Set on the Great Pot.

A SERMON UPON Hospitality, Preach'd at a late Visitation at Tunbridg in Kent, On 2 KINGS IV. 38.

By H. C.

LONDON, Printed for the Sons of the Prophets. MDCXCIV.

To the Worshipful JOHN CORNWALLEYS, OF WINGFEILD, Esq One of their Majesties Justices of the Peace, and Deputy-Lieute­nant of the County of Suffolk; And the Most Virtuous Grace his Wife, The Author wisheth all Happiness here, and Eternal Glory hereafter.

I Read in the Holy Writ, that when St. Paul had refreshed himself at the House of Onesiphorus, he expressed his Thankfulness to him in this Prayer, The Lord have Mercy on the House of [Page iv] Onesiphorus: and not being content with that single Prayer, he publishes another in his Behalf, God grant that he may find Mercy at the last Day. He re­membred him in his Prayers, and pub­lickly acknowledged his Hospitality in most of his Epistles. In the like manner, I that have often refreshed my self at your Table, and have there been an Eye­witness of your Hospitality to others, what can I do less for your free and ge­nerous Entertainments, than become your Orator to God by my Prayers; your He­rald to the World, by dedicating this Sermon of Hospitality to you, to shew to the World I am none of those ungrateful Wretches that can receive a Kindness, and immediately forget it.

Yours, H. C.
2 KINGS IV. 38.

—And he said to his Servant, Set on the great Pot, and seethe Pottage for the Sons of the Prophets.

PErhaps the Repast that I am now about to deliver unto you may be thought too gross for some nicer Palates, and the Text now read too light and airy for so Reverend and Learned an Auditory: but if any think so, I shall not apolo­gize for my Text as long as I find it within the Verge of the Bible, and a Portion of Holy Writ: Neither shall I matter any that disgust the Entertain­ment, since 'tis the same that the Pro­phet Elishah affords his Guests, and they Sons of the Prophets, and Clergy-men too; and will you disdain what they ac­cepted of?

[Page 6]I shall not here stand upon criticizing, and tell you how the Words are in the Original, and read you the meaning in the Arabick, Chaldaic, and Syriac: this would argue much Vanity in me; and to you it would be superfluous, and bode no better than casting of Wa­ter into the Sea.

Neither shall I stand upon the literal Meaning of the Words, which every Cook better than my self knows; but my Design is to extract something spi­ritual from this corporal Viand, and present you with some Food for your Soul from this of the Body.

The Words express Elisha's Hospita­lity and frank Disposition to the Sons of the Prophets, and may afford us this useful Theorem.

That a kind and liberal Reception, nei­ther niggardly sordid, nor extrava­gantly profuse, first became the Sons of the Prophets.

Or else take the Meaning in these Words, viz.

[Page 7] That all Clergy men, especially the Eli­sha's of them, those Persons that Nature and Heaven have so liberal­ly bestowed their Favours upon, and loaded with Riches and Greatness, ought to be hospitable and charitable.

I am now to preach to a mix'd Con­gregation, made up of Clergy-men and Laymen: My Text, Janus like, hath two Faces; the first respects you my Brethren of the Clergy, the other of the Laity.

To you my Brethren of the Clergy that are this Day come to honour me with your Company, I preach up Ho­spitality, not only from the Example of Elisha, but from the Holy Word of God, which both commands and com­mends it to us.

To you of the Laity that are come with good and honest Hearts to hear my Doctrine, I preach up Justice, that you should be so just in paying your Tythes, that you may be hospitably [Page 8] and charitably received at your Mini­sters Houses; for if you withdraw their Dues, how can they perform their Du­ty? if you shut your Hands, how can they enlarge their Tables, and be given to Hospitality?

Now that Hospitality is a Duty in­joined on all Christians, and conse­quently on all the Preachers of that Do­ctrine, I'll prove by these three Argu­ments:

  • 1. From the Law of Nature.
  • 2. From the Scripture.
  • 3. From the Examples of good Men that encourage us to perform it.

1. Then from the Law of Nature. They are not merely positive but natu­ral Laws that require us to be hospita­ble: these are Laws written in our Hearts and our Minds, which will di­rect us to them; they are the easy and unforced Suggestions of our Souls; and whoever he be that hath been but a lit­tle conversant with the Writings of the Heathens, will find that they practised this Duty, and that nothing was so de­testable [Page 9] among them, as not to be civil to Strangers: Inhospitu littora populus barbarus, were Appellations of the worst Sound in their Ears; and every little School-boy that had been but some time conversant with the classical Authors, will tell you how Homer brings in Ne­stor, importuning Minerva and Tela­maclus to stay with him: he tells them they leave him as if he had no Enter­tainment for them, or that he could not lodg them; but this he would ne­ver suffer so long as he kept a Servant.

The Grecians are observed by Histo­rians to have two Tables for Strangers; and the jus Hospitii was looked upon as a most sacred thing. This shews what Hospitality they used, and what the Heathens themselves thought of it in those old times in which they lived. So that indeed could we not find a Bible in our Closets, neither had we the Will of God from Heaven revealed to us, yet the Light of Nature will dictate to us this Truth.

And indeed 'tis a piece of good Na­ture, [Page 10] which so well becomes a Man, that it is called Humanity: and there­fore the Antients called our Kindness to Strangers by this name, Humanity; as if they then shew themselves to have more of a Man in them than others, when they were kind to Strangers: and those People that wanted this Generosi­ty, were ever censured by them with this Expression, to be barbarous and in­humane. They banished inhospitable Men from the Society of Mankind, and ranked them among the Wolves and Tygers: They were not fit for the Company of Men, and therefore they ranked them among the worser sort of Beasts.

2. The Scripture. But besides the Law written in our Hearts, the Laws that we have revealed to us from the God of Heaven, and written, as I may say, with the Finger of the Almighty, I mean the Holy Scriptures, give us full Proof of it.

How often in that Holy Book is Ho­spitality enjoined? how often incul­cated? [Page 11] how much commended? and how severely is the Neglect of it censu­red and punished? as may be proved both out of the Old and New Testament.

If at your leisure you turn over those Sacred Leaves, you will find that the ancient People of God, the Jews, are in most plain Words commanded to use Strangers well, not to oppress them, no not to vex them, but to love them as themselves, Exod. 22.21. Thou shalt do no Injury to Strangers. And also the same Duty is in the 9 th Verse of the following Chapter, pressed again, and the Command is back'd with a forcible moving Reason, viz. why we should be kind to them: and this was the Rea­son, because they were Strangers in the Land of Egypt, and knew the Hearts of Strangers; they were put in mind of the Condition they were once in, and of the Usage they wished from the E­gyptians: And this Reasoning supposes they would now deal with others as they once wished they might be dealt withal themselves. And the same Duty [Page 12] is again injoined them; Lev. 19.34. And if the Stranger sojourn with you, &c.

Why now I pray is this Duty so of­ten inculcated? why are we so often reminded of it, but because 'tis a Duty very necessary for all Men to put in practice? But from the Jews let us now go to the Christians, and see how well they practised this Duty. And that you may not think this a legal Pre­cept, and abolished in the time of the Gospel, let us see what Proofs are to be met with in the New Testament; and in Rom 13.12. you will find it enjoin­ed the Christians, and they are com­manded to use Hospitality: And in Heb. 13. they are cautioned not to for­get it; which supposes that Christians are otherwise, both by Nature and for­mer Revelations, taught to do thus: And in Mat. 25. you will find the Pra­ctice of it is not only good and fit, but necessary and indispensable; which may appear from the sad Doom Christ pass'd on them that neglected it, I was a Stranger, and ye took me not in. He [Page 13] does not lay this to their Charge, that they were Whoremongers, Adulterers, Murderers, guilty of those open Crimes which not only the Laws of God do threaten, but the Laws of Men punish with Death; but this was the chief Sin that was laid to their Charge, I was a Stranger and ye took me not in, that is, you were inhospitable.

3. And as it is commanded us in the Scripture, so also is it recommended to our Practice from the Example of seve­ral eminent Persons that have perform­ed it: so that we have both Precepts and Precedents to oblige us to it. Rules now are best learned when illustrated with Examples: the rich Store-house of the Scripture affords us Variety of In­stances both in the Old and New Testa­ment; some few I will instance in.

In the Old Law we find it to be the Practice of Abraham and Lot, Men be­loved of God, and famous with us; for they were not only honoured while they lived, but are renowned among us to all Posterity: And in Gen. 18.1, [Page 14] 2, 3, 4. we may find Abraham's Hospi­tality recorded, what he did, and with what Heartiness, Alacrity and Dili­gence he entertain'd them, how free he was in it; they asked not him, but he them: this was a Carriage that be­came the hearty Goodness of those old times; and it was a Work worthy of and sutable to the great Faith of that excellent Man. And also in the begin­ning of Chap. 19. we have Lot's Hospi­tality recorded; he saw two Strangers, he went to meet them, bowed himself with his Face to the Ground, addressed himself to them with all the most ob­liging Civility; he would not be deni­ed: but when they said they would tarry in the Street all Night, he forced them into his House, entertained them bountifully, and made a Feast for them. But was this his Kindness unreward­ed? how did they gratify their Host? why, the same Chapter tells you how they saved his Life, and rescued him and his Family from those fiery Show­ers, fatal to the rest of the Inhabitants. [Page 15] And as for his Brother Abraham, they so greatly requited his Hospitality, that they gave him the News of a Son in his old Age; and also such a Son in whom all the Nations of the Earth should be blessed.

We also find it upon Record in the New Testament, in Acts 28. that Pub­lius entertained Paul three Days courte­ously; and in Requital he healed his Father-in-law of a Fever: And Onesi­phorus having once or twice refreshed Paul at his Table, he remembred him in his Prayers, and publickly acknow­ledged his Hospitality in his Epistles.

But now to instance in an Example above all Examples, whose Example if we follow not we can never go to Hea­ven, you may read Deut. 10.18. God himself is said to love the Stranger, and to give him Food and Raiment: but we have a far greater Proof of God's Love to Strangers than these; for us Gentiles that were Foreigners hath he visited with his Salvation: To us that had a long time sat in Darkness, and in [Page 16] the Shadow of Death, hath he given a Light; he hath given to us his Son, and treated us with all the Expressions of Kindness imaginable.

Now if this Duty be enjoined us in the Scripture; if it hath been the Pra­ctice of the best Men that ever lived; nay, if it hath been the Practice of God himself, let us then be hospitable, that we may be like unto God.

And indeed as you ought to be hospi­table to Strangers, so ought you to be charitable to the Poor: we have an ex­press Mandate for it in Luke 14.13, 14. When thou makest a Feast, call the Poor, the Maimed and the Lame, and thou shalt be blessed, &c.

And it may well deserve our Obser­vation to consider the great Care God took of the Poor in the Mosaic Law; for besides what was given privately, God made several Laws for the publick and visible Relief of them.

When God Almighty had blessed them with Encrease, and they came to reap their Harvest, they were com­manded [Page 17] to leave some uncut for the Be­nefit of the Poor, Lev. 19.9. And be­sides every Year's Tything they had the third Year's Tythe, which by God's Law was their due; and not only the third Year, but the seventh Year the Land was to lie still, and they were to share in common the Fruits of it.

Neither did the Primitive Christians fall short of the Jews in their Charity, witness that ancient and primitive In­stitution of the Offertory in the Sacra­ment, which was so considerable a part of it, that it gave Denomination to the whole: and this I have read to be one reason why 'tis called the Communion-Service, because every Sunday the Pri­mitive Christians did communicate to the Necessities of others.

Nay, we may learn this Duty from the very Heathens themselves, for they had a Temple in Athens, and it was de­dicated to charitable Uses: and it was the greatest Reproach among them, to upbraid one with this, that they had never been at the Temple of Mercy.

[Page 18]And what greater Reproach can it be to a Christian than to be churlish and unmerciful. We read in the Mosaick Law, that the Shell-fish was accounted unclean; this I take to be one Reason, because the Meat was enclosed in the Shell, and it was hard to come by. They indeed are to be reckoned among the Unclean, viz. among the Wicked and Ungodly, that inclose their Estate with­in the Shell of their Cabinet, denying o­thers the Benefit of it; that, Hedg-hog like, wraps up himself in a Bed of Down, and throws out his Prickles to all the World besides. But besides the Command of God, and the Example of good Men, common Gratitude may oblige us to this Duty; we are all born Beggars, and live upon Alms, and all the Creatures do liberally contribute to our Necessities; the Sun hath not his Light for himself, but enriches the Earth with his golden Beams: The Earth brings forth a fruitful Crop; one Creature gives us Wool, another Silk; nay, all the Creatures, in some sort, ad­minister [Page 19] to Man's Necessities: and now shall every Creature be good to Man, and shall Man himself be inhu­man to his Neighbour?

But beside common Gratitude, our own Interest may oblige us to this Du­ty; 'tis the best Money we can lay out, and brings to the Donor the greatest Advantage: He that giveth to the Poor, lendeth to the Lord, who gives double Interest for the Money, and rewards us with temporal and eternal Blessings.

It was the Counsel of him that was the wisest Man that ever the Universe yet bore, (our Saviour Christ excepted, who was both God and Man) Cast thy Bread upon the Waters, and thou shalt find it after many Days. The word is not da, give, but mitte, send; like a Person that sends an Adventure to Sea, 'tis lost for the present, but yet he hopes it will one Day turn to a great Advantage.

Give me leave to superadd one Mo­tive more: As Charity procures Bles­sings, so also doth it divert those Judg­ments [Page 20] that hang over our Heads. When Nebuchadnezzar for his Pride had a Vi­sion, that God would take away his Kingdom, he consulted with Daniel what to do; and his Counsel to him was this, Break off your Sins by Righte­ousness, and your Iniquities by doing good to the Poor: as if his Alms could di­vert those Judgments that hanged over his Head, and the practice of these could wash away his Offences; and, like Celestial Fuller's Earth, take the Spots of the Flesh from the Soul. We find it therefore ranked with Righte­ousness in the Scripture, and they are promiscuously used one for the other. And this put Job into such an Amaze­ment, that his Afflictions should befal him when he had been so merciful to the Poor. And indeed though the Poor be counted a Burden to many of us, yet among the Jews they were reckoned a­mong their greatest Blessings. And this we find to be one of God's Promises to them, that the Poor shall be always among them, that so they might know [Page 21] what to do with their Wealth. Now that you may dispose of your Alms to the best Advantage, take along with you these following Rules.

1. De nostris dandum. When Seli­mas the great Turk lay on his Death-bed, being moved by Pirrhus to bestow that Wealth that he had wronged the Persian Merchants of, upon charitable Uses, he made this honest Reply, Nay rather, saith he, let it be sent back to the right Owners. And shall not a Christian's Creed be much better than a Turk's Alcoran? 'Tis a Will not pleasing to God, nor yet good Men, when a Person on his Death-bed be­queaths his Soul to God, and his ill-gotten Goods to the Poor. Neither can he be thought charitable that robs perhaps an hundred Families to build an Hospital for seven Droans.

2. The second Rule is this; What you give must be done with a good In­tention. I have read of a Traitor, who being hired to imbrue his Hands in Royal Blood, made his Attempt on the [Page 22] Royal Person, but by Accident only cut off a Wen, which the Skill of the ablest Chirurgion durst not venture; so that instead of killing, he cures his Enemy. Now whether the accidental Good he did could compound for the Wickedness of his intended Treason, I leave it to any sober Person to judg.

3. The third Rule is this; Give as you are able: 'Tis not always necessa­ry that Alms should come out of a Sack; a Man may be charitable though he hath not an expanding Plenty. A lit­tle Purse contained that Mite which was the greatest Gift in the Treasury, I mean the poor Widow's Gift, which was acceptable to God, because coming from her who wanted it her self. But should the rich Man take his Measures from hence, and give no more than she did, he would come as far short of her Charity, as she did of his Wealth.

I am now come to address my self to the Laity; and to you do I recommend a just and great Care of paying what­soever [Page 23] the Laws of the Land have made the Dues of your Ministers, and by no means to look with an evil Eye upon what is allotted them as an Encourage­ment to discharge their Office. When St. Paul makes it the Qualification of a Bishop, that he should be given to Ho­spitality, (1 Tim. 3.2.) you may be sure that he did not, like the Egyptian Tyrant, enjoin them to make Brick without Straw. He did not design they should build Castles in the Air, and feed their Guests with thin Notions and Speculations only. And without a Supply of these earthly things, it was not possible they should set more than a Chymerical Table before them, as the Enchanter did before his Royal Guests: no, he tells you, that no Man goeth to Warfare at his own Cost; and he that plants a Vineyard, eats of the Fruit of it; and he that keeps a Flock, is maintained with the Profit of it. From whence he argues the Equity of Ministers being liberally supplied by them in Temporals, whose spiritual [Page 24] Good they have devoted themselves and their Labours to: and therefore, in pur­suance of the same thing, he adds, that he spake not these things as a Man, as one that had Reason, and might argue from thence for it, but he had the In­stitution and Command of God to back him herein; Say I these things as a Man? or saith not the Law the same also? 1 Cor. 9.8. For it was written in the Law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the Mouth of the Ox that treadeth out the Corn. Doth God take care for Oxen, or saith it altogether for our sakes? Was the Precept given in regard to the Beasts alone, or rather had it not far­ther Reference to his Servants the Priests and Levites, who prepared spi­ritual Food for the People? For our sakes no doubt he spake it, that he that plows should plow in Hope; and he that thresh­eth in Hope, should be Partaker of the same Hope.

Nay he proceeds further, and shews how mean a Recompence this is for the mighty Advantages we bring to the [Page 25] World, the immortal Glories and Hap­piness that we, as Heralds, proclaim, purchased by our great Master the blessed Jesus for you: If we have sown unto you spiritual things, is it a great Matter if we reap your carnal things? If we teach how to live and be happy for ever, is it such a wonderful thing that you contribute towards our living, and being easy for a time here? Do you not know that they which minister a­bout holy things, live of the things of the Temple, are maintained by the Of­ferings and Oblations that are made there?

You know little of the Constitution among the Jews, if you think any o­pened or shut a Door in the Temple for nought, Mal. 1.10. and if all the inferior Officers had fair Allotments in propor­tion, much more they who attended at the Altar were Partakers with the Al­tar, shared in all the Gifts and Offer­ings which were brought thither. But why do I go about to light the Sun with a Taper, and prove that to you by Rea­son, [Page 26] which is so manifest by the Word of God? Perhaps my Sermon may make no Impression on your Hearts, because they are the Words of a mortal Man; behold, I will turn you to the Words of the ever-living God: I am a frail Man, and may err, but God is a God of Truth that cannot lie, nor alter the thing that is gone out of his Lips; hear then what he says by his Prophet Malachy, ch. 3.8, 9, 10. Will a Man rob God? yet ye have robbed me: but ye say, Wherein have we robbed thee? In Tythes and Offerings. Ye are cursed with a Curse: for ye have robbed me, even this whole Nation. Bring ye my Tythes into my House, and prove me, whether I will not open the Windows of Heaven, and pour out a Blessing, &c. In which Words we may observe, 1 st. Their Sin, they robbed God. 2 dly. Their Punishment, they are cursed. 3 dly. The Means to divert this Judgment, viz. to bring the full Tythes.

Will a Man rob God? 'Tis an horri­ble Wickedness to rob and dispoil our [Page 27] Parents or Masters, to ravish their Goods and Maintenance from them; but to rob our God is a Wickedness much more flagitious, a Sin so mon­strous, that the Jews, though then ve­ry much degenerated and corrupted, startled at the mention of, Ye have robbed me: but they say, Wherein have we rob­bed thee? In Tythes and Offerings. For God, the great Donor of all, had re­served these to himself, which he gave to his Priests for their Service in his Worship; and with-holding these, they robbed him. Hear then the Judgment that he denounced against them, Ye are cursed with a Curse. 'Tis bad to be cursed by Man: Elishah's Curse proved fatal to the Children bred up in Idolatry, that called him Bald Pate. Now if the Curse of Man prove so fatal, what is the Curse of God? But now what was there to redeem them from this Curse? mark in the following Verse, Bring all the Tythes into the Store-house, that there may be Meat in my House. A mighty Encouragement not only for them, but [Page 28] for all succeeding Generations, to have a Regard for things sacred.

But now to draw to a Conclusion; Give me leave to make this short Ad­dress to my Brethren of the Clergy, not to instruct them in their Duty, but to speak their own Thoughts in my plain Words.

If the Laity be just to us, let not us be unjust to our Master, but let us give according as we are able, to the Ne­cessity of the Poor. Remember the Le­vites were the least of all the Tribes, yet their Privileges and Revenues were greater than any other of the Tribes, for they had not only the Tenth of all the Fruits of the Land, but a share in all the Peace-Offerings and Free-will-Offerings of the People in their re­demption of several things sacred to God, (as the First-born) besides the many Cities and Lands which were set a-part in every Tribe for them, with numberless other things that belonged to them. Nay, as I learned once by the Conference of an eminent Divine of the [Page 29] Church of England, they had near the sixth Part of the Revenue of the Nati­on allotted to them.

But now why, I pray, were their Privileges and Revenues greater than any of the other Tribes? Why this I take to be the Reason, because they were not only Priests, but Almo­ners to the other Tribes; and their Houses were as Hospitals to the Poor.

Let us therefore, as the Apostles ad­vise us, be given to Hospitality; and following the Example of this great Prophet in time of Dearth and Famine, Set on the Great Pot, and seethe Pot­tage for our poor Brethren that are in Distress.

I shall now conclude with this ear­nest Prayer, That you may never want Clergy, Learned Persons, and Ortho­dox and diligent Workmen, that need not be ashamed, daily dividing the Word of Truth; and, like good Stew­ards, breaking the Bread of Life, and distributing to each, in their Families, sutable to their Needs and Capacities; [Page 30] and by an holy Life may powerfully lead, as well as by sound Doctrine safe­ly guide them to Heaven.

And I do further pray, That these may never want a People teachable and obedient, who may receive them as the Angels of God, the Ambassa­dors of Christ, and the Glory of the Churches; and then there is no doubt but they will meet with not only their legal Dues, but many grateful Re­turns for their abundant Labours, re­verencing their Persons, consulting their Reputations, contriving for their decent and becoming Support and Maintenance; in a word, esteeming them and theirs highly for their Works sake. This would make our Country a Land of Delight indeed, the Glory of all Places, a little Resemblance and Figure of Heaven, where Knowledg, Righteousness, Love and Unity, with all other Graces and Vertues, would flourish and abound, to the Praise of him who has called us out of Dark­ness to his infinite Light: which God [Page 31] of his infinite Goodness grant, for the sake of his dear Son and our Saviour Christ Jesus the Righteous, to whom with the Father and Eternal Spirit be ascribed all Praise, Might, Majesty and Dominion.

FINIS.

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