for men to live amongst; Nec mihi arrogare audeo, meliorem domum meam, quam Arca Noah, I cannot hope to have my house clearer than Noah's Ark, and there, in eight, there was one ill; nor then jacobs' house, and there the Son went up to the Father's bed; nor then David's, and there the brother forced the sister; nor then Christ's, and there judas betrayed his Master, and with a kiss: which alone does so aggravate the fact, as that for the atrocity and heinousness thereof, three of the Evangelists remember that circumstance, That he betrayed him with a kiss; and as though it might seem impossible, incredible to man, that it could be so, S. john pretermits that circumstance, That it was done with a kiss. In joabs' treachery, in judas treason, is the kiss defamed, and in the carnal and licentious abuse of it, it is every day depraved. They mistake the matter much, that think all adultery is below the girdle: A man darrs out an adultery with his eye, in a wanton look; and he wraps up adultery with his fingers, in a wanton letter; and he breathes in an adultery with his lips, in a wanton kiss. But though this act of love, be so defamed both ways, by treachery, by licentiousness, yet God chooses this Metaphor, he bids us kiss the Son. It is a true, and an useful Rule, That ill men have been Types of Christ, Hieron. Ep. 131. G. Sanctius. 2 Sam. 11. n. 29. and ill actions figures of good: Much more, may things not ill in themselves, though deflected and detorted to ill, be restored to good again; and therefore doth God, in more than this one place, expect our love in a kiss; for, if we be truly in love with him, it will be a holy and an acceptable Metaphor unto us, else it will have a carnal and a fastidious taste. Frustra ad legendum amoris carmen, qui non amat, accedit: Bernar. He that comes to read Solomon's Love song, and loves not him upon whom that Song is directed, will rather endanger, than profit himself by that reading: Non capit ignitum eloquium frigidum pectus: Idem. A heart frozen and congealed with the love of this world, is not capable, not sensible of the fires of the holy Ghost; Idem. Graecè loquentes non intelligit, qui Graecè non novit, & lingua amoris ei, qui non amat, barbara; As Greek itself is barbarous to him that understands not Greek, so is the language of love, and the kiss which the holy Ghost speaks of here, to him that always groveleth, and holds his face upon the earth. Treachery often, but licentiousness more, hath depraved this seal of love; and yet, nos ad amplexus sacri amoris accendat, Gregor. usque ad turpis amoris nostri verba se inclinat; God stoops even to the words of our foul and unchaste love, that thereby he might raise us to the heavenly love of himself, Idem. and his Son. Cavendum, ne machina quae ponitur ut levet, ipsa aggrevet: Take thou heed, that that ladder, or that engine which God hath given to raise thee, do not load thee, oppress thee, cast thee down: Take heed lest those phrases of love and kisses which should raise thee to him, do not bury thee in the memory and contemplation of sinful love, Idem. and of licentious kisses. Palea tegit frumentum; palea jumentorum, frumentum hominum: There is corn under the chaff; and though the chaff and straw be for cattles, there is corn for men too: There is a heavenly love, under these ordinary phrases; the ordinary phrase belongs to ordinary men; the heavenly love and the spiritual kiss, to them who affect an union to God, and him whom he sent, his Son Christ Jesus. S. Paul abhors not good and appliable sentences, because some secular Poets had said them before; nor hath the Christian Church abhorred the Temples of the Gentiles, because they were profaned before with idolatrous sacrifices. I do not conceive how that Jesuit Serarius should conceive any such great joy, In Jos. 6. q. 40. as he says he did, when he came to a Church-porch, and saw an old statue of jupiter, and another of Hercules, holding two basins of holy water; when jupiter and Hercules were made to do christian's such services, the Jesuit is overjoyed. His jupiter and his Hercules might well enough have been spared in the Christian Church, but why some such things as have been abused in the Roman Church, may not be preserved in, or reduced to their right use here, I conceive not; as well as (in a proportion) this outward testimony of inward love, though defamed by treachery, though depraved by licentiousness, is exacted at our hands by God himself, towards his Son, Kiss the Son, lest he be angry. For all joabs' and judas treason, Propinquitas. and carnal lover's licentiousness, kiss thou the Son, and be glad that the Son hath brought thee, in the Christian Church, within that distance, as that thou mayest kiss him. The nearest that the Synagogue, or that the Spouse of Christ not yet married came to, Cant. 11.1. was, Osculetur me, Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth. It was but a kissing of his hand, when he reached them out their spiritual food by others; It was a marriage, but a marriage by a proxy; The personal marriage, the consummation of the marriage was in the coming of Christ, in establishing a real presence of himself in the Church. Praecepta Dei oscula sunt, says Gregory; In every thing that God says to us, he kisses us; Sed per Prophetas & Ministros, alieno ore nos osculatur, He kissed us by another man's mouth, when he spoke by the mouth of the Prophets; but now that he speaks by his own Son, Exod. 6.12. it is by himself. Even his servant Moses himself was of uncircumcised lips, and with the uncircumcised there was no marriage. Even his servant Esay was of unclean lips, Esay 6.5. Jer. 1.6. and with the unclean there was no marriage: Even his servant jeremy was oris infantilis, he was a child and could not speak, and with children, in infancy, there is no marriage: But in Christ, God hath abundantly performed that supply promised to Moses, there, Aaron thy brother shall be thy Prophet; Christ himself shall come and speak to thee, and return and speak for thee: In Christ, the Seraphim hath brought that live coal from the Altar, and touched Esayes lips, and so spoken lively, and clearly to our souls; In Christ, God hath done that which he said to jeremy, Fear not, I am with thee; for in this Immanuel, God and man, Christ Jesus, God is with us. In Eschines mouth, when he repeated them, they say, even Demosthenes' Orations were flat, and tastlesse things; Compare the Prophets with the Son, and even the promises of God, 2 King. 4.34. in them, are faint and dilute things. Elishaes' staff in the hand of Gehazi his servant, would not recover the Shunamites dead child; but when Elisha himself came, and put his mouth upon the child's mouth, that did: In the mouth of Christ's former servants there was a preparation, but effect, and consummation in his own mouth. In the Old Testament. at first, God kissed man, and so breathed the breath of life, and made him a man; In the New Testament Christ kissed man, he breathed the breath of everlasting life, the holy Ghost, into his Apostles, and so made the man a blessed man. Love is as strong as death; Cant. 8.6. As in death there is a transmigration of the soul, so in this spiritual love, and this expressing of it, by this kiss, there is a transfusion of the soul too: And as we find in Gellius a Poem of Plato's, where he says, he knew one so extremely passionate, parùm affuit quin moreretur in osculo, much more is it true in this heavenly union, expressed in this kiss, as S. Ambrose delivers it, Per osculum adhaeret anima Deo, et transfunditur spiritus osculantis, In this kiss, where Righteousness and peace have kissed each other, In this person, where the Divine and the humane nature have kissed each other, Psal. 85.10. In this Christian Church, where Grace and Sacraments, visible and invisible means of salvation, have kissed each other, Love is as strong as death; my soul is united to my Saviour, now in my life, as in death, and I am already made one spirit with him: and whatsoever death can do, this kiss, this union can do, that is, give me a present, an immediate possession of the kingdom of heaven: And as the most mountainous parts of this kingdom are as well within the kingdom as a garden, so in the midst of the calamities and incommodities of this life, I am still in the kingdom of heaven. In the Old Testament, it was but a contract, but per verba de futuro, Sponsabo, I will marry thee; Hos. 2.19. Mat. 9.15. but now that Christ is come, the Bridegroom is with us for ever, and the children of the Bride-chamber cannot mourn. Now, by this, we are slid into our fourth and last branch of our first part, Exhortatic. The persuasion to come to this holy kiss, though defamed by treachery, though depraved by licentiousness, since God invites us to it, by so many good uses thereof in his Word. It is an imputation laid upon Nero, That Neque adveniens, neqùe profisciscens, That whether coming or going he never kissed any: And Christ himself imputes it to Simon, as a neglect of him, That when he came into his house, he did not kiss him. Luke 7.45. August. This than was in use, first among kinsfolks; In illa simplicitate antiquorum, propinqui propinquos osculabantur: In those innocent and harmless times, persons near in blood did kiss one another: And in that right, and not only as a stranger, jacob kissed Rachel, Gen. 29.12. and told her how near of kin he was to her. There is no person so near of kin to thee, as Christ Jesus: Christ Jesus thy Father as he created thee, and thy brother as he took thy nature: Thy Father as he provided an inheritance for thee, and thy brother as he divided this inheritance with thee, and as he died to give thee possession of that inheritance: He that is Nutritius, thy Foster-father who hath nursed thee in his house, in the Christian Church, and thy Twin-brother, so like thee, as that his Father, and thine in him, shall not know you from one another, but mingle your conditions so, as that he shall find thy sins in him, and his righteousness in thee; Osculamini Filium, Kiss this Son as thy kinsman. This kiss was also in use, as Symbolum subjectionis, A recognition of sovereignty or power; Pharaoh says to joseph, Thou shalt be over my house, Gen. 41.40. and according to thy word shall all my people be ruled; there the Original is, All my people shall kiss thy face. This is the Lord Paramount, the Sovereign Lord of all; The Lord Jesus; jesus, Phil. 2.10. Mat. 28.18. at whose name every knee must bow, in heaven, in earth, and in hell; jesus, into whose hands all power in heaven and in earth is given; jesus, who hath opened a way to our Appeal; from all powers upon earth, Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul; jesus, Mat. 10.28. who is the Lion and the Lamb too, powerful upon others, accessible unto thee; Osculamini Filium, Kiss this Son, as he is thy Sovereign. It was in use likewise In discessu, friends parting kissed; Gen. 31.15. Act. 20.37. Laban risen up early in the morning, and kissed his sons and his daughters, and departed: And at Paul's departing, they fell on his neck, and wept, and kissed him. When thou departest to thy worldly businesses, to thy six day's labour, kiss him, take leave of him, and remember that all that while thou art gone upon his errand, and though thou work for thy family, and for thy posterity, yet thou workest in his vineyard, and dost his work. They kissed too In reditu; Esau ran to meet his brother, and fell on his neck and kissed him. Gen. 33.4. When thou returnest to his house, after thy six day's labour, to celebrate his Sabbath, kiss him there, and be able to give him some good account, from Sabbath to Sabbath, from week to week, of thy stewardship, and thou wilt never be bankrupt. They kissed in reconciliation; David kissed Absalon. 2 Sam. 14.33. If thou have not discharged thy stewardship well, Restore to man who is damnified therein, Confess to God who hath suffered in that sin, Reconcile thyself to him, and kiss him in the Sacrament, in the seal of Reconciliation. They kissed in a religious reverence even of false gods; I have, says God, 2 King. 19 18. seven thousand knees that have not bowed unto Baal, and mouths that have not kissed him. Let every one of us kiss the true God, in keeping his knees from bowing to a false, his lips from assenting, his hands from subscribing to an Idolatrous worship. And, as they kissed In Symbolum concordiae, Rom. 16.16. (which was another use thereof; Salute one another with a holy kiss) upon which custom, justin Martyr says, Osculum ante Eucharistiam, before the Communion, the Congregation kissed, to testify their unity in faith in him, to whom they were then Sacramentally to be united, as well as Spiritually, And Tertullian calls it Osculum signaculum Orationis, Because they ended their public Prayers with that seal of unity and concord, Let every Congregation kiss him so; at every meeting to seal to him a new band, a new vow that they will never break, in departing from any part of his true worship. Luke 7.38. And to that purpose kiss his feet, as Marry Magdalen did: Speciosi pedes Euangelizantium; Let his feet, his Ministers, in whom he comes, be acceptable unto you; and love that, upon which himself stands, The Ordinance which he hath established for your salvation. Kiss the Son, that is, embrace him, depend upon him all these ways; As thy kinsman, As thy Sovereign, At thy going, At thy coming; At thy Reconciliation, in the truth of religion in thyself, in a peaceable unity with the Church, in a reverend estimation of those men, and those means, whom he sends. Kiss him, and be not ashamed of kissing him; Cant. 8.1. It is that, which the Spouse desired, I would kiss thee, & not be despised. If thou be despised for loving Christ in his Gospel, remember that when David was thought base, for dancing before the Ark, his way was to be more base. If thou be thought frivolous for thrusting in at Service, in the forenoon, be more frivolous, and come again in the afternoon: Gregor. Tanto major requies, quanto ab amore jesu nulla requies: The more thou troublest thyself, or art troubled by others for Christ, the more peace thou hast in Christ. We descend now to our second Part, 2 Part. from the duty to the danger, from the expressing of love to the impression of fear, Kiss the Son, lest he be angry: And first that anger and love, are not incompatible, that anger consists with love: God is immutable, and, God is love, and yet God can be angry. God stops a little upon scorn, in the fourth verse of this Psalm, When the Kings of the earth take counsel against his anointed, he laughs them to scorn, he hath them in derision. But it ends not in a jest; He shall speak to them in his wrath, and vex them in his sore displeasure; And that is not all; He shall break them with a rod of iron, and dash them in pieces like a Potter's vessel. Lactantius reprehends justly two errors, and proposes a godly middle way in the Doctrine of the anger of God. Some say, says he, that only favour, and gentleness can be attributed to God, Quia illaesibilis, He himself cannot be hurt, and then why should he be angry? And this is, says he, Favorabilis & popularis oratio, It is a popular and an acceptable proposition, God cannot be angry, do what you will, you cannot anger him, for he is all gentleness. Others, says Lactantius, take both anger, and gentleness from God, and say he is affected neither way: And this is, says he well, Constantior error, An error that will better hold together, better consist in itself, and be better stood to; for they are inseparable things; whosoever does love the good, does hate the bad: and therefore if there be no anger, there is no love in God; but that cannot be said. And therefore, says he, we must not argue thus, Because there is no anger in God, therefore there is no love; for that indeed would follow, if the first were true; But because there is love in God, therefore there is anger: And so he concludes thus, This is Cardo Religionis, This is the hinge upon which all Religion, all the Worship of God turns and moves, Si nihil praestat colenti non debetur cultus, nec metus si non irascitur non cobenti; If God gave me nothing for my love, I should not love him, nor fear him if he were not angry at my displeasing him. It is argument enough against the Epicures, (against whom principally he argues) Si non curate, non habet potestatem: If God take no care of humane actions, he hath no power; for it is impossible to think, that he hath power, and uses it not; An idle God is as impossible an imagination, as an impotent God, or an ignorant God. Anger, as it is a passion that troubles, and disorders, and discomposes a man, so it is not in God, but anger as it is a sensible discerning of foes from friends, and of things that conduce, or disconduce to his glory, so it is in God. In a word, Hilary hath expressed it well, Poena patientis, it a decernentis, Man's suffering is God anger; when God inflicts such punishments, as a King justly incensed would do, than God is thus angry. Now here, our case is heavier; It is not this Great, and Almighty, Filius. and Majestical God, that may be angry; that is like enough; But even the Son, whom we must kiss, may be angry: It is not a person whom we consider merely as God, but as man; Nay, not as man neither, but a worm, and no man, and he may be angry, and angry to our ruin. But is it he? Is it the Son, that is intended here? Ask the Roman Translation, and it is not he: There it is, Ne irascatur Dominus, Lest the Lord be angry; But the Record, the Original will be against them: Though it were so, The Lord, it might be He, the Son, but it is not the Lord, but must necessarily be the Son; The Son may, the Son will be angry with us. If he could be angry, why did he not show it to the Devil that tempted him, to the Jews that crucified him? God bless us from such an anger, as works upon the Devil, in a desperate unsensibleness of any mercy, from any trade in that Sea, which environs the whole world, and makes all that, one Island, where only the Devil can be no Merchant, The bottomless Sea of his blood; And God bless us from such an anger, as works upon the Jews, in an obduration, and the punishment of it, a dispersion: Are ye sure David was not angry with Shimei, because he reprieved him for a time? Are ye sure the Son is not angry now, because ye perish not yet? Do you not say, A fruit is perished, if it be bruised in one place? Is not your Religion perished, if Locusts and Earwigs have eaten into it, though they have not eaten it up? Is not your Religion perished, if irreligion and profaneness be entered into your manners, into your lives, though Religion have some motion in our ordinary meetings, and public exercises here? The Son is Caput, and Corpus, as S. Augustine says often, Christ, and the Church of Christ, are Christ; And, Quis enumeret omnia, quibus corpus Christi irascitur? says the same Father; Who can reckon how many ways, this Christ, this body of Christ, the Church, is constrained to express anger? How many Excommunications, how many Censures, how many Suspensions, how many Irregularities, how many Penances, and Commutations of Penances, is the body of Christ, the Church, forced to inflict upon sinners? And how heavy would these be to us, if we did not weigh them with the weights of flesh in the Shambles, or of Iron in the Shop; if we did not consider them only in their temporal damage, how little an excommunication took from us of our goods, or worldly substance, and not how much it shut up the ordinary and outward means of our salvation. When the anger of the Body, the Church, is thus heavy, what is the anger of the Head, of Christ himself, who is Judge in his own cause? When an unjust judgement was executed upon him, how was the frame of nature shaked in Eclipses, in Earthquakes, in renting of the Temple, and cleaving the Monuments of the dead: When his pleasure is to execute a just judgement upon a Nation, upon a Church, upon a Man, in the infatuation of Princes, in the recidivation of the Clergy, in the consternation of particular consciences, Quis stabit? who shall be able to stand in that Judgement? Kiss the Son lest he be angry; But when he is angry, he will not kiss you, nor be kissed by you, but throw you into unquenchable fire, if you be cold, and if you be lukewarm, spit you out of his mouth, remove you from the benefit and comfort of his Word. This is the anger of God, that reaches to all the world; and the anger of the Son, Osculum amovet. that comes home to us; and all this is removed with this holy and spiritual kiss: Osculamini Filium, Kiss the Son lest he be angry, implies this, If ye kiss him, he will not be angry. What this kiss is, we have seen all the way; It is to hang at his lips, for the Rule of our life, To depend upon his Word for our Religion, and to secure ourselves, by the promises of his Gospel, in all our calamities, and not to provoke him to farther judgements, by a perverse and froward use of those judgements which he hath laid upon us: As it is, in this point towards man, it is towards God too; Nihil mansuetudine violentius, There is not so violent a thing as gentleness, so forcible, so powerful upon man, Chrysost. or upon God. This is such a saying, as one would think he that said it, should be ready to retract, by the multiplicity of examples to the contrary every day. Such Rules as this, He that puts up one wrong invites and calls for another, will shake Chrysostom's Rule shrewdly, Nihil mansuetudine violentius, That no battery is so strong against an enemy, as gentleness. Say, if you will, Nihilmelius, There is no better thing than gentleness, and we can make up that with a Comment, that is, nothing better for some purposes; Say, if you will, Nihil frugalius, There is not a thriftier thing than gentleness, It saves charges, to suffer, It is a more expensive thing to revenge then to suffer, whether we consider expense of soul, or body, or fortune; And, (by the way) that, which we use to add in this account, opinion, reputation, that which we call Honour, is none of the Elements of which man is made; It may be the air, that the Bird flies in, It may be the water, that the Fish swims in, but it is none of the Elements that man is made of, for those are only soul, and body, and fortune. Say also, if you will, Nihil accommodatius, Nothing conforms us more to our great pattern Christ Jesus, than mildness, than gentleness, for that is our lesson from him, Discite à me, quiamitis, Learn of me, for I am meek. All this chrysostom might say; but will he say, Nihil violentius, There is not so violent, so forcible a thing as mildness? That there is no such Bullet, as a Pillow, no such Action, as Passion, no such revenge, as suffering an injury? Yet, even this is true; Nothing defeats an anger so much as patience; nothing reproaches a chiding so much as silence. Reprehendis iratum? accusas indignationem? says that Father: Art thou sorry to see a man angry? Cur magis irasci vis? Why dost thou add thy anger to his? Why dost thou fuel his anger with thine? Quodigni aqua, hoc irae mansuetudo, As water works upon fire, so would thy patience upon his anger. S. Ambrose hath expressed it well too, Haec sunt armajusti, ut cedendo vincat; This is the war of the righteous man, to conquer by yielding. Esay 36.21. It was Ezechiahs' way; when Rabshakeh reviled, They held their peace, (where, the very phrase affords us this note, That silence is called holding of our peace, we continue our peace best by silence) They held their peace, says that text, and answered him not a word, for the King had commanded them not to answer. Why? S. Hierom tells us why; Ne add majores blasphemias provocaret; Lest the multiplying of choleric words amongst men, should have occasioned more blasphemies against God. And as it is thus with man, with God it is thus too; Nothing spends his judgements, and his corrections so soon, as our patience, nothing kindles them, exasperates them so much, as our frowardness, and murmuring. Kiss the Son, and he will not be angry; If he be, kiss the rod, and he will be angry no longer; love him lest he be, fear him when he is angry: The preservative is easy, and so is the restorative too: The Balsamum of this kiss is all; To suck spiritual milk out of the left breast, as well as out of the right, To find mercy in his judgements, reparation in his ruins, feasts in his Lents, joy in his anger. But yet we have reserved it for our last Consideration, what will make him angry: what sins are especially directed upon the second Person, the Son of God, and then we have done all. Though those three Attributes of God, Sapientia. Power, and Wisdom, and Goodness, he all three in all the three Persons of the Trinity, (for they are all (as we say in the School) Co-omnipotentes, they have all a joynt-Almightinesse, a joynt-Wisdome, and a joynt-Goodnesse) yet, because the Father is Principium, The root of all, Independent, not proceeding from any other, as both the other Persons do, and Power, and Sovereignty best resembles that Independency, therefore we attribute Power to the Father: And because the Son proceeds Per modum intellectus, (which is the phrase that passes through the Fathers, and the School) That as our understanding proceeds from our reasonable soul, so the second Person, the Son, proceeds from the Father, therefore we attribute Wisdom to the Son: And then, because the Holy Ghost is said to proceed Per modum voluntatis, That as our soul (as the root) and our understanding, proceeding from that soul, produce our will, and the object of our will, is evermore Bonum, that which is good in our apprehension, therefore we attribute to the Holy Ghost, Goodness. And therefore David forms his prayer, Psal 51. in that manner, plurally, Miserere mei Elohim, Be merciful unto me all, because in his sin upon Vriah, (which he laments in that Psalm) he had transgressed against all the three Persons, in all their Attributes, against the Power, and the Wisdom, and the Goodness of God. That than which we consider principally in the Son, is Wisdom. And truly those very many things, which are spoken of Wisdom, in the Proverbs of Solomon, do, for the most part, hold in Christ: Christ is, for the most part, the Wisdom of that book. And for that book which is called altogether, The book of Wisdom, Isidore says, that a Rabbi of the Jews told him, That that book was heretofore in the Canonical Scripture, and so received by the Jews; till after Christ's Crucifying, when they observed, what evident testimonies there were in that book for Christ, they removed it from the Canon. This I know, is not true; but I remember it therefore, because all assists us, to consider Wisdom in Christ, as that does also, That the greatest Temple of the Christians in Constantinople, was dedicated in that name, Sophia, to Wisdom; by implication to Christ. And in some apparitions, where the Son of God is said to have appeared, he calls himself by that name, Sapientiam Dei. He is Wisdom, therefore, because he reveals the Will of the Father to us; and therefore is no man wise, but he that knows the Father in him. Isidore makes this difference Inter sapientem & prudentem, that the first, The wise man, attends the next world, the last, The prudent man, but this world: But wisdom, even heavenly wisdom, does not exclude that prudence, though the principal, or rather the ordinary object thereof, be this world. And therefore sins against the second Person, are sins against Wisdom, in either extreme, either in affected and gross ignorance, or in overrefined and sublimed curiosity. As we place this Ignorance in Practical things of this world, so it is Stupidity; and as we place it in Doctrinal things, of the next world, so Ignorance is Implicit Belief: And Curiosity, as we place it upon Practical things, is Craft, and upon Doctrinal things, Subtlety; And this Stupidity and this Implicit faith, and then this Craft, and this Subtlety, are sins directed against the Son, who is true and only Wisdom. First then, A stupid and negligent passage through this world, as though thou wert no part of it, without embarking thyself in any calling; To cross God's purpose so much, Stupiditas. as that, whereas he produced every thing out of nothing, to be something, thou wilt go so far back, towards nothing again, as to be good for nothing, that when as our Laws call a Calling, an Addition, thou wilt have no Addition, And when (as S. Augustine says) Musca Soli praeferenda, quia vivit, A Fly is a nobler Creature than the Sun, in this respect, because a Fly hath life in itself, and the Sun hath none, so any Artificer is a better part of a State, than any retired or contemplative man that embraces no Calling, These chip of the world, these fragmentary and incoherent men, trespass against the Son, against the second Person, as he is Wisdom. And so do they in doctrinal things, that swallow any particular religion, upon an implicit faith. When Christ declared a very forward knowledge, in the Temple, at twelve years, with the Doctors, yet he was there, Audience & interrogans, He heard what they would say, and he moved questions, to hear what they could say; for, Ejusdem scientiae est, scire quid interroges, quidve respondeas, Luke 2.46. Origen. It is a testimony of as much knowledge to ask a pertinent question, as to give a pertinent answer. But never to have been able to give answer, never to have asked question in matter of Religion, this is such an Implicitenesse, and indifferency, as transgresses against the Son of God, who is Wisdom. It is so too, in the other extreme, Curiosity; And this in Practical things, is Craft, Curiositas. in Doctrinal, Subtlety. Craft, is properly and narrowly, To go towards good ends, by ill ways: And though this be not so ill, as when neither ends, nor ways be good, yet this is ill too. The Civilians use to say of the Canonists, and Casuists, That they consider nothing but Crassam aequitatem, fat Equity, downright Truths, things obvious and apprehensible by every natural man: and to do but so, to be but honest men, and no more, they think a diminution. To stay within the limits of a profession, within the limits of precedents, within the limits of time, is to over-active men contemptible; nothing is wisdom, till it be exalted to Craft, and got above other men. And so it is, with some, with many, in Doctrinal things too. To rest in Positive Divinity, and Articles confessed by all Churches, To be content with Salvation at last, and raise no estimation, no emulation, no opinion of singularity by the way, only to edify an Auditory, and not to amaze them, only to bring them to an assent, and to a practice, and not to an admiration, This is but homespun Divinity, but Country-learning, but catechistical doctrine. Let me know (say these highflying men) what God meant to do with man, before ever God meant to make man: I care not for that Law that Moses hath written; That every man can read; That he might have received from God, in one day; Let me know the Cabal, that which passed between God and him, in all the rest of the forty days. I care not for Gods revealed Will, his Acts of Parliament, his public Proclamations, Let me know his Cabinet Counsels, his bosom, his pocket dispatches. Is there not another kind of Predestination, then that which is revealed in Scriptures, which seems to be only of those that believe in Christ? May not a man be saved, though he do not, and may not a man be damned, though he do perform those Conditions, which seem to make sure his salvation in the Scriptures? Beloved, our Country man Holkot, upon the book of Wisdom, says well of this Wisdom, which we must seek in the Book of God: After he hath magnified it in his harmonious manner, (which was the style of that time) after he had said, Cujus authore nihil sublimius, That the Author of the Scripture was the highest Author, for that was God, Cujus tenore nihil solidius, That the assurance of the Scripture was the safest foundation, for it was a Rock, Cujus valore nihil locupletius, That the riches of the Scripture was the best treasure, for it defrayed us in the next World, After he had pursued his way of Elegancy, and called it Munimentum Majestatis, That Majesty and Sovereignty itself was established by the Scriptures, and Fundamentum firmitatis, That all true constancy was built upon that, and Complementum potestatis, That the exercise of all power, was to be directed by that, he reserves the force of all to the last, and contracts all to that, Emolumentum proprietatis, The profit which I have, in appropriating the power and the wisdom of the Scriptures to myself: All wisdom is nothing to me, if it be not mine: and I have title to nothing, that is not conveyed to me, by God, in his Scriptures; and in the wisdom manifested to me there, I rest. I look upon God's Decrees, in the execution of those Decrees, and I try whether I be within that Decree of Election, or no, by examining myself, whether the marks of the Elect be upon me, or no, and so I appropriate the wisdom of the Scripture to myself. A stupid negligence in the practical things of this World, To do nothing; and an implicit credulity in doctrinal things, To believe all; and so also, a crafty preventing, and circumventing in the Practical part; and a subtle, and perplexing intricacy, in the Doctrinal part; The first on this side, The other beyond, do both transgress from that Wisdom of God, which is the Son, and, in such a respect, are sins, especially against the second Person in the Trinity. SERM. XLII. Preached at Lincoln's Inn upon Trinity-Sunday. 1620. GEN. 18.25. Shall not the judge of all the Earth do right? THese words are the entrance into that prayer and expostulation, which Abraham made to and with God, in the behalf of Sodom, and the other Cities. He that is, before Abraham was, Christ Jesus himself, in that prayer, which he hath proposed to us, hath laid such a foundation, as this is, such a religious insinuation into him, to whom we make that prayer; Before we ask any thing, we say. Our Father, which art in heaven: If he be our Father, A Father when his son asks bread will not give him a stone; Luk. 11.12. God hath a fatherly disposition towards us; And if he be our Father in Heaven, If evil fathers know how to give good things unto their children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Spirit to them that ask him? Shall your Father, which is in heaven, deny you any good thing? says Christ there; It is impossible: Shall not the judge of all the Earth do right? says Abraham here; It is as impossible. The history which occasioned and induced these words, I know you know. The Holy Ghost by Moses hath expressed plainly, and your meditations have paraphrased to yourselves this history, That God appeared to Abraham, in the plain of Mamre, in the persons of three men; three men so glorious, as that Abraham gave them a great respect: That Abraham spoke to those three, as to one person: That he exhibited all offices of humanity and hospitality unto them: That after they had executed the first part of their Commission, which was to ratify, and to reduce to a more certainty of time, the promise of Isaac, and consequently of the Messiah, though Abraham and Sara were past hope in one another; that they imparted to Abraham, upon their departure, the indignation that God had conceived against the sins of Sodom, and consequently the imminent destruction of that City; That this awakened Abraham's compassion, and put him into a zeal, and vehemence; for, all the while, he is said, to have been with him that spoke to him, and yet, now it is said, Abraham drew near, he came up close to God, and he says, Ver. 23.24. Peradventure, (I am not sure of it) but peradventure, there may be some righteous in the City, and if there should be so, it should be absolutely unjust to destroy them; but, since it may be so, it is too soon to come to a present execution; Absit a te, says Abraham, Be that far from thee; And he repeats it twice; And upon the reason in our text, Shall not the judge of all the Earth do right? First then, The person who is the judge of all the Earth, submits us to a necessity of seeking, Divisis. who it is that Abraham speaks to; and so, who they were that appeared to him: whether they were three men, or three Angels, or two Angels, and the third, to whom Abraham especially addressed himself, were Christ: Or whether in these three persons, whatsoever they were, there were any intimation, any insinuation given, or any apprehension taken by Abraham, of the three blessed Persons of the glorious Trinity. And then, in the second part, in the expostulation itself, we shall see, first, The descent, and easiness of God, that he vouchfafes to admit an expostulation, an admonition from his servant, He is content that Abraham remember him, of his office: And the Expostulation lies in this, That he is a judge, And shall not a judge do right? But more in this, That he is judge of all the Earth, and, if he do wrong, there is no Appeal from him, And shall not the judge of all the Earth do right? And from thence we shall fall upon this consideration, What was that Right, which Abraham presses upon God here: And we shall find it twofold: for, first, he thinks it unjust, that God should wrap up just and unjust, righteous and unrighteous, all in one condemnation, in one destruction, Absit, be this far from God: And then, he hath a farther aim than that, That God for the righteous sake, should spare the unrighteous, and so forbear the whole City. And though this Judge of the whole Earth, might have done right, though he had destroyed the most righteous persons amongst them, much more, though he had not spared the unrighteous, for the righteous sake, yet we shall see at last, the abundant measure of God's overflowing mercy to have declared itself so far, as if there had been any righteous, he had spared the whole City. Our parts then are but two: but two such, as are high parts, and yet growing rich, and yet emproving, so far, as that the first is above Man, and the extent of his Reason, The mystery of the Trinity; And the other is above God so, as that it is above all his works, The infiniteness of his Mercy. To come to the several branches of these two main parts, first, in the first, we ask, 1. Part. An viri. An viri, whether these three that appeared to Abraham, were men or no. Now, between Abraham's apprehension, who saw this done, and ours, who know it was done, because we read it here in Moses relation, there is a great difference. Moses who informs us now, what was done then, says expressly, Apparuit Dominus, The Lord appeared, and therefore we know they were more than ordinary men; But when Moses tells us how Abraham apprehended it, Ecce tres viri, He lift up his eyes, and he saw three men, he took them to be but men, and therefore exhibited to them all offices of humanity and courtesy: Where we note also, that even by the Saints of God, civil behaviour, and fair language is conveniently exercised: A man does not therefore mean ill, because he speaks well: A man must not therefore be suspected to perform nothing, because he promises much: Such phrases of humility, and diminution, and undervaluing of himself, as David utters to Saul; such phrases of magnifying, and glorifying the Prince, as Daniel uses to the King, perchance no secular story, perchance no modern Court will afford; Neither shall you find in those places, more of that which we call Compliment, 1 Sam. 25. then in Abigails access to David, in the behalf of her foolish husband, when she comes to intercede for him, and to deprecate his fault. Harshness, and morosity in behaviour, rusticity, and coorsenesse of language, are no arguments in themselves, of a plain, and a direct meaning, and of a simple heart. Abraham was an hundred years old, and that might, in the general, indispose him; And it was soon after his Circumcision, which also might be a particular disabling; He was sitting still, and so not only enjoying his bodily ease, but his Meditation, (for his eyes were cast down) But as soon as he lift up his eyes; and had occasion presented him to do a courtesy, for all his age, and infirmity, and possession of rest, he runs to them, and he bows himself to them, and salutes them, with words not only of courtesy, but of reverence: Explorat itinera, says S. Ambrose, he searches and inquires into their journey, that he might direct them, or accompany, or accommodate them; A dost non quaerentibus, He prevents them, and offers before they ask; Rapit praetergressuros, when they pretended to go farther, he forced them, by the irresistible violence of courtesy, to stay with him, and he calls them, (or one amongst them) Dominum, Lord, and professes himself their servant. But Abraham did not determine his courtesy in words, and no more: We must not think, that because only man of all creatures can speak, that therefore the only duty of man is to speak; fair Apparel makes some show in a wardrobe, but not half so good as when it is upon a body: fair language does ever well, but never so well as when it apparels a real courtesy: Abraham entreated them fair, and entertained them well: he spoke kindly, and kindly performed all offices of ease, and refocillation to these way-faring strangers. Now here is our copy, but who writes after this copy? Abraham is pater multitudinis, A father of large posterity, but he is dead without issue, or his race is failed; for, who hath this hospital care of relieving distressed persons now? Thou seest a needy person, and thou turnest away thine eye; but it is the Prince of Darkness that casts this mist upon thee; Thou stoppest thy nose at his sores, but they are thine own incompassionate bowels that stink within thee; Thou tellest him, he troubles thee, and thinkest thou hast chidden him into a silence; but he whispers still to God, and he shall trouble thee worse at last, when he shall tell thee, in the mouth of Christ Jesus, I was hungry and ye fed me not: Still thou sayest to the poor, I have not for you, when God knows, a great part of that which thou hast, thou hast for them, if thou wouldst execute God's commission, and dispense it accordingly, as God hath made thee his steward for the poor. Give really, and give gently; Do kindly, and speak kindly too, for that is Bread, and Hony. Abraham then took these for men, An Angeli. and offered courtesies proper for men: for though he called him, to whom he spoke, Dominum, Lord, yet it is not that name of the Lord, which implies his Divinity, it is not jehovah, but Adonai; it is the same name, and the same word, john 20. which his wife Sara, after, giveth him. And Mary Magdalen when she was at Christ's Sepulchre, speaks of Christ, and speaks to the Gardener (as she thought) in one and the same word: Tulerunt Dominum, she says of Christ, They have taken away my Lord, And to the Gardener she says, Domine, si sustulisti: for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is the word in both places, was but a name of civil courtesy, and is well enough translated by our men, in that later place, Sir, Sir if you have taken him away, etc. Abraham then, at their first appearing, had no evidence that they were other than men; but we have; for that place of the Apostle, Heb. 13.2. Be not forgetful to entertain strangers, for thereby some have entertained Angels unawares, hath evermore, by all Expositors, had reference to this action of Abraham's; which proves both these first branches, That he knew it not, and That they were Angels. The Apostles principal purpose there is, to recommend to us Hospitality, but limited to such hospitality as might in likelihood, or in possibility, be an occasion of entertaining Angels, that is, of Angelical men, good and holy men. Hospitality is a virtue, more recommended by the Writers in the Primitive Church, than any other virtue: but upon this reason, That the poor flock of Christ Jesus, being by persecution then scattered upon the face of the earth, men were necessarily to be excited, with much vehemence, to secure and relieve them, and to receive them into their houses, as they travailed. Tertullian says well, That the whole Church of God is one household: He says, every particular Church is Ecclesia Apostolica, quia soboles Apostolicarum, An Apostolical Church, if it be an offspring of the Apostolical Churches: He does not say, quia soboles Apostolicae, because that Church is the offspring of the Apostolical Church, as though there were but one such, which must be the mother of all: for, says he, Omnes primae, & omnes Apostolicae, Every Church is a supreme Church, and every Church is an Apostolical Church, dum omnes unam probant unitatem, as long as they agree in the unity of that doctrine which the Apostles taught, and adhere to the supreme head of the whole Church, Christ Jesus. Which S. Cyprian expresses more clearly, Episcopatus unus est, The whole Church is but one Bishopric, Cujus, à singulis, in solidum pars tenetur, Every Bishop is Bishop of the whole Church, and no one more than another. The Church then was, and should be, as one household; And in this household, says Tertullian there, there was first Communicatio pacis, a peaceable disposition, a charitable interpretation of one another's actions: And then there was Appellatio fraternitatis, says he; That if they did differ in some things, yet they esteemed themselves sons of one Father, of God, and by one Mother, the Catholic Church, and did not break the band of Brotherhood, nor separate from one another for every difference in opinion; And lastly, says he, There was Contesseratio Hospitalitatis, A warrant for their reception and entertainment in one another's houses, wheresoever they travailed. Now, because for the benefit and advantage of this ease, and accommodation in travailing, men conterfeited themselves to be Christians that were not, the Council of Nice made such provision as was possible; (though that also were deluded after) which was, That there should be literae formatae, (as they called them) certain testimonial letters, subscribed with four characters, denoting Father, Son, and holy Ghost; and those letters should be contesseratio hospitalitatis, a warrant for their entertainment wheresoever they came. Still there was a care of hospitality, but such, as Angels, that is, Angelical, good and religious men, and truly Christians, might be received. Beloved, Baptism in the name of the Father, Son, and holy Ghost, is this Contesseration; all that are truly baptised are of this household, and should be relieved and received: But certainly, there is a race that have not this Contesseration, not these testimonial letters, not this outward Baptism: Amongst those herds of vagabonds, and incorrigible rogues, that fill porches, and barns in the Country, a very great part of them was never baptised: people of a promiscuous generation, and of a mischievous education; ill brought into the world, and never brought into the Church. No man receives an Angel unawares, for receiving or harbouring any of these; neither have these any interest in the household of God, for they have not their first Contesseration: And as there are sins which we are not bid to pray for, so there are beggars which we are not bid to give to. God appeared by Angels in the Old Testament, and he appears by Angels in the New, in his Messengers, in his Ministers, in his Servants: And that Hospitality, and those feasts which cannot receive such Angels, those Ministers and Messengers of God, where by reason of excess and drunkenness, by reason of scurril and licentious discourse, by reason of wanton and unchaste provocations, by reason of execrable and blasphemous oaths these Angels of God cannot be present, but they must either offend the company by reprehension, or prevaricate and betray the cause of God by their silence, this is not Abraham's hospitality, whose commendation was, that he received Angels. Those Angels came, and stood before Abraham, but till he lift up his eyes, and ran forth to them, they came not to him: The Angels of the Gospel come within their distance, but if you will not receive them, they can break open no doors, nor save you against your will: The Angel does, as he that sends him, Stand at the door, and knock, Revel. 3.20. if the door be opened, he comes in, and sups with him; What gets he by that? This; He sups with me too, says Christ there; He brings his dish with him; he feeds his Host, more than his Host him. This is true Hospitality, and entertainment of Angels, both when thou feedest Christ, in his poor members abroad, or when thou feedest thine own soul at home, with the company and conversation of true and religious Christians at thy table, for these are Angels. Abraham then, took these three for men, and no more, when as they were Angels: An Christus. But were they all Angels, and no more? was not that one, to whom more particularly Abraham addressed himself, and called him Lord, The Son of God, Christ Jesus? This very many, very learned amongst the Ancients, did not only ask by way of Problem, and disputation, but affirm Doctrinally, by way of resolution. Irenaeus thought it, and expressed it so elegantly, as it is almost pity, if it be not true; Inseminatus est ubique in Scripture is, Filius Dei, says he: The Son of God is sowed in every furrow, in every place of the Scripture, you may see him grow up; and he gives an example out of this place, Cum Abraham loquens, cum Abraham comesurus, Christ talked with Abraham, and he dined with him. And they will say, that whereas it is said in that place to the Hebrews, That Abraham received Angels, the word Angel must not be too precisely taken: For sometimes, Angel in the Scriptures, signifies less than Angel, (as john, and Malachy are called Angels) and sometimes Angel signifies more than Angel, as Christ himself is called The Angel of the great Council, according to the Septuagint: So therefore, Esay 9 they will say, That though Christ were there, Christ himself might be called so, An Angel; Or it may be justly said by S. Paul, That Abraham did receive Angels, because there were two, that were, without question, Angels. This led Hilary to a direct, and a present resolution, that Abraham saw Christ, and to exclaim gratulatorily in his behalf, Quanta fidei vis, ut in indiscreta assistentium specie, Christum internosceret! What a perspicacy had Abraham's faith, who, where they were all alike, could discern one to be above them all! Make this then the question, whether Christ ever appeared to men upon earth, before his Incarnation; and the Scriptures not determining this question at all, if the Fathers shall be called to judge it, it will still be a perplexed case, for they will be equal in number, and in weight. S. Augustine (who is one of them that deny it) says first, for the general, the greatest work of all, the promulgation of the Law, was done by Angels alone, without concurrence of the Son; and for this particular, says he, concerning Abraham, they who think that Christ appeared to Abraham, ground themselves but upon this reason, That Abraham speaks to all, in the singular number, as to one person; And then, says that Father, they may also observe, that when this one Person, whom they conclude to be Christ, was departed from the other two, and that the other two went up to Sodom, Gen 19.18. there Lot speaks to those two, in the singular number, as to one person, as Abraham did before. From this argumentation of S. Augustine's, this may well be raised, That when the Scriptures may be interpreted, and Gods actions well understood, by an ordinary way, it is never necessary, seldom safe to induce an extraordinary. It was then an ordinary, and familiar way for God, to proceed with those his servants by Angels; but by his Son, so extraordinary, as that it is not clear, that ever it was done; and therefore it needs not be said, nor admitted in this place. In this place, this falls properly to be noted, that even in these three glorious Angels of God, there was an eminent difference; One of them seemed to Abraham, to be the principal man in the Commission, and to that one, he addressed himself. Amongst the other Angels, which are the Ministers in God's Church, one may have better abilities, better faculties than another, and it is no error, no weakness in a man to desire to confer with one rather then with another, or to hear one rather than another. But Abraham did not so apply himself to one of the three, that he neglected the other two: No man must be so cherished, so followed, as that any other be thereby either defrauded of their due maintenance, or dis-heartened for want of due encouragement. We have not the greatest use of the greatest Stars; but we have more benefit of the Moon, which is less than they, because she is nearer to us. It is not the depth, nor the wit, nor the eloquence of the Preacher that pierces us, but his nearness; that he speaks to my conscience, as though he had been behind the hang when I sinned, and as though he had read the book of the day of Judgement already. Something Abraham saw in this Angels above the rest, which drew him, which Moses does not express; Something a man finds in one Preacher above another, which he cannot express, and he may very lawfully make his spiritual benefit of that, so that that be no occasion of neglecting due respects to others. This being then thus fixed, An Trinitas. that Abraham received them as men, that they were in truth no other than Angels, there remains, for the shutting up of this Part, this Consideration, whether after Abraham came to the knowledge that they were Angels, he apprehended not an intimation of the three Persons of the Trinity, by these three Angels. Whether Gods appearing to Abraham (which Moses speaks of in the first verse) were manifested to him, Ver. 13. Ver. 17. when Sarah laughed in herself, and yet they knew that she laughed; Or whether it were manifested, when they imparted their purpose, concerning Sodom; (for, in both these places, they are called neither men nor Angels, but by that name, The Lord, and that Lord which is Jehovah) whether, I say, when Abraham discerned them to be such Angels, as God appeared in them, and spoke and wrought by them, whether then, as he discerned the Divinity, he discerned the Trinity in them too, is the question. I know the explicit Doctrine of the Trinity was not easy to be apprehended then; as it is not easy to be expressed now. It is a bold thing in servants, to inquire curiously into their Master's Pedigree, whether he be well descended, or well allied: It is a bold thing too, to inquire too curiously into the eternal generation of Christ Jesus, or the eternal procession of the Holy Ghost. When Gregory Nazianzen was pressed by one, to assign a difference between those words, Begotten, and Proceeding, Dic tu mihi, says he, quid sit Generatie, & ego dicam tibi, quid sit Processio, ut ambo insaniamus: Do thou tell me, what this Begetting is, and then I will tell thee, what this Proceeding is; and all the world will find us both mad, for going about to express inexpressible things. And as every manner of phrase in expressing, or every comparison, does not manifest the Trinity; so every place of Scripture, which the Fathers, and later men have applied to that purpose, does not prove the Trinity. And therefore, those men in the Church, who have cried down that way of proceeding, to go about to prove the Trinty, out of the first words of Genesis, Creavit Dii, That because God in the plural is there joined to a Verb in the singular, therefore there is a Trinity in Unity; or to prove the Trinity out of this place, that because God, who is but one, appeared to Abraham in three Persons, therefore there are three Persons in the Godhead; those men, I say, who have cried down such manner of arguments, have reason on their side, when these arguments are employed against the Jews, for, for the most part, the Jews have pertinent, and sufficient answers to those arguments. But yet, between them, who make this place, a distinct, and a literal, and a concluding argument, to prove the Trinity, and them who cry out against it, that it hath no relation to the Trinity, our Church hath gone a middle, and a moderate way, when by appointing this Scripture for this day, when we celebrate the Trinity, it declares that to us, who have been baptised, and catechised in the name and faith of the Trinity, it is a refreshing, it is a cherishing, it is an awakening of that former knowledge which we had of the Trinity, to hear that our only God thus manifested himself to Abraham in three Persons. Luther says well upon this text, If there were no other proof of the Trinity but this, I should not believe the Trinity; but yet says he, This is Singular testimonium de articule Trinitatis, Though it be not a concluding argument, yet it is a great testimony of the Trinity. Fateor, says he, historico sensu nihil concludi praeter hospitalitatem, I confess, in the literal sense, there is nothing but a recommendation of hospitality, and therefore, to the Jews, I would urge no more out of this place: Sed non sic agendum cum auditoribus, ac cum adversariis, We must not proceed alike with friends and with enemies. There are places of Scriptures for direct proofs, and there are places to exercise our meditation, and devotion in things, for which we need not, nor ask not any new proof. And for exercise, says Luther, Rudi ligne ad formam gladii utimur, We content ourselves with a foil, or with a stick, and we require not a sharp sword. To cut off the enemies of the Trinity, we have two-edged swords, that is, undeniable arguments: but to exercise our own devotions, we are content with similitudinary, and comparative reasons. He pursues it farther, to good use: The story doth not teach us, That Sarah is the Christian Church, and Hagar the Synagogue; But S. Paul proves that, from that story; he proves it from thence, Gal. 4.24. though he call it but an Allegory. It is true that S. Augustine says, Figuranihil probat, A figure, an Allegory proves nothing; yet, says he, addit lucem, & ornat, It makes that which is true in itself, more evident and more acceptable. And therefore it is a lovely and a religious thing, to find out Vestigia Trinitatis, Impressions of the Trinity, in as many things as we can; and it is a reverend obedience to embrace the wisdom of our Church, in renewing the Trinity to our Contemplation, by the reading of this Scripture, this day, for, even out of this Scripture, Philo judaeus, (although he knew not the true Trinity aright) found a threefold manifestation of God to man, in this appearing of God to Abraham: for, as he is called in this Story, jehova, he considers him, Fontem Essentiae, To be the fountain of all Being; As he is called Deus, God, he considers him, in the administration of his Creatures, in his providence; As he is called Dominus, Lord, and King, he considers him in the judgement, glorifying, and rejecting according to their merits: So, though he found not a Trinity of Persons, he found a Trinity of Actions in the Text, Creation, Providence, and Judgement. If he, who knew no Trinity, could find one, shall not we, who know the true one, meditate the more effectually upon that, by occasion of this story? Let us therefore, with S. Bernard, consider Trinitatem Creatricem, and Trinitatem Creatam, A Creating, and a Created Trinity; A Trinity, which the Trinity in Heaven, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, hath created in our souls, Reason, Memory, and Will; and that we have super-created, added another Trinity, Suggestion, and Consent, and Delight in sin; And that God, after all this infuses another Trinity, Faith, Hope, and Charity, by which we return to our first; for so far, that Father of Meditation, S. Bernard, carries this consideration of the Trinity. Since therefore the confession of a Trinity is that which distinguishes us from Jews, and Turks, and all other professions, let us discern that beam of the Trinity, which the Church hath showed us, in this text, and with the words of the Church, conclude this part, O holy, blessed, and glorious Trinity, three Persons, and one God, have mercy upon us miserable sinners. We are descended now to our second part, 2 Part. Expostulatio. job 31.13. what passed between God and Abraham, after he had thus manifested himself unto him; Where we noted first, That God admits, even expostulation, from his servants; almost rebukes and chide from his servants. We need not wonder at jobs humility, that he did not despise his man, nor his maid, when they contended with him, for God does not despise that in us. God would have gone from jacob when he wrestled, Gen. 32.26. and jacob would not let him go, and that prevailed with God. If we have an apprehension when we begin to pray, that God doth not hear us, not regard us, God is content that in the fervour of that prayer, we say with David, Evigila Domine, and Surge Domine, Awake O Lord, and Arise O Lord; God is content to be told, that he was in bed, and asleep, when he should hear us. If we have not a present deliverance from our enemies, God is content that we proceed with David, Eripe manum de sinu, Pluck out thy hand out of thy bosom; God is content to be told, that he is slack and dilatory when he should deliver us. If we have not the same estimation in the world, that the children of this world have, God is content that we say with Amos, Pauperem pro calceamentis, Amos 2.6. that we are sold for a pair of shoes; And with S. Paul, that we are the offscouring of the world: God is content to be told, that he is unthrifty, and prodigal of his servants lives, and honours, and fortunes. Now, Offer this to one of your Princes, says the Prophet, and see whether he will take it. Bring a petition to any earthly Prince, and say to him, Evigila, and Surge, would your Majesty would awake, and read this petition, and so insimulate him of a former drowsiness in his government; say unto him, Eripe manum, pull thy hand out of thy bosom, and execute Justice, and so insimulate him of a former manacling and slumbering of the Laws; say unto him, we are become as old shoes, and as off-scouring, and so insimulate him of a diminution, and dis-estimation fallen upon the Nation by him, what Prince would not (and justly) conceive an indignation against such a petitioner? which of us that heard him, would not pronounce him to be mad, to ease him of a heavier imputation? And yet our long-suffering, and our patiented God, (must we say, our humble and obedient God?) endures all this: He endures more; for, when Abraham came to this expostulation, Shall not the judge of all the earth do right? God had said never a word, of any purpose to destroy Sodom, but he said only, He would go see, whether they had done altogether, according to that cry, which was come up against them; and Abraham comes presently to this vehemency: And might not the Supreme Ordinary, God himself, go this visitation? might not the supreme Judge, God himself, go this Circuit? But as long as Abraham kept himself upon this foundation, It is impossible, that the judge of all the earth should not do right, God misinterpreted nothing at Abraham's hand, but received even his Expostulations, & heard him out, to the sixth petition. Almost such an Expostulation as this, Moses uses towards God; He asks God a reason of his anger, Iudex. Exod. 32.11. Lord, why doth thy wrath wax hot against thy people? He tells him a reason, why he should not do so, For thou hast brought them forth with a great power, and with a mighty hand: And he tells him the inconveniences that might follow, The Egyptians will say, He brought them out for mischief, to slay them in the mountain: He imputes even perjury to God himself, and breach of Covenant, to Abraham, Isaac, and jacob, which were Feffees in trust, between God and his people, and he says, Thou sware'st to them, by thine own self, that thou wouldst not deal thus with them; And therefore he concludes all with that vehemence, Turn from thy fierce wrath, and repent this evil purpose against them. But we find a prayer, or expostulation, of much more exorbitant vehemence, in the stories of the Roman Church, towards the blessed Virgin, (towards whom, they use to be more mannerly and respective then towards her Son, or his Father) when at a siege of Constantinople, they came to her statue, with this protestation, Look you to the drowning of our Enemy's ships, or we will drown you: Si vis ut imaginem tuam non mergamus in mari, merge illos. The farthest that Abraham goes in this place, is, That God is a judge, and therefore must do right: job 32.10. for, Far be wickedness from God, and iniquity from the Almighty; surely God will not do wickedly, neither will the Almighty pervert judgement. An Usurer, an Extortioner, an Oppressor, a Libeler, a Thief, and Adulterer, yea a Traitor, makes shift to find some excuse, some flattery to his Conscience; they say to themselves; the Law is open, and if any be grieved, they may take their remedy, and I must endure it, and there is an end. But, since nothing holds of this oppressor, and manifold malefactor, but the sentence of the Judge, shall not the Judge do right? how must this necessarily shake the frame of all? An Arbitrator or a Chancellor, that judges by submission of parties, or according to the Dictates of his own understanding, may have some excuse, He did as his Conscience led him: But shall not a judge, that hath a certain Law to judge by, do right? Especially if he be such a Judge, as is judge of the whole earth? which is the next step in Abraham's expostulation. Now, as long as there lies a Certiorari from a higher Court, Omnem terram. or an Appeal to a higher Court, the case is not so desperate, if the Judge do not right, for there is a future remedy to be hoped: If the whole State be incensed against me, yet I can find an escape to another Country; If all the World persecute me, yet, if I be an honest man, I have a supreme Court in myself, and I am at peace, in being acquitted in mine own Conscience. But God is the Judge of all the earth; of this which I tread, and this earth which I carry about me; and when he judges me, my Conscience turns on his side, and confesses his judgement to be right. And therefore S. Paul's argument, seconds, and ratifies Abraham's expostulation; Is God unrighteous? God forbidden; for then, says the Apostle, Rom. 3.6. how shall God judge the World? The Pope may err, but then a Council may rectify him: The King may err; but then, God, in whose hands the King's heart is, can rectify him. But if God, that judges all the earth, judge thee, there is no error to be assigned in his judgement, no appeal from God not throughly informed, to God better informed, for he always knows all evidence, before it be given. And therefore the larger the jurisdiction, and the higher the Court is, the more careful ought the Judge to be of wrong judgement; for Abraham's expostulation reaches in a measure to them, Shall not the judge of all (or of a great part of the earth) do right? Now what is the wrong, which Abraham dissuaded, and deprecated here? first, justi cum impiis. Ne justi cum impiis, That God would not destroy the Just with the unjust, not make both their cases alike. This is an injustice, which never any bloody men upon earth, but those, who exceeded all, in their infamous purposes, the Authors, and Actors in the Powder treason, did ever deliberately and advisedly, upon debate whether it should be so, or no, resolve, that all of both Religions should perish promiscuously in the blowing up of that house. Here the Devil would be God's Ape; and as God had presented to S. Peter, a sheet of all sorts of Creatures, clean and unclean, and bade him take his choice, kill and eat; So the Devil would make S. Peter, in his imaginary Successor, or his instruments, present God a sacrifice of clean and unclean, Catholics and Heretics, (in their denomination) and bid him take his choice: which action, whosoever forgets so, as that he forgets what was intended in it, forgets his Religion, and whosoever forgets it so, as that he forgets what they would do again, if they had power, forgets his reason. But this is not the way of God's justice; God is a God of harmony, and consent, and in a musical instrument, if some strings be out of tune, we do not presently break all the strings, but reduce and tune those, which are out of tune. As gold whilst it is in the mine, in the bowels of the earth, is good for nothing, and when it is out, and beaten to the thinness of leaf-gold, it is wasted, and blown away, and quickly comes to nothing; But when it is tempered with such allay, as it may receive a stamp and impression, than it is currant and useful: So whilst God's Justice lies in the bowels of his own decree and purpose, and is not executed at all, we take no knowledge that there is any such thing; And when God's Justice is dilated to such an expansion, as it overflows all alike, whole Armies with the sword, whole Cities with the plague, whole Countries with famine, oftentimes we lose the consideration of God's Justice, and fall upon some natural causes, because the calamity is fallen so indifferently upon just and unjust, as that, we think, it could not be the act of God: but when God's Justice is so allayed with his wisdom, as that we see he keeps a Goshen in Egypt, and saves his servants in the destruction of his enemies, than we come to a rich and profitable use of his Justice. And therefore Abraham presses this, with that vehement word, Chalilah, Absit: Abraham serves a Prohibition upon God, as S. Peter would have done upon Christ, when he was going up to Jerusalem to suffer, Absit, says he, Thou shalt not do this. But the word signifies more properly prophanationem, pollutionem: Abraham intends, that God should know, that it would be a profaning of his holy honour, and an occasion of having his Name blasphemed amongst the Nations, if God should proceed so, as to wrap up just and unjust, righteous and unrighteous, all in one condemnation, and one execution; Absit, Be this far from thee. But Abraham's zeal extended farther than this; parcat Impiis. his desire and his hope was, That for the righteous sake, the unrighteous might be spared, and reserved to a time of repentance. This therefore ministers a provocation to every man, to be as good as he can, not only for his own sake, but for others too. This made S. Ambrose say, Quantus murus patriae, vir bonus? An honest and religious man, is a wall to a whole City, a sea to a whole Island. When our Saviour Christ observed, that they would press him with that Proverb, Medice, cura teipsum, Physician, heal thyself, we see there, that himself was not his person, Luk. 4.23. but his Country was himself; for that is it that they intent by that Proverb, Heal thyself, take care of them that are near thee, do that which thou dost here in Capernaum, at home; Preach these Sermons there; do these miracles there: cure thy Country, and that is curing thyself. Live so, that thy example may be a precedent to others; live so, that for thy sake, God may spare others; and then, and not till then, thou hast done thy duty. God spares sometimes, ob commixtionem sanguinis, for kindred's sake, and for alliance; and therefore it behoves us to take care of our allyances, and planting our children in religious families. How many judgements do we escape, because we are of the seed of Abraham, and made partakers of the Covenant, which the Gentiles, who are not so, are overwhelmed under? God spares sometimes, Ob cohabitationem, for good neighbourhood; he will not bring the fire near a good man's house: As here, Act. 27. in our Text, he would have done in Sodom, and as he did save many, only because they were in the same Ship with S. Paul. And therefore, as in the other Religion, the Jews have streets of their own, and the Stews have streets of their own; so let us choose to make our dwellings, and our conversation of our own, and not affect the neighbourhood, nor the commerce of them who are of evil communication. Be good then, that thou mayest communicate thy goodness to others; and consort with the good, that thou mayest participate of their goodness. Omnis sapiens stulti est redemptio, is excellently said by Philo, A wise mad is the saviour and redeemer of a fool: And, (as the same man says) though a Physician when he is called, discern that the patient cannot be recovered, yet he will prescribe something, Ne ob ejus negligentiam periisse videatur, lest the world should think he died by his negligence; How incurable, how incorrigible soever the world be, be thou a religious honest man, lest some child in thy house, or some servant of thine be damned, which might have been saved, if thou hadst given good example. God's ordinary way is to save man by man; and Abraham thought it not out of God's way, to save man for man, to save the unjust for the just, the unrighteous for the righteous sake. But if God do not take this way, Si nolit Deus. Eccles. 9.2. if he do wrap up the just and the unjust in the same Judgement, is God therefore unjust? God forbidden. All things come alike to all, says Solomon; One event to the righteous, and to the wicked, to the clean, and to the unclean, to him that sacrificeth, and to him that sacrificeth not; as is the good, so is the sinner, and he that sweareth, as he that feareth an Oath. There is one event of all, says he; but, says he, This is an evil, that it is so: But what kind of evil? An evil of vexation; because the weak are sometimes scandalised that it is so, and the glory of God seems for a time to be obscured, when it is so, because the good are not discerned from the evil. But yet God, who knows best how to repair his own honour, suffers it, nay appoints it to be so, that just and unjust are wrapped up in the same Judgement. The Corn is as much beaten in the threshing, as the straw is; The just are as much punished here as the unjust. Because God of his infinite goodness, hath elected me from the beginning, therefore must he provide that I have another manner of birth, or another manner of death, than the Reprobate have? Must he provide, that I be borne into the world, without original sin, of a Virgin, as his Son was, or that I go out of the world, by being taken away, as Enoch was, or as Elias? And though we have that one example of such a coming into the world, and a few examples of such a going out of the world, yet we have no example (not in the Son of God himself) of passing through this world, without taking part of the miseries and calamities of the world, common to just and unjust, to the righteous and unrighteous. If Abraham therefore should have intended only temporal destruction, his argument might have been defective: for Ezekiel, and Daniel, and other just men, were carried into Captivity, as well as the unjust, and yet God not unrighteous: God does it, and avows it, and professes that he will do it, and do it justly; Occidam in te justum & injustum, I will cut off the righteous and unrighteous together. There is no man so righteous, Ezek. 21.3. upon whom God might not justly inflict as heavy judgements, in this world, as upon the most unrighteous; Though he have wrapped him up in the righteousness of Christ Jesus himself, for the next world, yet he may justly wrap him up in any common calamity falling upon the unrighteous here. But the difference is only in spiritual destruction. Abraham might justly apprehend a fear, that a sudden and unprepared death might endanger them for their future state; And therefore he does not pray, that they might be severed from that judgement, because, if they died with the unrighteous, they died as the unrighteous, if they passed the same way as they, out of this world, they therefore passed into the same state as they, in the next world, Abraham could not conclude so, but because the best men do always need all means of making them better, Abraham prays, that God would not cut them off, by a sudden destruction, from a considering, and contemplating the ways of his proceeding, and so a preparing themselves to a willing and to a thankful embracing of any way, which they should so discern to be his way. The wicked are suddenly destroyed; and do not see what hand is upon them, till that hand bury them in hell; The godly may die as suddenly, but yet he sees and knows it to be the hand of God, and takes hold of that hand, and by it is carried up to heaven. Now, if God be still just, though he punish the just with the unjust, in this life, Sinon parcat. much more may he be so, though he do not spare the unjust for the righteous sake, which is the principal drift of Abraham's expostulation, or deprecation. God can preserve still, so as he did in Egypt. God hath the same Receipts, and the same Antidotes which he had, to repel the flames of burning furnaces, to bind or stupefy the jaws of hungry Lions, to blunt the edge of Swords, and overflowing. Armies, as he had heretofore. john 8.59.18.6. Christ was invisible to his enemies, when he would scape away; And he was impregnable to his enemies, when in his manifestation of himself, (I am he) they fell down before him; And he was invulnerable, and immortal to his enemies, as long as he would be so, for if he had not opened himself to their violence, no man could have taken away his soul; And where God sees such deliverances conduce more to his honour then our suffering does, he will deliver us so in the times of persecution. So that God hath another way, and he had another answer for Abraham's petition; he might have said, There is no ill construction, no hard conclusion to be made, if I should take away the just with the unjust, neither is there any necessity, that I should spare the wicked for the righteous: I can destroy Sodom, and yet save the righteous; I can destroy the righteous, and yet make death an advantage to them; which way soever I take, I can do nothing unjustly. But yet, though God do not bind himself to spare the wicked for the righteons yet he descends to do so at Abraham's request. The jawbone of an Ass, in the hand of Samson, Tainen id facit. was a devouring sword. The words of man, in the mouth of a faithful man, of Abraham, are a Canon against God himself, and batter down all his severe and heavy purposes for Judgements. Yet, this comes not, God knows, out of the weight or force of our words, but out of the easiness of God. God puts himself into the way of a shot, he meets a weak prayer, and is graciously pleased to be wounded by that: God sets up a light, that we direct the shot upon him, he enlightens us with a knowledge, how, and when, and what to pray for; yea, God charges, and discharges the Canon himself upon himself; He fills us with good and religious thoughts, and appoints and leaves the Holy Ghost, to discharge them upon him, in prayer, for it is the Holy Ghost himself that prays in us. Mauz zim, which is, The God of forces, is not the name of our God, Dan. 11.38. but of an Idol; Our God is the God of peace, and of sweetness; spiritual peace, spiritual honey to our souls; His name is Deus optimus maximus; He is both; He is All Greatness, but he is All Goodness first: He comes to show his Greatness at last, but yet his Goodness gins his Name, and can never be worn out in his Nature. He made the whole world in six days, but he was seven in destroying one City, Jericho. God threatens Adam, If thou eat that fruit, in that day, Morte morieris, Thou shalt die the death; Here is a double Death interminated in one Day: Now, one of these Deaths is spiritual Death, and Adam never died that Death; And for the other Death, the bodily Death, which might have been executed that day, Adam was reprieved above nine hundred years. To lead all to our present purpose, Gods descending to Abraham's petition, to spare the wicked for a few just, is first and principally to advance his mercy, That sometimes in abundant mercy, he does so; but it is also to declare, that there is none just and righteous. Jerem. 5.1. Run to and fro through the streets of jerusalem, (says God in the Prophet) and seek in the broad places, If ye can find a man, if there be any that executeth judgement, that seeketh Truth, and I will pardon it. Where God does not intimate, that he were unjust, if he did not spare those that were unjust, but he declares the general flood and inundation of unrighteousness upon Earth, That upon Earth there is not a righteous man to be found. If God had gone no farther in his promise to man, then that, if there were one righteous man, he would save all, this, in effect, had been nothing, for there was never any man righteous, in that sense and acceptation; He promised and sent one who was absolutely righteous, and for his sake hath saved us. To collect all, Conclusio. and bind up all in one bundle, and bring it home to your own bosoms, remember, That though he appeared in men, it was God that appeared to Abraham; Though men preach, though men remit sins, though men absolve, God himself speaks, and God works, and God seals in those men. Remember that nothing appeared to Abraham's apprehension but men, yet Angels were in his presence; Though we bind you not to a necessity of believing that every man hath a particular Angel to assist him, (enjoy your Christian liberty in that, and think in that point so as you shall find your devotion most exalted, by thinking that it is, or is not so) yet know, that you do all that you do, in the presence of God's Angels; And though it be in itself, and should be so to us, a stronger bridle, to consider that we do all in the presence of God; (who sees clearer than they, for he sees secret thoughts, and can strike immediately, which they cannot do, without commission from him) yet since the presence of a Magistrate, or a Preacher, or a father, or a husband, keeps men often from ill actions, let this prevail something with thee, to that purpose, That the Angels of God are always present, though thou discern them not. Remember, that though Christ himself were not amongst the three Angels, yet Abraham apprehended a greater dignity, and gave a greater respect to one then to the rest; but yet without neglecting the rest too: Apply thyself to such Ministers of God, and such Physicians of thy soul, as thine own conscience tells thee do most good upon thee; but yet let no particular affection to one, defraud another in his duties, nor impair another in his estimation. And remember too, That though Gods appearing thus in three persons, be no irrefragable argument to prove the Trinity against the Jews, yet it is a convenient illustration of the Trinity to thee that art a Christian: And therefore be not too curious in searching reasons, and demonstrations of the Trinity, but yet accustom thyself to meditations upon the Trinity, in all occasions, and find impressions of the Trinity, in the three faculties of thine own soul, Thy Reason, thy Will, and thy Memory; and seek a reparation of that thy Trinity, by a new Trinity, by faith in Christ Jesus, by hope of him, and by a charitable delivering him to others, in a holy and exemplar life. Descend thou into thyself, as Abraham ascended to God, and admit thine own expostulations, as God did his. Let thine own conscience tell thee not only thy open and evident rebellions against God, but even the immoralities, and incivilities that thou dost towards men, in scandalising them, by thy sins; And the absurdities that thou committest against thyself, in sinning against thine own reason; And the uncleannesses, and consequently the treachery that thou committest against thine own body; and thou shalt see, that thou hadst been not only in better peace, but in better state, and better health, and in better reputation, a better friend, and better company, if thou hadst finned less; because some of thy sins have been such as have violated the band of friendship; and some such as have made thy company and conversation dangerous, either for tentation, or at least for defamation. Tell thyself that thou art the Judge, as Abraham told God that he was, and that if thou wilt judge thyself, thou shalt scape a severer judgement. He told God that he was Judge of all the earth; Judge all that earth that thou art, Judge both thy kingdoms, thy soul and thy body; Judge all the Provinces of both kingdoms, all the senses of thy body, and all the faculties of thy soul, and thou shalt leave nothing for the last Judgement. Mingle not the just and the unjust together; God did not so; Do not think good and bad all one; Do not think alike of thy sins, and of thy good deeds, as though when God's grace had quickened them, still thy good works were nothing, thy prayers nothing, thine alms nothing in the sight and acceptation of God: But yet spare not the wicked for the just, continue not in thy beloved sin, because thou makest God amends some other way. And when all is done, as in God towards Abraham, his mercy was above all, so after all, Miserere animae tuae, Be inercifull to thine own soul; And when the effectual Spirit of God hath spoken peace and comfort, and sealed a reconciliation to God, to thy soul, rest in that blessed peace, and enter into no such new judgement with thyself again, as should overcome thine own Mercy, with new distractions, or new suspicions that thy Repentance was not accepted, or God not fully reconciled unto thee. God, because he judges all the earth, cannot do wrong; If thou judge thy earth and earthly affections so, as that thou examine clearly, and judge truly, thou dost not do right, if thou extend not Mercy to thyself, if thou receive not, and apply not cheerfully and confidently to thy soul, that pardon and remission of all thy sins, which the holy Ghost, in that blessed state, hath given thee commission to pronounce to thine own soul, and to seal with his seal. SERM. XLIII. Preached at S. Dunstan's upon Trinity-Sunday. 1624. MAT. 3.17. And lo, A voice came from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. IT hath been the custom of the Christian Church to appropriate certain Scriptures to certain Days, for the celebrating of certain Mysteries of God, or the commemorating of certain benefits from God: They who consider the age of the Christian Church, too high or too low, too soon or too late, either in the cradle, as it is exhibited in the Acts of the Apostles, or bedrid in the corruptions of Rome, either before it was come to any growth, when Persecutions nipped it, or when it was so overgrown, as that prosperity and outward splendour swollen it, They that consider the Church so, will never find a good measure to direct our religious worship of God by, for the outward Liturgies, and Ceremonies of the Church. But as soon as the Christian Church had a constant establishment under Christian Emperors, and before the Church had her tympany of worldly prosperity under usurping Bishops, in this outward service of God, there were particular Scriptures appropriated to particular days. Particular men have not liked this that it should be so: And yet that Church which they use to take for their pattern, (I mean Geneva) as soon as it came to have any convenient establishment by the labours of that Reverend man, who did so much in the rectifying thereof, admitted this custom of celebrating certain times, by the reading of certain Scriptures. So that in the pure times of the Church, without any question, and in the corrupter times of the Church, without any infection, and in the Reformed times of the Church, without any suspicion of back-sliding, this custom hath been retained, which our Church hath retained; and according to which custom, these words have been appropriated to this day, for the celebrating thereof, And lo, A voice came, etc. In which words we have pregnant and just occasion to consider, first, Divisio. the necessity of the Doctrine of the Trinity; Secondly, the way and means by which we are to receive our knowledge and understannding of this mystery; And thirdly, the measure of this knowledge, How much we are to know, or to inquire, in that unsearchable mystery: The Quid, what it is; the Quomodo, How we are to learn it; and the Quantum, How fare we are to search into it, will be our three Parts. We consider the first of these, the necessity of that knowledge to a Christian, by occasion of the first Particle, in the Text, And; A Particle of Connexion, and Dependence; and we see by this Connexion, and Dependence, that this revealing, this manifestation of the Trinity, in the text, was made presently after the Baptism of Christ; and that intimates, and infers, That the first, and principal duty of him, who hath engrafted himself into the body of the Christian Church, by Baptism, is to inform himself of the Trinity, in whose name he is Baptised. Secondly, in the means, by which this knowledge of the Trinity is to be derived to us, in those words, (Lo, a voice came from heaven, saying) we note the first word, to be a word of Correction, and of Direction; Ecce, Behold, leave your blindness, look up, shake off your stupidity, look one way or other; A Christian must not go on implicitly, inconsiderately, indifferently, he must look up, he must intent a calling: And then, Ecce again, Behold, that is, Behold the true way; A Christian must not think he hath done enough, if he have been studious, and diligent in finding the mysteries of Religion, if he have not sought them the right way: First, there is an Ecce corrigentis, we are chidden, if we be lazy; And then, there is an Ecce dirigentis, we are guided if we be doubtful. And from this, we fall into the way itself; which is, first, A voice, There must be something heard; for, take the largest Sphere, and compass of all other kinds of proofs, for the mysteries of Religion, which can be proposed, Take it first, at the first, and weakest kind of proof, at the book of creatures, (which is but a faint knowledge of God, in respect of that knowledge, with which we must know him) And then, continue this first way of knowledge, to the last, and powerfullest proof of all, which is the power of miracles, not this weak beginning, not this powerful end, not this Alpha of Creatures, not this Omega of miracles, can imprint in us that knowledge, which is our saving knowledge, nor any other means then a voice; for this knowing is believing, And, how should they believe, except they hear? says the Apostle. It must be Vox, A voice, And Vox de coelis, A voice from heaven: For, we have have had voces de terra, voices of men, who have indeed but diminished the dignity of the Doctrine of the Trinity, by going about to prove it by humane reason, or to illustrate it by weak and low comparisons; And we have had voces de Inferis, voices from the Devil himself, in the mouths of many Heretics, blasphemously impugning this Doctrine; We have had voces de profundis, voices fetched from the depth of the malice of the Devil, Heretics; And voces de medio, voices taken from the ordinary strength of Moral men, Philosophers; But this is vox de Excelsis, only that voice that comes from Heaven, belongs to us in this mystery: And then lastly, it is vox dicens, a voice saying, speaking, which is proper to man, for nothing speaks but man; It is God's voice, but presented to us in the ministry of man; And this is our way; To behold, that is, to departed from our own blindness, and to behold a way, that is showed us; but shown us in the word, and in the word of God, and in that word of God, preached by man. And after all this, we shall consider the measure of this knowledge, in those last words, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; For, in that word, Meus, My, there is the Person of the Father; In the Filius, there is the Person of the Son; and in the Hic est, This is, there is the Person of the Holy Ghost, for that is the action of the Holy Ghost, in that word, He is pointed at, who was newly baptised, and upon whom the Holy Ghost, in the Dove, was descended, and had tarried. But we shall take those words in their order, when we come to them. First then, 1 Part. we noted the necessity of knowing the Trinity, to be pregnantly intimated in the first word, Et, And: This connects it to the former part of the history, which is Christ's Baptism, and presently upon that Baptism, this manifestation of the holy Trinity. Consider a man, as a Christian, his first Element is Baptism, and his next is Catechism; and in his Catechism, the first is, to believe a Father, Son, and holy Ghost. There are in this man, this Christian, Tres nativitates, says S. Gregory, three births; one, Per generationem, so we are borne of our natural mother; one Per regenerationem, so we are borne of our spiritual Mother, the Church, by Baptism; and a third, Per Resurrectionem, and so we are borne of the general Mother of us all, when the earth shall be delivered, not of twins, but of millions, when she shall empty herself of all her children, in the Resurrection. And these three Nativities our Saviour Christ Jesus had; Of which three, Hodie alter salvator is natalis, says S. Augustine, This day is the day of Christ's second birth, that is, of his Baptism. Not that Christ needed any Regeneration; but that it was his abundant goodness, to sanctify in his person, and in his exemplar action, that Element, which should be an instrument of our Regeneration in Baptism, the water, for ever. Even in Christ himself, Honoratior secunda, says that Father, The second birth, which he had at his Baptism, was the more honourable birth; for, Ab illa se, Pater qui putabatur, joseph excusat, At his first birth, joseph, his reputed Father, did not avow him for his Son; In hac se, Pater qui non putabatur, insinuat, At this his second birth, God, who was not known to be his Father before, declares that now: Ibi labour at suspicionibus Mater, quia professioni deerat Pater, There the Mother's honour was in question, because joseph could not profess himself the Father of the child; Hic honoratur genetrix, quia filium Divinitas protestatur, Here her honour is repaired, and magnified, because the Godhead itself, proclaims itself to be the Father. If then, Christ himself chose to admit an addition of dignity at his Baptism, who had an eternal generation in heaven, and an innocent conception without sin, upon earth, let not us undervalue that dignity, which is afforded us by Baptism, though our children be borne within the Covenant, by being borne of Christian Parents; for the Covenant gives them Ius ad rem, a right to Baptism; children of Christian Parents may claim Baptism, which aliens to Christ cannot do; but yet they may not leave out Baptism: A man may be within a general pardon, and yet have no benefit by it, if he sue it not out, if he plead it not; a child may have right to Baptism, and yet be without the benefit of it, if it be neglected. Christ began at Baptism; Natural things he did before; He fled into Egypt, to preserve his life from Herod's Persecution, before: And a miraculous thing he did before; He overcame in disputation, the Doctors in the Temple, at twelve years old; but yet, neither of these neither, before his Circumcision, which was equivalent to Baptism, to this purpose; but before he accepted, or instituted Baptism, he did some natural, and some miraculous things. But his ordinary work which he came for, his preaching the Gospel, and thereby raising the frame for our salvation, in his Church, he began not, but after his Baptism: And then, after that, it is expressly and immediately recorded, That when he came out of the waters, he prayed; and then, the next thing in the history is, that he fasted, and upon that, his tentation in the wilderness. I mean no more in this, but this, That no man hath any interest in God, to direct a prayer unto him, how devoutly soever, no man hath any assurance of any effect of his endeavours in a good life, how morally holy soever, but in relation to his Baptism, in that seal of the Covenant, by which he is a Christian: Christ took this Sacrament, his Baptism, before he did any other thing; and he took this, three years before the institution of the other Sacrament of his body and blood: So that the Anabaptists obtrude a false necessity upon us, that we may not take the first Sacrament, Baptism, till we be capable of the other Sacrament too; for, first in nature, Priùs nascimur, quàm pascimur, we are borne before we are fed; and so, in Religion, we are first borne into the Church, (which is done by Baptism) before we are ready for that other food, which is not indeed milk for babes, but solid meat for stronger digestions. They that have told us, that the Baptism, that Christ took of john, was not the same Baptism, which we Christians take in the Church, speak impertinently; John 1.6. for john was sent by God to baptise; and there is but one Baptism in him. It is true, that S. Augustine calls john's Baptism, Praecursorium ministerium, as he was a forerunner of Christ, his Baptism was a forerunning Baptism; It is true, that justin Martyr calls john's Baptism, Euangelicae gratiae praeludium, A Prologue to the grace of the Gospel; It is true, that more of the Fathers have more phrases of expressing a difference between the Baptism of john, and the Baptism of Christ: But all this is not De essentia, but De modo, Not of the substance of the Sacrament, which is the washing of our souls in the blood of Christ, but the difference was in the relation; john baptised In Christum morituturum, Into Christ, who was to die, and we are baptised In Christum mortuum, Into Christ who is already dead for us. Damascen expresses it fully, Christus baptizatur suo Baptismo: Christ was baptised with his own Baptism; It was john's Baptism, and yet it was Christ's too. And so we are baptised with his Baptism, and there neither is, nor was any other; And that Baptism is to us, janua Ecclesiae, as S. Augustine calls it, The Door of the Church, at that we enter, And Investitura Christianismi, The investing of Christianity, as S. Bernard calls it, There we put on Christ Jesus; And, (as he, whom we may be bold to match with these two floods of spiritual eloquence, for his Eloquence, that is Luther expresses it) Puerpera regni Coelorum, The Church in Baptism, is as a Woman delivered of child, and her child is the Kingdom of Heaven, and that kingdom she delivers into his arms who is truly Baptised. This Sacrament makes us Christians; this denominates us, both Civilly, and Spiritually; there we receive our particular names, which distinguish us from one another, and there we receive that name, which shall distinguish us from the Nations, in the next World; at Baptism we receive the name of Christians, Act. 11.26. and there we receive our Christian names. When the Disciples of Christ, in general, came to be called Christians, we find. It was a name given upon great deliberation, Barnabas had Preached there; who was a good Man, and full of the Holy Ghost, and of faith, himself. But he went to fetch Paul too, a Man of great gifts, and power in Preaching; and both they continued a year Preaching in Antioch, and there, first of all, the Disciples were called Christians: Before they were called Fideles, and Fratres, and Discipuli; The Faithful, and the Brethren, and the Disciples, and (as S. chrysostom says) De via, Men that were in the way; for, all the World besides, were beside him, who was The Way, the Truth, and the Life. But, (by the way) we may wonder, what gave S. chrysostom occasion of that opinion or that conjecture, since in the Ecclesiastic Story (I think) there is no mention of that name, attributed to the Christians: And in the Acts of the Apostles, it is named but once; when Saul desired Letters to Damascus, Acts 9.2. to punish them, whom he found to be of That way. Where we may note also, the zeal of S. Paul, (though then, in a wrong cause) against them, who were of That way, that is, That way inclined; And our stupidity, who startle not at those men, who are not only inclined another way, a cross way, but labour pestilently to incline others, and hope confidently to see all incline that way again. Here then at Antioch, they began to be called Christians; not only out of Custom, but, as it may seem, out of decree. For, if there belong any credit to that Council, which the Apostles are said to have held at Antioch, I ●●nus in Act 11.20. (of which Council there was a Copy, whether true or false, in origen's Library, within two hundred years after Christ) one Canon in that Council is, credentes in jesum, quos tunc vocabant Galilaeos, vocarentur Christiani, That the followers of Christ, who, till then, were called Galileans, should then be called Christians. There, in general, we were all called Christians; but, in particular, I am called a Christian, because I have put on Christ, in Baptism. Now, in considering the infinite treasure which we receive in Baptism, insinuated before the text, That the Heavens opened, that is, The mysteries of Religion are made accessible to us, we may attain to them; And then, The Holy Ghost descends, (And he is a Comforter, whilst we are in Ignorance, and he is a Schoolmaster to teach us all truths) And he comes as a Dove, that is, Brings peace of conscience with him, and he rests upon us as a Dove, that is, Requires simplicity, and an humble disposition in us, That not only as Elias opened and shut Heaven, pluviam aut emitteret, aut teneret, That he might pour out or withhold the rain; but (as that Father, S. chrysostom pursues it) Ita apertum, ut ipse conscendas, & alios, si velles, tecum levares, Heaven is so opened to us in baptism, as that we ourselves may enter into it, and by our good life, lead others into it too; As we consider, I say, what we have received in Baptism, so, if we be not only Dealbati Christiani, (as S. Augustine speaks) White-limed Christians, Christians on the outside, we must consider what we are to do upon all this. We are baptised, In plena & adulta Trinitate, says S. Cyprian, not in a Father without a Son, nor in either, or both, without a Holy Ghost, but in the fullness of the Trinity: And this mystery of the Trinity, is Regula fidei, says S. Hierom, It is the Rule of our faith, this only regulates our faith, That we believe aright of the Trinity; It is Dogma nostrae Religionis, says S. Basil, As though there were but this one Article; It is, says he, the foundation, the sum, it is all the Christian Religion, to believe aright of the Trinity. By this we are distinguished from the Jews, who accept no plurality of Persons; And by this we are distinguished from the Gentiles, who make as many several persons, as there are several powers, and attributes belonging to God. Our Religion, our holy Philosophy, our learning, as it is rooted in Christ, so it is not limited, not determined in Christ alone; we are not baptised in his name alone, but our study must be the whole Trinity; for, he that believes not in the Holy Ghost, as well as in Christ, is no Christian: And, as that is true which S. Augustine says, Nec laboriosius aliquid quaeritur, nec periculosius alicubi erratur, As there is not so steepy a place to clamber up, nor so slippery a place to fall upon, as the doctrine of the Trinity; so is that also true which he adds, Nec fructuosius invenitur, There is not so fulfilling, so accomplishing, so abundant an Article as that of the Trinity, for it is all Christianity. And therefore let us keep ourselves to that way, of the manifestation of the Trinity, which is revealed in this text; and that way is our second part. We must necessarily pass faster through the branches of this part, 2 Part. than the Dignity of the subject, or the fecundity of the words will well admit; but the clearness of the order must recompense the speed and dispatch. First then, in this way here is an Ecce, An awaking, an Alarm, a calling us up, Ecce, Behold. First, an Ecce correctionis, Ecce Correctionis. A voice of chiding, of rebuking. If thou lie still in thy first bed, as thou art merely a Creature, and thinkest with thyself, that since the Lily labours not, nor spins, and yet is gloriously clothed, since the Fowls of the Heavens sow not, nor reap, and yet are plentifully fed, thou mayest do so, and thou shalt be so; Ecce animam, Behold thou hast an immortal soul, which must have spiritual food, the Bread of life, and a more durable garment, the garment of righteousness, and cannot be imprisoned and captivated to the comparison of a Lily that spins not, or of a Bird that sows not. If thou think thy soul sufficiently fed, and sufficiently clothed at first, in thy baptism, That that Manna, and those shall last thee all thy pilgrimage, all thy life, That since thou art once Baptised, thou art well enough, Ecce fermentum, take heed of that leaven of the Pharisees, Take heed of them that put their confidence in the very act and character of the Sacrament, and trust to that: for there is a Confirmation belongs to every man's Baptism; not any such Confirmation as should intimate an impotency, or insufficiency in the Sacrament, but out of an obligation, that that Sacrament lays upon thee, That thou art bound to live according to that stipulation and contract, made in thy behalf, at thy receiving of that Sacrament, there belongs a Confirmation to that Sacrament, a holy life, to make sure that salvation, sealed to thee at first. So also, if thou think thyself safe, because thou hast left that leaven, that is, Traditions of men, and livest in a Reformed, and Orthodox Church, yet, Ecce Paradisum, Behold Paradise itself, even in Paradise, the bed of all ease, yet there was labour required; so is there required diligence, and a laborious holiness, in the right Church, and in the true Religion. If thou think thou knowest all, because thou understandest all the Articles of faith already, and all the duties of a Christian life already, yet Ecce scalam, Behold the life of a Christian is a jacobs' Ladder, and till we come up to God, still there are more steps to be made, more way to be gone. Briefly, to the most learned, to him that knows most, To the most sanctified, to him that lives best, here is an Ecce correctionis, there is a farther degree of knowledge, a farther degree of goodness, proposed to him, than he is yet attained unto. So it is an Ecce correctionis, an Ecce instar stimuli, God by calling us up to Behold, rebukes us because we did not so, and provokes us to do so now: It is also an Ecce directionis, an Ecce instar lucernae, God by calling us up to Behold, gives us a light whereby we may do so, and may discern our way: whomsoever God calls, to him he affords so much light, as that, if he proceed not by that light, he himself hath winked at that light, or blow out that light, or suffered that light to waste, and go out, by his long negligence. God does not call man with an Ecce, To behold him, and then hid himself from him; he does not bid him look, and then strike him blind. We are all borne blind at first; In Baptism God gives us that Collyrium, that eyesalve, by which we may see, and actually by the power of that medicine, we do all see, Mat. 7. ●. more than the Gentiles do. But yet, Ecce trabs in oculis, says Christ; Behold there is a beam in our eye, that is, Natural infirmities. But for all this beam, when Christ bids us behold, we are able to see, by Christ's light, our own imperfections; though we have that beam, yet we are able to see that we have it. And when this light which Christ gives us, (which is his first grace) brings us to that, than Christ proceeds so that which follows there, Projice trabem, Cast out the beam that is in thine eye, and so we become able by that succeeding grace, to overcome our former impediments: If Christ bid us behold, he gives us light; if he bid us cast out the beam, he gives us strength. There is an Ecce neutus, cast upon Zachary, Behold thou shalt be dumb, Luke 1.20. God punished Zacharies incredulity with dumbness; But there is never an Ecce caecus, Behold thou shalt be blind, That God should call man to see, and then blow out the candle, or not show him a candle, if he were in utter darkness; for this is an Ecce directionis, an Ecce lucernae, God calls, and he directs, and lightens our paths; never reproach God so impiously as to suspect, that when he calls, he does not mean that we should come. Well then, Vox. with what doth he enlighten thee? Why, Ecce vox, Behold a voice, saying. Now, for this voice in the Text, by whom it was heard, as also by whom the Dove that descended was seen, is sometimes disputed, and with some perplexity amongst the Fathers. Some think it was to Christ alone, because two of the Evangelists, Mark and Luke, record the words in that phrase, Tu es filius, not as we read it in our Text, This is, but, Thou art my beloved Son: But so, there had been no use, neither of the Dove, nor of the voice; for Christ himself lacked no testimony, that he was that Son. Some think it was to Christ, and john Baptist, and not to the company; Because, say they, The mystery of the Trinity was not to be presented to them, till a farther and maturer preparation; And therefore they observe, that the next manifestation of Christ, and so of the Trinity, Mat. 17. by a like voice, was almost three years after this, in his Transfiguration, after he had manifested this doctrine by a long preaching amongst them; And yet, even then, it was but to his Apostles, and but to a few of them neither, and those few forbidden to publish too; and how long? Till his resurrection; when by that resurrection he had confirmed them, than it was time to acquaint them with the Doctrine of the Trinity. But for the Doctrine of the Trinity, as mysterious as it is, it is insinuated and conveyed unto us, even in the first verse of the Bible, in that extraordinary phrase, Creavit Dii, Gods, Gods in the plural, created heaven and earth; There is an unity in the action, it is but Creavit, in the singular, and yet there is a plurality in the persons, it is not Deus, God, but Dij, Gods: The Doctrine of the Trinity, is the first foundation of our Religion, and no time is too early for our faith, The simplest may believe it; and all time is too early for our reason, The wisest cannot understand it. And therefore, as chrysostom is well followed in his opinion, so he is well worthy to be followed, That both the Dove was seen, and the voice was heard by all the company: for, neither was necessary to Christ himself; And the voice was not necessary to john Baptist, because the sign which was to govern him, was the Dove; He that sent me, said, upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit come down, and tarry still, it is he that baptizeth with the Holy Ghost. But to the company, both voice and Dove were necessary: for, if the voice had come alone, they might have thought, that that testimony had been given of john, of whom they had, as yet, a far more reverend opinion, then of Christ; And therefore, God first points out the person, and by the Dove declares him to all, which was He, and then, by that voice declares farther to them all, what He was. This benefit they had by being in that company, they saw, and they heard things conducing to their salvation; for, though God work more effectually upon those particular persons in the Congregation, who, by a good use of his former graces, are better disposed than others, yet to the most graceless man that is, if he be in the Congregation, God vouchsafes to speak, and would be heard. They that differ in the persons, Via Creaturae. who heard it, agree in the Reason; All they heard it, in all their opinions, to whom it was necessary to hear it; And it is necessary to all us, to have this means of understanding and believing, to hear. Therefore God gives to all that shall be saved, vocem, his voice. We consider two other ways of imprinting the knowledge of God in man; first in a dark and weak way, the way of Nature, and the book of Creatures; and secondly, in that powerful way, the way of Miracles. But these, and all between these, are uneffectuall without the Word. When David says of the Creatures, Psal. 19.3. Rom. 10.17. There is no speech nor language, where their voice is not heard, (the voice of the Creature is heard over all) S. Paul commenting upon those words, says, They have heard, All the world hath heard; but what? The voice of the Creature; now that is true, so much all the world had heard then, and does hear still: But the hearing that S. Paul intends there, is such a hearing as begets faith, and that the voice of Creature reaches not to. The voice of the Creature alone, is but a faint voice, a low voice; nor any voice, till the voice of the Word inanimate it; for then when the Word of God hath taught us any mystery of our Religion, than the book of Creatures illustrates, and establishes, and cherishes that which we have received by faith, in hearing the Word: As a stick bears up, and succours a vine, or any plant, more precious than itself, but yet gave it not life at first, nor gives any nourishment to the root now: so the assistance of reason, and the voice of the Creature, in the preaching of Nature, works upon our faith, but the root, and the life is in the faith itself; The light of nature gives a glimmering before, and it gives a reflection after faith, but the meridianall noon is in faith. Now, if we consider the other way, the way of power, Via miraculorum. Miracles, no man may ground his belief upon that, which seems a Miracle to him. Moses wrought Miracles, and Pharaohs instruments wrought the like: we know, theirs were no true Miracles, and we know Moses were; but how do we know this? By another voice, by the Word of God, who cannot lie: for, for those upon whom those Miracles were to work on both sides, Moses, and they too, seemed to the beholders, diversely disposed to do Miracles. One Rule in discerning, and judging a Miracle, is, to consider whether it be done in confirmation of a necessary Truth: otherwise it is rather to be suspected for an Illusion, then accepted for a Miracle. The Rule is intimated in Deuteronomy, where, Deut. 13. though a Prophet's prophecy do come to pass, yet, if his end be, to draw to other gods, he must be slain. What Miracles soever are pretended, in confirmation of the inventions of Men, are to be neglected. God hath not carried us so low for our knowledge, as to Creatures, to Nature, nor so high, as to Miracles, but by a middle way, By a voice. But it is Vox de Coelis, A voice from heaven. S. Basil applying (indeed with some wresting and derorting) those words in the 29 Psalm, vers. 3. De Coelis. (The voice of the Lord is upon the waters, the God of glory maketh it to thunder) to this Baptism of Christ, he says, Vox super aquas joannes, The words of john at Christ's Baptism, were this voice that David intends; And then that manifestation which God gave of the Trinity, (whatsoever it were) altogether, that was the Thunder of his Majesty: so this Thunder then, was vox de Coelis, A voice from heaven; And in this voice the person of the Father was manifested, as he was in the same voice at his Transfiguration. Since this voice than is from Heaven, and is the Father's voice, we must look for all our knowledge of the Trinity from thence. For, (to speak of one of those persons, Mat. 11.27. of Christ) no man knoweth the Son, but the Father; Who then, but he, can make us know him? If any knew it, yet it is an unexpressible mystery, no man could reveal it; Mat. 16.17. Flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven; If any could reveal it to us, yet none could draw us to believe it; No man can come to me, except the Father draw him: john 6.44. So that all our voice of Direction must be from thence, De Coelis, from Heaven. We have had Voces de Inferis, voices from Hell, in the blasphemies of Heretics; De Inferis. That the Trinity was but Cera extensa, but as a roll of Wax spread, or a Dough Cake rolled out, and so divided unto persons: That the Trinity was but a nest of Boxes, a lesser in a greater, and not equal to one another; And then, that the Trinity was not only three persons, but three Gods too; So far from the truth, and so far from one another have Heretics gone, in the matter of the Trinity; and Cerinthus so far, in that one person, in Christ, as to say, That Jesus, and Christ, were two distinct persons; and that into Jesus, who, says he, was the son of joseph, Christ, who was the Spirit of God, descended here at his Baptism, and was not in him before, and withdrew himself from him again, at the time of his Passion, and was not in him then; so that he was not borne Christ, nor suffered not being Christ; but was only Christ in his preaching, and in his Miracles; and in all the rest, he was but Jesus, says Cerinthus. We have had Voces de Inferis, de profundis, from the depth of hell, De Medio. in the malice of Heretics, And we have had Voces de medio, voices from amongst us, Inventions of men, to express, and to make us understand the Trinity, in pictures, and in Comparisons: All which (to contract this point) are apt to fall into that abuse, which we will only note in one; At first, they used ordinarily to express the Trinity in four letters, which had no ill purpose in it at first, but was a religious ease for their memories, in Catechisms: The letters were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and the two last belonged to the last person, for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and so there was Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, as if we should express it in F, and S, and H, and G. But this came quickly thus far into abuse, as that they thought, there could belong but three letters, in that picture, to the three persons; and therefore allowing so many to Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, they took the last letter P, for Petrus, and so made Peter head of the Church, and equal to the Trinity. So that for our knowledge, in this mysterious doctrine of the Trinity, let us evermore rest, in voce de coelis, in that voice which came from heaven. But yet it is Vox dicens, Dicens. A voice saying, speaking, A voice that man is capable of, and may be benefited by. It is not such a voice as that was, (which came from heaven too) when Christ prayed to God to glorify his name, john 12.28. That the people should say, some, that it was a Thunder, some that it was an Angel that spoke. They are the sons of Thunder, and they are the Ministerial Angels of the Church, from whom we must hear this voice of heaven: Nothing can speak, but man: No voice is understood by man, but the voice of man; It is not Vox dicens, That voice says nothing to me, that speaks not; And therefore howsoever the voice in the Text were miraculously form by God, to give this glory, and dignity to this first manifestation of the Trinity in the person of Christ, yet because he hath left it for a permanent Doctrine necessary to Salvation, he hath left ordinary means for the conveying of it; that is, The same voice from heaven, the same word of God, but speaking in the ministry of man. And therefore for our measure of this knowledge, (which is our third and last Part) we are to see, how Christian men, whose office it hath been to interpret Scriptures, that is, how the Catholic Church hath understood these words, Hic est Filius, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. How we are to receive the knowledge of the Trinity, 3 Part. Athanasius hath expressed as far as we can go; Whosoever will be saved, he must believe it; but the manner of it is not exposed so far as to his belief. That question of the Prophet, Quis enarrabit? who shall declare this? carries the answer with it, Nemo enarrabit, No man shall declare it. But a manifestation of the Being of the Trinity, they have always apprehended in these words, Hic est Filius, This is my beloved Son. To that purpose therefore, we take, first, the words to be expressed by this Evangelist S. Matthew, as the voice delivered them, rather than as they are expressed by S. Mark, and S. Luke; both which have it thus, Tu es, Thou art my beloved Son, and not Hic est, This is; They two being only careful of the sense, and not of the words, as it falls out often amongst the Evangelists, who differ oftentimes in recording the words of Christ, and of other persons. But where the same voice spoke the same words again, in the Transfiguration, there all the Evangelists express it so, 2 Pet. 1.17. Hic est, This is, and not Tu es, Thou art my beloved Son; And so it is, where S. Peter makes use by application of that history, it is Hic est, and not Tu es. So that this Hic est, This man, designs him who hath that mark upon him, that the holy Ghost was descended upon him, and tarried upon him; for so far went the sign of distinction given to john, The holy Ghost was to descend and tarry: Manet, says S. Hierome, The holy Ghost tarries upon him, because he never departs from him, sed operatur quando Christus vult, & quomodo vult, The holy Ghost works in Christ, when Christ will, and as Christ will; and so the holy Ghost tarried not upon any of the Prophets; They spoke what he would, but he wrought not when they would. S. Gregory objects to himself, that there was a perpetual residence of the holy Ghost upon the faithful, out of those words of Christ, The Comforter shall abide with you for ever; But as S. Gregory answers himself, This is not a plenary abiding, and secundùm omnia dona, in a full operation, according to all his gifts, as he tarried upon Christ: Neither indeed is that promise of Christ's to particular persons, but to the whole body of the Church. Now this residence of the holy Ghost upon Christ, was his unction; properly it was that, by which he was the Messiah, That he was anointed above his fellows; And therefore S. Hierome makes account, that Christ received his unction, and so his office of Messiah, at this his Baptism, and this descending of the holy Ghost upon him: And he thinks it therefore, because presently after Baptism, he went to preach in the Synagogue, and he took for his Text those words of the Prophet Esay, Esay 61.1. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me, that I should preach the Gospel to the poor. And when he had read the Text, he began his Sermon thus, This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears. But we may be bold to say, that this is mistaken by S. Hierome; for the unction of Christ by the holy Ghost, by which he was anointed, and sealed into the office of Messiah, was in the over-shadowing of the holy Ghost in his conception, in his assuming our nature: This Descending now at his baptism, and this Residence, were only to declare, That there was a holy Ghost, and that holy Ghost dwelled upon this person. It is Hic, Est. This person; And it is Hic est, This is my Son; It is not only Fuit, He was my Son, when he was in my bosom, Nor only Erit, He shall be so, when he shall return to my right hand again; God does not only take knowledge of him in Glory; But Est, He is so now; now in the exinanition of his person, now in the evacuation of his Glory, now that he is preparing himself to suffer scorn, and scourges, and thorns, and nails, in the ignominious death of the Cross, now he is the Son of the glorious God; Christ is not the less the Son of God for this eclipse. Hic est, This is he, who for all this lowness is still as high as ever he was, Filius. and that height is, Est Filius, He is the Son. He is not Servus, The Servant of God; or not that only, for he is that also. Behold my servant, Esay 41.1. (says God of him, in the Prophet) I will stay upon him, mine elect, in whom my soul delighteth; I have put my Spirit upon him, and he shall bring forth judgement to the Gentiles. But Christ is this Servant, and a Son too: And not a Son only; for so we observe divers filiations in the School; Filiationem vestigii, That by which all creatures, even in their very being, are the sons of God, as job calls God Pluviae patrem, The father of the rain; And so there are other filiations, other ways of being the sons of God. But Hic est, This person is, as the force of the Article expresses it, and presses it, Ille Filius, The Son, That Son, which no son else is, neither can any else declare how he is that which he is. This person than is still The Son, And Meus Filius, says God, My Son. Meus. He is the son of Abraham, and so within the Covenant; as well provided by that inheritance, as the son of man can be naturally. He is the Son of a Virgin, conceived without generation, and therefore ordained for some great use. He is the son of David, and therefore royally descended; But his dignity is in the Filius meus, that God avows him to be his Son; for, Unto which of the Angels said he at any time, Thou art my son? Heb. 1.5. But to Christ he says in the Prophet, I have called thee by thy name: And what is his name? Meus es tu, Thou art mine. Quem à me non separat Deitas, says Leo, non dividit potestas, non discernit aeternitas: Mine so, as that mine infiniteness gives me no room nor space beyond him, he reaches as far as I, though I be infinite; My Almightiness gives me no power above him, he hath as much power as I, though I have all; My eternity gives me no being before him, though I were before all: In mine Omnipotence, in mine Omnipresence, in mine Omniessence, he is equal partner with me, and hath all that is mine, or that is myself, and so he is mine. My Son, And My beloved Son; but so we are all, who are his sons, Deliciae ejus, Dilectus. Prov. 8.31. says Solomon, His delight, and his contentment is to be with the sons of men. But here the Article is extraordinarily repeated again, Ille dilectus, That beloved Son, by whom, those, who were neither beloved, nor Sons, became the beloved Sons of God; For, there is so much more added, in the last phrase, In quo complacui, In whom I am well pleased. Now, these words are diversely read. S. Augustine says, In quo. some Copies that he had seen, read them thus, Ego hodie genui te, This is my beloved Son, this day have I begotten him: And with such Copies, it seems, both justin Martyr, and Irenaeus met, for they read these words so, and interpret them accordingly: But these words are misplaced, and mis-transferred out of the second Psalm, where they are. And as they change the words, and in stead of In quo complacui, In whom I am well pleased, read, This day have I begotten thee; S. Cyprian adds other words, to the end of these, which are, Hunc audite, Hear him: Which words, when these words were repeated at the Transfiguration, were spoken, but here, at the Baptism, they were not, what Copy soever misled S. Cyprian, or whether it were the failing of his own memory. But S. chrysostom gives an express reason, why those words were spoken at the Transfiguration, and not here: Because, says he, Here was only a purpose of a Manifestation of the Trinity, so fare, as to declare their persons, who they were, and no more: At the Trans-figuration, where Moses and Elias appeared with Christ, there God had a purpose to prefer the Gospel above the Law, and the Prophets, and therefore in that place he adds that, Hunc audite, Hear him, who first fulfils all the Law, and the Prophets, and then preaches the Gospel. He was so well pleased in him, as that he was content to give all them, that received him, Eph. 1.6. power to become the Sons of God, too; as the Apostle says, By his grace, he hath made us accepted in his beloved. Beloved, That you may be so, Come up from your Baptism, as it is said that Christ did; Rise, and ascend to that growth, which your Baptism prepared you to: And the heavens shall open, as then, even Cataractae coeli, All the windows of heaven shall open, and rain down blessings of all kinds, in abundance; And the Holy Ghost shall descend upon you, as a Dove, in his peaceful coming, in your simple, and sincere receiving him; And he shall rest upon you, to effect and accomplish his purposes in you. If he rebuke you, (as Christ, when he promises the Holy Ghost, though he call him a Comforter, John 16.7. says, That he shall rebuke the world of divers things) yet he shall dwell upon you as a Dove, Quae si mordet, osculando mordet, says S. Augustine: If the Dove by't, it bites with kissing, if the Holy Ghost rebuke, he rebukes with comforting. And so baptised, and so pursuing the contract of your Baptism, and so crowned with the residence of his blessed Spirit, in your holy conversation, he shall breathe a soul into your soul, by that voice of eternal life, You are my beloved Sons, in whom I am well pleased. SERM. XLIV. Preached at S. Dunstanes upon Trinity-Sunday. 1627. REV. 4.8. And the four Beasts had each of them six wings about him, and they were full of eyes within; And they rest not day and night, saying, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come. THese words are part of that Scripture, which our Church hath appointed to be read for the Epistle of this day. This day, which besides that it is the Lords day, the Sabbath day, is also especially consecrated to the memory, and honour of the whole Trinity. The Feast of the Nativity of Christ, Christmas day, which S. chrysostom calls Metropolin omnium festorum, The Metropolitan festival of the Church, is intended principally to the honour of the Father, who was glorified in that humiliation of that Son, that day, because in that, was laid the foundation, and first stone of that house and Kingdom, in which God intended to glorify himself in this world, that is, the Christian Church. The Feast of Easter is intended principally to the honour of the Son himself, who upon that day, began to lift up his head above all those waters which had surrounded him, and to shake off the chains of death, and the grave, and hell, in a glorious Reserrection. And then, the Feast of Pentecost was appropriated to the honour of the Holy Ghost, who by a personal falling upon the Apostles, that day, enabled them to propagate this Glory of the Father, and this death, and Resurrection of the Son, to the ends of the world, to the ends in Extension, to all places, to the ends in Duration, to all times. Now, as S. Augustine says, Nullus eorum extra quemlibet eorum est, Every Person of the Trinity is so in every other person, as that you cannot think of a Father, (as a Father) but that there falls a Son into the same thought, nor think of a person that proceeds from others, but that they, from whom he, whom ye think of, proceeds, falls into the same thought, as every person is in every person; And as these three persons are contracted in their essence into one Godhead, so the Church hath also contracted the honour belonging to them, in this kind of Worship, to one day, in which, the Father, and Son, and Holy Ghost, as they are severally, in those three several days, might be celebrated jointly, and altogether. It was long before the Church did institute a particular Festival, to this purpose. For, before, they made account, that that verse, which was upon so many occasions repeated in the Liturgy, and Church Service, (Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost) had a convenient sufficiency in it, to keep men in a continual remembrance of the Trinity. But when by that extreme inundation, and increase of Arians, these notions of distinct Persons in the Trinity, came to be obliterated, and discontinued, the Church began to refresh herself, in admitting into to the forms of Common Prayer, some more particular notifications, and remembrances of the Trnity; And at last, (though it were very long first, for this Festival of this Trinity-Sunday, was not instituted above four hundred years since) they came to ordain this day. Which day, our Church, according to that peaceful wisdom, wherewithal the God of Peace, of Unity, and Concord, had inspired her, did, in the Reformation, retain, and continue, out of her general religious tenderness, and holy loathness, to innovate any thing in those matters which might be safely, and without superstition continued and entertained. For our Church, in the Reformation, proposed not that for her end, how she might go from Rome, but how she might come to the Truth; nor to cast away all such things as Rome had depraved, but to purge away those depravations, and conserve the things themselves, so restored to their first good use. For this day then, were these words appointed by our Church; Divisic. And therefore we are sure, that in the notion, and apprehension, and construction of our Church, these words appertain to the Trinity. In them therefore we shall consider, first what, these four creatures were, which are notified, and designed to us, in the names, and figures of four Beasts; And then, what these four creatures did; Their Persons, and their Action will be our two Parts of this Text. In each of which we shall have three Branches; In the first these, first, simply who they were; And then, their qualification as they are furnished with wings, Each of them had six wings; And then lastly, in that first Part, what is intended in their eyes, for, They were full of eyes within; And in these three, we shall determine that first Part, The Persons. And then in the second, our first Branch will be, Their Alacrity, their ingenuity, their free and open profession of their zeal to God's Service; They did it, says the Text, Dicentes, Saying, Publishing, Declaring; without disguises or modifications. And our second Branch, Their Assiduity, That which they did, they did incessantly, They ceased not day nor night, says our Text; No occasional emergencies, no loss, no trouble interrupted their zeal to God's service. And then the last is, that that which they did, first with so much ingenuity, and then with so much assiduity, first so openly, and then so constantly, was the celebration of the Trinity, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come; Which is the entire body of the Christian Religion? That they professed openly, and constantly, all the parts of their Religion, are also the three Branches, in which we shall determine our second Part, Their Action. First then, for our first Branch, in our first Part, 1. Part. Persons. Rom. 15.4. the Persons intended in these four creatures, the Apostle says, Whatsoever things are written afore time, are written for our learning; But yet, not so for our learning, as that we should think always to learn, or always to have a clear understanding of all that is written; for it is added there, That we, through patience, and comfort of the Scriptures, might have hope; Which may well admit this Exposition, that those things which we understand not yet, we may hope that we shall, and we must have patience till we do. For there may be many places in Scripture, (especially in Prophetical Scripture) which, perchance, the Church of God herself, shall not understand, till those Prophecies be fulfilled, and accomplished. In the understanding of this place, what, or who these four creatures are, there is so much difficulty, so much perplexity, as that amongst the interpretations of very Learned, and very Reverend, and very pertinent Expositors, it is easy to collect thirty several opinions, thirty several significations of these four creatures. The multiplicity of these Interpretations intimates thus much, that that man that believes the Trinity, can scarce turn upon any thing, but it assists, and advances, and illustrates that belief; As divers from one another as their thirty Expositions are, they all agree, that be our four creatures what they will, that which they do, is to celebrate the Trinity; He that seeks proof for every mystery of Religion, shall meet with much darkness; but he that believes first, shall find every thing to illustrate his faith. And then, this multiplicity of Interpretations intimates thus much more, That since we cannot give Sonsum adaequatum, Any such Interpretation of these four creatures, but that another, as probable as it, may be given, it may be sufficient, and it is best, (as in all cases of like intricacy) to choose such a sense, as may most advance the general purpose, and intention of the place; which is, in this place, The celebration of the Trinity. So therefore we shall do. And considering that amongst these manifold Expositors, some bind themselves exactly, rigidly, superciliously, yea superstitiously to the number of four, and that therefore these four Creatures must necessarily signify something, that is limited in the number of four, no more, no less, (either the four Monarchies, or the four Patriarches, or the four Doctors of the Church, or the four Cardinal Virtues, or the four Elements, or the four Quarters of the World, into all which, and many more such, rather Allusions, than Interpretations, these various Expositors have scattered themselves) And then considering also that divers others of these Expositors out of a just observation, That nothing is more ordinary in this Book of the Revelation, then by a certain and finite number, to design and signify an uncertain and infinite, (for, otherwise when we are told, that there were twelve thousand sealed of every Tribe, we should know the certain number of all the Jews that were saved, which certainly is not S. john's purpose in that place; but in the greatness of that number, to declare the largeness of God's goodness to that people) considering I say, that divers of these Expositors, have extended their interpretation beyond the number of four, we make account that we do best, if we do both; if we stop upon the number of four, and yet pass on to a greater number too. And so we shall well do, if we interpret these four Creatures, to be first and principally the four Evangelists, (and that is the most common Interpretation of the Ancients) and then enlarge it to all the Ministers of the Gospel, which is (for the most part) the Interpretation of the Later men. So then, the action being an open and a continual profession of the whole Christian Religion, in the celebration of the Trinity, which is the distinctive Character of a Christian, the persons that do this, are all they that constitute the Hierarchy, and order of the Church; All they that execute the Ministry, and dispensation of the Gospel; which Gospel is laid down, and settled and established radically in the four Evangelists; All they are these four Creatures. And farther we need not carry this first branch, which is the Notification of these persons; for, their Qualification is the larger consideration. And before we come to their Qualification, in the text, first, as they are said to have six wings, and then as they are said to be full of eyes, we look upon them, as they are form, and designed to us, in the verse immediately before the text; where, the first of these four Creatures hath the face of a Lion, the second of a Calf, or an Ox, the third of a Man, and the fourth of an Eagle. Now, Quatuor animalia sunt Ecclesiae Doctores, says S. Ambrose; These four Creatures are the Preachers of the Gospel; that we had established afore; But then, we add with S. Ambrose, Eandem significationem habet primum animal, quod secundum, quod tertium, quod quartum; All these four Creatures make up but one Creature; all their qualities concur to the Qualification of a Minister; every Minister of God is to have all, that all four had; the courage of a Lion, the laboriousness of an Ox, the perspicuity and clear sight of the Eagle, and the humanity, the discourse, the reason, the affability, the appliableness of a Man. S. Dionys the Areopagite had the same consideration as S. Ambrose had, before him. He imprints it, he expresses it, and extends it thus; In Leone vis indomabilis; In every Minister, I look for such an invincible courage, as should be of proof, against Persecution, (which is a great) and against Preferment, which is a greater temptation; that neither Fears, nor Hopes shake his constancy; neither his Christian constancy, to stagger him, nor his Ministerial constancy, to silence him; For this is Vis indomabilis, the courage required in the Minister as he is a Lion. And then says that Father; In 'Bove vis salutaris, In every Minister, as he is said to be an Ox, I look for labour; that he be not so overgrown, nor stall-fed, that he be thereby lazy; He must labour; And then, as the labour of the Ox is, his labour must be employed upon useful and profitable things, things that conduce to the clearing, not the perplexing of the understanding; and to the collecting, the uniting, the fixing, and not the scattering, the dissolving, the pouring out of a fluid, an unstable, an irresolved conscience; things of edification, not speculation; For this is that Vis salutaris, which we require in every Minister; that he labour at the Plough, and plough the right ground; that he Preach for the saving of souls, and not for the sharpening of wits. And then again, In Aquila vis speculatrix; As the Minister is presented in the notion and quality of an Eagle, we require both an Open eye, and a Piercing eye; First, that he date look upon other men's sins, and be not feign to wink at their faults, because he is guilty of the same himself, and so, for fear of a recrimination, incur a prevarication; And then, that he be not so dim-sighted, that he must be feign to see all through other men's spectacles, and so preach the purposes of great men, in a factious popularity, or the fancies of new men, in a Schismatical singularity; but, with the Eagle, be able to look to the Sun; to look upon the constant truth of God in his Scriptures, through his Church; For this is Vis speculatrix, the open and the piercing eye of the Eagle. And then lastly, In homine vis ratiocinatrix; As the Minister is represented in the notion and quality of a Man, we require a gentle, a supple, an appliable disposition, a reasoning, a persuasive disposition; That he do not always, press all things with Authority, with Censures, with Excommunications; That he put not all points of Religion, always upon that one issue, Quicunque vult salvus esse, If you will be saved, you must believe this, all this, & Qui non credider it, damnabitur, If you doubt of this, any of this, you are infallibly, necessarily damned; But, that he be also content to descend to men's reason, and to work upon their understanding, and their natural faculties, as well as their faith, and to give them satisfaction, and reason (as far as it may be had) in that which they are to believe; that so as the Apostle, though he had authority to command, yet did Pray them in Christ's stead to be reconciled to God, So the Minister of God, though (as he is bound to do) he do tell them what they are bound to believe, yet he also tells them, why they are to believe it; for this is Vis ratiocinatrix, The holy gentleness and appliableness, implied in that form of a Man. And so you have this Man composed of his four Elements; this Creature made of these four Creatures; this Minister made of a Lion, an Ox, an Eagle, and a Man; For, no one of these, nor all these, but one, will serve; the Lion alone, without the Eagle, is not enough; it is not enough to have courage and zeal, without clear sight and knowledge; Nor enough to labour, except we apply ourselves to the capacity of the hearer; All must have all, or else all is disordered; Zeal, Labour, Knowledge, Gentleness. Now besides these general qualifications, laid down as the foundation of the text, Alae. in the verse before it, in the text itself these four Creatures, being first the four Evangelists, and consequently, or by a just and fair accommodation, all the Preachers of the Gospel, which limit themselves in the doctrine laid down in the four Evangelists, have also wings added unto them; Wings, first for their own behoof and benefit, and then, wings for the benefit and behoof of others. They have wings to raise themselves from the earth; that they do not entangle themselves in the businesses of this World; but still to keep themselves upon the wing, in a Heavenly conversation, ever remembering that they have another Element, than Sea or Land, as men whom Christ Jesus hath set apart, and in some measure made mediators between him, and other men, as his instruments of their salvation. And then as for themselves, so have they wings for others too, that they may be always ready to secure all, in all their spiritual necessities. For as those words are well understood by many of the Ancients, Revel. 12.14. To the Woman were given two wings of an Eagle, that is, to the Church were given able and sufficient Ministers, to carry and convey her over the Nations: So are those words which are spoken of God himself, appliable to his Ministers, that first, The Eagle stirreth up her nest, Deut. 32.11. The Preacher stirs and moves, and agitates the holy affections of the Congregation, that they slumber not in a senselessness of that which is said, The Eagle stirreth up her nest, and then as it is added there, She fluttereth over her young; The Preacher makes a holy noise in the conscience of the Congregation, and when he hath awakened them, by stirring the nest, he casts some claps of thunder, some intimidations, in denouncing the judgements of God, and he flings open the gates of Heaven, that they may hear, and look up, and see a man sent by God, with power to infuse his fear upon them; So she fluttereth over her young; but then, as it follows there, She spreadeth abroad her wings; she overshadowes them, she enwraps them, she arms them with her wings, so as that no other terror, no other fluttering but that which comes from her, can come upon them; The Preacher doth so infuse the fear of God into his Auditory, that first, they shall fear nothing but God, and then they shall fear God, but so, as he is God; And God is Mercy; God is Love; and his Minister shall so spread his wings over his people, as to defend them from all inordinate fear, from all suspicion and jealousy, from all diffidence and distrust in the mercy of God; which is farther expressed in that clause, which follows in the same place, She taketh them and beareth them upon her wings; when the Minister hath awakened his flock by the stirring of the nest, and put them in this holy fear, by this which the Holy Ghost calls a Fluttering; and then provided, by spreading his wings, that upon this fear there follow not a desperation; then he sets them upon the top of his best wings, and shows them the best treasure that is committed to his Stewardship, he shows them Heaven, and God in Heaven, sanctifying all their crosses in this World, inanimating all their worldly blessings, raining down his blood into their emptiness, and his balm into their wounds, making their bed in all their sickness, and preparing their seat, where he stands soliciting their cause, at the right hand of his Father. And so the Minister hath the wings of an Eagle, that every soul in the Congregation may see as much as he sees, that is, a particular interest in all the mercies of God, and the merits of Christ. So then, these Ministers of God have that double use of their eagle's wings; first, volent ad escam, Job 9.26. (as it is in job) that they may fly up to receive their own food, their instructions at the mouth and word of God; And then, ubi cadaver sit, ibi statim adsit, (as it is in job also) where the dead are, Job 39.33. they also may be; That where any lie, Pro mortuis, (as S. Paul speaks) for dead, 1 Cor. 13.29. as good as dead, ready to die, upon their deathbed, they may be ready to assist them, and to minister spiritual Physic, opportunely, seasonably, proportionably to their spiritual necessities; That they may pour out upon such sick souls, that name of jesus, which is Oleum effusum, An oil, and a balm, always pouring, and always spreading itself upon all green wounds, and upon all old sores; That they may minister to one in his hot and pestilent presumptions, an Opiate, of Christ's Tristis anima, A remembrance, that even Christ himself had a sad soul towards his death, and a Quare dereliquisti, some apprehension, that God, though his God, had forsaken him. And that therefore, no man, how righteous soever, may presume, or pass away without fear and trembling; And then, to minister to another, in his Lethargies, and Apoplexies, and damps, and inordinate dejections of spirit, Christ's cordials, and restoratives, in his Clarifica me Pater, In an assurance, that his Father, though he have laid him down here, whether in an inglorious fortune, or in a disconsolate bed of sickness, will raise him, in his time, to everlasting glory. So these Eagles are to have wings, to fly Ad cadaver, to the dead, to those that are so dying a bodily death, and also, where any lie dead in the practice and custom of sin, to be industrious and earnest in calling them to life again, so as Christ did Lazarus, by calling aloud; Not aloud in the ears of other men, so to expose a sinner to shame, and confusion of face, but aloud in his own ears, to put home the judgements of God, thereby to plough and harrow that stubborn heart, which will not be kneaded, nor otherwise reduced to an uprightness. For these uses, to raise themselves to heavenly contemplations, and to make haste to them that need their assistance, the Ministers of God have wings; wings of great use; especially now, when there is Coluber in via, A snake in every path, a Seducer in every house; When as the Devil is busy, because he knows his time is short, so his instruments are busy, because they think their time is beginning again; therefore the Minister of God hath wings. And then, Sex alae. their wings are numbered in our Text; They have six wings. For by the consent of most Expositors, those whom S. john presents in the figure of these four Creatures here, Esa. 6.3. and those whom the Prophet Esay calls Seraphim, are the same persons; The same Office, and the same Voice is attributed unto those Seraphim there, as unto these four Creatures here; Those as well as these, spend their time in celebrating the Trinity, an in crying Holy, Holy, Holy. The Holy Ghost sometimes presents the Ministers of the Gospel, as Seraphim in glory, that they might be known to be the Ministers and dispensers of the mysteries and secrets of God, and to come A latere, From his Council, his Cabinet, his Bosom. And then on the other side, that you might know, that the dispensation of these mysteries of your salvation, is by the hand and means of men, taken from amongst yourselves, and that therefore you are not to look for Revelations, nor Ecstasies, nor Visions, nor Transportations, but to rest in God's ordinary means, he brings those persons down again from that glorious representation, as the Seraphim, to creatures of an inferior, of an earthly nature. For, though it be by the sight, and in the quality and capacity of those glorious Seraphim, that the Minister of God receives his commission, and instructions, his orders, and his faculties, yet the execution of his commission, and the pursuing of his instructions towards you, and in your behalf, is in that nature, and in that capacity, as they have the courage of the Lion, the laboriousness of the Ox, the perspicuity of the Eagle, and the affability of Man. These winged persons then, (winged for their own sakes, and winged for yours) these Ministers of God, (thus designed by Esay, as heavenly Seraphim, to procure them reverence from you, and by S. john, as earthly Creatures, to teach you, how near to yourselves, God hath brought the means of your Salvation, in his visible, and sensible, in his appliable, and apprehensible Ordinances) are, in both places, (that of Esay, and this in our Text) said to have six wings; And six, to this use, in Esay, with two they cover their face, with two their feet, and with two they fly. They cover their face; Not all over; for then, neither the Prophet there, nor the Evangelist here, could have known them to have had these likenesses, and these proportions. The Ministers of God are not so covered, so removed from us, as that we have not means to know them. We know them by their face; that is, by that declaration which the Church hath given of them to us, in giving them their orders, and their power over us; and we know them by their voice; that is, by their preaching of such doctrine, as is agreeable to those Articles which we have sucked in from our infancy. The Minister's face is not so covered with these wings, as that the people have no means to know him; For his calling is manifest, and his doctrine is open to proof and trial: But they are said to cover their face, because they dare not look confidently, they cannot look fully upon the majesty of the mysteries of God. The Evangelists themselves, and they that ground their doctrine upon them, (all which together, as we have often said, make up these four persons, whom Esay calls Seraphim, and S. john inferior Creatures) have not seen all that belongs to the nature and essence of God, not all in the attributes and properties of God, not all in the decrees and purposes of God, no, not all in the execution of those purposes and decrees; we do not know all that God intends to do; we do not know all that God intends in that which he hath done. Our faces are covered from having seen the manner of the eternal generation of the Son, or of the eternal proceeding of the Holy Ghost, or the manner of the presence of Christ in the Sacrament. The Ministers of God are so far open-faced towards you, as that you may know them, and try them by due means to be such; and so far open-faced towards God, as that they have seen in him and received from him, all things necessary for the salvation of your souls; But yet, their faces are covered too; somethings concerning God, they have not seen themselves, nor should go about to reveal, or teach to you. And it is not only their faces that are covered, but their feet too. Their covered faces are especially directed to God; denoting their modesty in forbearing unrevealed mysteries: Their covered feet are especially directed to you; They should not be curious in searching into all God's actions, nor you in searching into all theirs; Their ways, their actions, their lives, their conversations should not be too curiously searched, too narrowly pried into, too severely interpreted by private men, as they are but such, because, in so doing, the danger and the detriment is thus far likely to fall upon yourselves, that when the infirmities of the Minister, and your infirmities, that is, their faults, and your uncharitable censures of their faults, meet together, that may produce this ill effect, that personal matters may be cast upon the ministerial function, and so the faults of a Minister be imputed to the Ministry; and by such a prejudice, and conceit of one man's ill life, you may lose the taste and comfort of his, and perchance of others good Doctrine too. All that is covered shall be made manifest, says Christ; You shall know all their faults, and you shall know them then, when it shall most confound them, and least endanger you, when it shall aggravate their torment, and do you no harm; that is, at the day of Judgement. In the mean time, because it might hurt you to know their faults, God hath covered their feet so far, as that he would not have your looking upon their feet, divert you from depending upon their mouths, as long as by his permission they sit in Moses chair, and execute God's Commission. If they employ their middle wings, which were ordained for them to fly withal, if they do their duties in breaking the bread of life, and dispensing the Word and Sacraments, and assisting the sick in body, and sick in soul, though God have, in part, covered their faces, that is, not imparted to them such gifts, or such an open sight into deep points, as perchance you desire, yet he hath covered their feet too; he hath for your sakes removed their faults from your survey, as you are but private men. Take the benefit of their two middle wings, their willingness to assist you with their labours, and in their other four wings, be not too curious, too censorious, too severe, either their face-wings, that is, the depth of their learning, or their feet-wings, that is, the holiness of their lives. They have six wings to these several purposes; Singuli senas and singuli senas, says our Text, every one of them hath six wings. For, for the first couple, the face-wings, howsoever some of the Ministers of God have gifts above their fellows, howsoever they have gained the names of Doctores Seraphici, and Doctores illuminati, (with which titles they abound in the Roman Church) yet their faces are in part covered, they must not think they see all, understand all; The learnedst of all hath defects, even in matter of learning. And for the second couple, the feet-wings, howsoever some may make shift for the reputation of being more pure, more sanctified than their fellows, yet the best of them all need a covering for their feet too; All their steps, all their actions will not endure examination. But for the last couple, however there may be some intimation given of a great degree of perfection in matter of knowledge, and in matter of manners, (for in those creatures which are mentioned in the first of Ezek. (which also signify the Ministers of God) there are but four wings spoken of, so that there are no face-wings, they have an abundant measure of learning and knowledge, And the Cherubin (which may also signify the same persons) have but two wings, no covering upon face or feet; to denote, that some may be without any remarkable exception in their doctrine, and in their manners too) yet for the last couple, the two middle wings, by which they fly, and address themselves to every particular soul that needs their spiritual assistance, the Ministers of God are never in any figure but represented. Better they wanted face-wings, and feet-wings, (discretion to cover either their insufficiency in knowledge, or their infirmity in manners) then that they should want their middle-wings, that is, a disposition to apply themselves to their flock, and to be always ready to distribute the promises of God, and the seals of his promises, the Word and Sacraments, amongst them. And this may be conveniently intended in their wings. Now as they were Alati, Oculi. they were Oculati in our Text; They have eyes as well as wings; They fly, but they know whither they fly. In the doctrine of Implicit Obedience in the Roman Church, To believe as the Church believes, or as that Confessor which understands not what the Church believes, makes you believe the Church believes, In their doctrine of that which they call Blind Obedience, that is, to pursue and execute any commandment of any superior, without any consideration; In both these there are wings enough, but there are no eyes: They fly from hence to Rome, and Roman Jurisdictions, and they fly over hither again, after Statutes, after Proclamations, after Banishments iterated upon them; So that here are wings enough, but they lack those eyes by which they should discern between Religion and Rebellion, between a Traitor and a Martyr. And to take our consideration from them, and reflect upon ourselves, They that fly high at matter of mystery, and leave out matter of edification, They that fly over Sea for platforms of discipline, and leave out that Church that bred them, They that fly close to the service of great men's affections and purposes, and do the work of God coldly, and faintly, They may be Alati, but they are not Oculati, They may fly high, and fly fast, and fly far, and fly close in the ways of preferment, but they see not their end; Not only not the end that they shall come to, but not the end that they are put upon; not only not their own ends, but not their ends whose instruments they are. Those birds whose eyes are cieled, and sowed up, fly highest; but they are made a prey: God exposes not his servants to such dangers; He gives them wings, that is, means to do their office; but eyes too, that is, discretion and religious wisdom how to do it. And this is that which they seem to need most, Pleni. for their wings are limited, but their eyes are not; Six wings, but full of eyes, says our Text. They must have eyes in their tongues; They must see, that they apply not blindly and inconsiderately God's gracious promises to the presumptuous, nor his heavy judgements to the broken hearted. They must have eyes in their ears; They must see that they hearken neither to a superstitious sense from Rome, nor to a seditious sense of Scriptures from the Separation. They must have eyes in their hands; They must see that they touch not upon any such benefits or rewards, as might bind them to any other master then to God himself. They must have eyes in their eyes; spiritual eyes in their bodily eyes; They must see that they make a charitable construction of such things as they see other men do, and this is that fullness of eyes which our Text speaks of. But then especially, Intus. says our Text, They were full of eyes Within: The fullness, the abundance of eyes, that is, of providence and discretion in the Ministers of God, was intimated before: In the 6. verse it was said, That they were full of eyes before and behind: that is, circumspect and provident for all that were about them, and committed to them. But all is determined and summed up in this, that They were full of eyes within. For as there is no profit at all (none to me, none to God) if I get all the world and lose mine own soul, so there is no profit to me, if I win other men's souls to God, and lose mine own. All my wings shall do me no good, all mine eyes before and behind shall do me no good, if I have no prospect inward, no eyes within, no care of my particular and personal safety. And so we have done with our first general part, the Persons denoted in these four creatures, and the duties of their ministry; in which we have therefore insisted thus long, that having so declared and notified to you our duties, you also might be the more willing to hear of your own duties, as well as ours, and to join with us in this Open, and Incessant, and Totall profession of your Religion, which is the celebration of the Trinity in this acclamation, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which is, which was, and which is to come. To come therefore now to the second Part, 2 Part. and taking the four Evangelists to be principally intended here, but secundarily the Preachers of the Gospel too, and not only they, but in a fair extension and accommodation the whole Church of God, first we noted their Ingenuity and openness in the profession of their Religion, they did it Dicentes, Saying, declaring, publishing, manifesting their devotion, without any disguise, any modification. In that song of the three Children in the Furnace, Dicentes. O all ye works of the Lord, etc. there is nothing presented speechless: To every thing that is there, there is given a tongue; Not only all those creatures which have all a Being, but even Privations, Privations that have no Being, that are nothing in themselves, (as the Night, and Darkness) are there called upon to bless the Lord, to praise him, and magnify him for ever. But towards the end of that song, you may see that service drawn into a narrower compass; You may see to whom this speech, and declaration doth principally appertain; For after he had called upon Sun, and Moon, and Earth, and Sea, and Fowls, and Fishes, and Plants, and Night, and Darkness, to praise the Lord, to bless him, and magnify him for ever, Then he comes to O ye children of men, Primogeniti Dei, God's beloved creatures, his eldest sons, and firstborn, in his intention; And then, Domus Israel, O ye house of Israel, you whom God hath not only made men, but Christian men, not only planted in the World, but in the Church, not only endued with Reason, but inspired with Religion: And then again, O ye Priests of the Lord, O ye Servants of the Lord, those of God's portion, not only in the Church, but of the Church, and appointed by him to deal between him and other men: And then also, O ye spirits and souls of the righteous, those whom those instruments of God had powerfully and effectually wrought upon, upon those especially, those men, those Christian men, those Priests, those sanctified men, upon those he calls to bless the Lord, to praise him, and magnify him for ever. This obligation the holy Ghost lays upon us all, that the more God does for us, the more we should declare it to other men; God would have us tell him our sins; God would have us tell other men his mercies; It was no excuse for Moses that he was of uncircumcised lips; Exod. 5.12. jer. 1.6. No excuse for jeremy, to say, O Lord God, behold I cannot speak, for I am a child. Credidi, propterea locutus sum, is David's form of argument, I believed, and therefore I spoke. If thou dost not love to speak of God, and of his benefits, thou dost not believe in God, nor that those benefits came from him. Remember that when thou wast a child, and presented to God in Baptism, God gave thee a tongue in other men's mouths, and enabled thee, by them, to establish a covenant, a contract between thy soul, and him then. And therefore since God spoke to thee, when thou couldst not hear him, in the faith of the Church; since God heard thee when thou couldst not speak to him, in the mouth of thy sureties; Since that God that created thee was Verbum, The Word, (for, Dixit, & facta sunt, God spoke, and all things were made) Since that God that redeemed thee was Verbum, The Word, (for The Word was made flesh) Since that God that sanctified thee is Verbum, The Word, (for therefore S. Basil calls the holy Ghost Verbum Dei, quia interpres Filii, He calls the holy Ghost the Word of God, because as the Son is the Word, because he manifests the Father unto us, so the holy Ghost is the Word, because he manifests the Son unto us, and enables us to apprehend, and apply to ourselves, the promises of God in him) since God, in all the three Persons, is Verbum, The Word to thee, all of them working upon thee, by speaking to thee, Be thou Verbum too, A Word, as God was; A Speaking, and a Doing Word, to his glory, and the edification of others. If the Lord open thy lips, (and except the Lord open them, it were better they were luted with the clay of the grave) let it be to show forth his praise, and not in blasphemous, not in scurrile, not in profane language. If the Lord open thy hand, (and if the Lord open it not, better it were manacled with thy winding sheet) let it be, as well to distribute his blessings, as to receive them. Let thy mouth, let thy hand, let all the Organs of thy body, all the faculties of thy soul, concur in the performance of this duty, intimated here, and required of all God's Saints, dicant, That they speak, utter, declare, publish the glory of God. For this is that Ingenuity, that Alacrity, which constitutes our first Branch. And then the second is the Assiduity, the constancy, the incessantnesse, They rest not day nor night. But have the Saints of God no Vacation? Assiduitas. do they never cease? nay, as the word imports, Requiem non habent, They have no Rest. Beloved, God himself rested not, till the seventh day; be thou content to stay for thy Sabbath, till thou mayst have an eternal one. If we understand this, of rest merely, of bodily rest, the Saints of God are least likely to have it, in this life; For, this life, is (to them especially, above others) a business, and a perplexed business, a warfare, and a bloody warfare, a voyage, and a tempestuous voyage. If we understand this rest to be Cessation, Intermission, the Saints in heaven have none of that, in this service. It is a labour that never wearies, to serve God there. As the Sun is no wearier now, then when he first set out, six thousand years since; As that Angel, which God hath given to protect thee, is not weary of his office, for all thy perversenesses, so, howsoever God deal with thee, be not thou weary of bearing thy part, in his Choir here in the Militant Church. God will have low voices, as well as high; God will be glorified De profundis, as well as In excelsis; God will have his tribute of praise, out of our adversity, as well as out of our prosperity. And that is it which is intimated, and especially intended in the phrase which follows, Day and night. For, it is not only that those Saints of God who have their Heaven upon earth, do praise him in the night; according to that of S. Jerome, Sanctis ipse somnus, oratio; and that of S. Basil, Etiam somnia Sanctorum preces sunt; That holy men do praise God, and pray to God in their sleep, and in their dreams; nor only that which David speaks of, of rising in the night, and fixing stationary hours for prayer; But even in the depth of any spiritual night, in the shadow of death, in the midnight of afflictions and tribulations, God brings light out of darkness, and gives his Saint's occasion of glorifying him, not only in the dark, (though it be dark) but from the dark, (because it is dark.) This is a way unconceivable by any, unexpressible to any, but those that have felt that manner of Gods proceeding in themselves, That be the night what night it will, be the oppression of what Extension, or of what Duration it can, all this retards not their zeal to God's service; Nay, they see God better in the dark, than they did in the light; Their tribulation hath brought them to a nearer distance to God, and God to a clearer manifestation to them. And so, to their Ingenuity, that they profess God, and their Religion openly, is added an Assiduity, that they do it incessantly; And then also, an Integrity, a Totality, that they do not departed with, nor modify in any Article of their Religion; which is entirely, and totally enwrapped in this acclamation of the Trinity, (which is our third, and last Branch in this last Part) Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come. For the Trinity itself, Trinitas. it is Lux, but Lux inaccessibilis; It is light, for a child at Baptism professes to see it; but then, it is so inaccessible a light, as that if we will make natural reason our Medium, Psal. 18.11. to discern it by, it will fall within that of David, Posuit tenebras latibulum suum, God hath made darkness his secret places; God, as God, will be seen in the creature; There, in the creature he is light; light accessible to our reason; but God, in the Trinity, is open to no other light, than the light of faith. To make representations of men, or of other creatures, we find two ways; Statuaries have one way, and Painters have another: Statuaries do it by Substraction; They take away, they pair off some parts of that stone, or that timber, which they work upon, and then that which they leave, becomes like that man, whom they would represent: Painters do it by Addition; Whereas the cloth, or table presented nothing before, they add colours, and lights, and shadows, and so there arises a representation. Sometimes we represent God by Substraction, by Negation, by saying, God is that, which is not mortal, not passable, not movable: Sometimes we present him by Addition; by adding our bodily lineaments to him, and saying, that God hath hands, and feet, and ears, and eyes; and adding our affections, and passions to him, and saying, that God is glad, or sorry, angry, or reconciled, as we are. Some such things may be done towards the representing of God, as God; But towards the expressing of the distinction of the Persons in the Trinity, nothing. Then when Abraham went up to the great sacrifice of his son, he left his servants, Gen. 22.5. and his Ass below: Though our natural reason, and humane Arts, serve to carry us to the hill, to the entrance of the mysteries of Religion, yet to possess us of the hill itself, and to come to such a knowledge of the mysteries of Religion, as must save us, we must leave our natural reason, and humane Arts at the bottom of the hill, and climb up only by the light, and strength of faith. Dimitte me quia lucescit, Gen. 32.26. says that Angel that wrestled with jacob; Let me go, for it grows light. If thou think to see me by daylight, says that Angel, thou wilt be deceived; If we think to see this mystery of the Trinity, by the light of reason, Dimittemus, we shall lose that hold which we had before, our natural faculties, our reason will be perplexed, and enfeebled, and our supernatural, our faith not strengthened that way. Those testimonies, and proofs of the Trinity, which are in the old Testament, are many, and powerful in their direct line; But they are truly, for the most part, of that nature, as that they are rather Illustrations, and Confirmations to him that believed the Trinity before, than Arguments of themselves, able to convince him that hath no such Preconception. We that have been catechised, and brought up in the knowledge of the Trinity, find much strength, and much comfort, in that we find, in the first line of the Bible, that Bara Elohim, Creavit Dii, God's created heaven and earth; In this, that there is the name of God in the plural, joined to a Verb of the singular number, we apprehend an intimation of divers persons in one God; We that believe the Trinity before, find this, in that phrase, and form of speech; The Jews, which believe not the Trinity, find no such thing. So when we find that plural phrase, Faciamus hominem, That God says, Let us, us in the plural, make man, we are glad to find such a plural manner of expressing God, by the Holy Ghost, as may concur with that, which we believed before; that is, divers persons in one God. To the same purpose also is that of the Prophet Esay, where God says, Esay 6.8. Whom shall I send, or who shall go for us? There we discern a singularity, one God, (Whom shall I send?) and a plurality of persons too, (Who shall go for us?) But what man, that had not been catachized in that Doctrine before, would have conceived an opinion, or established a faith in the Trinity, upon those phrases in Moses, or in Esay, without other evidence? Certainly, it was the Divine purpose of God, to reserve and keep this mystery of the Trinity, unrevealed for a long time, even from those, who were, generally, to have their light, and instruction from his word; They had the Law, and the Prophets, and yet they had not very clear notions of the Trinity. For, this is evident, that in Trismegistus, and in Zoroaster, and in Plato, and some other Authors of that Air, there seem to be clearer, and more literal expressings of the Trinity, then are in all the Prophets of the old Testament. We take the reason to be, that God reserved the full Manifestation of this mystery, for the dignifying, and glorifying of his Gospel. And therefore it is enough that we know, that they of the old Testament, were saved by the same faith in the Trinity, that we are; How God wrought that faith in them, amongst whom he had established no outward means for the imprinting of such a faith, let us not too curiously inquire. Let us be content, to receive our light there, where God hath been pleased to give it; that is, in those places of the new Testament, which admit no contradiction, nor disputation. As where Christ says, Mat. 28.19. Go, and teach all Nations, baptising in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. And where it is said, There are three that bear witness in heaven; The Father, 1 john 5.7. the Word, and the Holy Ghost; and these three are one. There are Obumbrations of the Trinity, in Nature, and Illustrations of the Trinity, in the old Testament; but the Declaration, the Manifestation thereof, was reserved for the Gospel. Now, this place, this Text, is in both, It is in the old, and it is in the new Testament; here, and in Esay; And in both places, agreed by all Expositors, to be a confession of the Trinity, in that threefold repetition, Holy, holy, holy. Where (by the way) you may have use of this note; that in the first place, (in the Prophet Esay) we have a fair intimation, that that use of Subalternation in the service of God, of that, which we have called Antiphones, and Responsaries in the Church of God, (when in that service, some things are said or sung by one side of the Congregation, and then answered by the other, or said by one man, and then answered by the whole Congregation) that this manner of serving God, hath a pattern from the practice of the Triumphant Church. For there, the Seraphim cried to one another, or (as it is in the Original) this Seraphim to this, Holy, Holy, Holy; so that there was a voice given, and an answer made, and a reply returned in this service of God. And as the pattern is in the Triumphant Church for this holy manner of praising God, so in the practice thereof, the Militant prescribes; for it hath been always in use. And therefore, that religious vehemence of Damascen, (speaking of this kind of service in the Church in his time) may be allowed us, Hymnum dicemus, etsi Daemones disrumpantur; How much soever it anger the devil, or his devilish instruments of schism and sedition, we will serve God in this manner, with holy cheerefulness, with music, with Antiphones, with Responsaries, of which we have the pattern from the Triumphant, and the practice from the Primitive Church. Now as this Totality, and Integrity of their Religion which they profess, first, with an Ingenuity (openly) & then, with an Assiduity, (incessantly) hath (as it were) this dilatation, this extension of God into three Persons, (which is the character and specification of the Christian Religion; for no Religion, but the Christian, ever inclined to a plurality of Persons in one God) so hath it also such a contracting of this infinite Power into that one God, as could not agree with any other Religion than the Christian, in either of those two essential circumstances; first, that that God should be Omnipotent, and then, that he should be Eternal; The Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come. All the Heathen gods were ever subordinate to one another; Omnipotens. That which one god could not, or would not do, another would, and could; And this oftentimes, rather to anger another god, then to please the party. And then there was a Surveyor, a Controller over them all, which none of them could resist, nor entreat, which was their Fatum, their Destiny. And so, in these subsidiary gods, these occasional gods, there could be no Omnipotence, no Almightiness. Our God is so Omnipotent, Almighty so, as that his Power hath no limitation but his own Will. Tertul. Nihil impossibile nisi quod non vult, He can do whatsoever he will do; And he can do more than that; For he could have raised sons to Abraham, out of stones in the street. And as their gods were not Omnipotent, Aeternus. so neither were they Eternal. They knew the history, the generation, the pedigree of all their gods; They knew where they were born, and where they went to school, (as justin Martyr says, that Esculapius, and Apollo their gods of Physic, learned their Physic of Chiron; so that the Scholars were gods, and their Masters none) and they knew where their gods were buried; They knew their Parents, and their Uncles, their Wives and their Children, yea their Bastards, and their Concubines; so far were they from being eternal gods; But if we remit and slacken this consideration of Eternity (which is never to have had beginning) & consider only Perpetuity (which is never to have end) these gods were not capable of a perpetual Honour, an Honour that should never end. For, we see that of those three hundred several jupiters', which were worshipped in the World, before Christ came, though the World abound at this day with Idolatry, yet there is not one of those Idols, not one of those three hundred jupiters' celebrated with any solemnity, no, not known in any obscure corner of the World. They were mortal before they were Gods; They are dead in their Persons: and they were mortal when they were Gods; They are dead in their Worship. In respect of Eternity (which is necessary in a God) Perpetuity is but Mobilis Imago (as Plato calls it) a faint and transitory shadow of Eternity; and Pindarus makes it less; Idolum Aeternitatis; Perpetuity is but an Idol compared to eternity; And, an Idol is nothing, says the Apostle. Our souls have a blessed perpetuity, our souls shall no more see an end, than God, that hath no Beginning; and yet our souls are very far from being eternal. But those gods are so far from being eternal, as that, considered as Gods (that is, celebrated with Divine worship) they are not perpetual. Psal. 48.14. Psal 102.11. But God is our God for ever and ever; ever, without beginning; and ever, without end. My days are like a shadow that fadeth, and I am withered like grass; but thou O Lord dost remain for ever, and thy remembrance from generation to generation; It is a remaining, and it is a remembrance; which words denote a former being. So that God, our God, and only he, is eternal. To conclude all, with that which must be the conclusion of all at last, this Eternity of our God is expressed here in a phrase which designs and presents the last Judgement, that is, which was, and is, and is to come. For, though it be Qui fuit, Which was, and Qui est, Which is, yet it is not Qui futurus, Which is to be; but Qui venturus, Which is to come; that is, to come to Judgement; as it is in divers other places of this Book, Qui venturus, Which is to come. For, though the last judiciary Power, the final Judgement of the World, be to be executed by Christ, as he is the Son of Man, visibly, apparently in that nature, yet Christ is therein as a Delegate of the Trinity; It is in the virtue and power of that Commission, Data est mihi omnis potestas; He hath all Power, but that Power that he hath as the Son of man, is given him. For, as the Creation of the World was, so the Judgement of the World shall be the Act of the whole Trinity. For if we consider the second Person in the Trinity, in both his Natures, as he redeemed us, God and Man, so it cannot be said of him, that He was; that is, that he was eternally; for there was a time, when that God, was not that man; when that Person, Christ, was not constituted. And therefore this word, in our Text, which was, (which is also true of the rest) is not appropriated to Christ, but intended of the whole Trinity. So that it is the whole Trinity that is to come, To come to Judgement. And therefore, let us reverently embrace such provisions, and such assistances as the Church of God hath ordained, for retaining and celebrating the Trinity, in this particular contemplation, as they are to come to Judgement. And let us at least provide so far, to stand upright in that Judgement, as not to deny, nor to dispute the Power, or the Persons of those Judges. A man may make a petty larceny high treason so; If being called in question for that lesser offence, he will deny that there is any such Power, any such Sovereign, any such King, as can call him in question for it, he may turn his whipping into a quartering. At that last Judgement, we shall be arraigned for not clothing, not visiting, not harbouring the poor; For, our not giving is a taking away; our withholding, is a withdrawing; our keeping to ourselves, is a stealing from them. But yet, all this is but a petty larceny, in respect of that high treason, of infidelity, of denying or doubting of the distinct Persons of the holy, blessed, and glorious Trinity. To believe in God, one great, one universal, one infinite power, does but distinguish us from beasts; For there are no men that do not acknowledge such a Power, or that do not believe in it, if they acknowledge it; Even they that acknowledge the devil to be God, believe in the devil. But that which distinguishes man from man, that which only makes his Immortality a blessing, (for, even Immortality is part of their damnation that are damned, because it were an ease, it were a kind of pardon to them to be mortal, to be capable of death, though after millions of generations) is, to conceive aright of the Power of the Father, of the Wisdom of the Son, of the Goodness of the Holy Ghost; Of the Mercy of the Father, of the Merits of the Son, of the Application of the Holy Ghost; Of the Creation of the Father, of the Redemption of the Son, of the Sanctification of the Holy Ghost. Without this, all notions of God are but confused, all worship of God is but Idolatry, all confession of God is but Atheism; For so the Apostle argues, When you were without Christ, you were without God. Without this, all moral virtues are but diseases; Liberality is but a popular bait, and not a benefit, not an alms; Chastity is but a castration, and an impotency, not a temperance, not mortification; Active valour is but a fury, whatsoever we do, and passive valour is but a stupidity, whatsoever we suffer. Natural apprehensions of God, though those natural apprehensions may have much subtlety, Voluntary elections of a Religion, though those voluntary elections may have much singularity, Moral directions for life, though those moral directions may have much severity, are all frivolous and lost, if all determine not in Christianity, in the Notion of God, so as God hath manifested and conveyed himself to us; in God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, whom this day we celebrate, in the Ingenuity, and in the Assiduity, and in the Totality, recommended in this text, and in this acclamation of the text, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come. SERM. XLV. PREACHED UPON ALL-SAINTS DAY. APOC. 7.2, 3. And I saw another Angel ascending from the East, which had the seal of the living God, and he cried with a loud voice to the four Angels, to whom power was given to hurt the Earth, and the Sea, saying, Hurt ye not the Earth, neither the Sea, neither the Trees, till we have sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads. THe solemnity and festival with which the sons of the Catholic Church of God celebrate this day, is much mistaken, even by them who think themselves the only Catholics, and celebrate this day, with a devotion, at least near to superstition in the Church of Rome. For, they take it (for the most part) to be a festival instituted by the Church, in contemplation of the Saints in heaven only; and so carry and employ all their devotions this day, upon consideration of those Saints, and invocation of them only. But the institution of this day, had this occasion. The heathen Romans, who could not possibly house all their gods in several Temples, they were so overmany, according to their Law, Deos frugi colunto, to serve God as cheap as they could, made one Temple for them all, which they called Pantheon, To all the Gods. This Temple Boniface the Pope begged of the Emperor Phocas; (And yet, (by the way) this was some hundreds of years after the Donation of the Emperor Constantine, by which the Bishops of Rome pretend all that to be theirs; surely they could not find this Patent, this Record, this Donation of Constantine, then when Boniface begged this Temple in Rome, this Pantheon of the Emperor) And this Temple, formerly the Temple of all their gods, that Bishop consecrated to the honour of all the Martyrs, of all the Saints of that kind. But after him, another Bishop of the same sea, enlarged the consecration, and accompanied it with this festival, which we celebrate to day, in honour of the Trinity, and Angels, and Apostles, and Martyrs, and Confessors, and Saints, and all the elect children of God. So that it is truly a festival, grounded upon that Article of the Creed, The Communion of Saints, and unites in our devout contemplation, The Head of the Church, God himself, and those two noble constitutive parts thereof, The Triumphant, and the Militant. And, accordingly, hath the Church applied this part of Scripture, to be read for the Epistle of this day, to show, that All-Saints day hath relation to all Saints, both living and dead; for those servants of God, which are here in this text, sealed in their foreheads, are such (without all question) as receive that Seal here, here in the militant Church. And therefore, as these words, so this festival, in their intendiment, that applied these words to this festival, is also of Saints upon Earth. This day being then the day of the Communion of Saints, and this Scripture being received for the Epistle of this universal day, that exposition will best befit it, which makes it most universal. And therefore, with very good authority, such as the expositions of this book of the Revelation can receive, (of which book, no man will undertake to the Church, that he hath found the certain, and the literal sense as yet, nor is sure to do it, Irenaeus. till the prophecies of this book be accomplished) (for prophetiae ingenium, ut in obscuro delitescat, donec impleatur, It is the nature of prophecy to be secret, till it be fulfilled, Dan. 12.4. And therefore Daniel was bid to shut up the words, and to seal the book even to the time of the end, that is, to the end of the prophecy) with good authority, I say, we take that number of the servants of God, which are said to be sealed in the fourth verse of this Chapter, which is one hundred forty four thousand, and that multitude which none could number, of all Nations, which are mentioned in the ninth verse, to be intended of one and the same company; both these expressions denote the same persons. In the fourth verse of the fourteenth Chapter, this number of one hundred forty four thousand is applied to Virgins, but is intended of all God's Saints; for every holy soul is a virgin. And then this name of Israel, which is mentioned in the fourth verse of this Chapter, (That there were so many sealed of the house of Israel) is often in Scriptures applied to spiritual Israelites, to Believers, (for every faithful soul is an Israelite) so that this number of one hundred forty four thousand Virgins, and one hundred forty four thousand Israelites, which is not a certain number, but a number expressing a numberless multitude, this number, and that numberless multitude spoken of after, of all Nations, which none could number, is all one; and both making up the great and glorious body of all Saints, import and present thus much in general, That howsoever God inflict great and heavy calamities in this world, to the shaking of the best moral and Christianly constancies and consciences, yet all his Saints being eternally known by him, shall be sealed by him, that is, so assured of his assistance, by a good using of those helps which he shall afford them, in the Christian Church, intended in this sealing on the forehead, that those afflictions shall never separate them from him, nor frustrate his determination, nor disappoint his gracious purpose upon them, all them, this multitude, which no man could number. To come then to the words themselves, Divisio. we see the safety, and protection of the Saints of God, and his children, in the person and proceeding of our Protector, in that it is in the hands of an Angel, (I saw another Angel) And an Angel of that place, that came from the East; The East, that is the fountain of all light and glory, (I saw another Angel come from the East) And as the Word doth naturally signify, (and is so rendered in this last Translation) Ascending from the East, that is, growing and increasing in strength; After that we shall consider our assurance in the commission and power of this Angel, He had the seaele of the living God; And then in the execution of this Commission; In which we shall see first, who our enemies were; They were also Angels, (This Angel cried to other Angels) able to do much by nature, because Angels; Then we shall see their number, they were four Angels, made stronger by joining (This Angel cried to those four Angels.) And besides their malignant nature, and united concord, (two shrewd disadvantages, mischievous and many) They had a power, a particular, an extraordinary power given them, at that time, to do hurt, (four Angels, to whom power was given to hurt) And to do general, universal hurt, (power to hurt the Earth, and the Sea.) After all this we shall see this Protector, against these enemies, and their Commission, execute his, first by declaring and publishing it, (He cried with a loud voice) And then lastly, what his Commission was; It was, to stay those four Angels, for all their Commission, from hurting the Earth, and the Sea, and the Trees. But yet, this is not for ever; It is but till the servants of God were sealed in the forehead; that is, till God had afforded them such helps, as that by a good use of them they might subsist; which, if they did not, for all their sealing in the forehead, this Angel will deliver them over to the other four destroying Angels. Of which sealing, that is, conferring of Grace and helps against those spiritual enemies, there is a pregnant intimation, that it is done by the benefit of the Church, & in the power of the Church, which is no singular person, in that, upon the sudden, the person and the number is varied in our text; and this Angel, which when he is said to ascend from the East, and to cry with a loud voice, is still a singular Angel, one Angel, yet when he comes to the act of sealing in the forehead, to the dispensing of Sacraments, and sacramental assistances, he does that as a plural person, he represents more, the whole Church, and therefore says here, Stay, hurt nothing, Till we, we have sealed the servants of our, our God in their foreheads. And by all these steps must we pass through this garden of flowers, this orchard of fruits, this abundant Text. First then, Man being compassed with a cloud of witnesses of his own infirmities, Angelus. and the manifold afflictions of this life, (for, Dies diei eructat verbum, Psal. 19.2. Day unto day uttereth the same, and night unto night teacheth knowledge, The bells tell him in the night, and fame tells him in the day, that he himself melts and drops away piece-meal in the departing of parents, and wife, and children out of this world, yea he hears daily of a worse departing, he hears of the defection, and back-sliding of some of his particular acquaintance in matter of religion, or of their stiffness and obduration in some course of sin (which is the worse consumption) Dies diei eructat, every day makes him learneder than other in this sad knowledge, And he knows withal, Quod cuiquam accidere potest, cuivis potest, that any of their cases may be his case too) Man that is compassed with such a cloud of such witnesses, had need of some light to show him the right way, and some strength to enable him to walk safely in it. And this light and strength is here proposed in the assistance of an Angel. Which being first understood of Angels in general, affords a great measure of comfort to us, because the Angels are seduli animae pedissequae, Bern. faithful and diligent attendants upon all our steps. They do so, they do attend the service and good of man, because it is illorum optimum, It is the best thing that Angels (as Angels) can do, to do so: For evermore it is best for every thing to do that for which it was ordained and made; and they were made Angels for the service and assistance of man. Bern. Vnum tui & Angeli optimum est; Man and Angels have one and the same thing in them, which is better than any thing else that they have; Nothing hath it but they, and both they have it. Deus nihil sui optimum habet; unum optimum totus; It is not so with God; Id●● God hath nothing in him that is Best; but he is altogether one entire Best. But Man and Angels have one thing common to them both, which is the best thing that naturally either of them hath, that is, Reason, understanding, knowledge, discourse, consideration. Angels and Men have grace too, that is infinitely better than their Reason; but though Grace be the principal in the nature and dignity thereof, yet it is but accessary to an Angel, or to man; Grace is not in their nature at first, but infused by God, not to make them Angels and Men, but to make them good Angels, and good men. This very reason then, which is Illorum optimum, The best thing that Angels, as Angels, naturally have, teaches them, that the best thing that they can do, is the performance of that for which they were made. And then howsoever they were made spirits for a more glorious use, to stand in the presence of God, and to enjoy the fullness of that contemplation, yet he made his spirits Angels, for the love which he had to be with the sons of men. Sufficit illis, Bern. et pro magno habeant, Let this content the Angels, and let them magnify God for this, Quòd cum spiritus sint conditione, ex gratia facti sunt Angeli, That whereas by nature they are but spirits, (and the devil is so) by favour and by office they are made Angels, messengers from God to man. Now as the Angels are not defective in their best part, their Reason, and therefore do their office in assisting us, so also let us exalt our best part, our Reason too, to reverence them with a care of doing such actions only as might not be unfit for their presence. Both Angels and we have the Image of God imprinted in us; the Angels have it not in summo, though they have it in tuto; They have it not in the highest degree, (for so Christ only is the Image of the invisible God) but they have it in a deep impression, Colos. 1.15. so as they can neither lose it, nor deface it. We have this Image of God so as that we cannot lose it, but we may, and do deface it; Vri potest, non exuri; The Devil hath this Image in him, Bern. and it cannot be burnt out in hell; for it is imprinted in the very natural faculties of the soul. But if we consider how many waters beat upon us in this world to wash off this Image, how many rusty and habitual sins gnaw upon us, to eat out this Image, how many files pass over our souls in calamities, and afflictions, in which though God have a purpose, Resculpere imaginem, to re-engrave, to refresh, to polish this Image in us, August. by those corrections, yet the devil hath a harsh file too, that works a murmuring, a comparing of our sins with other men's sins, and our punishments with other men's punishments, and at last, either a denying of Providence, (That things so unequally carried cannot be governed by God) or a wilful renouncing of it in Desperation, That his Providence cannot be resisted, and therefore it is all one what we do, If we consider this, we had need look for Assistants. Let us therefore look first to that which is best in us naturally, that is, Reason; For if we lose that, our Reason, our Discourse, our Consideration, and sink into an incapable and barren stupidity, there is no footing, no subsistence for grace. All the virtue of Corn is in the seed; but that will not grow in water, but only in the earth: All the good of man, considered supernaturally, is in grace; but that will not grow in a washy soul, in a liquid, in a watery, and dissolute, and scattered man. Grace grows in reason; In that man, and in that mind, that considers the great treasure, what it is to have the Image of God in him, naturally; for even that is our earnest of supernatural perfection. And this Image of God, even in the Angels, being Reason, and the best act of rectified Reason, The doing of that for which they were made, It is that which the Angels are naturally inclined to do, to be always present for the assistance of man; for therefore they are Angels. And since they have a joy at the Conversion of a sinner, and every thing affects joy, and therefore they endeavour our Conversion, yea, since they have an increase of their knowledge by being about us, (for, S. Paul says, That he was made a Preacher of the Gospel, Eph. 3.10. to the intent that Angels might know, by the Church, the manifold wisdom of God) And every thing affects knowledge, these Saints of God upon earth, intended in our Text, might justly promise themselves a strong and a blessed comfort, and a happy issue in all tribulations, by this Scripture, if there were no more intended in it, but only the assistance of Angels; I saw an Angel. But our security of deliverance is in a safer, Angelus, Christus. and a stronger hand than this; not in these Ministerial, and Missive Angels only; but in his that sends them, yea in his that made them; Col. 1.16, 17. By whom, and for whom, they, and the Thrones, and Dominions, and Principalities, and Powers, and all things were created, and in whom they consist. For, as the name of Angel is attributed to Christ, Mal. 3.1. Angelus Testamenti, The Angel of the Covenant; And many of those miraculous passages in the deliverances of Israel out of Egypt, which were done by the second Person of the Trinity, by Christ, in Exodus, are by Moses there, and in the abridgement of that story, Acts 7. by Stephen after, attributed to Angels, So in this Text, this Angel, which doth so much for God's Saints, is, not inconveniently, by many Expositors, taken to be our Saviour Christ himself. And will any man doubt of performance of conditions in him? Will any man look for better security than him, who puts two, and two such into the band, Christ, and jesus; An anointed King, able, an actual Saviour, willing to discharge, not his, but our debt? He is a double Person, God and Man; He engages a double pawn, the old, and the new Testament, the Law, and the Gospel; and you may be bold to trust him, that hath paid so well before; since you see a performance of the Prophecies of the old Testament, in the free and glorious preaching of the Gospel, trust also in a performance of the promises of the Gospel, in timely deliverances in this life, and an infallible, and eternal reposedness, in the life to come. He took our nature, that he might know our infirmities experimentally; He brought down a better nature, that he might recover us, restore us powerfully, effectually; and that he might be sure to accomplish his work, he brought more to our reparation, then to our first building, The Godhead wrought as much in our Redemption, as in our Creation, and the Manhood more; for it began but then. And to take from us all doubt of his power, or of his will in our deliverance, he hath taken the surest way of giving satisfaction, Esay 53.4. He hath paid beforehand; Verè tulit, He hath truly born all our infirmities, He hath, already; And with his stripes are we healed; we that are here now, are healed by his stripes received sixteen hundred years since. Apoc. 13.8. Nay, he was Occisus ab origine, The Lamb slain from the beginning of the world; That day that the frame of the world was fully set up in the making of man, That day that the fairest piece of that frame fell down again, in the fall of Adam, That day that God repaired this ruin again, in the promise of a Messiah, (all which we take ordinarily to have fallen in one day, the sixth day) that day, in that promise, was this Lamb slain, and all the debts not only of our forefathers, and ours, but of the last man, that shall be found alive at the last day, were then paid, so long beforehand. This security then, Angelus Ecclesiae. for our deliverance and protection, we have in this Angel in our Text, (I saw an Angel) as this Angel is Christ; but yet we have also another security, more immediate, and more appliable to us. As men that lend money in the course of the world, have a desire to have a servant in the band with the Master, not that they hope for the money from him, but that they know better how to call upon him, and how to take hold of him: so besides this general assistance of Angels, and besides this all-sufficiency of the Angel of the Covenant, Christ Jesus, we have, for our security, in this Text, (I saw an Angel) the servants of Christ too; This Angel is the Minister of his Word, the Administrer of his Sacraments, the Mediator between Christ and Man, He is this Angel, as S. john, so often in the Revelation, and the Holy Ghost in other places of Scripture, styles them; This Angel is indeed, the whole frame, and Hierarchy of the Christian Church. For though this Angel be called in this text The Angel, in the singular, yet, (to make use of one note by Anticipation now, though in our distribution of the Branches, we reserved it to the end, because it fits properly our present consideration) though this Angel be named in the singular, and so may seem to be restrained to Christ alone, yet, we see, the Office, when it comes to execution after, is diffused, and there are more in the Commission; for those phrases, that We, We may seal, the servants of Our, Our God, have a plurality in them, a consent, a harmony, and imply a Congregation, and do better agree with the Ministry of the Church, then with the Person of Christ alone. So then, to let go none of our assistants, our sureties, our safety is in the Angel of the Covenant, Christ Jesus, radically, fundamentally, meritoriously; It is in the ministry of the Angels of heaven invisibly; but it is in the Church of God, and in the power of his Ministers there, manifestly, sensibly, discernibly; Mal. 2.7. They should seek the Law at the Priest's mouth, (They should, and therefore they are to blame that do not, but fly to private expositions.) But why should they? Quia angelus domini exercituum, (as it follows there) Because the Priest is the Angel of the Lord of Hosts. Yea, the Gospel which they preach, is above all messages, which an Angel can bring of himself; Gal. 1.8. If an Angel from heaven preach otherwise unto you, than we have preached, let him be accursed. The ministry of celestial Angels is inferior to the ministry of the Ecclesiastical; The Gospel (which belongs to us) is truly Euangelium, the good Ministry of good Angels, the best ministry of the best Angels; for though we compare not with those Angels in nature, we compare with them in office; though our offices tend to the same end (to draw you to God) yet they differ in the way; and though the service of those Angels, enlighten your understanding, and assist your belief too, yet in the ministry of these Angels in the Church, there is a blessed fulfilling, and verification of those words, Now is salvation nearer, Rom. 13.11. than when we believed. You believe, because those celestial Angels have wrought invisibly upon you, and dispersed your clouds, and removed impediments. You believe, because the great Angel Christ Jesus, hath left his history, his action, and passion written for you; and that is a historical faith. But yet salvation is nearer to you, in having all this applied to you, by them, who are like you, men, and there, where you know how to fetch it, the Church; That as you believe by reading the Gospels at home, that Christ died for the world, So you may believe, by hearing here, that he died for you. This is God's plenteous Redemption, Quòd linguam meam assumsit in opus suum; Bernar. That having so great a work to do, as the salvation of souls, he would make use of my tongue; And being to save the world by his word, that I should speak that word. Docendo vos, quod per se faciliùs & suaviùs posset, That he calls me up hither, to teach you that which he could teach you better, and sooner, at home, by his Spirit; Indulgentia ejus est, non indigentia, It is the largeness of his mercy towards you, not any narrowness in his power that he needs me. And so have you this Angel in our text, in all the acceptations, in which our Expositors have delivered him; It is Christ, It is the Angels of heaven, It is the Ministry of the Gospel; And this Angel, whosoever, whatsoever, S. john saw come from the East, (I saw an Angel come from the East) which was our second Branch, and falls next into consideration. This addition is intended for a particular addition to our comfort; Ab oriente. it is a particular endowment, or enlargement of strength and power in this Angel, that he comes from the East. If we take it, (to go the same way that we went before) first of natural Angels, even the Western Angels, Qui habuere occasum, Those Angels which have had their Sunset, their fall, they came from the East too; Quomodo cecidisti decoelo, Lucifer, filius orientis? Esay 14 12. How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, the Son of the morning? He had his begetting, his Creation in the East, in the light, and there might have stayed, for any necessity of falling, that God laid upon him. Take the Angel of the text to be the Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus, and his name is The East; he cannot be known, he cannot be said to have any West. Zech. 6.12. Ecce vir, Oriens nomen ejus, (so the vulgat reads that place) Behold the Man, whose name is the East; you can call him nothing else; for so, the other Zachary, the Zachary of the New Testament calls him too, Luke 1.78. Per viscera misericordiae, Through the tender bowels of his mercy, Visitavit nos Oriens, The East, the day spring from on high hath visited us; And he was derived à Patre luminum, He came from the East, begotten from all eternity of the Father of lights, john 16.28. I came out from the Father, and came into the world. Take this Angel to be the Preacher of the Gospel, literally, really, the Gospel came out of the East, where Christ lived and died; and Typically, figuratively, Paradise, which also figured the place, to which the Gospel is to carry us, Heaven, that also was planted in the East; and therefore S. Basil assigns that for the reason, why in the Church service we turn to the East when we pray, Quia antiquam requirimus patriam, We look towards our ancient country, where the Gospel of our salvation was literally acted, and accomplished, and where Heaven, the end of the Gospel, was represented in Paradise. Every way the Gospel is an Angel of the East. But this is that which we take to be principally intended in it, That as the East is the fountain of light, so all our illumination is to be taken from the Gospel. Spread we this a little thinner, and we shall better see through it. If the calamities of the world, or the heavy consideration of thine own sins, have benumbed and benighted thy soul in the vale of darkness, and in the shadow of death; If thou think to wrestle and bustle through these strong storms, and thick clouds, with a strong hand; If thou think thy money, thy bribes shall conjure thee up stronger spirits than those that oppose thee; If thou seek ease in thy calamities, that way to shake and shipwreck thine enemies; In these cross winds, in these countermines, (to oppress as thou art oppressed) all this is but a turning to the North, to blow away and scatter these sadnesses, with a false, an illusory, and a sinful comfort. If thou think to ease thyself in the contemplation of thine honour, thine offices; thy favour, thy riches, thy health, this is but a turning to the South, the Sunshine of worldly prosperity. If thou sink under thy afflictions, and canst not find nourishment (but poison) in God's corrections, nor justice (but cruelty) in his judgements, nor mercy (but slackness) in his forbearance till now; If thou suffer thy soul to set in a cloud, a dark cloud of ignorance of God's providence and proceed, or in a darker, of diffidence of his performance towards thee, this is a turning to the West, and all these are perverse and awry. But turn to the East, and to the Angel that comes from thence, The Ministry of the Gospel of Christ Jesus in his Church; It is true, thou mayst find some dark places in the Scriptures; Basil. and, Est silentii species obscuritas, To speak darkly and obscurely is a kind of silence, I were as good not be spoken to, as not be made to understand that which is spoken, yet fix thyself upon this Angel of the East, the preaching of the Word, the Ordinance of God, and thine understanding shall be enlightened, and thy belief established, and thy conscience thus far unburthened, that though the sins which thou hast done, cannot be undone, yet neither shalt thou be undone by them; There, where thou art afraid of them, in judgement, they shall never meet thee; but as in the round frame of the World, the farthest West is East, where the West ends, the East gins, So in thee, (who art a World too) thy West and thy East shall join, and when thy Sun, thy soul comes to set in thy deathbed, the Son of Grace shall suck it up into glory. Our Angel comes from the East, Angelus Ascendens. (a denotation of splendour, and illustration of understanding, and conscience) and there is more, he comes Ascending, (I saw an Angel ascend from the East) that is, still growing more clear, and more powerful upon us. Take the Angel here of natural Angels; 1 Sam. 28.13. and then, when the Witch of Endor (though an evil Spirit appeared to her) yet saw him appear so, Ascending, she attributes that glory to it, I see gods Ascending out of the earth. Take the Angel to be Christ, and then, his Ascension was Foelix clausula totius itinerarii, Bernar. The glorious shutting up of all his progress; and though his descending from Heaven to earth, and his descending from earth to hell gave us our title, his Ascending, by which he carried up our flesh to the right hand of his Father, gave us our possession; His Descent, his humiliation gave us Ius ad rem, but his Ascension Ius in re. But as this Angel is the Ministry of the Gospel, God gave it a glorious ascent in the Primitive Church, Psal. 19.6. when as this Sun Exultavit ut gigas ad currendam viam, ascended quickly beyond the reach of Heretics wits, and Persecutors swords, and as glorious an ascent in the Reformation, when in no long time, the number of them that had forsaken Rome was as great, as of them that stayed with her. Now to give way to this ascent of this Angel in thyself, make the way smooth, and make thy soul supple; find thou a growth of the Gospel in thy faith, and let us find it in thy life. It is not in thy power to say to this Angel, as joshua said to the Sun, Siste, Iosh. 10.12. stand still; It will not stand still; If thou find it not ascending, it descends; If thy comforts in the Gospel of Christ Jesus grow not, they decay; If thou profit not by the Gospel, thou losest by it; If thou live not by it, (nothing can redeem thee) thou diest by it. We speak of going up and down a stair; it is all one stair; of going to, and from the City; it is all one way; of coming in, and going out of a house; it is all one door: So is there a savour of life unto life, and a savour of death unto death in the Gospel; but it is all one Gospel. If this Angel of the East have appeared unto thee, (the light of the Gospel have shined upon thee) and it have not ascended in thee, if it have not made thee wiser and wiser, and better and better too, thou hast stopped that light, vexed, grieved, quenched that Spirit; for the natural progress of this Angel of the East is to ascend; the natural motion and working of the Gospel is, to make thee more and more confident in God's deliverance, less and less subject to rely upon the weak helps, and miserable comforts of this world. To this purpose this Angel ascends, that is, proceeds in the manifestation of his Power, and of his readiness to secure us. Of his Power in this, That he hath the seals of the living God; (I saw an Angel ascending from the East, which had the seal of the living God) which is our next Consideration. Of the living God. The gods of the Nations are all dead gods; Sigillum Dei viventis. either such Gods as never had life, (stones, and gold and silver) or such gods at best, as were never gods till they were dead; for men that had benefited the world, in any public and general invention, or otherwise, were made gods after their deaths; which was a miserable deification, a miserable godhead that grew out of corruption, a miserable eternity that begun at all, but especially that begun in death; and they were not gods till they died. But our Angel had the Seal of the living God, that is, Power to give life to others. Now, if we seek for this seal in the natural Angels, they have it not; for this Seal is some visible thing whereby we are assisted to salvation, and the Angels have no such. They are made keepers of this seal sometimes, but permanently they have it not. This Seal of comfort was put into an Angel's hand, Ezek. 9.4. when he was to set a mark upon the foreheads of all them that mourned; He had a visible thing, Ink, to mark them withal. But it was not said to him, Vade & signa omnes Creaturas, Go, and set this mark upon every Creature, as it was to the Minister of the Gospel, Go, and preach to every Creature. Mark 16.15. If we seek this seal in the great Angel, the Angel of the Covenant, Christ Jesus: It is true he hath it, for, Omnis potestas d●ta, All power is given unto me, in Heaven, and in earth; and, Omne judicium, Mat. 28.18. john 5.22. The Father hath committed all judgement to the Son; Christ, as the Son of man executes a Judgement, and hath a Power, which he hath not but by gift, by Commission, by virtue of this Seal, from his Father. But, because it is not only so in him, That he hath the Seal of the living God, but, He is this Seal himself, Colos. 1.15. Heb. 1.3. john 6.27. (He is the Image of the invisible God; He is the brightness of his glory, and the express Image of his Person) It is not only his Commission that is sealed, but his Nature, He himself is sealed, (Him hath God the Father sealed) since, I say, natural Angels though they have sometimes this seal, they have it not always, they have not a Commission from God, to apply his mercies to man, by any ordinary and visible means, since the Angel of the Covenant, Christ Jesus hath it, but hath it so, as that he is it too, the third sort of Angels, the Church-Angels, the Ministers of the Gospel, are they, who most properly can be said to have this Seal by a fixed and permanent possession, and a power to apply it to particular men, in all emergent necessities, according to the institution of that living God, whose seal it is. Now the great power which is given by God, in giving this seal to these Angels, hath a lively representation (such as a shadow can give) in the history of joseph. Pharaoh says to him, Thou shalt be over my house, and over all the land of Egypt, Gen. 41.40. (steward of the King's house, and steward of the Kingdom) And at thy word shall all my people be armed, (Constable and Martial too) and to invest him in all these, and more, Pharaoh gave him his ring, his seal; not his seal only to those several patents to himself, but the keeping of that seal for the good of others; This temporal seal of Pharaoh was a representation of the seal of the living God. But there is a more express type of it in Exodus: Thou shalt grave (says God to Moses) upon a plate of pure gold, Lxod. 28.36. as Signets are graved, Holiness to the Lord; and it shall be upon the forehead of Aaron; What to do? That the people may be accepted of him. There must be a holiness to the Lord, and that presented by Aaron the Priest to God, that the people may be acceptable to the Lord; So that this seal of the living God, in these Angels of our text, is, The Sacraments of the New Testament, and the Absolution of sins, by which (when Gods people come to a Holiness to the Lord, in a true repentance, and that that holiness, that is, that repentance, is made known to Aaron, to the Priest, and he presents it to the Lord) that Priest, his Minister seals to them, in those his Ordinances, God's acceptation of this degree of holiness, he seals this Reconciliation between God and his people. And a contract of future concurrence, with his subsequent grace. This is the power given by God to this ascending Angel; and we extend that no farther, but hasten to his haste, his readiness to secure us; in which, we proposed for the first consideration, That this Angel of light manifested and discovered to us, who our enemies were: (He cried out to them who were ready to do mischief, with a loud voice) so that we might hear him, and know them. Though in all Court-cases it be not good to take knowledge of enemies, Manifestat inimicos. (many times that is better forborn) yet in all cases, it is good to know them. Especially in our case in the Text, Eph. 6.12. because our enemies intended here, are of themselves, Princes of darkness; They can multiply clouds, and disguise, their kingdom is in the darkness, Sagittant in obscuro, Psal. 11.2: Psal. 143.3. They shoot in the dark, (I am wounded with a tentation, as with the plague, and I know not whence the arrow came) Collocavit me in obscuris, The enemy hath made my dwelling darkness, I have no window that lets in light, but then this Angel of light shows me who they are. But then, Inimici, Angeli. if we were left to ourselves, it were but a little advantage to know who our enemies were, when we knew those enemies to be Angels, persons so far above our resistance. Eph. 6.12. For, but that S. Paul mollifies and eases it with a milder word, Est nobis colluctatio, That we wrestle with enemies, (that thereby we might see our danger is but to take a fall, not a deadly wound, if we look seriously to our work; we cannot avoid falling into sins of infirmity, but the death of habitual sin we may: Quare moriemini domus Israel? He does not say, why would ye fall? but why will ye die, ye house of Israel?) it were a consideration enough to make us desperate of victory, to hear him say, that this (though it be but a wrestling) is not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, and powers, and spiritual wickednesses in high places. None of us hath got the victory over flesh and blood, and yet we have greater enemies than flesh and blood are. Some disciplines, some mortifications we have against flesh and blood; we have S. Paul's probatum est, his medicine, (if we will use it) Castigo corpus, 1 Cor. 9.27. I keep under my body, and bring it into subjection; for that we have some assistance; Even our enemies become our friends; poverty or sickness will fight for us against flesh and blood, against our carnal lusts; but for these powers and principalities, I know not where to watch them, how to encounter them. I pass my time sociably and merrily in cheerful conversation, in music, in feasting, in Comedies, in wantonness; and I never hear all this while of any power or principality, my Conscience spies no such enemy in all this. And then alone, between God and me at midnight, some beam of his grace shines out upon me, and by that light I see this Prince of darkness, and then I find that I have been the subject, the slave of these powers and principalities, when I thought not of them. Well, I see them, and I try then to dispossess myself of them, and I make my recourse to the powerfullest exorcism that is, I turn to hearty and earnest prayer to God, and I fix my thoughts strongly (as I think) upon him, and before I have perfected one petition, one period of my prayer, a power and principality is got into me again. Esay 29.10. Spiritus soporis, The spirit of slumber closes mine eyes, and I pray drousily; Esa. 19.14. Or spiritus vertiginis, the spirit of deviation, and vain repetition, and I pray giddily, and circularly, and return again and again to that I have said before, Luk. 9.55. and perceive not that I do so; and nescio cujus spiritus sim, (as our Saviour said, rebuking his Disciples, who were so vehement for the burning of the Samaritans, you know not of what spirit you are) I pray, and know not of what spirit I am, I consider not mine own purpose in prayer; And by this advantage, this door of inconsideration, enters spiritus erroris, 1 Tim. 4.1. The seducing spirit, the spirit of error, and I pray not only negligently, but erroneously, dangerously, for such things as disconduce to the glory of God, and my true happiness, Hosea 4.12.5.4. if they were granted. Nay, even the Prophet Hosea's spiritus fornicationum, enters into me, The spirit of fornication, that is, some remembrance of the wantonness of my youth, some misinterpretation of a word in my prayer, that may bear an ill sense, some unclean spirit, some power or principality hath depraved my prayer, and slackened my zeal. And this is my greatest misery of all, that when that which fights for me, and fights against me too, sickness, hath laid me upon my last bed, then in my weakest estate, these powers and principalities shall be in their full practice against me. And therefore it is one great advancement of thy deliverance, to be brought by this Angel, that is, by the Ministry of the Gospel of Christ, to know that thou hast Angels to thine enemies; And then another is to know their number, and so the strength of their confederacy; for, in the verse before the Text, they are expressed to be four, (I saw four Angels &c.) Four legions of Angels, four millions, nay, Quatuor Angeli. four Creations of Angels could do no more harm, then is intended in these four; for, (as it is said in the former verse) They stood upon the four corners of the earth, they bestrid, they cantoned the whole world. Thou hast opposite Angels enough to batter thee every where, and to cut off and defeat all succours, all supplies, that thou canst procure, or propose to thyself; absolute enemies to one another will meet and join to thy ruin, and even presumption will induce desperation. We need not be so literal in this, as S. Hierome, (who indeed in that followed Origen) to think that there is a particular evil Angel over every sin; That because we find that mention of the spirit of error, and the spirit of slumber, and the spirit of fornication, we should therefore think that Christ meant by Mammon, Mat. 6.24. a particular spirit of Covetousness, and that there be several princes over several sins. This needs not; when thou art tempted, never ask that Spirits name; his name is legio, for he is many. Mar. 5.9. Take thyself at the largest, as thou art a world, there are four Angels at thy four corners; Let thy four corners be thy worldly profession, thy calling, and another thy bodily refection, thy eating, and drinking, and sleeping, and a third thy honest and allowable recreations, and a fourth thy religious service of God in this place, (which two last, that is, recreation, and religion, God hath been pleased to join together in the Sabbath, in which he intended his own glory in our service of him, and then the rest of the Creature too) let these four, thy calling, thy sleeping, thy recreation, thy religion be the four corners of thy world, and thou shalt find an Angel of tentation at every corner; even in thy sleep, even in this house of God thou hast met them. The Devil is no Recusant; he will come to Church, and he will lay his snares there; When that day comes, Job 1.6. that the Sons of God present themselves before the Lord, Satan comes also among them. Not only so, as S. Augustin confesses he met him at Church, to carry wanton glances between men and women, but he is here, sometimes to work a misinterpretation in the hearer, sometimes to work an affectation in the speaker, and many times doth more harm by a good Sermon then by a weak, by possessing the hearers with an admiration of the Preachers gifts, and neglecting God's Ordinance. And then it is not only their natural power, as they are Angels, nor their united power, as they are many, nor their politic power, that in the midst of that confusion which is amongst them, yet they agree together to ruin us, but (as it follows in our text) it is potestas data, a particular power, which, besides their natural power, God, at this time, put into their hands; (He cried to the four Angels, to whom power was given to hurt) All other Angels had it not, nor had these four that power at all times, which, in our distribution at first we made a particular Consideration. It was potestas data, a special Commission that laid job open to Satan's malice; Potestas data. It was potestas data, a special Commission, that laid the herd of swine open to the Devil's tranportation: Much more, no doubt, Mat. 8.32. have the particular Saints of God in the assistances of the Christian Church, (for job had not that assistance, being not within the Covenant) and most of all hath the Church of God herself, an ability, in some measure, to defend itself against many machinations and practices of the Devil, if it were not for this Potestas data, That God, for his farther glory, in the trial of his Saints, and his Church, doth enable the Devil to raise whole armies of persecutors, whole swarms of heretics, to sting and wound the Church, beyond that ordinary power, which, the Devil in nature hath. That place, Curse not the King, no, not in thought, Eccles. 10.20. for that which hath wings shall tell the matter, is ordinarily understood of Angels; that Angels shall reveal disloyal thoughts; now, naturally Angels do not understand thoughts; but, in such cases, there is Potestas data, a particular power given them to do it; and so to evil Angels, for the accomplishment of God's purposes, there is Potestas data, a new power given, a new Commission, (that is beyond permission; for, though by God's permission mine eye see, and mine ear hear, yet my hand could not see nor hear by God's permission; for permission is but the leaving of a thing to the doing of that, which by nature, (if there be no hindrance interposed) it could, and would do.) This comfort then, and this hope of deliverance hast thou here, that this Angel in our text, that is, the Ministry of the Gospel, tells thee, that that rage which the Devil uses against thee now, is but Potestas data, a temporary power given him for the present; for, if thy afflictions were altogether from the natural malice and power of the Devil, inherent in him, that malice would never end, nor thy affliction neither, if God should leave all to him. And therefore though those our afflictions be heavier, which proceed ex potestate data, when God exalts that power of the Devil, which naturally he hath, with new Commissions, besides his Permission to use his natural strength, and natural malice, yet our deliverance is the nearer too, because all these accessary and occasional Commissions are for particular ends, and are limited, how far they shall extend, how long they shall endure. Here, the potestas data, the power which was given to these Angels was large, it was general, for, (as it is in the former verse) it was a power to hold the four winds of the earth, that the wind should not blow on the earth, nor on the sea, nor on any tree. What this withholding of the wind signifies, and the damnification of that, is our next Consideration. By the Land, Venti. is commonly understood all the Inhabitants of the Land; by the Sea Islanders, and Seafaring men, half inhabitants of the Sea; and by the Trees, all those whom Persecution had driven away, and planted in the wilderness. The hindrance of the use of the wind, being taken by our Expositors to be a general impediment of the increase of the earth, and of commerce at Sea. But this Book of the Revelation must not be so literally understood, as that the Winds here should signify merely natural winds; there is more in this then so; Thus much more, That this withholding of the winds, is a withholding of the preaching and passage of the Gospel; which is the heaviest misery that can fall upon a Nation, or upon a man, because thereby, by the misery of not hearing, he loses all light, and means of discerning his own misery. Now as all the parts, and the style and phrase of this Book is figurative and Metaphorical, so is it no unusual Metaphor, even in other Books of the Scripture too, to call the Ministers, and Preachers of God's Word, Cant. 4.16. by the name of winds. Arise O North, and come O South, and blow on my Garden, that the spices thereof may flow out, hath always been understood to be an invitation, a compellation from Christ to his Ministers, to dispense and convey salvation, Psal. 135.7. by his Gospel, to all Nations. And upon those words, Producit ventos, He bringeth winds out of his treasuries, and Educit nubes, He bringeth clouds from the ends of the earth, Puto Praedicatores & nubes & ventos, August. says S. Augustine, I think that the holy Ghost means both by his clouds, and by his winds, the Preachers of his Word, the Ministers of the Gospel; Nubes propter carnem, ventos propter spiritum, Clouds because their bodies are seen, winds because their working is felt; Nubes cernuntur, venti sentiuntur; as clouds they embrace the whole visible Church, and are visible to it; as winds they pierce into the invisible Church, the souls of the true Saints of God, and work, though invisibly, upon them. Psal 18.10. So also those words, God road upon a Cherub, and did fly, He did fly upon the wings of the wind, have been well interpreted of Gods being pleased to be carried from Nation to Nation, by the service of his Ministers. Now this is the nature of this wind, (of the Spirit of God breathing in his Ministers) Spirat ubi vult, John 3.8. that it blows where it lists; and this is the malice of these evil Angels, that it shall not do so. But this Angel, which hath the seal of the living God, that is, the Ministry of the Gospel established by him, shall keep the winds at their liberty; And howsoever waking dreamers think of alterations and tolerations, howsoever men that disguise their expectations with an outward conformity to us, may think the time of declaring themselves grows on apace; howsoever the slumbering of capital laws, and reasonof State may suffer such mistakers to flatter themselves, yet God hath made this Angel of the East, this Gospel of his to ascend so far now, and to take so deep root, as that now this one Angel is strong enough for the other four, that is, The sincere preaching of the Gospel, in our settled and well disciplined Church, shall prevail against those four pestilent opposites, Atheists, and Papists, and Sectaries, and Carnal indifferent men, who all would hinder the blowing of this wind, the effect of this Gospel. And to this purpose our Angel in the Text is said to have cried with a loud voice, (He cried with a loud voice to the four Angels.) For our security therefore that this wind shall blow still, Clamavit. that this preaching of the Gospel which we enjoy shall be transferred upon our posterity in the same sincerity, and the same integrity, there is required an assiduity, and an earnestness in us, who are in that service now, in which this Angel was then, in our preaching. Clamavit, our Angel cried, (it was his first act, nothing must retard our preaching) and voce magna, he cried with a loud voice; (he gave not over with one calling) What is this crying aloud in our Angel? Vocis modum, audientium necessitas definite; The voice must be so loud, as they, Basil. to whom we speak, are quick or thick of hearing. Submissa, quae ad susurrum propriè accedit, damnanda. A whispering voice was not the voice of this Angel, nor must it be of those Angels that are figured in him; for that is the voice of a Conventicle, not a Church voice. That is a loud voice that is heard by them whom it concerns. So the catechising of children, though in a familiar manner, is a loud voice, though it be not a Sermon: So writing in defence of our Religion, is a loud voice, though in the mean time a man intermit his preaching: So the speaking by another, when sickness or other services withhold him that should, and would speak, is a loud voice even from him. And therefore though there be no evident, no imminent danger of withholding these winds, of inhibiting or scanting the liberty of the Gospel, yet because it is wished by too many, and because we can imagine no punishment too great for our neglecting the Gospel, it becomes us, the Ministers of God, by all these loud voices, of catechising, of preaching, of writing, to cry, and to cry, (though not with vociferations, or seditious jealousies and suspicions of the present government) yet to cry so loud, so assiduously, so earnestly, as all whom it concerns (and it concerns all) may hear it: Hurt not the earth, withhold not the winds, be you no occasions, by your neglecting the Gospel of Christ Jesus, that he suffer it to be removed from you; and know withal, that you do neglect this Gospel, (how often soever you hear it preached) if you do not practise it. Nor is that a sufficient practice of hearing, to desire to hear more, except thy hearing bring thee to leave thy sins; without that, at the last day thou shalt meet thy Sermons amongst thy sins; And when Christ Jesus shall charge thee with false weights and measures in thy shop all the week, with prevarication in judgement, with extortion in thy practice, and in thine office, he shall add to that, And besides this, thou wast at Church twice that Sunday; when he shall have told thee, Thou didst not feed me, thou didst not cloth me, he shall aggravate all with that, Yet thou heardst two Sermons that Sunday, besides thine interlineary week Lectures. The means to keep this wind awake, (to continue the liberty of the Gospel) is this loud voice, (assiduous and pertinent preaching) but Sermons unpractised are three-piled sins, and God shall turn, as their prayers, so their preaching into sin. For this injunction, this inhibition which this Angel serves upon the four Angels, That they should not hurt the world by withholding the winds, that is, not hinder the propagation & passage of the Gospel, was not perpetual; it was limited with a Donec, Till something were done in the behalf and favour of the world, and that was, Till the servants of God were sealed in their foreheads, which is our last Consideration. The servants of God being sealed in their foreheads in the Sacrament of Baptism, Donec signentur. when they are received into the care of the Church, all those means which God hath provided for his servants, in his Church, to refist afflictions and tentations, are intended to be conferred upon them in that seal; This sealing of them is a communicating to them all those assistances of the Christian Church: Then they have a way of prevention of sin, by hearing; a way to Absolution, by Confession; a way to Reconciliation, by a worthy receiving the body and blood of Christ Jesus: And these helps of the Christian Church, thus conferred in Baptism, keep open still, (if these be rightly used) that other seal, the seal of the Spirit; After ye heard the Gospel, and believed, Ephes. 1.13. 2 Cor. 1.22. ye were sealed with the holy spirit of promise: and so also, God hath anointed us, and sealed us, and given us the earnest of his Spirit in our hearts. So that besides the seal in the forehead, which is an interest and title to all the assistances and benefits of the Church, public prayer, preaching, Sacraments and sacramental helps, there is a seal of the Spirit of God, that that Spirit bears witness with my spirit, that I perform the conditions passed between God and me, under the first seal, my Baptism. But because this second seal, (the obsignation and testification of the inward Spirit) depends upon the good use of the first seal, (the participation of the helps of the Church, given me in Baptism) therefore the Donec in our Text, (Hurt them not till they be sealed) reaches but to to the first seal, the seal of Baptism, and in that, of all Gods ordinary graces, ordinarily exhibited in his Ordinances. So then, this Angel takes care of us, till he have delivered us over to the sweet and powerful helps of that Church, which God hath purchased with his blood; when he hath placed us there, he looks that we should do something for ourselves, which, before we were there, and made partakers of God's graces in his Church by Baptism, we could not do; for in this, this Angel's Commission determines, That we be sealed in the foreheads, That we be taken from the Common, into God's enclosures, impayled in his Park, received into his Church, where our salvation depends upon the good use of those means. Use therefore those means well; and put not God to save thee by a miracle, without means. Trust not to an irresistible grace, that at one time or other God will have thee, Bernar. whether thou wilt or no. Tolle voluntatem, & non est infernus; If thou couldst quench thine own will, thou hadst quenched hell; If thou couldst be content, willing to be in hell, hell were not hell. So, if God save a man against his will, heaven is not heaven; If he be loath to come thither, sorry that he shall be there, he hath not the joy of heaven, and then heaven is not heaven. Put not God to save thee by miracle; God can save an Image by miracle; by miracle he can make an Image a man; If man can make God of bread, certainly God can make a man of an Image, and so save him; but God hath made thee his own Image, and afforded thee means of salvation: Use them. God compels not man. Luke 14.23. The Master of the feast invited many; solemnly, before hand; they came not: He sent his servants to call in the poor, upon the sudden; and they came; so he receives late comers. And there is a Compelle intrare, He sends a servant to compel some to come in. But that was but a servants work, The Master only invited; he compelled none. We the servants of God, have certain compulsories, to bring men hither; The denouncing of God's Judgements, the censures of the Church, Excommunications, and the rest, are compulsories. The State hath compulsories too, in the penal Laws. But all this is but to bring them into the house, to Church; Compelle intrare. We can compel them to come to the first seal, to Baptism; we can compel men, to bring their children to that Sacrament; But to salvation, only the Master brings; and (in that Parable) the Master does only invite; he compels none: Though his corrections may seem to be compulsories, yet even his corrections are sweet invitations; His corrections are so fare from compelling men to come to heaven, as that they put many men farther out of their way, and work an obduration, rather than an obsequiousness. With those therefore that neglect the means, that he hath brought them to, in sealing them in the forehead, this Angel hath no more to do, but gives them over to the power of the four destroying Angels. With those that attend those meanns, he proceeds; and, in their behalf, his Donec, (Spare them till I have sealed them) becomes the blessed Virgins Donec, Mat. 1.25. Psal. 110.1. she was a Virgin till she had her Child, and a Virgin after too; And it becomes our blessed Saviour's Donec, He sits at his Father's right hand, till his enemies be made his footstool, and after too; So these destroying Angels, that had no power over them till they were sealed, shall have no power over them after they are sealed, but they shall pass from seal to seal; after that seal on the forehead, Ne erubeseant Euangelium, Rom. 1.16. (We sign him with the sign of the Cross, in token, that hereafter he shall not be ashamed, to confess the faith of Christ Crucified) He shall come also to those seals, which our Saviour recommends to his Spouse, Cant. 8.6. Set me as a seal on thy heart, and as a seal on thine arm; S. Ambrose collects them, and connects them together, Signaculum Christi in cord, ut diligamus, in front, ut confiteamur, in brachio, ut operemur; God seals us in the heart, that we might love him, and in the forehead, that we might profess it, and in the hand, that we might declare and practise it; and then the whole purpose of this blessed Angel in our Text, is perfected in us, and we ourselves are made partakers of the solemnity of this day, which we celebrate, for we ourselves enter in the Communion of Saints, by these three seals, Of Belief, Of Profession, Of Works and Practice. SERMONS Preached upon THE CONVERSION OF S. PAUL. SERM. XLVI. Preached at S. Paul's, The Sunday after the Conversion of S. PAUL. 1624. ACTS 9.4. And he fell to the earth, and heard a voice, saying, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? LEt us now praise famous Men, and our Fathers that begat us, Ecclus. 44.1. (says the Wiseman) that is, that assisted our second generation, our spiritual Regeneration; Let us praise them, commemorate them. The Lord hath wrought great glory by them, Ver. 2. through his power from the beginning, says he there, that is, It hath always been the Lords way to glorify himself in the conversion of Men, by the ministry of Men. For he adds, Ver. 4. They were leaders of the people by their counsel, and by their knowledge and learning meet for the people, wise and eloquent men in their instructions; and that is, That God who gives these gifts for this purpose, looks for the employment of these gifts, to the edification of others, to his glory. There be of them, that have left a name behind them. Ver. 8. (as it is also added in that place) that is, That though God can amply reward his servants in the next world, yet he does it sometimes in this world; and, though not with temporal happinesses, in their life, yet with honour, and commemorations, and celebrations of them, after they are gone out of this life, they leave a name behind them. And amongst them, in a high place, shines our blessed and glorious Apostle S. Paul, whose Conversion the Church celebrates now, and for the celebration thereof, hath appointed this part of Scripture from whence this text arises, to be the Epistle of the Day, And he fell to the earth, and heard a voice, saying, Saul, Saul, why persccutest thou me? There are words in the text, that will reach to all the Story of S. Paul's Conversion, Divisio. embrace all, involve and enwrap all; we must contract them; into less than three parts, we cannot well; those will be these; first, The Person, Saul, He, He fell to the earth; and then, his humiliation, his exinanition of himself, his divesting, putting off of himself, He fell to the earth; and lastly, his investing of Christ, his putting on of Christ, his rising again by the power of a new inanimation, a new soul breathed into him from Christ, He heard a voice, saying, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? Now, a re-distribution, a sub-division of these parts, into their branches, we shall present to you anon, more opportunely, as we shall come in due order to the handling of the parts themselves. In the first, the branches will be but these; saul's indisposition when Christ took him in hand, and Christ's work upon him; what he found him, what he left him, will determine our first part, The person. First then, what he was at that time, 1. Part. Quid ante. the Holy Ghost gives evidence enough against him, and he gives enough against himself. Of that which the Holy Ghost gives, you may see a great many heavy pieces, a great many appliable circumstances, if at any time, at home, you do but paraphrase, and spread to yourselves the former part of this Chapter, to this text. Take a little preparation from me; Adhuc spirans, says the first verse, Saul yet breathing threaten and slaughter, Then when he was in the height of his fury, Christ laid hold upon him. It was, for the most part, Christ's method of curing. Then when the Sea was in a tempestuous rage, Mat. 8.24. when the waters covered the ship, and the storm shaked even that which could remove mountains, the faith of the Disciples, than Christ rebukes the wind, and commands a calm. Then when the Sun was gone out to run his race as a Giant, (as David speaks) than God by the mouth of another, of joshuah, bids the Sun stand still. Then when that unclean spirit foamed, and fumed, and tore, and rend the possessed persons, than Christ commanded them to go out. Let the fever alone, say our Physicians, till some fits be passed, and then we shall see farther, and discern better. The note is S. Chrysostom's, and he applies it to Christ's proceeding with Saul; Non expectavit ut fatigatus debacchando mansuesceret, says he, Christ stayed not till Saul being made drunk with blood, were cast into a slumber, as satisfied with the blood of Christians; Said in media insania superavit, but in the midst of his fit, he gave him physic, in the midst of his madness, he reclaims him. So is it also part of the evidence that the Holy Ghost gives against him, Quod petiit Epistolas, that he sued to the State for a Commission to persecute Christians. When the State will put men to some kind of necessity of concurring to the endamaging or endangering of the cause of Christ, and will be displeased with them, if they do not, men make to themselves, and to their consciences some faint colour of excuse: But when they themselves set actions on foot, which are not required at their hands, where is their evasion? Then when Saul sued out this Commission, That if he found any of that way, (that is, Christians) (for he had so scattered them before, that he was not sure to find any, They did not appear in any whole body, dangerous, or suspicious to the State) but, If he found any, Any man or woman, That he might have the Power of the State, so as that he need not fear men, That he might have the impartiality, and the inflexibility of the State, so as that he need not pity women, Then when his glory was to bring them bound to jerusalem, that he might magnify his triumph and greatness in the eye of the world, Then, then says Christ, to this tempest, Be calm, to this unclean spirit, Come out, to this Sun, in his own estimation, Go no farther. Thus much evidence the Holy Ghost gives against him; and thus much more himself, Act. 22.4. I persecuted this way unto the death; I bond and delivered into prison, both men and women; Act. 26.11. And after, more than this, I punished them, and that oft, and, in every Synagogue, and, compelled them to blaspheme, and, was exceedingly mad against them, and persecuted them even unto strange Cities. What could he say more against himself? And then, says Christ, to this tempest, Quiesce, Be still, to this glaring Sun, Siste, stand still, to this unclean spirit, 1 Cor. 15.2. Veni foras, come forth. In this sense especially doth S. Paul call himself Abertivum, a person borne out of season, That whereas Christ's other Disciples and Apostles, had a breeding under him, and came first ad Discipulatum, and then ad Apostolatum, first to be Disciples, and after to be Apostles; S. Paul was borne a man, an Apostle, not carved out, as the rest in time; but a fusil Apostle, an Apostle poured out, and cast in a Mould; As Adam was a perfect man in an instant, so was S. Paul an Apostle, as soon as Christ took him in hand. Now, Beloved, wilt thou make this perverse use of this proceeding, God is rich in Mercy, Therefore I cannot miss Mercy? wouldst thou say, and not be thought mad for saying so, God hath created a West Indies, therefore I cannot want Gold? Wilt thou be so ill a Logician to thyself, and to thine own damnation, as to conclude so, God is always the same in himself, therefore he must be always the same to me? So ill a Musician as to say, God is all Concord, therefore He and I can never disagree? So ill a Historian as to say, God hath called Saul, a Persecutor, then when he breathed threaten and slaughter, then when he sued to the State for a Commission to persecute Christ, God hath called a thief, then when he was at the last gasp; And therefore if he have a mind to me, he will deal so with me too, and, if he have no such mind, no man can imprint, or infuse a new mind in God? God forbidden. It is not safe concluding out of single Instances. It is true, that if a sour, and heavy, and severe man, will add to the discomforts of a disconsolate soul, and in that souls sadness, and dejection of spirit, will heap up examples, that God hath still suffered highminded sinners to proceed and to perish in their irreligious ways, and tell that poor soul, (as jobs company did him) It is true, you take God aright, God never pardons such as you, in these cases, these singular, these individual examples, That God hath done otherwise once, have their use. One instance to the contrary destroys any peremptory Rule, no man must say, God never doth it; He did it to Saul here, He did it to the Thief upon the Cross. But to that presumptuous sinner, who sins on, because God shown mercy to One at last, we must say, a miserable Comforter is that Rule, that affords but one example. Nay, is there one example? The Conversion of Saul a Persecutor, and of the Thief upon the Cross, is become Proverbium peccatorum, The sinner's proverb, and serves him, Gregor. and satisfies him in all cases. But is there any such thing? Such a story there is, and it is as true as Gospel, it is the truth of Gospel itself; But was this a late Repentance? Answer S. Cyril, Rogo te frater, Tell me, Beloved, Thou that deferrest thy Repentance, dost thou do it upon confidence of these examples? Non in fine, sed in principio conversus latro; Thou deludest thine own soul; The Thief was not converted at last, but at first; As soon as God afforded him any Call, he came; And at how many lights hast thou winked? And to how many Calls haste thou stopped thine ears, that deferrest thy repentance? Christ said to him, Hodie mecum eris, This day thou shalt be with me in paradise; when thou canst find such another day, look for such another mercy; A day that cloven the grave-stones of dead men; A day that cloven the Temple itself; A day that the Sun durst not see; A day that saw the soul of God (may we not say so, since that Man was God too) depart from Man; There shall be no more such days; and therefore presume not of that voice, Hodie, This day thou shalt be with me, if thou make thy last minute that day, though Christ, to magnify his mercy, and his glory, and to take away all occasion of absolute desperation, did here, under so many disadvantages call, and draw S. Paul to him. But we say no more of that, of the danger of sinning by precedent, Quid factus and presuming of mercy by example; we pass from our first Consideration, From what, to the other, To what, Christ brought this persecutor, this Saul. He brought him to that remarkable height, as that the Church celebrates the Conversion of no man but this. Many bloody Executioners were converted to Christ, even in the act of that bloody Execution; Then when they took a delight in tearing the bowels of Christians, they were received into the bowels of Christ Jesus, and became Christians. Man that road to Market, and saw an Execution upon the way; Men that opened a window to take air, and saw an Execution in the street; The Ecclesiastical Story abounds with examples of occasional Convertits, and upon strange occasions; but yet the Church celebrates no Conversion, but this. The Church doth not consider the Martyrs as borne till they die; till the world see how they persevered to the end, she takes no knowledge of them; Therefore she calls the days of their deaths, Natalitia, their birthdays; Then she makes account they are borne, when they die. But of S. Paul the Church makes herself assured the first minute; and therefore celebrates his Conversion, and none but his. Here was a true Transubstantiation, and a new Sacrament. These few words, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me, are words of Consecration; After these words, Saul was no longer Saul, but he was Christ: Vivit in me Christus, says he, It is not I that live, not I that do any thing, but Christ in me. It is but a little way that S. chrysostom goes, when he speaks of an inferior Transubstantiation, of a change of affections, and says Agnus ex Lupo, that here is another manner of Lycanthropy, then when a man is made a Wolf; for here a Wolf is made a Lamb, Ex lupo Agnus. Ex vepribus racemus, says that Father, A bramble is made a vine; Ex zizaniis frumentum, Cockle and tares become wheat; Ex pirata gubernator, A Pirate becomes a safe Pilot; Ex novissimo primus, The lees are come to swim on the top, and the last is grown first; and ex abortivo perfectus, He that was borne out of time, hath not only the perfection, but the excellency of all his lineaments. S. chrysostom goes farther than this, Ex blasphemo, Os Christi, & lyraspiritus, He that was the mouth of blasphemy, is become the mouth of Christ, He that was the instrument of Satan, is now the organ of the Holy Ghost. He goes very far, when he says, In Coelis homo, in terris Angelus, Being yet but upon earth, he is an Angel, and being yet but a man, he is already in Heaven. Yet S. Paul was another manner of Sacrament, and had another manner of Transubstantiation, than all this; As he was made Idem spiritus cum Domino, Gal. 6.17. The same spirit with the Lord, so in his very body, he had Stigmata, the very marks of the Lord Jesus. From such a lowness, raised to such a height, as that Origen says, many did believe, that S. Paul had been that Holy Ghost, which Christ had promised to the world, after his departing from it. It is but a little way that S. Jerome hath carried his commendation neither, when he calls him Rugitum leonis, The roaring of a Lion, if we consider in how little a forest the roaring of a Lion is determined; but that he calls him Rugitum Leonis nostri, The roaring of our Lion, of the Lion of the Tribe of juda, That as far as Christ is heard, S. Paul is heard too; Quem quoties lego, Idem. non verba mihi videor audire, sed tonitrua, Wheresoever I open S. Paul's Epistles, I meet not words, but thunder, and universal thunder, thunder that passes through all the world. Theoder. For, Ejus excaecatio totius or bis illuminatio, That that was done upon him, wrought upon all the world; he was struck blind, and all the world saw the better for that. So universal a Priest, (says S. chrysostom, who loves to be speaking of S. Paul) as that he sacrificed, not sheep and goats, sed seipsum, but himself; and not only that, sed totum mundum, He prepared the whole world, as a sacrifice to God. He built an Ark, that is, established a Church; and to this day, receives, not eight, but all into that Ark: And whereas in Noah's Ark, Quem corvum recepit, corvum emisit, If he came in a Raven, he went out a Raven; S. Paul, in his Ark, Ex milvis facit columbas, as himself was, so he transubstantiates all them, and makes them Doves of Ravens. Nay, so overabsolutely did he sacrifice himself, and his state in this world, for this world, as that he sacrificed his reversion, his future state, the glory and joy of heaven, for his brethren, and chose rather to be Anathema, separated from Christ, than they should. I love thee, says S. chrysostom to Rome, for many excellencies, many greatnesses; But I love thee so well, says he, therefore because S. Paul loved thee so well. Qualem Rosam Roma Christo, (as he pursues this contemplation) What a fragrant rose shall Rome present Christ with, when he comes to Judgement, in re-delivering to him the body of S. Paul? And though he join them both together, jugati boves Ecclesiae, That S. Peter and S. Paul were that yoke of oxen that ploughed the whole Church, Though he say of both, Quot carceres sanctificastis? How many Prisons have you two consecrated, and made Prisons Churches? Quot catenas illustrastis? How many fetters and chains of iron have you two changed into chains of gold? Yet we may observe a difference in S. Chrysostom's expressing of persons so equal to one another, Quid Petro majus? says he, But, Quid Paulo par fuit? What can exceed Peter, or what can equal Paul? Still be all this far from occasioning any man to presume upon God, because he afforded so abundant mercy to a Persecuter: but still from this, let every faint soul establish itself in a confidence in God; God that would find nothing to except, nothing to quarrel at, in S. Paul, will not lie heavy upon thy soul, though thou must say, as he did, Quorum ego maximus, That thou art a greater sinner than thou knowest any other man to be. We are, 2 Part. in our order proposed at first, devolved now to our second Part; from the person, and in that, what he was found, A vehement persecuter, And then, what he was made, A laborious Apostle, To the Manner, to his Humiliation, Cecidit super terram, He fell, and he fell to the ground, and he fell blind, as by the history, and context appears. We use to call every declination, of any kind, and in any subject, a falling; for, for our bodies, we say a man is fall'n sick, And for his state, fall'n poor, And for his mind, fall'n mad, And for his conscience, fall'n desperate; we are borne low, and yet we fall every way lower, so universal is our falling sickness. Sin itself is but a falling; The irremediable sin of the Angels, The undeterminable sin of Adam, is called but so, The fall of Adam, The fall of Angels. And therefore the effectual visitation of the holy Ghost to man, is called a falling too; we are fallen so low, as that when the holy Ghost is pleased to fetch us again, and to infuse his grace, he is still said to fall upon us. But the fall which we consider in the Text, is not a figurative falling, not into a decay of estate, nor decay of health, nor a spiritual falling into sin, a decay of grace; but it is a medicinal falling, a falling under God's hand, but such a falling under his hand, as that he takes not off his hand from him that is fall'n, but throws him down therefore that he may raise him. To this posture he brings Paul, now, when he was to re-inanimate him with his spirit; rather, to pre-inanimate him; for, indeed, no man hath a soul till he have grace. Christ, who in his humane nature hath received from the Father all Judgement, and power, and dominion over this world, hath received all this, upon that condition that he shall govern in this manner, Psal. 2.8. Ask of me, and I shall give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance, says the Father; How is he to use them, when he hath them? Thus, Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron, and dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel. Now, God meant well to the Nations, in this bruising and breaking of them; God intended not an annihilation of the Nations, but a reformarion; for Christ asks the Nations for an Inheritance, not for a triumph; therefore it is intended of his way of governing them; and his way is to bruise and beat them; that is, first to cast them down, before he can raise them up, first to break them before he can make them in his fashion. August. Novit Dominus vulnerare ad amorem; The Lord, and only the Lord knows how to wound us, out of love; more than that, how to wound us into love; more than all that, to wound us into love, not only with him that wounds us, but into love with the wound itself, with the very affliction that he inflicts upon us; The Lord knows how to strike us so, as that we shall lay hold upon that hand that strikes us, and kiss that hand that wounds us. Ad vitam interficit, ad exaltationem prosternit, says the same Father; No man kills his enemy therefore, that his enemy might have a better life in heaven; that is not his end in killing him: It is God's end; Therefore he brings us to death, that by that gate he might lead us into life everlasting; And he hath not discovered, but made that Northern passage, to pass by the frozen Sea of calamity, and tribulation, to Paradise, to the heavenly Jerusalem. There are fruits that ripen not, but by frost; There are natures, (there are scarce any other) that dispose not themselves to God, but by affliction. And as Nature looks for the season for ripening, and does not all before, so Grace looks for the assent of the soul, and does not perfect the whole work, till that come. It is Nature that brings the season, and it is Grace that brings the assent; but till the season for the fruit, till the assent of the soul come, all is not done. Therefore God begun in this way with Saul, and in this way he led him all his life. Tot pertulit mortes, quot vixit dies, He died as many deaths, as he lived days; Chrysost. for so himself says, Quotidie morior, I die daily; God gave him suck in blood, and his own blood was his daily drink; He catechised him with calamities at first, and calamities were his daily Sermons, and meditations after; and to authorise the hands of others upon him, and to accustom him to submit himself to the hands of others without murmuring, Christ himself strikes the first blow, and with that, Cecidit, he fell, (which was our first consideration, in his humiliation) and then, Cecidit in terram, He fell to the ground, which is our next. I take no farther occasion from this Circumstance, but to arm you with consolation, In terram. how low soever God be pleased to cast you, Though it be to the earth, yet he does not so much cast you down, in doing that, as bring you home. Death is not a banishing of you out of this world; but it is a visitation of your kindred that lie in the earth; neither are any nearer of kin to you, than the earth itself, and the worms of the earth. You heap earth upon your souls, and encumber them with more and more flesh, by a superfluous and luxuriant diet; You add earth to earth in new purchases, and measure not by Acres, but by Manors, nor by Manors, but by Shires; And there is a little Quillet, a little Close, worth all these, A quiet Grave. And therefore, when thou readest, That God makes thy bed in thy sickness, rejoice in this, not only that he makes that bed, where thou dost lie, but that bed where thou shalt lie; That that God, that made the whole earth, is now making thy bed in the earth, a quiet grave, where thou shalt sleep in peace, till the Angel's Trumpet wake thee at the Resurrection, to that Judgement where thy peace shall be made before thou comest, and writ, and sealed, in the blood of the Lamb. Saul falls to the earth; So fare; But he falls no lower. God brings his servants to a great lowness here; but he brings upon no man a perverse sense, or a distrustful suspicion of falling lower hereafter; His hand strikes us to the earth, by way of humiliation; But it is not his hand, that strikes us into hell, by way of desperation. Will you tell me, that you have observed and studied God's way upon you all your life, and out of that can conclude what God means to do with you after this life? That God took away your Parents in your infancy, and left you Orphans then, That he hath crossed you in all your labours in your calling, ever since, That he hath opened you to dishonours, and calumnies, and misinterpretations, in things well intended by you, That he hath multiplied ficknesses upon you, and given you thereby an assurance of a miserable, and a short life, of few, and evil days, nay, That he hath suffered you to fall into sins, that you yourselves have hated, To continue in sins, that you yourselves have been weary of, To relapse into sins, that you yourselves have repent; And will you conclude out of this, that God had no good purpose upon you, that if ever he had meant to do you good, he would never have gone thus fare, in heaping of evils upon you? Upon what dost thou ground this? upon thyself? Because thou shouldest not deal thus with any man, whom thou meanest well to? How poor, how narrow, how impious a measure of God, is this, that he must do, as thou wouldst do, if thou wert God God hath not made a week without a Sabbath; no tentation, without an issue; God inflicts no calamity, no cloud, no eclipse, without light, to see ease in it, if the patient will look upon that which God hath done to him, in other cases, or to that which God hath done to others, at other times. Saul fell to the ground, but he fell no lower; God brings us to humiliation, but not to desperation. He fell; Caecus. john 9.39. he fell to the ground, And he fell blind; for so it is evident in the story. Christ had said to the Pharisees, I came into the world, that they which see, might be made blind; And the Pharisees ask him, Have you been able to do so upon us? Are we blind? Here Christ gives them an example; a real, a literal, an actual example; Saul, a Pharisee, is made blind. He that will fill a vessel with wine, must take out the water; He that will fill a covetous man's hand with gold, must take out the silver that was there before, says S. chrysostom. Christ, who is about to infuse new light into Saul, withdraws that light that was in him before; That light, by which Saul thought he saw all before, and thought himself a competent Judge, which was the only true Religion, and that all others were to be persecuted, jer. 51.17. even to death, that were not of his way. Stultus factus est omnis homo à scientia, says God in the Prophet, Every man that trusts in his own wit, is a fool. 1 Cor. 3.18. But let him become a fool, that he may be wise, says the Apostle; Let him be so, in his own eyes, and God will give him better eyes, better light, better understanding. Saul was struck blind, but it was a blindness contracted from light; It was a light that struck him blind, as you see in his story. This blindness which we speak of, which is a sober and temperate abstinence from the immoderate study, and curious knowledges of this world, this holy simplicity of the soul, is not a darkness, a dimness, a stupidity in the understanding, contracted by living in a corner, it is not an idle retiring into a Monastery, or into a Village, or a Country solitude, it is not a lazy affectation of ignorance; not darkness, but a greater light, must make us blind. The sight, and the Contemplation of God, and our present benefits by him, and our future interest in him, must make us blind to the world so, as that we look upon no face, no pleasure, no knowledge, with such an Affection, such an Ambition, such a Devotion, as upon God, and the ways to him. Saul had such a blindness, as came from light; we must affect no other simplicity, then arises from the knowledge of God, and his Religion. And then, Saul had such a blindness, as that he fell with it. There are birds, that when their eyes are cieled, still soar up, and up, till they have spent all their strength. Men blinded with the lights of this world, soar still into higher places, or higher knowledges, or higher opinions; but the light of heaven humbles us, and lays flat that soul, which the leaven of this world had puffed and swelled up. That powerful light felled Saul; but after he was fallen, his own sight was restored to him again; Ananias says to him, Brother Saul, receive thy sight. To those men, who employ their natural faculties to the glory of God, and their own, and others edification, God shall afford an exaltation of those natural faculties; In those, who use their learning, or their wealth, or their power, well, God shall increase that power, and that wealth, and that learning, even in this world. You have seen saul's sickness, 3 Part. and the exaltation of the disease, Then when he breathed threaten, and slaughter, Then when he went in his triumph; And you have seen his death, The death of the righteous, His humiliation, He fell to the earth; And there remains yet his Resurrection; The Angel of the great Counsel, Christ Jesus, with the Trumpet of his own mouth, raises him, with that, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? First, Vox. he affords him a call, A voice. Saul could not see; Therefore he deals not upon him by visions. He gives a voice; and a voice that he might hear; God speaks often, when we do not hear; He heard it, and heard it saying; Not a voice only, but a distinct, and intelligible voice; and saying unto him, that is, appliable to himself; and then, that that the voice said to him, was, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? We are unequal enemies, Thou seest I am too hard for thee, Curtu me? why wilt thou, thou in this weakness oppose me? And then, we might be good friends, Thou seest I offer parley, I offer treaty, Cur tu me? Why wilt thou oppose me, me that declare such a disposition to be reconciled unto thee? In this so great a disadvantage on thy part, why wilt thou stir at all? In this so great a peaceableness on my part, why wilt thou stir against me? Cur tu me? Why persecutest thou me? First then, God speaks: For, beloved, we are to consider God, not as he is in himself, but as he works upon us: The first thing that we can consider in our way to God, is his Word. Our Regeneration is by his Word; that is, by faith, which comes by hearing; The seed is the word of God, says Christ himself; Even the seed of faith. Luke 8.11. Carry it higher, the Creation was by the word of God; Dixit, & facta sunt, God spoke, and all things were made. Carry it to the highest of all, to Eternity, the eternal Generation, the eternal Production, the eternal Procession of the second Person in the Trinity, was so much by the Word, as that he is the Word; Verbum caro, It was that Word, that was made Flesh. So that God, who cannot enter into bands to us, hath given us security enough; He hath given us his Word; His written Word, his Scriptures; His Essential Word, his Son. Our Principal, and Radical, and Fundamental security, is his Essential Word, his Son Christ Jesus. But how many millions of generations was this Word in heaven, and never spoke? The Word, Christ himself, hath been as long as God hath been: But the uttering of this Word, speaking hath been but since the Creation. Peter says to Christ, To whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life. It is not only, john 6.68. Thou art the word of eternal life; (Christ is so) But thou hast it; Thou hast it, where we may come to thee for it; In thy Treasury, in thine Ordinance, in thy Church; Thou hast it, to derive it, to convey it upon us. Here then is the first step of saul's cure, and of ours, That there was not only a word, the Word, Christ himself, a Son of God in heaven, but a Voice, the word uttered, and preached; Christ manifested in his Ordinance: He heard a voice. He heard it. How often does God speak, and no body hears the voice? Audivit. He speaks in his Canon, in Thunder, and he speaks in our Canon, in the rumour of wars. He speaks in his music, in the harmonious promises of the Gospel, and in our music, in the temporal blessings of peace, and plenty; And we hear a noise in his Judgements, and we hear a sound in his mercies; but we hear no voice, we do not discern that this noise, or this sound comes from any certain person; we do not feel them to be mercies, nor to be judgements uttered from God, but natural accidents, casual occurrencies, emergent contingencies, which as an Atheist might think, would fall out though there were no God, or no commerce, no dealing, no speaking between God and Man. Though Saul came not instantly to a perfect discerning who spoke, yet he saw instantly, it was a Person above nature, and therefore speaks to him in that phrase of submission, Quis es Domine? Lord who art thou? And after, with trembling and astonishment, (as the Text says) Domine quid me vis facere? Lord what wilt thou have me to do? Then we are truliest said to hear, when we know from whence the voice comes. Princes are God's Trumpet, and the Church is God's Organ, but Christ Jesus is his voice. When he speaks in the Prince, when he speaks in the Church, there we are bound to hear, and happy if we do hear. Man hath a natural way to come to God, by the eye, by the creature; Rom 2. So Visible things show the Invisible God: But then, God hath super-induced a supernatural way, by the ear. For, though hearing be natural, yet that faith in God should come by hearing a man preach, is supernatural. God shut up the natural way, in Saul, Seeing; He struck him blind; But he opened the supernatural way, he enabled him to hear, and to hear him. God would have us beholden to grace, and not to nature, and to come for our salvation, to his Ordinances, to the preaching of his Word, and not to any other means. Though he were blind, even that blindness, as it was a humiliation, and a diverting of his former glaring lights, was a degree of mercy, of preparative mercy; yet there was a voice, which was another degree; And a voice that he heard, which was a degree above that; and so fare we are gone; And he heard it, saying, that is distinctly, and intelligibly, which is our next Circumstance. He hears him saying, that is, He hears him so, as that he knows what he says, so, Dicentem. as that he understands him; for, he that hears the word, and understands it not, is subject to that which Christ says, That the wicked one comes, Mat. 13.19. and catches away that that was sown. S. Augustine puts himself earnestly upon the contemplation of the Creation, as Moses hath delivered it; he finds it hard to conceive, and he says, Si esset ante me Moses, Confess. l. 1. c. 3. If Moses who writ this were here, Tenerem eum, & per te obsecrarem, I would hold him fast, and beg of him, for thy sake, O my God, that he would declare this work of the Creation more plainly unto me. But then, says that blessed Father, Si Hebraea voce loqueretur, If Moses should speak Hebrew to me, mine ears might hear the sound, but my mind would not hear the voice; I might hear him, but I should not hear what he said. This was that that distinguished between S. Paul, and those who were in his company at this time; Ver. 7. Acts 22.9. S. Luke says in this Chapter, That they heard the voice, and S. Paul relating the story again, after says, They heard not the voice of him that spoke to me; they heard a confused sound, but they distinguished it not to be the voice of God, nor discerned God's purpose in it. Ver. 28. In the twelfth of john, there came a voice from Heaven, from God himself, and the people said, It thundered. So apt is natural man to ascribe even God's immediate and miraculous actions to natural causes; apt to rest and determine in Nature, and leave out God. The Poet chides that weakness, (as he calls it) to be afraid of God's judgements, or to call natural accidents judgements; Quo morbo mentem concusse? timore Deorum, says he; he says The Conscience may be overtender, and that such timorous men, are sick of the fear of God; But it is a blessed disease The fear of God, and the true way to true health. And though there be a moral constancy that becomes a Christian well, not to be easily shaked with the variations and revolutions of this world, yet it becomes him to establish his constancy in this, That God hath a good purpose in that action, not that God hath no hand in that action; That God will produce good out of it, not that God hath nothing to do in it. The Magicians themselves were forced to confess Digitum Dei, Exod. 6.16. The finger of God, in a small matter. Never think it a weakness, to call that a judgement of God, which others determine in Nature; Do so, so far as works to thy edification, who seest that judgement, though not so far, as to argue, and conclude the final condemnation of that man upon whom that judgement is fallen. Certainly, we were better call twenty natural accidents judgements of God, then frustrate God's purpose in any of his powerful deliverances, by calling it a natural accident, and suffer the thing to vanish so, and God be left unglorified in it, or his Church unedified by it. Then we hear God, when we understand what he says; And therefore, as we are bound to bless God, that he speaks to us, and hears us speak to him, in a language which we understand, and not in such a strange language, as that a stranger who should come in and hear it, 1 Cor. 14.23. would think the Congregation mad; So also let us bless him for that holy tenderness, to be apt to feel his hand in every accident, and to discern his presence in every thing that befalls us. Saul heard the voice, saying; He understood what it said, and by that, found that it was directed to him, which is also another step in this last part. This is an impropriation without sacrilege, Sibi. and an enclosure of a Common without damage, to make God mine own, to find that all that God says is spoken to me, and all that Christ suffered was suffered for me. And as Saul found this voice at first, to be directed to him, so ever after he bends his eye the same way, and observes the working of God especially upon himself; As at the beginning, so in the way too: particularly there, By the grace of God I am that I am; 1 Cor. 15. and then, His grace was bestowed on me, And not in vain; and again, I have laboured more abundantly then all; And after all, still he considers himself, and finds himself to be the greatest sinner, Quorum ego maximus. It is called a greatness of spirit, or constancy, but it is indeed an incorrigible height of pride, when a man will not believe that he is meant in a libel, if he be not named in that libel. It is a fearful obduration, to be Sermon-proofe, or not to take knowledge, that a judgement is denounced against him, because he is not named in the denouncing of that judgement. Is not thy name Simon Magus, if thou buy and sell spiritual things thyself? and is not thy servant's name Gehazi, if he exact after? Is not thy name Cain, if thou rise up against thy brother? And is not thy name Zacheus, if thou multiply thy wealth by oppression? Is not thy name Dinah, if thou gad abroad, to see who will solicit thee? And is not the name of Putiphars Wife upon thee, if thou stay at home and solicit thy servants? Post-date the whole Bible, and whatsoever thou hearest spoken of such, as thou art, before, believe all that to be spoken but now, and spoken to thee. This was one happiness here, that Saul found this voice to be directed to him; And another (which is our last Consideration) is what this voice said; it said, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? Here, Saul. to make sure of him, God calls him by his name, that he should not be able to transfer the summons upon any other, or say it was not he. They say that our Noctambulones, men that walk in their sleep, will wake if they be called by their names. To wake Saul out of this dream, (for, to think to oppose Christ and his cause, is, in the highest person of the world, of what power or of what counsel soever, but a vertiginous dream, and a giddy vapour) to wake him, he calls him by his name, to let him know he means him; and to wake him throughly, he calls him twice, Saul, and Saul again. Saul, Saul. jer. 22.29. The great desolation which was to fall upon that land, God intimates, God interminates, God intonates with such a vehemency, Terra, terra, terra, Earth, earth, earth hear the word of the Lord. God should be heard at first, believed at first; but such is his abundant goodness, as that he ingeminates, multiplies his warnings; And to this whole land he hath said, Terra, terra, terra, Earth, earth, earth hear the Word of the Lord; Once in an Invasion, once in a Powder-treason; and again, and again in pestilential contagions; And to every one of us, he hath said oftener than so, Dust, dust, dust why dost thou lift up thyself against thy Maker? Saul, Saul why persecutest thou me? Here Christ calls the afflictions of those that are his, in his purpose, his afflictions. Me. Christ will not absolutely verify his own words, to his own ease; He had said before this, upon the Cross, Consummatum est, All is finished; But though all were finished in his Person, he hath a daily passion in his Saints still. This language which the Apostle learned of Christ here, himself practised, and spoke after, Who is weak, and I am not weak? 2 Cor. 11.29. who is offended, and I burn not? Since Christ does suffer in our sufferings, be this our consolation, Till he be weary, we should not be weary, nor faint, nor murmur under our burdens; and this too, That when he is weary, he will deliver us even for his own sake; for he, though he cannot suffer pain, may suffer dishonour in our sufferings; therefore attend his leisure. We end all in this, Cur tu me? Why dost Thou persecute Me? Why Saul Christ? Tume. Put it upon a Nation, (what is any Saul, any one man to a Nation?) Put it upon all the Nations of the World, and you shall hear God ask with an indignation, Quare fremuerunt Gentes? Why do the heathen rage, why do the people imagine a vain thing? Psal. 2.1. Ver. 4. why will they do it? what can they get? He that sitteth in the Heavens shall laugh; The Lord shall have them in derision. Christ came into the Temple and disputed with the Doctors; but he did not despise them, he did not laugh at them. When all the Midianites, and all the Amalekites, and all the Children of the East, were in a body against Israel, judg. 6.33. God did not laugh at them. Gideon his General, mustered two and thirty thousand against them. God would not employ so many in the day of Battle, yet he did not laugh at them, he did not whip them out of the field, he made the face of an Army, though it were but three hundred. But when God can choose his way, He can call in Nation against Nation, he can cast a damp upon any Nation, and make them afraid of one another, He can do an execution upon them by themselves, (I presume you remember those stories in the Bible, where God did proceed by such ways) or he can sit still in a scorn, and let them melt away of themselves; when he can cast down Saul to the earth, and never appear in the cause, benight his noon, frustrate his purposes, evacuate his hopes, annihilate him in the height of his glory, Cur tu me? why will any Saul, any Nation, any World of saul's persecute Christ, any sinner tempt him, who is so much too hard for him? Cur me? Why dost thou offer this to me, who being thus much too hard for thee, would yet feign be friends with thee? and therefore came to a parley, to a treaty? for, verba haec, non tam arguentis, quam defendentis, says S. chrysostom: These are not so much offensive as defensive words; He would not confound Saul, but he would not betray his own honour. To many Nations God hath never spoken; To the Jews he spoke, but suffered them to mistake him; To some whole Christian Churches he speaks, but he lets them speak too; he lets them make their word equal to his; To many of us he hath spoken, and chidden, but given over before we are cured; As he says of Israel, in a manner, That she is not worth his anger, not worth his punishing, Esay 1.4. A people laden with sins, why should they any more be smitten? Why should I go about to recover them? But if God speak to thee still, and speak in a mixed voice, of Correction, and Consolation too, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? Him that receives so little benefit by thee, and yet is so loath to lose thee, Him that can so easily spare thee, and yet makes thy soul more precious than his own life, Him that can resolve thee, scatter thee, annihilate thee with a word, and yet afford so many words, so many hours' conferences, so many Sermons to reclaim thee, why persecutest Thou Him? Answer this question, with saul's answer to this question, by another question, Domine quid me vis facere? Lord what wilt thou have me do? Deliver thyself over to the will of God, and God shall deliver thee over, as he did Saul to Ananias; provide thee by his Ministry in his Ordinance, means to rectify thee, in all dejection of spirit, light to clear thee in all perplexities of conscience, in the ways of thy pilgrimage, and more and more effectual seals thereof, at the hour of thy transmigration into his joy, and thine eternal rest. SERM. XLVII. Preached at S. Paul's, The Sunday after the Conversion of S. PAUL. 27. jan. 1627. ACT. 20.25. And now, Behold, I know, that all ye among whom I have gone preaching the kingdom of God, shall see my face no more. WHen S. chrysostom calls Christmas day, Metropolin omnium festorum, The Metropolitan Holiday, the principal festival of the Church, he is likely to intent only those festivals which were of the Churches later institution, and means not to enwrap the Sabbath in that comparison. As S. Augustine says of the Sacrament of Baptism, that it is Limen Ecclesiae, The threshold over which we step into the Church; so is Christmas day, Limen festorum, The threshold over which we step into the festival celebration of some other of Christ's actions, and passions, and victorious overcommings of all the Acts of his Passion, such as his Resurrection, and Ascension; for, but for Christmas day, we could celebrate none of these days; And so, that day is Limen festorum, The threshold over which we pass to the rest. But the Sabbath is not only Limen, or janua Ecclesiae, The door by which we enter into the Church, and into the consideration what the Church hath done, but Limen mundi, The door by which we enter into the consideration of the World, how, and when the World was made of nothing, at the Creation, without which, we had been so far from knowing that there had been a Church, or that there had been a God, as that we ourselves had had no being at all. And therefore, as our very being is before all degrees of well-being, so is the Sabbath, which remembers us of our being, before all other festivals, that present and refresh to us the memory of our well-being: Especially to us, to whom it is not only a Sabbath, as the Sabbath is a day of Rest, in respect of the Creation, but Dies Dominicus, The Lord's day, in respect of the Redemption of the world, because the consummation of that work of Redemption, for all that was to be done in this world, which was the Resurrection of our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, was accomplished upon that day, Levit. 23. which is our Sabbath. But yet, as it did please God, to accompany the Great day, the Sabbath, with other solemn days too, The Passeover, and Pentecost, Trumpets, and Tabernacles, and others, and to call those other days Sabbaths, as well as the Sabbath itself; so, since he is pleased that in the Christian Church, other days of Holy Convocations should also be instituted, I make account, that in some measure, I do both offices, both for observing those particular festivals that fall in the week, and also for the making of those particular festivals to serve the Sabbath, when upon the Sabbath ensuing, or preceding such or such a festival in the week, I take occasion to speak of that festival, which fell into the compass of that week; for, by this course, that festival is not pretermitted, nor neglected, the particular festival is remembered: And then, as God receives honour in the honour of his Saints, so the Sabbath hath an honour, when the festivals, and commemorations of those Saints, are reserved to wait upon the Sabbath. Hence is it, that as elsewhere, I often do so, that is, Celebrate some festival that falls in the week, upon the Sabbath: so, in this place, upon this very day, I have done the like, and return now, to do so again, that is, to celebrate the memory of our Apostle S. Paul to day, though there be a day past, since his day was, in the ordinary course, to have been celebrated. The last time that I did so, I did it in handling those words, And he fell to the earth, and heard a voice, saying, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? which was the very act of his Conversion; A period, and a passage, which the Church celebrates in none but in S. Paul; though many others were strangely converted too, she celebrates none but his. In the words chosen for this day, And now behold I know etc. we shall reduce to your memories, first, His proceeding in the Church after he was called, (I have gone preaching the kingdom of God among you) And then the ease, the reposednes, the acquiescence that he had in that knowledge, which God by his Spirit had given him, of the approach of his dissolution, and departure out of this life; (I know that all you shall see my face no more.) As those things which we see in a glass, for the most part, must be behind us, so that that makes our transmigration in death comfortable unto us, must be behind us, in the testimony of a good Conscience, for things formerly done; Now behold, I know, that all ye, among whom I have gone etc. In handling of which words, our Method shall be this; Our general parts, Divisio. being (as we have already intimated) these two, His way, and his End, His painful course, and his cheerful finishing of his course; His laborious battle, and his victorious triumph: In the first, (I have gone preaching the kingdom of God among you) we shall see, first, That there is a Transivi, as well as a Requievi acceptable to God; A discharge of a Duty, as well in going from one place to another, as in a perpetual Residence upon one; Transivi, says our Apostle, I have gone among you. But then, in a second consideration, in that first part, That that makes his going acceptable to God, is, because he goes to preach, Transivi praedicans, I have gone preaching; And then lastly in that first part, That that, that makes his Preaching acceptable, is, that he preached the kingdom of God, Transivi praedicans regnum Dei, I have gone amongst you, preaching the kingdom of God. And in these three characters of S. Paul's Ministry, first, Labour and Assiduity; And then, Labour bestowed upon the right means, Preaching; And lastly, Preaching to the right end, to edification, & advancing the kingdom of God, we shall determine our first part. In our second part, we pass from his Transition, to his Transmigration; from his going up and down in the world, to his departing out of the world, And now, behold, I know, that ye shall see my face no more. In which, we shall look first, how S. Paul contracted this knowledge, how he knew it; And secondly, that the knowledge of it, did not disquiet him, not disorder him; he takes knowledge of it, with a confidence, and a cheerfulness. When he says, I know it, he seems to say, I am glad of it, or at least not troubled with it. And lastly, that S. Paul continues here, that way, and method, which he always uses; That is, to proceed by the understanding, to the affections, and so to the conscience of those that hear him, by such means of persuasion, as are most appliable to them, to whom he then speaks; And therefore knowing the power and efficacy of a dying, a departing man's words, he makes that impression in them, Observe, recollect, remember, practise that which I have delivered unto you, for, I know, that all ye shall see my face no more. And so we shall bring up that circle, which was begun in heaven, in our last exercise, upon this occasion, in this place, when Christ said from thence, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? up into heaven again, in that Euge bone serve, which Christ hath said since unto him, Well done good and faithful servant, enter into thy Master's joy; And our Apostle, whom, in our former Exercise, for example of our humiliation, we found fallen to the Earth, in this, to the assistance of our Exaltation, in his, we shall find, and leave, upon the last step of jacobs' ladder, that is, entering into Heaven, by the gate of death. First then, in our first Part, our first Branch is, 1 Part. That there is a Transivi as acceptable to God, as a Requievi; That God was served in S. Paul, by applying his labours to many places, as well as if he had resided, and bestowed himself entirely upon any one. When Christ manifested himself at first unto him, trembling and astonished, he said, Act. 9.6. Lord what wilt thou have me to do? And when Christ had told him, That in Damascus, from Ananias, he should receive his Instructions, which were, Ver. 15. That he should bear his name before the Gentiles, and Kings, and the children of Israel, After this commission was exhibited by Ananias, and accepted by S. Paul, that Prophetical Scripture laid hold upon him, by way of acclamation, Psal. 19.6. Exultavit ut gigas ad currendam viam, He rejoiced as a strong man to run a race, 1 Cor. 15.10. Rom. 15.19. He laboured more abundantly than they all, He carried the Gospel from jerusalem to Illyricum, That is, as S. Hierome surveys it, à mari rubro ad oceanum, from the Red Sea (a Sea within land) to the Ocean without, from all within, to all without the Covenant, Gentiles as well as Jews, Deficiente eum prius terra, quàm studio praedicandi, He found an end of the world, but he found no end of his zeal, but preached as long as he found any to preach to. And as he exceeded in Action, so did he in Passion too; He joins both together, 2 Cor. 11.23. In labours more abundant, (There was his continual preaching) In stripes above measure, And then, In prisons more frequent, In deaths often. Who dies more than once? Yet he dies often. How often? Death that is every other man's everlasting fast, and fills him his mouth with earth, was S. Paul's Panis quotidianus, His daily bread, I protest, says he, by your rejoicing, which I have in Christ, I die daily. Though therefore we cannot give S. Paul a greater name than an Apostle, (except there be some extraordinary height of Apostleship enwrapped in that which he says of himself, Gal. 1.1. Paul an Apostle, not of men, neither by men, but by jesus Christ, That in that place he glory in a holy exultation, that he was made an Apostle by Jesus Christ, then when Jesus Christ was nothing but Jesus Christ, then when he was glorified in heaven, and not a mortal man upon earth, as he was when he made his other Apostles; And that in his being an Apostle, there entered no such act of men, as did in the election of Mathias to that office, (though Mathias were made after the Ascension as well as he) in whose election those men presented God two names, and God directed that lot upon him, and so Mathias was reckoned amongst the eleven Apostles) Though we need not procure to him, Acts 1. ult. nor imagine for him, any other name then an Apostle, yet S. Paul was otherwise an universal soul to the whole Church, than many of the other Apostles were, and had a larger liberty to communicate himself to all places, than any of them had. That is it which S. chrysostom intends, when he extends S. Paul's dignity, Angelis diversae Gentes commissae, To particular Angels particular Nations are committed; sed nullus Angelorum, says that Father, No Angel governed his particular Nation better than S. Paul did the whole Church. S. chrysostom carries it so high; Isidore modifies it thus; He brings it from the Angels of heaven, to the Angels of the Church, Indeed the Archangels of the Church, the Apostles themselves, And he says, Apostolorum quisque regionem nactus unicam, Every Apostle was designed to some particular and certain compass, and did but that, in that, which S. Paul did in the whole world. But S. chrysostom and Isidore both take their ground for that which they say, from that which S. Paul says of himself, Besides these things which are without, 2 Cor. 11.28. that which cometh upon me daily, The care of all the Churches; for, says he, who is weak, and I am not weak? That is, who lacks any thing, but I am ready to do it for him? who suffers any thing, but I have compassion for him? We receive by fair Tradition, and we entertain with a fair credulity, the other Apostles to have been Bishops, and thereby to have had a more certain centre, to which, naturally, that is, by the nature of their office, they were to incline. Not that nothing may excuse a Bishop's absence from his Sea; for natural things, even naturally, do departed from those places to which they are naturally designed, and naturally affected, for the conservation of the whole frame and course of nature; for, in such cases, water will ascend, and air will descend; which motion is done naturally, though it be a motion from that place, to which they are naturally affected; And so may Bishops from their particular Churches; Cyprian. for, Episcopus in Ecclesia, & Ecclesia in Episcopo, Every Bishop hath a superintendency, and a residence in the whole Church, and the whole Church a residence, and a confidence in him. Therefore it is, that in some Decretal, and some Synodall Letters, Bishops are called Monarchae, Monarches, not only with relation to one Diocese, but to the whole Church; not only Regal, but Imperial Monarches. The Church of Rome makes Bishops every day, of Dioceses, to which they know those Bishops can never come; Not only in the Dominions of Princes of the Reformed Religion, (which are not likely to admit them) but in the Dominions of the Turk himself. And into the Council of Trent, they threw and thrust, they shoved and shoveld in such Bishops in abundance: They created (that their numbers might carry all) new Titular Bishops of every place, in the Eastern, the Greek Church, where there had ever been Bishops before, though those very places were now no Cities; Not only not within his Jurisdiction, but not at all, upon the face of the earth. But in better times than these, (though times, in which the Church was much afflicted too) S. Cyril of Alexandria mentions six thousand Bishops at once, against Nestorius. Now if the Church had six thousand Bishops at once, certainly all of them had not Dioceses to reside upon; sometimes collateral necessities enforce a departing from exact regularity, in matter of government. So it did, when S. Ambrose was chosen Bishop of Milan in the West, and Nectarius Bishop of Constantinople in the East, when they were both not only Laymen, but unbaptised. But yet, though there be divers cases in which Bishops may justly be excused from residence, (for they are still resident upon the Church of God, if not upon the Church of that City) yet naturally, and regularly an obligation falling upon them, of Residence, the Apostles were more bound to certain limits, by being Bishops, then S. Paul was, of whom it does not appear that he was ever so. I know some later men have thought S. Paul a Bishop: And they have found some satisfaction in that, That Niger, Acts 13.3. and Lucius, and Manaen laid their hands upon Barnabas and Paul; and that Imposition of hands, say they, was a Consecration; And this reason supplies them too, That Paul did consecrate other Bishops, as Timothy of Ephesus, and Titus of Crete. But since Niger, Tit. 1.5. and Lucius, and Manaen that laid their hands upon Paul, were not Bishops themselves, Paul cannot therefore be concluded to be a Bishop, because he laid his hands upon others. Neither hath any of those few Authors, which have imagined him to be a Bishop, ever assigned or named any place of which he should be Bishop; So that S. Paul had still another manner of liberty, and universality over the Church, than the rest had, and therefore still avows his Transivi, his peregrination, I have gone among you. So then our blessed Saviour having declared this to be his way for the propagation of the Gospel, that besides the men that reside constantly upon certain places, there should be Bishops that should spread farther than to a Parish, and Apostles farther than to a Diocese, and a Paul farther than to a Nation; As in the first Plantation Christ found this necessary, so may it be still convenient, that in some cases, some persons, at some times, may be admitted to forbear their service, in some particular place, so they do not defraud the whole Church of God by that forbearance. For so S. Paul, though he accuse himself, That he rob other Churches, taking wages of them, 2 Cor. 11.11. and yet served the Corinthians, thinks himself excusable in this, That he did this service in some part of the Church of Christ, though not always to them in particular, from whom he received that recompense. Now as this condemns our Brownists abroad, that have published their opinion to be, That no particular Church, given to one man's cure, may consist of more persons than may always hear that man, all together, so neither doth this afford any favour to those men, who absent themselves from their charge, unnecessarily; and every thing is unnecessary in a Churchman, that is not done for the farther advancement of the Church of God in general, and doth prejudice, or defraud a particular Church. Therefore is S. Paul's Transivi in this Text, accompanied with a Praedicavi, I have not resided in one place, I have gone among you, but I have gone among you preaching. Athanasius in his Epistle to Dracontius, who refused to be Bishop, says, Praedicando. If all men had been of your mind, who should have made you a Christian? who should have been enabled to have ministered Sacraments unto you, if there had been no Bishop? But when he saw that he refused it therefore, because men when they come to that state, give themselves more liberty than such as laboured in inferior places did, and Dracontius seemed loath to open himself to the danger of that tentation, Athanasius says, Licebit tibi in Episcopatu esurire, sitire, Fear not, I warrant you, you may be poor enough in a Bishopric; or if you be rich, no man will hinder you from living soberly in a plentiful fortune; Novimus Episcopos jejunantes, says he, & Monachos comedentes, I have known a Bishop fast, when a Monk, or an Hermit hath made a good meal; Nec corona pro locis, sed pro factis redditur, God doth not crown every man that comes to the place, but him only that doth the duties of the place, when he is in it. And here one of the Duties that induce our crown, is Preaching, I have gone among you preaching. Howsoever it be in practice in the Church of Rome, that Church durst not appear to the world, but in that Declaration, Praecipuum Episcoporum munus est praedicatio, Conc. Trid. Sess. 5. c. 2. The principal office of the Bishop is to preach. And as there is no Church in Christendom, (nay, let us magnify God in the fullness of an evident truth) not all the Churches of God in Christendom, have more, or more useful preaching, then ours hath, from those to whom the Cure of Souls belongs: so neither were there ever any times, in which more men were preferred for former preaching, nor that continued it more, after their preferments, then in these our times. There may be, there should be a Transiverunt, A passing from place to place, but still it is as it should be, Praedicando, A passing for Preaching, and a passing to Preaching; And then, a Preaching conditioned so, as S. Paul's was, I have gone among you, preaching the Kingdom of God. The Kingdom of God, Regnum Dei. is the Gospel of God; that Gospel which the Apostle calls the glorious Gospel of God. A Kingdom consists not of slaves; slaves that have no will of their own. The children of the Kingdom have so a will of their own, as that no man is damned, but for that, which he would not avoid, nor saved against his will; So we preach a Kingdom. A Kingdom acknowledges all their happiness from the King; So do we all the good use of all our faculties, will and all from the grace of the King of heaven; so we preach a Kingdom. A Kingdom is able to subsist of itself, without calling in Foreigners; The Gospel is so too, without calling in Traditions; and so we preach a Kingdom. A Kingdom requires, besides fundamental subsistence, grounded especially in offensive, and defensive power, a support also of honour, and dignity, and outward splendour; The Church of God requires also, besides unanimity in fundamental Doctrines, an equanimity, and a mildness, and a charity, in handling problematical points, and also requires order, and comeliness in the outward face, and habit thereof; And so we preach a Kingdom. So we preach a Kingdom, as that we banish from thence, all imaginary fatality, and all decretory impossibility of concurrence, and cooperation to our own salvation, And yet we banish all pride, and confidence, that any natural faculties in us, though quickened by former grace, can lead us to salvation, without a continual succession of more and more grace; And so we preach a Kingdom; So, as that we banish all spiritual treason, in setting up new titles, or making any thing equal to God, or his Word, And we banish all spiritual felony or robbery, in despoiling the Church, Psal. 45.13. either of Discipline, or of Possessions, either of Order, or of Ornaments. Be the King's Daughter all glorious within; Yet, all her glory is not within; For, Her clothing is of wrought gold, says that text. Still may she glory in her internal glory, in the sincerity, and in the integrity of Doctrinal truths, and glory too in her outward comeliness, and beauty. So pray we, and so preach we the Kingdom of God. And so we have done with our first Part. Our second Part, 2 Part. to which in our order we are now come, is a passionate valediction, Now I know, that all you shall see my face no more; where first we inquire how he knew it. But why do we inquire that? They that heard him did not so: They heard it, and believed it, Acts 17.10. and lamented it. When S. Paul preached at Berea, his story says, that he was better believed there, then at Thessalonica; And the reason is given, That there were Nobler persons there; Persons of better quality, of better natures, and dispositions, and of more ingenuity; and so, as it is added, They received the word with all readiness of mind. Prejudices, and disaffections, and under-valuations of the abilities of the Preacher, in the hearer, disappoint the purpose of the Holy Ghost, frustrate the labours of the man, and injure and defraud the rest of the Congregation, who would, and would justly, like that which is said, if they were not misled, and shaked by those hearers: And so work also such jealousies and suspicions, that though his abilities be good, yet his end upon his Auditory, is not their edification, but to work upon them, to other purposes. Though we require not an implicit faith in you, that you believe, because we say it, yet we require a holy Nobleness in you, A religious good nature, a conscientious ingenuity, that you remember from whom we come, from the King of heaven, and in what quality, as his Ambassadors; And so be apt to believe, that since we must return to him that sent us, and give him a relation of our negotiation, we dare not transgress our Commission. The Bereans are praised for this, That they searched the Scriptures daily, whether those things that Paul said were so; But this begun not at a jealousy, or suspicion in them, that they doubted, that that which he said, was not so, nor proceeded not to a gladness, or to a desire, that they might have taken him in a lie, or might have found, that that which he said, was not so; But they searched the Scriptures, whether those things were so, that so, having formerly believed him when he preached, they might establish that belief, which they had received, by that, which was the infallible rock, and foundation of all, The Scriptures; They searched; but they searched for confirmation, and not upon suspicion. In our present case, they to whom S. Paul said this, do not ask S. Paul how he knew, that they should see his face no more; they believed as we do, that he had it by revelation from God; and such knowledge is faith. Tricubitalis ere at, & coelum attingit, says S. chrysostom; S. Paul was a man of low stature; but four foot and a half high, says he; and yet his head reached to the highest heaven, and his eyes saw, and his ears heard the counsels of God. Scarce any Ambassador can show so many Letters of his Masters own hand, as S. Paul could produce Revelations; His King came to him, as often as other Kings writ to their Ambassadors. Acts 9.4. Gal. 1.1. Gal. 2. Acts 13. Acts 16. Acts 18. Acts 17. He had his first calling by Revelation; He had his Commission, his Apostle-ship by Revelation; So he was directed to Jerusalem, And so to Rome; to both by Revelation; and so to Macedonia also. So he was confirmed, and comforted in the night, by Vision, by Revelation; And so he was assured of the lives of all them, that suffered shipwreck with him at Malta. All his Cate chismes in the beginning, all his Dictates in his proceeding, all his encouragements at his departing, were all Revelation. Every good man hath his conversation in heaven, and heaven itself had a conversation in S. Paul; And so, even the book of the Acts of the Apostles, is, as it were, a first Part of the book of Revelation; Revelations to S. Paul, as the other was to S. john. This is the way that Christ promised to take with him, I will show him, Acts 9.16. Acts 20.11. how great things he must suffer for my sake. And this way Christ pursued, At Caesarea, Agabus a Prophet came from judaea to Paul, and took Paul's girdle, and bound his own hands, and feet, and said, Thus saith the Holy Ghost, So shall the jews bind the man that owes the girdle, and shall deliver him into the hands of the Gentiles. This than was his case in our text, (for, that revelation, by Agabus his Prophecy, of his suffering was after this) he had a revelation that he should never be seen by them more; but when, or how, or where he should die, he had not had a particular revelation then. He says, a little before our text, Ver. 12. I go bound in the Spirit to jerusalem: That is, so bound by the Spirit, that if I should not go, I should resist the Spirit; But, says he, I know not the things that shall befall me there; not at Jerusalem; much less the last, and bitterest things, which were farther off; the things that should befall him at Rome, where he died. But from the very first, he knew enough of his death, to shake any soul, that were not sustained by the Spirit of God; which is another Branch in this Part, That no revelations, no apprehensions of death removed him from his holy intrepidnesse, and religious constancy. We have a story in an Author of S. Hieromes time, Palladius, Non perterritus. that in a Monastery of S. Isidors', every Monk that died in that house, was able, and ever did tell all the society, that at such a time he should die. God does extraordinary things, for extraordinary ends; but since we see no such ends, nor use of this, we are at our liberty, to doubt of the thing itself. God told Simeon, that he should not die, till he had seen Christ; but he did not tell him, that he should die as soon as he had seen him; But so much as was told him, was enough to make him content to die, when he had seen him, and to come to his Nunc dimittis, to that cheerfulness, as to sing his own Requiem. God accustomed S. Paul, no doubt, to such notifications from him, and such apprehensions in himself of death, as, because it was not new, it could not be terrible. When S. Paul was able to make that protestation, I protest by your rejoicing, which I have in Christ jesus our Lord, I die daily; 1 Cor. 15.31. 2 Cor. 11.23. And again, I am in prisons oft, and often in deaths, I die often; No Executioner could have told him, you must die to morrow, but he could have said, Alas I died yesterday, and yesterday was twelvemonth, and seven year, and every year, and month, and week, and day, and hour before that. There is nothing so near Immortality, as to die daily; for not to feel death, is Immortality; and only he shall never feel death, that is exercised in the continual Meditation thereof; Continual Mortification is Immortality. As Cordials lose their virtue and become no Cordials, if they be taken every day, so poisons do their venom too; If a man use himself to them, in small proportions at first, he may grow to take any quantity: He that takes a dram of Death to day, may take an ounce to morrow, and a pound after; He that gins with that mortification of denying himself his delights, (which is a dram of Death) shall be able to suffer the tribulations of this world, (which is a greater measure of death) and then Death itself, not only patiently, but cheerfully; And to such a man, death is not a dissolution, but a redintegration; not a divorce of body and soul, but a sending of both divers ways, (the soul upward to Heaven, the body downward to the earth) to an indissoluble marriage to him, who, for the salvation of both, assumed both, our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus. Psal. 2.17. Therefore does S. Paul say of himself, If I be offered upon the sacrifice, and service of your faith, I joy, and rejoice with you all, that is, It is a just occasion of our common joy, on your part, and on mine too; And therefore does S. Augustine say in his behalf, whatsoever can be threatened him, Si potest vivere, tolerabile est, Whatsoever does not take away life, may be endured; for, if it could not be endured, it would take away life; and, Si non potest vivere, says he, If it do take away life, what shall he feel, when he is dead? He adds the reason of all, Opus cum fine, merces sine fine; Death hath an end, but their reward that die for Christ, and their peace, that die in Christ, hath no end. Therefore was not S. Paul afraid of melancholic apprehensions, by drawing his death into contemplation, and into discourse; he was not afraid to think, nor to talk of his death; But then S. Paul had another end in doing so here, (which is our last consideration) To make the deeper impression in them, to whom he preached then, by telling them, that he knew they should see his face no more. This that S. Paul says, Moriturus. he says to the Ephesians; but not at Ephesus: He was departed from thence the year before: for, upon the news that Claudius the Emperor, who persecuted the Christians, was dead, he purposed to go by Jerusalem to Rome. In that peregrination and visitation of his, his way fell out after to be by Miletus, a place not far from Ephesus; Ver. 22. He was bound in the Spirit, as he says here, to go to jerusalem; and therefore he could not visit them at Ephesus. A man may have such obligations, even for the service of God upon him, as that it shall not be in his power, to do that service which he may owe, and desire to pay in some particular Church. It was in part S. Paul's case: Verse 17. But yet he did what he could; from Miletus he sent to Ephesus, to call the Elders of that Church thither; And then he preached this short, but powerful Sermon. And, as his manner ever was, (though still without prevaricating or forbearing to denounce the judgements of God upon them, in cases necessary) to make those whom he preached or writ to, as benevolent, and well-affected to him as he could, (for he was Omnia omnibus, Made all things to all men) to which purpose it is that he speaks, and pours out himself, Gal 4.14. with such a loving thankfulness to the Galatians, Ye received me as an Angel of God, even as Christ jesus himself; pursuing, I say, this manner of a mutual endearing, and a reciprocal emboweling of himself in the Congregation, and the Congregation in him, (as, certainly, if we consider all unions, (the natural union of Parents and children, the matrimonial union of Husband and Wife) no union is so spiritual, nor so near to that, by which we are made Idem spiritus cum Domino, The same Spirit with the Lord, as when a good Pastor, and a good flock meet, and are united in holy affections to one another) to unite himself to his Ephesians inseparably, even after his separation, to be still present with them, in his everlasting absence, and to live with them even after death, to make the deeper impressions of all his past, and present instructions, he speaks to them as a dying man, I know you shall see my face no more. Why did he so? S. Paul did not die in eleven years after this: But he died to them, for bodily presence, now; They were to see him no more. As the day of my death is the day of Judgement to me, so this day of his departing was the day of his death to them. And for himself, from this time, when he gave this judgement of death upon himself, all the rest of his life was but a leading far off, to the place of execution. For first, very soon after this, Agabus gave him notice of manifold afflictions, in that Girdle which we spoke of before. There he was bound, and imprisoned at Jerusalem; from thence sent bound to Caesarea; practised upon to be killed by the way; forced to appeal to Caesar; upon that Appeal sent prisoner to Rome; ship-wracked upon the way at Malta; Imprisoned under guard, though not close prisoner, two years after his coming thither; and, though dismissed, and so enabled to visit some Churches, yet laid hold upon again by Nero, and executed. So that as it was literally true, that the Ephesians never saw his face, after this valediction, so he may be said to have died then, in such a sense, as himself says to the Corinthians, 1 Cor. 15. That some men were baptised, Pro mortuis, for dead, that is, as good as dead, past all hope of recovery. So he died then. Now beloved, who hath seen a Father, or a friend, or a neighbour, or a malefactor die, Luke 16.30. and hath not been affected with his dying words? Nay Father Abraham, says Dives, that will not serve, That they have Moses and the Prophets; Sermons will not serve their turns; But if one went to them from the Dead, they would repent. And the nearest to this is, if one speak to them that is going to the dead. If he had been a minute in Heaven thou wouldst believe him; and wilt thou not believe him a minute before? Did not jacob observe the Angels ascending, as well as descending upon that ladder? Trust a good soul going to God, as well as coming from God? And then, as our Casuists say, That whatsoever a man is bound to do, In articulo mortis, at the point of death, by way of Confession or otherwise, he is bound to do, when he comes to the Sacrament, or when he undertakes any action of danger, because than he should prepare himself as if he were dying: so, when you come to hear us here, who are come from God, hear us with such an affection, as if we were going to God, as if you heard us upon our deathbeds. The Pulpit is more than our deathbed; for, we are bound to the same truth, and sincerity here, as if we were upon our deathbed, and then God's Ordinance is more expressly executed here, then there. He that mingles falsehood with his last dying words, deceives the world inexcusably, because he speaks in the person of an honest man, but he that mingles false informations in his preaching, does so much more, because he speaks in the person of God himself. They to whom S. Paul spoke there, are said all to have wept, and to have fallen on Paul's neck, and to have kissed him; But it is added, they sorrowed most of all for those words, That they should see his face no more. When any of those men, to whom for their holy calling, and their religious pains in their calling, you own and pay a reverence, are taken from you by death, or otherwise, there is a godly sorrow due to that, and in a great proportion. In the death of one Elisha, King joash apprehended a ruin of all; He wept over his face, 2 King. 13.14. and said, O my father, my father, the Chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof; He lost the solicitude of a father, he lost the power and strength of the Kingdom, in the loss of one such Prophet. But when you have so sorrowed for men, upon whom your devotion hath put, and justly put such a valuation, remember that a greater loss, than the loss of a thousand such men may fall upon you. Consider the difference between the Candle and the Candlestick, between the Preacher of the Gospel, and the Gospel itself; between a religious man, and Religion itself: The removing of the Candlestick, and the withdrawing of the Gospel, and the profaning of Religion, is infinitely a greaten loss, then if hundreds of the present labourers should be taken away from us. Mat. 8.12.21.43. Apoc. 2.5. The children of the kingdom may be cast into utter darkness; and That kingdom may be given to others which shall bring forth the fruits thereof; and, The Lord may come, and come quickly and remove our Candlestick out of his place; pray we that in our days he may not. And truly where God threatens to do so in the Revelation, it is upon a Church, of which God himself gives good testimony, The Church of Ephesus; of her Labours, that is, Preaching; Ver. 2. of her Patience, that is, suffering; of her Impatience, her not suffering the evil, that is, her integrity and impartiality, without connivance or toleration; And of her not fainting, that is, perseverance; and of her having the Nicolaitans, that is, sincerity in the truth, Ver. 6. and a holy animosity against all false Doctrines: And yet, says he, I have something to say against thee. When thou hast testified their assiduity in Preaching, their constancy in suffering, their sincerity in believing, their integrity in professing, their perseverance in continuing, their zeal in hating of all error in others, when thou thyself hast given this evidence in their behalf, canst thou Lord Jesus have any thing to say against them? what then shall we, we that fail in all these, look to hear from thee? what was their crime? Because they had left their first love; Left the fullness of their former zeal to God's cause. Now, if our case be so much worse than theirs, as that we are not only guilty of all those sins, of which Christ discharges them, and have not only left our first love, but in a manner lost all our love, all our zeal to his glory, and be come to a luke warmness in his service, and a general neglect of the means of grace, how justly may we fear, not only that he will come, and come quickly, but that he may possibly be upon his way already, to remove our Candlestick, and withdraw the Gospel from us? And if it be a sad thing to you, to hear a Paul, a holy man say, You shall see my face no more, on this side the Ite maledicti, Go ye accursed into hell fire, there cannot be so sad a voice, as to hear Christ Jesus say, You shall see my face no more. Fancies Dei est, qua Deus nobis innotescit, says S. Augustin, That is the face of God to us, by which God manifests himself to us. God manifests himself to us in the Word, and in the Sacraments. If we see not them in their true lines and colours, (the Word and Sacraments sincerely and religiously preached and administered) we do not see them, but masks upon them; And, if we do not see them, we do not see the face of Christ; And I could as well stand under his Nescio vos, which he said to the negligent Virgins, I know you not, or his Nescivi vos, which he said to those that boast of their works, Mat. 7.22. I never knew you, as under this fearful thunder from his mouth, You shall see my face no more, I will absolutely withdraw, or I will suffer profaneness to enter into those means of your salvation, Word, and Sacraments, which I have so long continued in their sincerity towards you, and you have so long abused. Blessed God say not so to us yet; yet let the tree grow another year, before thou cut it down; And as thou hast digged about it, by bringing judgements upon our neighbours, so water it with thy former rain, the dew of thy grace, and with thy later rain, the tears of our contrition, that we may still seethy face; here and hereafter; here, in thy kingdom of Grace; hereafter in thy kingdom of Glory, which thou hast purchased for us, with the inestimable price of thine incorruptible blood. Amen. SERM. XLVIII. Preached at S. Paul's in the Evening, Upon the day of S. PAUL'S Conversion. 1628. ACTS 28.6. They changed their minds, and said, That he was a God. THe scene, where this canonisation, this super-canonization, (for, it was not of a Saint, but of a God) was transacted, was the I'll of Malta: The person canonised, and proclaimed for a God, was S. Paul, at that time by shipwreck cast upon that Island. And having for some years heretofore continued that custom in this place, at this time of the year, when the Church celebrates the Conversion of S. Paul, (as it doth this day) to handle some part of his Story, pursuing that custom now, I chose that part, which is knit and wound up in this Text, Then they changed their minds, and said, He is a God. S. Paul found himself in danger of being oppressed in judgement, and thereby was put to a necessity of Appealing to Caesar: By virtue of that Appeal being sent to Rome, by Sea, he was surprised with such storms, as threatened inevitable ruin; But the Angel of God stood by him, and assured him, that none of those two hundred seaventy six persons, which were in the ship with him, should perish; According to this assurance, though the ship perished, all the passengers were saved, and recovered this land, Malta. Where being courteously received by the Inhabitants, though otherwise Barbarians, S. Paul doing so much for himself and for his company, as to gather a bundle of sticks to mend the fire, there flew a Viper from the heat, and fastened on his hand. They thereupon said among themselves, No doubt, this man is a murderer, whom, though he have escaped the Sea, yet Vengeance suffereth not to live. But when he shaked off the Viper into the fire, and received no harm, and they had looked, that he should have swollen, and fallen down dead suddenly, after they had looked a great while, and saw no harm come to him, Then (and then enters our Text) They changed their minds, and said, He is a God. Almighty God had bred up S. Paul so; so he had catechised him all the way, with vicissitudes, and revolutions from extreme to extreme. He had taught him how to want, and how to abound; how to bear honour, and dishonour: He permitted an Angel of Satan to buffet him, (so he gave him some sense of Hell) He gave him a Rapture, an Ecstasy; and in that, an appropinquation, an approximation to himself, and so some possession of Heaven in this life. So God proceeded with him here in Malta too; He passed him in their mouths from extreme to extreme; A Viper serses him, and they condemn him for a murderer; He shakes off the Viper; and they change their minds, and say, He is a God. The first words of our Text carry us necessarily so far back, Divisio. as to see from what they changed; And their periods are easily seen; Their Terminus à quo, and their Terminus ad quem, were these; first, that he was a Murderer, Then that he was a God. An error in Morality; They censure deeply upon light evidence: An error in Divinity; They transfer the Name and estimation of a God, upon an unknown Man. Place both the errors in Divinity; (so you may justly do) And then there is an error in Charity, a hasty and inconsiderate condemning; And an error in faith, a superstitious creating of an imaginary God. Now, upon these two general Considerations will this Exercise consist; first, that it is natural Logic, an argumentation naturally imprinted in Man, to argue, and conclude thus, Great calamities are inflicted, therefore God is greatly provoked; These men of Malta were but natural men, but Barbarians, (as S. Luke calls them) and yet they argue, and conclude so; Here is a judgement executed, therefore here is evidence, that God is displeased. And so far they kept within the limits of humanity and piety too; But when they descended hastily and inconsiderately, to particular, and personal applications, This judgement upon this man is an evidence of his guiltiness in this offence, than they transgressed the bounds of charity; That because a Viper had seized Paul's hand, Paul must needs be a murderer. And then when we shall have passed through those things, which belong to that first Consideration, which consists of these two Propositions, That to conclude so, God strikes, therefore he is angry, is natural, but hastily to apply this to the condemnation of particular persons, is uncharitable, we shall descend to our second Consideration, to see what they did, when they changed their minds, They said, He is a God. And, as in the former part, we shall have seen, That there is in man a natural Logic, but that strays into uncharitableness; So in this we shall see, That there is in man a natural Religion, but that strays into superstition and idolatry; Naturally man is so far from being devested of the knowledge and sense of God, from thinking that there is no God, as that he is apt to make more Gods than he should, and to worship them for Gods, whom he should not. These men of Malta were but Natural men, but Barbarians, (says S. Luke) yet they were so far from denying God, as that they multiplied Gods, and because the Viper did Paul no harm, they change their minds, and say, He is a God. And from these two general considerations, and these two branches in each, That there is in man a Natural Logic, but that strays into Fallacies; And a Natural Religion, but that strays into Idolatry, and Superstition, we shall derive, and deduce unto you, such things as we conceive most to conduce to your edification, from this knot, and summary abridgement of this Story, Then they changed their minds, and said, He is a God. First then for the first Proposition of our first part, That this is natural Logic, 1. Part. an argumentation imprinted in every man, God strikes, therefore God is angry, He, whom they that even hate his name, (our Adversaries of the Roman persuasion) do yet so far tacitly reverence, as that, though they will not name him, they will transfer, and insert his expositions of Scriptures, into their works, and pass them as their own, that as Calvin, He, Calvin, collects this proposition from this story, Passim receptum omnibus saeculis, In all ages, and in all places this hath ever been acknowledged by all men, That when God strikes, God is angry, And when God is angry, God strikes; and therefore, says he, Quoties occurrit memorabilis aliqua calamitas, simul in mentem veniat, as often as you see any extraordinary calamity, conclude that God hath been extraordinarily provoked, and hasten to those means, by which the anger and indignation of God may be appeased again. So that for this Doctrine, a man needs not be preached unto, a man needs not be catechised; A man needs not read the Fathers, nor the Counsels, nor the Schoolmen, nor the Ecclesiastical story, nor Summists, nor Casuists, nor Canonists, no nor the Bible itself for this Doctrine; for this Doctrine, That when God strikes he is angry, and when he is angry he strikes, the natural man hath as full a Library in his bosom, as the Christian. We, we that are Christians have one Author of ours, that tells us, Vindicta mihi, Deut. 32.35. Revenge is mine, saith the Lord; Moses tells us so; And in that, we have a first and a second Lesson; First, that since Revenge is in God's hands, it will certainly fall upon the Malefactor, God does not mistake his mark; And then, since Revenge is in his hands, no man must take Revenge out of his hands, or make himself his own Magistrate, or revenge his own quarrel. And as we, we that are Christians, have our Author, Moses, that tells us this, the natural man hath his secular Author, Theocritus, that tells him as much, Reperit Deus nocentes, God always finds out the guilty man. In which, the natural man hath also a first, and a second Lesson too; First, that since God finds out the Malefactor, he never escapes; And then, since God does find him at last, God sought him all the while; Though God strike late, yet he pursued him long before; and many a man feels the sting in his conscience, long before he feels the blow in his body. That God finds, and therefore seeks, That God overtakes, and therefore pursues, That God overthrows, and therefore resists the wicked, is a Natural conclusion as well as a Divine. The same Author of ours, Deut. 10.17. Moses, tells us, The Lord our God is Lord of Lords, and God of gods, and regardeth no man's person. The natural man hath his Author too, that tells him, Semper Virgins Furiae, The Furies, (they whom they conceive to execute Revenge upon Malefactors) are always Virgins, that is, not to be corrupted by any solicitations. That no dignity shelters a man from the justice of God, is a natural conclusion, as well as a Divine. Psal. 55.23. We have a sweet Singer of Israel that tells us, Non dimidiabit dies, The bloody and deceitful man shall not live out half his days: And the natural man hath his sweet singer too, a learned Poet that tells him, that seldom any enormous Malefactor enjoys siccam mortem, (as he calls it) a dry, an un-bloody death. That blood requires blood, is a natural conclusion, as well as a Divine. Our sweet Singer tells us again, That if he fly to the farthest ends of the earth, or to the sea, or to heaven, or to hell, he shall find God there; And the natural man hath his Author, that tells him, Qui fugit, non effugit, He that runs away from God, does not scape God. That there is no sanctuary, no privileged place against which Gods Quo Warranto does not lie, is a natural conclusion, as well as a divine; Sanguis Abel, is our Proverb, That Abel's blood cries for revenge, And sanguis Aesopi is the natural man's Proverb, That Esop's blood cries for revenge; for Esop's blood was shed upon an indignation taken at sacrifice, as Abel's was. S. Paul's Deus Remunerator, That there is a God, and that that God is a just rewarder of men's actions, is a natural conclusion, as well as a Divine. When God speaks to us, us that are Christians, in the Scriptures, he speaks as in a Primitive, and Original language; when he speaks to the natural man, by the light of nature, though speak as in a translation into another language, yet he speaks the same thing; Every where he offers us this knowledge, That where he strikes, he is angry, and where he is angry, he does strike. Therefore Calvin might, as he doth, safely and piously establish his Quoties occurrit, As often as you see an extraordinary calamity, conclude that God is extraordinarily provoked: And he might as safely have established more than that, That wheresoever God is angry, and in that anger strikes, God sees sin before; No punishment from God, where there is no sin. God may have glory in the condemnation of man; but except that man were a sinful man, God could have no glory in his condemnation. Dan. 9.23. At the beginning of thy prayer, the commandment went out, says Gabriel to Daniel; But till Danicl prayed, there went out no commandment. At the beginning of the sinner's sin, God bends his bow, and whets his arrows, and at last he shoots; But if there were no sin in me, God had no mark to shoot at; for God hates not me, nor any thing that he hath made. And farther we carry not your consideration upon this first branch of our first Part, Naturally man hath this Logic, to conclude, where God strikes, God is angry; when God is angry, he will strike: But God never strikes in such anger, but with relation to sin. These men of Malta, natural men, did so, and erred not in so doing; They erred when they came to particulars, to hasty and inconsiderate applications, for that is uncharitableness, and constitutes our second branch of this part. When one of the Consuls of Rome, Charitas. Caninius, died the same day that he was made Consul, Cicero would needs pass a jest upon that accident, and say, The State had had a vigilant Conful of Caninius, a watchful Consul, because he never slept in all his Consulship; for he died before he went to bed. But this was justly thought a fault in Cicero, for calamities are not the subject of jests; They are not so casual things. But yet, though they come from a sure hand, they are not always evidences of God's displeasure upon that man upon whom they fall. That was the issue between job and his friends; They relied upon that, job 4.7. pursued that which they had laid down, Remember, who ever perished being innocent, or where were the righteous cut off? job relied upon that, pursued that which he had laid down; If I justify myself, mine own words shall condemn me; job 9.20. (selfe-justification is a selfe-condemnation) If I say I am perfect, that also shall prove me perverse, says job. (No man is so far from purity and perfection, as he that thinks himself perfect and pure) But yet, says he there, Though I were perfect, this is one thing, and therefore I say it, God destroyeth the perfect and the wicked. God's outward proceeding with a man in this world, is no evidence to another, what he intends him in the next. In no case? In no case, (on this side of Revelation) for the world to come. Till I be a Judge of that man's person and actions, and being his Judge have clear evidence, and be not misled by rumours from others, by passion, and prejudices in myself, I must pass no judgement upon him, in this world, nor say, This fell upon him for this crime. But whatsoever my capacity be, or whatsoever the Evidence, I must suspend my judgement for the world to come. Therefore says the Apostle, judge nothing before the time: 1 Cor. 4.5. When is the time? When I am made Judge, and when I have clear evidence, then is the time to pass my judgement for this world; But for a final condemnation in the world to come, the Apostle expresses himself fully in that place, judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and manifest the counsels of the heart. It was a wise and a pious counsel that Gamaliel gave that State, Abstinete, Acts 5.33. forbear a while, give God sea-room, give him his latitude, and you may find, that you mistook at first; for God hath divers ends in inflicting calamities, and he that judges hastily, may soon mistake God's purpose. It is a remarkable expressing which the holy Ghost hath put into the mouth of Naomi, Call not me Naomi, says she there; Naomi is lovely, Ruth 1.10. and loving, and beloved; But call me Mara, says she, Mara is bitterness: But why so? For, says she, The Almighty hath dealt very bitterly with me: Bitterly, and very bitterly. But yet so he hath with many that he loves full well. It is true, says Naomi, but there is more in my case then so; The Almighty hath afflicted me, and the Lord hath testified against me; Testified, there is my misery; that is, done enough, given evidence enough for others to believe, and to ground a judgement upon it, that he hath abandoned me utterly, forsaken me for ever. Yet God meant well to Naomi for all this Testification, and howsoever others might misinterpret Gods proceeding with her. That Ostracism which was practised amongst the Athenians, and that Petalisme which was practised amongst the Syracusians, by which Laws, the most eminent, and excellent persons in those States were banished, not for any crime imputed to them, nor for any popular practices set on foot by them, but to conserve a parity, and equality in that State, this Ostracism, this Petalisme was not without good use in those governments. If God will lay heaviest calamities upon the best men, If God will exercise an Ostracism, a Petalisme in his state, who shall search into his Arcana imperii, into the secrets of his government? who shall ask a reason of his actions? who shall doubt of a good end in all his ways? Our Saviour Christ hath shut up that way of rash judgement upon such occasions, Luke 13.2. when he says, Suppose ye, that those Galileans whom Herod slew, or those eighteen whom the fall of the Tower of Siloe slew, were greater sinners than the rest? It is not safely, it is not charitably concluded. And therefore he carries their thoughts, as far on the other side, That he that suffered a calamity, was not only not the greatest, but no sinner; for so Christ says, john 9.3. Neither hath this man sinned, nor his parents; (speaking of the man that was born blind.) Not that he, or his Parents had not sinned; but that that calamity was not laid upon him, in contemplation of any sin, but only for an occasion of the manifestation of Christ's Divinity, in the miraculous recovery of that blind man. Therefore says Luther excellently, and elegantly, Non judicandum de cruse, secundùm praedicamentum Quantitatis, sed Relationis; We must not judge of a calamity, by the predicament of Quantity, How great that calamity is, but by the predicament of Relation, to what God refers that calamity, and what he intends in it; For, Deus ultionum Deus, Psal. 93.1. (as S. Hierome reads that place) God is the God of revenge, And, Deus ultionum liberè agit, This God of revenge, revenges at his own liberty, when, and where, and how it pleases him. And therefore, as we are bound to make good constructions of those corrections that God lays upon us, so are we to make good interpretations of those judgements which he casts upon others. First, for ourselves, that which is said in S. Matthew, Mat. 24.30. That at the day of judgement shall appear in heaven, the sign of the Son of Man, is frequently, ordinarily received by the Fathers, to be intended of the Cross; That before Christ himself appear, his sign, the Cross shall appear in the clouds. Now, this is not literally so, in the Text, nor is it necessarily deduced, but ordinarily by the Ancients it is so accepted, and though the sign of the Son of Man, may be some other thing, yet of this sign, the Cross, there may be this good application, That when God affords thee, this manifestation of his Cross, in the participation of those crosses and calamities that he suffered here, when thou hast this sign of the Son of Man upon thee, conclude to thyself that the Son of Man Christ Jesus is coming towards thee; and as thou hast the sign; thou shalt have the substance, as thou hast his Cross, thou shalt have his Glory. For, this is that which the Apostle intends; Phil. 1.29. Unto you it is given, (not laid upon you as a punishment, but given you as a benefit) not only to believe in Christ, but to suffer for Christ. Where, the Apostle seems to make our crosses a kind of assurance, as well as our faith; for so he argues, Not only to believe, but to suffer; for, howsoever faith be a full evidence, yet our suffering is a new seal even upon that faith. And an evident seal, a conspicuous, a glorious seal. Cyprian. Quid gloriosius, quam Collegam Christi in passione factum fuisse? What can be more glorious, then to have been made a Colleague, a partner with Christ in his sufferings, and to have fulfilled his sufferings in my flesh. For that is the highest degree, which we can take in Christ's school, as S. Denys the Areopagite expresses it, A Deo doctus, non solùm divina discit, sed divina patitur, (which we may well translate, or accommodate thus) He that is throughly taught by Christ, does not only believe all that Christ says, but conforms him to all that Christ did, and is ready to suffer as Christ suffered. Truly, if it were possible to fear any defect of joy in heaven, all that could fall into my fear would be but this, that in heaven I can no longer express my love by suffering for my God, for my Saviour. A greater joy cannot enter into my heart then this, To suffer for him that suffered for me. As God saw that way prosper in the hands of Absalon, 2 Sam. 14.30. he sent for joab, and joab came not, he came not when he sent a second time, but when he sent Messengers to burn up his corn, than joab came, and then he time, but when he sent Messengers to burn up his corn, than joab came, and then he complied with Absalon, and seconded and accomplished his desires: So God calls us in his own outward Ordinances, and, a second time in his temporal blessings, and we come not; but we come the sooner, if he burn our Corn, if he draw us by afflicting us. Now, as we are able to argue thus in our own cases, and in our own behalves, as when a vehement calamity lies upon me, I can plead out of God's precedents, and out of his method be able to say, 2 Sam. 5.4. This will not last: David was not ten years in banishment, but he enjoyed the Kingdom forty: God will recompense my hours of sorrow, with days of joy; If the calamity be both vehement and long, yet I can say with his blessed servant Augustine; Et cum blandiris pater es, & pater es cum caedis, I feel the hand of a father upon me when thou strokest me, and when thou strikest me I feel the hand of a father too, Blandiris ne deficiam, caedis ne peream, I know thy meaning when thou strokest me, it is, lest I should faint under thy hand, and I know thy meaning when thou strikest me, it is, lest I should not know thy hand; If the weight, and continuation of this calamity testify against me, (as Naomi said) that is, give others occasion to think, and to speak ill of me, as of a man, for some secret sins, forsaken of God, still Nazianzens' refuge is my refuge, Hoc mihi commentor, This is my meditation, Si falsa objicit convitiator, non me attingit, If that which mine enemy says of me, be false, it concerns not me, he cannot mean me, It is not I that he speaks of, I am no such man; And then, Si vera dicit, If that which he says betrue, it begun not to be true, then when he said it, but was true when I did it; and therefore I must blame myself for doing, not him for speaking it; If I can argue thus in mine own case, and in mine own behalf, and not suspect God's absence from me, because he lays calamities upon me, let me be also as charitable towards another, and not conclude ill, upon ill accidents; for there is nothing so ill, out of which, God, and a godly man cannot draw good. When john Hus was at the stake to be burnt, his eye fixed upon a poor plain Country-fellow, whom he observed to be busier than the rest, and to run oftener, to fetch more and more faggots, to burn him, and he said thereupon no more but this, O sancta simplicitas! O holy simplicity! He meant that that man, being then under an invincible ignorance, misled by that zeal, thought he did God service in burning him. But such an interpretation will hardly be appliable to any of these hasty and inconsiderate Judges of other men, that give way to their own passion; for zeal, and uncharitableness are incompatible things; zeal and uncharitableness cannot consist together: and there was evident uncharitableness in these men of Maltas proceeding, when, because the Viper seized his hand, they condemned him for a murderer. It is true, they saw a concurrence of circumstances, and that is always more weighty, then single evidence. They saw a man who had been near drowning; yet he scaped that. They saw he had gathered a bundle of sticks, in which the Viper was enwrapped, and yet did him no harm when it was in his hand; He scaped that. And then they saw that Viper dart itself out of the fire again, and of all the company fasten upon that man. What should they think of that man? In God's Name, what they would, to the advancement of God's glory. They might justly have thought that God was working upon that man, and had some great work to do upon that man. We put no stop to zeal; we only tell you, where zeal determines; where uncharitableness enters, zeal goes out, and passion counterfeits that zeal. God seeks no glory out of the uncharitable condemning of another man. And then, in this proceeding of these men, we justly note the slipperiness, the precipitation, the bottomelesnesse of uncharitableness, in judgement; they could consist no where, till they charged him with murder, Surely he is a murderer. Many crimes there were, and those capital, and such as would have indueed death, on this side of murder, but they stopped at none, till they came to the worst. And truly it is easy to be observed, in the ways of this world, that when men have once conceived an uncharitable opinion against another man, they are apt to believe from others, apt to imagine in themselves any kind of ill, of that man; Sometimes so much, and so falsely, as makes even that which is true, the less credible. For, when passionate men will load a man with all, sad and equitable men begin to doubt whether any be true; and a Malefactor escapes sometimes by being overcharged. But I move not out of mine own sphere; my sphere is your edification, upon this centre, The proceeding of these men of Malta with S. Paul; upon them, and upon you I look directly, and I look only, without any glance, any reflection upon any other object. And therefore having said enough of those two Branches which constitute our first Part, That to argue out of God's judgements, his displeasure is natural, but then that natural Logic should determine in the zeal of advancing God's glory, and not stray into an uncharitable condemning of particular persons, because in this uncharitableness there is such a slipperiness, such a precipitation, such a bottomelesnesse, as that these hasty censurers could stop no where till they came to the highest charge; having said enough of this, we pass, in our order, to our second Part, to that which they did, when they changed their minds, They changed their minds, and said he was a God. In this second part we consider first, 2 Part. the incongruity of depending upon any thing in this world; for, all will change. Men have considered usefully the incongruity of building the tower of Babel, in this, That to have erected a Tower that should have carried that height that they intended in that, the whole body of the earth, the whole Globe, and substance thereof would not have served for a basis, for a foundation to that Tower. If all the timber of all the forests in the world, all the quarries of stones, all the mines of Lead and Iron had been laid together, nay if all the earth and sea had been petrified, and made one stone, all would not have served for a basis, for a foundation of that Tower; from whence then must they have had their materials for all the superedifications? So to establish a trust, a confidence, such an acquiescence as a man may rely upon, all this world affords not a basis, a foundation; for every thing in this world is fluid, and transitory, and sandy, and all dependence, all assurance built upon this world, is but a building upon sand; all will change. It is true, that a fair reputation, a good opinion of men, is, though not a foundation to build upon, yet a fair stone in the building, and such a stone, as every man is bound to provide himself of. For, for the most part, most men are such, as most men take them to be; Neminem omnes, nemo omnes fefellit; All the world never joined to deceive one man, nor was ever any one man able to deceive all the world. Contemptu famae contemnuntur & virtutes, was so well said by Tacitus, as it is pity S. Augustine said it not, They that neglect the good opinion of others, neglect those virtues that should produce that good opinion. Therefore S. Hierom protests to abhor that Paratum de trivio, as he calls it, that vulgar, that street, that dunghill language, Satis mihi, as long as mine own conscience reproaches me of nothing, I care not what all the world says. We must care what the world says, and study that they may say well of us. But when they do, though this be a fair stone in the wall, it is no foundation to build upon, for, They change their minds. Who do? Populus. our text does not tell us who; The story does not tell us, of what quality and condition these men of Malta were, who are here said to have changed their minds. Likeliest they are to have been of the vulgar, the ordinary, the inferior sort of people, because they are likeliest to have flocked and gathered together upon this occasion of Paul's shipwreck upon that Island. And that kind of people are always justly thought to be most subject to this levity, To change their minds. The greatest Poet lays the greatest levity and change that can be laid, to this kind of people; that is, In contraria, That they change even from one extreme to another; Scinditur incertum studia in contraria vulgus Where that Poet does not only mean, that the people will be of divers opinions from one another, for, for the most part they are not so; for the most part they think, and wish, and love, and hate together; and they do all by example, as others do, and upon no other reason, but therefore, because others do. Neither was that Poet ever bound up by his words, that he should say In contraria, because a milder, or more modified word would not stand in his verse; but he said it, because it is really true, The people will change into contrary opinions; And whereas an Angel itself cannot pass from East to West, from extreme to extreme, without touching upon the way between, the people will pass from extreme to extreme, without any middle opinion; last minute's murderer, is this minute's God, and in an instant, Paul, whom they sent to be judged in hell, Prov. 14.28. is made a judge in heaven. The people will change. In the multitude of people is the King's honour; 2 Sam. 24.3. And therefore joab made that prayer in the behalf of David, The Lord thy God add unto thy people, how many soever they be, a hundred fold. But when David came to number his people with a confidence in their number, God took away the ground of that confidence, and lessened their number seventy thousand in three days. Therefore as David could say, Psal. 3.6. I will not be afraid of ten thousand men, so he should say, I will not confide in ten thousand men, though multiplied by millions; for they will change, and at such an ebb, the popular man will lie, as a Whale upon the sands deserted by the tide. We find in the Roman story, many examples (particularly in Commodus his time, upon Cleander, principal Gentleman of his Chamber) of severe executions upon men that have courted the people, though in a way of charity, and giving them corn in a time of dearth, or upon like occasions. There is danger in getting them, occasioned by jealousy of others, there is difficulty in holding them, by occasion of levity in themselves; Therefore we must say with the Prophet, jer. 17.5. Cursed be the man, that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord. For, They, the people, will change their minds. But yet there is nothing in our text, Principes. that binds us to fix this levity upon the people only. The text does not say, That there was none of the Princes of the People, no Commanders, no Magistrates present at this accident, and partners in this levity. Neither is it likely, but that in such a place as Malta, an Island, some persons of quality and command resided about the coast, to receive and to give intelligence, and directions upon all emergent occasions of danger, and that some such were present at this accident, and gave their voice both ways, in the exclamation, and in the acclamation, That he was a murderer, and that he was a God. For, They will change their minds; All, High as well as low, will change. A good Statesman Polybius says, That the people are naturally as the Sea; naturally smooth, and calm, and still, and even; but then naturally apt to be moved by influences of Superior bodies; and so the people apt to change by them who have a power over their affections, or a power over their wills. So says he, the Sea is apt to be moved by storms and tempests; and so, the people apt to change with rumours and windy reports. So, the Sea is moved, So the people are changed, says Polybius. But Polybius might have carried his politic consideration higher than the Sea, to the Air too; and applied it higher than to the people, to greater persons; for the Air is shaked and transported with vapours and exhalations, as much as the sea with winds and storms; and great men as much changed with ambitions in themselves, and flatteries from others, as inferior people with influences, and impressions from them. All change their minds; Mal. 3.6. High, as well as low will change. But I am the Lord; I change not. I, and only I have that immunity, Immutability; And therefore, says God there, ye sons of jacob are not consumed; Therefore, because I, I who cannot change have loved you; for they, who depend upon their love, who can change, are in a woeful condition. And that involves all; all can, all will, all do change, high and low. Therefore, It is better to trust in the Lord, then to put confidence in man. What man? Psal. 118.8. Ver. 9 Psal. 146.3. Any man. It is better to trust in the Lord, then to put confidence in Princes. Which David thought worth the repeating; for he says it again, Put not your trust in Princes. Not that you may not trust their royal words, and gracious promises to you; not that you may not trust their Counsels, and executions of those Counsels, and the distribution of your contributions for those executions; not that you may not trust the managing of affairs of State in their hands, without jealous inquifitions, or suspicious misinterpretations of their actions. In these you must trust Princes, and those great persons whom Princes trust; But when these great persons are in the balance with God, there they weigh as little, as less men. Nay, as David hath ranked and disposed them, less; for thus he conveys that consideration, Surely men of low degree are vanity; that is sure enough; Psal. 62.5. there is little doubt of that; men of low degree can profit us nothing; they cannot pretend or promise to do us good; But than says David there, Men of high degree are a lie; They pretend a power, and a purpose to do us good, and then disappoint us. Many times men cannot, many times men will not; neither can we find in any but God himself, a constant power, and a constant will, upon which we may rely: The men of Malta, of what rank soever they were, did; all men, low and high, will change their minds. Neither have these men of Malta (consider them in what quality you will) so much honour afforded them, in the Original, as our translation hath given them. We say, they changed their minds; the Original says only this, they changed, and no more. Alas, they, we, men of this world, worms of this dunghill, whether Basilisks or blind worms, whether Scarabs or Silkworms, whether high or low in the world, have no minds to change. The Platonique Philosophers did not only acknowledge Animan in homine, a soul in man, but Mentem in anima, a mind in the soul of man. They meant by the mind, the superior faculties of the soul, and we never come to exercise them. Men and women call one another inconstant, and accuse one another of having changed their minds, when, God knows, they have but changed the object of their eye, and seen a better white or red. An old man loves not the same sports that he did when he was young, nor a sick man the same meats that he did when he was well: But these men have not changed their minds; The old man hath changed his fancy, and the sick man his taste; neither his mind. The Mind implies consideration, deliberation, conclusion upon premises; and we never come to that; we never put the soul home; we never bend the soul up to her height; we never put her to a trial what she is able to do towards discerning a tentation, what towards resisting a tentation, what towards repenting a tentation; we never put her to trial what she is able to do by her natural faculties, whether by them she cannot be as good as a Plato, or a Socrates, who had no more but those natural faculties; what by virtue of God's general grace, which is that providence, in which he enwraps all his creatures, whether by that she cannot know her God, as well as the Ox knows his Crib, and the Stork her nest; what by virtue of those particular graces, which God offers her in his private inspirations at home, and in his public Ordinances here, whether by those she cannot be as good an hour hence, as she is now; and as good a day after, as that day that she receives the Sacrament; we never put the soul home, we never bend the soul up to her height; and the extent of the soul is this mind. When David speaks of the people, he says, They imagine a vain thing; It goes no farther, Psal. 2.2. then to the fancy, to the imagination; it never comes so near the mind, as Consideration, Reflection, Examination, they only imagine, fancy a vain thing, which is but a waking dream, for the fancy is the seat, the scene, the theatre of dreams. When David speaks there of greater persons, he carries it farther than so, but yet not to the mind; The Rulers take counsel, says David; but not of the mind, not of rectified and religious reason; but, They take counsel together, says he; that is, of one another; They sit still and hearken what the rest will do, and they will do accordingly. Now, this is but a Herding, it is not an Union; This is for the most part, a following of affections, and passions, which are the inferior servants of the soul, and not of that, which we understand here by the Mind, The deliberate resolutions, and executions of the superior faculties thereof. They changed, says our Text; not their minds; there is no evidence, no appearance, that they exercised any, that they had any; but they changed their passions. Nay, they have not so much honour, as that afforded them, in the Original; for it is not They changed, but They were changed, passively; Men subject to the transportation of passion, do nothing of themselves, but are merely passive; And being possessed with a spirit of fear, or a spirit of ambition, as those spirits move them, in a minute their yea is nay, their smile is a frown, their light is darkness, their good is evil, their Murderer is a God. These men of Malta changed, not their minds, but their passions, and so did not change advisedly, but passionately were changed, and in that distemper, they said, He is a God. In this hasty acclamation of theirs, Deus. He is a God, we are come to that which was our principal intention in this part, That as man hath in him a natural Logic, but that strays into Fallacies, in uncharitable judgements, so man hath in him a natural Religion, but that strays into idolatry, and superstition. The men of Malta were but mere natural men, and yet were so far from denying God, as that they multiplied Gods to themselves. The soul of man brings with it, into the body, a sense and an acknowledgement of God; neither can all the abuses that the body puts upon the soul, whilst they dwell together, (which are infinite) divest that acknowledgement, or extinguish that sense of God in the soul. And therefore by what several names soever the old heathen Philosophers called their gods, still they meant all the same God. Chrysippus presented God to the world, in the notion and apprehension of Divina Necessitas, That a certain divine necessity which lay upon every thing, that every thing must necessarily be thus and thus done, that that Necessity was God; and this, others have called by another name, Destiny. Zeno presented God to the world, in the notion and apprehension of Divina lex; That it was not a constraint, a necessity, but a Divine law, an ordinance, and settled course for the administration of all things; And this law was Zenoes' God; and this, others have called by another name, Nature. The brahmin's, which are the Priests in the East, they present God, in the notion and apprehension of Divina lux, That light is God; in which, they express themselves, not to mean the fire, (which some natural men worshipped for God) nor the Sun, (which was worshipped by more) but by their light, they mean that light, by which man is enabled to see into the next world; and this we may well call by a better Name, for it is Grace. But still Chrysippus by his Divine Necessity, which is Destiny, and Zeno by his Divine law, which is Nature, and the brahmin's by their Divine light, which is Grace, (though they make the operations of God, God) yet they all intent in those divers names, the same power. The natural man knows God. But then, to the natural man, who is not only finite, and determined in a compass, but narrow in his compass, not only not bottomless, but shallow in his comprehensions, to this natural, this smite, and narrow, and shallow man, no burden is so insupportable, no consideration so inextrieable, no secret so inscrutable, no conception so incredible, as to conceive One infinite God, that should do all things alone, without any more Gods. That that power that establishes counsels, that things may be carried in a constancy, and yet permits Contingencies, that things shall fall out casually, That the God of Certainty, and the God of Contingency should be all one God, That that God that settles peace, should yet make wars, and in the day of battle, should be both upon that side that does, and that side that is overcome, That the conquered God, and the victorious God, should be both one God, That that God who is all goodness in himself, should yet have his hand in every ill action, this the natural man cannot digest, not comprehend. And therefore the natural man eases himself, and thinks he cases God, by dividing the burden, and laying his particular necessities upon particular Gods. Hence came those enormous multiplications of Gods; Hesiods thirty thousand Gods; and three hundred jupiters'. Hence came it that they brought their children into the world under one God, and then put them to nurse, and then to school, and then to occupations and professions under other several Gods. Hence came their Vagitanus, a God that must take care that children do not burst with crying; and their Fabulanus, a God that must take care, that children do not stammer in speaking; Hence came their Statelinus, and their Potinus, a God that must teach them to go, and a God that must teach them to drink. So far, as that they came to make Febrem Deam, To erect Temples and Altars to diseases, to age, to death itself; and so, all those punishments, which our true God laid upon man for sin, all our infirmities they made Gods. So far is the natural man from denying God, as that he thus multiplies them. But yet never did these natural men, the Gentiles ascribe so much to their Gods, (except some very few of them) as they of the Roman persuasion may seem to do to their Saints. For they limited their devotions, and sacrifices, and supplications, in some certain and determined things, and those, for the most part, in this world; but in the Roman Church, they all ask all of all, for they ask even things pertaining to the next world. And as they make their Saints verier Gods than the Gentiles do theirs, in ask greater things at their hands, so have they more of them. For, if there be not yet more Saints celebrated by Name, then will make up Hesiods thirty thousand, yet they have more, in this respect, that of Hesiods thirty thousand, one Nation worshipped one, another another thousand; In the Roman Church, all worship all. And howsoever it be for the number, yet, saith one, we may live to see the number of Hesiods thirty thousand equalled, and exceeded; for, if the Jesuit, who have got two of their Order into the Consistory, (they have had two Cardinals) and two of their Order into heaven, (they have had two Saints Canonised) if they could get one of their Order into the Chair, one Pope; As we read of one General that knighted his whole Army at once; so such a Pope may Canonize his whole Order, and then Hesiods thirty thousand would be literally fulfilled. And, that, as we have done, in the multiplication of their gods, so, in their superstition to their created gods, we may also observe a congruity, a conformity, a concurrence between the Heathen and the Roman Religion; As the Heathen east such an intimidation, such an infatuation, not only upon the people, but upon the Princes too, as that in the Story of the Egyptian Kings we find, that whensoever any of their Priests signified unto any of their Kings, that it was the pleasure of his God, that he should leave that kingdom, and come up to him, that King did always without any contradiction, any hesitation, kill himself; so are they come so near to this in the Roman Church, as that, though they cannot infatuate such Princes, as they are weary of to kill themselves, yet when they are weary of Princes, they can infatuate other men, to those assassinats, of which our neighbour kingdom hath felt the blow more than once, and we the offer, and the plotting more than many times. That that I drive to, in this consideration, is this, That since man is naturally apt to multiply Gods to himself, we do with all Christian diligence shut up ourselves in the belief and worship of our one and only God; without admitting any more Mediators, or Intercessors, or Advocates, in any of those Modifications or Distinctions, with which the later men have painted and disguized the Religion of Rome, to make them the more passable, and without making any one step towards meeting them, in their superstitious errors, but adhere entirely to our only Advocate, and Mediator, and Intercessor Christ Jesus; for he does no more need an Assistant, in any of those offices, then in his office of Redeemer, or Saviour; and therefore, as they require no fellow Redeemer, no fellow-Saviour, so neither let us admit any fellow-Advocate, fellow-Mediator, fellow-Intercessor in heaven. For why may not that reason hold all the year, which they assign in the Roman Church, for their forbearance of prayers to any Saint, upon certain days? Upon Good-Fryday, and Easter-day, and Whit sunday, say they, we must not pray to any Saint, no not to the blessed Virgin, Quia Christus, & Spiritus Sanctus, sunt tune temporis, supremi, & unici Advocati. Because upon those days, Christ, and the Holy Ghost, are our principal, nay upon those days, our only Advocares. Garantus in Rubr. Missal. par. 1. Tit. 9 §. 8. And are Christ, and the Holy Ghost out of office a week after Easter, or after Whitsuntide? Since man is naturally apt to multiply Gods, let us be Christianly diligent, to conclude ourselves in One. And then, since man is also naturally apt to stray into a superstitious worship of God, let us be Christianly diligent, to preclude all ways, that may lead us into that tentation, or incline us towards superstition. In which, I do not intent, that we should decline all such things, as had been superstitiously abused, in a superstitious Church; But, in all such things, as being in their own nature indifferent, are, by a just commandment of lawful authority, become more than indifferent (necessary) to us, though not Necessitate medii, yet Necessitate praecepti, (for, though salvation consist not in Ceremonies, Obedience doth, and salvation consists much in Obedience) That in all such things, we always inform ourselves, of the right use of those things in their first institution, of their abuse with which they have been depraved in the Roman Church, and of the good use which is made of them in ours. That because pictures have been adored, we do not abhor a picture; Nor sit at the Sacrament, because Idolatry hath been committed in kneeling. That Church, which they call Lutheran, hath retained more of these Ceremonies, than ours hath done; And ours more than that which they call Calvinist; But both the Lutheran, and ours, without danger, because, in both places, we are diligent to preach to the people the right use of these indifferent things. For this is a true way of shutting out superstition, Not always to abolish the thing itself, because in the right use thereof, the spiritual profit, and edification may exceed the danger, but by preaching, and all convenient ways of instruction, to deliver people out of that ignorance, which possesses people in the Roman captivity. From which natural inclination of man, Atheista. we raise this, by way of conclusion of all, That since man is naturally apt to multiply Gods to himself, and naturally apt to worship his Gods superstitiously, since there is a proneness to many Gods, and to superstition, in nature, There cannot be so unnatural a thing, no such Monster in nature, or against nature, as an Atheist, that believes not God. For, when we, we that are Christians, have reproached this Atheist, thus fare, our way, Canst not thou believe one God? such a debility, such a nullity in thy faith, as not to believe one God? we require no more, and canst thou not do that, not one? when we, we that are Christians, have reproached him so fare, The natural man of whose company he will pretend to be, will reproach him so much farther, as to say, Canst not thou believe one God? We, we who proceed by the same light that thou dost, believe a thousand. So that the natural man is as ready, readier than the Christian, to excommunicate the Atheist; For, the Atheist that denies all Gods, does much more oppose the natural man, that believes a thousand, than the Christian, that believes but one. Poor intricated soul! Riddling, perplexed, labyrinthicall soul! Thou couldst not say, that thou believest not in God, if there were no God; Thou couldst not believe in God, if there were no God; If there were no God, thou couldst not speak, thou couldst not think, not a word, not a thought, no not against God; Thou couldst not blaspheme the Name of God, thou couldst not swear, if there were no God: For, all thy faculties, how ever depraved, and perverted by thee, are from him; and except thou canst seriously believe, that thou art nothing, thou canst not believe that there is no God. If I should ask thee at a Tragedy, where thou shouldest see him that had drawn blood, lie weltering, and surrounded in his own blood, Is there a God now? If thou couldst answer me, No, These are but Inventions, and Representations of men, and I believe a God never the more for this; If I should ask thee at a Sermon, where thou shouldest hear the Judgements of God formerly denounced, and executed, re-denounced, and applied to present occasions, Is there a God now? If thou couldst answer me, No, These are but Inventions of State, to supple and regulate Congregations, and keep people in order, and I believe a God never the more for this; Be as confident as thou canst, in company; for company is the Atheists Sanctuary; I respite thee not till the day of Judgement, when I may see thee upon thy knees, upon thy face, begging of the hills, that they would fall down and cover thee from the fierce wrath of God, to ask thee then, Is there a God now? I respite thee not till the day of thine own death, when thou shalt have evidence enough, that there is a God, though no other evidence, but to find a Devil, and evidence enough, that there is a Heaven, though no other evidence, but to feel Hell; To ask thee then, Is there a God now? I respite thee but a few hours, but six hours, but till midnight. Wake then; and then dark, and alone, Hear God ask thee then, remember that I asked thee now, Is there a God? and if thou darest, say No. And then, as there is an universal Atheist, an Atheist over all the world, that believes no God, so is he also an Atheist, over all the Christian world, that believes not Christ. That which the Apostle says to the Ephesians; Absque Christo, absque Deo, As long as you were without Christ, you were without God, is spoken (at least) to all that have heard Christ preached; not to believe God, so, as God hath exhibited, and manifested himself, in his Son Christ Jesus, is, in S. Paul's acceptation of that word, Atheism: and S. Paul, and he that speaks in S. Paul, is too good a Grammarian, too great a Critic for thee to dispute against. And then, as there is an universal Atheist, he that denies God, And a more particular Atheist, he that denies Christ; so in a narrower, and yet large sense of the word, there is an actual Atheist, a practical Atheist, who though he do pretend to make God, and God in Christ the object of his faith, yet does not make Christ, and Christ in the holy Ghost, that is, Christ working in the Ordinances of his Church, the rule and pattern of his actions, but lives so, as no man can believe that he believes in God. This universal Atheist, that believes no God, the heavens, and all the powers therein, shall condemn at the last day; The particular Atheist, that believes no Christ, the glorious company of the Apostles, that established the Church of Christ, shall condemn at that day; And the practical Atheist, the ungodly liver, the noble army of Martyrs, that did, and suffered so much for Christ, shall then condemn. And condemn him, not only as the most impious thing, but as the most inhuman; Not only as the most ungodly, but as the most unnatural thing: for an Atheist is not only a Devil in Religion, but a monster in nature; not only elemented and composed of Heresies in the Church, but of paradoxes, and absurdities in the world; Natural men, the men of Malta, even Barbarians, though subject to levity and changing their minds, yet make this their first act after their change, to constitute a God, though in another extreme, yet in an evident and absolute averseness from Atheism; They changed their minds, and said, he was a God. And be this enough for the Explication of the words, and their Application, and Complication to the celebration of the day. The God of heaven rectify in us our natural Logic; That in all his Judgements we glorify God, without uncharitable condemning other men. The God of heaven sanctify to us our natural Religion, That it be never quenched nor damped in us, never blown out by Atheism, nor blown up by an Idolatrous multiplying of false, or a superstitious worship of our true God. The God of heaven preserve us in safety, by the power of the Father; In saving knowledge, by the wisdom of the Son; And in a peaceful unity of affections, by the love and goodness of the holy Ghost. Amen. SERM. XLIX. Preached on the Conversion of S. PAUL. 1629. ACTS 23.6, 7. But when Paul perceived that one part were Sadduces, and the other Pharisees, he cried out in the Council, Men and Brethren, I am a Pharisee, and the son of a Pharisee; Of the hope and resurrection of the dead I am called in question. And when he had so said, there arose a dissension between the Pharisees and the Sadduces, and the multitude was divided. WE consider ordinarily in the old Testament, God the Father; And in the Gospels, God the Son; And in this Book, the Acts, and in the Epistles, and the rest, God the Holy Ghost, that is, God in the Government and Administration of his Church, as well in the ordinary Ministry and constant callings therein, as in the extraordinary use of general Counsels; of which, we have the Model, and Platform, and precedent in the fifteenth Chapter of this Book. The Book is noted to have above twenty Sermons of the Apostles; and yet the Book is not called The Sermons, The Preaching of the Apostles, but the Practice, the Acts of the Apostles. Our actions, if they be good, speak louder than our Sermons; Our preaching is our speech, our good life is our eloquence. Preaching celebrates the Sabbath, but a good life makes the whole week a Sabbath, that is, A savour of rest in the nostrils of God, Gen. 8. Chrysost. Hieron. as it is said of Noah's Sacrifice, when he came out of the Ark. The Book is called The Acts of the Apostles; But says S. chrysostom, and S. Hierome too, it might be called the Acts of S. Paul, so much more is it conversant about him, than all the rest. In which respect, at this time of the year, and in these days, when the Church commemorates the Conversion of S. Paul, I have, for divers years successively, in this place, determined myself upon this Book. Once upon the very act of his Conversion, in those words, Acts 9.4. Acts 20.25. Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? Once upon his valediction to his Ephesians at Miletus, in those words, Now I know that all ye shall see my face no more; And once upon the escape from the Viper's teeth, and the viperous tongues of those inconstant and clamorous beholders, Acts 28.6. who first rashly cried out, He is a murderer, and then changed their minds, and said, He is a God. And now, for the service of your devotions, and the advancement of your edification, I have laid my meditations upon this his Stratagem, and just avoiding of an unjust Judgement, When Paul percived that one part were Sadduces, and the other Pharisees, etc. In handling of which words, Divisio. because they have occasioned a Disputation, and a Problem, whether this that Paul did, were well done, To raise a dissension amongst his Judges, we shall stop first upon that Consideration, That all the actions of holy men, of Apostles in the new Testament, of Patriarches in the old, are not to be drawn into example and consequence for others, no nor always to be excused and justified in them that did them; All actions of holy men, are not holy; that is first. And secondly, we shall consider this action of S. Paul, in some circumstances that invest it, and in some effects that it produced in our Text, as dissension amongst his Judges, and so a reprieving, or rather a putting off of the trial for that time; and these will determine our second Consideration. And in a third, we shall lodge all these in ourselves, and make it our own case, and find that we have all Sadduces and Pharisees in our own bosoms, (contrary affections in our own hearts) and find an advantage in putting these home- Sadduces, and home- Pharisees, these contrary affections in our own bosoms, in colluctation, and opposition against one another, that they do not combine, and unite themselves to our farther disadvantage; A Civil war, is, in this case, our way to peace; when one sinful affection crosses another, we scape better, then when all join, without any resistance. And in these three, first the General, How we are to estimate all actions, And then the Particular, what we are to think of S. Paul's Action, And lastly, the Individual, How we are to direct and regulate our own Actions, we shall determine all. First then, 1. Part. though it be a safer way, to suspect an action to be sin that is not, then to presome an action to be no sin, that is so, yet that rule holds better in ourselves, then in other men; for, in judging the actions of other men, our suspicion may soon stray into an uncharitable misinterpretation, and we may sin in condemning that in another, which was no sin in him that did it. But, in truth, Transilire lineam, To departed from the direct and strait line, is sin, as well on the right hand, as on the left; And the Devil makes his advantages upon the overtender, and scrupulous conscience, as well as upon the over-confident, and obdurate; and many men have erred as much, in justifying some actions of holy men, as in calumniating, or mis-condemning of others. If we had not evidence in Scripture, that Abraham received that Commandment from God, who could justify Abraham's proceeding with his son Isaac? And therefore who shall be afraid to call Noah's Drunkenness, and his undecent lying in his Tent, Or Lot's Drunkenness, and his iterated Incest with his Daughters, or his inconsiderate offer to prostitute his Daughters to the Sodomites, Or to call David's complicated and multiplied sin, a sin? When the Church celebrates Samsons death, though he killed himself, it is upon a tender & holy supposition, that he might do this not without some instinct and inspiration from the Spirit of God. But howsoever the Church interprets such actions, it is a dangerous and a fallacious way, for any private man to argue so, The Spirit of God directed this man in many actions, therefore in all; And dangerous to conclude an action to be good, either because he that did it, had a good purpose in doing it, or because some good effects proceeded from it. Bonum bene, are the two horses that must carry us to heaven; To do good things, and to do them well; To propose good ends, and to go by good ways to those good ends. The Midwife's lie, in the behalf of the Israelites children, was a lie, and a sin, howsoever God, out of his own goodness, found something in their piety, to reward. I should not venture to say, as he said, nor to say that he said well, when Moses said, Deal me, Forgive their fin, or blot me out of thy Book; Exod. 32.32. Rom. 9 3. Nor when S. Paul said, Anathema pro fratribus, I could wish that myself were separated from Christ for my Brethren. I would not, I could not without sin, be content that my name should be blotted out of the Book of Life, or that I should be separated from Christ, though all the world beside were to be blotted out, and separated, if I stayed in. The benefit that we are to make of the errors of holy men, is not that, That man did this, therefore I may do it: but this, God suffered that holy man to fall, and yet loved that good soul well, God hath not therefore cast me away, though he have suffered me to fall too. Bread is man's best sustenance, yet there may be a dangerous surfeit of bread: Charity is the bread that the soul lives by; yet there may be a surfeit of charity; I may misled myself shrewdly, if I say, surely my Father is a good man, my Master a good man, my Pastor a good man, men that have the testimony of God's love, by his manifold blessings upon them; and therefore I may be bold to do whatsoever I see them do. Be perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven, is perfect, Mat. 5.48. 1 Cor. 11.1. is the example that Christ gives you. Be ye followers of me, as I am of Christ, is ●he example that the Apostle gives you. Good Examples are good Assistances; but no Example of man is sufficient to constitute a certain and constant rule; All the actions of the holiest man are not holy. Hence appears the vanity and impertinency of that calumny, with which our adversaries of the Roman persuasion labour to oppress us, That those points in which we depart from them, cannot be well established, because therein we depart from the Fathers; As though there were no condemnation to them, that pretended a perpetual adhering to the Fathers, nor salvation to them, who suspected any Father of any mistaking. And they have thought that one thing enough, to discredit, and blast, and annihilate that great and useful labour, which the Centuriators, the Magdeburgenses took in compiling the Ecclesiastical Story, that in every age as they pass, those Authors have laid out a particular section, a particular Chapter De navis Patrum, to note the mistake of the Fathers in every age; This they think a criminal and a heinous thing, enough to discredit the whole work; As though there were ever in any age, any Father, that mistook nothing, or that it were blasphemy against the Holy Ghost, to note such a mistaking. And yet, if those blessed Fathers, now in possession of heaven, be well affected with our celebrating, or ill, with our neglecting their works, certainly they find much more cause to complain of our adversaries, then of us. Never any in the Reformation hath spoken so lightly, nay, so heavily; so negligently, nay, so diligently, so studiously in diminution of the Fathers, as they have done. One of the first Jesuits proceeds with modesty and ingenuity, and yet says, Quaelibet aetas antiquitati detulit, Salmeron. Every age hath been apt to ascribe much to the Ancient Fathers; Hoc autem asserimus, says he, juniores Doctores perspicaciores, This we must necessarily acknowledge, that our later Men have seen farther than the elder Fathers did. His fellow Jesuit goes farther; Hoc omnes dicunt, Maldon. sed non probant, says he, speaking of one person in the Genealogy of Christ, This the Fathers say, says he, and later men too; Catholics, and Heretics; All: But none of them prove it; He will not take their words, not the whole Churches, though they all agree. But a Bishop of as much estimation and authority in the Council of Trent, as any, Cornel. Mussu● goes much farther; Being pressed with S. Augustins' opinion, he says, Nec nos tantillum moveat Augustinus, Let it never trouble us, which way S. Augustine goes; Hoc enim illi peculiar, says he, ut alium errorem expugnans, alteri ansam praebeat, for this is inseparable from S. Augustine, That out of an earnestness to destroy one error, he will establish another. Nor doth that Bishop impute that distemper only to S. Augustine, but to S. Hierome too; Of him he says, In medio positus certamine, are door feriendi adversarios, premit & socios, S. Hierome lays about him, and rather than miss his enemy, he wounds his friends also. But all that might better be borne then this, Turpiter errarunt Patres, The Fathers fell foully into errors; And this, better than that, Eorum opinio, opinio Haereticorum, The Fathers differ not from the Heretics, concur with the Heretics. Who in the Reformation hath charged the Fathers so fare? and yet Baronius hath. If they did not oppress us with this calumny of neglecting, or undervaluing the Fathers, we should not make our recourse to this way of recrimination; for, God knows, if it be modestly done. and with the reverence, in many respects, due to them, it is no fault to say the Fathers fell into some faults. Yet, it is rather our Adversaries observation than ours, That all the Ancient Fathers were Chiliasts, Millenarians, and maintained that error of a thousand years temporal happiness upon this earth, between the Resurrection, and our actual and eternal possession of Heaven; It is their observation rather than ours, That all the Ancient Fathers denied the dead a fruition of the sight of God, till the day of Judgement; It is theirs rather then ours, That all the Greek Fathers, and some of the Latin, assigned God's foreknowledge of man's works, to be the cause of his predestination. It is their note, That for the first six hundred years, the general opinion, and general practice of the Church was, To give the Sacrament of the Lords Supper, to Infants newly baptised, as a thing necessary to their salvation. They have noted, That the opinion of the Ancient Fathers was contrary to the present opinion in the Church of Rome, concerning the conception of the blessed Virgin without Original sin. These notes and imputations arise from their Authors, and not from ours, and they have told it us, rather than we them. Indeed neither we nor they can dissemble the mistake of the Fathers. The Fathers themselves would not have them dissembled. Hieron. De me, says S. Hierom, ubicunque de meo sensu loquor, arguat me quilibet, August. For my part, wheresoever I deliver but mine own opinion, every man hath his liberty to correct me. It is true, S. Augustine does call julian the Pelagian to the Fathers; but it is to vindicate and redeem the Fathers from those calumnies which julian had laid upon them, that they were Multitudo caecorum, a herd, a swarm of blind guides, and followers of one another, And that they were Conspiratio perditorum, Damned Conspirators against the truth. To set the Fathers in their true light, and to restore them to their lustre and dignity, and to make julian confess what reverend persons they were, S. Aug. calls him to the consideration of the Fathers, but not to try matters of faith by them alone. Lactant. For, Sapientiam sibi adimit, qui sine judicio majorum inventa probat, That man devests himself of all discretion, who, without examination, captivates his understanding to the Fathers. It is ingenuously said by one of their later Writers, (if he would but give us leave to say so too) Sequamur Patres, Cajetan. tanquam Deuces, non tanquam Dominos, Let us follow the Fathers as Guides, not as Lords over our understandings, as Counsellors, not as Commanders. Nicephor. Chrysost. It is too much to say of any Father that which Nicephorus says of S. chrysostom, In illius perinde at que in Dei verbis quiesco, I am as safe in Chrysostom's words, as in the Word of God; Sophron. Leo. That is too much. It is too much to say of any Father that which Sophronius says of Leo, That his Epistles were Divina Scriptura, tanquam ex ore Petri prolata, & fundamentum fidei, That he received the Epistles that Leo writ, as holy writ, as written by S. Peter himself, and as the foundation of his faith; that is too much. It is too much to say of S. Peter himself that which Chrysologus says, Chrysolog. That he is Immobile fundamentum salutis, The foundation of our salvation, & Mediator noster apud Deum, The Mediator of man to God. Azorius. Their Jesuit Azorius gives us a good Caution herein; He says it is a good and safe way, in all emergent doubts, to govern ourselves Per communem opinionem, by the the common opinion, by that, in which most Authors agree; But says he, how shall we know which is the common opinion? Since, not only that is the common opinion in one Age, that is not so in another, (The common opinion was in the Primitive Church, that the blessed Virgin was conceived in Original sin, The common opinion now, is that she was not) But if we consider the same Age, that is the common opinion in one place, in one country, which is not so in another place, at the same time; That Jesuit puts his example in the worship of the Cross of Christ, and says, That, at this day, in Germany and in France it is the common opinion, and Catholic Divinity, That 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Divine worship is not due to the Cross of Christ; In Italy and in Spain it is the common opinion, and Catholic Divinity, that it is due. Now, how shall he govern himself, that is unlearned, and not able to try, which is the common opinion? Or how shall the learnedest of all govern himself if he have occasion to travail, but to change his Divinity, as often as he changes his Coin, and when he turns his Dutch Dollars into Pistolets, to go out of Germany, into Spain, turn his Devotion, and his religious worship according to the Clime? To end this Consideration, The holy Patriarches in the Old Testament, were holy men, though they strayed into some sinful actions; the holy Fathers in the Primitive Church, were holy men, though they strayed into some erroneous opinions; But neither are the holiest men's actions always holy, nor the soundest Fathers opinions always sound. And therefore the question hath been not impertinently moved, whether this that S. Paul did here, were justifiably done, Who, when he perceived that one part were Sadduces, and the other Pharisees, etc. And so we are come to our second part, from the consideration of Actions in general, to this particular action of S. Paul. In this second part we make three steps. First we shall consider, what Council, 2 Part. what Court this was, before whom S. Paul was convented, (He cried out in the Council, says the text) whether they were his competent Judges, and so he bond to a clear, and direct proceeding with them; And secondly, what his end and purpose was, that he proposed to himself; which was to divide the Judges, and so to put off his trial to another day; for, when he had said that, (says the text) that that he had to say, there arose a Dissension, and the multitude, All, both Judges, and spectators, and witnesses, were divided; And then lastly, by what way he went to this end; which was by a double protestation; first that, Men and brethren, I am a Pharisee; And than that, Of the hope and Resurrection of the dead, I am called in question. First then, for the competency of his Judges, Whether a man be examined before a competent Judge or no, he may not lie: we can put no case, judex Competens. in which it may be lawful for any man to lie to any man; not to a midnight, nor to a noon thief, that breaks my house, or assaults my person, I may not lie. And though many have put names of disguise, as Equivocations, and Reservations, yet they are all children of the same father, the father of lies, the devil, and of the same brood of vipers, they are lies. To an Incompetent Judge, if I be interrogated, I must speak truth, if I speak; but to a Competent Judge, I must speak: With the Incompetent I may not be false, but with the Competent, I may not be silent. Certainly, that standing mute at the Bar, which, of late times hath prevailed upon many distempered wretches, is, in itself, so particularly a sin, as that I should not venture to absolve any such person, nor to administer the Sacrament to him, how earnestly soever he desired it at his death, how penitently soever he confessed all his other sins, except he repent in particular, that sin, of having stood mute and refused a just trial, and would be then content to submit himself to it, if that favour might possibly at that time be afforded him. To an incompetent Judge I must not lie, but I may be silent, to a competent I must answer. Consider we then the competency of S. Paul's Judges, what this Council, this Court was. It was that Council, which is so often in the New Testament called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and in our Translation, the Council. The Jews speak much of their Lex Oralis, their Oral, their Traditional Law; that is, That Exposition of the Law, which, say they, Moses received from the mouth of God, without writing, in that forty day's conversation which he had with God, in the Mount; for, it is not probable, say they, that Moses should spend forty days in that, which another man would have done in one or two, that is, in receiving only that Law which is written: But he received an exposition too, and delivered that to joshuah, and he to the principal men, and according to that exposition, they proceeded in Judgement, in this Council, in this their Synedrion. Which Council having had the first institution thereof, Numb. 11.16. where God said to Moses, Gather me seventy men of the Elders of Israel, Officers over the people, Numb. 11.16. and I will take of the Spirit that is upon thee, and put it upon them, and they shall bear the burden; that is, I will impart to them that exposition of the Law, which I have imparted to thee, and by that they shall proceed in Judgement, in this Council, this Synedrion of Seventy, had continued (though with some variations) to this time, when S. Paul was now called before them. Of this Council of Seventy, this Synedrion, our blessed Saviour speaks, when he says, He that says Raca, (that is, declares his anger by any opprobrious words of defamation,) shall be subject to the Council. Of this Council he speaks, when he says, Mat. 5.22. john 10.17. for my sake, they will deliver you up to the Council; And from this Council it is, not inconveniently, thought, that those messengers were sent, which were sent to examine john Baptist, john 1.19. whether he were the Messiah or no; for there it is said, That Priests and Levites were sent; and this Council, says josephus, at first, (and for a long time) consisted of such persons, though, after, a third Order was taken in, that is, some principal men of the other Tribes. To this Council belonged the Conusance of all causes, Ecclesiastical and Civil, and of all persons; no Magistrate, no Prophet was exempt from this Court. Before this Council was Herod himself called, for an execution done by his command, which, joseph. l 14. c. 17. though it were done upon a notorious malefactor, yet was done without due proceed in law, and therefore Herod called before this Council for it. But (by the way) this was not done when Herod was King, as Baronius doth mischievously and seditiously infer and argue, as though this Council were above the King. Herod at that time, was very far from any imagination of being King; His Father, Antipater, who then was alive, having, at that time, no pretence to the Kingdom. But Herod, though young, was then in a great place of Government, and for a misdemeanour there, was called before this Council, which had jurisdiction over all but the King. For so, in the Talmud itself, the difference is expressly put; Sacerdos magnus judicat & judicatur, The High Priest, the greatest Prelate in the Clergy, may have place in this Council, and may be called in question by this Council, judicat & judicatur; So, Testimonium dicit, & de eo dicitur, He may go from the Bench, and be a witness against any man, and he may be put from the Bench, and any man's witness be received against him. But then of the King, it is as expressly said, of this Council, in that Talmud, Nec judicat, nec judicatur, The King sits in Judgement upon no man, lest his presence should intimidate an accused person, or draw the other Judges from their own opinion to his; Much less can the King be judged by any; Nec testimonium dicit, nec de eo dicitur, The King descends not to be a witness against any man, neither can any man be a witness against him. It was therefore mischievously, and seditiously, and treacherously, and traitorously, and (in one comprehensive word) Papistically argued by Baronius, That this Council was above the King. But above all other persons it was; In some cases, in the whole body of the Council; for, Matters of Religion, Innovations in points of doctrine, Imputations upon great persons in the Church, were not to be judged by any selected Committee, but by the whole Council, the entire body, the Seaventy; Pecuniary matters, and matters of defamation, might be determined by a Committee of any three; Matters that induced bodily punishments, though it were but flagellation, but a whipping matter, not under a Committee of twenty three. But so were all persons, and all causes distributed, as that that Court, that Council had conusance of all. So that then S. Paul was before a competent and a proper Judge, and therefore bound to answer; Did he that? That is our next disquisition, and our second Consideration in this part, His end, his purpose in proceeding as he did. His End was to dissolve the Council for the present. He saw a tumultuary proceeding; for, Finis. as the Text says, he was fain to cry out in the Council, before he could be heard. He saw the Precedent of the Council, Ver. 2. Ananias the high Priest, so ill-affected towards him, as that he commanded him extrajudicially to be smitten. He saw a great part of his Judges, and spectators, amongst whom were the witnesses, to be his declared enemies. He saw that if he proceeded to a trial then, he perished infallibly, irrecoverably, and therefore desired to put off the trial for that time. He did not deny nor decline the jurisdiction of that Court; He had no eye to any foreign Prince, nor Prelate: There are amongst us that do so; that deny that they can be traitors, though they commit treason, because they are subjects to a foreign Bishop, and not to their natural King; S. Paul did not so. He did not calumniate nor traduce the proceed of that Court, nor put into the people ill opinions of their superiors, by laying aspersions upon them; There are that do so; S. Paul did not. But his end and purpose was only to put off the trial for that time, till he might be received to a more sober, and calm, and equitable hearing. And this certainly was no ill end, so his way were good. What was that? That is our next, our third and last Consideration in this part. His way was by a twofold Protestation; Viae. Pharisaei. The first this, Men and brethren, I am a Pharisee. The Pharisees were a sect amongst the Jews, who are ordinarily conceived to have received their Name from Division, from Separation, from departing from that liberty, which other men did take, to a stricter form of life. Of which, amongst many others, S. Hierome gives us this evidence, that the Pharisees would fringe their long robes with thorns, that so they might cut, and tear, and mangle their heels and legs as they went, in the sight of the people. Outward mortification and austerity was a specious thing, and of great estimation amongst the Jews: you may see that in john Baptist; who was as much followed, and admired for that, as Christ for his Miracles, though john Baptist did no Miracles. For, extraordinary austerity is a continual Miracle. As S. Hierome says of Chastity, Habet servata pudicitia martyrium suum, Chastity is a continual Martyrdom; So to surrender a man's self to a continual hunger, and thirst, and cold, and watching, and forbearing all which all others enjoy, a continual mortification is a continual Miracle. This made the Pharisees gracious and acceptable to the people: Phil. 3.5. Act. 26.5. Therefore S. Paul doth not make his Protestation here only so, That he had been as touching the Law, a Pharisee, nor as he makes it in this book, After the strictest sect of our religion, I lived a Pharisee, that is, heretofore I did, but now, after his Conversion, and after his Apostolical Commission, he makes it, Men and brethren, I am a Pharisee. Beloved, there are some things in which all Religions agree; The worship of God, The holiness of life; And therefore, if when I study this holiness of life, and fast, and pray, and submit myself to discreet, and medicinal mortifications, for the subduing of my body, any man will say, this is Papistical, Papists do this, it is a blessed Protestation, and no man is the less a Protestant, nor the worse a Protestant for making it, Men and brethren, I am a Papist, that is, I will fast and pray as much as any Papist, and enable myself for the service of my God, as seriously, as sedulously, as laboriously as any Papist. So, if when I startle and am affected at a blasphemous oath, as at a wound upon my Saviour, if when I avoid the conversation of those men, that profane the Lords day, any other will say to me, This is Puritanical, Puritans do this, It is a blessed Protestation, and no man is the less a Protestant, nor the worse a Protestant for making it, Men and Brethren, I am a Puritan, that is, I will endeavour to be pure, as my Father in heaven is pure, as far as any Puritan. Now of these Pharisees, who were by these means so popular, Sadducaei. the numbers were very great. The Sadduces, who also were of an exemplary holiness in some things, but in many and important things of different opinions, even in matter of Religion, from all other men, were not so many in number, but they were men of better quality and place in the State, then, for the most part, the Pharisees were. And as they were more potent, and able to do more mischief, so had they more declared themselves to be bend against the Apostles, than the Pharisees had done. In the fourth Chapter of this Book, Ver. 1. The Priests, and the Sadduces, (no mention of Pharisees) came upon Peter and john, being grieved, that they preached, through jesus, the resurrection of the dead. And so again, Act. 5.17. The high Priest risen up, and all they that were with him, which is (says that Text expressly) the sect of the Sadduces, and were filled with indignation. And some collect out of a place in Eusebius, that this Ananias, who was high Priest at this time, and had declared his ill affection to S. Paul, (as you heard before) was a Sadduce: But, I think those words of Eusebius will not bear, at least, not enforce that, nor be well applied to this Ananias. Howsoever, S. Paul had just cause to come to this protestation, I am a Pharisee, and in so doing he can be obnoxious to nothing; if he be as safe in his other protestation, all is well, for the hope and resurrection of the dead, am I called in question; consider we that. It is true, that he was not, at this time, called in question, Resurrectio. Act. 21.23. directly and expressly for the Resurrection; you may see, where he was apprehended, that it was for teaching against that people, and against that law, and against that Temple. So that, he was indicted upon pretence of sedition, and profanation of the Temple. And therefore, when S. Paul says here, I am called in question for preaching the Resurrection, he means this, If I had not preached the Resurrection, I should never have been called in question, nor should be, if I would forbear preaching the Resurrection; No man persecutes me, no man appears against me, but only they that deny the Resurrection; The Sadduces did deny it; The Pharisees did believe it; and therefore this was a likely and a lawful way to divide them, and to gain time, with such a purpose, (so far) as David had, when he prayed, O Lord, Psal. 55.9. divide their tongues. For it is not always unlawful to sow discord, and to kindle dissension amongst men; for men may agree too well, to ill purposes. So have ye then seen, That though it be not safe to conclude, S. Paul, or any holy man did this, therefore I may do it, (which was our first part) yet in this which S. Paul did here, there was nothing that may not be justified in him, and imitated by us, (which was our second part) Remains only the third, which is the accommodation of this to our present times, and the appropriation thereof to ourselves, and making it our own case. The world is full of Sadduces, and Pharisees, and the true Church of God arraigned by both. The Sadduces were the greater men, the Pharisees were the greater number; 3 Part. Sadducaei. so they are still. The Sadduces denied the Resurrection, and Angels, and Spirits; So they do still. For, those Sadduces, whom we consider now, in this part, are mere carnal men; men that have not only no Spirit of God in them, but no soul, no spirit of their own; mere Atheists. And this Carnality, this Atheism, this Sadducisme is seen in some Countries to prevail most upon great persons, (the Sadduces were great persons) upon persons that abound in the possessions, and offices, and honours of this world; for they that have most of this world, for the most part, think lest of the next. These are our present Sadduces; Pharisaei. and then the Pharisee hath his name from Pharas, which is Division, Separation; But Calvin derives the name (not inconveniently) from Pharash, which is Exposition, Explication. We embrace both extractions, and acceptations of the word, both Separation, and Exposition; for the Pharisee whom we consider now, in this part, is he that is separated from us, (there it is Pharas, separation) and separated by following private Expositions, (there it is Pharash, Exposition) with a contempt of all Antiquity; and not only an undervaluation, but a detestation of all opinions but his own, and his, whom he hath set up for his Idol. And as the Sadduce (our great and worldly man) is all carnal, all body, and believes no spirit: so our Pharisee is so superspirituall, as that he believes, that is, considers no body; He imagines such a Purification, such an Angelification, such a Deification in this life, as though the heavenly Jerusalem were descended already, or that God had given man but that one commandment, Love God above all, and not a second too, Love thy neighbour as thyself. Our Sadduces will have all body, our Pharisees all soul, and God hath made us of both, and given us offices proper to each. Now of both these, Duplex Sadducaus. the present Sadduce, the carnal Atheist, and the present Pharisee, the Separatist, that overvalues himself, and bids us stand farther off, there are two kinds. For, for the Atheist, there is David's Atheist, and S. Paul's Atheist; david's, that ascribes all to nature, Psal. 14.2. and says in his heart, There is no God; That will call no sudden death, nor extraordinary punishment upon any enormous sinner, a judgement of God, nor any such deliverance of his servants, a miracle from God, but all is Nature, or all is Accident, and would have been so, though there had been no God: This is Natures Sadduce, David's Atheist; And then S. Paul's Atheist is he, who though he do believe in God, yet doth not believe God in Christ; Ephes. 2.12. for so S. Paul says to the Ephesians, Absque Christo, absque Deo, If ye be without Christ, ye are without God. For as it is the same absurdity in nature, to say, There is no Sun, and to say, This that you call the Sun is not the Sun, this that shines out upon you, this that produces your fruits, and distinguishes your seasons is not the Sun: so is it the same Atheism, in these days of light, to say, There is no God, and to say, This Christ whom you call the Son of God, is not God, That he in whom God hath manifested himself, He whom God hath made Head of the Church, and Judge of the world, is not God. This then is our double Sadduce, David's Atheist that believes not God, S. Paul's Atheist that believes not Christ. And as our Sadduce is, so is our Pharisee twofold also. There is a Pharisee, Duplex Pharisaeus. that by following private expositions, separates himself from our Church, principally for matter of Government and Discipline, and imagines a Church that shall be defective in nothing, and does not only think himself to be of that Church, but sometimes to be that Church, for none but himself is of that persuasion. And there is a Pharisee that dreams of such an union, such an identification with God in this life, as that he understands all things, not by benefit of the senses, and impressions in the fancy and imagination, or by discourse and ratiocination, as we poor souls do, but by immediate, and continual infusions and inspirations from God himself; That he loves God, not by participation of his successive Grace, more and more, as he receives more and more grace, but by a communication of God himself to him, entirely and irrevocably; That he shall be without any need, and above all use of Scriptures, and that the Scriptures shall be no more to him, than a Catechism to our greatest Doctors; That all that God commands him to do in this world, is but as an easy walk down a hill; That he can do all that easily, and as much more, as shall make God beholden to him, and bring God into his debt, and that he may assign any man to whom God shall pay the arrearages due to him, that is, appoint God upon-what man he shall confer the benefit of his works of Supererogation; For in such Propositions as these, and in such Paradoxes as these, do the Authors in the Roman Church delight to express and celebrate their Pharisaical purity, as we find it frequently, abundantly in them. In a word, some of our home-Pharisees will say, That there are some, who by benefit of a certain Election, cannot sin; That the Adulteries and Blasphemies of the Elect, are not sins: But the Rome-Pharisee will say, that some of them are not only without sin in themselves, but that they can save others from sin, or the punishment of sin, by their works of Supererogation; and that they are so united, so identified with God already, as that they are in possession of the beatifical Vision of God, and see him essentially, and as he is, in this life: (for, that Ignatius the father of the Jesuits did so, Sandaeus' Theolog. p●r. 1. fo. 760. some of his Disciples say, it is, at least probable, if not certain) And that they have done all that they had to do for their own salvation, long ago, and stay in the world now, only to gather treasure for others, and to work out their salvation. So that these men are in better state in this life, than the Saints are in heaven; There, the Saints may pray for others, but they cannot merit for others; These men here can merit for other men, and work out the salvation of others. Nay, they may be said in some respect to exceed Christ himself; for Christ did save no man here, but by dying for him; These men save other men, with living well for them, and working out their salvation. These are our double Sadduces, & our double Pharisees; & now, beloved, Dissentio. if we would go so far in S. Paul's way, as to set this twofold Sadduce, David's Atheist, without God, and S. Paul's Atheist, without Christ, against our twofold Pharisee, our home-Catharist, and our Rome-Catharist, If we would spend all our wit, and all our time, all our Ink, and our gall, in showing them the deformities and iniquities of one another, by our preaching and writing against them, The truth, and the true Church might (as S. Paul did in our Text) scape the better. But when we (we that differ in no such points) tear, and wound, and mangle one another with opprobrious contumelies, and odious names of sub-division in Religion, our Home-Pharisee, and our Rome-Pharisee, maligners of our Discipline, and maligners of our Doctrine, gain upon ns, and make their advantages of our contentions, and both the Sadduces, David's Atheist that denies God, and S. Paul's Atheist that denies Christ, join in a scornful ask us, Where is now your God? Are not we as well that deny him absolutely, as you that profess him with wrangling? But stop we the floodgates of this consideration; it would melt us into tears. Sadducaei & Pharisaei interni. End we all with this, That we have all, all these, Sadduces and Pharisees in our own bosoms: Sadduces that deny spirits; carnal apprehensions that are apt to say, Is your God all Spirit, and hath bodily eyes to see sin? All Spirit, and hath bodily hands to strike for a sin? Is your soul all spirit, and hath a fleshly heart to fear? All spirit, and hath sensible sinews to feel a material fire? Was your God, who is all Spirit, wounded when you quarrelled? or did your soul, which is all spirit, drink when you were drunk? Sins of presumption, and carnal confidence are our Sadduces; and then our Pharisees are our sins of separation, of division, of diffidence and distrust in the mercies of our God; when we are apt to say, after a sin, Cares God, who is all Spirit, for my eloquent prayers, or for my passionate tears? Is the giving of my goods to the poor, or of my body to the fire, any thing to God who is all Spirit? My spirit, and nothing but my spirit, my soul, and nothing but my soul, must satisfy the justice, the anger of God, and be separated from him for ever. My Sadduce, my Presumption suggests, that there is no spirit, no soul to suffer for sin; and my Pharisee, my Desperation suggests, That my soul must perish irremediably, irrecoverably, for every sin that my body commits. Now if I go S. Paul's way, to put a dissension between these my Sadduces, and my Pharisees, Via Pauli. to put a jealousy between my presumption & my desperation, to make my presumption see, that my desperation lies in wait for her; and to consider seriously, that my presumption will end in desperation, I may, as S. Paul did in the Text, scape the better for that. But if, without farther troubling these Sadduces and these Pharisees, I be content to let them agree, and to divide my life between them, so as that my presumption shall possess all my youth, and desperation mine age, I have heard my sentence already, The end of this man will be worse than his beginning, How much soever God be incensed with me, for my presumption at first, he will be much more inexorable for my desperation at last. And therefore interrupt the prescription of sin; break off the correspondence of sin; unjoint the dependency of sin upon sin. Bring every single sin, as soon as thou committest it, into the presence of thy God, upon those two legs, Confession, and Detestation, and thou shalt see, that, as, though an entire Island stand firm in the Sea, yet a single clod of earth cast into the Sea, is quickly washed into nothing; so, howsoever thine habitual, and customary, and concatenated sins, sin enwrapped and complicated in sin, sin entrenched and barricadoed in sin, sin screwed up, and riveted with sin, may stand out, and wrestle even with the mercies of God, in the blood of Christ Jesus; yet if thou bring every single sin into the sight of God, it will be but as a clod of earth, but as a grain of dust in the Ocean. Keep thy sins then from mutual intelligence; That they do not second one another, induce occasion, and then support and disguise one another, and then, neither shall the body of sin ever oppress thee, nor the exhalations, and damps, and vapours of thy sad soul, hang between thee, and the mercies of thy God; But thou shalt live in the light and serenity of a peaceable conscience here, and die in a fair possibility of a present melioration and improvement of that light. All thy life thou shalt be preserved, in an Oriental light, an Eastern light, a rising and a growing light, the light of grace; and at thy death thou shalt be super-illustrated, with a Meridional light, a South light, the light of glory. And be this enough for the explication, and application of these words, and their complication with the day; for the justifying of S. Paul's Stratagem in himself, and the exemplifying, and imitation thereof in us. Amen. That God that is the God of peace, grant us his peace, and one mind towards one another; That God that is the Lord of Hosts, maintain in us that war, which himself hath proclaimed, an enmity between the seed of the Woman, and the seed of the Serpent, between the truth of God, and the inventions of men; That we may fight his battles against his enemies without, and fight his battles against our enemies within, our own corrupt affections; That we may be victorious here, in ourselves, and over ourselves, and triumph with him hereafter, in eternal glory. SERMONS Preached upon the PENITENTIAL PSALMS. SERM. L. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 6.1. O Lord, Rebuke me not in thine Anger, neither chasten me in thy her Displeasure. GOD imputes but one thing to David, but one sin; The matter of Vriah the Hittite: nor that neither, but by way of exception, not till he had first established an assurance, that David stood well with him. First he had said, 1 King. 25.5. David did that which was right in the eyes of the Lord, and turned not aside from any thing, that he had commanded him all the days of his life: Here was rectitude, He did that which was right in the eyes of the Lord; no obliquity, no departing into byways, upon collateral respects; Here was integrity to God's service, no serving of God and Mammon, He turned not from any thing that God commanded him; And here was perpetuity, perseverance, constancy, All the days of his life: And then, and not till then, God makes that one, and but that one exception, Except the matter of Vriah the Hittite. When God was reconciled to him, he would not so much as name that sin; that had offended him: And herein is the mercy of God, in the merits of Christ, a sea of mercy, that as the Sea retains no impression of the Ships that pass in it, (for Navies make no path in the Sea) so when we put out into the boundless Sea of the blood of Christ Jesus, by which only we have reconciliation to God, there remains no record against us; for God hath canceled that record which he kept, and that which Satan kept God hath nailed to the Cross of his Son. That man which hath seen me at the sealing of my Pardon, and the seal of my Reconciliation, at the Sacrament, many times since, will yet in his passion, or in his ill nature, or in his uncharitableness, object to me the fins of my youth; whereas God himself, if I have repent to day, knows not the sins that I did yesterday. God hath razed the Record of my sin, in Heaven; it offends not him, it grieves not his Saints nor Angels there; and he hath razed the Record in hell; it advances not their interest in me there, nor their triumph over me. And yet here, the uncharitable man will know more, and see more, and remember more, than my God, or his devil remembers, or knows, or sees: He will see a path in the Sea; he will see my sin, when it is drowned in the blood of my Saviour. After the King's pardon, perchance it will bear an action, to call a man by that infamous name, which that crime, which is pardoned, did justly cast upon him before the pardon: After God's reconciliation to David, he would not name David's sin in the particular. But yet for all this, though God will be no example, of upbraiding or reproaching repent sins, when God hath so far expressed his love, as to bring that sinner to that repentance, and so to mercy, yet, that he may perfect his own care, he exercises that repentant sinner with such medicinal corrections, as may enable him to stand upright for the future. And to that purpose, was no man evermore exercised than David. David broke into another's family; he built upon another's ground; he planted in another's Seminary; and God broke into his family, his ground, his Seminary. In no story, can we find so much Domestic affliction, such rapes, and incests, and murders, and rebellions, from their own children, as in David's story. Under the heavy weight and oppression of some of those, is David, by all Expositors, conceived to have conceived, and uttered this Psalm. Some take it to have been occasioned by some of his temporal afflictions; either his persecution from Saul, or bodily sickness in himself, of which traditionally the Rabbins speak much, or Absoloms unnatural rebellion. Some others, with whom we find more reason to join, find more reason to interpret it, of a spiritual affliction; that David, in the apprehension, and under the sense of the wrath and indignation of God, came to this vehement exclamation, or deprecation, O Lord rebuke me not in thine anger, neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure. In which words we shall consider, Divisio. first the person, upon whom David turned for his succour, and then what succour he seeks at his hands. First his word, and then his end; first to whom, and then for what he supplicates. And in the first of these, the Person, we shall make these three steps; first that he makes his first access to God only, O Lord rebuke me not; do not thou, and though I will not say, I care not, yet I care the less who do. And secondly, that it is to God by Name, not to any universal God, in general notions; so natural men come to God; but to God whom he considers in a particular name, in particular notions, and attributes, and manifestations of himself; a God whom he knows, by his former works done upon him. And then, that name in which he comes to him here, is the name of jehovah; his radical, his fundamental, his primary, his essential name, the name of being, jehovah. For, he that deliberately, and considerately believes himself to have his very being from God, believes certainly that he hath his well being from him too; He that acknowledges, that it is by God's providence that he breathes, believes that it is by his providence that he eats too. So his access is to God, and to God by name, that is by particular considerations, and then, to God in the name of jehovah, to that God that hath done all, from his first beginning, from his Being. And in these three we shall determine our first part. First, 1. Part. To God. in this first branch of this part, David comes to God, but without any confidence in himself. Here is Reus ad rostra sine patrono, here is the prisoner at the Bar, and no Counsel allowed him. He confesses Indictments, faster than they can be read: If he hear himself indicted, that he looked upon Bathsheba, that he lusted after Bathsheba, he cries, Alas, I have done that, and more; dishonoured her, and myself, and our God; and more than that, I have continued the act into a habit; and more than that, I have drowned that sin in blood, lest it should rise up to my sight; and more than all that, I have caused the Name of God to be blasphemed; and lest his Majesty, and his greatness should be a terror to me, I have occasioned the enemy to undervalue him, and speak despitefully of God himself. And when he hath confessed all, all that he remembers, he must come to his Ab occultis meis, Lord cleanse me from my secret sins; for there are sins, which we have laboured so long to hid from the world, that at last, they are hidden from ourselves, from our own memories, our own consciences. As much as David stands in fear of this Judge, he must entreat this Judge, to remember his sins; Remember them, O Lord, for else they will not fall into my pardon; but remember them in mercy, and not in anger; for so they will not fall into my pardon neither. Whatsoever the affliction than was, temporal, or spiritual, (we take it rather to be spiritual) david's recourse is presently to God. 1 Sam. 16.14. He doth not, as his predecessor Saul did, when he was afflicted, send for one that was cunning upon the Harp, to divert sorrow so. If his Subjects rebel, he doth not say, Let them alone, let them go on, I shall have the juster cause, by their rebellion, of confiscations upon their Estates, of executions upon their persons, of revocations of their laws, and customs, and privileges, which they carry themselves so high upon. If his son lift up his hand against him, he doth not place his hope in that, that that occasion will cut off his son, and that then the people's hearts which were bend upon his son, will return to him again. David knew he could not retire himself from God in his bedchamber; Guards and Ushers could not keep him out. He knew he could not defend himself from God in his Army; for the Lord of Hosts is Lord of his Hosts. If he fled to Sea, to Heaven, to Hell, he was sure to meet God there; and there thou shalt meet him too, if thou fly from God, to the relief of outward comforts, of music, of mirth, of drink, of cordials, of Comedies, of conversation. Not that such recreations are unlawful; the mind hath her physic as well as the body; but when thy sadness proceeds from a sense of thy sins, (which is God's key to the door of his mercy, put into thy hand) it is a new, and a greater sin, to go about to overcome that holy sadness, with these profane diversions; to fly Ad consolatiunculas creaturulae (as that elegant man Luther expresses it, according to his natural delight in that elegancy of Diminutives, with which he abounds above all Authors) to the little and contemptible comforts of little and contemptible creatures. And as Luther uses the physic, job useth the Physician; Luther calls the comforts, Miserable comforts; and job calls them that minister them, Onerosos consolatores, Miserable comforters are you all. David could not drown his adultery in blood; never think thou to drown thine in wine. The Ministers of God are Sons of Thunder, they are falls of waters, trampling of horses, and run of Chariots; and if these voices of these Ministers, cannot overcome thy music, thy security, yet the Angel's trumpet will; That Surgite qui dermitis, Arise ye that sleep in the dust, in the dust of the grave, is a Triple that over-reaches all; That Ite maledicti, Go ye accursed into Hell fire, is a Base that drowns all. There is no recourse but to God, no relief but in God; and therefore David applied himself to the right method, to make his first access to God. It is to God only, and to God by name, and not in general notions; To God by Name. for it implies a nearer, a more familiar, and more presential knowledge of God, a more cheerful acquaintance, and a more assiduous conversation with God, when we know how to call God by a Name, a Creator, a Redeemer, a Comforter, then when we consider him only as a diffused power, that spreads itself over all creatures; when we come to him in Affirmatives, and Confessions, This thou hast done for me, than when we come to him only in Negatives, and say, That that is God, which is nothing else. God is come nearer to us then to others, when we know his Name. For though it be truly said in the School, that no name can be given to God, Ejus essentiam adaequatè repraesentans, No one name can reach to the expressing of all that God is; And though Trismegistus do humbly, and modestly, and reverently say, Non spear, it never fell into my thought, nor into my hope, that the maker and founder of all Majesty, could be circumscribed, or imprisoned by any one name, though a name compounded and complicated of many names, as the Rabbins have made one name of God, of all his names in the Scriptures; Gen. 32.29. Though jacob seem to have been rebuked for ask God's name, when he wrestled with him; And so also the Angel which was to do a miraculous work, Judg. 13.18. a work appertaining only to God, to give a Child to the barren, because he represented God, and had the person of God upon him, would not permit Manoah to inquire after his name, Because, as he says there, that name was secret and wonderful; And though God himself, Exod. 23.20. to dignify and authorise that Angel, which he made his Commissioner, and the Tutelar and Nationall Guide of his people, says of that Angel, to that people, Fear him, provoke him not, for my Name is in him, and yet did not tell them, what that name was; Yet certainly, we could not so much as say, God cannot be named, except we could name God by some name; we could not say, God hath no name, except God had a name; for that very word, God, is his name. God calls upon us often in the Scriptures, To call upon his Name; and in the Scriptures, he hath manifested to us divers names, by which we may call upon him. Dost thou know what name to call him by, when thou callest him to bear false witness, to aver a falsehood? Hath God a name to swear by? Dost thou know what name to call him by, when thou wouldst make him thy servant, thy instrument, thy executioner, to plague others, upon thy bitter curses and imprecations? Hath God a name to curse by? Canst thou wound his body, exhaust his blood, tear off his flesh, break his bones, excruciate his soul; and all this by his right name? Hath God a name to blaspheme by? and hath God no name to pray by? is he such a stranger to thee? Dost thou know every fair house in thy way, as thou travelest, whose that is; and dost thou not know, in whose house thou standest now? Beloved, to know God by name, and to come to him by name, is to consider his particular blessings to thee; to consider him in his power, and how he hath protected thee there; and in his wisdom, and how he hath directed thee there; and in his love, and how he hath affected thee there; and expressed all, in particular mercies. He is but a dark, but a narrow, a shallow, a lazy man in nature, that knows no more, but that there is a heaven, and an earth, and a sea; He that will be of use in this world, comes to know the influences of the heavens, the virtue of the plants, and mines of the earth, the course and divisions of the Sea. To the natural man, God gives general notions of himself; a God that spreads over all as the heavens; a God that sustains all as the earth; a God that transports, and communicates all to all as the sea: But to the Christian Church, God applies himself in more particular notions; as a Father, as a Son, as a holy Ghost; And to every Christian soul, as a Creator, a Redeemer, a Benefactor; that I may say, This I was not born to, and yet this I have from my God; this a potent adversary sought to evict from me, but this I have recovered by my God; sickness had enfeebled my body, but I have a convalescence; calumny had defamed my reputation, but I have a reparation; malice in other men, or improvidence in myself, had ruined my fortune, but I have a redintegration from my God. And then by these, which are indeed but Cognomina Dei, his surnames, names of distinction, names of the exercise of some particular properties, and attributes of his, to come to the root of all, to my very Being, that my present Being in this world, and my eternal Being in the next, is made known to me by his name of jehovah, which is his Essential name, to which David had recourse in this exinanition; when his affliction had even annihilated, and brought him to nothing, he fled to jehovah, the God of all Being, which is the foundation of all his other Attributes, and includes all his other names, and is our next and last branch in this first Part. This name then of jehovah that is here translated Lord, jehovah. is agreed by all to be the greatest name by which God hath declared and manifested himself to man. This is that name which the Jews falsely, but peremptorily, (for falsehood lives by peremptoriness, and feeds and arms itself with peremptoriness) deny ever to have been attributed to the Messiah, in the Scriptures. This is that name, in the virtue and use whereof, those Calumniators of our Saviour's miracles do say, that he did his miracles, according to a direction, and schedule, for the true and right pronouncing of that name, which Solomon in his time had made, and Christ in his time had found, and by which, say they, any other man might have done those miracles, if he had had Solomon's directions for the right sounding of this name, jehovah. This is that name, which out of a superstitious reverence the Jews always forbore to found, or utter, but ever pronounced some other name, either Adonai, or Elohim, in the place thereof, wheresoever they found jehovah. But now their Rabbins will not so much as write that name, but still express it in four other letters. So that they dare not, not only not sound it, not say it, but not see it. How this name which we call jehovah, is truly to be sounded, because in that language it is expressed in four Consonants only, without Vowels, is a perplexed question; we may well be content to be ignorant therein, since our Saviour Christ himself, in all those places which he cited out of the Old Testament, never sounded it; he never said, jehovah. Nor the Apostles after him, nor Origen, nor Jerome; all persons very intelligent in the propriety of language; they never sounded this name jehovah. For though in S. Ieromes Exposition upon the 8. Psalm, we find that word jehovah, in some Editions which we have now, yet it is a clear case, that in the old Copies it is not so; in Ieroms mouth it was not so; from Ieroms hand it came not so. Neither doth it appear to me, that ever the name of jehovah was so pronounced, till so late, as in our Father's time; for I think Petrus Gallatinus was the first that ever called it so. But howsoever this name be to be sounded, that which falls in our consideration at this time, is, That David in his distresses fled presently to God, and to God by name, that is, in consideration and commemoration of his particular blessings; and to a God that had that name, the name of jehovah, the name of Essence, and Being, which name carried a confession, that all our well-being, and the very first being itself, was, and was to be derived from him. David therefore comes to God In nomine totali; in nomine integrali; He considers God totally, entirely, altogether; Not altogether, that is, confusedly; but altogether, that is, in such a Name as comprehends all his Attributes, all his Power upon the world, and all his benefits upon him. The Gentiles were not able to consider God so; not so entirely, not altogether; but broke God in pieces, and changed God into single money, and made a fragmentarie God of every Power, and Attribute in God, of every blessing from God, nay of every malediction, and judgement of God. A clap of thunder made a jupiter, a tempest at sea made a Neptune, an earthquake made a Pluto; Fear came to be a God, and a Fever came to be a God; Every thing that they were in love with, or afraid of, came to be canonised, and made a God amongst them. David considered God as a centre, into which & from which all lines flowed. Neither as the Gentiles did, nor as some ignorants of the Roman Church do, that there must be a stormy god, S. Nicholas, and a plaguy god, S. Rook, and a sheepshearing god, & a swineherd god, a god for every Parish, a god for every occupation, God forbidden. Acknowledge God to be the Author of thy Being; find him so at the springhead, & then thou shalt easily trace him, by the branches, to all that belongs to thy well-being. The Lord of Hosts, and the God of peace, the God of the mountains, and the God of the valleys, the God of noon, and of midnight, of all times, the God of East & West, of all places, the God of Princes, and of Subjects, of all persons, is all one and the same God; and that which we intent, when we say jehovah, is all He. And therefore hath S. Bernard a pathetical and useful meditation to this purpose: Every thing in the world, says he, can say, Creator meus es tu, Lord thou hast made me; All things that have life, and growth, can say, Pastor meus es tu, Lord thou hast fed me, increased me; All men can say, Redemptor meus es tu, Lord I was sold to death through original sin, by one Adam, and thou hast redeemed me by another; All that have fall'n by infirmity, and risen again by grace, can say, Susceptor meus es tu, Lord I was fall'n, but thou hast undertaken me, and dost sustain me; But he that comes to God in the name of jehovah, he means all this, and all other things, in this one Petition, Let me have a Being, and then I am safe, for In him we live, and move, and have our Being. If we solicit God as the Lord of Hosts, that he would deliver us from our enemies, perchance he may see it fit for us to be delivered to our enemies: If we solicit him as Proprietary of all the world, as the beasts upon a thousand mountains are his, as all the gold and silver in the earth is his, perchance he sees that poverty is fit for us: If we solicit him for health, or long life, he gives life, but he kills too, he heals, but he wounds too; and we may be ignorant which of these, life or death, sickness or health, is for our advantage. But solicit him as jehovah, for a Being, that Being which flows from his purpose, that Being which he knows fittest for us, and then we follow his own Instructions, Fiat voluntas tua, thy will be done upon us, and we are safe. Now that which jehovah was to David, jesus is to us. jesus. Man in general hath relation to God, as he is jehovah, Being; We have relation to Christ, as he is jesus, our Salvation; Salvation is our Being, jesus is our jehovah. And therefore as David delights himself with that name jehovah, for he repeats it eight or nine times in this one short Psalm, and though he ask things of a divers nature at God's hands, though he suffer afflictions, of a divers nature, from God's hands, yet still he retains that one name, he speaks to God in no other name in all this Psalm but in the name of jehovah: So in the New Testament, he which may be compared with David, because he was under great sins, and yet in great favour with God, S. Paul, he delights himself with that name of jesus so much, as that S. Jerome says, Quem superfluè diligebat, extraordinariè nominavit, As he loved him excessively, so he named him superabundantly. It is the name that cost God most, and therefore he loves it best; it cost him his life to be a jesus, a Saviour. The name of Christ, which is Anointed, he had by office; he was anointed as King, as Priest, as Prophet. All those names which he had in Isaiah, The Counsellor, The Wonderful, The Prince of Peace, Esay 9 and the name of jehovah itself, which the Jews deny ever to be given to him, and is evidently given to him in that place, Christ had by nature; But his name of jesus, a Saviour, he had by purchase, & that purchase cost him his blood. And therefore, as jacob preferred his name of Israel, Gen. 32.28. before his former name of jacob, because he had that name upon his wrestling with God, and it cost him a lameness; so is the name of jesus so precious to him who bought it so dearly, that not only every knee bows at the name of jesus here, but Jesus himself, and the whole Trinity, bow down towards us, to give us all those things which we ask in that name. For even of a devout use of that veryname, do some of the Fathers interpret that, Oleun effusum Nomen tuu, That the name of jesus should be spread as an ointment, breathed as perfume, diffused as a soul over all the petitions of our prayers; As the Church concludes for the most part, all her Collects so, Grant this O Lord, for our Lord and Saviour Christ jesus sake. And so much does S. Paul abound in the use of this name, as that he repeats it thrice, in the superscription of one of his Letters the title of one of his Epistles, his first to Timothy. And with the same devotion, S. August. says, even of the name, Melius est mihi non esse, quam sine jesu esse, I were better have no being, then be without Jesus; Melius est non vivere, quam vivere sine vita, I were better have no life, than any life without him. For as David could find no being without jehovah, a Christian finds no life without jesus. Both these names imply that which is in this Text, in our Translation, The Lord, Dominus; to whom only, and entirely we appertain; his we are. And therefore whether we take Dominus, to be Do minas, to threaten, to afflict us, or to be Do manus, to secure, and relieve us, (as some have pleased themselves with those obvious derivations) as David did still, we must make our recourse to him, from whom, as he is jehovah, Being, or being our wel-beeing, our eternal being, our Creation, Preservation, and Salvation is derived; all is from him. Now when he hath his access to the Lord, 2 Part. to this Lord, the Lord that hath all, and gives all, and is all, the first part of David's prayer, and all his prayer which falls into our Text, is but Deprecatory; he does but pray that God would forbear him. He pretends no error, he enterprises no Reversing of Judgement; no at first, he dares not sue for pardon; he only desires a Reprieve, a respite of execution, and that not absolutely neither; but he would not be executed in hot blood; Ne in ira, ne in furore, not in God's anger, not in his hot displeasure. First then, Deprecation. Deprecari, is not Refragari, to Deprecate, is not to Contend against a Judge, nor to defend one's self against an Officer, but it is only in the quality, and in the humility of a Petitioner, and Suppliant, to beg a forbearance. The Martyrs in the Primitive Church would not do that. Nihil de causa sua deprecatur, qui nihil de conditione sua miratur, says Tertullian; and in that he describes a patience of Steel, and an invincible temper. He means that the Christians in those times of Persecution, did never entreat the Judge for favour, because it was not strange to them, to see themselves, whose conversation was in heaven, despised, and contemned, and condemned upon earth: Nihil mirantur de conditione, They wondered not at their misery, they thought it a part of their Profession, a part of the Christian Religion, to suffer, and therefore, Nihil deprecati de causa, They never solicited the Judge for favour. They had learned by experience of daily tribulation, the Apostles Lesson, Think it not strange, when tentations and tribulations fall; That is, make that your daily bread, and you shall never starve, use yourselves to suffering, at least to the expectation, the contemplation of suffering, acquaint yourselves with that, accustom yourselves to that before it come, and it will not be a stranger to you when it comes. Tertullia's Method may be right, and it may work that effect in very great afflictions; a man may be so used to them, as that he will not descend to any low deprecation, or suit to be delivered of them. But David's affliction was spiritual; and howsoever, as a natural man, nay; as a devout and religious man, (for even in rectified men there are affections of a middle nature, that participate of nature, and of grace too, and in which the Spirit of God moves, and natural affections move too; for nature and grace do not so destroy one another, as that we should conclude, He hath strong natural affections, therefore he hath no grace) David I say, that might justly wonder at his own condition, and think it strange, that he that put his trust so entirely in God, should so entirely be delivered over to such afflictions, might also justly deprecate, and boldly say, Ne facias, O Lord deal not thus with thy servant. Our Saviour Christ's Transeat calix, Let this cup pass from me, was a deprecation in his own behalf; And his Pater dimitte illis, Father, forgivethem, they know not what they do, was a deprecation in the behalf of his enemies; And so was Stephens, Ne statuas illis, O Lord, lay not this sin to their charge, A deprecation in the behalf of his Executioners. And these Deprecations for others, for ourselves, are proposed for our imitation. But for Moses his Deal me, Pardon this people, or blot my name out of thy Book, and for S. Paul's Anathema, rather than his brethren should not be saved, let himself be condemned, for such Deprecations for others, as were upon the matter, Imprecations upon themselves, those may not well be drawn into consequence, or practise; for in Moses and S. Paul themselves, there was, if not an irregularity, and an inordinateness, at least an inconsideration, not to be imitated by us now, not to be excused in them then; but for the Prayer that is merely deprecatory, though some have thought it less lawful than the postulatory prayer, because when God is come to the act of afflicting us, he hath then revealed, and declared, and manifested his will to be such, and against the revealed and manifested will of God we may not pray, yet because his afflictions are not peremptory, but we have ever day to show cause, why that affliction should be taken off, and because all his judgements are conditional, and the condition of every particular judgement is not always revealed to us, and this is always revealed to us, Miserationes ejus super omnia opera ejus, That his mercy is above all his judgements, therefore we may come to that Deprecation, that God will make his hand lighter upon us, and his corrections easier unto us. As the Saints in heaven have their Vsqucquo, How long Lord, holy and true, before thou begin to execute judgement? So the Saints on earth have their Vsquequo, How long Lord, before thou take off the execution of this judgement upon us? For, our Deprecatory prayers, are not Mandatory, they are not Directory, they appoint not God his ways, nor his times; but as our Postulatory prayers are, they also are submitted to the will of God, and have all in them, that ingredient, that herb of grace, which Christ put into his own prayer, that Veruntamen, Yet not my will, but thy will be fulfilled; And they have that ingredient, which Christ put into our prayer, Fiat volunt as, Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven; In heaven there is no resisting of his will; yet in heaven there is asoliciting, a hastening, an accelerating of the judgement, and the glory of the Resurrection; So though we resist not his corrections here upon earth, we may humbly present to God, the sense which we have of his displeasure; for this sense, and apprehension of his corrections, is one of the principal reasons, why he sends them; he corrects us therefore, that we might be sensible of his corrections; that when we, being humbled under his hand, have said with his Prophet, I will bear the wrath of the Lord, Micah 7.9. because I have sinned against him, He may be pleased to say to his Correcting Angel, as he did to his Destroying Angel, This is enough, and so burn his rod now, as he put up his sword then. For though David do, well for himself, and well for our example, deprecate the anger of God, expressed in those Judgements, yet we see he spends but one verse of the Psalm in that Deprecation. In all the rest he leaves God wholly to his pleasure, how fare he will extend, or aggravate that Judgement; and he turns wholly upon the Postulatory part, That God would have mercy upon him, and save him, and deliver his soul. And in that one verse, he does not deprecate all afflictions, all corrections. David knows what moves God to correct us; It is not only our illness that moves him; for he corrects us when we are not ill in his sight, but made good by his pardon: But his goodness, as well as our illness, moves him to correct us; If he were not good, not only good in himself, but good to us, he would let us alone, and never correct us. But, Wisd. 12.1. Ideo eos qui errant corripis, quia bonus & suavis es Domine, as the Vulgate reads that place, The Lord corrects us, not only as he is good, but as he is gentle; he were more cruel, more unmerciful, if he did always show mercy; That David intends, when he says, Propitius fuisti, Thou wast a Merciful God, because thou didst punish all their inventions. So then, our first work is to consider, that that in the Prophet, is a promise, jer. 30.11. and hath the nature of a mercy, I will correct thee in measure; where the promise does not fall only upon the measure, but upon the correction itself; and then, since this is a promise, a mercy, a part of our daily bread, we may pray as the same Prophet directs us, Psal. 10.24. O Lord correct me, but with judgement, not in thine anger; Where also the petition seems to fall, not only upon the measure, but upon the correction itself; and then, when I have found some correction fit to be prayed for and afforded me by God upon my prayer, if that correction at any time grow heavy, or wearisome unto me, I must relieve myself upon that consideration, Whether God have smitten me, as he smote them that smote me, Esay 27.7. Whether it be not another manner of execution, which God hath laid upon mine enemies then that which he hath laid upon me, in having suffered them to be smitten with the spirit of sinful glory, and triumph in their sin, and my misery, and with excecation, and obdurateness, with impenitence, and insensibleness of their own case. Or at least, let me consider, as it is in the same place, Whether I be slain according to the slaughter of them that were slain by me; That is, whether my oppression, my extortion, my prevarication have not brought other men to more misery, than God hath yet brought me unto. And if we consider this, as no doubt David did, and find that correction is one loaf of our daily bread, and find in our heaviest corrections, that God hath been heavier upon our enemies, then upon us, and we heavier upon others, than God upon us too, we shall be content with any Rebuke, and any Chastisement, so it be not in anger, and in hot displeasure, which are the words that remain to be considered. Now these two phrases, Argui in furore, and Corripi in ira, which we translate, To rebuke inanger, and to chasten in hot displeasure, are by some thought, to signify one and the same thing, that David intends the same thing, and though in divers words, yet words of one and the same signification. But with reverence to those men, (for some of them are men to whom much reverence is due) they do not well agree with one another, nor very constantly with themselves. S. Jerome says, Furor & ira maxime unum sunt, That this anger, and hot displeasure, are merely, absolutely, entirely, one and the same thing, and yet he says, that this Anger is executed in this world, and this hot Displeasure reserved for the world to come. And this makes a great difference; no weight of God's whole hand here, can be so heavy, as any finger of his in hell; the highest exaltation of God's anger in this world, can have no proportion to the least spark of that in hell; nor a furnace seven times heat here, to the embers there. So also S. Augustine thinks, that these two words, to Rebuke, and to Chasten, do not differ at all; or if they do, that the latter is the lesser. But this is not likely to be David's method, first to make a prayer for the greater, and that being granted, to make a second prayer for the lesser, included in that which was asked, Ayguanus. and granted before. A later man in the Roman Church, allows the words to differ, and the later to be the heavier, but then he refers both to the next life; that to Rebuke in anger, should be intended of Purgatory, and of a short continuance there, and to be Chastened in hot displeasure, should be intended of hell, and of everlasting condemnation there. And so David must make his first petition, Rebuke me not in thine anger, to this purpose, Let me pass at my death immediately to Heaven, without touching at any fire, and his second petition, Chasten me not in thy hot displeasure to this purpose, If I must touch at any fire, let it be but Purgatory, and not Hell. But by the nature, and propriety, and the use of all these words in the Scriptures, it appears, that the words are of a different signification, which S. Jerome it seems did not think; and that the last is the heaviest, which S. Augustine it seems did not think; and then, that they are to be referred to this life, which Ayguanus did not think. For the words themselves, all our three Translations retain the two first words, to Rebuke and to Chasten; neither that which we call the Bishop's Bible, nor that which we call the Geneva Bible, and that which we may call the Kings, depart from those two first words. But then for the other two, Anger and Hot displeasure, in them all three Translations differ. The first calls them Indignation and Displeasure, the second Anger and Wrath, and the last Anger and Hot displeasure. To begin with the first, Rebuke. to be Rebuked was but to be chidden, but to be Chastened, was to be beaten; and yet David was hearty afraid of the first, of the least of them, when it was to be done in anger: This word that is here to Rebuke, jacach, is for the most part, to Reprove, Esay 1.18. to Convince by way of argument, and disputation. So it is in Esay, Come now, and let us reason together, says God. The natural man is confident in his Reason, in his Philosophy; and yet God is content to join in that issue, If he do not make it appear, even to your reason, that he is God, Choose whom ye will serve, as joshuah speaks; If he do not make it appear, that he is a good God, change him for any other God that your reason can present to be better. Micah 6.2. In Micah, the word hath somewhat more vehemence; The Lord hath a quarrel against his people, and he will plead with Israel. This is more than a Disputation; it is a Suit. God can maintain his possession other ways; without Suit; but he will recover us, by matter of Record, openly, and in the face of the County; he will put us to a shame, and to an acknowledgement, of having disloially devested our Allegiance. Yea, the word hath sometimes somewhat more sharpness than this; for in the book of Proverbs, it comes to Correction, The Lord correcteth him whom he loveth, even as the father doth the child, in whom he delighteth. Though it be a fatherly correction, yet it is a correction; and that is more than the Reasoning or Disputing, more than the Suing or Impleading. Now though all this, Disputing, Impleading, Correcting, in S. Augustine's interpretation, amount but to an Instruction, and an Amendment, yet says he of David, In ira emendari non vult, erudiri non vult, He is loath to fall into God's hands, loath to come into God's fingers at all, when God is angry; he would not be disputed withal, not Impleaded, not Corrected, no, not Instructed, not Amended by God in his Anger. The Anger of God is such a pedagogy, such a Catechism, such a way of teaching, as the Law was. Lex paedagogus; the Law is a Schoolmaster, says the Apostle; but Litera occidi●, the Law is such a Schoolmaster, as brings not a rod, but a sword. God's Anger should instruct us, but if we use it not aright, it hardens us. And therefore, Psal. 2. Kiss the Son lest he be angry, says David, And what is the danger if he be? that which follows, Lest ye perish in the way; Though his Anger be one of his ways, yet it is such a way, as you may easily stumble in; and, as you would certainly perish without that way, so you may easily perish in that way. For when a sinner considers himself to be under the Anger of God, naturally he conceives such a horror, as puts him farther off. As soon as Adam heard the voice of God, and in an accent of Anger, or as he tuned it in his guilty conscience, to an accent of Anger, (for as a malicious man will turn a Sermon to a Satire, and a Panegyricke to a Libel, so a despairing soul will set God's comfortablest words, to asad tune, and force a Vae even in Gods Euge, and find Anger, and everlasting Anger in every Access, in every Action of God) when Adam heard God but walking in the Garden, but the noise of his going, and approaching towards him, (for God had then said nothing to him, not so much as called him) Adam fled from his presence and hid himself amongst the trees. When the guilty man was but spoken to, and spoken to mildly, by the Master of the Marriage feast, Amice quomodo intrasti? Friend how came you in? we see he was presently speechless, and being so, not able to speak, to come to any confessin, any excuse, he fell farther and farther into displeasure, till he was bound hand and foot, job 9.12. and cast irrecoverably away. For Simo repent interroget, quis respondebit ei? If God surprise a Conscience with a sudden question, if God deprehend a man in the Act of his sin, and while he accomplishes and consummates that sin, say to his soul, Why dost thou this, upon which mine anger hangs? there God speaks to that sinner, but he confounds him with the question; It is not a leading Intergatorie, it gives him no light to answer, Esay 38.14. till God's anger be out of his contemplation, he cannot so much as say Domine vim patior, respond pro me, O Lord I am oppressed, do thou answer for me; do thou say to thyself for me, My Spirit shall not always strive with man, because he is but flesh. Gen. 6.3. If the Lord come in anger, if he speak in Anger, if he do but look in Anger, a sinner perishes; Aspexit & dissolvit Gentes; He did but look, and he dissolved, he melted the Nations; Hab. 3.6. he poured them out as water upon the dust, and he blew them away as dust into the Sea, The everlasting mountains were broken, and the ancient hills did bow. It is not then the disputing, not the impleading, not the correcting, which this word jacach imports, that David declines, or deprecates here, but that Anger, which might change the nature of all, and make all the Physic poison, all that was intended for our mollifying, to advance our obduration. For when there was no anger in the case, David is a forward Scholar, to hearken to Gods Reasoning, and Disputing, and a tractable Client, and easy Defendant, to answer to God's Suit, and Impleading, Psal. 26.1. and an obsequious Patient, to take any Physic at his hands, if there were no Anger in the cup. Vre renes & cor meum, says David, he provokes God with all those emphatical words, judge me, Prove me, Try me, Examine me, and more, Vre renes, bring not only a candle to search, but even fire, to melt me; But upon what confidence all this? For thy loving kindness is ever before mine eyes. If God's Anger, and not his loving kindness had been before his eyes, it had been a fearful apparition, and a dangerous issue to have gone upon. So also he surrenders himself entirely to God in another Psalm, Psal. 139.23. Try me O God, and know my heart; prove me, and know my thoughts, and consider, if there be any way of wickedness in me. But how concludes he? And lead me in the right way for ever. As long as I have God by the hand, and feel his loving care of me, I can admit any weight of his hand; any furnace of his heating. Let God mould me, and then melt me again, let God make me, and then break me again, as long as he establishes and maintains a rectified assurance in my soul, that at last he means to make me a Vessel of honour, to his Glory, howsoever he Rebuke or Chastise me, yet he will not Rebuke me in Anger, much less Chasten me in hot Displeasure, which is the last, and the heaviest thing, that David deprecates in this Prayer. Both these words, which we translate to Chasten, and Hot displeasure, are words of a heavy, and of a vehement signification. They extend both, to express the eternity of God's indignation, even to the binding of the soul and body in eternal chains of darkness. For the first, jasar, signifies oftentimes in the Scriptures, Vincire, to bind, often with ropes, often with chains; to fetter, or manacle, or pinion men, that are to be executed; so that it imports a slavery, a bondage all the way, and a destruction at last. And so the word is used by Rehoboam, 1 Reg. 12.11. My Father chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with Scorpions. And then, the other word, Camath, doth not only signify Hot displeasure, but that effect of God's hot displeasure, which is intended by the Prophet Esay, Therefore hath he poured forth his fieree wrath, Esay 42. ult. and the strength of battle, and that set him on fire round about, and he knew it not, and it burned him up, and he considered it not; These be the fearfully conditions of Gods hot displeasure, to be in a furnace, and not to feel it; to be in a habit of sin, and not know what leads us into temptation; to be burnt to ashes, and so not only without all moisture, all holy tears, but, as ashes, without any possibility, that any good thing can grow in us. And yet this word, Camath, hath a heavier signification than this; for it signifies Poison itself, Destruction itself, for so is it twice taken in one verse, Psal. 58.4. Their poison is like the poison of a Serpent; so that this Hot displeasure, is that poison of the soul, obduration here, and that extension of this obduration, a final impenitence in this life, and an infinite impenitibleness in the next, to die without any actual penitence here, and live without all possibility of future penitence for ever hereafter. David therefore foresees, that if God Rebuke in anger, it will come to a Chastening in hot displeasure. 1 Sam. 2.25. For what should stop him? For, If a man sin against the Lord, who will plead for him? says Eli; Plead thou my cause, says David; It is only the Lord, that can be of counsel with him, and plead for him; and that Lord, is both the Judge, and angry too. So David's prayer hath this force, Rebuke me not in anger, for though I were able to stand under that, yet thou wilt also Chasten me in thine hot displeasure, and that no soul can bear; for as long as God's anger lasts, so long he is going on towards our utter destruction. In that State, (it is not a State) in that Exinanition, in that annihilation of the soul, (it is not an annihilation, the soul is not so happy as to come to nothing) but in that misery, which can no more receive a name, than an end, all God's corrections are borne with grudging, with murmuring, with comparing our righteousness with others righteousness; Job 7.20. In jobs impatience, Quare posuisti me contrarium tibi? Why hast thou set me up as a mark against thee, O Thou preserver of men? Thou that preservest other men, hast bend thy bow, I am. 3.12. and made me a mark for thine arrows, says the Lamentation: In that state we cannot cry to him, that he might answer us; If we do cry, and he answer, we cannot hear; Job 9.16. if we do hear, we cannot believe that it is he. Cum invocantem exaudierit, says job, If I cry, and he answer, yet I do not believe that he heard my voice. We had rather perish utterly, Ver. 23. then stay his leisure in recovering us. Si flagellat, occidat semel, says job in the Vulgat, If God have a mind to destroy me, let him do it at one blow; Et non de poenis rideat, Let him not sport himself with my misery. Whatsoever come after, we would be content to be out of this world, so we might but change our torment, whether it be a temporal calamity that oppresses our state or body, or a spiritual burden, a perplexity that sinks our understanding, or a guiltiness that depresses our conscience. in inferno protegas, Job 14.13. as job also speaks, O that thou wouldst hid me, In inferno, In the grave, says the afflicted soul, but in Inferno, In hell itself, says the despairing soul, rather than keep me in this torment, in this world! This is the miserable condition, or danger, that David abhors, and deprecates in this Text, To be rebuked in anger, without any purpose in God to amend him; and to be chastened in his hot displeasure; so, as that we can find no interest in the gracious promises of the Gospel, no conditions, no power of revocation in the severe threaten of the Law; no difference between those torments which have attached us here, and the everlasting torments of Hell itself. That we have lost all our joy in this life, and all our hope of the next; That we would feign die, though it were by our own hands, and though that death do but unlock us a door, to pass from one Hell into another. This is Ira tua Domine, & faror tuus, Thy anger, O Lord, and, Thy hot displeasure. For as long as it is but Ira patris, the anger of my Father, which hath disinherited me, Gold is thine, and silver is thine, and thou canst provide me. As long as it is but Ira Regis, some misinformation to the King, some misapprehension in the King, Cor Regis in manu tua, The King's heart is in thy hand, and thou canst rectify it again. As long as it is but Furor febris, The rage and distemper of a pestilent Fever, or Furor furoris, The rage of madness itself, thou wilt consider me, and accept me, and reckon with me according to those better times, before those distempers overtook me, and overthrew me. But when it comes to be Ira tua, furor tuus, Thy anger, and, Thy displeasure, as David did, so let every Christian find comfort, if he be able to say faithfully this Verse, this Text, O Lord, rebuke me not in thine anger, neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure; for as long as he can pray against it, he is not yet so fallen under it, but that he hath yet his part in all God's blessings, which we shed upon the Congregation in our Sermons, and which we seal to every soul in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. SERM. LI. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 6.2, 3. Have mercy upon me, O Lord, for I am weak; O Lord, heal me, for my bones are vexed: My soul is also sore vexed; But thou, O Lord, how long? THis whole Psalm is prayer; And the whole prayer is either Deprecatory, as in the first verse, or Postulatory. Something David would have forborn, and something done. And in that Postulatory part of David's prayer, which goes through six verses of this Psalm, we consider the Petitions, and the Inducements; What David asks, And why: of both which, there are some mingled, in these two verses, which constitute our Text. And therefore, in them, we shall necessarily take knowledge of some of the Petitions, and some of the Reasons. For, in the Prayer, there are five petitions; First, Miserere, Have mercy upon me, Think of me, look graciously towards me, prevent me with thy mercy; And then Sana me, O Lord, heal me, Thou didst create me in health, but my parents begot me in sickness, and I have complicated other sicknesses with that, Actual with Original sin, O Lord, heal me, give me physic for them; And thirdly, Convertere, Return, O Lord, Thou didst visit me in nature, return in grace, Thou didst visit me in Baptism, return in the other Sacrament, Thou dost visit me now, return at the hour of my death; And, in a fourth petition, Eripe, O Lord, deliver my soul, Every blessing of thine because a snare unto me, and thy benefits I make occasions of sin, In all conversation, and even in my solitude, I admit such tentations from others, or I produce such tentations in myself, as that, whensoever thou art pleased to return to me, thou findest me at the brink of some sin, and therefore Eripe me, O Lord, take hold of me, and deliver me; And lastly, Salvum me fac, O Lord, save me, Manifest thy good purpose upon me so, that I may never be shaken, or never overthrown in the faithful hope of that salvation, which thou hast preordained for me. These are the five petitions of the Prayer, and two of the five, The Miserere, Have mercy upon me, and the Sana, O Lord, heal me, are in these two verses. And then, the Reasons of the prayer, arising partly out of himself, and partly out of God; and some being mixed, and growing out of both roots together, some of the Reasons of the first nature, that is, of those that arise out of himself, are also in this Text. Therefore in this Text, we shall consider, first the extent of those two petitions that are in it, Quid miserere, what David intends by this prayer, Have mercy upon me, And then, Quid sana me, what he intends by that, O Lord, heal me. And secondly, we shall consider the strength of those Reasons, which are in our text, Quia infirmus, why God should be moved to mercy with that, Because David was weak, And then Quia turbata ossa, why, Because his bones were vexed; And again, Quia turbata anima valde, Because his soul was sore vexed. And in a third Consideration, we shall also see, that for all our petitions, for mercy, and for spiritual health, and for all our Reasons, weakness, vexation of bones, And sore vexation of the soul itself, God doth not always come to a speedy remedy, but puts us to our Vsquequò, But thou, O Lord, how long? How long wilt thou delay? And then lastly, That how long soever that be, yet we are still to attend his time, still to rely upon him; which is intimated in this, That David changes not his Master, but still applies himself to the Lord; with that Name, that he begun with in the first verse, he proceeds; and thrice in these few words he calls upon him by this name of Essence, jehova, O Lord have mercy upon me, O Lord heal me, O Lord how long wilt thou delay? He is not weary of attending the Lord, he is not inclinable to turn upon any other than the Lord; Have mercy upon me O Lord, etc. First then in our first part, 1 Part. Quid misereri. that part of David's postulatory prayer in this Text, Have mercy upon me, This mercy that David begs here, is not that mercy of God which is above all his works; for those works which follow it, are above it; To heal him, in this Text, To return to him, To deliver his soul, To save him, in the next verses, are greater works than this, which he calls here in that general name of Mercy. For this word Chanan used in this place, is not Deal iniquitates, Have mercy upon me so, as to blot out all mine iniquities; It is not Dimitte debita, Have mercy upon me so, as to forgive all my sins; but it is only Des mihi gratiam, Lord shed some drops of grace upon me, or as Tremellius hath it, Gratiosus sis mihi, Be a gracious Lord unto me. For this word is used, where Noah is said to have found grace in the eyes of the Lord; Gen. 6.8. which grace was, that God had provided for his bodily preservation in the Ark. And this word is used, not only of God towards men, Psal. 102.14. but also of men towards God; when they express their zeal towards God's house, and the compassion, and holy indignation which they had of the ruins thereof, they express it in this word, Thy servants delight in the stones of Zion, & miserti sunt pulveris ejus, They had mercy, they had compassion upon the dust and rubbish thereof. So that here this Miserere mei, which is the first groan of a sick soul, the first glance of the soul directed towards God, imports only this, Lord turn thy countenance towards me, Lord bring me to a sense that thou art turned towards me, Lord bring me within such a distance, as my soul may feel warmth and comfort in the rising of that Sun; Miserere mei, Look graciously upon me. At the first meeting of Isaac and Rebecca, Gen. 24.63. he was gone out to meditate in the fields, and she came riding that way, with his father's man, who was employed in making that marriage; and when upon ask she knew that it was he who was to be her husband, she took a veil and covered her face, says that story. What freedom, and nearness soever they were to come to after, yet there was a modesty, and a bashfulness, and a reservedness required before; and her first kindness should be but to be seen. A man would be glad of a good countenance from her that shall be his, before he asked her whether she will be his or no; A man would be glad of a good countenance from his Prince, before he intent to press him with any particular suit: And a sinner may be come to this Miserere mei Domine, to desire that the Lord would think upon him, that the Lord would look graciously towards him, that the Lord would refresh him with the beams of his favour, before he have digested his devotion into a formal prayer, or entered into a particular consideration, what his necessities are. Upon those words of the Apostle, 1 Tim. 2.1. Bern. De 4. modis orandi. I exhort you that supplications, and prayers, and Intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men, S. Bernard makes certain gradations, and steps, and ascensions of the soul in prayer, and intimates thus much, That by the grace of God's Spirit inanimating and quickening him, (without which grace he can have no motion at all) a sinner may come Ad supplicationes, which is S. Paul's first step, To supplications, which are à suppliciis, That out of a sense of some Judgement, some punishment, he may make his recourse to God; And then, by a farther growth in that grace, he may come Adorationes, which are Oris rationes, The particular expressing of his necessities, with his mouth; and a faithful assurance of obtaining them, in his prayer; And after, he may come farther, Ad Intercessiones, to an Intercession, to such an interest in God's favour, as that he durst put himself betwixt God and other men, as Abraham in the behalf of Sodom, to intercede for them, with a holy confidence that God would do good to them, for his sake; And to a farther step than these, which the Apostle may intent in that last, Ad gratiarum actiones, to a continual Thanksgiving, That by reason of God's benefits multiplied upon him, he find nothing to ask, but his Thanksgivings, and his acknowledgements, for former blessings, possess and fill all his prayers; Though he be grown up to this strength of devotion, To Supplications, to Prayers, to Intercessions, to Thanksgivings, yet, says S. Bernard, at first, when he comes first to deprehend himself in a particular sin, or in a course of sin, he comes Verecunde affectu, Bashfully, shamefastly, tremblingly; he knows not what to ask, he dares ask no particular thing at God's hand; But though he be not come yet, to particular requests, for pardon of past sins, nor for strength against future, not to a particular consideration of the weight of his sins, nor to a comparison betwixt his sin, and the mercy of God, yet he comes to a Miserere mei Domine, To a sudden ejaculation, O Lord be merciful unto me, how dare I do this in the sight of my God? It is much such an affection as is sometimes in a Felon taken in the manner, or in a condemned person brought to execution: One desires the Justice to be good to him, and yet he sees not how he can Bail him; the other desires the Sheriff to be good to him, and yet he knows he must do his Office. A sinner desires God to have mercy upon him, and yet he hath not descended to particular considerations requisite in that business. But yet this spiritual Malefactor is in better case, than the temporal are; They desire them to be good to them, who can do them no good; but God is still able, and still ready to reprieve them, and to put off the execution of his Judgements, which execution were to take them out of this world under the guiltiness, and condemnation of unrepented sins. And therefore, as S. Basil says, In scala, prima ascensio est ab humo, Basal. He that makes but one step up a stair, though he be not got much nearer to the top of the house, yet he is got from the ground, and delivered from the foulness, and dampness of that; so in this first step of prayer, Miscrere mei, O Lord be merciful unto me, though a man be not established in heaven, yet he is stepped from the world, and the miserable comforters thereof; He that committeth sin, is of the Devil: Yea, he is of him, in a direct line, 1 john 3.8. and in the nearest degree; he is the Offspring, the son of the Devil; john 8.44. Ex patre vestro estis, says Christ, You are of your father the Devil. Now, Qui se à maligni patris affinitate submoverit, He that withdraws himself from such a Father's house, though he be not presently come to means to live of himself, Basil. Quam feliciter patre suo orbatus! How blessed, how happy an Orphan is he become! How much better shall he find it, to be fatherless in respect of such a father, then masterless in respect of such a Lord, as he turns towards in this first ejaculation, and general application of the soul, Miserere mei, Have mercy upon me, O Lord, so much mercy, as to look graciously towards me! And therefore, as it was, by infinite degrees, a greater work, to make earth of nothing, then to make the best creatures of earth; So in the regeneration of a sinner, when he is to be made up a new creature, his first beginning, his first application of himself to God, is the hardest matter. But though he come not presently to look God fully in the face, nor conceive not presently an assurance of an established reconciliation, a fullness of pardon, a cancelling of all former debts, in an instant, Though he dare not come to touch God, and lay hold of himself, by receiving his Body and Blood in the Sacrament, yet the Evangelist calls thee to a contemplation of much comfort to thy soul, in certain preparatory accesses, and approaches. Behold, says he; that is, Look up, and consider thy pattern: Behold, Mat. 9.20. a woman diseased came behind Christ, and touched the hem of his garment; for she said in herself, If I may but touch the hem of his garment only, I shall be whole. She knew there was virtue to come out of his Body, and she came as near that, as she durst: she had a desire to speak; but she went no farther, but to speak to herself; she said to herself, says that Gospel, if I may but touch, etc. But Christ Jesus supplied all, performed all on his part, abundantly. Presently he turned about, says the Text: And this was not a transitory glance, but a full sight, and exhibiting of himself to the fruition of her eye, that she might see him. He saw her, says S. Matthew: Her; he did not direct himself upon others, and leave out her; And then, he spoke to her, to overcome her bashfulness; he called her Daughter, to overcome her diffidence; He bids her be of comfort, for she had met a more powerful Physician, than those, upon whom she had spent her time, and her estate; one that could cure her; one that would; one that had already; for so he says presently, Thy faith hath made thee whole. From how little a spark, how great a fire? From how little a beginning, how great a proceeding? She desired but the hem of his garment, and had all him. Beloved in him, his power, and his goodness ended not in her; Mat. 14.36. All that were sick were brought, that they might but touch the hem of his garment, and as many as touched it, were made whole. It was fare from a perfect faith, that made them whole; To have a desire to touch his garment, seems not, was not much: Neither was that desire that was, always in themselves, but in them that brought them. But yet, come thou so fare: Come, or be content to be brought, to be brought by example, to be brought by a statute, to be brought by curiosity, come any way to touch the hem of his garment, yea the hem of his servant, of Aaron's garment, and thou shalt participate of the sweet ointment, which flows from the head to the hem of the garment. Come to the house of God, his Church; Join with the Congregation of the Saints; Love the body, and love the garments too, that is, The Order, the Discipline, the Decency, the Unity of the Church; Love even the hem of the garment, that that almost touches the ground; that is, Such Ceremonies, as had a good use in their first institution, for raising devotion, and are freed and purged from that superstition, which, as a rust, was grown upon them, though they may seem to touch the earth, that is, to have been induced by earthly men, and not immediate institutions from God, yet love that hem of that garment, those outward assistances of devotion in the Church. Bring with thee a disposition to incorporate thyself with God's people here; and though thou be'st not yet come to a particular consideration of thy sins, and of the remedies, Though that spirit that possesses thee, that sin that governs thee, lie still a while, and sleep under all the thunders, which we denounce from this place, so that for a while thou be'st not moved nor affected with all that is said, yet Appropinquas, & nescis, (as S. Augustine said, when he came only out of curiosity to hear S. Ambrose preach at Milan) Thou dost come nearer and nearer to God, though thou discern it not, and at one time or other, this blessed exorcism, this holy Charm, this Ordinance of God, the word of God in the mouth of his servant, shall provoke and awaken that spirit of security in thee, and thou shalt feel him begin to storm, and at first that spirit, thy spirit, 1 Kings 18. will say to the spirit of the Preacher, Tune qui conturbas? Art thou he that troublest Israel? (as Ahab said to Eliah) Art thou he that troublest the peace of my conscience, and the security of my ways? And, when the Spirit of God shall search farther and farther, even ad occulta, to thy secretest sins, and touch upon them, and that that spirit of disobedience, 1 King 21.20. when he feels this powerful Exorcism, shall say in thee, and cry as Ahab also did, Invenisti me? Hast thou found me, O mine enemy? God shall answer, Inveni te, I have found thee, and found that thou hadst sold thyself to work wickedness in the sight of the Lord, And so shall bring thee to a more particular consideration of thine estate, and from thy having joined with the Church, Psal. 1●2. 13. in a Dominus miserebitur Zion, In an assurance, and acknowledgement, that the Lord will arise, and have mercy upon Zion, that is, of his whole Catholic Church, Psal. 67.1. And then come to a Dominus misereatur nostri, God be merciful unto us, and bless us, and cause his face to shine upon us, upon us that are met here, according to his Ordinance, and in confidence of his promise, upon this Congregation, of which thou makest thyself a part, thou wilt also come to this of David here, Domine miserere mei, Have mercy upon me, me in particular, and thou shalt hear God answer thee, Miserans miserebor tibi, With great mercy will I have mercy upon thee; upon thee; For, with him is plentiful Redemption; Mercy for his whole Church, mercy for this whole Congregation, mercy for every particular soul, that makes herself a part of the Congregation. Accustom thyself therefore to a general devotion, to a general application, to general ejaculations towards God, upon every occasion, and then, as a wedge of gold, that comes to be coined into particular pieces of currant money, the Lord shall stamp his Image upon all thy devotions, and bring thee to particular confessions of thy sins, and to particular prayers, for thy particular necessities. And this we may well conceive and admit, to be the nature of David's first prayer, Miserere mei, Have mercy upon me; And then, the reason, upon which this first petition is grounded, (for so it will be fittest to handle the parts, first the prayer, and then the reason) is, Quia infirmus, Have mercy upon me, for I am weak. First then, Quia. how imperfect, how weak soever our prayers be, yet still if it be a prayer, it hath a Quia, a Reason, upon which it is grounded. It hath in it, some implied, some interpretative consideration of ourselves, how it becomes us to ask that, which we do ask at God's hand, and it hath some implied, and interpretative consideration of God, how it conduces to God's glory to grant it: for, that prayer is very fare from faith, which is not made so much as with reason; with a consideration of some possibility, and some conveniency in it. Every man that says Lord, Lord, enters not into heaven; Every Lord, Lord, that is said, enters not into heaven, but vanishes in the air. A prayer must be with a serious purpose to pray; for else, those fashionall and customary prayers, are but false fires without shot, they batter not heaven; It is but an Interjection, that slips in; It is but a Parenthesis, that might be left out, whatsoever is uttered in the manner of a prayer, if it have not a Quia, a Reason, a ground for it. And therefore, when our Saviour Christ gave us that form of prayer, which includes all, he gave us in it a form of the reason too, Quia tuum, For thine is the Kingdom, etc. It were not a prayer, to say Adveniat Regnum, Thy Kingdom come, if it were not grounded upon that faithful assurance, that God hath a Kingdomehere; Nor to say Sanctificetur nomen, Hallowed be thy name, If he desired not to be glorified by us; Nor to ask daily bread, nor forgiveness of sins, but for the Quia potestas, Because he hath all these in his power. We consider this first access to God, Miserere mei, Have mercy upon me, to be but a kind of imperfect prayer, but the first step; but it were none at all, if it had no reason, and therefore it hath this, Quia infirmus, Because I am weak. This reason of our own weakness is a good motive for mercy, Quia infirmus. john 11.3. if in a desire of farther strength we come to that of La●arus sisters, to Christ, Ecce, quam amas, infirmatur, Behold Lord, that soul that thou lovest, and hast died for, is weak, and languishes. Christ answered then, Non est infirmitas ad mortem, This weakness is not unto death, but that the Son of God might be glorified. He will say so to thee too; if thou present thy weakness with a desire of strength from him, he will say, Quare moriemini, domus Israel? why will ye die of this disease? Gratia mea sufficit; you may recover for all this; you may repent, you may abstain from this sin, you may take this spiritual physic, the Word, the Sacraments, if you will; Tantummodo robustus esto, (as God says to joshuah) Only be valiant, and fight against it, and thou shalt find strength grow in the use thereof. But for the most part, De infirmitate blandimur, says S. Bernard, De gradibus humilitatis. we flatter ourselves with an opinion of weakness; & ut liberiùs peccemus, libenter infirmamur, we are glad of this natural and corrupt weakness, that we may impute all our licentiousness to our weakness, and natural infirmity. But did that excuse Adam, (says that Father) Quòd per uxorem tanquam per carnis infirmitatem peceavit, That he took his occasion of sinning from his weaker part, from his wife? Quia infirmus, That thou art weak of thyself, is a just motive to induce God to bring thee to himself; Qui verè portavit languores tuos, who hath surely borne all thine infirmities; Esay 53.4. But to leave him again when he hath brought thee, to refuse so light and easy yoke as his is, not to make use of that strength which he by his grace offers thee, this is not the affection of the Spouse, Languor amantis, when the person languishes for the love of Christ, but it is Languor amoris, when the love of Christ languishes in that person. And therefore if you be come so far with David, as to this Miserere quia infirmus, that an apprehension of your own weakness have brought you to him, in a prayer for mercy, and more strength, go forward with him still, to his next Petition, Sana me, O Lord heal me, for God is always ready to build upon his own foundations, and accomplish his own beginnings. Acceptus in gratiam, hilariter veni ad postulationes: Sanae. When thou art established in favour, thou mayst make any suit; when thou art possessed of God by one prayer, thou mayst offer more. This is an encouragement which that Father S. Bernard gives, in observing the divers degrees of praying, That though servandae humilitatis gratia, divina pietas ordinavit, To make his humility the more profitable to him, God imprints in an humble and penitent sinner, this apprehension, quanto plus profecit, eo minus se reputet profecisse, That the more he is in God's favour, the more he fears he is not so, or the more he fears to lose that favour, because it is a part, and a symptom of the working of the grace of God, to make him see his own unworthiness, the more manifestly, the more sensibly, yet, it is a religious insinuation, and a circumvention that God loves, when a sinner husbands his graces so well, as to grow rich under him, and to make his thanks for one blessing, a reason, and an occasion of another; so to gather upon God by a rolling Trench, and by a winding stair, as Abraham gained upon God, in the behalf of Sodom; for this is an act of the wisdom of the Serpent, which our Saviour recommends unto us, in such a Serpentine line, (as the Artists call it) to get up to God, and get into God by such degrees, as David does here, from his Miserere, to a Sana, from a gracious look, to a perfect recovery; Luke 10. from the act of the Levite that looked upon the wounded man, to the act of the Samaritane that undertook his cure; from desiring God to visit him as a friend, (as Abraham was called the friend of God) to study him as a Physician. james 2.23. Esay 55.1. Esay 53.4. Because the Prophet Esay makes a Proclamation in Christ's name, Ho, every one that thirsteth, etc. And because the same Prophet says of him, Verè portavit, He hath truly born upon himself (and therefore taken away from us) all our diseases, Tertullian says elegantly, that Esay presents Christ, Praedicatorem, & Medicatorem, as a Preacher, and as a Physician; Indeed he is a Physician both ways; in his Word, and in his Power, and therefore in that notion only, as a Physician, David presents him here. Now Physicians say, That man hath in his Constitution, in his Complexion, a natural virtue, which they call Balsamum suum, his own Balsamum, by which, any wound which a man could receive in his body, would cure itself, if it could be kept clean from the anoiances of the air, and all extrinsique encumbrances. Something that hath some proportion and analogy to this Balsamum of the body, there is in the soul of man too: The soul hath Nardum suam, Cant. 1.12. her Spikenard, as the Spouse says, Nardus meadedit odorem suum, Basil: she had a spikenard, a perfume, a fragrancy, a sweet savour in herself. For, Virtutes germaniùs attingunt animam, quàm corpus sanitas, Virtuous inclinations, and a disposition to moral goodness, is more natural to the soul of man, and nearer of kin to the soul of man, than health is to the body. And then, if we consider bodily health, Nulla oratio, nulla doctrinae formula nos docet morbum odiisse, says that Father: There needs no Art, there needs no outward Eloquence, to persuade a man, to be loath to be sick: Ita in anima inest naturalis, & citra doctrinam mali evitatio, says he; So the soul hath a natural and untaught hatred, and detestation of that which is evil. The Church at thy Baptism doth not require Sureties at thy hands, for this: Thy Sureties undertake to the Church in thy behalf, That thou shalt forsake the flesh, the world, and the devil, That thou shalt believe all the Articles of our Religion, That thou shalt keep all the Commandments of God; But for this knowledge and detestation of evil, they are not put to undertake them then, neither doth the Church Catechise thee, in that after: for, the sum of all those duties which concern the detestation of evil, consists in that unwritten law of thy conscience which thou knowest naturally. Scis quod boni proximo faciendum, says that Father, Naturally thou knowest what good thou art bound to do to another man; Idem enim est, quod ab aliis tute tibi fieri velis; for, it is but ask thyself, What thou wouldst that that other man should do unto thee: Non ignoras quid sit ipsum malum, Thou canst not be ignorant, what evil thou shouldest abstain from offering to another, Est enim quod ab alio fieri nolis, It is but the same, which thou thinkest another should not put upon thee. So that the soul of man hath in it Balsamum suum, Nardum suam, A medicinal Balsamum, a fragrant Spikenard in herself, a natural disposition to Moral goodness, as the body hath to health. But therein lies the souls disadvantage, that whereas the causes that hinder the cure of a bodily wound, are extrinsique offences of the Air, and putrefaction from thence, the causes in the wounds of the soul, are intrinsique, so as no other man can apply physic to them; Nay, they are hereditary, and there was no time early enough for ourselves to apply any thing by way of prevention, for the wounds were as soon as we were, and sooner; Here was a new soul, but an old sore; a young child, but an inveterate disease. As S. Augustin cannot conceive any interim, any distance, between the creating of the soul, and the infusing of the soul into the body, but eases himself upon that, Creando infundit, and infundendo create, The Creation is the Infusion, and the Infusion is the Creation, so we cannot conceive any Interim, any distance, between the infusing and the sickening, between the coming and the sinning of the soul. So that there was no means of prevention; I could not so much as wish, that I might be no sinner, for I could not wish that I might be no Child. Neither is there any means of separation now; our concupiscencies dwell in us, and prescribe in us, and will gnaw upon us, as worms, till they deliver our bodies to the worms of the grave, and our consciences to the worm that never dies. From the dangerous effects then of this sickness, David desires to be healed, and by God himself, Sana me Domine, O Lord heal me; for that physic that Man gives, is all but drugs of the earth; Moral and Civil counsels, rather to cover then recover, rather to disguise then to avoid: They put a clove in the mouth, but they do not mend the lungs. To cover his nakedness Adam took but fig-leaves; Esay 38.11. but to recover Ezechias, God took figs themselves. Man deals upon leaves, that cover, and shadow, God upon fruitful and effectual means, 2 King. 20.7. that cure, and nourish. And then, God took a lump of figs; God is liberal of his graces, and gives not over a cure, at one dressing: And they were dry figs too, says that story; you must not look for figs from the Tree, for immediate Revelations, for private inspirations from God; but the medicinal preaching of the Word, medicinal Sacraments, medicinal Absolution, are such dry figs as God hath preserved in his Church for all our diseases. S. Paul had a strong desire, and he expressed it in often prayer to God, to have this peccant humour, this malignity clean purged out, to have that Stimulus carnis, that concupiscence absolutely taken away. God would not do so; but yet he applied his effectual physic, sufficient Grace. This then is the souls Panacaea, The Pharmacum Catholicum, the Medicina omnimorbia, The physic that cures all, the sufficient Grace, the seasonable mercy of God, in the merits of Christ Jesus, and in the love of the Holy Ghost. This is the physic; but then, there are ever Vehicula medicinae, certain syrups, and liquors, to convey the physic; water, and wine in the Sacraments; And certain Physicians to ordain and prescribe, The Ministers of the Word and Sacraments; The Father sends, The Son makes, The Holy Ghost brings, The Minister lays on the plaster. For, Medicinae ars à Deo data, Basil; ut inde rationem animae curandae disceremus, God's purpose in giving us the science of bodily health, was not determined in the body: but his large and gracious purpose was, by that restitution of the body, to raise us to the consideration of spiritual health. When Christ had said to him, who was brought sick of the palsy, Thy sins are forgiven thee, Mark 2. and that the Scribes and Pharisees were scandalised with that, as though he, being but man, had usurped upon the power of God, Christ proves to them, by an actual restoring of his bodily health, that he could restore his soul too, in the forgiveness of sins: He asks them there, Whether is it easier to say, Thy sins are forgiven thee, or to say, Arise, take up thy bed, and walk. Christus facit sanitatem corporalem argumentum spiritualis; Bernar. Christ did not determine his doctrine in the declaration of a miraculous power exercised upon his body, but by that, established their belief of his spiritual power, in doing that, which in their opinion was the greater work. Pursue therefore his method of Curing; And if God have restored thee in any sickness, by such means, as he of his goodness hath imprinted in natural herbs, and Simples, think not that that was done only or simply for thy body's sake, but that, as it is as easy for God to say, Thy sins are forgiven thee, as Take up thy bed and walk, so it is as easy for thee, to have spiritual physic, as bodily; because, as God hath planted all those medicinal Simples in the open fields, for all, though some do tread them under their feet, so hath God deposited and prepared spiritual helps for all, though all do not make benefit of those helps which are offered. It is true, that God says of his Church, Hortus conclusus soror mea, My sister, Cant. 4.12. my Spouse is a Garden enclosed, as a spring shut in, and a fountain sealęd up; But therein is our advantage, who, by being enwrapped in the Covenant, as the seed of the faithful, as the children of Christian Parents, are borne if not within this walled Garden, yet with a key in our hand to open the door, that is, with a right and title, to the Sacrament of Baptism. The Church is a Garden walled in, for their better defence and security that are in it; but not walled in to keep any out, who, either by being borne within the Covenant, inherit a right to it, or by accepting the grace which is offered them, acquire, and profess a desire to enter thereinto. For, as it is a Garden, full of Spikenard, and of Incense, and of all spices, (as the Text says there) so that they who are in this Garden, in the Church, are in possession of all these blessed means of spiritual health; So are these spices, and Incense, and Spikenard, of a diffusive and spreading nature, and breath even over the walls of the Garden: Oleum effusum nomen ejus; The name of Christ is unction, Ointment; Cant. 1.3. 4.16. but it is an Ointment poured out, an Ointment that communicates the fragrancy thereof, to persons at a good distance; And, as it is said there, Christ calls up the North and the South to blow upon his Garden, he raises up men to transport and propagate these means of salvation to all Nations, so that, in every Nation, they that fear him are acceptable to him; not that that fear of God in general, as one universal power, is sufficient in itself, to bring any man to God immediately, but that God directs the Spikenard, and Incense of this Garden upon that man, and seconds his former fear of God, with a love of God, and brings him to a knowledge, and to a desire, and to a possession, and fruition of our more assured means of salvation. When he does so, this is his method, as in restoring bodily health, he said, Surge, Tolle, Ambula, Arise, Take up thy bed, and Walk: So to every sick soul, whose cure he undertakes, he says so too, Surge, Tolle, Ambula. Our beds are our natural affections; These he does not bid us cast away, nor burn, nor destroy; since Christ vouchsafed Endure hominem, we must not Exuere hominem; Since Christ invested the nature of man, and became man, we must not pretend to divest it, and become Angels, or flatter ourselves in the merit of Mortifications, not enjoined, or of a retiredness, and departing out of the world, in the world, by the withdrawing of ourselves from the offices of mutual society, or an extinguishing of natural affections. But, Surge, says our Saviour, Arise from this bed, sleep not lazily in an over-indulgency to these affections; but, Ambula, walk sincerely in thy Calling, and thou shalt hear thy Saviour say, Non est infirmitas haec ad mortem, These affections, nay, these concupiscencies shall not destroy thee. David then doth not pray for such an exact and exquisite state of health, as that he should have no infirmity; Physicians for our bodies tell us, that there is no such state; The best degree of health is but Neutralitas; He is well (that is, as well as Man can be) that is not dangerously sick; for, absolutely well no man can be. Spiritual Physicians will tell you so too; He that says you have no sin, or that God sees not your sin, if you be of the Elect, deceives you. It is not for an Innocency that David prays; but it is against deadly diseases, and against violent accidents of those diseases. He doth not beg, he cannot hope for an absolute peace: Nature hath put aware upon us; True happiness, and apparent happiness fight against one another: sin hath put a war upon us; The flesh and the Spirit fight against one another: Christ Jesus himself came to put a war upon us; The zeal of his glory, and the course of this world, fight against one another. It is not against all war; nay, it is not against all victory that David prays; He cannot hope that he should be overcome by no Tentations; but against such a war, and such a victory, as should bring him to servility, and bondage to sin, That sin entering by Conquest upon him, should govern as a tyrant over him, against such a sickness as should induce a consumption, it is that he directs this prayer, Sana me Domine, Not, Lord make me impeccable, but Lord make me penitent, and then heal me. And he comes not to take physic upon wantonness; but because the disease is violent, because the accidents are vehement; so vehement, so violent, as that it hath pierced Ad ossa, and Ad animam, My bones are vexed, and my soul is sore troubled, Therefore heal me; which is the Reason upon which he grounds this second petition, Heale me, because. my bones are vexed etc. We must necessarily insist a little upon these terms, Ossa. The Bones, The Soul, The Trouble, or Vexation. First, Ossa, Bones, We know in the natural and ordinary acceptation, what they are; They are these Beams, and Timbers, and Rafters of these Tabernacles, these Temples of the Holy Ghost, these bodies of ours. But Immanebimus nativae significationi? says S. Basil, Shall we dwell upon the native and natural signification of these Bones? Et intelligentia passim obvia contenti erimus? Shall we who have our conversation in heaven, find no more in these Bones, than an earthly, a worldly, a natural man would do? By S. Basils' example, we may boldly proceed farther: Membra etiam animae sunt, Esay 42. says he: The soul hath her limbs as well as the body. Surdi audite, caeci aspicite, says God in Esay; If their souls had not ears and eyes, the blind could not see, the deaf could not hear, and yet God calls upon the deaf and blind, to hear and see. As S. Paul says to the Ephesians, The eyes of your understanding being enlightened; so David says, Psal. 3.7. Dentes peccatorum contrivisti, Thou hast broken the teeth; That is, the pride and the power, the venom and malignity of the wicked: Membra etiam animae sunt, The soul hath her Bones too; and here David's Bones were the strongest powers and faculties of his soul, and the best actions and operations of those faculties, and yet they were shaken. For this hereditary sickness, Original sin, prevails so far upon us, that upon our good days we have some grudge of that Fever; Even in our best actions, we have some of the leaven of that sin. So that if we go about to comfort ourselves, with some dispositions to God's glory, which we find in ourselves, with some sparks of love to his precepts, and his commandments, with some good strength of faith, with some measure of good works, yea, with having something for the Name, and glory of Christ Jesus: yet if we consider what humane and corrupt affections have been mingled in all these, Conturbabuntur ossa, our Bones will be troubled, even those that appeared to be strong works, and likely to hold out, will need a reparation, an exclamation, Sana me Domine, O Lord heal these too, or else these are as weak as the worst: Ossa non dolent; The Bones themselves have no sense, they feel no pain. We need not say, That those good works themselves, which we do, have in their nature, the nature of sin; That every good work considered alone, and in the substance of the act itself is sin; But membranae dolent; Those little membrans, those films, those thin skins, that cover, and that line some bones, are very sensible of pain, and of any vexation. Though in the nature of the work itself, the work be not sin, yet in those circumstances that invest, and involve the work, in those things which we mingle with the work, whether desire of glory towards men, or opinion of merit towards God; Whensoever those bones, those best actions come to the examination of a tender and a diligent Conscience, Si ossa non dolent, membranae dolent, If the work be not sinful, the circumstances are, and howsoever they may be conceived to be strong, as they are Ossa, Bones, works, in a moral consideration, good, yet, as they are Ossa mea, says David, as they are My bones, such good works as taste of my ill corruptions, so long they are vexed, and troubled, and cannot stand upright, nor appear with any confidence in the sight of God. Thus far then first David needed this sanation, this health that he prays for, Anima. that his best actions were corrupt; But the corruption went farther, to the very root and fountain of those actions, Ad ipsam animam, His very soul was sore vexed. It is true, that as this word Anima, the soul, is sometimes taken in the Scriptures, this may seem to go no farther than the former, no more that his soul was vexed, then that his bones were so: for, Anima, in many places, is but Animalis Homo, The soul signifies but the natural man: And so opponitur spiritui, The soul is not only said to be a divers thing, but a contrary thing to the Spirit. When the Apostle says to the Thessalonians, 1 Thes. ult. 23. Now the very God of peace sanctify you throughout, that your whole spirit, and soul, and body, may be kept blameless unto the coming of our Lord jesus Christ. And where the same Apostle says to the Hebrews, The word of God divideth asunder the soul and the spirit; Heb. 4.12. here is a difference put between corrupt nature, and the working of the Spirit of God, the Holy Ghost in man: for here, the soul is taken for Animalis home, The natural man, and the Spirit is taken for the Spirit of God. But besides this, these two words, Soul and Spirit, are sometimes used by the Fathers, in a sense divers from one another, and as different things, and yet still as parts of one and the same man; Man is said by them, not only to have a body, and a soul, but to have a soul, and a spirit; not as Spirit is the Spirit of God, and so an extrinsecall thing, but as Spirit is a constitutive part of the natural man. So, in particular, amongst many, Gregory Nyssen takes the Body to be spoken De nutribili, The flesh and blood of man, And the soul De sensibili, The operation of the senses, And the Spirit De Intellectuali, The Intellectual, the reasonable faculties of man; That in the body, Man is conformed to Plants that have no sense, In the soul, to Beasts, that have no reason, In the spirit, to Angels. But so, The Spirit is but the same thing with that, which now we do ordinarily account the soul to be; for we make account, that the Image of God is imprinted in the soul, and that gives him his conformity to Angels: But divers others of the Ancients have taken Soul and Spirit, for different things, even in the Intellectual part of man, somewhat obscurely, I confess, and, as some venture to say, unnecessarily, if not dangerously. It troubled S. Hierome sometimes, Ad Hedibiam. l. 12. Epist. 150 how to understand the word Spirit in man: but he takes the easiest way, he dispatches himself of it, as fast as he could, that is, to speak of it only as it was used in the Scriptures: Famosa quaestio, says he, sed brevi sermone tractanda; It is a question often disputed, but may be shortly determined, Idem spiritus hic, ac in iis verbis, Nolite extinguere spiritum; When we hear of the Spirit in a Man, in Scriptures, we must understand it of the gifts of the Spirit; for so, fully to the same purpose, says S. chrysostom, Spiritus est charisma spiritus, The Spirit is the working of the Spirit, The gifts of the Spirit: and so when we hear, The Spirit was vexed, The Spirit was quenched, still it is to be understood, The gifts of the Spirit. And so, as they restrain the signification of Spirit, to those gifts only, (though the word do indeed, in many places, require a larger extension) so do many restrain this word in our text, The Soul, only Ad sensum, to the sensitive faculties of the soul, that is, only to the pain and anguish that his body suffered; But so far, at least, David had gone, in that which he said before, My bones are vexed. Now, Ingravescit morbus, The disease festers beyond the bone, even into the marrow itself. His Bones were those best actions that he had produced, and he saw in that Contemplation, that for all that he had done, he was still, at best, but an unprofitable servant, if not a rebellious enemy; But then, when he considers his whole soul, and all that ever it can do, he sees all the rest will be no better; The poison, he sees, is in the fountain, the Canker in the root, the rancour, the venom in the soul itself. Corpus instrumentum, anima ars ipsa, says S. Basil: The body, and the senses are but the tools, and instruments, that the soul works with. But the soul is the art, the science that directs those Instruments; The faculties of the soul are the boughs that produce the fruits; and the operations, and particular acts of those faculties are the fruits, but the soul is the root of all. And David sees, that this art, this science, this soul can direct him, or establish him in no good way; That not only the fruits, his particular acts, nor only the boughs, and arms, his several faculties, but the root itself, the soul itself, was infected. His bones are shaken, he dares not stand upon the good he hath done, his soul is so too, he cannot hope for any good he shall do: He hath no merit for the past, he hath no freewill for the future; that is his case. This troubles his bones, Turbata. this troubles his soul, this vexes them both; for, the word is all one, in both places, as our last Translators have observed, and rendered it aright; not vexed in one place, and troubled in the other, as our former Translators had it; But in both places it is Bahal, and Bahal imports a vehemence, both in the intenseness of it, and in the suddenness, and inevitableness of it: And therefore it signifies often, Praecipitantiam, A headlong downfall and irrecoverableness; And often, Evanescentiam, an utter vanishing away, and annihilation. David, (whom we always consider in the Psalms, not only to speak literally of those miseries which were actually upon himself, but prophetically too, of such measures, and exaltations of those miseries, as would certainly fall upon them, as did not seek their sanation, their recovery from the God of all health) looking into all his actions, (they are the fruits) and into all his faculties, (they are the boughs) and into the root of all, the soul itself, considering what he had done, what he could do, he sees that as yet he had done no good, he sees he should never be able to do any; His bones are troubled, He hath no comfort in that which is grown up, and past, And his soul is sore troubled, (for to the trouble of the soul, there is added in the Text, that particle, Valde, It is a sore trouble that falls upon the soul, A troubled spirit who can bear?) because he hath no hope in the future; He was no surer for that which was to come, then for that which was passed; But he, (that is, all, considered in that case which he proposes) he comes (as the word signifies) ad praecipitantiam, That all his strength can scarce keep him from precipitation into despair, And he comes (as the word signifies too) ad Evanescentiam, to an evaporating, and a vanishing of his soul, that is, even to a renouncing, and a detestation of his immortality, and to a willingness, to a desire, that he might die the death of other Creatures, which perish altogether, and go out as a Candle. This is the trouble, the sore trouble of his soul, who is brought to an apprehension of God's indignation for not performing Conditions required at his hands, and of his inability to perform them, and is not come to the contemplation of his mercy, in supply thereof. There is Turbatio Timoris, Mat. 2.3. Psal. 107.27. A trouble out of fear of danger in this world, Herod's trouble; When the Magis brought word of another King, Herod was troubled, and all jerusalem with him. There is Turbatio confusionis, The Mariners trouble in a tempest; Their soul melteth for trouble, Luk. 10.41. Luk. 1.29. says David. There is Turbatio occupationis; Martha's trouble; Martha thou art troubled about many things, says Christ. There is Turbatio admirationis, The blessed Virgins trouble, When she saw the Angel, she was troubled at his saying. To contract this, John 11.33. There is Turbatio compassionis, Christ's own trouble, When he saw Mary weep for her brother Lazarus, he groaned in the spirit, and was troubled in himself. But in all these troubles, Herod's fear, The Mariner's irresolution, Martha's multiplicity of business, The blessed Virgins sudden amazement, Our Saviour's compassionate sorrow, as they are in us, worldly troubles, so the world administers some means to extemiate, and alleviate these troubles; for, fears are overcome, and storms are appeased, and businesses are ended, and wonders are understood, and sorrows wear out; But in this trouble of the bones, and the soul, in so deep and sensible impressions of the anger of God, looking at once upon the pravity, the obliquity, the malignity of all that I have done, of all that I shall do, Man hath but one step between that state, and despair, to stop upon, to turn to the Author of all temporal, and all spiritual health, the Lord of life, with David's prayer, Psal. 51.10. Cor mundum crea, Create a clean heart within me; Begin with me again, as thou begunst with Adam, in innocency; and see, if I shall husband and govern that innocency better than Adam did; for, for this heart which I have from him, I have it in corruption; and, Job 4. who can bring a clean thing out of uncleanness? Therefore David's prayer goes farther in the same place, Renew a constant spirit in me; Present cleanness cannot be had from myself; but if I have that from God, mine own will make me foul again, and therefore do not only create a clean spirit, but renew a spirit of constancy and perseverance. Therefore I have also another Prayer in the same Psalm, Psal. 51.12. Spiritu principali confirma me, Sustain me, uphold me with thy free spirit, thy large, thy munificent spirit: for thy ordinary graces will not defray me, nor carry me through this valley of tentations; not thy single money, but thy Talents; not as thou art thine own Almoner, but thine own Treasurer; It is not the dew, but thy former and later rain that must water, though it be thy hand that hath planted; Not any of the Rivers, though of Paradise, but the Ocean itself, that must bring me to thy Jerusalem. Create a clean heart; Thou didst so in Adam, and in him I defiled it. Renew that heart; Thou didst so in Baptism; And thy upholding me with thy constant spirit, is thy affording me means, which are constant, in thy Church; But thy confirming me with thy principal spirit, is thy making of those means, instituted in thy Church, effectual upon me, by the spirit of Application, the spirit of Appropriation, by which the merits of the Son, deposited in the Church, are delivered over unto me. This then is the force of David's reason in this Petition, Ossa implentur vitiis, job 20.11. as one of jobs friends speaks, My bones are full of the sins of my youth, That is, my best actions, now in mine age, have some taste, some tincture from the habit, or some sinful memory of the acts of sin in my youth; Adhaeret os meum carni, as David also speaks, Psal. 102.5. Lam. 4.8. My bones cleave to my flesh, my best actions taste of my worst; And My skin cleaves to my bones, as jeremy laments, That is, My best actions call for a skin, for something to cover them: And Therefore, not Therefore because I have brought myself into this state, but because by thy grace I have power to bring this my state into thy sight, by this humble confession, Sana me Domine, O Lord heal me; Thou that art my Messiah, be my Moses, Exod. 13.19. and carry these bones of thy joseph out of Egypt; Deliver me, in this consideration of mine actions, from the terror of a self-accusing, and a jealous, and suspicious conscience: 1 King. 13.31. Bury my bones beside the bones of the man of God; Beside the bones of the Son of God: Look upon my bones as they are coffined, and shrouded in that sheet, the righteousness of Christ Jesus. Accedant ossa ad ossa, as in Ezekiel's vision, Let our bones come together, Ezek. 37.7. bone to bone, mine to his, and look upon them uno intuitu, all together, and there shall come sinews, and flesh, and skin upon them, and breathe upon them, and in Him, in Christ Jesus, I shall live; My bones being laid by his, though but gristles in themselves, my actions being considered in his, though imperfect in themselves, shall bear me up in the sight of God. And this may be the purpose of this prayer, this sanation, grounded upon this reason, O Lord heal me, for my bones are vexed, etc. But yet David must, and doth stop upon this step, he stays God's leisure, and is put to his Vsquequo? But thou, O Lord, how long? David had cried Miserere, he had begged of God to look towards him, Vsquequo. and consider him; He had revealed to him his weak and troublesome estate, and he had entreated relief; but yet God gave not that relief presently, nor seemed to have heard his prayer, nor to have accepted his reasons. David comes to some degrees of expostulation with God; but he dares not proceed far; it is but usquequo Domine? which if we consider it in the Original, and so also in our last Translation, requires a serious consideration. For it is not there as it is in the first Translation, How long wilt thou delay? David charges God with no delay: But it is only, Et tu Domine, usquequo? But thou O Lord, how long? And there he ends in a holy abruptness, as though he had taken himself in a fault, to enterprise any expostulation with God. He doth not say, How long ere thou hear me? If thou hear me, how long ere thou regard me? If thou regard me, how long ere thou heal me? How long shall my bones, how long shall my soul be troubled? He says not so; but leaving all to his leisure, he corrects his passion, he breaks off his expostulation. As long as I have that commission from God, Dic animae tuae, Salus tua sum, Psal. 35.3. Say unto thy soul, I am thy salvation, my soul shall keep silence unto God, of whom cometh my salvation: Silence from murmuring, how long soever he be in recovering me; not silence from prayer, that he would come; for that is our last Consideration; David proposed his Desire, Miserere, and Sana, Look towards me, and Heale me, that was our first; And than his Reasons, Ossa, Anima, My bones, my soul is troubled, that was our second; And then he grew sensible of God's absence, for all that, which was our third Proposition; for yet, for all this, he continues patiented, and solieites the same God in the same name, The Lord, But thou O Lord, how long? Need we then any other example of such a patience than God himself, Domine. who stays so long in expectation of our conversion? But we have David's example too, who having first made his Deprecation, Ver. 1. That God would not reprove him in anger, having prayed God to forbear him, he is also well content to forbear God, for those other things which he asks, till it be his pleasure to give them. But yet he neither gives over praying, nor doth he incline to pray to any body else, but still Domine miserere, Have mercy upon me O Lord, and Domine fana, O Lord heal me: Industry in a lawful calling, favour of great persons, a thankful acknowledgement of the ministry and protection of Angels, and of the prayers of the Saints in heaven for us, all these concur to our assistance; But the root of all, all temporal, all spiritual blessings, is he, to whom David leads us here, Dominus, The Lord; Lord, as he is Proprietary of all creatures; He made All, and therefore is Lord of All; as he is jehovah, which is the name of Essence, of Being, as all things have all their being from him, their very being, and their well-being, their Creation, and their Conservation; And in that Name of Recognition and acknowledgement, that all that can be had, is to be asked of him, and him only, Him, as he is jehovah, The Lord, does David solicit him here; Acts 4.12. for, as there is no other Name under heaven, given amongst men, whereby we must be saved, but the Name of jesus Christ; So is there no other Name above in heaven proposed to men, whereby they should receive these blessings, but the Name of jehovah; for jehovah is the name of the whole Trinity, and there are no more, no Queen-mother in heaven, no Counsellors in heaven in Commission with the Trinity. In this Name therefore David pursues his Prayer: for, from a River, from a Cistern, a man may take more water at once, than he can from the first spring and fountain head; But he cannot take the water so sincerely, so purely, so intemerately from the channel as from the fountain head. Princes and great persons may raise their Dependants faster than God does his; But sudden riches come like a land-water, and bring much foulness with them. Esay 5.7. We are God's vineyard; The vineyard of the Lord of Hosts, is the house of Israel, and the men of judah are his pleasant plant, says the Prophet. And God delights to see his plants prosper, and grow up seasonably. More than once Christ makes that profession, That he goes down into the Garden of Nuts, Cant. 6.10. Cant. 7.12. to see the fruits of the valley, And to see whether the Vine flourished, and whether the Pomegranet budded; And he goes up early into the vineyard, to see whether the tender grape appeared. He had a pleasure in the growth and successive increase of his plants, and did not look they should come hastily to their height and maturity. If worldly blessings, by a good industry, grow up in us, it is natural; But if they fall upon us, Psal 11.6. Exod. 9.23. Rev. 16.21. Pluit laqueos, God reins down springes and snares, occasions of sin in those abundances, and Pluit grandinem, He will rain down Hailstones; Hailstones as big as Talents, as in the Revelation; as big as Millstones; He will make our riches occasions of raising enemies, and make those enemy's Grindstones to grind our fortunes to powder. Make not too much haste to be rich: Even in spiritual riches, in spiritual health make not too much haste. Pray for it; for there is no other way to get it. Pray to the Lord for it: For, Saints and Angels have but enough for themselves. Make haste to begin to have these spiritual graces; To desire them, is to begin to have them: But make not too much haste in the way; Do not think thyself purer than thou art, because thou seest another do some such sins, as thou hast forborn. Beloved, at last, when Christ Jesus comes with his scales, thou shalt not be weighed with that man, but every man shall be weighed with God: Be pure as your Father in heaven is pure, is the weight that must try us all; and then, the purest of us all, that trusts to his own purity, must hear that fearful Mene Tekel Vpharsin, Thou art weighed, Thou art found too light, Thou art divided, separated from the face of God, because thou hast not taken the purity of that Son upon thee, who not only in himself, but those also who are in him, in him are pure, as his, and their Father in heaven is pure. Neither make so much haste to this spiritual riches, and health, as to think thyself whole before thou art: Neither murmur, nor despair of thy recovery, if thou be'st not whole so soon as thou desiredst. If thou wrestle with tentations, and canst not overcome them, If thou purpose to pray earnestly, and find thy mind presently strayed from that purpose, If thou intent a good course, and meet with stops in the way, If thou seek peace of conscience, and scruples out of zeal interrupt that, yet discomfort not thyself. God 〈…〉 in the Creation, before he came to make thee; yet all that while he wrought for thee. Thy Regeneration, to make thee a new creature, is a greater work than that, and it cannot be done in an instant. God hath purposed a building in thee; he hath sat down, and considered, Luke 14.28. that he hath sufficient to accomplish that building, as it is in the Gospel, and therefore leave him to his leisure. When thou hast begun with David, with a Domine ne arguas, O Lord rebuke me not, and followed that, with a Domine miserere, O Lord look graciously towards me, and pursued that, with a Domine sana me, O Lord heal me, If thou find a Domine usqucquo? Any degree of weariness of attending the Lords leisure, arising in thee, suppress it, overcome it, with more and more petitions, and that which God did by way of Commandment, in the first Creation, do thou by way of prayer, in this thy second Creation; First he said, Piat lux, Let there be light: Pray thou, that he would enlighten thy darkness. God was satisfied with that light for three days, and then he said, Fiant luminaria, Let there be great lights; Bless God for his present light, but yet pray that he will enlarge that light which he hath given thee; And turn all those his Commandments into prayers, till thou come to his Faciamus hominem, Let us make man according to our own Image; Pray that he will restore his Image in thee, and conform thee to him, who is the Image of the invisible God, our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus. Coloss. 1.15. He did his greatest work upon thee, before time was, thine Election; And he hath reserved the confummation of that work, till time shall be no more, thy Glorification: And as forty Vocation he hath taken his own time, (He did not call thee into the world in the time of the Primitive Church, nor, perchance, call thee effectually, though in the Church, in the days of thy youth) So stay his time for thy Sanctification, and, if the dayspring from on high have visited thee, but this morning, If thou be'st come to a fiat lux but now, that now God have kindled some light in thee, he may come this day seven-night to a siant luminaria, to multiply this light by a more powerful means. If not so soon, yet still remember, that it was God that made the Sun stand still to joshaah, as well as to run his race as a Giant to David; And God was as much glorified in the standing still of the Sun, as in the motion thereof; And shall be so in thy Sanctification, though it seem to stand at a stay for a time, when his time shall be to perfect it, in a measure acceptable to thee. Nothing is acceptable to him, but that which is seasonable; nor seasonable, except it come in the time proper to it: And, as S. Augustine says, Natura rei est, quam indidit Deus, That is the nature of every thing, which God hath imprinted in it, So that is the time for every thing, which God hath appointed for it. Pray, and Stay, are two blessed Monosy lables; To ascend to God, To attend God's descent to us, is the Motion, and the Rest of a Christian; And as all Motion is for Rest, so let all the Motions of our soul in our prayers to God be, that our wills may rest in his, and that all that pleases him, may please us, therefore because it pleases him; for therefore, because it pleases him, it becomes good for us, and then, when it pleases him, it becomes seasonable unto us, and expedient for us. SERM. LII. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 6.4, 5. Return, O Lord; Deliver my soul; O Lord save me, for thy mercy's sake. For in Death there is no Remembrance of thee; and in the Grave, who shall give thee thanks? THe whole Psalm is Prayer; and Prayer is our whole service to God. Earnest Prayer hath the nature of Importunity; We press, we importune God in Prayer; Yet that puts not God to a morosity, to a frowardness; God flings not away from that; God suffers that importunity, and more. Prayer hath the nature of Impudence; We threaten God in Prayer; as Gregor: Nazi: adventures to express it; He says, his Sister, in the vehemence of her Prayer, would threaten God, Et honesta quadam impudentiae, egit impudentem; She came, says he, to a religious impudence with God, and to threaten him, that she would never departed from his Altar, till she had her Petition granted; And God suffers this Impudence, and more. Prayer hath the nature of Violence; In the public Prayers of the Congregation, we besiege God, says Tertul: and we take God Prisoner, and bring God to our Conditions; and God is glad to be straitened by us in that siege. This Prophet here executes before, what the Apostle counsels after, Pray incessantly; Even in his singing he prays; And as S. Basil says, Etiam somniajustorum preces sunt, A Good man's dreams are Prayers, he prays, and not sleepily, in his sleep, so David's Songs are Prayers. Now in this his besieging of God, he brings up his works from a far off, closer; He gins in this Psalm, at a deprecatory Prayer; He asks nothing, but that God would do nothing, that he would forbear him; Rebuke me not, Correct me not. Now, it costs the King less, to give a Pardon, then to give a Pension; and less to give a Reprieve, then to give a Pardon; and less to Connive, not to call in Question, than either Reprieve, Pardon or Pension; To forbear, is not much. But then, as the Mathematician said, That he could make an Engine, a Screw, that should move the whole frame of the World, if he could have a place assigned him, to fix that Engine, that Screw upon, that so it might work upon the World: so Prayer, when one Petition hath taken hold upon God, works upon God, moves God, prevails with God, entirely for all. David then having got this ground, this footing in God, he brings his works closer; he comes from the Deprecatory, to a Postulatory Prayer; not only that God would do nothing against him, but that he would do something for him. God hath suffered man to see Arcana imperii, The secrets of his State, how he governs; He governs by Precedent; by precedents of his Predecessors, he cannot; He hath none; by precedents of other Gods, he cannot; There are none; And yet he proceeds by precedents; by his own Precedents; He does as he did before; Habenti dat, To him that hath received, he gives more, and is willing to be wrought, and prevailed upon, and pressed with his own example. And, as though his doing good, were but to learn how to do good better, still he writes after his own copy; And Nulla dies sine linea, He writes something to us, that is, he doth something for us, every day. And then, that which is not often seen, in other Masters, his Copies are better than the Originals; his later mercies larger than his former: And in this Postulatory Prayer, larger than the Deprecatory, enters our Text, Return O Lord; Deliver my soul; O save me, etc. David, Divisio. who every where remembers God of his Covenant, as he was the God of Abraham, remembers also, how Abraham proceeded with God, in the behalf of Sodom; And he remembers, that when Abraham had gained upon God, and brought him from a greater, to a less number of righteous men, for whose sakes God would have spared that City, yet Abraham gave over ask, before God gave over granting; And so Sodom was lost. A little more of S. Augustine's Importunity, of Nazi: Impudence, of Tertul: violence in Prayer, would have done well in Abraham; If Abraham had come to a less price, to less than ten, God knows what God would have done; for God went not away, says the text there, till he had left communing with Abraham; that is, till Abraham had no more to say to him. In memory and contemplation of that, David gives not over in this text, till he come to the utter most of all, as far as man can ask, as far as God can give; He gins at first, with a Revertere Domine, Return O Lord, and higher than that, no man can begin; no man can begin at a Veni Domine; no man can pray to God, to come, till God be come into him; Quid peto, ut venias in me, says S. August: Qui non essem, si nonesses in me? How should I pray, that God would come into me, who not only could not have the Spirit of praying, but not the Spirit of being, not life itself, if God were not in me already? But then, this prayer is, that when God had been with him, and for his sins, or his coldness, and slackness in prayer, was departed aside from him, yet he would vouchsafe to return to him again, and restore to him that light of his countenance which he had before, Revertere Domine, O Lord return. And then he passes to his second petition, Eripe animam, Deliver my soul; That when God in his return saw those many and strong snares which entangled him, those many and deep tentations and tribulations which surrounded him, God, being in his mercy thus Returned, and in his Providence seeing this danger, would not now stand neutral, between them, and see him, and these tentations fight it our, but fight on his side and deliver him; Eripe animam, Deliver my soul. And then, by these two petitions, he makes way for the third and last, which is the perfection and consummation of all, as far as he can carry a Prayer or a Desire, Salvum me fac, O Lord save me; that is, Imprint in me a strong hope of Salvation in this life, and invest me in an irremoveable possession, in the life to come. Lord I acknowledge that thou hast visited me heretofore, and for my sins hast absented thyself, O Lord return; Lord, now thou art returned, and seest me unable to stand in these tentations and tribulations, Deliver thou my soul; Lord thou hast delivered me again and again, and again and again I fall back to my former danger, and therefore, O Lord save me, place me where I may be safe; safe in a constant hope, that the Saviour of the World intended that salvation to me; And these three Petitions constitute our first part in David's postulatory Prayer. And then the second part, which is also within the words of this text, and consists of those reasons, by which David inclines God to grant his three Petitions, which are two, first, Propter misericordiam tuam, Do this O Lord, for thine own mercy sake, And then, Quia non in morte, Do it O Lord, for thine own honour's sake, Because in death there is no remembrance of thee, that second part will be the subject of another exercise, for, that which belongs to the three Petitions, will employ the time allowed for this. First then, the first step in this Prayer, Revertere, O Lord return, implies first a former presence, Revertere. and then a present absence, and also a confidence for the future; Whosoever says, O Lord return, says all this, Lord thou wast here, Lord thou art departed hence, but yet, Lord thou mayest return hither again. God was with us all, before we were any thing at all; And ever since our making, hath been with us, in his general providence; And so, we cannot say, O Lord Return, because, so, he was never gone from us. But as God made the earth, and the fruits thereof, before he made the Sun, whose force was to work upon that earth, and upon the natural fruits of that earth, but before he made Paradise, which was to have the Tree of Life, and the Tree of Knowledge, he made the Sun to do those offices, of shining upon it, and returning daily to it: So God makes this earth of ours, that is ourselves, by natural ways, and sustains us by general providence, before any Son of particular grace be seen to shine upon us. But before man can be a Paradise, possessed of the Tree of life, and of Knowledge, this Sun is made and produced, the particular graces of God rise to him, and work upon him, and awaken, and solicit, and exalt those natural faculties which were in him; This Son fills him, and fits him, compasses him, and disposes him, and does all the offices of the Sun, seasonably, opportunely, maturely, for the nourishing of his soul, according to the several necessities thereof. And this is God's returning to us, in a general apprehension; After he hath made us, and blest us in our nature, and by his natural means, he returns to make us again, to make us better, first by his first preventing grace, and then by a succession of his particular graces. And therefore we must return to this Returning, in some more particular considerations. There are beside others, three significations in the Scripture, of this word Shubah, which is here translated, to Return, appliable to our present purpose. The first is the natural and native, the primary and radical signification of the word. And so, Shubah, To Return, is Redire ad locum suum, To return to that place, to which a thing is naturally affected; So heavy things return to the Centre, and light things return to the Expansion; So Man's breath departeth, Psal. 146.4. says David, Et redit in terr am suam, He returns into his Earth; That earth, which is so much his, as that it is he himself; Of earth he was, and therefore to earth he returns. But can God return in such a sense as this? Can we find an Vbi for God? A place that is his place? Yes; And an Earth which is his earth; Surely the vineyard of the Lord of Hosts, Esay 5. is the house of Israel, and the men of judah are his pleasant plant. So the Church, which is his Vineyard, is his Vbi, his place, his Centre, to which he is naturally affected. And when he calls us hither, and meets us here, upon his Sabbaths, and sheds the promises of his Gospel upon the Congregation in his Ordinance, he returns to us here, as in his Vbi, as in his own place. And as he hath a place of his own here, so he hath an Earth of his own in this place. Our flesh is Earth, and God hath invested our flesh, and in that flesh of ours, which suffered death for us, he returns to us in this place, as often as he maketh us partakers of his flesh, and his blood, in the blessed Sacrament. So then, though in my days of sin, God have absented himself from me, (for God is absent when I do not discern his presence) yet if to day I can hear his voice, as God is returned to day to this place, as to his Vbi, as to his own place; so in his entering into me, in his flesh and blood, he returns to me as to his Earth, that Earth which he hath made his by assuming my nature, I am become his Vbi, his place; Delitiae ejus, His delight is to be with the sons of men, and so with me; and so in the Church, in the Sermon, in the Sacrament he returns to us, in the first signification of this word Shubah, as to that place to which he is naturally affected and disposed. In a second signification, this word is referred, not to the place of God, not to the person of God, but (if we may so speak) to the Passion of God, to the Anger of God; And so, the Returning of God, that is, of God's Anger, is the allaying, the becalming, the departing of his Anger; and so when God returns, God stays; his Anger is returned from us, Esay 5.25. but God is still with us. The wrath of the Lord was kindled, says the Prophet Esay; and He smote his people, so that the mountains trembled, and their carcases were torn in the midst of the streets. Here is the tempest, here is the visitation, here is God's coming to them; He comes, but in anger, and we hear of no return; nay, we hear the contrary, Et non redibat furor, For all this, his wrath, his fury did not return, that is, did not departed from them; for, as God never comes in this manner, till our multiplied sins call him, and importune him, so God never returns in this sense, in withdrawing his anger and judgements from us, till both our words and our works, our prayers and our amendment of life, join in a Revertere Domine, O Lord Return, withdraw this judgement from us, for it hath effected thy purpose upon us. And so the Original, which expresses neither signification of the word, for it is neither Return to me, nor Return from me, but plainly and only Return, leaves the sense indifferent; Lord, thou hast withdrawn thyself from me, therefore in mercy return to me, or else, Lord, thy Judgements are heavy upon me, and therefore return, withdraw these Judgements from me; which shows the ductilenesse, the appliableness of God's mercy, that yields almost to any form of words, any words seem to fit it. But then, the comfort of Gods returning to us, comes nearest us, in the third signification of this word Shubah; not so much in Gods returning to us, nor in his anger returning from us, Psal. 80.3. as in our returning to him, Turn us again, O Lord, says David, Et salvi erimus, and we shall be saved; There goes no more to salvation, but such a Turning. So that this Returning of the Lord, is an Operative, an Effectual returning, that turns our hearts, and eyes, and hands, and feet to the ways of God, and produces in us Repentance, and Obedience. For these be the two legs, which our conversion to God stands upon; Deut. 32.2. For so Moses uses this very word, Return unto the Lord and hear his voice; There is no returning, without hearing, nor hearing without believing, nor believing, to be believed, Mat. 11.21. without doing; Returning is all these. Therefore where Christ says, That if those works had been done in Tyre and Sidon, Tyre and Sidon would have repent in sackcloth and ashes; In the Syriack Translation of S. Matthew, we have this very word Shubah, They would have Returned in sackcloth and ashes. So that the word which David receives from the Holy Ghost in this Text, being only Returned, and no more, applies itself to all three senses, Return thyself, that is, Bring bacl thy Mercy; Return thy Wrath, that is, Call bacl thy Judgements, or Return us to thee, that is, make thy means, and offers of grace, in thine Ordinance, powerful, and effectual upon us. Now when the Lord comes to us, by any way, though he come in corrections, in chastisements, not to turn to him, is an irreverent, and unrespective negligence. If a Pursuivant, if a Sergeant come to thee from the King, in any Court of Justice, though he come to put thee in trouble, to call thee to an account, yet thou receivest him, thou entertainest him, thou payest him fees. If any Messenger of the Lord come to attach thee, whether sickness in thy body, by thine own disorder, decay in thy estate, by the oppression of others, or terror in thy Conscience, by the preaching of his Ministers, turn thou to the Lord, in the last sense of the word, and his mercy shall return to thee, and his anger shall return from thee, and thou shalt have fullness of Consolation in all the three significations of the word. If a Worm be trodden upon, it turns again; We may think, that is done in anger, and to revenge; But we know not; The Worm hath no sting, and it may seem as well to embrace, and lick his foot that treads upon him. When God treads upon thee, in any calamity, spiritual or temporal, if thou turn with murmuring, this is the turning of a Serpent, to sting God, to blaspheme him; This is a turning upon him, not a turning to him; But if thou turn like a Worm, than thou turnest humbly to kiss the rod, to lick and embrace his foot that treads upon thee, that is, to love his Ministers, which denounce his judgements upon thy sins, yea, to love them, from whom thou receivest defamation in thy credit, or detriment in thy state. We see how it was imputed to Asa, when God trod upon him, that is, 2 Chro. 16.12. diseased him in his feet, and exalted his disease into extremity, Yet in his disease he sought not to the Lord, but to the Physicians. He turned a by-way; at least, though a right way, too soon, to the Physician before the Lord. This is that, that exasperated God so vehemently, Esay. 9.13. Because the people turneth not to him that smiteth them; neither do they seek the Lord of Hosts; when the Lord of Hosts lies with a heavy Army upon them. Therefore, says the Prophet there, The Lord will cut off from Israel, head and tail, branch and rush in one day. God is not so vehement, when they neglected him in their prosperity, as when, though he afflicted them, yet they turned not to him. Measure God by earthly Princes; (for we may measure the world by a Barley corn) If the King come to thy house, thou wilt profess to take it for an honour, and thou wilt entertain him; and yet his coming cannot be without removes, and troubles, and charges to thee. So when God comes to thee, in his word, or in his actions, in a Sermon, or in a sickness, though his coming dislodge thee, remove thee, put thee to some inconvenience, in leaving thy bed of sin, where thou didst sleep securely before, yet here is the progress of the Holy Ghost, intended to thy soul, that first he comes thus to thee, and then if thou turn to him, he returns to thee, and settles himself, and dwells in thee. This is too lovely a Prospect, to departed so soon from; therefore look we by S. Augustine's glass, upon Gods coming and returning to man. God hath imprinted his Image in our souls; and God comes, says that Father, videat imaginem; Where I have given my Picture, I would see how it is respected: God comes to see in what case his Image is in us; If we shut doors, if we draw Curtains between him and his Image, that is, cover our souls, and disguise and palliate our sins, he goes away, and returns in none of those former senses. But if we lay them open, by our free confessions, he returns again; that so, in how ill case soever he find his Image, he may wash it over with our tears, and renew it with his own blood, and, resculpat imaginem, that he may refresh and re-engrave his Image in us again, and put it in a richer and safer Tablet. And as the Angel which came to Abraham at the promise and conception of Isaac, Gen. 18.10. gave Abraham a farther assurance of his Return at Isaaes' birth, I will certainly return unto thee, and thy wife shall have a Son; So the Lord, which was with thee in the first conception of any good purpose, Returns to thee again, to give thee a quickening of that blessed child of his, and again, and again, to bring it forth, and to bring it up, to accomplish and perfect those good intentions, which his Spirit, by over-shadowing thy soul, hath formerly begotten in it. So then, he comes in Nature, and he returns in Grace; He comes in preventing, and returns in subsequent graces; He comes in thine understanding, and returns in thy will; He comes in rectifying thine actions, and returns in establishing habits; He comes to thee in zeal, and returns in discretion; He comes to thee in fervour, and returns in perseverance; He comes to thee in thy peregrination, all the way, and he returns in thy transmigration, at thy last gasp. So God comes, and so God returns. Yet I am loath to departed myself, loath to dismiss you from this air of Paradise, of Gods coming, and returning to us. Therefore we consider again, that as God came long ago, six thousand years ago, in nature, when we were created in Adam, and then in nature returned to us, in the generation of our Parents: so our Saviour Christ Jesus came to us long ago, sixteen hundred years ago, in grace, and yet in grace returns to us, as often as he assembles us, in these holy Convocations. He came to us then, as the Wisemen came to him, with treasure, and gifts, and gold, and incense, and myrrh; As having an ambition upon the souls of men, he came with that abundant treasure to purchase us. And as to them who live upon the King's Pension, it is some comfort to hear that the Exchequer is full, that the King's monies are come in: so is it to us, to know that there is enough in God's hands, paid by his Son, for the discharge of all our debts; He gave enough for us all at that coming; But it is his returning to us, that applies to us, and derives upon us in particular, the benefit of this general satisfaction. When he returns to us in the dispensation and distribution of his graces, in his Word and Sacraments; When he calls upon us to come to the receipt; When the greater the sum is, the gladder he is of our coming, that where sin abounds, grace might abound too; When we can pursue this Prayer, Revertere Domine, Return O Lord in grace, in more and more grace, and when we are in possession of a good measure of that grace, we can pray again, Revertere Domine, Return O Lord in glory, Come Lord Jesus, come quickly; When we are so rectified by his Ordinances here, that in a sincerity of soul, we are not only contented, but desirous to departed from hence, then have we religiously followed our example, that man according to God's heart, David, in this prayer of his. If Christ have not been thus fully in thine heart, before, this is his coming; entertain him now: If he have been there, and gone again, this is his returning; bless him for that: And meet him, and love him, and embrace him, as often as he offers himself to thy soul, in these his Ordinances: Wish every day a Sunday, and every meal a Sacrament, and every discourse a Homily, and he shall shine upon thee in all dark ways, and rectify thee in all ragged ways, and direct thee in all cross ways, and stop thee in all doubtful ways, and return to thee in every corner, and relieve thee in every danger, and arm thee even against himself, by advancing thy work, in which thou besiegest him, that is, this Prayer, and enabling thee to prevail upon him, as in this first Petition, Revertere Domine, O Lord return, so in that which follows next, Eripe animam, Deliver my soul. In this Prayer, Eripo animam. we may either consider David in that affection which S. Paul had when he desired to be delivered ab angelo Satanae, from the messenger of Satan that buffeted him, that so that Stimulus carnis which he speaks of, that vexation, and provocation of the flesh, might have been utterly removed from him, whereby he might have past his life in God's service in a religious calm, without any storm, or opposition, or contradiction arising in his flesh: Or we may consider it as a Prayer agreeable to that Petition in our Lord's Prayer, Libera nos à malo, Deliver us from evil; which is not from being attempted by evil, but by being swallowed up by it. Eripe me, may be, Deliver me from rebellions, or Deliver me in rebellions; Either that they come not, or that they overcome not. In that prayer of S. Paul, that God would remove Angelum Satanae, and take away Stimulum carnis, first, S. Paul is not easily understood, and then, it may be, not safely imitated. It is hard to know what S. Paul means in his Prayer, and it may be dangerous to pray as he prayed. For the actions of no man, how holy soever, till we come to Christ himself, lay such an obligation upon us, as that we must necessarily do as t●●y did. Nay the actions of Christ himself lay not that obligation upon us, to fast as he fasted; no nor to pray as he prayed. A man is not bound in an Affliction, or Persecution, at least at all times, to that Prayer, Si possibile, or Transeat calix, If it be possible let this cup pass; But if God vouchsafe him a holy constancy, to go through with his Martyrdom, he may proceed in it without any such Deprecation to God, or Petition to the Judge. But first, before we consider whether he might be imitated, if we understood him, we find it hard to understand him. S. Augustine's free confession, Se nescire quid sit angelus Satanae, That he never understood what S. Paul meant by that Messenger of Satan, is more ingenuous than their interpretation, who, I know not upon what Tradition, refer it to an extreme pain in the head, that S. Paul should have, as Theophylact says; or refer it Ad morbum Iliacum, which Aquinas speaks of, or to the Gout, or pains in the Stomach, as Nazianzen, and Basil interpret it. Oecumenius understands this Angel, this Messenger of Satan, to be those Heretics, which were his Adversaries, in his preaching of the Gospel; according to that signification of the word Satan, in which Solomon uses it to Hiram, 1 King. 5.4. Non est mihi Satan, I have no Adversary. Others, even amongst the Fathers, understand it particularly, and literally, of that concupiscence, and those lusts of the flesh, which even the most sanctified men may have some sense of, and some attempts by. Others understand it generally of all calamities, spiritual, and temporal, incident to us in this life. But Cajetan goes farthest, who reads it not as we do, Angelum Satanae, but Angelum Satanam; not that Angel which comes from Satan, but that Angel that is Satan himself. So that he conceives it to be a prayer against all tentations and tribulations here, and hereafter, which the Devil or the Devil's Instruments can frame against us. Now, if we think we understand it aright, in understanding it so generally, then enters our second doubt, whether we may imitate S. Paul in so general a prayer. We dispute in the School, whether, if it were in his powerto do it, man might lawfully destroy any entire species of creatures in the world, though offensive, and venerhous, as Vipers, or Scorpions. For every species being a link of God's great chain, and a limb of his great creature, the whole world, it seems not to be put into our power, to break his chain, and take out a link, to maim his great creature, and cut off a limb, by destroying any entire species, if we could. So neither does it soeme conducible to God's purposes in us, (which is the rule of all our prayers) to pray utterly against all tentations, as vehemently as against sins. God should lose by it, and we should lose by it, if we had no tentations; for God is glorified in those victories, which we, by his grace, gain over the Devil. Nescit Diabolus, quant a bona de illo fiunt, etiam cum saevit; August. Little knows the Devil, how much good he does us, when he tempts us; for by that we are excited to have our present recourse to that God, whom in our former security, we neglected, who gives us the issue with the tentation. Ego novi quid apposuerim, Idem. I know what infirmities I I have submitted thee to, and what I have laid and applied to thee. Ego novi unde aegrotes, ego novi unde saneris; I know thy sickness, and I know thy physic. Sufficit tibi gratiamea; Whatsoever the disease be, my grace shall be sufficient to cure it. For whether we understand that, as S. chrysostom does, De gratia miraculorum, That it is sufficient for any man's assurance, in any tentation, or tribulation, to consider Gods miraculous deliverances of other men, in the like cases; or whether we understand it according to the general voice of the Interpreters, that is, Be content that there remain in thy flesh, Matter and Subject for me to produce glory from thy weakness, and Matter and Subject for thee to exercise thy faith and allegiance to me, still these words will carry an argument against the expedience of absolute praying against all tentations; for still, this Gratiamea sufficit, will import this, amount to this, I have as many Antidotes, as the Devil hath poisons, I have as much mercy as the Devil hath malice; There must be Scorpions in the world; but the Scorpion shall cure the Scorpion; there must be tentations; but tentations shall add to mine, and to thy glory, and, Eripiam, I will deliver thee. This word is in the Original, Chalatz; which signifies Eripere in such a sense, as our language does not fully reach in any one word. So there is some defectiveness, some slackness in this word of our Translation, Delivering. For it is such a Delivering, as is a sudden catching hold, and snatching at the soul of a man, then, when it is at the brink, and edge of a sin. So that if thy facility, and that which thou wilt make shift to call Good Nature, or Good Manners, have put thee into the hands of that subtle woman, that Solomon speaks of, That is come forth to mect thee, and seek thy face; Prov. 7.10.15. If thou have followed her, As an Ox goeth to the slaughter, and as a fool to the correction of the stocks; Even then, when the Axe is over thy head, then when thou hast approached so near to destruction, then is the season of this prayer, Eripe me Domine, Catch hold of me now O Lord, Gen. 39.10. and Deliver my soul. When joseph had resisted the tentations of his Master's Wife, and resisted them the only safe way, not only not to yield, but as the Text says, not to come in her company, and yet she had found her opportunity when there was none in the house but they, he came to an inward Eripe me Domine, O Lord take hold of me now, and she caught, and God caught; She caught his garment, and God his soul; She delivered him, and God delivered him; She to Prison, and God from thence. If thy curiosity, or thy confidence in thine own spiritual strength, carry thee into the house of Rimmon, to Idolatry, to a Mass, trust not thou to Naaman's request, Ignoscat Dominus servo in bacre, 2 Kings 5. That God will pardon thee, as often as thou dost so; but since thou hast done so now, now come to this Eripe animam, O Lord deliver my soul now, from taking harm now, and hereafter, from exposing myself to the like harm. For this is the purpose of David's prayer in this signification of this word, that howsoever infirmity, or company, or curiosity, or confidence, bring us within the distance, and danger, within the Sphere, and Latitude of a tentation, that though we be not lodged in Sodom, yet we are in the Suburbs, though we be not impailed in a sin, yet we are within the purlieus, (which is not safely done; no more than it is in a State, to trust always to a Defensive War) yet when we are engaged, and enthralled in such a tentation, then, though God be not delighted with our danger, yet then is God most delighted to help us, when we are in danger; and then, he comes not only to deliver us from that imminent, and particular danger, according to that signification of this word, but according to that Interpretation of this word, which the Septuagint have given it, in the Prophet Esay, Esay 58.11. jachalitz, Pinguefaciet; He shall proceed in his work, and make fat thy soul; That is, Deliver thee now, and preserve, and establish thee after, to the fulfilling of all, that belongs to the last Petition of this prayer, Salvum me fac, O Lord save me; Though he have been absent, he shall Return; and being Returned, shall not stand still, nor stand Neutral, but deliver thee; and having delivered thee, shall not determine his love in that one act of mercy, but shall Save thee, that is, Imprint in thee a holy confidence, that his salvation is thine. So then, Salvum me fac. Esay 19.20. in that manner is God's Deliverance expressed, They shall cry unto him, (till we cry, he takes no knowledge at all) and then he sends to them, (there is his returning upon their cry) and then, He shall deliver them, says that Prophet; and so, the two former Petitions of this prayer are answered; but the Consummation, and Establishment of all, is in the third, which follows in the same place, He shall send them a Saviour, and a great one. Esay 62.11. But who is that? what Saviour? Doubtless he that is proclaimed by God, in the same Prophet, Behold, the Lord hath proclaimed unto the end of the world, Behold thy salvation cometh. For, that word which that Prophet uses there, and this word, in which David presents this last Petition here, is in both places, jashang, and jashang is the very word, from which the name of jesus is derived; so that David desires here, that salvation which Esay proclaimed there, salvation in the Saviour of the world, Christ Jesus, and an interest in the assurance of his merits. We find this name of Saviour attributed to other men in the Scriptures, then to Christ. In particular distresses, when God raised up men, to deliver his people sometimes, those men were so called, Saviour's. And so S. Jerome interprets those words of the Prophet, Ascendent salvatores, Obad. 1.21. Saviour's shall come up, on Mount Zion, of Prophets, and Preachers, and such other Instruments, as God should raise for the salvation of souls. Those, whom in other places, he calls Angels of the Church, here he calls by that higher name, Saviour's. But such a Saviour as is proclaimed to the ends of the world, to all the world, a Saviour in the Mountains, in the height of presumptuous sins, and a Saviour in the valleys, in the dejection of inordinate melancholy too, A Saviour of the East, of rising, and growing men, and a Saviour of the West, of withering, declining, languishing fortunes too, A Saviour in the state of nature, by having infused the knowledge of himself, into some men then, before the light, and help of the Law was afforded to the world, A Saviour in the state of the Law, by having made to some men then, even Types Accomplishments, and Prophecies Histories, And, as himself Calls things that are not, as though they were, So he made those men see things that were not, as though they were, (for so Abraham saw his day and rejoiced) A Saviour in the state of the Gospel, and so, as that he saves some there, for the fundamental Gospel's sake, that is, for standing fast in the fundamental Articles thereof, though they may have been darkened with some ignorances', or may have strayed into some errors, in some Circumstantial points, A Saviour of all the world, of all the conditions in the world, of all times through the world, of all places of the world, such a Saviour is no man called, but Christ Jesus only. For when it is said that Pharaoh called joseph, Salvatorem mundi, A Saviour of the world, (besides, Gen. 41.45. that if it were so, that which is called all the world, can be referred but to that part of the world which was then under Pharaoh; as when it is said, that Augustus taxed the world, that is intended De orbe Romano, so much of the world, as was under the Romans) there is a manifest error in that Translation, which calls joseph so, for that name which was given to joseph there, in that language in which it was given, doth truly signify Revelatorem Secretorum, and no more, a Revealer, a Discoverer, a Decypherer of secret and mysterious things; according to the occasion, upon which that name was then given, which was the Deciphering, the Interpreting of Pharaohs Dream. Be this then thus established, that David for our example considers, and refers all salvation, Psal. 98.2. to salvation in Christ. As he does also where he says after, Notum fecit salutare tuum, The Lord hath made known his salvation. Quid est salutare tuum? says S. Basil; Luke 2. What is the Lords salvation? And he makes a safe answer out Simeons' mouth, Mine eyes have seen thy salvation, when he had seen Christ jesus. This then is he, which is not only Satvator populi sui, The Saviour of his people, the Jews, to whom he hath betrothed himself, In Pacto salis, A Covenant of salt, an everlasting Covenant: Nor only Salvator corporis sui, The Saviour of his own body, as the Apostle calls him; of that body which he hath gathered from the Gentiles, in the Christian Church: Nor only Salvator mundi, A Saviour of the world, so, as that which he did, and suffered, was sufficient in itself, and was accepted by the Father, for the salvation of the world; but, as Tertullian, for the most part reads the word, he was Salutificator; not only a Saviour, because God made him an instrument of salvation, as though he had no interest in our salvation, till in his flesh he died for us; but he is Salutificator, so the Author of this salvation, as that from all eternity, he was at the making of the Decree, as well as in the fullness of time he was at the executing thereof. In the work of our salvation, if we consider the merit, Christ was sole and alone, no Father, no Holy Ghost trod the Winepress with him; And if in the work of our salvation we consider the mercy, there, though Christ were not sole, and alone, (for that mercy in the Decree was the joynt-act of the whole Trinity) yet even in that, Christ was equal to the Father, and the Holy Ghost. So he is Salutificator, the very Author of this salvation, as that when it came to the act, he, and not they, died for us; and when it was in Council, he, as well as they, and as soon as they, decreed it for us. As therefore the Church of God scarce presents any petition, any prayer to God, but it is subscribed by Christ; the Name of Christ, is for the most part the end, and the seal of all our Collects; all our prayers in the Liturgy, (though they be but for temporal things, for Plenty, or Peace, or Faire-weather) are shut up so, Grant this O Lord, for our Lord and Saviour Christ jesus sake: So David for our example, drives all his petitions in this Text, to this Conclusion, Salvum me fac, O Lord save me; that is, apply that salvation, Christ Jesus to me. Now beloved, you may know, that yourselves have a part in those means, which God uses to that purpose, yourselves are instruments, though not causes of your own salvation. Salvus factus es pro nihilo, non de nihilo tamen; Bernard. Thou bringest nothing for thy salvation, yet something to thy salvation; nothing worth it, but yet something with it; Thy new Creation, by which thou art a new creature, that is, thy Regeneration, is wrought as the first Creation was wrought. God made heaven and earth of nothing; but he produced the other creatures, out of that matter, which he had made. Thou hadst nothing to do in the first work of thy Regeneration; Thou couldst not so much as wish it; But in all the rest, thou art a fellow-worker with God; because, before that, there are seeds of former grace shed in thee. And therefore when thou comest to this last Petition, Salvum me fac, O Lord save me, remember still, that thou hast something to do, as well as to say; that so thou mayst have a comfortable answer in thy soul, to the whole prayer, Return O Lord, Deliver my soul, and Save me. And so we have done with our first Part, which was the Prayer itself; and the second, which is the Reasons of the Prayer, we must reserve for a second exercise. SERM. LIII. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 6.4, 5. Return, O Lord; Deliver my soul; O Lord save me, for thy mercy sake. For in Death there is no Remembrance of thee; and in the Grave, who shall give thee thanks? WE come now to the Reasons of these Petitions, in David's Prayer; For, as every Prayer must be made with faith, (I must believe that God will grant my Prayer, if it conduce to his glory, and my good to do so, that is the limit of my faith) so I must have reason to ground a likelihood, and a fair probability that that particular which I pray for, doth conduce to his glory and my good, and that therefore God is likely to grant it. David's first Reason here is grounded on God himself, Propter misericordiam, Do it for thy mercy sake; and in his second Reason, though David himself, and all men with him, seem to have a part, yet at last we shall see, the Reason itself to determine wholly and entirely in God too, and in his glory, Quoniam non in morte, Do it O Lord, For in Death there is no remembrance of thee, etc. In some other places, Propter misericordiam. Psal. 40.11. David comes to God with two reasons, and both grounded merely in God; Misericordia, & veritas, Let thy Mercy and thy Truth always preserve me. In this place he puts himself wholly upon his mercy, for mercy is all, or at least, the foundation that sustains all, or the wall that embraces all. That mercy, which the word of this text, Casad imports, is Benignitas in non promeritum; Mercy is a good disposition towards him, who hath deserved nothing of himself; For, where there is merit, there is no mercy. Nay, it imports more than so, For mercy, as mercy, presumes not only no merit in man, but it takes knowledge of no promise in God, properly; For that is the difference between Mercy and Truth, that by Mercy at first, God would make promises to man, in general; and then by Truth, he would perform those promises: but Mercy goeth first; and there David gins and grounds his Prayer, at Mercy; Mercy that can have no pre-mover, no pre-relation, but gins in itself. For if we consider the mercy of God to mankind subsequently, I mean, after the Death of Christ, so it cannot be properly called mercy. Mercy thus considered, hath a ground; And God thus considered, hath received a plentiful, and an abundant satisfaction in the merits of Christ Jesus; And that which hath a ground in man, that which hath a satisfaction from man, (Christ was truly Man) falls not properly, precisely, rigidly, under the name of mercy. But consider God in his first disposition to man, after his fall, That he would vouchsafe to study our Recovery, and that he would turn upon no other way, but the shedding of the blood of his own and innocent and glorious Son, Quid est homo, aut filius hominis? What was man, or all mankind, that God should be mindful of him so, or so merciful to him? When God promises that he will be merciful and gracious to me, if I do his Will, when in some measure I do that Will of his, God gins not then to be merciful; but his mercy was awake and at work before, when he excited me, by that promise, to do his Will. And after, in my performance of those duties, his Spirit seals to me a declaration, that his Truth is exercised upon me now, as his mercy was before. Still, his Truth is in the effect, in the fruit, in the execution, but the Decree, and the Root is only Mercy. God is pleased also when we come to him with other Reasons; When we remember him of his Covenant; When we remember him of his holy servants, Abraham, Isaac, and jacob; yea when we remember him of our own innocence, in that particular, for which we may be then unjustly pursued; God was glad to hear of a Righteousness, and of an Innocence, and of clean and pure hands in David, when he was unjustly pursued by Saul. But the root of all is in this, Propter misericordiam, Do it for thy mercy sake. For when we speak of God's Covenant, it may be mistaken, who is, and who is not within that Covenant; What know I? Of Nations, and of Churches, which have received the outward profession of Christ, we may be able to say, They are within the Covenant, generally taken; But when we come to particular men in the Congregation, there I may call a Hypocrite, a Saint, and think an excomunicate soul, to be within the Covenant; I may mistake the Covenant, and I may mistake God's servants, who did, and who did not die in his favour, What know I? We see at Executions, when men pretend to die cheerfully for the glory of God, half the company will call them Traitors, and half Martyrs. So if we speak of our own innocency, we may have a pride in that, or some other vicious and defective respect (as uncharitableness towards our malicious Persecutors, or laying seditious aspersions upon the justice of the State) that may make us guilty towards God, though we be truly innocent to the World, in that particular. But let me make my recourse to the mercy of God, and there can be no error, no mistaking. And therefore if that, and nothing but that be my ground, God will Return to me, God will Deliver my soul, God will Save me, For his mercy sake; that is, because his mercy is engaged in it. And if God were to sell me this Returning, this Delivering, this Saving, and all that I pray for; what could I offer God for that, so great as his own mercy, in which I offer him the Innocence, the Obedience, the Blood of his only Son. If I buy of the King's land, I must pay for it in the King's money; I have not Mine, nor Mint of mine own; If I would have any thing from God, I must give him that which is his own for it, that is, his mercy; And this is to give God his mercy, To give God thanks for his mercy, To give all to his mercy, And to acknowledge, that if my works be acceptable to him, nay if my very faith be acceptable to him, it is not because my works, no nor my faith hath any proportion of equivalency in it, or is worth the least flash of joy, or the least spangle of glory in Heaven, in itself, but because God in his mercy, only of his mercy, merely for the glory of his mercy, hath past such a Covenant, Crede, & fac hoc, Believe this, and do this, and thou shalt live, not for thy deed sake, not nor for thy faith sake, but for my mercy sake. And farther we carry not this first reason of the Prayer, arising only from God. There remains in these words another Reason, In morte. in which David himself, and all men seem to have part, Quia non in morte, For in death there is no remembrance of thee, etc. Upon occasion of which words, because they seem to imply a loathness in David to die, it may well be inquired, why Death seemed so terrible to the good and godly men of those times, as that evermore we see them complain of shortness of life, and of the nearness of death. Certainly the rule is true, in natural, and in civil, and in divine things, as long as we are in this World, Nolle meliorem, est corruptio primae habitudinis, Picus Heptapl. l. 7. proem. That man is not well, who desires not to be better; It is but our corruption here, that makes us loath to hasten to our incorruption there. And besides, many of the Ancients, and all the later Casuists of the other side, and amongst our own men, Peter Martyr, and Calvin, assign certain cases, in which it hath Rationem boni, The nature of Good, and therefore is to be embraced, to wish our dissolution and departure out of this World; and yet, many good and godly men have declared this loathness to die. Beloved, weigh Life and Death one against another, and the balance will be even; Throw the glory of God into either balance, and that turns the scale. S. Paul could not tell which to wish, Life, or Death; There the balance was even; Then comes in the glory of God, the addition of his soul to that Choir, that spend all their time, eternity itself, only in glorifying God, and that turns the scale, and then, he comes to his Cupio dissolvi, To desire to be dissolved, and to be with Christ. But then, he puts in more of the same weight in the other scale, he sees that it advances God's glory more, for him to stay, and labour in the building of God's Kingdom here, and so add more souls than his own to that state, then only to enjoy that Kingdom in himself, and that turns the scale again, and so he is content to live. These Saints of God then when they deprecate death, and complain of the approaches of death, they are, at that time, in a charitable ecstasy, abstracted and withdrawn from the consideration of that particular happiness, which they, in themselves, might haye in heaven; and they are transported and swallowed up with this sorrow, that the Church here, and gods kingdom upon earth, should lack those means of advancement, or assistance, which God, by their service, was pleased to afford to his Church. Whether they were good Kings, good Priests, or good Prophets, the Church lost by their death; and therefore they deprecated that death, Esay 38.18. and desired to live. The grave cannot praise thee, death cannot celebrate thee; But the living, the living, he shall praise thee, as I do this day, says Hezekias; He was affected with an apprehension of a future barrenness after his death, and a want of propagation of God's truth; I shall not see the Lord, even the Lord, says he. He had assurance, that he should see the Lord in Heaven, when by death he was come thither; But, says he, I shall not see him in the land of the living; Well, even in the land of the living, even in the land of life itself, he was to see him, if by death he were to see him in Heaven; But this is the loss that he laments, this is the misery that he deplores with so much holy passion, I shall behold man no more, with the Inhabitants of the world; Howsoever, I shall enjoy God myself, yet I shall be no longer a means, an instrument of the propagation of God's truth amongst others; And, till we come to that joy, which the heart cannot conceive, it is, I think, the greatest joy that the soul of man is capable of in this life, (especially where a man hath been any occasion of sin to others) to assist the salvation of others. And even that consideration, that he shall be able to do God's cause no more good here, may make a good man loath to die. Quid facies magno nomini tuo? Jos. 7.9. says joshuah in his prayer to God; if the Canaanites come in, and destroy us, and blaspheme thee, What wilt thou do unto thy mighty Name? What wilt thou do unto thy glorious Church, said the Saints of God in those Deprecations, if thou take those men out of the world, whom thou hadst chosen, enabled, qualified for the edification, sustentation, propagation of that Church. In a word, David considers not here, what men do, or do not in the next world; but he considers only, that in this world he was bound to propagate God's Truth, and that that he could not do, if God took him away by death. Consider then this horror, and detestation, and deprecation of death, in those Saints of the old Testament, with relation to their particular, and then it must be, Quia promissiones obscurae, Because Moses had conveyed to those men, all Gods future blessings, all the joy and glory of Heaven, only in the types of earthly things, and said little of the state of the soul after this life. And therefore the promises belonging to the godly after this life, were not so clear then, not so well manifested to them, not so well fixed in them, as that they could, in contemplation of them, step easily, or deliver themselves confidently into the jaws of death; he that is not fully satisfied of the next world, makes shift to be content with this; and he that cannot reach, or does not feel that, will be glad to keep his hold upon this. Consider their horror, and detestation, and deprecation of death, not with relation to themselves, but to God's Church, and then it will be, Quia operarii pauci, Because God had a great harvest in hand, and few labourers in it, they were loath to be taken from the work. And these Reason's might, at least, by way of excuse and extenuation, in those times of darkness, prevail somewhat in their behalf; They saw not whither they went, and therefore were loath to go; and they were loath to go, because they saw not how God's Church would subsist, when they were gone. But in these times of ours, when Almighty God hath given an abundant remedy to both these, their excuses will not be appliable to us. We have a full clearness of the state of the soul after this life, not only above those of the old Law, but above those of the Primitive Christian Church, which, in some hundreds of years, came not to a clear understanding in that point, whether the soul were immortal by nature, or but by preservation, whether the soul could not die, or only should not die. Or (because that perchance may be without any constant clearness yet) that was not clear to them, (which concerns our case nearer) whether the soul came to a present fruition of the sight of God after death or no. But God having afforded us clearness in that, and then blest our times with an established Church, and plenty of able workmen for the present, and plenty of Schools, and competency of endowments in Universities, for the establishing of our hopes, and assurances for the future, since we have both the promise of Heaven after, and the promise that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against the Church here; Since we can neither say, Promissiones obseurae, That Heaven hangs in a Cloud, nor say, Operarii pauci, That dangers hang over the Church, it is much more inexcusable in us now, than it was in any of them then, to be loath to die, or to be too passionate in that reason of the deprecation, Quia non in morte, Because in death there is no remembrance of thee etc. Which words, being taken literally, may fill our meditation, and exalt our devotion thus; If in death there be no remembrance of God, if this remembrance perish in death, certainly it decays in the nearness to death; If there be a possession in death, there is an approach in age; And therefore, Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth. Eccles. 12.1. There are spiritual Lethargies, that make a man forget his name; forget that he was a Christian, and what belongs to that duty. God knows what forgetfulness may possess thee upon thy deathbed, and freeze thee there; God knows what rage, what distemper, what madness may scatter thee then; And though in such cases, God reckon with his servants, according to that disposition which they use to have towards him before, and not according to those declinations from him, which they show in such distempered sicknesses, yet God's mercy towards them can work but so, that he returns to those times, when those men did remember him before. But if God can find no such time, that they never remembered him, than he seals their former negligence with a present Lethargy; they neglected God all their lives, and now in death there is no remembrance of him, nor there is no remembrance in him; God shall forget him eternally; and when he thinks he is come to his Consummatum est, The bell tolls, and will ring out, and there is an end of all in death, by death he comes but to his Secula Seculorum, to the beginning of that misery, which shall never end. This then which we have spoken, arises out of that sense of these words, which seems the most literal; that is, of a natural death. But as it is well noted by divers Expositors upon this Psalm, this whole Psalm is intended of a spiritual agony, and combat of David, wrestling with the apprehension of hell, and of the indignation of God, even in this world, whilst he was alive here. And therefore S. Augustine upon the last words of this verse, in that Translation which he followed, In inferno quis consitchitur tibi? Not, In the grave, but In hell, who shall confess unto thee? puts himself upon this, In Inferne Dives confessus Domino, & oravit pro fratribus, In hell Dives did confess the name of the Lord, and prayed there for his brethren in the world. And therefore he understands not these words of a literal, and natural, a bodily death, a departing out of this world; but he calls Peccatum Mortem, and then, Caecitatem animae Infernum; He makes the easiness of sinning to be Death, and then, blindness, and obduration, and remorslesnesse, and impenitence, to be this Hell. And so also doth S. Jerome understand all that passionate deploring of Hezekias, (which seems literally to be spoken of natural death) of this spiritual death, of the habit of sin, and that he considered, and lamented especially his danger of that death, of a departing from God in this world, rather than of a departing out of this world. And truly many pieces and passages of Hezekias his lamentation there, will fall naturally enough into that spiritual interpretation; though perchance all will not, though S. Jerome with a holy purpose drive them, and draw them that way. But whether that of Hezekias be of natural, or of a spiritual death, we have another Author ancienter than S. Augustine, and S. Jerome, and so much esteemed by S. jereme, as that he translated some of his Works, which is Didymus of Alexandria, who says, it is Impia opinio, not an inconvenient, or unnatural, but an impious and irreligious opinion, to understand this verse of natural death; because, says he, The dead do much more remember God then the living do. And he makes use of that place, Deus non confunditur, Heb. 11.16. God is not ashamed to be called the God of the dead, for he hath prepared them a City. And therefore reading these words of our Text, according to that Translation which prevailed in the Eastern Church, which was the Septuagint, he argues thus, he collects thus, that all that David says here, is only this, Non est in morte qui memor est Dei, Not that he that is dead remembers not God, but that he that remembers God, is not dead; not in an irreparable, and irrecoverable state of death; not under such a burden of sin as devastates and exterminates the conscience, and evacuates the whole power and work of grace, but that if he can remember God, confess God, though he be fall'n under the hand of a spiritual death, by some sin, yet he shall have his resurrection in this life; for, Non est in morte, says Didymus, He that remembers God, is not dead, in a perpetual death. And then this reason of David's Prayer here, (Do this and this, for in death there is no remembrance of thee) will have this force, That God would return to him in his effectual grace, That God would deliver his soul in dangerous tentations, That God would save him in applying to him, and imprinting in him a sober, but yet confident assurance that the salvation of Christ Jesus belongs to him; Because if God did not return to him, but suffer him to whither in a long absence, If God did not deliver him, by taking hold of him when he was ready to fall into such sins as his sociableness, his confidence, his inconsideration, his infirmity, his curiosity brought him to the brink of, If God did not save him, by a faithful assurance of salvation after a sin committed and resented, This absence, this slipperiness, this pretermitting, might bring him to such a deadly, and such a hellish state in this world, as that In death, that is, In that death, he should have no remembrance of God, In hell, In the grave, that is, In that hell, In that grave, he should not confess, nor praise God at all. There was his danger, he should forget God utterly, and God forget him eternally, if God suffered him to proceed so far in sin, that is, Death, and so far in an obduration and remorslesnesse, in sin, that is, Hell, The Death and the Hell of this world, to which those Fathers refer this Text. In this lamentable state, we will only note the force, and the emphasis of this Tui, and Tibi, in this verse; no remembrance of Thee, no praise to Thee; For this is not spoken of God in general, but of that God, to which David directs the last and principal part of his Prayer, which is, To save him; It is to God, as God is Jesus, a Saviour; and the wretchedness of this state is, that God shall not be remembered in that notion, as he is jesus, a Saviour. No man is so swallowed up in the death of sin, nor in the grave of impenitence, No man so dead, and buried in the custom or senselessness of sin, but that he remembers a God, he confesses a God; If an Atheist swear the contrary, believe him not; His inward terrors, his midnight startlings remember him of that, and bring him to confessions of that. But here is the depth, and desperateness of this death, and this grave, habitual sin, and impenitence in sin, that he cannot remember, he cannot confess that God which should save him, Christ Jesus his Redeemer; he shall come, he shall not choose but come to remember a God that shall damn him, but not a saving God, a jesus. Beloved in the bowels of that Jesus, not only the riches, and honours, and pleasures of this world, and the favour of Princes, are, as job speaks, Onerosi consolatores, Miserable comforters are they all, all this world, but even of God himself (be it spoken with piety and reverence, and far from misconstruction) we may say, Onerosa consolatio, It is but a miserable comfort which we can have in God himself, It is but a faint remembrance which we retain of God himself, It is but a lame confession which we make to God himself, Si non Tui, Si non Tibi, If we remember not Thee, If we confess not Thee, our only Lord and Saviour Christ jesus. It is not half our work to be godly men, to confess a God in general; we must be Christians too; to confess God so, as God hath manifested himself to us. I, to whom God hath manifested himself in the Christian Church, am as much an Atheist, if I deny Christ, as if I deny God; And I deny Christ, as much, if I deny him in the truth of his Worship, in my Religion, as if I denied him in his Person. And therefore, Si non Tui, Si non Tibi, If I do not remember Thee, If I do not profess Thee in thy Truth, I am fall'n into this Death, and buried in this Grave which David deprecates in this Text, For in death there is no remembrance of thee, etc. SERM. LIV. Preached to the KING at Whitehall, upon the occasion of the Fast, April 5. 1628. PSAL. 6.6, 7. I am weary with my groaning; All the night make I my bed to swim, I water my couch with my tears. Mine eye is consumed because of grief; It waxeth old, because of all mine-enemies. THis is David's humiliation; and coming after his repentance and reconciliation, David's penance: And yet here is no Fast; It is true; No Fast named; David had had experience, that as the wisest actions of Kings, (of Kings as Kings over Subjects) so the devoutest actions of Kings, (of Kings, as humble Subjects to the King of Kings, the God of Heaven) had been misinterpreted. Of sighing, and groaning, and weeping, and languishing, (as in this Text) David speaks often, very, very often in the Psalms; and they let him sigh, and groan, and weep, and languish; they neglect his Passion, and are not affected with that; but that is all; they afflict him no farther: But when he comes to fasting, they deride him, they reproach him; Cares God whether you eat, or fast? But thrice in all the Psalms does David speak of his fasting, and in all three places, it was misinterpreted, and reproachfully misinterpreted; I humbled my soul with fasting, Psal. 35.13. and my prayer returned into mine own bosom; He did this (as he says there) for others, that needed it, and they would not thank him for it, but reproached him. When I wept, and chastened my soul with fasting, Psal. 69.10. Psal. 109.24. that was to my reproach. So also my bones are weak through fasting, and I became a reproach unto them. And therefore no wonder that David does not so often mention and publish his fasting, as his other mortifications; No wonder that in all his seven penitential Psalms, (which are the Churches Tropics for mortification and humiliation,) there is no mention of his fasting. But for his practice, (though he speak not so much of it in the Psalms) in his history where others, not himself, speak of him, we know that when he mourned, and prayed for his sick child, he fasted too. And we doubt not, 2 Sam. 2.15. but that, when he was thus wearied, (I am weary with my groaning; All the night make I my bed to swim, I water my Couch with my tears; Mine eye is consumed because of grief; It waxeth old because of all mine enemies) he fasted too; He fasted oftener, than he tells us of it. As S. Hierome says, jejunium non perfecta virtus, sed caeterarum virtutum fundamentum, Hieron. If we must not call fasting (as fasting is but a bodily abstinence) a religious act, an act of God's worship, yet it is a Basis, and a foundation, upon which other religious acts, and acts of God's worship are the better advanced. It is so at all times; but it is so especially when it is enjoined by Sovereign authority, and upon manifest occasion, as now to us. Semper virtutis Cibus jejunium fuit, It is elegantly, and usefully said: At all times, Leo. Religion feeds upon fasting, and feasts upon fasting, and grows the stronger for fasting. But, Quod pium est agere non indictum, impium est negligere praedicatum, Idem. It is a godly thing to fast uncommanded, but to neglect it being commanded, is an ungodly, an impious, a refractory perverseness, says the same Father. But then another carries it to a higher expression, Desperationis genus est, tunc manducare, cum abstinere debeas, Maximus de jejunio Ninevitarum. Not to fast when the times require it, and when Authority enjoins it, or not to believe, that God will be affected and moved with that fasting, and be the better inclined for it, is desperationis genus, a despairing of the State, a despairing of the Church, a despairing of the grace of God to both, or of his mercy upon both. And truly there cannot be a more disloyal affection then that, desper are rem publicam, to forespeak great Counsels, to be witch great actions, to despair of good ends in things well intended: And in our distresses, where can we hope, but in God? and how shall we have access to God, but in humiliation? We doubt not therefore but that this act of humiliation, his fasting was spread over David's other acts in this Text, and that as a sinner in his private person, and as a King in his public and exemplar office, he fasted also, (though he says not so) when he said he was wearied, I am weary with my groaning; all the night make I my bed to swim, I water my couch with my tears; mine eye is consumed because of grief; It waxeth old because of all mine enemies. But though this fasting, and these other penal acts of humiliation, be the body that carries, and declares, yet the soul that inanimates, and quickens all, is prayer; and therefore this whole Psalm is a prayer; And the prayer is partly Deprecatory, In some things David desires that God would forbear him, as v. 1. Correct me not, for if thou correct me, others will trample upon me; Rebuke me not, for if thou rebuke me, others will calumniate me; And partly Postulatory, that some things God would give him, as Health, and Deliverance, and that which is all, Salvation, in the other verses. Both parts of the prayer are (as all prayer must be) grounded upon reasons; and the reasons are from divers roots; some from the consideration of himself, and they argue his humiliation; some from the contemplation of God, and they testify his devotion, and present recourse to him; some from both together, God, and himself jointly, which is an acknowledgement, that God works not alone in heaven, nor man lives not alone upon earth, but there is a Conversation, and a Correspondence, and a Commerce between God and Man, and Conditions, and Contracts, and Covenants, and Stipulations between them, and so a mutual interest in one another. From God himself alone, David raises a reason, v. 4. Propter misericordiam, O save me for thy mercy's sake; for of the mercy of God, there is no precedent, there is no concurrent reason, there is no reason of the mercy of God, but the mercy of God: from God, and himself together, he raises a reason, v. 5. Quia non in morte, For in death there is no remembrance of thee; Destroy me not, for if I die, Quid facies magno nomini tuo? (as joshuah speaks) what will become of thy glory? of that glory which thou shouldest receive from my service in this world, if thou take me out of this world? But then, as he begun in reasons arising from himself, and out of the sense of his own humiliation under the hand of God, (for so he does) v. 2. Quia infirmus, Have mercy upon me, because I am weak, and cannot subsist without that mercy. And Quiaturbata ossa, his bones were vexed; Habet anima ossa sua, says S. Basil, The soul hath bones as well as the body; The bones of the soul are the strongest faculties, and best operations of the soul, and his best, and strongest actions, were but questionable actions, disputable, and suspicious actions; And Turbata anima, all his faculties, even in their very root, his very soul, was sore vexed, v. 3. As, I say, he began with reasons of that kind, arising from himself, so he returns and ends with the same humiliation, in the reasons arising from himself too, Quia laboravi in gemitu, I am weary with my groaning, all the night make I my bed to swim, etc. As our Saviour Christ entered into the house to his Disciples, john 20.28. januis clausis, when the doors were shut: so God enters into us too, januis clausis, when our eyes have not opened their doors, in any real penitent tears, when our mouths have not opened their doors, in any verbal prayers; God sees, and he hears the inclinations of the heart. S. Bernard notes well upon those words of Christ, John 11. at the raising of Lazarus, Father I thank thee, that thou hast heard me, That at that time, when Christ gave thanks to God, for having heard him, he had said nothing to his Father; but God had heard his heart. Since God does so even to us, he will much more hear us, as David, when we make outward declarations too, because that outward declaration conduces more to his glory, in the edification of his servants, therefore David comes to that declaratory protestation, Quia labor avi in gemitu, I am weary with my groaning, etc. In which words, Divisio. we shall consider, Quid factum, and Quid faciendum, What David did, and what we are to do: for David, after he had thrown himself upon the mercy of God, after he had confessed, and prayed, and done the spiritual parts of repentance, he afflicts his body besides; And so ought we likewise to do, if we will be partakers of David's example. And therefore we may do well to consider Quid faciendum, How this Example of David binds us, how these groan and waterings of his bed with tears, and other Mortifications assumed after repentance, and reconciliation to God, lay an obligation upon us. But this is our part, Quid faciendum, what is to be done by us; First, Quid factum, what David did; and truly he did much: first gemuit, he came to greane, to sigh, to outward declarations of inward heaviness. And Laberavit in gemits, He laboured, he traveled in that passion, and (as the word imports, and as our later Translation hath it) he was wearied, tired with it; so fare, that (as it is in the first Translation) he faimed, he languished with it. First he sighed, and sighed so; and groaned, and groaned so; passionately, vehemently, and then openly, exemplarily; and he was not ashamed of it, for he came to weeping, though he knew it would be thought childish: And that in that abundance, Natare feci, and Liqueseci lectum, He watered his bed, dissolved his bed, made his bed to swim, surrounded his bed with tears; And more, he macerated his bed with that brine: And then he continued this affliction; It was not a sudden passion, a flash of remorse; but he continued it, till his eye was consumed by reason of that anguish, and despite, and indignation; as our divers Translations vary the expressing thereof; so long, as night and day lasted, so long, as that he was waxen old under it; and when this great affliction should have brought him safely into harbour, that he might have rested securely at last, his enemies that triumphed over him, gave him new occasions of misery, his eyes were consumed, and waxed old because of his enemies; that is, because he was still amongst enemies that triumphed over him. Be pleased to take another Edition, another Impression of these particulars; A natural man's Moral constancy will hold out against outward declarations of grief; yet David came to that, he groaned: A groan, a sigh may break out, and the heart be at the more ease for that; But Laboravit, they grew upon him, and the more he groaned, and the more he sighed, the more he had an inclination, and not only that, but cause to do so, for he found that his sorrow was to be sorrowed for, and his repentance to be repent, there were such imperfections in all. Therefore he suffered thus till he was wearied, till he fainted with groaning, and sighing. And then this wind does not blow over the rain, he weeps; and weeps the more violently, and the more continually; extremes that seldom meet, violence, and lasting, but in his case they did. All this, all night, and all this, all this while, not amongst friends to pity him, and condole with him, but amongst enemies to affront him, and deride him: So that here are all the ingredients, all the elements of misery; Sorrow of heart, that admits no disguise, but flows into outward declarations; and such declarations as create no compassion, but triumph in the enemy. I am weary with my groaning, etc. To proceed then to the particulars in our first Part, Quid factum, What David did, 1 Part. Gemit. first Gemit, He comes to sigh, to groan, to an outward declaration of a sense of God's indignation upon him, till he had perfected his repentance. She sighed, Lament. and turned backward, was Jerusalem's misery. To sigh, and turn backward, to repent, and relapse, is a woeful Condition: But to sigh, and turn forward, to turn upon God, and to pursue this sorrow for our sins, then, in such sighs, The Spirit of man returns to God that gave it; Eccles. 12.7. As God breathed into man, so man breathes unto the nostrils of God a savour of rest, as it is said of Noah, an acceptable sacrifice, when he sighs for his sins. This sighing, this groaning, expressed in this word, Anach, Gemitus, is Vox Turturis. Turtur gemit; It is that voice, that sound which the Turtle gives; Plin. li. 18. c. 28. And we learn by Authors of Natural Story, and by experience, Turturis gemitus indicium veris, The voice of the Turtle is an evidence of the Spring; When a sinner comes to this voice, to this sighing, there is a Spring of grace begun in him; Then Vox Turturis audita in terra nostra, says Christ to his Spouse, The voice of the Turtle is heard in our Land; And so he says to thy soul, Gan. 2.12. This voice of the Turtle, these sighs of thy penitent soul, are heard interra nostra, in our Land, in the Kingdom of heaven. And when he hears this voice of this Turtle, these sighs of thy soul, than he puts thy name also into that List, which he gave to his Messenger, (in which Commission this very word of our Text, Ezek. 9.4. Anach, is used) Signabis signum super frontibus virorum suspirantium & gementium, Upon all their fore heads, that sigh and groan, imprint my mark; Which is ordinarily conceived by the Ancients to have been the letter Tau; of which though Calvin assign a useful, and a convenient reason, that they were marked with this letter Tau, which is the last letter of the Hebrew Alphabet, in sign, that though they were in estimation of the world, the most abject, and the outcasts thereof, yet God set his mark upon them, with a purpose to raise them; yet S. Hierome, Hieron. and the Ancients for the most part assign that for the reason, why they were marked with that letter, because that letter had the form of the Cross; Not for any such use, or power, as the Roman Church hath ascribed to that sign, but as in the Persecutions of the Primitive Church, the Martyrs at the stake, when a cry was raised, that they died for Treason, for Rebellion, for Sedition, and could not be heard, for the clamour, to clear themselves, used then in the sight of all, who, though they could not hear them, could see them, to sign themselves with the Cross, not to drive away devils, or to strengthen themselves against tentations by that sign, but by that sign to declare the cause of their death to be the profession of the Christian Religion, and not Treason, nor Sedition. And as we in our Baptism have that Cross imprinted upon us, not as a part of the Sacrament, or any piece of that armour, which we put on of spiritual strength, but as a protestation, whose Soldiers we became: so God imprinted upon them, that sighed, and mourned, that Tau, that letter, which had the form of the Cross, that it might be an evidence, that all their crosses shall be swallowed in his Cross, their sighs in his sighs, and their agonies in his. And therefore, Beloved, these sighs are too spiritual a substance, to be bestowed upon worldly matters; All the love, all the ambitions, all the losses of this world, are not worth a sigh; If they were, yet thou hast none to spare, for all thy sighs are due to thy sins; bestow them there. Gemit, Laboravit. he sighs, he groans; And then, Laboravit in gemitu, he laboured, he travailed, he grew weary, he fainted with sighing. Not to be curious, we meet with a threefold Labour in Scriptures. First there is Labour communis, the Labour which no man may avoid; job 5.7. Man is borne unto travailt, as the sparks fly upward; Where we may note in the Comparison, that it is not a dejection, a diminution, a depressing downward, but a flying upward, the true exaltation of a Man, that he labours duly in a lawful calling; and this is Labour communis; Secondly there is Labour impii, The labour of the wicked, for, They have taught their tongues to speak lies, says David, and take great pains to deal wickedly; job 15.20. As it is also in job, The wicked man travaileth with pain all his days, And (as our former Translation had it) he is continually as one travailing with Child; Indeed the labour is greater, to do ill, then well; to get hell, then Heaven; Heaven might be had with less pains, than men do bestow upon hell; and this is Labour impiorum. And lastly, there is Labour justorum, The labour of the Righteous, which is, To rise early, to lie down late, and to eat the bread of sorrow; for, though in that place, this seems to be said to be done in vain, Psal. 127.2. It is in vain to rise early, in vain to lie down late, in vain to eat the bread of sorrow, yet it is with the same exception, which is there specified, that is, Except the Lord build, it is in vain to labour, Except the Lord keep the City, it is in vain to watch; So except the Lord give rest to his beloved, it is in vain torise early: In vain to travail, except God give a blessing. But when the Lord hath given thee rest, in the remission of thy sins, then comes this Labour justorum, the labour that a righteous man is bound to, that as God hath given him a good night's rest, so he gives God a good days work, as God hath given him rest and peace of conscience, for that which is past, so he take some pains for that which is to come, for such was David's case, and David's care, and David's labour. Ephrem, an ancient Deacon, and Expositor in the Christian Church, takes this labour of David, Laboravi in gemitu, to have been in gemitu, but in comprimendo gemitu, that he laboured to conceal his penance and mortification, from the sight and knowledge of others; Beloved, this concealing of those things, which we put ourselves to in the ways of godliness, hath always a good use, when it is done, to avoid ostentation, and vain glory, and praise of men; And it hath otherwise, sometimes a good use, to conceal our tribulations and miseries from others, because the wicked often take occasion, from the calamities and pressures of the godly, to insult and triumph over them, and to dishonour and blaspheme their God, and to say, Where is now your God? and therefore it may sometimes concern us to labour to hid our miseries, to swallow our own spittle, as job speaks, and to sponge up our tears in our brains, and to eat, and smother our sighs in our own bosoms. But this was not David's case now; But as he had opened himself to God, he opened himself to the world too; and as he says in another place, Come and I will tell you, what God hath done for my soul, So here he says, Come, and I will tell you, what I have done against my God. So he sighed, and so he groaned; he laboured, he was affected bitterly with it himself; And he declated it, he made it exemplar, and catechistical, that his dejection in himself, might be an exaltation to others; And then he was not ashamed of it, but as he said of his dancing before the Ark, If this be to be vile, I will be more vile, So here, if this passion be weakness, I will yet be more weak; for this wind brought rain, These sighs brought tears, All the night make I my bed to swim, etc. The concupiscencies of man, are naturally dry powder, combustible easily, Lacrymae. easily apt to take fire; but tears damp them, and give them a little more leisure, and us intermission and consideration. David had laboured hard; first Add ruborem, as Physicians advise, to a redness, to a blushing, to a shame of his sin; And now Ad sudorem, Hilar. he had laboured to a sweat: for Lacrymae sudor animae moerentis, Tears are the sweat of a labouring soul, and that soul that labours as David did, will sweat, as David did, in the tears of contrition; Till then, till tears break out, and find a vent in outward declaration, we pant and struggle in miserable convulsions, and distortions, and distractions, and earthquakes, and irresolutions of the soul; I can believe, that God will have mercy upon me, if I repent, but I cannot believe that is repentance, if I cannot weep, or come to outward declarations. This is the laborious irresolution of the soul; But Lacrymae diluvium, Nazian. & evehunt animam, These tears carry up our soul, as the flood carried up the Ark, higher than any hills; whether hills of power, and so above the oppression of potent adversaries, or hills of our own pride, and ambition; True holy tears carry us above all. And therefore, when the Angel rebuked the people, for not destroying Idolatry, They wept, judg. 2.5. says the text, there was their present remedy; and they called the name of the place Bochim, Tears, that there might be a permanent testimony of that expressing of their repentance; that that way they went to God, and in that way God received them; and that their Children might say to one another, Where did God show that great mercy to our Fathers? Here; here, in Bochim, that is, Here in tears. And so when at samuel's motions, and increpation, the people would testify their repentance, They drew water, 1 Sam. 7.6. says the story, and poured it out before the Lord, and fasted, and said, We have sinned against the Lord. They poured water, esset symbolum lacrymarum, That that might be a type, and figure, Nab. Oziel. in what proportion of tears, they desired to express their repentance. For, such an effusion of tears, David may be well thought to intent, when he says, Effundite coram Deo animam vestram, Pour out your souls before God, pour them out in such an effusion, in a continual, and a contrite weeping. Still the Prophets cry out upon Idols and Idolaters, Vlulate Sculptilia; Howle ye Idols, and Howle ye Idolaters; He hath no hope of their weeping. And so the devil, and the damned are said to howl, but not to weep; or when they are said to weep, it is with a gnashing of teeth, which is a voice of Indignation, even towards God, and not of humiliation under his hand: So also says the Prophet of an impenitent sinner, Induratae super petram facies, They have made their faces harder than stone; jer. 5.3. wherein? Thou hast stricken them, but they have not wept; not sorrowed. Out of a stone water cannot be drawn, but by miracle, though it be twice stricken; Numb. 20.11. as Moses struck the Rock twice, yet the water came by the miraculous power of God, and not by Moses second stroke. Though God strike this sinner twice, thrice, he will not weep: though inward terrors strike his conscience, and outward diseases strike his body, and calamities and ruin strike his estate, yet he will not confess by one tear, that these are judgements of God, but natural accidents; or if judgements, that they proceeded not from his sin, but from some decree in God, or some purpose in God, to glorify himself, by thus afflicting him, and that if he had been better, he should have fared never the better, for God's purpose must stand. Therefore says God of such in that place, Surely they are poor, that was plain enough, and they are foolish too, says God there: And God gives the reason of it, for they know not the judgements of God; They know not his judgements to be judgements; They ascribe all calamities to other causes, and so they turn upon other ways, and other plots, and other miserable comforters. But attribute all to the Lord; never say of any thing, This falls upon me, but of all, This is laid upon me by the hand of God, and thou wilt come to him in tears. Rain water is better than River water; The water of Heaven, tears for offending thy God, are better than tears for worldly losses; But yet come to tears of any kind, and whatsoever occasion thy tears, Esay 25.8. Deus absterget omnem lacrymam, there is the largeness of his bounty, He will wipe all tears from thine eyes; But thou must have tears first: first thou must come to this weeping, or else God cannot come to this wiping; God hath not that errand to thee, to wipe tears from thine eyes, if there be none there; If thou do nothing for thyself, God finds nothing to do for thee. David wept thus, Nocte. thus vehemently, and he wept thus, thus continually; In the Night, says our Text; Psal. 42.3. Not that he wept not in the day: He says of himself, My tears have been my meat, both day and night, where though he name no fast, you see his diet, how that was attenuated. Lament. 1.2. And so when it is said of Jerusalem, She weepeth continually in the night, it is not that she put off her weeping till night, but that she continued her days weeping to the night, and in the night: Plorando plorabit, says the Original in the place; she does weep already, and she will weep still; she puts it not off dilatorily, (I will weep, but not yet) nor she puts it not over easily, suddenly, (I have wept, and I need no more) but as God promises to his children, Joel 1.23. the first and later rain, so must his children give to him again both reins, tears of the day, and tears of the night, by washing the sins of the day in the evening, and the sins of the night in the morning. But this was an addition to David's affliction in this night weeping, that whereas the night was made for man to rest in, David could not make that use of the night. When he had proposed so great a part of his happiness to consist in this, Psal. 4. ult. That he would lay him down and sleep in peace; we see in the next Psalm but one, he that thought to sleep out the night, come to weep out the night. When the Saints of God have that security, which S. Hierome speaks of, sanctis ipse somnus sit oratio, They sleep securely, for their very sleep is a glorifying of God, who giveth his beloved sleep, yet David could have none of this. Euseb. But why not he? Noctem letiferam nocte compensat; First, for the place, the sin came in at those windows, at his eyes, and came in, in fire, in lust, And it must go out at those windows too, and go out in water, in the water of repentant tears; And then, for the time, as the night defiled his soul, so the sin must be expiated, and the soul washed in the night too. And this may be some Emblem, some useful intimation, how hastily Repentance follows sin; David's sin is placed, but in the beginning of the night, in the Evening, (In the evening he risen, and walked upon the Terase, and saw Bathsheba) and in the next part of time, in the night, he falls a weeping: no more between the sweetness of sin, and the bitterness of repentance, then between evening, and night; no morning to either of them, till the Sun of grace arise, and shine out, and proceed to a Meridional height, and make the repentance upon circumstance, to be a repentance upon the substance, and bring it to be a repentance for the sin itself, which at first was but a repentance upon some calamity, that that sin induced. He wept then, Omni nocte. and wept in the night; in a time, when he could neither receive rest in himself, which all men had, nor receive praise from others, which all men affect. And he wept Omni nocte; which is not only Omnibus noctibus, sometime every night, but it is Tota nocte, clean through the night; And he wept in that abundance, as hath put the Holy Ghost to that Hyperbole in David's pen to express it, Liquefecit stratum, natare fecit stratum, Hieron. it drowned his bed, surrounded his bed, it dissolved, it macerated, it melted his bed with that brine. Well; Qui rigat stratum, he that washes his bed so with repentant tears, Non potest in cogitationem ejus libidinum pompa subrepere: Tentations take hold of us sometimes after our tears, after our repentance, but seldom or never in the act of our repentance, and in the very shedding of our tears; At lest Libidinum pompa, The victory, the triumph of lust breaks not in upon us, in a bed, so dissolved, so surrounded, so macerated with such tears. Thy bed is a figure of thy grave; Such as thy grave receives thee at death, it shall deliver thee up to Judgement at last; Such as thy bed receives thee at night, it shall deliver thee in the morning: If thou sleep without calling thyself to an account, thou wilt wake so, and walk so, and proceed so, without ever calling thyself to an account, till Christ Jesus call thee in the Clouds. It is not intended, that thou shouldest afflict thyself so grievously, as some overdoing Penitents, to put chips, and shells, and splints, and flints, and nails, and rowels of spurs in thy bed, to wound and macerate thy body so. The inventions of men, are not intended here; But here is a precept of God, implied in this precedent and practice of David, That as long as the sense of a former sin, or the inclination to a future oppresses thee, thou must not close thine eyes, thou must not take thy rest, till, as God married thy body and soul together in the Creation, and shall at last crown thy body and soul together in the Resurrection, so they may also rest together here, that as thy body rests in thy bed, thy soul may rest in the peace of thy Conscience, and that thou never say to thy head, Rest upon this pillow, till thou canst say to thy soul, Rest in this repentance, in this peace. Now as this sorrow of David's continued day and night, Oculus. (in the day for the better edification of men, and in the night for his better capitulation with God) so there is a farther continuation thereof without any weariness, expressed in the next clause, Turbatus à furore oculus meus, as the Vulgat reads it, and Mine eye is dimmed, for despite or indignation, as our former, or as this last Translation hath it, Mine eye is consumed because of grief; and to speak nearest to the Original, Erosus est oculus, Mine eye is eaten out with Indignation. A word or two shall be enough of each of these words, these three Terms, What the eye, which is the subject, what this consuming, or dimming, which is the effect, and what this Grief, or Indignation, which is the affection, imports and offers to our application. First, Oculus, the Eye, is ordinarily taken in the Scriptures, Pro aspectu, for the whole face, the looks, the countenance, the air of a man; and this air, and looks, and countenance, declares the whole habitude, and constitution of the man; As he looks, so he is: So that the Eye here, is the whole person; and so this grief had wrought upon the whole frame and constitution of David, and decayed that; though he place it in the eye, yet it had grown over all the body. Since thou wast not able to say to thy sin, The sin shall come to mine eyes, but no farther, I will look, but not lust, I will see, but not covet, thou must not say, My repentance shall come to mine eyes, and no farther, I will shed a few tears, and no more; but (with this Prophet David, and with the Apostle S. Paul) thou must beat down thy body to that particular purpose, and in that proportion, as thou findest the rebellions thereof to require: Thou couldst not stop the sin at thine eyes; stop not thy repentance there neither, but pursue it in wholesome mortification, through all those parts, in which the sin hath advanced his dominion over thee; and that is our use of the first word, the Eye, the whole frame. For the second word, which in our Translations, is, in one dimmed, Turbatus. Reuchlin. in the other consumed, and in the Vulgat troubled, a great Master in the Original, renders it well, elegantly, and naturally out of the Original, Verminavit, Tineavit, which is such a deformity, as worms make in wood, or in books; If David's sorrow for his sins brought him to this deformity, what sorrow do they owe to their sins, who being come to a deformity by their own licentiousness, and intemperance, disguise all that by unnatural helps, to the drawing in of others, and the continuation of their former sins? The sin itself was the Devil's act in thee; But in the deformity and debility, though it follow upon the sin, God hath a hand; And they that smother and suppress these by paintings, and pamper, unnatural helps to unlawful ends, do not deliver themselves of the plague, but they hid the marks, and infect others, and wrestle against God's notifications of their former sins. And then the last of these three words, which is here rendered Grief, Indignatio. does properly signify, Indignation, and Anger: And therefore S. Augustine upon this place, puts himself to that question, If David's constitution be shaken, if his complexion and countenance be decayed, and withered, Prae indignatione, for Indignation, for Anger, from whom proceeds this Indignation, and this Anger? says that blessed Father. If it proceed from God, says he, it is well that he is but Turbatus, and not Extinctus, that he is but troubled, and not distracted, but shaken, and not overthrown; but overthrown, and not ground to powder, not trodden as flat as dirt in the streets, as the Prophet speaks. For David himself had told us but a few Psalms before, Psal. 2. ult. That when the Son is angry, (and when we speak of the Son, we intent a person more sensible, and so more compassionate of our miseries, then when we speak of God, of God considered in the height of his Majesty) and but a little angry, (which amounts not to this provocation of God, which David had fall'n into here) we may perish; and perish in the way; perish in a half repentance, before we perfect our Reconciliation: In the way so, before we come to our end; or in the way, in these outward actions of repentance, if they be hypocritically, or occasionally, or fashionally, or perfunctorily performed, and not with a right heart towards God. Though this be the way, we may perish in the way. Now Aquinas places this fury (as the Vulgat calls it, this indignation) in Absolom, and not in David; He takes David's sorrow to rise out of his son's rebellion, and furious prosecution thereof; That David was thus vehemently affected for the fault of another: And truly it is a holy tenderness, and an exemplar disposition to be so sensible, and compassionate for the sins of other men; Though Absolom could not have hurt David, David would have grieved for his unnatural attempt to do it. So in Aquinas sense, it is Excandescentia pro inimicis, a sorrow for his enemies; Not for his own danger from them, but for their sin in themselves; But Gregory Nyssen takes it, de excandescentia in inimicos, for an indignation against his enemies: And that David speaks this by way of confession, and accusation of himself, as of a fault, that he was too soon transported to an impatience, and indignation against them, though enemies; And taking that sense, we see, how quickly even the Saints of God put themselves beyond the hability of making that Petition sincerely, Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us; How hard it is even for a good man to forgive an enemy; Heg. And how hard it is, Nihil in peccatore odisse nisi peccatum, to sever the sin from the sinner, and to hate the fault, and not the man. But leaving Thomas and Gregory, Aquinas and Nyssen to that Exposition, in which (I think) they are singularly singular, either that this sorrow in David was a charitable and compassionate sense of others faults, which is Aquinas way, or that it was a confession of uncharitableness in himself towards others, which is Gregory's way, the whole stream (for the most part) of ancient Expositors divide themselves into these two channels; Either that this indignation conceived by David, which withered and decayed him, was a holy scorn and indignation against his own sins, that such wretched things as those should separate him from his God, and from his inheritance, according to that chain of Affections which the Apostle makes, 2 Cor. 7. That godly sorrow brings a sinner to a care; He is no longer careless, negligent of his ways; and that care to a clearing of himself, not to clear himself by way of excuse, or disguise, but to clear himself by way of physic, by humble confession; and then that clearing brings him to an indignation, to a kind of holy scorn, and wonder, how that tentation could work so; Such an affection as we conceive to have been in the Spouse, when she said, Lavi pedes, I have washed my feet, how shall I defile them? I have emptied my soul by Confession, is it possible I should charge it with new transgressions? Or else they place this affection, this indignation in God; And then they say, it was an apprehension of the anger of God, to be expressed upon him in the day of Judgement; And against this Vermination, (as the Original denotes) against this gnawing of the worm, that may boar through, and sink the strongest vessel that sails in the seas of this world, there is no other varnish, no other lineament, no other medicament, no other pitch nor rosin against this worm, but the blood of Christ Jesus: And therefore whensoever this worm, this apprehension of God's future indignation, reserved for the Judgement, bites upon thee, be sure to present to it the blood of thy Saviour: Never consider the judgement of God for sin alone, but in the company of the mercies of Christ. It is but the hissing of the Serpent, and the whispering of Satan, when he surprises thee in a melancholy midnight of dejection of spirit, and lays thy sins before thee then; Look not upon thy sins so inseparably, that thou canst not see Christ too: Come not to a confession to God, without consideration of the promises of his Gospel; Even the sense and remorse of sin is a dangerous consideration, but when the cup of salvation stands by me, to keep me from fainting. David himself could not get off when he would; but (as he complains there, which is the last act of his sorrow to be considered in this, which is all his part, and all our first part) Inveteravit, He waxed old because of all his enemies. The difference is not of much importance, Inveteravit. whether it be Inveteravi, or Inveteravit; in the first, or in the third person. Whether David's eyes, or David himself be thus decayed, and waxed old, imports little. But yet that which Bellarmine collects, upon this difference, imports much. For, because the Vulgat Edition, and the Septuagint, (such a Septuagint as we have now) read this in the first person of David himself, Inveteravi, and the Hebrew hath it in the third, Inveteravit, Bellarmine will needs think, that the Hebrew, the Original, is falsified and corrupted; still in advancement of that dangerous Position of theirs, That their Translation is to be preferred before the Original; and that is an unsufferable tyranny, and an Idolatrous servility. The Translation is a reverend Translation; A Translation to which the Church of God owes much; but gold will make an Idol as well as wood, and to make any Translation equal, or better than the Original, is an Idolatrous servility. It is true, that that which is said here in the third person, implies the first; And it is David, that after his sighing, and fainting with that, After his weeping, and dissolving with that, After his consuming, and withering with that, foresees no rescue, no escape, Inveteravit, he waxes old amongst his enemies. Who were his enemies, and what was this age that he speaks of? It is of best use to pursue the spiritual sense of this Psalm, and so his enemies were his sins; And David found that he had not got the victory over any one enemy, any one sin; Another's blood did not extinguish the lustful heat of his own, nor the murder of the husband, the adultery with the wife: Change of sin is not an overcoming of sin; He that passes from sin to sin, without repentance, (which was David's case for a time) still leaves an enemy behind him; and though he have no present assault from his former enemy, no tentation to any act of his former sin, yet he is still in the midst of his enemies; under condemnation of his past, as well as of his present sins; as unworthy a receiver of the Sacrament, for the sins of his youth done forty years ago, if those sins were never repent, though so long discontinued, as for his ambition, or covetousness, or indevotion of this present day. These are his enemies; and then this is the age that grows upon him, the age that David complains of, I am waxenold; that is, grown into habits of these sins. There is an old age of our natural condition, We shall wax old as doth a garment; Psal. 102.26. David would not complain of that which all men desire; To wish to be old, and then grudge to be old, when we are come to it, cannot consist with moral constancy. There is an old age expressed in that phrase, The old man, which the Apostle speaks of, which is that natural corruption and disposition to sin, cast upon us by Adam; Rom. 6.6. But that old man was crucified in Christ, says the Apostle; and was not so only from that time when Christ was actually crucified, one thousand six hundred years ago, but from that time that a second Adam was promised to the first, in Paradise; And so that Lamb slain from the beginning of the world, from the beginning delivered all them, to whom the means ordained by God, (as Circumcision to them, Baptism to us) were afforded; and in that respect, David was not under that old age, but was become a new creature. Nor as the Law was called the old Law, which is another age also; for to them who understood that Law aright, the New Law, the Gospel, was enwrapped in the Old; And so David as well as we, might be said to serve God in the newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the Letter; Rom. 7.6. so that this was not the age that oppressed him. The Age that oppresses the sinner, is that when he is grown old in sin, he is grown weak in strength, and become less able to overcome that sin then, than he was at beginning. Blindness contracted by Age, doth not deliver him from objects of tentations; He sees them, though he be blind; Deafness doth not deliver him from discourses of tentation; he hears them, though he be deaf: Nor lameness doth not deliver him from pursuit of tentation; for in his own memory he sees, and hears, and pursues all his former sinful pleasures, and every night, every hour sins over all the sins of many years that are passed. That which waxeth old, is ready to vanish, says the Apostle: Heb. 8.13. If we would let them go, they would go; and whether we will or no, they leave us for the ability of practice; But Thesaurizamus, we treasure them up in our memories, Rom. 2.5. and we treasure up the wrath of God with them, against the day of wrath; And whereas one calling of our sins to our memories by way of confession, would do us good, and serve our turns, this often calling them in a sinful delight, in the memory of them, exceeds the sin itself, when it was committed, because it is more unnatural now, Ezek. 23.19. than it was then, and frustrates the pardon of that sin, when it was repent. To end this branch, and this part, So humble was this holy Prophet, and so apprehensive of his own debility, and so far from an imaginary infallibility of falling no more, as that after all his agonies, and exercises, and mortifications, and prayer, and sighs, and weeping, still he finds himself in the midst of enemies, and of his old enemies; for not only tentations to new sins, but even the memory of old, though formerly repent, arise against us, arise in us, and ruin us. And so we pass from these pieces which constitute our first Part, Quid factum, what David upon the sense of his case did, to the other, Quid faciendum, what by his example we are to do, and what is required of us, after we have repent, and God hath remitted the sin. Out of this passage here in this Psalm, and out of that history, 2 Part. where Nathan says to David, The Lord hath put away thy sin, and yet says after, 2. Sam. 12.13. The child that is borne to thee shall surely die, and out of that story, where David reputes earnestly his sin, committed in the numbering of his people, and says; Now, now that I have repent, 2 Sam. 24.10. Now I beseech thee O Lord, take away the iniquity of thy servant, for I have done very foolishly, yet David was to endure one of those three Calamities, of Famine, War, or Pestilence; And out of some other such places as these, some men have imagined a Doctrine, that after our repentance, and after God hath thereupon pardoned our sin, yet he leaves the punishment belonging to that sin unpardoned; though not all the punishment, not the eternal, yet say they, there belongs a temporary punishment too, and that God does not pardon, but exacts, and exacts in the nature of a punishment, and more, by way of satisfaction to his Justice. Now, Stipendium peccati mors est, There is the punishment for sin, The reward of sin is death. If there remain no death, there remains no punishment: For the reward of sin is death, And death complicated in itself, death wrapped in death; and what is so intricate, so entangling as death? Who ever got out of a winding sheet? It is death aggravated by itself, death weighed down by death: And what is so heavy as death? Who ever threw off his grave stone? It is death multiplied by itself; And what is so infinite as death? Who ever told over the days of death? It is Morte morieris, A Double death, Eternal, and Temporary. Temporal, and Spiritual death. Now, the Temporary, the Natural death, God never takes away from us, he never pardons that punishment, because he never takes away that sin that occasioned it, which is Original sin; To what Sanctification soever a man comes, Original sin lives to his last breath. And therefore, Heb 9.27. Statutum est, That Decree stands, Semel mori, that every man must die once; but for any Bis mori, for twice dying, for eternal death upon any man, as man, if God consider him not as an impotent sinner, there is no such invariable Decree; for, that death being also the punishment for actual sin, if he take away the cause, the sin, he takes away that effect, that death also; for this death itself, eternal death, we all agree that it is taken away with the sin; And then for other calamities in this life, which we call Morticulas, Little deaths, the children, the issue, the offspring, the propagation of death, if we would speak properly, no Affliction, no Judgement of God in this life, hath in it exactly the nature of a punishment; not only not the nature of satisfaction, but not the nature of a punishment. We call not Coin, base Coin, till the Alloy be more than the pure Metal: Gods Judgements are not punishments, except there be more anger than love, more Justice than Mercy in them; and that is never; for Miserationes ejus super omnia opera, His mercies are above all his works: In his first work, in the Creation, his Spirit, the Holy Ghost, moved upon the face of the waters; and still upon the face of all our waters, (as waters are emblems of tribulation in all the Scriptures) his Spirit, the Spirit of comfort, moves too; and as the waters produced the first creatures in the Creation, so tribulations offer us the first comforts; sooner than prosperity does. God executes no judgement upon man in this life, but in mercy; either in mercy to that person, in his sense thereof, if he be sensible, or at least in mercy to his Church, in the example thereof, if he be not: There is no person to whom we can say, that God's Corrections are Punishments, any otherwise then Medicinal, and such, as he may receive amendment by, that receives them; Neither does it become us in any case, to say God lays this upon him, because he is so ill, but because he may be better. But here our consideration is only upon the godly, and such as by repentance stand upright in his favour; and even in them, our Adversaries say, that after the remission of their sins, there remains a punishment, and a punishment by way of Satisfaction, to be borne for that sin, which is remitted. But since they themselves tell us, that in Baptism God proceeds otherwise, and pardons there all sin, and all punishment of sin, which should be inflicted in the next world, (for children newly baptised, do not suffer any thing in Purgatory) And that this holds not only in Baptismo fluminis, in the Sacrament of Baptism, but in Baptismo sanguinis, in the Baptism of blood too; (for in Martyrdom, as S. Augustine says, Injuriam facit Martyri, He wrongs a Martyr that prays for a Martyr, as though he were not already in Heaven; so he suspects a Martyr, that thinks that Martyr goes to Purgatory) And since they say, that he can do so in the other Sacrament too, and in Repentance, which they call, and justly, Secundam post naufragium tabulam, That whereas Baptism hath once delivered us from shipwreck, in Original sin, this Repentance delivers us after Baptism, from actual sin; Since God can pardon, without reserving any punishment, since God does so in Baptism and Martyrdom, since out of Baptism or Martyrdom, it appears often, that De facto, he hath done so, (for he enjoined no penance to the man sick of the Palsy, when he said, Mat 9 Son be of good comfort, thy sins are forgiven thee, Sins, and punishments too. He intimated no such after reckoning to her, of whom he said, Many sins are forgiven her; Sins, and punishments too. Luke 17. He left no such future Satisfaction in that Parable upon the Publican, Luke 18. that departed to his house justified; Justified from sins, and punishments too. And when he declared Zacheus to be the son of Abraham, and said, This day is Salvation come unto thy house. Luke 19 He did not charge this blessed inheritance with any such encumbrance, that he should still be subject to old debts, to make satisfaction by bodily afflictions for former sins) since God can do this, and does so in Baptism, and Martyrdom, and hath done this very often, out of Baptism, or Martyrdom, in Repentance, we had need of clearer evidence than they have offered to preduce yet, that God does otherwise at any time; that at any time he pardons the sin, and retains the punishment, by way of satisfaction. If their Market should fail, that no man would buy Indulgences (as of late years it was brought low, when they vented ten Indulgencies in America for one in Europe; If the fire of Purgatory were quenched, or slackened, that men would not be so prodigal to buy out Fathers or friends souls, from thence; If commutation of penance, were so moderated amongst them, that those penances, and satisfactions, which they make so necessary, were not commuted to money, and brought them in no profit, they would not be perhaps so vehement in maintenance of this Doctrine. To leave such imaginations with their Authors; We see David did enjoin himself penance, and impose upon himself heavy afflictions after he had asked, and no doubt, received assurance of the mercy of God, in the remission of his sins. Why did he so? S. Augustine observes out of the words of this Text, that because some of David's afflictions are expressed in the Preter tense, as things already past, and some in the Future, as things to come, (for it is Laboravi, I have mourned, and it is Natare faciam, I will wash my bed with tears) so that something David confesses he had done, and something he professes that he will do, therefore David hath a special regard to his future state, and he proceeds with God, not only by that way of holy worship, by way of confession, what he had done, but by another religious worship of God too, by way of vow, what he would do. David understood his own conscience well; and was willing to husband it, to manure, and cultivate it well; He knew what ploughing, what harrowing, what weeding, and watering, and pruning it needed, and so perhaps might be trusted with himself, and he his own spiritual Physician. This is not every one's case. Those that are not so perfect in the knowledge of their own estate, (as it is certain the most are not) the Church ever took into her care; and therefore it is true, that in the Primitive Church, there were heavy penitential Canons, and there were public penances enjoined to sinners: Either Ad explorationem, when the Church had cause to be jealous, and to suspect the hearty repentance of the party, They made this trial of their obedience, to submit them to that heavy penance; Or else Ad aedificationem, to satisfy the Church which was scandalised by their sins before; Or Ad Exercitationem, to keep them in continual practice, the better to resist future tentations, and relapses; for to them this penance was an Unction, as to one that was to wrestle with himself, and as the buckling on of an Armour upon one that was to fight God's Battles, in his own bowels. If from some of the Fathers, there have feign sometimes, some phrases which may have seemed to some, to attribute something more to man's works, to his after-afflictions, and post-penances, some power of satisfaction to the Justice of God, Bellarmine himself hath given us one good Caution, That we must be very wary in understanding those phrases; for he finds it very inconvenient, to accept all that the Fathers have said, in their manner of expressing themselves in that point. We will add thus much more, for the better understanding of repentance in the root, and the fruits of repentance, that there is such an indissoluble knot, such an individual marriage between those parts of repentance, which we call Parts constitutivas, Essential parts of repentance, and those parts, which we call Consecutivas, which do infallibly concur, or immediately follow upon repentance, these two are so inseparable; There is not only such a contiguity, but such a continuity in them, not only such a vicinity, but such an identity, between repentance, and the fruits of repentance, that many reverend persons, in their Expositions, and Meditations have presented, and named one for the other, and have called those subsequent, and subsidiary things, by the name of Repentance itself. Hence it comes, that whereas repentance is only Cogversio, a turning, and this conversion, this turning hath only Terminum à quo, Something to turn from, and that is sin, and Terminum ad quem, Something to turn to, and that is God, Those things which are indeed but helps to hold us in that station, and in that posture when we are turned from sin upon God, they have called by the names of Repentance itself, as parts of it; And so these bodily afflictions, which we speak of, being indeed to be embraced for that use, to maintain us in that good disposition, to which our repentance hath brought us, have sometimes been called parts of repentance, even by godly, and learned Expositors; and by occasion of that easiness in them, in calling these things thus, in aftertimes, salvation itself, which God gives upon repentance, hath been attributed to these post-penances, and after-afflictions, which because they do always accompany repentance, have sometimes been called repentance. The meaning of ancient and later men too therein, hath been to impose a necessity of taking these medicinal Physics, these after-afflictions, for that use of holding us in that state, to which we are brought; but their meaning hath ever been too, to exclude satisfaction, Ambrose. properly so termed. Poenitentia est, mala praeterita plaengere, This is repentance says that Father, to lament and bewail our former sins; But, this is not all that he requires, but he adds, Plangenda iterum non committere, This belongs to repentance too, not to return to those sins, August. which we have bewailed. For, Repentance is Vindicta semper puniens, quod dolet se commisisse, says another also; a man truly penitent is a daily executioner upon himself, and punishes after, the sins which he hath committed before. Here we see that both these blessed Fathers, S. Augustine, and S. Ambrose, attribute these after-afflictions, and post-penances to Repentance, and call them by that name, Repentance. But yet, not to leave these blessed Fathers, under the danger of misinterpretation, and ill application of words well intended, We consider the same Fathers in other places too; Ambrose. Lacrymas Petri lego, satisfactionem non lego, I read of Peter's tears, not of his satisfaction. So if these post-penances had the nature of punishments, yet these punishments had not the nature of satisfaction. August. But Calamitates ante remissionem sunt supplicia, post remissionem exercitationes, says the other of those Fathers: Till God be pacified by our Repentance, his corrections have more of the nature of punishments, because considered so, we are in the state of enemies, and he may justly punish; But after God hath remitted the sin, the after-afflictions are but from a Physician, not from an executioner, and intended to keep us in our station, and not to throw us lower; So that they are neither properly satisfactions, Origen. nor punishments. For, for satisfaction to the justice of God, Nec si te excories, satis facere possis, If thou flay thyself with haire-cloathes, and whips, it is nothing towards satisfaction of that infinite Majesty, which thou hast violated, and wounded by thy sin; Chrysost. And then for the other, that is, punishment after remission, Vbi misericordia, poenae locus non est, They are incompatible things, If God have reserved a disposition and purpose to punish, he hath not pardoned. So that howsoever something said by them, may seem to make these after-afflictions to be necessary to repentance, and, in a large sense, parts of repentance, yet neither did they put that value upon man's act, That man should be able to satisfy God, nor that delusion upon God's act, That God should pretend to pardon, and yet punish. We are not disposed to wrangle about words, and names; The School may admit that exercise, but not the Pulpit. If upon admittance, that these after-afflictions might be called punishments, they had not inferred a satisfaction, and thereupon super-induced a satisfaction after this life, and so a Purgatory, and so Indulgencies, and carried their Babel so many stories high, We to advance the doctrine of a necessity of these disciplines, and mortifications, even after God hath sealed to our consciences the remission of our sin, would not abhor, nor decline the name, we would not be afraid to call them Penances, nor Punishments, Chrysost. nor Satisfactions; for when S. chrysostom in his time, had no occasion to be afraid of such a misinterpretation, he was not afraid to call them so; Non remisit supplicium, says he; God hath not forgiven the punishment; And imponit poenam, God exacts a punishment at thy hands: But yet, though S. chrysostom suspected no such misinterpretations, the Holy Ghost who foresaw that they would come, prevents all dangerous misconstructions, and directs S. Chrysostom's pen, thus, God does all this, says he, Non exigens supplicium de peccatis, sed corrigens ad futurum; whatsoever I have said of punishments; it is not, that in that punishment, God hath any relation to the former, but to the future sin, not to our lapse, but to our relapse, not to that which he hath seen, but to that which he foresees would fall upon us, if he did not, if we did not prevent it with these medicinal assistances: And, as long as it is but so, call them what ye will, yet here is no foundation laid, no materials, no stone brought to the building of the Roman Satisfaction, or Purgatory, or Indulgencies. Howsoever therefore you exclude dangerous names, do not upon colour of that, exclude necessary things: Howsoever you have delivered yourselves to the mercy of God, and he hath delivered a seal of his mercy to you, inwardly in his Spirit, outwardly in his Sacrament, yet there are Amarae sagittae ex dulci manu Dei, Nazian. (as Nazianzen calls afflictions after repentance) Sharp arrows out of the sweet hand of God; Corrections, by which God intends to establish us in that spiritual health, to which our repentance, by his grace, hath brought us: Remember still, that this which David did for the present, and that which he promised be would do for the future, both together made up the reason of his prayer to God, by which he desired God in the former verses, to return to him, to deliver his soul, and to save him; He had had no reason, no ground of his prayer, though he had done something already, if he had not proposed to himself something more to be done: There is a preparation before, and there is a preservation after required at our hands, if we study a perfect recovery, and cure of our souls. Gregor. And as S. Gregory notes well, there is a great deal of force in David's Possessive, in his word of appropriation, Meus, lectus meus, and Oculus meus, It is his bed that he washed, and they are his eyes that washed it: He bore the affliction himself, and trusted not to that which others had suffered by way of Supererogation. Sometimes, when the children of great persons offend at School, another person is whipped for them, and that affects them, and works upon a good nature; but if that person should take Physic for them in a sickness, it would do them no good: Gods corrections upon others, may work by way of example upon thee; but because thou art sick for physic, take it thyself. Trust not to the treasure of the Church; neither the imaginary treasure of the Church of Rome, which pretends an inexhaustible mine of the works of other men, to distribute and bestow; No, nor to the true treasure of the true Church, that is, Absolution, upon Confession, and Repentance; No, trust not to the merits of Christ himself, in their application to thee, without a Lectus tuus, and an Oculus tuus, except thou remember thy sins in thy bed, and pour out thy tears from thine eyes, and fulfil the sufferings of Christ in thyself. Nothing can be added to Christ's merits; that is true: but something must be added to thee; a disposition in thee, for the application of that which is his: Not, that thou canst begin this disposition in thyself, till God offer it, but that thou mayst resist it, now it is offered, and reject it again, after it is received. Trust not in others, not in the Church, nor in Christ himself, so, as to do nothing for thyself; Nor trust not in that, which thou dost for thyself, so, as at any time to think, thou hast done enough and needest do no more: But when thou hast passed the signet, that thou hast found the signature of God's hand and seal, in a manifestation, that the marks of his Grace are upon thee, when thou hast passed his privy Seal, That his Spirit bears witness with thy spirit, that thy repentance hath been accepted by him, When thou hast passed the great Seal, in the holy and blessed Sacrament publicly administered, do not suspect the goodness of God, as though all were not done that were necessary for thy salvation, if thou wert to have thy transmigration out of this world this hour; but yet, as long as thou continuest in the vale of tentations, continue in the vale of tears too; and though thou have the seal of Reconciliation, plead that seal to the Church, (which is God's Tribunal, and judgement seat upon earth) in a holy life, and works of example to others, and look daily, look hourly upon the Ita quod of that pardon, upon the Covenants and Conditions, with which it is given, That if by neglecting those medicinal helps, those auxiliary forces, those subsidies of the kingdom of Heaven, those after-afflictions, (choose whether you will call them by the name of Penance, or no) you relapse into former sins, your present repentance, and your present seal of that Repentance, the Sacrament, shall rise up against you at the last day, and to that sentence (you did not feed, you did not clothe, you did not harbour me in the poor) shall this be added, as the aggravation of all, you did Repent, and you did receive the Seal, but you did not pursue that repentance, nor perform the conditions required at your hands. But we are here met, by God's gracious goodness, in a better disposition; with a sincere repentance of all our former sins, and with a deliberate purpose, as those Israelites made their pouring out of water, a testimony of dissolving themselves into holy tears, to make this fast from bodily sustenance, an inchoation of a spiritual fast, in abstinence from all that may exasperate our God against us; That so, though not for that, yet thereby our prayers may be the more acceptable to our glorious God, in our gracious Saviour, To him that sits upon the throne, and to the Lamb, first, that as he is the King of Kings, he will establish, and prosper that Crown, which he hath set upon the head of his Anointed over us here, and hereafter Crown that Crown with another Crown, a better Crown, a Crown of immarcescible glory in the Kingdom of Heaven, and in the mean time, make him his Bulwark, and his Rampart, against all those powers, which seek to multiply Mitres, or Crowns, to the disquiet and prejudice of Christendom: And then, That as he is the Lord of Lords, he will inspire them, to whom he hath given Lordship over others in this world, with a due consideration, that they also have a Lord over them, even in this world; and that he, and they, and we have one Lord over us all, in the other world: That as he is the Bishop and high Priest over our Souls, he vouchsafe to continue in our Bishops, a holy will, and a competent power to super-intend faithfully over his Church, that they for their parts, when they depart from hence, may deliver it back into his hands, in the same form, and frame, in which his blessed Spirit delivered it into their hands, in their predecessors, in the Primitive institution thereof: That as he is the Angel of the great Counsel, he vouchsafe to direct the great Counsel of this Kingdom, to consider still, that as he works in this world, by means, So it concerns his glory, that they expedite the supply of such means as may do his work, and may carry home the testimony of good Consciences now, and in their posterity have the thanks of posterity, for their behaviour in this Parliament: That as he is the God of peace, he will restore peace to Christendom; That as he is the Lord of Hosts, he will fight our battles, who have no other end in our wars, but his peace; and that after this fast, which in the bodily and ghostly part too, we perform to day, and vow and promise for our whole lives, he will bring us to the Marriage Supper of the Lamb, in that Kingdom which our Saviour Christ Jesus hath purchased for us, with the inestimable price of his incorruptible blood. Amen. SERM. LV. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 6.8, 9, 10. Depart from me, all ye workers of iniquity; for the Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping. The Lord hath heard my supplication; the Lord will receive my prayer. Let all mine enemies be ashamed and sore vexed: let them return and be ashamed suddenly. THis is David's profligation and discomfiture of his enemies; this is an act of true honour, a true victory, a true triumph, to keep the field, to make good one station, and yet put the enemy to flight. A man may perchance be safe in a Retreat, but the honour, the victory, the triumph lies in enforcing the enemy to fly. To that is David come here, to such a thankful sense of a victory; in which we shall first confider David's thankfulness, that is, his manner of declaring God's mercy, and his security in that mercy; which manner is, that he durst come to an open defiance, and protestation, and hostility, without modifications, or disguises, Depart from me all ye workers of iniquity. And then, secondly, we shall see his reason, upon which he grounded this confidence, and this spiritual exultation, which was a pregnant reason, a reason that produced another reason; The Lord hath heard my supplication, the Lord will hear my prayer; upon no premises doth any conclusion follow, so Logically, so sincerely, so powerfully, so imperiously, so undeniably, as upon this, The Lord hath, and therefore the Lord will. But than what was this prayer? that we may know, whether it were a prayer to be drawn into practice, and imitation, or no. It is not argument enough, that it was so, because God heard it then; for we are not bound, nay, we are not allowed to pray all such prayers, as good men have prayed, and as God hath heard. But here the prayer was this, Let all mine enemies be ashamed, and sore vexed, let them return, and be ashamed suddenly. But this is a malediction, an imprecation of mischief upon others; and will good men pray so? or will God hear that? Because that is an holy problem, and an useful interrogatory, we shall make it a third part, or a conclusion rather, to inquire into the nature, and into the avowablenesse, and exemplariness of this, in which David seems to have been transported with some passion. So that our parts will be three, the building itself, David's thanksgiving in his exultation, Divisie. and declaration, Depart from me all ye workers of iniquity; and then the foundation of this building, For God hath heard, and therefore God will hear; and lastly, the prospect of this building, David contemplates and looks over again the prayer that he had made, and in a clear understanding, and in a rectified Conscience, he finds that he may persist in that prayer, and he doth so: Let all mine enemies be ashamed, and sore vexed, let them return, and be ashamed suddenly. First then we consider David's thankfulness: But why is it so long before David leads us to that consideration? Why hath he deferred so primary a duty, to so late a place, 1. Part. to so low a room, to the end of the Psalm? The Psalm hath a Deprecatory part, that God would forbear him, and a Postulatory part, that God would hear him, and grant some things to him, and a Gratulatory part, a sacrifice of thanksgiving. Now the Deprecatory part is placed in the first place, Vers. 1. For if it were not so, if we should not first ground that, That God should not rebuke us in his anger, nor chasten us in his hot displeasure, but leave ourselves open to his indignation, and his judgements, we could not live to come to a second petition; our sins, and judgements due to our sins, require our first consideration; therefore David gins with the deprecatory prayer, That first God's anger may be removed: but then, that deprecatory prayer, wherein he desired God to forbear him, spends but one verse of the Psalm; David would not insist upon that long: When I have penitently confessed my sins, I may say with job, My flesh is not brass, nor my bones stones, that I can bear the wrath of the Lord; but yet I must say with job too, If the Lord kill me, yet will I trust in him. God hath not asked me, What shall I do for thee, but of himself he hath done more, than I could have proposed to myself in a wish, or to him in a prayer. Nor will I ask God, Quousque, how long shall my foes increase? how long wilt thou fight on their side against me? but surrender myself entirely, in an adveniat regnum, and a fiat voluntas, thy kingdom come, and thy will be done. David makes it his first work, to stay God's anger in a deprecatory prayer, but he stays not upon that long, he will not prescribe his Physician, what he shall prescribe to him, but leaves God to his own medicines, and to his own method. But then the Postulatory prayer, what he begs of God, employs six verses: as well to show us, that our necessities are many; as also that if God do not answer us, at the beginning of our prayer, our duty is still to pursue that way, to continue in prayer. And then the third part of the Psalm, which is the Gratulatory part, his giving of thanks, is, shall we say deferred, or rather reserved to the end of the Psalm, and exercises only those three verses which are our Text. Not that the duty of thanksgiving is less than that of prayer; for if we could compare them, it is rather greater; because it contributes more to God's glory, to acknowledge by thanks, that God hath given, then to acknowledge by prayer, that God can give. But therefore might David be later and shorter here, in expressing that duty of thanks, first, because being reserved to the end, and close of the Psalm, it leaves the best impression in the memory. And therefore it is easy to observe, that in all metrical compositions, of which kind the book of Psalms is, the force of the whole piece, is for the most part left to the shutting up; the whole frame of the Poem is a beating out of a piece of gold, but the last clause is as the impression of the stamp, and that is it that makes it currant. And then also, because out of his abundant manner of expressing his thankfulness to God, in every other place thereof, his whole book of Psalms is called, Sepher tehillim, a book of praise and thanksgiving, he might reserve his thanks here to the last place; And lastly, because natural and moral men are better acquainted with the duty of gratitude, of thanksgiving, before they come to the Scriptures, than they are with the other duty of repentance, which belongs to Prayer; for in all Solomon's books, you shall not find half so much of the duty of thankfulness, as you shall in Seneca and in Plutarch. No book of Ethics, of moral doctrine, is come to us, wherein there is not, almost in every leaf, some detestation, some Anathema against ingratitude; but of repentance, not a word amongst them all. And therefore in that duty of prayer, which presumes repentance, (for he must stand Rectus in curia that will pray) David hath insisted longest; and because he would enter, and establish a man, upon a confidence in God, he gins with a deprecation of his anger; for but upon that ground, no man can stand; and because he would dismiss him with that which concerns him most, he chooseth to end in a Thanksgiving. Therefore at last he comes to his thanks. Gratiae actae. Now this is so poor a duty, if we proportion it to the infiniteness of God's love unto us, our thanks, as we may justly call it nothing at all. Bernar. But Amor Dei affectus, non contractus, The love of God is not a contract, a bargain, he looks for nothing again, and yet he looks for thanks, for that is nothing, because there is nothing done in it, August. it is but speaking; Gratias dicere, est gratias agere, To utter our thanks to God, is all our performance of thankfulness. It is not so amongst us; Philo judae. Vix, aut nunquam apud nos purum, & merum beneficium; Every man that gives, gives out of design, Martial. and as it conduces to his ends: Donat in hamo, There is a hook in every benefit, that sticks in his jaws that takes that benefit, and draws him whither the Benefactor will. God looks for nothing, nothing to be done in the way of exact recompense, but yet, as he that makes a Clock, bestows all that labour upon the several wheels, that thereby the Bell might give a sound, and that thereby the hand might give knowledge to others how the time passes; so this is the principal part of that thankfulness, which God requires from us, that we make open declarations of his mercies, to the winning and confirming of others. This David does in this noble and ingenuous publication, Discedite. and protestation, I have strength enough, and company enough, power enough, and pleasure enough, joy enough, and treasure enough, honour enough, and recompense enough in my God alone, in him I shall surely have all which all you can pretend to give, and therefore Discedite à me, Depart from me all ye workers of iniquity; Here is then first, a valediction, a parting with his old company, but it is a valediction, with a malediction, with an imprecation of God's Justice, upon their contempts and injuries. There was in the mouth of Christ, sometimes, such a Discede, such an Abito, as that farewell was a welcome; as when he said to the Ruler, John 4.46. Luke 7.50. Abito, Go thy way, thy son liveth; And when he said to the woman, Go in peace, thy saith hath saved thee. This going was a staying with him still; Here the Abite, and Venite was all one. He that goes about his worldly business, and goes about them in God's name, in the fear and favour of God, remains in God's presence still. When the Angels of God are sent to visit his children, in the midst of Sodom, or where they lie, and languish in sordid and nasty corners, and in the loathsomeness of corrupt and infectious diseases, or where they faint in miserable dungeons, this Commission, this Discedite, go to that Sodom, to that Spittle, to that Dungeon, puts not those Angels out of the presence of God. No descent into hell, of what kind soever you conceive that descent into hell to have been, put the Son of God out of heaven, by descending into hell; no Discede, no Leave, no Commandment that God gives us, to do the works of our calling here, excludes us from him; but as the Saints of God shall follow the Lamb, wheresoever he goes in heaven, so the Lamb of God shall follow his Saints, wheresoever they go upon earth, if they walk sincerely. Christ uses not then as yet, as long as we are in this world, this Discede of David, to bid any man, any sinner to departed from him: But there shall come a time, when Christ shall take David's Discede, the words of this Text into his mouth, with as much and more bitterness than David does here, Nescivi nos, I never knew ye, and therefore Depart from me ye workers of iniquity. So have you his Protestation, Servi sui. his Proclamation, They must avoid; but who? Who be these that David dismisses here? Take them to be those of his own house, his Servants, and Officers in near places, whose service he had used to ill purposes, (as David's Person, and Rank, and History directs us upon that Consideration) and we shall find all such persons, wrapped up in this danger, that they dare not discharge themselves, they dare not displace, nor disgrace those men, to whom by such employments, they have given that advantage over themselves, as that it is not safe to them, to offend such a servant. Naturâ nec hostem habet, nec amicum rex, says a wise Statesman; In nature, (that is, Polybius. in the nature of greatness, and, as great) great persons consider no man to be so much a friend, nor to be so much an enemy, but that they will fall out with that friend, and be reconciled to that enemy, to serve their own turn, says that Statesman. But yet when great Persons trust servants with such secret actions, as may bring them into contempt at home, or danger abroad, by those vices, if they should be published, they cannot come when they would, to this Discedite, Depart from me all ye workers of iniquity. We have this evidently, and unavoidably, we cannot but see it, and say it, in this example which is before us, even in King David. He had employed joab in such services, as that he stood in fear of him, and endured at his hands that behaviour, and that language, Thou hast shamed this day the faces of all thy servants that have saved thy life, 2 Sam. 19 and thy sons, and daughters, and wives, and concubines, thou regardest neither thy Princes, nor servants; but come out, and speak comfortably unto them, for I swear by the Lord, except thou do come out, there will not tarry one man with thee this night. David endured all this, for he knew that joab had that letter in his Cabinet, which he writ to him for the murder of Vriah, and he never came to this Discedite, to remove joab from him in his life, but gave it in Commandment to his Son, 1 Kings 2. Let not joabs' hoary head go down to the grave in peace: Here is the misery of David, he cannot discharge himself of that servant when he will, and here the misery of that servant, that at one time or other he will; and he is a short lived man, whose ruin a jealous Prince studies. Because the Text invited us, commanded, and constrained us to do so, we put this example in a Court, but we need not dazzle ourselves with that height; every man in his own house may find it, that to those servants, which have served him in ill actions, he dares not say, Discedite, Depart from me ye workers of iniquity. Thus than it is; if those whom David dismisses here, were his own servants, Tentatores. it was an expressing of his thankfulness to God, and a duty that lay upon him, to deliver himself of such servants. But other Expositors take these men, to be men of another sort, men that came to triumph over him in his misery, Psal. 69.26. men that Persecuted him whom God had smitten, and added to the sorrow of him whom God had wounded, as himself complains; men that pretended to visit him, yet when they came, They spoke lies, Psal. 41.7. their hearts gathered iniquity to themselves, and when they went abroad they told it; Men that said to one another, When shall he die, and his name perish? Ver. 6. Here also was a Declaration of the powerfulness of God's Spirit in him, that he could triumph over the Triumpher, and exorcise those evil spirits, and command them away, whose coming was to dishonour God, in his dishonour; and to argue and conclude out of his ruin, that either his God was a weak God, or a cruel God, that he could not, or would not deliver his servants from destruction. That David could command them away, whose errand was to blaspheme God, and whose staying in a longer conversation, might have given him occasion of new sins, either in distrusting God's mercy towards himself, or in murmuring at God's patience towards them, or perchance in being uncharitably offended with them, and expressing it with some bitterness, but that in respect of himself, and not of God's glory only, this Discedite, Depart from me all such men as do sin in yourselves, and may make me sin too, was an act of an heavenly courage, and a thankful testimony of God's gracious visiting his soul, enabling him so resolutely to tear himself from such persons, as might lead him into tentation. Neither is this separation of David, and this company, partial; Omnes. he does not banish those that incline him to one sin, a sin that perchance he is a weary of, or grown unable to proceed in, and retained them that concur with him in some fresh sin, to which he hath a new appetite. David doth not banish them that sucked his Subject's blood, or their money, and retained them that solicit, and corrupt their wives, and daughters; he doth not displace them, who served the vices of his predecessor, and supply those places with instruments of new vices of his own, but it is Discedite omnes, Depart all ye workers of iniquity. Now beloved, when God gins so high as in Kings, he makes this duty the easier to thee; to banish from thee, All the workers of iniquity. It is not a Discede, that will serve to banish one, and retain the rest, Nor a Discedite, to banish the rest, and retain one, but Discedite omnes, Depart all, for that sin stays in state, that stays alone, and hath the venom, and the malignity of all the rest contracted in it. It is nothing for a sick man that hath lost his taste, to say, Discedat gula, Depart voluptuousness; nothing in a consumption to say, Discedat luxuria, Depart wantonness; nothing for a Client in Formapauperis, to say, Discedat corruptio, I will not bribe; but Discedant omnes, Depart all, and all together ye workers of iniquity. But yet David's general discharge had, Operantes. and ours must have, a restriction, a limitation; it is not (as S. jerom notes upon this place) Omnes qui operati, but Omnes operantes, not all that have wrought iniquity, but all that continue in doing so still. David was not inexorable towards those that had offended; what an example should he have given God against himself, if he had been so? we must not despise, nor defame men, because they have committed some sin. When the mercy of God hath wrought upon their sin in the remission thereof, that leprosy of Naaman cleaves to us, their sin is but transferred to us, if we will not forgive that which God hath forgiven, for it is but Omnes operantes, all they that continue in their evil ways. All these must departed: how far? first, Rom. 16.17. they must be avoided, Declinate, saith S. Paul, I beseech you brethren, mark them diligently which cause division and offences, and avoid them. And this corrects our desire in running after such men, as come with their own inventions, Schismatical Separatists, Declinate, avoid them; if he be no such, but amongst ourselves, a brother, but yet a worker of iniquity, 1 Cor. 5.11. If any one that is called a brother, be a Fornicator, or covetous, with such a one eat not. If we cannot starve him out, we must thrust him out; Put away from among you, that wicked man. No conversation at all is allowed to us, with such a man, as is obstinate in his sin, 2 john 1.10. and incorrigible; no not to bid him God speed, For he that bid. death him God speed, is partaker of his evil deeds. In this divorce, both the generality, and the distance is best expressed by Christ himself, Mat. 5.28. If thine eye, thine hand, thy foot offend thee, amputandi & projiciendi, with what anguish or remorse soever it be done, they must be cut off, and being cut off, cast away; it is a divorce and no super-induction, it is a separating, and no redintegration. Though thou couldst be content to go to Heaven with both eyes, (thy self, and thy companion) yet better to go into Heaven with one, thyself alone, then to endanger thyself to be left out for thy companions sake. To conclude this first part, Discedite. David does not say, Discedam, but Discedite, he does not say, that he will departed from them, but he commands them to departed from him. We must not think to departed from the offices of society, and duties of a calling, and hid ourselves in Monasteries, or in retired lives, for fear of tentations; but when a tentation attempts us, to come with that authority, and that powerful exorcism of Nazianzen, Fuge, recede, ne te cruse Christi, ad quam omnia contremiscunt, feriam, Depart from me, lest the Cross of Christ, in my hand, overthrew you. For a sober life, and a Christian mortification, and discreet discipline, are crosses derived from the Cross of Christ Jesus, and animated by it, and may be always in a readiness to cross such tentations. In the former descriptions of the manner of our behaviour towards workers of iniquity, there is one Declinate, one word that implies a withdrawing of ourselves; for that must be done, not out of the world, but out of that ill air, we must not put ourselves in danger, nor in distance of a tentation; but all the other words, are words of a more active vehemence, Amputate, and Projicite; it is Discedite, and not Discedam, a driving away, and not a running away. We proceed now in our second part, 2 Part. to the reasons of David's confidence, and his openness, and his public declaration; why David was content to be rid of all his company; and it was, because he had better; he says, The Lord had heard him; and first, He had heard, vocem fletus, the voice of his weeping. Here is an admirable readiness in God, that hears a voice in that, which hath none. They have described God by saying he is all eye, an universal eye, that pierceth into every dark corner; but in dark corners, there is something for him to see; but he is all ear too, and hears even the silent, and speechless man, and hears that in that man, that makes no sound, histeares. When Hezekias wept, Esay 38. he was turned to the wall, (perchance, because he would not be seen) and yet God bade the Prophet Esay tell him, Vidi lacrymam; though the text say, Hezekias weptsore, yet Vidit lacrymam, God saw every single tear, his first tear, and was affected with that. But yet this is more strange; God heard his tears. And therefore the weeping of a penitent sinner, Gregor. is not improperly called, Legatio lacrymarum, An embassage of tears; To Ambassadors belongs an audience, and to these Embassages God gives a gracious audience; Abyssus abyssum invocat, One depth calls upon another; Psal 43.7. And so doth one kind of tears call upon one another. Tears of sorrow call upon tears of joy, and all call upon God, and bring him to that ready hearing which is implied in the words of this text, Shamang; a word of that largeness in the Scriptures, that sometimes in the Translation of the Septuagint, it signifies hearing, Shamang, is audit, God gives ear to our tears; sometimes it is believing, Shamang, is Credit, God gives faith, and credit to our tears; sometimes it is Affecting, Shamang, is Miseretur, God hath mercy upon us for our tears; sometimes it is Effecting, Shamang, is Respondet, God answers the petition of our tears; and sometimes it is Publication, Shamang, is Divulgat, God declares and manifests to others, by his blessings upon us, the pleasure that he takes in our holy and repentant tears. And therefore Lacrymae foenus, says S. Basil, Tears are that usury, by which the joys of Heaven are multiplied unto us; the preventing Grace, and the free mercy of God, is our stock, and principal; but the Acts of obedience, and mortification, fasting, and praying, and weeping, are Foenus, (says that blessed Father) the interest, and the increase of our holy joy. That which we intent in all this, is, that when our heart is well disposed toward God, God sees our prayers, as they are coming in the way, before they have any voice, in our words. When Christ came to Lazarus house, before Mary had asked any thing at his hands, as soon as she had wept, Christ was affected, He groaned in the spirit, john 11. he was troubled, and he wept too; and he proceeded to the raising of Lazarus, before she asked him; her eyes were his glass, and he saw her desire in her tears. There is a kind of simplicity in tears, which God harkens to, and believes. Rom. 8.26. We know not what we should pray for as we ought. Quid? nescimus orationem dominicam? Can we not say the Lords Prayer, says S. Augustin? Yes, we can say that; but Nescimus tribulationem prodesse, says he, we do not know the benefit, that is to be made of tribulation, and tentation, Et petimus liberari ab omni malo, we pray to be delivered from all evil, and we mean all tribulation, and all tentation, as though all they were always evil; but in that there may be much error: The sons of Zebedee prayed, but ambitionsly, and were not heard; Mat. 20.22. 2 Cor. 12.8. S. Paul prayed for the taking away of the provocation of the flesh, but inconsiderately, and mist; the Apostles made a request, for fire against the Samaritans, but uncharitably, and were reproved. But when jehosaphat was come to that perplexity by the Moabites, 2 Chro. 20.12. that he knew not what to do, nor what to say, Hoc solum residui habemus, says he, ut oculos nostros dirigamus ad te, This we can do, and we need do no more, we can turn our eyes to thee. Now whether he directed those eyes in looking to him, or in weeping to him, God hears the voice of our looks, God hears the voice of our tears, sometimes better than the voice of our words, for it is the Spirit itself that makes intercession for us, Rom. 8.26. Gemitibus inenarrabilibus, In those groans, and so in those tears, which we cannot utter; Ineloquacibus, as Tertullian reads that place, devout, and simple tears, which cannot speak, speak aloud in the ears of God; nay, tears which we cannot utter; not only not utter the force of the tears, but not utter the very tears themselves. As God sees the water in the spring in the veins of the earth, before it bubble upon the face of the earth; so God sees tears in the heart of a man, before they blubber his face; God hears the tears of that sorrowful soul, which for sorrow cannot shed tears. From this casting up of the eyes, and pouring out the sorrow of the heart at the eyes, Supplicatio. at least, opening God a window, through which he may see a wet heart through a dry eye; from these overtures of repentance, which are as those unperfect sounds of words, which Parents delight in, in their Children, before they speak plain, a penitent sinner comes to a verbal, and a more express prayer. To these prayers, these vocal and verbal prayers from David, God had given ear, and from this hearing of those prayers was David come to this thankful confidence, The Lord hath heard, the Lord will hear. Now, Beloved, this prayer which David speaks of here, which our first translation calls a Petition, is very properly rendered in our second translation, a Supplication; for Supplications were à Suppliciis; Supplications amongst the Gentiles were such sacrifices, as were made to the gods, out of confiscations, out of the goods of those men, upon whom the State had inflicted any pecuniary or capital punishment. Supplicationes, à Suppliciis; and therefore this prayer which David made to God, when his hand was upon him, in that heavy correction, and calamity, which occasioned this Psalm, is truly and properly called a Supplication, that is, a Prayer, or Petition, that proceeds from suffering. And if God have heard his supplication, if God have regarded him then, when he was in his displeasure, if God have turned to him, when he was turned from him, and stroked him with the same hand that struck him, God will much more perfect his own work, and grant his prayer after; if God would endure to look upon him in his deformity, he will delight to look upon him then, when he hath shed the light and the loveliness of his own countenance upon him: It is the Apostles argument, as well as david's, If when we were enemies, Rom. 5.10. we were reconeiled to God, by the death of his Son, much more being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life. When David found, that God had heard his Supplications, the voice of his suffering, of his punishment, he was sure he would hear his Prayer, the voice of his thankfulness too. And this was David's second reason, Oratio. for his alacrity, and confidence, that God would never be weary of hearing, he had heard him, and he would hear him still, he had heard the Supplication, and he would hear his Prayer; for this word, which signifies Prayer here, is derived from Palal, which signifies properly Separare: As his Supplication was acceptable, which proceeded à Suppliciis, from a sense of his afflictions; so this Prayer, which came Post separationem, after he had separated, and divorced himself from his former company, after his Discedite, his discharging of all the workers of iniquity, must necessarily be better accepted at God's hand. He that hears a Suppliant, that is, a man in misery, and does some small matter for the present ease of that man, and proceeds no farther, Ipsum quod dedit, perit, That which he gave is lost, it is drowned by that flood of misery that overflows and surrounds that wretched man, he is not the better to morrow for to day's alms, Et vitam producit ad miseriam, that very alms prolongs his miserable life still; without to day's alms, he should not have had a to morrow to be miserable in. Now, Christ only is the samaritan which perfected his cure upon the wounded man: He saw him, Luk. 10.33. says the text, so did the rest that passed by him; but, He had compassion on him; so he might, and yet actually have done him no good; but, He went to him; so he might too, and then out of a delicateness or fastidiousness, have gone from him again; but (to contract) he bond up his wounds, he poured in oil and wine, he put him upon his own beast, he brought him to an Inn, made provision for him, gave the Host money beforehand, gave him charge to have a care of him, and (which is the perfection of all, the greatest testimony of our Samaritans love to us) he promised to come again, and at that coming, he does not say, He will pay, but He will recompense, which is a more abundant expressing of his bounty. Christ loves not but in the way of marriage; if he begin to love thee, Hosea 2.19. he tells thee, Sponsabo te mihi, I will marry thee unto me, and Sponsabo in aeternum, I will marry thee for ever. For it is a marriage that prevents all mistake, and excludes all impediments, I will marry thee in righteousness, and in judgement, and in loving kindness, and in mercies, and in faithfulness; many, and great assurances. And as it is added, Seminabo te mihi, which is a strange expressing of God's love to us, I will sow thee unto me in the earth; when I have taken thee into my husbandry, thou shalt increase, and multiply, Seminabo te, and all that thou dost produce, shall be directed upon me, Seminabo te mihi, I will sow thee to myself: therefore thy soul may be bold to join with David in that thankful confidence, He hath heard my supplication, and therefore He will hear my prayer; He looked upon me in the dust of the earth, much more will he do so, having now laid me upon Carpets; he looked upon me in my sores, sores of mine enemy's malice, and sores of mine own sins, much more will he do so now, when he hath imprinted in me the wounds of his own Son; for those that were so many wounds upon him, are so many stars upon me; He looked upon me, may David say, when I followed the Ewes great with young, much more will he do so now, now when by his directions, I lead out his people, great with erterprises, and victories against his enemies. First David comes to that holy nobleness, he dares cast off ill instruments, and is not afraid of conspiracy; he dares divorce himself from dangerous company, and is not afraid of melancholy; he dares love God, and is not afraid of that jealousy, that he is too religious to be employed, too tender conscienced to be put upon business; he dares reprehend them that are under his charge, and is not afraid of a recrimination; he dares observe a Sabbath, he dares startle at a blasphemy, he dares forbear countenancing a profane or a scurrile jest with his praise, he dares be an honest man; which holy confidence constituted our first part, Depart from me all ye workers of iniquity; And then he grounds this confidence upon an undeceivable Rock, upon God's seal, God hath heard me, therefore God will hear me. And when God hears, God speaks too, and when God speaks, God does too, and therefore I may safely proceed as I do, which was our second Consideration. And then the third, which remains, is, that upon this, he returns to the consideration, what that was, that he had done; he had either imprecated, or denounced, at least, heavy judgements upon his enemies; and he finds it avowable, and justifiable to have done so; and therefore persists in it, Let all mine enemies be ashamed, and sore vexed; let them return, and be ashamed suddenly. All clean beasts had both these marks, they divided the hoof, 3 Part. and they chewed the cud: All good resolutions, which pass our prayer, must have these two marks too, they must divide the hoof, they must make a double impression, they must be directed upon God's glory, and upon our good, and they must pass a rumination, a chawing of the cud, a second examination, whether that prayer were so conditioned or no. We pray sometimes out of sudden and indigested apprehensions; we pray sometimes out of custom, and communion with others; we pray sometimes out of a present sense of pain, or imminent danger; and this prayer may divide the hoof; It may look towards God's glory, and towards our good; but it does not chew the cud too; that is, if I have not considered, not examined, whether it do so or no, it is not a prayer that God will call a sacrifice. You see Christ brought his own Prayer, Si possibile, If it be possible etc. through such a rumination, Veruntamen, yet not my will etc. As many a man swears, and if he be surprised, and asked, what did you say, he does not remember his own oath, not what he swore; so many a man prays, and does not remember his own prayer. As a Clock gives a warning before it strikes, and then there remains a sound, and a tingling of the bell after it hath stricken: so a precedent meditation, and a subsequent rumination, make the prayer a prayer; I must think before, what I will ask, and consider again, what I have asked; and upon this dividing the hoof, and chewing the cud, David avows to his own conscience his whole action, even to this consummation thereof, Let mine enemies be ashamed etc. Now these words, whether we consider the natural signification of the words, Impreeatoria or the authority of those men, who have been Expositors upon them, may be understood either way, either to be Imprecatoria, words of Imprecation, that David in the Spirit of anguish wishes that these things might fall upon his enemies, or else Praedictoria, words of Prediction, that David in the spirit of Prophecy pronounces that these things shall fall upon them. If they be Imprecatoria, words spoken out of his wish, and desire, than they have in them the nature of a curse: And because Lyra takes them to be so, a curse, he refers the words Ad Daemons, To the Devil: That herein David seconds God's malediction upon the Serpent, and curses the Devil, as the occasioner and first mover of all these calamities; and says of them, Let all our enemies be ashamed, and sore vexed etc. Others refer these words to the first Christian times, and the persecutions then, and so to be a malediction, a curse upon the Jews, and upon the Romans, who persecuted the Primitive Church then, Let them be ashamed etc. And then Gregory Nyssen refers these words to more domestical and intrinsicke enemies, to David's own concupiscences, and the rebellions of his own lusts, Let those enemies be ashamed etc. For all those who understand these words to be a curse, a malediction, are loath to admit that David did curse his enemies, merely out of a respect of those calamities which they had inflicted upon him. And that is a safe ground; no man may curse another, in contemplation of himself only, if only himself be concerned in the case. And when it concerns the glory of God, our imprecations, our maledictions upon the persons, must not have their principal relation, as to God's enemies, but as to God's glory; our end must be, that God may have his glory, not that they may have their punishment. And therefore how vehement soever David seem in this Imprecation, and though he be more vehement in another place, Let them be confounded, and troubled for ever, yea, let them be put to shame, Psal. 83.17. and perish, yet that perishing is but a perishing of their purposes, let their plots perish, let their malignity against thy Church be frustrated; for so he expresses himself in the verse immediately before, Fill their faces with shame; but why? and how? That they may seek thy Name, O Lord; that was David's end, even in the curse; David wishes them no ill, but for their good; no worse to God's enemies, but that they might become his friends. The rule is good, which out of his moderation S. Augustine gives, that in all Inquisitions, and Executions in matters of Religion, (when it is merely for Religion without sedition) Sint qui poeniteant, Let the men remain alive, or else how can they repent? So in all Imprecations, in all hard wishes, even upon God's enemies, Sint qui convertantur, Let the men remain, that they may be capable of conversion; wish them not so ill, as that God can show no mercy to them; for so the ill wish falls upon God himself, if it preclude his way of mercy upon that ill man. In no case must the curse be directed upon the person; for when in the next Psalm to this, David seems passionate, when he asks that of God there, which he desires God to forbear in the beginning of this Psalm, when his Ne arguas in ira, O Lord rebuke not in thine anger, is turned to a Surge Domine in ira, Arise O Lord in thine anger; S. Augustine gins to wonder, Quid? illum, quem perfectum dicimus, ad iram provocat Deum? Would David provoke God, who is all sweetness, and mildness, to anger against any man? No, not against any man; but Diaboli possessio peccator, Every sinner is a slave to his beloved sin; and therefore, Misericors or at, adver sus cum, quitanque or at, How bitterly soever I curse that sin, yet I pray for that sinner. David would have God angry with the Tyrant, not with the Slave that is oppressed; with the sin, not with the soul that is enthralled to it. And so, as the words may be a curse, a malediction in David's mouth, we may take them into our mouth too, and say, Let those enemies be ashamed, etc. If this than were an Imprecation, a malediction, yet it was Medicinal, and had Rationem boni, a charitable tincture, and nature in it; he wished the men no harm, as men. But it is rather Pradictorium, Praedictoria. a Prophetical vehemence, that if they will take no knowledge of Gods declaring himself in the protection of his servants, if they would not consider that God had heard, and would hear, had rescued, and would rescue his children, but would continue their opposition against him, heavy judgements would certainly fall upon them; Their punishment should be certain, but the effect should be uncertain; for God only knows, whether his correction shall work upon his enemies, to their mollifying, or to their obduration. Those bitter, and weighty imprecations which David hath heaped together against judas, Psal. 109. Acts 1.16. seem to be direct imprecations; and yet S. Peter himself calls them Prophecies; Oportet impleri Scripturam; They were done, says he, that the Scripture might be fulfilled; Not that David in his own heart did wish all that upon judas; but only so, as foreseeing in the Spirit of Prophesying, that those things should fall upon him, he concurred with the purpose of God therein, and so fare as he saw it to be the will of God, he made it his will, and his wish. And so have all those judgements, which we denounce upon sinners, the nature of Prophecies in them; when we read in the Church, that Commination, Cursed is the Idolater, This may fall upon some of our own kindred; and Cursed is he that curseth Father or Mother, This may fall upon some of our own children; and Cursed is he that perverteth judgement, This may fall upon some powerful Persons, that we may have a dependence upon; and upon these we do not wish that God's vengeance should fall; yet we Prophesy, and denounce justly, that upon such, such vengeances will fall; and then, all Prophecies of that kind are always conditional; they are conditional, if we consider any Decree in God; they must be conditional in all our denunciations; if you repent, they shall not fall upon you, if not, Oportet impleri Scripturam, The Scripture must be fulfilled; We do not wish them, we do but Prophesy them; no, nor we do not prophesy them; but the Scriptures have preprophesied them before; they will fall upon you, as upon judas, in condemnation, and perchance, as upon judas, in desperation too. David's purpose then being in these words to work to their amendment, Mollior sensus. and not their final destruction, we may easily and usefully discern in the particular words, a milder sense than the words seem at first to present. And first give me leave by the way, only in passing, by occasion of those words which are here rendered, Convertentur, & Erubescent, and which in the Original are jashabu, and jeboshu, which have a musical, and harmonious sound, and agnomination in them, let me note thus much, even in that, that the Holy Ghost in penning the Scriptures delights himself, not only with a propriety, but with a delicacy, and harmony, and melody of language; with height of Metaphors, and other figures, which may work greater impressions upon the Readers, and not with barbarous, or trivial, or market, or homely language: It is true, that when the Grecians, and the Romans, and S. Augustine himself, undervalved and despised the Scriptures, because of the poor and beggarly phrase, that they seemed to be written in, the Christians could say little against it, but turned still upon the other safer way, we consider the matter, and not the phrase, because for the most part, they had read the Scriptures only in Translations, which could not maintain the Majesty, nor preserve the elegancies of the Original. Their case was somewhat like ours, at the beginning of the Reformation; when, because most of those men who laboured in that Reformation, came out of the Roman Church, and there had never read the body of the Fathers at large; but only such rags and fragments of those Fathers, as were patched together in their Decretats, and Decretals, and other such Common placers, for their purpose, and to serve their turn, therefore they were loath at first to come to that issue, to try controversies by the Fathers. But as soon as our men that in braced the Reformation, had had time to read the Fathers, they were ready enough to join with the Adversary in that issue: and still we protest, that we accept that evidence, the testimony of the Fathers, and resuse nothing, which the Fathers unanimly delivered, for matter of faith; and howsoever at the beginning some men were a little ombrageous, and startling at the name of the Fathers, yet since the Fathers have been well studied, for more than threescore years, we have behaved ourselves with more reverence to wards the Fathers, and more confidence in the Fathers, than they of the Roman persuasion have done, and been less apt to suspect or quarrel their Books, or to reprove their Doctrines, than our Adversaries have been. So, howsoever the Christians at first were fain to sink a little under that imputation, that their Scriptures have no Majesty, no eloquence, because these embellishments could not appear in Translations, nor they then read Originals, yet now, that a perfect knowledge of those languages hath brought us to see the beauty and the glory of those Books, we are able to reply to them, that there are not in all the world so eloquent Books as the Scriptures; and that nothing is more demonstrable, then that if we would take all those Figures, and Tropes, which are collected out of secular Poets, and Orators, we may give higher, and livelier examples, of every one of those Figures, out of the Scriptures, than out of all the Greek and Latin Poets, and Orators; and they mistake it much, that think, that the Holy Ghost hath rather chosen a low, and barbarous, and homely style, than an eloquent, and powerful manner of expressing himself. To return and to cast a glance upon these words in David's prediction, Erubescent. upon his enemies, what hardness is in the first, Erubescent, Let them be ashamed: for the word imports no more, our last Translation says no more, neither did our first Translators intent any more, by their word, Confounded; for that is, confounded with shame in themselves. This is Virga desoiplinae, says S. Bernard; as long as we are ashamed of sin, we are not grown up, and hardened in it; we are under correction; the correction of a remorse. As soon as Adam came to be ashamed of his nakedness, he presently thought of some remedy; if one should come and tell thee, that he looked through the door, that he stood in a window over against thine, and saw thee do such or such a sin, this would put thee to a shame, and thou wouldst not do that sin, till thou wert sure he could not see thee. O, if thou wouldst not sin, till thou couldst think that God saw thee not, this shame had wrought well upon thee. There are complexions that cannot blush; there grows a blackness, a sootinesse upon the soul, by custom in sin, which overcomes all blushing, all tend ernesse. White alone is paleness, and God loves not a pale soul, a soul possessed with a horror, affrighted with a diffidence, and distrusting his mercy. Redness alone is anger, and vehemency, and distemper, and God loves not such a red soul, a soul that sweats in sin, that quarrels for sin, that revenges in sin. But that whiteness that preserves itself, not only from being died all over in any foul colour, from contracting the name of any habitual sin, and so to be called such or such a sinner, but from taking any spot, from coming within distance of a tentation, or of a suspicion, is that whiteness, which God means, when he says, Thou art all fair my Love, Cant. 4.7. and there is no spot in thee. Indifferent looking, equal and easy conversation, appliableness to wanton discourses, and notions, and motions, are the Devils single money, and many pieces of these make up an Adultery. As light a thing as a Spangle is, a Spangle is silver; and leaf gold, that is blown away, is gold; and sand that hath no strength, no coherence, yet knits the building; so do approaches to sin, become sin, and fix sin. To avoid these spots, is that whiteness that God loves in the soul. But there is a redness that God loves too; which is this Erubescence that we speak of; an aptness in the soul to blush, when any of these spots do fall upon it. God is the universal Confessor, the general Penitentiary of all the world, and all dye in the guilt of their sin, that go not to Confession to him. And there are sins of such weight to the soul, and such intangling, and perplexity to the conscience, in some circumstances of the sin, as that certainly a soul may receive much ease in such cases, by confessing itself too man. In this holy shamefastness, which we intent in this outward blushing of the face, the soul goes to confession too. And it is one of the principal arguments against Confessions by Letter, (which some went about to set up in the Roman Church) that that took away one of the greatest evidences, and testimonies of their repentance, which is this Erubescence, this blushing, this shame after sin; if they should not be put to speak it face to face, but to write it, that would remove the shame, which is a part of the repentance. But that soul that goes not to confession to itself, that hath not an internal blushing after a sin committed, is a pale soul, even in the paleness of death, and senselessness, and a red soul, red in the defiance of God. And that whiteness, to avoid approaches to sin, and that redness, to blush upon a sin, which does attempt us, is the complexion of the soul, which God loves, and which the Holy Ghost testifies, when he says, Cant. 5.12. My Beloved is white and ruddy. And when these men that David speaks of here, had lost that whiteness, their innocency, for David to wish that they might come to a redness, a shame, a blushing, a remorse, a sense of sin, may have been no such great malediction, or imprecation in the mouth of David, but that a man may wish it to his best friend, which should be his own soul, and say, Erubescam, not let mine enemies, but let me be ashamed with such a shame. In the second word, Conturbentur. Let them be sore vexed, he wishes his enemies no worse than himself had been: For he had used the same word of himself before, Ossa turbata, My bones are vexed, Ver. 2. & 3. and Anima turbata, My soul is vexed; and considering, that David had found this vexation to be his way to God, it was no malicious imprecation, to wish that enemy the same Physic that he had taken, who was more sick of the same disease than he was. For this is like a troubled Sea after a tempest; the danger is past, but yet the billow is great still: The danger was in the calm, in the security, or in the tempest, by misinterpreting God's corrections to our obduration, and to a remorseless stupefaction; but when a man is come to this holy vexation, to be troubled, to be shaken with a sense of the indignation of God, the storm is past, and the indignation of God is blown over. That soul is in a fair and near way, of being restored to a calmness, and to reposed security of conscience, that is come to this holy vexation. In a flat Map, there goes no more, to make West East, though they be distant in an extremity, but to passed that flat Map upon a round body, and then West and East are all one. In a flat soul, in a dejected conscience, in a troubled spirit, there goes no more to the making of that trouble, peace, then to apply that trouble to the body of the Merits, to the body of the Gospel of Christ Jesus, and conform thee to him, and thy West is East, Zoch. 6.12. thy Trouble of spirit is Tranquillity of spirit. The name of Christ is Oriens, The East; Esay 14.12. And yet Lucifer himself is called Filius Orientis, The Son of the East. If thou be'st fallen by Lucifer, fallen to Lucifer, and not fallen as Lucifer, to a senselessness of thy fall, and an impenitibleness therein, but to a troubled spirit, still thy Prospect is the East, still thy Climate is heaven, still thy Haven is Jerusalem; for, in our lowest dejection of all, even in the dust of the grave, we are so composed, so laid down, as that we look to the East; If I could believe that Trajan, or Tecla, could look Eastward, that is, towards Christ, in hell, I could believe with them of Rome, that Trajan and Tecla were redeemed by prayer out of hell. God had accepted sacrifices before; but no sacrifice is call Odour quiet is, Gen. 8.21. It is not said, That God smelled a savour of rest, in any sacrifice, but that which Noah offered, after he had been variously tossed and tumbled, in the long hulling of the Ark upon the waters. A troublesome spirit, and a quiet spirit, are fare asunder; But a troubled spirit, and a quiet spirit, are near neighbours. And therefore David means them no great harm, when he says, Let them be troubled; For, Let the wind be as high as it will, so I sail before the wind, Let the trouble of my soul be as great as it will, so it direct me upon God, and I have calm enough. And this peace, Convertantur. this calm is employed in the next word, Convertantur, which is not, Let them be overthrown, but Let them return, let them be forced to return; he prays, that God would do something to cross their purposes; because as they are against God, so they are against their own souls. In that way where they are, he sees there is no remedy; and therefore he desires that they might be Turned into another way; What is that way? This. Turn us O Lord, and we shall be turned; That is, turned the right way; Towards God. And as there was a promise from God, to hear his people, not only when they came to him in the Temple, but when they turned towards that Temple, in what distance soever they were, so it is always accompanied with a blessing, occasionally to turn towards God; But this prayer, Turn us, that we may be turned, is, that we may be, that is, remain turned, that we may continue fixed in that posture. Lot's Wife turned herself, and remained an everlasting monument of God's anger; God so turn us always into right ways, as that we be not able to turn ourselves out of them. For God hath Viam rectam, & bonam, as himself speaks in the Prophet, A right way, and then a good way, which yet is not the right way, that is, not the way which God of himself would go. For his right way is, that we should still keep in his way; His good way is, to beat us into his right way again, by his medicinal corrections, when we put ourselves out of his right way. And that, and that only David wishes, and we wish, That you may Turn, and Be turned; stand in that holy posture, all the year, all the years of your lives, That your Christmas may be as holy as your Easter, even your Recreations as innocent as your Devotions, and every room in the house as free free from profaneness as the Sanctuary. And this he ends as he begun, with another Erubescant, Let them be ashamed, and that Valde volociter, Suddenly: for David saw, that if a sinner came not to a shame of sin quickly, he would quickly come to a shamelessness, to an impudence, to a searedness, to an obduration in it. Now beloved, this is the worst curse that comes out of a holy man's mouth, even towards his enemy, that God would correct him to his amendment. And this is the worst harm that we mean to you, when we denounce the judgements of God against sin and sinners, erubescatis, that we might see blood in your faces, the blood of your Saviour working in that shame for sin. That that question of the Prophet might not confound you, Were they ashamed when they committed abomination? nay, they were not ashamed; jer. 6.15. Erubescere nesciebant, they were never used to shame, they knew not how to be ashamed. Therefore, says he, they shall fall amongst them that fall, they shall do as the world does, sin as their neighbour's sin, and fall as they fall, irrepentantly here, and hereafter irrecoverably. And then, conturbati sitis, that you may be troubled in your hearts, and not cry Peace, Peace, where there is no peace, and flatter yourselves, because you are in a true Religion, and in the right way; for a Child may drown in a Font, and a Man may be poisoned in the Sacrament, much more perish, though in a true Church. And also revertamini, that you may return again to the Lord, return to that state of pureness, which God gave you in Baptism, to that state, which God gave you the last time you received his body and blood so as became you. And then lastly, erubescatis velociter, that you may come to the beginning of this, and to all this quickly, and not to defer it, because God defers the judgement. For to end this with S. Augustine's words, upon this word Velociter, Quandocunque venit, celerrimè venit, quod desperatur esse venturum: How late soever it come, that comes quickly, if it come at all, which we believed would never come. How long soever it be, before that judgement come, yet it comes quickly, if it come before thou look for it, or be ready for it. Whosoever labours to sleep out the thought of that day, His damnation sleepeth not, says the Apostle. It is not only, that his damnation is not dead, that there shall never be any such day, but that it is no day asleep: every midnight shall be a day of judgement to him, and keep him awake; and when consternation, and lassitude lend him, or conterfait to him a sleep, as S. Basil says of the righteous, Etiam somnia justorum preces sunt, That even their Dreams are prayers, so this incorrigible sinners Dreams shall be, not only presages of his future, but acts of his present condemnation. SERM. LVI. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.1, 2. Blessed is he whose trangression is forgiven, whose sin is covered; Blessed is the man, unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile. THis that I have read to you, can scarce be called all the Text; I proposed for the Text, the first and second verses, and there belongs more to the first, than I have delivered in it; for, in all those Translators, and Expositors, who apply themselves exactly to the Original, to the Hebrew, the Title of the Psalm, is part of the first verse of the Psalm. S. Augustine gives somewhat a strange reason, why the Book of Enoch, cited by S. jude in his Epistle, and some other such ancient Books, as that, were never received into the body of Canonical Scriptures, in Authoritate apud nos non essent, nimia fecit eorum Antiquitas, The Church suspected them, because they were too Ancient, says S. Augustine. But that reason alone, is so far from being enough to exclude any thing from being part of the Scriptures, as that we make it justly an argument, for the receiving the Titles of the Psalms into the Body of Canonical Scriptures, that they are as ancient as the Psalms themselves. So then the Title of this Psalm enters into our Text, as a part of the first verse. And the Title is Davidis Erudiens; where we need not insert (as our Translators in all languages and Editions have conceived a necessity to do) any word, for the clearing of the Text, more than is in the Text itself, (And therefore Tremellius hath inserted that word, An Ode of David, we, A Psalm of David, others, others) for the words themselves yield a perfect sense in themselves, Le David Maschil, is Davidis Erudiens, that is, Davidis Eruditio, David's Institution, David's Catechism; And so our Text, which is the first and second verse, taking in all the first verse, in all accounts, is now David's Catechism; Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven etc. In these words, Divisio. our parts shall be these; first, That so great a Master as David, proceeded by way of Catechism, of instruction in fundamental things, and Doctrines of edification. Secondly, That the foundation of this Building, the first lesson in this Art, the first letter in this Alphabet, is Blessedness; for, Primus actus voluntatis est Amor; Man is not man, till he have produced some acts of the faculties of that soul, that makes him man; till he understand something, and will something, Till he know, and till he would have something, he is no man; Now, The first Act of the will is love; and no man can love any thing, but in the likeness, and in the notion of Happiness, of Blessedness, or of some degree thereof; and therefore David proposes that for the foundation of his Catechism, Blessedness; The Catechism of David, Blessed is the Man. But then, in a third Consideration, we lay hold upon S. Augustins' Aphorism, Amare nisi nota non possumus, We cannot truly love any thing, but that we know; And therefore David being to proceed Catechistically, and for Instruction, proposes this Blessedness, which as it is in Heaven, and reserved for our possession there, is in-intelligible, (as Tertullian speaks) unconceivable, he purposes it in such notions, and by such lights, as may enable us to see it, and know it in this life. And those lights are in this Text, Three; for, The forgiveness of Transgressions, And then, The Covering of sins, And lastly, The not imputing of Iniquity, which three David proposes here, are not a threefold repeating of one and the same thing; But this Blessedness consisting in our Reconciliation to God, (for we were created in a state of friendship with God, our rebellion put us into a state of hostility, and now we need a Reconciliation, because we are not able to maintain a war against God, no, nor against any other enemy of man, without God) this Blessedness David doth not deliver us all at once, in three expressings of the same thing, but he gives us one light thereof, in the knowledge that there is a Forgiving of Transgressions, another, in the Covering of sins, and a third, in the not Imputing of Iniquity. But then, (that which will constitute a fourth Consideration) when God hath presented himself, and offered his peace, in all these, there is also something to be done on our part; for though the Forgiving of Transgression, The Covering of sin, The not Imputing of Iniquity, proceed only from God, yet God affords these to none but him, In whose spirit there is no guile. And so you have all that belongs to the Master, and his manner of teaching, David Catechising; And all that belongs to the Doctrine and the Catechism, Blessedness, That is Reconciliation to God, notified in those three acts of his mercy; And all that belongs to the Disciple, that is to be Catechised, A docile, an humble, a sincere heart, In whose spirit there is no guile; And to these particulars, in their order thus proposed, we shall now pass. That than which constitutes our first part, is this, That David, 1. Part. Catechismus than whom this world never had a greater Master for the next, amongst the sons of men, delivers himself, by way of Catechising, of fundamental and easy teaching. As we say justly, and confidently, That of all Rhetorical and Poetical figures, that fall into any Art, we are able to produce higher strains, and livelier examples, out of the Scriptures, than out of all the Orators, and Poets in the world, yet we read not, we preach not the Scriptures for that use, to magnify their Eloquence; So in David's Psalms we find abundant impressions, and testimonies of his knowledge in all arts, and all kinds of learning, but that is not it which he proposes to us. David's last words are, and in that David's holy glory was placed, That he was not only the sweet Psalmist, That he had an harmonious, a melodious, 2 Sam. 23.1. a charming, a powerful way of entering into the soul, and working upon the affections of men, but he was the sweet Psalmist of Israel, He employed his faculties for the conveying of the God of Israel, into the Israel of God; Ver. 2. The spirit of the Lord spoke by me, and his word was in my tongue; Not the spirit of Rhetoric, nor the spirit of Poetry, Ver. 3. nor the spirit of Mathematics, and Demonstration, But, The spirit of the Lord, the Rock of Israel spoke by me, says he; He boasts not that he had delivered himself in strong, or deep, or mysterious Arts, that was not his Rock; but his Rock was the Rock of Israel, His way was to establish the Church of God upon fundamental Doctrines. Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, says Stephen. Likely to be so, Act. 7.22. because being adopted by the King's daughter, he had an extraordinary education; Exod. 2.10. And likely also, because he brought so good natural faculties, for his Masters to work upon, Reminisci potiùs videretur, quàm discere, Philo. That whatsoever any Master proposed unto him, he rather seemed to remember it then, then to learn it but then; And yet in Moses books, we meet no great testimonies, or deep impressions of these learn in Moses: He had (as S. Ambrose notes well) more occasions to speak of Natural philosophy, in the Creation of the world, and of the more secret, and reserved, and remote corners of Nature, in those counterfeitings of Miracles in Pharaohs Court, than he hath laid hold of. So Nabuchadnezzar appointed his Officers, that they should furnish his Court, Dan. 1.4. with some young Gentlemen, of good blood and families of the Jews; And (as it is added there) well favoured youths, in whom there was no blemish, skilful in all wisdom, and cunning in knowledge, and understanding science; And then farther, To be taught the tongue, and the learning of the Chaldeans. And Daniel was one of these, and, no doubt, a great Proficient in all these; and yet Daniel seems not to make any great show of these learn in his writings. S. Paul was in a higher Pedagogy, and another manner of University than all this; Caught up into the third heavens, into Paradise, as he says; 2 Cor. 12.2. and there he learned much; but (as he says too) such things as it was not lawful to utter; That is, It fell not within the laws of preaching to publish them. So that not only some learning in humanity, (as in Moses and daniel's case) but some points of Divinity, (as in S. Paul's case) may be unfit to be preached. Not that a Divine should be ignorant of either; either ornaments of humane, or mysteries of divine knowledge. For, says S. Augustine, Every man that comes from Egypt, must bring some of the Egyptians goods with him. Quanto auro exivit suffarcinatus Cyprianus, says he, How much of the Egyptian gold and goods brought Cyprian, and Lactantius, and Optatus, and Hilary out of Egypt? That is, what a treasure of learning, gathered when they were of the Gentiles, brought they from thence, to the advancing of Christianity, when they applied themselves to it? S. Augustine confesses, that the reading of Cicero's Hortensius, Mutavit affectum meum, L. 3. c. 4. began in him a Conversion from the world, Et ad teipsum, Domine, mutavit preces meas, That book, says he, converted me to more fervent prayers to thee, my God; Et surgere jam coeperam ut ad te redirem, By that help I risen, and came towards thee. And so justin Martyr had his Initiation, and beginning of his Conversion, from reading some passages in Plato. S. Basil expresses it well; They that will die a perfect colour, dip it in some less perfect colour before. To be a good Divine, requires humane knowledge; and so does it of all the Mysteries of Divinity too; because, as there are Devils that will not be cast out but by Fasting and Prayer, so there are humours that undervalue men, that lack these helps. But our Congregations are not made of such persons; not of mere natural men, that must be converted out of Aristotle, and by Cicero's words, nor of Arians that require new proofs for the Trinity, nor Pelagians that must be pressed with new discoveries of God's Predestination; but persons embracing, with a thankful acquiescence therein, Doctrines necessary for the salvation of their souls in the world to come, and the exaltation of their Devotion in this. This way David calls his, a Catechism. And let not the greatest Doctor think it unworthy of him to Catechise thus, nor the learnedest hearer to be thus catechised; Christ enwraps the greatest Doctors in his Person, and in his practice, when he says, Sinite parvulos, Suffer little children to come unto me; and we do not suffer them to come unto us, if when they come, we do not speak to their understanding, and to their edification, for that is but an absent presence, when they hear, and profit not; And Christ enwraps the learnedest hearers, in the persons of his own Disciples, when he says, Except ye become as these little children, ye cannot enter into the Kingdom of heaven; Except you nourish yourselves with catechistical, and Fundamental Doctrines, you are not in a wholesome diet. Now in this Catechism, the first stone that David lays, (and that that supports all) the first object that David presents, (and that that directs to all) is Blessedness; David's Catechism; Blessed is the man. Philosopher's could never bring us to the knowledge, 2 Part. Beatitudo. what this Summum bonum, this Happiness, this Blessedness was. For they considered only some particular fruits thereof; and it is much easier, how high soever a tree be, to come to a taste of some of the fruits, then to dig to the root of that tree: They satisfied themselves with a little taste of Health, and Pleasure, and Riches, and Honour, and never considered that all these must have their root in heaven, and must have a relation to Christ Jesus, who is the root of all. And as these Philosophers could never tell us, what this blessedness was, so Divines themselves, and those who are best exercised in the language of the Holy Ghost, the Original tongue of this Text, cannot give us a clear Grammatical understanding, of this first word, in which David expresses this Blessedness, Ashrei, which is here Translated Blessed. They cannot tell, whether it be an Adverb, (And then it is Bene viro, Well is it for that man, A pathetic, a vehement acclamation, Happily, Blessedly is that man provided for) Or whether it be a Plural Noun, (and then it is Beatitudines, such a Blessedness as includes many, all blessednesses in it) And one of these two it must necessarily be in the Rules of their Construction; That either David enters with an Admiration, O how happily is that man provided for! Or with a Protestation, That there is no particular Blessedness, which that man wants, that hath this, This Reconciliation to God. Eusebius observes out of Plato, that he enjoined the Poets, and the Writers in his State, to describe no man to be happy, but the good men; none to be miserable, but the wicked. And his Scholar Aristotle enters into his Book of Ethiques, and Moral Doctrine, with that Contemplation first of all, That every man hath naturally a disposition to affect, and desire happiness. David who is elder than they, gins his Book of Psalms so; The first word of the first Psalm, is the first word of this Text, Blessed is the man. He comprehends all that belongs to man's knowledge, and all that belongs to man's practice, in those two, first in understanding true Blessedness, and then, in praising God for it: David's Alpha is Beatus vir, O the Blessedness of righteous men! And david's Omega is Laudate Dominum, O that men would therefore bless the Lord! And therefore, as he gins this Book with God's blessing of man, so he ends it with man's praising of God: For, where the last stroke upon this Psaltery, the last verse of the last Psalm, is, Let every thing that hath breath praise the Lord, Yet he adds one note more to us in particular, Praise ye the Lord; and there is the end of all. And so also our Saviour Christ himself, in his own preaching, observed that Method; Mat. 5.3. He begun his great Sermon in the Mount with that, Blessed are the poor inspirit, Blessed are they that mourn, Blessed are the pure in heart; Blessedness alone was an abundant recompense for all. And so the subject of john Baptists Commission before, and of his Disciples Commission after, Mat. 3.2. was still the same, to preach this Blessedness, That the Kingdom of God, that is, Mat. 10.7. Reconciliation to God in his Visible Church, was at hand, was forthwith to be established amongst them. Though then the Consummation of this Blessedness be that Visio Dei, That sight of God, which in our glorified state we shall have in heaven, yet, because there is an inchoation thereof in this world, which is that which we call Reconciliation, it behoves us to consider the disposition requisite for that. It is a lamentable perverseness in us, that we are so contentiously busy, in enquiring into the Nature, and Essence, and Attributes of God, things which are reserved to our end, when we shall know at once, and without study, all that, of which all our lives study can teach us nothing; And that here, where we are upon the way, we are so negligent and lazy, in enquiring of things, which belong to the way. Those things we learn in no School so well as in adversity. As the body of man, and consequently health, is best understood, and best advanced by Dissections, and Anatomies, when the hand and knife of the Surgeon hath passed upon every part of the body, and laid it open: so when the hand and sword of God hath pierced our soul, we are brought to a better knowledge of ourselves, than any degree of prosperity would have raised us to. All creatures were brought to Adam, and, because he understood the natures of all those creatures, he gave them names accordingly. In that he gave no name to himself, it may be by some perhaps argued, that he understood himself less than he did other creatures. If Adam be our example, in the time and School of nature, how hard a thing the knowledge of ourselves is, till we feel the direction of adversity, David is also another example in the time of the Law, who first said in his prosperity, Psal. 30.6. He should never be moved; But, When, says he, Thou hidest thy face from me, I was troubled, and then I cried unto thee O Lord, and I prayed unto my God; Then; but not till then. The same Art, the same Grammar lasts still; and Peter is an example of the same Rule, in the time of grace, who was at first so confident, as to come to that, Si omnes scandalizati, if all forsook him, Si mori oportuit, If he must die with him, or die for him, he was ready, and yet without any terror from an armed Magistrate, without any surprisal of a subtle Examiner, upon the question of a poor Maid he denied his Master: But then, the bitterness of his soul taught him another temper, and moderation; when Christ asked him after, Amas me? Lovest thou me? not to pronounce upon an infallible confidence, I have loved, and I do, and I will do till death, but, Domine tu scis, Lord thou knowest that I love thee; My love to thee is but the effect of thy love to me, and therefore Lord continue thine, that mine may continue. No study is so necessary as to know ourselves; no Schoolmaster is so diligent, so vigilant, so assiduous, as Adversity: And the end of knowing ourselves, is to know how we are disposed for that which is our end, that is this Blessedness; which, though it be well collected and summed by S. Augustine, Beatus qui habet quicquid vult, & nihil mali vult, He only is blessed, that desires nothing but that which is good for him, and hath all that, we must pursue, in those particulars, which here, in David's Catechism, constitute this Blessedness, and constitute our third Part, and are delivered in three Branches, first, The forgiving of our transgressions, And then, The covering of our sins, And thirdly, The not imputing of our iniquities. First then, that in this third Part, we may see in the first Branch, 3 Part. Transgression. the first notification of this Blessedness, we consider the two terms, in which it is expressed, what this is, which is translated Transgression, and then what this Forgiving imports. The Original word is Pashang, and that signifies sin in all extensions, The highest, the deepest, the weightiest sin; It is a malicious, and a forcible opposition to God: It is when this Herod, and this Pilate (this Body, and this soul of ours) are made friends and agreed, that they may concur to the Crucifying of Christ. When not only the members of our bodies, but the faculties of our soul, our will and understanding are bend upon sin: when we do not only sin strongly, and hungerly, and thirstily, (which appertain to the body) but we sin rationally, we find reasons, (and those reasons, even in Gods long patience) why we should sin: We sin wittily, we invent new sins, and we think it an ignorant, a dull, and an unsociable thing, not to sin; yea we sin wisely, and make our sin, our way to preferment. Then is this word used by the Holy Ghost, when he expresses both the vehemence, and the weight, and the largeness, and the continuance, all extensions, all dimensions of the sins of Damascus; Amos 1.3. Thus saith the Lord, for three transgressions of Damascus, and for four, I will not turn to it, because they have threshed Gilead with threshing instruments of Iron; So then, we consider sin here, not as a stain, such as Original sin may be, nor as a wound, such as every actual sin may be, but as a burden, a complication, a packing up of many sins, in an habitual practice thereof. This is that weight that sunk the whole world under water, in the first flood, and shall press down the fire itself, to consume it a second time. It is a weight that stupifies and benumbs him that bears it, August. so, as that the sinner feels not the oppression of his own sins; Et quid miserius miscro non miserante seipsum? What misery can be greater, than when a miserable man hath not sense to commiserate his own misery? Our first errors are out of Levity, and S. Augustin hath taught us a proper ballast and weight for that, Amor Dei pondus animae, The love of God would carry us evenly, and steadily, if we would embark that: But as in great trade, they come to ballast with Merchandise, ballast and freight is all one, so in this habitual sinner, all is sin, plots and preparations before the act, gladness and glory in the act, sometimes disguises, sometimes justifications after the act, make up one body, one freight of sin. So then Transgression in this place, in the natural signification of the word, is a weight, a burden, and carrying it, as the word requires, to the greatest extension, it is the sin of the whole World; And that sin is forgiven; which is the second Term. The Prophet does not say here, Forgiven. Blessed is that man that hath no transgression, for that were to say, Blessed is that man that is no man. All people, all Nations, did ever in Nature acknowledge not only a guiltiness of sin, but some means of reconciliation to their Gods in the Remission of sins: for they had all some formal, and Ceremonial Sacrifices, and Expiations, and Lustrations, by which they thought their sins to be purged, and washed away. Whosoever acknowledges a God, acknowledges a Remission of sins, and whosoever acknowledges a Remission of sins, acknowledges a God. And therefore in this first place, David does not mention God at all; he does not say, Blessed is he whose transgression the Lord hath forgiven; for he presumes it to be an impossible tentation to take hold of any man, that there can be any Remission of sin, from any other person, or by any other means, then from and by God himself; and therefore Remission of sins includes an Act of God; But what kind of Act, is more particularly designed in the Original word, which is Nasa, than our word, forgiving, reaches to; for the word does not only signify Auferre, but far; not only to take away sin, by way of pardon, but to take the sin upon himself, and so to bear the sin, and the punishment of the sin, in his own person. And so Christ is the Lamb of God, Qui tollit, not only that takes away, Esay 53.4. but that takes upon himself, the sins of the world. Tulit, portavit, Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows; Those griefs, those sorrows which we should, he hath borne, and carried in his own person. So that, as it is all one, never to have come in debt, and to have discharged the debt; So the whole world, all mankind, considered in Christ, is as innocent as if Adam had never sinned. And so this is the first beam of Blessedness that shines upon my soul, That I believe that the justice of God is fully satisfied in the death of Christ, and that there is enough given, and accepted in the treasure of his blood, for the Remission of all Transgressions. And then the second beam of this Blessedness, is in The covering of sins. Now to benefit ourselves by this part of David's Catechism, Sinne. we must (as we did before) consider the two terms, of which this part of this Blessedness consists, sin, and covering. Sin in this place is not so heavy a word, as Transgression was in the former; for that was sin in all extensions, sin in all forms, all sin of all men, of all times, of all places, the sin of all the world upon the shoulders of the Saviour of the world. In this place, (the word is Catah, and by the derivation thereof from Nata, which is to Decline, to step aside, or to be withdrawn, and Kut, which is filum, a thread, or a line) that which we call sin here, signifies Transilire lineam, To departed, or by any tentation to be withdrawn from the direct duties, and the exact straightness which is required of us in this world, for the attaining of the next: So that the word imports sins of infirmity, such sins as do fall upon God's best servants, such sins as rather induce a cofession of our weakness, and an acknowledgement of our continual need of pardon for some thing passed, and strength against future invasions, then that induce any devastation, or obduration of the conscience, which, Transgression, in the former branch implied. For so this word, Catah, hath that signification (as in many other places) there, where it is said, judge ●●. 16. That there were seven hundred left-handed Benjamits, which would sling stones at a hair's breadth, and not fail; that is, not miss the mark a hair's breadth. And therefore when this word Catah, sin, is used in Scripture, to express any weighty, heinous, enormous sin, it hath an addition, Peccatum magnum peccaverunt, says Moses, Exod. 32.31. when the people were become Idolaters, These people have sinned a great sin; otherwise it signifies such sin, as destroys not the foundation, such as in the nature thereof, does not wholly extinguish Grace, nor grieve the Spirit of God in us. And such sins God covers, says David here. Now what is his way of covering these sins? As Sin in this notion, is not so deep a wound upon God, as Transgression in the other, Covering. so Covering here extends not so far, as Forgiving did there. There forgiving was a taking away of sin, by taking that way, That Christ should bear all our sins, it was a suffering, a dying, it was a penal part, and a part of God's justice, executed upon his one and only Son; here it is a part of God's mercy, in spreading, and applying the merits and satisfaction of Christ, upon all them, whom God by the Holy Ghost hath gathered in the profession of Christ, and so called to the apprehending and embracing of this mantle, this garment, this covering, the righteousness of Christ in the Christian Christ; In which Church, and by his visible Ordinances therein, the Word, and Sacraments, God covers, hides, conceals, even from the inquisition of his own justice, those smaller sins, which his servants commit, and does not turn them out of his service, for those sins. So the word (the word is Casah, which we translate Covering) is used, Prov. 12.23. A wise man concealeth knowledge; that is, Does not pretend to know so much as indeed he does: So, our merciful God, when he sees us under this mantle, this covering, Christ spread upon his Church, conceals his knowledge of our sins, and suffers them not to reflect upon our consciences, in a consternation thereof. So then, as the Forgiving was Auferre ferendo, a taking away of sin, by taking all sin upon his own person, So this Covering is Tegere attingendo, To cover sin, by coming to it, by applying himself to our sinful consciences, in the means instituted by him in his Church: for they have in that language another word, Sacac, which signifies Tegere obumbrando, To cover by overshadowing, by refreshing. This is Tegere obumbrando, To cover by shadowing, when I defend mine eye from the offence of the Sun, by interposing my hand between the Sun and mine eye, at this distance, a far off: But Tegere attingendo, is when thus I lay my hand upon mine eye, and cover it close, by that touching. In the knowledge that Christ hath taken all the sins of all the world upon himself, that there is enough done for the salvation of all mankind, I have a shadowing, a refreshing; But because I can have no testimony, that this general redemption belongs to me, who am still a sinner, except there pass some act between God and me, some seal, some investiture, some acquittance of my debts, my sins, therefore this second beam of David's Blessedness, in this his Catechism, shines upon me in this, That God hath not only sowed and planted herbs, and Simples in the world, medicinal for all diseases of the world, but God hath gathered, and prepared those Simples, and presented them, so prepared, to me, for my recovery from my disease: God hath not only received a full satisfaction for all sin in Christ, but Christ, in his Ordinances in his Church, offers me an application of all that for myself, and covers my sin, from the eye of his Father, not only obumbrando, as he hath spread himself as a Cloud refreshing the whole World, in the value of the satisfaction, but Attingendo, by coming to me, by spreading himself upon me, as the Prophet did upon the dead Child, Mouth to mouth, Hand to hand; In the mouth of his Minister, he speaks to me; In the hand of the Minister, he delivers himself to me; and so by these visible acts, and seals of my Reconciliation, Tegit attingendo, He covers me by touching me; He touches my conscience, with a sense and remorse of my sins, in his Word; and he touches my soul, with a faith of having received him, and all the benefit of his Death, in the Sacrament. And so he covers sin; that is, keeps our sins of infirmity, and all such sins, as do not in their nature quench the light of his grace, from coming into his Father's presence, or calling for vengeance there. Forgiving of transgressions is the general satisfaction for all the world, and restoring the world to a possibility of salvation in the Death of Christ; Covering of sin, is the benefit of discharging and easing the conscience, by those blessed helps which God hath afforded to those, whom he hath gathered in the bosom, and quickened in the womb of the Christian Church. And this is the second beam of Blessedness, cast out by David here; and then the third is, The not imputing of iniquity, Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity. In this also, Impute. (as in the two former we did) we consider this Imputing, and then this Iniquity, in the root and Original signification of the two words. When in this place the Lord is said, not to impute sin, it is meant, That the Lord shall not suffer me to impute sin to myself. The word is Cashab, and Cashab imports such a thinking, such a surmising, as may be subject to error, and mistaking. To that purpose we find the word, where Hannah was praying, 1 Sam. 1.12. and Eli the Priest, who saw her lips move, and heard no prayer come from her, thought she had been drunk, Imputed drunkenness unto her, and said, How long wilt thou be drunk? put away thy wine: So that this Imputing, is such an Imputing of ours as may be erroneous, that is, an Imputing from ourselves, in a diffidence, and jealousy, and suspicion of God's goodness towards us. To which purpose, we consider also, that this word, which we translate here Iniquity, Gnavah, is oftentimes in the Scripture used for punishment, as well as for sin: and so indifferently for both, as that if we will compare Translation with Translation, and Exposition with Exposition, it will be hard for us to say, Gen. 4.13. whether Cain said, Mine iniquity is greater than can be pardoned, or, My punishment is greater than I can bear; and our last Translation, which seems to have been most careful of the Original, takes it rather so, My punishment, in the Text, and lays the other, My sin, aside in the Margin. So then, this Imputing, being an Imputing which arises from ourselves, and so may be accompanied with error, and mistaking, that we Impute that to ourselves, which God doth not impute, And this mis-imputing of God's anger to ourselves, arising out of his punishments, and his corrections inflicted upon us, That because we have crosses in the world, we cannot believe, that we stand well in the sight of God, or that the forgiving of Transgressions, or Covering of sins appertains unto us, we justly conceive, that this not Imputing of Iniquity, is that Serenitas Conscientiae, That brightness, that clearness, that peace, and tranquillity, that calm and serenity, that acquiescence, and security of the Conscience, in which I am delivered from all scruples, and all timorousness, that my Transgressions are not forgiven, or my sins not covered. In the first Act, we consider God the Father to have wrought; He proposed, he decreed, he accepted too a sacrifice for all mankind in the death of Christ. In the second, The Covering of sins, we consider God the Son to work, Incubare Ecclesiae, He sits upon his Church, as a Hen upon her Eggs, He covers all our sins, whom he hath gathered into that body, with spreading himself and his merits upon us all there. In this third, The not Imputing of Iniquity, we consider God the Holy Ghost to work, and, as the Spirit of Consolation, to blow away all scruples, all diffidences, and to establish an assurance in the Conscience. The Lord imputes not, that is, the Spirit of the Lord, The Lord the Spirit, The Holy Ghost, suffers not me to impute to myself those sins, which I have truly repent. The over-tendernesse of a bruised and a faint conscience may impute sin to itself, when it is discharged; And a seared and obdurate Conscience may impute none, when it abounds; If the Holy Ghost work, he rectifies both; and, if God do inflict punishments, (according to the signification of this word Gnavah) after our Repentance, and the seals of our Reconciliation, yet he suffers us not to impute those sins to ourselves, or to repute those corrections, punishments, as though he had not forgiven them, or, as though he came to an execution after a pardon, but that they are laid upon us medicinally, and by way of prevention, and precaution against his future displeasure. This is that Pax Conscientiae, The peace of Conscience, when there is not one sword drawn: This is that Serenitas Conscientiae, The Meridional brightness of the Conscience, when there is not one Cloud in our sky. I shall not hope, that Original sin shall not be imputed, but fear, that Actual sin may: not hope that my dumb sins shall not, but my crying sins may; not hope that my apparent sins, which have therefore induced in me a particular sense of them, shall not, but my secret sins, sins that I am not able to return and represent to mine own memory, may: for this Non Imputabit, hath no limitation; God shall suffer the Conscience thus rectified, to terrify itself with nothing; which is also farther extended in the Original, where it is not Non Imputat, but Non Imputabit; Though after all this we do fall into the same, or other sins, yet we shall know our way, and evermore have our Consolation in this, That as God hath forgiven our transgression, in taking the sins of all mankind upon himself, for he hath redeemed us, and left out Angels, And as he hath covered our sin, that is, provided us the Word, and Sacraments, and cast off the Jews, and left out the Heathen, So he will never Impute mine Iniquity, never suffer it to terrify my Conscience; Not now, when his Judgements, denounced by his Minister, call me to him here; Nor hereafter, when the last bell shall call me to him, into the grave; Nor at last, when the Angels Trumpets shall call me to him, from the dust, in the Resurrection. But that, as all mankind hath a Blessedness, in Christ's taking our sins, (which was the first Article in this Catechism) And all the Christian Church a Blessedness, in covering our sins, (which was the second) So I may find this Blessedness, in this work of the Holy Ghost, not to Impute, that is, not to suspect, that God imputes any repent sin unto me, or reserves any thing to lay to my charge at the last day, which I have prayed may be, and therefore hoped hath been forgiven before. But then, after these three parts, which we have now, in our Order proposed at first, passed through, That David applies himself to us, in the most convenient way, by the way of Catechism, and instruction in fundamental things; And then, that he lays for his foundation of all Beatitude, Blessedness, Happiness, which cannot be had, in the consummation, and perfection thereof, but in the next world; But yet, in the third place, gives us an inchoation, an earnest, an evidence of this future and consummate Blessedness, in bringing us faithfully to believe, That Christ died sufficiently for all the world, That Christ offers the application of all this, to all the Christian Church, That the Holy Ghost seals an assurance thereof, to every particular Conscience well rectified; After all this done thus largely on God's part, there remains something to be done on ours, that may make all this effectual upon us, non sit dolus in spiritu, That there be no guile in our spirit, which is our fourth part, and Conclusion of all. Of all these fruits of this Blessedness, there is no other root but the goodness of God himself; but yet they grow in no other ground, then in that man, 4. Part. Dolus. In cujus spiritu non est dolus. The Comment and interpretation of S. Paul, Rom. 4.5. hath made the sense and meaning of this place clear: To him that worketh, the reward is of debt, but to him that believeth, and worketh not, his faith is counted for righteousness, Even as David describeth the blessedness of Man, says the Apostle there, and so proceeds with the very words of this Text. Doth the Apostle then, in this Text, exclude the Co-operation of Man? Differs this proposition, That the man in whom God imprints these beams of Blessedness, must be without guile in his spirit, from those other propositions, Si vis ingredi, Mat. 19.17. If thou wilt enter into life, keep the Commandments; And, Maledictus qui non, Cursed is he that performs not all? Grows not the Blessedness of this Text, from the same root, as the Blessedness in the 119. Psal. ver. 1. Blessed are they, who walk in the way of the Lord? Or doth Saint Paul take David to speak of any other Blessedness in our Text, than himself speaks of, If through the Spirit ye mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live? Rom. 8.13. Doth S. Paul require nothing, nothing out of this Text, to be done by man? Surely he does; And these propositions are truly all one, Tantùm credideris, Only believe, and you shall be saved; And, Fac hoc & vives, Do this, and you shall be saved; As it is truly all one purpose, to say, If you live you may walk, and to say, If you stretch out your legs, you may walk. To say, Eat of this Tree, and you shall recover, and to say, Eat of this fruit, and you shall recover, is all one; To attribute an action to the next Cause, or to the Cause of that Cause, is, to this purpose, all one. And therefore, as God gave a Reformation to his Church, in prospering that Doctrine, That Justification was by faith only: so God give an unity to his Church, in this Doctrine, That no man is justified, that works not; for, without works, how much soever he magnify his faith, there is Dolus in spiritu, Guile in his spirit. As then the Prophet David's principal purpose in this Text, is, according to the Interpretation of S. Paul, to derive all the Blessedness of man from God: so is it also to put some conditions in man, comprehended in this, That there be no guile in his spirit. For, in this repentant sinner, that shall be partaker of these degrees of Blessedness, of this Forgiving, of this Covering, of this Not Imputing, there is required Integrapoenitentia, A perfect, and entire repentance; And to the making up of that, howsoever the words and terms may have been misused, and defamed, we acknowledge, that there belongs a Contrition, a Confession, and a Satisfaction; And all these (howsoever our Adversaries slander us, with a Doctrine of ease, and a Religion of liberty) we require with more exactness, and severity, than they do. For, for Contrition, we do not, we dare not say, as some of them, That Attrition is sufficient; that it is sufficient to have such a sorrow for sin, as a natural sense, and fear of torment doth imprint in us, without any motion of the fear of God: We know no measure of sorrow great enough for the violating of the infinite Majesty of God, by our transgression. And then for Confession, we deny not a necessity to confess to man; There may be many cases of scruple, of perplexity, where it were an exposing ourselves to farther occasions of sin, not to confess to man; And in Confession, we require a particular detestation of that sin which we confess, which they require not. And lastly, for Satisfaction, we embrace that Rule, Condigna satisfactio malè facta corrigere, Our best Satisfaction is, to be better in the amendment of our lives: And dispositions to particular sins, we correct in our bodies by Discipline, and Mortifications; And we teach, that no man hath done truly that part of Repentance, which he is bound to do, if he have not given Satisfaction, that is, Restitution, to every person damnified by him. If that which we teach, for this entireness of Repentance, be practised, in Contrition, and Confession, and Satisfaction, they cannot calumniate our Doctrine, nor our practice herein; And if it be not practised, there is Dolus in spiritu, Guile in their spirit, that pretend to any part of this Blessedness, Forgiving, or Covering, or Not imputing, without this. For, he that is sorry for sin, only in Contemplation of hell, and not of the joys of heaven, that would not give over his sin, though there were no hell, rather than he would lose heaven, (which is that which some of them call Attrition) He that confesses his sin, but hath no purpose to leave it, He that does leave the sin, but being grown rich by that sin, retains, and enjoys those riches, this man is not entire in his Repentanne, but there is guile in his spirit. He that is slothful in his work, Prov. 18.9. is brother to him that is a great waster; He that makes half-repentances, makes none. Men run out of their estates, as well by a negligence, and a not taking account of their Officers, as by their own prodigality: Our salvation is as much endangered, if we call not our conscience to an examination, as if we repent not those sins, which offer themselves to our knowledge, and memory. And therefore David places the consummation of his victory in that, Psal. 18.37. I have pursued mine enemies, and overtaken them, neither did I turn again, till they were consumed: We require a pursuing of the enemy, a search for the sin, and not to stay till an Officer, that is, a sickness, or any other calamity light upon that sin, and so bring it before us; We require an overtaking of the enemy, That we be not weary, in the search of our consciences; And we require a consuming of the enemy, not a weakening only; a dislodging, a dispossessing of the sin, and the profit of the sin; All the profit, and all the pleasure of all the body of sin; for he that is sorry with a godly sorrow, he that confesses with a deliberate detestation, he that satisfies with a full restitution for all his sins but one, Dolus in spiritu, There is guile in his spirit, & he is in no better case, Berna● then if at Sea he should stop all leaks but one, and perish by that. Si vis solvi, solve omnes catenas; If thou wilt be discharged, cancel all thy Bonds; one chain till that be broke, holds as fast as ten. And therefore suffer your consideration to turn back a little upon this object, that there may be Dolus in spiritu, Guile in the spirit, in our pretence to all those parts of Blessedness, which David recommends to us in this Catechism, In the Forgiveness of transgrestions, In the Covering of sin, In the Not imputing of iniquity. First then, Forgiving. in this Forgiving of transgressions, which is our Saviour Christ's taking away the sins of the world, by taking them, in the punishment due to them, upon himself, there is Dolus in spiritu, Guile in that man's spirit, that will so fare abridge the great Volumes of the mercy of God, so fare contract his general propositions, as to restrain this salvation, not only in the effect, but in Gods own purpose, to a few, a very few souls. When Subjects complain of any Prince, that he is too merciful, there is Dolus in spiritu, Guile and deceit in this complaint; They do but think him too merciful to other men's faults; for, where they need his mercy for their own, they never think him too merciful. And which of us do not need God for all sins? If we did not in ourselves, yet it were a new sin in us, not to desire that God should be as merciful to every other sinner, as to ourselves. As in heaven, the joy of every soul shall be my joy, so the mercy of God to every soul here, is a mercy to my soul; By the extension of his mercies to others, I argue the application of his mercy to myself. This contracting, and abridging of the mercy of God, will end in despair of ourselves, that that mercy reaches not to us, or if we become confident, perchance presumptuous of ourselves, we shall despair in the behalf of other men, and think they can receive no mercy: And when men come to allow an impossibility of salvation in any, they will come to assign that impossibility, nay to assign those men, and pronounce, for this, and this sin, This man cannot be saved. There is a sin against the Holy Ghost; and to make us afraid of all approaches towards that sin, Christ hath told us, that that sin is irremissible, unpardonable; But since that sin includes impenitibleness in the way, and actual impenitence in the end, we can never pronounce, This is that sin, or This is that sinner. God is his Father that can say, Our Father which art in heaven, And his God that can say, I believe in God; And there is Dolus in spiritu, Guile in his spirit, the craft of the Serpent, (either the poison of the Serpent, in a self-despaire, or the sting of the Serpent, in an uncharitable prejudging, and precondemning of others) when a man comes to suspect Gods good purposes, or contract God's general propositions; for, this forgiving of transgressions, is Christ's taking away the sins of all the world, by taking all the sins of all men upon himself. And this Guile, this Deceit may also be in the second, in the Covering of sins, which is the particular application of this general mercy, by his Ordinances in his Church. He than that without Guile will have benefit by this Covering, must Discover. Covering. Qui tegi vult peccata, detegat, is S. Augustine's way: He that will have his sins covered, let him uncover them; He that would not have them known, let him confess them; He that would have them forgotten, let him remember them; He that would bury them, let him rake them up. There is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed, and hid, Mat. 10.26. that shall not be known. It is not thy sending away a servant, thy locking a door, thy blowing out a candle, no not though thou blow out, and extinguish the spirit, as much as thou canst, that hides a sin from God; but since thou thinkest that thou hast hid it, by the secret carriage thereof, thou must reveal it by Confession. If thou wilt not, God will show thee that he needed not thy Confession; He will take knowledge of it, to thy condemnation, and he will publish it to the knowledge of all the world, to thy confusion. Tufecisti absconditè. says God to David, by Nathan, Thou didst it secretly, 2 Sam. 12.12. but I will do this thing before all Israel, and before the Sun. Certainly it affects, and stings many men more, that God hath brought to light their particular sins and offences, for which he does punish them, than all the punishments that he inflicts upon them; for then, they cannot lay their ruin upon fortune, upon vicissitudes, and revolutions, and changes of Court, upon disaffections of Princes, upon supplantations of Rivals and Concurrents; but God clears all the world beside; Perditio tua ex te, God declares that the punishment is his Act, and the Cause, my sin. This is God's way; and this he expresses vehemently against Jerusalem, Behold, I will gather all thy Lovers, with whom thou hast taken pleasure, Ezch. 16.37. and all them that thou hast loved, with all them that thou hast hated, and I will discover thy nakedness to all them. Those who loved us for pretended virtues, shall see how much they were deceived in us; Those that hated us, because they were able to look into us, and to discern our actions, shall then say Triumphantly, and publicly to all, Did not we tell you what would become of this man? It was never likely to be better with him. I will strip her naked, and set her as in the day that she was borne; Hos. 2.3. Howsoever thou wert covered with the Covenant, and taken into the Visible Church, howsoever thou wert clothed, by having put on Christ in Baptism, yet, If thou sin against me, (says God) and hid it from me, I am against thee, and I will show the Nations thy nakedness, and the Kingdoms thy shame. Nahum 3.5. To come to the covering of thy sins without guile, first cover them not from thyself, so, as that thou canst not see yesterdays sin, for to day's sin; nor the sins of thy youth, for thy present sins: Cover not thy extortions with magnific buildings, and sumptuous furniture; Dung not the fields that thou hast purchased with the bodies of those miserable wretches, whom thou hast oppressed, neither straw thine alleys and walks with the dust of God's Saints, whom thy hard dealing hath ground to powder. There is but one good way of covering sins from ourselves, Si bona factamalis superponamus, Gregor. If we come to a habit of good actions, contrary to those evils, which we had accustomed ourselves to, and cover our sins so; not that we forget the old, but that we see no new. There is a good covering of sins from ourselves, by such new habits, and there is a good covering of them from other men; for, he that sins publicly, scandalously, avowedly, that teaches and encourages others to sin; Esay 3.9. That declares his sin as Sodom, and hides it not, As in a mirror, in a looking glass, that is compassed and set about with a hundred lesser glasses, a man shall see his deformities in a hundred places at once, so he that hath sinned thus shall feel his torments in himself, and in all those, whom the not covering of his sins hath occasioned to commit the same sins. Cover thy sins then from thyself, so it be not by obduration; cover them from others, so it be not by hypocrisy; But from God cover them not at all; Prov. 28.13. He that covereth his sin, shall not prosper; but who so confesseth and forsaketh them, shall have mercy; Even in confessing, without forsaking, there is Dolus in spiritus, Guile and deceit in that spirit. Noluit agnoscere, maluit ignoscere, S. Augustine makes the case of a customary sinner; He was ready to pardon himself always without any confession; But God shall invert it to his subversion, Maluit agnoscere, noluit ignoscere, God shall manifest his sin, and not pardon it. Sin hath that pride, that it is not content with one garment; Adam covered first with fig-leaves, then with whole trees, He hide himself amongst the trees: Then he covered his sin, with the woman; she provoked him: And then with God's action, Quam tu dedisti, The Woman whom thou gavest me; And this was Adam's wardrobe. David covers his first sin of uncleanness with soft stuff, with deceit, with falsehood, with soft persuasions to Vriah, to go in to his Wife; Then he covers it with rich stuff, with scarlet, with the blood of Vriah, and of the army of the Lord of Hosts; And then he covers it with strong and durable stuff, with an impenitence, and with an insensibleness, a year together; too long for a King, too long for any man, to wear such a garment: And this was David's wardrobe. But beloved, sin is a serpent, and he that covers sin, does but keep it warm, that it may sting the more fiercely, and disperse the venom and malignity thereof the more effectually. Adam had patched up an apron to cover him; God took none of those leaves; God wrought not upon his beginnings, but he covered him all over with durable skins. God saw that David's several cover did rather load him, then cover the sin, and therefore Transtulit, He took all away, sin, and covering: for the cover were as great sins, as the radical sin, that was to be covered, was; yea greater; as the arms and boughs of a tree, are greater than the root. Now to this extension, and growth, and largeness of sin, no lesser covering serves then God in his Church. It was the prayer against them, Nehem. 4.5. August. who hindered the building of the Temple, Cover not their iniquity, neither let their sin be put out in thy presence. Our prayer is, Peccata nostra non videat, ut nos videat, Lord look not upon our sins, that thou mayst look upon us. And since amongst ourselves, 1 Pet. 4.8. Prov. 10.12. it is the effect of Love, to cover Multitudinem peccatorum, The multitude of sins, yea to cover Vniversa delicta, Louè covereth all sins, much more shall God, who is Love itself, cover our sins so, as he covered the Egyptians, in a red Sea, in the application of his blood, by visible means in his Church. That therefore thou mayest be capable of this covering, Psal. 37.6. Commit thy ways unto the Lord; that is, show unto him, by way of confession, what wrong ways thou hast gone, and inquire of him by prayer, what ways thou art to go, and (as it is in the same Psalm) He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgement as the noon day; And so there shall be no guile found in thy spirit, which might hinder this covering of thy sin, which is, the application of Christ's merits, in the Ordinances of his Church, nor the Not imputing of thine iniquity, which is our last consideration, and the conclusion of all. This not imputing, Imputing. is that serenity and acquiescence, which a rectified conscience enjoys, when the Spirit of God bears witness with my spirit, that, thus reconciled to my God, I am now guilty of nothing. S. Bernard defines the Conscience thus, Inseparabilis gloria, vel confusio uniuscujusque, pro qualitate depositi: It is that inseparable glory, or that inseparable confusion which every soul hath, according to that which is deposited, and laid up in it. Now what is deposited, and laid up in it? Naturally, hereditarily, patrimonially, Con-reatus, says that Father, from our first Parents, a fellow-guiltinesse of their sin; and they have left us sons and heirs of the wrath and indignation of God, and that is the treasure they have laid up for us. Against this, God hath provided Baptism; and Baptism washes away that sin; for as we do nothing to ourselves in Baptism, but are therein merely passive, so neither did we any thing ourselves in Original sin, but therein are merely passive too; and so the remedy, Baptism, is proportioned to the disease, Original sin. But original sin being thus washed away, we make a new stock, we take in a new depositum, a new treasure, Actual and habitual sins, and therein much being done by ourselves, against God, into the remedy, there must enter something to be done by ourselves, and something by God; And therefore we bring water to his wine, true tears of repentance to his true blood in the Sacrament, and so receive the seals of our reconciliation, and having done that, we may boldly say unto God, Do not condemn me: job 10.2. show me wherefore thou contendest with me. When we have said as he doth, I have sinned, job 7.20. what shall I do to thee? And have done that that he hath ordained, we may say also as he doth, O thou preserver of men, why dost thou not pardon my transgression, and take away mine iniquity? Why dost thou suffer me to faint and pant under this sad apprehension, that all is not yet well between my soul and thee? We are far from encouraging any man to antedate his pardon; to presume his pardon to be passed before it is: But when it is truly passed the seals of Reconciliation, there is Dolus in spiritu, Guile and deceit in that spirit, nay it is the spirit of falsehood and deceit itself, that will not suffer us to enjoy that pardon, which God hath sealed to us, but still maintain jealousies, and suspicion, between God and us. My heart is not opener to God, than the bowels of his mercy are to me; And to accuse myself of sin, after God hath pardoned me, were as great a contempt of God, as to presume of that pardon, before he had granted it; and so much a greater, as it is directed against his greatest attribute, his Mercy. Si apud Deum deponas injuriam, Tertul. ipse ultor erit, Lay all the injuries that thou sufferest, at God's feet, and he will revenge them; Si damnum, ipse restituet; Lay all thy losses there, and he will repair them; Si dolorem, ipse medicus; Lay down all thy diseases there, and he shall heal thee; Si mortem, ipse resuscitator, Dye in his arms, and he shall breathe a new life into thee; Add we to Tertullian: Si peccata, ipse sepeliet, lay thy sins in his wounds, and he shall bury them so deep, that only they shall never have resurrection: The Sun shall set, and have a to morrows resurrection; Herbs shall have a winter death, and a springs resurrection; Thy body shall have a long winter's night, and then a resurrection; Only thy sins buried in the wounds of thy Saviour, shall never have resurrection; And therefore take heed of that deceit in the spirit, of that spirit of deceit, that makes thee impute sins to thyself, when God imputes them not; But rejoice in Gods general forgiving of Transgressions, That Christ hath died for all, multiply thy joy in the covering of thy sin, That Christ hath instituted a Church, in which that general pardon is made thine in particular, And exalt thy joy, in the not imputing of iniquity, in that serenity, that tranquillity, that God shall receive thee, at thy last hour, in thy last Bath, the sweat of death, as lovingly, as acceptably, as innocently, as he received thee, from thy first Bath, the laver of Regeneration, the font in Baptism. Amen. SERM. LVII. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.3, 4. When I kept silence, my bones waxed old, through my roaring all the day long. For day and night thy hand was heavy upon me; my moisture is turned into the drought of Summer. Selah. ALL ways of teaching, are Rule and Example: And though ordinarily the Rule be first placed, yet the Rule itself is made of Examples: And when a Rule would be of hard digestion to weak understanding, Example concocts it, and makes it easy: for, Example in matter of Doctrine, is as Assimilation in matter of Nourishment; The Example makes that that is proposed for our learning and farther instruction, like something which we knew before, as Assimilation makes that meat, which we have received, and digested, like those parts, which are in our bodies before. David was the sweet singer of Israel; shall we say, God's Precentor? His son Solomon was the powerful Preacher of Israel; shall we say, God's Chaplain? Both of them, excellent, abundantly, super-abundantly excellent in both those ways of Teaching; Poet, and Preacher, proceed in these ways in both, Rule, and Example, the body and soul of Instruction. So this Psalm is qualified in the Title thereof, A Psalm of David giving Instruction. And having given his Instruction the first way, by Rule, in the two former verses, That Blessedness consisted in the Remission of sins, but that this Remission of sins was imparted to none, Cui dolus in spiritu, In whose spirit there was any deceit, he proceeds in this Text, to the other fundamental, and constitutive element of Instruction, Example; And by Example he shows, how far they are from that Blessedness, that consists in the Remission of sins, that proceed with any deceit in their spirit. And that way of Instruction, by Example, shall be our first Consideration; And our second, That he proposes himself for the Example, I kept silence, says he, and so My Bones waxed old, etc. And then, in a third part, we shall see, how far this holy Ingenuity goes, what he confesses of himself: And that third part will subdivide itself, and flow out into many branches. First, That it was he himself that was In doloso spiritu, In whose spirit there was deceit, Quia tacuit, because he held his tongue, because he disguised his sins, because he did not confess them. And yet, in the midst of this silence of his, God brought him Ad rugitum, to voices of Roaring, of Exclamation, to a sense of pain, and a sense of shame; so far he had a voice, but still he was in silence, for any matter of repentance. Secondly, he confesses the effect of this his silence, and this his Roaring, Inveteraverunt Ossa, My Bones waxed old, and, my moisture is turned into the drought of Summer. And then thirdly, he confesses the reason from whence this inveteration in his bones, and this incineration in his body proceeded, Quia aggravata manus, because the hand of God lay heavy upon him, heavy in the present weight, and heavy in the long continuation thereof, day and night. And lastly, all this he seals with that Selah, which you find at the end of the verse, which is a kind of Affidavit, of earnest asseveration, and re-affirming the same thing, a kind of Amen, and ratification to that which was said; Selah, truly, verily, thus it was with me, when I kept silence, and deceitfully smothered my sins, the hand of God lay heavy upon me, and as truly, as verily it will be no better with any man, that suffers himself to continue in that case. First then, 1 Part. Exemplum. for the assistance, and the power, that example hath in Instruction, we see Christ's Method, Quid ab initio, how was it from the beginning; Do as hath been done before. We see God's method to Moses, for the Tabernacle, Look that thou make every thing, Exod. 24.40. after thy pattern, which was showed thee in the Mount; And for the Creation itself, we know God's method too; for though there were no world, that was elder brother to this world before, yet God in his own mind and purpose had produced, and lodged certain Ideas, and forms, and patterns of every piece of this world, and made them according to those preconceived forms, and Ideas. When we consider the ways of Instruction, as they are best pursued in the Scriptures, so are there no Books in the world, that do so abound with this comparative and exemplary way of teaching, as the Scriptures do; No Books, in which that word of Reference to other things, that Sicut is so often repeated, Do this, and do that, Sicut, so, as you see such and such things in Nature do; And Sicut, so as you find such and such men, in story, to have done. So David deals with God himself, he proposes him an Example; I ask no more favour at thy hands, for thy Church now, than thou hast afforded them heretofore, Do but unto these men now, Psal. 83.3. Sicut Midianitis, as unto the Midianites, Sicut Siserae, as unto Sisera, as unto jabin: Make their Nobleses Sicut Oreb, like Oreb and like Zeb, and all their Princes Sicut Zeba, as Zeba and as Zalmana. For, these had been Examples of God's justice: And to be made Examples of God's anger, Num. 5.26. is the same thing, as to be a Malediction, a Curse. For, in that law of Jealousy, that bitter potion which the suspected woman was to take, was accompanied with this imprecation, The Lord make thee a Curse among the people; So we read it; But S. Hierome, In Exemplum, The Lord make thee an Example among the people; that is, deal with thee so, as posterity may be afraid, when it shall be said of any of them, Lord deal with this woman so, as thou didst with that Adulteress. And so the prayer of the people is upon Booz, Ruth 4.11. sit in Exemplum, (as S. Hierom also reads that place) The Lord make thee an Example of virtue in Ephrata, and in Bethlem; that is, that God's people might propose him to themselves, conform themselves to him, and walk as he did. As on the other side, the anger of God is threatened so, Ezek. 5.15. Jer. 48.39. God shall make thee Exemplum & stuporem, An Example and a Consternation; And Exemplum & derisum, An example and a scorn; That posterity, whensoever they should be threatened with God's Judgements, they might presently return to such Examples, and conclude, if our sins be to their Example, our Judgements will follow their Example too, a judgement accompanied with a consternation, a consternation aggravated with a scorn, we shall be a prey to our enemies, an astonishment to ourselves, a contempt to all the world; We do according to their Example, and according to their Example we shall suffer, is not a Conclusion of any Sorbon, nor a decision of any Rota, but the Logic of the universal University, Heaven itself. Zech. 13.5. And so when the Prophet would be excused from undertaking the office of a Prophet, he says, Adam exemplum meum ab adolescentia, Adam hath been the example, that I have proposed to myself from my youth; As Adam did, so in the sweat of my brows, I also have eat my bread; I have kept Cattle; I have followed a Country life, and not made myself fit for the office and function of a Prophet, Adam hath been my Example from my youth. And when Solomon did not propose a Man, he proposed something else for his Example, an example he would have; Pro. 24.32. He looked upon the ill husband's land, and he saw it overgrown, Et exemplo didici disciplinam, By that example I learned to be wiser. Enter into the Armoury, search the body and bowels of Story, for an answer to the question in job, Quis periit, Who ever perished being Innocent, Job 4.7. or where were the righteous cut off? There is not one example; no where; never. Answer but that out of Records, Quis restitit, Job 9.4. Job 11.10. Who hath hardened himself against the Lord, and prospered? Or that, Quis contradicet, If he cut off, who can hinder him? There is no Example; No man, by no means. So, if thou be tempted with over-valuing thine own purity, find an Example to answer that, Job 14.27. Pro. 20.9. Quis mundum, Who can bring a clean thing out of uncleanness? Or that, Who can say, I have made my heart clean, I am pure from sin? There is no Example; No man ever did it; No man can say it. If thou be tempted to worship God in an Image, be able to answer God something to that, To whom will ye liken God, or what likeness will ye compare unto him? Esay 40.18. There can be no example, no pattern to make God by: for, that were to make God a Copy, and the other, by which he were made, the Original. If thou have a tentation to withdraw thyself from the Discipline of that Church, in which God hath given thee thy Baptism, find an Example, to satisfy thy Conscience, and God's people, in what age, in what place, there was any such Church instituted, or any such Discipline practised, as thou hast fancied to thyself. Believe nothing for which thou hast not a Rule; Do nothing for which thou hast not an Example; for there is not a more dangerous distemper in either Belief or Practice, than singularity; for there only may we justly call for Miracles, if men will present to us, and bind us to things that were never believed, never done before. David therefore, in this Psalm, his Psalm of Instruction, (as himself calls it) doth both; He lays down the Rule, he establishes it by Example, and that was our first Consideration, and we have done with that. Our second is, That he goes not far for his Example; 2 Part. Exemplum ipse. He labours not to show his reading, but his feeling; not his learning, but his compunction; his Conscience is his Library, and his Example is himself, and he does not unclasp great Volumes, but unbutton his own breast, and from thence he takes it. Men that give Rules of Civil wisdom, and wise Conversation amongst men, use to say, that a wise man must never speak much of himself; It will argue, say they, a narrow understanding, that he knows little besides his own actions, or else that he overvalues his own actions, if he bring them much into Discourse. But the wise men that seek Christ, (for there were such wise men in the world once) Statesmen in the kingdom of heaven, they go upon other grounds, and, wheresoever they may find them, they seek such Examples, as may conduce most to the glory of God: And when they make themselves Examples, they do not rather choose themselves then others, but yet they do not spare, nor forbear themselves more than other men. David proposes his own Example, to his own shame, but to God's glory. For, David was one of those persons, Qui non potuit solus perire, Bernar. He could not sin alone, his sin authorized sin in others: Princes and Prelates, are Doctrinal men, in this sense and acceptation, that the subject makes the Prince's life his Doctrine; he learns his Catechism by the eye, he does what he sees done, and frames to himself Rules out of his Superiors Example. Therefore, for their Doctrine, David proposes truly his own Example, and without disguising, tells that of himself, which no man else could have told. Christ who could do nothing but well, proposes himself for an example of humility, john 3.15. Titus 2.7. I have given you an example; Whom? what? That you should do as I have done. So S. Paul instructs Titus, In all things show a pattern of good works; But whom? for Titus might have showed them many patterns; but Show thyself a pattern, says the Apostle; and not only of assiduous, and laborious preaching, but of good works. 1 Cor. 16.10. And this is that, for which he recommends Timothy to the Church, He works the work of the Lord, And, not without a pattern, nor without that pattern, which S. Paul had given him in himself, He works so, as I also do. S. Paul, who had proposed Christ to himself to follow, might propose himself to others, and wish as he does, I would all men were even as myself. 1 Cor. 7.7. For, though that Apostle, by denying it in his own practice, 2 Cor. 4.5. seem to condemn it in all others, To preach ourselves, (We preach not ourselves, but Christ jesus the Lord) yet to preach out of our own history, so fare, as to declare to the Congregation, to what manifold sins we had formerly abandoned ourselves, how powerfully the Lord was pleased to reclaim us, how vigilantly he hath vouchsafed to preserve us from relapsing, to preach ourselves thus, to call up the Congregation, to hear what God hath done for my soul, is a blessed preaching of myself. And therefore Solomon does not speak of himself so much, nor so much propose and exhibit himself to the Church, in any Book, as in that which he calls the Preacher, Ecclesiastes: In that Book, he hides none of his own sins; none of those practices, which he had formerly used to hid his sins: He confesses things there, which none knew but himself, nor durst, nor should have published them of him, the King, if they had known them. So Solomon preaches himself to good purpose, and pours out his own soul in that Book. Which is one of the reasons which our Interpreters assign, why Solomon calls himself by this name, Lorin. Proleg. C. 5. Ecclesiastes, Coheleth, which is a word of the Feminine gender, and not Concionator, but Concionatrix, a Shee-preacher, because it is Anima Concionatrix, It is his soul that preaches, he pours out his own soul to the Congregation, in letting them know, how long the Lord let him run on in vanities, and vexation of spirit, and how powerfully and effectually he reclaimed him at last: For, from this Book, the Preacher, the she-Preacher, the soule-Preacher, Solomon preaching himself, rather herself, the Church raises convenient arguments (and the best that are raised) for the proof of the salvation of Solomon, of which divers doubted. And though Solomon in this Book speak divers things, not as his own opinion, but in the sense of worldly men, yet, as we have a note upon Plato's Dialogues, that though he do so too, yet whatsoever Plato says in the name and person of Socrates, that Plato always means for his own opinion, so whatsoever Solomon says in the name of the Preacher, (the Preacher says this, or says that) that is evermore solomon's own saying. When the Preacher preaches himself, his own sins, and his own sense of God's Mercies, or Judgements upon him, as that is intended most for the glory of God, so it should be applied most by the hearer, for his own edification; for, he were a very ill natured man, that should think the worse of a Preacher, because he confesses himself to be worse than he knew him to be, before he confessed it. Therefore David thought it not enough, to have said to his Confessor, to Nathan in private, Peccavi, I have sinned; but here, before the face of the whole Church of God, even to the end of the world, (for so long these Records are to last) he proposes himself, for an Exemplary sinner, for a sinful Example, and for a subject of God's Indignation, whilst he remained so, When I kept silence, and yet roared, Thy hand lay heavy upon me, and my moisture was turned into the drought of Summer. And so we are come to our third Part, He teaches by Example; He proposes himself for the Example; and of himself he confesses those particulars, which constitute our Text. Three things he confesses in this Example. 3 Part. First, that it was he himself that was in doloso spiritu, that had deceit in his spirit, Quia tacuit, because he held his tongue, he disguised his sins, he did not confess them; And yet, in the midst of this silence of his, God brought him Ad Rugitum, to voices of Roaring, of Exclamation, To a sense of pain, or shame, or loss; so fare he had a voice; But still he was in silence, for any matter of repentance. Secondly, he confesses a lamentable effect of this silence, and this roaring, Inveteraverunt ossa, His bones were consumed, waxed old, and his moisture dried up; and then he takes knowledge of the cause of all this calamity, the weight of God's heavy hand upon him. And to this Confession he sets to that seal, which is intended in the last word, Selah. First then, David confesses his silence; therefore it was a fault: And he confesses it, Silentium. as an instance, as an example of his being In doloso spiritu, That there was deceit in his spirit; as long as he was silent, he thought to delude God, to deceive God; and this was the greatest fault. If I be afraid of God's power, because I consider that he can destroy a sinner, yet I have his will for my Buckler; I remember, that he would not the death of a sinner. If I be afraid that his will may be otherwise bend, (for what can I tell, whether it may not be his will to glorify himself in surprising me in my sins?) I have his Word for my Buckler, Miserationes ejus super omnia opera ejus, God does nothing, but that his Mercy is supereminent in that work, whatsoever; But if I think to scape his knowledge, by hiding my sins from him, by my silence, I am In doloso spiritu, if I think to deceive God, I deceive myself, and there is no truth in me. When we are to deal with fools, we must, or we must not answer, Christi. Prov. 26.4.5. as they may receive profit, or inconvenience by our answer, or our silence. Answer not a fool, according to his foolishness, lest thou be like him: But yet, in the next verse, Answer a fool according to his foolishness, lest he be wise in his own conceit. But answer God always. Though he speak in the foolishness of preaching, as himself calls it, yet he speaks wisdom, that is, Peace to thy soul. We are sure that there is a good silence; for we have a Rule for it from Christ, whose Actions are more than Examples, for his Actions are Rules. His patience wrought so that he would not speak, his afflictions wrought so that he could not. He was brought as a sheep to the slaughter, and he was dumb; Esay 59 Psal. 22.15. There he would not speak; My strength is dried up like a potsherd, and my tongue cleaveth to my jaws, and thou hast brought me into the dust of death, says David in the Person of Christ, and here he could not speak. Here is a good silence in our Rule: So is there also in Examples derived from that Rule. Reverentiae. Hab. 2. ult. There is Silentium reverentiae, A silence of reverence, for respect of the presence; The Lord is in his holy Temple, let all the world keep silence before him. When the Lord is working in his Temple, in his Ordinances, and Institutions, let not the wisdom of all the world dispute why God instituted those Ordinances, the foolishness of preaching, or the simplicity of Sacraments in his Church. Let not the wisdom of private men dispute, why those whom God hath accepted as the representation of the Church, those of whom Christ says, Dic Ecclesiae, Tell the Church, have ordained these, or these Ceremonies for Decency, and Uniformity, and advancing of God's glory, and men's Devotion in the Church; Let all the earth be silent, In Sacramentis, The whole Church may change no Sacraments, nor Articles of faith, and let particular men be silent In Sacramentalibus, in those things which the Church hath ordained, for the better conveying, and imprinting, and advancing of those fundamental mysteries; for this silence of reverence which is an acquiescence in those things which God hath ordained, immediately, as Sacraments, or Ministerially, as other Ritual things in the Church, David would not have complained of, nor repent. And to this may well be referred Silentium subjectionis, Subjectionis. 1 Cor. 14.34. 1 Tim. 2.11. That silence which is a recognition, a testimony of subjection. Let the women keep silence in the Church, for they ought to be subject: And, Let the women learn in silence, with all subjection. As fare as any just Commandment, either expressly, or tacitly reaches, in enjoining silence, we are bound to be silent: In Moral seals of secrets, not to discover those things which others upon confidence, or for our counsel, have trusted us withal; In charitable seals, not to discover those sins of others, which are come to our particular knowledge, but not by a judicial way; In religious seals, not to discover those things which are delivered us in Confession, except in cases excepted in that Canon; In secrets delivered under these seals, of Nature, of Law, of Ecclesiastical Canons, we are bound to be silent, for this is Silentium subjectionis, An evidence of our subjection to Superiors. But since God hath made man with that distinctive property, that he can speak, and no other creature; since God made the first man able to speak, as soon as he was in the world; since in the order of the Nazarites instituted in the old Testament, though they forbore wine, and outward care of their comeliness, in cutting their hair, and otherwise, yet they bond not themselves to any silence; since in the other sects, which grew up amongst the Jews, Pharisees, and Sadduces, and Esseans, amongst all their superfluous, and superstitious austerities, there was no inhibition of speaking, and Communication; since in the twilight between the Old and New Testament, Luk. 1.20. that dumbness which was cast upon Zacharic, was inflicted for a punishment upon him, because he believed not that, that the Angel had said unto him, we may be bold to say, That if not that silence, which is enjoined in the Roman Church, yet that silence which is practised amongst them, for the concealing of Treasons, and those silences which are imposed upon some of their Orders, That the Carthusians may never speak but upon Thursdays, others upon other times, they are not silentia subjectionis, silences imposed by a justauthority, but they are in Doloso spiritu, there is Deceit in their spirit; if not in every one of them, who execute the commandment, not in every poor Carthusian, yet in them who imposed it, who by such an obedience in impertinent things, infatuate them, and accustom them to a blind and implicit obedience in matters of more dangerous consequence. Silence of reverence, silence of subjection meet in this, and in this they determine, That we hold our tongues from questioning any thing ordained by God, and from defaming any thing done by that power, which is established by his Ordinance. And this silence falls not under David's complaint, nor confession. We have not long to stay upon this silence, Bonum. which we call the Good silence, because it is not the silence of our Text; This only we say, That there is a silence which is absolutely good, always good, and there is another occasionally good, sometimes good, and sometimes not so; and that is silentium Boni, or à Bono, An abstinence from speaking, or from doing some things, which of themselves, if no circumstance changed their nature, were good and requisite. Silentium bonum, that silence that is absolutely, and always good, Bernaed. is a quiet contentment in all that God sends, Ne, unde debueras esse dives, fias pauper, lest when God meant to make thee rich, and have indeed made thee rich, thou makethy self poor, by thinking thyself poor, and misinterpreting Gods doing: That thou have not praecordia fatui, as the same Father speaks, The bowels of an empty man, whining, and crying bowels; Sicut rota currus, foenum portans & murmur ans, As a Cart that hath a full and plentiful load, and squeaks and whines the more for that abundance. Neither murmur that thou hast minus de Bonis, not Goods enough, nor nimis de Malis, Afflictions too many, but reckon how much more good God hath showed thee, than thou hast deserved, Lament. 3.28. and how much less ill. Sat alone, and keep silence, because thou hast borne it, because the Lord hath laid affliction upon thee; Thine ease is within two verses, August. For the Lord will not for sake thee for ever. If thou murmur, and say, Quid feci, Lord what have I done to thee, that thou shouldst deal thus with me? thou shalt hear the justice of God answer thee, Verumdicis, nihil fecisti, Thou hast done nothing, and that is fault enough; Nothing for me, nothing for my sake, but all for respect of thyself, in thine own ways, and to thine own ends. The other good silence is not always Good, A Bone. but occasionally, and circumstantially so; It is a forbearing to speak Truth, which may be good then, when our speaking of Truth can do no good, Psal. 39.1. and may do harm. I will keep my mouth bridled whilst the wicked is in my sight; I was dumb, and spoke nothing, I kept silence even from good, and my sorrow was more stirred. Though it were a vexation to him, though he had a sense, and a remorse, that this was some degree of prevarication, to abandon the defence of God's honour at any time, yet his religious discretion made it appear to him, that this present abstinence would, in the end, conduce more to God's glory. It was the Wise man's rule, Ecclus. 8.10. Kindle not the coals of sinners, when thou rebukest them, lest thou be'st burnt in the fiery flames of their sins. Poison works apace upon choleric complexions; And Physicians may catch the plague by going about to cure it. An over-vehement, and unseasonable reprehender of a sin may contract that, or a greater sin himself. I may reprehend a Blasphemer, in such a manner, and at such a time, as I could not choose but suspect, that he would multiply blasphemies upon my reprehension; and, though that take off none of his fault, yet it adds to mine, and now God hath two in the Bond; He shall answer, and I too, for these later blasphemies. The Wise man gave us the Rule, Kindle not coals, and a good King gave us the example, when Rabshakeh had blasphemed against God and the King; Let not Hezekias deceive you, saying, The Lord will deliver us, Then they kept silence, and answered him not a word, says that Text; for, (as it is added) The King's commandment was, saying, Answer him not a word. There is a religious abstinence, in not answering our Adversaries, though their libels, and increpations, and contumelies tend to the dishonour of God. S. Ambrose observed good degrees in this Discretion. Ambrese. He notes in David, that, siluit à bonis, Though it troubled him, he could hold his peace, when hisreply might exasperate others: He notes in job, job 19.7. (as he reads that place, according to the Septuagint) Ecce, rideo opprobrium, Behold, I laugh at their reproaches; That he could take pleasure in the goodness of his conscience, for all their calumnies. He notes in S. Paul a higher degree than that; Maledicimur, & Benedicimus, 1 Cor. 4.12. That he when he was rev●ed could bless them that reviled him. Religious discretion allows us to disguise our Anger, and smother our sorrow, when either our anger would exasperate, or our sorrow encourage the Adversary, to a more vehement opposing of God, and his Church, and his Children. But all this is rather true, in private persons, Ministri. Ezek. 3.18. then in those whom God hath sent to do his Messages to his people. When I shall say to the wicked, (says God to the Prophet) Thou shalt surely die, and thou, The Prophet, givest him not warning, nor speakest to admonish that he may live, the same wicked man shall die in his iniquity, but his blood will I require at thy hands. And, if every single sinful act, and word, and thought of mine, need the whole blood of Christ Jesus to expiate that, what blood, and what seas of that blood shall I need, when the blood of a whole Parish shall be required at my hand, because I forbore to speak plainly of their sins, and God's judgement? It is true, which S. Bernard says, Bernat. Discretio mater, & consummatrix virtutum, Discretion is the mother, and discretion is the nurse of every virtue, but yet, in this commandment which is laid upon us, for the reproof of sin, Haec omnis sit nostra Discretie, says he, ut in hoc nulla sit nobis Discretio; Let this be all our Discretion, as Discretion is wisdom, that we use no Discretion, as Discretion is Acceptation of persons. Haec omnis sapientia, ut in hac parte nulla nobis sit, Let this be all our wisdom, to proceed in this way, this foolishness of Preaching, in season, and out of season. In God's name, let us fall within that danger, if we must needs, that if the poor man speak, they say, What fellow is this? We are fellows in this service, Ecclus. 13.23. to God's Angels, to the Son of God Christ Jesus, who is your High Priest, and we fellow-workmen with him, in your salvation: And, as long as we can scape that Imputation, Some man holdeth his tongue, because he hath not to answer, That either we know not what to say to a doubtful conscience, for our ignorance, Ecclus. 20.6.] or are afraid to reprehend a sin, because we are guilty of that sin ourselves; how fare States, and Commonwealths may be silent in connivencies, and forbearances, is not our business now; but for us, the ministers of God, Vaenobis, si non evangelizemus, Woe be unto us, if we do not preach the Gospel, and we have no Gospel put into our hands, nor into our mouths, but a conditional Gospel, and therefore we do not preach the Gospel, except we preach the Judgements belonging to the breach of those conditions: A silence in that, in us, would fall under this complaint, and confession, Because I was silent, these calamities fell upon me. It becomes not us, to think the worst of David, Silentium malum. that he was fallen into the deepest degree of this silence, and negligence of his duty to God: But it becomes us well to consider, that if David, a man according to God's heart, had some degrees of this ill silence, it is easy for us, to have many. For, for the first degree, we have it, and scarce discern that we have it: for our first silence is but an Omission, a not doing of our religious duties, or an unthankfulness for God's particular benefits. Exod. 14.14. When Moses says to his people, The Lord shall fight for you, & vos tacebit is, And you shall hold your peace, there Moses means, you shall not need to speak, the Lord will do it for his own glory, you may be silent. There it was a future thing; But the Lord hath fought many battles for us: He hath fought for our Church against Superstition, for our land against Invasion, for this City against Infection, for every soul here against Presumption, or else against Desperation, Dominus pugnavit, & nos silemus; The Lord hath fought for us, and we never thank him. A silence before, a not praying, hath not always a fault in it, because we are often ignorant of our own necessities, and ignorant of the dangers that hang over us; but a silence after a benefit evidently received, a dumb Ingratitude is inexcusable. There is another ill silence, and an unnatural one, for it is a loud silence; Pharisai. It is a bragging of our good works; It is the Pharisees silence, when by boasting of his fastings, and of his alms, he forgot, he silenced his sins. This is the devils best Merchant: By this Man, the devil gets all; for, his ill deeds were his before; and now, by this boasting of them, his good works become his too. To contract this, If we have overcome this inconsideration, if we have undertaken some examination of our conscience, yet one survey is not enough; Psal. 19.12. Delicta quis intelligit? Who can understand his error? How many circumstances in sin vary the very nature of the sin? And then, of how many coats, and shells, and superedifications doth that sin, which we think a single sin, consist? When we have passed many scrutinies, many inquisitions of the conscience, yet there is never room for a silence; we can never get beyond the necessity of that Petition, Ab eccultis, Lord cleanse me from my secret sins; we shall ever be guilty of sins, which we shall forget, not only because they are so little, but because they are so great; That which should be compunction, will be consternation; and the anguish, which, out of a natural tenderness of conscience, we shall have at the first entering into those sins, will make us dispute on the sins side, and, for some present ease, and to give our heavy soul breath, we will find excuses for them; and at last slide and wear into a customary practice of them: and though we cannot be ignorant that we do them, yet we shall be ignorant that they are sins; but rather make them things indifferent, or recreations necessary to maintain a cheerfulness, and so to sin on, for fear of despairing in our sins, and we shall never be able to shut our mouths against that Petition, Aboccultis; for, though the sin be manifest, the various circumstances that aggravate the sin, will be secret. And properly this was David's silence: Silentium Davidis. He confesses his silence to have been Ex dolese spiritu, Out of a spirit, in which was deceit; And David did not hope, directly, and determinately to deceive God; But by endeavouring to hid his sin from other men, and from his own conscience, he buried it deeper and deeper, but still under more and more sins. He silences his Adultery, but he smothers it, he buries it under a turf of hypocrisy, of dissimulation with Vriah, that he might have gone home, and covered his sin. He silences this hypocrisy; but that must have a larger turf to cover it; he buries it under the whole body of Vriah, treacherously murdered; He silences that murder, but no turf was large enough to cover that, but the defeat of the whole army, and after all, the blaspheming of the name and power of the Lord of Hosts, in the ruin of the army. That sin, which, if he would have carried it upward towards God, in Confession, would have vanished away, and evaporated, by silencing, by suppressing, by burying multiplied, as Corn buried in the earth, multiplies into many Ears. And, though he might (perchance for his farther punishment) overcome the remembrance of the first sin, he might have forgot the Adultery, and feel no pain of that, yet still being put to a new, and new sin, still the last sin that he did to cover the rest, could not choose but appear to his conscience, and call upon him for another sin to cover that; Howsoever he might forget last years sins, yet yesterday sin, or last night's sin will hardly be forgotten yet. And therefore, Hos. 14.2. Tollite vobiscum verba, says the Prophet, O Israel return unto the Lord; But how? Take unto you words, and turn unto the Lord. Take unto you your words, words of Confession; Take unto you his word, the words of his gracious promises; break your silence when God breaks his, in the motions of his Spirit, and God shall break off his purpose of inflicting calamities upon you. In the mean time, Rugitus. when David was not come so far, but continued silent, silent from Confession, God suffers not David to enjoy the benefit of his silence; though he continue his silence towards. God, yet God mingles Rugitum cum silentio, for all his filence, he comes to a voice of roaring and howling, when I was silent, my roaring consumed me; Theodor. so that here was a great noise, but no music. Now Theodoret calls this Rugitum compunctionis; That it was the inchoation of his repentance, which began diffidently, and with fearful vociferations; Bellarm. And so some of our later men understand it; That because David had continued long in his sin, when the Ice broke, it broke with the greater noise; when he returned to speak to God, he spoke with the more vehemence. And truly the word Shaag, Rugiit, though it signify properly the voice of a Lion, yet David uses this word Roaring, not only of himself, but of himself as he was a type of Christ: for this very word is in the beginning of that Psalm, which Christ repeated upon the Cross, Psal. 22.1. or, at least begun it, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me, and why art thou so far from the voice of my Roaring? So that, Roaring, may admit a good sense, and does not always imply a distemper, and inordinateness; for, in Christ it could not; But does it not in our Text? In our former Translation it might stand in a good sense, where the two actions are distinguished in time, thus, When I held my tongue, or when I roared, whether I kept or broke silence, all was one, no more ease in one, than the other. But with the Original, and with our later Translation, it cannot be so, which is, When I held my tongue, through my roaring, this and this fell upon me: They were concomitant actions, actions intermixed, and at the same time when he was silent, he roared too; and therefore that that he calls Roaring, is not a voice of Repentance; for if he had been come to that, than he had broke his former silence, for that Silence was a not Confessing, a not Repenting. This is then that miserable condition which is expressed in David's case, (though God delivered David from any deadly effect of it) that he had occasion of Roaring, of howling, (as the Scripture speaks often) though he kept silence: That he was at never the more ease, for all his sins: The eases that he laid hold on, were new sins in themselves, and yet they did not ease him of his other sins; he kept silence, and yet was put to exclamations. And how many examples can we present to ourselves, in our own memory, where persons which have given themselves all liberty to forge writings, to suborn witnesses, to forswear themselves, to oppress, to murder others, to make their ways easier to their ends, and yet have, for all this, though the hand of Justice have not fallen upon them, seen their whole estates consume and moulder away? When men out of their ill-grounded plots, and perverse wisdom, think themselves safe in the silence and secrecy of their sins, God overtakes them, and confounds them, with those two fearful blows, those two Thunderbolts, He brings them to Exclamations, to Vociferations, upon Fortune, upon Friends, upon Servants, upon Rivals, and Competitors, he brings them to a Roaring for their ruin, Never man was thus dealt withal as I am, never such a conspiracy as against me. And this they do, All day, says David here, Through my roaring all day. Totadie. It was long so with David; A day as long as two of their days, that have days of six months; almost a year was David in this dark, dead silence, before he saw day, or returned to speaking. With those that continue their silence all day, the roaring continues all day too; All their lives, they have new occasions of lamentations, and yet all this reduces them not, but they are benighted, they end their life with fearful voices of desperation, in a Roaring, but still in a silence of their sins, and transgressions. And this is that that falls first under his Confession, Roaring with Silence, pain, and shame, and loss, but all without Confession, or sense of sin. And then, that which falls next under his acknowledgement, is the vehement working, the lamentable effect of this Silence and Roaring, Inveteration of Bones, incineration of his whole substance, My Bones are waxen old, and my moisture is turned into the drought of Summer. Both these phrases, in which David expresses his own, Humidum literale. and prophecies of other such sinner's misery, have a literal, and a spiritual, a natural, and a moral sense. For first, this affliction of this silenced and impenitent finner though it proceed not from the sense of his sin, though it brought him not yet to a confession, but to a roaring, that is, an impatient repining and murmuring, yet it had so wrought upon his body, and whole constitution, as that it drunk up his natural, and vital moisture; Prov. 17.22. Psal. 102.3.63.9. Spiritus tristis exsiccarat, as Solomon speaks, A broken spirit had dried him up; His days were consumed like smoke, and his bones were burnt like a hearth; and that Marrow and fatness, in which, he says, he had such sat is faction, at other times, was exhausted. This is the misery of this impenitent sinner, he is beggared, but in the Devil's service, he is lamed, but in the Devil's wars; his moisture, his blood is dried up, but with licentiousness, with his overwatching, either to deceive, or to oppress others; for, as the proverb is true, Plures gulae quàm gladius, The Throat cuts more throats than the sword does, and eating starves more men then fasting does, because wastfulnesse induces penury at last, so if all our Hospitals were well surveyed, it would be found, that the Devil sends more to Hospitals then God does, and the Stews more than the wars. Thus his bodily moisture was wasted, literally the sinner is sooner infirmed, Humidum morale. sooner deformed, than another man; But there is an Humidum radical of the soul too: A tenderness, and a disposition to bewail his sins, with remorseful tears. When Peter had denied his Master, and heard the Cock crow, he did not stay to make recantations, he did not stay to satisfy them, to whom he had denied Christ, but he looked into himself first, Flevit amarè, says the Holy Ghost, He wept bitterly; His soul was not withered, his moisture was not dried up like summer, as long as he could weep. Horace. The learned Poet hath given some character, some expression of the desperate and irremediable state of the reprobate, when he calls Plutonem illacrymabilem; There is the mark of his incorrigibleness, and so of his irrecoverableness, That he cannot weep. A sinful man, an obdurate man, a stony heart may weep: Marble, and the hardest sorts of stones weep most, they have the most moisture, the most drops upon them: But this comes not out of them, not from within them; Extrinsecall occasions, pain, and shame, and want, may bring a sinner to sorrow enough, but it is not a sorrow for his sins; All this while the miserable sinner weeps not, but the miserable man, All this while, though he have winter in his eyes, his soul is turned into the drought of summer. God destroyed the first world, and all flesh with water: Tears for the want, or for the loss of friends, or of remporall blessings, do but destroy us. But God begun the new world, the Christian Church, with water too, with the Sacrament of Baptism. Pursue his Example; begin thy Regeneration with tears; If thou have frozen eyes, thou hast a frozen heart too; If the fires of the Holy Ghost cannot thaw thee, in his promises, the fire of hell will do it much less, which is a fire of obduration, not of liquefaction, and does not melt a soul, to pour it out into a new and better form, but hardens it, nails it, confirms it in the old. Christ bids you take heed, Mat. 24.20. that your flight be not in winter; That your transgmigration out of this world be not in cold days of Indevotion, nor in short days of a late repentance. Take heed too, that your flight be not in such a summer as this; That your transmigration out of this world be not in such a drought of summer, as David speaks of here, that the soul have lost her Humidum radical, all her tenderness, or all expressing of that tenderness in the sense of her transgressions. So did David see himself, so did he more foresee in others, that should farther incur God's displeasure, than he (by God's goodnesse) had done, this exsiccatian, this incineration of body and soul; sin burns and turns body and soul to a Cinder, but not such a Cinder, but that they can, and shall both burn again, and again, and for ever. And the dangerous effect of this silence and roaring, Ossa Naturalia. Drut. 29.5. David expresses in another phrase too, Inveter averunt ossa, That his bones were waxen old, and consumed; for so that word Balah signifies, Your Clothes are not waxed old upon you, nor your shoes waxed old upon your feet. In the Consuming of these Bones, (as our former Translation hath it) the vehemence of the Affliction is presented, and in the waxing old, the continuance. Here the Rule fails, Si longa levis, sigravis brevis, Calamities that last long, are light, and if they be heavy, they are short; both ways there is some intimation of some ease. But God suffers not this sinner to enjoy that ease; God will lay enough upon his body, to kill another in a week, and yet he shall pant many years under it. As the way of his Blessing is, Apprehendet tritura vindemiam, L●vit. 26. Your vintage shall reach to your threshing, and your threshing to your sowing; So in an impenitent sinner, his fever shall reach to a frenzy, his frenzy to a consumption, his consumption to a penury, and his penury to a wearying and tiring out of all that are about him, and all the sins of his youth shall meet in the anguish of his body. But that is not all; Ossa Spiricualia. Etiam animae membra sunt, says S. Basil, The soul hath her Bones too; And those are our best actions; Those, which if they had been well done, might have been called Good works, and might have met us in heaven; But when a man continues his beloved sin, when he is in doloso spiritu, and deals with God in false measures, and false weights, makes deceitful Confessions to God, his good works shall do him no good, his Bones are consumed, not able to bear him upright in the sight of God. This David sees in himself, and foresees in others, and he sees the true reason of all this, Quia aggravata manus, Because the hand of God lies heavy upon him, which is another branch of his Confession. It was the safety of the Spouse, Aggravata manus. C●at. 2.6. Gregor. That his left hand was under her head, and that his right hand embraced her: And it might well be her safety; for, Per laevam vita praesens, per dextram aeterna designatur, says S. Gregory, His left hand denotes this, and his right the other life: Our happiness in this, our assurance of the next, consists in this, that we are in the hands of God. But here in our Text, God's hand was heavy upon him; and that is an action of pushing away, and keeping down. And then when we see the great power, and the great indignation of God upon the Egyptians, Exed. 8.19. is expressed but so, Digitus Dei, the finger of God is in it, how heavy an affliction must this of David be esteemed, Quando aggravata manus, when his whole hand was, and was heavy upon him? Here then is one lesson for all men, and another peculiar to the children of God. This appertains to all, That when they are in silentio, in a seared and stupid forgetting of their sins, or in Doloso spiritu, in half-Confessions, half-abjurations, half-detestations of their sins; The hand of God will grow heavy upon them. Tell you your children of it, (says the Prophet) and let your children tell their children, and let their children tell another generation, (for this belongs to all) That which is left of the Palmer worm, the Grasshopper shall eat, and that that he leaves, the Canker worm shall eat, and the residue of the Canker worm, the Caterpillar. The hand of God shall grow heavy upon a silent sinner, in his body, in his health; and if he conceive a comfort, that for all his sickness, he is rich, and therefore cannot fail of help and attendance, there comes another worm, and devours that, faithlesness in persons trusted by him, oppressions in persons that have trusted him, facility in undertaking for others, corrupt Judges, heavy adversaries, tempests and Pirates at Sea, unseasonable or ill Markets at land, costly and expensive ambitions at Court, one worm or other shall devour his riches, that he eased himself upon. If he take up another Comfort, that though health and wealth decay, though he be poor and weak, yet he hath learning, and philosophy, and moral constancy, and he can content himself with himself, he can make his study a Court, and a few Books shall supply to him the society and the conversation of many friends, there is another worm to devour this too, the hand of divine Justice shall grow heavy upon him, in a sense of an unprofitable retiredness, in a disconsolate melancholy, and at last, in a stupidity, tending to desperation. This belongs to all, to all Non-confitents, That think not of confessing their sins at all, To all Semi-confitents, that confess them to halfs, without purpose of amendment, Aggravabitur manus, The hand of God will grow heavy upon them every way, and stop every issue, every postern, every sally, every means of escape. But that which is peculiar to the Children of God, is, That when the hand of God is upon them, they shall know it to be the hand of God, and take hold even of that oppressing hand, and not let it go, till they have received a Blessing from it, that is, raised themselves even by that heavy and oppressing hand of his, even in that affliction. Psal. 82. Psal. 77. Habak. 3.16. That when God shall fill their faces with shame, yet they shall seek his face; yea, when God shall kill him, yet he will trust in God, and seek him; And (as the Prophet carries it farther) Cum ingreditur putredo, when Rottenness enters into their Bones, yet they shall rest even in that day of trouble, of dissolution, of putrefaction. God shall call upon them, as he did upon Judah, Tritura mea, & filius are ae, O my threshing place, and the son of my floor, Esay 21.10. Thou whom I have beaten and bruised with my flails, when I have threshed, and winnowed, and sifted thee by these afflictions, and by this heavy hand, still thou shalt fix thy faithful eyes in heaven, and see a room reserved there for thee, amongst those, Apoc. 7, 14.17. which come out of great tribulations, and have made their long robes white in the blood of the Lamb; who shall therefore dwell in the midst of them, and govern them, and lead them to the lively fountains of waters, and wipe away all tears from their eyes. Even upon his own Children, his hand shall grow heavy, but that heaviness, that weight shall awake them, and that hand shall guide them, to, and in the ways of peace and reconciliation. And this both day and night, as our Text says, That is, Die ac nocte. both in the day of their prosperity, and the night of their adversity. Even in prosperity, the child of God shall feel the hand of God grow heavy upon him: He shall find a guiltiness of not having employed those temporal benefits to their right use; He shall find the Pluit laqueos, Psal. 11.6. a shower of snares to have been poured down upon him; occasions of sin; occasions of falling into sins himself; occasions of drawing others, and of buying those souls with his money, which Christ Jesus had a pre-emption of, and had bought them before with his blood: He shall find the hand of God in adversity, and love it, because it shall deliver him; He shall find his hand in prosperity, and be afraid of it, because that prosperity hath before, and may again lead him into tentations. To end all; all this, the Holy Ghost by the pen of David, Selah. seals with the last word of this Text, Selah. A word of uncertain sense, and signification; for the Jews themselves do not know exactly, and certainly what it signifies; but deriving this Selah, from Selal, which signifies Attollere, To lift up, they think it to be but a Musical note, for the raising of the voice, at that part of the Psalm, where that word is used; as, indeed the word is never used in the Bible, but in the Psalms, and twice in one Chapter, in the Prophet Habakkuk, which is a Musical, a metrical Chapter. In the Latin Translation, Hab. 3.3. & 9 and in the Arabic Translation of the Psalms it is clean left out, because they were not sure how to translate it aright. But, to speak upon the best grounds in the Grammar of that language, and upon best Authority too, the word signifies a Vehement, a Pathetical, a Hyperbolical asseveration, and attestation, and ratification of something said before. Such, in a proportion, as our Saviour's Amen, Amen is, Verily, verily I say unto you; Such, as S. Paul's fidelis Sermo, with which he seals so many truths, is, This is a faithful saying; Such, as that Apostles Coram Domino is, with which he ratifies many things, Before the Lord I speak it; and such, as Moses his Vivo ego, and Vivit Dominus, As I live saith the Lord, and As the Lord liveth. And therefore, though God be in all his words, Yea, and Amen, no word of his can perish in itself, nor should perish in us, that is, pass without observation, yet, in setting this seal of Selah to this Doctrine, he hath testified his will that he would have all these things the better understood, and the deeplier imprinted, That if a man conceal and smother his sins, Selah, Assuredly, God will open that man's mouth, and it shall not show forth his praise, but God will bring him, Ad rugitum, to fearful exclamations out of the sense of the affliction, if not of the sin; Selah, Assuredly, God will shiver his bones, shake his best actions, and discover their impurity; Selah, assuredly, God will suffer to be dried up all his moisture, all possibility of repentant tears, and all interest in the blood of Christ Jesus; Selah, Assuredly, God's hand shall be heavy upon him, and he shall not discern it to be his hand, but shall attribute all to false causes, and so place all his comfort in false remedies; He shall leave out God all day, and God shall leave out him all night, all his everlasting night, in which he shall never see day more. Selah, Assuredly, Verily, Amen, Fidelis Sermo, This is a faithful, an infallible Truth, Coram Domino, Before the Lord, Vivit Dominus, as the Lord liveth, as Moses, as Christ, as S. Paul testify their, David testifies his Doctrine, All between God and man is conditional, and where man will not be bound, God will not be bound neither; If man invest a habit and purpose of sinning, God will study a judgement against that man, 1. Sam 3.11. and do that, even in Israel, which shall make all our ears to tingle, and all our hearts to ache; Till that man repent, God will not, and when he does, God will repent too; For, though God be not Man, that he can repent, yet that God, who for Man's sake became Man, for our sakes, and his own glory, will so fare become Man again, as upon Man's true repentance, to repent the Judgements intended against that Man. SERM. LVIII. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.5. I acknowledged my sin unte thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord, and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. THis is the Sacrament of Confession; So we may call it in a safe meaning; That is, The mystery of Confession: for true Confession is a mysterious Art. 2. Thess. 2.7. Mat. 22.1. As there is a Mystery of iniquity, so there is a Mystery of the Kingdom of heaven. And the mystery of the Kingdom of heaven is this, That no man comes thither, but in a sort as he is a notorious sinner. One mystery of iniquity is, that in this world, though I multiply sins, yet the Judge cannot punish me, if I can hid them from other men, though he know them; but if I confess them, he can, he will, he must. The mystery of the Kingdom of heaven, is, That only the Declaring, the Publishing, the Notifying, and Confessing of my sins, possesses me of the Kingdom of heaven; There is a case, in which the notoriety of my sins does harm; when my open sinning, or my publishing of my sin, by way of glory in that sin, casts a scandal upon others, and leads them into tentation; for so, my sin becomes theirs, because they sin my sin by example, And their sin becomes mine, because I gave the example, and we aggravate one another's sin, and both sin both. But there is a publication of sin, that both alleviates, nay annihilates my sin, and makes him that hates sin, Almighty God, love me the better, for knowing me to be such a sinner, then if I had not told him of it. Therefore do we speak of the mystery of Confession; for it is not delivered in one Rule, nor practised in one Act. In this Confession of david's, Divisie. (I acknowledged my sin unto thee, etc.) We shall see more than so; for, though our two Parts be but the two Acts, David's Act, and God's Act, Confession and Absolution, yet is there more than one single action to be considered in each of them. For first, in the first, there is a reflected Act, that David doth upon himself, before he come to his Confession to God; Something David had done, before he came to say, I will confess, As he did confess, before God forgave the iniquity of his sin. Now that which he did in himself, and which preceded his Confession to God, was the Notum feci, I acknowledged my sin; which was not his bringing it to the knowledge of God by way of Confession, for, (as you see by the Method of the Holy Ghost, in the frame of the Text) it preceded his purpose of confessing, but it was the taking knowledge of his sin in himself, It was his first quickening, and inanimation, that grace gave his soul, as the soul gives the child in the Mother's womb. And then in David's act upon himself, follows the Non operui, I have not hid mine iniquity, none of mine iniquities from mine own sight: I have displayed to myself, anatomised mine own conscience, left no corner unsearched, I am come to a perfect understanding of mine own case, Non operui, This is David's act upon himself, the recalling, and recollecting of his sins, in his own memory. And then finding the number, the weight, and so, the oppression of those sins there, he considers where he may discharge himself of them; And Dixi, says David, which is a word that implies both Deliberation, and Resolution, and Execution too; I thought what was best to do, and I resolved upon this, and I did it; Dixi Confitebor, That I would make a true, a full, a hearty Confession to God of all those sins; for such we see the Elements and the Extent of his Confession to be; He will confess Peccata, Transgressions, Sins; Neither by an over-tendernesse, and diffidence, and scrupulosity, to call things sins, that are not so, nor by indulgent flattering, and sparing of himself, to forbear those things which are truly so; He will confess Peccata, Sins, and Peccata sua, His sins; First, Sua, that is, A se perpetrata, He will acknowledge them to have proceeded, and to have been committed by himself, he will not impute them to any other cause, least of all to God; And then, Sua, non aliena, he will confess sins that are his own sins, and not meddle with the sins of other men, that appertain not to him. This is the subject of his Confession, Sins, & His sins, and then, Peccata sua Domino, His sins unto the Lord, both in that consideration, That all sins are committed against the Lord, and in that also, That Confession of all sins is to be made unto the Lord; And lastly, all this, (as S. Hierome reads this text, and so also did our former Translation) Adversum se, Against himself, that is, without any hope of relief, or reparation in himself. He gins to think of his own sinful state, and he proceeds to a particular inquisition upon his conscience, There is his preparation, Then he considers, and thereupon resolves, and thereupon proceeds to confess things that are truly sins, And then all them as his own, without imputing them to others, If they be his own, without meddling with others, And these to the Lord, against whom all sin is committed, and to whom all Confession is to be directed; And all this still against himself, without any hope from himself. All this is in David's action, preparatorily in himself, and then declaratorily towards God, and do but make up our first Part. In the other, which is God's Act towards David, the Absolution, the Remission, the Forgiveness, we shall consider first the fullness; for, it is both of the sin, and the punishment of the sin, for the word imports both, and our two Translations have expressed it between them, for that which one Translation calls the Iniquity of the sin, the other calls The punishment; And then we shall consider the seasonableness, the speed, the acceleration of God's mercy, in the Absolution, for in David it is but Actus inchoatus, and Actus consummate as in God, David did but say, I will confess, and God forgave the iniquity, and the punishment of his sin. Now as this Distribution is Paraphrase enough upon the text, so a little larger Paraphrase upon every piece of the Paraphrase, will be as much as will fall into this exercise. For, as you see, he branches are many, and full of fruit, and I can but shake them, and leave every one to gather his own portion, to apply those notes, which may most advance his edification. First then in this mystery of Confession, 1 Part. Notum seci. we consider David's reflected act, his preparatory act, preceding his confession to God, and transacted in himself, of which the first motion is, the Notum feci, I acknowledged in myself, I came to a feeling in myself, what my sinful condition was. This is our quickening in our regeneration, and second birth; and till this come, a sinner lies as the Chaos in the beginning of the Creation, before the Spirit of God had moved upon the face of the waters, Dark, and void, and without form; He lies, as we may conceive, out of the Authors of Natural Story, the slime and mud of the River Nilus to lie, before the Sunbeams strike upon it; which after, by the heat of those beams, produces several shapes, and forms of creatures. So till this first beam of grace, which we consider here, strike upon the soul of a sinner, he lies in the mud and slime, in the dregs and lees, and tartar of his sin. He cannot so much as wish, that that Sun would shine upon him, he doth not so much as know, that there is such a Sun, that hath that influence, and impression; But if this first beam of Grace enlighten him to himself, reflect him upon himself, notum facit, (as the Text says) if it acquaint him with himself, then, as the creatures in the Creation, then, as the new creatures at Nilus, his sins begin to take their forms, and their specifications, and they appear to him in their particular true shapes, and that which he hath in a general name, called Pleasure or Wantonness, now calls itself in his conscience, a direct Adultery, a direct Incest; and that which he hath called Frugality, and providence for family and posterity, tells him plainly, My name is Oppression, and I am the spirit of covetousness. Many times men fall into company, and accompany others to houses of riot and uncleanness, and do not so much as know their sinful companions names; nay they do not so much as know the names of the sins that they commit, nor those circumstances in those sins, which vary the very name and nature of the sin. But then, Gregor. Oculos, quos culpa claudit, poena aperit, Those eyes, which sin shut, this first beam of Grace opens, when it comes, and works effectually upon us; Till this season of grace, jer. 2.29. this sinner is blind to the Sun, and deaf to Thunder. A wild Ass, that is used to the wilderness, and snuffeth up wind at her pleasure, in her occasion who can turn her away? An habitual sinner, that doth not stumble, but tumble, as a mighty stone down a hill, in the ways of his sin, in his occasion, who can turn him? in his rage of sin, what law can withhold him? But says the Prophet there, of that wild Ass, All they that seek her, will not weary themselves; Friends, Magistrates, Preachers, do but weary themselves, and lose their labour, in endeavouring to reclaim that sinner; But in her Month they shall find her, says the Prophet; That is, say our Expositors, when she is great and unwieldy. Some such Month, God of his goodness brings upon this sinner; Some sickness, some judgement stops him, and then we find him; God by his Ordinance, executed by us, brings him to this Notum feci, into company with himself, into an acquaintance and conversation with himself, and he sees his sins look with other faces, and he hears his sins speak with other voices, and he finds then to call one another by other names: And when he is thus come to that consideration, Lord! how have I mistaken myself, Am I, that thought myself, and passed with others, for a sociable, a pleasurable man, and good company; am I a leprous Adulterer, is that my name? Am I, that thought myself a frugal man, and a good husband; I, whom fathers would recommend to their children, and say, Mark how he spares, how he grows up, how he gathers, am I an oppressing Extortioner, is that my name? Blessed be thy name, O Lord, that hast brought me to this notum feci, to know mine own name, mine own miserable condition; he will also say, may that blessing of thine enlarge itself farther, that as I am come to this notum feci, to know that I mistook myself all this while, so I may proceed to the non operui, to a perfect sifting of my conscience, in all corners: which is David's second motion in his act of preparation, and our next consideration, I acknowledged my sin, and I hid none, disguised none, non operui. Sometimes the Magistrate is informed of an abuse, Non operni. and yet proceeds to no farther search, nor inquisition. This word implies a sifting of the conscience. He doth not only take knowledge of his sins, than when they discover themselves; of his riot and voluptuousness, then when he burns in a fever occasioned by his surfeits; nor of his licentiousness, then when he is under the anguish and smart of corrosives; nor of his wastfulnesse and pride, then when he is laid in prison for debt: He doth not seek his sins in his Belly, nor in his Bones, nor in his Purse, but in his Conscience, and he unfolds that, rips up that, and enters into the privatest, and most remote corners thereof. And there is much more in this negative circumstance, non operui, I hide nothing, then in the former acknowledgement, notum feci, I took knowledge of my sins. When they sent to sift john Baptist, whether he were The Christ, because he was willing to give them all satisfaction, joh. 1.20. he expressed himself so, He confessed, and denied not, and said, I am not the Christ. So when joshuah pressed Achan, to confess his trespass, Iosh. 7.19. he presses him with this negative addition, Show me what thou hast done, and hid it not; that is, disguise nothing that belongs to it. For, the better to imprint a confidence, and to remove all suspicion, Men to to their Masters, Wives to their Husbands, will confess something, but yet operiunt, they hid more. Those words, In multitudine virtutis tuae, Psal. 66.3. Through the greatness of thy power, thine enemies shall submit, S. Jerome, and the Septuagint before, and Tremellius after, and all that bind themselves to the Hebrew letter, read it thus, Mentientur tibi inimici tui, when thy power is showed upon them, when thy hand lies upon them, thine enemies will lie unto thee, They will counterfeit a confession, they will acknowledge some sins, but yet operiunt, they hid, they cover others. 1 Sam. 15. Saul in the defeat of the Amalekites reserved some of the fattest of the spoil, and being deprehended, and reprehended, he said he intended it for sacrifice: Many times, men in great place, abuse their own souls with that imagination, or palliation, That they do God good service in some sin, and that they should more hurt the cause of God, if they should proceed earnestly to the punishment of those that oppose it, then if they let them alone, and so leave laws unexecuted, and God's truth endangered. But David's issue was, non iniquitas, non operui, I left none iniquity unsearched, I hide none. But any thing serves us for a cover of sin, even from a Net, that every man sees thorough, to such a cloud of darkness, as none but the prince of darkness, that cast that cloud upon us, can see us in it, nor we see ourselves. That we should hid lesser sins with greater, is not so strange; That in an Adultery, we should forget the circumstances in it, and the practices to come to it. But we hid greater sins with lesser, with a manifold, and multiplied throng and cloud of lesser sins, all comes to an indifferency, and so we see not great sins. Easiness of conversation in a woman, seems no great harm; Adorning themselves to please those with whom they converse, is not much more; To hear them, whom they are thus willing to please, praise them, and magnify their perfections, is little more than that; To allow them to sue, and solicit for the possession of that which they have so much praised, is not much more neither; Nor will it seem much at last, to give them possession of that they sue for; nay it will seem a kind of injustice to deny it them. We hid lesser sins with greater, greater with lesser; Nay we hid the devil with God, we hid all the week's sins with a Sabbaths solemnity: And as in the Roman Church, they poisoned God, (when they had made their Bread-god, they poisoned the Emperor with that bread) so this is a Possessing of God, a making the devil to enter into God, when we hid our sins with an outward sanctity, and call God to witness and testify to the Congregation, that we are saints, when we are devils; for this is a suborning of God, and a drawing of God himself into a perjury. We hid our sins in his house, by hypocrisy, all our lives, and we hid them at our deaths, perchance with an Hospital. And truly we had need do so, when we have impoverished God, in his children, by our extorsions, and wounded him, and lamed him, in them, by our oppressions, we had need provide God an Hospital. As men that rob houses thrust in a child at the window, and he opens greater doors for them, so lesser sins make way for greater. De minimis non curat Lex, The law is feign to pass over small faults; but De minimis cur at lux, That light of grace, by which a sinner disposes himself to confession, must discover every sin, and hid none, suffer none to hid itself, nor lie hidden under others. When God speaks so much of Behemoth, and Leviathan, job 40. & 41. the great land and seaoppressors, he calls us to the consideration of the insupportablenesse of great sins; but in the plains of Egypt by hail, and locusts, and louse, little and contemptible things, he calls us to the consideration of these vermin of the soul, lesser and unconsidered sins. David had not accomplished his work upon himself, his reflected, his preparatory Act, till he had made both those steps, notum feci, non operui, first I took knowledge of my sinful condition, and then I proceeded to a particular inquisition of my Conscience, I took knowledge of my sin, and mine iniquity I have not hid, and then he was fit to think of an access to God, by confession, Dixi confiteber, etc. This word, Dixi meditando. Dixi, Amar, I said, is a word that implies first meditation, deliberation, considering, and then upon such meditation, a resolution too, and execution after all. When it is said of God, dixit, and dixit, God said this, and said that, in the first Creation, Cave ne cogites strepitum, Basil. Do not think that God uttered any sound; His speaking was inward, his speaking was thinking. So David uses this word in the person of another, Dixit insipiens, Psal. 14.1. The fool hath said, that is, In cord, said in his heart, that is, thought that there is no God. There speaking is thinking; and speaking is resolving too. So David's son Solomon uses the word, 1 King. 5.5. Behold I purpose to build a house unto the Lord, where the word is, I say, I will do it, Speaking is determining; and speaking is executing too, Dixi custodiam, I said I will take heed to my ways, Psal. 39.1. that is, I will proceed and go forward in the paths of God. And such a premeditation, such a preconsideration, do all our approaches, and accesses to God, and all our acts in his service require. God is the Rock of our salvation; God is no Occasional God, no Accidental God; neither will God be served by Occasion, nor by Accident, but by a constant Devotion. Our communication with God must not be in Interjections; that come in by chance; nor our Devotions made up of Parentheses, that might be left out. They err equally, that make a God of Necessity, and that make a God of Contingency: They that with the Manichees, make an ill God, a God that forces men to do all the ill that they do, And they that with the Epicures, make an idle God, an indifferent God, that cares not what is done; God is not Destiny; Then there could be no reward, nor punishment: but God is not Fortune neither, for then there were no Providence. If God have given reason only to Man, it were strange that Man should exercise that reason, in all his Moral and Civil actions, and only do the acts of God's worship casually; To go to Court, to Westminster, to the Exchange, for ends, and to come to Church, by chance, or for company, or for some collateral respects, that have no relation to God, Not to think of our Confession, till the Priest have called upon us, to say after him, We have erred and strayed from thy ways like lost sheep, To come for Absolution, Dan. 2.3. as Nabuchadnezzar came to Daniel, for the interpretation of his Dream, who did not only not understand his Dream, but not remember it, Somnium ejus fugit ab eo, He did not only not know what his Dream meant, but he did not know what his Dream was, Not to consider the nature of Confession, and Absolution, not to consider the nature of the sins we should confess, and be absolved of, is a stupidity against David's practice here; Dixit, He said, he meditated, he considered, God's service is no extemporal thing. But then Dixit, He resolved too, for so the word signifies, Consideration, but Resolution upon it; And then, that he Resolved, he Executed. This is not only david's dixit in cord, Dixi statuendo. Luke 15.12. where speaking is thinking, nor only solomon's dixi adificabo, I resolved how I might build, but it is also the Prodigals Dixi revertar, I said I will go to my Father, A resolving and executing of that Resolution for that, that execution crownes all. How many think to come hither, when they wake, and are not ready when the hour comes? And even this morning's omission is an abridgement, or an essay of their whole lives, They think to repent every day, and are not ready when the bell tolls. Cajetan. It is well said of Gods speaking, in the Creation, It was Dictio practica, diffinitiva, Imperativa, Ambrose. It was an Actual speaking, a Definitive, an Imperative speaking; And, Dicto absolvit negotium, His saying he would do it, that is, his meaning to do it, was the very doing of it. Our Religious duties require meditations, for God is no extemporal God; Those produce determinations, for God must not be held in suspense; And they flow into executions, for God is not an illusible God, to be carried with promises, or purposes only; And all those links of this religious Chain, Consideration, Resolution, Execution, Thought, Word, and Practise, are made out of this golden word, Amar, Dixi, I said I will do it. And then, Dixi confitebor, I considered, that my best way was to confess, and I resolved to do so, and I did it; Dixi confitebor. It is but a homely Metaphor, Confitebor. Origen. but it is a wholesome, and a useful one, Confessio vomitus, Confession works as a vomit; It shakes the frame, and it breaks the bed of sin; and it is an ease to the spiritual stomach, to the conscience, to be thereby disburdened. It is an ease to the sinner, to the patiented; but that that makes it absolutely necessary, is that it is a glory to God; for in all my spiritual actions, Appreciations, or Deprecations, whether I pray for benefits, or against calamities, still my Alpha, and Omega, my first and last motive, Iosh. 7.19. must be the glory of God. Therefore joshuah says to Achan, My Son, give I pray thee, glory unto the Lord God of Israel, and make Confession unto him. Now, the glory of God arises not out of the Confessing; but because every true Confessing is accompanied with a detestation of the sin, as it hath separated me from God, and a sense of my reunion, and redintegration with God, in the abjuration of my former sins, (for, to tell my sin by way of a good tale, or by boasting in it, though it be a revealing, a manifesting, is not a Confession) in every true confession God hath glory, because he hath a strayed soul, reunited to his Kingdom. And to advance this Glory, David confesses Peccata, sins; which is our next Consideration, I said, I will confess my sins unto the Lord. First he resents his state, All is not well; Then he examines himself, Peccata vera. Thus and thus it stands with me; Then he considers, than he resolves, than he executes, He confesses, (so far we are gone) and now he confesses sins. For, the Pharisees, (though he pretended a Confession) was rather an exprobration, how much God had been beholden to him, for his Sabbaths, for his Alms, for his Tithes, for his Fasting. David confesses sins; first, such things as were truly sins. For, as the element of Air, that lies between the Water, and the Fire, is sometimes condensed into water, sometimes rarified into fire: So lies the conscience of man between two operations of the Devil; sometimes he rarefies it, evaporates it, that it apprehends nothing, feels nothing to be sin, sometimes he condenses it, that every thing falls and sticks upon it, in the nature, and takes the weight of sin, and he mis-interprets the indifferent actions of others, and of his own, and destroys all use of Christian liberty, all conversation, all recreation, and out of a false fear, of being undutiful to God, is unjust to all the world, and to his own soul, and consequently to God himself, who, of all notions, would not be received in the notion of a Cruel, or Tyrannical God. In an obdurate conscience that feels no sin, the Devil glories most, but in the overtender conscience he practices most; That is his triumphant, but this is his militant Church; That is his Sabbath, but this is his six day's labour; In the obdurate he hath induced a security, in the scriptures, which the Holy Ghost hath expressed in so many names, as Sin; Sin, Wickedness, Iniquity, Transgressions, Offences, Many, many more; And all this, that thereby we might reflect upon ourselves often, and see if our particular actions fell not under some of those names; But then, lest this should over-intimidate us, there are as many names given by the Holy Ghost, to the Law of God; Law, Statutes, Ordinances, Covenants, Testimony, Precept, and all the rest, of which there is some one at least, repeated in every verse of the hundred and nineteenth Psalm; that thereby we might still have a Rule to measure, and try our actions by, whether they be sins or no. For, as the Apostle says, He had not known sin, if he had not known the Law; So there had been no sin, if there had been no Law. And therefore that soul that feels itself oppressed under the burden of a Vow, must have recourse to the Law of God, and see whether that Vow fall under the Rule of that Law; For as an overtender conscience may call things sins, that are not, and so be afraid of things that never were, so may it also of things that were, but are not now; of such sins as were truly sins, and fearful sins, but are now dead, dead by a true repentance, and buried in the Sea of the blood of Christ Jesus, and sealed up in that Monument, under the seal of Reconciliation, the blessed Sacrament, and yet rise sometimes in this tender conscience, in a suspicion and jealousy, that God hath not truly, not fully forgiven them. And as a Ghost, which we think we see, affrights us more than an army that we do see: So these apparitions of sins, of things that are not against any Law of God, and so are not sins, or sins that are dead in a true repentance, and so have no being at all, by the Devils practise work dangerously upon a distempered conscience; for, as God hath given the Soul an Imagination, and a Fancy, as well as an Understanding, So the Devil imprints in the conscience, a false Imagination, as well as a fearful sense of true sin. David confesses sins, sins that were truly sins. But the more ordinary danger is, Omniae. in our not calling those things which are truly sins, by that name. For, as sometimes when the Baptism of a Child is deferred for State, the Child dies unbaptised: So the sinner defers the Baptism of his sin, in his tears, and in the blood of his Saviour, offered in the blessed Sacrament, till he die nameless, nameless in the book of Life. It is a Character, that one of the ancientest Poets gives of a well-bred, and well-governed Gentleman, That he would not tell such lies as were like truths, not probable lies; nor such truths as were like lies, not wonderful, not incredible truths; It is the constancy of a rectified Christian, not to call his indifferent actions sins, for that is to slander God, as a cruel God; nor to call sins indifferent actions, for that is to undervalue God, as a negligent God. God doth not keep the Conscience of man upon the wrack, in a continual torture and stretching; But God doth not stupefy the conscience with an Opiate, in an insensibleness of any sin. The law of God is the balance, and the Criterium; By that try thine actions, and then confess. David did so; Peccata, he confessed sins; nothing, that was not so, as such; neither omitted he any thing, that was so. And then they were Peccata sua, His sins, I said, I will confess my sins unto the Lord. First, Sua. Sua, His sins, that is, à se perpetrata, sins which he confesses to have been of his voluntary committing; He might, and did not avoid them. When Adam said, by way of alienation, and transferring his fault, The woman whom thou gavest me; And the woman said, Gen. 3.12. The Serpent deceived me; God took this, by way of Information to find out the Principal, but not by way of extenuation, or alleviation of their faults; Every Adam eats with as much sweat of his brows, and every Eve brings forth her Children with as much pain in her travail, as if there had been no Serpent in the case. If a man sin against God, who shall plead for him? If a man lay his sins upon the Serpent, upon the Devil, it is no plea, but if he lay them upon God, it is blasphemy. job finds some ground of a pious Expostulation with God, in that, My flesh is not brass, nor my strength stones; And such as I am, thou hast made me; why then dost thou set me up as a mark to shoot at? But job never hopes for ease, in any such allegation; Thou hast made my soul a Cistern, and then poured tentations into it; Thou hast enfeebled it with denying it thy Grace, and then put a giant, a necessity of sinning upon it. My sins are mine own; The Sun is no cause of the shadow my body casts, nor God of the sins I commit. David confesses his sins, that is, he confesses them to be His; And then he confesses His, He meddles not with those that are other men's. The Magistrate and the Minister are bound to consider the sins of others; Non alienae. for, their sins become Qaodammodo nostra, in some sort ours, if we do not reprove, if the Magistrate do not correct those sins. All men are bound to confess, and lament the sins of the people. It was then when Daniel was in that exercise of his Devotion, Confessing his sin, Dan. 9.12. and the sin of his people, that he received that comfort from the Angel Gabriel; And yet, even then, the first thing that fell under his Confession, was his own sin, My sin, And then, The sin of my people. When josephs' brethren came to a sense of that sin, in having sold him, none of them transfers the sin from himself, neither doth any of them discharge any of the rest of that sin: Gen. 42.21. They all take all; They said to one another, says that Text, we, all we, are verily guilty, and therefore is this distress come upon us, upon us all; Nationall calamities are induced by general sins, and where they fall, we cannot so charge the Laity, as to free the Clergy, nor so charge the people, as to free the Magistrate. But as great sums are raised by little personal Contributions; so a little true sorrow from every soul, would make a great sacrifice to God, and a few tears from every eye, a deeper and a safer Sea, about this Island, then that that doth wall it. Let us therefore never say, that it is Aliena ambitio, The immoderate ambition of a pretending Monarch, that endangers us, That it is Aliena perfidia, The falsehood of perfidious neighbours that hath disappointed us, That it is Aliena fortuna, The growth of others who have shot up under our shelter, that may overtop us; They are Peccata nostra, our own pride, our own wantonness, our own drunkenness, that makes God shut and close his hand towards us, withdraw his former blessings from us, and then strike us with that shut, and closed, and heavy hand, and multiply calamities upon us. What a Parliament meets at this hour in this Kingdom? How many such Committees as this? how many such Congregations stand, as we do here, in the presence of God, at this hour? And what a Subsidy should this State receive, and what a sacrifice should God receive, if every particular man would but departed with his own beloved sin? We dispute what is our own, as though we would but know what to give. Alas, our sins are our own, let us give them. Our sins are our own; that we confess; And we confess them, according to David's Method, Domino, to the Lord; I will confess my sins to the Lord. After he had deliberated, Domino peecavi. and resolved upon his course, what he would do, he never stayed upon the person, to whom; His way being Confession, he stayed not long in seeking his ghostly Father, his Confessor, Confitebor Domino. And first, Peccata Domino, That his sins were sins against the Lord. For, as every sin is a violation of a Law, so every violation of a Law reflects upon the Lawmaker. It is the same offence to coin a penny, and a piece; The same to counterfeit the seal of a Subpoena, as of a Pardon. The second Table was writ by the hand of God, as well as the first; And the Majesty of God, as he is the Lawgiver, is wounded in an adultery, and a theft, as well as in an Idolatry, or a blasphemy. It is not enough to consider the deformity and the foulness of an Action so, as that an honest man would not have done it; but so as it violates a law of God, and his Majesty in that law. The shame of men, is one bridle, that is cast upon us. It is a moral obduration, and in the suburbs, next door to a spiritual obduration, to be Voyce-proofe, Censure-proofe, not to be afraid, nor ashamed, what the world says. He that relies upon his Plaudo domi, Though the world hisse, I give myself a Plaudite at home, I have him at my Table, and her in my bed, whom I would have, and I care not for rumour; he that rests in such a Plaudite, prepares for a Tragedy, a Tragedy in the Amphitheatre, the double Theatre, this world, and the next too. Even the shame of the world should be one one bridle, but the strongest is the other, Peccata Domino, To consider that every sin is a violation of the Majesty of God. And then Confitebor Domino, says David, I will confess my sins to the Lord; Domino confitebor. sins are not confessed, if they be not confessed to him; and if they be confessed to him, in case of necessity it will suffice, though they be confessed to no other. Indeed, a confession is directed upon God, though it be made to his Minister: If God had appointed his Angels, or his Saints to absolve me, as he hath his Ministers, I would confess to them. joshuah took not the jurisdiction out of God's hands, when he said to Achan, Josh. 7.19. Give glory unto the God of Israel, in making thy confession to him; And tell me now, what thou hast done, and hid it not from me. Levit. 14.2. The law of the Leper, is, That he shall be brought unto the Priest; Men come not willingly to this manifestation of themselves; nor are they to be brought in chains, as they do in the Roman Church, by a necessity of an exact enumeration of all their sins: But to be led with that sweetness, with which our Church proceeds, in appointing sick persons, if they seel their consciences troubled with any weighty matter, to make a special confession, and to receive absolution at the hands of the Priest; And then to be remembered, that every coming to the Communion, is as serious a thing as our transmigration out of this world, and we should do as much here, for the settling of our Conscience, as upon our deathbed; And to be remembered also, that none of all the Reformed Churches have forbidden Confession, though some practise it less than others. If I submit a cause to the Arbitrement of any man, to end it, secundùm voluntatem, says the Law, How he will, yet still Arbitrium est arbitrium boni viri, his will must be regulated by the rules of common honesty, and general equity. So when we lead men to this holy ease of discharging their heavy spirits, by such private Confessions, yet this is still limited by the law of God, so far as God hath instituted this power by his Gospel, in his Church, and far from inducing amongst us, that torture of the Conscience, that usurpation of God's power, that spying into the counsels of Princes, & supplanting of their purposes, with which the Church of Rome hath been deeply charged. And this useful and un-mis-interpretable Confession, which we speak of, Adversum me. is the more recommended to us, in that with which David shuts up his Act, (as out of S. Hierome, and out of our former translation, we intimated unto you) that he doth all this Adversum se, I will confess my sins unto the Lord, against myself; The more I find Confession, or any religious practice, to be against myself, and repugnant to mine own nature, the farther I will go in it. For, still the Adversum me, is Cum Deo; The more I say against myself, the more I vilify myself, the more I glorify my God. As S. Chry sostome says, every man is Spontaneus Satan, a Satan to himself, as Satan is a Tempter, every man can tempt himself; so I will be Spontaneus Satan, as Satan is an Accuser, an Adversary, I will accuse myself. I consider often that passionate humiliation of S. Peter, Exi à me Domine, He fell at jesus knees, saying, Depart from me for I am a sinful man, O Lord; Luk. 5.8. And I am often ready to say so, and more; Depart from me, O Lord, for I am sinful enough to infect thee; As I may persecute thee in thy Children, so I may infect thee in thine Ordinances; Depart, in withdrawing thy word from me, for I am corrupt enough to make even thy saving Gospel, the savour of death unto death; Depart, in withholding thy Sacrament, for I am leprous enough to taint thy flesh, and to make the balm of thy blood, poison to my soul; Depart, in withdrawing the protection of thine Angels from me, for I am vicious enough to imprint corruption and rebellion into their nature. And if I be too foul for God himself to come near me, for his Ordinances to work upon me, I am no companion for myself, I must not be alone with myself; for I am as apt to take, as to give infection; I am a reciprocal plague; passively and actively contagious; I breathe corruption, and breath it upon myself; and I am the Babylon that I must go out of, Gen. 32.10. Mat. 8.8. or I perish. I am not only under jacobs' Non dignus, Not worthy the least of all thy mercies; nor only under the Centurions Non dignus, I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roof, That thy Spirit should ever speak to my spirit, (which was the form of words, in which every Communicant received the Sacrament, in the Primitive Church, Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldest enter under my roof;) Nor only under the Prodigals Non dignus, Luke 15.21. Not worthy to be called thy son; neither in the filiation of Adoption, for I have deserved to be disinherited; nor in the filiation of Creation, for I have deserved to be annihilated; Mark 1.7. But Non dignus procumbere, I am not worthy to stoop down, to fall down, to kneel before thee, in thy Minister, the Almoner of thy Mercy, the Treasurer of thine Absolutions. So fare do I confess Adversum me, against myself, as that I confess, I am not worthy to confess, nor to be admitted to any access, any approach to thee, much less to an act, so near Reconciliation to thee, as an accusation of myself, or so near thy acquitting, as a self-condemning. Be this the issue in all Controversies, whensoever any new opinions distract us, Be that still thought best, that is most Adversum nos, most against ourselves, That that most lays flat the nature of man, so it take it not quite away, and blast all virtuous endeavours; That that most exalts the Grace and Glory of God, be that the Truth; And so have you the whole mystery of David's Confession, in both his Acts; preparatory, in resenting his sinful condition in general, and survaying his conscience in particular; And than his Deliberation, his Resolution, his Execution, his Confession; Confession of true sins, and of them only, and of all them, of his sins, and all this to the Lord, and all that against himself. That which was proposed for the second Part, must fall into the compass of a Conclusion, and a short one, that is God's Act, Thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. This is a wide door, 2 Part. and would let out Armies of Instructions to you; but we will shut up this door, with these two leaves thereof, The fullness of God's Mercy, He forgives the sin and the punishment; And the seasonableness, the acceleration of his mercy, in this expression in our text, that david's is but Actus inchoatus, He says he will confess, And Gods is Actus consummatus, Thou forgavest, Thou hadst already forgiven the iniquity, and punishment of my sin. These will be the two leaves of this door; and let the hand that shuts them be this And, this Particle of Connection which we have in the text, I said, And thou didst. For though this Remission of sin be not presented here as an effect upon that cause of David's Confession, (It is not delivered in a Quia, and an Ergo, Because David did this, God did that; for man's will leads not the will of God, as a cause, who does all his acts of mercy for his mercy's sake) yet though it be not an effect, as from a cause, yet it is at least as a consequent from an occasion, so assured, so infallible, as let any man confess as David did, and he shall be sure to be forgiven as David was. For though this forgiveness be a flower of mercy, yet the root grows in the Justice of God; If we acknowledge our sin, 1 John 1.9. he is faithful and just to forgive us our sin; It grows out of his faithfulness, as he hath vouchsafed to bind himself by a promise, And out of his Justice, as he hath received a full satisfaction for all our sins. So that this Hand, this And, in our Text, is as a ligament, as a sinew, to connect and knit together that glorious body of Gods preventing grace, and his subsequent grace; if our Confession come between and tie the knot, God, that moved us to that act, will perfect all. Here enters the fullness of his mercy, Plenitudo. Rev. 3 20. at one leaf of this door; well expressed at our door, in that Ecce sto, & pulso, Behold, I stand at the door and knock; for, first he comes; here is no mention of our calling of him before; He comes of himself; And then he suffers not us to be ignorant of his coming, he comes so, as that he manifests himself, Ecce, Behold; And then he expects not that we should wake with that light, and look out of ourselves, but he knocks, solicits us, at least, with some noise at our doors, some calamities upon our neighbours; And again he appears not, like a lightning that passes away as soon as it is seen, that no man can read by it, nor work by it, nor light a candle, nor kindle a coal by it, but he stands at the door, and expects us; all day; not only with a patience, but with a hunger to effect his purpose upon us, he would come in, and sup with us, Accept our diet, our poor endeavours; And then, would have us sup with him, (as it is there added) would feast us with his abundant Graces, which he brings even home to our doors; But those he does not give us at the door; not till we have let him in, by the good use of his former grace; And as he offers this fullness of his mercy, by these means before, so by way of Pardon, and Remission, if we have been defective in opening the door upon his standing and knocking, this fullness is fully expressed in this word of this Text, as our two Translations, (neither departing from the natural signification of the word) have rendered it. The word is the same here, in David's sweetness, as in cain's bitterness, Gnavon; Poena. Gen 4.13. and we cannot tell, whether Cain speak there of a punishment too great to be borne, or of a sin too great to be pardoned; Nor which David means here; It fills up the measure of God's mercy, if we take him to mean both. God, upon Confession, forgives the punishment of the sin; So that the just terror of Hell, and the imaginary terror of Purgatory, for the next World, is taken away; and for this World, what calamities and tribulations soever fall upon us, after these Confessions, and Remissions, they have not the nature of punishments, but they are Fatherly Corrections, and Medicinal assistances, against relapses, and have their main relation and prospect upon the future. For not only the sin itself, but the iniquity of the sin, is said to be forgiven; Iniquitas. God keeps nothing in his mind against the last day; But whatsoever is worst in the sin, the venom, The malignity of the sin, The violation of his Law, The affrontings of his Majesty residing in that Law, though it have been a winking at his light, a resisting of his light, the ill nature, the malignity, the iniquity of the sin is forgiven. Only this remains, That God extinguishes not the right of a third Person, nor pardons a Murder so, as that he bars another from his Appeal: Not that his pardon is not full, upon a full Confession, but that the Confession is no more full, if it be not accompanied with Satisfaction, that is, Restitution of all unjustly gotten, then if the Confession lacked Contrition, and true sorrow. Otherwise the iniquity of the sin, and the punishment of the sin, are both fully pardoned. And so we have shut one leaf of this door, The fullness; The other is the speed, and acceleration of his mercy, and that leaf we will clap to, in a word. This is expressed in this, David is but at his Dixit, and God at his Remisit; Promptitudo David was but Saying, nay, but Thinking, and God was Doing, nay Perfecting his work. To the Lepers that cried out for mercy, Christ said, Go, show yourselves to the Priest; Luke 17.11. So he put them into the way; and they went, says the text; and as they went, they were healed upon the way. No man comes into the way, but by the illumination, and direction of God, Christ put them into the way. The way is the Church; no man is cured out of the way; no man that separates himself from the Church; nor in the way neither, except he go; If he live negligently, and trust only upon the outward profession; nor though he go, except he go according to Christ bidding; except he conform himself to that worship of God, and to those means of sanctification, which God hath instituted in his Church, without singularities of his own, or Traditions of other men's inventing, and imposing. This, this submitting, and conforming ourselves to God, so as God hath commanded us, the purposing of this, and the endeavouring of this, is our Dixit in the Text, our saying that we will do it, and upon this Dixit, this purposing, this endeavouring, instantly, immediately, infallibly follows the Remisit, God will, God does, God hath forgiven, the iniquity, and the punishment of the sin. Therefore to end all, Pour out thy heart like water before the face of the Lord. Lament. 2.19. No liquor comes so clearly, so absolutely from the vessel, not oil, not milk, not wine, not honey, as that it leaves no taste behind; so may sweet sins; and therefore pour out, says the Prophet, not the liquor, but the heart itself, and take a new heart of Gods making; for thy former heart was never so of Gods making, as that Adam had not a hand in it; and his Image was in it, in Original sin, as well as Gods in the Creation. As liquors poured out leave a taste and a smell behind them, unperfected Confessions (And who perfects his Confession?) leave ill gotten goods sticking upon thine heir, and they leave a taste, and a delight to think, and speak of former sins, sticking upon thyself; But pour out thy heart like water; All ill impressions in the very root. And for the accomplishment of this great Mystery of Godliness by Confession, fix thy Meditations upon those words, and in the strength of them, come now, (or when thou shalt be better strengthened by the Meditation of them) to the Table of the Lord, The Lord looketh upon men, And, if any say, I have sinned, Job 33.27. and perverted that which was right, and it profited me not, he will deliver his soul from going down into the pit, and his life shall see light; and it is added, Lo all these things worketh God twice and thrice. Here is a fullness of consolation, first plenary, and here is a present forgiveness; If man, if any man say, I have sinned, God doth, God forgives; and here is more than that, an iteration, if thou fall upon infirmity again, God will on penitence more carefully performed, forgive again. This he will do twice, or thrice says the Hebrew, our Translation might boldly say, as it doth, This God will do often. But yet if God find dolum in spiritu, an over-confidence in this, God cannot be mocked; And therefore take heed of trusting upon it too often, but especially of trusting upon it too late. And whatsoever the Holy Ghost may mean by the twice or thrice, be sure to do it once, do it now, and receive thy Saviour there, and so as he offers himself unto thee in these his Ordinances this day, once, and twice, and thrice, that is, in prayer, in preaching, in the Sacrament. For this is thy trinity upon earth, that must bring thee to the Trinity in heaven: To which Trinity, etc. SERM. LIX. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.6. For this shall every one that is godly prey unto thee, in a time when thou mayest be found; surely in the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh unto him. YOu would not be weary of reading a long conveyance, Divisio. in which the land were given to yourselves; nor of a long Will, in which the body of the state were bequeathed to you. Be not weary, if at any time your patience be exercised some minutes beyond the threescore, sometime beyond the hour in these exercises, for we exhibit the conveyance, in which the land, the land of Promise is made yours, and the Testament, in which even the Testator himself is bequeathed to you. But Legacies must be demanded, and oftentimes sued for; and in this text you are directed how to come by it, by prayer, (For this shall every one, etc.) And you are encouraged in the suit by the value of that you are to recover, by the effect of prayer, Surely in the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh to him: and these two, the way and the end, the manner and the matter, prayer and the benefit thereof, will be our two parts. And in the first of these, The duty of prayer, though we be elsewhere commanded To pray continually, 1 Thess. 5.17. yet for all that continual disposition, we have here certain limitations, or rather indeed preparations, lest that which we call Prayer should not be so, and these are four: For first, it is but omnis sanctus, every godly man shall pray, for the prayer of the wicked turns to sin; And then the object of prayer, to whom it must be directed, is limited, it is but ad te, unto thee he shall pray, beyond him we cannot go, and he that prays short of him, to any on this side of God, falls short in his prayer; And in a third consideration, the subject, the matter of his prayer is limited too, It is but propter hoc, for this shall he pray, that is, for that which hath been formerly expressed, not whatsoever our desires, or our anguish, and vexation, and impatience presents or suggests to us; And lastly, the time is limited too, In tempore opportuno, In a time when thou mayest be found. In these four, we shall determine that first part, the duty; and in the second the reward, the benefit, which is deliverance, (Surely in the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh him) we shall see first, that the world is diluvium aquarum, a deluge of water floods that threaten all; But yet though worldly calamities be of that spreading, and diffusive, and overflowing nature, non approximabit, there are places that it cannot come to, rocks that it cannot shake, hills that it cannot overflow; God hath so erected the godly man, that he is a non ultra, a bank to this sea; It shall not come near him; and this David establishes with that seal of infallibility, Surely, Surely in the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh him. And these be the steps by which we shall lead you to the greatest happiness, that is, deliverance from all afflictions, and that by the noblest means, and the fairest way, that is, familiar conversation with God by prayer. Into our first part, 1 Part. The duty of prayer, we shall make our entry with this consideration, That our religious Duties, in their precepts, are for the most part accompanied with reasons to induce us to the performance thereof: Hoc fac & vives; Do this, says God; do it, because I command it, at least do it, because if thou do it, thou shalt live for ever. And so, Be not forgetful to entertain strangers, Heb. 13.2. for thereby some have entertained Angels unawares; Here the reason of the precept is example; others have prospered that way, therefore walk thou in it. God illustrates his precepts, comments upon his own Text much by examples. First, to raise us to the best height, God makes himself our example, Sicut Pater, Be holy as your Father in heaven is holy: Then, because we cannot reach to that, he makes men like ourselves (at least, such as we should be) our example, Sicut Elias, Elias was a man subject to like passions as we are, jam. 5.27. and he prayed that it might not rain, and it reigned not, and that it might, and it did. If we be not able to conform ourselves to the singularity of one particular and transcendent man, he sends as to the whole body of good men, his servants, Sicut Prophetae, Take, my brethren, the Prophets, ver. 10. for an example of long patience. And because he knows our inclination, to be a declination, and that we cast those looks, which he made upward towards him, downward towards the creature, he sends us to creatures of an ignobler nature, Vade ad formicam, Go to the Ant, do as she doth, be as industrious in thy business, as she is in hers. And then, as in inclining us to good, so also for avoiding of sinful courses, he leads us by example too, Non sicut quidam eorum, Be not idolaters as some of them, nor fornicators, 1 Cor. 10. nor tempters of Christ, nor murmurers, as some of them. And as that Apostle gins that catalogue there, so, These are examples to us, so he ends it thus also, ver. 6. ver. 11. These things came unto them for examples: God suffers the wicked to proceed in their sin, and he pours down his judgements upon them for their sins, not only for their punishment, but therefore, that they might be examples to us. Now if God raise a glory to himself in the destruction of the wicked, if he make the wicked in their ruin, even Ministers in his Church, that is, edifiers, and instructers of others, by their own ruin, if their ruin be a sensible Catechism, and a visible Sermon for the edifying of others, how much more doth it conduce to his glory, that the righteousness, and holy conversation of his Ministers, and Prophets should be a lantern to the feet of his people? This is all that David promises in thankfulness for that mercy which he asks of God, This is that that he asks; Psal. 51.2. Restore me to the joy of thy salvation, Et confirma me spiritu principali, Establish me with thy free spirit, Spiritu munisico, says S. Hierom, with thy liberal, thy bountiful Spirit; This is much that David asks; and what will David do for God? This; I will teach thy ways unto the wicked, and sinners shall be converted unto thee. And this is that which S. Paul apprehended to have moved God, to use his service in the Church; 1 Tim. 1.16. For this cause was I received to mercy, that jesus Christ should first show unto me all long suffering; but that was not all; But as it follows there, Unto the example of them, which shall in time to come believe in him unto eternal life. It is an unexpressible comfort to have been God's instrument, for the conversion of others, by the power of Preaching, or by a holy and exemplar life in any calling. And with this comfort David proceeds in the recommendation of this duty of Prayer, Day and night I have felt thy hand upon me, ver. 4. I have acknowledged my sin unto thee, and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin; thus it stood with me, and by my example, ver. 5. For this shall every one that is godly prey unto thee, in a time when thou mayest be found. First then, the person that hath any access allowed him, any title to pray, Omnis sanctus. is he that is Godly, holy. Now, Omnis Sanctus, est omnis Baptismate sanctificatus: Those are the holy ones whom God will hear, who are of the household of the faithful, of the Communion of Saints, matriculated, engrafted, enroled in the Church, Hierom. by that initiatory Sacrament of Baptism; for, the house of God, into which we enter by Baptism, is the house of Prayer; And, as out of the Ark, whosoever swum best, was not saved by his swimming, no more is any moral man, out of the Church, by his praying: He that swom in the flood, swom but into more and more water; he that prays out of the Church, prays but into more and more sin, because he doth not establish his prayer in that, Grant this for our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus sake. It is true then, that these holy ones, whose prayer is acceptable, are those of the Christian Church; Only they; but is it all they? are all their prayers acceptable? There is a second concoction necessary too: Not only to have been sanctified by the Church in Baptism, but a sanctification in a worthy receiving of the other Sacrament too; A life that pleads the first seal, Baptism, and claims the other seal, The body and blood of Christ Jesus: We know the Wise man's counsel, Ecclus. 5.5. concerning propitiation, Be not without fear. Though thou have received the propitiatory Sacrament of Baptism, be afraid that thou hast not all. Will the milk that thou suckedst from a wholesome Nurse, keep thee alive now? Or canst thou dine upon last year's meat to day? He that hath that first holiness, The holiness of the Covenant, the holiness of Baptism, let him pray for more. For Omnis Sanctus, is Quantumcumque Sanctus, How holy soever he be, that holiness will not defray him all the way, but that holiness is a fair letter of credit, and a bill of exchange for more. When canst thou think thyself holy enough? when thou hast washed thyself in snow water? In penitent tears? job 9.30. (as the best purity of this life is expressed) why, even then, Abominabuntur te vestimenta tua, Thine own shall make thee abominable. Is all well, when thou thinkest all well? Prov. 16.2. why, All the ways of a man are clean in his own eyes, but the Lord weigheth the spirit. If thine own spirit, thine own conscience accuse thee of nothing, 1 Cor. 3.4. job 4.18. nothing unrepented, is all well? why, I know nothing by myself, yet am I not thereby justified. It is God only that is Surveyor of thy holiness, And, Behold, he found no steadfastness in his Servants, and laid folly upon his Angels; how much more in them, that dwell in houses of clay, Gregor. whose foundation is in the dust? Sordet in conspectu aeterni judieis, When that eternal Judge comes to value our transitory, or imaginary, our hollow, and rusty, and rotten holiness, Sordet quod in intention fulget operantis, Even that which had a good lustre, a good speciousness, not only in the eyes of men that saw it, who might be deceived by my hypocrisy, but in the purpose of him that did it, becomes base, more allay then pure metal, more corruption than devotion. Though jacob, Gen. 31.31. when he fled from his Father in law, Laban, were free enough himself, from the theft of Laban's Idols, yet it was dangerously pronounced of him, With whomsoever thou findest thy gods, let him not live: For, his own Wife, Rachel had stolen them: August. And Caro conjux; Thy Wife, thy flesh, thy weaker part, may insinuate much sin into thine actions, even when thy spirit is at strongest, and thou in thy best confidence. Only thus these two cases may differ; Rachel was able to cover those stolen Idols from her Father's finding, with that excuse, The custom of Women is come upon me; But thou shalt not be able to cover thy stolen sins, with saying, The infirmity of man is come upon me, I do but as other men do; Though thou have that degree towards sanctification, that thou sin not out of presumption, but out of infirmity, though thou mayest in a modified sense fall within David's word, Omnis sanctus, A holy man, yet every holy and godly man must pray, that even those infirmities may be removed too. Qui sanctificatur, sanctificetur adhuc: Apo● 22.11. He that is holy, let him be holy still; not only so holy still, but still more and more holy. For, beloved, As in the firmament, of those stars which are reduced into Constellations, and into a certainty of shapes, of figures, and images, we observe some to be of one greatness, some of another, we observe divers magnitudes in all them, but to all those other Stars, which are not reduced into those forms, and figures, we allow no magnitude at all, no proportion at all, no name, no consideration: So for those blessed souls which are collected into their eternal dwelling in Heaven, which have their possession, position at the right hand of God, as one Star differs from another in glory, so do these Saints which are in Heaven; But whilst men are upon this earth, though they be stars, (Saints of God) though they be in the firmament, established in the true Church of God, yet they have no magnitude, no proportion, no certainty, no holiness in themselves, nor in any thing formerly done by God in their behalf, and declared to us; but their present degrees of godliness give them but that qualification, that they may pray acceptably for more; He must be so godly before he pray, and his prayer must be for more godliness; and all directed to the right object of prayer, To God, Unto Thee shall every one that is godly prey, which is our next, the second of our four Considerations in this first part. Ad Te, Ad Te. To God, because he can hear; And then Ad te, to God, because he can give. Certainly it were a strange distemper, a strange singularity, a strange circularity, in a man that dwelled at Windsor, to fetch all his water at London Bridge: So is it in him, that lives in God's presence, (as he does, that lives religiously in his Church) to go for all his necessities, by Invocation to Saints. David was willing be our example for Prayer, but he gives no example of scattering our prayers upon any other then God. Christ Jesus was willing to give us a Rule for Prayer: but if he had intended that his Rule should have been deflected and declined to Saints, he would have taught us to say, Frater noster qui es in Coelis, and not only Pater noster; to pray to our Brethren which are there too, and not only to our Father which is in Heaven. If any man have tasted at Court, what it is to be ever welcome to the King himself, and what it is to speak to another to speak for him, he will bless that happiness, of having an immediate access to God himself in his prayers. They that come so low down the stream, as we said before, to London Bridge, they will go lower, and lower, to Gravesend too; They that come to Saints, they will come to the Images, and Relics of Saints too; They come to a brackish water, between salt and fresh, and they come at last, to be swallowed up in that sea which hath no limit, no bottom, that is, to direct all their devotions to such Saints, as have no certainty, not only not in their ability, we know not what those Saints can do, but not in their history, we know not that such as they pray to, are Saints; nay, we know not whether they ever were at all. So that this may be Idolatry, in the strictest acceptation of the word, Idol; Idolum nihil est; let that be true, which they say, and in their sense, Our Images are not Idols, for an Idol is nothing, represents nothing, but our Images are the Images of Men that once were upon the earth. But that is not throughout true; for they worship Images of those who never were; Christopher's, and other symbolical, and emblematical Saints, which never lived here, but were, and are yet nothing. But let them be true Saints, how will they make it appear to us, that those Saints can hear us? What surety can we have of it? Let us rather pray to him, who we are sure can hear, that is first, and then sure he can give that we pray for, that is next. The prayer here, is forgiveness of sins; And can Saints give that? The Hosannaes', Qui daunt. and the Allelujahs, and the Gloria in Excelsis, Glory in heaven, peace upon earth, good will amongst men, these are good and cheerful Notes, in which the Choir of heaven are exercised; Cherubims and Seraphims, Prophets and Apostles, Saints and Angels, bless God and benefit men by these: But the Remittuntur peccata, Thy sins are forgiven thee, is too high a note for any creature in earth or heaven, to reach to, except where it is set by Gods own hand, as it is by his Commission to his Minister, in his Church, and there only, in the absolution given by his Ordinance to every penitent sinner. We see that phrase, Dimittuntur peccata, Thy sins are forgiven thee, was a suspicious word, even in the mouth of Christ himself, amongst the Scribes that would not believe his Divinity; when Christ said to him that had the Palsy, My son be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee; the Scribes cried out, he blasphemed: It strikes any man, to hear of forgiveness of sins, from any but God. It was not a harder thing to say, Fiat lux, then to say, Dimittuntur peccata: Not harder to bring light out of darkness by Creation, then to bring a clean thing out of uncleanness by Conversion; for, who can do that? job 14. And therefore when the King of Aram sent Naaman to the King of Israel, to take order for the curing of his bodily Leprosy, the King of Israel rend his Clothes, and said, Am I a God, 2 King. 5.7. to kill and to give life? The power even of temporal life and death, is proper to God; for, as Witches think sometimes that they kill, when they do not, and are therefore as culpable, as if they did; So a tyrannous persecutor, so a passionate Judge, so a perjured witness, so a revengeful quarrel, thinks he takes away the life of his enemy, and is guilty of that murder in the eye of God, though the blow be truly from God, whose judgements are ever just, though not ever declared. Let them never say, that they ask not these things, temporal or spiritual, at the hands of those Saints; for, expressly, literally, as the words stand, and sound, they do ask even those very things; and if the Church have any other meaning in those prayers, the mischief is, that they never teach the people, by Preaching, what that their reserved meaning is, but leave them to the very letter of the prayer, to ask those things, which, if they could hear, yet the Saints could not give. And when the prayer is made aright, directed to God himself, yet here in our Text it is limited, Propter hoc, For this, this that was spoken of before, every one that is godly shall pray unto thee. Now what is this This? for that is our third Consideration. Si à quo petenda, sed non quae petenda petis, If thou come to the right Market, Propter boc. August. but buy unwholesome herbs there, If thou come to the Apothecary's shop, and ask for nothing but poisons, If thou come to God in thy prayer, and ask only temporal blessings, which are blessings only in their use, and may be, and are ordinarily snares and encumbrances, then is this direction of david's, Propter hoc, for this shall he pray, transgressed. For, This, as appears in the words immediately before the Text, is, The forgiveness of the punishment, and of the iniquity of our sin; which is so inexpressible a comfort, to that soul that hath wrestled with the indignation of God, and is now refreshed and released, as whosoever should go about to describe it, should diminish it; He hath it not that thinks he can utter it. It is a blessed comfort to find my soul in that state, as when I last received the Sacrament with a good conscience: If I enjoy that peace now, that is, the peace of a religious, and of a wise conscience; for there is a wisdom of the conscience, not to run into infinite scruples and doubts, but Imponere finem litibus, to levy a fine in bar of all scruples, and diffidences, and to rest in the peace and assuredness of remission of sins, after due means for the obtaining thereof; and therefore if. I be as well now, as when I received, this is a blessed degree of blessedness. But yet there is one cloud in this case, Ab occultis, my secret sins, which even mine own narrowest inquisition extends not to. If I consider myself to be as well as I was at my Baptism, when I brought no actual sin, and had the hand of Christ to wash away the foulness of Original sin, can I pray for a better state than that? Even in that there was a cloud too, and a cloud that hath thunder and lightning in it, that Foams peccati, that fuel and those embers of sin, that are but raked up, and not trod out, and do break forth upon every tentation that is presented, and if they be not effectually opposed, shall aggravate my condemnation, more than if I had never been baptised. But David conceives such a forgiveness here, as carries up the soul to the contemplation of that state, which it had before the fall of Adam. It is not this present sin of a cold delivering, and a drowsy hearing of the messages of God; It is not my yesterday sin, nor my sins since my last repentance, that are forgiven me, but my sin committed six thousand years before I was borne, my sin in Adam, before any promise, nay, before any apprehension of any need of a Messiah; I am so restored, that now by the application of the merits of my Redeemer, I am as well as I should have been, though there had never been any use of a Redeemer, no occasion given by me in Adam, of the incarnation and passion of Christ Jesus. The comfort of being presented to God as innocent as Adam, then when God breathed a soul into him, yea as innocent as Christ Jesus himself, when he breathed out his soul to God; oh how blessed is that soul that enjoys it, and how bold that tongue that goes about to express it! This is the blessedness which the godly attain to by prayer, but not by every sudden Lord, Lord, or every occasional holy interjection, but by serious prayer, invested, as with the former, so with that other circumstance that remains, In tempore opportuno, In a time when thou mayest be found. This time is not those Horae stativae, Horae canonicae, In tempore. those sixed hours in the Roman Church, where men are bound to certain prayers at certain hours. Not that it is inconvenient for men to bind themselves to certain fixed times of prayer in their private Exercises; and though not by such a vow, as that it shall be an impiety, yet by so solemn a purpose, as that it shall be a levity to break it. I have known the greatest Christian Prince, (in Style and Title) even at the Audience of an Ambassador, at the sound of a Bell, kneel down in our presence and pray; and God forbidden, he should be blamed for doing so; But to place a merit in observing those times, as they do, is not a right understanding of this time of finding. Nor is it those transitory and interlocutory prayers, which out of custom and fashion we make, and still proceed in our sin; when we pretend to speak to God, but like Comedians upon a stage, turn over our shoulder, and whisper to the Devil. Esay. 1.15. When you stretch out your hands, I will hid mine eyes; when you make many prayers, I will not hear; for your hands are full of blood. And if they be full of blood, they can take in no more; If they be full of the blood of oppression, they can lay no hold upon the blood of propitiation. Is●●●. Irrisor est, non poenitens, qui adhuc agit quod poeniter, He mocks God, that reputes and sins over those sins every night, that every day he reputes. The Apostle says so too, He makes a mock of the Son of God, and crucifies him again. This only is true Repentance, Ambro. He makes a mock of the Son of God, and crucifies him again. This only is true Repentance, Plangere & plangenda non committere, To bewail our sins, and forbear the sins we have bewailed. Neither alone will serve; which deludes many. Many think they do enough if they repent, and yet proceed in their sin; and many think they do enough, if they forbear their sin now, though they never repent that which is past; August. both are illusory, both deceitful distempers. Laoessit judicem, qui post-posita satisfactione quaerit praemiis honorari, He doth but provoke and exasperate the Judge, that solicits him for heaven, before he hath appeased his anger by repentance for former sins; for this is to call for costs before he be discharged. These than are not the times of finding God; but what are? Gospel. August. Generally it is Manifestatio Euangelii, The time of the Gospel is the time of finding God; now when God hath vouchsafed Endure hominem, to put on us in his Incarnation, and enabled us Endure Deum, to put on him in the Sacraments; to stay with us here upon Earth, and to carry us up with him in his Ascension to Heaven; when he is made one body with us, and hath made us one Spirit with him, how can we doubt of a fit time to find him? Christ's time was always; for even under the law, God says, Esay 49.8. I have heard thee in an accepted time, and in the day of Salvation have I succoured thee; But this doth the Holy Ghost apply to the time of the Gospel, Behold now the accepted time, behold now the day of salvation. 2 Cor. 2.6. Calamity. Psal. 116.4. The time then of the Gospel is the time of finding; But now, all times are not alike. Calamities are a good time. When I found trouble, and sorrow, than I called upon the name of the Lord, saying, I beseech thee O Lord, deliver my soul. This is a good time, but it is somewhat a dark time; the withdrawing of God's countenance from us; Exod. 14.25. The Egyptians when they deprehended their danger, said, We will fly from the face of Israel; But whither? The Seareturned, and the Egyptians fled against it, and perished. We may be benighted, benumbed by calamities, and they may as well deject us as raise us. joab pursued Abner hotly, vehemently; Abner asks, What, Vsque ad internecionem, 2 Sam. 2.25. Shall the sword devour for ever? joab answered, (as the Vulgat reads those words) Vivit dominus, si locutus fuisses mane, As the Lord liveth, if thou hadst spoken in the morning, in the morning every man had departed. If we turn to the Lord in the morning, in the beginning of an affliction, the Lord turns his fierce wrath from us; but if we stand out long, and bend not under his corrections, he pursues Ad internecionem, even to destruction by obduration. So then the manifestation of the Gospel, that is, the helps which God offers us, Prosperitus. more than Jews, or Gentiles, in the Ministry of the Gospel, and the Ordinances of his Church, is the time of finding God; And woe unto us, if we seek him not whilst he affords us these helps; And then the time of affliction, when God threatens to hid his face, but hath not yet hidden it, but awakens us by a calamity, is a time of finding God. But the best and the clearest time is in the Sunshine, then when he appears to us in the warm and cheerful splendour of temporal blessings upon us; Then when thou hast a good estate, and good children to let it descend upon; Then when thou hast good health, and a good profession to exercise thy strength, and thy labours in; Then when the dishes upon thy table are doubled, and thy cup overflows, and the hungry and thirsty souls of the poor do not only feed upon the crumbs under thy table, and lick up the overflowings of thy cup, but divide dishes with thee, and enter into the midst of thy Bolls; Then when thou hast temporal blessings, (that is God's silver) and his grace to use those blessings well, (that is God's gold) then is the best time of finding the Lord, for than he looks upon thee in the Sunshine, and then thy thankful acknowledgement of former blessings is the most effectual prayer thou canst make, for the continuance, and enlargement of them. In a word, then is a fit time of finding God, Nunc. whensoever thy conscience tells thee he calls to thee; for, a rectified conscience is the word of God; If that speak to thee now this minute, now is thy time of finding God. That Now, that I named then, that minute is past; but God affords thee another Now; he speaks again, he speaks still, and if thy conscience tell thee that he speaks to thee, now is that time. This word of God, thy conscience will present unto thee, but that one condition, which Moses presented to God's people, and that is, That thou seek the Lordwith all thy heart, and all thy soul. It is a kind of denying the Infiniteness of God, to serve him by pieces, and rags; God is not Infinite to me, if I think a discontinued service will serve him. It is a kind of denying the Unity of God, to join other gods, Pleasure, or Profit with him; He is not One God to me, if I join other Associates, and Assistants to him, Saints or Angels. It is a kind of diffidence in Christ, as though I were not sure that he would stand in the favour of God still, as though I were afraid that there might rise a new favourite in heaven, to whom it might concern me to apply myself, If I make the balance so even, as to serve God and Mammon; if I make a complemental visit of God at his house upon Sunday, and then plot with the other faction, the World, the Flesh, and the Devil, all the week after. Jor. 9.13. The Lord promised a power of seeking, and an infallibility of finding; but still with this total condition, Ye shall seek me, and ye shall find me, because ye shall seek me with all your heart. This he promised for the future, that he would do; This he testified for the house of judah, 2 Chro. 15.15. that he had done, judah sought him with a whole desire, and he was found of them, and the Lord gave them rest round about: And the Lord shall give you rest round about; rest in your bodies, and rest in your estates; rest in your good name with others, and rest in your consciences in yourselves; rest in your getting, and rest in your enjoying that you have got, if you seek him with a whole heart; and to seek him with a whole heart, is not by honest industry to seek nothing else, (for God wears good , silk, and soft raiment, in his religious servants in Courts, as well as Camel's hair, in john Baptist in the Wilderness; and God manifests himself to man, as well in the splendour of Princes in Courts, as in the austerity of john Baptist in the Wilderness) but to seek God with the whole heart, is to seek nothing with that Primary, and Radical, and Fundamental affection, as God; To seek nothing for itself, but God: not to seek world things in excess, because I hope, if I had them, I should glorify God in them; but first to find established in myself a zealous desire to glorify God, and then a modest desire of means to be able to do it. And for this, every one that is holy shall pray unto thee, in a time when thou mayst be found. And so we have done with our first Part, and the four pieces that constitute that, The Person, Omnis sanctus, Every godly man; that is, Sanctificatus, and Sanctificandus, He that is godly enough to pray, and prays that he may be more godly: And the Object of prayer, Ad te, God alone, for God alone can hear, and God alone can give; And then the Subject of prayer, Hoc, This, this which David expresses, forgiveness of the punishment, and of the iniquity of fin, In which respect, (that David proposes and specificates the subject of prayer) we are fairly directed rather to accustom ourselves to those prayers, which are recommended to us by the Church, then to extemporal prayers of others, or of our own effusion; And lastly, the Time of finding God, that is, Then when we seek him with a whole heart, seek him as Principal, and then receive temporal things, as accessary, and conducible to his glory. Thus much hath fallen into the first Part, the duty of Prayer; A little remains to be said of the benefit here assured, Surely, in the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh unto him. Taking these waters, 2. Part. H●●r. Aquae. either Distributively, to every one that is godly, or Collectively, as S. Hierome does to the whole Church, the use will be all one. The Holy Ghost who is a direct worker upon the soul and conscience of man, but a Metaphorical, and Figurative expresser on himself, to the reason, and understanding of man, abounds in no Metophor more, then in calling Tribulations, Waters: particularly, He would bring in waters upon Tyrus, E●●k. 26.3. Hos●● 5. And, He would pour out his wrath upon his enemies, like waters. Neither doth he only intimate temporal, but spiritual afflictions too, in the name of Waters. And as S. Hierome understands this whole place of the Church, Hieron. August. collectively, so S. Augustine understands these waters, to be Varia Doctrinae, those divers opinions, that disquiet and trouble the Church. And though the Church of God were built upon a hill, and compassed, and environed, and fenced with the blood of him that built it, and defended and guarded by the vigilancy of the Apostles; yet into this Jerusalem did these waters break, even in the Apostles time, as we see by those several, those manifold, those contradictory Heresies, that sprung up them. Christ and his Apostles had carried two Waters about his Church: The water of Baptism, that is Limen Ecclesiae, and janua Sacramentorum, Argust. The first Ferry, by which we pass into the Church; and by this Water came three thousand, and five thousand at once to the Church, upon particular Sermons of S. Peter. And then Christ gave another Water, by which, they came to another Ablution, to Absolution from actual fins, the water of contrite tears, and repentance, which he had promised before, E●●k. 24.35. I will pour clean water upon you, and you shall be clean, And by this water came Peter himself, when his faith had failed, And by this water came Mary Magdalen, when her life had been defiled. But yet for all these Waters, other Waters soaked in, and corrupted them early; for, for Baptism, the Disciples of Simon Magus annulled Christ's Baptism, and baptised in Simons name; and his Disciple Menander annulled the Baptism of Christ, and Simon, and baptised in his own name. And then, for the other Water, Repentance, the Heretics drained up that shrewdly, when they took away all benefit of repentance for sins committed after Baptism. David denies not, nay David assures us, that collectively, the whole Church shall be beaten upon with waters. Water multiplied; Aquae multae, Many waters; so the vulgat reads this, Multae. that we Translate here, Great waters. So multiplied Heresies. The excellency of the Christian Religion is, that it is Verbum abbreviatum, A contracted Religion; All the Credenda, all that is to be believed, reduced to twelve Articles of the Creed; All the Speranda, all that is to be hoped for, prayed for, expressed in seven Petitions, in the Lord's Prayer; All the Agenda, all that is to be done in it, comprised in ten Commandments, in the Decalogue. And then our blessed Saviour, though he would take away none of the burden, (for it is an easy yoke, and a light burden) yet he was pleased to bind it in a less room, and a more portable form, when he re-abridged that Abridgement, and recontracts this contracted Doctrine, in those two, Love God, and Love thy Neighbour. And then the Devil hath opposed this Abridgement by Multiplication, by many waters, many heresies: for, it is easy to observe, that in every Article of the Creed, there have been at least a dozen Heresies. And in those Articles, which were most credible, most evident, most sensible, most of all; Many more Heresies upon the Humanity of Christ, then about his Divinity: And then, as in matters of Faith, so for matter of Manners, there was scarce any thing so foul and so obscene, which was not taught by some Heretics, to be religious and necessary; Things which cannot be excused, things which may not be named, made by the Gnostics, essential and necessary in the Consecration of the Sacrament. And then, when these waters of death were in a good part dried up, these gross errors in Faith and Manners were reasonably well overcome, Then came in those waters of Traditional Doctrines in the Roman Church, which are so many, as that they overflow even the water of life, the Scriptures themselves, and suppress, and surround them. Therefore does David, in this text, call these many waters, Diluvium, Diluvium. A flood of great waters; many and violent. For this word Shatach, Inundans, signifies Vehemence, Eagerness, and is elegantly applied to the fierceness of a horse in Battle, Equus inundans in Bellum, A horse that overflows the Battle, that rushes into the Battle. Jer. 8.6. Esay 15.9. Therefore speaks the Prophet of waters full of blood; What Seas of blood did the old Persecutions, what Seas have later times poured out, when in the Roman Church, their own Authors will boast of sixty thousand slain in a day, of them that attempted a Reformation in the times of the Waldenses! Surely, says our Prophet, These waters shall be, Heresies there shall be. Omnis sanctus. And no man may look for such a Church, as shall have no water; Evermore there will be some things raw, and unconcocted in every Church; Evermore some waters of trouble and dissension, and a man is not to forsake a Church, in which he hath received his Baptism for that. But waving this general, and collective application of these waters to the Church, and to take it as the letter of the Text invites us, Omnis sanctus, surely every godly man shall find these waters, many waters, floods of many waters; for affliction is our daily bread; for, we cannot live in this world a spiritual life, without some kind of affliction: for, as with long fasting we lose our stomaches, so by being long unexercised in tribulation, we come to lose our patience, and to a murmuring when it falls upon us. For that last Petition of the Lords Prayer, Liberanos à malo, Deliver us from evil, may as some interpret it, suppose that this Evil, that is Malum poenae, Affliction, will certainly fall upon us; and then we do not so much pray to be delivered from it, as to be delivered in it, not that afflictions may not come, but that they may not overcome, when they come, that they may not be ineffectual upon us. For, it was Durus sermo, A harder and an angrier speech than it seems, when God said to his people, Esay 1.4. Why should ye be smitten any more? Why should I keep you at School any longer? Why should I prepare Physic, or study your recovery by corrections any farther? When God was wearied with their afflictions, and they were not, this was a heavy case; He afflicted them forty years together in the Wilderness, and yet he says, Forty years long was I grieved with this generation: He never says, They were grieved, but he was with their stupidity; They murmured, but they sorrowed not to any amendment. So they perverted this word, Non approximabunt, They shall not come nigh thee, they shall not affect thee; That they must do; we must be sensible of God's corrections; but yet there is a good sense, and a plentiful comfort, in this word of our Text. To the godly man, non approximabunt, the floods of great waters, though waters, though floods, though great floods, they shall not come nigh him; and that is our last word, and final conclusion. Consider the Church of God collectively, Non approximabunt. and the Saints of God distributively, in which Babylon you will, in the Chaldean Babylon, or in the Italian Babylon, and these waters do come nigh us, touch, and touch to the quick, to the heart. But yet as David intends here, 2 Cor. 4.7. they touch not us, they come not nigh us; for we have treasures in earth-then vessels; They may touch the vessels, but not the Treasure. And this is literally expressed in the Text itself, non approximabunt, eum; not that they shall not come near his house, or his lands, or his children, or his friends, or his body, but non eum, they shall not come nigh him. For, for the Church, the peace of the Church, the plenty of the Church, the ceremonies of the Church, they are sua, but not illa, they are hers, but they are not she. And these things, riches & ceremonies, they may be washed off with onetide, and cast on with another, discontinued in one Age, and re-assumed in another, devested in one Church, and invested in another, and yet the Churches, she in her fundamental Doctrines never touched. And so for us, a wave may wash away as much as job lost, and yet not come nigh us; for if a Heathen could say, Vix ea nostra voco, That outward things were scarce worthy to be called Ours, shall a Christian call them not only His, but Himself, so as if they be lost, he is lost? How long will a Medal, a piece of Coin lie in the water, before the stamp be washed off? and yet how soon is the Image of God, of his patience, his longanimity defaced in us by every billow, every affliction? But for the Saints of God it shall not be so; Surely it shall not. They shall stand against the waters, Psal. 11 43. And the Sea shall see it, and fly, and jordan shall be turned bacl: And the world shall say, What ailed thee O Sea, that thou fleddest, O jordan that thou turnedst back? For they that know not the power of the Almighty, though they envy, yet shall wonder, and stand amazed at the deliverance of the righteous. Sto, & pulso, says God of himself, I stand at the door and knock; Rev. 3.22. God will not break open doors to give thee a blessing, as well as he loves thee, and as well as he loves it, but will have thee open to him: much more will he keep Tentations at the door; They shall not break in upon thee, except thou open. This than was that, which David elsewhere apprehended with fear, The sorrows of the grave compassed me about, Psal. 1● 5. and the snares of death overtook me; Here they were near him, but no worse. Psal. 69 15. This is that that he prays deliverance from, Let not the water flood drown me, neither let the deep swallow me up. And this is that God assures us all that are his, Is●y 43.2. When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee, and through the floods that they do not overflow thee. Maintain therefore a holy patience in all God's visitations: Accept your waters, though they come in tears; for he that sends them, Christ Jesus, had his flood, his inundation in Blood; and whatsoever thou sufferest from him, thou sufferest for him, and glorifiest him in that constancy. Upon those words, Tres sunt, There are three that bear witness, That Spirit, and water, and blood, Bernard. S. Bernard taking water there, (by way of allusion) for affliction, saith, Though the Spirit were witness enough, without water, or blood, yet Vix aut nunquam inveniri arbitror Spiritum sine aqua, & sanguine; we lack one of the seals of the Spirit, if we lack Gods corrections. We consider three waters in our blessed Saviour; He wept over Jerusalem; Do thou so over thy finfull soul. He sweat in the garden; Do thou so too, in eating thy bread in the sweat of thy brows, in labouring fincerely in thy Calling. And then he sent water and blood out of his side, Argust. being dead, which was, fons utriusque Sacramenti, the spring head of both Sacraments; Do thou also refresh in thy soul, the dignity which thou receivedst in the first Sacrament of Baptism, and thereby come worthily to the participation of the second, and therein the holy Ghost shall give thee, the seal of that security, which he tenders to thee in this Text, Non approximabunt, How great water floods soever come, they shall not come nigh thee, not nigh that, which is Thou, that is, thy faith, thy soul, and though it may swallow that, by which thou art a man, thy life, it shall not shake that, by which thou art a Christian, thy Religion. Amen. SERM. LX. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.7. Thou art my hiding place; Thou shalt preserve me from trouble; Thou shalt compass me about with songs of deliverance. AS Rhetoric is said to be a fist extended and displayed into an open Hand, And Logic a Hand recollected, and contracted into a fist; So the Church of God may be said to be a soul dilated and diffused into many Congregations, and a soul may be said to be the Church contracted and condensed into one bosom. So not only the Canticle of Solomon is taken indifferently by the ancient and later Expositors, by some for an Epithalamion, and marriage Song between Christ and his Church, by others, for the celebration of the same union between every Christian soul and him, but also many other places of Scripture have received such an indifferent interpretation, and are left in suspense, whether they be to be understood of the Church in general, or of particular souls; And of this nature and number is this Text, Thou art my hiding place, etc. For S. Hierom takes these words (and the whole Psalm) to be spoken collectively, others distributively; He in the person of the Church, Hieron. They of every, or at least of some particular souls. To examine their reasons is unnecessary, and would be tedious; It will ask less time, and afford more profit to consider the words both ways. In them therefore, considered twice over, we shall see a threefold state of the Christian Church, and a threefold mercy exhibited by God to every Christian soul. First, we shall see the Church under the clouds, in her low estate, in her obscurity, in her inglorious state of contempt and persecution, and yet then supported by an assurance that God overshadowed her, Tu absconsio, Tu latibulum, Thou art my hiding place; And in that first part we shall consider the state of a timorous soul, a soul that for fear of tentations dares scarce look into the world, or embrace a profession. Secondly, we shall see the Church emancipated, enfranchised, unfettered, unmanacled, delivered from her obscure and inglorious state, and brought to splendour, and beauty, and peace, blessing God in that acknowledgement, Thou shalt preserveme from trouble. And in that part, we shall consider the state of that soul exalted to a holy confidence and assurance, that though she come into the world, and partake of the dangers thereof, in opening herself to such tentations, as do necessarily and inseparably accompany every calling, yet the Lord will preserve her from trouble. And thirdly and lastly, we shall see a kind of Triumphant state in the Church in this world, a holy exultation, God shall compass her with songs of deliverance. In which part, we shall also see the blessed state of that soul which is come, not to a presumptuous security, but to modest certainty of continuing in the same state still. And these will be our three parts in these words, as they receive a public accommodation to the Church, and a more particular application to ourselves. We enter into these considerations, with this observation, 1 Part. That as God himself is eternal and cannot be considered in the distinction of times, so hath that language in which God hath spoken in his written word, the Hebrew, the least consideration of Time of any other language. Evermore in expressing the mercies of God to man, it is an indifferent thing to the holy Ghost whether he speak in the present, or in the future, or in the time that is past: what mercies soever he hath given us, he will give us over again; And whatsoever he hath done, and will do, he is always ready to do at the present. This verse is especially an exultation for mercies past, and yet the two last clauses are delivered in the future, Thou shalt preserve me, Thou shalt compass me, And the first is delivered without any limitation at all; The present word, Thou art, is but inserted by our Translators; In the Original it is only, Tu refugium, Thou my hiding place, There is no fuisti, nor es, nor eris, That he was, or is, or will be so, but it is an expressing of a perpetual and everlasting mercy, for his mercy endureth for ever. First then, Ecclesia. this is an acknowledgement of the Church, contemplating herself in her low estate; for the word Sether implies, Tu absconsio, Though I were in the dark, it was thou that didst overshadow me, Though I were in danger, it was thou that didst hid more from them. This the Church hath had occasion to say more than once; Once in the Primitive plantation thereof, and again in her Reformation: At both times God shown mercy to her that way, in hiding her. First then God hide the Primitive Church from the eye of envy, Primitiva. by keeping her poor; and from the eye of jealousy and suspicion, by keeping her in an humble devotion towards him. But yet even her poverty, and her humility hide her not so, but that persecution found her out, and raged so against her, as that those Emperors which raised the ten Persecutions against the Church, seem to have laboured to have gone beyond God in the ten Plagues of Egypt, and to have done more at Rome than he did there. All the power of the Roman world was bend against Christians; more home-Christians slain then foreign enemies. All the criminal justice of the world bend upon them; All other men's crimes, even Nero's burning of Rome, imputed to the Christians. All the wit of the world bend against them; All their Epigrammatists, & Satirists, having their wits exalted, with rage, with wine, with rewards, to multiply libels, and calumnies, and defamations upon the Christians. All the Mechaniques of that world bend against them; All the Enginiers employed to invent racks and tortures for the Christians. Truly, if I were to work upon Heathen men, Western Americans, or Eastern Chineses, for their conversion to Christ, I should scarce adventure to propose to them the histories of the Martyrs of the Primitive Church, because to men that had no taste of Religion before, they would rather seem fables than truths; and I should as soon be believed, That a Virgin had a Son, or in any main Article of our Religion, as that man could inflict, or that man could bear such things, as we are sure the Martyrs in the Primitive Church did. Then God hide the Church; He hide her, in a great part in the Wilderness, in Ermitages, and such retire, singlely one by one; and after in penurious and obscure Monasteries, many of these single Ermits gathering themselves together into one house; when those Monasteries were both Schools of learning, and shops of Manufactures; they taught and wrought in them; August. Nemo cuiquam onerosus, No man was a burden to any others, no man fed upon another's labours, nor drunk the sweat of another's brow: But, Operabantur manibus ea, quibus & corpus pasci possit, & à Deo mens impediri non possit, They laboured in such manufactures, as might sustain their bodies, and not withdraw their minds from the service of God. So God hide the Church, not that the persecution did not find and lop off many a great, and top bough, but he hide the root, and prevented the extirpation of that Tree, which his own right hand had planted. Tu absconsio, Reformata. Thou art my hiding place, says the Primitive Church, and so may the Reformed Church say too. For when the Roman Church had made this Latibulum, this hiding place, this refuge from Persecution, Ermitages and Monasteries, to be the most conspicuous, the most glorious, the most eminent, the richest and most abundant places of the World; when they had drawn these, at first remote corners in the Wilderness, first into the skirts, and suburbs, then into the body and heart of every great City; when for revenue and possession, they will confess, that some one Monastery of the Benedictan had ten thousand of our pounds of yearly rent; when they were come for their huge opulency to that height, that they were formidable to those States that harboured them, and for their numbers, (other Orders holding proportion with that one) to reckon out of one Order, fifty two Popes, two hundred Cardinals, seven thousand Archbishops and Bishops, and almost three hundred Emperors and Kings, and their children, and fifty thousand declared and approved Saints; when they were come to that overvaluation of their Religious Orders, as to say, That a Monk, a Friar merited more in his very sleep, or meals, than any secular man, (though a Churchman too) did in his best works, That to enter into any Order of Religion was a second Baptism, and wrought as much as the first; Their revenue, their number, their dignity being come to this, And then their viciousness, their sensuality, their bestiality, to as great a height and exaltation, as that; yet in the midst of all these, Tu absconsio mea, may the Reformed Church say, The Lord was their hiding place, that mourned for this, when they could not help, and at all times, and by all means that God afforded them, endeavoured to advancea Reformation. And though God exposed them as a wood to be felled, to a slaughter of twenty, of forty, of sixty thousand in a day, yet Ille absconsio, He hath been our hiding place, He hath kept the root alive all the way; And though it hath been with a cloud, yet he hath covered us. God came unto Moses, though he came In caligine Nubis, In a thick Cloud; Exod. 19.9. when the glory of the Lord is said to have filled the Tabernacle, even that glory was a Cloud; Exod. 40.34. And so it was in the second place of his worship too, in Solomon's Temple, 2 Chro. 5.13. that was filled with a Cloud. S. chrysostom when he considered that Christ ascended in a Cloud, a Acts 1. Chrysost. And that he shall return again in a Cloud, b Mat. 24. Paternum Currum deligere voluit, The Son would make use of his Father's Chariot, and show mercy, nay show glory in a Cloud, as his Father had done often. The Primitive Church, the Reformed Church, must not complain of having been kept under Clouds; for Ille absconsio, God hath made those Clouds their hiding place, and wrapped up the seed, and the root safe in that Cloud. Though the Church were trodden upon like a worm of the earth, yet still she might hear God in that Cloud, Noli timere vermis jacob, Be not afraid thou worm of jacob, for I will keep thee, Esay 41.14. saith the Lord thy Redeemer, the holy One of Israel. God hide her then, and hath manifested now, that there was never any time, when he had not some of his to oppose her tyranny and her Idolatry. They can name no time, when we cannot name some such; And it would be much harder for them, to name men in every age, that have professed all the doctrines of the present Roman Church, then for us to find men that have opposed those points that we oppose. Will they say, that these were too few, to constitute or establish, or give name to a Church? They were never so few, 1 King. 19.14. as Elias thought there had been in his time, when he said, I only am left; no nor so few, as God, for Elias comfort, named to him, seven thousand; they were more than so, else they could not have found so many to kill, as they did. Howsoever, since so great Schoolmen amongst them as Alexander Alice, and so great Canonists amongst them, as Cardinal Turrecremata, Brondus in Apoc. c. 1. q. 11. with many others, (as they themselves call them) Gravissimi Theologi, of the gravest Divines, asseveranter affirmant, do dogmatically affirm, that during the time that Christ lay in the Grave, there was no faith, and consequently no Church, but only in One, in the person of the Virgin Mary; in relation to which it is, that in the Ceremonies of the Church, they put out all their Candles but one, in the Church, at that time, to denote that all the Apostles lost their faith, and one She alone retained one; If the Church were then in one person, they may well afford a Church to have consisted of such numbers, as the Lord did hid under his wings, all the stormy time of their Persecutions. Tu absconsio, may the Primitive Church, and the Reformed Church say, Anima. Thou hast been our hiding place, And so must every timorous soul too, (for you may remember, that these words are by our Expositors ascribed to particular souls in the Church, as well as to the Church in general) every such soul, that for fear of tentations in the world, is loath to come abroad from its retiredness, and venture on the public view, must rely upon that, Tu absconsio, The Lord is able to hid them, able to cover them. jovinian the Heretic whom S. Hierom opposed, would needs think, or at least say, That after Baptism no man was tempted of the Devil: not only not overcome, but not tempted. But our Baptism does not drown the Devil. Chrysost. Pauci inter Athletas in expugnabiles, Few wrestlers that never took fall; none that may not, since we are all at best, but wrestlers. Vita hominis piraterium, says S. Ambrose, what Copy soever he followed. Ser. 42. job. 7.1. Ambrose. Others read it, Man's life is a warfare; And that is labour enough, and danger enough. But to be still upon so unconstant an element as the water, and still pursued by Pirates, or consorted with Pirates, is more; and Vita Piraterium, says he, Man's life, every man's life is spent amongst Pirates, pursued by them, or consorted with them. The Devil hath not a more subtle tentation to ensnare me with, then to bring me to think myself tentation-proofe; above tentation. Nemo diu fortis est, Idem. is excellently said by the same Father: No man continues strong against tentations long. For when he sees, that some tentations have done him no harm, he grows negligent and slack towards others. Infoelix ego! victonem me puto, dum capior, Miserable mistaking man that I am! Hieron. I think myself able to overcome any tentation, and I am overcome even by that tentation of thinking so. I think myself conqueror, when I am captive, and am chained to the Chariot, when I think I sit in it. Tranquillitas ista tempestas est, This calm is a storm, this security is a defeat; For, it is one of David's heavy imprecations, Veniat illi laqueus quem ignorat, Psal. 35.8. Ecclus. 34.9. Let him be catchedin a snare, that he suspected not: Destruction come upon him unawares, so we read it. We are tempted, and it is well that we are so. Qui non est tentatus, quid scit? He is an ignorant soul, and knows nothing, that hath passed no tentations; Nothing at all; August. not himself; Nescit se homo, nisi tentatione discat se, Except he be taught in that School, The School of tentations, no man ever comes to know himself. So then, Leo. Laqueus est in securitate; If I be secure, and negligent, that is a snare; But Laqueus in timore too, says he; It is a snare cast by the Devils own hand, If I be over-timerous, If upon pretence of hiding myself from tentations, I withdraw myself from the offices of mutual society. Tu absconsio, The Lord will be my hiding place from tentations that attempt me in my calling, Eccl. 9.20. but not to hid me from a calling. Scito quod in medio laqueorum ingrederis, Know that thou walkest in the midst of snares, but yet thou must walk, Chrysost. walk in a calling. So S. chrysostom reads that; and adds, He does not say, Vide, but Scito; He does not say, see them, for they are invisible; but know that there are snares, and be wary. August. And then, as S. Augustin says of the whole Church, (which was our first Consideration) Ecclesia Catholica inter tentationes vivit, inter tentationes crescit, The whole Church is in the midst of tentations, but lives and grows up in the midst of them: So, hear thy God say to thy soul, (which is the Consideration that we are now upon) Son of man, Ezek. 2.6. though briars and thorns be with thee, though thou dwell among Scorpions, be not afraid of their words, nor dismayed with their looks. Proceed in a lawful calling, and God shall hid thee though with his Clouds: And though he cover thee with a cloud of poverty, with sickness, with disgrace, and if he see no other cover safe, cover thee with the cloud of death, and the grave, all is to cover thee from the Tempter, and thereby to preserve thee for himself, which is our second part, Thou art my hiding place, Thou shalt preserve me from trouble. If we content ourselves with that word which our Translators have chosen here, Trouble, 2 Part. Trouble. (Thou shalt preserve me from Trouble) we must rest in one of these two senses; Either that God shall arm, and endue those that are his, with such a constancy, as those things that trouble others, 2 Cor. 1.5. shall not trouble them, but, As the sufferings of Christ abound in them, 2 Cor. 6.9. so their consolation also aboundeth by Christ, As unknown, and yet well known, as dying, and behold we live, as sorrowful yet always rejoicing, as poor yet making many rich, as having nothing, and yet possessing all things; For, God uses both these ways in the behalf of his servants; sometimes to suspend the working of that that should work their torment, as he suspended the rage of the Lions for Daniel, and the heat of the fire in the furnace, for the others; Sometimes by imprinting a holy stupefaction, and unsensibleness in the person that suffers, So S. Laurence was not only patiented, but merry and facetious when he lay broiling upon the fire, and so we read of many other Martyrs, that they have been less moved, less affected with their torments, than their Executioners, or their Persecutors have been, That which troubled others never troubled them; Or else the phrase must have this sense, That though they be troubled with their troubles, though God submit them so far, to the common condition of men, that they be sensible of them, yet he shall preserve them from that trouble so, as that it shall never overthrow them, never sink them into a dejection of spirit, or diffidence in his mercy; They shall find storms, but a stout and strong ship under foot; They shall feel Thunder and lightning, but garlands of triumphant bays shall preserve them; They shall be trodden into the earth with scorns and contempts, but yet as seed is buried, to multiply to more. So far this word of our Translators assist our devotion, Thou shalt preserve me from trouble, Thou shalt make me unsensible of it, or thou shalt make me victorious in it. But the Original word Tzur hath a more peculiar sense; Perplexity. It signifies a strait, a narrowness, a difficulty, 2 Sam. 1.26. a distress; I am distressed for thee, my brother jonathan, says David, in this word, when he lamented his irremediable, his irrecoverable death. So is it also, Esa. 21.3. Pangs have taken hold of me, as the pangs of a woman that travaileth. And so the word grows to signify, Psal. 89.43. Aciem gladii, Thou hast turned the edge of the sword, and to signify the top and precipice of a rock; Psal. 78.15. He clavae the rocks in the wilderness. So that the word expresses Angustiam, narrowness, pressure, precipitation, inextricablenesse, in a word, (that will best fit us) Perplexity; and, The Lord shall preserve me from perplexity; And this may the Church, and this may every good soul comfort itself in, Thou shalt preserve me from perplexity. Consider it first in the Church, and then in ourselves; and first in the Primitive, Ecclesia Primitiva. and then in the reformed Church. When God had brought his Church, ex abscondito, from his hiding place, from poverty, and contempt, and solitariness, and glorified it in the eyes of the world, by many royal endowments and possessions, with which Princes (then become Christians) and other great persons, piously and graciously invested her, though these were tentations to aspire to greater, yet God preserved her from perplexities of all kinds; from perplexing of Princes with her claims, that they might not marry, nor make leagues, nor levy Armies, but by her permission. The Church called nothing her own, but that which God had called His, and given her, that is, Tithes: All the rest, she acknowledged to have received from the bounty of pious benefactors. This was her plea, The Lord is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer, my strength, my buckler, Psal. 18.2. and my high tower. In all this Inventory, in all this Armoury, and furniture of the Church, there is never a sword; Rocks, and fortresses, and bucklers, and Towers, but no sword, no material sword in the Church's hand; Arma nostra preces & fletus; Ambrose. The Church fought with nothing but prayers and tears. And as God delivered her from these perplexities, from perplexing the affairs of Princes with her interest in their government; so he delivered her from any perplexities in her own government. No usurpation, no offer of any Prince that attempted to invade or violate the true right of the Church, no practice of any Heretics, how subtle, how potent soever, though they equalled, though they exceeded the Church in number, and in power, (as at some times the Arians did) ever brought the Church to a perplexity, or to an apprehension of any necessity, of yielding to sacrilegious Princes, or to irreligious Heretics in any point, to procure their peace, or to enjoy their rest, but still they kept the dignity of Priesthood entire, and still they kept the truth of the Christian Religion entire; no perplexity how they should subsist if they were so stiff, ever brought them to go less to any prevarications, or modifications, either in matter of Religion towards Heretics, or in the execution of their religious function towards facrilegious usurpers. So God preserved the Primitive Church from perplexity; she was ever thankful and submiss towards her benefactors; she was ever erect and constant against usurpers. And this preservation from perplexity, we consider in the reformed Church also. When the fullness of time was come, Ecclesia Reformata. and that Church which lay in the bowels of the putative Church, the specious Church, the Roman Church, that is, those souls which groaned and panted after a Reformation, were enabled by God to effect it; when the Iniquity of Babylon was come to that height, That whereas at first they took of Alms, afterwards Monachi emunt & Nobiles vendunt, Monks bought, and Lords sold, Hieron. Ep. ad Demetr. nay Monasteries bought, and the Crown sold; when they went so far, as to forgea Donation of Constantin, by which they laid hold upon a great temporal state, and after that so much farther, as to renounce the Donation of Constantin, by which, for a long time, the Roman Church claimed all their temporal state, S. Peter's patrimony, and so, at last came to say, That all the states of all Christian Princes are held of the Church, and really may be, and actually are forfeited to her, and may, at her pleasure, be re-assumed by her; when for the art and science of Divinity itself, they had buried it in the darkness of the School, and wrapped up that that should save our souls, in those perplexed and inextricable clouds of school-divinity, and their school-divinity subject to such changes, as that a Jesuit professes, that in the compass but of thirty years, Tanner. in Aquin. p. 1. ad Lector. since Gregory de Valentia writ, Verè dici possit, novam quodammodo Theologiam prognatam esse, We may truly say, that we have a new art of Divinity risen amongst us; The Divinity of these times, says he, is not in our Church the same that it was thirty years since; since all parts of the Christian Church were so incensed, both with their heresy, and their tyranny, as that the Greek Church, which generally they would make the world believe, is absolutely as they are, is by some of their own Authors confessed to be more averse from them, Stenartius Ep. Dedic. ante Calecam. and more bitter against them, than Luther or Calvin; since upon all these provocations, God was pleased to bring this Church, the Reformed Church, not only to light, but to splendour, He hath preserved this Church from perplexities. If they say, we are perplexed with differences of opinions amongst ourselves, let this satisfy them, that we do agree all, in all fundamental things: And that in things much nearer the foundation, than those in which our differences lie, they differ amongst themselves, with more acrimony and bitterness, than we do. If they think to perplex us with the Fathers, we are ready to join that issue with them; where the Fathers speak unanimously, dogmatically, in matters of faith, we are content to be tried by the Fathers. If they think to perplex us with Counsels, we will go as fare as they in the old ones, and as fare as they for meeting in new Counsels, if they may be fully, that is, Royally, Imperially called, and equally proceeded in, and the Resolutions grow and gathered there upon debatements, upon the place, and not brought thither upon commandment from Rome. If there be no way but Force and Arms, if they will admit no trial but that, God be blessed that keeps us from the necessity, but God be blessed also that he preserves us from perplexity, or not being able to defend his cause, if he call us to that trial. And therefore let them never call it a Perplexity in us, let them never say that we know not what to do, when we acknowledge the Church of Rome to be truly a Church: for the Pest-house is a house, and theirs is such a Church; But the Pest-house is not the best air to live in, nor the Roman Church the best Church to die in. Thou hast preserved me from perplexities, may the Primitive Church say, and so may the Reformed too, and so also may every particular soul say, which is a Consideration, that from the beginning we proposed for every Part, and are now come to it in this. When we were upon this consideration in our former Part, Anima. we shown you, that no overtender or timorous soul, might hid itself in a retired life, from the offices of society, but though every particular age bring a new sin with it, every complexion a new sin, every occupation a new sin, every friend a new sin, that must be loved for his sake, yet Para te foro, Thou art bound to come abroad, and trust upon Gods hiding thee there from tentations, and so assure thyself that he will preserve thee from perplexities. Now, we consider in the School, Perplexities, which are such only by misunderstanding; and Perplexities, which are such in the true nature of the thing. Those of the first kind, perplexities in a misunderstanding, should fall upon no man; perplexities of the second kind, in the nature of the thing itself, can fall upon no man. Of the first kind, this is an example, A man swears to conceal all his friends secrets, and he tells him of a treasonable purpose against the State; Either way he must offend; Against his oath if he reveal it, or against his Allegiance, if he do not. This is no perplexity; for in a right understanding he must know, that such an Oath binds not. Of the second kind there was an example in Origen, who must, by the commandment of the Persecutor, either offer sacrifice to an Idol, or prostitute his body to an adominable abuse with another man. Which should he do? Neither. God gives a man an issue in such cases, by death; August. Et vitam potiùs finire dèbet quàm maculare, He is bound to give his life, rather than to stain his life. This timorous soul than fears where no fear is. He would hid himself, he is loath to come into the world, because he thinks he must needs sin. He needs not. Is there a necessity laid upon him, that he must die as rich as the richest of his profession, and that he cannot do without sin? That he must leave his wife such a Jointure, and his children such Portions, and all that he cannot do without sin? First, all that he may do without sin: We have seen in all Professions honest men die as rich, Mark 10.29. as dishonest. If thou do not, he that hath said, There is no man that hath left wife or children for my sake, but shall have a hundred fold here, and everlasting life, (which is a blessed Codicil to a Will that was abundant before) will also say, There is no man that hath left wife and children poor for my sake, but I will enlarge my providence upon them even in this life, and my glory in the next: And this was our second Part, considered in the Church and in ourselves, Thou shalt preserve, etc. There remains yet a third Part, 3. Part. that as God hides us from tentations, that they reach us not; or preserves us from intricacies, and perplexities, so that they hurt us not; so if they do, yet he compasses us with a joyful Deliverance, (as our former) or with songs of Deliverance, as this Translation hath it, that is, imprints in us a holy certitude, a fair assurance, that he will never forsake us; And this voice we may hear from the Church first, and then from every particular soul; for, to both, (as we have told you all the way) do all the parts of this Psalm appertain. As it is an exaltation of God's indignation, Compass. Lament. 3.5. when he is said to Compass by way of siege, (so Jerusalem complains, He hath builded against me, he hath compassed me with gall and travel, he hath hedged me about, that I cannot get out; So God threatens, I will camp against thee round about, Esay 39.3. and I will lay siege against thee) for this intimates such a displeasure of God, as that he does not only leave us succourless, joyless, comfortless in ourselves, but cuts off those supplies which might relieve us; He compasses us, he besieges us, he camps round about us, that no relief can enter; so when his love and mercy is expressed in this phrase, that he compasses us, it signifies both an entire mercy, that no enemy shall break in in any part, whilst he doth compass us, and a permanent and durable mercy, that as no force of the enemy, so no weariness in himself, shall make him discontinue his watches, or his guard over us, but that he will compass us still. Thy faithfulness is round about thee, says David to God; that is our first comfort, Psal. 89.8. that God compasses himself with his own faithfulness, that is, is never unmindful of his own promises, and purposes; And then, He is round about our habitations; Psal. 78.28. God compasses himself with his own faithfulness, and then, he compasses us with himself: That as Satan told God one day after another, Circuivi terram, & perambulavieam, Job 1.8. I have compassed the earth, and walked it round, Job 2.2. but could never say that he had broke into jobs quarter, for he found the impossibility in that, The Lord had made a hedge about him, Where note that Gods first care is of the man; and the soul is the man; first a hedge about him, and then, about his house, and about all that he had, on every side; Job 1.10. So day after day we shall find arguments to establish our hearts in hope, that the Lord hath compassed us, and nothing shall break in so, as to take us from him; but God shall say to us, as to his former people, Leva in circuitu oculos tuos, Lift up thine eyes round about, Esay 49.18. and behold, (which is one great comfort, that he enables us to see and to know our enemies, to discern a tentation to be a tentation) Omnes isti congregati sunt, All these gather themselves together, and come to thee, (which is another assistance, that when we see our enemies multiply, and that there is none that fighteth for us, but only thou O God, we make a more present recourse to him) But, Vivo ego dicit Dominus, As I live saith the Lord, Velut ornamento vestieris, thou shalt surely clothe thee with them all as with an ornament, and bind them on thee as a Bride doth; (which is the fullness of the mercy, That as in another place, he promises his children, Panis vester sunt, your enemies shall be your Bread, Numb. 14.9. you shall feed upon your enemies; So here he makes our enemies, even our spiritual enemies; our , and more than that, our Jewels, our Ornaments, we shall be the stronger, the warmer, the richer, by tribulations, and tentations, having overcome them, as we shall, if the Lord compass us, if he continue his watchfulness over us) And that David says here, first in the Church's behalf. God from the beginning carried a wall about his Church, in that assurance, Primitiva. Mat. 16.18. Portae inferi, The gates of hell shall not prevail against it. The Gentiles, the Philosophers that were without the Church, found a party, Traitors, Conspirators within, The Heretics; and all these led and maintained by potent Princes that persecuted the Church; The gates of hell were all opened, and issued all her forces, but Non praevaluerunt, they never prevailed. The Arians were sometimes more than the true Christians in all the world: The Martyrians, a sect that affected the name of Martyrdom, could name more Martyrs than the true Church could, but Evanuerunt, yet they vanished: The Emperors of Rome persecuted the Bishops of Rome to death, yet when we look upon the reckoning, the Emperors died faster than Bishops. Thou hast compassed me, says the Primitive Church, and so says the Reformed too. Princes that hated one another have joined in leagues against the Religion, Reformata. Princes that needed their Subjects, have spent their Subjects by thousands, in Massacres, to extinguish the Religion; Personal Assassinate's, Clandestine plots by poison, by fire, by water have been multiplied against Princes that favour the Religion; Inquisitions, Confiscations, Banishments, Dishonours have overflown them that profess the true Religion; and yet the Lord compassing his Church, she enjoys a holy certainty, arising out of these testimonies of his care, that she shall never be forsaken. And this may every good soul have too. God comes to us without any purpose of departing from us again; Anima. For the Spirit of life that God breated into man, that departs from man in death; but when God had assumed the nature of man, the Godhead never parted from that nature; no, not in death; When Christ lay dead in the grave, the Godhead remained united to that body and that soul, which were disunited in themselves; God was so united to man, as that he was with man, when man was not man, in the state of death. So when the Spirit of God hath invested, compassed thy soul, and made it his by those testimonies, that Spirit establishes it in a kind of assurance that he will never leave it. Old Rome had (as every City amongst the Heathen had) certain gods which they called their Tutelar gods, gods that were affected to the preservation of that place; But they durst never call upon those gods, by their proper names, for fear of losing them; lest if their names should be known by their enemies, their enemies should win away their gods from them, by bestowing more cost, or more devotion towards them than they themselves used. So also is it said of them, that when they had brought to Rome a foreign god, which they had taken in a conquered place, Victory, they cut the wings of their new god Victory, lest he should fly from them again. This was a misery, that they were not sure of their gods when they had them. We are; If he once come to us, he never goes from us, out of any variableness in himself, but in us only; That promise reaches to the whole Church, Esay 30.20. and to every particular soul, Thy Teachers shall not be removed into a corner any more, but thine eye shall see thy Teachers, which in the Original (as is appliably to our present purpose, noted by Rabbi Moses) is, Non erunt Doctores tui alati, Thy Teachers shall have no wings, They shall never fly from thee, and so the great Translation reads it, Non avolabunt. As their great god, Victory, could not fly from Rome, so after this victory which God hath given his Church in the Reformation, none of her Teachers should fly to, or towards Rome. Every way that God comes to us, he comes with a purpose to stay, and would imprint in us an assurance that he doth so, and that Impression is this Compassing of thy soul, with songs of deliverance, in the signification and use of which word, we shall in one word conclude all. God hath given us this certitude, Songs. this fair assurance of his perpetual residence with us, in a word of a double signification; The word is Ranan, which signifies Joy, exultation, singing; Lament. 2.14. Psal. 17.1. But it hath another sense too. Arise, Cry out in the night. And, Attend unto my cry, which are voices far from singing. This God means therein, That though he give us that comfort to sit and sing of our Deliverance, yet he would not have us fall asleep with that music, but as when we contemplate his everlasting goodness, we celebrate that with a constant Joy, so when we look upon our own weakness and unworthiness, we cry out, Wretched men that we are, who shall deliver us from this body of death? For though we have the Spirit of life in us, we have a body of death upon us. How loving soever my soul be, it will not stay in a diseased body; How loving soever the Spirit of life be, it will not stay in a diseased soul. My soul is loath to go from my body, but sickness and pain will drive it out; so will sinne, the Spirit of life from my soul. God compasses us with Songs of Deliverance, we are sure he would not leave us; But he compasses us with Cries too, we are afraid, we are sure, that we may drive him from us. Pray we therefore our Lord of everlasting goodness, That he will be our Hiding-place, That he will protect us from tentations incident to our several Callings, That he will preserve us from troubles, preserve us from them, or preserve us in them, preserve us that they come not, or preserve us that they overcome not; And that he will compass us, so as no enemy find overture unto us, and compass us with songs, with a joyful sense of our perseverance, but yet with cries too, with a solicitous fear, that that multiplicity and heinousness of our sins may weary even the incessant and indefatigable Spirit of comfort himself, and chase him from us. SERM. LXI. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.8. I will Instruct thee, and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go, I will guide thee with mine eye. THis verse, more than any other in the Psalm, answers the Title of the Psalm. The title is, David's Instruction; and here in the Text it is said, I will instruct thee, and teach thee, in the way thou shalt go. There are eleven Psalms that have that Title, Psalms of Instruction; The whole book is Sepher Tehillim, The book of praises; and it is a good way of praising God, to receive Instruction, Instruction how to praise him. Therefore doth the holy Ghost return so often to this catechistical way, Instruction, Institution, as to propose so many Psalms, expressly under that Title purposely to that use. In one of those, The manner how Instruction should be given, is expressed also; Psal. 45. Bernard. It must be in a loving manner, for the Title is Canticum Amorum, A song of love for Instruction. For Absque prudentia, & benevolentia, non sunt perfecta consilia: True Instruction is a making love to the Congregation, and to every soul in it; but it is but to the soul. And so when S. Paul said, He was mad for their sakes, Insanivit Amatoriam insaniam, says Theophylact, S. Paul was mad for love of them, to whom he writ his holy love-letters, his Epistles. And thereupon do the Rabbins call this Psalm, Leb David, Cor Davidis, The opening and pouring out of David's heart to them, whom he instructs. We have no way into your hearts, but by sending our hearts. The Poet's counsel is, ameris, ama, If thou wouldst be truly loved, do thou love truly; The holy Ghosts precept upon us is, credaris, crede, That if we would have you believe, we believe ourselves. It is not to our Eloquence that God promises a blessing, but to our sincerity, not to our tongue, but to our heart: All our hope of bringing you to love God, is in a loving and hearty manner to propose God's love to you. The height of the Spouses love to Christ, came but to that, Cant. 2.5. I am sick of love: The love of Christ went farther, To die for love. Love is as strong as death; Cant. 8.6. but nothing else is as strong as either; and both, Love and Death, met in Christ. How strong and powerful upon you then should that Instruction be, that comes to you from both these, The Love and Death of Christ Jesus? and such an Instruction doth this text exhibit, I will instruct thee, and teach thee in the way in which thou shalt go, I will guide thee with mine eye. God so loved the world, as that he sent his Son to die: The Son being dead so loved the world, as that he returned to that world again; and being ascended; sent the holy Ghost to establish a Church, and in that Church, Vsque ad consummationem, till the end of the world, shall that holy Spirit execute this catechistical Office, He shall instruct thee, and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go, He shall guide thee with his eye. Though then some later Expositors have doubted of the person, who doth this Office, Divisio. To Instruct, who this I in our Text is, because the Hebrew word Le David, is as well Davidis, as Davidi, An Instruction from David, as an Instruction to David, and so the Catechist may seem to be David, and no more; yet since this Criticism upon the word, Le David, argues but a possibility that it may, and not a necessity that it must be so, we accompany S. Hierome, and indeed the whole body of the Fathers, in accepting this Instruction from God himself, it is no other than God himself that says, I will instruct thee, etc. No other than God himself can undertake so much as is promised in this text. For here is first, a rectifying of the understanding, I will instruct thee, and in the Original there is somewhat more than our Translation reaches to; It is there, Intelligere faciam te, I will moke thee understand. Man can instruct, God only can make us understand. And then it is Faciam te, I will make Thee, Thee understand; The work is the Lords, The understanding is the man's: for God does not work in man, as the Devil did in Idols, and In Pythonissis, and In Ventriloquis, in possessed persons, who had no voluntary concurrence with the action of the Devil, but were merely Passive; God works so in man, as that he makes man work too, Faciam Te, I will make Thee understand; That that shall be done shall be done by me, but in Thee; the Power that rectifies the act is Gods, the Act is man's; Faciam te, says God, I will make thee, thou, every particular person, (for that arises out of this singular and distributive word, Thee, which threatens no exception, no exclusion) I will make every person, to whom I present Instruction, capable of that Instruction, and if he receive it not, it is only his, and not my fault. And so this first part is an Instruction De credendis, of such things, as by Gods rectifying of our understanding, we are bound to believe. And then in a second part, there follows a more particular Instructing, Docebo, I will teach thee, And that In via, In the way; It is not only De via, To teach thee, which is the way, that thou mayest find it, but In via, How to keep the way, when thou art in it; He will teach thee, not only gradiaris, That thou mayest walk in it, and not sleep, but Quo modo gradieris, How thou mayest walk in it, and not stray; And so this second part is an Institution De agendis, of those things, which, thine understanding being formerly rectified, and deduced into a belief, thou art bound to do. And then in the last words of the text, I will guide thee with mine eye, there is a third part, an establishment, a confirmation, by an incessant watchfulness in God; He will consider, consult upon us, (for so much the Original word imports) He will not leave us to Contingencies, to Fortune, no nor to his own general Providence, by which all Creatures are universally in his protection, and administration, but he will ponder us, consider us, study us; And that with his eye, which is the sharpest, and most sensible organ and instrument, soon feels, if any thing be amiss, and so inclines him quickly to rectify us; And so this third part is an Instruction De sperandis, it hath evermore a relation to the future, to the constancy and perseverance of God's goodness towards us; to the end, and in the end, he will guide us with his eye: Except the eye of God can be put out, we cannot be put out of his sight, and his care. So that, both our freight which we are to take in, that is, what we are to believe concerning God; And the voyage which we are to make, how we are to steer and govern our course, that is, our behaviour and conversation in the household of the faithful; And then the Haven to which we must go, that is, our assurance of arriving at the heavenly Jerusalem, are expressed in this Chart, in this Map, in this Instruction, in this Text, I will Instruct thee, and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go, I will guide thee with mine eye. And when you have done all this, Believed aright, and lived according to that belief, and died according to that life, in the last voice Surgite, you shall find a Venite, as soon as you are called from the dust of the grave, you shall Enter into your Master's joy, and be no more called servants, but friends, no more friends, but sons, no more sons but heirs, no more heirs, but coheires with the only Son of God, no more coheires, but Idem Spiritus, The same Spirit with the Lord. First then, 1. Part. Instruit. the office which God by his blessed Spirit, through us, in his Church, undertakes, is to Instruct. And this being done so by God himself, God sending his Spirit, his Spirit working in his Ministers, his Ministers labouring in his Church, it is strange that S. Paul speaking so, in the name of God, and his Spirit, and his Ministers, and his Church, should be put to entreat his hearers, To suffer a word of exhortation. Yet he is; Heb. 13.22. I beseech ye, brethren, suffer a word of Exhortation. And the strangeness of the case is exalted in this, that the word there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Solatii, and so the Vulgat reads it, and justly, sufferatis verbum solatii, I bescech ye to suffer a word of Comfort. What will ye hear willingly, if ye do not willingly hear words of Comfort? With what shall we exercise your holy joy and cheerfulness, if even words of Comfort must exercise your patience? And yet we must beseech you to suffer, even our words of comfort; for, we can propose no true comfort unto you, but such as carries some irksomeness, some bitterness with it; we can create no true joy, no true acquiescence in you, without some exercise of your patience too. We cannot promise you peace with God, without a war in yourselves, nor reconciliation to him, without falling out with yourselves, nor eternal joy in the next world, without a solemn remorse for the sinful abuses of this. We cannot promise you a good to morrow, without sending ye bacl to the consideration of an ill yesterday; for your hearing to day, is not enough, except ye repent yesterday. But yet, though with S. Paul we be put to beseech you, sufferatis, That ye would suffer Instruction, though we must sometimes exercise your patience, yet it is but verbum instructionis, a word of Instruction; and though Instruction be Increpation, (for as the word is Solatium, Comfort, (so we have told you it is) it is Increpation too, for all true comfort hath Increpation in it) yet it may easily be suffered, because it is but verbum, but a word, a word and away. We would not dwell upon increpations, and chide, and bitternesses; we would pierce but so deep as might make you search your wounds, when you come home to your Chamber, to bring you to a tenderness there, not to a paleness or blushing here. We never stay so long upon denouncing the judgements of God, but that we would, as feign as you, be at an end of that Paragraph, of that period, of that point, that we might come into a calm, and into a Lee-shore, and tell you of the mercies of God in Christ Jesus. You may suffer Instruction, though Instruction be increpation, for it is but a word of instruction, we have soon done; and you may suffer, them, because they are but Verba, not Verbera, They are but words, and not blows. It is not Traditio Satanae, a delivering you up to Satan, it is not the confusion of face, nor consternation of spirit, nor a jealousy and suspicion of God's good purpose upon you, that we would induce by our Instruction, though it be Increpation, but only a sense of your sins, and of the Majesty of God violated by them, and so to a better capacity of this Instruction, which the Holy Ghost here presents, In credendis, in those things which you are bound to believe; of which his first degree is, Intelligere te faciam, He will make ye understand, he will work upon your understanding, for, so much (as we noted to you at first) doth that word, which we Translate here, I will Instruct thee, comprehend. Oportet accedentem credere; The Apostle seems to make that our first step, In intellectu. Heb. 11.6. He that comes to God, must believe. So it is our first step to God, To believe, but there is a step towards God, before it come to faith, which is, to understand; God works first upon the understanding. God proceeds in our conversion, and regeneration, as he did in our first Creation. There man was nothing; but God breathed not a soul into that nothing; but of a clod of earth he made a body, and into that body infused a soul. Man in his Conversion, is nothing, does nothing. His body is not verier dust in the grave, till a Resurrection, than his soul is dust in his body, till a resuscitation by grace. But then this grace does not work upon this nothingness that is in man, upon this mere privation; but Grace finds out man's natural faculties, and exalts them to a capacity, and a susciptiblenesse of the working thereof, and so by the understanding infuses faith. Therefore God gins his Instruction here at the understanding; and he does not say at first, Faciam te credere, I will make thee to believe, but Faciam te intelligere, I will make thee understand. That then being God's Method, To make us understand, certainly those things which belong to our Salvation, are not In-intelligibilia, not In-intelligible, un-understandable, Tertul. un-conceiveavable things, but the Articles of faith are discernible by Reason. For though Reason cannot apprehend that a Virgin should have a Son, or that God should be made Man and die, if we put our Reason primarily and immediately upon the Article single, (for so it is the object of faith only) yet if we pursue God's Method, and see what our understanding can do, we shall see, that out of ratiocination and discourse, and probabilities, and very similitudes, at last will arise evident and necessary conclusions; such as these, That as there is a God, that God must be worshipped according to his will, That therefore that will of God must be declared and manifested somewhere, That this is done in some permanent way, in some Scripture, which is the Word of God, That this book, which we call the Bible, is, by better reasons then any others can pretend, that Scripture; And when our Reason hath carried us so far, as to accept these Scriptures for the Word of God, than all the particular Articles, A Virgin's Son, and a mortal God, will follow evidently enough. And then those two Propositions, Mysteria credenda ut intelligantur, Mysteries of Religion must be believed before they be understood, and Mysteria intelligenda ut credantur, Mysteries of Religion must be understood before they can be believed, will be all one; For God exalts our natural faculty of understanding by Grace to apprehend them, and then to that submission and assent, which he by grace produces out of our understanding, by a succeeding and more powerful Grace he sets to the Seal of faith. Wait thou therefore upon God, his way; present unto him an humble and a diligent understanding; conclude not too desperately against thyself, if thou have not yet attained to all degrees of faith, but admit that preparation, which God offers to thine understanding, by an assiduous and a sedulous hearing; for a narrower faith that proceeds out of a true understanding, shall carry thee farther than a faith that seems larger, but is wrapped up in an implicit ignorance; no man believes profitably, that knows not why he believes. The subject then, that this work is wrought in, is that faculty, man's understanding; There God gins in the Instruction of this text, Thou shalt understand, Thou shalt; The act shall be thine, but yet, the power is mine, faciam te, I will make thee understand, which is another Consideration in this part. God doth not determine his promise here, Faciam. in a Faciam ut intelligas, I will cast an understanding upon thee, I will cause an understanding to fall upon thee, but it is faciam te intelligere, I will make thee to understand, Thou shalt be an Agent in thine own salvation. When God made the Ass speak under Balaam, God went not so far as this first step, (not to the faciam ut intelligas) he imprinted, infused no understanding in that Beast. When God suffers the hypocrite to praise him, he imprints no understanding; Here is a Frustra colunt, It is a worship that is no worship, when it is with the lips only, and the heart far off. So when a Papist cries Templum domini, Templum domini, Visibility of a Church, Infallibility in a Church, here is no understanding; He pretends to believe as the Church believes, but he knows not what the Church believes; no, nor he neither upon whom he relies for his Instruction, his Priest, his Confessor. They are deceived that think every Priest or Jesuit, that comes hither, knows the Tenets of that Church; it is a more reserved, a more perplexed, a more involved matter then so. To contract this Consideration, when a Preacher speaks well, and destroys as fast by his ill life, as he builds by his good doctrine, Psal. 111.10. here is no understanding neither. A good understanding have all they that keep the Commandments; not all they that preach them, but that keep them: It is all they, 1 Joh. 2.3. and only they. There is no other assurance but that; Hereby we are sure that we know him, if we keep his Commandments. This is our Criterium, and only this; hereby we know it, Pro. 18.9. and by nothing else. So that as he that is slothful in his work, is even the brother of him that is a great waster; So he that builds not with both hands, life and doctrine, Chrysost. is slothful in his work. He that preaches against sin, and doth it, Instruit dominum quomodo eum condemnet, He doth not so much teach his Auditory, how to scape condemnation, as teach God how to condemn him. In these cases there is no understanding at all; In the case of the Ass, and the hypocrite, and the blind Romanist, and the vicious Preacher. In some other cases, there is understanding given, but without any concurrence, any cooperation of man, as in those often visions, and dreams, and manifestations of God, to the Prophets, and his other servants; There was a faciam ut intelligas, God would make his pleasure known unto them, but yet not as in this Text, where God makes use of the man himself for his own salvation. But yet it is God, and God alone that does all this, that rectifies our understanding, as well as that establishes our faith. It is my soul that says to mine eye, faciam te videre, I will make thee see, and my soul that says to mine ear, faciam te audire, I will make thee hear, and without that soul, that eye and ear could no more see nor hear, than the eyes and ears of an Idol; so it is my God that says to my soul, faciam te intelligere, I will make thee understand. And therefore as thou art bound to infinite thanksgivings to God, when he hath brought thee to faith, to forget not thy tribute by the way, to bless and magnify him, if he have enlarged thy desire of understanding, and thy capacity of understanding, and thy means of understanding; for, as howsoever a man may forget the order of the letters, after he is come to read perfectly, and forget the rules of his Grammar, after he is come to speak perfectly, yet by those letters, and by that Grammar he came to that perfection; so, though faith be of an infinite exaltation above understanding, yet, as though our understanding be above our senses, yet by our senses we come to understand, so by our understanding we come to believe. And though the Holy Ghost repeat that more than once, Domine quis credidit? Lord who believes our report? And that, Shall the son of Man find faith upon earth when he comes? though he complain of want of faith, yet he multiplies infinitely that complaint for want of understanding, and there are ten Non intelligunts for one Non credunt, ten increpations, that his people did not understand, for one that they did not believe; because, though faith be a nobler operation, God takes it always worst in us, to neglect those things which are nearest us, as he doth to neglect the ordinary and necessary duties of Religion, and search curiously into the unrevealed purposes of his secret counsels. And this Instruction to the understanding, he seems in this text to extend to all, for this singular word, Te, I will make Thee, Thee to understand, includes no exclusion, but is an offer, a promise to all, which is our other and last Consideration in this first part. In this consideration, let us stop a little upon this question, Te. why the Scriptures of God more than any other book, do still speak in this singular person, and in this familiar person? still Tu, and Tibi, and Te; Thou must love God, God speaks to thee, God hath care of thee. Certainly in those passages, which are from lower persons to Princes, no Author is of a more humble, and reverential, and ceremonial phrase, than the phrase of the Scripture is. Who could go lower than David to Saul, that calls himself a flea, 1 Sam. 24.15. 2 Sam. 9.8. Dan. 2.37. and a dead dog? Who could go higher, than Daniel to Nabuchadnezzar, O King, thou art King of Kings; In all places, the children of men, the beasts of the field, the fouls of the air are given into thy hand; Thy greatness reacheth to heaven, Dan. 4.19. and thy dominions to the ends of the earth. So is it also in persons nearer in nature, and nearer in rank; jacob bows seven times to the ground, in the presence of his brother Esau, and My Lord, and My Lord, Gen. 33.3. at every word. The Scripture phrase is as ceremonial and as observant of distances, as any, and yet still full of this familiar word too, Tu and Tuus, Thou and Thine. And we also, we who deal most with the Scriptures, are more accustomed to the same phrase then any other kind of speakers are. In a Parliament, who is ever heard to say, Thou must needs grant this, Thou mayest be bold to yield to this? Or who ever speaks so to a Judge in any Court? Nay, the King himself will not speak to the people in that phrase. And yet in the presence of the greatest, we say ordinarily, Amend thy life, and God be merciful to thee, and I absolve thee of all thy sins. Beloved, in the Scripture. God speaks either to the Church, his Spouse, and to his children, and so he may be bo●d, and would be familiar with them; Or else he speaks so, as that he would be thought 〈◊〉 thee to speak singularly to thy soul in particular. Know then, that Christ Jesus ha● done enough for the salvation of all; but know too, that if there had been no other name written in the book of life but thine, he would have died for Thee. Of those which were given him, he lost none; but if there had been none given him, but Thou, rather than have lost Thee, he would have given the same price for Thee, that he gave for the whole world. And therefore when thou hearest his mercies distributed in that particular, and that familiar phrase, Faciam Te, I will make Thee understand, thou knowest not whether he speak to any other in the Congregation or no; Be sure that he speak to Thee; which he does, if thou harken to him, and answer him. If thou canst not find that he means Thee yet, that he speaks to thee now, if thou think he speak rather to some other, whose faith and good life thou preferrest before thine own, do but begin to think now of the blessedness of that man, to whom thou thinkest he speaks, and say to God, with thy Saviour, Eli, Eli, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Why art thou gone to the other side, or why to the next on my right, or on my left hand, and left out me? Why speakest thou not comfortably to my soul? and he will leave the ninety nine for thee, and thou shalt find Onus amoris, such a weight, and burden, and load of his love upon thee, as thou shalt be feign almost to say with S. Peter, Exi à me Domine, O Lord go farther from me, that is, thou shalt see such an obligation of mercy laid upon thee, as putteth thee beyond all possibility of comprehension, much more of retribution, or of due and competent thanksgiving. Miserere animae tuae, Be but merciful to thine own soul, and God will be merciful to it too; If God had never meant to be merciful to thee, he would learn of thee; If thou couldst love thyself before God love thee, God would love thee for loving thyself; how much more for thy loving his love in thee? Love understanding, and, faciet te intelligere, he will make thee understand enough for thy pilgrimage, enough for thy transmigration, enough for thy eternal habitation. As we count them wisest, who are most provident, and foresee most, he will make thee see farther than all they, through all generations, beyond children, and children's children, (which is the prospect of the world) to all eternity, that hath no termination, and he will allow thee an understanding for this world too; He will bid thee Lift up thine eyes to heaven, Esay 51.6. and bid thee Look down to the earth too; He will make thy considerations of this world acceptable to him, as well as those of the next; He will remember thee, that Angels descended as well as ascended, that to a religious soul, Gen. 28. this world is not out of the way to heaven; Faciet te intelligere, He will make thee understand enough for both. And so we have done with that first Part, De credendis, Things which we are bound to believe, That even for those, God works upon the understanding, That though God work all in all, yet it is the man that understands; and lastly, that in the Holy Ghosts choosing this word of singularity, Te, I will make thee understand, there is pregnant intimation of God's large and diffusive goodness to all, This word, Thee, excludes none. And so we pass to our second Part, Instruction, De agendis, what we are to do, I will teach thee in the way thou shalt go. If any man lack wisdom, 2 Part. Docebo. let him ask it of God; and Faciet intelligere, God shall make him understand: God shall; I may study, and then, you may hear me, but God only makes us all understand; for the understanding is the door of faith, and that door he opens, and he shuts: So by understanding he brings us to believe. But then, he that truly believes, finds that he hath something to do too; And he says to himself, Wherewith shall a young man cleanse his ways? And he cannot tell himself; He asks them whom God hath sent to tell him, his Ministers, Viri, fratres, Men and brethren, what shall we do to be saved? And by their leading, he goes to the Spirit of God, to God himself, and says, Mat. 19.16. Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life? And that good Master will teach him what to do, which is the promise of this part of Instruction in our Text, Gregor. I will teach thee in the way thou shalt go. And Plus est docere, quàm instruere, God promises more in this, that he will Teach thee in the way, then in the former, that he would make thee understand. Not that the matter or subject in this Part, is the greater, (for the former had relation to faith, and this but to good works) but that it intimates a more frequent recourse to us, and a more studious care of us, and a more provident vigilancy over us, and a more familiar conversation with us, that God accompanies us in all our way, and directs us in all our particular actions, then that by understanding he hath brought us to believe. He that horses a man well for a journey, or he that rewards a man well for a journey, does a greater work, than he that goes along with him as a guide; but yet there is aliquid magis in the guide, there is a more continual, a more incessant courtesy in him. We see in the Roman Church, they are not in their Beads, without Credoes, they believe enough; and lest that should not be enough, they have made a new Creed of more Articles then that, in the Council of Trent, and to testify a strong faith therein, they must swear they believe it: And then they have to every Creed, more Pater nosters, they petition enough, ask enough at God's hands; They have Credoes enough, Pater nosters enough, and Ave Maries more then enough; But when we consider them in the Commandments, what we are to do, (as great Workers as they pretend to be) though they enlarge their Credoes, and multiply their Pater nosters, they contract the Commandments, and put two into one, for fear of meeting one against Images. This then expresses Gods daily care of us, that he teaches us the way. But then, even that implies, that we are all out of our way; still all bends, all conduces to that, An humble acknowledgement of our own weakness, a present recourse to the love and power of God; The first thing I look for in the Exposition of any Scripture, and the nearest way to the literal sense thereof, is, what may most deject and vilify man, what may most exalt, and glorify God. We are all, all out of our way; but God deals not alike with all; Psal. 35.6. Esay 26.7. for, for the wicked, Their way is dark and slippery, And then, The Angel of the Lord persecutes them; But for those whom he loves, He will weigh the paths of the just, (says our later Translation) And, He will make the paths of the righteous equal and even, says our former; It shall be a path often beaten by him, for it is not righteousness, to be righteous once a year, at Easter, nor once a week, upon Sunday. An Anniversary righteousness, an Hebdomadary righteousness, a Sabbatarian righteousness is no righteousness. But it is a path; and so made even, without occasions of stumbling; that is, he shall be able to walk in any profession, and to make good any station, and not be diverted by the power of any tentations incident to that calling. The Angel of the Lord, The evil Angel, distrust and diffidence, shall persecute the wicked, in his dark and slippery way; this is no teaching; but because the godly have a teaching, even their direction hath a correction too; God beats his Scholars into their way too. The difference is expressed in the Prophet, Esay 30.21. When the Lord hath given you the bread of adversity, and the water of affliction, (for in God's School that is Scholars far) yet, says God, Thy Teachers shall not be removed from thee into a corner; Still in thine affliction thou shalt have a Teacher, or even the affliction itself shall be God's Usher; and thou shalt have evidence of it, Thy Teacher shall not be removed into a corner; thou shalt see it; and (as it follows there) Thine ears shall hear a voice behind thee; (that is, a voice arising even from that affliction that thou hast suffered) and that voice shall say, This is the way, walk ye in it; As dark as affliction is, it shall show thee the way, Haec est via, This is the way, as much as affliction enfeebles thee, yet it shall enable thee to walk in it, Ambulate in ea. God is a Schoolmaster; not as the Law was, to teach with a sword in his hand; but yet he teaches with a rod in his hand, though not with a sword. Now in teaching us the way, he instructs us De via, and In via; which is the way, De via. Psal. 119.168. and what is to be done in it. He sees all our ways; All my ways are before thee, says David. And he sees them not so as though they belonged not to him, for he considers them, Does not he behold all my ways, and tell all my steps? He sees them, Job 31.4. Esay 24.17. and sees our irremediable danger in them; Formido, & fovea, & laqueus, Fear, and a pit, and snares are upon thee; Upon whom? There we see the generality of this single word, Thee, that it is all; for so, it follows there, Upon thee, O Inhabitant of the earth. The danger than is general, and the Lord knows it; Who then can teach us a better way, but he? But how doth he teach us this way? When God had promised Moses to send an Angel to show the people their way, (I will send an Angel before thee) Moses says to God, See, Exod. 33.2, 12. thou sayest, Led this people forth, and thou hast not showed me whom thou wilt send with me; (so those Translators thought good to render it) God had told him of an Angel, but that satisfied not Moses; He must have something showed to him, he must see his guide. Ver. 15. If thy presence go not with me, carry me not from hence, says he to God. For, wherein shall it be known, that I, and thy people have found favour in thy sight? shall it not be when thou goest up with us? And therefore God satisfies him, My presence shall go with thee. Go? but how? says Moses; Wilt thou be pleased to show me thy glory? Ver. 18. Shall we see any thing? They did see that Pillar in which God was, and that presence, that Pillar shown the way. To us, the Church is that Pillar; in that, God shows us our way. For strength it is a Pillar, and a Pillar for firmness and fixation: But yet the Church is neither an equal Pillar, always fire, but sometimes cloud too; The Church is more and less visible, sometimes in splendour, sometimes in an eclipse; neither is it so a fixed Pillar, as that it is not in divers places. The Church is not so fixed to Rome, as that it is not communicated to other Nations, nor so limited in itself, as that it may not admit changes, in those things that appertain to Order, and Discipline. Our way, that God teaches us, is the Church; That is a Pillar; Fixed, for Fundamental things, but yet a movable Pillar, for things indifferent, and arbitrary. Thus he teaches, Quid via, which is the way, It is the Church, the Pillar of Truth. In via. He teaches next, Quid in via, What is to be done in the way; for, that counsel of the Apostle, See that ye walk circumspectly, presumes a man to be in the way; Eph. 5.15. else he would have cried to have stopped him, or to have turned him, and not bid him go on, how circumspectly soever. But, In my path, says David, Psal. 140.5. (not making any doubt but that he was in a right path) in my path, the proud have laid a snare for me, and spread a net with cords; Ad manum orbitae, (says the Original) even at the hand of the path; That path which should (as it were) reach out a hand to lead me, hath a snare in it. And therefore, says David, with so much vehemence in the entrance of that Psalm, Deliver me, O Lord, from the evil man, who purposeth to overthrow my go; Though I go in the right way, the true Church, yet purposes to overthrow me there. This Evil man works upon us: The man of sin; in those instruments that still cast that snare in our way, in our Church, There is a minority, an invisibility, and a fallibility in your Church; you begun but yesterday in Luther, and you are fallen out already in Calvin. So also works this Evil man amongst us, in those schismatic, who cast that snare in our way, Your way (though it be in part mended) hath yet impressions of the steps of the Beast, and it is a circular, and giddy way, that will bring us back again to Rome. And therefore, beloved, though you be in the way, see ye walk circumspectly, for the snares that both these have cast in the way, the reproaches, and defamations that both these have cast upon our Church. But when thou hast scaped both these snares, of Papist, and Scismatique, pray still to be delivered from that Evil man, that is within thee. Non tantùm potest hominem decipere, Hieron. quàm per Organum hominis, The Devil hath not so powerful an instrument, nor so subtle an engine upon thee as thyself. August. Quis in hoc seculo non patitur hominem malum? Who in this world (or if he go so fare out of this world, as never to see man but himself) is not troubled with this evil man? When thou prayest with David, to be delivered from this evil man, if God ask thee whom thou meanest, must thou not say, thyself? Canst thou show God a worse? Chrysost. Qui non est malus, nihil à malo mali patitur; If a man were not evil in himself, the worst thing in the world could not hurt him; the Devil would not offer to give fire, if there were no powder in thy heart. What that evil man is, that is in another, I cannot know: I cannot always discern another's snare; for, What man knoweth the things of a man, 1 Cor. 2.11. save the spirit of a man which is in him? Thy spirit knows what the evil man that is in thee, is. Deliver thyself of that evil man that ensnares thee in thy way; though thou come to Church; yea even when thou art there. David repeats this word A viro malo, from the evil man, twice in that Psalm. In one place, A viro malo, is in that name, Meish, which is a name of man proper only to the stronger sex, and intimates snares and tentations of stronger power, As when fear, or favour tempts a man to come to a superstitious, and idolatrous service. In the other it is but Meadam, and that is a name common to men, and women, and children, and intimates, that omissions, negligences, infirmities, may encumber us, ensnare us, though we be in the way, even in the true place of God's service; and the eye may be ensnared as dangerously, and as damnably in this place, as the ear, or the tongue in the Chamber. As S. Hierome says, Nugae in ore Sacerdotis sunt sacrilegium, An idle word in a Churchman's mouth is sacrilege; so a wanton look in the Church, is an Adultery. Now when God hath thus taught us the way, what it is, that is, brought us to the true Church, (for till then, all is diversion, all banishment) and taught us In via, what to do in that way, To resist tentations to superstition from other imaginary Churches, tentations to particular sins from the evil men of the world, and from the worst man in the world, ourself, the Instruction in our Text is carried a step farther, that is, to proceed and go forward in that way, Qua gradieris, I will teach thee to walk in that way. When S. Augustine saith upon this place, Qua gradieris. It is via qua gradieris, & non cui haerebis, A way to walk in, not to stick upon, he doth not mean, That we should ever change this way, or departed from it, (that any cross in this, should make us hearken after another religion) It is not that we should not stick to it, but that we should not stick in it, nor loiter in the way. Thou hast been in this way (in the true Church) ever since thy Baptism: and yet, if a man that hath lived morally well all his life, and no more than so, find by God's grace a door opened into the Christian Church, and a short turning into this right way, at the end of his life, he by the benefit of those good Moral actions, shall be before thee, who hast lived lazily, though in the right way, at his first step; For though those good Moral actions were not good works, when he did them, yet then, that grace which he lays hold upon at last, shall reflect a tincture upon them, and make them good in the eyes of God, ab initio. If thou have not been lazy in thy way, in thy Christian profession hitherto, yet except thou proceed still, except thou go from hence now, better than thou camest, (better in thy purpose) and come hither next day better than thou goest, (better in thy practice) thou hast not learned this lesson in this Instruction, I will teach thee to walk in this way. A Christian hath no Solstice, no highest point, where he may stand still, and go no farther; much less hath he any Aequator, where days and nights are equal, that is, a liberty to spend as much time ill, as well, as many hours in sinful pleasures, August. as in religious exercises. Quicquid citra Deum est, via est, nec immorandum in ea; He doth not say, praeter Deum, much less contra Deum; For whatsoever is against God, nay, whatsoever is besides God, is altogether out of the way; But citra Deum, on this side of God: Till we come to God in heaven, all our best is but our way to him. All the zeal of gathering knowledge, all the growth of faith, all the practice of sanctification, is but via, the way; and non immorandum in ea; since we have here a promise of God's assistance in it, in the way, we are sure there is an obligation upon it, as upon a duty, in this way, humbly, and patiently, and laboriously to walk towards him, without stopping upon any thing in this world, either preferments on the right, or disgraces on the left hand, (for a Cart may stop us, as well as a Coach, low things as well as high, with as much trouble, and more annoyance) Which is more especially intended in the last words of the Text, Firmabo super te oculos meos, I will settle my providence, fix mine eye upon thee, I will guide thee with mine eye. Thus fare hath our blessed Lord assured us, That he will make us understand, 3 Part. which is his Instruction de credendis, what to Believe; And that he will teach us to walk in his way, which is his Instruction de agendis, what to Do, how to avoid tentations; This last is, That he will guide us with his eye, which is his Instruction de sperandis, what we are to Hope for at his hand, if in this way we do stumble, or fall into some sins of infirmities. But it is but de sperandis, not the praesumendis; when by infirmity thou art fallen, thy Hope must begin then; but if the Hope begun before, so as thou fellest upon hope that God would raise thee, than it was presumption, and there the Lords eye shuts in, and guides thee no longer. Otherwise he directs thee with his eye, (that is, with his gracious and powerful looking upon thee) to the means of thy recovery. We hear of no blows, we hear of no chiding from him towards Peter, but all that is said, is, Luke 22.65. The Lord turned back and looked upon Peter, and then he remembered his case; The eye of the Lord lightened his darkness; The eye of the Lord thawed those three crusts of Ice, which were grown over his heart, in his three denials of his Master. A Candle wakes some men, as well as a noise; The eye of the Lord works upon a good soul, as much as his hand, and he is as much affected with this consideration, The Lord sees me, as with this, The Lord strikes me. We read in Natural story of some creatures, Qui solo oculorum aspectu fovent ova, Plin. l. 10. c. 9 which hatch their eggs only by looking upon them; What cannot the eye of God produce and hatch in us? Plus est quod probatur aspectu, quàm quod sermone. Ambrose. A man may seem to commend in words, and yet his countenance shall dispraise. His word infuses good purposes into us, but if God continue his eye upon us, it is a farther approbation, for He is a God of pure eyes, and will not look upon the wicked. Deut. 11.12. This land doth the Lord thy God care for, and the eyes of the Lord are always upon it from the beginning of the year, even to the end thereof. What a cheerful spring, what a fruitful Autumn hath that soul, that hath the eye of the Lord always upon her? The eye of the Lord upon me, makes midnight noon, and S. Lucy's day S. Barnabies; It makes Capricorn Cancer, and the Winters the Summer's Solstice; The eye of the Lord sanctifies, nay more than sanctifies, glorifies all the Eclipses of dishonour, makes Melancholy cheerfulness, diffidence assurance, and turns the jealousy of the sad soul into infallibility. Upon his people his eye shined in the wilderness; his eye singled them in Egypt, and in Babylon they were sustained by his eye. They were, and we are; Ezra 5.5. Psal. 33.18. The eye of their God was upon the Elders of Israel, And, Behold, the eye of the Lord is upon all them that fear him. The Proverb is not only as old as Aristotle, Oculus domini, and Pes domini, The eye of the Master fattens the horse, and the foot of the Master marles the ground, but it is as old as the Creation, God saw all that he had made, and so, it was very good; It was visio approbationis, Hieron. and his approbation was the exaltation thereof. This guiding then with the eye, we consider to be his particular care, and his personal providence upon us, in his Church; For, a man may be in the King's presence, and yet not in his eye; and so he may in Gods. God's whole Ordinance in his Church, is God's face; For, that is the face of God, by which God is manifested to us; But then, August. that eye in that face, by which he promises to guide us, in this Text, is that blessed Spirit of his, by whose operation he makes that grace, which does evermore accompany his Ordinances, effectual upon us; The whole Congregation sees God face to face, in the Service, in the Sermon, in the Sacrament; but there is an eye in that face, an eye in that Service, an eye in that Sermon, an eye in that Sacrament, a piercing and an operating Spirit, that looks upon that soul, and foments and cherishes that soul, who by a good use of God's former grace, is become fit for his present. And this guiding us with his eye, manifests itself in these two great effects; Convertit. conversion to him, and union with him. First, his eye works upon ours; His eye turns ours to look upon him. Still it is so expressed with an Ecce; Behold, Psal. 33.18. the eye of the Lord is upon all them that fear him; His eye calls ours to behold that; And than our eye calls upon his, to observe our cheerful readiness, Behold, Psal. 123.2. as the eye of a servant looks to the hand of his Master, so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God, till he have mercy upon us. Where the Donec, Until, is an everlasting Donec, as the blessed Virgins was; A Virgin Donec, till she brought forth her first Son, and a Virgin ever after; So our eyes wait upon God, till he have mercy, that is, while he hath it, and that he may continue his mercy; for it was his merciful eye that turned ours to him, and it is the same mercy, that we wait upon him. And then, when, as a well made Picture doth always look upon him, that looks upon it, this Image of God in our soul, is turned to him, by his turning to it, it is impossible we should do any foul, any uncomely thing in his presence. Will any man solicit a Wife or a Daughter, and call the Father or Husband to look on? Will any man break open thy house in the night, and first wake thee, and call thee up? Can any man give his body to uncleanness, his tongue to profaneness, his heart to covetousness, and at the same time consider, that his pure, and his holy, and his bountiful God hath his eye upon him? Can he look upon God in that line, in that Angle, (upon God looking upon him) and dishonour him? Psal. 25.15. August. Upon those words of David, Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord, Quasi diceretur, quid agitur depedibus? as though it were objected, Is all thy care of thine eyes? What becomes of thy feet? Non attendis ad eos? Dost thou look to thy steps, To thy life, as well as to thy faith, To please God, as well as to know God? And he answers in the words which follow, Ipse evellet, As for my feet, God shall order, that is, assist me in ordering them; If his eye be upon me, and mine upon him, (O blessed reflection! O happy reciprocation! O powerful correspondence!) Ipse evellet, He will pluck my feet out of the net, though I be almost ensnared, almost entangled, he will snatch me out of the fire, deliver me from the tentation. The other great effect of his guiding us with his eye, Vnit. Psal. 17.8. is, That it unites us to himself; when he fixes his his eye upon us, and accepts the return of ours to him, than he keeps us as the Apple of his eye, Quasi pupillam filiam oculi, (as S. Hierom reads it) as the Daughter, the issue, Zech. 2.8. the offspring of his own eye. For then, He that toucheth you, toucheth the Apple of his eye. And these are the two great effects of his guiding us by his eye, that first, his eye turns us to himself, and then turns us into himself; first, his eye turns ours to him, and then, that makes us all one with himself, so, as that our afflictions shall be put upon his patience, and our dishonours shall be injuries to him; we cannot be safer then by being his; but thus, we are not only His, but He; To every Persecutor, in every one of our behalf, he shall say, Cur me? Why persecutest thou me? And as he is all Power, and can defend us, so here he makes himself all eye, which is the most tender part, and most sensible of our pressures. So have you then this Instruction perfected unto you. First, Decredendis, facit te intelligere, God will make you understand, you, for he will work upon your natural faculties supernaturally, and by them, convey faith. And then, De agendis, docebo in via, He will teach you which is the way, and what to do when you are in it. And after that, De sperandis, firmabo oculos, he will guide you with his eye, watch, if in that way you stumble, and restore you. That you may constantly hope for; and when you have but thus much more, you have all, That there is In omni sperando, timendum; In every hope, there is something to be feared. Rom. 5.5. Hope makes us not ashamed, But yet hope, (as long as it is but hope) may make us afraid; though not with a suspicious fear, reflected upon God, yet with a solicitous fear, Rom. 5.2. Heb. 3.6. Phil. 2.12. arising from, and returning upon ourselves. There is a Hope of glory, and there is a Glory in hope; but no such Glory, as exterminates all fear: for we are bid To work out our Salvation with fear and trembling; It must be such a fear, as may still relate to my Salvation; For fear that excludes me from Salvation, is a fearful fear; but yet a fear it must be; for as there is a promise of guiding by his eye, there is also a possibility of taking his eye from thee. God is not in this, like the Sun, that makes no more haste over a dunghill, then over a Garden; over Babylon, then over Jerusalem. The eye of God is not infected with thy bleare-eye; but yet he will not stay and look upon it. And when he takes his eye from thee, Psal. 34.13. Gregor. he sets his face against thee; The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil. And thus, Ab ejus visione, quem conspicis, abes; Thou art out of God's sight, when thou seest him only in his judgements. Nay, Deut. 32.20. thou shalt not see him in them; I will hid my face from them, says God, (though it were an angry face, yet he would hid it) and I will see what their end will be. God shall look upon thy fearful end from the beginning, but thou thyself shalt not see the horror that appertains to it, till it be too late; for that is it, in which God does especially reproach that people, Vers. 28. O that they were so wise, as to consider their latter end! To that purpose hath God continued his Instruction to us, in this text, That we might know from him, what to believe, and what to do, and how to return to God, when we have gone astray, I will instruct thee, and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go, and I will guide thee with mine eye. SERM. LXII. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.9. Be not as the Horse, or the Mule, who have no understanding; whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle, lest they come near unto thee. AS God, above whom there is nothing, looks downwards to us; So except we, below whom there is nothing that belongs to us, look upward toward him, we shall never meet. And therefore God foreseeing such a descent in man, as might make him incapable, and put him out of distance of the rich promises of this Psalm, in this Text he forewarns him, of such a Descent, such a dejection, such a diminution of himself. Divisio. And first he forbids a Descent generally into a lower nature; Nolite fieri, Be not made at all, not made any other, than God hath made you. God would have man, who was his Medal at first, (when God stamped and imprinted his Image in him) And was God's Robe, and garment at last, (when Christ Jesus invested and put on our Nature) God would have this man preserve this Dignity, Nolite fieri, Be not made any new thing. Secondly, he forbids him a Descent, into certain particular depravations, and deteriorations of our Nature, in those qualities, which are intimated and specified, in the nature and disposition of those two beasts, The Horse, and the Mule, Nolite fieri siout Equus & Mulus, Be not as the Horse, or the Mule. But principally, for that which is in the third place, Quia non intellectus, Not because they have no faith, but because they have no understanding, for then, it is impossible that ever they should have faith; And so it is a reason proportioned to our Reason; Do not so, for it will vitiate, it will annihilate your understanding, your reason, and then what are you, for supernatural, or for natural knowledge? But then there is another reason proportioned to the sense, that this Declination of ours, into these inferior natures, brings God to a necessity to bit, and bridle, and curb us, that is, to inflict afflictions upon us; And then that reason is aggravated by the greatest weight that can be laid upon it, That God will inflict all these punishments upon these perverse men, metamorphosed into these Beasts, not only Ne approximent, That they may not come near God's Servants, to do them harm, (which seems indeed to be the most literal sense of the word) But, (as some of our Expositors have found reason to interpret them) Ne approximent, That they shall not come near him; not near God in the service of his Church, to do themselves any good; his Corrections shall harden them, and remove them farther from him, and from all benefit by his Ordinances. First then God arms him with a pre-increpation upon Descent, Nolite fieri, Descensus. Go no less, be not made lower. The first sin that ever was, was an ascending, a climbing too high; when the purest Understandings of all, The Angels, fell by their ascending; when Lucifer was tumbled down, by his Similis ero Altissimo, I will be like the most High, Esay 14.14. than he tried upon them, who were next to him in Dignity, upon Man, how that clambering would work upon him. He presents to man, the same ladder; He infuses into man the same Ambition, and as he fell with a Similis ero Altissimo, I will be like the most High, So he overthrew man, with an Eritis sicut Dii, Ye shall be as Gods. It seems this fall hath broke the neck of Man's ambition, and now we dare not be so like God, as we should be. Ever since this fall, man is so far from affecting higher places, than his nature is capable of, that he is still grovelling upon the ground, and participates, and imitates, and expresses more of the nature of the Beast then of his own. There is no creature but man that degenerates willingly from his natural Dignity; Those degrees of goodness, which God imprinted in them at first, they preserve still; As God saw they were good then, so he may see they are good still; They have kept their Talon; They have not bought nor sold; They have not gained nor lost; They are not departed from their native and natural dignity, by any thing that they have done. But of Man, it seems, God was distrustful from the beginning; He did not pronounce upon Man's Creation, (as he did upon the other Creatures) that He was good; because his goodness was a contingent thing, and consisted in the future use of his free will. For that faculty and power of the will, Dionys. is Virtus transformativa; by it we change ourselves into that we love most, and we are come to love those things most, which are below us. As God said to the Earth, (and it was enough to say so) Germinet terra juxta genus suum, Gen. 1. Let the Earth bring forth according to her kind; Ambro. So, Vive juxta genus tuum, says S. Ambrose to Man, Live according to thy kind; Non adulteres genus tuum, do not abase, do not allay, do not betray, do not abastardise that noble kind, that noble nature, which God hath imparted to thee, imprinted in thee. Mundi moles liber est, Basil. This whole world is one Book; And is it not a barbarous thing, when all the whole book besides remains entire, to deface that leaf in which the Author's picture, the Image of God is expressed, as it is in man? God brought man into the world, as the King goes in state, Lords, and Earls, and persons of other ranks before him. So God sent out light, and Firmament, and Earth, and Sea, and Sun, and Moon, to give a dignity to man's procession; and only Man himself disorders all, and that by displacing himself, by losing his place. The Heavens and Earth were finished, Et omnis exercitus eorum, Gen. 2.1. says Moses, All the Host thereof; and all this whole Army preserves that Discipline, only the General that should govern them, mis-governs himself. And whereas we see that Tigers and Wolves, Beasts of annoyance, do still keep their places and natures in the world; and so do Herbs and Plants, even those which are in their nature offensive and deadly, Ambrose. (for Alia esui, alia usui, Some herbs are made to eat, some to adorn, some to supply in Physic) whilst we dispute in Schools, whether if it were possible for Man to do so, it were lawful for him to destroy any one species of God's Creatures, though it were but the species of Toads and Spiders, (because this were a taking away one link of God's chain, one Note of his harmony) we have taken away that which is the Jewel at the chain, that which is the burden of the Song, Man himself. Partus sequitur ventrem; We verify the Law treacherously, mischievously; we all follow our Mother, we grovel upon the earth, whose children we are, and being made like our Father, Psal. 8.4. in his Image, we neglect him. What is Man that thou art mindful of him, and the son of Man, that thou visitest him? David admires not so much man's littleness in that place, as his greatness; He is a little lower than Angels; A little lower than God, says our former Translation; agreeably enough to the word, and in a good sense too; God's Lieutenant, his Vicegerent over all Creatures; Thou hast made him to have Dominion over the works of thy hands; (and Dominion is a great, it is a supreme estate) And thou hast put all things under his feet; (as it follows there) And yet we have forfeited this Jurisdiction, this Dominion, and more, our own Essence; we are not only inferior to the Beasts, and under their annoyance, but we are ourselves become Beasts. Consider the dignity of thy soul, which only, of all other Creatures is capable, susciptible of Grace; If God would bestow grace any where else, no creature could receive it but thou. Thou art so necessary to God, as that God had no utterance, no exercise, no employment for his grace and mercy, but for thee. And if thou make thyself incapable of this mercy and this grace, of which nothing but thou is capable, than thou destroyest thy nature. And remember then, that as in the Kingdom of Heaven, in those orders which we conceive to be in those glorious Spirits, there is no falling from a higher to a lower order, a Cherubin or Seraphim does not fall, and so become an Archangel, or an Angel, but those of that place that fell, fell into the bottomless pit; So, if thou depart from thy nature, from that susciptiblenesse, that capacity of receiving Grace, if thou degenerate so from a Man to a Beast, thou shalt not rest there in the state and nature of a Beast, whose soul breathes out to nothing, and vanishes with the life, thou shalt not be so happy, but thy better nature will remain, in despite of thee, thine everlasting soul must suffer everlasting torment. Now as many men when they see a greater piece of coin then ordinary, 2 Part. they do not presently know the value of it, though they know it to be silver, but those lesser coins which are in currant use, and come to their hands every day, they know at first sight; so because this stamp, this impression of the image of God in Man, is not well and clearly understood by every Man, neither this descent and departing from the dignity thereof, being delivered but in general, (Nolite fieri, Be ye made like nothing else) Therefore the Holy Ghost brings us here to the consideration of some lesser pieces, things which are always within distance and apprehension, always in our eye, (Nolite fieri sicut, Descend not to the qualities of the Horse and the Mule. Though (as God summed up his temporal blessings to the Jews, in that total, Et profecisti in regnum, Ezek. 16.13. Thou didst prosper into a Kingdom) He may also sum up his spiritual blessings to us in this, Et profecisti in Ecclesiam, & in Ecclesiam credentium, (for there is Ecclesia malignantium, Odivi Ecclesiam malignantium, says David, Psal. 26.5. I have hated the Congregation of evil doers) I have brought thee first from the Nations, from the Common, into a visible Church, And then from Babylon, from that Church of confusion, that makes the word of God and the word of Man equal, into an Orthodox and sincere Church, yet our sins have cast us Infra Gentes, and Infra Babylonem, Below all these again. For, for the Gentiles, Rom. 2.14. The Gentiles which have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law; we that have the help of the Law and Gospel too, do not. And for Rome, the example of our Reformation, and their own shame, contracted thereby, hath wrought upon the Church of Rome itself; They are the better for the Reformation, (in frequent Catechising and preaching) and we are not. Compare us with the Gentiles, and we shall fall under that increpation of the Apostle, There is such fornication amongst you, 1 Cor. 5.1. as is not once named amongst the Gentiles: We commit those things which they forbear to speak of. Compare us with Rome, and I fear that will belong to us, which God says and swears in the Prophet, As I live, saith the Lord, Sodom thy sister hath not done as thou hast done. Ezek. 16.48. Where, by the way, be pleased to note, that God calls eye Samaria, and Sodom, sisters of Jerusalem; there is a fraternity grounded in charity, which nothing must divest; If Sodom and Jerusalem were Sisters, Babylon and we may be so●●; uterin sisters of one womb, (for there is but one Baptism) though fornication itself, (and fornication, in the spiritual sense of the Scriptures, hath a heavy signification, and reaches even to Idolatry) have made that Church, as some think, scarce capable of the name of a Church, yet Sodom is a sister. But be she as far degenerate as she can, our sin hath made a descent below them that are below us. It hath cast us below the Inhabitants of the Earth, Beasts, and below the Earth itself, even to Hell; for we make this life, which is the place of repentance, the place of obstinacy and obduration; and obduration is Hell. Yea, it hath cast us below the Devil himself; our state is, in this, worse than theirs; They sinned before God had given them any express law; and before God had made any examples, or taken any revenge upon any sinners; But we sin after a manifest law, and after they, and many others have been made our examples. They were never restored, we have been restored often; They proceed in their obstinacy, when God casts them from him, we proceed even when God calls us to him; They against God which turns from them, and is glorified in their destruction, we against him that comes to us, and emptied and humbled himself to the shame, to the scorn, to the pain, to the death of the Cross for us. These be the lamentable descents of sin: But the particular descent to which this text doth purposely bend itself, is, That as God said at beginning, in contempt, and in derision, Ecce Adam, quasi unus ex nobis, Behold, Man is become as one of us; So now, Gen. 3.22. Bernard. (as S. Bernard makes the note) the Horse and Mule may say, Quasi unus ex nobis, Behold, Man is become as one of us; and, Nolite fieri, says God in our text, Be not as the Horse or the Mule. According to the several natures of these two Beasts, Equus & Mulus. the Fathers, and other Expositors have made several interpretations; at least, several Allusions. They consider the Horse and the Mule, to admit any Rider, any burden, without discretion or difference, without debatement or consideration; They never ask whether their rider be noble or base, nor whether their load be gold for the treasure, or roots for the market. And those Expositors find the same indifferency in an habitual sinner, to any kind of sin: whether he sin for pleasure, or sin for profit, or sin but for company, still he sins. They consider the Mule to be engendered of two kinds, two species, and yet to beget, to produce neither, but to be always barren; And they find us to be composed of a double, a heavenly, and earthly nature, and thereby bound to duties of both kinds, towards God, and towards men, but to be defective and barren in both. They consider in the Mule, that one of his Parents being more ignoble than the other, he is likest the worst, He hath more of the Ass then of the Horse in him; And they find in us, that all our actions, and thoughts, taste more of the ignobler part of earth then of heaven. S. Hierome thinks fierceness and rashness to be presented in the Horse, and sloth in the Mule. And S. Augustine carries these two qualities fare; He thinks that in this fierceness of the Horse, the Gentiles are represented, which ran fare from the knowledge of Christianity; And by the laziness of the Mule, the Jews, who came nothing so fast, as they were invited by their former helps, to the embracing thereof. They have gone fare in these allusions, and applications; and they might have gone as fare farther as it had pleased them; They have Sea-room enough, that will compare a Beast, and a Sinner together; and they shall find many times, in the way, the Beast the better Man. Here we may contract it best, Gregor. if we understand Pride by the Horse, and Lust by the Mule; for, though both these, pride and lust, might have been represented in the horse, which is, (as the Philosopher notes) Animal, post hominem, salacissimum, The most intemperate, and lustful of all creatures, but man, (still man, for this infamous prerogative, must be excepted) and though the Scriptures present that sin, Jer. 5.8. Lust, by the horse, (They risen in the morning like fed horses, and every man neighed after his neighbour's wife) (and therefore S. Hierome delights himself with that curious note, In Hos. 3. Numb. 5.12. That when a man brings his wife to that trial and conviction of jealousy, the offering that the man brings is Barley, Horse-provender in those parts, says S. Hierome) though both sins, pride and lust, might be taxed in the horse, yet pride is proper to him, and lust to the mule, both because the mule is Carne virgo, Hieron. but Mente impudicus, which is one high degree of lust, to have a lustful desire in an impotent body, And then, he is engendered by unnatural mixture, which is another high degree of the same sin. And these two vices we take to be presented here, as the two principal enemies, the two chief corrupters of mankind; pride to be the principal spiritual sin, and lust, the principal that works upon the body. To avoid both, consider we both in both these beasts. It is not much controverted in the Schools, Superbia. but that the first sin of the Angels was Pride. But because (as we said before) the danger of man is more in sinking down, then in climbing up, in dejecting, then in raising himself, we must therefore remember, that it is not pride, August. to desire to be better. Angeli quaesiverunt id, ad quod pervenissent, si stetissent. The Angel's sin was pride; but their pride consisted not in aspiring to the best degrees that their nature was capable of: but in this, that they would come to that state, by other means than were ordained for it. It could not possibly fall within so pure, and clear understandings, as the Angels were, to think that they could be God; that God could be multiplied; That they who knew themselves to be but new made, could think, not only that they were not made, but that they made all things else; To think that they were God, is impossible, this could not fall into them, though they would be Similes Altissimo, Like the most High. But this was their pride, and in this they would be like the most High, That whereas God subsisted in his Essence of himself, for those degrees of perfection, which appertained to them, they would have them of themselves; They would stand in their perfection, without any turning towards God, without any farther assistance from him; by themselves, and not by means ordained for them. This is the pride that is forbidden man; not that he think well of himself, In genere suo, That he value aright the dignity of his nature, in the Creation thereof according to the Image of God, and the infinite improvement that that nature received, in being assumed by the Son of God; This is not pride, but not to acknowledge that all this dignity in nature, and all that it conduces to, that is, grace here, and glory hereafter, is not only infused by God at first, but sustained by God still, and that nothing in the beginning, or way, or end, is of ourselves, this is pride. Man may, and must think that God hath given him the Subjicite, and Dominamini, A Majestical Character even in his person, to subdue and govern all the creatures in the world; That he hath given him a nature, already above all other creatures, and a nature capable of a better than his own is yet; 2 Pet. 1.4. 1 John 3.9. Acts 17.28. 1 Cor. 6.17. Dan. 3.17. (for, By his precious promises we are made partakers of the Divine nature) We are made Semen Dei, The seed of God, borne of God; Genus Dei, The offspring of God; Idem Spiritus cum Domino, The same Spirit with the Lord; He the same flesh with us, and we the same spirit with him. In God's servants, to have said to Nabuchadnezzar, Our God is able to deliver us, and he will deliver us; but, if he do not, yet we will not serve thy Gods: In the Martyrs of the Primitive Church, to have contemned torments, and tormentors with personal scorns and affronts: In all calamities and adversities of this life, to rely upon that assurance, I have a better substance in me then any man can hurt, I have a better inheritance prepared for me, than any man can take from me, I am called to Triumph, and I go to receive a Crown of Immortality, these high contemplations of Kingdoms, and Triumphs, and Crowns, are not pride; To know a better state, and desire it, is not pride; for pride is only in taking wrong ways to it. So that, to think we can come to this by our own strength, without God's inward working a belief, or to think that we can believe out of Plato, where we may find a God, but without a Christ, or come to be good men out of Plutarch or Seneca, without a Church and Sacraments, to pursue the truth itself by any other way than he hath laid open to us, this is pride, and the pride of the Angels. Now there is also a pride, which is the Horse's pride, conversant upon earthly things; To desire Riches, and Honour, and Preferment in this world, is not pride; for they have all good uses in God's service; but to desire these by corrupt means, or to ill ends, to get them by supplantation of others, or for oppression of others, this is pride, and a Bestial pride. And this proud man is elegantly expressed in the Horse; Job 39.19. The horse rejoiceth in his strength, he goes forth to meet the armed man, he mocks at fear, he turns upon the sword, and he swallows the ground. The River is mine, says Pharaoh, Ezek. 29.3. and I have made it for my sefl: They take all, and they mistake all; That which is but lent them for use, they think theirs; (The River is mine) That which God gave them, they think of their own getting; (I made it) And that which God placed upon them, as his Stewards for the good of others, they appropriate to themselves; (I have made it for myself) But when time is, Job 39.21. Zech. 12.4. Job 39.27. God mounteth on high, and he mocks the horse and the rider. In that day, I will smite every horse with astonishment, and his rider with madness. The horse believeth not that it is the sound of the Trumpet; When the Trumpet sounds to us in our last Bell, (for the last Bell that carries us out of this world, and the Trumpet that calls us to the next, is all one voice to us, for we hear nothing between) the worldly man shall not believe that it is the sound of the Trumpet, he shall not know it, not take knowledge of it, but pass away unsensible of his own condition. So then is Pride well represented in the Horse; and so is the other, Lust, Mulus. licentiousness in the Mule. For, besides that reason of assimilation, that it desires, and cannot, and that reason, that it presents unnatural and promiscuous lust, for this reason is that vice well represented in that Beast, because it is so apt to bear any burdens. For, certainly, no man is so inclinable to submit himself to any burden of labour, of danger, of cost, of dishonour, of law, of sickness, as the licentious man is; He refuses none, to come to his ends. Neither is there any tree so loaded with boughs, any one sin that hath so many branches, so many species as this. Shedding of blood we can limit in murder, and manslaughter, and a few more; and other sins in as few names. In this sin of lust, the sex, the quality, the distance, the manner, and a great many other circumstances, create new names to the sin, and make it a sin of another kind. And as the sin is a Mule, to bear all these loads, so the sinner in this kind is so too, and (as we find an example in the Nephew of a Pope) delights to take as many loads of this sin upon him, as he could; to vary, and to multiply the kinds of this sin in one act, He would not satisfy his lust by a fornication, or adultery, or incest, (these were vulgar) but upon his own sex; and that not upon an ordinary person, but in their account, upon a Prince; And he, a spiritual Prince, A Cardinal; And all this, not by solicitation, but by force: for thus he compiled his sins, He ravished a Cardinal. This is the sin, in which men pack up as much sin as they can, and as though it were a shame to have too little, they belie their own pack, they brag of sins in this kind, which they never did, as S. Augustine with a holy and penitent ingenuity confesses of himself. This sin then, (though one great mischief in it be, that for the most part, it destroys two together, (the Devil will have his creatures come to his Ark by couples too, two and two together) yet this sin we are able to commit without a companion, upon our own bodies, yea without bodies; (in the weakness of our bodies our minds can sin this sin) This which the Wiseman calls a pit, The mouth of a strange woman is as a deep pit, Prov. 22.14. he with whom the Lord is angry, shall fall therein. And therefore he that pursues that sin, is called to a double sad consideration, both that he anger's the Lord in committing that sin then; And that the Lord was angry with him before for some other sin, and for a punishment of that former sin, God suffered him to fall into this. And it is truly a fearful condition, when God punishes sin by sin; other corrections bring us to a peace with God; He will not be angry for ever, he will not punish twice, when he hath punished a sin, he hath done: But when he punishes sin by sin, we are not thereby the nearer to a peace or reconciliation by that punishment, for still there is a new sin that continues us in his displeasure. Punish me O Lord, with all thy scourges, with poverty, with sickness, with dishonour, with loss of parents, and children, but with that rod of wire, with that scorpion, to punish sin with sin, Lord scourge me not, for then how shall I enter into thy rest? And this is the condition of this sin; for, He with whom the Lord is angry, shall fall into it. 2 Sam. 12. And when he is fallen, he shall not understand his state, but think himself well; For Nathan presents David's sin to him, in a parable of a feast, of an entertainment of a stranger: He tastes no sourness, no bitterness in it; not because there is none, but because a carcase, a man already slain cannot feel a new wound; A man dead in the habit of a sin, hath no sense of it: This sin of which S. Augustin, who had been overcome by it, and was afraid that his case was a common case, saith in the person of all, Continua pugna, victoria rara; In a defensive war, where we are put to a continual resistance, it is hard coming to a victory; what hope then where there is no resistance, no defence, but a spontaneous and voluntary opening ourselves to all provocations, yea provoking of provocations by high diet, a tempting of tentations by exposing ourselves to dangerous company, Gen. 19.10. when as the Angels who were safe enough in themselves, yet withdrew themselves from the uncleanness of the Sodomites. This sin will not be overcome but by a league, job 31.1. jobs league, Pepigi foedus, I have made a covenant with mine eyes, why then should I think upon a maid? Since I have bound my senses, why should my mind be at liberty to sin? This league should bind both; I have taken a promise of mine eyes, that they will not betray me by wanton glances, by carrying me to dangerous objects, why should not I keep counant with them? why should my thoughts be scattered upon such tentations? The league must be kept on both parts, the mind and the senses; we must not entertain tentations from without, we must not create them within. Eloquia Domini casta, The words of the Lord are chaste words, Psal. 12.7. pure words, and so must all the talk, and conversation of him, that loves God, be. And then, Castificate animas vestras, you must see that you keep your minds pure and chaste. 1 Pet. 1.22. If we have not both chaste minds, and chaste bodies, we shall have neither; And then follows the excommunication: S. Augustine saith, That according to most probability, there were no Mules in the Ark; but undisputably there are no Mules in the Church, in the triumphant Church, none of our metaphorical Mules there: 1 Cor. 6.8. The Apostle hath put it beyond a Problem, Be not deceived, neither fornicators, nor adulterers, nor effeminate persons shall inherit the Kingdom of heaven, there is the fearful excommunication: And therefore Nolite fieri sicut, Be not made like the Horse or the Mule, in pride, or wantonness especially, Quia non Intellectus, because than you lose your understanding, and so become absolutely irrecoverable, and leave God nothing to work upon: For the understanding of man is the field which God sows, and the tree in which he engraffes faith itself; and therefore take heed of such a descent, as induces the loss of the understanding, and that is the case here, (and our next consideration) Non Intellectus, They have no understanding. This faculty of the understanding in man is not always well understood by men. Intellectus. The whole Psalm is a Psalm to rectify the understanding; It is in the title thereof, David's Instruction: ver. 8. And that office God undertakes in the verse before our Text, I will instruct thee, which is in some Latin Copies, Faciam te intelligere, I will make thee understand, and in others, (the vulgat) Intellectum tibi dabo, I will give thee understanding; Now though this Instruction, and this Understanding, which is intended in the Title, and specified in the former verse, be not the same Understanding as this in our Text, (for this is but of that natural faculty of man, joh. 1.9. wherewith God enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world, till he make himself like the horse or the mule) the other is God superedification upon this, those other supernatural Graces, which God produces out of the understanding, or infuses into the understanding; yet this Understanding in our Text, though it be but the natural faculty, is a considerable thing, and hath, in part, the nature of materials for God to work upon. That Instruction which is the subject of the whole Psalem, is that saving Doctrine, That there is no blessedness but in the remission of sins. That David establishes for his foundation in the first verse, and would say nothing till he had said that. But then, though this remission of sins (which only constitutes Blessedness) proceed merely from the goodness of God, yet that goodness of God, as it excites primarily, so it works still upon that act of man, penitent confession, Notum feci, I acknowledged my sin, and Dixi confitebor, I prepared myself to confess my sin, ver. 5. and thou forgavest all. This then S. Hierome delivers to be the Instruction of the Psalm, Hominem, Hieron. non propriis meritis, sed Dei gratia, posse salvari, si confiteatur admissa; That man of himself is irrecoverable, But yet there is a way opened to salvation in Christ Jesus: But this way is only open to them, who enter by Confession. And though S. Hierome, and S. Augustin differ often in the exposition of the Psalms, yet here they speak almost the same words. The Instruction of this Psalm is, Intelligentia, qua intelligitur, non meritis operum, August. sed gratia Dei hominem liberari, confitentem sua peccata, That no man is saved by his own merits, That any man may be saved by the mercy of God in the merits of Christ, That no man attains this mercy, but by confession of his sins: And that that rule, In ore duorum aut trium, may have the largest fullness, add we a third witness, Intellectus est, Gregor. This is the Instruction that David promises, Nemo ante fidem, Let no man presume of merits, before faith; But in all this they all three agree, Every man must know, that he may be saved, And that by his own merits he cannot, And lastly, that the merits of Christ are applied to no man, that doth nothing for himself. Quid est Intellectus? August. saith he again, What is this understanding? It is, saith he, no more but this, non jactes opera ante fidem, Never to take confidence in works, otherwise then as they are rooted in faith: For (as he enlarges this Meditation) if thou shouldst see a man pull at an Oar, till his eyestrings, and sinews, and muscles broke, and thou shouldst ask him, whither he rowed; If thou shouldst see a man run himself out of breath, and shouldst ask him whither he ran; If thou shouldst see him dig till his back broke, and shouldst ask him, what he sought, And any of these should answer thee, they could not tell, wouldst not thou think them mad? So are all Disciplines, all Mortifications, all whip, all starvings, all works of Piety, and of Charity madness, if they have any other root then faith, any other title or dignity, than effects and fruits of a preceding reconciliation to God. Multi pagani, saith he, Idem. There are many Infidels that refuse to be made Christians, because they are so good already; Sibi sufficiunt de sua bona vita; They are the worse for being so good, and they think they need no faith, but are rich enough in their moral honesty. And there are Christians, that are the worse for thinking and believing that it is enough to Believe. It is not faith to believe in gross, that I shall be saved, but I must believe, that I shall be saved by him that died for me. If I consider that, I cannot choose but love him too; And if I love him, I shall do his will; Ama & operaberis, Idem. whomsoever thou lovest, thou wilt do what thou canst to please him. Da mihi vacantem amorem; I would be glad to see an idle love, that that man, that loved any thing in this world, should not labour to compass that that he loved: But purga amorem, saith he, I do not forbid thee loving, (it is a noble affection) but purge and purify thy love; Aquam fluentem in cloacam converte in hortum; Turn that water which hath served thy stables, and sewers before, into thy gardens: Turn those tears which thou hast spent upon thy love, or thy losses, upon thy sins, and the displeasure of thy God, and Quales impetus habebas ad mundum, habebis ad Creatorem mundi, Those passions which transported thee upon the creature, will establish thee upon the Creator. The Instruction then of the whole Psalm, is peace with God, in the merits of Christ, declared in a holy life; which being the sum of all our Christian profession, is fare beyond this Understanding in our Text, (They have no understanding) but yet upon this Understanding God raises that great building, and therefore we take this faculty, The Understanding, into a more particular consideration. Here is the danger, He that at ripe years hath no understanding, hath no grace, A little understanding may have much grace; but he that hath none of the former, can have none of this. God therefore brings us to the consideration, not of the greatest, but of the first thing; not of his superedifications, but of his foundations, our understanding, our reason. For, though Animalis homo, The natural man perceiveth not the things that be of the Spirit of God, 1 Cor. 2.14. yet let him be what man he will, Natural or Supernatural, he must be a man, that must probare spiritum, prove and discern the spirit; let him have as much more as you will, it is requisite he have so much reason, and understanding, as to perceive the main points of Religion; not that he must necessarily have a natural explicit reason for every Article of faith, but it were fit he had reason to prove, that those Articles need not reason to prove them. If I believe upon the Authority of my Teacher, or of the Church, or of the Scripture, very expedient it were to have reason to prove to myself that these Authorities are certain, and irrefragable. And therefore, Caeteris animalibus, se ignorare, natura est, homini vitium, If a Horse or a Mule understand not itself, it is never the worse Horse nor Mule, for it is borne with that ignorance; But if man, having opportunities, both in respect of his parts and calling, to be better instructed, either by a negligent and lazy and implicit relying upon the opinion of others, do but lay himself down as a leaf upon the water, to be carried along with the tide, or by a wilful drowsiness, and security in his sins, have given over the debatement, the discussing, the understanding of the main of his belief, and of his life, if either he keep not his understanding awake, or over-watch it, if he do nothing with it, or employ it too busily, too fervently, too eagerly upon the world, I would it were true of them, Facti sicut, you are like the Horse, and the Mule; but utinam essetis, I would you were so well, as the Horse, and the Mule, who, though they have no understanding, have no forfeiture, no loss, no abuse of understanding to answer for. First then the Horse, Superbus. The proud man, hath no understanding; He hath forgot his letters, his Alphabet; how he was spelled and put together, and made of body and soul. You may as well call him an Anatomist, that knows how to pair a nail, or cut a corn, or him a Surgeon, that knows how to cut, and curl hair, as allow him understanding, that knows how to gather riches, or how to buy an Office, or how to hurt, and oppress others, when he hath those means. That absurdity, that height of strange ignorance, that the Prophet observes in an Idolatrous Image-maker, Esay 44.16. is in this proud man; He burns half in the fire, and the residue he makes a god. He hath seen as great estates as his, burn to ashes, as great persons as himself ruined and destroyed, burn out, and vanish into sparks, and stinking smoke; He hath seen half his own time burnt out and wasted, and yet he dreams of an eternity in himself; He says, I am, and none else; he will not say so to me in express words, but does he not say so to the whole world, in his manifest actions? The Horse then, Mulus. The proud man, hath no understanding, and the Mule, the licentious man, as little. The Ancients had a purpose to express that, when they placed by their Goddess of Licentiousness, Venus, A Tortoise, A Creature that had no heart; capable of no understanding. Gen. 19 And it is better expressed in those licentious persons, who pursued Lot's guests. Their blindness brought them to an impossibility of finding the door, (They were weary in seeking the door) And if they had found it, they had sound it shut. A man that hath wallowed long in that sin, when he seeks a door to repentance, he will quickly be weary, for there lie hard conditions upon him; and he is in danger of finding the door so shut, as his understanding (and that is all his key) cannot open; He will make shift for reasons, why he should continue in that sin, and he will call it ill nature, or falsehood, or breach of promise, and inconstancy, to departed from the Conversation that nourishes that sin. The door will be shut, and his Reason cannot, nay his Reason would not open it, but rather plead in the sins behalf. Thus far our first reason hath carried us, Do it not, lest you lose your understanding, The field of that blessed seed, The tree of that fruitful graft, The materials for that glorious building, Faith; For, the understanding is the receptacle of Faith: But do it not, the rather, because if ye do it, God will be brought to a necessity, In chamo & fraeno maxillas constringere, to hold in your mouths with bit and bridle, to come to hard usage, when as he would feign have you reduced by fair and gentle means. But to this way God is often brought; and, by this way of affliction, the cure is sometimes wrought upon us. S. Augustine proposes to himself a wonder, why the first woman was called at first, Gen. 2.23. and in her best state, but Isha, Virago, which was a name of diminution, as she was taken from the man, (for Isha is but a shee-man) And then in her worse state, when she had sinned, Gen. 3.20. she was called Eva, Mater viventium, The Mother of all living; she had a better name in her worst estate. But this was not in respect of her sin, says that Father, but in respect of her punishment. Now that she was become mortal by a sentence of death pronounced upon her, and knew that she must die, and resolve to dust, now, says he, there was no danger in her, of growing proud by any glorious title; affliction had tamed her, and rectified her now; and to that purpose sometimes does God bit and bridle us with afflictions, that our corrupt affections might not transport us. 2 Sam. 14. We find that Absolom sent for joab; The King's Son for the King's servant; There was coldness, some dryness between Absolom, and his Father, Absolom was under a cloud at Court, and so joab neglected him, he would not come; Absolom sent again, and again joab refused; But than Absolom sent his servants to burn joabs' Corn fields, and then joab came apace. Affliction and calamity are the bit and the bridle, that God puts into our mouth sometimes to turn us to him. Behold, we put bits into the horses mouths, that they should obey us, jam. 3.3. and we turn all the body about. And to this belongs that, A whip for the Horse, a bridle for the Ass, and a rod for the fools back; When we are become fools, made like the Horse and Mule, that we have no understanding, than God bits and bridles us, he whips and scourges us, sometimes lest our desires should misled us a wrong way, sometimes, if they have, to turn us into the right way again; But here in our text, it is, Ne approximent te, Their mouths must be held with bit and bridle, lest they come near unto thee. When God, by their incorrigibility, have given over all care of them, Ne approximent. yet he takes care of us, of his Servants, of his Church, and he bits and bridles his and our enemies, so, as that they shall not come near us, they shall not hurt us. So God said to Senacherib, Because thou ragest against me, (God was far enough out of Senacheribs reach, 2 King. 19.28. but God accounts his Jerusalem as Heaven, and his Hezekias as himself) Because thy rage is against me, I will put my hook into thy nose, and my bridle in thy lips, and will turn thee back, by the way by which thou camest. When man is become as the Horse, proud of his strength, In chamo, et fraeno, God shall bit him, and bridle him so, as that he shall be able to do no harm; and certainly, the godly have not a greater joy, when they are able to do good to others, than the wicked have sorrow, when having power in their hands, yet they are not able to execute their mischievous purposes upon them that they hate. Satan was glad of any Commission upon job, because God made a hedge about him, and about his house, Ne approximaret, That Satan could not come near him; He was glad God gave him power, to annoy him any way; but sorry that he exempted his person, in that first Commission, (Only upon himself put not forth thy hand) He was glad that in a second Commission, God did lay open his person to his power, but sorry that he excepted his life, job 2.6. (Behold he is in thy hand, but save his life.) For, till the wicked come to an utter destruction of their enemies, they think it no approximation, They are never come near enough to them. And In chamo, & fraeno, therefore God bits & bridles them, that they shall not come near, not so near, to destroy; and certainly, God's children have not so much sorrow for that which the wicked do inflict upon them, as the wicked have for that which they cannot inflict upon them; The wicked are more tormented that they can do no more, than the godly are, that they have done so much. And this is a comfortable, (and truly, the most literal sense of this Ne approximent) Their mouths must be held, They must, though none can hold them but God, yet God must, God himself for his own glory, and the preservation of his Church, is reduced to a necessity, he must, he will hold them in with bit and bridle, lest they come near us. But there is a sadder, and a heavier sense arising out of these words, as S. Hierom accepts and pursues the words, with which we shall end all that belongs to them. S. Hierom reads these words so, as that when God hath said, Nolite fieri, Be not as the Horse or Mule, that have no understanding, God hath done, and says no more; and that in the rest of the words, In chamo & fraeno maxillas eorum constringe, (hold in their mouths with bit and bridle, who come not near thee) the Church speaks to God; and so, this inhibition, Ne approximent, That they come not near thee, may very well be, That they come not near God, That God bits and bridles them so, afflicts and multiplies afflictions so, that even those afflictions drive them farther from God, and seal their condemnation in their own blood. God's Spirit shall fan them, sift them; That might do them good; Esay 30.28. purify them, cleanse them; No, it shall do them no good; for, (as it follows) God shall sift them with a sieve of vanity; In vain, to no purpose, without any amendment; And there shall be, Fraenum erroris, a bridle in their jaws causing them to err; Their impatient misinterpretation of God's corrections, shall turn them upon a wrong way on the left hand, and departed them farther and farther from God. And then, Prov. 29.1. He that being often reproved, hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy; suddenly, and irrecoverably; suddenly, no time given him to deprecate his destruction, no reprieve; Irrecoverably, Jere. 11.14. if he had never so much time; I will not hear them in the time that they cry unto me for their trouble. Shall any be able to cry unto God, and not be heard? Yes, to cry, and to cry for their trouble; for all this may be done, and yet no true prayer made, nor right foundation laid; when only impatience upon affliction extorts, and presses, and vents a cry, God will not hear them. No, nor when they are thus disabled to pray for themselves, will God hear any other to pray for them. Thrice doth God chide the Prophet jeremy from that charitable disposition of praying for that people. Lift not up a cry nor prayer for them; Ibid. & 7.16. & 14.11. Not a Cry, by way of remembering me of their pressures and afflictions, as though that should move me; Not a Prayer, by remembering me of my Covenant of mercy towards them, as though that should bind me. At other times, Ezck. 22.30. God sought for a man among them, that should make up the hedge, and stand in the gap before him for the land, that he might not destroy it, but he found none. Here jeremy offers himself in the gap, and God will not receive him to that Mediatorship, to that Intercession for that people. When Moses importuned God for the people, God tells him, for thyself thou shalt be no loser; Exod. 32.10. whatsoever become of this people; (I will make thee a great Nation) But yet, says God, (Let me alone, that my wrath may wax hot against this people, that I may consume them.) O how contagious and pestilent are the sins of man, that can thus (if we may so speak) infect God himself! How violent, how impetuous, how tempestuous are the sins of man, that can thus, (if we may so speak) transport God himself, and carry him beyond himself! for himself is mercy, and there is no room for our own prayers, no room for the prayers of others to open any door, any poor of mercy to flow out, or to breath out upon us. Truly, Beloved, it is hard to conceive, how any height of sin in man should work thus upon God, as to throw him away, without any purpose of reassuming him again, or any possibility of returning to him again. But to impute that distemper to God, that God should thus peremptorily hate Man, thus irreparably destroy Man, before he considered that Man, as a sinner, and as a manifold sinner, and as an obdurate sinner, nay before he considered him, as a Man, as a Creature, that first he should mean to damn him, if he had him, and then mean to make him, that he might damn him; this is to impute to God, a sourer and worse affected nature, then falls into any man. Doth any man desire that his enemy had a son, that he might kill him? Doth any man beget a son therefore, that he might disinherit him? Doth God hate any man therefore, because he will hate him? Deliver me, O Lord, from my sins, pardon them, and then return to thy first purposes upon me; for I am sure they were good, till I was ill; and my illness came not from thee; but may be so multiplied by myself, as that thou mayest bit me and bridle me so, as that I shall not come near thee, in any of those accesses which thou hast opened in thy Church: Prayer, Preaching, Sacraments, Absolution, all shall be unavailable upon me, ineffectual to me. And therefore, as God would have us conserve the dignity of our nature in his Image, and not descend to the qualities of these Beasts, Horse and Mule, specified by the Holy Ghost, to represent to us those two sins, which are the wombs and mothers of very many others, Pride and Lust, (the greatest spiritual, and the greatest bodily sin) because thereby we lose all understanding, which is the matter upon which Grace works; so would he have us do it for this also, that he might not be put to a necessity of bitting and bridling us, of hard usage towards us, which may turn us as well to Obduration as Contrition, and so come to lose our faith at last, as we had done our reason and understanding before. SERM. LXIII. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 32.10, 11. Many sorrows shall be to the wicked; But he that trusteth in the Lord, Mercy shall compass him about. Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice ye righteous; And shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart. THe two Elements, of which Heaven is proposed to us to be composed, are Joy and Glory. That which is opposed to these, is Sorrow and Contempt: Of the sense of contempt and ingloriousness, Men are not alike capable in this world; but of the sense of sorrow, we are somewhat more equal. A man must have had some possession, or at least some hopes of glory and greatness, that apprehends contempt or ingloriousness very passionately. And besides, in the lowest and most abject contempt a man may relieve himself by conveniences of a plentiful Fortune at home, how much soever he be undervalved and despised abroad. But when it comes to a sorrow of heart, which dwells not imaginarily in the opinion of others, as contempt doth, but really in mine own bosom, it is a heavy colluctation. Therefore doth the Holy Ghost so often, so very often, blow that coal, and threaten that insupportable, that inextinguishable fire, sorrow, sorrow of heart, sorrow of soul; Many sorrows shall be to the wicked. But the Holy Ghost is the Spirit of Consolation; He is a Dove that hasts to a better air, to a whiter house, to the Ark of Peace, the station of the Righteous; Joy in the mercy of God; for, He that trusteth in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about; Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice ye Righteous, and shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart. Our parts are, the Persons, and their Portions; Who they Be, and what they Have. Divisio. The Persons are all the Inhabitants of this world; for all are wicked, or righteous; And the Portion is all that the soul receives here, or hereafter; for all is joy or sorrow; Many sorrows shall be to the wicked, but he etc. First then, here are sorrows; A passion which we cannot express, and from the understanding whereof, in this sense, God bless us all: A sorrow, that is nothing but sorrow; a sorrow that determines not in joy at last. And here are Dolores multi, his sorrows are multiplied, Many sorrows; And as the word Rabbim doth as properly import, and might be as well so translated, here are Dolores magni, Great sorrows; Great in their own weight, great in themselves, and great also in the apprehension, and tenderness, and impatience of the sufferer, great to him; And then all these heavy circumstances, as the dregs and lees of this cup of malediction, meet in the bottom, in the centre of all; That these sorrows are determinable by no time; for in the Original, there is neither that which our first Translation inserted, (Shall come) Sorrows shall come to the wicked, lest the wicked might say, Let it go as it came, if I know how it came, what occasioned the sorrow, I know how to overcome it; nor is there that which our later Translation added, (Shall be) Sorrows shall be to the wicked; for though that imply a Continuance, when it comes, yet the wicked might say, It is not come yet, and why should I anticipate sorrow, or execute myself before the Executioner be sent? But it is without all limitation of time, and so includes all parts of time; Est, fuit, & erit, The wicked are not, never were, or shall be without sorrows, many sorrows, great sorrows, everlasting sorrows. This is the Portion in our first part; and then the Person, for whom this cup is thus filled there, is The wicked; Which denotes a Plurality, and a Singularity too; For it is not said, The wanton, The ambitious, The covetous, The man that is a little leavened, or soured, or discoloured with some degrees of some of these; but it is The wicked; a man whose whole complexion, and structure seems made up of wickedness; And so it is Super impium, Upon the wicked, Emphatically, The wicked; And then, Super impium, Upon the wicked, in the singular; that is, upon every such wicked person. The sorrow is not lessened by being divided amongst many; The wicked is not eased by having companions in his torments. And this is the Portion, and these be the Persons of the first kind; which will determine the first Part, Many sorrows shall be to the wicked. And then in the second, to give all this the full weight, and to make the sorrow the more discernible, and the more terrible, God puts into the other balance, The joy of the righteous. In which, that all may be in opposition to the other, we have also the Person, Him that trusteth in the Lord; Where we have, as in the former part, a plurality intimated, and a singularity too. For it is not said, He that trusteth not in Man, He that trusteth not in Princes, He that trusteth not in this or that miserable Comforter in the world, but He that trusteth in the Lord; Whose present refuge, be the case what it will, or can be, is the Lord; Him, Emphatically Him, mercies shall compass. And then, Ille, He, every such man, is infallibly interessed in this portion, in this true cause of joy, which is not, that he shall have no affliction, but that he shall have Mercy in his afflictions, patience and ease all the way, and an end and joy at last. And then, this mercy shall Compass him; It shall not suffer his confidence to break out into a presumption in God, nor any diffidence, or distrust in God, to break in upon him; But he shall see, that only to him, who Trusts in the Lord, to him who is Righteous, to him who is Upright in heart, (with which three Characters the Holy Ghost specifies the person, in this second Part of our Text) belong those three great privileges, those glorious beams of joy, which flow out here; first, Laetari, To be glad, that is, to conceive an inward joy; And then, Exultari, To rejoice, that is, to testify that inward joy, by outward demonstrations; And lastly, jubilare, To be full of joy, which our last Translation hath expressed well, in that word, To shout for joy, that is, to extend our joy to others, to glorify God by drawing in of others, and to call upon them, to call upon God: Many sorrows shall be to the wicked, but, etc. First then, 1. Part. Sorrow. they shall have sorrow, and cause of sorrow. For when we conceive a sorrow in the mind, without any real, and external cause, without pain, or shame, or loss, this is but a melancholy, but an abundance of a distempered humour, but a natural thing, to which some in their constitutions are borne, and to be considered but so: But when God lays his hand, and his crosses upon us, the sorrow of the wicked, conceived upon that impression, is the sorrow. For this Word, which we Translate Sorrows here, is according to the Septuagint, Scourges, and Whips; God shall scourge them, and that shall only work to a sorrow; So fare, and no farther. As a startling horse, they shall avoid a shadow, and fall into a ditch; They shall sorrow, and murmur at their afflictions in this life, and fall the sooner for that into the Eternal. Amongst the Romans, condemned persons were first whipped; but that excused them not; when they were whipped, they were executed too. The wicked are scourged by God in this life; and then their temporal afflictions shall meet, August. and join with the everlasting, they have begun already here, that which they shall never end there. Deeis qui voluntatem Dei facere nolunt, fit voluntas Dei; It is Panis quotidianus, A loaf of that bread which is to be distributed every day; A saying of S. Augustine, worthy to be repeated in every Sermon, That upon them, who will not do the will of God, the will of God is done; And God executes his righteous sentence upon them, and he executes his justice upon others also by giving them instructions from the impatience and obduration of these. Fata fugiendo in fata ruant; They chide, and they wrangle, they wrestle, and they exclaim at their miseries in an intemperate sorrow, and this intemperate sorrow is the heaviest part of the judgement of God upon them; they are too sensible of their afflictions, that is, too tender, too impatient; and yet altogether unsensible, without all sense of God's purpose in those afflictions. In hell itself, they know that they are in hell; And yet in this world, there are Dolores inferni, Sorrows that have begun hell here, and they that are under them, are stupefied, and devested of all sense of them. That sense that is bodily, and carnal, they abound in; They feel them impatiently; but of all spiritual sense they are absolutely destitute; They understand not them, nor God's purpose in them at all; yet they are Many, and Great, and Eternal. For by all these heavy talents doth the Holy Ghost weigh them in these words. They are Many. Many. Now the pride of the wicked is to conceal their sorrows, that God might receive no glory by the discovery of them. And therefore if we should go about to number their sorrows, they would have their victory still, and still say to themselves, yet for all his cunning he hath missed; they would ever have some bosome-sorrowes, which we could not light upon. Yet we shall not easily miss, nor leave out any, if we remember those men, that even this false and imaginary joy, which they take in concealing their sorrow and affliction, is a new affliction, a new cause of sorrow. We shall make up the number apace, if we remember these men, that all their new sins, and all their new shifts, to put away their sorrows, are sorrowful things, and miserable comforters; if their conscience do present all their sins, the number grows great; And if their own conscience have forgotten them, if God forget nothing that they have thought, or said, or done, in all their lives, are not their occasions of sorrow the more for their forgetting, the more for Gods remembering? Judgements are prepared for the scorners, says Solomon, Prov. 19.29. God foresaw their wickedness from before all times, and even then set himself on work, To prepare judgements for them; And as they are Prepared before, so affliction followeth sinners, Prov. 13.21. says the same Wise King; It follows them, and it knows how to overtake them; either by the sword of the Magistrate, or by that which is nearer them, Diseases in their own bodies, accelerated and complicated by their sins. And then, as affliction is Prepared, and Follows, and Overtakes, so says that wise King still, There shall be no end of plagues to the evil man; We know the beginning of their plagues; Prov. 24.20. they are Prepared in God's Decree, as soon as God saw their sins; we know their continuance, they shall Fellow, and they shall Overtake; Their end we do not know, we cannot know, for they have none. Thus they are Many. And if we consider farther, the manifold Topiques, and places, from which the sorrows of the wicked arise, That every inch of their ground is overgrown with that venomous weed, that every place, and every part of time, and every person buds out a particular occasion of sorrow to him, that he can come into no chamber, but he remembers, In such a place as this, I finned thus, That he cannot hear a Clock strike, but he remembers, At this hour I sinned thus, That he cannot converse with few persons, but he remembers, With such a person I sinned thus, And if he dare go no farther then to himself, he can look scarcely upon any limb of his body, but in that he sees some infirmity, or some deformity, that he imputes to some sin, and must say, By this sin, this is thus: When he can open the Bible in no place, but if he meet a judgement, he must say, Vindicta mihi, This vengeance belongs to me; and if he meet a mercy, he must say, Quid mihi? What have I to do to take this mercy into my mouth? In this deluge of occasions of sorrow, I must not say with God to Abraham, Look up to heaven, and number the Stars, (for this man cannot look up to heaven) but I must say, Continue thy dejected look, and look down to the earth, thy earth, and number the grains of dust there, and the sorrows of the wicked are more than they. Many are the sorrows; And as the word as naturally denotes, Great; Great sorrows are upon the wicked. That Pill will choke one man, which will slide down with another easily, Great. and work well. That sorrow, that affliction would strangle the wicked, which would purge, and recover the godly. The core of Adam's apple is still in their throat, which the blood of the Messiah hath washed away in the righteous; Adam's disobedience works in them still, and therefore God's Physic, the affliction, cannot work. So they are great to them, as cain's punishment was to him, greater than he could bear, because he could not ease himself upon the consideration of God's purpose, in laying that punishment upon him. But it is not only their indisposition, and impatience, that makes their sorrows and afflictions great; They are truly so in themselves; as the Holy Ghost expresses it, Job 31.3. Is not destruction to the wicked, and strange punishment to the workers of iniquity? A punishment, which we cannot tell how to measure, how to weigh, how to call, A strange punishment; Greater than former examples have presented. There the greatness is expressed in the Word; And in Esay it is expressed in the action; When the scourge shall run over you, Esay 28.18. and pass thorough you, Eritis in conculcationem, You shall be trodden to dust; Which is, as the Prophet calls it there, Flagellum inundans, An affliction that overflows, and surrounds all, as a deluge, a flood, that shall wash away from thee, even the water of thy Baptism, and all the power of that, And wash away from thee the blood of thy Saviour, and all his offers of grace to worthy receivers; A flood that shall carry away the Ark itself out of thy sight, and leave thee no apprehension of reparation by God's institution in his Church; A flood that shall dissolve, and wash thee thyself into water; Thy sorrows shall scatter thee into drops, into tears, upon a carnal sense of thy torment, And into drops, into incoherent doubts, and perplexities, and scruples, in understanding, and conscience, and into desperation at last. And this is the Greatness: Solutis doloribus inferni, In another sense than David speaks that of Christ; There it is, that the sorrows of hell were loosed, that is, were slacked, dissolved by him: But here it is that the sorrows of hell are loosed, that is, let lose upon thee; and when thou shalt hear Christ say from the Cross, Behold and see, if ever there were any sorrow like my sorrow, thou shalt find thy sorrow like his in the Greatness, and nothing like his in the Goodness: Christ bore that sorrow, that every man might rejoice, and thou wouldst be the more sorry, if every man had not as much cause of desperate sorrow, as thou hast. Many, and great are the sorrows of the wicked, and then eternal too, which is more than intimated, in that the Original hath neither of those particles of supplement, which are in our Translations, no such (shall come) not such (shall be) nor no (shall) at all; but only, Many sorrows to the wicked, Many and great now, more and greater hereafter, All for ever, if they amend not. It is not, Eternal. They have had sorrows, but they are overblown; nor that they have them, but patience shall outwear them; nor that they shall have them, but they have a breathing time to gather strength before hand; But as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, Sorrows upon them, and upon them for ever. Whatsoever any man conceives for ease in this case, Esay 33.11. it is a false conception; You shall conceive chaff, and bring forth stubble. And this stubble is your vain hope of a determination of this sorrow; But the wicked shall not be able to lodge such a hope, though this hope, if they could apprehend it, would be but an aggravating of their sorrows in the end. It is eternal, no determination of time afforded to it. Ibid. ver. 14. For, They shall be as the burning of lime, and as thorns cut up shall they be burnt in the fire. Who amongst us shall dwell with the devouring fire? Who amongst us shall dwell with that everlasting burning? It is a devouring fire, and yet it is an everlasting burning. The Prophet asks, Who can dwell there? In that intenseness who can last? Deut. 32.22. They that must, and that is, All the wicked. Fire is kindled in my wrath, saith God; Yet may not tears quench it? Tears might, if they could be had; But It shall burn to the bottom of hell, saith God there. And Dives that could not procure a drop of water to cool his tongue there, can much less procure a repentant tear in that place: There, as S. john speaks, Revel. 18.8. Plagues shall come in one day; Death, and Sorrow, and Famine. But it is in a long day; Short for the suddenness of coming, for that is come already, which for any thing we know, may come this minute, before we be at an end of this point, or at a period of this sentence: So it is sudden in coming, but long for the enduring. For it is that day, Ibid. when They shall be burnt with fire, for strong is the Lord God, that will condemn them. That is argument enough of the vehemence of that fire, that the Lord God, who is called the strong God, makes it a Masterpiece of his strength, to make that fire. Art thou able to dispute out this Fire, and to prove that there can be no real, no material fire in Hell, after the dissolution of all material things created? If thou be not able to argue away the immortality of thine own soul, but that that soul must last, nor to argue away the eternity of God himself, but that that must last, thou hast but little ease, in making shift to give a figurative interpretation to that fire, and to say, It may be a torment, but it cannot be a fire, since it must be an everlasting torment; nor to give a figurative signification to the Worm, and to say, It may be a pain, a remorse, but it can be no worm after the general dissolution, since that Conscience, in which that remorse, and anguish shall ever live, must live ever: If there be a figure in the names, and words, of Fire and Worms, there is an indisputable reality in the sorrow, in the torment, and in the manifoldness, and in the weightiness, and in the everlastingness thereof. For in the inchoation of these sorrows, in this life, and in the consummation of them, in the life to come, The sorrows of the wicked are many, and great, and eternal. This then is the portion prepared here, The Person. Psal. 50.18. Thy portion was with the Adulterers, as our last Translators have expressed that place in their Margin. Thy portion was with them here, in this world, and thy portion shall be with them for ever; for God expresses all kind of wickedness, carnal and spiritual, in that name of Adultery, throughout the body of the Scriptures. And therefore when you meet judgements denounced against Adulterers, never think that those judgements concern not you, if you have forborn that one sin, (and yet even that sin may have been committed in a look, in a letter, in a word, in a wish, in a dream) when S. james saith, Ye Adulterers, and Adulteresses, jam. 4 4. know you not this? Think not that S. james calls not upon you if you be but Covetous, but Ambitious, but Superstitious, and no Adulteters; for every aversion from the Creator, every converting to the creature is Adultery. Even in nature you are made for that marriage; In the covenant of God you were betrothed, and affianced for that marriage; In the Sacrament of Baptism you were actually, personally married; and in the other Sacrament there is a consummation of that marriage; And every departing from that contract which you made with God at your Baptism, and renewed at your receiving the other Sacrament, is an Adultery. Thus a Hermit is a husband, and a Nun a wife; and thus both may be adulterers, though in a Wilderness, though in a Cloister. August. Si deseris Deum qui te fecit, & amas illa quae fecit, adultera es; If thou turn from God that made thee, to those things that he made, this is an adultery. Therefore Christ calls them, An evil and adulterous generation, because they sought a sign; Matt. 12.39. because they turned upon other ways of satisfaction, than he had ordained for them, that was adultery. And as David saith, Thy portion was with adulterers here; so, as theirs is said to be, Revel. 21.8. Thy portion also shall be in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death. Thou art this person, if thou be this adulterer, which is intended in this emphatical word, The wicked. So then, as these Sorrows in our Text, are an inchoative Hell, The wicked they are such wounds as induce, such pangs as precede even the second death, sorrows that flow into desperation, and impenitibleness, (and impenitibleness is hell.) As the torment is an inchoative hell, so is the person, the Wicked here, an inchoated Devil: It is S. Chrysostoms' spontaneus daemon, and voluntarius daemon; He that is a devil to himself, that could be, and would be ambitious in a Spittle, licentious in a Wilderness, voluptuous in a Famine, and abound with tentations in himself, though there were no devil. Most of the names of the devil in the Scripture, denote some action of his upon us; As he is called The Prince of the power of the Air, there he is called so, because as it is added there, Ephes. 2.2. He works in the children of disobedience; As the air works upon our bodies, this Prince of the Air works upon our minds; how works he? he deceives; Revel. 12.9. He deceived the whole world, saith S. john; from this insinuation, he hath those other names there, the great Dragon, and the old Serpent. When he hath crept in as a Serpent, than he grows A roaring Lion; He professes his power, he disguises not a tentation; then he grows Satan an Adversary, an Enemy, he opposes all good endeavours in us; & then he grows Diabolus, an Accuser, an accuser to God, an accuser to our own conscience; and when he hath made our sin, as great as it can be in our practice, when by age, or sickness, or poverty, he cannot multiply our sins for the present, then by his multiplying glass, he multiplies the sins of our former times, and presents them greater, than even the mercies of God, or the merits of Christ Jesus. So he grows in mischievous names, according to his mischievous actions and practices upon us; but then out of himself arises the most vehement, and the most collective name that is given him in all the Scriptures, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and that with the emphatical article, The wicked one; One that is all wickedness, & one that is the wickedness of all; One, who if he had no object to direct his wickedness upon, no subject to exercise his wickedness in, If God should proclaim so general a Pardon, That all men, All, should effectually be saved, and so all hope to have enlarged his Kingdom be withdrawn, yet would still be as wicked, and as opposite to God as he is. So then, by this character of Multiplicity, Plurality. this emphatical note of the wicked in our Text, the person, whose portion this sorrow is, this sorrow which is a brand of Hell, at least a match, by which Hell fire itself is kindled, is not he that is an Adulterer, or that is a Murderer; not he that hath fallen into some particular sins, though great, and continued those great sins in habits, though long, for David fell so, and yet found a holy sorrow, a medicinal sorrow: but it is the wicked, he that runs headlong into all ways of wickedness, and usque ad finem, precludes, or neglects all ways of recovery: That is glad of a tentation, and afraid of a Sermon; that is dry wood, and tinder to Satan's fire, if he do but touch him, and is ashes itself to God's Spirit, if he blow upon him; That from a love of sin, at first, because it is pleasing, comes at last to a love of sin, because it is sin, because it is liberty, because it is a deliverance of himself from the bondage, as he thinks it, of the law of God, and from the remorse and anguish of considering sin too particularly. This is the person, in whom, at first, by this emphatical note, the wicked, we design a Plurality, (as we called it) that is, a Complicated, a Multiplied, a Compact sinner, a Body, rather a Carcase of Many, of All sins, all that have fallen within his reach. And then, in the word we noted also a Singularity, That upon such a sinner, upon every such sinner, these Many, these Great, these Eternal sorrows shall fall and tarry. As in the former Circumstance, Singularity. we noted that it was the They, that aggravated it, it was not an An, an Adulterer, an Ambitious man, but a The, The wicked, whom God enwrapped in this irrecoverable, this undeterminable sorrow: so here, it is not a This, or That, This wicked, or that wicked man, but The wicked, every wicked man is surrounded with this sorrow. He can propose no comfort in a decimation, as in popular Rebellions, where nine may be spared, and the tenth man hanged; No, nor so much hope as to have nine hanged, and the tenth spared; He is not in Sodoms case, That a few righteous might have saved the wicked; Ezek. 14.20. But he feels a necessity of applying to himself, that, If Noah; Daniel, and job were in the midst of them, as I live, saith the Lord God, they should deliver neither Son, August. nor Daughter. jussisti Domine, & sic est, ut poena sit sibi omnis inordinatus animus; It is thy pleasure O God, and thy pleasure shall be infallibly accomplished, that every wicked person should be his own Executioner. He is Spontaneus Daemon, as S. chrysostom speaks, an Inmate, an in-nate Devil; a bosom devil, a selfe-Devill; That as he could be a tempter to himself, though there were no Devil, so he could be an Executioner to himself, though there were no Satan, and a Hell to himself, though there were no other Torment. Sometimes he stays not the Assizes, but prevents the hand of Justice; he destroys himself before his time. But when he stays, he is evermore condemned at the Assizes. Let him sleep out as much of the morning as securelyas he can; embellish, and adorn himself as gloriously as he can; dine as largely and as delicately as he can; wear out as much of the afternoon, in conversation, in Comedies, in pleasure, as he can; sup with as much distension, and inducement of drowsiness as he can, that he may scape all remorse, by falling asleep quickly, and fall asleep with as much discourse, and music, and advantage as he can, he hath a conscience that will survive, and overwatch all the company; he hath a sorrow that shall join issue with him when he is alone, and both God, and the devil, who do not meet willingly, shall meet in his case, and be in league, and be one the sorrow's side, against him. The anger of God, and the malice of the devil, shall concur with his sorrow, to his farther vexation. No one wicked person, by any diversion or cunning, shall avoid this sorrow, for it is in the midst, and in the end of all his forced contentments; Prov. 14.13. Even in laughing, the heart is sorrowful, and the end of that mirth is heaviness. The person is The wicked; Communication. Every wicked person; He hath no relief in a decimation, that some may scape: Nor relief in the communication of the torment; It is no ease to him, that so many bear a part with him. In some afflictions in the world, men lay hold upon such a relief, Many men are in as ill case, as I; why am I so sensible of it? and they make shift to patch up a comfort of that kind, out of some chips of Poets, and fragmentary sentences; And they that cannot find this relief ready made, will make shift to make it; when they are under the burden of a defamation, of an ill name, they will cast aspersions of the same crime, upon as many as they can, and think themselves the better, if they can make others be thought as ill as they. But all these are amongst jobs miserable comforters; It is a part of our joy in Heaven, that every man's joy shall be my joy; I shall have fullness of salvation in myself, and I shall have as many salvations, as there are souls saved: But in hell there is no one feather towards such a Pillow, no degree of ease, in the communication of the torment. Every soul shall murmur against God, and curse God, for damning every other soul, as well as for damning his: Though they would have them damned, that are damned, yet they shall reproach God, for damning them: And though they wish all the Saints in Heaven, in hell, yet they shall call it tyranny in God, to have sent a Cain, or an Achitophel, or a judas thither. And as the person whom we consider in this text, is an embryo of the Devil, Genimina viperarum, The spawn of the Devil, a potential, and as we said, an inchoated Devil; so is the torment, this sorrow, a Lucifer, Such a Lucifer, as hell can send out; not a light of any light, but a cloud of that darkness: As sure as this man, The wicked, shall be a Devil, so sure this sorrow, shall end, not end, but reach to hell. Yet when all this is thus said, said with a holy vehemence, with a zealous animosity, as indeed belongs to the denouncing of God's judgements, yet may we not be asked, where is there any such person, or upon whom works there any such sorrow? Is it always true, that the wicked make no good use of afflictions? or is it always true, that they have them? The first may admit a doubt, for if God justify the ungodly, Rom. 8.5. (God justifieth the ungodly) than their affliction may be a way, to prepare justification in them, as well as in them whom we call godly; And if Christ died for the ungodly, Rom. 5.6. (Christ died for the ) they also may fulfil his sufferings in their flesh, and their afflictions may produce good effects. But for that, they which are called ungodly, in both those places, are only such as were ungodly before God's justification began to work upon them, before Christ's Death began to be applied to them, but did not continue in their ungodliness after; But these ungodly persons, whom afflictions supple and mollify no farther, but to an intemperate, and excruciating, and exclamatory sorrow, and continue ungodly still, are such as never have good effect of affliction or sorrow. But then have these always affliction inflicted upon them? one would doubt it, by that in job, The Tabernacles of robbers do prosper, and they are in safety that provoke God. job 12.6. God's children are rob and spoiled by the wicked, and the wicked show it in God's face, they hid not their Theft, they maintain publicly their Wantonness, and their Excesses, with the spoil of the poor; They have it, and they will hold it, and they bid God bring his action, and recover how he can. This the Prophet jeremy saw, and was affected, and scandalised with it; O Lord, if I plead with thee, thou art righteous; jer. 12.1. I know thou canst maintain, and make good that which thou hast done; But yet, says he, Let me talk with thee of thy judgements; wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper? wherefore are all they happy that deal very treacherously? Why, their ways prosper in a just punishment of God for their former sins, that they may have a larger and a broader way to destruction; and they are happy in temporal happinesses, that they may have more occasions of smarting; If their wealth stick not to their heirs, in a third generation, call them not Rich; If their prosperity cleave not to their souls, call them not Happy; He is a poor man, whose wealth can be writ in an Inventory; That hath locked all in such an iron Chest, in such a Cabinet, and hath sent up nothing to meet him in Heaven. As all the wealth of the wicked is but counterfeit, so is all the joy that they have in it sergeant too. And howsoever they disguise their sorrow, yet if their torment be invisible to us, it is the liker hell; If we know not how they are afflicted, it is the liker hell; Their damnation sleepeth not, nor they neither; And when at midnight their own consciences are a thousand witnesses to them, it is but a poor ease, that other men do not know, that they are those wicked persons, and their sorrow the sorrow of this text; that they are The wicked, and their sorrows many, and great, and eternal sorrows. But I would be glad to reserve as much time as I could for the other part, The person and The portion, that is in the other scale; Mercy shall compass, etc. In this part we will begin with the persons; For when we come to their portion, 2 Part. with which we must end, of that we shall be able to find no end, nay no beginning, for it gins with Mercy, (Mercy shall compass them) and mercy is as much without beginning, as eternal, as God himself, and it flows on to joy and gladness, and exultation, and this joy shall no more see an end of itself, than God himself shall see an end of himself. Upon the persons we have three characters, and in their portions we have three weights; Three degrees of goodness in their persons, three degrees of greatness in their portions. The persons first Trust in God, and then They are Righteous, and lastly, They are upright in heart; So also, the reward is first Inward joy, and then Outward declaration, and lastly, An exemplary working upon others; And then, all these are rooted in the root of all, that mercy shall compass them. First then They trust in God. And that, first Exclusiuè; They trust in him so, Trust in God. as that they trust in nothing else, and Inclusiuè too; so, as that they do actually, and positively trust in God. Some have been so beaten out of all confidences in this world, so evacuated of former power, so devested of former favour, so despoiled of former treasures, as that they are brought to trust in nothing else; But than they trust not in God neither; August. Quia Deo non audent dare iniquitatem, auferunt ei gubernationem; Because they dare not say, that God does any thing ill, they come to say, that God does nothing at all; and to avoid the making of an unjust God, they make an idle God; which is as great an Atheism as the other. But because it goes thus with them, that they have many and great sorrows, they conclude that all have so; But The heart knoweth his own bitterness; Prov. 14.10. They know their own case, Ibid. the case of the godly they know not. The stranger shall not meddle with their joy; He that is a stranger to this trust in God, understands nothing of the joy that appertains to them that have it. Esth. 14.19. Let that be thy prayer, which was the prayer of Esther, Thy handmaid hath had no joy but in thee, O Lord God of Abraham; O thou mighty God, above all, hear thou the voice of them that have no other hope. Our Adversaries of Rome charge us, that we have but a negative Religion; If that were true, it were a heavy charge, if we did only deny, and establish nothing; But we deny all their new additions, so as that we affirm all the old foundations. The Negative man, that trusts in nothing in the world, may be but a Philosopher, but an Atheist, but a stupid and dead carcase. The Affirmative man, that does acknowledge all blessings, spiritual and temporal, to come from God, that prepares himself by holiness to be fit to receive them from God, that comes for them by humble prayer to God, that returns for them humble thanks to God, this man hath the first mark of this person upon him, He trusts in God. But he that trusts not in the world, nor in God neither, is worse than he, that trusts in the world, and not in God; because he is farther removed from all humility, that attributes all to himself; He pretends to be an Atheist, and to believe in no God; and yet he constitutes a new Idolatry, he sacrifices to himself, and makes himself his God. The second Character, Righteous. and specification of this Person, is, that he is Righteous. And this word, we shall do best to contain here within a legal Righteousness; that Righteousness, in which S. Paul protested, and proclaimed himself to be unblamable. For howsoever this apparent Righteousness, Righteousness in the eyes of the world, be not enough alone, yet no other Righteousness is enough without this. The hypocrite, by being an hypocrite, may aggravate his own condemnation, when he comes to reckon with God; But to the Church, who knows him not to be an hypocrite, he does good, by his exemplar and outward Righteousness. He that does good for vainglory, may lead another man to good upon good grounds; And the prayers of those poor souls, whom he may have benefited by his vainglorious good work, may prevail so with God in his behalf, as that his vainglory here, may become true glory, even in the Kingdom of Heaven. So then we carry this word Righteous no farther, but to the doing of those honest things, which we are bound to do in the sight of men. The word is Tzadok, which is often used for the exaltation and perfection of all true holiness; But as it is very often in the old Testament taken for Verax and Aequus, when a man's word and work answer one another towards men; so in the New Testament, in the Syriake Translation, where the word is the same as in the Hebrew, it is Oportuit, It behoved Christ to suffer; and in such a sense, in very many places, to be Righteous, is to do that which it behoved us to do, became us to do, concerned us to do in the sight of men. Which can be expressed in no one thing more fully, then in this, To embrace a lawful Calling, and to walk honestly in that Calling; That is Righteousness; For, justus sua fide vivit, The Righteous lives by his own faith; Not without faith, nor with the faith of another; so justus suo sudore vescitur, The Righteous eats his Bread in the sweat of his own brows; He labours in an honest Calling, and drinks not the sweat of others labours; And this is that Righteousness in this Text, the second mark upon this Person, who is partaker of this Portion. And the third is, Upright in heart. that he is Rectus cord, Upright in heart; That he direct even all the works of his Calling, all the actions of his life upon the glory of God. If you carry a Line from the Circumference, to the Circumference again, as a Diameter, it passes the Centre, it flows from the Centre, it looks to the Centre both ways. God is the Centre; The Lines above, and the Lines below, still respect and regard the Centre; Whether I do any action honest in the sight of men, or any action acceptable to God, whether I do things belonging to this life, or to the next, still I must pass all through the Centre, and direct all to the glory of God, and keep my heart right, without variation towards him. For as I do no good action here, merely for the interpretation of good men, though that be one good and justifiable reason of my good actions: so I must do nothing for my Salvation hereafter, merely for the love I bear to mine own soul, though that also be one good and justifiable reason of that action; But the primary reason in both, as well the actions that establish a good name, as the actions that establish eternal life, must be the glory of God. Distortum lignum semper nutat, August. A wry and crooked plank in the floor, will always shake and kick up, and creak under a man's foot. A wry and a crooked heart will always shake distrustfully, and kick rebelliously, and creak repiningly, under the hand of God. Non potest collineari rectitudine Dei, Idem. says the same Father, He is not paralleled with God, he is not levelled with God, if he use not his blessings, if he accept not his corrections, as God intends them. First, To trust in God, and then to deal Righteously with men, and all the way to keep the heart strait upon God; these three make up the Person; And these three his Portion, That he shall be glad, and he shall rejoice, and jubilabit, he shall shout for joy. Now as three great sums of gold put into one bag, Mercy. these three branches of this Portion of the Righteous, are fixed in one root, raised upon one foundation, Mercy shall compass him about. But then this mercy, this Compassing mercy reaches not so fare, as that thou shalt have no affliction, though thou trust in God; David had been an unfit person, to have delivered such a Doctrine, who says of himself, Psal. 73.14. Daily have I been punished, and chastened every morning: He had it every day, it was his daily bread; and it was the first thing that he had, he had it in the morning. Here is mention of a morning, early sorrows, even to the godly; and mention of a Day, continuing sorrows, even to the godly; But he speaks of no Night here, the Son of grace, the Son of God, does not set in a Cloud of anger upon him. The Martyrs that abounded with this Trust in God, and this Righteousness, and this Uprightness of heart, abounded with these afflictions too. They that bestowed themselves upon God and his Church, 2 Cor. 12.15. as the Apostle expresses it, had these sorrows plentifully bestowed upon themselves. And to pass from them to the Author of their constancy, Christ himself, He is Vir dolorum, A man of sorrows, Esay 53.3. and acquainted with Grief. And now, Whom he loveth he chasteneth, and he scourgeth every one that he receiveth; Flagellat omnem, He scourgeth every one; Vis audire quem omneem? August. Will you know how general, and yet how particular this is? Vnicus sine peccato, non tamen sine flagello, There was one Man without any sin, but even that Man was not without punishment, Christ Jesus himself. So general is correction, as that in this case, and in this sense, it is more general than sin itself. It is not then that the godly shall no afflictions, no sorrows; But mutant fortitudinem, They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength, Esay 40.31. say our Translators in the body of their Translation; but in the Margin, (and nearer to the Original) They shall change their strength. They that have been strong in sinning, that have sinned with a strong hand, when they feel a judgement upon them, and find that it is God's hand, and God's hand for their sins, they faint not, they lose not their strength, but mutant fortitudinem, They change their strength, they grow as strong in suffering, as they were in sinning, and invest the Prophet's resolution, I will bear the indignation of the Lord, Mic. 7.9. Ezek. 2.10. because I have sinned against him. The Book which God gave Ezekiel to eat, was written within and without, with Lamentations, and Mournings, and Woes; but when he eat it, he found it in his mouth as sweet as honey. When God offers the Book, which is the Register of our sins to our Consciences, or the Decree of his Judgements to our understanding, or to our sense, it is writ in gall and wormwood, and in the bitterness of sorrow; but if we can bring it to the first concoction, the first digestion, to that mastication, that rumination, which is the consideration of God's purpose upon us in that Judgement, we shall change our taste, for we shall Taste and See, Quam suavis Dominus, Psal. 34.9. How good, and how sweet the Lord is; for even this Judgement is Mercy. Think not then thy valour sufficiently tried, if thou canst take it patiently, to have missed a fute long pursued, or failed of a Preferment long expected; no not if thou have stood in a hail of bullets without winking, or sat the searching of a wound without starting; but Muta fortitudinem, Change thy valour, and when thou comest to bear great crosses, proportionable to thy great sins, with a spiritual courage, acknowledge that courage to be the mercy of God, and not thine own moral constancy. God loves his own example, to do as he hath done; Omni quaestione severius, à te interrogari; It was said to a Roman Emperor, who examined with Wisdom, and Majesty too: It is truer of God; that it is more fearful than any rack, or torture, when he comes to search and sift a conscience: Yet God did come to that office upon Adam, before he would condemn him. He came to a worse place than Paradise; he came to Sodom, to rack and torture them, with that confession, that there could not be found ten Righteous men amongst them. But yet this he did, before he condemned them. God will visit thee in this wrack, in this furnace, in these trials, before he proceed to thy condemnation. But when God doth so, believe thou David, in his Indulgence to his Son, to have been a Type of God's disposition to thy soul. When he sent out his Army against Absalon, he stood in the gate to survey the Muster, and to every one of the Commanders, joab, and the rest, still he said, Servate mihi puerum Absalon, Entreat the young man Absalon well for my sake. The Lord of Hosts may send forth his Army against thee, Sickness, Loss, Shame, Paine, Banishment, Imprisonment, (which are all swords of his) but he says to them all, Servate mihi Absalon, That soul that I have bought with my blood, preserve for me; Fight but against mine enemies, his Pride, his Security, his Presumption; but Servate Absalon, Preserve his soul unshaken, and un-offended. God hath said it before, Jer. 29.11. and he says again to thee, in all thy afflictions, I know the thoughts that I think towards you, the thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end. God said this, when a False Prophet had promised them deliverance in two years; God prorogues the time; he would do it, but he would not do it under threescore and ten years. Limit not God in his time, nor in his means; The mercy consists in relieving thee so, as that thy soul suffer not, though thou do. And if that be preserved, this mercy is a Compassing mercy, which is also another Circumstance in this Branch. The Devil had Compassed all the Earth, Compass. and he was angry that God had Compassed job. He says in indignation, Job 1.9. Hast thou not made a hedge about him, and about his house, and about all that he hath, on every side? God did so for job, and he will do so for thee: He redeemeth thy life from the grave, Psal. 103.4. and crowneth thee with mercy, and compassion. This is the Compassing in heaven, when we come to be crowned there. But there is a Compassing here, Rom 8 28. and an empailing of God's children, in S. Paul's Cooperantur, When all things work together, for good, to them that love God. When Prosperity and Adversity, Honour and Disgrace, Profit and Loss, the Lords Giving and the Lords Taking, do all concur to the making up of this Pail, that must Compass us; When we acknowledge that there must be nails in the Pail, as well as stakes, there must be thorns in the hedge, as well as fruit trees; Crosses as well as Blessings; when we leer not over the Pail, neither into the Common; that is, to the Gentiles and Nations, and begin to think, that we might be saved by the light of nature, without this burden of Christianity: nor leer over into the Pastures, and Corn of our neighbours; that is, to think, that we are not well in our own Church, but must needs hearken to the Doctrine, or Discipline of another; When we see all that comes, to come from God, and are content with that, then Omnia cooperantur, Every piece serves to the making up this Pail, and his Mercy compasses us about. This is the root of our three Branches, the foundation of our three Stories; the bag of our three sums, in this portion, Mercy, Compassing mercy; and then the Branches themselves, Be glad, Rejoice, and Shout for joy; Which joy, is first an inward love of the Law of God, Glad. Psal. 119.111. Thy testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever, for they are the joy of my heart: It is not Dant, but Sunt, not that they Bring joy, but that they Are joy; There is no other joy but the delight in the Law of the Lord: For all other joy, the Wise King said, Eccles. 2.2. Of laughter, thou art mad, and of joy, what is this that thou dost? True joy is the earnest which we have of heaven, It is the treasure of the soul, and therefore should be laid in a safe place, and nothing in this world is safe to place it in: And therefore with the Spouse we say, Cant. 1.4. We will be glad in thee, we will remember thy love more than wine. Let others seek their joy in wine, in society, in conversation, in music; for me, Thou hast put gladness into my heart, more than in the time that their corn and their wine increased. Rejoice therefore in the Lord always, Rejoice. Phil. 4.4. and again I say, rejoice: Again, that is, Rejoice in the second manner of expressing it, by external declarations. Go cheerfully, and joyfully forward, in the works of your callings. Rejoice in the blessings of God without murmuring, or comparing with others. And establish thy joy so, in an honest, and religious manner of getting, that thy joy may descend to thine heir, as well as thy land. No land is so well fenced, no house so well furnished, as that, which hath this joy, this testimony of being well gotten. Job 20.4. For, This thou knowest of old, since man was placed upon earth, that the Triumphing of the wicked is short, and the joy of the Hypocrite but for a moment. And then the last degree is louder than this, jubilate, Shout for joy; jubilate. Declare thy joy in the ears of other men. As the Angels said to the Shepherds, Luke 2. I bring you tidings of great joy, which shall be unto all people, So be thou a cheerful occasion of glorifying God by thy joy. Declare his loving kindness unto the sons of men; Tell them what he hath done for thy soul, thy body, thy state. Say, With this staff came I over jordane: Be content to tell whose Son thou wast, and how small thy beginning. Smother not Gods blessings, by making thyself poor, when he who is truly poor, begs of thee, for that God's sake, who gave thee all that thou hast. Hold up a holy cheerfulness in thy heart; Go on in a cheerful conversation; and let the world see, that all this grows out of a peace, betwixt God and thee, testified in the blessings of this world; and then thou art that Person, and then thou hast that Portion, which grows out of this root, in this Text, Mercy shall compass him about that trusteth in the Lord. SERM. LXIV. Preached upon the Penitential Psalms. PSAL. 51.7. Purge me with Hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall bewhiter than snow. IN the Records of the growth, and propagation of the Christian Church, The Ecclesiastical Story, we have a relation of one Pambo, an unlearned, but devout, and humble Ermit, who being informed of another man, more learned than himself, that professed the understanding, and teaching of the Book of Psalms, sought him out, and applied himself to him, to be his Disciple. And taking his first lesson casually, at the first verse of the thirty ninth Psalm, I will take heed to my ways, that I sin not with my tongue, He went away with that lesson, with a promise to return again when he was perfect in that. And when he discontinued so long, that his Master, sometimes occasionally lighting upon him, accused him of this slackness, for almost twenty years together he made several excuses, but at last professed, that at the end of those twenty years, he was not yet perfect in his first lesson, in that one verse, I will take heed to my ways, that I sinne not with my tongue. Now, that which made this lesson hard unto him, was, that it employed all his diligence, and his watchfulness upon future things; to examine and debate all his actions, and all his words; for, else he did not take heed to his ways; at least, not so, as that he would not sin with his tongue. But if he had begun with this lesson, with this Psalm, which is but a calling to our memory that which is past, The sinful employment of that time, which is gone, and shall not return, The sinful heats of our youth, which, since we wanted remorseful tears to quench them, even the sin itself, and the excess thereof hath overcome, and allayed in us, sinful omissions, sinful actions, and habits, and all those transitory passages, in which the Apostle shows us, our prodigality, our unthriftiness, our ill bargain, when he asks us that question of Confusion, Rom. 6.21. What fruit had you then in those things, whereof ye are now ashamed? If he had begun his first lesson at this, with the presenting of all his passed sins, in the sight of the Father, and in the Mediation and merit of the Son, he would have been sooner perfect in that lesson, and would have found himself, even by laying open his disease, so purged with Hyssop as that he should have been clean, and so washed, as that he should have been whiter than snow. For, Repentance of sins past is nothing but an Audit, a casting up of our accounts, a consideration, a survey, how it stands between God and our soul. And yet, as many men run out of plentiful estates, only because they are loath to see a list of their debts, to take knowledge how much they are behind hand, or to contract their expenses: so we run out of a whole and rich inheritance, the Kingdom of heaven, we profuse and pour out even our own soul, rather than we will cast our eye upon that which is past, rather than we will present a list of our spiritual debts to God, or discover our disease to that Physician, who only can Purge us with hyssop, that we may be clean, and wash us, that we may be whiter than snow. In the words we shall consider the Person, Divisio. and the Action, who petitions, and what he asks. Both are twofold; for, the persons are two, the Physician and the Patient, God and David, Do thou purge me, do thou wash me; and the Action is twofold, Purgabis, do thou purge me, and Lavabis, do thou wash me. In which last part, and in the first branch thereof, we shall see first, the Action itself, Purgabis, Thou shalt purge me, and what that imports; And then the means, Purgabis hyssopo, Thou shalt purge me with hyssop, what that implies; and then the effect, Mundaber, I shall be made clean, and what that comprehends. And in the other branch of that second part, Lavabis, Thou shalt wash me, we shall also look upon the Action on God's part, Lavabis, Thou shalt wash me, and the Effect on our part, Dealbabor, I shall be white, and the Degree, the Extent, the Exaltation of that Emundation, that Dealbation, that Cleansing, supra nivem, I shall be whiter than snow. And then we shall conclude all with that consideration, That though in the first part, we find two persons in action; for God works, but man prays that God would work, yet in the other part, the work itself; Though the work be divers, a purging, and then a washing of the soul, the whole work is God's alone: David doth not say, no man can say, Do thou purge me, and then, I will wash myself; nor do thou make the Medicine, and I will bring the Hyssop; nor do thou but wash me, begin the work, and I will go forward with it, and perfect it, and make myself whiter than snow; but the entire work is his, who only can infuse the desire, and only accomplish that desire, who only gives the will, and the ability to second, and execute that will, He, He purges me, or I am still a vessel of peccant humours; His, His is the hyssop, or there is Mors in olla, Death in the cup; He, He washes me, or I am still in my blood; He, He exalts that cleanness, which his, his washing hath endued, or I return again to that red earth, which I brought out of Adam's bowels; Therefore Do thou purge me with Hyssop, and I shall be clean; Do thou wash me, and I shallbe whiter than snow. First then, 1. Part. for our first part, we consider the persons. Of these God is the first; Esay spoke boldly, Deus. saith the Apostle, when he said, God is found by them that seek him not; But still we continue in that humble boldness, Rom. 10.20. to say, God is best found, when we seek him, and observe him in his operation upon us. God gives audiences, and admits accesses in his solemn and public and out-roomes, in his Ordinances: In his Cabinet, in his Bedchamber, in his unrevealed purposes, we must not press upon him. It was ill taken in the Roman State, when men enquired in Arcana Imperii, the secrets of State, by what ways, and means, public businesses were carried: Private men were to rest in the general effects, peace, and protection, and Justice, and the like, and to inquire no more; But to inquire in Arcana Domus, what was done in the Bedchamber, was criminal, capital, inexcusable. We must abstain from enquiring De modo, how such or such things are done in many points, in which it is necessary to us to know that such things are done: As the manner of Christ's presence in the Sacrament, and the manner of Christ's descent into Hell, for these are Arcana Imperii, secrets of State, for the manner is secret, though the thing be evident in the Scriptures. But the entering into God's unrevealed, and bosome-purposes, are Arcana domus, a man is as fare from a possibility of attaining the knowledge, as from an excuse for offering at it. That curiosity will bring a man to that blasphemy of Alfonsus King of Castille, the great Astronomer, who said, That if he had been of God's Counsel in the creation of the world, he could have directed him to have done many things better than he did. They that look too fare into Gods unrevealed purposes, are seldom content with that that they think God hath done; but stray either into an uncharitable condemning of other men, or into a jealous, a suspicious, a desperate condemning of themselves. Here, in this first branch of this first part, we seek God, and because we seek him, where he hath promised to be, we are sure to find him; Because we join with David, in an humble confession of our sins, the Lord joins us with David, in a fruition of himself. And more of that first Person, God himself, we say not, but pass to the other, to the petitioner, to the penitent, to the patiented, to David himself. His example is so comprehensive, so general, that as a well made, David. and well placed Picture in a Gallery looks upon all that stand in several places of the Gallery, in several lines, in several angles, so doth David's history concern and embrace all. For his Person includes all states, between a shepherd and a King, and his sin includes all sin, between first Omissions, and complications of Habits of sin upon sin: So that as S. Basil said, he needed no other Book, for all spiritual uses, but the Psalms, so we need no other Example to discover to us the slippery ways into sin, or the penitential ways out of sin, than the Author of that Book, David. From his Example then, we first deduce this, That in the war-fare of this life, there are not Emeriti milites; none of that discipline, that after certain years spent in the wars, a man should return to ease, and honour, and security, at home. A man is not delivered from the tentation of Ambition, by having overcome the heats and concupiscences of his youth; nor from the tentation of Covetousness in his age, by having escaped ambition, and contented himself with a mean station in his middle years. David, whom neither a sudden growth into such degrees of greatness, as could not have fallen into his thought, or wish before, nor the persecution of Saul, which might have enraged him to a personal revenge, considering how many advantages, and occasions he might have made shift to think that God had put into his hands, to execute that revenge; David, whom neither the concourse and application of the people, who took knowledge of him, as of a rising Sun, nor the interest and nearness in the love and heart of jonathan the King's Son, which falls seldom upon a new, and a popular man; David, whom not that highest place, to which God had brought him, in making him King, nor that addition even to that highest place, that he made him Successor to a King of whom the State was weary; (for, as the Panegyrique says, Onerosum est succedere bono principi, It is a heavy thing, and binds a Prince to a great diligence, to come immediately after one, whom his subjects loved, So had David an ease, in coming after one, with whom the Kingdom was discontented) David, whom this sudden preferment, and persecutions, and popularity, did not so shake, but that we may say of him, as it is said of job, That in all this height, David did not sin, nor in all these afflictions, He did not charge God foolishly; Though he had many victories, he came not to a Triumph; but him, whom an Army, and an armed Giant, Goliath, near hand, could not hurt, a weaker person, and naked, and fare off, overthrows and ruins. It is therefore but an imperfect comfort for any man to say, I have overcome tentations to great sins, and my sins have been but of infirmity, not of malice. For herein, more than in any other contemplation appears the greatness, both of thy danger, and of thy transgression. For, consider what a dangerous, and slippery station thou art in, if after a victory over Giants, thou mayest be overcome by Pigmees; If after thy soul hath been Canon proof against strong tentations, she be slain at last by a Pistol; And, after she hath swom over a tempestuous Sea, she drown at last, in a shallow and standing ditch. And as it shows the greatness of thy danger, so it aggravates the greatness of thy fault; That after thou hast had the experience, that by a good husbanding of those degrees of grace, which God hath afforded thee, thou hast been able to stand out the great batteries of strong tentations, and seest by that, that thou art much more able to withstand tentations to lesser sins, if thou wilt, yet by disarming thyself, by divesting thy garrisons, by discontinuing thy watches, merely by inconsideration, thou sellest thy soul for nothing, for little pleasure, little profit, thou frustratest thy Saviour of that purchase, which he bought with his precious blood, and thou enrichest the Devils treasure as much, with thy single money, thy frequent small sins, as another hath done with his talon; for, as God was well pleased with the widows two farthings, so is the Devil well pleased, with the negligent man's lesser sins. O who can be confident in his footing, or in his hold, when David, that held out so long, fell, and if we consider but himself, irrecoverably, where the tempter was weak, and afar off? De longè vidit illam in qua captus est. Berseba was far off; Mulier longè, libido prope, August. but David's disposition was in his own bosom. Yet David came not up into the Teras, with any purpose or inclination to that sin. Here was no such plotting as in his son Hamon's case, to get his sister Tamar, by dissembling himself to be sick, to his lodging. That man post-dates his sin, and gins his reckoning too late, that dates his sin at that hour, when he commits that sin. You must not reckon in sin, from the Nativity, but the Conception; when you conceived that sin in your purpose, than you sinned that sin, and in every letter, in every discourse, in every present, in every wish, in every dream, that conduces to that sin, or rises from that sin, you sin it over, and over again, before you come to the committing of it, and so your sin is an old, an inveterate sin, before it be borne, and that which you call the first, is not the hundredth time, that you have sinned that sin. It is not much that David contributed to this sin on his part: He is only noted in the Text, to have been negligent in the public business, and to have given himself too much ease in this particular, 2 Sam. 11. that he lay in bed all day; When it was evening, David arose out of his bed, and walked upon the Teras. And it is true, that the justice of God is subtle, as searching, as unsearchable; and oftentimes punishes sins of Omission, with other sins, Actual sins, and makes their laziness, who are slack in doing that they should, an occasion of doing that they should not. It was not much that Bathsheba contributed to this tentation, on her part. The Vulgat Edition of the Roman Church, hath made her case somewhat the worse, by a mistranslation, Ex adverso super solarium suum, as though she had been washing herself, upon her own Teras, and in the eye of the Court; whereas indeed, it is no more, but that David saw her, he upon his Teras, not her upon hers. For her washing, it may well be collected out of the fourth verse, that it was a Legal washing, to which she was bound by the levitical Law, being a purification after her natural infirmity, and which it had been a sin in her, to have omitted. But had it been a washing of Refreshing, or of Delicacy, even that was never imputed to Susanna for a fault, that she washed in a Garden, and in the day, and employed not only soap, but other ingredients and materials, of more delicacy, in that washing. Certainly the limits of adorning and beautifying the body are not so narrow, so strict, as by some sour men they are sometimes conceived to be. Differences of Ranks, of Ages, of Nations, of Customs, make great differences in the enlarging, or contracting of these limits, in adorning the body; and that may come near sin at some time, and in some places, which is not so always, nor every where. Amongst the women there, the Jewish women, it was so general a thing to help themselves with aromatical Oils, and liniments, as that that which is said by the Prophet's poor Widow, to the Prophet Elisha, 2 King. 4 That she had nothing in the house but a pot of Oil, is very properly by some collected from the Original word, that it was not Oil for meat, but Oil for unction, aromatical Oil, Oil to make her look better; she was but poor, but a Widow, but a Prophet's Widow, (and likely to be the poorer for that) yet she left not that. We see that even those women, whom the Kings were to take for their Wives, and not for Mistresses, (which is but a later name for Concubines) had a certain, and a long time assigned to be prepared by these aromatical unctions, and liniments for beauty. Neither do those that consider, that when Abraham was afraid to lose his wife Sara in Egypt, and that every man that saw her, would fall in love with her, Sara was then above threescore; And when the King Abimelech did fall in love with her, and take her from Abraham, she was fourscore and ten, they do not assign this preservation of her complexion, and habitude to any other thing, than the use of those unctions, and liniments, which were ordinary to that Nation. But yet though the extent and limit of this adorning the body, may be larger than some austere persons will allow, yet it is not so large, as that it should be limited only, by the intention and purpose of them that do it; So that if they that beautify themselves, mean no harm in it, therefore there should be no harm in it; for, except they could as well provide, that others should take no harm, as that they should mean no harm, they may participate of the fault. And since we find such an impossibility in rectifying and governing our own senses, (we cannot take our own eye, nor stop our own ear, when we would) it is an unnecessary, and insupportable burden, to put upon our score, all the lascivious glances, and the licentious wishes of other persons, occasioned by us, in over-adorning ourselves. And this may well have been Bathshebaes' fault, That though she did not bathe with a purpose to be seen, yet she did not enough to provide against the infirmity of others. It had therefore been well if David had risen earlier, to attend the affairs of the State; And it had been well, if Bathsheba had bathed within doors, and with more caution; but yet these errors alone, we should not be apt to condemn in such persons, except by Gods permitting greater sins to follow upon these, we were taught, that even such things, as seem to us in their nature to be indifferent, have degrees of natural and essential ill in them, which must be avoided, even in the probability, nay even in the possibility that they may produce sin. And as from this Example, we draw that Conclusion, That sins, which are but the Children of indifferent actions, become the Parents of great sins; which is the industry of sin, to exalt itself, and (as it were) ennoble itself, above the stock, from which it was derived, The next sin will needs be a better sin than the last: So have we also from David this Conclusion, that this generation of sin is infinite; infinite in number, infinite in duration; So infinite both ways, as that Luther (who seldom checks himself in any vehement expression) could not forbear to say, Si Nathan non venisset, If Nathan had not come to David, David had proceeded to the sin against the Holy Ghost. O how impossible a thing is it then, for us to condition and capitulate with God, or with our own Nature, and say to him, or to ourselves, We will sin thus long and no longer, Thus far, and no farther, this sin, and no more; when not only the frailty of man, but even the justice of God provokes us (though not as Author, or cause of sin) to commit more and more sins, after we have entangled and enwrapped ourselves in former! Who can doubt, but that in this year's space, in which David continued in his sin, but that he did ordinarily all the external acts of the religious Worship of God? who can doubt but that he performed all the Legal Sacrifices, and all the Ceremonial Rites? Yea, we see, that when Nathan put David's case in another name, of a rich man that had taken away a poor man's only sheep, David was not only just, but he was vehement in the execution of Justice; He was, says the text, exceeding wroth, and said, As the Lord liveth, that man shall die; But yet, for all this external Religion, for all this Civil justice in matter of government, no mention of any repentance in all this time. How little a thing than is it, nay how great a thing, that is, how great an aggravating of thy sin, if thou think to bribe God with a Sabbath, or with an alms; And, as a criminal person would feign come to Sanctuary, not because it is a consecrated place, but because it rescues him from the Magistrate, So thou comest to Church, not because God is here, but that thy being here may redeem thee from the imputation of profaneness. At last Nathan came; David did not send for him, but God sent him; But yet David laid hold upon God's purpose in him. And he confesses to God, he confesses to the Prophet, he confesses to the whole Church; for, before he pleads for mercy in the body of the Psalm, in the title of the Psalm, which is as Canonical Scripture, as the Psalm itself, he confesses himself plainly, A Psalm of David, when the Prophet Nathan came to him, after he had gone in to Bathsheba. Audiunt male viventes, & quaerunt sibi patrocinia peccandi; We hear of David's sin, August. and we justify our sins by him; Si David, cur non & ego? If David went in to a Bathsheba, why may not I? That Father tells you why, Qui facit, quia David fecit, id facit, quod David non fecit, He that does that, because David did it, does not do that which David did; Quia nullum exemplum proposuit, For David did not justify his sin, by any precedent example; So that he that sins as David did, yet sins worse than David did; and he that continues as unsensible of his sin, as David was, is more unsensible than David was; Quia ad te mittitur ipse David, For God sends Nathan to thee, August. with David in his hand; He sends you the Receipt, his invitations to Repentance, in his Scriptures, and he sends you a Probatum est, a personal testimony how this Physic hath wrought upon another, upon David. And so having in this first Part, which is the Consideration of the persons in our Text, God and David, brought them by nathan's mediation, together, consider we also, for a conclusion of this Part, the personal applications, that David scatters himself upon none but God, Tu me, and he repeats it, do Thou purge me, do Thou wash me. Damascen hath a Sermon of the Assumption of the blessed Virgin, which whole Sermon is but a Dialogue, in which Eve acts the first part, and the blessed Virgin another; Tu. It is but a Dialogue, yet it is a Sermon. If I should insist upon this Dialogue, between God and David, Tu me, Tu me, Do thou work upon me, it would not be the less a profitable part of a Sermon for that. For first, when we hear David in an anhelation and panting after the mercy of God, cry out, Domine Tu, Lord do thou that that is to be done, do Thou purge, do Thou wash, and may have heard God, (thereby to excite us to the use of his means) say, Purget natura, purget lex, I have infused into thee a light and a law of nature, and exalted that light and that law, by a more particular law and a clearer light than that, by which thou knowest what is sin, and knowest that in a sinful state thou canst not be acceptable to me, Purget natura, purget lex, let the light of nature, or of the law purge thee, and rectify thyself by that; Do but as much for thyself, as some natural men, some Socrates, some Plato hath done, we may hear David reply, Domine Tu, Lord put me not over to the catechising of Nature, nor to the pedagogy of the Law, but take me into thine own hands, do Thou, Thou, that is to be done upon me. When we hear God say, Purget Ecclesia, I have established a Church, settled constant Ordinances, for the purging and washing of souls there; Purget Ecclesia, Let the Church purge thee, we may hear David reply, Domine Tu, Alas Lord, how many come to that Bath, and go foul out of it? how many hear Sermons, and receive Sacraments, and when they return, return to their vomit? Domine Tu, Lord, except the power of thy Spirit make thine Ordinance effectual upon me, even this thy Jordan will leave me in my leprosy, and exalt my leprosy, even this Sermon, this Sacrament will aggravate my sin. If we hear God say, Shall I purge thee? Dost thou know what thou askest, what my method in purging is, That if I purge, I shall purge thee with fire, with seven fires, with tribulations, nay, with tentations, with temporal, nay, with spiritual calamities, with wounds in thy fortune, wounds in thine honour, wounds in thy conscience, yet we may hear David reply, Josh. 24.16. Tu Domine; As the people said to joshuah, God forbidden we should forsake the Lord, we will serve the Lord; And when joshuah said, You cannot serve the Lord, for he is a jealous God; and if ye turn from him, he will turn and do you hurt, and consame you after he hath done you good; The people replied, Nay, but we will serve the Lord; so whatsoever God threatens David of afflictions and tribulations, and purge in fire, we may hear David reply, Nay but Lord, do Thou do it, do it how Thou wilt, but do Thou do it: Thy corrosives are better than others somentations; Thy bitternesses sweeter than others honey; Thy fires are but lukewarm fires, nay, they have nothing of fire in them, but light to direct me in my way; And thy very frowns are but as trenches cut out, as lanes that lead me to thy grave, or Rivers or Channels, that lead me to the sea of thy blood. Let me go upon Crouches, so I go to Heaven; Lay what weight thou wilt even upon my foul, that that be heavy, and heavy unto death, so I may have a cheerful transmigration then. Domine Tu, Lord do thou do it, and I shall not wish it mended. And then when we hear David say, Domine Me, Lord purge Me, wash Me, and return four times in this short Text, to that personal appropriation of God's work upon himself, Purge Me, that I may be clean, wash Me, that I may be whiter than snow, if we hear God say (as the language of his mercy is, for the most part, general) As the Sea is above the Earth, so is the blood of my Son above all sin; Congregations of three thousand, and of five thousand were purged and washed, converted and baptised at particular Sermons of S. Peter, whole legions of Soldiers, that consisted of thousands, were purged in their own blood, and became Martyrs in one day. There is enough done to work upon all; Examples enough given to guide all; we may hear David reply, Domine Me, Nay but Lord, I do not hear Peter preach, I live not in a time, or in a place, where Crowns of Martyrdom are distributed, nor am I sure my Constancy would make me capable of it if I did, Lord I know, that a thousand of these worlds were not worth one drop of thy blood, and yet I know, that if there had been but one some distressed, and that soul distressed but with one sin, thou wouldst have spent the last drop of that blood for that soul; Blessed be thy Name, for having wrapped me up in thy general Covenants, and made me partaker of thy general Ordinances, but yet Lord, look more particularly upon me, and appropriate thyself to me, to me, not only as thy Creature, as a man, as a Christian, but as I am I, as I am this sinner that confesses now, and as I am this penitent that begs thy mercy now. And now, Beloved, we have said so much towards enough of the persons, God and David; The access of David to God, and the appropriation of God to David, as that we may well pass to our other general part, the petitions which David in his own and our behalf makes to God, Purge me with Hyssop, and I shall be clean, wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. In this, 2 Part. Purgabis. the first is a great work, That which we translate, Purge me. And yet how soon David is come to it? It is his first period. The passage of a Spirit is very quick, but it is not immediate; Not from extreme to extreme, but by passing the way between. The Evil spirit passes not so; no good soul was ever made very ill in an instant, no, nor so soon as some ill have been made good: No man can give me Examples of men so soon perverted, as I can of men converted. It is not in the power of the Devil to do so much harm, as God can do good; Nay, we may be bold to say, it is not in the will, not in the desire of the Devil to do so much harm, as God would do good; for illness is not in the nature of the Devil; The Devil was naturally good, made, created good. His first illness was but a defection from that goodness; and his present illness is but a punishment for that defection; but God is good, goodness in his nature, essentially, eternally good; and therefore the good motions of the Spirit of God work otherwise upon us, than the tentations of the evil Spirit do. How soon, and to what a height came David here? He makes his Petition, his first Petition with that confidence, as that it hath scarce the nature of a Petition: for it is in the Original, Thou wilt purge me, Thou wilt wash me, Thou hadst a gracious will, and purpose to do it, before thou didst infuse the will and the desire in me to petition it. Nay, this word may well be translated not only Thou wilt, but by the other denotation of the future, Thou shalt, Thou shalt purge me, Thou shalt wash me, Lord I do but remember thee of thy debt, of that which thy gracious promise hath made thy debt, to show mercy to every penitent sinner. And then, as the word implies confidence, and acceleration, infallibility, and expedition too, That as soon as I can ask, I am sure to be heard; so does it imply a totality, an entireness, a fullness in the work; for the root of the word is Peccare, to sin, for purging is a purging of peccant humours; but in this Conjugation in that language, it hath a privative signification, and literally signifies Expeccabis; and if in our language, that were a word in use, it might be translated, Thou shalt un-sin me; that is, look upon me as a man that had never sinned, as a man invested in the innocency of thy Son, who knew no sin. David gives no man rule nor example of other assurance in God, then in the remission of sins: Not that any precontract or Election makes our sins no sins, or makes our sins no hindrances in our way to salvation, or that we are in God's favour at that time when we sin, nor returned to his favour before we repent our sin; It is only this expeccation, this unsinning, this taking away of sins formerly committed, that restores me; And that is not done with nothing; David assigns, proposes a means, by which he looks for it, Hyssop, Thou shalt purge me with Hyssop. The Father's taking the words as they found them, and fastening with a spiritual delight, Hyssopo. as their devout custom was, their Meditations upon the figurative and Metaphorical phrase of purging by Hyssop, have found purgative virtues in that plant, and made useful and spiritual applications thereof, for the purging of our souls from sin. In this do S. Ambrose, and Augustine, and Hierome agree, that Hyssop hath virtue in it proper for the lungs, in which part, as it is the furnace of breath, they place the seat of pride and opposition against the Truth, making their use of that which is said of Saul, Acts 9 That he breathed out threaten and slaughter against the Disciples of the Lord. And by this interpretation, David's disease that he must be purged of, should be pride. But except, as the Schoolmen, when they have tired themselves in seeking out the name of the sin of the Angels, are content at last for their ease to call it Pride, both because they thought they need go no farther, for, where pride is, other sins will certainly accompany it; and because they extended the name of Pride to all refusals and resistances of the will of God, and so pride, in effect, includes all sin; Except, I say, the Fathers take Pride in so large a sense as that they would not prescribe Hyssop to purge David's lungs, for his disease lay not properly there; They must have purged his liver, the seat of blood, the seat of concupiscence; They must have purged his whole substance, for the distemper was gone over all. And to this rectifying of his blood, by the application of better blood, and David relation in this place. All the sacrifices of Expiation of sin, in the old Law, were done by blood, and that blood was sprinkled upon the people, by an instrument made of a certain plant, which because the word in Hebrew is Ezob, for the nearness of the sound, and for the indifferency of the matter, (for it imports us nothing to know, of what plant that Aspergillum, that Blood-sprinckler was made) the Interpreters have ever used in all languages to call this word Hyssop. And though we know no proper word for Hyssop in Hebrew, (for when they find not a word in the Bible, the Hebrew Rabbins will acknowledge no Hebrew word for any thing) yet the other languages deduced from the Hebrew, Syriaque, and Arabic, have clearly another word for Hyssop, Zus; And the Hebrew Rabbins think this word of our text, Ezob, to signify any of three or four plants, rather than our Hyssop. But be the plant what it will, the form and the use of that Blood-sprinkler is manifest. Exod. 12. Levit. 14. In the institution of the Passeover, Take a bunch of Hyssop, and dip it in blood. In the cleansing of the Leper, there was to be the blood of a sparrow, and then Cedar wood, and scarlet lace, and Hyssop: And about that Cedar stick, they bond this Hyssop with this lace, and so made this instrument to sprinkle blood. And so the name of the Hyssop, because it did the principal office, was after given to the whole Instrument; all the sprinkler was called an Hyssop; As we see when they reached up a sponge of vinegar to Christ upon the Cross, joh. 19.29. They put it, says the text, upon Hyssop, that is, upon an Hyssop; not upon an Hyssop stalk, (as the old translation had it) for no Hyssop hath such a stalk, but they called such sticks of Cedar, as ordinarily served for the sprinkling of blood, Hyssops. And whether this were such a Cedar stick, or some other such thing, Mat. 27.48. fit to reach up that sponge to Christ, we cannot say. For S. Matthew calls that, that S. john calls an Hyssop, a Reed. This than was David's petition here; first, That he might have the blood of Christ Jesus applied and sprinkled upon him; David thought of no election, he looked for no sanctification, but in the blood of Christ Jesus. And then he desired this blood to be applied to him, by that Hyssop, by that Blood-sprinkler, which was ordained by God, for the use of the Church. Home-infusions, and inward inspirations of grace, are powerful seals of God's love; but all this is but the Privy seal, David desired to bring it to the Great seal, the public Ordinance of the Church. In a case of necessity God gave his children Manna and Quails; Iosh. 5. In cases of necessity God allows Sermons, and Sacraments at home; But as soon as ever they came to the Land of promise, the same day both Manna and Quails ceased: God hath given us a free and public passage of his Word, and Sacraments, the diet and the ordinary food of our souls, and he purges us with that Hyssop, with the application of his promises, with the absolution of our sins, with a redintegration into his mystical body, by the seals of reconciliation. And this reconciliation to God, by the blood of Christ, applied in the Ordinances of the Church, is that which David begs for his cleansing, and is the last circumstance of this branch, Purge me with Hyssop, and I shall be clean. This Cleansing then implies that, Cleansing. which we commonly call the enwrapping in the Covenant, the breeding in the visible Church, when God takes a Nation out of the Common, and encloses it, empailes it for his more peculiar use, when God withdraws us from the impossibility, under which the Gentiles starve, who hear not Christ preached, to live within the sound of his voice, and within the reach of our spiritual food, the Word and Sacraments. It is that state, which the holy Ghost so elegantly expresses and enlarges, Ezek. 16. That God found Jerusalem, Her father an Amorite, and her mother an Hittite, none of the seed of the faithful in her; that he found her in Canaan, not so much as in a place of true profession; that he found her in her blood, and her navel uncut, still incorporated in her former stock; And, The time was a time of love, says God, and I covered thy nakedness, and swore unto thee, and entered into a covenant with thee, and thou becamest mine. Will you say, this could not be the subject of David's petition, this could not be the cleansing that he begged at God's hand, to be brought into that Covenant, to be a member of that Church? for he was in possession of that before. Beloved, how many are borne in this Covenant, and baptised, and catechised in it, and yet fall away? How many have taught, and wrought, and thought in their own conscience that they did well, in defence of the Covenant, and yet fell away? And from how many places, which gave light to others, hath God removed the Candlestick, and left themselves in darkness? Psal. 84.8. Though David say, A day in thy Courts is better than a thousand, (than a thousand any where else) yet he expresses his desire, That he might continue in that happiness all the days of his life; It is as fearful a thing to be removed from the means of salvation, as never to have had them. This then is Cleansing, To be continued in the distance, and working of the means of cleansing, that he may always grow under the dew, and breath in the air of God's grace exhibited in his Ordinance. Amongst the Jews there were many uncleannesses, which did not amount to sin: They reckon in the Ceremonial law, at least fifty kinds of uncleannesses, from which if they neglected to cleanse themselves, by those ceremonies which were appropriated to them, than those uncleannesses became sins, and they were put to their sacrifices, before they could be discharged of them. Many levitieses, many omissions, many acts of infirmity might be prevented by consideration before, or cleansed by consideration now, if we did truly value the present grace, that is always offered us in these the Ordinances of God. What sin can I be guilty of, that is without example of mercy, in that Gospel which is preached to me here? But if you will not accept it, when God offers it, you can never have it so good cheap, because hereafter you shall have this present sin, of refusing that offer of grace, added to your burden. Ezek. 24.13. Because I have purged thee, & thou wast not purged, thou shalt not be purged any more, till I have caused my fury to light upon thee. But shall we be purged then? Then, when his fury in any calamity hath lighted upon us? Is not this donec, this until, such a donec, as donec faciam, Till I make thine cnemies thy footstool: Such a donec as the donec peperit, she was a Virgin, Till she brought forth her first son? Is it not an everlasting donec? That we shall not be purged till God's Judgements fall upon us, nor then neither: Physic may be ministered too late to work, and Judgements may fall too late, to supple or entender the soul: For as we may die with that Physic in our stomach, so may we be carried to the last Judgement, with that former Judgement upon our shoulders. And therefore our later Translation hath expressed it more fully, Not that that fury shall light, but shall rest upon us. This cleansing therefore, is that disposition, which God by his grace, infuses into us, That we stand in the congregation, and Communion of Saints, capable of those mercies, which God hath by his Ordinance, annexed to these meetings; That we may so feel at all times when we come hither, such a working of his Hyssop, such a benefit of his Ordinance, as that we believe all our former sins to be so forgiven, as that if God should translate us now, this minute, to another life, this Dosis of this purging Hyssop, received now, had so wrought, as that we should be assuredly translated into the Kingdom of heaven. This cleansing applies to us those words of our Saviour, My son, be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee; But yet there is a farther degree of cleanness expressed in Christ's following words, Go, and sin no more; And that grace against relapses, the gift of sanctification, and perseverance, is that that David asks in his other Petition, Lava me, Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. Here we proposed first the action, Lava, Wash me. This is more than a sprinkling, Lava. A total, and entire washing; More than being an ordinary partaker of the outward means, The Word, and Sacraments; more than a temporary feeling of the benefit thereof in a present sense; for it is a building up of habits of religious actions, visible to others, and it is a holy and firm confidence created in us by the Spirit of God, that we shall keep that building in reparation, and go forward with it to our lives end. It is a washing like naaman's in Jordan, to be iterated seven times, seaventy seven times, daily, hourly, all our life; A washing begun in Baptism, pursued in sweat, in the industry of a lawful calling, continued in tears, for our deficiencies in the works of our calling, and perchance to be consummated in blood, at our deaths. Not such a washing, as the Washeses have, which are those sands that are overflowed with the Sea at every Tide, and then lie dry, but such a washing as the bottom of the Sea hath, that is always equally wet. It is not a stillicidium, a spout, a shower, a bucket poured out upon us, when we come to Church, a Sabbath-sanctification, and no more, but a water that enters into every office of our house, and washes every action proceeding from every faculty of the soul. And this is the washing, A continual succession of Grace, working effectually to present Habits of religious acts, and constituting a holy purpose of persevering in them that induces the Whiteness, the Candour, the Dealbation that David begs here, Lava & Dealbabor. The purging with Hyssop, which we spoke of before, Dealbabor. which is the benefit which we have by being bred in a true Church, delivers us from that redness, which is in the earth of which we are made, from that guiltiness, which is by our natural derivation from our Parents imprinted in us; Baptism doth much upon that; but that that is not Red, is not therefore White. But this is our case: Our first colour was white; God made man righteous. Our redness is from Adam, and the more that redness is washed off, 2 Cor. 7.1. the more we return to our first whiteness; And this which is petitioned here, is a washing of such perfection, as cleanses us Ab omni inquinamento, from all filthiness of flesh and spirit. Those inquinamenta, which are ordinary, are first in the flesh, Concupiscence and Carnality, Gal. 5.19. and those other, of which the Apostle says, The works of the flesh are manifest; And in the spirit, they are Murmuring, Diffidence in God, and such others. But besides these, as an over-diligent cleansing of the Body, and additional beauty of the Body, is inquinamentum carnis, one of S. Paul's filthinesses upon the flesh, so an over purifying of the spirit, in an uncharitable undervaluing of other men, and in a schismatical departing from the unity of the Church, is Inquinamentum spiritus: False beauties are a foulness of the body, false purity is a foulness of the spirit. But the washing, that we seek, cleanses us Ab omni inquinamento, from all foulness of flesh and spirit. All waters will not cleanse us, nor all fires dry us, so as we may be clean, smoky fires will not do that. I will pour clean water upon you, Ezek. 36.25. and you shall be clean. The Sun produces sweat upon us, and it dries us too: Zeal cleanses us; but it must be zeal impermixt as the Sun, not mingled with our smoky, sooty, factious affections. Some Grammarians have noted, the word Washing here, to be derived from a word, that signifies a Lamb; we must be washed in the blood of the Lamb, and we must be brought to the whiteness, the candour, the simplicity of the Lamb; no man is pure, that thinks no man pure but himself. And this whiteness, which is Sanctification in ourselves, and charitable interpretation of other men, is exalted here to that Superlative, Super Nivem, Wash me, and I shall be whiter than Snow. Though your sins be as Scarlet, Super nivem. Esay 1.18. they shall be as white as snow. Esay was an Evangelicall Prophet, a prophetical Evangelist, and speaks still of the state of the Christian Church. There, by the ordinary means exhibited there, our Scarlet sins are made as white as Snow; And the whiteness of Snow, is a whiteness that no art of man can reach to; So Christ's garments in his Transfiguration are expressed to have been as white as Snow, Mark 9.3. so, as no Fuller on earth could white them. Nothing in this world can send me home in such a whiteness, no moral counsel, no moral comfort, no moral constancy; as God's Absolution by his Minister, as the profitable hearing of a Sermon, the worthy receiving of the Sacrament do. This is to be as white as snow; In a good state for the present. But David begs a whiteness above Snow; for Snow melts, and then it is not white; our present Sanctification withers, and we lose that cheerful verdure, the testimony of an upright conscience; And Snow melted, Snow water, is the coldest water of all; Devout men departed from their former fervour are the coldest and the most irreducible to true zeal, true holiness. Therefore David who was metal tried seven times in the fire, and desired to be such gold as might be laid up in God's Treasury, might consider, that in transmutation of metals, it is not enough to come to a calcination, or a liquefaction of the metal, (that must be done) nor to an Ablution, to sever dross from pure, nor to a Transmutation, to make it a better metal, but there must be a Fixion, a fettling thereof, so that it shall not evaporate into nothing, nor return to his former nature. Therefore he saw that he needed not only a liquefaction, a melting into tears, nor only an Ablution, & a Transmutation, those he had by this purging and this washing, this station in the Church of God, and this present Sanctification there, but he needed Fixionem, an establishment, which the comparison of Snow afforded not; That as he had purged him with Hyssop, and so cleansed him, that is, enwrapped him in the Covenant, and made him a member of the true Church; and there washed him so, as that he was restored to a whiteness, that is, made his Ordinances so effectual upon him, as that then he durst deliver his soul into his hands at that time: So he would exalt that whiteness, above the whiteness of Snow, so as nothing might melt it, nothing discolour it, but that under the seal of his blessed Spirit, he might ever dwell in that calm, in that assurance, in that acquiescence, that as he is in a good state this minute, he shall be in no worse, whensoever God shall be pleased to translate him. We end all the Psalms in our service, Conclusio. those of Praise, and those of Prayer too, with a Gloria Patri, Glory be to the Father, etc. For our conclusion of this Prayer in this Psalm, we have reserved a Gloria Patri too, This consideration for the glory of God, that though in the first Part, The Persons, the persons were varied, God and man, yet in our second Part, where we consider the work, the whole work is put into God's hand, and received from God's hand. Let God be true, and every man a liar; Let God be strong and every man infirm; Let God give, and man but receive. What man that hath no propriety therein, can take a penny out of another man's house, or a root out of his Garden, but the Law will take hold of him? Hath any man a propriety in Grace? what had he to give for it? Nature? Is Nature equivalent to Grace? No man does refine, and exalt Nature to the height it would bear, but if natural faculties were exalted to their highest, is Nature a fit exchange for Grace? and if it were, is Nature our own? Why should we be loath to acknowledge to have all our ability of doing good freely from God, and immediately by his grace, when as, even those faculties of Nature, by which we pretend to do the offices of Grace, we have from God himself too? For that question of the Apostle involves all, What hast thou that thou hast not received? Thy natural faculties are no more thine own, than the grace of God is thine own; I would not be beholden to God for Grace, and I must be as much beholden to him for Nature, if Nature do supply Grace; Because he hath made thee to be a man, he hath given thee natural faculties; because he hath vouchsafed thee to be a Christian, he hath given thee means of Grace. But, as thy body, conceived in thy Mother's womb, could not claim a soul at God's hand, nor wish a soul, no nor know that there was a soul to be had: So neither by being a man endued with natural faculties canst thou claim grace, or wish grace; nay those natural faculties, if they be not pre-tincted with some infusion of Grace before, cannot make thee know what Grace is, or that Grace is. To a child rightly disposed in the womb, God does give a soul; To a natural man rightly disposed in his natural faculties, God does give Grace; But that Soul was not due to that child, nor that grace to that man. Therefore, (as we said at first) David does not bring the Hyssop, and pray God to make the potion, but, Do thou purge me with Hyssop, All is thine own; There was no pre-existent matter in the world, when God made the world; There is no pre-existent merit in man, when God makes him his. David does not say, Do thou wash me, and I will perfect thy work; Give me my portion of Grace, and I will trouble thee for no more, but deal upon that stock; But Qui sanctificatur, sanctificetur adhuc, Let him that is holy be more holy, but accept his Sanctification from him, of whom he had his Justification; and except he can think to glorify himself because he is sanctified, let him not think to sanctify himself because he is justified; God does all. Yet thus argues S. Augustin upon David's words, Tuus sum Domine, Lord I am thine, and therefore safer than they, that think themselves their own. Every man can and must say, I was thine, Thine by Creation; but few can say, I am thine, few that have not changed their Master. But how was David his so especially? says S. Augustine: Quia quaesivi justificationes tuas, as it follows there; Because I sought thy Righteousness, thy Justification. But where did he seek it? He sought it, and he found it in himself. In himself, as himself, there was no good thing to be found, how far soever he had sought: But yet he found a Justification, though of God's whole making, yet in himself. So then, this is our Act of Recognition, we acknowledge God, and God only to do all; But we do not so make him Sovereign alone, as that we leave his presence naked, and empty; Nor so make him King alone, as that we depopulate his Country, and leave him without Subjects; Nor so leave all to Grace, as that the natural faculties of man do not become the servants, and instruments of that Grace. Let all, that we all seek, be, who may glorify God most; and we shall agree in this, That as the Pelagian wounds the glory of God deeply, in making Natural faculties joynt-Commissioners with Grace, so do they diminish the glory of God too, if any deny natural faculties to be the subordinate servants and instruments of Grace; for as Grace could not work upon man to Salvation, if man had not a faculty of will to work upon, because without that will man were not man; so is this Salvation wrought in the will, by conforming this will of man to the will of God, not by extinguishing the will itself, by any force or constraint that God imprints in it by his Grace: God saves no man without, or against his will. Glory be to God on high, and on earth Peace, and Good will towards men; And to this God of Glory, the Father, and this God of Peace and reconciliation, the Son, and this God of Good will and love amongst men, the Holy Ghost, be ascribed all praise, etc. PREBEND SERMONS Preached at St. PAUL'S. The first of the Prebend of Cheswicks five Psalms; which five are appointed for that Prebend; as there are five other, for every other of our thirty Prebendaries. SERM. LXV. Preached at S. Paul's, May 8. 1625. PSAL. 62.9. Surely men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie; To be laid in the balance, they are altogether lighter than vanity. WE consider the dignity of the Book of Psalms, either in the whole body together, or in the particular limbs and distribution thereof. Of the whole Body, Basil. it may be enough to tell you that which S. Basil saith, That if all the other books of Scripture could perish, there remained enough in the book of Psalms for the supply of all: And therefore he calls it Amuletum ad profligandum daemonem; Any Psalm is Exorcism enough to expel any Devil, Charm enough to remove any tentation, Enchantment enough to ease, nay to sweeten any tribulation. It is abundantly enough that our Saviour Christ himself citys the Psalms, not only as Canonical Scripture, but as a particular, and entire, and noble limb of that Body; All must be fulfilled of me, (saith he) which is written in the Law, Luk. 24.44. in the Prophets, and in the Psalms. The Law alone was the Sadduces Scripture, they received no more: The Law and the Prophets were (especially) the Scribes Scripture, they interpreted that: The Christians Scripture, in the Old Testament, is especially the Psalms. For (except the Prophecy of Esay be admitted into the comparison) no book of the Old Testament is so like a Gospel, so particular in all things concerning Christ, as the Psalms. So hath the Book of Psalms an especial dignity in the entire Body, all together. It hath so also in divers distributions thereof into parts. For even amongst the Jews themselves, those fifteen Psalms which follow immediately and successively after the 119. Psalm, were especially distinguished, and dignified by the name of Gradual Psalms; Whether because they were sung upon the Degrees and stairs ascending to the Altar, Or because he that read them in the Temple, ascended into a higher and more eminent place to read them, Or because the word Gradual implies a degree of excellency in the Psalms themselves, I dispute not; But a difference those fifteen Psalms ever had above the rest, in the Jewish and in the Christian Church too. So also hath there been a particular dignity ascribed to those seven Psalms, which we have ever called the Penitential Psalms; Of which S. Augustine had so much respect, August. as that he commanded them to be written in a great Letter, and hung about the curtains of his Deathbed within, that he might give up the ghost in contemplation, and meditation of those seven Psalms. And it hath been traditionally received, and recommended by good Authors, that that Hymn, Matt. 26.30. which Christ and his Apostles are said to have sung after the Institution and celebration of the Sacrament, was a Hymn composed of those six Psalms, which we call the Allelujah Psalms, immediately preceding the hundred and nineteenth. So then, in the whole Body, and in some particular limbs of the Body, the Church of God hath had an especial consideration of the book of Psalms. This Church in which we all stand now, and in which myself, by particular obligation serve, hath done so too. In this Church, by ancient Constitutions, it is ordained, That the whole book of Psalms should every day, day by day be rehearsed by us, who make the Body of this Church, in the ears of Almighty God. And therefore every Prebendary of this Church, is by those Constitutions bound every day to praise God in those five Psalms which are appointed for his Prebend. And of those five Psalms which belong to me, this, out of which I have read you this Text, is the first. And, by God's grace, (upon like occasions) I shall here handle some part of every one of the other four Psalms, for some testimony, that those my five Psalms return often into my meditation, which I also assure myself of the rest of my brethren, who are under the same obligation in this Church. For this whole Psalm, Psalmus integer. which is under our present consideration, as Athanasius amongst all the Fathers, was most curious, and most particular, and exquisite, in observing the purpose, and use of every particular Psalm, (for to that purpose, he goes through them all, in this manner; If thou wilt encourage men to a love, and pursuit of goodness, say the first Psalm, and 31. and 140, etc. If thou wilt convince the Jews, say the second Psalm; If thou wilt praise God for things past, say this, and this, And this, and this if thou wilt pray for future things) so for this Psalm, which we have in hand, he observes in it a summary abridgement of all; For of this Psalm he says in general, Adversus insidiantes, Against all attempts upon thy body, thy state, thy soul, thy fame, tentations, tribulations, machinations, defamations, say this Psalm. As he saith before, that in the book of Psalms, every man may discern motus animi sui, his own finfull inclinations expressed, and arm himself against himself; so in this Psalm, he may arm himself against all other adversaries of any kind. And therefore as the same Father entitles one Sermon of his, Contr a omnes haereses, A Sermon for the convincing of all Heresies, in which short Sermon he meddles not much with particular heresies, but only establishes the truth of Christ's Person in both natures, which is indeed enough against all Heresies, and in which (that is the consubstantiality of Christ with the Father, God of God) this Father Athanasius, hath enlarged himself more than the rest (insomuch, that those heretics which grow so fast, in these our days, The Socinians, (who deny the Godhead of Christ) are more vexed with that Father, then with any other, and call him for Athanasius, Sathanasius) As he calls that Sermon, a Sermon against all Heresies, so he presents this Psalm against all Tentations, and Tribulations; Not that therein David puts himself to weigh particular tentations, and tribulations, but that he puts every man, in every trial, to put himself wholly upon God, and to know, that if man cannot help him in this world, nothing can; And, for man, Surely men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie; To be laid in the balance, they are altogether lighter than vanity. We consider in the words, Divisie. The manner, and the matter, How it is spoken, And what is said. For the first, the manner, this is not absolutely spoken, but comparatively, not peremptorily, but respectively, not simply, but with relation. The Holy Ghost, in David's mouth, doth not say, That man can give no assistance to man; That man may look for no help from man; But, that God is always so present, and so all-sufficient, that we need not doubt of him, nor rely upon any other, otherwise then as an instrument of his. For that which he had spread over all the verses of the Psalm before, he sums up in the verse immediately before the Text, Trust in God at all times, for he is a refuge for us; and then, he strengthens that with this, What would ye prefer before God, or join with God? man? what man? Surely men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie; To be laid in the balance, they are altogether lighter than vanity. Which words being our second part, open to us these steps: First, that other Doctrines, moral or civil Instructions may be delivered to us possibly, and probably, and likely, and credibly, and under the like terms, and modifications, but this in our Text, is Assuredly, undoubtedly, undeniably, irrefragably, Surely men of low degree, etc. For howsoever when they two are compared together, with one another, it may admit discourse and disputation, whether men of high degree, or of low degree do most violate the laws of God; that is, whether prosperity or adversity make men most obnoxious to sin, yet, when they come to be compared, not with one another, but both with God, this asseveration, this surely reaches to both; Surely, The man of low degree is vanity, and, as Surely, The man of high degree is a lie. And though this may seem to leave some room, for men of middle ranks, and fortunes, and places, That there is a mediocrity, that might give an assurance, and an establishment, yet there is no such thing in this case, for (as surely still) to be laid in the balance, they are all, (not all of low, and all of high degree, all rich, and all poor, but) All, of all conditions, altogether lighter than vanity. Now, all this doth not destroy, not extinguish, not annihilate that affection in man, of hope, and trust, and confidence in any thing; but it rectifies that hope, and trust, and confidence, and directs it upon the right object: Trust not in flesh, but in spiritual things, That we neither bend our hopes downward, to infernal spirits, to seek help in Witches; nor miscarry it upward, to seek it in Saints, or Angels, but fix it in him, who is nearer us than our own souls, our blessed, and gracious, and powerful God, who in this one Psalm is presented unto us, by so many names of assurance and confidence, My expectation, my salvation, my rock, my defence, my glory, my strength, my refuge, and the rest. First then these words, Surely men of low degree, and men of high degree are vanity, 1 Part. Quid home erga Deum. are not absolutely, simple, unconditionally spoken; Man is not nothing: Nay, it is so fare from that, as that there is nothing but man. As, though there may be many other creatures living, which were not derived from Eve, and yet Eve is called Mater viventium, Gen. 3.20. The Mother of all that live, because the life of none but man, is considered; so there be so many other Creatures, and Christ sends his Apostles to preach, Omni Creaturae, Mark 16.15. to every creature, yet he means none but Man. All that God did in making all other creatures, in all the other days, was but a laying in of Materials; The setting up of the work was in the making of Man. God had a picture of himself from all eternity; from all eternity, the Son of God was the Image of the invisible God; Colos. 1.15. But than God would have one picture, which should be the picture of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost too, and so made man to the Image of the whole Trinity. As the Apostle argues, Cui dixit, To whom did God ever say, This day have I begotten thee, but to Christ? so we say, Heb. 1.5. for the dignity of man, Cui dixit, of what creature did God ever say, Faciamus, Let us, us make it, All, all, the Persons together, and to employ, and exercise, not only Power, but Counsel in the making of that Creature? Nay, when man was at worst, he was at a high price; man being fallen, yet then, in that undervalue, he cost God his own and only Son, before he could have him. Neither became the Son of God capable of redeeming man, by any less, or any other way, then by becoming man. The Redeemer must be better than he whom he is to redeem; and yet, he must abase himself to as low a nature as his; to his nature; else he could not redeem him. God was aliened from man, and yet God must become man, to recover man. God joined man in Commission with himself, upon his Creation, Gen. 1.28. in the Replete and Dominamini, when he gave Man power to possess the Earth, and subdue the Creature; And God hath made man so equal to himself, as not only to have a soul endless and immortal, as God himself, (though not endless and immortal as himself, yet endless and immortal as himself too, though not immortal the same way, (for God's immortality is of himself) yet as certainly, and as infallibly Immortal as he) but God hath not only given man such an immortal soul, but a body that shall put on Incorruption and Immortality too, which he hath given to none of the Angels. In so much, that howsoever it be, whether an Angel may wish itself an Archangel, or an Archangel wish itself a Cherubin; yet man cannot deliberately wish himself an Angel, because he should lose by that wish, and lack that glory, which he shall have in his body. We shall be like the Angels, says Christ; In that wherein we can be like them, Mark 12.25. we shall be like them, in the exalting and refining of the faculties of our souls; But they shall never attain to be like us in our glorified bodies. Neither hath God only reserved this treasure and dignity of man to the next world, but even here he hath made him filium Dei, Luke 6.35. The Son of God, 1 Joh. 3.9. 2 Pet. 1.4. and Semen Dei, The seed of God, and Consortem divinae naturae, Partaker of the divine Nature, and Deos ipsos, Gods themselves, for Ille dixit Dii estis, he hath said we are Gods. So that, as though the glory of heaven were too much for God alone, God hath called up man thither, in the ascension of his Son, to partake thereof; and as though one God were not enough for the administration of this world, God hath multiplied gods here upon Earth, and imparted, communicated, not only his power to every Magistrate, but the Divine nature to every sanctified man. David asks that question with a holy wonder, Quid est homo? What is man that God is so mindful of him? But I may have his leave, and the holy Ghosts, to say, since God is so mindful of him, since God hath set his mind upon him, What is not man? Man is all. Since we consider men in the place that they hold, and value them according to those places, and ask not how they got thither, when we see Man made The Love of the Father, The Price of the Son, The Temple of the Holy Ghost, The Signet upon God's hand, The Apple of God's eye, Absolutely, unconditionally we cannot annihilate man, not evacuate, not evaporate, not extenuate man to the levity, to the vanity, to the nullity of this Text (Surely men altogether, high and low, are lighter than vanity.) For, man is not only a contributory Creature, but a total Creature; He does not only make one, but he is all; He is not a piece of the world, but the world itself; and next to the glory of God, the reason why there is a world. But we must not determine this consideration here, That man is something, a great thing, Quid home erga hominem. a noble Creature, if we refer him to his end, to his interest in God, to his reversion in heaven; But when we consider man in his way, man amongst men, man is not nothing, not unable to assist man, not unfit to be relied upon by man; for, even in that respect also, God hath made Hominem homini Deum, He hath made one man able to do the offices of God to another, in procuring his regeneration here, and advancing his salvation hereafter; Obad. 21. As he says, Saviour's shall come up on Mount Zion; which is the Church. Neither hath God determined that power of assisting others, in the Character of Priesthood only, (that the Priest should be a god, that is, do the offices and the work of God to the people, by delivering salvation unto them) but he hath also made the Prince, and the secular Magistrate, a god, that is able to do the offices, and the works of God, not only to the people, but to the Priest himself, to sustain him, yea, and to countenance, and favour, and protect him too, in the execution and exercise of his priestly office; As we see in the first plantation of those two great Cedars, The Secular, and the Ecclesiastical Power, (which, that they might always agree like brethren, God planted at first in those two brethren, Moses and Aaron) There, though Moses were the temporal, and Aaron the spiritual Magistrate, Exod. 7.1. yet God says to Moses, I have made thee a God to Pharaoh, (but not only to Pharaoh) but Aaron thy brother shall be thy Prophet; for, (as he had said before) Thou shalt be to him in stead of a God. Exod. 4.16. So useful, so necessary is man to man, as that the Priest, who is of God, incorporated in God, subsists also by man; for, Isidor. Principes hujus seculi rationem reddituri sunt, The Princes of this world must give God an account, Propter Ecclesiam, quam à Christo tuendam susceperunt, for that Church, which Christ hath committed to their protection. In spiritual difficulties, and for spiritual duties, God sends us to the Priest; but to such a Priest as is a man; and (as our comfort is expressed) A Priest which was touched with the feeling of our infirmities, Heb. 4.15. and was in all points tempted like as we are: for the businesses of this world, Rights, and Titles, and Proprieties, Deut. 16.18. and Possessions, God sends us still to the Judge; (judges and officers shalt thou make in all thy gates) Judges to try between man and man; And the sword in battle tries between State and State, Prince and Prince; And therefore God commands and directs the levying of men to that purpose, in many places of the history of his people; Judg. 6. particularly God appoints Gideon to take a certain proportion of the army, a certain number of Soldiers. Exod. 32.26. And in another place, there goes out a press for Soldiers from Moses mouth; He presses them upon their holy allegiance to God, when he says, Who is on the Lord's side, let him come unto me. So, in infirmities, in sicknesses of the body, Jer. 8.22. we ask with the Prophet, Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no Physician there? God does not reprove Asa for seeking of help of the Physicians; 2 Chro. 16.12. but the increpation lies only upon this, That he sought to the Physician, and not to the Lord. God sends man to the Priest, to the Prince, to the Judge, to the Physician, to the Soldier, and so, (in other places) to the Merchant, and to cunning Artificers, (as in the building of the Temple) that all that man needs might be communicated to man by man. So that still, simply, absolutely, unconditionally, we cannot say, Surely men, men altogether, high or low, or mean, all are less than vanity. And surely they that pervert and detort such words as these, to such a use, and argue from thence, Man is nothing, no more than a worm or a fly, and therefore what needs this solemn consideration of man's actions, it is all one what he does, for all his actions, and himself too are nothing; They do this but to justify or excuse their own laziness in this world, in passing on their time, without taking any Calling, embracing any profession, contributing any thing to the spiritual edification, or temporal sustentation of other men. But take the words, as the Holy Ghost intends them, comparatively, what man compared with God, or what man considered without God, can do any thing for others, or for himself? When the Apostle says, That all the world is but dung, when the Prophet says, Phil. 3.8. Esay 40.15. 2 Cor. 12.11. 1 Cor. 1.21. That all the Nations of the world are less than nothing, when the Apostle says even of himself, that he is nothing, all this is nothing in comparison of that expression in the same Apostle, That even the preaching of the Gospel is foolishness, That that which is the favour of life unto life, Gods own Ordinance, Preaching, is but foolishness; Let it be a Paul that plants, and an Apollo that waters, if God give not increase, all is but frivolousness, but foolishness; And therefore boldly, confidently, uncontrollably we may proceed to the propositions of our Text, which constitute our second part, Man, any man, every man, all men, collectively, distributively, considered so, (comparatively with God, or privatively without God) is but a lie, but vanity, less than vanity. To make our best use of the words, 2 Part. Surely. (as our translation exhibits them) we make our entrance, with this word of confidence, and infallibility, which only becomes the holy Ghost, in his asseverations, and in which he establishes the propositions following; Surely, surely men of low degree, and as surely, men of high, and, surely still all men together, are lighter than vanity. Men deliver their assertions otherwise modified, and under other qualifications. They obtrude to us miraculous doctrines of Transubstantiation, and the like, upon a possibility only; It may be done, say they, It is possible, God can do it. But that is far from the assuredness of the Holy Ghost, Surely it is so; Chrysoft. for Asylum hareticorum, est omnipotentia Dei, is excellently said, and by more than one of the Fathers, The omnipotence of God is the Sanctuary of Heretics, Thither they fly, to countenance any such error; This God can do, why should you not believe it? Men proceed in their asseverations farther than so, from this possibility to a probability; It will abide argument, it hath been disputed in the School, and therefore is probable; why should not you believe it? And so they offer us the doctrine of the immaculate conception of the blessed Virgin without Original sin; But this probability reaches not to this assuredness of our text, surely. They will go farther than this probability, to a verisimilitude, it is more than merely possible, more than fairly probable, it is likely to be so; some of the ancient Fathers have thought so; and then, why should not you believe it? and so they offer us prayer for the dead. Farther than this verisimilitude they go too; They go to a Piè creditur, It may be piously believed, and it is fit to believe it, because it may assist and exalt devotion to think so; And then why should you not believe it? And so they offer us the worship of Images and Relics 〈◊〉 But still, all this comes short of our assuredness, Surely, undoubtedly, undisputably it is so. And when the Roman Church would needs counter ●it the language of the Holy Ghost, and pronounce this sureness upon so many new Articles in the Council of Trent, it hath not prospered well with them; for we all know, they have repent that forwardness since, and wished they had not determined so many particulars to be matter of faiths because after such a determination by a Council, they have bound themselves not to recede from those doctrines, how unmaintenable soever they be in themselves, or how inconvenient soever they fall out to be to them. And therefore we see, that in all the solicitations that can be used, even by Princes, to whom they are most affected, they will not come now to pronounce so surely, to determine so positively upon divers points that rest yet in perplexity amongst them. Which hath raised so many commotions in the kingdom of Spain, and put more than one of their later Kings, to send divers Ambassages to Rome, to solicit a clear declaration in that point, but could never, nor can yet attain it, that is, The immaculate conception of the blessed Virgin without Original sin. So also, for the obligation that the laws of secular Magistrates lay upon the Conscience, so also for the Concurrence of Grace, and , and divers others; in which they will not be drawn to this, Surely, to determine and declare of either side; for, indeed that is the language of the Holy Ghost. It hath been observed amongst Philosophers, that Plato speaks probably, and Aristotle positively; Plato's way is, It may be thus, and Aristotle's, It must be thus. The like hath been noted amongst Divines, between Calvin, and Melanchton; Calvin will say, Videtur, It seems to be thus, Melanchton, It can be no otherwise but thus. But the best men are but problematical, Only the Holy Ghost is Dogmatic; Only he subscribes this surely, and only he seals with Infallibility. Our deal are appointed to be in yea, yea, 2 Cor. 1.20. Rev. 3.14. and nay, nay, and no farther; But all the promises of God are yea, and Amen, that is, surely, verily; for that is his Name; These things saith The Amen, He that is Amen. And it is not (I hope) an impertinent note, That that Evangelist S. john, who considers the Divinity of Christ, more than the other Evangelists do, does evermore, constantly, without any change, double that which was Christ's ordinary asseveration, Amen. As oft as the other Evangelists mention it in Christ's mouth, still they express it with one Amen, verily I say; S. john always, Amen, Amen, verily, verily, it is thus and thus. The nearer we come to the consideration of God, the farther we are removed from all contingencies, and all inclination to Error, and the more is this Amen, verily, surely, multiplied and established unto us. It is in doctrines and opinions, as it is in designs and purposes; Go to, (says the Prophet, by way of reprehension) Go to, you that say, we will go to such a City, and trade thus and thus there, etc. So, go to, you that pronounce upon every invention, and Tradition of your own, a Quicunque vult salvus esse, Whosoever will be saved, must believe this, and clog every problematical proposition with an Anathema, Cursed be he, Excommunicated he that thinks the contrary to this; Go to you, that make matters of faith of the passions of men. So also, go to you that proceed and continue in your sins, and say, Surely I shall have time enough to repent hereafter. Go to you that in a spiritual and irreligious melancholy and diffidence in God's mercy, say, Surely the Lord hath locked up his mercy from me, surely I shall never see that Sun more, never receive, never feel beam of his mercy more, but pass through this darkness into a worse. This word, surely, in such cases, in such senses, is not your mother's tongue, not the language of the Christian Church. She teaches you, to condition all in Christ; In him you are enabled to do all things, and without him nothing. But absolutely, unconditionally, this surely is appropriated to the propositions, to the assertions of God himself; And some of those follow in this text. Now that which the Holy Ghost presents here upon this assuredness, Comparatio Divitis & Pauperis. is, That men of low degree are vanity, and that men of high degree are a lie; These are both sure, and alike sure. It is true that it constitutes a Problem, that it admits a Discourse, it will abide a debatement, whether men of high degree, or of low degree be worst; whether riches or poverty, (both considered in a great measure, very rich, and very poor) Prosperity or Adversity occasion most sins. Though God call upon us in every leaf of the Scripture, to pity the poor, and relieve the poor, and ground his last Judgement upon our works of mercy, Mat. 25.34. (Because you have fed and clothed the poor, inherit the kingdom) yet, as the rich and the poor stand before us now, (as it were in Judgement) as we inquire and hear evidence, which statory most obnoxious, and open to most sins, we embrace, and apply to ourselves that law, Exod. 23.3. Levit. 19.15. Thou shalt not countenance a poor man in his cause; And (as it is repeated) Thou shalt not respect the person of the poor in judgement. There is then a poverty, which, without all question, is the direct way to heaven; but that is spiritual; Mat. 5.3. Blessed are the poor in spirit. This poverty is humility, it is not beggary. A rich man may have it, and a beggar may be without it. The Wiseman found not this poverty, Ecclus 25.2. (not humility) in every poor man. He found three sorts of men, whom his soul hated; And one of the three, was a poor man that is proud. And when the Prophet said of Jerusalem in her afflictions, Esay 51.21. Paupercula es & ebria, Thou art poor, and miserable, and yet drunk, though (as he adds there) it were not with wine, (which is now, in our days an ordinary refuge of men of all sorts, in all sadnesses and crosses to relieve themselves upon wine and strong drink, which are indeed strong illusions) yet, though Jerusalem's drunkenness were not with wine, it was worse; It was a staggering, a vertiginousnesse, an ignorance, a blindness, a not discerning the ways to God; which is the worst drunkenness, and falls often upon the poor and afflicted, That their poverty and affliction staggers them, and damps them in their recourse to God, so far, as that they know not, That they are miserable, and wretched, and poor, and blind, Revel. 3.17. and raked. The Holy Ghost always makes the danger of the poor great, as well as of the rich. The rich man's wealth is his strong City. There is his fault, his confidence in that; Pro. 10.15. But Pavor pauperum, The destruction of the poor is his poverty; There is his fault, Desperation under it. Solomon presents them, as equally dangerous, Give me neither poverty, nor riches. Pro. 30.8. Ruth. 3.10. So does Booz to Ruth, Blessed be thou of the Lord, my daughter, in as much as thou followedst not young men, whether poor, or rich. That which Booz intended there, Incontinency, and all vices that arise immediately out of the corruption of nature, and are not induced by other circumstances, have as much inclination from poverty, as from riches. May we not say, more? I doubt we may. He must be a very sanctified man, whom extreme poverty, and other afflictions, do not decline towards a jealousy, and a suspicion, and a distrusting of God; And then, the sins that bend towards desperation, are so much more dangerous, than those that bend towards presumption, that he that presumes, hath still mercy in his contemplation, He does not think, that he needs no mercy, but that mercy is easily had; He believes there is mercy, he doubts not of that; But the despairing man imagines a cruelty, an unmercifulness in God, and destroys the very nature of God himself. Riches is the Metaphor, in which, the Holy Ghost hath delighted to express God and Heaven to us; Despise not the riches of his goodness, says the Apostle; And again, Rom. 2.4.11.33. Ephes. 3.8. ver. 16. O the depth of the riches of his wisdom; And so, after, The unsearchable riches of Christ; And for the consummation of all, The riches of his Glory, God's goodness towards us in general, our Religion in the way, his Grace here, his Glory hereafter, are all represented to us in Riches. With poverty God ordinarily accompanies his comminations; he threatens feebleness, and war, and captivity, and poverty every where, but he never threatens men with riches. Ordinary poverty, (that is a difficulty, with all their labours, and industry to sustain their family, and the necessary duties of their place) is a shrewd, and a slippery tentation. But for that street-beggery, which is become a Calling, (for Parents bring up their children to it, nay they do almost take prentices to it, some expert beggars teach others what they shall say, how they shall look, how they shall lie, how they shall cry) for these, whom our laws call Incorrigible, I must say of them (in a just accommodation of our Saviour's words, It is not meet to take the children's bread, Matt. 25.26. and to cast it to dogs) It is not meet, that this vermin should devour any of that, which belongs to them who are truly poor. Neither is there any measure, any proportion of riches, that exposes man naturally to so much sin, as this kind of beggary doth. Rich men forget, or neglect the duties of their Baptism; but of these, how many are there, that were never baptised? Rich men sleep out Sermons, but these never come to Church: Rich men are negligent in the practice, but these are ignorant in all knowledge. It would require a longer disquisition, than I can afford to it now, whether Riches, or Poverty (considered in lesser proportions, ordinary riches, ordinary poverty) open us to more, and worse sins; But consider them in the highest and in the lowest, abundant riches, beggarly poverty, and it will scarce admit doubt, but that the incorrigible vagabond is farther from all ways of goodness, than the corruptest rich man is. And therefore labour we all earnestly in the ways of some lawful calling, that we may have our portion of this world by good means. For first, the advantages of doing good to others in a real relief of their wants, is in the rich only, whereas the best way of a good poor man, to do good to others, is but an exemplary patience, to catechise others by his suffering; And then, all degrees of poverty are dangerous and slippery, even to a murmuring against God, or an invading of the possessions, and goods of other men, but especially the lowest, the desperate degree of beggary, and then especially, when we cannot say it is inflicted by the hand of God, but contracted by our own laziness, or our own wastfulnesse. This is a problematical, a disputable case, Whether riches or poverty occasion most sins. And because on both sides there arise good doctrines of edification, Men of low degree. I have thus far willingly stopped upon that disputable consideration. But now, that which we receive here, upon David's, upon the Holy Ghosts security, Surely it is thus, It is surely so, is this, That we shall be deceived, if we put our trust in men; for, what sort of men would we trust? Surely men of low degree are vanity. And this, if it be taken of particular men, needs no proving, no illustrating, no remembering. Every man sees and acknowledges, that to rely upon a man of no power, of no place, no blood, no fortune, no friends, no favour, is a vanity, Surely men of low degree are vanity. The first younger brother that was borne in the world, because he was less than another, is called by the very name of vanity; The eldest brother Cain signifies possession, but Abel is vanity. But take it of a whole body of such men, Men of low degree, and it is so too; the Applause of the people is vanity, Popularity is vanity. At how dear a rate doth that man buy the people's affections, that pays his own head for their hats? How cheaply doth he sell his Prince's favour, that hath nothing for it, but the people's breath? And what age doth not see some examples of so ill merchants of their own honours and lives too? How many men, upon confidence of that flattering gale of wind, the breath and applause of the people, have taken in their anchors, (that is, departed from their true, and safe hold, The right of the Law, and the favour of the Prince) and as soon as they hoist their sails, (that is, entered into any by-action) have found the wind in their teeth, that is, Those people whom they trusted in, armed against them. And as it is in Civil, and Secular, so it is in Ecclesiastical, and Spiritual things too. How many men, by a popular hunting after the applause of the people, in their manner of preaching, and humouring them in their distempers, have made themselves incapable of preferment in the Church where they took their Orders, and preached themselves into a necessity of running away into foreign parts, that are receptacles of seditious and schismatical Separatists, and have been put there, to learn some trade, and become Artificers for their sustentation? The same people that welcomed Christ, from the Mount of Olives, into Jerusalem, Matt. 21.9. upon Sunday, with their Hosannaes' to the Son of David, upon Friday mocked him in Jerusalem, with their Hail King of the jews, and blew him out of Jerusalem to Golgotha, with the pestilent breath, with the tempestuous whirlwind of their Crucifige's. And of them, Matt. 10.25. who have called the Master Beelzebub, what shall any servant look for? Surely men of low degree are vanity. And then, High degree under the same oath, and asseveration, Surely, as surely as the other, men of high degree are a lie. Doth David mean these men, whom he calls a lie, to be any less than those whom he called vanity? Less than vanity, than emptiness, than nothing, nothing can be; And low, and high are to this purpose, and in this consideration, (compared with God, or considered without God) equally nothing. He that hath the largest patrimony, and space of earth, in the earth, must hear me say, That all that was nothing; And if he ask, But what was this whole Kingdom, what all Europe, what all the World? It was all, not so much as another nothing, but all one and the same nothing as thy dunghill was. But yet the Holy Ghost hath been pleased to vary the phrase here, and to call Men of high degree, not vanity, but a lie, because the poor, men of low degree, in their condition promise no assistance, feed not men with hopes, and therefore cannot be said to lie, but in the condition of men of high degree, who are of power, there is a tacit promise, a natural and inherent assurance of protection, and assistance, flowing from them. For, the Magistrate cannot say, That he never promised me Justice, never promised me Protection; for in his assuming that place, he made me that promise. I cannot say, that I never promised my Parish, my service; for in my Induction, I made them that promise, and if I perform it not, I am a lie; for so this word Chasab (which we translate a lie) is frequently used in the Scriptures, for that which is defective in the duty it should perform; Thou shalt be a spring of water, (says God in Esay) Cujus aquae non mentiuntur, mhose waters never lie, Esay 58.11. that is, never dry, never fail. So then, when men of high degree do not perform the duties of their places, than they are a lie of their own making; And when I over-magnify them in their place, flatter them, humour them, ascribe more to them, expect more from them, rely more upon them, than I should, than they are a lie of my making. But whether the lie be theirs, That they fear greater men than themselves, and so prevaricate in their duties; Or the lie be mine, that canonize them and make them my God, they, and I shall be disappointed; for, Surely men of high degree are a lie. But we are upon a Sermon, not upon a satire, therefore we pass from this. And, Mediocrity. for all this, there may seem to be room left for the Middle-state, for a mediocrity; when it is not so low as to be made the subject of oppression, nor so high as to be made the object of ambition, when it is neither exposed to scorn and contempt, nor to envy, and undermining, may we not then trust upon, not rest in such a condition? Indeed, this mediocrity seems (and justly) the safest condition; for this, and this only enjoys itself: The lazy man gets not up to it; The stirring man stays not at it, but is gone beyond it. From our first Themes at School, to our Texts in the Pulpit, we continue our praising and persuading of this mediocrity. A man may have too much of any thing; Anima saturata, A full soul will tread honey under his feet; Prov. 27.7. jer. 10.14. He may take in knowledge till he be ignorant; Let the Prophet jeremy give the Rule, Stultus factus est omnis homo à scientia, Every man becomes a fool by knowledge, by overweening, and over-valuing his knowledge; And let Adam be the example of this Rule, His eyes were opened by eating the fruit, and he knew so much, as he was ashamed of it; Let the Apostle be the Physician, the moderator, Sapere ad sobrietatem, not to dive into secrets, Rom. 12.3. and unrevealed mysteries. There is enough of this doctrine involved in the fable, Actaeon saw more than he should have seen, and perished. There is abundantly enough expressed in the Oracle of Truth, Vzza was overzealous in an office that appertained not to him, 2 Sam. 6.6. in assisting the Ark, and suffered for that. We may quickly exceed a mediocrity, even in the praise of Mediocrity. But all our diligence will scarce find it out. What is mediocrity? Or where is it? In the Hierarchy of the Roman Church they never thought of this mediocrity; They go very high, and very low, but there is no mean station; I mean no denomination of any Order from meanness, from mediocrity. In one degree you find embroidered shoes, for Kings to kiss, and in another degree bare feet; we find an Order of the Society of jesus; and that is very high, for, Society implies community, partnership; And we find low descents, Minorits, men less than others, And Minims, lest of all men; and lower than all them, Nullans, men that call themselves, Nothing; And truly, this Order, best of all others hath answered and justified the name, for, very soon, they came to nothing. We find all extremes amongst them, even in their names, but none denominated from this mediocrity. But to pass from names to the thing; indeed what is Mediocrity? where is it? Is it the same thing as Competency? But what is competency? or where is that? Is it that which is sufficient for thy present degree? perchance thy present degree is not sufficient for thee; Thy charge perchance, perchance thy parts and abilities, or thy birth and education may require a better degree. God produced plants in Paradise therefore, that they might grow; God hath planted us in this world, that we might grow; and he that does not endeavour that by all lawful means, is inexcusable, as well as he that pursues unlawful. But, if I come to imagine such a mediocrity, such a competency, such a sufficiency in myself, as that I may rest in that, that I think I may ride out all storms, all dis-favours, that I have enough of mine own, wealth, health, or moral constancy, if any of these decay, this is a verier vanity, then trusting in men of low degree, and a verier lie, than men of high degree; for, this is to trust to ourselves; Habbak. 1.16. this is a sacrificing to our own nets, our own industry, our own wisdom, our own fortune; And of all the Idolatries of the Heathen, who made Gods of every thing they saw or imagined, of every thing, in, and between Heaven and hell, we read of no man that sacrificed to himself. Indeed no man flatters me so dangerously, as I flatter myself, no man wounds me so desperately, as I wound myself; And therefore, since this which we call Mediocrity, and Competency is conditioned so, that it is enough to subsist alone, without relation to others, dependency upon others, fear from others, induces a confidence, a relying upon myself; As, that which we imagine to be the middle region of the air, is the coldest of all, So this imagined mediocrity, that induces a confidence in ourselves, is the weakest rest, the coldest comfort of all, and makes me a lie to myself. Therefore may the Prophet well spread, and safely extend his asseveration, his Surely, upon all, high, and low, and mean; Surely to be laid in the balance, they are altogether lighter than vanity. Here then, upon a full enumeration of all parts, the Prophet concludes upon all. Lighter than vanity. If therefore thou have the favour of great ones, the applause of the people, confidence in thyself, in an instant, the power of those great ones may be overthrown, or their favour to thee withdrawn from thee, (and so, that bladder is pricked, upon which thou swommest) The applause of the people may be hushed and silenced, (either they would not, or they dare not magnify thee) And, thine own constancy may be turned into a dejection of spirit, and consternation of all thy faculties. Put all together, (which falls out seldom, that any man can do so) but if he can do that, (which is the best state of man, that can be imagined in this world, that he hath all these together, the favour of High and low, and of himself, that is, his own testimony in his conscience, (though perchance an erring, a mistaking conscience) yet, the Prophet had delivered the same assurance before (even of that state of man, which is rather imagined, then ever possessed) Surely every man, Psal. 39.5. at his best state, is altogether vanity; And here, he adds, lighter than vanity. Vanity is nothing, but there is a condition worse than nothing. Confidence in the things, or persons of this world, but most of all, a confidence in ourselves, will bring us at last to that state, wherein we would feign be nothing, and cannot. But yet, we have a balance in our text; And all these are but put together in one balance. In the other scale there is something put to, in comparison whereof all this world is so light. God does not leave our great and noble faculty, and affection of hope, and trust, and confidence, without something to direct itself upon, and rectify itself in. He does not; for, for that he proposes himself; The words immediately before the text, are, God is a refuge; and in comparison of him, To be laid in the balance, Surely they are altogether lighter than vanity. So then, Deus omnia. jer. 17.5. it is not enough not to trust in the flesh (for, for that, Cursed be man, that trusted in man, or maketh flesh his arm; Their flesh cannot secure thee, neither is thine own flesh brass, job 6.12. Mat. 16.17. that thou canst endure the vexations of this world, neither can flesh and blood reveal unto thee the things of the next world) It is not enough not to trust in flesh, but thou must trust in that that is Spirit. And when thou art to direct thy trust upon him, who is spirit, the spirit of power, and of consolation, stop not, stray not, divert not upon evil spirits, to seek advancement, or to seek knowledge from them, nor upon good spirits, the glorious Saints of GOD in Heaven, to seek salvation from them, nor upon thine own spirit, in an overvaluation of thy purity, or thy merits. For, there is a pestilent pride in an imaginary humility, and an infectious foulness in an imaginary purity; but turn only to the only invisible and immortal God, who turns to thee, in so many names and notions of power, and consolation, in this one Psalm. In the last verse but one of this Psalm, David says, God bath spoken once, and twice have I heard him. God hath said enough at once; but twice, in this Psalm, hath he repeated this, in the second, and in the sixth verse, He only is my Rock, and my Salvation, and my Defence, And, (as it is enlarged in the seventh verse) my Refuge, and my Glory. If my Refuge, what enemy can pursue me? If my Defence, what tentation shall wound me? If my Rock, what storm shall shake me? If my Salvation, what melancholy shall deject me? If my Glory, what calumny shall defame me? I must not stay you now, to infuse into you, the several consolations of these several names, and notions of God towards you. But, go your several ways home, and every soul take with him that name, which may minister most comfort unto him. Let him that is pursued with any particular tentation, invest God, as God is a Refuge, a Sanctuary. Let him that is buffeted with the messenger of Satan, battered with his own concupiscence, receive God, as God is his Defenoe and target. Let him that is shaked with perplexities in his understanding, or scruples in his conscience, lay hold upon God, as God is his Rock, and his anchor. Let him that hath any diffident jealousy or suspicion of the free and full mercy of God, apprehend God, as God is his Salvation; And him that walks in the ingloriousness and contempt of this world, contemplate God, as God is his Glory. Any of these notions is enough to any man, but God is all these, and all else, that all souls can think, to every man. We shut up both these Considerations, (man should not, Mic. ult. 5. (that is not all) God should be relied upon) with that of the Prophet, Trust ye not in a friend, put not your confidence in a guide, keep the doors of thy mouth from her that lies in thy bosom; (there is the exclusion of trust in man) and then he adds in the seventh verse, because it stands thus between man and man, I will look unto the Lord, I will look to the God of my Salvation, my God will hear me. SERM. LXVI. The second of my Prebend Sermons upon my five Psalms. Preached at S. Paul's, january 29. 1625. PSAL. 63.7. Because thou hast been my help, Therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice. THe Psalms are the Manna of the Church. Wisd. 16.20. As Manna tasted to every man like that that he liked best, so do the Psalms minister Instruction, and satisfaction, to every man, in every emergency and occasion. David was not only a clear Prophet of Christ himself, but a Prophet of every particular Christian; He foretells what I, what any shall do, and suffer, and say. And as the whole book of Psalms is Oleum effusum, Cant. 1.3. (as the Spouse speaks of the name of Christ) an Ointment poured out upon all sorts of sores, A Cerecloth that souples all bruises, A Balm that searches all wounds; so are there some certain Psalms, that are Imperial Psalms, that command over all affections, and spread themselves over all occasions, Catholic, universal Psalms, that apply themselves to all necessities. This is one of those; for, of those Constitutions which are called Apostolical, Constitut. Apostol. one is, That the Church should meet every day, to sing this Psalm. And accordingly, S. chrysostom testifies, That it was decreed, and ordained by the Primitive Fathers, Chrysost. that no day should pass without the public singing of this Psalm. Under both these obligations, (those ancient Constitutions, called the Apostles, and those ancient Decrees made by the primitive Fathers) belongs to me, who have my part in the service of God's Church, the especial meditation, and recommendation of this Psalm. And under a third obligation too, That it is one of those five psalms, the daily rehearsing whereof, is enjoined to me, by the Constitutions of this Church, as five other are to every other person of our body. As the whole book is Manna, so these five Psalms are my Gomer, which I am to fill and empty every day of this Manna. Now as the spirit and soul of the whole book of Psalms is contracted into this psalm, so is the spirit and soul of this whole psalm contracted into this verse. Divisie. The key of the psalm, (as S. Hierome calls the Titles of the psalms) tells us, Hieron. that David uttered this psalm, when he was in the wilderness of judab; There we see the present occasion that moved him; And we see what was passed between God and him before, in the first clause of our Text; (Because thou hast been my help) And then we see what was to come, by the rest, (Therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice.) So that we have here the whole compass of Time, Past, Present, and Future; and these three parts of Time, shall be at this time, the three parts of this Exercise; first, what David's distress put him upon for the present; and that lies in the Context; secondly, how David built his assurance upon that which was passed; (Because thou hast been my help) And thirdly, what he established to himself for the future, (Therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice.) First, His distress in the Wilderness, his present estate carried him upon the memory of that which God had done for him before. And the Remembrance of that carried him upon that, of which he assured himself after. Fix upon God any where, and you shall find him a Circle; He is with you now, when you fix upon him; He was with you before, for he brought you to this fixation; and he will be with you hereafter, for He is yesterday, Heb. 13.8. and to day; and the same for ever. For David's present condition, who was now in a banishment, in a persecution in the Wilderness of Judah, (which is our first part) we shall only insist upon that, (which is indeed spread over all the psalm to the Text, and ratified in the Text) That in all those temporal calamities David was only sensible of his spiritual loss; It grieved him not that he was kept from saul's Court, but that he was kept from God's Church. For when he says, Ver. 1. by way of lamentation, That he was in a dry and thirsty land, where no water was, he expresses what penury, what barrenness, what drought and what thirst he meant; To see thy power, Ver. 2. Ver. 5. Ver. 3. and thy glory, so as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary. For there, my soul shall be satisfied as with marrow, and with fatness, and there, my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips. And in some few considerations conducing to this, That spiritual losses are incomparably heavier than temporal, and that therefore, The Restitution to our spiritual happiness, or the continuation of it, is rather to be made the subject of our prayers to God, in all pressures and distresses, then of temporal, we shall determine that first part. And for the particular branches of both the other parts, (The Remembering of God's benefits past, And the building of an assurance for the future, upon that Remembrance) it may be fit to open them to you, anon when we come to handle them, than now. Proceed we now to our first part, The comparing of temporal and spiritual afflictions. In the way of this Comparison, 1 Part. Afflictio universalis. 2 Cor. 4.17. falls first the Consideration of the universality of afflictions in general, and the inevitableness thereof. It is a blessed Meraphore, that the Holy Ghost hath put into the mouth of the Apostle, Pondus Gloriae, That our afflictions are but light, because there is an exceeding, and an eternal weight of glory attending them. If it were not for that exceeding weight of glory, no other weight in this world could turn the scale, or weigh down those infinite weights of afflictions that oppress us here. There is not only Pestis valde gravis, (the pestilence grows heavy upon the Land) but there is Musca valde gravis, Exod. 9.3.8.24. God calls in but the fly, to vex Egypt, and even the fly is a heavy burden unto them. Job 7.20. 2 Sam. 14.26. Lament. 3.7. It is not only job that complains, That he was a burden to himself, but even Absaloms' hair was a burden to him, till it was polled. It is not only jeremy that complains, Aggravavit compedes, That God had made their fetters and their chains heavy to them, but the workmen in harvest complain, That God had made a fair day heavy unto them, Mat. 20.12. Pro. 27.3. (We have borne the heat, and the burden of the day.) Sand is heavy, says Solomon; And how many suffer so? under a sand-hill of crosses, daily, hourly afflictions, that are heavy by their number, if not by their single weight? And a stone is heavy; (says he in the same place) And how many suffer so? How many, without any former preparatory cross, or comminatory, or commonitory cross, even in the midst of prosperity, and security, fall under some one stone, some grindstone, some millstone, some one insupportable cross that ruins them? But then, (says Solomon there) A fool's anger is heavier than both; And how many children, and servants, and wives suffer under the anger, and morosity, and peevishness, and jealousy of foolish Masters, and Parents, and Husbands, though they must not say so? David and Solomon have cried out, That all this world is vanity, and levity; And (God knows) all is weight, and burden, and heaviness, and oppression; And if there were not a weight of future glory to counterpoise it, we should all sink into nothing. I ask not Mary Magdalen, whether lightness were not a burden; (for sin is certainly, sensibly a burden) But I ask Susanna whether even chaste beauty were not a burden to her; And I ask joseph whether personal comeliness were not a burden to him. I ask not Dives, who perished in the next world, the question; but I ask them who are made examples of Solomon's Rule, Eccles. 5.13. of that sore evil, (as he calls it) Riches kept to the owners thereof for their hurt, whether Riches be not a burden. All our life is a continual burden, yet we must not groan; A continual squeasing, yet we must not pant; And as in the tenderness of our childhood, we suffer, and yet are whipped if we cry, so we are complained of, if we complain, and made delinquents if we call the times ill. And that which adds weight to weight, and multiplies the sadness of this consideration, is this, That still the best men have had most laid upon them. As soon as I hear God say, that he hath found an upright man, that fears God, and eschews evil, in the next lines I find a Commission to Satan, to bring in Sabeans and Chaldeans upon his cattles, and servants, and fire and tempest upon his children, and loathsome diseases upon himself. As soon as I hear God say, That he hath found a man according to his own heart, I see his sons ravish his daughters, and then murder one another, Mat. 3.17. and then rebel against the Father, and put him into straits for his life. As soon as I hear God testify of Christ at his Baptism, This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased, I find that Son of his led up by the Spirit, to be tempted of the Devil. Matt. 4.1. Matt. 17.5. And after I hear God ratify the same testimony again, at his Transfiguration, (This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased) I find that beloved Son of his, deserted, abandoned, and given over to Scribes, and Pharisees, and Publicans, and Herodians, and Priests, and Soldiers, and people, and Judges, and witnesses, and executioners, and he that was called the beloved Son of God, and made partaker of the glory of heaven, in this world, in his Transfiguration, is made now the Sewer of all the corruption, of all the sins of this world, as no Son of God, but a mere man, as no man, but a contemptible worm. As though the greatest weakness in this world, were man, and the greatest fault in man were to be good, man is more miserable than other creatures, and good men more miserable than any other men. But then there is Pondus Gloriae, An exceeding weight of eternal glory, Afflictio spiritualis. and that turns the scale; for as it makes all worldly prosperity as dung, so it makes all worldly adversity as feathers. And so it had need; for in the scale against it, there are not only put temporal afflictions, but spiritual too; And to these two kinds, we may accommodate those words, He that falls upon this stone, (upon temporal afflictions) may be bruised, Matt. 21.44. broken, But he upon whom that stone falls, (spiritual afflictions) is in danger to be ground to powder. And then, the great, and yet ordinary danger is, That these spiritual afflictions grow out of temporal; Murmuring, and diffidence in God, and obduration, out of worldly calamities; And so against nature, the fruit is greater and heavier than the Tree, spiritual heavier than temporal afflictions. They who writ of Natural story, propose that Plant for the greatest wonder in nature, Plin. l. 27.11. Lithospermus. which being no firmer than a bulrush, or a reed, produces and bears for the fruit thereof no other but an entire, and very hard stone. That temporal affliction should produce spiritual stoniness, and obduration, is unnatural, yet ordinary. Therefore doth God propose it, as one of those greatest blessings, which he multiplies upon his people, I will take away your stony hearts, and give you hearts of flesh; And, Ezek. 11.19. & 36.26. Plin. & Plutar. Lord let me have a fleshly heart in any sense, rather than a stony heart. We find mention amongst the observers of rarities in Nature, of hairy hearts, hearts of men, that have been overgrown with hair; but of petrified hearts, hearts of men grown into stone, we read not; for this petrefaction of the heart, this stupefaction of a man, is the last blow of God's hand upon the heart of man in this world. Revel. 16. Those great afflictions which are poured out of the Vials of the seven Angels upon the world, are still accompanied with that heavy effect, that that affliction hardened them. They were scorched with heats and plagues, by the fourth Angel, and it follows, They blasphemed the name of God, and repent not, ver. 9 to give him glory. Darkness was induced upon them by the fift Angel, and it follows, ver. 11. They blasphemed the God of heaven, and repent not of their deeds. And from the seventh Angel there fell hailstones of the weight of talents, ver. 29. (perchance four pound weight) upon men; And yet these men had so much life left, as to blaspheme God, out of that respect, which alone should have brought them to glorify God, Because the plague thereof was exceeding great. And when a great plague brings them to blaspheme, how great shall that second plague be, that comes upon them for blaspheming? Let me whither and wear out mine age in a uncomfortable, in an unwholesome, in a penurious prison, and so pay my debts with my bones, and recompense the wastfulnesse of my youth, with the beggary of mine age; Let me whither in a spittle under sharp, and foul, and in famous diseases, and so recompense the wantonness of my youth, with that loath someness in mine age; yet, if God with draw not his spiritual blessings, his Grace, his Patience, If I can call my suffering his Doing, my passion his Action, All this that is temporal, is but a caterpillar got into one corner of my garden, but a mildew fallen upon one acre of my Corn; The body of all, the substance of all is safe, as long as the soul is safe. But when I shall trust to that, which we call a good spirit, and God shall deject, and empoverish, and evacuate that spirit, when I shall rely upon a moral constancy, and God shall shake, and enfeeble, and enervate, destroy and demolish that constancy; when I shall think to refresh myself in the serenity and sweet air of a good conscience, and God shall call up the damps and vapours of hell itself, and spread a cloud of diffidence, and an impenetrable crust of desperation upon my conscience; when health shall fly from me, and I shall lay hold upon riches to secure me, and comfort me in my sickness, and riches shall fly from me, and I shall snatch after favour, and good opinion, to comfort me in my poverty; when even this good opinion-shall leave me, and calumnies and misinformations shall prevail against me; when I shall need peace, because there is none but thou, O Lord, that should stand for me, and then shall find, that all the wounds that I have, come from thy hand, all the arrows that stick in me, from thy quiver; when I shall see, that because I have given myself to my corrupt nature, thou hast changed thine; and because I am all evil towards thee, therefore thou hast given over being good towards me; When it comes to this height, that the fever is not in the humours, but in the spirits, that mine enemy is not an imaginary enemy, fortune, nor a transitory enemy, malice in great persons, but a real, and an irresistible, and an inexorable, and an everlasting enemy, The Lord of Hosts himself, The Almighty God himself, the Almighty God himself only knows the weight of this affliction, and except he put in that pondus gloriae, that exceeding weight of an eternal glory, with his own hand, into the other scale, we are weighed down, we are swallowed up, irreparably, irrevocably, irrecoverably, irremediably. This is the fearful depth, this is spiritual misery, to be thus fallen from God. But was this Davids case? was he fallen thus fare, into a diffidence in God? No. But the danger, the precipice, the slippery sliding into that bottomless depth, is, to be excluded from the means of coming to God, or staying with God; And this is that that David laments here, That by being banished, and driven into the wilderness of Judah, he had not access to the Sanctuary of the Lord, to sacrifice his part in the praise, and to receive his part in the prayers of the Congregation; for Angels pass not to ends, but by ways and means, nor men to the glory of the triumphant Church, but by participation of the Communion of the Militant. To this note David sets his Harp, in many, many Psalms: Sometimes, Psal. 78.60. that God had suffered his enemies to possess his Tabernacle, (He for sooke the Tabernacle of Shiloh, He delivered his strength into captivity, and his glory into the enemy's hands) But most commonly he complains, that God disabled him from coming to the Sanctuary. In which one thing he had summed up all his desires, all his prayers, (One thing have I desired of the Lord, Psal. 27.4. that will I look after; That I may dwell in the house of the Lord, all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in his Temple) His vehement desire of this, Psal. 42.2. he expresses again, (My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God; when shall I come and appear before God?) He expresses a holy jealousy, a religious envy, Psal. 84.3. even to the sparrows and swallows, (yea, the sparrow hath found a house, and the swallow a nest for herself, and where she may lay her young, Even thine Altars, O Lord of Host, my King and my God.) Thou art my King, and my God, and yet excludest me from that, Luk. 12.7. which thou afford to sparrows, And are not we of more value than many sparrows? And as though David felt some false ease, some half-tentation, some whispering that way, Psal. 84.3. That God is in the wilderness of judah, in every place, as well as in his Sanctuary, there is in the Original in that place, a pathetical, a vehement, a broken expressing expressed, O thine Altars; It is true, (says David) thou art here in the wilderness, and I may see thee here, and serve thee here, but, O thine Altars, O Lord of hosts, my King and my God. When David could not come in person to that place, yet he bent towards the Temple, Psal. 5.7. (In thy fear will I worship towards thy holy Temple.) Which was also daniel's devotion; when he prayed, Dan. 6.10. his Chamber windows were open towards jerusalem; And so is Hezekias turning to the wall to weep, Esa. 38.2. and to pray in his sick bed, understood to be to that purpose, to conform, and compose himself towards the Temple. In the place consecrated for that use, God by Moses fixes the service, and fixes the Reward; And towards that place, Deut. 31.11. (when they could not come to it) doth Solomon direct their devotion in the Consecration of the Temple, 1 King. 8.44. (when they are in the wars, when they are in Captivity, and pray towards this house, do thou hear them.) For, as in private prayer, when (according to Christ's command) we are shut in our chamber, there is exercised Modestia fidei, The modesty and bashfulness of our faith, not pressing upon God in his house: so in the public prayers of the Congregation, there is exercised the fervour, and holy courage of our faith, Tertull. for Agmine facto obsidemus Deum, It is a Mustering of our forces, and a besieging of God. Therefore does David so much magnify their blessedness, that are in this house of God; (Blessed are they that dwell in thy house, for they will be still praising thee) Those that look towards it, may praise thee sometimes, but those men who dwell in the Church, and whose whole service lies in the Church, have certainly an advantage of all other men (who are necessarily withdrawn by worldly businesses) in making themselves acceptable to almighty God, if they do their duties, and observe their Church-services aright. Man being therefore thus subject naturally to manifold calamities, Excommunicatio. and spiritual calamities being incomparably heavier than temporal, and the greatest danger of falling into such spiritual calamities being in our absence from God's Church, where only the outward means of happiness are ministered unto us, certainly there is much tenderness and deliberation to be used, before the Church doors be shut against any man. If I would not direct a prayer to God, to excommunicate any man from the Triumphant Church, (which were to damn him) I would not oil the key, I would not make the way too slippery for excommunications in the Militant Church; For, that is to endanger him. I know how distasteful a sin to God, contumacy, and contempt, and disobedience to Order and Authority is; And I know, (and all men, that choose not ignorance, may know) that our Excommunications (though calumniators impute them to small things, because, many times, the first complaint is of some small matter) never issue but upon contumacies, contempts, disobediences to the Church. But they are real contumacies, not interpretative, apparent contumacies, not presumptive, that excommunicate a man in Heaven; And much circumspection is required, and (I am far from doubting it) exercised in those cases upon earth; for, though every Excommunication upon earth be not sealed in Heaven, though it damn not the man, yet it dams up that man's way, by shutting him out of that Church, through which he must go to the other; which being so great a danger, let every man take heed of Excommunicating himself. The imperswasible Recusant does so; The negligent Libertin does so; The fantastic Separatist does so; The halfe-present man, he, whose body is here, and mind away, does so; And he, whose body is but half here, his limbs are here upon a cushion, but his eyes, his ears are not here, does so: All these are are selfe-Excommunicators, and keep themselves from hence. Only he enjoys that blessing, the want whereof David deplores, that is here entirely, and is glad he is here, and glad to find this kind of service here, that he does, and wishes no other. And so we have done with our first Part, David's aspect, his present condition, and his danger of falling into spiritual miseries, because his persecution, and banishment amounted to an Excommunication, to an excluding of him from the service of God, in the Church. And we pass, in our Order proposed at first, to the second, his retrospect, the Consideration, what God had done for him before, Because thou hast been my help. Through this second part, we shall pass by these three steps. First, 2 Part. That it behoves us, in all our purposes, and actions, to propose to ourselves a copy to write by, a pattern to work by, a rule, or an example to proceed by, Because it hath been thus heretofore, says David, I will resolve upon this course for the future. And secondly, That the copy, the pattern, the precedent which we are to propose to ourselves, is, The observation of God's former ways and proceed upon us, Because God hath already gone this way, this way I will await his going still. And then, thirdly and lastly, in this second part, The way that God had formerly gone with David, which was, That he had been his help, (Because thou hast been my help.) First then, from the meanest artificer, through the wisest Philosopher, to God himself, Ideae. all that is well done, or wisely undertaken, is undertaken and done according to preconceptions, fore-imaginations, designs, and patterns proposed to ourselves beforehand. A Carpenter builds not a house, but that he first sets up a frame in his own mind, what kind of house he will build. The little great Philosopher Epictetus, would undertake no action, but he would first propose to himself, what Socrates, or Plato, what a wise man would do in that case, and according to that, he would proceed. Of God himself, it is safely resolved in the School, that he never did any thing in any part of time, of which he had not an eternal pre-conception, an eternal Idea, in himself before. Of which Ideas, that is, preconceptions, pre-determinations in God, S. Augustine pronounces, Tanta vis in Ideis constituitur, There is so much truth, August. and so much power in these Ideas, as that without acknowledging them, no man can acknowledge God, for he does not allow God Counsel, and Wisdom, and deliberation in his Actions, but sets God on work, before he have thought what he will do. And therefore he, and others of the Fathers read that place, joh. 1.3, 4. (which we read otherwise) Quod factum est, in ipso vita erat; that is, in all their Expositions, whatsoever is made, in time, was alive in God, before it was made, that is, in that eternal Idea, and pattern which was in him. So also do divers of those Fathers read those words to the Hebrews, Heb. 11.3. (which we read, The things that are seen, are not made of things that do appear) Ex invisibilibus visibilia facta sunt, Things formerly invisible, were made visible; that is, we see them not till now, till they are made, but they had an invisible being, in that Idea, in that pre-notion, in that purpose of God before, for ever before. Of all things in Heaven, and earth, but of himself, God had an Idea, a pattern in himself, before he made it. And therefore let him be our pattern for that, to work after patterns; To propose to ourselves Rules and Examples for all our actions; and the more, the more immediately, the more directly our actions concern the service of God. If I ask God, by what Idea he made me, God produces his Faciamus hominem ad Imaginem nostram, That there was a concurrence of the whole Trinity, to make me in Adam, according to that Image which they were, and according to that Idea, which they had pre-determined. If I pretend to serve God, and he ask me for my Idea, How I mean to serve him, shall I be able to produce none? If he ask me an Idea of my Religion, and my opinions, shall I not be able to say, It is that which thy word, and thy Catholic Church hath imprinted in me? If he ask me an Idea of my prayers, shall I not be able to say, It is that which my particular necessities, that which the form prescribed by thy Son, that which the care, and piety of the Church, in conceiving fit prayers, hath imprinted in me? If he ask me an Idea of my Sermons, shall I not be able to say, It is that which the Analogy of Faith, the edification of the Congregation, the zeal of thy work, the meditations of my heart have imprinted in me? But if I come to pray or to preach without this kind of Idea, if I come to extemporal prayer, and extemporal preaching, I shall come to an extemporal faith, and extemporal religion; and then I must look for an extemporal Heaven, a Heaven to be made for me; for to that Heaven which belongs to the Catholic Church, I shall never come, except I go by the way of the Catholic Church, by former Ideas, former examples, former patterns, To believe according to ancient beliefs, to pray according to ancient forms, to preach according to former meditations. God does nothing, man does nothing well, without these Ideas, these retrospects, this recourse to preconceptions, pre-deliberations. Something than I must propose to myself, Via Domini. to be the rule, and the reason of my present and future actions; which was our first branch in this second Part; And then the second is, That I can propose nothing more availably, than the contemplation of the history of God's former proceeding with me; which is David's way here, Because this was God's way before, I will look for God in this way still. That language in which God spoke to man, the Hebrew, hath no present tense; They form not their verbs as our Western Languages do, in the present, I hear, or I see, or I read, But they begin at that which is past, I have seen and heard, and read. God carries us in his Language, in his speaking, upon that which is past, upon that which he hath done already; I cannot have better security for present, nor future, than God's former mercies exhibited to me. Quis non gaudeat, August. says S. Augustine, Who does not triumph with joy, when he considers what God hath done? Quis non & ea, quae nondum venerunt, ventura sperat, propter illa, quae jam tanta impleta sunt? Who can doubt of the performance of all, that sees the greatest part of a Prophecy performed? If I have found that true that God hath said, of the person of Antichrist, why should I doubt of that which he says of the ruin of Antichrist? Credamus modicum quod restat, says the same Father, It is much that we have seen done, and it is but little that God hath reserved to our faith, to believe that it shall be done. There is no State, no Church, no Man, that hath not this tie upon God, that hath not God in these bands, That God by having done much for them already, hath bound himself to do more. Men proceed in their former ways, sometimes, lest they should confess an error, and acknowledge that they had been in a wrong way. God is obnoxious to no error, and therefore he does still, as he did before. Every one of you can say now to God, Lord, Thou broughtest me hither, therefore enable me to hear; Lord, Thou dost that, therefore make me understand; And that, therefore let me believe; And that too, therefore strengthen me to the practice; And all that, therefore continue me to a perseverance. Carry it up to the first sense and apprehension that ever thou hadst of God's working upon thee, either in thyself, when thou camest first to the use of reason, or in others in thy behalf, in thy baptism, yet when thou thinkest thou art at the first, God had done something for thee before all that; before that, he had elected thee, in that election which S. Augustine speaks of, Habet electos, quos creaturus est eligendos, August. God hath elected certain men, whom he intends to create, that he may elect them; that is, that he may declare his Election upon them. God had thee, before he made thee; He loved thee first, and then created thee, that thou loving him, he might continue his love to thee. The surest way, and the nearest way to lay hold upon God, is the consideration of that which he had done already. So David does; And that which he takes knowledge of, in particular, in God's former proceed towards him, is, Because God had been his help, which is our last branch in this part, Because thou hast been my help. From this one word, That God hath been my He●●● Quia auxilium. I make account that we have both these notions; first, That God hath not left me to myself, He hath come to my succour, He hath helped me; And then, That God hath not left out myself; He hath been my Help, but he hath left some thing for me to do with him, and by his help. My security for the future, in this consideration of that which is past, lies not only in this, That God hath delivered me, but in this also, that he hath delivered me by way of a Help, and Help always presumes an endeavour and co-operation in him that is helped. God did not elect me as a helper, nor create me, nor redeem me nor convert me, by way of helping me; for he alone did all, and he had no use at all of me. God infuses his first grate, the first way, merely as a Giver; entirely, all himself; but his subsequent graces, as a helper; therefore we call them Auxiliant graces, Helping graces; and we always receive them, when we endeavour to make use of his former grace. Lord, I believe, Mar. 9.24. (says the Man in the Gospel to Christ) Help mine unbelief. If there had not been unbelief, weakness, unperfectness in that faith, there had needed no help; but if there had not been a Belief, a faith, it had not been capable of help and assistance, but it must have been an entire act, without any concurrence on the man's part. So that if I have truly the testimony of a rectified Conscience, That God hath helped me, it is in both respects; first, That he hath never forsaken me, and then, That he hath never suffered me to forsake myself; He hath blessed me with that grace, that I trust in no help but his, and with this grace too, That I cannot look for his help, except I help myself also. God did not help heaven and earth to proceed out of nothing in the Creation, for they had no possibility of any disposition towards it; for they had no being: But God did help the earth to produce grass, and herbs; for, for that, God had infused a seminal disposition into the earth, which, for all that, it could not have perfected without his farther help. As in the making of Woman, there is the very word of our Text, Gnazar, God made him a Helper, one that was to do much for him, but not without him. So that then, if I will make Gods former working upon me, an argument of his future gracious purposes, as I must acknowledge that God hath done much for me, so I must find, that I have done what I could, by the benefit of that grace with him; for God promises to be but a helper. Lord open thou my lips, says David; Psal. 51.15. that is God's work entirely; And then, My mouth, My mouth shall show forth thy praise; there enters David into the work with God. And then, says God to him, Dilata os tuum, Open thy mouth, (It is now made Thy mouth, and therefore do thou open it) and I will fill it; All inchoations and consummations, beginnings and perfectings are of God, of God alone; but in the way there is a concurrence on our part, (by a successive continuation of God's grace) in which God proceeds as a Helper; and I put him to more than that, if I do nothing. But if I pray for his help, and apprehend and husband his graces well, when they come, than he is truly, properly my helper; and upon that security, that testimony of a rectified Conscience, I can proceed to David's confidence for the future, Because thou hast been my Help, therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice; which is our third, and last general part. In this last part, which is, (after David's aspect, and consideration of his present condition, Divisio. 3 Part. which was, in the effect, an Exclusion from God's Temple, And his retrospect, his consideration of God's former mercies to him, That he had been his Help) his prospect, his confidence for the future, we shall stay a little upon these two steps; first, That that which he promises himself, is not an immunity from all powerful enemies, nor a sword of revenge upon those enemies; It is not that he shall have no adversary, nor that that adversary shall be able to do him no harm, but that he should have a refreshing, a respiration, In velamento alarm, under the shadow of God's wings. And then, (in the second place) That this way which God shall be pleased to take, this manner, this measure of refreshing, which God shall vouchsafe to afford, (though it amount not to a full deliverance) must produce a joy, a rejoicing in us; we must not only not decline to a murmuring, that we have no more, no nor rest upon a patience for that which remains, but we must ascend to a holy joy, as if all were done and accomplished, In the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice. First then, Vmbra Alarm. lest any man in his dejection of spirit, or of fortune, should stray into a jealousy or suspicion of God's power to deliver him, As God hath spangled the firmament with stars, so hath he his Scriptures with names, and Metaphors, and denotations of power. Sometimes he s●●es out in the name of a Sword, and of a Target, and of a Wall, and of a Tower, and of a Rock, and of a Hill; And sometimes in that glorious and manifold constellation of all together, Dominus exercituum, The Lord of Hosts. God, as God, is never represented to us, with Defensive Arms; He needs them not. When the Poets present their great Heroes, and their Worthies, they always insist upon their Arms, they spend much of their invention upon the description of their Arms; both because the greatest valour and strength needs Arms, (Goliath himself was armed) and because to expose one's self to danger unarmed, is not valour, but rashness. But God is invulnerable in himself, and is never represented armed; you find no shirts of mail, no Helmets, Esay 59.17. no Cuirasses in God's Armoury. In that one place of Esay, where it may seem to be otherwise, where God is said to have put on righteousness as a breastplate, and a Helmet of salvation upon his head; in that prophecy God is Christ, and is therefore in that place, called the Redeemer. Christ needed defensive arms, God does not. God's word does; His Scriptures do; And therefore S. Hierome hath armed them, and set before every book his Prologum galeatum, that prologue that arms and defends every book from calumny. But though God need not, nor receive not defensive arms for himself, yet God is to us a Helmet, a Breastplate, a strong tower, a rock, every thing that may give us assurance and defence; and as often as he will, he can refresh that Proclamation, Nolite tangere Christos meos, Psal. 105.15. Our enemies shall not so much as touch us. But here, by occasion of his Metaphor in this Text, (Sub umbra alarm, In the shadow of thy wings) we do not so much consider an absolute immunity, That we shall not be touched, as a refreshing and consolation, when we are touched, though we be pinched and wounded. The Names of God, which are most frequent in the Scriptures, are these three, Elohim, and Adonai, and jehovah; and to assure us of his Power to deliver us, two of these three are Names of Power. Elohim is Deus fortis, The mighty, The powerful God: And (which deserves a particular consideration) Elohim is a plural Name; It is not Deus fortis, but Dii fortes, powerful Gods. God is all kind of Gods; All kinds, which either Idolaters and Gentiles can imagine, (as Riches, or Justice, or Wisdom, or Valour, or such) and all kinds which God himself hath called gods, (as Princes, and Magistrates, and Prelates, and all that assist and help one another) God is Elohim, All these Gods, and all these in their height and best of their power; for Elohim, is Dii fortes, Gods in the plural, and those plural gods in their exaltation. The second Name of God, is a Name of power too, Adonai. For, Adonai is Dominus, The Lord, such a Lord, as is Lord and Proprietary of all his creatures, and all creatures are his creatures; And then, Dominium est potestas tum utendi, tum abutendi, says the law; To be absolute Lord of any thing, gives that Lord a power to do what he will with that thing. God, as he is Adonai, The Lord, may give and take, quicken and kill, build and throw down, where and whom he will. So then two of God's three Names are Names of absolute power, to imprint, and re-imprint an assurance in us, that he can absolutely deliver us, and fully revenge us, if he will. But then, his third Name, and that Name which he chooses to himself, and in the signification of which Name, he employs Moses, for the relief of his people under Pharaoh, that Name jehovah, is not a Name of Power, but only of Essence, of Being, of Subsistence, and yet in the virtue of that Name, God relieved his people. And if, in my afflictions, God vouchsafe to visit me in that Name, to preserve me in my being, in my subsistence in him, that I be not shaked out of him, disinherited in him, excommunicate from him, devested of him, annihilated towards him, let him, at his good pleasure, reserve his Elohim, and his Adonai, the exercises and declarations of his mighty Power, to those great puklike causes, that more concern his Glory, than any thing that can befall me; But if he impart his jehovah, enlarge himself so far towards me, as that I may live, and move, & have my being in him, though I be not instantly delivered, nor mine enemies absolutely destroyed, yet this is as much as I should promise myself, this is as much as the Holy Ghost intends in this Metaphor, Sub umbra alarm, Under the shadow of thy wings, that is a Refreshing, a Respiration, a Conservation, a Consolation in all afflictions that are inflicted upon me. Yet, is not this Metaphor of Wings without a denotation of Power. As no Act of Gods, though it seem to imply but spiritual comfort, is without a denotation of power, (for it is the power of God that comforts me; To overcome that sadness of soul, and that dejection of spirit, which the Adversary by temporal afflictions would induce upon me, is an act of his Power) So this Metaphor, The shadow of his wings, (which in this place expresses no more, than consolation and refreshing in misery, and not a powerful deliverance out of it) is so often in the Scriptures made a denotation of Power too, as that we can doubt of no act of power, if we have this shadow of his wings. For, in this Metaphor of Wings, doth the Holy Ghost express the Maritime power, the power of some Nations at Sea, in Navies, (Woe to the land shadowing with wings;) that is, Esay 18.1. that hovers over the world, and intimidates it with her sails and ships. In this Metaphor doth God remember his people, of his powerful deliverance of them, Exod. 19.14. (You have seen what I did unto the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagle's wings, and brought you to myself.) In this Metaphor doth God threaten his and their enemies, what he can do, Ezek. 1.24. (The noise of the wings of his Cherubims, are as the noise of great waters, and of an Army.) So also, what he will do, (He shall spread his wings over Bozrah, jer. 49.22. and at that day shall the hearts of the mighty men of Edom, be as the heart of a woman in her pangs.) So that, if I have the shadow of his wings, I have the earnest of the power of them too; If I have refreshing, and respiration from them, I am able to say, (as those three Confessors did to Nabuchadnezzar) My God is able to deliver me, I am sure he hath power; And my God will deliver me, Dan. 3.17. when it conduces to his glory, I know he will; But, if he do not, be it known unto thee, O King, we will not servethy Gods; Be it known unto thee, O Satan, how long soever God defer my deliverance, I will not seek false comforts, the miserable comforts of this world. I will not, for I need not; for I can subsist under this shadow of these Wings, though I have no more. The Mercy-seat itself was covered with the Cherubims Wings; Exod. 25.20. and who would have more than Mercy? and a Mercy-seat; that is, established, resident Mercy, permanent and perpetual Mercy; present and familiar Mercy: a Mercy-seat. Our Saviour Christ intends as much as would have served their turn, if they had laid hold upon it, when he says, That he would have gathered jerusalem, Matt. 23.37. as a hen gathers her chickens under her wings. And though the other Prophets do (as ye have heard) mingle the signification of Power, and actual deliverance, in this Metaphor of Wings, yet our Prophet, whom we have now in especial consideration, David, never doth so; but in every place where he uses this Metaphor of Wings (which are in five or six several Psalms) still he rests and determines in that sense, which is his meaning here; That though God do not actually deliver us, nor actually destroy our enemies, yet if he refresh us in the shadow of his Wings, if he maintain our subsistence (which is a religious Constancy) in him, this should not only establish our patience, (for that is but half the work) but it should also produce a joy, and rise to an exultation, which is our last circumstance, Therefore in the shadow of thy wings, I will rejoice. I would always raise your hearts, and dilate your hearts, to a holy Joy, Gaudium. to a joy in the Holy Ghost. There may be a just fear, that men do not grieve enough for their sins; but there may be a just jealousy, and suspicion too, that they may fall into inordinate grief, and diffidence of God's mercy; And God hath reserved us to such times, as being the later times, give us even the dregs and lees of misery to drink. For, God hath not only let lose into the world a new spiritual disease; which is, an equality, and an indifferency, which religion our children, or our servants, or our companions profess; (I would not keep company with a man that thought me a knave, or a traitor; with him that thought I loved not my Prince, or were a faithless man, not to be believed, I would not associate myself; And yet I will make him my bosom companion, that thinks I do not love God, that thinks I cannot be saved) but God hath accompanied, and complicated almost all our bodily diseases of these times, with an extraordinary sadness, a predominant melancholy, a faintness of heart, a chearlesnesse, a joylesnesse of spirit, and therefore I return often to this endeavour of raising your hearts, dilating your hearts with a holy Joy, Joy in the holy Ghost, for Under the shadow of his wings, you may, you should rejoice. If you look upon this world in a Map, you find two Hemisphears, two half worlds. If you crush heaven into a Map, you may find two Hemisphears too, two half heavens; Half will be Joy, and half will be Glory; for in these two, the joy of heaven, and the glory of heaven, is all heaven often represented unto us. And as of those two Hemisphears of the world, the first hath been known long before, but the other, (that of America, which is the richer in treasure) God reserved for later Discoveries; So though he reserve that Hemisphere of heaven, which is the Glory thereof, to the Resurrection, yet the other Hemisphere, the Joy of heaven, God opens to our Discovery, and delivers for our habitation even whilst we dwell in this world. As God hath cast upon the unrepentant sinner two deaths, a temporal, and a spiritual death, so hath he breathed into us two lives; Gen. 2.17. for so, as the word for death is doubled, Morte morieris, Thou shalt die the death, so is the word for life expressed in the plural, Chaiim, vitarum, God breathed into his nostrils the breath of lives, of divers lives. Though our natural life were no life, but rather a continual dying, yet we have two lives besides that, an eternal life reserved for heaven, but yet a heavenly life too, a spiritual life, even in this world; And as God doth thus inflict two deaths, and infuse two lives, so doth he also pass two Judgements upon man, or rather repeats the same Judgement twice. For, that which Christ shall say to thy soul then at the last Judgement, Matt. 25.23. Enter into thy Master's joy, He says to thy conscience now, Enter into thy Master's joy. The everlastingness of the joy is the blessedness of the next life, but the entering, the inchoation is afforded here. For that which Christ shall say then to us, Verse 24. Venite benedicti, Come ye blessed, are words intended to persons that are coming, that are upon the way, though not at home; Here in this world he bids us Come, Luk. 15.10. there in the next, he shall bid us Welcome. The Angels of heaven have joy in thy conversion, and canst thou be without that joy in thyself? If thou desire revenge upon thine enemies, as they are Gods enemies, That God would be pleased to remove, and root out all such as oppose him, that Affection appertains to Glory; Let that alone till thou come to the Hemisphere of Glory; There join with those Martyrs under the Altar, Revel. 6.10. Vsquequo Domine, How long O Lord, dost thou defer Judgement? and thou shalt have thine answer there for that. Whilst thou art here, here join with David, and the other Saints of God, in that holy increpation of a dangerous sadness, Why art thou cast down O my soul? why art thou disquieted in me? That soul that is dissected and anatomised to God, Psal. 42.5. in a sincere confession, washed in the tears of true contrition, embalmed in the blood of reconciliation, the blood of Christ Jesus, can assign no reason, can give no just answer to that Interrogatory, Why art thou cast down O my soul? why art thou disquieted in me? No man is so little, as that he can be lost under these wings, no man so great, as that they cannot reach to him; Semper ille major est, August. quantumcumque creverimus, To what temporal, to what spiritual greatness soever we grow, still pray we him to shadow us under his Wings; for the poor need those wings against oppression, and the rich against envy. The Holy Ghost, who is a Dove, shadowed the whole world under his wings; Incubabat aquis, He hovered over the waters, he sat upon the waters, and he hatched all that was produced, and all that was produced so, was good. Be thou a Mother where the Holy Ghost would be a Father; Conceive by him; and be content that he produce joy in thy heart here. First think, that as a man must have some land, or else he cannot be in wardship, so a man must have some of the love of God, or else he could not fall under God's correction; God would not give him his physic, God would not study his cure, if he cared not for him. And then think also, that if God afford thee the shadow of his wings, that is, Consolation, respiration, refreshing, though not a present, and plenary deliverance, in thy afflictions, not to thank God, is a murmuring, and not to rejoice in God's ways, is an unthankfulness. Howling is the noise of hell, singing the voice of heaven; Sadness the damp of Hell, Rejoicing the serenity of Heaven. And he that hath not this joy here, lacks one of the best pieces of his evidence for the joys of heaven; and hath neglected or refused that Earnest, by which God uses to bind his bargain, that true joy in this world shall flow into the joy of Heaven, as a River flows into the Sea; This joy shall not be put out in death, and a new joy kindled in me in Heaven; But as my soul, as soon as it is out of my body, is in Heaven, and does not stay for the possession of Heaven, nor for the fruition of the sight of God, till it be ascended through air, and fire, and Moon, and Sun, and Planets, and Firmament, to that place which we conceive to be Heaven, but without the thousandth part of a minutes stop, as soon as it issues, is in a glorious light, which is Heaven, (for all the way to Heaven is Heaven; And as those Angels, which came from Heaven hither, bring Heaven with them, and are in Heaven here, So that soul that goes to Heaven, meets Heaven here; and as those Angels do not divest Heaven by coming, so these souls invest Heaven, in their going.) As my soul shall not go towards Heaven, but go by Heaven to Heaven, to the Heaven of Heavens, So the true joy of a good soul in this world is the very joy of Heaven; and we go thither, not that being without joy, we might have joy infused into us, but that as Christ says, john 16.24.22. Our joy might be full, perfected, sealed with an everlastingness; for, as he promises, That no man shall take our joy from us, so neither shall Death itself take it away, nor so much as interrupt it, or discontinue it, But as in the face of Death, when he lays hold upon me, and in the face of the Devil, when he attempts me, I shall see the face of God, (for, every thing shall be a glass, to reflect God upon me) so in the agonies of Death, in the anguish of that dissolution, in the sorrows of that valediction, in the irreversiblenesse of that transmigration, I shall have a joy, which shall no more evaporate, than my soul shall evaporate, A joy, that shall pass up, and put on a more glorious garment above, and be joy super-invested in glory. Amen. SERM. LXVII. The third of my Prebend Sermons upon my five Psalms: Preached at S. Paul's, November 5. 1626. In Vesperis. PSAL. 64.10. And all the upright in heart shall glory. I Have had occasion to tell you more than once before, that our Predecessors, in the institution of the Service of this Church, have declared such a reverence and such a devotion to this particular Book of Scripture, The Psalms, as that by distributing the hundred and fifty Psalms (of which number the body of this book consists) into thirty portions, (of which number the body of our Church consists) and assigning to every one of those thirty persons, his five Psalms, to be said by him every day, every day God receives from us (howsoever we be divided from one another in place) the Sacrifice of Praise, in the whole Book of Psalms. And, though we may be absent from this Choir, yet wheresoever dispersed, we make up a Choir in this Service, of saying over all the Psalms every day. This sixty fourth Psalm, is the third of my five. And when, (according to the obligation which I had laid upon myself, to handle in this place some portion of every one of these my five Psalms) in handling of those words, of the Psalm immediately before this, in the seventh verse, (Because thou hast been my help, therefore in the shadow of thy Wings I will rejoice) I told you, that the next world, Heaven, was (as this world is) divided into two Hemispheres, and that the two Hemispheres of Heaven, were Joy and Glory, (for, in those two notions of Joy and Glory, is Heaven often represented unto us) as in those words which we handled then, we sailed about the first Hemisphere, That of Joy, (In the shadow of thy Wings will I rejoice) So, in these which I have read to you now, our voyage lies about the Hemisphere of Glory, for, (All the upright in heart shall Glory.) As we said then of Joy, we say of Glory now; There is an inchoative joy here, though the consummative joy be reserved for Heaven; so is there also such a taste, such an inchoation of glory in this life. And as no man shall come to the joys of Heaven, that hath no joy in this world, (for, there is no peace of conscience without this joy) so no man shall come to the glory of Heaven, that hath not a holy ambition of this glory in this world; for, this glory which we speak of, is the evidence, and the reflection of the glory from above; for, the glory of God shines through godly men, and we receive a beam and a tincture of that glory of God, when we have the approbation, and testimony, and good opinion, and good words of good men; which is the Glory of our Text, as far as this world is capable of glory. All the upright in heart shall glory, that is, They shall be celebrated and encouraged with the glory and praise of good men here, and they shall be rewarded with everlasting glory in Heaven. In these words we propose to you but two parts; Divisio. First, The disposition of the Persons, Omnes recti cord, All the upright in heart, and then, The retribution upon these Persons, Gloriabuntur, They shall Glory, or, (as it is in the Vulgat, and well) Laudabuntur, They shall be celebrated, they shall be praised. In the first, The qualification of the persons, we shall pass by these steps; First, that God in his punishments and rewardings proposes to himself Persons, Persons already made, and qualified. God does not begin at a retribution, nor begin at a condemnation, before he have Persons, Persons fit to be rewarded, Persons fit to be condemned. God did not first make a Heaven and a Hell, and after think of making man, that he might have some persons to put in them; but, first for his Glory he made Man, and for those, who by a good use of his grace preserved their state, Heaven, and for those, who by their own fault fell, he made Hell. First, he proposed Persons, Persons in being; And then, for the Persons (as his delight is for the most part to do) in this Text he expresses it; which is, rather to insist upon the Rewards, which the Good shall receive, then upon the condemnation and judgements of the wicked. If he could choose, that is, If his own Glory, and the edification of his Children would bear it, he would not speak at all of judgements, or of those persons that draw necessary judgements upon themselves, but he would exercise our contemplation wholly upon his mercy, and upon Persons qualified and prepared for his gracious retributions. So he does here; He speaks not at all of perverse, and froward, and sinister, and obliqne men, men incapable of his retributions, but only of Persons disposed, ordained, prepared for them. And, in the qualification of these Persons, he proposes first a rectitude, a directness, an uprightness; declinations downward, deviations upon the wrong hand, squint-eyed men, splay footed men, left-handed men, (in a spiritual sense) he meddles not withal. They must be direct, and upright; And then, upright in heart; for, to be good to ill ends, (as, in many cases, a man may be) God accepts not, regards not. But, let him be a person thus qualified, Upright; upright because he loves uprightness, Upright in heart; And then, he is infallably embraced, and enwrapped in that general rule, and proposition, that admits no exception, Omnes recti cord, All the upright in heart shall be partakers of this retribution: And in these branches we shall determine our first Part, first, That God proposes to himself Persons; Persons thus and thus qualified; he gins at them. Secondly, That God had rather dwell himself, and propose to us the consideration of good persons, then bad, of his mercies, than his judgements, for he mentions not other here, but persons capable of his retributions; And then, the goodness that God considers, is rectitude, and rectitude in the root, in the heart; And from that root grows that spreading universality, that infallibility, Omnes, All such are sure of the Reward. And then, in our second Part, in the Reward itself, though it be delivered here in the whole bar, in the Ingot, in the Wedge, in Bulloyn, in one single word, Gloriabuntur, Laudabuntur, They shall Glory, yet it admits this Mintage, and coining, and issuing in lesser pieces, That first we consider the thing itself, The metal in which God rewards us, Glory, Praise; And then, since God's promise is fastened upon that, (We shall be praised) As we may lawfully seek the praise of good men, so must we also willingly afford praise to good men, and to good actions. And then, since we find this retribution fixed in the future, (We shall be praised, we shall be in glory) there arises this Consolation, That though we have it not yet, yet we shall have it, Though we be in dishonour, and contempt, and under a cloud, of which we see no end ourselves, yet there is a determined future in God, which shall be made present, we shall overcome this contempt, and Gloriabimur, and Laudabimur, we shall Glory, we shall be celebrated; In which future, the consolation is thus much farther exalted, that it is an everlasting future; the glory, and praise, the approbation, and acclamation, which we shall receive from good men, here, shall flow out and continue, to the Hosannaes' in Heaven, in the mouth of Saints, and Angels, and to the Euge bone serve, Well done, good and faithful Servant, Mat. 25.21. in the mouth of God himself. First then, God proposes to himself, (in his Rewards and Retributions) Persons; 1 Part. Personae qualificatae. Persons disposed and qualified. Not disposed by nature, without use of grace; that is flat and full Pelagianism; Not disposed by preventing grace, without use of subsequent grace, by Antecedent and anticipant, without concomitant and auxiliant grace; that is Semipelagianism. But persons obsequious to his grace, when it comes, and persons industrious and ambitious of more and more grace, and husbanding his grace well all the way, such persons God proposes to himself. God does not only read his own works, nor is he only delighted with that which he hath writ himself, with his own eternal Decrees in heaven, but he loves also to read our books too, our histories which we compose in our lives and actions, and as his delight is to be with the sons of men, Pro. 8.31. Ephes. 3.7. so his study is in this Library, to know what we do. S. Paul says, That God made him a Minister of the Gospel, to preach to the Gentiles, to the intent that the Angels might know the manifold wisdom of God by the Church; That is, by that that was done in the Church. The Angels saw God; Did they not see these things in God? No; for, These things were hid in God, says the Apostle there; And the Angels see no more in God, than God reveals unto them; and these things of the Church, God reserved to a future, and to an experimental knowledge, to be known then when they were done in the Church. So there are Decrees in God, but they are hid in God; To this purpose and entendment, and in this sense, hid from God himself, that God accepts or condemns Man Secundum allegata & Probata, according to the Evidence that arises from us, and not according to those Records that are hid in himself. Our actions and his Records agree; we do those things which he hath Decreed; but only our doing them, and not his Decreeing them, hath the nature of evidence. God does not Reward, nor Condemn out of his Decrees, but out of our actions. God sent down his Commissioners the Angels to Sodom, to inquire, Gen. 18.17. Gen. 3.9. and to inform him how things went. God goes down himself to inquire, and inform himself, how it stood with Adam and Eve. Not that God was ever ignorant of any thing concerning us, but that God would prevent that dangerous imagination in every man, That God should first mean to destroy him, and then to make him, that he might destroy him, without having any evidence against him. For God made man Ad imaginem suam, To his own Image. If he had made him under an inevitable, and irresistible necessity of damnation, he had made him Ad Imaginem Diabolicam, to the Image of the Devil, and not to his own. God goes not out as a Fowler, that for his pleasure and recreation, or for his commodity, or commendation, would kill, and therefore seeks out game that he may kill it; It is not God that seeks whom he may devour: 1 Pet. 5.8. But God sees the Vulture tearing his Chickens, or other birds picking his Corn, or pecking his fruit, and then when they are in that mischievous action, God takes his bow and shoots them for that. When God condemns a man, he proposes not that man to himself, as he meant to make him, and as he did make him, but as by his sins he hath made himself. At the first Creation, God looked upon nothing; there was nothing; But ever since there have been Creatures, God hath looked upon the Creature: and as Adam gave every Creature the Name, according as he saw the Nature thereof to be; so God gives every man reward or punishment, the name of a Saint or a Devil, in his purpose, as he sees him a good or a bad user of his graces. When I shall come to the sight of the Book of life, and the Records of heaven, amongst the Reprobate, I shall never see the name of Cain alone, but Cain with his addition, Cain that killed his brother; Nor judas name alone; but judas with his addition, judas that betrayed his Master. God does not begin with a morte moriendum, some body must die, and therefore I will make some body to kill; But God came to a morte morieris, yet thou art alive, and mayest live, but if thou wilt rebel, thou must die. God did not call up fevers, and pestilence, and consumptions, and fire, Levit. 26.16. and famine, and war, and then make man, that he might throw him into their mouths, but when man threw down himself, God let him fall into their mouths. Had I never sinned in wantonness, I should never have had consumption; nor fever, if I had not sinned in Riot; nor death, if I had not transgressed against the Lord of life. If God be pleased to look upon me, at the last day, as I am renewed in Christ, I am safe. But if God should look upon me, (as he made me) in Adam, I could not be un-acceptable in his sight, except he looked farther, and saw me in mine own, or in Adam's sin. I would never wish myself better, than God wished me at first; no, nor then God wishes me now, as manifold a sinner as he sees me now, if yet I would conform my will to his. God looks upon persons; persons so conditioned as they were, which was our first branch, in this first part; and our second is, That he delights to propose to himself Persons that are capable of his rewards; for he mentions no others in this place, All that are upright in heart. The first thing that Moses names to have been made, Insistit in bonis. was Heaven, (In the beginning God made Heaven and Earth) And infinite millions of generations before this Heaven was made, there was a Heaven, an eternal emanation of beams of glory, from the presence of God. But Moses tells us of no Hell made at the Creation; And before the Creation, such a Hell, as there was a Heaven, there could not be; for, the presence of God made Heaven; and God was equally present every where. And they who have multiplied Hells unto us, and made more Hells than God hath made, more by their two Limboes', (one for Fathers, another for Children) and one Purgatory, have yet made their new Hells, more of the nature of Heaven then of Hell. For, in one of their Limboes', (that of the Fathers) and in their Purgatory, there is in them, who are there, an infallible assurance of Heaven, They that are there, are infallibly assured to come to Heaven; And an assurance of salvation will hardly consist with Hell; He that is sure to come to Heaven, can hardly be said to be in Hell. God was loath and late in making places of torment; He is loath to speak of Judgements, or of those that extort Judgements from him. How plentifully, how abundantly is the word Beatus, Blessed, multiplied in the Book of Psalms? Blessed, and Blessed in every Psalm, in every Verse; The Book seems to be made out of that word, Blessed, And the foundation raised upon that word, Blessed, for it is the first word of the Book. But in all the Book, there is not one Vae, not one woe, so denounced; Not one woe, upon any soul in that Book. And when this Vae, this woe is denounced in some other of the Prophets, it is very often Vox dolentis, and not Increpantis, That Vae, that woe, is a voice of compassion in him that speaks it, and not of destruction to them to whom it is spoken. God, Jerem. 9.1. in the person of jeremy, weeps in contemplation of the calamities threatened, Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the Daughter of my people. It is God that was their Father, and it is God, their God that slew them; but yet, that God, their Father weeps over the slaughter. So in the person of Esay, Esay 16.9. God weeps again, I will bewail thee with weeping, and I will water thee with tears. And without putting on the person of any man, God himself avows his sighing, Esay 1.24. when he comes to name Judgements, Heu, vindicabor, Alas, I will revenge me of mine enemies; And he sighs, when he comes but to name their sins, Heu abominationes, Ezek. 16.11. Alas, for all the evil abominations of the house of Israel. As though God had contracted an Irregularity, by having to do in a cause of blood, He sighs, he weeps when he must draw blood from them. God delights to institute his discourses, and to take, and to make his Examples, from men that stand in state of grace, and are capable of his Mercies, and his Retributions, as here in this Text, he names only those, who are Recti cord, The upright in heart, They shall be considered, rewarded. The disposition that God proposes here in those persons, Recti. whom he considers, is Rectitude, Uprightness, and directness. God hath given Man that form in nature, much more in grace, that he should be upright, and look up, and contemplate Heaven, and God there. And therefore to bend downwards upon the earth, to fix our breast, our heart to the earth, to lick the dust of the earth with the Serpent, to inhere upon the profits and pleasures of the earth, and to make that which God intended for our way, and our rise to heaven, (the blessings of this world) the way to hell; this is a manifest Declination from this Uprightness, from this Rectitude. Nay, to go so far towards the love of the earth, as to be in love with the grave, to be impatient of the calamities of this life, and murmur at Gods detaining us in this prison, to sink into a sordid melancholy, or irreligious dejection of spirit; this is also a Declination from this Rectitude, this Uprightness. So is it too, to decline towards the left hand, to Modifications, and Temporize in matter or form of Religion, and to think all indifferent, all one; or to decline towards the right hand, in an over-vehement zeal, To pardon no errors, to abate nothing of heresy, if a man believe not all, and just all that we believe; To abate nothing of Reprobation, if a man live not just as we live; this is also a Diversion, a Deviation, a Deflection, a Defection from this Rectitude, this Uprightness. For, the word of this Text, jashar, signifies Rectitudinem, and Planiciem; It signifies a direct way; for, the Devil's way was Circular, Compassing the Earth; But the Angel's way to heaven upon jacobs' ladder, was a strait, a direct way. And then it signifies, as a direct and strait, so a plain, a smooth, an even way, a way that hath been beaten into a path before, a way that the Fathers, and the Church have walked in before, and not a discovery made by our curiosity, or our confidence, in venturing from ourselves, or embracing from others, new doctrines and opinions. The persons then, whom God proposes here to be partakers of his Retributions, Recti Cord. are first Recti, (that is, both Direct men, and Plain men) and then recti cord, this qualification, this straightness, and smoothness must be in the heart; All the upright in heart shall have it. Upon this earth, a man cannot possibly make one step in a strait, and a direct line. The earth itself being round, every step we make upon it, must necessarily be a segment, an arch of a circle. But yet though no piece of a circle be a strait line, yet if we take any piece, nay if we take the whole circle, there is no corner, no angle in any piece, in any entire circle. A perfectt rectitude we cannot have in any ways in this world; In every Calling there are some inevitable tentations. But, though we cannot make up our circle of a strait line, (that is impossible to humane frailty) yet we may pass on, without angles, and corners, that is, without disguises in our Religion, and without the love of craft, and falsehood, and circumvention in our civil actions. A Compass is a necessary thing in a Ship, and the help of that Compass brings the Ship home safe, and yet that Compass hath some variations, it doth not look directly North; Neither is that star which we call the North-pole, or by which we know the North-pole, the very Pole itself; but we call it so, and we make our uses of it, and our conclusions by it, as if it were so, because it is the nearest star to that Pole. He that comes as near uprightness, as infirmities admit, is an upright man, though he have some obliquities. To God himself we may always go in a direct line, a strait, a perpendicular line; For God is vertical to me, over my head now, and vertical now to them, that are in the East, and West-Indies; To our Antipodes, to them that are under our feet, God is vertical, over their heads, then when he is over ours. To come to God there is a strait line for every man every where: But this we do not, if we come not with our heart. Praebe mihi fili cor tuum, saith God, Pro. 23.26. My son give me thy heart. Was he his son, and had he not his heart? That may very well be. There is a filiation without the heart; not such a filiation, as shall ever make him partaker of the inheritance, but yet a filiation. The associating ourselves to the sons of God, in an outward profession of Religion, makes us so fare the sons of God, as that the judgement of man cannot, and the judgement of God doth not distinguish them. job 1.6. Because, then when the sons of God stood in his presence, Satan stood amongst the sons of God; God doth not disavow him, God doth not excommunicate him, God makes his use of him, and yet God knew his heart was fare from him. So, when God was in Council with his Angels, about Ahabs going up to Ramoth Gilead, 1 King. 22.22. A spirit came forth and offered his service, and God refuses not his service, but employs him, though he knew his heart to be fare from him. So, no doubt, many times, they to whom God hath committed supreme government, and they who receive beams of this power by subordination, and delegation from them, they see Satan amongst the sons of God, hypocrites and impiously disposed men come into these places of holy convocation, and they suffer them, nay they employ them, nay they prefer them, and yet they know their hearts are fare from them; but as long as they stand amongst the sons of God, that is, appear and conform themselves in the outward acts of Religion, they are not disavowed, they are not ejected: by us here, they are not. But howsoever we date our Excommunications against them, but from an overt act, and apparent disobedience, yet in the Records of heaven, they shall meet an Excommunication, and a conviction of Recusancy, that shall bear date from that day, when they came first to Church, with that purpose to delude the Congregation, to elude the laws in that behalf provided, to advance their treacherous designs by such disguises, or upon what other collateral and indirect occasion soever, men come to this place: for, though they be in the right way, when they are here, at Church, yet because they are not upright in heart, therefore that right way brings not them to the right end. And that is it which David looks upon in God, and desires that God should look upon in him; 2 Sam. 7.21. (According to thine own heart, saith David to God, hast thou done all these great things unto us) (For, sometimes God doth give temporal blessings to men, upon whom he hath not set his heart) And then in the 27. Verse he says, (Therefore hath thy servant found in his heart, to pray this prayer unto thee) If he had only found it in the Liturgy, and in the manner of the Service of that Church, to which he came with an ill will, and against his heart, he would not have prayed that prayer, nay he would not have come to that Church. Psal. 35.11. 40.10. For, though David place a great joy in that, (That he can come to praise God in the Congregation, and in the great Congregation) And though David seem even to determine God's presence in the Church, (for he multiplies that expostulation, that adprecation many times, When shall I come, in conspectum tuum, into thy presence? And, Restore me, O Lord, conspectui tuo, to thy presence, He was not right, not in the right way, if he came not to Church) yet there is a case in which David glories in, though (as he saith there) In cord meo abscondi eloquium tuum, Psal. 119.11. Thy word have I hidden, locked up, in my heart. Though in another, in many other places, he rejoice in that, (I have not hid thy righteousness in my heart, Psal. 40.10. I have not concealed thy truth from the great Congregation) yet here he glories in his Abscondi, I have hid it. Which, (as both S. Hilary, and S. Ambrose refer it to a discreet and seasonable suppressing of the mysteries of Religion, and not to cast pearls before swine) may also infer this Instruction; That a man were better serve God at home, (though not in so right a way, if he think it right) then to come hither against his heart, and conscience. Not, but that there is better means of receiving good here, then at home in private prayer, (though made the right way) But his end in coming is not to make this means his way to that good; And therefore his very being here, (though he be thereby in the right way) because it comes not from an upright heart, as it is a greater danger to us, who are deluded by their hypocritical conformity, so is it a greater sin to them, who come so against their conscience. David prays thus, Psal. 119.19. Incola sum, ne abscondas, I am a stranger, hid not thy commandments from me, (Let me not be a stranger at Church, at thy Service.) And so it behoves us to pray too, That those Doors, and those Books may always be open unto us; But yet I will say with David too, Abscondam eloquium, where I am a stranger, and in a place of strange, and superstitious worship, I will hid my religion so fare, as not to communicate with others, in a service against my heart; It is not safe for us to trust ourselves at a superstitious Service, though curiosity, or company, or dependency upon others draw us thither; neither is it safe to trust all that come hither, if their hearts be not here. For the Retribution of our Text, that is, Thanks and Praise, belongs only to them, who are Right, and Right of heart, and to them it is made due, and infallible, by this promise from God, and made universal, Omnes, All the upright in heart shall glory. How often God admits into his own Name, Omnes. this addition of Universality, Omne, All, as though he would be known by that especially. He is Omnipotent, There he can do All; He is Omniscient, There he can know All; He is Omnipresent, There he can direct All. Neither doth God extend himself to all, that he may gather from all, but that he may gather all, and all might meet in him, and enjoy him. So, God is all Centre, as that he looks to all, and so, all circumference, as that he embraces all. The Sun works upon things that he sees not, (as Ours in the womb of the earth) and so works the less perfectly. God sees all, and works upon all, and desires perfection in all. There is no one word so often in the Bible, as this, Omne, All. Neither hath God spread the word more liberally upon all the lines of this Book, than he hath his gracious purposes upon all the souls of men. And therefore, to withdraw Gods general goodness out of his general propositions, That he would have all repent, That he came to save all, is to contract and abridge God himself, in his most extensive Attribute, or Denotation, that is, his Mercy: And as there is a curse laid upon them, that take away any part, any proposition out of this Book, so may there be a curse, or an ill affection, and countenance and suspicion from God, that presses any of his general propositions to a narrower, and less gracious sense than God meant in it. It were as easily believed, that God looks towards no man, as that there should be any man (in whom he sees, that is, considers no sin) that he looks not towards. I could as easily doubt of the universal providence of God, as of the universal mercy of God, if man continued not in rebellion, and in opposition. If I can say, by way of confession, and accusing myself, Lord, my ways have not been right, nor my heart right, there is yet mercy for me. But, to them who have studied and accustomed themselves to this uprightness of heart, there is mercy in that exaltation, mercy in the nature of a Reward, of a Retribution; And this Retribution expressed here, in this word Glory, constitutes our second Part, All the upright in heart shall Glory. This Retribution is expressed in the Original, in the word Halal; And Halal, 2 Part. Laus. to those Translators that made up our Book of Common Prayer, presented the signification of Gladness, for so it is there, They shall be glad; So it did to the Translators that came after, for there it is, They shall rejoice; And to our last Translators it seemed to signify Glory, They shall Glory, say they. But the first Translation of all into our Language (which was long before any of these three) calls it Praise, and puts it in the Passive, All men of rightful heart shall be praised. He followed S. Hierom, who reads it so, and interprets it so, in the Passive, Laudabuntur, They shall be praised. And so truly jithhalelu, in the Original, bears it, nay requires it; which is not of a praise that they shall give to God, but of a praise, that they shall receive for having served God with an upright heart; not that they shall praise God in doing so, but that godly men shall praise them for having done so. All this will grow naturally out of the root; for, the root of this word, is Lucere, Splendere, To shine out in the eyes of men, and to create in them a holy and a reverential admiration, as it was john Baptists praise, That he was A burning, and a shining Lamp. Properly it is, by a good and a holy exemplary life, to occasion others to set a right value upon Holiness, and to give a due respect to holy men. For so, where we read, Psal. 78.63. Their Maidens were not given in Marriage, we find this word of our Text, Their Maidens were not praised, that is, there was not a due respect held of them, nor a just value set upon them. So that, this retribution intended for the upright in heart, as in the growth and extension of the word, it reaches to Joy, and Glory, and Eminency, and Respect, so in the root, it signifies Praise; And it is given them by God, as a Reward, That they shall be Praised; now, Praise (says the Philosopher) is Sermo elucidans magnitudinem virtutis; It is the good word of good men, a good testimony given by good men of good actions. And this difference we use to assign between Praise, and Honour, Laus est in ordine ad finem, Honour eorum qui jam in fine; Praise is an encouragement to them that are in the way, and so far, a Reward, a Reward of good beginnings; Honour is reserved to the end, to crown their constancy, and perseverance. And therefore, where men are rewarded with great honours at the beginning, in hope they will deserve it, they are paid beforehand. Thanks, and Grace, and good countenance, and Praise, are interlocutory encouragements, Honours are final Rewards. But, since Praise is a part of God's retribution, a part of his promise in our text, They shall be praised, we are thereby not only allowed, but bound to seek this praise from good men, and to give this praise to good men; for, in this Coin God hath promised, that the upright in heart shall be paid, They shall be praised. To seek praise from good men, by good means, Laus à bonis quaerenda. Prov. 22.1. Bernar. is but the same thing which is recommended to us by Solomon, A good name is rather to be chosen, then great riches, and loving favour, than silver and Gold. For, Habent & mores colores suos, habent & odores; Our good works have a colour, and they have a savour; we see their Candour, their sincerity in our own consciences, there is their colour; (for, in our own consciences our works appear in their true colours; no man can be an hypocrite to himself, nor seriously, deliberately deceive himself) And, when others give allowance of our works, and are edified by them, there is their savour, their odor, their perfume, their fragrancy. And therefore S. Hierom, and S. Augustin differ little in their manner of expressing this, Hieron. Non paratum habeas illud è trivio, Serve not thyself with that trivial, and vulgar saying, As long as my conscience testifies well to me, I care not what men say of me; August. And so says that other Father, They that rest in the testimony of their own consciences, and contemn the opinion of other men, Imprudenter agunt, & crudeliter, They deal weakly, and improvidently for themselves, in that they assist not their consciences, with more witnesses, And they deal cruelly towards others, in that they provide not for their edification, by the knowledge and manifestation of their good works. For, (as he adds well there) Qui à criminibus vitam custodit, bene facit, He that is innocent in his own heart, does well for himself, but Qui famam custodit, & in alios misericors est, He that is known to live well, he that hath the praise of good men, to be a good man, is merciful, in an exemplary life, to others, and promoves their salvation. For, when that Father gives a measure, how much praise a man may receive, and a rule, how he may receive it, when he hath first said, Nec totum, nec nihil accipiatur, Receive not all, but yet refuse not all praise, he adds this, That that which is to be received, is not to be received for our own sakes, sed propter illos, quibus consulere non potest, si nimia dejectione vilescat, but for their sakes, who would undervalue goodness itself, if good men did too much undervalue themselves, or thought themselves never the better for their goodness. And therefore S. Bernard applies that in the Proverbs to this case; Prov. 25.16. Hast thou found Honey? eat that which is sufficient. Mellis nomine, favour humanae laudis, says he, By Honey, favour, and praise, and thankfulness is meant; Meritóque non ab omni, sed ab immoderato edulio prohibemur, We are not forbid to taste, nor to eat, but to surfeit of this Honey, of this praise of men. S. Augustine found this love of praise in himself, and could forbid it no man, Laudari à bene viventibus, si dicam, nolo, mentior, If I should say, that I desired not the praise of good men, I should belie myself. He carries it higher than thus; He does not doubt, but that the Apostles themselves had a holy joy, and complacency, when their Preaching was acceptable, and thereby effectual upon the Congregation. Such a love of praise is rooted in Nature; and Grace destroys not Nature; Grace extinguishes not, but moderates this love of praise in us, nor takes away the matter, but only exhibits the measure. Certainly, he that hath not some desire of praise, will be negligent in doing praiseworthy things; and negligent in another duty intended here too, that is, To praise good men, which is also another particular branch in this Part. The hundred forty fift Psalm is, Laus danda aliis. in the Title thereof, called A Psalm of Praise; And the Rabbins call him Filium futuri Seculi, A child of the next World, that says that Psalm thrice a day. We will interpret it, by way of Accommodation, thus, that he is a child of the next World, that directs his Praise every day, upon three objects, upon God, upon himself, upon other men. Of God, there can be no question; And for ourselves, it is truly the most proper, and most literal signification of this word in our Text, jithhalelu, That they shall praise themselves, that is, They shall have the testimony of a rectified conscience, that they have deserved the praise of good men, in having done laudable service to God. And then, for others, That which God promises to Israel in their restauration, Zephan. 3.19. belongs to all the Israel of the Lord, to all the faithful, I will get thee praise, and fame in every land, and I will make thee a name, and a praise amongst all the people of the earth. This, God will do; procure them a name, a glory: By whom? When God binds himself, he takes us into the band with him, and when God makes himself the debtor, he makes us stewards; when he promises them praise, he means that we should give them that praise. Be all ways of flatter, and humouring of great persons precluded with a Protestation, with a detestation; Be Philo judaeus his comparison received, His Coquus, and his Medicus, One provides sweetness for the present taste, but he is but a Cook, The other is a Physician, and though by bitter things, provides for thy future health; And such is the honey of Flatterers, and such is the wormwood of better Counsellors. I will not shake a Proverb, not the Ad Corvos, That we were better admit the Crows, that pick out our eyes, after we are dead, than Flatterers that blind us, whilst we live; I cast justly upon others, I take willingly upon myself, the name of wicked, (if I bless the covetous whom the Lord abhorreth) or any other whom he hath declared to be odious to him. But making my object goodness in that man, and taking that goodness in that man, to be a Candle, set up by God in that Candlestick, God having engaged himself, that that good man shall be praised, I will be a Subsidy man so far, so far pay God's debts, as to celebrate with condign praise the goodness of that man; for, in that, I do, as I should desire to be done to, And in that, I pay a debt to that man, And in that I secure their weakness, who, (as S. Gregory says) when they hear another praised, Greg●r. Si non amore virtutis, at delectatione laudis accenduntur, At first for the love of Praise, but after, for the love of goodness itself, are drawn to be good. Phil. 4.8. For, when the Apostle had directed the Philippians upon things that were True, and honest, and just, and purc, and lovely, and of a good report, he ends all thus, If there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things. In those two says S. Augustine, he divides all, Virtue, and Praise; Virtue in ourselves, that may deserve Praise; Praise towards others, that may advance and propagate Virtue. This is the retribution which God promises to all the upright in heart, Gloriabuntur, Laudabuntur, They shall Glory, they shall have, they shall give praise. And then it is so far from diminishing this Glory, as that it infinitely exalts our consolation, that God places this Retribution in the future, Gloriabuntur, If they do not yet, yet certainly they shall glory, And if they do now, that glory shall not go out, still they shall, they shall for ever glory. In the Hebrew there is no Present tense; In that language wherein God spoke, Futurum. it could not be said, The upright in heart, Are praised; Many times they are not. But God speaks in the future; first, that he may still keep his Children in an expectation and dependence upon him, (you shall be, though you be not yet) And then, to establish them in an infallibility, because he hath said it, (I know you are not yet, but comfort yourselves, I have said it, and it shall be.) As the Hebrew hath not Superlatives, because God would keep his Children within compass, and in moderate desires, to content themselves with his measures, though they be not great, and though they be not heaped; so, considering what pressures, and contempts, and terrors, the upright in heart are subject to, it is a blessed relief, That they have a future proposed unto them, That they shall be praised, That they shall be redeemed out of contempt. This makes even the Expectation itself as sweet to them, as the fruition would be. This makes them, that when David says, Expecta viriliter, Wait upon the Lord with a good courage; Wait, I say, Psal. 27.14. upon the Lord, they do not answer with the impatience of the Martyrs under the Altar, Vsquequo, How long, Lord, wilt thou defer it? Rev. 6.10. Psal. 40.1. Psal. 52.9. But they answer in David's own words, Expectans expectavi, I have waited long, And, Expectabo nomen tuum, still I will wait upon thy Name; I will wait till the Lord come; His kingdom come in the mean time, His kingdom of Grace, and Patience; and for his Ease, and his Deliverance, and his Praise, and his Glory to me, let that come, when he may be most glorified in the coming thereof. Nay, not only the Expectation, (that is, that that is expected) shall be comfortable, because it shall be infallible, but that very present state that he is in, shall be comfortable, according to the first of our three Translations, They that are true of heart, shall be glad thereof; Glad of that; Glad that they are true of heart, though their future retribution were never so far removed; Nay, though there were no future retribution in the case, yet they shall find comfort enough in their present Integrity. Nay, not only their present state of Integrity, but their present state of misery, shall be comfortable to them; for this very word of our Text, Halal, that is here translated joy, and Glory, and Praise, in divers places of Scripture, (as Hebrew words have often such a transplantation) signifies Ingloriousness, and contempt, and dejection of spirit; Psal. 75.4. Esa. 44.25. Job 12.17. So that Ingloriousness, and contempt, and dejection of spirit, may be a part of the retribution; God may make Ingloriousness, and Contempt, and Dejection of spirit, a greater blessing and benefit, than Joy, and Glory, and Praise would have been; and so reserve all this Glory and Praising to that time, that David intends, Psal. 112.6. The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance. Though they live and die contemptibly, they shall be in an honourable remembrance, even amongst men, as long as men last, and even when time shall be no more, and men no more, they shall have it in futuro aeterno; where there shall be an everlasting present, and an everlasting future, there the upright in heart shall be praised, and that for ever, which is our conclusion of all. If this word of our Text, Halal, shall signify joy, (as the Service Book, Aeternum. and the Geneva translation render it) that may be somewhat towards enough, which we had occasion to say of the Joys of heaven, in our Exercise upon the precedent Psalm, when we sailed through that Hemisphere of Heaven, by the breath of the Holy Ghost, in handling those words, Under the shadow of thy wings I will rejoice. So that, of this signification of the word, Gaudebunt in aeterno, They shall rejoice for ever, we add nothing now. If the word shall signify Glory, (as our last translation renders it) consider with me, That when that Glory which I shall receive in Heaven, shall be of that exaltation, as that my body shall invest the glory of a soul, (my body shall be like a soul, like a spirit, like an Angel of light, in all endowments that glory itself can make that body capable of, that body remaining still a true body) when my body shall be like a soul, there will be nothing left for my soul to be like but God himself; 2 Pet. 1.4. 1 Cor. 6.17. I shall be partaker of the Divine nature, and the same Spirit with him. Since the glory that I shall receive in body, and in soul, shall be such, so exalted, what shall that glory of God be, which I shall see by the light of this glory shed upon me there? In this place, and at this time the glory of God is; but we lack that light to see it by. When my soul and body are glorified in heaven, by that light of glory in me, I shall see the glory of God. But then, what must that glory of the Essence of God be, which I shall see through the light of Gods own glory? I must have the light of glory upon me, to see the glory of God, and then by his glory I shall see his Essence. Rom. 11.33. When S. Paul cries out upon the bottomless depth of the riches of his Attributes, (O the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God) how glorious, how bottomless is the riches of his Essence? If I cannot look upon him in his glass, 1 Cor. 13.12. 1 Joh. 3.2. in the body of the Sun, how shall I look upon him face to face? And if I be dazzled to see him as he works, how shall I see him, Sicutiest, as he is, and in his Essence? But it may be some ease to our spirits, (which cannot endure the search of this glory of heaven, which shall show us the very Essence of God) to take this word of our Text, as our first translation of all took it, for one beam of this glory, that is Praise; Consider we therefore this everlasting future only so, How the upright in heart shall be praised in heaven. First, The Militant Church shall transmit me to the Triumphant, with her recommendation, That I lived in the obedience of the Church of God, That I died in the faith of the Son of God, That I departed and went away from them, in the company and conduct of the Spirit of God, into whose hands they heard me, they saw me recommend my spirit, 1 Cor. 6.19. And that I left my body, which was the Temple of the Holy Ghost, to them, and that they have placed it in God's treasury, in his consecrated earth, to attend the Resurrection, which they shall beseech him to hasten for my sake, and to make it joyful and glorious to me, and them, when it comes. So the Militant Church shall transmit me to the Triumphant, with this praise, this testimony, this recommendation. And then, if I have done any good to any of God's servants, (or to any that hath not been God's servant, for God's sake) If I have but fed a hungry man, If I have but clothed a naked child, If I have but comforted a sad soul, or instructed an ignorant soul, If I have but preached a Sermon, and then printed that Sermon, that is, first preached it, and then lived according to it, (for the subsequent life is the best printing, and the most useful and profitable publishing of a Sermon) All those things that I have done for God's glory, shall follow me, shall accompany me, shall be in heaven before me, and meet me with their testimony, That as I did not serve God for nothing, (God gave me his blessings with a large hand, and in overflowing measures) so I did not nothing for the service of God; Though it be as it ought to be, nothing in mine own eyes, nothing in respect of my duty, yet to them who have received any good by it, it must not seem nothing; for than they are unthankful to God, who gave it, by whose hand soever. This shall be my praise to Heaven, my recommendation thither; And then, my praise in Heaven, shall be my preferment in Heaven. That those blessed Angels, that rejoiced at my Conversion before, shall praise my perseverance in that profession, and admit me to a part in all their Hymns and Hosannaes', and Hallelujahs; which Hallelujah is a word produced from the very word of this Text, Halal; My Hallelujah shall be my Halal, my praising of God shall be my praise. And from this testimony I shall come to the accomplishment of all, to receive from my Saviour's own mouth, that glorious, that victorious, that harmonious praise, that Dissolving, and that Recollecting testimony, that shall melt my bowels, and yet fix me, pour me out, and yet gather me into his bosom, that Euge bone serve, Mat. 25.21. Well done, good and faithful servant, enter into thy Master's joy. And when he hath sealed me with his Euge, and accepted my service, who shall stamp a Vae quod non, upon me? who shall say, Woe be unto thee, that thou didst not preach, this or that day, in this or that place? When he shall have styled me Bone & fidelis, Good and faithful servant, who shall upbraid me with a late undertaking this Calling, or a slack pursuing, or a lazy intermitting the function thereof? When he shall have entered me into my Master's joy, what fortune, what sin can cast any Cloud of sadness upon me? This is that that makes Heaven, Heaven, That this Retribution, which is future now, shall be present then, and when it is then present, it shall be future again, and present and future for ever, ever enjoyed, and expected ever. The upright in heart shall have, whatsoever all Translations can enlarge and extend themselves unto; They shall Rejoice, they shall Glory, they shall Praise, and they shall be praised, and all these in an everlasting future, for ever. Which everlastingness is such a Term, as God himself cannot enlarge; As God cannot make himself a better God than he is, because he is infinitely good, infinite goodness, already; so God himself cannot make our Term in heaven longer than it is; for it is infinite everlastingness, infinite eternity. That that we are to beg of him is, that as that state shall never end, so he will be pleased to hasten the beginning thereof, that so we may be numbered with his Saints in Glory everlasting. Amen. SERM. LXVIII. The fourth of my Prebend Sermons upon my five Psalms: Preached at S. Paul's, 28. january, 1626. PSAL. 65.5. By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us, O God of our salvation; who art the confidence of all the ends of the earth, and of them that are a far off, upon the Sea. GOd makes nothing of nothing now; God eased himself of that incomprehensible work, and ended it in the first Sabbath. But God makes great things of little still; And in that kind he works most upon the Sabbath; 1 Cor. 1.21. when by the foolishness of Preaching he infatuates the wisdom of the world, and by the word, in the mouth of a weak man, he enfeebles the power of sin, and Satan in the world, and by but so much breath as blows out an hourglass, gathers three thousand souls at a Sermon, and five thousand souls at a Sermon, as upon Peter's preaching, in the second, and in the fourth of the Acts. And this work of his, to make much of little, and to do much by little, is most properly a Miracle. For, the Creation, (which was a production of all out of nothing) was not properly a miracle: A miracle is a thing done against nature; when something in the course of nature resists that work, than that work is a miracle; But in the Creation, there was no reluctation, no resistance, no nature, nothing to resist. But to do great works by small means, to bring men to heaven by Preaching in the Church, this is a miracle. When Christ intended a miraculous feeding of a great multitude, he asked, Quot panes habetis? Mark 6.38. First he would know, how many loaves they had; and when he found that they had some, though they were but five, he multiplied them, to a sufficiency for five thousand persons. This Psalm is one of my five loaves, which I bring; One of those five Psalms, which by the Institution of our Ancestors in this Church, are made mine, appropriated especially to my daily meditation, as there are five other Psalms to every other person of our Church. And, by so poor means as this, (my speaking) his Blessing upon his Ordinance may multiply to the advancement, and furtherance of all your salvations. He multiplies now, farther than in those loaves; not only to feed you all, (as he did all that multitude) but to feed you all three meals. In this Psalm (and especially in this Text) God satisfies you with this threefold knowledge: First, what he hath done for man, in the light and law of nature; Then, how much more he had done for his chosen people, the Jews, in affording them a law; And lastly, what he had reserved for man after, in the establishing of the Christian Church. The first, (in this Metaphor, and miracle of feeding) works as a breakfast; for though there be not a full meal, there is something to stay the stomach, in the light of nature. The second, that which God did for the Jews in their Law, and Sacrifices, and Types, and Ceremonies, is as that Dinner, which was spoken of in the Gospel, which was plentifully prepared, but prepared for some certain guests, that were bidden, and no more; Better means than were in nature, they had in the law, but yet only appropriated to them that were bidden, to that Nation, and no more. But in the third meal, God's plentiful refection in the Christian Church, and means of salvation there; first, Christ comes in the visitation of his Spirit, Revel. 3.20. (Behold I come, and knock, and will sup with him) (He sups with us, in the private visitation of his Spirit) And then, (as it is added there) he invites us to sup with him, he calls us home to his house, and there makes us partakers of his blessed Sacraments; And by those means we are brought at last to that blessedness, Revel. 19.9. which he proclaims, (Blessed are all they which are called to the marriage Supper of the Lamb) in the Kingdom of heaven. For all these three meals, we say Grace in this Text, (By terrible things, in righteousness, wilt thou answer us, O God of our salvation) for all these ways of coming to the knowledge and worship of God, we bless God in this Text, (Thou art the confidence of all the ends of the Earth, and of them that are a fare off, upon the Sea. The consideration of the means of salvation, afforded by God to the Jews in their law, inanimates the whole Psalm, and is transfused thorough every part thereof; and so, it falls upon this Verse too, as it doth upon all the rest; And then, for that, that God had done before in nature, and for all, is in the later part of this Verse, (Who art the confidence of all the ends of the Earth, and of them that are a fare off, upon the Sea) And last, that that he hath reserved for the Christian Church, God hath centred, and emboweled in the womb and bosom of the Text, in that compellation, (O God of our salvation) for there the word salvation, is rooted in jashang, which jashang is the very Name of jesus, the foundation, and the whole building of the Christian Church. So then our three parts will be these; What God hath done in Nature, what in the Law, what in the Gospel. And, when in our Order we shall come to that last part, which is that, that we drive all to, (The advantage which we have in the Gospel, above Nature, and the Law) we shall then propose, and stop upon the Holy Ghosts manner of expressing it in this place, (By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us, O God of our salvation) But first, look we a little into the other two, Nature, and Law. First then, 1 Part. Natura. the last words settle us upon our first consideration, What God hath done for man in Nature, He is the confidence of all the ends of the earth, and of them that are a far off, upon the Sea, that is, of all the world, all places, all persons in the world; All, at all times, every where, have Declarations enough of his power, Demonstrations enough of his Goodness, to confide in him, to rely upon him. The Holy Ghost seems to have delighted in the Metaphor of Building. I know no figurative speech so often iterated in the Scriptures, Phil. 3.20. Heb. 3.6. Psal. 147.2. as the name of a House; Heaven and Earth are called by that name, and we, who being upon earth, have our conversation in heaven, are called so too, (Christ hath a House, which House we are) And as God builds his House, (The Lord builds up lerusalem, saith David) so he furnishes it, he plants Vineyards, Gardens, and Orchards about it, joh. 14.6. Matt. 7.13. joh. 10.7. He lays out a way to it, (Christ is the way) He opens a gate into it, (Christ is the gate) And when he hath done all this, (built his house, furnished it, planted about it, made it accessible, and opened the gate) than he keeps house, as well as builds a house, he feeds us, and feasts us in his house, as well as he lodges us, and places us in it. And as Christ professes what his own Diet was, joh. 4.34. what he fed upon, (My meat is to do the will of my Father) so our meat is to know the will of the Father; Every man, even in nature, hath that appetite, that desire, to know God. And therefore if God have made any man, and not given him means to know him, Psal. 145.15. he is but a good Builder, he is no good Housekeeper, He gives him lodging, but he gives him no meat; But the eyes of all wait upon thee, and thou givest them their meat in due season. All, (not only we) wait upon God; and he gives them Their meat, though not our meat, (The Word and the Sacramenss) yet Their meat, such as they are able to digest and endue. Even in nature, He is the confidence of all the ends of the earth, and of them that are a far off, upon the Sea. That is his daily bread, which even the natural man begs at God's hand, and God affords it him. The most precious and costly dishes are always reserved for the last services, but yet there is wholesome meat before too. The clear light is in the Gospel, but there is light in Nature too. Revel. 19.9. At the last Supper, (the Supper of the Lamb in Heaven) there is no bill of fare, there are no particular dishes named there. It is impossible to tell us what we shall feed upon, what we shall be feasted with, at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb; Our way of knowing God there cannot be expressed. At that Supper of the Lamb, which is here, here in our way homewards, that is, in the Sacramental Supper of the Lamb, it is very hard to tell, what we feed upon; How that meat is dressed, how the Body and Blood of Christ is received by us, at that Supper, in that Sacrament, is hard to be expressed, hard to be conceived, for the way and manner thereof. So also in the former meal, that which we have called the Dinner, which is The knowledge which the Jews had in the Law, it was not easy to distinguish the taste, and the nature of every dish, and to find the signification in every Type, and in every Ceremony. There are some difficulties (if curious men take the matter in hand, and be too inquisitive) even in the Gospel; more in the Law; most of all in Nature. But yet, even in this first refection, this first meal, that God sets before man, (which is our knowledge of God in Nature) because we are then in God's House, (all this World, and the next make God but one House) though God do not give Marrow and fatness, Psal. 63.6. 81.16. (as David speaks) though he do not feed them with the fat of the wheat, nor satisfy them with honey out of the Rock, (for the Gospel is the honey, and Christ is the Rock) yet, even in Nature, he gives sufficient means to know him, though they come to neither of the other Meals, neither to the Jews Dinner, The benefit of the Law, nor to the Christians Supper, either when they feed upon the Lamb in the Sacrament, or when they feed with the Lamb in the possession and fruition of Heaven. Though therefore the Septuagint, in their Translation of the Psalms, have, in the Title of this Psalm, added this, A Psalm of jeremy and Ezekiel, when they were departing out of the Captivity of Babylon, intimating therein, that it is a Psalm made in contemplation of that blessed place which we are to go to, (as, literally, it was of their happy state in their restitution from Babylon to Jerusalem) And though the ancient Church, by appropriating this Psalm to the office of the dead, to the service at Burials, intimate also, that this Psalm is intended of that fullness of knowledge, and Joy, and Glory, which they have that are departed in the Lord, yet the Holy Ghost stops, as upon the way, before we come thither, and, since we must lie in an Inn, that is, Lodge in this World, he enables the World to entertain us, as well as to lodge us, and hath provided, that the World, the very world itself, (before we consider the Law in the World, or the Church in the World, or Glory in the next World) This very World, that is, Nature, and no more, should give such an universal light of the knowledge of God, as that he should be The confidence of all the ends of the Earth, and of them that are a fare off upon the Sea. And therefore as men that come to great places, and preferments, when they have entered by a fair and wide gate of Honour, but yet are laid down upon hard beds of trouble and anxiety in those places, (for, when the body seems in the sight of men, to go on in an easy amble, the mind is every day (if not all day) in a shrewd and diseaseful trot) As those men will sometimes say, It was better with me, when I was in a lower place, and fortune, and will remember, being Bishops, the pleasures they had when they were Schoolboys, and yet, for all this, intermit not their thankfulness to God, who hath raised them to that height, and those means of glorifying him: so, howsoever we abound with joy and thankfulness, for these gracious and glorious Illustrations of the Law, and the Gospel, and beams of future Glory, which we have in the Christian Church, Let us reflect often upon our beginning, upon the consideration of God's first benefits, which he hath given to us all in Nature, That light, john 1.9. by which he enlighteneth every man that cometh into the World, That he hath given us a reasonable soul capable of grace, here, (that, he hath denied no man, and no other creature hath that) That he hath given us an immortal soul capable of glory hereafter, (and that, that immortality he hath denied no man, and no other creature hath that.) Consider we always the grace of God, to be the Sun itself, but the nature of man, and his natural faculties to be the Sphere, in which that Sun, that Grace moves. Consider we the Grace of God to be the soul itself, but the natural faculties of man, to be as a body, which ministers Organs for that soul, that Grace to work by. That so, as how much soever I fear the hand of a mighty man, that strikes, yet I have a more immediate fear of the sword he strikes with; So, though I impute justly my sins, and my fears of judgements for them, to Gods withdrawing, or to my neglecting his grace, yet I look also upon that which is next me, Nature, and natural light, and natural faculties, and that I consider how I use to use them; whether I be as watchful upon my tongue, that that minister no tentation to others, and upon mine eye, that that receive no tentation from others, as by the light of Nature, I might, and as some moral Men, without addition of particular Grace, have done. That so, first for myself, I be not apt to lay any thing upon God, and to say, that he starved me, though he should not bid me to the Jews dinner, in giving me the light of the Law, nor bid me to the Christians Supper, in giving me the light of the Gospel, because he hath given me a competent refection even in Nature. And then, that for others, I may first say with the Apostle, Rom. 1.20. 11.33. That they are without excuse, who do not see the invisible God, in the visible Creature, and may say also with him, O altitudo! The ways of the Lord are passed my finding out; And therefore to those, who do open their eyes to that light of Nature, in the best exaltation thereof, God does not hid himself, though he have not manifested to me, by what way he manifests himself to them. For, God disappoints none, and he is The confidence of all the ends of the Earth, and of them who are a fare off upon the Sea. Commit thy way unto the Lord, Psal. 37.5. says David; And he says more, than our Translation seems to express; The Margin hath expressed it; for, according to the Original word, Galal, it is in the Margin, not Commit, but Roll thy way upon the Lord; which may very well imply, and intent this precept, Carry thy Rolling trench up to God, and gather upon him; Gen. 18.23. As Abraham, when he beat the price with God for Sodom, from fifty, to ten, rolled his Petition upon God, fo roll thy ways upon him, come up to him in a thankful acknowledgement, what he hath done for thee, in the Gospel, in the Law, and in Nature; And then, as Tertullian says of public Prayers, Obsidemus Deum, In the Prayers of the Congregation we besiege God, So this way we entrench ourselves before God, so, as that nothing can beat us out of our trenches; for, if all the Canons of the Church beat upon me, so that I be by Excommunication removed from the assistances of the Church, (though I be inexcusable, if I labour not my Reconciliation, and my Absolution) yet, before that be effected, I am still in my first trench, still I am a man, still I have a soul capable of Grace, still I have the light of Nature, and some presence of God in that; though I be attenuated, I am not annihilated, though by my former abuses of God's graces, and my contumacy, I be cast back to the ends of the earth, and a far off upon the Sea, yet even there, God is the confidence of all them; As long as I consider that I have such a soul, capable of Grace and Glory, I cannot despair. Thus Nature makes Pearls, Thus Grace makes Saints. A drop of dew hardens, and then another drop falls, and spreads itself, and that former drop, and then another, and another, and become so many shells and films that invest that first feminall drop, and so (they say) there is a pearl in Nature. A good foul takes first Gods first drop into his consideration, what he hath shed upon him in Nature, and then his second coat, what in the Law, and successively his other manifold graces, as so many shells, and films, in the Christian Church, and so we are sure, there is a Saint. Roll thy ways upon God; And (as it follows in the same verse) Spera in eo, & ipse faciet; we translate it, Trust in him, and he shall bring it to pass; Begin at Alpha, and he shall bring it to Omega: Consider thyself but in the state of Hope, (for the state of Nature is but a state of Hope, a state of Capableness; In Nature we have the capacity of Grace, but not Grace in possession, in Nature) Et ipse faciet, says that Text, God shall do, God shall work; There is no more in the Original but so, Ipse faciet; Not God shall do it, or do this, or do that, but do all; do but consider that God hath done something for thee, and he shall do all, for, He is the confidence of all the ends of the earth, and of them that are a fare off upon the Sea. Here is a new Mathematics; without change of Elevation, or parallax, I that live in this Climate, and stand under this Meridian, look up and fix myself upon God, And they that are under my feet, look up to that place, which is above them, And as divers, as contrary as our places are, we all fix at once upon one God, and meet in one Centre; but we do not so upon one Sun, nor upon one constellation, or configuration in the Heavens; when we see it, those Antipodes do not; but they, and we see God at once. How various forms of Religion soever pass us through divers ways, yet by the very light and power of Nature, we meet in one God; and for so much, as may make God accessible to us, and make us inexcusable towards him, there is light enough in this dawning of the day, refection enough in this first meal, The knowledge of God, which we have in Nature; That alone discharges God, and condemns us; for, by that, He is, that is, He offers himself to be, The confidence of all the ends of the Earth, and of them who are a far of upon the Sea; that is, of all mankind. But then, Lunae radiis non matureseit botrus, fruits may be seen by the Moonshine, but the Moonshine will not ripen them. Therefore a Sun rises unto us, in the law, and in the Prophets, and gives us another manner of light, than we had in nature. Prov. 4.19. The way of the wicked is as Darkness, says Solomon; Wherein? It follows, They know not at what they stumble. A man that calls himself to no kind of account, that takes no candle into his hand, never knows at what he stumbles, not what occasions his sin. But by the light of nature, if he will look upon his own infirmities, his own deformities, his own inclinations, he may know at what he stumbles, what that is that leads him into tentation. For, though S. Paul say, That by the law is the knowledge of sin, And, Rom. 3.20. Rom. 5.13. Rom. 7.7. Sin is not imputed when there is no law; And again, I had not known sin, but by the law; in some of these places, the law is not intended only of the law of the Jews, but of the law of nature in our hearts, (for, by that law, every man knows that he sins) And then, sin is not only intended of sin produced into act, but sin in the heart; as the Apostle instances there, I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet. Of some sins, there is no clear evidence given by the light of nature: That the law supplied; and more than that. The law did not only show, what was sin, but gave some light of remedy against sin, and restitution after sin, by those sacrifices, which, though they were ineffectual in themselves, yet involved, and represented Christ, who was their salvation. So then, God was to the Jews, in general, as he was to his principal servant amongst them, Moses; He saw the land of promise, but he entered not into it; The Jews saw Christ, Deut. 34.1. but embraced him not. Abraham saw his day, and rejoiced; They saw it, that is, they might have seen it, but winked at it. Luther says well, judaei habuere jus mendicandi, The Jews had a licence to beg, They had a Breve, and might gather, They had a Covenant, and might plead with God; But they did not; and therefore, though they were inexcusable for their neglect of the light of Nature, and more inexcusable for resisting the light of the law, That they and we might be absolutely inexcusable, if we continued in darkness after that, God set up another light, the light of the Gospel, which is our third and last part, wrapped up in those first words of our Text, By terrible things, in righteousness, wilt thou answer us, O God of our salvation. This word, Salvation, jashang, is the root of the name of jesus. 3 Part. Ecclesia Christiana. In the beginning of the Primitive Church, when the followers of Christ left or discontinued their being called the Disciples, and the Faithful, and the Brethren, and the Professors, as they had been called before, and would bring the Name of their founder, Christ Jesus, into more evidence and manifestation, yet they were not called by the Name of jesus, but from Christ; at Antioch first they were called Christians. For, it is well distinguished, Acts 11.26. That the Name of jesus, as it signifies a Saviour, first contemplates God, and the Divine nature, Bonavent. (which only could save us) And then hath relation to Man, and the Humane nature, without assuming of which, the Son of God could not have saved us that way, that God had proposed, The satisfaction of his Justice; And then, the Name of Christ, (as it signifies Anointed, and appointed to a certain purpose, as to die for us) first contemplates Man, and the Humane nature, which only could die, And then hath relation to God, and the Divine nature. So that Jesus is God, and Man in Him; And Christ is Man, and God in Him. So the Name jesus seems to taste of more Mystery, and more incomprehensibleness; And the Name of Christ, of more Humility, and appliableness. And with this lower Name, to be called Christians from Christ, was the Church of God contented; Whereas a later race of men in the Roman Church, will needs take their Denomination from jesus himself; But I know not whether they mean our jesus or no. josephus remembers two (at least) of that name, jesus, Josephus. that were infamous malefactors, and men of blood; and they may deduce themselves from such a jesus. And a Jesuit teaches us, that it is the common opinion, that Barrabas the murderer, Lorinus. Act. 13.6. was by his proper Name called jesus; that his name was jesus Barrabas; and that therefore Pilate made that difference upon our Saviour, jesus Nazarenus, This is jesus of Nazareth, and not jesus Barrabas; and from that jesus, jesus Barrabas they may deduce themselves. And we know also, that that mischievous sorcerer, was called by that Name, Bar-jesu, Ibid. The Son of Jesus. From which jesus amongst these, they will make their extraction, let them choose. As amongst the Jesuits, the bloodiest of them all, (even to the drawing of the sacred blood of Kings) is, by his name, Mariana; So all the rest of them, both in that respect, of sucking blood, and occasioning massacres, and other respects too, are rather Marianits than Jesuits, Idolaters of the blessed Virgin Mary, than worshippers of Jesus. We consist in the Humility of the Ancients; we are Christians, jesus is merely a Saviour, A name of Mystery, Christ is Anointed, A name of Communication, of Accommodation, of Imitation; Cant. 1.3. And so this name, the name of Christ, is Oleum effusum, (as the Spouse speaks) An ointment, a perfume poured out upon us, and we are Christians. In the name of jesus, Corn. Lap. Eph. 1.10. S. Paul abounded, but in the Name of Christ more; for, (as a Jesuit gives us the account) he repeats the name of jesus almost three hundred times, but the name of Christ more than four hundred, in his Epistles. In this Church then, which is gathered in the Name of Christ, (though in the power and merit of jesus) This light which we speak of, This knowledge of God, and means of salvation, is in the highest exaltation. In the state of nature, we consider this light, as the Sun, to be risen at the Moluccae, in the farthest East; In the state of the law, we consider it, as the Sun come to Ormus, the first Quadrant; But in the Gospel, to be come to the Canaries, the fortunate Lands, the first Meridian. Now, whatsoever is beyond this, is Westward, towards a Declination. If we will go farther than to be Christians, and those doctrines, which the whole Christian Church hath ever believed, 1 Cor. 1.12. if we will be of Cephas, and of Apollo's, if we will call ourselves, or endanger, and give occasion to others, to call us from the Names of men, Papists, or Lutherans, or Calvinists, we depart from the true glory and serenity, from the lustre and splendour of this Sun; This is Tabernaculum Solis, Here in the Christian Church, Psal. 19.5. God hath set a Tabernacle for the Sun; And, as in nature, Man hath light enough to discern the principles of Reason; So in the Christian Church, (considered without subdivisions of Names, and Sects) a Christian hath light enough of all things necessary to salvation. So then, still roll thy ways upon God, Gather upon him nearer and nearer; for, all these are emanations of lights from him, that he might be found, and seen, and known by thee. The looking upon God, by the first light of Nature, is, to catechise, and examine thyself, whether thou do govern, and employ thy natural faculties to his glory; whether thou do shut thine eyes at a tentation, stop thine ears at a blasphemy upon God, or a defamation upon thy neighbour; and withhold thy hand from blood and bribes, and thy feet from fellowship in sin. The looking upon God, by the second light, the light of the law, is, to discern by that, that God hath always had a peculiar people of his own, and gathered them, and contained them in his worship, by certain visible, sensible Ordinances and Institutions, Sacraments, and Sacrifices, and ritual Ceremonies, and to argue and conclude out of God's former proceed with them, his greatness and his goodness towards the present world. And then, to see God by that last and best light, the light of the Christian Church, is, to be content with so much of God, as God hath revealed of himself to his Church; And (as it is expressed here) to hear him answer thee, By terrible things in righteousness; for, that he does as he is the God of our salvation, that is, as he works in the Christian Church; which is our last Consideration; By terrible, etc. In this Consideration, Respondet, ergo Orandum. (Gods proceeding with us in the Christian Church) this observation meets us first, That God's conversation with us there, is called an Answering; (He shall answer us) Now if we look that God should answer us, we must say something to God; and our way of speaking to God, is by petition, by prayer. If we present no petition, Rom. 10.20. if we pray not, we can look for no answer, for we ask none. Esaias is very bold, (saith S. Paul) when he says, That God was found of them that sought him not, and made manifest to them that asked not after him; Yet though it were boldly said, it was truly said; so early, and so powerful is God's preventing grace towards us. So it is a very ordinary phrase amongst the Prophets, God answered, and said thus, and thus, when the Prophet had asked nothing of God. But here we are upon Gods proceeding with man in the Christian Church; and so, God answers not, but to our petitions, to our prayers. In a Sermon, God speaks to the Congregation, but he answers only that soul, that hath been with him at Prayers before. A man may pray in the street, in the fields, in a fair; but it is a more acceptable and more effectual prayer, when we shut our doors, and observe our stationary houses for private prayer in our Chamber; and in our Chamber, when we pray upon our knees, then in our beds. But the greatest power of all, is in the public prayer of the Congregation. It is a good remembrance that Damascene gives, Non quia gentes quaedam faciunt, Damase. à nobis linquenda; We must not forbear things only therefore, because the Gentiles, or the Jews used them. The Gentiles, particularly the Romans, (before they were Christians) had a set Service, a prescribed form of Common prayer in their Temples; and they had a particular Officer in that State, who was Conditor precum, that made their Collects, and Prayers upon emergent occasions; And Omni lustro, every five years there was a review, and an alteration in their Prayers, and the state of things was presumed to have received so much change in that time, as that it was fit to change some of their Prayers and Collects. It must not therefore seem strange, that at the first, there were certain Collects appointed in our Church; nor that others, upon just occasion, be added. God's blessing here, in the Christian Church, (for, to that we limit this consideration) is, that here He will answer us; Therefore, here we must ask; Here, our ask is our communion at Prayer: And therefore they that undervalue, or neglect the prayers of the Church, have not that title to the benefit of the Sermon; for though God do speak in the Sermon, yet he answers, that is, applies himself, by his Spirit, only to them, who have prayed to him before. If they have joined in prayer, they have their interest, and shall feel their Consolation in all the promises of the Gospel, shed upon the Congregation, in the Sermon. Have you asked by prayer, Is there no Balm in Gilead? He answers you by me, Yes, there is Blame; Esay 53.5. He was wounded for your transgressions, and with his stripes you are healed; His Blood is your Balm, his Sacrament is your Gilead. Have you asked by prayer, Is there no Smith in Israel? 1 Sam. 13.18. No means to discharge myself of my fetters, and chains, of my temporal, and spiritual Encumbrances? God answers thee, Yes, there is; He bids you but look about, and you shall find yourself in Peter case; The Angel of the Lord present, A light shining, Act. 12.7. and his chains falling off: All your manacles locked upon the hands, All your chains loaded upon the legs, All your stripes numbered upon the back of Christ Jesus. You have said in your prayers here, (Lord, from whom all good counsels do proceed) And God answers you from hence, The Angel of the great Counsel shall dwell with you, and direct you. You have said in your prayers, Lighten our darkness, and God answers you by me, Esay 60.19. (as he did his former people by Esay) The Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light, and thy God thy glory. Petition God at prayers, and God shall answer all your petitions at the Sermon. There we begin, (if we will make profit of a Sermon) at Prayers; And thither we return again, (if we have made profit by a Sermon) in due time, to prayers. For, Confess. l. 1. c. 1. that is S. Augustine's holy Circle, in which he walks from Prayers to the Sermon, and from the Sermon, next day to Prayers again. Invocat te fides mea, says he to God; Here I stand or kneel in thy presence, and in the power of faith, to pray to thee. But where had I this faith, that makes my prayer acceptable? Dedisti mihi per ministerium Praedicatoris; I had it at the Sermon, I had it, saith he, by the ministry of the Preacher; but I had it therefore, because thy Spirit prepared me by prayer before; And I have it therefore, that is, to that end, that I might return faithfully to prayers again. As he is The God of our salvation, (that is, As he works in the Christian Church) he answers us: If we ask by prayer, he applies the Sermon; And, He answers by terrible things, in righteousness. These two words, (Terribilia per justitiam) By Terrible things in Righteousness, Terribilia per justitiam are ordinarily by our Expositors taken, to intimate a confidence, that God imprints by the Ordinance of his Church, that by this right use of Prayer and Preaching, they shall always be delivered from their enemies, or from what may be most terrible unto them. In which exposition, Righteousness signifies faithfulness, and Terrible things signify miraculous deliverances from, and terrible Judgements upon his, and our enemies. Therefore is God called, Deus fidelis, The faithful God; for, Deut. 7.9. that faithfulness implies a Covenant, made before, (and there entered his Mercy, that he would make that Covenant) and it implies also the assurance of the performance thereof, for there enters his faithfulness. So he is called, Fidelis Creator, (We commit our souls to God, 1 Pet. 4.19. as to a faithful Creator) He had an eternal gracious purpose upon us, to create us, and he hath faithfully accomplished it. So, Fidelis quia vocavit, He is faithful in having called us; 1 Thes. 5.24. That he had decreed, and that he hath done. So Christ is called, Fidelis Pontifex, Heb. 2.17. A merciful and a faithful high Priest; Merciful in offering himself for us, faithful in applying himself to us. So Gods whole word is called so often, so very often Testimonium fidele, A faithful witness, an evidence that cannot deceive, nor misled us. Psal. 19.8. Therefore we may be sure, that whatsoever God hath promised to his Church, (And whatsoever God hath done upon the enemies of his Church heretofore, those very performances to them, are promises to us, of the like succours in the like distresses) he will perform, re-performe, multiply performances thereof upon us. Esay 25.1. Thy counsels of old are faithfulness and truth; That is, whatsoever thou didst decree, was done even then, in the infallibility of that Decree; And when that Decree came to be executed, and actually done, in that very execution of that former Decree was enwrapped a new Decree, That the same should be done over and over again for us, when soever we needed it. So that then, casting up our account, from the destruction of Babel, by all the plagues of Egypt, through the depopulation of Canaan, and the massacre in Sennacheribs Army, to the swallowing of the Invincible Navy upon our Seas, and the bringing to light that Infernal, that subterranean Treason in our Land, we may argue, and assume, That the God of our salvation will answer us by terrible things, by multiplying of miracles, and ministering supplies, to the confusion of his, and our enemies, for, By terrible things in righteousness, will the God of our salvation answer us. So then, Per justitiam. his Judgements are these Terribilia, Terrible, fearful things; And he is faithful in his Covenant, and by terrible Judgements he will answer, that is, satisfy our expectation. And that is a convenient sense of these words. But, the word, which we translate Righteousness here, is Tzadok, and Tzadok is not faithfulness, but holiness; And these Terrible things are Reverend things; and so Tremellius translates it, and well; Per res Reverendas, By Reverend things, things to which there belongs a Reverence, thou shalt answer us. And thus, the sense of this place will be, That the God of our salvation, (that is, God working in the Christian Church) calls us to Holiness, to Righteousness, by Terrible things; not Terrible, in the way and nature of revenge; but Terrible, that is, stupendious, reverend, mysterious: That so we should not make Religion too homely a thing, but come always to all Acts, and Exercises of Religion, with reverence, with fear, and trembling, and make a difference, between Religious, and Civil Actions. In the frame and constitution of all Religions, these Materials, these Elements have ever entered; Some words of a remote signification, not vulgarly understood, some actions of a kind of halfe-horror and amazement, some places of reservation and retiredness, and appropriation to some sacred persons, and inaccessible to all others. Not to speak of the services, and sacrifices of the Gentiles, and those selfe-manglings and lacerations of the Priests of Isis, and of the Priests of Baal, (faintly counterfeited in the scourge and flagellations in the Roman Church) In that very discipline which was delivered from God, by Moses, the service was full of mystery, and horror, and reservation, By terrible things, (Sacrifices of blood in manifold effusions) God answered them, then. So, the matter of Doctrine was delivered mysteriously, and with much reservation, and in-intelligiblenesse, as Tertullian speaks. The Joy and Glory of Heaven was not easily understood by their temporal abundances of Milk, and Honey, and Oil, and Wine; and yet, in these (and scarce any other way) was Heaven presented, and notified to that people by Moses. Christ, a Messiah, a Saviour of the World, by shedding his blood for it, was not easily discerned in their Types and Sacrifices; And yet so, and scarce any other way was Christ revealed unto them. Hos. 12.10. God says, I have multiplied visions, and used similitudes, by the ministry of the Prophets. They were Visions, they were Similitudes, nor plain and evident things, obvious to every understanding, that God led his people by. And there was an Order of Doctors amongst the Jews that professed that way, To teach the People by Parables and dark say; Sandaei symbulica fol. 108. and these were the powerfullest Teachers amongst them, for they had their very name (Mosselim) from power and dominion; They had a power, a dominion over the affections of their Disciples, because teaching them by an obscure way, they created an admiration, and a reverence in their hearers, and laid a necessity upon them, of returning again to them, for the interpretation and signification of those dark Parables. Many think that Moses citys these obscure Doctors, these Mosselim, in that place, Num. 21.7. in the book of Numbers, when he says, Wherefore they that speak in Proverbs, say thus, and thus, And so he proceeds in a way and words, as hard to be understood, Psal. 49.4. as any place in all his Books. David professes this of himself often; I will open dark say upon my Harp, Psal. 77.2. And, I will open my mouth in a Parable. And this was the way of Solomon; for that very word is the Title of his book of Proverbs. And in this way of teaching, Matt. 7.19. our Saviour abounded, and excelled; for when it is said, He taught them as one having authority, And when it is said, They were astonished at his Doctrine, Luke 4.32. for his word was with Power, they refer that to this manner of teaching, that he astonished them with these reserved and dark say, and by the subsequent interpretation thereof, gained a reverend estimation amongst them, that he only could lead them to a desire to know, (that dark way increased their desire) and then he only satisfy them with the knowledge of those things which concerned their salvation. For these Parables, and comparisons of a remote signification, were called by the Jews, Potestates, Powers, Powerful insinuations, as, amongst the Grecians, the same things were called Axiomata, Dignities; And of Christ it is said, Without a Parable spoke he not. Mat. 13.34. So that God in the Old, and Christ in the New Testament, hath conditioned his Doctrine, and his Religion (that is, his outward worship) so, as that evermore there should be preserved a Majesty, and a reverential fear, and an awful discrimination of Divine things from Civil, and evermore something reserved to be inquired after, and laid up in the mouth of the Priest, that the People might acknowledge an obligation from him, in the exposition, and application thereof. Nay, this way of answering us by terrible things, (that is, by things that imprint a holy horror, and a Religious reverence) is much more in the Christian Church, than it can have been in any other Religion; Because, if we consider the Jews, (which is the only Religion, that can enter into any comparison with the Christian, in this kind) yet, we look more directly and more immediately upon God in Christ, than they could, who saw him but by way of Prophecy, a future thing that should be done after; we look upon God, in History, in matter of fact, upon things done, and set before our eyes; and so that Majesty, and that holy amazement, is more to us then ever it was to any other Religion, because we have a nearer approximation, and vicinity to God in Christ, than any others had, in any representions of their Gods; and it is a more dazzling thing to look upon the Sun, in a direct, then in an obliqne or side line. And therefore, the love of God, which is so often proposed unto us, is as often seasoned with the fear of God; nay, all our Religious affections are reduced to that one, To a reverential fear; If he be a Master, he calls for fear, and, Mal. 1.6. If he be a Father, he calls for honour; And honour implies a reverential fear. And that is the Art that David professes to teach, Artem timendi, Come ye children, and hearken unto me, Psal. 34.12. and I will teach you the fear of the Lord. That you think not Divinity an Occupation, nor Church-Service a recreation; but still remember, That the God of our Salvation (God working in the Christian Church) will answer you; but yet, by terrible things; that is, by not being over-fellowly with God, nor over-homely with places, and acts of Religion; which, it may be an advancement to your Devotion and edification, to consider, in some particulars in the Christian Church. And first, consider we it, in our manners, and conversation. Christ says, In moribus. john 15.14. Mat. 22.12. Henceforth I call you not servants, but friends. But, howsoever Christ called him friend, that was come to the feast without the wedding garment, he cast him out, because he made no difference of that place from another. First then, remember by what terrible things God answers thee in the Christian Church, when he comes to that round and peremptory issue, Mark 16.16. Qui non credider it, damnabitur, He that believes not every Article of the Christian faith, & with so steadfast a belief, as that he would die for it, Damnabitur, (no modification, no mollification, no going less) He shall be damned. Consider too the nature of Excommunication, That it tears a man from the body of Christ Jesus; That that man withers that is torn off, and Christ himself is wounded in it. Consider the insupportable penances that were laid upon sinners, by those penitential Canons, that went through the Church in those Primitive times; when, for many sins which we pass through now, without so much as taking knowledge that they are sins, men were not admitted to the Communion all their lives, no, nor easily upon their deathbeds. Consider how dangerously an abuse of that great doctrine of Predestination may bring thee to think, that God is bound to thee, and thou not bound to him, That thou mayest renounce him, and he must embrace thee, and so make thee too familiar with God, and too homely with Religion, upon presumption of a Decree. Consider that when thou preparest any unclean action, in any sinful nakedness, God is not only present with thee in that room then, but then tells thee, That at the day of Judgement thou must stand in his presence, and in the presence of all the World, not only naked, but in that foul, and sinful, and unclean action of nakedness, which thou committedst then; Consider all this and confess, that for matter of manners, and conversation, The God of thy Salvation answers thee by terrible things. And so it is also, if we consider Prayer in the Church. God House is the house of Prayer; In oratione. It is his Court of Requests; There he receives petitions, there he gives Order upon them. And you come to God in his House, as though you came to keep him company, to sit down, and talk with him half an hour; or you come as Ambassadors, covered in his presence, as though ye came from as great a Prince as he. You meet below, and there make your bargains, for biting, for devouring Usury, and then you come up hither to prayers, and so make God your Broker. You rob, and spoil, and eat his people as bread, by Extortion, and bribery, and deceitful weights and measures, and deluding oaths in buying and selling, and then come hither, and so make God your Receiver, and his house a den of Thiefs. His house is Sanctum Sanctorum, The holiest of holies, and you make it only Sanctuarium; It should be a place sanctified by your devotions, and you make it only a Sanctuary to privilege Malefactors, A place that may redeem you from the ill opinion of men, who must in charity be bound to think well of you, because they see you here. Offer this to one of your Princes, (as God argues in the Prophet) and see, if he will suffer his house to be profaned by such uncivil abuses; Psal. 47.3. And, Terribilis Rex, The Lord most high is terrible, and a great King over all the earth; Psal. 96.4. and, Terribilis super omnes Deos, Moore terrible than all other Gods. Let thy Master be thy god, or thy Mistress thy god, thy Belly be thy god, or thy Back be thy god, thy fields be thy god, or thy chests be thy god, Terribilis super omnes Deos, The Lord is terrible above all gods, Psal. 95.3. Deut. 28.58. A great God, and a great King above all gods. You come, and call upon him by his name here, But Magnun & terribile, Glorious and fearful is the name of the Lord thy God. And, as if the Son of God were but the Son of some Lord, that had been your Schoolfellow in your youth, and so you continued a boldness to him ever after, so, because you have been brought up with Christ from your cradle, and catechised in his name, Psal. 111.4. his name becomes less reverend unto you, And Sanctum & terribile, Holy, and reverend, Holy and terrible should his name be. Consider the resolution that God hath taken upon the Hypocrite, and his prayer; What is the hope of the Hypocrite, job 27.8. Hos 7.14. when God taketh away his soul? Will God hear his cry? They have not cried unto me with their hearts, when they have howled upon their beds. Consider, that error in the matter of our prayer frustrates the prayer and makes it ineffectual. Zebedees' Sons would have been placed at the right hand, Mat. 20.21. and at the left hand of Christ, and were not heard. Error in the manner may frustrate our prayer, and make it ineffectual too. jam. 4.3. Ye ask, and are not heard, because ye ask amiss. It is amiss, if it be not referred to his will, Luke 5.12. jam. 1.6. (Lord if thou wilt, thou canst make me clean.) It is amiss, if it be not asked in faith, (Let not him that wavereth, think he shall receive any thing of the lord) It is amiss, if prayer be discontinued, 1 Thes. 5.17. Luke 22.44. Esay 1.15. intermitted, done by fits, (Pray incessantly) And it is so too, if it be not vehement; for Christ was in an Agony in his prayer, and his sweat was as great drops of blood. Of prayers without these conditions, God says, When you spread forth your hands, I will hid mine eyes, & when you make many prayers, I will not hear you. Their prayer shall not only be ineffectual, Prov. 28.9. Psal. 129.7. but even their prayer shall be an abomination; And not only an abomination to God, but destruction upon themselves; for, Their prayer shall be turned to sin. And, when they shall not be heard for themselves, no body else shall be heard for them; (Though these three men, Ezek. 14.14. Noah, job, & Daniel, stood for them, they should not deliver them; Though the whole Congregation consisted of Saints, they shall not be heard for him, nay, they shall be forbidden to pray for him, forbidden to mention, or mean him in their prayers, as jeremy was. When God leaves you no way of reconciliation but prayer, and then lays these heavy and terrible conditions upon prayer; Confess that though he be the God of your salvation, and do answer you, yet By terrible things doth the God of your salvation answer you. And consider this again, as in manners, and in prayer, so in his other Ordinance of Preaching. Think with yourselves what God looks for from you, In concionibus. 1 Cor. 1.21. and what you give him, in that Exercise. Because God calls Preaching foolishness, you take God at his word, and you think Preaching a thing under you. Hence is it, that you take so much liberty in censuring and comparing Preacher and Preacher, nay Sermon and Sermon from the same Preacher; as though we preached for wagers, and as though coin were to be valued from the inscription merely, and the image, and the person, and not for the metal. You measure all by persons; 1 〈◊〉 4. ●●. and yet, Non erubescit is faciem Sacerdotis, You respect not the person of the Priest, you give not so much reverence to God's Ordinance, as he does. In no Church of Christendom but ours, doth the Preacher preach uncovered. And for all this good, and humble, and reverend example, (fit to be continued by us) cannot we keep you uncovered till the Text be read. All the Sermon is not God's word, but all the Sermon is God's Ordinance, and the Text is certainly his word. There is no salvation but by faith, nor faith but by hearing, nor bearing but by preaching; and they that think meanliest of the Keys of the Church, and speak faintliest of the Absolution of the Church, will yet allow, That those Keys lock, and unlock in Preaching; That Absolution is conferred, or with held in Preaching, That the proposing of the promises of the Gospel in preaching, is that binding and losing on earth, which binds and loses in heaven. And then, though Christ have bid us, Preach the Gospel to every creature, Mar. 16.15. yet, in his own great Sermon in the Mount, he hath forbidden us, to give holy things to dogs, Mat. 7.6. or to cast pearl before swine, lest they trample them, and turn and rend us. So that if all those manifold and fearful judgements, which swell in every Chapter and blow in every verse, and thunder in every line of every Book of the Bible, fall upon all them that come hither, as well, if they turn, and rend, that is, Calumniate us, the person of the Preacher, as if they trample upon the pearls, that is, undervalue the Doctrine, and the Ordinance itself; If his terrible Judgements fall upon every uncharitable misinterpretation of that which is said here, and upon every irreverence in this place, and in this action; Confess, that though he be the God of your salvation, and do answer you, yet, by terrible things doth the God of your salvation answer you. And confess it also, as in manners, and in prayers, and in preaching, so in the holy and blessed Sacrament. This Sacrament of the Body and Blood of our Saviour, Luther calls safely, In Sacramento. Venerabile & adorabile; for certainly, whatsoever that is which we see, that which we receive, is to be adored; for, we receive Christ. He is Res Sacramenti, The form, the Essence, the substance, the soul of the Sacrament; And Sacramentum sine re Sacramenti, mors , Bernar. To take the body, and not the soul, the bread, and not Christ, is death. But he that feels Christ, in the receiving of the Sacrament, and will not bend his knee, would scarce bend his knee, if he saw him. The first of that royal Family, Alvarez de Auxil. Epist. ad Phil. 3. which thinks itself the greatest in Christendom at this day, The House of Ostrich, had the first marks of their Greatness, The Empire, brought into that House, for a particular reverence done to the holy and blessed Sacrament. What the bread and wine is, or what becomes of it, Damasc. Damascen thinks impertinent to be inquired. He thinks he hath said enough; (and so may we do) Migrat in substantiam animae; There is the true Transubstantiation, that when I have received it worthily, it becomes my very soul; that is, My soul grows up into a better state, and habitude by it, and I have the more soul for it, the more sanctified, the more deified soul by that Sacrament. Now this Sacrament, which as it is ministered to us, is but a Sacrament, but as it is offered to God, is a Sacrifice too, is a fearful, a terrible thing: If the sacrifices of the Law, the blood of Goats and Rams, were so, how fearful, how terrible, how reverential a thing is the blood of this immaculate Lamb, the Son of God? And though God do so abound in goodness towards us, possint injuriata Sacramenta prodesse reversis, Cyprian. (as S. Cyprian excellently expresses it) That that Sacrament which we have injured and abused, received unworthily, or irreverently, at one time, may yet benefit us, and be the savour and seal of life unto us, at another, yet when you hear that terrible Thunder break upon you, That the unworthy receiver eats and drinks his own damnation, 1 Cor. 11.27. That he makes Christ Jesus, who is the propitiation of all the world, his damnation; And then, That not to have come to a severe examination of the Conscience before, and to a sincere detestation of the sin, and to a formed, and fixed, and deliberate, and determinate resolution against that sin, at the receiving of the Sacrament, (which, alas, how few do? Is there one that does it? There is scorce one) That this makes a man an unworthy receiver of the Sacrament, That thus we make a mock of the Son of God, Heb. 10.29. thus we tread the blood of the Covenant under foot, and despite the Spirit of grace; And that for this, at the last day, we shall be ranked with judas, and not only with judas, as a negligent despiser, but with judas, as an actual betrayer of the blood of Christ Jesus. Consider well, with what fearful Conditions even this scale of your reconciliation is accompanied, and though you may not doubt, but that God, the God of your salvation does answer you, yet you must confess too, That it is by terrible things, that he does it. And, as it is so in matter of manners, and so in our prayers, and so in our preaching, and so in the Sacrament, so is it also at the hour of our Death, which is as far as we can pursue this Meditation, (for, after Death we can ask nothing at God's hands, and therefore God makes us no answer) And therefore with that Conclusion of all, we shall conclude all, That by terrible things, the God of our salvation answers us, at the hour of our death. Though death be but a sleep, In morte. yet it is a sleep that an Earthquake cannot wake; And yet there is a Trumpet that will, when that hand of God, that gathered dust to make these bodies, shall crumble these bodies into dust again, when that soul that evaporated itself in unnecessary disputations in this world, shall make such fearful and distempered conclusions, as to see God only by absence, (never to see him face to face) And to know God only by ignorance, (never to know him sicuti est, as he is) (for he is All mercy) And to possess immortality, and impossibility of dying only in a continual dying; when, as a Cabinet whose key were lost, must be broken up, and torn in pieces, before the Jewel that was laid up in it, can be taken out; so thy body, (the Cabinet of thy soul) must be shaked and shivered by violent sickness, before that soul can go out, And when it is thus gone out, must answer for all the imperfections of that body, which body polluted it, And yet, though this soul be such a loser by that body, it is not perfectly well, nor fully satisfied, till it be reunited to that body again; when thou remember'st, Mat. 26.36. (and, oh, never forget it) that Christ himself was heavy in his soul unto Death, Mat. 26.39. That Christ himself came to a Si possibile, If it be possible, let this Cup pass; That he came to a Quare dereliquisti, Mat. 27.46. a bitter sense of God's dereliction, and forsaking of him, when thou considerest all this, compose thyself for death, but think it not a light matter to die. Death made the Lion of Judah to roar; and do not thou think, that that which we call going away like a Lamb, doth more testify a conformity with Christ, than a strong sense, and bitter agony, and colluctation with death, doth. Christ gave us the Rule, in the Example; He taught us what we should do, by his doing it; And he pre-admitted a fearful apprehension of death. A Lamb is a Hieroglyphique of Patience, but not of stupidity. And death was Christ's Consummatum est, All ended in death; yet he had sense of death; How much more doth a sad sense of our transmigration belong to us, to whom death is no Consummatum est, but an In principio; our account, and our everlasting state gins but then. Apud te propitiatio, Psal. 130.4. ut timearis; In this knot we tie up all; With thee there is mercy, that thou mightest be feared. There is a holy fear, that does not only consist with an assurance of mercy, Pro. 21.15. but induces, constitutes that assurance. Pavor operantibus iniquitatem, says Solomon; Pavor, horror, and servile fear, jealousy and suspicion of God, diffidence, and distrust in his mercy, and a bosome-prophecy of self-destruction; Destruction itself, (so we translate it) be upon the workers of iniquity; Pavor operantibus iniquitatem; And yet says that wise King, Pro. 28.14. Beatus qui semper Pavidus; Blessed is that man that always fears; who, though he always hope, and believe the good that God will show him, yet also fears the evils, that God might justly multiply upon him; Blessed is he that looks upon God with assurance, but upon himself with fear. For, though God have given us light, by which we may see him, even in Nature, (for, He is the confidence of all the ends of the Earth, and of them that are a far of upon the Sea) Though God have given us a clearer light in the Law, and experience of his providence upon his people throughout the Old Testament, Though God have abundantly, infinitely multiplied these lights and these helps to us in the Christian Church, where he is the God of salvation, yet, as he answers us by terrible things, (in that first acceptation of the words which I proposed to you) that is, Gives us assurances, by miraculous testimonies in our behalf, that he will answer our patiented expectation, by terrible Judgements and Revenges upon our enemies, In his Righteousness, that is, In his faithfulness, according to his Promises, and according to his performances of those Promises, to his former people; So in the words, considered the other way, In his Holiness, that is, in his ways of imprinting Holiness in us, He answers us by terrible things, in all those particulars, which we have presented unto you; By infusing faith; but with that terrible addition, Damnabitur, He that believeth not, shall be damned; He answers us, by composing our manners, and rectifying our life and conversation; but with terrible additions of censures, and Excommunications, and tearings off from his own body, which is a death to us, and a wound to him; He answers us by enabling us to speak to him in Prayer; but with terrible additions, for the matter, for the manner, for the measure of our Prayer, which being neglected, our very Prayer is turned to sin. He answers us in Preaching; but with that terrible commination, that even his word may be the savour of death unto death. He answers us in the Sacrament; but with that terrible perplexity and distraction, that he that seems to be a john, or a Peter, a Loving, or a Beloved Disciple, may be a judas, and he that seems to have received the seal of his reconciliation, may have eat and drunk his own Damnation. And he answers us at the hour of death; but with this terrible obligation, That even then I make sure my salvation with fear and trembling. That so we imagine not a God of wax, whom we can melt, and mould, when, and how we will; That we make not the Church a Market, That an over-homelines and familiarity with God in the acts of Religion, bring us not to an irreverence, nor indifferency of places; But that, as the Militant Church is the porch of the Triumphant, so our reverence here, may have some proportion to that reverence which is exhibited there, Revel. 4.10. where the Elders cast their Crowns before the Throne, and continue in that holy and reverend acclamation, Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive Glory, and Honour, and Power; for, (as we may add from this Text) By terrible things, O God of our salvation, dost thou answer us in righteousness. SERM. LXIX. The fifth of my Prebend Sermons upon my five Psalms: Preached at S. Paul's. PSAL. 66.3. Say unto God, How terrible art thou in thy works! Through the greatness of thy Power shall thine Enemies submit themselves unto thee. IT is well said, (so well, as that more than one of the Fathers seem to have delighted themselves in having said it) Titulus Clavis, The Title of the Psalm, is the Key of the Psalm; the Title opens the whole Psalm. The Church of Rome will needs keep the Key of heaven, and the key to that Key, the Scriptures, wrapped up in that Translation, which in no case must be departed from. There, the key of this Psalm, (the Title thereof) hath one bar wrested, that is, made otherwise, than he that made the Key, (the Holy Ghost) intended it; And another bat inserted, that is, one clause added, which the Holy Ghost added not. Where we read, in the Title, Victori, To the chief Musician, they read, In finem, A Psalm directed upon the end. I think, they mean upon the later times, because it is in a great part, a Prophetical Psalm, of the calling of the Gentiles. But after this change, they also add, Resurrectionis, A Psalm concerning the Resurrection; and that is not in the Hebrew, nor any thing in the place thereof. And, after one Author in that Church had charged the Jews, That they had razed that clause out of the Hebrew, Leo Castr. and that it was in the Hebrew at first, A learned, and a laborious Jesuit, (for truly, Lorinus. Schools may confess the Jesuits to be learned, for they have assisted there; and States, and Councell-tables may confess the Jesuits to be laborious, for they have troubled them there) he, I say, after he hath chidden his fellow, for saying, That this word had ever been in the Hebrew, or was razed out from thence by the Jews, concludes roundly, Vndecunque advenerit, Howsoever those Additions, which are not in the Hebrew, came into our Translation, Authoritatem habent, & retineri debent, Their very being there, gives them Authentikenesse, and Authority, and there they must be. That this, in the Title of this Psalm, be there, we are content, as long as you know, that this particular, (That this Psalm by the Title thereof concerns the Resurrection) is not in the Original, but added by some Expositor of the Psalms; you may take knowledge too, That that addition hath been accepted and followed, by many, and ancient, and reverend Expositors, almost all of the Eastern, and many of the Western Church too; and therefore, for our use and accommodation, may well be accepted by us also. We consider ordinarily three Resurrections: A spiritual Resurrection, a Resurrection from sin, by Grace in the Church; A temporal Resurrection, a Resurrection from trouble, and calamity in the world; And an eternal Resurrection, a Resurrection after which no part of man shall die, or suffer again, the Resurrection into Glory. Of the first, The Resurrection from sin, Esay 60.1. is that intended in Esay, Arise, and shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. Of the later Resurrection, is that harmonious strain of all the Apostles in their Creed intended, I believe the Resurrection of the body. And of the third Resurrection, from oppressions and calamities which the servants of God suffer in this life, Calvin. job 19.26. Ezek. 37. some of our later men understand that place of job, I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that in my flesh I shall see God; And that place of Ezekiel all understand of that Resurrection, where God saith to the Prophet, Son of man, can these bones live? Can these men thus ruined, thus dispersed, be restored again by a resurrection in this world? And to this resurrection from the pressures and tribulations of this life, do those Interpreters, who interpret this Psalm, of a Resurrection, refer this our Text, (Say unto God, How terrible art thou in thy works! Through the greatness of thy power shall thine enemies submit themselves unto thee.) Consider how powerfully God hath, and you cannot doubt, but that God will give them a Resurrection in this world, who rely upon him, and use his means, whensoever any calamity hath dejected them, ruined them, scattered them in the eyes of men. Say unto the Lord, That he hath done it, and the Lord will say unto thee, that he will do it again, and again for thee. We call Noah, Divisio. janus, because he had two faces, in this respect, That he looked into the former, and into the later world, he saw the times before, and after the flood. David in this Text, is a janus too; He looks two ways, he hath a Prospect, and a Retrospect, he looks backward and forward, what God had done, and what God would do. For, as we have one great comfort in this, That Prophecies are become Histories, that whatsoever was said by the mouths of the Prophets, concerning our salvation in Christ, is effected, (so prophecies are made histories) so have we another comfort in this Text, That Histories are made Prophecies; That whatsoever we read that God had formerly done, in the relief of his oppressed servants, we are thereby assured that he can, that he will do them again; and so Histories are made Prophecies: And upon these two pillars, A thankful acknowledgement of that which God hath done, And a faithful assurance that God will do so again, shall this present Exercise of your devotions be raised; And these are our two parts. Dicite Deo, Say unto God, How terrible art thou in thy works! (that part is Historical, of things past) In multitudine virtutis, In the greatness of thy power, shall thine enemies submit themselves unto thee, (that part is Prophetical, of things to come.) In the History we are to turn many leaves, and many in the Prophecy too, to pass many steps, to put out many branches in each. In the first, these; Dicite, say ye; where we consider first, The Person that enjoins this public acknowledgement and thanksgiving, It is David, and David as a King; for to Him, to the King, the ordering of public actions, even in the service of God appertains. David, David the King speaks this, by way of counsel, and persuasion, and concurrence to all the world, (for so in the beginning, and in some other passages of the Psalm, it is Omnis terra, All ye lands, Verse 1. and All the earth, Verse 4.) David doth what he can, that all the world might concur in one manner of serving God. By way of Assistance he extends to all, And by way of Injunction and commandment to all his, to all that are under his government, Dicite, say you, that is, you shall say, you shall serve God thus. And as he gives counsel to all, and giveth laws to all his subjects, so he submits himself to the same law; For, (as we shall see in some parts of the Psalm, to which the Text refers) he professes in his particular, that he will say and do, Iosh. 24.15. whatsoever he bids them do, and say; My house shall serve the Lord, says joshua; But it is, Ego, & domus mea, I and my house; himself would serve God aright too. From such a consideration of the persons, in the Historical part, we shall pass to the commandment, to the duty itself; That is, first Dicite, say. It is more than Cogitate, to Consider Gods former goodness; more than Admirari, to Admire Gods former goodness; speculations, and ecstasies are not sufficient services of God; Dicite, Say unto God, Declare, manifest, publish your zeal, is more than Cogitate, Consider it, think of it; but it is less than Facite, To come to action; we must declare our thankful zeal to God's cause, we must not modify, not disguise that; But, for the particular ways of promoving, and advancing that cause, in matter of action, we must refer that to them, to whom God hath referred it. The Duty is a Commemoration of Benefits; Dicite, Speak of it, ascribe it, attribute it to the right Author; Who is that? That is the next Consideration, Dicite Deo, Say unto God; Non vobis, Not to your own Wisdom, or Power, Non Sanctis, Not to the care and protection of Saints or Angels, Sed nomini ejus da gloriam, Only unto his name be all the glory ascribed. And then, that which falls within this commandment, this Consideration, is Opera ejus, The works of God, (How terrible art thou in thy works!) It is not Decreta ejus, Arcana ejus, The secrets of his State, the ways of his government, unrevealed Decrees, but those things, in which he hath manifested himself to man, Opera, his works. Consider his works, and consider them so as this commandment enjoins, that is, How terrible God is in them; Determine not your Consideration upon the work itself, for so you may think too lightly of it, That it is but some natural Accident, or some imposture and false Miracle, or illusion, Or you may think of it with an amazement, with a stupidity, with a consternation, when you consider not from whom the work comes, consider God in the work; And God so, as that though he be terrible in that work, yet, he is so terrible but so, as the word of this Text expresses this terribleness, which word is Norah, and Norah is but Reverendus, it is a terror of Reverence, not a terror of Confusion, that the Consideration of God in his works should possess us withal. And in those plain and smooth paths, we shall walk through the first part, The historical part, what God hath formerly done, (Say unto God, how terrible art thou in thy works!) from thence we descend to the other, The Prophetical part, what, upon our performance of this duty, God will surely do in our behalf; he will subdue those enemies, which, because they are ours, are his; In multitudine virtutis, In the greatness of thy power, shall thine enemies submit themselves unto thee. Where we shall see first, That even God himself hath enemies; no man therefore can be free from them; And then we shall see, whom God calls enemies here, Those who are enemies to his cause, and to his friends; All those, if we will speak David's language, the Holy Ghosts language, we must call God's enemies. And these enemies nothing can mollify, nothing can reduce, but Power; fair means, and persuasion will not work upon them; Preaching, Disputing will not do it; It must be Power, and greatness of power, and greatness of God's Power. The Law is Power, and it is God's Power; All just Laws are from God. One Act of this Power (an occasional executing of Laws at some few times, against the enemies of God's truth) will not serve; there must be a constant continuation of the execution thereof; nor will that serve, if that be done only for worldly respects, to raise money, and not rather to draw them, who are under those Laws, to the right worship of God, in the truth of his Religion. And yet all, that even all this, This power, this great power, his power shall work upon these, his, and our enemies, is but this, They shall submit themselves, says the text, but how? Mentientur tibi, (as it is in the Original, and as you find it in the Margin) They shall dissemble, they shall lie, they shall yield a feigned obedience, they shall make as though they were good Subjects, but not be so. And yet, even this, Though their submission be but dissembled, but counterfeited, David puts amongst God's blessings to a State, and to a Church; It is some blessing, when God's enemies dare not appear, and justify themselves, and their Cause, as it is a heavy discouragement, when they dare do that. Though God do not so far consummate their happiness, as that their enemies shall be truly reconciled, or throughly rooted out, yet he shall afford them so much happiness, as that they shall do them no harm. And, Beloved, this distribution of the text, which I have given you, is rather a Paraphrase, than a Division, and therefore the rest will rather be a Repetition, than a Dilatation; And I shall only give some such note, and mark, upon every particular branch, as may return them, and fix them in your memories, and not enlarge myself far in any of them, for I know, the time will not admit it. First then, we remember you, in the first branch of the first part, that David, 1 Part. Rex gubernat Ecclesiam. in that Capacity, as King, institutes those Orders, which the Church is to observe in the public service of God. For, the King is King of men; not of bodies only, but of souls too; And of Christian men; of us, not only as we worship one God, but as we are to express that worship in the outward acts of Religion in the Church. God hath called himself King; and he hath called Kings Gods. And when we look upon the actions of Kings, we determine not ourselves in that person, but in God working in that person. As it is not I that do any good, 1 Cor. 15.10. but the grace of God in me, So it is not the King that commands, but the power of God in the King. For, as in a Commission from the King, the King himself works in his Commissioners, and their just Act is the King's Act: So in the King's lawful working upon his Subjects, God works, & the King's acts are Gods acts. That abstinence therefore, and that forbearance which the Roman Church hath used, from declaring whether the Laws of secular Magistrates do bind the Conscience, or no, that is, whether a man sin in breaking a Temporal Law, or no, (for, though it have been disputed in their books, and though the Bishop of that Church were supplicated in the Trent Council, to declare it, yet he would never be brought to it) that abstinence, I say, of theirs, though it give them one great advantage, yet it gives us another. For, by keeping it still undetermined, and undecided, how far the Laws of temporal Princes do bind us, they keep up that power, which is so profitable to them, that is, To divide Kings and Subjects, and maintain jealousies between them, because, if the breach of any Law, constitute a sin, then enters the jurisdiction of Rome; for, that is the ground of their indirect power over Princes, In ordine ad spiritualia, that in any action, which may conduce to sin, they may meddle, and direct, and constrain temporal Princes. That is their advantage, in their forbearing to declare this doctrine; And then, our advantage is, That this enervates, and weakens, nay destroys and annibilates that ordinary argument, That there must be always a Visible Church, in which every man may have clear resolution, and infallible satisfaction, in all scruples that arise in him, and that the Roman Church is that Seat, and Throne of Infallibility. For, how does the Roman Church give any man infallible satisfaction, whether these or these things, grounded upon the temporal Laws of secular Princes, be sins or no, when as that Church hath not, nor will not come to a determination in that point? How shall they come to the Sacrament? how shall they go out of the world with a clear conscience, when many things lie upon them which they know not, nor can be informed by their Confessors, whether they he sins or no? And thus it is in divers other points besides this; They pretend to give satisfaction and peace in all cases, and pretend to be the only true Church for that, and yet leave the conscience in ignorance, and in distemper, and distress, and distraction in many particulars. The Law of the Prince is rooted in the power of God. The root of all is Order, and the orderer of all is the King; And what the good Kings of Judah, and the religious Kings of the Primitive Christian Church did, every King may, nay, should do. For, both the Tables are committed to him; (as well the first that concerns our religious duties to God, as the other that concerns our Civil duties to men.) So is the Ark, where those Tables are kept, and so is the Temple, where that Ark is kept; all committed to him; and he oversees the manner of the religious service of God. And therefore it is, that in the Schools we call Sedition and Rebellion, Sacrilege; for, though the trespass seem to be directed but upon a man, yet in that man, whose office (and consequently his person) is sacred, God is opposed, and violated. And it is impiously said of a Jesuit, (I may easily be believed of that Jesuit, Gretzer. if any other might be excepted) Non est Regum etiam veram doctrinam confirmare, The King hath nothing to do with Religion, neither doth it belong to him to establish any form of Religion in his Kingdom, though it be the right Religion, and though it be but by way of Confirmation. This than David, Omnibus persuadet. David as a King takes to be in his care, in his office, To rectify and settle Religion, that is, the outward worship of God. And this he intimates, this he conveys by way of counsel, and persuasion to all the world, he would feign have all agree in one service of God. Ver. 1. Therefore he enters the Psalm so, jubilate omnes terrae, Rejoice all ye lands; Ver. 4. and, Adoret te omnis terrae, All the earth shall worship thee; and again, Venite & audite omnes, Ver. 16. Come and hear all ye that fear God. For, as S. Cyprian says of Bishops, That every Bishop is an universal Bishop, That is, must take into his care and contemplation, not only his own particular Diocese, but the whole Catholic Church: So every Christian King is a King of the whole Christian world, that is, must study, and take into his care, not only his own kingdom, but all others too. For, it is not only the municipal law of that kingdom, by which he is bound to see his own subjects, in all cases, righted, but in the whole law of Nations every King hath an interest. My soul may be King, that is, reside principally in my heart, or in my brain, but it neglects not the remoter parts of my body. David maintains Religion at home; but he assists, as much as he can, the establishing of that Religion abroad too. David endeavours that, persuades that every where; but he will be sure of it at home; Suis imperat. There he enjoins it, there he commands it; Dicite, says he, Say; that is, This you shall say, you shall serve God thus. We cannot provide, that there shall be no Wolves in the world, but we have provided that there shall be no Wolves in this kingdom. Idolatry will be, but there needs be none amongst us. Idolaters were round about the children of Israel in the land of promise; They could not make all those Proselytes; but yet they kept their own station. When the Arian heresy had so surrounded the world, as that Vniversa fere Orientalis Ecclesia, Almost all the Eastern Church, Nicephor. Vinc. Lyra. And Cuncti pene Latini Episcopi, aut vi, aut fraude decepti, Almost all the Bishops of the Western Church, were deceived, or threatened out of their Religion into Arianism; Insomuch, Hilar. that S. Hilary gives a note of an hundred and five Bishops of note, noted with that heresy; When that one Bishop, who will needs be all alone, the Bishop of Rome, Liberius, so far subscribed to that heresy, Hieron. De Roma. pont. l. 4. c. 9 (as S. Hieroms express words are) that Bellarmine himself does not only not deny it, but finds himself bound, and finds it hard for him to prove, That though Liberius did outwardly profess himself to be an Arian, yet in his heart he was none; yet for all this impetuousness of this flood of this heresy, Athanasius, as Bishop, excommunicated the Arians in his Diocese, And Constantine, as Emperor, banished them out of his Dominions. Athanasius would have been glad, if no other Church, Constantine would have been glad, if no other State would have received them; When they could not prevail so far, yet they did that which was possible, and most proper to them, they preserved the true worship of the true God in their own Jurisdiction. David could not have done that, if he had not had a true zeal to God's truth, Ipse facit. quod jub●●. in his own heart. And therefore, as we have an intimation of his desire to reduce the whole world, and a testimony of his earnestness towards his own Subjects, so we have an assurance, that in his own particular, he was constantly established in this truth, He calls to all, (Come and see the works of God) And more particularly to all his, (O bless our God ye people) but he proposes himself to their consideration too, Ver. 5. Ver. 8. Ver. 16. Psal. 145.3. (I will declare what he hath done for my soul.) Great is the Lord, and greatly to be feared, says this religious King, in another Psalm; And that is a Proclamation, a Remonstrance to all the world. He adds, One generation shall declare thy works to another; Ver. 4. Ver. 6. And that is a propagation to the ends of the world. But all this is rooted in that which is personal, and follows after, I will speak of the glorious honour of thy Majesly; And that is a protestation for his own particular. And to the same purpose is that which follows in the next verse, Men shall speak of the might of thy terrible acts; They shall, that is, They should; and, I would all men would, says David; But, whether they do, or no, I will declare thy greatness, says he there; I will not be defective in my particular. And David was to be trusted with a pious endeavour amongst his Neighbours, and with a pious care over all his own subjects, as long as he nourished, and declared so pious a disposition in his own person. And truly, it is an injurious, it is a disloyal suspicion, and jealousy, it is an ungodly fascination of our own happiness, to doubt of good effects abroad, and of a blessed assurance at home, as long as the zeal of God's truth remains so constantly in his heart, and flows out so declaratorily in his actions, in whose person God assures both our temporal safety, and our Religion. We pass now from this consideration of the persons; which, though it be fixed here, Dicite. in the highest, in Kings, extends to all, to whom any power is committed, To Magistrates, to Masters, to Fathers, All are bound to propagate God's truth to others, but especially to those who are under their charge; And this they shall best do, if themselves be the Example. So far we have proceeded, and we come now to the Duty, as it is here more particularly expressed, Dicite, Say unto God, Publish, declare, manifest your zeal. Christ is Verbum, The Word, and that excludes silence; but Christ is also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and that excludes rashness, and impertinence in our speech. Inter caeteras Dei appellationes, Nazianz. Sermonem veneramur, Amongst Gods other Names, we honour that, that he is the Word; That implies a Communication, God's goodness in speaking to us, and an obligation upon us, Josh. 10.12. to speak to him. For, Beloved, That standing of the Sun and Moon, which gave occasion to the drawing of so much blood of the Amorites, is, in the Original, not Siste Sol, but Sile Sol; He does not bid the Sun and Moon stand still, but he bids them say nothing, make no noise, no motion so. Be the Sun the Magistrate, and be the Moon, the Church, Si sileant, if they be silent, command not, pray not, avow not God's cause, Acts 2.3. Mat. 12.22. Mar. 7.32. the case is dangerous. The Holy Ghost fell in fiery tongues, he inflamed them, and inflamed them to speak. Divers dumb men were presented to Christ; but if they were dumb, they were deaf too, and some of them blind. Upon men that are dumb, that is, speechless in avowing him, God heaps other mischievous impediments too; Deafness, They shall not hear him in his word, and Blindness, They shall not see him in his works. Dicite, Magis quàm cogitare. Say, says David, Delight to speak of God, and with God, and for God; Dicite, say something. We told you, this was Magis quàm Cogitare, That there was more required then to think of God. Consideration, Meditation, Speculation, Contemplation upon God, and divine objects, have their place, and their season; But this is more than that; And more than Admiration too, for all these may determine in ecstasies, and in stupidities, and in useless and frivolous imaginations. Gold may be beat so thin, as that it may be blown away; And Speculations, even of divine things, may be blown to that thinness, to that subtlety, as that all may evaporate, never fixed, never applied to any use. God had conceived in himself, from all eternity, certain Ideas, certain parterns of all things, which he would create. But these Ideas, these conceptions produced not a creature, not a worm, not a weed; but then, Dixit, & facta sunt, God spoke, and all things were made. Inward speculations, nay, inward zeal, nay, inward prayers, are not full performances of our Duty. God hears willingliest, when men hear too; when we speak aloud in the cares of men, and publish, and declare, and manifest, and avow our zeal to his glory. It is a duty, Minùs quam facore. which in every private man, goes beyond the Cogitare, and the Admirari; but yet not so far as to a Facite, in the private man. Private men must think piously, and seriously, and speak zealously, and seasonably of the cause of God. But this does not authorise, nor justify such a forwardness in any private man, as to come to actions, though he, in a rectified conscience, apprehend, that God's cause might be advantaged by those actions of his. For, matter of action requires public warrant, and is not safely grounded upon private zeal. When Peter, out of his own zeal, drew his sword for Christ, Origen. Nondum manifestè conceperat Euangelium patienty. He was not yet well instructed in the patience of the Gospel; Nay, he was submitted to the sentence of the law, out of the mouth of the supreme Judge, Mat. 26.54. All they that take the sword (that take it before it be given them by Authority) shall perish by the sword. The first law, that was given to the new world, Gen. 9.4. Gen. 9.6. after the Flood, was against the eating of blood. God would not have man so familiar with blood. And the second commandment, was against the shedding of blood, (Who so sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed.) Nay, not only where Peter was overforward of himself, to defend Christ by arms, but where john and james were too vehement, and importunate upon Christ, to give them leave to revenge the wrong done to him upon the Samaritans, Luk. 9.55. (Wilt thou that we command fire to come down from heaven, and consume them?) Christ rebukes them, and tells them, They knew not of what spirit they were; that is, of what spirit they ought to be. They knew, says S. Hierome; they had no power of their own; They go to him who had; And they do not say, Domine jube, Lord do thou do it; but, Thou shalt never appear in it, never be seen in it, only let us alone, and we will revenge thee, and consume them. Though they went no farther than this, yet this rash, and precipitate importunity in james and john, as well as that hasty coming to action in Peter, was displeasing to Christ; Dicite, speak; so far goes the duty of this Text; Speak by way of Counsel, you that are Counsellors to Princes, And, by way of Exhortation, you that are Preachers to the people; but leave the Facite, matter of action, to them in whose hearts, and by whose hands, and through whose commandments God works. We are yet in our first, Opera. in our Historical part, Commemoration, and there we made it, (in our distribution and paraphrase) our next step, what we are to commemorate, to employ this Dicite, this speaking upon; and it is upon God's works; (Say unto God, how terrible art thou in thy works!) So that the subject of our speech, (let it be in holy Conferences, and Discourses, let it be in God's Ordinance, Preaching) is not to speak of the unrevealed Decrees of God, of his internal, and eternal purposes in himself, but of his works, of those things in which he hath declared, and manifested himself to us. God gave not always to his Church, the Manifestation of the pillar of Fire, but a pillar of Cloud too; And, though it were a Cloud, yet it was a Pillar; In a holy, and devout, and modest ignorance of those things which God hath not revealed to us, we are better settled, and supported by a better Pillar, then in an overcurious, and impertinent inquisition of things reserved to God himself, or shut up in their breasts, of whom God hath said, Ye are gods. God would not show all himself to Moses, as well as he loved him, and as freely as he conversed with him, He shown him but his hinder parts. Exod. 33.23. Let that be his Decrees then, when in his due time they came to execution; for then, and not till then, they are works. And God would not suffer Moses his body to be seen, when it was dead, Deut. 34.6. because than it could not speak to them, it could not instruct them, it could not direct them in any duty, if they transgressed from any. God himself would not be spoken to by us, but as he speaks of himself; and he speaks in his works. And as among men, some may Build, and some may Write, and we call both by one name, (we call his Buildings, and we call his Books, his Works) so if we will speak of God, this World which he hath built, and these Scriptures which he hath written, are his Works, and we speak of God in his Works, (which is the commandment of this Text) when we speak of him so, as he hath manifested himself in his miracles, and as he hath declared himself in his Scriptures; for both these are his Works. There are Decrees in God, but we can take out no Copies of them, till God himself exemplify them, in the execution of them; The accomplishing of the Decree is the best publishing, the best notifying of the Decree. But, of his Works we can take Copies; for, his Scriptures are his Works, and we have them by Translations and Illustrations, made appliable to every understanding; All the promises of his Scriptures belong to all. And, for his Miracles, (his Miracles are also his Works) we have an assurance, That whatsoever God hath done for any, he will do again for us. It is then his Works upon which we fix this Commemoration, Deutipse, in operibus illis, considerandus. and this glorifying of God; but so, as that we determine not upon the Work itself, but God in the Work, (Say unto God, (to Him) how terrible art thou, (that God) in thy Works?) It may be of use to you, to receive this note, Then when it is said in this Psalm, Come, and see the Works of God, and after, Come, and hear all ye that fear God, in both places it is not, Psal. 66.5. Verse 16. Venite, but Ite, It is Lechu, not Come, but Go, Go out, Go forth, abroad, to consider God in his Works; Go as fare as you can, stop not in yourselves, nor stop not in any other, till you come to God himself. If you consider the Scriptures to be his Works, make not Scriptures of your own; which you do, if you make them subject to your private interpretation. My soul speaks in my tongue, else I could make no sound; My tongue speaks in English, else I should not be understood by the Congregation. So God speaks by his Son, in the Gospel; but then, the Gospel speaks in the Church, that every man may hear. Ite, go forth, stay not in yourselves, if you will hear him. And so, for matter of Action, and Protection, come not home to yourselves, stay not in yourselves, not in a confidence in your own power, and wisdom, but Ite, go forth, go forth into Egypt, go forth into Babylon, and look who delivered your Predecessors, (predecessors in Affliction, predecessors in Mercy) and that God, who is Yesterday, Heb. 13.8. and to day, and the same for ever, shall do the same things, which he did yesterday, to day, and for ever. Turn always to the Commemoration of Works, but not your own; Ite, go forth, go farther than that, Than yourselves, farther than the Angels, and Saints in heaven; That when you commemorate your deliverance from an Invasion, and your deliverance from the Vault, you do not ascribe these deliverances to those Saints, upon whose days they were wrought; In all your Commemorations, (and commemorations are prayers, and God receives that which we offer for a Thanksgiving for former Benefits, as a prayer for future) Ite go forth, by the river to the spring, by the branch to the root, by the work to God himself, and Dicite, say unto him, say of him, Quam terribilis Tu in Tuis, which sets us upon another step in this part, To consider what this terribleness is, that God expresses in his works. Though there be a difference between timer, and terror, Terribilis. (fear and terror) yet the difference is not so great, but that both may fall upon a good man; Not only a fear of God must, but a terror of God may fall upon the Best. When God talked with Abraham, a horror of great darkness fell upon him, Gen. 15.12. says that Text. The Father of lights, and the God of all comfort present, and present in an action of Mercy, and yet, a horror of great darkness fell upon Abraham. When God talked personally, and presentially with Moses, Exod. 13.6. Moses hide his face, for (says that Text) he was afraid to look upon God. When I look upon God, as I am bid to do in this Text, in those terrible Judgements, which he hath executed upon some men, and see that there is nothing between me and the same Judgement, (for I have sinned the same sins, and God is the same God) I am not able of myself to die that glass, that spectacle, thorough which I look upon this God, in what colour I will; whether this glass shall be black, through my despair, and so I shall see God in the cloud of my sins, or red in the blood of Christ Jesus, and I shall see God in a Bath of the blood of his Son, whether I shall see God as a Dove with an Olive branch, (peace to my soul) or as an Eagle, a vulture to prey, and to pray everlastingly upon me, whether in the deep floods of Tribulation, spiritual or temporal, I shall see God as an Ark to take me in, or as a Whale to swallow me; and if his Whale do swallow me, (the Tribulation devour me) whether his purpose be to restore me, or to consume me, I, I of myself cannot tell. I cannot look upon God, in what line I will, nor take hold of God, by what handle I will; He is a terrible God, I take him so; And then I cannot discontinue, I cannot break off this terribleness, and say, He hath been terrible to that man, and there is an end of his terror; it reaches not to me. Why not to me? In me there is no merit, nor shadow of merit; In God there is no change, nor shadow of change. I am the same sinner, he is the same God; still the same desperate sinner, still the same terrible God. But terrible in his works, Reverendus. says our Text; Terrible so, as he hath declared himself to be in his works. His Works are, as we said before, his Actions, and his Scriptures. In his Actions we see him Terrible upon disobedient Resisters of his Graces, and Despisers of the means thereof, not upon others, we have no examples of that. In his word, we accept this word in which he hath been pleased to express himself, Norah, which is rather Reverendus, Mal. 2.5. then Terribilis, as that word is used, I gave him life and peace, for the fear wherewith he feared me, and was afraid before my Name. So that this terribleness, which we are called upon to profess of God, is a Reverential, a Majestical, not a Tyrannical terribleness. And therefore he that conceives a God, that hath made man of flesh and blood, and yet exacts that purity of an Angel in that flesh, A God that would provide himself no better glory, then to dam man, A God who lest he should love man, and be reconciled to man, hath enwrapped him in an inevitable necessity of sinning, A God who hath received enough, and enough for the satisfaction of all men, and yet, (not in consideration of their future sins, but merely because he hated them before they were sinners, or before they were any thing) hath made it impossible, for the greatest part of men, to have any benefit of that large satisfaction. This is not such a terribleness as arises out of his Works, (his Actions, or his Scriptures) for God hath never said, never done any such thing, as should make us lodge such conceptions of God in ourselves, or lay such imputations upon him. The true fear of God is true wisdom. It is true Joy; Rejoice in trembling, saith David; Psal. 2.11. There is no rejoicing without this fear; there is no Riches without it; Reverentia Ichovae, The fear of the Lord is his treasure, and that is the best treasure. Thus fare we are to go; Heb. 12.28. Let us serve God with reverence, and godly fear, (godly fear is but a Reverence, it is not a Jealousy, a suspicion of God.) And let us do it upon the reason that follows in the same place, For our God is a consuming fire, There is all his terribleness; he is a consuming fire to his enemies, but he is our God; and God is love: And therefore to conceive a cruel God, a God that hated us, even to damnation, before we were, (as some, who have departed from the sense and modesty of the Ancients, have adventured to say) or to conceive a God so cruel, as that at our death, or in our way, he will afford us no assurance, that he is ours, and we his, but let us live and die in anxiety and torture of conscience, in jealousy and suspicion of his good purpose towards us in the salvation of our souls, (as those of the Roman Heresy teach) to conceive such a God as from all eternity meant to damn me, or such a God as would never make me know, and be sure that I should be saved, this is not to profess God to be terrible in his works; For, his Actions are his works, and his Scriptures are his works, and God hath never done, or said any thing to induce so terrible an opinion of him. And so we have done with all those pieces, which in our paraphrastical distribution of the text, at beginning, did constitute our first, our Historical part, David's retrospect, his commemoration of former blessings; In which he proposes a duty, a declaration of God's goodness, Dicite, publish it, speak of it; He proposes Religious duties, in that capacity, as he is King; (Religion is the King's care) He proposes, by way of Counsel to all; by way of Commandment to his own Subjects; And by a more powerful way, than either counsel or Commandment, that is, by Example, by doing that himself, which he counsels, and commands others to do. Dicite, Say, speak; It is a duty more than thinking, and less than doing; Every man is bound to speak for the advancement of God's cause, but when it comes to action, that is not the private man's office, but belongs to the public, or him, who is the Public, David himself, the King. The duty is Commemoration, Dicite, Say, speak; but Dicite Deo, Do this to God; ascribe not your deliverances to your Armies, and Navies, by Sea, or Land; no, nor to Saints in Heaven, but to God only. Nor are ye called upon to contemplate God in his Essence, or in his Decrees, but in his works; In his Actions, in his Scriptures; In both those you shall find him terrible, that is, Reverend, majestical, though never tyrannical, nor cruel. Pass we now, according to our order laid down at first, to our second part, the Prophetical part, David's prospect for the future; and gather we something from the particular branches of that, Through the greatness of thy power, thine enemies shall submit themselves unto thee. In this, our first consideration is, that God himself hath enemies; and then, 2 Part. Habet Deus hosts. how should we hope to be, nay, why would we wish to be without them? God had good, that is, Glory from his enemies; And we may have good, that is, advantage in the way to glory, by the exercise of our patience, from enemies too. Those for whom God had done most, the Angels, turned enemies first; vex not thou thyself, if those whom thou hast loved best, hate thee deadliest. There is a love, in which it aggravates thy condemnation, that thou art so much loved; Does not God recompense that, if there be such a hate, as that thou art the better, and that thy salvation is exalted, for having been hated? And that profit, the righteous have from enemies. God loved us then, when we were his enemies, Rom. 5.10. and we frustrate his exemplar love to us, if we love not enemies too. The word Host, (which is a word of heavy signification, and implies devastation, and all the mischiefs of war) is not read in all the New Testament: Inimicus, that is, non amicus, unfriendly, is read there often, very very often. There is an enmity which may consist with Evangelicall charity; but a hostility, that carries in it a denotation of revenge, of extirpation, of annihilation, that cannot. This gives us some light, how far we may, and may not hate enemies. God had enemies to whom he never returned, The Angels that opposed him; and that is, because they oppose him still, and are, by their own perverseness, incapable of reconciliation. We were enemies to God too; but being enemies, Rom. 5.10. we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son. As than actual reconciliation makes us actually friends, so in differences which may be reconciled, we should not be too severe enemies, but maintain in ourselves a disposition of friendship; but, in those things, which are in their nature irreconciliable, we must be irreconciliable too. There is an enmity which God himself hath made, and made perpetual: Ponam inimicitias, says God; Gen. 3.15. God puts an enmity between the seed of the Serpent, and the seed of the woman; And, those whom God joins, let no man sever, those whom God severs, let no man join. The School presents it well; we are to consider an enemy formally, or materially; that is, that which makes him an enemy, or that which makes him a man. In that which makes him a man, he hath the Image of God in him, and by that is capable of grace and glory; and therefore, that we may not hate, which excludes all personal, and all national hatred. In that which makes him an enemy he hath the Image of the Devil, infidelity towards God, perfidiousness towards man, Heresy towards God, infectious manners towards man; and, that we must always hate; for, that is Odium perfectum, A hate that may consist with a perfect man, nay, a hate that constitutes love itself, I do not love a man, except I hate his vices, because those vices are the enemies, and the destruction of that friend whom I love. Inimici tui, Dei sunt inimici. God himself hath enemies, Thine enemies shall submit, says the text, to God; There thou hast one comfort, though thou have enemies too; but the greater comfort is, That God calls thine enemies his. Psal. 105.15. Nolite tangere Christos meos, says God of all holy people; you were as good touch me, Psal. 17.8. as touch any of them, for, they are the apple of mine eye. Our Saviour Christ never expostulated for himself; never said, why scourged you me? why spit you upon me? why crucify you me? as long as their rage determined in his person, he opened not his mouth; when Saul extended the violence to the Church, to his servants, Acts 9 than Christ came to that, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? cain's trespass against God himself was, that he would bind God to an acceptation of his Sacrifice; And for that God comes no farther, Gen. 4.6. Ver. 11. but to Why dost thou thus? but in his trespass upon his brother, God proceeds so much farther, as to say, Now art thou cursed from the earth. jeroboam suffered Idolatry, and God let him alone; that concerned but God himself. But when jeroboam stretched forth his hand to lay hold on the Prophet, 1 King. 13.4. his hand withered. Here is a holy league, Defensive, and Offensive; God shall not only protect us from others, but he shall fight for us against them; our enemies are his enemies. And beloved, Magnitude potentiae. it is well that it is so; for, if we were left to ourselves, we were remediless. It is his mercy that we are not consumed, by his indignation, by himself; But it must be the exercise of his power, if we be not consumed by his, and our enemies; for, there is but that one way in the text, that can bring these enemies to any thing, that is, In multitudine virtutis tuae, In the greatness of thy power. It must be power; Entreaty, appliableness, Conformity, Facility, Patience does not serve. It must be Power, and His power; To assist ourselves by his enemies, by Witches, or by Idolaters, is not his power. It is Power that does all; for, the name that God is manifested in, in all the making of the World, in the first of Genesis, is Elohim, and that is Deus fortis, The powerful God. It is Power, and it is His power; for, his name is Dominus tzebaoth, The Lord of Hosts. Hosts and Armies of which he is not the General, are but great insurrections, great rebellions. And then, as it is Power, and His power, so it is the greatness of his Power; His Power extended, exalted. It is in the Original, Berob, In multitudine fortitudinis, in thy manifold power, in thy multiplied power. Moses considers the assurance that they might have in God, Deut. 20.4. in this, That God fought their battles (The Lord your God goeth with you, to fight for you against your enemies, and save you) There was his power declared, and exercised one way; and then in this, That he had afforded them particular Laws, for their direction in all their actions, Religious, and Civil; (To what Nation is God come so near? what people have Laws and Ordinances, such as we have?) So that, where God defends us by Armies, and directs us by just Laws, that is Multitudo fortitudinis, The greatness of his power, his power magnified, his power multiplied upon us. Now, Mentientur. through this power, and not without this power, this double power, Law and Arms, Thine enemies shall submit themselves unto thee, says our text. And then, is all the danger at an end? shall we be safe then? Not then. The word is Cacash, and Cacash is but Mendacem fieri, to be brought to lie, to dissemble, to equivocate, to modify, to temporize, to counterfeit, to make as though they were our friends, in an outward conformity. And there are enemies of God, whom no power of Armies or Laws can bring any farther than that, To hold their tongues, and to hold their hands, but to withhold their hearts from us still. Iosh 9 So the Gibeonites deceived joshua, in the likeness of Ambassadors; joshuahs' power made them lie unto him. So Pharaoh deceived and deluded Moses and Aaron; Every Act of power brought Pharaoh to lie unto them. I direct not your thoughts upon public Considerations; It is not my end; It is not my way: My way and end is to bring you home to yourselves, and to consider there, That we are full of weaknesses in ourselves, full of enemies, sinful tentations about us; That only the power of God, his power multiplied, (that is, The receiving of his word, (that is, the power of Law) The receiving of his corrections (that is, the power of his Hosts) can make our enemies, our sinful tentations submit, and when they do so, it is but a lie, They return to us, and we turn to them again, In the greatness of thy power shall thine enemies submit unto thee. But then, Consolatio. (which is our last step and Conclusion) even this, That these enemies shall be forced to such a submission, to any submission, though disguised and counterfeit, is, in this Text, presented for a Consolation; There is a comfort even in this, That those enemies shall be feign to lie, that they shall not dare to avow their malice, nor to blaspheme God in open professions. There is a conditional blessing proposed to God's people; (O that my people had harkened unto me! O that Israel had walked in my ways!) Psal. 80.15. What had been their recompense? This. The haters of the Lord should have submitted themselves unto them. Should they in earnest? No truly; there is the same word, They should have lied unto them, they should have made as though they had submitted themselves; and that, God presents for a great degree of his mercy to them. And therefore, as in thy particular Conscience, though God do not take away that Stimulum carnis, and that Angelum Satanae, though he do not extinguish all lusts and concupiscencies in thee, yet if those lusts prevail not over thee, if they command not, if they divert thee not from the sense, and service of God, thou hast good reason to bless God for this, to rest in this, and to call it peace of conscience: So hast thou reason too to call it Peace in the Church, and peace in the State, when God's enemies, though they be not rooted out, though they be not disposed to a hearty Allegiance, and just Obedience, yet they must be subject, they must submit themselves whether they will or no, and though they will wish no good, yet they shall be able to do no harm. For, the Holy Ghost declares this to be an exercise of power, of God's power, of the greatness of God's power, that his enemies submit themselves, though with a feigned obedience. SERMONS Preached at COURT, AND ELSEWHERE, UPON Several Occasions. SERM. LXX. Preached at , April 8. 1621. PROV. 25.16. Hast thou found honey? eat so much as is sufficient for thee, lest thou be filled therewith, and vomit it. THere is a temporal unsatiableness of riches, and there is a spiritual unsatiableness of sin. The first Covetousness, that of riches, the Apostle calls The root of all evil, but the second Covetousness, that of sin, is the fruit of all evil, for that is The treasure of God's wrath, as the Apostle speaks, when he makes our former sins, the mother of future sins, and then our future sins the punishments of former. As though this World were too little to satisfy man, men are come to discover or imagine new worlds, several worlds in every Planet; and as though our Fathers heretofore, and we ourselves too, had been but dull and ignorant sinners, we think it belongs to us to perfect old inventions, and to sin in another height and excellency, then former times did, as though sin had had but a minority, and an infancy till now. Though the pride of the Prince of Tyrus were ever in some Tyrant's, who says there, I am a god, and sit in the seat of God, in the midst of the Seas, Ezek. 28.2. and am wiser than Daniel; Yet there is a Sea above these seas, a power above this power, a spiritual pride above this temporal pride, one so much wiser than Daniel, as that he is as wise as the Holy Ghost. The world hath ever had levitieses and inconstancies, Ecclus. 27.11. and the fool hath changed as the Moon; the same men that have cried Hosanna, are ready to cry Crucifige; but, as in jobs Wife, in the same mouth, the same word was ambiguous, (whether it were bless God, or curse God, out of the word we cannot tell) so are the actions of men so ambiguous, as that we cannot conclude upon them; men come to our Prayers here, and pray in their hearts here in this place, that God would induce another manner of Prayer into this place; and so pray in the Congregation, that God would not hear the prayers of the Congregation; There hath always been ambiguity and equivocation in words, but now in actions, and almost every action will admit a divers sense. And it was the Prophet's complaint of old, You have multiplied your fornications, Ezek. 16. and yet are not satisfied; but we wonder why the Prophet should wonder at that, for the more we multiply temporally or spiritually, the less we are satisfied. Others have thought, that our souls sinned before they came into the world, and that therefore they are here as in a prison; but they are rather here, as in a School; for, if they had studied sin in another world before, they practise it here, If they have practised it before, they teach it now, they lead and induce others into sin. But this consideration of our insatiableness in sin, in my purpose I seposed for the end of this hour; But who knows whether your patience, that you will hear, or who knows whether yours, or my life, that you can hear, shall last to the end of this hour? and therefore it is an excusable anticipation, to have begun with this spiritual covetousness of sin, though our first payment be to be made in the literal sense of the text, A reprehension, and in it, a Counsel, against our general insatiableness of the temporal things of this world. Hast thou found honey? eat so much as is sufficient for thee, lest thou be filled therewith, and vomit it. In which words, Divisio. there being first a particular Compellation, Tu, hast thou found it? it remembers thee, that there be a great many, that have not found it, but lack that which thou aboundest in; And Invenisti, thou hast not inherited it, nor merited it, thou hast but found it; and for that which thou hast found, it is Honey, sweetness, but it is but Honey, which easily becomes choler, and gall, and bitterness. Such as it is, Comede, thou mayst eat it, and eat it safely, it is not unwholesome; but Comede sufficientiam, eat no more than is sufficient; And in that, let not the servant measure himself by his Master, nor the subject by the King, nor the private man by the Magistrate, but Comede sufficientiam tuam, eat that which is sufficient for thee, for more than that will fill thee, overfill thee; perchance not so full as thou wouldst be, yet certainly so full, as that there will be no room in thee for better things; and then thou wilt vomit, nay perchance thou must vomit, the malice and plots of others shall give thee a vomit, And such a vomit shall be Evacuans, an exinanition, leave thee empty; and Immundum, an uncleanness, leave thee in scorn and contempt; and Periculosum, a danger, break a vein, a vein at the heart, break thy heart itself, that thou shalt never recover it. Hast thou found honey? eat so much as is sufficient for thee, lest thou be filled therewith, and vomit it. First then, Tu. for that Compellation Tu, hast thou found it? It is a word first of familiarity, and then a word of particularity. It is a degree of familiarity, that God hath notified himself to us in several Persons; that he hath come so near to our comprehension, as to be considered not only as an universal, and infinite God, but as a Father, and as a Son, and opened himself unto us in these Notions, Tu Pater, Tu Fili, Thou O Father, and Thou O Son, have mercy upon us. A Constable, or Beadle will not be spoke to so, to be thou'd, and any Person in the Trinity, the whole Trinity together is content with it; Psal. 92.8. Take God altogether, and at highest, Tu altissimus, Thou Lord art most high for evermore; Psal. 93.2. Take him from before any beginning, Tu à seculo, Thy throve is established of old, and thou art from everlasting; Take him from beyond all ending, Tu autem permanes, Psal. 102.27. Thou art the same, and thy years shall have no end. In which, we go not about to condemn, or correct the civil manner of giving different titles, to different ranks of men; but to note the slipperiness of our times, where titles flow into one another, and lose their distinctions; when as the Elements are condensed into one another, air condensed into water, and that into earth, so an obsequious flatterer, shall condense a yeoman into a Worshipful person, and the Worshipful into Honourable, and so that which duly was intended for distinction, shall occasion confusion. But that which we purpose, in noting this Tutor, is rather the singularity, the particularity, than the familiarity; That the Holy Ghost in this collects Man, abridges Man, sums up Man in an unity, Clem Alex. in the consideration of one, of himself. Oportet hominem fieri unum, Man must grow in his consideration, till he be but one man, one individual man. If he consider himself in Humanitate, in the whole mankind, a glorious creature, an immortal soul, he shall see this immortal soul, as well in Goats at the left hand, as in Sheep at the right hand of Christ, at the Resurrection; Men on both sides: If he consider himself in Qualitate, Mat. 7.22. in his quality, in his calling, he shall hear many then plead their Prophetavimus, we have prophesied, and their Ejecimus, we have exercised, and their Virtutes secimus, we have done wonders, and all in thy Name, and yet receive that answer, Nunquam cognovi, I do not know you now, I never did know you. Oportet unum fieri, he must consider himself in individuo, that one man, not that man in nature, not that man in calling, Origen Homil. unica in lib. r●g. but that man in actions. Origen makes this use of those words, as he found them, Erat vir unus, There was one man; (which was Elkanah) He adds, Nomen ejus possessio Dei, this one man, says he, was, in his Name, God's possession; Nam quem Daemones possident, non unus sed mulii, for he whom the Devil possesses, is not one. The same sinner is not the same thing; still he clambers in his ambitious purposes, there he is an Eagle; & yet lies still grovelling, and trodden upon at any greater man's threshold, there he is a worm. He swells to all that are under him, there he is a full Sea; and his dog that is above him, may wade over him, there he is a shallow, an empty River. In the compass of a few days, he neighs like a horse in the rage of his lust over all the City, and groans in a corner of the City, in an hospital. A sinner is as many men, as he hath vices; he that is Elkanah, Possessio Dei, possessed by God, and in possession of God, he is unus homo, one and the same man. And when God calls upon man so particularly, he intends him some particular good. It is S. Hieromes note, Hieron. That when God in the Scriptures speaks of divers things in the singular number, it is ever in things of grace; And it is S. Augustins' note, that when he speaks of any one thing in the plural Number, it is of heavy and sorrowful things; as jeptha was buried In civitatibus Gilead, Judg. 12.7. in the Cities, but he had but one grave; And so that is, they made Aureos vitulos, Golden Calves, when it was but one Calf. When God's voice comes to thee in this Text, in particular, Tu, Hast thou found, he would have thee remember, how many seek and have sought, with tears, with sweat, with blood, and lack that, that thou aboundest in. That whereas his Evidence to them whom he loves not, in the next world shall be, Esurivi, I was hungry, Mat. 25.42. and ye gave me no meat; And his proceeding with them whom he loves not in this world, is, Si esuriero, If I be hungry, I will not tell thee, I will not awaken thee, not remember thy conscience, Psal. 50.12. wherein thou mayest do me a service; He does call upon thee in particular, and ask thee, Nun tu, Hast thou not fortune enough, to let fall some crumbs upon him that starves? and, Nun tu, hast not thou favour enough, to shed some beams upon him that is frozen in disgrace? There is a squint eye, that looks side-long; to look upon riches, and honour, on the left hand, and long life here, on the right, is a squint eye. There is a squint eye, that looks upwards and downwards; to look after God and Mammon, is a squint eye. There are squint eyes, that look upon one another; to look upon ones own beauty, or wisdom, or power, is a squint eye. The direct look is to look inward upon thine own Conscience; Not with Nabuchadnezzar, Is not this great Babylon, Dan. 4.30. which I have built by the might of my power, and for the honour of my Majesty? But with David, Quid retribuam? for if thou look upon them with a clear eye, thou wilt see, that though thou hast them, thou hast but found them, which is our next step. Now, if you have but found them, thou hast them but by chance, by contingency, Invenisti. Co. l. 10. Pand. by fortune. The Emperor Leo, he calls money found, Dei beneficium, It is a benefit derived from God; but the great Lawyer; Triphonius, calls it, Donum fortunae too, An immediate gift of fortune. They consist well enough together, God and fortune. S. Augustine in his Retract: makes a conscience of having named her too oft, lest other men should be scandalised; and so the Prophet complains of that, Esa. 65.11. (as the Vulgat reads it) Ponitis mensam fortunae, You sacrifice to fortune, you make fortune a god; that you should not do; but yet you should acknowledge that God hath such a servant, such an instrument, as fortune too. God's ordinary working is by Nature, these causes must produce these effects; and that is his common Law; He goes sometimes above that, by Prerogative, and that is by miracle, and sometimes below that, as by custom, and that is fortune, that is contingency; Fortune is as far out of the ordinary way, as miracle; no man knows in Nature, in reason, why such, or such persons grow great; but it falls out so often, as we do not call it miracle, and therefore rest in the Name of Fortune. We need not quarrel the words of the Poet, Tu quamcunque Deus tibi fortunaverit horam, Grata sum manu, Thank God for any good fortune, since the Apostle says too, that Godliness hath the promise of this life; The godly man shall be fortunate, God will bless him with good fortune here; but still it is fortune, and chance, in the sight and reason of man, and therefore he hath but found, whatsoever he hath in that kind. It is intimated in the very word which we use for all worldly things; It is Inventarium, an Inventory; we found them here, and here our successors find them, when we are gone from hence. 2 King. 9.30. jezabel had an estimation of beauty, and she thought to have drawn the King with that beauty, but she found it, she found it in her box, and in her wardrobe, she was not truly fair. Achitophel had an estimation of wisdom in Counsel, I know not how he found it; he counselled by an example, which no man would follow, he hanged himself. Thou wilt not be drawn to confess, that a Man that hath an office, is presently wiser than thou, or a man that is Knighted, presently valianter than thou. Men have preferment for those parts, which other men, equal to them in the same things, have not, and therefore they do but find them; And to things that are but found, what is our title? Nisi reddantur, rapina est, says the Law, If we restore not that which we find, it is robbery. S. Augustine hath brought it nearer, Qui alienum negat, si posset, tolleret, He that confesseth not that which he hath found of another man's, if he durst, he would have taken it by force. For that which we have found in this world, our ealling is the owner, our debts are the owner, our children are the owner; our lusts, our superfluities are no owners: of all the rest, God is the owner, and to this purpose, the poor is God. S. Augustine puts a case to the point: Aug. Serm. 19 de verb. Apost. He says when he was at Milan, a poor Usher of a Grammar School found a bag of money, 200 Solidorum; let it be but one hundreth pounds; he set up bills; the owner came, offered him his tithe, ten pounds; he would none; he pressed him to five, to three, to two; he would none: and then he that had lost it, in an honourable indignation, disclaimed it all; Nihil perdidi, says he, it is all your own, I lost nothing: Quale certamen! Theatrum mundus, spectator Deus, Out of importunity, he that found it, took it all, and out of conscience, that it was not his, gave it all to the poor. The things of this world we do but find, and of the things which we find, we are but Stewards for others. This finding is not so merely casual, as that it implies no manner of seeking; Matzah Exuxit, vel expressit. We must put ourselves into the way, into a calling. The word is Matza, and that word is allowed us; but a word like it, is not allowed us; Matza is, but Matzah is not; if there be an H added, an H, as it is an aspiration, a breathing, a panting after the things of this world, or an Ache, as it is a pain, that it make our bones ache, or our hearts ache, or our conscience ache, it is a seeking, and a finding, not intended in this word. Our prosecution and seeking must be moderate, our title and interest is but a finding; and what hath the most fortunate found? Hony; it is true, but yet but Hony. That which Solomon may justly seem to intent, Mel. especially by Honey in this Text, is that which the Poets, and other Masters of language, have called Magnas amicitias, and Magnas Clientelas, dependence, and interest, and favour in great persons. It appears by the next verse, which depends upon this, and paraphrases it; Withdraw thy foot from thy neighbour's house. Where that which we read, Withdraw, is in the Original Hokar, which is Fac pretiosum, make not thyself cheap, not vulgar, have some respect to thyself, to thine own ingenuity, but principally to the other, to thy great friend: be not importune and troublesome by any indiscreet assiduity, to them who are possessed with business, though at sometimes they descend to thee; This is this Honey, where thou hast access, yet do not push open every door, fling up every hanging, but use thy favour modestly. But in this Honey is wrapped up also all that is delightful in this life; and Solomon carries us often to that Comparison; Ver. 13. In the Chapter before this, for Wisdom; My Son, eat thou Honey, because it is good; so shall the knowledge of wisdom be to thy soul; and in the seven and twentieth verse of this Chapter, 27. he uses it for Glory; It is not good to eat much honey; so for men to search their own glory, is not glory. In the sixth Chapter of this book, when Solomon had sent us to the Ant, Prov. 6. to learn wisdom, between the eight verse and the ninth, he sends us to another school, to the Bee: Vade ad Apem & disce quomodo operationem vener abilem facit, Go to the Bee, and learn how reverend and mysterious a work she works. Hieron. For, though S. Hierome acknowledge, that in his time, this verse was not in the Hebrew Text, yet it hath ever been in many Copies of the Septuagint, and though it be now left out in the Complutense Bible, and that which they call the Kings, In Ezek. 3.3. yet it is in that still, which they value above all, the Vatican. S. Hierome himself takes it into his exposition, and other Fathers into theirs. So far therefore we may hearken to that voice, as to go to the Bee, and learn to work by that Creature. Both S. Basil, Basil. Hom. 8. in Hexa. Chrysost. in Psal. 110. and S. chrysostom put this difference in that place, between the labour of the Ant, and the Bee, That the Aunts work but for themselves, the Bee for others: Though the Aunts have a Commonwealth of their own, yet those Fathers call their labour, but private labour; because no other Commonwealths have benefit by their labour, but their own. Direct thy labours in thy calling to the good of the public, and then thou art a civil, a moral Ant; but consider also, That all that are of the household of the faithful, and profess the same truth of Religion, are part of this public, and direct thy labours, for the glory of Christ Jesus, amongst them too, and then thou art a religious and a Christian Bee, and the fruit of thy labour shall be Hony. The labour of the Ant is sub Dio, open, evident, manifest; The labour of the Bee is sub Tecto, in a house, in a hive; They will do good, and yet they will not be seen to do it; they affect not glory, nay, they avoid it. For in experience, when some men curious of natural knowledge, have made their Hives of glass, that by that transparency, they might see the Bees manner of working, the Bees have made it their first work to line that Glasse-hive, with a crust of Wax, that they might work and not be discerned. It is a blessed sincerity, to work as the Ant, professedly, openly; but because there may be cases, when to do so, would destroy the whole work, though there be a cloud and a curtain between thee, and the eyes of men, yet if thou do them clearly in the sight of God, that he see his glory advanced by thee, the fruit of thy labour shall be Honey. Pliny names one Aristomachum Solensem, Plin. that spent threescore years in the contemplation of Bees; our whole time for this exercise is but threescore minutes; and therefore we say no more of this, but Vade ad Apem, practife the sedulity of the Bee, labour in thy calling, And the community of the Bee, believe that thou art called to assist others, And the secrecy of the Bee, that the greatest, and most authorized spy see it not, to supplant it, And the purity of the Bee, that never settles upon any foul thing, that thou never take a foul way to a fair end, and the fruit of thy labour shall be Honey; God shall give thee the sweetness of this world, honour, and ease, and plenty, and he shall give thee thy honeycomb, with thy honey, that which preserves thy honey to thee, that is, a religious knowledge, that all this is but honey; And honey in the dew of the flowers, Plin. whence it is drawn, is but Coeli sudor, a sweaty excrement of the heavens, and Siderum saliva, the spittle, the phlegm of the stars, and Apum vomitus, the casting, the vomit of the Bee. And though honey be the sweetest thing that we do take into the body, yet there it degenerates into gall, and proves the bitterest; And all this is honey in the Anti-type, in that which it signifies, in the temporal things of this world; In the temporal things of this world there is a bitterness, in our use of them; But in his hand, and his purpose that gives them, they have impressions of sweetness; and so Comede, Eat thy honey, which is also a step farther. Here is libery for any man to eat Honey, if he have found it, Comede. and jonathan the King's son found honey upon the ground, and did but dip his staff in it, 1 Sam. 14 24. and put it to his mouth, and he must die for it. Of forbidden honey the least dram is poison, how sweet soever any collateral respect make it. But jonathan knew not that it was forbidken by the King: Ignorance is no plea in any subject against the King's laws; and there is a King, in breach of whose laws, no King, no King's son can excuse themselves by ignorance, if they do but dip their Sceptre in forbidden honey, in any unlawful delight in this world; For they do, or they may know the unlawfulness of it. But for the honey which God allows us, whether God give it in that plenty, Terram fluentem, Exod. 3.8. that the land flow with milk and honey, nay Torrentes mellis, rivers and streams of honey, job 20.17. that great fortunes flow into men, in this world; or whether God put us to suck honey out of the Rock, that that which we have, we dig, and plough, and thresh for, Deut. 32.13. yet when thou hast found that, Comede, use it, enjoy it, eat it; He that will not work, shall not eat; 2 Thes. 3.10. He that shuts himself up in a Cloister, till the honey find him, till meat be brought to him, should not eat. Christ himself are Honey, but after his Resurrection; Luk. 24.41. when his body needed not refection; when our principal end in worldly things, is not for the body, nor for the world, but that we have had a spiritual resurrection, that we can see God's love in them, and show God's glory by them, then Invenisti, thou hast found; (for Invenire, Festus. est in rem venire, id est in usum) to find a thing is to make the right use of it, and Invenisti mel, thou hast found Honey, that which God intends for sweetness, for necessities, conveniences, abundances, recreations, and delights; and therefore Comede, eat it, enjoy it; but to thee also belongs that Caveat, Comede ad sufficientiam, Eat but enough. That great Moral man Seneca, could see, that Nihil agere, to pass this life, Sufficientiam and intent no Vocation, was very ill; and that Aliud agere, to profess a Vocation, and be busier in other men's callings, than his own, was worse; but the Super-agere, to overdo, to do more than was required at his hands, he never brought into comparison, he never suspected; and yet that is our most ordinary fault. That which hath been ordinarily given by our Physicians, by way of counsel, That we should rise with an appetite, hath been enough followed by worldly men; They always lie down, and always rise up with an appetite to more, and more in this world. An Office is but an Anti-past, it gets them an appetite to another Office; and a title of Honour, but an Anti-past, a new stomach to a new Title. The danger is, that we cannot go upward directly; If we have a stair, to go any height, it must be a winding stair; It is a compass, a circumventing, to rise: A Ladder is a strait Engine of itself, yet if we will rise by that, it must be set a slope; Though our means be direct in their own nature, yet we put them upon crooked ways; It is but a poor rising, that any man can make in a direct line, and yet it is, Ad sufficientiam, high enough, for it is to heaven. Have ye seen a glass blown to a handsome competency, and with one breath more, broke? I will not ask you, whether you have seen a competent beauty made worse, by an artificial addition, because they have not thought it well enough before; you see it every day, and every where. If Paul himself were here, Act. 14.12. whom for his Eloquence the Lystrians called Mercury, he could not persuade them to leave their Mercury; It will not easily be left; for how many of them that take it outwardly at first, come at last to take it inwardly? Since the saying of Solomon, Eccles. 7.17. Be not over righteous, admits many good senses, even in Moral virtues, and in religious duties too, which are naturally good, it is much more appliable in temporal things, which are naturally indifferent; Be not over fair, over witty, over sociable, over rich, over glorious; but let the measure be Sufficientia tua, So much as is sufficient for thee. But where shall a man take measure of himself? Tuam. At what age, or in what calling shall he say, This is sufficient for me? jeremy says, Puer sum, I am a child, and cannot speak at all; S. Paul says, Quando puer, When I was a child, no bigger, I spoke like a child; this was not sufficientia sua, sufficienr for him; for since he was to be a man, he was to speak like a man: The same clothes do not serve us throughout our lives, nay not the same bodies, nay not the same virtues, so there is no certain Gomer, no fixed Measure for worldly things, Clem. Alex. for every one to have. As Clemens Alexandrinus saith, Eadem Drachma data Nauclero, est Naulum, The same piece of Money given to a Waterman, is his Fare; Publicano Vectigal, given to a Farmer of Custom, it is Impost; Mercatori pretium, to a Merchant it is the price of his Ware; Operario Merces, Mendico Eleemosyna, To a Labourer it is Wages, to a Beggar it is Alms; So on the other side, this which we call sufficiency, as it hath relation to divers states, hath a different measure. I think the rule will not be inconveniently given, if we say, That whatsoever the world doth justly look for at our hands, we may justly look for at God's hands: Those outward means, which are requisite for the performance of the duties of your calling to the world, arising from your birth, or arising from your place, you are to pray for, you are to labour for; For that is Sufficientia tua, so much is sufficient for you, and so much Honey you may eat; but eat no more, says the Text, Ne satieris, Lest you be filled. He doth not say yet, Ne satieris. lest thou be satisfied; there is no great fear, nay there is no hope of that, that he will be satisfied. We know the receipt, the capacity of the ventricle, the stomach of man, how much it can hold; and we know the receipt of all the receptacles of blood, how much blood the body can have; so we do of all the other conduits and cisterns of the body; But this infinite Hive of honey, this insatiable whirlpool of the covetous mind, no Anatomy, no dissection hath discovered to us. When I look into the larders, and cellars, and vaults, into the vessels of our body for drink, for blood, for urine, they are pottles, and gallons; when I look into the furnaces of our spirits, the ventricles of the heart and of the brain, they are not thimbles; for spiritual things, the things of the next world, we have no room; for temporal things, the things of this world, we have no bounds. How then shall this over-eater be filled with his honey? So filled, as that he can receive nothing else. More of the same honey he can; Another Manor, and another Church, is but another bit of meat, with another sauce to him; Another Office, and another way of Extortion, is but another garment, and another lace to him. But he is too full to receive any thing else; Christ comes to this Bethlem, (Bethlem which is Domus panis) this house of abundance, and there is no room for Christ in this Inn; there are no crumbs for Christ under this table; There comes Boanerges, (Boanerges, that is, filius Tonitrui, the son of Thunder) and he thunders out the Vae's, the Comminations, the Judgements of God upon such as he; but if the Thunder spoil not his drink, he sees no harm in Thunder; As long as a Sermon is not a Sentence in the Star-chamber, that a Sermon cannot fine and imprison him, he hath no room for any good effect of a Sermon. The Holy Ghost, the Spirit of Comfort comes to him, and offers him the consolation of the Gospel; but he will die in his old religion, which is to sacrifice to his own Nets, by which his portion is plenteous; he had rather have the God of the Old Testament, that pays in this world with milk and honey, than the God of the New Testament, that calls him into his Vineyard in this World, and pays him no wages till the next: one jupiter is worth all the three Elohims, or the three jehovahs (if we may speak so) to him. jupiter that can come in a shower of gold, out weighs jehova, that comes but in a shower of water, but in a sprinkling of water in Baptism, and sells that water so dear, as that he will have showers of tears for it, nay showers of blood for it, when any Persecutor hath a mind to call for it. The voice of God whom he hath contemned, and wounded, The voice of the Preacher whom he hath derided, and impoverished, The voice of the poor, of the Widow, of the Orphans, of the prisoner, whom he hath oppressed, knock at his door, and would enter, but there is no room for them, he is so full. This is the great danger indeed that accompanies this fullness, but the danger that affects him more is that which is more literally in the text, Evomet, he shall be so filled as that he shall vomit; even that fullness, those temporal things which he had, he shall cast up. It is not a vomiting for his ease, that he would vomit; but he shall vomit; Evomas. he shall be forced to vomit. He hath swallowed down riches, and he shall vomit them up again; job 20.15. God shall cast them out of his belly; But by what hand? whether by his right hand, by the true way of justice, or his left hand, by malice, under colour of justice, his money shall be his Antimony, his own riches shall be his vomit. Solomon says, he saw a sore evil under the Sun; Eccles. 5.22. but if he had lived as long as the Sun, he might have seen it every course of the Sun, Riches reserved to their owners for their own hurt; Rich-men perish, that should not have perished, or not so soon, or not so absolutely, if they had not been rich. Their confidence in their riches provokes them to some unjustifiable actions, and their riches provoke others to a vehement persecution. And in this vomit of theirs, if we had time to do so, we would consider first, The sordidness, and the contempt and scorn that this evacuated Man comes to in the world, when he hath had this vomit of all his honey; That because there can be no vacuity, he shall be filled again, but Saturabitur ignominia, Habak. 2.16. He shall be filled with shame for glory, and shameful spewing shall be upon his glory. jer. 48.26. He magnified himself against the Lord, and therefore was made drunk, and shall wallow in his vomit, and be had in derision. His honey was his soul, and that being vomited, he is now but a rotten and abhorred carcase; At best he was but a bag of money, and now he is but the bag itself, which scarce any man will stoop to take up: And as in a vomit in a basin, the Physician is able to show the world, what cold meat, and what raw meat, and what hard and indigestible meat he had eaten; So when such a person comes by justice, or malice to this vomit, every man becomes a Physician, every man brings Inditements, and evidence against him, and can show all his falsehoods, and all his extortions in particular. In these particulars we would consider the scorn upon this vomit; and then the danger of it in these, That nothing weakens the eyes more than vomiting; when this worldly man hath lost his honey, he hath lost his sight; he was dim sighted at beginning, when he could see nothing but worldly things, things nearest to him, but when he hath vomited them, he hath lost his spectacles; through his riches he saw some glimmering, some colour of comfort, now he sees no comfort at all: And a greater danger in vomiting is, that often times it breaks a vein within, and that is most commonly incurable; This man that vomits without, bleeds within; his fortune is broke, and his heart is broke; and he bleeds better blood than his own, he bleeds out the blood of Christ Jesus himself; the blood of Christ Jesus poured into him heretofore in the consolation of the Gospel, and in the Cup of Salvation in the Sacrament (for so much as concerns him) is but spilt upon the ground; as though his honey, his worldly greamesse, were his Father, and Mother, and Wife, and Children, and Prince, and friends, and all, when that is lost by this vomit, he mourns for all, in a sad and everlasting mourning, in such a disconsolate dejection of spirit as ends either in an utter inconsideration of God, or in a desperation of his mercies. This is that Incipiamte evomere (as the Vulgat reads it) in this vomit of worldly things, Revel. 3.16. God does begin to vomit him out of his mouth; and than God does not return to his vomit, but leaves this impatient patient to his impenitibleness. But we must not launch into these wide Seas now, to consider the scorn, or the danger of this vomit, but rather draw into the harbour, and but repeat the text, transferred from this world to the text, from temporal to spiritual things. Thus far we have been In melle, In honey, upon honey; but now Super mel, Conclusio. above honey. Psal. 19.10. The judgements of the Lord are Dulcia prae melle, Sweeter than honey, and the honey comb; And the judgements of the Lord are that, by which the Lord will judge us, and this world; it is his word. His word, the sincerity of the Gospel, the truth of his Religion is our honey and honey comb; our honey, and our wax, our Covenant, and our Seal; we have him not, if we have not his truth, if we require other honey; and we trust him not, if we require any other Seal, if we think the word of God needs the traditions of men. And Invenisti tu, Hath God manifested to thee the truth of his Gospel? Bless thou the Lord, praise him and magnify him for ever, whose dayspring from an high hath visited thee, and left so many Nations in darkness, who shall never hear of Christ, till they hear himself, nor hear other voice from him then, than the Ite maledicti; Pity them that have not this honey, and confess for thyself, that though thou have it, thou hast but found it; couldst thou bespeak Christian Parents beforehand, and say, I will be borne of such Parents as shall give me a title to the Covenant, to Baptism? or couldst thou procure Sureties, that should bind themselves for thee, at the entering into the Covenant in Baptism? Thou foundest thyself in the Christian Church, and thou foundest means of salvation there; thou broughtest none hither, thou boughtest none here; the Title of S. Andrew, the first of the Apostles that came to Christ, was but that, Invenimus Mesiam, We have found the Mesias. It is only Christ himself that says of himself, Cant. 5.1. Comedi mel meum, I have eat my honey, his own honey. We have no grace, no Gospel of our own, we find it here. But since thou hast found it, Comede, Eat it; do not drink the cup of Babylon, lest thou drink the cup of God's wrath too: but make this Honey (Christ's true Religion) thy meat; digest that, assimilate that, incorporate that: and let Christ himself, and his merit, be as thy soul; & let the clear and outward profession of his truth, Religion, be as thy body: If thou give away that body, (be flattered out of thy Religion, or threatened out of thy Religion) If thou sell this body, (be bought and bribed out of thy Religion) If thou lend this body, (discontinue thy Religion for a year or two, to see how things will fall out) if thou have no body, thou shalt have no Resurrection, and the clear and undisguised profession of the truth, is the body. Eat therefore this honey Ad sufficientiam; so much as is enough. To believe implicitly as the Church believes, and know nothing, is not enough; know thy foundations, and who laid them; Other foundations can no man lay, then are laid, Christ Jesus; neither can other men lay those foundations otherwise then they are laid by the Apostles, but eat Ad sufficientiam tuam, that which is enough for thee, for so much knowledge is not required in thee in those things, as in them, whose profession it is to teach them; be content to leave a room still for the Apostles, Aemulamini charismata meliora, desire better gifts; and ever think it a title of dignity which the Angel gave Daniel, to be Vir desideriorum; To have still some farther object of thy desires. Do not think thou wantest all, because thou hast not all; for at the great last day, we shall see more plead Catechisms for their salvation, than the great volumes of Controversies, more plead their pockets, than their Libraries. If S. Paul so great an Argosy held no more, but Christum crucifixum, what can thy Pinnace hold? Let humility be thy ballast, and necessary knowledge thy freight: for there is an over-fulnesse of knowledge, which forces a vomit; a vomit of opprobrious and contumelious speeches, a belching and spitting of the name of Heretic and Schismatique, and a loss of charity for matters that are not of faith; and from this vomiting comes emptiness, The more disputing, Psal. 90.14. the less believing: but Saturasti nos benignitate tua, Domine, Thou hast satisfied us early with thy mercy, Thou gavest us Christianity early, and thou gavest us the Reformation early: and therefore since in thee we have found this honey, let us so eat it, Levit. 18.25. and so hold it, That the land do not vomit her Inhabitants, nor spew us out, as it spewed out the Nations that were before us, Levit. 18.29. but that our days may be long in this land, which the Lord our God hath given us, and that with the Ancient of days, we may have a day without any night in that land, which his Son our Saviour hath purchased for us with the inestimable price of his incorruptible blood. To which glorious Son of God, etc. SERM. LXXI. At the Hague Decemb. 19 1619. I Preached upon this Text. Since in my sickness at Abrey-hatche in Essex, 1630. revising my short notes of that Sermon, I digested them into these two. MAT. 4.18, 19, 20. And jesus walking by the Sea of Galilee saw two brethren, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the Sea, (for they were fishers.) And he saith unto them, Fellow me, and I will make you fishers of men; And they straightway left their nets, and followed him. SOLOMON presenting our Saviour Christ, in the name and person of Wisdom, in the book of Proverbs, puts, by instinct of the Holy Ghost, these words into his mouth, Prov. 8.30. Deliciae meae esse cum filiis hominum, Christ's delight is to be with the children of men; And in satisfaction of that delight, he says in the same verse, in the person of Christ, That he rejoiced to be in the habitable parts of the Earth, (that is, where he might converse with men) Ludens in orbe terrarum, (so the Vulgat reads it) and so our former Translation had it, I took my solace in the compass of the Earth. But since Christ's adversary Satan does so too, Job 1.7. (Satan came from compassing the Earth to and fro, and from walking in it;) since the Scribes and Pharisees do more than so, They compass Land and Sea, to make one of their own profession, the mercy of Christ is not less active, not less industrious than the malice of his adversaries, He preaches in populous Cities, he preaches in the desert wilderness, he preaches in the tempestuous Sea: and as his Power shall collect the several dusts, and atoms, and Elements of our scattered bodies at the Resurrection, as materials, members of his Triumphant Church; so he collects the materials, the living stone, and timber, for his Militant Church, from all places, from Cities, from Deserts, and here in this Text, from the Sea, (jesus walking by the Sea, etc.) In these words we shall only pursue a twofold consideration of the persons whom Christ called here to his Apostleship, Divisio. Peter and Andrew; What their present, what their future function was, what they were, what they were to be; They were fishermen, they were to be fishers of men. But from these two considerations of these persons, arise many Circumstances, in and about their calling; and their preferment for their cheerful following. For first, in the first, we shall survey the place, The Sea of Galilee; And their education and conversation upon that Sea, by which they were naturally less fit for this Church-service. At this Sea he found them casting their Nets; of which act of theirs, there is an emphatical reason expressed in the text, For they were fishers, which intimates both these notes, That they did it because they were fishers; It became them, it behoved them, it concerned them to follow their trade; And then they did it as they were fishers, If they had not been fishers they would not have done it, they might not have usurped upon another's Calling; They cast their Nets into the Sea, for they were fishers) And then, in a nearer consideration of these persons, we find that they were two that were called; Christ provided at first against singularity, He called not one alone; And then they were two Brethren, persons likely to agree; He provided at first against schism; And then, they were two such as were nothing of kin to him, (whereas the second pair of brethren, whom he called, james and john, were his kinsmen) He provided at first, against partiality, and that kind of Simony, which prefers for affection. These men, thus conditioned naturally, thus disposed at this place, and at this time, our blessed Saviour calls; And then we note their readiness, they obeyed the call, they did all they were bid, They were bid follow, and they followed, and followed presently; And they did somewhat more than seems expressly to have been required, for, They left their Nets, and followed him. And all these substantial circumstances invest our first part, these persons in their first estate. For those that belong to the second part, Their preferment upon this obedience, (Fellow me, and I will make you fishers of men) it would be an impertinent thing, to open them now, because I do easily foresee, that this day we shall not come to that part. In our first part, Andrea's. The consideration of these persons then, though in this Text Peter be first named, yet we are to note, that this was not the first time of their meeting; when Christ and they met first, which was, when john Baptist made that declaration upon Christ's walking by him, Joh. 1.35. Behold the Lamb of God, Peter was not the first that applied himself to Christ, nor that was invited by Christ's presenting himself to him, to do it; Peter was not there; Peter was not the second; for, Andrew, and another, who were then john Baptists Disciples, and saw Christ declared by him, were presently affected with a desire to follow Christ, and to converse with him, and to that purpose press him with that question, Magister, ubi habitas? They profess that they had chosen him for their Master, and they desire to know where he dwelled, that they might wait upon him, and receive their instructions from him. And in Andrews thus early applying himself to Christ, we are also to note, both the fecundity of true Religion; for, as soon as he had found Christ, he sought his brother Peter, Et duxit ad jesum, he made his brother as happy as himself, he led him to Jesus; (And that other Disciple, which came to Christ as soon as Andrew did, yet because he is not noted to have brought any others but himself, is not named in the Gospel) And we are to observe also, the unsearchable wisdom of God in his proceed, that he would have Peter, whom he had purposed to be his principal Apostle, to be led to him by another, of inferior dignity, in his determination. And therefore Conversus converte, Think not thyself well enough preached unto, except thou find a desire, that thy life and conversation may preach to others, And Edoctus disce, think not that thou knowest any thing, except thou desire to learn more; neither grudge to learn of him, whom thou thinkest less learned than thyself; The blessing is in Gods Calling, and Ordinance, not in the good parts of the man; Andrew drew Peter, The lesser in God's purpose for the building of the Church, brought in the greater. Therefore doth the Church celebrate the memory of S. Andrew, first of any Saint in the year; and after they have been altogether united in that one festival of All-Saints, S. Andrew is the first that hath a particular day. Bernar. He was Primogenitus Testamenti novi, The first Christian, the first begotten of the new Testament; for, john Baptist, who may seem to have the birthright before him, had his conception in the old Testament, in the womb of those prophecies of Malachy, Mal. 3.1. Esa. 40.3. and of Esay, of his coming, and of his office, and so cannot be so entirely referred to the new Testament, as S. Andrew is. Because therefore, our adversaries of the Roman heresy distil, and rack every passage of Scripture, that may drop any thing for the advantage of S. Peter, and the allmightines of his Successor, I refuse not the occasion offered from this text, compared with that other, joh. 1. to say, That if that first coming to Christ were but (as they use to say) Ad notitiam & familiaritatem, and this in our Text, Ad Apostolatum, That they that came there, came but to an acquaintance, and conversation with Christ, but here, in this text, to the Apostleship, yet, to that conversation, (which was no small happiness) Andrew came clearly before Peter, and to this Apostleship here, Peter did not come before Andrew; they came together. These two than our Saviour found, Mare Galilaeum. as he walked by the Sea of Galilee. No solitude, no tempest, no bleaknesse, no inconvenience averts Christ, and his Spirit, from his sweet, and gracious, and comfortable visitations. But yet this that is called here, The Sea of Galilee, was not properly a Sea; but according to the phrase of the Hebrews, who call all great meetings of waters, by that one name, A Sea, this, which was indeed a lake of fresh water, is called a Sea. From the root of Mount Libanus, spring two Rivers, Jor, and Dan; and those two, meeting together, joining their waters, join their names too, and make that famous river Jordan; a name so composed, as perchance our River is, Thamesis, of Thame, and Isis. And this River Jordan falling into this flat, makes this Lake, of sixteen miles long, and some six in breadth. Which Lake being famous for fish, though of ordinary kinds, yet of an extraordinary taste and relish, and then of extraordinary kinds too, not found in other waters, and famous, because divers famous Cities did engirt it, and become as a garland to it, Capernaum, and Chorazim, and Bethsaida, and Tiberias, and Magdalo, (all celebrated in the Scriptures) was yet much more famous for the often recourse, which our Saviour (who was of that Country) made to it; For this was the Sea, where he amazed Peter, with that great draught of fishes, that brought him to say, Exi à me Domine, Depart from me, O Lord, for I am a sinful man; Luk. 5.8. This was the Sea, where himself walked upon the waters; Matt. 14.25.8.23. And where he rebuked the tempest; And where he manifested his Almighty power many times. And by this Lake, this Sea, dwelled Andrew and Peter, and using the commodity of the place, lived upon fishing in this Lake; and in that act our Saviour found them, and called them to his service. Why them? Why fishers? First, Christ having a greater, a fairer Jerusalem to build then david's was, Cur Piscatores. a greater Kingdom to establish then Judas was, a greater Temple to build then solomon's was, having a greater work to raise, yet he begun upon a less ground; He is come from his twelve Tribes, that afforded armies in swarms, to twelve persons, twelve Apostles; from his juda and Levi, the foundations of State and Church, to an Andrew and a Peter fishermen, seamen; and these men accustomed to that various, and tempestuous Element, to the Sea, less capable of Offices of civility, and sociableness, than other men, yet must be employed in religious offices, to gather all Nations to one household of the faithful, and to constitute a Communion of Saints; They were Seamen, fishermen, unlearned, and indocil; Why did Christ take them? Not that thereby there was any scandal given, or just occasion of that calumny of julian the Apostate, That Christ found it easy to seduce, and draw to his Sect, such poor ignorant men as they were; for Christ did receive persons eminent in learning, (Saul was so) and of authority in the State, (Nicodemus was so) and of wealth, and ability, (Zacheus was so, and so was joseph of Arimatliea) But first he chose such men, that when the world had considered their beginning, their insufficiency then, and how unproper they were for such an employment, and yet seen that great work so fare, and so fast advanced, by so weak instruments, they might ascribe all power to him, and ever after, come to him cheerfully upon any invitation, how weak men soever he should send to them, because he had done so much by so weak instruments before: To make his work in all ages after prosper the better, he proceeded thus at first. And then, he chose such men for another reason too; To show that how insufficient soever he received them, yet he received them into such a School, such an University, as should deliver them back into his Church, made fit by him, for the service thereof. Christ needed not man's sufficiency, he took insufficient men; Christ excuses no man's insufficiency, he made them sufficient. His purpose then was, that the work should be ascribed to the Workman, Nequid Instrumentis. August. not to the Instrument; To himself, not to them; Nec quaesivit per Oratorem piscatorem, He sent not out Orators, Rhetoricians, strong or fair-spoken men to work upon these fishermen, Sed de piscatore lucratus est Imperatorem, By these fishermen, he hath reduced all those Kings, and Emperors, and States which have embraced the Christian Religion, these thousand and six hundred years. When Samuel was sent with that general Commission, 1 Sam. 16.6. to anoint a son of Ishai King, without any more particular instructions, when he came, and Eliab was presented unto him, Surely, says Samuel, 1 Sam. 30. (noting the goodliness of his personage) this is the Lords Anointed. But the Lord said unto Samuel, Look not on his countenance, nor the height of his stature, for I have refused him; for, (as it followeth there, from God's mouth) God seethe not as man setth; Man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord beholdeth the heart. And so David, in appearance, less likely was chosen. But, if the Lords arm be not shortened, let no man impute weakness to the Instrument. For so, when David himself was appointed by God, to pursue the Amalekites, the Amalekites that had burnt Ziklag, and done such spoil upon God's people, as that the people began to speak of stoning David, from whom they looked for defence, Ver 6. when David had no kind of intelligence, no ground to settle a conjecture upon, which way he must pursue the Amalekites, and yet pursue them he must, in the way he finds a poor young fellow, a famished, sick young man, derelicted of his Master, and left for dead in the march, and by the means and conduct of this wretch, David recovers the enemy, recovers the spoil, recovers his honour, and the love of his people. If the Lords arm be not shortened, let no man impute weakness to his Instrument. But yet God will always have so much weakness appear in the Instrument, as that their strength shall not be thought to be their own. When Pete and john preached in the streets, Acts 4.13. The people marvelled, (says the Text) why? for they had understood that they were unlearned. But beholding also the man that was healed standing by, they had nothing to say, says that story. The insufficiency of the Instrument makes a man wonder naturally; but the accomplishing of some great work brings them to a necessary acknowledgement of a greater power, working in that weak Instrument. For, if those Apostles that preached, Acts 8.10. had been as learned men, as Simon Magus, as they did in him, (This man is the great power of God, not that he had, but that he was the power of God) the people would have rested in the admiration of those persons, and proceeded no farther. It was their working of supernatural things, that convinced the world. For all Paul's learning, (though he were very learned) never brought any of the Conjurers to burn his books, or to renounce his Art; But when God wrought extraordinary works by him, That sicknesses were cured by his napkins, Acts 19.11. and his handkerchiefs, (in which cures, Paul's learning had no more concurrence, no more cooperaton, than the ignorance of any of the fishermen Apostles) And when the world saw that those Exorcists, Verse 13. which went about to do Miracles in the Name of Jesus, because Paul did so, could not do it, because that Jesus had not promised to work in them, Verse 19 as in Paul, Then the Conjurers came, and burned their books, in the sight of all the world, to the value of fifty thousand pieces of silver. It was not learning, (that may have been got, though they that hear them, know it not; and it were not hard to assign many examples of men that have stolen a great measure of learning, and yet lived open and conversable lives, and never been observed, (except by them, that knew their Lucubrations, and night-watching) to have spent many hours in study) but it was the calling of the world to an apprehension of a greater power, by seeing great things done by weak Instruments, that reduced them, that convinced them. Peter and john's preaching did not half the good then, as the presenting of one man, which had been recovered by them, did. Twenty of our Sermons edify not so much, as if the Congregation might see one man converted by us. Any one of you might outpreach us. That one man that would leave his beloved sin, that one man that would restore ill-gotten goods, had made a better Sermon than ever I shall, and should gain more souls by his act, than all our words (as they are ours) can do. Such men he took then, Non in-idoneos. as might be no occasion to their hearers, to ascribe the work to their sufficiency; but yet such men too, as should be no examples to insufficient men to adventure upon that great service; but men, though ignorant before, yet docil, and glad to learn. In a rough stone, a cunning Lapidary will easily foresee, what his cutting, and his polishing, and his art will bring that stone too. A cunning Statuary discerns in a Marble-stone under his feet, where there will arise an Eye, and an Ear, and a Hand, & other lineaments to make it a perfect Statue. Much more did our Saviour Christ, who was himself the Author of that disposition in them, (for no man hath any such disposion but from God) foresee in these fishermen, an inclinableness to become useful in that great service of his Church. Therefore he took them from their own ship, but he sent them from his Cross; He took them weatherbeaten with North and South winds, and rough-cast with foam, and mud; but he sent them back souple, and smoothed, and levigated, quickened, and inanimated with that Spirit, which he had breathed into them from his own bowels, his own eternal bowels, from which the Holy Ghost proceeded; He took fishermen, and he sent fishers of men. He sent them not out to preach, as soon as he called them to him; He called them ad Discipulatum, before he called them ad Apostolatum; He taught them, before they taught others. As S. Paul says of himself, 2 Cor. 3.6. and the rest, God hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament; Idoneos, fit Ministers, that is, fit for that service. There is a fitness founded in Discretion; a Discretion to make our present service acceptable to our present Auditory; for if it be not acceptable, agreeable to them, it is never profitable. As God gave his children such Manna as was agreeable to every man's taste, and tasted to every man like that, that that man like best: so are we to deliver the bread of life agreeable to every taste, to fit our Doctrine to the apprehension, and capacity, and digestion of the hearers. For as S. Augustine says, That no man profits by a Sermon that he hears with pain, if he do not stand easily; so if he do not understand easily, or if he do not assent easily to that that he hears, if he be put to study one sentence, till the Preacher have passed three or four more, or if the doctrine be new and doubtful, and suspicious to him, this fitness which is grounded in discretion is not showed. But the general fitness is grounded in learning, S. Paul hath joined them safely together, 2 Tim. 4.2. Rebuke and exhort with all long suffering, and learning. Show thy discretion in seasonable Rebuking; show thy learning in Exhorting. Let the Congregation see that thou studiest the good of their souls, and they will digest any wholesome increpation, any medicinal reprehension at thy hands, Dilige & dic quod voles. We say so first to God, August. Lord let thy spirit bear witness with my spirit, that thou lovest me, and I can endure all thy Prophets, and all the vae's, and the woes that they thunder against me and my sin. So also the Congregation says to the Minister, Dilige & dic quod voles, show thy love to me, in studying my case, and applying thy knowledge to my conscience, speak so, as God and I may know thou meanest me, but not the Congregation, lest that bring me to a confusion of face, and that to a hardness of heart; deal thus with me, love me thus, and say what thou wilt; nothing shall offend me. And this is the Idoneity, the fitness which we consider in the Minister, fitness in learning, fitness in discretion, to use and apply that learning. So Christ fits his. Such men than Christ takes for the service of his Church; Mittebant rete in Mare. such as bring no confidence in their own fitness, such as embrace the means to make them fit in his School, and learn before they teach. And to that purpose he took Andrew and Peter; and he took them, when he found them casting their net into the Sea. This was a Symbolical, a Prophetical action of their future life; This fishing was a type, a figure, a prophecy of their other fishing. But here (in this first part) we are bound to the consideration of their real and direct action, and exercise of their present calling; They cast their Net, for they were Fishers, says the Text. In which, for, (as we told you at first) there is a double reason involved. First, in this For is intimated, how acceptable to God that labour is, 1. Quia piscatores. that is taken in a calling. They did not forbear to cast their nets because it was a tempestuous Sea; we must make account to meet storms in our profession, yea and tentations too. A man must not leave his calling, because it is hard for him to be an honest man in that calling; but he must labour to overcome those difficulties, and as much as he can, vindicate and redeem that calling from those aspersions and calumnies, which ill men have cast upon a good calling. They did not forbear because it was a tempestuous Sea, nor because they had cast their nets often and caught nothing, nor because it was uncertain how the Market would go when they had catched. A man must not be an ill Prophet upon his own labours, nor bewitch them with a suspicion that they will not prosper. It is the slothful man that says, A Lion in the way, A Lion in the street. Cast thou thy net into the Sea, Prov. 26.13. and God shall drive fish into thy net; undertake a lawful Calling, and clog not thy calling with murmuring, nor with an ill conscience, and God shall give thee increase, and worship in it, They cast their nets into the Sea, for they were fishers; it was their Calling, and they were bound to labour in that. And then this For hath another aspect, looks another way too, 2. Quia piscatores. and implies another Instruction, They cast their nets into the Sea, for they were fishers, that is, if they had not been fishers, they would not have done it; Intrusion into other men's callings is an unjust usurpation; and, if it take away their profit, it is a theft. If it be but a censuring of them in their calling, yet it is a calumny, because it is not in the right way, if it be extrajudicial. To lay an aspersion upon any man (who is not under our charge) though that which we say of him be true, yet it is a calumny, and a degree of libelling, if it be not done judiciarily, and where it may receive redress and remedy. And yet how forward are men that are not fishers in that Sea, to censure State Counsels, and Judiciary proceed? Every man is an Absolom, to say to every man, Your cause is good, 2 Sam. 15.3. but the King hath appointed none to hear it; Money brings them in, favour brings them in, it is not the King; or, if it must be said to be the King, yet it is the affection of the King and not his judgement, the King misled, not rightly informed, say our seditious Absoloms, and, Ver. 4. Oh that I were made judge in the land, that every man might come unto me, and I would do him justice, is the charm that Absolom hath taught every man. They cast their nets into a deeper Sea than this, and where they are much less fishers, into the secret Counsels of God. It is well provided by your Laws, that Divines and Ecclesiastical persons may not take farms, nor buy nor sell, for return, in Markets. I would it were as well provided, that buyers and sellers, and farmers might not be Divines, nor censure them. I speak not of censuring our lives; please yourselves with that, till God be pleased to mend us by that, (thought that way of whispering calumny be not the right way to that amendment) But I speak of censuring our Doctrines, and of appointing our doctrines; when men are weary of hearing any other thing, than Election and Reprobation, and whom, and when, and how, and why God hath chosen, or cast away. We have liberty enough by your Law, to hold enough for the maintenance of our bodies, and states; you have liberty enough by our Law, to know enough for the salvation of your souls; If you will search farther into God's eternal Decrees, and unrevealed Counsels, you should not cast your nets into that Sea, for you are not fishers there. Andrew and Peter cast their nets, for they were fishers, (therefore they were bound to do it) And again, for they were fishers, (if they had not been so, they would not have done so.) These persons then thus disposed, Duo simul. unfit of themselves, made fit by him, and found by him at their labour, labour in a lawful Calling, and in their own Calling, our Saviour Christ calls to him; And he called them by couples, by pairs; two together. So he called his Creatures into the world at the first Creation, by pairs. So he called them into the Ark, for the reparation of the world, by pairs, two and two. God loves not singularity; The very name of Church implies company; It is Concio, Congregatio, Coetus; It is a Congregation, a Meeting, an assembly; It is not any one man; neither can the Church be preserved in one man. And therefore it hath been dangerously said, (though they confess it to have been said by many of their greatest Divines in the Roman Church) that during the time that our blessed Saviour lay dead in the grave, there was no faith left upon the earth, but only in the Virgin Mary; for then there was no Church. God hath manifested his will in two Testaments; and though he have abridged and contracted the doctrine of both in a narrow room, yet he hath digested it into two Commandments, Love God, love thy neighbour. There is but one Church; that is true, but one; but that one Church cannot be in any one man; There is but one Baptism; that is also true, but one; But no man can Baptise himself; there must be Sacerdos & competens, (as our old Canons speak) a person to receive, and a Priest to give Baptism. There is but one faith in the remission of sins; that is true too, but one; But no man can absolve himself; There must be a Priest and a penitent. God calls no man so, but that he calls him to the knowledge, that he hath called more than him to that Church, or else it is an illusory, and imaginary calling, and a dream. Take heed therefore of being seduced to that Church that is in one man; In scrinio pectoris, where all infallibility, and assured resolution is in the breast of one man; who (as their own Authors say) is not bound to ask the counsel of others before, nor to follow their counsel after. And since the Church cannot be in one, in an unity, take heed of bringing it too near that unity, to a paucity, to a few, to a separation, to a Conventicle. The Church loves the name of Catholic; and it is a glorious, and an harmonious name; Love thou those things wherein she is Catholic, and wherein she is harmonious, that is, Lyrinen. Quod ubique, quod semper, Those universal, and fundamental doctrines, which in all Christian ages, and in all Christian Churches, have been agreed by all to be necessary to salvation; and then thou art a true Catholic. Otherwise, that is, without relation to this Catholic and universal doctrine, to call a particular Church Catholic, (that she should be Catholic, that is, universal in dominion, but not in doctrine) is such a solecism, as to speak of a white blackness, or a great littleness; A particular Church to be universal, implies such a contradiction. Christ loves not singularity; Duo fratres. he called not one alone; He loves not schism neither between them whom he calls; & therefore he calls persons likely to agree, two brethren, (He saw two brethren, Peter and Andrew, etc. So he began to build the Synagogues, to establish that first government, in Moses and Aaron, brethren; So he gins to build the Church, in Peter and Andrew, brethren. The principal fraternity and brotherhood that God respects, is spiritual; Brethren in the profession of the same true Religion. But Peter and Andrew whom he called here to the true Religion, and so gave them that second fraternity and brotherhood, which is spiritual, were natural brethren before; And that God loves; that a natural, a secular, a civil fraternity, and a spiritual fraternity should be joined together; when those that profess the same Religion, should desire to contract their alliances, in marrying their Children, and to have their other deal in the world (as much as they can) with men that profess the same true Religion that they do. That so (not meddling nor disputing the proceed of States, who, in some cases, go by other rules then private men do) we do not make it an equal, an indifferent thing, whether we marry ourselves, or our children, or make our bargains, or our conversation, with persons of a different Religion, when as our Adversaries amongst us will not go to a Lawyer, nor call a Physician, no, nor scarce a Tailor, or other Tradesman of another Religion than their own, if they can possibly avoid it. God saw a better likelihood of avoiding Schism and dissension, when those whom he called to a new spiritual brotherhood in one Religion, were natural brothers too, and tied in civil bands, as well as spiritual. And as Christ began, so he proceeded; Non cognati. for the persons whom he called were catechistical, instructive persons; persons, from whose very persons we receive instruction. The next whom he called, (which is in the next verse) were two too; and brethren too; john and james; but yet his own kinsmen in the flesh. But, as he chose two together to avoid singularity, and two brethren to avoid Schism, so he preferred two strangers before his own kindred, to avoid partiality, and respect of persons. Certainly every man is bound to do good to those that are near him by nature; The obligation of doing good to others lies (for the most part) thus; Let us do good to all men, Gal. 6.10. but especially unto them which are of the household of the faithful; (They of our own Religion are of the Quorum) Now, when all are so, (of the household of the faithful, of our own Religion) the obligation looks home, and lie thus, He that provideth not for his own, denieth the faith, 1 Tim. 5.8. and is worse than an Infidel. Christ would therefore leave no example, nor justification of that perverse distemper, to leave his kindred out, nor of their disposition, who had rather buy new friends at any rate, then relieve or cherish the old. But yet when Christ knew how far his stock would reach, that no liberality, howsoever placed, could exhaust that, but that he was able to provide for all, he would leave no example nor justification of that perverse distemper, to heap up preferments upon our own kindred, without any consideration how God's glory might be more advanced by doing good to others too; But finding in these men a fit disposition to be good labourers in his harvest, and to agree in the service of the Church, as they did in the band of nature, he calls Peter and Andrew, otherwise strangers, before he called his Consins, james and john. These Circumstances we proposed to be considered in these persons before, Continuò secuti. and at their being called. The first, after their calling, is their cheerful readiness in obeying, Continuò secuti, They were bid follow, and forthwith they followed. Which present obedience of theirs is exalted in this, that this was freshly upon the imprisonment of john Baptist, whose Disciple Andrew had been; And it might easily have deterred, and averted a man in his case, to consider, that it was well for him that he was got out of john Baptists school, and company, before that storm, the displeasure of the state fell upon him; and that it behoved him to be wary to apply himself to any such new Master, as might draw him into as much trouble; which Christ's service was very like to do. But the contemplation of future persecutions, that may fall, the example of persecutions past, that have fall'n, the apprehension of imminent persecutions, that are now falling, the sense of present persecutions, that are now upon us, retard not those, upon whom the love of Christ Jesus works effectually; They followed for all that. And they followed, when there was no more persuasion used to them, no more words said to them, but Sequere me, Fellow me. And therefore how easy soever julian the Apostate might make it, for Christ to work upon so weak men, as these were, yet to work upon any men by so weak means, only by one Sequere me, Fellow me, and no more, cannot be thought easy. The way of Rhetoric in working upon weak men, is first to trouble the understanding, to displace, and discompose, and disorder the judgement, to smother and bury in it, or to empty it of former apprehensions and opinions, and to shake that belief, with which it had possessed itself before, and then when it is thus melted, to pour it into new moulds, when it is thus mollified, to stamp and imprint new forms, new images, new opinions in it. But here in our case, there was none of this fire, none of this practice, none of this battery of eloquence, none of this verbal violence, only a bare Sequere me, Fellow me, and they followed. No eloquence inclined them, no terrors declined them: No dangers withdrew them, no preferment drew them; they knew Christ, and his kindred, and his means; August. they loved him, himself, and not any thing they expected from him. Minùs te amat, qui aliquid tuum amat, quod non propter te amat, That man loves thee but a little, that gins his love at that which thou hast, and not at thyself. It is a weak love that is divided between Christ and the world; especially, if God come after the world, as many times he does, even in them, who think they love him well; that first they love the riches of this world, and then they love God that gave them. But that is a false Method in this art of love; The true is, radically to love God for himself, and other things for his sake, so far, as he may receive glory in our having, and using them. This Peter and Andrew declared abundantly; Relictia retibus. they did as much as they were bid; they were bid follow, and they followed; but it seems they did more, they were not bid leave their nets, and yet they left their nets, and followed him: But, for this, they did not; no man can do more in the service of God, then is enjoined him, commanded him. There is no supererogation, no making of God beholden to us, no bringing of God into our debt. Every man is commanded to love God with all his heart, and all his power, and a heart above a whole heart, and a power above a whole power, is a strange extension. That therefore which was declared explicitly, plainly, directly by Christ, to the young man in the Gospel, Mat. 19.21. Vade, & vend, & sequere, Go and sell all, and follow me, was implicitly implied to these men in our text, Leave your nets, and follow me. And, though to do so, (to leave all) be not always a precept, a commandment to all men, yet it was a precept, a commandment to both these, at that time; to the young man in the Gospel, (for he was as expressly bid to sell away all, as he was to follow Christ) and to these men in the text, because they could not perform that that was directly commanded, except they performed that which was implied too; except they left their nets, they could not follow Christ. When God commands us to follow him, he gives us light, how, and in which way he will be followed; And then when we understand which is his way, that way is as much a commandment, as the very end itself, and not to follow him that way, is as much a transgression, as not to follow him at all. If that young man in the Gospel, who was bid sell all, and give to the poor, and then follow, had followed, but kept his interest in his land; If he had devested himself of the land, but let it fall, or conveyed it to the next heir, or other kinsmen; If he had employed it to pious uses, but not so, as Christ commanded, to the poor, still he had been in a transgression: The way when it is declared, is as much a command, as the end. But then, in this command, which was implicitly, and by necessary consequence laid upon Peter and Andrew, to leave their nets, (because without doing so, they could not forthwith follow Christ) there is no example of forsaking a calling, upon pretence of following Christ; no example here, of divesting one's self of all means of defending us from those manifold necessities, which this life lays upon us, upon pretence of following Christ; It is not an absolute leaving of all worldly cares, but a leaving them out of the first consideration; Primùm quaerite regnum Dei, so, as our first business be to seek the kingdom of God. Mat. 8.14. For, after this leaving of his nets, for this time, Peter continued owner of his house, and Christ came to that house of his, and found his mother in law sick in that house, and recovered her there. Upon a like commandment, upon such a Sequere, Mat. 9.10. Fellow me, Matthew followed Christ too; but after that following, Christ went with Matthew to his house, and sat at meat with him at home. And for this very exercise of fishing, though at that time when Christ said, Fellow me, they left their nets, yet they returned to that trade, sometimes, upon occasions, in all likelihood, in Christ's life; and after Christ's death, clearly they did return to it; for Christ, after his Resurrection, Joh. 21.1. found them fishing. They did not therefore abandon and leave all care, and all government of their own estate, and dispose themselves to live after upon the sweat of others; but transported with a holy alacrity, in this present and cheerful following of Christ, in respect of that then, they neglected their nets, and all things else. Perfecta obedientia est sua imperfocta relinquere, Not to be too diligent towards the world, August. is the diligence that God requires. S. Augustine does not say, sua relinquere, but sua imperfecta relinquere, That God requires we should leave the world, but that we should leave it to second considerations; That thou do not forbear, nor defer thy conversion to God, and thy restitution to man, till thou have purchased such a state, bought such an office, married, and provided such and such children, but imperfecta relinquere, to leave these worldly things unperfected, till thy repentance have restored thee to God, and established thy reconciliation in him, and then the world lies open to thy honest endeavours. Others take up all with their net, and they sacrifice to their nets, because by them their portion is fat, Hab. 1.16. and their meat plenteous. They are confident in their own learning, their own wisdom, their own practice, and (which is a strange Idolatry) they sacrifice to themselves, they attribute all to their own industry. These men in our text were far from that; they left their nets. But still consider, that they did but leave their nets, they did not burn them. And consider too, that they left but nets; those things, which might entangle them, and retard them in their following of Christ. And such nets, (some such things as might hinder them in the service of God) even these men, so well disposed to follow Christ, had about them. And therefore let no man say, Imitari vellem, sed quod relinquam, non habeo, Gregor. I would gladly do as the Apostles did, leave all to follow Christ, but I have nothing to leave; alas, all things have left me, and I have nothing to leave. Even that murmuring at poverty is a net; leave that. Leave thy superfluous desire of having the riches of this world; though thou mayest flatter thyself, that thou desirest to have only that thou mightest leave it, that thou mightest employ it charitably, yet it might prove a net, and stick too close about thee to part with it. Multa relinquitis, si desideriis renunciatis, Idem. You leave your nets, if you leave your over-earnest greediness of catching; for, when you do so, you do not only fish with a net, (that is, lay hold upon all you can compass) but, (which is strange) you fish for a net, even that which you get proves a net to you, and hinders you in the following of Christ, and you are less disposed to follow him, when you have got your ends, than before. He that hath least, hath enough to weigh him down from heaven, by an inordinate love of that little which he hath, or in an inordinate and murmuring desire of more. And he that hath most, hath not too much to give for heaven; Tantum valet regnum Dei, quantum tu vales, Idem. Heaven is always so much worth, as thou art worth. A poor man may have heaven for a penny, that hath no greater store; and, God looks, that he to whom he hath given thousands, should lay out thousands upon the purchase of heaven. The market changes, as the plenty of money changes; Heaven costs a rich man more than a poor, because he hath more to give. But in this, rich and poor are both equal, that both must leave themselves without nets, that is, without those things, which, in their own Consciences they know, retard the following of Christ. Whatsoever hinders my present following, that I cannot follow to day, whatsoever may hinder my constant following, that I cannot follow to morrow, and all my life, is a net, and I am bound to leave that. And these are the pieces that constitute our first part, the circumstances that invest these persons, Peter, and Andrew, in their former condition, before, and when Christ called them. SERM. LXXII. MAT. 4.18, 19, 20. And jesus walking by the Sea of Galilee saw two brethren, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the Sea, (for they were fishers.) And he saith unto them, Fellow me, and I will make you fishers of men; And they straightway left their nets, and followed him. WE are now in our Order proposed at first, come to our second part, from the consideration of these persons, Peter and Andrew, in their former state and condition, before, and at their calling, to their future estate in promise, but an infallible promise, Christ's promise, if they followed him, (Fellow me, and I will make you fishers of men.) In which part we shall best come to our end, (which is your edification) by these steps. First, that there is an Humility enjoined them, in the Sequere, follow, come after. That though they be brought to a high Calling, that do not make them proud, nor tyrannous over men's consciences; And then, even this Humility is limited, Sequere me, follow me; for there may be a pride even in Humility, and a man may follow a dangerous guide; Our guide here is Christ, Sequere me, follow me. And then we shall see the promise itself, the employment, the function, the preferment; In which there is no new state promised them, no Innovation, (They were fishers, and they shall be fishers still) but there is an improvement, a bettering, a reformation, (They were fishermen before, and now they shall be fishers of men;) To which purpose, we shall find the world to be the Sea, and the Gospel their Net. And lastly, all this is presented to them, not as it was expressed in the former part, with a For, (it is not, Fellow me, for I will prefer you) he will not have that the reason of their following; But yet it is, Fellow me, and I will prefer you; It is a subsequent addition of his own goodness, but so infallible a one, as we may rely upon; Whosoever doth follow Christ, speeds well. And into these considerations will fall all that belongs to this last part, Fellow me, and I will make you fishers of men. First then, Sequere. Humilitas. here is an impression of Humility, in following, in coming after, Sequere, follow, press not to come before; And it had need be first, if we consider how early, how primary a sin Pride is, and how soon it possesses us. Scarce any man, but if he look back seriously into himself, and into his former life, and revolve his own history, but that the first act which he can remember in himself, or can be remembered of by others, will be some act of Pride. Before Ambition, or Covetousness, or Licentiousness is awake in us, Pride is working; Though but a childish pride, yet pride; and this Parents rejoice at in their children, and call it spirit, and so it is, but not the best. We enlarge not therefore the consideration of this word sequere, follow, come after, so fare, as to put our meditation upon the whole body, and the several members of this sin of pride; Nor upon the extent and diffusiveness of this sin, as it spreads itself over every other sin; (for every sin is complicated with pride, so as every sin is a rebellious opposing of the law and will of God) Nor to consider the weighty heinousness of pride, how it aggravates every other sin, how it makes a musket a Canon bullet, and a pebble a Millstone; but after we have stopped a little upon that useful consideration, That there is not so direct, and diametral a contrariety between the nature of any sin and God, as between him and pride, we shall pass to that which is our principal observation in this branch, How early and primary a sin pride is, occasioned by this, that the commandment of Humility is first given, first enjoined in our first word, Sequere, follow. But first, Nihil tam centrarium Deo. we exalt that consideration, That nothing is so contrary to God, as Pride, with this observation, That God in the Scriptures is often by the Holy Ghost invested, and represented in the qualities and affections of man; and to constitute a commerce and familiarity between God and man, God is not only said to have bodily lineaments, eyes and ears, and hands, and feet, and to have some of the natural affections of man, as Joy, in particular, Deut. 30.9. (The Lord will rejoice over thee for good, as he rejoiced over thy Fathers) And so, pity too, Gen. 39.21. (The Lord was with joseph, and extended kindness unto him) But some of those inordinate and irregular passions and perturbations, excesses and defects of man, are imputed to God, by the Holy Ghost in the Scriptures. For so, laziness, drowsiness is imputed to God; (Awake Lord, why sleepest thou?) So corruptibleness, and deterioration, Psal. 44.23. Psal. 18.26. and growing worse by ill company, is imputed to God; (Cum perverso perverteris, God is said to grow froward with the froward, and that he learns to go crookedly with them that go crookedly) And prodigality and wastfulnesse is imputed to God; Psal. 44.12. (Thou sellest thy people for naught, and dost not increase thy wealth by their price) So sudden and hasty choler; (Kiss the Son lest he be angry, and ye perish Inira brevi, Psal. 2.12. though his wrath be kindled but a little) And then, illimited and boundless anger, a vindicative irreconciliablenesse is imputed to God; (I was but a little displeased, Zech. 1.15. (but it is otherwise now) I am very sore displeased) So there is Ira devorans; Exod. 15.4. job 10.17. jer. 21.5. Psal. 80.4. (Wrath that consumes like stubble) So there is Ira multiplicata, (Plagues renewed, and indignation increased) So God himself expresses it, (I will fight against you in anger and in fury) And so for his inexorableness, his irreconciliablenesse, (O Lord God of Hosts, Quousque, how long wilt thou be angry against the prayer of thy people?) God's own people, Gods own people praying to their own God, and yet their God irreconciliable to them. Scorn and contempt is imputed to God; which is one of the most enormous, and disproportioned weaknesses in man; that a worm that crawls in the dust, that a grain of dust, that is hurried with every blast of wind, should find any thing so much inferior to itself as to scorn it, to deride it, to contemn it; yet scorn, and derision, and contempt is imputed to God, Psal. 2.4. Prov. 1.26. (He that sitteth in the Heavens shall laugh, the Lord shall have them in derision) and again, (I will laugh at your calamity, I will mock you when your fear cometh.) Nay beloved, even inebriation, excess in that kind, Drunkenness, is a Metaphor which the Holy Ghost hath mingled in the expressing of God's proceed with man; for God does not only threaten to make his enemies drunk, (and to make others drunk is a circumstance of drunkenness) (so Jerusalem being in his displeasure complains, Inebriavit absynthio, Lam. 3.15. Esay 49.26. (He hath made me drunk with wormwood) and again, (They shall be drunk with their own blood, as with new Wine) Nor only to express his plentiful mercies to his friends and servants, does God take that Metaphor, (Inebriabo animam Sacerdotis, I will make the soul of the Priest drunk; fill it, jen. 31.14. Ver. 25. satiate it) and again, (I will make the weary soul, and the sorrowful soul drunk) But not only all this, (though in all this God have a hand) not only towards others, but God in his own behalf complains of the scant and penurious Sacrificer, Non inebriasti me, Esay 43.24. Thou hast not made me drunk with thy Sacrifices. And yet, though for the better applying of God to the understanding of man, the Holy Ghost impute to God these excesses, and defects of man (laziness and drowsiness, deterioration, corruptibleness by ill conversation, prodigality and wastfulnesse, sudden choler, long irreconciablenesse, scorn, inebriation, and many others) in the Scriptures, yet in no place of the Scripture is God, for any respect said to be proud; God in the Scriptures is never made so like man, as to be made capable of Pride; for this had not been to have God like man, but like the devil. God is said in the Scriptures to apparel himself gloriously; Psal. 104.2. Psal. 45.13. (God covers him with light as with a garment) And so of his Spouse the Church it is said, (Her clothing is of wrought gold, and her raiment of needle work) and, as though nothing in this world were good enough for her wearing, she is said to be clothed with the Sun. Rev. 12.1. But glorious apparel is not pride in them, whose conditions require it, and whose revenues will bear it. God is said in the Scriptures to appear with greatness and majesty, Dan. 7.10. (A stream of fire came forth before him; thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him.) And so Christ shall come at Judgement, with his Hosts of Angels, in majesty, and in glory. But these outward appearances and acts of greatness are not pride in those persons, to whom there is a reverence due, which reverence is preserved by this outward splendour, and not otherwise. God is said in the Scriptures to triumph over his enemies, and to be jealous of his glory; (The Lord, whose name is jealous, Exod. 34.14. is a jealous God) But, for Princes to be jealous of their glory, studious of their honour, for any private man to be jealous of his good name, careful to preserve an honest reputation, is not pride. For, Pride is Appetitus celsitudinis perversus, It is an inordinate desire of being better than we are. Now there is a lawful, nay a necessary desire of being better and better; And that, not only in spiritual things, (for so every man is bound to be better and better, better to day then yesterday, and to morrow then to day, and he that grows not in Religion, withers, There is no standing at a stay, He that goes not forward in godliness, goes backward, and he that is not better, is worse) but even in temporal things too there is a liberty given us, nay there is a law, an obligation laid upon us, to endeavour by industry in a lawful calling, to mend and improve, to enlarge ourselves, and spread, even in worldly things. The first Commandment that God gave man, was not prohibitive; God, Gen. 1.28. in that, forbade man nothing, but enlarged him with that Crescite, & multiplicamini, Increase and multiply, which is not only in the multiplication of children; but in the enlargement of possessions too; for so it follows in the same place, not only Replete, but Dominamini, not only replenish the world, but subdue it, and take dominion over it, that is, make it your own. For, Terram dedit filiis hominum, As God hath given sons to men, so God gives the possession of this world to the sons of men. For so when God delivers that commandment, the second time, to Noah, for the reparation of the world, Crescite & multiplicamini, Gen. 9.1. Increase and multiply, he accompanies it with that reason, The fear of you, and the dread of you shall be upon all, and all are delivered into your hands; which reason can have no relation to the multiplying of Children, but to the enlarging of possessions. God planted trees in Paradise in a good state at first; at first with ripe fruits upon them; but God's purpose was, that even those trees, though well then, should grow greater. God gives many men good estates from their parents at first; yet God's purpose is that they should increase those estates. He that leaves no more, than his father left him, (if the fault be in himself) shall hardly make a good account of his stewardship to God; for, he hath but kept his talon in a handkerchief. Mat. 18.25. Prov. 18.9. And the slothful man is even brother to the waster. The holy Ghost in Solomon, scarce prefers him that does not get more, before him that wastes all. jer. 48.10. He makes them brethren; almost all one. Cursed be he that does the work of God negligently; that does any Commandment of God by halves; And this negligent and lazy man, this in-industrious and illaborious man that takes no pains, he does one part of God's Commandment, He does multiply, but he does not the other, he does not increase; He leaves Children enough, but he leaves them nothing; not in possessions and maintenance, nor in vocation and calling. And truly, 1 Tim. 6.10. 1 Tim. 9 howsoever the love of money be the root of all evil, (He cannot mistake that told us so) Howsoever they that will be rich (that resolve to be rich by any means) shall fall into many tentations, Howsoever a hasty desire of being suddenly and prematurely rich, be a dangerous and an obnoxious thing, a pestilent and contagious disease, (for what a perverse and inordinate anticipation and prevention of God and nature is it, to look for our harvest in May, or to look for all grainst at once? and such a perverseness is the hasty desire of being suddenly and prematurely rich, yet, to go on industriously in an honest calling, and giving God his leisure, and giving God his portion all the way, in Tithes, and in Alms, and then, still to lay up something for posterity, is that, which God does not only permit and accept from us, but command to us, and reward in us. And certainly, that man shall not stand so right in God's eye at the last day, that leaves his Children to the Parish, as he that leaves the Parish to his Children, if he have made his purchases out of honest gain, in a lawful Calling, and not out of oppression. In all which, I would be rightly understood; that is, that I speak of such poverty as is contracted by our own laziness, or wastfulnesse. For otherwise, poverty that comes from the hand of God, is as rich a blessing as comes from his hand. He that is poor with a good conscience, that hath laboured and yet not prospered, knows to whom to go, Psal. 4.7. and what to say, Lord, thou hast put gladness into my heart, more than in the time when corn and wine increased; (more now, then when I had more) I will lay me down and sleep, for thou Lord only makest me to dwell in safety. Does every rich man dwell in safety? Can every rich man lie down in peace and sleep? no, nor every poor man neither; but he that is poor with a good conscience, can. And, though he that is rich with a good conscience may, in a good measure, do so too, (sleep in peace) yet not so out of the sphere and latitude of envy, and free from the machinations, and supplantations, and undermine of malicious men, that feed upon the confiscations, and build upon the ruins of others, as the poor man is. Though then S. chrysostom call riches Absurditatis parents, the parents of absurdities, That they make us do, not only ungodly, but inhuman things, not only irreligious, but unreasonable things, uncomely and absurd things, things which we ourselves did not suspect that we could be drawn to, yet there is a growing rich, which is not covetousness, and there is a desire of honour and preferment, which is not Pride. For, Pride is, (as we said before) Appetitus perversus, A perverse and inordinate desire, but there is a desire of honour and preferment, regulated by rectified Reason; and rectified Reason is Religion. And therefore, (as we said) how ever other affections of man, may, and are, by the Holy Ghost, in Scriptures, in some respects ascribed to God, yet never Pride. Nay, the Holy Ghost himself seems to be straitened, and in a difficulty, when he comes to express God's proceed with a proud man, and his detestation of him, and aversion from him. There is a considerable, a remarkable, indeed a singular manner of expressing it, (perchance you find not the like in all the Bible) where God says, Psal. 101.5. Hini that hath a high look, and a proud heart, I will not, (in our last) I cannot, (in our former translation) Not what? Not as it is in those translations, I cannot suffer him, I will not suffer him; for that word of Suffering, is but a voluntary word, supplied by the Translators; In the Original, it is as it were an abrupt breaking off on God's part, from the proud man, and, (if we may so speak) a kind of froward departing from him. God does not say of the proud man, I cannot work upon him, I cannot mend him, I cannot pardon him, I cannot suffer him, I cannot stay with him, but merely I cannot, and no more, I cannot tell what to say of him, what to do for him; (Him that hath a proud heart, I cannot) Pride is so contrary to God, as that the proud man, and he can meet in nothing. And this consideration hath kept us thus long, from that which we made our first and principal collection, That this commandment of Humility, was imprinted in our very first word, Sequere, follow, be content to come after, to denote how early and primary a sin Pride is, and how soon it entered into the world, and how soon into us; and that consideration we shall pursue now. We know that light is God's eldest child, his first borne of all Creatures; Superbia in Angelis. and it is ordinarily received, that the Angels are twins with the light, made then when light was made. And then the first act, that these Angels that fell, did, was an act of Pride. They not thank nor praise God; for their Creation; (which should have been their first act) They did not solicit, nor pray to God for their Sustentation, their Melioration, their Confirmation; (so they should have proceed) But the first act that those first Creatures did, was an act of pride, a proud reflecting upon themselves, a proud overvaluing of their own condition, and an acquiescence in that, in an imaginary possibility of standing by themselves, without any farther relation, or beholdingness to God. So early, so primary a sin is Pride, as that it was the first act of the first of Creatures. So early, so primary a sin, as that whereas all Pride now is but a comparative pride, Superbia positiva. this first pride in the Angels was a positive, a radical pride. The Pharisee is but proud, that he is not as other men are; that is but a comparative pride. Luk. 18.11. No King thinks himself great enough, yet he is proud that he is independent, sovereign, subject to none. No subject thinks himself rich enough, yet he is proud that he is able to oppress others that are poorer, Et gloriatur in malo, quia potens est, He boasteth himself in mischief, Psal. 52.1. because he is a mighty man. But all these are but comparative prides; and there must be some subjects to compare with, before a King can be proud, and some inferiors, before the Magistrate, and some poor, before the rich man can be proud. But this pride in those Angels in heaven, was a positive pride; There were no other Creatures yet made, with whom these Angels could compare themselves, and before whom these Angels could prefer themselves, and yet before there was any other creature but themselves, any other creature, to undervalue, or insult over, these Angels were proud of themselves. So early, so primary a sin is Pride. So early, so primary, as that in that ground, which was for goodness next to heaven, Superbia in Paradiso. that is, Paradise, Pride grew very early too. Adam's first act was not an act of Pride, but an act of lawful power and jurisdiction, in naming the Creatures; Adam was above them all, and he might have called them what he would; There had lain no action, no appeal, if Adam had called a Lion a Dog, or an Eagle an Owl. And yet we dispute with God, why he should not make all us vessels of honour, and we complain of God, that he hath not given us all, all the abundances of this world. Comparatively Adam was better than all the world beside, and yet we find no act of pride in Adam, when he was alone. Solitude is not the scene of Pride; The danger of pride is in company, when we meet to look upon another. But in Adam's wife, Eve, her first act (that is noted) was an act of Pride, Gen. 3.5. a harkening to that voice of the Serpent, Ye shall be as Gods. As soon as there were two, there was pride. How many may we have known, (if we have had any conversation in the world) that have been content all the week, at home alone, with their worky day faces, as well as with their worky day clothes, and yet on Sundays, when they come to Church, and appear in company, will mend both, their faces as well as their clothes. Not solitude, but company is the scene of pride; And therefore I know not what to call that practice of the Nuns in Spain, who though they never see man, yet will paint. So early, so primary a sin is Pride, as that it grew instantly from her, Gen. 2.18. whom God intended for a Helper, because he saw that it was not good for man to be alone. God sees that it is not good for man to be without health, without wealth, without power, and jurisdiction, and magistracy, and we grow proud of our helpers, proud of our health and strength, proud of our wealth and riches, proud of our office and authority over others. So early, so primary a sin is pride, as that, out of every mercy, and blessing, which God affords us, (and, His mercies are new every morning) we gather Pride; we are not the more thankful for them, and yet we are the prouder of them. Nay, we gather Pride, not only out of those things, which mend and improve us, (Gods blessings and mercies) but out of those actions of our own, that destroy and ruin us, we gather pride; sins overthrew us, demolish us, destroy and ruin us, and yet we are proud of our sins. How many men have we heard boast of their sins; and, (as S. Augustine confesses of himself) belie themselves, and boast of more sins than ever they committed? Out of every thing, out of nothing sin grows. Therefore was this commandment in our text, Sequere, Fellow, come after, well placed first, for we are come to see even children strive for place and precedency, and mothers are ready to go to the Heralds to know how Cradles shall be ranked, which Cradle shall have the highest place; Nay, even in the womb, Gen. 25.26. there was contention for precedency; jacob took hold of his brother Esau's heel, and would have been borne before him. And as our pride gins in our Cradle, Superbia in monumentis. it continues in our graves and Monuments. It was a good while in the primitive Church, before any were buried in the Church; The best contented themselves with the Churchyards. After, a holy ambition, (may we call it so) a holy Pride brought them ad Limina, to the Church-threshold, to the Church-door, because some great Martyrs were buried in the Porches, and devout men desired to lie near them, 1 King. 13.31. as one Prophet did to lie near another, (Lay my bones besides his bones.) But now, persons whom the Devil kept from Church all their lives, Separatists, Libertines, that never came to any Church, And persons, whom the Devil brought to Church all their lives, (for, such as come merely out of the obligation of the Law, and to redeem that vexation, or out of custom, or company, or curiosity, or a perverse and sinister affection to the particular Preacher, though they come to God's house, come upon the Devil's invitation) Such as one Devil, that is, worldly respect, brought to Church in their lives, another Devil, that is, Pride and vainglory, brings to Church after their deaths, in an affectation of high places, and sumptuous Monuments in the Church. And such as have given nothing at all to any pious uses, or have determined their alms and their dole which they have given, in that one day of their funeral, and no farther, have given large annuities, perpetuities, for new painting their tombs, and for new flags, and scutcheons, every certain number of years. O the earliness! O the lateness! how early a Spring, and no Autumn! how fast a growth, and no declination, of this branch of this sin Pride, against which, this first word of ours, Sequere, Fellow, come after, is opposed! this love of place, and precedency, it rocks us in our Cradles, it lies down with us in our graves. There are diseases proper to certain things, Rots to sheep, Murrain to cattles. There are diseases proper to certain places, as the Sweat was to us. There are diseases proper to certain times, as the plague is in divers parts of the Eastern Countries, where they know assuredly, when it will begin and end. But for this infectious disease of precedency, and love of place, it is run over all places, as well Cloisters as Courts, And over all men, as well spiritual as temporal, And over all times, as well the Apostles as ours. The Apostles disputed often, who should be greatest, Ma●. 19.28. and it was not enough to them, that Christ assured them, that they should sit upon the twelve thrones, and judge the twelve Tribes; Matt. 19.28. it was not enough for the sons of Zebedee, to be put into that Commission, but their friends must solicit the office, to place them high in that Commission; their Mother must move, that one may sit at Christ's right hand, and the other at his left, in the execution of that Commission. Because this sin of pride is so early and primary a sin, is this Commandment of Humility first enjoined, and because this sin appears most generally in this love of place, and precedency, the Commandment is expressed in that word, Sequere, Fellow, Come after. But then, even this Humility is limited, for it is Sequere me, follow me, which was proposed for our second Consideration, Sequere me. There may be a pride in Humility, Sequere me. and an overweening of ourselves, in attributing too much to our own judgement, in following some leaders; for so, we may be so humble as to go after some man, and yet so proud, as to go before the Church, because that man may be a Schismatic. Therefore Christ proposes a safe guide, himself, Sequere me, follow me. It is a dangerous thing, when Christ says, Vade post me, Get thee behind me; for that is accompanied with a shrewd name of increpation, Satan, Get thee behind me Satan; Christ speaks it but twice in the Gospel; once to Peter, who because he then did the part of an Adversary, Christ calls Satan, and once to Satan himself, Matt. 16 23. Matt. 4.10. because he pursued his tentations upon him; for there is a going behind Christ, which is a casting out of his presence, without any future following, and that is a fearful station, a fearful retrogradation; But when Christ's says, not Vade retro, Get thee behind me, see my face no more, but Sequere me, follow me, he means to look back upon us; Luk. 22.63. so the Lord turned and looked upon Peter, and Peter wept bitterly, and all was well; when he bids us follow him, he directs us in a good way, and by a good guide. The Carthusian Friars thought they descended into as low pastures as they could go, when they renounced all flesh, and bound themselves to feed on fish only; and yet another Order follows them in their superstitious singularity, and goes beyond them, Foliantes, the Fueillans, they eat neither flesh, nor fish, nothing but leaves, and roots; and as the Carthusians in a proud humility, despise all other Orders that eat flesh, so do the Fueillans the Carthusians that eat fish. There is a pride in such humility. That Order of Friars that called themselves Ignorantes, Ignorant men, that pretended to know nothing, sunk as low as they thought it possible, into an humble name and appellation; And yet the Minorits, (Minorits that are less than any) think they are gone lower, and then the Minims, (Minims' that are less than all) lower than they. And when one would have thought, that there had not been a lower step than that, another Sect went beyond all, beyond the Ignorants, and the Minorits, and the Minims, and all, and called themselves, Nullanos, Nothings. But yet, even these Diminutives, the Minorits, and Minims', and Nullans, as little, as less, as least, as very nothing as they profess themselves, lie under this disease, which is opposed in the Sequere me, follow, come after, in our Text; For no sort nor condition of men in the world are more contentious, more quarrelsome, more vehement for place, and precedency, than these Orders of Friars are, there, where it may appear, that is, in their public Processions, as we find by those often troubles, which the Superiors of the several Orders, and Bishops in their several Diocese, and some of those Counsels, which they call General, have been put to, for the ranking, and marshalling of these contentious, and wrangling men. Which makes me remember the words, in which the eighteenth of Queen Elizabeth's Injunctions is conceived, That to take away fond Courtesy, (that is, needless Compliment) and to take away challenging of places, (which it seems were frequent and troublesome then) To take away fond courtesy, and challenging of places, Processions themselves were taken away, because in those Processions, these Orders of Friars, that pretended to follow, and come after all the world, did thus passionately, and with so much scandalous animosity pursue the love of place, and precedency. Therefore is our humility here limited, Sequere me, follow me, follow Christ. How is that done? Consider it in Doctrinal things first, and then in Moral; Sequendus in Doctrina. First how we are to follow Christ in believing, and then how in doing, in practising. First in Doctrinal things, There must have gone some body before, else it is no following; Take heed therefore of going on with thine own inventions, thine own imaginations, for this is no following; Take heed of accompanying the beginners of Heresies and Schisms; for these are no followings where none have gone before: Nay, there have not gone enough before, to make it a path to follow in, except it have had a long continuance, and been much trodden in. And therefore to follow Christ doctrinally, is to embrace those Doctrines, in which his Church hath walked from the beginning, and not to vex thyself with new points, not necessary to salvation. That is the right way, and then thou art well entered; but that is not all; thou must walk in the right way to the end, that is, to the end of thy life. So that to profess the whole Gospel, and nothing but Gospel for Gospel, and profess this to thy death, for no respect, no dependence upon any great person, to slacken in any fundamental point of thy Religion, nor to be shaken with hopes or fears in thine age, when thou wouldst feign live at ease, and therefore thinkest it necessary to do, as thy supporters do; To persevere to the end in the whole Gospel, this is to follow Christ in Doctrinal things. In practical things, Sequendus in vitae. jam. 5.11. things that belong to action, we must also follow Christ, in the right way, and to the end. They are both (way and end) laid together, Sufferentiam Iob audiistis, & finem Domini vidistis; You have heard of the patience of job, and you have seen the end of the Lord; and you must go jobs way to Christ's end. job hath beaten a path for us, to show us all the way; A path that affliction walked in, and seemed to delight in it, in bringing the Sabaean upon his Oxen, the Chaldean upon his Camels, the fire upon his Sheep, destruction upon his Servants, and at last, ruin upon his Children. One affliction makes not a path; iterated, continued calamities do; and such a path job hath showed us, not only patience, but cheerfulness; more, thankfulness for our afflictions, because they were multiplied. And then, we must set before our eyes, as the way of job, so the end of the Lord; Now the end of the Lord was the cross: So that to follow him to the end, is not only to bear afflictions, though to death, but it is to bring our crosses to the Cross of Christ. How is that progress made? (for it is a royal progress, Matt. 16.24. not a pilgrimage to follow Christ to his Cross) Our Saviour saith, He that will follow me, let him take up his cross, and follow me. You see four stages, four resting, baiting places in this progress. It must be a cross, And it must be my cross, And then it must be taken up by me, And with this cross of mine, thus taken up by me, I must follow Christ, that is, carry my cross to his. First it must be a Cross, Crux. Gal. 6.14. Tollat crucem; for every man hath afflictions, but every man hath not cross. Only those afflictions are crosses, whereby the world is crucified to us, and we to the world. The afflictions of the wicked exasperate them, enrage them, stone and pave them, obdurate and petrify them, but they do not crucify them. The afflictions of the godly crucify them. And when I am come to that conformity with my Saviour, Col. 1.24. as to fulfil his sufferings in my flesh, (as I am, when I glorify him in a Christian constancy and cheerfulness in my afflictions) than I am crucified with him, carried up to his Cross: 2 King. 4.34. And as Elisha in raising the Shunamits dead child, put his mouth upon the child's mouth, his eyes, and his hands, upon the hands, and eyes of the child; so when my crosses have carried me up to my Saviour's Cross, I put my hands into his hands, and hang upon his nails, I put mine eyes upon his, and wash off all my former unchaste looks, and receive a sovereign tincture, and a lively verdure, and a new life into my dead tears, from his tears. I put my mouth upon his mouth, and it is I that say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? and it is I that recover again, and say, Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit. Thus my afflictions are truly a cross, when those afflictions do truly crucify me, and supple me, and mellow me, and knead me, and roll me out, to a conformity with Christ. It must be this Cross, and then it must be my cross that I must take up, Tollat suam. Other men's crosses are not my crosses; Crux mea. no man hath suffered more than himself needed. That is a poor treasure which they boast of in the Roman Church, that they have in their Exchequer, all the works of supererogation, of the Martyrs in the Primitive Church, that suffered so much more than was necessary for their own salvation, and those superabundant crosses and merits they can apply to me. If the treasure of the blood of Christ Jesus be not sufficient, Lord what addition can I find, to match them, to piece out them! And if it be sufficient of itself, what addition need I seek? Other men's crosses are not mine, other men's merits cannot save me. Nor is any cross mine own, which is not mine by a good title; If I be not Possessor bonae fidei, If I came not well by that cross. 1 Cor. 4.7. And Quid habeo quod non accepi? is a question that reaches even to my crosses; what have I that I have not received? not a cross; And from whose hands can I receive any good thing, but from the hands of God? So that that only is my cross, which the hand of God hath laid upon me. Alas, that cross of present bodily weakness, which the former wantonnesses of my youth have brought upon me, is not my cross; That cross of poverty which the wastfulnesse of youth hath brought upon me, is not my cross; for these, weakness upon wantonness, want upon wastfulnesse, are Nature's crosses, not Gods, and they would fall naturally, though there were (which is an impossible supposition) no God. Except God therefore take these crosses in the way, as they fall into his hands, and sanctify them so, and then lay them upon me, they are not my crosses; but if God do this, they are. And then this cross thus prepared, I must take up; Tollat. Foreign crosses, other men's merits are not mine; spontaneous and voluntary crosses, Tollat. contracted by mine own sins, are not mine; neither are devious, and remote, and unnecessary crosses, my crosses. Since I am bound to take up my cross, there must be a cross that is mine to take up; that is, a cross prepared for me by God, and laid in my way, which is tentations or tribulations in my calling; and I must not go out of my way to seek a cross; for, so it is not mine, nor laid for my taking up. I am not bound to hunt after a persecution, nor to stand it, and not fly, nor to affront a plague, and not remove, nor to open myself to an injury, and not defend. I am not bound to starve myself by inordinate fasting, nor to tear my flesh by inhuman whip, and flagellations. I am bound to take up my Cross; and that is only mine which the hand of God hath laid for me, that is, in the way of my Calling, tentations and tribulations incident to that. If it be mine, that is, laid for me by the hand of God, and taken up by me, that is, Sequatur me. voluntarily embraced, then Sequatur, says Christ, I am bound to follow him, with that cross, that is, to carry my cross to his cross. And if at any time I faint under this cross in the way, let this comfort me, that even Christ himself was eased by Simon of Cyrene, in the carrying of his Cross; and in all such cases, Mat. 27.32. I must fly to the assistance of the prayers of the Church, and of good men, that God, since it is his burden, will make it lighter, since it is his yoke, easier, and since it is his Cross, more supportable, and give me the issue with the tentation. When all is done, with this cross thus laid for me, and taken up by me, I must follow Christ; Christ to his end; his end is his Cross; that is, I must bring my cross to his; lay down my cross at the foot of his; Confess that there is no dignity, no merit in mine, but as it receives an impression, a sanctification from his. For, if I could die a thousand times for Christ, this were nothing, if Christ had not died for me before. And this is truly to follow Christ, both in the way, and to the end, as well in doctrinal things as in practical. And this is all that lay upon these two, Peter and Andrew, Fellow me. Remains yet to be considered, what they shall get by this; which is our last Consideration. They shall be fishers; and what shall they catch? men. They shall be fishers of men. Piscatores hominum. And then, for that the world must be their Sea, and their net must be the Gospel. And here in so vast a sea, and with so small a net, there was no great appearance of much gain. And in this function, whatsoever they should catch, they should catch little for themselves. The Apostleship, as it was the fruitfullest, so it was the barrenest vocation; They were to catch all the world; there is their fecundity; but the Apostles were to have no Successors, as Apostles; there is their barrenness. The Apostleship was not intended for a function to raise houses and families; The function ended in their persons; after the first, there were no more Apostles. And therefore it is an usurpation, an imposture, an illusion, it is a forgery, when the Bishop of Rome will proceed by Apostolical authority, and with Apostolical dignity, and Apostolical jurisdiction; If he be S. Peter's Successor in the Bishopric of Rome, he may proceed with Episcopal authority in his Diocese. If he be; for, though we do not deny that S. Peter was at Rome, and Bishop of Rome; though we receive it with an historical faith, induced by the consent of Ancient writers, yet when they will constitute matter of faith out of matter of fact, and, because S. Peter was (de facto) Bishop of Rome, therefore we must believe, as an Article of faith, such an infallibility in that Church, as that no Successor of S. Peter's can ever err, when they stretch it to matter of faith, then for matter of faith, we require Scriptures; and then we are confident, and justly confident, that though historically we do believe it, yet out of Scriptures (which is a necessary proof in Articles of faith) they can never prove that S. Peter was Bishop of Rome, or ever at Rome. So then, if the present Bishop of Rome be S. Peter's Successor, as Bishop of Rome, he hath Episcopal jurisdiction there; but he is not S. Peter's Successor in his Apostleship; and only that Apostleship was a jurisdiction over all the world. But the Apostleship was an extraordinary office instituted by Christ, for a certain time, and to certain purposes, and not to continue in ordinary use. As also the office of the Prophet was in the Old Testament an extraordinary Office, and was not transferred then, nor does not remain now in the ordinary office of the Minister. And therefore they argue impertinently, and collect and infer sometimes seditiously that say, The Prophet proceeded thus and thus, therefore the Minister may and must proceed so too; The Prophets would chide the Kings openly, and threaten the Kings publicly, and proclaim the fault of the Kings in the ears of the people confidently, authoritatively, therefore the Minister may and must do so. God sent that particular Prophet jeremy with that extraordinary Commission, jer. 1.10. Behold I have this day set thee over the Nations, and over the Kingdoms, to root out, and to pull down, to destroy and throw down, and then to build, and to plant again; But God hath given none of us his Ministers, in our ordinary function, any such Commission over Nations, and over Kingdoms. Even in jeremies' Commission there seems to be a limitation of time; Behold this day I have set thee over them, where that addition (this day) is not only the date of the Commission, that it passed God's hand that day, but (this day) is the term, the duration of the Commission, that it was to last but that day, that is, (as the phrase of that language is) that time for which it was limited. And therefore, as they argue perversely, frowardly, dangerously that say, The Minister does not his duty that speaks not as boldly, and as publicly too, and of Kings, and great persons, as the Prophets did, because theirs was an Extraordinary, ours an Ordinary office, (and no man will think that the Justices in their Sessions, or the Judges in their Circuits may proceed to executions, without due trial by a course of Law, because Marshals, in time of rebellion and other necessities, may do so, because the one hath but an ordinary, the other an extraordinary Commission) So do they deceive themselves and others, that pretend in the Bishop of Rome an Apostolical jurisdiction, a jurisdiction over all the world, whereas howsoever he may be S. Peter's Successor, as Bishop of Rome, yet he is no Successor to S. Peter as an Apostle; upon which only the universal power can be grounded, and without which that universal power falls to the ground: The Apostolical faith remains spread over all the world, but Apostolical jurisdiction is expired with their persons. These twelve Christ calls Fishers; Piscatores, quia nomen humile. why fishers? because it is a name of labour, of service, and of humiliation; and names that taste of humiliation, and labour, and service, are most properly ours; (fishers we may be) names of dignity, and authority, and command are not so properly ours, (Apostles we are not in any such sense as they were) Nothing inflames, nor swells, nor puffes us up, more than that leaven of the soul, that empty, airy, frothy love of Names and Titles. We have known men part with ancient lands for new Titles, and with old Manors for new Honours; and as a man that should bestow all his money upon a fair purse, and then have nothing to put into it; so whole Estates have melted away for Titles and Honours, and nothing left to support them. And how long last they? Exod. 3.14. How many winds blast them? That name of God, in which, Moses was sent to Pharaoh, is by our Translators and Expositors ordinarily said to be I Am that I Am, (God and say, I Am hath sent me, says God there) But in truth, in the Original, the name is conceived in the future, it is, I shall be. Every man is that he is; but only God is sure that he shall be so still. Therefore Christ calls them by a name of labour and humiliation. But why by that name of labour and humiliation, Fishers? Because it was Nomen primitivum, Piscatores, quia nomen primitivum. their own, their former name. The Holy Ghost pursues his own way, and does here in Christ, as he does often in other places, he speaks in such forms, and such phrases, as may most work upon them to whom he speaks. Psal. 78.72. Of David, that was a shepherd before, God says, he took him to feed his people. Mat. 2.2. To those Magis of the East, who were given to the study of the Stars, God gave a Star to be their guide to Christ at Bethlem. jehn 6.24. To those which followed him to Capernaum for meat, Christ took occasion by that, to preach to them of the spiritual food of their souls. jehn 4.21. To the Samaritan woman, whom he found at the Well, he preached of the water of Life. To these men in our Text accustomed to a joy and gladness, when they took great, or great store of fish, he presents his comforts agreeably to their taste, They should be fishers still. Beloved, Christ puts no man out of his way, (for sinful courses are no ways, but continual deviations) to go to heaven. Christ makes heaven all things to all men, that he might gain all: To the mirthful man he presents heaven, as all joy, and to the ambitious man, as all glory; To the Merchant it is a Pearl, and to the husbandman it is a rich field. Christ hath made heaven all things to all men, that he might gain all, and he puts no man out of his way to come thither. These men he calls Fishers. He does not call them from their calling, but he mends them in it. It is not an Innovation; Non Innovatio, sed Renovatio. God loves not innovations; Old doctrines, old disciplines, old words and forms of speech in his service, God loves best. But it is a Renovation, though not an Innovation, and Renovations are always acceptable to God; that is, the renewing of a man's self, in a consideration of his first estate, what he was made for, and wherein he might be most serviceable to God. Such a renewing it is, as could not be done without God; no man can renew himself, regenerate himself; no man can prepare that work, no man can begin it, no man can proceed in it of himself. The desire and the actual beginning is from the preventing grace of God, and the constant proceeding is from the concomitant, and subsequent, and continual succeeding grace of God; for there is no conclusive, no consummative grace in this life; no such measure of grace given to any man, as that that man needs no more, or can lose or frustrate none of that. The renwing of these men in our text, Christ takes to himself; Faciam vos, I will make ye fishers of men; no worldly respects must make us such fishers; it must be a calling from God; And yet, Mar. 1.16. (as the other Evangelist in the same history expresses it) it is Faciam fieri vos, I will cause ye to be made fishers of men, that is, I will provide an outward calling for you too. Our calling to this Man-fishing is not good, Nisi Dominus faciat, & fieri faciat, except God make us fishers by an internal, and make his Church to make us so too, by an external calling. Then we are fishers of men, and then we are successors to the Apostles, though not in their Apostleship, yet in this fishing. And then, for this fishing, the world is the Sea, and our net is the Gospel. The world is a Sea in many respects and assimilations. It is a Sea, Mundus Mare. as it is subject to storms, and tempests; Every man (and every man is a world) feels that. And then, it is never the shallower for the calmness, The Sea is as deep, there is as much water in the Sea, in a calm, as in a storm; we may be drowned in a calm and flattering fortune, in prosperity, as irrecoverably, as in a wrought Sea, in adversity; So the world is a Sea. It is a Sea, as it is bottomless to any line, which we can sound it with, and endless to any discovery that we can make of it. The purposes of the world, the ways of the world, exceed our consideration; But yet we are sure the Sea hath a bottom, and sure that it hath limits, that it cannot overpasse; The power of the greatest in the world, the life of the happiest in the world, cannot exceed those bounds, which God hath placed for them; So the world is a Sea. It is a Sea, as it hath ebbs and floods, and no man knows the true reason of those floods and those ebbs. All men have changes and vicissitudes in their bodies, (they fall sick) And in their estates, (they grow poor) And in their minds, (they become sad) at which changes, (sickness, poverty, sadness) themselves wonder, and the cause is wrapped up in the purpose and judgement of God only, and hid even from them that have them; and so the world is a Sea. It is a Sea, as the Sea affords water enough for all the world to drink, but such water as will not quench the thirst. The world affords conveniences enough to satisfy Nature, but these increase our thirst with drinking, and our desire grows and enlarges itself with our abundance, and though we sail in a full Sea, yet we lack water; So the world is a Sea. It is a Sea, if we consider the Inhabitants. In the Sea, the greater fish devour the less; and so do the men of this world too. And as fish, when they mud themselves, have no hands to make themselves clean, but the current of the waters must work that; So have the men of this world no means to cleanse themselves from those sins which they have contracted in the world, of themselves, till a new flood, waters of repentance, drawn up, and sanctified by the Holy Ghost, work that blessed effect in them. All these ways the world is a Sea, but especially it is a Sea in this respect, that the Sea is no place of habitation, but a passage to our habitations. So the Apostle expresses the world, Here we have no continuing City, but we seek one to come; we seek it not here, Heb. 13.14. but we seek it whilst we are here, else we shall never find it. Those are the two great works which we are to do in this world; first to know, that this world is not our home, and then to provide us another home, whilst we are in this world. Therefore the Prophet says, Mic. 2.10. Luk. 12.19. Arise, and departed, for this is not your rest. Worldly men, that have no farther prospect, promise themselves some rest in this world, (Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years, take thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry, says the rich man) but this is not your rest; indeed no rest; at least not yours. You must departed, depart by death, before ye come to that rest; but than you must arise, before you depart; for except ye have a resurrection to grace here, before you depart, you shall have no resurrection to glory in the life to come, when you are departed. Now, Status navigantium. in this Sea, every ship that sails must necessarily have some part of the ship under water; Every man that lives in this world, must necessarily have some of his life, some of his thoughts, some of his labours spent upon this world; but that part of the ship, by which he sails, is above water; Those meditations, and those endeavours which must bring us to heaven, are removed from this world, and fixed entirely upon God. And in this Sea, are we made fishers of men; Of men in general; not of rich men, to profit by them, nor of poor men, to pierce them the more sharply, because affliction hath opened a way into them; Not of learned men, to be over-glad of their approbation of our labours, Nor of ignorant men, to affect them with an astonishment, or admiration of our gifts: But we are fishers of men, of all men, of that which makes them men, their souls. And for this fishing in this Sea, this Gospel is our net. Eloquence is not our net; Rete Euangelium. Traditions of men are not our nets; only the Gospel is. The Devil angel's with hooks and baits; he deceives, and he wounds in the catching; for every sin hath his sting. The Gospel of Christ Jesus is a net; It hath leads and corks; It hath leads, that is, the denouncing of God's judgements, and a power to sink down, and lay flat any stubborn and rebellious heart, And it hath corks, that is, the power of absolution, and application of the mercies of God, that swim above all his works, means to erect an humble and contrite spirit, above all the waters of tribulation, and affliction. A net is Res nodosa, Rete nodosum. a knotty thing; and so is the Scripture, full of knots, of scruple, and perplexity, and anxiety, and vexation, if thou wilt go about to entangle thyself in those things, which appertain not to thy salvation; but knots of a fast union, and inseparable alliance of thy soul to God, and to the fellowship of his Saints, if thou take the Scriptures, as they were intended for thee, that is, if thou be'st content to rest in those places, Rete diffusivum. which are clear, and evident in things necessary. A net is a large thing, past thy fathoming, if thou cast it from thee, but if thou draw it to thee, it will lie upon thine arm. The Scriptures will be out of thy reach, and out of thy use, if thou cast and scatter them upon Reason, upon Philosophy, upon Morality, to try how the Scriptures will fit all them, and believe them but so far as they agree with thy reason; But draw the Scripture to thine own heart, and to thine own actions, and thou shalt find it made for that; all the promises of the old Testament made, and all accomplished in the new Testament, for the salvation of thy soul hereafter, and for thy consolation in the present application of them. Now this that Christ promises here, Non quia tanquam causa. Rom. 6.23. is not here promised in the nature of wages due to our labour, and our fishing. There is no merit in all that we can do. The wages of sin is Death; Death is due to sin, the proper reward of sin; but the Apostle does not say there, That eternal life is the wages of any good work of ours. (The wages of sin is death, but eternal life is the gift of God, through jesus Christ our Lord) Through Jesus Christ, that is, as we are considered in him; and in him, who is a Saviour, a Redeemer, we are not considered but as sinners. So that God's purpose works not otherwise upon us, but as we are sinners; neither did God mean ill to any man, till that man was, in his sight, a sinner. God shuts no man out of heaven, by a lock on the inside, except that man have clapped the door after him, and never knocked to have it opened again, that is, except he have sinned, and never repent. Christ does not say in our text, Fellow me, for I will prefer you; he will not have that the reason, the cause. If I would not serve God, except I might be saved for serving him, I shall not be saved though I serve him; My first end in serving God, must not be myself, but he and his glory. It is but an addition from his own goodness, Et faciam, Fellow me, and I will do this; but yet it is as certain, and infallible as a debt, or as an effect upon a natural cause; Those propositions in nature are not so certain; The Earth is at such a time just between the Sun, and the Moon, therefore the Moon must be Eclipsed, The Moon is at such time just between the Earth and the Sun, therefore the Sun must be Eclipsed; for upon the Sun, and those other bodies, God can, and hath sometimes wrought miraculously, and changed the natural courses of them; (The Sun stood still in joshua, And there was an unnatural Eclipse at the death of Christ) But God cannot by any Miracle so work upon himself, as to make himself not himself, unmerciful, or unjust; And out of his mercy he makes this promise, (Do this, and thus it shall be with you) and then, of his justice he performs that promise, which was made merely, and only out of mercy, If we do it, (though not because we do it) we shall have eternal life. Therefore did Andrew, and Peter faithfully believe, such a net should be put into their hands. Christ had vouchsafed to fish for them, and caught them with that net, and they believed that he that made them fishers of men, would also enable them to catch others with that net. And that is truly the comfort that refreshes us in all our Lucubrations, and night-studies, through the course of our lives, that that God that sets us to Sea, will prosper our voyage, that whether he six us upon our own, or send us to other Congregations, he will open the hearts of those Congregations to us, and bless our labours to them. For as S. Paul's Vaesi non, lies upon us wheresoever we are, (Woe be unto us if we do not preach) so, (as S. Paul says to) we were of all men the most miserable, if we preached without hope of doing good. With this net S. Peter caught three thousand souls in one day, at one Sermon, and five thousand in another. Acts 2.41.4.4. With this net S. Paul fished all the Mediterranean Sea, and caused the Gospel of Christ Jesus to abound from Jerusalem round about to Illyricum. This is the net, Rom. 15.19. with which if ye be willing to be caught, that is, to lay down all your hopes and affiances in the gracious promises of his Gospel, than you are fishes reserved for that great Mariage-feast, which is the Kingdom of heaven; where, whosoever is a dish, is a guest too; whosoever is served in at the table, sits at the table; whosoever is caught by this net, is called to this feast; and there your souls shall be satisfied as with marrow, and with fatness, in an infallible assurance, of an everlasting and undeterminable term, in inexpressible joy and glory. Amen. SERM. LXXIII. Preached to the King in my Ordinary waiting at , 18. April 1626. JOH. 14.2. In my Father's House are many Mansions; If it were not so, I would have told you. THere are occasions of Controversies of all kinds in this one Verse; And one is, whether this be one Verse or no; For as there are Doctrinal Controversies, out of the sense and interpretation of the words, so are there Grammatticall differences about the Distinction, and Interpunction of them: Some Translations differing therein from the Original, (as the Original Copies are distinguished, and interpuncted now) and some differing from one another. The first Translation that was, that into Syriaque, as it is expressed by Tremellius, renders these words absolutely, precisely, as our two Translations do; And, as our two Translations do, applies the second clause and proposition, Si quo minus, If it were not so, I would have told you, as in affirmation, and confirmation of the former, In domo Patris, In my Father's house there are many Mansions, For, If it were not so I would have told you. But then, as both our Translations do, the Syriaque also admits into this Verse a third clause and proposition, Vado parare, I go to prepare you a place. Now Beza doth not so; Piscator doth not so; They determine this Verse in those two propositions which constitute our Text, In my Father's house, etc. and then they let fall the third proposition, as an inducement, and inchoation of the next Verse, I go to prepare a place for you, and if I go, I will come again. Divers others do otherwise, and diversely; For some do assume (as we, and the Syriaque do) all three propositions into the Verse, but then they do not (as we, and the Syriaque do) make the second a proof of the first, In my Father's house are many Mansions, For, If it were not so, I would have told you, But they refer the second to the third proposition, If it were not so, I would have told you, For, I go to prepare you a place, and being to go from you, would leave you ignorant of nothing. But we find no reason to departed from that Distinction and Interpunction of these words, which our own Church exhibits to us, and therefore we shall pursue them so; and so determine, though not the Verse, (for into the Verse, we admit all three propositions) yet the whole purpose and intention of our Saviour, in those two propositions, which accomplish our Text, In my Father's house, etc. This Interpunction than offers and constitutes our two parts. Divisic. First, A particular Doctrine, which Christ infuses into his Disciples, In domo Patris, In my Father's house are many Mansions; And then a general Rule and Scale, by which we are to measure, and weigh all Doctrines, Si quo minus, If it were not so, I would have told you. In the order of nature, the later part falls first into consideration, The rule of all Doctrines; which in this place is, The word of God in the mouth of Christ, digested into the Scriptures; In which, we shall have just, more than just, necessary occasion to note both their distempers, both theirs, that think, That there are other things to be believed, then are in the Scriptures, and theirs that think, That there are some things in the Scriptures, which are not to be believed: For when our Saviour says, Si quo minus, If it were not so, I would have told you, he intends both this proposition, I have told you all that is necessary to be believed; and this also, All that I have told you, is necessary to be believed, so as I have told it you. So that this excludes both that imaginary insufficiency of the Scriptures, which some have ventured to aver, (for God shall never call Christian to account for any thing not notified in the Scriptures) And it excludes also those imaginary Dolos bonos, and frauds pias, which some have adventured to aver too, That God should use holy Illusions, holy deceits, holy frauds, and circumventions in his Scriptures, and not intent in them, that which he pretends by them; This is his Rule, Si quo minus, If it were not so, I would have told you, If I have not told you so, it is not so, and if I have, it is so as I have told you: And in these two branches we shall determine the first part, The Rule of Doctrines, the Scripture. The second part, which is the particular Doctrine which Christ administers to his Disciples here, will also derive and cleave itself into two branches; For first we shall inquire, whether this proposition in our Text, In my Father's house are many Mansions, give any ground, or assistance, or countenance to that pious opinion, of a disparity, and difference of degrees of Glory in the Saints in heaven; And then, if we find the words of this Text to conduce nothing to that Doctrine, we shall consider the right use of the true, and natural, the native and genuine, the direct, and literal, and uncontrovertible sense of the words; because in them, Christ doth not say, that in his Father's house there are Divers Mansions, divers for seat, or lights, or fashion, or furniture, but only that there are Many, and in that notion, the Plurality, the Multipliciry, lies the Consolation. First then, 1 Part. for the first branch of our first part, The general Rule of Doctrines, our Saviour Christ in these words involves an argument, That he hath told them all that was necessary; He hath, because the Scripture hath, for all the Scriptures which were written before Christ, and after Christ, were written by one and the same Spirit, his Spirit. It might then make a good Problem, why they of the Roman Church, not affording to the Scriptures that dignity which belongs to them, are yet so vehement, and make so hard shift, to bring the books of other Authors into the rank, and nature, and dignity of being Scriptures: What matter is it, whether their Maccabees, or their Tobies be Scripture or no? what get their Maccabees, or their Tobies by being Scripture, if the Scripture be not full enough, or not plain enough, to bring me to salvation? But since their intention and purpose, their aim, and their end is, to undervalue the Scriptures, that thereby they may over-value their own Traditions, their way to that end may be to put the name of Scriptures upon books of a lower value, that so the unworthiness of those additional books, may cast a diminution upon the Canonical books themselves, when they are made all one: as in some foreign States we have seen, that when the Prince had a purpose to erect some new Order of Honour, he would disgrace the old Orders, by conferring and bestowing them upon unworthy and incapable persons. But why do we charge the Roman Church with this undervaluing of the Scriptures, when as they pretend, (and that cannot well be denied them) That they ascribe to all the books of Scripture this dignity, That all that is in them is true. It is true; they do so; But this may be true of other Authors also, and yet those Authors remain profane and secular Authors. All may be true that Livy says, and all that our Chronicles say, may be true; and yet our Chronicles, nor Livy become Gospel: for so much they themselves will confess and acknowledge, that all that our Church says is true, that our Church affirms no error; and yet our Church must be a heretical Church, if any Church at all, for all that. Indeed it is but a faint, but an illusory evidence or witness, that pretends to clear a point, if, though it speak nothing but truth, yet it does not speak all the truth. The Scriptures are our evidence for life or death; john 5.39. Search the Scriptures, says Christ, for in them ye think ye have eternal life. Where, ye think so, is not, ye think so, but mistake the matter, but ye think so, is ye think so upon a well-grounded and rectified faith and assurance. Now if this evidence, the Scripture, shall acquit me in one Article, in my belief in God, (for I do find in the Scripture, as much as they require of me to believe, of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost) And then this evidence, the Scripture, shall condemn me in another Article, The Catholic Church, (for I do not find so much in the Scripture, as they require me to believe of their Catholic Church) If the Scripture be sufficient to save me in one, and not in the rest, this is not only a defective, but an illusory evidence, which though it speak truth, yet does not speak all the truth. Fratres sumus, quare litigamus? says S. Augustine, We are all Brethren, by one Father, one Almighty God, and one Mother, one Catholic Church, and then why do we go to Law together? At least, why do we not bring our Suits to an end? Non intestatus mortuus est Pater, says he, Our Father is dead; for, Deut. 32.30. Is not he your Father that bought you? is Moses question; he that bought us with himself, his blood, his life, is not dead intestate, but hath left his Will and Testament, and why should not that Testament decide the cause? Silent Advocati, Suspensus est populus, Legant verba testamenti: This that Father notes, to be the end in other causes, why not in this? That the Counsel give over pleading, That the people give over murmuring, That the Judge calls for the words of the Will, & by that governs, and according to that establishes his Judgement. I would at last contentious men would leave wrangling, and people to whom those things belonged not, leave blowing of coals, and that the words of the Will might try the cause, since he that made the Will, hath made it thus clear, Si quo minus, If it were not thus, I would have told you, If there were more to be added then this, or more clearness to be added to this, I would have told you. In the fift of Matthew, Christ puts a great many cases, what others had told them, Mat. 5. but he tells them, that is not their Rule. Audivistis, & ab antiquis, says he, you have heard, & heard by them of old, but now I tell you otherwise. So Audivimus, & ab antiquis, we have heard, and heard by them of old, That the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ is so absolutely necessary, as that Children were bound to receive it, presently after Baptism, and that no man could be saved without it, more than without Baptism: Maldon in john 6.35. This we have heard, and heard by them of old; for we have heard S. Augustin to have said so, and the practice of the Church for some hundreds of years to have said so. So Audivimus, & ab antiquis, We have heard, and heard by them of old, That the Saints of God departed out of this life, after their resurrection, and before their ascension into heaven, shall enjoy all worldly prosperity and happiness upon the earth, for a thousand years: This we have heard, and heard by them of old, for we have heard Tertullian say so, and Ireneus, and Lactantius, and so many more as would make the balance more than even. So also Audivimus, & ab antiquis, We have heard, and heard by them of old, That in how good state soever they die, yet the souls of the departed do not see the face of God, nor enjoy his presence, till the day of Judgement, This we have heard, and from so many of them of old, as that the voice of that part is louder, then of the other. And amongst those reverend and blessed Fathers, which strayed into these errors, some were hearers and Disciples of the Apostles themselves, as Papias was a Disciple of S. john, and yet Papias was a Millenarian, and expected his thousand year's prosperity upon the earth after the Resurrection: some of them were Disciples of the Apostles, and some of them were better men than the Apostles, for they were Bishops of Rome; Clement was so; and yet Clement was one of them, who denied the fruition of the sight of God, by the Saints, till the Judgement. And yet our Adversaries will enjoy their liberty to departed from all this which they have heard, and heard from them of old, in the mouths of these Fathers. And where the Fathers are divided in two streams, where all the Fathers, few, scarce any excepted, till S. Augustine, Hist●● Vossi● l. 7. Thes. 8. so. 538. etc. Bemus ca 26. Petetius Ro. 8. disp 22. placed the cause of our Election in God's foresight, and foreknowledge of our faith and obedience, and, as generally after S. Augustin, they placed it in the right Centre, that is, only in the free goodness and pleasure of God in Christ, half the Roman Church goes one way, and half the other; (for we may be bold to call the Jesuits half that Church) And in that point the Jesuits depart from that which they had heard, and heard of old, from the Primitive Fathers, and adhere to the later; And their very heavy, and very bitter adversaries, the Dominicans, apply themselves to that which they have heard of old, to the first opinion. In that point in the Roman Church they have Fathers on both sides; but, in a point, where they have no Father, where all the Fathers are unanimely and diametrally against them, in the point of the Conception of the most blessed Virgin, Canus. Etsi omnes Sancti uno ore asseverent, says a wise Author of theirs, Though all the Ancient Fathers with one entire consent affirm that she was conceived in Original sin, Etsi nullus Author contravenerit, says he, Though no one ancient Author ever denied it, yet says he, Infirmum est ex omnium patrum consensu argumentum, Though our opinion have no ground in Scriptures (that, says he, I confess) Though it be no Apostolical Tradition, (that, says he, I confess) yet it is but a weak argument, says he, that is concluded out of all the Fathers against it, because, It was a doctrine manifested to the Church but about five hundred years since, and now for two hundred years hath been well followed and embraced: As the Jesuit Maldonat says in such another case, whatsoever the ancient Fathers have thought, or taught, or said, or writ, that the marriage of Priests after Orders taken, and chastity professed, was a good marriage, Contrarium nunc verum est, whatsoever was true then, the contrary is true now. If then these men who take to themselves this liberty, will yet say to me, in some other points, Si quo minus, Surely if you were in the right, some of the ancient Fathers would have told you so; And then, if I assist myself by the Fathers, they will say, Si quo minus, If it were not otherwise, some general Council would have told you so; And again, if I support myself by a Council, Si quo minus, if that Council were to be followed, some Pope would have confirmed that Council, And if I show that to have been done, yet they will say, that that Confirmation reaches not to that Session of the Council, or not to that Canon of that Session, or not to that period in that Canon, or not to that word in that period; And then, of every Father, and Council, and Session, and Canon, and period, and word, Ejus interpretatio est sensus Spiritus Sancti, His sense and interpretation must be esteemed the Interpretation, and the Sense of the Holy Ghost, as Bellarmine hath concluded us, why will they not allow me a juster liberty, then that which they take? That when they stop my prayers in their way to God, and bid me turn upon Saints, when they stop my faith in the way to Christ, and bid me turn upon mine own, or others merits, when they stop my hopes of Heaven upon my deathbed, and bid me turn upon Purgatory, That when, as yet it is in debatement and disputation, whether man can perform the Law of God or no, they will multiply their Laws, above the proportion of Moses Tables, And when we have Primogenitum Ecclesiae, The eldest son by the Primitive Church, The Creed of the Apostles, they will super-induce another son, by another venture, by a stepmother, by their sick and crazy Church, and (as the way of stepmother's ) will then make the portion of the later, larger than the elders, make their Trent-Creed larger than the Apostles, That in such a case, they will not allow me, neither in my studies in the way, nor upon my deathbed at mine end, to hearken unto this voice of my Saviour, Si quo minus, If it were not so, I would have told you, this is not only to preclude the liberty, but to exclude the duty of a Christian. But the mystery of their Iniquity is easily revealed, their Arcana Imperii, the secrets of their State easily discovered. All this is not because they absolutely oppose the Scriptures, or stiffly deny them to be the most certain and constant rule that can be presented, (for whatsoever they pretend for their own Church, or for the Super-soveraigne in that Church, their transcendent and hyperbolical supreme Head, they will pretend to deduce out of the Scriptures) But because the Scriptures are constant, and limited, and determined, there can be no more Scriptures, And they should be shrewdly prejudiced, and shrewdly disadvantaged, if all emergent cases arising in the Christian world, must be judged by a Law, which others may know beforehand, as well as they; Therefore being wise in their own generation, they choose rather to lay up their Rule in a Cupboard, then upon a Shelf, rather in Scrinio pectoris, in the breast and bosom of one man, then upon every desk in a study, where every man may lay, or whence every man may take a Bible. Therefore have so many sad and sober men amongst them, repent, that in the Council of Trent, they came to a final resolution in so many particulars; because how incommodious soever some of those particulars may prove to them, yet they are bound to some necessity of a defence, or to some aspersion if they forsake such things as have been solemnly resolved in that manner. Therefore it was a prudent, and discreet abstinence in them, to forbear the determination of some things, which have then, and since, fall'n into agitation amongst them. Be pleased to take one in the Council, and one after for all. Long time it had, and then it did, and still it doth, perplex the Consciences of penitents that come to Confession, and the understandings of Confessors, who are to give Absolution, how far the secular Laws of temporal Princes bind the Conscience of the Subject, and when, and in what cases, he is bound to confess it as a sin, who hath violated and transgressed any of those Laws; And herein, says an Author of theirs, who hath written learnedly De legibus, Carbo. of the hand and obligation of Laws, The Pope was solicited and supplicated from the Council, in which it was debated, that he would be pleased to come to a Determination; but because he saw it was more advantage to him, to hold it undetermined, that so he might serve others turns, and his own especially, it remains undetermined, and no Confessor is able to un-entangle the Conscience of his penitent yet. So also in another point, of as great consequence, (at least for the peace of the Church, if not for the profit) which is, those differences, which have arisen between the Jesuits and the Dominicans, about the concurrence of the Grace of God, and the free will of man, Though both sides have come to that vehemence, that violence, that virulency, as to call one another's opinion heretical, (which is a word that cuts deep, and should not be passionately used) yet he will not be brought to a decision, to a determination in the point, but only forbids both sides to write at all in that point; and in that inhibition of his, we see how he suffers himself to be deluded, for still they writ with protestation, that they writ not to advance either opinion, but only to prepare the way against such time, as the Pope shall be pleased to take off that inhibition, and restore them to their liberty of writing; for this way hath one of their last Authors, Arriba, taken to vent himself. In a word, if they should submit themselves to try all points and cases of Conscience by Scripture, that were to govern by a known, and constant Law; but as they have imagined a Monarchy in their Church, so have they a prerogative in their Monarchy, a secret judgement in one breast, however, he who gives them all their power, make this protestation, Si quo minus, If it were not thus, and thus, I would have told you so. So then this proposition in our Text falls first upon them, who do not believe All things to be contained in the Scriptures; And it falls also upon them, who do not believe All persons to be intended in the Scriptures, who seem to be concerned therein. The first sort dishonour God in his Scriptures, in that kind, That there is not enough in the Scriptures for any man's salvation; And the other in this kind, That that that is, is not intended, as it is pretended, not in that largeness and generality, as it is proposed, but that God hath set a little Diamond in a great deal of gold, a narrow purpose in large promises; and thereupon they impute to God (in their manner of expressing themselves) Dolos bonos, and Frauds' pias, holy deceits, holy falsehoods, holy illusions, and circumventions, and overgood husbands of Gods large and bountiful Grace, contract his general promises. I dispute not, but I am glad to hear the Apostle say, Rom. 5.14. That as all were dead, so one died for all; and to put the force of his argument there, in that, That except we can say, That one died for all, we cannot say, that all were dead. I argue not, but I am glad to hear another Apostle say, 1 Joh. 2.2. That Christ is the propitiation for the sins of all the world; for if any man had been left out, how should I have come in? I am not exercised, nor would I exercise these Auditories with curiosities, but I hear the Apostle say, Rom. 14.11. 1 Cor. 8.11. Destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ died; And I hear him say, Through thy knowledge may thy weak brother perish, for whom Christ died: and, me thinks, he means, That though they might be destroyed, though they might perish, yet Christ died for them. Only to deliver God from all aspersions, and to defend particular Consciences from being scandalised with dangerous phrases, and in a pious detestation of those impious Doli, and Frauds, holy deceits, holy falsehoods, I only say, God forbidden, that when our Saviour Christ called the Pharisee hypocrite, that Pharisee should have been able to recriminate that upon Christ, and to have said, So are you, for you pretend to offer salvation where you mean it not: God forbidden, that when Christ had made that the mark of a true Israelite in the person of Nathaniel, In quo non est dolus, In whom there is no deceit, Joh. 1.47. any man should have been able to have said to Christ, Then Nathaniel is a better Israelite then you, for you pretend to offer salvation, where you mean it not. Psal. 35.3. David hath joined those two words together, The words of their mouth, are Iniquity and Deceit; If there be Deceit, there is Iniquity too. Our Saviour hath joined all these together, Mar. 7.22. Adulteries, Murders, Blasphemies, and Deceit; where there is Deceit, all mischief is justly presumed. The Apostle S. Paul discharges himself of nothing with more earnestness than that, 2 Cor. 12.16. Acts 13.10. Have I deceived you? have I circumvented you with fraud? Neither doth he charge him, whom he calls, The child of the Devil, Elymas the sorcerer, farther than so, O plene omni dolo, That he was full of all Deceit. And therefore they that think to gild and enamel deceit, and falsehood, with the additions of good deceit, good falsehood, before they will make deceit good, will make God bad: For, even in the Law, an action De Dolo, will not lie against a Father, nor against a Master, and shall we emplead God De Dolo? In the last foreign Synod, which our Divines assisted, with what a blessed sobriety, they delivered their sentence, Art. 2. ad Thes. 3. That all men are truly, and in earnest called to eternal life, by God's Minister; And that whatsoever is promised or offered out of the Gospel by the Minister, is to the same men, and in the same manner promised and offered by the Author of the Gospel, by God himself. They knew whose breasts they had sucked; and that that Church, Art. 〈◊〉. our Church had declared, That we must receive God's promises so, as they be generally set forth to us in the Scriptures; And that for our actions and manners, for our life and conversation, we follow that will of God, which is expressly declared to us in his Word: And that is, That conditional salvation is so far offered to every man, as that no man may preclude himself from a possibility of such a performance of those Conditions which God requires at his hands, as God will accept at his hands, if either he do sincerely endeavour the performing, or sincerely repent the not performing of them. For all this is fayrly employed in this proposition, Si quo minus, If it were not so, I would have told you; That all that is necessary to salvation, is comprehended in the Scriptures, which was our first branch; And then, That all that is in the Scriptures, is intended so as it is proposed, which was our second; And these two constitute our first part, The general Rule of Doctrines, and farther we enlarge not that part, but descend to the other, The particular Doctrine, which Christ gives to his Disciples, in the other Proposition, In domo patris, In my Father's house there are many Mansions. This second part, 2 Part. you may also be pleased to remember, derives itself into two branches; first to inquire, whether this proposition assist that Doctrine of Disparity and Degrees of Glory in the Saints in heaven; And then the right use which is to be made of the right sense of these words, In domo patris, In my Father's house there are many Mansions. The occasion of the words will be the foundation of all; Our Saviour Christ had said to his Disciples in the Chapter before, Ver. 33. That he was to stay with them but a little while; That when he was gone, they should seek him, and not find him; And that whither he went, they could not follow: And when, upon that, Peter, who was always forwardest, Ver. 36. and soon scandalised, had pressed him with that question, Lord, whither goest thou? and received that answer, whither I go, thou canst not follow me now, but hereafter thou shalt follow me, lest the rest of the Disciples, who were troubled with that which was formerly said, should be more affected with this, to hear that Peter should come, whither none of them might, to establish them all, as well as Peter, he says to them all, in the first verse of this Chapter, Let not your hearts be troubled, for, (And here enters this proposition of our Text, for their general establishment) In my Father's house are many Mansions. So that, that these are words of Consolation is certain, but whether the consolation be placed in the disparity, and difference of degrees of Glory in Heaven, or no, is not so certain. That there are degrees of Glory in the Saints in heaven, scarce any ever denied. Non negatur. Heaven is a Kingdom, and Christ a King, and a popular parity agrees not with that State, with a Monarchy. Heaven is a Church, and Christ a Highpriest, and such a parity agrees as ill with the Triumphant, as with the Militant Church. In the Primitive Church jovinian denied this difference, and degrees of glory; and S. Hierome was so incensed, so inflamed for this, as if foundations had been shaken, and the common cause endangered. Indeed it was thus fare the common cause, that all the Fathers followed this chase, (if we may use that Metaphor) and were never at a default: No one of the Fathers, whom I have observed to touch upon this point, did ever deny this difference of degrees of Glory. And therefore, as in the Primitive Church, when that one man jovinian, came to deny it, S. Hierome was vehement upon him, so when in the Reformation, one man (for I never found more than that one, one Schoufeldius) denies it too, I wonder the less, Gerard. that another (of the Reformation also) grows somewhat sharp towards him. We deny not then this difference of degrees of glory in Heaven; But that frame, Modus in Eccles. Rom. negatur. and that scale of these degrees, which they have set up in the Roman Church, we do deny. We must continue, and return often to that complaint against them, That they shake and endanger things near foundations, by their enormous superedifications, by their incommodious upper-buildings: That many things, which might be well enough accepted, and would be agreed by all, become justly suspicious, and really dangerous to the Church, by their manifold consequences which they super-induce upon them: That many things, which in the sincerity of their beginning, and institution, were pious, and conduced to the exaltation of Devotion, by their additions are become impious, and destroy Devotion so fare, as to divert it upon a wrong object. In this point which we have in hand, it is so; In these degrees of glory in Heaven, That Church, which treads all sovereign Crowns in this world, under her feet, pretends to impart, and distribute Crowns in Heaven also of her own making: We find Coronam auream, a Crown of gold upon the head of that Son of Man, who is also the Son of God, Christ Jesus, Revel. 14.14. in the Revelation. And we find Coronas aureas, particular Crowns of gold, upon the heads of all the Saints that stand about the Throne, in the same Book. And these Crowns upon the Saints are the emanations, and effluences of that Crown which is upon Christ; The glory of the Saints is the communication of his glory. But then, because in their Translation, in the vulgat Edition of the Roman Church, Exod. 25.25. they find in Exodus that word Aureolam, Fancies Coronam aureolam, Thou shalt make a lesser Crown of gold; out of this diminutive, and mistaken word, they have established a Doctrine, that besides those Coronae aureae, Those Crowns of gold, which are communicated to all the Saints from the Crown of Christ, some Saints have made to themselves, and produced out of their own extraordinary merits certain Aureolas, certain lesser Crowns of their own, whereas indeed the word in the Original in that place of Exodus is Zer zehab, which is a Crown of gold, without any intimation of any such lesser crowns growing out of themselves. This then is their new Alchemy; that whereas old Alchemists pretend to make gold of courser Metals, these will make it of Nothing; Out of a supposititious word, which is not in the Text, they have hammered and beat out these Aureolas, these lesser crowns. And these Aureolaes' they ascribe only to three sorts of persons, to Virgins, to Martyrs, to Doctors. Are then all the other Saints without Crowns? They must make shift with that beam which they have from the Crown of Christ; for, for these additional crowns proceeding from themselves, they have none. And yet, say they, there are Saints which have some additions growing out of themselves, though not Aureolas, little crowns, and those they call Fructus, peculiar fruits growing out of themselves; And for these fruits they distrain upon that place of Matthew, where Christ saith, Matt. 13.6. That some brought forth fruit a hundred fold, some sixty, and some thirty; And the greater measure they ascribe to Virgins, the sixty to Widows, and the thirty to Married persons, but only such married persons, as have lived continently in marriage. So then, to make this Riddle of theirs as plain as the matter will admit, They place salvation itself, Blessedness itself, (if a man will be content with that.) in that union with God, which is common to all the Saints: But then they conceive certain Dotes, as they call them, certain dispositions in this life, by which some have made themselves fitter to be united to God, in a nearer distance than an ordinary Saint; And these Dotes, these endowments, and dispositions here, produce those Aureolas, and those Fructus, those lesser crowns, and those measures of fruits, which are a particular Joy, not that they are united to God, (for so every Saint is) but that they had those Dotes, those dispositions to take that particular way of being united to God, The way of Virginity, the way of Martydome, and the way of Preaching; for by this, they become Sancti Majores, as they call them, Saints in favour, Saints in office, and fit to receive our petitions, and mediate between God and us, than those whom they call Mediocres, and Inferiores, Saints of a middle form, or of an inferior rank. Yet these are so fare provided for, by them too, that we must pray also to these Inferior Saints, either because I may have had a more particular interest in this life in that Saint, then in a greater, and so the readiness, and the assiduity of that Saint may recompense his want of power, Or else, Ad tollendum fastidium, lest a great Saint should grow weary of me, if I trouble him every day, and for every trifle in heaven; And some other such reasons, it pleases them to assign, why though some Saints have more power with God than others, yet we are bound to pray to all. And thus they play with Divinity, as though after they had troubled all States with political Divinity, with their Bulls, and Breves of Rebus sic stantibus, That as long as things stood thus, this should be Catholic Doctrine, and otherwise, when otherwise, And in this political Divinity, Machiavelli is their Pope; And after they had perplexed understandings with Philosophical Divinity in the School, and in that Divinity, Aristotle is their Pope; They thought themselves in courtesy, or conscience bound, to recreate the world with Poetical Divinity, with such a Heaven, and such a Hell as would stand in their Verses, and in this Divinity, Virgil is their Pope. And so, as Melancthon said, when he furthered the Edition of the Alcoran, that he would have it printed, videamus quale poema sit, That the world might see what a piece of Poetry the Alcoran was; So I have stopped upon this point, that you might see what a piece of Poetry they have made of this problematical point of Divinity, The disparity, and degrees of Glory in the Saints in Heaven. Be this then thus settled; Non liquet ex Scriptures. In the matter, The difference of degrees of Glory, we will not differ; In the manner, we would not differ so, as to induce a Schism, if they would handle such points Problematically, and no farther. But when upon matter of fact they will induce matter of faith, when they will extend problematical Divinity to Dogmatic, when they will argue and conclude thus, It may be thus, therefore it must be thus, A man may be saved, though he believe this, therefore he cannot be saved except he believe this, when (in this point in hand) out of our acknowledgement of these degrees of Glory in the Saints they will establish the Doctrine of Merits, and of Invocation of Saints, than we must necessarily call them to the Rule of all Doctrines, the Scriptures. When they tell us Historically, and upon a Historical Obligation, and for a Historical certitude, that Peter was at Rome, and that he was Bishop of Rome, we are not so froward as to deny them that: But when upon his Historical and personal being at Rome, they will build that mother Article, of an universal Supremacy over all the Church, than we must necessarily call them to the Rule, to the Scriptures, and to require them to prove both his being there, and his being Bishop there, by the Scriptures, and either of these would trouble them; As it would trouble them, in our present case, to assign evident places of Scripture, for these degrees of Glory in the Saints of Heaven. For though we be far from denying the Consentaneum est, That it is reasonable it should be, and likely it is so, and fare from denying the Piè creditur, That it may advance Devotion, and exalt Industry to believe that it is so, Though we acknowledge a possibility, a probability, a very similitude, a very truth, and thus fare a necessary truth, that our endeavours may flag and slacken, except we do embrace that help, that there are degrees of Glory in Heaven, yet if we shall press for places of Scriptures, so evident, as must constitute an Article of faith, there are perchance none to be found, to which very learned, and very reverend Expositors have not given convenient Interpretations, without inducing any such necessity. At least, Minus ex hee Taxtu. however other places of Scripture may seem to contribute more, this proposition of our text, In my Father's house are many mansions (though it have been applied to the proof of that) hath no inclination, no inclinableness that way. For in this text, our Saviour applies himself to his Disciples, in that wherein they needed comfort, That Christ would go away, That they might not go too, That Peter had got a Non-obstante, He might, and they might not, and Christ gives them that comfort, that all might, In my Father's house are many mansions. 1 Tim. 3.16. When the Apostle presents a great part of our Christian Religion together, so as that he calls it a Mystery, and a great mystery, yet he calls it a mystery without controversy; Without controversy great is the mystery of God manifested in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, preached to the Gentiles, believed in the world, received into glory. When he presents matter of consolation, he would have it without controversy; To establish a disconsolate soul, there is always Divinity enough, that was never drawn into Controversy. I would pray? I find the Spirit of God to dispose my heart, and my tongue, and mine eyes, and hands, and knees to pray; Do I doubt to whom I should pray? To God, or to the Saints? That prayer to God alone was sufficient, was never drawn into controversy. I would have something to rely and settle and establish my assurance upon; Do I doubt whether upon Christ, or mine own, or others merits? That to rely upon Christ alone was sufficient, was never drawn into Controversy. At this time, Christ disposed himself to comfort his Disciples in that wherein they needed comfort; now their discomfort, and their fear lay not in this, whether there were different degrees of glory in Heaven, but their fear was, that Christ being gone, and having taken Peter, and none but him, there should be no room for them, and thereupon Christ says, Let not that trouble you, for, In my Father's house are many mansions. And so we have done with the former branch of this last part, That it is piously done to believe these degrees of glory in Heaven; That they have inconsiderately extended this problem in the Roman Church, That no Scriptures are so evident as to induce a necessity in it, That this Scripture conduces not at all to it; and therefore we pass to our last Consideration, The right use of the right sense of these words. First then, Christ proposes in these words Consolation; A work, Consolatio. than which none is more divine, nor more proper to God, nor to those instruments, whom he sends to work upon the souls and consciences of others. Who but myself can conceive the sweetness of that salutation, when the Spirit of God says to me in a morning, Go forth to day and preach, and preach consolation, preach peace, preach mercy, And spare my people, spare that people whom I have redeemed with my precious Blood, and be not angry with them for ever; Do not wound them, do not grind them, do not astonish them with the bitterness, with the heaviness, with the sharpness, with the consternation of my judgements. David proposes to himself, that he would Sing of mercy, Psal. 101.1. and of judgement; but it is of mercy first; and not of judgement at all, otherwise than it will come into a song, as joy and consolation is compatible with it. It hath fall'n into disputation, and admitted argument, whether ever God inflicted punishments by his good Angels; But that the good Angels, the ministerial Angels of the Church, are properly his instruments, for conveying mercy, peace, consolation, never fell into question, never admitted opposition. How hearty God seems to utter, and how delightfully to insist upon that, which he says in Esay, Consolamini, consolamini populum meum, Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, Esay 40.1. And Loquimini ad cor, Speak to the heart of jerusalem, and tell her, Thine iniquities are pardoned? How glad Christ seems that he had it for him, when he gives the sick man that comfort, Fili confide, My son be of good comfort, thy sins are forgiven thee? What a Coronation is our taking of Orders, by which God makes us a Royal Priesthood? And what an inthronization is the coming up into a Pulpit, where God invests his servants with his Ordinance, as with a Cloud, and then presses that Cloud with a Vaesi non, woe be unto thee, if thou do not preach, and then enables him to preach peace, mercy, consolation, to the whole Congregation. That God should appear in a Cloud, upon the Mercy Seat, as he promises Moses he will do, That from so poor a man as stands here, Levit. 16.2. wrapped up in clouds of infirmity, and in clouds of iniquity, God should drop, rain, pour down his dew, and sweeten that dew with his honey, and crust that honeyed dew into Manna, and multiply that Manna into Gomers, and fill those Gomers every day, and give every particular man his Gomer, give every soul in the Congregation, consolation by me; That when I call to God for grace here, God should give me grace for grace, Grace in a power to derive grace upon others, and that this Oil, this Balsamum should flow to the hem of the garment, even upon them that stand under me; That when mine eyes look up to Heaven, the eyes of all should look up upon me, and God should open my mouth, to give them meat in due season; That I should not only be able to say, as Christ said to that poor soul, Confide fili, My son be of good comfort, but Fratres & Patres mei, My Brethren, and my Fathers, nay Domini mei, and Rex meus, My Lords, and my King be of good comfort, your sins are forgiven you; That God should seal to me that Patent, Ite praedicate omni Creaturae, Go and preach the Gospel to every Creature, be that creature what he will, That if God lead me into a Congregation, as into his Ark, where there are but eight souls, but a few disposed to a sense of his mercies, and all the rest (as in the Ark) ignobler creatures, and of brutal natures and affections, That if I find a licentious Goat, a supplanting Fox, an usurious Wolf, an ambitious Lion, yet to that creature, to every creature I should preach the Gospel of peace and consolation, and offer these creatures a Metamorphosis, a transformation, a new Creation in Christ Jesus, and thereby make my Goat, and my Fox, and my Wolf, and my Lion, to become Semen Dei, The seed of God, and Filium Dei, The child of God, and Participem Divinae Naturae, Partaker of the Divine Nature itself; This is that which Christ is essentially in himself, This is that which ministerially and instrumentally he hath committed to me, to shed his consolation upon you, upon you all; Not as his Almoner to drop his consolation upon one soul, nor as his Treasurer to issue his consolation to a whole Congregation, but as his Ophir, as his Indies, to derive his gold, his precious consolation upon the King himself. What would a good Judge, a good natured Judge give in his Circuit, what would you, in whose breasts the Judgements of the Star-chamber, or other criminal Courts are, give, that you had a warrant from the King, to change the sentence of blood into a pardon, where you found a Delinquent penitent? How ruefully do we hear the Prophet's groan under that Onus visionis, which they repeat so often, O the burden of my vision upon Judah, or upon Moab, or Damascus, or Babylon, or any place? Which is not only that that judgement would be a heavy burden upon that place, but that it was a heavy burden to them to denounce that judgement, even upon God's enemies. Our errand, our joy, our Crown is Consolation: for, if we consider the three Persons of the holy, blessed and glorious Trinity, and their working upon us, a third part of their work (if we may so speak) is consolation; the Father is Power, the Son Wisdom, and the Holy Ghost Consolation: for the Holy Ghost is not in a Vulture, that hovers over Armies, and infected Cities, and feeds upon carcases, But the Holy Ghost is in a Dove, that would not make a Congregation a slaughter-house, but feeds upon corn, corn that hath in nature a disposition to a reviviscence, and a repullulation, and would imprint in you all, the consolation and sense of a possibility of returning to a new, and a better life. God found me nothing, and of that nothing made me; Adam left me worse than God found me, worse than nothing, the child of wrath, corrupted with the leaven of Original sin; Christ Jesus found me worse than Adam left me, not only soured with Original, but spotted, and gangrened, and dead, and buried, and putrified in actual and habitual sins, and yet in that state redeemed me; And I make myself worse than Christ found me, and in an inordinate dejection of spirit, conceive a jealousy and suspicion, that his merit concerns not me, that his blood extends not to my sin; And in this last and worst state, the Holy Ghost finds me, the Spirit of Consolation, And he sends a Barnabas, a son of Consolation unto me, A Barnabas to my sick bed side, A Physician that comforts with hopes, and means of health, A Barnabas to my broken fortune, A potent and a loving friend, that assists the reparation, and the establishing of my state, A Barnabas into the Pulpit, that restores and rectifies my conscience, and scatters, and dispels all those clouds that invested it, and infested it before. That un-imaginable work of the Creation were not ready for a Sabbath, though I be a Creature, and a man, I could have no Sabbath, no rest, no peace of conscience; That un-expressible work of the Redemption were not ready for that Seal, which our Saviour set to it upon the Cross, in the Consummatum est; All were not finished that concerned me, if the Holy Ghost were not ready to deliver that which Christ sealed, and to witness that which were so delivered, that that Spirit might ever testify to my spirit, That all that Christ Jesus said, and did, and suffered, was said, and done, and suffered for my soul. Consolation is not all, if we consider God, but if I consider myself, and my state, Consolation is all. Christ's meaning then in this place, was to establish in his Disciples this Consolation; Consolatio vera. but thus, Si quo minus, If it were not thus, I would tell you; If this were not true consolation, I would not delude you, I would not entertain you with false: for he is Deus omnium miserationum, The God of all mercies, and yet he will not show mercy to them, who sin upon presumption; So he is Deus omnium Consolationum, The God of all Comforts, and yet will not comfort them, who rely upon the false, and miserable comforts of this world. How many, how very many of us do otherwise? Otherwise to others, otherwise to our own Consciences? Delude all with false Comforts? They would not suffer Christ himself to sleep upon a pillow in a storm, but they waked him with that, Master, carest not thou, though we perish? When will we wake any Master, Mar. 4.38. any upon whom we depend, and say, Master, carest not thou, though thou perish? We suffer others, whom we should instruct, and we suffer ourselves to pass on to the last gasp, and we never rebuke our Consciences, till our Consciences rebuke us at last, Alas, it is otherwise, and you never told us. Christ comforts then, he disputes not, that is not his way; He ministers true comfort, Domus. he flatters not, that is not his way; And in this true comfort, the first beam is, That that state which he promises them is a House, In my Father's House, etc. God hath a progress house, a removing house here upon earth, His house of prayer; At this hour, God enters into as many of these houses, as are opened for his service at this hour: But his standing house, his house of glory, is that in Heaven, and that he promises them. God himself dwelled in Tents in this world, and he gives them a House in Heaven. A House, in the design and survey whereof, the Holy Ghost himself is figurative, the Father's wanton, and the Schoolmen wild. The Holy Ghost, in describing this House, Rev. 21. fills our contemplation with foundations, and walls, and gates, of gold, of precious stones, and all materials, that we can call precious. The Holy Ghost is figurative; And the Fathers are wanton in their spiritual elegancies, such as that of S. Augustins, (if that book be his) Hiems horrens, Aestas torrens, And, Virent prata, vernant sata, and such other harmonious, and melodious, and mellifluous cadences of these waters of life. But the Schoolmen are wild; for as one Author, who is afraid of admitting too great a hollowness in the Earth, Munster. lest then the Earth might not be said to be solid, pronounces that Hell cannot possibly be above three thousand miles in compass, (and then one of the torments of Hell will be the throng, for their bodies must be there, in their dimensions, as well as their souls) so when the Schoolmen come to measure this house in heaven, (as they will measure it, and the Master, God, and all his Attributes, and tell us how Almighty, and how Infinite he is) they pronounce, that every soul in that house shall have more room to itself, than all this world is. We know not that; nor see we that the consolation lies in that; we rest in this, that it is a House, It hath a foundation, no Earthquake shall shake it, It hath walls, no Artillery shall batter it, It hath a roof, no tempest shall pierce it. It is a house that affords security, and that is one beam; And it is Domus patris, His Father's house, a house in which he hath interest, and that is another beam of his Consolation. It was his Fathers, and so his; And his, and so ours; Patris. for we are not joint purchasers of Heaven with the Saints, but we are coheirs with Christ Jesus. We have not a place there, because they have done more then enough for themselves, but because he hath done enough for them and us too. By death we are gathered to our Fathers in nature; and by death, through his mercy, gathered to his Father also. Where we shall have a full satisfaction, in that wherein S. Philip placed all satisfaction, ostend nobis patrem, Lord, show us thy Father, and it is enough. We shall see his Father, and see him made ours in him. And then a third beam of this Consolation is, That in this house of his Fathers, Mansiones. thus by him made ours, there are Mansions; In which word, the Consolation is not placed, (I do not say, that there is not truth in it) but the Consolation is not placed in this, That some of these Mansions are below, some above stairs, some better seated, better lighted, better vaulted, better fretted, better furnished than others; but only in this, That they are Mansions; which word, in the Original, and Latin, and our Language, signifies a Remaining, and denotes the perpetuity, the everlastingness of that state. A state but of one Day, because no Night shall overtake, or determine it, but such a Day, as is not of a thousand years, which is the longest measure in the Scriptures, but of a thousand millions of millions of generations: August. Qui nec praeceditur hesterno, nec excluditur crastino, A day that hath no pridie, nor postridie, yesterday doth not usher it in, nor to morrow shall not drive it out. Methusalem, with all his hundreds of years, was but a Mushroom of a night's growth, to this day, And all the four Monarchies, with all their thousands of years, And all the powerful Kings, and all the beautiful Queens of this world, were but as a bed of flowers, some gathered at six, some at seven, some at eight, All in one Morning, in respect of this Day. In all the two thousand years of Nature, before the Law given by Moses, And the two thousand years of Law, before the Gospel given by Christ, And the two thousand of Grace, which are running now, (of which last hour we have heard three quarters strike, more than fifteen hundred of this last two thousand spent) In all this six thousand, and in all those, which God may be pleased to add, In domo patris, In this House of his Fathers, there was never heard quarter clock to strike, never seen minute glass to turn. No time less than itself would serve to express this time, which is intended in this word Mansions; which is also exalted with another beam, that they are Multa, In my Father's House there are many Mansions. In this Circumstance, Multa. an Essential, a Substantial Circumstance, we would consider the joy of our society, and conversation in heaven, since society and conversation is one great element and ingredient into the joy, which we have in this world. We shall have an association with Christ himself; for where he is, it is his promise, that we also shall be. We shall have an association with the Angels, and such a one, as we shall be such as they. We shall have an association with the Saints, and not only so, to be such as they, but to be they: Mat. 8.11. And with all who come from the East, and from the West, and from the North, and from the South, and sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and jacob in the kingdom of heaven. Where we shall be so far from being enemies to one another, as that we shall not be strangers to one another: And so far from envying one another, as that all that every one hath, shall be every others possession: where all souls shall be so entirely knit together, as if all were but one soul, and God so entirely knit to every soul, as if there were as many Gods as souls. Be comforted then, says Christ to them, for This, which is a House, and not a Ship, not subject to storms by the way, nor wrecks in the end, My Father's House, not a strangers, in whom I had no interest, A House of Mansions, a dwelling, not a sojourning, And of many Mansions not an Abridgement, a Model of a House, not a Monastery of many Cells, but an extension of many Houses, into the City of the living God, This house shall be yours, though I depart from you. Christ is nearer us, when we behold him with the eyes of faith in Heaven, then when we seek him in a piece of bread, or in a sacramental box here. Drive him not away from thee, by wrangling and disputing how he is present with thee; unnecessary doubts of his presence may induce fearful assurances of his absence: The best determination of the Real presence is to be sure, that thou be really present with him, by an ascending faith: Make sure thine own Real presence, and doubt not of his: Thou art not the farther from him, by his being gone thither before thee. No, nor though Peter be gone thither before thee neither, which was the other point, in which the Apostles needed consolation; They were troubled that Christ would go, and none of them, and troubled that Peter might go, and none but he. What men soever God take into heaven before thee, though thy Father that should give thee thy education, though thy Pastor that should give thee thy instruction, though these men may be such in the state, and such in the Church, as thou mayest think the Church and state cannot subsist without them, Discourage not thyself, neither admit a jealousy or suspicion of the providence and good purpose of God; for, as God hath his panier full of Manna, and of Quails, and can pour out to morrow, though he have poured them out plentifully upon his friends before; so God hath his Quiver full of arrows, and can shoot as powerfully, as heretofore, upon his Enemies. I forbidden thee not S. Paul's wish, Cupio dissolvi, To desire to be dissolved, therefore, that thou mayest be with Christ; I forbidden thee not David's sigh, Hei mihi, Woe is me that I must dwell so long with them that love not peace! I only enjoin thee thy Saviour's Veruntamen, Yet not mine, but thy will, O Father, be done; That all thy wishes may have relation to his purposes, and all thy prayers may be inanimated with that, Lord manifest thy will unto me, and conform my will unto thine. So shalt thou not be affrighted, as though God aimed at thee, when he shoots about the mark, and thou seest a thousand fall at thy right hand, and ten thousand at thy left; Nor discouraged as though God had left out thee, when thou seest him take others into garrison, and leave thee in the field, assume others to Triumph, and leave thee in the Battle still. For as Christ Jesus would have come down from heaven, to have died for thee, though there had been no soul to have been saved but thine; So is he gone up to heaven, to prepare a place for thee, though all the souls in this world were to be saved as well as thine. Trouble not thyself with dignity, and priority, and precedency in Heaven, for Consolation and Devotion consist not in that, and thou wilt be the less troubled with dignity, and priority, and precedency in this world, for Rest and Quietness consist not in that. SERM. LXXIV. Preached at , the 30. April 1620 PSAL. 144.15. Being the first Psalm for the day. Blessed are the People that be so; Yea blessed are the People, whose God is the Lord. THe first part of this Text hath relation to temporal blessings, Blessed is the people that be so: The second part to spiritual, Yea blessed is the people, whose God is the Lord. His left hand is under my head, saith the Spouse; Cant. 2.6. That sustains me from falling into murmuring, or diffidence of his Providence, because out of his left hand he hath given me a competency of his temporal blessings; But his right hand doth embrace me, saith the Spouse there; His spiritual blessings fill me, possess me, so that no rebellious fire breaks out within me, no outward tentation breaks in upon me. So also says Solomon again, Prov. 3.16. In her left hand is riches and glory, (temporal blessings) and in her right hand length of days, all that accomplishes and fulfils the eternal joys of the Saints of heaven. The person to whom Solomon attributes this right and left hand is Wisdom; And a wise man may reach out his right and left hand, to receive the blessings of both sorts. And the person whom Solomon represents by Wisdom there, is Christ himself. So that not only a worldly wiseman, but a Christian wiseman may reach out both hands, to both kinds of blessings, right and left, spiritual and temporal. And therefore, Interrogo vos, filios regni coelorum, saith S. Augustine, Let me ask you, who are sons and heirs of the Kingdom of Heaven, Progeniem Resurrectionis in aeternum, You that are the offspring of the Resurrection of Christ Jesus, and have your resurrection in his, Membra Christi, Templa Spiritus Sancti, You that are the very body of Christ, you that are the very temples of the Holy Ghost, Interrogo vos, Let me ask you, for all your great reversion hereafter, for all that present possession which you have of it, in an apprehensive faith, and in a holy conversation in this life, for all that blessedness, Non est isba saelicitas? Is there not a blessedness in enjoying Gods temporal blessings here too? Sit licèt, sed sinistra, saith that Father; It is certainly a blessedness, but a left handed blessedness, a weaker, a more imperfect blessedness, then spiritual blessings are. As then there is dextra, and sinistrabeatitudo, a right handed, and a left handed blessedness in the Text: so there is dextra and sinistra Interpretatio, a right and a left Exposition of the Text. And as both these blessednesses, temporal and spiritual, are seals and testimonies of God's love, though not both of equal strength, and equal evidence; so both the Interpretations of these words are useful for our edification, though they be not both of equal authority. That which we call Sinistram Interpreiationem, is that sense of these words, which arises from the first Translators of the Bible, the Septuagint, and those Fathers which followed them; which, though it be not an ill way, is not the best, because it is not according to the letter; and then, that which we call Dextram Interpretationem, is that sense which arises pregnantly, and evidently, liquidly, and manifestly out of the Original Text itself. The Authors and followers of the first sense read not these words as we do, Beatus populus, That people is blessed, but Beatum dixerunt populum, That people was esteemed blessed; and so they refer this and all the temporal blessings mentioned in the three former Verses to a popular error, to a general mistaking, to the opinions, and words of wicked and worldly men, that only they desire these temporal things, only they taste a sweetness, and apprehend a blessedness in them; whereas they who have truly their conversation in heaven, are swallowed up with the contemplation of that blessedness, without any reflection upon earth or earthly things. But the Author of the second sense, which is God himself, and his direct word, presents it thus, Beatus populus, That people is truly blessed, there is a true blessedness in temporal things; but yet, this is but sinistra beatitudo, a less perfect blessedness; For the followers of both Interpretations, and all Translators, and all Expositors meet in this, That the perfect, the accomplishing, the consummatory blessedness is only in this, That our God be the Lord. First then, Interpretatio to make our best use of the first sense, That temporal things conduce not at all to blessedness, S. Cyprians wonder is just, Deum nobis solis contentum esse, nobis non sufficere Deum; That God should think man enough for him, and man should not be satisfied with God; That God should be content with Fili da mihi cor, My son give me thy heart, and man should not be content with Pater da mihi Spiritum, My God, my Father, grant me thy Spirit, but must have temporal additions too. Non est castum cor, saith S. Augustine, si Deum ad mercedem colit; as he saith in another place, Non est castauxor, quae amat quia dives, She is never the honester woman, nor the lovinger wife, that loves her husband in contemplation of her future jointure, or in fruition of her present abundancies; so he says here, Nonest castum cor, That man hath not a chaste, a sincere heart towards God, that loves him by the measure end proportion of his temporal blessings. The Devil had so much colour for that argument, that in prosperity there can be no trial, whether a man love God or no, as that he presses it even to God himself, in jobs case: job 1 Doth job serve God for nought? hast not thou hedged him in, and blessed the works of his hands, and increased his substance? How canst thou tell whether he will love thee, or fear thee, if thou shouldst take away all this from him? thou hast had no trial yet. And this argument descended from that father to his children, from the Devil there, to those followers of his whom the Prophet Malachy reprehends for saying, It is in vain to serve God, Mal. 3.14. for what profit is it, that we have kept his commandments? When men are willing to prefer their friends, we hear them often give these testimonies of a man; He hath good parts, and you need not be ashamed to speak for him; he hath money in his purse, and you need not be sorry to speak for him; he understands the world, he knows how things pass, and he hath a discreet, a supple, and an appliable disposition, and he may make a fit instrument for all your purposes, and you need not be afraid to speak for him. But who ever casts into this scale and valuation of a man, that weight, that he hath a religious heart, that he fears God? what profit is there in that, if we consider this world only? But what profits it a man, if he get all the world, and lose his own soul? And therefore that opinion, That there was no profit at all, no degree towards blessedness in those temporal things, prevailed so fare, as that it is easy to observe in their Expositions upon the Lord's Prayer, that the greatest part of the Fathers do ever interpret that Petition, Da nobis hodie, Give us this day our daily bread, to be intended only of spiritual blessings, and not of temporal; So S. Hierome saith, when we ask that bread, Illum petimus, qui panis vivus est, & descendit de coelo; we make our petition for him, who is the bread of life, and descended from the bosom of the Father; and so he refers it to Christ, and in him, to the whole mystery of our Redemption. And Athanasius and S. Augustine too (and not they two alone) refer it to the Sacramental bread; That in that Petition, we desire such an application of the bread of life, as we have in the participation of the body and blood of Christ Jesus in that Communion. S. Cyprian insists upon the word Nostrum, Our bread; For, saith he, temporal blessings cannot properly be called Ours, because they are common to the Saints, and to the reprobates; but in a prayer ordained by Christ for the faithful, the petition is for such things as are proper, and peculiar to the faithful, and that is for spiritual blessings only. If any man shall say, Ideo quaerenda, quia necessaria, We must pray, and we must labour for temporal things, because they are necessary for us, we cannot be without them, Ideo non quaerenda quia necessaria, says S. chrysostom, so much of them, as is necessary for our best state, God will give us, without this laborious anxiety, and without eating the bread of sorrow in this life, Non speran dum de superfluis, non desperandum de necessariis, says the same Father; It is a suspicious thing to doubt or distrust God in necessary things, and it is an unmannerly thing to press him in superfluous things. They are not necessary before, and they are not ours after: for those things only are ours, which no body can take from us: and for temporal thing, Auferre potest inimicus homo, invito: Let the inimicus homo be the devil, and remember jobs case, Let the inimicus homo be any envious and powerful man, who hath a mind to that that thou hast, and remember Naboths case, and this envious man can take any temporal thing from thee against thy will. But spiritual blessings cannot be taken so, Fidem nemo perdidit, nisi qui spreverit, says S. Augustin, No man ever lost his faith, but he that thought it not worth the keeping. But for jobs temporal estate says S. Augustine, all was lost. And lest any man should say, Vxor relicta erat, job had not lost all, because his Wife was left, Misericordem putatis diabolum, says that Father, qui ei reliquit Vxorem? do you think that job lighted upon a merciful and good natured devil, that the devil did this out of pity and compassion to job, or that job was beholding to the devil for this, that he left him his Wife? Noverat per quam deceperat Adam, says he, The devil knew by what instrument he had deceived the first man, and by the same instrument he practices upon job; Suam reliquit adjutricem, non mariti consolatricem, He left job a helper, but a helper for his own ends, but for her Husband a miserable comforter. Caro conjux, says the same Father in another place, This flesh, this sensual part of ours, is our wife: and when these temporal things by any occasion are taken from us, that wife, that flesh, that sensuality is left to murmur and repine at God's corrections, and that is all the benefit we have by that wife, and all the portion we have with that wife. Though therefore S. Hierom, who understood the Original Language, the best of his time, in his Translation of the Psalms, do give the true, the right sense of this place, yet in his own Commentaries upon the Psalms, he takes this first sense, and beats upon that doctrine, that it is but a popular error, a general mistaking, to make worldly blessings any degree of happiness: he saw so good use of that doctrine, as that he would not see the right interpretation of the words: he saw well enough, that according to the letter of the text, temporal things were blessings, yet because they were but left-handed blessings, remembering the story in the book of Judges, of 700. left-handed Benjamites, judg. 20.10. that would sling stones at a hair's breadth, and were better mark-men than the right-handed, and considering the left-handed men of this world, those who pursue temporal blessings only, went with most earnestness, and best success to their works, to correct that general distemper, that general vehemence upon temporal things, S. Hierom, and so many of the Fathers as accompany him in that interpretation, were content to embrace that sense, which is not truly the literal sense of this place, that it should be only Beatum dixerint, and not Beatus populus, a popular error, and not a truth, that any man, for any people, were blessed in temporal things; and so we have done with the first sense of these words, and the reason why so many follow it. We are come now to the second Interpretation: where there is not Beatitudo falsa and vera, for both are true, but there is dextra and sinistra, 2. Interpretatio. a right-handed and left-handed blessedness; there is Inchoativa and perfectiva, there is an introductory, and a consummatory blessedness: and in the first of these, in the left-handed, in the less perfect blessedness, we must consider three things. First, Beatitudinem ipsam, That there is a blessedness proposed: and secondly, In quibus, in what that blessedness is placed in this text, Quibus sic, blessed are they that are so, that is, so, as is mentioned in the three former verses: and thirdly, another In quibus, not in what things, but in what persons this first blessedness is placed, Beatus populus, It is when all the people, the whole body, and not some ranks of men, nor some particular men in those ranks, but when all the people participate of these blessings. Now first, for this first blessedness, Beatitudo. As no Philosophers could ever tell us amongst the Gentiles, what true blessedness was, so no Grammarian amongst the Jews, amongst the Hebrews, could ever tell us, what the right signification of this word is, in which David expresses blessedness here; whether Asherei, which is the word, be a plural Noun, and signify Beatitudines, Blessednesses in the plural, and intimate thus much, that blessedness consists not in any one thing, but in a harmony and consent of many; or whether this Asherei be an Adverbe, and signify beatè, and so be an acclamation, O how happily, how blessedly are such men provided for that are so; they cannot tell. Whatsoever it be, it is the very first word, with which David gins his book of Psalms; Beatus vir: as the last word of that book is, Laudate Dominum; to show, that all that passes between God and man, from first to last, is blessings from God to man, and praises from man to God; and that the first degree of blessedness is, to find the print of the hand of God, even in his temporal blessedness, and to praise and glorify him for them, in the right use of them. A man that hath no land to hold by it, nor title to recover by it, is never the better, for finding, or buying, or having a fair piece of evidence, a fair instrument, fairly written, duly sealed, authentically testified; A man that hath not the grace of God, and spiritual blessings too, is never the nearer happiness, for all his abundances of temporal blessedness. Evidences are evidences to them who have title. Temporal blessings are evidences to them, who have a testimony of God's spiritual blessings in the temporal. Otherwise as in his hands, who hath no Title, it is a suspicious thing to find evidences, and he will be thought to have embeazeled and purloined them, he will be thought to have forged and counterfeited them, and he will be called to an account for them, how he came to them, and what he meant to do with them: so to them, who have temporal blessings without spiritual, they are but useless blessings, they are but counterfeit blessings, they shall not purchase a minute's peace of conscience here, nor a minutes refreshing to the soul hereafter; and there must be a heavy account made for them, both how they were got, and how they were employed. But when a man hath a good title to Heaven, 1 Tim. 4.8. than these are good evidences: for, Godliness hath a promise of the life to come, and of the life that now is; and if we spend any thing in maintenance of that title, give, or lose any thing for his glory and making sure this salvation, Mat. 19.29. We shall inherit everlasting life, says the best surety in the world; but we shall not stay so long for our bill of charge, we shall have A hundred fold in this life. S. Augustine seems loath to take Christ at that large word, he seems to think it too great usury, to take a hundred fold for that which we have laid out for Christ: And therefore he reads that place, Accipiet septies tantum, He shall receive seven times as much, in this life. But in both the Evangelists, Matthew and Mark, the overflowing bounty and retribution of God is so expressed, Centuplum accipiet. God repaired job so, as he had been impaired; God recompensed him in specie, in the same kind as he had been damnified. And Christ testifies of himself, that his coming to us is not only, vitam habeatis, sed habeatis abundantiùs; More abundantly; that is, as divers of the Fathers interpret it, that you might have eternal life sealed to you, in the prosperity and abundancies of this life. john 9.10. I am the door, says Christ, in the same Chapter: we must not think to fly over walls, by sudden and undeserved preferments, nor to sap and undermine, and supplant others; we must enter at that door, by fair and Christian means: And then, By me if any man enter, says Christ there, he shall be saved; there is a rich and blessed inheritance; but before he come to that salvation, He shall go in and out, and find pasture, says that text. Now, in Heaven there is no going in and out; but in his way to Heaven, in this life, he shall find his interest in the next, conveyed and sealed to him in temporal blessings here. If Plato found and acknowledged a happiness in that, Quòd natus homo, that he was borne a man, and not a beast, (Lactantius adds in Plato's behalf, when he citys that place out of him, Quòd natus vir, that he was borne a man and not a woman) if he found a farther happiness, Quòd Graecus, that he was borne a Grecian, and not a Barbarian; quòd Atheniensis, that he was borne in the Town which was the receptacle, and dwelling of all wisdom; and quòd tempore Socratis, and that he was borne in Socrates his time, that so he might have a good example, as well as a good rule for his life: As all we own to God an acknowledgement of blessedness, that we are borne in a Christian Church, in a Reformed Church, in a Monarchy, in a Monarchy composed of Monarchies, and in the time of such a Monarch, as is a Peacemaker, and a peace-preserver both at home and abroad; so let all them who are borne of Nobility, or borne up to Nobility upon the two fair wings of merit and of favour, all that are borne to riches, and born up and born out by their riches, all whom their industry, and wisdom, and usefulness to the State, hath or may any way prefer, take heed of separating the Author and the means; of separating God and the King, in the ways of favour; of separating God and their riches, in the ways of purchase; of separating God and their wisdom, in the ways of preferment; but let them always discern, and always acknowledge, the hand of God, the Author, in directing and prospering the hand of his instrument in all these temporal things, and then, these temporal things are truly blessings unto them, and they are truly blessed in them. This was our first Consideration, our first branch in this part, In quibus. that temporal things were seals and testimonies of blessedness; The second is, to what particular evidence this seals is annexed in this text, upon what things this blessedness is placed here; which are all involved in this one little particle, this monasyllable So, Blessed are they that are so; that is, so, as a prayer is made in the three former verses, that they might be. Now as the maledictions which were threatened to David, were presented to him by the Prophet in three forms, of war, of famine, of pestilence; so these blessings which are comprised in those three verses, may well be reduced to three things contrary to those three maledictions; To the blessing of peace, contrary to David's war, Ver. 14. That there may be no invasion; To the blessing of plenty, contrary to David's famine, Ver. 13. That our barns may abound with all sorts of Corn; To the blessing of health, contrary to David's destroying sickness, That our sons may grow up as plants in their youth. Ver. 12. For the first temporal blessing of peace, we may consider the loveliness, Pax. the amiableness of that, if we look upon the horror and ghastliness of war: either in Effigy, in that picture of war, which is drawn in every leaf of our own Chronicles, in the blood of so many Princes, and noble families, or if we look upon war itself, at that distance where it cannot hurt us, as God had formerly kindled it amongst our neighbours, and as he hath transferred it now to remoter Nations, whilst we enjoy yet a Goshen in the midst of all those Egypt's. In all Cities, disorderly and facinorous men, covet to draw themselves into the skirts and suburbs of those Cities, that so they may be the nearer the spoil, which they make upon passengers. In all Kingdoms that border upon other Kingdoms, and in Islands which have no other border but the Sea, particular men, who by dwelling in those skirts and borders, may make their profit of spoil, delight in hostility, and have an adversenesse and detestation of peace: but it is not so within: they who till the earth, and breed up cattles, and employ their industry upon God's creatures, according to God's ordinance, feel the benefit and apprehend the sweetness, and pray for the continuance of peace. This is the blessing, in which God so very very often expresses his gracious purpose upon his people, that he would give them peace; and peace with plenty; Copia. O that my people had harkened unto me! says God, I would soon have humbled their enemies, Psal. 81.13. & ult. (there is their peace) And I would have fed them with the fat of wheat, and with the honey out of the Rock, and there is their plenty. Persons who are preferred for service in the war, prove often suspicious to the Prince. joabs' confidence in his own merit and service, made him insolent towards the King, and the King jealous of him. But no man was more suddenly nor more safely preferred than joseph, for his counsel to resist penury, and to preserve plenty and abundance within the Land. See Basil in an Homily which he made in a time of dearth and drought, in which he expresses himself with as much elegancy, as any where, (and every where I think with as much as any man) where he says, there was in the sky, Tristis severitas & ipsa puritate molesta, That the air was the worse for being so good, and the fouler for being so fair; and where he inverts the words of our Saviour, Messis magna, operarii pauci, says Christ, Here is a great harvest, Luk. 10.2. but few workmen; but Operarii multi, messis parva, says Basil, Here are workmen enough, but no harvest to gather, in that Homily; He notes a barrenness in that which used to be fruitful, and a fruitfulness in that which used to be barren; Terra sterilis & aurum foecundum, He prophesied of our times; when not only so many families have left the Country for the City, in their persons, but have brought their lands into the City, they have brought all their Evidences into Scrivener's shops, and changed all their renewing of leases every seven years, into renewing of bonds every six months: They have taken a way to inflict a barrenness upon land, and to extort a fruitfulness from gold by usury. Monsters may be got by unnatural mixtures, but there is no race, no propagation of monsters: money may be raised by this kind of use; but, Non haerebit, It is the sweat of other men, and it will not stick to thine heir. Nay, commonly it brings not that outward blessing of plenty with it; for, for the most part, we see no men live more penuriously, more sordidly, than these men do. The third of these temporal blessings is health, without which both the other are no more to any man, than the Rainbow was to him who was ready to drown; Quid mihi, si peream ego? says he, what am I the better, that God hath passed his word, and set to his seal in the heavens, that he will drown the world no more, if I be drowned myself? What is all the peace of the world to me, if I have the rebellions and earthquakes of shaking and burning Fevers in my body? What is all the plenty of the world to me, if I have a languishing consumption in my blood, and in my marrow? The Heathens had a goddess, to whom they attributed the care of the body, deam Carnam: And we that are Christians, acknowledge, that God's first care of man, was his body, he made that first; and his last care is reserved for the body too, at the Resurrection, which is principally for the benefit of the body. There is a care belongs to the health, and comeliness of the body. When the Romans canonised Pallorem and Febrim, Paleness and Fevers, and made them gods, they would as feign have made them Devils, if they durst; they worshipped them only, because they stood in fear of them. Sickness is a sword of Gods, and health is his blessing. For when Hezekias had assurance enough, that he should recover and live, yet he had still a sense of misery, in that he should not have a perfect state of health. Esay 38.15. What shall I say, says he, I shall walk weakly all my years, in the bitterness of my soul. All temporal blessings are insipid and tastlesse, without health. Now the third branch of this part, Populus. is the other In quibus, not the things, but the persons, in whom these three blessings are here placed: And it is Beatus populus, when this blessedness reaches to all, dilates itself over all. When David places blessedness in one particular man, as he does in the beginning of the first Psalm, Beatus vir, Blessed is that man, there he pronounces that man blessed, If he neither walk in the counsel of the wicked, nor stand in the way of sinners, nor sit in the seat of the scornful. If he do not all, walk, and stand, and sit in the presence and fear of God, he is not blessed. So, if these temporal blessings fall not upon all, in their proportions, the people is not blessed. The City may be blessed in the increase of access; And the Lawyer may be blessed in the increase of suits; and the Merchant may be blessed in the increase of means of getting, if he be come to get as well by taking, as by trading; but if all be not blessed, the people is not blessed: yea, if these temporal blessings reach not to the Prince himself, the people is not blessed. For in favorabilibus Princeps è populo, is a good rule in the Law; in things beneficial, the King is one of the people. When God says by David, Let all the people bless the Lord, God does not exempt Kings from that duty; and when God says by him too, God shall bless all the people, God does not exempt, not exclude Kings from that benefit; And therefore where such things as conduce to the being, and the well-being, to the substance and state, to the ceremony and majesty of the Prince, be not cheerfully supplied, and seasonably administered, there that blessing is not fully fallen upon them, Blessed is that people that are so; for the people are not so, if the Prince be not so. Nay, the people are not blessed, if these blessings be not permanent; for, it is not only they that are alive now, that are the people; but the people is the succession. If we could imagine a blessing of health without permanency, we might call an intermitting ague, a good day in a fever, health. If we could imagine a blessing of plenty without permanency, we might call a full stomach, and a surfeit, though in a time of dearth, plenty. If we could imagine a blessing of peace without permanency, we might call a night's sleep, though in the midst of an Army, peace; but it is only provision for the permanency and continuance, that makes these blessings blessings. To think of, to provide against famine, and sickness, and war, that is the blessing of plenty, and health, and peace. One of Christ's principal titles was, Esay 9 that he was Princeps pacis, and yet this Prince of peace says, Non veni mittere pacem, I came not to bring you peace, not such a peace as should bring them security against all war. If a Ship take fire, though in the midst of the Sea, it consumes sooner, and more irrecoverably, than a thatched house upon Land: If God cast a firebrand of war, upon a State accustomed to peace, it burns the more desperately, by their former security. But here in our Text we have a religious King, David, that first prays for these blessings, (for the three former Verses are a prayer) and then praises God in the acknowledgement of them; for this Text is an acclamatory, a gratulatory glorifying of God for them. And when these two meet in the consideration of temporal blessings, a religious care for them, a religious confessing of them, prayer to God for the getting, praise to God for the having, Blessed is that people, that is, Head and members, Prince and subjects, present and future people, that are so; So blessed, so thankful for their blessings. We come now, Ad dextram dextrae, to the right blessedness, 2 Part. in the right sense and interpretation of these words, to spiritual blessedness, to the blessedness of the soul. Estne Deo cura de bobus? is the Apostles question, and his answer is pregnantly implied, 1 Cor. 9.9. God hath care of beasts: But yet God cared more for one soul then for those two thousand hogs which he suffered to perish in the Sea, when that man was dispossessed. Mar. 5. A dram of spiritual is worth infinite talents of temporal. Here then in this spiritual blessedness (as we did in the former) we shall look first, Quid beatitudo, what it is; and then, In quibus, in what it is placed here, Deus eorum sit Dominus, That their God be the Lord; And lastly, the extent of it, That all the people be made partakers of this spiritual blessedness. This blessedness then, you see is placed last in the Text; Beatitudo. not that it cannot be had till our end, till the next life; In this case, the Nemo ante obitum fails, for it is in this life, that we must find our God to be the Lord, or else, if we know not that here, we shall meet his Nescio vos, he will not know us; But it is placed last, because it is the weightiest, and the uttermost degree of blessendness, which can be had, To have the Lord for our God. Consider the making up of a natural man, and you shall see that he is a convenient Type of a spiritual man too. First, in a natural man we conceive there is a soul of vegetation and of growth; and secondly, a soul of motion and of sense; and then thirdly, a soul of reason and understanding, an immortal soul. And the two first souls of vegetation, and of sense, we conceive to arise out of the temperament, and good disposition of the substance of which that man is made, they arise out of man himself; But the last soul, the perfect and immortal soul, that is immediately infused by God. Consider the blessedness of this Text, in such degrees, in such proportions. First, God blesses a man with riches, there is his soul of vegetation and growth, by that he grows in estimation, and in one kind of true ability to produce good fruits, for he hath wherewithal. And then, God gives this rich man the blessing of understanding, his riches, how to employ them according to those moral and civil duties, which appertain unto him, and there is his soul of sense; for many rich men have not this sense, many rich men understand their own riches no more than the Oaks of the Forest do their own Acorns. But last of all, God gives him the blessing of discerning the mercy, and the purpose of God in giving him these temporal blessings, and there is his immortal soul. Now for the riches themselves, (which is his first soul) he may have them ex traduce, by devolution from his parents; and the civil wisdom, how to govern his riches, where to purchase, where to sell, where to give, where to take, (which is his second soul) this he may have by his own acquisition, and experience, and conversation; But the immortal soul, that is, the discerning of God's image in every piece, and of the seal of God's love in every temporal blessing, this is infused from God alone, and arises neither from Parents, nor the wisdom of this world, how worldly wise so ever we be in the governing of our estate. And this the Prophet may very well seem to have intimated, when he saith, Psal. 112.1. The generation of the righteous shall be blessed; Here is a permanent blessedness, to the generation. Wherein is it expressed? thus; Riches and treasure shall be in his house, and his righteousness endureth for ever. He doth not say, that Simony, or Usury, or Extortion shall be in his house; for riches got so are not treasure; Nor he doth not say, that Riches well got, and which are truly a blessing, shall endure for ever, but his righteousness shall endure for ever. The last soul, the immortal soul endures for ever. The blessedness of having studied, and learned, and practised the knowledge of God's purpose in temporal blessings, this blessedness shall endure for ever; When thou shalt turn from the left to the right side, upon thy death bed, from all the honours, and riches of this world, to breathe thy soul into his hands that gave it, this righteousness, this good conscience shall endure then, and then accompany thee: And when thine eyes are closed, and in the twinkling of his eye that closed thine, thy soul shall be gone an infinite way from this honour, and these riches, this righteousness, this good conscience shall endure then, and meet thee in the gates of heaven. And this is so much of that righteousness, as is expressed in this Text, (because this is the root of all) That our God be the Lord. In which, In quibus. first we must propose a God, that there is one, and then appropriate this God to ourselves, that he be our God, and lastly, be sure that we have the right God, that our God be the Lord. For, for the first, he that enterprises any thing, seeks any thing, possesses any thing without recourse to God, without acknowledging God in that action, he is, for that particular, an Atheist, he is without God in that; and if he do so in most of his actions, he is for the most part an Atheist. If he be an Atheist every where, but in his Catechism, if only then he confess a God when he is asked, Dost thou believe that there is a God, and never confess him, never consider him in his actions, it shall do him no good, to say at the last day, that he was no speculative Atheist, he never thought in his heart, that there was no God, if he lived a practic Atherst, proceeded in all his actions without any consideration of him. But accustom thyself to find the presence of God in all thy get, in all thy preferments, in all thy studies, and he will be abundantly sufficient to thee for all. Quantumlibet sis avarus, saith S. Augustine, sufficit tibi Deus, Be as covetous as thou wilt, be as ambitious as thou canst, the more the better; God is treasure, God is honour enough for thee. Avaritia terram quaerit, saith the same Father, add & Coelum; wouldst thou have all this world? wouldst thou have all the next world too? Plus est, qui fecit coelum & terram, He that made heaven and earth is more than all that, and thou mayest have all him. And this appropriates him so near to us, Noster, as that he is thereby Deus noster. For, it is not enough to find Deum, a God; a great and incomprehensible power, that sits in luce, in light, but in luce inaccessibili, in light that we cannot comprehend. A God that enjoys his own eternity, his own peace, his own blessedness, but respects not us, reflects not upon us, communicates nothing to us. But it is a God, that is Deus noster; Ours, as we are his creatures; ours, as we are like him, made to his image; ours, as he is like us, in assuming our nature; ours, as he hath descended to us in his Incarnation; and ours, as we are ascended with him in his glorification: So that we do not consider God, as our God, except we come to the consideration of God in Christ, God and man. It is not enough to find Deum, a God in general, nor to find Deum meum, a God so particularly my God, as that he is a God of my making: That I should seek God by any other motions, or know God by any other notions, or worship God in any other fashions, than the true Church of God doth, for there he is Deus noster, as he is received in the unanime consent of the Catholic Church. Sects are not bodies, they are but rotten boughs, gangrened limbs, fragmentary chips, blown off by their own spirit of turbulence, fallen off by the weight of their own pride, or hewn off by the Excommunications and censures of the Church. Sects are no bodies, for there is Nihil nostrum, nothing in common amongst them, nothing that goes through them all; all is singular, all is meum and tuum, my spirit and thy spirit, my opinion and thy opinion, my God and thy God; no such apprehension, no such worship of God, as the whole Church hath evermore been acquainted withal, and contented with. It is true, that every man must appropriate God so narrowly, as to find him to be Deum suum, his God; that all the promises of the Prophets, and all the performances of the Gospel, all that Christ Jesus said, and did, and suffered, belongs to him and his soul; but yet God is Deus meus, as he is Deus noster, my God, as he is our God, as I am a part of that Church, with which he hath promised to be till the end of the world, and as I am an obedient son of that Mother, who is the Spouse of Christ Jesus: For as S. Augustine saith of that Petition, Give us this day our daily bread, Vnde dicimus Da nostrum? How come we to ask that which is ours, Quomodo nostrum, quomodo da? if we be put to ask it, why do we call it ours? and than answers himself, Tuum confitendo, non eris ingratus, It is a thankful part to confess that thou hast some, that thou hast received some blessings; and then, Ab illo petendo, non eris vacuus, It is a wise and a provident part, to ask more of him, whose store is inexhaustible; So if I feel God, as he is Deus meus, as his Spirit works in me, and thankfully acknowledge that, Non sum ingratus; But if I derive this Pipe from the Cistern, this Deus meus, from Deus noster, my knowledge and sense of God, from that knowledge which is communicated by his Church, in the preaching of his Word, in the administration of his Sacraments, in those other means which he hath instituted in his Church, for the assistance and reparation of my soul that way, Non er o vacuus, I shall have a fuller satisfaction, a more abundant refection then if I rely upon my private inspirations: for there he is Deus noster. Now, as we are thus to acknowledge a God, and thus to appropriate that God; Dominus. so we must be sure to confer this honour upon the right God, upon him who is the Lord. Now this name of God, which is translated the Lord here, is not the name of God, which presents him with relation to his Creatures: for so it is a problematical, a disputable thing, Whether God could be called the Lord, before there were any Creatures. Tertullian denies absolutely that he could be called Lord till then; S. Augustin is more modest, he says, Non audeo dicere, I dare not say that he was not; but he does not affirm that he was; Howsoever the name here, is not the name of Relation, but it is the name of his Essence, of his Eternity, that name, which of late hath been ordinarily called jebovah. So that we are not to trust in those Lords, Whose breath is in their nostrils, Esay 2. ult. as the Prophet says, For, wherein are they to be esteemed? says he; we are less to trust in them, whose breath was never in their nostrils, such imaginary Saints, as are so far from hearing us in Heaven, as that they are not there: and so far from being there, as that they were never here: so fare from being Saints, as that they were never men, but are either fabulous illusions, or at least, but symbolical and allegorical allusions. Our Lord is the Lord of life and being, who gave us not only a well-being in this life, (for that, other Lords can pretend to do, and do indeed, by preferments here) nor a beginning of a temporary being in this life, (for that our Parents pretend, and pretend truly to have done) nor only an enlarging of our being in this life, (for that the King can do by a Pardon, and the Physicians by a Cordial) but he hath given us an immortal being, which neither our Parents began in us, nor great persons can advance for us, nor any Prince can take from us. This is the Lord in this place, this is jehova, and German jehovae, The Lord, Esay 4.2. and the offspring of the Lord; and none is the offspring of God, but God, that is, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. So that this perfect blessedness consists in this, the true knowledge and worship of the Trinity. And this blessing, that is, the true Religion and profession of Christ Jesus, Populus. is to be upon all the people; which is our last Consideration. Blessed is the Nation, whose God is the Lord, Psal. 33.12. and the people whom he hath chosen for his Inheritance. And here again (as in the former Consideration of temporal blessedness) The people includes both Prince and people; and then, the blessing consists in this, that both Prince and people be sincerely affected to the true Religion; And then, the people includes all the people; and so, the blessing consists in this, that there be an unanimity, a consent in all, in matter of Religion; And lastly, the people includes the future people; and there, the blessing consists in this, that our posterity may enjoy the same purity of Religion that we do. The first tentation that fell amongst the Apostles carried away one of them: judas was transported with the tentation of money; and how much? For thirty pieces, and in all likelihood he might have made more profit than that, out of the privy purse; The first tentation carried one, but the first persecution carried away nine, when Christ was apprehended, none was left but two, and of one of those two, S. Hierom says, Vtinàm fugisset & non negasset Christum, I would Peter had fled too, and not scandalised the cause more by his stay, in denying his Master: for, a man may stay in the outward profession of the true Religion, with such purposes, and to such ends, as he may thereby damnify the cause more, and damnify his own soul more, then if he went away to that Religion, to which his conscience (though ill rectified) directs him. Now, though when such tentations, and such persecutions do come, the words of our Saviour Christ will always be true, Luke 12.32. Fear not little flock, for it is God's pleasure to give you the Kingdom, though God can lay up his seed-corne in any little corner, yet the blessing intended here, is not in that little seed-corne, nor in the corner, but in the plenty, when all the people are blessed, and the blessed Spirit blows where he will, and no door nor window is shut against him. And therefore let all us bless God, for that great blessing to us, in giving us such Princes, as make it their care, Nebona caducasint, ne mala recidiva, That that blessedness which we enjoy by them, may never departed from us, that those miseries which we felt before them, may never return to us. Almighty God make always to us all, Prince and people, these temporal blessings which we enjoy now, Peace, and Plenty, and Health, seals of his spiritual blessings, and that spiritual blessedness which we enjoy now, the profession of the only true Religion, a seal of itself, and a seal of those eternal blessings, which the Lord the righteous Judge hath laid up for his, in that Kingdom which his Son, our Saviour hath purchased for us, with the inestimable price of his incorruptible blood. In which glorious Son of God, etc. SERM. LXXV. Preached to the King at , April 15. 1628. ESAY 32.8. But the liberal deviseth liberal things, and by liberal things he shall stand. BY two ways especially hath the Gospel been propagated by men of letters, by Epistles, and by Sermons. The Apostles pursued both ways; frequent in Epistles, assiduous in Sermons. And, as they had the name of Apostles, from Letters, from Epistles, from Missives, (for, the Certificates, and Testimonials, and safe-conducts, and letters of Credit, which issued from Prince's Courts, or from Courts that held other Jurisdiction, were in the formularies and terms of Law called Apostles, before Christ's Apostles were called Apostles) so they executed the office of their Apostleship so too, by Writing, & by Preaching. This succession in the Ministry of the Gospel did so too. Chrysost. Therefore it is said of S. chrysostom, Vbique praedicavit, quia ubique lectus, He preached every where, because he was read every where. And, he that is said to have been S. Pelusiota. Chrysostom's disciple, Isidore, is said to have written ten thousand Epistles, and in them to have delivered a just, and full Commentary upon all the Scriptures. In the first age of all, they scarce went any other way, (for writing) but this, by Epistles. Of Clement, of Ignatius, of Polycarpus, of Martial, there is not much offered us, with any probability, but in the name of Epistles. When Christians gathered themselves with more freedom, and Churches were established with more liberty, Preaching prevailed; And there is no exercise, that is denoted by so many names, as Preaching. Origen began; for, (I think) we have no Sermons, till origen's. And though he began early, (early, if we consider the age of the Church, (a thousand four hundred years since) and early, if we consider his own age, for, origen's. preached by the commandment, and in the presence of Bishops, before he was a Churchman) yet he suffered no Sermons of his to be copied, till he was sixty years old. Now, Origen called his Homilies; And the first Gregory, of the same time with Origen, that was Bishop of Neocesaria, hath his called Sermons. And so names multiplied; Homilies, Sermons, Conciones, Lectures, S. Augustins' Enarrations, Dictiones, that is, Speeches, Damascens and Cyrils Orations (nay, one excercise of Caesareus, conveied in the form of a Dialogue) were all Sermons. Add to these Church-exercises, (Homilies, Sermons, Lectures, Orations, Speeches, and the rest) the Declamations of Civil men in Courts of Justice, the Tractates of Moral men written in their Studies, nay go bacl to your our own times, when you went to School, or to the University; and remember but your own, or your fellow's Themes, or Problems, or Common-places, and in all these you may see evidence of that, to which the Holy Ghost himself hath set a Seal in this text, that is, the recommendation of Bounty, of Munificence, of Liberality, The Liberal deviseth liberal things, and by liberal things he shall stand. That which makes me draw into consideration, Divisio. the recommendation of this virtue, in civil Authors, and exercises, as well as in Ecclesiastical, is this, That our Expositors, of all the three ranks, and Classes (The Fathers and Ancients, The later men in the Roman Church, and ours of the Reformation) are very near equally divided, in every of these three ranks; whether this Text be intended of a moral and a civil, or of a spiritual and Ecclesiastical liberality; whether this prophecy of Esay, in this Chapter, beginning thus, (Behold, a King shall reign in righteousness, Ver. 1. and Princes shall rule in judgement) be to be understood of an Hezekias, or a josias, or any other good King, which was to succeed, and to induce virtuous times in the temporal State, and government, Or whether this were a prophecy of Christ's time, and of the exaltation of all virtues in the Christian Religion, hath divided our Expositors in all those three Classes. In all three, (though in all three some particular men are peremptory and vehement upon some one side, absolutely excluding the other exposition, as, amongst our Authors in the Reformation, one says, Dubium non est, It can admit no doubt, Calvin. but that this is to be understood of Hezekias, and his reign, And yet another of the same side, says too, Heshusius. Qui Rabbinos secuti, They that adhere too much to the Jewish Rabbins, and will needs interpret this prophecy of a temporal King, obscure the purpose of the Holy Ghost, and accommodate many things to a secular Prince, which can hold in none, but Christ himself) yet, I say, though there be some peremptory, there are in all the three Classes, Ancients, Romans, Reformed, moderate men, that apply the prophecy both ways, and find that it may very well subsist so, That in a fair proportion, all these blessings shall be in the reigns of those Hezekiasses, and those josiasses, those good Kings which God affords to his people; But the multiplication, the exaltation of all these blessings, and virtues, is with relation to the coming of Christ, and the establishing of his Kingdom: And this puts us, if not to a necessity, yet with conveniency, to consider these words both ways; What this civil liberality is, that is here made a blessing of a good King's reign; And what this spiritual liberality is, that is here made a testimony of Christ's reign, and of his Gospel. And therefore, since we must pass twice through these words, it is time to begin; The liberal man deviseth liberal things, and by liberal things he shall stand. From these two arms of this tree, that is, from the civil, and from the spiritual accommodation of these words, be pleased to gather, and lay up these particular fruits. In each of these, you shall taste first, what this Liberality thus recommended is; And secondly, what this devising, and studying of liberal things is; And again, how this man is said to stand by liberal things; The liberal man deviseth liberal things, and by liberal things he shall stand. And because in the course of this Prophecy, in this Chapter, we have the King named, and then his Princes, and after, persons of lower quality and condition, we shall consider these particulars; This Liberality, this Devising, this Standing; First, in the first accommodation of the words, In the King, in his Princes, or great persons, the Magistrate, and lastly, in his people. And in the second accommodation, the spiritual sense, we shall consider these three terms, (Liberality, Devising, Standing) First, in the King of Kings, Christ Jesus, And then, in his Officers, the Ministers of his Gospel, And lastly, in his people gathered by this Gospel; In all which persons, in both sorts, Civil and Spiritual, we shall see how the liberal man deviseth liberal things, and how by liberal things he stands. First then, in our first part, In the civil consideration of this virtue, Liberality, 1 Part. Liberality. It is a communication of that which we have to other men; and it is the best character of the best things, that they are communicable, diffusive. Light was God's first child; Light opened the womb of the Chaos; borne heir to the world, and so does possess the world; and there is not so diffusive a thing, nothing so communicative, and self-giving as light is. And then, Gold is not only valued above all things, but is itself the value of all things; The value of every thing is, Thus much gold it is worth; And no metal is so extensive as gold; no metal enlarges itself to such an expansion, such an attenuation as gold does, nor spreads so much, with so little substance. Sight is the noblest, and the powerfullest of our Senses; All the rest, (Hearing only excepted) are determined in a very narrow distance; And for Hearing, Thunder is the farthest thing that we can hear, and Thunder is but in the air; but we see the host of Heaven, the stars in the firmament. All the good things that we can consider, Light, Sight, Gold, all are accompanied with a liberality of themselves, and are so far good, as they are dispensed and communicated to others; for their goodness is in their use. It is Virtus prolifica, a generative, a productive virtue, a virtue that begets another virtue; another virtue upon another man; Thy liberality begets my gratitude; and if there be an unthankful barrenness in me, that thou have no children by me, no thankfulness from me, God shall raise thee the more children for my barrenness, Thy liberality shall be the more celebrated by all the world, because I am unthankful. God hath given me a being, and my liberal Benefactor hath given me such a better being, as that, without that, even my first being had been but a pain, and a burden unto me. He that leaves treasure at his death, left it in his life; Then, when he locked it up, and forbade himself the use of it, be left it. He that locks up, may be a good Jailor; but he that gives out, is his Steward: The saver may be God's chest; The giver is Gods right hand. But the matter of our Liberality (what we give) is but the body of this virtue. The soul of this Liberality, that that inanimates it, is the manner, intended more in the next word, He deviseth, He studieth, The liberal deviseth liberal things. Here the Holy Ghosts word is jagnatz, Deviseth. and jagnatz carries evermore with it a denotation of Counsel, and Deliberation, and Conclusions upon premises. He Devises, that is, Considers what liberality is, discourses with himself, what liberal things are to be done, And then, upon this, determines, concludes, that he will do it, and really, actually does it. Therefore, in our first Translation, (the first since the Reformation) we read this Text thus, The liberal man imagineth honest things; Though the Translator have varied the word, (Liberal and Honest) the Original hath not. It is the same word in both places; Liberal man, Liberal things; but the Translator was pleased to let us see, that if it be truly a liberal, it is an honest action. Therefore the liberal man must give that which is his own; for else, the receiver is but a receiver of stolen goods; And the Curse of the oppressed may follow the gift, not only in his hands, through which it passed, but into his hands, where it remains. We have a convenient Emblem of Liberality in a Torch, that wastes itself to enlighten others; But for a Torch to set another man's house on fire, to enlighten me, were no good Emblem of Liberality. But Liberality being made up of the true body, and true soul, true matter, and true form, that is, just possession for having, and sober discretion for giving, then enters the word of our Text, literally, The liberal man deviseth liberal things; He devices, studies, meditates, casts about, where he may do a noble action, where he may place a benefit; He seeks the man with as much earnestness, as another man seeks the money; And as God comes with an earnestness (as though he thought it nothing, to have wrought all the week) to his Faciamus hominem, Now let us make man; So comes the liberal man to make a man, and to redeem him out of necessity and contempt; (the upper and lower Millstone of poverty) And to return to our former representations of Liberality, Light, and Sight; As light comes through the glass, but we know not how, and our sight apprehends remote objects, but we know not how; so the liberal man looks into dark corners, even upon such as are loath to be looked upon, loath to have their wants come into knowledge, and visits them by his liberality, when sometimes they know not from whence that shower of refreshing comes, no more than we know, how light comes through the glass, or how our sight apprehends remote objects. So the liberal man deviseth liberal things; And then, (which is our third term, and consideration in this civil and moral acceptation of the words) By liberal things he shall stand. Some of our later Expositors admit this phrase, (The liberal man shall stand) to reach no further, Shall stand. nor to signify no more, but that The liberal man shall stand, that is, will stand, will continue his course, and proceed in liberal ways. And this is truly a good sense; for many times men do some small actions, that have some show and taste of some virtue, for collateral respects, and not out of a direct and true virtuous habit. But these Expositors (with whose narrowness our former Translators complied) will not let the Holy Ghost be as liberal as he would be. His liberality here is, That the liberal man shall stand, that is, Prosper and Multiply, and be the better established for his liberality; He shall sow silver, and reap gold; he shall sow gold, and reap Diamonds; sow benefits, and reap honour; not honour rooted in the opinion of men only, but in the testimony of a cheerful conscience, that pours out Acclamations by thousands; And that is a blessed and a loyal popularity, when I have a people in mine own bosom, a thousand voices in mine own conscience, that justify and applaud a good action. Therefore that Translation which we mentioned before, reads this clause thus, The liberal man imagineth honest things, and cometh up by honesty; still that which he calls Honesty, is in the Original Liberality, and he comes up, he prospers, and thrives in the world, by those noble, and virtuous actions. It is easy for a man of any largeness in conversation, or in reading, to assign examples of men, that have therefore lost all, because they were loath to part with any thing. When Nazianzen says, That man cannot be so like God in any thing, as in giving, he means that he shall be like him in this too, that he shall not be the poorer for giving. But keeping the body, and soul of liberality, Giving his own, and giving worthily, in soul and body too, (that is, in conscience and fortune both) By liberal things he shall stand, that is, prosper. Now these three terms, (Liberality, the virtue itself, the studying of Liberality, Rex. this devising; and the advantage of this Liberality, this standing) (being yet in this first part, still upon the consideration of civil, and moral Liberality) we are to consider, (according to their Exposition, that bind this Prophecy to an Hezckias, or a josias, in which Prophecy we find mention of all those persons) we are, I say, to consider them, in the King, in his Officers, the Magistrate, and in his Subjects. For the King first, this virtue of our Text, is so radical, so elementary, so essential to the King, as that the vulgat Edition in the Roman Church reads this very Text thus, Princeps verò ea quae principe digna sunt, cogitabit, The King shall exercise himself in royal Meditations, and Actions; Him, whom we call a Liberal man, they call a King, and those actions that we call Liberal, they call Royal. A Translation herein excusable enough; for the very Original word, which we translate, Liberal, is a Royal word, Nadib, and very often in the Scriptures hath so high, a Royal signification. The very word is in that place, where David prays to God, to renew him spiritu Principali; And this, Psal. 51.10. (spiritus Principalis) as many Translators call a Principal, a Princely, a Royal spirit, as a liberal, a free, a bountiful spirit; If it be Liberal, it is Royal. For, when David would have bought a threshing-floore, 2 Sam. 24.23. to erect an Altar upon, of Araunah, and Araunah offered so freely place, and sacrifice, and instruments, and all, the Holy Ghost expresses it so, All these things did Araunah, as a King, offer to the King; There was but this difference between the Liberal man, and David, A King, and The King. Higher than a King, for an example and comparison of Liberality, on this side of God, he could not go. The very form of the Office of a King, is Liberality, that is Providence, and Protection, and Possession, and Peace, and Justice shed upon all. And then, this Prophecy (considered still the first way, morally, Principes. civilly) carries this virtue, not only upon the King, but upon the Princes too, upon those persons that are great, great in blood, great in power, great in place, and office, They must be liberal of that, which is deposited in them. The Sun does not enlighten the Stars of the Firmament, merely for an Omament to the Firmament, (though even the glory, which God receives from that Ornament, be one reason thereof) but that by the reflection of those Stars his beams might be cast into some places, to which, by a direct Emanation from himself, those beams would not have come. So do Kings transmit some beams of power into their Officers, not only to dignify and illustrate a Court, (though that also be one just reason thereof, for outward dignity and splendour must be preserved) but that by those subordinate Instruments, the royal Liberality of the King, that is, Protection, and Justice might be transferred upon all. And therefore, Epistol. ad Salvian. S. Hierome speaking of Nebridius, who was so gracious with the Emperor, that he denied him nothing, assigns that for the reason of his largeness towards him, Quòd sciebat, non uni, sed pluribus indulgeri, Because he knew, that in giving him, he gave to the Public; He employed that which he received, for the Public. And lastly, our Prophecy places this Liberality upon the people. Now, Populus. still this Liberality is, that it be diffusive, that the object of our affections be the Public. To departed with nothing which we call our own, Nothing in our goods, nothing in our opinions, nothing in the present exercise of our liberty, is not to be liberal. To press too fare the advancing of one part, to the depressing of another, (especially where that other is the Head) is not liberal dealing. Therefore said Christ to james, and john, Mat. 20.23. August. Non est meum dare vobis, It is not mine to give, to set you on my right, and on my left hand; Non vobis, quia singuli separatim ab aliis rogatis, not to you, because you consider but yourselves, and petition for yourselves, to the prejudice, and exclusion of others. Joh. 4.16. Chrysost. Therefore Christ bade the Samaritan woman call her husband too, when she desired the water of life, Ne sola gratiam acciperet, saith S. chrysostom, That he might so do good to her, as that others might have good by it too. For, Adpatriam quâitur? August. Which way think you to go home, to the heavenly Jerusalem? Per ipsum mare, sed in ligno, You must pass thorough Seas of difficulties, and therefore by ship; and in a ship, you are not safe, except other passengers in the same ship be safe too. Cant. 1.4. The Spouse saith, Trahe me post te, Draw me after thee. When it is but a Me, in the singular, but one part considered, there is a violence, a difficulty, a drawing; But presently after, when there is an uniting in a plural, there is an alacrity, a concurrence, a willingness; Curremus post te, We, We will run after thee; If we would join in public considerations, we should run together. This is true Liberality in God's people, to departed with some things of their own, though in goods, though in opinions, though in present use of liberty, for the public safety. These Liberal things, these Liberal men, (King, Magistrate, and People) shall devise, and by Liberal things they shall stand. The King shall devise Liberal things, Cogitabit Rex. that is, study, and propose Directions, and commit the execution thereof to persons studious of the glory of God, and the public good; Magistratus. And that is his Devising of Liberal things. The Princes, Magistrates, Officers, shall study to execute aright those gracious Directions received from their royal Master, and not retard his holy alacrity in the ways of Justice, by any slackness of theirs, nor by casting a damp, or blasting a good man, or a good cause, in the eyes, or ears of the King; And that is their Devising of Liberal things. The people shall divest all personal respects, and ill affections towards other men, and all private respects of their own, and spend all their faculties of mind, of body, of fortune, upon the Public; And that is their Devising of Liberal things. And by these Liberal things, Stabit Rex. Magistratus. these Liberal men shall stand. The King shall stand; stand in safety at home, and stand in triumph abroad. The Magistrate shall stand; stand in a due reverence of his place from below, and in safe possession of his place from above; neither be contemned by his Inferiors, nor suspiciously, and guiltily inquired into by his Superiors; Populus. neither fear petitions against him, nor commissions upon him. And the People shall stand; stand upon their right Basis, that is, an inward feeling, and an outward declaration, that they are safe only in the Public safety. And they shall all stand in the Sunshine, and serenity of a clear conscience, which serenity of conscience is one fair beam, even of the glory of God, and of the joy of heaven, upon that soul that enjoys it. This is Esays Prophecy of the times of an Hezekias, of a josias, the blessing of this civil and moral Liberality, in all these persons. And it is time to pass to our other general part, from the civil, to the spiritual, and from applying these words, to the good times of a good King, to that, (which is evidently the principal purpose of the Holy Ghost) That in the time of Christ Jesus, and the reign of his Gospel, this, and all other virtues, should be in a higher exaltation, than any civil, or moral respect can carry them to. As an Hezekias, 2 Part. Liberalitas. a josias is a Type of Christ, but yet but a Type of Christ; so this civil Liberality, which we have hitherto spoken of, is a Type, but yet but a Type of our spiritual Liberality. For, here we do not only change terms, the temporal, to spiritual, and to call that, which we called Liberality in the former part, Charity in this part; nor do we only make the difference in the proportion & measure, that that which was a Benefit in the other part, should be an Alms in this. But we invest the whole consideration in a mere spiritual nature; and so that Liberality, which was, in the former acceptation, but a relieving, but a refreshing, but a repairing of defects, and dilapidations in the body or fortune, is now, in this second part, in this spiritual acceptation, the raising of a dejected spirit, the redintegration of a broken heart, the resuscitation of a buried soul, the re-consolidation of a scattered conscience, not with the glues, and cements of this world, mirth, and inusique, and comedies, and conversation, and wine, and women, (miserable comforters are they all) nor with that Meteor, that hangs between two worlds, that is, Philosophy, and moral constancy, (which is somewhat above the carnal man, but yet far below the man truly Christian and religious) But this is the Liberality, of which the Holy Ghost himself is content to be the Steward, of the holy, blessed, and glorious Trinity, and to be notified, and qualified by that distinctive notion, and specification, The Comforter. To find a languishing wretch in a sordid corner, not only in a penurious fortune, but in an oppressed conscience, His eyes under a divers suffocation, sinothered with smoke, and smothered with tears, His ears estranged from all salutations, and visits, and all sounds, but his own sighs, and the storms and thunders and earthquakes of his own despair, To enable this man to open his eyes, and see that Christ Jesus stands before him, and says, Behold and see, if ever there were any sorrow, like my sorrow, and my sorrow is overcome, why is not thine? To open this man's ears, and make him hear that voice that says, I was dead, and am alive, and behold, I live for evermore, Amen; Revel. 1.18. and so mayest thou; To bow down those Heavens, and bring them into his sad Chamber, To set Christ Jesus before him, to out-sigh him, out-weepe him, out-bleed him, out-dye him, To transfer all the fasts, all the scorns, all the scourges, all the nails, all the spears of Christ Jesus upon him, and so, making him the Crucified man in the sight of the Father, because all the actions, and passions of the Son, are appropriated to him, and made his so entirely, as if there were never a soul created but his, To enrich this poor soul, to comfort this sad soul so, as that he shall believe, and by believing find all Christ to be his, this is that Liberality which we speak of now, in dispensing whereof, The liberal man deviseth liberal things, and by liberal things shall stand. Now you may be pleased to remember, that when we considered this word, Cogitabit. in our former part, (he shall Devise) we found this Devising Originally to signify a studying, a deliberation, a concluding upon premises; upon which, we inferred pregnantly and justly, that as to support a man's expense, he must Vivere de proprio, Live upon his own; so to relieve others, he must Dare de suo, Be liberal of that which is his. Now, what is ours? Ours, that are Ministers of the Gospel? As we are Christ's, so Christ is ours. Puer datus nobis, filius natus nobis, There is a Child given unto us, a Son borne unto us; Esay 9 Even in that sense, Christ is given to us, that we might give him to others. So that in this kind of spiritual liberality, we can be liberal of no more but our own; we can give nothing but Christ; we can minister comfort to none, farther than he is capable, and willing to receive and embrace Christ Jesus. When therefore some of the Fathers have said, Ratio pro fide Graecis & Barbaris, Just. Mar. Rectified reason was accepted at the hands of the Gentiles, as faith is of the Christians; Philosophia per se justificavit Graecos, Philosophy alone (without faith) justified the Grecians; Clemens. Satis fuit Gentibus abstinuisse ab Idololatria, It was enough for the Gentiles, Chrysost. if they did not worship false Gods, though they knew not the true truly; Andrad. when we hear Andradius in the Roman Church pour out falvation to all the Gentiles, that lived a good moral life, and no more; when we hear their Tostatus sweep away, Tostatus. blow away Original sin so easily from all the Gentiles, In prima operatione bona in charitate, In the first good Moral work that they do, Original sin is as much extinguished in them by that, as by Baptism in us; When we see some Authors in the Reformation afford Heaven to persons that never professed Christ, this is spiritual prodigality, and beyond that liberality which we consider now; for, Christ is ours; and where we can apply him, we can give all comforts in him; But none to others. Not that we manacle the hands of God, or say, God can save no man without the profession of Christ, But, that God hath put nothing else into his Church's hands to save men by, but Christ delivered in his Scripture, applied in the preaching of the Gospel, and sealed in the Sacraments. And therefore, if we should give this comfort, to any but those that received him, and received him so, according to his Ordinance in his Church, we should be over-liberall, for we should give more than our own. But to all that would be comforted in Christ, we devise liberal things, that is, we spend our studies, our lucubrations, our meditations, to bring Christ Jesus home to their case, and their conscience, And, by these liberal things we shall stand. In our former part, in that Civil liberality, Stabit. we did not content ourselves with that narrow signification of the word, which some gave, That the liberal man would stand to it, abide by it, that is, continue liberal still habitually, but that he should stand by it, and prosper the better for it. If this Liberality which we consider now in this second Part, were but that branch of Charity, which is bodily relief by bountiful Alms, and no more, yet, we might be so liberal in God's behalf, as to pronounce that the charitable man should stand by it, prosper for it, and have a plentiful harvest for any sowing in that kind. The Holy Ghost in the 112. Psalm, and 9 verse, hath taken a word, which may almost seem to taste of a little inconsideration in such a charitable person, a little indiscretion, in giving, in flinging, in casting away; for it is, He hath dispersed; Dispersed; A word that implies a careless scattering. But that which follows, justifies it; He hath dispersed, he hath given to the poor. Let the manner, or the measure be how it will, so it be given to the poor, it will not be without excuse, not without thanks. And therefore we have this liberal charity expressed by S. Paul in the same word too, 2 Cor. 9 9 He hath dispersed; but dispersed as before, Dispersed by giving to the poor. For there is more negligence, more inconsideration allowed us, in giving of Alms, then in any other expense; Neither are we bound to examine the condition, and worthiness of the person to whom we give too narrowly, too severely. He that gives freely, shall stand by doing so; Prov. 17.19. for, He that pitieth the poor, dareth to the Lord; And the Lord is a good Debtor, and never puts Creditor to sue. And, if that be not comfort enough, S. Hicrom gives more, in his-translation of that place, foeneratur Domino, he that pitieth the poor, puts his money to use to God, and shall receive the debt, and more. But, the liberality which we consider here, in this part, is more than that, more than any charity, how large soever, that is determined, or conversant about bodily relief; for, (as you have heard) it is consolation applied in Christ, to a distressed soul, to a disconsolate spirit. And how a liberal man shall stand by this liberality, (by applying such consolation to such a distressed soul) I better know in myself, than I can tell any other, that is not of mine own profession; for this knowledge lies in the experience of it. For the most part, men are of one of these three sorts; Either inconsiderate men; (and they that consider not themselves, consider not us, they ask not, they expect not this liberality from us) or else they are over-confident, and presume too much upon God; or diffident, and distrust him too much. And with these two we meet often; but truly, with seven diffident, and dejected, for one presuming soul. So that we have much exercise of this liberality, of raising dejected spirits: And by this liberality we stand. For, when I have given that man comfort, that man hath given me a Sacrament, he hath given me a seal and evidence of God's favour upon me; I have received from him, in his receiving from me; I leave him comforted in Christ Jesus, and I go away comforted in myself, that Christ Jesus hath made me an instrument of the dispensation of his mercy; And I argue to myself, and say, Lord, when I went, I was sure, that thou who hadst received me to mercy, wouldst also receive him, who could not be so great a sinner as I; And now, when I come away, I am sure, that thou who art returned to him, and hast re-manifested thyself to him, who, in the diffidence of his sad soul, thought thee gone for ever, wilt never departed from me, nor hid thyself from me, who desire to dwell in thy presence. And so, by this liberality I stand; by giving I receive comfort. We follow our text, Rex Christus. in the Context, our Prophet, as he places this liberality in the King, in the Magistrate, in the People. Here, the King is Christ, The Magistrate the Minister, The People the people, whether collectively, that is, the Congregation, or distributively, every particular soul. Afford your devotions a minute to each of these, and we have done. When we consider the liberality of our King, the bounty of God, to man in Christ, it is Species ingratitudinis, It is a degree of ingratitude, nay, it is a degree of forgetfulness, to pretend to remember his benefits so, as to reckon them, for they are innumerable. Sicut in visibilibus est Sol, Nazlan. in intelligibilibus est Deus; As liberal as the Sun is in Nature, God is in grace. Bonitas Dei ad extra, liberalitas est; It is the expressing of the School, and of much use; That God is Essential Goodness, within doors, in himself; But, Ad extra, when he comes abroad, when this interior Goodness is produced into action, Barnard. than all God's Goodness is Liberality. Deus est voluntas Omnipotens, is excellently said by S. Bernard; God is all Almightiness, all Power; but he might be so and we never the better. Therefore he is Voluntas omnipotens, A Power digested into a Will, as Willing, as Able to do us all, all good. What good? Receive some drops of it in S. Bernard's own Manna, his own honey; Creans mentes ad se participandum, So good, as that he hath first given us souls capable of him, and made us so, partakers of the Divine Nature; Vivificans ad sentiendum, So good as that he hath quickened those souls, and made them sensible of having received him; for, Grace is not grace to me, till it make me know that I have it Alliciens ad appetendum, So good as that he hath given that soul an appetite, and a holy hunger and thirst to take in more of him; for I have no Grace, till I would have more; and then, Dilatans ad capiendum, So good, as that he hath dilated and enlarged that soul, to take in as much of God as he will. And lest the soul should lose any of this by unthankfulness, Luke 6.31. God is kind even to the unthankful, says God himself; which is a degree of goodness, in which God seldom is, nay, in which God scarce looks to be imitated, To be kind to the unthankful. But if the whole space to the Firmament were filled with sand, and we had before us Clavius his number, how many thousands would be; If all that space were filled with water, and so joined the waters above with the waters below the Firmament, and we had the number of all those drops of water; And then had every single sand, and every single drop multiplied by the whole number of both, we were still short of numbering the benefits of God, as God; But then, of God in Christ, infinitely, super-infinitely short. To have been once nothing, and to be now coheir with the Son of God, is such a Circle, such a Compass, as that no revolutions in this world, to rise from the lowest to the highest, or to fall from the highest to the lowest, can be called or thought any Segment, any Arch, any Point in respect of this Circle; To have once been nothing, and now to be coheirs with the Son of God: That Son of God; who if there had been but one soul to have been saved, would have died for that; nay, if all souls had been to be saved, but one, and that that only had sinned, he would not have contented himself with all the rest, but would have died for that. And there is the goodness, the liberality of our King, our God, our Christ, our Jesus. But we must look upon this liberality, as our Prophet leads us, in the Magistrate too, Magistratus. that is, in this part, The Minister. As I have received mercy, I am one of them, as S. Paul speaks. And why should I deliver out this mercy to others, in a scanter measure, than I have received it myself from God? Why should I deliver out his Talents in single farthings? Or his Gomers in narrow and shallow thimbles? Why should I defalk from his general propositions, and against all Grammar, and all Dictionaries, call his Omnes, his All, a few? Why should I lie to the Holy Ghost, Acts 5. (as S. Peter charges Ananias) Soldest thou the land for so much? Yea, for so much. Did God make heaven for so few? yes, for so few. Why should I say so? If we will constitute a place for heaven above, and a place for hell below, even the capacity of the place will yield an argument, that God, (as we can consider him in his first meaning) meant more should be saved then cast away. As oft as God tells us, of painful ways, and narrow gates, and of Camels, and needles, all that is done to sharpen an industry in all, not to threaten an impossibility to any. If God would not have all, why took he me? And if he were sorry he had taken me, or were wearied with the sins of my youth, why did he not let me slide away, in the change of sins in mine age, or in my sinful memory of old sins, or in my sinful sorrow that I could not continue in those sins, but still make his mercies new to me every morning? My King, my God in Christ, is liberal to all; He bids us, his Officers, his Ministers, to be so too; and I am; even thus far; If any man doubt his salvation, if any man think himself too great a sinner to attain salvation, let him repent, and take mine for his; with any true repentant sinner, I will change states; for, God knows his repentance, (whether it be true or no) better then I know mine. Therefore doth the Prophet here, promise this liberality, as in the King, in Christ, Populus. and in the Magistrate, the Minister; so in the people too, in every particular soul. He cries to us, his Ministers, Consolamini, Consolamini, Comfort, O Comfort my people, Esay 40.1. and he cries to every one of you, Miscrere animae tuae. Have mercy upon thine own soul, Ecclus. 30.24. and I will commiserate it too; Be liberal to thyself, and I will bear thee out in it. God asks, Quid potui, What could have been done more to my Vineyard? Do but tell him, Esay 5.4. and he will do that. Tell him, that he can remove this damp from thy heart; Tell him, as though thou wouldst have it done, and he will do it. Tell him, that he can bring tears into thine eyes, and then, wipe all tears from thine eyes; and he will do both. Tell him, that he did as much for David, as thou needest; That he came later to the Thief upon the Cross, than thou putst him to; And David's Transtulit peccatum, shall be transferred upon thee, And that thief's Hodie mecum eris, shall waft, and guard, and convey thy soul thither. Think not thy God a false God, that bids me call thee, and means not that thou hear; nor an impotent God, that would save thee, but that there is a Decree in the way; nor a cruel God, that made thee, to damn thee, that he might laugh at thy destruction. Thy King, thy Christ, is a liberal God; His Officers, his Ministers, by his instructions, declare plentiful redemption; Be liberal to thyself, in the apprehension and application thereof, and by these liberal things, we shall all stand. The King himself stands by it, Stabit Rex Christus. Minister. Christ himself. It destroys the nature, the office, the merit of Christ himself, to make his redemption so penurious, so illiberal. We, his officers, his Ministers stand by it. It overthrows the credit, and evacuates the purpose of our employment, and our Ministry, if we must offer salvation to the whole Congregation, and must not be believed, that he that sends it, means it. The people, every particular soul stands by it. For, if he cannot believe God, to have been more liberal to him, than he hath been to any other man, he is in an ill case, because he knows more ill by himself, than he can know by any other man. Believe therefore liberal purposes in thy God; Accept liberal propositions from his Ministers; And apply them liberally, and cheerfully to thine own soul; for, The liberal man deviseth liberal things, and by liberal things he shall stand. SERM. LXXVI. Preached to the Earl of Carlisle, and his Company, at Zion. MARK. 16.16. He that believeth not, shall be damned. THe first words that are recorded in the Scriptures, to have been spoken by our Saviour, are those which he spoke to his father and mother, then when they had lost him at Jerusalem, Luk. 2.49. How is it that you sought me? knew ye not that I must be about my Father's business? And the last words, which are in this Evangelist recorded to have been spoken by him, to his Apostles, are then also, when they were to lose him in Jerusalem, when he was to departed out of their presence, and set himself in the heavenly Jerusalem, at the right hand of his Father: of which last words of his, this Text is a part. In his first words, those to his father and mother, he doth not rebuke their care in seeking him, nor their tenderness in seeking him, (as they told him they did) with heavy hearts: But he lets them know, that, if not the band of nature, nor the reverential respect due to parents, than no respect in the world should hold him from a diligent proceeding in that work which he came for, the advancing the kingdom of God in the salvation of mankind. In his last words to his Apostles, he doth not discomfort them by his absence, Mat. 28.20. for he says, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world: But he encourageth them to a cheerful undertaking of their great work, the preaching of the Gospel to all Nations, by many arguments, many inducements, of which, one of the weightiest is, That their preaching of the Gospel was not like to be uneffectuall, because he had given them the sharpest spur, and the strongest bridle upon mankind; Praemium & poenam, Authority to reward the obedient, and authority to punish the rebellious and refractory man; he put into their hands the double key of Heaven, and of Hell; power to convey to the believer Salvation, and upon him that believed not, to inflict eternal condemnation; He that believeth not, shall be damned. That than which man was to believe upon pain of damnation, Divisio. if he did not, being this Commission which Christ gave to his Apostles, we shall make it our first part of this Exercise, to consider the Commission itself, the subject of every man's necessary belief; And our second part shall be, The penalty, the inevitable, the irreparable, the intolerable, the inexpressible penalty, everlasting condemnation, He that believeth not, shall be damned. In the first of these parts, we shall first consider some circumstantial, and then the substantial parts of the Commission; (for though they be essential things, yet because they are not of the body of the Commission, we call them branches circumstantial) First, a sit, whether there be such a Commission or no; secondly, the Vbi, where this Commission is; and then the Vnde, from whence this Commission proceeds; And lastly the Quò, how fare it extends, and reaches; And having passed thorough these, we must look back for the substance of the Commission; for in the Text, He that believeth not, is implied this particle, this, this word this, He that believeth not this, that is, that which Christ hath said to his Apostles immediately before the Text, which is indeed the substance of the Commission, consisting of three parts, Ite praedicate, go and preach the Gospel, Ite Baptizate, go and baptise them, Itedocete, go and teach them to do, and to practise all that I have commanded; And after all these which do but make up the first part, we shall descend to the second, which is the penalty; and as fare as the narrowness of the time, and the narrowness of your patience, and the narrowness of my comprehension can reach, we shall show you the horror, the terror of that fearful intermination, Damnabitur, He that believeth not, shall be damned. First then, it is within this Credererit, that is, It is matter of faith to believe, 1 Part. An sit. that such a Commission there is, that God hath established means of salvation, and propagation of his Gospel here. If then this be matter of faith, where is the root of this faith? from whence springs it? Is there any such thing writ in the heart of man, that God hath proceeded so? Certainly as it is in Agendis, in those things which we are bound to do, which are all comprehended in the Decalogue, in the Ten Commandments, that there is nothing written there, in those stone Tables, which was not written before in the heart of man, (exemplify it in that Commandment which seems most removed from natural reason, which is the observing of the Sabbath, yet even for that, for a Sabbath, man naturally finds this holy impression, and religious instinct in his heart, That there must be an outward worship of that God, that hath made, and preserved him, and that is the substance, and moral part of that Commandment of the Sabbath) And it is in Agendis, that all things, that all men are bound to do, all men have means to know; And as it is in Sperandis, in Petendis, of those things which man may hope for at God's hand, or pray for, from him, there is a knowledge imprinted in man's heart too; (for the Lord's Prayer is an abridgement of all those, and exemplify also this in that Petition of the Lords Prayer, which may seem most removed from natural reason, That we must forgive those who have trespassed against us, yet even in that, every natural man may see, That there is no reason for him, to look for forgiveness from God, who can, and may justly come to an immediate execution of us, as soon as we have offended him, if we will not forgive another man, whom we cannot execute ourselves, but must implore the Law, and the Magistrate to revenge our quarrel) As it is in Agendis, in all things which we are bound to do; As it is in Petendis, in all things which we may pray for, so it is in Credendis, all things that all men are bound to believe, all men have means to know. This then, that God hath established means of salvation, being Inter credenda, one of those things which he is bound to believe, (for he that believeth not this, shall be damned) Man hath thus much evidence of this in nature, that by natural reason we know, that that God which must be worshipped, hath surely declared how he will be worshipped, and so we are led to seek his revealed and manifested will, and that is no where to be found but in his Scriptures. So that when all is done, the Ten Commandments, which is the sum of all that we are to do; The Lord's Prayer, which is the sum of all that we are to ask; and the Apostles Creed, which is the sum of all that we are to believe, are but declaratory, not introductory things; The same things are first written in man's heart, though dimly and sub-obscurely, and then the same things are extended, shed in a brighter beam, in every leaf of the Scripture; And the same things are recollected again, into the Ten Commandments, into the Lord's Prayer, and into the Apostles Creed, that we might see them all together, and so take better view and hold of them. The knowledge which we have in nature, is the substance of all, as all matter, Heaven and earth were created at once, in the beginning; and then the further knowledge which we have in Scripture, is as that light which God created after; for as by that light, men distinguished particular creatures, so by this light of the Scripture, we discern our particular duties. And after this, as in the Creation, all the light was gathered into the body of the Sun, when that was made; so all that is written in our hearts radically, and diffused in the Scriptures more extensively, is reamassed, and reduced to the Ten Commandments, the Lords Prayer, and to the Creed. The heart of man is hortus, it is a garden, a Paradise, where all that is wholesome, Cant. 4.12. and all that is delightful grows, but it is hortus conclusus, a garden that we ourselves have walled in; It is fons, a fountain, where all knowledge springs, but fons signatus, a fountain that our corruption hath sealed up. The heart is a book, legible enough, and intelligible in itself; but we have so interlined that book with impertinent knowledge, and so clasped up that book, for fear of reading our own history, our own sins, as that we are the greatest strangers, and the least conversant with the examination of our own hearts. There is then Myrrh in this garden, but we cannot smell it; and therefore, All thy garments smell of Myrrh, Psal. 45.8. saith David, that is, God's garments; those Scriptures in which God hath apparelled, and exhibited his will, they breathe the Balm of the East, the savour of life, more discernably unto us. But after that too, there is fasciculus Myrrhae, Cant. 1.13. a bundle of Myrrh together, fasciculus Agendorum, a whole bundle of those things which we are bound to do, in the Ten Commandments; fasciculus Petendorum, a whole bundle of those things, which we are bound to pray for, in the Lord's Prayer; and fasciculus Credendorum, a whole bundle of those things, which we are bound to believe, in the Apostles Creed; And in that last bundle of Myrrh, in that Creed, is this particular, credamus hoc, That we believe this, this, that God hath established means of salvation here, and He that believeth not this, that such a Commission there is, shall be damned. In that bundle of Myrrh then, Vbi. where lies this that must necessarily be believed, This Commission? In that Article of that Creed, Credo Ecclesiam Catholicam, I believe the holy Catholic Church; For till I come to that grain of Myrrh, to believe the Catholic Church, I have not the savour of life; Let me take in the first grain of this bundle of Myrrh, the first Article, Credo in Deum Patrem, I believe in God the Father, by that I have a being, I am a creature, but so is a contemptible worm, and so is a venomous spider as well as I, so is a stinking weed, and so is a stinging nettle, as well as I; so is the earth itself, that we tread under our feet, and so is the ambitious spirit, which would have been as high as God, and is lower than the lowest, the devil himself is a creature as well as I; I am but that, by the first Artiele, but a creature; and I were better, if I were not that, if I were no creature, (considering how I have used my creation) if there were no more Myrrh in this bundle then that first grain, no more to be got by believing, but that I were a creature: But take a great deal of this Myrrh together, consider more Articles, That Christ is conceived, and borne, and crucified, and dead, and buried, and risen, and ascended, there is some savour in this; But yet, if when we shall come to judgement, I must carry into his presence, a menstruous conscience, and an ugly face, in which his Image, by which he should know me, is utterly defaced, all this Myrrh of his Merits, and his Mercies, is but a savour of death unto death unto me, since I, that knew the horror of my own guiltiness, must know too, that whatsoever he be to others, he is a just Judge, and therefore a condemning Judge to me; If I get farther than this in the Creed, to the Credo in Spiritum Sanctum, I believe in the Holy Ghost, where shall I find the Holy Ghost? I lock my door to myself, and I throw myself down in the presence of my God, I divest myself of all worldly thoughts, and I bend all my powers, and faculties upon God, as I think, and suddenly I find myself scattered, melted, fallen into vain thoughts, into no thoughts; I am upon my knees, and I talk, and think nothing; I deprehend myself in it, and I go about to mend it, I gather new forces, new purposes to try again, and do better, and I do the same thing again. I believe in the Holy Ghost, but do not find him, if I seek him only in private prayer; But in Ecclesia, when I go to meet him in the Church, when I seek him where he hath promised to be found, when I seek him in the execution of that Commission, which is proposed to our faith in this Text, in his Ordinances, and means of salvation in his Church, instantly the savour of this Myrrh is exalted, and multiplied to me; not a dew, but a shower is poured out upon me, and presently follows Communio Sanctorum, The Communion of Saints, the assistance of Militant and Triumphant Church in my behalf; And presently follows Remissio peceatorum, The remission of sins, the purifying of my conscience, in that water, which is his blood, Baptism, and in that wine, which is his blood, the other Sacrament; and presently follows Carnis resurrectio, A resurrection of my body; My body becomes no burden to me; my body is better now, than my soul was before; and even here I have Goshen in my Egypt, incorruption in the midst of my dunghill, spirit in the midst of my flesh, heaven upon earth; and presently follows Vita aeterna, Life everlasting; this life of my body shall not last ever, nay the life of my soul in heaven is not such as it is at the first. For that soul there, even in heaven, shall receive an addition, and access of Joy, and Glory in the resurrection of our bodies in the consummation. When a wind brings the River to any low part of the bank, instantly it overflows the whole Meadow; when that wind which blows where he will, The Holy Ghost, leads an humble soul to the Article of the Church, to lay hold upon God, as God hath exhibited himself in his Ordinances, instantly he is surrounded under the blood of Christ Jesus, and all the benefits thereof; The communion of Saints, the remission of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting, are poured out upon him. And therefore of this great work, which God hath done for man, in applying himself to man, in the Ordinances of his Church, S. Augustine says, Obscuriùs dixerunt Prophetae de Christo, August. quàm de Ecclesia, The Prophets have not spoken so clearly of the person of Christ, as they have of the Church of Christ; Hieron. for though S. Hierom interpret aright those words of Adam and Eve, Erunt duo in carnem unam, They two shall be one flesh, to be appliable to the union which is between Christ and his Church, Ephes. 5. (for so S. Paul himself applies them) that Christ and his Church are all one, as man and wife are all one, yet the wife is (or at least, it had wont to be so) easilier found at home, than the husband; we can come to Christ's Church, but we cannot come to him; The Church is a Hill, and that is conspicuous naturally; but the Church is such a Hill, as may be seen every where. August. S. Augustine asks his Auditory in one of his Sermons, do any of you know the Hill Olympus? and himself says in their behalf, none of you know it; no more says he, do those that dwell at Olympus know Giddabam vestram, some Hill which was about them; trouble not thyself to know the forms and fashions of foreign particular Churches; neither of a Church in the lake, nor a Church upon seven hills; but since God hath planted thee in a Church, where all things necessary for salvation are administered to thee, and where no erroneous doctrine (even in the confession of our Adversaries) is affirmed and held, that is the Hill, and that is the Catholic Church, and there is this Commission in this text, means of salvation sincerely executed; So then, such a Commission there is, and it is in the Article of the Creed, that is the ubi. We are now come in our order, to the third circumstantial branch, the Vnde, Vnde. from whence, and when this Commission issued, in which we consider, that since we receive a deep impression from the words, which our friends spoke at the time of their death, much more would it work upon us, if they could come and speak to us after their death; You know what Dives said, Si quis ex mortuis, Luke 16. If one from the dead might go to my Brethren, he might bring them to any thing. Now, Primitiae mortuorum, The Lord of life, and yet the first borne of the dead, Christ Jesus, returns again after his death, to establish this Commission upon his Apostles; It hath therefore all the formalities of a strong and valid Commission; Christ gives it, Ex mero motu, merely out of his own goodness; He foresaw no merit in us that moved him; neither was he moved by any man's solicitations; for could it ever have fallen into a man's heart, to have prayed to the Father, that his Son might take our Nature and die, and rise again, and settle a course upon earth, for our salvation, if this had not first risen in the purpose of God himself? Would any man ever have solicited or prayed him to proceed thus? It was Ex mero motu, out of his own goodness, and it was Ex certa scientia, He was not deceived in his grant, he knew what he did, he knew this Commission should be executed, in despite of all Heretics, and Tyrant's that should oppose it; And as it was out of his own Will, and with his own knowledge, so it was Ex plenitudine potestatis, He exceeded not his Power; for Christ made this Commission then, Mat. 28.18. when (as it is expressed in the other Evangelist) he produced that evidence, Data est mihi, All power is given to me in Heaven and in earth; where Christ speaks not of that Power, which he had by his eternal generation, (though even that power were given him, for he was Deus de Deo, God of God) nor he speaks not of that Power which was given him as Man, which was great, but all that, he had in the first minute of his conception, in the first union of the two Natures, Divine and Humane together; but that Power, from which he derives this Commission, is that, which he had purchased by his blood, and came to by conquest; Ego vici mundum, says Christ, I have conquered the world, and coming in by conquest, I may establish what form of Government I will; and my will is, to govern my Kingdom by this Commission; and by these Commissioners, to the World's end; to establish these means upon earth, for the salvation of the world. And as it hath all these formalities of a due Commission, made without suit, made without error, made without defect of power: so had it this also, that it was duly and authentically testified; for, though this Evangelist name but the eleven Apostles to have been present, and they in this case might be thought Testes domestici, Witnesses that witness to their own, or to their Master's advantage; Yet, the opinion which is most embraced is, That this appearing of Christ, which is intended here, is that appearing, which is spoken of by S. Paul, 1 Cor. 15.6. when he appeared to more than five hundred at once; Christ rests not in his Teste meipso, That himself was his witness, as Princes use to do, (and as he might have done best of any, because there were always two more that testified with him, the Father, and the Holy Ghost) he rests not in calling some of his Council, and principal Officers, to witness, as Princes have used too; but in a Parliament of all States, Upper and Common house, Spiritual and Temporal Apostles, Disciples and five hundred Brethren, he testifies this Commission. Who then can measure the infinite mercy of Christ Jesus to us? which mercy became not when he began, by coming into this world; for we were elected in him before the foundations of the world; nor ended it when he ended, by going out of this world, for he returned to this world again, where he had suffered so much contempt and torment, that he might establish this object of our faith, this that we are therefore bound to believe, a Commission, a Church, an outward means of Salvation here; such a Commission there is, it is grounded in the Creed, and it was given after his Resurrection. In which Commission (being now come to the last of the circumstantial Branches, Quo. the extent and reach of this Commission) we find, that it is Omni Creaturae, before the Text, Preach to every Creature, that is, Means of salvation offered to every Creature; and that is large enough, without that wild extent that their S. Francis gives it, in the Roman Church, whom they magnify so much for that religious simplicity, as they call it, who thought himself bound literally by this Commission, To preach to all Creatures, and so did, as we see in his brutish Homilies, Frater Asine, and Frater Bos, Brother Ox, and brother Ass, and the rest of his spiritual kindred; But in this Commission, Omnis Creatura, Every Creature, is every man; and to every man this Commission extends; Man is called Omnis Creatura, Gen. 3.20. Every creature, as Eve is called Mater omnium viventium, though she were but the Mother of men, she is called the Mother of all living, and yet all other creatures live, as well as Man; Man is called Every creature, as it is said, Omnis caro, Gen. 6.12. All flesh had corrupted his ways upon earth, though this corruption were but in man, and other creatures were flesh as well as man; Man is every creature, says Origen, because in him, Origen. Tanquam in officina, omnes Creaturae conflantur, Because all creatures were as it were melted in one forge, and poured into one mould, when man was made. For, these being all the distinctions which are in all creatures, first, a mere being which stones and other inanimate creatures have; and then life & growth, which trees and plants have; and after that, sense and feeling, which beasts have; and lastly, reason and understanding, which Angels have, Gregor. Man hath them all; and so in that respect is every creature, says Origen: He is so too, says Gregory, Quia omnis creaturae differentia in homine, Because all the qualities and properties of all other creatures, how remote and distant, how contrary soever in themselves, yet they all meet in man; In man, if he be a flatterer, you shall find the grovelling and crawling of a Snake; and in a man, if he be ambitious, you shall find the high flight and piercing of the Eagle; in a voluptous sensual man, you shall find earthliness of the Hog; and in a licentious man, the intemperance, and distemper of the Goat; ever lustful, and ever in a fever; ever in sicknesses contracted by that sin, and yet ever in a desire to proceed in that sin; and so man is every creature in that respect, says Gregory. August. But he is especially so, says S. Augustine, Quia omnis creatura propter hominem, All creatures were made for man, man is the end of all, and therefore man is all, says Augustine. So that the two Evangelists have expressed one another well; for those whom this Evangelist S. Mark calls all creatures, Esay 49.6. S. Matthew calls Omnes Gentes, All Nations; And so, that which is attributed to Christ by way of Prophecy, It is a small matter, that thou shouldest be my servant, to raise up the tribe of jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel, I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of the earth; That which is attributed to Christ there, is fulfilled in this Commission, given by Christ here; That he should be preached to all men; In which, we rather admire then go about to express his unexpressible mercy, who had that tenderness in his care, that he would provide man means of salvation in a Church, and then that largeness in his care, as that he would in his time impart it to all men; for else, how had it ever come to us? And so we pass from the Circumstances of the Commission, That it is, And where it is, And whence it comes, And whither it goes, to the Substance itself. This is expressed in three actions; first, Ite praedicate, Go and preach the Gospel; And then, Baptizate, Baptise in the Name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; And Docete servare, Teach them to observe all those things which I have commanded you; for that Hoc, Qui non crediderit hos, He that believes not this, (which is implied in this Text) reaches to all that; as well, Qui non fecerit hoc, He that does not do all this, as Qui non crediderit hoc, He that believes not this, is within the penalty of this Text, Damnabitur: The first of these three, is the ordinance and institution of preaching the Gospel; The second is the administration of both Sacraments; (as we shall see anon) And the third is the provocation to a good life, which is in example as well as in preaching; first preach the Gospel, that is, plant the root, faith; then administer the Sacraments, that is, water it, cherish it, fasten and settle it with that seal; and then procure good works, that is, produce the blessed fruit of this faith, and these Sacraments: Qui non crediderit hoc, He that does not believe all this, shall be damned. First then, Qui non crediderit, He that hath this Apostleship, Predicate. this ministry of reconciliation, he that is a Commissioner for these new buildings, to erect the kingdom of God by the Gospel, and does not believe, and show by his practice that he does believe himself to be bound to preach, he is under the penalty of this Text. When therefore the Jesuit Maldonat pleases himself so well, that, as he says, he cannot choose but laugh, In Matth. 28. when the Calvinists satisfy themselves in doing that duty, that they do preach; for, says he, Docetis, sed nemo misit, You do preach, but you have no calling; if it were not too serious a thing to laugh at, would he not allow us to be as merry, and to say too, Missi estis, sed non docetis, Perchance you may have a calling, but I am sure you do not preach? for if we consider their practice, their secular Clergy, those which have the care of souls in Parishes, they do not preach; and if we consider their Laws, and Canons, their Regular Clergy, their Monks and Friars should not preach abroad, out of their own Cloisters. And preaching was so far out of use amongst them, as that in these later ages, Cheppinus de Jure Monast. under Innocentius the third, they instituted Ordinem praedicantium, An order of Preachers; as though there had been no order for preaching in the Church of God, till within these four hundred years. And we see by their Patent for preaching, what the cause of their institution was; It was because those who only preached then, that is, the Humiliati, (which was another Order) were unlearned, and therefore they thought it not amiss, to appoint some learned men to preach: The Bishops took this ill at that time, that any should have leave to preach within their Dioceses; and therefore they had new Patents, to exempt them from the Jurisdiction of the Bishops; and they had liberty to preach every where; Modò non vellicent Papam, As long as they said nothing against the Pope, they might preach. It is therefore but of late years, and indeed, especially since the Reformation began, that the example of others hath brought them in the Roman Church to a more ordinary preaching; whereas the penalty of this Text lies upon all them who have that calling, and do it not; and so it does upon them too, who do not believe, that they are bound to seek their salvation from preaching, from that ordinance and institution. I cannot remember that in any History, for matter of fact, nor in the framing or institution of any State, for matter of Law, there hath ever been such a Law, or such a practice, as that of Preaching. Every where amongst the Gentiles, (particularly amongst the Romans, where there was a public Office, to be Conditor Precum, according to emergent occasions, to make Collects and Prayers for the public use) we find some resemblance, some representation of our common Prayer, our Liturgy; and in their ablutions, and expiations, we find some resemblance of our Sacraments; but no where any resemblance of our Preaching. Certain anniversary Panegyriques they had in Rome, which were Coronation Sermons, or Adoption Sermons, or Triumph Sermons, but all those, upon the matter, were but civil Commemorations. But this Institution, of keeping the people in a continual knowledge of their religious duty, by continual preaching, was only an ordinance of God himself, for Gods own people; For, after that in the wisdom of God, 1 Cor. 1.21. the world by wisdom knew not God, It pleased God (says the Apostle) by the foolishness of Preaching to save them that believe. What was this former wisdom of God, that that could not save man? it was twofold; First, God in his wisdom manifests a way to man, to know the Creator by the creature, Rom. 1.20. That the invisible things of him might be seen by the visible. And this gracious and wise purpose of God took not effect, because man being brought to the contemplation of the creature, rested and dwelled upon the beauty and dignity of that, and did not pass by the creature to the Creator; and then, God's wisdom was farther expressed, in a second way, when God manifested himself to man by his Word, in the Law, and in the Prophets; and then, man resting in the letter of the Law, and going no farther, and resting in the outside of the Prophets, and going no farther, not discerning the Sacrifices of the Law to be Types of the death of Christ Jesus, nor the purpose of the Prophets to be, to direct us upon that Messiah, that Redeemer, Ipsa, quae per Prophetas locuta est, Clem. Alex. sapientia, says Clement, the wisdom of God, in the mouth of the Prophets, could not save man; and then, when the wisdom of Nature, and the wisdom of the Law, the wisdom of the Philosophers, and the wisdom of the Scribes, became defective and insufficient, by man's perverseness, God repaired, and supplied it by a new way, but a strange way, by the foolishness of preaching; for it is not only to the subject, to the matter, to the doctrine, which they were to preach, that this foolishness is referred. To preach glory, by adhering to an inglorious person, lately executed for sedition and blasphemy; to preach salvation from a person, whom they saw unable to save himself from the Gallows; to preach joy from a person whose soul was heavy unto death, this was Scandalum Iudaeis, 1 Cor. 1.23. says the Apostle, even to the Jews, who were formerly acquainted by their Prophets, that some such things as these should befall their Messiah, yet for all this preparation, it was Scandalum, the Jews themselves were scandalised at it; it was a stumbling block to the jews; but Graecis stultitia, says the Apostle there, the Gentiles thought this doctrine mere foolishness. But not only the matter, but the manner, not only the Gospel, but even preaching was a foolishness in the eyes of man; For if such persons as the Apostles were, heirs to no reputation in the State, by being derived from great families, bred in no Universities, nor sought to for learning, persons not of the civilest education, Seamen, Fishermen, not of the honestest professions, (Matthew but a Publican) if such persons should come into our streets, and porches, and preach, (I do not say, such doctrine as theirs seemed then) but if they should preach at all, should not we think this a mere foolishness; did they not mock the Apostles, and say they were drunk, Act. 2.13. as early as it was in the morning? Did not those two sects of Philosophers, who were as fare distant in opinions, as any two could be, the Stoiques, and the Epicureans, Acts 17.18. concur in defaming S. Paul for preaching, when they called him Seminiverbium, a babbling and prating fellow? But the foolishness of God is wiser than men, said that Apostle; 1 Cor. 1.25. and out of that wisdom, God hath shut us all, under the penalty of this Text, If we that are peachers, and you that are hearers, do not believe, that this preaching is the ordinance of God, for the salvation of souls. This then is matter of faith, Euangelium. That preaching is the way, and this is matter of faith too, that that which is preached, must be matter of faith; for the Commission is, Praedicate Euangelium, Preach, but preach the Gospel; And that is, first, Euangelium solum, Preach the Gospel only, add nothing to the Gospel, and then Euangelium totum, Preach the Gospel entirely, defalk nothing, forbear nothing of that; First then, we are to preach, you are to hear nothing but the Gospel; And we may neither postdate our Commission, nor interline it; nothing is Gospel now, which was not Gospel then, when Christ gave his Apostles their Commission; And no man can serve God and Mammon; no man can preach those things, which belong to the filling of Angels rooms in heaven, and those things which belong to the filling of the Pope's Coffers at Rome, with Angels upon earth: For that was not Gospel, when Christ gave this commission. And did Christ create his Apostles, as the Bishop of Rome creates his Cardinals, Cum clausura oris? He makes them Cardinals, and shuts their mouths; they have mouths, but no tongues; tongues, but no voice; they are Judges, but must give no Judgement; Cardinals, but have no interest in the passages of businesses, till by a new favour he open their mouths again: Did Christ make his Apostles his Ambassadors, and promise to send their instructions after them? Did he give them a Commission, and presently a Supersedeas upon it, that they should not execute it? Did he make a Testament, a will, and refer all to future Schedules and codicils? Did he send them to preach the Gospel, and tell them, You shall know the Gospel in the Epistles of the Popes and their Decretals hereafter? You shall know the Gospel of deposing Princes, in the Council of Lateran hereafter; and the Gospel in deluding Heretics, by safe conducts, in the Gospel of Constance hereafter; and the Gospel of creating new Articles of the Creed, in the Council of Trent hereafter? If so, then was some reason for Christ's Disciples to think, when Christ said, Verily, I say unto you, there are some here, who shall not taste death, Mat. 16. ultim. till they see the Son of man come in glory; that he spoke and meant to be understood literally, that neither john nor the rest of the Apostles should ever die, if they must live to preach the Gospel, and the Gospel could not be known by them, till the end of the world: And therefore it was wisely done in the Roman Church, to give over preaching, since the preaching of the Gospel, that is, nothing but the Gospel, would have done them no good to their ends: When all their preaching was come to be nothing, but declamations of the virtue of such an Indulgence, and then a better Indulgence than that, to morrow, and every day a new market of fuller Indulgences, when all was but an extolling of the tenderness, and the bowels of compassion in that mother Church, who was content to set a price, and a small price upon every sin; So that if David were upon the earth again, and then when the persecuting Angel had drawn his sword, would but send an appeal to Rome, at that price, he might have an inhibition against that Angel, and have leave to number his people, let God take it as he list; Nay, if Sodom were upon the earth again, and the Angel ready to set fire to that Town, if they could send to Rome, they might purchase a Charter even for that sin (though perchance they would be loath to let that sin pass over their hills:) But not to speak any thing, which may savour of jest, or levity, in so serious a matter, and so deplorable a state, as their preaching was come to, with humble thanks to God that we are delivered from it, and humble prayers to God, that we never return to it, nor towards it, let us cheerfully and constantly continue this duty of preaching and hearing the Gospel; that is, first the Gospel only, and not Traditions of men; And the next is, of all the Gospel, nothing but it, and yet all it, add nothing, defalk nothing; for as the Law is, so the Gospel is, Res integra, a whole piece; and as S. james says of the integrity of the Law, Whosoever keeps the whole Law, James 2.10. and offends in one point, he is guilty of all; So he that is afraid to preach all, and he that is loath to hear all the Gospel, he preaches none, he hears none. And therefore, if that imputation, which the Roman Church lays upon us, were true, That we preach no falsehood, but do not teach all the truth, we did lack one of the true marks of the true Church, that is, the preaching of the Gospel; for it is not that, if it be not all that; take therefore the Gospel, as we take it from the School, that it is historia, and usus, (the Gospel is the history of the Gospel, the proposing to your understanding all that Christ did, and it is the appropriation of the Gospel, the proposing to your faith, that all that he did he did for you) and then, if you harken to them who will tell you, that Christ did that which he never did (that he came in, when the doors were shut, so that his body passed through the very body of the Timber, thereby to advance their doctrine of Transubstantiation) or that Christ did that which he did, to another end than he did it, (that when he whipped the buyers and sellers out of the Temple, he exercised a secular power and sovereignty over the world, and thereby established a sovereignty over Princes, in his Vicar the Pope) These men do not preach the Gospel, because the Gospel is Historia & usus, The truth of the History, and of the application; and this is not the truth of the History; So also if you harken to them, who tell you, that though the blood of Christ be sufficient in value for you, and for all, yet you have no means to be sure, that he meant his blood to you, but you must pass in this world, and pass out of this world in doubt, and that it is well if you come to Purgatory, and be sure there of getting to heaven at last; these men preach not the Gospel, because the Gospel is the history, and the use; and this is not the true use. And thus it is, if we take the Gospel from the School; but if we take it from the School master, from Christ himself, the Gospel is repentance, and remission of sins; For he came, That repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his Name; Luk. 24.47. If then they will tell you, that you need no such repentance for a sin, as amounts to a contrition, to a sorrow for having offended God, to a detestation of the sin, to a resolution to commit it no more, but that it is enough to have an attrition, (as they will needs call it) a servile fear, and sorrow, that you have incurred the torments of hell; or if they will tell you, that when you have had this attrition, that the clouds of sadness, and of dejection of spirit have met, and beat in your conscience, and that the allision of those clouds have brought forth a thunder, a fearful apprehension of God's Judgements upon you; And when you have had your contrition too, that you have purged your soul in an humble confession, and have let your soul blood with a true and sharp remorse, and compunction, for all sins past, and put that bleeding soul into a bath of repentant tears, and into a bath of blood, the blood of Christ Jesus in the Sacrament, and feel it faint and languish there, and receive no assurance of remission of sins, so as that it can levy no fine that can conclude God, but still are afraid that God will still encumber you with yesterday sin's again to morrow; If this be their way, they do not preach the Gospel, because they do not preach all the Gospel; for the Gospel is repentance and remission of sins; that is, the necessity of repentance, and then the assuredness of remission, go together. Thus fare then the Crediderit is carried, Baptizate. we must believe that there is a way upon earth to salvation, and that Preaching is that way, that is, the manner, and the matter is the Gospel, only the Gospel, and all the Gospel, and then the seal is the administration of the Sacraments, as we said at first, of both Sacraments; of the Sacrament of Baptism there can be no question, for that is literally and directly within the Commission, Go and Baptise, and then Qui non crediderit, He that believes not, not only he that believes not, when it is done, but he that believes not that this aught to be done, shall be damned; we do not join Baptism to faith, tanquam dimidiam solatii causam, as though Baptism were equal to faith, in the matter of salvation, for salvation may be had in divers cases by faith without Baptism, but in no case by Baptism without faith; neither do we say, that in this Commission to the Apostles, the administration of Baptism is of equal obligation upon the Minister as preaching, that he may be as well excusable if he never preach, as if he never Baptise; We know S. Peter commanded Cornelius and his family to be Baptised, Acts 10. ult. we do not know if he Baptised any of them with his own hand; So S. Paul says of himself, that Baptising was not his principal function; 1 Cor. 1.17. Christ sent not me to Baptise, but to preach the Gospel, saith he; In such a sense as God said by jeremy, Jer. 7.22. I spoke not unto your fathers, nor commanded them concerning burnt offerings, but I said, obey my voice, so S. Paul saith, he was not sent to Baptise; God commanded our father's obedience rather than sacrifice, but yet sacrifice too; and he commands us preaching rather then Baptising, but yet Baptising too; For as that is true, Hiero. In adultis, in persons which are come to years of discretion, which S. Hierome says, Fieri non potest, It is impossible to receive the Sacrament of Baptism, except the soul have received Sacramentum fidei, the Sacrament of faith, that is the Word preached, except he have been instructed and chatechized before, so there is a necessity of Baptism after, for any other ordinary means of salvation, that God hath manifested to his Church; and therefore Quos Deus conjunxit, those things which God hath joined in this Commission, joh. 3.5. let no man separate; Except a man be borne again of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of heaven; Let no man read that place disjunctively, Of Water or the Spirit, for there must be both; S. Peter himself knew not how to separate them, Acts 2. Repent and be baptised every one of you, saith he; for, for any one that might have been, and was not Baptised, S. Peter had not that seal to plead for his salvation. The Sacrament of Baptism then, Eucharistia. is within this Crediderit, it must necessarily be believed to be necessary for salvation: But is the other Sacrament of the Lords Supper so too? Is that within this Commission? Certainly it is, or at least within the equity, if not within the letter, pregnantly employed, if not literally expressed: For thus it stands, they are commanded, Matt. 28. ult. 1 Cor. 11.23. To teach all things that Christ had commanded them; And then S. Paul says, I have received of the Lord, that which also I delivered unto you, That the Lord jesus took bread, etc. (and so he proceeds with the Institution of the Sacrament) and then he adds, that Christ said, Do this in remembrance of me; which is, not only remember me when you do it, but do it that you may remember me; As well the receiving of the Sacrament, as the worthy receiving of it, is upon commandment. In the Primitive Church, there was an erroneous opinion of such an absolute necessity in taking this Sacrament, as that they gave it to persons when they were dead; a custom which was grown so common, as that it needed a Canon of a Council, Carthag. 3. c. 6. to restrain it. But the giving of this Sacrament to children newly baptised was so general, even in pure times, as that we see so great men as Cyprian and Augustine, scarce less than vehement for the use of it; Musculus. and some learned men in the Reformed Church have not so far declined it, but that they call it, Catholicam consuetudinem, a Catholic, an universal custom of the Church. But there is a fare greater strength both of natural and spiritual faculties required for the receiving of this Sacrament of the Lords Supper, than the other of Baptism. But for those who have those faculties, that they are now, or now should be able, to discern the Lords body, and their own souls, besides that inestimable and inexpressible comfort, which a worthy receiver receives, as often as he receives that seal of his reconciliation to God, since as Baptism is Tessera Christianorum, (I know a Christian from a Turk by that Sacrament) so this Sacrament is Tessera orthodoxorun) I know a Protestant from a Papist by this Sacrament) it is a service to God, and to his Church to come frequently to this Communion; for truly (not to shake or affright any tender conscience) I scarce see, how any man can satisfy himself, that he hath said the Lord's Prayer with a good conscience, if at the same time he were not in such a disposition as that he might have received the Sacrament too; for, if he be in charity, he might receive, and if he be not, he mocked Almighty God, and deluded the Congregation, in saying the Lords Prayer. There remains one branch of that part, Docete servare, Preach the Gospel, Docete servare. administer the Sacraments, and teach them to practise and do all this: how comes matter of fact to be matter of faith? Thus; Qui non crediderit, he that does not believe, that he is bound to live aright, is within the penalty of this text. It is so with us, and it is so with you too; Amongst us, he that says well, presents a good text, but he that lives well, presents a good Comment upon that text. As the best texts that we can take, to make Sermons upon, are as this text is, some of the words of Christ's own Sermons: so the best arguments we can prove our Sermons by, is our own life. The whole week's conversation, is a good paraphrase upon the Sundays Sermon; It is too soon to ask when the clock struck eleven, Is it a good Preacher? for I have but half his Sermon then, his own life is the other half; and it is time enough to ask the Saturday after, whether the Sundays Preacher preach well or no; for he preaches poorly that makes an end of his Sermon upon Sunday; He preaches on all the week, if he live well, to the edifying of others; If we say well, and do ill, we are so far from the example of God's children, which built with one hand, and fought with the other, as that, if we do build with one hand, in our preaching, we pull down with the other in our example, and not only our own, but other men's buildings too; for the ill life of particular men reflects upon the function and ministry in general. And as it is with us, if we divorce our words and our works, so it is with you, if you do divorce your faith and your works. God hath given his Commission under seal, Preach and Baptise; God looks for a return of this Commission, under seal too; Believe, and bring forth fruits worthy of belief. The way that jacob saw to Heaven, was a ladder; It was not a fair and an easy stair case, that a man might walk up without any holding. But manibus innitendum, says S. Augustine, August. in the way to salvation there is use of hands, of actions, of good works, of a holy life; Servate omnia, do then all that is commanded, all that is within the Commission: If that seem impossible, do what you can, and you have done all; for than is all this done, Cum quod non fit ignoscitur, August. When God forgives that which is left undone; But God forgives none of that which is left undone, out of a wilful and vincible ignorance. And therefore search thy conscience, and then Christ's commandment enters, Scrutamini Scripturas, then search the Scriptures; for till then, as long as thy conscience is foul, it is but an illusion to apprehend any peace, or any comfort in any sentence of the Scripture, in any promise of the Gospel: search thy conscience, empty that, and then search the Scriptures, and thou shalt find abundantly enough to fill it with peace and consolation; for this is the sum of all the Scriptures, Qui non crediderit hoc, He that believes not this, that he must be saved by hearing the word preached, by receiving the Sacraments, and by working according to both, is within the penalty of this text, Damnabitur, He shall be damned. How know we that? many persons have power to condemn, 2 Part. which have not power to pardon; but God's word is evidence enough for our pardon and absolution, whensoever we repent we are pardoned, much more than for our condemnation; & here we have God's word for that; if that were not enough we have his oath; for it is in another place, God hath sworn, Heb. 4.3. that there are some, which shall not enter into his rest, and to whom did he swear that, says S. Paul, but to them that believed not? God cannot lie, much less be forsworn, and God hath said and sworn, Damnabitur, he that believeth not, shall be damned. He shall be; but when? does any man make hast? though that be enough that S. chrysostom says, Chrysot. It is all one, when that gins, which shall never end, yet the tense is easily changed in this case, john 3.18. from damnabitur to damnatur; for he that believeth not, is condemned already. But why should he be so? condemned for a negative? for a privative? here is no opposition, no affirming the contrary, no seducing or dissuading other men that have a mind to believe, 1 john 5.10. that is not enough; for, He that believeth not God, hath made God a liar, because he believeth not the record that God gave of his Son. Here is the condemnation we speak of, john 1. as S. john says, Light was presented, and they loved darkness; so that howsoever God proceed in his unsearchable judgements with the Heathen, to whom the light and name of Christ Jesus was never presented, certainly we, to whom the Gospel hath been so freely, and so fully preached, fall under the penalty of this text, if we believe not, for we have made God a liar in not believing the record he gives of his Son. That then there is damnation, and why it is, and when it is, is clear enough; but what this damnation is, neither the tongue of good Angels that know damnation by the contrary, by fruition of salvation, nor the tongue of bad Angels who know damnation by a lamentable experience, is able to express it; A man may sail so at sea, as that he shall have laid the North Pole flat, that shall be fallen out of sight, and yet he shall not have raised the South Pole, he shall not see that; So there are things, in which a man may go beyond his reason, and yet not meet with faith neither: of such a kind are those things which concern the locality of hell, and the materiality of the torments thereof; for that hell is a certain and limited place, beginning here and ending there, and extending no farther, or that the torments of hell be material, or elementary torments, which in natural consideration can have no proportion, no affection, nor appliableness to the tormenting of a spirit, these things neither settle my reason, nor bind my faith; neither opinion, that it is, or is not so, doth command our reason so, but that probable reasons may be brought on the other side; neither opinion doth so command our faith; but that a man may be saved, though he think the contrary; for in such points, it is always lawful to think so, as we find does most advance and exalt our own devotion, and God's glory in our estimation; but when we shall have given to those words, by which hell is expressed in the Scriptures, the heaviest significations, that either the nature of those words can admit, or as they are types and representations of hell, as fire, and brimstone, & weeping, and gnashing, and darkness, and the worm, and as they are laid together in the Prophet, Esay 30.33. Tophet, (that is, hell) is deep and large, (there is the capacity & content, room enough) It is a pile of fire and much wood, (there is the durableness of it) and the breath of the Lord to kindle it, like a stream of Brimstone, (there is the vehemence of it:) when all is done, the hell of hells, the torment of torments is the everlasting absence of God, and the everlasting impossibility of returning to his presen●●; Horrendum est, says the Apostle, It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God. Heb. 10.31. Yet there was a case, in which David found an ease, to fall into the hands of God, to scape the hands of men: Horrendum est, when God's hand is bend to strike, it is a fearful thing, to fall into the hands of the living God; but to fall out of the hands of the living God, is a horror beyond our expression, beyond our imagination. That God should let my soul fall out of his hand, into a bottomless pit, and roll an unremovable stone upon it, and leave it to that which it finds there, (and it shall find that there, which it never imagined, till it came thither) and never think more of that soul, never have more to do with it. That of that providence of God, that studies the life of every weed, and worm, and ant, and spider, and toad, and viper, there should never, never any beam flow out upon me; that that God, who looked upon me, when I was nothing, and called me when I was not, as though I had been, out of the womb and depth of darkness, will not look upon me now, when, though a miserable, and a banished, and a damned creature, yet I am his creature still, and contribute something to his glory, even in my damnation; that that God, who hath often looked upon me in my foulest uncleanness, and when I had shut out the eye of the day, the Sun, and the eye of the night, the Taper, and the eyes of all the world, with curtains and windows and doors, did yet see me, and see me in mercy, by making me see that he saw me, and sometimes brought me to a present remorse, and (for that time) to a forbearing of that sin, should so turn himself from me, to his glorious Saints and Angels, as that no Saint nor Angel, nor Christ Jesus himself, should ever pray him to look towards me, never remember him, that such a soul there is; that that God, who hath so often said to my soul, Quare morier is? Why wilt thou die? and so often sworn to my soul, Vivit Dominus, As the Lord liveth, I would not have thee die, but live, will nether let me die, nor let me live, but die an everlasting life, and live an everlasting death; that that God, who, when he could not get into me, by standing, and knocking, by his ordinary means of entering, by his Word, his mercies, hath applied his judgements, and hath shaked the house, this body, with agues and palsies, and set this house on fire, with fevers and calentures, and frighted the Master of the house, my soul, with horrors, and heavy apprehensions, and so made an entrance into me; That that God should frustrate all his own purposes and practices upon me, and leave me, and cast me away, as though I had cost him nothing, that this God at last, should let this soul go away, as a smoke, as a vapour, as a bubble, and that then this soul cannot be a smoke, a vapour, nor a bubble, but must lie in darkness, as long as the Lord of light is light itself, and never spark of that light reach to my soul; What Tophet is not Paradise, what Brimstone is not Amber, what gnashing is not a comfort, what gnawing of the worm is not a tickling, what torment is not a marriage bed to this damnation, to be secluded eternally, eternally, eternally from the sight of God? Especially to us, for as the perpetual loss of that is most heavy, with which we have been best acquainted, and to which we have been most accustomed; so shall this damnation, which consists in the loss of the sight and presence of God, be heavier to us then others, because God hath so graciously, and so evidently, and so diversely appeared to us, in his pillar of fire, in the light of prosperity, and in the pillar of the Cloud, in hiding himself for a while from us; we that have seen him in all the parts of this Commission, in his Word, in his Sacraments, and in good example, and not believed, shall be further removed from his sight, in the next world, than they to whom he never appeared in this. But Vincenti & credenti, to him that believes aright, and overcomes all tentations to a wrong belief, God shall give the accomplishment of fullness, and fullness of joy, and joy rooted in glory, and glory established in eternity, and this eternity is God; To him that believes and overcomes, God shall give himself in an everlasting presence and fruition, Amen. SERM. LXXVII. Preached at S. PAUL'S, May 21. 1626. 1 COR. 15.29. Else, what shall they do which are baptised for the dead? if the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptised for the dead? I Entered into the handling of these words, upon Easter day; for, though the words have received divers Expositions, good and pervers, yet all agreed, that the words were an argument for the Resurrection, and that invited me to apply them to that Day. At that Day I entered into them, with origen's protestation, Odit Dominus, qui festum ejus unum putat diem, God hates that man, that thinks any holiday of his lasts but one day, that never thinks of the Resurrection, but upon Easter day: And therefore I engaged myself willingly, according to the invitation, and almost the necessity of the words, which could not conveniently, (scarce possibly) be determined in one day, to return again and again to the handling thereof. For, they are words of a great extent, a great compass: The whole Circle of a Christian is designed and accomplished in them; for, here is first the first point in that Circle, our Birth, our spiritual birth, that is, Baptism, Why are these men thus baptised? says the Text; And then here is the point, directly and diametrally opposed to that first point, our Birth, that is, Death, Why are these men thus baptised for the dead? says the Text; And then the Circle is carried up to the first point again, to our Birth, in another Birth, in the Resurrection, Why are these men thus baptised for the dead, if there be no Resurrection? So that if we consider the Militant and the Triumphant Church, to be (as they are) all one House, and under one roof, here is first Limen Ecclesiae, (as S. Augustine calls Baptism) The Threshold of the Church, we are put over the Threshold, into the Body of the Church, by Baptism, and here we are remembered of Baptism, Why are these men thus baptised? And then here is Chorus Ecclesiae, The Choir, the Chancel of the Church, in which all the service of God is officiated and executed; for we are made not only hearers, and spectators, but actors in the service of God, when we come to bear a part in the Hymns and Anthems of the Saints, by our Death, and here we are remembered of Death, Why are these men thus baptised for the Dead? And then, here is Sanctum Sanctorum, The innermost part of the Church, The Holy of Holyes, that is, the manifestation of all the mysterious salvation, belonging to soul and body, in the Resurrection, Why are these men thus baptised for the dead, if there be no Resurrection? Our first days work in handling these words, was to accept, and then to apply that, in which all agreed, that these words were an argument for the Resurrection; And we did both those offices; we did accept it, and so show you, how the assurance of the Resurrection accrues to us, and what is the office of Reason, and what is the office of Faith, in that affair; And then we did apply it, and so show you divers resemblances, and conformities between natural Death, and spiritual Death, and between the Resurrection of the body to glory at last, and the Resurrection of the soul by grace, in the way; and wherein they induced, and assisted, and illustrated one another; And those two miles made up that Sabbath day's journey. When we shall return to the handling of them, the next day, (which will be the last) we shall consider how these words have been misapplyed by our Adversaries of the Roman Church, and then the several Expositions which they have received from sound and Orthodoxal men, that thence we may draw a conclusion, and determination for ourselves; And in those two miles, we shall also make up that Sabbath Day's journey, when God shall be pleased to bring us to it. This day's Exercise shall be, to consider that very point, for the establishment whereof, they have so detorted, and misapplyed these words, which is their Purgatory, That this Baptism for the Dead must necessarily prove Purgatory, and their Purgatory. So then this Day's Exercise will be merely polemical, the handling of a Controversy; which though it be not always pertinent, yet neither is it always unseasonable. There was a time but lately, when he who was in his desire and intention, the Peacemaker of all the Christian world, as he had a desire to have slumbered all Field-drums, so had he also to have slumbered all Pulpit-drums, so far, as to pass over all impertinent handling of Controversies, merely and professedly as Controversies, though never by way of positive maintenance of Orthodoxal and fundamental Truths; That so there might be no slackening in the defence of the truth of our Religion, and yet there might be a discreet and temperate forbearing of personal, and especially of Nationall exasperations. And as this way had piety, and peace in the work itself, so was it then occasionally exalted, by a great necessity; He, who was then our hope, and is now the breath of our nostrils, and the Anointed of the Lord, being then taken in their pits, and, in that great respect, such exasperations the fit to be forborn, especially since that course might well be held, without any prevarication, or cooling the zeal of the positive maintenance of the religion of our Church. But things standing now in another state, and all peace, both Ecclesiastical and Civil, with these men, being by themselves removed, and taken away, and he whom we feared, returned in all kind of safety, safe in body, and safe in soul too, whom though their Church could not, their Court hath chatechised in their religion, that is, brought him to a clear understanding of their Ambition, (for Ambition is their Religion, and S. Peter's Ship must sail in their Fleets, and with their winds, or it must sink, and the Catholic and Militant Church must march in their Armies, though those Armies march against Rome itself, as heretofore they have done, to the sacking of that Town, to the holding of the Pope himself in so sordid a prison, for six months, as that some of his nearest servants about him died of the plague, to the treading under foot Priests, and Bishops, and Cardinals, to the dishonouring of Matrons, and the ravishing of professed Virgins, and committing such insolences, Catholics upon Catholics, as they would call us Heretics for believing them, but that they are their own Catholic Authors that have written them) Things being now, I say, in this state, with these men, since we hear that Drums beat in every field abroad, it becomes us also to return to the brasing and beating of our Drums in the Pulpit too, that so, as Adam did not only dress Paradise, but keep Paradise; and as the children of God, did not only build, but build with one hand, and fight with another; so we also may employ some of our Meditations upon supplanting, and subverting of error, as well as upon the planting, and watering of the Truth. To which purpose I shall prepare this day, for the vindicating and redeeming of these words from the Adversary, (which will be the work of the next day) by handling to day that point, for which they have misapplied them, which is Purgatory, and the mother, and the offspring of that; for what can that generation of vipers suck from this Text, which is not, If there be no such Purgatory, but, If there be no such Resurrection, why then are these men baptised for the dead? Heaven and earth shall pass away, saith Christ, but my word shall not pass away. Matt 24.35. But rather than Purgatory shall pass away, his word must admit such an Interpretation, as shall pass away, and evacuate the intention and purpose of the Holy Ghost therein. How much of the earth is passed away from them, we know, who acknowledge the mercy, and might, and miracle of Gods working, in withdrawing so many Kingdoms, so many Nations of the earth, in so short time, from the obedience, and superstition of Rome, as that if Controversies had been to have been tried by number, they would have found as many against them, as with them; so much of the earth is passed from them. How much of heaven is passed from them, that is, how much less interest and claim to heaven they can have now, when God hath afforded them so much light, and they have resisted it, then when they were in so great a part, under invincible ignorance, God only, who is the only Judge in such causes, knows; and he, of his goodness, enlarge their title to that place, by their conversion towards it. But how much soever of earth or heaven pass away, they will not lose an acre, an inch of Purgatory; For, as men are most delighted with things of their own making, their own planting, their own purchasing, their own building, so are these men therefore enamoured of Purgatory: Men that can make Articles of faith of their own Traditions, (And as men to elude the law against new Buildings, first build sheds, or stables, and after erect houses there, as upon old foundations, so these men first put forth Traditions of their own, and then erect those Traditions into Articles of faith, as ancient foundations of Religion) Men that make God himself of a piece of bread, may easily make Purgatory of a Dream, and of Apparitions, and imaginary visions of sick or melancholic men. It may then be of use to insist upon the survey of this building of theirs, Divisio. in these three considerations. First, to look upon the foundation, upon what they raise it, and that is Prayer for the Dead, and that is the Grandmother Error; And then upon the Building itself, Purgatory itself, and that is the Mother; And lastly upon the outhouses, or the furniture of this Building, and that is Indulgences, which are the children, the issue of this mother, and not such children as draw their parents dry, but support and maintain their parents; for, but for these Indulgences, their prayer for the Dead, and their Purgatory would starve; And starve they must all, if they can draw their maintenance from no other place but this, Why are these men baptised for the dead? First then for the first of these three parts, The foundation, the Grandmother, 1 Part. Oratio pro mortuis. Prayer for the Dead; The most tender Mother, the most officious Nurse, cannot have a more particular care, how a newborn child shall be washed, or swathed, or fed, when they consider every drop of water, every clout, every pin that belongs to it, than God had of his Infant Church, when he delivered it over to her foster-fathers', her nursing-fathers', her godfathers, Moses and Aaron, and bound them by his instructions, in every particular, as he prescribed them. How many directions he gave, what they should eat, what they should wear, how often they should wash, what they should do, in every religious, in every civil action, and yet never, never any mention, any intimation, never any approach, any inclination, never any light, no nor any shadow, never any colour, any colourablenesse of any command of prayer for the Dead. In all the Law, no precept for it; And this might imply a weakness in God's government, in so particular a law no precept of so important a duty: In all the History no example; And this might imply ill luck at least, in so large a story no Precedent of an Office so necessary: In all the Gospel no promise annexed to it; And this doth not imply, but manifest a conclusion against it, an exclusion of it. There being then no precept, no precedent, no promise for it, how came it into use and practise amongst the Jews? After the Jews had been a long time conversant amongst the Gentiles, judaei. and that as fresh water approaching the Sea, contracts a saltish, a brackish taste, so the Jews received impressions of the customs of the Gentiles, who were ever naturally inclined to this mis-devotion, and left-handed piety, of praying for the Dead, In the faintness, and languishing of their Religion, when they were much declined from the exact observation thereof, then, in the time of the Maccabees entered that one example, which hath raised such a dust, and blinded so many eyes. We have mention of many funerals before that, and after that of many too, even in the time when Christ was upon the earth, and yet never mention of prayer for the dead, but in this one place of this book; I do not say, in this one story, (for in this story reported by josephus, there is no mention of it) but in this one book. That is true that I have read, that after Christ's time, the Rabbins laid hold upon it, and brought it into custom; And that is true which I have seen, that the Jews at this day continue it in practice; For when one dies, for some certain time after, appointed by them, his son or some other near in blood or alliance, comes to the Altar, and there saith and doth some thing in the behalf of his dead father, or grandfather respectively. But all this they have drawn into practice, from this one place, from this book, from which book the same Rabbins draw a justification of a man's kill himself, because in this book they find an example of that in Razis: 2 Macc. 14.37. The Rabbins took no better a ground for their prayer for the dead, then for selfe-homicide, only matter of fact, out of a Historical book, which themselves did not believe to be Canonical. But how took this hold of Christians? That which wrought upon the Jews, Christiani. prevailed upon the new Christians too; for the greatest part of them, by much, being Gentiles, (for few amongst the Jews, in comparison, were converted to the Christian religion) they which came from Gentilism, retained still many impressions of such things as they had been formerly accustomed unto. And as the Fathers of the Church then, out of an indulgence to these new Convertits, did suffer and tolerate the practice of many things, which these Gentiles brought with them; (as indeed a great part of the ceremonies of the Christian Church are of that nature, and of such an admission, Things, which rather than avert their new Convertits from coming to them, by an utter abolishing of all parts of their former religion, and worship of their gods, those blessed Fathers thought fit to retain, and turn to some good use, than altogether to take them away) As in other things, so also in this prayer for the dead, to which they, as Gentiles, had been formerly accustomed, the Fathers did not oppose it with any peremptory earnestness, with any vehement diligence, partly because the thing itself argued and testified a good, and tender, and pious affection; (and though God do not ground his Decrees upon any disposition in man's nature, yet in the execution of his Decrees, God as he works in his Church, loves to work upon a good natured man) and partly also, because this practice, being but a practice only, and no Dogmatic constitution, might be (as it was in the first practice thereof) without shaking any foundation, or wounding any Article of the Christian Religion; And lastly, (that we may speak truth, with that holy boldness which belongs to the truth) because it was a long time before the Fathers came to a clear understanding of the state of the soul, departed out of this life: for though they never doubted of the certain performance of God's promises, That all that die in him, do rest in him, yet where, and how this rest was communicated to them, admitted more clouds than they could at all times dispel and scatter, some arising from Philosophers, some from Heretics, some from ignorance, some from heat of Disputation. So then, Tertul. at first it was a weed that grew wild in the open field, amongst the Gentiles; Then because it bore a pretty flower, the testimony of a good nature, it was transplanted into some Gardens, and so became a private opinion, or at least a practice amongst some Christians; And than it spread itself so far, as that Tertullian, and he first of any takes knowledge of it, as of a custom of the Church; And truly this of Tertullian is very early, within little more than two hundred years after Christ. But as Tertullian shows us an early birth of it, so he tells us enough, to show us, that it should not have been long lived, when he acknowledges that it had no ground in Scripture, but was only a custom popularly, and vulgarly taken up. But Tertullian speaks of more than Prayer; he speaks of oblations and sacrifices for the dead; It is true, he does so; but it is of oblations and sacrifices far from the propitiatory sacrifice of the Mass, for Tertullian makes a woman the Priest in his sacrifice: Offert uxor, says he, annuis diebus dormitionis mariti, The wife offers every year upon the day of her husband's death; that is, every year upon that day, she gives a dole and alms to the poor, as the custom was to do in memory of dead friends. This being then but such a custom, and but so induced, why did none oppose it? Aerius. Epiphanius. Why it was not sufficiently opposed, I have intimated some reasons before: The affection of those that did it, who were (though mistaken in the way) piously affected in the action, And then the harmlessness in the thing itself at first, And then partly a loathness in the Fathers to deter the Gentiles from becoming Christians, And partly a cloud and darkness of the state of the soul after death. Yet some did oppose it; But some not early enough, and some not earnestly enough; And some not with much success, because they were not otherwise Integrae famae, They were not thought sound in all things, and therefore they were believed in nothing; which was Aerius his case, who did oppose it; but because Aerius did not come home to all truths, he was not harkened unto, in opposing any error. Otherwise at that time, Epiphanius had a fair occasion offered, to have opposed this growing custom, and to have rectified the Church in a good measure therein, about an hundred years after Tertullian: For then Aerius opposed it directly; but because he proceeded upon false grounds, That since it was come to that, That the most vicious man, the most enormous sinner, might be saved after his death, by the prayers and devotions of another man, there remained no more for a Christian to do, but to provide such men in his life, to do those offices for him after his death, and so he might deliver himself from all the disciplines, and mortifications, and from the anguishs, and remorses, and vexations of conscience which the Christian Religion induces and requires, Epiphanius discerning the advantage that Aerius had given, by imputing things not throughly true, he places his glory, and his triumph, only in overthrowing Aerius his ill grounded arguments, and takes the question itself, and the danger of the Church, no farther to heart then so. And therefore when Aerius asks, Can prayers for the dead be of any use? Epiphanius says, Yes, they may be of use, to awaken and exercise the piety and charity of the living; and never speaks to that which was principally intended, whether they could be of any use to the dead. So when Aerius asks, Is it not absurd to say, That all sins may be remitted after death? Epiphanius says, No man in the Church ever said, That all sins may be remitted after death, and never clears the main, whether any sin might. And yet with all advantages, and modifications, Epiphanius lodges it at last, but upon custom, Nec enim praeceptum Patris, sed institutum matris habemus, says he, For this which we do, we have no commandment from God our Father, but only an Institution, employed in this Custom, from the Church our Mother. But than it grew to a farther height; from a wild flower in the field, Chrysost. and a garden flower in private grounds, to be more generally planted, and to be not only suffered by many Fathers, but cherished and watered by some, and not above forty years after Epiphanius, to be so far advanced by S. chrysostom, as that he assigns, though no Scripture for it, yet that which is nearest to Scripture, That it was an Apostolical Constitution. And truly, if it did clearly appear to have been so, A thing practised, and prescribed to the Church, by the Apostles, the holy Ghost were as well to be believed in the Apostles mouths, as in their pens; An Apostolical Tradition, that is truly so, is good evidence. But because those things do hardly lie in proof, (for that which hath been given for a good Rule of Apostolical Traditions, is very defective, that is, That whatsoever hath been generally in use in the Church, of which no Author is known, is to be accepted for an Apostolical Tradition, for so that Ablutio pedum, The washing of one another's feet after Christ's example, was in so general use, that it had almost gained the dignity of being a Sacrament; And so was also the giving of the Sacrament of the Body and Blood to children newly baptised, and yet these, though in so general use, and without any certain Author, are not Apostolical Traditions) Therefore we must apply S. Augustine's words to S. chrysostom, Lege ex Lege, ex Prophetis, ex Psalmis, ex Euangelio, ex Apostolicis literis, & credemus, Read us any thing out of the Law, or Prophets, or Psalms, or Gospel, or Epistles, and we will believe it. And we must have leave to return S. Augustine's words upon S. Augustine himself, who hath much assisted this custom of praying for the dead, Lege ex Lege, etc. Read it out of the Scriptures, and we will believe it; for S. Augustine does not pretend any other place of Scripture, than this of the Maccabees, and (not disputing now what credit that Book had with S. Augustine) certainly it fell not within this enumeration of his, The Maccabees are neither Law, nor Prophets, nor Psalms, nor Gospel, nor Epistle. Beloved, it is a wanton thing for any Church, in spiritual matters, to play with small errors; to tolerate, or wink at small abuses, as though it should be always in her power to extinguish them when she would. It is Christ's counsel to his Spouse, that is, the Church, Capite vulpes parvulas, Take us the little foxes, for they destroy the Vine; though they seem but little, and able to do little harm, yet they grow bigger and bigger every day; and therefore stop errors before they become heresies, and erroneous men before they become formal heretics. Capite, says Christ, Take them, suffer them not to go on; but then, it is Capite nobis, Take us those foxes, Take them for us, The bargain is between Christ and his Church. For it is not Capite vobis, Take them to yourselves, and make yourselves Judges of such doctrinal matters, as appertain not to your cognizance; Nor it is not Cape tibi, Take him to thyself, spy out a Recusant, or a man otherwise not conformable, and take him for thy labour, beg him, and spoil him, and, for his Religion, leave him as you found him; Neither is it Cape sibi, Take him for his ease, that is, compound with him easily, and continue him in his estate and errors, but Cape nobis, Take him for us, so detect him, as he may thereby be reduced to Christ and his Church. Neither only this counsel of Christ to his Church, but that commandment of God in Levit. Exod. 23.3. Leu. 19.15. is also appliable to this, Non misereber is pauperis in judicio, Thou shalt not countenance a poor man in his cause, Thou shalt not pity a poor man in judgement. Though a new opinion may seem a poor opinion, able to do little harm, though it may seem a pious and profitable opinion, and of good use, yet in judicio, if it stand in judgement, and pretend to be an article of faith, and of that holy obligation, matter necessary to salvation, Non misereberis, Thou shalt not spare, thou shalt not countenance this opinion upon any collateral respect, but bring it to the only trial of Doctrines, the Scriptures. In the beginning of the Reformation in Germany, there arose a sect, whom they called Intermists, and Adiaphorists, who, upon a good pretence, were like to have done a great deal of mischief: They said, Since all the hope of a Reformation that we can promise ourselves, must come from a general Council, and of such a Council we can have no hope but by the Pope, it were impertinent, and dis-conducing to our own ends, to vex or exasperate the Pope, in this Interim, till the Council be settled, and so the Reformation put into a way; and in the Interim, for this short time till the Council, these Adiaphora, the indifferent things, (in which mild word they involved all the abuses, and all the grievances that were complained of) may be well enough continued. But if they had continued so long, they had continued yet; If they had spared their little foxes then, they had destroyed their vines; If they had pitied the poor in judgement, the cause had been judged against them; If they had reprieved those abuses for a time, they had got a pardon for ever: And therefore blessed were they in taking those children, and dashing them against the stones, In taking those newborn opinions, and bringing them to the true touchstone of all Doctrines, An ab initio, whether they had been from the beginning, or could consist with the Scriptures. Neither doth this counsel of Christ's, Take us these little foxes, nor this commandment of God, Thou shalt not pity the poor in judgement, determine itself in the Church, or in the public only, but extends itself (rather contracts itself) to every particular soul and conscience. Capite vulpeculas, Take your little foxes, watch your first inclinations to sins, for if you give them suck at first, if you feed them with the milk and honey of the mercy of God, it shall not be in your power to wean them when you would, but they will draw you from one to another extreme, from a former presumption to a future desperation in God's mercy. So also Non misereberis; Thou shalt not pity the poor in judgement; now that thou callest thyself to judgement, and thy conscience to an examination, thou shalt not pity any sin, because it pretends to be a poor sin, either poor so, that it cannot much endanger thee, not much encumber thee, or poor so, as that it threatens thee with poverty, with penury, with disability to support thy state, or maintain thy family, if thou entertain it not. Many times I have seen a suitor that comes in forma pauperis, more trouble a Court, and more importune a Judge, than greater causes, or greater persons: And so may such sins as come in forma pauperis, either way, That they plead poverty, That they can do little harm, or threaten poverty if they be not entertained. Those sins are the most dangerous sins, which pretend reason why they should be entertained: for sins which are done merely out of infirmity, or out of the surprisal of a tentation, are (in comparison of others) done as sins in our sleep; but in sins upon deliberation, upon counsel, upon pretence of reason, we do see the wisdom of God, but we set our wisdom above his, we do see the law of God, but we insert and interline non obstantes of our own, into Gods Law. If therefore thou wilt corruptly and viciously, and sinfully love another, out of pity, because they love thee so; If thou wilt assist a poor man in a cause, out of pretence of pity, with thy countenance and the power of thy place, that that poor man may have something, and thou the rest that is recovered in his right; If thou wilt embrace any particular sin out of pity, lest thy Wife and Children should be left unprovided; If thou have not taken these little foxes, that is, resisted these tentations at the beginning, yet Nunc in judicio, now that they appear in judgement, in examination of thy conscience, Non misereberis, Thou shalt not pity them, but (as Moses speaks of false Prophets, Deut. 13. and by a fair accommodation of all bewitching sins, with pleasure or profit) If a Dreamer of Dreams have given thee a sign, and that sign be come to pass; If a sin have told thee, it would make thee rich, and it have made thee rich; yet if this Dreamer draw thee to another God, If this profit draw thee to an Idolatrous, that is, to an habitual love of that sin, (for Tota habemus recentes Deos, quot vitiae, says S. Hierom, Hieron. Every man hath so many Idols in him, as he hath habitual sins) yet, Though this dreamer (as God proceeds there) be thy brother, or thy son, or thy friend which is as thine own soul, How near, how dear, how necessary soever this sin be unto thee, Non misereberis, says Moses, Thine eye shall not pity that Dreamer, thou shalt not keep him secret, but thine own hand shall be upon him to kill him; And so of this pleasurable, or profitable sin, Non misereberis, Thou shalt not hid it, but pour it out in Confession; Non misereberis, Thou shalt not pardon it, no nor reprieve it, but destroy it, for the practice presently; Non misereberis, Thou shalt not turn out the Mother, and retain the Daughter, not leave the sin, and retain that which was sinfully got, but divest all, root, and body, and fruits, by confession to God, by contrition in thyself, by restitution to men damnified; Elf, that will fall upon thee and thy soul, which fell upon the Church, That because they did not take their little foxes, they endangered the whole vine; Because they did pity the poor in judgement, that is, (as S. Augustine says) they were loath to wrestle with the people, or force them from dangerous customs, they came from that supine negligence, in tolerating prayer for the Dead, to establish a doctrinal point of Purgatory; and for both, prayer for the Dead, and Purgatory, they detort this text, Else, that is, if no Purgatory, why then are these men baptised for the Dead? As in the Old Testament there is no precept, no precedent, 2 Part no promise for prayer for the Dead, So in the Old Testament they confess, there was no Purgatory; no such place, as could purify a soul to that cleanness, as to deliver it up to Heaven; For thither, to Heaven, no soul, say they, had access, till after Christ's ascension. But as the first mention of prayer for the dead was in time of the Maccabees, so much about the same time was the first stone of Purgatory laid; and laid by the hands of Plato. For, Plato. Tertul. Hareticorum Patriarchae, Philosophi, says Tertullian, The Philosophers were the Patriarches of Heretics, evermore they had recourse to them. And then, Plato being the Author of Purgatory, we cannot deny, but that the Greek Church did acknowledge Purgatory, that is, that Greek Church, of which Plato is a Patriarch; for, for the Christian Greek Church, that never acknowledged Purgatory, so as the Roman, that is, A place of torment, from which our prayers here, might deliver souls there. But yet Plato's invention, or his manner of expressing it, Eusebius Anno 326. took such root and such hold, as that Eusebius, when he comes to speak of Purgatory, delivers it in the very words of Plato, and makes Plato's words his words, and Plato his Patriarch, for the Greek Church. The Latin Church had Patriarches too for this Doctrine; though not Philosophers, yet Poets; for of that which Virgil says of Purgatory, Virgil. Lactantius Anno 290. Lactantius says, propemodum vera, Virgil was very near the truth, Virgil was almost a Catholic, but then later men say, Haec prorsus vera, This is absolutely true that Virgil says, and Virgil is a perfect, a downright Catholic; for an upright Catholic, in the point of Purgatory, were hard to find. These than are the first Patriarches of the Greek and Latin Church, Philosophers, and Poets; And when it came farther, to Christians, it gained not much at first; for the first mention of Purgatory amongst Christians hath this double ill luck, that first it is in a Book which no side believes, the Book called Pastor, whose Author is said to be Hermes, Hermes. and he fancied to be S. Paul's Disciple; And than that which is said of Purgatory in that Book, is put into an old woman's mouth, and so made an old wife's tale; she tells that she had a vision, of stones fallen from a tower, and then mended after they were fallen, and laid in the building again: And this Tower must be the Church, and these fallen stones must be souls in Purgatory, and then they must be made fit to be placed in the uppermost part of the building, in the Triumphant Church. But to consider this plant in better grounds, than Philosophers, or Poets, or old wives tales, Clem. Alexan. or supposititious books, amongst men of more weight and gravity; Clement of Alexandria, within little more than two hundred years after Christ, spoke doubtfully, uncertainly, suspiciously, disputably of Purgatory; And within twenty years after him, Origen. Origen, who was evermore transported beyond the letter, upon mysteries, somewhat directly. But yet when all is done, origen's Purgatory is a purgatory, that would do them no good; for it would bring them in no money; and they could be as well content that there were none, as that it were nothing worth; except they may have the letting and setting of Purgatory at their price, they care not though it were pulled down. And origen's Purgatory is such a purgatory as the best men must come into it, even Martyrs themselves, that are rebaptized in their own blood, (and will this purgatory serve their turns?) And it is such a purgatory, as the worst of all, even the Devil himself may, and shall get out of it; And will this purgatory serve their turns? Neither is this an error peculiar to Origen, That all souls must pass through Purgatory, but common with others of the Fathers too; Sieve Paulus, sive Petrus, says Origen, whether it be S. Paul, or S. Peter, Ambrose. thither he must come, And sieve Petrus, sive johannes, says S. Ambrose, whether it be the Disciple that loved Christ, S. Peter, or the Disciple whom Christ loved, S. john, thither he must come; And S. Hilary extends it farther, he draws in the blessed Virgin Mary herself into purgatory. And that we may see clearly, that that Purgatory which the Fathers intended, is not the Purgatory now erected in the Roman Church, S. Ambrose consigns to his Purgatory, even the Patriarches and Prophets of the Old Testaments; Igne filii Levi, igne Ezekiel, igne Daniel, The holiest generation, the Sons of Levi, and the greatest of the Prophets must pass through this fire: And will such a purgatory serve their turns, as was kindled in the Old Testament? Well; Interrogant nos. They are very loath to be put to their special plea, very loath to answer, what Purgatory of the Fathers they will stand to; They would not be put to answer; They choose rather to interrogate us; and they ask us, Since the Fathers are so pregnant, so frequent in the name of Purgatory, one Purgatory or other, will you believe none? None, upon the strength of that argument, that the Father's mention Purgatory, except they will assign us a Purgatory, in which those Fathers agree, and agree it to be matter of faith, to believe it; for from how many things, which pass through the Fathers, by way of opinion, and of discourse, are they in the Roman Church departed, only upon that, That the Fathers said it, but said it not Dogmatically, but by way of discourse, or opinion. But then they ask us again, Since it is clear that they did use prayer for the dead, what could they mean by those prayers, but a Purgatory, a place of torment, where those souls needed help, and from whence those prayers might help them? What could they mean else? Certainly, we cannot tell them, what they meant; If they should ask them, who made those prayers, they could hardly tell them. If a man should have surprised S. Ambrose at his prayers, and stood behind him, and heard him say, Non dubitamus, Ambrose. etiam Angelorum testimoniis credimus, Lord, I cannot doubt it, for thou by thine Angels hast revealed it unto me, Fide ablutum, aeterna voluptate perfrui, That my dead Master the Emperor, was baptised in his faith, and is now in possession of all the joys of heaven, and yet have heard S. Ambrose say, sometimes to God, sometimes to his dead Master, Si quid preces, if my prayers may prevail with thee O God, and then, Oblationibus vos frequentabo, I will wait upon you daily with my Oblations, I will accompany you daily with my Sacrifices; And for what? des, Domine, requiem, That thou, O Lord, wouldst afford rest, and peace, and salvation to that soul, And if this man after all this, should have asked S. Ambrose, What he meant to pray for him, of whose present being in heaven he was already assured? surely S. Ambrose could have given no such answer, as would have implied a confession, or an argument for Purgatory; But S. Ambrose is likely to have said to him, as he does say there, Est in piis affectibus quaedam stendi voluptas, In tender hearts, and in good natures, there is a kind of satisfaction, and more than that, a holy voluptuousness in weeping, in lamenting, in deploring the loss of a friend; In commemoratione amissi acquiescimus, Let me alone, give me leave to think of my lost Master some way, by speaking with him, by speaking of him, by speaking for him, any way, I find some ease, some satisfaction in commemorating and celebrating of him; But all this would not have amounted to an argument for Purgatory. So also if a man should have found S. Augustine in his Meditations after his Mother's death, August. and heard him say, Pro peccatis Matris meae deprecor te, Lord, I am a suitor now for my Mother's sins; Exaudi Domine, propter medicinam vulnerum tuorum, Hear me, O Lord, who acknowledge no other Balsamum, then that which drops out of thy wounds, Dimitte Domine, Domine obsecro, Pardon her, O Lord, O Lord pardon her all her sins; And then should have heard S. Augustine, with the same breath, and the same sigh, say, Credo quòd jam feceris, quae rogo, Lord, I am faithfully assured, that all this is already done, which I pray for; and then should have asked S. Augustine, What he meant to pray for that which was already done? S. Augustine could but have said to him, as he does to God there, Voluntaria oris mei accipe Domine, Accept O Lord, this voluntary, though not necessary Devotion. But if a man would have pressed either of them for a full reason of those prayers, it would have been hard for him to have received it. They prayed for the Dead, and they meant no ill, in doing so; but what particular good they meant, they could hardly give any farther account, but that it was, if not an inordinate, yet an inconsiderate piety, and a Devotion, that did rather transport them, then direct them. These than prayed for the dead, and yet confessed those whom they prayed for, to be then in heaven; S. chrysostom prays for others, and yet believes them to be in Hell; Chrysost. Potest infideles de Gehenna dimittere, says he, sed fortè non faciet, God can deliver an unbelieving soul out of hell, perchance he will not, says he, but I cannot tell, and therefore I will try. And yet S. Gregory absolutely forbids all prayer for the dead, Gregory. where they died in notorious sin; As generally their whole School doth at this day, either for such sinners, as dying in impenitency, are presumed to be already in Hell, or such as died so well, that they are already presumed to be in possession of as much as can be asked in their behalf. If then they will still press and pursue us with that question, What could those Fathers mean by their prayer for the Dead, but Purgatory? We must send them to those Fathers, (and I pray God they may get to them) to ask what they meant. So much as any of those Fathers have told us, we can tell them; and amongst those Fathers, Areopag. S. Dionyse the Areopagite hath told us most; He hath told us the manner, and the Ceremonies used at the funerals of Christians; and amongst them the offices, and liturgies, and services said and read at such funerals; and expressed them so, as that we may easily see, That first the Congregation made a declaration of their religious and faithful assurance, that they that die in the Lord, rest in him; And then a protestation in the behalf of that dead brother, that he did die in that faith, and that expectation, and therefore was then in possession of that rest, which was promised to them who died so. And this testimony for themselves in general, and this application thereof to that dead man, says he, the Church then expressed in the form of prayer, and so seemed to ask and beg at God's hands, that which indeed they did but acknowledge to have received before; they gave that the form of a prayer, as of a future thing, which was indeed but a recognition of that which was present, and past, That they did then, and that that dead brother had before embraced that belief. This answer to their question, (What could they mean but Purgatory, by those prayers?) they may have from those of those ancient times; And thus much more from daily practice, That every man who prostrates himself in his chamber, and powers out his soul in prayer to God; though he have said, O Lord, enter not into judgement with thy servant; forgive me the sins of my youth, O Lord; O Lord blot out all mine iniquities out of thy remembrance, though his faith assure him, that God hath granted all that he asked upon the first petition of his prayer, yea before he made it, (for God put that petition into his heart and mouth, and moved him to ask it, that thereby he might be moved to grant it) yet as long as the Spirit enables him, he continues his prayer, and he solicits, and he importunes God for that which his conscience assures him, God hath already granted: He hath it, and yet he asks it; and that second ask it implies and amounts but to a thanksgiving for that mercy, in which he hath granted it. So those Fathers prayed for that which they assured themselves was done before, and therefore, though it had the form of a prayer, it might be a commemoration of God's former benefits; it might be a protestation of their present faith, or an attestation in the behalf of their dead friend, whose first obsequies, or yearly anniversary they did then celebrate. Add to this the general disposition in the nature of every man, to wish well to the dead, And the darkness in which men were then, in what kind of state the dead were, and we shall the less wonder, that they declined to this custom in those times, especially if we consider, Chemnicius Exam. De purgator. fo. 92. b. that even in the Reformation of Religion, in these clearer times, Luther himself, and after him, (if perchance Luther may be thought not to have been enough fined and drawn from his lees) The Apology for the Confession of Auspourg, which was written after all things were sufficiently debated, and had sift, and cribrations, and alterations enough, allows of such a form of prayer for the dead, as that of the primitive Fathers may justly seem to have been. All ends in this, that neither those prayers of those Fathers, nor these of these Lutherans, (though neither be in themselves to be justified) did necessarily imply, or presuppose any such Purgatory, as the Roman Church hath gone about to evict or conclude out of them; Men might pray for the dead as those Fathers did, and as the Lutherans do, safely enough without assisting the doctrine of Purgatory, if that were all that were to be said against such prayers. Be then that thus settled, The Fathers did not intent any such building upon that foundation, not a Purgatory, which should be a place of torment, upon those prayers for the dead; but then, what did they mean by that Purgatory, and that fire, which is so frequent amongst them? In the confession of our Adversaries, the greatest part of the Fathers that mention a Purgatory fire, intent it of the general fire of conflagration at the last day: They thought the souls of the Dead to have been kept in Abditis, and in Receptaculis till the day of Judgement, and that then that fire which was to take hold of all creatures to the purifying of them, should also take hold of all souls, and burn out all that might be unacceptable to God in those souls, and that this was their Purgatory. Others of the Fathers have called that severe judgement, and examination which every soul is to pass under, from the hand of God at that time, (because it hath much of the nature of fire, and many of the properties and qualities of fire in it) a fire, a purging fire, and made that their Purgatory. If others of the Fathers have spoken of a purging fire after this life, so as it will not fall within these two acceptations, of the fire of conflagration, or of the fire of examination, we must say in their behalf, as Sextus Senensis does, That they are not the less holy, Sext. Senens. nor the less reverend, for having strayed into some of these mistake, because it is a fire without light. In those sub-obscure times, August. S. Augustine might be excusable, though he proceeded doubtfully and said, Non incredibile, It is not incredible that some such thing there may be, and Quaeri potest, It is not amiss to inquire, (where such things are to be inquired after, that is, in the Scriptures) whether any such thing be or no, and Vtrum latere, an inveniri, whether any such thing will be found there, or no, I cannot tell: he may be excusable in his proceeding farther in his doubt, Sive ibi tantum, whether all our Purgatory be reserved for the next world, Sive hic & ibi, or whether God divide our Purgatory, some here, and some there, Sive hic ut non ibi, or whether God exalt and multiply our Purgatory here, that we may have none hereafter. Of these things, I say, howsoever S. Augustine might be excusable for doubting in those dark times, we should be inexcusable, if we should not deny them in these times, in which God hath afforded us so much light and clearness; And rest in that acknowledgement, that we have in this life Purgationem, & purgatorium, A purging, and a Purgatory; A purging in this, That Christ Jesus, Whom God hath made the heir of all things, by whom also he made the world, Heb. 1.3. who was the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person; That he, by himself hath purged our sins: There is our purging; But then, because after this general purging, which is wrapped up in the general nature, as Christ died for mankind, for all men, and after that nearer application thereof, as it is wrapped up in the Covenant, as he died more effectually for all Christians, still our own clothes defile us, our own evil habits, job our own flesh pollutes us, therefore God sends us a Purgatory too in this life, Crosses, Afflictions, and Tribulations, and to burn out these infectious stains and impressions in our flesh, Ipse sedet tanquam ignis conflans, God sits as a fire, and with fullers soap, to wash us, Malac. 3.2. and to burn us clean with afflictions from his own hand. Let no man think himself sufficiently purified, that hath not passed this Purgatory; Irascaris mihi Domine, saith S. Bernard, Lord let me see that thou art angry with me; Bernar. I know I have given thee just cause of anger; and if thou smother that anger, and declare it not by corrections here, thou reservest thine anger to undeterminable times, and to unsupportable proportions. Propitius fuisti, says David, Thou wast a merciful God to thy people; for, saith he, Thou didst punish all their Inventions; In this consisted his mercy, that he did punish; for if he had been more merciful, he had been unmerciful; If he had begun with no Judgements, they had ended in Judgements without end; Affliction is a Christians daily bread, and therefore in that petition, Da nobis hodie, Give us this day our daily bread, not only patience in affliction, but affliction itself, so fare as it conduces to our mortification is asked at God's hand. It is an over-presumptuous confidence, for which they glorify one in the Roman Church, that he was put often to his Decede à me, Domine, O Lord, withdraw thyself, and thy grace farther from me, for by mine own sanctity, or diligence, I am able to wrestle with, and to overcome all the tentations, and tribulations of this life, Decede à me, withdraw thyself, and thy grace, and put not thyself to this trouble, nor this cost with me, but leave me to myself: This was too much confidence; but that was more, which we find in another, That he begged of God, by prayer, that he might be possessed with the Devil for some months, because all the tentations of the flesh, and all the crosses of the world, were not enough for his victory, and his triumph. But it is an humble and a requisite prayer, to ask such a measure of affliction, as may ballast us, and carry us steadily, through all the storms, and tempests of this life. As he that hath had no rub in his fortune, in his temporal state, is in most danger to fall, (to fall into murmuring) at the first stumble he makes, As he that hath had no sickness till his age, hardly recovers then; So he that hath not borne his yoke in his youth, that hath not been accustomed to crosses and afflictions, hath a wanton soul all the way, and a froward and impatient soul towards the end. This is our true Purgatory; And in this Purgatory, we do need the prayers of others; and upon this Purgatory, we may build Indulgences, which are those testimonies of the remission of sins, which God hath enabled his Church to imprint and confer upon us, in the absolution thereof; which are nothing of kin to those Indulgences of the Roman Church, which are the children of this mother of Purgatory, and to the maintenance of which, they have also detorted our Text, Else, If there be no such Indulgences, If the works of Supererogation done by other men, may not be applied to the souls that are in Purgatory, If there be no such use of Indulgences, why are then these men baptised for the dead? Against the popular opinion of the Sphere, or Element of Fire, Indulgences. some new Philosophers have made this an argument, that it is improbable, and impertinent, to admit an Element that produceth no Creatures; A matter more subtle than all the rest, and yet work upon nothing in it; A region more spacious than all the rest, and yet have nothing in it, to work upon. All the other three Elements, Earth, and Water, and Air abound with inhabitants proper to each of them, only the Fire produces nothing. Here is a fire that recompenses that defect; The fire of the Roman Purgatory hath produced Indulgences, and Indulgences are multiplied to such a number, as that no herds of Cattles upon earth can equal them, when they meet by millions at a Jubilee, no shoals, no spawn of fish at Sea, can equal them, when they are transported in whole Tuns to the West Indies, where of late years their best Market hath been; No flocks, no flights of birds in the Air can equal them, when as they say of S. Francis, at every prayer that he made, a man might have seen the Air as full of souls flying out of Purgatory, as sparkles from a Smith's Anvil, beating a hot Iron. The Apostle complains of them, that made Mercaturam animarum, Merchandise of men's souls; but these men make Ludibrium animarum, a Jest of men's souls: For, if that sad and serious consideration, that this doctrine concerns that part of man, which nothing but the incorruptible blood of the Son of God could redeem, the soul, did not cast a devout and a religious bridle upon it, it were impossible to speak of these Indulgences, otherwise then merrily: They do make merchandise of souls, and yet they make a jest of them too. These then, these Indulgences, are the children, the generation of that Viper, the Salamanders of that fire, Pliny. Purgatory; And then, Inter omnia venenata, says Pliny, Of all the venomous creatures in the world, the Salamander is Maximi sceleris, the most mischievous; for whereas others, singulos feriunt, (as the same Author says) they sting but one at once, the Salamander destroys whole families, whole Cities together, for all that eat the fruit of any tree, that he hath touched, perish. We need not apply this; Our fathers did, and our neighbours do feel the manifold mischiefs that these mercenary Indulgences work in the world, and to what desperate and bloody actions men are induced, and animated by them; what knives these Indulgences have whet in Courts, and what Armies they have paid in the open field; A cheap discharge, and easy Subsidy; we have seen Copper coined, and we have read of leather coined, but here they coin paper, and in an Indulgence, which require but as much paper as a Ballad, they send a man more salvation, than the whole Bible can give them. Men that will not see light, or not watch by the light, will not see this; Men that delight to wallow still in the mire, can digest this; Etiam Salamandra à suibus manditur, says Pliny, As venomous as a Salamander is, a Sow will eat a Salamander; As the citizens of the lowest fire, of hell itself, entered into the heard of swine, so these children of this other fire, of Purgatory, these Indulgences, enter into swinish men, that consider not their own foulness, but think themselves clean when they have eaten a Salamander, that is, bought an Indulgence. But though they have had a spurious generation, and yet have lasted longer than spurious generations use to do, (for they have spread into three generations, Prayer for the dead begot Purgatory, and Purgatory Indulgences) yet they have had a viperous generation too, for they have eaten out the womb of their own Mother, and these Salamanders, these Indulgences retain still the nature of Pliny's Salamanders, Non gignunt, They beget no more, they proceed no farther; For in this enormous excess of Indulgences, the Roman Church took her death's wound; from this extreme abuse of Indulgences, arose the occasion of the Reformation, which God advanced and prospered so miraculously in the hands of Luther, upon the indignation that the world took upon these Indulgences. How they risen, how they grew, how they fell, is a historical knowledge, and not much necessary to be insisted upon here though indeed our danger be greater from these Indulgences, then either from prayer for the Dead, or from Purgatory; though all three be equally erroneous in matter of doctrine, yet for matter of fact, and danger, Indulgences are the most pernicious, because that opinion of an immediate passing to Heaven thereupon, animates men to any undertake. But as the Christians in abolishing the Idolatry of the Gentiles, in some places, some times, left some of their Idols standing, lest the Gentiles should come to deny, that ever they had worshipped such monsters: So it hath pleased the Holy Ghost to hover over the Authors and Writers in the Roman Church, so as that they have left some impressions of the iniquity of these Indulgences in their books. From them we are able to declare, That Indulgencies in the Primitive Church were nothing but relaxations, moderations of those severe penances, which the Canons, called Penitential, inflicted upon particular sins, which Canons were for the most part the Rule of the whole Church, and which penances, enjoined by those Canons, every Bishop in his own Diocese, might according to his holy discretion moderate, according to the bodily infirmity, or the spiritual amendment of the penitent sinner; That in time, the Bishops of Rome drew into their hands all this power of remitting penances, reserving to themselves, and shedding upon other Bishops, as much, and as little as they were pleased; That after they had extended this overflowing power over this world, they enlarged it farther to the next world too, to Purgatory. And this, not long since, Postquam aliquandiu ad Purgatorium trepidatum est, coepere indulgentiae, Roffens. says a good Author of theirs, of our Nation, that Bishop of Rochester, whose service they recompensed with a Cardinal's Hat, (but somewhat late, for his head was off before his hat came) After the vapours of Purgatory had blinded men's eyes, after men had been made afraid of those fires, for a good while, says that Bishop, than they began to set on foot their Indulgencies; This beginning was not above three hundred years since, and within one hundred they came to that height, that though in their Schools they make the pains of Purgatory to be so violent, that they say no soul is likely to remain there above ten years, yet they give Indulgencies for infinite thousands of years; They give one day Plenam, and the next pleniorem, and after plenissimam, They forgive all to day, and to morrow the rest, and then they find something beyond that, which was beyond all: So that as Seneca says, of the excess in Libraries in his time, That they had Bibliothecas pro Supellectile, No man thought his house well furnished, if he had not a Library, though he understood never an Author, So no man thought his house well furnished, if he had not Indulgencies for every season, if he bought not all that came to market, if he had not Indulgence upon Indulgencies, present and successive Indulgences, possessory and reversionary Indulgences, total and supernumerary, current and concurrent Indulgences, to delude the justice of God withal. Well; to our true Purgatory which we spoke of before, Those crosses which God is pleased to lay upon us, belong true Indulgencies, The constant promises of our faithful God, that he will give us the issue with the tentation, and that as the Apostle says, No tentation shall befall us, Si non humana, but that which appertains to man: 1 Cor. 10.13. Now for this Humana tentatio, tentation or affliction that appertains to man, it is not only affliction that appertains to man so, as that other men do inflict it, when wicked men revile and calumniate and oppress the godly; it is not only that, Chrysost. though so S. chrysostom interprets it; Nor is this affliction appertaining to man, because man himself inflicts it upon himself, our own inherent corruption being become Spontaneus Daemon, a Devil in our own bosom; it is not only that, though so S. Hierom interpret it; Hieron. nor is this affliction appertaining to man, so called Humana, as humanum is opposed Daemoniaco, That all torments falling upon the Devil, work in him more and more obduration, but the corrections inflicted by God upon man, work a reconciliation; it is not only this, though so S. Gregory interpret it; But this affliction appertains so to a Christian man, Gregory. as the soul itself, and as reason appertains to a natural man: He is not a man, that is without a reasonable soul, he is not a Christian that is without correction; It appertains unto man so, as that it is convenient, more, that it is expedient, more than that, that it is necessary, and more than all that, that it is essential to a Christian: As when the spirit returns to him that gave it, there is a dissolution of the man, So when God withdraws his visitation, there is a dissolution of a Christian; for so God expresses the spiritual Death, and the height of his anger, in the Prophet, I will make my wrath towards thee to rest, Ezek. 15.42. and my jealousy shall departed from thee; That is, I will look no more after thee, I will study thy recovery and thine amendment no farther. Have ye forgot the Consolation? says the Apostle; what is that Consolation? Heb. 12.5. & 6. Is it that you shall have no affliction? No; This is the Consolation, That whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and he scourgeth every son whom he receiveth. It is general to all sons, for, If ye be without correction, whereof all are partakers, then are ye bastards, and not sons; Ver. 8. And then, to show us how this Purgatory and these Indulgencies accompany on another, how Gods crosses, and his deliverances do ever concur together, we see the Holy Ghost hath so ordered and disposed these two, Mercy and Correction, in this one verse, Ver. 6. as that we cannot say which is first, the Correction or the Mercy, the Purgatory or the Indulgence: For first the Indulgence is before the Purgatory, The Mercy before the Correction, in one place, Whom he loveth, he chasteneth, first God loves, and then he chasteneth; and then after, The Purgatory is before the Indulgence, the Correction is before Mercy, He scourgeth every son whom he receiveth; first he scourges him, and then he receives him; They are so disposed, as that both are made first, and both last, we cannot tell whether precede, or succeed, they are always both together, they are always all one; As long as his love lasts, he corrects us, and as long as he corrects us, he loves us. And so we have a justifiable prayer for the Dead, that is, for our souls, dead in their sins, Cor novum, O Lord create a new heart in me; And we have a justifiable Purgatory, Purgabit aream, Luke 4.17. Esay 26.15. If we be God's floor, he hath his fan in his hand, and he will make us clean; And we have justifiable Indulgences, Indulsisti genti Domine, indulsisti genti, Thou hast been indulgent to thy people, O Lord, thou hast been indulgent to us; We cannot complain, jer. 4.10. as they begin, rather to murmur, then to complain, Ah Lord God, surely thou hast deceived thy people, saying, you shall have peace, and the sword pierceth to the heart; For when this sword of God's corrections shall pierce to the heart, that very sword shall be but as a Probe to search the wound, nay that very wound shall be but as an issue to drain, and preserve the whole body in health; for his mercies are so above all his works, as that the very works of his Justice are mercy. And so, not the Prayer for the Dead, not the Purgatory, not the Indulgences of the Roman Church, but we, who have them truly, do truly receive a benefit from this Text, which Text is a proof of the Resurrection. Because we feel a Resurrection by grace now, because we believe a Resurrection to glory hereafter, therefore we can give an account of this Baptism for the dead in our Text: The particular sense of which words, will be the Exercise of another day. This day we end, both with our humble thanks, for all Indulgences which God hath given us in our Purgatories, for former deliverances in former crosses, and with humble prayer also, that he ever afford us such a proportion of his medicinal corrections, as may ever testify his presence and providence upon us in the way, and bring us in the end, to the Kingdom of his Son Christ Jesus. Amen. SERM. LXXVIII. Preached at S. PAUL'S, June 21. 1626. 1 COR. 15.29. Else, what shall they do which are baptised for the dead? if the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptised for the dead? WE are now come at last, Divisio. to that which was first in our intention, How these words have been detorted, and misapplied by our Adversaries of the Roman Church, for the establishing of those heresies, which we have formerly opposed, And then, the divers ways, which sounder and more Orthodoxal Divines have held in the Exposition thereof; that so from the first Part, we may learn what to avoid and shun, and from the second, what to embrace and follow. Of all the places of Scripture which Bellarmine brings for the maintenance of Purgatory (excepting only that one place of the Maccabees) (And of that place we must say, as it was said of that jealous husband, which set a watch and spy upon his Wife, Quis custodit custodes? Who shall watch them that watch her? So when they prove matters of faith out of the Maccabees, we say Quis probat probantem, who shall prove that book to be Scripture, by which they prove that doctrine to be true?) But of all other places, there is scarce one, to which Bellarmine himself doth not, by way of objection against himself, give some better sense and interpretation then that, which himself sticks to; and such a sense, as when the matter of Purgatory is not in question, his fellows often times in their writings, and himself sometimes in his writings doth accept, and adhere to. I offer it for a note of good use, and in the observing whereof, I have used a constant diligence in reading the Roman Writers, That those Writers which writ by way of Exposition, and Commentaries upon the Scriptures, and are not engaged in the professed handling of Controversies, do very often content themselves with the true sense of those places which they handle, and hunt after no curious, nor forced, nor foreign, nor unnatural senses: But if the same Authors come to handle Controversies, they depart from that singleness of heart, and that holy ingenuity, and stray aside, or soar up into other senses of the same places. I look no farther for a reason of this, than this, That almost all the Controversies, between Rome, and the rest of the Christian world, are matters of profit to them, and raise money, and advance their Revenue: So that, as they are but Expositors, they may have leave to be good Divines, and then, and in that capacity, they may give the true sense of that Scripture; But as they are Controverters, they must be good Subjects, good Statesmen, good Exchequer men, and then, and in that capacity, they must give such senses as may establish and advance their profit: As an Expositor, he may interpret this place of the Resurrection, as it should be; but as a Controverter, he must interpret it of Purgatory, for so it must be, when profit is their end: And as our Alchemists can find their whole art and work of Alchemy, not only in Virgil and Ovid, but in Moses and Solomon; so these men can find such a transmutation into gold, such a foundation of profit, in extorting a sense for Purgatory, or other profitable Doctrines, out of any Scripture. So Bellarmine does upon this place, and upon this place principally he relies, De purge. l. 1. c. 6. in this he triumphs, when he says, Hic locus apertè convincit quod volumus, Here needs no wresting, no disguising, here Purgatory is clearly and manifestly discovered. Now certainly, if we take the words as they are, and as the Holy Ghost hath left them to us, we find no such manifestation of this Doctrine, no such clear light, no such bonfire, no such beacon, no beam at all, no spark of any such fire of Purgatory: That because S. Paul says, That no man would be baptised Pro mortuis, for Dead, or, for the Dead, except he did assure himself of a Resurrection, that this should be Aperta convictio, an evident Conviction of Purgatory, is, if it be not a new Divinity, certainly a new Logic. But it is not the word, but the sense that they ground their assurance upon. Now, the sense which should ground an assurance in Doctrinal things, should be the literal sense: And yet here, in so important a matter of faith as Purgatory, it must not be a literal, a proper, a natural and genuine sense, but figurative, and metaphorical; for, in this place, Baptism must not signify literally the Sacrament of Baptism, but it must signify, in a figurative sense, a Baptism of tears. And then that figure must be a pregnant figure, a figure with child of another figure, for as this Baptism must signify tears, so these tears must signify all that they use to express by the name of Penance, and discipline, and mortification; Weeping, and fasting, and alms, and whipping, all must be comprehended in these tears; And then, as there was a mother figure, and a daughter figure, so there is a grandchild too; for here is a Prosopopoeia, an imagining, a raising up of a person that is not; That all this must be done by some man alive, with relation, and in the behalf of a dead person, that these afflictions which he takes upon himself in this world, may accrue, in the benefit thereof, to a man in another world. Now if any of this Evidence be defective, if it be not evident, that this is a figurative speech, but that the literal sense is very proper to the place, if it be not evident, that this figure of Baptism is meant for tears, and other penances; If it be not evident, that this penance is more than that man needed to have undergone for his own salvation, but that God became indebted to him for that penance so sustained, and if it be not evident, that this penance and supererogation may be applied and communicated to a dead man, it is a little too forwardly, and too courageously pronounced, Hic locus apertè convincit quod volu mus, We desire no more than this place, for the proof of Purgatory. Yet he pursues his triumph, Vera & genuina interpretatio, says he; As though he might waive the benefit, of making it a figurative sense, and have his ends, by maintaining it to be the literal sense; This is, says he, the true and natural sense of the place. But it will be hard for him, to persuade us, either that this is the literal sense of the place, or that this place needs any other, than a literal sense. Since he will not allow us a figurative sense, in that great mystery, in the Sacrament, in the Hoc est Corpus meum, but bind us punctually in the letter, without any figure, not only in the thing, (for in the thing, in the matter, we require no figure, we believe the body of Christ to be in the Sacrament as literally, as really as they do) but even in the words, and phrase of speech, He should not look that we should allow him a figurative sense in that place, which must be Apertissimus locus, his most evident place for the proof of so great an article of faith, as Purgatory is with them. We have a Rule, by which that sense will be suspicious to us, which is, Not to admit figurative senses in interpretation of Scriptures, where the literal sense may well stand; And he himself hath a Rule, (if he remember the Council of Trent) by which that sense cannot be admitted by himself, which is, That they must interpret Scriptures according to the unanime consent of the Fathers; and he knows in his conscience, that he hath not done so, as we shall remember him anon. Not to founder by standing long in this puddle, he makes no other argument, that Baptism must here be understood of afflictions voluntarily sustained, but that that word Baptism is twice used, and accepted so in the Scriptures by Christ himself; It is taken so there, therefore it must be taken so here. But not to speak at all, of the weakness of that Consequence, (the word hath been taken figuratively, therefore it must never return to a literal sense) which will hold as well, that because Christ is called Porta, A Gate, therefore when Samson is said to have carried a Gate, Samson must be a Christopher, and carry Christ; And because Christ is a vine, and a way, and water, and bread, wheresoever any of these words are, they must be intended of Christ; not to stand upon the argument and inconsequence, I say, this word Baptism, hath not that signification, which he would have it have here, in any of those other places of Scripture, which he citys to this purpose. They are but two, and may quickly be considered; The first is, when Christ asks the ambitious Apostles, Mat. 20.20. Luk. 12.50. Are ye able to drink of the Cup, that I shall drink of, and to be baptised with the baptism, that I shall be baptised with? The second is in S. Luke, I must be baptised with a Baptism, and how am I grieved, till it be ended? In both which places, Christ doth understand by this word Baptism, his Passion; That is true: And so ordinarily in the Christian Church, as the days of the death of the Martyrs were called Natalitia Martyrum, The Birthday's of the Martyrs; so Martyrdom itself, was called a Baptism, Baptisma sanguinis, The Baptism of Blood; That is also true; but what then? was the Passion of Christ himself, such an affliction, as Bellarmine speaks of here, and argues from in this place, that is, an affliction so inflicted upon himself, and undertaken by himself, as that then when he did bear it, he might have forborn it, and refused to bear it? Though nothing were more voluntary than Christ's submitting himself to that Decree of dying for man, yet when that Decree was passed, to which he had a privity, nothing was more necessary, nor unavoidable to any man, than the Death of the Cross was to Christ, neither could he not only not have saved us, but not have been exalted in his humane nature himself, if he had not died that death; for all that was wrapped up in the Decree, and from that grew out, the propterea exaltatus, and the oportuit pati, That all those things Christ ought to suffer, And therefore, therefore because he did suffer all that, he was exalted. And will Bellarmine say, that the Martyrdom of the Martyrs in the primitive Church was so voluntarily sustained, as that they might have forsaken the cause of Christ, and refused Martyrdom, and yet have been saved, and satisfied the purpose, or the commandment of God upon them? If from us Bellarmine will not hear it, let him hear a man of his own profession; not only of his own Religion, but so narrowly of his own profession, as to have been a public Reader of Divinity in a great University as well as he; Estius. And he says, Sunt aliqui recentiores, qui baptizari interpretantur affligi; There are some, says he, not all, nor the most, and therefore it is not so manifest a place; Sunt aliqui recentiores, There are some of the later men, says he, not of the Fathers, or Expositors in the primitive Church, and therefore it is not so reverend, and uncontrollable an opinion; But only some few later men there are, says he, that think that Baptism in this place is to be understood of Affliction. But, says the same Doctor, It is an Interpretation valde figurata, & rara, wholly relying upon a figure, and a figure very rarely used; so rarely, says he, non ab alio, quam à Christo usurpetur, That never any but Christ, in the Scriptures, called Affliction, Baptism. So that it lacks thus much of being a manifest proof for Purgatory, as Bellarmine pretends, That it is neither the common sense, but of a few; nor the ancient sense, but of a few later men; nor a sense obvious, and ordinary, and literal, but figurative, and that figure not communicated to others, but only applied by Christ, and appropriated to his Passion, which was not a passion so undergone, as that then when he suffered it, he might have refused it, which is necessary for that Doctrine, which Bellarmine would evict from it. But because Bellarmine, in whom, perchance, the Spirit of a Cardinal hath not overcome the Spirit of a Jesuit, will admit no competition, nor diversity of opinion, except it be from one of his own Order, we have justinian, a man refined in that Order, justinian. a Jesuit as well as he, an Italian, and so hath his natural and national refining as well as he, and one, whose books are dedicated to the Pope as well as his, and so hath had an Oraculous refining, by an allowance Oraculo vivae vocis, by the breath of life, the Oracle of truth, the Pope's approbation, as well as he, and thus much better, That justinian's never were, but Bellarmine's books have been threatened by the Inquisition, And justinian never was, but Bellarmine hath been put to his Retractations; And he says only this of this place, Aliqui referunt ad corporis vexationes, pro Mortuis, Some men refer these words to bodily afflictions, sustained by men alive, for the Dead; Et haec sententia multis vehementer probatur, says he, This interpretation hath much delighted, and satisfied many men: Sed potest dici, says he, By their leaves, this may be said, If S. Paul ask, Why do men afflict themselves, in the behalf of them that are dead? it may be answered, says he, That if they do so, they are fools in doing so. S. Paul intends certainly, to prove the Resurrection by these words; neither, says he, could the Resurrection of the body be proved by all S. Paul's argument, if that were admitted to be the right sense of the place; for what were all this to the Resurrection of the body, which is S. Paul's scope, and purpose in the place, If men were baptised, that is, (as Bellarmine would have it) if they did suffer voluntarily, and unnecessarily affliction for the Dead, that is, to deliver their souls out of Purgatory; what would all this conduce to the proof of the Resurrection of the body? But that we may have a witness against him, in all his capacities, as we have produced one, as he is a Jesuit, and another equal to him, as he was public Professor, so to consider him as a Cardinal, (for, as a Cardinal, Bellarmine hath changed his opinion in some things that he held, before he was hood-wincked with his Hat) to consider him therefore so, we have a witness against him, in the Consistory, Cardinal Cajetan, Cajetan. who finds no baptism of tears, nor penance in these words, no application of any affliction sustained voluntarily by the living, in the behalf and contemplation of the dead, but adhering to that, which is truly the purpose of the Apostle, to prove the resurrection of the body, he says, In hoc quòd merguntur sub aqua, mortuos gerunt, When in Baptism, they are, as it were, buried under the water, (as the form of Baptising was then by Immersion of the whole body, and not only by Aspersion upon the face) they are, says he, buried for dead, presented by the Church, as dead in Christ; Et in hoc, quòd ad hoc merguntur, ut emergant, agunt mortuorum resurrectionem; In this, that they are therefore buried under water, because they may be raised above water again, in this they represent the resurrection of the dead. So in the act of Baptism literally, and Sacramentally taken, that Cardinal hath found an evident argument, and proof of the Resurrection. And then, in the next words, he hath found, that that which is done in this action, is done for him, that doth it, and not with relation to any other; In hoc quòd se profitentur mortuos mundo, agunt mortuos, In this, that in the act of Baptism, they profess themselves to be dead to the world, they are baptised for dead, And in this, says he, that they profess themselves to be dead to the world in Baptism, therefore that by that Baptism they may rise to a newness of life, Profitentur resurrectionem mortuorum, They profess the Resurrection of the dead: And this destroys utterly the purpose of Bellarmine in these words, because the Baptism spoken of here, be it a Sacramental Baptism literally, or a Disciplinary Baptism, metaphysically, yet is a Baptism determined, for the benefit thereof, upon him that is baptised, and not extended to the dead in Purgatory. Since than it is the Exposition of a few only, Alii dicunt, Aliqui dicunt, Others have said so, Some few have said so, and those few are late men, new men, and of those new men, Jesuits, and Readers, and Cardinals have differed from that opinion, this Jesuit, and Reader, and Cardinal Bellarmine needed not to have made that victorious acclamation, Hic locus, we desire no more than this place, for the evident proof of Purgatory. Much less did it become that lesser man, that Minorite Friar, Fevardentius, who for name's sake, (it seems, for his name is Burning fire) is so over-vehement for this place, in defence of Purgatory, to pronounce so peremptorily, for this interpretation of this Text, Qui huic sententiae concordat, Catholicus, qui discordat, Haereticus est; He that interprets these words thus, is a Catholic, and he is an Heretic that interprets them otherwise. For thus, he leaves out the Fathers themselves out of the Ark, and makes them Heretics; And howsoever they pretend peace amongst themselves, he proclaims, at least discovers a war amongst themselves, for they are of themselves, whom he calls Heretics. job 9.4. Indeed, Quis restitit Domino, & pacem habuit? who ever resisted the truth of God's word, and brought in Expositions to serve turns, and had peace amongst themselves? When they went about this building of Purgatory, they thought not of that counsel, Luk. 14.28. When you build, sit down before, and count the cost, lest men mock you; They never considered how they were provided of Materials, what they had from the Prophets, what from the Evangelists, what from the Apostles, for the building of this Purgatory: They had the disease of our times; If they might build, they thought it a profitable course; If they could raise a Purgatory, they were sure they should gain by it; but neither had they leave to build, that is, to erect new Articles of faith, neither had they wherewithal; And therefore being destitute of the foundation of all, the Scriptures of God, and having raked together some straws, and sticks, ends of Poetry, and Philosophy, and some rubbish of the Manichees, they have made such a work under ground, as their Predecessors made above ground, in the Tower of Babel, in which they understand not one another, but are in a confusion amongst themselves, Quia restiterunt Domino, And who ever resisted the Lord, and had peace? Thus fare we have proceeded in rescuing these words, Patres. from their captivity, from the enemy, that enforced them to testify for Purgatory. And, according to my understanding of S. Hieromes rule, who says, That in interpreting of Scriptures, he ever proposed to himself Necessitatem, & perspicuitatem, The necessity being (as I take it) the redeeming of the words from the ill interpretation of Heretics, which we have now done; For the perspicuity, and clearness, you shall see first, how the Ancients, before they suspected any ill use of them for Purgatory, received them, and then how the later men, after they had been mis-applied for Purgatory, interpret them: All which I shall propose with as much clearness as I can, as taking myself bound thereunto, by that other rule of the same Father, Qui per me intellecturus est Apostolum, nolo ut ad Interpretem cognoscendum, alium quaerat Interpretem, I would not have them, who come hither to understand the Apostle from me, be put to seek help from others, to understand me; when I must tell them what S. Paul meant, I would not have them put to ask what I meant; and therefore as fare as the matter will bear it, I would speak plainly to every capacity. First then, Tertul. for Tertullian, he seems to understand this Baptism for the dead, De vicario baptismate, of Baptism by an Attorney, by a Proxy, which should not be such a Godfather, as should be a witness or surety for me, when I am baptised alive, but such a Godfather, as should be baptised for me when I am dead. For, that perverse and heretical custom was then come into practice, that out of a false opinion, (though grounded, or coloured with a zeal of reverence to the Sacrament) that Baptism was so absolutely necessary, as that none could possibly be saved, that were not actually baptised; When any man died without Baptism, his friends used to baptise another in his name; The dead body was laid under the bed, and another man that was laid in the bed, to represent him, answered to all those questions which the Priest should ask, concerning Baptism, in the behalf of him that lay under the bed, (as the Sureties do now in the Church for a child, that perchance understands no more than that dead man did) and then that person in the bed, was baptised for him who lay under the bed. Now Tertullian thinks, that the Apostle argues out of that custom, and disputes thus, If there were no Resurrection, why do you thus provide for them that are dead, by baptising others for them? To what purpose do ye this, if they for whom you do it have no Resurrection? But, besides that it is not much probable, that S. Paul would take an Heretical action, and practise, for the ground of his Argument, to prove so great a mystery of our faith, as the Resurrection is, and besides that, it doth not appear that this Heretical practice (which is attributed to the Marcionits') was entered into the Church in S. Paul's time, and therefore he could not take knowledge of it; Besides all this, all this, if it were granted, did nothing at all conduce to S. Paul's ends, who had undertaken the proof of the Resurrection of the body, and the answer was easy, and obvious, We do not baptise living men in the name, and in the behalf of the dead, for any other respect, then for the salvation of their souls, and what is that to the resurrection of the body? So that this sense of Tertullias, of Baptism by a Proxy, by an Attorney, seems not to be the sense of this place; and yet because it savours of charity to the dead, though it were an heretical custom, Bellarmine prefers this interpretation of Tertullian, before any other but his own, which we handled before. Theodoret interprets this Baptism for the dead to be a baptism of Representation; Theodoret. That in baptism, by being put under the water, and raised up again, we represent the death and resurrection of Christ; for the dead, is for Christ, for the testimony of Christ: And therefore that baptising by immersion, by covering the party with water, was so exactly observed in those times, as it came to be thought, that no man was well baptised, except he had received it so, by Immersion, as by many Treatises, and many Consultations amongst the Fathers, by way of Letters, and the Acts of some Counsels, we perceive. And of this representation of the death of Christ, in our Baptism, administered in that manner, by Immersion, S. Paul is thought by some to have spoken, when he says, Know ye not that all we that have been baptised into jesus Christ, Rom. 6.3. have been baptised into his death? That is, say they, by that representation of his death, in Immersion. Neither is any thing more evident, then that Theodoret was so far in the right, that our baptism (and the rather in that form of Immersion) is a representation of the death, and burial, and resurrection of Christ; but yet to call this Baptism therefore, because it was a representation of Christ, who was dead, a Baptism for the dead, is a phrase somewhat more hard and unusual, then may be easily admitted, in such a matter of faith as this is. And besides, that Baptism, which is this Representation, is a Baptism common to all; all that are baptised, are baptised so; But the Apostle in this place makes his argument from a particular kind of Baptism, which some did, and some did not use, Quid de illis, says he, what shall become of them? and Quid illi, what do they mean that are baptised in this peculiar manner? So that, as not Tertullias baptism by an Attorney, so neither Theodoret's baptism by Representation, seems to be the sense of this place. S. chrysostom, much about the same time with Theodoret, and long after them both, Chrysost. Theophylact. (at least six hundred years) Theophylact, meet in a third sense; That because at the taking of Baptism, they did usually rehearse the Creed, which Creed concluded with those articles, The resurrection of the body, and life everlasting, therefore this baptism for the dead should only signify a baptism for the hope of the Resurrection. But since they rehearsed all the articles of the Christian belief, as well as that, at Baptism, it might as properly be said, that they were baptised for Christ; baptised for the holy Ghost, baptised for the descent into hell, as for the dead: And besides that, this was also a baptism common to all, all rehearsed the Articles of the Creed; it was not such a peculiar baptism, as the Apostle hath respect to here, in his Quid de illis, and Quid illi, what shall become of them, and what do they mean by this their Baptism? And therefore this seems not to be the sense. That this Baptism for the dead should only be a profession of that article of the Resurrection of the dead, though S. chrysostom, and Theophylact concur in, or derive from, or upon one other that interpretation. To come lower, and to a lower rank of witnesses, from the Fathers to the School, Aquinas. Aquinas hath another sense; and certainly an useful, a devout, and an appliable interpretation; which is, That Mortui here are peccata, Those that are called Dead here, are Dead works, sins, and so to be baptised for the dead, is to be baptised for our sins, for the washing away our sins, in an acknowledgement, That although we did contract a leprous sin, even in our conception, That we were subject to the wrath and indignation of God, before we were able to conceive that there was a God, That before our bones were hardened, the canker and rust of Adam's sin was in our bones, That before we were a minute old, we have a sin in us that is six thousand years old, That though we be as blind after we come out of our mother's bellies, as we were there, Though we pass over our time, without ever ask our own consciences, why we were sent hither, Though our sins have hardened us against God, and done a harder work than that, in hardening God against us, yet though we have turned God into a Rock, there is water in that rock, Num. 20. if we strike it, if we solicit it, affect it with our repentance. As in the stone font in the Church, there is water of Baptism, so in the Corner stone of the Church, Christ Jesus, whom we have hardened against us, there is a tenderness, there is a Well of water springing up into everlasting life. As we have changed this water into stone, petrified God's tenderness towards us, Psal. 114.8. so convertit petram in stagna aquarum, says David, He hath turned that rock into a standing water, (water, and water that stays with us, in his Church) and the flint into a fountain of waters; that is, says S. Augustine, seipsum, & suam quandam duritiam liquefecit, ad irrigandos fideles, At the beams of his own mercy, God hath thawed that ice, and dissolved that stone, into which we had hardened him, and he hath let in a River of Jordan into his Church, the Sacrament of Baptism, in the present act, and subsequent efficacy whereof, we are washed from original, and from actual sins. All these sins are the fruits of death, as they are opposed against the Lord of life, and pro hisce mortuis baptizamur, says Aquinas; for the dead, that is, for these dead works, we are baptised. And certainly, for a second sense, to exalt our devotion by, I should prefer this before any other; But the principal and literal sense of this place, this cannot be, because it is a figurative sense; and though the figure be not in the word Baptism, where Bellarmine places it, (for Aquinas speaks literally of a Sacramental Baptism) yet it is in the other word In mortuis, (Aquinas doth not speak literally, but metaphorically of the Dead) and that may as ill be admitted, in a matter of faith, of so great importance, as the other. And besides, this seems to conclude nothing necessarily for the resurrection of the body, that we are washed from our sins; And lastly, this is still a Baptism common to all, all that are baptised, are baptised from their sins; And therefore this of Aquinas, not reaching to S. Paul's Quid de illis, and Quid illi, to these men thus baptised, is not that sense neither, which we seek. But the time will not permit us to pursue the several interpretations of those, Moderni. whom directly, or comparatively we call Ancients; Neither truly, though there be many other Interpreters than we have named, are there many other interpretations than we have touched upon, or then may be reduced to them. And therefore to end here this consideration of the Fathers, and those whom they esteem Pillars of their Church, we are thus much at our liberty for all them, That first there is no unanime consent in the interpretation of this place, and that which they bind themselves to follow, is the unanime consent of the Fathers; And than though the Fathers had unanimely consented in one, and that one had been the exposition which Bellarmine pursues, yet we might, by their example, have departed from it; for in the Roman Church, Fathers, and Father's Fathers, Popes themselves, (And howsoever the Fathers may be Fathers, in respect of us, yet in respect of the Pope, who is S. Peter himself, and always sits in his person, the Fathers are but children, says Bellarmine) were of opinion, That the Sacrament of the Lords Supper was absolutely necessary for children, to their salvation, and this opinion lasted in force and in use for divers hundreds of years, neither was it ever repressed by Authority, till the other day, in the Council of Trent, but wore out of itself long before, because it had no foundation; So the opinion of the Millenarians, That Christ with his Saints should have a thousand years of a temporal reign here upon earth, after his second coming, had possessed the Fathers, in a very great party. The Fathers, in a great party denied, that the souls of good men departed were to enjoy the sight of God, till the Resurrection. And the Fathers affirmed, That the cause of God's election was the foresight of the faith and obedience of the Elect. These errors are so noted, even by the Authors of the Roman Church, (for I depart not herein from their own words, and observations) as that they still present them so, Omnes, plurimi, All the Fathers, Most of the Fathers, were of this and this opinion; And yet for all these Fathers, no man in the Roman Church is so childish now, as to give his child that Sacrament, or to accompany those Fathers in those other mistake. This hath been done in fact, they have departed from the Fathers; And then for a Rule, Cardinal Cajetan tells us, That if a new sense of any place of Scripture, agreeable to other places, and to the analogy of faith, arise to us, it is not to be refused, Quia torrens patrum, because the stream of the Fathers is against it. For they themselves have told us, why we may suspect the Fathers, and by what means the Fathers have fall'n into many misinterpretations. First they say, Quia glaciem sciderunt, because the Fathers broke the Ice, and undertook the interpretation of many places, in which they had no light, no assistance from others, and so might easily turn into a sinister way: And then Rhetoricati sunt, say they, The Fathers often applied themselves in figurative, and hyberbolical speeches, to exalt the devotions, and stir up the affections of their auditory, and therefore must not be called to too severe, and literal an account, for all that they uttered in that manner: And again, Plebi indulserunt, as S. Augustine says of himself, sometimes out of a loathness to offend the ignorant, and sometimes the holy and devout, and that he might hold his auditory together, and avert none from coming to him, he was unwilling to come to such an exact truth, in the explication and application of some places, as that for the sharpness and bitterness thereof, weaker stomaches might forbear. So also, they confess too, that ex vehementia declinarunt, In heat of disputation, and argument, and to make things strait, they bent them too much on the other hand, and to oppose one Heresy, they endangered the inducing of another, as in S. Augustine's disputations against the Pelagians, who over-advanced the free will of man, and the Manicheans, who by admitting Duo principia, two Causes, an extrinsique cause of our evil actions, as well as of our good, annihilated the free will of man, we shall find sometimes occasions to doubt whether S. Augustine were constant in his own opinion, and not transported sometimes with vehemency against his present adversary, whether Pelagian, or Manichean. Which is a disease that even some great Counsels in the Church, and Church-affaires have felt, that for collateral and occasional, and personal respects, which were risen after they were met, the main doctrinal points, and such as have principally concerned the glory of God, and the salvation of souls, and were indeed the principal and only. cause of their then meeting there, have been neglected. Men that came thither with a fervent zeal to the glory of God, have taken in a new fire of displeasure against particular Heretics, or Schismatics, and discontinued their holy zeal towards God, till their occasional displeasure towards those persons might be satisfied, and so those Heresies, and Heretics against whom they met, have got advantage by that passion, which hath overtaken and overswayed them, after they were met. And whatsoever hath fallen into Counsels of that kind, Ecclesiastical Counsels, may possibly be imagined, or justly be feared, or at least, without offence be pre-disswaded, and deprecated, in all Civil Consultations, and Counsels of State, That Occasional things may not divert the Principal: for as in the Natural body, the spleen may suffocate the heart, and yet the spleen is but the sewar of the body, and the heart is the strength and the Palais thereof; so in politic bodies, and Counsels of State, an immature and indigested, an intempestive and unseasonable pressing of present remedies against all inconveniencies, may suffocate the heart of the business, and frustrate and evacuate the blessed and glorious purpose of the whole Council. The Basilisk is very sharp-sighted, but he sees therefore, and to that end, that he may kill: So is, so does passion. Who would wish to be sharper sighted than the Eagle? And his strength of sight is in this, that he looks to the Sun; To look to things that are evident, The evident danger of the State and the Church, The evident malice and power of the enemy, The evident storm upon our peace and Religion, To look that God be not tempted by us, nor his Lieutenant and Vicegerent wearied, and hardened towards us, This is the object of the eagle's eye, and this is wisdom high enough. Where men see a great foundation laid, they will think, that all that is not only to raise a Spittle to cure, or a Churchyard to bury a few diseased persons. Great Counsels are great foundations; and the superedifications fit for them, are the safety of the State, and the good of the Church: And, as in coming to such Counsels, every man puts off his own person, and leaves himself at home, so neither when he is there, should he so seek out, or hunt after any particular person, as that that should retard public business. God forbidden that my praying that things may not be so, should be interpreted for a suspicion in me, that things are so; God forbidden, that invocation upon God, should imply a crimination upon men; The Spirit of God, in sense of whom, and in whose presence I speak, knows that my prayer is but a prayer, and not an Increpation, not an Insimulation; And therefore may God be pleased to hear, and good men be pleased to join in this prayer, That God will so be satisfied, with having laid his own hand upon us, in the late pestilence, as neither to make any foreign hand, nor one another's hand, his instrument to destroy, or farther to punish us. And so, having been invited by this Consideration, that Fathers and Counsels have deflected into error, to say so much of Civil Counsels too, we depart from this Point thus, that though the Fathers had consented in Bellarmine's Exposition, that had laid no obligation upon us; how much less, when we find scarce any of them to agree with one another, nor any one of them to agree with him; and therefore we pass to the Consideration of the later men. And amongst the later men, we will give the first place to a Jesuit, because they love Primos accubitus, as our Saviour says of the Pharisees, To be placed highest, and they love to be called, if not Rabbi, Master, yet Abba, Father; (for that is a name which the youngest Jesuit will challenge to himself, to be called Father; and amongst us, I am afraid, they come to that name, the name of Father, a little too literally, they are fathers indeed, where they should not be so) Next to the true Fathers, we place then a imaginary Father, Maldonat. the Jesuit Maldonate, who interprets this place thus, That to be baptised for the dead, when the Apostle spoke, was to suffer Martyrdom, or affliction for the testimony of the resurrection of the Dead: for we see, that the doctrine of the Resurrection especially was inquired upon, and given in charge, and made criminal and odious, Acts 23.6. by that which the Apostle says in the Acts, Of the hope, and resurrection of the dead, I am called in question. Now, I will not say of Maldonat, as Maldonat does of us, who, when sometimes he citys the interpretation of our Authors, will say, This is the likeliest and the probablest sense, and I should believe it to be the true sense, but that an Heretic said it; I will not say, I would admit Maldonats' sense, but that a Jesuit says it; for, for all that, I would receive it, so far as it may stand, but yet not for the primary and principal sense; for so, we cannot receive it, because it is grounded upon a figure, for he takes not Baptism, for the Sacrament of Baptism, but for the Metaphorical Baptism, the Baptism of blood. And then Bellarmine will not accept his sense, because though they agree in the figure, that Baptism signifies affliction, yet they differ in these two important points, That first Bellarmin takes it for affliction voluntarily sustained, (for that only constitutes Supererogation, which is necessary to Bellarmine's sense) and Maldonate taketh it for affliction inflicted by a Persecutor, for a testimony of his faith, in which case to decline the penalty, were to deny the faith, and therefore is no more then, being so called by God, he is bound to suffer: And then Bellarmine takes it for affliction sustained in the behalf, and for the benefit of another dead friend, and Maldonat determines it in him that does it, for an outward testimony of his constancy in the faith of the Resurrection. So that this Jesuit hath brought no stone to Bellarmine's building from this place, he works not in his harvest, he conduces not to his end, he goes not his way. But to contract ourselves in this last Part, we find amongst our own men (Expositors since the Reformation) two senses of these words, of which either may be taken, for both come home to the purpose and intention of the Apostle, which is, to prove the Resurrection, and to all the other circumstances, in which we have observed the other Interpretations to be deficient. The first is, that this was a Baptism of those men, Qui ad testandam certissiman spem de Resurrectione, which for a more especial testimony of their faith in the Resurrection, did (according to the use of many, in those first times) administer, or receive Baptism, upon the tombs and graves of other Christians, formerly departed this life, and thereby declared both their charitable opinion, that those who were there buried, should receive a resurrection, And that themselves were baptised into the same faith, and so made up the Communion of Saints. And in this sense is the Original best preserved, which seems not to be so properly translated, Pro mortuis, as Super mortuos, not for the Dead, but upon the Dead, upon the graves of the Dead: If there be no resurrection of the Dead, why do some of you choose to be baptised upon the Dead, upon the graves of the Dead, rather than in other places? And this is the Exposition of him, Luther. Melancton. who is evermore powerful in the Exposition of those Scriptures which he undertakes, Luther. And Melancton, a man of more learning and temperance then perchance have met in any one, in our perverse and froward times, follows the same Interpretation, and adds, That he that was to be Baptised, was brought to the bones of them that were buried there, and that there he was asked, whether he did believe that that body which lay so scattered there, should be restored again, and made capable of a glorious Resurrection, and upon confession of that faith he received his Baptism: And this, says Melancton (a man freest of any from contention) is Interpretatio simplex, nativa, & vera, The plain, the natural, and the true signification of the place. Neither is this Interpretation subject to that calumny, which our Adversaries use to object, that in any Interpretation of Luther's, or Melanctons, the rest who profess them their Disciples, follow as Sheep, but others, though of the Reformation too, do not so: for we have another, esteemed in his Division, Piscator. a learned and narrow searcher into the literal sense of Scripture, who though he be very far from communion (in opinion) with them, whom, for distinction, the world calls Lutherans, though he be none of those sheep, which run after Luther, yet out of a holy ingenuity, and inclination to truth, he professes this interpretation of the place, to be Omnium simplicissimam, the most sincere and natural interpretation, and that it doth not wound, nor violate the purpose and intention of the Apostle, as, says he, all the other interpretations, which Beza produces, do. And yet Beza himself, as well as Piscator, in their translatitions, retain the Super, which is in Luther, and make it so, a baptism upon the dead, and not for the dead. To be baptised then for the dead, or upon the dead, is, in their understanding, an expectation of a Resurrection for themselves, together with them, in sight of whose dead bodies they were baptised. Here is no figurative speech, but the words taken in their proper, and present, and first signification. And this is not of a general baptism, common to all, but of a custom taken up by some in the Church of Corinth, out of special devotion, and testification of the Resurrection. And lastly, this had reference, not only to the immortality of the soul, but to the resurrection of the body also, which was then in their contemplation, in which Circumstance, most of the former interpretations of the Ancients were defective, for still it might have been answered to S. Paul's question, Quid illi, Quid de illis? What mean they, and what becomes of them? We do all this for the salvation of souls, though we do not bind ourselves to believe a resurrection of bodies; So that all the particulars that S. Paul proposed to himself, meet fully, and strongly, in this interpretation. Nothing can be opposed against it, if the history be true; if the matter of fact be clear and evident, if it appear fully, that this was a custom in the Apostles time, that those Christians did use to receive baptism upon the graves of the dead. I doubt not but Luther had ground for it; I doubt not but Melancton had Authors; for he says, Aliqui scribunt, some have written it. They may have seen Authors, whom I have not; for my part, I confess, I never found this Custom in the Ecclesiastic Story, to my remembrance. And when the Centuriators, who gathered the Story of the Church, with some diligence, and who were of the persuasion whom the world calls Lutherans, when they say, Constat, It is manifest, that in the Church of Corinth, Cent. 1. l. 2. c. 6. they did baptise in that manner, upon the graves of the dead, they never cite any testimony of History for their Constat, nor for their evidence of this matter of fact, but only this very place of Scripture, this text; and the director and the fuller way had been, to have proved the text from the story, than the story from the text. The Exposition is very fair, and very likely, if the matter of fact be proved; and the fact may be proved by some, whom those reverend persons have read, and I have not. There is one Interpretation more, which is open to no imputation, spotted with no aspersion, subject to no objection, and therefore fittest to be embraced, which is also grounded upon a Custom, which came very early into the Church of God, (so early as that we can assign no beginning) and of which Custom for the matter of fact, we are sure it was in practice: which was, that upon an opinion, that at the time of Baptism, there was an absolute washing away, and a deliverance from all sins, men did ordinarily, or very often, defer their baptism till their deathbed, that so they might have their transmigration, and passage out of this world, in that purity, that baptism restored them to, without contracting any more sins after baptism. This we are too sure was in use; for we see the Ecclesiastical Story full of Examples of it, in great persons; great in power and authority, for Constantine the Emperor deferred his baptism, long after his resolution to be a Christian; And great in estimation, and merit, and knowledge; for S. Augustine remembers it with much compunction, That in an extreme sickness, Conf. l. 1. c. 11. Flagitavi baptismum à Matre, he begged at his Mother's hands, that he might be baptised, and obtained it not, because he was a person, (in her observation) like enough to fall into more sins, after he had been delivered of those by baptism. He notes the general disposition of his time, Sonat undique, It is every man's voice, every man's saying, Sine eum, faciat quid vult, nondum baptizatus est, Let him alone yet, let him do what he will yet, for yet he is not baptised: But, says that blessed Father there, would they say to a man that lay wounded and weltering in his blood, Sine eum, vulneretur ampliùs, nondum enim sanatus est, Let him lie, or give him two or three wounds more, for the Surgeon is not come yet to cure him? And yet, says he, his and my case is all one. Before his time, which was after four hundred years, we may see, that this custom of late baptising, was not only tolerated, but advised and counselled in the Church, when Tertullian, two hundred years before S. Augustine, chides away young children, from coming to Baptism, so soon, before, says he, they need it; Quid festinat innocens aetas ad remissionem peccatorum? Why are they brought to the washing away of sins, which as yet have committed no sin? And he makes Baptism so occasional a thing, and subject to so many Circumstances, that very many other occasions might put off Baptism. Innuptis procrastinandus baptismus, says Tertullian, quia eis praeparata tentatio; He would not have them baptised, that meant to marry soon after, because they were to wrestle with a great tentation, as long as their fancy and imagination was full of their future marriage. So soon, and so deeply was this opinion rooted, (that it was to little purpose to baptise till towards our death) that S. Basil was feign to oppose it expressly in the Eastern Church, And both the Gregory's, Nazianzen and Nyssen, and then S. Ambrose, and others, in the Western, all arguing against it, as a custom long before in use, and none assigning any beginning of it. Upon this custom then S. Paul argues; If men upon their deathbed, when they are esteemed pro Mortuis, as good as dead, no better then dead, (for so the phrase is ordinarily used, pro derelicto, pro perdito, when we esteem a man forsaken, or a thing lost) If men desire baptism, when they are held pro mortuis, no other then dead, given over for dead, and are to have no fellowship with themilitant Church here in this life, do they not in this care of this act to be done upon their bodies, imply a confession of the Resurrection? These were they, whom those times called Clinicos, Bed-baptists, Bed-Christians, which either deferred their baptism, upon the reasons mentioned before, that they might be sure to have a pure transmigration, presently after Baptism; Or else they were Catechumeni, such Convertits to the Christian faith, as the Church had undertaken to instruct and catechise, but did not baptise till a certain time, (Easter, and Whitsontyde) except they were surprised with sudden sickness, and then they were baptised in their deathbed: And both ways the sense stands well, That they were baptised pro Mortuis, that is, pro Derelictis, where they were given over for dead, when there was no hope of life, Or else pro Mortuis, that is, pro statu Mortuorum, only with respect to their state after this life, because they were going to the dead. And these be Divina Compendia, as S. Cyprian calls them, God's Abridgements, who can give his grace in a minute; for, 7. l. 4. 2d Magnum. as he says in the end of that Epistle, Clinici, an peripatetici, whether they be walking, or bedrid Christians, Sacramenti majestas & sanctitas non derogetur, The Sacrament hath the same power, whether they be baptised for the living, or for the dead, that is, to remain with us in this world, or to departed to them of the next. And this Exposition is not so much the Exposition of later men, as that it is destitute of the honour of Antiquity; Haeres. 28. for Epiphanius, the eldest whom we have named yet, but Tertullian, opposes this sense and interpretation of these words, to that sense which Tertullian laid hold of, De baptismate vicario, of his Baptism, by Proxy, and Attorney. It is so reasonable, that we need no better approbation of it, but that, (though it be especially pursued by Calvin) that great professor, Estius. and reader in Divinity, whom we spoke of before, hath given of it, that it is Sensus apertus, & simplicissimus, omnibus aliis anteponendus, & ad probandum id quod Apostolus instituit aptissimus, It is the directest sense, and the plainest, a sense to be preferred before all the rest, as being fittest to establish all that the Apostle proposed in this place; To be baptised, says he, jamjam moriturus, when he is ready to die, is to be baptised pro mortuis, for the dead, with respect only to the state of the dead; and therefore in this interpretation which even the adversary hath approved, and justified for us, we may safely rest ourselves, and the rather, because our translations have relation to this sense, either as it is in our first Edition, pro Mortuis, for Dead, that is, as good as dead, or as it is in the second, pro Mortuis, for the Dead, for the state of the dead, and the hope of the resurrection. Thus, beloved, S. Paul hath made an argument here, to prove the Resurrection of the body; One of the hardest bones in the body, one of the darkest corners in the mysteries of our Religion, and yet all the Religions of the Heathens had ever some impressions of it: Seculum, resurrectionem mortuorum, nec cum errat, ignorat, says Tertullian, The world knew that there was some resurrection, though they were not come to know, what it was; For he remembers, that at their funerals, they prepared great feasts upon the graves of the dead, and cried out to them, Resurgite, comedite, bibite, Arise, and come to us, and eat and drink with us, They imagined some bodily being, and some possibility of conversation with the living, in the Dead. You have understood S. Paul's Argument, and yet perchance, you have not understood S. Paul. Quocumque respexer is fulmina sunt, says, S. chrysostom. All S. Paul's words work as lightning, Et capit omne quod tetigerit, It affects, and it leaves some mark upon every thing that it touches; And if he have touched thee now, his effect is not only to make thee believe a future resurrection of thy body, but to feel a present resurrection in thy soul, and to make me believe that thou feelest it, by expressing it in thy life and conversation: Ad intelligendum Paulum vita pura opus est; To understand S. Paul, a man must be an honest man; Chrysost. he must mend his life, that will be believed to have comprehended S. Paul; For if he be only the wiser, and the learneder, and not the better, and the honester, he hath but half understood S. Paul. S. Paul condemns Hymenaeus, 2 Tim. 2.17. and Philetus for saying The Resurrection was passed already; That is, as S. Augustine interprets it, that all the Resurrection which we are to have, is nothing but a resurrection from sin. If S. Paul say so bitterly, that this doctrine doth fret as a canker, because it is not enough, what will he say, if thou be'st not come so fare, as to a Resurrection from sin? We fall away into manifold, and miserable dejections, but Qui cadit, non resurget? Jer. 8.4. Shall we fall, and not arise? shall we turn away, and not turn again? Shall not God be able to multiply our resurrections as well as the Devil our falls from God? We are dejected when we see the wicked prosper; when God seems to behave himself, as a Prince that were not well settled in his government, and durst not offend nor displease any party, nor take knowledge of their insolent and rebellious proceed. When men that tempt God, and never pray for any thing before hand, nor thank him for it, when they have it, and yet sweat in their abundances, when the children of God starve for their crumbs, we are dejected. But David found a resurrection in this case, and a strange one, which was, that he could buy down and steep in peace; his resurrection was, Psal. 4.8. Dedisti laetitiam in cord, Thou hast put gladness into my heart, more than in the time that their corn, and their wine increased. If all God's promifes be not presently performed unto us, temporal supplies in all temporal wants, spiritual supplies in all spiritual distresses presently administered, we are dejected. But Abraham had a resurrection in this case; when God had said to him, In Isaac vocabitur semen tuum, In Isaac shall all Nations be blessed, and then had commanded him to stop up that fountain, to dig up that foundation, to pull up that root of all this universal blessing, to sacrifice that very Isaac, yet Abraham erected himself, Heb. 11.19. only with considering, That God was able to raise Isaac from the dead. He left God to his own will when he would do it, it was resurrection enough to him, to establish himself in the assurance that God could do it. If thou be dejected and depressed with the weight of thy sins, if the malediction, and curses, and denunciations of God's judgements against sinners lie heavy upon thee, make haste to thy resurrection, raise thyself from it as fast as thou canst, for it is a grave that putrifies, and corrupts, and molders away a soul apace. Laetetur cor quaerentium Dominum, Psal. 105.3. says David; Thou art not in the right way of finding the Lord, if thou do not find a joy in the seeking of him; Though thou canst not settle thyself in a sense that thou hast found him, yet thou hast, if thou canst find a holy melting, and joy in thy seeking of him. If the Angels be come down to destroy Sodom, If jonas be come to proclaim destruction to Nineveh, wilt thou make thyself believe that thou art a Citizen of Sodom, an inhabitant of Nineveh, and must necessarily be wrapped up in that destruction? If David say, Non sic impii, non sic, The wicked shall not stand in judgement, wilt thou needs be one of them? As a wise, and a discreet man will never believe that he that writes a satire, means him, though he touch upon his vices, so whatsoever the Prophets say, of an aversion, and obduration in God, against sinners, yet they mean not thee, nor do thou assume it, in an inevitableness upon thyself. The Angel of God, the Spirit of God shall deal with thee, as he did with Lot in Sodom; He told Lot overnight, Gen. 19.12. that he would burn the City, and bade him prepare; God shall give thee some grudge, before he exalt thy fever, and warn thee to consider thy state, and consult with thy spiritual Physician; The Angel called him up in the morning, and then hastened him, and when he prolonged, says the Text, The Angel caught him, and carried him forth, and set him without the City. Because, though there was no cooperation in Lot, yet there was no resisting neither, God was pleased to do all; So in this death of diffidence, and sense of God's fearful judgements, God opens thy grave now, and now he calls to thee, Lazare veni for as, Come forth Lazarus, and he offers his hand to pull thee out now, Iosh. 1.6. Only Comfortare & esto robustus, as God said to joshuah, Be strong and have a good courage, and as God adds there, Comfortare & esto robustus valde, Multiply thy courage, and God shall multiply thy strength, in all dejections have a cheerful apprehension of thy resurrection, and thou shalt have it, nay thou hast it. But this death of desperation, or diffidence in God's mercy, by God's mercy hath swallowed none of us, but the death of sin hath swallowed us all, and for our own customary sins we all need a resurrection: And what is that? Resurrectio à peccato, & cessatio à peccato, Durand. non est idem; Every cessation from sin, is not a resurrection from sin. A man may discontinue a sin, intermit the practice of a sin, by infirmity of the body, or by satiety in the sin, or by the absence of that person, with whom he hath used to communicate in that sin. Damasc. But Resurrectio, est secunda ejus, quod interiit, statio. A Resurrection is such an abstinence from the practice of the sin, as is grounded upon a repentance, and a detestation of the sin, and then it is a settling, and an establishing of the soul in that state, and disposition: It is not a sudden and transitory remorse, nor only a reparation of that which was ruined, and demolished, but it is a building up of habits contrary to former habits, and customs, in actions contrary to that sin, that we have been accustomed to. Else it is but an Intermission, not a Resurrection; but a starting, not a waking; but an apparition, not a living body; but a cessation, not a peace of conscience. Now this Resurrection is begun, and well advanced in Baptismate lachrymarum, In the baptism of true and repentant tears. But, Beloved, as S. Paul in this place, hath a relation Ad baptismum clinicorum, to death-bed-baptists, death-bed-Christians, to them that defer their Baptism to their death, but he gives no allowance of it; So this Baptisma clinicorum, this repentance upon the deathbed, is a dangerous delay. Even of them, I will say with S. Paul here, If there were no Resurrection, no need to rise from sin by repentance, why are they then thus baptised, pro mortuis? why do they repent, when they are as good as dead, and have no more to suffer in this world? But if there be such a resurrection, a necessity of such a Baptism by repentance, why come they no sooner to it? For is any man sure to have it, or sure to have a desire to it then? It is never impertinent to repeat S. Augustine's words in this case, Etiam hac animadversione percutitur peccator, ut moriens obliviscatur sui, qui dum viveret, oblitus est Dei; God gins a dying man's condemnation at this, That as he forgot God in his life, so he shall forget himself at his death. Compare thy temporal, and thy spiritual state together, and consider how they may both stand well at that day. If thou have set thy state in order, and made a Will before, and have nothing to do at last, but to add a Codicil, this is soon dispatched at last; But if thou leave all till then, it may prove a heavy business. So if thou have repent before, and settled thyself in a religious course before, and have nothing to do then, but to wrestle with the power of the disease, and the agonies of death, God shall fight for thee in that weak estate; God shall imprint in thee a Cupio dissolvi, S. Paul's, not only contentedness, but desire to be dissolved; And God shall give thee a glorious Resurrection, yea an Ascension into Heaven before thy death, and thou shalt see thyself in possession of his eternal Kingdom, before thy bodily eyes be shut. Be therefore S. Cyprians Peripatetique, and not his Clinique Christian; A walking, and not a bedrid Christian; That when thou hast walked with God, as Henoch did, thou mayst be taken with God, as Henoch was, and so walk with the Lamb, as the Saints do in Jerusalem, and follow him whithersoever he goes; That even thy deathbed may be as Elias Chariot, to carry thee to heaven; And as the bed of the Spouse in the Canticles, which was Lectus floridus, a green and flourishing bed, where thou mayst find by a faithful apprehension, that thy sickness hath crowned thee with a crown of thorns, by participation of the sufferings of thy Saviour, and that thy patience hath crowned thee with that crown of glory, which the Lord the righteous Judge shall impart to thee that day. SERM. LXXIX. Preached at S. PAUL'S. PSAL. 90.14. O satisfy us early with thy mercy, that we may rejoice and be glad all our days. THey have made a Rule in the Council of Trent, that no Scripture shall be expounded, but according to the unanime consent of the Fathers: But in this Book of the Psalms, it would trouble them to give many examples of that Rule, that is, of an unanime consent of the Fathers, in the interpretation thereof. In this Psalm, Bellarmine in his Exposition of the Psalms, finds himself perplexed; He says (and says truly) Hieronymus constanter affirmat, Augustinus constanter negat, S. Hierome doth confidently and constantly affirm, and S. Augustine with as much confidence, and constancy deny, that this Psalm, and all that follow to the hundredth Psalm, are Moses Psalms, and written by him. And this divers constancy in these two Fathers, S. Hierome and S. Augustine, shake the constancy of that Canon, which binds to a following of an unanime consent, for that cannot be found. Bellarmine expedites himself herein, that way, which is indeed their most ordinary way amongst their Expositors, which is, where the Fathers differ, to adhere to S. Augustine. So he doth in this point; though most of the Ancients of the Christian Church, most of the Rabbins of the Jews, most of the Writers in the Reformation, take it to be Moses Psalm, and that way runs the greatest stream, and nearest to a concurrence. And thus far I have stopped upon this consideration, Whether this be Moses Psalm or no, That when it appears to be his Psalm, and that we see, that in the tenth verse of this Psalm, man's life is limited to seventy years, or at most to eighty, and then remember, that Moses himself, then when he said so, was above eighty, and in a good habitude long after that, we might hereby take occasion to consider, that God does not so limit, and measure himself in his blessings to his servants, but that for their good and his glory he enlarges those measures. God hath determined a day, from Sun to Sun, yet when God hath use of a longer day, for his glory, he commands the Sun to stand still, till joshua have pursued his victory. So God hath given the life of man, into the hand of sickness; and yet for all that deadly sickness, God enlarges Hezekiah's years: Moses was more than fourscore, when he told us, that our longest term was fourscore. If we require exactly an unanime consent, that all agree in the Author of this Psalm, we can get no farther, then that the holy Ghost is the Author. All agree the words to be Canonical Scripture, and so from the holy Ghost; and we seek no farther. The words are his, and they offer us these considerations; First, That the whole Psalm being in the Title thereof called a Prayer, A Prayer of Moses the man of God, it puts us justly, and pertinently upon the consideration of the many dignities and prerogatives of that part of our worship of God, Prayer; for there we shall see, That though the whole Psal me be not a Prayer, yet because there is a Prayer in the Psalm, that denominates the whole Psalm, the whole Psalm is a Prayer. When the Psalm grows formally to be a Prayer, our Text enters, O satisfy us early with thy mercy, that we may rejoice and be glad all our days: And in that there will be two Parts more, The Prayer itself, O satisfy us early with thy mercy, And the effect thereof, That we may rejoice and be glad all our days. So that our Parts are three; First Prayer, Then this Prayer, And lastly the benefit of all Prayer. For the first, which is Prayer in general, 1 Part. Prayer. I will thrust no farther than the Text leads me in, that is, That Prayer is so essential a part of God's worship, as that all is called Prayer. S. Hierome upon this Psalm says, Difficillimum Psalmum aggredior, I undertake the exposition of a very hard Psalm, and yet, says he, I would proceed so in the exposition thereof, ut interpretatio nostra aliena non egeat interpretatione, That there should not need another Comment upon my Comment, that when I pretend to interpret the Psalm, they that hear me, should not need another to interpret me: which is a frequent infirmity amongst Expositors of Scriptures, by writing, or preaching, either when men will raise doubts in places of Scripture, which are plain enough in themselves, (for this creates a jealousy, that if the Scriptures be every where so difficult, they cannot be our evidences, and guides to salvation) Or when men will insist too vehemently, and curiously, and tediously in proving of such things as no man denies; for this also induces a suspicion, that that is not so absolutely, so undeniably true, that needs so much art, and curiosity, and vehemence to prove it. I shall therefore avoid these errors; and because I presume you are full of an acknowledgement of the duties, and dignities of Prayer, only remember you of thus much of the method, or elements of Prayer, That whereas the whole Book of Psalms is called Sepher Tehillim, that is, Liber Laudationum, The Book of Praise, yet this Psalm, and all that follow to the hundredth Psalm, and divers others besides these, (which make up a fair limb of this body, and a considerable part of the Book) are called Prayers; The Book is Praise, the parts are Prayer. The name changes not the nature; Prayer and Praise is the same thing: The name scarce changes the name; Prayer and Praise is almost the same word; As the duties agree in the heart and mouth of a man, so the names agree in our ears; and not only in the language of our Translation, but in the language of the holy Ghost himself, for that which with us differs but so, Prayer, and Praise, in the Original differs no more than so, Tehillim, and Tephilloth. And this concurrence of these two parts of our devotion, Prayer and Praise, that they accompany one another, nay this co-incidence, that they meet like two waters, and make the stream of devotion the fuller; nay more than that, this identity, that they do not only consist together, but constitute one another, is happily expressed in this part of the Prayer, which is our Text; for that which in the Original language is expressed in the voice of Prayer, O satisfy us, etc. in the first Translation, that of the Septuagint, is expressed in the voice of praise, Saturasti, Thou hast satisfied us; The Original makes it a Prayer, the Translation a Praise. And not to compare Original with Translation, but Translation with Translation, and both from one man, we have in S. Hieroms works two Translations of the Psalms; one, in which he gives us the Psalms alone; another, in which he gives them illustrated with his notes and Commentaries. And in one of these Translations he reads this as a Prayer, Reple nos, O fill us early with thy mercy, and in the other he reads it as a Praise, Repleti sumus, Thou hast filled us, etc. Nay, not to compare Original with Translation, nor Translation with Translation, but Original with Original, the holy Ghost with himself, In the Title of this Psalm, (and the Titles of the Psalms are Canonical Scripture) the holy Ghost calls this Psalm a Prayer, and yet enters the Psalm, in the very first verse thereof, with praise and thanksgiving, Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. And such is the constitution and frame of that Prayer of Prayers, That which is the extraction of all prayers, and draws into a sum all that is in all others, That which is the infusion into all others, sheds and showers whatsoever is acceptable to God, in any other prayer, That Prayer which our Saviour gave us, (for as he meant to give us all for ask, so he meant to give us the words by which we should ask) As that Prayer consists of seven petitions, and seven is infinite, so by being at first begun with glory and acknowledgement of his reigning in heaven, and then shut up in the same manner, with acclamations of power and glory, it is made a circle of praise, and a circle is infinite too, The Prayer, and the Praise is equally infinite. Infinitely poor and needy man, that ever needst infinite things to pray for; Infinitely rich and abundant man, that ever hast infinite blessings to praise God for. God's house in this world is called the house of Prayer; but in heaven it is the house of Praise: No surprisal with any new necessities there, but one even, incessant, and everlasting tenor of thanksgiving; And it is a blessed inchoation of that state here, here to be continually exercised in the commemoration of God's former goodness towards us. My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, Psal. 5.3. Psal. 55.17. O Lord, says David. What voice? the voice of his prayer; it is true; In the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, says David there. And not only then, but at noon and at night he vows that Sacrifice; Evening and morning, and at noon will I pray, and cry unto thee. But David's devotion began not, when his prayers began; one part of his devotion was before morning; Psal. 119.62. At midnight will I rise, to give thanks unto thee O Lord, says he. Doubtless when he lay down and closed his eyes, he had made up his account with God, and had received his Quietus est then: And then the first thing that he does when he wakes again, is not to importune God for more, but to bless God for his former blessings. And as this part of his devotion, Praise, began all, so it passes through all, I will bless the Lord at all times, Psal. 34.11. and his praise shall be continually in my mouth. He extends it through all times, and all places, and would feign do so through all persons too, as we see by that adprecation which is so frequent with him, O that men would therefore praise the Lord, and declare the wondrous works that he doth for the children of men! If we compare these two incomparable duties, Prayer, and Praise, it will stand thus, Our Prayers besiege God, (as Tertullian speaks, especially of public Prayer in the Congregation, Agmine facto obsidemus Deum) but our praises prescribe in God, we urge him, and press him with his ancient mercies, his mercies of old: By Prayer we incline him, we bend him, but by Praise we bind him; our thanks for former benefits, is a producing of a specialty, by which he hath contracted with us for more. In Prayer we sue to him, but in our Praise we sue him himself; Prayer is as our petition, but Praise is as our Evidence; In that we beg, in this we plead. God hath no law upon himself, but yet God himself proceeds by precedent: And whensoever we present to him with thanksgiving, what he hath done, he does the same, and more again. Neither certainly can the Church institute any prayers, more effectual for the preservation of Religion, or of the State, than the Collects for our deliverances, in the like cases before: And when he hears them, though they have the nature of Praise only, yet he translates them into Prayers, and when we ourselves know not, how much we stand in need of new deliverances, he delivers us from dangers which we never suspected, from Armies and Navies which we never knew were prepared, and from plots and machinations which we never knew were brought into Consultation, and diverts their forces, and dissipates their counsels with an untimely abortion. And farther I extend not this first part of Prayer in general, in which, to that which you may have heard often, and usefully of the duty and dignity of Prayer, I have only added this, of the method and elements thereof, that prayer consists as much of praise for the past, as of supplication for the future. We pass now to our second Part, To this particular Prayer, 2 Part. and those limbs that make up this body, those pieces that constitute this Part. They are many; as many as words in it: Satisfy, and satisfy Us, and do that early, and do that with that which is thine, and let that be mercy. So that first it is a prayer for fullness and satisfaction, Satura, satisfy; And than it is a prayer not only of appropriation to ourselves, Satisfy me, But of a charitable dilatation and extension to others, Satisfy us, all us, all thy servants, all thy Church; And then thirdly, it is a prayer of dispatch and expedition, Satura nos mane, Satisfy us early; and after that, it is a prayer of evidence and manifestation, Satisfy us with that which is, and which we may discern to be thine; And then lastly, it is a prayer of limitation even upon God himself, that God will take no other way herein, but the way of mercy, Satisfy us early with thy mercy. And because these are the landmarks that must guide you in this voyage, and the places to which you must resort to assist your memory, be pleased to take another survey and impression of them. I may have an apprehension of a conditional promise of God, and I may have some fair credulity and testimony of conscience, of an endeavour to perform those conditions, and so some inchoations of thoses promises, but yet this is not a fullness, a satisfaction, and this is a prayer for that, Satura, satisfy: I may have a full measure in myself, find no want of temporal conveniencies, or spiritual consolation even in inconveniencies, and so hold up a holy alacrity and cheerfulness for all concerning myself, and yet see God abandon greater persons, and desert some whole Churches, and States, upon whom his glory and Gospel depends much more than upon me, but this is a prayer of charitable extension, Satura nos, not me, but us, all us that profess thee aright: This also I may be sure that God will do at last, he will rescue his own honour in rescuing or establishing his Servants, he will bring Israel out of Egypt, and out of Babylon, but yet his Israel may lie long under the scourge and scorn of his and their enemies, 300. years before they get out of Egypt, seventy years before they get out of Babylon, and so fall into tentations of conceiving a jealousy, and suspicion of God's good purpose towards them, and this is a Prayer of Dispatch and Expedition, Satura nos mane, Satisfy us early, O God make speed to save us, O Lord make haste to help us: But he may derive help upon us, by means that are not his, not avowed by him, He may quicken our Counsels by bringing in an Achitophel, he may strengthen our Armies by calling in the Turk, he may establish our peace and friendships, by remitting or departing with some parts of our Religion; at such a dear price we may be helped, but these are not his helps, and this is a prayer of manifestation, that all the way to our end he will be pleased to let us see, that the means are from him, Satura nos tua, Satisfy us with that, which is thine, and comes from thee, and so directs us to thee: All this may be done too, and yet not that done which we pray for here; God may send that which is his, and yet without present comfort therein; God may multiply corrections, and judgements, and tribulations upon us, and intent to help us that way, by whipping and beating us into the way, and this is his way; but this is a Prayer of limitation even upon God himself, That our way may be his, and that his way may be the way of mercy, Satisfy us early with thy mercy. First then, Saturae. the first word Satura, implies a fullness, and it implies a satisfaction, A quietness, a contentedness, an acquiescence in that fullness; Satisfy is, let us be full, and let us feel it, and rest in that fullness. These two make up all Heaven, all the joy, and all the glory of Heaven, fullness and satisfaction in it. And therefore S. Hierom refers this Prayer of our Text, to the Resurrection, and to that fullness, and that satisfaction which we shall have then, and not till then. For though we shall have a fullness in Heaven, as soon as we come thither, yet that is not fully a satisfaction, because we shall desire, and expect a fuller satisfaction in the reunion of body and soul. And when Heaven itself cannot give us this full satisfaction till then, in what can we look for it in this world, where there is no true fullness, nor any satisfaction, in that kind of fullness which we seem to have? Pleasure and sensuality, and the giving to ourselves all that we desire, Ezek. 16. cannot give this; you hear God reproaches Israel so, You have multiplied your fornications, & yet are not satisfied. Labour for profit, or for preferment, cannot do it; Hagg. 1. you see God reproaches Israel for that too, Ye have sown much, and bring in little, ye eat, but have not enough, ye drink, but are not filled, ye cloth you, but are not warm, and he that earneth wages, putteth it into a broken bag; that is, it runs out as fast as it comes in, he finds nothing at the year's end, his Midsummer will scarce fetch up Michaelmas, and if he have brought about his year, and made up his Circle, yet he hath raised up nothing, nothing appears in his circle. If these things could fill us, yet they could not satisfy us, job 20. because they cannot stay with us, or not we with them: He hath devoured substance, and he shall vomit it. He devoured it by bribery, and he shall vomit it by a fine; He devoured it by extortion, and he shall vomit it by confiscation; He devoured it in other Courts, and shall vomit it in a Star-chamber. If it stay some time, it shall be with an anguish and vexation; When he shall be filled with abundance, it shall be a pain to him, as it is in the same place. Still his riches shall have the nature of a vomit, hard to get down, and hard to keep in the stomach when it is there; hardly got, hardly kept when they are got. Luke 6. If all these could be overcome, yet it is clogged with a heavy curse, Woe be unto you that are full, for ye shall be hungry: Where, if the curse were only from them, who are poor by their own sloth, or wastfulnesse, who for the most part delight to curse and malign the rich, the curse might be contemned by us, and would be thrown back by God into their own bosoms; but Os Domini locutum, The mouth of the Lord hath spoken it, Christ himself hath denounced this curse upon worldly men, That they shall be hungry, not only suffer impairment and diminution, but be reduced to hunger. There is a spiritual fullness in this life, of which S. Hierom speaks, Ebrietas foelix, satietas salutaris, A happy excess, and a wholesome surfeit; quae quanto copiosiùs sumitur, majorem donat sobrietatem, In which the more we eat, the more temperate we are, and the more we drink, the more sober. In which, (as S. Bernard also expresses it, in his mellifluence) Mutuâ, interminabili, inexplicabili generatione, By a mutual and reciprocal, by an undeterminable and unexpressible generation of one another, Desiderium generat satietatem, & satietas parit desiderium, The desire of spiritual graces begets a satiety, if I would be, I am full of them, And then this satiety begets a farther desire, still we have a new appetite to those spiritual graces: This is a holy ambition, a sacred covetousness, Deut. 32.23. and a wholesome Dropsy. Napthalies' blessing, O Napthali satisfied with favour, and full with the blessing of the Lord; S. Stephens blessing, Act. 6.5. Full of faith and of the Holy Ghost; The blessed Virgin's blessing, Full of Grace; Dorcas blessing, Act. 9.37. Full of good works, and of Almsdeeds; The blessing of him, who is blessed above all, and who blesseth all, Christ Jesus, a Luk. 2.4. Full of wisdom, b Luk. 4.1. Full of the Holy Ghost, c Joh. 1.14. Full of grace and truth. But so far are all temporal things from giving this fullness or satisfaction, as that even in spiritual things, there may be, there is often an error, or mistaking. Even in spiritual things, there may be a fullness, and no satisfaction, And there may be a satisfaction, and no fullness; I may have as much knowledge, as is presently necessary for my salvation, and yet have a restless and unsatisfied desire, to search into unprofitable curiosities, unrevealed mysteries, and inextricable perplexities: And, on the other side, a man may be satisfied, and think he knows all, when, God knows, he knows nothing at all; for, I know nothing, if I know not Christ crucified, And I know not that, if I know not how to apply him to myself, Nor do I know that, if I embrace him not in those means, which he hath afforded me in his Church, in his Word, and Sacraments; If I neglect this means, this place, these exercises, howsoever I may satisfy myself, with an over-valuing mine own knowledge at home, I am so far from fullness, as that vanity itself is not more empty. In the Wilderness, every man had one and the same measure of Manna; The same Gomer went through all; for Manna was a Meat, that would melt in their mouths, and of easy digestion. But then for their Quails, birds of a higher flight, meat of a stronger digestion, it is not said, that every man had an equal number: some might have more, some less, and yet all their fullness. catechistical divinity, and instructions in fundamental things, is our Manna; Every man is bound to take in his Gomer, his explicit knowledge of Articles absolutely necessary to salvation; The simplest man, as well as the greatest Doctor, is bound to know, that there is one God in three persons, That the second of those, the Son of God, took our nature, and died for mankind; And that there is a Holy Ghost, which in the Communion of Saints, the Church established by Christ, applies to every particular soul the benefit of Christ's universal redemption. But then for our Quails, birds of higher pitch, meat of a stronger digestion, which is the knowledge how to rectify every straying conscience, how to extricate every entangled, and scrupulous, and perplexed soul, in all emergent doubts, how to defend our Church, and our Religion, from all the mines, and all the batteries of our Adversaries, and to deliver her from all imputations of Heresy, and Schism, which they impute to us, this knowledge is not equally necessary in all; In many cases a Master of servants, and a Father of children is bound to know more, than those children and servants, and the Pastor of the parish more than parishioners: They may have their fullness, though he have more, but he hath not his, except he be able to give them satisfaction. This fullness than is not an equality in the measure; our fullness in heaven shall not be so; Abraham died, says the text, Plenus dierum, full of years; Gen. 25.8. It is not said so in the text of Methusalem, that he died full of years, and yet he had another manner of Gomer, another measure of life than Abraham, for he lived almost eight hundred years more than he; But he that is best disposed to die, is fullest of years; One man may be fuller at twenty, than another at seaventy. David lived not the tithe of Methusalems' years, not ten to his hundred, he lived less than Abraham, and yet David is said to have died Plenus dierum, full of years; he had made himself agreeable to God, 1 Chro. 29.28. and so was ripe for him. So David is said there to have died full of honour; God knows David had cast aspersions upon his own, and others honour; but, as God says of Israel, Because I loved thee, thou wast honourable in my sight; so because God loved David, and he persevered in that love to the end, he died full of honour. So also it is said of David, that he died full of Riches; for, though they were very great additions, which Solomon made, yet because David intended that which he left, for God's service, and for pious uses, he died full of Riches; fullness of riches is in the good purpose, and the good employment, not in the possession. In a word, the fullness that is inquired after, and required by this prayer, carry it upon temporal, carry it upon spiritual things, is such a proportion of either, as is fit for that calling, in which God hath put us; And then, the satisfaction in this fullness is not to hunt and pant after more worldly possessions, by undue means, or by macerating labour, as though we could not be good, or could do no good in the world, except all the goods of the world passed our hands, nor to hunt and pant after the knowledge of such things, as God by his Scriptures hath not revealed to his Church, nor to wrangle contentiously and uncharitably about such points, as do rather shake others consciences, then establish our own, as though we could not possibly come to heaven, except we knew what God meant to do with us, before he meant to make us. S. Paul expresses fully what this fullness is, Colos. 4.12. and satisfies us in this satisfaction, sitis pleni in omni voluntate Dei, That ye may be filled according to the will of God: What is the will of God? How shall I know the will of God upon me? God hath manifested his will in my Calling; and a proportion, competent to this Calling, is my fullness, and should be my satisfaction, Gen. 8.21. that so God may have Odorem quietis, (as it is said in Noah's sacrifice, after he came out of the Ark, that God smelled a savour of rest) a sacrifice, in which he might rest himself; for God hath a Sabbath in the Sabbaths of his servants, a fullness in their fullness, a satisfaction when they are satisfied, and is well pleased when they are so. So then this Prayer is for fullness, Nos. and fullness is a competency in our calling, And a prayer for satisfaction, and satisfaction is a contentment in that competency; And then this prayer is not only a prayer of appropriation to ourselves, but of a charitable extension to others too, Satura nos, Satisfy us, All us, all thy Church. Charity gins in ourselves, but it does not end there, but dilates itself to others; The Saints in heaven are full, as full as they can hold, and yet they pray; Though they want nothing, they pray that God would pour down upon us graces necessary for our peregrination here, as he hath done upon them, in their station there. We are full; full of the Gospel; present peace and plenty in the preaching thereof, and fair appearances of a perpetual succession; we are full, and yet we pray; we pray that God would continue the Gospel where it is, restore the Gospel where it was, and transfer the Gospel where it hath not yet been preached. Charity desires not her own, says the Apostle; but much less doth charity desire no more than her own, so as not to desire the good of others too. True love and charity is to do the most that we can, all that we can for the good of others; So God himself proceeds, when he says, What could I do, that I have not done? And so he seems to have begun at first; when God bestowed upon man, his first and greatest benefit, his making, it is expressed so, Faciamus hominem, Let us, All us, make man; God seems to summon himself, to assemble himself, to muster himself, all himself, all the persons of the Trinity, to do what he could in the favour of man. So also when he is drawn to a necessity of executing judgement, and for his own honour, and consolidation of his servants, puts himself upon a revenge, he proceeds so too; when man had rebelled, and began to fortify in Babel, Gen. 11.7. than God says, Venite, Let us, All us come together, And Descendamus, & confundamus, Let us, all us, go down, and confound their language, and their machinations, and fortifications. God does not give patterns, God does not accept from us acts of half-devotion, and half-charities; God does all that he can for us; And therefore when we see others in distress, whether national, or personal calamities, whether Princes be dispossessed of their natural patrimony, and inheritance, or private persons afflicted with sickness, or penury, or banishment, let us go God's way, all the way; First, Faciamus hominem ad imaginem nostram, Let us make that Man according unto our image, let us consider ourselves in him, and make our case his, and remember how lately he was as well as we, and how soon we may be as ill as he, and then Descendamus & confundamus, Let us, us, with all the power we have, remove or slacken those calamities that lie upon them. This only is charity, to do all, all that we can. And something there is which every man may do; There are Armies, in the levying whereof, every man is an absolute Prince, and needs no Commission, there are Forces, in which every man is his own Muster-master, The force which we spoke of before, out of Tertullian, the force of prayer; In public actions, we obey God, when we obey them to whom God hath committed the public; In those things which are in our own power, the subfidies and contributions of prayer, God looks that we should second his Faciamus, with our Dicamus, That since he must do all, we would pray him that he would do it, And his Descendamus, with our Ascendamus, That if we would have him come down, and fight our battles, or remove our calamities, we should first go up to him, in humble and fervent prayer, That he would continue the Gospel where it is, and restore it where it was, and transfer it where it was never as yet heard; Charity is to do all to all; and the poorest of us all can do this to any. I may then, I must pray for this fullness, (and fullness is sufficiency) And for this satisfaction, Mane. (and satisfaction is contentment) And that God would extend this, and other his blessings, upon others too, And if God do leave us in an Egypt, in a Babylon, without relief, for sometime I may proceed to this holy importunity, which David intimates here, Satura nos mane, O Lord, make haste to help us, Satisfy us early with thy mercy, and God will do so. Weep may endure for a night, says David. Psal. 30.5. David does not say, It must endure for a night, that God will by no means shorten the time; perchance God will wipe all tears from thine eyes, at midnight, if thou pray; Try him that way then. If he do not, If weeping do endure for a night, all night, yet joy cometh in the morning, faith David; And then he doth not say, Joy may come in the morning, but it cometh certainly, infallibly it comes, and comes in the morning. God is an early riser; In the Marning-watch, God la●ked upon the h●st of the Egyptians. Exod. 14.24. He looked upon their counsels to see what they would do, and upon their forces to see what they could do. He is not early up, and never the nearer; His going forth is prepared as the Morning, Hos. 6.3. (there is his general Providence, in which he visits every creature) And he shall come to us, in the former, and later rain upon the earth; He makes haste to us in the former, and seconds his former mercies to us, in more mercies. And as he makes haste to refresh his servants, so goes he the same pace, to the ruin of his enemies, In matutina inters●oiam, Psal. 101.8. I will early destroy all the wicked of the land: It is not a weakening of them, It is a destruction; It is not of a squadron or regiment, It is all; It is not only upon the Land, but the wicked of any band, he will destroy upon the Sea too. This is his promise, this is his practice, this is his pace. Thus he did in Sennacheri●s Army, When they arose early in the Morning, 2 King. 19.35. behold they were all dead carcases; They risen early that saw it, but God had been up earlier, that had done it. And that story, God seems to have had care to have recorded almost in all the divisions of the Bible, for it is in the Historical part, and it is in the Prophetical part too; and because God foresaw, that men's curiosities would carry them upon Apocryphal Books also, it is repeated almost in every Book of that kind, in Ecclesiasticus, in Tobit, in the Maceabees in both Books, That every where our eye might light upon that, and every soul might make that Syllogism, and produce that conclusion to itself, If God be thus forward, thus early in the ways of Judgement, much more is he so in the ways of mercy; with that he will satisfy us Mane, early, and as Tremellius reads this very Text, unoquoque mane, betimes in the morning, and every morning. Now if we look for this early mercy from God, we must rise betimes too, and meet God early. God hath promised to give Matutinam stellam; the Morningstar; Revel. 2 28. but they must be up betimes in the morning, that will take the Morningstar. He himself who is it, hath told us who is this Morning star; I jesus am the bright and Morning star. Revel. 2●. ●●. God will give us Jesus; Him, and all his, all his tears, all his blood, all his merits; But to whom, and upon what conditions? That is expressed there, Vincenti dabe, To hin● that overcommeth I will give the Morningstar. Our life is a warfare, our whole life; It is not only with lusts in our youth, and ambitions in our middle years, and indevotions in our age, but with agonies in our body, and tentations in our spirit upon our deathbed, that we are to fight; and he cannot be said to overcome, that fights not out the whole battle. If he enter not the field in the morning, that is, apply not himself to God's service in his youth, If he continue not to the Evening, If he faint in the way, and grow remiss in God's service, for collateral respects, God will overcome his cause, and his glory shall stand fast, but that man can scarce be said to have overcome. It is the counsel of the Wise man, Prevent the Sun to give thanks to God, Wisd. 16.28. and at the dayspring pray unto him. You see still, how these two duties are marshaled, and disposed; First Praise, and then Prayer, but both early: And it is placed in the Lamentations, as though it were a lamentable negligence to have omitted it, It is good for a man, Lament. 3.27. that he bear his yoke in his youth. Rise as early as you can, you cannot be up before God; no, nor before God raise you: Howsoever you prevent this Sun, the Sun of the Firmament, yet the Son of Heaven hath prevented you, for without his preventing Grace you could not stir. Have any of you slept out their Morning, resisted his private motions to private Prayer at home, neglected his callings so? Though a man do sleep out his forenoon, the Sun goes on his course, and comes to his Meridional splendour, though that man have not looked towards it. That Son which hath risen to you at home, in those private motions, hath gone on his course, and hath shined out here, in this house of God, upon Wednesday, and upon Friday, and upon every day of holy Convocation; All this, at home, and here, ye have slept out and neglected. Now, upon the Sabbath, and in these holy Exercises, this Son shines out as at noon, the Grace of God is in the Exaltation, exhibited in the powerfullest and effectuallest way of his Ordinance, and if you will but awake now, rise now, meet God now, now at noon, God will call even this early. Have any of you slept out the whole day, and are come in that drowsiness to your evening, to the closing of your eyes, to the end of your days? Yet rise now, and God shall call even this an early rising; If you can make shift to deceive your own souls and say, We never heard God call us; If you neglected your former callings so, as that you have forgot that you have been called; yet, is there one amongst you, that denies that God calls him now? If he neglect this calling now, to morrow he may forget that he was called to day, or remember it with such a terror, as shall blow a damp, and a consternation upon his soul, and a lethargy worse than his former sleep; but if he will wake now, and rise now, though this be late in his evening, in his age, yet God shall call this early. Isai. 26.9. Be but able to say with Esay this night, My soul hath desired thee in the night, and thou mayst be bold to say with David to morrow morning, Satura nos mane, Satisfy us early with thy mercy, and he shall do it. But yet no prayer of ours, howsoever made in the best disposition, in the best testimony of a rectified conscience, must limit God his time, or appoint him, in what morning, or what hour in the morning, God shall come to our deliverance. The Son of man was not the less the Son of God, nor the less a beloved Son, though God hide from him the knowledge of the day of the general Judgement. Thou art not the less the servant of God, nor the less rewarded by him, though he keep from thee the knowledge of thy deliverance from any particular calamity. All Gods deliverances are in the morning, because there is a perpetual night, and an invincible darkness upon us, till he deliver us. God is the God of that Climate, where the night is six Months long, as well as of this, where it is but half so many hours. The highest Hill hinders not the roundness of the earth, the earth is round for all that hill; The lowest vaults, and mines hinder not the solidness of the earth, the earth is solid for all that; Much less hath a year, or ten years, or all our threescore and ten, any proportion at all to eternity; And therefore God comes early in a sort to me, though I lose abundance of my reward by so long lingering, if he come not till he open me the gate of heaven, by the key of death. There are Indies at my right hand, in the East; but there are Indies at my left hand too, in the West. There are testimonies of God's love to us, in our East, in our beginnings; but if God continue tribulation upon us to our West, to our ends, and give us the light of his presence then, if he appear to us at our transmigration, certainly he was favourable to us all our peregrination, and though he show himself late, he was our friend early. The Prayer is, that he would come early, but it is, if it be rightly form, upon both these conditions; first, that I rise early to meet him, and then that I magnify his hour as early, whensoever he shall be pleased to come. All this I shall do the better, Tu●. if I limit my prayer, and my practice, with the next circumstance in David's prayer, Tuâ, Satisfy us early with that which is thine, Thy mercy: For there are mercies, (in a fair extent and accommodation of the word, that is Refresh, Eases, Deliverances) that are not his mercies, nor his satisfactions. How many men are satisfied with Riches (I correct myself, few are satisfied; but how many have enough to satisfy many?) and yet have never a penny of his money? Nothing is his, that comes not from him, that comes not by good means. How many are there, that are easy to admit scruples, and jealousies, and suspicions in matter of Religion: Easy to think, that that Religion, and that Church, in which they have lived ill, cannot be a good Religion, nor a true Church; In a troubled, and distempered conscience, they grow easy to admit scruples, and then as over-easy to admit false satisfactions, with a word whispered on one side in a Conventicle, or a word whispered on the other side in a Confession, and yet have never a dram of satisfaction from his word, whose word is preached upon the house top, and avowed, and not in corners? How many men are anguished with torturing Diseases, racked with the conscience of ill-spent estates, oppressed with inordinate melancholies, and irreligious dejections of spirit, and then repair, and satisfy themselves with wine, with women, with fools, with comedies, with mirth, and music, and with all jobs miserable comforters, and all this while have no beams of his satisfaction, it is not Misericordia ejus, his mercy, his satisfaction? In losses of worldly goods, in sicknesses of children, or servants, or cattles, to receive light or ease from Witches, this is not his mercy. It is not his mercy, except we go by good ways to good ends; except our safety be established by alliance with his friends, except our peace may be had with the perfect continuance of our Religion, there is no safety, there is no peace. But let me feel the effect of this Prayer, as it is a Prayer of manifestation, Let me discern that, that that is done upon me, is done by the hand of God, and I care not what it be: I had rather have God's Vinegar, than man's Oil, God's Wormwood, than man's Manna, God's Justice, than any man's Mercy; for, therefore did Gregory Nyssen call S. Basil in a holy sense, Ambidextrum, because he took every thing that came, by the right handle, and with the right hand, because he saw it to come from God. Even afflictions are welcome, when we see them to be his: Though the way that he would choose, and the way that this Prayer entreats, be only mercy, Satisfy us early with thy mercy. That rod and that staff with which we are at any time corrected, is his. Mis●ricordia Esay 10.5. So God calls the Assyrians, The rod of his anger, and he says, That the staff that is in their hand, is his Indignation. He comes to a sharper execution, from the rod, and the staff to the sword, and that also is his, It is my sword, that is put into the hands of the King of Babylon, Ezek. 30.24. and he shall stretch out my sword upon the whole land; God will beat down, and cut off, and blow up, and blow out at his pleasure; which is expressed in a phrase very remarkable by David, He bringeth the wind out of his Treasuries; And then follow in that place, Psal. 135.7. all the Plagues of Egypt: storms and tempests, ruins and devastations, are not only in God's Armouries, but they are in his Treasuries; as he is the Lord of Hosts, he fetches his judgements from his Armouries, and casts confusion upon his enemies, but as he is the God of mercy, and of plentiful redemption, he fetches these judgements, these corrections out of his treasuries, and they are the Money, the Jewels, by which he redeems and buys us again; God does nothing, God can do nothing, no not in the way of ruin and destruction, but there is mercy in it; he cannot open a door in his Armoury, but a window into his Treasury opens too, and he must look into that. But then God's corrections are his Acts, as the Physician is his Creature, God created him for necessity. When God made man, his first intention was not that man should fall, and so need a Messiah, nor that man should fall sick, and so need a Physician, nor that man should fall into rebellion by sin, and so need his rod, his staff, his scourge of afflictions, to whip him into the way again. But yet says the Wiseman, Ecclus. 38.1. Honour the Physician for the use you may have of him; slight him not, because thou hast no need of him yet. So though God's corrections were not from a primary, but a secondary intention, yet, when you see those corrections fall upon another, give a good interpretation of them, and believe God's purpose to be not to destroy, but to recover that man: Do not thou make God's Rheubarbe thy Ratsbane, and poison thine own soul with an uncharitable misinterpretation of that correction, which God hath sent to cure his. And then, in thine own afflictions, fly evermore to this Prayer, Satisfy us with thy mercy; first, Satisfy us, make it appear to us that thine intention is mercy, though thou enwrap it in temporal afflictions, in this dark cloud let us discern thy Son, and though in an act of displeasure, see that thou art well pleased with us; Satisfy us, that there is mercy in thy judgements, and then satisfy us, that thy mercy is mercy; for such is the stupidity of sinful man, That as in temporal blessings, we discern them best by wanting them, so do we the mercies of God too; we call it not a mercy, to have the same blessings still: but, as every man conceives a greater degree of joy, in recovering from a sickness, then in his former established health; so without doubt, our Ancestors who endured many years Civil and foreign wars, were more affected with their first peace, than we are with our continual enjoying thereof, And our Fathers more thankful, for the beginning of Reformation of Religion, than we for so long enjoying the continuance thereof. Satisfy us with thy mercy, Let us still be able to see mercy in thy judgements, lest they deject us, and confound us; Satisfy us with thy mercy, let us be able to see, that our deliverance is a mercy, and not a natural thing that might have happened so, or a necessary thing that must have happened so, though there had been no God in Heaven, nor providence upon earth. But especially since the way that thou choosest, is to go all by mercy, and not to be put to this way of correction, so dispose, so compose our minds, and so transpose all our affections, that we may live upon thy food, and not put thee to thy physic, that we may embrace thee in the light, and not be put to seek thee in the dark, that we come to thee in thy Mercy, and not be whipped to thee by thy Corrections. And so we have done also with our second Part, The pieces and petitions that constitute this Prayer, as it is a Prayer for Fullness and Satisfaction, a Prayer of Extent and Dilatation, a Prayer of Dispatch and Expedition, and then a Prayer of Evidence and Declaration, and lastly, a Prayer of Limitation even upon God himself, Satisfy, and satisfy us, and us early, with that which we may discern to be thine, and let that way be mercy. There remains yet a third Part, 3 Part. Gaudium. what this Prayer produces, and it is joy, and continual joy, That we may rejoice and be glad all our days. The words are the Parts, and we invert not, we trouble not the Order; the Holy Ghost hath laid them fitliest for our use, in the Text itself, and so we take them. First then, the gain is joy. Joy is Gods own Seal, and his keeper is the Holy Ghost; we have many sudden ejaculations in the form of Prayer, sometimes inconsiderately made, and they vanish so; but if I can reflect upon my prayer, ruminate, and return again with joy to the same prayer, I have God's Seal upon it. And therefore it is not so very an idle thing, as some have mis-imagined it, to repeat often the same prayer in the same words; Our Saviour did so; he prayed a third time, and in the same words; This reflecting upon a former prayer, is that that sets to this Seal, this joy, and if I have joy in my prayer, it is granted so far as concerns my good, and God's glory. It hath been disputed by many, both of the Gentiles, with whom the Fathers disputed, and of the Schoolmen, who dispute with one another, a sit gaudium in Deo, de semet, Whether God rejoice in himself, in contemplation of himself, whether God be glad that he is God: But it is disputed by them, only to establish it, and to illustrate it, for I do not remember that any one of them denies it. It is true, that Plato dislikes, and justly, that salutation of Dionysius the Tyrant to God, Gaude, & servato vitam Tyranni jucundam; that he should say to God, Live merrily, as merrily as a King, as merrily as I do, and then you are God enough; to imagine such a joy in God, as is only a transitory delight in deceivable things, is an impious conceit. But when, as another Platonique says, Plotinus. Deus est quod ipse semper voluit, God is that which he would be, If there be something that God would be, and he be that, If Plato should deny, that God joyed in himself, we must say of Plato as Lactantius does, Deum potius somniaver at, quàm cognoverat, Plato had rather dreamt that there was a God, then understood what that God was. Bonum simplex, says S. Augustine, To be sincere Goodness, Goodness itself, Ipsa est delectatio Dei, This is the joy that God hath in himself, of himself; And therefore says Philo judaeus, Hoc necessarium Philosophiae sodalibus, This is the tenant of all Philosophers, (And by that title of Philosophers, Philo always means them that know and study God) Solum Deum verè festum agere, That only God can be truly said to keep holy day, and to rejoice. This joy we shall see, when we see him, who is so in it, as that he is this joy itself. But here in this world, so far as I can enter into my Master's sight, I can enter into my Master's joy. I can see God in his Creatures, in his Church, in his Word and Sacraments, and Ordinances; Since I am not without this sight, I am not without this joy. Here a man may Transilire mortalitatem, Seneca. says that Divine Moral man; I cannot put off mortality, but I can look upon immortality; I cannot departed from this earth, but I can look into Heaven. So I cannot possess that final and accomplished joy here, but as my body can lay down a burden or a heavy garment, and joy in that ease, so my soul can put off my body so far, as that the concupiscencies thereof, and the manifold and miserable en● cumbrances of this world, cannot extinguish this holy joy. And this inchoative joy, David derives into two branches, To rejoice, and to be glad. The Holy Ghost is an eloquent Author, Exultatio. a vehement, and an abundant Author, but yet not luxuriant; he is far from a penurious, but as far from a superfluous style too. And therefore we do not take these two words in the Text, To rejoice, and to be glad, to signify merely one and the same thing, but to be two beams, two branches, two effects, two expressings of this joy. We take them therefore, as they offer themselves in their roots, and first natural propriety of the words. The first, which we translate To rejoice, is Ranan; and Ranan denotes the external declaration of internal joy; for the word signifies Cantare, To sing, and that with an extended and loud voice, for it is the word, which is oftenest used for the music of the Church, and the singing of Psalms; which was such a declaration of their zealous alacrity in the primitive Church, as that, when to avoid discovery in the times of persecution, they were forced to make their meetings in the night, they were also forced to put out their Candles, because by that light in the windows they were discovered; After that this meeting in the dark occasioned a scandal and ill report upon those Christians, that their meetings were not upon so holy purposes, as they pretended, they discontinued their vigils, and night-meetings, yet their singing of Psalms, when they did meet, they never discontinued, though that, many times, exposed them to dangers, and to death itself, as some of the Authors of the secular story of the Romans have observed and testified unto us. And some ancient Decrees and Constitutions we have, in which such are forbidden to be made Priests, as were not perfect in the Psalms. And though S. Hierome tell us this, with some admiration, and note of singularity, That Paula could say the whole book of Psalms without book, in Hebrew; yet he presents it as a thing well known to be their ordinary practice; In villula Christi Bethlem, extrapsalmos silentium est, In the village where I dwell, says he, where Christ was borne, in Bethlem, if you cannot sing Psalms, you must be silent, here you shall hear nothing but Psalms; for, (as he pursues it) Arator stivam tenens, The husbandman that follows the plough, he that sows, that reaps, that carries home, all begin and proceed in all their labours with singing of Psalms. Therefore he calls them there, Cantiones amatorias, Those that make or entertain love, that seek in the holy and honourable way of marriage, to make themselves acceptable and agreeable to one another, by no other good parts, nor conversation, but by singing of Psalms. So he calls them, Pastorum sibilum, and Arma culturae, Our shepherds, says S. Hierome, here, have no other Eclogues, no other Pastorals; Our labourers, our children, our servants no other songs, nor Ballads, to recreate themselves withal, than the Psalms. And this universal use of the Psalms, that they served all for all, giveth occasion to one Author, in the title of the Book of Psalms, to departed from the ordinary reading, which is, Sepher Tehillim, The book of Praise, and to read it, Sepher Telim, which is Acervorum, The book of Heaps, where all assistances to our salvation are heaped and treasured up. And our Countryman Bede found another Title, in some Copies of this book, Liber Soliloquiorum de Christo, The Book of Meditations upon Christ; Because this book is (as Gregory Nyssen calls it) Clavis David, that key of David, which lets us in to all the mysteries of our Religion; which gave the ground to that which S. Basil says, that if all the other Books of Scripture could be lost, he would ask no more than the Book of Psalms, to catechise children, to edify Congregations, to convert Gentiles, and to convince Heretics. But we are launched into too large a Sea, the consideration of this Book of Psalms. I mean but this, in this, That if we take that way with God, The way of prayer, prayer so elemented and constituted, as we have said, that consists rather of praise and thanksgiving, than supplication for future benefits, God shall infuse into us, a zeal of expressing our consolation in him, by outward actions, to the establishing of others; we shall not disavow, nor grow slack in our Religion, nor in any parts thereof; God shall neither take from us, The Candle and the Candlestick, The truth of the Gospel, which is the light, And the cheerful, and authorized, and countenanced, and rewarded Preaching of the Gospel, which is the Candlestick that exalts the light; nor take from us our zeal to this outward service of God, that we come to an indifferency, whether the service of God be private or public, sordid or glorious, allowed and suffered, by way of connivency, or commanded and enjoined by way of authority. God shall give us this Ranan, this rejoicing, this extern all joy, we shall have the public preaching of the Gospel continued to us, and we shall show that we rejoice in it, by frequenting it, and by instituting our lives according unto it. But yet this Ranan, this Rejoicing, this outward expressing of our inward zeal, Delectabimur. may admit interruptions, receive interceptions, intermissions, and discontinuances; for, without doubt, in many places there live many persons, well affected to the truth of Religion, that dare not avow it, express it, declare it, especially where that fearful Vulture, the Inquisition, hovers over them. And therefore the Holy Ghost hath added here another degree of joy, which no law, no severe execution of law, can take from us, in another word of less extent, Shamach, which is an inward joy, only in the heart, which we translate here, to be Glad. How far we are bound to proceed in outward declarations of Religion, requires a serious and various consideration of Circumstances. Dan. 6.10. You know how far Daniel proceeded; The Lords had extorted a Proclamation from the King, That no man should pray to any other God, than the King, for certain days; Daniel would not only not be bound by this Proclamation, and so continue his set and stationary hours of private prayer in his chamber, but he would declare it to all the world; He would set open his chamber windows, that he might be seen to pray; for, though some determine that act of Daniel, in setting open his windows at prayer, in this, That because the Jews were bound by their law, wheresoever they were, in war, in captivity, upon the way, or in their sick beds, to turn towards Jerusalem, and so towards the Temple, whensoever they prayed, according to that stipulation, which had passed between God and Solomon, at the Dedication of the Temple, When thy servants pray towards this house, hear them in it; Therefore as Hezekias, in his sick bed, when he turned towards the wall to pray, is justly thought, to have done so, therefore that he might pray towards the Temple, which stood that way; so Daniel is thought to have opened his windows to that purpose too, that he might have the more free prospect towards Jerusalem from Babylon; though some, I say, determine daniel's act in that, yet it is by more, and more usefully extended, to an expressing of such a zeal, as, in so apparent a dishonour to his God, could not be suffocated nor extinguished with a Proclamation. In which act of his, which was a direct and evident opposing and affronting of the State, though I dare not join with them, who absolutely and peremptorily condemn this act of Daniel, because Gods subsequent act in a miraculous deliverance of Daniel seems to imply some former particular revelation from God to Daniel, that he should proceed in that confident manner, yet dare I much less draw this act of daniel's into consequence, and propose it for an Example and precedent to private men, lest of all, to animate seditious men, who upon pretence of a necessity, that God must be served in this, and this, and no other manner, provoke and exasperate the Magistrate with their schismatical conventicles and separations. But howsoever that may stand, and howsoever there may be Circumstances which may prevail either upon humane infirmity, or upon a rectified Conscience, or howsoever God in his Judgements, may cast a cloud upon his own Sun, and darken the glory of the Gospel, in some place, for some time, yet, though we lose our Ranan, our public Rejoicing, we shall never lose our Shamach, our inward gladness, that God is our God, and we his servants for all this. God will never leave his servants without this internal joy, which shall preserve them from suspicions of God's power, that he cannot maintain, or not restore his cause, and from jealousies, that he hath abandoned or deserted them in particular. God shall never give them over to an indifferency, nor to a stupidity, nor to an absence of tenderness, and holy affections, that it shall become all one to them, how God's cause prospers, or suffers. But if I continue that way, prayer, and prayer so qualified, if I lose my Ranan, my outward declarations of Rejoicing; If I be tied to a deathbed in a Consumption, and cannot rejoice in coming to these public Congregations, to participate of their prayers, and to impart to them my Meditations; If I be ruined in my fortune, and cannot rejoice in an open distribution to the relief of the poor, and a preaching to others, in that way, by example of doing good works; If at my last minute, I be not able to edify my friends, nor Catechise my children, with any thing that I can do or say; if I be not able so much, as with hand or eye to make a sign, though I have lost my Ranan, all the Eloquence of outward declaration, yet God shall never take from me, my Shamach, my internal gladness and consolation, in his undeceivable and undeceiving Spirit, that he is mine, and I am his; And this joy, this gladness, in my way, and in my end, shall establish me; for that is that which is intended in the next, and last word, Omnibus diebus, we shall Rejoice and be Glad all our days. Nothing but this testimony, Omnibus diebus. That the Spirit bears witness with my spirit, that upon my prayer, so conditioned, of praise, and prayer, I shall still prevail with God, could imprint in me, this joy, all my days. The seals of his favour, in outward blessings, fail me in the days of shipwreck, in the days of fire, in the days of displacing my potent friends, or raising mine adversaries; In such days I cannot rejoice, and be glad. The seals of his favour, in inward blessings, and holy cheerfulness, fail me in a present remorse after a sin newly committed. But yet in the strength of a Christian hope, as I can pronounce out of the grounds of Nature, in an Eclipse of the Sun, that the Sun shall return to his splendour again, I can pronounce out of the grounds of God's Word, (and God's Word is much better assurance, than the grounds of Nature, for God can and does shake the grounds of Nature by Miracles, but no Jod of his Word shall ever perish) that I shall return again on my hearty penitence, if I delay it not, and rejoice and be glad all my days, that is, what kind of day soever overtake me. In the days of our youth, when the joys of this world take up all the room, there shall be room for this holy Joy, that my recreations were harmless, and my conversation innocent; and certainly to be able to say, that in my recreations, in my conversation, I neither ministered occasion of tentation to another, nor exposed myself to tentations from another, is a fair beam of this rejoicing in the days of my youth. In the days of our Age, when we become incapable, insensible of the joys of this world, yet this holy joy shall season us, not with a sinful delight in the memory of our former sins, but with a re-juveniscence, a new and a fresh youth, in being come so near to another, to an immortal life. In the days of our mirth, and of laughter, this holy joy shall enter; And as the Sun may say to the stars at Noon, How frivoulous and impertinent a thing is your light now? So this joy shall say unto laughter, Thou art mad, and unto mirth, Eccles. 2.2. what dost thou? And in the midnight of sadness, and dejection of spirit, this joy shall shine out, and chide away that sadness, with David's holy charm, My soul, why art thou cast down, why art thou disquieted within me? In those days, which job speaks of, job 30.27. Praevenerunt me dies afflictionis meae, Miseries are come upon me before their time; My intemperances' have hastened age, my riotousness hath hastened poverty, my neglecting of due officiousness and respect towards great persons hath hastened contempt upon me, Afflictions which I suspected not, thought not of, have prevented my fears; and then in those days, which job speaks of again, Possident me dies afflictionis, Verse 16. Studied and premeditated plots and practices swallow me, possess me entirely, In all these days, I shall not only have a Zoar to fly to, if I can get out of Sodom, joy, if I can overcome my sorrow; There shall not be a Goshen bordering upon my Egypt, joy, if I can pass beyond, or besides my sorrow, but I shall have a Goshen in my Egypt, nay my very Egypt shall be my Goshen, I shall not only have joy, though I have sorrow, but therefore; my very sorrow shall be the occasion of joy; I shall not only have a Sabbath after my six day's labour, but Omnibus diebus, a Sabbath shall enlighten every day, and inanimate every minute of every day: And as my soul is as well in my foot, as in my hand, though all the weight and oppression lie upon the foot, and all action upon the hand, so these beams of joy shall appear as well in my pillar of cloud, as in theirs of fire; in my adversity, as well as in their prosperity; And when their Sun shall set at Noon, mine shall rise at midnight; they shall have damps in their glory, and I joyful exaltions in my dejections. And to end with the end of all, In die mortis, In the day of my death, and that which is beyond the end of all, and without end in itself, The day of Judgement, If I have the testimony of a rectified conscience, that I have accustomed myself to that access to God, by prayer, and such prayer, as though it have had a body of supplication, and desire of future things, yet the soul and spirit of that prayer, that is, my principal intention in that prayer, hath been praise and thanksgiving, If I be involved in S. Chrysostoms' Patent, Orantes, non natura, sed dispensatione Angeli fiunt, That those who pray so, that is, pray by way of praise, (which is the most proper office of Angels) as they shall be better than Angels in the next world, (for they shall be glorifying spirits, as the Angels are, but they shall also be glorified bodies, which the Angels shall never be) so in this world they they shall be as Angels, because they are employed in the office of Angels, to pray by way of praise, If, as S. Basil reads those words of that Psalm, not spiritus meus, but respiratio mea laudet Dominum, Not only my spirit, but my very breath, not my heart only, but my tongue, and my hands be accustomed to glorify God, In die mortis, in the day of my death, when a mist of sorrow, and of sighs shall fill my chamber, and a cloud exhaled and condensed from tears, shall be the curtains of my bed, when those that love me, shall be sorry to see me die, and the devil himself that hates me, sorry to see me die so, in the favour of God; And In die judicii, In the day of Judgement, when as all Time shall cease, so all measures shall cease; The joy, and the sorrow that shall be then, shall be eternal, no end, and infinite, no measure, no limitation, when every circumstance of sin shall aggravate the condemnation of the unrepentant sinner, and the very substance of my sin shall be washed away, in the blood of my Saviour, when I shall see them, who sinned for my sake, perish eternally, because they proceeded in that sin, and I myself, who occasioned their sin received into glory, because God upon my prayer, and repentance had satisfied me early with his mercy, early, that is, before my transmigration, In omnibus diebus, In all these days, the days of youth, and the wantonnesses of that, the days of age, and the tastlesnesse of that, the days of mirth, and the sportfulness of that, and of inordinate melancholy, and the disconsolateness of that, the days of such miseries, as astonish us with their suddenness, and of such as aggravate their own weight with a heavy expectation; In the day of Death, which pieces up that circle, and in that day which enters another circle that hath no pieces, but is one equal everlastingness, the day of Judgement, Either I shall rejoice, be able to declare my faith, and zeal to the assistance of others, or at least be glad in mine own heart, in a firm hope of mine own salvation. And therefore, beloved, as they, whom lighter affections carry to Shows, and Masks, and Comedies; As you yourselves, whom better dispositions bring to these Exercises, conceive some contentment, and some kind of Joy, in that you are well and commodiously placed, they to see the Show, you to hear the Sermon, when the time comes, though your greater Joy be reserved to the coming of that time; So though the fullness of Joy be reserved to the last times in heaven, yet rejoice and be glad that you are well and commodiously placed in the mean time, and that you sit but in expectation of the fullness of those future Joys: Return to God, with a joyful thankfulness that he hath placed you in a Church, which withholds nothing from you, that is necessary to salvation, whereas in another Church they lack a great part of the Word, and half the Sacrament; And which obtrudes nothing to you, that is not necessary to salvation, whereas in another Church, the Additionall things exceed the Fundamental; the Occasional, the Original; the Collateral, the Direct; And the Traditions of men, the Commandments of God. Maintain and hold up this holy alacrity, this religious cheerfulness; For inordinate sadness is a great degree and evidence of unthankfulness, and the departing from Joy in this world, is a departing with one piece of our Evidence, for the Joys of the world to come. SERM. LXXX. Preached at the funerals of Sir William Cokayne Knight, Alderman of London, December 12. 1626. JOH. 11.21. Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died. GOd made the first Marriage, and man made the first Divorce; God married the Body and Soul in the Creation, and man divorced the Body and Soul by death through sin, in his fall. God doth not admit, not justify, not authorise such Super-inductions upon such Divorces, as some have imagined; That the soul departing from one body, should become the soul of another body, in a perpetual revolution and transmigration of souls through bodies, which hath been the giddiness of some Philosophers to think; Or that the body of the dead should become the body of an evil spirit, that that spirit might at his will, and to his purposes inform, and inanimate that dead body; God allows no such Super-inductions, no such second Marriages upon such divorces by death, no such disposition of soul or body, after their dissolution by death. But because God hath made the band of Marriage indissoluble but by death, farther than man can die, this divorce cannot fall upon man; As fare as man is immortal, man is a married man still, still in possession of a soul, and a body too; And man is for ever immortal in both; Immortal in his soul by Preservation, and immortal in his body by Reparation in the Resurrection. For, though they be separated à Thoro & Mensa, from Bed and Board, they are not divorced; Though the soul be at the Table of the Lamb, in Glory, and the body but at the table of the Serpent, in dust; Though the soul be in lecto florido, Cant. 1.16. in that bed which is always green, in an everlasting spring, in Abraham's Bosom; And the body but in that green-bed, whose covering is but a yard and a half of Turf, and a Rug of grass, and the sheet but a winding sheet, yet they are not divorced; they shall return to one another again, in an inseparable reunion in the Resurrection. To establish this assurance of a Resurrection in us, God does sometimes in this life, that which he hath promised for the next; that is, he gives a Resurrection to life, after a bodily death here. God hath made two Testaments, two Wills; And in both, he hath declared his Power, and his Will, to give this new life after death, in this world. To the Widow's son of Zarephtha, 1. King. 17. he bequeathes new life; and to the Shunamites son, he gives the same legacy, 2 King. 4. in the Old Testament. In the New Testament, to the widow of Naims' son, Luk. 7.8. he bequeathes new life; And to jairus daughter he gives the same legacy: And out of the surplusage of his inexhaustible estate, out of the overflowing of his Power, he enables his Executors to do as he did; for Peter gives Dorcas this Resurrection too. Act. 9.40. Divers examples hath he given us, of the Resurrection of every particular man, in particular Resurrections; such as we have named; And one of the general Resurrection, in the Resurrection of Christ himself; for, in him, we all rose; for, he was All in All; Con-vivificavit, Ephes. 2.5. says the Apostle; and Considere nos fecit, God hath quickened us, (all us; not only S. Paul, and his Ephesians, but all) and God hath raised us, and God hath made us to sit together in heavenly places, in Christ jesus. They that are not fallen yet by any actual sin, (children newly baptised) are risen already in him; And they that are not dead yet, nay, not alive yet, not yet borne, have a Resurrection in him, who was not only the Lamb slain from the beginning, but from before all beginnings was risen too; and all that shall ever have part in the second Resurrection, are risen with him from that time. Now, next to that great Prophetical action, that type of the general Resurrection, in the Resurrection of Christ, the most illustrious Evidence, of the Resurrection of particular men, is this Resuscitation of Lazarus; whose sister Martha, directed by faith, and yet transported by passion, seeks to entender and mollify, and supple him to impressions of mercy and compassion, who was himself the Mould, in which all mercy was cast, nay, the substance, of which all mercy does consist, Christ Jesus, with this imperfect piece of Devotion, which hath a tincture of Faith, but is deeper died in Passion, Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died. This Text which you Hear, Martha's single words, Divisio. complicated with this Text which you See, The dead body of this our Brother, makes up between them this body of Instruction for the soul; first, That there is nothing in this world perfect; And then, That such as it is, there is nothing constant, nothing permanent. We consider the first, That there is nothing perfect, in the best things, in spiritual things; Even Martha's devotion and faith hath imperfections in it; And we consider the other, That nothing is permanent in temporal things; Riches prosperously multiplied, Children honourably bestowed, Additions of Honour and Titles, fairly acquired, Places of Command and Government, justly received, and duly executed; All testimonies, all evidences of worldly happiness, have a Dissolution, a Determination in the death of this, and of every such Man: There is nothing, no spiritual thing, perfect in this world; Nothing, no temporal thing, permanent and durable; And these two Considerations shall be our two parts; And then, these the branches from these two roots; First, in the first, we shall see in general, The weakness of Man's best actions; And secondly, more particularly, The weaknesses in Martha's Action; And yet, in a third place, the easiness, the propenseness, the largeness of God's goodness towards us, in the acceptation of our imperfect Sacrifices; for, Christ does not refuse, nor discourage Martha, though her action have these imperfections; And in this largeness of his Mercy, which is the end of all, we shall end this part. And in our second, That as in spiritual things nothing is perfect, so in tempoporall things nothing is permanent, we shall, by the same three steps, as in the former, look first upon the general consideration, the fluidness, the transitoriness of all such temporal things; And then, consider it more particularly, in God's Masterpiece, amongst mortal things, the body of man, That even that flows into putrefaction; And then lastly, return to that, in which we determined the former part, The largeness of God's goodness to us, in affording even to man's body, so dissolved into putrefaction, an incorruptible and a glorious state. So have you the frame set up, and the rooms divided; The two parts, and the three branches of each; And to the furnishing of them, with meditations fit for this Occasion, we pass now. In entering upon the first branch of our first part, 1. Part. In spiritualibus, nihil perfectum. Scientia. That in spiritual things nothing is perfect, we may well afford a kind of spiritual nature to knowledge; And how imperfect is all our knowledge? What one thing do we know perfectly? Whether we consider Arts, or Sciences, the servant knows but according to the proportion of his Master's knowledge in that Art, and the Scholar knows but according to the proportion of his Master's knowledge in that Science; Young men mend not their sight by using old men's Spectacles; and yet we look upon Nature, but with Aristotle's Spectacles, and upon the body of man, but with Galens, and upon the frame of the world, but with Ptolemy's Spectacles. Almost all knowledge is rather like a child that is embalmed to make Mummy, then that is nursed to make a Man; rather conserved in the stature of the first age, then grown to be greater; And if there be any addition to knowledge, it is rather a new knowledge, than a greater knowledge; rather a singularity in a desire of proposing something that was not known at all before, than an emproving, an advancing, a multiplying of former inceptions; and by that means, no knowledge comes to be perfect. One Philosopher thinks he is dived to the bottom, when he says, he knows nothing but this, That he knows nothing; and yet another thinks, that he hath expressed more knowledge than he, in saying, That he knows not so much as that, That he knows nothing. S. Paul found that to be all knowledge, To know Christ; And Mahomet thinks himself wise therefore, because he knows not, acknowledges not Christ, as S. Paul does. Though a man knew not, that every sin casts another shovel of Brimstone upon him in Hell, yet if he knew that every riotous feast cuts off a year, and every wanton night seven years of his seventy in this world, it were some degree towards perfection in knowledge. He that purchases a Manor, will think to have an exact Survey of the Land: But who thinks of taking so exact a survey of his Conscience, how that money was got, that purchased that Manor? We call that a man's means, which he hath; But that is truly his means, what way he came by it. And yet how few are there, (when a state comes to any great proportion) that know that; that know what they have, what they are worth? We have seen great Wills, dilated into glorious uses, and into pious uses, and then too narrow an estate to reach to it; And we have seen Wills, where the Testator thinks he hath bequeathed all, and he hath not known half his own worth. When thou knowest a wife, a son, a servant, a friend no better, but that that wife betrays thy bed, and that son thine estate, and that servant thy credit, and that friend thy secret, what canst thou say thou knowest? But we must not insist upon this Consideration of knowledge; for, though knowledge be of a spiritual nature, yet it is but as a terrestrial Spirit, conversant upon Earth; Spiritual things, of a more rarified nature then knowledge, even faith itself, and all that grows from that in us, falls within this Rule, which we have in hand, That even in spiritual things, nothing is perfect. We consider this therefore in Credendis, Fides. In things that we are bound to Believe, there works our faith; And then, in Petendis, In things that we are bound to pray for, there works our hope; And lastly, in Agendis, In things that we are bound to do, and there works our charity; And there is nothing in any of these three perfect. When you remember who they were, Luk. 17.5. that made that prayer, Domine adauge, That the Apostles themselves prayed, that their faith might receive an increase, Lord increase our faith, you must necessarily second that consideration with a confession, That no man's faith is perfect. When you hear Christ so often upbraid, sometimes whole Congregations, with that, Mat. 6.30. Modicae fidei, O ye of little faith; And sometimes his Disciples alone, with the same reproach, Mat. 8.26. Modicae fidei, O ye of little faith; when you may be perplexed with the variety of opinions amongst the ancient Interpreters, whether Christ spoke but to the incredulous Jews, Mat. 17.17. or to his own Disciples, when he said, O faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you? how long shall I suffer you? (for many Interpreters go one way, and many the other) And when you may be cleared without any colour of perplexity, that to whom soever Christ spoke in that place, he spoke plainly to his own Disciples, Vers. 20. when he said, Because of your unbelief you cannot do this; In which Disciples of his, he denies also, that there is such a proportion of faith, as a grain of Mustardseed, can ye place a perfectness of faith in any? When the Apostle takes knowledge of the good estate and condition of the Thessalonians, and gave God thanks for their Works of faith, for their labours of love, for their patience of hope, in our Lord jesus Christ: 1 Thes. 1.2.3.10. does he conclude them to be perfect? No; for after this he says, Night and day we pray exceedingly, that we may perfect that which is lacking in your faith. And after this, he sees the fruit of those prayers, We are bound to thank God always, 2 Thes. 1.3. because your faith groweth exceedingly; still, at the best, it is but a growing faith, and it may be better. There are men that are said to be Rich in faith; james 2.5. men that are come from the weak and beggarly elements of Nature, or of the Law, to the knowledge of the precious and glorious Gospel, Galat. 4.9. and so are Rich in faith, enriched, emproved by faith. 2 Cor. 8.7. There are men that Abound in faith; that is, in comparison of the emptiness of other men, or of their own emptiness before they embraced the Gospel, they abound now; But still it is, Rom. 12.3. As God hath given the measure of faith to every man; Not as of his Manna, a certain measure, and an equal measure, and a full measure to every man; no man hath such a measure of faith, as that he needs no more, or that he may not lose at least some of that. When Christ speaks so doubtfully, When the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith upon earth? Luke 18. ●. Any faith in any man? If the Holy Ghost be come into this presence, into this Congregation, does he find faith in any? A perfect faith he does not. Deceive not yourselves then, with that new charm and flattery of the soul, That if once you can say to yourselves you have faith, you need no more, or that you shall always keep that alive; The Apostle says, All boasting, that is, all confidence, Rom. 3.27. is excluded; By what Law? says he, by the Law of faith, Not by faith, but by the Law of faith; There is a Law of faith; a rule that ordinates', and regulates our faith; by which law and rule, the Apostle calls upon us, To examine ourselves whether we be in the faith, or no; 2 Cor. 13.5. not only by the internal motions, and private inspirations of his blessed Spirit, but by the Law and the Rule, which he hath delivered to us in the Gospel. The King's pardon flows from his mere grace, and from his breast; but we must have the writing and the Seal, that we may plead it: So does faith from God; But we must see it ourselves, and show it to others, or else we do not observe the Law of faith. Rom. 4.11. Abraham received the Seal of the righteousness of faith, says the Apostle; He had an outward testimony to proceed by; And then, Abraham became an outward testimony and Rule to the faithful, Walk in the steps of the faith of Abraham, says that Apostle in that place; Ver. 12. Not a faith conceived only, but a faith which you saw, The faith of Abraham; for, so the Apostle proposing to us the example of other men says, Their faith follow you, Heb. 13.7. Not faith in general, but their faith. So that it is not enough to say, I feel the inspiration of the Spirit of God, He infuses faith, and faith infused cannot be withdrawn; but, as there is a Law of faith, and a practice of faith, a Rule of faith, and an example of faith, apply thyself to both, Regulate thy faith by the Rule, that is, the Word, and by Example, that is, Believe those things which the Saints of God have constantly and unanimely believed to be necessary to salvation: The Word is the Law, and the Rule, The Church is the Practice, and the Precedent that regulates thy faith; And if thou make imaginary revelations, and inspirations thy Law, or the practice of Sectaries thy Precedent, thou dost but call Fancy and Imagination, by the name of Reason and Understanding, and Opinion by the name of Faith, and Singularity, and Schism, by the name of Communion of Saints. The Law of thy faith is, That that that thou believest, be Universal, Catholic, believed by all; And then, that the Application be particular, To believe, that as Christ died sufficiently for all, so he died effectually for thee. And of this effectual dying for thee, there arises an evidence from thyself, in thy conformity to him; Thy conformity consists in this, That thou art willing to live according to his Gospel, and ready to die for him, that died for thee. For, till a man have resisted unto blood, he cannot know experimentally what degrees towards perfection his faith hath: And though he may conceive in himself a holy purpose to die for Christ, yet till he have died for Christ, or died in Christ, that is, as long as we are in this valley of tentations, there is nothing, no not in spiritual things, not in faith itself, perfect. It is not In credendis, in our embracing the object of faith; we do not that perfectly; Spes. It is not In petendis, in our directing our prayers faithfully neither; we do not that; our faith is not perfect, nor our hope is not perfect; for, so argues the Apostle, Ye ask, james 4.3. and receive not, because ye ask amiss; you cannot hope constantly, because you do not pray aright: And to make a Prayer a right Prayer, there go so many essential circumstances, as that the best man may justly suspect his best Prayer: for, since Prayer must be of faith, Prayer can be but so perfect, as the faith is perfect; and the imperfections of the best faith we have seen. Christ hath given us but a short Prayer; and yet we are weary of that. Some of the old Heretics of the Primitive Church abridged that Prayer, and some of our later Schismatics have annihilated, evacuated that Prayer: The Cathari then, left out that one Petition, Dimitte nobis, Forgive us our trespasses, for they thought themselves so pure, as that they needed no forgiveness, and our new men leave out the whole Prayer, because the same Spirit that spoke in Christ, speaks in their extemporal prayers, and they can pray, as well as Christ could teach them. And (to leave those, whom we are bound to leave, those old Heretics, those new Schismatics) which of us ever, ever says over that short Prayer, with a deliberate understanding of every Petition as we pass, or without deviations, and extravagancies of our thoughts, in that halfe-minute of our Devotion? We have not leisure to speak of the abuse of prayer in the Roman Church; where they will antedate and postdate their prayers; Say to morrows prayers to day, and to day's prayers to morrow, if they have other uses and employments of the due time between; where they will trade, and make merchandise of prayers by way of exchange, My man shall fast for me, and I will pray for my man; or my Attorney, and Proxy shall pray for us both, at my charge; nay, where they will play for prayers, and the loser must pray for both; To this there belongs but a holy scorn, and I would feign pass it over quickly. But when we consider with a religious seriousness the manifold weaknesses of the strongest devotions in time of Prayer, it is a sad consideration. I throw myself down in my Chamber, and I call in, and invite God, and his Angels thither, and when they are there, I neglect God and his Angels, for the noise of a Fly, for the rattling of a Coach, for the whining of a door; I talk on, in the same posture of praying; Eyes lifted up; knees bowed down; as though I prayed to God; and, if God, or his Angels should ask me, when I thought last of God in that prayer, I cannot tell: Sometimes I find that I had forgot what I was about, but when I began to forget it, I cannot tell. A memory of yesterday pleasure's, a fear of to morrows dangers, a straw under my knee, a noise in mine ear, a light in mine eye, an any thing, a nothing, a fancy, a Chimaera in my brain, troubles me in my prayer. So certainly is there nothing, nothing in spiritual things, perfect in this world. Not In credendis, Charitas. In things that belong to Faith; not In petendis, In things that belong to Hope; nor In agendis, In things that belong to Action, to Works, to Charity, there is nothing perfect there neither. I would be loath to say, That every good work is a sin; That were to say, That every deformed, or disordered man were a beast, or that every corrupt meat were poison; It is not utterly so; not so altogether; But it is so much towards it, as that there is no work of ours so good, as that we can look for thanks at God's hand for that work; no work, that hath not so much ill mingled with it, as that we need not cry God mercy for that work. There was so much corruption in the getting, or so much vain glory in the bestowing, as that no man builds an Hospital, but his soul lies, though not dead, yet lame in that Hospital; no man mends a highway, but he is, though not drowned, yet mired in that way; no man relieves the poor, but he needs relief for that relief. In all those works of Charity, the world that hath benefit by them, is bound to confess and acknowledge a goodness, and to call them good works; but the man that does them, and knows the weaknesses of them, knows they are not good works. It is possible to Art, to purge a peccant humour out of a sick body; but not possible to raise a dead body to life. God, out of my Confession of the impurity of my best actions, shall vouchsafe to take off his eyes from that impurity, as though there were none; but no spiritual thing in us, not Faith, not Hope, not Charity, have any purity, any perfection in themselves; which is the general Doctrine we proposed at first; And our next Consideration is, how this weakness appears in the Action, and in the Words of Martha in our Text, Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died. Now lest we should attribute this weakness, Marthae fides only to weak persons, upon whom we had a prejudice, to Martha alone, we note to you first, that her sister Mary, to whom in the whole Story very much is ascribed, when she comes to Christ, comes also in the same voice of infirmity, Ver. 32. Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died. No person so perfect, that hath not of these imperfections; Both these holy Sisters, howsoever there might be differences of degrees in their holiness, have imperfections in all three, in the consideration of their Faith, and their Hone, and their Charity; though in all three they had also, and had both, good degrees towards perfection. Look first upon their Faith; they both say, Lord, if thou hadst been here, our brother had not died. We cannot say so to any Consultation, to any College of Physicians; not to a Chiron, to an Esculapius, to a God of Physic, could any man say, If you had been here, my friend had not died? though surely there be much assistance to be received from them, whom God hath endowed with knowledge to that purpose. And yet there was a weakness in these Sisters, in that they said but so, and no more to Christ. They thought Christ to be the best amongst good men; but yet they were not come to the knowledge that he was God. Martha says, I know, that even now, whatsoever thou askest of God, Verse 22. God will give it thee; but she does not know him to be God himself. I do not here institute a confutation, but here, and every where I lament the growth, and insinuation of that pestilent Heresy of Socinianism; That Christ was a holy, a thrice-holy man, an unreproachable, an irreprehensible, an admirable, an incomparable man; A man, to whom, he that should equal any other man, were worse than a Devil; A man worthy to be called God, in a fare higher sense than any Magistrate, any King, any Prophet; But yet he was no God, say they, no Son of God; A Redeemer, by way of good example; but no Redeemer, by way of equivalent satisfaction, say those Heretics. S. Paul says, Ephes. 2.12. He is an Atheist, that is without Christ; And he is as much an Atheist still, that pretends to receive Christ, and not as God; For if the receiving of Christ must redeem him from being an Atheist, there can no other way be imagined, but by receiving him as God, for that only, and no other good opinion of Christ, overcomes, and removeth his Atheism. After the last day, whatsoever is not Heaven, is Hell; He that then shall be where the Sun is now, (if he be not then in heaven) shall be as fare from heaven, as if he were where the Centre of the earth is now; He that confesses not all Christ, confesses no Christ. Horribile dictu, dicam tamen, says S. Augustine in another case; There belongs a holy trembing to the saying of it, yet I must say it, If Christ were not God, he was a devil that durst say he was God. This than was one weakness in these Sister's faith, that it carried them not up to the consideration of Christ as God; And then another rose out of that, That they insisted so much, relied so much, upon his corporal, and personal presence, and promised themselves more from that, than he had ever given them ground for; which was that which Christ diverted Mary from, when after his Resurrection manifesting himself to her, and she flying unto him with that impatient zeal, and that impetuous devotion, Rabboni, Master, My Master, Christ said to her, joh. 20.16. Touch me not, for I am not ascended to my Father; that is, Dwell not upon this passionate consideration of my bodily, and personal presence, but send thy thoughts, and thy reverence, and thy devotion, and thy holy amorousness up, whither I am going, to the right hand of my Father, and consider me, contemplate me there. S. Peter had another holy distemper of another kind, upon the personal presence of Christ; He was so astonished at his presence in the power of a Miracle, that he fell down at his feet, and said, Luke 5.8. Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord. These Sisters longed for him, and S. Peter longed as much to be delivered of him; both out of weakness and error. So is it an error, and a weakness to attribute too much, or too little to Christ's presence in his Sacraments, or other Ordinances. To imprison Christ in Opere operato, to conclude him so, as that where that action is done, Christ must necessarily be, and necessarily work, this is to say weakly with these Sisters, Lord, if thou hadst been here, our brother had not died. As long as we are present at thine Ordinance, thou art present with us. But to banish Christ from those holy actions, and to say, That he is no otherwise present, or works not otherwise in those actions, then in other times, and places, this is to say with Peter, in his astonishment, Exi à me Domine, O Lord departed from me; It is enough that thy Sacrament be a sign; I do not look that it should be a Seal, or a Conduit of Grace; This is the danger this is the distemper, to ascribe too much, or too little to God's visible Ordinances, and Institutions, either to say with those holy Sisters, Lord, if thou hadst been here, our brother had not died, If we have a Sacrament, if we have a Sermon all is well, we have enough; or else with Peter, Exi à me, Leave me to myself, to my private motions, to my bosom inspirations, and I need no Church-work, no Sermons, no Sacraments, no such assistances. So there was weakness in their Faith, Marthae spes. there was so too in their Hope, in their confidence in Christ, and in their manner of expressing it. For, they did not go to him, when their brother was sick, Joh. 3.1. Mat. 8.5. Mark 5.25, 33. but sent. Nicodemus came in person for his sick soul; And the Centurion in person, for his sick servant; And jairus in person, for his sick daughter; And the woman with the bloody Issue in person, for her sick-selfe. These sisters did but send, but piously, and reverendly; Their Messenger was to say to Christ, not Lazarus, not Our Brother, but He whom thou lovest, is sick; And they left this intimation to work upon Christ; But that was not enough, we must bring Christ and our necessities nearer together then so. There is good instruction in the several expressings of Christ's curings of Peter mother in the Evangelists. Mark 1.29. S. Mark says, They told him of her; And S. Luke says, They brought him up to her; And S. Matthew says, He saw her, and took her by the hand. I must not wrap up all my necessities in general terms in my prayers, but descend to particulars; For this places my devotion upon particular considerations of God, to consider him in every Attribute, what God hath done for me in Power, what in Wisdom, what in Mercy; which is a great assistance, and establishing, and propagation of devotion. As it is a degree of unthankfulness, to thank God too generally, and not to delight to insist upon the weight, and measure, and proportion, and the goodness of every particular mercy: so is it an irreverent, and inconsiderate thing, not to take my particular wants into my thoughts, and into my prayers, that so I may take a holy knowledge, that I have nothing, nothing but from God, and by prayer. And as God is an accessible God, as he is his own Master of Requests, and is ever open to receive thy Petions, in how small a matter soever: so is he an inexhaustible God, he can give infinitely, and an indefatigable God, he cannot be pressed too much. Therefore hath Christ given us a Parable of getting Bread at midnight by Importunity, Luke 11.5.18.7. and not otherwise; And another of a judge that heard the widow's cause by Importunity, and not otherwise; And, not a Parable, Matt. 15.21. but a History, and a History of his own, of a woman of Canaan, that overcame him in the behalf of her daughter, by Importunity; when, but by importunity, she could not get so much as an answer, as a denial at his hands. Pray personally, rely not upon dead nor living Saints; Thy Mother the Church prays for thee, but pray for thyself too; She can open her bosom, and put the breast to thy mouth, but thou must draw, and suck for thyself. Pray personally, and pray frequently; David had may stationary times of the day, and night too, to pray in. Pray frequently, and pray fervently; God took it not ill, at David's hands, to be awaked, and to be called up, as though he were asleep at our prayers, and to be called upon, to pull his hand out of his bosom, as though he were slack in relieving our necessities. This was a weakness in those Sisters, that they solicited not Christ in person; still get as near God as you can; And that they declared not their case particularly; It is not enough to pray, nor to confess in general terms; And, that they pursued not their prayer earnestly, thoroughly; It is not enough to have prayed once; Christ does not only excuse, but enjoin Importunity. And then a weakness there was in their Charity too, Marthae charitas. even towards their dead brother. To lament a dead friend is natural, and civil; and he is the deader of the two, the verier carcase, that does not so. But inordinate lamentation implies a suspicion of a worse state in him that is gone; And if I do believe him to be in heaven, deliberately, advisedly to wish him here, that is in heaven, is an uncharitable desire. For, for me to say, He is preferred by being where he is, but I were better, if he were again where I am, were such an indispofition, as if the Prince's servant should be loath to see his Master King, because he should not hold the same place with him, being King, as he did when he was Prince. Not to hope well of him that is gone, is uncharitableness; and at the same time, when I believe him to be better, to wish him worse, is uncharitableness too. And such weaknesses were in those holy and devout Sisters of Lazarus; which establishes our Conclusion, There is nothing in this world, no not in spiritual things, not in knowledge, not in faith, not in hope, not in charity perfect. But yet, for all these imperfections, Christ doth not refuse, nor chide, but cherish their piety, which is also another circumstance in that Part. There is no form of Building stronger than an Arch, and yet an Arch hath declinations, which even a flat-roofe hath not; Non rejicit Christus. The flat-roofe lies equal in all parts; the Arch declines downwards in all parts, and yet the Arch is a firm supporter. Our Devotions do not the less bear us upright, in the sight of God, because they have some declinations towards natural affections: God doth easilier pardon some neglectings of his grace, when it proceeds out of a tenderness, or may be excused out of good nature, than any presuming upon his grace. If a man do departed in some actions, from an exact obedience of God's will, upon infirmity, or humane affections, and not a contempt, God passes it over often times. For, when our Saviour Christ says, Be pure as your Father in heaven is pure, that is a rule for our purity, but not a measure of our purity; It is that we should be pure so, not that we should be so pure as our Father in heaven. When we consider that weakness, that went through the Apostles, even to Christ's Ascension, that they looked for a temporal Kingdom, and for preferment in that; when we consider that weakness in the chief of them, S. Peter, at the Transfiguration, when, Mar. 9.6. as the Text says, He knew not what to say; when we consider the weakness of his action, that for fear of death, he renounced the Lord of Life, and denied his Master; when in this very story, when Christ said that Lazarus was asleep, and that he would go to awake him, they could understand it so impertinently, as that Christ should go such a journey, to come to the waking of a man, asleep at that time when he spoke; All these infirmities of theirs, multiply this consolation upon us, That though God look upon the Inscription, he looks upon the metal too, Though he look that his Image should be preserved in us, he looks in what earthen vessels this Image is put, and put by his own hand; and though he hate us in our rebellions, yet he pities us in our grievances; though he would have us better, he forsakes us not for every degree of illness. There are three great dangers in this consideration of perfectness, and purity; First to distrust of God's mercy, if thou find not this purity in thyself, and this perfectness; And then to presume upon God, nay upon thine own right, in an overvaluing of thine own purity, and perfectness; And again, to condemn others, whom thou wilt needs think less pure, or perfect then thyself. Against this diffidence in God, to think ourselves so desperately impure, as that God will not look upon us; And this presumption in God, to think ourselves so pure, as that God is bound to look upon us; And this uncharitableness towards others, to think none pure at all, that are not pure our way; Christ arms us by his Example, He receives these sisters of Lazarus, and accomplishes as much as they desired, though there were weaknesses in their Faith, in their Hope, in their Charity, expressed in that unperfect speech, Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died: for, there is nothing, not in spiritual things perfect. This we have seen out of the Text we have Herd; And now out of the Text, which we See, we shall see the rest, That as in spiritual things, there is nothing Perfect, so in temporal, there is nothing Permanent. I need not call in new Philosophy, that denies a settledness, 2. Part. an acquiescence in the very body of the Earth, but makes the Earth to move in that place, where we thought the Sun had moved; I need not that help, that the Earth itself is in Motion, to prove this, That nothing upon Earth is permanent; The Assertion will stand of itself, till some man assign me some instance, something that a man may rely upon, and find permanent. Consider the greatest Bodies upon Earth, The Monarchies; Objects, which one would think, Destiny might stand and stare at, but not shake; Consider the smallest bodies upon Earth, The hairs of our head, Objects, which one would think, Destiny would not observe, or could not discern; And yet, Destiny, (to speak to a natural man) And God, (to speak to a Christian) is no more troubled to make a Monarchy ruinous, then to make a hair grey. Nay, nothing needs be done to either, by God, or Destiny; A Monarchy will ruin, as a hair will grow grey, of itself. In the Elements themselves, of which all sub-elementary things are composed, there is no acquiescence, but a vicissitudinary transmutation into one another; Air condensed becomes water, a more solid body, And Air rarified becomes fire, a body more disputable, and in-apparant. It is so in the Conditions of men too; A Merchant condensed, kneaded and packed up in a great estate, becomes a Lord; And a Merchant rarified, blown up by a perfidious Factor, or by a riotous Son, evaporates into air, into nothing, and is not seen. And if there were any thing permanent and durable in this world, yet we got nothing by it, because howsoever that might last in itself, yet we could not last to enjoy it; If our goods were not amongst Movables, yet we ourselves are; if they could stay with us, yet we cannot stay with them; which is another Consideration in this part. The world is a great Volume, and man the Index of that Book; Corpus hominis. Even in the body of man, you may turn to the whole world; This body is an Illustration of all Nature; God's recapitulation of all that he had said before, in his Fiat lux, and Fiat firmamentum, and in all the rest, said or done, in all the six days. Propose this body to thy consideration in the highest exaltation thereof; as it is the Temple of the Holy Ghost: Nay, not in a Metaphor, or comparison of a Temple, or any other similitudinary thing, but as it was really and truly the very body of God, in the person of Christ, and yet this body must whither, must decay, must languish, must perish. When Goliath had armed and fortified this body, And jezabel had painted and perfumed this body, And Dives had pampered and larded this body, As God said to Ezekiel, when he brought him to the dry bones, Fili hominis, Son of Man, dost thou think these bones can live? They said in their hearts to all the world, Can these bodies die? And they are dead. jezabels' dust is not Ambar, nor Goliahs' dust Terra sigillata, Medicinal; nor does the Serpent, whose meat they are both, find any better relish in Dives dust, then in Lazarus. But as in our former part, where our foundation was, That in nothing, no spiritual thing, there was any perfectness, which we illustrated in the weaknesses of Knowledge, and Faith, and Hope, and Charity, yet we concluded, that for all those defects, God accepted those their religious services; So in this part, where our foundation is, That nothing in temporal things is permanent, as we have illustrated that, by the decay of that which is God's noblest piece in Nature, The body of man; so we shall also conclude that, with this goodness of God, that for all this dissolution, and putrefaction, he affords this Body a Resurrection. The Gentiles, Resurrectio. and their Poets, describe the sad state of Death so, Nox una obeunda, That it is one everlasting Night; To them, a Night; But to a Christian, it is Dies Mortis, and Dies Resurrectionis, The day of Death, and The day of Resurrection; We die in the light, in the sight of God's presence, and we rise in the light, in the sight of his very Essence. Nay, Gods corrections, and judgements upon us in this life, are still expressed so, Dies visitationis, still it is a Day, though a Day of visitation; and still we may discern God to be in the action. Gen. 2. The Lord of Life was the first that named Death; Morte morieris, says God, Thou shalt die the Death. I do the less fear, or abhor Death, because I find it in his mouth; Even a malediction hath a sweetness in his mouth; for there is a blessing wrapped up in it; a mercy in every correction, a Resurrection upon every Death. When jezabels' beauty, exalted to that height which it had by art, or higher then that, to that height which it had in her own opinion, shall be infinitely multiplied upon every Body; And as God shall know no man from his own Son, so as not to see the very righteousness of his own Son upon that man; So the Angels shall know no man from Christ, so as not to desire to look upon that man's face, because the most deformed wretch that is there, shall have the very beauty of Christ himself; So shall Goliahs' armour, and Dives fullness, be doubled, and redoubled upon us, And every thing that we can call good, shall first be infinitely exalted in the goodness, and then infinitely multiplied in the proportion, and again infinitely extended in the duration. And since we are in an action of preparing this dead Brother of ours to that state, (for the Funeral is the Easter-eve, The Burial is the depositing of that man for the Resurrection) As we have held you, with Doctrine of Mortification, by extending the Text, from Martha to this occasion; so shall we dismiss you with Consolation, by a like occasional inverting the Text, from passion in Martha's mouth, Lord, if thou hadst been here, my Brother had not died, to joy in ours, Lord, because thou wast here, our Brother is not dead. The Lord was with him in all these steps; In vita. with him in his life; with him in his death; He is with him in his funerals, and he shall be with him in his Resurrection; and therefore, because the Lord was with him, our Brother is not dead. He was with him in the beginning of his life, in this manifestation, That though he were of Parents of a good, of a great Estate, yet his possibility and his expectation from them, did not slacken his own industry; which is a Canker that eats into, nay that hath eat up many a family in this City, that relying wholly upon what the Father hath done, the Son does nothing for himself. And truly, it falls out too often, that he that labours not for more, does not keep his own. God imprinted in him an industrious disposition, though such hopes from such parents might have excused some slackness, and God prospered his industry so, as that when his Father's estate came to a distribution by death, he needed it not. God was with him, Psal. 81.11. as with David in a Dilatation, and then in a Repletion; God enlarged him, and then he filled him; He gave him a large and a comprehensive understanding, and with it, A public heart; And such as perchance in his way of education, and in our narrow and contracted-times, in which every man determines himself in himself, and scarce looks farther, it would be hard to find many Examples of such largeness. You have, I think, a phrase of Driving a Trade; And you have, I know, a practice of Driving away Trade, by other use of money; And you have lost a man, that drove a great Trade, the right way in making the best use of our home-commodity. To fetch in Wine, and Spice, and Silk, is but a drawing of Trade; The right driving of trade, is, to vent our own outward; And yet, for the drawing in of that, which might justly seem most behooveful, that is, of Arts, and Manufactures, to be employed upon our own Commodity within the Kingdom, he did his part, diligently, at least, if not vehemently, if not passionately. This City is a great Theatre, and he Acted great and various parts in it; And all well; And when he went higher, (as he was often heard in Parliaments, at Council tables, and in more private accesses to the late King of ever blessed memory) as, for that comprehension of those businesses, which he pretended to understand, no man doubts, for no man lacks arguments and evidences of his ability therein, So for his manner of expressing his intentions, and digesting and uttering his purposes, I have sometimes heard the greatest Master of Language and Judgement, which these times, or any other did, or do, or shall give, (that good and great King of ours) say of him, That he never heard any man of his breeding, handle businesses more rationally, more pertinently, more elegantly, more perswasively; And when his purpose was, to do a grace to a Preacher, of very good abilities, and good note in his own Chapel, I have heard him say, that his language, and accent, and manner of delivering himself, was like this man. This man hath God accompanied all his life; and by performance thereof seems to have made that Covenant with him, which he made to Abraham, Multiplicabote vehementer, Gen. 17.2. I will multiply thee exceedingly. He multiplied his estate so, as was fit to endow many and great Children; and he multiplied his Children so, both in their number, and in their quality, as they were fit to receive a great Estate. God was with him all the way, In a Pillar of Fire, in the brightness of prosperity, and in the Pillar of Clouds too, in many dark, and sad, and heavy crosses: So great a Ship, required a great Ballast, So many blessings, many crosses; And he had them, and sailed on his course the steadier for them; The Cloud as well as the Fire, was a Pillar to him; His crosses, as well as his blessings established his assurance in God; And so, in all the course of his life, The Lord was here, and therefore our Brother is not dead; not dead in the evidences and testimonies of life; for he, whom the world hath just cause to celebrate, for things done, when he was alive, is alive still in their celebration. The Lord was here, that is, with him at his death too. In morte. He was served with the Process here in the City, but his cause was heard in the Country; Here he sickened, There he languished, and died there. In his sickness there, those that assisted him, are witnesses, of his many expressings, of a religious & a constant heart towards God, and of his pious joining with them, even in the holy declaration of kneeling, then, when they, in favour of his weakness, would dissuade him from kneeling. I must not defraud him of this testimony frō●y self, that into this place where we are now met, I have observed him to enter with much reverence, & compose himself in this place with much declaration of devotion. And truly it is that reverence, which those persons who are of the same rank that he was in the City, that reverence that they use in this place, when they come hither, is that that makes us, who have now the administration of this Choir, glad, that our Predecessors, but a very few years before our time, (and not before all our times neither) admitted these Honourable and worshipful Persons of this City, to sit in this Choir, so, as they do upon Sundays: The Church receives an honour in it; But the honour is more in their reverence, then in their presence; though in that too: And they receive an honour, and an ease in it; and therefore they do piously towards God, and prudently for themselves, and gratefully towards us, in giving us, by their reverend comportment here, so just occasion of continuing that honour, and that ease to them here, which to less reverend, and unrespective persons, we should be less willing to do. To return to him in his sickness; He had but one day's labour, and all the rest were Sabbaths, one day in his sickness he converted to business; Thus; He called his family, and friends together; Thankfully he acknowledged Gods manifold blessings, and his own sins as penitently: And then, to those who were to have the disposing of his estate, jointly with his Children, he recommended his servants, and the poor, and the Hospitals, and the Prisons, which, according to his purpose, have been all taken into consideration; And after this (which was his Valediction to the world) he seemed always loath to return to any worldly business, His last Commandment to Wife and Children was Christ's last commandment to his Spouse the Church, in the Apostles, To love one another. He blessed them, and the Estate devolved upon them, unto them: And by God's grace shall prove as true a Prophet to them in that blessing, as he was to himself, when in entering his last bed, two days before his Death, he said, Help me off with my earthly habit, & let me go to my last bed. Where, in the second night after, he said, Little know ye what pain I feel this night, yet I know, I shall have joy in the morning; And in that morning he died. The form in which he implored his Saviour, was evermore, towards his end, this, Christ jesus, which died on the Cross, forgive me my sins; He have mercy upon me: And his last and dying words were the repetition of the name of Jesus; And when he had not strength to utter that name distinctly and perfectly, they might hear it from within him, as from a man a far off; even then, when his hollow and remote naming of Jesus, was rather a certifying of them, that he was with his Jesus, than a prayer that he might come to him. And so The Lord was here, here with him in his Death; and because the Lord was here, our Brother is not dead; not dead in the eyes and ears of God; for as the blood of Abel speaks yet, so doth the zeal of God's Saints; and their last prayers (though we hear them not) God continues still; and they pray in Heaven, as the Martyrs under the Altar, even till the Resurrection. He is with him now too; In funere. Here in his Funerals. Burial, and Christian Burial, and Solemn Burial are all evidences, and testimonies of God's presence. God forbidden we should conclude, or argue an absence of God, from the want of Solemn Burial, or Christian Burial, or any Burial; But neither must we deny it, to be an evidence of his favour and presence, where he is pleased to afford these. So God makes that the seal of all his blessings to Abraham, Gen. 15. Gen. 46. Gen. 50. Esay 11.10. Matt. 26. That he should be buried in a good age; God established jacob with that promise, That his Son joseph should have care of his Funerals: And joseph does cause his servants, The Physicians, to embalm him, when he was dead. Of Christ it was Prophesied; That he should have a glorious Burial; And therefore Christ interprets well that profuse, and prodigal piety of the Woman that poured out the Ointment upon him, That she did it to Bury him; And so shall joseph of Arimathea be ever celebrated, for his care in celebrating Christ's Funerals. If we were to send a Son, or a friend, to take possession of any place in Court, or foreign parts, we would send him out in the best equipage: Let us not grudge to set down our friends, in the Antichamber of Heaven, the Grave, in as good manner, as without vaine-gloriousnesse, and wastfulnesse we may; And, in inclining them, to whom that care belongs, to express that care as they do this day, The Lord is with him, even in this Funeral; And because The Lord is here, our brother is not dead; Not dead in the memories and estimation of men. And lastly, In resurrectione. that we may have God present in all his Manifestations, He that was, and is, and is to come, was with him, in his life and death, and is with him in this holy Solemnity, and shall be with him again in the Resurrection. Gen. 46.4. God says to jacob, I will go down with thee into Egypt, and I will also surely bring thee up again. God goes down with a good man into the Grave, and will surely bring him up again. When? The Angel promised to return to Abraham and Sarah, Gen. 18.10. for the assurance of the birth of Isaac, according to the time of life; that is, in such time, as by nature a woman may have a child. God will return to us in the Grave, according to the time of life; that is, in such time, as he, by his gracious Decree, hath fixed for the Resurrection. And in the mean time, no more than the Godhead departed from the dead body of our Saviour, in the grave, doth his power, and his presence departed from our dead bodies in that darkness; But that which Moses said to the whole Congregation, I say to you all, both to you that hear me, Deut. 4.4. and to him that does not, All ye that did cleave unto the Lord your God, are alive, every one of you, this day; Even he, whom we call dead, is alive this day. In the presence of God, we lay him down; In the power of God, he shall rise; In the person of Christ, he is risen already. And so into the same hands that have received his soul, we commend his body; beseeching his blessed Spirit, that as our charity inclines us to hope confidently of his good estate, our faith may assure us of the same happiness, in our own behalf; And that for all our sakes, but especially for his own glory, he will be pleased to hasten the consummation of all, in that kingdom which that Son of God hath purchased for us, with the inestimable price of his incorruptible blood. Amen. FINIS. ❧ The Table of such places of SCRIPTURE, as are illustrated and expounded in this BOOK. GENESIS. 1.16. TWo great lights, etc. 81. A. 2.7. Man was a living soul 71. A. 18.10. According to the time of life 826. D. 26.18. Isaac digged the wells of water, which 118. B. 29.12. jacob kissed Rachel 407. C. 41.45. Pharaoh called josephs' name 529. A. 51.20. You thought evil against me, 171. B. EXODUS. 4.22. Israel is his son 56. E. 14.14. The Lord shall fight for you 577. D. 23.3. Thou shalt not countenance 782. C. 33.13. Show me now thy way 66. E. DEUTERONOMY. 21.23. He that is hanged is accursed of God 8. A. 30.15. See, I have set before thee life and death 70. A. 30.19. I have set before you life and death 148. D. JOSHUAH. 10.12. Sun, stand thou still 700. A. JUDGES. 2.5. They wept, 539. B. RUTH. 1.19. Call me not Naomi 479. B. 2 SAMUEL. 14.14. We must needs die, and are 311. A. 26.12. The sleep of the Lord was upon him 257. D. 2 KINGS. 9.3. None shall say, This is jezebel 148. B. 11.12. They put the crown 336. D. 20.7. Take a lump of figs 514. E. JOB. 4.18. His Angels he charged with folly 9 C. 5.7. Man is borne unto travatle, as 538. B. 7.1. Man's life is a warfare 142. A. & 603 E. 8.16. Woe unto me poor rush, for etc. 141. B. 10.20. Lord spare me a while 162. C. 19.25. I know my Redeemer liveth, etc. 150. A. 19.26. In my flesh etc. 122. A. 20.11. My bones are full of the sins 519. B. PSALMS. 2.2. They imagine a vain thing 433. D. 2.8. Ask of me and I will give thee etc. 26. E. & 462. E. 2. ult. Kiss the Son lest he be angry 541. D. 3.7. Thou hast broken the teeth 516. D. 6.5. In death there is no remembrance of thee 533. E. 15.2. Lord, who shall ascend to thy Tabernacle 117. E. 19.9. The judgements of the Lord justify themselves 366. D. 22.6. I am a worm 18. A. 45. C. 65. A. 25.15. Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord 618. A. 37.5. Commit thy ways unto the Lord 686. B. 37.26. The righteous is merciful 83. E. 45.7. God hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness 396. C. 50.12. If I were hungry 101. B 55.19. Because they have no changes, therefore they fear not God. 57 D. 65.1. Praise waiteth for thee 64. A. 66.3. Through the greatness of thy power, shall thine enemies submit. 585. A. 72.18. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, which 394. D. 78.63. Their maidens were not given in marriage. 679. C. 82.1. God standeth in the 72. D. 90.10. The days of our years etc. 83. B. 101.1. I will sing of thy mercy and 12. A. 101.5. Him that hath a high look 729. B. 102.5. My bones cleave to my flesh 519. B. 104.29. They die, and they return 255. D. 105.15. Touch not mine anointed 55. B. 106.20. They changed their glory 85. A. 111.10. A good understanding have 612. C. 113.5. He dwells in heaven 134. C. 119.57. The Lord is my portion 14. B. 119.136. Rivers of waters ran 161. E. 135.7. He causeth the vapours 264. B. 136.4. Facit mirabilia magna 215. C. 139.21. Do not I hate them 99 C. 145.15. The eyes of all wait 684. D. 146.3. Put not your trust in Princes 483. A. PROVERBS. 11.13. The fruit of the righteous 84. A. 12.23. A wise man concealeth 565. C. 13.22. The wealth of the sinner etc. 83. C. 14.23. He shall have hope 83. D. 17.6. The glory of children 84. A. 25.16. Fill not thyself with honey 63. E. ECCLES. 10.10. If the iron be blunt, we must 356. C. 10.20. Those that have wings 92. D. 38.9. Myson, in thy sickness etc. 110. C. CANTICLES. 1.8. O thou fairest among women 119. E. 2.15. Take us the little Foxes, for they devour the Vine 117. A. 782. B. 4.12. My Sister, my Spouse is a garden en closed 515. C. 8.6. Set me as a seal on thy heart, 456. D. ESAY. 7.13. Is it a small thing to weary men, 15. A. 9.6. A child is given to us, a Son is borne to us 86. C. 9.6. Counsellor, The mighty God. 6. B. 14.12. How art thou fallen from heaven 187. B. 18.1. woe to the land shadowing with wings 671. B. 27.7. Hath he smitten him as he smote those that smote him? 505. D. 36.21. They held their peace, and 410. B. 38.2. Hezekiah turned his face toward the wall, and prayed 251. D. 40.15. As a drop upon the Bucket 64. D. 40.31. They that wait upon the Lord, shall renew their strength. 637. C. 53.10. It pleased the Lord to bruise him, but 181. A. 55.8. My thoughts are not your 25. B. 58.11. Thou shalt be a spring of water 660. D. 60.1. Arise, shine, for thy light is come 188. E. JEREMIAH. 1.10. Behold, I have this day 734. B. 5.1. Run to and fro through the streets of 422. A. 18.2. Arise and go down 147. B. LAMENTATIONS. 1.2. She weepeth continually in the night. 540. A. 2.19. Pour out thy heart like water 591. D. 2.10. Women eat their children of a span long 146. D. & 215. D. 4.8. My skin cleaves to my bones 519. B. EZECHIEL. 9.4. Set a mark upon the foreheads 537. E. 16.29. Thou hast multiplied thy fornications, etc. 24. C. 44.2. This gate shall be shut etc. 22. E. HOSEA. 14.2. Take unto you words, and turn 578. C. MICAH. 2.13. The breaker is gone up before, 181. B. HABAKKUK. 2.4. The just shall live etc. 79. C. 2.18. What good can an Idol, or &c 117. D. HAGGAI. 2.9. The glory of the later house etc. 30. D. ECCLUS. 7.36. Remember the end, and 371. B. 38.1. Honour a Physician with 187. B. 38.15. He that sinneth before his 187. B. MATTHEW. 1.25. Till she brought forth her Son 22. E. 5.48. Be ye perfect as your Father in heaven is 823. A. 5.23. If thou bring thy gift to the Altar, and 33. C. 7.19. He taught them as one 690. E. 9.2. My son be of good cheer, 343. C. 10.39. He that finds his life 150. C. 16.24. He that will follow me, let 732. C. 16.28. There be some standing here, 259. A. 19.28. In the regeneration 181. A. 20.23. It is not mine to give 761. E. 21.44. He that falls upon this stone 665. B. 24.20. Pray that your flight be not in the Winter, 580. B. 28.19. Go and teach all Nations 47. B. MARK. 9.24. Lord, I believe 669. C. LUKE. 1.28. Blessed art thou amongst women 18. C. 4.23. Physician, heal thyself 420. B. 4.32. They were astonished at his 691. A. 7.29. The Pharisees and Lawyers rejected. 366. D. 12.32. Fear not little flock, for etc. 45. C. & 228. B. JOHN. 1.3, 4. All things were made by him 667. E. 1.16. Grace for grace 310. E. 1.9. He was that light etc. 78. B. & 345. C. 1.16. Of his fullness have all we received, and grace for grace 4. C. 2.4. Woman, what have I to do with thee 23. D. 5.25. Verily, verily, I say unto you, the hour 150. E. 5.17. My Father worketh 240. A. 5.39. Search the Scriptures 339. B. 8.11. Sin no more 110. A. 9.10. I am the door 752. D. 10.3. His sheep hear his voice 66. D. 10.11. The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep 63. A. 19.29. They put it upon Hyssop. 646. A. 20.16. Touch me not, for 821. D. ACTS. 1.22. There was a necessity of one 180. C. 17.11. The Bereans searched the etc. 472. E. 20.22. I go bound in the Spirit 473. C. ROMANS. 6.21. What fruit had ye then 65. D. 8.15. Whereby we cry Abba, Father 27. D. 8.21. The creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage etc. 9 D. 8.23. Ourselves have the first fruits 293. B. 1 CORINTHIANS. 1.20. God hath made the wisdom of this world, foolishness 180. B. 6.3. We shall judge the Angels 235. A. 6.20. Ye are bought with a price 26. D. 10.13. No tentation shall befall us, but 789. B. 15.8. As of one borne out of due 460. D. 15.3. Christ died for our sins 397. B. 15.28. God shall be all in all 231. B. 15.29. For the dead 56. D. 2 CORINTHIANS. 7.1. Let us cleanse ourselves 118. A. 12.7. A thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan 526. E. 527. A. 12.9. My grace is sufficient for thee 527. D. EPHESIANS. 1.10. That God might gather in one 9 D. 2.12. Without Christ, without God 71. C. 3.19. That they are filled with all the 4. C. 5.14. Awake thou that sleepest 188. E. 11.6. Without faith it is impossible 105. A. PHILIPPIANS. 4.8. If there be any virtue. 681. A. COLOSSIANS. 3.5. Mortify your members 151. B. 1 THESSALONIANS. 4.7. God hath not called us to etc. 117. E. 5.25. I pray God your spirit 335. E. 1 TIM. 2.1. I exhort you that supplications and prayers etc. 510. D. TITUS. 2.14. Christ gave himself for us 77. C. HEBREWES. 4.12. The Word of God pierces etc. 335. D. & 517. B. 4.12. A two edged sword 139. B. 11.35. Others were tortured etc. 150. C. 13.22. I beseech you brethren, suffer 610. D. JAMES. 1.17. The Father of lights 385. B. 5.3. Your gold and your silver etc. 81. B. 5.11. You have seen the end etc. 399. A. 1 PETER. 2.5. Built of lively stones 35. A. 2 PETER. 1.19. We have also a more sure word of prophecy, 59 E. 1 JOHN. 3.2. Now we are the sons of God 120. C. 5.16. There is a sin unto death 348. E. REVELATION. 3.14. Thus saith Amen 53. A. 12.4. The Dragon's tail drew the 240. E. 12.7. Michael and his Angels fought against the Dragon 146. E. 17.2. The great Whore sitteth upon 310. B. 22.11. He that is holy 594. D. ❧ The Table of such Authors, as are either cited, illustrated, or refelled in this BOOK. A ABulensis. 7. A. B. 50. A. 314. D. 763. C. Aerius. 781. B. Alcazar. 184. B. Alvarez. 693. C. Alexander Alensis. 379. D. 603. C. Alcoranum. 379. C. 744. C. Ambrose. 18. A. 24. A. 38. A. 88 A. 105. D. 106. A. 110. E. 262. D. 306. B. 322. A. 390. B. 392. B. 407. A. 410. B. 546. B. 586. D. 603. E. 617. B. 784. C. 785. A. Andradius. 314. D. 763. C. Anselmus. 171. A. Apologia Confession: Augustan: 786. B. Aquinas. 17. A. 51. E. 111. B. 156. A. 205. D. 216. B. C. 306. C. 344. A. 369. A. 527. A. 541. E. 795. D. Aristoteles. 388. A. 562. D. 744. B. 818. A. Arriba. 741. D. Athanasius. 180. D. 221. B. 235. E. 244. D. 251. E. Athenagoras. 204. D. Augustinus. 4. E. 9 B. E. 15. C. 16. C. 17. D. 23. B. 27. D. 31. A. 33. E. 37. B. 48. D. E. 51. E. 59 E. 61. C. 65. B. 66. E. 67. B. 68 A. E. 69. A. 70. A. E. 79. B. 81. A. E. 89. C. 97. B. 98. B. 100 A. 102. A. 105. E. 120. E. 121. C. 122. B. C. 133. B. 148. C. D. 153. B. 154. E. 161. C. 167. A. E. 169. D. 171. B. 180. C. 183. A. 188. A. D. 194. E. 197. B. 200. D. 229. E. 232. E. 295. E. 299. E. 304. C. D. 309. B. 313. E. 323. A. D. 330. D. 369. A. B. E. 386. D. 527. A. 546. B. De libro Enoch. 560. B. 563. D. 756. B. 785. B. 786. E. 802. C. Augustin. Eugubinus. 50. A. Augustinus de Roma. 171. C. Aulus Gellius. 6. A. 17. A. 407. A. Ayguanus. 506. B. Azorius. 490. D. B Baldus. 168. E. Baronius. 142. D. 236. E. 489. E. refellitur. 492. A. Basilius. 16. D. E. 17. E. 42. B. 160. D. 168. C. 269. C. 284. C. 306. B. 309. D. 318. E. 352. E. 455. A. 511. B. 514. B. 515. B. 553. A. 712. E. 815 E. Bellarminus. 790. D. 545. E. notatus. 542. E. 578. E. 699. B. 740. D. 791. B. 803. B. Berengarius. 37. C. Bernardus. 5. E. 6. B. 7. A. 11. B. 23. A. 51. C. 75. A. 90. A. 91. C. 93. A. B. C. 94. A. B. C. etc. 118. E. 152. C. 153. B. 155. A. 162. B. 200. C. 204. C. 319. E. 340. A. 383. A. C. 389. C. 405. E. 426. A. 456. B. 510. D. 513. B. 550. B. 570. E. 680. B. 787. B. 806. E. Beda. 813. C. Beza. 220. D. 737. E. 799. A. Benius. 740. A. Biblia Complutens. 712. D. Biblia Vatican. 712. D. Biel. 380. C. Bodinus. 243. E. Bolduccus. 131. E. 133. A. 234. A. Boethius. 171. A. Bonaventura. 687. D. Brigittae Revelationes. 43. A. Bradwardinus. 171. A. Brondus. 603. C. C Calvinus. 9 C. 14. E. 18. B. 32. D. 45. D. 49. E. 80. D. 217. E. 218. A. 220. D. 246. D. 271. C. 298. B. 347. B. 477. D. 800. D. Cajetanus. 131. C. 221. A. 271. B. 490. C. 527. B. 586. D. 793. C. Carbo. 741. B. Catharinus. 4. E. 237. D. 271. B. 339. B. Canon's Poenitentiales. 282. B. 402. A. 545. C. 691. D. Caesarius. 758. D. Clemens Alexandrinus. 170. D. 187. D. 314. C. 710. D. 763. C. 772. B. 784. B. Chrysologus. 161. D. 228. B. 246. D. 249. C. 490. D. Chrysostomus. 24. A. 48. D. E. 58. B 93. A. 106. D. 152. C. 162. A. 210. E. 217. D. 263. C. 299. D. 314. C. 321. B. 322. C. 326. A. 362. C. 389. C. 401. E. 409. E. notatus. 426. B. 546. D. 712. E. 763. C. 785. C. 789. C. 795. C. 815. D. Cantepratensis. 81. D. Chemnitius. 32. D. 786. B. Chiffletius. 246. C. Choppinus. 771. C. Chrysippus. 484. B. Clavius. 765. A. Clemens Romanus. 758. C. Collius. 262. E. Concilium Nicenum. 216. D. 300. D. 415. A. Concilium Trident. 234. C. D. 404. D. 471. E. 773. A. Concilium Lateranense sub Innocent. tertio. 252. B. 773. A. Concilium Constantiense. 773. A. Concilium Senonense. 231. E. Concilium Lateranense sub Leone decimo. 237. B. Concilium Neocaesariense. 216. D. Concilium Carthaginense tertium. 775. A. Concilium Eleberitanum. 80. C. Concilium Antiochenum primum, 426. C. Constitutiones Apostolicae. 663. C. Cornelius à Lapide. 50. A. 688. A. Cornelius Mus. 489. D. Corpus Juris Civilis. 711. C. Cramerus. 18. B. Cyprianus. 17. C. 36. B. 99 D. 269. E. Explicatus. 329. C. 330. D. 355. E. 414. E. 480. B. 800. C. Cyrillus Alexandrinus. 20. E. 66. B. 67. A. 170. E. 188. C. 190. D. 194. A. 236. C. 302. B. Cyrillus Hierosolymitanus. 262. C. D Damascenus. 16. C. 27. C. 48. C. 49. A. 167. E. 168. B. 189. D. 236. C. 262. B. 309. D. 396. D. 425. E. 689. A. 802. B. Demosthenes. 387. E. Didymus Alexandrinus. 333. C. 533. D. Dionysius Areopagita. 121. A. 168. A. 261. E. 382. E. 480. B. 620. A. 785. E. Durandus. 802. A. E Epictetus. 315. A. 387. E. 667. E. Epiphanius. 23. C. 159. B. 164. E. 176. C. 394. D. 781. B. Ephrem Syrus. 538. D. Epistola Lentuli. 153. D. Erasmus. 32. E. Estius. 792. D. 800. D. Euangelium Spiritus Sancti. 291. C. Euangelium Syriacum. 525. A. Eusebius. 42. D. 45. E. 493. C. 540. B. 562. D. 784. A. F Faustus Manichaeus. 318. C. Ferus. 50. C. Festus. 713. D. Fevardentius. 793. E. G Galenus. 818. B. Galelinus. 31. D. 502. D. Genebrardus. 17. A. Gerhardus. 743. B. Gerson. 202. E. 251. C. Gregorius Neocaesariensis. 758. D. Gregorius Magnus. 9 E. 35. A. 99 D. 100 A. 107. D. 128. C. 141. B. 161. C. 181. A. 186. E. 247. E. 248. B. 266. C. 274. A. 316. B. 339. E. 342. C. 343. A. 406. A. 408. B. 461. A. 547. B. 552. E. 569. E. 580. E. 724. B. C. 785. D. 789. C. Gretserus. 698. D. Greg: Nazianzen. 71. C. 121. A. 171. C. 235. E. 385. B. 394. A. 396. C. 417. A. 480. D. 522. B. 539. B. 547. A. 552. C. 699. E. 761. A. 764. D. Greg: Nyssen. 16. C. 160. E. 249. A. 251. E. 517. C. 542. A. 555. D. 811. A. 813. C. Guavantus. 485. E. H Harmon. Synod. Belg. 115. E. Herodotus. 198. D. Hermes, sive Pastor. 784. B. Heshusius. 759. A. Hieronymus. 15. C. 24. A. 26. D. 55. A. 72. E. 79. D. 99 B. 111. A. 121. B. 147. E. 164. E. 178. A. 182. D. 190. E. 200. C. 207. B. 217. A. 231. D. 236. C. 244. D. 248. A. 252. D. 272. C. 306. B. 309. D. 363. D. 368. E. 378. E. 405. C. hallucinatus. 430. E. 462. A. de prologo ejus Galeato. 670. C. 699. B. 789. C. 794. C. 806. E. Hilarius. 16. C. 248. D. 378. E. 416. A. 539. A. 699. B. 784. D. Holkot. 311. A. 412. A. Horatius. 577. E. Hugo de Sancto Victore. 157. A. 542. A. I Ignatius. 758. C. Johannes Huss. 480. E. Josephus. 32. D. 397. E. 491. E. 687. E. Irenaeus. 16. C. 57 C. 151. D. 152. B. 415. E. 739. E. Isiodorus Hispalensis. 410. E. 411. A. 656. D. Isiodorus Pelusiota. 596. E. 758. C. Julianus Apost. 719. B. Julianus Pelagianus. 490. B. Justinianus. 793. A. Justinus Martyr. 72. E. 156. A. 236. C. 269. B. 314. C. 401. E. 408. A. 425. E. 763. C. L Lactantius. 80. A. 306. C. 354. C. 396. A. 408. C. 739. E. 751. E. 784. A. Lapide. 50. A. Leo Magnus. 42. B. 48. C. D. 63. B. 221. E. 321. B. 431. B. 535. D. 604. A. Leo Castrius. 695. D. Lex XII. Tabularum. 445. D. Lombardus. 237. B. notatus. 334. E. Lorinus. 426. C. 574. C. 687. E. 695. D. Lutherus. 18. D. 130. B. 205. A. 231. C. 232. D. 271. D. 301. D. 404. C. Apophthegma ejus. 405. C. 417. B. 426. A. 479. E. 501. A. 687. B. 786. B. 798. E. Lyra. 50. B. 555. D. M Magdeburgenses. 489. C. 799. C. Maldonatus. 197. D. 356. E. 489. D. 739. D. 771. B. 798. A. Mariana. 687. E. Martialis. 550. B. S. Martialis. 758. C. P. Martyr. 271. B. 347. C. Masoritae. 153. C. Maximus. 63. A. 535. E. Matchiavel. 744. B. Melancthon. 92. C. 744. C. 798. E. Melchior Canus. 42. A. 740. B. Menander. 220. A. Mendoza. 162. B. D. Munsterus. 747. C. Musculus. 775. A. N Nicephorus. 31. D. dictum ejus de Chrysostomo. 490. C. 699. B. O Oecumenius. 66. A. 232. C. 527. A. Oleaster. 391. D. Origenes. 99 D. 102. A. 118. C. 128. E. 170. E. 201. C. 262. D. 263. C. 299. B. 333. B. 362. C. 363. D. 386. B. 411. C. 546. C. 700. C. 710. E. primus concionator. 758. D. 770. D. 784. C. Osiander. 221. C. 298. B. P Palladius. 473. C. Pamelius. 329. C. Panigorolla. 166. A. Papias. 739. E. Paracelsus. 64. E. Paraphrastes Chaldaeus. 134. A. 269. D. 404. B. Pellicanus. 221. C. 404. C. Peltanus. 97. E. Pererius. 50. A. 740. A. Philo Judaeus. 170. B. 417. D. 420. C. 550. B. 561. C. 680. D. 812. C. Picus. 531. D. Pindarus. 442. D. Piscator. 46. C. 49. E. 131. E. 737. E. 799. A. Plato. 46. D. 68 E. 168. D. 318. D. 442. D. 752. E. 783. E. 812. C. Plinius. 17. A. 222. A. 385. C. 537. D. 617. B. 665. B. 713. A. 788. B. Plotinus. 812. C. Plutarch. 665. C. Polycarpus. 758. C. Polybius. 482. D. 551. A. Porphyrius. 207. B. 289. B. Prosper. 240. D. Prudentius. 262. E. Psalmi Arabicè. 582. A. Ptolomaeus. 818. B. Q Quintilianus. 289. B. R Rabbi Aben Ezra. 131. C. Rabbi Moses. 63. E. 66. B. 608. B. Rabbi Solomon. 50. B. 404. B. Reuchlinus. 541. C. Rhemigius. 4. B. 340. A. Ribera. 184. C. Roffensis. 789. A. Ruffinus. 270. E. Rupertus. 51. B. S Salmeron. 489. D. Sanctius. 151. E. 405. E. Sandaeus. 495. A. 690. D. Scotus. 111. B. Scribanius. 142. C. Schonfeldius. 743. B. Seneca. 147. E. 168. E. 362. B. 387. E. 388. A. 713. E. 789. B. 812. D. Serarius. 406. B. Septuaginta Interpretes. 404. B. 416. A. 528. B. 585. A. Severianus. 249. C. Sextus Senensis. 786. E. Sidonius Apollinaris. 33. B. Sophronius. 490. C. Stenartius. 605. E. Strabo. 198. D. Stunnica. 133. A. Synodus Dordrecthana. 742. C. T Tacitus. 481. E. Talmud. 379. C. 492. A. Tannerus. 605. D. Tertullianus. 17. C. 18. A. 33. E. 80. A. memoria lapsus. 101. B. 152. A. 168. C. 181. E. 207. E. 289. B. 290. D. 309. D. 312. B. 334. B. 337. B. C. 369. E. 370. E. 379. B. 388. A. 395. B. E. 397. E. 400. A. B. 408. A. 414. E. 504. B. 739. E. 783. E. 794. C. 800. E. Testamentum Syriacum. 636. C. 737. E. Theocritus. 478 A. Theodoretus. 91. B. 232. A. 305. D. 462. A. 578. D. 795. A. Theophylactus. 91. B. 181. B. 246. B. 527. A. 609. C. 795. C. Tremellius. 131. E. 133. E. 510. A. 560. C. 585. A. 690. B. 737. E. 809. C. Trismegistus. 287. B. 295. B. 347. C. 379. C. 501. C. Turrecremata. 603. C. V G. Valentia. 356. D. 605. D. Vincentius Lyrinensis. 47. A. 699. B. 722. D. Virgilius. 744. C. 784. A. Vita P. Nerei. 116. E. Vega. 339. D. Ulpianus. 194. E. Vossius. 740. A. Us; pergensis. 208. A. Vulgata Editio. 146. D. 157. D. 162. C. 260. A. 288. D. 311. A. 505. C. 610. E. 711. D. 717. C. 743. C. 761. B. W Waldo. 291. D. AN ALPHABETICAL TABLE OF THE PRINCIPAL CONTENTS IN THIS BOOK. The number of the Figures referreth to the Page; the Letter to the like Letter in the Margin. A ABsolute Decree; how dangerously man may be abused by it 691. E There is no such in God, of punishing man, but as a sinner 675. C. D. E Absolution of sins; the power of it 143. A. B The cheerfulness of their spirits that have newly received it 264. A 596. B The necessity of it 370. A. B Active life, and Contemplative, both good 30. D One, not to despise the other ibid. Admiration and Wonder, how it stands between Knowledge and Faith 194. A Adoption, in civil use; the Laws and Customs of it 27. B Applied to our spiritual Adoption ibid. Adversity, not the best time to seek the Lord in 139. C. D. 245. D. E Whether Adversity or Prosperity be the cause of most sins 658. D Adultory; God expresseth all carnal and spiritual sin by the name of Adultery 632. E Advice, to be mixed with Love and Charity 93. C How many do miscarry in it ibid. D Afflictions, wherefore inflicted upon Men 109. C Wherefore on godly men, 129. B. 480. A. B. C 664. E They are not evil 170. D Common as well to the good, as bad, 420. E Age; the centre of Reverence 31. D Allelujah Psalms, which they are, and how many 654. A Alms to be done 94. B. 106. C Cheerfully, and without delay 107. D Against those that neglect them 414. B We, not to consider the person too severely that is to receive them 764. A Against being Alone 51. E. 761. E. 762. A Alphonso, King of Casteel, his blasphemy 640. E Amen, ever doubled by Saint John, and why 658. B Anabaptists; their wicked opinions 23. C. 91. C 344. D Anathema; the several acceptations of it 401. E Saint Andrew, the first Saint in the Calendar, and why 718. C. D Angels, how reconciled by the death of Christ 9 B Whether they understand thoughts 111. B Or, see the Essence of God 120. E. 121. D. E They pray for us 130. A Whether they shall give account of their Stewardship over us, at the day of Judgement 234. E. 235. A Thought in the Greek Church to be created before the World 235. E Nothing in Scripture about their creation 235. D Not in themselves Immortal 237 B. C. Some men called by the ministry of Angels, even from the beginning of the world 261. E They that fell, might have repent, according to the Schools 262. B They that fell, shall never given 346. B Of tutelar Angels 422. B Angels created with the Light 729. C Anger in God; two errors about it, noted by Lactantius 408. D Anointing in Scripture, not always taken for real Unction 44. E. 45. A &c Anointing, proper to Kings, as well as Priests 396. A Ant and the Bee; the difference between their labour; and yet we are commanded to learn of both 712. E Apatheia, against indolency, and emptiness of all Affections 156. A Apochryphas Books; the good use that is made of them 220. D Of their esteem with the Ancient Fathers 221. A. B. C Applause after Sermon, given to the Primitive Fathers 48. D Applause of the people, or popularity, a dangerous and uncertain thing, not to be affected by any men; especially, not by the Clergy, whom it usually deceiveth most. ib. Approaches to Sin, how soon and easily they become Sin 557. E Apostles; why chosen out of simple fishermen 719. C What things were called Apostles, before Christ's Apostles were so called 758 C Apostolical Authority vainly claimed by the Pope 733. E Apostolical Tradition, what it is 781. E Articles of Faith, how they are proved by Reason 178. A 611. D Atheist, nothing so unnatural as the Atheist, 486. B Of the universal, particular, and practical Atheist ibid. & 487. A. B. & vide 756. B. Authority of the Fathers, not baulked by the Reformed Churches 557. A Though at the beginning of the Reformation our men were a little startled at it B. C B Balsam; of the natural Balsam in the body and in the soul. 514. A Baptism of children, how necessary 309. E. 425. B The Remembrance of our Baptism, a stop against sin 310. A Christ, why Baptised 425. A The Anabaptists argument against Baptism of Children, answered ibid. D The Baptism of John, whether the same with that of Christ 425. E The custom of late Baptising, why tolerated in the Church 800. A Bees; the manner of their working sub tecto 712. E Commended for their sedulity, community, secrecy, and purity 713. A. B Beggars; against ordinary Street-Beggers, and relieving them. Benedictines, of their increase and riches 602. E Benefactors and Founders, their honourable commemoration and mention pleases God 85. D The straits, to which, some of the Reformed Churches have been put about it ibid. The Benefits of this world seldom free 550. B Bishops not necessarily resident at their Sea 470. D Six thousand Bishops at one time in the Christian Church 471. A The passage between Athanasius and Dracontius who refused to be made a Bishop 471. D Bishop of Rome, against his tyranny, cruelty etc. 284. B Against his Infallibility 698. C. 722. D His Imprisoning of the Holy Ghost 292. A His Universality 371. D Against his usurping Apostolical Authority, and not contenting himself with Episcopal 733. E Blasphemy, not restrained to God alone; other persons and things may be blasphemed 343. E No Blessing in this world without permanency and continuance 754. E Blessings of this world, only Blessings in use 84. C How God blesseth man, and man blesseth God 376. D Blessedness, what it is; and what the Philosophers have thought of it 119. C. D. 752. A Whom Plato commanded the Poets and writers in his State, to call Blessed 562. D. E That temporal Blessings do not conduce at All to true Blessedness 750. B The danger of Temporal Blessings, without Spiritual 752. B What Plato thought Blessedness 752. E Spiritual Blessedness, how it is superinduced upon Temporal, as the reasonable soul upon that of sense 755. C. D Blood; no Remission without it, and why 6. D Christ shed it seven times 7. B The will, the Blood of the Soul 7. A Blood taken for sin, oftentimes in Holy Writ 132. A Bodies; the Kingdom of heaven imperfect without them 145. A The little power we have over our own Bodies ibid. D Bodies glorified and their Dotes or Endowments 189. A. B God's love to our Bodies 194. B. C Of sinning against our own Bodies by lust and licentiousness 195. D. E Bones; what is meant by Bones in Scripture 516. C Bribery; against it, or receiving of Rewards 389. E Brothers; the first enmity began in them 108. A Brownists; their opinion, that no particular Church may consist of more persons than may always hear that man, to whose charge that Church is given, censured 471. C. D Building; the Holy Ghost delights to use the name of Building and House 684. C Against Busy-bodies with other folk's matters 721. E. 722. A Burden; how every thing, even the least, the Fly; even the best, as riches, beauty, comeliness, is a Burden to us 664. C. D C Carded. Cajetans' reasons for not following the Judgement of the fathers in expounding Scripture 796. E. 79●. A. Calamities, not to be jested at 478 E Not always evidences of God's displeasure ib. Calling; the ordinary duties of our Calling not to be disputed, but executed 41. A Such as are extraordinary, may 42. A Against such as will take upon them no Calling 45. D. 411. B. 606. B How acceptable to God that labour is, which is taken in an honest Calling 721. C Against Intruders, and medlars with other men's Callings ibid. E Calvin, an approver of Ceremonies 80. D Candles; the use of them in divine Service, ancient 80. B Canonical Hours; no inconvenience in observing them, so we place no merit in them 596. D Catechising; the excellent use and benefit of it 250. A. 561. B. C. D. etc. Cathedral Churches; why so called 115. C Censuring of Preachers, and comparing one with another, condemned 692. E Ceremonies; of their antiquity and use 80. C They should differ from Mysteries ibid. Not hastily to be condemned ibid. E They are vehicula Religionis 300. B Against the Opposers of them ibid. How we are to love them 512. A Not to be disputed of by private men 575. C Changes of this world, how many 481. D Of inconstancy, and changing of mind 483. C Changes of sin, how dangerous 543. A Children; of their love and duty to Parents 387 E CHRIST; he came of women noted in Scripture for their incontinency 24. A He came to save All 26. C. 70. C. 66. B Learning at the height, when he was borne 72. C Whether he was Man, whilst in the Grave 157. A CHRIST; his Death and Passion, how necessary, and how voluntary 7. D. 792. C Three remarkable Conjunctions at his Birth 11 B The world how full with expectation of it 21. D CHRIST shed blood seven times here on earth 7. B How effectually he is present in the Sacrament 19 C His Incarnation; no way so proper to deliver us, as it 16. C His Humane Nature adunited to the Divine, whether Impeccable 169. B The infiniteness of his merits rather placed in Pacto, than in Persona, by the School 179. B The difference between his Dying, and other men's 272. E The several Heresies concerning CHRIST 316. D CHRIST died for all men 741. E. 742. A. B Church; the power of it, in applying Christ to every particular soul 60. A The true Church, which 61 A How soon multiplied and enriched 72. A. B The ten Persecutions of it 184 B. C The Church, the ordinary place for knowledge and illumination of a Christian 228. A The Primitive Church; how the whole world was bend against it 602. C The Church, a Pillar; and how 615. C What a loss it is to be kept from God's Church 664. A The care which God hath ever had of his Church 779. E Circle; the proper Hieroglyphic of God; and why 13. E Citation of Scripture; the words, much more the Chapter and verse, not always observed in it 250. C. 325. D Compliments; of their abuse and use 176. A. B. C. 412. D Comforts; how easily we mistake false Comforts for true 279. E. 382. D. 383. A. B 501. A Of the true Comfort of the Holy Ghost, 353. D Of that Comfort and consolation, which the Minister of the Gospel is to preach to all people 746. A. B C Confession to the Priest, in some cases, useful and necessary 558. A 568. A. 589. B. C How necessary to Confess 569. D. 586. E Confidence; true Confidence proceeds only from true goodness 171. E Confirmation; whether a Sacrament 329. C The use and benefit of it ibid. D. E Continency; that trial not made as should be, whether young people can Contain from marriage 217. B C Contrition, Confession, and Satisfaction, three parts of true Repentance 568. A Conventicles: against their private opinions 228. C Against them 455. A They are no Bodies 756. D Consideration of ourselves and our insufficiencies, how necessary 44. D. 45. A. etc. Constitutions: No sins to be laid and fathered upon them 90. A Corporations: how they have no souls 99 A Covering of sins, what good, and what bade 569. E It is good to cover them from giving other men examples 570. A Counsel not to be given, unless we love those to whom we give it 93. C How many miscarry in that point ibid. D Craft: and that cunning and Craft which men affect in their several Callings 411. D Creatures: how fare we may love the Creatures, and how fare not 398. E Curiosity: against the excess of it in matter of Knowledge 63. E. 64. A. 411. E. 563. B. 701. A Conscience, obdurate, and overtender; the effects of either 587. B. C. D Curses and Imprecations; whether we may use them 401. C. D. 555. E D DAmned: the consummation of their torment, wherein it consisteth in the opinion of the School 344. B More shall be saved than damned 765. C Of the torments of the damned 776. B. C The absence of God, the greatest torment of the damned ibid. D Day of Judgement: the manner of proceeding in it 140. B Fearful, even to the best 200. B. C The certainty and uncertainty of it 271. D To be had ever in remembrance, and why 371. B. 389. C. 392. A Death: how it may be desired of us, and how not 38. A. B. C. D. 148. B. C. 531. D. E Against the ambition of it in the pseudomartyrs 142. C The word Fortasse hath place in all things but Death 147. C. D It is a law, a tribute, and a duty, and how 147. E. 148. A We not to grudge if we die soon, or others live longer ibid. B Death; how an enemy to mankind, and how not ibid. E God made it not, but maketh use of it 188. B Of undergoing Death for Christ 400. A, B Not a banishment to good men, but a visitation of their friends 463. C Death; why so terrible to the good men of former times 532. D The often contemplation of Death takes much from the fear of it 473. E Debts: of our Debts to God 87. C To our neighbours 93. E To our superiors 91. C To ourselves 94. D Deceit and Deceiving: the mischief of it 742. B The law will not suppose it either in a father or a master ibid. 42. Decrees of God, to be considered only by the Execution 330. C None absolute, considering man, before a Sinner 675. C. D. E Departing from sin; to be general 552. A We are not to retain any one 568. D Deprecating of afflictions, whether or no lawful 504. B. C. D. E Desperation: the sin of it greater and worse than that of presumption 398. C Several sects there have been; but never any of Despairing men 346. A Against it 360. D E God brings his servants to humiliation, often, but never to Desperation 464. Destroying; whether man may lawfully destroy any one hurtful species in the world 527. B 620. C De viâ, the name of such as were Christians in the former times; that is, men of that way, according to S. chrysostom 426. B Devils; capable of mercy, according to many of the Father's 66. A The Devils quoting of Scripture 338. C Devotion; a serious, sedulous, and impatient thing 244. E It is good to accompany ourselves to a general Devotion 512 D It must be constant 586. B And not taken up by chance ibid. C Disciplining, and mortifying Acts, after God hath forgiven us our sins, commended 546. E They infer neither Purgatory, nor Indulgences, nor Satisfaction 547. A They are sharp arrows from a sweet hand ib. The necessity of them, to make our Repentance entire 568. B Discretion, the mother and nurse of all virtues 577. B What Discretion is to be used in telling people of their sins ibid. Division, the forerunner of destruction 138. D. E Not always unlawful to sow Division amongst men, when they agree too well to ill purposes 493. D Doubting; the way to know the truth 322. D Duels; the inhumanity and sin of them 5. E Duties of our calling not to be disputed, but executed 41. A Of our general weakness and impotency in spiritual Duties 513. C E EArly seeking of God, what it is 245. C. D God is an Early God 809. A. B And we to seek him Early ibid. D. E Eloquence required in the delivery of God's Word 47. D Enemies; profit to be made of them 98. A We come too soon to the name, and then carry it too fare 98. C God and Religion, both, have Enemies 375 D 703. C How we may, and how we may not hate our Enemies ibid. D. E Our Enemies are Gods Enemies 704. A Errors in the way, almost as dangerous as Errors in the end 639. A. D Of the Errors of the Fathers of the Church 490. A About administering the Sacrament to children; about the state of the soul after death, etc. 739. E Not good for the Church to play with small Errors, and tolerate them, when she may as easily redress them 782. B Esay, rather an Evangelist, than a Prophet 54. B Evil; none from God 168. C. D Nothing is naturally Evil 171. A Example; in all our actions and purposes, we to propose unto ourselves some pattern or Example 667. D. Examples; what power they have in matter of instruction 572. D. 593. A What care is to be taken in making the inordinate acts of some Holy men in Scripture our Examples 155. C. D. 488. D. E. 489. A. 526. E How fare Example works above precept or command 165. B Of giving good Examples to others 420. C God follows his own Examples 522. E Of giving bad Examples unto other men 570. A. 573. E Excommunication; the use of it amongst the Druids and the Jews 402. A Much tenderness to be used in excommunicating any from the Church 667. A How many men excommunicare themselves without any Church-censure ib. B. C. 418. B. C Expostulation with God, how without sin 44. B. We may not excuse the inordinateness of all Expostulations of good men in the Scripture 132. C Nor come near that excess which we find in some of them 155. C Of that in the widow of Zareptha 218. A Against Extortion 94. A Against Extremities in matters of opinion 42. A. B. etc. In Religion 326. D F FAith; against implicit Faith, 178. C. 411. C Faith and Reason, how contiguous they are 178. B Faith, how it is assisted by Reason 429. A. 612. A Of the imperfection that is in our Faith 818. D Faith and Works 78. E. 368. A. 567. D. E Our Works more ours than our Faith 79. C. D. E. etc. The Faith of others, how profitable to us 105. D And how not 106. E Men, not to deceive themselves with thinking, that if they have Faith once, they shall have it ever: or have enough 819. B. C Fall; sin is a fall; and how 186. D. 187. B. C. 462. D Against impossibility, of falling from grace received 240. B. C Of Fame and getting a good name; the necessity of it 680. A Fathers; of the power of life and death which they had over their own children 388. A How Jesuits slight the authority of the Fathers of the Church 489. C How they are to be followed 490. C Fear; of the Fear of God 386. B The difference between fearfulness and Fear 387. B Servile and Filial Fear, both good 386. D The Fear of God a blessed disease 466. B It constitutes the best assurance 694. C Not only a Fear, but even a terror of God may fall upon the best men 70. A Festivals: the reason of their Institution in the Church 298. B Of applying particular Scriptures, to particular Festivals 423. D Filiation; the marks of our spiritual Filiation, less subject to error, than of our Temporal 338. E Fasting; but thrice mentioned by David; and he thrice derided for it 535. C The commendation, and use of it ibid. D. E Finding of God; the several times of it 597. A Of Finding that which was lost 711. E The passage of the Usher in S. Augustine, that found a bag of money, and would not take so much as the tithe of it 712. A Fishers of men; the Apostles why so called 734. E Flatterers; how men may flatter the best men, the very Angels, yea, and God himself 332. B Foliantes, an Order in the Roman Church, who only feed on roots and leaves 731. C Following Christ; how we are to Fellow, in believing, and in doing 731. E Against Forespeaking the Counsels or Actions of the State 535. E Foretelling of death; the passage of the Monks of S. sidorus Monastery, about it 473. C Form of public Prayer, used amongst the very Gentiles 89. A And they had a particular Officer, who made Prayers and Collects for them, upon emergent occasions ibid. Which were received every five years ibid. Fortune and God; how they consist together 711. C Freewill; the obliquities of it from whence 283. D The power of it in our conversion 309. A. B Funerals; of the duties belonging to them 196. A. 198. B Of the several manner of them, among several nations 198. D Christian Funerals, an evidence of God's presence 826. B Fullness; how in Christ, and how in others of the Saints 3. C Three Fullness in Christ, above others 4. A How Full all of us are of original sin 2. E How Full God is of mercy 12. C Of Fullness without satisfaction; and of satisfaction without Fullness 807. A Abraham why Full of years, and yet not so old as Methusalem ibid. D Several Fullness ibid. E G GEntiles, and their salvation; how prone the Fathers were in believing of it 261. D. 763. C Of the power of natural reason in them; and what many of the Father's thought of it 314. C Of their multiplicity of Gods 378. B. 484. D. 502. E They durst not call their Tutelar Gods by their names 608. A Gentleness, meekness and mildness; the power of it, both upon man and God 409. E. 410. A. B Glad; God, whether he be Glad, that he is God 812. B Glorified bodies; their Endowments applied to the soul after her first resurrection 189. A. B. C Gloria Patri, after every Psalm, how ancient 88 C Glory; against our fear of giving God too much Glory 58. E No Glory to God in destroying man only for his pleasure 85. B Glory, what it is 88 A The light of Glory in heaven, what 231. A All things we do, must be to the Glory of God 636. E Of the disparity and degrees of Glory in the Kingdom of heaven 742. D. 743. A. B. C Gluttony: the effects and miseries of it 579. D God; not to be loved in consideration of the Temporal Blessings he bestoweth upon us, but for himself 750. C. D Four ways of knowing him 229. B God, how present even in hell 226. D. E Seeing of God before us, in our actions, how necessary 169. E How we see him in a glass 226. B How we are enemies to God 65. B All his ways are goodness 66. E Several positions, motions, and transitions ascribed to him 67. C How omnipresent, with the Ubiquetary and the Stancarist 67. E Why he makes some poor, & others rich 84. E Glories not in destroying man, till he find cause 85. B Proposeth his glory to himself, as the end of all his works 87. C. D. E All our wealth and honour to be ascribed to him 95. B Whether his Essence shall be seen in heaven 120. D. 230. D No evil from him 168. C Not the Author of sin 368. E To be reverenced as a Father 388. C Of the reason of many Gods amongst the Gentiles 484. D God hates not any man, but as a finner 628. C. D His mercy to all men 679. A. B The numberless number of God's Benefits unto man 765. A Our Goods; what care to be taken they be well gotten 83. A. 95. E They are abusively called Goods 168. D Goodness special in God 167. E. 168. A. B Golden Crowns of the Saints, how forged in the Roman Church 743. D Gospel; whether yet preached over all the world 363. D Why it is called in Scripture the Kingdom of God 472. A How compared to a net 736. C Grace; against irresistible Grace 456. B Grace and Nature how they cooperate 649. D No consummative Grace in this life 735. B Gradual Psalms; which, and why they are so called 653. E Great men not always good; and why 166. A But when good, the more acceptable; and their ill the more pardonable ibid. B. C The true end of Greatness 321. B. C. D Great men; how dangerously obnoxious to their own servants 551 A Gretzer the Jesuit, how injurious to the power of Kings, in matters of Religion 698. D H AGainst making too much Haste, either in Temporal or Spiritual Riches 520. D Hatred; how it may consist with Charity 100 A Health: Spiritual Health to be preferred before that of the Body 110. C. 755. A What a Blessing the Bodily Health is 754. A. B. Hearing the Word; against the neglect of it 331. A. B Against Hearing only 455. C Heart: no inward part of man ascribed unto God, beside the Heart 64. B Heaven: the joys of it 73. C. D. 223. A. B. C 266. A The Glory 682. A The Dotes or Endowments of the Saints of Heaven 266. B. 189. A. B. etc. 824. C Heresy: of the several Heresies against the person of Christ 316. D Of that of the Photinians, and Nativitarians 344. C Heretics: of several ways of dealing with them 355. C. D. 356. B. C. D Of History, and returning the memory of man to things that are past and gone 290. B The Holy Ghost; not so easily apprehended by the light of Reason, as the other persons of the Trinity 318. C. D In the Procession especially; ibid. E. 327. A. B. C 335. B The manner how he works upon man 322. C. D Three branches of sins against the Holy Ghost in the School 349. E Refusing of lawful Authority, is sin against the Holy Ghost, in St. Bernard's judgement 350. B The power of the Holy Ghost, in blowing where he lists 364. B. C His operations in mere moral men 365. A St. Paul believed of many to be the H. Ghost 461. E Holy Ghost only Dogmatic; the best men but problematical 658. A Hope: how imperfect a Christian man's Hope is 820. A How; a hateful and a damnable Monosyllable 301. D Honour and Reputation, which so many stand upon, what it is 410. A Honey; what is meant by it in Scripture 712. C Hospitalite; the commendation and benefit of it 414. D. E. 415. A. B Houses of Progress, and standing Houses for God; Heaven and the Church 747. B Humane learning; how necessary to the making of a good Divine 562. A Hypocrisy; the good use and benefit that may be made by it 297. E. 636. B Against the wicked practice of it 585. D I OF those Ideas which are in God 667. E Against Idleness and laziness, and taking of no Calling 45. D. 411. B Jehovah; the right pronouncing of that Name; the means whereby Christ did Miracles, according to the calumniating Jews 502. C Not pronounced till of late ibid. D Jesuits; their uncharitableness, even to their own Authors, in defaming and disgracing of them, though their betters 50. A The pride of their Denomination from Jesus 687. D How boldly they depart from the Fathers and their Authority 740. B. C. 796. C D Their pride in taking upon them the name of Father's 798. A Jesus; of the name of Jesus 503. C How S. Paul delights himself in that Name 503. D. 688. A Jews; not one of them in all the world a Soldier 5. D Their opinion of Christ's coming. 21. C Their impious custom of anointing such as die, with the blood of a Christian Infant ibid. Ignorance; the several Divisions and subdivisions of it in the School 287. B. How full the most knowing men are of it ibid. C. D A learned Ignorance, what 295. E Of the several Imperfections in our Faith, in our Hope, and in our Charity 819.820. A. B. C. D Imprecations, in Scripture, are often only Prophecies 401. C Not allowed us D. but in some cases 555. E Against Impossibility of Falling 240. B Incarnation; the mystery of it 16. C. D. 395. E. 396. A. D E Inconsideration: the miseries of it. 246. D. E. 247. A. 296. E. 297. B. C. D In case of Zeal, the more pardonable. ib. B Indignation for sin, how great it ought to be. 542. C Of that Individuality wherein man is to be considered. 710. D Of that Infallibility with which the Holy Ghost proposeth his Dictates in the scripture, and how fare it is from that possibility, probability, and verisimilitude of the Church of Rome 657. C Jnfidels: of their right unto the things of this world. 214. D Indulgencies: the vanity the Church of Rome was grown to, in preaching and extolling of them 773. B. C The multiplicity of them 788. A The Reformation arose from them ibid. D Indulgencies; what they were in the Primitive Church 788. E. Against Ingratitude for mercies and Diliverances past 88 B. 577. E Why so seldom condemned in the scripture. 550. A Injuries: of patience in suffering them 410. A. B Innovations: the difference between Innovations, and Renovations 735. A Inquisition: of torturing men in the Romish Inquisition: and the uncertainty of such kind of Trials 194.195. C. D Intentions: the best men's best intentions, usually misconstrued 344. E Instinct: the difference between the Reason of Man, and the instinct of Beast: what it is; and wherein it consisteth 227. B. C Inward speculations, inward zeal, inward prayer, are not full performances of a Christian man's duty 700. B Jordan: the River Jordan, why so called 718. E joys of Heaven: of their eternity 73. C. D 223. A. B. C. 266. A. 340. D. 747. E Heaven represented in Joy and Glory 672. A Joy of the wicked, which they have in this world, sergeant 635. C Of the Joy of the godly, which they have in this world 671. E. 672. etc. 673. A. B Cheerfulness and Joy commended 816. B Judging of other men condemned 128. D. 479. A In doubtful cases we are ever to incline towards Charity 164. E There may be sin in a charitable judging of some holy men's Actions 488. D Judgement; of the day of Judgement, and the uncertainty thereof 271. D Gods Judgements have not exactly the name of Punishments. 544. C How unwilling God is to speak of, or to come to Judgement 676. C Justificare, to Justify; taken three several ways 366. C Neither Works nor Faith the cause of our Justification 367. E K KIngs; the best form of Government by Kings 51. B Our duty and debt unto them 91. C The Relieving of them, more necessary than giving of Alms 92. A What Humility and Reverence in Subjects is due unto them ibid. D And afforded in the very Scripture ibid. Not only their substantial, but their circumstantial and ceremonial wants, to be prevented by the Subjects Giving 100 E Their Crown of Thorns 137. B Kings; a particular ordinance of God, and nothing resulting out of the consent of the people 391. C The King to institute and order matters in the public service of God 698. A He is Keeper of both the Tables D Against those disloyal jealousies and suspicions, which the people have of the King, and of his affection to Religion 699. D In matters of favour, the King is one of the people, saith the Law 754. C. D Kisses; of their treacherous, carnal, and sacred uses 405.406. A. B. C Used of Kinsfolks 407. C As a Recognition of Power D In coming and going E In religious reverence E In sign of concord 408. A Kneeling; the necessity of it, in the time of prayer 72. E. 73. A Of the Kneeling at the Sacrament 115. D. 116. A. B. Knowledge of Fundamentals, every man is bound to have; but not of the superstructure and superedification 807. B How Imperfect all our Knowledge is, in Arts and Sciences 818. A Knowledge; against overmuch curiosity, in attaining to it 63. E. 308. C. 319. A. B Whether we shall Know one another in the next world 157. C Of sobriety in Knowledge 270. C. 701. A Knowing of ourselves, how hard a thing it is 563. C Knowing of God; four ordinary ways of it in the Schools 229. B L LAbour; threefold Labour in the Scripture 538. B Law and the Gospel; of the several state of either 284. E. 285. A Of the Law of Nature, under which every man is 362. C How the Law is said to show what is sin 687. B Laws of Temporal Princes; whether or no they bind the conscience of the Subject; wherefore never stated by the Pope, or by any Council 741. B Liberality and Bounty, Civil and Spiritual, what 759. E Liberality, a virtue that begets a virtue ibid. The true body and true soul of Liberality, what it is 760. C Life, the excellency of it 69. D. E. 70. A All that is good, included in it. 70. A Light, the first creature 759. D Literae Formatae, in the Primitive Church, their Institution and use 415. A Lord; whether God could be called the Lord before there were any creatures, a disputable thing 757. A The Judgement of Tertullian and S. Augustine, either way ibid. B Love, the first Act of the Will 225. D How we may love the creatures 398. E 598. B Against the Love of the things of this world 187. C. 399. C Against loving of God, for the Temporal blessings he bestows upon us 750. C Loving our enemies; six degrees observed in it 97. B Lust and Licentiousness; the burdens that it makes men under go 623. D Lying; whether it be lawful before one that is no competent Judge 491. B M Macchabees; their torture and patience 221. E. 222. A. B. C. etc. Man; what Man is 64. D. E. 65. A. etc. The dignity and honour of Man 655. C. D He cannot deliberately wish himself an Angel; for, he should lose thereby ibid. E Of those helps and assistances which Man affords to Man 656. D. E. etc. Man is called every creature in Scripture, and why 770. C. D Mary; the Crowns of England, Scotland, Denmark, and Hungary, much about one time, fell upon women, whose name was Marry 243. E It is a noble and a comprehensive name, and why 244. A Marriage; of second Marriages 216. D. E. &c, Masters; of that esteem and regard is to be had to such as have taught us, or have been our Masters 288. E. 289. A why called Patres-familias 388. B Mediocrity of Estate; the commendation of it 661. A. B. etc. 685. D Orders in the Church of Rome from both extremes; but not one from the Mean 661. B. What is a Mediocrity to one, is not, nor aught to be to another 714. C Memory; the Holy Ghosts pulpit oftener than the Understanding 290. B. C Of the sinful Memory of past sins, how dangerous it is 542. D Mercy of God, how much above his judgements 12. B. 67. A. 71. A How full God is of it. C Occasional Mercies, what, and how many D The Devils capable of Mercy, in the judgement of many Fathers. 66. A. 262. D The proper difference between Mercy and Truth 530. D Against those that abridge the great volume of God's Mercies 568. E Of several Mercies and refreshments, which are none of God's 810. E. 811. A God can do nothing but in Mercy 811. C Merits foreseen; no cause of Graces in us 5. A Millenarii; their error, what, and how general: almost all the Fathers tainted with it 261. C Miracles; against multiplying of them in the Roman Church 36. D Mirabilis, or, the man that works Miracles; the first of those great names given to Christ, by the Prophet Esay 58. C Nothing dearer to God, than a Miracle 215. A They are his own Prerogative ibid. B It is more to change Nature by Miracles, than to make Nature 394. E No man to ground his Faith upon a Miracle, as it seems to him. 429. A How to judge of Miracles, whether they be true or false 429. B Dangerous putting of God to a Miracle in saving us 456. B What is properly a Miracle 683. D The Creation itself, none ibid. Monuments; not in Churches, in the Primitive times 730 D Mortification; outward Mortification and austerity, a specious thing 492. E Mortification, to be general, of all the parts, and not of one only 541. B Mosselim; a kind of Doctors amongst the Jews, that taught the people by parables and obscure say 690. E The Multitude; of their levity, judgement, and changing of opinions 482. B. D Against Murmuring at God's blessings, if they be not as great as we desire 576. C Mute; against standing Mute, at examinations 491. C Mysteries; of two kinds in the Schools 203. D Every Religion under heaven, hath had her Mysteries, and some things in-intelligible of all sorts of men 690. D N NAmes and Titles; nothing puffeth men up more 734. D The Heathen never called their Tutelar Gods by their Names, and why 608. A Of getting a good Name amongst men, and against those that neglect it 680. A. E Of men's retaining those Names that are most acceptable 285. B Of the Name of Christian, and when it was given, and how 426. B Adam named all creatures but himself, and why 563. B Natalitia Martyrum; their days of suffering so called, and why 268. C. 461. C Nativities; three Nativities to every Christian, and which they are 424. E Nature; of that sight, which we have of God, even by the light of Nature 227. B. 686. E Of that power which some of the Father's attribute to Nature, without Grace 314. C Men do not half so much against sin, as even by the power of Nature they are able to do 315. B. C Of the testimony which a Natural soul gives unto itself of itself 337. B Nature not equivalent to Grace 649 A Nature not our own. ibid. Nature and Grace how they cooperate ibid. D Neighbourhood, and evil Neighbourhood, and communicating with evil men 420. C Noctambulones; men that walk in their sleep, wake if they be called by their Names 467. A Nothing; there is nothing more contrary to God, than to be, to do, or to think Nothing 265. B The Devil himself, cannot wish himself deliberately to be nothing C An Order of Friars in the Roman Church; that, in humility, called themselves Nullanos or Nothings 731. C Of the Numberless number of God's benefits to Man. 765. A O Occasional instruments of God's glory; what cold affections they meet with in the world amongst men disaffected to God's cause 154. E Occasional, mercies offered; what, and how many 12. D Occasional Convertites; who 461. C God, no Occasional God, and why 586. B Devotion no Occasional thing, and why 244. E A great disease both in Church and State, that Occasional things have diverted the principal, and hindered them from being done 797. C Often contemplation of death takes much from the fear of it 473. E Old; against growing old in sin 543. C Opinion; in a middle station between ignorance and knowledge 354. C Foolish and fantastical Opinions should not so much as be disputed against ibid. D Of gaining a good Opinion amongst men 481. E Oppression; against Oppression and Extortion 94. A Original sin; how full we are of it 2. E It is a Natural poison in us; and how it works 313. D The Gentiles, how purged of Original sin; in the judgement of some Romanists 314. D How Original sin is voluntary in us 363. A Ostracism amongst the Athenians what 479. C P PAinting and adorning of themselves; how used, how abused of men and women 196. B. C. 541. C. 714. A The limits of it, not so narrow as some conceive them 643. C Parents; the honour due unto them 217. D Patience; in suffering of injuries; the power and benefit of it 410. B Peace; the consideration and the benefit of it 145. E. 146. A. B The loveliness and amiableness of it considered 753. B. C Of Peace and plenty ibid. Penance; different Penances upon different sins; yet practised in our Church 402. B Public Penances in the Primitive Church, and why 545. D No satisfaction to God's justice in them 544 B. C. D How to understand the Fathers, inclining that way 545. E Perplexities; of the several kinds of them 606. C Persecution of the Primitive Church described 185. B. C Perfect; there is nothing in the world perfect; no, not in spiritual things 817. D. 818. A Of Persevering; and not trusting to our former goodness 165. C. D. 303. A. B. 331. A. 547. D. E Petalisme amongst the Syracusians, what it was 479. C S. Peter's being at Rome; how believed, and how not 404. E. 733. E. 744. D S. Peter and S. Paul, how magnified by S. chrysostom. 462. B. C Philosopher's; what knowledge many of them had of Christ 68 E Pilgrimages; how they begun, and grew on in the Church of Rome 252. B The abuses of them, taxed by the Romanists themselves ibid. C And by sundry Fathers ibid. D Places Consecrated; of their honour & use 251. D Against being over-homely, and over-fellowly with God and them 691. C Place and Precedency; the fond contentions about it 730. E Especially amongst the several Orders of Friars, who all pretend to the most humble Names that can be 731. D Against the sin of night-Pollutions; 129. C. D Popularity; the sin and danger of it 482. C The vanity of it 660. A Poverty and Riches; which occasioneth most sins 658. D. 659. D What kind of Poverty is a blessing 728. D. E Power; of that Power that is in us to discern our own Actions and assist ourselves in our own Salvation 118. B. C. D Prayer for the dead; no precept, no example of it in the Law, or Gospel 780. A First used of the Gentiles: and of them taken up by the Jews ibid. B. C Then of the Christians; and how ibid. D. E Why the Fathers did not oppose the practice of it. 780. D. E. 781. B Turtullian the first that took knowledge of it. 781. A Aerius did oppose it: but not hearkened to, and why 781. C How fare allowed by Epiphanius. ibid. D. What the Fathers meant by Praying for the dead, out of Dennis the Areopagite 735. E which is allowed by the Apology for the Confession of Auspourg 786. B Prayer: A set form of Prayer used of the Gentiles 689. A The Office of Conditor precum, what it was ib. Their Prayers received every five years ibid. A. 771. E Prayer; how we may Pray earnestly, and yet wait the Lords leisure 34. D Of Prayer at home, and at Church 35. C. &c. 90. B. 264. E. 370. B. 688. E Unseasonable Prayers not accepted of God 50. E. 521. B Prayers to be said kneeling 72. E Prayer and Preaching 89. E Against ex tempore Prayers 90. C. 130. C. 668. B. C. And Praying to several Saints, for several things 90. D What Prayer is properly called Ours, 130. A The condition of pure Prayer 131. A Not always heard of God, and why 133. B. C. 553. C. Against fashionall and customary Prayer 512. E Of the importunity, impudence, and violence of Prayer 522. B Against incogitancy in Prayer 555. B Against irreverence in God's House, in the time of Prayer 692. A Of the several errors that are easily committed, and do all frustrate our Prayers 692. D The duties and dignities of Prayer 804. B Repeating the same Prayer often, no idle thing 812 B Of those distractions which the best of us have in Prayer 820. B. C. Of the abuses of Prayer in the Church of Rome ibid. We are to descend to particulars in our Prayers 822. A Of that fervency and importunity which is required in our Prayers ibid. B. C Praise and thanksgiving; all our Religion is nothing else 88 C The necessity and benefit of it ibid. D Of such Praise as is due to the good actions of men 167 A. B. C. etc. Praise, what it is 679. D That it may be fought of good men ibid. Praise to be directed upon three Objects 680. C We may Praise, and yet not flatter D. E Of Praying and Praising 804. C. 805. B Preaching and Praying; the benefit and use of either 689. B. C. D Preaching, more frequent in the Primitive Times than now; and good reason why 324. C Preaching often ex tempore; and Preaching of other men's Sermons, ordinary ibid. D Against the sudden extemporal Preaching of this time 325. A Some points of Divinity not fit to be Preached 561. D. E In what sense it is good for a man to Preach himself 574. B. C. D Against popular Preaching 660. B Of Abuses offered to Preaching 693. A The several Names of Preaching 758. D No resemblance of Preaching amongst the Gentiles 771. E Preisthood; the honour and dignity of it 32. D 391 D. E That, the particular way of ennobling men amongst the Jews ibid. 32. E The Priest to be sent for before the Physician 110. C In extraordinary cases, above the King; but not otherwise 396. B The Egyptian Kings killed themselves, when the Priest bid them 485. C Of the Pretences and cover, and excuses which we find out for our sins 570. B Against Pride 65. A Pride the first sin of the Angels 622. C All Pride is not forbidden Man ibid. D What is not Pride 623. B. 727. D How early a sin Pride is 726. D Nothing so contrary to God as Pride is 727. E 728. A Against Prodigality 94. C Of that Progress which a man is to make, be he never so learned or religious 427. B. C. D. 616. D Promises; the difference between the Promises of the Messiah, and the Performance of them, by Christ's coming in the Flesh 68 B. 406. E Prophet; no visible calling to the Office of a Prophet 54. D. The promises of God in the Prophets, how different from those in the Gospel 40. E. A This a seditious inference; the Prophets did thus and thus in the Law: therefore the Ministers of the Gospel should do so likewise; and why 734. A Psalms; The Book of Psalms; the dignity and virtue of it 653. D. E They are the Manna of the Church 663. B Such forbidden to be made Priests, that were not perfect in the Psalms 813. B sing of the Psalms; how general and commendable in S. Hieromes times ibid. B. C Purgatory; none in the old Testament, and why, 783. E How derived from Poets and Philosophers, to Father's 784. A. B. C How suspiciously and doubtfully the Fathers speak of it bid. specially, S Augustine 786. E Bellarmine refuted about it 792.793 Q QVestions arising, taken away by Silencing of both parties 42. D Against curiosity in seeking after them 57 D There is always Divinity enough to save a soul that was never called into Question 745. A How peevish some Romish Authors do detort the Scripture, when they fall upon any Question, or Controversy; though otherwise they content themselves with the true meaning and sense of the same words 790. E. 791. A Quomodo; to Question how God doth this or that, dangerous 301. E. 367. C R REason, not to be enquired after, in all points of Faith 23. B Reasons not convincing, never to be proffered for to prove Articles of Faith 205. D God useth to accompany those Duties which he commands, with Reasons to induce us to the performance of them 593. A Reconciliation, how little amongst the Papists 10. D All Nations under heaven, have acknowledged some means of Reconciliation to their offended gods, in the remission of their sins 564. C Religion: against such as damnify Religion by their outward profession, more, than if they did forsake it 757. D Every Religion had her mysteries, her Reservations and in-intelligiblenesse, which were not easily understood of all men 690. D And therefore Religion not to be made too homely and course a thing ibid. C Christian Religion, an easy yoke; a short and contracted burden 71. D All points of Religion not to be divulged to the people 87. D Defects in Religion, safer than superfluities 291. A Of peaceable conversation with men of divers Religions 310. C We, charged to have but a negative Religion 636. A Religion; how fare we may proceed in the outward declaration of our Religion 814. A Resurrection; of three sorts 149. E Of that from persecution 185. B. C. D Of that from Sin 186. D. E. &c Of that from Death 189. D How, a Resurrection of the soul; being the soul cannot die 189. D Christ; how the First Resurrection 191. B Our Resurrection, a mystery 204. C Resurrection; All Religions amongst the Heathens, had some Impressions of it 800. E Retrospection or looking upon time past, the best rule to judge of the future 668. D Reverence; how much due to men of old Age 31. D What Required in God's House 43. D Revelations; we are not to hearken after them 238 E Nor yet, to bind God from them 239. A Rewards; against bribery, or receiving of Rewards 389. E God first proposes to himself persons to be Rewarded or condemned, before he thinks of their condemnation or their Reward 674. B. 675. B. C Riches; the cause of less sin than poverty 658. D Especially, considered in the highest degree, and in the lowest; that is, abundant Riches, and extreme beggarly poverty 659. D Against the perverse desire of Riches. 728. C Riches, S. chrysostom calls the parents of absurdities; and why 729. A The Remane Church, a true Church; as the Pest house, is a house 606. A. 621. C Rome; the Church of Rome, the better for reformamation 621. B They do charge us that we have but a negative Religion 636. A Why they so much undervalue the Scripture; and yet endeavour to bring books of other Authors into that rank, as the Macchabees and such like 738. E Rome itself, how it hath been handled ever by Catholics in their bloody wars 779. A Almost all the Controversies between Rome and the Christian world, are matters of profit 791. A Rule and Example; the two only ways of Teaching 571. E. 668. B The only Rule of doctrine, the Scripture and Word of God 738. E S THe Sabbath; a Ceremonial Law 92. C Sacrament; how effectually Christ is present in it 19 C Of preparing ourselves to the worthy receiving of it 32. A. &c. 33. A. &c. Against Superstition and profaneness too, in the coming to it 34. A Of Christ's real presence in it 36. D. 37. B. C That which we receive in the Sacrament, to be Adored 693. B Against unworthy receiving of it 693. D. E Of both extremes about Chrsts presence in the Sacrament 821. E Saints; against praying to them 90. D. 378. D. 595. A. 744. A. 757. B The Saints in heaven pray for us 106. B Why they must not pray to Saints in the Church of Rome, upon good Friday, Easter, and Whitsunday 485. D Whether they enjoy degrees of Glory in heaven 742. E Salvation; of the general possibility of Salvation for all men 66. B. 330. A. B. 742. B. C. D. Not to be ascribed to our Works 107. D Nor to our Faith ibid. E More that are Saved, than that are damned 241. A. 259. C The impossibility of Salvation to any man before he was a man, a uncomfortable doctrine 278. B Of that certainty of Salvation, which is taught of some in the Roman Church; and how fare we are from it 339. D. E. 340. A. 608. C Salvation offered to all men, and in earnest 742. A. B Saviour; the name of Saviour attributed to others beside Christ 528. D Scriptures; the most eloquent Books that are 47. E 556. E. 557. C four Elements of the right exposition and sense of Scripture 305. B Moderation in reading of them 323. C Scriptures the only rule of Doctrine 738. E Secrecy in Confession, commended; but in case of disloyalty 92. E. 575. E Seeing of God in our Actions, how necessary 169. E Against Selfe-Subsistence, or standing of ourselves 240. A. B Against Self-love 156. A Sermons; how loath the Fathers were to lack company at them 48. C Of preaching the same Sermons twice 114. C 250. C The danger of hearing Sermons without practising 455. C. D Sighing for sin; the benefit of it 537. D Sight; the noblest of the senses; and all the senses 225. B Sign of the Cross; wherefore used in the Primative times 538. A And why by us, in baptism ibid. Signs, how they may be sought after, and how not 15. B. C. D Shame for sin; a good sign 557. D To be voice-proofe, not afraid nor Ashamed of what the World says of a Man, an ill sign of a Spiritual obduration in sin 589. A Silence; the several sorts of it; Silence of Reverence 575. C Silence of subjection ibid. D Silence which is good 576. B. C Silence which is bad 577. D Good to be Silent sometimes, even in good things; and when 576. E Simple-men of this world; why chosen for Christ's Apostles 719. C Singular; Gods speaks of things of grace in the Singular: but of heavy things in the plural number, ever 711. A Single instances; no safe concluding from them 460. E Neither in the case of the Thief on the Cross, nor S. Paul 461. B Singularity; not ground enough to condemn every opinion 234. C Against Singularity 51. D. 177. C. 573. D. 722. B Of a Single testimony 234. B Sin; the cause of all sicknesses 109. C Little light and customary Sins, how dangerous 117. B. 164. C. D. 585. E All Sin is from ourselves: not from any thing in God 118. A. 330. D The Sin of the Heart, the greatest of all Sin, and why 140. D How well some Men husband their Sin 147. A That it is good for men to fall into some Sins 171. B. C Sin is a fall, and how 186. D. 187. C Whether it have rationem demeriti, and may properly offend God 342. C Sin, not merely nothing 342. E Not so much of any thing as of Sin 343. C How soon Sin is followed of Repentance 540. C How Sin rises by little and little, in us 585. C Against sitting in the time of Divine Service 72. D Socinians; their monstrous opinions 317. C And nicknaming of Athanasius Sathanasius 654. D Against the growth of that pestilent Heresy of Socinianism 821. B Sorrow for the dead; how lawful 157. C. D. E. 822. D Of the end less Sorrow of the wicked 632. B No communication of their Sorrow 634. D The Soul; of the miseries of it in the body 190. A Of the laziness of the Soul in the disquisition of any Divine Truth's 190. B C Of her excellency of knowledge in the next world ibid. C. D Of bending the Soul up to her proper height, and putting of her home 483. D Soul and Spirit; what the Fathers understand by them in Scripture 517. C Subjects, how to look upon the faults and errors of their Governors 13. C How reverend to be towards their Princes 92. D Supererogation; against Works of Supererogation: and of the fondness of them 390. C 494. E. 495. A. 547. C. 732. E Superstition better than profaneness, and why 69. A The danger of it to be prevented, but how 485. E Supplications; how they differ from Petitions or Prayers 553. E Synedrion; the Original and power of the Synedrion, or Sanhedrim, amongst the Jews 491. E Herod called before it; but not when he was King 492. A T Tears; against their inordinateness 155. A Never ascribed to God 156. D Will employed for the dead, though they be at rest 157. A Of those whose constitution will afford no Tears 160. D Four considerations that will enforce Tears 160. E. 161. A Of Tears shed for worldly losses ib. C. D. 162. A For sin 539. B Of the effect of Tears 162. B How God is said in Scripture to hear Tears that make no sound 552. E Tears the humidum-radicale of the Soul 577. E Temporal blessings; how seldom prayed for in Antiquity 750. D. E They are blessings; but blessings of the left hand 751. D Nothing permanent in them 823. D Tentations; all men not alike enabled against them 310. E Whether it be lawful to pray against all kind of Tentations 527. C One of the Devil's greatest Tentations it is to make us think ourselves above Tentations, or Tentation-proofe, that they cannot hurt us 603. E The use and necessity of them 789. C Thanksgiving; the duty of thanksgiving, better than that of Prayer 549. D How small it is, if proportioned to the love of God unto us 550. B Thoughts; of the greatness of sins of thought 140. D. 543. D Titles and bare empty Names; how men are puffed up with them 734. D Torturing; whether or not to be admitted, in case of Religion 194. D Tongue; how many it hath damned 344. B Tradition; against the making of Traditions articles of Faith 779. D Transubstantiation; the riddles, and contradictions of it. 36. E What true Transubstantiation in the Sacrament may be admitted. 693. C Tribulations; the benefit of them 563. B 604. A. B Spiritual Tribulations and afflictions, heavier than Temporal 665. B. D. E Tribulation and affliction, part of our daily bread which we ought to pray for, and how 787. B Tribute; God never wrought miracle in the matter of money, but only for Tribute to Caesar 91. E Trinity; the knowledge of it not by natural reason attained 301. B Not one of a thousand knows what himself means, when he speaks of the Trinity. 307. E Some obumbrations of the Trinity, even in nature 379 What, are illustrations of it, to us Christians are no Arguments unto the Jews 417. B Four several trinities 417. E. 418. A It is the only rule of our Faith, the Trinity 426. E To be believed first of all, but not last of all to be understood 428. C. D The opinions of several Heretics, concerning it 429. D The several ways of expressing it by figures and letters 429. E Troubles; five several sorts of Troubles 518. D The universality and inevitableness of them 664. B Truth; not always to be spoken 576. E Turning; of Gods Turning to us, and of our Turning to God 524. B. C. D. 525. A. B. 526. A. B V VAgabonds and incorrigible rogues; against receiving or harbouring of them 415. B. C Vain things in themselves, may be brought to a religious use 226. E ubiquitaries; 67. E Confuted by the Angel's Argument 248. C Of that Vicissitude which is in all temporal things; 823. D Vigils; why discontinued in the Primitive Church 813. A Virginity; The dignity and praise of it 17. C. D Three Heresies impeaching the Virginity of the blessed Lady 17. D Against vowed Virginity 30. D Virgin Mary; The error of Tertullian about her 18. A Of the Manichees and Anabaptists 23. D Against appeals to her in heaven 46. A Borne in Original sin 314. A Called of the Father's Deipara, but not Christipara; and why 400. D Threatened at a siege of Constantinople to be drowned, if she did not drown the enemy 418. E The Church only in the Virgin Mary, according to the School 603. C Against Uncharitable objecting of repent sins 499. D Unity; the Devil's way to break it 138. D The Vnsatiablenesse of sin 709 C Uprightness; what Uprightness is required of man in this world 677 B. C What it is to be Upright in heart ibid. 678. A. B. C Against Usury 753. E. 754. A. Vulgate Edition; of the Antiquity and Authority of it 542. E Not to be preferred before the original ibid. W War; the miseries and incommodities of it 146. C. D Waters; those of Baptism, sin, tribulation, and death 309. C. &c. What is meant by Waters in Scripture 598. D Waiting upon God's time; how it consists with fervent Prayer 34. D Wings; the several acceptations of the Word in Scripture 671. B Winning upon God by prayer, how well God likes it 513. E Wisdom; of sins against it, especially ignorance, and curiosity 411. B Witness; the credit of the Testimony, dependeth much upon his credit that is the Witness 238. B Women; our Saviour came from such as were dangerously suspected and noted in Scripture, for their incontinence. 24. A Never any good Angel appeared in the likeness of a Woman 242. D Whether Women were created after God's Image; a question in S. Ambrose his Commentaries upon the Epistles; that hath called those Commentaries in doubt 242. E Of women's able in State affairs and matters of Government ibid. Powerful in matters of Religion, both on the right hand, and on the left 243. A Wonder; the difference between the Philosophers and the Fathers about wondering 194. A Word of God; the very Angels of heaven refer themselves unto it 249. E Stronger than any reason to a Christian 394. B 815. A The only rule of Doctrine 738. E The World is a sea, and in how many respects, 735. C Works; we no enemies to good works, as the Adversary doth traduce us 82. A. &c. No Faith without them 136. A We are to continue in them 554. B Works, good, when to a good end 82. E To be done, of what 83. A How they may be seen of men 141. B Sometimes there is good use in concealing our Works of mortification 538. E Of those imperfections which are in the best of our Good Works 820 D. E Wounds of love; how God doth so wound us, that we kiss that hand that strikes us 463. A Z Zeal to be reconciled to discretion 10. A How the devil makes it his Instrument 42. B Of the Zeal we ought to have to God's service 72. D Zeal distempered, what it will do 237. A Zeal and uncharitableness, are two incompatible things 480. E Of daniel's Zeal in praying against the express Proclamation of the King 814. A. B. C Zoroaster, he only laughed when he was born 21. A FINIS. Errata. Pag. line read 22 39 waives 22 40 waives 22 50 waives 110 52 when he 116 40 may come 142 31 the Cato's 164 39 Manors 196 15 in indignifying 420 32 man 426 45 blown 534 35 Topics 710 46 exorcised 751 43 or any people 782 63 Interimists. In the life. Pag. 15 line 12 for merit, read mercy Pag. 16. line 40. for friends, read friend.