LONDON,
Printed by Aug. Matthewes for Iohn Griſmand, and
are to bee
ſold at his Shop in Pauls Alley, at
the Signe of the Gunne. 1622.
Printer’s ornament
Errata.
PAge 7. for propoſition, read pro portion. page 18. for imitates, reade intimates. page 19. for if reade as.
Printer’s ornament
Printer’s ornament
To all that loue Peace and Truth.
PEace, take it with all faults, is better then
Warre: and the ende of a iuſt warre, is but Studium Pacis, the
intention of a right peace. The Subiect then is beyond exception, to all
that loue Peace. But commonly they, with whom it med
dles
A3
The Epiſtle
dles, refuſe to meddle with it. Let
ſuch take the courſe of their vnhappy precipice into euerlaſting
vnquiet neſſe, who wilfully
reiect the cure of their affected maladie: denying their conſciences a
trouble that may ſaue them, for feare of looſing a trouble that
doth1 pleaſe them. As if a man were leſſe then mad, that
will leap into the fire, to auoid the ſmoke. There is Pax fundamenti, the peace
of Doctrine: and Pax
Ordinis, the peace of Diſcipline. The Heretike would
pull downe the firſt Pillar, the Schiſmaticke
the
to the reader.
the other: The former would break
our peace with Chriſt; the latter with our ſelues & the Church: both
theſe are almoſt deſperate. But there is a third, Pax Politica, a ciuill
Peace: and the common diſtur bers
of this are ſuch con tentious
ſpirits; that either vnprouoked, out of miſ chieuous intention: or be ing prouoked, out of malicious reuenge; ſet all
in vprore, make a mutiny in manners, an ataxie in the courſe of life. To
cure this Babel, if at
leaſt ſhee will bee cured, is the ſcope of this Tractate. Peace
was
A4
The Epiſtle
was Chriſts bleſſed Lega cie to his Church; and we are the
Miniſters whom he hath choſen to ſee it pay ed. Executours are often ſued for the bequeſts
giuen by dead Teſtators: Loe here a Legacie without ſu ing from a liuing Father. Embrace it, and bee
regu lated by it: ſo ſhall
your heartſ finde preſent com fort, and your ſoules eter nall
life in it.
The heartie deſirer of your Peace.
Th. Adams.
1
Printer’s ornament
THE CITIE OF PEACE. Horizontal line
PEace is the Daughter of Righteouſnes, and the mo [t]her of knowledge, the nurſe of Arts, and the
improuement of all bleſ-
ſings.
B
2
The Citie of
Peace.
ſings. It is delectable to al that taſte it,
profitable to thẽ that practiſe it; to thẽ that look vpõ it, ami able; to them that enioy it, a
benefit inualuable. The building of Chriſti anity knows no other ma terials: if we looke vpon
Ephes. 4.4
the Church it ſelf, There is one body: if vpõ the ve ry ſoule of it, There is one Spirit: if
vpõ the endow ment of it,
There is one
Hope: if vpon the head of it, There is one Lord: if
vp on the life of it,
There is one
Faith: if vpon the doore of it, There is one Baptiſme: if
vpon the
Fa-
3
The Citie of
Peace.
Father of it, There is one God, and Father of
all.
Peace is a faire
Virgin, euery ones Loue, the
The Picture of Peace
praiſe of all tongues, the obiect of all eyes, the wiſh of all
hearts; Pacẽ [n]te poſcimus omnes. She hath a
ſmiling looke, which neuer frowned with the leſt ſcowle of anger: ſnowy
armes, ſoft as Downe, and whiter then the Swannes feathers; alwaies open
to pious embracements. Her mil ken
hand carries an O liue branch, the
Sym bole and Embleme of
quietneſſe. She hath the
face
B2
4
The Citie of
Peace.
face of a glorious Ang ell, alwaies looking to wards righteouſneſſe, as the two Cherubins
loo ked one vpon the other,
and both vnto the Mer cy-Seate.
Her Court is the inuincible Fort of integrity; ſo guarded by the diuiue
prouidence; that Drummes, Trum pets, and thundring Ca nons,
thoſe lowd Inſtru ments of war, (I
meane Blaſphemy, Contenti on,
Violence) may af front her, but
neuer af fright her. Shee hath a
bounteous hand, virtu all like the
Garment of
Chriſt
5
The Citie of
Peace.
Chriſt; if a faithfull ſoule
can come to touch it, to kiſſe it; all her vex ations are fled, her conſcience is at reſt. Her
bowels are full of pitty: ſhee is alwayes compo ſing ſalues for all the wounds of a broken
heart, Sedition and tu mult her
very ſoule hates: ſhee tramples in iuries and diſcords vn der her
triumphant feet. Shee ſits in a Throne of Ioy, & weares a Crown of
Eternitie: and to all thoſe that open the doore of their heart to bid
her welcome, ſhee
will
B3
6
The Citie of
Peace.
will open the doore of Heauen to bidde them
welcome, and repoſe their ſoules in euerlaſting Peace.
The requiſiteneſſe & revvard of Peace.
In
theſe continuall Dogge-daies of ours, wherein loue waxeth cold, and
ſtrife hote, wee had need ſet our Inſtruments to the tune of Peace. This
was the bleſſed legacie which Chriſt bequea thed to his Church: the Apoſtle from his Ma ſter ſent it as a token to the
Corinthians:
and I from the Apoſtle com mend it
as a Iewell to all Chriſtians;
Note: 2. Cor. 13.
11
Liue in
Peace
7
The Citie of
Peace.
Peace, and the God of Loue and
Peace ſhall bee with you. Which concluſion of the
Epiſtle containes the bleſſing of the Apo ſtle’: a Valediction, and a Benediction. They
are in part Hortatory, in part Conſolatory: the vertue to which he
per ſwades them, and the
reward which hee promi ſeth them.
There is a ſweet ſymphony, and reſpondent propoſition betweene the
Counſell and the Comfort; the Actiue Peace, and the Factiue Peace: for
ſee king peace on Earth, we
ſhall
B4
8
The Citie of
Peace.
ſhall find peace in Hea uen: for keeping the peace of God, wee ſhall
bee kept by the God of peace. The one is the regular Compaſſe of our
life on Earth, the o ther is the
glorious Crowne of our life in Heauen.
That wee may not cheriſh too weake an o pinion of this duty, wee muſt know, that this
A poſtolicall counſel is an
Euangelicall law;
The forme of a right Lavv.
and binds vs all to the peace. Liue
in Peace: there are in it all the concurring
qualities, that define a
good
9
The Citie of
Peace.
good law; as
Lycurgus taught: Generalitas, Bonitas,
Poſſibilitas. It muſt be Generall, Good, Poſ ſible.
Generall, ſo that all be tied to the obedience of it. Elſe it were like
A nacharſis law, a cobweb to
catch flies: or thoſe tyranous cẽſures, which are made to vex Doues,
while they are indul gent to
Buzzards.
It muſt be Good, for none are bound to the obedience of vniuſt things. If
it haue an in different extent to
good or bad, there is eaſily
found
B5
10
The Citie of
Peace.
found ſome colour of euaſion.
It muſt bee Poſſible; for if things be impoſed vltra
poſſe, and ſo men be made lyable to the mulct, when they
are not culpable of the guilt; they may obiect that Naturae
dictamen. Nemo tenetur ad
impoſſi bile:
none are to be ty ed to the
obedience of impoſſible things. Such are Tyrants Lawes; not vincula, ſed retia: not limits to
confine, but netts to enſnare: not Pales, but Toiles.
But the Law of Peace is
in
11
The Citie of
Peace.
General,
the equity of Peace
none can plead immunitie.
Good, none taxe it of iniquitie. Poſ ſible, none can ſay, it is beyond their
abilitie. But it may be obiected. If you require it Gene rall, it is not Poſsible: for wee
cannot haue peace with all men. If it were Poſsible, yet is it not
lawfull and good; for wee may not haue peace with all men. To direct vs
in this, the A poſtle inſerts two
cautions. If it be
poſsible,
as much as lyeth in you; liue
peaceably with all men. For there are ſome caſes
in
12
The Citie of
Peace.
in which ὄυ
δυνατὁν
, it is not poſſible.
[...] Cor.
6, 15
What communion hath light with
darkeneſſe! and what concord hath Chriſt with Belial! Wee muſt
haue no peace with it, if there be no grace in it.
Pſalme 1
Bleſſed is hee that walketh not in the
counſell of the vngodly, &c. Forbeare not only to ſit in
the Chaire of
peſtilence with them, which is Sinne raigning:
but euen to ſtand and diſcourſe with
them, which is Sinne deligh ting: yea
euen to walke a turne
with them, which is Sinne
entring:
teach-
13
The Citie of
Peace.
teaching vs to ſhunne the
very acquaintance of their counſels.
But wicked men can not be
auoided;
The
termes of Peace diſtingui shed.
and ſo long as wee are in this world, wee
muſt con uerſe with men of the
world. To anſwer this, we muſt diſtinguiſh be tweene offenders, and offences: we may haue no
peace with the one, true peace with the o ther. There are two names,
Auguſt.
Homo &
Peccator: a Man, and a Sin ner. Quod Peccator eſt, corripe: quod
Homo, mi ſerere. As he is a Sinner,
re-
14
The Citie of
Peace.
reforme him: as he is a man, the Image of God,
pitie him. Doth thy Brother ſinne of igno rance? Dilige errantem, interfice
errorem: kill the error, preſerue thy bro ther. Doth hee offend of frailty?
Bee at peace (cum hominibus, non cummoribus) with the man, not
with the manners. Treſpaſſeth hee of ma lice? Hate (vitium, not virum) the diſeaſe, not the patient. Howſoeuer theſe
infirmities are in euitable, ſtill
wee may haue Peace, Cum malis, licet non in
malis: with
euill
15
The Citie of
Peace.
euill men, though not in
euill matters.
Indeede let him that hath a[u]5thority, correct malicious offences: for that is not
like a rauiſher to abuſe, but like a Chã pion to vindicate the ho nour of peace. Yet ſtill Cum corrigat
malitiam, diligat perſonam; let him correct the
tranſgreſsi on, loue the
perſon.
But how ſhall we an ſwere that of
the Pſal miſt?
Pſal. 59. 5.
Be not mercifull to them that ſinne of
mali tious
wickedneſſe. This was not Precantis votum, ſed Prophetantis
vaticini-:
um:
16
The Citie of
Peace.
um: not the requeſt of a Petitioner, but the pre diction of a Prophecier. Hee did
not wiſh it ſhould be ſo, but ſaw it would be ſo.
But if all this be true, wee may then admit peace with Rome? Wee doe accept a
Ciuill, not a Religious peace. In a treatiſe of pacification, both
parties muſt yeeld ſomwhat: but nothing is to be yeelded that may
preiudice the Truth. In a Muſicall Inſtrument the ſtrings that bee out
of tune, are ſet vp, or ſet downe to the reſt: the
ſtrings
17
The Citie of
Peace.
ſtrings that be in tune,
are not ſtirred. Our Do ctrine and
Profeſſion are tuned to the bleſſed Go ſpell, that infallible Ca non of Truth, and there fore muſt not bee chan ged. Their Faith and Religion iarreth and er reth from that; therefore muſt
bee proportioned to ours, if they will endenour a perfect Har mony.
Thus far,
The life
of Peace.
& vpon theſe tearmes wee may haue
peace, if we ſeeke it: we may liue in peace, and peace may liue in vs,
if we deſire it. Therefore
ſtill
18
The Citie of
Peace.
ſtill έίρηνευέτε6Liue in peace. Caluin
renders it, Pacem
agite, Doe peace.
Or, as if God ſhould ſay to men, whom he found quarrelling, or too lowd;
Peace. The word
is emphaticall, and imi tates a
continual habite: wee may call it, The Exerciſe of peace, or the
Practice of peace.
Some haue a good mind to peace,
The neglect.
but they
will bee at no labour a bout it:
many are con tent to embrace it,
but they are aſhamed to ſeek it: moſt men loue it, few practiſe it. The
vſe com-
mends
19
The Citie of
Peace.
mends the vertue: the
beautie and praiſe of peace conſiſts not in motion, but in action: nor
is the benefit of it in a knowing diſcourſe, but in a feeling ſenſe. A
Spe culatiue peace, is like an
Hiſtoricall knowledge: ſuch as he that hath bin alwayes confined to his
ſtudy, may haue of for raine
countries: ſo wee make a conqueſt of peace, as the by word ſayes, our Fathers wonne Boloigne; who neuer came
within the report of the Canon. Or if the Grecians kept
Phi-
20
The Citie of
Peace.
Philoſophy in their leaues, but kept it not in
their liues. A ieiune and emptie ſpeculation, like ſome ſubtill ayre in
the head, onely breakes out into crochets: it is ex perience that brings the ſweetneſſe of peace
home to the heart. Vſe breeds perfectneſſe, and diſuſe looſeth the moſt
ſeruiceable things. Gold looſeth more of the waight by ruſting in
corners, then by conti nuall
running in com merces, the proper
end it was coyned for. The beſt land will yeeld ſmal
en-
21
The Citie of
Peace.
encreaſe, if it be not
til led: though ſome haue the
moſt profitable trades, the want of induſtry hath made them the pooreſt
men. The throne of peace is in the heart, not in the head.
To recouer,
The
Me thod.
therefore the ſwouning life of this vertue, I will compare Peace to a Citie: if you will, to
this City: which ſhould be like Ieruſalem, A Citie of Peace. And ſo much we will
pray for it; that it may preſerue peace, and peace may preſerue it, to
the worlds end.
Let
22
The Citie of Peace.
Let the walles of this Citie be Vnitie and Concord. Let her haue
foure Gates; Innocence,
and Patience; Benefaction, and Satiſfaction. The firſt gate of peace is
In nocence; ſhe muſt doe no
wrong. The ſecond is Patience; ſhe muſt ſuffer wrong. The third is Be neficence; ſhe muſt doe
good in ſtead of wrong. The fourth is Recom pence; ſhe muſt make li berall and iuſt ſatiſfacti on for any committed wrong. There
is alſo a Poſterne
Gate, and that is Humility. A gate indeed,
but
23
The Citie of
Peace.
but a ſmall and low one;
whoſoeuer enters the Citie of peace that way, muſt ſtoop before he get
in. The enemies of this Citie are many; diuided into two bands;
Hoſtilitie and
Mutinie The
Gouernour of it, is Magiſtracie: the Law, Religion: the Palace, the
Temple: the
life of the Citizens is Loue. It is ſerued by the Riuer of Proſperitie; the State of
it, is Felicitie: the
Inheri tance, eternall
Glory.
The Wals of Peace.
The Wals of
Peace.
Are Vnitie and Con-
cord
24
The Citie of Peace.
cord. Omnis Societas eſt corpus politicum: and it is
in a Citie, as in a Bo die: there
are many members, one body: many Citizens, one Ci tie.
The Body is a figure of
Vnitie.
The Body is one of the moſt liuely figures and
examples of peace. Wee are all one
Body:
1 Cor. 12
not
onely one Kingdome; ſo diſparitie in Religions make many differences.
Nor only one Citie, Inter dites erunt lites; ſo
diſparitie of eſtates will breed quarrels. Nor on ly one Houſe, ſo wee may haue enemies of our owne
houſhold. But one
Body
25
The Citie of
Peace.
Body, here muſt be al
loue & peace. Where all are tied by bonds, ioynts, & ligaments
to the head; there alſo by the fame Nerues one to another.
Some mẽbers are ſin gle; as the
tongue is one, to ſpeake one truth:
Mutuall Loue.
the heart
one, to entertaine one God. Other are Gemina, Germana; their for ces are doubled to ſup ply mutuall defects. Some are
ſtronger, as the armes and leggs; for the ſupportation of the weaker.
Thus qualified are all the faithfull citi zens of Peace; preſer-
uing
C
26
The Citie of Peace.
uing an vnanimitie in affection, a ſympathy in affliction, a ready
helpe to the moſt needful con dition. Comforting the mindes of thoſe that are perplexed, ſupplying
the wants of thoſe that are diſtreſſed, rectifying the weakneſſe of
thoſe that are vnſetled, informing the ignorance of thoſe that are
ſeduced, and reforming the errors of thoſe that are peruerted: all
endeauoring the deliuerãce of the oppreſſed.
The mẽbers prouide one for another:
Prouidence of parts for the
vvhole·
the eye ſees not only for it ſelfe,
but
27
The Citie of
Peace.
but for the Body: the hand
works not only for it ſelf, but for the Body: the eare hearkens, the
tongue talkes, the foote walkes, all parts exerciſe their functions for
the good of the whole. In the Citie of peace men muſt not only ſeek
their owne, but the glory of their Maker, and the good of their Society.
That God who hath giuen vs honour by our Anceſtors, would alſo haue vs
adde honour to our Succeſſors. To pre ferre a priuate good be fore a publike; is to fa-
miſh
C2
28
The Citie of Peace.
miſh and ſtarue the whole Body, to fatt a toe, or pleafe a finger.
Such Monopolies and Patents, as impoueriſh the whole, to enrich a part
are not tolerable in the Citie of Peace.
There is no enuy and grudging among the members:
Diſcontents remoued.
the eye doth not grieue to ſee the arme grow ſtrong, nor the foote to
bee ſenſible of the Stomacks health. In this Citie, one ſhould not enuy
anothers thri uing; as if all were
ta ken from our ſelues that is
giuen to our neigh-
bours.
29
The Citie of
Peace.
bours. The Lord ſees that an
inequality is beſt for his glory: diſtributing (to whomſoeuer leſt, yet)
to euery one more then hee deſerues. Shall the Eare ſay,
[...] Cor. 12. 16.
Becauſe I am not the Eye, I am not of the
Body? No, but as Iohn
Baptiſt ſaid of Chriſt; He commeth af ter me, yet is before me: Some come
after vs in wealth, that may goe before vs in grace. The poore man is
not ſo ma ny pounds behinde the
rich for this world, as he may be talents before him for the world to
come.
C3
30
The Citie of Peace.
come. They often with their pouertie, miſerie, ignominy, are
ſaued; whiles others with all their honour and opulencie goe to
hell.
If one member ſuffer,
Condolency of the mem bers.
the
reſt ſuffer with it. If there be a thorne in the foote, the eye ſhedds a
teare, the heart akes, the head grieues, the hand is ready to pull it
out. If a man tread on our toe, wee ſay, Why doe you tread on Me?
Quod
cuiquam, cuivis: let vs ſorrow for the
afflictions of others, as if we
were in the body. He is no ſonn
of
31
The Citie of
Peace.
of Peace, that forgets the breaking of his brother
Ioſeph.
Amo. 6. 6.
The Walls of the Ci tie muſt bee
whole,
Schiſme
dangerous.
no breaches in them, leaſt this aduantage
the ene mies entrance. There muſt
bee no ſchiſme in a Citie, as no diuiſion in the Body: one muſt not be
for Paul, another for
Apollos,
another for Cephas; but
all for Chriſt; & all for Peace. Many euill men may haue one will in
wicked neſſe. It is ſaid of
Pilate Tradidit
Ieſum volunta ti
earum7;
Luk
23. 25
Hee deliuered
Ieſus
C4
32
The Citie of Peace.
Ieſus to their Will; not wills: many ſinners, one will. Shall then the
Sonnes of grace iarre? The Children of Peace be mutinous? Vnica columba
mea, ſaith Chriſt: My Doue is but one; the
Doue is a Bird of peace. Many of them can agree louingly together in one
houſe: euery one hath a litle cottage by her ſelfe, wherein ſhee ſits
content without diſqui eting her
neighbours. Thus Dum ſingulae quærunt vnionem, omnes
conſeruant vnitatem. Wee haue them that ruſh
in-
to
33
The Citie of
Peace.
to others Tabernacles,
ſwallowing a man and his heritage: would Doues doe thus? Poore Nabaoths portion is ma ny a rich Ahabs eye ſore; would Doues doe thus?
Numbers are ſtill on the wing, to prey vp on proſtrate fortunes; theſe bee Rauens, not
Doues: If the Law cannot make worke for their malice, their malice ſhall
make worke for the law. This is like Cockes of the Game, to pecke out
one ano thers eyes, to make the
Lawyers ſport. When
two
C5
34
The Citie of Peace.
two friends are fallen out of loues into blows, and are fighting;
a third aduerſary hath a faire aduantage to kill them both. We haue an
ene my that watcheth his time,
and while wee wound one another, hee wounds vs all.
If the members bee pulled a ſunder,
Diſtraction mortall.
they
all rott: the diſtraction of parts is the diſſolution of the whole. If
we for ſake the peace of our
Mother, wee put our ſelues vpon record for baſtards Diſcontẽt with our
owne portions and
places,
35
The Citie of
Peace.
places, ouerthrowes the
Citie of Peace.
2 Eſdr. 4. 1.
When the
Woods and the
Floods were at
variance, the Sand and
the Fire were
faine8 to quiet their in ſurrections. While men will not reſt ſatiſfied with their owne
deter minate ſtations; but
in uade the ſeueralls and
proprieties of others; what can bee expected but deſtruction? If there
be Contention on this ſide, and Ambiti on on that ſide, there will bee confuſion on
all ſides. While Iu dah was hot
againſt
Iſrael
36
The Citie of Peace.
Iſrael,
and Iſrael hott a gainſt Iudah,
the King of Syria ſmote
them both. God ſhall ſupply the part of Syria; and when brother
is againſt brother, hee will bee againſt them all. He that doth not what
he can to mainetaine the walles doth what he can to betray the Citie. So
I come from the Walles to the Gates.
The firſt Gate
The firſt Gate
Is Innocence;
The firſt Foundation
of Peace.
and this may bee called Biſhopſ gate; the Miniſters of the Goſpell being both
the
37
The Citie of
Peace.
the Preachers and
Precedents of Innocencie. If men would abſtaine from doing wrong, the
Peace could not be bro ken. St.
Bernard writes
of the Doue, that
Felle
caret, ſhe hath no Gall: Let vs bee ſuch Doues to
purge our harts from all bitterneſſe.
Now the firſt ſhelfe that wracks Innocence, is Anger. It were rare if
the wrath of man ſhould
fulfill the righteòuſneſſe of God:
The angry man cannot
be Innocent.
euen a curſt anger breakes the Peace.
It is an euidence where by God
will iudge men
guilty
38
The Citie of Peace.
guilty:
now there is no malefactor going to the barre for his tryall9, would willingly haue that euidence found a bout him, that ſhould caſt him.
Iratus non
vi det legem, ſed Lex
videt iratum. The wrathfull man takes no notice
of the Law, but the Lawe takes notice of the wrathfull man. Let vs take
heede leſt wee carry our anger with vs vnto God. That which offends our
eyes, we re moue either our ſight
from it, or it from our ſight, but that which of-
fends
39
The Citie of
Peace.
fends our ſoules, we too
often lay next our heart. But, it is the voice of tranſportiue fury, I
can not moderate my anger.
Cannot? Wherfore ſer ueth grace,
but to morti fie ſuch natural, yea
ra ther vnnatural
paſsions?
How eaſily doth this rage often inueterat10;
ma king ſome ſo angry with
men, that they will ſearſe bee pleaſed with God himſelfe! And either he
muſt take thẽ with their anger, or let them alone. So ſoone it rankles
into malice, & that is full op poſite to Innocence.
What
40
The Citie of Peace.
What
ſhall a man do? In this ſudden fitt ſhall he come to the Lords Table, or
forbeare it? Si
non acceſſerit, pericu lum: Si acceſſerit, dam num. To refuſe the Sa crament in anger, is e uill: to receiue it in an ger, thats worſe. Is the Body & Bloud of
Chriſt no more worth, but that for loue of a peeuiſh hu mour we ſhould neglect it? Shall we ſtarue our
conſciences, to feed our miſbegotten paſſions? What is then to be done
in this ſtraight? The anſwer is eaſie: Let vs
ex-
41
The Citie of
Peace.
excommunicate our wrath,
that wee may communicate with the Church: leaue our luſts behinde vs,
and wee are welcome;
Gen. 22. 5
as
Abraham left
his Aſſe when hee went about his Sacri fice. In the Leuiticall Law no vncleane thing
might be touched: if it were touched, the Tem ple by that perſon muſt not be approched. Now
for the Iſraelite to ab ſent
himſelfe from the aſſembly of Saints, and ſeruice of God, was ponderous:
to come ſo polluted, was dange-
rous
42
The Citie of Peace.
rous. He
knew the reme die; either not to
be vn cleane at all, or ſoone to
get himſelfe clenſed. The firſt beſt is to har bour no malice; the next to deliuer our ſelues
from it with all poſſible ſpeed.
In a word, let vs turne our anger whẽ it comes, another way. Let all our
hate be the hate of ſin; and all our anger bent againſt our owne cor ruptions. Let our wrath, like the
Shepheards dogge, ſleepe till the Wolfe comes. Be we at peace with God
by re-
pentance
43
The Citie of
Peace.
pentãce, with our neigh bour by innocence, with our owne
heart by a pu rified and pacified
con ſcience; and the Prince of
peace, the Lord Ieſus ſhall embrace vs.
The ſecond Gate
The ſecond Gate
Is Patience;
The ſecond Foundation
of Peace.
which is not vnlike to Ludgate: for that is a Schoole of patiẽce;
the poore ſoules there learne to ſuffer. The firſt entrance of peace is
to doe no iniury, the next is to ſuffer in iury. It is one ſpeci all commendation of Charitie, that it Suffers
all
44
The Citie of Peace.
all things; Pro fratribus, a
fratribus, propter fra tres. For our brethren wee muſt ſuſtaine ſome
loſſe: hee that ſuffers not an abatement of his owne fulneſſe, to ſupply
their emptineſſe, is no brother. Of our bre thren wee muſt put vp ſome wrong, rather then
make a flaw in the ſmooth paſſage of peace. Becauſe of our brethren, and
for the E lects ſake,
2 Tim 2. 18
we muſt endure all things, that
they may obtaine Saluation. Let vs bee infirmed, to
haue them confirmed: broo-
king
45
The Citie of
Peace.
king a temporal loſſe, to
procure their eternall good.
According to the A poſtles
counſell, Let vs beare the burthen
one of another,
Gal.
62.
and God ſhall beare the burthen of vs all. As in the Arch
of a building, one ſtone beares mutually, though not equally, the waight
of the reſt. Or as Deere ſwimming ouer a great water, doe eaſe them ſelues in laying their heads, one
vpon the backe of another: the formoſt hauing none to ſupport him,
changeth
his
46
The Citie of Peace.
his
place, and reſts his head vpon the hind moſt. Beare thou with his curiouſnes, hee doth
beare with thy furiouſ nes: let
mee beare with his arrogance, hee doth beare with my igno rance. In Architecture, all
ſtones are not fit to bee laid in euery part of the building: but ſome
below, as the fundament all, and
chiefe corner ſtone to ſuſtain the
load of the reſt: ſome higher in the wall, other in the top for
ornament. In the Church, which is built of Liuing Stones,
Chriſt
47
The Citie of
Peace.
Chriſt is the Head of the corner, the
Foundation that ſupports all. Gra cious Saints haue the next places, and are ſo ſet that they may helpe
to beare vp the weaker.
Materialls that bee onely of a hard nature, will neuer fadge well in an
Edifice. The Ita lians haue a
Prouerbe; Hard without ſoft, the
wal is nought. Stones cob bled vp together, with out morter to combine them, make but a totte ring wall. But if there be morter
to ciment them,
and
48
The Citie of Peace.
and
with the tractable ſoftneſſe of the one to glew and fixe the ſolide
hardneſſe11 of
the other; this may fortifie it a gainſt the ſhocke of the Ramme, or ſhot of the Canon. The ſocietie
that conſiſts of nothing but ſtones, intractable and refractory ſpirits,
one as froward and per uerſe as an
other, ſoone diſſolues. But when one is reaking with the fire of rage,
and another ſhall bring the water of patience to coole and quench it;
here is a du ration of peace. When
yron
49
The Citie of
Peace.
yron meets yron, there is a
harſh and ſtubborne iarre: let wooll meete that rougher mettal, and this
yeelding turnes reſiſtance into embrace ments.
Let not then the voice be an eccho of ill words, nor the hand a Racket
to bandy back fire-bals. Patience makes euen the wicked confeſſe;
Thou art more righteous
then I. Infoelix victoria qua ho minem
ſuperamus,
1. Sam.
24.
vitio ſuccũbi.
18.
Bern.
It is a wretched victory that ouercomes our ſoules, and
ſlaues vs to our luſtes. Patientia
mea
D
50
The Citie of Peace.
mea à
Domino,
Pſal. 62. 5.
as the Fa thers read it: and
indeed who can giue this pati ence, but God? Paul
had many liues, yet he ſacri ficed
them all;
Cor. 15.
I die dai ly.Etſi non mortis
expe rientia,
31. Chryſ.
tamen
propoſito. Though he could looſe but one, yet in
regard of his patience and pur poſe, hee was ready to looſe them all.
Nor is Chriſtian pati ence thus
confined with in the bearing of
ini uries; but it extends
al ſo to the remitting of
them. Some can ſuffer for the preſent, as Ha-
man
51
The Citie of
Peace.
man before Mordecay, Animo
vindicandi. For giueneſſe is the demon ſtration of patience. Not to conteſt becauſe
wee cannot conquer, is cal led
Patience perforce: but can we remit? The ciuill man can forbeare, the
Chriſtian muſt for giue. Let vs
bee remiſſe to note a wrong, remiſ ſiue to forget it, writing all our iniuries in the duſt. Yea, let
humilitie ſweetly order our forgiuenes:
Sen.
for Grauiſsima
poena eſt contumelioſa ve nia: a proud and ſcorn full pardon, is a reproch-
full
D2
52
The Citie of Peace.
full
wrong; there is in it more bitterneſſe then mercie; more puniſh ment then reconcile ment.
Otherwiſe how can we pray, Forgiue
vs our treſpaſſes, As wee forgiue them that treſpaſſe againſt
vs? O but ſay ſome, God is merciful: what, ſhall wee
therefore bee vnmercifull? I may for giue, but I cannot for get; is the faint reſerua tion of another. Take we heed, let not vs be in
ieſt with God, leaſt hee be in earneſt with vs. Do we not otherwiſe beg
a
remo-
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The Citie of
Peace.
remouall of mercie and
pardon from our owne ſoules? Will not God ſay, Euill ſeruant, Ex ore
tuo, out of thy owne mouth wil I iudge thee? Hath
Chriſt with his owne blood made thee friends with God, and cannot that
blood in treat thee to bee friends
with thy brother,
when thou commeſt to the holy Altar
with thy gift, and remembreſt thy of fended brother: Leaue there thy gift,
firſt be reconciled to him, then offer to God. A gift doth pacifie
wrath, and God is
plea-
D3
54
The Citie of Peace.
pleaſed
with our Sacri fice vpon his
Altar: yet Cum
omnis culpa munere ſoluatur,
Aug.
ſola iniuria
in condonata
reijcitur: when euery fault is ſolued with a
gift, Iniury alone is ſent away without pardon.
Therfore Qualem vis erga te eſſe
Deum,
Iſodo[...].
talem te
exhibeas erga proxi mum: bee thou to thy brother on earth, as thou
wouldeſt haue thy Father in heauen bee to thee. Si lædens, pete
ve niam: ſt laeſus, da
veniam. If an iniurer, aſke par don: if a ſufferer, giue
pardon
55
The Citie of
Peace.
pardon. Be we ſo farre from
expecting his ſubmiſſion, that wee tender our r13emiſſion; and meet the treſpaſſer with a pardon before
hee aſke it.
Sen.
Diſſenſio ab
alijs, à te reconciliatio incipiat. Let ſtrife
begin from others, bee thou firſt in recon cilement. Chriſt healed Malchus his eare, that
came to arreſt him. Which amongſt vs ſo loues his benefactors, as
Paul loued his
malefactors? Hee would doe any thing to ſaue them, that would do any
thing to kill him. Others of-
fences
D4
56
The Citie of Peace.
fences
to vs are but ſmall; valued with ours againſt God who is in finite. If he forgiue the pounds,
let not vs ſticke at the farthing tokens.
The next Gate
The next Gate
Is Beneficence; Doing
good,
The third foundation of Peace.
is
the fortification of peace. This may be called Ald-gate; not on ly becauſe there is the picture
of Charitie: (at the gate: I doe not ſay, as neere going out; but at the
gate, to keepe goodneſſe in.) But becauſe that is called the Old-gate, and Charitie
was
57
The Citie of
Peace.
was a vertue of olde times,
not ſo much now in faſhion. The heathen Moraliſt ſaid, wee muſt vſe men
thus; Benevelle
omnibus, benefacere ami cis; wiſh well to all, and doe good onely to
our friends. But the cleere light of nature, which is the Goſpell,
chargeth vs while wee haue opportunitie,
Gal. 6.
10.
to doe good to all men;
albeit with ſome preferment of the beſt, eſpecially to the houſhold of
Faith.
All men may bee ranked vnder one of theſe combinations: Rich and
poore,
D5
58
The Citie of Peace.
poore,
home-borne and ſtrangers, friends & ene mies. Firſt for the rich and poore; the
Phariſee wil ſtand on good terms with the rich, inuite them for a
re-inuitation as men at Tenniſſe, toſſe the ball to another, that hee
may toſſe it to them againe: but who helpes the poore?
Pro. 19. 4.
Wealth mak eth many
friends, but the poore is ſeparated from his
neighbours. If hee doe well, he is not regarded: if ill,
hee is deſtroyed. The poore man by his wiſdome deliuered the citie from
the force of a
puiſ-
59
The Citie of
Peace.
puiſſant enemy; yet whẽ all
was done,
Eccl. 9. 15.
no man re membred that poore man. But
if hee ſtumble,
Ecclus. 13. 23.
they will helpe to ouerthrowe
him. How contemptibly doth a rich epicure look vpon
a poore beggar! yet the rich and
the poore meete together,
Prou.
22. 2
and the Lord is the maker of them
all. In all our graund Feaſts, the gueſtes that
Chriſt ſpoke for,
Luk. 14. 14.
are left
out.
For Domeſtickes and ſtrangers; many haue ſo much religion as to pro uide for their owne; yea ſo much
irreligion as to
do
60
The Citie of Peace.
do it
with the preiudice of the publicke good, and hazard of their own ſoules:
but who pro uides for
ſtrangers?
Heb. 13. 2.
Entertaine ſtrangers, for thereby
ſome haue entertained Angels vnawares: but for all
this poſſible happineſſe, few will put it to the venture: and were they
indeed An gels without angels in
their purſes to pay for it, they ſhould find cold entertainment.
Friends and enemies; for friends, many will be at peace with them, till
they bee put to the triall
puiſ-
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The Citie of
Peace.
by ſome expreſſiue acti on. And then they will rather
hazard the loſſe of a friend, then the leſt loſſe by a friend. But
ſuppoſe we anſwere our friendes in ſome ſlight courteſie, hoping for a
greater: who will doe good to his enemies? If thine enemie hunger,
Ro. 12. 20.
feed him· ſo thou ſhalt heape
ſoales of fire on his head. Do it, not with an
intent to make his reckoning more, but thy owne rec koning leſſe. Loue your enemies,
Mat. 5. 44.
bleſſe them that curſe you, doe
good to them that hate you, and pray for
them
62
The Citie of Peace.
them that deſpitefully vſe
you. Doe vnto them deeds of amitie, deeds of charitie,
deeds of pi etie. Of amitie,
Loue them that
hate you: of Charitie, Doe
good to them that hurt you: of Pietie, Pray for thẽ that
perſecute you. There is the Diligite of the Heart, Loue your enemies. The
Benedicite of
the Tongu, Bleſſe them that curſe
you. The Benefacite of
the Hand, Doe good to them that
hate you. The Beneuelle
of all, Pray for thẽ
that perſecute you. Loue your enemies,
there
63
The Citie of
Peace.
there is Affectus
cordis: Doe them good, there is Effectus
operis: Pray for them, there is Perfectio
charitatis. But the wiſe man counſels;
Eccl. 12. 5.
7.
Doe well to him that is lowly, but
giue not to the vngodly. And Giue vnto the good, not to the
ſinner. Though not Qua impius, and quia impius14; yet qua homo; and
quia
homo, wee muſt re leeue him. Cheriſh him ſelfe, not his ſinne. Wee muſt loue him,
non quoad
culpam, ſed quoad natu ram. They are Gods children, licet
inſani, although they be ſick; and
our
64
The Citie of Peace.
our
brethren, licet
infir mi, although they bee weake. Therefore for the
conformitie of na ture, becauſe we
are the ſame workmanſhip: for our owne benefite, for hee that doth good
to his enemy, euen in that doth better to himſelfe: and for the
imitation of Him wee
worſhip, let vs vphold Peace by Cha ritie. His Sunne riſes, and raine falls, both on the iuſt and vniuſt.
Noli
negare,
Mat. 5, 45.
quod Deus nulli
negat. Thus looking vp with pietie to the Lords
perfection, and downe
with
65
The Citie of
Peace.
with pitie vpon mans
imperfection, let vs doe good to all.
Through the gate of Beneficence, doth the charitable man enter in to the Citie of Peace. Hee that
is couetous, muſt needs be mutinous. He that is greedy of
gaine,
Pro. 15. 27.
troubleth his owne houſe
Salomon cals him a trou ble-houſe, and wee doe find him a
trouble-citie; as Demetrius did all Epheſus. But Charitie makes peace; Diuitem voluit Deus
vt pauperem adiuvaret, Pauperem voluit vt diuitem
probaret.
God
66
The Citie of Peace.
God
makes ſome rich, to helpe the poore: and ſuffers ſome poore, to try the
rich. The loaden would bee glad of eaſe: now charitie lighteneth the
rich man of his ſu perfluous and
vnweldy cariage. When the poor find mercy, they will be tractable: when
the rich find quiet, they ſhould bee charitable. Would you haue your
goods kept in Peace?
Firſt, lock them vp by your pray ers, then open them againe with your thank full vſe, and truſt them in the hands of Chriſt
by
67
The Citie of
Peace.
by your Charitie.
This Citie heares ill for oppreſſion, and is (I feare too iuſtly)
ſuſpected of Iniuſtice: now the moſt noble confutation of iealouſie, is
by deeds of charitie. This is the Eaſt-gate to the Citie of Peace, and I
may (from Saint Paul) call it the
principall, and moſt excllent way.
1. Cor. 12.
31.
Whoſoeuer can ſhew you the way better, yet certainly none
can ſhew you a better way.
The fourth Gate
The fourth Gate
Is Recompence, or
Satiſ-
faction;
68
The Citie of
Peace.
faction; and this we may liken to Creeple-gate. It is the lameſt way to peace, yet a way:
it is a halting gate, but a gate. It were far better com ming into this Citie by any of
the former gates, yet better at this then none. All come not in by
Innocence, nor all by Patience, nor all by Be neficence: but if they haue failed in theſe,
they muſt be admitted by re compence, or not at all. The firſt beſt is to do no iniury; the next
is Satiſ faction, to make amends
for that wee haue done.
Hor
69
The Citie of
Peace.
Hortenſins ſayd of his
mother, Ego
nunquam cum ea inivi gratiam, I neuer was
reconciled to her, becauſe we two neuer fell out. O that the Inhabitants
of this citie could ſay ſo of their neighbours; Wee neuer were made
friends, be cauſe wee neuer were
foes.
Non operter
Officii, ſed potius officiendi.
But as our Sauiour ſaith, It is neceſſary that offences doe
come: not that it ſhould be ſo, but that it will be ſo. There is no
neceſſity that com pels a man to
ſinne; ex cept that the heart
being euill, will giue of-
fence
70
The Citie of Peace.
fence.
As it is neceſſary for him that comes to the fire, to be made hot:
Hieron.
but there is no neceſſity that hee come vnto the fire.
The malady of offen ces, will bee
contracted, therefore the onely Cure is by Satiſfaction. That wee may
know how to doe this, the Scripture ſets downe di uers degrees in the ac compliſhment of this Satiſfaction for iniuries.
Firſt, he muſt goe to the party wronged. Second ly, He muſt confeſſe his fault. Thirdly, He
muſt
hum-
71
The Citie of
Peace.
humble himſelf. Fourth
69
ly, He
muſt make reſti
69
tution.
Fiftly, Hee muſt reconcile himſelfe. Sixt
69
ly, and this muſt be done quickly, with all
poſsi
69
ble ſpeed.
He muſt goe to him, not tarry till hee meete him, or till ſome occaſion
bring them together;
Mat. 5. 24.
not
Obuiamda; But Goe to thine aduerſary,
goe on purpoſe: enquire for him, ſeeke him out, reſt not till thou finde
him.
Humanity may worke ſome to this vnderta
69
king, and ouertaking of peace: but man is
natu-
rally
72
The Citie of Peace.
rally ſo
good a conſtru ctor of his owne
doings, that will hee confeſſe his fault?
Num. 5.
7.
Yes, He ſhall con feſſe his
treſpaſſe.
An ingenious nature may be brought to ac knowledge his fault: but will Pride, the con tention-maker, admit Humilitie? will hee
ſtoope to him hee hath abuſed? From inſulta tion will hee deſcend to ſubmiſſion? He muſt;
Goe and humble thy
ſelfe.
Prou. 6. 3.
Touch of conſcience may procure Humilitie; but yet wll he not ſpend
twice as much at Law,
ere
73
The Citie of
Peace.
ere
he make reſtitution? Yet euen here, a quiet man for his owne peace ſake
may be brought to giue ſomewhat, for a part of amends: but will hee
ſatiſfie him the whole? The law of na ture requires total ſatiſfaction, but will hee
beſides giue dammages? The law of the Land al lowes dammages; but now will hee giue any
ouerplus to make an at tonement?
or bee at ſo much coaſt as to buy a reconcilement, rather then miſſe it?
He muſt: Zacheus
reſtores foure-
fold;
74
The Citie of
Peace.
fold; and by the Law he is bound to adde a fifth part.
Num. 5. 7.
But if all this be done, will hee yet euer bee friends with him? will he
be truely reconciled? Hee muſt:
Mat. 5. 24.
Reconcile thy ſelf to thy
brother. Other wiſe, when he deſires of the Lord to be forgiuen, as hee forgiueth;
God will anſwer as Ioſeph did to his brethren;
Gen.
43. 3.
Looke me not in the face, vnleſſe
thy brother bee with thee. Shall the father thinke
wel of that ſonne, which reiecteth his brother? Doe we call the
Author
of
75
The Citie of
Peace.
of Peace, our God,
while wee are the children of diſſention? Will he euer agree with him,
that de lights to quarrell with
his? But ſuppoſe the in iurer doth
intreate and perſwade himſelf, with out pre15uailing, will he vſe his friendes about ſuch a
buſineſſe? Yes, ſaith Solomon, hee muſt employ his friends.
Time may worke all this, but to doe it when the fleſh trembles, and the
blood boyles for re uenge,
ſuddenly; who can ſo preuaile ouer him ſelfe? He muſt doe it
quick-;
E2
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quickly;
Mat 5. 25.
Agree with thine aduerſary
quickly. Yes perhaps, when leaſure may ſerue: but
will any man neglect buſineſſe to goe about it? Yes, all buſines ſet
apart, though it were as important as offring ſacrifice at Gods owne
Altar; Leaue there thy
gift,
Pelican.
&c.
Non
experi eris Deum tibi
propitium, niſi proximus te ſentiat ſibi
placatum. Strife with our brother makes our beſt ſeruices
vnaccepta ble to our Father.
The Lord deſpiſeth his own worſhip, to maintain our charitie: and will
not be
found
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found of vs,
Chyſoſt.
till we haue found our brother, to make
our peace with him. Come not to the Temples, heare no Ser mons, ſay not your prai ers, forbeare all worſhip and
deuotions, while a feſtring and rankling hatred is in your ſoules.
Yet now all this may be done of an Inferiour to a Superior, either for
feare or hope of gaine by his loue: but would you haue a Superiour yeeld
thus to an Infe rior, to deprecate
ſtrife? Yes, Abraham
diſdained not to goe vnto Lot, the
elder
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The Citie of Peace.
elder
to the yonger, the vncle to the nephew, the worthier to the meaner, and
that in the kindeſt manner, to compoſe a controuerſie begun by their
ſeruants. O that this age, which ſeldome wakes but to doe miſ chiefe, would yet think, how
after all iniuries to others, they doe this greateſt iniury to their
owne ſoules; that for want of a iuſt compen ſation, they exclude themſelues from the
bleſſing of Peace!
Theſe bee the maine Gates, there is a little Po-
ſterne
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Peace.
ſterne beſides, that is
Hu militie: for of all vices,
Humilitie the
conſeruation of Peace.
Pride is a ſtranger to Peace.
The proud man is too guiltie, to come in by Innocence: too ſur ly, to come in by Pati ence: he hath no minde to come in
by Benefacti on: and he ſcornes to
come in by Satiſfaction. All theſe Portculliſes be ſhut againſt him:
there is no way left but the Poſtern for him, he muſt ſtoope, or neuer
bee ad mitted to peace. Pride is
alwayes enuious & con tumelious, thinking ſhee addes ſo much to her
owne
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The Citie of Peace.
owne
reputation, as ſhee detracts from others: ſhe is no fit neighbor for
Peace.
Heauen is a high Ci tie, yet hath
but a low Gate.
Aug.
Celſa patria,
via humilis. Tolle ſuper biam, quod habes meum eſt· tolle
inuidiam, quod habe[...] tuum eſt. Take away
pride, and that which thou haſt is mine: take away enuie, and that which
I haue is thine. Pride and enuy are too vnciuill for a peaceable citie:
the one cannot en dure a vicine
proſperity, nor the other a ſuperior
emi-
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Peace.
eminency. All men muſt bee poore to pleaſe the one, and all muſt be baſe
to content the other. Peace is humble, pride quite ouer-lookes her. The
Philoſopher might haue ſeene the ſtarres in the water, he could not ſee
the water in the ſtarres, when hee ſtumbled into the ditch. Men may
behold glory in hu militie, they
ſhall neuer find peace in ambition. The ſafeſt way to keepe fire, is to
take it vp in embers: the beſt means to preſerue peace, is in
humbleneſſe. The tall
Ce-
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Cedars
feele the fury of tempeſts; which blow ouer the humble ſhrubs in the low
vallies. There was no rule with Paul at firſt; raiſing tumults, ſpeeding
Commiſſions, breathing out ſlaugh ters againſt poore Chri ſtians.
But when Chriſt had thundred him from his horſe, broken his wild ſpirit
to humilitie, thẽ he was fit for peace. God, that often effectu ates his owne will by contraries,
makes trou ble the preparation for
peace: as a father cor rects his
vnruly children
that
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that they may be quiet. Let vs examine our owne experience: when the
Lord hath ſoundly ſcourged vs, we go from vnder his fingers as tame as
lambs: farewell ſtrife, all our care is to finde reſt and peace in Ieſus
Chriſt.
Wee haue ſeene the Citie of
Peace, with her walles
and gates, and wee wiſh well to her; Peace bee within thy
wals,
Pſal. 122. 7.
and proſperitie within thy
palaces. But hath ſhe no aduerſaties? Yes, there is
an enemic that be leaguers this
Citie; Con-
tention
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The Citie of Peace.
tention. Whoſe army is
diuided into two Bands or Troups;
The Enemies of Peace.
the
one cal led the Ciuill, the other the
Vnciuill: the
Ciuill are Law-quarrels, the vnciuil are Sword-quar rels. The one is the ſmooth-fac’d company, the
other the rugged or ragged Regiment. The citie of peace hath gates for
theſe alſo, when ſhe hath ſubdued them. Ei ther ſhee turnes them out at Moore-gate, as fitter for the ſocietie of Moores and
Pagans; ſhe baniſheth them. Or laies them vp in New-gate; a
place
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place very conuenient, beeing not ſo olde as peace, built ſince the
birth of ſtrife. Theſe e nemies
purſue vs, vel
ferro, vel foro,
Aug.
as that Fa ther ſaith.
Ferro,
The firſt
Troupe.
when vpon e uery punctilio of honor, as they falſely call it, Reaſon &
Religion muſt be thrown by, and Fury gouerne. The Gallant, as if hee
knew no Law but his owne will, or as if the leaſt aſpertion vp on his honor were more weighty,
then if the ſtate of Chriſtendome, or the glory of God lay vpon
it;
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it;
cryes Reuenge, offers the ſtab, threatens the piſtoll. How is that
pre cious account forgotten
which God requires of man and beaſt!
Gen. 9.
5.
Men ſtudy to bee mad with reaſon, they haue an Art of
killing, that teaches murther by the booke: as cunning as Ioab was, that could
ſtabbe in the fift rib,
a ſpeeding place:
ſo he treacherouſly ſlew Abner and Amaſa. O that men ſhould venture their liues vpon
one an others ſword, as if they
had no ſoules to be ven tured vpon
the ſword of
Gods
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Gods vengeance! That he ſhould bee held baſe, who being challenged, doth
not write his mind with a pen of ſteele, in the inke of blood, on the
white paper of mans life!
Cannot the teares of our Mother preuail with vs, when ſeeing vs quar rell, ſhe ſayes as Iocaſta aduiſed her two
vnbrotherly ſonnes; Bella geri placuit nullos habitura
triumphos. Or as Rebecca ſaid of her
twinnes;
Gen. 27. 45.
Why ſhould I be depriued of you
both in one day? But if our Mother cannot ſtill
vs,
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vs, our
Father will
part vs: & they whoſe ſoules haue peace, ſhall be ſent to a priſon
where is no peace: that ſeeing they loue quarrels, they may haue
fighting enough with infernall ſpirits. But perhaps there bee ſome who
make no other reckoning, reſol uing with him in the O rator,
Hodie
coenabimus apud Inferos: to night wee will ſup
together in hell. As it is reported of two to haue fought vnder the
gallows: de ſperately
fore-caſting, that if the one were
there
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there killed, the other ſhould there be hanged.
By the toleration of this Duel in France, that kingdome loſt in tenne
yeres ſix thouſand Gen tlemen; as
themſelues report. Wretched men! for Occiſer lethaliter
peccat,
Bern.
& occiſus aeternaliter
perit: the homicide ſins deadly, and the ſlaine
(without vnexpectable mercy) periſheth eter nally. How dare they lift vp thoſe hands to God
for mercy, that haue beene lifted vp againſt their brother in cruelty?
Euery baſe ver-
mine
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The Citie of Peace.
mine can
kill,
Aug.
it is true proweſſe and honour
to giue life, and preſerue it Simeon and Leui ſeemed to haue iuſt cauſe;
Gen. 34. 31
theWhoring of their owne
Siſter:
Gen. 49. 6.
yet their father cals them
brethren in
euil for it, bleſſeth his honor from their company,
& his ſoule from their ſe crecy. Thou ſayſt of thy contendent, he ſhal haue as good as he
brings, yet thy ſelf condemneſt that hee brings for euill. [Note: Baſil.
] Ne vtaris
inimico praecepto re, let not thy enemie teach thee to due that,
which thy ſelfe deteſteſt
in
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in
him. Becauſe wee re ceiue iniuries
without right, ſhall wee returne them without law?
Sometimes this ari ſeth from the
wine, Bac chus ad arma
vocat: and lightly it makes men ap teſt to vſe their armes, when they cannot ſtand
on their legges. But ſhall this ſerue for a plea, and get a pardon, it
was done in drinke? no, this rather deſerues a double puniſhment, as it
is a double fault. Common ly it
proceeds from vn aduiſed anger; as
if any thing done in fury, were
not
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not
done in folly. The cholericke man is like one that dwels in a that ched houſe; who being rich in the
morning, by a ſodaine fire is a beg gar before night. It was the decree of Theodoſi us, by the counſell of
S. Ambroſe;
that execution after a ſeuere ſentence ſhould be deferred thir tie dayes: that the heat being
qualified, the ſe ueritie might be
mode rated.
But they obiect, This is to ſtand by like fooles, while wee ſuffer others
to abuſe vs: no, that is
not
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Peace.
not
folly, which the Lord hath commended for wiſdome. The ſhot of the Cannon
hurts not Wooll, and ſuch yeel ding things; but that which is hard, ſtub borne, and reſiſting: the rage of our roaring
ſonnes is tamed by pa tience.
Turne to the brawling curre, and hee will be more fierce: ride on
neglecting him, and he will ſoone be quiet. This is the furious
Band.
Foro;
The other
Troupe.
there is another Battalia of aduerſaries that
turne their chal-
lenge
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The Citie of Peace.
lenge
into a Writ; the field appointed is Weſt minſter Hall, or ſome
other Court of Iuſtice: the weapons, the Law: the poſtures of the fight
are Demurres, Delayes, Quirks, Remoouals: the Victory, a Verdict: the
Doome, a Sentence: and the death it ſelfe, an Ex ecution. One ſayes, To beare this, is againſt
my conſcience: when indeed hee meanes it is a gainſt his concupiſcẽce. If the Plaintife goe
no further then the Court of his owne affections, the defendant ſhal
neuer
have
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haue audience: for he is Amicus Curiae.
Pro. 18. 17.
He that is firſt in his owne cauſe,
ſee meth iuſt: but his
neigh bour commeth,
and ſearch eth
him: hee is no com petent Iudge in his own matter. It will beare an action, ſaith the
Law giuer, this enflameth
paſſion in the Law-goer.
O that men could ſee the folly of this litigi ouſneſſe. 1. That hee is not in the ſtate of
grace, but a meere carnal man. This is Saint Pauls ar gument to the Corin thians; If there be con tentions amongſt you,
Are
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Are ye not carnall?
1. Cor. 3. 4.
wheras the Fruit of the Spirit is
Peace,
Gal. 5. 22.
Long-ſuffering,
Gentleneſſe. 2. That hee doth not ſo much find, as make
himſelfe ene mies: we may ſay of
him as the Angel ſaid to Ha gar
concerning her ſon Iſhmael;
Gen. 16. 12
His hand is a gainſt euery man, and eue ry mans hand againſt
him. 3. That he vexeth him ſelfe without need: they that goe to Law for
tri fles, are like nice people
that continually lie in the hands of Chirurgi ans, and Phiſicians, for pimples & warts:
wher- as
as
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as
the Phyſician and Lawyer are for neceſſi tie, not wantonneſſe. Their boxes and papers
are the Books & Badges of their profeſſion: they trudge vp and
downe, more buſie to caſt away their money, then Law yers are to catch it: their word is Currat
Lex, let the law haue his courſe: but by their willes
that courſe ſhould neuer haue an end.
They plead, wee haue ſtood before the beſt, in Courts of higheſt ho nor: alas, ſo doth the
ſpider,
Pro. 30. 28.
euen in kings pala-
ces
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ces. So did the Deuill, when the Sons of God preſented
themſelus be fore him,
Iob. 2. 1.
Satan was ther alſo. 4. They
conſider not the root of contentions, as the Apoſtle de ſcribes them: want of Wiſdome to compound
controuerſies; Is there not one
wiſe man among you,
1 Cor. 6.
5. &c.
able to iudge be tweene brethren? Want of loue, Brother is againſt
brother. Want of Pati ence; Why do ye not
rather ſuffer wrong? Want of Iuſtice; Ye defraud and do wrong.
For want of Iuſtice, foro conſcientiae,
they
proſe-
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proſecute their malice, foro Iuſtitiae. Wee
may add, want of Mercy,
they cannot forgiue: but if they forgiue not others, their finall
Quietus
eſt
was neuer yet ſealed;
and they ſhal be called to an after-reckoning. As that wicked ſeruãt
ſped; not withſtanding the
Lord forgaue
him at his re queſt,
Mat. 18. 22
becauſe he did not
forgiue his brother at his intreaty, he was deli uered ouer to the tormen tors.
Fiftly, they weigh not how they are deceiued. Lawyers firſt inuented
lawes
F2
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The Citie of Peace.
Lawes
to ſecure our lands and titles: now they make thoſe lawes engines to get
away our lands and titles. Their frequent Seſſion hath not beene
euermore to preſerue a mans poſſeſſi on. And for thoſe that can tarry the leaſure of
the Lawe, they haue quirks & delayes: which are like the corroſiue
plaiſters of an vnconſci nable
Leach, that turnes a ſmall greene wound to an incurable Fiſtula, by poyſoning and
exulce ration of it for filthy
lu cre. When a man muſt
die
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die without mercy, it is ſome eaſe to die quick ly, and bee out of his paine. But ſuch, when
they purpoſe to murther a mans eſtate, haue tricks to keepe him long a
dy ing: that hee may ſtill
languiſh and pine away in hope of recouery.
And what doth the winner get, that at the Tearmes end, hee may bragge of
his gaines? Doth hee not come home dry-founderd? Doth he not follow the
Mill ſo long, till the toll be more then the grieſt? It is a token of
vnwhol-
ſome
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ſome
ayre, wher the coũ trey is full of
thriuing Phyſitions: Si valeant homines, arſtua, Phaebe,
ia cet.
It argues little health in that kingdome, which hath ſo many thriuing
Lawyers: who while vnquietneſſe feeds vs, do quietly feed vpon vs.
We are willing to giue ſuch ſelf-moleſters ſome counſell, if they wil
take it, and aſke them no fees for it. Yea wee giue it not, but Chriſt
giues it: wil they take his aduice, that great Counſeller of the Father?
He counſels his clients to the euerla-
ſting
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Peace.
ſting poſſeſſion of their ſoules by patience. In O lympiacis certaminibus,
Diabolo conſecratis; [
[...]hyſoft.
In the
games of Olympus conſecrated to the De uill, hee had the glory of the day, that gaue
moſt wounds, and came off himſelfe vntouched. In ſtadio Chriſti non eſt ea
certãdi lex, ſed contraria: In the race of
Chriſtia nitie, there is a
contrary Law of ſtriuing: not he that offers moſt blowes, but hee that
ſuffers moſt blowes, is crowned. A man is ſtricken, will hee goe to law
for this? no,
ra-
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The Citie of Peace.
rather
let him turne the other cheeke; this is Chriſts counſell. His cloke is
taken from him, it is neere him a gar ment; of neceſſary com lineſſe, a cloke: of ſin gular vſe, hee hath but one cloke: hee hath the
proprietie of it, it is his cloke: muſt hee goe to Law for this? no,
rather let him take his coat al ſo. Foelix
ille, ſi nudus corpore, ſit nudus mali cia: there is a wedding
garment to cloth ſuch.
I am no Anabaptiſt, nor Libertine, to deny the Magiſtracie, or law-
fulnes
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fulnes of authoritie, and our iuſt appeale thereto. Rather then
euery man ſhould be his owne Iudge, I would appeaſe vprores with the
Town-clerke of Epheſus; The Law is
open,
Act. 19. 38.
and there are Deputies, let them
im plead one
another. Saint Paul himſelfe took this courſe, appealing to the
Iudgment ſeat of Cæſar.
Act 25. 10.
Our
Sauiours practiſe is a cleere Comment and declaration of his Law: hee
that bade vs rather turne out other checke to the ſmiter, then re uenge our ſelues; did
him-
F5
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himſelf
ſweetly reproue him that ſmote him.
Iohn 18.
23
If I haue ſpoken
euill, beare witneſſe of the euill: but if well, why ſmiteſt
thou mee? So Paul to Ana nias, Sitteſt thou to
iudge me after the Law,
Act. 23. 3.
& com mandeſt mee to be ſmitten contrary to
the Law? The Lord himſelfe hath ap poynted Tribunals: and no law, no loue. I know
there is a Chriſtianly ſeeking of Iuſtice, when iniurious perſons grow
worſe by forbearance, and ground their inſo lence vpon others patience. As Chriſtians may
warre
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warre in loue, ſo they may iarre in loue: when the partie caſt in the
ſuit, may be bettered, if not in his money, yet in his manners; and
Satan onely conquered. Vt qui vincitur, ſimul vincat, &
vnus tantummodo vinca tur
diabolus. Sed reprimã me, I will hold me where I
was. I haue laboured to bring men into peace, I muſt ſhew them no way
out againe. The Fa thers ſometimes
in con futing an Hereſie much
ſpread; if they did runne a little within the brinks of a contrary
error, not
then
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then
queſtioned, nor ſo dangerous; were neuer cenſured for that to haue erred
Dogmaticè. So if to conuince that Hereſie in
maners, (It is lawfull to go to law for euery thing;) I ſhould a little
leane to and fauor that other opinion, (It is lawfull to goe to law for
nothing;) either excuſe mee, or at leaſt ſuſpend your iudgements, till I
come on purpoſe to handle that poynt. If men would promiſe not to goe to
Law till then, I would promiſe, when they did goe to Law, to
beare
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Peace.
beare all their charges.
Howſoeuer, let them not doe it animo litigan di, nor for euery wrong
enter an action, leſt God enter his action againſt them.
Hos. 4. 1.
The Lord hath a controuerſie with
the In habitants of the
land: a terrible action, which the Iury of heauen
and earth wil find. Let them therefore leaue all, and ſtudy Gods Law,
with that royall Prophet; Thy
Teſtimonies are my delight and my Counſellers:
Pſal. 119. 24. 48.
and I will meditate in thy
Statutes. Bleſſed is hee that meditates on Gods
Law
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Law day and night:
Pſal. 1. 2.
but curſed is he that waſtes his
time to meditate and ſtudy Law-trickes. Let the litigious ſoule learne a
new courſe of law: let Conſcience be his Chan cery, Charity his Chance lor, Patience his Counſel ler, Truth his Atturney, and Peace his
Sollicitor.
Litem in
proximum, di uertat in
ſeipſum. Let him go to Law with his owne heart;
arraigne his paſſionat will at the Bar of Gods Iudgement; let the twelue
Apoſtles bee a Iury againſt him, who all condemned Conten-
tion
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tion. Thus let him iudge himſelfe, that he be not iudged of
Ieſus Chriſt. For he that auengeth his owne quarrell, ſteps into the
Princes Chaire of Eſtate, yea into Gods owne Seat; dethroning both; and
ſo diſturbes neauen and earth. Mad men, that thus preſume, as if God did
not ſee malice in the heart!
Hell and deſtruction are before the
Lord, much more then the hearts of the children of
men. Or as if ſeeing men contend, he had no thing to do with it: but muſt ſit
ſtill like an idle
looker
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looker
on, and take part with neither.
Dearly beloued,
Rom. 12. 19.
auenge not your ſelues, but rather
giue place vnto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine, I
will repay, ſaith the Lord. This ſounds a Retreat to
all quarrels: Paul
ſeeing the Daggers drawen, and the peace in danger to bee broken; ſteps
in with the ſword of the Spirit, to part the fray. It is a Writ of Re uerſment from the high Court of
heauen: if we break open the writ, we ſhall find the Kings plea ſure in it; an Arreſt of
reuen-
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Peace.
reuengers. Hee begins with Dearely
beloued; a ſweet ingredience, to qualifie a bitter
medi cine. As if he ſhould
ſay, It is my loue that I write ſo much againſt malice: not for your
hurt, but for your eternal good: if you wil not beleeue me, beleeue God
himſelf:
Deu. 32. 35
To me belongeth
vengeance.
The Deuill when hee gets audience, tels a man how much hee is hated of
others: the holy Spi rit tels him
how much hee is loued of others. The argument of our charity to them, is
Gods
cha-
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charitie to vs. Put on (as the
elect of God,
Col. 3. 12
holy and beloued) bowels of mer cies, kindnes, humblenes
of mind, long ſuffering: ſee ing you are beloued of God, loue his.
This is Gods chalenge, Vengeance is
mine: Gods execution, I will repay: Gods
Subſcription, to which his great Name is affixed, Thus ſaith the Lord.
Scriptum
eſt, it is a tranſcript and faithfull copy out of
the Origi nall, to ſhew it the
Lords true act and deed: twice written, that it might ne uer be forgotten. Once
hath
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hath God ſpoken, twice haue I heard
it,
Pſal. 62. 11
that Vengeance (ſo well
as Power) belongeth vnto God. Hee
pleads the continuance of Succeſſion without interruption; ve ngeance, Iudgement, and Glory are
His alone.
Therefore to auenge our ſelues, is both to loſe Gods pro tection, and to incurre his
condemnation. It is faithleſſe and fruitleſſe: faithleſſe, not to
beleeue that God wil deale with vs according to his Word.
Pſal. 91. 8.
With thine eyes thou ſhalt ſee the
reward of the wicked. It is then
infi-
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infidelitie not to commit our caſe to God, and his Deputie the Prince;
but to make them both our deputies and inſtru ments of reuenge. What is this but to exalt our
ſelues aboue all that is called God; and to play the Deuil in ieſt, and
the Pope in good earneſt? Fruitleſſe, for if being wronged, we draw out
our woodden dagger of reuenge, God wil put vp his ſword, and leaue vs to
our ſelues. The iniu red child
turnes not againe, but runs to his fa ther. When the Italians
heare
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heare how God hath re ſerued
Vengeance to himſelfe, they ſay blaſ phemouſly, He knew it was too ſweet a bit for
man, therefore kept it for his owne tooth. But if man were is owne
caruer, he would carue too deepe. God onely is wiſe and iuſt, wiſe to
know, & iuſt to giue the due proportion. Now the Great and Omni potent Lord chiefe Iu ſtice, bind vs all to the peace
on earth, and bring vs all to the peace of heauen.
Now
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Now becauſe euery Citie muſt haue an eſta bliſhed Gouernment; Order being the good of
euery creature, & it is better not to be, then to be out of order:
therefore this Citie of
Peace muſt haue a Lord, and a Law: a Ruler to gouerne it, and a Rule whereby it muſt be
gouerned. The King is
Chriſt, who is therfore called Princeps Pacis, The
Prince of Peace. And hee hath a Deputie or Vicegerent vnder him, whom
hee hath ſet to promoue the good, and to remoue the
euill,
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euill, of Peace. The Law is Truth, that is the Goſ pell, Regula Pacis, the Rule of Truth.
The Gouernour of this Citie
The Gouernour of
this Citie
Is ſupreme Authoritie:
[Note:
The King of
Peace.
] as God is a great King, ſo the king is (as
it were) a little God. I haue ſaid,
Yee are Gods. God is an inuiſible King, the King is
a viſible god.
Rom. 13. 5.
Ye muſt bee ſubiect, not onely for
wrath, but alſo for Conſci ence ſake. All muſt obey: the bad for feare, the
good for loue. To com pell the
one, there is a
Writ
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Writ out of the Kings Bench: to perſwade
the other, there is a motion in the Chancery.
Of all Nations we are bleſſed with peace, vn der a King of peace: therefore all bound to bee
children of peace. There are three wayes of chuſing Kings. 1. An
immediate nomination from God. 2. A Suc ceſſion of blood. 3. An election of the people.
The firſt ceaſeth, the laſt hath been found dange rous, the beſt remaines. They that are ſuddenly
choſen out of the flock,
doe
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doe
ſeldome manifeſt ſuch royall behauiour, nor become their Maie ieſtie; for it is not their
Trade. Iehu remitted
much of his noble zeale, when hee was ſetled in his kingdome. It is one
thing to ſay, With a great ſumme of
money,
Acts 22.
28
obtained I this
kingdome: and for another to ſay, I was a King borne. Wee
may iuſtly ſay of our King, Digniſſimus Regno, ſi non natus ad
Regnum. When the Poets called ſome men the Sonnes
and off ſpring of the gods; they
meant that they were
men
G
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men of a more noble and vncommon nature: and
that thoſe graces were, Ex Diuino afflatu. It
was as familiar with Homer, to make a King fight with a god at his elbowe,
as a common Souldier with his ſword in his hand. To whom the Lord giues
moſt honour, he giues moſt aſſi ſtance. The heart of the King is
in his hand, as ri uers of
waters; the heart of a priuate man as a lit tle brook: in the former is more
need of his om nipotence.
Howſoeuer, the grace of adoption, in
the
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the Apoſtles time,
1 Cor. 1. 26
was not giuen to many mightie or
noble; yet the graces of adminiſtration are.
Anarchie is the mo ther of
diuiſion, the ſtep mother of
peace. While the State of Italy wants a King, all runnes into ciuill
broiles. It is the happineſſe of this Citie, that there is no diſtra ction. Not a King at Iudah, and another at
Dan: not one in
Hebron, another
in Gibeon: not the redd
Roſe here, and the white there. We are not ſhuffled into a popu lar gouernment, nor cut
into
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into Cantons, by a headles, headſtrong A riſtocracie: but Henricus Roſas,
Regna Iacobus: in Henry was the vnion of
Roſes, in
Iames of the
kingdomes. Euery King is not a Peace-maker; ours, like a ſecond
Au guſtus, hath ſhut the ru ſtie doore of Ianus Tem ple; ſo making Peace, as if hee
were made of peace. That bleſſed Queene of ſweete and ſacred memory
before him, was Filia Pacis: who, as by her Sexuall graces ſhed
deſerued to bee the Queene of wo-
men,
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men, ſo by her maſcu line vertues to bee the Queen of
men. Certen ly, it would haue
trou bled any King but
Him, to haue
ſucceeded ſuch a Queene; yet no man complaines the want of peace. This
hee promi ſed, and Verbum Regis, Rex
Regi, this hee hath perfourmed to euery good
ſoules content. When he was firſt pro claimed, what heard we but peace? What heard
the Nobles? a King that would honour them. What the Senators? a King
that would coun-
ſell
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ſell them. What the Schooles? a King that would
grace thẽ. What the Diuines? a King that would encourage them. What the
rich? a King that would defend thẽ. What the poore? a King that would
relieue them.
When a Tyrant comes abroad, all ſeeke to hide themſelues:
Pro. 28. 28
When the wicked riſe, men hide
themſelues. But when a clement Prince progreſ ſeth, all flock to him, the
ſtreets and wayes are fil led with
people, the aire with acclamations. We
call
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Peace.
call our peace, the
Kings peace:
and ſay to brawlers, Keepe the Kings peace. Peace, Plentie, Trafficke,
Learning, Ad miniſtration of
Iuſtice, flouriſhing of arts, preaching of the Goſpell, Rex Iupiter omnibus
idem. Like Dauid, hee leads the Dance to hea uen: and like Auguſtus, makes a ſweet
ſpring whereſoeuer hee goes. Iſrael
had reſt fortie yeres, we haue had a Iubile of
fiftie yeares, and begun againe.
Iudg. 5.
31
The Peace-ma ker
doth both bleſſe, and is bleſſed: therefore let
vs
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vs bleſſe him, and bleſſe God for him, and hold
our ſelues bleſſed in him.
Away then with thoſe diſcontented ſpirits, that grudge theſe outward
rights, whether tributes of money, or attributes of Supremacie. Soluatur ſubſidium,
ne contingat excidium. For this cauſe pay wee tribute alſo,
&c.
Rom. 13. 6
It
is the mediate due to God, as prayers & prai ſes are his immediate rents. Some haue obſer ued, that Chriſt did no miracle
about Honor or money, except that one
of
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of giuing tribute to
Cæ ſar.
Mat. 17. 27
Much more intolerable are thoſe our Co ſens of Samaria, that fly off in
a rage; What porti on haue wee in Dauid? For
this cauſe certainly, if Dauid were now a liue, he would neuer ad mit a Ieſuit to his Chap laine. But periſh his ene mies, and vpon his own Head let
his Crowne flouriſh. May not the Scepter depart from Ia cob, nor a Seed from his
loynes, till Shiloh
come againe. May his Poſte ritie
haue a Crowne on earth, when himſelfe
vs
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Peace.
hath a crown in heauen. Amen.
The Law of this Citie
The Law of
this Citie
Is the Goſpel of Chriſt:
The Lavv of Peace.
a law
indeed, but a law of peace. It made peace betwixt God and man, and it
muſt make peace betweene man and man. If it cannot reconcile vs one to
another, it ſhall reconcile none of vs to the Lord. It is a lawe, not to
bee obſerued for State, but for Conſci ence. Indeed thoſe Ca tuli Catilinarÿ,
Statiſing Ieſuites, turne all their Religion into Statiſme,
yea
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yea into Atheiſme. And
there be many Church-Recuſants, a monſtrous, menſtruous brood, the
Moone-calues of that lunatick religion. Come they doe, but more for
feare of the Law, then for loue of the Goſpell. And al the children that
euen hang on the breſts of peace, cannot be ex cuſed: for ſome through neſcience or
negligence, ſcarce caſt an eye on the ſtatutes of peace.
I will heare what the Lord will
ſpeake:
Pſal. 85. 8
for hee will ſpeake peace vnto his
people. One takes ſnuffe
at
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at his poore neighbour; perhaps it is Mordecai’s cap that hath
put Ha man out of his princely
wits: and now hee re ſolues to
trounce him: proud beggar! Hee will teach him to knowe his betters. O
but tarry, and heare the Statute of Peace.
Pro. 22.
22.
Rob not the poore becauſe hee is
poore: for the Lord will pleade his cauſe, and
ſpoyle the ſoule of them that ſpoile him. Luſt makes this a ſpurre to
op reſſion, Quia
pauper, becauſe hee is poore: the Law makes this a
bridle
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bridle from it, Quia
pauper, becauſe he is poore. Another is erop-ſicke of
Ceremonies; hee hath a toy in his head, that the Churches garment ſhould
not bee embroy dered, nor haue
more lace and fringe then his owne coat: there is in him ſo little of
man, that he talkes of nothing but the Beaſt. Rather then his
children ſhall bee croſſed in Baptiſme, hee will out of the Arke into
ſome fantaſticall Wher ry. Let him
tarry, and heare what the Lord ſpeakes, in his Law of
peace.
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peace.
Gal. 6. 15.
In Chriſt Ieſus neither
Circumciſion a uayleth
anything, nor vn circumciſion, but a New creature. That is, neither
Ceremony, nor no Ce remony, but
the Sub ſtantiall; a new Crea ture.
Another flatters him ſelfe; I need
not ſtand on ſtrict performance of Tythes, the Goſpell re quires nothing but Be neuolence: experienced men
iuſtifie it, I haue the warrant of good Law yers for it. O but ſuch a Lawyer is the
Barri ſter of Barathrum, a
ſworne
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ſworne enemy to the law of
peace. The voice of Chriſt is not in it, heare that. Let him that is taught in the
word,
Gal. 6. 6
communicate vnto him that teacheth,
in all good things.
This City of Peace hath one immutable Rule, and it is
ſufficient to direct all actions. And as many as walke accor ding to this Rule,
Gal. 6, 16
peace be on them, and mercy, and
vpon the Iſraell of God. A man is proud of his
victorious miſchiefes, fleſh’d with his fortunat wickedneſſe; thinkes he
hath
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hath carried himſelfe brauely, in out-bribing
his aduerſary, fooling Iudge and Iury by falſe teſtimony, and triumphs
in his vnbleſt gain; but is this according to the rule of Peace. Vincat
veritas, let Truth ouercom. The loſer may ſit down
with content, but the winner ſhall ye down in tormẽt. A rich man carries
him ſelfe proudly,; aboue
others in ſcorne, aboue himſelfe in folly: hee thinkes all his Titles
be neath him, and euen thoſe
that worſhip him, ſtill to vnderualue him:
others
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others hee lookes vpon, as
if they were made to ſerue him, yea, and bee proud to bee comman ded by him. Croſſe him, and hee
rages, ſwelles, foames, like the Sea in a ſtorme: but is this after the
Rule of Peace?
Mat. 11. 29
Learne of mee who am meeke and
lowly in heart. Alas, what is the diffe rence in duſt? The Beg gar dies,
Luk. 16. 22
ſo doth the rich man.
Before, the rich could not endure the beggar neere him, here one verſe
containes thẽ both. In life the rich hath the preheminence
of
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of eaſe, and wealth, and honour: in death the
poore man goes firſt to peace.
In driuing a trade, it is Mammons prime poli cy, to take aduantage of others neceſſitie, or
ſim plicity. Sold you it for ſo much?
Acts 5. 8.
Saith Peter: For ſo much, anſwers
Ananias. Did it
coſt ſo much? ſayes the buy er:
yes, ſaith the ſeller. Let him tremble at the Iudgement, which was a
ſudden death. This is the Rule of an vniuſt Ci tie, not of the Citie of Peace. Pereat
mundi
lucrum
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Peace.
lucrum, ne
fiat18 animae damnum. Periſh that
gaine which comes with the ſoules loſſe.
Many thinke Charity to the poore, to bee a worke of meere Supe rerogation; that they are not
bound liberally to giue part of that to laſie beggars, which they haue
laboriouſly gotten by their endea uours. But heare the Rule of Peace; Breake thy bread vnto the hungry;
Sell that thou haſt,
Mat. 19. 21
and giue to the poore.
But as when Chriſt diſ ſwaded from
Couetice,
by
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by the difficultie of en trance that wealth finds to heauen, they
amazed ly replied, Who then can be ſaued?
Who can walk after this Rule? When we preach this doctrine, the world
cries, Durus
Sermo, this is a hard ſay ing, a harſh Sermon. Yet is this the law of
peace, and thus minded are the citizens of peace. When the poore at your
gates aſke you Panem quotidi num, their daily bread; they after a ſort make you
gods; therfore ſhew your ſelues at leaſt to be men. Charitie is the
food
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food of Peace on earth,
and the Seed of peace in heauen.
The Palace of Peace
The Palace
of Peace
Is the Temple:
The Court or Palace
of Peace.
the peace of man can neuer bee preſerued
without the worſhip of God. It is not enough for the citie to haue
lawes, but theſe muſt be diuulged, made knowen to the Inhabi tants; the obſeruation of them
continually vr ged: for by nature
men are apt enough to flye out. Howſoeuer the Ro mans built their Templũ Pacis without
the gates, yet heere it is the chiefe
honor
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honor and ornament of the Citie. Heere
Peace keepſher
Court, and ſits like a royall Queene in her Chaire of Eſtate. Which is
not like Solo mons Throne, guarded with
Lyons; but with milke-white Doues, and couered ouer with Oliue
branches.
But alas! how doth her Palace now fall to ruine for want of repa ration? Few there bee that
repaire it, but to im paire it
thouſands are ready. The queſtion was once;
1 Sam.
9. 7
What ſhall we bring
to the man of God? Now
it
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it is a motion ſuffered in
all Courts, What ſhall we take away from the man of God? The no ble Shunamite built him a
chamber, with a bed and a candleſticke: We haue thoſe that pull downe
his roomes, di ſturbe his reſt,
and put out his light. Nehemiah reduced the Tythes to the primitiue
inſtitution and order: But if any Nehemiah ſhould now vndertake it, and reſtore our
portion to our own hands; there are tenne thouſand Harpies ready to
catch it ere it come
to
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to our mouthes. Wee may ſing, or rather ſigh
one to another, as little children chaunt in the ſtreets: When ſhall we
eat white Bread? When the Puttock is dead: when there is not a Sa crilegious Lawyer left. If
the walls of Ieruſalem
ſhould beginne to riſe, there is a Tobiah or Sam ballat to flout vs,
Neh. 4.
3.
that a Fox is able to
breake them downe. Corrupt Aduo cates are thoſe Foxes, and by their wills
the Vine of Peace ſhould beare no Grapes that e cape their fingers. Some
haue
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haue written wittily in
the praiſe of folly, ſome haue commended Bald neſſe; other in a quaint Paradoxe extolled
de formity: but in former
times it was neuer heard that any wrote Encomiums of Sacrilege.
That the Kings of the earth ſhould conſpire a gainſt Chriſt, [Note:
Pſal. 2. 2.
] it was no wonder:
1 Cor.
2. 8
for they knew him not.
Pſal. 13. 6.
That the Edo mites and Iſhmaelites ſhould
oppoſe him,
Acts 4. 27
no wonder: for they
ſtood on termes of hoſtilitie. That the Iewes ſhould confederat againſt
him,
no
H
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no wonder: for they ha ted him. But that men baptized in his Faith,
bearing his Name as their honourable Title, and wearing his Profeſ ſion, as their chiefe or nament; ſhould conſent to rob
him, and iuſtifie it by their law! this is ſuch a thing as the very
Barbarians would bluſh at. Suppoſe the Mini ſters of this Citie, the Pencioners of
Peace, by ſome
humble complaint requeſt their owne, or (at moſt but) ſo me ſmall part
of their owne; is the Spoyler at a non-plus?
Can-
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Cannot hee finde an
Aduocate to plead for him, and make his cauſe (though not be, yet) ap peare good? What, not one for his
fees, that can cry downe the Temple, the Goſpell, Chriſt himſelfe? Is there no
Bill to bee framed? no falſe plea to bee found? Is Sathan turn’d foole?
Hath none of his ſchol lers any
braines left? Yes, we might think the deuil were dead, if there could
not bee found an Aduocate to plead for Sacriledge. The Lord in his
Iuſtice for ſinne,
hath
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hath broken downe her
hedges;
Pſal. 80. 12
and
now euery hand hath a ſnatch at her Grapes.
In many places, Ahab-
like, they haue engroſ ſed the
whole vineyard: but if the poore, expo ſed, & vnſupported Vine be left, it ſhall
beare the owner but a few grapes. This may hold in Iure
Fori, it neuer ſhall hold in Iure Poli. God
promiſed that the faith of the Church ſhould remoue mountaines: ſuch
were Domitian,
Diocleſian, and
thoſe Imperiall per ſecutors. The Church
prayes
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Peace.
prayes, Dorſum corum
incurua, Bow
downe their backes; and ſo the Lord did. Valerian was ſo bowed
downe, that hee became a footſtoole for the King of Perſia, to mount vp to
his horſe O that the Church of Peace had ſtill this mira culous Faith, to re moue theſe mountaines; malicious and
truth-ha ting pleaders, the
pio ners of the Temple, and
the maintainers of thoſe that pillage it.
They tell vs, the Law is open, and
there be deputies;
Acts 19.
38
but who be the de-
puties
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puties in this Citie? Is there any other then a
Iudge of their owne? And is it not then a pro uerbiall anſwere of any man queſtioned in this
Sacriledge; Aſke my fa ther if I
bee a theefe? When Dauid decided the matter to Mephibo ſheth; Thou and Ziba di uide the land:
2 Sam. 19. 30.
he anſwe red, Yea
let him take all: For the miſery of Law, I neuer by
experience found it, becauſe I neuer tried it: but when they haue leaue
to diuide the Inheritance of Chriſt with their Miniſters (and
it
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Peace.
it were ſomthing tolera ble if they did but diuide it) I
ſay, yea let thẽ take all, ſeeing all they will haue, rather then we go
to recouer it by ſuch a Iudgement. But certen ly God cannot long a bide to ſee that people proſper, who cannot
abide to ſee his Church proſper. They that ſpoil the Palace of Peace on earth,
ſhall neuer be en tertained into
her glori ous Court of heauen.
The Riuer that ſerues this Citie of Peace
The Riuer
that ſerues
this Citie of
Peace
Is Proſperitie.
The Riuer of this
Citie.
] It is one
prin-
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principall happineſſe of a Citie, to bee
ſcituated by a Riuers ſide: that as it hath fortified it ſelfe by land,
ſo it may haue commaund of the Sea. Proſperitie is the Riuer to this
Citie, that like a louing Meander, winds it ſelfe about, throwing his
ſiluer Armes vpon her ſides; ebbing ſlowly, but flowing merrily, as if
he longed to embrace his loue. Peace is the mother of Proſperitie, but
Proſperitie is too often the murtherer of Peace. For peace breeds
wealth, wealth breedes
pride,
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pride, pride breeds con tention, and contention kils
peace. Thus ſhee is often deſtroyed by her owne iſſue, as Senache rib was by his owne bo wels.
Take this Citie wee liue in for an Inſtance. Peace hath brought Gods
plentie: the Inha bitants neither
plowe, nor ſowe, nor reape; yet are fed like the fowles of heauen. They
fare well with leſſe trouble, then if come grewe at their doores, and
cattell graſed in their ſtreets. But as Nylus may riſe
too
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too high, and water E gypt too much; ſo the inundation of opulency
may doe thẽ hurt. Thus may the influence of heauen, and the plentie of
earth, be a Snare vnto
vs; and our abundance, an occaſion of our fal ling. Proſperitie is
hear tie meat, but not
digeſti ble by a weake
ſtomack, ſtrong wine, but naught for a weake braine. The proſperitie of fooles de ſtroyeth
them.
Pro. 1, 32
It is not
ſimply proſperitie, but the proſperitie of fooles that deſtroyeth them.
The ſwelling Riuer by
the
155
The Citie of
Peace.
the ſurfet of a Tyde, doth
not ſooner bring in our encreaſe; but our encreaſe doth breed in our
minds another ſwel ling, in our
bodies another ſurfeting: we ſwell in pride, and ſurfet in wantonneſſe.
The Iſ raelites neuer fared ſo
well, as when they liued at Gods immediate fin ding; and at night ex pected their morrowes breakfaſt frõ the clouds.
When they did daily aſke, and daily receiue their daily bread.
There be (as I heard a worthy Diuine ob-
ſerue
156
The Citie of
Peace.
ſerue) three maine Ri uers in the land, where of this is held the beſt: and this Citie is
placed in the beſt Seate of the Riuer, vpon the gentle riſing of a hill,
in the beſt ayre, and richeſt ſoyle. When a Cour tier gaue it out, That Queene Mary
being diſ pleaſed with the Citie,
threatned to diuert both Tearme and Parliament to Oxford: an Alder man aſked whether ſhee meant to
turne the cha nell of the
Thames thi ther, or no: if not, ſaith hee,
by Gods grace we
ſhall
157
The Citie of
Peace.
ſhall doe well enough.
The lines are fallen to vs
in pleaſant places,
Pſal. 16. 6
wee haue a goodly
Heritage. Both the Elements are our friends; the Earth
ſends vs in her fruites, the Sea her merchan diſe. Wee are neere enough the benefits, and
farre enough from the dangers of the Ocean. Nothing is wanting to the
conſummation of our happineſſe: to keepe vs in our owne Coun trey, in our owne Citie, in our
owne Houſes, but that which keepes men in their wits, Tem-
perance,
158
The Citie of
Peace.
perance, and Thankful neſſe.
But doe wee not re quite this Riuer
of Pro ſperitie, with vngrateful
impietie? and vſe the Ocean of Gods boun tie, as wee doe the Thames? It brings vs in all
manner of proui ſion; Clothes to
couer vs, Fuell to warme vs, Food to nouriſh vs, Wine to cheare vs, Gold
to enrich vs: and we in recompenſe, foile it with our rubbiſh, filth,
common ſewers, & ſuch excretions. It yeeldes vs all manner of good
things
159
The Citie of
Peace.
things, and we requite it
with all plentie of bad things. It comes flowing in with our commodi ties, & we ſend it loaden
backe with our iniuries.
Such toward God is the impious ingratitude of this famous Citie, which
elſe had no Para lell vnder the
Sunne. Shee may not vnfitly bee compared to certaine Pictures, that re preſent to diuers behol ders, at diuers ſtations, diuers
formes. Look ing one way, you ſee
a beautifull Virgine: an other
way, ſome defor-
med
160
The Citie of
Peace.
med monſter. Caſt an eye vpon her Profeſſi on, ſhee is a well grac’d
creature: turne it vpon her conuerſation, ſhee is a miſhapen
ſtigmaticke. View her Peace, ſhee is fayrer then the daugh ters of men:
viewe her Pride, the children of the Hittites and Amo rites are beautious to her.
Think of her good works, then Bleſſed art thou of the Lord: num ber her ſinnes, then How is that faithfull Citie be come an
harlot!19
Eſa. 1. 21.
To tell of her Charitie, and
how many hundreds ſhe
feeds
161
The Citie of
Peace.
feedes in a yeare, you
will ſay with Paul,
In this I praiſe
her. To tell of her oppreſſions, and how many thouſands
ſhee vndoes in a yeare, you will ſay with him againe, In this I praiſe her not.
Behold her like a Nourſe drawing her Breſts, and giuing milke to
Orphans, you wiſh her Cup to runne ouer with fulneſſe. Behold her like a
Horſe leech, ſucking the blood of the Church, to feede her owne
ſacrilegious aua rice; you will
ſay her Cup is too full. When
we
162
The Citie of
Peace.
wee thinke of her pro ſperitie, wee wonder at her impietie: when we
thinke of her impietie, wee wonder at her pro ſperitie. O that her Ci tizens would learne to mannage their liberall
fortunes, and to enter taine the
Riuer of
Peace that makes glad the
Citie of God, with Humilitie and Sobrietie. That
when Death ſhall diſ franchiſe
them heere, they may be made free aboue, in that tryumphant Citie, whoſe glory hath
neither meaſure, nor end.
The
163
The Citie of Peace.
The Life of the Citizens
The Life
of the
Citizens
Is Loue:
The life of
Peace.
for without the loue of men there can be no
peace of God, and there is no loue of God in them that deſire not peace
with men. He that loues not the members, was neuer a friend to the
Head. To ſay we
loue Chriſt, and hate a Chriſtian; is as if a man, while hee was
ſaluting or proteſting loue to his freind, ſhould tread on his toes. I
know indeed, that euery creature is to bee loued, but in ordine ad
Deum:
Religi-
164
The Citie of
Peace.
Religion doth not for bid, but rectifie our af fections. Our Parents, ſpouſes, children,
allies, countrymen, neighbors, friends; haue all their due places in our
loue: and it were a brutifh do ctrine to diſpoſſeſſe vs of theſe humane rela tions. Onely they muſt know their orders and
ſtations, and by no meanes vſurpe vpon God: they muſt not be miſtreſſes,
but hand maides to the loue of
Chriſt.
But let vs loue them, becauſe they loue God:
as
165
The Citie of Peace.
as reflections of our
ſight, which glaunce from the Lord vpon his Image: if God haue their
hearts, let them haue our hearts. It is poore to loue a man for that is
about him: hee muſt bee loued for that is within him. If wee ſhould
account of men as we doe of bagges; prize them beſt that weigh heauieſt,
and meaſure out our loue by the Subſidie-booke; ho nouring a man becauſe he is well cloathed: I
ſee then no reaſon, but wee ſhould doe greater
reue-
166
The Citie of
Peace.
reuerence to the Baſon and Euer on the ſtall,
then to the Goldſmith in the Shop; and moſt humbly ſalute Sattin &
Veluet in whole pieces, becauſe their virgin-glo ry was neuer yet raui ſhed and abuſed into fa ſhion.
No, but eſpecially let vs loue others, becauſe they feare God, and ſerue
Ieſus Chriſt. For as the braine is to the ſinewes, the liuer to the
veines, and the heart to the arteries; ſo is Gods loue to humane
ſocie ties: as the very ſoule
by
167
The Citie of Peace.
by which they liue, and
the forme that giues them being. Otherwiſe our companies are con ſpiracies; when we fall in one
with another, to fall out with God. Let vs beginne our loues a boue, deriuing this holy fire
from the Altar of Heauen; let our faith inkindle it at the heart of
Chriſt, and then like the Cherubins, wee ſhall looke graciouſly one
vp on another, while all
faithfully looke vp to the Mercy-ſeate of God.
The
168
The Citie of Peace.
The generall State of this Citie.
The generall State
of this Citie.
This is the Corollary of all;
The Eſtate.
euery
particular being caſt vp, heere is the ſumme; her vniuer ſall felicitie. For the il luſtration whereof, it will not
bee vnuſefull, to borrow an inſtance: and wee need not tra uell farre to ſeeke out ſuch an
image or reſem blance.
Looke wee vpon our owne Nation, the hap py Module of this Citie of peace. It was ſayd,
that in Rome a man might ſee all Countries:
and
169
The Citie of Peace.
and the Romans vſed to
ſolace themſelues; It is good
looking on a Map of the World, vbi nihil in orbe
videmus alienum, when wee find nothing in the
world which is not our owne. What doth the whole earth produce, which is
not yeelded to our enioy ing? What
was once ſayd of Ormus,
is true of this Citie, Turne the world into a Ring, and this is the
Diamond of it. Like to Gideons
Fleece, it hath been wet with the dewe of hea uen, when drought was
on
I
170
The Citie of Peace.
on the whole earth be ſides:
Or like Nylus, which
keeps within the Bankes, when other Ri uers ouerflow their con tinents. Some Nations haue peace, but with out the Truth: other haue the
Trueth, but without Peace: wee haue both Truth and Peace. Our neighbours
haue beene exerciſed with troubles, whirled about with hoſtile tu mults; their eares af frighted with the thun der of thoſe murdering pieces:
their eyes aga ſhed with their
Temples
and
171
The Citie of Peace.
and Tabernacles fla ming about their heads: Infants
bleeding vpon the ſtones, and their a mazed mothers raui ſhed ere they can bee permitted to die. The
ſhrikes of the dying, and ſlauery of the liuing, vn der the mercileſſe hands of a killing or
inſulting aduerſary; theſe haue beene their diſtracting obiects: none of
them come neere vs. There is no rifling of houſes, no flying to refuges,
no rotting in Dungeons, no ruinating of Monuments, no ſwelling the
cha-
I2
172
The Citie of Peace.
chanels with blood, no fiering of Cities, no Rapes of Virgines, no
daſhing of Babes againſt the ſtones, nor caſting them, as they droppe
from their mothers wombes, into their mothers flames. But in ſtead of
theſe, the truth of the Goſpell is prea ched, pietie profeſſed, the practiſe of it
encouraged; Grace promiſing, and Peace performing, bleſſed rewards.
That is verified in vs, which is recorded of the dayes of Solomon; That hee had peace on all
ſides
173
The Citie of Peace.
ſides round about him:
1. Kings 4. 25.
and Iudah & Iſrael dwelt
ſafely, euery man vnder his Vine, and vnder his Figgetree, from
Dan to Beerſheba. Or as Syluius ſayd of Rhodes; Semper in ſole ſita
eſt. The Sun ſhine of mercy embra ceth vs,
and hath made vs a day of peace, not ſhorter then ſixty yeres: the
fauours of God o uerſhadowing vs,
as the Cherubins did the Mer cie-Seat. I know that Rome frets at this, and let the Harlot rage her
heart out: ſhee thun ders out
Curſes, but
(prai-
I3
174
The Citie of Peace.
(praiſed bee God) wee neuer more proſpered, then when the Pope
moſt curſed vs. Yea, O Lord, thogh they curſe, doe thou bleſſe: their
thunder doth more fear then hurt, thy fauour doth more good then they
can blaſt. Conuert or confound them that haue euill will at Sion: &
ſtill let vs inherit thy Peace, that thou mayſt inherit our praiſe.
This is the Reward of Peace, and of all thoſe that in ſincerity of heart loue
her:
2. Cor. 13. 11.
the God of peace ſhall be with
them. There
be
175
The Citie of Peace.
be ſix kinds of peace, but
the peace of God con taines all
the reſt. The peace of God paſſeth
all vn derſtanding: therefore whoſoeuer looſeth this peace,
hath a loſſe paſt all vnderſtanding. But Chriſt foretold vs, that
in the world wee ſhall haue
no peace.
Ioh. 16. 33.
Indeed no peace Quoad oppoſitionem ſecu li, yet much peace quoad diſpoſitionẽ
Domini. The moſt ſauage diſturbers, Si non reformentur
ne pereant, tamen reprimentur ne perimant: if
they bee not reformed to ſaue thẽ themſelues, they ſhall be
re-
I4
176
The Citie of Peace.
reſtrained from harming vs. If they will not do vs the good they
ſhould, yet they ſhall not doe vs the euill they would. Vel inimieus tuus
non mane bit, vel non
manebit inimi cus. Either our enemies ſhall not liue, or they
ſhall not liue our ene mies.
Either the righteous ſhal reioyce whẽ they
ſee the vengeance, and waſh their feet in the blood of the
wic ked. Or the Lord
wil giue them fauour in the ſight of their enemies,
Exod. 11. 3
and thoſe that hated them, ſhall
cleaue vnto them.
From hence ariſeth
peace
177
The Citie of Peace.
peace with our ſelues: a
conformitie of affection to reaſon, of reaſon to grace: that the con flicts which a diſtreſſed
conſcience finds with legall terrors, ſhall bee turned to mild
embracements. Faith leading the vnder ſtãding, the vnderſtãding guiding the wil, the
will ruling the operatiue po wers,
& Chriſt Ieſus go uerning all.
For indeed hee is the Fountaine of peace,
Rom. 5.
1.
and wee through him
beeing iuſtified by faith, haue peace with God.
Through the corrupti on of our
nature, and Iu-
ſtice
178
The Citie of Peace.
ſtice of Gods nature, we are enemies: and there is no
reconciliation, but through the blood o the euerlaſting Coue nant. He reconciles vs to God,
as Ioab did
Abſolon to
Dauid by the
woman of Tekoah: when
the whole family roſe vp, & ſaid, Deliuer him that ſmote his
brother,
2 Sam. 14 7
that wee may take his life for the
life of the ſlaine: and ſo the father & mother
ſhal haue no name nor remain der vpon
earth. God hath two ſorts of ſons Angels & men: the
Angels that fel, are loſt for euer: men
fell
179
The Citie of Peace.
fel, if they were loſt
too, where ſhould God haue ſonnes? I know that he needs not man: he hath
ſtil the elect Angels, and is able to raiſe ſonnes of ſtones: he can
want no thing while he poſſeſſeth
himſelf. Wel, yet in mer cy Chriſt
reconciles vs: Dauid
aſkes,
Verſe 19.
Is not the hand of Ioab in all
this? ſo we may admire, Is not the hãd of Ieſus in all
this? Yes, hee hath made our peace. The Miniſter
al wayes ends his publicke
deuotions with the peace of
God, & the bleſſing of this Peace reſt vpon vs.
Thus
180
The Citie of Peace.
Thus wee haue a reall abridgment of this my ſtical Citie of Peace; happy euery way. Vigilanc ie is her Officer of Peace; that
hath an eye in the darkeſt angles, and diſ couers the firſt concep tions of ſtrife. Diſci pline is her Clerke of the peace, that
keepes the Records, and indicts of fenders. Authoritie is her Iuſtice of peace: that if any will not be ruled,
binds them ouer to the peace. Equitie is her Burſe, where men exchange
kindnes for kind nes: on whoſe
ſtayres
In-
181
The Citie of Peace.
Iniurie and impoſture
durſt neuer ſet their foule feet. Truth is her Standard, which with the
Trumpet of Fame ſhall reſound her happi nes to all nations. Plenty is her Treaſurer, Li beralitie her Almoner, Conſcience her
Chance lor, Wiſdome her Coun ſeller, Prayer her
Clerk of the
Cloſet, Faith her Crowne, Iuſtice her Scep ter, Maſculine Vertues her
Peeres, Graces
her Attendants, and
Nobi litie her Maid of Honor.
All her Garments are greene and orient; all
her
182
The Citie of Peace.
her paths bee Milke, her words Oracles, and her works Miracles:
making the blind to ſee, and the lame to goe, by a merci full ſupply to their de fects. Her breath is ſwee ter then the new blowen Roſe;
millions of ſoules lie ſucking their life frõ it: and the ſmell of her
garments is like the ſmel of Lebanon. Her ſmiles are more reuiuing then the
Vertumnall Sunne ſhine: and her
fauours, like ſeaſonable dewes, ſpring vp flowers and fruits whereſoeuer
ſhee walks. Holineſſe is the
Ca-
183
The Citie of Peace.
Canopie of State ouer
her head, and Tranquilitie the Arras where ſhe ſets her foot. All her Ser uants wait in order; and
can with contentfull knowledge, diſtinguiſh and accept their owne
places. Her Court is an Image of Paradiſe; all her channels ſlow with
milke, and her Conduits runne wine. Enuy and murmuring, as priuy to
their owne guilt, flye from her Preſence. Her Guard conſiſts not of men,
but Angels: and they pitch their Tents about her Palace. Laſt-
ly,
184
The Citie of Peace.
ly,
hauing preſerued and bleſſed all her children on earth, ſhee goes with
them to heauen; is wel comed into the armes of her Father, inueſted
Queene with a Diadem of glory, & poſſeſſed of thoſe ioyes, vnto
which Time ſhall neuer put
An End.
Notes
Faded ink; missing letters obvious from context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; Biblical citation obvious from the context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; missing letters obvious from context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; missing letters obvious from context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; missing letters obvious from context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; Biblical citation obvious from the context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; Biblical citation obvious from the context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; missing letters obvious from context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; missing punctuation obvious from context. (MS)↑
Faded ink; Biblical citation obvious from the context. (MS)↑
References
Citation
Adams, Thomas. The works of Thomas Adams: being the sum of his sermons, meditations, and other divine
and moral discourses. Ed. James Nichol. Vol. 3. Edinburgh: James Nichol, 1861-1862. Babel Haithi Trust. Open. [We cite by volume and page number.]
Adams, Thomas. Eirenopolis.The Map of Early Modern London, edited by Janelle Jenstad, U of Victoria, 20 Jun. 2018, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/EIRE1.htm.
Chicago citation
Adams, Thomas. Eirenopolis.The Map of Early Modern London. Ed. Janelle Jenstad. Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed June 20, 2018. http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/EIRE1.htm.
APA citation
Adams, T. 2018. Eirenopolis. In J. Jenstad (Ed), The Map of Early Modern London. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/EIRE1.htm.
RIS file (for RefMan, EndNote etc.)
Provider: University of Victoria
Database: The Map of Early Modern London
Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
TY - ELEC
A1 - Adams, Thomas
ED - Jenstad, Janelle
T1 - Eirenopolis
T2 - The Map of Early Modern London
PY - 2018
DA - 2018/06/20
CY - Victoria
PB - University of Victoria
LA - English
UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/EIRE1.htm
UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/xml/standalone/EIRE1.xml
ER -
RefWorks
RT Web Page
SR Electronic(1)
A1 Adams, Thomas
A6 Jenstad, Janelle
T1 Eirenopolis
T2 The Map of Early Modern London
WP 2018
FD 2018/06/20
RD 2018/06/20
PP Victoria
PB University of Victoria
LA English
OL English
LK http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/EIRE1.htm
TEI citation
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#ADAM3"><surname>Adams</surname>, <forename>Thomas</forename></name></author>.
<title level="a">Eirenopolis</title>. <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>,
edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename> <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>,
<publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date when="2018-06-20">20 Jun. 2018</date>,
<ref target="http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/EIRE1.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/EIRE1.htm</ref>.</bibl>
Encoder, research assistant, and copy editor, 2012–13. Cameron completed his undergraduate
honours degree in English at the University of Victoria in 2013. He minored in French
and has a keen interest in Shakespeare, film, media studies, popular culture, and
the geohumanities.
Janelle Jenstad, associate professor in the department of English at the University
of Victoria, is the general editor and coordinator of The Map of Early Modern London. She is also the assistant coordinating editor of Internet Shakespeare Editions. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival,
the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. Her articles have appeared
in the Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from
Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), and Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, forthcoming). She is currently working on an edition of The Merchant of Venice for ISE and Broadview P. She lectures regularly on London studies, digital humanities, and
on Shakespeare in performance.
Research assistant, 2013-15, and data manager, 2015 to present. Tye completed his
undergraduate honours degree in English at the University of Victoria in 2015.
Director of Pedagogy and Outreach, 2015–present; Associate Project Director, 2015–present;
Assistant Project Director, 2013-2014; MoEML Research Fellow, 2013. Kim McLean-Fiander
comes to The Map of Early Modern London from the Cultures of Knowledge digital humanities project at the University of Oxford, where she was the editor of Early Modern Letters Online, an open-access union catalogue and editorial interface for correspondence from the
sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. She is currently Co-Director of a sister project
to EMLO called Women’s Early Modern Letters Online (WEMLO). In the past, she held an internship with the curator of manuscripts at the Folger Shakespeare Library, completed a doctorate at Oxford on paratext and early modern women writers, and worked a number of years for the
Bodleian Libraries and as a freelance editor. She has a passion for rare books and manuscripts as social
and material artifacts, and is interested in the development of digital resources
that will improve access to these materials while ensuring their ongoing preservation
and conservation. An avid traveler, Kim has always loved both London and maps, and
so is particularly delighted to be able to bring her early modern scholarly expertise
to bear on the MoEML project.
Graduate research assistant, 2012-13. Michael Stevens began his MA at Trinity College
Dublin and then transferred to the University of Victoria, where he completed it in
early 2013. His research focuses on transnational modernism and geospatial considerations
of literature. He prepared a digital map of James Joyce’s Ulysses for his MA project. Michael is a talented photographer and is responsible for taking
most of the MoEML team photographs appearing on this site.
Programmer, 2018-present; Junior Programmer, 2015 to 2017; Research Assistant, 2014
to 2017. Joey Takeda is an MA student at the University of British Columbia in the
Department of English (Science and Technology research stream). He completed his BA
honours in English (with a minor in Women’s Studies) at the University of Victoria
in 2016. His primary research interests include diasporic and indigenous Canadian
and American literature, critical theory, cultural studies, and the digital humanities.
Programmer at the University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC).
Martin ported the MOL project from its original PHP incarnation to a pure eXist database
implementation in the fall of 2011. Since then, he has been lead programmer on the
project and has also been responsible for maintaining the project schemas. He was
a co-applicant on MoEML’s 2012 SSHRC Insight Grant.
Originally built as a Roman fortification for the provincial city of Londinium in the second century C.E., the London Wall remained a material and spatial boundary for the city throughout the early modern
period. Described by Stow as high and great, the London Wall dominated the cityscape and spatial imaginations of Londoners for centuries. Increasingly,
the eighteen-foot high wall created a pressurized constraint on the growing city;
the various gates functioned as relief valves where development spilled out to occupy
spaces outside the wall.
Aldgate was the easternmost gate into the walled
city. The name Aldgate is thought to come from one of four sources:
Æst geat meaning Eastern gate (Ekwall 36), Alegate from the Old
English ealu meaning ale,Aelgate from
the Saxon meaning public gate or open to all, or Aeldgate
meaning old gate (Bebbington
20–1).
St. Paul’s Cathedral was—and remains—an important church in London. In 962, while London was occupied by the Danes, St. Paul’s monastery was burnt and raised anew. The
church survived the Norman conquest of 1066, but in 1087 it was burnt again.
An ambitious Bishop named Maurice took the opportunity to build a new St. Paul’s, even petitioning the king
to offer a piece of land belonging to one of his castles (Times 115). The building Maurice initiated would
become the cathedral of St. Paul’s
which survived until the Great Fire of 1666.
St. Paul’s Cathedral is mentioned in the following documents:
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