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

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is be●●ne God 〈◊〉 sinner forasmuch as it is a free contract betweene the Lord and a sinner concerning the pardon of sinne and life euerlasting through faith in Christ Iesus This couenant he made with Iewes and Gentiles This was made with sinfull man immediately after the fall Gen. 3 15. This succeedeth the former which is of workes so soone as it was broken for the latter which is the couenant of grace had not beene made if the former had not bin broken and so made insufficient and vnpossible Heb. 8 7. Rom. 3 23. Gal. 3 21. True it is the new Couenant which offereth saluation vnto a sinner is but one in substance but in regard of circumstances it differeth For in the old Testament it was shadowed out by types by figures and by shadowes before Christs comming in the flesh This yoke was taken away when Christ was exhibited and all these ceremonies abolished to the great manifestation of Gods loue toward vs and the speciall comfort of all the faithfull Secondly that dishonour is done to God violence to the Sacraments and iniury to the Fathers by such as hold that the Sacraments of the old Testament were only significatiue and meere shadowes For the Apostle speaking of the Fathers saith Acts 15 11. We beleeue that through the grace of the Lord Iesus Christ we shall be saued euen as they but they were not saued by shadowes of grace for how can the rocke be accounted a meere shadow and nothing else seeing the Apostle calleth it Christ 〈◊〉 Rocke ●●●eth 〈◊〉 If it be Christ then doubtlesse they dranke Christ himselfe which dranke of that rocke euen as if the bread be the body of Christ and the cup the blood of Christ sacramentally it cannot be denied but that all they which eate the bread and drinke of the cup of the Lord worthily must necessarily eate the body drinke the blood of Christ spiritually If any obiect ●●●ect that Christ had not yet taken flesh of the virgin Mary neither was exhibited to the world I answer Answer it is true but nothing to the purpose because faith is the substance of things hoped for the euidence of things not seene Heb. 11 1. This made the flesh of Christ present though he had not yet taken our nature vpon him neither were partaker of flesh and blood Heb. 2 14 And thus they did finde saluation in the flesh of Christ who was the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world Reuel 13 18. because God had promised euen in the garden Gen. 3 15. that the seed of the woman should bruise the serpents head so that we may say with the Apostle Iesus Christ the same yesterday and to day and for euer Hebr. 13 8. And how could the Fathers vnder the Law haue eternall life otherwise forasmuch as this was euermore a true saying Except ye eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his blood yee haue no life in you c. Iohn 6 53 54. So then the Israelites did seek obtaine saluation in the flesh of Christ which he was to giue whē the fulnesse of time came for the redemption and saluation of the world And through faith they receiued Christ not onely in the word but also in the Sacraments Thirdly from hence it appeareth that the eating and drinking of the body and blood of Christ is meerely and wholly spirituall for by faith it is that we are vnited vnto Christ as branches to the vine and draw from him euerlasting life and by faith he dwelleth in our hearts Eph. 3 17. This communion is common to the Fathers and vs but the Fathers could not cōmunicate with Christ any otherwise then by faith in the Word and Sacraments seeing he had not taken our flesh vpon him and therefore so it is with vs our communion is not carnall but spirituall Christ ouerthroweth the real presence And such a communion did Christ himselfe teach Iohn 6 where he ouerthroweth and destroyeth the carnall eating of his body both by telling them of his ascending into heauen verse 62. What if yee shall see the Sonne of man ascend vp where he was before as if he should say I will carry vp my flesh with me into heauen whither your mouth cannot reach nor enter and by shewing that such kinde of carnall eating can profit nothing v. 63. It is the Spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing the words that I speake are spirit and they are life This only is necessary sufficient vnto saluatiō the corporal carnall eating which is now maintained and defended by the Church of Rome and others i● neither necessary nor profitable nor sufficient nor any way auaileable vnto saluation Nay to many it is hurtfull dangerous deadly and damnable These are like to the Capernaites that did adhere seruilely to the letter wil seeme to sticke closely to the words of Christ howbeit he saith not The words of institution expounded in the bread or vnder the species of the bread is the body but This that is this bread which I haue blessed broken and deliuered into your hands to be eaten with the mouth of the body is my body to be broken for you vpon the Crosse But if the bread it selfe be the body of Christ thē cannot the body of Christ be said to be in the bread Wherefore the words of institution do not teach or require or confirme the carnall presence of the body of Christ in the bread Secondly if the body and blood of Christ had beene really in the bread and wine Christ should haue eaten himselfe euen his owne body and drunke his owne blood which was not yet really and actually shed but rested remained within the veines For it is holden that he did eate of the bread and drinke of the wine with his Disciples and therefore he sayeth I will not drinke henceforth of this fruite of the Vine vntill that day when I drinke it new with you in my Fathers kingdome Math. 26 29. And as he was circumcised for vs not for himselfe and was baptized for vs not for himselfe and did eate the Passeouer also with his Disciples so it may well be thought that he did partake of the Supper as well as of the other Sacraments Moreouer Christ is ascended really into heauen with his body which must containe him vntill his coming againe Acts 3 21 and 1 11. When he ascended he left this world with his body Iohn 16.28 We haue the poore euer with vs but him we shall not haue euer Math. 26 11. It will be said that Christ saith Loe I am with you to the ende of the world Math. 28. It is true in respect of his Deity for the promise is made to the Church of his perpetuall presence prouidence and protection by his Spirit Againe if he were alwaies vppon the earth he could not be our Priest to make intercession for vs as Hebr. 8 4. If he were on earth
there cannot be a greater benefit God the Father offereth and assureth his owne Sonne whom he hath sealed to be the Mediatour of our redemption he deludeth and deceiueth no man that commeth to the Supper as a guest prepared for the marriage feast 2 Cor. 2.16 For as the word turneth to be the sauour of death vnto death to the vnreuerent and vnregarding hearer so in truth is the Sacrament the sauour of death vnto death to the vnworthy and vnwise receiuer Let vs therefore throughly examine and prooue our selues whether we be in the faith or not 2 Cor. 13 5. and consider diligently what is set before vs and hunger and thirst after Christ that we may obtaine this hidden Manna This we shall neuer do except we obserue these few rules First we must try our selues by the law of God whereby commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3 20 7 7. It is a cleere glasse to shew vs our faces or rather our hearts Iam. 1 23. From hence we must frame an editement against our selues Secondly we must labour to vnderstand and beleeue the common corruption of all mankinde standing partly in originall sinne and partly in the fruites thereof wherewith all are tainted as with an vncleane leprosie from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot Rom. 3 9. Thirdly we must feele the curse of euerlasting death due to vs Gal. 3 10. Fourthly we must learne what couenant God hath made with vs touching grace and mercy that we may be raised vp to comfort in the Sonne of God our Redeemer Fiftly we must desire to be made partakers of the Lords Supper and feele how much we stand in need of it which will follow necessarily vpon the former Lastly we should fit our selues the better vnto the worke by considering the proportion betweene the signes and the things signified The beholding of the breaking of the bread the powring out of the wine should enforce vs to remember the body of Christ broken and his blood shed for vs. When wee looke vpon the Minister comming to vs and reaching forth these elements We should consider that the Lord Iesus himselfe commeth to vs and offereth himselfe with all his mercies and merits vnto vs if wee haue faith to receiue him And as we lay hold vpon the bread and wine and take them in our hands so we must stretch forth the hand of a liuely faith to lay hold of Christ for with him we shall entertaine all his sauing benefits to our endlesse and euerlasting comfort CHAP. X. Ver. 1 2. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Make thee two Trumpets of siluer c. HEere wee haue the conclusion of the first part of this book Doctrine Of the siluer Trumpets the vse of thē In this chapter we are to consider two thinges First the commandement of God directed to Moses to make two siluer Trumpets Secondly the remouing of the Israelites from Sinai to Paran Touching the Trumpets they are described by the matter they must be made of siluer by the forme of an whole piece Thirdly by the ends for the calling of the assembly and for the iournying of the Campe. Fourthly by the manner prescribed how to vse them to what purpose one alone is to be sounded to what purpose both when an alarme is to be blowne and when the alarme is to be blowne the second time when they must blow but not sound the alarme Fiftly by telling who shall be the trumpetters or sound the Trumpets the sonnes of Aaron the Priest Lastly by the time how long this vse shall continue to wit as an ordinance for euer euen so long as the Commonwealth of the Israelites shall endure This is the present vse of them there is a double vse of them commanded for the time to come one in time of warre to assure them that God will then remember them for good and saue them from their enemies ver 9 the other in time of peace at their solemne feasts at their burnt offerings and peace offerings Vse 1 The vses of them follow which are partly ciuill and partly ecclesiasticall And first seeing these siluer Trumpets serued for the Camp and the Congregation to assemble and to remoue and that the power of making them is committed to Moses who hath the sole prerogatiue to call and to dissolue assemblies about publike affaires we learn that it belongeth to Kings and Princes as their proper right to gather together The authority of K ngs and Princes what it is and to dismisse them that are gathered together Euery one hath not authority and iurisdiction to draw multitudes together we shall haue no small ado if that may be suffered Acts 1● 23. We must haue lawfull and orderly assemblies vers 29. and such as do not sauour of confusion So it was in Egypt without Phar●oh no man might lift vp his hand or foot in all the Land of Egypt Gen. 41 44. This right is annexed to the highest power by an estate indefeizible and by a perpetuall law that cannot be dissolued throughout all generations As this power together with the Trumpets was giuen to Moses so did he and his successours practise the same who commanded in chiefe as Deut. 33 ver 5. Numb 31 6. Ioshua called and dismissed the people and they obeyed him in the execution of that power no lesse then they had done Moses before Iosh 1 17 and 24 28. So did Dauid vse these Trumpets 1 Chron 15 4 23 2 3 6. When the Arke was to be remoued and when the offices of the Tabernacle were to be ordered which are things meerely belonging to true religion The like we might say of Salomon 2 Chron. 5 2. of Asa Iehosaphat Hezekiah and Iosiah Thus were all generall Councels congregated and called together and there were none otherwise called for a thousand yeares after Christ but by the Trumpet of Moses that is by the authority of Caesar Thus did Moses also in gathering assemblies about publike affaires both for consultation and action For consultation The nece●● of gatheri●● assemblie● because many eies may discerne that which few cannot For action because many hands may discharge that which is troublesome cumbersome for one to do Exod. 18.18 This serueth to reproue three sorts first the Bishop of Rome who as a theefe and vsurper hath encroched vpon the Princes right and stollen away one of these siluer Trumpets and carried to it Rome He would leaue Moses but one Trumpet and would limit his office to ciuill and temporall things challenging power in all spirituall causes and ouer all spirituall persons Howbeit Aaron the High-Priest neuer offered to wring and wrest out of the hand of Moses this power he was content to blow them at the commandement of Moses or rather at the commandement of God Nay such is the tyranny of this proud Bishop that he contenteth not himselfe with one Trumpet though he haue indeed right to none
our selues True it is he is mindfull of a few that serue him and ready to shew mercy to one of a City and two of a Tribe that feare his Name Though they be contemned derided of the vnthankfull world yet they are deare to him and they come vp in remembrance before him When all flesh had corrupted their waies he remembred Noah and his family saued eight persons when he destroyed all the rest Gen. 7 1. So he deliuered righteous Lot 2 Pet. 2.7 when hee ouerthrew the cities of the plaine and would haue spared Sodome if ten righteous persons had beene found in it Ge. 18 32. On the other side if multitudes trespasse against him and rush on in euil as the horse into the battell he will not spare them for their multitude sake It is a great encouragement vnto many to walk in the broad way Math. 7.13 because many there are that go in thereat they are much discouraged and terrified from entring into the strait gate narrow way because there be few that finde it they shal haue litle company to go with them but if wee would consider the end both of the one of the other it were sufficient to make vs wise vnto saluation It is a very notable remarkeable iudgment that is remembred vnto vs that fell vpō this multitude the exceeding goodnes kindnes of the Lord onely toward two persons of those sixe hundred thousand that were brought out of the land of Egypt forasmuch as albeit he saued them from the hands of Pharaoh yet afterward he destroyed them that beleeued not Iude 5. Who doth not desire rather like Caleb Ioshuah to be had in euerlasting remembrance Psa 112 6 to haue our names written in the booke of life then to perish with the multitude and to be cast into destruction Vse 2 Secondly it warneth and warranteth the Ministers of God to be bold to reproue sinne in all though they be neuer so great and gracious in the world though they be many yea a whole multitude yet if they be a sinful company they haue a commandement and commission giuen vnto them to reprooue them without respect of persons without care of the multitude and without feare of their faces This is a certaine rule a multitude may not stoppe our mouthes from reprouing sinne and it serueth as a shield and sure defence for the Ministers against those that vpbraid them for their faithfulnesse in their callings asking them what they need to trouble themselues and the people by reproouing these and these things doe you not see that all men practise them It is no matter who or what they are that offend whether they be many or few al or some he is not to be silent because of the multitude but is rather to open his mouth the wider and to lift vp his voyce the louder For if Gods hand will not be stayed when great cities are sinfull when the whole world corrupted their wayes but his iudgements will certainely come according to our sinnes the Minister ought not to be dumbe and tongue-tyed though a whole land be corrupt and sinfull In the dayes of Noah all flesh became obstinate and disobedient stiff-necked and abominable yet he is made a Preacher of righteousnesse to reproue the world of sinne 1 Pet. 3 20. If a Prince send forth his Herald to proclaime warre against a company of rebels shall the Herald because he findeth them to be a great multitude returne backe and not pronounce the sentence and yet thinke himselfe discharged No certainly hee may not do so but rather he should doe it the more speedily and earnestly and boldly because they are a multitude how then should the Minister hold his peace and haue his mouth stopped because generally the times are corrupt and the dayes are euill whereas he should consider that the moe doe sinne the more God is offended dishonored and prouoked In the time of a generall plague or infectious sicknesse will any well in his wits or in his right minde say to the Physician Take no care to cure or recouer any it is a vaine labour to goe about it for the plague is generall Is it not rather the honour of a Physician that will still stay and do his endeauor euen then when the disease is dispersed and scattered farre and neare And shall it bee thought the dishonour of the Minister of God when the plague of sin is spread as a leprosie ouer all that from the sole of the foote euen vnto the head there is no soundnesse but wounds and bruises putrifying sores if he shall then lift vp his voyce as a Trumpet and reproue sin with zeale and boldnesse No doubtles he ought to do it if he be faithfull and painefull in his place hee will do it yea though he see little hope when the euill is growne common and hath preuailed the hearts of the multitude through custome are hardened For if the blood of one soule that perisheth be a burden too heauy to be borne how then shall he bee able to beare the weight and the cry of the blood of many soules If the blood of Abel which was but the blood of the body and that but of one only Gen. 4 10. did notwithstanding cry for vengeance against him that shed it doubtlesse the blood of the soule much more of many soules redeemed by the precious blood of Christ shall cry vnto God and bring wrath vpon their heads that shed it as water vpon the earth Forasmuch as they must answer for them if they perish through their negligence and ydlenesse What though no repentance or reformation follow our reproofes yet we must not giue ouer but continue constant in our caling knowing that our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord but our reward is layde vp with God in the life to come to remaine for euer Vse 3 Lastly it must teach and admonish vs to take heed that we doe not follow a multitude to do euil nor be caried with the time as with a streame to commit wickednes as if we must needs be safe and out of gun-shot because we follow the multitude and do as the most doe For it is neuer a whit the lesse sin neyther are lesse iudgements to be looked for In the gouernment of a priuate family if al the seruants and children should conspire together against the gouernor of the houshold shall their multitude ioyning in one euer a whit excuse or lessen their conspiracy No certainely rather it will make the master of the family to bee far more angry and displeased with them so is it in this point thogh they be many that rebell rise vp against God yet they shall therby nothing at all protect themselues from his wrath and displeasure Iude ver 4. There are many thousands in hell ordained of old to this condemnation yet none of them hath the lesse torment or the
hanged by the necke yet none I say would repine at such a man so what ground hath any man to fret or fume or enuy at the flourishing estate of any wicked man especially when it is knowne that GOD hath decreed that he shall perish and that not by an honourable death but perish like Haman shamefully in his owne house and after that shall haue all shame and contempt powred vpon him and go to the place of the damned there to suffer torments with the diuel his angels where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Lastly this being well learned will serue Vse 3 as an admonition for euery one to take heede of euery euill way that he be not obstinate in sinne It is one thing to sinne and another to be obstinate in sinne to withstand the word and rod of God and to abuse his patience It is incident to all to sinne but obstinacy in sinning hardnesse of heart and casting off Repentance are the forerunners of destruction Let vs thinke thus with our selues what can a short or fading pleasure profit vs when God shall come with his fearfull destruction Nay what can all the pleasures or profites in the world recompence for the losse of that comfort and peace that otherwise we may enioy What did Esaus red pottage so pleasing vnto his eye profit him in the end when hee lost thereby not onely his fathers blessing but also the blessed life to come What good got Achan by his wedge of Gold when it proued to be the wracke and ruine both of himselfe of his family And therefore doth Christ our Sauiour teach vs Mat. 16 26. What is a man profited if he shall gaine the whole world then lose his owne soule Againe this fearfulnesse of iudgement should make a man thinke of the difficulty of repentance and what fearfull things hee shall suffer if he practise it not If it be a hard thing to breake off sinne we shall find it much harder to be broken with the iudgments of God and the fiercenesse of his wrath It is a fearfull thing to fall into the handes of an earthly Prince Prou. 19 10 but more fearefull to fall into the hands of the liuing God especially when he is inraged and incensed by the sinnes of men and therefore we ought to meete him with repentance lest we feele his vengeance to our condemnation A notable mediation to moue to break off ●he course of sinne And let vs labor to set the hardnesse of bearing the iudgements of God against the breaking off of sinne the one will easily counteruaile and ouercom the other If we finde it an hard and harsh saying to repent and breake off our sins we shall find it more hard when it shall be saide Goe ye cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the diuell and his Angels Mat. 25. Let a man seriously and throughly consider what an hard and vnpossible thing it will be to vndergo the wrath of God which maketh the diuels and damned spirits to tremble Iames 2 19 he wil think it an easie and light thing to forsake sinne although it were more deere then all things in the world whatsoeuer What if it were as hard a thing to renounce thy sin and to take vp the practice of true repentance as to pluck out a mans eye or to cut off his arme yet it must be done he hath pronounced it with his owne mouth that must be thy Iudge that is if there be any one sinne as deere vnto thee as thy right eye thou must pull it out or els thou shalt neuer come to the kingdome of heauen or if there be any sin as deere vnto thee as thy right arme by which thou gettest thy liuing if thou canst not be content to cut it off and dost not constantly and confidently resolue to cast it from thee thou canst haue no entrance giuen thee into Gods kingdome We see by common experience daily that men will endure very hard and bitter things from the hand of the Physitian that they may recouer health and escape death and yet it is not to put away death vtterly it is onely to prolong life for a time for they may deferre death they are not able to take it away If then such sharpe and bitter things seeme easie to auoid a temporall death then what ought a man to doe and to suffer to auoid the bitternesse and sharpnesse of eternall destruction and the fierce wrath of God which indeede is nothing but this To forsake sinne and to take vp repentance and the performance of religious and holy duties But alas alas how many are there euery wherin the world that haue bene content to lose many ounces of blood out of the veins for the good of the body that haue neuer shed a few drops of teares out of their eyes for the recouery of their soules To take bitter pilles and potions to purge the grosse humors that distemper vs that haue neuer purged or cleansed themselues from the filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of GOD 2 Cor. chap. 7 verse 1. Nay we see men are willing to be seared that cānot abide to haue the wounds of their soule searched by Gods holy Word yea to haue one member cut off to saue the whole bodie who notwithstanding will not leaue one pleasure of sinne for a season to saue both body and soule This is no better then folly and madnesse Heere is wisedome therefore to thinke of this betimes 31 And Moses and Eleazar the Priest did as the Lord commanded Moses 32 And the booty beeing the rest of the prey which the men of warre had caught was six hundred thousand and seuenty thousand and fiue thousand sheepe 33 And threescore c. 34 And threescore and one thousand Asses c 35 And thirty and two thousand persons in all of women that had not knowne man by lying with him c. 37 And the Lords tribute of the Sheepe was sixe hundred and threescore fifteene c. 41 And Moses gaue the tribute which was the Lords heaue-offering vnto Eleazar the priest c. 47 Euen of the children of Israels halfe c. Wee haue heard before the commandement of God touching the diuiding of the prey Now followeth the execution of it by Moses and Eleazar It is worth the obseruation to consider that as before the death of Aaron Moses and Aaron are alwaies ioyned together so after his death Moses and Eleazar The Magistrate and the minister shold ioyne togeth●r the Magistrate and the Minister as the hand and the eye are in the body Then doth the church and the conmmonwealth flourish when these two go together and on the other side they go to wrack when they are separated draw seuerall wayes The greatnesse of the victorie and conquest that God gaue to his people appeareth further in these wordes by the distribution of the people and by the reseruation of the
Ministers and to make them labour more conscionably then they haue done so it should stirre vp the people to seeke after knowledge which is as the light of the eye or as a candle in the house whereby we may see what we do and how we serue God whether truely or falsely and whether we goe right or wrong It is enough with the greatest sort to do as most doe and to practise that manner of the worshippe of God which is countenanced and continued by authority albeit they can giue no reason of it neither know how to warrant it It belongeth vnto vs not only to professe the truth but to bee able to maintaine the truth which we professe against all gainsayers and such enemies as seeke to rob vs of it It is a duty required of vs not to content our selues to doe as the rest of our neighbours do but to be ready alwaies to giue an answer to euery man that asketh vs a reason of the hope that is in vs with meeknesse of spirit 1 Pet. 3 15. ●et 3 15. Euery man presumeth he hath the truth and therefore they neuer enquire farther into the matter nor labor to satisfie their own harts vpon what grounds they stand They doe as their honest neighbours they think it no good manners to differ from them they account it folly to seeke to be wiser then their fore-fathers so they iumpe with the Church of Rome that teacheth her Disciples to beleeue as the Church beleeueth albeit they can yeeld no reason how the Church beleeueth Whereby it appeareth that albeit all men are worshippers of God yet the greatest sort know not how they worship God so that we may say vnto them as Christ spake to the woman of Samaria Ye worship ye know not what Iohn 4 22. ●●●n 4 22. Let all such know that they want true comfort in their worshipping forasmuch as they know not whether they please God or not They are like men that shoote at a marke which know not whether they shoot short or shoot beyond the marke or whether they shoot wide or how much they are wide or whether they hit the marke Thus it fareth with ignorant worshippers they are wholly ignorant whether they go astray in the matter or in the manner of his worshippe whether they doe that which God requireth or that which hee condemneth For this is no otherwise nor no where learned but by the word so that all such as are ignorant thereof are in a wretched case and wofull condition and not farre from destruction whatsoeuer they doe esteeme of themselues or others iudge of them 5. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 6. Bring the Tribe of Leui neere and present them before Aaron the Priest that they may minister vnto him 7. And they shall keepe his charge and the charge of the whole Congregation before the Tabernacle of the Congregation to doe the seruice of the Tabernacle 8. And they shall keepe all the instruments of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and the charge of the children of Israel to doe the seruice of the Tabernacle 9. And thou shalt giue the Leuites vnto Aaron and to his sonnes they are wholly giuen vnto him out of the children of Israel 10. And thou shalt appoint Aaron and his sonnes and they shall waite on their Priests Office and the stranger that commeth nigh shall be put to death 11. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 12. And I behold I haue taken the Leuites from among the children of Israel in stead of all the first borne that openeth the matrice among the children of Israel therefore the Leuites shall bee mine 13. Because all the first borne are mine Exod. 13 1. Leuit. 27 26. Luc. 2 23. for on the day that I smote all the first borne in the Land of Egypt I hallowed vnto me all the first borne in Israel both man and beast mine they shall bee I am the Lord. Hitherto of the first part of the Preface consisting in a description of Aarons sonnes and in a relation what became of them part of them dying in their sinnes and part succeeding in the Priests Office Now followeth the second part in these words which is a presentation of the Leuites before him Touching this whole Tribe we must obserue that it was diuided and sorted into two rankes whereof the first is the Priests and the second the rest commonly called by the common name of Leuites who were not admitted into the former order as appeareth more euidently in the 16 chapter following as also in the 18 chapter Touching the Priests they are of two sorts Of the high Priest the one was as the head the other as his hands one was the chiefe aboue all the rest the other were inferiour as assistants vnto him The chiefe was the high Priest Sigon de rep Heb●ae li. 5 c. 2. of whom the Scripture setteth downe foure things First his consecration he was brought before the Altar he was washed with water he was cloathed with those holy garments that God had appointed he had the sacred oyle powred vpon his head lastly sacrifice was offered on the Altar for his sanctification and his garments were sprinkled with the blood of it Secondly the things that were required in him being consecrated in the former manner which are cheefely these hee might not be defectiue or deformed in body his wife must be a virgin of his owne people he might not vncouer his head rent his garments nor go in to mourn for any that was dead though it were his father or mother Thirdly the Scripture setteth downe his imployment which was to goe daily into the Sanctuary to light the Lampes to burne Incense and euery weeke to prouide the shew-bread on the feast daies to offer the peoples sacrifices with the other Priests and once in the yeare on the day of expiation to enter into the Holiest of all to make prayer for himselfe and the people Fourthly his attire or holy vestiments in which he was to perform this seruice of God which were these six in number a brest-plate an Ephod a Robe a broidred coat a miter a girdle Of the inferiour Priests Touching the Priests of inferiour condition they had the same kinde of consecration which the high Priest had in sacrificing they were like vnto him and in the seruice of the Sanctuary in burning incense in prouiding the bread of proposition and in preparing looking to the lampes and lights This was the difference in these betweene him them that he was the chiefe and they were helpers he was the directer they were directed and guided by him Besides this was peculiar to the high Priest that hee consulted with God by Vrim and Thummim Exod. 28 30. Leuit. 16 30. and entred into the holiest place to make attonement to cleanse and hallow it from the sinnes of the people Their vestiments were the same sauing that the high Priest onely
deformed both wayes they haue too little one way and too much another way and yet alasse they see it not they know it not they feele it not Or if they do know it they will not acknowledge it or if they feele it they will not reforme it and if they see it they glory at it and reioyce in it It were a strange thing to see any body to bee merry and make a triumph of it because it wanteth an eye or an hand or a foot But thus the case standeth with many Churches they consist of confused bodies one member encroching vpon the office of another they want their eyes to see withall and yet they dreame of perfection and despise other that are more faire and forward in good things then themselues Nothing continueth long at one stay in this life nothing is so well ordered but Satan and his instruments seeke to put it out of ioynt Wee must pray to God to open our eyes to see our wants and wrinkles and to labour earnestly as well to restore that which is wanting as to cut off that which is abounding Christ is the King of this Church shall any presume in his kingdome to set vp or pull downe to place or to displace to plant or to destroy This is Gods office it belongeth vnto him onely to do them such therefore are no better then vsurpers Vse 2 Secondly this serueth to reprooue the state of the Iewes as it stood in the dayes of Christ It was time for him to come to reforme and restore all things they had many strange plants growing in the garden of God which his right hand had neuer planted that were as naughty and noysome rootes to bee pulled vp and as byles and blisters in the body We heard before that in the Church vnder the Law there was found no other Ecclesiasticall ministeries which were ordinary then those orders of the high Priest the inferiour Priests and the rest of the Leuites all which were appointed by the law of God And if any were raised vp extraordinarily the same had their calling confirmed from heauen eyther by inward motion of the Spirit or by working of miracles or by euident testimonies of the mouth of God But this gouernment of the Church stood not long without change and alteration for though the field were sowne with good seed yet the enuious man sowed tares in it so that in latter times there arose many sectes and sorts of teachers among thē who by schismes were ready to rent that body in sunder departing from the simplicity sincerity that was established by Gods instistution Epiph. cont haer lib. 1. Some of the ancient that haue taken paines to discouer to the world the heresies that sprung vp and grew apace where once they tooke rooting and footing and so to giue notice of them that they might be auoyded doe testifie that seuen seuerall and principall sects arose among the Iewes Seuen sects among the Iewes whereof some are mentioned in the Scriptures and other are not The first was that of the Scribes Scribes who were Interpreters of the Law but withall as if the law were too base a thing to sticke onely vnto it they deliuered many traditions as from their Elders not contained in the Law and sought taking counsell of humane wisedom to bring in a more exact kind of the worship of GOD then Moses and the Prophets euer taught consisting in many voluntary obseruations and customes deuised by men which they are wont to magnifie preferre before the Commandements of God Mat. 15. Colossians 2. Thus would man become wiser thē GOD Deut. 4 2. who forbad all adding or taking from his word The second sect were the Sadduces Sadduces which were of the race of the Samaritans and had their name of one Sadoc a Priest these denied the resurrection of the body and beleeued not that there is any Angell or spirit Acts 23 and consequently ouerthrew all religion as 1. Corinth 15. For if there be no resurrection of the body or immortality of the soule then are wee of all men the most miserable that professe Christ In vaine wee beleeue in his Name and in vaine wee fight with beasts at Ephesus in vaine we suffer crosses and afflictions for the Gospels sake it were better for vs to do as the most doe and to bee wicked and vngodly if there were no other life or reward in another world If the dead rise not 1 Cor. 15 16 17. then is not Christ raised and if CHRIST bee not raised our faith is vaine we are yet in our sinnes The third sect were Pharisies Pharisies these were the strictest of all others and most reuerenced and best esteemed these beleeued the rising againe of the dead at the last day and that there were both Angels and spirits as the Scribes also did and that all shall come vnto iudgement to receiue according to the things they do in this flesh whether they bee good or euill Acts 23. Acts 23 6 7. When Paul beeing accused by his enemies perceiuing that they were partly Pharisies and partly Sadduces he cryed out in the Councell Men and brethren I am a Pharisie the sonne of a Pharisie of the hope and resurrection of the dead I am called in question They much honoured virginity and single life they paied tithes of the smallest things they possessed Luke 18 verse 12. They washed cups platters beds and all kinde of vessels that they vsed they fasted twice euery week and differed in their habite from other men Against these are many woes denounced by our Sauiour Christ in the Gospel Math. 23 verse 23 for their hypocrisie that delighted more in outward shewes then in the truth of the heart The fourth sect were the Hemerobaptists Hemerobaptists or Quotidian washers who thought that no man could be saued if hee were not washed euery day that so he might be clensed from the impurity and filthinesse of sinne It is not the water in the whole sea nor any fountaine can wash away the sinnes and corruptions of our life or of our heart It hath no force in it eyther by any naturall power or by any voluntary vse Christ is our Purgatory and purification it is he that must wash vs or else wee remaine vnpure and vncleane He is the water of life whereby our consciences must be sprinkled Heb. 10 22. he is the lauer of regeneration by whom wee are borne againe and washed as with pure water If he make vs cleane then we are clean indeed His passion and the shedding of his blood must be communicated to vs and the sanctifying grace of the Spirit of God And this is necessary vnto saluation not any outward washing of the body which may clense the flesh but cannot touch the soule This is made auaileable three waies First by faith which serueth to apply Christ vnto vs and all his benefits Secondly by repentance from dead workes whereby
cut off a part then to bring the life of his patient into danger So should it be in the Church it may be willing and desirous to keepe it selfe within the degrees of admonition exhortation reprehension rather then to proceed to the vtmost to wit to excommunication Wee must remember to take heede of extremity and be sure alwayes to temper seuerity with compassion setting the example of God euermore before our eyes who in iudgment remembreth mercy Haba 3.2 The Church hath the helpe of the Christian Magistrate he wil take order and make lawes that the obstinate shall be chastened if any presume to contemne the first second and third admonition so that the sword of excommunication shall seldome and sparingly bee drawne out ●tractat de ●●municat as it hath fallen out in many Churches But when these will not serue and suffice the Church ought to proceed further lest contagion as an infectious disease enter in among the sheepe of Christ to the destruction of many soules Lastly it is euident that this discipline prescribed by Christ deliuered by the Apostles and practised by the Churches ought to haue place in euery congregation and where it is not let the Pastour supply that want by his duty and diligence in teaching and preaching of the Gospel which is as his fanne to blow the chaffe away and as the shrill trumpet waxing louder and louder to make them afraid Especially we must beware lest we shold condemne that to be no Church where there is want of this censure or where it is not duly executed as if there could be no schoole without a rod. This was the opinion of the Donatists in former times and this the sect of the Anabaptists holdeth at this day which is as absurd as if one should say that it could not be a sound body that neuer had member cut off nor that be a good Physitian that neuer came to cutting and caulterizing neither that an expert Chirurgion that vseth not a saw and other tooles to pare away and to open If we haue the right vse of the word let vs submit our selues vnto it which is able to cut off the head of sin as with a sword and to burne vp our corruptions as with violent and deuouring fire and to breake in peeces the stony hearts of such as goe forward in their iniquities as with an hammer Verse 3. Both male and female shall ye put out After that we haue set downe the particular parts of Gods commandement touching putting out of the campe the lepers and such as had issues and them that were defiled by touching of the dead we are now come next in order to the manner of the commandement shewing how farre it is extended it layeth hold on all sorts and degrees both male and female And we shewed before diuers examples of the trueth heereof in the beginning of this Chapter from whence we might obserue that the ordinances of God must be handled without partiality and respect of persons The word of God serueth not onely to reprooue the lowest and poorest but as well the highest and chiefest And the Ministers of God haue their office committed vnto them to reprooue sinne for all and not sow pillowes vnder the elbowes So ought it to be in the censures of the Church But to passe ouer this point let vs come to the reasons seruing to confirme the former doctrine whereof the first is that because sinne defileth therefore the obstinate sinner is not to be suffered The strength of this reason enforceth the putting out of the Church the leprous that is sinnefull persons in consideration of the nature of sinne that it is filthy and infectious So that the consideration of the contagion of sinne ought to mooue the gouernours of the Church to remooue such out of it as are of a corrupt and wicked life But to omit this also we see how he expresseth the nature of sinne it defileth their campes and it defileth three wayes persons actions and places From hence we are to learne that all sinne is foule and filthy vncleane and loathsome Doctrine All sinne is contagious vnto men and foule in the sight of God Lamen 1.9 Zach. 13.1 infectious and contagious in the sight of God Heereunto commeth that which Moses saith Leuit. 18.24 Defile not your selues with any of these things for in all these the nations are defiled which I cast out before you The Prophet Ezekiel warneth the people of Israel to take heed they did not defile themselues with idoles Ezekiel 20.18 Our Sauiour reproouing the hypocrisy of the Scribes and Pharisees maketh the point plaine with which we deale Matth. 15.19 20. Out of the heart proceed euill thoughts murders adulteries fornieations thefts false witnesse blasphemies These are the things that defile a man but to eate with vnwashen hands defileth not a man Heereunto we may adde directly to the purpose the exhortation of the Apostle Paul 2 Corinth 7.1 Hauing these promises dearely beloued let vs cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God And in the Epistle to Titus chap. 1. ver 15. he saith Vnto the pure all things are pure but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their minde and conscience is defiled The Apostle Iames calleth sinne filthinesse and superfluity chap. 1. verse 21. whereunto we might adde sundry other places Zeph. 3.1 Reuel 21.27 and all of them ayming at this that as all sinne is contagious vnto men so it is also foule and filthy in the sight of God Let vs see this yet farther assured and confirmed Reason 1 vnto vs by the word of GOD first by such comparisons as the Scriptures vse to expresse the nature of it It is as an vncleane cloath Esay chapter 64. verse 6. We are all as an vncleane thing and all our righteousnesse are as filthy ragges and we all do fade as a leafe and our iniquities like the winde haue taken vs away It is compared to the blood of pollution for which the menstruous woman was put apart seuen dayes so that whosoeuer touched her was vncleane vntill the euen Ezek. 16.6 9 12. Leuit. 15 19. We come into the world more defiled in soule then polluted in body and more vnsauory in the nostrils of God then a dead carrion lying long in a tombe is stinking in the nostrils of men Matth. 23.27 28. Can you name any thing more vnsauory and vnwholesome then these things who doth not loath them at the naming of them and yet sinne is more odious and abominable then all these Reason 2 Secondly all sinne defileth the soule more then mire and dung can defile the body and garments of those that are soiled with it It defileth the person that doth commit it and continue in it without repentance it polluteth and prophaneth the actions of greatest deuotion in the seruice of God The Prophet Haggai saith Hag. 2.13 If one that
not Calfe or any Cattell should vndergo the punishment for sinne because the soule that sinned shall die the death Ezek. 18 verse 4. and the threatning must be true that because man sinned he should die Gen. 2. Thou shalt die the death So that it was necessary eyther that all man-kinde by reason of sinne must perish euerlastingly Heb. 9 15. or else Christ the Mediator of a better testament must become a surety for vs and satisfie the wrath of God kindled and conceiued against vs for sinne If any aske the question Question if the blood of Buls Goats could not take away sinne why did God command them to be offered and to what end were they appointed I answer Answer this was not done in vaine but to good purpose For albeit they could neuer take away sinne nor purge the conscience from dead workes yet they serued fitly to shadow out the death of Christ and to assure the heart that it is washed by the blood of the Messiah This was a notable comfort to the people of God from the beginning taught them to looke for redemption through him Obiection If it bee farther said that God speaketh euery where in the Law that the blood it selfe of Buls and Beasts clenseth and purgeth sinne as Leuit. 17 11. The life of the flesh is in the blood and I haue giuen it to you vpon the Altar to make an attonement for your soules for it is the blood that maketh an attonement for the soule I answer Answer that place speaketh not properly but sacramentally as in the new Testament he calleth in the institution of his last Supper Math. 26 26. the bread his body because it is a figure of it so in this place to the outward signe he giueth the name of the thing signified and to the type he ascribeth the proper effect of the blood of Christ which onely is the blood that is able to make attonement for our sinnes Otherwise those offerings of beasts should be called in vaine Heb. 9 24 10 1. the similitudes and shadowes of good things to come As for those heretikes that dreame that those oblations did really and indeed clense away the sinnes of the fathers not by their naturall operation but by the acceptation of God and therefore were not types of Christs sacrifice washing away sinne they are euidently conuinced by the places before alledged and throughout the Epistle to the Hebrewes Obiect If any aske how these can bee figures of Christ seeing GOD witnesseth in his word that he neuer required them When hee commeth into the world he saith Sacrifice and Offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou prepared me in burnt offerings and sacrifices for sinne thou hast had no pleasure Psal 40 7. Heb. 10 verses 5 6. If then God would haue none of them how could they be the figures and images of better things I answer Answer God may be said to allow them and yet to disallow them to reiect them and to regard them in diuers senses Hee willed them as he commandeth them and commendeth them as a sweet sauour vnto him performed in faith and as types referred to the comming of the Messiah and the time of reformation Heb. 9 10. On the other side he may be said to refuse and reiect them for these three causes First when the manner of doing is euill doing that which God requireth but doing it in a corrupt manner to wit without faith and obedience as the Prophets in euery place reprooue the sacrifices of hypocrites wicked persons as Esay 1 11 12. I delight not in the blood of Bullocks or of Lambs who hath required this at your hand Your new Moones and your appointed feasts my soule hateth and the reason of this is rendered in the words following Verse 1● Your hands are full of blood Againe God would not that they should remaine continue for euer but that though they had place in the Church for a time they should ceasse at the coming of the Messiah Therfore Christ being come into the world and manifested in the flesh God willed thē no longer but would haue them abolished And this sense doth the Apostle principally intend in this place that the shadowes must giue place when the body it selfe was come in person Lastly it may after a sort be said that God neuer willed them that is approued allowed of thē as the principall part of Gods worship and as the very price of our redemption the ransome for our sins our reconciliation vnto God albeit he would haue them obserued of his people and vsed for a time as certaine rudiments rites to bring them to Christ to confirme their faith in him Let vs shut vp this with the comparison that the Apostle expresseth Heb. 9 13 14. If the blood of Buls and of Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the vncleane sanctifie to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience frō dead workes to serue the liuing God In these words he compareth the shadow the body the type the truth the ceremony and the substance together Doctrine Christ Iesus hath made a● attonement between G●● and vs by h●● blood Frō hence we learne this doctrine that the blood of Christ taketh away our sins reconcileth vs to God the Father Christ Iesus hath in the performance of his Priesthood freed and deliuered vs from the guilt punishment of our sins This appeareth euidently vnto vs by considering laying before vs the end the parts and fruite of his Priesthood The end of the Leuiticall Priest-hood and of this figured by it was to offer sacrifice for the ignorances Hebr. 9 ● that is for the sins of the people The distinct parts of it are two satisfaction and intercession His satisfaction consisteth partly in suffering and partly in obedience The second part of his Priesthood standeth in intercession in that he is become our perpetuall and perfect Aduocate that therby God might be appeased for them and we reconciled vnto him The fruite thereof is this that we are deliuered redeemed ransomed iustified and freed from the guilt of sin from the burden of ceremonies from the curse of the Law from the wrath of God and from feare of condemnation This truth is taught in many places Ioh 1 29. Iohn seeing Christ coming vnto him saith Behold the Lambe of God which taketh away the sin of the world And the same Apostle in his first Epistle chap. 2 ver 1 2. If any sinne we haue an Aduocate Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world Likewise in the Epistle to the Romanes the Apostle magnifying the mercy of God and setting out the merites of Christ he saith chap. 3 verse
24 25. We are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Iesus Christ whom God hath set foorth to be a propitiation thorough faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sinnes that are past thorough the forbearance of God The Apostle to the Hebrewes declareth that Christ was to offer vp himselfe once and not often as the High-Priest entreth into the high place euery yeare with blood of others For then must hee often haue suffered since the foundation of the world Heb. 9 26. but now once in the ende of the world hath be appeared to put away sinne by the sacrifice of himselfe By all which testimonies it appeareth that Christ is our Aduocate and hath wrought our peace and attonement and thereby made an end of all other sacrifices The reasons are plaine First because God Reason 1 thereby is well pleased and his wrath appeased so that hee accounteth his death as a full price and sufficient ransome paid for them So the Euangelist witnesseth that a voice came from heauen saying This is my beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased Math. 3 17. And in the Epistle to the Ephesians the Apostle saieth chap. 5 verse 2. Walke in loue as Christ also hath loued vs and hath giuen himselfe for vs an offering and a sacrifice to God of a sweete smelling sauour It is noted in the booke of Genesis that when Noah being come out of the Arke builded an Altar and offered burnt offerings the Lord smelled a sweete sauour Gen. 8 21. which was not the smoke of the sacrifice that ascended for what sweetnesse could there be in that but it was the sweet precious sacrifice of Christ for which his wrath was appeased being shadowed by that ceremony Reason 2 Secondly Christ tooke the whole burden of our sinnes vpon his shoulders presenting himselfe before God in our person and offering vs to God in his person so that he tooke vpon him our vnrighteousnesse and imputed to vs his righteousnesse This the Prophet Esay did most cleerely prophesie off chap. 53 verses 4 12. Surely hee hath borne our greefes and carried our sorrowes and powred out his soule vnto death c. He bare the sinnes of many and made intercession for the transgressors And the Apostle teacheth that in Christ we are reconciled to God For hee hath made him to be sinne for vs who knew no sinne that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5 21. And in the Epistle to the Colossians chap. 2 ver 14 15. he setteth out the fruite of Christs death that he hath forgiuen vs our trespasses hath put out the hand-writing of ordinances that was against vs he tooke it out of the way and fastened it to his Crosse hee hath spoiled principalities and powers hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them in the same Crosse This was notably prefigured and foreshewed in the rites of the Law For when any propitiatory sacrifice was to bee offered for the people the Priest was to present the beast before the Lord to lay his hands vpon the head of the beast and to confesse the sinnes of the people vpon it and so it bare their iniquities the truth whereof is Christ himselfe Thirdly there could otherwise bee no remission Reason 3 of sinnes so that it is the blood of Christ in the suffering of the Crosse that purgeth away our sinnes as Hebr. 9 verse 22. Almost all things in the Law are purged with blood and without shedding of blood is no remission and therefore it was necessary that Christ should purge and purifie vs by his blood The greatnesse of our sinnes could not otherwise bee pardoned nor the person that is offended satisfied they are infinite and so require a sacrifice of infinite price and value No treasures no riches no creatures no sacrifices no ceremonies could do it it cost more to saue a soule and to redeeme the captiues and prisoners that are holden by Satan in slauery to do his will Knowing that we are not redeemed with corruptible things as siluer and gold from our vain conuersation receiued by the tradition of the Fathers But with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lambe vndefiled and without spot 1 Pet. 1 verses 18 19. Fourthly nothing but the death of Christ could quench the scorching wrath of God as Reason 4 a consuming fire kindled against vs counteruaile his seuere iustice Hence it is that the Apostle writing to the Hebrewes hauing shewed that the blood of Bulles and Goats could not possibly take away sinnes addeth immediately after When hee commeth into the world he saith Sacrifice and offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou ordained mee Heb. 9 5. Our sinnes haue a bloody face in the sight of God and we are enemies vnto him so that the robes of the Saints must bee dipped in the blood of the Lambe Reuel 7 ver 14. All the nitre and sope and Fullers earth in the world are weake and vnsufficient and haue not power and strength enough in them to do it So that we must say with the Prophet Psal 50 7. Purge me with Hyssope and I shall bee cleane wash me and I shall bee whiter then snow Thus then we see that Moses mentioning heere the Ramme of attonement whereby an attonement is to be made for sinners teacheth vnder this type this certaine and vndoubted truth that Christ our Sauiour hath by his blood made an attonement betweene God and vs therby reconciled vs vnto his Father The vses of this doctrine are of great weight and importance First it offereth to our considerations Vse 1 this meditation what sin is how it is to be esteemed It is a most fearefull and greeuous thing the wrath of God against it is exceeding great so that nothing in heauen or in earth could satisfie for sinne but the death of Christ Iesus the Sonne must dye for the seruant or rather for the enemy for we are by nature the children of wrath as well as others The iustice of God would not spare him though he were his onely and welbeloued Sonne but forasmuch as he was to beare our sinnes in his body he must die for ir Rom. 8 32. He spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him to the death for vs all We are not therefore to be lightly carried into the practise of sinne but to be much greeued at it to striue with all our force against it and to endeuour to ouercome it and among other things this is not the least that should trouble vs that we haue by sinne brought such misery and shame vpon the Sonne of God Wee ought to lament for this and to bewaile it euery day For if we had not sinned and by sinne beene depriued of the glory of God he had not taken vpon him the shape of a seruant neither beene humbled to the death of the Crosse We doe daily cry out
what the Ephah was to wit ten times so much If wee follow the account and estimate that some of the Rabbines make which seemeth to bee the most sound and most certaine we may hold What the Omer is that the Omer maketh iust three pintes of our ale-measure so that the Ephah by this reckoning containeth neere halfe of our bushell not full out foure gallons For thus doth Rabbi Shelomo take the computation D. W●l●et Hex ap●●n Exod. chap. 16. as wee may reade in the learned and laborious commentary set out vpon that booke The Ephah containeth three of the measures called Seah Euery Seah held sixe of the measures called Cabi Euery Cabi held so much as 24. Egges So then the Omer being the tenth part of the Ephah containeth 24. Egges which maketh iust three pintes of ale-measure and as the Omer is three pintes of our ale-measure What the Ephah is so the Epha being ten times so much containeth almost halfe of our bushell Neither may this seeme strange or against that which we reade in the booke of Ruth that she gleaned Ruth 2 17. gathered euery day an Ephah of barley and carried it home to her mother but rather strengtheneth and confirmeth that which hath beene said for as it was not a burden too great for a woman to beare so it was not a measure too great for a woman to gather many in our daies sometimes vsing to do as much who haue not that extraordinary fauour shewed vnto them which she had albeit she were a stranger By all this that hath beene spoken we may easily see and perceiue that this tenth part of the Ephah heere mentioned which was also offered amounted to three pintes of barley floure of our ale-measure I am not ignorant that many enlarge these measures much more and in a manner double the account that I haue followed but this seemeth to be the truer computation neither will we contend with any in a matter of no higher nature let the Reader follow that which carrieth greatest shew of reason And thus much of the questions arising out of the first point Secondly hauing now declared what the husband did wee come to shew in the next place what the Priest did he must bring her neere which is suspected of adultery and set her before the Lord Verse 18. that is before the Altar of burnt offerings standing within the Tabernacle to the end she should consider that shee stood as it were ready to hold vp her hand at the barre of Gods iudgement seat where and when she should not escape if so be she were faulty and guilty of that crime He taketh holy water in an earthen vessell and dust from the floore of the Tabernacle and putteth it into the water so that they were mingled together Then hee vncouereth her head putteth the offering into her hand and holdeth the bitter water in his hand that causeth the curse In this part of the diuision containing the Question 1 actions of the Priest sundry questions are to be considered and dissolued As first whence the Priest had this water heere mentioned From what place did he take it I answer Answer eyther it was the water of separation sprinkled with the ashes of the red heiffer so called because it was applied vnto thē which for their vncleannesse were separated from the Congregation to the end that being washed and cleansed with it they might bee receiued againe into the host for which cause it is also named the water of sinne of which wee reade at large afterward Numb 19. or else it must be water taken out of the brazen lauer Exo. 30 19 21 wherwith the Priests vsed to wash themselues before they ministred in the Tabernacle And indeed many vnderstand it of the former But that was the water vsed to purge and clense as we noted before which hath no vse in this place forasmuch as the woman should after a sort be reputed as guilty and be condemned of the crime whereof she was suspected accused as if it were to be purged by it which were to condemne the person before the fact be proued a thing that cannot bee practised without iniustice This then is the difference betweene those waters that was to purge this is to discouer Forasmuch therefore as it could not be that water it followeth that it was the water which was set in the Tabernacle and taken out of the brazen lauer appointed for the Priests to wash withall Question 2 Secondly it would bee knowne why this water was called holy Was there any purity or holinesse in it Or was it better then any other Or had it any secret force in it to make any man holy I answer Answer it was so called not in regard of the substance of it or of any naturall strength it had in it but in regard of the vse because it was appointed and set apart to an holy vse 2 Kin● 〈…〉 Iohn 5 ● as the water and washing in Iordan clensed Naaman and the poole of Siloam healed the diseased Thus the instruments of the Tabernacle the Arke the Shew-bread the Candlesticke the Lampes and the rest of the vessels vsed in the seruice of God were all of them consecrated and hallowed not in regard of the matter whereof they consisted neither in regard of the forme after which they were fashioned because they had the one from nature the other frō art but in respect of Gods ordinance that had separated them to an holy purpose So we see in the new Testament whē Christ instituted his last Supper and thereby commanded his Church to keepe a perpetuall memory of his death and passion vntill his cōming againe the bread and wine that hee set apart to that purpose are said to be blessed Math. 26 26. 1 Cor. 10 ●6 Paul calleth it the cup of blessing not that they haue any holinesse inherent and included in them or any power to sanctifie all the comers and communicants that doe receiue them for then no man should eate of that bread or drinke of that cup vnworthily nor make himselfe guilty of the body and blood of Christ whereas the Apostle teacheth 1 Cor. 11 29. that whosoeuer eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation not discerning the Lords body And the Church of the Corinthians was generally chastened of the Lord for this abuse contempt as he sheweth in the same place Verse 30. For this cause many are weake and sickely among you and many sleepe It remaineth therefore that these outward elements are holy onely in regard of Gods ordinance and our vse and sanctified to them that come aright prepared vnto them So is it touching the water mentioned in this place it is called indeed holy water howbeit not in regard of any holines that was in it but partly in regard of the vse to which it was applied partly in regard of the person by which it was vsed partly in
will raise vs also We are the members he is the head Therfore if the head be aliue he will no● leaue the members dead so that if he be risen frō the dead we shall rise againe How thē shall we that are appointed to glory defile our bodies beastly lustes the end and wages whereof is shame and ignominy Seeing then Christ Iesus hath determined to make our bodies glorious let vs not make them foule and infamous for as much as the reward of fornication is shame not glorie If then we look that these fraile and mortall bodies should be partakers of immortality at the last day let vs keepe them as fit vessels to receiue honor and glory and euerlasting life It is no small offence to pollute the body of Christ with filthines and vncleannes which God raiseth frō the dead and maketh it sit most glorious in the heauens The fourth motiue to worke in vs the detestation and to lay before vs the danger of whoredome is this the members of Christ are not to bee made the members of an harlot but our bodies are the members of Christ therefore we ought not to make them the members of an harlot Now the bodies of the faithful are called the members of Christ because Christ is the head of the church and performeth the office of an head vnto it into which all the elect are grafted by faith If any man were asked whether he would willingly rent or pull away a member from Christes owne body to make it the member of an harlot he would vtterly deny it he would be ashamed of it he would be ready to defie him that should charge him with it Howbeit the Apostle feareth not to lay that imputation vpon such as commit fornication they separate themselues quite away from Christ so that it must needs be a deadly sin which parteth and pulleth vs from him Wherefore hee saith Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ 1 Cor. 6 15. Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot God forbid Hereby then we must learne how heinous whoredome is because wee are the members of Christ but by it we make our bodies the members of an harlot which is as much in effect as to turne Christ himselfe into an harlot and to make him a whoremaster then which nothing is more reproachfull and dishonorable vnto the glory and maiesty of Christ Colos 1 18. Eph. 1 22. For the Church is the mysticall bodie of Christ which hee hath redeemed with his blood whereof hee is the head and by his Spirit so ioyneth it to him that it is made one spiritual body with him So then euery faithful person is one member for his part of the body of the Church and of Christ the head ioyned with him by faith quickned by his Spirit He that ioyneth himself therfore to an harlot is made one body with an harlot so that of the members of Christ hee shall make them the members of an harlot and thereby cease to be any longer the members of Christ then which what can be more dangerous to vs or more reprochful to Christ or more dishonorable to God The fift motiue to disswade from fornication is because this sin is committed against the body whereas all other sins are without the body He that committeth whoredom defileth and abuseth his own body and leaueth a proper staine and blot vpon it making it both the subiect and the obiect of his sin It is not so with the theef or the murtherer or the slanderer they deale with the life with the goods and with the good name of another But the whore-master vseth his bodie as the instrument and sinneth against his owne body more then any other Hence it is that the Apostle saith Flie fornication euery sinne that a man doth is without the body 1 Cor. 6. ● but hee that committeth fornication sinneth against his owne bodie If a man kill himselfe he hurteth indeed his owne bodie howbeit he vseth sworde or knife or fire or water or some such like instrument which is out of the body but the fornicator both vseth and abuseth his owne body he maketh it either instrument or obiect or subiect or all of them The sixt motiue that is vsed is this That our body is the Temple of the holye Ghost whereupon the Apostle would haue it inferred that a fornicator is a sacrilegious person because he hurteth and wrongeth the temple of God But Whosoeuer defileth the Temple of God him shall God destroy for the temple of God is holy which temple we are 1 Cor. 3. ver 17. Temples are ordained and appointed for holinesse and pure actions and are not therefore to be prophaned with filthinesse forasmuch as they be consecrated and dedicated to God which is most pure and holy To this purpose he speaketh and argueth What 1 Cor. 6 13. Know yee not that your body is the temple of the holy ghost which is in you which ye haue of God If our bodies be Temples they ought to bee kept cleane and decent of vs. The Apostle nameth the bodie in this place as hee did also before in regard of the matter he hath in hand to the end hee might withdraw vs from the defiling and poluting of our bodies Wee heard alreadie that our bodies are the members of Christ heere he saith Our bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost not that our soules are excepted and exempted for they are made partakers of Christ and we are the Temples of God in soule and bodie as hee speaketh in the second Epistle Ye are the Temples of the liuing GOD. 2 Cor. 6 16. If he dwell in vs let vs beware of fornication because he will not inhabite and abide in defiled bodies He is the spirit of purity therefore we must be pure he is the spirit of holinesse therefore we ought to be holy otherwise we are not his He will dwell in a clean house therfore not in a stye of vnclean and filthy swine Let vs take heed we greeue not the spirit of God whereby wee are sealed vnto the day of redemption Eph. 4. The Gentiles knewe by the light of nature that they ought to keepe their temples swept and garnished Christ whipped out of the temple such as bought sold in it yet what are these but lime stone and such corruptible stuffe how much more then ought wee to looke to our selues our souls bodies that we do not defile them and God destroy them The Temple of Ierusalem was burned and the Arke carried away for the sinnes of the people there is no holinesse of place can priuiledge vs if sound Religion be wanting in them that inhabit it Thus was it also at the destruction of Ierusalem foretolde in Scripture after the Gospell of Christ was preached the abhomination of desolation was set in the holy place so that one stone was not left vpon another
handled before Now wee come to consider the yssue and effect of the whole matter according to the determination of God For as he foretold what should come to passe so hee faileth not in it but accordingly verifieth the same Whatsoeuer hee hath spoken shall fall out whether hee promise any thing vnto vs or threaten any thing against vs. Hee is not as man that he should lye neyther as the sonne of man that hee should repent as Balaam by the Spirit of God prophesieth heereafter in this booke Chapt. 23. verse 19. And Christ our Sauiour teacheth Math. 5 18. that Heauen and earth must passe away but one word of his mouth shall not passe away but all shall be accomplished and fulfilled This euent heere mentioned is two-fold First respecting the guilty in the 27. Verse where it is shewed that shee shall perish according as shee sinned and her name shall turne into a Prouerbe of cursing Secondly in respect of the innocent because by drinking of the water shee shall receiue and feele no hurt but God will turne that wrongfull suspition and causelesse calumniation into a great blessing and so reward her innocency that he wil turne the heart of her husband toward her who hath the hearts of all men in his power and turneth them about as pleaseth him so that they shall mutually loue one another and be blessed in their children that shall be giuen vnto them Now the question may be asked Obiect whether this force to discerne betweene the guiltie and the innocent and to bring to light the things that were hidden in darkenesse were in the water it selfe and a qualitie inherent in it and infused into it I answer Answer we must ascribe no power to the water it selfe which in regarde of the substance was no other then common Water forasmuch as both the guilty and the vnguilty did drinke of it or at least might drinke of it The whole force proceeded from the operation of God and his holy institution The brazen Serpent set vpon a pole and looked vppon by them that were bitten by the fierie Serpents did heale them so that albeit they were stung yet they dyed not Howe came this to passe Was it in regard of the matter or of the forme Surely of neyther but all the vertue proceeded from GOD the author of it When Christ healed the blinde man Iohn 9. verse 6. He spate vpon the ground and made clay of the spettle he annointed the eyes of the blinde man with the clay and bad him wash in the poole of Siloam who went his way and washed and returned seeing All men know and can easily iudge that this could not by any naturall operation restore sight to the blind so that it was Christ that healed him not the spettle not the clay not the annointing not the washing This may bee expressed and conceiued by the miracle that Christ shewed vpon the woman that had an issue of blood Mat. 9 20. Marke 5 28. She came behind him and touched the hem of his garment for she said If I may touch but his clothes onely I shall be whole what then Did his garments heal her or were they the cause that her fountain of blood stanched and dried vp No it was the power of Christ that gaue a blessing to the weake meanes and therefore he saith to his disciples Some bodie hath touched me Luke 8 46. for I perceiue that vertue is gone out of me He saith not out of the border of my garment which shee hath touched Shee touched indeede the garment of Christ but it was her faith in Christ that made her whol So in this place both sorts that came to be tryed drunke of the water and according as they were either innocent or not innocent so it fell out vnto them howbeit it was God that vnderstandeth all secrets that brought the trueth to light not any inherent strength that was in the waters Verse 27. And when he hath made her to drinke the water c. Heere wee haue obserued that the successe of the whole busines is contained wherein Moses declareth what doth follow and most certainly come to passe if the woman haue beene abused Heere is set down the temporall punishment that shall come vpon her The more she hath stood vppon her purgation and the greater her impudency and shamelesnesse hath beene the more notorious is her sinne and the more notable is her punishment God hauing all meanes in his owne hand could haue punished her if it had pleased him otherwise but to make it the better appeare that he is the maintainer and preseruer of marriage which is his owne institution and that all might acknowledge the iudgement to be from his hand hee punisheth her in those parts wherewith shee had offended Hee hath all diseases in his owne power to bring vpon the breakers of his ordinance and the transgressors of his Law he might therefore haue stricken her with the leprosie or with plague and pestilence with the consumption with incurable agues or with such an issue of blood as we heard off before in the woman that was cured by touching of Christs garment but to brand her with a perpetuall marke of infamy and to shew how hee hateth adultery hee meeteth with her in her owne kind and punished those parts of her body which she had abused Ezek 16.25 She had opened her feet as the Prophet speaketh to euery one that passed by so that shee became as a wife that committeth adultery which taketh strangers in stead of her husband Her filthinesse was powred out and her nakednesse discouered her belly and thighes communicated to another howbeit her pleasure should be turned into paine and she should be iudged as women that breake wedlocke she should feele the curse of God end her daies in reproach for as she had sinned with her belly so her belly should swell through greatnesse and anguish and as she had opened her thighes so they should rot away so that she shold be punished where she most deserued and become a fearefull spectacle of a forlorne creature and a liuing carkasse consuming in her flesh and dying being yet aliue We doe all learne from hence Doctrine God punisheth in the same things wherein men and women offend and in the same maner that God doth not onely punish sinne but he punisheth sinne in his owne kinde He dealeth with men and women in his punishments as they deale with him in their transgressions so that according as we sinne so we are punished We see this by infinite examples laid before vs in the word of God Consider with me the enemies persecuters of Daniel that sought his life and caused him to be cast into the Lyons denne but how doth God meete with them he might haue reuenged himselfe vpon them by his owne immediate hand but hee would not for they perish and are punished the same way Dan. 6.14 for the king commanded to bring
and false measures to make triall of themselues of whom I may say as the Lord doth of Belshazzar Dan. 5 27. Thou art weighed in the ballances art found wanting for while they measure themselues with the mete-yard of others they keepe a false measure in their owne house which is an abhomination vnto the Lord Prou. 11 1 16 11. Euery one must weigh himselfe if he wold not be found too light with the weights of the Sanctuary and measure himselfe with the standard of the Scripture comparing his workes with the word of God and not with the life of other men then he shall be sure not to bee reprooued Euery Christian is like the Sunne that neuer standeth still but is euer in motion If our conuersation be in heauen we must be goers walkers runners goers in the right way walking toward our iournies end and running in a race that we may obtaine We must be as plants growing in the house of the Lord Psal 92 13. Such as are planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the house of our God There must be none of Gods seruants that must be idle and stand still doing nothing they must be labourers that looke to receiue their penny when the euening cometh Math. 20 verse 8. Hee that had receiued a talent and digged and hid it in the earth was accounted an euill and vnfaithfull seruant Math. 25 26. Who will entertaine a seruant to giue him meate drinke and wages that will do nothing but looke about him and neuer set his hands to worke and shall we think that God will receiue such seruants into his house as sit still and will doe him no seruice at all Shall we put our hands into our bosome and neuer pull them out againe to imploy them as we ought to do Let vs euermore bee doing somewhat that may please God blessed is that seruant whom his master when he commeth shall finde so dooing Thirdly such deserue to be reproued and Vse 3 to be ranged in the number of the former who hate and scorne those that go before them and beyond them in the duties of piety in gifts of knowledge and vnderstanding But we must take heed we do not oppose our selues against any worke of grace that is euident and eminent to be seene in any of Gods seruants For this is as much as to hate and scorne the word of God nay the Lord himselfe the Gospel of peace nay Christ Iesus the author and first Preacher of it It argueth a malicious heart against our brethren and that in the highest degree like Caine who hated his brother Gen. 4 ● Heb 11 4 because God accepted his offering Malice against any man is an euill roote that bringeth foorth bitter fruites to maligne any for his riches for his peace for his prosperity is very dangerous but to enuy him repine at him for heauenly riches for his soules health for the peace of a good conscience and for matters that concerne his euerlasting saluation in Gods Kingdome is a thousand times worse then the malice of Saul against Dauid or of Pharaoh against Moses and the Israelites True it is these sought their liues but such desperate malicious persons that enuy glory and immortality and heauen it selfe to others do seeke the life of their liues the other were guilty of the blood of their bodies whō they hated and persecuted but these are guilty of the blood of mens soules and their thirst cannot be quenched but by rasing them out of the booke of life These are stamped with the image of Satan the old deceiuer and the first enuious person that euer was who being fallen into condemnation himselfe enuied the standing of mankinde in the state of grace 〈◊〉 4 5. and therefore could not rest nor be quiet vntill he had plunged man into the same gulfe of condemnation So is it with these men they are backward in the feare of God themselues and they desire to haue all like them to be backeward as themselues Let vs take heed of such enuie let vs barre no man of Gods Kingdome Vse 4 Fourthly it is our dutie to proceed in sanctification and labour to bring foorth fruite euermore in old age Psal 92 15. Let vs leaue the principles of the doctrine of Christ go on vnto perfection not laying again the foundation Heb. 6.1 Let vs not thinke wee haue attained vnto perfectiō but forget that which is behinde and endeauour to that which is set before vs let vs presse toward the marke for the price of the high calling of GOD that so we may apprehend that for which we are apprehended of Christ Iesus Phil. 3.13.14 Let vs cleanse our selues from all filthynesse of the flesh and Spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7 1. True it is that albeit the good worke begun in vs be but as a sparke of fire kindled in wood or a yong plant newly grafted in the stocke or as a drop of raine fallen into the earth yet Christ Iesus doth accept of the truth sincerity of the new work wrought in vs be it neuer so small howbeit we must not euermore be as smoaking flax as bruised reeds and as new-set plants wee must not still be weaklings but as the graine of Mustard seede which is one of the least of the sorts of seedes but it groweth great and becommeth as a tree and the birds of the aire builde their nestes in it Math. 13 32. Or like vnto leauen which though it be small yet being hidden in three measures of Meale the whole is leauened verse 33. Therefore it behooueth vs as we haue receiued how wee ought to walke and to please God so to abound more and more 1 Thess 4 1. Notwithstanding we must take heed that we doe not glory in our owne strength as if we were able to do the will of God touching our sanctification of our selues without the helpe and assistance of the Spirit of God without which we can do nothing at all True it is the Apostle willeth vs to worke out our saluation with feare and trembling howbeit lest any should trust in himselfe as if hee were something or build vpon the freedome of his owne will he addeth in the next words It is God that worketh in vs the will and the deede of his good pleasure Philip. 2 12 13. It is a notable token of our continuance in good things and a comfort to our consciences that we shall perseuere vnto the end if we haue a care to goe forward and to make our good workes moe at the last then they were at the first Verse 2. The Princes of Israel Heads of the house of their Fathers offered Here we haue another circumstance to be considered to wit a description of the persons that offered they were the Princes and Rulers the heads of the people And albeit they onely are expressed yet they brought their offering in the name of
washed with water which signifieth our washing with his bloode and our partaking of his righteousnesse Rom. 6 3. Galath 3 27. Hence it is that many are saide to be baptized in the name of Christ Act. 2 38. 19 5. which noteth not the forme but rather the end or effect of their baptisme It may be said we reade no such signification of the cloud or of the sea in the olde Testament how then did the Fathers vnderstand them to be Sacraments True it is this is not expressed but the Apostle the best interpreter of the Scripture giueth vs a good warrant so to vnderstand them and to conceiue of them And there is no doubt but Moses and Aaron and others instructed by them and by the Spirit of God thus vnderstood these mysteries For how can we thinke that they which dealt faithfully in the house of God would be silent in these things not teach the people Neither may wee admit of the grosse conceit of Illyricus who noteth that the Apostle inflectit paulò violentiùs ipsum simile Illyr Gloss super 1 Cor. eap 10. that is doth somewhat violently wrest this similitude God forbid that we should thinke that Paul would lay violent hands vpon the Scriptures or wrest any part of the worde of God from the naturall meaning 2 Peter 3 16. The vnlearned and vnstable wrested the writings of Paul as they did also the other Scriptures would Peter haue complained of such if his beloued brother Paul had done the like Now it cannot bee denied that they were true Sacraments because they signified Christ Iesus True it is they were not ordinary nor perpetuall but extraordinary and temporall and transitory howbeit they had a spirituall signification The cloud was in stead of the outward element and visible signe neyther was the word of grace wanting and therefore it is called the Lord and the Cloud of the Lord Exod. 14. Numb 14. 19. If then the word ioyned to the element do make a Sacrament this also must be acknowledged to be a Sacrament forasmuch as it was a signe to them of the protection and preseruation of God The like we might say of their passing through the sea they had this word of promise Feare not stand still and see the saluation of the Lord which he shall shew you to day Exod. 14 13. c. These indeede were outward blessings but they pointed out spirituall blessings to the faithfull to wit the fauour and grace of God and ledde them as it were by the hand to Christ in whom is the accomplishment of all promises True it is all were partakers of the temporall benefites but all did not partake of the eternall howbeit this came to passe thorough their owne fault infidelity inasmuch as they wer offered by God albeit not receiued by them For all haue not faith 2 Thes 3 2. and therefore all haue not Christ the pith and marrow of the Sacraments If any aske why the Apostle maketh choice of these two Obiection the cloud and the sea and calleth them by the name of a Baptisme and doth not rather remember circumcision which was to the Iewes in stead of our baptisme forasmuch as their circumcision is our baptisme and our baptisme is their circumcision Phil. 3 3. Coloss 2 11. and both of them are a Sacrament of our regeneration and adoption The answer Answer is that in the cloud and the sea is a more plaine and euident resemblance and proportion with the water in baptisme and the passage from death to life was more liuely and cleerely shewed and shadowed in them then in the circumcision For they that stood vnder the cloud as of all them did what did they in a manner but stand vnder death because the cloud hanging ouer their heads seemed ready in a minute and moment to fall vpon them and ouerwhelme them So to goe downe into the bottome of the Sea what was it to them but a kinde of death and to passe to the other shore what was it but a rising againe from death to life And this doth the Apostle speake of baptisme as wee haue heard So then the cloud and the sea were as a baptisme to the Iewes and our baptisme is as the cloud and the sea to vs Christians all looked at Christ all signified grace life saluation remission of sinnes and regeneration thorough him To these we must ioyne Manna and the rocke the one was spirituall meat vnto them the other was spirituall drinke and both of them the same with the Lords Supper and therefore they were not inferiour vnto vs. Our Supper is spirituall meate and spirituall drinke they also had their spirituall meate and Manna and their spirituall drinke out of the rocke and all these had reference to one and the same Christ and therefore Paul saith verse 4. The Rock was Christ So the Manna was Christ for he is the hidden Manna Reuel 2 17. Reuel 2 ● These are called spiritual because they had a spirituall signification Thus are the Iewes made equall to vs in the other Sacrament also which is a signe and seale of the nourishment which we haue by Christ The Sacraments were diuers in the outward signs but in the thing signified they are one and the same This Manna the rock were as the Supper of the Iewes Aug. Trac● so the Supper of the Lord is as the Manna and rock of vs that are christians Thus then we see that the cloud was Christ the red sea was Christ the Manna was Christ as the Apostle expresseth that the rock was Christ as Christ sheweth that the bread was his body the cup is the new Testament in his blood 1 Cor. 10 Math. 26 Luke 22. ● the breaking of bread is the cōmunion of the body of Christ and the cup of blessing is called the communion of the blood of Christ 1 Corin. 10 16. So that we see all Sacraments whatsoeuer did figure out Christ and point him out as with the finger Vse 1 This sheweth the agreement betweene the Sacraments of the old new Testament they are the same in regard of the grace represented and signified by them The same Christ is in both the one figuring him out to come the other pointing him out as already come in the flesh Hence it is that their Sacraments were darke and obscure ours doe serue more plainely and cleerely to confirme our faith and to seale vp our saluation For as the Apostle teacheth that the Israelites were baptized as well as we and did all eate spirituall meate and drinke spirituall drinke as wel as we so he sheweth that we are circumcised and haue a Passeouer sacrificed for vs and therefore it followeth that they had the same spirituall communion with Christ that we haue Out of this we haue three things to be considered of vs. First that the Couenant of God with man hath euermore beene in substance the same ●●t the co●●nt
which shall doe him good and for his sake he will also doe them good that do good to him If any shall rise vp against him as an enemy God will shut the mouth of the lyon he will declare himselfe to bee his enemy and arise betimes for the defence of his seruant And this appeareth euidently in the hystory that is set downe of him This is therfore the comfort of the Church that albeit it haue many enemies that hate it oppresse it persecute it yet it shal haue many patrons nurses friends and fauourers nay God himselfe will protect it defend it and deliuer it nay he promiseth to blesse them that blesse it and threatneth to curse them that curse it This made Dauid say Pray for the peace of Ierusalem let them prosper that loue thee Ps 122.6 Vse Lastly it is our duty to labour to be in the number of his children otherwise these promises belong nothing at all to vs. Glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God but what is that to vs if we be not citizens of that city It is a notable priuiledge to haue the same common friends and enemies with God this is made ours if wee bee his if not we haue no benefit by it at all What will mooue vs to holinesse and righteousnesse of life if this will not that he which toucheth any of those that belong to him toucheth the apple of his eye Zach. 2. Could the Prophets haue vsed a fitter phrase to shew the care of God toward vs and the desire he hath to further our saluation If he were a mortall man like vnto vs Caluin S●● on De● 3 and had flesh and blood together with those parts that we haue he could not more tenderly keep the apple of his eye then he hath kept his people from time to time We know it is the most tender part of the body of man vpon which dependeth the comfort of all the rest If a man were stricken on the head or hand or arme it might be borne but if he receiue a blow in the eye all the body starteth at it and wee are much grieued by it Howbeit we are expresly taught that God keepeth vs not as his arme or as his legge onely but as the most tender part to wit his ey as the most tender part of that tender part namely the apple of the eye Thus it pleaseth God to speake to vs to make vs vnderstand that which otherwise would be high and hard for vs if he should speake according to his own maiesty He hath neither armes nor legs neither hands nor eies but he borroweth this comparison as well known to vs and stoopeth down to our rudenesse and infirmity that we might conceiue his workes the better For the meaning is that he will defend and preserue vs not as a mortall man doth his hands or feet but as he wold do the apple of his eye This is his goodnesse toward vs when any of his are hurt he receiueth a blow on his eye and therefore cannot hold his peace and ought not we on the other side for our parts make all hast to register and enrol our selues in the number of his children All this his fauour is lost if we be not his Let vs ioyne our selues therefore to Gods people let vs be one with them that we may be as one heart and one soule And as we noted before that seeing God reputeth our enemies to be his we ought to esteeme his enemies to be ours so likewise we ought to account his friends to be our friends Such shall enter into the Tabernacle of God Psal 1● and rest in his holy hill in whose eyes a vile person is contemned but he honoureth them that feare the Lord. 1 Sam And if God will honor them that honor him ought not we also to honor them and shew our selues like to our heauenly Father The Prophet telleth vs that all his delight was toward the Saints that were on earth Psal 16.3 God delighteth in such let vs follow his example doth the contrary of the vngodly Psal 139. Doe not I loue them O Lord that loue thee and doe not I reioyce with those that are obedient vnto thee yea I loue them with an vnfained and perfect loue I account them as my best and chiefest friends in comparison of whom I doe make account of none other In doing this we shal haue God to be our friend Wherefore let vs remember our duty to bee carefull to become sound and sincere members of the Church by true faith and a right ordered obedience that so God may accept vs to be his children Verse 36. And when it rested he said Returne O Lord vnto the many thousands of Israel This is the second prayer which Moses ordinarily made at the resting of the Arke and the pitching downe of the tents Heere are two things set forth first the act of God Returne O Lord this is also spoken after the maner of men for properly God neither goeth nor returneth he neither proceedeth forward nor returneth backeward but it is spoken in regard of a new work of God to be shewed toward his people The meaning is as if Moses had said As thou Lord wentest before vs to driue away our enemies so hauing put them to flight that none can stand before thee vouchsafe to come againe to our tents take vp thy rest residence among vs thy people ●●●l ●●●ol ●●●c locum as Psal 7.6.7 Arise O Lord in thine anger lift vp thy selfe because of the rage of mine enemies and awake for me c. So shall the Congregation of the people compasse thee about for their sakes therefore returne thou on high Secondly the persons to whom he should returne and among whom he should rest to wit the thousand thousands of Israel From hence we may obserue breefly ●●●trine where it is that God resteth and among whom he dwelleth 〈◊〉 dwelleth ●●ng his ●●le that is among his owne people hee abideth in his Church for euer there he hath pitched downe his standard and purposeth to continue he hath chosen Sion he hath desired it for his habitation This is my rest for euer heere will I dwell And in the next words he giueth the reason for I haue desired it Psal 132.13 14. All creatures are his so are all places his he hath his choyce to abide wheresoeuer it pleaseth him for all the world is his for who created it and gaue it a being but he Now of all places hee chooseth his Church to be with it and to rest in it Thus speaketh the king of Iudah 2 Chron. 13.12 God is with vs for our Captaine and Matth. 28.20 Christ saith euen he that walketh among the seuen golden candlestickes Reuel 1.13 Loe I am with you to the end of the world Reason 1 For first who is it that gathereth the Church but he can any doe this but God by his infinite
doth or can do the body Iohn 6 54 55 56. My flesh is meate indeed and my blood is drinke indeed that is they haue thē same nature to our soules which meate and drinke haue to our bodies Secondly in these and by these is prouision Reason 2 to satisfie all sorts in the word is sincere milke for children and strong meate for men of riper age Hebrewes chapter 5. Christ is hidden Manna which all did gather and were fed and nourished by it it feedeth small and great Thirdly the prouision of God is farre better then all earthly prouision This food is Reason 3 perpetuall the word of the Lord endureth for euer 1 Pet. 1.23 In eating of this food there is no danger of surfet and excesse This is durable meate it liueth for euer and maketh vs liue for euer who so eateth of it and digesteth it shall neuer perish for hunger and who so drinketh of this shall neuer thirst againe It is therefore Gods ordinance that his children and houshold seruants should be largely and liberally prouided for to haue euery one of them a full meale The vses From hence it followeth that the soule hath alwayes very great neede of Vse 1 food and sustenance as well as the body and will perish for hunger and die for thirst euen eternally through want of spirituall food as well as the body for want of temporall food The soule hath her diet as well as the body the strength of it is maintained by the bread of life as well as the state of the body by the bread of wheat How many are there among vs that consider not these things or at least care not for them Many there are that haue fat and lusty bodies that haue plenty of outward things who notwithstanding haue poore leane and pining soules euen ready to starue and to be famished and to giue vp the ghost For as the wise Salomon teacheth Prou. 29 18. Where there is no vision the people perish And the Prophet threatneth a greater famine of the word and more dangerous then the famine of bread or the thirst for water Amos 8 11. If then we be content to take paines and to trauaile farre for this earthly food as we see in Iacob when he and his family wanted corne how much more ought we to labour for the bread that endureth to euerlasting life Vse 2 Secondly we should come to the house of God with hungry and thirsty soules We must resort to the Word and Sacraments and to all the holy ordinances of God as an hungry person doth to a good feast Esay 55 1. Ioh. 7 37. Reuel 22 17. 1 Pet. 2 2. Let it be with vs as with Dauid 2 Sam. 23 15. he longed greatly and said Oh that one would giue me drinke of the water of the well of Bethlehem which is by the gate Where there is no desire of grace there is no grace The faithfull haue alwaies testified their desire Ps 42 1. The Prophet felt the sweetnesse of the word and sacraments testifieth often what a goodly taste he found in him as Psal 119 103 19 10. How sweet are thy words vnto my taste yea sweeter then hony vnto my mouth He that is sicke findeth no taste in any thing the purest hony is bitter vnto him but he that hath a good taste and is in health of body iudgeth and findeth it otherwise So if our soule be in health it findeth the word to bee sweeter then the hony and the hony combe and more to bee desired then gold yea then much fine gold Haue we then no taste in the word doth it not rellish with vs then most certaine it is we are soule-sicke we are sicke at the hart it is high time to run poste with all speed to the Physition Christ Iesus to restore this taste to vs which we haue lost or to bestow it vpō vs if we neuer enioyed it How irkesome is it for a man to haue no taste in his meate and drinke Elihu saith The eare trieth words Iob 34 3. as the mouth tasteth meat But we should thinke it a thousand times more troublesome to haue no taste of the good word of God as if it were no meate for vs. The Manna described in this place which figured out the word is compared for the taste sweetnesse to wafers made with hony Exod. 16 31. How then shall we thinke our selues well and whole in good health when we haue no more taste in it then is in the white of an egge Vse 3 Thirdly heere is comfort to all those that are poore christians which haue little store at home hard fare bare bread smal drinke and a thin diet al the yeare Let vs cheere vp our harts and refresh our spirits with this consideratiō that albeit we haue a scanty meale at home yet there is plentiful prouision in Gods house We haue much matter of great reioycing that although there be great difference in fare and furniture betweene the rich mans table the poor mans yet the priuiledges of Gods house are common to them both the poore hath as good interest in them as the rich yea sometimes a better portion if he make greater vse of them and take more benefit by them The poore are admitted to Gods table albeit they be not to the table of the rich haue accesse vnto his house and to his presence where is fulnesse of ioy and pleasure for euermore and this their ioy shall no man take from thē Nay such as haue riches and plenty at al times of al things which haue their tables furnished at home with variety of dainty dishes are serued in with sundry courses of most choise meates euen they must make account that their best fare is in the Church of God prefer it farre before the other otherwise they iudge not aright betweene soule body Psal 63 5 ● 65 4. betweene meat and meat betweene house and house Fourthly this serueth to reproue papists Ministers people For first it meeteth with Vse 4 the popish diet that bar the people from the cup of the Lord therby keeping backe a part of the spirituall banquet that Christ hath prepared for them when he spake to the communicants Drinke ye all of this Mar● 14 ● But these Church-robbers allow not to the people any consecrated wine withdrawing from them a part of their allowance This sin is no lesse then sacriledge Christ saith Math. 26 ● This is my blood which is shed for you and for many for the remission of sins And who are those many that are there spokē off Doubtlesse all that should afterward beleeue in his Name From hence then we reason thus If the blood of Christ be shedde for the people then the cup of the Lord must bee communicated vnto them but the former is true therfore the latter For as we reason touching baptisme of infants that if the kingdome of God
them yea euen in our enemies These are approued remedies to keepe vs from enuy Would God that all the Lords people were Prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit vpon them See heere the godlinesse and humility of Moses he is so farre from enuying this gift of these two seruants of God that he reprooueth Ioshua and wisheth from his heart that all the Church of God had the same gift which he had from the least to the greatest As if he should say I am so farre from enuying them in hauing these graces though they came not with the others seeing God confirmeth euen their calling also as well as the rest that I could rather wish if it pleased God that all in the host could prophesie and were endued with mine and their graces If any obiect that this may seeme to giue way for vnwarrantable wishes friuolous desires and vaine praiers not grounded vpon any promise I answer it doth not for he onely testifieth his holy desire of the Churches good as when we pray that God would keep vs this day from al sinne It is against the word of God to hold that we can be without sinne but it is not against it to testifie our desire to be free from it for it is that which we ought al to aime at and to endeuour that wee may attaine vnto Neither doeth this praier giue scope to the wishes of the sottish multitude that pray for their friends when they are dead who neuer praied for them when they were aliue saying God haue mercy on their soules or God rest their soules whereby the Name of God is taken in vaine For they haue receiued their iudgment according to their works and are already either in rest or in torment frō which they cannot returne Doctrine The godly desire that ●thers of the● Church 〈◊〉 be equall to them or aboue them graces We learne from hence that the godly doe heartily desire the good and growth the profit and encrease of the whole Church It is the duty of all faithfull persons to desire that all true Christians may excell in graces euen to be equall or aboue themselues how eminent and excellent soeuer their gifts places be This appeareth in Iohn the Baptist Iohn 3 29 30. Now is my ioy full he must encrease but I must decrease The Apostle desireth that the Thessalonians who were grown greatly in grace might yet grow more and more 1 Thess 4 1. Rom. 1 11. This desire of the prosperity and flourishing estate of the Church made Paul to moue Barnabas to go againe and visite the brethren in euery City where they had preached and planted the Gospel of Christ Acts 15 36. Rom. 9 3. Gal. 6 16. Math. 11 25. Iohn 17 24. 2 Cor. 13 9. As thē Ioab sent out to number al the tribes of Israel said vnto the King 2 Sam. ●4 ● The Lord thy God adde vnto the people how many soeuer they be an hundred fold and that the eies of my Lord the King may see it so ought we in seeking the encrease of the true Israel of God much rather say The Lord adde vnto the church such as shal be saued how many soeuer they seeme already to be thousand thousands and that our eies may see the spirituall growth of them For as the glory of God ought to be most Reason 1 precious vnto vs so heereby he is most glorified whē many lights shine before men Mat. 5 16 Iohn 15 8. Secondly superiours in gifts are fathers and haue that title giuen vnto them as well as superiours by office and calling and therefore as fathers reioyce to see their children excelling themselues or others in gifts as Salomon did excced Dauid so ought it to bee in the spirituall growth of the Church such as are fathers in respect of gifts should reioyce and be glad when they behold their inferiors to come forward to a perfect man vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnes of Christ Eph. 4 13. Thirdly they heartily loue one another therefore they cannot but desire their greatest welfare and excelling in all graces to the greatest edification of other not enuying but reioycing in their encreasing more and more contrariwise sorrowing at their dwarfish estate euer learning yet still needing to bee taught the first principles of religion as not able to beare strong meat Heb. 5 12 13.14 From hence we haue a way left vs to examine Vse our selues and to iudge our selues whether we belong vnto God and be truely sanctified or not whether we be true parts of the true church or not euen by this desire of the good of the churches of God Hereby we may discerne and try what is in vs by this note we may proue our selues truely to seeke Gods glory with sincere harts to wit when we can reioyce in the excelling of other mens gifts aboue our owne whether they be in the same or other callings with vs wishing our selues inferiour to all others and euery one to excell vs in gifts to the edification of the Church Gods glory in the setting vp and establishing of the kingdom of Christ Let vs not account it a shame to see a sheep go before his Shepheard or the sonne to go beyond the father or the wife her husband or the seruant his master if the inferiours haue greater better gifts then their superiours blesse God for it and pray God yet more to multiply their graces There are many Pastours that are afraid lest their people by too often teaching and by going and growing forward by reading and conference should be able to teach them their duty or else controle their teaching of others This is as vnnaturall as if a father should be greeued to see his childe prosper to grow in stature We must desire the conuersion of those that bee out of the Church therefore much more the blessing of God to be vpon the Church in a more plentifull measure Acts 26 29 and 7 60. He that is desirous of the good of such as are not of the family will be more carefull of those that are of the family Euery part and member of the body desireth and procureth the good of the other parts so ought it to be in the mysticall body whereof Christ Iesus is the head who laide downe his life for the Church and shedde his precious blood for the ransome of it Acts 20 28. It will be a great comfort to vs to finde this affection and desire in our hearts to long after the common good of the Church Vse 2 Secondly it condemneth the Church of Rome that hinder the growth and encrease of it deteining the Scriptures from the people keeping them in blindnesse and ignorance whereas the Lord would haue his word communicated vnto all When a Prince hath published statutes for the gouernement of the Commonwealth they are open for all to read them so is it with God after he caused the word to
a man lay down his life for his friends This sacrifice was very acceptable to God the father in it he resteth and requireth no further satisfaction at our hands contrary to the doctrine of the popish church The force of this sacrifice is very great not so of any other Psal 40 6. and 50 13. and 51 16. Esay 1 11. Amos 5 21. Micah 6 7. None of them were of in them selues a sweet sauor of rest neither brought they pardon of sin and therfore God testifieth that he stood not in need of them but they were a sweete sauour as they were referred to the sacrifice of Christ and were offered by faith in him as Heb. 11 4. by faith Abel offered and thereby obtained witnesse that hee was righteous And now also none of our spirituall sacrifices are acceptable to God but so far forth as they are offered by faith in Christ 1 Pet. 2 5. Al our sacrifices are acceptable through Christ Obiection If any ask whence it cometh that his sacrifice is so effectuall and forcible Answ I answer first from the dignity of his person The excellency of Christs sacrifice which offered himselfe for vs for he was true God equal to his Father therefore of infinit value Acts 20 28. Iohn 6 62 63. Secondly from the fulnesse of his obedience toward his Father Phil. 2 6 7. from his keeping of the law perfectly for vs Math. 5 17. Gal. 4 4. whence we see that he was tainted with no sin 1 Pet. 2 22. Iohn 8 46. that he should haue need to offer first for himselfe as the priests of Leui were constrained to doe in the law Heb. 7 27. Hence it is that the Apostle saith He gaue himself for vs not for himself who was without sin Heb. 9 13. Vse 2 Secondly the sacrifice of the burnt offering made by fire had a meat-offering ioyned to it vers 4. of a tenth deale of floure mingled with the fourth part of an Hin This was a measure of moist or liquid things as the Gomer Epha were of dry and solid containing six pints What the Hin was according to the computation of the Hebrewes which ought to haue most knowledge in these things But to leaue this wee must consider that to the burnt offering is ioyned a meat offering this meate offering is no other then the flesh of Christ which hee should offer for the sins of the world Iohn 6 53 54 55. 1 Cor. 10 3. They did all eate of the same spirituall meat and dranke the same spirituall drinke that is Christ Iesus Obiect If any aske how he is made meate for vs and drink for vs Answer I answer in that he was crucified dead and buried our life ariseth out of his death our strength out of his weaknes our saluation out of his condemnation This is our meat offering as indeed it was theirs also and this we must eate by faith if we desire to liue for euer This must teach vs to hunger after him the nature of this hunger must be according to the nature of the meate spirituall meate requireth spiritual hunger in our harts As truly as we hunger after our meate so truly should we hunger after this meat-offering This made the Apostle count all things as dung that he might win Christ Phil. 3 8. Neuerthelesse great is the prophanenesse of the world for wee are for the most part like those Israelites that preferred the Onions and Garlick of Egypt before Angels food Numb 11 5 6. Vse 3 Lastly the sacrifices offered vp must haue Wine powred vpon them ver 5. as also oyle of which we haue spoken before chap. 6. Out of which wee must learne to acknowledge that for the faith and truths sake for Christ and the Gospels sake wee must not account the best things we haue no not our owne liues deere and precious vnto vs but be ready to forsake brethren and sisters house and lands to offer vp our bodies and to haue our blood shed and poured out as a drinke offering to God 2 Cor. 4 10. Gal. 6 17. 2 Tim 4 6. Phil. 2 17. For as Christ offered himselfe for vs so should we be content to offer vp our selues to him as he shed his blood for vs so should we be ready to giue our liues for his truth He that will saue his life shall lose it but hee that loseth his life shall saue it Math. 16 25 This haue the faithfull done for they considered that in heauen they had an enduring substance Heb. 10 34. If they lost a temporall life they found an eternall if they parted from any earthly treasure they obtained heauenly and therefore their gaines were infinitely greater then their losses It is not enough to professe the truth in prosperity so long as it is faire weather and the Sun shineth warme von vs. Euery hypocrite will go so farre but we must remember the pouring out of the wine vpon the meat offering as the faithfull complain that their blood hath bene shed like water round about Ierusalem Psal 80 3. We must know that it is our duty to stand in a storme as well as in a calme when the winde bloweth as well as when it bloweth not and when persecution ariseth as well as in time of peace and plenty Mat. 10 32 33. Thinke it not therefore strange when trouble appeareth and the fierie triall cometh which is to try vs 1 Pet. 4 12. We must reioyce vnder the crosse All men can reioyce and be glad when they haue a plentifull haruest when they find great spoiles when the riches of their house encrease Psa 4 7. but we must reioyce if the wil of God be to proue vs so farre when we suffer the spoiling of our goodes and are companions of them that are so vsed To conclude we haue all neede of patience Heb. 10 36. that we do not faint when we are rebuked Let vs therefore be alwayes ready for affliction when we haue suffered much yet make preparation and prouision for more for we haue not yet resisted vnto blood striuing against sin Heb. 12 4. But we for the most part promise to our selues rest and ease we are willing to hear of the meate offering but we care not for powring wine vpon it Wee would haue Christ but we would not suffer for Christ We are willing to haue him our meat but not our crosse 13 All that are borne of the country shal do these things after this manner in offering an Offering made by fire of a sweet sauour vnto the Lord. 14 And if a stranger soiourne among you or whosoeuer bee among you in your generations and will offer an Offering made by fire of a sweet smelling sauour vnto the Lord as ye doe so shall hee doe 15 One ordinance shall bee both for you of the Congregation and also for the stranger that soiourneth with you c. Moses hauing set downe sundry rites and ceremonies
by staied and repressed it winneth ground and spreadeth farther like a canker Whereby we see it is an easie steppe and descent from one euill to another as it is to go downe a steepe hill Now the sinne of these men is three-fold First they are as blinde men that cannot see the iudgements of the Lord but accuse Moses of murther and impute to him the death and destruction of those that were buried in the earth consumed to ashes with the fire Moses was onely the Minister of God in their destruction the cause of their owne death was in thēselues as if a malefactour neuer considering what himselfe hath committed should cast the cause of his condemnation vpō the Iudge and cry out against him as a shedder of blood Secondly their vnthankfulnesse who will by no meanes confesse that they were saued the day before and sundry times besides from destruction by the intercession of Moses if he had not praied for them they had perished as one man with the seditious For they were all become as one sicke body wherein no part was sound but ful of wounds and bruises and putrifying sores Esay 1 6. They seeke his death that after a sort had giuen them life and they rise vp against him that had beene the meanes of their deliuerance Thirdly as they did condemne the innocent so they iustifie the vngodly both which are an abhomination to the Lord Prou. 17 15. Such wicked persons as God had rooted out of the Land of the liuing and turned them into the earth which was weary to beare such vnprofitable burdens they call them the people of God which were no better then a cursed crue of conspirators against God and such as he had appointed to manage the State Ciuill and Ecclesiasticall These men therefore rising vp in their stead that were fallen into the pit and defending their cause of whom GOD had taken the account doe make themselues guilty of their sinnes are iustly swept away with the iudgements of God Doctrine We learne heereby The wicked will not bee warned by former iudgements that such is the corrupt heart of wicked man that it will take no warning by former iudgements though they be neuer so fearefull and euident They had often seene how great things God had wrought among his people yet they are blinde and doe not see them they are wilfull and will not regard them they are sottish and will take no knowledge of them Psal 10 5. Esay 22 12 13 Psal 24 38 39. Luk. 19 42. Dan. 5 22. This maketh sinne out of measure sinfull The reasons First because they see God Reason 1 is a mercifull patient God he beareth long and holdeth his peace and therefore they thinke he is like vnto themselues Psal 50 21. so they abuse his patience and will do nothing Secondly they thinke the day of their iudgment Reason 2 is not neere they set it farre off from them It may be it may come in time but they hope there will be peace in their dayes Ezek. 12 27. The people iudged that the Prophet had prophesied for many daies to come and of such times as were farre off and thereupon they concluded that the daies were prolonged and euery vision failed Thirdly they loue their owne sinnes and Reason 3 out of that great loue to their sinnes they are vnwilling altogether to take notice of any iudgement due to their sinne cannot abide that the Minister or any other should giue thē warning of the same for they hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhorre him that speaketh vprightly Amos 5 verse 10. The vses remaine Vse 1 First of all are men naturally so vnwilling of themselues to set before them Gods iudgements Then this serueth as an admonition to the Ministers that they should often threaten Gods iudgeme●● against the wicked seeing they are so dull a●d vnwilling to take any notice of them or to be warned by them God worketh out his iudgements in euery place and he setteth his Ministers on worke that they should cry ou●●nd not spare to publish them and make them ●owne though men be neuer so much hardened in their sinnes sometimes by reason of the profite that they make by their sinnes sometimes by reason of the pleasure that they finde in their sinnes But howsoeuer they be admonished of any iudgement present or imminent they are little affected with it they are ready to say with the Atheists 1 Cor. 15 32. Let vs eate and drinke for to morrow we shall die Let vs alone with our doing for the present and we will take order for those iudgements that are to come hereafter well enough Obiect If any say it behoueth not the Minister to be so feruent and earnest in his reproofes but to handle sinne more gently because many are the worse for sharpe rebukes and few or none the better Answer I answer this is our greefe and causeth vs often to mourne in secret but yet this cannot be our discharge for we must labour to free and deliuer all men so farre as we can from the fierce wrath iudgements of God otherwise their blood would light vpon our heads and be required at our hands if they perish through our negligence It is the nature of the Cocke as some obserue that at the dead time of the night hee croweth most loud and shrill whether he doth so or not I know not but this I am sure of that the Ministers of God ought to do so when they see men to be most dull and dead in their sinnes they should be most earnest and vehement euen at the deadest times of all they must bee most zealous that so they may deliuer their owne soules and not be constrained to answer for the sinnes of those that perish Vse 2 Secondly this reproueth the age wherein we liue of much corruption because it can sleepe so securely at the noyse of Gods iudgements These murmurers in this place had heard the pittifull cry and fearefull noise of those that were swallowed vp in the earth yet they haue already forgotten that which fell out but a day before We commonly say A wonder lasteth but nine daies but behold how they had seene one of the greatest wonders in the world when the earth whose foundation the Lord hath laid to bee firme and stable that it should not be remoued for euer Psal 104 5 opened her mouth and swallowed these vnbeleeuers and they had heard with their eares their outcryes when they descended into the deepe yet this wonder lasted but one day nay not one whole day for on the morrow it was quite out of their remembrance We haue had all sorts of warnings whatsoeuer generall particular by his word by his workes by his iudgements vpon others and vpon our selues yet we take generally and particularly little warning by them How hath God dealt with many of vs and how neare hath he come vnto vs with his particular
to saluation Moreouer the Apostle speaking of one Mediatour and naming Christ to be that one 1 Tim. 2 5. speaketh in that place of prayer and therefore euen in praier he will haue vs to acknowledge no Mediatour of intercession but Christ Iesus onely A Mediatour of intercession as it is defined by Austine Aug. contra epist ●arm lib. 2 cap. 8. cannot agree to any sauing to Christ for he teacheth that it is commanded that euery Christian shold pray for others but he who requests for all and for whom none requesteth is the one and true Mediatour Againe they obiect Obiect that the Saints pray for vs and therefore we may pray to them Answ I answer this will not follow What the praiers of the Saints departed are Againe they pray for the perfecting of the body of Christ desire the full gathering together of the Saints they long for the resurrection restitution of their bodies which lye in the dust they wish to see the auengement of the blood of the holy martyrs shed for the testimony of the truth and craue to behold the last comming of Christ to iudgment to restore all things howbeit they know not the particular troubles of Gods children neither vnderstand the inward wrastlings and bucklings with sin and Satan which the conscience sustaineth no more then Eli knew the trouble of heart that Hannah had though she praied in his presence Wherefore let vs content our selues with the onely and all-sufficient mediation of Christ remembring the saying of the Apostle Iohn We haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes 1 Ioh. 2 1 2. And seeing he calleth vs vnto himselfe let vs not refuse to goe to him When he saith Come to me Mat. 11 28. shall we say nay we wil go to some other When Mary called her sister secretly saying The master is come and calleth for thee as soone as she heard that she arose quickly and came vnto him So it ought to be with vs Our master Christ calleth vs why doe we run from him why do we not run to him why do we run to any other Let vs not refuse to come to him who gaue his life for vs that we might liue in him Shall we then depart from him that calleth vs to them that call vs not that know vs not that heare vs not that help vs not that saue vs not Secondly this condemneth the ignorant Vse 2 multitude which through palpable and horrible ignorance rush into the presence of God without any Mediator knowing neither God nor themselues They dream that God is mercifull neuer consider what he is in his owne nature to wit a God of perfection a most iust Iudge and we can neuer reconcile his mercy and iustice but by looking vpon him in the face and countenance of Christ Iesus in whom only he is wel pleased Mat. 3 17. We can receiue nothing at his hands except we come to him in his Son For as he is perfect so he accepteth of nothing that is vnperfect But we can offer nothing to God but that which is tainted and defiled with sin and if God looke vpon vs our wants out of his Sonne wee are no better then the children of wrath he findeth matter enough in vs to reiect our workes and to condemne our persons We haue our praiers heard no other way but in the Name of Christ We are no otherwise accepted but in his beloued Iohn 15 6. Eph. 1 6. Acts 4 12. Heb. 2 14 ● Math. 1● 1 to wit in Christ He is the onely Sauiour of the Church he saueth his people from death and him that hath the power of death that is the diuell He saueth vs from our sins guilt and punishment For sin is the power sting of death an vgly serpent Christ only hath quelled him he hath merited our saluation by his death and passion none else hath done it none else could do it The Saints glorified and all the company of the elect Angels in heauen were too weak and vnworthy to accomplish this work The Papists as we haue shewed make him but half a Sauiour ioyning others with him in the worke of saluation For they teach that with Christs merites we must ioyne the workes of grace in the matter of iustificatiō that with Christs satisfaction of the wrath of God we must ioyne our satisfaction by temporall punishment But we haue shewed before that he will bee a sole Sauiour or else no Sauiour at all Thirdly it behoueth vs in remembrance of Vse 3 this excellent benefite of Christs attonement to be thankfull to God This is the main cause of al thankfulnes The most common blessings which we receiue must at all times moue vs to be thankfull as meat drinke health wealth liberty peace prosperity and the like but this should as it were swallow vp all the remembrance of all the rest and the zeale thereof cōsume vs Ps 116 12 ● What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefites toward me I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord. What deadnesse of hart then remaineth in many mē that neuer remember this great worke thereby to be prouoked to obedience and newnesse of life that so we may return our loue to God againe who loued vs first Lastly we must acknowledge what we are Vse 4 in our selues to wit vtterly lost the enemies of God the children of wrath the bondslaues of Satan and the heires of condemnation This we must confesse frō the bottome of our hearts haue a liuely feeling thereof before we can receiue him as our Peace-maker and Sauiour Math. 18 11. and 15 14. Luke 4 18 and 19 10. We must say with Daniel Shame and confusion of faces belongeth vnto vs chap. 9 8. What was due to the people in this place and what might they haue looked for if Aaron had not made an attonement but present death So is it with vs we are borne dead in sinnes and trespasses can looke for nothing but wrath and iudgement and fiery indignation which shall deuoure the aduersaries Hebr. 10 27. if Christ do not make peace between God and vs. Let vs therefore looke for saluation from him as men hearing of cunning Physitions to cure diseases do seeke and send to thē farre and neere Math. 9 20 21. Iohn chap. 7 verse 37. CHAP. XVII 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Speake vnto the children of Israel and take of euery one of them a rod according to the house of their fathers of all their Princes according to the house of their fathers twelue rods write thou euery mans name vpon his rod. 3. And thou shalt write Aarons name vpon the rod of Leui for one rod shall bee for the head of the house of their fathers WEe haue seene in the former chapter how the people enuied Moses in the Camp and
full of good workes and almes deedes he kneeled downe and prayed 〈◊〉 9.40 and turning him to the body hee bad her arise and she opened her eyes and sate vp Heereunto also we may not vnfitly apply the examples of such as haue recouered out of eminent dangers and haue beene in a manner in the iawes of death and helde their soules in their hands as Hebr. 11.17 19. Touching Isaac hee lay bound with cords as a sacrifice vpon the Altar the knife was lifted vp to haue killed him and his father ready to haue offered him for a burnt offering and therefore he is also said to haue offered him accounting that God was able to raise him vp euen from the dead from whence also he receiued him in a figure The like we might say of many other the Saints that haue had experience of Gods power who being no better then dead in their own opinions by incurable diseases and incredible dangers haue notwithstanding been suddenly restored Hezekiah was willed to set his house in order for he should die his disease was mortall yet by prayer hee obtained the prolonging of his dayes When Daniel was in the lyons denne and the three seruants of God in the fiery furnace Noah in the Arke vpon the waters Ionah in the belly of the Whale where were they but after a sort in death yet all these had deliuerance and flourished againe like the Almond rod in this place The like we might say of Paul Cor. 11.26 and 1.9 10 he was pressed with trouble out of measure aboue strength insomuch that he despaired euen of life and receiued the sentence of death in himselfe yet God which raised the dead deliuered him from so great a death We reade in the actes of the Apostles that he was stoned with stones so that they drew him out of the citie supposing that he had beene dead but when the disciples stood round about him 〈◊〉 14.19 20 〈◊〉 2.27 he rose vp and came into the citie So doth this Apostle speake of Epaphroditus he was sick nigh vnto death but God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on me also lest I should haue sorrow vpon sorrow This was likewise the flourishing of the Almond rod of Aaron Reason 1 This is not to be maruelled at forasmuch as God is the liuing God he hath life and being in himselfe and he giueth life and breath and being vnto other things This is a title proper and peculiar to God Matth. 22.32 and therefore it is said Hee is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Secondly he is of infinite power and was Reason 2 able in the beginning to create all things of nothing Heb 11.3 so that the things which were seene were not made of things which doe appeare Thirdly he Reason 3 can take away life and breath so often as it pleaseth him yea cast body and soule into hel Psal 104.29 Matth. 10.28 The vses remaine First this was a type as Vse 1 also the whole Priesthood was of the person doctrine Priesthood and kingdome of Christ as appeareth in many places of the Prophets Esay 11.1 2. Psal 45.6 and 22.14.18 Act. 13.23 Al our saluation springeth from his crosse and our life from his death He offered vp himselfe vpon the crosse for the redemption of our bodies to obtaine for vs euerlasting peace perfect righteousnesse and the kingdome of heauen he rose againe from death to life for our iustification Rom. 4 25. This is the rod that came out of the stemme of Iesse and as a branch that grew out of his roots who though he were put to death in the flesh and became as a dry and withered stalke and staffe that was not regarded 1 Pet. 3.18 Rom. 4.24 yet he was quickened by the spirit and God raised him from the dead so that hee became as the flourishing rod of Aaron in whom we haue redemption through his blood the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to the riches of his grace Eph. 1.7 Secondly heere is also a type set forth for Vse 2 the confirmation of our faith in the doctrine of the resurrection of the body at the last day which as dry seede is cast into the earth and brought to dust yet in due time shall flourish againe as the rod of the almond in this place Dan. 12.2 Ioh. 5.25 and 11.24 25. Ioh. 19.25 26 29. This hath beene taught in all ages of the Church from the very beginning Gen. 4.10 and 5.24 Heb. 11.5 Iude ver 14 14. Exod. 3.6 15. 2 King 2.11 Esay 26.19 Notwithstanding in all ages some haue been found that haue denyed the resurection Among the people of God that Sadduces taught that man perished wholly and that after death there is no rising or returning to life but that he perisheth as the beast Matth. 22.23 Act. 23.8 And the Apostle Peter foretelleth that in the last dayes should mockers arise that should say Where is the promise of his comming 2 Pet. 3.3 4. and what is this else but not to beleeue that Christ will come againe to iudgement nor raise vppe the dead to life And in the Church of Corinth some were found which said there is no resurrection of the dead 1 Cor. 15 12. Some haue confessed the immortalitie of the soule as many also of the heathen did but touching the resurrection they haue fansied it to be in this life and not after death so that the resurrection with them is nothing els but regeneration to wit a dying vnto sin and arising againe to newnesse of life The authours of this heresie seeme to haue beene Hymeneus and Philetus of whom the Apostle saith Concerning the truth they haue erred saying that the resurrection is already past 〈◊〉 thereby doe destroy the faith of some 2 Tim. 2.18 Neither is this heresie dead with them but is reuiued and continued in the damnable sect of the Family of loue who hold that hell and heauen are in this life and no other resurrection of the body or day of iudgment or comming of Christ thē in this world To these we may ioin as next neighbors the Anabaptists of our times who vtterly deny that the same bodies which now we haue and shal lie in the dust shal euer rise againe but they hold that God at the second comming of Christ will make vs new bodies This is to maintaine a new creation of new bodies but to deny the resurrection of the former bodies For it is one thing to make and another to raise vp Against all these errors wee must cleaue to the simplicity of the Scriptures The resurrection proued For this is a fundamentall point of Religion if this be shaken and ouerturned all religion is pulled vp by the rootes Hence it is that the Apostle reasoneth against these at large 1 Cor. 15. and prooueth the point soundly substantially by many arguments The first reason First if there be no resurrection
might gaine their soules to God not their goods to himselfe 2 Cor. 12 14 19. Phil 4 17. Lastly that he might not be any way inferiour to the false Apostles 2 Cor. 11 12. But let vs come to the vses Vse 1 First this serueth to reproue sundry persons First him that is the grand theefe that first robbed the Church by his dispensations alienations of the rights and reuenues thereof I meane the Bishop of Rome who hath robbed the Church in soule and body and is growne far with the spoiles thereof This he hath done by degrees he would not let out all the blood at once but opened the veines by little little that had he continued longer to beare sway he would haue left no blood nor liuely-hood in the body The first wrong was offered to the Churches by depriuing them of their tithes in fauour of his goodly creatures the cursed generation of his Monkes D. Field of Church lib cap. ult who obtained of the Pope and other Bishops that the lands which they held in their owne hands vsed for their owne benefit might bee freed from any payment of tithes So the councel of Lateran vnder Alexander the third ordained that religious men shall pay no tithes out of such their lands as they till themselues but if they put any out and take rent as other men they shall pay tithe as other men do Here was the flood-gates pulled vp and a way and passage made for al the mischiefe and misery that fell vpon the Church in succeeding times for heere is the seede sowne that beeing watered from the Vatican grew vp apace to the robbing of many flourishing Churches to the destruction of many christian soules and to the discouragement of many godly Pastours For this exemption of religious men I might say irreligious was indeed the cut-throat of all religion and the bringing in of the streames floods of irreligion which staied not here but preuailed greatly and gate farther footing to the great preiudice of the Church therefore this rabble of Church-robbers sought in the next place to exempt all their farmers and tenants that belonged vnto them from payment of tithes the which albeit it were disliked and resisted at the first in the Councell of Cabilon Cabienes ● ca● 19. yet at the length it passed and preuailed Nay after that they had swallowed vp the inheritance of the Church like wolues that tasted the sweetnesse of the blood of the lambes which they had hurried wearied they went forward to steale to kill and to destroy as the theefe doth Iohn 10 v. 10. till they had subiected those Ministers Churches vnto themselues to whom themselues at the first paied tithes as belonging to their iurisdiction Thus these idle drones and euill beasts were not cōtent to slippe their neckes out of the yoke and make themselues free from others vntill they had brought others to be in bondage and subiection vnto themselues Thus did one theefe make another and one Church-robber gaue free licence vnto another to rob spoile saying one to another Come with vs let vs lay wait for blood let vs lurke priuily for the innocent without cause let vs swallow thē vp aliue as the graue and whole as those that goe downe into the pit we shall finde all precious substance we shall fill our houses with spoile cast in thy lot among vs let vs all haue one purse Prou. 1 11 12 13 14. Thus did one theft and robbery make cleere way for another in all this time while the church was pilled and polled and as it were left naked of her garments the Pope that would bee called the Protectour of the Church was so farre from sitting still and looking on that hee was the ringleader in this sinne that vpon his head may iustly come all the blood of so many thousand soules as haue by this meanes bin lost vtterly Thus hath the wilde boare rooted vp the vineyard of the Lord and made it a prey to wolues and foxes that entred into the same and the rauenous cloisters of the insatiable Monkes are guilty of that horrible sacriledge which hath laid waste and desolate so many goodly Churches brought the Cleargy to that poore estate wherein to this day it remaineth and continueth in many places For it is not to be imagined that any of the people who gaue liberally to the Churches and richly endowed them with lands and liuings of their owne would euer haue entertained any thought much lesse entred into any practise of alienating tithes from the lawfull owners and appropriating them to themselues had they not seene the way laid plaine and open before them and that by those who by the originall institution of their order were to pay tithes yea and those same tithes consumed in most vile and shamefull manner Neither shall we finde that euer any inherited possessed this portion by an absolute title of inheritance as their feesimple and freehold til the suppression of the houses of these vermine which were become cages of vncleane birds and dens of theeues and robbers I cannot see therefore how at the first laymen could haue any better title to these tithes then their predecessours the Monkes had and therfore they yet beare the names of impropriations ●ropriati why so ●d as things that are so holden and possessed by an vnproper title In other purchases the Lawyers are wont to say if the case in this be not altered caueat emptor that is let the buyer take heed and looke to his right and title To conclude therefore I would gladly be resolued whether our Improprieta●ies hold the Church tithes by any better title then the Monkes did at the first by the Popes pillage and whether they were not giuen to the Church by a good law and taken from it by a bad Vse 2 Secondly seeing it is Gods pleasure that such as preach the Gospel should be maintained by the Gospel they are reproued that account it an idle and needlesse function care not if wee were chased out of house home when we haue spent our time our labour our strength and our substance for the fitting of our selues to this calling Such men are wholly carnall and sauour nothing of the Spirit The Apostle saith They that labour in the word and doctrine are worthy of double honour 1 Tim. 5 17. Meaning by honour the care and prouision that is to be taken for them And in the Epistle to the Hebrewes they are willed to be mindfull of them that haue the ouersight of them who haue deliuered to them the word of God Heb. 13 8. 1 Thess 5 12 13. To these mis-prizers and false iudges of good things I will adde another sort that hold tithes to be a kinde of almes and so would not haue the Ministers chalenge any thing as due for their Ministery and maintenance but to stand wholly to the peoples deuotion good will and thus they
come yet his death was as forcible frō the beginning of the world is now also as auaileable and effectuall and shal be euer hereafter to the end of the world as when he hung vpon the Crosse in the dayes of his Passion and when the blood really streamed and issued out of his body The Israelites in the time of the Law were the children of God heires of eternall life and had the promises of saluation as well as we vnder the Gospel God did not seed them and fat them as swine in a stye but vnder certaine figures and types hee gaue them a taste of heauenly things The offering of bruite beasts in sacrifice was a signe that they were made partakers of the redemption wrought by the blood of Christ which was shed to wash away our sinnes Vnder the promise of giuing thē the earthly Canaan so often remēbred he gaue thē a taste representation of the heauenly inheritance The aboundance of temporall blessings was a pledge and earnest penny to them of the life eternall they hauing the same faith Ephe. 4.4 5. 1 Cor. 10. ● 4. the same Father the same spiritual meat the same spirituall drinke the same Lord the same hope the same heauen the same Christ that wee haue Albeit Gal. 4.1.2 3.4 they were as little children vnder tutors and gouernours and were taught in rude manner by shadowes and ceremonies which are as certaine pictures and looking glasses to behold the outward manner of his dispensation whereas wee are come to mans estate in comparison of them and behold Iesus Christ openly in the face we know his death resurrection ascension and opening the kingdome of heauen to vs. Therefore our Sauiour saith Ioh. 8.56 Your father Abrahā reioyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad Heb. 11 13 14 15 16. So the Apostle to the Hebrewes sayth That the Fathers dyed in faith and receiued not the things promised but saw them afarre off beleeued them receiued them thankefully confessed that they were Pilgrims and strangers on the earth so that they iudged the promises made to them to bee spirituall and expected more then temporall blessings This is one point which we are to learne and imprint in our mindes touching the Iewes who had an image of the serpents lifted vp to teach them the doctrine of Christ hanging on the crosse If then the vnbeleeuing Iewes in these dayes blaspheme Christ crucified account the blood of the new Testament an vnholy thing and vnpossible to giue saluation let thē know that their fathers receiued life and recouered health by a brazen serpent an image without life and motion the meaning signification heereof were not hard but easie to gather sauing that the Apostle teacheth that their mindes are obstinate and that a veile is laid ouer their hearts in reading the old Testament so that they vnderstand nothing c. 1 Corin. 3 14. Thus doth God send them strong delusions that they should beleeue lies that all they might be damned which beleeued not the truth but had pleasure in vnrighteousnesse 2 Thess 2 11 12. Thus then we see that the Couenant which GOD made with man to be gracious and fauourable vnto them is one in substance and matter seeing there is but one God 1 Tim. 2 5. one Mediatour betweene God and man one faith one meane of reconciliation and one way of saluation to all that are saued and haue bin saued from the beginning Christ Iesus was appointed ouer all things to be the head of the Church by whom all the body is coupled and knit together Eph. 1 22 4 16. He is the way the truth and the life no man cometh to the Father but by him Iohn 1 18 and 14 6. All therefore he being onely the way as well vnder the Law as vnder the Gospel who were to be saued had respect to the only Mediatour Christ by whom alone they were reconciled to God and saued by faith The differences betweene the Iewes and vs were onely in certaine circumstances in promising of corporall benefits in giuing them outward signes and oblations in propounding things more obscurely and darkely in restraining his gifts and in limiting them to the Iewish Nation whereas otherwise the old and new couenant agree together not only in the Author of them which is God and in the Mediatour of them which is Christ but in the promises of grace touching remission of sinnes and euerlasting life to bee freely giuen for Christs fake and in the condition in respect of man that we should walke before him vprightly beleeue the Gospel vnfainedly Vse 2 Secondly we obserue from this similitude the naturall estate and condition of all mankinde what it is wee are all naturally stung with the poison of the olde serpent and the wound is mortall All the Israelites that were bitten by the fiery serpents whether deeply or but a ●ittle whether more or lesse whether once or often dyed the death if they vsed not the remedy ordained of God albeit the wound were slender and shalow So such as looke not on Christ hanging on the Crosse are sure to fall into damnation The guilt of sin is as the poyson of a serpent this we haue drawne frō our first parents by whose offence we are culpable of iudgement We are all stung with it vnto death The wound is so deep deadly that we are guilty of the transgression of Adam being in his loynes We haue the spawne and seed of all sinne in vs we are corrupt in soule and body we are prone to fall into the most dangerous and desperate sins The Israelites felt the anguish of the paine and the danger of death otherwise they would neuer haue looked vp to the brazen serpent If the sicke man finde not the want of his health feele not the greefe of his sicknesse feare not the losse of his life he wil neuer seeke to the Physition for ease and recouery And indeed what should it haue auailed these distressed Iewes to haue any recourse to the brazen ferpent vnlesse they had perceiued themselues to be stung euen to death and no other way or remedy to procure their deliuerance So it behooueth all of vs to haue a liuely and sencible feeling of our spirituall wounds We must know that sinne is as a poyson to the soule and the Law giueth strength to sinne We must be greeued for our sins which draw vpon vs the losse of Gods fauour more then for the lacke and losse of bodily health Let vs not therefore make a mock of sin We see no man will dally or delight in poyson no poyson is so dangerous to the body as sin is to the soule Let vs beware of the wiles and subtilties of the old serpent lest as he beguiled Eue through his craftinesse so hee corrupt our mindes from the simplicity that is in Christ 2 Cor. 11● carry vs headlong to destruction and damnation of soule and
when Rabshakeh with his bold and blasphemous mouth had ●ailed vpon the strength of Israel and had proudly threatened the King and his people that they should be compelled to eate their own dung and to drinke their owne water Be not afraid of the words which thou hast heard behold I will send a bl●st vpon him and he shall heare a noise returne to his owne Land and I will cause him to fall by the sword in his owne Land Esay 37 6 7. And afterward chap. 43.1 5 when the people of God were greeuously oppressed by their bitter and bloody enemies so that they were robbed spoyled snared thrust and throwne into Dungeons fettred in prison-houses and euery way euilly entreated he speaketh vnto them on this manner Thus saith the Lord that created thee O Iacob and he that formed thee O Israel feare not for I haue redeemed thee I haue called thee by name thou art mine feare not for I am with thee So Christ forewarning his Disciples what entertainment they should finde in the world Mat. 10 26 28 and how hardly they should be tryed as to be betrayed hated persecuted imprisoned scourged railed vpon and in the end brought to their end hee prepareth them to this duty and repeateth it oftentimes Feare them not And the Apostle Paul after he had earnestly instructed the Philippians to grow in all graces to leade their conuersation worthy the Gospel of Christ he remembreth thē of this point In nothing feare your aduersaries Phil. 1 18 Answerable to these precepts are the worthy practises of the faithfull Hereunto cometh the example of Moses Heb 11 Exod. 11 8. 27 when he led the people of Israel out of Egypt notwithstanding the threatenings and bloudy words of Pharaoh he feared not the fiercenesse of the King but endured a constant maintainer of the Church of God ceassed not to encourage the people aga●●●● their enemies whose hearts failed and q●●●led when they were pursued and ouertaken by the Egyptians Likewise the three seruants of God beeing threatned by that great Tyrant Nebuchadnezzor to be cast into the fiery Furnace were not daunted or feared by his high power fierce displeasure but answered him We are not carefull to answer thee in this matter Dan. 4 15. This appeareth at sundry times vpon sundry occasions in Dauid whē he waxeth bold and couragious in the Spirit saith I will not be afraid for ten thousand of the people that should beset me round about Psal 3 6. Reason 1 The reasons follow First God is with his people If he be with them shall we feare any to be against them If we haue a protection from the Prince shall we feare the face of the subiect If the Lyon fight for vs shal we feare the flye or the worme that are weak in strength This is the reason vrged by the Lord in the Prophet Feare not for I am with thee Esay 43 5. Now God is with vs by his power and prouidence If we consider these things that are in God as his generall speciall prouidence which guideth and ouer-ruleth all things for the glory of his Name and the benefit of his children the holy meditation hereof ought to remoue from vs all distracting and distrustfull feare When Christ had disswaded his Disciples from the feare of men he saith Are not two Sparrowes sold for a farthing and one of them shall not fall to the ground without your Father Yea the haires of your head are numbred Math. 10 29 30. And indeed the cause why in trouble we faint and faile for feare of men whose breath is in their nostrils and whose malice is limited is because we distrust Gods promises and prouidence which is indeed a fearefull sinne Againe if we consider that God is with vs by his power which being endlesse infinite is able to redresse represse the greatest tyrant and tyrany in the world we shall finde nothing more auaileable to keepe vs from the excessiue feare of weake man seeing he can restraine them when it pleaseth him This the three seruants of God acknowledge in their danger Behold our God whom we serue is able to deliuer vs from the fiery Furnace and he will deliuer vs out of thine hand O King Dan. 3 13. Againe let vs haue our conuersation without Reason 2 feare in regard of the persecuters themselues and the power which they haue For consider the difference betweene that which God can do and that which man can do The most vile and cruell tyrant that breatheth out threatnings and slaughter against the Saints when he hath done his worst and raged to the vtmost when he hath disgorged al his malice and quenched his thirst in bloud can goe no further but to kill the body but God can goe further who hath the keyes of hell and death Nay these enemies cannot so much as kill the body or touch the skin with all their power without the will of God as our Sauiour speaketh to Pilate when he boasted of an absolute power in his owne hands to binde or loose to crucifie or to absolue Thou couldst haue no power at all against mee except it were giuen thee from aboue Iohn 19 10 11. This is that reason which Christ himselfe expresseth Mat. 10 28. Feare not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in hell Thirdly the enemies shall be destroyed Reason 3 They fight against God they fight against his people therefore they cannot prosper True it is they may for a time preuaile and proceed in their euill enterprizes and God may for a season vse them as his Rod to try the faith of his children but when he hath vsed them as instruments to bring his iudgements to passe they shall preuaile no longer This consideration serued to encourage the people of Israel when Pharaohs hoast pressed vpon them and marched toward them Feare not stand still behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to you this day for the Egiptians which yee haue seene this day ye shall neuer see them againe the Lord shall fight for you therefore holde you your peace Exod. 14 13 14. The vses remaine to be stood vpon First this teacheth that the childe of God must be Vse 1 a man of valour and courage and as a mighty man of warre not to be daunted with any terrour to forsake his faith a good conscience but such an one as is able by the fortitude power of Christ to vndergo all tryals to ouer-stride al dangers to ouercome al enemies and to triumph ouer all things that oppose themselues against their peace So then the godly whose faith ouercommeth the world are not onely souldiers but valiant souldiers 1 Iohn 5 and victorious conquerors The Apostle hauing commended Moses that he forsooke Egypt feared not the fiercenesse of the King addeth this
〈◊〉 35 ●● and hearkened not to the words of Necho which were of the mouth of God The like we may consider oftentimes in the booke of Daniel when Nebuchadnezzar had dreamed a dreame which was not humane but diuine neyther of a naturall cause but of a supernaturall wherewith his spirit was troubled Daniel saide vnto him Dan. 2 28. There is a God in heauen that reuealeth secrets and sheweth the King what shall be in the latter daies The Reasons are euident First to set downe his great loue and fauour to his Children 〈◊〉 1. For as God did shew himselfe in sundry manners and speake by liuely voyce to the vngodly so in all the manifestations of himselfe vnto thē he had respect and reference to his Church as appeareth in the former examples Heerein therefore appeareth the wonderfull loue of God to his chosen people who hath the harts of all men in his owne hands and turneth thē about as pleaseth him This is that reason which the Prophet pointeth vnto Psal 105 13 14 15 where speaking of Abraham his posterity he saith Albeit they were few in number yea very few and strangers in the Land and walked about from Nation to Nation from one Kingdome to another people yet suffered he no man to do them wrong but reprooued Kings for their sakes saying Touch not mine annointed and doe my Prophets no harme Secondly it pleaseth God to make himselfe and his great Name knowne out of the limits and circuit of the Church 〈◊〉 2. to constraine euen the wicked to cleere him in his proceedings to acknowledge his iudgements to bee iust and righteous to giue sentence against themselues For God is holy in all his wayes and pure in all his works hee causeth their owne consciences to be witnesses against thē to accuse and to conuince them inasmuch as they become vnthankfull 〈◊〉 ● 2● and do not glorifie him as God who is worthy of all glory and neuer leaueth himselfe without witnesse Acts 14 17. no not among the Infidels Thirdly he declareth and reuealeth himselfe Reason 3 to Infidels not because they be worthy but because by the mouth of the very Infidels he will strengthen and confirme his children True it is the cheefe and principall meanes which he vseth is to teach them by his seruants the Prophets and Apostles by Pastours and Teachers which he hath set in his church but he will also vse the tongues of prophane men to his owne glory comfort of his children This we see euidently shewed Iudg. 7 13. When Gideon came to the outside of the hoast of the enemies Behold a man told a dream vnto his neighbour and said Behold I dreamed a dreame and loe a cake of Barly-bread tumbled from aboue into the hoast of Midian and came vnto a Tent and smote it that it fell downe was ouerturned and his fellow answered This is nothing else saue the sword of Gideon for into his hand hath God deliuered Midian and all his host When Gideon heard the dreame deliuered and the interpretation opened he worshipped and returned into the hoast of Israel and saide Vp for the Lord hath deliuered into your hand the hoast of Midian Whereby we see that God made knowne his purpose to these vnbeleeuers for the strengthening of Gideons weake faith and the enabling of him to the worke whereunto he was appointed The vses follow First confesse from this Vse 1 dealing of God not onely that hee is great in ●ion and high aboue all the people but ●hat his Name is great glorious among his enemies He reigneth as King Psal 120.2 1 not onely ouer his Church but ouer all creatures and he maketh them to acknowledge his greatnesse stoop downe vnder his hand ●his we see in the Prophet Daniel chap. 6 26 27 by the decree that Darius wrote vnto all the people nations and languages that dwell in all the world I make a decree that in all the Dominions of my kingdome men tremble and feare the God of Daniel for hee is the liuing God and remaineth for euer and his kingdome shall not perish and his Dominion shall be euerlasting he refuseth and he deliuereth he worketh signes and wonders in Heauen and in Earth who hath deliuered Daniel from the power of the Lyons The like confession Nebuchadnezzar maketh before chap. 3 32 33. I thought it good to declare the signes wonders that the high God hath wrought toward me How great are his signs and how mighty are his wonders His kingdome is an euerlasting kingdome and his Dominion is from generation to generation Secondly we see that God leaueth not men Vse 2 with out excuse because hee maketh knowne his truth vnto them they haue some meanes or other offered vnto them to teach them to acknowledge God and to glorifie him whom they haue acknowledged Rom. 1.20.24 So Christ our Sauiour speaketh to the obstinate Iewes Iohn chapter fifteene verse 22. If I had not come and spoken vnto them they should not haue had sinne but now haue they no cloke nor colour for their sinne Thus was Pilate the Iudge of Iewry conuinced in his owne conscience of wrongfull iudgement against Christ beeing warned of his wife to whom God had reuealed his innocency that he was a iust man as a Lambe vnspotted and vndefiled For the Euangelist Matthew testifieth that when Pilate was set downe on the iudgement seate his wife sent to him saying Haue thou nothing to do with that iust man for I haue suffered many things this day in a dreame by reason of him Mat. 27 19. This was no meere humane or naturall dreame Eccles 5 2. arising from multitude of busines or proceeding frō an euil constitution of the body or euill digestion of meate or such like ordinary causes as daily befall vs but it was diuine from the speciall instinct of God and the inspiration of the Almighty For as God the Father diuers wayes approued the innocency of Christ that it might appeare he dyed not for his owne offences but for ours for our redemption so did God send terror and trouble vpon the Iudges wife in the night season to discouer his hypocrisie make him without excuse altogether in condemning the Innocent that all the water in the wide sea was not able to wash away the guilt of his sinne much lesse the water he called for to wash his hands before the multitude when he saide I am innocent of the blood of this iust man looke you to it Math. 27 24. The staine of sinne soyleth the soule and defileth the conscience cannot be washed away with water which onely putteth away the filth of the flesh and clenseth the body but cannot enter any further Thirdly seeing God hath shewed and manifested Vse 3 himselfe to wicked men vnworthy of his fauour we may be certaine and well assured that he will neuer leaue his owne children destitute of instruction that call vpon his
the Saduces Luke 20 27. Actes 23.8 which denyed the rising againe of the body and the subsisting of the soule after the separation For when Paul cryed out in the Councell I am accused of the hope and resurrection of the dead there was a dissention betweene the Pharisees and the Saduces for the Saduces say That there is no resurrection neyther Angel nor spirit but the Pharisies confesse both These Christ confuteth and conuinceth in the Gospel by the testimony of Moses I am the God of Abraham the God of Isaac and the God of Iacob God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Matth. 22 32. Exodus 3 6. And if these heretickes and enemies of God would not for conscience sake yeelde to this truth and subscribe with heart and hand vnto it yet at least for the profit of it and the excellency aboue their beastly dotage about the mortality of the soule they should embrace it and cleaue vnto it For it is surer and safer to beleeue as the Church holdeth For if this opinion bee true that the soule is immortall It is mor●ty le●●ger to b● the soul● be imm● then m● whosoeuer beleeueth it not in heart and confesseth it not with the mouth shall suffer eternall punishment and beare his condemnation If it should not be true which we speake onely by supposition the doctrine being most certaine there is no daunger after death to haue holden the immortality of the soule in the time of our life forasmuch as if the soule do not remaine it cannot be reproued of error nor punished for sinne Againe it is most honest and honorable to hold the dignity of our soule receyued of God and so to thinke reuerently and religiously of it resembling it to God the Angels not to debase and disgrace it making it like vnto the beasts and vnreasonable creatures Lastly it is better to beleeue the soules eternity as fitter to stirre vs vp to liue soberly righteously godlily in this present world and to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts to minde heauenly things that we may bee holy as our heauenly Father is holy For if we beleeue our selues to be immortall Math. 16 26 wee will haue a greater care of vertue a greater respect to the reward a greater conscience of Religion a greater feare of sin and of the punishment due to sin So then as there is greater verity so there is more safety security to hold the immortality of the soule against the erroneous opinions of all hereticks that haue desperately and damnably denyed the same to the decay of piety dishonor of God and vnto the vtter confusion of their owne soules Vse 2 Secondly acknowledge from hence a great difference betweene the soule of man and the soule of a beast Euery beast and liuing creature hath a kind of soule which perisheth with the body so that he which killeth the body of a beast destroyeth also the soule which ariseth from the mixture and temperature of the Elements But man was made after the image of God Gen. 1 26. according to his likenesse Eph. 4 24 to resemble him especially in his soule which is of an heauenly nature albeit not of the substance of God This difference and distinction Moses teacheth and obserueth Gen. 9 4 6. But the flesh with the life thereof I meane with the blood thereof shall ye not eate who so sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood bee shed for in the image of God hath hee made man Where hee maketh an opposition betweene man and beast and between the soule of man and beast Man was made in his soule to resemble his Maker and Creator but the soule of a beast is in his blood And therefore God charging his people to abstain from eating of blood euen of cleane beasts vseth these two reasons Leuit. 17 11 14. First because theyr blood is the seate of the soule secondly God hath commanded it to be vsed in attonemēts for sinne as a type and figure of the blood of Christ The soule of man is a substance the soule of a beast is an accident whose being is alwayes to be in another The soule of man is a spirit the soule of a beast is a quality arising of the matter of the body vanishing also with the body and hauing no beeing at all out of the body Thirdly see here a difference between the Vse 3 soule and the body of a man For as this truth teacheth a distinction betweene the soule of a man and the soule of a beast so it maketh a diuision betweene one part of man and the other Man consisteth of two parts of the bodie which is visible and of the soule which is inuisible The body dyeth and is laid in the graue for as it was taken out of the earth so it returneth to the earth againe But the soule as wee haue proued by diuers Scriptures and confirmed by strong reasons neuer dyeth or decayeth Therefore albeit we be taught in the Articles of our faith to beleeue the resurrection of the body yet wee are neuer taught to beleeue the resurrection of the soule For a rising vp presupposeth first a falling down The soul falleth not into the iawes of death nor goeth downe into the house of the graue This difference the wiseman teacheth Eccles. 12 7. Dust returneth vnto the earth as it was and the spirit returneth vnto God that gaue it The dwelling place of the body is the earth the habitation of the soule is with God The soule neuer dyeth nor decayeth nor sleepeth nor riseth againe but is a spirituall substance and inuisible hauing neyther flesh nor bones liuing and abiding for euer as wel out of the Tabernacle of the body as in the same But the body is an earthly and visible substance consisting of sensible parts neuer liuing nor breathing without the soule Wherefore these abide together as two the nearest and dearest friends reioycing together sorrowing together and alike affectioned one toward another yet the day of separation commeth and will come when a departure must be made of these two that cannot alway continue together the body must returne to the earth the soule must bee carryed vnto God the eternall Iudge who immediatly wil passe the sentence of life or death vpon the same Fourthly we must be careful to liue a godly Vse 4 and vpright life that when we shal goe the way of all flesh our soules may bee receyued vp into the heauenly habitations and bee carryed by the Angels into the glorious presence of God There is no man if he bee to stand before Princes and to come into the presence of great men but prepareth and maketh himself ready for that purpose When Ioseph was to appeare before Pharaoh Gen. 41 14. albeit he were called hastily and brought sodainly before him yet he shaued his head and changed his rayment How then ought our care to be increased and how ought we to work out our
subiect vnto God But when he had nearkened to the olde serpent and disobeyed the commandement of God the whole course of Nature was turned he hid himselfe from the presence of God and feared the creatures which before hee ruled To conclude therefore seeing it is God who is the cause of our peace let vs rest vpon his prouidence and protection and seek earnestly reconciliation with God that wee may haue the inward peace of a good conscience which howsoeuer the world may striue to disturbe and hinder yet cannot take away from vs as our Sauiour Christ promiseth Iohn 16. verse 33 In me ye shall haue peace in the world yee shall haue affliction And againe Iohn 14 27. Peace I leaue with you my peace I giue vnto you not as the world giueth giue I vnto you So that in regard of this spirituall peace of the faithfull cōsisting partly in our peace with God which is the Fountaine and partly in our peace of conscience which is the fruite Psal 25 our soules are assured to dwell at ease in the middest of all troubles wee shall be comforted and by his prouidence and protection be secured howsoeuer our bodyes bee tossed and turmoyled For this spirituall peace not onely may stand but is euermore ioyned with crosses and persecutions Verse 24. Behold the people shall rise vp as a Lyon and lift vp himselfe as a young Lyon hee shall not lye downe till he eate of the prey c. In these words the estate of the Church is described after sundry conflictes in this life It hath many enemies that for a time rise vppe against it but in the end the Church shal rouze vp it selfe and arise as a Lyon who will not couch till hee haue taken and eaten his prey This shal be the strength of the people of God in subduing and ouercomming all theyr enemies This was begun by Moses prosecuted by Ioshua continued by Dauid and fulfilled by Christ Who ruleth in the midst of his enemies and shall bring all things in subiection vnder his feete Doctrine 〈◊〉 Church 〈◊〉 in the ●●●●e vic●●er all ●●●es Psal 110 1 2. From hence we learne That the Church in the end shall haue victory ouer all enemies that set themselues against it They dash themselues against the Rocke that shall breake them in peeces for howsoeuer they oppose themselues against the good estate thereof they doe but kicke against the goad as stiffe-necked hard-hearted beasts that haue not learned to beare the yoke of God nor to acquaint themselues with the wayes of godlinesse God will shew himselfe most powerfull in ouerthrowing and discomfiting the enemies of the Church This euidently appeareth by the history of the Church in Egypt in Babylon as also in the bookes of Exodus and Ester The Prophet Dauid declareth 〈◊〉 14 and 〈◊〉 8. that notwithstanding the rage of Gods and his enemies He that dwelleth in the heauens shall laugh the Lord shall haue them in derision yea he shall crush them with a scepter of Iron and breake them in peeces like a Potters vessell Psal 2 4 9. This Christ our Sauiour teacheth his Disciples when he sent them foorth to worke myracles and to preach the Gospel of the kingdome to be at hand he prepareth them for the Crosse he foretelleth them what they should looke for I send you as sheepe in the midst of wolues but beware of men for they wil deliuer you vp to the Councels they will scourge you in their Synagogues they will bring you before Rulers they will betray you to your enemies and ye shall be hated of all men for my sake but hee that endureth to the ende shall bee saued Matth. 10 16 17 22. Reason 1 The Reasons are euident For first the Lord Iesus is the King of his Church he hath the keyes of hell and death He openeth and no man shutteth he shutteth and no man openeth Reuel 1 18. Iohn 10 28. He is the Shepheard of his sheepe his sheepe heare his voyce he knoweth them they follow him he giueth vnto thē eternall life so that they shall neuer perish neyther shall any pluck them out of his hand He is the head of the Church and quickeneth all the members of his body by whom we haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of our sinnes Col. 1 18. Seeing therefore Christ Iesus is the King of his Church the Shepheard of his sheepe the Head of his body wee cannot doubt but he will defend his Church saue his sheepe keepe safe and sound the members of his body that none shall be able to destroy them or to take them out of his hand Reason 2 Secondly our weaknes is not hidden from the Lord he knoweth whereof we are made he remembreth that we are but dust yea a winde that passeth and cometh not againe Therefore the Apostle saith that God is faithfull which will not suffer vs to bee tempted aboue that we are able but will euen giue the issue with the tentation that we may bee made able to beare it 1 Cor. 10 13. So the Prophet teacheth that the rod of the wicked shall not alwayes rest vpon the lot of the righteous lest the righteous put foorth their hand vnto wickednesse Psal 125 3● declaring that the Lord appoints his for a time to be afflicted yet in the end they shall be deliuered and the wicked shall not be suffered in their oppressions The vses are now to bee handled First Vse 1 this teacheth for our instruction that the Church hath alwayes enemies in this world against which it must continually striue and fight There is no victory before the battaile there is no conquest before the fight We are all souldiers and warriours in this life to fight the battels of God we must not dreame of liuing euer in rest and pleasure Humility and misery must go before honour and glory the crosse commeth before the crowne we must wrastle before we can haue the garland 1 cor 9 24 25. wee must runne before we can obtaine the goale we must striue before we can haue the mastery we must labour before we can receiue the fruites we must fight before we can win the victory This is it which the Apostle sheweth vnto vs 2 Tim. 2 5 6 11 12. Thus it was with Christ first he suffered aduersity and then hee entred into glory first he endured the Crosse and despised the shame and then he was set at the right hand of the Throne of God Luke 24 26. Hebr. 12 2. This is the way let vs walke in it He is a foolish husbandman that will look to reape before he haue sowed The Disciple must not looke to be aboue his Master nor the seruant aboue his Lord. We must through manifold tribulations enter into the kingdome of heauen and all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer persecutions This is our lot portion this is the cup which is prepared for vs to drinke
they haue gone into warre to fight with their enemies they haue called vpon his name and receyued great comfort This we see euidently in the practise of Ioshua who prayed vnto him in the day when hee gaue the Amorites before the children of Israel Ioshua chap. 10. verses 12 14. Sunne stay thou in Gibeon and thou Moone in the valley of Aialon and there was no day like that day before it nor after it that the Lord heard the voice of a man for the Lord fought for Israel When the Philistines were assembled against Israel the children of Israel sayde to Samuel Cease not to cry vnto the Lord our God for vs that hee may saue vs out of the hand of the Philistines 1 Samuel chapt 7. verses 8 9 10. Samuel cried vnto the Lord who heard him and thundered with a great thunder that day vppon the Philistines and scattered them so they were slaine before Israel And there is a notable example hereof recorded in the first of the Chronicles the fift chapter and the 20. verse touching the sonnes of Reuben of Gad and of halfe the Tribe of Manasseh They were holpen against the Hagarims who were deliuered into their hand and all that were with them for they cryed to God in the battell and hee heard him because they trusted in him If then God do in mercy heare the prayers of those that call vpon his most holy name going vnto the warre and preparing themselues vnto the battaile wee cannot doubt of the lawfulnesse of the worke it selfe seeing almighty God vseth not to heare those that goe about euill but sendeth his curse vppon them Fourthly the word of God setteth downe Reason 4 the duties of those that manage the matters of the field as of the King of the Captaine of the common souldier which it would neuer do if the callings were vnlawfull For as wee conclude marriage to be lawfull and an honorable ordinance of God because the Scripture setteth forth the duties of maried persons aswell of the husband toward the wife as the wife toward her husband so in as much as we finde the duties of such as go to war aswel of those that are commanders as of those that are vnder commandement described plentifully and fully in the booke of God wee cannot call the lawfulnes of their office in question Hence it is that the Lord teacheth Ioshua the duties of his calling Iosh 1 6 that he should be strong and of a good corage that he shold meditate in the booke of the Law and assure himselfe that he would be with him and not leaue him nor forsake him so that there shold not a man be able to withstand him all the daies of his life So when the soldiers came to Iohn Baptist to bee instructed how to leade their liues and to bee directed how to escape the wrath of God to come Luke 3.14 he said vnto them Do violence to no man neither accuse any falsely and be content with your wages The particular handling and setting downe of these duties inforceth the acknowledgement of the lawfulnes of the calling Reason 5 Lastly we shall see the lawfulnes of warres if wee consider the lawfull causes of a lawfull warre The first is the defence of true religion against the oppugners thereof as appeareth by the words of Ahijah to Ieroboam and all Israel 2 Chron. 13 6. The second is that such as are oppressed for religion may bee freed and deliuered as we see in the histories of the Iudges who raised wars to deliuer the opprested and distressed people out of the bloody hands of the cruell oppressors The third is for the necessary defence of the Commonwealth by repulsing iniuries offred Iudg. 11 13 ● Sam. 10 4. ● Chron. 14 9 1 Sam. 30 18. Genes 14.16 1 Chron. 18.1 by reuenging indignities and assaults and by recouering things lost as their wiues their sonnes their daughters their goods their possessions their cities their substance dominions The ouerthrow of the Commonwealth bringeth the ruine of the Churches peace For as the flourishing estate of the Commonwealth maintaineth and furthereth the Churches peace Ieremy 29 7. so when the Common-wealth is spoiled the libertie and freedome of the Church is diminished as appeareth in sundry places of the Lamentations ●amen 1 4 5. Vse 1 Let vs now make vse of this doctrine and apply it to our instruction First it is required of euery one to haue courage Wee must not grow feeble and faint-hearted we should not feare nor be discouraged but be bold as in the worke of the Lord assuring our selues that the Lord is our strength who teacheth our hands to fight and our fingers to battell Psalme 144 1. When Hezekiah saw that Zaneherib was come and that his purpose was to fight against Ierusalem he said to his Captaines souldiers Be strong and couragious feare not neither be afraid for the king of Ashur neither for all the multitude that is with him for there is moe with vs then is with him with him is an arme of flesh but with vs is the Lord our God for to helpe vs and to fight our battels 2 Chron. 32 7. This appeareth in the exhortation of Nehemiah when Sanballat and Tobiah conspired to come to fight against Ierusalem to hinder the building of the wall he said Be not afraid of them remember the great Lord and fearfull and fight for your brethren your sonnes and your daughters your wiues and your houses Neh. 4.14 The heathen Captaines that carried their men to battel were alwayes wont as we see in prophane histories to put courage into them not to feare to looke the enemy in the face but their onely or cheefest reason to mooue them was earthly glory that either they should liue in wealth or dye with honor It is not so with the people of God they haue greater Reasons to worke in them the gift of valour and hope of victory True religion therfore doth not weaken the hearts of men and make them Cowards It is no enemy to true fortitude and manhood The Reasons why true Religion giueth courage in battel For first it teacheth and informeth the conscience that the cause and quarrell in which the warriour fighteth is good iust and warrantable by the word of GOD which maketh him stand vpon a sure ground without which knowledge in the heart how vgly how foule how sauage how cruell a thing is the effusion and shedding of blood What an horrible and grisly a spectacle is it to see Villages and Townes burned Cities and Castles ruinated Churches and religious places ouerturned bodies dismembred with Ordnance the ayre infected with stench the ground embrued with blood the country wasted grasse and corne troden downe and spoyled and all places with feare and terror filled Is it not to be esteemed rather a practise of all inhumanity then an exercise of manhood Secondly as true religion establisheth the conscience touching the lawfulnes
the reason is rendred for what cause the Midianities were to be destroied to wit because they had a chiefe hand and were principall doers in the seducing of the people of God and drawing them into sin The Moabites and Ammonites were actors in this tragedy but the chiefe part was assigned to the Midianites The Moabites and Ammonites came of Lot by committing incest with his daughters Gen. 19 37 38. The Midianites came of Midian the fourth sonne of Keturah which she bare to Abraham Gen. 25 2. They ought being so neerely ioyned to the people of God to haue performed all duties of humanity and kindnesse vnto them whereas they sought their ouerthrow and wrought their destruction We heard before how the people of God were beguiled and punished heere wee may behold those threatened and afterward destroyed that did trouble them with theyr wyles as concerning Peor Before wee saw the chasticement of them that were seduced and ledde into sinne now they are threatned that were seducers Before we saw the iudgment that fell vpon them that followed now we may see the iudgements that ouertooke the Captains and Ringleaders From hence we learne Doctrine The seducers the seduced shall be punished together that the seducer and the seduced the Ringleader and they that are misled the deceyuer and the deceyued shall perish and be punished together The Lord will punish not onely false Teachers and such as leade the way vnto wickednesse but theyr schollers and disciples such as are brought to lewdnesse and euill by them This Moses declareth very euidently Deut. 13 15. If a false Prophet arise and draw an whole City to Idolatry Gods iudgements shall be not onely against that false Prophet but against the City so that not an Oxe or a Sheep should be spared they should perish and be destroyed together When Gamaliel gaue counsell to take heede to themselues what they intended to do touching the Apostles he bringeth in the examples of Theudas and Iudas Acts 5 36 37 which drew away much people after them but they perished all that obeyed them The Prophet Ezekiel denounceth That if the watchman seeing the sword comming did not giue the people warning nor admonish them of their wicked waies the wicked should die in their sinnes but their blood should be required at the watchmans hands We see this confirmed vnto vs euen from the beginning when the diuell abusing the tongue and body of the serpent had drawne our first parents into sinne the diuell was the principall author of this apostacy and falling from God the serpent was the instrument the woman did hearken to the diuell and was before her husband in the transgression Adam followed the counsell of his wife and yeelded to sinne against God through her perswasion The diuell was a seducer Adam was seduced Enah was both a seducer and seduced Gen. 3 1 2 3 for she was seduced by the diuell and a seducer of her husband deceiuing and being deceiued so that when God called them to an acount and brought them before the barre of his iudgement seate he punished not onely the diuel the serpent that were the authors but also Adam and his wife that were the followers Heereunto commeth the saying of our Sauiour Mat. 15 14. Let them alone they be the blinde leaders of the blinde and if the blinde leade the blinde both shall fall into the ditch not onely the leader but he likewise that is blindly led The Lord Iesus reproueth the Church of Thyatira that they suffered a wretched woman which called her selfe a Prophetesse and threatneth to punish not onely her Reuel 2 12 but those that were her disciples with great afflictions And afterward in the same booke they that receiued the marke of the beast are put out of the booke of life as well as the beast This truth will be more manifest vnto vs if Reason 1 we marke the reasons ●or first such as are misled and moued to heresie and wickednes in life o● doctrine in faith or manners in opinion or practise are culpable of the same sins and abhominations and therfore right●ously to be pu●ished and condemned with such as are the leaders and perswaders vnto the same The Lord himselfe rendreth the reason why those that were seduced should bee destroyed because they had forsaken his waies and commandements Deut. 1 ●● They then that are seduced that are t●●●ed from the Lord that are thrust out of the right way wherein they should walke and commit abhominations against him as well as the seducers are culpable of the same sinnes together and therefore shall partake of the same punishment Reason 2 Secondly what is the reason that men are seduced Is it not theyr owne sinne and ignorance They are wilfully blinde they are not careful to learne and stand in the truth as they ought The Prophet Hosea speaking of false Prophets and of the people misled by them saith That they shall all full the people by day the Prophet by night with them Hosea 4.5 This is it which the Apostle vrgeth 2 Thess 2 10 11. Because they receiued not the loue of the truth that they might be saued therefore God shall send them strong delusions that they should beleeue lies that all they might be damned which beleeued not the truth but had pleasure in vnrighteousnesse Vse 1 Now let vs come to the vses of this Doctrine First from hence we are to conclude that pretences or excuses shall not beare out the followers and fellowes of wicked seducers and lewd leaders from God his truth but they shall beare theyr sinnes and punishments themselues We see how ready many are to answer for themselues A lasse we are poore simple men we haue no learning wee know not the letters wee are not able to try whether the Doctrine bee good or bad true or false right or wrong we hope God will hold vs excused and not lay it to our charge These couerings to hide our shame as so many figge-leaues shall be pulled from vs and fall to the earth as weake and vnable to vphold themselues What did the vaine coloured shewes auaile Adam and Eue feeding themselues with vaine hopes Gen. 3 12 13 and excusing themselues with fayre pretences Adam saide The woman whom thou gauest to be with me deceiued mee and I did ea●e The woman saide The Serpent beguiled me and I did eate The Serpent might haue said the diuell entred into me preuailed ouer mee and abused me to be his instrument Heere are many delayes and deuices the man excuseth himselfe by the woman the woman by the serpent the serpent by the diuell but God cannot be mocked he will not be deluded and therefore none of them escaped all of them ●re punished as they were willingly and wittingly deceiued For the diuell had his iudgement the serpent had his iudgement the man and the woman had also their iudgment Let this be assu●ed to the consciences or all of vs
that stand in neede There is none of vs but would be glad of releefe if we were in misery necessity and therefore we should shew pity toward others When the Lord would mooue the Israelites to compassion he putteth them in minde that they had bene strangers bond slaues in the land of Egypt Such as haue felt the want of worldly things would be gladde that euery one should bee willing to stretch out his hand to helpe them and therefore we should do the like Yea though we neuer felt any want let vs remember that want may befall vs hereafter For what are wee but fraile creatures and what are earthly things but mutable flitting No man may exempt him selfe from the stroke of God we may fal from plenty to pouerty yea from superfluity to necessity and be driuen to beg our bread as infinite examples testifie Let vs therfore consider that we are mortal men and that nothing hath befalne to others that may not happen to our selues that thereby we may bee mooued not to turne away our eyes from our owne flesh Esay 58 7. Vse 4 Lastly we must obserue another point in this feast that it was instituted in the remembrance of the deliuerance of the Law which was giuen at the same time For it is said that the people came to Sinai the third month after their departure out of Egypt the same day that they departed from Rephidim Exod. 19 1 2 now that was the first day of the moneth and the fourteenth day was the day of the Passeouer And as the months were then obserued which went by the course of the Moone there was one whole moneth added so that in effect there were fifty dayes from the Passeouer to Gods setting foorth of his Law vpon Mount Sinai so as the feast of Pentecost or Whitsontide was referred to that time Of this we finde mention in the new Testament Acts 2 1. 20.16 at this time the holy Ghost came downe in clouen tongues and sate vpon the disciples Actes 2 3. Wee know the law of it selfe could do men no good through their infirmity It is a dead letter and killeth 2 Cor. 3 6 7. It is a glasse to shew that we are all sinners transgressors of it Rom. 7 10 and therefore serueth to condemne accurse vs Gal. 3 13. Rom. 8 15. Howbeit at the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ and after his ascension God brought in another manner of Whitsontide then had beene obserued in time of the shadowes and ceremonies when he vouchsafed to poure down as a showre of raine the plentifull graces of his Spirit vpon his Church so that the things that were figured vnder the Law were fulfilled in Christ our Sauiour Wherefore besides the admonition that the Iewes had to wit to do homage to God for their haruest and to fill their mouths with his praise for the fruits of the earth and the bodily sustenance which they receiued likewise to impart of part of these blessings to their poor brethren that there might be a common reioycing and gladnesse among them so God be glorified with one accord they had also a resemblance of the things that were fulfilled at the comming of Christ And albeit it bee not euill or vnlawfull to haue one certain day wherein the history of the comming down of the holy Ghost should be declared and published yet the figure is ceased and accomplished We must not runne trotting or trauelling to Ierusalem to worship there but lift vp pure hands euery where vnto him that hath powred out the infinite riches of his holy Spirit 2 Tim. 2 8. and sent vs the liuing waters Ezek. 47 9 that wee should haue ioy and gladnesse therein Rom. 14. Let vs therefore reioyce seeing God hath shewed himselfe so bountifull to vs to reioice euen according to the ioy in haruest Esay 9 3. For as the Iewes reioyced in the haruest of corruptible fruits that nourished the body so we hauing receiued the incorruptible graces of the holy Ghost shed abroad in our hearts should be ioyfull and glad by withdravving our selues from the vanities of this world and by holding our selues contented with the fauour of God Phil. 4 7 and vvhen this gladnesse is vvrought in vs wee must labour to make others partakers of the same For if the Iewes were commanded to call the poore the Widdowes and the fatherlesse to make merry with thē in the vse of those outward blessings that God had giuen them much more ought we to labour to make others partakers of the spirituall graces which we haue receyued that belong to the building of the church Rom. chap. 12 6. 1 Cor. chapt 12 verse 7. Eph. 2 14. Zach. 2 4 as the woman of Samaria being taught by Christ called out the rest of the City to heare the gracious words that came out of his mouth which shee had heard Iohn 4 so that we ought to say with the Leapers We do not well this is a day of good tidings and we hold our peace and as they saide Come that we may go and tell the Kings houshold 2 Kin. 7 9 so should we say Come let vs goe and tell our brethren what God hath done for our soules CHAP. XXIX 1 ANd in the seuenth moneth on the first day of the moneth ye shall haue an holy conuocation ye shall do no seruile worke it is a day of blowing the Trumpets vnto you 2 And ye shall offer a burnt offering for a sweete sauour vnto the Lord one young Bullocke and one Ramme c. 3 And their meate Offering shal be of flowre mingled with oyle three tenth deales for a bullocke c. 4 And one tenth deale for one Lambe throughout the seuen Lambes 5 And one kid of the goats for a sinne offering c. 6 Besides the burnt offering of the moneth and his meate Offering and the daily burnt offering and his meate offering and their drinke offerings according vnto their manner for a sweet sauour c. BEfore we saw how Moses beganne to handle the daily sacrifice The contents of this chapt and the monethly and yearely feasts and solemnities of the Iewes this Chapter is of like argument with the former describing three other solemn feasts or rather three yearly sacrifices one to be offered at the feast of Trumpets another at the feast of humiliation the third at the feast of Tabernacles all these fell out in one and the same month called of the Hebrewes Thisri which answereth in part to our September Touching the first it was to be celebrated on the first day of that moneth which was holden sacred in two respects both in regard of the feast of the New Moone and then for the feast of Trumpets so that three ordinary sacrifices were to bee offered in it the daily sacrifice the monthly then that which is proper to this feast to wit a young Bullocke a Ram and seuen Lambes of the first yeere for a burnt
disciples that he must go to Ierusalem and suffer many things of the Elders and chiefe Priests and Scribes be killed and bee raised againe the third day he tooke him aside and began to rebuke him saying Be it farre from thee Lord this shall not be vnto thee the Lord Iesus turned about and said vnto him Get thee behinde mee Satan thou art an offence vnto me for shou sauourest not the things that be of God but those that be of men Mat. 16 23 where by we are taught that such as are an offence to others are no better then the instruments of Satan therefore iustly beare his name Vse 1 The vses follow First this setteth downe the vnlawfull condition of such as hinder others in the profession and labour to make them fall from God Thus did the diuels as we heard before they threw downe our first parents from the hight of their happinesse therefore are reserued in chaines vnto iudgement 2 Pet. 2 4. In the Law hee is accursed that layeth a stumbling block before the blind to cause him to wander out of the way and all the people shall say Amen Deut. 27 18 hee therefore that seeketh to subuert and supplant the faith of men and to destroy the soule must needes be vnder a farre greater curse of God and man The soules of such as perish through their procuring shall cry out against them and bring downe an heauy iudgment vpon them Hence it is that Christ our Sauiour saith Who so shall offend one of these little ones which beleeue in me it were better for him that a milstone were hanged about his necke and that hee were drowned in the depth of the sea woe vnto the world because of offences it must needes be that offences come but woe to that man by whom offences come Math. 18 6 7 we see therefore the wretched estate and condition of all those that giue offence to others They are guilty of horrible sins against God and against their brethren O that they had eyes to see them and hearts to bewaile them Euery man is prone through the corruption of his nature to fall from God but much more when occasions are laid before them for two are stronger then one and if we haue alwayes one foot ready to slip we are in more danger of falling when wee are pushed forward Let all such consider as haue caused others to fall that the time will come when it will be required at their hands These do hunt for the precious life of a man they are soule-hunters and soule-killers and destroyers and murther those for whom Christ died These are the chiefe causes of the coldnes and backwardnesse of Religion and that so few professe it in sincerity Our Sauiour pronounceth an heauy woe against them that neither entred into the kingdome themselues neither suffred others to enter but hindred them Luke 11 52. This woe lieth vpon the shoulders of all those that stop the way of others that they cannot enter into it Vse 2 Secondly thinke it not strange when wee haue this measure offered vnto vs and when men whisper vs in the eare to take heed we be not too forward or precise and that thereby we shall lay our selues open to the reproches of the world if sinners thus entice vs hearken not vnto them It hath beene an old practice to discourage and discountenance others from obeying God It is bitter to heare and beare the railings and reuilings of carnall men and many start aside from the truth by such taunts And if these reproches proceeded onely from open enemies they might be borne more easily but it pleaseth God many times to try the faith and to proue the patience of his faithfull seruants farther and they receiue much discouragemēt from their acquaintance from their friends with whom they tooke sweete counsell together and walked with them into the house of God Iob receiued much disgrace by his owne wife that lay in his bosome as also by his three friends that were as his owne soule and came to visite and to comfort him but miserable comforters were they all as himself complaineth chapt 16 2 and chapt 19 2 3 How long will ye vexe my soule and breake mee in pieces with words these ten times haue yee reproched me c. Was not this thinke you a great tentation and assault to the faith of this righteous man to bee thus taunted and tormented by his deare friends and by his dearest wife was hee not flesh and blood as well as others to haue an inward feeling of these sorrows to drinke vp the very lees of this bitter cup was he as brasse and iron or had he a body of steele that these afflictions could not pierce him or enter into him No doubtlesse for then his patience could not bee commended vnto vs and set before vs for an example Iam. 5 11. If then it go so with vs we haue the Prophets and holy men of God for an example of suffering affliction that haue gone before vs. The Church complaineth in Salomons Song that the watchmen that went about the city found her they smote her the keepers of the walles tooke away her vaile from her Cant. 5.7 They that should bee her guard turned to bee her griefe and they that watched for her wounded her The people that professe the truth in sincerity looke to haue all encouragement from their Ministers in weldoing yet oftentimes it falleth out as with the Church before that such worke them al the disgrace they can and seeke to put them to shame that should bee their glory Phil. 4 1 and vexe them with the crosse that ought o tbe their crowne and discomfort them that indeed might be their ioy and their comfort Paul complaineth oftentimes of the Iewes and of false brethren by whom he receiued greater hurt then euer hee did at the hands of the Gentiles Tit. 1 10 11. 2 Cor. 11 26. Sometimes children haue hard measure offered vnto them by their fathers and mothers whose reioycing it should be to see their children prosper in good things yet oftentimes it falleth out they are scoffed at by them and this falleth out not onely in the bloody dayes of persecution when parents haue betrayed their owne children the fruit of their bodies into the hands of cruell persecutors but likewise in the times of peace and prosperity and the generall and publike profession of the Gospel when we seem all to embrace one faith and one Religion yet if their sonnes and daughters be zealous in the truth they mock taunt them for their precisenes and grieue the bowels of those that are and should be theyr owne bowels not onely by nature but in loue and affection And therefore Christ teacheth such children Math. 10 34 35 36. I came not to send peace vpon earth but a sword and to set a man at variance against his father and the daughter c. And a mans foes shall be they
blood Do not our Gentry for the most part think it their glory to haue their hands embrewed in the blood of innocents What conscience is made of fighting quarrelling for point of pretended honour but in truth for assured dishonour and disgrace vnto them to their names and to their posterity for let thē set what varnish soeuer they please vpon their combates they shall carry the marke of an horrible sinne to their graue God grant it bee not to hell and the place of perpetuall torment and if euer GOD open their eyes they will weepe day and night for it and bee humbled for it all the dayes of their liues Secondly Vse 2 it is the duty of Magistrates especially and of all men generally in their places to make diligent search enquiry when blood is shed by whom the blood hath beene shedde and if the murtherer bee not found they shold craue pardon at the hands of God And touching the Magistrates and others I would commend to them the consideration of two things first that they be carefull that no man dye innocently that they put no man to death without cause Ier. 25 14. of which we shall speake afterward in the end of this chapter Secondly when murther is committed all men must do their endeuour to the vtmost of their power and meanes to detect the authors of that bloody acte Hence it is that God requireth that when a body is found slaine vpon the ground in the Land which he had giuen the Israelites to possesse and it is not knowne who killed him then the Elders and Iudges shall come forth to the dead body and wash their hands ouer a Bullocke whose head was striken off and protest and say Our hands haue not shed this blood neither haue our eyes seene it O Lord bee mercifull to thy people Israel whom thou hast purchased and lay not the guiltlesse blood vpon them and the man-slaughter shall be forgiuen them Deut. 21 7 8 9. Where we see that the killing of one man is a defiling of the whole country and what care the Lord hath of the life of euery man For murther is so hated of God that albeit the dooer thereof be vnknowne yet hee would haue a solemne cleansing and cleering thereof to be made And see what God requireth at the hands of the Magistrates and ministers of iustice It is not enough for them to protest that they haue not committed or supported or fauoured any euill when causes and complaints haue beene brought before them but they must search carefully and enquire diligently of disorders albeit no man sollicite or seeke vnto them yet themselues must be watchfull in their places Howbeit this duty is oftentimes ill obserued and slenderly practised For how many are there that thinke themselues fully discharged and flatter themselues with a fond imagination that they are greatly to be commended when they patiently giue men the hearing and make countenance to helpe them But God is not contented with this he will take an account of them of a farther duty and will not take it for a sufficient discharge to bee able to say though it be truly There was no information giuen no man made any complaint If then Magistrates that haue the sword of iustice put into their hands to cut off euill doers from the City of God shall suffer any wickednesse to lurke in any Citty or corner they themselues are guilty thereof and it is as much in Gods sight as if they had giuen theyr consent to the practising of it These are they that must after a sort answer for the whole body of the people if euill doers be suffered to nustle vnder them through their negligence Vse 3 Lastly it is the duty of euery one to beware of all occasions and allurements that may draw vs to this bloody sinne For as there is a murther of the hand so there is a murther of the tongue which is therefore in holy Scripture resembled vnto a Razor to a sword to coales to arrowes to poyson to fire all which kill and are the instruments of death and likewise there is a murther of the heart of which the Apostle Iohn sayeth Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer and yee know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him Iohn 3 15. So then we are guilty of this sinne euen by anger and malice in the heart onely and shall haue our portion in the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone If any man haue not a feeling of this in his heart hee is more then dead and if he labour not to repent of it it argueth him to be past all grace and so out of the number of those which shall see God to their comfort For albeit such haue the shape and forme of men yet they haue the hearts of the very beasts If they had the right vse of reason in them and the gouernment of theyr corrupt appetites and affections it could not be but that they would haue a care of the life of their brethren and which is more of theyr owne liues also So then euery man should examine himself and try his owne heart how farre he hath bin guilty of this sinne of murther in euery kinde and branch thereof that so wee may humble our selues Albeit it bee but the anger of the heart yet it is murther in the sight of God is therefore as well to be repented of as the outward acte of murther it selfe To this wee may ioyne the sinne of enuy when men so repine at the good of others that they cannot bee quiet or contented because they want that which others haue and haue not so great a portion as they for this also we should humble our selues and labour continually against it To conclude we see also what crueltie and hard-dealing is oftentimes vsed against poore labouring men that get their liuing by the sweate of their browes and yet many thinke they may vse them as they list eyther with turning of them off with an halfe-peny for a peny or else in exchanging other things for their worke which haply are not worth halfe the money or in keeping backe their wages for weekes moneths or yeares which Saint Iames speaketh of Chapter 5 verse 4. Behold the hyre of the Labourers cryeth and the cryes of them are entred into the eares of the Lord of Sabbath Let vs labour by all meanes to keepe our selues free from bloud and not onely from the outward acte it selfe but from the inward thoughts of the heart as enuy hatred and malice as also from the slaughter of the tongue by cruell and cursed speeches Such a murtherer was Shemei when hee railed vpon Dauid True it is hee charged him to be a murtherer but the murther might iustly and fully bee discharged vpon himselfe for he was the man of blood and a sonne of Belial 2 Sam. 16 7 8. Indeed if a man haue an iniury done vnto him it is lawfull for him
it self who notwithstanding are saued in the day of the Lord. This appeareth in Lots wife Gen. 19 she looked backe contrary to the commandement of the Angel and was turned into a pillar of salt Her offence might seeme little at the first and the punishment to be ouergreat howbeit we must not measure sinne by the outward acte but by the commandement and will of God which is the onely rule of righteousnes This her disobedience seemeth to proceed from infidelity vnthankfulnesse curiosity and the immoderate loue of the world of the substance which they had left behind and therefore she is punished and made as a mirror and monument of Gods iustice which Iosephus testifieth to continue to his time Ioseph antiq Iud. lib. 1. ca. 1● yet we doubt not but her soule was saued and she receyued to mercy The like we might say of Iobs childred they were all sodainly slaine by the fall of the house wherin they were assembled yet they gaue good testimony of their godlynesse in their life for as no euil is recorded of them in the Scripture so it appeareth they were wel taught and trained vp in the feare of God by their carefull father euen in the daies of theyr youth God heard their father when he praied for them when bee sent for them they came dutifully and obediently vnto him if they had despised that God whom their father worshipped he would not haue said It may be my sonnes haue blasphemed God and it had beene a vaine thing for him to speake to them of sanctification Moreouer if their bankettings feastings had bene like our Wakes and reuels which they commonly call Yeauals or drunken feasts of such as call themselues good fellowes he ought to haue forbidden their meetings and not to haue prayed to God to pardon their sins which they might commit in their meetings and thereby suffer them to liue in the continual practise of sin forasmuch as that were to mocke and dally with God not desiring pardon for sinne past but to craue free liberty to sin for the time to come And if the father had doubted of their saluatiō no doubt hee would haue bewailed their destruction Lastly it is to bee noted that they feasted in their owne houses they did not run to Ordinaries or haunt Ale-houses or frequent Tauernes neither did they feast euery day like the rich glutton whose daily dinners were daily feasts for hee did nothing else but feast euery day neither did they keepe companie with ruffians swearers drunkards swaggerers and such like but they inuited one another to witnesse their good will and to continue mutuall loue among themselues The like wee might say of Vzzah that stayed vp the Arke and was stricken with sodaine death because he laid his hand vpon the Arke 2 Sam. 6 7. So was it with Vriah the faithfull seruant of Dauid yet he was slain by the sword of the Ammonites 2 Sam. 11 17. Iosiah that good king serued the Lord from his youth yet dyed hee a violent death and was slaine by Pharao Nechoh at Megiddo and al the people of the land mourned for him 2 Kings 23 29. Reason 1 Thus doth God deale with his owne children oftentimes they are chastised in this world lest they should be condemned with the wicked in the world to come 1 Cor. 11 32. Secondly those whom God loueth hee loueth vnto the end Ioh. 13 inasmuch as all his giftes are without repentance Rom. 11. therefore temporall chastisements cannot alter his loue or make frustrate the gifts that once he hath bestowed vpon his children Thirdly euen his owne people sinne against him for in manie things we sinne all Iames 3 ver 1. and therfore when they sinne against him he chastiseth thē with death as with a rod howbeit his mercie he neuer taketh from them Thus did Iosiah offend he would not heare the word of the Lord which was brought vnto him therefore he was smitten by the hand of God Vse 1 This teacheth that it is a false rule and a deceitfull measure to iudge of the saluation of men by temporall things whereas commonly all things fall out alike to the godly vngodly Eccl. 9 12. Many there are that wil take vpon them to iudge and censure men to bee out of the fauour of God because sometimes they dye sodainly and sometimes strangely and contrarywise if they dye in their beddes quietly and calmely they conclude that they must necessarily bee the children of God for that cause onely But if we haue no better testimony to discerne a childe of God then this note we may soone be deceiued for this may often happen more by the nature of the disease then through any grace in the soul of the diseased The constant course of a mans life is the best witnesse what is in man A man may dye rauing and haply blaspheming and yet be the seruant of God by the violence and rage of some sicknesse disturbing the head and the braine For as Paul sayeth It was not hee but sinne that dwelled in him Rom. 7 15 so I may say it is not they that raue and blaspheme it is the force of their sicknesse to which they do not consent and againe a man may go away like a Lambe and yet dye out of Gods fauour and go to hell as Iob chap. 21. verses 13 14. Vse 2 Secondly this reprooueth the Popish sort that commonly condemne Zuinglius a sound defender of the true and Apostolike faith Zuinglius defended because he died in the field as a good Patriot against the enemies of his country Hee did no more then euery true Minister and faythfull man ought to be ready to do Hee was slaine with the sword of wickedmen but that death was an honourable death Hee exhorted the people to constancy in the faith as the Priest is commanded in the Law to do Deut. 20 23 It is no reproach to dye in a good cause and a iust quarrell If he had dyed as Sanders an arch enemy to the Queene and State dyed in Ireland in the rebellion which himselfe had procured who died distracted and in a frenzy to behold the hand of God gone out against him and all his plots and proiects crossed O what outcries would these men then haue made he died as a Traitor against his lawfull Prince in the Popes quarrel and was in the field against his owne Soueraigne whereas Zuinglius dyed with his owne Cittizens in a good cause and was lamented of all good men Lastly we must take heed we doe not iudge Vse 3 rashly and rigorously of the Churches sorrowes and afflictions albeit they seem oftentimes both strong and strange when God feedeth them with the bread of teares giueth them teares to drinke in great measure Psal 80 5. The dead bodies of his seruants haue the enemies giuen to be meate to the fowls of the heauen and the flesh of his Saints to the beasts of the earth their
blood haue they shed like water and there was none to bury them Psal 79 2 3 4 5. Neuerthelesse they shal not be able to separate them from God Rom. 8 35. If we be the children of God nothing shall bee able to hurt vs though death come vpon vs sodainly as it hath done vpon many it shall bring vs to God not diuide vs from his presence Wee do for the most part take vpon vs through a generall corruption to iudge those the most greeuous sinners that suffer the greatest sorrows as it appeareth by Iobs friends and Christs followers Luke 13. howbeit this is an opinion that must be reiected as full of error and empty of charity 15 And Moses spake vnto the Lord saying 16 Let the Lord the God of the spirites of all flesh set a man ouer the congregation 17 Which may goe out before them and which may go in before them and which may leade them out and which may bring them in that the Congregation of the Lord be not as sheepe which haue no sheepheard 18 And the Lord said to Ioshua c. 19 And set him before Eleazar c. Heere is offered vnto vs the second occasion of the election and inauguration of Ioshua to wit the prayer of Moses Wee must not thinke that hee vsed no more words then heere are expressed for this is onely the substance and cheefe effect of his prayer In it wee are to note first the preface or entrance into the same for no man ought rashly to enter vpon this holy worke but well aduised and throughly prepared Secondly the prayer it selfe The Preface containeth a description of God by his titles and effect giuing life and breath to all creatures for thorough him wee liue and mooue and haue our being Act 17.28 The prayer it selfe is that he would appoint a mā ouer the congregation to succeede him in the administration and gouernment of the Commonwealth considered farther by the ends that being endued with the Spirit of God he may be able to performe the duties of his calling and go before them by his example expressed by going in and out before them and by leading thē out and bringing them in as Salomon prayeth for wisedom and vnderstanding for the same purpose 2 Chron. 1 10. 1 Chro. 27 1. Secondly that the people may not be as sheepe without a sheepheard scattered vpon the mountains but may keepe together liue in order and society one with another to performe such mutuall duties as are required for this life the life to come Thus much of the occasions now we come to the calling of Ioshua and separating him to beare office among the people wherein wee must obserue the commandement of God the obedience of Moses The commādements of God are many Take him c lay thine hāds vpon him set him before Eleazar the Priest c. giue him charge c. and Eleazar must aske counsell of the Lord for him after the iudgement of Vrim and Thummim What the Vrim and Thummim were Exod. 28 30 What this Vrim and Thummim were is diuersly vnderstood it were endlesse and fruitlesse to rehearse the seuerall opinions of all neither is it easie to determine Some of the Hebrew Doctors thinke they were not the work of any Artificer but that they were a mystery deliuered to Moses from the mouth of God or they were the worke of God himselfe as the two Tables of the Law were and that when the Priest asked counsell of God by Vrim hee made answer by liuely voice 1 Sam. 30 8. The words are both plurall and the Septuagint doe translate them The manifestation and the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but properly they signifie the lights and the perfections and both of them were a figure of Christ who communicateth vnto vs from his father the true light and perfection being made our wisedome and righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1.30 for in the heart of him beeing our great high Priest the true Aaron were the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure Ioh 3 34. Col. 2.3 Againe others thinke that as those words holinesse to the Lord were grauen on a plate and put on Aarons forhead so these words Vrim and Thummim were likewise grauen on a golden plate and put in the brest lap which was double for something to bee put therein Lastly others thinke they were no other then the precious stones spoken of Exod. 28 and that they put the Priest in mind of his office that hee must instruct the people both by the light of his doctrine and by the integrity of his life But whatsoeuer they were it is most certaine that the vse of them was to enquire of GOD and likewise to receiue an answer of his will as appeareth in this place and in sundry others Iudg. 1 1 20 18 28. 1 Sam. 23 9. 10 11 12. These were lost at the captiuity of Babylon and wanted at the peoples returne Ezr. 2 63. Neh. 6 65 neither do wee reade that euer God gaue answer by them any more thus much of these The obedience of Moses is set downe generally particularly he did as the Lord commanded hee tooke Ioshua and set him before Eleazar and put his hands vpon him gaue him a straight charge to execute his office faithfully in the gouernment of all the people committed vnto him Let the Lord the God of the spirits of al flesh This is the preface or preparatiue to the prayer The faithfull were alwayes wont to make some entrance or introduction into this holy exercise as it appeareth in the forme of prayer left to the church by Christ our Sauiour In these words Moses acknowledgeth the Lord to be the God of the spirits of all flesh as before chap. 16 22 whereby he meaneth Doctrine God is the creator of the soule that he is the Creator of our soules and hath giuen them vnto vs. The doctrine God is the Creator and maker of the soules of men and hath giuen vnto them not onely their bodyes but also their soules Gen. 2 7. Iob 27 3. Eccl. 12 7 c. And how can it be otherwise For first he it is that hath formed al things Reason 1 he is the creator of things visible and inuisible Col. 1 16 that are in heauen or in earth and without him was nothing made that was made Iohn 1 3. Secondly he is the father of our spirits so called of the Apostle Heb 12 9 if then he be the Father of them doubtles hee is the former of them It is confessed that God is the Creator of the soule neuerthelesse it will not follow from hence necessarily that it is created immediately or giuen immediatly by him as it is certaine it was at the first creation And albeit many places bee produced to proue an immediate creation yet the opinion is rather weakned by those testimonies from whence it is thought to be established as for example Eccl. 12 7 The