[...]

THE IAYLORS Conuersion.

Wherein is liuely represented, the true Image of a Soule rightlye touched, and conuerted by the spirit of God.

The waightie circumstances of which supernaturall worke, for the sweete ampli­fications, and fit applications to the present time, are now set downe for the com­fort of the strong, and confir­mation of the weake.

By Hugh Dowriche Batch. of Diuinitie.

The Lord maketh poore, and maketh rich: bringeth low and exalteth. 1. Samu. 2. 7.
Behold now, for I, I am he, and there is no gods with me: I kill, & giue life: I wound, and make whole: neither is there any that can deliuer out of my hand, Deu. 32, 39
[figure]

LONDON, Printed by Iohn Windet, dwelling at Pauls Wharfe, at the signe of the Crosse Keyes, and are there to be solde. 1596.

To the Worshipfull, and my approued good Friende: Valentine Knightly Esquire, long prosperitie, and peace of conscience in Christ.

BLessed is hee (sayth Dauid) whose wic­kednesse is forgiuen and whose sinne is couered, &c. Here is one Medicine for two maladies: here is one salue that heales two sores. Sinne is the testie botch that may not be touched. All are infected with this plague: but heere is the diffe­rence, some see it not at al, some see it too much, some feele it, & feare it, some nei­ther feare it, nor feele it. In some negli­gent blindnesse, and securitie breeds con­tempt of imminent perill; in some, the [Page] view of great daunger accompanied with feare without faith, commits them to the dangerous downefall of a deadly desper­ation. The one seeth not his sinne, & ther­fore seeketh no remedie; the other ouer­whelmed with sinne, findeth not the meanes to applie the remedie. Heere is both the remedie and the application. Ther is a meane betwene these extremes: This meane is, to see our sinne, our naked­nes, our wickednes, but so, as we alwaies haue one eye on our selues and our sin, the other, on Christ and his merits. If we see our sins in themselues, they exceede in number the sands of the Sea, in great­nesse, the compasse of the whole world. If we then goe about to match them, with our owne power, strength, or merites, how infinitly shall we bee ouerwhelmed in this comparison? But if we, leauing our selues, fly to the power of God, by which he can; and his mercie in Iesus Christ, by which he will deliuer vs from this infect­ing plague; we shall presently see, both sin, hell, and Sathan to consume as smoke, be­fore the presence of our God. Sin is the plague, sinne is the sore: The medicine is, [Page] the mercy of God, thorough Iesus Christ in whome, and by whome, our sinnes are forgiuen. This mercie is apprehended by faith, and faith is the gift of God. There­fore, when we haue cast vp all our recko­ning, we shall find, that all our righteous­nes, and all our merites, (in respect of per­fection, to merite saluation) are nothing else but the righteousnes and merites of Christ, imputed to vs by the mercie of God, by which our sinnes are pardoned. And therefore with Saint Paule euerie man, to his owne Conscience, may right­ly say, What hast thou, which thou hast not re­ceiued? Yet, to this mercie there is tyed a blessing, and a curse, to shewe the diffe­rence betweene the reprobate, and the children of God. They, which by mercy, attaine this mercy, are truely called bles­sed; They which for want of mercie, are depriued of this mercy, are iustly accur­sed. But can there bee in one, and one so certaine and immutable cause, such, and such diuers effects? Can mercy be found without mercy? Can light be seene with­out light? Can fire be felt without heate? What more contrarie the one to the o­ther, [Page] then glorie, & confusion? Yet one, and the selfe same fire, makes golde more glorious, which vtterly consumes wood, straw, and stubble. What is more contra­rie then hard, and soft? yet one and the selfe same sunne doth harden the dirte, and mollifieth the waxe. These contrarie effects proceede not from any contrarie­tie that is found in the pure and simple essence either of Sunne or fire, but from the diuersitie which lyeth hid in the na­ture of the subiects, on which they work. The mercy of God, being still one and the same, is offered to al without respect, (as the Sunne shines and the raine fals, as well on the vniust as the iust) but all re­ceiue it not. The wicked see it, but des­pise it, and make a iest of it, till, by the iust iudgement of God they perish in theyr wickednesse, as did Pharao, Iudas, and the wicked sonnes of Elie, &c. The elect, being moued by the spirit of God, do see, lament, and repent their sinnes, and so by mercy obtaine pardon. So that, though, both the elect and the reprobate are both alike happie, in that mercy is offered to both a like, yet because the wicked refuse [Page] it, they are iustly accursed; and the other that receiue, and take hold of it, are here accounted happie and blessed. And yet not blessed in respect of any work or wor­thinesse in themselues, but that, by the merits of Christ, (which they apprehend by faith) they are by mercy and imputa­tion, made worthy of this blessing. This then is the golden meane, that makes the godly blessed to beholde their sinnes by faith in Christ; and not as the reprobate, either, not to see them at all, or, without faith to behold them. Of this meane, Da­uid himselfe tooke happie hold-fast. For now, conducted by mercie, and faith, we see, how lustely hee leapes out from the hote-house of desperate temptations in which it seemes (at the making of this Psalme) he was deepely plunged, by the terror of a guiltie conscience, touched by the hand of God, for the sinne which he had committed with Barsheba. The ex­tremity of his passions and the vehemen­cie of his conflicts, are described in the 3. and 4. verses of this Psalme. Now this is not Dauids case alone; but it is certaine, that all the children of God, that are elec­ted [Page] in his eternall purpose, in their times appointed, shal heare the like calling and tast of the like mercy. For manifestation of the which, wee may see an example of the same mercy, which the Lord shewed vnto a simple and sinfull man, the com­mon Iailor of Phillippy; of whō in the 16. of the Acts ther is an honorable memorie left to al posterity. K. Dauid, & this Iaylor, were both sinners; both of them acknow­ledged the hand of God heauie vpon thē for their sinnes; the one, called to repen­tance by the voice of a man; the other, shaken from his drowsinesse, by the ter­ror of an Earthquake; both felt comfort in their miseries, by the mercy of GOD, which kept them from desperation. The rarenes of which example, the great mer­cy of God; and the singular instructions that rise, to the profit of such as deepely waigh the whole action; besides the ear­nest desire of some, whose request I could not denie; haue drawne me now, to set downe certaine notes, and considerati­ons touching the singular working of the spirit of God in this man, vttered long si­thence vpon occasion; which I haue ter­med, [Page] The Iaylors Conuersion.

This being the first thing of mine, that euer past the presse; I thought to make bold, to Dedicate it, to the first friend, that euer was truely possessed of my hart. The first fruits were stil most accepted & de­sired of the Lord; The first childe, by na­ture, is best beloued of the father: The first faith is euer most firme, most deare and sweete to the possessor: My first faith­full affection, hath inforced me, to offer these simple first fruites, to you that had the gift of my first faith. Which affection you first wonne by curtesie, & after con­firmed it by desert; which, being planted young, hath now growne to be olde: be­ing begun long sithence, hath continued to this present, inuiolable; and as the greene bayes, (whome no tempest can blast) euer flourishing; & (so I hope) shal continue so long, as life shal giue leaue to loue. If I could as easily bestow on you, a great part of the world, as I doe willingly giue you this smal portiō of words, thogh you bee great already, yet would I make you greater: But seing words for want of welth, must shewe my will, consider in [Page] these words, not the words, but the wor­king of the spirit of God. And I dare pre­sume to say, that if you can imitate right­ly this one example, these words in short time, though you bee good already, yet shall they make you better.

The Lord, that hath giuen you a great portion of faith, & hath bestowed on you great worldly blessings of wisedome and welth, increase this faith, & so dayly mul­tiplie these blessings vpon you, that you may go forward, frō faith to faith, from vertue to vertue, from life to life, till in the day of the Lord, your imperfections being made perfect, you may receiue the Crowne of immortall glorie, prepared for such as loue the Lord vnfainedly. Ho­niton in Deuon, this 30. daye of Iune. 1596.

Your louing friend. Hugh Dowriche.
Vaine floting blastes of worldly blisse, that neuer stay,
Are smoke-like, mounting spied, but quickly quite decay.
Like vewes of fawning shades, that plant alluring baytes,
Erre fully come, their farwell shewes, their hid deceytes.
No trust, in trustlesse trash, no faith in friendly shewes,
Truth quailes in Hectik fits, whilst falshoode greenely growes.
Yea, masking visars fraude, great grace, in gracelesse findes,
No place, for naked truth, No time, for fraudlesse mindes,
Esteemed vice soores high, on gales of witlesse windes.
Knocke VVisedome while she faint, on rocke of flintie hart,
No answere, but, I will not come, you may depart,
If supreame voice, to Conscience call, to counte for sinne,
Greene Figleaues, grace defects, as sinne had neuer binne.
Hygh Cedars stoutly vaunt, that fruitlesse haruest yeelde,
The Volgo, bright, yet good, for neither fish nor feelde.
Let not false Susis springs, finde poores in Corkie hart,
Yeelde not to loose the truth, though clad in carefull smart,
Establish vertues throne, And say to sinne, depart.

To the friendly Reader.

THere is dayly preaching, and daily printing of good Sermōs, and good Bookes, and yet there is little profiting, and little a­mendment seene to follow, ei­ther in words or workes. We haue had precept vpon precept, Sermon vpon Sermon; in euery corner, here a little, and there a little, and yet Egypt cannot speake the language of Ca­naā.Esay. 8 13. Esay. 19. 18. Some professors cannot see what is belong­ing to their profession, & liue there after.The Vineyeard yeeldeth but briers & thornes. The companie of vaine, Papisticall, Liber­tine, Esay. 27. 5. Ierem. 7. 11 and Machiauelion professors, are be­come cōpanions to theeues, they are euen found to be the den and the sinke of loth some hypocri­sie; which the eye of Christ viewed, his heart lothed, his whip purged. The swords edge is re­bated to them, it cannot Pearce: the shaft is shot in vaine, it cannot sticke. The force of [Page] the Gospell, is become now so weake, it cannot moue them.The bellowes are burnt, the ledde is consumed in the fire, the foun­derIerem. 6 [...]hath melted in vaine. The preachers haue lost their labours, and the Printers haue spent their care, their time, their strength in nothing, for The wicked yet still wrestle against God, like wild Buls tumbling in a Ierem. 1. [...]net: yea, they haue made a new couenant with death, and with hell: they haue clapped hands vpon a new bargaine. As Sathan told Eua she should not die so our lying fancies haue told vs, that,No plague shall come neere vs. Long peace and wealth hath brought vs to wanton 1. Cor. 4. Babels estate: we are a virgine not to be oppres­sed by any; we are tender and delicate, the mis­tresse of felicitie; we are a Lady of kingdomes, with a perelesse prosperitie, in the middest of Esay. 47. 1 [...] our neighbours miseries, wee neuer feared of our owne calamities, our necke is framed of yron sinewes, it cannot bow; our browes are o­uer-plated Esay: 48. 4 [...] with brasse, they cannot blush. The trumpe hath blowen, yet can bee not bring a­gaine them that Were lost in the land of Assiria: Though the preachers with their Cornets haue seuen and seuen times compassed Iericho, yet the cursed wals fal not; though the [Page] voice, the crie, and the force of the Gospell, of signes and wonders haue beene heard and felt in euery corner, yet the weedes ouertoppe the Corne: the soule lost in the sincke of error and land of transgression, returnes not againe: the Papists deceiued by the full flesh pots of Egypt are not yet reclaimed; the Atheists, Brownists, Anabaptists, Libertines, and carnall, care­lesse, and dissolute professors, that are for their sinne suffered to be led into heresies, are not yet contented to ioyne in one godly vnitie to wor­ship and serue the Lord in the mount of Ierusa­lem, the vision of peace. We doe not yet see that blessed time, when Ephraim shall be are no euill will to Iuda; nor Iuda vexe Ephraim, when preachers shall not wrangle for trifels and bee deuided one from an other, but all ioyne toge­ther to flie vpon the shoulders of the Pihlistins the common enemies of the Gospell. All our preaching cannot draw on that happie time, when, Iuda and Israel, shall walke both to­gether, When all preachers and professors that now hate, backbite, and slaunder one an other shall so ioyne hands and hearts together, that neither of thē walke or continue any longer in the hardnesse of their froward harts. It was a certaine signe of Gods heauie plague against [Page] Iuda, and a sure token that their destruction was at hand, when the peoples eares began to be Vncircumcised, when they could not patiently harken to the truth; and when the word was to thē as a reproch, & that they could not delighte in it. If the same to­kens may be now any way á signe to England of her destruction, as it was to Ierusalem, then may Englands Musicke, be well turned into Iu­dahes mourning, and say,Woe bee vnto me, Woe is me now, My heart, my health, my hope, my helpe and all is gon from me. It were a lamentable thing, that our wilfull and wick­ed sinnes, (dayly crying for vengeance to fall vpon vs, from the seate of God,) our couetous­nesse, vsurie, drunkennesse, whordome, blas­phemie, periurie; contentions, pride, enuie, & disobedience, should giue our Corne to be meate for our enemies, and the fruite of our labours, to refresh strangers, while we our selues famish: yet thus it hath beene in time, and thus it may bee againe.

Some thinke there be too many Books, too many Sermons, too much preaching, too much Printing: and I thinke there is too little of eue­riesort. There is no fault found with too much ease, too much pleasure, too much negligence, [Page] too much wantonnesse in behauiour, too much pride in apparell, too much loue to imitate new Apish toyes and strange fashions: we are neuer cloyed with these, come as thicke as they can, but the poore dispised word sounds too oft, & comes too thicke vpon vs. O sinne, O Sathan, Papisti­call enuie saith, euery boye is become a prea­cher: euerie foole is become a writer. Iosua en­uiously murmureth against Eldad and Me­dad, for prophecying in the Tent: The Disci­ples Num. 11. 28 Mark 9. 38. Luke. 9. 48 Iohn. 3. 26. of Iohn, enuied at Christ for working of Miracles, but I say with meeke Moyses, I would all the people of God did prophecie, I woulde all were learned, I would all were preachers, I would all were so perfectly taught of God, that euery man were able to preach to himselfe, to teach and instruct himselfe and his charge in all things, that wee might indeede neede lesse preaching, and lesse writing.

Some woulde haue no Bookes written, but such onely as did wade into the depth of Diui­nitie, and contained the marrow, and quintes­sence of learning; such as did profoundly han­dle deepe points, & suttle quiddities of Diuine or Phylosophicall controuersies; and such as in a manner shoulde speake that which was neuer spoken before.

This is the verie pollicie of Sathan, to take from the simple people, their greatest comfort, (next vnto preaching) that they enioy, which is, the reading or hearing, at leasure times some plaine exposition or familiar Sermon, penned to their capacitie, wherin many and many take great and singular comfort, delight and profit. Many there be, that for age, troubles and other occasions, cannot often come to heare Sermons, where and when they would, which hauing at home some good Booke, supplies often times the want of a better meanes, to bring them to the knowledge, and loue of God.

I speake not this to patronise any lewd, wan­ton or foolish Pamphlets, which tend not to edi­fication, but rather to destruction; neither yet to prefer or compare reading, or writing with preaching, which is the blessed, and ordinarie meanes of our saluation, but onely to crop the blossomes of their proud Enuie, that despise their weake brothers gifts, in respect of theyr own surmised perfections: & which think, that some profit may not redound to the simple, by the most simple gift, that euer was bestowed of God vpon the most simple man.

I detest the fantastical humor of them that write or publish any booke, to hunt for any pri­uate [Page] praise, glorie, or profit to themselues, and not with a single, and simple intent to seeke onely the glorie of God, the furderance of the Gospell; and the knowledge, comfort and sal­uation of Gods childrē, & the weake brethren. With this intent and no other, (as he knowes that knowes my hart) I haue perswaded my self to suffer these plaine & Countrie notes, to sub­iect themselues to the curious eyes, to the sharpe conceites, and the quicke iudgements of the learned Readers of this age, not intended or adorned for the learned, but onely vowed and plotted in the lowest kinde, for the capacitie of the simple and ignorant.

It may bee that I haue studied more, to bee plaine, briefe and perspicuous, then some haue to flie aloft in the mistie cloudes of rolling elo­quence; be cause I seeke the edification of the simple, not the praise of my selfe.

If I should vauntingly flie so high, as the wings of fancie would carrie but a meane Schollers reache, I might neither in dutie doe that I should; nor in conscience, performe that which I would.

Let the Iaylors and keepers of Prisons in these daies, accounte this example the chiefe flower in their garland, that there hath beene [Page] so honest a man, an vndoubted childe of God found in their Corporation: of whome, I would they would all learne, to be more mercifull and courteous to their poore brethren that are in bands, to consider the cause of their imprison­ment: not to hepe miserie vpon miserie, but in their punishments to see the anger of God a­gainst their owne sinnes: to bee sorrie for them that are in Captiuitie, to thanke God for their owne freedome: not to insult ouer them, whom God hath cast downe, but in a charitable mind to comfort them that are in heauinesse, and re­lieue the wants of the poore and needie, to their powers. So God (with this Iaylor) shall blesse them with the true knowledge of their saluati­on, and the ioyfull spirite of regeneration: So shall the Lord comfort them in their distresse, and deliuer them from the prison and punish­mēt which their sins haue deserued. This is the wourst I wish thē, this the Lord graunt them. And so I commit thee, gentle Reader, to Gods mercifull protection. From Honiton in Deuon this 30. day of Iune. 1596.

Thine in the Lord, Hugh Dowriche.

Verses written by a Gentle-woman, vpon The Iay­lors Conuersion.

THe man is blest which can indure,
Whose hart doth neuer slide,
When for his sinne, with fierie scourge,
His patience shal be tride.
No daunting feare can once attainte,
The conscience that is cleare:
The wicked waile that haue no faith,
When dangers doe appeare.
The rod that doth correct our life,
And sinfull waies reproue,
Is said, to be a certaine signe,
Of Gods eternall loue.
No tempting tryall from the Lord,
No griefe or dire annoye,
Can seuer once the faithfull hart,
From Christ, his onely ioye.
Though sinfull flesh doe oft rebell,
And fancie file our fall,
Yet happie man, that can returne,
When God beginnes to call.
Though God permit his chosen flocke,
Sometimes to walke astraie:
Yet sets he both the times and meanes,
To wayne them from their waie.
How long did Paule, with cruell hart,
The Church of Christ molest?
Till called home to see the truth,
His blindnesse did detest.
How cruell was this Iaylors hart,
To vex the poore elect?
Till trembling earth by mightie power,
His madnesse did detect.
The God, that makes the haughtie hils,
And Libans Cedars shake
When he shall take his cause in hand,
Will make the prowdest quake.
To comfort his, that be in neede,
The Lord is alwaies prest,
And all that haps to his elect,
Is alwaies for the best.
Which in this picture here is seene,
By that, which shall in sew,
Lord graunt vs grace, when he doth call,
To frame our liues anew.
A. D.
Ad Authorem, amicum suum, vt plura det.
P [...]rge, mi: quidnam titubas eundo?
Hic labor certé, hoc opus est, Catenas
Nocte subnigra, miseré Reclusis
Rumpere tetras.
Siue diuinas, Calamo, loquelas
Pingis, aut sacrum [...] Ore pandis:
Pingis & pandis veneranda, pulchré,
Dogmata Iouae.
Hinc, & hinc, laudes (mihi crede) celsae
Te manent: Sedes manet ampla: vtrin (que)
Digna praeclaris, (quid enim recusas?)
Proemia factis.
Plura des nobis igitur, Iehouae
Seruiens, nobis, patriae, tibi (que),
Et mihi: Da, quos voluisse dix'ti
Dare, libellos.
Diuites (Dowrich per-amice) Dotes
Si tui cunctis animi paterent,
(Pluribus notae:) At taceo tacendi
Aposiopesis
Nomen Amici.
Ergo, mi: nunquam titubes eundo:
Hic labor certé, hoc opus est, Cateruas
Quas Catenatas tenet atra nigri
Ianua Ditis,
Soluere vinclis.

Quo pede coepisti, sic benè semper eas.

Per Guilielmum Palfraeium, Gener. Lin-colniensis Hospitij Socium.

Ad Carcerum Custodes. S. P.

[...], Terrae motu concussus, ad vnum,
Et verum motus, vertitur inde, Deum:
Quid facis, O Saeuo, stringens tua viscera ferro?
Sola Saius Animae, quaeritur vna tuae.
Heu cohibete manus, Custodes Carceris omnes,
Mittite sub Christi, colla superba Iugum.
Paule, Comes (que) Sila, Captiui corpora; nullas
Fregistis, Domino sed reserante, fores.
Ille aperit vobis, Neopoitae Ianitor aulae,
[...], ac Fletus, [...] (que) vias,
Et soluit duris, religatos crura, cathenis,
Ad Christum vt properent Liberiore pede.
Discite ab hoc Omnes exemplo, vera vereri
Numina, [...].
[...].

THE IAYLORS Conuersion.

The Argument.

PAule and Silas were by the spirite of God, sent into Macedonia, and passing through many places of the Countrie, came vnto the chiefe Cittie called Phillippie. Where prea­ching the word, they found a fortune-telling Deuill, which had long time abused the simple people. Paul not able to beare with this deceite of Sathan, by the word of the Lord expels him. Hereof rose a grieuous persecution against the word. The worst part was the greatest. They preuailed. Paul and Silas were whipt, and cast into prison. They praied, and the Lord heard them; and sent an Earthquake. The Iaylor would haue killed himself, but Paul staies him. The Iaylors eyes are opened, he humbleth him [Page] selfe; he seekes the way to be saued, he obtaineth it for himselfe and his whole familie. &c.

THE TEXT.

Actes. 16. 30.‘And he brought them out, and said, Syrs, what must I doe, to be saued?’

IN this verse is expres­sed onely, a question demaunded, by the Iaylor. In which ques­tion these fiue circum­stances are to be con­sidered. First, The person that doeth de­maunde it. Secondly, Of whome he deman­deth it. Thirdly, What the question is which is demaunded. Fourthly, What it was which brought this man to this godly care, to de­maund this question. And lastly, the time when he fell to this consideration what hee ought to doe to be saued

For the first. In the person that doth de­maunde the question, these three things are to be considered. First, his Office. Second­ly his Charge. Thirdly his sodden Alterati­on. By Office hee was the common Iaylor: which, though it be an Office necessarie, yet [Page 2] commonly, I know not how it falleth out, they continue not long honest men that haue it; but, for the most part, are of nature cruell, hard-harted; and oftentimes blinde and farre from the knowledge of the truth, as this man was.

Application. Doctrine. The Lord doth not giue vnto euerie man one order and kinde of life, but hath by a maruailous wisedome, disposed men, into seuerall callings, as they may best serue for the performance of seuerall duties, which are either for order, pollicie, regiment, or the glory of God established in the Church. And therefore euerie man is to consider of his calling, and place whereunto hee is ap­pointed, to acknowledge it to bee the ordi­nance of the Lord; to content himselfe with it, as with a thing deliuered vnto him from the Lorde; to frame himselfe so in it, as hee may onely seeke the glorie of God, and not his owne pleasure, profit, or glorie, &c.

Euerie Office which is▪ either commaun­ded by the worde, or not contrarie to the same, is good, lawfull, and honest, of it selfe in his owne nature: if any Office bee con­temptible, odious, or lothsome vnto vs, it is made so, by reason of the wickednesse, cru­eltie, couetousnesse, and follie of him that doth possesse it. As the Publicanes, the Rent gatherers, or Romaine Baylifes made their Office odious among the Iewes, by Requi­ring [Page] more, then that which was appointed vnto Luk. 3. 13. them. The souldiers made their calling odi­ous, by doing of violence. Accusing inno­cents falsely for their owne luker, Not being con­tent with their wages, But robbing, stealing and spoyling besides. The Scribes and Pha­risies made their prefession odious, By their horrible and wicked hypocrisie. The laylors Mat. 23. 23. make their Office odious, by vnmercifull abusing of the poore prisoners, robbing thē by their great fees, selling them but a little libertie for a great deale of money; murder­ing the simple by penurie, by pinching them of their allowance, and ordinarie dutie, and such like, &c. Nay, to fal to a higher recko­ning, Kinges and Princes haue made their seate and Crowne infamous, by their sinne and wickednesse, as Ieroboam by Idolatrie, 1. King. 12. 28. Ahab and Iesabel by couetous oppression, sheding of innocent bloud, and persecuting Gods Prophets and truth. Dauid by murder and whordome caused the enemies of The Lord to blaspheme: Noblemen and Gentle­men 1. Kin. 21. 8 make their degree odious, by their pride, contempt of the word, wantonnesse, couetousnes, whordomes, libertie in sinning, iniurie, and such like. Iustices turne iustice into wormwoode, and iudgement into gall, condemning the innocent and iustifying the wicked, dishonouring their calling. Lawyers defame their vocation & the godly and ho­nourable [Page 3] vse of the law, by taking the patro­nage of bad matters, by defiling their hands with bribes & their closets with gifts against the poore and helpelesse, being content for gaine to giue counsell with the wicked a­gainst the iust, with the mightie against the simple, with the rich, against the poore fa­therlesse and widdow, against Law, by Law; against right, by making sower sweete and sweete sower, by altering cases, and making right no right, where it is for their profit, a­gainst conscience, hauing no conscience, where commoditie shewes it selfe. Physiti­ons haue made their necessarie and good sci­ence odious and infamous among the com­mon people and most men in these daies, by their vntollerable and excessiue coue­tousnes, by taking such great summes of mo­ney for little labour, and oftentimes when to the parties diseased they doe no good at all but rather hurt, without either pietie, pittie or conscience. Protestants and pro­fessours Protestants by professi­on, but Pa­pistes in­deede. of the Gospell, make the glorious word and preaching of Christ to be blasphe­med among the Papists, and they hinder many from professing and beleeuing the same, because they walke not wisely toward them that are without: because there is as much whordome, couetousnes, drunkennes, vsurie, periurie, simonie, subtiltie, briberie & iniurie amongst them, as euer was among [Page] the Papists, or can be among the Turkes and infidels; because there is as little faith, as litle regard of promise or word, or lesse then euer was in the time of ignorance. &c. But what shall become of these wicked hypo­crites, of these Painted wals, of these stinck­ing Sepulchers, and fruitlesse Figtrees, which defame their callings, abuse their places, pollute their Offices, and dishonor the Lord by their sinfull liues: Surely, they shall leaue a deadly curse vpon their posteritie: the fil­thie mawes of the hungrie Dogges shall bee thought to be a Sepulcher, worthie and suffi­cient for such cursed carrions. The Lorde shall plague them by taking from them their sonne begotten in a dulterie, their Offices, their dignities, and the thing they loue best: the Lord shall punish them by rebellion in in their sonnes, in their subiects, and heauie mishappes within their owne houses.

Some of these wicked abusers of their Office and calling, the Lord doth notwith­standing (as we here see) cal home to a consi­deration of their miserable estate, to the knowledge and sight of their sinnes, to a true humiliation of their proude stomackes, and to an effectuall repentance, because it is cer­taine and sure, that the wickednesse of man cannot alter the purpose of the Lord. Where we learne, that as God doth suffer his elect for a time to be seduced, and to wander out [Page 4] of the right way, as Dauid by his lust, Paule by blinde zeale, Mary Magdalene by lewde concupisence, and this Iaylor by crueltie & blindnesse, yet, as many as pertaine to Gods election, haue the times and meanes of their conuersion appointed, and they, at that cal­ling, obey, (as we see here this Iaylor doth) though before oftentimes they haue re­fused.

Here we see the great mercy of the Lord: which calleth all sortes of men, which despi­seth no Office, nor the vilest callings: which refuseth not to thinke vppon the greatest sinners in the middest of all their blindnes, but vseth louing and fit meanes to call sin­ners to repentaunce. As, according to the qualitie, greatnesse and continuance of any sinne, so wee see his motions to repentance fitted for them. Dauid had not long beene forgetfull, neither remained any great time in the sincke of his sinne: therefore the voice of the Lord in a simple man wrought a sor­row and repentance in him. Peter had not long continued in his Apostasie, hee was brought vnto that forgetfulnes of his good master, and duetie, by the frailenes & feare that was in his flesh and bloud, and not by any malice or wilfull contempt, therefore the voice of a Cocke was sufficient to awa­ken him, to make him see the foulenes of his finne, and to lament his weakenes with bit­ter [Page] teares. But of the contrarie, where the sinne is setled of a long continuance, where the sinners after admonition haue taken de­lite in it, haue continued it with mallice, and wilfull contempt, there, the Lord must vse great and mightie motions to remoue them, as Earthquakes, throwing downe some tower in Siloe, stirring vp great ene­mies, and shewing great and vnusuall won­ders, &c. And yet these great motions moue not all, for there are some which pertaine to the Lords inheritance, that are conuerted by them, as this Iaylor and many other. But such againe as bee none of this number, but those whome the Lord hath forsaken, and cast off, cannot be moued nor conuerted by all the signes, wonders and Earthquakes that can bee shewed: such were the Scribes and Pharisies the masters of this Iaylor, such was Pharao, such were the sonnes of Elie, and many in Ierusalem: such are our great and grounded Papists, such are our libertine professors, and fleshly Gospellers, such are our Atheists and Iesters in religion, &c.

2. His Charge.

It seemeth, that his Charge was very great and that it stoode greatly vppon him, to re­store againe such as he had receiued. It shuld appeare that these Apostles were deliuered vnto him, with such a straite commaunde­ment, that, if he did let them escape, his life [Page 5] should go for theirs. For, being now awake­ned, by the suddaine shaking of the earth, & rysing out of his bed at midnight in great feare, and comming vnto the prison and finding the doores open, and thinking assu­redly that his prisoners had beene fled, in a desperate minde, determined rather to kill himselfe, then to stand to the curtesie of that sentence, which his good masters the enuious Scribes and Pharisies should pro­nounce against him. Which wicked act, the fearefull and desperate man had committed in deede, had not Paule by the spirit of God in the darke seene his intent, and with this ioyfull voice at that instant comforted him, Do thy selfe no harme: for we are all here.

Application and Doctrine. First, by his straite Charge which the Scribes and Pharisies gaue for the keeping of these Apostles, we learne, with what great heate and hateful mallice, the wicked world with the blind potentates thereof doe per­secute the truth, wheresoeuer they shall see it but once to shew it selfe, or appeare ne­uer so little, and how loth they are that the messengers of this newes should escape with life or libertie, when they once come within their fingers. The estate of Gods trueth in this world is maruelous and miserable. For the euerie, murder, whordome, drunkennes, &c, hath alwaies found more friendship in it, and hath beene better alowed of then the [Page] simple truth. There was a theefe and a mur­derer preferred before Christ himselfe. The illusion of Sathan, and a Deuill that decea­ued them, by blinde toyes and telling of for­tunes, was a great deale better accepted in this blinde Cittie of Phillippie, then Paule and Silas the true preachers. For wherefore were Paule and Silas cast into prison with so straite a commaundement, after they had beene buffeted and whipt most cruelly be­fore? Surely the holy Ghost layeth downe no other causes but these. First, They prea­ched the truth, and assayed to turne them from their Idolatry & blindnesse. Secondly, They cast out the Deuill that did deceaue them. Where wee learne how vnwilling the world and the wicked are to haue the Deuil cast out of themselues, of their sonnes and daughters, especially if the Deuill bring a­ny kinde of commoditie with him, as this Deuill did. For that was the cause of this commotion, because Paules new doctrine could not agree with their olde Deuill, be­cause they might not follow Paules Religi­on, and yet still retaine their former profite and commoditie. By which we see, how hard a matter it is to plant the true Religion a­mong the couetous and worldly minded wretches. Wee see now the cause, why the godly in the primatiue church, why the bles­sed martyrs in Queene Maries daies, were [Page 6] vexed, exiled, whipped, imprisoned, set vp­pon the rackes, tyed and chained to the stakes and burned: onely for this, because they preached truely the Gospell of Christ which Paule and Silas preached before: be­cause they called them from darkenesse to light, from error to truth, from hell to hea­uen: because they opened the illusions of the Masse, Purgatorie and other such peeuish fantasies. But here a man might saie, it see­meth that there was some other matter which moued these rulers to lay vp Paule and Silas with so straite a charge. For as there was no commoditie came to the rulers by the spirit of Diuination which was in the woman, but rather a priuate gaine to cer­taine that were her masters, so there was no such hurt like to insue vnto the Magistrate or state of the towne, by expelling of him, as should force them to so great a furie: ther­fore, ther was belike some other matter. No, but here we see most notably▪ the nature of the wicked. For it falleth out many times, The natu of the wiked. that the Magistrate which feareth not God, perswadeth himselfe that by pollicie, and maintaining of that which best liketh the multitude, the common-wealth shal be both better & longer maintained quiet & peace­able, then by establishing any thing bee it neuer so good, which the people like not. That was one error of the Magistrates. An [Page] other thing that we see in them is, vaine glo­rie, and a desire to keepe their dignitie. Which thing where so euer it doth enter, it makes them vnwilling to heare of any alter­ations, bee they neuer so little or neuer so good, and bee they themselues neuer so full of imperfections, for feare, least if they should alow the doctrine of the Gospell, in the reformation of one thing, bee it neuer so little, it would in time grow farder, and at length perchance finde a fault in their owne best cootes that had neede to be amended. That was the cause which made these Ma­gistrates stop the proceedings of the trueth in the first appearing, and to alow and incou­rage wicked men in their furie against the same, when as (if they had done well) they should haue corrected the couetous abuse of the Deuill: and haue praised the good men that did open it, & haue thanked God that had reuealed this abuse vnto thē. Here we see another abuse and follie, that was in those Magistrates, for they presently vpon the cry & exclamation of two or three lewd fellowes without examination of either cau­ses, or parties, sent good men to the prison, and let the varlets goe vnpunished. Lastly, we see the dulnes and blindnes of such Ma­gistrates whome the Lord doeth not blesse. They could not see the right cause of this tu­mult, which was, a couetous minde; neither [Page 7] could they perceiue the pollicie of the De­uill, in shadowing this cause. For the wicked come not to the Magistrate & say, Sir, they by their preachings haue taken awaye our gaine and commoditie, for then it might ea­sily haue bene perceiued from whence their heate proceeded, but they colour their co­uetousnesse with an other shadow, and saie: Sir, These men, which are Iewes, trouble our Cittie: They preach ordinances which are not lawfull for vs to receiue, neither to ob­serue, seing we are Romaines. So, we see that it is a common thing to intitle that trueth (which we think will in time ouerthrow our pride, & our couetousnes) with rebellion, se­dition, & conspiracy: by that menes to make it a cloke for lewdnes & knauerie. Now we see the causes of this straite charge which the Magistrates gaue vnto the Iaylor.

We learne here againe, that the Lord suf­fereth euen his elect & chosen for a time to run in the path of sinners, that he doth exer­cise them with great temptations, & that he brings them euen to the brincke of hell and desperation, & yet recals them, & euen then when they are fardest gon, & least thinke of succour, then is the Lord neerest vnto them, as is here to be seene by the example of this woefull Iaylor, and many other such like in the Scripture. For whē Abraham had hoped beyond hope, & had waited for the promise, [Page] till it was past both mans helpe and hope, yet then did the Lord keepe promise when he least thought it. When the same Abra­ham Gen 17. 19 & 21. 2. Heb. 11. 11. (being commanded to offer vp his son that he had so long loked for,) could see no reason of the Lords promise, yet at the very Gen. 22. 10. Eccl. 44. 20. instant when the axe was lifted vp, vnknow­en to Abraham, there was a meanes proui­ded to saue the childe, ere the Axe fell. When there was but a sily basket betweene death and Moses, yet at an instant, the Lord Exod. 2. 3. 4 had prouided an vnknown meanes, to make him ruler of his people. When Ioseph was in great extremitie, solde into a straunge Gen. 41. 40. countrie, and for a long time in grieuous im­prisonment, without friends, or hope of re­stitution, and therefore might haue beene comfortlesse, yet the Lorde, when Ioseph thought least of it, set him at libertie, and 1. Sam. 23. 27. made him ruler of a great Countrie. When Dauid was in great perill by Saule: When Daniel was cast into the Lyons denne: When the three young men that would not wor­ship the Idoll, were cast into the hote fur­nace, Dan. 6. 22. & 3. 25. yet the Lord at that instant when flesh and bloud coulde see no helpe, preserued them. So, this feare, which the Iaylor felt, first in the Earthquake, next in that hee thought that his prisoners had beene al gon, stroke him verie deepe to the heart, and brought him to great extremitie, which all, [Page 8] vnknowing to him, was vsed by the Lorde, to be a meane of his conuersion, and saluati­on. Where wee see, how the Lord watcheth ouer his electe, to comfort them, to keepe them, to defend them from water, from fire, from wilde beastes, and from desperation and cruell enemies, that nothing may hin­der them from that happie hower, wherein the Lord hath appointed to call them, con­uert them, and saue them.

Lastly, wee learne that they bee happie, though they feele some miserie, which may heare the voice of the Gospel and true prea­chers: for they euer bring comfort and ioye vnto them, that can heare them, they expell all feare, abandon all qualmes of lothsome desperation, from their heartes▪ but more happie are they that heare, obey, and sub­mit themselues and their affections to the rule of the worde, speaking to their eares outwardly, or of the spirite of God, mouing their hearts inwardly, as this Iaylor did.

Thirdly, his sudden Alteration.

The Alteration of this man was sud­daine and maruelous. For he, which at the beginning of the night, did with ioy receiue these prisoners, with crueltie and disdaine no doubt thrust them into the vilest dunge­on, set them into the stockes, and clapt giues vpon their feete: before the same night was ended, felt the power and spirite of God; [Page] confessed his ignorance; saw his owne sinne, vnderstoode the vanitie of his masters, the Scribes and Pharisies, perceiued himselfe to bee in an error, humbled himselfe to them, whom before he had abused, and with teares sought their comfort, whom he thought be­fore to be comfortlesse, desiring of them to know the right way to bee saued, whome a litle before he had condemned as those that helde some wrong opinions, &c.

Applicati∣on and Doctrine. First we see, that though God suffered his elect, his seruants, his truth, by tyrants, wic­ked and malicious enemies, in our iudge­ment to bee oppressed, ouerborne and tro­den vnder, yet he neuer leaueth, nor forsak­eth them, but is present with them in their prisons, in the stockes, in the darke and vg­ly pits, hee sitteth with them, hee suffereth with them, he comforteth them, he strength­neth them, he heareth their praiers, & when Psal. 34. 19. & 145. 18. & 34. 16. Act. 4. 31. & 12. 10. it pleaseth him to deliuer them, the strongest Irons, prisons, and tyrants in the world, shall not be able to hold them.

And here we are to remember, what dif­ference there is betweene the miseries that we feele for the cause of Christ, and the tor­ments which are put vpon vs for our owne wickednesse. For when we are cast into pri­son Act. 11. 4 Mat. 25. 40 Zakar. 2. 8. Ephe. 1. 22. & 4. 13: 15. for Christes cause, Christ is there with vs, when we suffer for him he is grieued with vs, for the head cannot be quiet, if the body [Page 9] be in paine. These haue alwaies such peace and ioye in their conscience, that suffer for the truth, that when they are whipped they reioyce, when they are wounded they are Act. 5. 4. Gal. 6. 17. not agrieued, when they are tyed to the stakes, they triumph in the middest of the fire, the ioy of a good conscience is so great, and the earnest desire, and assured comfort, of the present receiuing of that vnspeakable ioy that will neuer faile, makes the greatest torments seeme euen to flesh & bloud, either verie little, or no paine at all: knowing assu­redly that they could not suffer for Christ, Phil. 1. 29 Rom. 9. 29. 2. Cor. 4. 10 Luk. 24. 26. except they were thereunto appointed, that they in these passions might bee made like vnto the sonne of God. And assuring them­selues that assone as they be deliuered from the stincking prison of this filthie carkasse, their soule shall be presently in the hand of Deut. 33. 3. Wis. 3. 1. 2. Tim. 2. 11 Psal. 116. 15 Apo. 14. 13. the Lord: wher no torment shal touch them, & that they shal be presently with Christ in his kingdome, with whome, and for whome they haue suffered: and their death being precious in the sight of the Lord, they feele that they are most happie of all other, that die in the quarrell of Christ. Of the other side, they which suffer iustly, for their thee­uerie, murder, whordome or any other like vice, they feele most horrible horror of con­science, and torment both of body & mind, being seperated from Christ and hauing no [Page] peace or ioy in their heart by the quietnesse of a good conscience, and assured trust in the mercie of God. And therfore many of them in their tormentes and death, lamentably houle without hope, without comfort, being without the companie of Christ, and so in miserable desperation, without especiall grace, oftentimes end a wretched life. Here wee must remember that God doth often giue repentant hearts, to such as haue com­mitted, and doe suffer for most vile offences, of whome we are to iudge the best.

Wee learne heere, to haue alwaies a sure hope, and confidence in the Lord, our cause being his, that though we alwaies see not his power, and will ready to deliuer vs, when our fleshe doeth desire it, yet, let vs assure our selues that hee is with vs, and that hee will helpe and deliuer vs, when he seeth his time.

We see how quickly God can pul downe the pride, and confound the deuises of his enemies, & by such meanes as they can nei­ther suspect, nor preuent, and how quickly he can turne the hearts of the wicked and e­nemies, to cherish and fauour his seruantes, and truth if he list.

We may learne of this Iaylor here a no­table The right vse of Gods iudgments. lesson, which is, to make our right, and true vse of the iudgements of God, when we see or feele them; which is, that by them we descend into a deepe consideration of our [Page 10] owne estate, life, and behauiour, and see whether these iudgements fall not vpon vs for our pride, our wantonnesse, whordome, murder, ignorance, ingratitude, negligence, contempt of Gods truth, and euil intreating the seruants of God: Which all it seemeth that this man considered, for he feeling the Earthquake, and knowing that it was the hand of the Lord, hee fell presently to view his life, the damnable estate wherein hee stoode, and the lamentable miserie that hee was to fall into, if his life at that instant should haue been taken from him. He comes therefore and desireth the true Phisicke, not that which comforteth the body, but that which preserueth the soule. What shall I doe, that I may be saued? How many of vs in Eng­land either high or low, haue with our selues entered into this consideration, hauing felt the like Earthquakes and many other signes and tokens? I doubt not, but there be some which haue, though it be, perchance, a lit­tle some. In all Philippie the Scripture maks mention but of a few which were conuerted thoroughly, and made to see, and acknow­ledge their sinne. Wee reade that the rulers were moued, but this motion proceeded not so farre, as to make them to see the estate wherein they stoode. Therefore we see that the signes and wonders of the Lord are not effectuall, in all, but onely in such, as are his, [Page] and were before known in his purpose. The cause of this defect is not in the iudgements themselues, but in the hardnes, and sinne of their froward hearts that see them: as, the cause why a blinde man taketh no comfort of the sunne, is not in the sunne it selfe, but in the fault of his owne eyes. It may be that many of our Rulers, our great men and Gen­tlemen were at that present when they felt Gods hand shaken vppon them, in the last Earthquake moued, and troubled in minde, but it was such a motion, as the proude Pha­risies felt, which was not so soone & sudden­ly conceiued, but it was euen as soone and suddenly forgotten. It was not such a moti­on as the Iaylor here felt, which made him see his sinne, his imperfections, his wicked life, and raysed in him a hartie repentaunce for the same, and which caused him to giue ouer all other cares, as one now wholly mor­tified, to seeke onely the right way, how he might be saued. For, this motion of the Iay­lor, had the spirite of the holy Ghost ioyned with it, which moued inwardly, and effectu­ally, the heart, with the outward motions of the body: the other, moued but the outward limbes, and sences, with a suddaine fleshly feare, without the spirite of God. For, let vs see, how many great men, gentlemen & rich men, which before that time were whore­mongers, adulterers, vsurers, theeues, pirats, [Page 11] rackers of rents, and and vnmerciful to their poore tenants, how manye that were swea­rers, blasphemers, Athiests of no Religion, neither hote nor colde, wantons, and liber­tines, haue beene sithens soundly conuerted, haue taken an accounte of their liues, of their behauiours, of their sinnes, and haue repen­ted hartely for them, and haue come vnto their Preachers and Ministers to learne the right way to be saued, and haue euer sithens continued in that godly course, which all, we see this Iaylor did? I know not what other preachers can testifie, but, for my selfe, I can witnesse but of a verie few, or rather none. There were in some fewe places, solemne & generall fastes, by the Pastors proclaimed, many did resorte, from manye places, per­chance many, for the noueltie of the matter more then for any touch of conscience: but the follie of some, the great hypocrisie of a number, the short continuance of the good mind, the quicke forgetting of these iudge­ments, and the murmuring of manye against these proceedings: doe argue plainely, that the best of vs all were farre from the perfect inioying of that sweete motion, which cal­led this Iaylor to a sorrowfull repentance, and kept him alwaies in a perfect obedience. If we consider this, we may lament, that the Lord in 38. yeares peace and preaching of the Gospel, hath not by his grace giuen vnto [Page] vs so perfect harts, and sorrowfull consider­ation of our sin, neither such desire to seeke him, nor such obedience to heare him, be­lieue him, and continue with him, as at a suddaine hee gaue then vnto this poore and miserable Iaylor, but now a happie and ioy­ful belieuer. God graunt that we now seeing our want, our imperfections, and our blind­nesse, which is the curse of God vppon our sinne, may with this Iaylor be perfectly, (by the spirite of God) moued, vpon the sight of our sinne, to true repentance, to humble hearts, to an earnest desire to seeke our sal­uation in Christ, that so we may continue in perfect obedience to the worde of life, and vnder the protection of Christ, escape those plagues, miseries, warres and calamities, which our sinne, rebellion and vnthankful­nesse doe now threaten to pull vpon vs.

Lastly, this Iaylor receiued no comfort, ioye, or peace of conscience, vntill hee was moued by the spirit of God, to loue & com­fort the preachers of the word, to heare the voice of the Gospell, and yeelde obedience vnto the same: so we learne, that we which are sicke, are not to hope for health; we that are weake, are not to looke for strength, and we that are wicked, are not to promise vnto our selues pardon, and forgiuenesse, vntill, we haue with sorrow confessed, and acknow­ledged our sicknesse, weakenesse and wic­kednes [Page 12] and haue sought helpe at the Lord, and his word, and haue freely and willingly submitted our rebelling affections to the or­ders and direction of the same.

The second circumstance. Of whom he demaunded this question.

Hee came to the poore Apostles. The keeper, to his prisoners, a free-man; to them that were in bondage; he that before thoght well of himselfe, vnto men that were despi­sed, &c. For now out of all question, hee knew assuredly, that they were the seruants of God and preachers of the truth. Which o­pinion he had conceiued, by this strange and wonderfull miracle, which GOD for their sakes had lately wrought. It may be marue­led, why he feeling his conscience sore bur­dened, with feare, sorrow, griefe and re­morse of sinne, had not gon for comfort and consolation vnto the great Scribes and Pha­risies: which before had taught him. Surely, the spirit of God had secretly made him to see, that they were all blinde guides, that they were farre out of the right way, & ther­fore now at length was well content to for­sake them all, and to yeelde vnto the mani­fest truth, which at this time appeared plain­ly, and would no longer wilfully stoppe his eares and refuse the proffered grace. Wher­in, hee did maruelously disgrace the whole company of the Priests, Scribes & Doctors, [Page] in that hee preferred these mens learning counsell and doctrine, before all theirs. These being poore men, straungers and in the outward shew of the world abiects: and the other, men rich, glorious, graue, and in the opinion of most men, learned, and great Rabbies. Besides all this, he put him selfe in great daunger of excommunication, of life and liuing, which they had published against Io. 9. 23, 34. all such as should enter either acquaintance or familiaritie with them which spake or taught in the name of Iesus, whom they had crucified. Yet we see, that hee casting away all feare and not consulting with flesh and Gala. 1. 16. bloud, submitted himselfe happyly to bee a Scholer vnto these Apostles.

Application. Doctrine. First we learne, in our extremities, mise­ries, feare, doubts, & heauie trouble of con­science, where we are to seeke for ease, helpe and comfort: not of the blinded, proude, and cruel Pharisie, which is not acquainted with the motions of Gods spirit: but of the pure word of God, reuealed, and preached vnto vs, and of the true preachers and A­postles, which leade vs directly to Christ & no other. When we will take comfort by the word, we must not consult with the Papists Torrensis in confess. Au­gustiniana. lib. 1. cap. 7. Housius de ex­presso verbo. the Iudasites, terming themselues Iesuites for they will tell vs, that the Scriptures are hard and obscure, and that it is but lost la­bour to reade them, &c. But the spirite of [Page 13] God, in the Scripture, teacheth vs the con­trarie, that the worde of the Lord is a light Psal. 119. Prou. 6. Esay. 45. Iohn. 6. 2. Pet. 1. vnto our feete, and a lanthrone vnto our pathes.

When wee are troubled with concupi­sence, the first motions of sinne, the prickes of Sathan in our flesh, which driue the god­ly to great sorrow, we may not goe for coun­sell Torrens. lib. 1. ca. 2. Ca­thechismus ex decret. Cons. Trident. in Sacra. Bap­tism. and remedy, vnto the Pharisaicall Pa­pist, for hee will goe about to perswade vs, that this Concupisence, and the first motions are no sinne in their owne nature, neither any sinne at all, either in name, or substance, ex­cept Consent go with it: which deuilish voice, and lie, is confuted by the word of God, for it is called Enmitie against God, it is against the commaundement, Thou shalt not lust or couet, It confirmes their horrible sin, which Rom. 8. 7. Exod. 20. 17 1. Iohn. 1. [...] Mat. 5. 22. say They haue no sinne: Christ accountes the motion of anger a deadly sinne, and worthie iudgement. Lastly the definition of sinne by Saint Iohn confutes them. Sinne is the trans­gression 1. Iohn. 3. 4 of the law.

Litle comfort shall the weake younglings finde in them, which say, that the Scripture is not sufficient for their saluation, but they must seeke other traditions: which say, that to belieue in Christ is not sufficient, except he keepe the whole law: which impudently and wickedly affirme, that Christ by his death hath not sufficiently purged their sins [Page] but that there is an other Purgatorie, appoin­ted to clense, and make cleane the faithfull, Col. 2. 8. thorough which, euery one must passe, that shall enter into heauen. Contrarie to the preaching of the true Apostles, and the sa­cred word, for wee are bid to take heede of Tit. 1. 14 mens traditions, that wee bee not deceiued by them. Againe, that wee follow not com­maundements of men which turne from the truth. And in the very next verse to my text, Act. 16. 31. Paule tolde this Iaylor that it was sufficient both for him and his housholde to be saued Ioh 3. 18. & 5. 24. if he did onely belieue: Christ hath said. He that belieueth shall be saued, Hee that belieueth in the sonne shall not come into iudgement: Hee Wisd. 3. 1. that heareth my word, and belieueth in him that sent me, hath life euerlasting, hee shall not bee iudged, but hath passed from death vnto life. The soules of the righteous are in the hands of God, and no torment shall touch them. Heb. 1. 3. Christ by himselfe hath purged our sinne, therefore we neede no other Purgatories, & we defie such as haue inuented them to the derogation of Christs power and honour.

Litle comfort may a wounded conscience Torrensis. lib [...]. ca. 4. & lib. 8. cap. 4. Consilium Tridenti­ [...]um sess. 6. [...]an. 12. & [...]3. & can. [...]5. & 16. find at their hand who teach, That men must alwaies doubt, and neuer assure themselues of their election in Christ, what motions so euer they feele, and that they must alwaies carrie an vncertaine opinion, whether they shall perseuere vnto the end, or not. But let [Page 14] them come to the pure foūtaine of the word of God, and then they shall heare the spirite Iam. 1. 7. tell them, that, except they belieue the For­giuenes of sinnes, without doubting, or if they wauer vncertainely in doubtfull dumpes, they shall neuer obtaine anye thing of the Mat. 9. 2. Lord: they shall heare Christ say, Son, stand not in doubt, but comfort thy selfe & assure thy selfe, Thy sins are forgiuen thee. They shall heare, that Abraham after the promise was made vnto him, neuer doubted of the Rom. 4. 18. 19 performance of it, not considering himselfe, and the weakenesse of his owne body, but the promise, and the abilitie of the Lorde that had promised. They shall heare the spi­rite of God tell the Corinthians, and vnder them, vs, that we being sometime disobedi­ent (hauing now receiued and belieued the word) Are sanctified, are iustified in the name 1. Cor. 6. 11▪ of the Lord Iesus Christ, and by the spirite of our God. They shall heare Paule in the full assu­raunce of his election, to reioyce without doubting, I liue, yet not I now, but Christ liueth in me, and in that, that I now liue in the flesh, I Gala. 2. 20. [...], by the faith in the sonne of God, who hath loued me, and giuen himselfe for me. They shal heare the spirite exhorting them to go bold­ly Heb. 4. 16. & 10. 19. to the throne of grace, and not to doubt, but rather, that by the bloud of Christ they may be bolde, & trust perfectly (not doubt­ingly) 1. Pet. 1. 13. on the grace that is brought vnto [Page] them, &c. Aske of the Papists, which teach this doubting doctrine, what is ment by that [...], or fulnesse of faith, whereof the Scripture makes so much mention, calling it the full Assurance of vnderstanding, and the ef­fectuall Col. 2. 2. faith? they must needs if they answere truely, say, that it is A peculiar application, whereby euerie perfect beleeuer, that feeleth the earnest pennie of his election, doth applye vnto 1. Thes. 1. 3. himselfe, the promise of eternall life in Christ Iesus.

Now for perseuerance vnto the end, of which the Papists would haue vs to doubt, Let them consider whether they saye not daily in their beliefe, I belieue euerlasting life. If they doe, let them consider what they be that Christ saith shall be saued. They that in­dure to the end. Such as be not werie in weldoing. Mat. 24. 13. 2. The. 3: 13 Then, if they belieue that any shal be saued, they must needes also belieue that they shal endure to the end. So that they must needes confesse, that the faithfull shall indure vnto the end, such I meane, as are appointed to e­ternall life. And if this argument suffice not, let vs see, what speeches the full assurance of this perseuerāce vnto the end, hath brought forth in the elect and godly. Dauid sayth. Doubtlesse, goodnes and mercie shall follow me Psal. 23. 9. all the daies of my life, &c. Paule saith, I am perswaded that neither death nor life, &c. shall seperate vs frō the loue of God which is in Christ Rom. 8. 38. [Page 15] Iesus our Lord. Againe, the same Paule saith, vnto such as afterwarde had receiued the word, and belieued in this Cittie of Phillip­pie where our Iaylor was, I am perswaded Phil. 1. 6. that he which hath begun this good work in you, will performe it vntill the day of our Lord Iesus Christ. Thus we see that wee are to comfort our selues in this, that if wee pertaine vnto Christ, we may not doubt of our election, or perseuerance, which both we must be assu­red of; not by reason of any perfection, strength, or goodnesse in our selues; but onely, relying on the might, and mercie of Iesus Christ, which by his bloude hath redeemed our dayly, and fleshly imper­fections, and fals, that our continuaunce in him, and by him, may neuer be finally bro­ken off.

Thus we see to whome we must goe with this Iaylor for comfort in our extremitie, & whome we must auoide.

We see further, that GOD hath at all times confirmed his trueth, spoken by his seruants, with manifest signes, and tokens, whereby they that were not quite forsaken, might bee called to the knowledge of the same. What good our signes and tokens haue done to vs, I can not see, but onely, that manye, by them are made the more hard harted, and carelesse, no doubt to their farder condemnation.

This Iaylor no sooner saw the power of God, making manifest and giuing testimo­nie vnto the truth, which the Apostles had preached, but he presently yeelded vnto it, imbraced it, sought his remedie by it, for­sooke his olde customes, and masters, & was content and willing to learne. He no sooner saw the iudgements of God, but straight he remembred his sinne, he repented, hee bad farwell to his former delightes, pleasures, pastimes, wantonnesse, and wickednesse, and of an enemie, became a friend, of a persecu­tor, a professor, of a proude master, an hum­ble seruant, and of a sinfull Iaylor a penitent beleeuer. Therefore as Christ said, that Ty­rus and Sidon, and the Queene of the South should rise in iudgement, against the hard­harted vnbelieuers of Ierusalē, so no doubt, this Iaylor as he condemned the proud Pha­risies then, so, he shal be a heauie condemna­tion, to our blinde Papistes and our carnall and licentious professors of the Gospel, now, which hauing the truth, haue loued error more then the truth: hauing the light, haue desired darkenesse more then the light, and hauing saluation offered by Christ, haue chosen rather damnation, in following their owne deuises, and wilfully continuing the course of their sweete olde sinnes, For our Papists, notwithstanding all the preaching of Christ, will be still Moses Disciples, they [Page 16] wil not forsake the customes of their fathers, and the ignorance of that time, wherin they were Christened, they will neuer suspecte that there can bee hypocrisie, error and de­ceite vnder the graue habites, and demure countenances, of their old Doctors, Priests, Scribes and Pharisies. They would be loth to depart from the vnitie (as they call it) & the consent, of so many ages, counsels, and learned fathers, to belieue the new doctrine of Paule and Silas, strangers, wanderers, but lately heard of & but euen now come to the towne. These, and many other stops, were laide in the laylors way, to haue kept him from obedience to the truth, but, when the arme of the Lord was reuealed vnto him, and when by the spirite of God his hart was Act. 16. 14. opened, he cast of these fantastical shadows, and obeyed the effectuall calling. He might haue aleaged against the Apostles, euerye way, as much as any Papist in the world can say, against the Gospell, and the Lords in­struments, which in this last age, hee com­maunded, and appointed to vnrake the truth from the dull ashes, and misties sha­dowes, in which it lay long time for sinne in­closed, the worlde being not worthie of it. Now the Papistes must condemne this Iay­lor, to be a foole for consenting so quickly to strange doctrine, for giuing credit to a fewe against many; to strangers, against men that [Page] were knowne, and for reuolting so easilye from the faith wherein hee was baptised: or, if they will not condemne him, whome the word doth commend, they must needs con­demne themselues, for not belieuing the same worde, and obeying the like callings. Especially, seeing they haue many and diuers other examples, that vrge and teach the same, as, Elisha, who ranne after Elias vpon a 1. King. 19 20. small calling, to our iudgement: The Disci­ples also vpon smal acquaintance were con­tent to forsake, shippes, nets, occupation, Mat. 4. 18. gaine, friendes and father, to follow Christ, assone as hee called them. Mathew being a Publican was content, at one word, to arise, to leaue his Office, his profit, his glorie, his masters and former teachers, to follow an o­ther Mat. 9. 9. master that had now called him. What should I recken Paule, Cornelius, Lidia, with infinite others, which obeyed the same calling that our Iaylor did. Surely, if the like should happen now, if any should fall away from Poperie, from superstition, to follow Christ, or belieue the doctrine of the Apo­stles: if Elisha, if the Disciples, if Paule, if Cornelius, now liued, they should bee con­demned by the Pope, to be rash, foolish and rancke heretiques. It is time for vs which haue beene so long and many waies called, at length to bid farwell vnto your pleasures, delightes, deceite, hypocrisie, &c. This [Page 17] Iaylor will rise in iudgement against vs.

The Popish chaine of vniuersalitie, was now not yet coyned, or of this man little esteemed; which, at this time, is one of the great Ankers, which holdes the Popedome that it sinckes not, and keepes so many sim­ple fooles in bondage, vppon great bragges and vaine ostentation; of a Monster in the ayre, which neuer was, That all the worlde (forsoth) is of their Religion; or was not long sithens. If this be true, where was then, I say, not the popish vniuersalitie, (for that hath alwaies beene an vniuersalitie of error,) but where was any vniuersalitie of the truth, at all, when first the linage of Seth; then of A­braham, and his kindred, in all the world, Israel, among all nations: onely Iuda, among all the tribes, onely Iohn Baptist in al Iudea, Christ only and his Apostles in all the earth, Paul & Silas only in all Macedonia, Luther and a few others in all Germanie, gaue testi­monie of the truth? Had it not beene a foo­lish thing for this Iaylor to haue iested at the truth, because there were but a few that professed it? Euen so grosse an absurditie it is now, in our Papists to say, that we haue not the truth, because, it is not vniuersally cre­dited, and belieued of all men, and in al pla­ces receiued, when as it is certaine, that the truth hath neuer beene vniuersally recei­ued, nor euer will: but rather it hath alwaies [Page] beene (by the wicked, and most part of the world) vniuersally persecuted, and kept vn­der, and so will continue, till the daye of Christ.

We see, that if the opinion of wisedome, grauitie, and learning; if gray haires, strange formes of apparell, with braue and gorgeous shewes: if the riches, pompe, pride, and glo­rie of the world, in the dumbe Scribes and Pharisies, could haue pacified the troubled conscience of this poore man, hee needed not to haue come to the Apostles. But wee learne, that though error, and the illusi­ons of Sathan, bare a gallant face, and delightfull countenance, outwardly to the world, to blind, and deceiue the sences of the simple, yet there is nothing can pacifie, (with true peace) the conscience wounded for sinne, but onely the word of God. For I pray you, what is he, in all the time of Pope­rie, that can say, that he was either comfor­ted in conscience, or conuerted from sinne, by any of the masking shewes in apparel, by the melodie, sencing, perfuming, images, painting, guilting, crossing, shriuing, or any other such Apish toyes, vsed for a pompe, without preaching or expounding the word? Saint Paule alowes not any thing to be vsed, neither by the minister, nor in the Church, Rom. 15. 2. 1. Tim. 1. 4. 1. Cor. 14. 26. 40. but such things onely, as concerne a godly decencie, and are knowne to edifie.

Lastly, here is a glasse, which neuer failes, to shew vs the true proportion, of such as be A true glasse for al estats. rightly touched, at the touch-stone of Gods spirit. We see this man after he was touched, how little ashamed hee was to confesse his blindnesse, to condemne himselfe, to desire helpe; how little afraide hee was, to venter credit, office, liuings, life and all to obtaine that saluation which he desired, & of which he now felt the want. This was a sure token in him, and so it is in all, to know them that are rightly called, from the hypocritical pro­fessors. For it is as possible, that they which be rightly touched, should continue in their olde couetousnesse, whordome, drunkennes, blasphemie, malice, negligence, and iniu­rie, as it is for the spirite of God to continue in the heart of a wicked man: which can ne­uer be. Now we see what we are to thinke of those lyars, which say with their mouthes, Wis. 1. 3. 4. 5 Titus. 1. 16. they know God, and haue felt his motions, and yet in their deedes denie him: and of those fruitelesse and cursed Figtrees, which in the spring bud faire and promise greate hope and yet at haruest yeelde nothing but Mat. 21. 19. leaues, &c.

The third circumstance. What question it was that the Iaylor de­maunded.

The question is. What must I doe, to be saued?

Hee inquires not now, after the fashion of worldlings, what must I doe to come to promotion, to honour and dignitie? What must I doe to become rich, and to obtaine an easie & quiet life? What must I do to be reuenged of my enemies, to deceiue my neighbours, and to satisfie my lust? &c. No he was not troubled about any such matter, but the spirite of God had now made him carefull onely for one thing, and the best thing, which was, what he might doe to bee saued, and to haue his sinne forgiuen. And it seemeth that the iudgements of God had touched him home, that so presently, a man so carnall, so fleshly, so worldly and sensual, should so willingly take his leaue of the loue of the world, of the vanities and pleasures of the same, the loue of his house, wife, childrē, liuing, life and all, and onely craue to know that which few did desire, which many did despise, that is, what he might do to be saued. Pointing as it were with his finger vnto the onely marke, & end, vpon which euerie man should haue his whole care fixed & planted.

In this question, wee are to consider the manner of his comming vnto them, and his salutation. He fel down before thē, he trem­bled, he brought them out, hee called then in Greeke my Lordes, by a reuerend title. What could hee haue done more to Noble men? Nay what could he haue done more to [Page 19] the greatest princes in the world? But a man may aske, how could Paul & Silas abide to be honoured & not reprehend him. Surely, they knew that he honored thē not supersti­tiously (which Paul could not abide in other Act. 14. 14. 15. places, & men,) but rather that he vsed this gesture, forced vnto it, by the manifest feele­ing Act. 10. 26. of the iudgmēts of God in the late Earth­quake, and therefore suffered him to doe it.

Application and Doctrine. We see first how the Lord, when it plea­seth him, forceth euen his enemies, in their conscience to giue that truth an honourable testimonie, which they persecuted, and to honour it with great reuerence.

Wee learne of this Iaylor, to honour the Lords gifts, (especially the worde of truth) wheresoeuer we find it, whether it be in the prison, or at libertie, whether it bee contem­ned, or honored, whether it be in men simple and despised, or in men of credite and digni­tie. For the Lorde chuseth manye times the weake, to confound the mightie, & the hum­ble, to shame the proude, &c.

We see againe, that the ministerie of the word, is a calling and Office, ordained, and blessed by the Lord, and therefore hee will haue it honored of all men. Because the mi­nisters thereof are not the Embassadours of worldly Princes, (which is also a calling of greate honour, for they represent the Maiestie of the Kinge and are as it were [Page] the verie mouth of the Prince himselfe (but they are the messengers of the Prince of all Princes, the eternall Lorde of heauen and earth: they represent the maiestie of the Lord, in his word, and when we heare them speaking (if they preach nothing but accor­ding to the verie word) wee must assure our selues that we heare the Lord speaking vn­to vs in them. Therefore we find that in ma­ny places, the word it selfe giues them hono­rable titles, for S. Paule saith, they are wor­thie of double honour. This Iaylor heere 1. Tim. 5. 17 cals them by the worthiest name of prehe­minence that he could deuise, not in respect of their persons, which seemed to bee but simple, but for the loue and honour which he bare to the word, which they professed.

Another thing we are here to consider, which may not be forgotten, That, the Iay­lor in demaunding this question, What must I doe to bee saued, flatly and plainely ouer­throwes, and condemneth, all the Religion of the Scribes and Pharisies, to bee nothing else, but a fardle of ceremonies, toyes, and superstitions, ioyned with a worldly pompe, and beautie onely, hauing nothing in it to comfort the hart oppressed with Woe, or as­sure the conscience of the mercie of God in Iesus Christ, which is the onely Sauiour and saluation of the elect by faith. For if hee had beene perswaded that the doctrine which [Page 20] the Pharisies taught concerning the fulfill­ing of the lawe, had beene sufficient for his saluation, & to haue brought him the right way to the mercie of God, and the forgiue­nesse of his sinne, he would neuer haue come vnto the Apostles, to haue learned another way, which had beene superfluous. But wee see plainly, that he did now not only doubt, but boldly renounce, and abandon and for­sake in the plaine fielde, the Pharisies super­stition, the rites, and Religion wherein hee was borne, brought vp, and had for a long time continued. Because hee saw that now, when he most needed, he could find no com­fort nor saluation in it at all. As if he should say: ‘Sirs, I was borne vnder the Religion The Ora­tion of the Iaylor vnto the Apostles. which the Pharisies professe, I haue beene zealous in it, as many others at this day are. I haue had an honorable opinion of it, and haue hated them that haue gain-saide it, I haue beene of long time now led with their outward pompe of dumbe shewes, & I could neuer by anye meanes bee perswaded that these great, graue, auncient, learned & wise men could euer haue bene deceiued, or haue beene conuinced of any error, or so blinded, that they could not haue sene the truth. Yet now, I plainely see, that they all, the verye best of thē, are but hypocrits, blind guides, folish, ignorant of the true knowledge, wick­ed, Ma, 23. 13 & the generation of Vipers, which shut [Page] vp the kingdome of heauen, and wil neither enter themselues nor suffer others that would, which deuour the widdowes houses with colour of long praier, which compasse sea & land to make one of their profession, which make cleane the outerside of the cup and platter, but within are full of briberie and excesse, which I see are nothing else but whited Tombes, full of dead mens bones, & all filthynes, &c. I can not find now in their Religion anye comfort at all for a wounded conscience, or any hope to haue my sins for­giuen. Now therefore sith it hath pleased the Lord with one motion to moue both bo­dy and heart, and that he hath made me see my sinne, my ignorance, my blindnes:’ I doe here forsake, renounce and detest for euer, this Pharisaicall superstition. And seeing this course that I haue taken, can doe me no good, I pray you, whō I now know to be the seruāts of the liuing God, & prechers of the truth, Tell mee at length what course I must take, & what I must do that I may be saued?

By which words wee see that he did not only suspect but vtterly by the spirit of God renounce that, which the same spirite had tolde him, to be wicked and abhominable. And I wish in perfect charitie that all those which are now blinded with Poperie, and lie yet drunken with the cursed wine of the great whore of Babilon, al what euer they be [Page 21] either in Italy, France, Spaine or England, may, (if they pertaine to the Lords election) feele the like motions & the like hartquakes to assault their cōscience, & open their eyes, that they may once feele & see their blind­nes, their errors, and their sinnes & certaine damnatiō, that they may once with this Iay­lor perfectly bid farwell vnto al the Romish Pharisies, blind guides, & deceiuing hypo­crites, that now so monsterously abuse them.

Againe, seeing this Iaylor seekes to be sa­ued, let vs consider what saluation it is that he desireth. The Greek word signifieth such a kind of sauing, as that a man may continu­ally remaine assured and without feare. The Syrian Paraphrase hath it, what must I doe that I may liue? Which is as much to say, as, to be preserued: which teacheth vs, that hee sought not for the temporal & present sauing of his life, the feare of the earthquake being passed, and they being that way able to doe him no good, neither did he as the wicked are wont to do, which seing the iudgements of God, for a time tremble, & quake, but the rod being past, they return againe vnto their former wickednes: But, this man being right­ly touched, and fearing more his sin, then the Earthquake, earnestly sought for the salua­tion of his soule, the comfort of which might continue with him for euer. If he desired the right waye, the verie truth, and life it selfe, [Page] whome did he desire but Christ? If hee desi­red Iohn. 14. 6. saluation, what desired hee but Christ, which is the onely Sauiour of the faithfull? Blessed, saith Dauid, is he whose wickednes is forgiuen & whose sin is couered. If no man Psalm. 32. 1 can bee blessed, happie, ioyfull and saued, but they that haue their sins forgiuen: then wee see what saluation it is that this man sought, namely, an assurance that his sinnes should be forgiuen, & the meanes by which hee might attaine vnto this. This saluation the Pharisies coulde not teach this Iaylor then, and our Papistes purely without cor­ruption will not haue it taught now.

Further, we learne here, if we see any cru­ell, wicked, and malicious persecutors of the truth, or any other abhominable sinners, not to proceede in rash iudgement against thē, to cōdemne for reprobates, but rather to leaue this iudgment to the Lord, who only know­eth what they be that are his, because wee know not whether the Lord haue appointed both time and meanes for their conuersion, as hee had for this Iaylor, &c.

Lastly we learne, that this care and desire of the Iaylor condemneth the cares and de­sires of many of vs that haue beene longer [...]h. 10. 41. 42. taught. Christ said once to a worldly minded Martha, Martha, thou carest & art troubled about many things, but one thing is neede­full, &c. This one needfull thing is to desire [Page 22] to heare the worde of God and the meanes how to bee saued, and haue our sinnes forgi­uen. This one thing had the Iaylor nowe found, this one thing he desired & no more. Whosoeuer therefore neglecting the word of God and care of saluation, applyeth his mind to any other exercise, pleasure, or pro­fit, his care is needlesse, vaine, foolish and wicked. For all our cares, studies and endea­uors, wherin we haue not a principal regard vnto the glorie of God and our owne salua­tion, are accursed of the Lord, and therefore can neuer bring a blessing vppon vs. The counsels and conspiracies of the wise Achi­tophels, 2. Sam. 17. the Lord for his Dauid shall ouer­throw by his appointed Hushais. No proui­sion, counsell, or determination for the go­uernment or safetie of any common-welth, can euer stand long, or bring a blessing vp­on that land, where the principall marke of all their deuises tend not to the establishing and setting forth of the truth, the honour of God, and saluation by Christ Iesus our one­ly Sauiour. Hospitalitie is good: a reasona­ble prouision of things necessarie, is alowa­ble: an earnest desire to bee diligent in our vocations, occupations, and callings, is com­mended: but yet to loue, follow, or be busi­ed so in any of these, that we neglect at times conuenient, and when occasions be offered, to heare the Sermons of Christ, or neglect [Page] the learning of the knowledge of our salua­tion, is in Martha by Christ greatly repre­hended. There bee many Marthaes in Eng­land which trouble themselues about many vaine pleasures, offices, and deuises, while in the meane time they neglect the best dutie: As Gentlemen that trouble themselues to build faire houses & gorgeous palaces, which yet care not for the building of the Lordes house, and as little for their owne saluation: countrie men that are careful to prouide for their posteritie, yet carelesse for their owne safetie and helpe of their soules: Ministers, which either for ignorance, negligence, or contempt of the word, leauing the consider­ation of their calling giue themselues som to be husbandmen, farmers, grasiers &c, some to be Physitions, Lawyers, and other secular officers, as though that one blessed calling of theirs were not needful only, & sufficient, to preach the word of God truely, and to liue thereafter, & to bring the simple & ignorant to know which way they must be saued. &c.

The fourth circumstance. What it was, which brought this man to this Consideration.

The text shews vs, that it was the iudge­ment and hand of the Lord which he felt in the Earthquake, and the holy Ghost also in­wardly working which wrought this care & desire in him, and made him to haue a consi­deration of his sins, &c.

Application and Doctrine. First we see, that it is a profitable & good thing for a man to feel the iudgements, rods and scourge of the Lord oftentimes, to awa­ken him out of his securitie, and also to cast downe his pride, that he may learne to hum­ble himself before the Lord. For ease, peace, and quietnesse bring vs a sleepe, harden our harts, make vs to contemne the messengers and worde of the Lord: But feare and his rod when it is seene, maketh vs more apt to learne, and willingly to seeke for comfort & helpe. Therefore said Dauid, It is good for me Psal. 119. 67 71 that I haue beene afflicted, that I may learne thy statuts. For before I was troubled, I went astray, but now I keepe thy word. The worldly mindes which are not indued with spirituall know­ledge, do wonderfully repine, murmure, and frowne against all miseries, sickenes, calami­ties, plagues, or what troubles so euer hap­pen in this life, detesting al things which are not pleasant to the flesh, as a thing most re­pugnant to nature. But the godly on the o­ther side do know, that the church & seruāts of God in this life, are subiect to many cros­ses, troubles, persecutions, not yt the Church shal perish wt these afflictions, but rather yt it is thus ordained by the singular prouidence of the Lord, that by this meanes his seruants may see their sins, & the Lords anger against it, that they may learne to tame the mad and outragious concupiscence of the flesh, & that [Page] faith, loue, charitie and mercie, with the fee­ling of one anothers infirmities, may dayly increase, and bee renewed in them. Where we see, that these afflictions, are nothing but iust corrections for our escapes and faultes: and we see what they be that are most fit to receiue admonition, euen such as are most visited with afflictions, griefes, sickenesse, want of things necessarie, and such like, &c. Blessed is the man whome the Lord correct­eth, because it is a signe of his loue, & blessed Iob. 3. 17. is that man which indureth temptations, & continueth constant to the ende, and is not Iam. 1. 12. ouerborne with calamities, for hee shall re­ceiue a Crowne of life, which the Lord hath Mat. 5. 10. promised to them that loue him.

Againe; we are to learne, that, whensoe­uer wee see the Lord to wounde our consci­ences, or to threaten vs with any calamitie, warres, plagues, sicknesse, or any other visi­tation, hee doth it for no other cause, but to make vs to consider that we are gon astray, that we are out of order, that our life is not such as it should be, and that he hath a hea­uie quarrell, and reckoning against vs. Then here we see the cause, why the Lord hath of late giuen vs so many gentle warnings, shew­ed vs so many louing rods, and like a merci­full father, hath rather made vs as yet to see them, then to feele them. And yet surely we haue so seene the sentence (as it were) of our [Page 24] own condemnation, in signes in the heauens, and wonders in the earth, in Earthquakes, in the necessitie, & crie of many thousands in this time of miserie, by the stop of mutual traficke, and euen now in these rumors of warres, and expectations of forraine inuasi­on: that we may easily coniecture, what ef­fect there will follow, if the cause be not re­moued. Our sinne, our vnthankefulnes, our negligence, our carelesse and licentious li­bertie, in all estates, our wicked behauiours, our monsterous apparell, our want of chari­tie, loue and patience, our aboundance of enuie, malice, deceite, whordome, and like abhominations, are the causes of these tu­mults, of these motions, of these feares, and of these signes and tokens. And, if wee with this Iaylor bee not drawne, by some meanes to seeke helpe the sooner, wee are to looke for some heauie misery to fal vpon vs & our land. The Lord shakes these rods ouer our heads to some purpose, wee must thinke. A carefull & louing father, if he find his childs stomacke so stubborne, that the sight of the rod, and threatning will not terrifie him, at length he fals to seuere whipping, and chast­ning of him indeede. I pray God, that my feare and coniecture in this respect, may be vaine: but surely I feare, and by most mani­fest signes am driuen to coniecture, that, ex­cept verie shortly we all, euen frō the high­est [Page] vnto the lowest take an other course and trade of behauior, we must looke for a fear­full end of our long, our sweete and pleasant peace, that hath nowe so soundly lulled a sleepe some of vs in the cradle of securitie, some in the cradle of iniquitie, some in the cradle of Atheisme, doubting of God, giuing Manifest signes of A­theisme. no credite to the Scriptures, disputing of foolish and heathnish questions, & seeking to comprehend the works & power of God, which are in the vnscrutable wisedome of the Lord, by reason and not by faith: which Saint Paule proues to be a monstrous follie, Rom. 1. some in the cradle of Anabaptisme, some at the brest and sweete teate of Poperie, all in the rolling and vnsetled cradle of our owne fantasie. Alas, the carefull soules of manye thousand poore men that haue bene oppres­sed, crie out of our land and euerye corner thereof, as the bloud of Abel for vengeance against our land, and against our hypocrisie, & abusing of our religion. What end can we imagine, what reward can we looke for, but the fearefull marke of Caine, and the heauie iudgement of the forsaken, hatefull & wan­dering Iewe? I feare greatly least these thir­tie and eight yeares of pleasant peace, haue prouoked God more to anger against this land, then fiue hundred yeares before of warre and miserie. O that Gods blessings should bee so abused, that they should ende [Page 25] with so heauie a curse. O that his mercye should leade vs to such vnmercifulnes, that we should forget the care of our owne salua­tion, and fal a murdering of our owne soules. O that wee should liue to see that daye, in which the sweet benefits & louing patience of the Lord should make vs the worse. Hap­py is the man that with this Iaylor finds oc­casion & his motions in these things to come vnto the Lord; and happie may that man be thought which resteth in the Lord, which shall not see the miserie of the future times, which sinne and Sathan without repentance wil pul downe vpon this Noble realme, &c.

Wee see farder, by the great care which this man had to know how to be saued, and the haste that hee made to obtaine his pur­pose, that hee gaue sure tokens of his obe­dience to his calling: which teacheth vs that the iudgements of God take not like effect in all men, For in some, that is, in the elect which are rightly touched by the spirite of God, it is true that the Prophet said: Assone as they heare, they shall obey me. But in others, Psal. 18. 44. this is true, I called but they would not heare nor obey. There be some which at the iudge­ments of God tremble for a time, but it is a­gaine presently forgotten, as Pharao, the keepers of Christs Sepulcher, Caligula and many others. But in the godly they worke Exod. 7. 3. Mat. 28. 5. contrarie effects. It is true amongest most of [Page] vs, that the more signes and tokens of Gods wrath we see, the harder our harts grow day­ly: what may the ende of these things be? A blinde man may see. The Lord be merciful vnto vs, and giue vs grace with this Iaylor be more carefull of our saluation.

We learne also, that a great festred sore, needeth a sharpe and quicke Surgion. These proud Rabbies and great Doctors woulde not heare the voice of the Ministers of the Gospell speaking vnto them, neither could their voice driue them to any consideration of their estate. Therfore the Lord sent them the voice of a more terible preacher, which shooke both bodies and houses all at once, assaying by this meanes to bring their impe­nitent harts, to some shaking, feeling, and feare of conscience for their sinnes. But as Which was felt about the yeare, 1580. that Earthquake shewed them, so our last Earthquake, and other tokens sithens, shew vs plainely now, the estate wherin we stand, which is, that we yet continue in our sinnes, That we despise the voice of the Gospel, & neede a more sharp preacher▪ it openeth our securitie, it threatneth Gods iustice in seue­ritie, it promiseth our punishment, & shews vs that it is very neere the last time of war­ning.

Happie (wee see) are they which come, when the Lord calleth them, for many bee called, but few are chosen, few come. What [Page 24] callings should we looke for more then wee haue had? Wee haue had our daughter dis­eased, our sonne sicke, our seruant like to die, wee haue seene fearefull signes ouer Ie­rusalem, we haue heard of the gatherings, of the confederacies and conspiracies, of many nations against vs, we haue found little faith in our friends, little loyaltie in our owne na­turall children, great falsehoode in friendly face, great diuisions, quarrels, and hartbur­nings amongst our selues, many Malcontent dayly rising, and a thousand other such cal­lings, besides the consideration of the silly threede of our happie estate, depending vp­on one, and in earthly respects but one one­ly; the vncertaintie of all things, when God shall visite vs, the turmoyles and hurlibur­lies, that we may long before plainely see, if God of his mercy helpe not. These thinges are considered of few, of many not accoun­ted of, and feared of none. What will the ende of these things bee? Let all the inhabi­tants of England crie: Lord saue our Noble Queene Elizabeth from treason at home, and from forraine enemies abroade. Lord forgiue her her sinnes, and vs our wickednes, and graunt, if it be thy will, that she may yet long and long time in peace, and in saftie preserue this her Noble Realme of England. Amen.

Lastly, we learne the great mercies of our God. For he chideth before he stricke, hee [Page] warneth before he destroyeth; he punisheth not, till he haue vsed all meanes to haue vs returne. Hee giueth sinners, both grace and space to repent, and to seeke which waye they may be saued, with this sinfull Iaylor.

The fift and last circumstance: The time when he fell to haue this care, what hee might doe to be saued.

He neuer fell to this consideration, till the Lord drew him vnto it by his spirit. For in the nature of mā, ther is no good thought motion or power to returne from euill, to consider and see our sinnes, or to lament and be sorrie for them, and at the word to seeke for remedy against them; but rather, a desire, will and affection still to remaine in them. Therefore Christ said. No man can come vn­to me, except my father draw him. This man Iohn. 6. 37. 44. & 3. 27 had his part of two motions. The one out­ward by the miracle, the other inward by the holy Ghost.

Application. Doctrine. Where first we see, that all our labour & trauaile is lost in preaching, and opening the Scripture outwardly to the eare, except the spirit also preach inwardly to the heart. For men are of themselues deafe and dull, till God doe open their harts, and giue them a new vnderstanding, as he gaue to Lidia, to this Iaylor and many other.

Againe we see, how naked, weake & mi­serable [Page 27] we be of our selues: and that, if wee were not gouerned and nourished by better power then our owne, how quickely & mi­serably wee should perish. Therefore this consideration may serue to conquer the spi­rit of pride in our freewill men, when they shall know that in their flesh and humaine nature ther is no goodnes at all, & that they can performe nothing, that is good without him that said. Without me, ye can do nothing. 1. Cor. 4. 7. Act. 20. 35.

What hast thou (saith Paule) which thou hast not receiued?

We learne that faith is not in the power & nature of mā, to beleue or not to beleue whē Ep. 1. 18. 19 1. Cor. 12 [...] 9 11. it pleseth him, but yt it is the free gift of God for Christs sake, vnto those that are his chosē. For if it were in the nature of man, then all Phil. 1. 29. 2. Thes. 3, 2. men shuld beleue. But Al men haue not faith, therefore, it is in vs a worke supernaturall, wrought by the spirite of God onely: The want of the presence, and working of which spirit, in the harts of men, makes them, that they haue no desire to heare the word, and when they doe heare it, they take no profit by it, for it is saide. But the word which they heard, profited them not, because it was not mix­ted Heb. 4. 20 with faith in them that heard it. Where wee see a notable relation betweene fayth, & the word. The one can neuer be effectual without the other. They goe both together. Therefore as soone as there was a fayth [Page] kindle in the hart of this Iaylor, by the ho­ly Ghost, he seekes presently for the word, as the body for the soule. For as the body is a dead thing without the soule, so the word also hath no life, effect or motion without faith. Now wee see why many Gentlemen, Countriemen and others are yet either A­theists, [...]esters in Religion, or despisers of the word, because as yet with this Iaylor they haue not receiued the gift of faith, &c.

Here we vnderstand, that all shall not be saued, against the error of Origen: for with­out faith none can be saued: but none haue faith but they onely whome God the father gaue vnto his sonne Christ. But hee saith, I pray not for the world, but for them which thou Ioh. 17. 9. hast giuen me. Therefore the elect which are separated from the world, (that is the repro­bate,) by the free election, and donation of God, and are garded by the continuall pra­yer of Christ, are they onely that shall bee saued. Of which number wee see now this Iaylor by his calling, and faith, to bee one. For Gods election oftentimes lyeth hid vn­der a wicked life, till the time of their con­uersion come, which the Lord hath appoin­ted.

All are not, wee see, drawne to Christ in one manner: for there bee many which pro­fesse Religion, and talke much of Christ, whome God the father by his spirite neuer [Page 26] drew, but either their bellie, hope of honor, vaine glorie &c. No maruaile though they belieue not rightly, and though they conti­nue not long in a good course. Such are ma­ny of our earnest Iesuites, Papists, and liber­tine professors of the Gospell of Christ.

Lastly, when it is saide, that this Iaylor was drawne to this Religion & to this godly care, and in like manner all the elect, wee learne what vnwillingnes, what slacknesse, & what negligence wee vse in our comming to Christ, and that wee of our owne nature haue no list, affection, or good will to come, longer then God by his spirite, moueth vs and compelleth vs. Therefore if Christ should looke for vs till wee should come of our selues, wee should surely neuer see him, nor haue any part in him. Let vs therefore desire the Lord, that as he by his holy spirit drew this Iaylor from the miserable thral­dome of ignorance, error, and iniquitie, and planted a desire in him to seeke the truth, and by the same gaue him both comfort & saluation: So in like manner that he will by the same spirite moue our hard hearts to la­ment our sinne, open our blinde eyes to see our imperfection, and draw our proude sto­makes to humble our affections, to the obe­dience of the word, and kindle in vs a loue to like, and seeke the same, that wee also in [Page] our most extremities, may by Christ re­ceiue light, helpe, and euerlasting comfort: which the Lord God graunt vnto vs, for his deare Sonne Iesus Christs sake, to whome with the holy Ghost, three persons and one eternall God, be al honor, power, praise, glorie and dominion both now and euer.

Let all praise and glorie be giuen to God alone.

FINIS.

This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Text Creation Partnership. Searching, reading, printing, or downloading EEBO-TCP texts is reserved for the authorized users of these project partner institutions. Permission must be granted for subsequent distribution, in print or electronically, of this EEBO-TCP Phase II text, in whole or in part.