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A22507 A commentarie vpon the fourth booke of Moses, called Numbers Containing, the foundation of the church and common-wealth of the Israelites, while they walked and wandered in the vvildernesse. Laying before vs the vnchangeable loue of God promised and exhibited to this people ... Heerein also the reader shall finde more then fiue hundred theologicall questions, decided and determined by William Attersoll, minister of the word. Attersoll, William, d. 1640.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Pathway to Canaan.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Continuation of the exposition of the booke of Numbers. 1618 (1618) STC 893; ESTC S106852 2,762,938 1,336

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full of good workes and almes deedes he kneeled downe and prayed 〈◊〉 9.40 and turning him to the body hee bad her arise and she opened her eyes and sate vp Heereunto also we may not vnfitly apply the examples of such as haue recouered out of eminent dangers and haue beene in a manner in the iawes of death and helde their soules in their hands as Hebr. 11.17 19. Touching Isaac hee lay bound with cords as a sacrifice vpon the Altar the knife was lifted vp to haue killed him and his father ready to haue offered him for a burnt offering and therefore he is also said to haue offered him accounting that God was able to raise him vp euen from the dead from whence also he receiued him in a figure The like we might say of many other the Saints that haue had experience of Gods power who being no better then dead in their own opinions by incurable diseases and incredible dangers haue notwithstanding been suddenly restored Hezekiah was willed to set his house in order for he should die his disease was mortall yet by prayer hee obtained the prolonging of his dayes When Daniel was in the lyons denne and the three seruants of God in the fiery furnace Noah in the Arke vpon the waters Ionah in the belly of the Whale where were they but after a sort in death yet all these had deliuerance and flourished againe like the Almond rod in this place The like we might say of Paul Cor. 11.26 and 1.9 10 he was pressed with trouble out of measure aboue strength insomuch that he despaired euen of life and receiued the sentence of death in himselfe yet God which raised the dead deliuered him from so great a death We reade in the actes of the Apostles that he was stoned with stones so that they drew him out of the citie supposing that he had beene dead but when the disciples stood round about him 〈◊〉 14.19 20 〈◊〉 2.27 he rose vp and came into the citie So doth this Apostle speake of Epaphroditus he was sick nigh vnto death but God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on me also lest I should haue sorrow vpon sorrow This was likewise the flourishing of the Almond rod of Aaron Reason 1 This is not to be maruelled at forasmuch as God is the liuing God he hath life and being in himselfe and he giueth life and breath and being vnto other things This is a title proper and peculiar to God Matth. 22.32 and therefore it is said Hee is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Secondly he is of infinite power and was Reason 2 able in the beginning to create all things of nothing Heb 11.3 so that the things which were seene were not made of things which doe appeare Thirdly he Reason 3 can take away life and breath so often as it pleaseth him yea cast body and soule into hel Psal 104.29 Matth. 10.28 The vses remaine First this was a type as Vse 1 also the whole Priesthood was of the person doctrine Priesthood and kingdome of Christ as appeareth in many places of the Prophets Esay 11.1 2. Psal 45.6 and 22.14.18 Act. 13.23 Al our saluation springeth from his crosse and our life from his death He offered vp himselfe vpon the crosse for the redemption of our bodies to obtaine for vs euerlasting peace perfect righteousnesse and the kingdome of heauen he rose againe from death to life for our iustification Rom. 4 25. This is the rod that came out of the stemme of Iesse and as a branch that grew out of his roots who though he were put to death in the flesh and became as a dry and withered stalke and staffe that was not regarded 1 Pet. 3.18 Rom. 4.24 yet he was quickened by the spirit and God raised him from the dead so that hee became as the flourishing rod of Aaron in whom we haue redemption through his blood the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to the riches of his grace Eph. 1.7 Secondly heere is also a type set forth for Vse 2 the confirmation of our faith in the doctrine of the resurrection of the body at the last day which as dry seede is cast into the earth and brought to dust yet in due time shall flourish againe as the rod of the almond in this place Dan. 12.2 Ioh. 5.25 and 11.24 25. Ioh. 19.25 26 29. This hath beene taught in all ages of the Church from the very beginning Gen. 4.10 and 5.24 Heb. 11.5 Iude ver 14 14. Exod. 3.6 15. 2 King 2.11 Esay 26.19 Notwithstanding in all ages some haue been found that haue denyed the resurection Among the people of God that Sadduces taught that man perished wholly and that after death there is no rising or returning to life but that he perisheth as the beast Matth. 22.23 Act. 23.8 And the Apostle Peter foretelleth that in the last dayes should mockers arise that should say Where is the promise of his comming 2 Pet. 3.3 4. and what is this else but not to beleeue that Christ will come againe to iudgement nor raise vppe the dead to life And in the Church of Corinth some were found which said there is no resurrection of the dead 1 Cor. 15 12. Some haue confessed the immortalitie of the soule as many also of the heathen did but touching the resurrection they haue fansied it to be in this life and not after death so that the resurrection with them is nothing els but regeneration to wit a dying vnto sin and arising againe to newnesse of life The authours of this heresie seeme to haue beene Hymeneus and Philetus of whom the Apostle saith Concerning the truth they haue erred saying that the resurrection is already past 〈◊〉 thereby doe destroy the faith of some 2 Tim. 2.18 Neither is this heresie dead with them but is reuiued and continued in the damnable sect of the Family of loue who hold that hell and heauen are in this life and no other resurrection of the body or day of iudgment or comming of Christ thē in this world To these we may ioin as next neighbors the Anabaptists of our times who vtterly deny that the same bodies which now we haue and shal lie in the dust shal euer rise againe but they hold that God at the second comming of Christ will make vs new bodies This is to maintaine a new creation of new bodies but to deny the resurrection of the former bodies For it is one thing to make and another to raise vp Against all these errors wee must cleaue to the simplicity of the Scriptures The resurrection proued For this is a fundamentall point of Religion if this be shaken and ouerturned all religion is pulled vp by the rootes Hence it is that the Apostle reasoneth against these at large 1 Cor. 15. and prooueth the point soundly substantially by many arguments The first reason First if there be no resurrection
ye sware vnto her Therfore the Prophet teacheth that he shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the Lord Psal 15 4. and rest in his holy hill That sweareth to his owne hinderance and changeth not If there be no faith in our words nor truth in our dealings nor constancy in our promises but that we can take vppe the name of God in our mouths and vse it as a colour to hide our bloody deseignes wee must not looke for any blessing from GOD nor to haue him to go out with our armies Fourthly let the ends of our warres be holy and righteous not tyranny not vainglory but to maintaine the honor and glory of God to defend the Church and Commonwealth from violence and inuasion and to establish peace and concord in our borders The Heathen by Natures light saw these three ends of a iust warre first to withstand force by force Cic. de offic l. 1. and to defend themselues and the things that belong vnto them Secondly to recouer things lost and regaine things taken away Thirdly to reuenge wrongs and iniuries offered being before prouoked Many examples are set downe in the Scriptures of the godlie Kings and other Gouernors who propounded these ends vnto themselues and so were able to warrant to themselues and others the bearing of Armes Fiftly we must not suffer leud euill persons incorrigible and vnreformable to remaine in the hoste of God who may endanger the whole hoste and bring the curse of God vpon them For how should God giue a blessing to such wicked instruments or how should he fight their battels that fight against him Hence it is that he commandeth Deut. 23. Deut. 23 9 10 When thou goest out with the hoste against thine enemies keepe thee then from all wickednes c. When the Israelites gathered themselues together to smite At they could not prosper but were smitten downe ouercome by their enemies Iosh ●7 11 12. Because they had sinned and transgressed the couenant of God which hee commaunded them for they had euen taken of the excommunicate thing and had stoln and dissembled also and put it euen with their owne stuffe So long as Achan remained among them who had taken two hundred shekels of siluer a goodly Babylonish garment and a wedge of gold contrary to the commandement of God they could not stand before their enimies but were constrained to turne their backes This example doth Phinehas afterward propound as a warning to the Tribe of Reuben Gad and the halfe Tribe of Manasseh ch 22 Did not Achan the sonne of Zerah trespasse grieuously in the excommunicate thing and wrath fel on all the Congregation of Israel Iosh 22 20 and this man alone perished not in his wickednesse This is the cause why our warres do not prosper that when wee haue sent out our armies by thousands they haue returned by hundreds and when we haue sent out hundreds they haue come home by tennes because they haue giuen themselues to al wickednesse and vngodlinesse they haue broken out into all disorder and committed all abominations with greedinesse and none is carefull to restraine them and reforme them They haue not desired God to guide them and as a Captaine to goe out with their armies they haue had nothing to do with him nor he with them they haue beene led by the diuell he hath gone out with them and returned home with them taketh the gouernment of their whole liues they liue to him and without repentance they dye to him Sixtly that we may vse our wars aright it behoueth vs to put our trust in God alone to depend vpon him to pray vnto him and to looke for safety and helpe from him It is not the Shield that can defend vs it is not the sword that can deliuer vs it is not the horse that can saue vs the best shield is The Shield of faith Eph 6 14 16 17 the surest armour is The brest-plate of righteousnesse the helmet of saluation the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God The Prophet Ieremy teacheth chapt 17. Cursed be the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme Ier 17 5 and with-draweth his heart from the Lord. Dauid putting confidence in God when he went to encounter with Goliah put off Sauls armour and saide Thou commest vnto me with a sword 1 Sam 17 45 1 Sam 14 6 and with a speare and with a shield but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of boasts the GOD of the hoast of Israel whom thou hast railed vpon Thus did Iehosaphat arme himselfe when he was assaulted by his enemies 2. Chron. 20. 2 Chr. 20 3.12 There is no strength in vs to stand before this great multitude that commeth against vs neyther doe wee know what to doe but our eyes are toward thee Saneherib glorying in his owne strength and boasting of his owne power is driuen to flight with his whole army 2 Kings 19.25 Wee haue seene sometimes the swift not to gaine the prize in running nor the valiant the victorie in fighting nor the strong the praise in wrestling for as Sa●omon saith Prou. 21. Prou. 21 31 The horse is prepared against the day of battell but saluat on is of the Lord. Such therefore as trust in the greatnesse of their owne strength and do not put their confidence in the liuing God lye open as a prey to their enemies and cannot looke for God o be their deliuerer Seuenthly no man should go out to warfare but with greese of minde and sorrow of heart For albeit the warre be lawfull yet when the enemies are slaine in battell it is a defiling of mens hands and a defacing of Gods Image God hath imprinted his Image in man as hee teacheth Gen. 9 6 in as much as in the image of God he made man Likewise when Dauid would haue builded a Temple vnto God it was said vnto him 1 Chron. 22. 1 Chro. 22 8 and 28 3 2 Sam ● 13 Thou hast seed mu●h bloud and hast made great battels thou shalt not build an house vnto my name for thou hast shed much blood vpon the earth in my sight Not that hee imputeth it simply for a crime but to giue euery one a lesson and direction which is constrained to fight against his enemies though the cause be iust and the quarrel lawfull that they should be greeued to see the order of nature so troubled and peruerted by reason of mens sinnes and wickednes We ought so to liue together and loue one another as brethren and acknowledge our owne flesh in all that are created after our likenesse what corruption then and confusion is this that we shall be driuen to destroy each other after this fashion Wherefore euen in the time of warre hee that putteth on armour against his enemies and girdeth his sworde by his side must do it after a sort against his will and with sorrow conceiued
giue sleepe vnto their eies nor slumber to their eie-liddes Let the sluggards goe to the Ant and learne wisedome by her waies which hauing no guide ouerseer nor ruler prouideth her meat in the summer and gathereth her food in the haruest Prou. 6 7 8. Thirdly seeing it is required of vs to haue Vse 3 contented mindes it putteth vs in minde of this duty that we auoid couetousnes which is directly contrary to contentation It is a common corruption that taketh hold of our corrupt nature a fruite of the old man which must be mortified of al the children of God and so much the rather because it stealeth vpō vs at a sudden and draweth away our hearts from God and godlinesse This is the vse directly touched and taught by the Apostle Heb. 13. ●●b 13.5 Let your conuersation be without couetousnesse and be content with such things as ye haue The greatnesse of this sinne is such that it causeth a man to be an idolater as Ephe. 5.5 Col. 3.5 This ye know ●●h 5.5 CoI ● that no whoremonger nor vncleane person nor couetous man who is an idolater hath any inheritance in the kingdome of God and of Christ ●ow the co●●●ous are ●dolaters The couetous are idolaters or worshippers of idolles two wayes First because they preferre their riches in their affections before God the gift before the giuer of them depending vpon them as vpon God trusting in them ●●b 31.24 as in God saying vnto them Thou art my confidence as we heard before out of the booke of Iob. Secondly because they account their life to consist in their riches and to rest vpon their wealth rather then to stand on the prouidence of God failing of all comfort and hope and ioy when their wealth faileth them Sathan vsed this bait to bring Christ himselfe to idolatry when he offered vnto him the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them How easily we slippe into this sinne appeareth by the example of the rich man that came vnto our Sauiour when he was bid sell all that he had hee went away pensine and sorrowfull Matth. 19. Hence it is that he saith in another place ●●k 12.15 Take heed and beware of Couetousnesse for a mans life consisteth not in the aboundance of the things which he possesseth We are ready to flatter our selues and to say to our soule Thou hast much goods layd vp for many yeeres take thine ease eate drinke and be merry vntill it be said vnto vs Thou foole this night shall thy soule be required of thee then whose shall those things be ●ouetousnes ●y be in the ●ore as well in the rich that thou hast prouided This is a sinne not onely in the rich but also in the poore True it is such as are in want and necessity do wash their hands as innocent in this matter but they do it as Pilat did touching blood which notwithstanding did cleaue so fast vnto his loynes that all the Fullers earth and all the waters in the Sea could not wash away the guilt and staine therof from him So the poore for the most part put this sin farre from them and thinke it doth not belong vnto them they cry out against the rich because they are couetous as blinde men deceiuing themselues and beholding their owne faces in a false glasse For first of all they vse vngodly shifts and vnlawfull meanes to store themselues which is right couetousnesse They care not how they come by meate money corne or any thing so they may haue it Againe they beare not the burden of pouerty patiently but murmure and grudge at it nay at him that sendeth it but whosoeuer disdaineth his present state because it is not higher richer and better is couetous therefore the poore may be couetous Furthermore they are oftentimes idle and liue by the sweat of other mens browes and breake out into pilfering and stealing and so not onely couet but catch and conuey vnto themselues other mens goods This also is couetousnesse and this is a common sickenesse and disease of the poore For as pride may walke and iet vp and downe in a russet coat so may couetousnesse lodge in a simple and smokie cottage But in whomsoeuer it be whether in the rich or poore it is a dangerous euil it bringeth the couetous man to destruction of body and soule 2 King 5.22 It brought the leprosie vpon Gehazi that coueted the siluer and garments that Naaman offered Elisha refused but he accepted It brought a more heauy plague vpon the soule and conscience of Iudas Matth. 27.5 for when he had betrayed his master for thirty shekels in horror of himselfe and of his fact he went and hanged himselfe Hee was brought vp with Christ and liued with him who had instructed him not to couet after siluer nor gold he heard his doctrine and beheld his miracles yet hee was infected with this disease worse then the dropsie or the hungry euill The description of a couetous man It seeth nothing in another without grieefe and sorrow and is neuer well contented vntill he haue it himselfe and then hee cannot bee satisfied but still hee would haue more The more he hath the more he thinketh he hath not The more full his coffers are the more he iudgeth them to be empty for as much as he wanteth as well those things that he hath as those things that he hath not It is a great blessing of God Chrys in Math. 26. homi 81. that the earth yeeldeth the fat of wheat but the couetous man is not a little greeued that in stead of eares of corne it doth not shoot and send forth leaues of gold that euery riuer doth not runne with streames of gold and that the barraine mountaines haue not gold to bee digged out of them in stead of stones He is oftentimes greeued at the seasonablenesse of the weather at the fruitfulnesse of the seasons at the plenty of all things at the increase of the earth and at the sweet influence of the heauens hee taketh it heauily when there is store and aboundance that there is no want nor crying in our streetes because he cannot fell his corne his cattell and commodities at the dearest rate He hateth all men both rich and poore the rich because he doth not possesse that which they haue and seeth them to abound as well as himselfe whereas he cannot abide that any should enioy any thing and thinketh it lost that passeth by his doore the poore because they craue somewhat of him which he is as vnwilling to leaue as his life and therefore as if he were hurt and wronged with all he is angry and offended with all The more he hath The more the couetous man hath the more he coueteth the more he craueth and coueteth Euen as the drunken man is more vexed with thirst then he that vseth to drinke with sobriety and moderation and is therewith contented so
of highest descent that euer liued vpon the earth who was not onely of the linage and stocke of Dauid and heire vnto the Crowne Kingdome but the sonne of the eternall God yet he disdained not to serue but vouchsafed to minister in this office and hath giuen example to all posterity that none should account themselues vnworthy of it or it vnworthy of thē forasmuch as the Gospel began to be preached of him Heb. 2 3 who is the brightnesse of glory and the expresse image of his person and vpholdeth all things by the word of his power Heb. 1 3. Seeing then Princes and Peeres and noble men yea such as haue bene of the Kings blood haue imployed themselues to the Lords seruice seeing sundry of these among both Pagans and Papists haue exercised this function seeing some of the elect Angels were Preachers of the Gospel what a slander and reproch is it for vs that are dust and ashes and wormes of the earth and no better that are called Christians and would be accounted great professers who in so great want of labourers and haruest men to reape downe the corne do bestow our youth rather any way then this that is the best way It is incredible what great good such might do in the church O what a furtherance would it be to true religion and a notable meanes to gaine many soules to God! For how many be there that contemne the Ministery of the word and consequently the word it selfe because for the most part they are meane and poore men that are the Ministers and Preachers of it Euen as when the professers of the truth consist of the lowest sort it hindreth the faith of diuers to consider that none of the rich or of the Rulers beleeue in him but the people that are accursed Iohn 7 4● so is it in the Ministery also When such as are ignorant of true religion cast their eyes vpon the poore condition of the teachers of it and behold the worshipfull and noble shun it and shake it from their shoulders they are offended and grow into hatred and contempt of the Calling and regard not such as haue taken it vpon them Whereas if the men of great places would stoope downe vnto it if this may be accounted a stooping downe and as well preach Christ as beleeue in him it might be a forcible and effectuall meanes to further and foster true religion Is it not a comfort to all godly parents to see their children well bestowed Can we haue them better bestowed then to serue the Lord and to labour in his haruest and to be made Rulers or Stewards in his house Is there any thing we should reioyce more to see then our sons put in trust with the price of the blood of Christ and by preaching to win many soules and send them to heauen How do men seeke to shroud themselues vnder the cloth of noble men and are glad of places and offices vnder them like to Zebedees childrē that would sit at the right hand and at the left hand of Christ in his Kingdome But the Ministers are the seruants of the most High they serue the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords then which what seruice can be more holy or honourable The Prophet Haggai complaineth chap. 1 4 that the whole people from the highest to the lowest neglected the building of the Temple and followed their owne profits plesures Is it time for you O ye to dwel in your sieled houses and his house lye waste And therefore he threatneth in the words following to punish those greeuously that were so retchlesse and carelesse for the helping forward of this building Let Zerobabel and Iehoshua with the remnant of the people diligently consider this point and meditate seriously vpon these things And let all haue a tender regard to imploy and set apart some of theirs to worke in the Lords vineyard as painfull labourers True it is some goe about by pilling and polling to bring the Church to beggery and slauery but this ought not to discourage any from seruing in this calling nor to withdraw any of his children frō preaching of the word The earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof Psal 24 1. All the siluer and gold in the world is at his commandement Hag. 2 8. He will neuer leaue nor forsake those that be his He will pay good wages to all that are his seruants They shall be sure of their pay that reape his corne and beare the burden of the work and the heat of the day He hath the hearts of all Princes and Potentates in his owne hand He moued the mindes of pagan and heathen Kings to contribute things necessary for the repairing of the materiall Temple as appeareth in the bookes of Ezra and Nehemiah ●zra 3 7. ●eh 2 8. and therefore he will not suffer such to lack which labour in his spirituall Temple vnder godly and christian Princes Seeing then we ought to make a great account and haue a reuerent estimation of the Preachers of the word and esteeme the Calling giuen them an honorable office inasmuch as Christ the euerlasting Son of the Father the wisest the worthiest the noblest the notablest person beyond all comparison of all that euer were or shall be or are in heauen or earth hath taken vp the office of a Preacher Priest and Prophet to teach the people and to pray for them let vs also further this worke by all the meanes we can and let the Ministers comfort themselues in this their holy vocation hauing a multitude of such excellent predecessors as it were a cloud of witnesses going before them to be examples to encourage them and let vs not be discouraged by the taunts opprobious termes of the vngodly to dislike and forsake our function or to be ashamed of it or to thinke scorne to labour in it howsoeuer many scorne at it as too meane and base a thing for themselues For albeit the Ministery aboue all other callings is most subiect to the contempt and disgrace of prophane and godlesse men yet let vs be assured that as it is in it selfe in regard of the ordinance of God as also of the benefit of it vnto mankinde a worthy and excellent calling so they that enter into it shall be honoured of all those which are the children of God Let vs tread those disgraces contumelies vnder our feete and be so farre from being dismaied at them that rather we ought to account our selues happy for them Mat. 5 11 12. Seeing we are thereby made conformable not onely to the Prophets and Apostles of Christ but to our Sauiour himselfe and shall in the end be like vnto him in glory and eternall life Yea we are assured that in the middest of al disgracings and defacings of vs we are the sweet sauour of God not only in them that are saued but in them also that perish ● cor 2 15 16 And albeit we
reckoning He that thinketh he can make sufficient amends to men that there shall be no farther enquiry into the matter reckoneth without his host and therefore must reckon once againe Hence it is that the Apostle saith 1. Thess 4 6. Let no man goe beyond and defraud his brother in any matter because the Lord is an auenger of all such We must know that God hath to do with it and will punish seuerely for the breach of his law There are many sorts of coniunctions whereby mankind is coupled combined one to another as the coniunction of consanguinity of affinity of amity of city of country of humanity some haue more of these bands linked together all haue some of them to vnite them in one and thereby as it were to binde them to the peace to their good behauiour that they should abstaine from all violent and fraudulent conueyances one from another Among all knots that serue to linke vs and locke vs together as friends which are as our owne soule none is greater or faster then that coniunction which we haue with Christ our head and which the members of his body haue one with another whereby it commeth to passe that we are al made in himselfe of twaine one new man Eph. 2 15. and euery man of vs members one of another Rom. 12 5. This spirituall coniunction is more effectuall to procure the mutuall good of the parties conioyned then either that which is naturall or that which is ciuill Neuerthelesse we must do no wrong to any man God hath made vs keepers of the body of the substance of the dignity of the honour and of the good name of our brethren if they be men and bee alied vnto vs no other way but by the commō band of humanity we must do them no iniury although they be our vtter enemies If wee haue farther bands to chaine vs together it is so much the greater sinne if wee breake those cords and will not suffer our selues to be tied with them And marke the reason that the Apostle vrgeth he doth not say If we doe any way defraud them or circumuent them the Iudge shall iudge it or the Magistrate shall punish it but God is the auenger of all such dealings and will not suffer them to escape The like threatning we reade in Moses Exod. 22 22 23 24. If the oppressed cry God will heare their cry so that they shall be deliuered and their oppressors punished If we could suffer this consideration to enter into our hearts that though all should acquit vs or no man durst lay hold vpon vs yet God himselfe will take their cause and quarrell into his hands execute sentence vpon their enemies it would be an effectual argument to moue vs to make conscience of all sinnes euen of such as immediately and directly do concerne men and not onely of such as concerne God and his worship If we were assured that the iniuries which we do vnto others should be answered before the Magistrate and we stand at the bar to plead guilty or not guilty we would be afraid to deale hardly with them or to shew any indignities toward them How much more then ought we to tremble and to quake euery ioynt of vs to consider that the time of vengeance shall come when we must appeare before the throne and tribunall seate of Iesus Christ our Lord to receiue according to the workes that we haue done in this flesh Foure crying sins mentioned in the Scriptures Sundry of the ancient haue obserued foure crying sinnes mentioned in the Scriptures the which albeit they goe away many times vnpunished in the world yet vengeance will not suffer such to liue but God findeth them out in their sinnes as the crying of blood the lust of the Sodomites the noise of the oppressed and the hire of the labourers these are often passed ouer with silence and tollerated among men but they sound shrilly in the eares of God ascend vp to his iudgement seat Albeit there be no man to accuse them that commit these sinnes yet without farther processe or enditement they suffer them not to rest but summon them to his barre and call without ceasing for iudgement against them The first is wilfull murther and shedding of innocent blood for when Abel the righteous was slaine Gen. 4 11. the Scripture saith The voice of thy brothers blood crieth vnto me from the ground whereby is signified that the godly though secretly and seditiously slaine of the vngodly patiently bearing the iniuries offered them without murmuring and complaining yet after death when their mouthes seeme to bee stopped and their tongues tied ceasse not to accuse their murtherers as guilty before God and to lift vp their voices out of the earth to call downe vengeance against them The Prophet saith Psal 116 15. The death of the Saints is precious in the sight of the Lord and Psal 72 12 14. He shall deliuer the needy when he cryeth the poore also and him that hath no helper he shall redeeme their soule from deceit and violence and precious shall their blood be in his sight So likewise the soules of them that were slaine for the word of God and for the testimony which they held Reuel 6 10. cry with a loud voice O Lord holy and true doest thou not iudge auenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth This ought to minister contentment vnto them and to teach them patience forasmuch as God hath a care of them and a tender respect vnto them He numbreth the haires of their head Math. 10. He gathereth their teares in a bottell Psalm 56 8. He heareth their sighes Psal 69 33. He telleth their steps and ordereth their goings Psal 56. He vnderstandeth their complaints Psal 145. He hearkneth to their praiers Psal 34 6. and he keepeth all their bones The second crying sinne is lust and vncleannesse of which the Lord speaketh Gen. 18 20 21. Because the cry of Sodome and Gomorrah is great and because their sinne is very greeuous I will goe downe now and see whether they haue done altogether according to the cry of it which is come vnto me and if not I will know True it is those Cities were culpable of sundry sinnes as Ezek. 16 49. Pride fulnesse of bread abundance of idlenesse and contempt of the poore howbeit when the Lord saith their sinne is very greeuous he pointeth out this outragious and accursed sinne which the pure God abhorreth as a fruite of impurity See heere the difference betweene the Spirit of God and the spirit of the diuell Such as are filthy liuers and possessed with the spirit of vncleannesse doe account fornication and adultery to be tricks of youth and sports of pleasure whereas God maketh them in his word to be sinnes that lift vp their voices cry vnto him for vengeance When Pharaoh King of Egypt had taken away Sarah Abrahams wife Gen 12. ● The
Lord plagued him and his house with great plagues vntill hee had restored her If a bare purpose to commit adultery and that ignorantly called for iudgment vpon an heathen king how much more shall the liuing in this sinne bring moe stripes vpon vs that liue in the light of the Gospel haue the truth plainely reuealed vnto vs forasmuch as he that knoweth his masters will doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes The third crying sinne is the oppression of such persons as are destitute of helpe which is ioyned with cruelty as for example such as are widdowes fatherlesse strangers poore innocents whose cry God hath promised to heare and to helpe them This we heard before out of the booke of Exodus If you afflict them in any wise and they cry at all vnto me Exo. 22 ●● Deut. 154. I will surely heare their cry and my wrath shall waxe hot and I will kill you with the sword and your wiues shall be widdowes and your children fatherlesse The Prophet Habakkuk prophesieth against such and painteth out their sinne in liuely colours chap. 2 9 11 12. Woe to him that coueteth an euill couetousnesse to his house that he may set his nest on high that he may be deliuered from the power of euill c. The stone shall cry out of the wall and the beame out of the timber shal answer it One shall say Woe to him that buildeth a Towne with blood another shall make answer and stablisheth a City by iniquity These oppressers do sucke out as it were the blood and life of the needy that haue none to whom to cry out for redresse but in the eares of the Lord. They dare not buckle and encounter with the mighty for as when the pot of earth and of yron meet together the earthen vessell is dashed in peeces so when the mighty and the needy striue the poore man striueth against the streame and bringeth much misery vpon himselfe Their helpe is onely in God the Father of all consolation If men stop their eares against them and will not rescue them out of the snare of the fowler and the net of the hunter let them abide vnder the shadow of the Almighty and shroud themselues vnder his wings who wil couer them with his feathers and heare them in their afflictions The last crying sinne is the poore labourers wages that are wrongfully and vniustly deteined this also cryeth aloud and neuer ceaseth vntill God hearken to the cry of it Many thinke it goods well gained that can be gotten from the poore but they shall finde it fret as a canker and consume as a moth the residue of their substance Hereunto commeth that law of the Lord Deut. 24 14 15. Thou shalt not oppresse an hired seruant that is poore needy c. thou shalt giue him his hire neither shall the Sunne goe downe vpon it for he is poore and setteth his heart vpon it lest he cry against thee vnto the Lord and it be sinne vnto thee Where wee see that this consideration of committing sinne against God ought to enter into vs to restraine vs from doing wrong against any especially the poore and needy brother or the stranger that is in the Land And to this purpose speaketh the Apostle Iames chap. 5 4. Behold the hire of the labourers which haue reaped downe your fields which is of you kept back by fraud cryeth the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lord of Saboth ●ld ●cry● Whereby it appeareth that there is a double kinde of crying one of iniquity and wickednes the other of the oppressed and afflicted If one of these ceasse yet the other shall neuer ceasse crying It falleth out oftentimes through the power and might of the greater sort that the poore dare not mutter or murmure if they begin to cry out and complaine their mouthes are soone stopped because their angry lookes make them afraid of their displeasure their seuere threatnings are too heauy a burden for them to beare but the other shall neuer giue ouer crying the sinne of the oppressors shall cry against them for vengeance as we see whē Abel could not cry yet his blood cried and was heard Sinne hath a voice more shrill then the sound of a Trumpet for that be it neuer so loud vanisheth in the aire cannot pierce the Clouds whereas the noise that issueth and proceedeth from sin out-reacheth the Clouds entreth into the eares of the Lord of hosts What then Must we imagine that sinne is a bodily thing ●he cry ●e it that hath a mouth to speake a voice to cry No this cry is nothing else but the vnchangeable order of Gods iustice punishing sinne euen as at the instance and importunity of the innocent party a iust Iudge cannot but releeue the oppressed and punish the guilty and so doe iustice according to the office committed vnto him As if it were said blood will haue vengeance vncleannesse will haue vengeance oppression will haue vengeance fraud and deceit will haue vengeance God cannot but punish all these crying sins because he is a iust Iudge otherwise he were vnrighteous It is the nature of all sin to prouoke God to enter into iudgement with the sinner but especially these horrible and abhominable crimes mentioned before And as it is the nature of sinne to cry out to GOD for vengeance so it is the nature of God to punish sinne and to take vengeance of it Therefore they greatly deceiue both themselues and others that make him like to one of the gods of the Gentiles not to be offended at all or very little displeased with sinne and not to regard what men doe As if iustice were not essentiall vnto him or as if he could deny himselfe or as if he could ceasse to be God for as soone he may do these as the other But if it can in any sort agree to him ●ent Pa● in Gen. 4. that he can bee not willing to punish sinne then he can also not hate sinne forasmuch as to hate is nothing else but to be willing to punish reiect And if it be incident to him not to hate sinne then also it will follow that hee can loue and like sinne If he can loue sinne he can deny himselfe and destroy himselfe he can like of the workes of the diuell which is vnpossible to do and horrible blasphemy to affirme Lastly seeing whatsoeuer is of the nature of sinne is against God it directeth vs what Vse 5 we are to do when we haue any way sinned and desire to haue peace of conscience we must not goe to Saints or Angels whom wee haue not offended who are not able to be reuenged of vs but it is our duty to call for mercy at his hands against whom onely wee haue sinned and to seeke to be reconciled to him whose lawes we haue transgressed and who is able to cast body and soule
24 25. We are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Iesus Christ whom God hath set foorth to be a propitiation thorough faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sinnes that are past thorough the forbearance of God The Apostle to the Hebrewes declareth that Christ was to offer vp himselfe once and not often as the High-Priest entreth into the high place euery yeare with blood of others For then must hee often haue suffered since the foundation of the world Heb. 9 26. but now once in the ende of the world hath be appeared to put away sinne by the sacrifice of himselfe By all which testimonies it appeareth that Christ is our Aduocate and hath wrought our peace and attonement and thereby made an end of all other sacrifices The reasons are plaine First because God Reason 1 thereby is well pleased and his wrath appeased so that hee accounteth his death as a full price and sufficient ransome paid for them So the Euangelist witnesseth that a voice came from heauen saying This is my beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased Math. 3 17. And in the Epistle to the Ephesians the Apostle saieth chap. 5 verse 2. Walke in loue as Christ also hath loued vs and hath giuen himselfe for vs an offering and a sacrifice to God of a sweete smelling sauour It is noted in the booke of Genesis that when Noah being come out of the Arke builded an Altar and offered burnt offerings the Lord smelled a sweete sauour Gen. 8 21. which was not the smoke of the sacrifice that ascended for what sweetnesse could there be in that but it was the sweet precious sacrifice of Christ for which his wrath was appeased being shadowed by that ceremony Reason 2 Secondly Christ tooke the whole burden of our sinnes vpon his shoulders presenting himselfe before God in our person and offering vs to God in his person so that he tooke vpon him our vnrighteousnesse and imputed to vs his righteousnesse This the Prophet Esay did most cleerely prophesie off chap. 53 verses 4 12. Surely hee hath borne our greefes and carried our sorrowes and powred out his soule vnto death c. He bare the sinnes of many and made intercession for the transgressors And the Apostle teacheth that in Christ we are reconciled to God For hee hath made him to be sinne for vs who knew no sinne that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5 21. And in the Epistle to the Colossians chap. 2 ver 14 15. he setteth out the fruite of Christs death that he hath forgiuen vs our trespasses hath put out the hand-writing of ordinances that was against vs he tooke it out of the way and fastened it to his Crosse hee hath spoiled principalities and powers hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them in the same Crosse This was notably prefigured and foreshewed in the rites of the Law For when any propitiatory sacrifice was to bee offered for the people the Priest was to present the beast before the Lord to lay his hands vpon the head of the beast and to confesse the sinnes of the people vpon it and so it bare their iniquities the truth whereof is Christ himselfe Thirdly there could otherwise bee no remission Reason 3 of sinnes so that it is the blood of Christ in the suffering of the Crosse that purgeth away our sinnes as Hebr. 9 verse 22. Almost all things in the Law are purged with blood and without shedding of blood is no remission and therefore it was necessary that Christ should purge and purifie vs by his blood The greatnesse of our sinnes could not otherwise bee pardoned nor the person that is offended satisfied they are infinite and so require a sacrifice of infinite price and value No treasures no riches no creatures no sacrifices no ceremonies could do it it cost more to saue a soule and to redeeme the captiues and prisoners that are holden by Satan in slauery to do his will Knowing that we are not redeemed with corruptible things as siluer and gold from our vain conuersation receiued by the tradition of the Fathers But with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lambe vndefiled and without spot 1 Pet. 1 verses 18 19. Fourthly nothing but the death of Christ could quench the scorching wrath of God as Reason 4 a consuming fire kindled against vs counteruaile his seuere iustice Hence it is that the Apostle writing to the Hebrewes hauing shewed that the blood of Bulles and Goats could not possibly take away sinnes addeth immediately after When hee commeth into the world he saith Sacrifice and offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou ordained mee Heb. 9 5. Our sinnes haue a bloody face in the sight of God and we are enemies vnto him so that the robes of the Saints must bee dipped in the blood of the Lambe Reuel 7 ver 14. All the nitre and sope and Fullers earth in the world are weake and vnsufficient and haue not power and strength enough in them to do it So that we must say with the Prophet Psal 50 7. Purge me with Hyssope and I shall bee cleane wash me and I shall bee whiter then snow Thus then we see that Moses mentioning heere the Ramme of attonement whereby an attonement is to be made for sinners teacheth vnder this type this certaine and vndoubted truth that Christ our Sauiour hath by his blood made an attonement betweene God and vs therby reconciled vs vnto his Father The vses of this doctrine are of great weight and importance First it offereth to our considerations Vse 1 this meditation what sin is how it is to be esteemed It is a most fearefull and greeuous thing the wrath of God against it is exceeding great so that nothing in heauen or in earth could satisfie for sinne but the death of Christ Iesus the Sonne must dye for the seruant or rather for the enemy for we are by nature the children of wrath as well as others The iustice of God would not spare him though he were his onely and welbeloued Sonne but forasmuch as he was to beare our sinnes in his body he must die for ir Rom. 8 32. He spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him to the death for vs all We are not therefore to be lightly carried into the practise of sinne but to be much greeued at it to striue with all our force against it and to endeuour to ouercome it and among other things this is not the least that should trouble vs that we haue by sinne brought such misery and shame vpon the Sonne of God Wee ought to lament for this and to bewaile it euery day For if we had not sinned and by sinne beene depriued of the glory of God he had not taken vpon him the shape of a seruant neither beene humbled to the death of the Crosse We doe daily cry out
consequently Obiect 2 the Pope may for the auoyding of a greater inconuenience tollerate and permit this sinne without fault and without being charged with any allowance of the sinne it selfe It is one thing to approue and another to allow a thing as God permitteth many wicked actes in the world which notwithstanding he detesteth I answer Answer the comparison is vnequall that I say not it is blasphemous It is the fearefull iudgement of God vpon his enemies to make such monstrous and mishapen conclusions God hath a royall prerogatiue aboue his law and is not subiect vnto it but to the righteousnesse of his owne will He permitteth the abominations that are committed that by his infinite power and wisdome he may turne all things to the glory of his mercy or iustice It is not so with the Magistrate he must bee obedient to the law of God and all his authority is to be subiect vnto it it is his office to punish knowne euill and not to permit it neither is hee able to turne euill into good by his suffering of it Besides it will not follow from hence to speak nothing of the Popes temporall iurisdiction and of the right he claimeth to be a temporall Prince neither can it any way iustifie his practise who raiseth rents and taketh fines for bawdry and therfore maketh himselfe no better then a bawde to whores and knaues forasmuch as he maintaineth them and they maintaine him They haue streetes and houses assigned vnto them where they shall dwell and he taketh their money whch they pay with ease and liue in brauery and excesse with the rest Lastly we may conclude from this reason that Magistrates if they list may permit all maner of wickednesse and suffer it to escape vnpunished and not be charged with the allowance of it For if this reason doe hold in one particular God may permit therfore the Magistrate may it is good in all which were to open a gap wide to all prophannesse Libertinisme Atheisme and Epicurisme A third argument Obiect is this a naughty thing may sometimes be necessary and being necessary and consequently impossible to be remooued it must needes be tollerated without fault as they goe about to prooue by testimony of Christ there must be offences Matth. 18.11 and of Paul there must be heresies 1 Corinth 11.19 Heere is a necessity of offences and heresies yet Christ and Paul were not in fault neither did they allow heresies I answer Answer first I would know whether they meane euery wicked thing or onely some wicked thing I suppose they meane not in generall that euery naughty thing is so necessary that it should be tollerated for then they must speake plainely with the diuels tongue and openly vtter his language Doe they then vnderstand it of some naughty and wicked thing that is necessary and so to bee tollerated Then the reason must be framed in this maner Some euill is necessary and therefore to be suffered but the stewes is some euil that is necessary and therfore the stewes ought to be tollerated Euery one meanly seen in the art of reasoning knoweth that the forme of this reason is starke naught and neither necessary nor to be suffered for of particulars nothing can follow Againe they peruert and corrupt the meaning of Christ and his Apostle Such things as cannot be auoyded may be accounted necessary according to the decree of God When he purposeth to try his children to haue them discerned from hypocrites oftentimes euils yea euen heresies breake forth from the corruption of men This is true we confesse and so much the places proue and inferre So then we must distinguish of tolleration which is of two sorts there is a tolleration of necessity and a tolleration of negligence The one is good as when a Magistrate hauing a subiect that committeth treason or such heinous crime that he cannot punish by reason of his owne weaknesse and his subiects power this he must beare of necessity because he hath no remedy so Dauid dealt toward Ioab when hee had slaine Abner with the sword 2. Sam. 3.39 I am this day weake though annointed king and these men the sonnes of Zeruiah be too hard for me the Lord shall reward the dooer of euill according to his wickednesse Where we see he tollerateth the euill which he could not remedy and referreth the execution of iustice vnto God that was of ability and power to punish it So may the Magistrate beare with patience for a certaine season not failing in his duty howbeit this must not be alwayes for when there is no such cause to suffer a knowne sinne to escape vnpunished he may not winke at it and beare with it There is also a tolleration that is euill which is done of negligence carelesnesse and ouermuch lenity and indulgence this is no necessary tolleration as when Eli bare with his sonnes in his old age did not chastise them for their offences this way doe they offend that punish not at all those that are to be punished or punish lightly such as are to be punished seuerely This tolleration of negligence cannot be implyed from the former places of Scripture seeing that to iustifie the wicked and to condemne the innocent are both of them equally an abomination vnto the Lord. Prouerbes 17.15 Lastly I would gladly vnderstand whether our aduersaries would reason thus Heresies must be therefore tollerate heresies and suffer heretikes to remaine therefore burne not heretikes confute not heresies but let them alone If they dare not reason thus why doe they presse vs with the like consequent if they will needs conclude after this manner what wrong haue they done to our brethren and how much innocent blood haue they shed in the late dayes of persecution O that this argument had beene coyned and vrged in Queene Maries dayes among vs or might now preuaile with the Spanish Inquisition then should not the soules of them that were slain for the word of God Reuel 6.9 10. and for the testimony which they held cry out with a loud voyce saying How long O Lord holy and true dost thou not iudge and auenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth The last argument is this that the Protestants permit vsurie by their lawes and doe not punish Obiect 4 men for taking ten in the hundred which is done to meet with a greater inconuenience or mischiefe and so doth the Pope with his stewes Heereunto we may adde that which Parsons patcheth together after his trifling manner namely that we allow not the Catholikes absenting themselues from the Church and yet we make them pay for their recusancy I answer Answer to the first instance that if we punish not all byting gaine or suffer the poore to be oppressed we cannot be excused but are to bee blamed forasmuch as the word of God forbiddeth to oppresse the poore by vsury Exo. 22.25 Leuit. 25.35 36. Deu. 23.19 Touching the second instance or example
wee should receiue the like againe that hee which taketh the sword should perish with the sword that he which spoileth should bee spoiled that hee which leadeth into captiuity should be led into captiuity Reuel 13 10. That what a man doth the same he should suffer that by what a man sinneth by that he should be punished that euill should hit the worker and the offender be pressed with his owne example This is the law of equity and equality that men suffer the same things of others which they haue offered vnto others Thus then wee may conclude this truth very strongly vpon the ground of these reasons that God punisheth men and women in the same things wherein they offended dishonoured him Let vs make vse of this doctrine which I Vse 1 purpose at this present breefely to point out because we shall haue fit occasion to handle it afterward in this booke First this ought to teach vs to set a watch ouer our selues to keepe out the practise of sinne that carrieth such a taile and traine after it The sinner shall neuer escape but finde a punishment answearable to his sinne This is a notable bridle to induce vs to abstaine from all manner of sin We see this in whoredome which is the point that is aymed at in this chapter Forasmuch as men are slacke and carelesse in punishing of it God bringeth vpon them that continue in this sinne and follow it with greedines such loathsome and noysome diseases as our forefathers neuer knew neither heard off If we bee wise to commit new sinnes shall not the wise God catch vs in our wisedome 1 Corin. 3 19. and be wise enough to finde out punishments that be proportioned according to our transgressions Let vs therefore watch ouer our hands and hearts ouer our tongues and mouthes ouer our eyes and eares and ouer all the members of our body lest to our great greefe and sorrow we finde and feele the fruite of our iniquities This is that which Christ in one particular pointeth out Math. 7. Iudge not that ye be not iudged c teaching vs that all such as censure others procure and prouoke iudgement vpon themselues so that we ought to keepe the doore of our lippes and gouerne our tongues aright This is one maine cause of slanders and defamations that are so common in the world the beginning of them for the most part is in the person himselfe that is defamed It is the ordinance and appointment of God in his wisedome prouidence that such as giue rash iudgement should haue rash iudgement giuen of them Heere is then a lesson to be learned to make vs beware of all sinne considering it hath such a penalty going with it or following it hard at the heeles and lying at the doores ready to enter vpon vs. If we did onely heare and vnderstand that God will certainely punish sinne that none shall be able to escape at what time he shall search Ierusalem with lights Zeph. 1 12. and visite the men that are frozen in the dregs of their euill waies were not this sufficient to withhold vs from it and cause vs to abstaine from all wickednesse For how can we hide our selues from him or how can we deliuer our selues from his presence He that made the eye shall he not see and hee that made the eare shall hee not heare But the doctrine that now we deale withall doth not onely teach vs that God will assuredly punish but that he wil punish vs according to our sinnes It is one part of iustice to punish and another to punish as wee haue sinned Both of them do serue to cleere God of iniustice and to stirre vs vp to consider that so often as we prouoke him to anger by our sinnes he sleepeth not neither hath his sword rusting in his sheath but draweth it out after he hath whet it and striketh the sonnes of men with a terrible stroke Nay that which is more when we transgresse his commandements walke stubbornely against him he holdeth the ballance in his owne hand that hee may weigh vs out our punishment with an equal weight and when wee haue filled vp the measure of our sinnes he will also giue vs a full measure pressed downe and running ouer Hence it is that the Lord threatneth Leuit 26 verse 24. that if we walke stubbornely against him he will also walke stubbornely against vs and smite vs yet seuen times for our sins If we set our faces against him and will not obey him Verse 17. he will set his face against vs will chastice vs seuen times for our sinnes in his sore anger and heauy displeasure and bring seuen times more plagues vpon vs according to our deseruings When we haue sinned against him and will not be reformed it might bring comfort or at least some ease if wee might be assured that our punishment should bee mitigated For the consideration of a slight and slender punishment might slake our care and endeuour of striuing against sin But we are taught that our transgressions against God and his afflictions vpon vs for them shall be squared one to the other A lesser sinne shall not haue a greater punishment neither shall a greater sinne haue a lesser punishment but with what measure we mete to him with the same it shall be measured vnto vs againe This doth our Sauiour Christ presse against the Iewes Math. chap. 23 verses 32 35. Fulfill ye the measure of your fathers that vpon you may come all the righteous blood that was shedde vpon the earth from the blood of Abel the righteous vnto the blood of Zacharias the sonne of Barachias whom ye slew betweene the Temple and the Altar So then it standeth vs vpon to examine our selues and to consider how greatly we sinne and how greeuously wee offend the Maiesty of God If we adde sinne vnto sinne we may bee sure he will adde iudgement vnto iudgement A necessary point carefully to be marked of vs who haue receiued the mercies of GOD in greater measure then many others If they escape not that haue receiued little doubtlesse they shall not escape that haue receiued much If they shall bee beaten with few stripes that know not the will of their master they shall be beaten with many that know it and do it not Luke 12 ver 47 48. If Sodome and Gomorrha were destroyed with fire and brimstone which knew not the Law nor the Lord then Capernanm which was lifted vp vnto heauen must be brought down to hell For if the great workes done in it had beene done among them of Sodome they had remained vnto this day Mat 11 23. Vnto whomsoeuer much is giuen of him shall be much required aed to whom men much commit the more of him will they aske If we be not carefull to walke in his waies we are of all people the most vnthankfull so that as our blessings haue beene great our plagues and punishments shall
Apostle teacheth Put on the new man which is renued in knowledge after the image of him that created him Coloss 3 ● Would we then know what the true image of God is It is the reasonable soule in man endued with diuine knowledge holines righteousnes such like This image is much deformed for we haue vtterly lost all supernaturall gifts and corrupted those that are naturall therefore our whole life is or at least should bee nothing else but a making vppe of this breach a stopping of this gap and a repairing of these ruines But to leaue these we must vnderstand that the face of God noteth out diuers things somtimes it signifieth the inuisible nature and essence of God as Exod. 33 23. Paraeus C●●●● on Ro●● Thou shalt see my backe parts but my face shall not be seene that is thou shalt see so much of my glory and maiesty as man in this life can comprehend But no man can see God in his full perfection liue if we cannot look vpon the Sun without dazling and dimming of our eies how should we be able to behold the glory of the eternal God let it content vs to look vpon him in his word in his workes in his creatures and in the face of Iesus Christ our Mediator these are as perspectiue glasses wherein we may after a sort see the face of God though it be darkely yet so far as we can conceiue Secondly it signifyeth the fauour of God as also all his benefites Daniel ● 37 deliuerances and graces which proceede from his good wil as from a fountaine and serue to witnesse his fauour to vs Cause thy face to shine and we shal be saued Psal 80. ● Thirdly it signifieth reuēge and punishment and the signes of his anger all which do oftentimes appear by the face of man I wil set my face against that man Leuit. 28. ● and I wil cut him off from among his people Lastly it noteth out the place of Gods worship where his face and fauour is perceiued through deliuery of the doctrine of godlines Genes ● ●● Cain was banished from the face of God of the which Dauid cōplaineth 2 Sam. 26 49. So highly did the seruants of God prize the holy meetings and assemblies of the Saints considering that where two or three are gathred together in his name there is he in the midst of them In this place the shining of Gods face vpon his church people is the refreshing of them with his loue grace and fauour and a traine of other blessings flowing from them as it is expounded in the words following added by way of exposition Be gracious vnto them The last part of the blessing is the giuing of peace This word signifieth sometimes our attonement with God through Christ by whom he is reconciled to his chosen who therefore is called the Prince of peace Esa 9 6. and our peace-maker Eph. 2 15. Sometimes it signifieth peace of conscience which is a most sweet quietnes and tranquility of minde arising of a most comfortable feeling and apprehension of our reconciliation with God as Rom. 5 1. Beeing iustified by Faith wee are at peace with God Sometimes a prosperous and happy successe when that speedeth well and is turned to the best whatsoeuer a righteous man taketh in hand as Eph. 6 23. Peace be to the Brethren and loue with faith from God the father c. And sometimes the mutual concord agreement among Christian brethren ●th 6 22. 34 14. Gal. 6 22. Ps 34.14 In this place I refer it to the second and third significations for it is taken for the peace of a good conscience and an happy and prosperous successe in our godly endeuors enterprises This is a fruite of our attonement with God comprehendeth vnder it sundry other benefites For being once at peace with God through the precious bloode of Christ we are at peace with al other creatures in heauen and earth with the Angels with the godly with our enemies and with the beasts of the field To conclude when it is saide They shall put my name vpon the children of Israel hee meaneth that Aaron and his sonnes should after their solemne blessing lay their hands on the people and by this signe assure them that all these blessings which they had prayed for should fall on them because God would blesse them Touching the order of the words obserue herein two principal points first the forme of blessing secondly Gods blessing on their blessing Tremel ●a in An Numb testifyed by the outward signe of laying on of their hands The forme of blessing is a publike praier to God that he wold blesse his church which stands of 3. points First that God would saue his church and vouchsafe to hold it vp in all dangers Secondly that he would as the sun in perfect glory shine vpon it with his grace and fauour Thirdly that he wold poure out vpon the same the effects of his grace and fauour to wit ioy peace prosperitie which are liuely fruites thereof The second part which is a blessing vpon the blessing is noted by a Ceremonial or sacramental sign which is the laying on of their hands For when the priests had held vp their hands in praier as their manner was while they stood in prayer and praied for the blessing of God vppon the people afterward they put their hands vpō them as if they had already obtained a blessing from heauen by their prayers and bestowed it with their hands vpon the people For God promiseth that their imposition of hands shall not be in vaine inasmuch as he wil ratifie make good their word as he doth all his Sacraments and ordinances saying I will blesse them But before we come to the particular handling of diuers doctrines offered to our considerations in this prayer I will point out a few generall obseruations to be marked of vs. As first this forme of blessing is the same in effect which the Apostles vse in their saluations to the Churches when they wish vnto them grace and peace from God the Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ This Apostolicall benediction was drawne from this Blessing which sheweth how well acquainted they were with the doctrine of the Scriptures with the prayers of Moses and of the Prophets whereunto also wee should attend as vnto a light that shineth in darke places Secondly we haue here a fundamentall point of our religion offered to our considerations to wit the mystery of the Trinity of persons and the vnity of the God-head Marbac Comm. on Numb 6. This is gathered by diuers out of these words in that the name of the Lord is 3. times repeated The Lord blesse thee the Lord make his face shine vpon thee the Lord lift vp his countenance vpon thee and yet there are not three Lords but one Lord and therefore he saith I will blesse thee and not wee will blesse
pleaseth God to preserue life by very weake meanes to shew that man liueth not by bread onely so is it in the famine of spirituall things In the dayes of Ahab when the Temple was forsaken by the ten tribes and idolatry was erected in Israel the altars digged downe and the Prophets slaine yet God reserued seuen thousand that neuer bowed the knee to Baal 1 King 19.18 Rom. 11.4 There were very few labourers in the daies of Christ among the Iewes ignorance had couered the land that they were as sheep without a shepheard Matth. 9 3● and yet in those barren times when the seede of the word was thinly sowen there was a plentifull haruest ready to be gathered for loe the fields were white vnto the haruest Ioh. 4.35 Thus doth God blesse what meanes soeuer it shall please him to vse let them be neuer so weake in themselues and little in our eyes yet they shall haue force and strength enough when he will imploy them which serueth as a great comfort to those that haue not the best meanes to bring them to faith and repentance Use 3 Lastly we must take heed we put not slight and vnnecessary excuses for vrgent and necessary causes They that were bidden to the wedding pleaded by way of excuse for themselues I haue hyred a farme I haue bought fiue yoke of oxen I haue married a wife I cannot come Luke 14.18 Matth. 22.5 Many in our dayes would account these good excuses honest pretences lawful defences indeed it cannot be denyed but they iustifie them by their owne practises ●●k 16.51 as Ierusalem did Samaria For they goe further in their wicked wayes and account it a sufficient colour to warrant their absence from Gods ordinance saying I haue a bargaine to make I haue worke to take I am bidden to a feast I must goe speake with such a man it is rainy weather there is an yeueall at the next Parish I must walke about my ground to see my corne and cattell I am otherwise busie and therefore I cannot come Others that thinke themselues more wise yet shew themselues more wicked because they pretend greater loue to the truth and liking to Religion then the other they can reade good Sermons and vse good prayers at home and therefore what need they come Let all these take heed to bind them together in one bundle lest it be said vnto them heereafter as it was said to such as made such like slight and sleeulesse excuses that none of those that were bidden should taste of that Supper Necessary causes of absence are such as require present doing that could not be dispatched before neither can be put off vntill afterward Heat and colde raine and shine hunger and thirst pouerty of estate or tediousnes of iourney could not keepe the people of God from the Passeouer Psal 84.6 They goe from strength to strength euery one of them in Sion appeareth before God These can excuse no man to his Prince no not to the ordinary iudge and iustice When a man is cited and summoned by word or writ to appeare at the barre of an earthly iudge will it be taken for currant answer to say O sir I was willing and desirous to appeare but it was hote weather or cold weather or rainy weather wil such friuolous and fruitlesse excuses be admitted and shall wee think that the king of kings and the iudge of iudges will receiue them at such times as hee summoneth vs to appeare before his presence Let vs not therefore offer and performe lesse duty and seruice vnto God then we do vnto men nor suppose that God will content himselfe with lesse attendance then man doth Ver 10. If any of you or of your posterity shall be vncleane by reason of a dead body Heere is another cause of being kept from the Passeouer ●●●n ●●d●●●●●● offen●●●●●ght t●●●●ed 〈◊〉 the com●●n to wit vncleannesse The doctrine ●●ctrine is that open offenders and impenitent persons ought not to haue any accesse to the Lords Table but are to be kept from it as vncleane birdes from the Sacrifice A stranger vncircumcised had nothing to doe with the Passeouer Exod. 12.48 The incestuous person was excommunicated from the Church and the priuiledges of it 1 Cor. 5. as Caine was from the face of God Gen. 4. When Adam had sinned against God and eaten of the forbidden fruite he was put out of the ga●den that he might not eate of the fruite of the tree of life Gen. 3.22 23 24. this was as a Sacrament vnto him of life so long as he continued in obedience The Sacraments are holy things but holy things must not be giuen to dogges the Sacraments are precious pearles but pearls must not be cast before swine Now obstinate offenders and notorious sinners are dogges and swine The reasons are as Christ saith they will Reason 1 trample them vnder their feet Matt. 7.6 they place no holinesse in them they do not esteem them as any pearles or value them at any rate Hence it is that the Prophet saith If any that is vncleane by a dead body touch any of these it shall be vncleane Hag. 2.13 if then the person be defiled he defileth whatsoeuer he toucheth the holines of the sacrifice cannot make him holy but the wickednesse of the person shall make the sacrifice vnholy Againe such as come to the Lords Supper must shew the Lords death till he come 1 Cor. 11.26 That is he must publish with praise and thanksgiuing vnto God the memoriall of the greatest wonder and mystery that euer fell out in the world to wit the propitiatory sacrifice and precious death of the eternall Son of God But this can neuer be done by a wicked man Praise in the mouth of a foole is not comely nor commendable neither God will accept of them any such sacrifice Thirdly they are guilty of the body and blood of Christ and therfore it must needs be a feareful wickednesse to come in such a wretched and prophane manner 1 Corinth 11.27 They are despisers of the most precious thing in the world Heb. 10.29 They tread vnder foot the Sonne of God and account the blood of the New Testament a prophane thing which caused the Angels of God the whole frame of nature in heauen and earth to wonder at it and to be dismayed at the death of the Sonne of God contemned by these wicked wretches No sinne murther incest treason comparable to this sinne Fourthly they haue no fellowship with the Church in these holy things there is no communion betweene light and darkenesse betweene righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse and therefore Simon Peter said to Simon Magus Thou hast neither part nor fellowship in this businesse Acts 8.21 Such therefore as are scandalous prophane are to be separated by the Church from others as ●●ule and filthy beasts are to be kept from faire springs lest with their feet they defile the water Lastly the seale belongeth to
albeit God had decreed that such should be punished yet he had not declared by any law the kinde of punishment and therefore they asked how hee should be punished as for example whether he should be hanged on a tree or burned with fire or stoned with stones or striken with the sword But this answer cannot satisfie mee for when death is appointed in the Law and the particular kinde not expressed Iosh 7 ● with 6 ● the Magistrate was left free to set downe the same as also when no punishment at all is mentioned Deut. 25 13.14 neither were the people boūd to aske counsell at the mouth of God vpon euery occasion of execution of iustice against euill doers where the manner of punishment is not limited It was the law of God that witches should not liue Exod. 22 18. Saul did wel and is commended by the Spirit of God that he cut them off that had familiar spirits out of the land rooted out the wizards yet he did not aske neither was he bound to aske counsell now or which way they should be put to death though God had not defined the particular Leuit. 20 27. This then is left to the discretion of the Magistrate when hee hath the generall to decree the particular punishment as he thinketh good In sundry places of the bookes of Moses wee finde sundry lawes set downe inflicting death vpon the offenders yet the manner of death is not named Genesis 9. verse 6. Exod. chap. 22 19 20. Leuit. chap. 20. verses 9 11 15 16 17 18. Deut. chap. 20. verse 25. and 24 17. All this were to no purpose if the Magistrate might not proceede against them ex officio without knowing the farther pleasure of God For it had bin all one as if no sentence of death had beene set downe inasmuch as they might as easily and with as little labour know the punishment in particular as when no punishment at all is expressed Neither did the Iewes take thēselues to be bound in that case to enquire of God Leuit. 20 10. Deut. 22 22. Iohn 8 5. Wherefore I rather thinke they consulted with God about the quality of the work then the maner of the punishment God had threatned that whosoeuer did Worke on the Sabbath should be put to death but hee had not followed his handy-worke nor laboured in his calling he had onely gathered a few stickes True it is he had done it impudently yet it was doubt full whether this fact were within the compasse of that law or not and therefore Moses would not call the life of this man in question without certaine direction from the mouth of God For life is precious and blood being spilt is as water poured vpon the earth that cannot be gathered vp againe So then they desired to know whether this fact were worthy of death not by what manner of death he should die And as the Iewes in other things are full of fables so in this they haue deuised of their owne braines that this man was Zelophehad ●ish fable out any ●nd of whom we reade afterward in this Booke chapt 27 3. where it is saide of him that he dyed not in the conspiracie of Korah but in his owne sinne thereby casting an aspersion vpon him and charging him with an imputation which the Scripture doeth not charge him withall of which wee shall speake more afterwards But who it was and what his name was and whether he were one of the Israelites or of the straungers that came with them out of Egypt or what his purpose was it is vncertaine but whosoeuer it were he is put to death for prophaning of the Sabbath Wee learne heereby Doctrine that the Sabbath day ought wholly to be spent in religious and holy exercises The Sabbath day must bee spent religiously It is the end why it was sanctified of God that wee should sanctifie it and spend it in holy vses from morning vnto euening Genesis chap. 2. verse 2 3. Where wee see hee blessed it and sanctified it in the Garded or at least in the time of mans innocency Exodus chap 16 20. Esay 56 verse 2. 58 13. Exod. chap. 20. verse 4. This was the practise vnder the Law continued also vnder the Gospell It was the custome of Christ to preach the gospell in the Synagogues on that day he did it not for once or twice but it was his ordinary and vsuall manner So the Disciples Acts 20 17. and 17 1 2. 1 Cor. 16 1. Reuelat 1 10. The doores of the Temple were kept shut the sixe dayes but opened from morning vntill the euening vpon the seuenth day Ezek 46 1 2. There are many reasons in the fourth commandement Reason 1 drawne from the equity and liberality of God in giuing vs sixe dayes from the example of Gods rest and from the consideration of the end why it was appointed to bee kept holy all these are of great force Exod 20 4 5. Secondly this serueth to preserue men from Reason 2 barbarisme and Atheisme and all irreligions prophanenesse We see notwithstanding this comfortable profitable ordinance of God how much impiety and loosenesse is in the world but if euery man were left vnto himselfe to serue God as himselfe list to his priuat deuotions without this generall obseruation it is to bee feared wee should shortly haue no knowledge no faith no church no religion no order that the greatest part would scarfe thinke of God from one weeke nay from one yeere to another or haue any acquaintance with his word and Sacraments or reade the Scriptures or pray vnto him nay they would scarse know whether there were any Scriptures or Sacraments or not Therefore the Lord saith The Sabbath is a signe betweene mee and you throughout your generations that yee may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctifie you Exod. 31 13 For when doe the greatest part reade or heare or conferre or meditate or pray but vpon the Sabbath Take away therefore that day you take away all these Thirdly Reason 3 Christ Iesus vouchsafed to honour this day aboue the rest of the daies of the weeke after his resurrection and that by his speciall appe●●ings in it as wel as by his rising again vpon it If we obserue and marke it wee shall see he shewed himselfe to his disciples and followers vpon that day especially First to Marie Magdalene early in the morning Iohn 20 1. and 14. Secondly to the other women as they were going to communicate to the Apostles the certainty of his resurrection which the Angels had declared vnto them before at the sepulcher Matth. 28 9. Thirdly to the two disciples going to Emmaus which also was the same day Luke 24 21 For they said it was the third day since these things were done Fourthly the same day at night he appeared to his Disciples Iohn 20 19. Fiftly he appeared for the confirmation of the faith of Thomas in the matter of his
hath another two edged sword the sworde of his iudgement that shall cut vs in peeces and bring vs to vtter confusion If the former bee not sharpe enough to cut the cords of our sins which we haue so strongly twisted yet the latter shall be able to consume vs and wee shall not be able to resist it 33 And it came to passe as hee had made an end of speaking all these wordes that the ground claue asunder that was vnder them 32 And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them vp and their houses and all the men that appertained vnto Korah and all their goods The threatning of the iudgement went before denounced by God pronounced by the mouth of Moses the execution followeth with wonderfull terror and astonishment on euery side when the earth which GOD had made firme and established by a perpetuall decree to stand fast vnder our feete could no longer sustaine and beare vp these wretches but swallowed them vp We see here that all the threatnings of God in their times and seasons come to passe and that all the elements are armed for the confusion and destruction of the wicked wicked ●dly crie ●od when ●oo late Now these rebels beginne to cry verse 34. but they cry out and howle when it is too late they should haue cryed vnto God for mercy and forgiuenesse while it was time and pardon was offered Thus no doubt did many men of the old world cry out when they were in the water but then the acceptable time was past they should haue watered their harts with the teares of repentance when Noah preached vnto them The Sodomites no doubt cried out when fire and brimstone was come downe vpon them but they shold haue cryed to God when hee cryed vnto them by Lot whom he sent among them But then was the time of iudgement the time of mercy was gone and past So it was with Esau when he had sold his birthright and lost the blessing he cryed with a great cry and a bittter but it was too late Heb. 12 17. Gen. 27 28. So did the rich man being in hell in torments Luke 16 23. then he called for mercy but mercie was departed from him Heere is time and place for mercy but there is no mercy to be had in hell The earth is the schoole of instruction hell is the house of correction There the Reprobate cry and yell where is nothing but weeping gnashing of teeth but it is without ease without end without profite They that could shedde neuer a teare to God in this life shall be constrained to shed abundance of teares in the pit of destruction The teares of repentance that we poure out ascend vp vnto heauen and are kept in a bottle of remembrance but the teares that are wrung from the reprobate in hell are neuer gathered vp nor regarded of God and are vtterly vnprofitable to our selues Let it therefore bee our wisedome to make vse of the time of Gods mercy and patience and know that there is no place of repentance after this life ●rine But to leaue this to our farther meditations ●us per●all com ●ruction consider with me in these fearefull examples of Korah Dathan and Abiram and their companions as well those that were swallowed in the earth as those that were consumed by fire the end of all Conspirators and seditious persons such as rise vp against Princes and lawfull Magistrates that are the Lords annointed haue their power from him they cannot prosper or haue good successe but are made examples to others The doctrine from hence assureth that seditions persons come to destruction to an vntimely death albeit timely enough in respect of their merits and deserts Such as resist lawful and publike authority are iustly cut off by that authority which they resist I will not handle this point at large as it would require I will be short in it as the life of these men also ought to bee Looke vpon the attainder of the two Eunuches that sought to lay hands vpon King Ahashuerosh Ester 2 21. In whose enditement though there were no fact found but onely a plot and purpose to haue done it yet they dyed as iustly as Mordecai was iustly honoured and rewarded for the discouerie thereof The Scripture is full of prohibitions and examples ratifying the same Eccle. 10 20. Prou. 24 21 22. Ier. 27 8. 2 Sam. 18 9. 16 23. This Dauid knew well enough For when Saul was deliuered into his hand and lay asleepe in his tent he would not kill him neither suffer any to touch him but said Who can stretch forth his hand against the Lords Annointed and be guiltlesse 1 Sam. 26 9 10. and 24 7 11. They that slew Ishbosheth and brought his head to Hebron vnto Dauid looking for a reward were indeed iustly rewarded with death and had their hands and feete cut off and were hanged vp 2 Sam. 4 11 12. hee required his blood at those wicked mens hands and tooke them away from the earth Heereunto come the words of Iezebel 2 Kings 9 31. Had Zimri peace which slew his master But we need not seeke so farre for forreine examples wee haue seene the truth of this oftentimes at home I may not forget the late examples very memorable and remarkeable I meane the righteous most deserued execution of those that prepared the powder and would haue lighted the match in that late monstrous Gun-powder Treason some of them hang in the aire others hanged themselues c. None escaped the hand of God or man And no maruell because such as fight against Reason 1 God from whom commeth all power and it is hee that setteth Princes vpon their throne Iohn 19 11. Rom. 13 1.2 Psal 75 7. Prou. 8 15. Daniel 2 21. He annointed Saul by the hand of Samuel to be Head ouer his people 1 Sam. 10.1 and he chose him to be King ouer Israel verse 24. He sent his seruant Eliah to annoint Hazael and Iehu the one to be King of Syria the other ouer Israel 1 King 19 15 16. The God of heauen gaue to Nebuchadnezzar a kingdome power strength and glory thogh he knew not God neither acknowledged the hand that set him vp Daniel 2 verse 27. 2. Chron. 9. verse 8. and 1 Chronic. chapt 28. verse 4. If then Caesar be ordained to be Caesar of God they cannot prosper that set thēselues against Caesar because they set themselues against God Secondly such are seuerely punished because Reason 2 disobedience and disloyalty rebellion treason are not one sinne onely but the sinke of all sinnes and as Paul speaketh of another the roote of all euill An heathen man could say That Rebellion is all kinde of euill and as a Channell from whence they doe flow The first sparke of that fire is pride and ambition discontentment giueth it entertainement enuy bloweth the coales wrath malice increase the flame till all things farre and neere
dangers daily decaies in good things praier is as foode whereby the graces of God are preserued encreased Aarō made an attonement for the people stood between the liuing the dead Obserue in these words that Aaron the high Priest in taking his censer offering vp with fire taken from the Altar incense to God is a notable figure and type of the intercession of Christ the true high Priest of our profession Heb. 3 1. that he maketh for all his elect to his Father The doctrine is this ●rine Christ Iesus hath set himselfe as Mediatour betweene God and men 〈◊〉 Iesus 〈◊〉 Media between and man For Origen saith well hom 9. in Numer that we must ascend vnto the high mystery or signification of this Scripture and consider how Christ Iesus the great high Priest Heb. 4 14. taking our nature vpon him stood as in the midst betweene the liuing and the dead and brought it to passe by his death that death shold spread no farther 1 Tim. 2 5. Iohn 12 32. Rom. 5 11. and 8 34. He maketh intercession for vs not that now he boweth the knee to his Father or lifteth vp his eyes or spredeth abroad his hands or vttereth any voice of praier for his Church being now in the heauens for this he hath already sufficiently performed Ioh. 17 1. Now he presenteth to his Father the merites of his death and passion of his obedience and resurrection which hath the force of a liuely praier and reconcileth the Father vnto vs. Thus then we see that Christ Iesus is the true Aaron the high Priest that maketh attonement between God and vs Heb. 7 24 25. Eph. 1 verse 5 6. Reason 1 The reasons Christ Iesus our Redeemer hath fulfilled all the parts of a Mediatour and left none vnperfected he alone hath trodē the wine-presse of the wrath of his Father Esay 65 5. Hee appeareth before the Father for vs and in our names as we do before the Father in his name he offereth vp our praiers and worketh our saluation Ioh. 17 9. Heb. 4 14 2 15 17. He hath deliuered all them which for feare of death Reason 2 were all their life time subiect to bondage Secondly the blood of Bulles and Goats outwardly sprinkled the ashes of beasts were not false lying signes representing that which is not but true and effectuall signes of purifying and cleansing ● ● 12 13. these did sanctifie the vncleane as touching the purifying of the flesh because such as were shut out of the Congregation for some legall and externall vncleannesse had thereby entrance againe into the assemblies might lawfully come to the worship of God and be partakers of holy things much more thē doth the blood of Christ which is the truth substance of all the former and which indeed is the blood of the Son of God Acts 20 28. purge your consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God Heb. 9 13 14 14 24. Vse 1 The vses remaine First this teacheth that we haue no other Mediator in heauē or earth but Iesus Christ who maketh intercession for vs. In the old Testament no praier is made to Henoch though he walked with God or to Abraham though the father of the faithfull or to Moses though God spake to him face to face no praier was offered vp to any Cherubin or Seraphin to any Saint or Angel The Church of Rome therefore is an Apostate Church which hath made so many Mediators and Aduocates for vs in heauen as there are Saints departed and perfected yea which is more absurd they make one Saint Patron for one disease and another for another Comment vpon Philem. so that they haue left nothing for Christ to doe as I haue shewed more at large elsewhere Neither let them obiect that there is one Mediatour of redemption but many Mediatours of intercession But as this is an euill distinction so it is as euilly obserued by themselues And will they beare vs in hand that the simple people simple indeed they are God wot among them vnderstand this difference and can tell how to distinguish betweene these to giue to each his due and no more But what speake I of the simple people of whom I may speake as Ieremy doth Surely these are poore Ier. 5 4. they are foolish for they know not the way of the Lord nor the iudgement of their God I will goe vnto the great ones and speake vnto them The learned thēselues among them doe ioyne with Christ our Sauiour other Mediatours not onely of intercession but also of redemption and saluation Hitherto commeth the praier to the Popes great martyr Thomas Becket of Canterbury Breuiarium ad vsum eccles Sarum in festo S. Tho. Cantuar. who died in the Popes quarrell which he maintained against his souereigne king Henry the second and therefore a false martyr but a true traitor and rebell Tu per Thomae sanguinē quem pro te impendit Fac nos Christe scandere quò Thomas ascendit that is By the blood of Thomas which he for thee did spend Make vs O Christ to climbe whither Thomas did ascend A most blasphemous praier wherein they present not the blood of Christ who gaue himselfe a ransome for vs but the blood of Thomas to bring vs to heauen It were endlesse to shew their idolatrous praiers made to the blessed Virgin desiring to haue her to reconcile them to her Sonne Among the rest consider this one O foelix puerpera nostra pians scelera Iure matris impera redemptori that is O holy mother which dost purge away our sinnes command thou him that is our redeemer by thy motherly authority And touching Peter and Paul they say Ex Rom Breuiar Concede vt amborum meritis aeternitatis gloriam consequamur that is Grant that by the merites of them both wee may obtaine eternall glory Neither shall we need to maruaile at these things although they sound harsh in all Christian eares if we consider what they ascribe vnto the Crosse of Christ Sabb. in Hebd quarta Quandrag I meane to the wood tree to which they make their praier to this day saying O crux aue spes unica Hoc passionis tempore Auge pijs iustitiam Reisque dona veniam that is O Crosse all haile thou that art our onely hope at this time of the passion encrease thou righteousnesse to the godly and grant pardon to them that are guilty Other grosse blasphemies they haue reformed in their Portesse but this which giueth as great and grosse honour to the wooden crosse they haue reserued and reteined What is become now of their distinction that Christ is the Mediatour of redemption but the Saints of intercession when as they ascribe to the Virgin Mary to Peter to Paul nay to a vile traitour nay to a wooden crosse power to purge away the sinnes of the faithfull to grant them pardon and forgiuenesse and to bring them
band knitteth faster nor bindeth closer then this while loue and liking lasteth so no contention is so bitter no hatred so deadly as that of brethren and others that are neere in blood when the knot is broken and dissolued The tender glasse when it is once broken will neuer be set together againe No water proueth so exceeding colde as that which was once heated exceeding hot so no hatred prooueth like to the hatred of brethren which are often found mercilesse one toward another such as can neuer be appeased as we see in the malice of Cain toward Abel This is it that Salomon pointeth out in Prou. 18 19. Prou. 18 19. A brother offended is harder to win then a strong City their contentions are as a barre of a Castle For as they loued most entirely deerely before so when once they grow enemies they hate one another most extremely whose hearts are as stony wals that cannot be pierced and as barres of iron that cannot bee broken Now as the Prophet teacheth That it is a good and comely thing for brethren to dwell together in vnity Psal 133 1. so it is a noisome and vnnaturall thing to behold greatest enuy and most mortall malice where the greatest and neerest bands of kindred should knit together Secondly how much more is it required of those that spiritually are knit together in the profession of the same faith to loue and helpe one another that haue one God to bee their Father one Church to bee their Mother one Christ to be their elder Brother one Heauen to be their hope and one Faith to be their assurance These considerations are of far greater might and moment then al bands of other societies which begin in the flesh and end in death Wherefore the Apostle handleth this at large Eph. 4 3 4 5 6. Ephe 4. ● 5 6. Endeuour to keep the vnity of the spirit in the bond of peace There is one body and one spirit euen as yee are called in one hope of your vocation There is one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all which is aboue all and through all and in you all To this purpose Christ our Sauiour teacheth that there is a neerer coniunction betweene himself the faithfull as also betweene the faithful among themselues then betweene brethren and kinsfolkes in the flesh For when some of his hearers saide Behold thy Mother and thy Brethren stand without desiring to speake with thee he answered and saide to him that told him Math. 12 ● 48 ●9 5● Who is my Mother and who are my brethren And hee stretched forth his hands towards his Disciples and saide Behold my mother and my brethren for whosoeuer shall do my Fathers will which is in heauen the same is my brother and sister and mother Lastly there is no man in the world but we are after a sort charged with him to affect him as a brother to account him as a friend to help him as a neighbour and to loue him as hee is a man Albeit hee be neuer so far remoued from vs albeit we neuer saw him albeit wee know him not in the flesh yet we are appointed as his keeper and guardian to doe him good all the dayes of his life Esay 5 ● defending him from wrongs garding him from enemies sauing him from dangers It was a prophane voice of a prophane man who being asked where his brother was answered I cannot tell Genes ● Am I my brothers keeper Therefore our Sauiour in the Parable of him that fell among theeues teacheth Luke ●● Rom. ● that euery man is to be called and accounted our neighbor It is not for any to aduance and lift vp himselfe aboue his brethren in disdaine or pride of heart be he neuer so high great in the world but to acknowldge from whence hee came and in that respect to make himselfe equall with them of the lowest sort Thy Brother Israel Hitherto we haue spoken of the strength of the reason and considered the words not simply in themselues but as they are referred to the point they argue that is to perswade their passage Now we wil weigh them as they stand by themselues They declare in their plea that there is a coniunction betweene them in the flesh Doctr●●● Amon● 〈◊〉 kinde ●●tain b● hood ●●●mon 〈◊〉 The Doctrine from hence arising is this Among kinsfolkes and generally among all mankind is a certain brotherhood acquaintance familiaritie and vnion one toward another True it is there is not fleshly kindred immediately among all men to make them so neere of blood as to cal one another kinsmen and to descend of the same line and linage but there is a certaine common kindred in generall to ioyne bind vs one to another So then all mankind thogh seated and placed farre one from another by large and many Countries and distinguished by seuerall languages rites lawes religions and customes are one blood one flesh yea all as brethren issuing out of one fountaine hewne out of one Rocke Euery one is of kin to euery man whether Iew or Grecian Turk Barbarian Scythian French Spanish Italian German c. This appeareth in many places of the word of God 〈◊〉 20.32 ●3 Thus Ahab calleth Benhadad King of Aram his Brother that is his Friend So Christ compriseth euery man vnder the name and title of a neighbor This also the heathen knew and acknowledged well enough as the Apostle testifieth Acts 17 26. God hath made of one blood all mankinde to dwell on all the face of the earth and hath assigned the seasons which were ordained before and the bounds of their habitation declaring hereby that there is an vnion and coniunction among all mankinde Reason 1 The Reasons are these First we had all one beginning from God who is the Creator and Maker of all things visible and inuisible and therefore hee being the efficient cause of all there must be some dependance vpon him and some fellowshippe among the workes of his hands This the heathen confessed as the Apostle alledgeth out of their owne Poet Acts 17 29. 〈◊〉 17 29. We are the generation of God Hee is the Creator we are the workes of his hands he is our Father we are his children consequently brethren one to another Reason 2 Secondly as we had one beginning so we al were made of one mould and matter being framed of the clay and dust of the earth which the Lord tempered and fashioned to make man as appeareth in the history of the Creation So then the matter of all mankinde is remembred vnto vs to be the earth This Moses teacheth Gen. 2.7 3 19. Heereunto the Apostle accordeth 1 Cor. 15 47 The first man is of the earth earthly Thus the most noble and notable creature of a wonderfull frame and composition representing in it the glory of the world was made of the most base matter
possession To this Moses answereth that albeit it could not be denied and gain-sayed but that the Cities were in former time within the Borders and Territories of Moab yet Sihon had taken them away by right of warre and conquest of the sword so that now they were alienated from the Moabites and appropriated to the Amorites who possessed them and dwelt in them So then the Israelites offered no wrong to the Moabites but recouered the places to their owne vse out of the hand of the Amorites Neither did Moab lay any claime to them for many generations as Iephtah declareth Iudg. 11. And this is the right that Israel had to these Cities Thus we see what dealings passed betweene the Moabites and the Amorites before Israel came to these places both of them were idolaters both wicked men both grosly ignorant of the true worship of God and desperate enemies to the true Church one is ready to cut the throat of another and killeth one another in battell We learne from hence Doctrine God often punisheth one euill man by the hand of another as euil that God punisheth oftentimes one wicked man by the hand of another He raiseth vp and armeth one of them to destroy another to eate vp and consume another This truth appeareth in many other places of holy Scripture Chedor-laomer vsurping dominion ouer other Nations made warre against them Gen. 14 5 6.7 8. and tooke away all the substance as a prey booty out of Sodome and Gomorrha God in his prouidence causeth one euill man to slay another The Sodomites were exceeding sinners against the Lord. He raised vp an enemy not much better then themselues for their destruction The like we see in the example of the Midianites Who sheathed their swords in their owne bowels Iudg. 7 20 22 Indeed Gideon gaue his men at armes that went with him to that seruice Lampes Trumpets and Pitchers and thus he marched against his enemies they sounded their Trumpets they brake their Pitchers they lighted their Lampes then the hoast of the Midianites fled euery mans sword was set against his neighbour their own weapons were their owne bane their owne men were their owne murtherers and so they destroyed one another This the Prophet Habbakkuk Hab. 1 6. sheweth when the Law was dissolued Iustice oppressed cruelty practised and all wickednes was aduanced among them the LORD would worke a wonder among them He wold raise vp the Chaldeans against them a bitter and furious Nation to destroy them a people worse then themselues This is that which Esay the Prophet pointeth vnto when he saith Euery one shall eate the flesh of his owne arme Manasseh Ephraim and Ephraim Manasseh and they both shall be against Iudah Esay 9 21. Likewise he prophesieth the destruction of Babylon by the Medes and Persians chap. 13 17. The destruction of the Egyptians by the Assyrians chap. 19. Yea he would set the Egiptians against the Egiptians so that euery one should fight against his brother and euery one against his neighbour City against City and Kingdom against Kingdom The reasons of this order and manner of Gods working are not hard to finde For first Reason 1 who shall limit him what meanes to vse and what persons to imploy in his seruice Dare any Subiect prescribe vnto his Prince whom he shall send Or shall a seruant teach appoint his master whom he shall entertaine to performe his busines Or will any Magistrate master take well such pride presumption Shall God then the King of Kings the master ouer all men be stinted and limited whom he shal vse As none can appoint him what he shall do or when he shall punish or whom he shall correct no more can we decree or determine the meanes and manner of his proceedings He appointeth the times and seasons of punishing he singleth out the persons to bee punished For who hath knowne the minde of the Lord Or who was his Counseller Hee will finde out his enemies in their sinnes and he will chuse out the instruments of his owne iudgements He armeth many times men of euill hearts and of vncleane hands to doe his works diligently and to accomplish his waies feruently When the Lord would smite the house of Ahab and auenge the blood of his seruants the Prophets Iehu is annointed King ouer Israel made the Rod of the Lord who performed his word and will to the full hee slew Iehoram 2 King 9 7. 10 31. cast downe Iezabel and slew the Priests of Baal yet notwithstanding all his zeale which he pretended for the Lord his heart was not vpright before him neither regarded hee to walke in the Law of the Lord God of Israel neither departed hee from the sinnes of Ieroboam which made Israel to sinne As then the worke is the Lords so is the workman and as the iudgement is his so is the instrument which hee chuseth and fitteth to effect the same without the prescription appointment of any other Reason 2 Againe albeit they be wicked and vngodly men infidels and idolaters that hee imploieth to finish his worke to bring his decree determination to passe yet he frameth their harts to serue his prouidence as seemeth good in his heauenly wisedome He hath the hearts of all men in his hand euen of Kings to turne them about to be instruments of his will If then he can change the hearts of enemies no maruaile if he vse them as his seruants So he vseth the seruice of the diuels and euill spirits and maketh them to do his will and against their will further the saluation of his children whō they purposed to bring to despaire and damnation as appeareth in the History of Iobs Iob 1 and 2. tentations Albeit they be not his faithfull seruants to do his wil cheerefully yet they are his slaues to serue him by constraint and compulsion This the Apostle Iohn declareth in the destruction of that great whore which is drunke with the blood of the Saints with whom the Kings of the earth committed fornication namely that they gaue their power and authority to the Beast but they shall hate the whore make her desolate eate her flesh and burne her with fire for God hath put in their hearts to fulfill his will and to doe with one consent for to giue their kingdome vnto the Beast vntil the words of God be fulfilled Reu. 17 15 16 17. Nothing is done without the will of God He holdeth in his hands the hearts and purposes of Princes and great men vpon earth and directeth them by a secret motion to worke what hee pleaseth whether they know his will or know it not the whole action commeth of him and from him For howsoeuer it might seeme hard and harsh that the Angel saith it was GOD that put it into the harts of Kings to aduance the Papacy which was the work of the diuell to seduce the world yet after
they would not enter into their fieldes they would not meddle with their vineyards they would not drinke of their water freely yet see with what a terror and trembling they were stricken at the approch of the Israelites neere their borders And this was the heauy hand of God vpon them as Moses declareth Deut. 2. This day will I begin to send thy feare and thy dread vpon all people vnder the whol heauen which shall heare thy fame and shall tremble and quake before thee Heereby we learne for our instruction That the enemies of God and his people are many times afraid where no true cause of any feare is Doctrine Euil men fear where no feare is Euill men are often afrayd of the people of God that faine would liue in peace So Saul liued in continual feare of Dauid 1 Sam. 18 15 29 he was vexed disquieted in heart and neuer in rest although hee we●e harmlesse though he sought peace and ensued after it yea the more Dauid prospered the more Saul feared him So did Pharaoh and the Egyptians feare the Israelites when they began to multiply and increase in abundance Exod. 1.12 Thus Herod feared Iohn knowing that he was a iust and holy man reuerencing him greatly hearing him gladly doing many things at his preaching Mark 6 20. Thus the high Priest feared the Apostles and the officers of the people Acts 5 26. Whē Herod and the rest of Ierusalem heard of the birth of a new King they were greatly troubled and perplexed in mind Mat 2.3 Al these things confirme the truth of this doctrine verifie the saying of the wise man The wicked flye when none pursueth but the righteous are bold as a Lion Prou. 28 1. Reason 1 The Reasons are these First because an euill man carrieth in his owne bosome a conscience for sinne which striketh and accuseth him which citeth and summoneth him before the barre of Gods iudgement seate Albeit no man can bee deposed against him albeit none can giue sentence and iudgement against him yet hee carrieth that about him which is instead of all Mala mens Tert. 〈…〉 1. sc 2. malus animus as the Poet sayth An euill minde an euill meaning an euill conscience arraigning him at the Tribunall of the eternall Iudge who shall giue to euery one according to his workes It shall serue as plaintiffe witnesse iudge and executioner against him This is confirmed vnto vs by many examples in the word of God When Cain had slaine his owne brother shed his innocent bloode which cryed for vengeance vnto heauen the reuenging hand of God pursued him Gen. 4 10 12 17. liuing as a runnagate and vagabond vpon the earth and fearing the sight of euery creature to bee armed against him he began to build a City to hide his head to yeelde him comfort to prouide for his safety and to defend him from iniury but there also the iustice of God ouertooke him the vengeance of his hand followd him and he was driuen from that enterprize The like we see in Belteshazzer Dan. 5.56 when there appeared fingers of a mans hand which wrote ouer against the Candlesticke vpon the plaister of the wall of the Kings Palace albeit hee knew not the substance and signification of the miracle whether it fore-shewed good or euill yet he carryed his witnesse with him that could not be bribed or corrupted so that his countenance was changed his thoughts were troubled the ioynts of his loynes were loosed and his knees smote one agaynst the other This terror of conscience the Lord fortold as the punishment of sinne Leu. 26 17 36 37. and Deuteronomy 28. verses 65 66 67. Againe no maruel if the wicked be oftentimes Reason 2 smitten with feare as with the spirit of giddynesse because they want the shielde of Fayth and the helmet of Hope which are as two strong Anchors to hold the shippe that it be not shaken in peeces with the stormes or dashed on rockes or drowned in the water or swallowed in quicke-sands A liuely fayth in the Sonne of God is the mother of all true comfort the peace of the soule the life of good workes the key of heauen for beeing iustified by Fayth Rom. 5 1. We haue peace toward God through our Lord Iesus Christ and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God Wee haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but we haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Ro. 8 15. We haue boldnesse against the day of Iudgment there is no feare in loue but perfect loue casteth out feare for feare hath painfulnesse and he that feareth is not perfect in loue 1 Iohn 4 17 18. The stronger our faith is the lesse is our feare as one increaseth the other decreaseth If our faith bee little our feare is great as our Sauiour sheweth in the example of his disciples tossed with a tempest on the sea crying vnto Christ saying Master saue vs we perish Mat. 8 25 26. who saide vnto them Why are yee fearefull O ye of little Faith Now let vs come to the Vses If this be the Vse 1 nature of the wicked that he carrieth about with him a troubled and trembling conscience then a wicked man is a very coward faint-hearted being afraide of euery thing True it is there are many who neyther feare God nor the diuell who seeme to be valiant to aduenture their flesh and to expose themselues to desperate dangers in fighting and quarrelling as the manner of sundry Ruffians and swashbucklers is who feare not to meete any man in the field at any weapon and for euery crosse word are ready to giue the stab yet bring these ventrous and foole hardy fellowes to encounter hand to hand with the enemies of our soules to wrastle against spirituall wickednesses in high places and to striue as for life and death against pride prophanenesse against concupiscence of the flesh and contempt of the word against idle games of euill report against our lustes and sins which fight against our owne soules we shall see no childe so weake and willing to turn his heeles as these Ruffian-like spirits who albeit they walke with long blades by their sides or long poles on their neckes and iet vp and downe as ●ords of the earth ready alwayes to lay the hand vpon the dagger and to pick a quarrell at euery word yet they haue not the hand or the heart to strike one stroke to conquer sin and the tyrany of the diuell in themselues but yeeld themselues like slaues and captiues to do his will and are led away to destruction as an Oxe to the slaughter Notwithstanding this is true valour and manhoode to wound more and more the corruption of the old man He is stronger that conquereth himself then he that winneth a City Prou. 16 32. He is a better man of his hands that ouercommeth his own concupiscence then he that hath the vpper hand
arise from hence we haue considered diuers things before We see how Balak and Balaam proceede in their diuellish purposes if God had suffeted them and not crossed them Hee reuealed his wil to Balaam who spake moued by Gods Spirit and thereby declareth that he speaketh not onely to his owne children but sometimes teacheth wicked men to make them without excuse and therefore he wil not leaue his owne people destitute of instruction that desire to feare his name But of this wee haue spoken before chap. 22 9. Verse 2. Balaam lift vp his eyes looked vpon Israel and the spirit of God came vpon him Moses shewing the prophesie that Balaam vttered describeth it by the author thereof the Spirit of God came vpon him In this part of the title he saith That the things deliuered in this prophesie which were vttered for the Churches sake were hid kept secret before they were reuealed and manifested by God This prophesie containeth not a doctrine that is common or communicated by the light of nature to men but a declaration of such secrets as God reserueth hid to himselfe in his owne counsel which no liuing creature could knowe otherwise then as it pleaseth God to disclose it by a gracious participation of it This teacheth vs this truth That the things of God can no man know but by the Spirite of God Doctrine The things of God are vnknowne til he reueale them The mysteries of saluation and doctrine of godlynesse are secret and vnknown of men and Angels before they be of God reuealed This our Sauiour teacheth Peter hauing made a confession of Christ Blessed art thou Simon the sonne of Ionas for flesh and blood hath not reuealed it vnto thee but my Father which is in heauen Matth. 16 17. And expounding the parable of the Sower to his disciples he sayth To you it is giuen to know the mystery of the kingdome of God but vnto them that are without all things are done in Parables Mark 4 11. The Apostle teacheth that the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnes vnto him neyther can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned And the same Apostle speaking of the gospel Rom. 16 25. Eph 3 9. calleth it A mystery reuealed which was kept secret from the beginning of the world So the Apostle Iohn handling hidden visions and teaching the Church the things that must come to passe hereafter called that Booke The Reuelation of Iesus Christ which God gaue vnto him Reuel 1 1. The truth of this appeareth because they Reason 1 were hid in the treasury of Gods wisedome which is vnsearchable and not to be sounded by any creature and therefore the Apostle calleth them A secret hid in God Ephe. 3 9 so that the Apostles and holy Prophets of God could deliuer nothing of his counsell before he had reuealed it to them So the Lord speaketh Numb 12 6. Heare now my words If there be a Prophet of the Lord among you I wil be known vnto him by a vision and will speake vnto him by dreame The calling of the Gentiles seemed strange to the very Apostles before it was reuealed to Peter Who would euer haue imagined that God would haue redeemed man by such a wonderfull meanes the greatest wonder that euer came into the world by giuing his Son and that vnto the death to ransome and redeem a church by his own blood Acts 20. This no creature in heauen or earth would euer haue thought vpon if God had not reuealed it by his word and assured it by his Spirit Secondly this receyueth further strength Reason 2 for the confirmation of it because the wisest and subtilest that were in the world were herein ouertaken and proued fooles for by al their wisedome though neuer so great they were not able to reach vnto it nor to looke into any the least part of it The Apostle speaking of the mystery of the Gospel reuealed by his ministery alledgeth the prophesie of Esay where the Lord threatneth to destroy the wisedome of the wise and to cast away the vnderstanding of the prudent and after he saith Where is the wise hath not God made the wisedom of the world foolishnes 1 Cor 1 18 19. The Vses remaine to be learned of vs. First Vse 1 for knowledge wee see that the mysterie of godlines reuealed to the world by God in the Gospel is a most worthy glorious mystery greatly to be admired and reuerenced vnto vs that are called it is the wisedome of God and the power of God So the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 1 2● Great is the mystery of godlines which is God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3 16. It seemeth farre otherwise to the foolish world it appeareth to thē a base and vile thing as Paul complaineth in his time We preach the Gospel euen Christ crucified vnto the Iewes a stumbling blocke vnto the Grecians foolishnes 1 Cor. 1 23. A stumbling blocke to the Iewes because they dreaming of an earthly king of this world to free them from the bondage of the Romanes and thinking they should be Lords of the earth were offended at the low estate of Christ comming in the shape of a seruant foolishnesse to the Grecians because it seemed foolishnes to the wise Philosophers among the heathē to look for life from death to beleeue in him that rose from the dead and that such as are dead shall rise againe How many are there amongst our selues that are offended at the simplicity of the Gospel that it is not accompanyed with miracles that it is brought vnto vs in earthen vessels These are they that esteeme the Manna as light meate and therefore loathe it But let them alone to loathe this Manna that loathe faith Christ and heauen it selfe yea their owne saluation Secondly for obedience wee must obserue Vse 2 that when these secret things be reuealed vnto vs of God we ought to endeuour to learne them to vnderstand them to publish them speake of them to others Whensoeuer God hath a mouth to speake we must haue an eare to heare Therefore Moses saith Deut. 29 29. Secret things belong vnto the Lord but the things reuealed belong to vs and our children to do them So the Apostle Paul when God had reuealed Christ vnto him and ordained him a teacher vnto the Gentiles saith I was not disobedient to the heauenly vision but shewed to Iewes and Gentiles that they should repent and turne to God and do works worthy amendment of life Acts 26 19 20. This serueth to reprooue all such as refuse to looke into these reuealed things of God but dwell in blindnesse and ignorance Of this sort are the greatest number in our assemblies They are wise enough to look into their own profit but they care not for the wisedome that is of God They are brought vp in the church but know not the Doctrine of the Church They are alwayes learning
frozen harts and shew themselues vnworthy of so great mercy Vse 2 Secondly it sheweth vs that it is vnpossible for all the tyrants and enemies vnder heauen to prolong the time for the further vexation of Gods people when God hath determined the release and appointed the end of their troubles All the creatures of God shall helpe them and worke for them yea hasten the purpose and counsell of God This appeared very notably in the deliuerance of Israel out of Egypt When the time of foure hundred yeares which God had appointed were expired albeit the King and his people had concluded to detaine them in bondage they were by the ouer-ruling hand of God moued to thrust them out of the land Exod 12 33 and 14 22. yea euen to hyre them at a great price to depart giuing them iewels of siluer and gold and casting vpon them the most precious things that were in their possession Pharaoh and his people forced them out of the land in hast and whē they were hardned to follow after them to bring them backe againe the winde wrought for them the sea gaue them passage and GOD that ruleth both winde and sea drowned their enemies The time of deliuerance was come and who could hinder or deferre it The like wee see in the bringing of this people out of captiuity and bondage in Babylon nothing seemed more vnlikely or vnpossible vnto the Saints themselues for when the proclamation for the returne of the people was published Psal 126 1 2. the wonderfulnesse of the deliuerance seemed so great and incomprehensible that they could hardly perswade themselues of the truth thereof vntill they saw the Gentiles speake of it and helpe them forward with ayd toward theyr country This serueth greatly to comfort and cheare vp the hearts of the faithfull that seeing God will giue rest vnto his beloued people vaine are the practises of the enemies althogh they band themselues together as Herod Pontius Pilate and the high Priests did in the dayes of Christ yet we haue assurance of deliuerance they shall not alwayes preuaile the people of God shall be preserued and all shall work for the best for their owne safety Thirdly this must teach vs in the time of Vse 3 our distresses while wee lye vnder the Crosse to relye vpon God whatsoeuer troubles and tentations arise although we should come to the gates of the graue and passe by the doore of death we must lift vp our heads knowing that our deliuerance draweth nere This then serueth to worke patience in the seruants of God and to teach vs to waite vpon him vntill the time of rest and refreshing come from the presence of God for surely it will come as the Prophet Habbakkuk teacheth chapt 2. verse 3. The vision is yet for an appointed time but at the last it shall speake and not lye though it tarry waite for it shall surely come and shall not stay So when the Angel had limited the time of the desolation of the holy people and of the deliuerance of the Church he pronounceth him blessed that waiteth vntill that time Dan. chap. 12. verses 11 12. And when the soules of them that were killed for the Word and the Testimony which they had maintained cryed out with a lowde voyce from vnderneath the Altar How long Lord which art holy and true Dooest not thou iudge and auenge our bloud on them that dwell on the earth An answer was giuen vnto them That they should rest for a little season vntill the number of their Brethren were fulfilled Reuel chap. 6. verse 10. This the Prophet Dauid sheweth to haue beene his practice earnestly waiting vppon the Lord for helpe and deliuerance out of all his troubles and dangers as Psalme 123 verses 1 2. I lifte vp mine eyes vnto thee which dwellest in the heauens Behold euen as the eyes of seruants looke vnto the hand of their masters and as the eyes of a maid vnto the hand of her mistris so our eyes waite vpon the Lord our God vntill he haue mercy vpon vs. Great are our feares and troubles and many bee our infirmities it behooueth vs greatly therefore to cleaue vnto the liuing God without separation and euermore continue our trust in him and to poure out our meditations and prayers before him vntill such time as hee graciously looke vpon vs and grant our petitions yea it is our dutie whensoeuer we perceiue the time of our deliuerance to approach or to be expired or any signes and tokens thereof as the sprouting of the Figge-tree to appeare and to bee offered vnto vs from GOD it is our duty I say to raise vp our faith and to intreat God to bring his purpose to passe and to make good the words of his owne mouth When Daniel by reading the Prophets of God knew that the number of yeares appointed for the desolation of Ierusalem was expired he turned his face to the Lord with prayer Daniel 9 2. in fasting in weeping in sackcloth and ashes Vse 4 Lastly it is the duty of all such as lye not vnder the crosse to commend the common cause of their brethren to God Hath God giuen vs rest on euery side Do we liue in ease sitting vnder our Vines and Figge-trees enioying peace and liberty vnder a gracious Prince Do we enioy health and wealth and taste not of the bitter cup of affliction that others drinke of It is required of vs not to forget the affliction of Ioseph but to be mindfull of the miseries of other parts of the Church and to haue a fellow-feeling of their sorrows as that we be thereby prouoked to call vpon God for them This the Apostle vrgeth the Church of the Corinthians to thinke vpon 2 Corinthians chap. 1. verse 7 that they being partakers of the suffering of the Saints may also be partakers of the consolation This is a duty needfull to be learned and considered Wee know not what troubles may fall vpon our selues There is nothing that happeneth vnto any of our brethren but it may fall vpon our owne heads Let vs therefore call vpon God for others and remember them that are in trouble Heb. 13 2. as if we were troubled with them that so we may haue the benefit of other mens prayers be deliuered when wee fall into troubles It is therefore a duty that we owe to God and our brethren being touched with a respect of his commandement of their misery His commandement should compell vs their miserie should mooue vs not to be forgetfull of their condition And from hence we should haue a double meditation First it is our parts to praise the name of the Lord when hee giueth to our brethren or to vs any share of this outward prosperity and manifesteth his loue vnto vs by deliuering our soules from death our eyes from teares and our feete from falling Psalme 116 8.14 When he causeth our houses to be inhabited our streets to bee replenished our
2 1 2. Let vs pray heartily for their preseruation life health wealth prosperity and encrease of all honour considering that the prayer of a faithfull man auayleth much if it be feruent Vse 3 Lastly we learne heere to feare them onely for euill doing So long as wee doe well it skilleth not who stand by vs and see vs thogh the eyes of al men be vpon vs. The duty of the Magistrate is to allow approue it to commend and reward it This is it which the Apostle teacheth Magistrates are not to be feared for good workes but for euill wilt thou then be without feare of the power Doe well so shalt thou haue praise of the same but if thou doe euill feare for he beareth not the sword for nought Rom. 13 3. Where wee see they are in regard of their high place a terror to men but it must be to the wicked to the godly they should not bring any terrour This should comfort encourage all the faithfull in well doing the Magistrate is to them as a sanctuary and citty of refuge they should repaire and resort vnto them in time of trouble they are as a buckler to defend them and as an hauen to harbour them from the stormes and tempests that beat vpon them This is practised by the Shunamite who departed out of the land of Israel and soiourned in a strange land during the famine when she returned backe she called vpon the King for her house and for her land So the King appointed her an Eunuch saying Restore thou all that is hers and all the fruites of her lands since the day shee left the land vntill this time 2. Kings 8 3 6. She vsed the ordinance of God as he had commanded and God gaue a blessing vnto his owne ordinance Againe this serueth to terrifie vngodly men let them be restrayned from committing euill if not for conscience yet for feare if not for loue of godlinesse yet for the certainty of punishment that shall fall vpon them Although for a time they may escape yet in the end they shall bee met withall Moreouer it must put all Magistrats and superiors in mind to order the ends of their calling aright True it is there are two sinnewes of a common-wealth which knit the parts together to wit punishment and reward But it is not enough for them to shew mercy and iudgment but they must shew mercy to whom mercy belongeth and iudgement to whom iudgement appertaineth It is the office of the Minister to teach and to reproue to comfort to threaten to raise vp and to cast downe to root vp and to plant but if he comfort the wicked and harden them in their sinnes speake peace to whom the Lord hath not spoken peace and againe if hee threaten iudgment cast downe the heauy hearted and seeke to quench the smoaking flaxe and to breake the bruised reed he is not that wise Scribe which must giue to euery one in the family his portion in due season 2 Tim. 2 13. nor that workeman which needeth not to bee ashamed diuiding the word of truth aright So likewise it is the office of all Magistrates to punish and to reward to correct and to comfort without these no kingdome can flourish no citty can stand no house can continue But it behooueth them to consider who ought to bee the obiect and subiect as well of the one as of the other They must not discountenance the godly and embolden the wicked they must not spare the guilty and oppresse the innocent Their Lawes must not bee as the spiders web to catch the flye and to hold the gnat but let goe greater things and suffer them to escape to breake away from them They must make a difference betweene the cleane and vncleane betweene the holy and prophane He is a bad gardiner that plucketh vp his best plants and choisest hearbes of greatest price and suffereth the thornes thistles to take root and prosper which should bee cut downe and cast into the fire Math. 3 10. Hee is a bad husbandman that plucketh vp the wheat and good corne out of his field which was to bee gathered into the barne when the time of haruest came and suffereth tares and darnell to grow which were fitter to be bound in sheaues and burned Math. 13 29. It is no mercy to spare the life of the wolfe and to shed the blood of the Lambe Heereupon it is that Salomon saith Prou 17 15. He that iustifieth the wicked and hee that condemneth the iust euen they both are abhomination to the Lord. This appeareth in Ahab who solde himselfe to worke wickednesse in the sight of God and brought destruction vpon his owne head as well by slaying the innocent that should haue beene defended as by sparing the wicked that should haue beene destroyed For when the bloud of Naboth was spilt as water vpon the earth that cannot be gathered it cried to heauen for vengeance And the Lord paid him home to the full in his owne person and in his posterity 1 Kings 21 19 and 22 38. And when he spared Benhadad whom hee ought not to haue spared the Lord said vnto him Because thou hast let goe out of thine hands a man whom I appointed to dye thy life shall go for his life and thy people for his people 1 Kings 20 42. To this purpose wee reade in another place of Prouerbs chap. chap. 24 24. He that saith vnto the wicked Thou art righteous him shall the people curse and the multitude abhorre him Let vs all lay this to our hearts If we haue any in our seuerall gouernments that are godly feare the Name of God let such bee made much of let them finde our helpe and fauour let them bee comforted and encouraged in well doing But on the other side we are not to winke at the wicked but labour to finde them out and to draw them out of their dens where they lurke watching their seasons to pester poyson others remembring alwayes the ends for which God hath lifted vp the heads of all Gouernors aboue their brethren to wit that euill doers should be punished and that such as do well should be commended considering duely diligently that the time will come when they must giue an account to God of the Stewardship committed vnto them Verse 6. And behold one of the children of Israel came and brought vnto his brethren a Midianitish woman in the sight of Moses c. In these words is offered vnto vs an example expressing the nature of sinne where once it is entertained For behold here how they grow in sinne and proceed from euil to worse from a great sinne to a greater At the first they departed out of the hoast of Israel and went to the people of Moab and Midian with whom they coupled themselues so that albeit they sinned yet they had some shame of sinne and made some conscience of committing it opēly amongst their
who afterward was reckoned amongst the sonnes of Midian that were slaine by Moses Numbers 31 8. These names of the two persons are singled out amongest the rest vnto their perpetuall infamy and reproach For as the names of the righteous are registred and remembred to their euerlasting praise so the name of the vngodly shal rot Prou. 10 ver 7. Their families are fingled out that part of the disgrace and dishonour should blemish them to humble them and to instruct them to nourish sinne in none of their kindred Their high place is singled out to teach that GOD the Iudge of all the world iudgeth without respect of persons and that all men of what credite and countenance soeuer should feare before him Verse 7. And when Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron the Priest saw it hee rose vp c. This holy man of God slew the adulterer and the adulteresse with a speare If he had beene a meere priuate man this shedding of blood had beene vnlawfull in him howsoeuer they deserued it But the Spirit of God was his direction and hee had a secret calling to be to him as a sure safe warrant So then albeit priuate persons may put no mā to death as appeareth in the Commandement Exod. 20 13 yet such as are warranted from God are his Officers and Magistrates Doctrine Actions in ●hemselues vnlawful are by a calling made lawfull We learne from hence that actions which of themselues and in their own nature are vnlawfull vnseemely and against humanity by a calling from God become lawfull warrantable and necessary This speciall calling giuen vnto speciall men is sometimes outward and sometimes inward The inward calling is when God by the motion of his Spirit moueth the heart to doe some speciall worke against the ordinary rules that he left to the rest of the sonnes of men Heereof we haue plentifull examples in the booke of Iudges in those whom God extraordinarily raised vp to saue his people and to destroy their enemies Whē Eglon King of Moab oppressed Israel kept them in great slauery and subiection as a tyrant and vsurper the Lord stirred vp Ehud Iudg. 3 15 16. who made him a Dagger with two edges conueyed it closely vnder his garment and when opportunity serued he thrust it into his belly and flew him This action had beene sinfull without this calling for though Eglon were an oppressour yet the killing of him had not beene warrantable The like we see afterward in the same booke set before vs in the example of Sampson for there we see he tooke to wife an vncircumcised Philistim Iudg. 14 and 15 and 16 he tyed firebrands to the Foxes tayles to burne their Corne he carried away the gates of Azzah he slew many with the iaw-bone of an Asse pulled down the house of Dagon whereby hee killed the Princes people and himselfe He was inwardly called and commanded to doe these works of God For when he spake to his father to giue him one of the daughters of the Philistims to wife that pleased him well his father and his mother faide vnto him Is there neuer a wife among the daughters of thy brethren and among all thy people that thou must goe take a wife of the vncircumcised Philistims For they knew not that it came of the Lord that hee should seeke an occasion against the Philistims Iudg. chapter 14 verse 4. The same we noted before in Moses slaying the Egyptian which fact howsoeuer some condemne as vnlawfull both because he was not appointed a Iudge ouer that people but was a priuate man and because he seemed to passe the bounds of iustice supposing he were a Magistrate punishing the smiting of a blow Exod. 2 12 with the taking away of life seeing God commanded a tooth for a tooth Exod. 21 24 wound for wound and blow for blow yet it appeareth by the words of Stephen that GOD had giuen him commission and endued him with authority to deliuer the Israelites and to auenge their iniuries when he saith He supposed his brethren would haue vnderstood that God by his hand shold giue them deliuerance but they vnderstood it not Acts chap. 7 25. Againe when Moses had receiued the Law in the Mount written with the finger of God and beeing come downe had seene the molten Calfe Hee tooke the two Tables and cast them out of his two hands and brake them before their eyes Deut. chap. 9 verse 17. He did not this through any vnaduised zeale or hastinesse or fleshly affection but God gouerned him by his holy Spirit stirred him vp by this exraordinary meanes to declare to the people that his Couenant was broken and disanulled that was made betweene them Likewise some haue had an outward calling commanding and warranting the doing of extraordinary things So Abraham was commanded by liuely voice to take his sonne his onely sonne him whom he loued euen Isaac the sonne of promise and to offer him vp for a burnt offering vpon one of the mountaynes which God would shew him Gen. 22 2. This also appeareth in one of the children of the Prophets who willed his neighbour to smite him by the commandement of the Lord and in smiting to wound him that hee might disguise himselfe when hee spake vnto the King 1. Kings 20 35. The reasons making these extraordinary Reason 1 workes lawfull are apparent First true obedience standeth not in mans will but in the commandement of GOD. Whatsoeuer hee commandeth howsoeuer our carnall reason iudgeth of it and whatsoeuer iniquity it may seeme vnto vs to contayne or prescribe wee must account it lawfull That which hee forbiddeth what shew soeuer it carrieth of piety and holinesse is vnlawfull This appeareth in the answere of Christ vnto Iohn Baptist putting him backe and refusing to baptize him Let be now for thus it becommeth vs to fulfill all righteousnesse Math. 3 15. And to this purpose the Prophet speaking of this act of Phinehas here remembred sayth It was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Psal 106 31. If then in those actions the children of God obeyed him and followed not theyr owne corrupt wils they must needs be held and pronounced to be lawfull Reason 2 Secondly none can withstand his commandements That is righteous which he accounteth righteous And if he will haue it done who shall contradict it Who is so strong as to resist his will This doth the Apostle Peter declare when he had beene with Cornelius he maketh this defence for himselfe Forasmuch as God gaue them a like gift as hee did vnto vs when wee beleeued in the Lord Iesus Christ who was I that I could let God Acts 11 7. Thus we see the Doctrine confirmed now Vse 1 let vs see likewise how it may bee applyed First marke heere the difference betweene God and our selues His word is our light and direction Wee haue no other way or warrant to approue our actions but from God and his word but
our selues True it is he is mindfull of a few that serue him and ready to shew mercy to one of a City and two of a Tribe that feare his Name Though they be contemned derided of the vnthankfull world yet they are deare to him and they come vp in remembrance before him When all flesh had corrupted their waies he remembred Noah and his family saued eight persons when he destroyed all the rest Gen. 7 1. So he deliuered righteous Lot 2 Pet. 2.7 when hee ouerthrew the cities of the plaine and would haue spared Sodome if ten righteous persons had beene found in it Ge. 18 32. On the other side if multitudes trespasse against him and rush on in euil as the horse into the battell he will not spare them for their multitude sake It is a great encouragement vnto many to walk in the broad way Math. 7.13 because many there are that go in thereat they are much discouraged and terrified from entring into the strait gate narrow way because there be few that finde it they shal haue litle company to go with them but if wee would consider the end both of the one of the other it were sufficient to make vs wise vnto saluation It is a very notable remarkeable iudgment that is remembred vnto vs that fell vpō this multitude the exceeding goodnes kindnes of the Lord onely toward two persons of those sixe hundred thousand that were brought out of the land of Egypt forasmuch as albeit he saued them from the hands of Pharaoh yet afterward he destroyed them that beleeued not Iude 5. Who doth not desire rather like Caleb Ioshuah to be had in euerlasting remembrance Psa 112 6 to haue our names written in the booke of life then to perish with the multitude and to be cast into destruction Vse 2 Secondly it warneth and warranteth the Ministers of God to be bold to reproue sinne in all though they be neuer so great and gracious in the world though they be many yea a whole multitude yet if they be a sinful company they haue a commandement and commission giuen vnto them to reprooue them without respect of persons without care of the multitude and without feare of their faces This is a certaine rule a multitude may not stoppe our mouthes from reprouing sinne and it serueth as a shield and sure defence for the Ministers against those that vpbraid them for their faithfulnesse in their callings asking them what they need to trouble themselues and the people by reproouing these and these things doe you not see that all men practise them It is no matter who or what they are that offend whether they be many or few al or some he is not to be silent because of the multitude but is rather to open his mouth the wider and to lift vp his voyce the louder For if Gods hand will not be stayed when great cities are sinfull when the whole world corrupted their wayes but his iudgements will certainely come according to our sinnes the Minister ought not to be dumbe and tongue-tyed though a whole land be corrupt and sinfull In the dayes of Noah all flesh became obstinate and disobedient stiff-necked and abominable yet he is made a Preacher of righteousnesse to reproue the world of sinne 1 Pet. 3 20. If a Prince send forth his Herald to proclaime warre against a company of rebels shall the Herald because he findeth them to be a great multitude returne backe and not pronounce the sentence and yet thinke himselfe discharged No certainly hee may not do so but rather he should doe it the more speedily and earnestly and boldly because they are a multitude how then should the Minister hold his peace and haue his mouth stopped because generally the times are corrupt and the dayes are euill whereas he should consider that the moe doe sinne the more God is offended dishonored and prouoked In the time of a generall plague or infectious sicknesse will any well in his wits or in his right minde say to the Physician Take no care to cure or recouer any it is a vaine labour to goe about it for the plague is generall Is it not rather the honour of a Physician that will still stay and do his endeauor euen then when the disease is dispersed and scattered farre and neare And shall it bee thought the dishonour of the Minister of God when the plague of sin is spread as a leprosie ouer all that from the sole of the foote euen vnto the head there is no soundnesse but wounds and bruises putrifying sores if he shall then lift vp his voyce as a Trumpet and reproue sin with zeale and boldnesse No doubtles he ought to do it if he be faithfull and painefull in his place hee will do it yea though he see little hope when the euill is growne common and hath preuailed the hearts of the multitude through custome are hardened For if the blood of one soule that perisheth be a burden too heauy to be borne how then shall he bee able to beare the weight and the cry of the blood of many soules If the blood of Abel which was but the blood of the body and that but of one only Gen. 4 10. did notwithstanding cry for vengeance against him that shed it doubtlesse the blood of the soule much more of many soules redeemed by the precious blood of Christ shall cry vnto God and bring wrath vpon their heads that shed it as water vpon the earth Forasmuch as they must answer for them if they perish through their negligence and ydlenesse What though no repentance or reformation follow our reproofes yet we must not giue ouer but continue constant in our caling knowing that our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord but our reward is layde vp with God in the life to come to remaine for euer Vse 3 Lastly it must teach and admonish vs to take heed that we doe not follow a multitude to do euil nor be caried with the time as with a streame to commit wickednes as if we must needs be safe and out of gun-shot because we follow the multitude and do as the most doe For it is neuer a whit the lesse sin neyther are lesse iudgements to be looked for In the gouernment of a priuate family if al the seruants and children should conspire together against the gouernor of the houshold shall their multitude ioyning in one euer a whit excuse or lessen their conspiracy No certainely rather it will make the master of the family to bee far more angry and displeased with them so is it in this point thogh they be many that rebell rise vp against God yet they shall therby nothing at all protect themselues from his wrath and displeasure Iude ver 4. There are many thousands in hell ordained of old to this condemnation yet none of them hath the lesse torment or the
others but when we must lay downe this earthly tabernacle little or no difference will appeare The condition of all men is alike in death and Salomon saieth Eccl. chap. 9 verse 4. A liuing dogge is better then a dead Lyon We must therefore know that whatsoeuer we are we are no better then dust whether we consider the originall cause or the finall we are of the dust and we must returne againe to the dust and can carry away nothing with vs. Secondly this should instruct men of high Vse 2 places to turne vnto God to serue him with feare ●nd to reioyce before him with trembling yea to kisse the sonne lest he be angry and they perish in the way for when his wrath is kindled but a little blessed are all they that put theyr trust in him For when all must appeare before the iudgement seate of God no ensigne of honour will do vs any good Let not the rich man glory in his riches or the strong man in his strength nor the noble man in his honour but hee that glorieth let him glory in this That hee vnderstandeth and knoweth God that he is the Lord which exerciseth kindnesse iudgement and righteousnesse in the earth for in these be delighteth Ierem. chap. 9 verse 14. When a man commeth before an earthly Iudge hee respecteth not the person of the poore nor honoureth the person of the mighty for that were to doe vnrighteousnesse in iudgement but hee iudgeth his neighbour rightly Leuit. 19 15. How much more then must we assure our selues that the Iudge of all the world will do right The Prophet Dauid chosen of God to bee the Gouernour of his people professeth that he will sing mercy and iudgement Psalm 101 verse 1. Thus shall it be with God heere the vngodly often escape because no man dare attach them or meddle with them but in the end they shall not escape Euery man shall appeare without his vizard here some poore are respected for theyr rags the rich for theyr bagges the noble for theyr Escutchions the Captaines for theyr armes the mighty for theyr friends the clyents for theyr bribes thus are the eyes of men dazeled and blinded that they cannot consider euery mans cause but too much respect the person It is not so with God All the glory of man is no better then vanity like the flower of the field that fadeth away God looketh vpon the heart if we come before him with a soule washed in the blood of Christ this will keepe vs from the wrath of God Vse 3 Lastly from hence ariseth comfort to the oppressed and them of low degree that are in misery to know that God will pleade theyr cause and enter into iudgement with the mighty ones of the earth He is higher then the highest and stronger then the strongest Heere men stand in feare of them that do not stand in feare of God but God feareth not theyr faces He heareth the cry of the poore and will deliuer them Marke the end that God will make who is the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords he will call those to iudgment that heere escape the hands of men When they shall receiue for the wrong which they haue done because with him is no respect of persons Col. 3 25. 12 And they brought the captiues the prey and the spoile vnto Moses Eleazar the Priest and vnto the Congregation of the C●●ldren of Israel vnto the Campes at the plaine of Moab which are by Iordan neere Iericho 13 And Moses and Eleazar the Priest and all the Congregation went foorth to meete them without the Campe. 14 And Moses was wroth with the Officers of the hoast with the Captaines ouer thousands and Captaines ouer hundreds which came from the battell 15 And Moses saide vnto them Haue ye saued all the women aliue 16 Behold these caused the children of Israel through the counsell of Balaam to commit a trespasse against the Lord as concerning Peor and there came a plague among the Congregation of the Lord. 17 Now therefore kill euery male among the children and kill euery woman that hath knowne man c. 18 But all the women children that haue not knowne a man by lying with him keepe aliue for your selues 19 And do yee abide without the Campe seuen dayes all that haue killed any person and all that haue touched any dead and purifie both your selues and your prisoners the third day and the seuenth 20 And ye shall purifie euery garment and all that is made of skinnes and all worke of Goats haire and all things made of wood 21 And Eleazar the Priest said vnto the men of warre which went to the battell This is the ordinance of the Law which the Lord commanded Moses 23 Euery thing that may abide the fire ye shal make it goe through the fire and it shall be cleane yet it shall be purified with the water of purification and all that suffereth not the fire ye shall cause to passe by the water In the words before we heard the maruellous and memorable iudgement of GOD against the Midianites who were enemies to the Church of God among whom also Balaam perished He wished to dye the death of the righteous chap. 23 10 but hee lost his life among the vnrighteous Thus they that digge a pit oftentimes fall into it themselues Psalm 7. Now in these words we haue the third and last part of the Chapter touching the yssue of things after the battell when the Captaines Souldiers returned from the battell These are of two sorts First the things that happened before they came into the Campe to the 25 verse and then what fell out when they were admitted into the Campe. Touching the things that befell the men of war before they were admitted into the hoast they are these foure First Moses chideth and checketh them because they had done the Commandement of God to halfes they had executed a part and left another part vndone like Saul that spared the fatter Sheepe and Oxen for sacrifice 1. Sam. 15. verse 21. They had saued all the women vnder a pretence of foolish pitty accounting it no honour or valour to consist in killing them but they ought to haue beene destroyed because they caused the children of Israel to commit a trespasse against the Lord and a great plague fell vpon the congregatiō of the Lord chapter 25 1. Secondly Moses commandeth that such should all be destroyed theyr eye must spare none of them but the women children that had not knowne man by carnall copulation should be reserued aliue for their vses Thirdly hee commandeth the men of warre to purifie themselues before they came into the host Lastly we see the commandement of Eleazar the Priest to purifie the siluer and gold and garments that they had gotten that such mettals as would abide the fire and not be consumed should passe through it the rest was to bee washed with water that so they might be consecrated
but meeteth with them one way or other eyther he striketh them with his owne hand that did lift vp their hands to strike others or he deliuereth them ouer to the Magistrate Some times he maketh them to be witnesses against themselues sometimes to discouer themselues in their dreames sometimes to feele the torments of hell in their owne consciences and sometimes the birds of the ayre to reueale them We see this in Caine that slew his brother for God set a marke vpon him and branded him for his wretched parricide Genesis 4 verse 15. This the very heathen themselues knew by the light of nature that howsoeuer the murtherer may escape out of some danger yet vengeance will pursue and ouertake him Acts 28 4. This we see in Herod that killed Iames with the sword and put Peter in prison intending also the like against him hee escaped not the hand of God long but his deepe vengeance did so dog him at the heels that he was smitten shortly after by the greater stroake of an Angel from heauen and was eaten vp of worms Acts 12 2.23 Thus did Samuel speake to king Agag 1 Sam. 15 33. As thy sword hath made women childlesse so shall thy mother bee childlesse among women and he hewed him in peeces before the Lord. The like we see in Ioab who was smitten with the sword as hee had killed others 1 Kings 2 31 32. And it is to be obserued what Dauid saith of him concerning the blood of Abner that he had spilled 2 Sa. 3 29. Let it rest on the head of Ioab and on all his fathers house and let there not faile from the house of Ioab one that hath an yssue or that is a leper or that leaneth on a staffe or that falleth on the sword or that lacketh bread Thirdly God doth so detest murther that if a beast kill a man it must bee stoned to death and his flesh not eaten Exod. 21 28. What is God offended with the bruite beasts or do they sinne against him and breake his Commandement No but thereby GOD would shew how much hee abhorreth the shedding of mans blood and that man should lay it to his heart Fourthly it is an offence against a mans owne flesh Eph. 5 29 No man euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it now euery man is as our owne flesh Esay 58 7. We see Beares and Lions and Tigres and wilde beasts doe play together because they are of one kinde mankind is of one kind if we do not agree together but prey one vppon another we are more fierce then Beares more cruell then Lyons more mercilesse then Tygres and more sauage then wilde beasts Fiftly such as slew another violently were taken out of the Cities of refuge by violence God wold giue no protection to such beasts neither City nor Altar nor Tabernacle nor any thing could yeeld them any safegard Deu. 19 11 12 13. 1 Kings 2 31 32. Sixtly it is a crying sinne blood hath a very lowd voice and neuer ceaseth crying vntill iudgement fall vpon the head of the murtherer Gen. 4 10. Beholde the blood of thy brother cryeth from the earth Abel was now dead his mouth was stopped and he could not speak but his blood could speake the which called and cryed in the eares of the Lord GOD of hoastes from the earth for vengeance Hebre. 11 4. Seuenthly no pardon was to bee giuen to such as appeareth in this chapter and verse 32. Ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of him that is a murtherer which is guilty of death but he shall surely be put to death Lastly the Land is defiled by it ver 33 34. Blood defileth the Land and the Land cannot bee clensed of the blood that is shed therein but by the blood of him that shed it Defile not therefore the Land which ye shall inherite wherein I dwell for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel Now let vs come to the vses First we haue iust cause to feare the wrath of God and if he come to make inquisition of blood he shall finde much blood spilt vpon the earth like water that cannot be gathered vp again throughout the whole Land What abundance of iniustice and cruelty is there to be found in euery place and thought to be iust and vpright dealing How many are there to bee found that hauing once conceyued anger and malice in their hearts will remaine whole dayes and moneths and yeares before they will bee reconciled nay speake one to another thereby depriuing themselues of the mutuall comfort they might reape and receyue and by suffering the Sunne to goe downe vpon their wrath doe giue place to Satan to enter into them to possesse them Eph. 4 26 27. And what colour soeuer men set vpon their cruelty it is but a false painting of a foule face as Adams fig-leaues that couered his shame but could not hide his sinne If it be done vnder pretence of law it is a most fearefull sinne the pretence it selfe maketh it more fearefull because fained iustice is a double iniustice When the Law is so wrested that it is made the occasion of murther it must needs be offensiue displeasing vnto God And albeit this sinne be committed by the Magistrate in letting malefactors go vnpunished yet it must needs bee offensiue vnto GOD because it is that which bringeth the guilt of blood vpon the Land nothing can clense the Land from blood but the blood of him that shed blood This made the Prophet say to Ahab Because thou hast let go out of thy hand a man whom I appointed vnto destruction therefore thy life shall goe for his life and thy people for his people 1 Kings 20 42. Whē there was a famine in the Land in the dayes of Dauid three yeares yeare after yeare and hee enquired of the Lord the cause of that sore iudgement the Lord answered It is for Saul and for his bloody house because hee slew the Gibeonites 2 Sam. 21 1 and the attonement could not be made vntil seuen men of his sons were deliuered into their hands and they were hanged vp vnto the Lord that his inheritance might be blessed The sinnes of the sonnes of Eli became to be the sins of their father not because he was their father neyther yet because he was the committer of them but because he being a Magistrate did not punish correct them so likewise when iudgement is not executed vpon men for their sinnes the blood of those which are slaine must needs remaine in the Land If this be committed by way of reuenge it is also an heynous sinne against almighty God because he that doth it preuenteth Gods worke and so prouoketh Gods wrath for he taketh Gods office out of his hand and taketh vp his place who hath saide Vengeance is mine Rom. 12. And if we ascend to the higher degree of men shall wee not finde among them little conscience made of shedding