PRAETERITA, ORA SUMMARY Of several SERMONS: The greater part preached many years past, in several places, and upon sundry Occasions. By JOHN RAMSEY, Minister of East-Rudham in the County of Norfolk. In Templo Dei offert unusquisque quod potest. Hieronym. in Prologue. Galeato. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Gregor. Nazianzen. Oratione 20. in Laudem Basilii. LONDON, Printed by Tho. Creak, for Will. Rands, over against the Bear Tavern in Fleetstreet, 1659. EMMANUEL Collegium Emmanuelis Cantabrigiae bookplate of Emmanuel College Cambridge TO HIS Right Worthy & Learned Friend, Mr. JAMES DUPORT, Bachelor of Divinity, one of the Signior Fellows, and Vice-Master of Trinity College in Cambridge. SIR, IT was forbidden by the Attic Law, to the Orators of that Commonwealth, to make use of any long Praeludium and preface, thereby to insinuate and wind themselves in a sly and secret stealth, into the Ears and Hearts of their Judges; and to repose more strength and stress upon the force of their Rhetoric, then upon the weight and worth of the Cause and Argument. And yet that Lawyer was of another judgement, who accounted it not a Solecism only, but a Nefas videri in foro causas dicentibus, nulla praesatione facta, Judici rem exponunt. Caius Crime, for public pleaders to jump and leap into their matter, and not to walk towards it in a slow and sure pace; by a just Narrative, and Expository preface, touching the several grounds and reasons of their undertaking. If then any question be moved and made about those renewed and reiterated Addresses to yourself, rather than to some of another Orb, Stars of a far greater magnitude, who by their propitious Aspect, and benign Influence, were more like to afford light and life to these dead labours; This may be alleged and advertized in the general, That divers of that rank and number (for I speak not of all, nor of the greater part) are none of the firmest and fastest Friends of our Tribe and Order; whereof many, very many have had late and lamentable experience in these tumultuary and calamitous times; and may fitly and feelingly take up that sad complaint of Gregory Nazianzen, concerning great Saint Basil. Gregor. Naz, Basilio Epist. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. This hath been the only benefit and advantage they have made of their Friendship, not to trust friends hereafter. Add hereunto, that Applications and Dedications of this nature, should hold some suitable conformity and correspondence with the Genius and Disposition of the parties; lest otherwise they seem to patronage and privilege that with their Names, which they disown and deny in their principles or practice. And it was sage advice, of that great Master of Morality in this case and kind; Not to dishonour or disoblige Friends, by incongruous, or Vtique cavebimus, ne inunera supervacua mittamus: ut foeminae aut sine arina venatoria, aut Rustico libros, aut studiis ac literis dedito, retia. Seneca de Benef. l. 1. c. 11. superfluous presents. In all which respects I know none so fit and proper to interest and entitle to these ensuing Sermons, as yourself. None, in whose proved and approved Friendship, select and solid Judgement, unswaied and Integrity, I may more securely and safely confide. The poor Widow in the Gospel threw in her two Mites into the Treasury, which make a Farthing. And whereas other rich and wealthy persons poured out of their abundance, she devoutly dropped out of her pure poverty; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, even all her living, Mark 12.42, 43. I have herein personated this poor Widow, and cast in a second Mite into the Church's Treasury; the common Gazophylacium of the Press: and so far presumed, as to make you the Receiver of Both. Be pleased to afford them as favourable acceptance, (though every way as unworthy of you, as in themselves) as they are freely tendered by the Hand of Your most Assured, and Respective Friend, JOHN RAMSEY TO THE CHRISTIAN READER. AN ancient and honourable name, imposed by the Apostles, in a renowned and famous City: And the Disciples were called Christians first in Antioch, Acts 11.26. And it is the Christian Reader, which is the only Saint, at whose shrine this oblation is made, and to whom these ensuing Sermons are dedicated and devoted. But as for all other discriminating and distinguishing Characters, of any particular profession or persuasion: All denominations and dependencies borrowed from the persons or parts of men which were rise and rank in the Church of Corinth. And every one of them said, I am of Paul, and I of Apollo, and I of Cephas, 1 Cor. 1.12. Each of these Epiphan. Har. 42. & 70. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Epiphanius justly styles it: Titles not of Faith but of Faction: Names of Non Petrianos non Paulinos vocare nos oportet, sed Christianos. Nazianz. Orat. 30. Christiani esse desierunt qui Christi nomine omisso, humana & externa vocabula induerunt. Lactan●. Justit. lib. 4 c. 30. Sects and Schisms: No other than By-names, and Nicknames, and not once to be Oblivisceamur suisse unquam in rerum natura (quantum ad Sectae quidem ullius denotationem) Lutherum, Philippum, Zuinglium, Calvinum, Arminium, etc. Columba Noae, pag. 46. named among Saints. Two things there are that I have to impart and acquaint the Christian Reader. The one by way of Advertisement and advice touching the Title, Praeterita, The Inscription of these Se●m●ns. The other by way of satisfaction and resolution, for the end of the publishing. A Title taken up by the Learned Drusius, applied to his Annotations on the New Testament, and by him Christened with the name of Nam ideo Praeterita inscripsi quia duntaxat ea netavi quae ab aliis praeterita fuerunt. Quod si est, ut revera est, quid aliud ●●ihi relictum est, praeter spicas aliquot post luculentam messem, aut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ●●ss insign●m vinden iam? Drusius Epist. Lec●o●i, pag. 4. Praeterita, touching only upon those things which were baulked and passed over by those that went before: Gleaning in the Field of others, as Ruth did in that of Boaz, and gathering up some of those handfuls, which were left by the Reaper, Ruth. 2.6. and plucking the grapes after the Vintage. It is the confession of Drufius, and that well near in his own words. And yet that is not the reason, why I make use of the name Praeterita, as if I might take up with Archimedes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but only in reference to the Time; as being so many scattered pieces, preached many years since, antedating those signal alterations, which afterwards happened both in Church and State: and are now published Terminis terminantibus, as they were then Pulpited, without making use of the Sponge or Pancil ● Either taking from, or adding to them, lest that the putting in a piece of new cloth into an old garment, should talk from the garment, and the rent be made worse, Matth. 9.16. and the same Fate should abide these Sermons which befell Theseus' Ship, that was so oft trimmed and dockt, that very few of the first planks were left behind. And it might be said of them, as Lipsius sometimes spoke of his Politics, Lips. Polit. Praefat. Omnia nestra & 〈◊〉, there is all new, and nothing old in them. But as for the publishing these Sermons (and that is the second thing premised) which were at first cut out only for private use, with Antoninus his Title in the front, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and dedicated to no other than myself: that which beckoned them abroad into the World, and invited them, In Diaslyminis oras; which might still have lain hid (in Si omnino huic labori supersedissem, optime fecissém, & juxta illud Flacci; In sylvam ne ligna feras: Aut enim eadem diceremus ex superfluo, aut si nova voluerimus dicere, clarissimo ingenie occupata sunt meltora. Hieron. Adu. Pelag. lib. 3. St. Hior●ms judgement,) was some probable presumptions and persuasions, that there was somewhat of Ancient truth in them, Those old Paths, where is the good way, commended by the Prophet Jeremy, c. 6. v. 16. and being seconded with walking therein, men may find rest to their souls. All good is of a diffusive and spreading nature, and communicative of itself; and it is so much the better, by how much it is more common. And whereas the good of a single person is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Arist. Ethic. l. 1. c. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, lovely and desirable of itself; that of a City or Nation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (says the Philosopher) is of a more beautiful and divine nature. And in a matter of common concernment, where the good of others may be any way interessed and engaged, I would not be thought overnice and squeamish. Nor treat my Mother the Church, as the supercilious and superstititious Pharisees dealt most unnaturally with their natural Mother: It is Corban, that is to say a Gift, by whatsoever thou mayest be profited by me, Mark 7.11. A gift formerly consecrated to privacy and obscurity; And so not to do aught for my Mother, ver. 12. in a public manner. The great Apostle St. Peter was very conscientious in the case, and held himself obliged to premote the Church's welfare both by Word and Writing, 2 Epist. Pet. 1.13, 15. I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you up, by putting you in remembrance. Moreover I will endeavour that you may be able after my decease, to have things always in remembrance. As if he had conceived the Triple Pasce, given in charge by his Lord and Master, John 21.15, 16, 17. to import this Threefold duty, Pasce verbo, Pasce exemplo, Pasce scripto; Feed by word, Feed by Example, Feed by Writing. For though the Habet nescio quid latentis evergiae viva vox. Hieron. Epist. ad Paul. lively voice hath a secret energy and efficacy; And a great part of the Sermon is wanting when it is only read and not heard, as it was said of the Magna pars Demosthenis abest, quod legitur potius quam auditur. Valer. Maxi. lib. 8. cap. 10. Orations of Demosthenes; Yet nevertheless, Writing hath the advantage and peculiar privilege in the duration and continuance. The lively voice is as the refreshing influences of the rain and dew, which soak and sink deep, and both moisten and fat the Forth with their sorcible hear and warmth; but Writing is as a Flight of Snow, which though it 〈◊〉 much colder, yet it lies longer upon the ground. The Word preached reacheth only to a few, and edifies the Hearers of the present Age; but the Word printed is more extensive, and enlarges and dilates itself to posterity. And in that respect, The Preacher (saith Gregor. in Ezek. Hom. 3. Gregory) should be as the Smith's iron, which not only heateth those that are near, but casteth sparkles a far off. No sparkles of strife and contention, no wild fire of Sedition, to set on fire the Beacons in the Country, or to cause a combustion in the City; but only to afford light and heat to others. Not commanding Fire to come down from Heaven, to consume men, as the Disciples of Christ transported with a Fiery zeal, called for, upon the heads of the Samaritans after Elias example, Luke 9.54. but heaping coals of Fire upon men's heads in St. Paul 's sense, Rom: 12.20. To soften and melt them into contrition and conversion. And of such a kind of Fire that speech of our Saviour may be understood, Luke 12.49. I am come to send fire upon the earth, and what will I, if it be already kindled. That is the fire which these Sormons bring along with them, to enlighten knowledge and to inflame zeal; and to borrow Saint Paul's Metaphor, 2 Tim. 1.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. To blow up those dying sparkles, that lay covered and raked up under the Embers of security. And I shall send them into the World with the same charge wherewith Joseph dismissed his Brethren, into the Land of Canaan, Gen. 45.24. See that ye fall not out by the way. And with the Commission of Christ to his Disciples, Luke 10.5.6. Into what house soever ye enter, first say, peace be to this house: And if the Son of peace be there, it shall rest upon it: If not it shall turn to you again. And it is my earnest desire these Sermons may meet with such peaceable affections and dispositions in their reception and entertainment, as may answer the candour and calmness of spirit, wherewith they were composed and written. I conclude all with that savoury and sweet Prayer of St. Augustine, wherewith he concludes that great work of his, touching the Mystery of the Trinity; August. de Trini●. lib. 15. cap. 28. Domine Deus, quaecunque di●● de ●uo, agnoscant & Tui: Si quae de ●●eo, & ta ignosee, & Tui. O Lord God, whatsoever I have written that is thine, let those who are thine acknowledge it: If any thing of mine own, let thou and Thine be pleased to pardon it. So he prays, who remains Thine in our common Saviour, JOHN RAMSEY. SYLLABUS CONCIONUM, OR A List of the Texts and Titles. 1. THe Growth of Tares, Matth. 13.30. Let both grow together until the Harvest. 2. Lapis Lydius, Or the Trial of Spirits, 1 Joh. 4.1. Beloved, believe not every Spirit, but try the Spirits, whether they be of God: Because many false Prophets are gone out into the world. 3. Agrippa, Or the Semi-Christian. Acts 26.28. Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian. 4. The Inner-Temple. 1 Cor. 3.17. For the Temple of God is Holy, which ye are. 5. St. Paul's Tactics. 1 Thess. 5.14. Now we beseech you brethren, Warn them that are unruly, or disorderly. 6. The Politic Reformation. Isa. 1.26. And I will restore thy Judges as at the first, and thy Councillors as at the beginning. 7. The Usurpation of the Priesthood, Or the scourge of Sacrilege. Numb. 16.38. The censers of these sinners against their own souls, let them make them broad plates for a covering of the Altar: for they offered them before the Lord, therefore they are hallowed. And they shall be a sign unto the children of Israel. 8. The Christian Man's Task. Phil. 2.12. Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling. 9 Vnum Necessarium, Or Charity is All in All. 1 Cor. 16.14. Let all your things be done with Charity. THE GROWTH OF TARES. A SERMON Preached at King's Lynne in the County of Norfolk, in the Lecture course. Non propter malos boni deserendi, sed propter bonos mali tolerandi sunt. August. Epist. 48. LONDON, Printed by Thomas Creak. 1659. THE GROWTH OF TARES. MATTH. 13. v. 30. Let both grow together until the harvest. THese words are a conclusion and close of a Parable (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suidas. Aenigma est obscura Farabola, quae difficile intelligitur August. in Psal. 46. an enigmatical and involved kind of speech, The Introduction. and that borrowed and taken up from sensible and earthy things; which are more connacural to the soul in the present state, being united and joined unto the Body; wherein it conceives and receives nothing, but by the means and subservient ministry of the outward Senses. Like unto shadows in Painting that are tempered of obscure and dark colours; And yet add no less beauty and brightness to the Picture, than those that are most fresh and orient: Or as stars in the Firmament, that are the more condensed part of the Orb, and yet the most proper seat and subject of the greatest light. There is a double ground or reason of the use of Parables. A Double Use of Parables. 1. First in respect of the wicked. The one in resect of the wicked, to whom they are represented as the Pillar of cloud, which was a cloud and darkness to the Egyptians. Therefore speak I to them in Parables: Because they seeing, see not, and hearing, they hear not: neither do they understand, Matth. 13.13. Christ hereby excludes and shuts them out as with bars and bolts, lest otherwise then should co●●mit a spiritual kind of Burglary, by breaking into the knowledge of divine Mysteries. And so holds them forth unto the world, as the Philosopher set forth his Books of Acroamaticks; which were (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristot. Published in such a manner, that they were suppressed, and concealed. 2. Secondly in respect of the codly. Another Use of Parables is in respect of the faithful, to whom they appear as a Pillar of Fire, which gave light by night to the Israelites. The Explication whereof openeth the window to let in the light, breaketh the shell that we may eat the kerhel, removeth the Cover of the Well, that we may come, by Water; and putteth aside the Curtain, that we may look into the holy Place. Christ the eternal word of God, and essential wisdom of the Father, was very frequent and familiarly conversant in a Parabolical instruction. Therein verifying and fulfilling that of the Prophet, Matth. 13.35. I will open my mouth in parables. Nor shall we need to renew or take up St. Austin's wish touching the Parable in the Text, (c) utinam qui os suum operuit in Parabolis ipsus etiam Parabolas aperiret. August. Would to God that he who opened his mouth in Parables, would be pleased to open the Parables themselves. This is already done by Christ; who first lays down, the Protasis, and then gives in the Apodosis; Propounding the parable from the 24. ver. to the 31. And afterwards expounding it from the 38. to the 43. verse. The Words contain in them Christ's command and counsel to the servants of the householder, who being astonished and amazed at the sight of the Tares, Sir didst thou not sow good seed in the Field? Ver. 27. From whence then hath it Tares? And being inflamed with a zealous and ardent desire of purging and cleansing the field of the lord Wilt thou then that we go, and gather them? v. 28. Christ hints them a caveat and a countermand, Nay, (d) Quia separatio sine exterminio fieri non potest, ne dum evellitur quod opus non est conculcetu● quod opus est. Optat. lib. ●. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 〈◊〉. Varinus. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suidas in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. lest while ye gather up the Tares, ye root up also the Wheat with them, v. 29. And here in the Text commends unto them this general Rule of Advise, thereby to inform and instruct, to curb and check them in their precipitate and headlong courses, Let both grow together until the harvest. There is not any word in the Text that stands in need of opening or clearing, but only that of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Tares The Etymology whereof some would fetch from the love of the corn: Others draw it from the hurt of the corn, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Suidas hath it, The corruption of the good seed. And so many are the conjectures and guesses at the reason of the word, that we may well propound the self same question, touching the derivation, which was moved by the servants concerning the cause of their growth unde hoec zizanta. From whence are these Tares? And whereas our English Translation, expresseth the original Zizania by the name of Tares and Fitches; which are a formal seed and distinct grain of itself, that are presently descried and pulled up, and may fitly signify the condition of professed Schismatics and open Heretics. The word should rather be rendered Evil seed, that which we called blasted corn, or Deaf Ears; whereunto carnal-Gospellers and outside Hypocrites are assimilated and resembled; which cannot be discerned or distinguished, much less severed or separated from the good Corn; But according to our Saviour's counsel to the Servants in the Text: Both must grow together until the Harvest. The Parts of the Text are Two. 1. The Subjects in the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Both, That is, The Division of the Text. Wheat and Tares. 2. The Adjunct, And that is . 1. The first Motus, in the verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, They both grow. 2. The second Locus, in the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, They both grow together. 3. The third Tempus, The Time of their growth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, until the Harvest. But I shall cast the words into another mould and model, Six Propositions considerable in the Text. and anal, se and resolve the whole bulk and Body of the Text, into six general Propositions. 1. The different nature of the godly and wicked, resembled by Wheat and Tares. 2. The impurity and imperfection of the visible Church, consisting of good and bad, as the same field contains wheat and Tares. 3. The confused mixture and cohabitation of good and bad in the visible Church, They are both together. 4. The Temporal prosperity and felicity of good and bad, They both grow alike. 5 The Time and Term of the flourishing estate of the wicked. It is but until the Harvest. And this until, is both a Note of Determination, and Termination: Till then; It doth not end before: Till then, it doth not continue after. 6. The true and proper reason of the being, growth, and continuance of the Wicked; And that is Christ's sufferance and toleration. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Suffer both to grow together until the harvest. I shall take them up as they lay in order. And first, of the first. 1. The first Proposition. The different nature of good and bad resembled by Wheat and Tares. The purblind world judgeth all things amiss and observes no inequality or disparity among the sons of men. Homo homini quid praestat? stulto intelligens quid interest say they, with him in the comedy? What difference in point of excellency, betwixt one man and another? But if we consult with the Oracle of God, that resolves us to the contrary. The righteous is more Excellent than his neighbour, Prov. 12.26. And i● there be any creature of greater transcendency than the rest, it seems to illustrate their dignity by way of similitude and comparison. As being the Lily among Flower. The Dove among Fowls. Gold among Metals. And wheat among grain, both for the worth and weight of it A fit Emblem of the Faithful, who are the chief and choice of men, even as Wheat beareth the greatest price and value among grain. And the worth of the faithful appears in their weight, in in regard of their steadfastness and stability, their constancy and continuance, which are no way moved, much less removed with the gusts and blasts of temptation. Even as Wheat which is a ponderous and a heavy substance, is not carried away with the force and violence of the wind: (d) Cyprian de unit. Eccles. Sect. 8. Nemo putet bonos, de Ecclesia posse discedere. Triticum non rap t ventus, saith St. Cyprian. But as for the ungodly, they are as Tares, or blasted Ears; Tares for their emptiness, whose heart is utterly destitute of grace and goodness; even as blasted Ears have no inward pith nor substance, no food nor foison in them: and Tares be for their lightness (e) Avole●t quantum volent Paleae levis fidei, quocunque afflatu tentationum, eo purior massa frumenti, in horrea domini reponetur. Tertul. de Praeser. adver. Haeret. Inanes Paleae. Cypr. ibid. Paleae levis fidei, as Tertullian styleth them, and so subject to fly away, being hurried to and fro with every puff of wind. The Southern wind of favour and preferment, which blows upon them with a gentle and pleasing blast, and though in itself it be but an evil wind, yet in their opinion it blows them to good. The blustering and boisterous North winds, of trial and persecution: Each of these winds, whether it blows from the North or South, doth easily carry away these light and empty Tares out of the Church. And those our Saviour he sets forth under the similitude of Tares, or blasted Ears in the Parable of the Text. And that in opposition to the Wheat, thereby importing their unprofitable and worthless nature. Such is the difference betwixt good and bad, as betwixt Wheat and Tares. 2. The impurity and imperfection of the visible Church, The second Proposition. consisting of good and bad, even as the same field contains both Wheat and Tares. The name of the Church is no univocal word, wherein there is an agreement both of Name and Nature; but an aequivocal voice, where things of a most different nature communicate in the same name. I speak not this of the Jesuits, who in respect of their execrable doctrine of their mental reservations and equivocations are fitly styled aequivocal, Christians: But of the external members of the visible Church, the greater part whereof are only commended by the titular profession of Christianity, as an empty sign and shadow, and yet want the thing signified, and are utterly destitute of the substance. And as the name of the Church is no univocal, but aequivocal voice, so the Church itself is no Homogeneal, but an Heterogeneal body: not like unto the similar parts of men, Blood, Spirits, or the like, each portion whereof is suitable, and agreeable to the whole: But resembling the organical parts, as a Leg or Arm, which consists of Skin, Flesh, Bones and Marrow, And these far different from each other. There are three several places in the world, Heaven, Hell, and Earth. In Heaven above there are none but perfectly good, the blessed society of Saints and Angels. In Hell beneath, none but irrecoverably wicked, the cursed crew of damned spirits. But the visible Church upon Earth is a middle place and state betwixt both; a confused mixture and medley both of good and bad; like unto Noah's Ark, wherein were cooped up both clean and unclean beasts: A wide drag-net that closes not only profitable fish, but worthless weeds and beggary. A common Inn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a receptacle for all comers. A great House which affords vessels of gold and silver, and some other of wood and earth, 2 Tim. 2.20. A Barn or threshing Floor where corn and chaff lie covered in the same heap, Mot. 3.12. And here in the Text, A vast and open Field, that brings forth Wheat and Tares. And as it was said of Hantbals' Army, Colluvies omnium gentium: So is the visible Church a promiscuous Company, and Congregation; a rabble and a rhapsody of all sorts; corrupt Heretics, who deprave the verity of the faith; supercilious and factious Schismatics, that deprive and destroy the unity of the Church; disguised and masked Hypocrites: mere Sceptics in their opinion; Hybrides in their profession; Amphibia in their conversation, like unto those flying fishes in America, that live sometimes in the water, and sometimes in the air, and are ill accepted in both places; the ravenous fishes being ready to devour them below, and the Sea fowls continually beating them above. And last of all, men openly profane and vicious, (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat, Epist. ad Magnes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat ibid. Ignatius reduces the several sorts of men in the visible Church to two Heads; and observes the same difference among men, that is to be found in coin, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; whereof some is true and sound, such as can endure the Touch; the other is false and counterfeit: Holy men are God's coin that bear his image and superscrip ion; But as for pro●●ne and wicked men they are adulterate deceitful and corrupt ●oyn, that are minted and stamped by the Devil. It is St. Chryso●●omes observation upon the 23. of Saint Matth●w that there is somewhat bred and born in every creature that wastes and consumes the substance. The soundest Timber engenders worms; the finest Garments give life to Moths: The most wholesome Herbs bring forth small flies, that fret them in pieces. Neither fares it otherwise with the Church of God upon Earth, that conceives and carries in her womb full sore against her will Pharisaical and formal Hypocrites, licentious and lewd livers, and at last brings them forth viper like to the destruction of the mother. This cannot seem strange to any that intentively considers the frame & fashion of the (g) In omni conditione optimis miara sunt pessima. Hieron. ad Rust. world. There is a refuse generation, an Heterogencal company, an unequal and unsound mixture even in the Church, and cannot be avoided (h) Nazianz. Orat 21. in Laud. Athanas. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith ●reg. Nazianzen. The Church is God's yineyard and pleasant plant, yet it hath some briers and brambles that grow upon it. A cursed Cam in Noah's posterity. A scoffing Ishmael in Abraham's family. And Judas the Traitor, a Devil, as our Saviour styles him. A Devil incarnate as it was said of John the 22. and that not in Hell which is his proper place; but in Heaven upon Earth the Church of God the School of Christ's disciples. For though the Church be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a company of men called out of the world, yet is this calling different in the nature, and diversified in the effects. There are some that are called both outwardly and inwardly by the Ministry of the word, and by the attractive power and energy of the Spirit which dra●s men that they may run after it as the Spouse pruyeth, Cant. 1.3. And there are others that are eahed outwardly only by the sound of the Gospel, which though it is the power of God unto salvation, yet it doth borrow his force and efficacy from the concomitance and assistance of the Spirit. The former of these are not only invited to the participation of God's saving grace, but convicted and persuaded in their judgements, and inclined to obedience. Whom when God prevents with his gracious tall, Seek ye my face, they forthwith Ecca back again his voice, thy face Lord will I seek, Psal. 27.8. The latter are indeed invited on God's part to come unto the Heavenly Marriage; yet do they not answer it in an obediential manner, but pretend and plead excuses with them in the Gospel, and will not come at his call. If their it be the call of God that affords both name and nature to the Church, which being a divine action, works differently according to the different disposition of the receivers: no marvel there is such a diversity and contrariety among the members. There is not a Pomegrunate, wherein there are not some rotten grains, Nor a Church here on Earth which is not in some part putrified and corrupted. Nullum corpus sine suis excrementis. It is the censure of Gretser the Jesuit, of his order, Never was there a Body without his Excrements. Nor is it more true of the Natural, Grets'. de stud. Jesuit, abstrac, cap. 5. then of the Body of Christianity. And in vain did the Donarists of old, with the Anabaptists and Brownists of later Times project this Platform to themselves, An airy a speculative, a Notional, and not a National Church; which as it was devised by the strength of fancy and mere imagination, so it never had any other being and existence; but in their own Brains. A Platonical kind of Church, like unto Plato's Commonwealth, wherein Plato alone was said to live: A Church like unto Xenophon's Cyrus; described not as he was, but as he should be. A Church that is pure and sound in all the parts, where there are no notorious offenders, no dissolute or disordered persons within the pale. What is this but to dream of impossibilities? to expect a perfection in the place of imperfection? To hope for Heaven here upon Earth? To look for a field without tares? and to take away the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the very subject of the Text? (i) Numquid in agro dici●●●●st. quid pa●●is ad t●●ticum quaudo e● dem radice pertantur? numquid in area, ubi pariter triturantur? sed utique in Horreo, quid paleis ad Triticum? August. co ●●. Epist. Parmen. Lib. 13. cap. 3. The Third Proposition. It is the privilege of Heaven as of God s Granary to receive whent only without chaff: In the Field they grow together: In the Floor they are threshed together, and the separation is not made till they come to the Granary; which leads me to the third and next point in order. The confused mixture and cohabitation of good and bad in the visible Church; They are both together. The Church and people of God as it is a soclety that is called out of the world in respect of the Spiritual state and condition: so is it resident and abiding in the world in regard of the natural place. And Christ prayed not for the translation but the proservation of his disciples. I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world, but that thou keep them from evil, John 17.15. The world is in the Church; and the Church is in the world; which is both a fragrant Rose with sharp prickles for the inward corruption of its own nature: (k) August. in Psal. 99 And a beautiful Li●ie among the Thorns, for the outward and circumstant wickedness of the place. Like a li●ie among thorns, so is my love among the daughters, Cant. 2.2. Non dixit in medio alienarum, sed in medio Piliarum, saith Saint Augustine. Christ's love dwells not in the midst of strangers, but amongst the daughters. And the f●rce and reason of the resemblance consists in these three particulars. First, the Church of Christ which is his love is a Li●ie for the excellency both of sweetness and comeliness, in the colour and figure of it. 2. The Daughters are children of the same Mother the Church, though they have not the same God for their Father; They are as Thorns. 1. For their malignity whose property is to prick and draw blood 2. Thorns for their sterility and larrenness bearing no fruit of worth and hindering fruit in others. 3. And Thor●●s too for their end to be cast into the fire. 3. And as the Lily grows among thorns, so is Christ's love, his Church seated amidst these daughters, counterfeit and false professors. That speech of God, call it a promise or a threatening (as you please) as it was merely temporal in respect of the Israelires, so it is eternal and immutable as it concerns the universal Church the Israel of God. Wherefore I said also, I will not cast them out before you, but they shall be as Thorns in your sides, Judg. 2.3. God permits and suffers his Lily the Church to be environed and Hemmed in with Thorns. First for the exercise of their faith and patience, the quickening of their obedience, provoking and pricking them on to good works; even as the Jews wore Thorns in their phylacteries and fringes of their garments to admonish them of the custody and keeping of the Law. And Secondly for the reformation and conversion of the wicked, that the Canaanite may become an Israelite, Thorns turned into lilies, and Tares made good corn. We may then observe from hence a double Corollary or conclusion. A Double Corollary or conclusion. The First Corollary. First, the condition of God's people in this present world. Secondly, the grievous misery and calamity of this their condition. First, we may take notice of the condition of the people of God in this present world. To be promiscuously blended with wicked men & unequally yoked with Infidels; Much like unto the state of the Church of France because of the dinersity of religion; the dispersion of Papists and Hugonites throughout the whole Kingdom is fitly compared to A Panthers or Leopard's skin which is full of all kind of spots. Such a speckled Beast is the visible Church upon Earth. For though there be no communion betwixt light and darkness in theniselves; yet is the light of saving truth, and the darkness of error, and superstition, confounded in the firmament of the Church, as light and darkness are mixed in the Air. Though no fellowship be betwixt righteousness and unrighteousness in their nature, yet is there a society in place, we may and must separate from the fornicators of the world, covetous, extortioners and Idolaters, both in affection & action: yet can we not separate and quit ourselves of the place, unless we should follow Saint Paul's direction and go out of the world, 1 Cor. 5 10. Let then the giddy Separatists who first run out of their wits, and then out of the Church; let these I say travel into the remotest parts of the world and beyond the course of the Sun; ultra Garamantas & Indos: to find out such a Church as is without spot or wrinkle: wrinkle in doctrine: spot in manners, which Christ indeed purchased with his death, (e) August. lib. 1. Retract. ca 19 & lib. 2. cap. 18. non quod jam sit talis, sed quod praeparetur ut sit talis: As Austin glosses upon the place, Ephes. 5.27. yet unless they can fly from themselves, as well as they abandon the company of others, they shall never be free of sinners. And they must have a special heed lest while they mutter any thing secretly with themselves, they talk not with a wicked person. And if there be any like unto Saint Paul's Mariners who in a tempestuous storm go about to fly out of the ship of the Church, and let down a Boat into the Sea under a colourable pretence of casting Anchor, whereby the Ship should be more steadfast, and so sail into foreign parts. I will only advise them in Saint Paul's words to the centurion and the soldiers; Except these abide in the Ship ye cannot be safe, Acts 27.30, 31. Yet let no man think I limit salvation to any Topical or particular Church, or have any obliqne glance or gird at any of our Brethren, who out of a religious intention of enlargement and propagation of the Gospel, and conversion of poor pagan Insidels, have changed their Church and Climate: I rather accompany them with my most affectionate and hearty prayers; yea, with David's wishes for Jerusalem, Psal. 122.7, 8, 9 Peace be within thy walls and prosperity within thy palaces. For my Brethren and companions sake I will now say pence be within thee, because of the House of the Lord our God, I will procure thy wealth. My speech only aims and drives at new fangled Separatists, who out of a dislike if not a detestation of the present Church, as if the case thereof was not only deplorate but desperate: casting away the whole apple with the Hermit's friend, for some few specks of rottenness. Or out of an ungrounded hope of devising or finding ready moulded to their hand such a Church as is free from errors and enormities: schismatically divide and cut themselves off from the unity of that Body whereof they were late members. These are the men to whom I recommend more Christian charity and Spiritual wisdom: And turn them over to the preposition ●● in the words of the Text for information and conviction both at once. Suffer them both to grow tegether. Secondly, The Second Corollary. we may from hence collect the matchless miseries of God's people in this present world, whose souls are among it Lions as the Psalmist sometimes complained, Psal. 57.4. Like unto Daniel in the Lion's Den; who are necessitated to converse and to have at least a civil commerce and intercourse with the Sons of Belial: And have just cause to bewail and bemoan their case in the words of David, Psal. 120.5. Woe is me that I remain in Meshech, and dwell in the Tents of Kedar: A double woe of God's people in this world. And there is a double woe that attends and waits upon God's Servants here beneath. First, The inward corruption of their own nature, being as a Rose that grows up with sharp prickles, That there were Roses without prickles in Paradise was the conceit of great St. Basil: Sure I am, there is no Rose of grace without the prickles of corruption. Secondly, The outward and concomitant wickedness of others, in that they are as a Lily among Thorns. The Prophet Isaiah displays them both; and so may every child of God lament them after his Example; Woe is me for I am undone, because I am a man of polluted lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of polluted lips, Isa, 6.5. They are not only polluted in their own persons but are circled and encompassed with pollution on every side: And who is there that can refrain from breaking forth into that pathetical and melting speech in this respect: Woe is me for I am undone. Needs must it be as a deep taint and a fretting corrosive to the hearts and spirits of God's people that there should be so many outside Hypocrites in the Church, no better than Stage-players in religion, and like unto that silly Stage-player who pronounced 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with his tongue and pointed unto the Earth with his finger: And so did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, commit a kind of Solecism and absurdity with his hand. And as it was said of one that painted his Hair with a false colour that he wore a lie in his head and was guilty of Sophistery in his locks: So are there too too many of such deceitful Sophisters even in the profession of godliness itself, who by their painting and false colours, carry a lie not in their head but in their heart, being inwardly nothing less than what they outwardly appear: Thereby starting and staggering the judgements of those that are wavering and unstable, who are ready hereupon to pass a peremptory and downright censure. (m) Linacre on the 5.6. ●. cap. of Matth. Aut hoc non est Evangelium, aut isti non sunt Evangelici; Either this is not the Gospel, or these are not true Gospelers. And opening the mouths of other, to speak evil of the way of the Lord; to jest and gape and thrust out their Tongues against profession and purity itself. And because all is not gold that glisters, they from hence take occasion to reject and condemn the most orient and shining colour of the purest gold; Needs must it be as a racking pain and torture, yea as the torments of Hell to God's faithful Servants. The word signifies no less, and so it proved unto just Lot. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Pet. 2 8, He racked and tortured and tormented his righteous soul in Sodom, as if he had been in Hell itself, in seeing and hearing their unlawful deeds. And where shall we find a Lot either without his Sodom or without racking the joints of his soul with inward grief and sorrow: To hear the blasphemy of the common multitude in every street which makes their ears to tingle, who by their cursed oaths in each Fair and Market crucify the Lord of life the second time, open his wounds, cause his blood to stream forth a fresh; yea, rend and tear asunder his sacred Body? Like unto a company of Bloodhounds or Hellhounds rather having seized upon a poor Hare, which they soon dispatch, and pull one joint from another. That the lascivious and lustful livers should defile the Temples of the Holy Spirit, and make the members of Christ the members of an Harlot. That the voluptuous and sensual Glutton, the swinish Drunkard, should ordinarily abuse the good creatures of God to riot and excess, making their bodies no other than (n) Cribra ciborum & potuum. Senec. Colanders and strainers for meats and drinks, mere graves to bury both the creatures and themselves alive, and even dig their Graves with their Teeth. And who is there among the people of God that doth seriously consider and lay to heart their calamity that they are even constrained not only to breath in the same open air, but to abide in the same Church with such men or beasts rather, and renews not this sad and mournful complaint of David, Woe is me that I remain in Meshech and have my habitation in the Tents of Kedar? How should this inflame the hearts of the faithful with an uncessant and unsatisfied desire of removing out of this world; of exchanging the company of wicked and ungodly for the Spirits of just and perfect men, the Society of Saints and Angels! How should this provoke and excite them to a vehement and earnest longing of being Members in the Church Triumphant, and of sharing in the accomplishment of that promise, Cant 4.8. Come with me from Lebanon (my spouse) even with me from Lebanon, and look from the Top of Amana, from the Top of Shenir and Hermon, from the Dens of the Lions, and from the mountains of the Leopards. A threefold promise that Christ passes unto his Church. 1. Of Delivery. 2. Of Victory. 3. Of Safety. 1. A promise of delivery out of the world: Lebanon which is a part of it being put for the whole. 2. A promise of victory whereby the Church shall be exalted upon the Tops of the highest Hills and shall triumphantly look upon her vanquished enemies, that shall be trodden under feet. 3. A promise of safety from Lions and Leopards cruel and bloodthirsty men, and from dissembling and coloured Hypocrites that have as many contrary forms and guises as a Leopard's skin hath spots. Saint Austin reports of his mother Monica, that having discoursed and reasoned together of the joys of Heaven, she being ravished with the consideration of them, sent forth this ejaculation as a Harbinger to Heaven before her, (o) August. Conf. lib. 9 cap. 10. Fili quantum ad me attinet, nuliâ jam re delector in hac vitâ. Quid hic faciam adhuc? & cur hîc sim nescio? I am delighted with nothing of this life. And what do I? and why am I here? Hieron. Epist. And Saint Hierom relates of the Monks in Egypt, that when they heard any mention of the Kingdom of Christ and of the glory of the life to come, they all stole a secret sigh, and lifting up their eyes to Heaven, repeated the words of the Psalmist, Psal. 55.6. Quis dabit mihi pennas sicut columbae? O that I had the wings of a Dove, then would I flee away, and be at rest. And why should not the meditation of this world's misery, in regard of the association of the godly with the wicked, beget in us the same desire, that the apprehension of the glory of Heaven wrought in them? why should it not move us to fly to Heaven? not with the wings of a Dove, but with our ardent wishes and devout affections, which are the wings of the Soul: Why should we not long after the end of the world, when Christ will gather out of his Kingdom all things that offend, and them that do iniquity. When he will pluck up these Tares by the roots which till then must of necessity grow together. And this is the fourth point that falls in course. 4. The Temporal prosperity and felicity of good and bad; They both grow alike. The Fourth Proposition. The things of this life are neither morally good nor evil, but of an indifferent and middle nature, and indifferently dispensed to all sorts of men: nec mala turpiter evitentur, That neither the crosses thereof should be abhorred as sins, wherein thebest of God's Servants have their greatest share and portion: Nec bona cup●dius appetantur. Nor the comforts thereof too too eagerly desired and coveted; whereof the most profane & wicked are proprietaries and possessors. Sometimes God pours forth with a liberal hand, and heaps those external blessings in an abundant incasure upon the heads of the righteous, as he did upon (p) Constantinum Imperatorem tantis teirenis implevit muneribus, quanta optare nullus auderet. August. de Civ. Dei, lib. 5. c. 25. Constantine the great; so that it is the height of boldness and presumption for any man to pray for the like. It is the expression of St. Austin. And yet for the most part, the men of the world who have their portion in this life (as the Psalmist describes them) surpass and outstrip the godly in this respect. The Tares stand boult-upright with an high and a lofty Top; when as the good corn hangs down the head, and is bowed to the ground: I have seen the wicked strong and spreading himself like a green Bay Tree. It is David's observation, Psal. 37.35. Tanquam arbor indigena virens, as Junius renders it out of the original. As a Tree that grows out of the soil of the earth of its own accord, whereof the earth is the natural mother, and so more indulgent in affording it plenty of juice and moisture, Then unto those whereof she is an hard or unkind stepmother, and planted by the hand of another. This resemblance we find in nature, and we need not seek far for the like in the course of the world; even as in the structure of a house, the chimney is designed to the meanest office, the conveyance of the smoke; And yet it is the highest part of the building and overtops the whole frame. And as a Feather is a light substance and of little or no worth, save only in estimation, and yet placed above the head: Just so the most wicked and unworthy amongst men, are exalted and advanced to the highest pitch of earthly dignity; (q) Minut. Foelix Octavius, pa. 15. ut in pluribus nescias utrum sit corumi detestanda pravitas, an optanda foelicitas said Minutius Foelix. That it is hard to say for the greater part whether a man should rather detest their impiety or envy their felicity. There is a double Abyssus or unfadomable depth in religion: 1. The depths of predestination, or God's eternal decrees and counsels. 2. And the depths of his temporal providence in the administration of the world, whereof this is one, the growth of these Tares, the outward prosperity of the wicked; And may justly move us to take the Apostles exclamation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O the depth. And if we will give credit to St. Austin, (r) Revera nullum mare tam profundum est quam est cogitatio rei, ut mali floreant & boni laborent. Nihil tam altum, ubi nauf●agat omnis insidelis, Aug. in Psal. 91. there is no see a so deep as to dive into the serious consideration of the flourishing state of sinners, and the calamitous condition of the Saints. And in this sea every unbeliever makes ship wrack. This was it that caused many to turn downright Atheists and to say in their hearts there is no God; Others to prove gross Idolaters, and to imagine a plurality and a multiplicity of Gods; A good and a bad. And that the Book of Exodus was no part of Canonical Writ, nor inspired by a good God; for that it makes report of the misery of the Israelites in the wilderness. (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Leontius, de Sanctis. It is not the part & property of a good God, to bring his people out of Egypt, and to afflict, and correct them, after their deliverance. Yea, this was it, that well near tripped up the heels of David, though a strong & a stout Saint: And so far nonplu'st and posed holy Jeremy, that he was very earnest to enter the lists of disputation with God himself Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper? why are all they in wealth that rebelliously transgress? Jer. 12.1. Here the Israelites make the Bricks, and the Egyptians dwell in the Houses. David is in want, and Nabal abounds. Zion is Babylon's Captive: what hath God nothing in fore for Joseph but the sticks? for Isaiah but a saw? will not Elish adorn the Chariot better than the Juniper Tree? will not John B●●tists Head become a Crown as well as a platter? But mull his head be needs tripped oft with Herodias heels? what may we infer from hence, but the positive conclusion of the Psalmist, Psal. 58.11. Weril there is a reward for the righteous in the life to come, when God will render them good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over into their bosom, Luke 6.38. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, good measure for the nature of the reward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pressed down for the matter like unto corn in a Bushel, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shaken together for the manner of it, even as corn which couches so much the closer for the shaking, whereof Husbandmen are very careful in the delivery of their corn; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 running over for the measure, as a vessel that is brim full runs over; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into their bosom, that so they shall be experimentally sensible in their own hearts of God's bounty in their retribution. What other inference can any man draw out of the former premises, But that there is such a reward for the righteous: And that the present prosperity and felicity of the wicked as it is temporal for the nature, so it is but temporary for duration. Though the Tares grow, yea overgrow the good corn, yet it is but until the Harvest. And that is the fifth point that naturally and necessarily follows, and treads upon the heels of the former. 5. The Fifth Proposition. The time and term of the flourishing estate of the wicked: until the harvest; which is both a note of determination and termination, Till then; it doth not end before: Till than it doth not continue after. What this Harvest is, our blessed Saviour the best Expositor of his own Text, resolves us in the Sequel of the Chapter. The Harvest is the end of the world, verse 39 which is here compared to a Harvest, and that in Three respects. 1. Propter Segetis desectionem. 2. Propter Segetis collectionem. 3. Propter Segetis Trituram. 1. For the cutting down of the corn. 2. For the gathering in of the corn. 3. For the threshing out of the corn. And this threefold resemblance betwixt the Harvest and the end of the world sets forth unto us a double and different estate of the godly and the wicked. A double state of the godly and wicked. 1. The one of utter ruin and destruction of the wicked. under the similitude of the cutting down and threshing out of corn: who shall then be cut down with a sharp sickle of his just vengeance, and beaten in pieces (as corn that is threshed) by the instruments of indignation. 2. The other of quiet repose and rest; the safety and security of the godly, under the Parable of gathering in of corn: who in this Harvest, shall be gathered out of the world, and gathered into their Father's House, the repository of Heaven wherein there are many mansions; even as corn in the time of Harvest is gathered into the Barn. As therefore there is a confused mixture, a cohabitation an equal or rather an unequal growth of Tares & wheat in the field of the world; So shall there be a general Harvest of good & bad at the end of it. That law which God established with Noah after the flood as an unchangeable & a perpetual ordinance in the course of nature; Seed time and Harvest shall not cease so long as the earth remaineth, Gen. 8.22. The very selfsame law hath God enacted with the sons of men touching the dispensation of his justice, in the distribution of rewards and punishments. There shall be a Harvest for both, and that proportionable to the different nature and quality of the seed; wherein whatsoever a man sows that shall he also reap. He that sows to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption. And he that sows to the spirit shall of the spirit reap life everlasting, Gal. 6.7 Hail than ye servants of the Lord, cheer up your drooping and dismayed spirits, lift up your hands that hang down and your weak knees ye that now eat bread of affliction and drink the water of affliction with Micaiah; that eat ashes for bread and mingle your drink with weeping, after the manner of David. Ye that now sow in tears shall reap in joy; ye that now go forth weeping (and it matters not though the seed time be somewhat moist, so the Harvest prove dry) and carry precious seed shall return with joy and bring your sheaves with you, Psal 126.5.6. What though the light of God shines bright and clear upon the forehead and about the Tabernacle of the wicked, while ye in the mean time are hanged up like Bottles in the smoke, and cast into by-corners like the shreds of a a broken pot. They sing to the Lute and see their children dance before them; whereas your hearts are heavy in your bodies as lead, your sighs beat as thick as a swift pulse; and water your couch with your tears. They wash their paths in butter, and their Tables are full furnished day by day: But earth and ashes are your bread; yet comfort yourselves ye seed of the righteous with the settled expectation of a Harvest, wherein ye shall rejoice according to the joy of Harvest; as the Prophet Isaiah speaks, yea, comfort ye, comfort ye your hearts against the Fret of the ungodly, the present prosperity of the wicked: Learn to laugh them to scorn (after the example of the most high) for that you see that their day is coming, Psal. 37.13. when it shall be verified of them which the Prophet affirms of Babylon, Jer. 51.33. The daughter of Babel is like a threshing floor. The time of her threshing is come: yet a little while and the time of her Harvest shall come. It is Gregory's speech in his morals upon Job, occasioned by an elegant and exact description of the happiness of the ungodly, Job 21. from the 6. to the 13. verse, (t) Greg. in Job. O Job bene enumer asti vitam impiorum, dic finem quaeso? Thou hast set forth to the life the life of the wicked, Tell us I pray thee what is their end? And he supplies and furnisheth himself with an answer out of the next words. They spend their days in wealth, and suddenly they go down into the Grave, v. 13. If any propound and move the like question that have hitherto heard of the growth of these Tares, and are pensive and disconsolate at the hearing of it; dic finem quaeso, what is the end of these Tares? and what abides them in time of Harvest? let such take their answer from the mouth of Christ in the words after the Text. And in time of Harvest I will say to the reapers; Gather ye f●r● the Tares, and bind them in sheaves to burn them. This is their end. An end without end; and so I am fallen upon the sixth and last point. 6. The Sixth Proposition. The true and proper reason of the being, growth, and continuance of the wicked; and that is Christ's rance and toleration; Suffer both to grow together. This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or suffer, hath a double reference. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or suffer, hath a double reference. First to Christ, the Housholder or owner of the field, who utters the words, Suffer, and therein presents himself, as a precedent and pattern for their imitation. Secondly the servants of the Housholder, who complained of the springing up of the Tares; Master, sowed ● thou not good seed in thy field? from whence then hath it Tares? ver. 23. And so it serves as a rule of instruction, to suffer them after his example. First this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or suffer, hath reference to Christ the Housholder, First, to Christ the Housholder. or owner of the field. The will of God is as single and simple as his nature; yet is it expressed and signified by general signs: as both Lombard, and Aquinas teach. 1. His precept, council, and operation in respect of good. 2. His prohibition, and permission of Evil; So that sufferance is an act of God's will concerning sin, which he neither commands, nor counsels, nor brings to pass. But prohibits, and yet gives way to both at once. Of all the mysteries of Religion, Praecipit, ac prohibet, permittit, consulit, implet. there is none more intricate and involved; There is not a more vexed question and disquisition, than that which respects God's concourse in sinful actions; wherein there is equal danger of running into each extreme, either by laying an attainder upon divine justice, who is purity and holiness itself, and is not a God that loveth wickedness, as David speaks, Psal. 5.4. as if he were any way guilty, or accessary to our sins: or by charging and challenging of God's providence, as if he were a bare spectator and overseer, who by his Allseeing Eye did only foresee things to come; but by any active power did no way interpose and intermeddle in our affairs. And the reconciling of both these together, the clearing God's Justice and Providence, in this particular, is a point of no less difficulty than importance. And this one word in the Text, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or suffer, doth compromise the difference, and as an indifferent Umpire, or Moderator, equally determines and states the question for both attributes. For, first, Christ suffers these Tares, not involuntarily or against his will, which would argue either ignorance or impotency, and want of power; but in a voluntary and willing manner: concurring as an universal cause to the sustentation of the creature; to the natural being of their sinful actions, though not to the moral defect and sinfulness. And yet ordering their sins to his own ends, the manifestation of his glory, both of his Justice and Mercy, by his overruling and all-disposing providence. Secondly, though Christ suffers, yet he only suffers the children of the wicked; he doth not inwardly excite and move them unto sin; not outwardly prescribe and command it in his word; not operatively effect or work; nor approve and allow it being once committed. All which are so many arguments of the holiness of his nature, and the exquisiteness of his Justice. Christ suffers the Tares willingly, and therein gives testimony to his Providence; but he only suffers, he is not the Author, that shows his Justice. If then we desire and seek resolution in the point, touching the proper and direct cause of evil, we shall not find it like unto the River Nilus, the head whereof could not be discovered. Nor need we rack and torture our thoughts with Saint Austin in a busy and too too curious inquisition, which moved him to turn Manichee. But we may resolve it into the liberty of man's will, as the only impulsive and effcient cause of his own sin; void indeed of any inward principle of corcuption, and endowed with sufficiency of gifts and abilities to resist temptation, and yet mutable in his state and condition: into the wily subtlety and spiteful malice of the Devil, as the procatartical and moving cause, outwardly inviting and inveigling him with his suggestions; And into the free pormission of the will of God, leaving man in the hand of his own council, and to the managing of his inbred liberty, either in the election of good or evil; and so suffering it to come to pass. And by this sufferance of God it is, as a just reason of the being, though not from it as a procuring and producing cause, that sin entered at the first, and as yet continues in the world. Christ lets the Tares spring and grow, in that he doth not let them; for though God evermore hinders sin by his Justice, and opposes a spiritual impediment thereunto; the prohibitions and communications of his word; like unto the Angel that appeared unto Balaam with a drawn sword in his hand to cross him in his way; yet God doth not always hinder sin by his power, and make use of a natural impediment in denying the assistance of his Providence, or in restraining and cutting them short in the act of sin: as when he contracted and shrunk the sinews of Jerobeams Arm, which being once stretched forth to lay violent hands upon the Prophet, he was utterly disabled from pulling it in again. Neither need we make search for any other reason of God's proceed than the short and modest answer of the School. In particular administration, a provident Ruler prevents (what lies in him) all inconveniencies; but in the universal government of the world, it seemed best to divine wisdom to suffer some evil, not for want of power to hinder it, but out of his abundant goodness. (t) Miro & ineffabili modo non fit praeter Dei voluntatem, quod etiam contra ejus voluntatem sit. Quia nec fieret nisi sineret, nec utique nolens: Nec sineret bonus fieri male, nisi etiam omnipotnes de malo facere possit bene. Augustin. Enchirid ad Laurentium. And God who is infinite both in goodness and power, hath thought it more expedient, and conducing to the illustration of his glory to bring good out of evil, than not to permit or suffer it to be at all. And as he suffers it to enter, so to continue in the world till the men of corrupt minds dispute against his providence, quarrel his justice, blasphemously gainsay the truth of the Divinity, and conclude with David's Fool, There is no God. (u) Tertul. de Patient. cap. 2. Plures Dominum idcirco non credunt quia tamdiu saeculo iratum nesciunt, saith Tertullian; This tamdiu or length of time extends and reaches unto the end of the world: Sin and the world are of an age for their birth & beginning; and they have the self same end and period. And as our Saviour informs us in the words of the Text; Let both grow together until the Harvest. Christ suffers the Tares so long; and therein presents himself in his own person as a pattern for our imitation. Secondly, Secondly, to the servants of the Housholder. this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or suffer hath reference to the servants of the Housholder, who complained of the springing up of the Tares: being directed unto them as a rule of direction in the case, to suffer them by his example. And so it may be considered in a double manner. And so considered in a double manner. First, as a rational counsel and advice touching Tares in the generality. Secondly, as a peremptory and strict command in respect of particular Tares and offences. First, First, as a Rational counsel touching tares in the general. this word (suffer) may be conceived is a counsel to the Servants to permit, though not allow those evil and enormities, errors in doctrine, corruption in manners, which they can no way reform and remedy. Christ indeed suffers them willingly, and out of the fullness of his power, which he might as easily prevent as rectify: But as for the servants of Christ, they are constrained to suffer them against their will, in regard of their impotency and disability, both in the withstanding and removal of them. As for particular mischiefs and grievances they are not, they ought not to be once endured. There must be no toleration of several Religions and Professions in the same State and Kingdom, which though a Politic Machiavilian may well approve as useful and advantageous: And a Turkish Sultan account this diversity as pleasing a sight and spectacie in the eye of his indifferent and neutral judgement, as variety of flowers being pricked in the same Nosegay which make it more sweet and beautiful; yet in this to blow with an Ox and an Ass, to sow God's field with Meslain, and apparel the body of the Church with a Linsey wolsey garment in a spiritual sense, and was therein especially forbidden unto the Jows: yea, this is to endeavour a communion with light and darkness, and accord with Christ and Belial; and with the silly Hermit of old, to mediate a peace betwixt God and the Devil. There must be no toleration of Stews and Brothel-Houses, Cages of unclean Birds in a Christian Commonwealth; which are not only publicly professed and licenced in the Church and City of Rome by the Pope's Holiness, and under his nose; but are solemnly defended and maintained (x) Watson, lib. 2. Quodl. 4. Artic. pag. 31. cum approbatione as lawful as any Citizen, Magistrate, order of Religion, or the Pope himself, which Watson the Priest avoucheth to be the Tenet of no mean Jesuit. And this is one difference among many other, betwixt the Church of Christ, and the Antichristian Synagogue of Satan; wherein vices are not only perpetrated and committed, but privileged by authority, and observed with a kind of religious reverence, (z) Cypr. Epist. 2. cap. 3. Fiunt miseris religiosa Delicta, as Saint Cyprian speaks of the Heathen; whereas in the Church of Christ though the self sum vices are by some entertained, yet do they not find either Patrons or Proctors to plend for them; no Magistrate either supreme or subordinate, to establish them by a royal Decree, or support them by their power; I say there is not any particular evil that must in any case be tolerated: yet considering the deplorable condition of this present world, which even lies in wickedness, 1 John 5.19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is under the power and dominion of the Devil as the word imports. So that though superintendent Governors be never so vigilant by their inspection and circumspection, never so active and zealous in execution; though those Hydra's heads of that Monster, sin, be never so oft out off, yet new heads arise fresh in the room, and many for one. There is an indispensable and unavoidable necessity of an involuntary toleration of sin in the general, which they cannot redress; and of suffering the Tares of iniquity (according to our Saviour's council) which they cannot with any possibility extirpate or root up. Toleramus quae tollere non possumus; sed qui tolorat non amat, etsi tolerare amat, saith Saint Austin. They must tolerate what they cannot take away. And albeit no man loves what he suffers, yet he loves for to suffer. Secondly, Secondly as a peremptory command for particular Tares. This word suffer as it hath relation to the servants of the Housholder, may be considered as a peremptory and strict command to weed out and pluck up each particular Tare to the utmost of their ability. And so it respects four sorts of men. And so it respects and reflects upon four sorts of men. 1. The civil Magistrate. 2. The ecclesiastical Judge. 3. The public Minister. 4. The private Christian. 1. By the right managing of the sword of Justice. 2. By the orderly use of the spiritual Keys, the just censures of the Church. 3. By the religious ministration of the Word and Sacraments. 4. By their devout Prayers and Tears. First, First, the civil Magistrate; two manner of ways. the civil Magistrate must do his best endeavour to weed out every Tare by the right managing of the sword of Justice. And that two manner of ways. First, by coaction and impulsion to the unity of the faith, having to deal with refractory and pertinacious persons, and such as are obstinate, and obdurate in their impiety. Secondly, by inflicting capital punishment, upon those that are desperate and incorrigible. First, First by compelling men to the unity of the faith. obstinate and obdurate sinners are to be compelled to the unity of the faith, by the sword of the civil Magistrate. Man indeed is a reasonable creature, and the Lord of his own actions. God had not made us men, unless he had made us free. And this freedom shows itself nowhere more than in point of Religion, (a) Nihil est tam voluntarium quam religio, In qua si animus sacrificantis aversus est; ●am sublata iam nulla est. Last. l. 5. c. 20. Nihil est tam voluntarium quam religio, saith Laciantius. And faith is not to be enforced by violence, but persuaded by force of argument. And yet that of Tertullian against the Gnostics, is most true on the other side; (b) Ad efficium H●retieos compelli, non inlici dignum est, duritia vincenda est, non suadenda. Tertul. Sco piac adve●s. Gnosticos. cap 2. Obstinacy is not to be alured or entreated only, but subdued and conquered with a high hand: Qui imponit praeceptum, extorquet obsequium. And he that imposes a precept, will both expect and exact obedience; (c) Intrare posse hominem in Ecclesiam nolentem, acc●dere ad altare posse nolentem, accipere sacramente posse nolentem; credere non posse, nisi volentem, August in Joan Tract. 26. For though a man cannot believe without the elicit act and express consent of his own will, yet he may be constrained to profession, which is the exterior act of it. To frequent the assembly of Saints in the Temple, to communicate in divine Rites and Mysteries; the participation of the Word and Sacraments, even against his inclination. Howsoever the will of a Recusant cannot be compelled to reform his Religion, and turn Protestant; yet may compulsion be offered to his outward man. To his estate by urging pecuniary mulcts, and the penalties of the law upon his purse; and to his Body by Incarceration and imprisonment. This is the duty of the civil Magistrate, highly commended in good Josiah, who compelled all that were found in Israel to serve the Lord 2 Chro. 34.33. And commanded by our blessed Saviour to the servants in the parable, Luke 24.23. compel them to come in. Though not unto faith, yet, to the means of faith, the hearing of the Word, and to the receiving of the Sacraments, as St. Austin well expounds it. And this he retracts as an oversight (d) Haec mea primitus sententia erat, neminem ad unitatem Christi esse cogendum, verbo esse agendum, disputatione pugnandum. Sed haec opinio mea non contradicentium verbis, sed demonstrantium superatur exemplis. August. Epist. 48. ad Vincentium. in his 48 Epistle to Vincentius. This was once my opinion that no man ought to be forced to Christian unity, but that we should deal by persuading, strive by disputing, conquer by reasoning. But this judgement of mine is confuted not so much by words of contradiction as demonstrative example to the contrary. And many there are who have so thriven and profited by the Terror of the law that they have thereby been enabled to an ingenious confession. Gratias ago Domino qui vincula nostra dirupit. I give God thanks who hath broken my bonds in sunder. Secondly, by inflicting capital punishment upon such as are incorrigible. Secondly, the civil Magistrate must weed out Tares by inflicting capital puishments upon such as are desperate and incorrigible. The brainsick (e) Illis hominibus solenne est, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 formale Para bolarum Christi negligere, & to materiale urgere. Camer. Myret. pag. 17. Anabaptists would strain and squeeze this inference from our Saviour's answer to the demand of the servants in the parable; wilt thou then that we go and gather them up? But he said unto them, nay, lest while ye go about to gather the Tares, ye pluck also with them the wheat, Matth. 13.28, 29. That it is altogether unlawful for the civil Magistrate to execute judgement upon evil doers; whereas they themselves make use of most direful and dreadful excommunication (as Cameron observes.) And our late Socinians, Ostorodius, Smalcius, and the rest of that litter, plough with the Anabaptists Heifer in this point, and under pretence of Christian charity, they take away the power of the Sword from the Christian Magistrate, so far as it concerns capital punishments and the effusion of blood unto death. Quis non impudentissime nitatur; aliquid in Allegoria positum pro se interpretari, nisi habeat & manisesta testimonia, quorum lumine illustrentur obscura. August. Epist. 49. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Clemens Alexandrines. This they seem to ground upon that Ancient law, Thou shalt not kill; which is not repealed, abrogated, or any way altered (say they) in the New Testament; whereas God only interdicts in that royal law of his, private revenge, and unjust murder, not the just effusion of blood by the lawful hand of a Magistrate; who is a public person and the Minister of God that beareth not the sword in vain; but to take vengeance on him that doth evil, Rom. 13.4. And is in that respect non Homicida sed malecida: He slays not the man but his mischief. That very God who speaks thus unto the private Man; Thou shalt not kill: says likewise unto the public Magistrate, Thou shalt kill. And were there not an occides to authorise the one in the inflicting of deserved punishment, Cui convenit illud scholasticorum placitum: Theologia Symholica, non est argumentativa Thomae Opuscula. 70. there would not be a non occides to restrain the insolency and the outrages of the other. This was the exemplary practice of the Jews under the policy of the old law; of the primitive Church in the New; And of all Christian States and Kingdoms: Confirmed by the joint attestation of the Heathen, and ratified by the clear evidence of natural reason. That a gangrened and incurable member must be cut off: and that it's far () Melius est ut pereat unus, quam unitas, Bern. Epist. ●02. better and safer for one man to perish then unity itself. Yet herein a difference must be observed betwixt those that offend against the first, or second Table, whether Infidels, Heretics, Unbelievers, or Misbelievers; Infidels and unbelievers, such as Turks and Jews, deserve rather pity then punishment. And though they may be banished out of our Dominions, yet are they not to be deprived of their Lives for a negative Infidelity. Neither are Heretical misbelievers in Fundamental matters or in accessary Points of Faith, to be adjudged and doomed to death, merely for (e) Defendenda est religio non occidendo sed monendo: non saevitia, sed patientia: non scelere, sed side: illa enim malorum sunt, haec bonorum Lact. lib. 5. cap. 20. Error in Religion. And it was a strange mistake of that silly Papist, who in reading the Text it may be of set purpose, Titus 3.10. made two words of one, and turned the verb into a noun Haereticum, post unam dut alteram admonitionem devita. Supplet Tolle; that is their supplement and addition. There is no remedy but an Heretic must be put to death And the execrable cruelties of the Church of Rome have served as a Commentary upon the corruption of this Text; who as they brand and stigmatize the reformed party with the note of Heretics, so they forthwith add Devita: And their language hath been no other against them then the outcries of the Jews against Christ. Tolle, Away with them. Away with them; Occide trucida, vivat missa, vivat missa; Kill, burn, kill, burn, it matters not, so the mass may take place. And were we guilty either of blasphemy against God, or any treasonable practice against the State, there might be some colourable equity in their Sentence, and to make it justice and not (f) Long diversa sunt carnificina & pietat: nec potest aut veritas cum vi, aut justitia cum crudelitate conjungi. Lact. lib. 5. cap. 20. cruelty. For in this double case only, it is lawful to bring Heretics to the Faggot. 1. (f) It is possible to see a Campian at Tyburn or a Garnets' head upon a pole: Treasonable practices not mere Religion are guilty of those executions. But howsoever our Church is thus favourable in the case of those Heresies which are either simple, or secondary and consequential: yet in the cases of heretical blasphemy, her holy zeal hath not feared to shed blood. Witness the flames of Ket and Let at, and some other Arrians in our memory. Bish. Hall, Christ. Moderation, pag. 143.144. Blasphemy. 2. Treason, When either one or the other is intwined and interweaved with the cause of religion and marked under the disguise of a false belief, which is the just Apology of the Church of England against the unjust challenges and criminations of the scarlet whore; upbraiding her cruelties and casting in her face the blood of some Popish shamelings, Garnet, Campian, and some few other Tyburn Martyrs, Martyrs of treason and not of religion. Never was their any haltered or Gybbeted here in England, Causa religionis merae, sed mixtae, (That is the profession of our Church) being first Fugitives out of the land, than sent home as Spies and Emissaries, Seducers, and Seminaries to sow Tares, like unto the Devil in the Text. Assassinates of Kings, Incendiaries of States, and powder-pioners to undermine and blow up the House of Parliament. It were indeed much to be wished that gentleness and clemency might reclaim this stubborn Generation, and each Christian Prince should be of the Emperor Severus mind (g) Tertul. Apol. cap. 4. utinam errorem, non ●●tain deposui●●●t, Augu●tini votum, sib. 2. contra Gaudent, cap. 12 cui affine igad Hicron. V●●●● silius 〈◊〉 ●●m 〈…〉 qui 〈…〉 niss 〈◊〉 spiritualibus Hicron. ●●●es l 5. c. 14. suffundere maluit Hominis sanguinem, quam effundere; Rather to keep their blood within their veins, then to det, or pour it out: And to second good Theodosius in his desire, Vtina ● mortuos ab inforis possem revocare; That they could bring men from the dead. But seeing that mildness and moderation doth for the most part eneourage and animate offenders, and (as it is not more commonly then truly said) Too much pity spoils the City, and Country both. And the Futhers of the Country, have just cause to complain with the Father in the Comedy; Nimis male docuit te mea facilitas multa (h) S●ut est aliquan so mijeric●●. dia puntens; ita & crudelicas parcens. August. ad Macedonium, Epist 5●. They must in this respect, unsheathe and draw out the sword of justice, set an odge upon it, to make it sharp and keen, and taking up David's Heroical resolution, Cut off all the workers of iniquity from the City of the Lord, Psal. 101.8. I read of the Landgrave of Hesse a sweet and a gracious Prince, whose clemency was much abused; that being cast by adventure upon a Smith's Forge, overheard what the Smith said, all the while he was striking his iron; Duresce, duresoe inquam, utinam Langravius durescat. I forbear to make any further application of the story, then to join with the Smith in his utinam; would to God that Christian Kings and Magistrates those especially the candour of whose disposition inclines them to a vimium of lenity and compassion, would hearten their zeal, and harden their courage, against the brazen brows and iron sinews, and steeled hearts of the sons of Belial. That they would pluck up these Tares of wickedness by the roots; and since they will not grow better, 〈…〉 they may not grow at all. Secondly, Secondly, the Ecclefiastical Judge. The Ecclesiastical Judge must employ and improve his power to weed out Tares by the orderly use of the spiritual keys, the just censures of the Church. The power of the keys is merely spiritually exercised upon the soul and conscience as the proper object, which as it is a more transcendent and sovereign authority, than God hath delegated unto Sovereigns upon earth, or the glorious Angels themselves: So the punishments thereby inflicted, are of all other the most dreadful; as being a cutting off from the mystical body of Christ, a shutting out of the Kingdom of Heaven: Et summum extremi judicii praejudicium, an anticipation or prevention of the latter judgement. And they who are entrusted with the custody of the keys, had need be in this respect the most accomplished among men, for extraordinary qualifications and endowments; perfection of wisdom, excess of charity, unswayed integrity, abundance of caution and circumspection in the use of the keys. That they turn them not the wrong way, either opening when they should shut, or shutting when they should open; absolving the wicked, and excommunicating, and condemning the righteous, both which saith Solomon, are an abomination unto the Lord, and should be likewise unto his faithful Deputies. And it is an useful caveat, and profitable direction for spiritual Governors, which is given by Gerson and Erasmus: Ne teutere vibrent fulmen excommunication is: That they throw not about the thunderbolt of their censures rashly and at random: Wherein if they would weed out Tares aright, A threefold error to be avoided in Church censures. they must take heed of a threefold error and extremity. 1. Frequency and too much commonness. 2. Immoderate and undue rigour. 3. Temporal and by respects. First, Frequency & too much commonness. There must not be frequency and too much commonness in Church censures, lest they thereby forfeit their estimation, and abate their force and efficacy: For even as purging Physic, if ordinarily and familiarly received, hath little or no operation upon the body whereunto it is accustomed, and losing both name and nature, it becomes nonrishment in stead of physic, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith the Philosopher, for the constant and continual use. In like manner this Spiritnal Physic, I mean the censures, Ecclesiastical, which is Saint Cyprians resemblance, Non deest censura quae increper, nec medecina quae sanet. I say these censures, if threatened and urged upon all occasions, they lose their power and strength, they are neglected and slighted at all hands, and work not at all unless it be contempt; and at length are (as it were) east out into the draught. Secondly, Immoderate and undue rigour. There must not be immoderate and undue rigour in Church censures. A course much like the practice of unskilful Physicians, who for the most part purge, Vsque ad habitum corporis, the utmost strength and ability of the body, and thereby endanger the life of the patiented. The Tent must not be made too big for the Wound, nor the Plaster too broad for the Sore: For every petty and small offence in comparison, an eight penny matter, default of payment, a Proctor's fee, want of appearance, or the like; to be threatened excommunicatione majori. It is all one, saith Parisiensis, as if a man that perceives a fly in his neighbour's forehead, should forthwith club him to death, killing the man, that he may kill the fly, and dash out his brains. And though it be not so much the quality of the offence, as the contumacy of the offender that necessitates them thereunto; (which they usually allege) yet whether this contumacy is of so high a nature as to promerit the most dreadful censure under Heaven, yea the loss of Heaven itself, I submit unto better judgements. Thirdly, There must be no temporal, Temporal and by respects. nor by respects in the exercise of Church cexsures. That power which is purely spiritual in the nature, must not be made temporal in the end. These keys are not tempered of gold or silver, nor must they be used, or abused rather, to the unlocking of men's chests or cossers. The enriching of a corrupt Judge, or a sharking and a prouling Officer, what is this but to imitate the lothsoni wickedness of Elie's sonss and to make the sentence of exdommunication like unto their three toothed flesh, hook, which they thrust into the kettle, cauldron, or pot, and whatsoever it brought up they took it to themselves, 1 Sam. 2.13. But that I may not seem to inveigh and complain without cause, or without countenance of just authority, give me leave to express what I intent to deliver in the point, in the strain of a late Reverend Bishop of our own, and that Andrew's by name: They are the words of the wise, which are as goads and nails fastened by one of the Masters of our Assemblies. (h) Omnium abusuum medecira, abusus ipsa est censura scilicet Ecclesiastica. Opuscul. Posth. pag. 41. Quae ad scelera profliganda data s●●t, flagellum Christi, & clavis Petri, solum jam crumenam pulsant: Our Saviour's scourge strung with small cords, and Saint Peter's keys, which were first ordained for the exterminating of sin, they now only vex the purse. It is commonly said, that it is but lost labour to present offenders to your Commissaries or Officials, who when they have had their Fee, is forthwith dismissed unpunished, and then revels as insolently, as securely, as before; but if they have no money at hand to satisfy the Court, the sword of authority is then brandished against them, and no more ado, but with one stroke are cut off from the Church, given over unto Satan, and denounced public Ethnics and Anathemaes. Add because they see these censures fly abroad in light matters, and that against the best of men no less frequently than unadvisedly, Quasi bruta fulmina & soli metuenda crumenae contemnere didicerunt; They have learned to contemn them as empty Thunderbolts, torrible only to the purse. And there is a groat deal of Analogy and agreement in, the terms of the comparison; For as the thunder and lightning that comes down from above, melts the money in the purse, but consumes not, or any way burts the purse itself. Even so this spiritual lightning seizes only upon the substance, and wastes the hard Metal that makes resistance, but passes through, passes over the person who is more yielding, and leaves him untouched. This is not the orderly use of the spiritual keys, nor this the direct way for the Ecclesiastical Judge, to weed Tares out of the Church. 3. Thirdly, the public Ministry. The public Minister must put to his helping hand to gather out Tares by the religious ministration of the Word and Sacraments. Behold this day have I set thee over the Nations, and over the Kingdoms, to pluck up, and to root out, and to destroy, and throw down, and to build, & to plant, saith God to the Prophet Jer. 1.10. This speech the Bishop of Rome ingrosses and appropriates as personal to himself, grounding thereupon his unlimited Jurisdiction, and Ecumenical power in Temporalities, to depose Kings, and dispose of their Kingdoms; whereas the Text equally and indifferently concerns all even the meanest Ministers of the Gospel. The Spirit of God therein assimilating the pains of their profession to the toil and sweat of the natural Husbandman, (i) Disce, sarculo non seep●●o epus est, ut sacias opus prophetae Bernard. ad Engenium, De considera●●one, Lib. ●. Rusticani sudoris schemate quodam, spiritualis iste labor expressus est, as devout Bernard expounds and applies the place to Pope Eugenius, whose office and duty it is to pluck up, and root out these Tares in the public Ministry. And if there be any Tare of wickedness that pesters the field of the Lord, spreads the roots far and near, advances the head higher, and grows more rank and rife than the rest; be it gross idolatry, customary swearing, prodigious blasphemy, open profanation of the Sabbath, the filthiness of whoredom, or any other; these are the Tares which they principally endeavour with all their might, not only to top or crop (as the Heathen King struck off the tops of the Poppies) but pluck them up by th' roots. What though they meet with difficulties and discouragements of all sorts and reap no other guerdon of assiduity, and faithfulness in their calling, but enmity and opposition: yet must they make their face hard against their faces, and their forehead hard against their foreheads: Cry aloud and spare not, lift up their voice like a Trumpet. Preach the word: be instant in season and out of season: improve, rebuke, exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine. I will close up the Point with a story of Luther, who when he began first to appear in public against Popish indulgences, a friend of his rounded him in the ear with more safe than sound advice. As good hold your tongue, the custom is so strong, you will do no good: go into your study and pray; Domine miserere nostri; And get you no anger. This is the distressed and entangled condition of poor Ministers in the Gospel, If they plead for their due maintenance, they are barred with legal customs and prescriptions. If they preach in the Name of the Lord against the crying abominations of the time, they are affronted in the same manner with customary and common practices; So that one way or other the custom is always too hard for us. And though it be a matter of as great difficulty and slender hopes to cry down the customs of sin, as of Tithes and payments in the vulgar, being armed and fenced with prescription in both; Yet this must not daunt or damp our spirits, nor quell or quail our courage, no more than it dismayed the Heroical resolution of stout-spirited Luther; much less must it move us to grow feeble and faint-hearted, and utterly to desist with disconsolate Jeremiah: Then I said I will not make mention of him nor speak any more in his name, Jer. 20.9. But notwithstanding the strength of custom, the public Minister must do his best to weed out these Tares of wickedness by the religious ministration of the Word and Sacraments. Fourthly, The private Christian must bend his strength, Fourthly, the private Christian. and b●ckle to the task of gathering out of Tares by devout prayers and Tears. Acts of authority and jurisdiction are confined and limited to public offices. But duties of common piety & pity fall within the verge & compass of the meanest Christian. It were presumption and usurpation for every one to lay hands upon the civil sword. To arrogate and assume the power of the keys; to sit in Moses chair, and teach authoritatively in the Church; yet is there none no not of the lowest rank but may pour forth his soul unto God in prayer, and pour out his inward grief, in sad and mournful tears. Arma ecclesiae sunt preces & lachrymae, Prayers and tears are the spiritual weapons of the Church, and the offensive & defensive arms of the private Christian. How much better do these become them then to repine and whine in a malcontented humour which is the natural language of the multitude, to defame the persons, censure the actions of superiors, to look upon Government with an obliqne eye, and cast dirt in the face of authority. How may we solace and recreate ourselves, in the most exulcerate and calamitous times; even in a holy Soliloquy with God, and a pathetical lamentation of our own miseries. And memorable is that example of Gerson in this kind, that famous Chancellor of Paris, who being exulsed the university by the Sorbonists, and in his old age deprived of all his dignities, he betook himself to the profession of a Schoolmaster and caused all his Scholars being but little children to join with him daily in this short prayer, (k) Illyric. Cat. Test. Tom. 2. pag. 805. My God my Maker have mercy upon thy miserable servant Gerson. Thus may every Christian address himself unto God, in sending up a pithy ejaculation unto Heaven (My God, my Maker have mercy upon thy miserable Servant) for the redress of particular grievances, the pardon of Epidemical evils, and the prevention of universal vengeance, when as impiety and iniquity domineers and overrules with an high hand: the judgements of God hang over our heads and threaten us with destruction, when as the times are most intricate and perplexed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and there are fightings without and fears within. This, this is the fittest season for each private Christian to call upon the Name of God, and to stir up themselves to take hold on him. The supine neglect whereof God severely faults and taxes, Isa. 64.7. This necessity should be their opportunity, that when they are at their wit's end, driven to the straitest pinch and exigent, and find neither hope nor help in the sons of men; To appeal unto God for succour, and after holy David's example to excite and awaken him by their prayers; up Lord let not man prevail, Psal. 9.19. Help Lord for there is not a godly man left, Psal. 12.1. Tunc votorum locus praecipuus quum spei nullus. Then is the chiefest place for request, up Lord and help Lord, when there is no place left for hope: but if ever Christians mourned and cried in the bitterness of their spirits for the abominations of the Time; If ever they cried mightily unto the Lord; now, now is the time to pluck up and root out these Tares of wickedness, by their devout Prayers and Tears. The End of the first Sermon. Lapis Lydius, OR THE TRIAL OF SPIRITS. A SERMON Preached at the Cathedral in the City of Norwich. Prove all things, hold fast that which is good, 1 Thess. cap. 5. ver. 21. LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. THE TRIAL OF SPIRITS. 1 JOHN 4.1. Dear Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits, whether they are of God, for many false Prophets are gone out into the World. THis Text is the Watchword, The Preface. or Warn-word of the great Apostle Saint John, and that not bound up with any particularities of time, place, or person, but of universal extent and concernment, appliable, and applied by him to all ages, and may well be conceived, as the Prophecy of the latter times. This was the peculiar privilege and pre-eminence of Saint John that he was an Evangelist, Prophet, and Apostle; An Evangelist in the penning of his Gospel. A Prophet in his revelation. A. Apostle in his Epistles. A Divine Trismegistus, or thrice excellent; yea, he shows himself a Prophet in his Epistles, and that in these words of the Text, wherein he foretells the Epidemical disease of the latter times, and withal prescribes and applies the remedy. We, This Sermon was preached during the distraction of the late Civil Wars. are now fallen upon times of war and bloodshed, haec fundi nostri calamitas; and one principal cause of the defeat and overthrow, that hath been given unto both parties, hath been the neglect of Sconts and Emissaries to discover and descry the approach of the enemies. Give me leave therefore at this time to take upon me the office of a Church Scout, to give timely notice and intelligence of an enemy, and that not upon the frontiers or borders, but Hannibal ad portas, that knocks at the gates for entrance. One that hath made an invasion and inroad into the heart of the Kingdom, and subdued a great part of it; who are here indigitated and pointed out by Saint John, and branded with the title of false Prophets: For false Prophets are gone out into the world. I shall likewise furnish you with sundry weapons out of Saint John's Armoury, for the better encounter with this enemy. Weapons defensive; Believe not every spirit: Slowness of belief is a defensive weapon against the assaults of a sly seducer Weapons offensive; Try the spirits whether they be of God. And lest that my discovery seem unpleasant, or prove unto any of you, I shall borrow and take up Saint John's Preface for my just Apology: (Dear Beloved) and apply it to every one here present. I will speak the words of truth and oberness. (a Paul told Festus) yea and love too, without any gall of bitterness. And so I come to the Text. The General parts whereof are two. The division of the Text. 1. A compellation, Dear beloved. 2. And a command in the sequel. In the command we have two specialties, or particular circumstances. 1. The Matter. 2. The Motive. 1. the matter is partly dissuasive, or monitory; Believe not every spirit. 2. Partly persuasive, or injunctive; Try the spirits, whether they be of God. 2. The second speciality of the Command, is the motive unto the matter, or the ground and reason of it. And that is couched in the close, or latter part of the verse, For money false Prophets are gone out, etc. I begin with the compellation; Dear beloved. 1. There were two great Apostles of our blessed Saviour, The first parr. The compellation. Saint Peter and Saint John. Saint Peter was a man of an hot temper, and a fiery metal, the freest and forwardest of his order; one that was ready to vent and put forth himself at every turn, and to ply Christ with replies and answers upon each occasion: who like unto the foreman of a Jury, was commonly the mouth of all the rest. To say with Aquinas, that Christ loved Saint Peter above the rest of the Apostles, in ordine ad Ecclesiam; savours strong and sour of the Leaven of the Pharisees, the Doctrine of the Church of Rome. For Christ loved his Disciples alike, with an even and uniform love in reference to his Church, yet did Christ advance Saint John above the rest of his brethren in ordine ad personam, in reference unto his person, (as the same Aquinas affirmeth) as being the natural and near kinsman of Christ, and in that respect, the more affected and endeared to him. And as Saint John was the beloved, so the most loving Disciple of his Lord and Master. Magnes amoris amor, the love of Christ to him, was as an attractive Loadstone of his heart to the love of Christ; and to draw Christians to the mutual love of one another. His soul was a full volume of charity, and every leaf of this volume, each leaf in his Epistles, each Chapter, and well near verse and line in those Chapters, contain sundry invitations and inducements unto charity. And as it was said of Homer's Iliads, (a) Justin. Martyr. Orat. ad Graecos. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That, it was carnal and sensual love that was the beginning and end of his writings; so may it be much more truly affirmed of Saint John's works, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Divine and spiritual love, that was the beginning and end, yea, and the middle too of his Epistles. This was his constant practice in his declining time, and extremity of old age, that being carried into the Temple upon the shoulders of his Disciples, and being unable to preach to them, in regard of his weakness, and infirmity, he would then inculcate and press upon them this short and pithy exhortation, which was in effect a very powerful and persuasive Sermon; Filioli diligite vosmet invicom, little children, love one another; For as Saint Paul was an Apostle of faith, constantissimus gratiae praedicator (as Austin styles him) a most constant Preacher of the free grace of God in Christ. As Saint James was an Apostle of works, which he vehemently urges against lose Libertines and carnal Gospelers. So this was the special excellency of S. John, that he was an Apostle of love, which he expresses and evidences in the Compellation here in the Text, A double duty: Dear beloved. And implies and intimates a double duty. 1. The one of the pastor. The duty of the Pastor to love his people, to love them affectionately, tenderly, from the very heart-root, and bowels yea, in the bowels of Christ. For God is my record how I long after you all in the bowels of Jesus Christ. It is Saint Paul's profession to the Philippians, Phil. 1.8. 2. The other of the people. The duty of people to be throughly assured & persuaded of the love of their Pastor, and to embrace his instructions, admonitions, and his severest reprehensions, as so many love-tokens and arguments of his affection. And if the people's hearts be once possessed and taken up with this belief, it will be as an Harbinger to make way for the entertainment of their doctrine; it will welcome their Message and their Ministry, and make their sharpest reproofs not only saving but sweet; and cause them to pray in the words of the Psalmist, Psal. 101.5. Let the righteous smite me for that is a benefit: and let them reprove me, and it shall be a precious oil that shall not break my head. And let this suffice to have spoken of the compellation, Dear beloved; For I must not stay in the porch or entry, which though it be both useful and necessary in a Building, yet it is only to lead us into the inward rooms, whereunto I now come. 2. The Command. The second Part. The command which contains in it the Matter. The second general part of the Text, where the matter and the motive present themselves unto us. And in the matter, first of the dissuasive or monitory part, believe not every spirit. And then of the persuasive or munitive; Try the spirits whether they be of God. I will take them up as they lie in order. 1. Believe not every spirit. The dissuasive or monitory part. That is St. John's dissuasion or admonition. There are spirits in their nature, spiritual and immaterial substances, and those either uncreated as God himself, God is a Spirit, John 4.24. or else created; as Angels and the Souls of men. And there are spirits in their function and office, Believe not every spirit. that are assigned and deputed to a spiritual service and employment. Thus a Prophet and a spiritual man are Synonymous, and signify one and the same thing. The Prophet is a fool, the spiritual man is mad, Hosea 9.7. If any man thinks himself a Prophet or spiritual, 1 Cor. 14.37. In both which places a Prophet and a spiritual man are linked together, and go hand in hand. And in this sense is the word here used in the Text, and the name of spirit is taken by way of Metonymy, for such an one as boasts and brags of the gift of the spirit for the discharge of a Prophet's duty. (b) Calv. in Lecum. Nomen spiritus Metonymice accipitur pro eo qui spiritus done se praeditum esse jacrat ad obeundum Prophetae munus, (as Calvin well observes upon the place.) And if we take a full view of the Text, we shall then find that they who are termed Spirits in the beginning, and the middle, are styled false prophets in the latter end of the Verse, so that these spirits are no other than false prophets. And herein we may take notice of a concession and a caution of the Apostle. 1. A Concession. A concession, in that he grants them the honour of their name, the dignity of their high place and calling, the excellency of their parts and gifts: All which are but airy and empty vanities, husks without grain, shells without kernels, unless they be stuffed with realities and substance of inward holiness. Nomine illuditur cui res nomini subjecta negatur, saith Tortullian. An honourable name and a glorious calling is but a goodly mockery, where the truth of the name is wanting. This is St. John's concession in that he gives them their due style and title, Tertul. adv. Martion, lib. 1. and freely affords them the name of spirits; yet believe them not; this is his caution or admonition. 2. A Caution. But is it not the great and weighty work of the Spirit of God to persuade men unto faith? Doth he not use all possible arguments and inducements to incline and move the assent of the will to believe? And would St. John have us to be Infidels? Believe not. What must we mere Sceptics and Academics in religion? and hold nothing positively and dogmatically, as an established and grounded certainty? what must we be such neuters in the Church, as the Roman Orator in the commonwealth, when he thus proclaimed his indifferency? Quem fugiam scio, quem sequar nescio. Must we know what to deny, and not know what to believe? This is the unstable state of many, too many great Clerks and Scholars, who having run out their lives in the study of Controversies and School-divinity in canvasing of doubts and questions, and in (c) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazian. Orat. 21. in laudem. ●●banas. fight with those School-weapons pro and con, they are far better at the con then at the pro. and as Hierom speaks of Lactautius, (d) utinam tam nostra confirmare potuisset quam facile aliena destruit. So are they more able to confute others, then to resolve or satisfy their own consciences. This is not the scope and purpose of St. John's caution, 〈…〉 only to interdict a double fault or error. ●. Inconsideration. ●. Inconstancy of judgement. 1. Lightness and giddiness. 2. Vnsteadiness and fickleness of belief. 1. The first error St. John prohibits is inconsideration of judgement, lightness and giddiness of belief. Try all things, hold fast that which is good, 1 Thess. 5.21. To try all things is a point of spiritual wisdom and discretion. To hold fast that which is good, utinam tam facile vera invenire possem quam falsa convincere. is the property of Christian constancy and perseverance. And it is St. Paul's method and order first to try, and then to trust: whereas such is the preposterous course of many that they begin at the wrong end of St. Paul's precept, whosuddenly take up an holdfast opinion, without any previous trial, or examination. It was a notable piece of folly of them in the Gospel: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Athenag. de Resurcarnis. I have bought a Farm and I must needs go out and see it. I have bought five yoke of Oxen and I go to prove them, Luke 14.18, 19 who by the rule of ordinary prudence should first have seen and proved, ere they had concluded, and struck up the bargain. Such is the spiritual folly of the greater part who lay out their judgement (as they suppose) in buying the truth, A double error interdicted in the Ca●tion. and then make search and enquiry after it. 1. Inconsideration, or giddiness of belief. But as it was the high commendation of the Heathen Emperor August. in observing the rules of friendship; Rarus ad meundas amicitias, ad retinendas constantissimus: that he was hardly drawn to enter the league of friendship, but was most punctual and constant in the keeping of it. Such should be the praise of an advised and wary Christian, to be slow-paced in assent to those doctrines, that are propounded; but being once convinced of the truth, he should not be more slow than sure, and every way steadfast and immovable in their maintenance and just defence. 2. A Second error that Saint John forbids in these words (believe not every spirit,) Inconstancy & unsetledness. is inconstancy of judgement: unsteadiness and fickleness of belief, when men are mere whirlegigs in religion; like unto Fanes and Weathercocks that are fastened to the tops and pinnacles of the Temple, and carried about with every wind, That is St. Paul's metaphor, Ephes. 4.14. wavering and carried about with every wind of doctrine: when men are now off, and then on, in their opinion; now of this mind, and forth with of another; flust believing this spirit, and soon after another: And so ever: spirit successively and in their turns. Like unto the old Arrians, who changed their faith every year and month, (e) Eo processum est, ut neque penes nos, neque penes quenquam ante nos, sanctum. exinde aliquid atque invi, labile perseveret. Hil. count. Auxent. Annuas & menstruas de Deo fides decorn it is, (as St. Hilary tells them) they took up a new faith, every now your, and every new Moon brought forth a new faith. Their faith sometimes in the bull, some 〈◊〉 in the Wane; one while increasing, another decreating; and like the Moon in perpetual changes. I cannot betten resemble these men th●● to the Halcyon, or King's Fisher, a Bird called by that name; whose dead body being hung up in the house it flickers, and moves to and fro, and turns with the wind into every quarter. Such King's Fishers are there too too many in religion who are wheeled and hurried with every wind; The wind of Soveraighty and Authority; the wind of Honour and Presferment. The wind of the present time and season (f) Optat. cont. Parmen. Don. lib. 1. Omnia pro tempore nihil pro veritate. They are all for the time, nothing at all for the truth: As Optatus sometimes of the Donatists. This is the double error that St. John censitres upon a threefold ground and reason. A threefold ground of St. John's Inter dict. 1. The folly. 2. The impiety. 3. The danger. First, It is folly to believe every spirit. For man is a rational creature, The Folly. both in the inward principle, and outward actions. And it is the ordenly course of reason finst to consult, afterwards to conclude, to deliberate, ere it do determine. There is not a surer argument of sound wisdom than tardity or slowness of belief; which occasioned that moral precept of the Heathen Epitharmu, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take heed that thou be distrustful. These are the slnews and joints of wisdom. And for men to be sudden and overhasty of belief, it is the character and cognizance of a Fool 5 A Fool believes every thing, Prov. 14.15. Secondly, The Implety. 'Tis impiety to believe every spirit. The implicit saith and blind obedtence of the Papists are worthily exploded and hist out of the Schools. And to be precipitate and headlong in the sirst embracing of an opinion, and as headstrong in the after defence of it, (as they that are rash and head long, are peremptory and headstrong for the most part) what is this but to agree and jump with the Papists in their implicit faith, by folding and wrapping it up, in the authority and wisdom of their Leaders, and to afford them a blind obedience. True it is that Christ exe●●cises the faith of his people by seducers and false prophets; yet hath he not left them unfurnished of helps, wherewith to withstand their suggestions, the suspending and withholding their belief. Then, if any shall say unto you, lo, here is Christ, or there, belaeve it not. Wherefore if they shall say unto you, behold, he is in the desert, go not forth. Bobold, he is in the secret places, believe it not, Matth. 24.23, 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is the word in the original. In penetralibus in the inward rooms; as the vulgar translates it. In conclautbus, In the close closerts, or privy chambers, as Beza renders it. If that the Church of Rome bear us in hand, that Christ is in conclavibus, in the conclaves of the Popes and Cardinals, That he is in the pix or box wherein (as they conceive) they carry about their breaden god: Our Saviour forewarns us of our duty; Believe it not. If that others affirm as confidently, that Christ is only in their Congregational Churches, which yet are but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, close closerts, straight narrow chambers; yea, but little Boxes, in comparison of a Church: That there, and only there is that platform of Discipline and Church-government, which Christ hath instituted and ordained; our Saviour admonishes us what to do in the case; Believe it not. Thirdly, It is danger to believe every spirit. The Danger. The sadness and heaviness of some men's tempers and the dulness of their naturals, is an excellent preservative, against imposture and deceit. Such was the constitution of the old Thessalians, who were so sottish and blockish, that they could not be circurrented or overreached by any. The like may be observed of our neighbouring Netherlanders, whose dulness is a notable furtherance and advantage to their negotiation; and what other Nation's effect and bring to pass out of their quickness and nimbleness of their parts, That they compass by reason of their dulness; which requires a longer time for deliberation and dispatch, and redoubles their watchfulness and circumspection. Even so, the slowness of belief is an useful and profitable help to the common sort of Christians; which makes them more apprehensive and jealous of their own simplicity; and more and wary of the wiles of others; For even as in War, there is use both of a Sword and Shield: And they that want a sword therewith to offend the Enemy, must defend themselves with a Shield and Buckler. Even so, strength of reason, pregnancy of parts is a sword, which God vouchsafes to some above others to contend and fight with the common Enemy: But tardity and wariness of belief, that is as a shield which God puts into the hand of the weaker and simpler sort of people; thereby to receive and repel those envenomed Arrows, and fiery Darts of Fiery spirits, that would otherwise wound them unto death. And so I pass from the Dissuasion or Admonition to the persuasion or Injunction. Try the spirits whether they be of God. 2. The persuasive or injunctive Part. The word in the original is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A word of frequent use in Scripture, and that figurative and Metaphorical. A Metaphor borrowed and taken up from Metalists or Goldsmiths, who for the better discovery of the truth and soundness of their Metals are wont to bring them to the Touchstone and what will not abide the Test, is cast away, as false and counterfeit. Try the spirits whether they be of God. And hereunto the Spirit of God alludes, Jer. 6.30. They shall call them reprobate silver; for the Lord hath rejected them; that is reprobate silver, which will not endure the Touchstone, and thereby becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and is ruprobated, and rejected. Such is the trial of spirits enjoined by St. John, like unto that of gold, silver, or precious stones; Therein are four specialties. wherein we may take notice of these four Particulars. 1. The Metal. The Spirits. 2. The Touchstone. 3. The Touch. 4. The Metalists or Lapidaries. First the Metal. The spirits: which may be said to be of God in two respects. All which are inaplied in the verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Try. 1. I begin with the Metal. The Spirits. These Spirits are said to be of God in two respects. 1. Respectu originis. 2. Respeciu finis. First, First in respect of the Author of the 1. Inward. in respect of the beginning or Author both of their inward and outward calling. There is an inward calling which consists in zeal to God's glory, forwardness and faithfulness in his service; a sufficiency or at least a competency of parts and abilities whereby they are gifted and qualified for the office. For God who disdained a blind and lame sacrifice, under the Law, doth not employ and make use of a blind and lame Priest, who must of necessity offer a blind and a lame sacrifice. He that sendeth a message by the hand of a fool, cutteth off the feet, saith the wise man, Prov. 26.6. And God never sends a fool of his Errand. He doth not command him to run, and cut off his feet, or deny him legs. Christ the eternal word of God hath nothing to do with their tongues that cannot speak the word. That are not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is St. Paul's Character of a lawful Minister, 1 Tim. 3.2. Both able and apt to teach. Secondly, But besides this, there is an outward calling, 2. And ourward Calling. which is from God; for it is his Ordinance, but by man; The imposition of hands, The Ordination of the Church, as the ordinary means and instruments. And though the outward calling may not compare with the inward either in peint of excellency, or necessity: yet in a constituted and a settled Church, and in an ordinary way, this outward calling is of simple and absolute necessity. No men taketh this honour unto himself but he that is called of God, as was Aarou, Heb. 5.4. and that is by man's Ministry. And not to wave the comparison of my Text, As in Metal, there is both the Bullion as it lies in the mass and bulk; And there is the Coin after it hath once passed the mould, and Mint, and received the stamp and impress and supersoription of the Prince. Even so the inward calling is as the Bullion of Gold and Silver, which shows the intrinsic worth and value, and is the very nature and substance of it. But the outward calling is as the coining and minting of this Bullion in ordination, which sets upon it the stamp of Church autharits, and makes it currant and passable among men. Secondly, Secondly, in respect of the End. These spirits are said to be of God in respect of the End. For as in nature the efficient and final cause is one and the same; so is it every way as true in Divinity. God is alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end of all. For of him, and through him, and to him are all things, Rom. 11.36. And those Spirits are of God that are for God, that intent God, that tend to God as to their ultimate and lastend. When us Luther first began to appear in Germany, and his Doctrine passed sundry censures and constructions according to the variety of men's apprehensions, and their particular interests and engagements, Dr. Stanpitius professed for his part that he was the better satisfied with it, and the more throughly confirmed in the belief of it, (g) Hoc mihi placet quod haec doctrina quam praedicat, gloriam & omnia soli Den tribuit hominibus nihil Lut her. loc. Com. Quar. Glass. cap. 30. Quod omnia in solidum Deo ascribebat: That it did entirely ascribe all to the praise of God's grace & glory. And certainly those Spirits are of God, that do most abase and depress the aspiring pride, and haughtiness of man's heart; That do vilify, yea nullify the spiritual impotency and disability of man's decayed, wounded, and dead nature; that do extol and magnify the free grace of God in Christ; that enhance and advance his glory. These, these are the Spirits, who as they are for God, so they likewise are of God, 2. The Touchstone, and that double. The false or counterfeit which is five fold. The second thing considerable in the trial next after the metal, is the Touchstone, and that is either 1. I also and counter suit, 2. On Ise right and true. The false and counterfeit Touchstones are these five in member. 1. Pretended Revelation. 2. Lying Nti●●aeles. 3. Rucollancy of Burts and Abrtitues. 4. Fl●●●●ess of Life. 5. Success, or truth of Eveuts. The first false and counterfeit Touchstone is Pretended Revelations. The first, pretended Bevelations. These our (h) Dicunt paracsetum plura in Montano dixisse, quam Christum in Evan, lium protulisse. Nec tantum plura sed etiam meliora, atque majora. Tertul. Prescr. adv. Haeret. c. 152. Fanatici spiritus hodie quicquid somniant, volunt esse spiritum sanctum. Luther Tom. 4. fol. 5 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basilius. Inth ●srast, and Anahaptists, the Dreanters if our lanentimes, as Saint Jade fitly styles them, boast and brag of, and prattle much to little purpose of their secret inllincts and inspirations. So did Suenck feildius, a whelp of that litter; who, as if he had been a Prophet dropped from Heaven, or sullen out of the Clouds, did amaze and inoltant mens minds with those high flown terms, Illumination, Revelation, Deification of the interior and spiritual men; words misapplied and perverted by him, and grossly understood by the common multitude. And that I may extricate and wind myself out of ambiguities all at once. True it is that God doth enlighten the minds of his children in the knowledge of spiritual and saving mysteries, and inwardly reveal unto them the sense and feeling of God's love in Christ; so that they taste and see how gractous the Loed is, as the Psalnist has it, Psal. 34.8, abounding more and more in Knowledge, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and in all judgement, as Saint Paul prays for the the Philippians, Phil. 1.19. yet this affords no ground, or sooting for any new Bevelation, by way of Supplement or Addition to the written word, either against or besides the Seripturea. Though we or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel unto you, than that we have preached unto you, let him, be accursed, Gal. 1.8. Though we, Saint Paul himself, who was rapt into the third Heaven, or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, non solum contrarium sed diversum. Not only that which is directly contrary, but any way different: Let him be accounted execrable and abominable; that is Saint Paul's doom upon himself and others. For the Doctrine of Salvation touching faith and manners, whatsoever is necessary to be believed or observed, is revealed from Heaven already; and they that expect and look for any new revelations, may go out and seek for them, as the children of the Prophets did for Elias body after it was taken up into Heaven, 2 King. 2.17. but shall be sure to return without it. 1. Optat. lib. 5. Si fuerit inter fratres contentio orta, non itur ad tumulum sed quaeritur Testamentum● sit qui 〈◊〉 lo quiescit, tacitis de tabulis loquitur. ibidem. Nobis curiositate opus non est post christum, nec inquisitione post Evangelium. Cum credimus, nihil desideramus ultra credere. Hoc enim prius credimus, non esse quod ultra credere debeamus, Tert. Presc. cap. 8. Quid pulsamus ad coelum cum habeamus in Evangelio Testamentum, (saith Optatus excellently.) To what end should we knock at Heaven gates for Revelations, when as we have Christ's last Will and Testament in the Gospel. There may be indeed a Codicill or Schedule annexed to the Will of a dying man, as long as he is alive. And the same may be as authentic and forcible as the original Will, if it hath his hand and seal to speak for it, and be ratified by the testimony of others. But Christ is deceased long ago, his Will is consigned and sealed up, and proved in the High Court of Heaven: and in that regard there can be no Codicil or Schedule of new Revelation affixed, or added to the word revealed. 2. The second lying Miracles A second false Touchstone is Lying Miracles, which are so far from the discovery of the true, that they are rather a sign of counterfeit metal, and a mark of false Prophets. (i) Contra istos (ut sic loquar) nirabiliarios cautum me fecit Deus meus, dicens: In novissimis temporibus exurgent pseudoprophetae facientes signa & prodigia: ut seducant si fieri potest etiam electos. August. in Evangel. secund. Johan. Tractat. 13. 1. There shall arise false Prophets and shall show great sign● and wonders, Matth. 24.24. The coming of Antichrist the man of sin, is with all power, and signs, and lying wonders: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, wonders of lies; on usual Hebraism in Scripture, 2 Thess. 2.9. And those unclean spirits that came out of the mouth of the Dragon, are not to seek for miracles; For they are the spirits of Devils working miracles, Rev. 16.14. The spirits of Devils, and yet working miracles. And these miracles are either (u) August. de Donato & Pontio, miracula operantibus. De unit. Eccles. cap. 16. Daemons nonnulla faciunt sanctis Angelis similia; non veritate sed specie, non sapientia, sed plaene fallacia. August. Epist. 49. The third excellency of parts and abilities. portenta fallacium spirituum, aut figmenta mendacium hominum, as St. Austin states the question. The prodigies of lying spirits, or else the imposture and Legerdemain of juggling Mountebancks. There are false Prophets as well as Poets, who tell of strange wonders, but such as are not to be believed. Miracanunt, sed non credeuda Poetae. And this we may lay down for a sure conclusion, That false Prophets may make show of false Miracles, their natural and base children every way like unto their parents. 3. A third false Touchstone for the trial of Spirits, is, excellency of parts and abilities, pregnancy of wit, prosoundness of judgement, a high strain of eloquence and elocution, a voluble insinuative and persuasive tongue, the excellent, knowledge of Arts and Sciences, variety of tongues and languages. All these are but common gifts, and it ofttimes so falls out, that there are many of God's gifts and graces in wicked men without God himself. Nihil prodest Donorum largitas, ubi aliquod spiritus donum habetur, & spiritus ipse non habetur, as Fulgentius elegantly; Though there be never so liberal a Largess of the gifts of the spirit, it is of no avail; where the spirit of grace itself is not possessed, and retained. 4. The fourth false Touchstone is Holiness of life. The fourth holiness of life. This is a strong attractive of every ingenuous and honest heart. And it wrought upon the affections of Christ, who cast his eyes upon the young man in the Gospel and loved him, Mark 10.21. There is not a more powerful argument to persuade and prevail with men, than the show of holiness; which the Devil knows well enough, who when he cannot work his ends as long as he is clad in black, he puts on his white apparel, and transforms himself into an Angel of light, 2 Cor. 11.14. A Fiend of darkness may appear as an Angel of light. And here may be the truth of Holiness, at least in some degrees, even in false Prophets: as there was in Swenk feldius afore mentioned, one who did pour out most fervent prayers unto God day by day, and led a chaste and sober life; so that a great Chronologer of his time, Bucholcerus, passed this censure on him, Swenkfeldio non defuisse cor bonum, (k) Spanhem. Dintr. Histor. de Sect. Anabap. sed caput regulatum, Swenkfeldius wanted not a good heart, but a regulated, and well ordered head. For these two must concur to the integrity of a true Prophet: A sound brain, and a siucere heart. And though a sincere heart is to be preferred beforea sound brain, yet where this sound brain is wanting, it may make a man a false Prophet. The fifth and last counterfeit Touchstone, The fifth, success, or truth of events. is success or truth of events. If there arise among you a Prophet, or a Dreamer of dreams, and giveth thee a sign or a wonder, and the sign or the wonder come to pass, Dent. 13.1, 2. Implying that a sign or wonder may come to pass foretold by a Dreamer, and yet the party be a false Prophet. We must not judge of things by the event or issue; and it is just with God to deny them success, who make sirccesse the rule of their judgement, or the Touchstone of their trial. These are the false and counterfeit touchstones: But besides these there is a true and a right touchstone. The true Touchstone. That same Lydius Lapis, the sword of the spirit, like unto that of Golrah, none to this: the supreme Judge of Controversles, the Adequate rule of saith, the infallible Canon and Index both of its own straightness, and the crooked-nose of all things else. () Sint castae deliciae meae Scripturae tuae, nec fallar in eyes, nec fallam exeis. Aug. vot. Conf. l. 11. c. 2. Adoro Scripturae plenitudinem. Scriptum esse doceat Hermegenis officina. Si non est scriptum time at vae illud, adjicientibus aut detrahentibus destinatum. Tertul. Adu. Hermog. c. 22. The written word, the Book of the Scriptures, and whatsoever will not abide the trial of this touchstone; it may be, it ought to be refused and rejected with the same facility that it is asserced and maintained. To the Law, To the Testimonies, Isa. 8.20. This is God's rule of direction to the people, to have recourse unto the Law, the straight, and even, and inflexible rule of the Law. If they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them. That is the best means of conviction of false Prophets, to bring them to the Law, though full sore against their wills. The Ministers of the Gospel are spiritual soldiers, and they must as soldiers upon their watch, both know and give the word: and it is the people's duty to demand and require the word of them; If they speak not according to this word, there is no light in them. 3. The third thing considerable in this Trial, The touch which shows itself in five properties. is the Touch, or the application of the metals unto the Touchstone, and shows itself in the discovery of a property. 1. Holiness in respect of God. 2. Peaceableness in the Church and State. 3. Obedience to Authority. 4. Charity to our brethren. 5. Humility in our own persons. 1 First there must be a touch of holiness in respect of God. A touch of Holiness in respect of God. The wisdom that is from above is first pure, Jam. 3.17. And what Saint James speaks of Divine Wisdom, may as truly be affirmed of the Spirits that are of God. They are pure in the first place. Holivess becomes thy house for ever, saith the Psalmist, Psal. 83.5. And if holiness becomes the material Temple, then much more the mystical. And if the mystical Temple, then chief the Priests and Ministers of the Temple. Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord, Isa. 52.11. Yea above all other the High Priest under the Law had this Motto engraven upon his Mitre, Holmess unto the Lord. And certainly the Ministers of the Gospel are every way as much bound to make good this impress and inscription. Not ike unto the high Priest and Bishop of Rome, who hears no less than His. Holiness in the abstract; he being in the mean time as S. Paul justly styles him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that stigmatical Outlaw and man of sin. And if we must needs grant him the Livery of Holiness, let him be accounted holy as (k) An ad priorem partem nominis Hildebrandini, alluserit Petrus Damiani, cum Hildebrandum. Virgam Assur, Sanctum suum satanam appellat equidem nescio: quod ad posteriorem attinet, ipsa res clamat, fuisse illum furialem mundi incendiarium; adeoque ipsum Acheronta movisse, ut ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, demum perduceretur tyrannis Antichristi. Vsserius de Christ. Eccles. success cap. 5. pag. 112. Pope Hildebrand, one of his own rank and order, sed Sanctus Satanus. It is the holy Epithet that is given him by Damianus. And let them be for ever honoured and magnisied in their royal Title to all posterity (l) Sanctos Cinaedos, sanctos adulteros sanccos proditores, & parricidas, saints Apostatas, sanctos Atheos', sanctos Diabolos. Defence. Eccles. Anglic. Cracanth. cap. 2. As holy Sodomites and Adulterers, at the best, holy Traitors, holy Apostates, holy Atheists, and holy Devils. If the words sound something harsh, I speak them not without authority: they are not mine, but one of the Worthies of our Church. These are the men that are at league with Hell, and exorcise the Devils by consent, or else as by a Writ De ejectione Firmâ, cast them out of their Churches at their pleasure; but can in no case dislodge, or conjure them out of their own consciences: whose very Relics, their Ashes, Salt, Candles, Oil, Wafers, are all holy in the highest degree; yea, their Bells are baptised by them, while they in the mean time remain impure wretches, and their inward parts are very filthiness. But far be it from us to resemble them in their wickedness, or to he holy with their holiness. Let it not be thought enough for the Ministers of the Gospel to be men in holy orders & of impure and unholy lives: to be clad in black, a colour of gravity, and to be light in their carriage and behaviour. Nor let it seem sufficient to be mere outsides and formalists in religion, like unto an empty superficies without bulk or body, ringing out that solemn peal of the Jews, The Temple of the Lord, The Temple of the Lord, And yet these Templars, This order of the Templars, for the most part have but little regard to the Lord of the Temple, and as small care to maintain the honour of the mystical. Let us not confine all holiness to the public place of God's worship, but reserve some part of it at least, and assign it to the time. And if we maintain out of judgement the calling of Bishops, the duty of Tithes of Divine right, let the Lords day obtain as much favour at our hands, let Christ be thought the Author of it, whose name it bears, and not pass for an Ecclesiastical constitution. Let not those spirits that are of God, be holy in this manner; but as he that hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation, 1 Pet. 1.15. 2. Secondly, A touch of peaceableness in respect of the Church and State. there must be a touch of peaceableness in respect of the Church and State. The wisdom that is from above, is first pure, then peaceable, Jam. 3.17. Even so the spirits that are from above, are pure in the first place, and peaceable in the second. The fruit of righteousness, is sown in peace, verse 18. Peace is the seed of righteousness; This is a duty that concerns Christians in the generality. Seek peace and pursue it, Psal. 34.14. but especially the Ministers of the Gospel, who are Ambassadors of Christ the Prince of peace, whose office it is to bring good tidings, to publish peace, to preach peace, to pray for peace, and to endeavour by all lawful means to procure a true and sound peace: For although the civil and secular Jurisdiction of the Clergy be lately abrogated and annulled, and Ministers remain no longer Justices of peace; yet they are and must for ever continue Ministri pacis, Ministers of peace. And that which should encourage and provoke them thereunto, is the present fence and woeful experience of the calamities of a civil war. The old Athenians never consulted about peace, until they were clad in their mourning gowns. How hath this whole Kingdom been clad in black, the Livery of sorrow and lamentation, as if we were now solemnising the funeral Exequys of our Nation. The disconsolate Widow bemoaning the loss of her dearest Husband, Parents bewailing the fruit of their own Womb; Rachel weeping for her children, refused to be coniforted, because they were not. How hath the High and Honourable Person, the Great and Grave Counsellor, been snatched away by an untimely death. And is it not high time to advise of peace? Heu quantum potuit terrae pelagique Lucan Belgiosa Pharsal. parari Hoc quem civiles hauserunt sangume dextrae! And had there been half so much English blood hazarded and adventured, as hath been already shed in this civil war, we might have made a vehement impression upon the common enemy; redeemed and ransomed the Palatinate out of the hands of Popery and cruelty, whereunto it hath been mortgaged for many years. We might have subdued and conquered the Irish Rebels long ago; those barbarous and blood thirsty Rebels, not once to be mentioned or thought of, without just horror and execration; Who now roar in the midst of the Congregations, and set up their Ensigns for signs. They have said in their hearts, let us destroy them together, They have burnt up all the houses of God in the land, Psal. 74.4, 8. Yea they have burnt up not the material houses of God alone, but well near all the mystical Temples of God with the fiery flames of a civil war. 3. A touch of obedience to Authority. Thirdly, there must be a touch (l) Mallem obedire quam mi acula facere, ctiamsi possem. It was Luther's answer to the Bishop of Brandenbourg diss: ading him from the present publishing of his Propositions. Tom. 1. Epist. Luth. Epist. 32. of obedience to Anthorities; For though humane laws do not bind the conscience directly, and by an immediate power and virtue of their own; yet have they a binding power indirectly, and at the second hand. The Commands of God are authoritative for their own sake. The Ordinances of man so far forth, as they are agreeable to the law of God, and the law of the Land. Let every soul be subject to the higher powers. Rom. 13.1. And how hath this Text been strained and squeezed of late? And as the wring of the nose bringeth forth blood, saith the wise man, Prov. 30.33. So some, and those not a few, by a violent wring of this Text of the Apostle, have forced blood out of it: and yet I find the result of the place to be no other than this; The absolute necessity of a regular and orderly subjection: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is Saint Paul's word, which is bred in the wars, and taken up from the exercise of martial discipline; where the common soldier is subject to his Captain, the Captain to his Colonel, the Colonel to the Chieftain, or General, according to the order of war: but if either General, Colonel, or Captain command any thing that is contrary to the rules of military discipline, if they break their ranks, or run over into the camp of the enemy; the common soldier is not herein bound to observe their commands, or follow their example. And that which order and discipline is in an Army, the same are awes & statutes in an established State. And this is all that may be clearly collected out of S. Paul's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a legal and orderly subjection. And as for those higher powers whereof he speaks, they are sundry forms and kinds of government, or the several degrees of the same government. There is a Monarchy where a King commands in chief; an Aristocrocy that is swayed and ruled by select States and Senutors; a Democracy where the power of government is vested and lodged in the common people. And they that are members of any of these, must conform themselves to the law of the whole, and testify their subjection: and as to the several forms, so to the different degrees of the same government; to every degree of superiority, supreme and subordinate, even to the meanest and lowest Officer, a petty and a parish Constable. And that Text of Saint Peter may well serve for a Commentary upon Saint Paul, 1 Pet. 3.2.21.14. Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake; whether it be to the King as supreme, or unto governors, as unto those that are sent by him. Which is all one, as if Saint Peter had expressed himself more particularly, and come home to the present case of the Kingdom, To the King as to the Supreme, or to the Parliament as to the Governors that are sent by him. For the King and Parliament as they are joined together in the civil polity and constitution of our Kingdom, so most they be conjoined in our subjection. And it is an undeniable principle in reason; subordinata non pugnant. The supreme and subordinate do not fight in their nature, or in action and outward opposition; Howsoever the vulgar sort conceive and misjudge the contrary; and they that go about to make them fight against each other, or endeavour to divide betwixt them, they show themselves the disciples of the Florent ne, and well versed in his politics, Divide & impera: That so by dividing betwixt both, they may rule alone. Fourthly, A Touch of charity to our Christian Brethren. There must be a Touch of charity to our Christian Brethren. God is love saith St. John, 1 John 4.8. not only causally, as the efficient and the author, but formally and in his own nature. And there is not any spiritual or supernatural quality whereby we approach and draw nearer unto God; and more perfectly communicate in the divine nature, than the grace of love. Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God, 1 John 4.7. and if God is love, and love cometh of God, then sure those spirits that are of God, must needs have this Touch of charity. And yet if we bring the greater part of the Metal to the true Touchstone, Three Characters of the Donatists. they manifestly bewray the want of it. I will only acquaint you with some of the Marks and Characters of the old Donatists as I find them alleged by Optatus, and exemplisie them in the Donatists of the last stamp. And they are Three in number. First, was the engrossing and as it were monopolising of the name of the Church, The engrossing the name of the Church. as if they alone had the Patent for it. (m) Optat. lib. 2. Vultis vos solos esse totum, qui in omni toto non estis. saith Optatus of them. And how fitly doth this Character agree to the Church of Rome, Babylon of the West, who prides herself with Babylon in the East, and speaks in her Ancient language, Isa. 47.8. I am and none else besides me, assuming and usurping the stile and Title of the Catholic Church, which is the confusion of a particular with an universal, and withal implies a gross and evident contradiction. For if it be the Roman, it is not Catholic; and if the Catholic Church, it is no longer Roman. Secondly, a second Mark of the Donatists was their supercilious renouncing and disclaiming all Brotherly communion with the Orthodox, The disclaiming of Brotherly communion. (n) Optat. lib. 1. Nolunt se Fratres dici, saith Optatus. They thought it a disparagement to be known for their Brethren. And herein the Church of Rome offends as in the former, who deny unto the Protestant party all right and title unto the Church as their common Mother, will in no wise acknowledge them for their Brethren; Brand them with the odious name of Heretics, and accurse them unto death. Thirdly, a third Character of the Donatists, was their common opprobry and reproaches which they familiarly inserted into their Tractates and Sermons, Opprobrious and reproachful speeches. who having made choice of Scripture for their Text, they were wont to Comment upon it with shameless rail and revile. (o) Nullus vestrum est qui non convitia nostra suis tractatibus misceat. Lectiones dominicas incipitis, & tractatus vest os ad vostras injurias explicatis. Optaet. lib. 4. Profertis Evangelium & facitis absonti fratri convitium, as Optatus relates it. Not to speak of the open Enemy of Religion; those railing Rabshakehs of Priests and Jesuits: are there not a great part even of professing Protestants that are guilty of this sin? and may not that of the Psalmist be fitly applied to many of them? Psal. 50.20. Thou sittest and speakest against thy brother: Thou slanderest thine own mother's son. What else mean those paltry Pamphlets, lying Libels, defamatory Declarations, bitter Sarcasms and invectives? So that there is just cause to renew St. Hilaries complaint of old, (p) Hilar. ad Constant. l. 2. Cum alter coepit esse Anathema alteri; prope jam nemo est Christi. When one Christian bespatters and besprinkles another with scurrilous and scandalous reports, what is now become of hristianity? Is not Christ well near lost among us? O how are we fallen from the Primitive piety, purity and charity of the ancient Christians for which they were so renowned in the eves of God and Men! insomuch that it was taken up as an usual byword of commendation, and that from the mouths of the Heathen, (q) Tertul. Apolog. Vide ut invicem se diligunt. See how these Christians love one another. And may not the contrary be charged home upon us. See how these Christians hate and spleen, yea see, see not without a just passion of shame and grief, how they malice and malign each other. Fifthly, A Touch of Humility in respect of themselves. There must be a Touch of humility in respect of themselves. God is the high and losty that dwells in the high and holy place, with him also that is of an humble and contrite spirit. So he speaks of himself, Isa. 57.15. There are but two places where God dwells. The High, and the Low. The highest Heaven. And the lowest heart. There is nothing more opposite to the nature of God than humility, as being the most high: And yet nothing more suitable to his affection and desire. The spirits that are of God must be spirits of humility. Two manner of ways. And yet both 1. In their inward Temper and constitution. 2. In their outward carriage and behaviour. First, they must be spirits of humility in their inward temper and constitution. 1. In their inward temper and constitution. Such a one was St. Paul, reporting himself the least of Saints, and yet the greatest of all sinners. Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners whereof I am chief, 1 Tim. 1.15. There St. Paul was the chief of sinners. Unto me who am less than the least of all Samts, is the grace given, Ephes. 3.8. Here we find him the least of all Saints, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, less than the least; which if it were Emphatically and throughly translated, should be rendered minimissimo; a degree above the superlative, wherein St. Paul dstracts as much from himself as he adds unto the word. Even so the spirits that are of God must have a mean conceit of their own excellency, a weak apprehension of their own strength, a low prised opinion of the sublimity of their gifts and graces. Secondly, 2. In their outward carriaye and behaviour. the spirits that are of God must be spirits of humility in their outward carriage and behaviour. The Kings of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them; and they that exercise authority upon them are called Benefactors. Vos autem non sic. But it shall not be so among you, Luke 22.25, 26. where our Saviour lays down a direct and a Diametral opposition betwixt the rule of the Gentiles, and the power and authority of his Disciples. And if it be excepted that Christ only forbids a Tyrannical Government, Let them consult with the Original in St. Luke, and they shall not find it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which notes the orderly Exercise and Administration of it. And in case our Saviour cashiers not the jurisdiction and Lordship of the Clergy, yet doubtless he condemns the Domineering and Lording of the Clergy. And Saint Peter is most express and punctual in the point, Not as Lords over God's Heritage, 1 Pet. 5.3. Away with the Domineering and Lording over men's consciences or persons; away with that supercilious and stately carriage to others; or those of their own rank and order, bearing thunder and lightning in their countenances: Brow beating and looking a skue upon men, as if they were unworthy of a full eyed glance, or a fair aspect. These, these are not the things that honour them, though never so honourable and reverend in themselves. But casivess of access, affability, meekness, and gentleness, and in the height of dignity, the lowliness of humility. And it was sovereign council of a holy and wise man to the British Bishops and Monks of Bangor, summoned by Austin the Monk to convene him in a Synod; That if he were humble and lowly in his carriage, They should then give him the right hand of fellowship, and agree with him as the servant of God. The spirits that are of God, must be spirtis of humility. Fourthly, the fourth and last thing observable in this trial, is the Metalists, lapidaries, The Metalists or Lapidaries of two sorts. or the parties that must make this Trial. And they are of two sorts. 1. Private Christians. 2. Public Officers. 1. Private Christians. The first sort of Metalists that must have a hand in the Trial of spirits, are private Christians. The Church of Rome doth many ways usurp over the rights and liberties of the common people, denying them the knowledge of the Scriptures, thereby to blindfold and hoodwink them in ignorance; that so being hooded like unto Hawks, they may fist them as they list, and carry them about at pleasure: And as they bereave them of the reading of the Scriptures in a known tongue, so do they abridge them of all power, of trial and examination. And yet this is a duty which St. Paul presses with a great deal of earnestness, (q) Botrum carp, spinam cave: Cathedra Mosis vitis erat: Phariseorum mores spinae erant. Botrum inter spinas caute lege; ne dum quaeris fructum, laceres manum. Et cum audis bona dicentem, ne imiteris mala sacientem, Quae dicunt facite, legite uvas: quae autem faciunt, facere nosite. cavete spinas. August. Tract. 46. in Evang. secund. Johan. Grandis est prudentiae, aurum in luto quae eye Hiero. Epist. ad Laetam. Try all things, 1 Thess. 5.21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very self same word that is used in the Text. And the Exhortation is directed not to the Pastor alone, but to the Common people. And it is recorded to the perpetual commendation of the noble Beraeans, Acts 17.11. That they searched the Scriptures with all readiness whether those things were so. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. They discerned and judged of them. And what is it that debars the people from, or hinders them in the doing of it, who are rational men as well as others, endued with the faculty and use of reason? I speak as to wise men, judge ye what Isay, so Paul to the Corinthians, 1 Cor. 10.15. And many of them are not only rational but spiritual, inwardly enlightened with the spirit: And he that is spiritual judgeth all things, saith the same Apostle, 1 Cor. 2.15. not indisinitely and simply all things: not all the mysteries of Art or Nature, not all the secrets of Reason and Religion; but all things that fall within the latitude and compass of the proper object. As the Eye seethe all things; that is, all sorts of colours: and the Ear heareth all things; that is, the differences of all sounds: even so the spiritual man judges all things that are essentially and absolutely necessary to his Salvation; not that he is qualified with that extraordinary gift of discerning of spirits, which was peculiar to the first age of the Apostles, 1 Cor. 12.10. not that he hath the judgement of Definition to mint any new Articles of faith, and Magisterially to determine the Rules of belief and manners: yet hath he the judgement of discretion, enabling him out of an inward spiritual light to judge of things according to the written word, and no otherwise. I say to judge according to rule, as well as others. For not only the Church of God in the general, but each private and particular person may truly and confidently affirm of himself, and say with the Spouse in the Canticles, Cant. 2.4. Introduxit me in cellam vinartam, Christ hath led me into his wine cellar: that is, (as (r) Bernard in Cant. Bernard sweetly applies it) He hath revealed to me, even unto me, though a private Christian, the knowledge of heavenly mysteries. 2. Public Officers and those two. A second sort of Metalists that must have a hand in the trial of Spirits, are public officers: and they are of two sorts. 1. The Magistrate. 2. the Minister. 1. First the Magistrate, the Supreme Magistrate, The Magistrate. the King or Prince must try the spirits by re-enacting religious and politic Laws, by making use of the Civil Sword, and by a coactive and coercive power compel men to obedience. For if ordinary Justices by a derived authority challenge this power and privilege as inherent and inseparable from their places, to bind men to the peace, and to the good behaviour; then much more the Supreme Justice may, must bind men to the peace of the State; and bind them to their good behaviour in the Church, to worship God in this or that manner, as they shall establish; provided always that all their Decrees and Constitutions be agreeable to the general rules of Church-Government, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Decency Order, Edification; and thereof not every private person, but the King with the great Council of the Land must be the Supreme and Sovereign Judg. How else is the King their Sovereign? how is it the Supreme Court of Parliament? 2. Secondly, the Minister must try the spirits, The Minister. and that either as solitary and single by himself apart, or gathered together in Synods, Councils, Provincial, National, General. By teaching publicly in the Congregation, therein informing men of their duty; by laying hold of the Keys of the Church, and by denouncing sometimes the censure of Excommunication against those that are obstinate and incorrigible. And unless there be this Trial of Spirits by the public Magistrate and Minister; Kingdoms will estsoone degenerate into the Cyclops Commonwealth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherein no man will hear or obey another. All things will grow into a confusion, yea into a combustion both in Church and State. The public worship of God will be as a peal of Changes without tune or order: and not only the Bells in the Steeple, but the Ministers in the Pulpit will ring Awke (as in times of combustion) the Triple, the Tenor, the Little, the Great Bell will jar, (s) Hieron. advers. Lucif. and strike against each other: Tot erint Schismata quot Sace●dotes (as Hierom tells the Luciferians) There will be as many Schisms as Ministers. The Independency of Churches will breed (as may justly be feared) an Independency of Pastors; and the Independency of Pastors will end in the Independency of the people. Every man will be a Law to himself. Two things there are which are the bane and ruin of a Church. 1. Dependency. 2. Independency. A slavish dependency upon the opinions, humours, and practices of men in place of eminency. A Royal independency in respect of lawful and just authority: We have surfered much of late by Dependency on the one hand, God grant we suffer not as much by Independency on the other. And so I pass from the Matter to the Motive, The second part of the Text. The Motive Therein a threesold circumstance. the last part of the Text, as it lies couched in these words: For many false Prophets are gone out into the world. Wherein we may take notice of a threefold circumstance. 1. Their Nature; False Prophets. 2. Their Number; Many. 3. Their active diligence and restless endeavours, or their manifestation and discovery; They are gone out into the world. 1. First they are described from their name and nature, First their Name and Nature: False Prophets. False Prophets. There are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. False Christians of private rank and quality, and false Prophets of public office and employment. And that which makes them such is not any defect or want in their profession. Beware of false Prophets which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves, Mat. 7.15. Quaenam sunt istae pelles ovium nisi nominis Christiani extrinsocus superficies, saith (t) Tertul. de Prescript. adv. Haerot. c. 4. Tertullian: what is this sheep's clothing but the outward superficies of Christianity. Ravening wolves are clad in sheep's clothing; and false Prophets are outside professors, and wear the livery of the true Religion. Neither is it the impurity of their lives that denominates them to be such: For truth and falsehood relate to the understanding, as the proper object of it. But the habits of good and evil are placed in the Will, as in the subject: and it is not the pravity of the Will, but the error of the Judgement that gives them this stile and title; It is corruption of manners that argues a bad Christian; but erroneous Doctrine that makes a false Prophet. The Apostle Saint Paul lays down a threefold badge or cognizance of them in his farewell Sermon at Ephesus, A threesold badge of false Prophets. Act. 20.29, 30. For I know this that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw Disciples after them. 1. The first badge of false Prophets is spiritual cruelty; Spiritual cruelty. Not sparing the flock. And no marvel, as being ravening wolves. So far shall they be from sparing it, that they shall disperse and scatter it abroad, devour and worry it, rend and tear it in pieces, with Church distractions and divisions. 2. Prodigious & portentous Doctrine. A second badge of false Prophets is prodigious and and portentous Doctrine; misbegotten Monsters of strange opinions: Speaking perverse things, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, They shall draw the Word the wrong way, and cause convulsions in Religion. 3. The third badge of false Prophets, An itch of Pride and vainglory. is an itch of pride and vain glory, To draw Disciples after them. For pride, as it is the Mother of all Heretics, so it slews itself in nothing more than inveigling and entangling others with their opinions. (r) Numquam erat haereticus quisuas non habuerit. Philumenas' Pam. de Apple. in Presc. adv. baeret. Totus adulter, & praedicationis, & carnis It is Tertullia's character of Hermogenes, that he did not only adulterate the Word of God, but was likewise guilty of corporal adultery and uncleanness. Tertul. advers. Hermog cap. 1. This is the aspiring ambition of false Prophets, to be the ringleaders of a Faction; to be the Captains of a Troop, or Company; Colonels of a Regiment; to carry four hundred men after them, with Theudas in the Acts; and to be followed by a multitude: and their Army for the most part consists of (u) Women; which lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts; as Saint Paul sets them forth, 2 Tim. 3.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, little women (as the word imports) silly women; as the last Translation renders it, vicious and sinful women, laden with sins, led away with divers lusts. 2. Their Number; Many. The second circumstance in the description of false Prophets, is their Number; Many. Behold a company, as Leah spoke at the birth of Gad. And they may fitly answer with the Fiend in the Gospel, Our name is Legion, for we are many. To rehearse and reckon up the false Prophets that have pestered and plagued the Church of God, were not only impossible, but unprofitable. This were to recall those ancient Heretics out of their graves, and to breathe the spirit of life into their Heresies, which are dead and rotten long ago: and let them never rise again, no not in the mention or confutation of them. It is well observed of our blessed Saviour, that he did willingly prete●m●, and pass over many capital and heinous sins; that he never let fly an arrow at Idolatry in the New Testament, which is so severely interdicted and mentioned in the Old. Yet did he every where take to task the Formality and Hypocrisy of the Scribes and Pharisees, as being the sin of the present time and age. And I shall herein follow our Saviour's example, and purposely balk and wave the false Prophets of former times, and only point out some few that have infected and infested the Church of late, and endanger our Church and State at present: and they are four in number. 1. The Papist. 2. The Secinian. Four sorts of false prophets. 3. The Arminian. 4. The Antinomian. 1. The first sort of false Prophets is the Papist. The Papists. This is the proper name of the Pope, who is styled the false Prophet, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the superlative degree of excellency.— And I saw three unclean spirits like Frogs come out of the mouth of the Dragon, and out of the mouth of the Beast, and out of the mouth of the false Prophet, Rev. 16.13. The Dragon is the Devil; The Beast, the Roman Empire; The false Prophet, the Pope. That is the common exposition. And out of the mouth of these three came three spirits: And they are Monks and Friars, Priests and Jesuits. Like Frogs 1. for their impurity; unclean spirits they are termed in the Text; even as Frogs for the most part live in morish and miry places. 2. Frogs for their numberless number, and infinite multitude. 3. And Frogs (w) Quae est ista secunda plaga, Ran● in abundantia? In Ranis haeretici intelliguntur atque Philosophi. Habes● congruenter signatam haereticorum pravitatem, si censideres randr●m loquacitatem. Aug. de cenve. 10. praec. & 10. plag. cap. 2. for their obstreperous voice, and loud outcries, whose croakings are nothing else but only the self same confused clamour of their Holy Father the Pope, and their Holy Mother the Church: They have no other tone besides. These are the spirits of Devils, Rev. 16.14. An expression of an high nature, such as the Scripture scarce affords a parallel; not men of a devilish strain or temper alone; not the Incubi or Succubuses, or imps of the Devil; not Devils incarnats, as it is said of John the 22. but the spirits of Devils. The Devil is a spirit himself, and these are the spirits of that spirit; the very Extract, the Elixir, and quint-essence of the Devil. And as the Pope is the false Prophet, so Popery is a pack of falsehood, and a Congeries, and a Mass of errors. God shall send them strong delusions, that they should believe a , 2 Thes. 2.11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Lie in the Singular Number, to show that popery is nothing else but a prodigious and a horrible lie. 2. The Socinian. A second kind of false Prophets are the Socinians. A Hydra, a monster of many heads. I will only touch one or two of them. His blasphemy against the word of God. 1. The written word of the Scriptures. 2. The essential and eternal word of Christ himself. Such are his blasphemies against the written word, that he submits it to the Tribunal and Judgement seat of Reason, which if it be pure and sound, it is able to discern and judge of it, even before the illumination of the spirit. Neither doth he further allow it, or credit the authority, than it is consonant and agreeable to the rules of reason. And this is it that causes him to reject the () Like unto the Heathen Romans in Tertullian, Apolog. cap. 5. Apud vos divinitas de bumano arbitratu pensitatur; nisi homini Deus placuerit, Deus non erit. Homo jam Deo pre ●itius esse debe●. Divinity of Christ, for that it crosses and thwarts the apprehension of humane reason, and makes Christian Religion a laughing flock to Turks and Jews, and a stu●●bling block to other ●●●idels. And herein appears his Blasphemy against the essential word Christ, in that he denies His nature as the eternal Son of God; His office as a Priest to offer himself in sacrifice as an All-suffieient satisfaction to God's justice, and to expiate our sins in his blood. All that he will acknowledge of Christ, is, that he was a great Prophet, whose errand it was to enlighten the world with his heavenly Doctrine. That he was the Interpreter of God's mind and will: and in this sense only he owns him for a Mediator, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, There is one Mediator, even the man Christ Jesus, 1 Tim. 2.5. That is, as he expounds it, one Interpreter; thus wresting Scripture to his own destruction. But as for the Priesthood of Christ he doth utterly void it, and make it of none effect. 3. A third sort of false Prophets are the Arminians. The Arminian. Those enemies of grace, as St. Austin styles Pelagius. And if we take a survey of their several Tenets; their conditional election out of fore-seen Faith; their universal Redemption, wherein Christ hath done as much for Judas and Simon Magus, as for Simon Peter, in respect of the solution of the price, and the impetration of the benenofit. The manner of conversion only by moral swasions and minitations whereby Christ stands at the door and knocks, and leaves the will to its inbred liberty to elicit its ownact to let Christ in, or to bar and boult him out at pleasure, The total and final Apostasy of the Saints. In all which they show themselves profissed enemies to the riches of God's grace and mercy. God I thank thee I am not as other men are; It was a kind of humble confession of the proud Pharisee, Luke 18.11. Gratias agit Deo quod non sit sicut, caeteri homines, (as Hierom speaks of him.) And yet herein the Arminian outstrips the Pharisee, who will not acknowledge himself beholding to the grace of God, nor let fall by way of compliment, God I thank thee I am not as other men. And if we put them 〈◊〉 on Saint Paul's question, Who maketh thee differ from another? 1 Cor. 4.7. That bubble of froth and bladder of air and wind (x) Quod potai id Dei miserentis est, quod tantum volui, cum possim nolle; id meaepotcstatis. Grevin. adv. Ames. pag. 253. Periculum est ne hic vermicuus stantopere insletur, ut crepet. Molin. Anat. Armin. pag. 233. Grevinthonius will return that peremptory and presumptuous answer, Ego memet ipsum discerno, It is I, even I, that make myself to differ from another; in direct opposition to the Apostle, and in open desiance of the grace of God. The fourth and last kind of false Paophets are the Antinomian, The Antinomian. or Lawless Christian. A Sect which was first sprung in the Egg, and the Bird hatched in Germany, in the year 1538. Sleydan. Li. 12. Sleydan reports in his Commentary, a Sect that cried down the preaching of repentance, of the Decalogue, and did stiffly and strenuously maintain, that though a Christians life was never so impure and filthy, yet was he justified and approved in the sight of God, so long as he believed the promises of the Gospel. These were Antinomians of the first Edition: but besides these, there are other of a later Impression, yet little corrected or amended; who take away the directive and regulating power of the Law under the Gospel; as if the free grace of God in Christ were a Supersedeas, or a Writ of Ease to the moral Law, so far forth as it respects a true convert and a sound Christian. And strange it is that such a thought should ever fasten or settle in a Christian; That the moral Law which was engraven in the heart of man at the first, and given unto Adam as a rule in the state of Innocence; That Law which Christ came not to destroy but fulfil; That Law which is indispensable in its own nature; That Law which is an express copy of the original purity and perfection that is in God; and as some conceive shall be inviolably observed in the highest Heaven; That that Law should receive the consummation with the consummatum est; and breath out the last spirit with Christ upon the Cross. And as there are Antinomians in Religion, This Sermon was preached before any alteration happened in Church or State. so are there lawless. Christians in Church or State, who either deny obedience to things legally established or withdraw their obedience before they be orderly reversed and repealed. And no marvel that they which make light of the Decalogue, should make little or no account of a Statute: and that they who dispense with the Commandments of God, should break the Commandments of men, and that without a Dispensation. True it is that as all created truth is subject unto error, so is all created goodness liable to several defects and imperfections. The Laws of men are not like to those of the Medes and Persians that changed not; but a they are provisionally made and in reference to the time, so are they alterable upon good grounds. There is not any Order, Rite, Ceremony, but may be displaced, annulled, and pulled down; by the self same hand that first founded and set it up. And yet methinks a Law, as long as it is in being, should be in force, and have an obligatory power, though not over the inward, yet over the outward man, to exterior conformity and obedience. And for private men to become Reformers, and attempt an innovation in Church or State, is a strange prolepsis of disobedience: an anticipation and a high disparagement to the Authority of the Highest, and brings men within the compass of Antinomians, or lawless Christians. 3. The third and last circumstance of the Text, They active diligence. They are gone out into the World. concerns the active diligence and restless endeavours of these false Prophets. They are gone out into the world. The Devil is a professed Peripatetic, a constant walker. From whence comest thou? from going to and fro in the earth, and from walking in it. That is the Devils answer to God's demand, Job 2.2. The Pharisees of old learned this trick of the Devil's trade, and compassed sea and land to make a proselyte, Mat. 23.15. And our upstart and late born Pharisees of Rome: the Priests and Jesuits are compassers likewise of sea and land, that so they may compass their own ends; and may justly say with him in the Poet, Quae Regio in terris nostri non plena laboris. There is not any Land or Nation under Heaven that may not testify their unwearied pains and travel, to make men proselytes to Rome, convert them not to Christ, but to the Pope; and when they are made, they are tenfold more the Children of Hell than they were at the first. 2. Or else secondly, Their manifestation. Apair. in 〈◊〉 this going out into the world imports the manifestation and discovery of false Prophets, Exierunt; qui prius latebant manifesti sunt (as Aquinas glosses upon the place.) They that before shrouded themselves, and walked in a disguise, are now uncased and bore faced and laid open to every eye. It was a sad complaint of reverend Calvin in his time, (y) Calv. 〈◊〉 Loc. I loc nostrum saeculum horrenda quaedam sectarum portenta protulit. They are his own Commentary upon the Text. And may not this complaint of his be renewed, and as pertinently applied to our Church and Age, Hoc nostrum saeculum horrenda quaedam sectarum portenta protulit. How do those spirits of Devils those three unclean spirits like Frogs cover our land, as the Frogs did the land of Egypt? How do these Frogs, Papists, Priests and Jesuits creep, and crawl, and croak in every corner from one end unto the other. And which is most to be lamented, How do these presumptuous Frogs come up into the King's house, and into his bedchamber; As they did into the house of Pharaoh, Exod. 8.2. How do the Socinians, Arminians, Antinomians cover the face of our Kingdom, as the Locusts covered the face of the earth in Egypt: so that the land is darkened, the light of the Gospel is grown both dim and dark in many places? How do these Locusts eat the herb of the land, the fruit of the trees, and every green thing, as they did in Egypt. Exod 10.15. And whereas the Locusts in the Revelation were strictly prohibited to hurt the grass of the earth, or any green thing, Rev. 9.4. Yet these spiritual Locusts, Socinians, Arminians, and Antinomians attempt and endeavour it: and so strong and powerful are their delusions, that if it were possible they would deceive the very elect, Mat. 24.24. What should we do in this case, but follow Saint John's counsel, Believe not every spirit. Take heed of inconsideration and precipitancy of judgement; a lightness and giddiness of belief, Try all things, beware of inconstancy in judgemen, an unsteadiness and sickleness of belief; let us not be carried about with every wind of Doctrine. This is flat folly, gross impiety, and extreme danger to believe every spirit. And in the second place we must Try the spirits; whether they are of God, in respect of the beginning and Author both of their inward and outward calling. Whether they are for God, his free grace and glory, as their ultimate and last end. And try them we must, not by any counterfeit or false Touchstone, pretended Revelations, lying Miracles, excellency of Parts and Abilities, holiness of Life, success and truth of Events: But by the right and true Touchstone; the straight and inflexible rule of the written word; to the Law and to the Testimonies: And as we must try them by the true Touchstone, so likewise by the true Touch; Holiness in respect of God; Peaceableness in respect of the Church and State; Obedience to Authority, supreme and subordinate; Charity toward our brethren; Humility in their own persons. Try we false Prophets in their nature, by a threefold badge and cognizance; Spiritual Cruelty, Prodigious Doctrine, theitch of pride and vainglory. Try we them in their number, in their several sorts and kinds, The Papist, Socinian, Arminian, Antinomian. And this duty of Trial reflects upon the private Christian, The public Officer, the Magistrate, the Minister. And as we must try these spirits, so God by these spirits tries us, the stability and steadfastness of our Faith, the sincerity and soundness of our love; our love to the truth, and the truth of our love. There must be Heresies among you, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you, 1 Cor. 11.19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Saint John in the Text; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith Saint Paul here; that so by our trial of them, a●● 〈◊〉 trial of us by them; we may be proved and approved in his light, (z) 〈◊〉 de pr●scrip. adv. Haeret cap 1. fides habendo tentatioon●● 〈◊〉 ctiam probationem (as Tertullian hath it) 〈◊〉 our Faith being tried may be purified and resined. Many shall be purified, made white and tried. That is daniel's prophesy of the latter times, Dan. 12.10. And these are the times wherein this prophecy of his is ace mplished and fulfilled. These are bleaching times wherein God lays out the faith and love of his Saints a whiting, and that by means of this ●ery trial: that so being tried and purified, they may be made white. I conclude all with the pronouncing of a blessing, which is the last duty of the Minister in the Pulpit; and shall be the close of my Sermon. The great Apostle Saint James shall give it, Jam. 1.12. Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; That trieth the spirits: That is tried by the spirits; For when he is tried he shall receive the Crown of life, which the Lord hath promised to them that love him. Soli Deo Gloria. AGRIPPA: OR THE SEMI-CHRISTIAN. A SERMON Preached at Fakenham in Norfolk, in the Lecture course. The children are come to the birth, and there is no strength to bring forth, Isa. 37.3. LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. AGRIPPA, OR, THE SEMI-CHRISTIAN. ACTS 26.28. Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian. THe threefold Wish of St. Augustin, The Introduction. wherewith he was not only affected, but even transported in his desire, is not unknown; yea, far better known to many of you, then to myself. That he might see Rome in her flower and beauty; Christ in the flesh; And St. Paul in the Pulpit. To this threefold Wish of St. Augustin's, St Chrysostom annexes and adds a Fourth; Mallem è carcere. That if so great a happiness had been afforded him as to have been St. Paul 's Auditor, he might have heard him out of the Prison. And what these two great Lights and Stars of the Church, stars of the first magnitude importunately desired, is after a sort presented, and held forth unto us in this Chapter. St. Paul in the Pulpit; St. Paul in the Prison: Pleading and reasoning the cause of Christ and Christianity, as a prisoner at the Bar. And as it is observed of the good Thief upon the Cross, that he preached a very excellent Sermon, though he had none of the best Pulpits. Even so the Apostle St. Paul, had no other Pulpit than the Bar, which must needs be acknowledged to be none of the best; and yet he made a rare and choice Sermon. Rare for the hearers, Festus the Governor; but above all King Agrippa, which St. Paul reckons no small part of his happiness: I think myself happy King Agrippa, because I shall answer for myself this day before thee Acts 26.2. These were St. Paul's hearers, a select and a Royal auditory; and yet the Sermon was more choice for the preacher, St. Paul; of whom it is most true in the second place, and next to his Lord and Master, Never man spoke like this man, John 7.46. One in whom the (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Goddess of persuasion Pitho herself, took up her Quarters in his lips: Even as a swarm of Bees are said to have lighted in the mouth of another: One, who left (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Pericles Atheniensis. a prick, a sting behind in the hearts of his Hearers, as Bees are sometimes wont to do; and is reported of the Heathen Orator. One, who insinuating and winding himself into the conscience of King Agrippa in a penetrating and piercing interrogation King Agrippa, believest thou the Prophets? I know that thou believest, ver. 27. Being after a sort overpowered and overcome with the energy and efficacy of St. Paul's Sermon; he breaks forth by way of admiration and astonishment in the words of the Text. Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian. The Text then as you see is a Part, and that the Conclusion and Close of St. Paul's Sermon; preached not so much before, as to King Agrippa, and consisting of these Four particulars. 1. The end of our Conversion, The Parts of the Text. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, To be a Christian. 2. The manner of our Conversion, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Persuadest. 3. The means of our Conversion. Thou St. Paul, a Preacher of righteousness in the public Ministry. 4. The impediment or hindrance of the means; Almost, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It was but a little or half persuasion, not thoroughly, or altogether. 1. In the End there is Excellency, incomparable and matchless, excellency It is an excellent thing, and every way most desirable, to be a Christian. 2. In the manner, and that by way of persuasion, there is a great deal of sweetness, and gentleness. 3. In the means, there is a wonderful, yea, an infinite power and efficacy. 4. In the impediment or hindrance, ineffectualness in regard of the indisposition and averseness of the person. I begin with the end of our Conversion. To be a Christian: The first Part of the Text: The end of our conversion. To be a Christian. Which is first in Intention though last in Execution; and must be first in handling, yet last mentioned in course and order of the words. The name of Christian, denotes our communion with Christ our Head; as that of Catholic points out the fellowship with our fellow-members; which occasioned that speech of Pacianus of old, (c) Christianus mihi nomen est, Catholicus vero cognomen. Pacianus ad Simpron, Ep. 1. Christian is my name and Catholic my surname. And as the head is more excellent than the members: so the name of Christian is to be preferred before the surname of Catholic. A high and honourable name, that had the City of Antioch for the mother of it. And the disciples were called Christians first in Antioch, Acts 11.26. A name wherein they gloried and boasted as than chiefest privilege. Insomuch that Sanctus the Martyr being demanded his name, City, Country, returned this as a Catholic answer to all their interogatories, I am a Christians. And Blandina being upon the Rack cried out in the midst of her Torments. Christiana fum; and was forthwith refreshed with new comfort. And it was the general shout and acclamation of the Armies at the Coronation of Jovinian, who would not accept of their choice to be Emperor, but upon this condition; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. We are all here Christians. There are two sorts of Christians. Two sorts of Christians. 1. A Dogmatical, or Doctrinal. 2. A Regenerate, or renewed Christian. First, There is a dogmatical or doctrinal Christian who is Orthodox and sound in point of faith, A dogmatical or doctrinal Christian. and exemplifies and expounds the Truth of his Belief in an outward profession of Religion, as the best Comment upon the Text. And hereof there were two degrees or steps, in the Ancient Church. 1. Catechumeni. 2. Fideles. (d) An alius est intinctis Christus, alius Audientibus? Tertul. de ●oenit. cap. 6. 1. Audientes. 2. Intincti. The former of these was but as the setting of the Plant; The latter as the watering of it: and so some gloss and sense that Text of St. Paul, 1 Cor. 3.6. (d) de Vagano Catechumenum seci; Ille baptisavir: Optatus count. Parm. lib●●. Sic. alba lana regalem transit in purpuram; quo modo Catechumenus in side●em. Opt. l. 5. I have planted; of a Pagan I have made him a Catechist or a Hearer; Apollo watered; He it was that baptised: For even as white wool being dipped in a crimson or scarlet Dye, is turned into purple, and so changes the name and colour: In like manner the Catechist or Hearer of the Word being drenched in the water of Baptism as the Laver of Regeneration, passes into the number of Believers; and thereby acquires and gets the name of a Doctrinal, or professing Christian. Secondly, There is a Regenerate or renewed Christian, A Regenerate or renewed Christian. who hath put on the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness: and is renewed in the spirit of his mind, as the Apostle describes him, Ephes. 4.23, 24. This name of Christian may be considered in a double manner. 1. As a Derivative, from Christ the Primitive. 2. As a Diminutive, in respect of Christ. First, The name of Christian is it Derivative from Christ, A Derivative name from Christ. which signifies nothing else but an Anointed. And it is most true of the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, what the Spouse of Christ a firmes of her Well-beloved, Cant, 1.3. Thy name is as ointment poured forth. Nor was this ointment poured only upon Christ but upon us. Like the precious ointment upon the head, that ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's beard: that went down to the skirts of his garment, Psal. 1.33.2. And as he was Christ or anointed, so we Christed from him, and christened with the name of Christians. Secondly, A Diminutive name in respect of Christ. The name of Christians, is a Diminutive in respect of Christ, who was not only Christus Domini, The Lord's anointed; but Christus Dominus, The Lord anointed. With the oil of gladness above his Fellows, Psal 45.6.1. Intensive. 2. Extensive. Both in the Intention and Extension of his gifts and graces. And it was notably prefigured and shadowed forth by the different anointing of Saul and David; Saul with a vial of oil, 1 Sam. 10.1. which is but a little vessel and contains a small portion and quantity. But David with a Horn filled with oil, 1 Sam. 16.1. which is an Emblem of plenty and abundance; And hieroglyphically sets forth unto us, the fullness that was in Christ, as Antitype unto David; Full of grace and truth, and of his fullness we have all received, grace for grace, John 1.14.16. The people of God then are styled Christians from Christ, and are (as the word imports) the Lord's anointed; Christians not anointed with any material oil. and yet not with any material oil, which was of great use and estimation with Antiquity even unto (e) Chrisma est oleum in nomine Christi consectum, quod cutem conscientiae emollit, eaclusa duritie peccatorum; Isedem spiritui sancto parat, ut invitatus, asperitate illa fugata, libenter inhabitare dignetur. Optatus. superstition. And as for those of the Church of Rome they ascribe such a sovereign virtue and efficacy unto it; that they have made Extreme unction one of their seven Sacramenst. And by this craft they have their wealth, as Demetrius the Silversmith pleaded the cause of the great Goddess Diana: Acts 19.25. And it is truly observed of these Popish shavelings; Non tam ungunt quam emungunt. They do not so much bring oil to the sick as they take it away from them. And it shall go hard with them, if they lose their oil and labour. And seeing it is not any material oil, But with an oil of another nature; of three several sorts & kinds. wherewith Christians are anointed, it must needs be of another, of a diviner nature; and that of these three sorts and kinds. First, The Oil of spiritual Illumination. Oleo spiritualis Illuminationis. The oil of spiritual Illumination. For oil was commonly poured upon the Head: My head with oil didst thou not anoint, Luke 7.46. And may symbolically point out unto us the gifts of the understanding which are seated in the Brain. And the chief use of oil was for Lamps and lights, and fitly denotes the Illumination of the mind. This is that anointing commended by St. John, 1 Epist. cap. 2. v. 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him, abideth in you: and ye need not that any man teach you. (f) Perperam pharatici homines testimonium arripiunt, ut ab Ecclesia usum externi ministerii excludant. Calvin. in Locum. A Text much perverted and wrested by the giddy Anabaptists, to exclude and shut out the public Ministry out of the Church, as Calvin well observes upon the place. And yet all that the Apostle intends, amounts to no more than this; That the Disciples of Christ being taught Magisterially by the Spirit of God, as the great Doctor of the Chair, were already instructed in those Truths, which St. John inculcates and presses in the course of his Ministry: so that there was no need of teaching them, as of things altogether unknown, or as those that were rude and ignorant. For the Scripture sometimes seems to deny things simply and absolutely, which must be understood only by way of comparison. An instance whereof we have in that of St. Paul, 1 Cor. 1.19. For Christ sent me not to baptise but to preach the Gospel. That is, not to baptise in the first place; or not so much to baptise as to preach the Gospel. And parallel here unto is this Text of St. John, Ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things; where the Apostle doth not dispute the necessity of man's teaching, much less samply deny it; but prefers the teaching of the Spirit in a comparative sense; as being (g) Nisi revelet ille qui intus est, quid dico, aut. juid loquor. Exterior, cultor arboris, interior creator. Qui plantat & rigat extrinseous operatur: Hoc facimus nos. Aug. in Joh. Tract. 26. Intimus Magister, (as he calls it) that same inward Schoolmaster and Teacher of the inward man. Let no man think saith (h) August. Tract. 4. Expos. in Epist. Joan. Augustine, That any man can learn any thing of man: If there be not one to teach from within, Inanis noster strepitus est. All that we say is but a beating of the Air, in vain, as a sounding Braesse, or a tinkling cymbal. Secondly, Christians are anointed, Oleo-salutis Gratiae, with the oil of saving grace. The oil of saving Grace. For as Oil was applied unto the Head, so it served likewise to anoint the Priest. And the oil of grace must not only enlighten the mind, but renew and change the Heart. This is that oil which supples the conscience, makes smooth the soul, and prepares an habitation for the spirit. All which are the proper effects of it, and were erroneously, not to say idolatrously attributed by some of the Ancients, to their Chrism, or material Oy. Thirdly, Christians are anointed, Oleo novae obedientiae, with the oil of new obedience. The oil of new obedience. For there were certain Officers known by the name of Alyptae among the Heathen, and by them appointed to anoint Runners in a Race; and champions and fellow-combatants, on their several sports and games. There being a double use of oil with them. 1. Ad cursum. For running in a Race. 2. Ad certamen. For fight and skirmish. And in both those consists, the new obedience of a Christian. 1. In a spiritual motion, running the way of God's commandments after David 's example, Psal. 119.33. So running that they may obtain according to St. Paul's prescript, 1 Cor. 9.24. And that in doing and suffering the will of God, in suffering death in Christ's quarrel. That is a Christians Race; Fox Martyr. as () Mappalicus told the Proconsul the day before his death: To morrow (saith he) you shall see me Run for a wager. That of St. Paul's, Phil. 3.14. The price of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. 2. In a spiritual conflict and Fight, which St. Paul commends unto Timothy, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ; Fight the good fight of Faith, 1 Tim. 6.12. And whereof he triumphs in his own person, I have fought a good fight, 2 Tim. 4.7. Thus have you seen in part, the end of our conversion, so far forth as may be collected and gathered from the Etymology and signification of the name of Christian; and affords unto us, a double instruction. A Double instruction from the name of Christian. 1. First, as a Derivative from Christ, so it teacheth us conformity and resemblance. 2. Secondly, as a Diminutive in respect of Christ, so it shows a disparity and disproportion. First, The name of Christian as a Derivative from Christ, As a Derivative name from Christ, it teacheth conformity unto Christ. teacheth conformity and imitation of Christ's example. He that saith he abides in him, ought himself also to walk even as he walked, John 1 Epist. c. 2. v. 6. (Even as he) for the quality though not for the equality of our walking. We must tread in the same path, albeit we cannot take (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazian. Orat. in laud. Basil. the same steps and strides, and follow him in the strictest and most proper sense; That is, we must come after him. As St. Peter followed Christ into the high Priests hall, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a far off, Matth. 26.58. This is a Christians definition, or description as it is rendered by (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Basilius. St. Basil. A Christian is a Resemblance of God according to the utmost of his ability. And as we are called by the name of Christians, so we must not be Christians by calling, and no more. The empty name without the nature, is but a deaf Nut, a dead Fly, a mere mockery and cozenage, (k) Reatus impii est pium nomen. Salvianus, lib. 4. A boly name is the guilt of an unholy person. As therefore it was sometime said of Beatus Rhenanus (l) Beatus Rhenanus nomine beatus, re vero beatissimus. That he was blessed in his name, but more blessed in his nature. Even so they that are Christians in stile and title, should be much more Christians in Deed. And as the Christian Emperors of Constantinople, were anointed with these words uttered at that solemnity, (m) Curopoclates. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Be holy, be worthy. So Christians should make good their unction by walking worthy of the vocation wherewith they are called. And approve themselves to be the Lords anointed by being holy as he is holy; Christian's must be like unto oil in two respects. and by being like unto oil in two particulars. 1. The nature of Oil. 2. The property of Oil. First, Christians must be like unto Oil in the nature, and that is usefulness and profitableness. In the nature of Oil. like unto St. Basil, to whom Nazianzen gives this Elegy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. His words were thunder, and his life lightning. Nazian. in Epitap. In the Parable of the Trees, the Olive makes boast of her fatness, Judges 9.9. shall I leave my fatness? wherewith they honour God and men. This is the high commendation of her oil. And Lamps that have oil for their matter, consume and waste themselves to give light unto others. Such lamps should Christians be, Burning and shining lights, like John the Baptist, shining in their Lives, burning in their Deaths, yea and after their deaths too; like unto those primitive Christians, who were condemned to the Faggot through Nero's cruelty, and served as Beacons and Bonfires to give (n) In usum noctmrni luminis. Tacitus. light in the night season. A good man is a common Good, a public Treasure. There is none so useful and profitable as the true Christian. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And when the name of Christian was abusively turned into (o) Cum perperam Chrestianus pronunciatur à vobis de suavitate & benignitate compositum est. Tertul. Apolog. Chrestian in an Jrony and bitter Sarcasme; it was compounded and made up of nothing else but sweetness and bounty; as Tertullian tells the Heathen, who objected it, by way of contempt and scorn. Secondly, Christians must be like unto oil in the properties, and they are Three in number. In the properties of oil. Three properties of oil. 1. Simplicity and purity. 2. Gladness and cheerfulness. 3. Constancy and continuance. 1. The first property of Oil is the simplicity and purity of it, in that it admits of no mixture, The first property of oil simplicity and purity. but swims above other liquors. And herein Christians should assimilate oil, And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, Eph. 5.11. For what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness what communion hath light with darkness? 2 Cor. 6.14. What fellowship? Surely none at all. No more than there is communion betwixt light and darkness. And yet St. Paul's prohibition, (Have no fellowship) must not indefinitely and universally be understood, but must be limited and bounded with a distinction, of the several parts and branches of it. 1. There is a natural fellowship of breathing in the same air, of treading on the same earth, & of performing those mutual offices whereunto we stand obliged by the common interest of humanity. Such a fellowship as this, is merely natural and so no way sinful, and impossible to be avoided. And if we would utterly rid and free ourselves of the society and company of wicked men, we must follow St. Paul's advice, and needs go out of the world, 1 Cor. 5.10. And yet herein the Worthies of former Times have been somewhat scrupulous and suspicious. And the great Apostle St. John makes haste and (p) Fugiamus ne & Balneum corruat, in quo est Cerinthus veritatis bostis: Euseb. Histor. Eccles. lib. 3. cap. 25. leaps out of the Bath as soon as he casts his eye upon that Arch-Heretick Cerinthus, as fearing a downfall of that place that had given entertainment to the common enemy of Christianity. Secondly, There is a civil communion and fellowship, in contracts and bargains, in Leagues of peace and war; which may be concluded and observed with misbelievers, unbelievers, men of a different Religion, of no Religion at all And even in this there must be a great deal of care and caution, lest it make way for a nearer compliance and correspondence, and usher in an entireness of friendship and familiarity, lest that a civil fellowship become a bait and snare to hook us into a spiritual, as it proved unto King Jekoshaphat, for which he falls under just reproof, 2 Chron 19.2. Shouldst thou help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord; therefore is wrath upon thee from before the Lord. Thirdly, There is a spiritual fellowship with wicked men, and that double. 1. The one in the means of Grace, The Word, Sacraments, Prayer, which are pure to the pure, as St. Paul umpiers the case, Tit. 1.15. and it is not another's sin that can defile my conscience, or pollute God's ordinances. 2. The other in the works of sin and wickedness those unfruitful works of darkness, as the Apostle calls them; which is absolutely interdicted and forbidden. Herein we must be like unto oil that will not incorporate or mingle with other liquors. The second property of oil is gladness and cheerfulness. The oil of gladness, The second property of oil, gladness and i erfulness. Psal. 45.7. And it is oil that makes the face to shine, Psal. 104.15. This is the natural effect of it. Christian's must be like unto oil for their cheerfulness. Their head must lack no ointment as the wise man's counsels Eccle. 9.8. there are none that have greater cause and matter of joy, and none that are more excited and provoked to that duty. They are the men to whom St. Paul sends those summons, Phil. 4.4. Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice. And it is a part of his charge else where, Phil. 4.20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And grieve not the holy Spirit of God, and how is that done, but by our immoderate grief and sorrow. The Spirit of God is grieved by our grief, and sadded with our sorrow; in so much that it was grown into a Proverbial speech among the ancient Hebrews (q) Spiritus sanctus non residet super beminem maestum Drusus Fraeter Proesat. pag. 4. That the Spirit of God rests not upon a man in heaviness. As being wholly repugnant to the nature of it, a spirit of joy and gladness. The happy man is the only merry man, and takes his name of happiness, from the greatness of his (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Joy and Gladness. The third property of oil is constancy and continuance, the Olive tree is ever green and flourishing; a fit Emblem of perseverance. And hereunto the Prophet David alludes in his own Person, Psal. 52.8. I am like a green Olive Tree in the House of God. And colours that are laid in oil will not wash off in a storm, or tempest, and Christians must Analogically answer the Symbolical quality of oil in their constancy, and duration. The third property of oil. Constancy and continuance. And without this they cannot avouch and justify themselves to be Christians in the judgement of Tertullian (v) Nemo christianus nisi qui ad sinem perseveraverit. Tertul Praeser. adv. Haeret. Thomson. There is no man that is to be ranked in the number of Christians, unless he persevere and hold out unto the end. And therefore that distinction which is fancied and feigned by (s) Diatrib. pag. 6. 7. some, truth of being: and truth of duration: is fond and frivolous. Then may a thing be said to be true for the substance and subsistence of the nature, when it is permanent, and abiding for the time. That only is true, that persevers, John 8.32. If ye continue in my word, then are ye my Disciples 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, indeed and in truth. For howsoever that which is false and (t) Nemo personam diu sustinere potest: cito in raturam suam recidu ●● quibus veritas non subest Seneca. counterfeit altars and changes at every turn; yet Truth is uniform and like itself, or rather like unto him whose name is I am, Exod. 3.14. I am the Lord, and change not. Mal. 3.6. And may fitly apply and take up the Motto of that Renowned Queen Semper eadem; as being one and the same for ever. Secondly, The name of Christian as a diminutive in respect of Christ, The name of Christian as a diminutive in respect of Christ shows a disparity. shows a disparitiy betwixt Christ and Christians For though therebe a conformity and resemblance, yet is it not a similitude of equality but of proportion, and that joined with an infinite disparity and disproportion in three respects. 1. A threesold disparity betwixt Christ and Christians A Disparity of Nature. 2. A Disparity of Power. 3. A Disparity of Grace. First, There is a disparity of nature, Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God and man in one Person. A disparity of nature. But as for the highest and best of Christians he is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a mere & bare man. The Pope's Parasites indeed hold him forth unto the world as a Petty God, a mortal, or rather an immortal God: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And whereas Christ is God manifested in the flesh, God and Man making up the same Hypostasy; the Pope is (u) Nec Deus nec homo Papa. Gratian. neither God nor Man in the Canon Law, and so a professed Antichrist in his nature. Secondly, There is a disparity of power betwixt Christ and Christians, A disparity of power. All power is given unto me in Heaven and Earth, Matth. 28.18. there is no mortal man may assume the like without blasphemous arrogance and presumption. And yet he who hath the name of Blasphemy written in his forehead, and exalts himself not only above all that is called God, but above God himself; He it is, who wears a threefold crown, and challenges a threefold power unto himself, in Heaven, Earth, and Purgatory, where Christ hath no Authority. Thirdly, there is a disparity of Grace betwixt Christ and Christians, Disparity of grace. Christ was full of Grace. 1 John 1.14. Christians are full too, but with a vast and wide difference; the fullness of Christ is Plenitudo Fontis the fullness of a Fountain; that is both Repletive and filling of his own person, and is known by the name of Plentifulness. And diffusive and communicative of itself to us, and passes under the name of bountifulness: Of whose fullness we all receive grace for grace, Joh. 1.16. The fullness of a Christian is Plenitudo vasis, The fullness of a scant and narrow vessel; Christ had the spirit dealt out unto him, Not by measure, Joh. 3.34. A Christian likewise hath it dealt out unto him, but it is only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A measure of Faith, Rom. 12.3. In all which there is an infinite disparity and disproportion betwixt Christ and Christians; insomuch as John the Baptist, who had not a greater born of women, was very and jealous of usurping his name, who will not give his glory unto another. And he confessed and denied not, but confessed, I am not the Christ, Joh. 1.20. And doubtless the Jesuits have a great deal to answer for their grand Sacrilege and robbery in this respect; who not content with the common name of Christians, style themselves Jesuits from Jesus by way of eminency and perfection, as if they meant to make him but dimidiatum Mediatorem, a half Mediator; and themselves coparceners, and parcel Saviour's in the work of our redemption; but they who love the Lord Jesus in sincerity, must take heed and beware of the Jesuits. Qui cum Jesu itis, non itis cum Jesuitis. The second general part of the Text concerns the manner of our conversion, and that by way of persuasion: so Agrippa bespeaks Saint Paul, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Thou persuadest. The second part of the Text. There are two strong Forts and Holds in man's nature, The manner of our conversion. Persuades. Two strong holds in man's nature. and those reared and raised up in the prime powers and faculties. 1. In the mind and understanding. 2. In the will and affections. First in the mind there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, imaginations and thoughts, In the mind and understanding. and these are cast down by the conviction of the judgement. Secondly, in the will there are corrupt lusts, and sinful habits, In the Will and Affections and God casts down, and casts out these by the persuasion of the heart. God persuades men to become Christians, he doth not necessitate and compel them whether they will or no. No man can come unto me, unless the Father draw him, Joh. 6.44. And yet this atraction to Christ is not by force and violence, as a Bear is drawn to the stake, but as a sheep is drawn to a green bough, alured by delight and pleasure. This is a kind of drawing, Trahit sna quemque voluptas, Those whom Christ draws, he draws (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chrysostom. Si Poetae dicere licuit: trahit sua quemque voluptas; non necessitas, sed voluptas; non obligatio, sed delectatio; quanto fortius nos dicere debemus, trahi hominem ad Christum. Ramum viridem ostendis ovi, & trahis illam; Nuces puero demonstrantur & trahitur, & quod currit trahitur. Amando trahitur, sine laesione corporis trahitur; cordis vinculo trahitur. August. Tract. 26. in Evang. secund. Johan. willingly with cords of a man, and bonds of love, Hos. 11.4. Christ breaks not into the heart by a spiritual Burglary, but he opens the doors of the heart, as he did the doors of the house where his Disciples were assembled after his Resurrection. He comes into the heart as he did to the house, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Joh. 20.19. Which being shut before, he caused them to fly open. He speaks to these doors of the heart in a powerful and effectual manner. Lift up your heads O ye gates, and be ye lift up ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall come in, Psal. 24.7. The conversion of a sinner is not only facilitated, but effected by persuasion of the heart; God persuades Japhet to dwell in the Tents of Shem, Gen. 9.27. God allures his Church, and speaks comfortably to her, Hos. 2.14. He beseeches men in the mouth of his Ministers, 2 Cor. 5.20. This is most connatural unto the will, which is far more easily led then drawn. Apud Reges etiam quae pro sunt ita tamen ut delectent suadend a sunt. Seneca. And it is verified of it what the Heathen man hath observed concerning the treating and dealing with Princes. Things profitable must be represented to the heart of man rather with the face of delight, then of necessity. And yet nevertheless this persuasion is not only a moral, but a physical cause of man's conversion; not barely propounding the object as lovely and desirable, but inclining and determining the Will, and eliciting the Act of it; (z) August. adv. Pelag. l. 1. c. 24. wherein God doth suadere & persuadere, working, Et veras revelationes, & bonas voluntates, true revelations in the Mind, and good affections and desires in the Will. And as the same St. Augustine sweetly, Deus omnipotentissima facilitate convertit, & ex nolentibus volentes facit. There is the facility of persuasion, and an omnipotent kind of working, an invincible and irresistible producing the effect, that sweetly concur and go together in man's conversion. The third part of the Text is the means of our conversion. (Thou) Saint Paul's preaching of the Word in the public Ministry. The third, part. The means of our conversion, Thou. The word preached hath a pre-eminence and privilege above the word read, and the lively voice a secret energy more than the dead Letter, which is dull and flat in comparison of the other: But herein especially appears the efficacy of the Ministry, that God hath selected and made choice of it as his prime and principal ordinance, that he hath destinated and appointed to effectuate man's conversion. The walls of Jericho were overturned by a blast of Rams-horns, and those blown by the Priests, Josh. 6.5. And the Midianites discomfited by the (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. As is moralised by Theodoret, in Librum Judicum. sound of Trumpets, and breaking of Pitchers of gideon's soldiers, which more forcible means could not effect. Judg. 7.22. Thus doth God cast down those strong holds in the soul, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that Saint Paul speaks of, by the breath of man, whose breath is in his nostrils. This efficacy of the word of God shows itself in these three particulars. The efficacy of the word in these particulars. First, in the discovery and manifestation of the conscience; For the word of God is lively and mighty in operation, and sharper than a two edged sword, and entereth through, First in the discovery of the conscience. even to the dividing asunder of the soul, and of the spirit, and of the joints, and of the marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts, and of the intents of the heart. Neither is there any creature which is not manifest in his sight, (which some expound of the creature of the heart.) But all things are manifest and open in his eyes, with whom we have to deal, Heb. 4.12, 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, A Metaphor borrowed from brute Beasts that are unridged and cut down by the back. (a) An example whereof we have in a simple and illiterate Christian, who at the Council of Nice convinced a great Philosopher with that plain, but powerful speech, In nomine jesu Christi, audi Philosophe quae vera sunt. Ruffi●●. 1. c. 3. Thus doth the word make an Anatomy and Dissection of the Soul; and the inmost motions and imaginations are made as evident and apparent, as the entrails of a beast that is flayed and opened, and thereby exposed to public view. Secondly, the efficacy of the word appears in the consternation and humiliation of the soul; Secondly, in the consternation and shaking of the soul. For as it manifests the secrets of men's hearts, so it makes men fall upon their faces and worship God, and say plainly, That God is in his Ministers indeed, 1 Cor. 14.25. It is mighty through God to cast down strong holds, imaginations. & every high thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God, and bringeth into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ, 2 Cor. 10.4, 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. What can be more said to set forth the infinite and irresistible power of the word of God. When Paul disputed, * A man made up of lust and cruelty. Per omnem saevitiam & libidinem jus regium exercuit. Tacit. Foelix trembled, Acts 24.26. The most wicked men are shaken by the word of God; yet like unto sturdy Oaks, whose lofty tops veil, and as it were, strike their sails before the force and fury of the wind, but their roots are firmly fixed, and in the same place. Thirdly, the efficacy of the word puts forth itself in the renewing and changing of the Heart; Thirdly, in the renewing and changing of the heart. this is the proper effect of it. The Law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul, Psal. 19.7. Give me a man (saith Lactantias) that is unbridled and intractable in his anger, bring him to the word of God, and it will forthwith make him as mild and gentle as a lamb. Give me a man that is covetous, close-fisted, greedy and griping, the word of God shall cause him presently to become liberal and open handed. Give me a man that is as lascivious as a Goat, a professed fornicator and adulterer. Let but the word of God take him to task, and you shall see him sober, chaste, and continent. (b) Pavea Dei praecepta sic totum hominem immutant et expolito vetere novum reddunt, ut non cognoscos eundem esse. Lactantius Instit. Lib. 3. Cap. 26. sententia cerum ut plurimum efficient, non exscindit vitia sed abscondit. Lactant. ibidem. And herein the word of God is far more energetical and operative than the moral precepts and institutions of Philosophers; Who when they have done their best do only Palliate and cloak men's vices, they do not fallen them by the Ground, nor stub them up by the Roots. 1. And yet this energy of the word proceeds not from any qualifications and endowments of the messengers. For Who is Paul and who is Apollo, but Ministers by whom ye believed? 1 Cor. c. 3. v. 5. Ministers, not Authors of of our Faith, (c) Cui creditur ipse dat quod creditur, non per quem creditur Optatus. Lib. 5. He alone works faith, in whom, not by whom we do believe; as Optatus excellently. And as it is said in the cure of the King's Evil: Tangit te Rex, sanat te Deus. So it is the Minister that only toucheth the heart, but the taking away the Evil, the gift of healing comes from God, as the Author. 2. Nor doth the efficacy of the word depend upon any vital force or inherent virtue in the word itself. For though the grace of God be not only a moral but a Physical cause of our conversion: yet the word of God is no Physical instrument that works by its own power and strength. And albeit it be sharper than a two edged sword yet it is not like to a material sword that cuts naturally of itself; but as every instrument works by the motion and impression of the principal Agent; And a sword cuts not but as it is acted by the hand of him that holds it; even, so the sword of the spirit, which is the word of God produceth rare and admirable effects; but the force and vigour is derived from that out stretched and revealed Arm of the Lord, and this is his Spirit. Hugo de Sacram. Lib. cap. 3. And what is observed of the Sacraments, Non tribuunt quod per ista tribuitur, is most true of the word, it works not that which is wrought by it. And howsoever the instructions and admonitions of the word be outward helps and furtherances in the public Ministry: yet he who teacheth the heart hath his chair (d) Cathedram coelo habet qui cordae docet August in Epist. Joan. in Heaven, and that is none but God. The fourth part of the Text is the Impediment and Hindrance of the means: The fourth part. The impediment or hindrance of the means Almost. or ineffectualness in regard of the indisposition of the subject. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Almost, not altogether. The name of Agrippa was common among the Romans, and was significantly imposed upon some from their preposterous birth; who came not with their head but their feet forward into the world. And whether King Agrippa in my Text was such or no, I know not, sure I am he was an Agrippa in Religion, and came the wrong way to Christianity. To whom that of the Prophet may fitly be applied, Isa. 37.3. The children are come to the birth, but there is no strength to bring forth. Who when he should have been born again, struck betwixt the knees in a spiritual sense: and like an abortive and untimely birth, was but almost persuaded to be a Christian Three sorts of Men there are, that are Enemies to Christianity. 1. Three sorts of enemies to Christianity. Neuters. 2. Ambodexters. 3. Halvers. The First are Neuters, The first Neuters. men of an indifferent and middle temper; whose judgement hangs in aequilibrio et aquipondio, in an equal poise and posture like to the Coffin of that Impostor Mahomet, The second Ambodexters such a one Erasmus seemed to be in that speech. apud me tantum valet Ecclesiae authoritas, ut cum Arianis et Pelagianis sentire possum si probasset ecclesia, quod isti docuerunt. Eras. Epist. illust. Bilibaldio. betwixt two loadstones in the great Temple of Mecha, or as a pair of scales and balances that incline to neither side. Their souls are a rude Chaos and first matter, a mere Tohu and Bohu, without form and void; empty of all forms, and fit to receive any. The Second sort are our Ambodexters, Hermaphrodite or mongrel Christians; who wear Linsey Wolsey garments, plough with an Ox and an Ass; sow all sorts of grain in the field of their hearts, and are made up of all Religions like unto the Idolatrous Israelites they fear the Lord, but serve their Idols, 2 Kin. 17.33. they swear by the Lord and Malcha, with them in the Prophet Zephany 1.5. Just, Augustin's Amphibions. Qui dum volunt esse judaei et Christiani neque sunt judaei, nec Christiani. () While they would be Jew's and Christians, Arrians, Pelagians, Papists, Protestants; they become Neuters and Nihils, men of all Religions, and so of no Religion at all. The Third sort are our Halvers, faint hearted and lukewarm professors; The third Halvers. A cake not turned with Ephraim in the Prophet, Hos. 7.8. who it may be have some velleities, hankerings, and imperfectwishes to entertain and embrace Religion: but want the strength of resolution to bring them to maturity, and perfection. And these are every way as opposite to Christianity as the former; for as in some cases the half may be more than the whole; even so this halting in Religion is worse than no Religion. And as the refined Semipelagian did every way derogate as much from the grace of God as the gross Pelagian; Just so our Agrippa's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, half or almost Christians, are cousin Germans once removed and next of the blood of Christians: and that which is but () 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basilius, 2. de Baptis. almost done, is not done at all. There is a double cause of this Almost, or half Christianity. A double cause of this Almost in Christianity. 1. Amor male inflammen. Or inordinate love. 2. Timor male humelians. Or immoderate fear. This inordinate love is three fold 1. Of natural consanguinity and Relations. 2. Worldly promotion and preferment. 3. Vicious and sinful lusts. A Dalilah a Drusilla, a delicious and darling sin. First, inordinate love three fold. The First cause of this Almost in Christianity is the inordinate love of natural Relation when we prefer Father or Mother, Wife or Children before Christ himself: causing Religion to hold the stirrup, Of natural consanguinity or relations. and Nature to mount on Horseback and ride in the saddle: making a Sarah of an Hagar, and an Hagar of a Sarah. While that Hagar the bondmaid becomes malapert and Wanton and sits at the table; and dame Sarah is thrust into a lower place, and attends and waits upon her. For though we be bound by the law of nature to respect and reverence nature; yet must not our affection, either begin or terminate itself in it. Though we may love somewhat in and with Christ, yet nothing (e) Minus te diligit, O Domine, qui praeter te aliquid diligit; quod propter te non diligit. August. Soliloq Minus te amat, qui tecum aliquid amat quod non propter te amat. Confess. lib. 10. cap. 29. before or above him, Nay we must be content to hate it too, by way of comparison; and in case of opposition. That is our Saviour's injunction, Luke 14.26. If any man come to me, and hate not his father and mother, and wife and children, and brethren and sisters; yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my Disciple. And the hatred there spoken of, is an inferior and lower love. For a Diminutive love is a kind or at least a degree of hatred. And then especially must we exercise our hatred toward them, and say unto them as Christ unto St. Peter, Get thee behind me Satan; when they are an offence unto us, Matth. 16.23. A rub or stumbling block in the way to Christianity. Excellent is the advice of St. Hierom to this purpose, in his first Epistle to Heliodorus, (f) Hieron. ad Heliod. Epis. 1. Licet parvulus ex collo pendeat nepos, licet sparso crine & scissis vestibus, ubera quibus te nutri erat mater ostendat: Licet in limine Pater jaceat; Percalcato prope Patre sic cis oculis ad vexillum crucis evola. Solum pietatis genus est, in hac re esse crudelem. Non est crudelitas pro Deo pietas. Hieron. ad Riparium. If that thy tender Infant should hang weeping and wailing about thy neck; If that thy dearest mother with her hair disheveled, and her torn garments should show the womb that bore thee, and the paps that gave thee suck; If that thy aged and hoary-headed Father should lie in the threshold to detain thee in a course of wickedness, or hinder thy passage unto Christ: In such a case as this, Cast down thy Infant, run over thy mother, tread and trample thy father under feet: And with dry eyes run, yea fly to the Banner of Christ's cross. It is the only piety, to be accounted even cruel for Christ's sake; and the highest strain and pitch of natural affection to prove unnatural in the cause of Christianity. The second cause of this Almost in Christianity, is the inordinate love of worldly promotion and preferment, Worldly promotions and preferments. when men make the world their standing mark, and do only rove at God: when they do uti frnendis & frui utendis, Make use of God only, (who should be enjoyed) to serve their own turn; and enjoy the world, (which should be but barely used,) and that as though we used it not. It was the world that made Demas a Renegado and a Revolter from his profession: Demas hath forsaken me, and embraced this present world; so St. Paul complains of him, 2 Tim. 4.10. And it is the love of the world that is as (g) Amor rerum temporalium est viscus alarum spiritualium. August. Baldwino, ferventi Monacho ac Abbati calido, Episcopo tepido, frigido Archiepiscopo. PopeVrbans Letter to him. Gerald. Camb. Itinerar. Birdlime to the wings of the foul, that keeps it from soaring and mounting upward unto God, and from seeking those things that are above. It was the downright confession of Theodorus a Jew; That it was neither ignorance nor hatred of the true Religion that captivated him in his errors; but only his pre-eminence, and temporal dignities in his own Country, that dissuaded him from the embracing of Christianity. And it may be this was it that prevailed with Agrippa in my Text; who eme and Bernice with him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with a great deal of pomp and outside bravery, Acts 25.23. And it is like enough, that this vain show and fancy of earthly glory, so bleared, and misted, and cast such a Dust in the eye of his judgement, that he could not find the right Way to Christianity. The third cause of this Almost in Christianity, is the inordinate love of some vicious and sinful lust; Of vicious and sinful lusts. Non faciunt bonos vel malos mores, nisi boni, vel mali amores. August. Epist. 52. a Dalilah and darling sin. What though Herod do many things and hear John Baptist gladly; yet if his Herodias come in the way, she will soon take off the edge of his Devotion. And howsoever Foelix trembled, being hammered upon the Anvil of St. Paul's ministry; yet his Drusilla his bosom sin of lasciviousness and incontinency mars all. This is the reason of our Saviour's counsel, To pluck out the right Eye, and to cut off the right Hand, Mattli. 5.29, 30. For if this right eye or right hand be left behind, an Herodias or Drusilla, That which Divines stile, Peccatum in deliciis, a delicate and dainty lust; a tender and beloved corruption: This will so entangle and inveigle the Heart and make another Agrippa of it, That it shall be but Almost persuaded to be a Christian. The second cause of this Almost in Christianity, A second cause of this Almost in Christianity. Immoderate fear. is immoderate Fear. The terror of the cross, the amazement of trial and temptation, and the frightful Bugbears of Persecution; These are the main matters that stave men off from coming unto Christ. The slothful man saith, a Lion is in the way; a Lion is in the streets, Prov. 26.13. Such is the spiritual sluggishness and faint-hearted-cowardize of our natures, who preoccupate and forestall our hearts with superfluous fears, & speak in the language of the sluggard; a Lion is in the way of Christianity, (h) Si coelum stetit, si terra movit, si fames, si lues, statim Christianos ad Leonem. Tertul. Apol. cap. 40. Christianos ad Leonem, which was the outrageous outery of the Heathen. There is nothing to be found there, but death and destruction; Insomuch that when Christ began to instruct his Disciples of his going up to Jerusalem, of his suffering many things of the Elders, and of being slain the third day; they all lent a deaf Ear unto it: and St. Peter who was forwarder than the rest, began to rebuke him, saying: Master, This shall not be unto thee, Matth. 16.21, 22. Men cannot endure to hear of suffering; and they that would fain reign with Christ, will in no case be brought in the mind to suffer with him. They will not accept of Christ for their spiritual Husband upon the just conditions of marriage, for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health. They fancy not a poor neglected, despised, and persecuted Redeemer. Nor can they be alured and invited to accompany their Saviour in reproach and ignominy, in poverty and nakedness, in imprisonment and banishment, and to die with him upon mount Calvary. (h) Non est in Deum delicata & secura confessio; Qui in me credit, debet sanguinem suum fundere Hieronym. It is no delicate or secure thing to confess Christ; that man which believes in him, must so cast up his account and reckoning; as to be ready to lay down his life, and to shed his blood for him. This is it that makes men look a skue upon Christ as a mere stranger, as if with St. Peter they knew not the man, and to follow him a far of after his example and that for dread of their own danger. This is it that makes so many Agrippa's in times of temptation, who upon this very ground and reason are but almost persuaded to become Christians. Seeing then Agrippa broke of as it were in the middle of a sentence, and slopped as at a full point, where he should have made a comma or a colon, & yet remained but a Semi-Christian, and that after the hearing of another Apollo St. Paul, mighty in the Scriptures; who preached a penetrating, and a piercing Sermon, and with a deep tent, and keen lancet searched his conscience to the quick; we may from hence observe the truth of that Divine Aphorism and Theological Maxim. The first Corollary. That there is not a (i) It is given to you to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven, but to them it is not given, Matth. 13.11. Fides inchoata & perfecta donum Dei est, & hoc donum quibusdam dari & quibusdam non dari, omnino non dubitet, qui non vult manifestissimis sacris literis repugnare. August, de Praedest. sanct. cap. 9 Quidam sic opinantur, quasi Deus recesse habeat praestare etiam indignis quod spospondit, & liberalitatem ejus faciunt servitutem; Sed Deus Thesauro suo providet, nec sinit obrepere indignos. Tertul. de Foenitent. cap. 6. sufficient Grace dispensed and dealt out unto all men, for their salvation. There may be indeed a sufficiency of outward means, but not of inward grace. And there may be a sufficiency of grace to render them inexcusable, but not to effectuate their conversion. And therefore that School distinction of Gratia sufficiens & Efficax, seems not every way accurate enough. The several members whereof (which in a just division should be opposite) are coincident with each other; and that grace which is of itself sufficient, must needs be of force and efficacy. For as it is a part of the sufficiency of God, that he is entire and every way absolute in his nature and altogether independent in his Actions upon the creature; so it cannot but be essential to sufficient grace, not to borrow of any other, & to want nothing for the accomplishment of the effect: I deny not, but that there may be a sufficiency in nature, which is not ever attended & accompanied with force and efficacy. Thus a sovereign plaster may be sufficient to cure a putrid & rotten sore. And a medicinal Potion may be sufficient to recover a desperate disease. And yet the indisposition, frowardness and impatience of the Patient, in plucking off the plaster, assoon as it is applied; or his peremptory refusal to drink of it may frustrate and void the virtue of it. But where there is a sufficiency of grace, there must of necessity be a concurring efficacy in removing all obstacles and impediments out of the way, in mastering and overcoming the contumacy and obstinacy of the tough heart of man in making opposition and resistance. For if it be in the power (k) It is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy. Rom. 9.16. Non potest effectus misericordiae Dei esse in hominis potestate, ut frustra illius misereatur, si homo nosit, Aug. l 1. ad Simpl. Quest. 11. and liberty of the will, either to embrace, or reject those offers and tenders of grace as it pleases; Then that grace is not sufficient of itself, which for the compassing of its own act, is wholly dependent and beholding to another. For sufficient grace may be considered either in regard of 1. Efficacy. 2. Or the Effect. The sufficiency and efficacy of grace are inseparable companions; yet that grace which is sufficient of itself, doth not always take effect. And in this sense Christ died sufficiently, but not effectually for all men, in that they are not redeemed and ransomed from the cruel bondage of sin and Satan, and actually partake not of the benefit: If then grace both sufficient and efficacious be afforded unto all; if to Pagans and Insidels, much more to those that live in the bosom of the Church, and enjoy the public Ministry: How comes it to pass that Agrippa S. Paul's Auditor, Who taught as one having authority, whose word was lively and mighty in operation? What is the reason, that Agrippa who was so sufficiently and efficaciously instructed, was not converted by it? but mangres this sufficient and effectual grace, which they so earnestly plead for, is still drawn aside with the bias of his corrupt lusts, and makes open profession in the Text, Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian. Secondly, The second Corollary. we may from Agrippa's example deduce this corollary and conclusion; That the conversion of Agrippa's, Princes, and Potentates of the earth, the Great and Mighty men of the world, who are advanced to the highest pitch of remporal felicity, is exceeding hard and difficult. Why else should our blessed Saviour express himself in so high a strain of a vehement asseveration, and lay it down for a dogmatical and a positive Truth, Mat. 19.23. Verily I say unto you, That rich men shall hardly enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. Not that the salvation of great ones is impossible, or altogether desperate; For even a Lazarus, August. Epist. 89. ●. 4. a poor man sat in Abraham's bosom, who was rich; (as an Ancient observes out of the Parable.) Rich and poor have both access to Heaven alike. And yet nevertheless that of Saint Paul is an undoubted truth, 1. Cor. 1.26. Not many wise men after the flosh, not many mighty, not many noble are called. Men of this rank and quality are great strangers, rare guests in God's Kingdom, wonderful dainties and delicates; and as old Bishop Latimer was wont to term them, They are Venison at God's Table. And hence it was that Luther dropped down that speech, upon occasion of the death of Elizabeth Queen of Denmark, a religious and gracious Princess. (l) Scilicet Christus etiam aliquando voluit Reginam in coelum vebere. Lutherus de Elizabetha Regina Dan. Tom. 2. Epist. pag. 311. True indeed, and so it is, That Christ will sometimes take up a Queen into his Heavenly Kingdom: Sometimes, but very seldom. This may be the reason of that resolute and definitive speech of Pope Marcellus, the second of that name, (m) Non video quomodo qui locum hunc altissimum tenent, salvari possint. Onophr. in Marcel. A double reason why the salvation of A grippa's, proves so hard and difficult. I see not how many that sit in the Popish Chair can be saved. And that which he spoke of the Popedom, may after a sort be verified of all earthly Dignities and Promotious. This is a cragged and a thorny way to Heaven, more beset with difficulties then that of others. There is a double cause and reason of it. 1. The painted face of worldly glory. 2. The ugly vizard of worldly shame. First, worldly glory is a Siren, a Circe, a common Strumpet, which with her painted face and whorish looks, catcheth men by the eyelids, infatuates and enchants their judgements, inveigles and entangles their affections. The painted face of worldly glory. And so far doth it prevail in the seducing of them, that unless Religion comes accompanied with a large Retinue of respect and reputation, honours and preferments, as so many Handmaids to attend upon her, and to bear up her Train, they conceive it no meet match or mate for them, and altogether unworthy their choice and acceptation: witness the wavering example of that Heathen Consul, of whom Saint Hierom makes mention, who in private and pleasant conference, was wont to impart his mind to Pope Damasus, (n) Facito me Romanae urbis Episcopum, & ero protinus Christianus. Hieron. Epist. 1. Do but make me Bishop of Rome, and I will forthwith turn Christian. That which he chief respected was the outside pomp and glory of Religion; and unless he might be assured to better his state by the exchange, he was at a point for his resolution, To live and die a Heathen. Secondly, the ugly vizard of worldly shame, is as great a Remora to men's conversion, The ugly vizard of worldly shame. as the painted face of worldly glory, and affrights and scares them out of the profession of Christianity; as conceiving by this means they shall soon become vile and contemptible, and forfeit their reputation to ignomy and reproach. For that which Salvian observes of the Humour of his Times, is most true of ours; (o) Si quis ex nobilibus ad Deum converti caeperit statim honorem nobilitatis amittit. Statim enim ut quis melior esse tentaverit, deterioris abjectione calcatur; Ac per hoc on nes quodammodo mali esse coguntur, ne viles habeantur. Salvian. de Gubern. Dei lib. 4. pag. 113. If any of the Nobility chances to be converted unto God, forthwith he degrades himself, and loses the honour of his Nobility. Quantus in Christiano populo honor Christi, ubi Religio ignobilem facit. O how great is the honour of Christ even in the people of Christ, where Religion renders men ignoble, and betrays them to contempt and scorn! And this is the fear of many great ones, of the Nobility and Gentry both, that if they be truly zealous of God's glory, resolute, downright, and thoroughpaced in in his cause and quarrel: If they set their faces toward Jerusalem with Christ and his Disciples, and approve themselves not Agrippaes', 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Almost, but altogether Christians: This will slain their Gentry, taint their highborn blood, eclipse their credit, and cloud their preferment. This will open wide the black mouth of calumny and detiaction, to stigmatize and brand them for brainsick Puritans, and formal Hypocrites. This will burden them, yea and break their backs with the weight of their heavy censures. They are none of Caesar's friends, Incendiaries and common Boutefeus', the very pests and plagues of the Commonwealth. And for the better prevention of soul-mouthed Obloquy and disgrace, they make use of this device and shift, which they account of as a neat and acquaint piece of State Policy, to contain themselves within the narrow bounds and lists of Mediocrity and Moderation: To be merely indifferent and neutral in their carriage, and to side with neither party. They will not in any case be just overmuch, which is the sage counsel of the wise man, Eccles. 7.18. They cannot endure to be noted for hotspurs, furious Jehu's, that drive as if they were mad, to over-lash and switch on too fast in Religion. And indeed their main fear is to be true and sound Christians. Christianity is a Race, as Saint Paul resembles it, 1 Cor. 9.24. So run that ye may obtain, whereunto is required agility of body, strength and length of wind, lest otherwise we tyre and give over. And as it is in other Races, so likewise in this of Christianity, wherein there are many purfie and shortwinded Christians, who set out with the foremost, and run well for a while (as S. Paul speaks of the Galatians) but soon run themselves off their legs, or out of breath. And as that which causes this shortness of wind, is either the corpulency and fatness of a soggy body, or debility and faintness of spirits; even so fat Live and preferments, A massy Corpse belonging to an Ecclesiastical Dignity, or else an over-timorous and feeble disposition make so many shortwinded Christians, who faint and fail ere they come to the goal and mark, The price of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. So that it is one of the two, either the painted face of worldly glory, inflaming the heart with inordinate love; or the ugly vizard of worldly shame, producing and causing in it immoderate fear: That makes the conversion of great men to prove exceeding hard and difficult. And when the most forcible means are attempted and applied for the effecting of it; they still remain in Agrippa's temper, their pulse beats in the same manner: and out of the abundance of their heart their mouth speaks, and breaths out the same words, Almost you persuade us to be Christians. THE INNER-TEMPLE. A SERMON Preached at Fakenham in Norfolk, in the Lecture course. Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you? 1 Cor. 3.16. LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. THE INNER-TEMPLE. 1 COR. 3.17. For the Temple of God is holy, which ye are. WE are now (Blessed be God) presented and met together in the Temple; The Preface. And here is a Temple that presents itself and meets us in the Text. And what more proper and accommodate, then to treat of the Temple, in the Temple; where both Text and place, seem to comment upon each other. The place whereon we stand is holy ground, and Holiness becomes this House for ever, Psal. 93.5. Such is the Temple in the Text. For the Temple of the Lord is holy. And yet lest some illiterate and literal Hearer should misapply the words to the material Temple, (as the ignorant Jews perverted our Saviour's meaning, John 2.19. Destroy this Temple: Which our Saviour precisely affirms of the Temple of his Body. Ver. 21. But he spoke of the Temple of his Body.) St. Paul the best expositor and Interpreter of himself, puts the matter out of question, and delivers himself in plain and positive Terms; Which ye are. The Parts of the Text are Two. 1. A Thesis. The Division of the Text. 2. An Hypothesis. 1. The Shrine. 2. And the Saint. 1. The Saint is God himself, the Holy one of Israel. A Saint and more than a Saint, The Saint. as Christ spoke of John the Baptist; A Prophet and more than a Prophet, Matth. 11.9. To whom the glorious Seraphims sing that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord of Hosts, Isa. 6.3. 2. The Shrine, and that is the Saints; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Church of God, The Shrine. the society and company of true Believers. So that the sum of the words amounts to a double Observation. A double observation. 1. Sanctitas Templi. For the Temple of God is Holy. 2. Templum Sancti. Which ye are. Each of these agreeable to the several names 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whereby the Temple is expressed in the original. The material Temple is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mystical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Both Holy. But the first shall be last, and the last first, and by way of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I shall begin with the latter. 1. Templum Sancti. The Church is God's Temple. There is not any creature but is of a limited and a finite nature, The first Observation. and confined to a definite place. Bodily substances circumscriptive, by way of circumscription. Spiritual Essences, as Angels and the souls of Men, Definitive & per Assignationem; And are so restrained to a certain space, that they neither are nor can be elsewhere present in the same Article of Time: But God who is a divine and heavenly circle, whose centre is everywhere and circumference no where, is everywhere Repletive; By way of diffusion and repletion. Thus saith the Lord, The Heaven is my Throne, and the earth is my footstool, Isa. 65.1. And therefore it was advisedly and religiously answered by a profound Christian to an inquisitive and busy-headed Philosopher, who overcuriously demanded touching the place of the Godhead: Dic tu prius O Philosophe ubi non sit. Tell us first O Philosopher where God is not. Such was his resolution; This the purblind Heathen discerned by the glimmering and dim light of nature. And Heraclitus one of that rank, thus invited his friends that came to visit him in his Stove, with this assurance & persuasion, (a) Arist de Histor. Arimal. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And the Historian reports of the Ancient Germans, that they consecrated to their false and feigned Gods (b) Tacit. Hist. Lucos & nemora, Groves and shady places; As supposing they could not be comprehended and included within the precincts and compass of any Habitation. And yet God who is all centre without circumference, and knows no limitation of his nature, power, or presence; makes choice nevertheless by way of appropriation to himself (My House) of a peculiar place and dwelling. God challenges a house. 1. Such was the Tabernacle for a time, which was ambulatory in the Wilderness, & unsettled in the land of Canaan. The Tabernacle. 2. So was the Temple afterward which was fised at Jerusalem: There kept he his fire and chimney, as Ezekiel phraseth it: The Temple at Jerusalem. And dwelled as a Honsholder in his Mansion or proper Tenement. And hereunto was annexed that solemn promise, Psal. 132.14. This is my rest for ever. That is, for many successions and generations. There being Aeternitas Absoluta and Periodica: And Aevum oftimes passes in Scripture language for Eternity; which determined and expired with the coming of Christ, who laid the foundation of another world, by the publishing of the Gospel. And thus was the Temple God's rest for ever. Here did he dwell; for he had a delight therein. 3. And God dwells in our Temples and Churches where his name is publicly called upon, and Religious Rites and Ceremonies duly celebrated and administered, Our Temples and Churches. yet with a difference and distinction. The Temple at Jerusalem, was not Locus ut locus, The difference between them A bare and naked place: But Locus ut sic, A place in such a respect, as the Schoolmen speak. As being Medium divini cultus, Scotus: in Senten. The place that God had chosen above all other to put his name there, particularly allotted and appointed for divine Worship, and honoured with many choice privileges, and special promises, of audience and benediction: whereunto they were to direct and turn their faces, though far distant and removed from it, in a foreign and strange Country, even in their private devotions and supplications. This was a lively Type and representation of the Body of Christ, as himself is pleased to style it, Destroy this Temple, John 2.19. In all which respects the Jewish Temple, was God's House 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so called by way of Excellency. But as for our Christian Temples and Churches, they are consecrated to God's sacred worship and service; and so made holy, though not with an inherent holiness (as Bellarmine presses it too far;) For how should timber and stones be capable, not only of a spiritual quality but of saving grace, which like unto the Leprosy must needs cleave unto the Walls? yet do they partake of an adherent and relative holiness in regard of their use and end, so long as they continue dedicated; and must not at any time be perverted to profane and common Offices, no not when the Assembly is dissolved; which nevertheless can no way match and parallel either in outward glory, or inward dignity and pre-eminence, but must of necessity give place to that same special place, Locus ut sic, The Temple at Jerusalem. For whereas the Temple sanctified the Congregation and meeting to the Jews; our Temples are sanctified by virtue of the Assembly and Congregation. Neither is the promise simply entailed to the place, but to the persons and performances; The joint participation of the Word and Sacraments; the united devotion of the People; the force of whose prayers prove like a great thunderclap, as Saint Hierom resembles it: Or, as the roaring of the enraged Sea; so Saint Basil phraseth it: To these I say doth the promise appertain, Matth. 18.20. Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them. Which occasioned that common by word among the Jews, (c) D●usius Apotheg. p. 20. Vbi duo sunt qui de Lege colloquuntur, ibi Divinitas est inter eos; as the Learned Drusius relates it. So then, both the Jewish Temple and the Christian Churches are but material Temples: And God dwells not in Temples made with hands, Acts 7.48. Both which I must pass over as Samuel did the seven Sons of Ishai, These are not they which the Lord hath chosen. It is the mystical and living Temple which God prefers as he did sometimes little David, and wherein he principally resides. The mystical and living Temple. And it is well observed by judicious Cameron that the word (d) Ecclesia hic non locum in quo convenitur, sed caetum significat Cam. in 1. ad Carincap. 11.18, et 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is never taken Topically, nor doth the Church signify throughout the New Testament any certain place: but either an Ecclesiastical assembly and meeting, or the spiritual society of the faithful, The Church of the living God. And to them alone St. Paul applies the words in the text. For the Temple of God is Holy: which ye are. And he speaks not to stones but men. These, These are Gods Temples, not only in their spiritual and better part their soul, that same Divinae particula aurae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A sprig and branch of the Divinity itself, plucked of as it were from the tree of Life: But even in the outward frame and constitution of their Bodies: St. Paul affirms no less, 1 Cor. 6.19. Know ye not that your Body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost, which is in you. Which bodies of ours, though far different from the material Temples, as being of a more excellent and Divine nature; yet do they represent and resemble them by way of Analogy and proportion: For as salomon's Temple was severed & parted, in Atrium populi the tabernacle of the Congregation, the Sanctuary, and the Sanctum sanctorum, the Holy of Holies: whereunto the Prophet Jeremiah alludes (as some conceive) in a threesold rehearsal and repetition, The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord, the Temple of the Lord, Jer. 7.4. In an apish imitation whereof the Heathenish Temples consisted of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, A Porch, A Body, and a Quire. Even so the outward parts of the Bodies of the Saints, the hands and arms are the Court and Porch of this Temple. The legs are so many Marble Pillars that support and bear it up, the eyes in the forehead the supreme and highest place, like windows that transmit and convey light. And as for the inward cells of the Brain and Heart, they are as the Sanctuary, and Body of the Temple. But the soul with the several powers and faculties, the understanding, Will, Affections; this is the Sanctum Sanctorum, the most Holy of all other. For as there is, and aught to be a correspondence betwixt the nature of God and the manner of his service; so must there be likewise an agreement betwixt it and the place. God is a Spirit, and they that worship him, must worship him in Spirit and in Truth, John. 4.24. And as he is worshipped in Spirit for the manner, so will he also be worshipped in spirit the for the place: in the spirits & souls of Believers. Though God dwells in the Body, yet chief in the Soul; this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by way of excellency God's Temple. And thus are we at last come into God's Temple by many degrees and steps; as they ascended into that of Solomon: Or as they climb up some long ladder by several staves which rise each higher than the other, and like unto jacob's ladder, the foot whereof stood upon the ground: so doth the material Temple, but the top thereof which is the mystical reacheth unto Heaven. Ingrediturque solo, et caput inter nubila conduit. That is the spirit and soul of man (e) Arist. de. Anima. Lib. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Philosopher teacheth, Jerusalem which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, above, the mother of us all. The Congregation of the first born, whose names are written in Heaven. And in two respects is the Church assimilated and compared to a Temple. The Church a Temple in two respects. 1. Ratione structurae et aedificationis. 2. Ratione usus et inhabitationis. First, The Church is God's Temple in regard of the structure or the building. Ratione structurae et aedificationis. For every house is built of some man, but he that buildeth all things is God, Heb. 3.4. God who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Architect of heaven & earth: he likewise frames and fashions his Church, which is as it were a Heaven here on Earth. And as the soul in the Body doth Fabricare sibi domiclium, so God who is the soul of the Church, prepares and forms his own dwelling. Nor shall we need over-curiously to inquire touching the manner of the workmanship: Qui vectes quae ferramenta? What tools and instruments God had to effect it; which were the several Queries of the Epicure in Tully concerning the Creation of the world: For as in the Creation Dixit, et fact a sunt, He spoke the word and it was done, he commanded and it was created. So God doth but speak the word in the mouth of his Ministers, there is but a Dixit on God's part and forthwith there follows a factum est without more ado. There is neither noise of axe nor sound of hammer to be heard in the building of this Temple, no more nay far less than in that sumptuous and stately Temple of Jerusalem. The foundation of which Temple is not the Church, The foundation of this Temple. Not the Church. that being the Temple itself. This were to confound the building with the foundation, and how should the Church be accounted the Pillar and ground of faith which relies and rests upon it? or if the text seems to favour it, and imports as much in express terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Tim. 3.15 yet is it only Columna forensis like unto the Pillars of of the Heathen whereunto their solemn Laws and constitutions were publicly affixed, and so made manifest and legible to the people. It is not Columna architectonica, that supports and bears up the weight of the frame. Not St. Peter. Nor is St. Peter the Pillar of the Church which he no more sustains then ever St. Christopher carried Christ: whom nevertheless the Romish faction injuriously honour, as the great Atlas of the universal. Church firmly leaning upon the strength of his shoulders; and though St. Peter bestiled a pillar, yet is that title given in common to the rest, Galations the second Chapter, and the nine verse. And when james, Cophas, and john, who seemed to be pillars. And it as worth the observing, that St. Paul purposely inverts the order, james, Cophas, and john, placing James and not Cophas in the forefront, lest he should have seemed thereby to have conferred the Primacy upon him, and made Peter Metropolitan over his Brethren. Nor doth he join the Sons of Zebedee hand in hand, who were surnamed Bonaerges, and accompanied Christ in his transfiguration; but ranks Saint Peter in the midst, that he might no way be suspected to ascribe unto them the like authority and jurisdiction. Let Peter then continue his name, yet is he Petrus, non Petra, the chief corner Stone, and Rock of our Salvation. Christ builds not upon Saint Peter, but builds Saint Peter upon himself; (f) August. in Mat. 16.18. Super me aedifieabo te, non me super te; as Augustine upon the place. And let him for ever enjoy his title of Cephas, and be deservedly honoured as a choice stone; yet is he not the chief co●ner stone, or the foundation of the building: But Christ is the foundation of the Church two ways. For other foundations can no man lay then that is laid, which is Jesus Christ, 1 Cor. 3.11. A Doctrinal Foundation, Respectu doct●inae reve●atae, The supernatural and divine Truth of the Scriptures, wherewith he inspired the Church in all Ages, by the ministry of his messengers; and in the fullness of Time instructed it by word of mouth, Respectu doctrinae revelatae immediately in his own Person, as being the Eternal Wisdom, and Essential Word of God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Who was sent from the bosom of the Father. 1. A personal foundation, Respectu gratiae salutiferae; which by the satisfaction and merits, Respectu gratiae salutiserae. whereby he trod the wine-press alone, he hath effectually purchased & procured. And herein it far exceeds, and altogether differs from earthy foundations, which are in imo, laid low and deep within the ground; but Christ is Fundamentum in summo, the uppermost part of that new Jerusalem which cometh down from Heaven. 2. Descend we therefore from the foundation to the walls, the society and company of the faithful; The people of God are the walls of the Temple. all of them disposed and couched together, as so many lively stones in a mystical and spiritual Temple. This is that elegant strain and metaphos, wherewith Saint Peter seems to be much affected and delighted, to whom ye come as unto a living stone disallowed of by men, but chosen of God, and precious. And ye as lively stones be made spiritual houses, 1 Pet. 2.3, 4. He whom the Prophet Daniel compares to a stone cut out of the mountain without hands, either in regard of his eternal generation of the Father, or his temporal birth of his Mother. He whom David foretold to be the head stone of the corner, being highly exalted by his Resurrection and Ascension: Him doth Saint Peter term an elect, and precious, and living stone, having life in his own person, even as the Father hath life in himself, John 5.26. And the Church of God lively stones, as being quickened by ●●s spirit. Stones not by propriety of nature, such as sabulous Antiquity dreamt of, that Pyrrha by casting of stones changed them into men. Behold here a more strange Metamorphosis, yet far unlike that of Medusa, so famous among the Poets, men turned into stones. Nor yet stones, for their inbred folly and senselesness of disposition, such as the Philosopher styles, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Likened to stones in a double propriety. one stone upon another. But by a borrowed similitude and resemblance, both in regard of their absolute and relative property. 1. The absolute property which is the solidity and firmness of their faith. 2. The relative property, and that is their aptness and appliableness unto building. And or such materials doth God make up a spiritual house, and out of these stones he raises up children unto Abraham. First, stones are a hard and tough, and well compacted substance: This is the absolute property of the faithful, Their absolute property. to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, steadfast and immovable, and though their outward man is but weak and feeble, neither is their strength the strength of stones, as holy Job too too passionately complains, Job 6.12. yet hath their inward man the strength of flinty stones, and is so far from yielding to the surious strokes of temptation and affliction, that it forcibly resists these Hammers, and beats them back with violence. For God who promises to take away the stony heart out of the midst of his people, Ezek. 36.26. bestows upon them in stead thereof, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Saint Paul styles it, Col. 2.5. A firm, solid, and stony faith. And howsoever it may and will be fiercely assaulted, yet it shall not be fully foiled and vanquished, pressed, but not oppressed; (g) Concuti potest, non excuti. Tertul. shaken, and yet not shaken off. What though the most pompous and stately Temples are turned topsie turvy, and laid level on the ground, with the sudden blast of a terrible earthquake, and their place knows them, no more; yet shall these spiritual Temples be as mount Zion, which cannot be moved, but standeth fast for ever, Psal. 125.1. Let stones fall out of the building, and moulder away into rottenness, as being subject to a kind of mortality and corruption, Mors etiam saxis, nominibusque venit. Yet as for these living stones, Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. It is our Saviour's determinate assertion, and peremptory promise, John 11.26. Thus are the faithful stones in the absolute property, their steadfastness and continuance. Secondly, The Saints of God are Stones for their relative property, Their relative property. their usefulness and appliableness unto Building, Ex quovis ligno non fit Mercurius. Temples are not framed of beggarly stuff, and rude materials; neither are common pebbles and unhewen stones (as are all natural and carnal men) meet to join with Christ the chief corner stone, in whom all the building coupled together, groweth to a holy Temple in the Lord, Eph. 2.21. This Temple consists only of choice and precious stones; so is Christ entitled by Saint Peter. And such are all believers, who have obtained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the like precious faith, whereof Saint Peter speaks. There is not the meanest Christian but after a sort shares in Saint Peter's privilege, and is placed as another Peter in this edifice, wherewith, though not whereupon Christ builds his Church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it, Mat. 16.18. Not the power and policy of the Devil, symbolically set forth by the gates of a City, which was anciently the seat of Counsel and Judgement in the time of peace, and hath been always the place of strength and fortifications in the time of war. Yet neither shall the cunning straingems, or stoutest opposition of these gates of Hell, nor the gates of (h) Vox 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nusquam in sc riptura, (unicus modo lecus excipiatur) insernum significat, sed sepulchrum vel hominis vita functi statum, & conditionem. Camer. Myr. Evang. in Mat. 16.18. Death, as Cameron expounds the place) the domineering Tyranny of the Grave, which deraint our bodies as close prisovers for a time under the earthen bars of rottenness and corruption; and so some what avails, but shall not be able to prevail against it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as he descants upon the place. So sure and permanent is this building, that it is stronger than death itself, so indissoluble is the conjunction, so entire the union of the several stones with the foundation, that the very name of Christ is applied & communicated to his Church: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith Saint Paul in the Apodosis of the similitude, 1 Cor. 12.12. The bond and ligament of which union is the spirit of God on his part, and faith the means on ours; which in regard of the office of being instrumental in joining us to Christ the foundation; it is sometimes honoured with the name of a Foundation. Faith is as the foundation (saith Saint Chrysostom) other graces are as the upper part of the building. (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chrysost. And as Faith is the bond of our union with Christ, so is Charity of our communion and fellowship with our brethren; For Hard with bard, stone with stone, will never make good wall, as it is in the Italian proverb. But Charity must come betwixt, and as a spiritual kind of mortar, both join and bind them fast together. And as in a building, each (k) Vnusquisque lapis portat alterum & portatur ab altero. Luther. in Galat. stone supports and bears up another: So must we bear up one another's burden, as Saint Paul adviseth in the case, Gal. 6.2. who are lively stones of the same mystical Temple. Thus have we taken a survey of the several parts of the foundation, and the walls of this structure; and had a cursory and short view of the means, both of the framing, and of the coupling and conjunction. In all which appears the formality of the Comparison, Ratione edificationis, the Church is God's Temple, in regard of the building. So is it likewise in the second place, Ratione inhabitationis, the proper use and habitation; Ratione usus, & in habitati onis. God hath a threefold Temple. For God hath a threefold Temple, or place of residence, whereof the Church is one, though every way inferior to the former. The first Temple of God is his glorious Majesty, altogether infinite and incomprehensihle; who as he is void of all bounds and limits in his nature, so he is not included within any lists and terms of place. His glorious Majesty. Thus God dwelled in himself from all eternity. In se & apud se habitabat, It was the answer of an Ancient to those smattering Questionists, Et apud se est Dens. Pet. Lomb. dist. 17. ere August. and curious Inquisitors, who would needs pry into the place of God's abode, ere this visible world was created. The second Temple of God is the humane nature of Christ, The humane nature of Christ. which being hypostatically united to the Godhead, it was the seat of the Deity, in a most peculiar manner; Being replenished with Divine Grace from his first conception, as Solomon's Temple was filled with a cloud at the dedication; and that far above the capacity of the creature. Full of Grace and Truth saith Saint John 1 Joh. 14. Of Truth, which is the perfection of the understanding. Of Grace, which is the excellency and beauty of the Will. Nor was he only full of habitual grace, but of the Divinity itself; For in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily, Col. 2.9. There is not a word in the Text, but is dogmatically full, and very significant and emphatical, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The very fullness of the Godhead in the utmost latitude, dwelled in Christ, as in a sacred Temple. And that personally and essentially, not only in regard of the inward gifts and endowments which are imparted and dealt out unto us in measure and proportion. This was not only Templum Domini, but Templum Dominus, as (l) August in Evang. John. Augustine distinguished of old betwixt Panem Domini, & Panem Dominum, Christ was both the Temple of the Lord, and the Lord of the Temple. The third Temple of God is the Church, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a living and a walking Temple; The Church. and from hence it takes its name, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because of God's habitation; for though God be every where per divinitatis praesentiam, and the whole world be his great presence chamber, yet is the Church his privy chamber, his withdrawing room, where he most frequently converseth, Walking in the midst of the golden candlesticks, as Christ describes himself, Revelations 2.1. abiding only in the faithful, per inhabitationis gratiam, as in the place of his habitation. And albeit every good creature be in God, as in the conserving cause, In whom we live, and move, and have our being, which is nothing else then a (m) Id ipsum quod sumus nihil aliud est, quam in uno Deo subsistentia. Calvin. Iust. l. 1. subsistence in God, and our preservation is but one continued (n) Quamdiu creatura est tamdiu creature. Durand. in Senten. Creation; yet nevertheless God is not in every creature (though every creature be in God) as in the proper seat and mansion. This Christ appropriates to his Disciples by special promise. john 14.16. And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another comforter, that he may abide with you for ever, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is of singular force, and denotes (o) Mir●●r, in scriptura singularem babet significationem; notat enim constantiam & penitissimam adhaesionem ejus rei quae dicitur mancre. Camer. Myr. Evang. in Joh. 14.16. constancy and continuance. In which respect the Jews of old called the spirit of God by the name Shechina, that is, a Mansion, or an habitation. This is an inseparable privilege of the Temple, as Saint Paul quotes the Text, 2 Cor. 6.11. For ye are the Temple of the living God, as God hath said, I will dwell among them, & walk there; and if we stick not to credit the testimony of Antiquity, God dwells no less virtually in the Church, then in the Throne of the highest Heaven; a devout soul is another heaven upon earth: even that heaven which is mentioned in the Preface of the Lords Prayer, Our Father which art in Heaven, that is, in the Saints. And herein consists the difference betwixt Physical places, (p) Anima beata est eaelum. Bernard. Pater Noster qui est in coelis, id est, in Sanctis. August. and this which is Metaphorical; those contain and preserve the body: but here the inhabitant includes and upholds the dwelling. And as other Temples prove Sanctuaries to such as repair for refuge; so is God an Asylum to his Church, and a Sanctuary to his Temple. And so have we completely dispatched and finished the several branches of the Allegory, and the doctrinal part of the Proposition. Which being thus premised, we may from hence infer a threefold Corollary and Conclusion. A threefold Corollary. 1. The Dignity. Of the Church. 2. The Duty. Of the Church. 3. The Danger. Of the Church. All arising from the consideration of a Temple. First, we may take notice of the Church's Dignity, and that in a double consideration. The Church's Dignity, in a double consideration. 1. Simply and absolutely in itself, as being the Temple, the mystical Temple of God. 2. Comparatively and relatively, in reference to the material. First, then observe the absolute Excellency of the Church, Simply and absolutely in itself. as being God's Temple. For if as the Heathen Philosopher Menedemus some time spoke, Those stones were happier than the rest, which served for their Altars. Surely these Stones in this go fare beyond them, who are deputed to a higher employment; to be the receptacle and habitation of the Spirit. The entertainment of some Worthy and Noble Guest, doth as it were enhance the honour of the dwelling. Yea the presence of a dead Corpse, whose Ashes and Memory are for ever sacred and precious, doth after a sort honour the Urn, and dignifies the Grave that contains it. O te beatum cespitem tanto Hospite! Calvini Epitaphium. Beza. O cui invidere cuncta possint marmora! As Beza warbled it most sweetly in a funeral Elegy, and Epitaph of renowned Calvin. What is it then for a poor Christian to harbour the living God, not as a stranger, or sojourner, but a perpetual Residentiary; Not to receive Angels into his house with righteous Lot; But the holy spirit into his heart: There to enjoy the constant presence in the powerful motions and excitations, the sovereign and happy effects. 1. As an Instructor. This is the way, walk ye in it, Isa. 30.21. 2. As a Guide, As many as are led by the spirit, Rom. 8.14. 3. As a Coadjutor and Fellow-helper, Likewise the spirit helpeth our infirmities. Rom 8.26. 4. As a Comforter, But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, he will teach you all things, John 14.26. The Comforter by way of Excellency, above all other. The Comforter by way of Propriety, in opposition to all other. And to have the Spirit of God thus present, is an Excellency without match, or parallel; A Praeludium of the joys of Heaven; and a fore-taste of future Happiness: Like to that White Stone with a new Name engraven, which to man knoweth, but he that receiveth it, Revel. 2.17. And as it is observed of the City of Venice, that none can imagine the surpassing beauty of the place, but the native Citizens and Inhabitants: no more can they conceive the ineffable happiness and comfort of a Christian in this respect, who have not sensibly found it by experience, nor shall a stranger meddle with it. This is one of that (q) 1 Deus & Homo. 2. Mater & Virgo. 3. Fides & cor Humanum. Bernard. in Vigil. Nativit. triple Union and Conjunction, all which are, singulariter mirabilia & mirabiliter singularia, Singularly wonderful, and wonderfully singular in the judgement of Saint Bernard. 1. God become Man. 2. A Virgin, and yet a Mother. 3. Faith and Man's Heart incorporated into each other. And it is not the least of the the three, that the spirit of man should be, as it were, espoused and married to the Spirit of God. That our blessed Saviour, the High Priest of our profession, should dwell in the Soul as in his Temple. Such honour have all his Saints. Secondly, We may collect and gather the relative dignity of the Church in reference to the material Temple. Relatively in reference to the material. For Respublica non est in parietibus: As he sometime spoke. Nor doth the Church consist in the outward frame and walls of the Temple. And as great a difference there is betwixt the Church, and the Church in point of excellency; as betwixt senseless and living stones. A Mason, and a Minister; the Mason builds the one, but the Minister of God as a wise master builder is the Architect of the other. Let there be granted to the material Temple, that it is a consecrate place, Holy ground, yea the Beauty of holiness, as the Psalmist calls it and a Sanctuary; yet if that be the sanctuary which was the middle part of the temple; the Church, the saints are the Sanctum sanctorum the more inward part & most holy of all other. And if we herewith compare Solomon's temple, which was the perfection of beauty, and the glory of the whole world; whereat the Devil pointed (as some conjecture) in that temptation: And he shown him all the Kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them, Mat. 4.8. that is the Temple of Jerusalem; yet shall we find verified of the place which our Saviour affirms of the person; A greater than Solomon's Temple is here in my text. And in all the royalty it was not cleathed like unto one of these living Temples. For as it was not the Gold that sanctified the Temple under the Law: but the Temple that sanctified the Gold; so we read in the Gospel: no more is it the outward pomp and bravery of the place that sanctifies the person; but the inward sanctity of the person, that sanctifies the comely beauty, and decent apparel of the place. And as Cornelia the Mother of the Roman Gracchis, spoke of her children: so may our Mother Church of her natural children in the faith; Hi sunt ornamenta mea, These are my chiefest ornaments. As for their rich attire and costly furniture, I mean in the extremity & excess; they were in a manner peculiar to the infancy of the Jewish Church, being trained up under, the pedagogy and beggarly Rudiments of the ceremonial law: which nevertheless were then made authentical by God's ordinance both strict and punctual in their behalf, and were typical in part. Or else the blind devotion of succeeding & declining age, cast them into the Church's Treasury with a liberal hand in the time of the Gospel: and that in the palpable darkness of Popish ignorance and prevailing superstition. Which escaped not the prudent observation and grave reproof of some of their own party, Witness that speech of (r) Calicibus contenta ligneis sacerdotibus ecclesia fruebatur aureis Walafrid. Strab. de reb. ecclesiae pag. 2●. Boniface Archbishop of Mentz. That in the Golden age of the Church, there were Wooden Chalices and Golden Priests, but Golden Chalices were afterward transubstantiated into wooden Priests and empty sconces, were graced with precious mytres. So that it formerly passed for a proverbial form in Bavaria and other parts of Germany; (s) Gum templa obsoura, erant lucida corda: tum lueida templa, obscura. corda. Aventin. dark Temples were enlightened, with bright and clear ●●uning Hearts: and light Temples were obscured with dark hearts. I speak not this to derogate in the least measure, either from the right ornament or due respect of Churches. Which I shall always esteem and magnify as Jacob did his Bethel, Gen. 28.17. Quam reverendus est hic locus, How fearful is this place? this is no other than the house of God, this is the gates of Heaven. Chrysost. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; as sweetly St. Chrysostom. So that heaven and the Temple seem to interchange names and are put promiscuously for each other, Psal. 11. ●. The Lord is in his Holy Temple, the Lords throne is in heaven. And certainly, this is one of the Epidemical diseases of the Nation, Malum quod semper vit abitur et somper retinebitur. Yea the opprobry and shame of our Religion; that Temples are now ruinated and laid waist in many places, and nor one stone left upon another: or else they are converted into Barnes and Stables: and the lay Patron like a greedy Harpy, having seized the tithes to his own use, & swallowed up Gods domains and portion; He contrives & transforms the Church into a Barn as the fittest place An holy place for holy things to harbour and receive them. Questionless these men are not eaten up with the zeal of God's House as David was: but rather cat it up, as if the stones of the Temple at the request of the Devil were turned into bread. These men (I say) are not of David's stamp and strain, & yet they pray in David's form, Psal. 27.4. One thing have I desired of the Lord, de praeterite for the time past: And that I will seek after, de futuro, for Time to come. And what is that not to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to vifit his Temple: with David: But to dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of their life. To dwell in a literal sense, and to leave it as a Farm or manner House to their posterity. This puts the difference betwixt the primitive devotion of our forefathers, and the unheard of sacrilege of this latter age. (t) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chrys. in 1 Cor. 14. Hom. 36. the time was when houses were dedicated into Churches: but now churches are profaned into houses yea worse than houses; which was the just complaint of St. chrysostom. Now are they made Dovecoats, and cages of unclean birds. And as of old the Jewish Merchants sold Doves, so do they now House-Doves in the Temple. Yea the sparrow hath found her an house and the swallow a nest where she may lay her young, even by thine Altars O Lord. So David of his time, Psal. 84.3. And now if ever may our Saviour's expostulation be justified of ours? The Foxes have holes, and the Birds of the air have nests, but the Son of man, God and his sacred worship in many places, have not where to lay their head. Shall then both Birds and Beasts find mansion and yet God be shut out of his own dwelling? Shall we dwell in sieled houses, and his house lay waste? And if either cost or comeliness be added to it; shall they that carry the bag complain with judas, Quorsum haec perditio? to what purpose is all this waist: or disdain fully insult with scoffing julian after he had peeled and rob the Church, (u) Ecee quam pretiosis vasis mi●istratur Mariae Filio. Theoder. Hist. Lecles l. 3. c. 11. Are such goodly vessels fit for the Son of Mary? let such give ear to the wife man's caveat, Prov. 3.9. Honour the Lord with thy substance, and that not only in the due maintenane of the Ministry, but in repairing and beautifying of his Temple, the place where his honour dwelleth. And yet know we must these are not the weightier matters of the Law, nor the great mystery of godliness. Not the form but the formality of Religion; or if the form, the outward and accidental, not the inward and essential form that gives it being and distinction. For the King's daughter is all glorious within, Psal. 45.13. Glorious without too, there is no question; so it follow, Her clothing is of wrought gold yet all glorious within; The chiefest, yea all the Church's glory, ariseth from her inward Beauty. Neither is any thing more unbecoming the spouse of Christ, (x) Clemens Alexandr. Padagog. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; saith Clemens Alexandrinus. To be decked and set forth with stately and strange attire, especially where the inside is not suitable. That the walls of the Church (y) Fulget in parictibus luget in pauperibut Bernard. should shine and glister, and the Church itself carry a forlorn and dusky countenance: This was the vanity of vanities, that Bernard justly faulted in his time, that the outward Temples should be specious and gorgeous to the Eye, and the living Temples have neither form nor comeliness. The Temple of Solomon far surpassed the glory of the second Temple; yet of this doth God pronounce that solemn benediction. The glory of the last house shall be greater than the first, Hag. 2.10. As being honoured and graced with the birth of Christ. Even so the birth of Christ in the heart of the meanest Christian doth highly advance it above the most pompous and stately Temple, were it parallel with that of Solomon. As therefore it is the credit of our Nation to be stored with sumptuous (z) Auglia. mons, pons, ecclesia, etc. Churches and adorned with goodly Temples, that is one of our prime Excellencies; so should it be a testimony of far greater commendation to be replenished with these spiritual mystical Temples. So shall we be an holy Nation, a chosen generation, a Royal Priesthood, and the Temple of the living God. Secondly, If the Church be God's Temple, then may we from hence reflect upon her duty; The second corollary. The Church's duty. which St. Paul enforces and presses upon this consideration; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Cor. 6.14, 16. Be not unequally yoked with Infidels. For to join these two together, by way of communication in sacred Rites and Mysteries; This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the drawing in an uneven yoke, the ploughing with an Ox and Ass; which by positive law was interdicted to the Jews: and why so? Doth God take care for Oxen? As St. Paul questions elsewhere. Or saith he it not altogether for our sakes? For our sake no doubt it is written: As appears by the illation and inference. For what concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath the believer with the Infidel? And as it comes home to the purport and phrase of my Text. And what agreement hath the Temple of God with Idols? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉? what harmony or consent? what consistence or standing of the Ark and Dagon in the same Temple? Surely none at all. And St. Paul's interrogation implies a vehement and peremptory denial: there being no sin more Diametrally cross & opposite to the infinite nature, truth, & unity of the Godhead: which is both Ens, unum, & verum; all which are convertible with each other: then the portraiture and representation of it in an image or similitude, be it only by way of Analogy and mystical signification. No sin more directly adversative to the rule of religion, than Idolatry. Insomuch that Lactantius lays it down for a truth no less evident than infallible, (a) Non est dubium quin religio nulla sit, ubicunque fimulachr● est. Non religio in fimulachris sed mimus religionis est. Lactan. lib. 2. cap. 10. That Religion and Imagery cannot staend together: For what a greement hath the Temple of God with Idols? Neither is the impiety of the sin greater than the ridiculous folly and simplicity; which so far abaseth the nature of man, the Express and lively Image of God, to incline and bow both soul and body to dead and senseless images. And had they either sense or motion they would of their own accord worship men, by whom they were polished and fashioned into form and figure, or else had for ever remained stocks and stones, rude and unhewen matter. But as Belshazzar and his fellow ●●evellers when they caroused in the golden and silver vessels of the Temple; They drank wine saith the Text, Dan. 5.4. And praised the gods of gold and silver, of brass and iron, of wood, and of stone; whereupon Saint Hierom passes this grave censure, (b) Quantae erat stultitia in vasis aure●s et argenteis bibextes, deos ligne●s et lapidens laudare. Hi●rem. What folly was it for them that quassed in vessels of gold and silver to praise gods of wood and stone? Such yea far greater is the sottish stupidity of Idolatry, if not in praising yet in praying to the gods of wood and stone, whereunto they are far superior; not being redeemed or made of corruptible things, as gold and silver, but of higher and divine Principles. So that if the Church of Rome had not long ago, expunged and razed out the second Commandment out of the Decalogue; And of late devised some wire drawn distinctions, of Imago & Idolum objectum motivum et terminativum & the like, they had long since wanted colouring to paint and varnish over the prodigious profanness & palpable grossness of their Idolatry. And yet nevertheless how many are there even amongst us that would fain put forth their helping Hand to reconcile the Temple of God with Idols? like unto that silly Hermit, that seriously mediated a firm League of Friendship betwixt God and the Devil. Promiscuously blending both Religions together, Like unto bastard feathers imped in with the royal feathers of the Eagle; (*) Metuendum est in postrema mundi aetate hunc errorem grassaturum quod ant nihil sunt religiones aut differant tantum vocabulis Melanet. ●ostil. de Baptism Christi. Extenuating and mincing the differences of both sides, as if they were, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a needless question of words and names, as Gallio spoke of the Jewish: yea, a brainsick quarrel betwixt stomach and discretion. Ask you these men their judgement in the controverted points, They will tell you out of St. Paul, Idolum nihil est, The Idolatry of the Church of Rome is little or none at all. Transubstantiation is now become a question onel● de modo. It is not faith that justifies alone but works; Nor is the Pope any longer that stigmatical Antichrist, pointed out as it were with the singer. And were it not for the absolute supremacy and jurisdiction of the Pope over Princes, the asserting and maintaining whereof is crimen laesae Majestatis, High treason no less than capital: Who could bring a Quare impedit against these aequi vivocal Protestants, for proving downright and professed Catholic●s? These are the men that would set up a Bridge betwixt Rome and England for the passage of each to other. A Bridge over the Sea as Xerxes once assayed in the Hellespont. But all in vain; For as Abraham replied upon the request of the rich man in the Parable, Luke 16.26. so may it be answered the Romish party; Besides all this, betwixt you and us, there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a great gulf set, so that they that would go from hence to you cannot; neither can they come from thence to us. And whether we regard (c) No peace with Rome B. Hall. Sect. 2. the indisposition of the parties, the difficulty of the means, or the quality of the controversies; this reconciliation and atonement of both sides together, is an attempt impossible. And if either Authority or Learning may bear sway, then let the judgement of a late Reverend Bishop determine and umpire the question; (d) King on Ionas Lect. 7. pag. 101. It hath been a favourable compromission of men more partial than wise; that the questions betwixt Rome and the Reformed Churches might easily be accorded; I find it not. And I will be bold to say, as Tully sometimes of the Stoics and Academics (e) Non de terminei sed de tota possessio ne contentio. Acad. quest. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianz. vita. that the contention betwixt us is not for bounds, but for the whole possession and inheritance. Whether God or Man, Grace or Nature, the blood of Christ or the merits of Saints; written verities or unwritten vanities shall take place; We have Altar against Altar, Lyturgy against Lyturgy, prayers against prayers, doctrine against doctrine, potentate against potentate, Pope against Prince, religion against religion, subjection against subjection, faith against faith so diametrally opposed: As the Northern and Southern Poles, shall sooner meet together; then our opinions (standing as they do) can be reconciled. Thus far that worthy Bishop. How long then halt we betwixt two opinions? If the Lord be God, let us follow him: If Baal be God, follow him, was Elias counsel to the neutral Israelites, 1 Kings 18.21. Are we happily rescued and set at liberty from that Egyptian thraldom, whereof Reverend Grosthead prophesied a little before his Death, (f) Non liberabitur Ecclesia ab Aegyptiaca servitute nisi in ore gladii cruentandi. Grostheadus Episc. Line. That the Church should not be redeemed out of the Egyptian bondage, but by the mouth of the bloody sword; Then let us not turn back again, no not in heart and affection, to the fleshpots of Egypt any more; but as God enjoineth the Prophet Jeremy, Jer. 15.19. Let them return to thee, but do not thou return to them. Are the walls of Jericho battered down in this Kingdom, by the strong hand of two puissant and mighty Princes? then cursed be they that go about with untempered mortar to build them up. It hath been the complaint of old: In nomine Domini incipit omne malum. And it is still censoriously observed by some, that there seldom happens any notable alteration in Religion, but some of the Clergy are the Antesignani, the very Ensign-bearers and chiefest leaders. So that the Church may now complain with the Tree in the Fable, that she hath been torn asunder with those wedges that were hewn out of her own bowels. — Pudet haes opprobria dici, Et dici potuisse, & non potuisse refelli. Let not us above all other leave our station and fly from our colours; the open badge of a coward or a Traitor. Let not us be carried about with every wind of doctrine, like fans and weathercocks; nor shift our sails after the example of the common Mariner; That is, change our Tenets altogether, or refine and pair away our opinions, as the inconstant wind turns and flickers, the wind of authority, countenance and preferment. Far be it from us to give place to the common Adversary by subjection for an hour: Or to make merchandise of the least iota or tittle of the truth of the Gospel; which as Luther gathers from these words, Matth. 5.18. (g) Vnus apex plus valet quam coelum & terra. Luther. Is of more worth than Heaven or Earth. Each drop whereof we must esteem more precious, than a drop of blood: Ever remembering and imitating that generous resolution of that stout Champion of Christ Saint Basil: who when he was solicited by the Deputy of Valens the Emperor to turn Arrian, the difference consisting only in a Letter, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: returned unto him that courageous Answer, (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Basil. apud Theodor. lib. 4. cap. 19 That they who were nourished up with the word of God, would not exchange, or bate so much as a syllable, or letter of that Faith, wherewith Christ had entrusted them. It were indeed earnestly to be wished, That the Apostles Rule might pass for currant among all Nations, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Such another Pillar of the Christian faith was Gregory Nazianz. who when he offered to leave the City of Constantinople all the People cried out as one man. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianz. vit● Ephes. 4.5. So should we willingly embrace and easily observe the foregoing Precept, ver. 3. Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the bond of peace. Peace is like the bond of the Faggot, which preserves it entire, and whole: But where the unity of the Spirit is divided and rend in two, how can the bond of peace be kept inviolate. For as Jehu answered King Jehoram enquiring after peace: So may it be said to the Advocates and Proctors of the Church of Rome, that thus vehemently plead for it. What peace while the whoredoms of thy mother Jezabel? The Spiritual whoredoms of the mother of fornications, and her witchcrafts are yet in great number, 2 Kings 9.22. And as long as these continue, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, let us continue where we are: yea let us not stick to maintain and wage that same holy (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianz. Virgilius. War, wherein whosoever dies Fight the good fight of faith, shall undoubtedly obtain (saith Gregory Nazianzen) of the chiefest Bishop of our Souls, a plenary indulgence for his sins. And as in situation and site of place, this nation is divided from the main continent: so let it for ever continue divided in opinion and affection to their heresies from the whole Antichristian world; that so it may be said of it in this respect as well as in the other. Et penitus toto divisos orbe Britannos. As therefore the heathen man promised to full fill the law of friendship (k) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Pericles apud Gellium, l. 1. c. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, So let us profess ourselves unfeigned well-willers to the Church of Rome, and hearty desirous of a solid union, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, till we come to the Altars. But if they seek to bring over their Altars unto us or us unto their Altars; then let us stand at staff's end, and stiffly endeavour to prove as opposite unto them, as is the purity of Divine worship to humane superstition: the true Church and Temple of God to the congregation of Idolaters, and what agreement hath the Temple of God with Idols. Thirdly, If the Church be God's Temple, we may from hence conclude the Church's danger as being liable to a threefold injury and calamity. The third Corollary. The Church's danger. And that threefold. 1. Impropriation. 2. Dilapidations. 3. Sacrilege. After the manner of the material Temple, 1. The first danger of this Temple, is the impropriation and the betraying of it into the hands of sinners. Impropriation. This hazard hath it run in every age, never was there wanting an adulterous generation; yet never more rife & rank then in these days of ours; whereof David complained in his, Psal. 83.12. Who said, let us take to ourselves the Houses of God in possession. And which they barely projected and resolved on, they have now effected and brought to pass. The Ark of God is long since taken prisoner, and detained as forcibly, as unjustly, I say not by the Philistines, but profane and lay hands. And the house of God, whereon Christ's sets a special accent and emphasis, and imprints as it were his own marks (my House) is now by prescription become a Den of thiefs. Thus doth it fall out with the Church the spiritual house and Temple of God, which is openly exposed as a naked prey to the greedy desire and malicious designs of a double impropriator. A double Impropriator. 1. The Devil. 2. And the Pope. I join them both together. 1. The Devil. The first and the chiefest impropriator of the Church is the Devil who being fallen irrecoverably from the state of happiness (e) Solatium perditionis suae perdendis hominibus operatur. Lactant. l. 2.15. he solaces his own misery by drawing and booking others into the same pitfal of destruction. Labouring nothing more than to make of a Saint a sinner, and a firebrand of Hell of an Heir of Heaven, and as this is God's royalty to rule in the midst of his enemies: maugre their most furious rage and fierce opposition, raising up unto himself a holy seed even where Satan's throne is, such was the seat of the Church of Pergamus, Rev. 2.13. The Devil who is the God of this world, and the Ape of God as well in this as in other matters, affects and studies a resemblance. That subtle serpent who slyly crept into the terrestrial Paradise, and there seduced our first Parents, who were then the Representative Body of the Universal Church, doth still insinuate, and cunningly convey himself into the spiritual Paradise, the visible society of the faithful: some whereof he solicits and effectually draws unto his own party, and would (if it were possible) deceive the elect. So that it hath been commonly and truly said: where God hath his Church, there the Devil hath his Chapel. This is the first and great Impropriator. 2. The second Impropriatour and next unto the Devil is the Pope and Bishop of Rome, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Pope. That man of sin: As if his entire frame and composition were nothing else. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That professed Adversary, that sits as God, in the Temple of God, showing himself that he is God, 2 Thess. 2.4. yet is he not a foreign or open Adversary; for his trade is the mystery of iniquity, ver. 7. And though he speak like the Dragon, he hath two horns like the lamb, Rev. 13.11. But an intestine and homebred Enemy that sits in the Temple. Not in Solomon's Temple at Jerusalem, (as Bellarmin trifles) for that is not his Sea and Seat; And yet St. Augustin moves an (m) Vtrum in illa ruina Templi quod à Solomone constructum est, an vera in Ecclesia ut Deus sessurus sit, incertum est. August. de Civit. Dei lib. 20. cap. 19 utrum concerning it, and passes it over as uncertain: but in the mystical Temple of the visible Church, yea in the invisible Temple of the heart and conscience, as some expound it. In this inward Temple doth he sit, and that not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as it is in the original. Not so much in as upon the Temple, treading and trampling upon it as his footstool; riding as it were in respect of his Tyrannical government upon men's consciences, as he is usually mounted and carried in public upon men's shoulders. Sic volo sic jubeo, is his known Motto; And his imperious slile the same with the Ancient Donatists, (n) Augustinus verba illa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, non in Templo sed adversus Templum interpretatus est. De Civit. Dei lib. 20. cap. 19 Epist. 48. ad Vincentium. Quod volumus sanctum est, His lust must be observed as a Law, and that the necessitate salutis: as having all Laws both divine and humane cooped up in his own Breast, unwritten and unjust Traditions, Ecclesiastical definitions and constitutions, pari pietatis affectu & reverentia; (to use the words of the Council of Trent.) ought to be entertained with no less reverend affection and devotion than the written Word of God; and by their own force and virtue, directly, and immediately, oblige and fetter the conscience. And whilst the (o) Ista 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (uti appellat Basilius, Epist. 10.) adeo ei dis ●licuit: ut de Rom. Ecclesia dixerit: odi sastum illius Ecclesiae. Baron. Annal. Tom. 4. An. 327. S. 32. Pope thus sits in & upon the Temple, and exercises an absolute Sovereignty and Dominion over the conscience which is proper only unto God, he is justly argued and convinced, as an impropriator of the Temple. The second danger of the Church is the dilapidations and ruins of it: The second danger of the Church. Dilapidations. a danger no less common to the mystical, then to the material Temple. And as the negligent Person though otherwise a wise master builder, by his profession doth oft times let fall the one: so doth the bloody persecutor demolish and make havoc of the other. And if we take but a general survey of the state of the Church in Germany, we cannot but give evidence to that truth, whereof they long had and still have too too sensible and most lamentable experience: Whose sons and daughters, This Sermon was preached in the time of the Germane wars, soon after the death of the King of Sweden at the battle of Lutzen. within these few years were as the polished corners of the Temple! and are now broken down not with Axes and Hammers; but with the swords and spears of bloodthirsty soldiers, crying out in the fierce Dialect of War, the cruel language of the children of Edom, Down with them, down with them, even to the ground. And as heretofore it might have been spoken even of this Temple, not without admiration and wonderment, which Christ's Disciples affirmed of the other; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See what manner of stones, and what buildings are here. So is our Saviour's Prophecy verified, to the uttermost of both a like; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, There is not now left one stone upon another, that hath not been thrown down: yea, that choice and precious stone, that victorious and ever renowned King of Sweden, of late a worthy member of the Church Militant, now a glorious member of the Church Triumphant, yea always Triumphant while he was yet Militant, Whose sword, like that of Saul, never returned empty from the blood of the slain, and from the fat of the mighty: Of whose loss I may safely say, in respect of the Church, as the Historian sometime spoke of Cornelia in the loss of her loving Husband, (o) Valer. lib. 4. cap. 6. Corneliam nescio an faeliciorem dixerim, quod talem virum habuerit, an insaeliciorem quod amiserit; It is hard to say whether the Church of God were happier in the enjoiment, or more unhappy in the loss of so great a personage: Yet this precious stone which was worth ten thousand other, as David's Subjects valued the life of their Sovereign; This Princely stone, graven after the similitude of a Palace, is fallen likewise out of this spiritual building, and the fall thereof was great. These are the ruins and dilapidations of the Temple. The third danger of the Church is Sacrilege, The third danger of the Church Sacrilege. not the pilfering and purloining of the Vestments, and outward Ornaments; not the stealing of the Bible out of the Church by the common Thief; but the stealing of the public preaching, and the interpretation of the Bible from the common people, by the careless and idle Minister. Loath I am to parallel Brethren with professed Adversaries of the Church of Rome; yet are they as parallel lines that go together and cannot well be sundered. And as the sin of Sacrilege is no less heinous than Idolatry; yea the Apostle seemeth to argue à minore ad majus, and to grant it the precedency, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Thou that abhorrest Idols. dost thou commit Sacrilege? Rom. 2.22. So is their Sacrilege well near as heinous in the degree, as is the Sacrilege of these Idolaters. The Popish Idol-monger robs the Church of the Letter of the Scripture, by reading it in an unknown tongue; And though a Roman he speaks in the language of a Barbarian. The Idol Shepherd, as Zachary fitly styles him, the idle and non-curing Curate robs the Church too, as well as the former; and that not of the Letter, but of the Sense, by bare reading of the words, without retriving the scope and meaning of the Text, or clearing the doubts and difficulties. Shall then the Pastor justly complain of the sacrilegious people, in the cause and name of God: Will a man rob his Gods? but ye have rob me in Tithes and Offerings, Mal. 3.8. And shall not the people as justly complain of the lazy Pastor, and that in the name of God, Will a man rob his Gods? but ye have rob me in the dispensation of the word, and the work of the Ministry. I close up this point with an Historical Narration of a notorious and famous Church Robber: The Story reports him to be Celsus, who one day hearing that Text of Isaiah read; We to them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the earth, Isa. 5.8. cried out immediately, (p) Gregor. Tur. n. l 2. c. 24. Vae mihi & Filiis meis, Woe be to me and my children. And if there be any such spiritual Church-robber here present, let me put them in mind of Saint Paul's Vae, and each of them apply it in particular, Vae mihisi non Evangelizavero. And woe is unto me, if I preach not the Gospel, 1 Cor. 9.16. Yea let me remembrance them of a second woe of Saint Augustine (q) Vae tacentibus de te Domine cum ipsi loquaces muti sint, August. Woe be to them that are tonguetied and hold their peace, when they that speak most frequently and plentifully of thee (O Lord) are found to be dumb and silent. And let such as are mindful of the Lord not keep silence, Isa. 62.6. Thus have I at length concluded the threefold conclusion, The Dignity, the Duty, the Danger of the Church. A threefold danger, Impropriation, Dilapidations, Sacrilege. And so dismiss the first general Proposition. Templum Sancti, the Church is God's Temple. The second follows, which I must only point at afar of, The second Proposition. as Moses discovered upon mount Nebo the borders of the land of Canaan. Sanctitas Templi, For the Temple of God is Holy, and that in a threefold respect, after the manner of the material. Temple. 1. In the separation. The Church holy, in three respects. 2. In the consecration. 3. In the practical use and exercise. First the Church is holy by separation, By separation. even as the threshing floor of Araunah, when it was severed from common ground, and destinated to an Altar. And that three manner of ways 1. In the eternal decree of God's Election. Three manner of ways. 2. In the meritorious efficac, of Christ's Redemption. 3. In the actual vocation and conversion. First the Church is separate and set apart from the confused and corrupt mass of mankind, In the eternal decree of God's election. whereof that likewise is a portion, by the eternal decree of God's election: and choice being only Aliquorum, it can neither consist, nor yet be conceived or imagined without a refusal: That same negative Act of Preterition, or Reprobation, God freely denying grace, and justly passing over the remainder. Thus Saint Paul restrains to a definitive number, Rom. 8.30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whom be predestinate, them also he called. Quos praescivit, saith the Apostle, so that it is Electio personarùm non qualitatum. An absolute, no respective decree, either grounded or occasioned by any motive condition in the object of foreseen faith, and perseverance. Nor is it an universal or general election, which is quite repugnant to the nature. Quos praescivit, saith the Text, Hos non alios, those alone, and no other, as Augustine toucheth upon the place. Secondly, In the meritorious Efficacy of Christ's Redemption. the Church is separated unto holiness in the meritorious Efficacy of Christ's Redemption, who though he gave himself, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a ransom for all men, 1 Tim. 2.6. A propitiation for the sins of the whole world, 1 John 2.2. if we take an estimate of the greatness of the price and sufficiency of his death and passion; Yet doth he lay down his life for his sheep, and hath purchased the Church with his own blood, Acts 20.28. in respect of the force and efficacy of his death, and the property of redemption. Poculum immortalitatis habet equidem in se ut prosit omnibus, sed si non bibit non proficit, saith Prosper excellently, And did all men drink of the blood of Christ, then should they have eternal life, John 6.5. Thirdly, the Church is separated from the world in the actual vocation and conversion; In the actual vocation and conversion. for though God embraced and clasped it in the arms of his mercy from all Eternity; And loved it with an everlasting love, Jer. 3.3. by way of benevolence: Yet neither doth the purpose of Election, which is an immanent act in God, confer aught upon the party that is predestinate; nor the virtues of Christ's Redemption avail any whit to the justification and acceptation of the person. Nor doth God respect and tender the Church with the love of complacency and contentment, until he be pleased actually to call it out of the power of darkness, into his marvellous light. And hereby it becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, populus evocatus, a people called out from amidst the sons of men by the powerful attraction and energy of the spirit: and by the subordinate ministry of the Word and Sacraments. In all these respects the Church is Holy by Separation. Secondly, this Temple and Church is holy in the Consecration, In the Consecration. being dedicated to God by baptism, which though it be no Physical instrument, that conveys grace by any natural force & efficacy; yet is it signum & figillum & both by representation and assurance doth establish and confirm it; And as many as are baptised into Christ, have put on Christ, Gal. 3.27. And from hence arose that ancient custom in the Primitive Church of clothing the baptised with white apparel, Fulgentes animas vestis quoque candida signat. Lactantius Who were therefore styled Candidati & the Sunday after Easter, whereon this Sacrament of Baptism was solemnly administered for the whole year, took the denomination of Dominica in albis, and was termed White Sunday; that so both the name of the day, & the bright colour of their garments, might clearly signify & set forth the unspotted innocency of their profession, & the spiritual purity of their conversation. Thus is the Church holy by consecration. Thirdly, it is holy in the practical use and exercise. In the Practical use and exercise. The reverend hearing of the Word; the devout administration of the blessed Sacraments; And above all, affectionate & fervent Prayer. This is the service of God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whereunto his house is assigned and dedicated in a special manner. My house shall be called the House of Prayer for all people, Isa. 56.7. And this is it which Christens the public places of God's worship; and gives the name unto Temples; Not Concionatoria, nor Sacramentaria, but Oratoria, houses of request and prayer. As being a primary action, which by an elegant Synecdoche, compriseth all other religious duties, that are ordered to it, and derive and borrow from it a plentiful increase. Thus is the Temple, the Church of God in the general, and each private Christian in particular, the house of Prayer: who prays not only openly in the outward Temple, but secretly in the (r) Vis in Temple orare de scendi in reipsum. August. inward Temple of his own heart. And as the consecration of Temples is evermore solemnised with prayer; so is every living Temple hereby dedicate unto God. It was so with Saul upon the point of his conversion; For behold he prayeth, faith God to Ananias, Act. 9.10. To ascertain him of the truth. It is so with all others, whose invocation and calling upon the name of God, immediately follows God's vocation & effectual calling of them. This is the threefold holiness of the Temple. The separation. The consecration. The practical use and exercise; These are the several limbs and members of the point, like unto those dry bones in Ezekiel's vision, which though they are knit together by their several Sinews, yet are they not covered with flesh and skin, as otherwise they might, if the time would permit. And lest these dry bones should be utterly void of life, give me leave but once more to prophesy unto them, and breathe a little upon them by the spirit of Application. And is the Temple of God holy? The Application. away then with the vainglorious vaunt of Corah and his complices: All the congregation of the Lord is holy every one of them, and the Lord is among them, Numb. 16.2. These indeed are the presumptuous speeches of the sons of Corah (I mean) some of our own Tribe: there is no distinction betwixt Elect and Reprobate. Tros, Tyriusque, illis nullo discrimine habentur. There is no certainty of grace, no assurance of salvation. Nemo ante obitum foelix, Believe them who list, As is the good, so is the sinner. And yet saith the text expressly, The Temple of God is holy. But who is this holy Temple? Quod vos estis; so it follows in the Text, ye of the Clergy in a peculiar manner who serve at God's Altar, Be ye clean that carry the vessel of the Lord, Isa. 52.11. Ye are not only the Temple, but the Priests of the Temple, and should have engraven, as it were, upon your foreheads with the High Priest under the Law, Holiness unto the Lord. And as he that hath called you, and that not only ad salutem, but officium; as he is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation, 1 Pet. 1.15. 2. The Temple of God is holy; quod vos estis; Ye of the Laity, ye are the Temple and house of God: and holiness becomes thy house for ever: ye are Saints by calling, 1 Cor. 1.2. Be not so by calling only, your bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost, 1 Cor. 6.19. Defile not these Temples with uncleanness or drunkenness; neither carouse nor quaff in these vessels of your bodies, as Belshazzar sometimes did in the consecrated vessels of the Temple. Preserve ever more in these Temples the laver of Repentance, for the washing away of sin. The Altar of offering, for the mortifying and sacrificing of it, kindled with the heavenly fire of fervent zeal, and devout love The Altar of incense for the sending up, and breathing forth the sweet perfume of your daily Prayers with the candle of faith, always burning and giving light in the Sanctuary. That so the holy Spirit of God may be pleased to dwell in us, as in his Temple upon earth, and we hereafter dwell with him in the new Jerusalem, where there is no Temple, Rev. 21.22. But the Lord God Almighty, and the Lamb, are the Temple of it. To which Lord God Almighty be Glory and Honour, Adoration and Thanksgiving, now and for ever, Amen. St. PAVL'S TACTICS. A SERMON Preached at Fakenham in Norfolk, at a Visitation. For we hear that there are some which walk among you disorderly, 2 Thess. 3.11. LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. St. PAUL'S TACTICS. 1 THESS. 5.14. Now we beseech you Brethren, warn them that are unruly. TO encounter the common abuses and general corruptions of the time by a seasonable reprehension, The Preface. cannot but be acknowledged a work as profitable, as necessary; yet will it hardly find any other then hard and harsh entertainment with the most, blinded either out of ignorance, or self love. Neither is there any undertaking more subject to censure, than censure and just reproof; there is no man almost but affects a liberty of life and action; but how few that dislike and disdain not utterly the liberty of speech in others, though it be to control and countermand their licontiousness. We are all wise and liberal to afford and deal out (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Euripides. admonition, yet, as he characters out his young man, monitoribus asper; we are withal so squeazy stomached that we cannot digest rebuke though never so well tempered and seasoned with the salt of discretion, without murmuring and complaint, and if but taxed in the mildest manner, we are forthwith in the gall of bitterness. The delicious and darling sins of many might, they have their desire, should be as the forbidden tree, and as the flaming Mount, which none may touch, nor draw near unto, no not Moses himself; and as God forbade the people concerning his Prophets; Touch not mine anointed, do my Prophets no harm: So do they forewarn even the Prophets in effect, not once to Touch their beloved sins, nor harm their iniquity: Only in this they must be merciful (as Naaman requested Elisha,) and be as men in whose mouth are no reproofs. A strong presumption and more than probable conjecture, that a Text of this stamp or strain, that carries rebuke in the forehead of it, and levels point blank at scandals and offences: (that such a Text as this I say) treating of admonition and disorder, will scarce comply with the misguided affections of some partial hearers; or seem appliable to the occasion, in their too shallow apprehensions. How proper and pertinent is the choice, I list not, I need not to exemplify, as the Blind man's parents spoke of their Son, Joh. 9.23. so may I affirm of the Text, Aetatem habet, it is of Age, ask it, and let it answer for itself. Sure I am if any except and quarrel with the matter and so Kick against the Pricks, they are those unruly mates here pointed at in my Text, and such must be admonished; and if there seem overmuch rigour and severity in the Apostolical injunction, observe a little how he qualifies and candies over the tartness of his advice, with the (b) Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci. sweetness of obsecration We beseech you brethren; this is St. Paul's condescension and meekness of spirit, who though he might command that which is convenient and not be bold with them: yet for love's sake he doth rather entreat as he speaks to Philemon. And for mine own part, I thought it most suitable and agreeable to the insufficiency of the speaker to stir you up by putting you in remembrance, as St. Peter hath it. Endeavouring rather to add some hear, and fervency to your affections, by the earnestness of admonition, than any way to enlighten and clear your judgements by precepts of instruction. For who knows not that hardy soldiers, and stiff wrestlers (c) Athletae etenim suis incitatoribus fortiores sunt et tamen monet debilior ut pugnet isle qui fortior est. Hieron ad Julianum. (to borrow St. Hierom comparison) are far more stout and resolute, than such as animate and encourage them, and yet ofttimes the weaker abilities quicken the spirit of prowess and valour in the stronger combatants, by their hortatives and persuasion. I will use no other Apology for pitching upon this argument, than the argument of the Text, for the discharge and exercise of the duty. (We beseech you brethren) suffer then the words of exhortation, as the Apostle elsewhere infers upon the same premises, and think not ye suffer when ye hear them. The Text will not bear any accurate division as every piece of timber is not fit matter for (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. Eth. 1. cap. 1. The division of the Text. curious workmanship, and it were but a trifling vanity, to attempt it. The words of their own accord spread themselves into these two Branches. 1. An attestation to the misdemeanours of some particular persons in the Church of Thessalonica, That were unruly. 2. An obtestation for the redress of the malady, by the application of the remedy We beseech you Brethren. 1. An Excitation. 2. An Exhortation. 1. The Motive. 2. The Matter: Wherein there are three remarkable specialties. 1. The Act or duty enjoined, Admonish. 2. The subject, or the parties whom it concerns, The Brethren. 3. The object of the Act and that is, The disordered or unruly. This General Assembly whose proper end agreeable to the first institution is to rectify and reform abuses, might furnish any reasonable Logician were he not a mere Lay Preacher, at least with a competency of Art, for the resolution of the Text. First, To take notice of the delinquents or offenders, such as are here termed unruly. Secondly, The censure or sentence pronounced by Saint Paul upon these offenders, who must be Admonished. Thirdly, The Censors or persons nominated, to whom the cognizance of the cause is committed, not by virtue of any special office, and obligation, but out of a more general respect and interest in the common state of Christianity. And these are the brethren. Not to balk the Metaphor in the Text, which lays close couched in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and is borrowed and taken up from the course of War, that directs and points out unto us a threefold Analogy or resemblance. The First betwixt dissolute Christians and extravagant and straggling soldiers, both these are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, without rank and station unru y or disordered. The Second betwixt the exercise of brotherly admonition and martial discipline 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Text, restore and put their mind in order by admonition. The Third betwixt private Christians and fellow soldiers, whose duty it is to correct each roving companion that will not know his place or colours, and to reduce them into order. The words are three in number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. I will take and pick them out one by one like so many kernels of a Pomegranate, without quartering or dividing of the skin; marvel not that I give the first place of handling to that which is last; and begin with those who had need to be first dealt with, and these are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the unruly. A double Quaery, A double Quaere or inquiry may be moved, concerning the subject of the Text. An sit? Quid sit? 1. a sit. Were it not a taking away of the subject to make proposition of the first, and a calling of that in question which which is no way questionable or controversal? St. Paul here argues ex suppositis et concessis, and it had been utterly superfluous to enforce and press the duty of admonition, had there not been some guilty and obnoxius unto censure, certainly had St. Paul erected a holy inquisition, and set Officers a work to make an exact search and scrutiny into the manners of Thessalonians, they would have give in a verdict like unto Ezekiols' roll written without and within; as full of corruptions and offences, as that was full of Lamentations and woes, at least they would have returned, some disordered; I may say of them, as Christ advertised his Disciples concerning the poor, these dissolute and unruly persons, ye have them and shall have them always with you. There must be such and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as St. Paul tells the Corinthians) even in the visible Church of Christ that being vox aequivoca, and totum heterogeneum, an equivocal word, and heterogeneal body, whose name though common to all, yet are the several parts every way different in the nature, Many are in the Church that are not of the Church, as corrupt humours in the body, that are no formal members: and it is not local (e) Non Hierosolymis fuisse sed Hierosolymisbene vixisse laudandum est. Hieronym. residence nor outward conformity, but the vital participation of inward sanctity that ranks men in the number of sound Christians. And being such they are not absolutely privileged & exempted from Ataxy or disorder: Be the choice never so good there will be some rascal Dear within the pale of the Church. And though it be Acies ordinata, an uniform and well marshaled army, there cannot want 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, such as are unruly and disordered. So then the question An sit, is out of question, and taking leave of that, we pass to the Quid sit, and search more narrowly into the property of their nature. 2. Quid sit. Disorder is a defect or privation, and privations are best differenced and discerned in reference to their proper forms and habits; (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristot. Straightness is Index sui & obliqui; and such is the friendship even among contraries, though at formal enmity and opposition in their nature, that they afford a more distinct and evident knowledge mutually to each other, if compared and ranked together. Order in the full extent and latitude, contains these two Branches. First, Order contains in it two Things. The public Discipline and Government of the Church, wherein there are several 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sundry steps and stays above each other, a diversity of degrees and functions. There is nothing more unequal in Ecclesiastical Polity, than parity and equality. That being the breader of (g) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristot. confusion; and not of order, which is made up of parity and imparity; wisely allotting and appointing the power of jurisdiction and correction to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as command in chief and sit at the Helm; and regular obedience to inferiors: and they that are refractory in this kind, are branded by Saint Paul with the black character of, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. This is his injunction to the Thessalonians, 2 Thess. 3.6. To withdraw themselves from every brother that walketh inordinately, and not after the Instructions which ye have received of us. Both these are connected and coupled together, and the latter is an Exegesis or explication of the former; so that to despise government or wilfully to reject the just commands of Authority, must needs argue a man inordinate. There are Praecepta Patris, and Decreta Matris, Divine Precepts and Ecclesiastical constitutions. The Pharisaical Papists make the Word of God of no effect through their Traditions. And as if they were an illegitimate and spurious issue, bastards and no sons, acknowledge none but their Mother. The giddy Novelists on the other side, so seem to reverence the selfsufficiency of the Scriptures, that withal they cry down the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church, though no whit repugnant thereunto. And while they vainly boast (as the Jews of old) that they have one God for their Father; they no way observe and respect the Church, as their natural and lawful Mother. But as Paul speaks in another case, 1 Cor. 11.11. Neither is the man without the woman, nor the woman without the man in the Lord; No more is the Father without the Mother, nor the Mother without the Father: God and the Church are both essentially required to the generation, and must be reverently and religiously regarded, though in a far different manner of such as are true born Christians. And as Saint Cyprian hath long since determined. (h) Non potest Deum habere patrem, qui Ecclesiam non habet matrem. Cyprianus de unit. Eccles. They cannot have God for their Father in Heaven, who will not receive the Church for their Mother here in Earth. Secondly, Order fitly sets forth composedness of manners and integrity of life, where men of a vicious disposition and a lewd behaviour, are justly styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as passing all bounds of order. Not to stray beyond the proper signification of the word which is ofttimes the best Interpreter, Nomina notamina: names being so many lively expressions and notations, yea compendious Definitions of the several natures thereby deciphered and included in them, as the shell contains the kernel. Orders though a branch of our Latin Tongue, yet is it a sprig that sprouts from a Greek Root, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is Scaligers Etymology. And thus spoke the Tribunes to their soldiers, hitherto you shaladvance your march there make a stand and begin a retreat, this is the order of martial discipline: sure I am that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the original is a military word, and bred in the war, implying and noting out the several ranks and places that are allotted to every private soldier; and it is figuratively applied to represent and shadow forth the comely order of the Church which as our Saviour renders the similitude Cant. 6.3. is terrible as an army with banners. That which a peculiar office in the service of war is to each common soldier, the same is a particular calling to private Christians, whereunto they stand limited and confined: and as in an army, such lose companions as want a station or straggle or wander from it, or encroach upon another's liberty, or are notoriously debauched and riotous; are all arranged upon the File 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and annumbred amongst disordered. So are there four sorts of men in the Church. Four sorts of disordered persons in the the Church. 1. The lawless loiterer. 2. The careless rover. 3. The busy intruder. 4. The licentious libertine. Upon all which St. Paul sets his mark 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as God did a mark upon Cain, indigitating and pointing them out to be the self same persons, that must be admonished. 1. The lawless loiterer. The first of these and the ringleader of the rest is the lawless loiterer, men privileged and as it were protected from all other calling then that which is so falsely called and a strain of their own invention, to whom it is as great a punishment to be condemned to a settled course of life, and bounded within the compass of an honest and laudable vocation, as for Evil spirits to be conjured into a circle beyond which they must not pass. As if the first man was justly exiled and banished out of Paradise, and yet his posterity might take liberty to make themselves another Paradise, through pleasure and delight, and live without employment. The peevish Anabaptists have sweat hard to fetch up our Ministers within that number, for that they labour not with their hands, and they that work not must not eat. That is St. Paul's order touching those that are inordinate, 2 Thess. 3.10. But had these men brains to discern and judge of others they would soon find in themselves that the ever working and contriving brains of our painful Ministers drop more than their fat Brows: and might have learned this difference in the schools of the Heathen (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Arist. Ethic. lib. 1. c. 1. That there are inward and immanent operations of the mind, wholly terminated within itself, as well as transient actions and manuary works, that leave an impression in the outward matter: yea had they ploughed with St. Paul's Heifer they might then find out this riddle; it may be they can blow indeed and do nothing else; yet know not what belongs to the spiritual tillage, to God's Husbandry, as St. Paul terms the Corinthians, and as our famous Bishop Grosthead sometimes answered an undeserving suitor for a benefice; That if their plough was broken it were great pity, but they should have a new one, but as for a cure of souls they are unfit, and altogether unworthy, (k) Ne edentium dentibus edentult invideant. Nec oc●los caprarum Talpae contemnant. Hieron. Epist. ad Rom. let not them then that want teeth envy those that eat therewith: nor contemn the eyes of goats, if themselves be Wants and Moles: as Hierom admonished Calphurnius. How much better might these curious and prying spies that come to oversee the weakness of the Land, have spent their busy search elsewhere, and found fit matter for their observation. And lest it should be thought that this lawless loiterer were as rare among us, as a needy beggar in Israel: and that our Country were as well cleansed of these wild creatures, as long since freed of Wolves; two kinds of men here cross my way which I cannot but take notice of and these as different in their profession as near a kin in their condition, both which may be justly challenged. 1. The lazy Monk. Two sorts of lawless Loiterers. 2. The sensual Gallant. The Papists must needs own the one, and I know not well how the Protestant should wash their hand of the other. 1. I begin with the lazy Monk and sluggish Friar, The lazy Monk. into whom the souls of the ancient Cretians seem to have reentered having left their first habitation; as if St. Paul had prophesied of the one in the description of the other: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it being very difficult to conceive how he should pencil, and draw a picture in every joint and limb so like themselves, and yet never mind the pattern. Their bellies indeed may be thought nimble at their meat and are alone exercised with labour, when the rest of the members take their ease, and be they never so slow they are most sure and fail not to do their work. And to those four devouring creatures rehearsed by Solomon, Prov. 30.16. The Grave, and the barren womb, the earth that is not filled with water, and the fire that saith not, it is enough: A fifth may be added, as insatiable a cormorant as any of the former, and that is the belly of the Monk, and this above all other is quick of hearing: and cannot endure to be spoken against, or have the copy once questioned: which was one of the grand and capital faults committed by Luther at the first; Dresserus, An. ●al. Scul. pag. 45. that he presumed to lift at the Pope's triple Crown and to pinch the Monk's belly; as Erasmus some what pleasantly answered the Duke of Saxony. These, these are the abbey lubbers, and stalled bulls of Bashan that live mewed up in their private cells and cloisters as Bears in a frank, and sit hooded all the day as so many birds of prey. And all this they do under the folded cowl of piety and devotion, and the most sad pretence of stern mortification: observing fat fasts, and lean prayers, as jentilet complained of old, pining themselves into lard, and beating down their Bodies, till their girdle crack. And in the midst of their gourmandising they thus cry out Heu quanta patimur pro amore Christi! O what great matters do we suffer for the name of Christ. And were they such as they fond profess themselves, men wholly sequestered from the world by an over rigorous & austere course of life, and utterly devoted to religious contemplation; they were no way justifiable or excusable: for who hath required them at your hands? nor can they be warranted in this kind, whose thoughts are so swallowed up in the general consideration of Christianity and profession, that in the mean time they quite forget their personal relations of Husbands, Parents, Mlasters, and Members of the Commonwealth: spending their whole time in continual Pilgrimage from one Church and Saint to another, and that with the extreme neglect of their private calling, and a total impoverishing of their estate. But as the civil Courts of Justice must not clash or justle, no more must the exercises of religion strike and enterfere, the care of the general and particular charge must meet together; Holiness and Righteousness must kiss each other. The Jews have an excellent parable to this purpose whereof Gamaliel was the Author (e) Pulchium est studium legis cum via terrae, opificio aliquo conjunctum. Drus. Apot. pag. 15. The study of the Law is rare and commendable, so that it be cum via Terrae, and we join therewith some profitable employment; Such was the Monkery of ancient times, and the original institution of their order, who were not so enamoured of their delightful and self-pleasing contemplation: (which though like Rachel it be exceeding fair and beautiful, yet is it for the most part barren) as to set at nought industrious labour. Nor did they so content themselves with an Avery life soaring and mounting aloft upon the wings of their meditations, as the Fouls of the Firmament; but they descended downwards to the ground, and got their living upon the Earth, as the birds of the Air do: and by their ordinary craft and trade procured some benefit to society. This was the wont custom of the (m) Aegyptio rum monasteria hunc morem habent ut nem inem absque opereiss labour so scipiant Hieron. Epist. Egyptian monasteries, who received none into their covents, that did not busy themselves in labour. And the primitve Church hath not only condemned the lazy monk, as an unprofitable burden, but manacled and chained him with a (n) Monach us qui non laborat manibus, similis est pradoni. Socrat. Hist. Thief; that Monk which laboureth not with his hands, is no better than a thief. St. Paul implies and intimates as much in his Apostolical Canons touching the idle and inordinate, 2 Thess. 3.11, 12. We command and exhort by our Lord Jesus Christ, that they work with quietness and eat their own bread, as if it were not their own but the bread of deceit and theft, unless they earned it with the sweat of their Brows, and purchased it with their lawful labour. Let then the Monkish crew who receive honour one of another, style themselves by the name of Regulars, and call their covents and fraternities after them several orders St. Francis, Dominick, and the rest; yet doth my Text indict them for irregular and disordered persons and that in a high degree as being lawless loiterers. 2. The sensual Gallant. Next unto these is the sensual gallant whose frolic spirit is so heated & over warmed with a plethory of generous and high born Blood that fills and swells his veins, or else are so cherished & fleshed with an overweening opinion and unshaken confidence in their ample possessions and revenues; that they think it a kind of disparagement and abasement to stoop to any office and employment though never so honourable in the cause of God or their country, and cannot endure to be enclosed within the Boundaries of a calling, albeit they themselves join House to House and lay Field to Field, and so would enclose all: these are the men that squander and lavish out their precious time, in Eating, Drinking, Snorting, Sporting, (to say no worse.) And with the wanton Israelites of old they sit down to eat, and rise up to play. Whose life is a perpetual Holiday, a profane Sabbath dedicate to the Devil, An exchange of pleasures and recreations; a garment patched together, and yet woven with a kind of Curiosity of several threads of vanity; the warp and groundwork being luxury and lasciviousness, and the woof lose pastimes and delights. As if they were born into the world to no other end, then with the wild Ass colt to snuff up the wind in the wilderness, or with the great Leviathan to take the pastime in the waters, and though they be spruce and trim as the Lilies of the field, Solomon in all his royalty was not clothed like unto one of them: yet they neither sow, nor reap, nor carry into their Barns; they neither labour, nor spin, nor do any work of merit beneficial to themselves or others. And are no other than Lawless loiterers. 2. The careless Rover. A second sort of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in my Text is the careless Rover and unlimited straggler; professed Peripatetics, and mere Ubiquitaries not in opinion, but action; that are every where and yet no where resident: who like unto unruly beasts overtop the highest hedge, and break down the strongest fence, or if tied up they will stray beyond the tedder: too many I find herein faulty and that in our own tribe. And I must not forfeit the truth by concealing it from any; nor you think much, if I point out some spots and plots (as St. Peter styles them) and these in our Priestly garments. The substance of the cloth is exceeding fine, our calling pure and precious; but the black colour is not so in grain, that it cannot change, nor prove subject unto stain. I will instance only in two Particulars. Two sorts of Bovers. 1. The first, have a centre but no circumference. 2. The second, neither centre nor circumference, and both as you shall hear, Disordered. 1. The first have a centre without a circumference. Some Ministers there be that have a centre, but no circumference, that want not a charge or cure, but are wanting in their care and presence: like unto moist bodies that are easily contained within another's bounds, but hardly in the terms of their own substance. And as if no Prophet could be sufficiently honoured in his own Country, they range abroad at large, with Noah's Raven it may be to seize upon the prey, whilst the innocent Dove contains itself within the Ark of his own Parish: Who out of an itching humour or an aspiring desire to climb higher with the spider, or to publish their good parts unto the world, for the most part hover and dance attendance at the court or else put themselves into commons at gentlemen's Tables, and there live as their Domestic Chaplains, yea as some of their household servants, of whom it may be demanded in the mean time as Eliab inquired of David, 1 Sam. 17.28. Why art thou come down hither? and with whom hast thou left those few sheep in the wilderness? which for the most part are as sheep scattered without a shepherd. St. Judas fitly styles them wand'ring stars, v. 13. Stars they are indeed, fixed in a Church as in an Orb; and many of them shine as stars in the Firmament, with an inbred and proper lustre; and have not only a borrowed light from the brightness of others labours: but yet stars though they be, they are wand'ring stars and planets, now ascending then descending and forthwith retrograde: whose perfection as they account it, doth not only consist in motion, as that of the Heavens, but in moving without their circles, forgetting that sure rule of the heathen: (o) Id unumquemque decet maxim, quod unius cujusque est maxim. that chief concerns every man, that most properly belongs to him. A Minister's charity must begin at home: and to speak in the words of Luther he should be nailed to his own Pulpit. 2. A second sort of wanderers there are, The second sort have neither centre nor circumference. I cannot call them star or lights, as Christ testifies of John the Baptist, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That he was a burning and a shining light, placed in the Jewish Church as in a candlestick; But as if they were light without a socket, lights in the abstract, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and that of the world in general, as Apostolical men whose commission is as large as the whole earth; they have neither centre nor circumference. These are our vagrant curriers, itinerant and erroncous Clergy men, who never leave compassing the earth to and fro, and yet not to make a Proselyte with the Pharisees; travelling from place to place with a little pocket learning as with a lawful pass: and seldom out of their way, though as seldom in it, after the manner of common beggars. Begging it may be on the Sabbath day for a gratuity and free benevolence in the pulpit, and lashing out most licentiously the week following in an Alchouse. St. Paul earnestly the requests the prayers of the Thessalonians in his own behalf and fellow-labourers.; That we may be delivered, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, from unreasonable & evil men, 2 Thess. 3.2. this he specifies as the end of his desire. And they if any other are not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and that in the proper sense and signification; men without mansion or dwelling place, and we have great cause to second Saint Paul's desires, and Pastor and people to join in prayer with the Thessalonians, that we may be delivered from them. 3. The busy Intruder. The third species of this disordered and outlawed company is the busy encroacher and intruder, and that either by 1. Speculative curiosity. 2. Or Actual usurpation. 1. By speculative curiosity. There is a stickling and a stingling generation of quicksilver spirits and pragmatical dispositions, (p) Curiosi ad inquirendam vitam alienam, incuriosi ad corrigendam suam. August. Not more curious in another man's matters then incurious in their own, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as St. Peter rightly characters them, 1 Pet. 4.15. most diligent and uncessant Visitours in a strange diocese, thrusting their sharp sickles into the hearvest of each man's affairs, and stirring their restless Oar in every Boat that passes; as if they were Inquisitors General, and had the privilege and faculty of that house to examine and make search at pleasure, or were retained as private confessors, that might plumb and sound the bottom of men's hearts, and dive into the secrets of all estates by their prying curiosity: these of all other are the most lazy Drones, and the greatest enemies to all honest labour; as appears by St. Paul's opposition, 2 Thess. 3.11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: They work not at all, but are busy bodies: so that busy bodies work not all, and their business causes them to omit and neglect their business (q) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Agatho● apud Athicaum, li. 5. their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their affected and idle meddlings prove their most painful exercise, and while with Martha they are troubled about many things they attend not that one thing which is necessary. 2. By actual usurpation. But besides the busy intruder there is an actual and unjust usurper of another's place and function far more dangerous than the former, who cast off their ordinary trade of life as familiarly as a waste garment; & shift themselves out of one calling into another as a Mariner shifts his sails as the flickering wind turns and chaps out of one quarter into another, the wind of necessity, advantage and advancement, ubicunque flat ventus, exin velum vortitur. By what right and warranty Civilians now turn Divines, and own their livings whose livery they scorn to wear, I list not to dispute: And yet me thinks they seem to entrench upon the Apostles Canon, 1 Cor. 7.24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Let him therein abide with God: this above all other seems to me a strange wonder in this our Israel. Is Saul also among the Prophets? and lay men in holy orders? as if every blue Apron might turn professor of Divinity, and each unlearned tradseman accustomed only to his yardward, toss Theological questions in the Pulpit, which he understands not, as if they were to be measured by the Ell! O confidence shall I call it, or insolent presumption! not only to touch the tottering Ark with unhallowed hands as Vzzah did, who was stricken with sudden death, but to make the living Ark the Church of God, to reel and stagger by laying hands upon it. The heathen Philosopher shall confute them who hath laid down this for a grounded Maxim in the school of natural Religion. (r) Aristot. 7. Polit. cap. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, let no Husbandman or handicraft person be a Priest; for it greatly importeth the good of all men that God be reverenced, with whose honour it standeth not, that they who live of base and manuary trades should be publicly employed in his service. Nor doth it suit with the decent order, or benefit of God's Church and people. 4. The licentions Libertine. The fourth and last sort of disordered persons is the licentious libertine these are the parties, I cannot call them men, that St. Paul fought with at Ephesus; Here only lies the difference; they were Beasts after the manner of men; these men after the manner of beasts. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as he speaks) whose life is a continual pampering and fatting for the day of slaughter: And as Saint Peter describes them to the life, 2 Pet. 2.12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Brute beasts led with sensuality made to be taken & destroyed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and shall perish through their own corruption. Such are the common swearer and sacrilegious Sa bath-breaker, men utterly void of all inward sense of God, and reverend observation of his religious worship; I speak this to your shame. Such are the lascivious and unclean livers in what kind soever; the sottish and more than swinish drunkards who thus revive and cheer up their drenched and drowned spirits, sauced as it were in their liquor in the Epicures song or sonnet, Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die. As if (s) Ebrii & ructantes intrarent in Paradisum. Hieronym. reeling and belching they should stumble upon Heaven in their way, or size and fall unawares into Paradise. Expect not I should run Division upon them as in the former, and give in a list of the several branches. For behold a company, as Leah spoke at the birth of her son Gad; And well may their name be called Legion, as the Devils confessed in the Gospe, for they are many. Sufficient it is barely to have mentioned them, the very naming of them being (as the Philosopher speaks of some (t) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aris. Ethi. lib. 2. c. 6. vild affections) conjoined with a secret filthiness And hard it is (I say not impossible) to reprove such onormous sins, and not to incur and commit sin in the mere reproof; or to stir, much more to rake in such a noisome puddle, and not to raise an odious stench and savour. And thus I am quit at length of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these unruly ones in my Text in speaking whereof marvel not if my Method hath been somewhat perplexed and confused, as my matter was disorder; nor that I have been so copious in the handling, as having thrust in my Beast into so wide a Field, wherein there was no hedge, (as the Jewish Proverb runs.) And treated of such an argument, as wanted all bounds and limits. 2. I now pass from the object to the act, or duty here enjoined; The Act or duty iujoined. Admonish. from the offenders to the censure of their fault, comprised in this one word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 admonish those that are unruly. Wherein we may take notice of a threefold observation. 1. Ordo. 2. Modus. 3. Ratio. 1. Ordo, the order of the duty, admonish in the first place. Secondly, Modus, the manner of the duty, not rebuke or reproach with bitterness, but lovingly, Admonish. Thirdly, Ratio, the reason or necessity of the duty, admonish them for reformation and amendment: there is indeed a nice difference betwixt corripere at corrigere correptio being only intentio emendandi; correctio emendatio cum effeciu: as the schoolmen teach and gather out of St. Austin: yet for the most part correction necessarily followeth upon correption, especially if it meet with a gracious disposition, and as the wise man verifies it, Prov. 6.23. Correction for instruction is the way of life. 1. I begin with the order of the duty, which is the first in order, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 admonish in the first place. First, the order of the Duty. There are Three terms in Scripture exactly expressing and deciphering the nature of the duty. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Each of these exceeding the other in the degrees and measure of it. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That is a kind of striking and forcible beating of another as the word imports with vehemency and carnestness of reproof, from which the gravity of some men's persons and the dignity of their places exempt and proves a supersedeas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rebuke not an Elder, So St. Paul instructs Timothy, 1 Tim. 5.1. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is a more mild and gentle kind of reprehension, yet joined for the most part with some acrimony and sharpness of speech, and exemplary punshment inflicted upon the offender, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, It is sufficient to the same man that he was rebuked of many, 2 Cor. 2.6. that is the Apostles determination in the case of the incestuous Corinthian. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is a bare minding and remembrancing, a putting of the mind in order by advertisement and admonition. This of all the rest is the most fair and favourable course, freest from all manner of sharpness, and smartness, and in that regard must primarily and principally be attempted. To what purpose serve extremities, but in case of extremity: in vain it were to enterprise and endeavour the effecting of any design, per plura, which may be compassed per pauciora, By more direct and gentle means; if single admonition will serve the turn, what mean the thundering of the Pope's bolts and cracks, the roaring of his ●ulls to the amazement of the world. What need the sending forth and scattering of Excommunications at the first dash; as if the giving men over into the power of Satan, were but a matter of sport and pastime, who might be reclaimed in a far more easier and speedy way. Quorsum haec perditio? To what end is all this waist? Great is the affinity betwixt soul and body, both in the disease, and the remedies: that which Physic is unto the one, the same is correction unto the other. And there must be observed the same rule and method in the application of the means of cure. There are three parts of Physic. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And so many ways there are to help the natural diseases of an ill affected body. 1. By Diet. 2. By Potions. 3. By Surgery. All which we find by way of Analogy and proportion in curing the spiritual malady of the soul, and are excellently compared together by Clemens Alexandrinus. (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Diet of the soul is admonition, forbidding that which is simply hurtful in itself or contrary to the disposition of the patiented, and affording strong and wholesome nonrishment. (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Reproof though mild and moderate is as a medicinal potion that hath always a tang of bitterness; that dissolves those sinful passions which are grown hard and tough, that purges out the inward corruptions of an unclean life: that brings down the swell of pride and arrogance, and restores the inward man to sound and perfect health. (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Paedag. lib. 1. Rebuke if sharp and keen is as the spiritual surgery of the soul, which doth not only cut to the life and quick, but quite cut of the dead works of sin as members that are incurable. As therefore potions are no way necessary or expedient, nor must be administered to the languishing and feeble patient, who only by a regular abstinence, or by a physical kind of Diet may in due time be recovered; nor must those parts be utterly divided from the unity of the body for some wounds and ulcers, that may otherwise be closed and healed up; no more must the faults of men in a kind of self-pleasing cruelty be openly lanced and ripped up (as if they meant to read a lecture of Anatomy) by cutting rebukes and menaces: nor too too strongly wrought upon, usque ad habitum corporis, to the utmost ability of their patient, (a fault very rife and common among many unskilful empirics in Religion) by the purging potion of reprehension; which may first of all be cured by the spare Diet of Admonition. St. Paul seems to enforce and press the duty, and that by way of allusion to the former Metaphor; if any man be fallen upon occasion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of Prolepsis or anticipation, being suddenly surprised and unawares, ye which are spiritual restore him with the spirit of meekness, Gal. 6.1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith the original, after the manner of skilful Chirurgeons, who are not wont to break a bone that is only dislocated and out of joint; but with a dexterous and nimble hand are wont to remove it into the proper socket and carefully bind it up. For many there are as carefully affected to the imposthume of their vices, as the King of Egypt's daughter to the impostum in her Breast, which she could not endure to have once touched with a lancing instrument, and had it at length opened with a penknise, secretly enclosed and covered over with a water sponge prepared for that purpose. And they that cannot abide the sharp lancet of reproof, must be warily handled with the soft and smooth sponge of gentle admonition, especially in the first place. That is the order of the duty. Secondly, from hence take notice of the Modus, the manner of the duty, Secondly, The manner of the duty. it is but a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not corripite, but monete, amissam mentem reponite; as Beza with the Greek scholiast fitly render the signification of the word. No way importing any severe chastisement and correction, but only a brotherly admonition, fashioned and shaped as it were in the tender bowels of an affectionate charity and compassion. Our Saviour confirms and warrants the Modus by his own rule and precept, Mat. 8.15. If thy brother trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault betwixt him and thee alone; Non dicit accusa nec increpa nec vindictam expete; (as an ancient glosses upon the place) but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only argue him as guilty and put him in remembrance; and that between him and thee alone, who as he hath sinned (In te) so must he be admonished (Inter to) the censure must be as private as the salt, which if committed in secret and published upon the house top, it is not the part of a (z) Non correctores, sed Proditor. August. reprover but of a most dangerous traitor in the judgement of St. Austin. Shall I come unto you, saith Saint Paul to the Corinthians, 1 Cor. 4.21. With the rod, in love, and in the spirit of meekness. Shall I come? he demurs and makes a pause? which of the two were most behooveful and convenient for himself and them, and that not without cause: for actions of this nature must be squared by a double rule, 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Their necessity, and their decency and fitness: Amendment being the and intended in admonition, which cannot always be procured by the rod, but by the spirit of meekness. (a) Ferrum de manubrio prosilit, cum de correptione sermo durior excidit. Gregor. Cur. part. 2. cap. 10. Too harsh an increpation (saith Gregory) is like an Axe that flies from the handle, and kills our Brother on a sudden, which should only cut down the Briars and Brambles of his corruptions. And it is in reproving the faults of others, as in the snuffing of a Candle, which if rightly done, it maketh it burn more bright and clear; but if too much of the week be taken off, it quite extinguisheth and puts it out. Yet herein not an Arithmetical, but a Geometrical proportion must be observed, and respect had to the nature and quality of the sin, and to the proper inclination of the offender; even as a prudent Father corrects his tender child with an easy touch of the hand, or a small and tender twig: but if grown up to maturity of years and parts, he makes use of a staff and cudgel (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Epi ph. therein applying himself to their several ages and coustitutions. Some men are of a sullen and churlish disposition, and somewhat resemble the nature of that (c) Vngentem pungit pungentem ungit. plant, which if lightly touched it pricks and stings; but if roughly handled, it appears soft and smooth; like unto the goats of the mount Oeta, which never gave any milk, till the shepherds had (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Arist. lib. 3. de Hist. Animal. ca 20. rubbed their teats with nettles, and so made them smart. There are obstinate and stiff necked sinners whose brows are made of brass, & their heart as hard as the Adamant: Such must be rebuked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a piercing and cutting manner: so Paul prescribes Titus to deal with the stubborn Cretians Tit. 1.13. the disease that is habitual and inveterate cannot be removed with a gentle and easy Dosis which doth rather stir and anger, then purge out the corrupt humours. So fareth it with customary and common sins, a mild reproof doth but animate and encourage them, and makes them seem as light as the reprehension. And as our Saviour speaks of some sort of devils, so may be said of some kind of evils: this generation is not cast out without prayer and fasting; such means as are strong and powerful. Nevertheless if it be possible and as much as lies in us, there must be only a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, we must admonish those that are unruly, and that in the spirit of meekness. A threefold caution in the manner of our admonition. In the exercise whereof a threefold caution and condition must be observed, all noted from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 First, our admonition must be general and universal without exception or respect of persons; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the full extent and latitude, and there is none so great and mighty, but may shall within the compass of it. And being such we must not stick to follow David's precedent, who said unto the foolish, be not so foolish, and to the wicked lift not up your Horns, Psal. 25.4. nor fear to tell the Pope's holiness, as St. Paul withstood St. Peter to his face, Domine cur●ita facis? though we therein cross the Canon law, (which excepts him from censure should he seduce many thousands to destruction:) as that crosses the canon of sacred Scripture. Secondly, our admonition though general yet must it not be personal and particular, pointing out men expressly as with the finger and speaking unto any emphatically in the words of N●than to David, thou art the man: for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the plural and not in the singular number. This was the gravity and discretion of ancient times, St. Austin relating his practice in this kind (c) Auresomnium pulso, sed conscientias quorundam convenio. August. I say not thou Adulterer correct thyself, but whosoever art infected with that vice in this people, do thy best to rectify and reform it. And it is St. Hieroms profession to his friend Rusticus (f) Ego neminem nominabo, nec veteris Comaediae licentia certas personas eligam atque perstringam. Hieron. Epi. add Rustic. I will name no man, nor bring men's persons upon the stage in a licentious manner, as they did of old in their comedies. Such should our admonitions be, especially if publicly delivered in the Pulpit: like unto a field without coming home to any: lest otherwise by dealing too roundly and punctually with men's persons, by turning Sermons into Satyrs, into Philippics and open invectives; we do not only expose their names to reproach and infamy, but confirm and harden them in their Impiety. We resemble Mice in the property of their nature, in nibbling & biting at men's reputation, in cropping their credit; as Tertulian was wont to stile Martion, (g) Tertul. adv. Marc. Must Ponticus, the Mouse of Pontus. And show ourselves in the judgement of Bernard, (h) Corrosores potius quam correctores. Bern. Epist. 178 rather Corroders, than Correctors. Thirdly, our Admonition, though not personal and particular, yet must it aim directly and immediately at the sin; for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the concrete, which notes both the Subject and the Adjunct, and is the proper name of the sinner. And as Gregory tells Venantius, (i) Ego sic personam diligo ut vitia tua corrigam; et sic vitia tua corrigo ut personam diligam. Gregor. ad Venantium. I so correct thy faults, that withal love thy person; and I so love thy person, that I likewise correct thy faults; Even so though we tender men's persons with due respect and reverence, yet must we not shoot at Rovers, or beat the Air in an empty discourse, that breaks forth violently like a flash of lightning, and seizeth upon no particular subject; but come close and home to the matter in hand, and effectually admonish men of their disorder. This is the Modus, and the manner of the duty. Thirdly, consider the Ratio, the reason or necessity of the duty, Admonish them that are disordered. And why? Thirdly, the reason of the Duty. to reduce them into order; that being forewarned they may be forearmed against the danger of the next encounter. Correct thy Son and he will give thee rest, and will give pleasure to thy soul, saith the wise man, Prov. 29.17. (k) Aurum eget percussione et Puer verberatione. Ber. Syra. apud. Drus. Gold stands in need of beating, and children of another kind of beating. The beating of the one gives beauty and lustre to the Gold, and works it into any form and fashion: and the beating of the other makes them more tractable and ingenuous. Neither is correction more necessary for children, than admonition for perfect men. Our Saviour could not prescribe a more soverein remedy for sin committed, Mat. 18.15. If thy brother trespass against thee, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, argue and admonish him: If he hear thee, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Thou hast gained thy Brother. He hath not so much gained himself, as thou hast made a private benefit and advantage; who thereby becomes our letter of commendation, our joy our (l) Et per salutem alterius, nobis acquiritur Salus. Hier. in loc. crown of rejoicing. So that admonition in the issue proves as profitable to the Monitor and Adviser, as necessary and healthful to the Offender, and that upon a double ground or reason. 1. A double ground of Admonition. The one, Debitum Justitiae. 2. The other, Actus Charitatis. First, admonition is Debitum justitiae; Thou shalt plainly rebuke thy neighbour, Levit. 19.17. Thou shalt; a powerful and a peremptory command. The silly Ass challenges our helping hand by God's appointment, and must be lifted up, that lies groaning under the burden; yea, though it be our enemies. And doth God take care of Oxen or Asses? it is the Apostles Question. Surely, yes, yet hath he a far greater care of collapsed sinners; They are of more value than many Asses. (m) Cadit Asina, & est qui relevet, perit Anima & non est qui recogitet. Bern. The Ass falls down, and is raised up; but a Soul perisheth, and there is none that takes notice of it: was the pathetical complaint of devout Bernard. Secondly, Admonition is Actus charitatis, which consists of a Soul as well as a Body, and exercises itself both in corporal and spiritual Duties. Visito, poto, cibo, redimo, tego, colligo, condo. Instrue, castiga, jejuna, solare, fer, ora. These are the works of charity, all comprised in that old Distich after the Poetry of the Schoolmen. So that Castiga, is an inward act of charity, and a spiritual kind of Almos, relieving the sinful Soul in her necessity: And more properly belongs to the true nature of Charity, than any outward expressions of liberality. Ad charitatem magis pertinet Remotio peccati, quam remotio exterioris damni, aut corporalis nocumenti; it is the sound conclusion of Aqumas. And this Remotio peccati, is procured by admonition, and that in two respects. First it removes the guilt of sin from the committer, as the principal, either by way of prevention of remedy, putting a Bridle in his Mouth, and a Hook in his Nostrils to restrain and curb the violence of his desire; or else chastising him with the lashes of shame and sorrow, by remembrancing him of the fact. This is the reason of the connexion, Levit. 19.17. Thou shalt plainly rebuke thy neighbour, and not suffer him to sin. Rebuke, it doth not suffer sin, but brings a Quare impedit against it, and overrules it perforce. And the want hereof takes away remorse and apprehension, (n) Non putat peccare qui à nemine corripitur. That man will never be sensible of his fault, much less eschew it, who is not first admonished. Secondly, Admonition removes the guilt of sin from the Reprover, as being accessary by consent; For silence in this case is consent: (o) In omnibus peccantibus pecco, quando eos quos scio peccasse, crudelis quodam animi malignitate non increpo. Prosper. not to forbid, is to command: not to control, is to countenance and to allow: Even as it is all one in matter of Theft, to hold the sack, or to fill it. To abstain from a free and just admonition for fear of offence and displeasure, is a most cruel kind of mercy to the party whom we thus fond seem to respect and tender: as if being in present danger of drowning, we should not dare to catch them by the hair of the head, lest they should lose some few hairs. And it is no less cruelty unto ourselves ofttimes involving both the one and other in the same common vengeance: as it did the (p) Quia eorum peccatis damnabilibus parcunt, dum eos in suis licet levibus & venialibus metuunt, jure cum eis temporaliter, flagellantur; quamvis in aeternum minime puniantur. August de Civitate Dei. Christians with the Pagans, who also tasted of the violence of the Goths and Vandals, for not being Monitors to them to amend their Idolatry. And this with the former shows the reason and the necessity of the Duty; from which I now pass, to the third branch of the Text, The circumstance of the persons to whom the exercise of the Duty is delegated and referred. And these are the Brethren. Might the Brethren of the Separation, unnatural brethren indeed, and such as will not dwell together in unity; The third part of the Text. The subject or the parties whom the duty concerns. The Brethren. might these expound and comment upon the Text, they would from hence infer, as from a most evident and pregnant proof, the undeniable power and authority of Lay Elders here charactered to the life, under the name of Brethren; to interpose and intermeddle in Church-censures, though without all ground and warrant, either of Text or Truth. And why may they not as well challenge the privilege to preach the Word, and to administer the Sacraments, as rudely hang the Church's Keys at their own Girdles, and usurp spiritual Jurisdiction. This is an opinion of Fancy rather, which though it were sound and orthodox in itself, yet malam caudam trahit, It carries with it a bad tail, and draws after it disorder and confusion; And God is not the Author of confusion, but of peace, as in the Churches of the Saints, 1 Cor. 14.33. yea proves extremely pernicious and dangerous, not only to the unity and decency of the Church, but to the state and being of it: For, as the blood in the natural body, if it falls extra vasa, doth soon corrupt and putrify; So doth Ecclesiastical power, when it comes into Lay men's hands, being then Extra vasa, the proper vessels of the Clergy. And let me speak to these Sectaries and their abettors, as freely as plainly in the words of Moses to Corah and his confederates; Ye take too much upon you ye sons of Levi, (or rather ye sons of Lay men) God hath taken thee to him, and all thy Brethren the sons of Levi with thee; and seek ye the office of the Priesthood likewise? Num. 16.7, 10 A second sort there are professedly opposite unto the former, trampling upon the necks of the common people, with the supercilious Pharisee, in the proud stile of Populus Terrae, as men of no account and reckoning; who because they must not presumptuously shuffle themselves into the office of the Clergy, condemn it as a piece of spiritual Sacrilege in Lay Christians, to meddle at all in matters of Religion. Yea, to make Piety the subject of their discourse in ordinary conference, and to reprove a notorious sinner to his face in private; is most unjustly conceived by some, an infallible mark of a precise and pragmatical follow, and a high strain of singularity. Both these are dangerous extremities. There are two kinds of Admonition. 1. Juridical. 2. Fraternal. 1. Of Ecclesiastical Authority. Two kinds of Admonition. 2. Of private Love and Duty. There is a Corripe inter te & illum; and a Dic Ecclesiae; The one appropriate and entailed unto Churchmen. The other in general appertaining to Christians in common. And these alone are the Brethren here specified in my Text. Give me leave nevertheless, though not to stretch and strain it, yet at least to amplify and enlarge it in the Application, to four sorts of men. 1. The People. Four sorts of Monitors. 2. The Pastor. 3. The Ecclesiastical Judge. 4. The Town Officer. All which must admonish those that are unruly. First, the people must mutually admonish one another, Numquid ego sum custos fratris mei? First the people. was the word of Cain, a speech as wicked as the person. The faithful are stamped and sealed with another mark in their forehead, Then spoke they that feared the Lord, every one to his neighbour, Mal. 3.16. And when God denounceth the fierceness of his wrath, against the horrible provocations of his people, he adds this punishment among the rest; Yet let none rebuke nor reprove another, Hos. 4.4. And certainly 'tis the defect and default of the people, in the negligent omission of this duty, that makes the Minister's task so hard and difficult: They laying this heavy burden of Admonition upon the Ministers shoulders, and in the mean time refuse, as the Pharisees of old, to touch it so much as with one of their fingers. It is not for them to become Priests or Clerks; (so they think and speak) no nor religious men in the largest sense; And they say in effect of the sins of others, as the High Priest spoke of that of judas; What is that to us? look thou to that: Bewraying an immoderate and selfe-respecting love, not only in the things of this life, but in point of Religion, in the great and weighty business of men's Salvation. I beseech you then brethren of the common people, Admonish them that are unruly. Secondly, the Pastor must admonish the people. It is not sufficient for him to live well himself, Secondly, the Pastor. if he corrects him not by reproof that lives amiss; so shall he be punished for another sin, were he innocent in his own person. Son of man, I have made thee a watchman to the house of Israel, saith God to the Prophet Ezekiel, Ezek. 3.17. And what is the office of a watchman? Therefore hear the word of my mouth, and give them warning from me. And if thou givest him not warning, nor speakest to the wicked, to admonish him of his wicked way, that he may live; The same wicked man shall die in his iniquity, But his blood will I require at thy hands. Who (q) Quis roge tam saxei pectoris, quis tam ferreus erit, quem sententia ista non terreat. Prosper. in locum. is there of such a flinty heart, and iron sinews, whom this speech of God to the Prophet, doth not affright and terrify? saith Prosper upon the place. All other men must answer personally for themselves, but the Minister stands charged with the souls of his people, as Judah was pledge for Benjamin: which made Saint chrysostom wish, and that in a strange manner, that there was no day of Judgement. Great cause we have frequently and seriously to ponder Saint Paul's charge to Timothy, and that with fear and trembling. I charge thee before God, and before the Lord jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearanee, and in his Kingdom, 2 Tim. 1, 2. How could he adjure him in a more solemn and dreadful manner? and to what end? Preach the word of God; bare reading will not serve the turn; monthly, or quarterly preaching is not sufficient: Be instant, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, insist and dwell upon it: In season and out of season. This is never out of season, as other creatures are, unless it be in respect of the indisposition of the Hearers. Improve, rebuke, exhort, with all long suffering and doctrine. And to Saint Paul's charge to Timothy, let me add the observation of my Text, I beseech you brethren of the Clergy, Admonish them that are unruly. Thirdly, The Ecclesiastical Judge must admonish likewise, and so strengthen the hands of the minister, Thirdly, the Ecclesiastical Judge. which are oft times weak and feeble for want of assistance; (as Aaron and Hur supported those of Moses) by the sinews of his authority. And would he have his censures like goads and nails fastened, he must begin In proprio Lare, in his own court and consistory; So David resolves and vows, Psal. 101.3, 8. I will walk in the uprightness of mine heart in the midst of my house, in the first place; and what follows in the next? Betimes will I destroy all the wicked out of the land. And 'tis our Saviour's counsel to the critical and censorious Hypocrite, Matth. 7.5. Primum ejice trabem ex oculo tuo, then shalt thou see clearly the mote that is in thy brother's eye. St. Paul expostulates with the outside Jew, not without admiration, Rom. 2.21, 22. Thou that teachest another, teachest thou not thyself? Thou that sayest a man should not commit adultery, yea and punisheth it in another, dost thou commit adultery? And there is none of us to learn what that means, Turpe est Doctori, cum culpa redurguat ipsum. The Snuffers of the Temple were made of the purest Gold; so they who are by their place appointed to correct the corrupt manners of a sinful generation, had need be among men as Gold among Metals the chiefest for weight and worth: These mystical snuffers if soul within, will hardly by snuffing others, make their own light shine the brighter. If any demand with John Baptists Hearers, And what shall we do? I will return no other advise, then is by him afforded to the soldiers, Luke 3.14. Do violence to no man, accuse no man falsely, be content with our wages. Admonish indifferently and impartially without respect of persons, not trucking and bartering with the sins of men after the manner of Merchants: and to speak in your own language not commuting a penance into a payment, which (if I be not deceived) is no part of commutative justice. Admonish conscientiously and in singleness of heart, out of a fervent zeal of God's glory, the Church's reformation, the faithful discharge of your private interest, and not for filthy lucre sake. Let it never be said of this Court, which was commonly voiced of the Court of Rome; Plus nituntur pecunias colligere, quam culpas corrigere; That they endeavoured rather to collect the people's moneys, than any way to correct their manners. And I beseech you Brethren of this Court and place. Admonish them that are unruly. Fourthly, The Town-officer, be he Questman or Churchwarden, Fourthly, The Town-officer. they also must admonish by way of Certificate and Presentment; For as the Eunuch complained to Philip in another case, How can I understand without an Interpreter? Acts 8.31. so may the Ecclesiastical Judge in this; How can I admonish without a Monitor and Informer. Inform than they must, and not give in a blank verdict, or return an Omnia bene, like unto that Athenian Traveller, whereof Plutarch mentioneth, who being asked at his coming home how matters were at Athens, forthwith passed this smooth and ready answer to the question; Omnia pulchra, All there was well and good: Ironically insinuating, Omnia pulchra putari, Nihil turpe, That all things were there accounted good, and nothing wicked or dishonest. You cannot be ignorant of the Rights of your Office, the strictness of your Oath, the enormity of the sins committed in your several parishes; yea, may not most of you give in evidence out of your own experience, and affirm as David did, I have seen cruelty and strife in the City; I have seen secure sleeping in the Church, brutish drunkenness in an Alehouse, and do you hold your peace? Do you know them yourselves and not cause the Authors likewise to know their abominations? Lay your hands upon the heads of these beasts, as the offenders did under the Law; cast the first stone at these malefactors, not to kill them, but to give them life; what though you cannot reform and rectify disorders? as the Emperor spoke of Galba's crooked back, Ego monere possum, corrigere non possum; yet may you certify and admonish: nor shall your labour be in vain in the Lord; I will only give you your charge in St. Paul 's words inverted, Phil. 4.8. Whatsoever things are sinful, whatsoever things are dishonest and profane, offensive to God, scandalous to his Church; If there be any vice or wickedness think on these things. And I beseech you Brethren, Churchwardens, with the rest of Town-officers, Admonish them that are unruly. 2. Thus am I fallen at length upon the second General and last part of the Text, The second part of the Text. The motive we beseech St Paul's Motive or Excitation to the duty, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, We beseech you: Where we might take notice of these two Particulars. 1. St. Paul's Earnestness. 2. St. Paul's Gentleness. 1. He doth not barely exhort them in a soft and easy strain, after a calm and cool manner; but earnestly beseeches them, with veheniency and importunity. 2. Nor doth he express himself by way of command, Sic volo, sic jubeo; Fiat, Fiat; which is the formal tenor of the Pope's Edicts, though Pope Zachary somewhat mistook the style, and changed it into a Fiatur. For knowing that man is a reasonable creature that must rather be led then drawn, and that Faith is to be persuaded and not enforced, Saint Paul beseeches them with meekness of spirit, and tenderness of Affection. 1. Some there are as soft and smooth in their instruction, as Jacob in his Body. The words of their mouth are softer than butter, and as sweet as soft; saying, Peace peace, where there is no peace: I hope better things of you, and such as accompany salvation; Then which what more ordinary; though indeed unless they hope as Abraham did above hope, there can be no hope at all. These come not in the spirit and power of Elias with John the Baptist. They want the spirit of Phineas, which had need be prayed for in the words of Ambrose (r) Veni Phinees Ambros. Serm. 18. in 118. Psal. Come Phinees, take the sword of the Spirit, smite Heresy, strike idolatry, cut the iron sinew of contempt and obstinacy, wound the hairy scalp of such as go on in their wickedness. 2. Others there are, all rough and rugged like Esau, men of a sierce and fiery temper, and know not of what spirit they are made, as Christ told his Disciples, All their Sermons like the Element of Fire, are Excessus fervoris, the extremity and excess of heat. And the pulpit while they are in it, proves like Mount Sinai at the giving of the law all in a flaming fire, sending forth only the terrible thunders & lightnings of the Law, and nothing is to be heard from thence, but the shrill sound of judgement, and of damnation. As therefore Moses and Elias, Elias the hottest man alive, who sucked fire from his Mother's breasts, as St. Basil symbolically describes his zeal: And Moses the meekest man upon earth appeared together with Christ when he was transfigured upon the Mount; So must the fervent spirit of Elias, and the mild spirit of Moses, meet together in the pulpit; As here they did in Saint Paul, and are both joined together, Earnestness, and Gentleness, in this one word; We beseech you. And so the beginning of my Text, hath brought me to the end of my Sermon: And where, or how shall we end better, then with terms of Supplication. Now we beseech you earnestly, we beseech you gently and meekly; Laity, Clergy, Ecclesiastical and Temporal Officers, Brethren of all sorts, Admonish them that are unruly. The End of this Sermon. THE POLITIC REFORMATION. A SERMON Preached before the Judges, at the general Assizes, holden at Thetford, for the County of Norfolk. And I will turn my hand upon thee, and purely purge away thy dross, and take away all thy Tin, Isa. 1.25. LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. THE POLITIC REFORMATION. ISAIAH. 1.26. And I will restore thy Judges as at the first, and thy Counselors as at the beginning. I Read of a Priest in Germany, The Preface. (a) Vos libenter me non auditis & ego libenter non concionor ideo diu vos non tenebo. In vita Melancth. who for want of better Apology thus prefaced to his Sermon: Neither do I preach willingly nor you hear, and therefore I will not hold you long. Far be it from me, as far as it is from the ingenuity of Christian Charity, so to derogate from the honour of your devotion, as to entertain the least jealousy of your unwillingness, much less to betray mine own in not offering a free will offering; so that I shall not need to capitulate, or condition for a favourable attention by the promise of expedition. My Text happily doth not a little startle and awaken at the first rehearsal and bare sound of the words, and may seem to carry rebuke in the forehead; than which what more requisite in the Speaker? what more behoveful for the Hearers? especially in these ill affected times, that are less impatient of their Malady, then of their Remedy. And yet conceive not out of forestalled prejudice, that I intent to imitate the Wasp or Hornet, whose property it is to sting; or delight to play the busy Fly, lighting only upon parts exulcerate, the sores and ulcers of the Commonwealth. How easy it is (I am not ignorant) to come within compass of an error, ofttimes the greater, and that in a just, but intemperate reproof: whereof Luther was not free in the judgement of Erasmus, (b) Mu'ta quidem praeclare monet sed utinam civilius admonuisset. Erajm. Epist. lib. 12. ad Rect. Acad. Ersurt. That his admonitions were no less excellent than necessary; but it had been well if he bade seasoned them with more civility. Herein he did amiss, and respect must be had to the Poet's rule, Quid verum quidque decet; which was warily observed by Saint Paul as a notable pattern and example, Acts 26.25. I speak the words of truth and soberness. And this will we do if God permit. The Method of the Prophecy is like the manner of Gods appearing to Eliah upon mount Horeb: first in a boisterous and blustering wind, and then in a soft and still voice. He gins by way of astonishment, with a vehement reprehension of the unheard of abominations of his people the more monstrous because theirs; And solemnly denounceth his sierce wrath against the heads of the committers: and these were the head, the prime and chief among them. Thy Princes are rebellious and companions of thiefs, vers. 23. yea, head and tail were both alike: Every one loveth gifts, and followeth after rewards. All sorts of men had corrupted their ways, and it was then verified of Jerusalem, which Salvian afterwards applied to the City of (c) Plena turbis & turpitudinibus. t Salu. de Carthag. Carthage, that it was as full of sin as of people. Thus is the first part spent in sharp menaces and terms of objurgation; God descends in the sequel, in a calm and gentle strain from matter of terror to the means of their recovery. My Text borders betwixt both, and partakes jointly of a promise and threatening. A promise it is, if we respect the general good thence accrueing to the Nation; but a severe threatening of the persons in particular. Call it, if you please, The Politic Reformation, wherein there are these four parts remarkable. 1. The Author, or Reformer, The Parts of the Text. [I] 2. The nature of the Reformation, and that by way of restoring, [I will restore] 3. The object of Reformation, or Delinquents, [The judges, and the Counsellors]. 4. The Rule or Means of Reformation, [As at the first, as at the beginning.] 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And first of the Author, or Reformer, [I.] Ejus est reficere cujus est facere. And who so fit to be a Reformer as the first former of them. The first part, The Author of the Reformation, [I] It is a sure principle in nature, causes constitutive, are also conservative; and preservation is nothing else but a continued creation. And it holds true likewise in Divinity, The powers that be are ordained of God, Rom. 13.1. all civil honour and authority is from the Prince within the precincts and limits of his Dominion: and God who ordained them at the first, still maintains and bears them up with the word of his power, or else reduces them to their first estate, being collapsed and decayed. Four specialties are necessarily requisite in a Reformer. Four specialties required in a Reformer. 1. Personal Integrity. 2. Perfection of Wisdom. 3. A lawful Warrant. 4. The Sinews of power and strength. All which appertain to God in the highest degree of excellency. 1. The Snuffers of the Temple were made of pure gold; The first, Personal integrity. and so they that go about to correct the crooked manners of others, had need be among men, as gold among metals, the chiefest for weight and worth. It is not without cause, that the Heathen man defines his Orator (d) Vir bonus dicendi peritus. Quintil. Orat. Instit. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazian. Orat, pag. 7. A good man in the first place: For he shall never persuade others, that doth not first amend himself. Lucian's Apothecary is worthily laughed at, for giving remedies for a Cough, and yet was always molested with it. This is the disgrace of the Art, and just cause of contempt and scorn to the professors. And every one in stead of requiring their advice, or following their prescriptions, will be ready to give them a bitter Pill, and admonish them in the tartest manner; Physician heal thyself, Luke 4.23. Such Physicians are they who are very zealous in curing the sores of the Commonwealth, and yet themselves are the foulest Ulcers, and have most need of lancing to let out their corruption: but as Saint Paul speaks of the office of a Bishop, so may I of a Reformer; If any man desire it, he desires a worthy work. Yet is it required in either (as the same Apostle adds) That he be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, without reproof or blame. 1 Tim. 3.2. The Reformer must not be liable to an Informer, or a Promoter; but a rare pattern and paragon of virtue, and teach not so much by precept as by example. Such a one is God, even by the confession of the Heathen. (c) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Clem. Alexan. God is not, he cannot be unjust, but the most righteous of all other; and is therefore styled the Holy of Holies in Scripture, as the Highest Heaven, the Heaven of Heavens, that encloses the inferior Orbs in the vast compass of the body: And so doth God include in the purity of his nature, the utmost perfection of the creature. And as he is holy in himself, and his Will the exact rule of righteousness; not willing things because they are just, but are therefore just because they are willed of him; So is he holy in all his ways, and just in all his works, Psal. 145.17. For shall not the Judge of all the world do righteousness? as Abraham pleads with God, Gen. 18.25. How else could he judge & reform others? Secondly, perfection of Wisdom is of principal importance in a Reformer: The second. Perfection of Wisdom. To discern and judge a right, and to be able to put a difference. The Eye is a precious and a choice part; yet is not every unskilful hand fit to tamper with the blemishes; which in stead of curing the weak and dimmer sight, may soon blind and put it out. There are corruptions in manners, both odious and enormous, which must immediately be redressed; but lesser inconveniencies may be tolerated for a time. Remissness and rigour will do equal harm. The potion may be altogether unpleasant in the taste, and too operative for the state of the patiented. Such a draught did Luthor give the World, Pharmacum violentum & amarum, as Brashius censures it. And the right discerning the quality of the disease, with the application of fit remedies, requires abilities of Wisdom and Discretion. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith the (f) Ethic. lib. 1. cap. 10. Philosopher. And it is the part of a wise man to distinguish in a case of likelihood: and who so fit to be a reformer in this respect as God, in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge; who cun exquisitely determine of matter, manner, circumstance, as well as substance, and cannot be deceived with fair semblances and pretensions. It is Machiavels maxim in his institution of Princes, that they above all others should rest contented (g) Machia. Princ. cap. 18. specie et colore pietatis and that upon this persuasion: nam videndi facultas omnes atting it, attrectandi vero paucos duntaxat, as if they had men only, not God for their overseer, or God were like unto blind Isaac that could not discern without handling: whereas he sees and touches both at once, thus is the council of Achitophel turned into foolishness. Thirdly, The Third. A lawful Warrant. A lawful warranty is absolutely necessary in a Reformer; and no man takes this honour upon him, but he who is called as was Aaron, Heb. 5.5. For St. Paul's Rule is general, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not in Church alone but in Commonwealth. To the truth whereof the very Heathen have subscribed, That good is not good unless it be done well. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Israelites by God's Commandment were to overthrow the Altars and pull down the Images when they were brought into the Land of Canaan. First, they must be possessed of the Land, which should authorise, and as it were legitimate the reformation, and then demolish and subvert their Idols, as Augustine well observes upon the place. And Gregory commends Serenus for his apprehensive suspicion and tender jealously of Idolatry, but faults the rashness of the fact in the violent displacing and removal of the Images; and gravely wisheth and adviseth him (h) utinam zelum tuum discretione condisses. Indict. 4. Epist. 9 to season the rankness of his zeal with the salt of discretion. An excellent Caveat for the vulgar sort and plebeians of our Time, whose inbred property it is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, who looking upon their Superiors with an envious eye, are forward in declaiming liberally against their abuses, ofttimes merely supposed and imaginary; and out of a giddy zeal would fain be tampering in redressing of them: and so cause a greater (i) Nullo potest a schismaticis tanta fieri correptio, quanta est schismatis pernicies. Tertul. Praesc. cap. 60. confusion by a disordered and ungrounded enterprise. Shall I show you their lively portraiture behold it in a story (k) Joseph Bell. Judal. Lib. 6. cap. 1.2. Josephus is the Reporter. There were in Jerusalem in Nero's time, who flocked and herded together by troops and multitudes, in defence as they pretended of Religion and the Temple, surnaming themselves Zelots by way of distinction; yet these were the men that peremptorily refused the conditions of peace offered by Vespasion, and the first that cast fire upon the Temple, which they were engaged to preserve; And were not these true Zelots? and their zeal as hot as fire? and yet without light. These never walked in the light of Christ's example, who would not Umpire in a Law case, though requested, as being without the compass of his Office; Who made me a Judge? This was his allegation. Nor did he permit the Devils to take his name into their unhallowed mouth for want of a calling. God therefore, who is the ultimate object against whom offences of what kind soever are committed, whose unlimited power justly entitles him over all persons and in all causes Supreme Head and Governor, hath a general influence into every matter, and may out of his high prerogative, interpose and reform at pleasure Fourthly, The fourth. Sinews of power and strength. There had need be the sinews of power, where reformation is attempted; thereby enabling the undertakers to pass over difficulties, and even to wade through a Sea of dangers. (e) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Great adventures require suitable abilities in him that manages them. And Philosophy teacheth Omnis Actio est a viciaria; unless the active and opposing power exceed the force of the resisting there can be no victory. And who sees not that the best cause is ofttimes crushed and trodden under foot, not being backed and seconded with the strength of authority, which exposes the enterprise to bitter derision and contempt. And each one that considers, will be ready to let fly their taunting censure; This man began to build but was not able to finish it. Such a one Sanballat and Tobiah accounted Nehemiah, when he went about to repair the Temple; What do these weak Jews? will they fortify themselves? will they finish it in a day? will they make the stones whole again out of the heaps of dust, seeing they are burnt? And though they build, yet if a Fox go up, he shall even break down their stone wall, Nehem. 4.2, 3. Thus did they discourage them from the work. And Albertus Crantzius seriously endeavoured to take off the edge of Luther's eagerness, when he first adventured to cry down the Pope's Indulgences, (f) Chytraeus. Chronico Sax. Lib. 2. Frater vade in cellam, & dic Domine miserere nostri: This was his council to him, as if to effect it had been impossible. And his friend Faber told him, that though he was fortified with the whole armour of God, yet he should be encountered with other weapons, sword, spear, & shield, out of Goliah's armoury; while he came out against them in the Name of the Lord of Hosts: But God is the Lord of Hosts, This is his Name, and his memorial throughout all Ages. The Prophet describes him like a man of War, Isa. 59.17. He put on righteousness as an Habergeon, and a Helmet of salvation upon his Head. And he put on the garments of vengeance for clothing, and was clad with zeal as a cloak. And when any strange work is foretold or promised, this is usually prefixed to assure the accomplishment, The zeal of the Lord of Hosts will perform it. And such is his invincible power, and the strength of his right hand, That when he gins to reform, (as himself speaks of Eli's house) he will also make an end. 2. The second part of the Text, is the nature of the reformation, The second part. The nature of the reformation by way of restoring I will restore and that by way of restoring [I will restore]. It is not a forming but a reforming, an innovation but a renovation, a framing, but a lash●●●ing: God deals not as a Creator as at the first, when he made all things new of no preaexistent matter; but as a wise Physician, he cures the ancient maladies and diseases of the same body. God doth not abolish, but restore, which Act of God, hath a double reference. 1. To their Places. A double 2. To their Persons. First, God doth restore, First, to their places. not abrogate their place and function and dissolve their profession; all innovations are dangerous and warily to be attempted, especially when they carry along with them any show of violence and extremity; then are they utterly to be declined and abandoned: non est movendum quod sine sanguine moveri nequit. And it is far safer for the Body's health (in the judgement of those whom we are bound to believe in their own Art) to abide in a corrupt and foggy Air, then remove to a pure; to continue an inveterate custom, though somewhat obnoxious in itself then admit of an alteration: and it may in some times and cases, prove as safe for the body Politic: And of this mind were the Thebans, who caused him to come with a halter to the Tribunal who proposed a new law; yet when there is a sufficient cause that doth necessitate a change, it must warily be attempted and by degrees; it is the Naturalists rule (m) Omnis transitus ab extremo ad extremum fit per medium. that there is no passage from one extreme to another, but by a mean; and it is nature's course converting fire into air, and air into water, which agree in some symbolical and common quality; not turning one contrary into another: and it ought likewise to be observed as a Policy of state. Let no man think I plead for a toleration of corruption, as some have done under that pretence: witness that frigid excuse of Pope Adrian in his instructions to his Legate, that he could not suddenly reform all enormities of the Church, and he would have no man wonder at it: for that the disease was habituate, and every mutation liable to extreme peril; et qui nimis mungit, elicit sanguinem. Thus wresting Scriptures to his own destruction. I drive not the same project, nor speak in favour of the disease, but only censure the preposterous application of the remedy. Some spirits there are over jealous and fantastical, who would cast a Commonwealth into a new platform all at once; and utterly abandon on a sudden, whatsoever hath been perverted to abuse: Herein resembling those weak-spirited soldiers that will not venture upon a stratagem that hath formerly been practised by an adversary, and are so terrible afraid of being found in the trenches of the enemy, that they out run their own camp. I may not unfitly parallel their ridiculous courses, with the folly of that painter, in the Reign of Queen Mary; who having drawn the picture of King Henry the eight, against her coming through the City in triumph, with a Bible in his hand, and being checked by a great counsellor of State, and wished to wipe it out: because he would make sure to leave none of the Bible, he wipes out book, and hand withal. There must be a distinction made betwixt these things themselves, and the corruption inherent or adherent: that fault which proceedeth out of the (n) Thom. Par. 1. quest. 41. Art. 6. nature of the fact itself, being simply evil: and that which ariseth from the abuse of what is good in its own kind, and yet becomes evil only by accident. Lycurgus' the wise lawgiver, in this shown himself none of the wisest, in destroying all the vines of Sparta; for that men were made drunk and mad with the wine: who should rather have digged (o) Insanum Deum alio sobrio repressum, castigare. wells and fountains near unto them, & so have taken away the abuse by mixing some quantity of water with it; the Roman Cotta bewrayed little knowledge in the condemning of it, for that it ofttimes proves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 armed wickedness, and so enabled to be the instrument of greater mischief: and devout Bernard justly complains of many in his time, who cried down reading and diversity of study: and that because (p) Prolixa lectio memoriam legentis obliterat. Bern. de inter. domo. cap. 50. overmuch reading debilitates and oppresses the memory of the reader. For in (q) In multisnon usus rerum sed libido utentis in culpa est. August. de Doct. Christ. lib. 3. cap. 13. many things not the use but the disorder of him that useth them must be blamed: and good must not be removed or laid aside, for adjoining and bordering upon evil, as he proves at large against the Donatists: and our upstart Anabapist●s as whelps of the same litter, those Dreamers foretold by Sr. Judas v. 8. that despise dominion, and speak evil of dignities (s) Non debere inter Christian●s esse praetoria, leges, juditia aut jus gladii. Calv. Inst. lib. 4. the Law, Magistracy, judgement, the power of the sword are not to be received or exercised among Christians: it is their own tenet, and it may be occasioned and furthered from the defaults and defects of the Ministers, and their opinion well accords and suits with their practice, one while choosing Knipperdoling for their Consul, and not long after advancing him to the high office of a Hangman. But as tyranny which is an extremity of government is far better than an headless Anarchy; Even so it is to be preferred of the two, (t) Praestat illie esse ubi omnia licent quam ubi nihil. to live under irregular rulers, then utterly to be destitute: God himself determines it by his own testimony: I gave them a King in mine anger, but took him away in my wrath, Hos. 13.11. a wicked King such as Saul was, may be given in God's anger but is taken away in his wrath, which is the fierceness and fury of it; and it is a greater judgement to be without a Governor, then to have one that is ungodly and unworthy. Two means of reformation Two ways there are to redress errors, and rectify abuses. 1. By a total abolition. The one by a total abolition not only of the corruption, but of the thing itself; thus Moses stamped the molten ●alf, and Hezekiah broke the brazen Serpent and did grind it into powder; taking away all mention and memorial. 2. The other by separating the precious from the vile; and removal of the abuse: By separation as in the cleansing of the leprous houses which were scraped and pared, and some stones if need required were pulled out, yet the Pile and frame continued entire, and undemolisht. This is the most sovereign means, as being freest from violence and disorder: and needs must it be so, when God himself is pleased to make choice of it, thy silver is become dross; so he tells the Jews v. 22. the places of their Governors were as pure as silver, but the unequal managing and execution impure dross: and will God consume and melt both promiscuously in the fiery trial as if there were no difference? no his word which is as silver fined seven times in the furnace affirms the contrary, I will purely take away thy dross and purge out all thy tin, v. 25. and then as the wise man speaks, take away the dross from the silver and there shall come forth a vessel for the finer, Prov. 25.4. The Emperor Domitian therefore took a wrong course in banishing all promoters out of Italy, and Pope Nicholas the third, erred for all his infallibility, in thrusting all practisers at law out of Rome, for that (as he said) they lived upon the blood of the poor people: who were soon recalled by Pope Martin his successor, because they brought grist to his Mill. Since then as St. Paul speaks of the law, so it may be said of the profession; the law is good, if a man use it lawfully, 1 Tim. 1.8. and as Bodin well reason's the case, there are no other means to decide controversies, (u) Bodin, de Republ. Se● Lege aut Armis: and the sound of the Laws cannot be heard amidst the clashing of Arms, and neighing of Horses: The calling itself must still be retained and maintained in due honour. And if at any time there be need of censure, it must not be a rigid removal, or an utter extirpation, but only (as God here promises in the Text,) A restoring the judges as at the first, and the Councillors as at the beginning. Secondly, The act of Gods restoring relates to men's persons. It may be by some pecuniary mulct, The second reference to their persons. by a just displacing, or degrading them from the dignity of their office, which with such indignity they had administered; or at least correct them with some milder chastisement, not utterly consume or destroy their persons: Extrema primo nemo tentavit loco, they are only desperate diseases that must have desperate cures. He were an unskilful Physician and cruel Chirurgeon, that cared not to deprive the body of life, being only ulcevous and diseased, or delighted in applying corrosives and caustics, when gentle lenitives would serve the turn; in bruising or breaking bones being dislocated and out of joint, which he should rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (a word borrowed from the practice of that Art) set them in their place and socket, and as St. Paul renders it, Gal. 6.1. Restore them in the spirit of meekness. It is (x) Colum. de re Rustic. Columella's advice touching Landlords, not to exact forfeitures, and to warn their Tenants out for every lesser breach of Covenant; for that Summum jus, est summa crix, and the extremity of the Law is a lawless extremity. A good caveat for greater Lords than they, that they enforce not matters in the strictest rigour, and cause not the Law to be written in blood, like unto those of Draco, and were therefore surnamed, (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Not the Laws of men, but of Draco. And are there not many like that Athenian Lawgiver, that draw the very life blood from those Laws, that were first written in ink. And whilst they press the breasts of the Laws too hard, (as Volusian complains touching the Scriptures) they bring forth blood that strangles, in stead of milk that nourisheth, and so make the Law a kill Letter. God forbade his people to eat the blood of brute beasts, for that vita in sanguine, The life is in the blood. How much more heinous, yea barbarous is it for men in place to glut and gorge their cruelty with their own flesh and blood, after the manner of the Horseleech. The Heathen man cries out against his Rulers, for that they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, devourers of rewards; What would he have said and done, had they been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and fed upon their own kind. It is Saint Gregory's observation, from the benediction of God upon Noah and his posterity: The fear and dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth, and every foul of the heaven, and upon all that moveth upon the earth, and upon all the fishes of the sea, Gen. 9.2. (z) Gregor. in loc. That at first men were Governors of beasts alone, and not of men; but now is the order quite inverted, they are Governors of men, and not of beasts: and must not convert the dreadful seat of Justice into a Shambles, or a Slaughter-house; For man is a noble creature, his life dear and precious, be their manners never so debauched and dissolute, their crime heinous and horrible, yet still they continue men, and call and claim some pity and compassion, for the common interest of humanity. And there must be a reflection from the Magistrate, of the eye of pity and compassion upon the offender, whilst he darts forth the flaming eye of jealousy and fierce indignation upon the danger of the example. Physician's will not take away a few drops of blood from the body natural, but at certain seasons, and in case of necessity: nor must they that are Physicians of the Country be prodigal of their blood, or spend it, much less spill it without just cause. For as Physicians may be murderers as well as others; even so may Judges and Justices as well as Physicians, not only in action, but in affection, if they execute judgement libidine vindictae, non amore justitiae, (as the Schools speak) Rather out of revengeful lust, than a zealous desire of equity. The ancient Law of the (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutar. de sera numin vindict. Egyptians, in reprieving the condemned woman that is found with child, till after the time of her delivery, which is also the law of Nations, is favourable to the Delinquent, and commendable in itself: Yet herein the offspring of the soul is chief to be respected above that of the body; if there appear but some imperfect conceptions, and Embrio's of goodness in the soul, yea a probable hope and presumption of it, great pity it were if the course of justice were not interrupted, or infringed by the connivance, that it should ever prove as the untimely fruit of a woman. Shall I move you to emulation by the example of the Heathen? The Charge of that Roman General Pompey to his outrageous soldiers, Parce civibus, Spare, O spare the Citizens, may serve as a fit Impress for all judges. The profession of Antoninus Pius was as holy as his name, That he had rather lose a member then a Citizen. But above all that memorable speech of our Renowned and ever Happy Queen Elizabeth, deserves to be written with a pen of Iron, and with the point of a Diamond, That next the Scripture, she know no book did her so much good as the frequent reading of seneca de Clementin. To leave till Arguments besides the Text, God honours judges with his name, Judge's must be Gods in two respects. and they should strive also to bono●● themselves by a resemblance of his nature. I have said ye are Gods, Psal. 82.6. Gods by Deputation, Gods by representation, and must be Gods also in the Administration of their office. First in the traversing of the cause by patiented hearing, enquiring and examination of the witnesses. First in the traversing of the cause. The outward position of their bodies in sitting to judge the people, a phrase very ordinary and obvious in the Scripture, should at the least admonish them of the settled composedness of their affections, and deliberate proceeding unto judgement. This well agrees with the sublimity of their places, who should be like the Stars of the Firmament, which as they are higher in situation, so they move with a slower pace, and absolve their courses in a longer time. This is God's order, walking in the Garden in the cool of the day, Gen. 3.8. When God comes to arraign Adam, he walks, and runs not. I will go down and see, so God speaks of the sins of Sodom, Gen. 18.21. First taking diligent notice of the Crime, ere he reins down a shower of Brimstone. Secondly, Secondly in pronouncing and passing. sentence. Judges must be Gods in pronouncing and passing sentence; visiting only with the rods of men, punishing but in measure, and tempering the bitter Aloes of justice and judgement with the candid sweetness of gentleness and moderation. For thus doth God also, he stirs not up all his wrath, but in the midst of judgement he remembers mercy, Habak. 3.2. And here, he destroves not the Judges, nor quite overthrows the Counsellors, but only restores them as at the first, and rectifies them as at the beginning. The third part of the Text concerns the Object, The third part. The object or parties to be reform. or Persons to be reform. The Judges and the Counsellors. I will restore, saith God in the Text: and the promise of this restauration implies and argues their desections and declinings, for as the Emperor Charles the fifth told his Shavelings, and massing 〈◊〉, (b) Si vos sacrisiculi pii es setis, non indiguissetis n●orum censore Luthero. Pet. Matth. lib. 4.2. Narrat. ad finem. If ye had been innocent and blameless, ye should have stood in no need of Luther's, censure; So had the judges persisted in the integrity of their Predecessors, or answered their first institution, why should they be thus poured out from vessel to vessel, as God speaks of Moab: If there had not been sound in them some Errata, and those very palpable, they should not need a new Impression. The ●greatness of place is no sufficient protection or privilege against transgression, but rather an outward occasion of exorbitancy and aggravation of the heinousness; They that are advanced above others, must needs have a pre-eminence in their faults; men of high degree sin with a high hand; and where the train is long, it is not possible but it should gather the more soil: their errors are suitable to the quality of their persons, yea, to the crimson colour of their robe, crimson and scarlet sins, twice dipped and of a double tincture. The Book indeed is not capable of stain, a lively Emblem of their purity that should wear it; Yet if the garment chance to be spotted with the flesh, then as Gregory Nazianzen ●peaks, (c) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianzen. The more glorious the garment is, the stain is far more conspicuous and ho●orious. King Vzziah was stricken with a Leprosy on his forehead, for intruding into the Priest's office; Upon no other place but his forehead, and thus rendered by Saint Chrysostom, (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chrysost. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God as it were denoting and pointing out the height and heinousness of his si●, by the high and visible place whereupon it was inflicted. And Aquinas his observation is pregnant and pertinent to this purpose, The greater the fault was (e) Aquin. 2. Quaest. 102. Art. 3. Tau●● vilior erat species animalis, the meaner and basor was the sacrifice which the Law enjoined. A Calls for the ●rou● of the Priest, and a Goat for the ignorance of the Ruler; It may be to set forth the vildness of their offences above others: which caused devout Ezra to rend his , and pluck his hair, and to sit down aftonied, when he he once heard that the hands of the Rulers and of the Princes had been chief in the Trespass, Ezra, chap. 9 vers. 3. This then is the only effectual course in effecting a reformation, to select and cull out the prime and capital Delinquents, as Tarqvinius struck off the heads of the highest Poppies, and so to descend unto the rest. It was the accustomed policy of Scanderbag in all his military encounters, to begin his war with the defeat of the chiefest, and his advised counsel in all such attempts and enterprises: That the head should be first cut off, and then the rest of the body will fall alone. And that he knew no living creature that could live, the head being taken off. For as Physicians speak of the body natural, (f) Caput malum caput malorum. Theorema Medicorum. That an evil head is the head of evil; so is it likewise in the body politic. And the Commonwealth is herein like unto a Fish or Beast, which for the most part gins to (g) Piscis à capite incipit putiescere. Corpus caput sequitur. putrify from the head. And it is in reforming others as in the flaying of a Beast, which seldom or never sticks, or then most when it comes to the head. And this was faulted in the Emperor Sigismund's proceed, That being very zealous to correct the abuses of the Clergy, he meddled only with the Minorites, an Order of Friars so called, but left the Majorites untouched, whom he should first have took to task. The conceit is acquaint and pretty, but the ground substantial, and the truth unquestionable. An attempt I confess full of difficulty and danger, obnoxious to envy, censure, frowns, and what not? suspected, dreaded and opposed by the guilty; as he observes concerning the Pope (h) Papam non minus concilium, quam Iliacam passi●nem horrere. Georg. Hiemb. in su● Appel. that he abhors a Council as the most intolerable disease, which is the best, if not the only means to cure his distempers, and to bring him into order. God himself is pleased to commend it by his own example, who gins his Reformation in the Text, with the chiefest in place and transgression. The Judges and the Counsellors. I will speak of each distinctly. I will restore the Judges. Well might St. Paul affirm, those that rule well are worthy of double honour: it being (as he justly styles it) (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazian. Apol. Orat. 1 a. an art of arts, a science of sciences, to command and govern the people. There are three labours that are found to be most difficult, (k) Melch. Adam. in vit. Melan. in the judgement of Melaanchton. 1. Regentis. The Ruler. 2. Docentis. The Teacher. 3. Parturientis. The Travailing Woman. And among these three, he gives the first place to the ruler. This difficulty hath many causes, I will not enter into a particular enquiry, or survey, but point out some few instead of many, that are most connatural to the Text, the grand vices that are incident & appendent; to those great places, yea as it were entailed to their callings. I shall instance only in Two, and we shall find any one of them more then enough; the one in Affection, the other in Action. The Judges charged by God, with a double Fault. 1. Partiality in Affection. 2. Bribery in Action. In both which Hierusalems' Judges were exceedingly culpable by God's own Testimony and conviction. They judge not the fatherless, nor doth the widow's cause come before them, Isa. 1.23. this was their Partiality in Affection. Thy Princes are rebellious and companions of Thiefs. Every one loveth gifts and follows after rewards, ver. 23. that was their Bribery in Action. So that the Magistrates which should have been speaking Laws, were become as Bells without Clappers, void of speech and sound; or else spoke quite contrary. Like unto the Roman Gracchus that poured forth a long discourse in behalf of the Treasury, whereof he was the Robber: and they who by the rule of their order were appointed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Guardians and Keepers of the Law, they chief wanted (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Arist. a law themselves to restrain their injustice. And being such it was high time for God to uncover his own Arm in the vindicating and asserting of his quarrel, & to make re●●●ution; to restore them unto themselves, being thus degenerate and perverted; and that which they had fraudulently purloined (〈◊〉 cannot call it theirs,) to the lawful and proper owner: In both these respects they stood in need of God's restoring. And first of their Bribery in action. 1. Every one loveth gifts and followeth after rewards, is God's expostulation by the Prophet: Bribery in Action. Every one; the disease was Epidemical a common evil, and in that regard the worse; yet nor for the community alone, but for the inordinate coveting and affecting them. For in the (m) In gravitate culpae magis attenditur insensio voluntatis, quam effectus operis. Aqui. 2da. 2dae Qu. 13. Art. 3. greatness of a fault it is not the effect of the work that is so much regardable, as the vehement affection and inclination of the will; as Aquinas rightly. They did not only take gifts but love them; yea, follow after them with a hot pursuit as if they would not come fast enough; pressing hard unto the Tribunal for the price of the high calling, in as bad a sense as Paul spoke it in a good: and thrusting their sickle into the Magistracy, Tanquam in auream messem with Stratocles in Plutarch, thereby to reap the golden Harvest of commodity and advantage. The Wise man complains of it as a grievous sickness, Ecclos. 3.16. I have seen under the Sun: And great pity indeed it was that so deformed a sin should ever see the Sun, or the Sun it, and not rather hid his head, and suffer a voluntary Eclipse. But he saw it only under the Sun, not above it, where God sits in the Throne that judgeth right; Whilst men sit down in the place of judgement where is wickedness, and in the seat of justice where is iniquity. The place of justice is hallowed and holy ground, no poisonous Serpent should enter this terrestrial Paradise, much less the Cockatrice eggs, be hatched therein. Holiness becomes this house for ever. That famous Distich written over the judgement Seat in Zant, in Golden Characters, (n) Sandys Travels. Hic locus odit, amat, punit, conservat, honorat, Nequitiam, Pacem, crimina, jura, probos. may fitly serve as a golden Motto for all other, How ill then doth judgement and wickedness agree? and what communion can there: be betwixt the seat of justice and iniquity? surely this was not the fault of the place but of the persons; God himself taxeth them elsewhere, The Rulers love to say with shame, bring ye, Hos. 4.18. Such was their insatiable greediness and undaunted impudence, that they became earnest Solicitours for their hire, exacting injuries as Duty; expecting recompense in the nature of a gratuity, and yet extorting it by compulsion. Like unto Eli's sons that by forcible violence seized on the oblations of the people; It was not the weight of reason and religious equity that swayed the unequal balances of their proceed, but unjust gain, which could not but incline and lean to that side, where most was cast in: Thus deceitful were these sons of men upon the weights, and lighter than vanity. Nor were their Ears but Hands Judges of men's causes, as old Isaac distinguished his sons by feeling; and to them the people came for judgement. As Bernard describes the vicious practice of his Time: (o) Pauci ad os Judicis, ad ma●us omnes respiciunt Bernar. ad Eugen. There are few that regard the mouth of the Judge all look to his Hands. And if they brought not somewhat beside the innocency of the matter to them that loved to say with shame ●ive ye; They were sure to carry nothing back but a shameful repulse and overthrow. So (p) Nescio quo pa●● rara est in hominibus manus clausa & aperta justitia. Cassied lib. 9 Var. Lect. rare and hard a thing it is to find an hand close shut against rewards, and yet open to do justice. This was the state of Judah's Judges, a state unstable, and next unto ruin. St. Hierom hath entered a comparison betwixt Britanny and Jerusalem, in point of (q) De Britannia non minus quam de Hicrose ymis patet aula coele●●is. Hyer. ad Paul. excellency, shall parallel them in their corruption; and from thence argue a necessity of restoring: comparisons (they say) are odious: I abstain from particulars. But since it ever hath been permitted and accounted lawful (r) Licuit semperque licebit, Parcere persovis dicere de vitiis. to spare the persons and to strike at the vices give leave to a free and just invective against a sin so execrable and piacular, and that occasionally from my Text. Bribery an ancient and flourishing evil which grows with a losty top, and spreads the branches far and near in the declining age of the world; a sin which shall always be (s) Semper vetabitur & semper retinebitur. Tacitus de Mathem. interdicted and cried down: and yet supported like Nebuchadnezzers idol, by the illegal profanation of authority: corruption is the vulgar name whereby it is commonly known, and this in ordinary form of speech so appropriate unto it, that it hath as it were engrossed the style of corruption as well as the substance of the Commonwealth; than which what is there more diametrally opposite to the impartial execution of justice, which gives to every man his own, and makes not a salary or a merchandise, For equity is the common right of every suitor, ordained (t) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. for the benefit of others! and can there be a greater extremity of injury, then to sell a man his own inheritance? Nor is it only a personal or a private damage but an universal ataxy and confusion that thence ensues: The silencing at least eluding the force of the laws, the patronage of the most desperate wickedness and rankest kind of injustice: neither is there scarce any punishment so surely entailed to a capital offender, but may be cut of by a fine of recovery should bribery sit as judge. And it is notthe least consequent of danger, the impoverishing of the state, this being the sponge that sucks up all the juice, the moth and canker that frets and gnaws the heart of it in pieces: and as the blood in the body natural being stopped in the course and passage abounds in some parts beyond measure so causing in them a Plethory, but being defective and wanting in the rest, brings leanness and consumption to the fellow members; so is it likewise in the body politic, when the wealth which is the life blood of it, is unequally distributed and dispersed: All following in a full stream to the highest part, by means of the eversucking veins of excessive exaction and oppression, while the lower in the mean time are ready to faint and starve, and grow crazy and enfeebled for want of vital nourishment. Which so ill digesting of wealth in the body, is the chiefest cause why Italy incomparably the richest Nation in Christendom, abounds with poverty and beggary: so that is truly said (u) Relat. of Relig. S. E. Sandys. The rich men of Italy are the richest, and the poor the poorest creatures that any country can afford: For they that fill and defile their (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianz. Orat. 19 p. 290. hands though not so many as Briareus to screw and lock themselves into high places, (like unto Jeroboams Priests, who if they would but fill their hands, might offer the oblations of the people, though, the ● worthiest of that ●ank) may well plead the (*) Vendere jure potest, emerat ille prius. Popes, privilege of seling what they formerly bought; and they will be sure to sell dear by Retail what they formerly bought in Grosse: so that the best causes, and worst offences (as in Rome itself) shall pass either as venial or venal: And what a general loss and detriment, a self respecting officer may bring to the weal public, the Historian shows by the example of Quintil us Varus, a pilling and pouling officer; of whom he gives this testimony (y) Syriam cui praesuerat pauper ingressus est divitem, dives reliquit pauperem. Vel. Pater. lib. 2. that being poor he entered upon a rich province, and so good use did he make of his time which was but short, that Varus was no longer Varus nor Syria Syria, but each converted into other; all the treasure of the country was cunningly conveyed into Varus his coffers and poor Syria utterly exhausted. It was not therefore without the weight of reason, that the thrice noble Emperor and wise lawgiver Justiman, enacted this among the rest (z) Auth. de Judic. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianz. de Patre Orat. 19 that Magistrates should show clean hands to God, the King and the Law, both in the first entering and the after managing of their jurisdiction. There is a sin too too infamous in itself, St. Peter, styles it not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 8.23. a very bundle of iniquity yet it is aggravated by harsh censure; I am long ere I name it, & would God it had neither name nor existence in nature, I mean the Simony of the Clergy: howsoever let our Saviour's vae, light upon the immediate author, and woe be to him by whom the offence cometh: for mine own part I cannot in the judgement of charity arbitrate the sin as voluntary in the buyer, but enforced by the seller, for who would purchase this freedom with a great sum of money (as the chief Captain spoke of his) might he obtain it a free gift. And sure I am the ancient Church hath involved and wrapped up both in the same degree of sin and (a) Dantem & accipientem damnatio Symonis involvit. Gelaes'. Epist. 1. cap. 23. Anathema danti, anathema accipienti. Gregor. punishment. There is cirse to the Giver, and a curse to the Receiver: It is the uniform judgement of the Fathers. Let those then that are so forward in passing their rigid verdict against the Simony of the Clergy, whereof they times are the cause, reflect at least the indifferent eye of their observation, upon the sale of Offices of Justice, yea of Time itself among the Laity; which may well match the former, both for the rankness and heinousness of the fault; For as it is better to give then to receive in the Act of liberality; so is it worse to receive then give, in the exercise of injustice, by how much it is more voluntary. And to judge impartially betwixt them, without giving the right hand of pre-eminence to either, they are both devouring Harpies: the one hath a long time preyed upon the Church, and the other still feeds upon the garbage of the Commonwealth. I subscribe to Aquinas judgement touching both alike, who being demanded by the Duchess of Lorraine, whether it was lawful to sell offices, positively returned this Negative Answer, That poor men who were most fit, were least able to pay the price; the Rich who were most able, less fit, and did it only for ambition and oppression: And those that were fit and able, rich and good, neither needed nor respected such advancement. And therefore neither the sale of Benefices or Offices, Simony or Bribery is in any case to be tolerated. For this God threatens to restore the judges in the Text; yet not for this alone, their Bribery in Action was seconded with Partiality in Affection. They judge not the fatherless, nor doth the widow's cause come before them, Partiality in affection. Verse 23. who wanting the importunate intercession of powerful Friends, and being no way able to oblige them by any respects and courtesies of their own, whatsoever the innocency of their cause was, it was utterly prejudiced and impeached by the neglected and despised condition of their persons: so that Truth was fallen in the streets, as God complains by the Prophet, Isa. 59.14. (Not in the desolate wilderness, there it had been no matter of astonishment, but amidst the concourse of the people, where none would interpose to lift it up.) and equity could not enter. There is nothing more erroneous or corrupt then a forestalled judgement, and an inclining and a propending will: That first brought Heresy in Doctrine into the Church: and this gave being to injustice in the State, The Heresy of life. They that will deliberate and conclude rightly, though private men, must quit themselves of the command of affections, especially such as are in place of Judicature; whereof some of the Heathen were not ignorant, who upon their first investiture in the place of Government, disclaimed all special intimation and inward amity with their entirest Friends, as a thing incompatible with their charge. And the Emperor Adrian meeting with his deadly enemy in former times, gave him a Go-by, with an Evasisti, refusing to condescend and stoop so low, as to revive and revenge the quarrel of his private life, being then in the Throne of Sovereignty. It is both scandalous and pernicious for Magistrates to become Partiaries, inserting & interlacing their personal interests and relations in the discharge of their public Duty, (b) Sic faclitando probatis vos plenitudinem habere potestatis, sed non justitiae. Bern. ad Eugenium. Making no other use of their Authority, then as an advantage, or commanding ground for discouraging their opposites, and crushing their adversaries in pieces; or else for the lawless protection of known offenders, and the high advancing of the creatures of their own breeding, their worthless and undeserving Favourites. Four ways there are, and that in the judgement of a Lawyer, whereby judgement may be turned into Wormwood, and lose its sweet relish. (c) Alexand. nb Alexand. Genial. Dier. 1. Odio. 2. Gratia. 3. Timore. 4. Pretio. 1. Hatred. 2. Favour. 3. Fear. 4. Reward. The former as well as the latter quite blind the eyes of the Wise, and pervert the understanding of the Prudent. For as in nature (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristot. de Anima. l. 3. c. 1. the Receiver must be denuded and freed of the nature of the thing received, and having once taken possession, it hinders the admission and entrance of another; The Aguish Palate savours the most pleasant meat in the taste of the vicious humour; And the Eye that is ill affected with the laundice, or looks through the coloured medium of blue or green glass, hath all manner of objects, though never so different in appearance, represented under that species or similitude; So is it likewise in Civil Government and Administration: The judge that is prepossessed and taken up with a strong affection either of love or hatred, apprehends and orders matters according to their impression and instigation, and is wholly overruled by them both in judgement and action: the information of Council, deposition of Witnesses, construction of Evidence, and pressing of Circumstances, whatsoever he conceives or hears, all seem to comply and suit with his affection, and sound either in favour or opposition of the party. God in himself is free from the nature of affections, and if he inclines to any in special, they are those that were most vilified by the judges in my Text, (e) Oculi Domini in tauperens respiciunt; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Palpebrae autem ejus interrogant filies hominum. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianz. Orat. 16. de Pauperum amore. The poor and the fatherless: Thou hast heard the desire of the poor, saith the Psalmist, Psal. 10.17. And in thee the fatherless find mercy; It is the confession of the faithful, Hos. 14.6. and it is likewise requisite in his Vice-Gerents. Affections in God should they properly be ascribed, would imply imperfections; But in them whom he hath honoured with his own name, they are arguments of injustice. The Poet's fiction had a grave moral; Astraea the Goddess of justice unto them, had her head wrapped within the clouds, and her eyes turned upwards, so was she portrayed and deciphered: And so should justice and justices reflect only upon God on High. whose image and pourtraicture they bear, without respect of persons. The silent Statues of Magistrates among the Thebans, spoke so much by their want of hands and eyes: The Areopagites never decided causes, either Criminal or Capital, but in the gloomy night, that they might not judge after the sight of their eyes: And it was precisely forbidden by the Attic Law, to use any insinuative proaemium or praeludium, thereby to stir or steal affection, nor repose a greater confidence in their persuasive Oratory, and compassion of the judge, then in the equity of their Plea. Honourable is that commendation which Gregory Nazianzen hath left recorded of Great Athanasius, (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Naz. in Laud. Ath. Orat. 21. That he was as the Loadstone in Prosperity, and an Adamant in Adversity. And it ought to agree to those whose high calling styles them Honourable: In the plausible integrity of their carriage, and composed gravity of their behaviour they should be Lodestones, winning, yea drawing by a magnetic and attractive virtue, not the substance, but the hearts and affections of the people; but in the stiff maintaining the Royalty of their Sovereign; the resolute asserting the fundamental Laws of the Nation; the entire preserving the Rights of their Place; the unswayed and peremptory execution of justice to all complainants; In all these respects they should be as hard as the Adamant, immovable through fear or favour, & inflexible by menaces or rewards. Such did Jethro commend to choice, Men of courage in the first place, Exod. 18.21. Which was Hierogly phically resembled by Solomon's Throne, supported and born up by Lions. Magistrates must be as Lions, not to devour and seize upon the prey; these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, were justly plainted by the Heathen; but as bold and stout as Lions, striking terror and amazement into guilty consciences; (for they bear not the sword in vain;) And procuring an awful reverence of their Dignity, by observing meet distance and decorum, even in all: yet still must they be Lions couchant under the Throne, (for so were those of Solomon,) not daring to prove rampant by way of opposition,, or to give an affront or checkmate to supreme authority. Rare was the example of a Lord Chief justice of our own so famous in our Chronicle●, who ventured far in come, mitting the Prince to prison, for smiting him on the face; and yet King Henry the fourth his Father thanked God at the tidings of it; That he had both a Son of that obedience, and a Judge of such irrespective and undaunted courage. The judges in my Text were clean of another stamp, and came as far behind in their exemplary virtue, as they went before in time. Partiality was their reproach and slain, and this with their Bribery the motive cause of Gods restoring; and yet not of the judges only, but of the Counsellors. So it follows in the Text, The Judges and the Counsellors. God descends from the judges to the Counsellors, and my speech must descend likewise with the order of the words. Betwixt these two there is a near conjunction, and are here linked in the same censure, after the manner of Malefactors, and seldom do they transgress alone. They may not unfitly be assimilated to the Liver and the Heart in the body natural; the Liver first concocts the meat, and converts the nourishment into blood, so transmitting it to the Heart, which animates it by the inward heat, and changes it into vital spirits. Thus the Counsellor as the Liver prepares the matter for the Judge, who like the Heart by his proper power, doth umpire and determine it. And as the Liver sometimes corrupts the Heart by conveying crude and indigested humours, and the Heart empoisons the Liver with pestilential vapours and distempers; So oft the Counsellor perverts the sentence of the Judge by misinformation, and the judge crosses the suggestions of the Counsellor by a sinister construction. What were the particular faults of Judah's Counsellors is not punctually set down in the Context; nor will I be over curious in the inquiry, but only probably conjecture, in touching those that are nearest allied with their profession, and most ordinary in practice. Some there are that have vented both their spleen and folly, in speaking contumeliously of their calling: Pope Pius his comparison of the Field, the Fowl, and the Net is well known; and who were the Fowlers, but Advocates and Attorneys. Let me not be thought bold, though I tax his Holiness. Not to mention the resolution of the question by the Duke of Milan, touching the precedency of the Lawyer and Physician, it being scurrious and invective. That common Proverb is as uncharitable, as witty; The Physician seldom lives well, and the Lawyer dies well; The former being oft intemperate in their Diet: the latter injurious in their Courses. For mine own part, I cannot but think as reverently of the Counselors profession as of the name; so honourable in itself that it is attributed by way of excellency to our blessed Saviour; And he shall call his Name Counsellor, Isa. 9.6. yet is this no privilege of exemption or supersedeas to the professors why they may not prove guilty of miscarriage, or lay open to reproof, Why else should they stand in need of God's restoring? As he spoke in praise of Tully; He that would commend Cicero, must be another Cicero, for the strength and sinews of his Oratory; So it were a task more meet for a Lawyer then a Divine to acquaint you with the tith of their abuses: I should weary your patience, and mine own infirmity, (as they many of their Clients,) to insist upon their lingering and tedious delays, Involution of practice, Labyrinths of suits and controversies, cross motions, as fitly so styled, as Grammarians derive montes à movendo: motion without motion: Contentions springing up like Hydra's Heads, following fast and thick, as one wave upon the neck of another, and as one circle begets many. So true is that of Solomon, The beginning of strife is as the opening of the waters. Our Edward the first complained of this evil in his Time, (so that it hath Antiquity to plead for it;) That his Lawyers were long advising, but never advised. And another passed his judgement of them long before; Pay them; and they will delay you: Pay them not, and they will deceive you. To omit these and many more, (for I must not be infinite,) and the taste of the least drop of water in the Sea, will make sufficient proof of the brackishness. Give me leave to point out in a word or two, Two foul enormities, and excessive grievances. 1. The perverting of the Laws, A double Fault of Counsellors. by a corrupt interpretation. 2. The disturbing and troubling the State with needless and endless altercations. Both which may in some measure be imputed to the Counselors, as the Authors. 1. The Law is not as other Arts and Sciences that are grounded upon immutable Principles, The pervorting of the Laws. and confined within certain rules and precepts whose Truth is Eternal: yet is it founded upon the evidence of Reason, which though it be differently observed in several Nations, and is appliable to the emergent necessities and occasions of the same Kingdom; nevertheless it must not be made a nose of wax to turn and writhe every way: a skippers Hoof to stretch out, and girt up at pleasure, a Lesbian Rule to serve the present Time, or resemble the Polypus in the property, that receives the shape and colour from the body it cleaves too, and the next adjoining substance. How could there be more piety, discretion, circumspection, and moderation used in the framing and enacting of the Laws? and the Lawyers themselves who are the Guardians of this Orphan, aught to be as the Priests in Malac. cap. 2.7. The people should seek the Law at their mouth. And yet for all this, as the Heathen man observes of the Athenians, That they found out the use both of Corn and Laws (g) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristot. but made use of Corn and not of the Laws; So are wholesome Laws neglected by the Authors and Contrivers; and laid aside by such as should quicken them in the execution. And many there are that study the Law for no other end, then to find out quirks and tricks, to pervert and distort it, at least in appearances; as the straightest staff seems crooked in the water. And constant experience testifies the truth of that common Proverb; (h) Leges in calamo virgins in Foro meretrices. Laws which are Virgins in the penning, become Strumpets in the pleading: being too much prostituted by vendible Tongues, or wrested from their natural sense by a forced exposition. 2. The second fault of Counselors, The disturbance of the Common. wealth. is the disturbance of the Commonwealth with jangling suits and contentions. Bees are but little, yet very ingenious creatures, and maintain in their society, a kind of well ordered Polity in imitation of mankind: Herein only lies the difference, (i) Reipubls. gerend. praec. Plutarch. Those Hives are in best case where the Bees make most noise: but that Commonwealth fares best where there is least sound and Tumult. For as a multitude of plasters and patches in a Face, covering the secret blains and botches, is an open and an outward sign of a corrupt constitution; so is the multiplicity of suits and Trials a palpable discovery of an unquiet and unsound State. And as the increase of the Spleen in the body natural, is the decay of the rest of the members, and hastens the destruction of the whole; of like effect is the increase of spleen, rancour and divisions whether secret or open, in the body Politic: which being thus dangerous in the issue, we may not unfitly demand St. James' question, James 4.1. From whence are wars and contentions among you? shall we ascribe them to the general temperature of the Climate, and the nature of the soil? Gallia that vites, sic d t Britannia lights. France doth not more abound with vines, than England with suits and quarrels, as some have observed. And our famous Annalist severely chargeth the inhabitants of this (k) Si nikil sit litium lites tamen ex juris apicitus severe callent. Camden. Brittann. Norfolc. Country in particular; That in case they want a Title in Law, they have a singular faculty in striving about Tittles. And how many wrangling mates are there among us, to whom revenge is as sweet as honey, and feed upon contention as the Ox upon Hay: professed and open enemies unto peace, who cannot endure the sound of the name, and for petty and paltry matters ●ir up strife all the day long. And certainly there are a generation of men who foment and foster this malignant humour by the abetting and instigation of those who repair to them, which by their seasonable advice and counsel, they should labour to cure and remedy. They are near a kin to Chrysippus the Stoic, who boasted in earnest, that he sometimes wanted opinions, never arguments to defend them. And the Historian characters them to the life, (l) Quibus quieta movere magna merces. Sallust. that it is their work and wages both to move and remove that which is at rest. All their desire and delight is to fish in troubled waters; to embroil others in the fire of contention wherein they live like Salamanders; yea, they themselves set all on fire as Nero did, to warm them with the heat. Physicians they say are then in soundest health, when all men else are sick. Bloody war the dreadful spectacle of universal misery, is the soldier's peace, the sweetest peace they pray for. And the unquiet jars and unkind discords among Brethren, are the only harmony and consent which some Lawyers will persuade. But let us with David make the precepts of God our Counselors, though others should suggest the contrary. Attend we St. Paul's counsel whom (m) Habent Causidici suum Paulum dictantem jura litigantium, Habemus nos quoque Paulum, dictantem pacis jura non litis. Augustin. St. Austin styles Juris divini consultum; A Counsellor of God's Law. A counsellor of Peace. For so he advises, Rom. 12.18. If it be possible and as much as lies in you, have peace with all men. And with these two conditions, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. If there be a possibility in effecting it, and may be a yielding disposition in a secure admitting of terms of agreement, We must seek peace and ensue it. 4. The fourth Part. The Rule or means of reformation. As at the first as at the beginning. The fourth and last part of the Text, is the rule of reformation (as at the first, as at the beginning) reducing the Judges and the Counselors to the original Institution. This order God observes and thereby commends unto us a double instruction; the one implieitly, the other explicitly, and expressly. First, This reference to the first doth not obscurely point out the vicious propension of private persons and general assemblies to swerve from their first integrity. Secondly, It implies and intimates the most natural and proper course in reforming and rectifying what is amiss; to have recourse to the first foundation: 1. It is not in the power of the ablest States and Politicians, to prevent by their discerning wisdom the encroachment of corruption, but as our Saviour speaks of scandals and St. Paul in case of heresy, they must come and will come, and it is in some sort necessary and behoouful, since the most excellent laws receive their birth and life from the most dissolute and deadly manners: even as the ashes of the most poisonous viper prove medicinal. God is pleased to be styled Hierusalems' King, and he shown his care in drawing them a platform of government, and prescribing them Laws for direction even in the smallest matters; yet how unthankfully did they slight his goodness? how shamefully deprave his wisdom? And as himself complains of Israel, Exod. 32.8. They have turned aside quickly out of the way which I commanded them. So that in a short tract of time, all the foundations of the earth, I mean of Judah 's Civil and Ecclesiastical state were out of course. The Judges and Counselors in my Text, were all gone out of the way. I forbear to add the ensuing words; There is none that doth good, us not one. The works of God were all complete and perfect at the first creation, yet were they strangely defaced & blemished being left to man's enjoying; So those Commonwealths that were fairly planted and settled in a square course by grave and worthy founders, and committed to men of conscientious equity for the first management; yet are they turned quite topsie turvy and become altogether unlike themselves by a degenerating generation; who occupy their rooms ofttimes as intruders and usurpers, but constantly abhor the imitation of their virtues. It is with the disposition of men as with the succession of Times, whereof (n) Damnosa quid non imminuit dies? Aetes' parentum peior avis tulit nos nequiores, mox daturos prageniem vitiosiorem. Horat. Carmin. lib. 3. Ode. 6. the last commonly prove the worst. And Clemens Alexandrinus the better to ill strate how corruption of doctrine (a Case not much unlike that of manners) followed presently after the Apostles times & as it were trodden upon the heels; allegeth that familiar Proverb: (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Clem. Alexan. lib. 1. Stromat. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Homerus. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Acetum potest esse filius vini purissimi. Hebraeorum Adagium. there are few sons like their fathers. The clearest water that issues from a pure spring, doth ofttimes run foul and muddy, being far removed from the fountain. The clearest grain that is winnowed from the dust and so sown in the earth, brings forth an imprositable increase of that light matter that was severed and taken from it: The purest metal gathers dimness and sullage by long use, and passing through divers hands: upon one entire stalk, grows the sweet Rose, and the sharp prickle: Even so in a continued and as it were a lineal descent of men in the same seat and place, there oft appears a manifest dissimilitude of manners, unsuitableness of carriage, disagreement in action: and seldom do posterity answer the harmless innocency of their predecessors. The Wise man makes it the sum of divine learning Eccles. 7.31. Only lo this have I found, that God made man righteous, but he hath sought out many inventions: And it is the sum of this observation; The Judges and Counselors in my Text were constituted and ordained holy by him who is the Holy of holies, and such do men institute and substitute at the first; yet did they then seek, and still find out strange inventions, and are utterly perverted from their primitive integrity, with cunning quirks and new devices. Secondly, God restores the Judges as at the first, and the Counselors as at the beginning, therein propounding his practice as exemplary unto us in the reformation of abuses. It was God's command to Moses, Exod. 25.40. Look thou make all things after their pattern that was showed thee in the Mount: And so must we have respect and reference to the Prototype or first pattern in the just regulating and ordering of our Actions, as being a sufficient evidence of itself, and of the contrary. The Position of Machiavelli is as sound as Politic, and not to be disallowed for the Author. The securest and sa est means for the establishing and settling of government is to reduce things to their Original and first Principles; For as that is true which is most (p) Id dominicum & verum quod prius, id autem extraneum & falsum quod posterius Tertulitanus de Praescrip. adv. Haeret. cap. 31. Justinus Marty. Graecis objecit, Quod non haberent. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Justin. Mart. coh●●at. ad Grae●os. p. ●● ancient, so is it usually the most excellent; I say usually, but not perpetually: For there is an Antiquity without Truth, which is nought else but the rottenness of error: And the Antiquity of the Church of Rome (were that granted) shows not the strength or soundness of it, but that it hath more need of mending. It is excellently said by the Prophet, Jer. 6.16. Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old Paths where is the good way, and walk therein. He says not stand in the old ways, and walk therein; but see, and ask for the old Paths: For though with all moderate and judicious persons (q) This was laid to origen's charge, that laying aside the judgement of Antiquity, he leaned too much to his own. Origines, ingenium suum secit Ecclesiae Sacramenta. Hierony n. Yrolog. in s. Comment Esai. Antiquity obteins that reverence of being a sufficient motive to pause and stand a while, in making a further survey and discovery; yet it is no infallible Guide to conduct and direct them: A just ground (I say) it is, to deliberate, not to determine: And continuance of Time is not available to plead prescription in a Writ of Error, be it in doctrine, or manners. True it is, and cannot be denied, That the world hath highly advanced itself in these later Times in point of Knowledge and Learning, abounding with rare discoveries of hidden mysteries, and admirable enlargements of Arts and Sciences, and that beyond comparison. In which respect, Time hath been thought to be the wisest creature for that it finds out all things: And the (r) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Pindar. Later days are the soundest and surest Witnesses: yet as one of our own observes rightly, Age doth profit rather in the powers of the understanding, then in the virtues of the will and affections. And every man is able to justify out of his own experience, That the world is grown wicked as well as witty; and the practice of sin increased with the knowledge. The disease of our For futhers was ignorance, ours impiety; they were crazy in the head, we sick at the heart; they blind, but after their manner devout; we skilful and profane: the had much conscience with a small measure of science; we their unnatural os-spring, have much science, with little or no conselence. It is with the declining of men's persons, as with the nature of wine or any other liquor, where the purer parts and the very quintessence of the spirits evaporate and fly upwards; but the corrupt lees and dregs settle in the bottom. And Time resembles in the property, the current of a mighty River, wherein light and frothy matter float and swim above, as cork and foam, but solid and massy substances sink down immediately, and are buried in the waters: And as in the scouring of a channel, the further it is driven downwards, the more filth abounds; so are the lower Ages the common sink & sewer of former defilements & uncleanness. The Judges and Counsellors at the first, were as Absalon in his body without spot and blemish: But how is the faithful city become an harlot? It was full of judgement, justice lodged therein, but now murderers, v. 21. That is the reason of the Inference in the Text, I will restore the Judges as at the first, and the Counsellors, as at the beginning. Thus have I set before you the condition of Judah's Judges and her Counsellors, The Conclusion. as they were; not as they should be as Xenophon described his Cyrus. I hope there is none here present of Corah's gainsayers who will be ready to Expostulate in their Dialect, You take too much upon you Moses and Aaron; or once imagine that I have been a busy stickler in a strange Diocese, & overcurious in the affairs of the Commonwealth. And let me speak unto you (Right Honourable) in the words of Gregory Nazianzen to the Governor of Constantinople, (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianz. Orat. 16. The law of God hath in some respect subjected the Benoh unto the Pulpit; and even the Judges themselves must seek the law at the Priest's mouth. But if there be any of such sinister apprehensions, taking that with the left hand which was reached them with the right; as if my reproof carried point-blank and came home to particulars: To them I must excuse myself as Zuinglius was wont to do in the heat of his reprehensions, (t) Probe vir hoc nihil ad te. Mycon. in vit. Zuingl. Honest man, this no way concerns thee: or rudder in St. Paul's language; I have injured, I have wronged not man. To close and wind up all, Let me turn the promise of God to Judah into an earnest prayer in our own behalf. Lord restore the Judges as at the first, and the Counsellors, as at the beginning. THE USURPATION OF THE PRIESTHOOD, Or the Scourge of SACRILEGE. A SERMON Preached at Trinity Church in Cambridge, in the Lecture Course. To be a memorial to the children of Israel, that no stranger, which is not of the seed of Aaron come near to offer incense before the Lord, that he be not as Corah and his company, Numb. 16.40. Communi jure gentium sancitum est, ut ne mortales quod deorum immortalium cultui consecratum est, usucapere poslint, Cicero. LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. THE USURPATION Of the PRIESTHOOD, Or the Scourge of SACRILEGE. NUMB. 6.38. The censers of these sinners against their own souls, let them make them broad plates for a covering of the Altar: for they offered them before the Lord, therefore they are hallowed, and they shall be a sign unto the children of Israel. IT is the Divine Aphorism of the great Apostle Saint Paul, Rom. 15.4. The Introduction. Whatsoever things were written afore time, were written for our learning. And this whatsoever, is a very large and comprehensive word, and relates not only to dogmatical and doctrinal truths, but to practical examples, to matters of Fact as well as Faith: all which are recorded and siled up in Holy Writ, and serve as patterns for our imitation or instruction, to make us the more cautinate and wary in the steering of our course from the shipwreck of others, that we split not ourselves upon those rocks, nor be swallowed up of those quicksands, wherein they have perished. This is the use we are to make of examples, that we ourselves be not made examples; and we are diligently to observe and peruse History, that we become not a Story to posterity. The Text is part of a Story, and History is a relation of things past, the say and do of our Ancestors. And if we look back a little to the beginning of the Chapter, we may from thence take the rise of these words, and retrieve the occasion of the History: there we find mention of Corahs' rebellion, as the ringleader and chief actor in it; together with Dathan and Abiram, and two hundred and fifty men as his complices and confederates in his conspiracy. All these combined and headed together in an open affront offered to the public authority of Moses and Aaron, the Prince and Priest of the people. 2. These they charged and challenged in an high strain of insolent intrusion into that place and office, unto which they were not designed of God; and for domineering & lording it over their brethren. And they gathered themselves together against Moses & Aaron and said unto them, Ye take too much upon you, seeing all the congregation are holy, every one of them, and the Lord is amongst them; wherefore then lift ye up yourselves above the congregation of the Lord? Num. 16.3. Nor was it enough for them to word it by way of contestation, and to beard them to their face, unless they commented upon their mutinous speeches, by the like presumptuous attempts and undertake; For the two hundred and fifty men took every man his censer, and put fire in them, and laid incense thereon, verse 18. which of right belonged to the Priest; whereas Corah and his crew were but the sons of Levi at the best, and Dathan and Abiram of the Tribe of Reuben; neither of which had any authority at all to intermeddle with the Priesthood. And albeit they agreed and joined together in the same common sin, yet were they differenced and distinguished in the punishment. As for Corah and his rebellious rout, they were removed and swept away with a strange and unheard of miracle; The earth cleving asunder under the unsupportable weight of so unprofitable a burden, opening her devouring jaws to swallow them up, who went down quick into the pit, verse 31, 32, 33. But as for the two hundred and fifty that offered incense, they did thereby incense the fierce wrath of God, and it fared with them as with Nadab and Abihu, who offered strange fire, and perished by fire in as strange a manner. And there came out a fire from the Lord, and consumed the two hundred and fifty men that offered incense, verse 35. And lest that so signal and exemplary a punishment should be buried in oblivion with the sufferers, God takes a special care and order that the memory thereof should be commended & transmitted to posterity: And whereas the punishment seized but upon few, the example should reach unto all; and this is the reason of the strict command and charge of God to Moses, and of Moses to Eleazar the son of Aaron the Priest, in the words of the Text, The censers of these sinners, etc. In which portion of Scripture we may consider these three specialties. The division of the Text. 1. A description, and that double; The one general of the persons here spoken of, (sinners against their own souls.) The other special of the sin of these persons, who presumed to offer incense, and took the honour unto them, and yet were not called as was Aaron. 2. A direction of God himself, touching the disposing of these censers, the instruments of their sins, Let them make them broad plates for the covering of the Altar. 3. The reason of the direction, and that threefold. 1. The oblation of them, For they offered them before the Lord. 2. The Consecration which followed upon the oblation; there fore they are hallowed. 3. The commemoration of the use and benefit of the example to posterity; And they shall be a sign to the children of Israel. I shall cast the whole bulk and body of the Text into a fourfold proposition, Four doctrinal conclusions. or so many doctrinal conclusions. 1. Presumptuous and peremptory offenders are sinners against their own souls. 2. The usurpation of the Priesthood under the Law, or the office of the Ministry under the Gospel, (for both these agree in their substance, though differing in some formal Rites, and in several modes and administrations;) I say the usurpation of the Ministry is a sin against a man's own soul. 3. Those things that are separated and set apart to public worship, and thereby consecrated unto God, must not be alienated in the property, and perverted to a profane and common use. 4. The sins and punishments of our Ancestors should serve as so many signs and examples unto succeeding generations. 1. I begin with the first proposition; The first conclusion. Sinners against their own souls. Presumptuous and peremptory transgressors are sinners against their own souls. But how can this be (may some men say) seeing every sin is committed against God, as the proper object; it being nothing else then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a transgression of the Divine Law, which is hereby injured and offended. This is no Gordian knot that stands in need of the sword of Alexander to cut asunder; The doubt is easily assoiled and wiped away with a wet finger, for all sin is against God, as the object, against the soul of the sinner as the subject of it: Against God for the dishonour, the sinner for the danger; against God as an offence, the sinner for the guilt and punishment Three manner of ways there are whereby men may be said to sin against their own souls. Three manner of ways. 1. The purity of the soul. 2. The peace of the soul. 3 The safety of the soul. First, men sin against the purity of the soul, for every sin hath a Macula a spot or stains not only adherent, The purity of the soul. but inhering also in the nature; it makes an impression of a blot and blemish upon the conscience, and after the manner of the Snail, leaves a slime behind it, whereby it may be discovered and traced out. There is not any noisomeness or nastiness of nature that may compare with that of sin, which is joined hand in hand with uncleanness. There shall be a fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness, Zach. 13.1. And goes under the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Pet. 2.20. pollutions, or filthinesses, in the plural number: Hence is it compared to the loathsome vomit, not of a man, but dog; to the dirty mire and puddle, wherein the unclean swine delights to wallow and welter itself. The Dog is returned to his vomit, and the Sow to her wallowing in the mire. 2. Pet. 2.22. Sometimes we find it resembled by the unsavoury and poisonous damp which rotten carcases exhale and breathe forth from the open graves, Rom. 3.13. elsewhere it is likened to the dirt & filth that is gathered under the nails, the stinking sweat of the body, the very excrements themselves which nature severs from the purer nourishment, and casts forth into the draught. Saint James implies and intends as much in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, wherefore lay apart all filthiness, and superfluity of naughtiness, James 1.21. Secondly, Men sin against the peace of their souls, This being the grand incendiary that sets all on fire, The peace of the soul. and raiseth combustion both in the greater and lesser world; the great makebate and peace-breaker, that divides betwixt God and the Soul; Your iniquities have separated betwixt you and your God, Isa. 59.2. that divides betwixt the soul and itself, as being the chiefest enemy to its own peace and comfort, Vbi peccatum ibi procella, Where sin goes before, there a storm and tempest follow after; no sooner was Jonah embarked for Tarshish, whether he fled through disobedience, but forthwith God dispatched after him a blustering, and a boisterous wind, as a Pursuivant purposely sent to arrest and attach him. There is no peace (saith my God) to the wicked, Isa. 57.21. Thirdly, Men sin against the safety of their souls. The temporal and eternal safety, For the wages of sin is death, Rom. 6.23. The first, The safety of the soul. the second death, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Nazianzen speaks of it, and that by way of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, being every way as due unto it, as wages to the common Soldier. There is not a presumptuous sinner but is a felo de se, that in a most unnatural and desperate manner lays violent hands upon himself; and is not only accessary to his own ruin, but the chief Actor and Author of it, O Israel thou hast destroyed thyself. Hos. 13.9. Thou, not I as is made good by the Antithesis, But in me is thy help. This is the true ground and reason of that passionate and melting wish of God in the behalf of his people, Ezek. 33.11 As I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live; Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways, for why will ye die O house of Israel? That God who cannot die himself, wills not the death of the wicked; (a) Tertul. de Paenit. cap. so he saith and swears (as I live) O faelices nos quorum causâ jurat Dexs, O miserrimos si nec juranti credimus, how happy men are we for whom God is pleased to swear! how extremely wretched must we needs be, if we will not believe him upon his oath. Seek not death in the error of your lives, and pull not destruction upon your heads by the works of your own hands. It is the wise man's counsel, Wisd. 1.12. what do wicked men but seek their own death in the error of their lives? What else do they but pull destruction upon their own heads, by the works of their own hands? What do they but perish wilfully and willingly through their own default? for they are not inevitably compelled to sin by any outward force and violence; nor are they any way necessitated by any fatal decree and destiny. There is no predestination of men to sin, but punishment; no predetermining or preordaining to offend God by sin, but to suffer for it, as a just reward and recompense, (b) Illius rei Deus ultor est, cujus author non est. Fulg. ad Monim. lib. 1. Neq, evim ipsa justitia justa dicetur, si puniendum reum non invenisse sed focisse dicatur, Justice itself should be unjust if God should be the avenger of that evil whereof he is the first Author, should he make them guilty by his decree and then punish them for their guiltiness. And as for those that maintain and hold that men are (c) Concil. Arausic. 2. Can. 25. Prosp. pag. 902. predestinated to sin by an overruling and Almighty power, if there be any that believe so great an evil, non solum non credimus, sed cum omni detestatione anathema illis dicimus, We are so far from believing it ourselves that we denounce the severest anathema and curse against such, with all horror and detestation. It is the Canon of the second Arausioan counsel, and is reported by Prosper at the latter end of his Book. 2. I come to the second proposition, The second Conclusion the usurpation of the Priest bood under the law, and the office of the Ministry under the Gospel is a sin against the soul: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, who is there that will mistake, or miss the door, and stumble at the very threshold? ●et some such I meet with upon the first entrance into the point, who take away the subject of the proposition, and deny all usurpation? me thinks I hear them buzzing and whispering in my ear, yea rather lift up their voice like a Trumpet, and ring it out aloud in the words of Corah, ye take too much upon you ye Ministers of the Gospel, seeing all the Congregation of the Lord are holy: every one of them, and the Lord is amongst them, ver. 3. And although it may suffice by way of answer, to such a bold exception, that it is the language of rebellion; and just cause of fear there is that while men speak in the words of Corah, they perish in the gainsaying of Corah, as St. Judas hath it: and although I might retort and return their words into their own mouths, v. 7. ye take too much upon you ye sons of Levi, ye sons of Lay men: but to ●●g and grapple with the objection, hand to hand, and to try the strength and the sinews of it? let that be granted as true, that all the Congregation are holy every one of them with an external and faederal holiness, and some in that number with habitual and saving grace; yet notwithstanding the holiness of a general and Christian, they want the holiness of a particular and special calling, that goes under the name of ordination and holy orders, that entitles them to the Ministry, and gives them though not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and inables them by way of authority to the offices, and the duties of it. See it in the example of Barnabas and Saul, Acts. 13 23. the holy Ghost said, separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them, and when they h●●d fasted and prayed, and laid their hands upon them they sent them away. Herein consists the holiness of the Ministry in separating and setting men apart to that service in conferring of the holy Ghost, that is a spiritual and Ghostly power, which is given and received by the imposition of hands and that by means of ordination. And should men from their general and Christian callings infer that they are Priests, who are styled by St. Peter a royal Priesthood and an holy Nation, 1 Pet. 2.9. they might as rationally conclude themselves to be Kings, both which are joined together by St. John; And alike true in the same sense, and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God, Rev. 1.6. and yet as men may not invade the royalties of the Kingdom; so neither can they justly assume and arrogate the dignity of the Priesthood. And if we take a cursory survey and view of all times and ages. we cannot but observe the distinction of Priest and people; the people are as those that strive with the Priest, Hos. 4.4. and this striving of the people with the Priest, doth fully evince the distinction of each from otherd: or else they should be said to strive with themselves, the Priest's lips should keep knowledge, and they should seek the law at his mouth, Mal. 2.7. He and They; He as the Lords messenger, whose lips are the storehouse, treasury, and hive of knowledge; They as the Bees that are to suck honey out of his combs. Pass we from the old to the new Testament, there we meet with Pastors and with their flocks: take heed to yourselves and to all the flock, to feed the Church of God, Acts. 20.28. nor is it more strange and dangerous for a flock to want a shepheatd then to be nothing else then shepherds and no flock at all. Let him that is taught in the word communicate into him that teacheth, Gal. 6.6. there were in St. Paul's time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some as Catechists others as Catechumeni, that were instructed, and taught by them. And if we descend and fall down to the age of Tertullian, we shall find that the whole Church was sorted into these two ranks and companies (d) Tertul. Apolog. ordinem & plebem: such as were in orders, and the common people. This necessary distinction is grounded upon the general and Apostolic Canon of St. Paul, 1 Cor. 14.40. (*) Est allusio ad oeconomiam in qua haec duo requiruntur. Pareus in Locum. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost. in Loc. let all things be done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 decently and in order: and how can things be done in order, unless orders be maintained and kept up. For order is nothing else (as St. Austin defines it) (e) August. de Civit. Dei, lib. 19 cap. 13. but parium impariumque sua cuique loca tribuens dispositio, a right disposing and changing of things equal and unequal, assigning unto each their proper rank and station: and where there is not a due observing and keeping of their several stand in a just parity and imparity there can be neither natural, civil, military, Four kinds of Order. or Ecclesiastical order. 1. 1. Natural. There is a natural order of the several members in the same body, and these distinct in nature and office, in dignity and in duty if the whole body were an eye where were the hearing? 1 Cor. 12.17 and is it not alike true if the whole body were a tongue what should become of the ear? if all were Preachers; we should be to seek and at a loss for want of hearers. 2. 2. Politic. There is a politic and civil order of Prince and people, sovereign and subjects, some rulers, and governors, others that are ruled and governed by them. 3. 3. Military. There is a military or wartial order in an Army consisting of several Officers and Offices, General, Colonels, Captains, Common Soldiers; all these are observable in an Army, unless it be that of Alcibiades, wherein every man would be a guide and leader, none guided or lead by others. Ecclesiastical. 4. There is an Ecclesiastical or Church order, wherein God hath set First, Apostles. Secondly, Prophets, Thirdly, Teachers. Are all Apostles? are all Prophets? are all Teachers? the Apostles interrogation is every way equivalent, and carries with it the sconce of a peremptory negation: and so much is there intimated and implied; that all are not teachers, or at leastwise ought not to be so, who wanting both the extraordinary and immediate call of Prophets, and Apostles, together with that (e) Such a one was Petrus Waldo, the father and founder of the Waldenses, that took their name from him: whom Alanus characters in this manner, if he may be believed. Qui suo spiritu ductus, non a Deo missus no vam sectam invenit, ut sine alicujus Praelati autoritate, sine divina, inspiratione, sine conscientia, sine litera praedicare praesumeret: sine ratione Philosophus, sine visione Propheta, sine missione Apostolus, sine instructione Didascalus. Alanus contra Valdens. lib. 20 cap 10. ordinary and ministerial call of common Pastors and Teachers, are not to intrude and thrust themselves into the Ministry. No man takes the honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron, Heb. 5.4. lo here is an universal negative, no man, which is exclusive of all, takes this honour to himself that is in a fair and legal way, as that which is offered and held forth unto him; but rather catcheth and snatcheth at it, and herein deals with the Ministry, as Elies' son with the fat of the sacrifices, who in case the people would not give it upon the first motion, they would take it by force. It is against the nature of any creature to elevate and raise itself above the nature of it (f) Aquin in 5. tum cap. ad Heb. v. 4. sieut aer non facit s●●psum i● nem, sed fit ● supertore, even as the air is not made fire of itself but is converted and turned into it by a superior and an higher cause (as Aquinas notes upon the place;) even so in Church Polity men must not make themselves Ministers (as Novatus was said to consecrate himself a Bishop) but must be ordained by superiors. It is a general observation of Pareus on those words (g) Pareus in loc. Potest alius quivis nobis divinae gratiae esse testis, sed Paulus have functionem docet specialiter ministris esse injunctam. Calvinus in Epist. 2. ad Corint. cap. 5.18. been liquet cur nec princeps ipse nec privatus quisquam sibi ministerii partes sumere potest: neither Prince nor private person of what rank soever can justly challenge the office of the Ministry, God hath not made them the disposers of his secrets, nor dispensers of his Sacraments, he hath not entrusted them with the power of absolution, nor hung St. Peter's keys at their girdle: let them produce their warrant out of the word of God, that Christ's patent unto St. Peter Tibi dabo Claves regni coelorum, Mat. 16.19. is a part of their commission, let them make it good upon proof that they are able Ministers of the New Testament: and that Ministers not only of the peace, but of the quorum too: quorum remiseritis peccata, John. 20.23. whose sins ye remit they are remitted, and whose sins ye rem in they are retained. But what do I speak of private persons or the King himself to be made Minister, seeing Christ the Prince of peace did not attempt or endeavour it; Christ glorified not himself to be made an high Priest, but he that said unto him thou art my son this day have I begotten thee, Heb. 5.5. and as he did it not in his own person, so neither would he tolerate and endure it in others: for when the Devil himself would needs turn Preacher, though he delivered very orthodox and sound doctrine, and afforded a notable testimony to Christ's Divinity, I know thee who thou art, the holy one of God, Mar. 1.24. yet Christ stops his mouth, and puts him to silence, quia extra vocationem, as wanting the warrant of a lawful calling. Let me but add one instance more, that the Devil would not be commanded and adjured by the sons of Sheva the Jew who professed themselves Exorcists and played the Conjurers, Josus I know, and Paul I know, but who are ye, Acts. 19 15. that was the reason alleged by them, their wanting power and authority for the doing of it. A double evil of usurpation of the ministry There is a double evil that follows upon the usurpation of the Ministry. 1. The removing of God's boundaries. 2. A general Ataxy and disorder. 1. The first a removing of God's bounds, The removing of God's boundaries. a sin of an high and heinous nature, insomuch that when God would exaggerate and aggravate the fin of his people, he describes it in this manner, Hos. 5.10. The Princes of Judah were like them that removed the bounds; that is the reason of that strict command, Den. 19.14. thou shalt not remove thy neighbour's land mark which they of old time or thy fathers have set in thy inheritance. And shall we then remove the bounds that are fixed by God himself? the antiart of days 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the father of fathers, as Justine Martyr calls him; these bounds are set forth by God in the distinction of offices and callings, with the appropriation unto, several persons; let every man abide in the same calling, wherein 〈◊〉 was called, 1 Co●. 7.20. Let every man wherein be in called, therein abide with God, ver. 24. there is not a word but hath its 〈◊〉 and full weight; 2 A general Ataxy and disorder. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yet very man ti●its a general 〈◊〉 and admits of no exception 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him continue or settle in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the ●●●ne and not it another, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is God's ordinance and hath his warrant in the expectation and assurance of his presened and protection. And in case men desert their station, and proveirenegadoes and runaways from their callings, they full under the guilt of Judah's sin, and are like unto them that remove their bounds. 2. The second 〈◊〉 that follows upon this usurpation, is a general Ataxy and disorder, the transforming the Church into a deform and misshapen monster, cui lumen ademptum; a Polephemus without an eye, a Cyclopical kind of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherein no m●n hears of understands each other, a Cor. 14.33. God is not the Author of confusion, but of peaceful in all Churches of the Saints. In case then that party that claim and clepe themselves the Churches of the Saints, bring in confusion instead of peace into the Church of God, therein inverting St. Pituls' rille, yea perverting the hanne of God himself, in making him who is the God of peace, to be the God of consusion; they therein forfeit the honour of their denomination, and (to say no more) cease to be the Churches of the Saints. And hereby it comes to pass (as he speaks proveniunt onatores novi●● dolescentuli; we have such a strange swarm and fry of new and (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That learn the Potter's Art at the Wheel; As Nazianzen alludes in the Proverb. Orat. prim. pag. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he phrases it elsewhere. Orat. 29. Yesterday Dolts, to day Doctors; And may fitly take up that of Bildad, Job. 8.9. We are but of yesterday, and know not, or know nothing. (h) Nimium multi sunt, qui imperitorum fiunt magistri, priusquam suerint Doctorum discipuli. Hierun. Epist. 8. young Orators, that teach before they have learned, and are the masters of the unlearned, before they have been the Disciples of the learned; as Hierom complains in his Time. Hence it is, that Divine and Heavenly mysteries are handled with unwashed hands; and men of all sorts have entered into the (i) Illotis pedilus sanctuarisim Domini ingressi surt. Reynol. Collat. cum Ilart. c. 2. sanctuary with foul and dirty feet: hereby it comes to pass, that the word of truth is not orthotomized or divided aright, but rather broken in pieces by the many: And the bread of life not dealt out in a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to every one his demensure, or just portion, but scattered abroad at random and cast away amongst the people. Hence it is that ignorance and irreverence is advanced, and cried up; and the gravity of religion and learning decried, and despised. The necessary. helps and handmaids of Arts and Sciences, Tongues, and Languages, are thought by some to be the mark of the beast; and to name the Universities, sive 〈◊〉 sive joeo (which was the decree of Paul the third) accounted the brand and badge of heresy. But though Israel play the harlot, yet let not Judah sin: though ignorance be canonised as a Popish Saint in the Romish Rubric and Calendar; though ignorance be adored and worshipped as the mother of their devotion, and her children ask her blessing; yet let wisdom be justified of her children: let as many as pretend to sobriety of mind and ingenuity, and modesty of spirit, account learning and the nurseries of learning (I mean the Universities) as worthy of double honour. And let me herein applaud and magnify the happiness of their condition to whom I now speak, who are all Prophets, or Prophet's sons, and live here as in another Naioth, the school of the Prophets: yea let me freely bespeak you in the word of Christ to his disciples, Mat. 13.16, 17. Blessed are your eyes for they see, and your ears for they hear: For verily I say unto you that many Prophets and righteous men have desired to see those things which you see, and have not seen them, and to hear those things which you hear and have not heard them. And so I pass to the third Proposition. 3. The third Conclusion. Those things that are separate and set apart to public worship, and thereby consecrated to God, they must not be alievated in the property, and perverted to profane and common use. There were several things that had the shamp and print of holiness under the law, Holiness stamped upon sundry things under the law like unto the high Priests Mitre with this inscription, Holiness unto the Lord. 1. The holy plaee. There was an holy place, when ye shall see the abomination of desolation stand. the holy place, Mat. 24.15. it is the sanctuary, or Holy of Holies. 2. An holy time. There was an holy time, if thou turn away thy foot from doing thy pleasure on my holy day Isa. 58.13. and that was the Sabbath. 3. An holy person. There was an holy person, let thy Thummim and thy Vrim be with thy holy one, Deut. 33.8. and that was the Priest. 4. An holy part or portion. There was an holy part or portion, which was separated and set apart as the maintenance of the holy person, which passeth under the name of the hallowed things, Deut. 26.13. The time will no way permit and suffer me to glance at all these, I shall only touch upon the Church's patrimony, the Minister's portion, which God himself is pleased to phrase, A double ground of the holiness. Tithes and Offerings. There is a double ground or reason of their holiness. 1. Humane donation or dedication. 2. Divine claim and challenge. 1. 1. Humane donation or dedication. The first ground of their holiness is Humane Donation or Dedication, of men devout and pious in their generations who bequeathed them to God by way of legacy or inheritance in their last will and Testament; and certainly it was as lawful for them to make God their Heir or Legatee, as any of the sons of men; and being such, he is not to be defeated of his legacy, or disseissed of his inheritance. For as the Apostle tells us, Gal. 3.15. though it be but a man's testament, yet if it be confirmed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no man disannuls or adds thereunto; and if he adds not noi●●●oz then can he take it quite away. 〈◊〉 second ground for the holiness of the Church's patrimony is divine claim and challenge, whereby he separates and reserves it to his own worship and service. For God is the high and mighty possessor of Heaven and Earth, the Lord Paramount of the whole world; who as he commands the seventh part of our time, so doth he require the tenth of our substance as his own peculiar, all the tithe of the land, whether of the seed of the land, or of the fruit of the tree is the Lords, it is holy unto the Lord, Levit. 27.30. and being such is not to be alimated, invito domino, without the consent of the owner. And if the question be here moved whether a thing that is dedicated through ignorance or superstition, may not be altered in the use and converted to another and that a better end, the example here in the Text may serve as an answer to this query. For the Censers of Korah and Dathan even by God's appointment must be employed for a covering of the Altar, and that because, though erroneously, yet they offered them before the Lord, therefore they are hallowed. Add hereunto the joint attestation of the heathen and that drawn from those common principles and apprehensions, which like unto so many seeds and sparkles are naturally sown and raked up in the hands of children (k) Plato Philib Semel deo dicatum non est ad usus humanos ulterius transferendum. 6. Decret. de Regul. juris. Si facta ades sit, licet collapsa sit jam religio tamen ejus occupavit solum. Plin. 2. Epist. Lib. 10. Epist. 74.75. Nos dicimus (quod pueri solent) quae recte data sunt eripere non licet, saith the Heathen Plato: Do but ask children and they will acknowledge this much, and subscribe unto it as an undeniable and undoubted truth. Those things that are well given, are not to be devoyed into another hand, or diverted from their main end: For though there may be an alienation from the particular end & intention of the Donors, wherein through ignorance they erred; yet from the general and ultimate end, and that is the maintenance of God's worship, they may not, they must not be alienated. And herein a special Caution is to be had that we transfer them not to our proper use, or translate them to our private benefit and advantage, flying upon the spoil after Saul 's example, and too too nimbly fingering the wedge of gold, and Babylonish garment, which was the sin of Achan. The reason is rendered by great Saint Augustine, (l) August. Epist. 154. ad Publicol. appareat nos pietate ista desstruere, non avaritiâ; That it may be evident and apparent unto all, that we have altered the property out of zeal to God and his glory, not for filthy lucre sake, and the love of Bulaam 's wages, the wages of iniquity; That we have not acted his part, and pleaded the cause of religion, as he did the cause of the poor. Quorsum haec perditio? to what purpose is all this waist? why was not the ointment sold for three hundred pence and given to the poor. This he said not that he cared for the poor, but because he was a Thief, and had the bag and bare what was put therein, John 12.56. There are many pretending and professing Christians, that care as little for religion as Judas did for the poor, yet would be thought affectionate well-willers and fast friends unto it. Nor is it much to be wondered at, seeing whatsoever they say and do is for the bags sake whereof they are the Keepers; Which occasioned that great and sad complaint of Calvin upon the alienation of the Church Lands at the reformation in Geneva; I well see (saith he) we have taken away Judas his purse, and given it to the Devil. And yet nevertheless things formerly dedicated and devoted to a false, may justly be consecrated to the honour of the true God, and that by the special warrant and express command of God himself. Thus the silver and gold, the vessels of brass, of iron, of the city of Jericho must be brought into the treasury of God, Josh. 6.19. And the wood of Baal's grove cut down by Gideon, must serve as fuel for Gideon 's sacrifice, Judges 6.26. And when things formerly abused to Idolatry are afterwards converted to God's worship and service, (m) August Epist. 154. ad Public. Hoc de istis fit, quod de ipsis hominibus cum ex sacrilegis & impiis in veram religionem mutantur, saith Saint Augustine excellently in his hundred fifty fourth Epistle to Publicola. Herein it happeneth with the things thus converted, as to the persons of men converted and changed themselves, when of sacrilegious and impious wretches they become devout and holy Christians. This is not the perversion but conversion of the things; Like unto the paring of the nails, and the shaving of the hair of the Heathenish captive, whereby the woman was made a perfect proselyte and true Israelite. And if it be demanded and asked in the second place, whether it be not in the power of the State, to alienate the Church's portion, and to dispose of it to civil and common uses: Though I hold it neither prudential nor safe to reason the power of States; and it was but a piece of discretion in that Philosopher who would not dispute it with the Emperor Adrian, modestly excusing himself in that manner; That it was but reason to yield to him, that commanded thirty Legions: Yet so much may be truly and piously affirmed in the cause of God, and his Church; That as the rule of justice binds men to a suum cuique to give every man his own; so the Rule of Religion obligeth much more strongly to afford God his deuce and rights, and that his part and portion should be held as sacred and inviolable. Give unto Caesar the things which are Caesar 's; and unto God, the things which are God's, Matth. 22.21. There are quae Caesaris & quae Dei; and these must necessarily be distinguished from each other. And though the Power of States may reach to a meum and tuum, mine and thine, yet can we not conceive it to be so far extensive as to fetch in God's peculiar. And albeit we may give unto God that which is Caesar's, we must not give unto Caesar the things that are God's; lest otherwise we fall under the guilt and censure of the Heathen in the words of Tertulian (n) Tertul. Apolog. cap. 27. Majori formidine observatis Caesarem quàm ipsum de Olympo Jovem; ye show more respect and reverence unto Caesar then unto God himself. And in case this be done, God who is a righteous Judge adjudgeth it as flat robbery; Will a man rob his God? (a mere natural or Heathen man) but ye have rob me in Tithes and Osserings, Mal. 3.8. This robbing of God is a sin of an high strain and no way inferior to Idolatry. Thou that abhorrest Idols, dost thou commit sacrilege? Rom. 2.22. where by Saint Paul's Clyma●● or gradation, saeriledge is a degree or step above Idolatry itself. And as theft is a capital crime and a deadly sin to the Author by the law of the Land; even so is sacrilege every way as punishable by the law of God. An accursed sin that carries a curse with it, and that not only to particular persons, but to a whole Nation: Ye are cursed with a curse, for ye have rob me, even the whole Nation, Mal. 3.9. And it is worth the observing how God hath punished this sin even in Heathen men who knew not God, in bewraying the irreligion and atheism of their dispositions and their open dishonour & despite to their false and feigned Deities. I will only point at a double Instance; the one of the Grecians, the other of a Roman. The first Example is that of the Grecian who offered violence to the Temple of Pallas. Corripuere sacram effigiem manibusque cruentis, Virgineas aufi Divae contingere vittas. Virgil. Aeneid. And mark what followed. Ex illo fluere, & retro sublapsa referri, spes Danaum. Ex illo fluere the ruin of the Grecians flowed from hence as the immediate and the proper cause; or ex illo fluere, from that very time they never dawned good day, nor held up their head after. The second Example is that of the Roman Fulvius the Censor, reported by (o) Lactant. de orig. error. lib. 2. cap. 8. Mente capius. est. & amissis duobus filiis in Illyrico militantibus, sumno animi maerore consumptus est. Lactantius, who having uncovered the Temple of Juno Lacinia, and taken from thence marmoreas tegulas, certain marble tiles, therewith to cover his house; he forthwith grew distracted, and bereaved of his wits: soon after lost his two sons in battle as they were warring in Illiricum & himself consumed and pined away to death. And this leads me to the fourth & last Proposition. 4. The fourth Conclusion. The sins and punishments of our Ancestors should serve as so many signs and examples unto succeeding generations. There are sundry sorts of signs, signum militare, signum memoriale, sive exemplare, A military, or memorial sign. There is a military sign or ensign, the property whereof is to congregate soldiers together, and cause their repair to their colours; and in this respect the prophet foretold of Christ, he shall stand for an ensign to the people, to it shall the Gentiles seek, Isa 11.10. There is an exemplary or memorial sign, and of this kind was Lots wise, who had a● mark of remembrance set upon her forehead, remember Lot's wife, Luke. 17.32. and was purposely turned into a pillar of salt, ut exemple suo nos condiat, to season us with her example. Such a sign was Corah here in the Text, as a public monument or memorial, Numb. 26.10. And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up together with Corah, when that company died; what time the fire devoured two hundred and fifty men, and they became a sign, exemplum omnium oculis expositum sicut signum erecium: (p) Junius in Loc. an open example exposed as obvious unto everyl eye, like unto a standard set up in the head of an Army, as Junius glosseth upon the place. There are several kinds of punishments. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Three kinds of punishments. There are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that respect the instruction and correction of the party, and there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that seem to intent the confusion and destruction of the offender. And there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that serve as patterns and precedents unto others (q) Optat. lib. 1. Deus in singulis rebus posuit exemplorum formam ut sit quod imputet imitantibus prima peccata, saith Optatus: God hath set the seal and stamp of examples upon the action and sufferings of wicked men, that so he might the more justly impute unto those the imitation of former sins who will not be forewarned and amended by their punishments. And it is very remarkable that God never punished any sin in a more exemplary and severe manner then that of Corah and his Rebels For the earth opened her mouth, swallowed them up quick, and then shut her mouth upon them; (r) Et ne beneficium de mortis compendi, consequi viderentur, dum non essent digni vivere, iis nec mori concessum est. Optat. lib. 1. And lest the suddainness of their death should seem a benefit, as they were not deemed worthy to live; so neither had they the privilege to die: They were forthwith enclosed and shut up in the prison of the grave; Ante sepulti quàm mortui (as Optatus hath it) and buried before dead. True indeed (may some men say) it was so in former times, but such like instances are long since antiquated, and out of date. There is now no earth to swallow men up quick, as it did Korah and his Rebetious Rout; there is now no fire that comes down from Heaven to consume men, as it did the two hundred and fifty that offered incense: If there be any that reason in this manner, they may be returned the same answer that was sometimes rendered by Optatus to Parmenion the Donatist, (s) Optat ibid. An quia talis vindicta modo cessat ideo tibi cum tuis vindicas innocentiam. And is it even so that because divine vengeance forbears to display & manifest itself as in former times, therefore thou and thine presume themselves innocent? nothing less: For even as Fathers are not wont to correct their unruly children in the self same manner and fashion being grown up to riper years as when they were young and tender; Even so God hath not the same discipline and method of punishment under the Gospel, which he sometime had under the pedagogy of the Law. It is St. Chrysostorus compatison, God doth not now so frequently scourge men with the rods of temporal chastisements, but in the stead thereof inflicteth spiritual judgements, in giving men up to their own hearts lusts, to vile affections, & which is worst of all, to a reprobate sense (as he dealt with the Gentiles) and so reserves men to eternal punishment. (t) Optat. lib. 1. Ad exemplum praesens poena praecessit, secunda judicio reservabitur, saith Optatus; As the place is well restored and corrected by Merick Causaubon, God's present pnnishment goes before as an example; but as for the second it is deferred and delayed, until the latter judgement. I conclude all with the Oracle of the Wise man, Prov. 20.25. It is a snare to a man who devours that which is holy. There are three properties of a snare. 1. It is laid secretly. 2. It catcheth suddenly. 3. It holds surely. And as a bird being taken in a snare is ofttimes held by the leg or wing until the evening, or the coming of the Fowler. Such a snare is an usurpation of the office of the Ministry: such a snare is the invading the part and portion of the Minister; wherein men may lie hampered and entangled, till the evening of death, till the coming of God to a purticular or a general judgement: Then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, It is a snare to a man to devour that which is holy, and will end in destruction. The Christian Man's TASK, EXPLAINED & APPLIED, IN TWO SERMONS: THE FORMER Preached before the Mayor, and Court of Aldermen of the City of Norwich in Newhall Chapel in the Forenoon. THE LATTER, In St. Andrews Parish, in the Afternoon, the same day. Nisi ego mihi quis mibi? & cum ego mihi, quid ego? & nisi nunc quando? Hillel senex apud Drusium, Apothegm. Ebraeor. pag. 9 LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. The Christian Man's TASK. PHIL. 2.12. Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling. HOw beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace, The Introduction. that bringeth good tidings of good things, that publisheth salvation, Isa. 5●. 7. And what the Prophet Isaiah styles the publishing salvation, the Apostle Saint Paul who copies out the substance of the same sentence, Rom: 10.15. renders the preaching of the Gospel of peace, the Ministry of reconciliation, 〈…〉 and the joyful message of man's salvation. And herein lies the difference betwixt the terms and tenor of the first and second Covenant: The promise of the first Covenant of works was life, Do this and thou shalt live; as being the just reward of Adam's obedience, had he continued in the state of innocence and integrity: But the privilege of the second Covenant of grace is salvation, and runs in this mannen, Believe and thou shalt be saved; which is the restauration of a lapsed creature, a decayed and a destroved sinner, by wilful Apostasy and disobedience And how beautiful are the feet of him that publisheth salvation? E● si Pedes ●●d ora? and if their feet are thus beautiful, what then are their mouths, that are as silver Trumpets to sound it forth in our ears? So that a Gospel Text that treats of salvation, as the● argument and subject matter, cannot but fi●d welcome entertainment, and prove worthy of all acceptation. And yet there is somewhat required on our part by way of Duty, to intere● us in this salvation, work out. And this duty hath a condition appendent and annexed, with fear and trembling. But I must not open my sacks by the way; and yet as Joseph's brethren upon the opening of their sacks, found every man his money in the mouth of it, Soluto sacco re uxit Argentum, as Ambrose speaks of that of Benjamin; even so upon the first opening of the Text; there appears Silver in the mouth of it, there is choice and precious matter contained in. Not to trouble you, or spend time about the connexion and coherence of the words. Therein following the example of Wire drawers, who further and forward their work by going backward. The Text as it lies before you, contains in it an Apostolical precept and injunction of a duty no less excellent 〈◊〉, the sum and substance of all other. And herein there are two specialties. 1. The matter of the duty in the first clause, Work 〈◊〉 salvation. The Division of the Text. 2. The manner of the duty in the later, With fear and trembling. In the matter of the duty, there are two circumstance, that present and offer themselves to consideration. 1. The Means, Work out. 2. The End, and that double. 1. Finis cujus, The end for what, Salvation. 2. Finis ovi, The end for whom, Your own. Or if you will you may branch them into these two particulars. 1. The exercise of the Act both in the intention and extension of it, Work, work out. 2. The specification and appropriation of the object, Your own salvation. I shall make them up as they lie in order, and first of the exercise of the Act in the matter of the duty; Work out. Six things there are employed in the exercise of the Act or Duty, which is not barely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The first general part of Text. not work, but work out. Some in the worker, other in the work, or manner of working. The matter of the Duty, and therein the exercise of the Act, Work out. 1. Liberty and freedom of will in the worker. 2. Necessity of the work, as the means unto the end: no working, no salvation. 3. The difficulty of the work it is a work, and that painful and toilsome, not a pastime or recreation. Six things implied in the Act or Duty. 4. Industrious diligence in the prosecution and pursuance; it is not simply work, but work out. 5. A proficiency in the work of sanctification, and a progression unto perfection. 6. The duration and continuance of the work, till we arrive and attain to salvation. The first particular pointed out in the exercise of the Act, is liberty and freedom of will in the Worker. First, liberty and freedom of Will in the Worker. To Will is as natural unto man, as for the Sun to shed forth light: and Liberty is as inseparable from the Will, as Light from the Sun. without which it cannot subsist. Every creature works after the inbred principle of the nature; natural Agents being determined unto one, without the inclining to the contrary, or suspending the proper action, out of necessity of nature. And the Will being placed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the reasonable part of the soul is first set on work by the deliberate act of the understanding, and then (a) Non sicut in lapidibus in sensatis, aut in iis in quorum ratura rationem aut voluntatem non condidit Deus, Saluten nostram oteratur. Aug de Pec. merit. & remis. lib. 2. cap, 2. acts in a voluntary manner: and were it not thus free, it were no Will at all. But though to Will is a natural and essential property, yet so yet so far forth as it respects a supernatural and a spiritual good, it is an effect of special and saving grace; And albeit the Will is free of itself, yet till Christ make it free it is not free indeed. Nor doth it obtain grace by freedom, but freedom by grace, as (b) Humana voluntas non libertate gratiam, sed gratia consequitur libertatem. Aug. de Correp. & Gratia ad Valent. c. 8. Austin rightly resolves and states the question; even as a wall cannot reflect heat, or light, till the Sun hath first shined upon it; Nor the Echo resound a noise or voice, till the voice be first uttered; and the Wax could not receive the impression of the Seal, unless the seal had been first stamped upon it; No more can the Will move freely to a supernatural good, unless it be prevented and determined by the work of grace. And the Text seems to import as much, Work out your salvation, and not your conversion; For good works do not go before, but follow after justification; neither is the Will an Agent, but a mere Patient in the first Act of conversion. But being once (c) Agis te ageris & tum bene agis, cum à bono ageris. Aug. de verbis Apost. Serm. 13 acted it acts, and first moved of God, it than moves itself; when God hath once touched and tuned us like unto a musical instrument, we then yield a melodious harmony; when the Spirit of God, the wind that bloweth where it listeth, imbreaths us with the fresh gales of his grace, we then turn, about like a Mill. The regenerate being once wrought by grace, do then freely work according to grace; even as the point of a Needle being once touched with a Loadstone, moves towards it of its own accord. Nor doth Saint Paul's exhortation presuppose any inward strength and power on our part, though charged upon us as an express command: for as he that affirms there is virtue enough in the pool of Bethesda to heal an infirmity, if a man had power enough to put himself in, doth not thereby grant that a man hath strength for performance; Even so Divine promises and precepts, and this amongst the rest, show only what we ought, not what we can; our obligation, not our ability; and they are not the measure of our strength, but the rule of our duty. There is not any thing of greater excellency than the grace of God, and is fitly resembled by the Prophet, Isa 55 1, 2. To Wine, Milk, Bread, Waters, for the sufficiency, all-sufficiency that is to be found in it, as being both meat and drink, a full and perfect nourishment, all in all unto the soul. And that which is required on our part for the procuring and obtaining of it, is only to thirst and come, He every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, vers. 1. and both these are from God (d) Fulgent. ad Monimum Lib. 1. Ab ipso nobis est quod ad fontom sitientes venimus & qui se nobis tribuit ut bibamus, saith Fulgentius. It is God that affords aquam & sitim (as regory speaks) that gives water to quench our thirst, and thirst to desire water. There is a preventing and a following grace within, yet without us, in us, and with us, and both grounded upon that Text of Saint Paul, 1 Cor. 15.10. By the grace of God I am that I am; And his grace which was bestowed upon me was not in vain: but I laboured more abundantly than they all, yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me. Being and working both come from Grace; it is Grace that lays the foundation of this mystical Temple, as Zerubbabel did of the material: And it is grace too, that sets up the roof after his example; And he shall bring forth the head stone thereof with shouting, saying, Grace, grace unto it, Zach. 4.7. Not nature nor free will nor merit, but grace, grace to it. And howsoever Saint Paul's exhortation runs in the Active, Work out in the Text; yet are the words elsewhere rendered in the Passive Act. 2.40. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Be ye saved. And the Apostle Saint Paul puts the matter out of question, Eph. 2.8. By Grace ye are saved through Faith, (e) Hoc est opus Dei, ut credatis in eum quem misit ille. Joh 6.29. Non dixit hoc est opus vestrum, sed hoc est opus Dei, ut credatis in illum quem misit ille, ut qui gloriatur in Domino glorietur, Aug. in Joh. Tract. 25. not of yourselves, it is the gift of God. This was the common opinion of the Heathen, that there was a principle of virtue implanted in man's nature, without going out of himself, and borrowing ability from another. (f) Deorum munus est quod vivimus, nostrum quod faelicem. Senec. That we live is the gift of God; fancte vivimus. Turpe est fatigare Deos: Quid votis opus est? Fac te Epist. 31. that we live well is of ourselves. And to what end should we trouble and tire God with the importunity of our prayers; Fac te saelicem, Thou mayst be happy if thou wilt. * Eum ut faceret homines liberos, jecisse sacrilegos. August. de Cicer. De civet. Dei. Lib. 5. Thus while they made men free, they made them sacrilegious. And there is much of the sum rank blood, that runs in the veins of professing Christians, the Pelagian and the Papist: and if we compare the words of the Text with those that follow, they will soon stop the mouth of both. The Pelagian challenging Saint Paul's precept even at the first syllable, (Work out) as a pregnant proof of the liberty of the Will; And the Papist concluding the merit of Works from the working out of our salvation. And yet both cunningly suppress what Saint Paul subjoins and immediately infers; For it is God that works to will: He doth not give power alone, and leaves the will to elicit its own Act, but works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, where then is the Free will of the Pelagian? And to do; how then can the Papist evince their Works to be meritorious? Let no man then put asunder these two parcels of Scripture, whom St. Paul, yea God himself hath thus joined together. And as our Saviour speaks in another case, Joh. 5.17 My Father works hitherto and I work, so Gods working and man's working, his efficiency and our concurrence and co-operation must both go hand in hand; for though it be God that works the Will, yet are not we stocks and stones, that have no Will at all; and albeit it be he that works the deed, (g) Totum ex Deo non tamen dormientis, non quasi ut non conemur, non quasi ut non velimus. Aug. de verb. Apost serm. 15. Non quasi ut dormientes, non quasi ut non conemur; yet not that we should snort after the manner of sleepers; (h) Qui fecit te sine te, non justi●●cat te, sine te. Ibid. and no way second it with our endeavours: That God who made us without us, will not save us without us, but we likewise must work out. Secondly,, Necessity in the work. the Act of working imports the necessity of the duty for the attaining of salvation as the end. It is the speech of Eliphaz in Job 5.7. Man is born to trouble, as sparks fly upward: that is, naturally and of their own accord. And many men by nature are of an unquiet and restless disposition; like unto Quicksilver, that hath a principle of motion but not of rest: Or as a Mill if no grist be cast into it, it than grinds itself. There is no earthly commodity that can be procured or purchased without the price of labour: No penny can be expected at night, unless men take pains in the vineyard, and bear the burden and heat of the day. Nor will the penny of eternal life be afforded upon other terms and conditions; no salvation without working. It is not enough to desire it, and to let fall Balaams wish, Num. 23.10. Let me die the death of the righteous, and my last end be like his. Yea, it is altogether unreasonable and preposterous to bestow an hankering and faint velleity upon the end, without the lawful use of the means. Nor must we say of the water of Life, as David sometime spoke, of the water of the well of Bethlem, 2 Sam. 23.15.16. O that one would give me to drink of the water of the well of Bethlem, which is by the gate: But as the three mighty men broke through the Host of the Philistines, and drew water, and took it, and brought it to David; Even so we must not long and linger after David's example, O that some would give me to drink of the water of Life; but we must break through all opposition and intervening difficulties that obstruct and block up the way; and hinder us in the undertaking. For as in nature the concupiscible and irascible faculties are both joined and twisted together, like to several threads of the same cord and cable in the inferior and sensitive part of the soul; So must the desire of the ultimate end, be enforced and seconded with the use of the most propoitionate and proper means in the working out of our salvation. God hath three several places in the World, saith Saint Basil. 1. Heaven, that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God's Storehouse, or Treasure, the place of reward and recompense. 2. Hell, that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God's Gaol, or Prison, where men are fast bound in chains of darkness. 3. Earth, a middle place betwixt both, and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God's Workhouse for the working out of our salvation. The necessity whereof is commended unto us, under a threefold consideration. First, To evidence the truth of our profession. to evidence and exemplify the truth of our profession by the effects and fruits of it; for as Faith justifies the person in the sight of God, so do Works justify our Faith in the eyes of men. And hence it is, that as Saint Paul's former Epistles contain & confirm at large our entire justification by faith alone, against the legal and Jewish Justiciary; so the later Epistles of Saint James, Peter, and John precisely press, and earnestly urge the exercise of Works and new obedience against the carnal gospeler, and lose Libertine, as is well observed by Chemnitius. It was a scornful Sarcasme that was cast upon the professors and profession of Christianity, by him who was a second Elymas, full of all subtlety and mischief, that enemy of all righteousness, Julian the Apostate, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Gregory Nazianzen reports it, You Christians have nothing else at your tongue's end, nothing in your mouths and hearts but Faith, Faith, Believe, and then all is well. And the self same charge and challenge that stolen frump and jeer, is renewed by our Adversaries of the Church of Rome the Papists, who stick not to proclaim us to the world, with a full and foul mouth, as Solifidians and Nullifidians; and to brand our Religion with that odious nickname; Calva Calvini sides, The bald faith of Calvin: This they affirm 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with a bare and ●ald head, and therein show that they have not so much as one hair of honest men: An impudent and shameless calumny purposely devised by him, who is a liar and the Father of it, and most opprobriously and injuriously obtruded upon the Protestant party, and reformed Churches: The sounder part whereof, (*) Sicut substantia sundamentum est omnium accidentium; sic fides omnium virtutum & donorum. B●navent. Serm. de Sanclis. Ex fide crumpurt ●●ra op●. a. Luther. reuerences Faith as a spiritual Dorcas, that is full of good works, with which it is evermore attended and accompanied, as individual and inseparable companions. And in case works be wanting, they make no other account and reckoning of such a kind of Faith, than a bare name without a thing, a sign without a thing signified, a shadow without a substance, a body without a soul, A dead faith, as St. James makes out the comparison, Jam. 2.26. For as the Body without the Spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also; A mere Sceleton and carcase of it. Faith indeed is a more inward and radical grace, of a spiritual nature, without flesh and bones, as our Saviour concludes of every spirit; But good works are Fides incarnata (as Luther styles them) Faith manifested in the flesh, which may be seen and felt of others. And in this sense though somewhat beside it divers of the Ancients expound those words of the Apostle, 1 Cor. 15.46. That is not first which is spiritual, but that which is carnal; referring it to faith and works, and preferring works before it. Not to enter the list of a comparison, which of them should be the greater, a question that sometimes happened amongst Christ's Disciples, and yet a little to illustrate the matter by a similitude; Faith is as the inward wheels of a Clock that move it, and make it go: Works are as the Hand or Fingen of the Dial, which though it be no cause of motion, yet is it an evident sign how the Clock goes within, and outwardly points forth the hour of the day to the Traveller in the streets. Thus is Faith discerned and descried by our Works. Secondly, To improve and increase grace. working is necessary for the improvement of grace received, which though free y given, yet must it be increased by our pains and industry in renewing and repeating the several acts of it: Even as the sire that came down from Heaven upon the Altar, yet being once kindled it was maintained by the addition of new wood and fuel. (k) Council Nicen. 1 part. 2. cap. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Though we receive grace without labour at the first, yet can we not preserve it without labour, say the blessed Fathers of the first Nicene Council. Thirdly, To attain and gain salvation. working is necessary for the attaining of salvation, as a condition of an obligation, as motion unto rest, as the way to the end of the journey, and the means unto the end. For as in nature there can be no passage from one entream to another, but by a middle that intervenes and comes between, and so unites and joins them together; No more can we be translated from a state of corruption, to a state of happiness, but by working as the means. We must not look to commence in Heaven, per salt●●m, to skip and leap into it; neither nature nor grace allow it. The greater part of the world would have glory without grace, and happiness without holiness; like to the Roman Dictator Sylla, that had rather be surnamed Foelix then Pius. Fain would men receive the wages, and yet not do the work, but in vain and to no end; For life eternal is resembled by a Crown, which they alone wear that run, yea so run that they may obtain. And as the old Romans gave the obsidional Crown to him that had delivered a City from the siege of the enemy, and that made of the grass and flowers of the besieged City; Even so doth God reward men according to their works, and sets them as a Crown upon their head. Let this be granted as an undoubted truth, that salvation is a reward, yet such a reward as issues out of mere bounty and liberality, no wages or due debt. Nor is it given Propter factum sed pacium, not for the worthiness of the deed done, but by a (k) Bona opera non sunt causa rogni sed via regnandi. Bernard. de Liber. Arbit. promissory obligation and engagement, by way of covenant: working is the means whereby, not the cause why we come to salvation: and though it be styled our salvation, yet is it as Faith and Repentance are termed ours, being in us, but not of us: and actions and passions denominate the subject, and not the cause. God only is the efficient cause and author, and man the proper subject, or object of it. For though works be never so necessary in themselves, both in regard of their presence and instrumental efficiency, as a condition, means, and way, ordained by God that we should walk in, yet must we not set so high a rate upon them, as if they were a suficient price for Heaven, any way adaquate and equivalent in proportion to the recompense of reward. This alone is fitly compared to the penny in the Gospel, and money (as the wise man speaks) answers all things, and is the measure and rule of all, but is not to be bought and sold at all. It was the sacrilegious error of Simon Magus, to conceive that the gift of God might be purchased with money: and it hath a spice of his sin, and may so pass for a kind of spiritual Simony, to think that salvation which is the gift of God may be procured with our labour. The Papists indeed have coined a counterfeit and base money of merit to buy Heaven withal, and though it hath none of God's image and superscription, yet would they give that unto God which is none of Gods: as if they were to truck and chaffer and barter with him by way of merchandise, and to deal with him upon the strictest terms of commutative justice. Hear them speak in their own language; Opera bona mercatura regni coelestis, saith Bellarmine, Heaven is as due to good works, as Hell to bad: So Andradius, Coster, & the Rhemists on the New Testament. Let Andrew Vega that proud Jesuit, as the foreman of the Jury give in the Verdict for all the rest, Gratis non accipiam, He will rather lose it, then take it as a free gift. Nor do the Papists offend more on the right hand then the * Canisius lib. 1. de corrupt. verbi Dei. cap. 10. Flaccians, and the rigid Lutherans on the left; who decree them as unnecessary, as hurtful, as dangerous; who pray for Faith without Works, and pass upon them that desperate and damnatory sentence: (l) Ad Satanam spectare Christianos; cum operibus bonis. Lutherani in colloquio Altenburgens●. Ista qnom docun que excusentur, certe ma●nam vin habent ad persuadendum simplici papulo, non esse facien da bona opera. Bellar. de Justisic. l. 4 c. 1. Ad Satanam spectare Christianos cum oper bus bonis. That good Works are a Christians Posport to send them packing to the Devil. Thus is the Doctrine of good Works strangely perverted and corrupted betwixt the Papists on the one side, and the Antinomians and Libertines on the other; As corn is bruised and broken betwixt the upper and nether Millstone: And the trutth of Christianity suffers amongst them, as Christ was crucified betwixt two Thiefs. Thirdly the Act of working shows the difficulty of the duty, it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, no matter on the By, not a slight, or easy task, but a work, yea a working out. 3. Difficulty in the work. And if that of the Philosopher be true (m) Aristot. Ethic. li. 2. c. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It is matter of labour to become a mere moral honest man; what then shall we think of being a Christian, of advancing and aspiring to salvation? surely this must needs require industry and (n) Labour virtutis processus. Ambros. in Psal. 119. diligence, labour for the meat that endureth unto everlasting life, Joh. 6.27. tugging and wrestling, strive to enter in at the strait gate, Luk. 13.24. violence and contention, the kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force, Mat. 11.12. Not on common swashbucklers who are but a word and a blow, and as if they were of Lamech's race, will kill a man in their wound and a young man in their hurt; these are not the violent men here spoken of (o) Non qui aliu sed voluntatibus suis praeclaram inferunt violentiam Bern. in oct. Punct. Punct. 6. not such as exercise violence towards others, but those only who offer an excellent kind of violence to their own wills, as Bernard glosses upon the place; yea faith itself, which of all other seems most easy, is a work, though it justifies not in that respect (p) Ideo noluit discernere ab opere fidem: sed ipsam fidem di cit esse opus Dei. Ipsa enim est, quoe per dilectionem operatur, August. in Johan. Tiaila 25. this is the work of God that ye may believe, Joh. 6.29. neither can this work but be exceeding difficult, as being so cross and contrary to our natural inclinations, a cutting against the grain: A rowing against wind and tide: the elimbing and clmbering of a lofty Hill: like unto that of Jonathan and his armour bearer, upon their hands and feet, betwixt two sharp rocks, Bozer and Zeneh: carnal security and presumption on the one hand, and dreadful despair on the other. It is an easy matter to run down an high and steep hill, where the declivity of the place, and the propending weight of the body facilitates the motion and precipitates the descent; But to move and mount upwards so as to rest in God's holy Hill, (as David styles it) his labour, boc opus est; this is an hard and a sore travel, a painful and toilsome work; and though heavy fowls fall down naturally and drop Hellward of their own accord, yet must they be even compelled to heaven above, with a kind of force and violence. Fourthly, This act of working calls for diligence and earnestness, Diligence and earnestness. yea, great haste and speed; for the Apostle suiths not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as (p) Chrysost. Homil ad Philip. chrysostom expounds it, with a solicitous care and study: Give all diligence to make your calling and election sure, 2 Pet. 1.10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, ply you or make hast like unto Travellers, who being to measure a long tract of ground in the straits of time, they gather up their feet the faster: or like unto runners in a race who being nimble of body and swift of foot, after the manner of Asahel, they leap from place to place as a young Hart upon the mountains of Bether: they press themselves forward, yea stretch forth their whole body, as St. Paul alludes in his own person, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3.13. striving to reach the goal, and to lay hold upon the garland, if it were possible before the time: for a Christian if he gains not ground he loses it, he is soon cast away if he pauses and stops and gives in never so little; he is soon cast behind like unto a Mariner that sails or rows against wind and tide, ad ima relabitur, nisi ad summae conetur: if he work and work not out his salvation, he can not but work toward his destruction. Fifthly, Working imports a proficiency of the work of sanctification, and a progression to perfection, Magis magisquo operamini, Proficiency & progression. as the word is rendered in the Syriack translation; the path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day, Prov. 4.18. This is the property of the righteous, like unto that of the morning light, which is of a growing and waxing nature till it come to the meridian light, and shines forth in his full might: and it is the high commendation of the Church of Thyatira, that her last works were more than the first, Rev. 2.19. There is no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or consistence of height and stature in grace, as in nature, and it fares with the soul in a spiritual sense, as is reported of the Crocodile, that it grows as long as it lives. And old Age which brings with it sterility and barrenness, as the natural and proper effect, adds to the increase and fruitfulness of the Faithful, They shall still bring forth fruit in old Age; they shall be fat and flourishing, Psal. 84.14. Sixthly, This act of working includes constancy and continuance, Constancy & continuance. Conficite. Bez. Ad finem usque opus perducite. Zanch. in Loc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est rem effectam dare, Rom. 7.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Camero. Praelect. in Loc. Tom. 2. go through stitch with it saith Beza, bring it to an end saith Zanchy; as being not only a working but a working out. To effect this without all interruptions, Chasma's or lesser breaches is altogether impossible: it may be, nay it must be without long discontinuance or palpable dec inations; beginnings be they never so good, are but the preface of goodness, and foundation of virtues at the best, and so prove no foundation, unless men build upon them. And albeit a worthy enterprise and undertaking may pass as currant for half the action; Dimidium facti qui bene coepit habet, yet God will not be served by halves, that which is but almost done is not done at all; nor can ought be presumed to be done so long as it remains unfinished. It is a Maxim in the civil law (q) Quicquid in calore iracundiae vel fit vel dicitur. non prius ratum est, quam si perseverantia apparuit judicium animi fuisse Regul. juris ex Digest. whatsoever is done or spoken in hot blood or anger, is of no effect or force, as being a sudden and rash act, unless it be further confirmed and ratified by a deliberate resolution; So they that are religious only in heat of blood, hotspurs in devotion, by fits and starts, and most violent for a turn or two; who follow the chase eagerly till they meet with the honey, as Jonathan sometimes did these I say are of no account and estimation, except they approve & declare themselves to be so in their cold blood, by constancy and perseverance For it is not the receiving but keeping of faith, that quickens the dead soul; they are not the beginnings but the end, that commend a christian: and Tertullian is peremptory in the case (r) Nemo Christianus nisi qui ad finem usque perseveraverit. Tertul. Praescr. adv. Haer. cap. 3. there cannot be a true Christian that perseveres not unto the end; what is this but to look out of Sodom with Lot's wife, to go out of Egypt with the dissembling Israelites? to put the hand to the plough, and then look back to begin in the spirit and end in the flesh, with the foolish Galatians to work, and not to work out? what is this but to render ourselves like unto blazing stars or fiery Meteors, that yield a short blaze and shine, and forthwith vanish in smoke and smother? to flirt up from the ground with the frisking Grasshopper, and presently to fall down upon the earth; this is it that argues men foolish bvilders with him in the parable, and affords matter of open contempt and scorn; This man began to build, but was not able to finish it, Luk. 14.30. 2. Pass we then from the Act to the Object, whereabout the act is conversant; The second thing considerable in the matter of the duty. The specification of the object; Your salvation. and that is said to be our salvation: were there no reward for the righteous, as David infers with a note of certainty, doubtless there is, than were they (as St. Paul reasons the case) of all men most misorable: were the reward severed and separated from the work (s) Mercedem si tollas, nihil in vita hominum tam inutile tam stultum videri potest, quam virtus, Lactant. de Justit. lib. 5. cap. 19 nihil tam inutile tam stultum quam virtus, saith Lactantius, there were nothing more vain and unprofitable than Christianity, and true religion: were it any trivial or light commodity, an ordinary or inferior kind of good, it were more than questionable whether it would recompense our pains, much less satisfy our expectation; and that to pursue it with so great toil and travel, were not to tread in their steps or wander who sweat out the spirit and life, of their most stately steeds of great price and value, to gain it may be with much hazard and uncertainty, a small quarry of a small or no price at all? meeting with more pain in the chase, than they find pleasure or profit in the purchase, which scarce entertains them with a supper? And lest such like jealousies should damp and daunt our desires, or rebate the edge of our endeavours; the Apostle tells us, we work for salvation, which will sufficiently requite and repay us for our pains? there is not so great difficulty or tediousness in the work, Two things in the object. 1. Excellency, Salvation. 2. Property. Your. but there is far greater dignity and duration in the reward, so that he ven and earth, time and eternity are not more differenced and distanced each from other if St. Paul may be judge, 2 Cor. 4.17. For our light afflictions which are but for a moment, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (which is the word of the text) works for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. There are two things that are the common attractives of affection, and are wont to excite and provoke love, (t) Aristot. 2. Pocit. cap. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Philosopher, property and excellency when the object is amiable and lovely in itself, and when it is proper and peculiar to the party, both meet together, and kiss each other in the Apostles precept: such is the excellency that it is no less than salvation: and for the property it is our salvation, a common salvation indeed as St. Judas styles it in the extent and multitude of possessors, yet proper to the owner: and that best becomes every one, that most properly belongs to him; and property and interest is the ground of care and diligence: and where excellency and property fall in each with other, they cannot but whet on industry in the most secure and sluggish dispositions, and set every man to work. The very name of salvation is a short notation and description of the excellency, as being the Elixir and quintessence of perfection, the adequate object, and ultimate end of man's desire. This is the whole man, and without this every man is altogether vanity. The Syriack and Arabic translations, turn the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into life; and so seemingly neglect not only the Emphasis but the efficacy of the speech; For though salvation be a life, yet all life is not a salvation: And God himself who is blessed for ever, and the glorious Angels, lead a happy a thrice happy life, and yet are no way capable of salvation, (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est ca vita quae miseris & deploratae spei, & perditis homini bus obvenit. Cameron in Loc. Myroth. Evangelic. which is proper unto those which were sometime wretched and miserable and utterly lost in themselves, and there is a double consideration of it. 1. As an Immunity or Freedom. 2. As a Dignity or high Privilege. First, Salvation is an immunity from misery, a freedom from the danger of the greatest evils, Salvation is an immunity and freedom. sin, death, and eternal damnation. It is not safety only but salvation; and betwixt these two there is a broad and wide difference. That man may be said to preserve another who prevents his ruin and destruction; But he only can be said to save, that recovers and restores it being lost. Which moved the Orator, to break forth by way of admiration; (*) Hoc quantum est! ita magnum ut uno latino vocabulo exprimi non possit. Is est nimirum Soter, qui salutem dedit. Cicer. lib. 2. cont. Verrem. O how great a thing is this! so great; that it cannot be expressed in one Latin word. Is est nimirum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, qui salutem dedit. He saves who gives life to the Dead. Secondly, Salvation is a Dignity and high Privilege; in the several degrees and steps of it. 1. In the inchoation and beginning. 2. In the consummation and perfection. First, Salvation is a dignity and high privilege in the inchoation and beginning of it. A dignity and high privilege. The foundation whereof is laid in this world, but the roof set up in another: Who hath saved and called us with an holy calling, 2 Tim. 1 9 Salvation and calling go hand in hand, In the inchoation and beginning. and effectual vocation is the first fruits, the earnest, the Livery and seizin of our salvation. This day is salvation come to thy house saith Christ to Zachous, Luke 19.9. That man who is not saved in this life, by receiving Christ into his heart, as Zacheus into his house, shall never be saved in another, by being received into those eternal habitations. Secondly, In the consummation & perfection. Salvation is a dignity and high privilege in the consummation and perfection. An aggregation of all good, a confluence and affluence of all comforts and contentments: The making us free. Denizens of the new Jerusalem, the possessors of the highest Heavens, the linking us in society with Saints and Angels, the beatifical vision of God, and divine transformation into the image of his glory. Salvation is one of Saint Paul's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Cor. 12.4. It is all we can conceive and utter, and all we cannot conceive and utter: coelum non patitur hyperbolem, the highest hyperbole cannot reach the highest Heaven. We can never speak enough, or too much of it. As therefore Gregory Nyssen, treating on the Preface in the Lord's Prayer, Our Father which art in Heaven, wished himself wings, wherewith to mount and fly a pitch proportionable to the height of the Argument; So were there need of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, winged words in preaching of salvation, to soar a loft according to the sublimity of the matter. And as Hierom reports of the Monks in Egypt, that when they heard any mention of the Kingdom of Heaven, and of the glory of the world to come; they all stole a secret sigh, and lifting up their eyes to Heaven repeated the words of the Psalmist, Psal. 55.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Naz. Orat. 17. Quis dabit mihi pennas sicut columbe; Oh that I had the wings of a Dove, then would I fly and be at rest. Even so the devour meditation of that great salvation presented and held forth in the Text, should work as vehement a desire in us to fly unto Heaven; not with the wings of a Dove, but with the most ardent affections and ecstatical raptures, which are the wings of the soul, that so we may have a full fruition and enjoyment of it. Thus have you heard the specification and appropriation of the object, and what it is; We must work out our own salvation. But lest I should seem to leave so mysterious and sublime a point, so excellent and so necessary a Truth, like unto Ezekiels dry bones, without life and breath: Give me leave to prophesy to these dry bones, and breath upon them once more, with the spirit of Application. And to collect and gather from hence a threefold Corollary and Conclusion. 1. By way of supposition. 2. A threefold. Corollary, or conclusion. By way of inference. 3. By way of exhortation. First, seeing it is salvation, that is here recommended by the Apostle, First, by way of supposition. as the reward of our obedience; And salvation is an immunity and freedom from the state of sin and misery; We may from hence observe, That all men by nature are at a loss, and in a destitute and desperate condition. For as the Apostle reasons the case, 2 Cor. 5: 14. We thus judge, that if Christ died for all, then were all dead. Had not we been dead in trespass and sins there had been no outward cause or motive reason in the object, That the Captain of our Salvation, and Lord of Life, should purchase our life with the price of his own death, had not we been the lost Sheep, and the lost Groat in the Parable, there had been no need for Christ to go after that which is lost, and to seek diligently till he find it. This was the end of his coming into the world, as himself professes, Luke 19.10. The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost. Salvation necessarily presupposes and implies a loss on our part, sins guilt and a just obligation to wrath to come. And as we are lost in ourselves, so must we find ourselves to be such in our own apprehension. We must be deeply sensible and throughly convinced of our woe and wretchedness, we must hunger and thirst after Christ's righteousness, and even look and long for his salvation. Being ready to sink into the bottomless gulf of despair, each one in his own person must cry out with Saint Peter, Matth. 14.31. Lord save me; Being tempested upon the Sea of God's fierce wrath, and the ship of our souls well near covered and overwhelmed with the stormy waves of his indignation; we must go unto Christ, awake him with the importunity of our prayers, and say in the language of Christ's Disciples, Matth. c. 8. v. 25. Lord save us, we perish. Secondly, If it be a Christians task and charge to work out his salvation; A second Corrollary by way of inference: Then may we from hence deduct and infer, That it is lawful to do good out of hope of reward; as an incentive of desire and duty, and a spur unto diligence: An Argument that God propounds and holds forth in the School of Christianity; Even as prudent Schoolmasters, are wont to train up, and draw on their younger Scholars, with fair and gentle promises. — Pueris dant crustula blandi Doctores, elementa velint ut discere prima. Horat. Serm. lib. 1. Satyr. 1. * Licet omnium consensu in operibus temporalibus spectare temporalem finem; ut pharmacum sumerigratia sanitate. arare, & serere spe fructus percipiendi, currere vel decertare in stadio causa chrinendae victoriae: Cur igitur non liceat in opere spirituali, in cursu & certamine ab ipso Deo proposito, ad pramium supernae vocationis attendere? Bellarm. de Justit. lib. 5. cap. 8. It is not only lawful but laudable, and in some sort necessary to have respect and reference to the fruition of our own happiness, as the guerdon of our labours: even as he that runs in a race, hath his eye full fixed on the Garland: and the most generous soldier in the hottest shock, the most fierce and fiery encounter, hath his thoughts prepossessed and swallowed up, in the hope of victory; For salvation being the End of our operation, as Saint Peter speaks of it, 1 Pet. 1.9. Receiving the end of your faith the salvation of your souls. It must needs be first in intention and efficiency, not by any proper motion of its own, but only metaphorical of love and desire, whereby it excites and stirs up the Agent unto work, and gives life and being to each enterprise and undertaking. It is indeed but a subordinate and inferior end, Finis sub fine, or rather a means in respect of God, who is the chief and ultimate. Et tota ratio amandi medium est congruentia cum fine, saith the School: yet in as much as it conduces and leads unto God, as the means unto the last end, and is the end of our service, though not of God whom we serve; It may well suit and stand with the single sincerity of a Christians affection, and the integrity of the obedience, to propound it as the scope of our employment and recompense of our endeavours. Even as the cunning Archer directs the sight of his eye to the white or mark, but glances in the second place at the Butt; Thus may a Christian have salvation in his eye as the Butt whereat he shoots, though he punctually aims and levels at God as the white: Neither can we fasten our arrows in the Butt, and participate of salvation, but we must needs hit the white, and enjoy the beatifical vision and presence of God himself. True it is, that the blessed Angels and Spirits of just men made perfect in the Heavens, serve God out of a reverential and servant love, with an ingenuous and free spirit: and the more we are spiritualised and made heavenly in our affections, the nearer we approach to their excellence and perfection. Like as the Elements the nearer the are conjoined unto the Heavens, are so much the purer in their substance & inclined to their motions; And yet as the Elements have a double motion, The one ad conservationem sui, The other ad conservationem universi: even as water descends of its own accord, and yet violently ascends ad vitandum vacuum, for the eschewing vacuity and emptiness which is repugnant to the nature of the whole: In like manner the servants of God have a double inclination for the more general and universal good, which is the glory of God; and for their private and personal interest, the benefit of their salvation. And yet nevertheless this doth not justify the Devil's challenge and indictment preferred against Job, Doth Job serve God for nought? nor argue them of a mercenary and (y) Nolite esse sicut servi qui serviunt Domino mercedis ergo; sed petius estote servis similes qui serviunt Domino, sed non causa mercedis. Antigonus Sochaeus apud Drusium, Apothegm. pag. 5. servile disposition, unless they regard their wages, as the principal or only motive of their obedience. And as he that abstaius from evil for fear of punishment (z) Qui tantum timet est inimicus justitia. Aug. Epist. 144. alone; so he that serves God for hope of reward only, is an enemy of sound righteousness. Observe we but these two conditions, that we do not reflect upon our own Blessedness, as the main or only reason of our Duty; Like unto little children who will hardly be persuaded to pray for their daily Bread, except they be first alured and invited with the promise of their Breakfast. And then have we a cloud of Witnesses and Examples to direct and regulate our practice; For had not Moses respect to the recompense of reward? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. saith the Text, Heb. 11.26. he looked upon it (as the word signifies) in a curious and intentive manner, and with the eye of admiration. And did not Saint Paul solace himself with this assurance, 2 Tim. 4.8. From henceforth is laid up for me a crown of righteousness. Yea, our blessed Saviour himself, a Pattern without Parallel, and beyond all exception, endured the Cross, and despised the shame, and that for the joy that was set before him, Heb. 12.2. And thus may we work out our salvation. Thirdly, Be we exhorted to take up the duty, as it is laid down to our hand by the Apostle, A Third Corollary by way of Exhortation. and that is to work out our salvation. This is all that God requires by way of Duty, who sets forth the Kingdom of Heaven (a) Venale habet regnum Deminus, preeium ipsius labor est. Aug. in Psal. 93. to sale, and the price of it is our Labour. If we consider it in the nature, it is salvation; A freedom from misery. And as it is the greatest misery to have been once happy, so it is the greatest happiness that is ushered in by a foregoing misery. Light though sweet and pleasant in itself, becomes more pleasant and delightful after the blackness of darkness. Health is more welcome after a lingering and languishing sickness; to have passed from Death to Life, doubles the nature of the Benefit. If we look upon it in the Adjunct, it is not a temporary but an eternal salvation. Duration and continuance commend every thing, as it did the garments of the Israelites which waxed not old for the space of forty years in the Wilderness: And if length of Time enhances the Honour of a Blessing, much more eternity: (b) The Apostle takes up a comparison from the example of the Heathen, and those Isimian games among the Corintoians, and argues à fortiori, if they, much more we. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chrysost. Hom. 15. in Matth. Erubesceo Paula, Ethnicae comparatione superaris: melior est ancilla Diaboli, quam mea. Hieronym. Epist. ad Paul. Know ye not that they which run in a Race, run all. Now they do it, to obtain a corruptible crown, but we an incorruptible. 1 Cor. 9.24, 25. Not a crown of Laurel, or wreath of Bayss, and Flowers, Spectaculi & spiraculi res, good only for sight and sent, yet withal of a fading substance, But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Saint Peter styles it, 1 Pet. 5, 4. A crown of glory that fades not away. If Glasses, Beads and Bugles, those transparent and brittle vanities be so much esteemed; of what price and value is that precious Pearl of life eternal? If men purchase damnation at so dear a rate, shall they not be at the same or far greater pains to work out their salvation? Nauseabit ad Antidotum, qui hiavit ad venenum? (c) Quid gravatum pati nunc homo ex remedio, quod non est tunc gravatus pati ex vitio? Displices occidi in salutem cui non displicet occidi in perditionem. Nauseabit ad Antiditum, qui hiavit ad venenum? Tertul Scorp. adv. Gnosticos, cap. 10. What shall they kick or strain at the Antidote, who have opened their mouths wide, to swallow down the poison. Secondly, it is our salvations; and property is the indearment and engagement of affection. The loadstone of love, and whetstone of courage and resolution: what is it but property that moves a Nation to sight pro aris & focis, and to withstand the incursion and inroad of a common enemy, with the hazard and loss of their own lives? what is it but property that prevails with corporations and Cities to appear in the maintaining of their charters, and defence of their local privileges? what is it but property that invites particular and private persons so earnestly to contend for the securing their estate and substance? this meum & tuum, is the soul of the lessur world, that animates and informs it, and affords both life and motion; nay more, it is the soul of religion that entitles us unto Heaven, and interests us in God himself; tolle meum, & tolle deum: Take away mine, and take away God likewise. There is a politic and state Maxim, and hath been as politicly handled of later years, * Cicero 3. de Legibus. Salus populi suprema lex, the safety of the people is the supreme law; sure I am that Salus. propria suprema lex, a man's personal safety and salvation is the supreme law, the highest of all other. 2. The second general part of the Text, is the manner of the duty, with fear and trembling: The manner of he Duty. With fear and trembling. betwixt these two there is this difference, Metus internus, tremor externus est, as Cajetan glosses upon the place. (t) Cajetan in Locum. Fear is an inward affection of the heart, arising from the apprehension of a future and imminent evil; trembling is an outward effect of that inward fear; which causeth a concussion and agitation, a quaking and quivering in the body there is a disease in nature which is known by this name, the palpitation and trembling of the heart: and herewith God threatneth his rebellious people by way of punishment, Deut. 28.65. The Lord shall give thee a trembling heart. This was that mark which God set upon Gain, lest any man finding him should kill him, Gen. 4.15. which was nothing else (as some conceive) but a quotidian ague of an astonishing and amazing fear, a continual rattling of his bones, and an uncessant shaking of the several limbs and joints of his whole body; so that cursed Cain was the first Quaker that we find upon record, and that even appeared in the world? but besides this natural affection, there is a spiritual fear which may be distinguished in to two forts and kinds. Two sorts of Fear. 1. A fear of distrust and diffidence. 2. A fear of solicitous care and diligence. First, There is a fear of distrust and difference. A Fea of distrust and diffidence. Not of our own power and strength, that holiness and righteousness that is in us, which is a holy frame and temper of spirit, and disposeth it unto perfect blessedness, and in this sense that of the wise man: is most true, Pro. 28.14. Happy is that man that feareth always a but it is a distrustful fear of the riches of God's grace and mercy, the un-sufficiency of Christ's merits, and plenteousness of redemption: this kind of sear we leave to Popish Justitiuries and Merit-mongers, those Doctor of doubting, which they press and urgo as essential to the rapture of faith; and condemn a particular persuasion and confident assurance under the censure of high presumption. These are the men that vie merits with Christ, that stand upon their tiptoes, as if they hoped to reach heaven, and to lay hold upon it with their finger; that challenge it as a due debt by way of condignity of the intrinsic worth and value of their works, holding a kind of proportion and equality with the glory that shall be revealed: and yet when these men come to the way gate, & their souls sit hover upon the tip of their tongues, ready to take their flight into another world; then all merits of Saints and Angels, and the blessed Virgin herself are laid aside: then Christ comes to be in request and credit with them and no other prayers drop from their mouths, but such as are directed to him as their Saviour, with a Bone Jesus instead of an Ave Maria, O bene Jesu esto mibi Jesus; O sweet jesus be thou unto me a jesus: witness their Cardinal controversor Beltarmine, who having tugged hard in the traversing of the question and sweated out many arguments for the support of their idle Dagon, justification by works; he is at longth enforced to a short retractation, and to draw a cross line over all that he had wrote at large in defence of it through the compass of five whole books, si. (c) Bellarm. de Justif. lib. 5. cap. 7. Tertia propositio. propter incertitudinem propriae justitiae, & periculum manis gloriae, tutissimum est totam fiduciam in sola Dei benignitate & misericordia reponere: that in regard of the uncertainty of our own righteousness, and vain glory; it is the safest course to place our whole trust and confidence in the alone mercy and benignity of the God of our salvation. Secondly, There is a fear of solicitous care and watchful diligence, A fear of solicitous care and diligence. an awful reverence of offending God in contracting the guilt of the least sin: this is the souls scout or sentinel, placed in the heart as a watch tower to foresee and prevent the assault of danger; the guide of our lives which hath a general influence into all virtues, and into each holy and religious duty; fear is faith's antidote and preservative, that keeps it from spiritual pride and presumption: thou standest by faith; be not high minded but fear, Rom. 11.20. It is fear that serves as an allay to qualify and temper our joy, that it degenerate not into a wanton or wild looseness and dissoluteness: serve the Lord with (d) Sit timor innocentiae cunos, ut dominus qui in mentes nostras indulgentiae coelestis allapsu clementer influxit in dnimi obt rectantis hospitio iusta operatione teneatur. Cyprian. Epist. 2 Dovato. laudo timorem dili●o verecundiam: timer hominis, dei honor est. Tertul. de penitent. cap. 7. fear, and rejoice with trembling, Psal. 2.12. and it is the grace of fear that confirmeth and establisheth the Saints in the state of grace, and is given them to that end as a condition of that everlasting covenant, Jer. 32.40. I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not departed from me. And whereas some go about to evince the apostasy of believers, and to coisclude an a mission or intercision, and if not a final yet at least a total falling away from God, from these and such like instructions and admonitions; Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall, 1 Cor 10.13. And work out your salvation with fear and trembling. This caution and fear here spoken of, is not opposed to religion, confidence or to the certainty of faith, but to carnal security and presumption; and is joined with an assurance that God will work both the will and the deed of his good pleasure: as it follows in the next verse, and is annexed as a reason of the duty. For how can our taking heed of falling infer a necessity of falling away? which is ordained of God as a * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristor. sovereign means to prevent it; And if we do these things we shall never fall, 2 Pet. 1.1. how can the fear of watchfulness, and diligence render them less watchful and diligent in the work of the Lord? and albeit that of St. Cyprian hath its truth (e) Cyprian. Epist. 2. Doato. accepta securitas indiligentam parit: security being once conferred breeds a lither kind of laziness or supine sluggishness: yet is this verified only of (f) Aiunt quidam se salvo m●tu & fide peccure; hoc est salva castitate matrimonia violare, salva pietate parenti venenum temperare; sic ergo & ipsi salva venia in gebeunam detrudentur, dum salvo metu peccant. Tertul. de Poenit. cap. 5. carnal security, that makes men reckless and negligent, not spiritualsecurity, which is evermore attended with sedulity and assiduity in the use of the means, and in giving all diligence to make their calling and election sure, omnia tuta timet, that is the property of it: it fears what is most safe. There are two grounds of this fear and trembling in the work of our salvation; Two grounds of our fear and nembling. I mean that of solicitous fear, and watchful diligence, I shall take them up as they are laid down by Bellarmine. Bellarm. loco citats. 1. Incertitudo proprie justitiae. 2. Periculum inanis gloriae. 1. The first ground of our fear and trembling, is the uncertainty of our own righteousness; The uncertainty of our own righteousness. for howsoever the gifts and calling of God are without repentance, Rom. 11.29. The foundation of God abideth sure, having this seal: the Lord knoweth who are his, 2 Tim. 2.19. And they that trust in the Lord, shall be as mount Zion, that cannot be moved, but abideth for ever, Psal. 125.1. Yet simply considered in themselves, they are but as a reed shaken with the wind; as Christ speaks of john the Baptish, and might not only be shaken but even bruised and broken in pieces, if left to their own liberty. The stoutest and strongest Christians are but as Samson when his locks were shaved, weak and like unto other men, Judg. 10.17. And as they fall, so should they be utterly cast down: but that the Lord upholdeth them with his hand, Psal. 37.24. And keeps them by his power through faith unto salvation, 1 Pet. 1.5. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God that worketh to will and to do of his own good pleasure; That is the reason which implies the necessity of fear and trembling in the working out of our salvation; (f) Cajetan. in locum. quia nec velle nec operari consistit in nostris viribus: saith Cajetan upon the place, because neither will nor doing proceeds from our own power; and we must therefore fear lest (q) Propterea timendum ac tremendum est, ne Deus subtrahat operationem qua in vobis haec operatur. Cajet. ibidem. God should withdraw his graoe and cease to work in us. Add hereunto the consideration of the might and multitude of our ghostly enemies, in their nun, nature, and infinite advantages; Principalities, Powers, and spiritual wickednesses in high places: the thought whereof may justly move us to take up the speech of Elisha's servant, when he beheld the City compassed with horses and charets: Alas my master how shall we do? 2 Kin. 6.15. and to confess in the words of good Jehoshaphat, 2 Chron 20.12. O my God we have no might against this great company that cometh against us: neither know we what to do, but our eyes are upon thee. 2. The second ground of our fear and trembling, The danger of vainglory. is the danger of vain glory: why doth the Apostle say with fear and trembling. (saith St. Augustine) and not rather with security, if God work both to will and to do; unless it be in regard of our will, without which we cannot prove what is that good, & perfect, and acceptable word of God. It may soon come into man's heart to conceive, that what he doth well to be his own work, and to say with the Prophet David I shall never be moved: therefore he who gave power to his will turned his face for a while from him, that he who said so might be troubled; (h) August de natura & gratia contra Pelagium. cap. 17. quoniam ipsis lest ille tumor sanandus doloribus, because that tumour and tympany of swelling pride, was to be he healed with the bitter sorrows of a troubled mind: what is virtue but a medicine, and vice but a wound? and yet we have so often wounded ourselves by our medicine, that God hath been fain to make wounds medicinable, to cure by vice, where virtue hath stricken, to suffer the just man to fall, that being raised he might be taught what power it was that upheld him standing. The great Apostle St. Paul had a thorn in the flesh a messenger of Satan sent to buffet him, lest he should be ovalted above measure, 2 Cor. 12.7. whereupon St. Austin cries out by way of admiration, O venenum quod non curatur nisi veneno, caput caedebatur ne caput extolleretur; O the malignity of that deadly poison, which was not to be cured but by another poison the head was buffeted, that the head might not be exalted. And herein lies the difference betwixt pride and other sins, which are ranked and numbered among vices; whereas pride takes place in good works, even in the best of our services; and great cause we have (as Luther well advises) to take no less heed of our duties, then of our sins. Faith and fear are of the same use in the soul, with the cork and lead in the silhermans' net, both which are joined together, and fastened to each other; the cork makes the net to float and keeps it from sinking: the lead causes it to sink downward, and to settle to the bottom; even so the grace of faith is as (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Pindarus. cork unto the soul enabling it to swim above water, in the depth of greatest miseries and extremities, by a firm recumbency and a sure reliance upon God; but as for fear it hath the property of lead to lay low and even sink the soul through self-denial, and distrust of its own strength, lest otherwise it perish by presumption. Give me leave therefore to draw the Saw back again the same way, The application. and to reinforce the foregoing exhortation, by taking up the duty in the Text entire and whole: work out your salvation with fear and trembling. Let us be jealous over our hearts with a godly jealousy, as St. Paul was affected to his Corinthians, and say we of our hearts, as Job speaks of his children, when they had feasted each other in their several houses: It may be my sons have sinned and cursed God in their hearts, Job. 1.5. L●● us fear all our works after Jobs example, Job: 9.28. So as not to repos● any trust and con●idence in them and utterly to renounce all opinion of merit by them and seeing there was no sacrifice without dung, fear we the wants and weaknesses, the sinful defects and imperfections, that adhear and cleave to our best actions; say we every one of us with the devout affection of holy Bernard, (k) Bernard. in Cantic. Horreo quicquid de meo sum, ut sim meus, abhor we whatsoever it ours, that so we may be ours; and not so much ours as Gods. This solicitous and watchful fear, will not be a means to impain, but improve, not to shake but to strengthen our security. That which one sometimes told the Senators of Rome, Ego sic existimabam patres conscripti, uti patrem meum saepe praedicantem audiveram; qui vesiram amicitiam colerent, multum laberein suscipere, caeterum ex omnibus maxime tutos esse; As I have often heard my father acknowledge, so did I ever think: that the friends and favourers of this state, barged themselves with greatest labour, but no man's condition so safe as theirs; the same may we a great deal more justly say in this case, our Fathers and Prophets, yea our Lord and Master have full oft spoken, and by long experience we have found it most true; as many as are retained in this service, Eosmaximum laborem suscipere, they have taken upon them a laboursome, a toy lesome, a painful profession, sed omnium maxime titos esse; but no man's security like their. If then there be any that propound and move the jaylours' question, Act. 16.30. What must I do to be saved? I shall return no other than St. Paul's answer, Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved; provided always that we forget not St. Peter's rule, 2 Pet. 1.5. and besides this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue: and that we take along with us St. Paul's charge to Titus, 3.8. this is a faithful saying, and these things I will that thou affirm constantly; that they which have believed in God be careful to maintain good works. This is the duty of every Titus, of each faithful Minister of Christ to hold forth faith and good works in the course of their public Ministry: and it is a duty of as high concernment to the private Christian, to join saith and good works in their personal practice. These are the two pillars of Religion, whereon it relies and rests; like unto jachin, and Boas, that supported Solomon's Temple; and are like unto Rachel and Leah which two did build the house of Israel, Ruth. 4.11. and by both these we must edify and build up ourselves, in the working of our salvation. As therefore holy Br●●lford cried out frequently in the ears of this Nation; Repent, Repent, Repent. And that other Martyr, was wont to call upon his followers; Pray Pray, Pray. So let me bespeak you, I say not with the bare ingemination, but trebling of the duty, Work, Work, Work. Let us begin, and set upon the work to day, this present hour and minute I now speak unto you. And let us go on with the work the next, and the next, yea all the days of our life. And being at the point of death, let us say with that dying Emperor Severus; Is there yet any more work to do? Let us not cause the work to cease, till we cease to be any more; Till we rest from our labours; and our good works follow us; not to the Grave alone, but to the highest Heaven. I close up all with the repetition of the context, and what Saint Paul made use of as a Preface, shall serve me instead of a Conclusion. Wherefore my Beloved, as ye have always obeyed not as in my presence only, but now much more in my abfence: Work out your salvation with sear and trembling. VNUM NECESSARIUM, OR CHARITY Is ALL in ALL A SERMON Preached before the Mayor, and Court of Aldermen of the City of Norwich in the Newhall Chappel. Vnum opus est; id est, unum necessarium est. Non unum, quasi singulare opus: sed opus est. expedit: necessarium est. August. in Evang. secund. Lucam. Serm. 26. de Martha & Maria. Propterea unus sanabatur in illa Piscina: & quisquis alius descendebat, non sanabatur: Ergo iste unus, commendat unitatem Ecclesiae. August. in Evang. secund. Johan. Tractat. 12. LONDON, Printed by T. C. for Will. Rands at Fleet-bridge. 1659. VNUM NECESS ARIUM, OR CHARITY Is ALL in ALL. 1 COR. 16.14. Let all your things be done with Charity. A Concise and short Text, a small Ray or Sparkle, The Introduction. like unto that of a precious pearly or orient, Diamond; but of great price and value: A drop of Words, and yet a sea of Matter. (a) Tertul. de Orat. cap. 1. Quantum substringitur verbis, tantum diffunditur sensibus; as T●rtullian speaks of the Lords Prayer. It is not mord compendious and contracted in form of speech, then copious in sense and substance. The words are very few in number, and but five in the original, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And may fitly be resembled to Saint Paul's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so, highly commended, 1 Cor. 7.19. In the Church I had rather speak five words with my understanding, that by my voice I may teach others also, then five thousand in an unknown tongue. And surely these n●r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the five words of the Text, being solidly and judiciously handled, might prove more edifying then five thousand employed upon some other Theme and Subsect. But far be it from me to presume or promise it in my own behalf. And yet what is wanting in the sufficiency, and abilities of the speaker, is abundantly supplied in the worth and weight of the matter. An argument that commands and calls for your awakened attention and most serious observation. That what I preach and press, you may practise, and while I spear of, you may hear with, charity: therein rendering yourselves exampies of the Apos●es rule even in this present exercise; Let all your things be done with Charity. The Apostle Saint Paul spends a whole Chapter, from the beginning of the thirteenth, to the end, in a large and liberal commendation of the grace of Charity, describing it in fair and fresh colours, from the several marks and characters. And it is Saint Chrysostoms' earnest request and obtestation of the Reader, that they would not pass over so lively an image and pourtraicture in a cursory manner, but exactly consider every line and lineament in so beautiful a piece, as a most exquisite Picture drawn by the hand and pencil of a Curious Limner. And here in the words of the Text the Apostle reassumes the same subject; not like to an unskilful (b) Ridetur Cythar● dus. chordn qui seirper oberrat eadem. Har. de art. Poetiea. A double reason of the Precept. Musician, who by striking double and treble upon the fume string, is justly exposed to censure; but as a prudent Physician, he prescribes it as a Catholicon, a Catholic Medicine, an Universal Receipt and Remedy of all spiritual Maladies and Diseases. There is a double reason, why the Apostle is so frequent and importunate in urging and reinforcing the grace of Charity. The one respects the Corinthians, to whom he inscribes this Epistle, The first respects the Corinthians. who were men of an active spirit, a pragmatical and busy headed people; such as were split asunder into strange Sects and Schisms, into several Rents and Ruptures in the Body of Religion, and Church-Discipline, which should have been like unto the (c) Now the coat of Christ was without seam, woven from the top throughout. Joh. 19.23. Desuper Texta, quid significat nisi charttatem, Desuper Texta Tunica, quid significat nisi unitatem. Aug. in Joh. Tract. 13. Sacramento vestis & sign declaravit Ecelesiae unitaetem. Cypr. de unit. Eccles. cap. 6. Coat of Christ, without seam. Every one of you saith, I am of Paul, and I of Apollo, and I of Cephas, and I of Christ. Is Christ divided? 1 Cor. 1.12, 13. Surely not in himself; yet was he divided among them, by means of their differences and distractions. When ye come together in the Church, I hear there are differences among you, and I partly believe it, 1 Cor. 11.18. Nor were they only broken in pieces, and crumbled into Factions and Fractions In Sacris, in the worship and service of God; but they were of an unquiet and restless temper, of a litigious and troublesome disposition, and immoderately affected vain-jangling and wrangling in vita communi, even in civil affairs and business. Now therefore there is utterly a fault amongst you, that ye go to Law one with another, 1 Cor. 6.7. So that strife and contention was their proper and peculiar sin, the Dalilah and darling lust of these Corinthians. And there could be no Doctrine more appliable to their condition, or snitable to their necessities, then to hear a Lecture or Lesson of Love and Charity. The second reason concerns the incomparable worth and excellency of the Duty itself, which shines clear and bright in perfect beauty and lustre among other graces, The second Reason concerns the duty itself. as the Morning or Evening Star, or the Moon amidst the lesser Lights. Saint Paul was wonderfully in love with the Grace of Love, and seems to express and profess his affection to it, as David did to Jerusalem, Psal. 137.5, 6. If I forget thee, let my right hand forget her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. He could not forget to give the Corinthians some brief intimation and hint of Charity, both in the beginning and end of this Epistle. That is never too much spoken of, which is never learned enough. The Text contains in it an Apostolical Precept and injunction, consisting of these two specialties. 1. The Duty commended and commanded, and that is Charity. 2. The parts of the Text, two. The extent of the Duty, in reference to the Object or Subject of it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Let all your things be done with charity. I begin with the Duty laid down in the end, and the very last word of the verse, Charity. Charity is one of the three Theological Virtues, a created Trinity in the Soul of man, The first part. The Duty commanded, Charity. saith Altisiodorensis, and are famously known to be these, Faith, Hope, and Charity: That is a supernatural and infused Habit, a sanctifying and saving Grace, which compriseth and comprehendeth the love of God, and of our Neighbour, as the several Branches. Not to speak any thing of the love of God, which is no part of the Apostles charge, nor any way falls within the verge and compass of the Text. And as for the love of men, it is either that general affection that belongs unto men as men, the not hiding of ourselves from our own flesh, as the Prophet Isaiah phraseth it, Isa. 58.7. such as partake and share with us in the common interest of Humanity; or else it is that special degree of Christian love, that we own and exereise to our Brothren, either by a visible and external profession of Religion, or a vital participation of the spirit of Grace and Holiness. Which are thus distinguished by Saint Peter, under several names and titles, Brotherly kindness and charity, 2 Pet. 1.7. And in the vulgar and common acception of the word, Charity is that part of love that is exhibited to men in misery and distress, and is all one with mercy and compassion. And herein the good Samaritan, who bond up the wounds and poured in oil and wine, approved himself a Neighbour to him that fell among Thiefs; which was ingenuously acknowledged by the Lawyer in answer to our Saviour's question, and by him propounded as a pattern for our imitation, Go and do thou likewise, Luke 10.37. Saint Paul compares the three Theological Virtues together, and gives the right hand of Fellowship unto Charity, 1 Cor. 13.13. And now abideth Faith, Hope, and Charity: these three, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but the greater, or greatest of these is Charity. The comparative degree being put for the superlative; and yet not simply and absolutely the greatest, but in some respects, in the several acts and offices, and those two in number. 1. The Latitude and breadth. 2. The Longitude and length of it. 1. The Extent. 2. The duration and continuance. You have them both recorded in the former part of the Chapter. Charity greater than Faith and Hope, in two respects. First, Charity is greatest in the latitude and breadth of it, whereby it respects and reflects upon others. First, in the latitude, or breadth of it. This the Apostle makes good by a particular enumeration, and rehearsal of fifteen several Attributes and Properties, partly Negative, in the careful eschewing and avoidance of whatsoever is offensive and hurtful; And partly Affirmative, in the solicitous procuring and promoting the good of our brethren, 1 Cor. 13.4, 5, 6, 7. For whereas Faith is the receiving band of the soul, which apprehends and applies Grace offered, and is narrow handed and close listed, and will in no case part with what it hath formerly laid hold on, and seized to its own use; The operation whereof is wholly terminated in a man's own person for his private benefit and advantage: Hast thou Faith, have it with thyself, Rom. 14.22. Charity is a communicating and giving hand, and that wide and open, in distributing to the necessities of others, Hoc habet, quodcunque dedit. Accounting and reckoning that only as her own possession, which it hath disbursed and expended. Her wants are her wealth, and her losses her greatest gains. Charity is kind, 1 Cor. 13.4. not to those only that are nearly related and allied, but even unto strangers, and professed enemies; like unto a sparkling fire, which heats and warms the bystanders, and the flames likewise reach unto those of remote distance. And being a common good, it is so much the more excellent. There is the same difference betwixt Faith and Charity, that is betwixt the Root and Branches. Faith is as the root of the tree, that attracts and sucks in the juice of the earth, to conserve and preserve the life of it: But charity is as the boughs and branches, down laden with plenty of ripe fruit, which stretch out, and as it were, spread forth their arms to as many as are willing to take the pains to pluck and gather them. Secondly, Charity is greatest in the longitude and length of it, Secondly in the longitude and length of it. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Cor. 13.8. charity never faileth, neither in this life, nor in that which is to come. It is but a Popish gloss of Caietan upon the place. Take heed when you read these words, that you fall not into that error, (d) Charitatem semel habitam nunquam amitti. Charitas quantum est exparte temporis nescit casum. Caiet. in locum. That charity once bad, cannot be lost. And yet that which he adds is sound and Orthodox, wherewith he strangles and cuts the throat of what he had formerly laid down for a sure conclusion: charity knows no loss nor end, in respect of time. For whereas Faith and Hope shall determine and expire in another world; Faith being turned into a Vision, the beatifical vision of God; and Hope into Fruition: yet both Faith and Hope shall be swallowed up of Love, which then shall be consummate and made perfect. (e) Appetitus inhiantis erit amor fruentis. August. The thirsting desire of the soul after happiness shall be then exchanged with the full fruition, and perfect enjoyment of Love through all eternity. And hence it was that Henry Nicolas the Founder of the Family of Love, was wont in a most prodigious and blasphemous manner, to boast among his seduced Sectaries, (f) Se nimirum Mosi & Christo praepenendum, eo quod Moses spem docuisset, Christus fidem, ipse vero cbaritatem utraque majorem. Jo. Laetus Camp. Hist. universal. pag. 583. Calvin. in Locum. That he was every way to be preferred before Moses and Christ upon this ground and reason, That Moses taught the people of Israel the grace of Hope; Christ the grace of Faith; but he the grace of Love, which is greater than both: And so pronounced by the definitive sentence of the Apostle, Now abideth Faith, Hope, and Charity, these three, but the greatest of these is Charity. Nor doth this any way allow or privilege the corrupt gloss of the Papists, that if charity be the greater grace, it must needs have the greater hand and stroke, and proves more availsome than faith itself in point of justification. A strained and forced inference, an inconsequential and unconcluding argument: and it is all one (as Calvin well observed) as if they should reason in this manner; Therefore the King must till the ground more knowingly then the Husbandman; and make a neater shoe than the Shoemaker, as being far above both: therefore a man must ran swifter than a Horse or Dromedary, and bear an heavier weight and burden then an Elephant, because he surpasses them in worth and dignity: therefore the glorious Angels must afford a better and brighter light unto the earth, than either Sun or Moon, as being creatures of greater excellency. For the force and efficacy of justifying Faith, is not to be measured by any intrinsic and inherent quality in the nature, but by the proper place and office of Faith, whereunto it is designed; wherein it hath no coparcener nor corrival. In this respect Faith hath the pre-eminence, even as Charity is the greater in the forementioned particulars, the Breadth, the Length; the Extent and Continuance. This is the reason why the spirit of God every where inculcates and enforces the duty, with a reiterated and a zealous vehemency, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Above all things put on charity, which is the bond of perfection, Colossians 3. verse 14. Therein resembling it to an outward garment that is put over and covers the other apparel, that is larger and wider, that is more comely and costly than the rest; and serves to distinguish the several Orders and Ranks of men, according to their different capacities and conditions. Such a spiritual garment is charity to the soul, a proper badge and cognizance of a Christian, the livery of Christ's Disciples: By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another, joh. 13.35. And it is not without cause that the Apostle styles it, the bond of perfectness; it being of the same use unto other virtues, that the bond is unto the faggot, that holdeth the sticks together and keeps them from severing and falling from each other: and to the Church of God in common, which is the mystical body of Christ, it is in the place of the nerves and sinews in the body natural, which connect and join the several members, and make them mutually helpful, and serviceable to each other: this is St. Paul's commendation, Above all things put on Charity. And that leads me to the second speciality, that was promised, the extent of the duty in reference to the object 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let all your things be done with Charity. Every sacrifice shall be salted with salt, Mar. 9.49. such a salt is Christian charity, which must season every sacrifice and so make it well pleasing and acceptable unto God, The second speciality. The extent of the Duty all your things. and beneficial and profitable unto men: charity is a spiritual leaven, which affords taste and savour to the whole mass of dough, that it may prove toothsome to the , and wholesome, and nourishable to the body. Charity is the soul of religion, and like to the soul in the body, it is Tota in toto, & tota in quelibet parte, and is well translated by the Apostle in the words of the Text, Let all your things be done with charity. And would you know the comprehension of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and now far the All things extend and reach: you may have them explicated and enlarged in a foursold consideration. 1. In our diligent inquiries and researches after truth. These all things enlarged in a fourfold consideration. 2. In passing judgement and censures upon others. 3. In the exercise or forbearance of our Christian liberty. 4. In all our affairs and business, the whole series and course of our conversation. First, Charity must take place in our diligent inquiries and researches after truth, First, In our diligent inquiries and researches after truth. and moderate in all our disputations; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 4.15. following the truth, (as the vulgar Latin renders it) speaking the truth, (as our English translation reads it) which way soever we turn the words, whether we speak the truth, or follow the truth, it must be in love. It is good to be zealously affected always, Gal 4.18. provided we take in the Apostles caution, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so it be a good thing, and regulated in a right manner: there must be light and heat in the fire of our zeal; the (g) Zelum tuum inflammet charitas, informet scientia formet constantia. Bern. in Cant. Serm. 20. Zelam tuum lavao modo non desideretur mansuetudo; vinum & oleum in suo tempore infundendum. Evangelistam non tyrannuum legislatorem praestes. Oecolamp. Epist. ad Gul. Farrel. light of discretion to direct and guide it, that it prove not blind, like unto metal in a blind horse; and love to correct and temper the fiery heat, lest instead of warming, it scorch and burn yea utterly destroy and devour: for though we must earnestly contend for the faith (as St. jude exhorts jude. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, like unto wrestlers that tug and grapple, or champions and combatants that run for a wager; yet we must herein follow the example of the ancient, of whom it is well observed; Sanctorum patrum disputationes, non contentiones sed collationes erant, The disputations of the fathers were brotherly collations and conferences, not contentions: rational discourses and debates no uncharitable divisions or separation. We may, yea we must strive and fight under truth's Banner, as being of (h) Incomparabiliter pulchrior est veritas Christianorum, quam Helena Graecorum. August. Epist. 9 ad Hieron. incomparable worth and beauty: yet not after the manner of soldiers, b● laying hold on sword and buckler, and making use of other carnal weapons; we must subdue and conquer our enemies in opinion, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as (i) Nazianzen Orat 14. Four rules observable in our inquiries after truth Nazianzen well adviseth) Not by force of Arms but by force of Arguments; and herein we must take along with us, and take up in our practice a four fold rule and direction. First, We must heedfully beware of curious speculations, perverse dispute, nice and needless questions which minister matter of vain jangling, and profane babbling rather then godly edifying in the faith: like unto Spider's cobwebs, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. That are artificially woven with a very fine thread, but good for nothing save to catch flies. 1. The first rule to beware of nice and needless questions. This was the folly and vanity of the (k) Statum lacessunt omuipollentis dei, calumniosis litibus. Fidem minutis dissecant ambagibus, quoquisque lingua nequior solvunt ligantque questionum vincula per Syllogismos plectiles. vae caeptiosis Sycopbantarum Strophis. vae versipelli astutiae. Pradent. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Repreh. Infid. Schoolmen, who were even sick about questions and strife of words, men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth; (as St. Paul speaks of such) who turned all divinity non in usum, sed in utrum; not into use and practise, but impertinent queres and questions, and with the Stoics of old; they were more careful to dispute, then to live. But far be it from us to be like unto them, to fall in travel with Mountains and to bring forth a silly Mouse, to put ourselves to an anxious toil and trouble about mere toys and trifles; if we must needs contend, let it be for the (l) This was one of the three things, whereof Constantius the Arrian Emperor repent before his death, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazianzen. Orat. 21. pag. 389. faith once delivered to the Saints? if we will be provoking one another, let it be (as St. Paul adviseth) Heb. 10.24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a provoking, and (as the word implies) a whetting to love and to good works: let us make that solemn procession of Hierom to Austin (m) Hyeronim August. Epist. 18. Sit inter nos pura germanitas, & demeeps non question●m sed charitatis scripta ad nos mittamus; let all English Divines turn pure Germans, and Christian Ministers prove cousin Germans in this respect; and henceforth employ their Tongues and Pens, not in Preaching or Printing controverted questions, but exercise them in commendation and practice of the grace of charity. 2. We must not act the Pharisees part, in gaining Proselytes, to ourselves, The second rule not to pursue victory more than truth. and not to Christ; we must not pursue victory more than truth, nor captivate men's judgements to private opinions, rather than to the faith. There cannot be a nobler conquest than when the truth gets the victory over ourselves or others; this was the firm league and covenant that was jointly agreed on betwixt Hierom and Austin in the heat & height of their altetercations, (n) Cumque tu viceris, & ego vincam si meum errorrm intellexero: & è contrario me vincente tu superas. Hieron. August. Epist. 11. ille mei victor est, ita ego triumphator erroris. Caecil. Octavio. Minut. Fadix, pag. 128. ut inter nos contendentes veritas superet, That truth may be the conqueror; that whether the one or other win, they may both win by a right understanding of their errors. Thirdly, The third Rule. Not to cast dirt and mire, upon the Persons or Professions of others. We must seriously refrain and forbear all (o) Qui loquacitatem facundiam existimet: & impudentiam constantiam deputet: & maledicere singulis, officium bonae conscientiae judicet. Hermogenes apud Tertull. lib. 1. cap. 1. reproachsul invectives and defamatory Libels.: Not seeking to enhance the Honour of our own names, by casting dirt and mire upon the faces of others; by aspersing their persons, or bespattering their professions, no not when we are most exasperated and provoked. That Text of Saint Peter may well serve as a Christian Motto: Not rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing, 1 Pet. 3.9. That of Oecolampadius to Favel in a monitory Epistle of his was good counsel; (p) Oecolamp. Epist. ad Favellum. Evangelizatum non maledictum missus es. You are sent not to rail but to preach. And it was a notable speech of Calvin, having had an ample experience of the acrimony and sharpness of Luther's stile, who was wont to put too much Gall and Coppress into his Ink, having to deal with them that dissented in opinion; (q) Saepe dicere solitus sum; etiamsi me Diabolum vocaret, me tamen hoc illi honoris habiturum, ut insignem Dei servum agnoscam: qui tamen ut pollet eximiis vi●tutibus, isa magnis vitis laborat. Hanc intemperiem qua ubique ebullit, utinam froenare studuisset, vehementiam autem, quae illi est ingenita, u●inam in hosts veritatis semper contulisset, non erian, vibrasset in serves Dominr. Calvinus Epist. Bullingero. pag. 383. though Luther should call me foul fiend and Devil, yet would I most willingly acknowledge him as a famous instrument of God's glory. Fourthly, We must keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, the bond of perfectness; The Fourth Rule. To keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. without breaking this bond asunder. And in case of breach, there cannot be a more honourable work, then to be called A repairer of the breach, Isa. 58.12. to close the rents and ruptures of the Church of God; and to bind up her wounds with the good Samaritan. Shall I provoke you to emulation, with the example of the Primitive Christians, of the first and best Age of the Church; I might put you in mind of the memorable behaviour of Irenaeus, in compounding the difference betwixt the Eastern and Western Churches, about the precise Time of the celebration of Easter: who therein shown himself a true Irenaeus: And as he was (r) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb. lib. 5. c. 23. pag. 70. peaceable in his name, so was he a peacemaker in his Disposition, (as Euseb●us speaks o● him.) I might tell you of great Saint Basil, and Gregory Nazianzen, who were (as it were) miraculously raised up in the Church of God, being then miserably rend and torn asunder, with strange Divisions: (s) Nazianz. vita, pag. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: Like unto Runnels that is poured into Milk, that makes it curdle, and unites the dispersed and scattered parts together. And let me add hereunto that Elogium of Calvin, (t) Non aliter in ●cclesias quantumvis remotas affectus, quam si illas humeris gestaret. Beza, in vita Calvin. That he had no less tenderness, no less feeling even of remote Churches, then if he had born them on his own shoulders. And it was a noble Resolution of his; Ne decem quidom maria; That it would not grieve him to sail over ten Seas to settle an uniform draught of Religion in the Church of God. Seeing therefore we are compassed about with so great a cloud of Witnesses, let us follow the direction and guidance of it; as the people of Israel did the motion of the pillar of the cloud in the Wilderness; and walk in the light of their Example. Learn we from so many goodly patterns and precedents, not to make the like use of dissensions and distractions in Religion, that the superstitious Pharisees did of their Apparel: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; who made broad their Phylacteries, and enlarged the borders of their garments, Matth. 23.5. But let us rather shorten and lessen them, let us bring them into as strait and a narrow compass as may be, and as much as lies in us, utterly out them off, by an unfeigned and zealous endeavour after peace and unity. Secondly, Charity must interpose in passing judgement and censures upon others. In passing judgement & censures upon others. This must not be a precipitate, a headlong, a rash and unjust judgement. Judge not after the appearance, but judge righteous judgement, John 7.24. where appearance and righteous are contra-distinguished to each other. And then may men be said to judge according to appearance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as the word is) when they judge after the sight of the eyes, which Christ himself did not, lsu. 11.3. Looking only upon the face and outside, as Samuel did upon Eliabs' countenance and the height of his stature, without prying and piercing into the hidden cause, and the inward truth of the matter. And herein we must observe a difference in the judgement of things and persons; as is well noted by Aquinas, the honour of the Schools; (u) In rerum judicio debet aliquis niti ad hoc ut interpretetur unumquedque secundum quod est. In judicio ant● personarum, us interpretetur in melius. Aquin. 2da. 2da. quest. 60. Artic. 4. In the judgement of things we must be exact and accurate, and cut a hair if it were possible, by interpreting them as they are in themselves, without any addition, or substraction: But in the judgement of persons, there is a greater latitude and liberty allowed, in rendering them to the better, by commenting upon the Text with a fair gloss, and setting it off, with a favourable Interpretation. That man who makes another worse than he is, makes himself worse then be. And in matters of Fact, of an evil colour or consequence, it is a point of charity to apprehend or suppose them not done at the first: For: charity, as it believeth all things, so it hopoth all things, 1 Cor. 13.7. and evermore presumes the best, where there is not pregnant and proving Evidence to the contrary, and favours the suspected or accused party, in cases of an ambignous or doubtful nature, that they are done out of weakness not wilfulness, a common passion of humane frailty, not any deliberate resolution or propensed malice; and not so much out of any propending affection and inclination to the sin in their own persons, as the importunate solicitation and instigation of others, and a prevailing power of a sudden and strong Temptation. And howsoever we may spend our judgement upon wieked and ungodly men according to their present state and condition, and deal plainly and roundly with them in an Apostolical manner; Rom. 8.13. If ye live after the flesh ye shall die. If ye live and die in your sins, ye must needs die for your sins; yet we must not desinitively pronounce any peremptory and damnatory sentence touching their final and last estate. For who art thou that judgest another man's servant? to his own Master he standeth or falleth, Rom. 14.4. This is an Abortive kind of judgement, that comes before the time; and is justly dissuaded by the Apostle, 1 Cor. 4 5. Therefore judge nothing before the time, till the Lord come. And for men who were never empanel ' d●by God as his Jury, to come in as a Quest of Life and Death, and to give in a Verdict of Reprobates and Castaways: (x) Tertullia. Apolog. cap. 19 de Excemmun. Summum futuri judicii praejudicium est. A strange kind of Prolepsis and no less uncharitable than presumptuous preoccupation of the latter Judgement. Thirdly, Our Charity must express itself, in the exercise or forbearance of our Christian liberty. In the exercise or for hearance of our Christian Liberty. It is Saint Paul's advice, 1 Cor. 8.9. Take heed lest by any means this liberty of yours become a stumbling block to them that are weak. All manner of offence and scandal, that is given though not taken, be it in things morally evil, or an indifferent and middle rank, is either in the nature of the thing, or the intention of the Doer, a spiritual stumbling block laid in the way of ignorant or doubting Christians, that hinders their going forward in the way of holiness: as the dead Body of Amasa, stopped the mareh of Joab's Army. Or else it proves an outward occasion and impulsive cause of their fall into sin: and that either by stumbling or staggering their judgements, the sadding and perplexing their spirits, the intangling and puzzling their consciences with doubts and scruples, and the utter ruin and overthrow of the whole man. This the Apostle exemplifies by instancing in meats and drinks; which are both clean in themselves, and in the judgement of those that are sufficiently instructed and informed touching the nature and use of them; but prove unclean unto those that through ignorance or error misapprehend them to be such; and yet partake of them, being encouraged and emboldened by their examples, who out of supercilious scorn, or the ralliness of indiscretion at the best, adventure on them in their fight and presence, to the open violation of Christian charity. That is Saint Paul's resolution in the case. Rom. 14.15. But if thy brother be grieved with thy meat, now walkest thou not charitably. Destroy not him with thy meat, for whom Christ died. For Actions of this nature in the use of things indifferent, must be ordered and measured by a double Rule. Two Rules in the use of our Christian liberty. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 1. Duty. 2. Decorum. 1. lawfulness. 2. Expediency. 1. Necessity. 2. And edification. And there must be regard had not only to the strength of our own knowledge, and the steadfastness of our persuasion, but a tender respect shown to the infirmity and weakness of others. An arrogant knowledge may swell our spirits and make us carry our heads on high; but it is an humble charity, that must cause us to submit and stoop; to the necessities and advantagos of our Brethren. This is the excellency of Charity above that of Knowledge in the different effect of it, 1 Cor. 8.1. Knowledge puffeth up, but charity edifieth. Fourthly, Charity must act and operate in all our affairs and business, In all our affairs and business. in the whole series and course of our civil conversations. Many are the works of charity in order to our converse and commerce with men; And should I treat of them at large and in particular, yet might you justly affirm even after the enumeration and rehearsal, what the Queen of Sheba sometimes spoke touching the report of Solomon 's wisdom; the half was not told us. I shall therefore bind up an handful of gleanning, or rather some few Eurs out of a large and wide Field; And reduce these works of charity, to four Heads. Four works of charity, in the course of our civil conversation. 1. The concealing and hiding the natural infirmities, or moral and sinful imperfections of others. 2. A Christian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and meek-spirited condescension to those that are beneath us, for the avoiding of superfluous quarrels and contentions, and for the procuring and promoting of peace and unity. 3. A liberal communicating and distributing with a free heart and open hand to the necessities of our brethren. 4. The exercise of benevolence and beneficence, to such as are most alienated and estranged from us; the persons of professed enemies. 1. The first work of charity, is the concealing and hiding the natural infirmities, The first work of charity; The concealing of natural or moral imperfection of others. or moral and sinful imperfections of others: this is the proper and immediate effect of it, and is laid down by St. Peter as the Basis and groundwork of his exhortation, 1 Pet. 4.8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Above all things have fervent Charity among yourselves: for charity shall cover a multitude of sins; not that charity covers our sins in the sight of God, or hides them from the allseeing Eye of his Vindictive and Avenging justice, which nothing else can do, but the glorious Robe of Christ's unspotted and perfect righteousness imputed unto us, for the remission and covering of sin, which are both one in David's account; Psal. 32.1. Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered: but as for our righteousness, and charity which is a part of it, Pallium breve est, 'tis a very short cloak, and mantle, that will not reach down to the Ankles, and palliate the spirtual nakedness of the soul; and yet nevertheless charity covers the sins of others by not divulging and spreading them abroad; not lending an open and listening ear to reports and rumours, that are dispersed and scattered by others; by denying, defending, justifiing, excusing, extenuating, qualifying what soever is capable of a candid and a courteous construction, & so far as it is compatible and consistent with the rule of charity. Like unto Shem and Japhet, that took a garment and laid it upon their shoulders, and went backward and covered the nakedness of their Father, Gen. 9.23. or as the Emperor Constantine, who in case of detecting the miscarriage of an Ecclesiastical person, full sore against his will, he would (y) Se●paludamento obtecturum scelerarum faciws, ne forte cui cernentium illud visum noceret. Theodoritus Hist. lib. 1. cap. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith the Historian, and taking the royal Robe from his own back, cast it upon his fault and folly. Such a cloak is that of charity, a wide and side cloak, and (as St. Peter speaks of it) covers a multitude of sins: there cannot be a more demonstrative argument and evidence of our love then this, and if we will credit the wise man Solomon, he who covereth transgression, seeketh love, Prov. 17.9. 2. The second work of charity is a Christian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and meek spirited condescension to those that are every way beneath us, The second work of charity. A meek spirited, condescension to those that are below us. for the better avoiding of unnecessary quarrels and contentions, and for the procuring and preserving of Peace and Amity: a notable example whereof we have in the Patriarch Abraham, who though he was Uncle to Lot, and every way his superior in age and dignity; yet doth he leave it to his liberty, for the settling his abode, and for the choice of his habitation: Is not the whole land before thee? separate thyself I pray thee from me: If thou wilt take the left hand, I will go to the right: or if thou depart to the right hand, then will I go to the left, Gen. 13.9. And that which moved him to yield so far, and stoop so low; was a solicitous care to prevent, and cut off all occasion of strife, that sounded ill in the ears of the Gananite and Perezzite, that then dwelled in the land. And Abraham said to Lot; let there be no strife betwixt me and thee, and betwixt my Herdsmen, and thy Herdsmen; for we are brethren, v. 8. thus doth Abraham conjure his Nephew Lot with a charm of love and charity. And the Apostle St Paul severely reproves and taxeth this spirit of debate and division, in the many headed Corinthians, 1 Cor. 6.7. Now there is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to law one with another; why do ye not suffer wrong? why do ye not rather suffer yourselves to be defrauded? this was the 〈◊〉 the spiritual impotency and infirmity of their dispositions, that they did not voluntarily relinquish, and in some measure recede from their own right, thereby to piece and flitch up differences out of a zealous desire and endeavour after brotherly love and concord. This was very remarkable and signal in Gregory Nazianzen, who when the Council of Constantinople was split in two about the choice of a Bishop; he took his leave both of the Council and of his Bishopric with this farewel speech, (z) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Gregor. Naz. vita. If I be the cause of this dissension, I am not better than the Prophet Ionas: cast me forth into the sea, so shall the sea be calm unto you; only remember that of Zacharie, love the truth and peace. 3. The third work of charity is a liberal communicating, and distributing with a free heart, and an open hand, to the necessities of our brethren, who so hath this world's good, and seethe his brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, ●how dwelleth the love of God in him, The third Work of Charity. A free distributing to the necessity of our Brethren. 1 joh. 3.17. and then do men shut their bowels of compassion, when they shut their hands, and are close fisted; and in so doing how dwelleth the love of God in them? and the Apostles interrogation hath in it the force of a vehement negation; that there is no love at all. It is a gross yet common error of the Papists, to confound good works in the general, with works of charity and liberality: as if the part, and the whole, were all one, and there were no other works besides: and yet almsdeeds are good works; good in their kind and nature, Good and profitable unto men, Titus, 3.8. And much more profitable unto ourselves: for howsoever works of charity, are not either efficient or meritorius causes, entitling or interessing us in the Kingdom of Heaven; which descends upon us as an inheritance provided by our Father from all Eternity, and purchased in the fullness of time by the blood of Christ: Yet are they a necessary condition, and an effectual means of our entrance, and actual possession of that Kingdom; the rule and measure of Christ's award in pronouncing and passing that definitive sentence, at the great and general judgement of the latter day, Mat. 25.34, 35, 36. Come ye blessed children of my Father, receive the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world. For I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger. and ye took me in: naked and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye came unto me. Thus will Christ entertain and welcome men into his Kingdom at the day of his appearance. And that is the reason of Saint Paul's charge to Timothy, Why those that are rich in this world, should be rich in good works; Ready to distribute, willing to communicate: Laying up in store for themselves a good foundation, against the time to come, that they may lay hold on eternal life, 1 Tim. 6.17, 18, 19 4. The Fourth work of charity is the exercise of benevolence and beneficence, The fourth Work of Charity. The doing good to our Enemies. to such as are most alienated and estranged from us, the person of professed Enemies. And that whether enemies in Opinion, Affection, Action; we must according to our Saviour's counsel, Love, Bless, Pray, Do good to them, and by all means possible intent and further their temporal, and much more their eternal welfare. This is the Genius of the Gospel; the discriminating character of Christianity, from all other professions and all Religions. (a) Amicos diligere est omnium, inimicos autem solorum Christianorum. Tertul. ad Scapulam, cap. 1. For men to love their Friends is common to all: but to love their Enemies is proper and peculiar to Christians. And herein must we express & evidence our charity to enemies, by an unfeigned earnest desire of their conversion to the unity of faith and love. If that a member be dissected and out off from the society of (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chrysost. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. the Body, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; we forthwith carefully closely and bind it up, and use the best means of art and skill to incorporate it with the (c) fellows, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It is St. Chrysostom's comparison. Even so should all our attempts & endeavours aim and levelly at this main project and design, The Application, in a threefold Consectary & Inference. to reunite and combine our most enraged and implacable Enemies in the bond of Christian communion and Brotherly fellowship, from which they are severed and divided for want of Charity. 1. And is St. Paul's Aphorism sound Divinity? Let all your things be done with charity? The First affording matter of Grief and Sorrow. That which we may from hence observe in the first place, is matter of grief and sorrow. Private grief and public sorrow; A copious Theme and subject, large enough to make up a full volume of the same Argument with the Roll of Ezechiel ' s prophecy that was written within and without, with lamentation, and mourning, and woe. And just cause there is now if ever, for every man in his own person, to renew and take up that melting desire of the pathetical Prophet; Jer. 2.1. O that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I may weep day and night, for the want of this grace and charity. Oh Charity, the map and mirror of Excellency, the glory of graces, the bond of peace the bond of perfectness, the desire and delight of Angels, the lively image and portraiture of God himself? which is everywhere styled, The peace of God, and the God of peace; (c) Nazianz. Orat. 14. pag. 214. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith Nazianzen. Which is of God, and is God. For God is love, 1 John 4.8. Not only causally in us, but formally in himself, though not as an Affection, but as his Nature. Oh thou highly beloved and lovely Love, the fairest among virtues, Beautiful as Tirzah, comely as Jerusalem? What is become of thee? where dost thou abide and dwell? Hast thou quite left this habitable world, and art ascended and gone up to Heaven? there to enjoy the sight of God's blessed Face, and to repose and rest thyself in his Bosom from whence thou first came? (d) Nazianz: Orat. 14. pag. 214. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It is the passionate complaint of Gregory Nazianzen. O dear and precious peace? a Grace that is generally commended and cried up by all, but observed and practised by a very few; Where hast thou forsaken us for so long time? And when, oh when wilt thou return unto us? oh Christian Religion the clear fountain of peace and union, How do thy distractions turn thee into a puddle of quarrels and contentions? How are thy wells become Esek and Sitnah; thy waters Massah and Meribah; that were once another Siloe flowing in a still and gentle current. Thy sacred Scripture is made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: Thy Blessed Sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The cup of Blessing, a cup of controversy. The means of our spiritual communion, an occasion of disunion and separation. The Lord's Supper purposely ordained by our Blessed Saviour to conjoin our affections, hath disjoined our judgements: and is to be feared lest our long quarrels, about the manner of Christ's Presence, cause the matter of his Absence, for the want of our charity to receive him. It is our Saviour's prophecy and prediction of the last times, Matth. 24.12. And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold: That malice shall turn and charity frieze every day more and more. The decay of natural heat in the Body is an inseparable concomitant and companion of old age: and the want of Christian charity, the spiritual heat of the Soul, is an infallible mark and token of the last and worst Age of the World. Herein resembling that of David, who was grown old and cold; And they covered him with , but he got no heat, 1 Kings 1.1. And what is that a abundance of iniquity foretold by Christ? whereunto may we refer those swarms of suits and quarrels, excess of strife and contention; those wild distempers, and wide distractions, not only in civil matters, but even in point of Religion? (e) Gerson de precept. Decal. cap. 8. Where, in a pennyworth of strife, there is not half a pennyworth of love, (as Gerson complains in his time) Whereunto (I say) may we impute them as the true and proper cause? but that the love of many, very many is grown cold: yea, not only cold but dead. And as Martha spoke concerning Lazarus, whom Christ came to recover and raise out of his grave, John 11.21. Lord if thou hadst been here, my brother had not been dead; So certainly if the grace of charity had been present, and the peace of God ruled in men's hearts, those deformed and misshapen Monsters, of all kind of Sects and Schisms, had not so much infected and infested the Church of God: All which have had their first Rise, growth and continuance from the want of Charity▪ which hath been utterly lost of later years, in our unkind differences, unbrotherly discord and dissension. (f) Na●ianz, Carm. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. As Nazianzen warbles it out sweetly. That fierce and fiery zeal of some; a zeal of God but not according to knowledge, as Saint Paul testifies of the Jews, hath not only strained and stretched, but loosed and cracked all the strings of Love, and utterly marred the melody and harmony of Christian concord, and left us no more of it then the bare Name and Title. And as the Turkish Emperor being some years since prevailed on by our Ambassador to hear some of our English Music, from which, (as from other Liberal Sciences) both he and his Nation, were naturally averse and abhorrent; It is so happened that the Musicians were so long in tuning their Instruments, that the Great Turk distasting their tediousness, went away in discontent before their music begun: Even so may it probably be presumed, that the difference and dissensions betwixt christian Churches, (being so long in reconciling their Discords) will breed in Pagans such a disrelish of our Religion, as that they will not be easily invited to attend and give car unto it. This is it that renders the Reformed religion, an Object of shame and scorn, that makes it a common Byword, and a parable of reproach. (g) Vestem persecutores non consciderunt Christiani Ecclesiam dividuet August in Evang. Johan. Tract. 13. This is it that exposeth it as matter of offence and scandal to her dearest Friends, & an hissing astonishment and amazement to her deadly Enemies; that a foreign fo● cannot wish us a greater mischief, or themselves a grcater advantage, then Domestical dissensions. And every subdivision in cause of the Religion (as the Author of the Council of Trent well observes) is a strong weapon in the hand of an Adversary: And encouraged the igra●th Turk to let fall that politic, but sad story; (h) Richterus Axiom. Polit. pag. 866. That his fingers would sooner be all one length, than Protestant Princes of one mind. And as for Solyman the Great, one of that rank and number, he proved a truer Prophet of the dismembered and disjoined condition of Christendom, than his false Prophet Mahomet; (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Naz. Orat. 1. de Pace. Scissura domestica turbat Rem populi, tituatque foris, quod dissidet vitus. Prudent. Christianorum accasus intestinis disidiis corroboratur, The declining and utter downfall of Christians is occasioned and caused by their intestine broils and quarrels; Their dissensions portend their dissolution. This is a Lamentation and shall be for a Lamentation. Secondly, If all things must be done with charity, this may justly reprove and tax such, A second consectary affording matter o just reproof Two sorts of men reprovable. as notoriously violate this Apostolical Maxim, and offend against Truth and Charity. I shall range them into two Files or Ranks. The professed Papist. The professed Protestant. The first sort that offend against the rule of charity are professed Papists, speaking lies in hypocrisy (as Saint Paul prophesies of them) doctrinal, practical lies; Who have taught their tongues to utter falsehood, and may be condemned out of their own mouths, with the evil servant in the Parable. For as the Testimony of an enemy in point of justification, is a strong evidence and presumption of Truth: So in matter of accusation an enemy's tongue is no slander; And strong affirmations are but weak proofs. If it were enough to accuse one another, who then should be innocent? Sure I am, that if the Protestant party should be tried at the Bar of the Papists, They would be condemned when they are judged; and found guilty of Heresy, Blasphemy, or if there be any thing more criminal, or capital in the nature. Hear them speak in their own language, (k) Protestants articulum omnin nullum tenent symboli Apostolici. Andr. jurgervicius, lib. Tet. Evang. quinti professores. Calvini Pseudo-Evangelium, Alcorano esse in nullo melius, in multis tetrius & flagitiosius. Decan. Gifford, Praef. in lib. D. Reynoldi wright's Articles. Artio. What should I tell you of Protestants, Atheism set forth by Possevine, and William Reynolds Calvino Tureisme approved and prefaced by Dean Gifford. Books so entitled and commended to the Christian world under those names: The Protestants have no Faith, no Religion, no Christ; They are the words of our Country man Wright in his Articles. Let Preston and Coster and Campian bring up the rear, and charge through and through far more furiously and desperately then the former: Their Religion is error, themselves Heretics, their end destruction: one Heaven cannot hold them and us hereafter, nor one Church now. That if we be not damned; they will be damned for us. This is the charity of the Papists. And it would be no breach of charity to apply jacob's imprecation against Simeon and Levi, Brethren in evil, Gen. 49.7. Cursed be them anger for it was fierce, and their wrath for it was cruel. And I will pray yet against their wickedness. A second sort that offend against the rule of Charity are professing Protestants, Professing protestants. and those of both sides and parties, the Lutheran and the Calvinist; but especially the Lutheran. And albeit they are distinguished into Rigidi & molles Lutherani, Rigid and gentle Lutherans; yet for the generality and greater part, they are Esau's, and Edom's, red and hairy all over like a garment, and are as rough and rugged in their dispositions, as he was hairy in his body. Such is the bitterness of spirit, and acrimony and sharpness of stile, that possesses and transports some of them: that Isaiahs' Prophecy seems to be verified and fulfilled in a spiritual sense, Isa. 9.20, 21, 22. No man shall spare his brother; they shall eat every man the flesh of his own arm. Manasseh, Ephraim; and Ephraim Manasseh. The Lutheran against the Calvinist, and the Calvinist against the Lutheran; and that with such animosities and heats of Passion, that they (l) A Calviniana fraeternitate libera nos Demine. Lutheranus quidam apud Prolaeum. Fasc. cap. 1. q. 7. pray against the brotherhood of the Calvinists. And if Adam Contzen the Jesuit may be believed, and an enemy deposes as a legal witness.) (m) Si quisquam Lutheranorum libros erislicos contra Calvinianos', vel illerum centra Lutheranos legere velit; non hominum in h●mines invectivas esse, sed Daemonum contra Daemonas furores & rugitus sibi persuad ebit. Adam. Contr. Polit. lib. 2. cap. 19 sect. 6. Whosoever will spare so much time, as to peruse and turn over the Polemical Writings of Lutherans against Calvinists, or Calvinists against Lutherans; he will not conceive them as the invectives of men, but the rage and roar of Devils. This is the charity of professing Protestants. Nor can we of this Church and Nation be acquitted and discharged from being guilty of breach of charity; And there are so many faulty in this kind, that I may say of them as Leah at the birth of Gad, A Troop or company cometh: Lo a multitude of all sorts and kinds. I shall instance only in these two. Two sorts of professing protestants. 1. The Pastor. 2. The giddyheaded People. The first sort who are guilty of the breach of charity, is the Pastor, The Pastor. who neglecting the well tempered gravity, and (n) Mediis consiliis vel Author, vel Approbator semper Bucerus. Calvin. Epist. Bu●ero. pag. 81. meek spirited moderation, that so well becomes the Ministers of Christ in the dispensation of the Gospel, are every way more indulgent to their natural passion of sudden anger, the boiling of hot blood about the heart, then affected with true zeal; they rather scald then warm men's consciences; and in stead of a cutting reproof of men's corruptions, they fall foul upon their persons These men instruct the people, as Gideon taught the men of Succoth, with thorns and briers, Judg. 8.16. by pricking and scratching, by rending and tearing, and by drawing blood of the Hearers. The Pulpit, while they are in it, is nothing but thunder and lightning, all in a burning flame, like mount Sinai, when the Law was given upon it; Or rather like mount Aetna, that breathes forth Fire and Brimstone, to the astonishment and annoyance of such as are afar off, and the utter endangering, and swallowing up of those that draw near. All their Sermons are sharp Satyrs, fierce Philippics, violent Declamations, and are seemingly used to evacuate and empty spleen, to vent and void choler, in that they abound and run over with Gall and bitterness, reproachful and reviling speeches. The old Donatists are long since dead; yet do they seem to live in this generation. And what Optatus in his time affirmed of the one, may fitly be applied to the other: (o) Nullus vestrum est qui non convitia nostra suis tractatibus misceat. Lectiones Dominicas incipitis, & Tractatus vestros ad nostras injurias explicatis; profertis Evangegelium facitis absenti Fratri convitium: Auditorum animos: infigitis odia, inimicitias fuadendo, docendo suadetis. Opt. count: Parm. l. 4. There is none of you, but inserts and interlaces, the personal disgrace of others with your own works and writings: you begin the reading of the word of God, and expound it in our wrongs and injuries; you take a Text out of the Gospel, and comment upon it with railing; you in till hatred into the minds of your Hearers; you persuade Hatred, yea you persuade by your teaching. Such were the uncharitable usages of the old Donatists; and one egg is not more like another, than our actions resembles theirs. 2. The second sort that are guilty of the breach of charity, The giddyheaded people. are the giddyheaded people; unstable as water, as Jacob said of his first born Reuben, Gen. 49.4, And they have this property of water, that they are very hardly contained within their own terms; but most easily within the bounds of another substance: who schismatically divide & cut off themselves from the unity of the Church, and gather separate Churches apart by themselves, and so set up Church against Church, and Altar against Altar, with the old Donatists. An evil as ancient as the Apostolic times, and timously forewarned and forbidden by St. Paul, Heb. 10.24, 25. Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together: and then may men be said to forsake the assembling themselves together, when they withdraw and separate from Christian communion, and fellowship in doctrine; breaking of bread, and prayers, Act. 2.42. which are so many essential parts of it, and wherein as to the public exercise, it consists and stands; as the manner of some is, and unmannerly manner, and that taken up in St. Paul's days. And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works: as it is in the foregoing verse, whereupon this is inferred: so that to be friends and favourers of a separation, is by the Apostles argument, to be enemies to love, and to good works: and then are our works good when they are well done; and they cannot be well done in schisms and faction, to gratify and please a party, to support and uphold a private interest. And would we have our works well pleasing and acceptable unto God; (p) August in Psal. 83. Ponenda sunt ova in nido Ecclesiae, (q) Vade prius reconciliare fratri tuo, & tunc veniens offer donum tuum Mat. 5.24. Plus deus diligit concordiam nostram quam sua munera-Author Oper. imperf. in Math. (as Austin well advises) We must lay our Eggs in the nest of the Church; thereby to preserve the natural heat and warmth of the Eggs, and to hatch and bring forth the Birds. And for this very cause the Chickens of the Heathen. (that is their virtues) were trodden under foot, in that they were not hatched in the nest of the Church, (saith the same Author:) and so will our works be abhorred and abandoned, yea utterly refused and rejected at the hands of God, if if not seasoned with peace and unity, and done in love and charity. 3. Let me bespeak you all in St. Paul's words, Heb. 13.22. I beseech you brethren, suffer the words of exhortation, & think not ye suffer when ye hear it: the same Apostle hath provided it and brought it to my hand, 1 Cor. 4.1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, follow after charity. Not as St. Peter followed Christ into the high Priests hall, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 afar off: but pursue and persecute it, as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies, let us seek it in case we want it, and if it runs from us, let us run after it with a vehement and earnest violence: and let us herein assure and settle our belief, that we are as fully and firmly obliged in point of conscience; to preserve unum ac verum, Pacem ac Fidem, Unity as Verity, and Peace as well as Truth; as being twin virtues a lovely pair and couple, and both jointly and equally commended to our Christian care & study, Zach. 8.19. love the truth and peace. And there will be little difference at the day of reckoning, whether we have wounded Christ our Head with Heretical opinions, or rent and torn in pieces, the Church which is his Body with schismatical distractions; that body which Christ esteemed most dear and precious, who exposed and offered his natural body unto death, to ransom and redeem his mystical. I say and protest (saith an Ancient) that no man may plead ignorance, (r) Chrisost. ad Ephes. Homil. 11; Ecclesiam scindere non minus peccatum est quam in haerestu incidere: Schism in the Church is as great a sin, as Heresy: all impiety is the heresy of life, and want of charity is impiety in a high degree, and so must needs be a great heresy; and if we would follow after charity, we must follow St. Paul's advice and counsel elsewhere, Phil. 2.3, 4. Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory, but in lowliness of mind, let each esteem other better than themselves. Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others. And therein the Apostle dissuades them from several sins, close couched and laid together in sundry rules or precepts, which are so many Make-bates and Peace-breakers among men, and they are three in number. 1. Three make-bates, and Peace-breakers among men. The First Peace-breaker, Perverse and peevish strife. Perverse, and peevish strife. 2. Supercilious, and scornful pride. 3. Sordid, and self ended covetousness. 1. The first , and Peace-breaker, is perverse and peevish strife; as will easily appear by comparing the rule of the Text, with that of the Glass and Comment. For if all our things must be done with charity, then let nothing be done through rise and vain glory: there must be no fishing in troubled waters, no living in the scorching flames of broyloes and contention, after the manner of the Salamander: a duty that concerns all men in the general, but in a more especial 〈◊〉, the Ministers of the Gospel who should be peaceable in their private temper and disposition, and Peacemakers in their place and office. There is no greater misery or mischief that can befall a Nation, than a Factious or seditious Clergy: who are the bellows to blow the coaloes of discord and division; The silver Trumpets to sound the Alarm of War; and the common Bountefou's and Incondiaries of States and Kingdoms. So that in this respect, we have great cause to make use of Luther's Litany (s) A Doctore glorioso, pastore contentioso, & inutilibus questionibus liberet Eclesiam sua●● Dominus. vita Parei pag. antepenul. from a vainglorious Doctor, a contentious Pastor, and unprofitable questions, good Lord deliver us. 2. The second , and Peace-breaker in the world is supercilious and scornful pride; The second peace-breaker supercilious and scornful pride. which so far disables men from esteeming others better than themselves, that Diotrephes like they do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love to have the pre-eminence, and to surpass and excel others: what will not pride of spirit attempt and aspire into? what earboyles and combustions will it not foment and kindle? if we inquire after the Original cause of Reubens heats, Deborah the Prophetess will resolve us in her Divine Cantick Judg. 5.15.16. The Divisions of Reuben were great thoughts of heart. And would we discover & find out the common parent of emulation, and discord; the wise man indigitates, and points it out unto us, Prov. 13.10. Only by pride cometh contention; this is it that breeds it and brings it up. 3. The third and last , and Peace-breaker, is Sordid and self ended covetousness; The third Peace-breaker sordid and selfended. covetousness. whereby men do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, intent and mind their own things, as the mark or white, whereat they aim and levelly, and fasten all their arrows. For all differences and debates arise from an unequal distribution of (t) Frivola illa verba, Meum & Tuum quae tot bella mundo invexerunt, erant ex sancta illa Ecclesia exterminata; inhabitaturque non aliter terra quam ab Angelis caelum. Christ. de Eccl. Arist. Homilia oportet Haereses esse. mine and thine; it is division of estates, that makes division of affections, self is the main stickler in every controversy, which renders men resolute and pertinacious in defence of property, and possession; and that ofttimes with a general disrespect and gross neglect of common safety: Not caring what becomes of the Ship of Church or State, whether it float or sink, so they may save themselves in the Cockboat of their private fortunes; and oft-time with that silly Swain or poor Peasant they set the whole house on fire, to roast their own Egg. These are the several Make-bates, and Peace-breakers, that we must take heed and beware of, as professed enemies unto charity. And give me leave to reinforce the duty, and to conjure you as St. Paul doth his Philippians by whatsoever is divine or sacred, Phil. 2.1, 2. If therefore there be any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any Bowels and mercies, fulfil ye my joy, that ye be like minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind. The Conclusion. I began with a Text out of the first Epistle, and shall make an end with another out of the second to the Cor. 13.11. and take the same leave of you that St. Paul. doth of them. Finally, Brethren farewel, be perfect, be of good Comfort, be of one mind: Live in peace, and the God of Love and Peace shall be with you. Amen. FINIS.