this fire of torments) vpon greene wood, what will they not doe vpon drye wood? That is, if the iustice of the Almightie exact such rigorous satis∣faction, at the hands of his only son∣ne, who is wholy innocent, vnspotted, liable to no faults, but those of mise∣rable man, what may not the sinner him∣selfe, guiltie of so many crimes, and so drye, fruitlesse and barren of all good workes, expect and dread.
[Affect.] Ah Saith S. Augustine, if he cannot passe out of the world without stripes, who came into the world with∣out sinne; what stripes is not he liable vnto who was conceiued and borne in sinne? and who daily addes to those originall ones, which are, in some sorte, necessary, a multitude of voluntary ones. O when I attentiuely looke vpon the prodigious sufferances of my Sauiour, I am forced to crye out to sinners, and in the first place, to mine owne sinfull soule, Vae, vae, vae illis qui non cogitent corde: woe, woe, woe to those, who thinke not of this in their hartes.
2. Point.
Consider, how our Bles∣sed Sauiour with wearied limmes, hath