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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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in the house of God but good faithfull seruants b Hebru 3 5. such as Moses was in all his house shal continue in the house Lastly it is no sound consequent to conclude that the seruant is not to be heard because the Master is rather to be heard neither is this to equall or prefer the seruant before the Master to heare the seruant beare witnesse of his Master For we are taught that he heareth the Lord that heareth the seruant as the Ambassador of his lord The Title of this Booke Hitherto of the Authour and writer of this booke now let vs come to consider the second point which is the Title or inscription being called the book of Numbers The Hebrues haue a threefold maner which they vse in the entituling of bookes For their custom is to call name the bookes either of the first words in the booke as the fiue books of Moses and the Lamentations or of the authors and persons spoken of in them as the Prophets as Iob Samuel Ruth Ezra Ester Neh●mi●h or els of the matter and principall part handled as the Kings the Chroni●l●s and such like The Iewes call this booke by two names the first by the first word where-with it beginneth Vaiedabber that is and he spake The second Bemidbar that is in the wildern●sse either because this word is also vsed in the beginning of this book or else because herein are expounded and expressed such things as were done dispatched in the wildernesse the space of more then 35. yeares The Grecians and Latines whom wee in English follow doe call it The booke of Numbers by reason of the often numbering that is vsed in it aboue other bookes For as the c first booke of Moses is called Genesis The reasons of the names of the bookes of Moses because it containeth the creation of the world and the generation of the first Fathers and as the second is called Exodus that is a departure because the first part thereof is spent in shewing the going of Israel out of Aegypt wherein they were helde in bondage and as the next is named Leuiticus of the Tribe of Leui because it setteth foorth the Office and function of the Priests and Leuites together with the Sacrifices and Ceremonies belonging thereunto their Feasts and solemnities the purifications and differences betweene cleane and vncleane beasts so doth this booke beare the Title of Numbers because beside the Historie of the peregrinations and murmuringes of the people he numbreth them vp particularly vnder seuerall Regiments and rangeth them in order for their better proceeding and trauailing in their iourneyes in the Wildernesse The Reasons why this Booke hath this name aboue all other are these First Causes why this Booke is called Numbers beecause there is comprized heerein a double numbering of the people One in the Desart of Sinai which is described in this Chapter the other in the Plaine of Moab ouer against Iordan mentioned in the twenty sixth chapter of this Booke Secondly by reason of the numbering of the Leuites who were consecrated to the Office of the Priest-hoode and separated for the Ministery of the Tabernacle which is reckoned vp in the fourth chapter Thirdly the Booke may haue this Title in regard of numbering vppe particularly the gifts and Offerings which the Princes of the Tribes at the consecrating of the Tabernacle and the Altar offered of which we reade a large rehearsall in the 7. chapter Last of all for the enumeration and numbering vp of the 42. places of abode where the children of Israel pitched their Tents after they wer come out of Egypt described from iourney to iourny in the 33. chapter Thus we see the causes rendred wherefore this booke hath the inscription of Numbers giuen vnto it Let vs see what vses may be gathered from Vse 1 this Title which is made peculiar and proper to this booke First we learne that the holy Scriptures of God giuen by inspiration are distinctly to be retained in the Church without mixture and confusion For to what end and purpose are the titles giuen but for difference distinction sake to know the one from the other Thus is this booke by this Title discerned from euery other booke of the old new Testament The Church must haue a speciall care of this point seeing the Scriptures d Rom. 3 2 are committed as a Treasure to their trust therefore it is required of them that they be found faithfull and answere the credite that is reposed in them The Church of the Iewes was careful in this point did not content themselues to preserue the Scriptures whole entire but retained them seuerally and distinctly that one booke might be known from the other If a body had all his parts without addition a Hor de a●t poet of any strange member or detraction of any that is naturall yet if the partes were hudled and confounded together that the arme did grow out of the legge and the legges bee wrapped about the necke and no limbe remaine distinct from the other but all shuffled together it were a deformed mishapen body and no member could performe his office ●f all parts of the world were so confounded that the Elements were hudled in one rude lumpe or vndigested Chaos that fire were iumbled together with the earth and the aire with water what place were there for anie creature Or what profit could these elements yeeld In like manner if the whole volume of the Scriptures which is as a bodye consisting of many distinct members were put into one confused heape albeit no part were lost yet the comelinesse and profit and beauty of them were taken away For the body b 1 Cor. 12 4.9 20. is not one member but many for if they were al but one member where were the body but now there are many members yet but one bodye So the Scripture is not one booke or one part but it hath many bookes and sundry parts to make it a perfect and a complete body and all must remaine in their proper place that they may be knowne one from another This appeareth by the words of Christ conferring with the Disciples going to Emaus and expounding vnto them the doctrine of the Gospell more perfectly c Luke 24 44 when he saide vnto them These are the words which I spake vnto you while I was with you that all must bee fulfil●ed which are written of me in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes Whereby wee see he diuideth the Scriptures into three partes the Law the Prophets and the Psalmes so that they were distinguished one from another so that the old Testament is diuided into three parts This is farther confirmed vnto vs in the Sermon of Paul preached at Antioch●a where he saith d Acts 13 33. God hath fulfilled the promise made vnto the Fathers vnto vs their children in that he raised vp
the world This is it which the Prophet teacheth Psal 111. The works of his hands are established for euer and euer and are done in truth and equity If then all his works abide and continue from the glorious Creatures in the heauens to the silly worme creeping in the earth much more the holy Scripture must abide without decaying or diminishing as the durable Cedar without rotting and consuming which is not onely his handy-worke but a masterworke chiefe aboue all others as the Diamond among pearles of great price And if the least and lowest creature in the world hath beene in his kinde continued hitherto and shall be continued to the end by the mighty hand of God vpholding and supporting all things that he hath made much lesse shall the Scripture perish and fall away which bringeth greater glory to God and greater gaine to his people Thirdly the Scripture was written for these ends and purposes for instruction and admonition for teaching and confutation for comfort and consolation that so the man of God may be absolute 1 Tim. 3 16 17. Neither was God deceiued in his purpose and intent so that it must remaine continue being written for those endes and vses But what errour can be conuinced what comfort can be receiued what vice can bee corrected what truth can be published what grace can be commended to the Church out of those books which are supposed to be lost Let vs not therefore doubt of Gods prouidence and so shake the faith of the Church thereby Fourthly we see the old Testament hath reserued entirely the Genealogies of the fathers which are not absolutely necessary to faith and saluation as also the whole body of the ceremonies set downe in Leuiticus and other places of the Law which notwithstanding were shadowes of things to come why then should we not presume that the same his prouidence hath also watched ouer other books which more properly belong to our practise and times and so more fitly might informe vs against ignorance teach vs in our religion warne vs in dangers and comfort vs in afflictions And if we haue no word missing or sentence wanting in such bookes as are left to the Church that there should need a void roome or a desunt nonnulla or an Asteriscus and some little starre to giue warning of some defect as we see it is in many prophane writings Dionys Hal● car●as Plut● Tu●● Po●●●●●pian L●●● and other● and those of the best note how should we be induced to beleeue that whole volumes of the old and new Testament are vtterly lost neuer to be repaired Lastly let vs heare the testimony of the Scripture it selfe obserue what it can say and doth witnesse for it selfe Moses an old and ancient witnesse teacheth Deut. 29 29 that secret things belong to the Lord our God but the things reuealed belong vnto vs and to our children for euer that we may do all the words of this Law But how do they belong vnto vs that are not reserued for vs Or how shall our children be directed by them that cannot be found in their daies or in the daies of their fathers before them Or how shall either father or sonne doe that which they cannot know Heereunto Dauid accordeth Psal 119 152. I haue knowne long since by thy testimonies that thou hast established them for euer And our Sauiour giueth his holy consent vnto this heauenly truth saying Truely I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iote or one title of the Law shall not escape till all things be fulfilled Mat. 5 18 and 24 35. So then we must hold the durablenesse and continuance of the Scripture in the Church which is the pillar of truth that it cannot faile or fall away as is prooued at large in the answer to the Preface of the Rhemish Testament But before we proceed to the Doctrines of this diuision it shall not bee amisse to answer the obiections that are raised and mooued against this point touching the perpetuity of the whole Scripture and of euery part of it First wee finde often mention made of the bookes of the Chronicles of the Kings of Iudah and Israel ●ect 1. ●ngs 14 19 ●5 7 11 Iosh 10 3 ●am 1 18. of the booke of the iust such like which are lost If then these be lost and by no meanes to be found how shall we truly say that the whole Scripture doeth continue I answer ●sw these bookes were neuer Canonicall Scriptures but ciuill stories and chronicles of the Commonwealth matters not of the Church whereunto the Reader is directed if he be desirous to reade and know the History more at large whereas the Prophets doe onely touch so much as serued for the edification of the Church and the building of it in faith toward God For as all ciuill Nations haue the Chronicles of their fore-fathers and auncestors actes Ester chap. 6 verse 1. Ezra 4 verses 15 19 so had the Iewes their ciuill Histories such were those wee now speake of which were good and profitable bookes of men but were neuer committed or commended to the care of the Church to be preserued and maintained ●ect 2. Againe we reade in sundry places of the bookes of Nathan and Gad the words of Samuel the works of Ahia of Shemaia of Isaiah and other Prophets which likewise seeme to be lost as well as the other wee named before I answer ●er they seeme so to such as do not duely consider of them which indeed are not lost but contained in the olde Testament in the bookes of Samuel and of the Kings which were not written by any one Prophet but by diuers Prophets at diuers times euen in the seuerall ages wherein they prophesied albeit their seuerall names bee not to euery part expressed as appeareth 2 Chron. chapter 26 verse 22 where the Spirit of God testifieth that Esaiah wrote the actes of Vzziah first and last meaning that he wrote them in the second booke of the Kings and in his Prophesies and not pointing out any book which now is lost both the former bookes remaining as a treasure to the Church As then we confesse these bookes mentioned in this obiection to bee of another nature then those expressed in the former so they haue beene preserued and euer shall bee preserued in the Church and be as it were laide vp in the Arke thereof Thirdly it may bee obiected that many Obiect 3 worthy bookes of Salomon are lost which hee wrote I answer Answ his workes are of two sorts first sundry bookes of Humanity and of Philosophy naturall and morall secondly bookes of Diuinity written as he was moued and inspired by the Spirit of God The first sort of humane and earthly things which the Church might best spare without perill or impeachment of faith haue long since failed as it is thought in the captiuity the rest which are parts of the Canonicall Scriptures do abide And marke
intermeddle onely with the Common-wealth hath not God made them ouerseers of both states as also committed the charge vnto them of both Tables Answer I answere the care of Religion belongeth to all Princes and therefore the godly kings of Iudah made it their first labour to establish Gods worshippe But touching the worship of God wee must obserue that Church lawes and constitutions are of three sorts Materiall Ministeriall or circumstantiall Lawes that concerne the matter substance and parts of Gods worship are already established by God in the word nothing is left to Princes or Pastours of the Church nothing ought to be inuented of man nothing may be hammered in the forge of our braines which are too shallow to meddle in such deepe and profound matters as Christ teacheth Matth. 15.9 Matthew chapter 15. verse 9. In vaine they doe worship mee teaching for doctrines the commandements of men These Lawes we are to leaue to God only which touch the substance of his worship Ministeriall Lawes are such Canons as command the practise and execution of the former Lawes wherein the Prince is as it were the Minister commanding vnder God It belongeth to him to see both Ministers and people to doe their dutie 2 Chronicles chapter 30. verses 12.16 and to prouide that all his subiects reforme themselues in those things that pertaine to the worship of God and to punish idolaters Exodus chapter 22. Exod. 22.20 Leuit. 24 1● Deut. 13.5 Numb 15.35 verse 20 blasphemers Leuiticus chapter 24. verse 16. false Prophets Deuteronomie 13.5 and prophaners of holy things Numbers chapter 15. verse 35. These belong vnto him these he is to looke vnto Lastly other Lawes are circumstantiall such as are constitutions made in things meerely indifferent which vary according to times occasions places and Churches These Lawes also he hath authority to make and meddle withall prouided that the rules of the word be not transgressed but carefully obserued So then albeit the Prince ought not himselfe to execute the things of God as to preach the word or to administer Sacraments or to practise the discipline of the Church yet he is bound to see them done and that all things be done in order comelinesse in the Church Againe it may be obiected Obiect that the Scripture doth often mention that sacrifices were offered otherwise then God appointed yet accepted They ought to be brought to the doore of the Tabernacle and not offered elsewhere I answere Answer the question is not so much of the fact as of the right not what was done but what ought to be done This is the cause that the Lord complaineth both against their persons and their doings and brandeth them both with a marke of dishonour in this manner Iehoshaphat did that which was right in the sight of the LORD 1 King 22 4● but the high places were not taken away he walked in all the wayes of Asa his father he turned not aside from it neuerthelesse the people offered and burnt incense yet in the high places The like is remembred of Iehoash hee did that which was right in the sight of the Lord all his dayes wherein Iehoiada the Priest instructed him But the high places were not taken away the people still sacrificed and burnt Incense in the high places 2 Kings 12.2 3. When Manasseh was brought againe to Ierusalem into his kingdome he sought the Lord his God took away the strange gods and repaired the Altar of the Lord ●●r 33 17 neuerthelesse the people did sacrifice still in the high places yet vnto the Lord their God onely God required to be worshipped not only as he appointed but where he appointed and therefore the contrary practise is noted to be a transgression a breach of the Law of God Thirdly it may be saide that the Prophets Obiection 4 of God who could not bee ignorant of their duties did not sacrifice as God commanded and yet are blamelesse They did not bring their sacrifice to the Tabernacle nor vnto the place that God had chosen but offered in other places as Samuel in Mispah 1 Sam. 7 9. and elsewhere chap. 16 2. ●●●wer I answer he did it as one of the Prophets who were extraordinary persons and not tied to the ordinary rules in all their actions So we see Elijah offered in Mount Carmel 1 Kin. 18. But wee are not to follow extraordinary matters without a speciall calling forasmuch as we liue by lawes not by examples So then it was lawfull in the Prophets in regard of their personal vocation which without it had beene vtterly vnlawfull Lastly it may be obiected that Dauid is Obiection 4 commended because he intended to build an house to the Name of God He had receiued no commandement from God to builde the Temple it was his good meaning and good intent yet he is expresly commended of God 2 Chron. 6 7.8 where Salomon in praising God saith It was in the heart of Dauid my father to build an house for the Name of the Lord God of Israel but the Lord saide to Dauid my father forasmuch as it was in thy heart to builde an house for my Name thou diddest well in that it was in thy heart If then Dauid hauing no word or direction from God did well how is all will-worship euill ●●swer I answer in this God respecteth not the deed it selfe but the intent of the dooer so that when it is said Thou hast done well it is as much as if the Lord had saide I know thou hadst a good meaning in it as it appeareth by the reasons vsed in the second booke of Samuel where Dauid saith to Nathan the Prophet Sam. 7 2. See now I dwell in an house of Cedar but the Arke of GOD dwelleth within Curtaines where he compareth himselfe with God and his owne house of Cedar with Gods Arke within Curtaines This reason carrieth with it a great shew of comlinesse seemelinesse For some might thinke with themselues was it meete that himselfe should dwell in his seeled house the Lords house lye waste Notwithstanding in matters of God wee are not to reason according to our owne opinion and outward appearing but according vnto the word of God ●●mment Pet. ●artyr in 2 ●an c. 7. And heerein was Dauid deceiued that he went beyond the Commandement of God To build a Temple to God is not in it selfe euill GOD had promised that the Tabernacle and the Arke should haue a resting place Deut. 12 5 6. 1 Kings 8 but to seeke to preuent God was to bee reprooued As to set a King ouer them was not in it selfe vnlawfull Deuter. 17 15. but when they attempted it before the time and waited not Gods Commandement to goe before them they are reproued and punished for it 1 Sam. 12 16. Dauid in this place had receiued no direction touching this matter eyther of the time or of the place there was no Commandement eyther who should
immediately going before where he willeth them to heale the sicke to clense the leapers to raise vp the dead and to cast out diuels If they be extended farther because he willed them to goe and preach ●ath 10 7. saying The Kingdome of God is at hand he forbiddeth them to set the Gospel to sale as that which standeth at offer and proffer so that the Minister must not be giuen to filthy lucre 1 Tim. 3 3. Tit. 1 7. So then they do giue freely who do not intend gaine as the reward of their labours nor set it before their eyes as the marke they aime at but desire nothing more then the glory of God and the saluation of the Church and referre thereunto all their studies and endeuourss They that onely or cheefely seeke their owne wealth are truly called hirelings whereas the seruants of God haue him before their eyes of whom they are sent that so they may feed the flocke with knowledge and doctrine ●biection Againe it may be saide that Paul witnesseth he tooke nothing of the Corinthians and that he laboured with his owne hands Acts 20 34. 1 Cor. 4 12. I answer ●nswer the Apostle in taking nothing of that Church considered what did belong to the edification of that Church neuerthelesse the brethren that came from Macedonia supplied his wants and helped him in his necessities But of this we spake more at large in the former doctrine Vse 3 Thirdly let no man presume to refuse and reiect the Ministery as thinking themselues or their children too high or this calling too low for them thinking themselues too honourable and this office too contemptible for their persons No man is too good to serue God at the Altar and to minister in his Sanctuary If any refuse the Ministery in regard of his birth and his wealth or worth or gifts he deceiueth himselfe and ouervalueth his owne condition for who is sufficient for these things Cor. 2 16. We are a thousand fold more vnworthy to be Ministers then the Ministery can be thought vnworthy of vs. Noah was the Prince of the world yet a Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Pet. 2 5. Melchizedech was both King of Salem and a Priest of the most high God Heb. 7 1. Gen. 14 18. Samuel was both a Iudge of the people and a Prophet of God 1 Sam 3 20. and 7 15. Dauid was both a King a Prophet And albeit certaine Kings haue beene Prophets yet it was no greater credite to the Ministery that Kings were Prophets then commendation to Kings themselues that they were Prophets as it was a greater glory to Kings that they haue beene Philosophers then credite to Philosophy that Kings haue studied professed and imbraced it The Son of God our Lord Iesus Christ before his incarnation was the Teacher of his people for by his Spirit he spake in the Patriarkes Prophets and was the Messenger of God and therefore called the Angell of the Couenant and after that he tooke our flesh and nature vpon him being the seed of Abraham he professed that he was sent to preach deliuerance to the captiues the acceptable yeare of the Lord Luke 4 18 19 43. He was equall in glory with the Father yet this was his calling and worke while he liued vpon the earth God the Father thought it a meet office to be committed to his onely begotten Sonne and should it seeme a reprochfull office to his seruants If he were annointed to be both our King Prophet and Priest let not vs despise prophesie Nay not onely the Sonne of God as he was man disdained not this function but God himselfe in Paradise was a Preacher of the Gospel Gen. 3 15. The seed of the woman shall bruise the serpents head Math 17 5. and the Spirit of God is as it were a fellow-worker with the labours of the Ministers Besides the Angels themselues most glorious creatures that alwayes behold the face of the Father that is in heauen haue not refused to be the publishers of this message Luke 2 9 10. Wherefore all such as GOD hath blessed with forward and toward children as a speciall mercy toward them and withall bestowed the goods of this world vpon them enabling them to maintain them in schooles of learning ought to further the building of Gods Church and to thinke it no disgrace or disparagement vnto them to apply their sonnes to be workmen in this spirituall building and so to dedicate them vnto God as godly Hannah gaue Samuel vnto the Lord that so long as he liued he might bee giuen vnto the Lord 1 Sam. 1 28. It is a thing greatly to be lamented that this high office of preaching the word is so contemned by all of high calling that the Nobility vtterly shunne it the greatest part of the Gentry of the Land generally refuse it eyther as base in it selfe or at least as base to them or in them Great mens children are set to study mans law but it beseemeth not their greatnesse to study Gods law To be sent on Embassage in the affaires of a Prince is a great honour but to be sent with Gods message in his mouth is esteemed a disgrace Ye fooles and blinde whether is greater God or man Whose message is most honourable Gods or else mans We see in the Popedome how men of countenance and estimation are not ashamed to giue their children to the Popes seruice and beare the mark of the beast and refuse not to haue thē neerely and ill-fauouredly shauen vntill they haue scarce one haire of an honest man left vnto them Cardinal Pool nay some of the blood royall haue taken vpon them the orders or rather the disorders of that Hierarchy as we haue examples in our owne Chronicles Princes themselues haue renounced their crowns and kingdoms and entred into Monasteries haue put their sonnes and daughters into Cloysters It is very apparent that Princes among the Heathen were also Priests Shall not these being poore blinde Idolaters that knew not GOD aright stand vp at the day of iudgement against vs to condemne vs that haue so little care or loue to the Lords Temple that the seruing of him there is become so vile a thing as it is not beseeming a mans sonne of any countenance and reputation in the world So that they will not set their hand to the Lords Plough but scorne it almost as much as to go to plough and cart The Prophet Esaias as it is probably collected was of a very noble linage See the Argument of the Geneua translation Prolego Vrsini in Esay sonne to Amos who was brother vnto Amaziah King of Iuda and therefore thought to be of the blood royall as the Hebrew writers agree who had the bookes of Genealogies extant among them The Prophet Daniel with Hananiah Mishael Azariah were of the Kings seed Dan. 1 3. We heard before that Christ himselfe the Lord of life and the most honourable person
Israel that hee had done great things for them saying How great things hath the Lord wrought This is the substance of this Prophecy now the conclusion followeth shutting vp the whole with an admiration and commendation of the power and glory of Gods people whose courage and happinesse shal be so great in subduing and subuerting their enemies that as the Lyon resteth not till he hath gotten his prey so they shall not put vp their swords and dwell in peace vntill they haue sheathed them in the bowels of their enemies and seene the destruction of them before their eyes The meaning of the words is not that they should be cruell and rauenous or to stir them to be barbarous and beastly in shedding mans blood and spilling it on the ground as water that cannot he gathered vp againe but to declare and assure that their harts were valiant and victorious so that they should be able to withstand all that did stand against them This was performed and accomplished in Ioshua and Dauid Psal 60 10. 2 Sam. ● 2 ● who fought the battels of the Lord and trod downe their enemies Iosh 23.10 One man of them did chase a thousand for the Lord their God fought for them as he had promised them but especially it was verified in Christ Reu. 5.5 who as the Lyon of the Tribe of Iuda rose from the dead led captiuity captiue and hath put all things in subiection vnder his feete Verse 18. He vttered his parable and said Rise vp Balak and heare hearken vnto me thou sonne of Zippor This is the entrance of the Prophecy wherein he mooueth Balak to attention by three words rise hearken heare And when hee chargeth and commandeth him in the Name of GOD to rise vp he requireth of him to giue eare with meeknesse and reuerence This wee see in the booke of Iudges when Ehud appointed to bee a deliuerer of the people saide to Eglon King of the Moabites I haue a message vnto thee from God Iudg. 3 2● then he arose out of his throne So when Samuel was to annoint Saul King ouer Israel to be gouernour ouer Gods inheritance he saide vnto him Bid thy seruant goe before vs but stand thou still now that I may shew thee the word of God that thou maist heare it with reuerence 1 Sam. 9 27. To the same purpose it is noted 2 Kings 23 2 Chro. 34 that when the Law of God was read Iosiah stood by the Pillar and made a couenant before the Lord. The like wee see in the booke of Nehemiah when Ezra the Scribe read the Scriptures to the people and gaue the interpretation of them All the people stood vp in token of their reuerence and attention Neh. 8.5 So in this place Balaam requireth Balak to rise and stand vp when he was to speake vnto him in the Name of the Lord as if he should say Albeit thou be a King and sittest in the throne yet I come vnto thee from the King of Kings thou rulest ouer thy subiects but thou must bee content to suffer God to rule ouer thee thou requirest silence and subiection to thy selfe but thou must hold thy peace hearken with all reuerence respect when he speaketh From Doctrine hence we learne All reuere●● and atten●● is due to t●● Word S●craments whatsoeu●● the speak● be that the Word of God is alwaies to be heard with great reuerence wonderful attention Whensoeuer wee come to the exercises of Religion we must come with humility and humblenesse of mind albeit they be deliuered and brought vnto vnto vs by wicked vngodly men The truth of this doctrine is confirmed vnto vs by diuers precepts proued by many promises and sanctified by sundry examples out of the Word of God Touching precepts when Moses exhorted the people without adding or diminishing to obserue the Law he saith Deut. 4 1 34 12.13 Now therefore hearken O Israel vnto the ordinances and to the Lawes which I teach you to doe that ye may liue and possesse the land And afterward Gather the people together men women and children and the stranger that is within thy gates that ye may heare that ye may learne and feare the Lord your God and keepe obserue all the words of this Law and that your children which haue not knowne it may heare it and learne to feare the Lord your God This Salomon teacheth Eccl. 4.17 Take heede to thy foot when thou entrest into the house of God and be more neere to heare then to giue the sacrifice of fooles for they know not that they doe euill Hereunto accordeth the saying of our Sauiour so often vrged Mat. 13 9. Reuel 2 17 9 and 3 6. He that hath eares to heare let him heare Touching the promises made to such as come with such an affection we may reade in the Prophet Esay chap. 66 2 5. To him will I looke euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my words And againe Heare ye the word of the Lord all ye that tremble at my word Lastly touching the examples of the faithfull that haue gone before vs in the performance and practice of this duty wee haue a cloud of witnesses recorded vnto vs. The Israelites after their returne from captiuity are commended Neh. 8 2 3. that when Ezra the Priest brought the Law before the congregation both of men and women read therein from the morning vntil the mid-day the eares of all the people hearkned vnto the booke of the Law So when Samaria was called conuerted to the faith of Christ by the preaching of Philip Acts 8 5 6 10 11 it is said that the people gaue heed with one accord to those things which he spake hearing and seeing the miracles which he did as before they had giuen heed from the least to the greatest to the enchantments of Simon the sorcerer And in the sixteenth Chapter ver 14. the Spirit testifieth that Lydia heard the Apostles diligently whose heart the Lord opened that shee attended vnto the things which Paul spake The Apostle Peter writing to the dispersed Iewes testifieth this 2. Pet. 1.19 We haue a sure word of the Prophets to the which ye do well that ye take heed as vnto a light that shineth in a dark place vntill the day dawn the daystar arise in your harts All these precepts commanding promises assuring and examples confirming this doctrin do teach that it is our duty to stirre vp our attention and to be forward to learne Gods wil with all reuerence and readinesse when it is reuealed and deliuered vnto vs. Reason 1 The reasons heereof are plaine and euident For first it is God that speaketh vnto vs so often as his word is preached among vs. He is a most mighty and terrible GOD whom wee worship and in whose presence we stand hauing all power and Maiesty in him who is euen a consuming and deuouring fire
of the church rauishing as it were all his senses and so astonishing him that he is not able to finde words sufficient to expresse the glory thereof For heere we see he compareth the happinesse and blessednesse of the Church to the Valleyes Gardens Cedars and such like all to this end to shadow out vnto vs the value and worth of it that it farre surmounteth all other societies and is most precious deare in the sight of God Heereby then wee learne what is the Doctrine true Church The Chur● is more excellent an● precious 〈◊〉 all other ●ces it exceedeth all other societies of men and is most precious and deare vnto God and vnto Christ We see then how from hence we learne that aboue all other companies and fellowships in the world the Church is most excellent and beautifull and of GOD most respected This hath plentifull testimony of other Scriptures The Prophet saith The Kings daughter is glorious within her cloathing is of broidered gold Psal 45 13. Hereunto come the titles and commendations giuen vnto the Church in sundry places dispersed in the booke of Canticles chap. 2 2. and 4 13. and 5 9. Shee is the Rose of the field the Lilly of the valley the fairest among women an Orchard of Pomgranats a Fountaine of Gardens a Well of springing waters the Spouse and Sister of Christ the beauty of the earth the glory of the world and being compared with other societies as a Lilly among Thornes like the Apple among the Trees of the Forrest It is a Citty whose walles and gates are of precious stones and the streetes thereof of gold Reuel 21 2 19. It is compared to a woman cloathed with the Sunne and had the Moone that is all corruptible things which are vnstable and vncertaine vnder her feete As the Doctrine by these euidences is Reason 1 made cleare so by the Reasons whereby it is proued it may be yet made much clearer For first it is more excellent then all other societies as gold aboue all other mettals because in it alone saluation is to be found and no where else When the vniuersall flood came and couered the face of the whole earth what place wouldest thou preferre before the arke in which Noah and his family were saued and out of the which all the world beside was drowned So saluation is taught and receiued in the Church damnation is to be found and felt out of the Church Can there be a greater priuiledge had then to haue our souls saued or a greater losse then the losse of our soules Wee reade in the Scriptures of many great and exceeding grieuous losses Iob lost all his camels and his asses his oxen and his sheepe his seruants and his sons all his goods and riches Saul lost his kingdome and his life But all these are pettie losses and damages in comparison of the incomparable and inestimable losse of the soule which is a perpetuall separation from the glorious and comfortable presence of God according to the saying of our Sauiour Math. 25 16. What shall it profite a man if he winne the whole world and then lose his owne soule Or what shall a man giue for the recompence of his soule The truth of this reason the Lord himself expresseth in the Prophet saying I will giue saluation in Sion and my glory vnto Israel Esay 46 13. The wealthiest country vnder heauen hath not this treasure the greatest Monarke in the world hath none of this merchandice the richest merchant that compasseth sea and land and trauaileth into the furthest part of the earth cannot bring home with him this pearle of vnualuable price it is only to be found in the city of God which is his Church for in mount Sion and in Ierusalem shal be deliuerance Reason 2 Secondly all other sorts and societies of men are appointed and ordained of God to serue and preserue this This is it which the Prophet Esay saith Esay 45 14. It shall be the honour of Kings and Princes to doe seruice to the Church and to promote the good of it It is the end for which God hath lifted vp the heads of rulers and gouernors aboue their brethren to promote the good of the Church and to aduance the glory of God This the Prophet speaketh of in the Psalme Psal 78 71. that God chose Dauid his seruant tooke him from the sheepefold and preferred him before his brethren euen tooke him and from behinde the ewes with yong brought he him to feed his people in Iacob and his inheritance in Israel so he fed them according to the simplicitie of his heart and guided them by the dis●retion of his hands The like we see in the book of Ester when the destruction of the Church was determined and contriued Mordecai said to Ester Ester 4.14 If thou holdest thy peace at this time comfort and deliuerance shall appeare to the Iewes out of another place but thou and thy fathers house shall perish and who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time So what power strength ability or meanes soeuer God hath giuen he looketh for this duty and thankfulnes at our hands to seek the safety of Sion to aduance the glory of Ierusalem and to know that hereunto we are called Thirdly the beauty of all other cities and Reason 3 societies standeth in this that they are parts and members of the Church This is the glory of kingdomes and countries whereby they are beautified in that they belong to the true Church for otherwise all places are as cages of vncleane birds nay as lodges of vncleane spirits and all persons are as dogges swine as Tygers and vncleane beasts Hence it is that the Apostle describing what wee are by nature saith Eph. 2 12. Yee were at that time without Christ aliants from the commonwealth of Israel strangers from the couenants of promise and had no hope and were without GOD in the world If then it beautifie other places and persons it must needes be beautifull it selfe If it giue grace and glory to others that ioyne themselues to it it must needs be both gracious and glorious it selfe For whatsoeuer causeth a thing to be so must needes be so it selfe much more The vses of this doctrine are excellent as Vse 1 the nature of the Church is For first we conclude that they must needs be most happy blessed of God that are members of the Church For howsoeuer the world account them miserable grinning at them with their teeth nodding at them them their heads gaping at them with their mouthes hissing at them with their tongues and euery way contumeliously reproaching them with their words yet they are deare and precious in the account of God and in the reputation of Christ Iesus who bought them at a great price and redeemed them with the ransome of his owne blood 1. Pet. 1 18 19. Behold what loue the Father hath giuen to vs that we should be called
infirmity Psal 77 10. For when they are themselues in trouble and theyr soule refuseth to be comforted they begin to reason and dispute with themselues and say Will the Lord cast off for euer Will hee be fauourable no more Is his mercy cleane gone for euer and doth his promise faile for euermore Psalm 77 7 8 9. On the other side when they see the vngodly prosper that they are not in trouble as other men neyther plagued like other men they are ready to thinke of themselues that they haue cleansed their hearts in vaine and washed their hands in innocency Psal 73 verses 3 5 13. Neuerthelesse whatsoeuer we are sometimes ready to iudge in the time of trouble tentation wee must vpon better aduice say with the Apostle Let God be true and euery man a lyar as it is written That thou mightest be iustified in thy sayings and mightest ouercome when thou art iudged Rom. 3 verse 4. Albeit therefore GOD do not by and by strike with his hand and draw his sword yet he is not vniust neyther is he slacke concerning his promise but he is long-suffering to vs-ward not willing that any should perish but that all shold come to repentance 2 Pet. 3 9. Secondly this serueth to teach vs that we Vse 2 should not enuy at the wickednesse of men albeit for a season they prosper in theyr sins the measure is not yet heaped vp but when once they are growne to the height the iudgments of God will ouertake them and they shall passe away as the grasse of the field A good man will neuer enuy at their euill Psal 37 1 2 because he knoweth well that they stand in a slippery place and what is reserued for them if they go on in theyr sinnes Thirdly this serueth to instruct informe Vse 3 euery man that he should not grow obstinate and obdurate in his sinnes because of Gods patience and long-suffering toward him because as he hath his time so also God hath his If we fill vppe the measure to the full of our transgression hee will also poure downe the vialle of his indignation Such as runne on in sinne grow thereby starke blinde that they cannot see and starke deafe that they cannot heare vntill theyr eyes and eares bee opened by affliction and his iudgements take holde vpon them Let vs lay before vs the examples of others and consider how it hath gone with them that wee may learne wisedome by theyr folly and take warning by theyr misery Wee know how it went with the old world after the dayes of Gods patience were expired only eight soules were saued all the rest were destroyed Gen. 7. 1 Pet. 3 verse 20. It is better for vs to be admonished by the fall and ruine of others and to take heed of abusing the patience of God then that we should bee taken in our sinnes and bee made examples vnto others to our vtter confusion and destruction for euer And they slew the Kings of Midian besides the rest of them that were slaine namely Eui c. fiue Kings of Midian c. Moses doth not content himselfe to tell the Church of God in generall that the multitude of the people of Midian were destroyed but singleth out the number and the names of theyr Kings that were slayne Whereby wee may gather that high and low Doctrine Princes and Potentates are punished for sin as well as others Prince and people lye open to iudgement God spareth none but striketh punisheth all that sinne against him We see this in those Kings that took away Abrahams wife the Lord plagued them and theyr houses with great plagues Gen. 12 17 and 20 3 17 to verifie that which the Prophet saith He suffered no man to do them wrong but reprooued Kings for their sakes saying Touch not mine annointed and do my Prophets no harme Psal 105 14 15. We saw this in the sixteenth chapter of this Booke concerning Korah and his complotters they were famous and great men in the Congregation yet the earth was not able to beare them his iudgements were so heauy vpon them This doth the Lord tell such as are mighty vpon earth that band themselues together and take counsell against the Lord and against his annointed He will breake them with a rodde of Iron and dash them in peeces like a Potters vessell Psal 2 2 9. And Psalm 82 6 7. I haue saide ye are Gods and all of you are children of the most High but yee shall idie like men and fall like one of the Princes The examples of this are infinite when God sent out Saul to take vengeance vpon the Amalekites the sword fell vpon Agag the King that sate vpon the Throne as well as the common sort that sate in the dust 1 Sam. 15. Herod the king although he were clad in royall apparell could not keepe his body from the wormes by the which he was eaten vp aliue Acts 12. And it must be thus Reason 1 For first the Heads and Captaines of the people haue oftentimes the cheefe hand in the trespasse and when open impieties are set afoote and practised they should not beare the sword in vaine If then they draw not out the sword of iustice but suffer it to rust in the scabbard while iniquity walkes in the Land without controlment they make themselues guilty of those sins bring vpon themselues many iudgements As then it was saide to Eli who winked at the wickednesse of his sonnes I wil iudge his house for euer for the iniquity which he knoweth because his sonnes made themselues vile and he restrained them not 1 Sam. 3 13 so it may be said to Kings and Princes that God will also enter into iudgement with them if they restraine not theyr people from theyr euill Reason 2 Secondly with God is no respect of persons at all though they be supreme and souereigne though they be wealthy and honourable learned and mighty in the world yet they shall escape neuer a whit the more for these priuiledges as Iob 34 19 He accepteth not the persons of Princes nor regardeth the rich more then the poore they beeing all the worke of his hands This serueth iustly to reprooue those that Vse 1 make their places a priuiledge and as it were a Sanctuary to hold and harbour them from Gods iudgements These do much deceyue themselues to beare themselues so bold and to build vpon so weake a foundation It is as possible for a City to hold out against the enemy that hath no wall but of Reedes which are easily eyther pierced or fired as it is for a man to stand against gods iudgments by his noble birth or his high place or his great riches or his deepe learning or his golden crowne And yet wee see how common it is for such to exempt themselues from the common sort as if they ●ad more liberty to sinne then others Indeed heere is for a time some difference betweene them and
Epistle to the Hebrews teacheth touching the faithful Heb. 11 33 34 that through faith they subdued kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained the promises stopped the mouthes of lyons quenched the violence of fire escaped the edge of the sword of weake were made strong waxed valiant in battell turned to flight the armies of the aliants All these testimonies and examples of the old and new Testament set forth expresly this truth that it is a lawfull thing and allowed to the godly to follow the warres The reasons to confirme this truth do follow Reason 1 First God doth command it and therefore doth allow it as iust and lawfull For hee doth not will things because they are iust but they are iust because he willeth them Now the holy Scripture affoordeth sundry testimonies of this truth and setteth downe the precepts commandements that God gaue to his people to bee their warrant to vse their weapon So he commanded them to destroy the Canaanites Deut. 7 2 3. The Lord thy God shall giue thē before thee and thou shalt smite them thou shalt vtterly destroy them thou shalt make no couenant with them nor haue compassion on them Thus he commanded Saul to slay the Amalekites 1 Sam. 15 2. who set vpon the people of God when they were come out of the Land of Egypt and as God commanded the worke so he gaue a blessing vnto it so that those enemies were brought to destruction For we reade in the holy history that God said vnto him I remember what Amalek did to Israel how they laid waite for them in the way as they came vp from Egypt now therefore go and smite Amalek and destroy ye al that pertaineth vnto them and haue no compassion on them but slay both man and woman both infant and ●uckling both oxe and sheepe both Camell and Asse Many other precepts are found in the word of God which we cannot stand vpon But God the Lord of hoasts commandeth nothing that is vniust vnlawful therfore war rightly vsed is lawful warranted Secondly as God gaue direct and expresse Reason 2 commandement so the people of God going forth to battell were to call vppon him for a blessing and to sanctifie the worke by prayer and in so doing haue beene heard Things in their owne nature vnlawfull are so foule and filthy that no prayer and inuocation of Gods name can cleanse them nay they make such prayer foule and abhominable If an idolater going to worship his Idol and serue the creature which is the work of mans hands should poure out his praiers all day long 1 Kin. 18 26. as the Priests of Baal did to bee heard O Baal heare vs what were this but a bellowing or beating of the aire or what profit should they receiue by it But the people of God hauing praied for good successe building themselues vpon the commandement of God vpon the promise of blessing and vpon the example of the faithful haue earnestly praied and effectually obtained that which they asked and desired This we see in the practise of the sonnes of Reuben and of Gad and of halfe the Tribe of Manasseh 1 Chr. 5 19. Valiant men able to beare shield and sword and exercised in war when they made warre against the Hagarims they were holpen against them they deliuered into their hands for they cryed to God in the battell he heard them because they trusted in him Seeing therefore God commandeth and blesseth and heareth and deliuereth such as go to warre it must needs follow that war true religion may well stand together so that one and the same man may bee both a warriour and yet religious Let vs make vse of this point First it serueth Vse 1 to conuince the cursed sect of the Anabaptists and other spiritualists who glory of the Spirit and vnder a colour of seeking peace and establishing vnity and concorde ouer all the world do bring in detestable doctrines and absurd opinions as if none were the true Church but onely themselues True it is it were to be wished that all persons and nations maintained amity and league one with an other and that there might be no more vse of the sword but this is rather to bee wished then expected and may sooner bee spoken then it will be obtained and effected They obiect the Lawe of God Thou shalt not kill Obiection 1 Exod. 20 and the words of Christ Resist not euill Answere Math. 5. But these and such like places must be vnderstood of priuate persons and of priuate reuenge It is vnlawfull for any person without a publike calling to that duty to kill another but a publike Officer may and ought to do it So did Moses kill the Egyptian Exod. 2 12. with Act. 7 25 Numb 25 8. 1 Kings 18 40 so did Phineas those that committed fornication as appeareth afterward in this booke so did Eliah to the Priests of Baal that committed Idolatry and seduced the people And thus it is in all lawfull warres for souldiers haue a publike calling they seek not priuate reuenge and therefore the battell is saide 2 Chro. 20 15. Not to be theirs but the Lord of Hoasts Likewise there is a priuate reuenge which Christ forbiddeth and condemneth but the publike reuenge committed to the Magistrate who beareth not the sword in vaine must bee duely and diligently executed that euill may be taken away out of the City of God For as in necessity it is good for mans body to cut off a rotten and dead member betimes lest the sound parts be corrupted and the whole body perish so it is profitable for the safety and security of humane society to sweepe away as dung hurtfull and noysome Citizens before they infect others that liue among them Wherefore so long as wicked men liue vp on the face of the earth and so long as the Diuell stirreth vp his instruments to set themselues against God and his truth and his seruants so long there will be vse of the sword and of the Magistrate to handle it Wherefore the Apostle calleth vpon vs to cal vpon God for Kings and Princes and them that are in authority that vnder them wee may liue a peaceable and quiet life 1 Timoth. 2 2 Ro. 13.1.2 3. in all godlines honesty If then these be the ends of Magistracy to maintaine peace to settle quietnesse to establish religion and to confirme honesty of manners surely it may be discharged and perfourmed by one that is religious and fearing God Besides God promised as a speciall grace and fauour to the Church of Christ in the new Testament that Kings should be the nursing Fathers Queenes the nursing Mothers of it Esay 49 23. which could not be vnlesse a godly and faithfull man might beare the Office and discharge the calling of a Magistrate and take vengeance of the wicked maintaine the cause of the righteous Secondly wee learne heereby that no calling Vse 2 and
tempted Where we see he beginneth the sentence with the plurall number and endeth it with the singular Wherefore to returne vnto our purpose from which we haue digressed to answere an obiection and to open the interpretation of this Scripture faithfull parents who haue endeuoured to sow the seede of eternall life in the mindes of their children are not to bee censured and condemned because they haue leude and vngodly children that giue euident tokens rather of reprobation then of saluation as if it were their fault and offence for as much as they may bee carefull to vse all meanes of faith and furtherance to eternall life and yet notwithstanding faile of their end If they doe not discharge their duties they shall be guilty of their blood but if they doe teach them they are free they haue deliuered their soules If wee haue vsed diligence and be euill spoken off let vs comfort our selues in the Lord and rest our selues in the cleerenesse of our owne consciences and comfort our hearts in the testimony thereof being well assured that in the great day of account the LORD shall acquit vs when the mouth of iniquitie shall be stopped Vse 3 Thirdly from this ground ariseth great consolation to all faithfull parents who are to comfort themselues in this if among many children and a plentifull issue they haue some fewe of them yea but one onely that appeareth to be the faithfull childe of GOD albeit it bee otherwise with the rest GOD indeede will receiue glory in all though some of them bee reprobates this must preuaile with our natural affections and teach vs to suppresse our greefe and sorrow No doubt it is cause of the greatest griefe and maketh their head as waters and their eyes a fountaine of teares that they make their bed to swimme and water their couch with weeping which striketh neerer vnto them to beholde their vngodly wayes then to see them suffer a thousand deaths Abraham was exceedingly mooued when he was commanded to cast out of his family his sonne Ishmael Gen. 21.11 and 17.18 for the thing was grieuous in Abrahams sight because of his sonne and before this he had saide O that Ishmael might liue in thy sight yet neuerthelesse he yeelded to the will of God who would therein bee honoured So when GOD respecteth vs and confirmeth his couenant toward vs and taketh vnto himselfe any of our seede we ought rather to praise God for this mercy and goodnesse toward vs in sauing one then murmure against him or aske the question of him why he calleth not all If it please God so to deale in mercy toward vs that he vouchsafeth to be both our God and the God of all I say of all our seede we are bound vnto him in so much greater dutie and he requireth of vs the greater obedience and looketh for a sacrifice of greater thankefulnesse Hee dealeth not so with all good men euen such as haue faithfull soules and desire to approoue their seruice vnto him who when they haue giuen them what education they can and heartily craued of GOD his blessing vpon their holy endeauours yet haue found many crosses and such inward griefes as haue beene ready to breake euen their heart-strings and to bring their gray haires with sorrow to the graue Neuerthelesse we must not suffer our ouer-strong affections to preuaile too farre within vs and to swallow vs vp with ouermuch heauinesse when we beholde with our owne eyes the wickednesse of our children that are come out of our owne loynes and are of our owne blood when we see them without hope of being reclaimed and reformed as those that runne into all excesse of riot no though we should see them taken away in the prophanenesse of their hearts For why should we repine at it to consider how God glorifieth himselfe albeit it be in the destruction of some of ours Of this we haue two most notable examples in Aaron and in Eli neuer to be forgotten of vs recorded in the Bookes of Leuiticus and of Samuel Touching Aaron his two eldest sonnes Nadab and Abihu of whom we now speake sinned against the Lord in offering strange fire and seruing of God otherwise then hee appointed which is a thing detestable in his eyes and there came out a fire from the Lord and deuoured them and they dyed before the Lord. Heere was a grieuous sinne committed heere was a grieuous punishment executed vpon them and their father did beholde it with his eyes and how they were carryed out of the campe in their coates Moses tolde him that the LORD would bee sanctified in them that come nigh him and before all the people he will be glorified so that Aaron helde his peace Leuiticus chapter 10. verse 3. So touching Eli when he heard a fearefull iudgement denounced against his posterity he said It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good 1 Samuel 3.18 Thus ought we to doe and not vexe and turmoyle our selues without reason for that which we cannot remedy and redresse All the children of the faithfull are not the children of the promise they that are the children of the flesh are not the children of God Galatians chapter 4. verse 23. All that are the seede of Adraham are not the children of Abraham Romanes chapter 9. verse 6 7. neither are all the Israel of God which are of Israel Heere it may be obiected which the Apostle Obiection 1 Peter speaketh to the Iewes The promise is made to you and to your children Actes 2.39 God is the God of the faithfull and of their seede I answere The Apostle answereth this in the next wordes Answer euen as many as the Lord our God shall call So many as haue God to bee their God shall in his good time be called to the knowledge of the trueth Hence it is that in the promise annexed to the second commandement it is said Exod. 20.6 hee sheweth mercy to thousands that loue him and keepe his commandements Thus hee limiteth the promise of mercy he restraineth it to those that loue him This promise is performed when it holdeth in any albeit a farre off Another obiection ariseth out of Paules words to the Corinthians where the seede of Obiection the faithfull are said to be holy that is sanctified and cleansed The vnbeleeuing husband is sanctified by the wife 1 Cor. 7.14 and the vnbeleeuing wife is sanctified by the husband else were your children vncleane but now are they holy If then they be all cleane and holy it followeth they are also vnder the election of grace I answere they are holy touching the outward couenant and generall election Answer as to be of the visible Church to haue right in the Sacraments and to haue interest in the outward priuiledges therof as in the word prayer and such like Thus the whole nation of the Iewes are saide to bee chosen and thus they may bee saide Rom. 11.16 and are saide to bee sanctified They
Mat. 13 verse 3 the watchmen Ezek. 3 verse 17 the Leaders Heb. 13 verse 17 the Shepheards Eph. 4 verse 11 the Stewards Luke 12 verse 42. Shall the Ministers then being Officers onely vnder another to serue him presume to doe any thing in their owne name and not acknowledge their subiection vnto another Thirdly the Ministeries that are expressed Reason 3 in the word are all sufficient to bring the church to perfection and to make it a complete body as appeareth by the Apostle where he serteth downe the Officers that haue receiued guifts for the instruction of the Church of Christ Eph. 4 11 12 13. Christ gaue some Apostles and some Prophets and some Euangelists and some Pastours and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints and for the worke of the Ministery for the edifying of the body of Christ till we all come in the vnity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God vnto a perfect man vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ If then these suffice for the bringing of the worke to perfection all other inuented by men are needlesse and superfluous and may be cut off as superfluous branches Lastly none can appoint new Officers or Reason 4 strange Ministers in the Church but he that can giue them gifts to discharge the Callings that they vndertake For what is an office with out strength and ability to execute it Eph. 4 10. but an idle name without the thing as it were an empty box without the oyntment But no mā hath it in his power to bestow any gifts to set vp a new office neither ought hee to set on worke the gifts that God hath giuen otherwise then he appointeth as it were to till the earth with another mans heiffer therefore it belongeth not to any man to institute any new Ministeries or to imploy them that are warranted contrary to the will of him that hath called thē and consequently it is God only to whō it belongeth to chuse such as shal minister before him as the master appointeth his owne seruants that shall serue him in his house and do his businesse Vse 1 Let vs in the first place see what profitable vses arise from this doctrine First of all we learne that no man hath any authority or iurisdiction to peruert or euert that order that God hath set in his Church whether it be by deuising new Ministeries or by destroying diminishing of the old For as well do they erre in building that adde such as are not warranted as they that take away such as are established in the word It is a true saying worthy to be obserued deliuered by Christ our Sauiour Euery plant which mine heauenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted vp Matth. 15 13. It is the word of GOD that endureth for euer all mans deuices are as the flower of the field that fadeth in a moment There is nothing shall continue constant which standeth not by the strength of God The traditions of men howsoeuer they may seeme to be firmely rooted and strongly backed by the best deuices and pollicies that flesh and blood can deuise yet they are as chaffe which the wind driueth away and they shall not be able to endure It is truely spoken of Gamaliel though it be euilly applied Acts 5 38. Refraine from these men and let them alone for if this counsell or this worke bee of men it will come to nought The Church is the body of Christ wherein nothing is too much nothing too little 1 Corinth 12 12. For as the body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is it in the mysticall body of Christ whereof he is the head In the naturall body of man if it should haue three legges or three ●ands or diuers heads it would be a monstrous body it would not reioyce or take pleasure in that excrescence or abounding of proud flesh Or if it had onely one legge or one eye it could not delight in it but would be greeued at the defect So is it in the body of Christ which is the Church God hath made it a perfect body he hath giuen it hands eyes to guide it selfe into the way of peace and to bring it vnto the kingdome of glory If wee will adde other eyes or other hands then God hath fitted or tye them that it hath from imploiment to the good of the body we do iniury to the body of CHRIST and make the Church disfigured and deformed If wee should see a man in our daies like to the gyant mentioned in the second booke of Samuel whose stature was exceeding great that should haue on euery hand sixe fingers and on euery foot sixe toes 2 Sam. 21 20. foure and twenty in number we would thinke it vncomely and ill-fauoured and no ornament vnto the body So is it with the Church which ought to haue her forme and feature in euery part It is for beauty and comlinesse compared to a company of horses in Pharaohs Chariots Cant. 1 verse 9 and to a rowe of Iewels It is saide to be beautifull as Tirzah Cant. 6 verse 4. and comely as Ierusalem that is compact together Psalme 122 3. It is saide to looke foorth as the morning to bee faire as the Moone cleare as the Sunne and terrible as an army with banners Cant. 6 verse 10. If then wee shall strippe the Church of any of her ornaments if we shall wound it and take away her veile from her Cant. 5 verse 7. If we shall giue her any new parts or rob her of any of her true parts we make her no longer beautifull and beloued to say of it as Christ doth Thou art all faire my Loue there is no spot in thee Cant. 4 verse 7. We make it deformed as a body that is eyther maimed or monstrous Eph. 5 26 27. This is the commendation of the Church that her glory is absolute perfect throughout all the parts of her and that it hath no spot no blemish no imperfection Such a glorious body is meet to be ioyned with so glorious an head as Christ is When we suffer the Church to be all black and foule full of wrinkles and withered deformities how should it be vnited vnto him Happy is that Church that hath all her parts and none but her parts like a body that retaineth the naturall lustre But if it want any members that it ought to haue or haue gotten an ouerplus that it ought not to haue they serue to no other vse but to disfigure the body and to disgrace the head The true naturall parts are much ashamed both of those wants and of those superfluities the which the more they are the farther is that Church from perfection Some Churches haue somewhat too much that ought to be pared away some Churches haue too little that ought to be restored and some Churches are
serue Vse 4 them to further the preaching of the word and to furnish such places as belong vnto them with able teachers This is required of all godly Magistrats whether they be supreme or subordinate that they endeauor to be noursing fathers to the Church Esay 49. that they by their authority may encourage and countenance all such as are Pastors and teachers to the end they may goe boldly forward with that worthy worke which is in their hands A notable example heereof we haue in those Princes that were sent out by Iehoshaphat for albeit they did not preach to the people in the cites to which they came nor minister the Sacraments nor offer the sacrifices nor burne incence inasmuch as they had the Leuites with them to doe that seruice yet it is not to be omitted or concealed that they did countenance them and accompany them and this their authorizing or backing of them is called a preaching Chro. 17.7 because it made a plaine way and set open a wide doore for the peoples better receiuing of the word with readinesse cheerefulnesse and obedience The example of great personages is of great force and is a strong cord to draw inferiours after them Whensoeuer such men of high place make account of the Ministers highly esteeme of their message and Ministery it moueth others most mightily to shew reuerence to this holy ordinance of God Especially it belongeth to them that are Patrones haue the presentation and collation of spirituall promotions to haue an especiall care and regard that the Churches committed to their tuition may be sufficiently furnished and that as well the small flockes as the greater heards be prouided of godly and learned teachers for as much as Christ himself preaching the Gospel of the kingdome from place to place as occasion serued and the necessity of the people required deliuered the ioyfull newes and glad tydings of saluation as well to the people of little villages as to the inhabitants of famous townes and populous Cities not onely to thousands that flocked to heare him but to hundreds and tennes that came vnto him He shunned popularity and the applause of men and shewed not himselfe alwaies openly nor any otherwise then as he might doe most good to the people and gaine greatest glory to his Father He was not ambitious or vaine-glorious nor sought the praise of men Ioh. 7.10 and 5.41 and 8.50 When God determined to destroy the Cities of the plaine at the request of Lot in mercy he saued Zoar a little towne Gen. 19. God hath his people whom he created and Iesus Christ redeemed euen in little places as well as in great parishes in small villages as well as in large Cities These haue soules to saue as well as others Little flockes would haue their shepheards as well as great heards such as are poore seruants of the family would be glad to haue food to eat as well as the chiefest persons To instruct a countrey-village is a worke of mercy as well as to teach the mother-Cities of a kingdome and to be carefull of the high or head places but carelesse of little hamlets is as vnmercifull a part as to pamper vp a great family and to let a little one starue for hunger or as if a Prince should prouide for the safety of great multitudes of his subiects and neglect the lesser companies that abide in poorer villages or as if a man should tender the welfare of his head and neuer regard his foot or his finger Wherefore all Magistrates must set before their eyes the example of God as a cleere glasse to looke vpon appointing the ordering of the Leuites in such sort that all the Tribes might be instructed being so diuided scattered among the rest that their labours might be communicated to all as also the example of Iesus Christ who in the dayes of his flesh taught and preached euery where not onely at Ierusalem but in Galile and other desert and desolate places so that they ought to haue an especiall care and regard that euery Congregation haue his sufficient Minister And that they may be constrained to yeeld to this trueth or at least perswaded to the practise and performance of this dutie or if not perswaded yet conuinced in conscience that it should be done and that it is their sinne if it be left vndone let vs a little consider somewhat farther the fact of God how carefull he was thereof in the land of Israel that as well the little townes as the greater Cities might haue able teachers Hence it is that he commandeth the children of Israel that they giue vnto the Leuites the ordinary teachers of the people of the inheritance in their possession Cities to dwell in all the Cities which they were to giue to these Leuites were eight and forty Num. 35.2 7. The accomplishment whereof we may reade at large in the booke of Ioshua chap. 21.4 5 6 7. In euery Tribe they had foure Cities and so were by the ordinance of God diuided in Iacob and scattered in Israel according to the ancient Prophesie of Iacob Gene. 49. For out of the Tribes of Iudah Simeon and Beniamin they had 13. Cities verse 4. Out of the families of the Tribe of Ephraim and out of the Tribe of Dan and out of the halfe Tribe of Manasseh they had 10. Cities verse 5. Out of the families of the tribe of Issachar and out of the Tribe of Asher and out of the Tribe of Naphtali and out of the halfe tribe of Manasseh in Bashan they had 13. Cities vers 6. Lastly out of the Tribe of Reuben Gad and Zebulun they had giuen and granted vnto them 12. Cities verse 7. By this meanes was the instruction of Gods people prouided for plentifully through a multitude of Cities appointed vnto them not altogether or in one place of the land but dispersed heere and there according to the infinite wisedome of God and the absolute necessity of the people We heard before what wonderfull care godly Iehoshaphat the king of Iudah had who sent the Leuites throughout all the Cities of his kingdome which caryed with them the Booke of the Lord and taught all the land and his zeale was rewarded with riches honour and great prosperitie in aboundance 2. Chron. 17.5.9 The like commendation is giuen of Iosiah who appointed the Priests to their seuerall charges and encouraged them to the seruice of the Lord and said vnto the Leuites that taught all Israel 2 Chr. 35.2.3 which were holy vnto the Lord Put the holy Arke in the house which Salomon the sonne of Dauid king of Israel did build c. So then for as much as Christ preached to small villages as wel as to bigger townes forasmuch as it was the wise policy of God to place the Leuites round about his Tabernacle and to grant vnto them cities throughout euery Tribe forasmuch as it was the carefulnesse of Iehoshaphat and Iosiah to haue all places of
of highest descent that euer liued vpon the earth who was not onely of the linage and stocke of Dauid and heire vnto the Crowne Kingdome but the sonne of the eternall God yet he disdained not to serue but vouchsafed to minister in this office and hath giuen example to all posterity that none should account themselues vnworthy of it or it vnworthy of thē forasmuch as the Gospel began to be preached of him Heb. 2 3 who is the brightnesse of glory and the expresse image of his person and vpholdeth all things by the word of his power Heb. 1 3. Seeing then Princes and Peeres and noble men yea such as haue bene of the Kings blood haue imployed themselues to the Lords seruice seeing sundry of these among both Pagans and Papists haue exercised this function seeing some of the elect Angels were Preachers of the Gospel what a slander and reproch is it for vs that are dust and ashes and wormes of the earth and no better that are called Christians and would be accounted great professers who in so great want of labourers and haruest men to reape downe the corne do bestow our youth rather any way then this that is the best way It is incredible what great good such might do in the church O what a furtherance would it be to true religion and a notable meanes to gaine many soules to God! For how many be there that contemne the Ministery of the word and consequently the word it selfe because for the most part they are meane and poore men that are the Ministers and Preachers of it Euen as when the professers of the truth consist of the lowest sort it hindreth the faith of diuers to consider that none of the rich or of the Rulers beleeue in him but the people that are accursed Iohn 7 4● so is it in the Ministery also When such as are ignorant of true religion cast their eyes vpon the poore condition of the teachers of it and behold the worshipfull and noble shun it and shake it from their shoulders they are offended and grow into hatred and contempt of the Calling and regard not such as haue taken it vpon them Whereas if the men of great places would stoope downe vnto it if this may be accounted a stooping downe and as well preach Christ as beleeue in him it might be a forcible and effectuall meanes to further and foster true religion Is it not a comfort to all godly parents to see their children well bestowed Can we haue them better bestowed then to serue the Lord and to labour in his haruest and to be made Rulers or Stewards in his house Is there any thing we should reioyce more to see then our sons put in trust with the price of the blood of Christ and by preaching to win many soules and send them to heauen How do men seeke to shroud themselues vnder the cloth of noble men and are glad of places and offices vnder them like to Zebedees childrē that would sit at the right hand and at the left hand of Christ in his Kingdome But the Ministers are the seruants of the most High they serue the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords then which what seruice can be more holy or honourable The Prophet Haggai complaineth chap. 1 4 that the whole people from the highest to the lowest neglected the building of the Temple and followed their owne profits plesures Is it time for you O ye to dwel in your sieled houses and his house lye waste And therefore he threatneth in the words following to punish those greeuously that were so retchlesse and carelesse for the helping forward of this building Let Zerobabel and Iehoshua with the remnant of the people diligently consider this point and meditate seriously vpon these things And let all haue a tender regard to imploy and set apart some of theirs to worke in the Lords vineyard as painfull labourers True it is some goe about by pilling and polling to bring the Church to beggery and slauery but this ought not to discourage any from seruing in this calling nor to withdraw any of his children frō preaching of the word The earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof Psal 24 1. All the siluer and gold in the world is at his commandement Hag. 2 8. He will neuer leaue nor forsake those that be his He will pay good wages to all that are his seruants They shall be sure of their pay that reape his corne and beare the burden of the work and the heat of the day He hath the hearts of all Princes and Potentates in his owne hand He moued the mindes of pagan and heathen Kings to contribute things necessary for the repairing of the materiall Temple as appeareth in the bookes of Ezra and Nehemiah ●zra 3 7. ●eh 2 8. and therefore he will not suffer such to lack which labour in his spirituall Temple vnder godly and christian Princes Seeing then we ought to make a great account and haue a reuerent estimation of the Preachers of the word and esteeme the Calling giuen them an honorable office inasmuch as Christ the euerlasting Son of the Father the wisest the worthiest the noblest the notablest person beyond all comparison of all that euer were or shall be or are in heauen or earth hath taken vp the office of a Preacher Priest and Prophet to teach the people and to pray for them let vs also further this worke by all the meanes we can and let the Ministers comfort themselues in this their holy vocation hauing a multitude of such excellent predecessors as it were a cloud of witnesses going before them to be examples to encourage them and let vs not be discouraged by the taunts opprobious termes of the vngodly to dislike and forsake our function or to be ashamed of it or to thinke scorne to labour in it howsoeuer many scorne at it as too meane and base a thing for themselues For albeit the Ministery aboue all other callings is most subiect to the contempt and disgrace of prophane and godlesse men yet let vs be assured that as it is in it selfe in regard of the ordinance of God as also of the benefit of it vnto mankinde a worthy and excellent calling so they that enter into it shall be honoured of all those which are the children of God Let vs tread those disgraces contumelies vnder our feete and be so farre from being dismaied at them that rather we ought to account our selues happy for them Mat. 5 11 12. Seeing we are thereby made conformable not onely to the Prophets and Apostles of Christ but to our Sauiour himselfe and shall in the end be like vnto him in glory and eternall life Yea we are assured that in the middest of al disgracings and defacings of vs we are the sweet sauour of God not only in them that are saued but in them also that perish ● cor 2 15 16 And albeit we
then he is and indeed as well the one as the other are vnfit vnmeete to haue the charge of sheepe or of old shooes It discourageth those that labour painefully in this calling and weakneth the hands and hearts of those that are diligent in their office It bringeth a slander vpon the Church of God and emboldeneth many to goe forward in sinne while there is for the most part like Priest like people like master like man like mother like daughter And last of all it bringeth ineuitable perils and dangers vpon the people whose soules perish through their ignorance and wickednesse that are entred into this calling The third reproofe 〈◊〉 third re●fe is the haste which for the most part young men that runne before they are sent make to the Ministery wherein the common prouerbe is true That haste maketh waste The zeale of these persons is very preposterous forasmuch as they haue not that iudgement knowledge that wisedome and experience that grace and grauity that stayednesse and moderation in ordering and brideling their affections that is needfull in those that are to teach others the way how to do it lest it be said vnto them Physitian heale thy selfe Luke 4 23. and as the Apostle sheweth Thou that teachest another teachest thou not thy selfe Rom. 2 21. In former times of the Church the Prophets well qualified hung backe and shunned the burden but we are fallen into another extreme whereby it commeth to passe that we desire to be soone employed albeit rawly furnished as if a Captaine should leade his souldiers vnto the battell before they be halfe harnessed and prepared But some may say Obiection Are none to be chosen to the Ministery that are young men Or is this Law giuen to the Leuites remembred heere a morall precept to which the Church is necessarily tied None were to serue in the Tabernacle or Temple vntill thirty yeares 1 Chr. 23 3. is this precisely to be kept in the new Testament I answer Answer not all that are of that age are to be admitted nor all vnder that age are to be refused For as there are two sorts of young men set downe before so there are two sorts of Elders some are olde men in yeares and some are old men in gifts and thus may the Ministers be saide sometimes to be both old and young yong in age old in the graces giuen vnto them necessary for this calling as on the other side a man may be old in yeares and haue many gray haires on his head and yet in regard of necessary gifts that ought to haue beene in him be a young man a childe an infant If it be farther saide Obiect Iohn Baptist began to preach at that age and so did Christ himselfe yet had these great gifts and who is like to them or who may compare with them Answer I answer these examples are not to be drawne into imitation to make of them perpetuall Canons and constitutions of the Church And this was indeed a long time after obserued in the Church all such kept out as by a strong barre that had not attained to that age We haue laide before vs the doctrine and life of Christ to be followed not the yeares ability not age The Apostle warneth Timothy so to behaue himselfe that none should despise his youth 1 Tim. 4 verse 12. He would haue him learne before he goe about to teach others It is said in the booke of Iob chapt 12 12. With the auncient is wisedome and in length of daies vnderstanding Neuerthelesse albeit this bee ordinarily seene yet God is not tyed to any age but bestoweth his gifts where and vnto whom hee pleaseth as appeareth in Ioseph Ieremy Samuel Salomon Daniel Dauid Timothy Titus and sundry others Howbeit such examples are not common but rare and vnwonted like a shining starre in a cloudy Firmament Aristotle No man chuseth yong men to be Generals of an army saith the heathen Philosopher That Physition is thought to be the better who hath most conuersed and liued longest among the sicke Plato lib. 3. de rep In the host of Alexander the Great Q. Curtius none was suffered to leade the bandes into the field that was not elder then three-score In the state and common-wealth of Rome none vnder full age were chosen to bear any office None was chosen to be a Senator before 25. yeares nor Pretor before 30 nor Consul before 43. How much more is this to be regarded in the regiment of the Church where as the calling is weightier so the danger is greater when these pastorall charges are bestowed vpon vnfit persons For a speciall care must be had that such as are aduanced and promoted whether young or old doe not cause their ministery to be contemned especially considering that it falleth out as we see by continuall experience that euen his doctrine is little regarded whose person is despised Some are old in yeares but young in wisedome Esay 65. and at an hundred yeares old are as children touching vse and experience who staine and disgrace their hoare heads white haires with foolishnesse sottishnesse and more then childishnesse In the art of nauigation Nazian in laud. Basilij this law was wont to be precisely obserued that none should be chosen Master of the Ship or Masters mate that hath not first beene a skuller and rowed with oares and frō thence beene promoted to sit at the sterne In military discipline a man was first chosen a souldier then he rose higher to be a Centurion before he could be Generall of the host God would haue the Leuites to be at the first as it were probationers before they were alowed to be practitioners They were taken in for tryall at 25. yeares of age as it followeth in the 8. chapter and so continued vnto 30. at what time they were suffered to minister if they were found faithfull and painefull But it may be said of many in our church that they runne before they be sent Iere. 23 21. and thrust themselues into the Vineyard before they be hired These are young in yeares and as young in qualities and conditions required of a Minister that haue not yet shed their colts teeth nor scarse sowed their wilde oates as we say in our common Prouerbs so that we may say with the Prophet Hosea chap. 9 7. The Prophet is a foole the spirituall man is mad And another Prophet Her Prophets are light and treacherous persons her Priests haue polluted the Sanctuary they haue done violence to the Law Zeph. 3 verse 4. Vse 2 Secondly it teacheth a good duty and profitable to the Ministers that remembring this lesson and considering how they must be adorned and with what gifts endued they looke to themselues that they giue no occasion of scandall and offence of euill speeches and contempt of their calling but keep themselues vnspotted and vncorrupted This the Apostle teacheth his Timothy 1. ch 4 12.
abhominable If we come wickedly and vnworthily to the Lords Supper we eate and drinke our owne damnation Let vs therefore examine our selues and prepare our hearts before we come that so wee may bee meete partakers of those holy mysteries Obiect Before wee come to the doctrine offered vnto vs in this diuision we are to answer one obiection that ariseth from hence For the question may be asked whether this charge heere spoken of were perpetually enioyned to the Leuites that they should carry the instruments of the Sanctuary and the Arke whether I say they were alwayes to beare the Arke Answer or not I answer this commandement was temporary It was their duty for a time vntill the Priests were encreased and multiplied in number that they were sufficient and enabled to carry it Deut. 31 9. But afterward all the examples of the histories mentioned in the bookes of Ioshua and the Iudges of Samuel and of the Kings do manifestly declare that it was the office of the Priests themselus Iosh 3 6. 1 Sam. 14 18. 2 Sam. 15 29. 1 Kings 2 26 and 8 3 4. For the most worthy things were to be handled by the more worthy persons thereby to testifie the worthines and dignity of the things themselues and to procure the greater reuerence and respect vnto them Wherefore the commandement enioyned in this place was for a season onely vntill there were a sufficient number of the Priests to do it 2 Sam. 6 3. The setting of the Arke vpon a Cart was Dauids infirmity though otherwise a man after Gods owne heart for Princes may erre the best of them may be deceiued They followed not the ordinance of God and caused it not to be carried on the shoulders eyther of the Priests or Leuites but followed the example of the Philistims who made a new Cart 1 Sam. 6 7 11. and laide the Arke of the Lord vpon the Cart so did Dauid and all the people they set the Arke of God vpon a new Cart and brought it out of the house of Abinadab Againe we reade sometimes in the Scriptures that the Leuites did it 1 Chr. 15 2. Then Dauid said None ought to carry the Arke of God but the Leuites for them hath the Lord chosen to carry the Arke of God and to minister vnto him for euer Thus was Dauid made wiser by the former breach of Gods wrath among them whereby Vzzah was destroyed Howbeit we must vnderstand heereby the Priests that were of the Tribe of Leui as appeareth by the 26 verse of that chapter It came to passe when God helped the Leuites to beare the Arke of the Couenant of the Lord that they offered seuen Bullocks seuen Rams Where we see that such as did beare the Arke did also offer sacrifices but the Priests office onely was to offer sacrifice therefore they onely did carry the Arke For all the Priests were Leuites but all Leuites were not Priests The name of Leuites was a common name to all that belonged to that Tribe whereof some were called Priests other by the common name of Leuites But concerning those that executed the Priests office and were not of that Tribe they were no better then intruders and vsurpers Verse 5 6 c. And when the Campe setteth forward Aaron shall come and his sonnes and they shall take downe c. Moses mentioneth and setteth downe in this place the particular calling of all the Leuites what they ought to do and what they ought not to do wherein they are to busie themselues exercise their gifts and how they may approue themselues in their places as if he should bring euery one of them into their proper field that they were to till For euen as a master of a family appointeth euery one of his seruants their taske and worke that he will haue them do so doth the Lord our God deale with his Ministers and all his people he giueth them their peculiar office and sheweth how and wherein they must employ themselues We learne Doctrine 1 from hence that euery man whether out of the Ministery or in the Ministery It is the duty of euery one to know and learne the duties of his owne calling must learne and know the duties of his owne calling what charge God hath laide vpon him and what seruice he requireth at his hands At the giuing of the law in Mount Sion euery one had his standing place assigned vnto him which he might not passe for as God hath set bounds vnto the sea that though it rage yet it can go no farther then hee hath appointed he hath said hitherto it shall goe and it can go no farther so Moses is charged to deale with the people that they do not breake thorough vnto the Lord Exod. 19 12. Thou shalt set bounds vnto the people saying Take heed to your selues that ye goe not vp into the Mount or touch the border of it c. Thus also the Lord speaketh to Ieremy chapt 1 5 10. Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee and before thou camest foorth out of the wombe I sanctified thee and I ordained thee a Prophet vnto the Nations The Prophet Ionah is reproued that being to go to Niniueh Ionas 1 3. rose vp to flye vnto Tarshish from the presence of the Lord. Thus doth Paul speake to Timothy for hauing set downe before him the duty of his calling he saith 1 Tim 4.15 16. Tit. 1 5 and 2 15 and 3 ● Meditate vpon these things giue thy selfe wholly to them that thy profiting may appeare to all Euery one is taught to labour with his hands the thing that is good Eph. 4 28. and to withdraw himselfe from euery brother that walketh inordinately and not according to the doctrine receiued The reasons to confirme vs Reason 1 in this truth are many First we can neuer practise the duties of our callings except we know them This is the eie that leadeth vs to the doing of thē from the beginning to the ending of them The blind man cannot see his way Ioh. 13 17. If ye know these things blessed are ye if ye doe them When once we know what duties are laid vpon vs we are already entred into the way to do them and performe them Reason 2 Secondly such as transgresse the bounds set before them shall surely perish and be punished When the people before the Law was giuen were limited how farre to passe Moses addeth ●d 19.12 whosoeuer toucheth the mount shal be surely put to death and the Apostle prosecuteth the threatening further 〈◊〉 12.20 If so much as a beast touch the mountain it shall be stoned or thrust through with a dart So then the consideratiō of the punishment threatned denounced against all that breake the listes set vnto them which is farther confirmed by sundry examples of Vzzah and of Corah and his company ought so farre to preuaile with vs as to teach vs to continue in the workes
in those that follow yet there was a legall impurity and a ceremoniall vncleannes in them putting them in mind of the foulenes of sinne Thirdly such as haue touched a dead carcase must also goe out of the hoste these were also vncleane for a certaine season The first sort to wit of the lepers was infectious the two latter were accounted vncleane and abominable in respect of the law and ordinance of God that forbade those ceremonies vntill the time of the restoring of all things and yet some of them could not be auoided as the touching of the dead These are the parts the manner followeth shewing that this commandement is generall and toucheth all ages and sexes yong and old male and female Prince and subiect rich and poore there must no partiality be vsed God will haue none of these vncleane persons to be spared or suffered among his people from the king that setteth on his throne to the begger that lyeth on the dunghill Hereupon Moses saith both male and female ye shal put out without the campe shall ye put them And in the booke of Deuteronomy it is said Deut. 24. ● Take heed in the plague of leprosie that thou obserue diligently and doe according to all that the Priests Leuites shal teach you as I commanded them so ye shall obserue to do Remember what the Lord thy God did vnto Miriam by the way after that ye were come forth out of Egypt She was the sister of Moses and Aaron had gone before the women in singing the praises of God for their deliuerance at the red sea yet when she spake against Moses Num 12.14 she was shut out from the campe seuen dayes according to the law Leui. 13 4● All the dayes wherein the plague shall bee in him he shal be defiled he is vncleane he shal dwel alone without the camp shal his habitation be The practise hereof we see in Gehazi the seruant of Elisha because he had taken two talents of siluer contrary to the wil of the Prophet he said vnto him 2 Kin 5.27 The leprosie of Naaman shal cleaue vnto thee and vnto thy seed for euer and he went out from his presence a leper as white as snow In the seige of Samaria by the Syrians it appeareth that foure leprous men dwelt out of the citie who for feare of that great and mighty hoste abode at the entring in of the gate 2 King 7.3 and were the first messengers of glad tidings that the enemies had broken vp their campe in haste and were fled away When Ahasiah presumed in the pride of his heart to execute the priests office the Lord smote the king 2 King 15. ● so that he was a leper vnto the day of his death and dwelt in a seuerall house Thus we see how this law was executed without al respect of persons or degrees and estates of men high and low bond and free master and seruant The reasons of the former commandement follow which are two in number the one drawn from the nature and condition of these vncleane persons the other from the person and presence of God The former reason concerning the foulenesse of the leprosie in these words lest they defile their camp may bee thus concluded If the lepers defile the places of their abode then they are to be remooued But the lepers defile the places of their abode Therefore they are to be remooued The conclusion of this argument is the commandement it selfe mentioned in the 2 verse so also is the second part in the end of the same verse The first proposition is to be supplyed The next reason drawne from the Lord himselfe in these words I dwell in the mids of them is thus concluded If God dwel among his people then no vncleane thing is to be tolerated among them But God dwelleth among his people Therefore no vncleane thing is to be tolerated among them The parts of this argument are partly expressed and partly vnderstood as we shewed in the former that went before and therefore need not be repeated Thus much of the commandement the execution heereof followeth in the 4. verse set downe first generally and particularly Generally the children of Israel did so Particularly they put them out of the campe as the Lord spake vnto Moses Now whereas the tents among the Israelites were threefold one of the Tabernacle another of the Leuites the third of the Tribes 〈◊〉 in Nume ●5 sundry of the Hebrews hold that such as were leprous were banished from them all three that such as had running issues were suffered in the campe but neither in the court of the Tabernacle nor among the tents of the Leuites and that such as were defiled by touching the dead were onely banished and excluded out of the court of the Tabernacle and the Tabernacle it selfe But these are more curious speculations then well grounded obseruations whereof the Hebrew Rabbins are full and seeme to be ouerthrowne in this place where they are thought to be established forasmuch as Moses ioyneth all these 3. together and turneth them out of the host ●biect Before we proceed to handle the doctrines of this diuision it shall not be amisse for vs to answer one obiection which we will do briefly and that is whether God in requiring the lepers to be put out of the campe doe respect the bodies of his people or not forasmuch as the leprosie was a contagious and infectious disease ●nswer I answere I am not ignorant how diuersly diuers men doe carry this and vnderstand hereby that God as a prudent and prouident Lawgiuer giueth wholesome counsell and direction lest contagious diseases should creepe among the people and so infect one another But this is too weake a coniecture and collection reacheth not to the purpose nor attaineth to the intent of God who respecteth the soule rather then the body For he doth not in this place giue counsel as a Phisition that prouideth for the health of his patient but he dealeth as a Physition of the soule and therefore vnder these outward rites and ceremonies he would traine them vp teach them to giue themselues to holinesse of life to study to attaine vnto and acquaint themselues with purity and to beware of all filthines and vncleannesse This appeareth in the example before set downe of such as were driuen from the company and society of men being stricken with the leprosie by the hand of God Besides this reason is rendred of their casting out of the hoste lest they should defile the campe in which the Lord dwelled Lastly we see that such as haue issues in the flesh such as touch the dead which are no infectious diseases and the one no disease at all are ioyned with the leprosie in this chapter so that the drift intent of God in this place is not to prouide for the body or to keepe the people in health and strength but for the
and in many others To this doth the Prophet exhort them Hos 14.3 Take vnto you words and turne to the Lord and say vnto him Take away all iniquity and receiue vs graciously so will we render the calues of our lips Thus we see confession of sinne and asking of pardon must ioyne hand in hand and goe together as friends that are agreed so that we should not hope for pardon but pray for pardon of God Exod. 34.7 whose nature is to forgiue iniquity transgression and sinne that is sinnes of all sorts how great and heinous soeuer they be If we sinne against God and neuer aske forgiuenesse of God we shall neuer receiue forgiuenesse at his hands Lastly we ought so to confesse our sinnes The eighth property as that we haue also a purpose to leaue and to forsake our sinnes We must not thinke to find mercy so long as we haue a desire to continue in them Hence it is that the Prophet saith Esay 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his wayes and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations and returne vnto the Lord and he will haue mercy vpon him and to our God for he is very ready to forgiue This is true repentance to flie from sinne forasmuch as euery one that nameth the Name of Christ must depart from iniquitie 2 Tim. 2.19 This is a faultie confession of sinne when there appeareth no change or alteration in them that doe confesse We must confesse both some of our sins and all of them Iob 20.12 and keepe none of the sweetnesse of them vnder our tongues as Iob speaketh but refraine from them and be afraid that they will be vnto vs as the gall of Aspes We must cast aside euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth so fast on Heb. 12.1 he will bring all sin vnto iudgment and therefore we should confesse all of them if we would haue pardon of all of them We desire to haue them all pardoned so that we must hide none of them nor conceale them for thereby we shut vp Gods mercy and are enemies to our owne peace And shall restore the dammage thereof with his principall and put the fift part of it more thereunto c. The second meanes of expiation of our sins or of receiuing forgiuenesse of them is restitution which is set downe three wayes He that hath wronged his neighbour must restore first the principall secondly the dammage and thirdly he shal adde a fift part thereto to the end that all persons should be terrified from committing this or the like sinne and the owner may haue a full amends and receiue a perfect satisfaction True it is our offences are forgiuen freely without our deserts and certaine it is we cannot make amends and satisfaction to God but we can and may and ought vnto our brethren which are damnified by vs. Now if God had ordained that such as purloyne from men their goods either by open oppression or by forged cauillation or by violent extortion or by colourable circumuention should onely restore the principall portion which they haue taken away it might haue encouraged many in their wicked waies and haue strengthened the hands of the fraudulent dealer For he might reason thus with himselfe I wil enrich my selfe with my neighbours goods and draw vnto me that which is his I will goe closely and couertly to worke it is a thousand to one that euer it be knowne or I espied and if it come abroad to the open light I know the hardest and the worst that may befall he can haue but his owne againe and so though I be no winner I am sure I shal be no looser To preuent this mischiefe and to stop the mouthes of all those that are ready to doe wrong the Lord decreeth that such a one shall restore not onely the principall but he shall repay the dammage that the owner hath sustained by the lack or losse of his goods and besides he shall adde a fift part thereunto whether it be more or lesse that he hath taken away From hence we learne that whatsoeuer is vniustly taken away from the right owners Doctrine Restitutio● i● required or 〈◊〉 such as haue taken any thing wro●●fully ought to be restored vnto them againe It is a duty required at our hands to make restitution to our brethren whensoeuer wee haue wronged them and whatsoeuer we haue taken from them When Abimelech had taken away Abrahams wife while he soiourned in Gerar the Lord said vnto him in a dreame Deliuer the man his wife againe for he is a Prophet and he shall pray for thee that thou mayest liue but if thou deliuer her not againe be sure that thou shalt die the death thou and all that thou hast Gen. 20.7 Abimelech is commanded to restore her againe to him whose by right shee was and to whom onely she pertained Many lawes to like purpose are set downe in the booke of Exodus chap. 22.1 3 4 5 c. If a man steale an oxe or a sheepe and kill it and sell it he shall restore fiue oxen for the oxe and foure sheep for the sheepe c. If a man doe hurt field or vineyard and put in his beast to feede in another mans field he shall recompense of the best of his own field and of the best of his owne vineyard So in the booke of Leuiticus chap. 6.1 c. the Lord ordaineth If a soule sin and commit a trespasse against the Lord it shall be because he hath sinned that he shall restore c. And to this purpose Samuel appealeth to the consciences of the people 1 Sam. 12.3 Behold heere I am beare record of me before the Lord and before his Annointed whose oxe haue I taken or whose asse haue I taken or whom haue I defrauded or whom haue I oppressed or of whose hand haue I receiued a bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith and I will restore it you Euery one that hath gouerment ouer others cannot truely say thus but euery one ought to do thus Whereby we see that howsoeuer God commandeth vs to confesse our sinnes which we haue committed vnto him yet that is not sufficient vnlesse we also make actuall restitution to him whom we haue offended This trueth is yet better to be confirmed Reason 1 by strength of reason And first we must know that it is a fruit or signe of true repentance and turning vnto God and of an heart touched with a feeling of his former offences that he which hath stollen will steale no more This we see in the example of Zacheus Luke 19.8 when once hee beleeued in Christ who had as it were lighted a candle within his heart that he began to see his own vnrighteousnesse and so his vnworthinesse to receiue any good thing he stood forth and said vnto the Lord Behold Lord the halfe of my goods I giue to the poore and if I haue taken away any thing from any man by false
with suspicion of adultery when as oftentimes she is innocent I answere Answer that God dealt with his people two wayes sometimes he commandeth that which is simply and in it selfe good and honest and forbiddeth that which in it selfe and owne nature is euill as when he commandeth to restore and forbiddeth a witch to liue and infinite such like precepts Againe sometimes he winketh at some euils that could not be auoyded as it were bearing with an inconuenience to remedy and to preuent a mischiefe To the end they might sly from the greater he tolerateth and permitteth the lesser euill This we see euidently in the cause of diuorse Deut. 24.1 He suffereth them to put away their wiues vpon priuate grudge and dislike as he doth allow it simply in the case of adultery Matth. 5.32 and 19.8.9 Not that he euer approued of it but Christ saith it was for the hardnesse of their hearts howbeit from the beginning it was not so The like we might say of marrying many wiues a common custome among the Patriarkes and godly kings which was as a mighty streame bearing all things before it it was permitted but neuer allowed Mal 2.15 it was practised but neuer pronounced to be lawfull Sometimes therefore God giueth lawes as Lord and God to their consciences which did binde them for euer and sometimes as a Lawgiuer he tolerateth that which he could not take away as Princes doe such abuses as haue taken roote among their subiects and are growne to an head so that custome is turned into another nature For to beare with corruptions is one thing and to remooue them is another So in this place howsoeuer the iealous head of the surmising husband offendeth against God when vpon euery light occasion and suspicion he accuseth his wife that is innocent of adultery yet lest he being wayward and head-strong should rage and rise against his wife in fury and lay violent hands hands on her and so be his owne iudge and executioner it pleased God to remedy that mischiefe allowing them an ordinary meanes to make tryall of their wiues whether they were guilty or not guilty of vnfaithfulnes and falsehood toward them In the meane season God alwayes condemneth iealousie suspicion arising without iust causes forbids to receiue a false accusatiō not only against their wiues but against any their friends neighbors or enemies as we shall shew more afterward And the Priest in this case if he saw no cause of suspition that he could approue off no doubt both might and did put backe the husband and reiect his needlesse tryall and therefore he is commanded when he intendeth such a matter to goe first of all to the Priest euen as the leapers were sent to the Priest who did pronounce them either cleane or vncleane and was made a competent iudge in the matter So that al husbands were not altogether left to their libertie to accuse without cause to try without proofe and to suspect without occasion And albeit the same allowance be not giuen to the wife to make tryall of the suspected husband yea though the spirit of iealousie come vpon her yet the husband was warned hereby that he is no lesse guilty in the sight of God who would also find him out in his sinne and that he ought to deale with all meekenesse and moderation with his wife as it is noted touching the Pharisees when Christ said to them that would haue the woman taken in adultetery to be stoned Ioh. 8.7 9. Let him that is without sinne among you cast the first stone at her they which heard it being conuicted by their owne conscience went out one by one beginning at the eldest euen vnto the last Thus much touching the first Question Againe others may obiect and say What Obiect 2 needed this solemne meanes of purgation which was to be put in practise by so many seueral ceremonies some to be done by the husband some by the wife some by the Priest forasmuch as there was a neerer course and a more ready way to bring the matter to light For the high Priest hauing on his breast-plate might in all doubtful and difficult cases whatsoeuer haue asked counsell of God and giuen answer vnto men as Numb 27.21 Exod. 28.30 and in the bookes of Samuel This was practised oftentimes when the people of God were in distresse and vncertaine what to doe Whereas this law of tryall of the suspected wife was not often if at any time it was practised As for that which is read and found in the forged and counterfeit Gospel of Iames Da●●d 〈…〉 that the blessed Virgin espoused to Ioseph had these bitter waters giuen vnto her and that she dranke of them and thereby cleared her selfe is no better then a grosse fable of some idle head hammered in the times of darknesse and vented abroad to deceiue the simple I anwere ●●swer to the obiection that the hauing of one means is not the taking away of another True it is that it is needlesse to be done by more which may be done by fewer but repetition and iteration of moe meanes in Gods matters is not needlesse In earthly things we say commonly that store is no sore and that if a man haue two strings to his bow it is the better ●tle 4.9 so that in all things two are better then one A more plentifull prouision doth not hurt but helpe Howbeit it pleased God to adde this meanes also to diuers others to declare how greatly he hateth and detesteth adultery and that thereby he might terrifie all women and make them afraide to commit secret sinne through the reproach and infamy they were compelled to vndergoe if they should giue any suspicion of adultery vnto their husbands Obiect 3 Lastly the question must be asked what is meant in this place by the spirit of iealousie when it is said If the spirit of iealousie come vppon him verse 14. ●●swer I answer it is an Hebrew phrase and manner of speaking noting thereby an eager and earnest desire a feruent and forward inclination vnto any thing which are deepely rooted in their hearts So that the Hebrewes cal all earnest inclinations and passionate affections by the name of the spirit as the spirit of lying 1 King 22.13 the spirit of giddinesse Esay 19.14 the spirit of drowsinesse Esay 29.10 the spirit of vncleannesse Zach. 13.2 the spirit of fornications Hos 14.12 the spirit of errour 1 Ioh. 4.6 In all which places it signifieth the exceeding forwardnesse and wonderfull pronenesse of mans corrupt nature vnto those euils as though the soule were wholly set vpon them and minded nothing else Againe by a figuratiue speech it pointeth out vnto vs the chiefe author and principall cause from whence it is deriued euen Satan the vncleane spirit the euill spirit the worker of all wickednesse the first father and founder and fountaine of all sinne whatsoeuer For euen as when we reade of the
those men that accused Daniel and to cast them into the den of Lyons who had the mastery ouer them and brake all their bones in peeces or euer they came at the bottome of the denne Dauid sinned in committing of adultery with the wife of Vriah his faithfull seruant and destroyed him with the sword of the Ammonites 2 Sam. 11● he is paied home and punished in his owne kind for God by way of rewarding and seruing him as he had serued others as a iust iudge doth raise vp euill against him out of his owne house His owne sonnes breake out into the same sinnes and he kindleth such a fire in his owne family that they rise vp against him and one against another Absalom spreadeth a tent and lyeth with his fathers concubines in the sight of all Israel Amnon deflowreth his sister Tamar to reuenge this Absalom killeth his owne brother Experience teacheth vs that blood requireth blood so that the murtherer requireth vengeance of God albeit peraduenture he escape the hand of the Magistrate We see this in Ioab he shed innocent blood and escaped a long time as if it had bin forgotten but at length his blood was shed and his hoare head went not downe to the graue in peace This is it which Christ telleth vs 1 King 2. ● Matth. 7.1 2. Iudge not that ye be not iudged for with what iudgement ye iudge ye shal be iudged and with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you againe He that rashly and vniustly censureth others feeleth at one time or other the smart of it in the like kinde for God rayseth vp others iustly albeit they defame him vniustly that therby he may be recompensed This is that which Samuel bringeth into the remembrance of Agag the king of Amalek 1 Sam. 15.33 As thy sword hath made women childlesse so shall thy mother bee childlesse among women so he hewed him in pieces before the Lord. Neither need we goe farre to fetch examples of this trueth or turne ouer histories of ages past for we haue it sealed vp to vs in our daies and times wherein we liue I meane in those of the pretended holy league in our neighbor kingdome they confederated themselues to root out true religion and the professors therof out of the face of the earth they bend all their forces to effect it but the Lord that sitteth in heauen laugheth them to scorne and hath thē in derision he hath rewarded thē to the full and that in their owne kind he turned their weapons vpon themselues and sheathed their swords in their owne bowels as he dealt with the Midianites that slew one another Iudg. 2. ●● The example of Haman is famous and well knowne he set vp a gibbet to hang Mordecai because he bowed not vnto him Ester ● ●● howbeit himselfe was hanged vpon it and fell into the pit he had prepared for another but Mordecai escaped and was deliuered and aduanced who spake good for the King as appeareth in the booke of Ester Reason 1 The reasons are euident to be seene and easie to be found out First the iustice of God is thereby cleered and the mouth of iniquity stopped For what haue we to alledge or answer for our selues when God retaileth vs according to the sinne that wee haue committed Doubtlesse we haue no excuse or pretence or allegation for our selues but wee must confesse with our owne mouthes euen against our selues that God is righteous and we are vnrighteous This appeareth in the booke of Iudges in the example of Adonibezek being taken by Ioshua and the people hee had his thumbes and great toes cut off for he confessed that the iustice of God had found him out and requited him in his kinde according to his owne cruelty Iudg. 1 ver 7. Threescore and ten Kings hauing their thumbes and their great toes cut off gathered their meate vnder my Table as I haue done so God hath requited me and they brought him to Ierusalem there he died If then God bee iust he cannot but measure all his actions by iustice for no vnrighteousnesse is found in him as he will make men themselues confesse Reason 2 Secondly the Lord cannot abide a measure and a measure they are an abhomination vnto God as Prou. 20 23. Diuers weights are an abhomination to the Lord and a false ballance is not good The Iudge of all the world cannot but deale iustly and truely This reason is expressed by the Angel of the waters Reuel 16 5 6. Thou art righteous O Lord which art and wast and shall be because thou hast iudged thus for they haue shed the blood of Saints and Prophets and thou hast giuen them blood to drinke Where he concludeth that their blood must be shed that delighted to shed the blood of others because God is a righteous Lord. His iustice shineth among men in all places in that he recompenceth the wickednesse of men by a like punishment sent from him so that their punishment is answerable to their sinne Reason 3 Thirdly the vngodly are fully worthy of such punishment It is meete that malefactors haue their deserts how then can they complaine of iniquity or iniustice so long as they receiue their owne and he paieth them the debt he oweth them with their owne mony GOD will giue to euery man according to his workes Rom. 2. and giue their wages according to their merites This reason is also added in the former place of the Reuelation where the Angel chargeth them that they had shed the blood of the Saints and putteth them in minde that God had done them no wrong when he gaue them blood to drinke then he annexeth the reason for they are worthy ●euel 16 6. If then wee consider the deserts of men how great they are we cannot maruaile whē at any time we behold the hand of God stretched out against them in this manner and recompencing them with such measure Fourthly let vs marke what God requireth Reason 4 at the hands of Magistrates in his Law to wit that they recompence like for like Moses saith in the Law Thou shalt pay life for life eye for eye tooth for tooth hand for hand foot for foot burning for burning wound for wound stripe for stripe Exod. 21 24. Such a blemish as he hath made in any such shall be repaied to him Leuit. 24 20. Neither was this law repealed or disliked by Christ our Sauiour Math. 5 38. Forasmuch as in that place he onely condemneth the abuse of it by priuate persons according to their priuate affections and lustes of reuenge who are not Magistrates If then the Lord will haue the higher powers recompence the sinner according to the manner of his sinne we may not doubt but he that is aboue all will measure his workes according to the rule of iustice which is most equall Therefore whatsoeuer measure we mete Luke 6 38. Matth. 26 52. Esay 33 1. it is iust
the whole Tribe as appeareth by the largenes of the offering and by the first Prince that offered Thus we see that they being set vp in high place aboue others do also goe before them and giue them good example in the best things seeke to further them in Gods worship We learne hereby Doctrine that albeit God be to be serued of all Such as are of high st place ought to bee more forward in good things then others and that all persons should shew themselues forward and ready to further the worke of the Lord yet aboue all other the chiefe and heads of the people are to be guides of the way and leaders vnto the rest The Prophet teacheth that vnder the Gospell Kings shall be nursing Fathers and Queenes shall be Nursing mothers to the Church Esay 49 23. Dauid exhorteth Kings to be wise and the Iudges of the earth to be instructed to serue the Lord with feare and to reioyce with trembling Psa 2 10 11. When the people saw the zeale and feruencie of Hezekiah that he spared no cost to further the worship of God it kindled in them a loue to do his seruice and they reioyced exceedingly 2 Chron. 30 24 25. Such therefore as are aduanced aboue the people as the head is aboue the body ought to be more zealous forward in the waies of God then others that are of the lowest sort Thus it ought to be because they must Reason 1 know they lye open to iudgement as well as others if not before others Topheth is prepared of old for the King as well as for the subiect It is made deepe and large as well for the one as for the other Esay 30.33 God accepteth no mans person Nay they are for the most part chiefly pursued and ouer-taken with iudgements as Ezra 7.23 Artaxerxes decreed that all should returne and build the house of the God of heauen For why should there bee wrath against the Realme of the King and his sons And to this purpose it is saide in the Psalme 82 6 7. I haue saide ye are Gods and all of you are children of the most high but ye shall dye like men and fall like one of the Princes Secondly they sinne by their example and giue offence vnto others When they fall they make others fall with them as a mighty Oake casteth downe the low and little shrubs that grow nere it So then they offend not only by their owne transgression as a priuate man but all their actions are exemplary and they bring a great scandall vnto others They are as a city set vpon an hil or as a light vpon a Beacon that is seene farre and neere when they sinne they make others sinne with them For this cause Salomon saith Prou. 29.12 If a Ruler hearken to lyes all his seruants are wicked Thirdly wherefore are they separated in calling and condition and why are they aduanced to honor Is it to magnifie themselues is it to sit at ease or to liue in pleasure or to delight them in their high titles or to please themselues to see others creepe and crouch vnto them No but to be pillars in the house of God and to serue the Church Hence it is that Nehemiah saide Nehem. 6 11. Should such a man as I fly Or who is there that being as I am would goe into the Temple to saue his life As if hee had sayde Should I flye that am a Ruler of the people I will not doe it And Mordecai perswadeth Ester to goe in to the King and to aduenture her life for the deliuerance of the Church by this reason chap. 4.14 Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time as this Hee putteth her boldly in minde that God had aduanced her to honour and made her inherite the throne of glorie to the end she should honour him againe and referre all the glory she had attained to the setting forth of his glorie Vse 1 This teacheth vs that it is a dangerous state where are no Leaders or Rulers to goe before the people and to hold them in Gods seruice there of necessity godlinesse must decay Iustice fall to the ground and all duties of Religion sinke downe as in an army where are no Commanders in a family where are no Gouernours in a ship where are no Pilots what is there but all disorder and confusion The last part of the booke of Iudges setteth forth the truth heereof at large the Israelites corrupted themselues with Idolatry they defiled the worship of God and God gaue them ouer to a reprobate minde to doe those things which are not conuenient being filled with all vnrighteousnesse fornication and such like wickednesse and what was the occasion of al Iudg. 17 18. 19. In those dayes there was no King in Israel but euery man did that which was right in his owne eyes And it is obserued by the Author of that Booke that the people feared the Lord all the dayes of Ioshua a godlie Gouernour and all the dayes of the Elders that out-liued Ioshua who had seene all the great workes of the Lord but when they were dead and buried The children of Israel did euill in the sight of the Lord Iudg. 2 7 11. and serued Baalim Wee must therefore needes acknowledge the happinesse and blessednesse of that people that haue godly Gouernours such as Moses and Ioshua and Dauid and Iehoshaphat and Hezekiah and Iosiah and such like to teach them and guide them in the wayes of godlynesse This is a great mercy and fauour of God Vse 2 Secondly we may conclude that wretched and miserable is their condition where Gouernors are cold and carelesse in Gods seruice and enemies to the aduancement of his glory The Prophet sheweth that the Chiefe had no knowledge and the great men had broken the yoke and burst the bonds Woe therefore vnto the Land the Lord would visit for these things and his soule be auenged on such a nation as this Ier. 5 5 9. If it be within the walles of a priuate family that zeale be found in the Gouernours it will appeare oftentimes in the lowest seruant which goeth to the doore as in Rhode Acts 12 14. She dwelled in a godly family where manie were gathered together in prayer intreating the Lord to work Peters deliuerance when she heard his voice standing without and knocking at the doore shee could not open the gate for gladnesse but ran in to acquaint them with that glad tidings If Cornelius bee a deuout man and one that feareth God hee shall haue seruants and soldiers to attend vpon him to be deuout also Acts 10 2 7. If the Courtier or Nobleman whose sonne was cured do beleeue his whole house will beleeue also and follow his example Ioh. 4 53. If the Iaylor desire to know how to be saued and if once himselfe become a beleeuer he shall not beleeue alone his houshold will beare him company
consider two things first the commandement of God without whose authority nothing is to be imposed as necessary in the Church which is that the Priests should light the lampes not one or two but all of them to giue light in the Tabernacle to signifie the light of Gods word shining in the Church which ought sincerely to be preached and published by the teachers to giue light of knowledge to all in the house of God as the Apostle declareth of himselfe that he had kept backe nothing Acts 20 20 27 but reuealed the whole counsell of God as the Priests kept not any of the lampes vnlighted but did light thē all Secondly the obedience of Aaron to the commandement he lighted the lampes that they might giue light round about the candlestick on euery side wheresoeuer the candlesticke could be seene Vpon occasion of mentioning the candlesticke we haue a description of it verse 4 by the matter of it it was made of gold and by the forme of beaten gold according to the patterne shewed to Moses in the Mount for he was a faithfull seruant in the house of God Heb. 3 2. But of this we may reade farther Exo. 25 37 40 25 26. There was but one candlesticke in the Tabernacle made by Moses because this was sufficient howbeit Salomon that built the Temple afterward made ten candlestickes whereof fiue stood at the one side fiue on the other side 2 Chron. 4 ver 7 20. because the Temple was larger and wider then the Tabernacle and therefore moe were requisite in the one then in the other The place where the Candlesticke stood was in the Sanctuary next to the most holy place or in the first Tabernacle Hebrewes chapter 9 verses 2 9. Not in the most holy place forasmuch as the High-Priest went into it once onely in the whole yeare Heb. 9 7. whereas the lampes of the Candlesticke were renued daily But let vs come to the words as they lye in order and first touching the lampes appointed to bee lighted we must consider that the Tabernacle with all things thereunto belonging was a figure of the time present vntil the time of reformation Heb. 9 9. and when the Priesthood was changed there must be also a change of the law Heb. 7 12. All things had their signification and the truth which is as the pith and substance of the ceremonies belongeth to vs as well as to the Iewes Hence it is that the lampes belonging to the candlesticke ●●ctrine signifie vnto vs that the word is the light of the church 〈◊〉 word is ●●amp and 〈◊〉 of the ●●●rch giuing light to the people as the Sun doth to the world wherby the true light of the knowledge of God of Christ our Redeemer of true righteousnesse and of saluation is kindled in the hearts of all true beleeuers Dauid is a certaine witnesse of this truth who teacheth that the commandement of the Lord is pure enlightening the eyes Psal 19 8. Thy word is a lampe vnto my feete and a light vnto my path Psal 119 105. So Salomon saith Prou. 6 23. The Commandement is a lampe and the Law is a light It is plaine therefore that the lampe lighted in the Tabernacle did figure out the word of God Hence it is that the Prophet Esay saith O house of Iacob ●●●y 2 5. come let vs walke in the light of the Lord and afterward he sheweth that if any speake not according to this word 〈◊〉 8 20. it is because there is no light in them Reason 1 And it cannot be otherwise because the Lord which is the author of the Scriptures is light it selfe he is called the Father of lights Iam. 1 and the Church acknowledgeth when it sate in darknes that the Lord was the light of it Mich. 7 8. The Apostle saith he only hath immortality and dwelleth in the light which no mā can approch vnto 1 Tim. 6 16. And in the beginning of Iohns Gospel Christ is called the light of men Iohn 1 4. If God then be the true light how can his word but partake of his nature and be lightsome in it selfe and bring light to vs Againe the word hath in it the effects of light it expelleth darknes and is very comfortable and therfore comfort is often called by the name of light Ps 97 11. Ester 8 16. Ps 118 27 and 43 3. Iob 30 26. Lam. 3 2. So is it with the word it driueth away spirituall darknes and it comforteth and reioyceth the heart Psal 19 8. Vse 1 This doctrine serueth to reproue the church of Rome which bring in their Torches and Tapers and Candles into the Church as the setting of them vp at burials and funerals 〈◊〉 d● par ●●b 2 c. 19. to signifie that the soules of the dead are aliue a superstitious custome condemned by sundry Councels as superstitious and heathenish Moreouer they obserue continually another foolish custome to set vp wax candles Taper lights before their Images and vpon the Altar in their Churches and this they do not onely in the night but in the day at noone when the Sun shineth in his strength And lest they might seeme to wander without Scripture and to be mad without reason they pretend for themselues and their superstition the continuall burning of the lampes in the Tabernacle before the Arke of the testimony Exod. 25. Bellarmine disputing of the reliques of the Saints Bellar. lib. 2. de reliqu c. 3. et 4. noteth three ends of this practise because fire is a signe of gladnesse a signe of glory and a signe of life But all this is no better then will-worship which is condemned Mat. 15 9. Col. 2 23. of which it may be said Who required these things at your hands Es 1 12 And this obseruation in the law touching the lamps is meerly ceremoniall which had an end with the Priesthood and was honourably buried with the Synagogue and is not to be raked out of the dust and raised out of the graue againe Also it is vtterly vntrue that these lampes were lighted in the day time for they were lighted in the euening burned vntill the morning and then were put out Thus doth Ahijah tell Ieroboam and all Israel 2 Chr. 13 11. that they had the Candlesticke of gold with the lampes thereof to burne euery euening Therefore it is said in the law The high Priest shall light the lampes at euen the word is betweene the twilights meaning therby both the euening and the morning Exod. 30 8 and Aaron must cause the lampes to burne continually from the euening vnto the morning Leuit. 24 3. In the booke of Samuel in other places it appeareth that they burned all night for those that kept the watch of the Lord in the Tabernacle and in the Temple but were alwaies exstinguished in the morning when it was day 1 Sam. 3 3. Thus then we reason against them from their owne
or in the publicke ioy of the Church do mourne cannot in truth perswade their owne hearts that they haue anie part or portion in the body of Christ Wherefore whensoeuer God taketh away any principall stay of Church or Common-wealth we haue cause of mourning and humbling our selues vnder Gods iudgement When the husbandman layeth his Axe to the root of the tree or vndermineth the ground about it we can not doubt but he meaneth the felling and falling of it Or when wee see a Gardiner take away the hedge or wall of his garden Esay 5 5 6. plucke vp by the roots the cheefest choisest plants disfigure the ornaments and beauty of it and lay it open for the beasts to enter we may gather hee mindeth not to continue but deface the Garden Or when a Carpenter pulleth downe the master-peeces and postes that doth hold vp the whole frame and layeth the foundation euen with the ground wee may coniecture by these meanes that he meaneth to remoue the building to another place So when we see the euident footsteps of Gods wrath and begin to discerne the fire of his iealousie breaking out by the smoake beginning to appeare in taking away seruiceable men as plāts of his own garden as pillars of his own house and as branches of the Tree which his right hand hath planted we must lay it to our hearts as tokens going before destruction This our Sauiour handleth Matth. 42 32 33. speaking of the signes going before his glorious appearance at the end of the world Learne the Parable of the Figge tree when her bough is yet tender and it putteth foorth leaues yee know that Summer is neere so likewise yee when ye see all these things know that the kingdome of God is nere euen at the doore And now beloued behold and consider lift vp your eies and looke how God hath dealt with vs and marke whether his dealings toward vs be not tokens of his anger and fore-runners of his iudgements Hath hee not taken from vs a most worthy Prince our late Soueraigne who by the course of nature might haue liued longer Of whom wee may truly say as Dauid did 2 Sam. 1 24. Ye daughters of Israel weepe for Queene Elizabeth who clothed you with Scarlet and pleasures and hanged Ornaments of Gold vpon your apparrell P. o● 31 2● Or else as Salomon doth speaking of a good woman Many daughters haue done vertuously but thou surmountest them all She opened the house of the Lord in the first yeere of her reigne as good K. Hezekiah did shee called backe the reuerent Ministers fled out of the land as Eliah into the wildernesse through the tyranny of Iezabel she brought in the pure worship of God cast out the Romish abhominations set forth the seruice of God in a knowne tongue repealed the bloody acts of the persecutors and therefore she thus honouring God and aduancing his Gospel he likewise exalted her Throne on high as the Throne of Salomon 2. Samuel 2 ver 30. so that she shined in her time in the world as if all the firmament thereof had bin but one starre and as if in all the cope compasse of heauē there had shined none but she This starre is now set and gone downe which should go neere vnto vs and pierce vs to the quicke and make vs seeing a great Prince is fallen in Israel neuer to forget the great works which the Lord did among vs by her happy hand Besides hath not the Lord taken from vs many lights out of the Vniuersity whence flowed many comfortable streames that watered the Garden of God many out of Cities and particular Churches wherby the Church hath receiued a deepe and dangerous wound and yet we seeme to haue feared consciences and to be past feeling When the vitall parts begin to faile or to languish the life of the body is in hazard While the disease or distemperature is in the outward parts farre from the head or the heart there is hope of health and recouery but when the liuely parts begin to waste and consume by little and little it is a signe of the decay of life and of the approch of death Howsoeuer therefore the greatest part neuer lay these things to their hearts nor interprete them as present tokens of imminent danger and iudgement yet we that haue learned better things ought to consider that as they are taken away from the euill to come ● 57 1 2. ●gs 22 20 rest quietly in the graue as in a bed euen so they haue left vs behinde for the euill to come Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty to pray to God to stay his hand to shew mercy to his Church and to poure out the full Viall of his vengeance vpon his enemies that know him not Psal 79 6. Ieremy 10 25 and vpon the Nations that call not vpon his Name This the Prophet practiseth Psalm 74 2 19 20 21 22. Thinke vpon thy Congregation which thou hast possessed of old and on thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this Mount Sion wherein thou hast dwelled We see how he putteth God in minde of his Couenant and entreateth him to strike through the loynes of his enemies to their destruction to maintaine his own cause and to spare his people the sheepe of his own Pasture the dwelling place of his own Name and the Congregation of his poore afflicted ones So when in like manner we behold the hand of God vpon his owne Sanctuary to begin iudgement at his owne house let vs call vpon him to consider whereof wee are made and to remember that we are but dust This did the Prophet Habakkuk when God threatened to enter into iudgment with his church O Lord I haue heard thy voice and was afraid O Lord reuiue thy worke in the midst of thy people in wrath remember mercy Hab. 3 2. Where hee teacheth that whensoeuer wee heare of the threatnings and iudgements of God we must pray him to repaire and restore the state of the Church which is ready to perish who is able to heale the wound that his owne right hand hath made True it is the great sinnes of this Land do cry out against vs may iustly prouoke him to make hauocke of all yet let vs call for mercy at his hands and stay the course of our sinnes that so he may stay the stroke of his iudgements CHAP. XXI IN this Chapter ●e diuition ●●es chapter we are to obserue four principall pointes First the battaile fought betweene Arad King of the Canaanites the Israelites Secondly another murmuring of the people the last recorded in this Booke which God punisheth with fiery serpents cureth them with a brazen serpent Thirdly their happy proceeding in their journey toward the Land of promise where God gaue them water and brought them to the borders of the Amorites Lastly the victories which Israel obtained on Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the
as false and vnreasonable declaring as the truth was that Israel took not away that land which they claimed as their owne but wonne it from the Amorites by the law of warre and Verse 20 by right of conquest who denying them passage and moreouer making assault vpon them constrained them to draw out their swords to defend themselues by occasion whereof they obtained victory through the helpe of God and possessed their Cities And as they tooke them by force of armes so they held thē Verse 26 by prescription of time three hundred yeares So that he declareth that if any had right to those Cities or could lay any iust claime or title vnto them it should be the Moabites who were the lawfull owners of them before Sihon had encroched vpon them and taken them away from the first inhabitants But the Moabites hauing once lost them in battell neuer asked Verse 25 them of the Israelites neither laid any claime vnto them therefore much lesse should the Amonites to whom they appertained not by any iust title neither belonged any way vnto them either as owners by law or conquerers by sword and therefore they had no cause to dispute what right Israel had vnto that Land which now they possessed The second point heere amplified and enlarged is touching the well which by a diuine reuelation to them they had digged For when they departed from the Riuer Arnon they came into a dry place where they wanted water such as the wildernesse affoordeth many where the streames are swallowed vp in the hot sandes but at the speciall commandement of God they were directed what to doe as Peter was where he should cast his Net Luke chapter 5 verse 4 they digged and found water in great abundance and therefore they praise God by an effectuall song of thanksgiuing amplified by many rhetoricall figures as goodly flouers or as precious iewels to beautifie and garnish the same withall For first they eloquently by an Apostrophe turne their speech to the Well it selfe though a dumbe and senslesse creature and speake vnto it as if it had eares to heare and vnderstanding to conceiue Rise vp O Well confessing thereby the great power of God who contrary to the nature of all heauy and weighty things made the water to ascend whose property is to descend and exhorting with many acclamations and loud out-cries one another to the worke Secondly they set downe who were the labourers and workmen about the Well together with the tooles and instruments wherwith they laboured to wit the Princes and Nobles directed by Moses by whose ministery they receiued the Law and holpen with their staues and such like instruments wherewith they laboured fit for that purpose And this is the third myracle which God wrought in giuing them waters First in Rephidim immediately after they had passed ouer the red Sea Exod. 17. The second in the desert of Zin whē they came to Kadesh as we shewed before in the former chapter The third is that recorded in this place in the desert of the Moabites Afterward Moses reckoneth vp other places by which they passed as Mattaanah Nahaliel Bamoth and so that Valley which is in the plaine of the Moabites In this History of the passage of the Israelites from place to place a question Question ariseth what is meant by the booke of the warres of the LORD mentioned in the fourteenth verse For where is it now extant or what is become of it From hence also from such like places many conclude that sundry bookes of Canonicall Scripture are lost I answer Answer the word Sepher is taken diuersly and doubtfully it signifieth any publishing or rehearsing whether it be written or vnwritten whether it be set downe by the pen or vttered by liuely voice as also the word Tradition is taken for that which is deliuered eyther by word of mouth or by course of writing So then we cannot necessarily conclude It is rehearsed therefore it is written Nor thus It is written Therefore it is an holy booke and put into the Canon of the Scripture Let these three things be cleered and decided that it was a booke that it was an holy booke and lastly that it was a Canonicall booke and then wee shall easily be satisfied But Moses speaketh barely of rehearsing the warres not of writing them as if he should say Whensoeuer the warres ordered and disposed by the prouidence of God shall be spoken off this warre also and worke of his shall bee remembred which he hath wisely wrought and accomplished for his people against Vaheb King of the Moabites giuing part of his Country to Sihon that so his owne people might recouer the same out of his hands againe and reteine it as a possession for themselues as Iephtah telleth the Ammonites Iudg. 11 23 24 that they had held it by prescription of a long time peaceably without any molestation from the Moabites or desire of re-entry But if this had bene penned in a booke and reserued to posterity no doubt Ieptah would haue produced it as a sure witnesse to cleere the whole matter and to put it out of all doubt Wherefore this truth must be holden of vs that no part of the Canonicall Scripture No canonical Scripture is lost inspired of God is lost and perished I meane such as was committed as the Lords treasure to the Church for the perpetuall instruction thereof in faith and obedience so that no one oracle or sentence of God can fall away True it is 2 King 22 8. 1 Mac. 1 19. these sacred bookes may sometimes bee neglected and carelesly kept of men they may be furiously burned and despitefully handled by cruell tyrants that seeke the ouerthrow of all piety and religion but they can neuer be finally lost and wholly extinguished As he that keepeth Israel cannot slumber or sleepe so he that keepeth the holy Scripture the glory of Israel cannot slumber nor sleepe For first of all who is the author and enditer of thē but God and will not he preserue his truth and keepe it for the good of his Church in all ages Shal we make him vnable or vnwilling to defend and continue them If vnable we make him a weake and impotent God if vnwilling we make him enuious and malicious both which are farre from the pure and perfect nature of God and cannot stand with his essence Secondly all the workes of God remaine for euer and euer and are done in truth and equity Take a perfect view of all creatures vnder the Sunne which are the workes of his hands though they may be abolished and rooted out in one place yet they continue in another If thou wouldst ascend into the heauens or goe downe into the deepe if thou wouldst take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vtmost parts of the sea which of all the Creatures are now missing What place is void empty What hath beene that is not now being and extant in
Patron of that people could do them no good but suffered them to be taken and spoyled Such is the vain hope of poore Idolaters in their Idols which cannot helpe or deliuer themselues much lesse their worshippers that trust in them Lastly touching the Israelites they spoiled them that were the spoilers and conquered them that were the conquerors for they recouered for themselues and for their owne vse the Townes and Cities which the Moabites had lost Thus Israel medled not with the Moabites neither tooke any thing from them but peaceably possessed that which they won frō the Amorites none laying any claime or title thereunto as Iephtah pleadeth Iudg. 11 13. And this is the right which the Israelites had to dwell in the Cities of the Amorites and to possesse as their owne goods the labours and liuings of other men which they could iustifie by the Law of God and man For when Abraham had subdued in battell the fiue Kings he chalenged to himself a right in the prey that was taken and payed the tenth of all to Melchizedek Gen. 14 20 21 Hereunto belongeth the commandement giuen of God touching the diuiding and retaining the spoyles of war saying All the spoyle thereof shalt thou take vnto thy selfe and shalt eate the spoyle of thine enemies which the Lord thy God hath giuen thee Deuter 20 14. Xenoph. lib. 7. Cyropaed Halicarnas li. 6. And this we might plentifully prooue by the Lawes Decrees and Constitutions of Princes and States in former times Verse 21. Then Israel sent Messengers In this diuision generally is set foorth the end of the enemies of the Church that albeit they preuaile for a season and plow vpon the backs of the godly and make long and large surrowes albeit they plant themselues strong flourish as the greene Bay-tree yet they passe away suddenly and are cast downe in desolation The persecuters and enemies of the Church shall perish and come to confusion Doctrine The persecuters of the Church shall perish Howsoeuer they lift vp their heads hornes on high and their honor reach vp to the Clouds there shall be a downefall they shall be confounded and consumed in his wrath Looke vpon Caine who was the first persecuter of the church in Abel and we shall see the same confirmed which is offered to our considerations in these present examples He killed his brother Gen. 4 11 and wherefore slew he him Because his owne works were euill and his brothers good But did cruell Caine escape No the curse of God came vpon him he was made a runnagate and fugitiue vpon the earth and so God reuenged the innocent blood of his brother Abel which he had shedde with barbarous and vnnaturall cruelty The like we might say of Pharaoh an arch-enemy of the Church in Egypt who oppressing the people of God with burdens and destroying their children was ouerwhelmed in the red Sea Exod. 14 28. Another fearefull example we haue in Saneherib which set himselfe against the people that called vpon the liuing God and blasphemed his Name which is holy throughout all generations hee was slaine of his owne sonnes 2 Kings 20 37 which iudgement the Lord foretolde that being accordingly performed accomplished it might be knowne whence it was wherefore it came to passe The like is reported recorded of Haman in the booke of Ester ch 7 9 who procured the Kings writ to roote out to kill and to destroy all the Iewes young and olde children and women in one day yet abusing his high fauour with the King and great honour in the Court God threw him downe and layd his honor in the dust so that he was hanged on the same tree which he had prepared for Mordecai that spake good for the King Thus his mischiefe returned on his owne head and his cruelty fell vpon his owne pate and himself was taken in the snare which he made for another Hereunto tendeth the end of Nebuchadnezar whose seruice God vsed to chasten his owne people to destroy the Temple to waste the City and to cary them away captiue Dan. 4.30 hee was throwne downe his reason was taken from him and he had the heart of a beast giuen vnto him The Iewes to whom pertained the right of adoption the glory of the Arke the tables of the Couenant the giuing of the Law the seruice of God the accomplishment of the promises the comming of the Messiah the Oracles of trust committed vnto them were notwithstanding all these priuiledges enemies of Christ and of the Apostles enemies of Christian Religion and the professors thereof they put the Sonne of God to death and persecuted his Apostles that he sent among them to preach and teach the Gospel of the Kingdome Matth. 24.21 in the end themselues were iustly slain for sedition which they falsely charged vpon the Apostles nay as themselues cried his blood be vpon vs Ioseph de bel● Iuda lib. 7. cap. 4. 8. and vpon our children so that which Christ foretold came vpon them in full measure pressing downe and running ouer when the abhomination of desolation sate in the holy place there was such trouble amongst them and so great tribulation came vpon them that the like neuer was nor shall be to the end Herod that bloody tyrant which had slaine Iames with the sword and putting Peter in prison intended the like measure and murther vpon him this wicked wretch escaped not the hands of God for being arrayed in his royall Robes sitting vpon the Iudgement seate and making an Oration vnto the people The Angel of the Lord smote him he was eaten of wormes Acts 12 23. Iudas the child of perdition and betrayer of the Son of God despaired Hung himselfe burst in the middest and his Bowels gushed out Acts 1 18. for whom it had bin good if he had neuer bene borne What shold I say more If we remember the late dayes of persecution wherin the patience of the Saints was tried by bloody executions tortures murthers massacres hanging beheading burning and imprisonment wee may obserue that the heauy hand of God was one way or other against those bloody Inquisitors and cruell persecutors that had imbrued and defiled their hands with their blood that they dyed not the ordinary and common death of all See Acts and Monuments in the end nor were visited after the visitation of all men Some died fodainly falling downe on the ground that they neuer stirred as Ananias and Sapphira some had their bowels and inward parts fall out and died the death of Iudas their elder brother some could not swallow and digest their meate but it came forth againe sometimes at their mouth and sometimes at their nosthrils most horribly to behold Some were striken in the one halfe of their body that they lay benummed halfe aliue and halfe dead to the great terror and astonishment of all that were present and did looke vpon them Some brake their Neckes others became
his power is not now weakened he can deale thus with all his enemies the enemies of his Church If he blow vpon them with the blast of his mouth they passe away suddenly as the chaffe is scattered before the winde An example heereof is recorded in the holy History 2 Chron. 20 23. when a great multitude of the Moabites Ammonites and Amorites assembled themselues to fight against Iehoshaphat after he had set himselfe to seeke the Lord proclaiming a fast throughout all Iudah asking counsell of the Lord and praying to him in the zeale of his spirit the enemies slew one another with the sword Thus doth God turn the edge of the sword drawne against the Church vpon themselues rescueth his people when there is none to helpe We haue had experience of Gods protection of his church our eyes haue seene and our eares haue heard how one hath butchered and murthered another whereby God hath giuen a time of rest and breathing vnto his seruants Hee is the same without changing with him is no variablenes neither shadow of turning if we turne to him with all our hearts he will turne to vs and not suffer the rod of the wicked alwaies to rest on the lot of the righteous lest they should put forth their hand to wickednes Therefore Israel dwelled in all the Cities of the Amorites in Heshbon and in all the Villages therof We haue heard of the murthers slaughters that were betweene the Moabites the Amorites in the which howsoeuer one sought to defend himselfe the other preuailed by vsurpation as might sometimes ouer-cometh right yet the purpose of God who ouer-swayeth all actions of men and draweth good out of euill was to giue rest to his people and to make them inherite and inhabite the Cities and Villages which the Amorites had wrongfully gotten Doctrine Gods childrē are oftentimes brought into the inhe●itāce of the vnfaithfull Hereby we learne for our instruction that God oftentimes bringeth the godly and faithfull that please him to inherite the Lands and possessions of the wicked and vngodly Howsoeuer the beleeuers that feare God are many times thrust out of house and home and haue their lawfull possessions taken from them as we see in Naboths Vineyard 2 King 21 15. Gen. 21 25. and in Abrahams Well yet sometimes God returneth in mercy to the faithfull and maketh the substance and inheritance of the vnfaithfull to descend vnto them This is confirmed in the Booke of Exodus at the departure of Israel out of the Land of Egypt at which time GOD recompenced the sore labours and heauy trauels of his people imposed vpon them by cruell taske-masters For they asked of the Egiptians Iewels of siluer and Ingots of gold and change of rayment then the Lord gaue them fauour in the sight of the Egiptians so that they granted their requests inriched the Israelites and spoiled themselues Exod. 12 35 36. This goodnesse of God the Prophet with praise acknowledgeth toward his people saying He cast out the Heathen before them caused them to fall to the lot of his inheritance c. Psal 78 55. This verifieth the saying of the wise man Prou. 28 8. He that encreaseth his riches by vsury and interest gathereth them for him that will be mercifull to the poore And in another place Prou 13.22 The good man shall giue inheritance to his childrens children and the riches of the sinner is laid vp for the iust In like manner Iob describing the condition of the vngodly fheweth that though he should heape vp siluer as the dust Iob 27.16 17. and prepare raiment as the clay hee may prepare it but the iust shall put it on and the innocent shall diuide the siluer Thus God taketh away the things of this life from such as vse thē wickedly and bestoweth them vpon such as will imploy them lawfully Reason 1 The Reasons remaine to be considered to strengthen this truth and to make it appeare to the conscientes of all of vs to be a necessary and apparant truth First of all the mercy of God toward such as are sealed vp to be his seruants is without end there is no brim nor bottome of it If then his mercy surmount our thoughts he will let passe no part of his kindnes toward them that do feare him Thus the Prophet reasoneth Psal 136 21 22. Where vpon these examples of Gods great kindnes toward Israel in ouerthrowing Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Bashan hee saith He gaue their Land for an heritage for his mercy endureth for euer euen an heritage vnto Israel his seruant for his mercy endureth for euer Whensoeuer therefore wee see this come to passe we must acknowledge the cause of it to be in God who ceasseth not to bee good to those that be his Reason 2 Againe God maketh knowne his power among his people to teach them to depend vpon him to shew vnto them that they serue not a weake and impotent God to instruct them to walke in the obedience of his waies This the Prophet pointeth out Psalm 44 2 3 and 111 6 105 44 45. Vse 1 The vses follow First this truth teacheth who is the soueraigne disposer of all things in heauen and earth namely God He ordereth kingdomes and disposeth Countries he giueth and taketh away hee encreaseth and diminisheth he maketh rich and maketh poore It is not our owne strength or pollicy it is not our owne care or labour it is the bountifulnes and blessing of God that is all in all We haue heere beneath vpon the earth Owners and Land-lords we haue such as account themselues possessours of houses and lands but we must know that wee are all Tenants at will we enioy nothing by Lease or Indenture for terme of yeares but hold the tenure of the Lands and liuings at the will and pleasure of the great and high Land-lord of all the world This is the confession of Hannah in her song of thanksgiuing 1 Sam. 2 7 8. The Lord maketh poore and maketh rich bringeth low and exalteth he raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth vp the begger from the dunghill to set them among Princes and to make them inherite the seat of glory for the Pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world vpon them Whatsoeuer therefore we haue let vs acknowledge therein not our owne desarts or merites but the goodnes of God toward vs filling vs with good things to serue him Secondly let vs from hence confesse that Vse 2 all the carke and care of man with his best endeuours cannot alwaies attaine to the benefit and fruite of his trauell but he prouideth that which another enioyeth This the Prophet Haggai testifieth chap 1 6.9 Yee haue sowne much and bring in little ye eate but ye haue not enough ye drinke but ye are not filled ye cloathe you but ye are not warme c. According to that which
pressed sore vpon him he sought to the witch at Endor which had a familiar Spirit raysed vp the diuell in the likenes of Samuel The like is approoued vnto vs by the practise of Amaziah King of Israel in the second book of the Kings the first chapter and the second verse When hee was fallen thorough the Lattice window in his vpper Chamber which was in Samaria and thereof grew sicke vnto the death hee directed Messengers to goe and enquire of Baallzebub the god of Ekron whether hee should recouer of this his disease So did Haman likewise an enemy of the Iewes and one of the race of the Amalekites thirsting after the blood of Mordecai and the destruction of the whole Church dealt by Sorcerie for to effect his intended purpose Ester chap. 3 verse 7. And cast Pur that is a Lot to know when hee might haue a luckie and prosperous time to enterprize this businesse Moreouer it is noted by the Prophet that when Nebuchadnezzar King of Babell was come out of his kingdome with a mightie hoast and stoode at the parting of the way doubting vnto what place he should go whether against the Ammonites or against the Tribe of Iudah as in the one and twentieth chapter of Ezekiel and the eleuenth verse He consulted by Diuination and made his Arrowes bright he consulted with Idolles and looked in the Liuer Heereunto commeth the threatning denounced against the Egyptians by the Prophet Esay in chapt 19. verses 3 4. The spirit of Egypt shall faile in the middest of her and I will destroy their counsell and they shall seeke at the Idolles and at the Sorcerers and of them that haue spirits of Diuination and at the Soothsayers And I will deliuer the Egiptians into the hand of cruell Lords and a mightie King shall rule ouer them saith the Lord God of hoastes Thus wee see it was very vsuall with the wicked when they saw no other helpe at hand to seeke vnto witches and to resort vnto enchanters The Reasons hereof are these first Reaso● because they want Fayth and beleefe in God they trust not in him they looke not for saluation from him they dare not repose theyr confidence in him This we see in Saul when he had once forsaken God in breaking his commandement by sparing the Amalekites in offering sacrifice in killing the Priests in persecuting the Saints in refusing to consult with God as a needlesse thing and proceeding from one degree of wickednesse to another in the end he sayde vnto his seruants 1. Sam. chap. 28. verse 3. Seeke me a woman that hath a familiar spirit that I may goe to her and aske of her This is that reason which the Spirit of God poynteth out in the first booke of the Chronicles and the tenth chapter Saul dyed for his transgression that he committed agaynst the Lord euen against the word of the Lord which he kept not and in that hee sought and asked counsell of a familiar spirit and asked not of the Lord therefore hee slew him and turned the kingdome vnto Dauid the son of Ishai True it is wee reade in the first of Samuel chapter 28. verse 6. that he asked counsell of the Lord and heere we heare hee asked not counsell of the Lord these are not repugnant and contrary one to another no more then these words in the eleuenth Chapter of S. Matthew and the fourteenth verse Iohn Baptist is Elias and Iohn Baptist is not Elias Christ sayde of Iohn Baptist This is Elias Iohn Baptist sayd of himselfe I am not Elias Iohn 1 21. Notwithstanding heere is no contradiction for Christ vnderstoode it one way Iohn another Christ meant he was Elias in spirit Luke 1 17. as comming in the spirit and power of Elias Iohn meant hee was not Elias in person which the Pharisies thought and imagined So these words seeme contrary in shew but are not in substance and in deed In deed he asked of the Lord but not in faith nor with a purpose to cast himselfe vpon God but in hypocrisie and with resolution to goe to the witch As Ahab consulted with the Prophet of the Lord 〈◊〉 ●2 15. but he was before determined what he would do whatsoeuer the Prophet should say Wherefore that which was not done rightly and religiously is as it were not done at all as the Apostle speaking of vnreuerent comming to the Lords Table saith This is not to eate the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11 20. Where he denyeth that absolutely which many did corruptly Againe no maruaile if the wicked forsake God in their troubles 〈◊〉 2. betake themselues to Sorcerers and Wizards which are the enemies of God seeing sorcery is the inuention of the diuell and a manifest worke of the flesh If then it came from the father of lyes and be a fruite of our owne corrupt nature it is not strange or to be wondred at that carnall and corrupt men giue themselues ouer to this practise This the Apostle teacheth Gal. 5 19 20. The works of the flesh are manifest which are adultery fornication vncleannesse wantonnesse idolatry witchcraft and such like Seeing therefore euill men want faith ioyning to God purifying the heart working by loue making vp the marriage betweene God our soules and seeing witchcraft is a worke of the flesh it is naturall to naturall men in their distresses to vse vnlawfull meanes as charming figure-casting and such curious actes and artes as are wrought by the deuice of the diuell Now let vs make vse of this Doctrine First Vse 1 this condemneth the common custome and practise of the people in our dayes who when the hand of God is any way on them or theirs when they be strangely visited or their children greeuously afflicted or their Cattle eyther lost or languish with any extraordinary disease at which time especially they should acknowledge Gods ouer-ruling and ouer-swaying prouidence that not a silly Sparrow falleth to the ground without the will of our heauenly Father by and by they send out to that cunning man or that cunning woman so forget God that made them These men will not tarry the Lords leysure nor waite vpon his mercy for ease and comfort they will haue present helpe or else they will runne to the diuell resort to witches and fetch health out of hell it selfe This is the folly and vanity of such as know not God neither acknowledge that all things are disposed according to his purpose and good pleasure Let vs beware of this sinne which is a forsaking of the true God a renouncing of helpe from his holy place and an entertainment of familiarity with the diuell which is the very height and top of all iniquity This the Lord himselfe teacheth Leuit. 20 6 7. If any turne after such as worke with spirits and after soothsayers to go a whoring after them then will I set my face against that person and will cut him off from among his people Sanctifie your selues
our God hath such a watchman as neyther slumbereth nor sleepeth But the Church which is Gods commonwealth hath a gouernour and guardian which is all an eye to see their dangers all an eare to heare the counsels all an heart to vnderstand the deuices of theyr enemies and all an hand and strong arme to scatter them and to defeate them This happines we heard before verse 10 how Balaam praised and desired He confesseth alowd that the death of the Iews was more to be desired thē the life of all other men because GOD held them for his people Though he were a wretched idolater and sought to turne the truth of God into falshood yet standing as it were vpon the racke hee was inforced to vtter this speech as if he had sayde Who is it that can doe any thing against Israel seeing they remaine in the fauour of their God Let vs learn to magnifie the Lord for his mercy and walk worthy of this our happines which the men of this world do want They haue no protection from God but lye open and naked vnto dangers of soule and body and haue to defend them not so much as a poore fig leafe Thirdly let vs seeke to bee at peace with God and labour to be reconciled vnto him If God be against vs what creature dare stand vp for vs to helpe and comfort vs nay what creature shall not fight against vs to destroy and confound vs For the subiect though neuer so noble honorable that hath the King against him shall finde few others to succour him or shew him any countenance as we see in the booke of Ester Ester 7 9. so soon as the wrath of the King began to be kindled against Haman by and by they couered his face and helped forward his execution So if wee sinne against God the King of Kings and prouoke him to wrath who shall dare to pleade for vs On the other side if God be on our side who shall be against vs or what creature shall hinder our peace This the Prophet Hosea declareth as a benefite belonging to the Church Hos 2 18. In which words the Lord promiseth that hee will so watch ouer his Church by his prouidence that they shall haue rest and securitie from all dangers of enemies and be deliuered from the rage of beasts and the violence of men But how will some say can this bee Obiection Seeing the vngodly that haue God their enemy yet haue the world and the men of the world smile laugh vpon them and the godly who haue God their friend yet haue the world for their enemy I answer Answ This seemeth to be so to those that iudge of things after the flesh according to the outward appearing but if we will iudge righteous iudgement and behold them with the eye of Fayth wee shall finde it to be otherwise whether wee respect the end or the inward feeling of the soule and Conscience Touching the end and issue of things if we waite with patience but a while and looke with a single heart vpon the euent we shall see that the vngodly who haue God set against them haue al things to work their destruction and to further their condemnation not onely their troubles but euen the most holy ordinances of God the exercise of prayer the hearing of the word the partaking of the Sacraments The things are in themselues and their owne nature the sauor of life to life 2 Cor. 2 16 but to them they become the sauour of death to death Contrarywise the godly who haue God reconciled to them in Iesus Christ haue all things to further to finish the saluation of their soules and to seale vp their eternall peace Rom. 8 28 inasmuch as all accidents that befal them tend to bring them to glory and immortality and work for the best vnto them that loue God euen vnto them that are called of his purpose not onely prayers and praises not onely the Word and Sacraments which are as the life of their souls and the breath of their nosthrils but all crosses calamities and afflictions are sanctifyed for their good and happinesse Secondly in respect of the inward feeling of the soule and conscience For the vngodly who feele the wrath of God for their sinnes as it were the flashings of hell fire doe finde rest and refuge in nothing but account all the creatures for their enemies and alwayes stand in feare of them as of Gods hoast and army set in battell array against them and as of his instruments to bring them to destruction The heauens are prepared at the commandement of God to be as brasse as in the dayes of famine to punish them 1 Kings 17 1. the clouds to poure down showres of raine vpon them as vpon the olde world Gen. 7 11 the waters ready to drowne them as the hoast of Sisera Iudg. 5 12 the fire to consume them as it did Sodom and the other Cities of the plaine Gen. 19 24 the aire to poyson and infect them as in the time of pestilence Ezek. 5 12 the earth open to swallow them as it did Dathan and his followers Numb 16 32 the Beares to deuoure them as they did the two and forty vngracious children that mocked the Prophet 2 King 2 42 the Lyons to destroy them as they did the Idolatrous Samaritanes 2 King 17 25 Fiery serpents to sting them as they did the murmuring Israelites in the wildernesse Num. 21.6 the basest and meanest creatures are armed with power and will to bidde battell against them Flies and Frogges to annoy them as they did the Egyptians Exod. 8 6.24 Lice to eate them as they did Herod a bloody persecutor of the Church Acts 12 23. Thus do the vngodly feare all the creatures of God cannot be secured from any one of them An example whereof we haue in Cain who wandered vp and downe in the earth and feared that euery creature that found him would kill him Gen. 4 14. And no maruell for the wicked flyeth when no man pursueth him Prou. 28 1. But the godly who feele Gods fauour and mercy toward them and haue him for their friend do find by blessed experience all Gods creatures as it were his souldiers to stand for them and therefore doe not stand in feare of them but can say with a feeling faith Rom 8 38. I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things to come nor heighth nor depth nor any other creature shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. For when the wayes of a man please God he will make euen their enemies at peace with them Prou. 16 7. All this appeareth in the example of Adam as in a glasse before he fell into sinne Gen. 3 8. he walked in the garden without feare he talked and communed with God without feare all things were subiect to him that was
Iudea and to carry away the Israelites ●●remy 25 9. ranging ouer the land raging with fire and sword and wasting the neighbour-Nations they spoyled the Kenites bordering vpon the Iewes which doth verifie the common Prouerbe It is some euil to be neere vnto euill And againe when thy Neighbours house is on fire it is high time to looke vnto thine owne and teacheth vs to esteeme as our owne the damage of our neighbour and to feare lest in the ruines of others our destruction bee conspired This calamity and captiuity was brought vpon them by Saneherib who comming to spoyle Israel spoiled them and as they were carried away out of their owne country together so they returned back againe into their Countrey together as wee reade in the holy history of the 1. Chronicles chap. 2 53. And thus as they tasted of the same misery so God made them partakers of the same mercy as they were afflicted together so also they were comforted together Thus much of the method and meaning of these prophesies The doctrines arising from hence are to be considered according to the seuerall prophesies and first touching the first against the Moabites Verse 17. I see that but not now I behold it but not neere there shall come a Starre out of Iacob c. In this prophesie Balaam foretelleth the future condition of the Moabites declaring both that they shal be destroyed and by whom For God wil raise out of the contemptible stocke of Iacob a bright Starre that shall refresh the Church with his sweete influence and giue them comfort against their enemies This we shewed to be performed in the dayes of Dauid afterward therefore he saith I see it but not now nor neere at hand This teacheth vs Doctrine The Church sometimes hath rest and glory That sometimes God maketh the Church to flourish in this life Howsoeuer God oftentimes bring trouble vpon his Church and affliction vpon his people yet at other times he giueth rest and peace and continueth theyr prosperity a long time This truth receyueth plentifull confirmation out of the booke of Iudges chap. 3.11 30. 5 31. 8 28 it is the maine drift and scope of it to shew how God in the miseries thereof prouideth a remedie and giueth rest round about from all their enemies God sometimes giueth them a time of breathing and recouering their strength and will not suffer the rodde of the wicked alway to rest on the lot of the righteous Psalm 125 3. We haue examples of this in the reigne of Salomon Iehoshaphat Hezekiah Iosiah and other godly Kings which were as strong props and pillars in Gods house a sure stay to the seruants of God in well doing he gaue them an outward estate that flourished both in wealth and pe●ce This appeareth euidently in the booke of Ester Ester 8 1 16. after he had deliuered them from the mouth of the Lyon that gaped as it were after his prey to deuoure them the Church prospered the head of Mordecai was exalted comfortable letters were published and sent abroad for their safety and vnto the Iewes came light and ioy gladnes honor So the prophet Zacharie prophesying of their returne from captiuity saith That the streets of the City shal be full of boyes girles playing in the streets thereof Zac. 8 5. The booke of Iosuah is a notable storehouse of Gods mercy vnto his church giuing them rest from their enemies as hee had promised them so that none were able to stand before them Iosh 22 4. And as he dealeth with his Church in generall so hee doth with his seruants in particular as we see in Ioseph Moses Dauid and diuers other turning their mourning into ioy Psal 30 11. loosing theyr sack and griding them with gladnes The Reasons of this dealing of the Lord are many and most euident First his eares are Reason 1 open to heare the cries of his children he seeeth their miseries add putteth all their teares in his bottle of remembrance This is it which the Lord declared vnto Moses when he called him to deliuer his people out of the thraldom and bondage of Egypt Exod. 2 7. I haue surely seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry be●ause of their Taske-masters for I know their sororwes GOD hath made a couenant of peace with his people hath a compassionate sense of their miseries and a feeling of their afflictions There is a notable agreement and vnion betweene God and his Children They in their crosses and calamities cannot but sigh and mourne and they cannot so soone vtter a groane but by by and by the Lord is touched with compassion This is euidently recorded in the booke of Exodus 2 23 where it is said The childrē of Israel sighed for the bondage and cried and their cry for the bondage came vp to God The prayers of the faithfull preuaile much with God if they be feruent He vnderstandeth the words of their mouth and the grones of the heart and in his good time will heare them graciously Reason 2 Secondly hee giueth vnto his Church oftentimes a sweet taste of earthly blessings to the end his people might haue all occasions and opportunities to serue him If they should alwayes beare the yoke vpon their necks and haue the heauy burden of affliction lying on their backs though they were strong in faith and had their hope fixed in GOD yet they would be soone dismayed and discouraged and ioyne with the wicked falling into the impieties of their persecuters But God is the sunne and the shield of his Church hee will giue grace and glory vnto it and withholde nothing that is good from them that walke vprightly Psal 84 11. He will comfort and defend them in their danger he will exalt them to dignity after their distresses least they should bee too much daunted and discomforted This is the reason vsed by the Prophet The rod of the wicked shall not alwayes rest on the lot of the righteous lest the righteous put foorth their hand vnto wickednesse Psal 125 3. Vse 1 The vses now are to be marked and obserued of vs. First acknowledge from hence with a sweet feeling the infinite loue compassion of God toward his people he delighteth not to be alwayes chiding and his anger endureth not for euer Hee will not haue his Church to be alwayes vnder the crosse but sendeth it some release For hee endureth but a while in his anger but in his fauour is life c. Psal 30 5 6. Thus doth the Lord giue encouragements and comforts vnto those that faithfully serue and rightly worship him whereby hee not onely testifieth his owne loue toward them but allureth others by their example to trust in him and daunteth all their enemies that hoped to haue seene their destruction Such therefore as are not mooued to confesse the loue of God vnto his seruants and see not his kindnesse toward them haue
12. how is it then that he omitteth this miracle Doubtlesse if he had receiued so great miraculous a benefit he would not haue forgotten it neither indeede could without note of vnthankfulnesse which was farre from that deuout and religious man Furthermore the setting vp of this miracle of the new-found fire hid in the pit and after discouered by the Priests and kindled by the Lord is the weakning and shaking of a great mystery and foundation of the Christian religion For it is written that the Iewes were stirred vp by the Prophets to proceed cheerefully in building of the Temple because the glory of that latter house should be greater then of the former Hag. 2 9 which prophecy is agreed vpon to be fulfilled in that Christ was borne while the second house stood which he made famous and renowned by his presence by his doctrine by his miracles Luke 2 46 7 8. There also did the Apostles begin the preaching of the Gospel which taking his beginning from Sion and Ierusalem was spread abroad from thence into all the earth Many were the priuiledges and prerogatiues of the Tabernacle framed by Moses and of the first house builded by Salomon they had the fire from heauen the Arke of the Couenant the pillar of the cloud the Vrim and Thummim and the succession of the Prophets but the second house built after their returne from captiuity wanted all these therefore while it stood the Messiah must come being greater then all these that through his presence who was to be the ruler in Israel Mic. 5 2 the glory of the latter house might be greater then the former and so the prophecy should be fulfilled But if this story were true which is broached by the writer of that book the latter Temple should bee more glorious and famous through this miraculous fire then the former For in the former the sacrifices were onely consumed with fire that fire was sent from God and nourished by the continuall ministery and attendance of the Priests but in the latter temple they should haue had not onely the same fire with the other but the fire preserued by a wonderfull miracle that in a contrary element Fire burned ●nto water water into fire yea heere are many miracles heaped together for as that fire was preserued in water so of that thicke water into which it was changed was the fire kindled againe 2 Macab 1 22 and that which is more when the sacrifice was consumed Nehemiah is said to haue commanded the water that was left to be powred on the great stones whereby was kindled a flame which was consumed by the light that shined from the altar verse 31 32. And this is so apparent that the Iewish Rabbines that haue the vayle before their eyes or rather before their harts haue acknowledged the truth herof that the 2 house had not that fire which the former had contrary to the opinion of that writer And yet notwithstanding the euidence of the former reasons and the confession of the Iewes themselues hee sticketh not in the next chapter to alleage the Prophet Ieremy as if he had commanded them that were carried away to take with them the Tabernacle the Arke and the fire as hath beene signified 2 Maccab. 2 1. But to leaue all these assertions deliuered with warrant let vs come to the doctrine offred to our considerations in the destruction of the 2. Doctrine It is a sin to decline from the worship of God sons of Aaron because they offred strange fire to wit that it is a sin impiety which the Lord leaueth not vnpunished for any man in the outward worship of God to decline from the Law of God He appointed to burne euery sacrifice with fire taken from the Altar which was continually kept and nourished for that purpose They altered Gods ordinance and are therefore striken suddenly from heauen so that it is a great sinne for any Church or particular person to swarue from the Law of God in the worship of God as appeareth by many examples testimonies of holy Scripture 1 Sam. 13 12 13 14. 2 Chro. 26 16 17 18. Math. 15 9. Col. 2.20.21 22. The grounds are plaine first because the Reason 1 word of God is the rule of all things that wee are warranted to do and more generally it is the rule of Gods worship so that to decline from this rule to the right hand or to the left must needs be a great sinne which GOD abhorreth Deut. 12 8 13 32. In an art to vary from the rules of the art is a great errour thr carpenter and mason are guided by their line and leuell the Law of GOD is the square and rule of his worship the more closely wee keepe our selues to this rule the more warrantable are our workes if wee decline and depart from it wee wander in errour and the farther we goe from it the more we are out of the way Secondly that starting and swaruing from the Law reprooueth and checketh the wisedome of God who is Wisedome it selfe Pro. 9 1 as if we were able to direct him and knew what belongeth to his worship better then himselfe An artificer in his worke cannot abide to bee checked and controlled by those that know not so well what belongeth vnto it as he doth Iam. 4.12 so the wise GOD the supreme Lawgiuer cannot endure that men should decline from the order which hee hath settled and established in his worship and prescribed vnto them in his Word and therefore he accounteth it a great sinne and impiety in any that attempt the same This reprooueth the Church of Rome Vse 1 which is as a body infected with many diseases and running sores For their whole worship in a maner is an apostacy from God full of dangerous wounds that cannot be cured as wee may see by their worshipping of images prayer in a strange tongue communion vnder one kind and an hundred such like horrible corruptions which are so many prophanations of the worship of God These men set the Law of God at nought and thinke themselues wiser then he and preferre their owne traditions before his commandements and so worship him by the precepts of men Math. 15.6 which is a vaine worship and maketh his Law of none effect Secondly it serueth as a direction to the Vse 2 Church what they receiue to godly Magistrats what they establish by their authority that in the worship of God they alwayes set the law of God before their eies allow nothing but that which is grounded vpō the rules of the same that they adde nothing to it take nothing frō it For this cause the King must write him a coppy of the Law in a booke that it may be euer with him that he may reade in it all the dayes of his life and learne to feare the Lord his God Deu. 17 18 19. This was taught to Ioshua chap 1 8 and
Princes hold their Crownes and Scepters by the gift of God and therefore none but hee that gaue them can take them away from them They were accountable to him but to no mortall man whatsoeuer Ambros in his Apol. of Dauid chap. 10. and therefore Dauid saide To thee onely I haue sinned Psal 51 4. And this teacheth them a good lesson to remember that they must one day appeare before the iudgement seate of God and plead before his barre guilty or not guilty as now their subiects doe before them This then is the Regall tenour to hold immediatly from God to whom they must doe homage and fealty for their Crownes and Kingdomes It is not vnknowne what exorbitant courses the Bishop of Rome hath taken exalting himselfe from a Christian Pastour to bee an Antichristian Pope and from a Pope to a temporall Prince and from a temporall Prince to be a supreme Monarch ouer all and to haue omnipotent power as a vice-god on earth Such Almain-leapes in good time there is good hope will breake his backe nay his necke and free the Christian world from his yoke and bondage worse a thousand times then the slauery of the Israelites in Egypt when God shall open the eyes of all Christian Princes to see his vsurped ambition dominion which God grant for the glory of his Name and the saluation of the poore people that are held in more thē Turkish captiuity Lastly we must acknowledge that Magistrates Vse 3 are of great necessity forasmuch as the end of their Office is the good and benefit of the people ouer whom they are placed Lam. 4 20. They serue as a comfortable shadow to preserue vs from the scorching fires of raging persecuters like the gourd of Ionah which came ouer his head to deliuer him from the heare of the Sunne Ionah 4 6 8 which serueth to condemne the Anabaptists which cannot abide any gouernment or gouernors whereas we must learne to pray for them and to be subiect vnto them which are the Lords Shepheards ouer his flocke without whom nothing is to be seene but miserable disorder confusion of all things Iudg. 18. For a Commonwealth without a Gouernor is as a body without an head as a shippe without a Pilot as an army without a Leader or as an house without a Ruler The losse of a good and godly Prince is a great losse and greatly to be lamented 2 Chron. 35 verse 24. Zach. 12 verse 11. CHAP. XXVIII 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Command the Children of Israel and say vnto them My offering and my bread for my sacrifices c. 3. And thou shalt say vnto them This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer vnto the Lord Two Lambes of the first yeare without spot day by day for a continuall burnt offering 4. The one Lambe shalt thou offer in the morning and the other Lambe shalt thou offer at euen 5. And a tenth part of an Ephah c. 6. It is a continuall burnt offering c. 7. And the drinke roffering c. 8. And the c. MOSES hauing set downe the numbering of the people proceedeth to handle the lawes vnder which they ought to be wherof some belong to Church-matters and some to the Common-wealth some sacred and some ciuill Such as are holy haue the first place and that worthily which order sheweth that the Common-wealth can neuer be well established vntill the Church be rightly ordered Doctrine The first and chiefe care is to be had of the Church and matters of religion The first and chiefe care is to be had of the Church and afterward of the ciuill state Commonwealth They begin at a wrong ende that begin with matters of policy as if a man should be very carefull to looke to the body but be carelesse of looking to the soule or should haue regard to the foote and vtterly neglect the head It was euermore the manner of the godly religious Kings of Iudah to beginne first with Church-matters and looking to religion and ordering the preaching of the Word and administration of the Sacraments as wee see in Dauid Iehoshaphat Hezekiah and Iosiah So did Zerubbabel immediately after their return from captiuity as wee see in the booke of Ezra Reason 1 And no maruaile for true religion is the soule and life of the Commonwealth without this it cannot prosper and florish but is as a dead carkasse without life it may carry a goodly shew and seeme to promise peace perpetuity but it is not well grounded and will deceiue in the end witnesse the Monarchies of the world which all receiued theyr decaying and declining in theyr times seasons of which before chap. 3. Secondly true religion is that onely which instructeth all sorts in true obedience teacheth them to performe theyr duties which is the meanes to establish a Commonwealth to order it aright when euery one knoweth his standing and no man encrocheth vpon the calling of another and the contrary bringeth confusion Thirdly euery one is charged to seeke the glory of God aboue his owne good and to set vp him before our selues For as he wil not giue his glory to any other so we ought to take heed we do not rob him of it But when we haue the first care to establish matters of religion then we shew that we are zealous of his glory First then they are deceiued that thinke it Vse 1 enough to make lawes for preseruation of publike peace and tranquility that euery man may keep and enioy his owne that wrongs and iniuries may be suppressed and banished The cheefest care ought to bee of Gods seruice and worship otherwise our Common-wealths shall differ little or nothing from the states and gouernments of the heathen Heere then is a lesson for all Law-giuers if they desire to haue Christian Commonwealths to begin with Christian religion and looke to the Church and there lay a good foundation He that would build an house to stand against stormes and tempests that will beate against it and seeke to beare it downe will be sure to begin with the foundation make sure work there so such as desire to haue a flourishing Commonwealth and all estates as a goodly building to grow vp and prosper in it must make religion the foundation and then it shal be sure to stand because that is as a rocke that shall neuer fayle nor fall Vse 2 Secondly hereby also we may try our selues whether we belong to God or not if in the first place we regard duties of piety and godlinesse and be more carefull to feare God thē to feare man then we are truely religious and may assure our selues we are true members of the church We must make him our feare who is able to cast body and soule into hell Matth 10 rather then man who can but kill the body if kill the body Iohn 19. Let euery one of vs therefore bee more
afraide that Christ should come within their doores They are in effect like the Gadarens that bid him depart out of their quarters The particular faith is the only comfortable faith and by this the iust man liueth The Ciuilians haue a rule that mine is better then ours and in temporall things all men like of it So we may say in the matters of faith touching particular application it is better for a man to say Christ is mine then Christ is ours Neuerthelesse we must vnderstand and obserue thus much that men must not bee discouraged to thinke they do not beleeue when indeed they do beleeue For the best of Gods children do beleeue with much weaknesse and encounter with many oppositions with which they wrastle and buckle hand to hand Sometimes the effects of Gods grace are not so liuely in them as formerly they haue beene sometimes the heart of man being full of corruption will cast many doubts concerning his faith which is as much as if it should cast mire and dirt in the face of it The life of a Christian is like the daies of the yeare sometimes the dayes are verie faire sometimes againe they are cloudie and full of showres so a man that doeth beleeue shall finde much peace and haue a long time of rest and refreshing together sometimes againe he shall be full of many doubts and of much staggering as when the Sun withdraweth it selfe within the clouds Euery true faithfull soule knoweth this by continuall experience And he that findeth these things let him not be discouraged but rather be assured that these are signes of true faith that God dealeth thus with his own for these ends to make them more certaine of their faith to teach thē to lay better hold of the promises of God and to haue more ioy in them and howsoeuer they may lose the sight of these things for a time yet their faith in the end shal haue victory and they shall bee able to pierce and passe through these clouds and haue a certaine application by which they shall be sure to want no good thing CHAP. XXXV 1 ANd the Lord spake vnto Moses in the plaines of Moab by Iordan neere Iericho saying 2 Command the children of Israel that they giue vnto the Leuites of the inheritance of their possession Cities to dwell in and ye shall giue also vnto the Leuites suburbs for the c. 3 And the Cities shall they haue to dwel in and the suburbes of them shall be for their Cattle and for their goods c. 4 And the suburbes of the Cities which ye shall giue vnto the Leuites shall reach from the wall of the City and outward a thousand cubites round about 5 And yee shall measure from without the City on the East side two thousand cubites and on the Southside two thousand c. 6 And among the Cities which ye shall giue vnto the Leuites there shall be six Cities for refuge which ye shall giue to the manslayer c. 7 So all the Cities which ye shall giue to the Leuites shall be 48. Cities 8 And the Cities which ye shall c. IN the former chapter we spake of the inheritance in generall Now we come to the particular and first touching the Priest which is an exception from the former The contents of this chap. Of this chapter there are two principall parts first a commandement to assigne certaine Citties for the vse and dwelling of the Priests and Leuites who otherwise had no portion allotted chap. 29. Secondly Lawes prescribed touching manslaughter Touching the first we see that albeit in the former distribution of the inheritance there be no mention made of the Priests and Leuites yet God will not forget them himselfe neyther haue them forgotten by others but prouideth for them places of habitation and assigneth to them 48. Cities with their suburbs wherein they are appointed to dwell Touching their foode and sustenance they had the first fruites and the tythes of the fruite of their land and of the increase of their Cattle And because he would haue them wāt nothing that was needfull for them although mens deuotion and charity is such that they could be content to see them want all things he taketh order in this place for theyr houses and dwellings and that in a plentifull and bountifull manner considering the compasse of the land as wee described it in the former chapter For besides the many Cities appointed they had suburbes with a thousand Cubites in compasse about those cities for barns outhouses and stalles for cattle besides fields stures and medowes containing two thousand cubites more for feeding and breeding of their cattle These were not assigned vnto them out of one or two tribes but selected out of them all yet in such sort that the tribes which had the larger inheritance must set apart the more and they that had lesse were to giue the fewer and thus was a iust and equall proportion obserued that one should not bee eased and another ouerburthened Thus were the Leuites dispersed in Iacob and scattered in Israel that so God might bee serued and his worship preserued throughout the land Thus God would haue all his people in all corners and quarters to be taught and instructed the small as well as the great plaine villages as well as famous and populous Cities as wee haue shewed before chap. 3. Thus was the punishment laide vpon Leut Gen. 49 7 turned into a blessings and their reproach changed into matter of honor and dignity These were commonly called the Citties of the Leuites not that they onely dwelt in them but because they among others dwelled in them the youth were instructed in the liberall sciences the law of God was expounded in the Synagogues there also publicke schooles and colledges were builded to be as holy Seminaries and Nurseries of piety and religion as we do reade in many places of the bookes of Samuel and the kings Of the Cities of refuge Moreouer obserue that out of these Cities of the Leuites God maketh choise of sixe Cities of refuge whereof three are in the land of Canaan and the other on this side Iordan and these were not chosen to bee together but they were so fitted that euery part of the Land had one of them at hand least such as were without fault and innocent should be pursued and slaine by the auenger of blood before he could recouer any of them Now these Cities are assigned out of the Cities of the Leuites rather then out of any othet that the places might be more respected and bee more inuiolably obserued and it is presumed that the Priests would not protect wilfull wretched offenders and so defile the places which were granted onely to be Sanctuaries for the innocent Thus did God allow Sanctuaries priuiledged places among his people and many other nations in all times and of ancient times haue followed this example But whether it be expedient in the
as a flocke of Sheepe in the iawes of the Woolfe and as a prey in the teeth of the Lion so that the Church standeth and the truth preuayleth albeit the power of men the malice of the diuell and the gates of hell be set wide open against it Wherefore in this distressed estate of the Church beeing as a Citty battred on many sides besiedged of many enemies smitten with many weapons and assaulted with many Engines let vs not boast of our owne power nor glory in our owne greatnesse as though we stood by our owne strength held out by our owne might and ouercame by our owne multitude For if the Lord should leaue vs yea but a little and suffer these enemies to rise vp against vs they would soone deuoure vs with open mouth and wee quickely see our owne weaknesse This then is our duty in the deepe consideration of this vnity of the enemies in such great diuersitie of hearts to ascribe all the glory of our safety to God and to acknowledge his onely power in our standing least if wee presume of our selues the Lord in iustice leaue vs vnto our selues This is it that the Prophet Dauid confesseth and practiseth in many places as Psalme 3 verses 1 2 6. Lord how are mine aduersaries increased How many rise against me Many say to my soule There is no helpe for him in God at all Heereupon hee concludeth Saluation belongeth vnto the Lord and thy blessing is vpon the people most of all And Psalme 124. verses 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. If the Lord had not beene on our side may Israel now say if God had not bin on our side when men rose vp against vs they had quickly swallowed vs vp quicke when their wrath was kindled against vs then the waters had drowned vs and the streame had gone ouer our soule Praised be the Lord which hath not giuen vs as a prey vnto their teeth Our soule is escaped euen as a Bird out of the snare of the Fowler the snare is broken and we are deliuered Our helpe is in the Name of the Lord which hath made heauen and earth Thirdly seeing so many of so diuers dispositions Vse 3 plot against the Church it is required of vs to bee the Lords Solliciters and Remembrancers calling vpon him night and day to be mercifull to his Church to bee a buckler about them to be a Rocke of refuge and a Tower of defence to those that bee his Wherefore as at all times we ought to bee mindfull of the flourishing estate and welfare of the Church so especially when we see enemies of such nature disposition to increase it standeth vs vpon to bee mindefull of the Lord and to giue him no rest Till hee repaire and vntill he set vppe Ierusalem the prayse of the world Esay 62 6 7. This we see to be practised by the Prophet Dauid in the 64. Psalme verses 1 2. where hee prayeth against the furie of his enemies Heare my voyce O God in my prayer preserue my life from feare of the enemy hide mee from the conspiracy of the wicked and from the rage of the worker of iniquity This also was put in practise by Iehoshaphat and Hezekiah 2 Chron. 20 verse 3. and chap. 32. verses 7 8. seeing the multitude of their enemies and acknowledging their owne weakenesse not able to deliuer or helpe themselues or to saue others the Children being come to the birth and there was no strength to bring foorth they called vpon the Lord set themselues to seeke him with all their hearts and proclaymed a solemne Fast to be kept throughout the land So when we see the enemies consult and talke together and take crafty counsell against the seruants of God and against his truth then it s high time to ioyne with pure hearts in praier to Almighty God to protect his people to turne the wisedome of his enemies into foolishnesse Psalme 83. verses 13 14 15 16. O my God make them like vnto a wheele and as the stubble before the winde as the fire burneth the Forrest and as the flame setteth the mountaines on fire so persecute them with thy Tempest and make them afraide with thy storme Fill their faces with shame that they may seeke thy name O Lord. Let them be confounded and troubled for euer yea let them be put to shame and perish Lastly seeing there is a league and confederacy Vse 4 amongst the wicked conspiring together notwithstanding their owne contentions at home let vs not stand in their wayes let vs not walke in their pathes let vs not bee partakers of their counsels lest we bee partakers also with them in their punishments Albeit they agree as brethren in euill wee must take heed we haue no fellowship and familiarity with them This is it which Salomon teacheth Prou. 1 10 11 15. My sonne if sinners entice thee consent thou not if they shal say Come vnto vs let vs lye in waite for blood let vs freely hide our selues against the innocent My sonne walke not in the same way with them draw backe thy foot from their path We are by the corruption of our owne nature prone to euill Now if beside the inward inclination of the heart there be an outward tentation and alluremēt we are carried vnto euill as a violent streame or as the horse that rusheth into the battaile Many haue dashed themselues into peeces against this rocke of offence VVherefore although we heare their words wee must not follow their deeds Let vs not haue our eares open to such seducers but stop them as the Adder when they seeke to draw vs into their counsels and practises This is that which Iacob speaketh Genes 49 5 6. Simeon and Leui Brethren in euill the instruments of cruelty are in their habitations into their counsell let not my soule come my glory be not thou ioyned with their assembly for in their wrath they slew a man in their selfe will they digged downe a wall Verse 5. He sent Messengers to Balaam the sonne of Beor to call him saying Behold there is a people come out of Egypt Marke here the resolution and determination of the Moabites confederate with the Midianites in their distresse fearing Israel and perceiuing themselues not able to meet them in the field They do not seek the Lord in their trouble but they send out to an old witch to a notable Sorcerer Hereby we see that it hath bene the vsuall practise and custome of the wicked in their crosses Doctrine Wicked men in trouble resort to witches troubles and perplexities seeing no other helpe to repaire and resort to witches and sorcerers I say euill men in dangers and distresses amongst other vnlawfull meanes vse to goe to coniurers and cunning men which are very witches and wizards This we see in the example of Saul when the Lord answered him not neyther by dreames nor by Vrim nor yet by the Prophets and when the Philistims assembled themselues
gifts that make the possessors of them better This duty the Apostle declareth 1 Tim. 6 9 11. They that will bee rich fall into tentations and snares and into many foolish and noysome lustes which drowne men in perdition and destruction But thou O man of God flie these things and follow after righteousnesse godlinesse faith loue patience and meeknes The things of this life are common to the godly and vngodly nay oftentimes the vngodly haue the greater share and portion in them let vs therefore labour after those graces that accompany saluation Let vs lay vp our treasure in heauen Where neither the Moth nor Canker corrupteth and where theeues neither dig through nor steale Mat. 6 20. These gifts in the day of trouble and in the houre of tentation shall minister more comfort and more true peace vnto vs then all earthly and transitory things which end in corruption But a lasse if it were possible for vs to gain the whole world what should it auaile or aduantage vs Math. 16 26. and afterward lose our owne soules Or what comfort can we take in our riches and possessions when it shall be said Thou foole this night shall they fetch away thy soule from thee then whose shall all these be that thou hast gathered For so shall it fall out to all those that are rich but not in God Luk. 12 20 21. So then let vs learne to trust in the liuing God and not in vncertaine riches let vs cast all our care vpon him that hath cared for vs And let vs first of all seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all other things shall be cast vpon vs. Mat 6 32. Lastly let vs learne to beare the yoke of pouerty with patience If we want this worlds goods let vs not be discouraged God oftentimes recompenceth the want of earthly blessings with great abundance of heauenly graces Making the poore of this world rich in faith and such as haue nothing to inherit to be heyres of the kingdome which he hath promised to them that loue him Iam. 2 5. This Christ declareth in the Epistle which he commanded Iohn to write to the Church of the Smyrnians I know thy works and tribulation and pouerty but thou art rich Reuel 2.9 He maketh them rich in knowledge in faith in obedience and ioy in the holy Ghost He blesseth them with inward comfort and with peace of conscience that passeth all vnderstanding He giueth them patience in troubles meeknesse of spirit and an holy contentation to sustaine the weight of their affliction And albeit they beare a greeuous burthen yet hee hath eased them of a greater to wit the burthen of their sinne which in Christ they feele to be lightned and remitted This the Apostle testifieth 2 Cor. 6 10. We are as dying and yet behold we liue c. Heereunto acords the witnesse of Peter Acts 3 6. 2 Pet. 1 2. who albeit hee said Siluer and Gold haue I none yet he confesseth that the Diuine power hath giuen vnto vs all things that pertaine vnto life and godlinesse through the acknowledgement of him that hath called vs vnto glory and vertue This is that Iacob perswaded his owne heart and tolde to his brother Gen. 33 11 God hath shewed mercy vnto me and therefore I haue all things Seeing therefore riches are as thorns to choke vs and as snares to deceiue vs let vs learne to be content with our estate and not greedily desire that which may turne to our destruction Verse 9. Then God came to Balaam saying c. We shewed before that the purpose of Balaam the sorcerer was to raise vp the God of the Hebrewes to consult with him and to entice him to leaue the protection of the Israelites according to the guise and fashion of Coniurers as wee declared before in the sixt conclusion For when the vnbeleeuers began to lay siege to their enemies they called forth the god or goddesse of that place to forsake that people and come vnto themselues Thus did the diuell seduce the world and set vp the kingdome of darknesse in the children of disobedience The Infidels indeed thought they dealt with their god but they had to do with the diuell We see in al histories Herod 〈◊〉 how carefully they resorted to the Oracle of Apollo as it were to know the will and pleasure of God in things to come but a lasse poore soules they were deluded by the voyce of the diuell so that whilst they supposed they asked counsell of one they receiued answer of another Therfore the Apostle Paul saith These things which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to diuels and not vnto God and I would not that ye should haue fellowship with the diuels 1 Corinth 10 19 20. Wherefore when the sorcerers and soothsayers vsed to call vp the protecting god of their enemies the diuels ordinarily vsed to returne them their answer But in this place whilst this enchanter goeth about his superstitious practise supposing the true God to bee like their false gods of other Nations so thinketh to bring vp the God of the Israelites God suffereth not the diuel to giue him answer but himselfe preuenteth his apparition appeareth vnto him both to procure the good of his owne people and to make knowne his power to conuince the rage and madnes of the enemies and to declare to all the world the blessed estate of the Church Heereby then we learne in that God came vnto him Do●● God●●ime 〈…〉 ●keth ●ue●● 〈◊〉 ●me● and shewed him what to do that God sometimes speaketh to wicked men and reuealeth his wil vnto them God say I not onely teacheth and instructeth his owne people and hath appeared to them by visions and dreames but hath appeared and made knowne his will euen to his vtter enemies and to open Idolaters that know him not Thus he spake to Caine Gen. 4 6 7 and reproued him for his malice against his brother exhorting to repentance toward God and reconciliation toward his brother and threatning him with destruction if hee continued So he dealt with Abimelech when he had taken away Sarah from Abraham God came vnto him in a dreame by night and said vnto him Thou art but dead because of the woman which thou hast taken for she is a mans wife Gen. 20 3. So he did to Laban the Aramite speaking vnto him in a dreame by night and saying Take heed that thou speake not to Iacob ought saue good Gen. 31 24. Thus hee dealt with Pharaoh King of Egypt God shewed him in a dreame what he was about to doe which was a meanes vsed of God to deliuer Ioseph out of prison where the yron entred into his soule and to prouide for his Church in time of famine that was to come Thus he reuealed his will to Necho King of Egypt God willed him to make warre against the Assyrians and commanded him to make haste but Iosiah would haue stopped his iourney
〈◊〉 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