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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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kill our bodies the filthy stincke that issues out of these dead carkasses of sin will kill both body and soule therefore let them be detested by us These dead workes of sinne will poyson us all therefore have nothing to doe with them as wee love our life which is most deere to us all skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life so let us avoide these dead workes that deprive us of eternall life in the world to come 5. Dead things are heavy a dead man So these lye heavy on our consciences Caine Iudas they were not able to beare that intollerable burden Sins may very well be termed dead workes 1. Laedunt vitam naturae they make our naturall life more unpleasant to us in the end they cut the threed of it for the wages of sinne is death if we had never sinned against God we should never have dyed 2. Carent vita gratiae So long as we are dead in our sins we are out of the favour of God 3. Auferunt vitam gloriae they deprive us of the kingdome of heaven in the life to come therefore they are worthily termed dead workes Thirdly the end of our redemption is to serve God we are redeemed from our old conversation not to our old conversation we are bought with the bloud of Christ not to serve the Devill our selves the flesh the world we have served them too much already but from henceforth we must serve God And how must we serve him 1. Integraliter in soule and body not in body alone as hypocrites doe that draw neere to GOD with their lippes but their hearts are farre from him nor in soule alone as some fearefull Christians doe which say they have a good heart to God-ward and yet give their bodyes to the service of the Devill As God by Iesus Christ hath redeemed both soule and body so we must glorifie him with them both 2. Wee must serve God peculiariter him and him alone I am a jealous God Thou shalt have no other Gods besides me We must not make our belly our God as Epicures doe our money our God as covetous misers doe but wee must serve God alone hee must have all our service Matth. 4.10 3. Perseveranter not a while but continually to our lives end bee faithfull to the end and I will give thee the Crowne of life If wee persevere not in his service to our dying day wee shall loose our reward 4. Totaliter all the time of our whole life Wee must serve him not only when wee bee old drie and withered but in our fresh and flourishing yeeres wee must beare the yoke of the LORD when wee are young hee must have the first fruits of our service But alas though wee professe that wee are redeemed by CHRIST yet wee serve our owne lusts and affections wee serve not the living GOD as wee ought to doe Let us have a care to serve the living GOD in this short and transitory world that we may live eternally with this everliving GOD in the world to come There is no fishing to the Sea no service to the Kings nor no service to the King of Kings 1. Some Masters are poore and cannot reward their servants our master is rich heaven and earth are his Hester though a poore mayde yet because she served him he made her a Queene 2. Some masters are churlish and will not reward their servants as Nabal was wee have a kinde and loving master not the least service we doe if we give but a cup of cold water in his name but he will reward it 3. Earthly Masters give but earthly rewards they may give good wages while yee be with them and peradventure bestow a farme on you but our master will give us a kingdome 4. Earthly masters dye Gentlemen Knights Noblemen dye yea Kings themselves dye and then their servants seeke abroad but our master lives for ever Therefore let us serve him with all cheerefulnesse let us serve him in this life and we shall enter into the joy of our Master Will the Son of Iesse give you all Vineyards Our Master will give us all a kingdome We are servants here we shall bee Kings there have palmes in our hands and Crownes on our heads and raigne with him for ever VERSE 15. SEcondly the truth and substance of the Tabernacle is applyed to Christ as to a testatour Where 1. The constitution of the Testament Verse 15. 2. A confirmation of it In the constitution of it there be foure circumstances 1. The legatour 2. The death of the testatour that strengthens the Testament 3. The legatarie every believer 4. The legacie an eternall inheritance The instrumentall cause whereby wee attaine to our legacie was the death of Christ which hath a double use 1. To purchase redemption for us as a Priest we are redeemed by the bloud of Christ from the bonds of sins wherewith we were tyed by vertue of the former Testament 2. To ratifie the covenant and Testament to us as a Testatour he is a Priest in regard of God making an attonement for us with his bloud hee is a Testatour in respect of us bequeathing that to us which hee hath bought with his bloud It is ratified by the death of the Testatour Which is confirmed by two arguments 1. Iure humano Verses 16.17 2. Iure legali Where 1. A generall assertion Ver. 18. 2. A particular explication of it Verse 19.20 Here may seeme to be some contradictions 1. There it is said when Moses had read the booke here it is said when hee had spoken every precept that is appertaining to the booke of the covenant So that there is no jarre but a sweete harmony 2. There is mention only of the bloud of Beeves here of Calves and Goates they are by a Synecdoche comprehended in the other 3. There is nothing said of water wooll and hysop but there he speakes of sprinkling and these were used in all sprincklings 4. It is not said that the booke was sprinckled but that may well bee collected Verse 6. for having made an Altar and set the booke of the covenant on it with halfe of the bloud he sprinckled the Altar and the booke afterwards hee sprinckled the people too 5. There it is said this is the bloud of the Testament which God hath made with you Here which GOD commanded to bee brought to you This in sense is all one it was made according to the booke and being made was brought to them comprised in the booke Exod. 24.9 The force of the argument is this the former Testament was confirmed with bloud by the death of Calves Goats c. therefore it was requisite that the latter Testament should be ratified with bloud namely by the death of Christ the Testatour Because by his owne bloud hee hath purged our consciences which the bloud of beasts could not doe in the Law He by whose meanes and mediation the New
writing by his Apostles The Testatour is Christ the thing bequeathed is an inheritance the legataries are the faithfull the witnesses to it are his Apostles Act. 1.8 The seales are the Sacraments the exequutor is the HOLY GHOST Ioh. 14.16 which is CHRIST 's Vicar on the earth a faithfull exequutor that will give us our legacies to the full and deprive us of nothing Our SAVIOUR is dead therefore his Testament is of force Object If CHRIST 's Testament was of no force till his death then how could they in the time of the Law have remission of sinnes and eternall life Sol. In seeing the day of Christ by the eye of faith as Abraham did it was not in force complemento till Christ dyed acceptatione it was This eternall inheritance could not have come to us without the death of our Saviour Christ. If hee had not dyed wee could never have had possession of this inheritance therefore how are wee to love the Lord Iesus that hath ratified this inheritance to us by his bloud Let the consideration of the death of Christ worke a death to sinne in us all that as he hath dyed for us to procure this inheritance so we may dye to sin daily more and more Seeing the Testatour is dead we may assure our selves of this inheritance bequeathed to us by his will It is a rule in Law debts must be payd before legacies and oft-times under the colour of paying debts the legataries goe long without their legacies It cannot be so here our Saviour Christ left no debts to pay he ought nothing he departed cleere with all men therefore we may be sure of our legacie All the devils in the world cannot keepe us from it VERSE 18. DEdicated to God by certaine Solemne rites and ceremonies Hinc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the feast of dedication Ioh. 10.22 Much lesse should the latter bee ordained without bloud VERSE 19. TO the Law as God required Exod. 24.8 Every precept being spoken by Moses Some thinke that all the people are said to be sprinkled because the twelve pillars representing the twelve tribes of Israel were sprinckled Others thinke that some few of the elders were sprinckled instead of all the rest Or all may be put for a great part In a manner all of them were sprinckled VERSE 20. YEt it was the bloud of heifers or of Goates but it is called the bloud of the testament because by it was signified Christ his bloud which is the maker of the Testament to this did our Saviour allude Matth. 26.28 this is the bloud of the New Testament which was shed for you Beza translates it that God hath commanded to you as if it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but rather expound it which God hath commanded subaudi to be carryed to you The bloud of Calves and goates sprinckled on the people in the time of the Law was a figure of Christ's bloud sprinckled on our consciences Object Here wee may learne say the Rhemists that the Scripture containes not all necessary truths when neither the place to the which the Apostle alludeth nor any other doth mention halfe these ceremonies but he had them by tradition Sol. I but all these are contained in the Scripture The booke was sprinckled on the Altar or at least with the respersion that was cast on the people For the purple wooll and hysop Levit. 14.51 there is the water too Ribera sayes all these are necessarily collected for there could be no sprinckling without them Vnder the peace offerings Exod. 24.5 are comprehended Goates appointed to peace offerings as wee may see Levit. 3.12 The meaning of these words is nothing else but this is a significant token of the bloud of the New Testament that is to bee shed for your sins This bloud sprinckled on the people was a significant type and figure of the bloud of our Saviour Christ whereby the New Testament is confirmed to us That was the bloud of Goates and Heifers this of Christ the immaculate Lamb of God 2. Moses was the sprinckler of that bloud the Holy Ghost is the sprinckler of this 3. That was sprinckled on the face or garments of the people this on our hearts and consciences 4. The aspertorium the sprinckling sticke there was made of purple wooll and hysop the aspertorium here is faith With that doth the Spirit or God sprinckle on us the bloud of Christ. 5. That sprinckling did but sanctifie the outward man this the hid man of the heart 6. The force and power of that sprinckling lasted but a while the efficacy of this sprinckling continueth for ever Therefore let us all be desirous of this sprinckling As the Woman of Samaria said Lord give me of that water So let us say LORD sprinckle us with the bloud of CHRIST continually It is a comfortable thing for a man to bee sprinckled with sweet water it is a sweet smell and refreshes him but nothing so sweete as the bloud of CHRIST sprinckled on our soules and consciences by faith Let us desire the Lord to sprinckle this bloud on us dayly more and more that being washed with it wee may bee made fitt for the Holy Hierusalem and remaine with Christ for ever and ever Hebrewes 9.21 NOw followes an application of the rites and ceremonies belonging to the Tabernacle 1. A narration of them Verse 21.22 2. An accommodation of them The rites are two 1. The rite of consecration or sanctification Lev. 16.14 16. 8 15 18. 2. The rite of purification some by fire some by water Num. 31.23 In all things are comprehended also all persons An accommodation is made of these rites by the way of an antithesis or opposition whereof there be foure members 1. An application of the things Verse 23. 2. Of the place Verse 24. 3. Of the actions Verse 25.26 4. Of the use Verse 27.28 The things are applyed by way of opposition It was necessary that the types of heavenly things should be purified with such externall things for the purification of the flesh or outward man But c. The sacrifice of Christ is termed sacrifices in the plurall number and yet is but one because the fruit and efficacy of it is derived unto many So the wisedome of Christ is set forth by seven eyes his power by seven hornes Apoc. 5.6 The Holy Ghost being but one spirit it is called seven spirits Apoc. 1.4 The place is applyed by way of opposition 1. In respect of the nature that was made with hands this without 2. Of the use or end there the High-Priest did appeare before the Arke and Mercy-seate which were figures of Gods presence here our High-Priest appeares before GOD immediately without figures for us The third is an application of the action or service the dissimilitude whereof consisteth in three things 1. There the High-Priest went often into the holy place here our High-Priest went into heaven but once 2. He went with other bloud ours
speech for properly to speake God cannot repent Num. 23.19 Men repent of a thing either for want of knowledge and foresight into the thing or by reason of the mutability and inconstancy of their affections neither of these are incident to God hee knowes all things before they come to passe so doe not we therefore we repent and say if I had knowne this I would never have done it GOD knowes all things afore-hand therefore he cannot repent 2. Wee repent because wee are mutable like the Weather-Cocke and like little Children that are wonne with an Apple and lost with a Nutt that makes us repent of many things Everie new Tale carries us away It is not so with GOD hee yesterday and to day the same for ever therefore hee cannot repent When hee is said in Scripture to repent it is spoken for our capacitie for the which cause the Scripture brings him in angrie and chiding as men are wont to doe and yet no anger in GOD as we if we have entertained a man into our service and he proves not according to our minde then we repent that ever we tooke him into our service so the Scripture applying Gods doings to our capacitie introduces God repenting Man that was created after mine owne image is become brutish in his manners more disobedient to mee then any other creature therefore it repenteth me that I made man Saul proves a bad King therefore it repenteth me that I made him King this is spoken for our capacity otherwise God repents not man changes but he is the same still Men may repent being lighter than vanity it selfe moveable and variable weather-Cockes reeds turned about with every mind We may be of one minde to day of another to morrow Amnons hot love is turned into deadly hatred the people that would make Christ a King cry out against him crucifie him wee have no King but Caesar. The Lycaonians that would have worshipped Paul and done sacrifice to him as a God stoned Paul Yea good men oftentimes are changed and altered they repent of the goodnesse that they have done David upon a flattering tale repented of the favour hee shewed to Mephibosheth and gave away his lands to Zibah Often times an honest man of the Parish a true dealing man a pittifull and mercifull man that for a world would not any way offer the least wrong to any by the ungodly perswasion of some politicke Achitophel and churlish Nabal becomes an hard dealing man no constancy in men Yea Kings and Princes many times change and withdraw their affections from their favourites but God never repents of his love Whom he once loveth he loveth to the end and the gifts and calling of God is without repentance God may take away riches beauty strength wit learning from a man but hee never takes away faith and his sanctifying spirit from the faithfull As God here sware and would not repent so God hath sworne to bring us to the kingdome of heaven and hee will never repent of it therefore let us rest confident in Gods Word and oath there is no repentance in God VERSE 22. VPon the former premisses followeth the conclusion In as much as hee was made with an oath they without an oath by so much c. Hee doth not say he is made a better Priest but that which serveth more for our consolation he was made a surety of a better Testament Of a better covenant Sureties are in covenants not in Testaments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in manibus At the making of covenants pledges were put in hand and sureties were provided which did undertake for the performance of the things covenanted even so in the covenant made betweene God and us our Saviour CHRIST is the surety that undertakes for both parts on the behalfe of God the Father hee doth undertake to satisfie his wrath for us on our behalfe he doth undertake to reconcile us to God and to make him our friend A singular comfort to us Wee have sinned we are indebted to God many thousands sinnes and because wee cannot satisfie for them wee must goe to the prison of Hell then CHRIST steps forth saying nay I will bee their surety I will pay the debt for them therefore they shall not goe to hell unspeakeable comfort ô loving surety he payes the debt with no lesse price than his own bloud How are wee beholden to this surety All the Priests in the time of the law could not doe so much for the people therefore Christ is better than they The new Testament is better than the old not in regard of the substance but of diverse circumstances the substance of both is one which is Christ Iesus 1. The Old Testament did but shadow out things to come the new Testament makes a gift and an exhibition of them Col. 2.17 and as the body is better than the shadow so is the New Testament then the Old 2. The Old Testament was dark and obscure this is plain and perspicuous that did darkely speake of Christ this plainely This hath fewer more lively and easie Sacraments That was temporall and therefore not ratified with an oath this is eternall and lasteth for ever For the which cause it was confirmed with an oath So was not that 5. The Mediatour of surety of that was Moses the surety of this is CHRIST therefore many degrees greater and better than that It is a weighty thing that makes GOD sweare as Hebr. 3.11.6 17. here he sweares that CHRIST is a Priest for ever therefore wee are not to call into question the eternity of his Priest-hood The Pope and his skamblings would faine winde themselves into the society of this Priest-hood Christ is a Priest for ever ergo the Pope and his Clergy are Priests for ever I but this is proper to Christ this Priest that is for ever sitteth at the right hand of God Psalm 110.1 So doe not the Pope and his Clergy therefore it makes nothing for them We in the time of the Gospell have all things better than they had in the time of the Law we have a better Priest a better sacrifice a better Testament therefore in reason wee should bee better than they A King deales better with such a man then with many thousands of his subjects therefore he should bee more dutifull to him The King of Kings hath dealt more bountifully with us then with them in the time of the Law therefore we should be more religious more carefull to serve him then they were Yet it is to bee feared we are worse than they Drunkennesse abhominable swearing covetousnesse loathing of the sweete and heavenly Manna of the Word of God hard-hearted dealing one with another all kind of vices flow with a more full streame among us then among them Having all things better wee our selves should bee better yet wee are worse and therefore have the more fearefull account to make at the latter day VERSE 23. THe fourth argument is taken from a
us But alas we have no care of it we defile our selves innumerable kinde of wayes A dainty Lady or Gentlewoman would bee loath to file her fingers with a little dirt we all loath outward defilements but we give entertainement to sin which is the greatest pollution of all Nay we are like hogs that had rather be in fowle water then in cleane wallowing in the puddle of sin then bathing our selves in the bath of vertue As Christ separated Himselfe from sinners So must wee doe how wee must not shut up our selves in Cloysters in Nunneries and Monasteries as some did in a blind zeale in the time of Popery thinking that they were then separated from sinners when they were many of the most beastly sinners themselves Neither must wee be brethren of separation as the Brownists most unbrotherly name themselves we must not Hebr. 10.25 forsake the assembling of our selves together Wee must not separate our selves from the spouse of Christ because of some pretended wrinkles in her face neither must we altogether abandon the society of men 1 Cor. 5.10 but we must separate our selves from the pollution of sinners Though we be in Sodome as Lot was yet wee must not be Sodomites though we come into the company of drunkards yet we must not be drunken as they are though among adulterers bawdy talkers and livers yet wee must not draw with them in the same yoke of sin we must be like to the fishes that dwell in the salt water and yet themselves are fresh so though our dwelling be in a prophane towne yet wee must separate our selves from the prophanenesse that is in the Towne This is hard for us to doe though Christ could doe it It is a difficult matter to touch pitch and not to be defiled with it to bee in a fire and not to be burnt Barnabas keeping company with dissemblers was brought to dissemble with them and St. Peter that stout champion of Christ being in the high Priests hall was brought to the denyall of Christ. Therefore the best course we can take is to refraine their company as Ioseph if not but that wee fall into it then to pray to God to separate us from the wickednesse that is in that company The high-Priest in time of the Law was in a Sanctuary on the earth but our high-Priest is in the Temple and Sanctuary of heaven where he appeareth alwayes in the sight of God for us and let not our affections be here on the earth but let our conversation bee in heaven let us seeke the things that bee above where Christ our high-Priest and Saviour is VERSE 27. THe second thing in his Ministerie is his sacrifice which surpasseth the sacrifices of the Priests in the time of the Law in regard of the time when of the persons for whom and the kinde of sacrifice offered by him 1. For the time he had no necessity to offer daily as they did Num. 28.3 4. It was necessary for them to offer daily 1. Because both they and the people sinned daily 2. Because their sacrifices were imperfect and were dayly to be iterated There was no such necessity for Christ to offer dayly because he had no sin and by one sacrifice perfected us for ever 2. They did offer for their owne sinnes and the peoples too and that every day and so did not Christ. He had no sinne of his owne to offer for and as for the sins of the people he tooke them all away by one sacrifice First for he must be holy himselfe before hee could make the people holy Aaron sinned grievously in the calfe 3. For the kind of sacrifice they offered things without themselves as Sheepe Goates Oxen c. Christ offered himselfe he was Sacerdos victima Hebr. 9.14 We are all sinners Ministers and people we must all say yea even arietes gregis the Lords prayer forgive us our trespasses Therefore let us not swell in pride one against another but flie all to the mercy of God in Christ. Therefore let the best Preacher in the world knocke on his breast with the poore Publican and say Oh God be mercifull to me a sinner The order is here worthy to be observed he offered first for his owne sins A Minister in killing of sinne must begin with himselfe Si vis alios flere flendum tibi prius first weepe bitterly for thine own sins as Saint Peter did and then make the people to weepe for their sins I beat downe mine owne body sayes Saint Paul least while I preach to others my selfe should be a reprobate The like method must be practised by all Christians First cast the beame out of thine owne eye let us first represse sinne in our selves Then in others As the Priest in the time of the Law first offered for his owne sins so let us all being Priests by Iesus Christ first offer up our selves to God Wee count him a foole that will have more care of his neighbours Sheepe then of his owne and shall wee have more care of our neighbours soule then of our own Let us first begin with our selves There is but one sacrifice of the New Testament whereby the daily sacrifice of the masse is quite overthrowne This is a knife to cut the throat of the masse among the Papists the Priests offer up Christ dayly they doe more than needs there is no necessity of that for Christ offered up Himselfe once for all There bee many pregnant places for it in this epistle as Hebr. 10.11 12. I say the Papists there is but one bloudy sacrifice which was once offered on the Crosse 1 Pet. 3.18 yet there is an unbloudy sacrifice which Christ instituted at his last Supper where the body and bloud of Christ are offered under the similitudes of bread and wine which is a commemoration and an application of his sacrifice on the crosse to us for Christ said to his Disciples hoc facite that is Sacrificate as the Poet sayes cum faciam vitula pro frugibus ipse venito and the Hebrew word Gnasah doth often signifie sacrificare After the words of consecration bee said this is my body that is given for you i. that is offered to God the Father for you this is the bloud of the New Testament that is shed for many it was then shed and powred out for a sacrifice to God I but where do they read in any Author that hoc facite with an accusative case doth signifie to sacrifice The Poet doth not say facere vitulam 2. The Evangelists wrote in Greeke not in Hebrew or Latine Hee then ordained no propitiatory that 's my meaning sacrifice which was to be offered every day he instituted a Sacrament not such a sacrifice 1. In every sacrifice there is sensible quiddam as Bellar. confesseth and they also say it is an externall thing and they call it visible sacrificium In this imaginarie sacrifice there is no sensible outward thing that may be discerned by
sinne doe this in remembrance of me that my body was broken for you and my bloud shed for you on the Crosse. The immoderate showers that come oft in harvest and deprive us of the fruits of the earth may put us in minde of sin for they bee our sinnes that keepe good things from us Our moyling and toyling for the sustentation of our selves with much care and wearisome labour for if we had not sinned it shold not have bin so The sicknesses and diseases that bee among us terrible agewes that bring men to deaths doore and continue with them many weekes together the plague and pestilence that hath raged among us swept many thousands away and in a manner consumed some Townes c. the death of so many of our brethren and sisters continually before our eyes c. may put us in minde of sin for if we had not sinned wee should not have dyed There bee a number of things to put us in minde of sinne but there is nothing that can take away sinne but Iesus Christ the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world All these should humble us and make us to knocke on our breasts with the poore Publican and say ô God bee mercifull to us sinners Therefore let us all flye to this heavenly Physition for the curing of us VERSE 4. HE doth not say it is an unlikely thing hard or difficult but unpossible 1. God that is offended by sin and to be reconciled to us is a Spirit Bulls and Goats are fleshly things Psal. 50.13 2. God is most holy just and righteous there is no holinesse in Bulls and Goates 3. Man is a farre more glorious creature then Bulls and Goates created after Gods own Image endewed with reason and understanding yet the bloud of the wisest and holiest men in the world could not make satisfaction for sinne much lesse can the bloud of Bulls and Goates Yee are more worth than many Sparrowes so we are more worth than many Bulls and Goates 4. The Angels in heaven cannot take away sinne much lesse Bulls and Goates 5. As man had sinned so the bloud of man must bee powred out for the sin of man yea the bloud of such a man as knew no sin A sinner cannot satisfie for sinners therefore it became us to have such a High-Priest as was separated from sinners Neither was he to be a meere man but God and man the power of man is finite the power of God is infinite Therefore hee that delivered us from sinne offered up himselfe by his eternall Deity So that it is not the bloud of Bulls and Goates that can take away sinne but wee are purchased with the bloud of God Object Levit. 16.30 That is spoken sacramentally because that was a token and a signification of their clensing Object Rhemists The sacrifices of the Law before Christ could not take away sinne but the sacrifice of the New Testament since CHRIST 's death being an Application of it can take away sinne Sol. I but no creature can doe it neither before nor since CHRIST 's passion CHRIST yesterday and to day the same for ever Oh that this were effectually considered of us all Wee are redeemed from our old conversation by the precious bloud of CHRIST Our sins cost the bloud of the LORD IESUS Therefore let us take no pleasure in them David said of the water for the which three of his worthies ventured their lives this is the bloud of them c. Therefore hee would not drinke of it but powred it on the ground So as often as we are entised to sinne to drunkennesse uncleannesse covetousnesse c. Let us say these cost the bloud of the Sonne of God therefore though never so sweete let us not drinke of that water but hurle it away The love of CHRIST should constraine us to it Will any nourish a Serpent that hath killed his deere friend Sinne is the Serpent that killed CHRIST the friend of friends therefore let us not harbour him but hurle him out of doores Yet this bloud wherewith we are bought is little considered for all that wee wallow in sin still But they that belong to Christ will lay it to heart that it may be as a bridle to restraine them from sin As we are washed from our sins in the bloud of Christ no other bloud could do it so let us cast away sin keep our selves undefiled in this world that we may reigne with Christ in the world to come VERSE 5. 1. THe promised Messiah of whom David prophesieth in that Psalme for there bee sundry things that are peculiar to Christ and cannot be communicated to David 1. God required sacrifices of David but of this man he requireth none Psal. 40.6 2. This man was to supply the defect of the legall sacrifices and to fulfill the will of GOD perfectly for mankind this could not David doe Therefore this is a prophesie which David maketh of our Saviour Christ. Taking our nature on him In respect of his deity hee was in the world before but now he is in it too in respect of his humanity Ioh. 3.13 Eph. 4.9 yet he brought not his body with him from heaven 1 Cor. 15.47 Namely to God the Father Cruenta that were slaine incruenta Caphatsta thou takest no pleasure in He would have those sacrifices in the time of the Law as demonstrations of their obedience and monuments of thankefulnesse as Noah but now in the time of the Gospell hee will not have them 2. He would have them as types and figures for a time to represent the sacrifice of Christ to come but he will not have them as propitiatory for sin The only propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the world is the Christ's body which is opposed to the others Hast thou fitted in all respects for me Here seemes to be an apparant jarre betweene St. Paul and David In the Hebrew it is aoznaijm Carithali boared Some think that the Seventy whom St. Paul followeth did at the first interpret it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the Hebrew and afterwards by the fault of the Printers came in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But there is no likelihood the Apostle would cite a corrupt glosse instead of the true interpretation In substance there is no difference betweene the Hebrew and the Greeke If God the Father prepared eares for Christ then a body For there cannot bee eares without a body so that both may stand very well save that the Seventy no doubt directed by the Spirit of God doth make the Prophets meaning more plaine which St. Paul layeth hold of because it fitteth his purpose to make an opposition betweene the Christ's body and the sacrifices of the Law The servant that would dwell with his master had his eare bored through with an awle Exod. 21.5 So because Christ offered himselfe as a servant to God the Father for our sakes it is said that he boared his eares
people I have beene ample in this text heretofore I will now bury it in silence But Christ is the Mediatour of the Gospell the which hee hath established with his owne bloud The Heretiques called Melchisideciani made Melchizedec our Mediatour Epiphan contr haeret l. 2. tom 1. Some Papists will have all the Angels and Saints in heaven to bee our Mediatours together with Christ. Aquin. p. 3. q. 26. art 1. He freely confesseth that Christ is our Mediatour simpliciter perfectivè yet the Angels and Saints also must bee our Mediatours dispositivè ministerialiter They are much beholden to this distinction of principall and ministeriall some unskilfull physitions give one drinke or one medicine for all diseases so these men apply this distinction of principall and ministeriall to salve up all soares among them Christ is the Chiefe Head of the Church the Pope is a ministeriall head under him So Christ is the principall Mediatour Angels and Saints are ministeriall Yet if a woman should heare she had a Chiefe husband and a ministeriall husband she could hardly indure it 1 Tim. 2.5 One God one Mediatour they might as well say there is one Principall God but many ministeriall Gods under him as to say there is one Chiefe Mediatour and many ministeriall and he tels us who it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is of the feminine gender 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee alone and no other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Mediatour betweene God and man must be both God and man hee must have aliquid simile Deo aliquid simile hominibus sayes Saint Aug. confess l. 10. c. 42. That hee may mediate betweene them both If he were onely man hee could not goe to GOD if hee were onely GOD he could not goe to man As for Angels they be neither God nor men therefore they cannot be our Mediatours As for the Saints in heaven they bee halfe men they have soules but as yet they have no bodies and they are not God therefore they cannot bee our Mediatours Nay properly to speake the Holy Ghost the third Person in the glorious Trinitie cannot be our Mediatour for though hee be God yet hee is not man much lesse can the Angels and Saints bee our Mediatours There is but one Mediatour of the new Covenant and that is Christ Iesus who being GOD above all blessed for ever vouchsafed likewise for our sakes to become man The Mediatour of the new Covenant hath established the Covenant with his blood It is Christ alone that by the bloud of hit Crosse hath set at peace all things in heaven and in earth Col. 1. Therefore hee is the onely Mediatour of the New Testament No Testament is of force without the death of the Testatour Let them proove that any dyed for us besides Christ and then wee will acknowledge other Mediatours As hee trode the wine presse alone so hee is Mediatour alone it is sacriledge to adjoyne others to him Therefore as he tooke the paines alone so let him have the honour alone Heaven indeed is opened by Christ but wee are sinners we shall not be admitted into it Yes for our sinnes are washed away in the bloud of Christ. Where 1. Sanguinis larga effusio 2. Effusi excellens utilitas The bloud that speaketh better then that of Abel Oecum 1. In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Erasmus reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so doth Oecum referre it to Abel not to his bloud 2 Hebr. 11.4 hee is said Yet to speake It comes all to one reckoning Saint Chrys. reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 melius but it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the plurall number The bloud of Abel spake well in his kinde it is meete that sin should be avenged but this speakes better in his kinde to the joy and comfort of us all 1. Abel spake on earth this in heaven 2. That spake against Cain and Elias made request against Israel Rom. 11.2 This speakes for us all 3. That was the bloud of a meere man this is the bloud of him that was both God and man 4. That cryed murder murder my brother hath murdered mee this cries I have beene murthered and killed for my brethren 5. That did Tsagmah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 clamare send forth an hideous cry this doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 speake sweetly to us that did cry after a terrible manner this doth speake after a more joyfull manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more splendid more significant more sweete and comfortable A cry is fearefull and lamentable so is not a voice 6. Abels bloud had no power of cleansing this hath it washeth us from our sinnes This Saint Ambrose paints out in most lively colours Ille vindictam clamavit hic indulgentiam Ille peccatum fratris accusat hic peccatum mundi remisit Ille prodidit crimen hic texit as it is written Beati quorum tecta sunt peccata Ambr. de fuga saeculi c. 5. Blessed are they that are come to the sprinkling of his bloud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The vulgar reads it as if it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adsanguinis aspersionem Hebr. 10.22 v. 19. Hebr. 9.13 Exod. 12.22 As the bloud of the lambe was sprinckled with a bunch of hysop on the doore posts of the Israelites and they escaped the destroying Angel so Christs bloud sprinkled on our consciences the devill that Abaddon hath nothing to doe with us Let the Papists glory of the bloud of Saint Thomas By the bloud of Saint Thomas which hee for thee did spend grant we may goe whither Thomas did ascend Let them magnifie the bloud of Saint Peter Saint Paul Saint Iames. Nay Let them magnifie the bloud of their Pseudomartyrs yet we will rejoyce onely in the bloud of Iesus wherewith we are washed from our sinnes By which we have an entrance into the most holy place O sweet Iesus that would dye for us The Master for the servant the Creator for the creature he that knew no sin for miserable sinners O the unmatchable love of Iesus that sheddest thy bloud for thine enemies Many and grievous are our sins moe in number than the hayres of our head as red as crimson and skarlet but Lord Iesus wash them away in the bloud of thy sprinkling and then I shall be found whiter than the snow that I may stand without trembling before thee at the dreadfull day of judgement Generosus animus magis ducitur quàm trahitur a good nature will sooner be moved with loving perswasions than drawne with threatnings GOD hath beene more gracious to us than to them They had the tart vinegar of Gods judgements we have the sweet oyle of his mercy they came to Moses that terrified them with the curse and malediction of the Law we are come to Iesus
time Was confirmed to us that is to our time by those that heard him some of them being still alive even in our time the Law and the Prophets were to Iohn that is to Iohn's time The Gospell in England hath beene continued to us that is to our time not by me alone which am a secondary Apostle borne out of time but by the first Apostles of all those after Christ preached to you Hebrews VERSE 4. GOD Himselfe was a witnesse to the Gospell therefore let us beleeve it But how did GOD beare witnesse to it by signes and wonders c. Then they came not from Satan but from GOD. Signa quia significant the Divine Power and Majestie of God Signes are any miracles in generall as the fleece to Gedeon c. Hezekiahs signe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prodigia quòd porrò dicant Some call them praedicidia because they doe praedicere aliquid mali terrible miracles of GOD's wrath and judgement as the striking of Ananias and Sapphira with sudden death the killing of Herod by the Angell the blindnesse of Elymas the Sorcerer but it is sometimes taken also for miracles of mercie And with diverse miracles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby the power of God is shewed to the world Act. 2.43 cap. 5.12 The distributions of the Holy Ghost 1. Because they be freely and frankly bestowed by him 2. Because liberally and bountifully vid. 1 Cor. 12.8 9 10. The reason moving him to this distribution is no merits in us but his owne blessed will his gracious goodnesse is the cause of all both of sending the Gospell by Christ and of confirming it by so many miracles and gifts There be counterfeit miracles Matth. 24.24 2 Thes. 2.9 and true miracles they may be distinguished by the matter the cause and the end 1 Sometimes they seeme to be that which they are not as the walking of spirits in Church-yards bloud in their breaden god whereas they be but a cousenage 2 They may be substantiall for the matter and yet effected by a wrong cause as the Sorcerers in Egypt brought forth true Frogs c. yet by the Devill not by the finger of GOD and they may be wrought by a naturall cause which men see not nor can comprehend as they shut up Mahomet in an Iron-Chest brought him into a Temple and made it hang aloft which was done by Loadstones that the silly people were ignorant of There was a Lampe in Venus Temple that burnt continually which some thought to be a miracle whereas it was done by a certaine stone called Asbestus which was found in Arcadia 3 By the end If it be to confirme falshood it is a bad miracle Deut. 13.1 though never so glorious Whereas a true miracle is effected by the power of GOD exceedeth the bounds of Nature and is for the confirmation of the truth The Gospell at the beginning was adorned with many miracles 1. Because it seemed strange to the world a new doctrine 2. Because it seemed repugnant to the law of Moses instituted by GOD. 3. Because it could not bee proved and confirmed by naturall reasons But now since the famous miracles of CHRIST Resurrection ascension into heaven of the sending of the Holy Ghost of the spreading of the Gospell over all the world we must not still curiously gape after miracles that is reproved Matth. 12.39 Ioh. 4.48 Luk. 23.8 To the law and the testimonie Isai. 8.20 the people must resort The glory of miracles with the Papists is a note of the Church and they bragge much of their miracles they have one thousand miracles to our one Bernard the Monke restored sight to a blind man Dominicus raised up three from the dead Antoninus 38. Franciscus Xavorius the Iesuite cured many dumbe lame and blind in India As for us we have no miracles therefore ours is not the Church What of all this Iohn Baptist wrought never a miracle yet he was a good Preacher sent from God But for the determination of this point In some sence we will not deny but that miracles may be notes of the Church but here we must distinguish of notes and of miracles too One true note of the Church is the sound preaching of the Word where that is to beget men and women to CHRIST there is the Church yet miracles may bee an ornament to the Church a confirmation of it in the truth of the Gospell But what miracles 1. Not forged or counterfeit as the miracles of the Papists be their jugling being brought to light and detected to all the world but true miracles wrought by the finger of GOD. not lying wonders with the which Antichrist should come and delude the world 2. Not new miracles that came yesterday out of the mint but the old and ancient miracles of CHRIST and his Apostles are a demonstration of the Church and of the truth of the Gospell that the Gospell might be carryed more speedily throughout the world miracles were requisite at the beginning but now no such necessitie of them A wicked and crooked generation seeketh a signe Herod would faine see CHRIST that he might see some miracle done by him Let us not now gape after new miracles the miracles wherewith God honoured the Gospell at the first were sufficient for the confirmation of it to all posterity The rich man in Hell would faine have had a miracle for the saving of his brethren Lazarus must be sent from the dead to them but it was answered him they have Moses and the Prophets that is enough if we will not believe for the preaching of the word all the miracles in the world will not save us Yet the Gospell at this day has many miracles though they be not observed men are metamorphosed and changed by it of proud they become humble of Devills Saints men are raised from the death of sinne by it they that were blind in the knowledge of CHRIST are come to a cleere sight in matters of religion they that were lame and could not walke in the way to the kingdome of heaven are made to runne cheerfully in it they that were dumbe and could not speake for CHRIST are made to speake wisely and boldly in his quarrell These are excellent miracles which might procure an estimation of the Gospell in our hearts Now for so much as the LORD honoured the Gospell with so many miracles let us yeeld a reverent attention to it and not neglect so great salvation which with so many great and wonderfull miracles hath beene so much graced by GOD let us lay it up in our hearts let us frame our lives according to it that wee may feele the power and comfort of it in our hearts and be saved eternally by CHRIST in the world to come He returnes to CHRIST where 1. A farther confirmation of his deitie 2. A transition to his humanitie Verse 10. His deity is confirmed by this argument He to whom the world is subject is God the world is
to the throne of grace with broken hearts and contrite spirits that so we may find favour in this life by Iesus Christ that came into the world to save sinners and eternall happinesse with him in the life to come Now followes the manner of the punishment and the guilt of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to their owne condemnation Rom. 2.5 But after thy hardnesse and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous Iudgement of GOD. There can bee no renewing but by the death of Christ now Christ dyed and was crucified once for all that believe and abide in him If any fall quite away from CHRIST they cannot bee renewed unlesse CHRIST bee crucified againe but that is impossible therefore the other That they should bee renewed to repentance They tread under foote the Sonne of God Hebr. 10.29 The greatest indignity that can be offered greater than to spit in a mans face The foot is the lowest member of the body they will have Christ the King of Kings under their feet the greatest contempt that can be before they had an honourable opinion of him that hee was the Sonne of God the Saviour of the world but now they count basely of him They count the bloud of the Testament a prophane thing what is the bloud of Christ shed on the Crosse the bloud of a malefactor is as good as that ô horrible blasphemy And despise all the graces of the spirit which they have received And put him to an open shame exemplificantes make a mocke Matth. 1.19 Then Ioseph her husband being a just man and not willing to make her a publike example as those that be made publike examples and pointed at by all exposing him to the reprochfull death of the Crosse on the which he was derided of all or CHRIST being once crucified and dead is made immortall and living for ever To crucifie him againe were to make him mortall againe which were an egregious mockerie Or they despise CHRIST once crucified and would faine have him to be crucified for them againe which is to make a mock of him Or it may be a reason drawne from the malice of men seeing they are so spitefully set against Christ as that they could finde in their hearts to crucifie him againe if it lay in their power and so to make him a mocking-stocke to all the world accounting the crucifying of CHRIST to bee but a ridiculous thing to make sport withall of no moment to life eternall therefore it is impossible they should bee restored As much as lyeth in them they crucifie the Sonne of GOD and make a mocke of Him which are such horrible sinnes as that GOD cannot in justice give them Repentance for them Now he describeth them that sin against the Holy Ghost comparatively hee sets them out by a lively similitude taken from the earth As the earth that is painefully tilled and hath plentifull raine powred downe on it and yet for all that instead of good fruit bringeth forth pricking thornes and scratching brambles is good for nothing but to be burnt So those men who having bin washed with many sweete showres of the Word of God and enriched with diverse excellent graces yet prooving pricking thornes in the end hurtfull to men and God too they are good for nothing but to burne in hell fire for evermore Before he comes directly to this lamentable end of the reprobates he doth illustrate it by a comfortable Antithesis in the good and godly which might provoke them with all cheerefulnesse to contend to perfection in Religion VERSE 7. THe Protasis only is set downe the Apodosis is to bee supplyed 1. For the Protasis The earth which is apparant to us all none can be ignorant of it As a thirsty man taketh in drink which is dispersed into his bowels So doth the drie and thirsty earth the raine she takes it and conveys it into her bowels It comes into the earth but because it must come upon it before it can come into it therefore the HOLY GHOST useth that phrase not seldome but often God being bountifull to the earth to send it much raine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bringeth forth as a mother her Children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a Synecdoche is put for all the fruits of the earth because the herbe is one of the first fruits that it bringeth forth Not onely herbes but trees and all kinde of corne for hee speakes of such an earth which is tilled whereas herbes spring up without tillage What manner of fruit Which doth benè reponere gratiam requites the cost and charges which the dressers have bestowed on it Receiveth blessing from God without whose blessing the earth would be as brasse and yron for all the labour of the husbandman As such an earth is blessed of God God blesseth it with a rich and plentifull harvest to the joy and comfort of men so is it with all those that profit by the Word of God For a more particular opening of every branch in the similitude The earth is every Christian man and woman in the lap of the Church Man was taken out of the earth and therefore may fitly bee resembled to the earth bad hearers are called bad ground and good hearers good ground Luke 8. verse 15. The raine that falls upon it is the Word of GOD Deuteronomie 32. ver 2. Isaiah 55. ver 10. 1. Raine comes downe from heaven So the word 2. Raine comes down to us by the clouds So the Word by the Preachers 3. Raine refresheth the earth So the Word our soules 4. Raine never returnes in vaine So the Word accomplishes that which the Lord pleases and prospers in the thing whereunto he sends it it never returnes voyd either we are the better or the worser by it through our owne fault The fruits that they bring forth is increase of knowledge and of all vertues The dressers of this ground are God and the Ministers Ioh. 15.1 1 Cor. 3.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The blessing that good hearers receive is a further increase of all graces in this life to him that hath shall be given c. Mat. 13.8 and eternall blessednesse in the life to come Blessed are they that heare the Word of God and keepe it 1. All people are as the ground that stand in need of the Raine of the Word of God the earth must have Raine all the yeare long more or lesse else it dryeth and withereth away So doe we if wee want the Raine of the Word In what a miserable case were they in Israel when there fell no raine by the space of three yeeres and sixe moneths and in what a pittifull taking are those townes and countries though they feele it not which want the Raine of the Word of GOD You that have it be thankfull to God for it and learne to esteeme more highly of this blessing than ye doe If it raine on your wheat
undefiled we are bought with a price and that a deere price even the bloud of the Sonne of GOD. Our swearing drunkennesse c. these cost the bloud of the Sonne of GOD we are washed from them in the bloud of Christ and shall we wallow in them is not this the water said David for the which three worthy men ventured their lives he would not drinke of it though very thirsty So when we are provoked to sinne to drunkennesse covetousnesse adultery let us reason with our selves Indeed the water of these sins is sweete but did it not cost the bloud of CHRIST therfore away with it we think sin to be nothing yet all the Martyrs on the earth all the Angels in heaven could not have freed us from sin The Son of God must shed his bloud for it therefore let the consideration hereof bee a perpetuall bridle to restraine us from sin CHRIST 's bloud is the price of our redemption he sweat drops of bloud when hee was in his agony in the garden at the commandement of Pilat hee was extreamely whipped so that the bloud came exceedingly out of his holy body he had a Crowne of thornes platted on his head that made the bloud runne about his eares being nailed hand and foote to the Crosse the bloud came out in great measure a Souldier thrust him through with a speare and out of his side came water and bloud So that this our High-Priest redeemed us not with the bloud of beasts but with his owne bloud How then are wee to love CHRIST IESUS that spared not his heart bloud for us There was no bloud almost left in this immaculate Lamb he spent all for our sake Wee will love them that give their money for us and shall wee not love CHRIST that gave his bloud for us yet the love of Christ is not so deepely fixed in us as it ought to bee We love the trash of the world the pleasures of the flesh above Christ. This love of Christ should constraine us to forsake our sinnes Wilt thou make much of the knife that cut the throate of thy friend or father Sinne was the knife that cut CHRIST 's throate therefore let us hurle it away but this bloud of CHRIST by the which we are washed from our sinnes is little regarded for all that wee wallow in the mire of our sinnes forgetting the LORD that bought us as Saint Peter speaketh Wee are redeemed from our drunkennesse covetousnesse pride c. by the bloud of CHRIST therefore let us have no fellowship with these sins 2. Heaven is an holy place there dwells the holy God there bee the holy Angels and holy Saints they that remaine unholy shall never enter into it dogs enchanters c. are without By nature we are all unholy borne in sin conceived in iniquity pulling sinne to us with Cartropes and iniquity with Cords of vanity but wee are made holy by the spirit of Sanctification Such were some of you drunkards c. but yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6.11 They that continue in sin without repentance shall never set a foote into the kingdome of heaven Noah was once overtaken with Wine but he forsooke that sin David fell into adultery but hee washed it away with his teares Peter denyed Christ but he wept bitterly for it Manasseh left his idolatry Paul his persecuting of the Church of God Mary Magdalen her uncleannesse even so if through the corruption of our nature wee have beene carryed into any sin let us by repentance rise up out of it againe Let us strive to be holy in this world holy in heart in conversation that wee may enter into the holy Hierusalem in the world to come Follow peace and holinesse without which none can see God The wicked mocke at them that be holy I but except yee likewise be holy ye shall never reigne with Christ in the Holy Hierusalem 3. By CHRIST wee have a plenary redemption of soule and body out of the clawes of Satan As the Bird is in the fowlers net so were we in the Devills snare but we may say with them in the Psalme the net is broken and we are delivered yea wee are delivered eternally we shall never fall into that bondage againe The afflictions whereunto we are incident in this life are temporall but the redemption is eternall sicknesse poverty malevolent tongues imprisonment death it selfe is temporall our joy is eternall Let that comfort us in all the calamities of this life A burning agew the tooth-ach the stone lasts not alwayes but my joy in heaven shall be eternall here I may be in griefe for a time but there I shall reigne with Christ for ever Wee love them that obtaine a temporall redemption for us If a young man bee bound Prentise to an hard master for tenne or twelve yeeres and if one should buy out his apprentiseship and set him free would hee not take himselfe much beholding to him Wee were bound Prentises to Satan hee kept us in his snare at his will and pleasure being his bond men wee should have remained in hell fire world without end Now Christ Iesus hath redeemed us and made us the free men of God Cittizens of heaven how are we indebted to him If thou wert a Gallislave under the Turke and one should rid thee out of it wert thou not much obliged to him Christ hath brought us out of the gally of sinne and damnation therefore let us sound forth his praises all the dayes of our life Let us say with them in the Revelation worthy is the Lamb that was killed and hath obtained eternall redemption for us to receive all honour and glory and blessing for ever and ever VERSE 13. THat Christ by the shedding of his owne bloud hath obtained an eternall redemption for us is confirmed by an argument à pari à minore from the sacrifices of the Law to the sacrifice of Christ. 1. What they were 2. What was the fruit and effect of them If the bloud of Bulls and goates c. being an outward thing could sanctifie the flesh that was an outward thing then the bloud of Christ being a spirituall thing in force and power everlasting must needs sanctifie the conscience which is a spirituall and internall thing yea this rather than that for many respects as we shall see but the one ergo the other The Protasis is in this 13. Verse Because hee would enwrap the whole Ceremonial Law hee reckons up other sacrifices and rites then those which the High-Priest used when hee went into the Holy of Holies 1 Chron. 29. Verse 21. Among the rest he makes mention of one solemne ceremony whereunto the Iewes adscribed much Num. 19.1 A Red Cow was commanded to bee taken which was without spot and never accustomed to the yoke she was to be burnt to
Testament is made There is no Mediatour besides him Mediatour quasi medius dator Of the New Testament which is farre different from the Old Covenant or Testament for it consisteth on better promises Hebrewes 8. ver 6. By the meanes of death that death being or comming betweene for the redeeming of us from the punishments due to the transgressions and the price wherewith he redeemed us from them was his owne bloud If CHRIST his death doth redeeme us from all transgressions then there needs no sacrifices for sin after his death Yes say the Iesuites one to be a representation of that on the Crosse. I but you say that the sacrifice of the Masse and that on the Crosse are all one in substance differing only in the forme and manner Now if Christ be really present in the Masse how can the Masse bee a representation of him And that manner is opposite to the Scriptures for the Scripture sayes he is only offered up with bloud Your unbloudy sacrifice is no sacrifice In the former covenant whereas we for our part were not able to performe that which belonged to us GOD performed his part but we could not doe ours It is unseasonable here to dispute whether CHRIST delivered them that lived in the time of the Law for by the Old Testament is meant the Old Covenant not the time of the Old Testament Therefore it is opposed to the New Testament In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it were for the sins of them that were under the Old Testament That they which are called namely effectually as well internally by the spirit as externally by the word 1 Cor. 1.2 24. Rom. 8.30 Not only heare it but receive it namely by faith The promise The full fruition whereof they should receive hereafter in the meane season the Holy Ghost is as a Seale and earnest penny of it Ephes. 1.13 2 Cor. 1.22 It is not a thing merited by our workes but a gracious inheritance promised to us CHRIST is the right and principall heire Hebr. 1.2 we are secondary heyres with him and by him Rom. 8.17 Not a fading inheritance as these be but that lasteth for ever CHRIST is the sole Mediatour 1 Tim. 2.5 Ioh. 16.23 Apoc. 8.3 Let us not cry with those Idolaters ô Baal heare us but aske the Father in his Sons name and say ô CHRIST heare us Who prevailes more with the King then the Kings Son Let us not leave the Sonne and goe to servants There is a double calling the one externall alone by the outward sound of the word the other externall and internall too not by the Trumpet of the Word alone ringing in the eare but by the voice of the Spirit also perswading the heart and moving us to goe to Christ. Of this calling spake our SAVIOUR CHRIST no man commeth to me except the Father draw him namely by his spirit as well as by his word Iudas was called hee was not a professour alone but a Preacher of the Gospell Simon Magus was called he believed and was baptized Herod was called he heard Iohn Baptist sweetely and did many things that he willed him Sundry at this day come to Church heare Sermons talke of Religion that doe not answere Gods call Therefore let us entreat the Lord to call us effectually by his blessed Spirit out of our sinnes to holinesse and newnesse of life If wee be thus called we shall receive the eternall inheritance which CHRIST hath purchased for us Let us be suiters to God that he would make us partakers of this calling that makes an alteration of us 1 Cor. 6.9 11. If wee were Idolaters as Manasseh to call us out of our superstition and idolatry if persecutors as Paul to call us out of our persecuting if wee are Adulterers as David to call us out of our uncleannesse if drunkards out of our drunkennes if covetous oppressours as Zacheus was to call us out of our oppression and make us new Creatures in Christ Iesus It is not a purchase bought with the money of our owne merits but an inheritance bequeathed to us by the last Will and Testament of our Saviour Christ Luk. 22.29 and I appoint unto you a kingdome as my father hath appointed unto me The inheritances that bee in the world seeme faire and glorious it is a goodly thing to have the inheritance of a great Gentleman of a Knight Lord Earle Duke but a Kings inheritance surpasseth all yet these are but strawes to this inheritance These inheritances may bee taken from us while wee bee here Mephibosheth's lands were given away to Tsibah and Naboth lost his Vineyard though it was the inheritance of his fathers When Death comes then we must forgoe all houses and lands all that our fathers left us But this inheritance is eternall wee can never be deprived of it we shall enjoy it world without end Therefore let us seeke to have an assurance of this inheritance in our hearts and consciences If a man be sure to be a Lords heyre though hee is in misery yet he will endure it we are sure to have an eternall inheritance by Christ let us therefore abide patiently the miseries of this short life VERSE 16. THere must needs be carryed as a true and an infallible report it must be sure and certaine that the Testatour is dead Where 1. The axiome 2. The proofe or illustration of it Verse 17. Here wee see it was necessary CHRIST should dye Ought not CHRIST to suffer these things and to enter into his glory Luk. 24 26. why not because the Devill would have it to be so not that the rage and fury of the Pharises should bee satisfied not because Iudas would but because God the Father in singular love to mankinde had so ordained in his eternall counsell and because Christ was willing to dye for us Can mankinde bee saved no otherwise but by my death then here am I take me I will dye for them ô the wonderfull love of Christ Here the Testatour would live still if he might and then the legataries should never have their legacies our testatour might have lived still if he would being the Lord of life yet that we might have our legacy hee would dye ô unspeakable love Let it bee imprinted on our hearts that it may constraine us to leave all sins VERSE 17. NOw followes the proofe or illustration of the axiom A Testament is thus defined by Vlpianus Est declaratio voluntatis nostrae de eo quod fieri volumus post mortem Is of force Is firme After the Testatour is dead both because hee may alter it at his pleasure and the goods remaine all still in the Testatours hands it is testamentum ambulatorium usque ad mortem The Testament of our SAVIOUR CHRIST is a good Testament It is partly nuncupativum as it was pronounced by himselfe when hee was alive partly Scriptum as it was after committed to
it is committed after the receipt of the knowledge of the truth Their punishment is described 1. By a substraction of the remedy against sin there remaines no more sacrifice for it analysis 27 2. By a position of the grievous punishment it selfe which is a fearefull expectation of two things of judgement as of the antecedent of fire as of the consequent described by the quality of it and by an effect of devouring whom the adversaries of Christ for they are the fewell of this fire analysis 28 The confirmation of it by two arguments 1. A Christ's Law but the one ergo the other Where 1. The protasis of the comparison shewing what befell to the former 2. The apodosis what shall befall the latter In the protasis 1. The fault 2. The punishment The fault is a despising not every transgressing of Moses Law The punishment is death amplified by the severity of it without mercy and the equity of it because the party is condemned by two or three witnesses In the apodosis there is an inversion of these two analysis 29 1. The grievousnesse of the punishment which in all equity must exceed the other in as much as Christ is greater than Moses the Lord and master of the house then a servant in the house 2. The haynousnes of the sin in respect of two most glorious and worthy persons contemned by them God the Son and God the Holy Ghost In the Sonne there be two speciall things the mysterie of his incarnation for that they tread under foote the Son of God which was God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 the Saviour and redeemer of the world The mystery of his passion for that they count the bloud of the Testament an unholy thing Which ingratitude is amplified by a benefit bestowed on them though they had beene sanctified by that bloud For the Holy Ghost is the instructor and comforter of the Church that reveales the will of God to men They despise the spirit of grace therefore they are worthy of sore punishment VERSE 1. THe ceremoniall Law not the morall that containeth substantiall dutyes that sheweth sin to us but is no shadow of any thing in Christ to come A dark an obscure delineation Of Iesus Christ and all his benefits of justification sanctification and redemption purchased by him bonagratiae gloriae A lively picture of them as we have in the time of the Gospell wherein Christ is painted out and crucified before our eyes A shadow is a resemblance of a body utrumque repraesentat umbra in communi imago in particulari When yee see a shadow yee may truly say there is a body yet it is but a generall resemblance of a body 1. A shadow cannot fight 2. Not eate 3. Not speake 4. Not walke but accidentally Yee cannot perceive in a shadow the distinct parts and members of a body the eyes the face hands armes feete c. only the shadow tells you there is a body but an image hath the whole lineaments and proportion of the body in it In it ye may behold the severall parts and dimensions of the body So in the Law they had a sight of Christ yet it was darkely in a shadow Wee have the very expresse forme and image of Christ with all his benefits they had Christ in an obscure picture drawne at the first in darke lines wee have him as in a lively picture graced with most lightsome and excellent colours Abraham saw the day of Christ and was glad yet hee saw him a farre off and at a little crevis we see the sunne of righteousnesse cleerely shining before our eyes they saw him as in a winter day we see him in a bright summers day Blessed are the eyes that see that which we see for Kings and Prophets have desired to see those things which wee see and have not seene them The Law did shadow out Christ by whom wee are justified and redeemed from our sins it did not justifie and redeeme us The same specie though not numero the same in substance as Goates Sheep Heifers c. and offered up alwayes with the same rites and ceremonies they offered them up regulariter the same according to the Law frequenter indesinenter yet inefficaciter Never though they bee iterated ten thousand times c. no hope of salvation by the sacrifices of the Law They the Priests immediately and all the people mediately by the hands of the Priest Yeerely hee seemes to allude especially to that sacrifice which the High-Priest offered yeerely for all Israel when he went into the Sanctum Sanctorum that of all others was most solemne for himselfe his household and the whole land Levit. 16. Sanctifie the heart or conscience Though they might give them an outward kinde of sanctification Or perfect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word Sacraments prayer cannot perfect no perfection till wee come to heaven That came to it As Schollers to the Master to be taught and directed by it Whereas all that come to CHRIST by faith obtaine true Sanctification Hebrewes 7.25 salvation is not by the Law but by Iesus Christ. But herein is condemnation sayes Christ light is come into the world but men love darkenesse more than light Wee live in wonderfull light yet the workes of darkenesse are too rise among us drunkennesse envy strife emulations c. A great number of us are in the Pharisees case are we also blind Christ said to them if ye were blind ye should have no sin but now ye say we see therefore your sinne remaineth We see much yet we practise little therefore our sins multiplyed by us in this great light shall testifie against us at the latter day I feare me this sentence may be inverted the godly in time of the Law had the substance and we have the shadow there is almost nothing but shadowes among us A shadow of knowledge of zeale love holinesse wee have a forme of godlinesse but deny the power thereof Therefore as we live in greater light so let our light shine before men that they seeing our good workes we and they may glorifie our Father in this life and bee glorified of him in the life to come Our Sacraments may sanctifie us instrumentally they may be as instruments whereby God conveyeth Sanctification to us In respect whereof Baptisme is called the washing of the new birth they may sanctifie us significantly as signes of our sanctification nay as seales of it but they cannot sanctifie us as principall efficient causes of our Sanctification Now it is CHRIST alone that thus sanctifieth us and clenseth us from all our sinnes for this cause sanctifie I my selfe Hee is the onely fountaine of our sanctification neither the sacrifices in the Law nor our Sacraments in the time of the Gospell can in this sense procure to us the sanctification of our soules that wee may be fit for the heavenly Hierusalem VERSE 2. SOme coppies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make it
man at the latter day The very conscience of a man doth tell him at one time or other whether hee will or no that there is a day of judgement Why are men vexed in their soules when they have sinned when they have committed such sinnes as the Law cannot take hold off as oppression and wrongs offered to their brethren secret adulteries c. Why are they grieved for these and can find no rest in them if there were not a judgment to come VERSE 28. HEre is the equity of it He that abrogates it that pulls it out of place that violates it elata manu Num. 15.30 Not he that in a small offence transgresseth the Law but that breaketh it in some monstrous and notorious manner either by blasphemy by contemptuous prophaning by contumacy against father and mother and hee that doth transgresse these lawes in a despite and contempt of them hee must needs be put to death there is no remedy No mercy is to be shewed in it the Law must have his course without respect of persons whether hee bee high or low rich or poore hee must dye for it No bribe may save his life Deut. 19.21.13 8. Yet good advice must bee had in putting him to death there must be an orderly proceeding against him his fault must be convinced by sufficient witnesses All Moses lawes were not written with bloud as Draco's were but only great and capitall crimes Such were to dye without mercy Mercie is an excellent vertue a divine vertue draweth neere to the nature of God which is the Father of mercies be yee mercifull as your heavenly father is mercifull Yet for all that mercy in some actions is to be shut out of doores We must sing of judgement as well as of Mercy as David did Mercy is not so to be imbraced as that Iustice should bee forgotten they that have transgressed the Law especially in contempt of the Law are to dye without mercy the Lord often toucheth upon this string We must not be more mercifull then God will have us Saul spared Agag but it cost him his kingdome Some will say of a thiefe a murderer condemned to dye is it not pitty such a proper man as he should dye no verily foolish pitty marrs the Citty If such a one be permitted to live hee may doe much hurt in the common-wealth therefore no pitty is to bee shewed to him mercy must bee stretched no further than God hath appointed But how must he dye orderly being convicted by the due course and order of Law The fact must be sufficiently proved before sentence of death passe against him and how must it be proved either by his owne confession or by the testimony of others Now one man may be partiall or he may speake on spleene and malice therefore two witnesses at least must be produced Iesabel procured two witnesses against Nabal Two witnesses were brought in against our SAVIOUR CHRIST Timothy must not receive an accusation against an Elder but under two or three witnesses There was thought no probability that two would conspire in an untruth the one at the length would bewray the jugling of the other Therefore if there were two then he dyed but now the world is growne to such an height of impiety as that it is as easie a matter to suborne two false witnesses to get two knaves to sweare an untruth as to take the pot and drinke A most vile age wherein we live but from the beginning it was not so VERSE 29. THe interrogation is more forcible then if it had beene a plaine affirmation they dyed the death of the body but these are worthy of the death where soule and body shall dye for ever Be you Iudges in the matter I dare appeale to your own selves Then he sets forth the greatnesse of their sin which ariseth by three steps or degrees 1. They in the Law despised Moses which was but a man these Christ which is the Son of God therfore they are worthy of a sharper punishment they broke but one particular Law these renounce the whole Gospell of CHRIST the Son of God They have not Christ actually to tread upon he is in heaven at the right hand of God but metonymically in treading his truth under their feete which they make no reckoning of in conculcating the benefits of CHRIST offered to them they tread CHRIST Himselfe or they carry such a spitefull minde against him as if possible they would pull him out of heaven and tread him under their feete They did it not actu but affectu This is the vilest indignity that can be offered to any to make him as dirt to tread on The Souldiers crucified CHRIST but they did not treade him under their feete For Traytors to tread the King under their feete is a monstrous thing yet these as arrant Traytors did tread Christ the King of Kings under their feete Horrible wretches In this they opposed themselves to his kingdome In the next to his Priest-hood Christ by his last Will and Testament gave us a Legacie of the kingdome of heaven Luk. 22.29 the which Testament was confirmed by the bloud and death of the Testatour Matth. 26.28 Now this holy precious and pure bloud wherewith we are washed from our sinnes these impure wretches account an unholy a common a polluted thing Mark 7.2 Acts 10.15 They make no more account of the bloud of Christ then of the bloud of a thiefe nay of a dogge or swine yet they had some benefit by this bloud Last of all they opposed themselves to the prophesie of Christ. It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they abuse him with some notable reproach and contumelie Which is the fountaine and bestower of all graces He had given them many graces of knowledge of some faith hope love and zeale yet they contumeliously reproach this spirit revile him terming him a spirit of errour that had deluded them all this while For this cause they have sinned against the Holy Ghost In these respects they are worthy of most severe punishment no sacrifice for this sinne Is any pitty to bee shewed to them that In this world there is Mercy but none to bee expected in the world to come Then judgement mercilesse Now CHRIST standeth with open armes venite ad me omnes but then he shall say ite maledicti no mercy to be found for the wicked at the day of judgment God shew mercy to the house of Onesiphorus at that day there is mercy for the godly that be in Christ but none for the wicked that be out of Christ. And who be they that shall be so severely punished From hence may be collected a true definition of the sin against the Holy Ghost It is a malicious oppugning of the truth of the Gospell sealed up in their hearts by the HOLY GHOST they were enlightned in the mysterie of redemption purchased by Christ that he is the only Priest which
by the sacrifice of his own body hath made satisfaction for our sins and hath reconciled us to God the Father that by his bloud alone wee have an entrance into the holy place this truth was revealed to them by the Holy Ghost this they once acknowledged and professed before all men but afterwards maliciously they oppugne this truth by blasphemous speeches rayling and reviling books and by all the force they can go about to suppresse it by fire and fagot treading under foote the Sonne of GOD and counting the bloud of the Testament as an unholy thing Paul was a blasphemer and a persecutor of the Lord Iesus Saul Saul why persecutest thou mee yet hee sinned not against the HOLY GHOST because hee did it on ignorance Peter sinned against his owne knowledge when hee denyed and forswore CHRIST yet he sinned not against the Holy Ghost because he did it on weakenes for the preservation of his life Malicious impugning of every truth of the Gospell is of the essence of the sinne against the Holy Ghost To malice a member of Christ a Preacher an Ambassadour of Christ as Ahab did Mich●aiah is a grievous sinne a step to the sinne against the Holy Ghost yet not the sinne against the Holy Ghost That is a malicious oppugning of the truth it selfe As Saint Paul sayes of Alexander the Copper-smith that he resisted not his person but his preaching and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all his might Such a one was Iulian the Apostata that had beene a Christian baptised into the name of Christ in outward shew a zealous professour of the Gospell a publike reader in the Church of Nicomedia he and his brother Gallus together built a Temple to Mammas the Martyr This simulata Sanctitas proved duplex iniquitas Afterward in contempt of Christ and Christian religion he washed away his baptisme with bloud he was a scoffer and derider of Christ a cunning persequutor of the Gospell not by fire and sword but by sleights and devices because he thought open persequution would make Christianity more glorious In despight of the true God revealed to him in Scripture he worshipped the Gods of the heathen To the last gaspe hee spewed out malice against our Saviour Christ. When the arrow was in his side that gave him his deadly wound he took some of his own bloud into his hand threw it into the ayre and said Vicisti Galilaee c. and so dyed miserably Bellarmine sayes l. 2. de poen c. 15. there bee some among us that knowing the Scriptures and the Fathers yet sinne against their owne knowledge and that of malice to the truth But as for us we will not judge them An horrible sin Let us all take heed of it The damned commit not this sin for men may be damned for lesse sins If thou continuest in adultery unrepented thou mayest be damned nay the least sinne without repentance may throw us into hell but questionlesse they are damned that sin against the HOLY GHOST A sore punishment is reserved for them Therefore let us all beware of this sinne Let us bee thankefull to GOD for the Truth of the Gospell revealed to us let us make much of it Let us not quench the light of the spirit but nourish it in our hearts Let not the least thought against the truth finde any entertainment in us Let us never open our mouthes against it but blesse God for it and defend it by all possible meanes Let us say with that worthy Apostle we can doe nothing against the truth but for the truth yea let us be content if God shall see it good even to lay down our lives for the Truth Let us take heede how upon pride vaineglory or singularity we maintaine any opinion against the truth how upon malice we set our selves against the truth For by these degrees the Devill at the length may carry us into this fearefull sinne against the HOLY GHOST Let us not grieve the good Spirit of God any kinde of way but let us suffer our selves to be guided by him all the dayes of our lives that we never fall into this horrible sin nor be partakers of the punishment due to it but that wee may be preserved from it and all other sinnes and reigne with CHRIST our blessed SAVIOUR in the life to come There is an outward and an inward sanctification hee is not a Iew which is one outward but he is a Iew which is one within Iudas seemed to be a Saint yet he was a Devill Let us entreat the Lord to sanctifie our hearts as well as our hands our soules and consciences as well as our tongues That is true sanctification that beginneth at the heart and from thence floweth to all the parts and members of the body What should we doe with a faire and beautifull Apple if the core be rotten A straw for an outward glorious profession and if there be no truth in the inward parts Therefore let us desire God to sanctifie us in soule spirit and body throughout VERSE 30. The second argument is taken from a divine testimony containing in it the nature of God Where 1. The allegation of the testimony 2. The Application of it In the allegation 1. The manner how 2. The matter of the testimony alleadged which hath two branches the one out of Verse 35. the other out of Verse 36. If GOD bee a just judge and a severe revenger of all impiety even among his owne people then those vile wretches must not thinke to escape that tread under foote the Sonne of God But God is such a one Ergo. Quàm verax potens sit They that bee Christians must bee acquainted with God they must know him of what nature and disposition he is ye erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God Heb. 9.11 If sitting in the lappe of the Church we know not God our condemnation shall be the greater Where hath he said it In the Scripture Moses was the pen-man of that booke out of the which this testimony is desumed yet it is God that speaketh in that booke God spake by the mouth of David by the mouth of all his Prophets Art thou desirous to heare God speake as who would not bee glad to heare the King speake but art thou desirous to heare the King of Kings speake come to the Scriptures and there thou shalt heare him speaking Which ought to enflame us with a love of the Scriptures and cause us to read and heare them with al reverence because not man out God speaketh in them What sayes he he thunders with a vehement voice Vengeance and retribution are mine What may none revenge but GOD Surely no by his owne authority The Magistrate may revenge for he carryeth not the sword in vaine But his throne is Gods throne his sword Gods sword his vengeance Gods vengeance no private man may revenge The King sayes White-Hall is mine the Scepter and Crowne of
England is mine and shall any goe about to wring them out of his hands The King of Kings sayes vengeance is mine and wilt thou wrest Gods sword out of his hand Take heede how thou doest it lest thou beest found a fighter against God Say not such a one hath angred mee I will be even with him ô saucy Merchant wilt thou intrude thy selfe into Gods office The second branch of the testimony The greatest part of Interpreters are of opinion that the Apostle alleadgeth this to his purpose indirectly by the way of consequent If God will bee avenged on the enemies of his people much more on the enemies of his Sonne They thinke that to judge his people is to judge the enemies of his people for his peoples sake But this is alleadged directly and to judge is put for to punish The Lord shall judge his owne people even so many of them as revolt from him the living God to dumb and dead idols That is the scope of the whole Chapter as yee may see from Verse 15 to this place and Saint Paul citeth Verse 21. Rom. 10. to prove the rejection of the Iewes Though they be his owne people whom he hath honoured with the Word and Sacraments that have given up their names to him and taken upon them the profession of his holy truth yet if they fall from him he will severely punish them Therefore those men that have beene enlightned with the Spirit of grace that have had CHRIST IESUS revealed to them and yet contumeliously despise that spirit count the bloud of the Testament a prophane thing and tread the Sonne of God under their feete undoubtedly they shall drinke deepely of the cup of Gods vengeance for vengeance is Gods and he will powre it in full measure on them It cannot bee denyed but that God is exceeding mercifull his mercy reacheth to the clouds is higher than the heavens his mercy is over all his workes There is not halfe a Psalme of Iustice but an whole Psalme of his Mercy The foote of that song is this for his mercy endureth for ever yea he is the Father of mercies of a great number of mercies yet for all that hee is just too As mercy is his so vengeance is his he is a Iudge as well as a Father As he is wonderfull kind and beneficiall to his people when they serve him so he will judge his people when they depart from him David said concerning the government of his house and kingdome I will sing of Mercy and Iudgement Wee sing of Mercy but we let Iudgement goe like bad Musitions wee leave out one part of the song wee harpe much on the string of Mercy but we never meddle with the string of Iustice. Though wee sweare be drunken commit adultery steale secretly from our neighbours though we make small reckoning of his word raile on it and the Preachers too yet God is mercifull ready to forgive our sins I but remember likewise that vengeance is his and he will judge even his owne people especially if with an high hand they sinne against him hee will wound the hairie scalpe of them that goe on in their sins The Scripture records examples of Gods vengeance as well as of Gods Mercie He threw the Angels out of heaven when they sinned hee drowned the whole world for sinne he rained fire and brimstone on Sodome he made Iesabel a filthy adulteresse though a Queene to be cast out of a window and eaten up with dogs If we know the truth and make no conscience to live according to the truth if we cause his Gospell to be blasphemed by our wicked lives especially if wee choake the truth revealed to us set our selves against it and maliciously despise the spirit of grace whereby wee were in some measure sanctified then the vengeance of GOD will light heavy on us Therefore let us thinke as well on Gods Iustice as on his Mercy VERSE 31. OVt of this divine testimony the Apostle inferreth a fruitfull conclusion shewing what use we are to make of this doctrine it must cause us to feare God Almighty An horrible thing to fall suddenly when we little thinke of it and deepely too into the wine presse of Gods wrath so much the word doth import Into what into the hands of the living GOD. Why God hath no hands therefore we need not feare falling into them True indeed God hath no part or member of a body as we have for he is a spirit yet for our capacitie it is adscribed to him By the hands of God in this place is meant the wrath power and anger of God Almighty As a master sayes to his servant take heede how you come into my hands againe so it is a fearefull thing to fall into Gods hands What is this God A living God that lives for ever not a dead and dumbe Idoll therefore there is no escaping out of his hands if we fall into them For the better explication of it know that GOD hath two hands The one is Manus protegens into thy hands I commend my spirit It is a comfortable thing to fall into these hands The other is manus puniens and that is double the one as he is Pater castigans so David chose to fall into the hands of God the other as he is Iudex vindicans and so it is a fearefull thing to fall into his hands The wrath of a King sayes Salomon is as the roaring of a Lion what is the wrath of the King of Kings An earthly King may be appeased with rewards and requests but his wrath if he be once angry as a Iudge cannot be appeased Some by violence may snatch thee out of a Kings hand which is stronger than he none can deliver thee out of Gods hands if thou beest his prisoner once looke for no Gaole delivery Thou mayest run out of a Kings kingdome but there is no running from GOD whither shall I flye from thy presence in any corner of the earth hee will finde thee out yea though thou haddest wings to mount up into the heavens he can fetch thee downe An earthly King lives but for a time at the length hee dyes but GOD lives for ever Therefore it is a fearefull thing to fall into his hands Yet men little consider this they imagine it is nothing to fall into Gods hands A servant had rather fall into Gods hands by making a lye then into the hands of his master by speaking a truth A number of desperate persons had rather fall into Gods hands by swearing and forswearing then into the hands of an earthly judge We make no account of Gods hands tush God sees it not or if he regard it he is a kinde God it makes no matter for falling into his hands yet it is a fearefull thing for though he beare long with thee in wonderfull patience and long suffering yet he will make thee beare in the end Therefore let us not wittingly and willingly
faith submitted themselves to his ordinance so must we with the hand of faith imbrace the Sacraments of the New Testament Some Atheist might object against them to what end is a little water laid on the forehead of the childe as Naaman said Are not Abana and Pharpar Rivers of Damascus better than all the waters of Israel So say they is not the water in the pompe as good as the water in the Font Wherefore doe we receive a little Bread and Wine so solemnely in the Church at the celebration of the Lords Supper May we not have as good in every Taverne I but if we have faith wee receive them as pledges of the body and bloud of Christ with hearty thanksgiving to GOD yea as exhibiting the same The bloud of the Lambe on the doores of their houses did assure them of their deliverance from the plague and judgement of God that though never so many were slaine among the Egyptians yet none of their first-borne should lose their lives so the water in Baptisme must assure us of the washing away of our sins in the bloud of Christ. The Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper must assure us of the Body and Bloud of Christ that as we eate and drinke the one with our mouth so we eate and drinke the other with our hearts in so much as CHRIST is one with us and we with him Our reverent use of the Sacraments in the feare of God is a token of faith they that contemne the Sacraments that regard them not that care not though they come not at the Communion once in a yeere nay in five or ten yeeres they feele no want of it these declare to the world that they have no faith Moses keeping of the Passeover was a Touchstone of his faith and our usage of the Sacraments will bewray our faith The Paschall Lambe was a type of Christ whereupon he is called our Passeover 1 Cor. 5.7 He was the Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Not a bone of the Paschall Lambe might be broken Exod. 12.46 So Not a bone of Christ could bee broken Iohn 19.36 This Passeover was an adumbration of Christ. And the Effusion of the bloud of the Lambe was a figure of the effusion of the bloud of Christ Heb. 12.24 As the bloud of the Lambe sprinkled on the doores of the Israelites kept away the Destroyer from them So the bloud of Christ sprinkled on our consciences 1 Pet. 1.2 keepes away the Devill from us Where this bloud is sprinkled by the sponge of faith there the Devill can have no entrance nor possession This no doubt they likewise saw by the eye of faith and let us desire to be sprinkled with this bloud more and more Whether it were a good or evill Angell is a question more curious than commodious for the most part Executioners among us are bad men the scum and off-scouring of the Countrey such as have no piety nor religion in them yet sometimes a good man may be a Kings executioner as Benaiah was to Salomon 1 Reg. 2. Punire malum non est malum sed facere malum malum est So it may please the High and Eternall GOD to use good Angels in the execution of his wrath They are as ready to be instruments of his justice as of his mercy It might be a good Angell that slew 70000. with the Pestilence in three dayes space that slew an hundred fourescore and five thousand in Senacheribs Campe in one night and it was a good Angel for ought we know that destroy'd the first-borne in Egypt it was an evill Angell that deceived Achab it was the Devill that afflicted Iob but it may be a good Angell that destroyed the first-borne of the Egyptians Whether it were or no it makes no great matter it doth not much concerne us If we feare God and serve him we need feare no Angels they be Traitors not loyall Subjects that feare the Kings Guard Feare not the rod but him that striketh with the rod. The rod cannot smart nay it cannot move without the striker Let us feare Almighty GOD that useth creatures as his rods at his will and pleasure and then we shall not need to feare any creature whatsoever Whom did the Angell destroy The first-borne which of all the children are deerest to the parents Men glory most of the first Apple the tree beareth loe this is the first Apple that my tree bore So the first fruit of our body is most joyfull and welcome to us Now the Lord being displeased with the Egyptians a stubborne and rebellious people he takes away their first-borne and this was the last arrow which he shot against them as the deadliest and heaviest of all If we love our children let us love GOD if we desire to keepe them let us keepe in with GOD he gave and hee can take away at his pleasure if we provoke him by our sins whom we ought to love most hee will bereave us of that which wee love most If wee have one childe deerer to us than another by one meanes or other he will deprive us of it the best way to keepe our children is to serve him who gave us our children The Lord will preserve his though the wicked bee destroyed 2 Pet. 2.9 Touch not mine anointed and doe my Prophets no harme A thousand shall fall on thy right hand c. but it shall not come neere thee No doubt thousands fell in Egypt being a populous Countrey yet the Israelites are not touched It cannot be denied but that sometimes the godly are involved in the same temporall plague with the ungodly Good Iosiah was slaine in the battell behold hee whom thou lovest is sick A good man may be sick yea sick of the plague yea dye of the plague too Iob was a singular good man yet his seven sonnes and three daughters were all touched the house fell on them altogether they were all slaine at one stroke Neverthelesse sometimes it pleaseth GOD to make a difference there was howling and crying among the Aegyptians my son is dead but not one dyed among the Israelites God sets a marke on his children that the Destroyer seeing it may not touch them If God for the sinnes of England should send a destroyer into England though there should be an intended massacre of Protestants by the Devillish and bloud-sucking Papists yet if God see it good he shall not touch any of his servants If he doe for in these outward things we must referre our selves to God yet the bloudy instruments of death shall prove golden keyes to open to us the doores of the kingdome of heaven VERSE 29. HEre 1. The miraculous preservation of Gods people 2. The fearefull destruction of their enemies Their preservation is illustrated by the instrumentall cause the place where and the manner how they were preserved They men women and children both Moses and all the Israelites It is
house and Temple Remember that our God is a God of peace let us be peaceable Wee have had the Title now to the effect the raising up of Christ from the dead elementia in collatione pacis potentia in suscitatione filij The party raised is set forth 1. By his Sovereignty 2. By his Name 3. By his Office For his Sovereignty He is our Lord. Ye call me Master and Lord. Not every one that sayeth to me Lord c. He created us He redeemed us He hath marryed us to Himselfe therefore we are to call Him Lord as Sarah did Abraham For His Name it is IESUS the onely SAVIOUR of the world There is no other name whereby wee can be saved but by the Name of IESUS Moses was the giver of the Law yet not he but Iosuah brought the people into Canaan So they be not the workes of the Law but Christ alone that carryes us into heaven the celestiall Canaan For His Office Hee is the Shepheard of the sheepe Cyrus my Shepheard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where observe 1. What manner of Shepheard he is 2. How hee comes to bee our Shepheard If ye will know what manner of Shepheard he is he is a great one There be little Shepheards as the Rectours Curates of every Congregation but Hee is the great Shepheard 1. Great in the extent of the flocke the universall Shepheard of the whole Church throughout the world the Shepheard of Iewes and Gentiles so is none but he 2 Great in authority The sheepe are His Hee ownes them Simon feede my sheepe feede my lambes Peter as other Pastors feede them but the sheepe are Christs Iob had 7000. sheepe he had many Shepheards that kept them yet the sheepe were Iobs So Christ hath many thousands of sheepe in Christendome in the world Sundry Shepheards he places over them yet the sheepe are Christs not ours 3 Great in the charge which hee hath taken on him hee is the Shepheard of soule and body too the great Shepheard of our soules 1 Pet. 2. ult He hath care of body and soule too 4 Great in humility the King of Kings yet hee abased himselfe to be a Shepheard 5 Great in knowledge Iohn 10.3 6 Great in love and kindenesse Hee gave Himselfe for the sheepe 7 Great in power none can take them out of his hands All the Divells in hell all the wicked men on the earth cannot cozen him of one sheepe Be thankefull to God for this great Shepheard Of whom of the sheepe that is the righteous They are most fitly resembled to sheepe 1 Sheepe are humble Learne of Me I am humble and meeke 2 Sheepe are harmelesse be as innocent as Doves as harmelesse as sheepe 3 Sheepe are profitable for backe and belly 4 They are ruled by their Shepheard So whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe 5 Sheepe are lead into pastures and folds 6 They are obnoxious to many dangers to Wolves Briers Theives Dogges So many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord delivers them out of all Happy are the sheepe that have such a Shepheard But how came He to be Shepheard Sayd the chiefe Captaine with a great summe of money obteined I this burgeship But it cost Christ a greater summe even His bloud whereby the everlasting covenant is confirmed Acts 20.28 The wine in the Lords Supper is a lively representation of this bloud The wine is red So was the bloud of CHRIST the wine is powred out into the cup So the bloud of CHRIST was powred forth for our sinnes The grapes are pressed before there is any wine So was CHRIST Wine comforts a man hee hath given him wine to make him a glad heart So the consideration of the bloud of Christ that was shed for the remission of our sins is a singular comfort to the soules of Christians By this bloud He came to be the Shepheard of the Church and this is that bloud that ratifies GODS everlasting Covenant The Covenant I am thy GOD and the GOD of thy seede is an everlasting Covenant Such as the man is such is his bond and word It is good dealing with honest men A man may be bold to build on their word And such as GOD is such is His Covenant an everlasting GOD and an everlasting Covenant of His Kingdome there shall bee no end and of His Covenant there shall be no end As He is our GOD now So he will be for ever Let this stay us up when we are ready to faint in all distresses This is that great Shepheard of the sheepe which GOD hath brought againe from the dead But was hee not able to bring himselfe from the dead Yes verily He raised up this Temple Himselfe He presented Himselfe alive Acts 1.3 Yet in respect of His humanity GOD is sayd to have brought Him from the dead which He did after a glorious manner the Angels waiting on the Sepulcher the earth trembling the graves opening sundry of the Saints rising with Him and appearing to many Our Saviour truely dyed on the Crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the breath went out of His body it was wrapt up in linnen cloathes layed in the Sepulcher there it continued three dayes and nights yet God brought Him againe from the dead Hee was seene of His Apostles and others fourty dayes together they beheld the print of the nailes in His hands and feet they eat and dranke with Him and looked on Him when Hee went into Heaven Even so the same God shall bring us againe from the dead The Head is risen therefore the members shall rise the first fruits are in the barne of Heaven therefore we that are the second fruits shall be gathered thither The husband is in Heaven therefore the wife shall be in Heaven Where I am they also that believe in mee shall bee there Hee brought CHRIST from the dead the third day there was an extraordinary reason in that because His Sacred body might see no corruption Our bodies corrupted with sinne must lye putrifying in the earth till the day of Iudgement Adventus Domini clavis resurrectionis then wee shall meete CHRIST in the ayre and bee translated with Him into His Kingdome of glory Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours VERSE 21. WEE have heard of the person to whom he prayes now to the thing for which he prayes It is perfection in all good workes the which is first set downe then amplified It is comprised in these words make you perfect c. Hee doth not say in faith but in workes workes are a demonstration of faith shew me thy faith by thy workes Except your righteousnesse exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall not enter into the Kingdome of heaven Their righteousnesse was to say not to doe Matth. 23.3 ours must be to say and doe too else wee shall not set a foote into the Kingdome of heaven Not every one that sayeth unto mee Lord Lord c. Therefore
to catch me but the King of Kings is with mee I feare him not I will rest under the wings of Gods protection Chrysost. answers that he did not so feare as that he should never returne againe Why for he endured with a strong and a valiant minde nothing could overthrow him As seeing him that is invisible God in himselfe is invisible and cannot be seene Yet Moses by the eye of faith saw him as a Gyant on his side which made him to contemne Pharaoh and all enemies whatsoever he saw him in the bush Exod. 3. but rather by the eye of faith The Rhemists translate it him that is invisible he sustained as if he had seene him how can a man sustaine God they have quite lost the force of the Greeke word which governes no case but is absolute of it selfe All flight is not to be condemned Moses fled out of Aegypt yet it was in faith St. Paul fled out of Damascus yet in faith Tertullian hath an excellent treatise to this purpose There is a time to burne and a time to flye If they persecute you in one City flye to another If our flight come from faith not from feare and infidelity wee may have comfort in it It had beene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost. cast thy selfe downe said the Devill to Christ so Moses should have cast himselfe into danger if he had not fled There be two wings wherewithall we must flye when wee flye out of any Country being pursued by our enemies the wing of faith and of righteousnesse Whatsoever we doe must be done in faith else it is sinne in the sight of God if we sticke by it in the time of persecution it must not be in presumption presuming in our owne strength but in faith relying on GOD. If we flye it must not be in infidelity as if GOD were not able to keepe us in security and being unwilling to suffer any thing for the name of Christ but it must be in faith to reserve ourselves for better opportunities and to fight more manfully afterwards under Christ his banner By faith Moses forsooke Aegypt The second wing wherewith we must flye is the wing of righteousnesse If wee flye not sinne as well as the Country if wee carry our sinnes adultery covetousnesse pride c. with us in our flight they will make hue and cry after us and pursue us to the terrour of our conscience whithersoever wee goe these things being observed let us bee bold to flye Christ himselfe fled and hee gave his Apostles license to flye 2 We cannot see the essence of GOD yet we may see the goodnesse mercy and power of GOD. The essence of the winde cannot be seene yet the effects of it may When David was hunted by Saul as a Partridge he saw GOD preserving him from his clawes The three children saw GOD in the fiery furnace Daniel in the Lions den Ionah in the belly of the Whale S. Peter in prison The faithfull in all calamities see GOD in poverty in disgrace exile sicknesse yea in death it selfe they see the Lord Iesus ready to receive their spirits and they have such joy at this spirituall sight of GOD as that it makes them in a manner to forget all sorrow This makes them to endure all crosses as Moses did Let us desire the LORD to sharpen the eye of our faith that we may see him which is invisible to the comfort of our soules in this life and may see him face to face in the life to come The reason why we faint in calamities why wee give place to the fury of men is because we see not GOD on our sides by the eye of faith for if we did we would not feare men Will the Souldier feare if he see his Captaine with him especially if hee bee a most wise Vlysses and valiant Ajax that can protect him from his enemies Will a childe feare that hath his Father by him which is able to defend him If Gehazi had seene the Chariots and Horsemen of fire round about him and his Master he would never have delivered that pitifull speech alas Master what shall we doe VERSE 28. THE former were proper to Moses Now follow two other which are common to the Israelites together with him the celebration of the Passeover and their passage through the red sea In the celebration of the Passeover 1. the act then the causes of it which are three the instrumentall formall and finall Made the Passeover which doth signifie both to ordaine and to keepe and celebrate Matth. 26.18 Moses did not onely ordaine it at GODS appointment but together with the Israelites did keepe and celebrate it as a confirmation of their faith in the deliverance that was to come Here by Passeover of necessity must be understood the Paschall Lambe which was a signe and token to them of the Passeover The Passeover was the passing of the Angell by the house of the Israelites when he slew the first-borne among the Egyptians Moses did neither institute nor celebrate that but that was instituted and performed by GOD. They did take and eat the Paschall Lambe which was a significant token to them of that Passeover therefore it is no new thing by a Sacramentall metonymie to give the signes the name of the thing signified This is the LORD 's Passeover Exod. 12.11 that is A signe of the Lords Passeover this is my covenant sayes GOD of Circumcision Gen. 17.10 that is as it is expounded Vers. 11. A signe of my Covenant The Rock was Christ that is a type and figure a lively signification of Christ. Therefore we are not to seeke a knot in these rushes He shewes what this Passeover is affusion of bloud not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an affusion namely to the lintell and doore cheekes with a sponge of hysope The Lambe was killed the bloud effused into a Basin the sponge of hysope dipped in the bloud whereby it was sprinkled on the doore cheekes This Moses ordained and celebrated that the Angell seeing this bloud on the doores of the Israelites might passe by their houses and kill none there That is the Angell appointed to it by GOD yet no Angell is mentioned The first borne both of man and beast among the Egyptians Touch them that is kill them Gen. 26.11 A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not so much as touch them with his finger or the top of his sword The celebration of this Sacrament by Moses and the Israelites was a lively demonstration of their faith Achaz would have no signe They did not reject this signe To what purpose should bloud be sprinkled on our doores Cannot the Angell discerne the house of an Israelite from the house of an Egyptian without such a marke or can a few drops of the bloud of a Lambe be as a buckler to us against the wrath of God They chopt no such Logick with the Lord but in