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I verily think, with Hilary, that these two are pointed at as the forerunners of the second coming of Christ, as now they were the foretellers of his departure: neither doubt I, that these are the Two Witnesses, which are alluded to in the Apocalypse; howsoever divers of the Fathers have thrust Enoch into the place of Moses. Look upon the place, Apoc. xi. 5, 6. Who but Elias can be he, of whom is said, If any man will hurt him, fire proceedeth out of his mouth, and devoureth his enemies, alluding to 2 Kings i.? Who but Elias, of whom is said, He hath power to shut the heaven, that it rain not in the days of his prophesying, alluding to 1 Kings xviii? Who but Moses, of whom it is said, He hath power to turn the waters into blood, and smite the earth with all manner of plagues, alluding to Exod. vii, and viii? But take me aright: let me not seem a friend to the publicans of Rome, an abettor of those alcoran-like fables of our popish doctors, who, not seeing the wood for trees, do hærere in cortice, "stick in the bark," taking all concerning that Antichrist according to the letter. Odi, & arceo. So shall Moses and Elias come again in those Witnesses, as Elias is already come in John Baptist: their spirits shall be in these Witnesses, whose bodies and spirits were witnesses, both of the present glory and future passion of Christ.

Doubtless, many thousand angels saw this sight, and were not seen; these two both saw and were seen. Oh how great a happiness was it for these two great prophets, in their glorified flesh to see their glorified Saviour, who before his Incarnation had spoken to them! to speak to that Man God, of whom they were glorified, and to become prophets not to men, but to God! And if Moses's face so shone before, when he spoke to him without a body in Mount Sinai, in the midst of the flames and clouds; how did it shine now, when himself glorified, speaks to him a man, in Tabor, in light and majesty! Elias hid his face before with a mantle, when he passed by him in the rock; now with open face he beholds him present, and in his own glory adores his.

Let that impudent Marcion, who ascribes the Law and Prophets to another God, and devises a hostility betwixt Christ and them, be ashamed to see Moses and Elias, not only in colloquio, but in consortio claritatis; not only " in conference," but "in a partnership of brightness," as Tertullian speaks, with Christ; whom if he had misliked, he had his choice of all the quire of heaven; and now chusing them, why were they not in sordibus & tenebris, “in rags and darkness?" Sic inalienos demonstrat illos, dum secum habet; sic relinquendos docet, quos sibi jungit; sic destruit, quos de radiis suis exstruit: "So doth he shew them far from strangeness to him, whom he hath with him; so doth he teach them to be forsaken, whom he joins with himself; so doth he destroy those, whom he graces with his beams of glory;" saith that Father.

His act verifies his word. Think not, that I come to destroy the Law or the Prophets; I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil them, Matt. v. 17. Oh what consolation, what confirmation was this to the disciples, to see such examples of their future

glory! such witnesses and adorers of the eternal Deity of their Master! They saw in Moses and Elias, what they themselves should be. How could they ever fear to be miserable, that saw such precedents of their ensuing glory? how could they fear to die, that saw in others the happiness of their own change?

The rich Glutton pleads with Abraham, that if one came to them from the dead, they will amend: Abraham answers, They have Moses and the Prophets, let them hear them. Behold, here is both Moses and the prophets; and these too come from the dead: how can we now but be persuaded of the happy state of another world, unless we will make ourselves worse than the damned? See and consider, that the saints of God are not lost, but departed; gone into a far country with their Master, to return again richer and better than they went.

Lest we should think this the condition of Elias only, that was rapt into heaven, see here Moses matched with him, that died and was buried.

And is this the state of these two saints alone? Shall none be seen with him in the Tabor of Heaven, but those, which have seen him in Horeb and Carmel? O thou weak Christian, was only one or two limbs of Christ's body glorious in the Transfiguration, or the whole? He is the Head, we are the members. If Moses and Elias were more excellent parts, tongue, or hand; let us be but heels or toes, his body is not perfect in glory without ours. When Christ, which is our life, shall appear, then shall we also appear with him in glory, Col. iii. 4. How truly may we say to death, Rejoice not mine enemy, though I fall, yet shall I rise, yea I shall rise in falling? We shall not all sleep, we shall be changed, saith Saint Paul to his Thessalonians. Elias was changed, Moses slept ; both appeared: to teach us, that neither our sleep nor change can keep us from appearing with him. When therefore thou shalt receive the sentence of death on Mount Nebo, or when the fiery chariot shall come and sweep thee from this vale of mortality, remember thy glorious re-apparition with thy Saviour, and thou canst not but be comforted, and cheerfully triumph over that last enemy; outfacing those terrors, with the assurance of a blessed Resurrection to glory. To the which, &c.

Matthew xvii. Mark ix. Luke ix.

THE SECOND PART OF THE MEDITATIONS UPON THE TRANSFIGURATION OF CHRIST.

IN A SERMON

PREACHED AT WHITEHALL, BEFORE KING JAMES, OF BLESSED MEMORY.

IT falls out with this discourse, as with Mount Tabor itself; that it is more easily climbed with the eye, than with the foot: if we may not rather say of it, as Josephus did of Sinai, that it doth not only

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ascensus hominum, but aspectus fatigare; "weary not only the steps but the very sight of men.”

We had thought not to spend many breaths in the skirts of the hill, the Circumstances; and it hath cost us one hour's journey already and we were glad to rest us, ere we can have left them below us. One pause more, I hope, will overcome them, and set us on the top.

No Circumstance remains undiscussed, but this one, What Moses and Elias did with Christ in their apparition. For they were not, as some sleepy attendants, like the three disciples in the begin ning, to be there and see nothing; nor, as some silent specta tors, mute witnesses, to see and say nothing: but, as if their glory had no whit changed their profession, they are prophets still, and foretold his departure, as St. Luke tells us: foretold; not to him, which knew it before, yea which told it them; they could not have known it but from him; he was & λoyos, the Word of his Father: they told but that, which he before had told his disciples; and now these heavenly witnesses tell it over again, for confirmation. Like as John Baptist knew Christ before; he was vor clamantis, the voice of a cryer, the other Verbum Patris, the Word of his Father. There is great affinity betwixt vor and verbum; yea, this voice had uttered itself clearly, Ecce Agnus Dei, Behold the Lamb of God: yet he sends his disciples, with an, drt thou he? that be might confirm to them by him, that which he both knew and had said of him. So our Saviour follows his forerunner in this, that what he knew and had told his disciples, the other Elias, the typical John Baptist, and Moses must make good to their belief.

This εξοδος departure of Christ was σκληρος λογος, a word both hard and harsh; hard to believe, and harsh in believing. The disciples thought of nothing but a kingdom; a kingdom restored magnificently, interminably: and two of these three witnesses had so swallowed this hope, that they had put in for places in the state, to be his chief peers. How could they think of a parting? The Throne of David did so fill their eyes, that they could not see his Cross and if they must let down this pill, how bitter must it needs be! His presence was their joy and life; it was their death, to think of his loss. Now therefore, that they might see that his suf ferings and death were not of any sudden impotence, but predetermined in heaven and revealed to the saints, two of the most noted saints in heaven shall second the news of his departure; and that, in the midst of his Transfiguration: that they could not chuse but think, "He, that can be thus happy, needs not be miserable; that Passion, which he will undergo, is not out of weakness, but out of love."

It is wittily noted by that sweet Chrysostom, that Christ never lightly spake of his Passion, but immediately before and after he did some great miracle: and here answerably, in the midst of his miraculous Transfiguration, the two saints speak of his Passion. A strange opportunity! In his highest exaltation to speak of his sufferings; to talk of Calvary in Tabor; when his head shone with

glory, to tell him how it must bleed with thorns; when his face shone like the sun, to tell him it must be blubbered and spat upon; when his garments glistered with that celestial brightness, to tell him they must be stripped and divided; when he was adored by the saints of heaven, to tell him how he must be scorned by the basest of men; when he was seen between two saints, to tell him how he must be seen between two malefactors: in a word, in the midst of his Divine Majesty, to tell him of his shame; and whilst he was transfigured in the Mount, to tell him how he must be disfigured upon the Cross! Yet, these two heavenly prophets found this the fittest time for this discourse; rather chusing to speak of his sufferings in the height of his glory, than of his glory after his sufferings.

It is most seasonable, in our best to think of our worst estate : for both that thought will be best digested, when we are well; and that change will be best prepared for, when we are the furthest from it. You would perhaps think it unseasonable for me, in the midst of all your court-jollity to tell you of the days of mourning; and, with that great king, to serve in a death's-head amongst your royal dishes, to shew your coffins in the midst of your triumphs: yet these precedents above exception shew me, that no time is so fit as this. Let me therefore say to you, with the Psalmist, I have said, ye are gods: if ye were transfigured in Tabor, could ye be more ? but ye shall die like men: there is your odos. It was a worthy and witty note of Jerome, that, amongst all trees, the cedars are bidden to praise God, which are the tallest; and yet, Dies Domini super omnes cedros Libani, Isa. ii. 12, 13. Ye gallants, whom a little yellow earth and the webs of that curious worm have made gorgeous without and perhaps proud within, remember, that, ere long, as one worm decks you without, so another worm shall consume you within; and that both the earth that you prank up, and that earth wherewith you prank it, is running back into dust. Let not your high estate hide from you your fatal humiliation; let not your purples hide from you your winding-sheet: but, even on the top of Tabor, think of the depth of the grave: think of your departure from men, while ye are advanced above

men.

We are now ascended to the top of the hill. Let us therefore stand, and see, and wonder at this great sight: as Moses, to see the bush flaming, and not consumed; so we, to see the Humanity continuing itself in the midst of these beams of Glory.

Christ was ev poppy deλe, saith St. Paul, in the form of a servant; now, for the time, he was truly μelauogweis transformed: that there is no cause why Maldonat should so inveigh against some of ours, yea of his own, as Jansenius, who translates it transformation for what is the external form, but the figure? and their own Vulgar, as hotly as he takes it, reads it, Phil. ii. 7. pop dels, formam servi accipiens. There is no danger in this ambiguity. Not the substantial form, but the external fashion of Christ was changed. He baving three forms, as Bernard distinguishes,

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contemptam, splendidam, divinam, changeth 'here the first into the second.

This is one of the rarest occurrences, that ever befel the Saviour of the World. I am wont to reckon up these four principal wonders of his life, Incarnation, Temptation, Transfiguration, and Agony: the first, in the womb of the Virgin; the second, in the Wilderness; the third, in the Mount; the fourth, in the Garden: the first, that God should become man; the second, that God and man should be tempted and transported by Satan; the third, that man should be glorified upon earth; the last, that he, which was man and God should sweat blood under the sense of God's wrath for man. And all these either had the angels for witnesses, or the immediate voice of God. The first had angels singing; the se. cond, angels ministering; the third, the voice of God thundering; the fourth, the angels comforting: that it may be no wonder, the earth marvels at those things, whereat the angels of heaven stand amazed.

Bernard makes three kinds of wonderful changes: sublimitas in humilitatem," height to lowliness," when the Word took flesh; contemptibilitas in majestatem, when Christ transformed himself before his disciples; mutabilitas in eternitatem, when he rose again, and ascended to heaven to reign for ever. Ye see this is one of them; and as Tabor did rise out of the valley of Galilee, so this exaltation did rise out of the midst of Christ's humiliation.

Other marvels do increase his dejection, this only makes for his glory; and the glory of this is matchable with the humiliation of all the rest. That face, wherein before, saith Isaiah, there was no form, nor beauty, now shines as the sun. That face, which mea hid their faces from in contempt, now shines so, that mortal eyes could not chuse but hide themselves from the lustre of it, and immortal receive their beams from it. He had ever in vultu sidereum quiddam, as Jerome speaks, "a certain heavenly majesty and port in his countenance," which made his disciples follow him, at first sight; but now, here was the perfection of supercelestial brightness. It was a miracle in the three children, that they so were delivered from the flames, that their very garments smelt not of the fire it is no less miracle in Christ, that his very garments were dyed celestial, and did savour of his glory: like as Aaron was so anointed on his head and beard, that his skirts were all perfumed. His clothes therefore shined as snow, yea (that were but a waterish white) as light itself, saith St. Mark, and Matthew in the most Greek copies. That seamless coat, as it had no welt, so it had no spot. The King's Son is all fair, even without. O excellent glory of his Humanity! The best diamond or carbuncle is hid with a case; but this brightness pierceth through all his garments, and makes them lightsome in him, which use to conceal light in others. Herod put him on in mockage eσита λаμжрav, Luke xxiii. 15. not a white, but a bright robe, the ignorance whereof makes a shew of disparity in the Evangelists: but God the Father, to glorify him, clothes his very garments with heavenly splendour. Behold, thou

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