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Lancelot Andrewes Gunpowder Plot Sermon

This, the first of many Gunpowder Plot sermons was delivered soon after the discovery of the plot in 1606.  It became a annual custom for the king and parliament to commission a sermon to commemorate the deliverance. These sermons help us to understand the changing nature of the celebration of the deliverance. This sermon in particular, was to set the tone for all subsequent celebrations. It is helpful for us to reflect upon it in order to return to the traditional roots of the celebration. Below you will find both the text. With this sermon in mind compose one of your own for your celebration of the deliverance of November 5, 1605. To go to the sermon transcription click here.

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A Sermon Preached Before The Kings Maiestie

At Whitehall

On the Fifth of November

Anno Dom. MDCVI

Ppsal. CXVIII. Ver. XIII.XIV

A Domino factum est istud, &est mirabile in oculis nostris.

Eaecest Dies quam fecit Dominus; exultemus& laetemur in ea.

This is the Lords doing, and it is marvellous in our eyes.

This is the day which the Lord hath made, let us rejoyce and be glad in it.

O entitle this time to this Text, or to shew it pertinent to the present occasion, will ask no long processe. This Day of ours, this fifth of November, a day of GOD's making; that which was done upon it, was the Lords doing. Christ's owne application (which is the best) may well be applied here: This day, is this scripture fulfilled in our eares. For, if ever (Luke 4.21) there was a deed done, or a day made by God, in our dayes; this day, and the deed of this day was it. If ever He gave cause of marvelling (as in the first) or rejoycing (as in the second verse) to any land; to us this day, He gave both: If ever saved, prospered, blessed any; this day, He saved, prospered, and (as we say) fairely blessed us.

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The day (we all know) was meant to be the day of all our deaths; and many were appointed as Sheepe to the Slaughter, nay, worse than so. There was a thing doing on it, if it had been done, we all had been undone. And the very same day we (all know) the day wherin that appointment was disappointed by God, and we all saved, that we might not die but live, and declare the praise of the Lord: the Lord

Verse 17.

of whose doing, that marvellous deed was, of whose making , this joyfull day is, that we celebrate

This mercifull and gracious Lord (saith David, Psalme 1:15.) hath so done His marvellous works, that they ought to be had, and kept in remembrance. Of keeping remembrance, many wayes thre be: Among the rest, this is one, of making dayes;

Psl 1 11.f.

set solemne Dayes to preserve memorable Acts, that they be not eaten out, by them, but ever revived, with the returne of the Year, and kept still fresh in continual memory.

Exod. 12&c.

God himselfe taught us this way. In remembrance of the great delivery from the destroying Angell, He himselfe ordained the day of the Passe-over yearly to be kept. The Church, by Him taught, tooke the same way. In remembrance of the dissappointing of Hamans bloudy lots, they were like wise appointed the dayes of Purim, yearly to be kept. The like memorable mercy did He vouchsafe us. The destroyer passed over our dwelings, this day: It is our Passe-over. Haman, and his Fellowes had set the dice on us, and we by this time had been all in peeces: It is our Purim day.

We have therefore well done and upon good warrant, to tread in the same steps, and by law to provide, that this Day should not die, nor the memorial thereof perish, from our selfes or from our seed, but be consecrated to perpetual memory, by a yearly acknowledgement to be made of it through all generations. In accomplishment of which order, we are now here in the presence of God, on this day, that He first, by His Act of doing, hath made, and we secondly, by our act of decreeing, have made before Him, His holy Angels, and men, to confesse this His goodnesse, and our selves eternally bound to Him for it. And, being to cofesse it, with what words of Scripture can we better or fitter do it, that those we have read out of this Psalme? Sure, I could thinke of none fitter, but even thus to say, A Domino Factum, &c.

The treaty where of may well be comprised in three points: 1. The Deed or doing: 2. The Day, and 3. The Duty. The Deed, in these: This is the Lord,s &c. The Day, in these: This is the day, &c. The Dut,y in the rest, Let us, &c. The other two reduced to the Day, which is the center of both. The doing is the cause; The Duty is the consequent: from the day groweth the duty.

To proceed orderly, we are to begin with the day. For though (in place) it stand after the deed, yet to us, it is first: our knowledge is a posteriori. The effect ever first, where it is the ground of the rest. Of the day then first.

1. That such dayes there be, and how they come to be such. 2. Then of the doing, that maketh them: wherein that this of Davids was; and that ours is no lesse, rather more. 3. Then of the duty, how to doe it, by rejoycing, and being glad, for so, guadium erit plenum, these two make it full. How to take order, that we may long and often do it, by saying our Hosanna, and Benedictus, for, gaudium rostrum nemo tolles a nobis, those will make, that our joy no man shall take from us.

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This is the day! This Why, are not all dayes made by Him? is there any dayes not made by Him? Why then say we, This is the day the Lord hath made? Divide the dayes into naturall and civill, the naturall, some are cleare and some are cloudy; the civill, some are luckie dayes, and some are dismall! Be they faire or foule, glad or sad; (as the Poet calleth him) the Great Diespiter, the Father of dayes hath made them both. How say we then of some one day, above his fellow, This is the day, &c.?

No difference at all, in the dayes, or in the moneths themselves: by nature, they are one. No more in November than another moneth, nor in the fifth, than in the fifteenth. All is, in God's making, For, as in the Creation , we see, all are the workes, and yet a plaine difference between them for all that, in the manner of making: Some are made Six, Let there be light, a firmament, drie Land; Some, with Faciamus with more adoe, greater forecast, and framing, as man, that master-peece of His workes, of whom therefore in a different sense, it may be said: This is the Creature which God hath made (suppose, after a more excellent manner.) In the very same manner, it is with dayes; All are His making, all equal in that' but, that letteth not, but He may bestow a speciall Faciamus upon some one day more than other; and so that day, by speciall perogative, said To be indeed a day, that God hath made.

Now, for God making, it fareth with dayes, as it doth with yeares. Some yeare (saith the Psalme) God crowneth with His goodnesse, maketh it more seasonable, healthful, fruitfull, than other. And so for dayes, God leaveth a more sensible impression of His favour, upon some one, more than many besides, by doing upon it some marvellous work. And , such a day on which God vouchsafeth some speciall factum est, some great and publike benefit, notable for the time present, memorable for the time to come, in that case, of that Day (as if God had said Faciamus diem hunc, shewed some workemanship, done some speciall cost on it) it may with an accent, with an emphasis be said, This verily is a day which God hath made, in comparison of which, the rest are as if they were not; or at least were not of His making.

As for black and dismall dayes, dayes of sorrow and sad accidents; they are and may be counted (saith Iob) for no dayes: Nights rather, as having the shadow of death upon them; or, if dayes, such as his were, which Sathan had marr'd than which God had made. And for common and ordinary dayes, wherein as there is no harme, so not any notable good, we rather say, they are gone forth from God in the course of nature (as it were) with a fiat, then made by Him; specially, with a faciamus. So, evill dayes no dayes, or dayes marr'd: and common dayes, dayes; but no made dayes: Onely those made, that crowned with some extraordinary great Favour, and thereby get a dignity, and exaltation above the rest: exempted out of the ordinary course of the Calendar with an Hic est. Such, in the Law, was the Day in the Passe-over, made by God, the head of the yeare. Such, in the Gospell, of CHRISTS Resurrection, made by God, Dies Dominicus; and to it, do all the Fathers apply this verse. And we had this day, our Passe-over, and we had a Resurrection or

as Isaac had. But, I forbeare to goe further in the generall. By this that hath been said, we may see, there be dayes of which it may be safely said, This the day, &c. and in what sense, it may be said. Such there be then, that this of ours, one of them; that if it be, we may so hold it, and doe the duties that pertain to it.

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David's day here, was one certainly, dist (?) ante Spiritu; and they, that are like it, to be holden for such: so that, if ours be as this was, it is certainly dies a Deo factus. Now then (to take our rule from the former verse) Factum Domini facit diem Domini. It is Gods deed, that maketh it God's day; and, the greater the Deed, the more God's day. There must be first, Factum est, some doing: and secondly, it must be a Domino, He the doere: and thirdly, that somewhat must be somewhat marvellous: and fourthly, not, in it selfe, so; but, in our eyes. These foure goe to it; these foure make any day a day of God's making. Let us see then these four; First,.in David's here, and then in our owne; and if we finde them all, boldly pronounce, This is the day, &c.

First, the factum est, in David's; what was done, set downe at large in the forepart of the Psalme. It was a deliverance: all the Psalme runneth on nothing else. Every deliverance is from a danger, and, by the danger, we take measure of the deliverance. The greater that, the greater the Delivery from it: and the greater the delivery, the greater the day, and the more likely to be of Gods owne manufacture. His danger first: what should have been done. He was in great distresse. Three several times, with great passion, he repeats it, that his Enemies: came about him; compassed him round: compassed and kept him in on every side: were, no swarm of bees so thicke: That they gave a terrible lift or thrust at him, to overthrow him, and very neare it they were. And at last, as if he were newly crept out of his grave, out of the very jawes of death and despaire, he breaks forth and saith, I was very neare my death, neare it I was, but non moriar, die I will not now, for this time, but live a little longer to declare the works of the Lord. This, was his danger and, a shrewd one (it seemeth) it was . From this danger, he was delivered. This, the factum est.

But, man might do all this; and so it be man's day, for any thing is said yet Though it were great, it maketh it not God's unlesse God, God (I say) and not man, but God Himselfe were the doer of it: and, if He the Doer, He donominates the Day. This then was not any mans, nor any Princes doing, but GODs alone, His might, His mercy, that brought it to passe: Not any arme of flesh, but Gods might, not of any merit of his, but of His owne meere mercy. This was done by His might: Thrice he tels us of it, It was the right hand of the Lord, that brought this mighty thing to passe. This was done by His mercy. His ever-enduring mercy: foure times he tels us, it was that, did it. With that he begins, and makes it the key of the song. Then, as we have factum est, so we have A Domine: The deed and the doer both.

Gods doings are many, and not all of one size. The Prophet * Zachary speaketh of a day of Small things, and, even in those small, must we learne to see God, or we shall never see Him in greater. Yet, so dimme is our sight, that unlesse they be great, commonly we see Him not: nay unlesse it be greate usque ad miracalum , so great, that marvellous withall, we count it not worth a day, nor worthy God: unlesse it be such. But, if it be such, then it is God's, Qui facit mirabilis solus, Who only workes great marvells: then, man is shut out, and Gods must the Day be. A Domino factum, & mirabile.

And yet this is not enough. The truth is, all that God doth, all His workes are wonderful: Magna, sed ideo parva quia afitata. Great, wonders, all: but, not wonderfull; seeme small to us, because they be usuall: His miracles are no more marvellous, than His ordinary works, but that, we see the one daily, and the other, not. Therefore he addeth [in our eyes] for a full period: His doings, all marvellous in themselves; but, not marvellous, in our eyes, unless they be rare, and the like not seene before: But then they be; and then we say, Digitus Dei est, it is the finger of God, nay, the right hand

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of God, that brought this mighty thing to passe. Then we give the day for God's, without more adoe. Now then, we have all that goeth to it: 1, A Deliverance wrought; 2, wrought, by God, 3, a wonderfull deliverance, 4, and that, even in our eyes, These make David's day, a day of Gods making.

Will these be found in ours, and then ours shall be so too? They will, all of them certainly; and that, in an higher degree, in a greater measure; match David's day, and overmatch it in all. 1. We were delivered, and from a danger, that is cleare. How great? (for, that makes the oddes.) Boldly, I dare say, from a greater than Davids. Thus I shew it, and go no further than the Psalme it selfe.

1. David called upon God in his danger; he knew of it, therefore, We did not: we imagined no such thing; but that all had been safe, and we might have gone to the Parliament, as secure as ever. The danger never dreamt of, that is the danger.

2. His was, by compassing and hemming in, that is above ground, and may be descried from a watch- tower. Ours was by undermining, digging deep under ground, that none could discerne.

3. One cannot be beset, but he may have hope to break through, at some part. But here, from this, no way, no meanes, no possibility of escaping. The danger not to be descried, not to be escaped, that is the danger.

4. His were a swarme of bees (He calleth them so) they buzze and make a noise when they come. Ours, a brood of vipers, mordentes in silentio, still, not so much as a hisse, till the deadly blow had been given.

5. His was but of himselfe alone, so he saith, I was in trouble, They came about me, kept me in, thrust sore at me. But one person, Davids alone. Ours of a farre greater extent; David, and his three Estates with him.

Now, though David himselfe were valued by them at ten thousand of themselves (and not over valued neither; for he is worth more; and all Kings like him, no lesse worth) yet he and they too, must needs be more, than He alone. Not onely King David had gone but Queene Esthere too: and not onely they, but Salomon the young Prince, and Nathan his brother. Nor these were not all. The Scriptures recount, David had Jehosaphat for his Chancellour, Adoran his Treasurer, Seraja his Secretarie, Sadoc and Abiathar, and twenty two more, the chiefe of the Priests, Admo his judge, Joab his Generall; all had bone. His forty eight Worthies or Nobles, all they too. The Principall of all the Tribes in the kingdome: all they too; and many more than these; no man knoweth how many. It is out of question, it had exceeded this of Davids here.

6. One more. His danger (he confesseth) was from man. He goeth no further, I will not feare what man doth unto me. This of ours was not: meerly mans, I deny it, it was the devill himselfe. The instruments (not as his, a swarme of bees, but) a swarme of Locusts, out of the infernall pit. Not men, no not Heathen men: Their Stories; nay their Tragedies can shew none neare it. Their Poets could never faine any so prodigiously impious. Not men; No, not Savage wilde men: the Hunnes, the Heruli, The Turcilingi, noted for inhumanity, never so inhumane: Even among those barbarous people, this fact would be accounted barbarous. How then? Beasts: There were at Ephesus, beasts in shape of men, and (Greek) , brutishness is the worst, Philosophie could imagine of our nature. This is more than brutish, What Tiger, though never so inraged, would have made the like havock? Then, if the like, neither in the nature of men, nor beasts to be found (it is so unnaturall) we must not looke to patterne it upon earth, we must to hell, thence it was certainly, even from the devill. He was a murderer from the beginning, and will be so to the ending. In every sinne of bloud, he hath a claw, but, all his clawes, in such an one as this: wherein so much bloud as would have made it raine bloud, so many baskets of heads, so many peeces of rent bodies cast up and downe, and scattered all over the face of the earth. Never such a day; all Joels signes of a fearfull day, bloud, and fire and the vapour of Smoake. As he is a murtherer, so we see (in Marke) by his renting and tearing the poore possessed childe,

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he is cruell, and in this, all his cruelties should have met together. Pharoahs and Herods killing innocent and harmless children, yet, they spared the Mother: Esau's cruelty, smiting mother, children and all. Nebuzaradens (?) not sparing the King, nor his Lord: Hamans not sparing Hester, nor her Ladies. Edoms cruelty, not sparing the Sanctuary nor the wals, downe with them to the ground. His owne smiting the foure corners and bringing downe the house upon the heads of Jobs children. Put to all the cruelties, in Jeremies Lamentations, the not honouring the faces of Nobles, Priests, Judges, the making so many widowes nd orphans; the voice in Rama of Rachel comfortlesse. Cruelty, more cruell to them, it spared and left behind, than to those, it took away. It yrketh me to stand repeating these; That every age, or land, but that our age, and this land should foster or breed such monsters!

That you may know it for that perfectly, consider but the wickedness of it, as it were in full opposition to God, and you must needs say, it could not be His doing: God forbid (saith Abraham) thou shouldest destroy the righteous with the wicked. Kill not Dam and young ones both (faith Moses in the Law.) You shall not touch mine Annointed (faith God in the Psalmes.) You shall not pull up the good corne, rather let the tares stand (saith CHRIST in the Gospell.) You shall not doe evil that good may come of it. (saith Paul in his Epistles.) But, here is Satan flat contrary, in despite of Law, Prophets, Psalme, Epistle and Gospell. Hoc est Christum cum Paule conculare, to throw downe Abraham and Moses, and David, and Paul, and CHRIST, and GOD, and all, and trample upon them all.

One more yet: That this abominasien of desolation (so calleth Daniel, so calleth our Saviour, the uttermost extremity of all that bad is. so may we this truly) that this abomination of desolation tooke up his standing in the holy place.

1. An abomination: so it is, abhorred of all flesh, hatred and detested of all, that but heare it named: yea, they themselves say, they should have abhorred it, if it had taken effect. It is an abomination.

2. Every abomination doth not forthwith make desolate. This had. If ever a desolate kingdome upon earth, such had this beene, after that terrible blow. Neither root nor branch left, all swept away. Strangers called in, murtherers exalted; the very dissolution and desolation of all ensued.

3. But this, that this so abominable and desolatory a plot, stood in the holy place, this is the pitch of all. For, there it stood, and thence it came abroad. Undertaken with an holy oath, bound with the holy Sacrament (that must needs be in a holy place) warranted for a holy Act, tending to the advancement of a holy Religion, and by holy persons, called by a most holy name, the name of Jesus. That these holy religious persons, even the chiefe of all religious persons (the Jesuites) gave not onely absolution, but resolution, that all this was well done; that it was by them justified as lawfull, sanctified as meritorious, and should have been glorified (but it wants glorifying, because the event failed, that is the griefe, if it had not glorified) long yer this, and canonized, as a very good and holy act, and we had had orations out of the Conclave in commendation of it. (Now I think, we shall hare no more of it.) These good Fathers they were Davids bees here, came hither, only to bring us honey, right honey they, not to sting anybody:

or (as in the XXII. verse) they (as builders) came into the land, only for edification, not to pull down, or to destroy any thing. We see their practice, they begun with rejecting this Stone, as one that favoured Hereticks at least, and therefore excommunicate, and therefore deposed, and therefore exposed, to any that could handle a spade well, to make a mine to blow him up, Him, and all his Estates with him to attend him: (The corner Stone being gone, the walls must needs follow.) But then, this shrining it (such an abomination) setting it in the holy place, so oughly and odious, making such a treason as this a religious, missal, sacramental treason; hallowing it with orison, oath and Eucharist, this passeth all the rest. I say no more, but as our SAVIOUR concludeth, when you see such abominations so standing, qui legit intelligat, nay qui videt. God send them, that (not read of it, but) see it, and had like to have smelt of it, to learne that, they should by it: and so I leave it.

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Tell me now if this were not His doing, and if it should not have beene a day of His making, the Devils owne making.

This should have beene done; this, the danger: what was done. This , the factum fuisset, what the factum est? All these were undone, and blowen over, all the undermining dissappointed; all this murder, and crueltie, and desolation defeated. The mine is discovered, the snare is broken and we are delivered. All these, the King, Queene, Prince, Nobles, Bishops, Judges, both Houses alive, all: not a haire of any of their heads perished; not so much as the smell of fire on any their garments. Give thankes o Israel, unto the Lord thy God in the congregation from the bottome of their heart; here is little Benjamin thy ruler, the Princes of Juda &c. that they are here and do see them here and that the Stone these Builders refused, is still the Head-stone of the corner. That, should have beene done; this, was done: and we all, that are here this day, are witness of it; Witness above all exception of this factum est.

But by whom, whose doing? Truly, not mans doing this; it was the Lords. A Demone factum est illud, or fictum est illud. It was the Devils doing, or devising. (the plot) A Domino factum est hoc, This was God's doing (the deliverance.) The blow was the Devils. The ward was Gods. Not man, but the Devill, devised it: Not man, but God defeated it. He, that sate in heaven all this while, and from hence looked downe and saw all this doing of the devill and his lims, in that mercy of his, which is over all his works, to save the effusion of so much blood, to preserve the soules of so many innocents, to keep this Land from so foule a confusion, to shew still some token, some sensible token upon us for good, that they which hate us may see it, and be ashamed; but especially, that that, was so lately united, might not so soone be dissolved, He tooke the matter into his owne hand. And, if ever God shewed, that He had a hooke in the Leviathans nose, that the Devil can go no further than his chaine, if ever that thre is in him more power to help, than in Sathan to hurt; in this, he did it. And , as the devils clawes to be seene in the former; so God's right hand, in this mighty thinkg ( He brought to passe) and all the fingers of it.

1. To shew it was He. He held his peace and kept silence, sat still, and let it go on, till it came neere, even to the very period, to the day of the lot; so neere, that wee may trruly say (with King David) as the Lord liveth, uno tantum gradu, nos morsque dividimur, there was but a step between death and us. We were upon the point of going to the hill, all was prepared, the traine, the match, the fire,wood, and all, and we ready to be the sacrifice, and even then and there, In monte providebat Dominus, God provided for our safety, even in that very place, where we should have been the burnt offering; from heaven, stayed the blow. It was the Lords doing.

2. When treachery hath his course like water, and creepes along like a snail (it is the fiftie eight Psalme) then to make it like the untimely birth of a woman, never to see the sun (not, as in this, arserunt sicut ignis in spinis, but was a blaze, as in a bush of thornes:nay, if it come so far, it had gone wrong with us:) but, as in that, priusquam intelligerent spine, or even the thornes gate heat, or the powder, fire;) then, saith he there, dicit homo,Utique est Deus, Men shal say, verily, there is a God, and this was His doing.

3. And not only, that it was bewrayed, but that he made them the bewrayers of it themselves, and even according to the place (Eccl. 10.) made things with feathers to disclose it: When (as in Psalme 64.) their owne tongues (or, which is all one, their owne pens) make them to fall: all that consider it, shall be amazed; and then all men shall say, This hath God done; for they shall perceive it plaine, it is His worke. They shall be changed in confession, they shall sweare, they shall take the Sacrament not to doe it, and yet, contrary to all this, it shall come out by themselves. Was not this Gods doing?

4. Yet further, to shew it was so: This which was written, was so written, as diverse of profound wisdome, knew not what to make of it. But then commeth God againe (God most certainly) and (as in the Prov. 1610.) puts (hebrew,) a very divination, a very

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oracle, in the Kings lips, and his mouth missed not the matter; made him, as Joseph, the revealer of secrets, to read the riddle: giving him wisdome to make both explication, what they would doe and application, where it was they would doe it. This was God certainly. This, Pharaoh would say, none could, unless he were filled with the Spirit of the holy God. It was A domino factum.

5. Lastly, as that, when it was come forth they were not reclaimed, not then when they saw, the hand of God was gone out against them, and that it was even God they strove withall: no, but even then, from hidden treacherie, fell to open rebellion and even perished in it (if God shewed not a miracle of his mercie on them) perished there, and perished eternally: as this I say did (that it was factum a Demone, who never left them, till he had brought them thither) So, that (before they came thither) God cast their owne powder in their faces, poudered them and disfigured them with it. and that their quarters stand now in pieces, as they meant, ours should: It is the case of the CIX. Psalme, And hereby shall they know, that is in thy hand, and then the Lord hast done it. How? in that, they are thus cloathed with their owne shame, and even covered with their owne confusion; that they fall as fast as they rise; are still confounded, and still thy servants rejoyce. These five (as prints) shew, it was God's hand. It was the Lord, that made the day, it was the day, that the Lord made. Be thou exalted Lord in thine own strength. It was thy right hand, that brought this mighty thing to passe.

This will not serve the turne. His doing makes it not the Day. His doing a miracle, that makes it, and that is too. I take no thought, to prove this point: by the Law, the Prophets, the Gospell. To put them to it; Moses: enquire now of the dayes, that were before us, since the day that God created man upon the earth, and aaske from one end of heaven to the other, if there came to passe such a thing as this, whether any such like thing have been heard, and, if we cannot suit it or for such another by it, we must needs yeeld it for one. By the Prophets, Goe to the isles and behold, send to Kedar and take diligent heed, and see if you can possibly finde the like: if not, confesse it for mervailous. Come hither (saith David) and behold, how marvelous God is! and what is that? that such, as are rebellious, are not able to exalt themselves. We need not goe so farre, we have it here to see. We may say to him, Come hither. By the Gospell: for, so doe they (there) acknowledge our Saviours for miracles: Sure we have seene strange things today. We never saw it on this fashion. The like was never seen in Israel. Therefore marvailous certinly. It is now no miracle, no strange thing, to have a King delivered: every othere yeare, we see it, and therefore wonder not at it. But to see King, Queene, their seede and all their estates delivered, that is mirabile, that is a new thing created on the earth, I conclude: as, that was the Divels doing, and was monstrous in our eyes. so, this is God's doing, and it is marvellous in our eyes. And againe, upon all these markes, that, as this was a day, the divell would have marred, so this is a day, that the Lord made.

Mervailous then it is: yet hath it not (as we say) his full Christendome, unlesse it be so in our eyes. For the time it was, and that (of the Psalme) fits us well, When God (saith he) turned away the captivitie (say we, the destruction) of his people; then were wee like to them that dreame. No man, but stood in a maze, as if he knew not well, whether he saw it making or reams of it, it was so strange.

And let me goe further. Not, in ours only for (sure I am) that which followeth there, is true (Then said they, inter Gentes) of other nations; The Lord hath done great things for them: and we are too blame, if we answer them not, with the Eccho there following, Yea indeed, the Lord hath done great things for us. for which wee have cause to rejoice. If strangers think it strange, and say, and write, A feculo inauditum, The like was never heard before. If it were marvellous in their eyes, It were very mervaileus if it should not be so, in our eyes too.

I adde, they that were in (?) of it, in their eyes, it is so; and that of the

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Apostle, may aptly be applied to them. Behold ye despisers, and wonder, and vanish, for God hath wrought a work in your dayes, a work which you yourselves that were the doers, shall scarce believe, when it shall be told that even astonished themselves, to see it goe forward so long, and suddenly cast down. Nay, I goe further, to make it a miracle consummate. I doubt not, but it was strange news, even in Hell itself, insomuch as even that place had never hatched the like monster before. You see the welcome they in Hell gave him of Assur, (Esay. 1`4.) What art thou come, that makest the earth to tremble, and dost shake whole kingdomes? And yet it is well known all his shaking was but in a metaphore. He never made it shake actually as these would have done: and therefore this of greater admiration, and (I doubt not, but) more wonderful in their eyes. And ours are very dimme, if in all other it be, and be not so in ours.

Then if such dayes there be, if this of ours be one of them, if the fore-part of the verse doe, then must the latter also belong to us: If this, the day, the Lord hath made then, this, the day, wherein we to rejoyce. When He makes, we to make; and our rejoycing in it, is our making of it.

To rejoyce, no hard request, nor heavie yoke, let it not be grievous to us. We love to doe it, we seek all meanes to doe it in all cases else: then to assay to doe it here. This (sure) the Prophet would not require nor make it the office of the day, but that upon such dayes, God himselfe cals us to joy.

And even as, when God calleth us to mourning, by black dayes, of famine or warre, or the like; then to fall to feasting or revelling, is that that highly displeaseth God: so, when God, by good dayes, calleth us to joy; then to droope, and not to accommodate our selves to seasons of his sending, is that which pleases him never a whit.

What? (saith Nehemias, upon such a blessed day as this) Droope you today? No-lite, at no hand to doe it, Dies enim festus est, it is a festival day: what then? why it is essential, it is the nature of every Feast (saith God in His Law) omnio-gaudere, by any meanes in any wise therein to rejoyce. And Nehemias promise is to incourage us, that if the strength of the Lord bee our joy, the very joy of the Lord shall be our strength.

To conclude: Sure I am, that if the plot had prevailed, it would have beene an high Feast in Gath and a day of Jubilee in Ascalon; The daughters of the uncircumcised would have made it a day in triumph. Let us not be behind them then, but shew as much joy for our saving, as they would certainly have done, for our perishing.

Exultemus & Laetemur. God loveth our joy should be full; it is not full, except we have both these, the body (as it were) and the soule of joy: the joy outward of the body, and the gladnesse inward of the soule. (So much doe the two words signifie, in all the three tongues.) Both he will have: for; if one be wanting, it is but semiplenum; halfe full.

And he beginneth with Exultemus, the outward: not to ourselves within, which we call gaudere in sinu, joy of the bosome but such, so exuberant, as the streames of it may overflow, and the beames of it shine and shew forth, in an outward sensible exultation. It is a day, so would he have us rejoyce, that, as by day-light it might be seene in our face, habit and gesture: Seene and heard both: Therefore hee faith (at the 15, verse.) the voice of joy is in the dwellings of the righteous. And in the dwelling it doth well: But yet, that would not serve his turne; but, open me (saith he at the 19. verse) the gates of righteousnesse, that is, the Church-doore (his house would not hold him) thither will I go in, and there, in the congregation, in the great congregation, give thanks to the Lord. And that so great a congregation, that it may constituere diem solemnem in condensis usque ad Cornua altaris, that they may stand so thicke in the Church, as fill it from the entrie of the doore, to the very edge of the Altar.

This same joy that is neither seene nor heard, there is some leven of malignitie in it; he cannot skill of it. He will have it seene in the countenance, heard in the voice; not only

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preaching, but singing forth His praise. And that, not with voices alone, but with instruments, and not instruments of the Quire alone, but instrument of the steeple too, bels and all, that so it may be Hosanna in altissimus in the very highest key we have. This for exultemus.

But, many a close Hypocrite may do all this, and many a counterfeit Schemei and Sheba did all this, to David; got them a fleering forced countenance, taken-on joy. And there fore the other, that God will have his joy, not be the joy of the countenance alone, a cleere face and a cloudy overcast heart, he will have the gladnesse of the heart too, of the inner man: Cor meum & caro mee; the heart, as well as the flesh, to be joyfull. The joy of the soule is the soul of joy, not a body without a soul, which is but a carcase. Strange children may (and will) dissemble with me (saith the Psalme 18.44) dissemble a gladnesse, for feare of being noted and yet within, in heart, you wot what. But , God calleth for his defontibus Israel, which we read, from the ground of the heart. That is (indeed) the true fountaine of joy, that our lips may be faire, when we sing unto Him, and so may our soule which he hath delivered. Nay, he delivered both: and therefore, both the body to rejoyce, and the soul to be glad. This doth Laetemur adde, to exaultemus.

If then we be agreed that we will doe both, I come to the last, how to order our joy, that it may please Him, for whom it is undertaken. It is not every joy, that He liketh. Merry they were, and joyfull (they thought) that kept their Kings day (Hos. 7.) by taking in boule after boule till they were sick again. So they that Malachi speaks of, there came nothing of their feasts but dung (beare with it, it is the Holy Ghost his own terme) that is, all in the bellie and bellie-cheere. So they, that sate downe to eat and drink and rose up to play, and there was all, that is the Calves feast, a Calfe can do as much. But with none of these was God pleased, and as good no joy, as not to the purpose, as not to please him.

That it may be to the purpose, that God may take pleasure in it, it must begin at Hosanna, at Aperite mihi porta Iusitia, at the Temple doore, there must it goe in, it must blesse, and be blessed in the house of the Lord. I will first make joyful in my house of Prayer (it is God by Esay: )the streame of our joy, must come from the spring head of Religion.

Well then, to the Church we are come. So far onward. When we are there, what is to be done? Somewhat we must say, we must not stand mute. There to stand still, that, the Prophet cannot skill of. That then, we may (there) say something, hee here frames, he here endites a versicle, which after grew into such request, as no feast ever without it, without an Hosanna: it grew so familiar, as the very children were perfect in it. The summe and substance whereof (briefly) is no more, but (which we all desire) that God would still save, still prosper, still bless him that in His name, is come unto us (that is) King David himselfe, whom all in the house and all of the House of the Lord blesse in His name.

And to very good purpose doth he this for, joy hath no fault, but that it is too short, it will not last, it will be taken from us too soone. It is ever a barre, in all joy, tolletur a vebis, subject to the worme, that Jonas gourd was. It standeth us therefore in hand, to begin with Hosanna, so to joy, as that we may long joy to pray for the continuance, that it bee not taken from us: ever remembering, the true temper of joy, is (exultate in tremere) not without the mixture of some feare. For, this day, wee see what it is, a joyfull day: we knew not (saith Salemon) what the next day will be and if not what the next day, what the next yeare much lesse. What will come, we know not; what our sinnes call for to come, that wee know; even that God should call to judgement, if not by fire, by somewhat else. If it be but for this, it concerns us neerly, to say our Hosanna, that the next yeare be as this. It is our wisedome therefore, to make the meanes, for the continuance of it, that God would still stablish the good worke, He this day wrought in us; still bless us, with the continuance of the same blessings.

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And this that we may doe, not faintly but cheerefully with the lifting up of our soules therefore, as far as art or spirit can doe it, he hath quickened his Hosanna, that he may put spirit and life in us to follow him in it, with all fervor and affection: foure times twice with Anna, and twice with Nr, either of them before, and after, but eightwords, and foure of them interjections: all to make it passionate, and that, so as (in the original) nothing can be devised more forcible, and so, as it is hard, in any other tongue, to expresse it; which made the Evangelist let it alone, and retaine the Hebrew word still. But, this, as neere as I can it soundeth. Now good Lord save us yet still now good Lord prosper us yet still. Be to us as last yeare, so this, and all the yeares to come, Jesus a Saviour, yesterday and today and the same for ever.

And three things doth he thus earnestly pray for, and teacheth us to do the like.

1. to save, 2. prosper, and 3. blesse

1 To save: that should be first with us; it is commonly last. We have least sense of our soules. To save us, with the true saving health; (it is a word whereof our Saviour Jesus hath His name) it importeth the salvation of the Soule; properly to that it belongeth, and hath joyned to it Hosanna in the Gospell (Hosanna in excelsis) to shew it is an high and heavenly salvation.

2. Then, to prosper, If He but grant us the former alone, to have our soules saved though without prosperitie, though with the dayes of adversity, it is sors sanctorum, the lot of many a Saint of his, of farre more worth than we: Even so, we are bound, to thanke Him, if even so, we may be but saved. But, if he adde also prosperitie of the outward, to the saving of the inward man, that not so much as a leafe of us shall wither, but looke what we doe shall prosper, and that, whasoever men of evil counsels do, shall not prosper against us,. if He not onely vouchsafe us Hosanna in excelsis, but Hosanna de profundis too, from deepe cellers, deepe vaults, those that dig deepe to undermine our prosperitie, If he adde the shadow of his wings, to shelter us from perils, to the light of his countenance to save us from our sins, then have we great cause to rejoyce yet more and, both with exultemus from without, and laetemur from within, to magnifie his mercie, and to say with the Prophet, Praised be the Lord, that ( not only taketh care for the safetie, but taketh pleasure in the prosperitie of his servants.

3. Lastly, because both these and one and the other, our future salvation, by the continuance of His Religion and truth among us, and our present prosperitie (like two wals) meet upon the head-stone of the corner, depend both, first, upon the name of the Lord, and next upon him, that in his name, and with his name, is come unto us (that is) the King. (So, do both the Evangelists S. Luke and S. John supply, and, where we read, Blessed be he, there they read Blessed be the King that commeth, so that neither of them sure, unlesse he be safe, that he would blesse him, and make him blest, that in His blessed name, is come amongst us. The building will be as mount Sion, so the corner stone be fast; so the two walls, that meet, never fall asunder. If otherwise: but I will not so much as put the case but as we pray, so trust, it shall never be removed, but stand tall for ever.

This then we all with that are now in House of the Lord, and we that are of the houe of the Lord, do now and ever, in the Temple and out of it, morning and evening, night and day, wish and pray both, that he would continue forth his goodnesse, and blesse with length of dayes, with strength of health, with increase of all honour, and happinesse, with terror in the eyes of his enemies, with grace in the eyes of his subjects, with whatsoever David, or Salomon or any King, that ever was happie, was blessed with; Him, that in the Name of the Lord is come to us, and hath now these foure years stayed with us, that he may be blessed in that name, wherein he is come, and by the Lord, in whose Name he is come, many and many yeares yet to come.

And, when we have put this incense in our phials, and bound this sacrifice with cords to the altar fast, we blesse you and dismisse you, to eat your bread with joy, and to drink your wine with a cheerfull heart: for God accepteth your work, your joy shall please Him: this Hosanna shall sanctifie all the joy, shall follow it.

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To end then. This Day, which the Lord hath thus made fo marvellously, so marvillously, and mercifully, let us rejoyce in the Maker, for the making of it, by His doing on it that deed, that is so marvellous in our eyes, in all eyes returning to the beginning of the Psalme, and saying with the Prophet: O give thanks to the Lord, for he is gracious, &c Let Israel, let the house of Aron, yea, let all that feare the Lord, cofesses that His mercie endureth for ever.

Who only doth great wonders. Who remembered us when we were in danger, and hath delivered us from our enemies, with a mightie hand and stretched out arme. And, as for them, hath turned their device upon their owne head. And hath made this day, to us a day of joy and gladnesse. To this God of Gods, the Lord of heaven, glorious in holinesse, fearefull in power, doing wonders, be, &c.

 

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Westminster Abbey - Sermon 2003

15th Sunday after Trinity
Sermon at Matins, Sunday September 28th
by Canon David Hutt

Last week, on Thursday the 25th September, the Abbey calendar noted the commemoration of Lancelot Andrewes.

Among a number of significant appointments he became Dean of Westminster in July 1601. Andrewes was born in 1555 six years after the publication of the first English prayer book in 1549. This was the first attempt to sketch out a via media, (a ‘middle way’) which was reinvented during 1558 and 1559 by the government of Elizabeth the first after a period of extremes which marked the reign of Queen Mary.

Lancelot Andrewes was educated at Merchant Taylors School and Pembroke Hall, Cambridge where he was elected Fellow in 1576. He was a scholar of considerable eminence who is reputed to have mastered no fewer than fifteen languages. He was to become a Prebendary of St Paul’s Cathedral where his remarkable preaching earned him a widespread reputation. Queen Elizabeth offered him two Bishoprics, those of Salisbury and Ely, both of which he declined. He subsequently enjoyed the patronage of King James I with the result that his rise was accelerated, not to say meteoric, becoming Bishop of Chichester in 1605, of Ely in 1609 and Winchester in 1619. He died at Winchester House, Southwark, on the 25th September 1626 and was buried in what is now Southwark Cathedral nearby.

Throughout his distinguished career he lived the life of a scholar. A biography of Andrewes by Henry Isaacson records a typical day in the life of “The Reverend Prelate”.

“His private devotions finished, to the time he was called to dinner, which, by his own order, was not until 12 noon at the soonest, he kept close at his book and would not be interrupted by any that came to speak with him, or upon any occasion, public prayer excepted. Insomuch that he would be so displeased with scholars that attempted to speak with him in a morning, that he would say “he doubted they were no true scholar that came to speak with him before noonday.”

Among the more bizarre events in his lifetime was his appointment to the commission examining George Abbott, Archbishop of Canterbury, who had accidentally shot a gamekeeper while out hunting. Reprieved from censure by the casting vote of King James the sporty Archbishop survived the contemporary equivalent of “hounding by the tabloids” and went on to crown King Charles I.

History records that his few years at the Abbey were relatively successful. He was popular, unstuffy and apparently a good judge of character in the appointment of four first-class men as Prebendaries installed during his reign. A disciplinarian, he turned his attention to the Petty Canons or singing men. Until his arrival they had largely pleased themselves about the regularity of their attendance in choir “by means whereof divers tymes greate inconvenience hathe insewed, all the voyces of one part being absent at once”. There was some acrimonious correspondence between the High Steward, Sir Robert Cecil, and the Dean and Chapter over a certain John Heathman who desired “a singing-mansplace” and “emoluments” but who objected to having to perform any duties whatsoever. Not surprisingly, the Chapter refused to sanction this appointment since, as they pointed out, not only would the choir be “impaired with the discontinuance of any voice” but others might well be tempted to follow his example.

In 1603 bubonic plague raged in London resulting in more than 33,500 deaths. Dean Andrewes wisely decamped to the relative safety of Chiswick but he returned in time to assist at the Coronation of James and his Queen which, shorn of the usual procession, took place on the 25 July 1603. Immediately afterwards he fled back to his bolthole and a Chapter Minute of the 27th July 1603 records: “the College shall break up and ye Commons be dissolved from tomorrow at Night”. The dissolution was to continue until the 7 October or to such time “as it shall please God to cease his visitation

Back once again at Westminster after an exile lasting more than four months Andrewes set about a programme of restoration and repair to the fabric. “Item”, ran a Chapter minute of the 3rd September 1603 “that provision be made of lead, stone, timber and other necessaries towards the reparations of the fabricke of the church yearely to the value of £40, layd up in the storehouse, not to be imployed without consent of the Dean.” When he resigned his office in 1605 Andrewes was judged to have “left a place truly collegiate in all respects both within and without, free from debts, from encroachments and evil customs”. The truth of this was only partial. He did indeed leave the Abbey free of debt and added considerably to the amenities of the Deanery; but other collegiate buildings were bequeathed to his successor in a sad state of decay. Furthermore he fully expected the Chapter to compensate him for his “stuffe” at Westminster and Chiswick, besides paying for the Wainscotting that he had installed in the Dean’s Lodgings.

Andrewes’ time at the Abbey is chiefly remembered for the great interest he took in Westminster School - insisting on strict discipline and personally supervising the studies of the scholars. His reign was likewise noteworthy for the commencement of a tradition whereby the Dean regularly preached a sermon at Court on Good Friday.

His stature as a scholar led him to be appointed one of the translators of the authorised version of the Bible. He was persistent in upholding the need for order in public worship and maintained a high view of the Episcopate. That the Church of England was part of the “One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church” he had no doubt.

Biographers have recorded a certain timidity of temperament and an inability to express criticism of the reigning monarch even when censure was appropriate. Obliquely, he challenged the worldliness and corruption of the court of King James through his sermons and also in his own profound personal piety.

The historian Florence Higham has remarked:

To him tranquillity and order in rule, in worship and belief were God’s will for his Holy Church and this was the end he strove to foster, alike in his writing and Episcopal duties and in the witness of his own disciplined life grounded firmly on the daily practice of prayer.

It is noteworthy that apart from his studies and tasks as a Bishop he is reputed to have spent five hours a day in prayer at his devotions.

Given the distance of time and the contradictions and complexities of another culture so far distant from us, what are we to make of Lancelot Andrewes? Surely a rare disciplined and committed Christian especially blessed with a quality of humility. On becoming Bishop of Chichester he caused to be engraved around his Episcopal seal words attributed to St Paul. “And who is sufficient for these things?” (2cor 2v16). Of his published works the Preces Privatae or Private Prayers is now recognised as one of the great Anglican devotional treatises of the 17th Century reflecting his simple but profound faith in God and Jesus Christ as his Saviour.

He was never really at home in the Courts of Kings and was unwilling to face confrontation well knowing the consequences of open criticism and conflict. We must recall that the year of his birth witnessed many Protestant martyrdoms under Queen Mary.

He displayed a real concern for the poor and needy. At his own desire his funeral cortege was followed by seventy one old people representing the years of his age, all clad in new warm mourning gowns. In his will he provided for the yearly legacy of £25 to be distributed on mid-summer’s day amongst seven “poore, fatherless children”; £25 to be distributed on the 3rd January each year to “aged widows”; £25 to be allocated during the course of Holy Week to seven prisoners in the nearby clink/prison. Further monies were provided for the relief of old and retired seafarers.

There can be no doubt that he did not spare himself – in a word “he worked hard” and used the God-given day to the greatest advantage.

We must be grateful for his insistence that “all things shall be done decently and in order”. Much of what is highly regarded at the Abbey he once served in terms of music, liturgy and conduct of services follows from this principle. It remains a true legacy for which we must be grateful. Frequently taken for granted such careful ordering nevertheless provides a threshold for all to experience the presence of God and a window through which heaven may be glimpsed.

May his memory be blessed and his soul rest in peace. Amen.

1448

 

 

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