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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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enemies to their brethren they draw an heauier enemy vpon themselues to wit God himselfe Before we passe from this so necessary a duty it shall not be amisse for vs both to obserue such motiues as may stirre vs vp to the practise of it and to answere such obiections as may hinder vs from yeelding obedience vnto it First of all let vs lay before vs the example of Christ the author and finisher of our saluation who had greater wrong offered vnto him then he had who was more innocent then he that was as a sheepe dumbe before his shearer and opened not his mouth and therefore the Apostle Peter saith chap. 2.22 Christ suffered for vs leauing vs an example that ye should follow his steps who did no sin neither was guile found in his mouth who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe when he suffered he threatned not but cōmitted himselfe to him that iudgeth righteously This farther appeareth vnto vs in that he prayed for his enemies that persecuted him He had power in his own hand to haue resisted their force 〈◊〉 34 reuenged his cause He could haue praied to his Father he would haue giuen him more then twelu legions of Angels yet notwithstanding he suffered patiently 〈◊〉 ●6 53 the iust for the vniust 〈◊〉 18. that he might bring vs to God If any thinke or alledge that this example is too high for vs aboue our reach and too eminent in regard of his person who is God aboue to be worshipped let vs set before vs the examples of the faithful seruants of God that haue liued in all ages in the time of the law and vnder the Gospel ●ed mo● that this may be another motiue vnto vs. How often did the children of Israel murmure against Moses and Aaron and sometimes went about to stone him yet he neuer sought reuenge against them albeit he had bin able to right his own cause by force When Miriam Aaron spake against him by reason of the woman of Ethiopia 〈◊〉 12.2 3 and said What hath the Lord spoken only by Moses hath he not also spoken by vs Moses held his peace and gaue not taunt for taunt rebuke for rebuke he was a very meeke man aboue all the men that were vpon the earth Thus was it with Dauid a man indeed after Gods owne heart though he were a king and wanted not seruants to execute his will yet he would not himselfe reuenge neither suffer any other to take reuenge on Shimei albeit he cursed the king with an horrible curse Saul sought his life 〈◊〉 16.9 and preferred him to be his son in law for no other cause but to lay a snare before him when Dauid had his life oftentimes in his hand to saue it or to destroy it ye he was so farre from seeking reuenge 〈◊〉 26.9 〈◊〉 24.5 that his heart smote him for cutting off the lap of his garment When Stephen had made a worthy defence for himselfe and his own innocency that the enemies could take no iust exception against him their hearts brast asunder and they gnashed at him with their teeth ran vpon him violently all at once 〈◊〉 60. but he kneeled down and cryed with a loud voyce Lord lay not this sin to their charge The Church of Rome are not ashamed to teach thereby to strengthen the hands of traitors rebels that rise vp against Princes that Christians of old deposed not Nero and Dioclesian and Iulian the Apostata and Valens the Arrian and such like persecutous and heretikes 〈◊〉 de Rom. ●●b 5. c. 7. because they wanted temporall power and if they had had power they would haue done it If this be true all their patience was perforce and is not thanke-worthy But they testifie in many places that they had power sufficient but held it vnlawfull to resist and rebell They had filled all places Cities Ilands castles boroughes tents tribes bandes palaces ● Apolog. the Senate and Court not excepted so that they wanted neither number nor strength to make their party good They professe that albeit they be equall in power yet with them it is more tollerable to be killed then to kill They affirme freely God forbid that his religion should be maintained with fire and sword They acknowledge no other weapons to be put into their hands but praiers tears Arma nostra sunt pre●es lacrymae Tert. They neuer practised any reuēge against their persecutors and those that hated them One night with a little fire would haue serued and sufficed them largely to be reuenged of their enemies but they accounted it vnlawful to requite euill with euill But to leaue this consideration to another occasion let vs come to a third motiue A third motiue that is the office which is proper vnto God to whom it belongeth peculiarly to take vengeance and is therefore in holy Scripture called the God of vengeance Psal 94.1 O Lord God the auenger O God the auenger shew thy selfe clearly It is a grieuous sin to sit down in Gods seat and to rob him of his right and royalty Let the enemies of God and his people know that he is the God of reuenge as well as the God of saluation and that he wil as wel right their causes as saue their soules He is a iust God wil recompense tribulation to all that trouble those that are his and therefore hath said Deut. 32 3● Vengeance and recompense are mine but he neuer said to priuate persons Vengeance is thine neither did he euer put the sword into their hands A fourth motiue A fourth motiue to perswade vs to lay aside priuate reuenge is drawn from the gracious promise that God hath made vnto vs namely that he will take our causes into his hand and pay them home that do oppresse vs. For God doth not restraine vs as it were tye vp our hands to expose vs to all iniuries and to leaue vs as a prey in the iawes of the Lyons but because he hath passed his word vnto vs I will repay Rom. 12.29 saith the Lord. So then we must know that God is called the authour and executer of vengeance not only because the power and right belongeth vnto him that he is able to take vengeance of all our enemies how many and mighty soeuer they bee but because he hath vsed this power executed this office from the beginning of the world and as yet vseth it and will vse it to the ful in the great day of the general iudgement He knoweth best of all the greatnes of the iniury that is done vnto vs because he searcheth into the thoughts of the heart and vnderstandeth not only what is done but the manner how it is done Seeing then he hath promised to pay them home into their bosomes that wrong vs it were a fruit of infidelity in vs not to beleeue him at his word
3 we see the wicked prosper and florish spredding themselues as the greene Bay tree for loe God hath set them in slippery places Psal 37 53. and casteth them downe in the end vnto desolation they are suddenly destroyed horribly consumed as the chaffe which the winde driueth away and as a dreame when one awaketh This tentation hath ouertaken the children of God and caused them oftentimes to shrinke back when they saw the prosperity of the vngodly Psal 73 2 3. Hab. 1 4. and on the other side the troubles of the godly hath made them to reason within themselues of the prouidence of God But shall not the King rule his owne kingdome or the Master gouerne his own house as pleaseth him And shall not we giue the Lord leaue to dispose of all things in heauen and earth after the good pleasure of his owne will Hee fatteth the wicked against the day of slaughter he leaueth them without excuse and maketh his blessings as a witnesse against them Contrarywise the children of God although they suffer afflictions yet afflictions to them are not euill but try their faith as the furnace doth the gold Senec. de diui prouidentia c. 8 Let vs not deceiue our selues in iudging and esteeming of good and euill That is good which maketh vs better that is euil that maketh vs worse The workes of the flesh adultery fornication vncleannesse wantonnes idolatry witchcraft hatred debate emulations wrath contentions seditions heresies enuy murthers drunkennesse couetousnesse and such like are manifestly euill These God keepeth from his deere children and his deere children from them that they reigne not in them The Israelites in Egypt liued vnder hard masters and carried many heauy burthens and sent vp many passionate sighes to God with deepe grones of spirit whilst Pharaoh and the Egyptians tooke crafty counsell together and sported themselues in the miseries mischiefs which they had brought vpon them But whose condition was the more happie let the red Sea testifie from which the Israelits were deliuered Exo 14 27 29 in which the Egyptiās were drowned Dauid taken from the sheepe-folds tasted of many sorrowes being in perils among the Amalekites in perils in the Wildernesse in perils of his owne Nation in perils of his own seruants in perils among false bretheren and was hunted from place to place as a Partridge in the Mountaines 2 Sam. 31 4. whilst Saul sought his life and enioyed the pleasures and treasures of a kingdom But whose estate was the more happy let the end and yssue of them both determine the one liued in glory ended his daies in peace the other sheathed his sword in his owne bowels and so dyed in despaire The Apostle Iames willeth vs to take the Prophets for an example of suffering aduersity and of long patience which haue spoken in the name of the Lord Ye haue heard of the patience of Iob haue knowne what end the Lord made Iam. 5 10 11. for the Lord is very pittifull and mercifull Lazarus a poore begger destitute of succour and friends lying at the rich mans gate hauing his minde as full of cares as his bodie was of sores whilst the rich glutton was clad in purple gorgiously and fared deliciously euery day But whose condition was the more blessed and happy of them twaine let this tell vs and teach vs for our instruction that Lazarus when he died had the holy elect Angels to attend vpon him to carry his soule into Abrahams bosome Luk. 16 22 23 that is to say into the kingdome of heauen Matth. 8 11. the rich man also died his body was buried his soule was carried cast into the torments of hell Where the worme neuer dyeth Marke 9 44. and the fire neuer goeth out the one vnsufferable the other vnquenchable both infinite Let vs not therefore rest in beholding the present face of outward things but possesse our soules with patience in a sweet meditation of Gods prouidence considering that it shall in the end bee well with all them that feare the Lord and that howsoeuer the wicked do prosper in the world increase in riches yet if we enter into the Sanctuary of God Psal ●3 ● we shal see they are set in slippery places they are lifted vp on high and therefore their fall shall be more fearefull seeing all the threatnings of God must without faile fasten vpon them Lastly seeing the menaces and threatnings Vse 4 of God must bee performed this serueth also to assure vs that the gracious promises of God made in mercy to his people shall in truth and righteousnesse bee accomplished The Lord that is alwaies the same as hee is true in his threatnings to the vngodly so wil he be found true in his promises toward the godly For seeing no part of his word shall passe away that he will not falsifie his trueth Psal 89 ● nor alter the thing that is gone out of his mouth one part serueth to confirme another his threatnings are ratified by the assurance of his promises and his promises are established to bee surer then the heauens by the assurāce of his threatnings So then let vs learne to depend vpon God to trust in him knowing 2 Cor. 1 that all his promises are yea and Amen vnto the glory of his name Let vs rest in him for the pardon of our sinnes for the hearing of our prayers for the feeding of our bellies for the resurrection of our bodies for the inheritance of euerlasting life hauing a strong assurance of faith that the Lord is iust and true in all his promises This is a notable comfort and consolation to all the childrē of God to cause vs to set our hope in him hauing a patient and constant expectation of all things that by faith we haue beleeued saying with the Apostle 1 Tim. 1 12. For this cause I also suffer these things but I am not ashamed for I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I haue committed to him against that day Verse 25 26. Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and cause Aaron to strip off his Garments and thou shalt put them vpon his sonne Heere is deliuered how Aaron yet liuing his sonne is inuested and installed into his Office with the ceremonies and solemnities thereunto appertaining at the appointment of God to shew the continuance of the Priesthoode to take away al occasions of dissentions from the people Thus we see the good estate of the Church is prouided for by Moses before Aaron dyed Doctr● The Ch● must be in good after co● parture and went the way of all flesh The Doctrine hence is that the good of the Church must be regarded of vs to leaue it in good case after our death and departure I say it is a principall duty required of vs when wee must leaue the worlde to prouide for the
giue to these maintaine them both in idlenes wickednes As then we see vnto whō we ought not to giue so we must know to whom we ought to giue To whom we ●●ght to giue These are poore widdowes and fatherlesse children 1 Tim. 5 16 such as are poore strangers such day laborers as worke hard for their liuing all the week and yet cannot either thorough weaknesse of their body or greatnes of their charge get things necessary and sufficient for them and of these we shall alwaies haue with vs to the end of the world Mat. 62 11 Such also as are falne into decay by ineuitable losses 〈◊〉 15 11. Leu. 23 35. Lastly such as are weake and impotent whether through age or other blemish whether in their feete or in their hands or other parts that thereby though they bee willing yet they are not able to take paines for theyr liuing Acts 3.2 6. but amongst all these they are especially to bee respected that are of the houshold of faith Gal. 6 10. If we be careful and mindfull of these God will recompence vs againe and pay vs home seuenfolde into our bosomes whatsoeuer we haue giuen both in temporall spirituall and eternall blessings Lastly it is our duty to acknowledge Gods Vse 3 great mercy toward vs in the blessings of this life that hee hath giuen to vs that which hee hath denied to many others and when he giueth vnto vs a comfortable vse of these blessings wee must confesse we haue them not by our owne labor and industrie but by his speciall goodnes towards vs Psal 127 1 3. and therfore we ought to sanctifie our daily pains with daily prayer and begin and end our labors with remembring him that remembreth vs and so praise his goodnes that enableth vs to get goods and this shall make our labour sweet and pleasant and the yoake that lyeth in our neckes to be light and easie Againe as God giueth them so he giueth a blessing with them a blessing with a blessing that is bread and the nourishment of bread For a man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Deut. 8. Moreouer as he giueth outward blessings so he can take them away when it pleaseth him euen in a moment Iob 1 Luk 12. 22 And the Lord saide vnto Moses Get thee vp into this mount Abarim and see the land which I haue giuen vnto the children of Israel 13 And when thou hast seene it thou shalt bee gathered vnto thy people c. 14 For ye rebelled against my commandement c. Here followeth the second part of the chapt touching the successour of Moses in the gouernment of this great people wherein obserue the occasion the calling of Ioshua The occasion is double the death of Moses at hād his request to God to appoint a man to be set in his place Touching his death he is willed to go vp to mount Abarim and to behold the land that God had giuen to the Israelites for God had foreshewed that he should see the land with his eies though he did not tread on it with his feet when he had seene the land he should dy as Aaron his brother before him chap. 20 24 amplified by the cause they had not sanctified the name of the Lord at the Waters of Meribah of which we haue spoken before Touching the prayer and request of Moses he desireth of the Lord that he wold appoint a fit Ruler ouer his people to succeed him in this gouernment that might be able to beare this great burthen For hearing the vnchāgeable determination of God humbling himselfe vnder his correcting hand chastising his transgression he is not afraid of the sentence of death being at hand and seeing it before him neither doth he craue to haue the stroke thereof prolonged and delayed neither is he troubled with excessiue cares for himselfe and his children and posterity as the manner is of worldly minded men that mind nothing but the earth and earthly things when they must go out of the world shall haue their mouth full thereof but all his care was for the future benefite of the people to leaue them in good estate after his departure This should teach vs after his example to be readie to leaue the world whensoeuer God calleth vs not to stād in feare of death but to be willing to goe to God knowing the we shall go to an inheritance immortall that fadeth not 1 Pet. 1. and we must all likewise be carefull to leaue our houses places in good state when we are gone of which we haue spoken before chap. 20. Moses was the deere seruant of God yet sinning hee is punished The Lord himselfe receyued his soule and buried his body Deut 34 6 13. He was in high fauour with God liuing and dying an excellent Prophet to whom God spake face to face yet hee was not suffered to enter into the land of Promise Doctrine Many want the outward signes that are partakers of the truth of the Sacraments Wherby we see that many want the Sacraments that are partakers of the truth and substance of the Sacraments He entred into the heauenly Canaan that was not permitted to enter into the earthly Some are admitted vnto the outward signe that neuer receiue the thing signified so was Iudas to the Passeouer as well as Peter and the rest of the Apostles yet he was neuer partaker of the Lambe that taketh away the sins of the world Iohn 1 29. On the other side some take not the outward signe that neuerhelesse partake the inward grace The vses heereof are to teach vs that the outward Vse 1 and inward parts of the Sacraments are not necessarily ioyned together so that hee which partaketh the one should also partake the other and therfore the outward sign doth not simply conferre grace Secondly it condemneth the Church of Rome that holdeth that children dying without baptisme are not saued whereas saluation is not alwayes annexed to the signe so that though infants want the outward washing yet to them may belong the kingdom of heauen Mark 10 14. Lastly it serueth as a great comfort to such as desire to come to the Sacraments yet are hindred sometimes by sicknes and somtimes by other ineuitable occasions that procure their absence forasmuch as we see in this example of Moses that we may bee partakers of the truth of the signes and yet bee barred or banished from the signes themselues In such cases as these God accepteth the will for the deede 2 Cor. 8 12. Againe Doctrine Many are temporally punished that are not eternally condemned we learne by the examples of Moses and Aaron that were not suffered to enter into Canaan a figure of the heauenly Canaan this truth That many are temporally punished which are not eternally condemned Many are chastised in this life not onely with diseases and sicknesses but with death
vpon you seeing all the Congregation is holy euery one of them and the Lord is among them Wherefore then lift ye vp your selues aboue c. IN this chap. we haue two other murmurings set down the latter arising out of the former as one sticke on fire kindleth another The former consisteth of a few carried away with enuy and emulation against Moses and Aaron the originall whereof arose from Korah of the Tribe of Leui The cause of Korahs Conspiracy who first blew the bellowes and tooke it greeuously that the Priestly dignitie was translated to Aaron and challenged Moses of partiality as if hee had preferred his owne Kindred and followed his priuate affection rather then the direction of God This seditious Korah associateth vnto himselfe Dathan Abiram and On of the Tribe of Reuben whom he knew to be ill affected towards Moses because hee being the eldest sonne of Iacob had by right of his birth-right the Principality and gouernement of the whole people belonging vnto him and therefore they thought themselues as worthy to haue the Soueraignty in their hands as Moses was to haue it in his hands All these ioyning together made a schisme or rent amongest the people and assemble two hundred and fifty others all Princes of the assembly which seeme to stand for the good of the whole Congregation as also all Rebelles haue euer had some pretence and colour for they plead that all the Lords people are holy that God is present among them and therefore they should no longer vsurpe the sole gouernment of the whole hoste It is vsuall in all ages of the Church to haue schismes and rents to arise in it and for men to separate themselues from the Church because forsooth it is not well gouerned as it ought to be Now albeit this open insurrection were a flat rebellion against the expresse ordinance of God yet they set many goodly shewes vpon their doings helping a bad cause with a beautifull colour lest they should seeme to be mad without reason alledging that all the Lords people are holy and the Lord is among them ●octrine We learne heereby that whatsoeuer corruptions breake out of men and whatsoeuer euils they doe ●hatsoeuer 〈◊〉 wicked ●en doe they some co●er vpon it and howsoeuer they decline from God from his word and from his ordinances yet they will labour to excuse it to defend it to colour it that it should not seeme as it is When euill men haue committed euill they are ready to iustifie their euils that they may seeme good We see this in Saul 1 Sa. 13.11.12 and 15.15 so Ioh. 12.5 6. Iudas pretended the poore and his great care of them albeit he cared not for them but for himselfe and chap. 11.48 So Caiaphas pretendeth the safety of the people to wit if Christ were not put to death the Romanes would come with a mighty army and ouerrunne them but the taking of him away and the putting of him to death was indeede the true cause why the Romanes came and destroyed the Temple the Citie and the people This we see sometimes also in those that are not the worst men The fact of Simeon and Leui against the Schechemites was no better then horrible murther committed against the Law of God and of nature and against the league and couenant that had passed between them which ought to be held inuiolable euen among infidels yet somewhat they pretend to couer it Gen. 34.31 should he deale with our sister as with an harlot So the Israelites touching their Idolatry Exod. 32.1 and Aaron verse 23. and our first parents Gen. 3. and in a maner all wicked men do the like that are vnregenerate without repentance and sanctification The reasons Reason 1 For men are affected to their actions as they are to themselues Though they be corrupt abominable yet they would not bee thought and iudged to be so so it is with their actions that proceed from them though they bee wicked and vniust yet they would haue them accounted iust and therefore they seeke excuses for themselues ●● 7. as Adam did fig leaues to Reason 2 couer his shame and his sinne Secondly if they should pretend nothing al would be ready to condemne them and to passe sentence vpon them therefore to blinde the eyes of others they cast a mist before them as iuglers vse to doe that they may not be espied This did Herod Mat. 2.8 he pretended to come and worship Christ For he knew well enough if hee had dealt plainely and told them hee sought the life of the babe they would haue detested his detestable cruelty This serueth to reprooue diuers sorts that Vse 1 goe about to varnish their actions with false colours thereby to blind the world and to put out their eyes These shew themselues to bee ranke hypocrites exceeding sinners against the Lord which serue to harden their hearts and to hinder them from a sight of their sinnes and sorrow for them For no man can returne from his sinnes and repent of his euill wayes so long as he goeth about to defend them because all such sinners doe declare a firme resolution to continue and goe forward in sinne and thinke themselues safe and sure because they haue some colours for their actions But the first beginning of repentance is confession a duty oftentimes commended and continually practised by the faithfull The first thing that Ioshua perswaded Achan to performe when he was taken as guilty for taking the accursed thing was that he should giue glory to the God of Israel and make confession vnto him Iosh 7.19 Prou. 28.13 1 Ioh. 1.9 Whereas such as hide their sinnes shall not prosper and they that say they haue not sinned doe make God a lyar and his word is not in them Wherefore we cannot giue a more euident signe of our want of the grace of repentance Psa 32.3 4 5. then by defending denying excusing or lessening of sinne Secondly this sheweth the cause why the Vse 2 dregs of Popish religion are so setled in the hearts of men that they are hardly rooted out euen because such deceitfull colours are set vpon them and their superstitious practises If they be accused for their idolatry worshipping of Images they pretend they worship God in the Image Touching the worship of Saints and praier to them they say they honor them as the friends of God and that they are vnworthy to approch or to come neere to God themselues and therefore in humility they goe to the Saints and Angels but this is nothing but to speake lies through hypocrisie Col. 2.23 Concerning their sacriledge in withholding the cup from the people they haue their colour that the labour of the Priest would be too great if he should deliuer the same to all himselfe or else that the blood of Christ might be spilt vpon the ground but these excuses cannot deceiue God hee seeth their open declining from the word of
had numbred the people after God sent him this word and offered him the choise of famine or sword or pestilence he saide I am in a wonderfull streight let vs now fall into the hād of the Lord for his mercies are great and let mee not fall into the hand of man Who had not rather receiue punishment at his fathers hands of whose loue he is assured then to bee punished with the strokes of an enemy that loueth him not but hateth him to the death Men are proud and cruell fierce ambitious but God is full of compassion and his mercy endureth for euer he knoweth whereof we were made Psal 103.14 Psalme 78 39 he remembreth that we are but dust hee considereth that we are mortall yea a winde that passeth and commeth not againe He will not suffer vs to bee tempted aboue that wee are able to beare Hitherto the Lord hath visited vs with his mercifull and gentle corrections famines sicknesses and strange diseases Let vs behold his gracious dealing toward vs and profit by these fatherly admonitions for if he should deliuer vs into the hands of barbarous and beastly enemies we should soone discerne the difference betweene the louing chasticements of a father and the bloody strokes of an enemy 22 Then they departed from Kadesh and the childrē of Israel euen al the congregation came vnto Mount Hor. 23 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron in Mount Hor neere the border of the land of Edom saying 24 Aaron shall be gathered vnto his people for he shall not enter into the Land which I haue giuen vnto the children of Israel because yee rebelled against my commandements at the waters of strife 25 Take Aaron and Eleazar his sonne and charge them to come vnto this Mount 26 And cause Aaron to strip off his garments and thou shalt put them vpon Eleazar his sonne then Aaron shall be gathered vnto his Fathers and shall dye there 27 And Moses did as the Lord had commanded for they went vp vnto Mount Hor in the sight of all the congregation 28 And Moses caused Aaron to strip off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son and Aaron dyed there in the toppe of the Mount So Moses and Eleazar came downe from off that Mount 29 And when all the Congregation saw that Aaron was dead all the house of Israel wept for Aaron thirty dayes Hitherto of the Ambassage of Moses to the King of Edom These words containe the third and last part of the Chapter to wit the death of Aaron after the people were remooued from the borders of the Edomites For albeit the King did so vnkindly deny them any passage yet Moses and the Israelites doe not oppose themselues against them or attempt to breake through by force of Armes multitude of men and dint of sword but passe by their borders peaceably and fetch a compasse about their land True it is those enuious Edomites were worthy to perish and to be vtterly destroyed for their inhumanity yet because the time was not yet come wherein the Lord had prophesied and promised that the elder should serue the yonger Gen. 25 23. therefore the Israelites commit vengeance to the Lord to whom it belongeth Rom. 12 19. Now in these verses we see how God beginneth to execute the former threatning against Moses and Aaron For heere wee are to consider three things First the death of Aaron Secondly the succession of his sonne Thirdly the mourning of the people The father dieth the son succeedeth the people lamenteth the death of the high Priest If Aaron had dyed without any prediction and foretelling of his death all men might haue thought it had fallen out at aduentures and ascribed it wholy to the decaying of strength wasting of nature but being reuealed to Aaron himselfe and manifested to the whole Congregation both the time when and the place where he should die it appeareth that his daies were numbred and his yeeres limited which hee could not passe As then God had determined the death of Aaron and denounced his shutting out of the land of Canaan so that sentence is heere executed vpon him Deut. 34 4 5. the other concerning Moses is reserued vnto his time appointed of God In this place God commanded both of them what to doe euen to ascend vp to the Mountaine and sheweth that Aaron shall die there for his disobedience whose garments must be pulled off and put vpon Eleazar lest by touching of the dead the holy garments should be defiled After this commandement followeth their obedience agreeable to the same they come vp to the Mountain Aaron is stripped Eleazar is cloathed with them Aaron without feare of death or longer desire of life or prayer for life departeth in peace according to the word of God he is gathered to his Fathers Moses and Eleazar descend from the Mountaine Moses Eleazar and the people mourne for Aaron thirty daies Verse 23 24. And the Lord spake vnto Moses and Aaron We see heere according to the former threatning pronounced by the mouth of God verse 12. that Aaron cometh not into the land of Promise but dieth in Mount Hor. We learne heereby Doctri● God-thr●nings are 〈◊〉 comp●●●● that the threatnings of God are accomplished Howsoeuer his iudgments are many times deferred and his punnishments prolonged because hee is patient toward vs and would haue no man to perish but would haue all persons come vnto repentance yet in the end all his threatnings shall be verified and fulfilled in their times and seasons Consider this truth in our first parents Ge. 2 17. ● 3 7. God threatned them that if they did eate the forbidden fruite they should die the death we see the effect in them and all their posterity throughout al times and generations Behold other threatnings of God wee shall alwayes reade the execution after the denunciation So when God by the Ministery of Noah a Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Peter 2● had threatned to destroy the whole world if in an hundred and twenty yeeres they repented not wee see how he brought in the flood vpon the world of the vngodly swept them away from the face of the earth which they had corrupted with their cruell and vncleane conuersation This we see likewise taught vnto vs throughout the bookes of the holy history of Ioshua The man is cursed before the Lord Ioshua 6● that ryseth vp and buildeth the City Iericho he shall lay the foundation thereof in his eldest sonne and in his yongest sonne shall he set vp the gates of it meaning therby that whosoeuer should attempt to builde this City he should pay for it deerely because what time hee layeth the foundation of the wals his eldest sonne shall dye and when hee setteth vp the gates and hath finished it his yongest sonne shall dye When this threatning seemed quite forgotten and consumed with the rust of time God doeth bring it to passe as we
with vs if we haue hollow and barren harts we neuer profite though we heare al day long but if we haue good honest harts when we heare the word we keepe it bring forth fruit with patience some an hundred some sixty and some thirty fold We haue many that heare in these dayes but they are as ground that is out of heart they bring forth nothing but weeds thistles brambles and briars no good Corne can bee seene to spring vppe and grow in them The sixt and last helpe is feruent prayer and an earnest begging of Gods blessing at his hands which if we be carefull to aske his promise is sure gone out of his mouth which he will neuer call backe nay which he can neuer call backe namely that we shal receiue Iam. 1.5 1. Kin. 3.6.9 The Apostle Saint Iames saith If any man want wisedome let him aske it of God who giueth to all frankly and vpbraideth no man If then we be not wanting vnto our selues God wil not be wanting vnto vs but open the gate of his mercy if we knock thereat Thus much of the generall obseruations by way of Preface now let vs come to the particular handling of the booke it selfe CHAP. I. 1 THe Lord spake againe vnto Moses in the Wildernesse of Sinai in the Tabernacle of the Congregation in the first day of the second moneth in the second yeare after they were come out of the Land of Egypt saying 2 Take ye the summe of all the Congregation of the children of Israel after their Families the housholds of their Fathers with the number of their names to wit all the males man by man And so forward vnto the end of the 16. verse WE haue shewed already that Moses in the ten first chapters prepareth the people of Israel to vndertake their iourney toward the promised Land the land of Canaan If they had beene taken vnprepared and vnprouided it would haue stopped their course and hindred their way and encouraged their enemies Wherefore there is order taken in the first place that all should be in readinesse fitted to go and rightly disposed to attaine the end of their desires In these chapters we must consider three things First the numbering of the people taking the summe of them Secondly lawes are prescribed how to keepe themselues pure and holy in their iourneyes For how should the Lord their God go with them vnlesse they walked in holines Thirdly the maner of their going is deliuered in what sort they were to proceed The numbering of the people is set downe in the foure first chapters The lawes of sanctification are handled in the fiue chapters following to wit the 5 6 7 8 9. chapters The maner of their iourney in the tenth and last chapter The taking of the number of the Israelites and setting downe the summe of them which is the argument drift of the foure first chapters is of two sorts the one of the people the other of the Priests and Leuites that ministred before God and serued in the Tabernacle of the congregation The gathering of the sum of the people is in the two first chapters the numbring of the tribe of Leui is in the 3. 4. chap. Touching the numbring of the people we haue a rehersal and reckoning vp of their persons in the first chapter and of the ordering and disposing of them vnder seueral Ensignes and Regiments in the second chapter This first chapter into which wee are now entred cōtaineth these two points the former is the taking of the summe of the people of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai the latter is the exempting of the Leuites together with the cause wherefore they were not numbred So then we see who they wer that were numbred and then who were not numbred Touching the former it comprehendeth both the commandement of God to number them and the obedience of Moses The commandement of God is amplified by sundry circumstances as of place of time and maner of doing The place is twofold generall in the desert of Sinai where the Law was giuen and special in the Tabernacle of the Congregation from whence God promised hee would declare himselfe vnto them Exod. 25.22 and tell all things which he would giue in commandement vnto the children of Israel For we must know there were three places out of which God gaue audience to Moses In what places the Lord vsed to speake with Moses and vsed to speake vnto him One was at the dore of the Tabernacle where the Altar of the burnt offerings was as Exod. 29 42. This shall be a continual burnt offering in your generations at the doore of the Tabernacle of the congregation before the Lord where I wil make appointment with you to speake there vnto thee Another was out of the cloud of pillar Num. 12 5. But this for the most part did concurre with the other inasmuch as the pillar of the cloud did most vsually stand in the doore of the Tabernacle whensoeuer the Lord did from thence speake vnto Moses The third was the Mercy-seate which was the chiefe and principall place Numb 7 89. When Moses went into the Tabernacle to speake with God hee heard the voyce of one speaking vnto him from the Mercy-seat that was vpon the Arke of the testimonie between the two Cherubims and he spake to him The second circumstance is the time when God commanded the people to be numbred that is the first day of the second moneth and of the second yere after they were com out of the land of Egypt By this it appeareth that the Israelites abode in the desert of Sinai almost an whole yeere For they came into that wildernesse the first day of the thirde Moneth in the first yeare Exod. 19 1 and they continued in that place vnto this time neither did they remoue their Tents before the twentieth day of the second Moneth of the second yeare as appeareth chap. 20 11 of this booke The cause of this long staie and continuance in this wildernesse was because God would haue his people throughly taught and instructed in all things belonging to his worship and seruice before they inhabited and possessed the Land of promise For within this space of time the Lord published the Law in Mount Sinai commanded the Tabernacle to be builded which Moses erected the first day of the second yeare and in the daies following of the first moneth hee gaue them Lawes touching the sundrie sorts of sacrifices and touching the difference of cleane and vncleane prescribed at large in the booke of Leuiticus The third circumstance is the manner of their numbring namely that Moses Aaron must take other Princes the heads of the house of their Fathers to bee helpers and assistants vnto them who ioyning with them must take the summe of all the Congregation of the Children of Israel after their families and households of their Fathers from 20 yeare old and aboue
heere as afterward in this Booke ch 20. where he obeyeth with doubting but he executeth the charge laide vpon him with readinesse and willingnesse This obedience of Moses and Aaron is set downe first generally then particularly Generally in these words particularly in the verses following Heere a question may be demanded Obiection whether it were lawfull for them to number the people Wee reade in the holy Historie 2 Samuel 24 that Dauid was sharply reprooued and seuerely punished because hee did number them yet Moses numbereth them in this place and is approoued and iustified● Some thinke Answer that Dauid is reproued not simply for numbring the people but because he would haue all numbred and not onely from 20 yeare old and aboue But this was not the true cause of Dauids offence and of Gods iudgement in as much as it is very euident out of the words of the Text and circumstances of the place that such only were numbred as were strong men and able to draw out their swords 2 Sam. 24.9 Others make this the reason because the Lord promised to multiply the seede of Abraham as the starres of Heauen which are innumerable and as the sand on the Sea Shore which cannot bee tolde Oleast in Exod. and therefore he was angry sore displeased whē they were numbred as if it were a calling of his promise into question But if this reason were good and to bee granted it would follow that they could neuer be numbred without sin Neither was this the cause of Gods anger as others imagine Sim●●r in Exod because after his numbring of them hee caused not the tribute to be paid that God had appointed Exod. 30.12 for Moses did not alway enioyne any such polle-mony to be paid whensoeuer he nūbred their persons and besides the punnishment should be inflicted vpon Dauid not for numbring the people but for want of paiment The true causes why Moses is commended Differences between Moses and Dauid in numbering the people Dauid condemned for their numbring of Israel are these First Moses was inioyned vnto it had the expresse commandement of God to direct and warrant him but Dauid was not commāded of God he was stirred vp of Sathan who tempted him to this euill in setting before his eies 1 Chron. 21 1 his glory and excellency his power victories Aug. quaest 134 in Exod. This is one difference Secondly it was lawfull to number the people when anie publique collection or contribution was to bee made of tribute or subsidy for vnlesse an exact account were taken some should be omitted others ouerburthened and iniustice committed This maketh it lawful for Princes to number their people muster them by hundreds or thousands albeit they haue no special warrant or particular commissiō from God Thus did Dauid in another place and at another time number them without sin 2 Sam. 18 1. Againe when any Army is to be gathered forces to be leuied it is necessarie the people should be assembled and mustered that fit choise may bee made of such as are to goe to battell as Dauid did number them without sinne 2 Sam. 18 1. when hee sent an armie against Absolon but in this place hee did not intend any of these ends either that Tribute should be gathered or that souldiers should be mustered and therefore the warrant of his worke was not answerable to the calling of Moses Thirdly as they were stirred vp by diuers causes so they respected diuers ends Dauid propounded to himselfe an euill end hee did it to set forth his owne glorie to reioyce in himselfe to put his whole affiance and confidence in the multitude of his men and therefore his pride and presumption his haughtinesse and ambition his rashnesse and vnthankefulnesse were punished of GOD. Thus we see how one and the same thing is praised in one and reprooued in another because howsoeuer the deede were one yet the cause was not one from whence it proceeded neither were the ends one whereunto it was referred Verses 17.18.19 Moses Aaron tooke these men c And as the Lord commaunded Moses so he numbred them Heere we haue an example of the obedience of Moses Aaron who lingred not the time to discharge the dutie that God had laide vpon them This example offereth vnto vs this instruction that it Doctrine 3 is required of all Gods seruants t is our dutie to obey Gods co●mandements to performe obedience to Gods commandements Whensoeuer God speaketh vnto vs wee must heare and obey his voyce Noah receiued a Commandement from God to builde the Arke Genes 6 ver 13. Whereby hee and his houshold might be saued many hindrances might haue stayed him and sundry inconueniences might haue stopped him and infinite dangers might haue terrified him from that enterprize the greatnesse of the Arke the labour of the building the continuance of the worke the tants of the wicked and an hundred such like troubles stood in his way all which he did ouerstride as the Apostle witnesseth Heb. 11 7. By Faith Noah beeing warned of GOD of the things which were as yet not seene mooued with reuerence prepared the Arke to the sauing of his Houshold through the which Arke hee condemned the world and was made heire of the righteousnesse which is by faith In like manner Gen. 12 4. Heb 11 8. Abraham receiued an expresse commandement to go out of his Country and from his Kindred and Fathers house and he also by Faith when hee was called obeyed to go into a place which he should afterwarde receiue for inheritance and he went out not knowing whither hee went So when God charged him to circumcise himselfe his sonne and all his houshold hee did not delay the time Gen. 17 23. 22 1 2 3. Heb. 11 17. 18 19. but did it the same day and when hee commanded him to take his sonne his onely son euen Isaac whom he loued the sonne of promise through whom all Nations should bee blessed By Faith hee offered vp Isaac when hee was tryed for he considered that God was able to raise him vp euen from the dead from whence he receiued him also after a sort When God called Samuel and determined to reueale vnto him the destruction of Elies house and the calamitie that hanged ouer all Israel hee saide vnto him to testifie the willingnesse of his heart to obey Speake Lord 1 Sam. 3 9 10 for thy Seruant heareth This the Prophet Dauid witnesseth Psal 27 8. When thou sayedst Seeke ye my face mine heart answered thee O Lord I will seeke thy face Luke 5 4 5. When Christ commanded Peter to launch out into the deepe and to let out their Nets to make a draught Simon answered and saide vnto him Master we haue trauailed sore all night and haue taken nothing neuerthelesse at thy word I wil let down the net The examples are infinite and endlesse that might bee
but to sixtie yeares after their comming into Egypt The third part of this nine thousand being three thousand maketh fisteene hundred couples or persons to marrie who hauing euery yeare one childe who in lesse then a yeare may haue more then one will increase the next thirty yeares forty fiue thousand which bringeth vs to the ninetieth yeare after their comming into Egypt The third part heereof being fifteene thousand will make seauen thousand foure hundred couples or marriages omitting the odde hundreth which may beget by the twelue yeare 222000. persons the third part hereof being seuenty foure thousand maketh thirty seauen thousand couples and will begat at the hundred and fifty yeare 1110000. soules The third part heereof being three hundred seuenty thousand persons maketh one hundred eighty fiue thousand marriages which will multiply by generation the next thirty years which falleth being expired into the 180. yeare 555000. soules the third part heereof being one hundred eighty fiue thousand maketh besides the odde thousand 920000. mariages which will beget by the two hundred and tenth yeare 27600000. that is seuen and twenty thousand and sixe hundred thousand This particular supputation we haue made to shew that the Israelites bringing forth abundance of increase as the spawne of the fish in the waters did not multiply by a miraculous generation but by an extraordinary benediction GOD giuing a speciall blessing vnto them partly to vexe their enemies and partly to verifie his owne promises Question 2 Secondly it may seeme strange in this place that Reuben the eldest sonne of Iacob and the beginning of his strength placed also in this muster in the first ranke commeth farre behinde many other in the number of posterity For if wee compare that Tribe with those that follow and namely with Simeon Issachar Dan and Naphtali we shall finde they are much more populous Ioseph was one of the sonnes of Iacob and one of the last and yongest yet hee exceeded and surmounted him almost halfe in halfe But in the Tribe of Iudah the blessing of God doeth most apparently shew it selfe according to the ancient prophesie of Iacob I answere though Reuben had the priuiledge to be the first born Answer yet he lost his birth-right and for his wickednesse committed against his Father he was thrust downe from that seate of honour This is it which Iacob foretold long before Genesis 49 3 4. Reuben mine eldest sonne thou art my might and the beginning of my strength the excellencie of dignity and the excellency of power c. Thou shalt not be excellent because thou wentest vp to thy Fathers bed then diddest thou defile my bed thy dignity is gone This threatning was denounced by the mouth of his Father but hee was therein the mouth and minister of GOD and therefore it must bee in time accomplished God maketh way for the effecting of it and this was a signe of the fulfilling of that curse that his posterity is diminished and others taste of Gods blessing before him And as the birth-right had two priuiledges Gen 4 7. the rule ouer his Brethren and a double portion of the Fathers inheritance the former fell to Iudah vpon whose posterity the kingdome was cast the latter to Ioseph 1 Chr. 5 1 2. whose two sonnes had a twofold portion so that Reuben lost the one and the other For it standeth with Gods iustice that he who climbed vp where he ought not to haue touched should bee thrust from that which of right to him belonged according to the saying of Christ in the Gospell Luke 14 11. and 18 14. Math 23 12. Whosoeuer lifteth vp himselfe shal be cast downe and he that humbleth himselfe shal be exalted This is the cause also that Iudah and Ioseph so much increased multiplyed aboue their fellowes to the end that God might make good the promise hee made vnto them For heauen and earth shall passe away but one iot or tittle of this worde shall not passe but be fulfilled But of these things we shall haue occasion offered to speake more in the next chapter whereunto I referre you for farther direction Thirdly the question may bee asked for Question 3 what cause Moses numbering the Tribes seuerally vseth the same words and maketh so many repetitions whereas he might haue cōprehended the same in a shorter summe For hee saith of euerie Tribe that they were numbred by their generations by their Families and by their Fathers houses according to the number of their names euery male from twēty yeares and aboue as many as went forth to war was it not enough to haue saide so once for all but he must repeate it so often I answer Answer there are no vaine and needlesse repetitions in the Scripture euery word syllable and letter hath his vse and standeth for some purpose albeit we do not alwayes knowe so much * Reasons rendred why Moses vseth so many words One cause may be in respect of God to teach that as with him is no respect of persons so he hath a care as well of one as of another he is a common Father of them all he neglecteth none but remembreth them with his kindnesse and spreadeth the wing of his protection ouer them Thus doth God deale with vs at this day he keepeth vs in his book of remembrance no lesse then he did the Iewes inasmuch as there falleth not a Sparrow to the ground without his wil Mat. 10 29 30 and the haires of our head are numbred The second cause may bee to graft in our mindes and imprint in our memories this so great a blessing in multiplying them vnto the number of so many thousands in so short a space If hee had spoken it once and in few words it might soone be forgotten lightly passe from vs now hee standeth vpon it at large that the often repetition and commemoration might ingraft and engraue it in our hearts that there it might continue for we are apt to ascribe Gods workes to nature and to take them to our selues so to make no profit of them Thirdly he maketh as honourable mention of one as he doth of another without anie difference that one should not enuy at another neyther one condemne another but that mutuall loue and friendship should bee maintained among them as among Brethren A little title of honour and dignitie is able to make vs swell one against another Least therefore he should seeme to neglect one and preferre another hee keepeth an euen hand and equalleth one with another so farre as lyeth in him Hee giueth no occasion of aduantage to such as were readie to seeke all occasions but cutteth them off by speaking that of one which hee had affirmed of the other Thus much of the Questions that may be made and mooued out of this diuision let vs now come to the Doctrines that are to bee gathered for our instruction Verse 20 21 c. So were the sons of Reuben c
the Tribe of Simeon were farre moe in number then the Tribe of Reuben how far they exceeded them and the cause thereof we declared in the former chapter It is naturall to those that are blessed in children a fruitefull increase to glory therin and to triumph ouer those that either haue none or do come behind themselues When Rahel conceiued she said Gen 30 23. Luc. 1 25 God hath taken away my rebuke This appeareth in the behauior of Peninna toward Hanna who were the two wiues of Elkanah who mourned and wept sore because her aduersary vexed her from day to day 1 Sam. 1 6 forasmuch as she vpbraided her because the Lord had made her barren Lastly if none of all these occasions of murmuring and muting had broken out or if they beeing broken out had beene presently pacified and appeased among them yet a new broile might arise touching the two tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh For either the rest might grudge and repine that Ioseph being but one of the sonnes of Iacob should haue a double portion of inheritance which tended to their detriment and disparagement or else a controuersie might fall out not easie to bee decided whether of these twaine should obtaine the supremacie and superiority either of other Wherefore to end all strife to leaue no starting-hole to raise any quarrell or question among them the Lord himselfe determineth the controuersie and so disposeth of them that euery Tribe must needes know his owne place and acknowledge the order assigned vnto him Thus we see the reason in respect of the Israelites themselues that moued God to range them into order to wit that all contention and emulation might be cut off and taken away This teacheth vs to take notice of our selues and to learne what we are by Nature we are prone to ambition and vaine-glory cannot content our selues to abide in the vocation and calling wherein God hath set vs. Wee see this plentifully confirmed in this Booke Numb 12 1. 14 1. and 16 2. and 20 4. how Aaron and Miriam and manie other rise vp against Moses and seek to ouerthrow the order and ordinance of God left among them for the administration of matters belonging to the Church Commonwelth The like we see in the Disciples of Christ he had giuen them a patterne and example of all meekenesse and lowlinesse of minde yet such was their ambition Math 20 25. Luk. 22 24 25 that they stroue amongest themselues who should be the cheefest It is the counsell of our Sauiour when we are bidden of any man to a wedding not to set our selues downe in the cheefest place but to take the lowest roome from thence he raiseth a generall doctrine Luke 14 8 11 Whosoeuer exalteth himselfe shall be brought low and he that humbleth himselfe shall be exalted Let vs conclude therefore 1 Cor. 11 16. if any lust to be contentious We haue no such custome neyther the Churches of God Let vs haue the same minde that was in Christ Iesus who being in the forme of God made him selfe of no reputation Phil. 2 3. and took on him the shape of a seruant let nothing be done through contention or vainglory but that in meekenesse of minde euery man esteeme other better then himselfe Thirdly they are mustered and marshalled into an exact and exquisite order to dismay and terrifie their enemies as also to confirme and encourage their owne hearts There is nothing doth more strengthen an enemy and giue him hope of victory then to beholde an army put out of array in which case such as haue bene defeated and ouercome haue gathered their dispersed and despised Companies together haue renewed the fight put their enemies to flight Contrarywise to behold an hoast of men setled in battell array as it were a Tower not to be shaken or a Mountaine not to be remoued doth daunt and dismay all aduersary power whatsoeuer and maketh them put their surest trust and best confidence in their heeles Great is the force of vnity peace and concord One man serueth to strengthen and stablish another like many staues bound together in one Many stickes or staues ioyned in one bundle are not easilie broken but seuer them and pull them asunder they are soone broken with litle strength Thus the case standeth in all societies whether it be in the Church or Commonwealth or in the priuate family If our hearts be thoroughly vnited and fast glued one to another we neede not feare what man can do vnto vs or worke against vs. But if we be at iarre and warre betweene our selues we ly open to our enemies to worke vs any despight and indignity whatsoeuer I would to God we had not learned this by wofull and lamentable experience and sealed vp the trueth of it by home-bred contentions so that wee may renew the old complaint For the diuisions of Reuben were great thoughts of heart Iudg 5 15. Euery one seeth with griefe the increase of our aduersaries they begin to lift vp their hearts and handes against vs they hope to haue their Masses their Maskings their superstitions their trumperie vp againe all men confesse it and complaine of it But will we not behold the cause of all this and consider that we minister them weapons and as it were put a two-edged sworde into their handes to wound our selues It is our owne strife they are our owne contentions that helpe and hearten them when brother is set against brother and striketh one another with the fist of iniquity So long as these bitter roots of enuy and emulation the coales of contention are kindled by the mouths and pens of those that loue contention wee haue much deceiued our selues if we think to suppresse the enemies of the grace of God who make an aduantage of our diuisions We may therefore say with our Sauiour Woe bee to the world because of offences Mat. 18 7 6. for it must needes bee that offences shall come but woe be to that man by whom the offence commeth It were better for him that a Milstone were hanged about his neck and that he were drowned in the depth of the Sea Thus we see the danger that commeth by hatred and debate let vs therfore follow peace and stop so much as lyeth in vs all occasions of diuisions that wee may liue in peace one with another cleaue vnto the gospel of peace and then the peace of God shall be with vs. Hitherto we haue spoken of the reasons causes for which God prescribeth to euerie one his order The diuision of this Chapt. and limiteth to euery Tribe his proper place In this Chapter we are to obserue two things First the commandement of God directed to Moses and Aaron telling them and instructing them what his pleasure is touching the order of their marching and proceeding Secondly a generall subiection and obedience yeelded vnto this commandement for so soone as they
the Lord Obiect Ephes 6. Ephe. 6.4 If any obiect against these commandements They will be vnruly and disordered albeit they be neuer so well brought vp and though their parents be very carefull they will be very carelesse and therefore they were as good holde their peace as to speake to them and not to be regarded Answer I answere so it is sometimes but alwayes it is not so Many that haue feared GOD with all their housholdes haue receiued much comfort by their children and seruants that haue had good instruction put into them as pure and wholesome liquour into a vessell and haue seene the fruite thereof to the vnspeakeable ioy of their hearts This we might shew at large in the reformed families of Abraham and Cornelius and sundry others As they planted and sowed good seede in the parts of their families as it were in a fruitfull field so they reaped a plentifull haruest Abraham had seruants that were also Gods seruants Gen 24.12 and 14.14 Act. 10.7 and prayed earnestly vnto him Cornelius had a souldier that waited vpon him that feared God yea all his band of Italian souldiers were Christian souldiers Againe we must trust GOD with the effect and successe of the education that we giue them He will worke thereby by his Spirit in all that belong vnto him as seemeth good to his heauenly wisedome If he doe not giue a blessing for causes vnknowne to vs but knowne to him let vs leaue Gods secret yet iust iudgments to himselfe The third particular branch is to pray to God for them to guide them in his wayes and to blesse them in his feare and to blesse our labours bestowed among them This wee see in Iob Iob 1.5 Chapter 1. toward his children When the dayes of their feasting were gone about he sent and sanctified them and rose vp early in the morning and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all for he said It may be that my sonnes haue sinned and cursed God in their hearts He was carefull for those which were committed vnto his charge and feared they might offend God in their meetings albeit hee knew no such euill by them The wise man saith Happy is the man● that feareth alway but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischiefe Prou. 28. Prou. 28.14 A like example wee haue in Dauid Psalme 72. where he prayeth for Salomon Giue the king thy iudgements O God and thy righteousnesse to the kings sonne hee shall iudge thy people with righteousnesse and thy poore with iudgement So then the faithfull are to entreate and craue from God the continuance of his couenant to their children and to begge from his handes an holy and sanctified seede We must not presume because we are faithfull and haue receiued to beleeue that therefore our seede must of necessity be so likewise for then we shall but deceiue our selues Let not vs therefore faile in crauing a blessing from God vpon our children if we desire to make them heires of blessing Fourthly it is required of vs to reioyce in the blessing of God vpon them and to giue him praise and glory when he vouchsafeth to shew mercy vpon them and vpon vs. If hee did leaue them in their sinnes and in that corruption which they receiued from vs Psal 51. as it were by inheritance we could not finde iust cause of complaint against him who is bound neither to vs nor to our children but forasmuch as he sheweth much mercy to our posteritie as he hath done vnto vs we haue matter of praise and thankesgiuing giuen vnto vs whereby also we shall procure their farther good It is noted of the Iailour Actes 16. Act. 16.34 that he reioyced that they of his houshold also beleeued in the Lord. He accounted it not sufficient for himselfe to beleeue nor reioyced onely in his owne saluation but forasmuch as God had vouchsafed greater mercy vnto him to call his family also to the faith this cheered his heart much more If we haue tasted of the like mercy let vs not be forgetfull of the like duty Lastly it belongeth vnto vs for the furtherance of their good to giue those all good encouragement in well doing that are conscionable in their duties to God and to vs we are bound to praise and commend them to comfort them to cheere them vp and to defend them against all malicious enemies that seeke to disgrace them The Apostle Paul willeth parents not to prouoke their children lest they be discouraged Coloss 3.21 It is a meanes to coole and quench zeale to finde discouragements in godly proceedings On the other side we ought to shew all dislike and hatred against euill and an angry countenance toward such as are vnreformed The Prophet touching the right ordering and good gouernment of his house declareth that hee would not know a wicken person and him that hath an high looke he will not suffer Psal 101.4.5 His eyes should be vpon the faithfull of the land that they may dwell with him hee that walketh in the perfect way hee shall serue him This is a good meanes to make both houses to prosper and kingdomes to flourish when the godly are aduanced and the euil doers are beaten down but when euil is set aloft and goeth vnchecked and vncontrolled and godlinesse is driuen to the wall it prognosticateth and foretelleth the ruine and vtter desolation of those societies albeit for a time they may continue When they offered strange fire before the Lord in the wildernesse Wee haue hitherto spoken of the destruction of Aarons sonnes before the face of their father now let vs see for what cause it was done The sinne of his sonnes is remembred to be this they offered strange fire that is such as was not appointed and commanded of the Lord they tooke not the fire from the altar to burne incense with all which came downe from heauen and was preserued by the diligence of the Priests vntill the captiuity of Babylon Now whereas the authour of the second booke of Macchabees telleth vs that whē their fathers were led into Persia the Priests that were then deuout tooke the fire of the altar priuily Macch. 1.19 and hid it in an hollow place of a pit without water where they kept it sure so that the place was vnknowne to all men hath no testimony of trueth out of the sacred Scriptures as we shal shew more in the 26. Chapter of this Booke of Numbers Moses maketh mention of this example of the sinne and punishment of Aarons sonnes to the end the Leuites should be more wise and wary in the execution of their office because God hereby sheweth that they shal neuer escape his hand that do not rightly discharge the duties committed vnto them For the examples of Gods iudgements vpon the corrupters and contemners of his worship must make vs more carefull and fearefull to offend Now whereas they are punished according to their
riches and reioyce in it more then they that finde great spoiles Account the merchandise of it better then the Merchandise of siluer and the gaine thereof more precious then Rubies so that nothing that we highly esteeme can be compared vnto it Prou. 3.13 14. Magnifie it as a treasure of that value that rather then thou wilt leaue it thou wilt be ready to forsake all that thou hast Matth. 13. There is nothing that more slaketh and shaketh off our deuout attention then to account the precious word of God vile and base in our eyes according to the corrupt custome of many in our dayes that preferre huskes fit to feed swine before the fat of wheat that is sent to nourish the sonnes of God Fourthly we must know that there is great hope of those that refuse not the meanes but submit themselues vnto it but none at all of those that vtterly refuse it What God may worke extraordinarily who sometimes feedeth by miracle from heauen as he did the Israelites Exod. 16.15 1 King 17.6 and Eliah in the wildernesse we cannot affirme and they that waite vpon such vanities forsake their owne mercy But of this point we haue spoken already Lastly it is our duty to lay vp the Word in our hearts that it may not be taken from vs but that we may practise it and profit by it For all our hearing must aime at profiting We must desire the sincere milke of the Word 1 Pet. 2.2 that we may grow thereby Now it can neuer take root except we heare it with an honest and good heart Luke 8.15 If we haue it only running in our mouthes or swimming in our braines it is as the grasse vpon the house toppe Psal 129.6.7 which withereth afore it groweth vp wherewith the mower filleth not his hand nor he that bindeth sheaues his bosome Let vs therefore first of all giue our hearts vnto God pray him to reforme them and to open them that so we may attend to those things that are deliuered vnto vs. As for those that haue their mouthes open but their hearts empty of the word they are as sounding brasse or a tinkling cymball they may please themselues and deceiue others for a time but their hypocrisie shall be vncased their deceitfull dealing manifested and themselues prooued to be no better then vessels that make a noyse but are without all substance in them Verse 11 12. And I behold I haue taken the Leuites c. Hitherto we haue spoken of the commandement of God directed vnto Moses that he should present the Leuites before Aaron the Priest that they may minister vnto him now we are to proceede to the reason of the commandement where we see the cause rendred why they should be giuen vnto him because euen vnto this time the first borne had executed the Priests office being consecrated vnto God and preserued out of the common destruction when the first borne in Egypt were destroyed He putteth them in mind of Gods mercy toward them who might iustly haue destroyed them as well as the Egyptians if it had pleased him When we see a common desolation or destruction and our selues as a remnant taken out of the common calamity it ought to make vs thankfull vnto God and to acknowledge that wee holde our life of him in cheife Thus did Noah stand affected when he offered sacrifice to God after he was come out of the Arke and was preserued with his family from the flood of waters Thus doth Daniel Dan. 5.20 ●● teach Belshazzar the king to humble his heart knowing the heauy iudgment that God brought vpon his father and tooke his glory from him We must profit by the examples of Gods workes both of his mercy and iudgement vpon others We learne from hence Doctrine that the first borne were from the beginning the Lords The first bo● were sanctified to the Lord. and consecrated to serue him and to instruct others This dignity and preheminence of the first borne beganne among the sonnes of Adam and continued in his posteritie as well before as after the generall destruction of the old world the eldest euer succeeding in the kingly and Priestly office vnlesse for some open impiety or other secret cause best knowne vnto God and vnknowne vnto the Church hee were reiected so that there was euermore some excellency vntill that Israel came out of Egypt and the Church became nationall Hence it is that God saith to Caine the elder sonne of Adam If thou doe well shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest not well sinne lieth at the doore and vnto thee shall be his desire and thou shalt rule ouer him Gen. 4.7 To this purpose Iacob speaketh to Reuben Gen. 49.3 Thou art my first borne my might and the beginning of my strength the excellency of dignity and the excellency of power Thus he was by priuiledge of birthright and thus was euery sonne by creation that first opened the matrice Luke 2.23 Whereby we see that in the family of the faithfull from the first man that God created vntill Aaron was sanctified to be a Priest vnto God in stead of the first borne the eldest of the family ordinarily had both the kingly and Priestly direction of the rest of his brethren As we saw this before in the house of Adam so it appeareth also afterward For when Caine the eldest sonne of Adam to whom the dignity of the first borne did pertaine was for his iniquitie reiected from that honour and excommunicated from the Church which was a spirituall kinde of banishment God raised vp Seth who being taught by his father touching the fall of man touching the punishments of sinne and the promised Sauiour assisted him while he liued in guiding his family and succeeded him after his death in the gouernment of the Church of God which was as a little flocke in comparison of the race of Caines posterity that married many wiues and encreased in great multitudes In like sort Enoch succeded Seth and dying ●ield of the ●rch lib. 5. ● ●et 2.5 ●● 4. ● left that honour to Kenan Kenan to Mahalaleel c. These were preachers of righteousnesse and repentance some of them indued with the spirit of Prophesie to conuince that wicked generation These Preachers of God being contemned and despised in the world such entertainement haue his seruants euer found the flood came and swept them away Noah gouerned as a father the Church of God before and after the Flood and left the same dignitie and office to Shem his second sonne Iaphet his eldest sonne being put behinde for secret causes knowne vnto God euen as his father had committed it vnto him ●en 10.21 Thus we might proceed and goe forward to shew in succeeding ages of the Church how God continued this fauour to the first borne and thereby set as it were a crowne of honour vpon their head Hence it is that at the giuing of the
him the forme of a seruant and was made in the likenesse of man When the disciples began to contend for place of superiority so that a strife arose among them which of them should be accounted the greatest he propoundeth vnto them his manner of liuing and conuersation and thereby disswadeth them from ambition Luke 22.27 Whether is greater he that sitteth at meat or he that serueth is not he that sitteth at meate but I am among you as he that serueth The whole life of Christ euen from the first moment of his conception vnto the last period of his assumption and ascension from the earth doe preach vnto vs as with a liuely voyce his wonderfull humiliation that he made himselfe as a worme of the earth who was equall in glory with his Father If this example of him that is the authour and finisher of our faith wil not moue vs to true humility nothing in the world will moue vs. Lastly pride is the preparation of vs vnto a fall and the ready way that leadeth to destruction The proude man that climbeth aloft worketh his owne ouerthrow and confusion and the higher we ascend the greater is our downe-fall Salomon in the booke of his Prouerbes beateth much vpon this point as Chap. 11.2 When pride commeth then commeth shame but with the lowly is wisedome and Chap. 16.18 Pride goeth before destruction and an hauty spirit before a fall chap. 18.12 Before destruction the heart of man is hauty and before honour is humility This may be farther confirmed vnto vs by three famous and memorable examples recorded in the Scriptures to wit Nebuchadnezzar Haman and Herod The first whiles he was boasting of great Babylon which he had built for the chamber of the Empire by the might of his power Dan. 4.30 and for the honour of his maiesty was driuen from the company of men and had his habitation with the beasts of the fielde and did eate grasse as oxen The second to wit proud Haman swolne with the conceit of his owne greatnesse while he thought to be clad in royall apparel which the king vsed to weare to bee mounted on horsebacke that the king rideth vpon and to haue the crowne royall that he weareth to be set vpon his head was driuen to play the lacky on foot and to dance attendance as a Page Ester 6.10 and 7.9.10 and not long after fell from the highest toppe and tower of honour to the lowest degree of shame and reproch The third and last example is of Herode who being puffed vp with the Syren songs of Sycophants and Flatterers thought himselfe worthy to take vpon him the honour of God Act. 12 2● but immediately the Angel of the Lord smote him because he gaue not God the glory and he was eaten vp of wormes Behold heere how the greatest sort of men are wonderfully deceiued in their owne imaginations deeming pride as a stirrup to mount vp into the saddle of honour whereas it is a steppe to bring them-downe and a meanes to make them fall into shame and confusion ●e sixt re●oofe Lastly it reproueth such as enuy at the better and higher callings of others These are euen ready to die consume away when they see others placed in greater places and adorned with greater gifts then themselues This is a common sicknesse and sinne and the cause of many euils that swarme in Church common-wealth When Ioshua heard the Elders in the hoste to prophesie he enuyed them for Moses sake ●mb 11.28 ● 3.26 The like we see in Iohns disciples when they heard of Christs glory and fame encreasing more more they feared it would turne to the diminishing of the credite and estimation of their master The remedies to preuent this mischiefe before it come or to pull it vp when it hath taken hold of vs are many First let vs acquaint our hearts to reioyce at the good that doth befall them and to be glad when any thing befalleth them for the comfort of their soules or bodies as when one member is had in honour all the rest are cheered and refreshed by it Cor. 12.26 Secondly we are to consider that all places of preferment come from God as the Prophet teacheth Promotion commeth neither from the East nor from the West ●l 76.6 7. nor from the South but God is the Iudge he putteth downe one and setteth vp another Thirdly we must al of vs make this account of our gifts that they are bestowed for the common good and not onely for the priuate benefit of such as possesse them so that the eye cannot say to the hand Cor. 12.21 nor the head that is highest to the foot that is lowest I haue no need of thee without the destruction of the whole body Fourthly the fewer our gifts and the lower our places and the smaller our callings are the lesser lighter account we are to make wheras such as haue the greatest charges haue the greatest account to make according to the rule of Christ ●e 12.48 Vnto whomsoeuer much is giuen of him shall be much required and to whom men haue committed much of him they will aske the more The higher therefore a man is exalted the more is he bound to God and to them ouer whom he is set and to those among whom he liueth so that there is no gift no honour no calling without his burden and account For as the starres haue light but for mans vse so we haue gifts but for others benefit Lastly this consideration if there were no other is sufficient to correct all pride and ambition in vs to wit to examine our owne ability and we shall finde that there cannot be so small a charge committed vnto vs but the same is able to make our shoulders shrinke and crack yea to bow and breake if we doe our duties as we ought to doe For our infirmities are so great and our strength so little that whosoeuer sifteth himselfe throughly and tryeth his owne giftes without hypocrisie and flattery shall find that he is able to do as good almost as nothing at all If we thinke vpon these things it will be as a bridle to restrain vs from soaring and climbing so high and a forcible means to breed in vs contentation in our places whatsoeuer they be whether high or low whether great or little Thirdly it is a comfortable thing to a mans Vse 3 conscience in life and death in prosperity and aduersity to remember that we haue thus serued God fulfilled the callings with a good conscience that he hath laid vpon vs. The faithfull seruant that hath giuen to his fellow seruants their portion of meat in due season shall be most happy and be made ruler ouer all his goods He that occupied his masters talents and gained by them heard this comfortable voyce Matth. 24.47 and 25.23 Well done good and faithfull seruants thou hast beene faithfull ouer a few things I will
should be as frontlets betweene their eyes and write them vpon the postes of their houses and gates of their Cities all these were as helpes for memory against forgetfulnesse as if he had said vnto them Haue them alwayes in remembrance Of all persons old men seeme to haue the weakest memories which decay with their age and these doe most of all complaine of them howbeit the heathen man telleth vs that there is no man so old Cicero lib. de Senect that hath forgotten where he laid vp his treasure All men remember the things they most regard such as they loue they will not forget forasmuch as Where the treasure is there will the heart be also Mat. 6.21 If then we remember not the things of God the chiefe cause is because we doe not much esteeme of them Set an high price vpon them value them aboue thy siluer and thy gold esteeme them beyond all pearles and precious stones and thou shalt finde thy memory much bettered and encreased The fourth is to plant in vs true godlinesse and reforme our liues as it were to rid our ground of all bryars bushes before we sow any thing in it The gate of Gods house is the gate of righteousnesse because none but the iust and righteous ought to enter into it Psa 118.19 20. This is the cause that Iacob when hee went to Bethel to worship God first cleansed his house of the filthines of idolatry and commanded his houshold to be cleane Gen. 35. ● and change their garments thereby vnderstanding the purity of the heart and the changing of their mindes by the renuing of them according to true godlinesse Thus doth the Lord command the Israelites to wash their cloathes and sanctifie themselues before they came to heare the law at his mouth Exo. 19.14 To this purpose Dauid saith Psal 26.6 I will wash mine hands in innocency so will I compasse thine Altar O Lord. If we come into Gods presence without sanctification we offer a sacrifice full of blemishes which his soule abhorreth He reiecteth our prayers as abominable and our hearing of his word is turned into sinne Lastly we are bound to lay vp in the heart that which we heare for God especially requireth the heart If that be wanting he misseth it by and by he espyeth it so soon as we come as he did him that came to the marriage feast without his wedding garment Mat. 22.11 There is no man hath any treasure that leaueth or layeth it commonly and carelesly but he locketh it vp that no man should take it from him the word is a pearle and a pearle of such price that when he hath found it that knoweth the worth of it Matth. 13. he selleth all that he hath to buy it the heart is as it were the coffer where we ought to keepe it If we hold it in our hands or haue it in our heads or suffer it to dwell in our mouthes onely and cannot afford to giue it roome and lodging in our hearts it is in danger euery foote to be taken from vs and we surprised of it Esay 29.13 Such persons honour him with their lips but their harts are far from him Matt. 15. The blessed Virgin is commended that she kept those sayings in her heart So did Isaac go out into the fields to meditate Luk. 2.10 Gen. 24.63 at euentide he chose a solitary place and fit season to call to minde such things as he had heard Wherefore let vs also lay vp in our soules and ponder in our hearts such good things as wee haue learned and let vs hide them as in the casket of a good conscience that in all times of need we may bring foorth these precious treasures to helpe vs. We know not into what troubles and perplexities we may come how we may be tempted assaulted into what dangers of spiritual enemies we may fall how bitter will those dayes be vnto vs if wee haue no word of God dweling in vs to comfort vs raise vs vp againe It wil then be too late to go and buy oile in our lamps when we should vse it Let vs store our selues with plenty of heauenly meditations that we may neuer be too seeke and arme our selues with such sufficient furniture that wheresoeuer the enemy seeke to foile vs and to make a breach into our soules we may be able to resist him and to stand fast in the power of God against all the wyles of the diuell 21. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 22. Take also the summe of the sonnes of Gershon throughout the houses of their fathers by their families 23. From thirty yeares old and vpward vntill fifty yeare old shalt thou number them all that enter in to performe the seruice to doe the worke in the Tabernacle of the Congregation 24. This is the seruice of the families of the Gershonites to serue and for burdens 25. And they shall beare the Curtaines of the Tabernacle and the Tabernacle of the Congregation his couering and the couering of the badgers skinnes that is aboue vpon it and the hanging for the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation 26. And the hangings of the Court and the hanging for the doore of the gate of the Court which is by the Tabernacle by the Altar round about and their cords and all the instruments of their seruice all that is made for them so shall they serue 27. At the appointment of Aaron and his sonnes shall be all the seruice of the sonnes of the Gersbonites in all their burdens and in all their seruice and ye shall appoint vnto them in charge all their burdens 28. This is the seruice of the families of the sonnes of Gershon in the Tabernacle of the Congregation and their charge shall be vnder the hand of Ithamar the sonne of Aaron the Priest Hitherto Moses hath spoken of the Kohathites and he hath done it more largely then he doth handle the other families for the causes noted before In the next place he proceedeth to the Gershonites Touching these first God commandeth them also to be numbred and t●●ir age is appointed and limited as in the fo●mer from thirty yeares old and vpward vntill fifty Secondly their proper and peculiar charge is expressed what burdens they are to beare to wit the Curtaines and the couerings the cordes the veiles and all the instruments appertaining to their seruice Thirdly all these things before mentioned must be done at the commandement of Aaron and his sonnes Ver. 22 23. Take also the summe of the sons of Gershon c. Obserue with me in this diuision that Moses repeateth sundry points that are set downe in the former chapter as will euidently appeare vnto vs if wee make tryall and comparison in euery one of the three families as for example touching the Kohathites that which hee speaketh of them in this chapter verse 5 7 9. compare it with the 31. verse of the third chapter
soule that they may be preserued from sin from the infection of sin Now if any aske whether the disease of the leprosie be not contagious and therfore whether it be not expedient that all such as are taken and touched with it should be barred and banished from the society of men I confesse this is true and conuenient ought to be so but this was not the chiefe and principall end that God respected and therfore this is left to the Physitians and Masters of that profession to iudge according to the rules of art and experience God committed the matter to the Priests that they should order all things according to the directions giuen vnto them it had beene much safer to haue committed and commended the matter to such as had iudgement in that faculty Moreouer we must consider The leprosie of three sorts that as this disease was foule and filthy vgly and feareful so there are three sorts of it named in the law to wit the leprosie of the body the leprosie of the garments and the leprosie of the house so that it is most probable according to the opinion of the learned that the Iewes in a proper and peculiar manner vnknowne to vs at this day and vnknowne to the Iewes themselues at this day were troubled and tormented with this disease Euen as we that are cast into the last age of the world haue diseases that follow some sinnes which in former times were not knowne to the Physitians themselues And heereupon no doubt prophane writers tooke occasion to deuise sundry lyes and slanders against the whole nation of the Iewes as if it were hereditary vnto them and that all the posterity of Abraham were full of botches and blisters and itches and therefore were driuen out of Egypt by force Ioseph antiq lib. 9. lest they should corrupt the rest with their infection This forged surmise had ancient Authors to rest vpon Cornel. Tacit. Iustin lib. 38. and is as likely to proceed from the Egyptians themselues a proude and hauty people as from any other who being ashamed of the plagues that were sent among them and inflicted among them and desirous to blot out the memory of the reproch of their nation and of the vengeance of eternall God turned the iudgement of scabs blisters that fel vpon thē from themselues to the people of Israel as if they had infected them were for that cause compelled to banish them out of Egypt lest they should corrupt the whole countrey with their maladies But if this had bin the true reason of their departure why did they retaine them so long among them and in the end bestow vpon thē siluer and gold iewels and precious stones thereby spoiling themselues to enrich their enemies or why did they persecute them with such hatred at the red sea that themselues were drowned Furthermore among the curses that God denounceth to bring vpō his people for the contempt of his word disobedience to his lawes Deut. 28.27 he threatneth to smite them with the botch of Egypt and with the hemrohds and with the scabbes and with the itch whereof they should not be healed Lastly if the people of God had beene haunted and vexed with any such filthy diseases the Lord would neuer haue established such sharpe and seuere lawes among them the like whereof were not to be found among forreine nations whereby such were separated from the company of men as had any loathsome and noysome vlcers and sicknesses following them yea if any suspition did arise they were seuered and sundered from the rest for a time vntill the trueth were throughly knowne and found out as appeareth at large in the booke of Leuiticus Verse 2. Command the children of Israel that they put out c. Heere we haue a plaine and expresse commandement of God charging Moses to put out lepers vncleane persons from the Congregation The Apostle Paul speaking of fornicators and incestuous persons that were vncleane liuers vncleane in body and in soule vseth the same word Put out such from among you 1 Cor. 5.13 thereby Doctrine 1 shewing what God intended by this Ceremony Obstinate sinners are to be cast out of the Church the substance whereof teacheth this truth namely that obstinate sinners are to be cast out of the Church All open offenders and vnreformed persons by the dreadfull and direfull sentence of excommunication as it were by the two edged sword of God are to be cut off from the fellowship of the Church and from all the priuiledges that belong vnto the faithfull This ordinance of God hath good ground vpon the separation mentioned in this place which was not commanded as a ciuill policy to keep the whole from the sick but as a part of Ecclesiasticall discipline inasmuch as the Priests the sonnes of Aaron had the whole knowledge of the cause as well the shutting of them out as the receiuing of them into the hoste as we shewed by sundry examples before There are that draw the originall of this Church-censure euen from Adam whom the Lord cast out of Eden and set an Angel at the entry of the garden who by shaking the blade of a glistering sword feared him from re-entring and suffered him not to touch or taste of that tree which was a Sacrament of life vnto him The like doe the Hebrew interpreters obserue touching Caine Gen. 3.24 whom the Lord cast out and banished from the face of God Gen. 4.14 as the lepers were cast out of the fellowship of men For what else is the face of God but the place appointed for his worship where he was wont to appeare to the Fathers and where Adam and his family met together to serue him and to sacrifice vnto him And al ●his was before the law when the sons of God were manifestly distinguished from the sonnes of men Gen 6.1 In the time of the Law we haue many ceremonies to this purpose We see that the vncleane were kept from comming to the Tabernacle from entring into the Temple from the partaking of the sacrifices and from eating the Passeouer Num 19. ● 20. and 9. ● So in another place the Lord threatneth that he shal be cut off from his people that being vncleane eateth of his sacrifice and that the sacrifice shal profit him nothing nor be accounted to him to take away his sinne but that it shall remaine vpon his owne head These are no obscure types darke shadowes but liuely pictures and patternes that represent vnto vs the nature of excommunication Let vs come to the new Testament Mat. 16.13 and 18.18 The vse of the keyes to open and shut and the words of binding and loosing come directly to this purpose And as this trueth is taught by precept so it is farther enlarged and warranted by sundry examples Abraham is commanded to cast out the bond woman her son Ge. 21.10 ● out of his family which was
lifted vp himselfe against the LORD of heauen So when wee behold any cut off from the society of the Saints and doe not feare the same sentence it argueth that we are as members benummed and want that liuely feeling which ought to be in the members The fourth end is that those punishments which hang ouer the Church for sinne may be auoyded For so long as they that deserue to be excommunicate remaine in the Church God is prouoked to plague that Church as we saw before in the example of Achan Iosh 7.11 When the Church hath done what lyeth in them to do God is appeased and his wrath turned away as we noted by the zeale that Phinehas shewed against the adulterer and the adulteresse Numb 25.7 Psal 106.30 he stood vp and executed iudgement and so the plague was stayed Lastly the glory of God which is the ende of all good things is another end of excommunication This the Church ought to aime at and if this be before their eyes that are the gouernours of the Church it will keepe them from declining either to the right hand or to the left hand both from sparing the guilty and from punishing the guiltlesse from winking at the sinnes of great ones and censuring the faults and infirmities of those of low degree too sharpely from winking at great beames in some and hauing Eagles eyes to pry into the motes of others This will make vs walke in the beaten path of Gods word If then ●or 10.31 in the least things as our eating and drinking we must do all to the glory of God how much more ought we to respect it when wee are to deale in so serious and weighty a cause For his name is honoured and glorified in the saluation of the Elect and in the iust condemnaon of the reprobate both which are furthered by this ordinance of excommunication being rightly vsed 5 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying ●●●it 6.3 6 Speake vnto the children of Israel When a man or woman shall commit any sinne that men commit to doe a trespasse against the Lord and that person be guilty 7 Then they shall confesse their sinne which they haue done and he shall reoompense his trespasse with the principall thereof and adde vnto it the fift part thereof Leuit. 6.5 and giue it vnto him against whom he hath trespassed 8 But if the man haue no kinseman to recompense the trespasse vnto let the trespasse be recompensed vnto the Lord euen to the Priest beside the ramme of the attonement whereby an attonement shall be made for him 9 And euery offering of all the holy things of the children of Israel which they bring vnto the Priest shall be his 10 And euery mans hallowed things shall bee his whatsoeuer any man giueth the Priest Leuit. 10.12 it shall bee his The first part of the Chapter hath hitherto beene handled touching the putting of lepers and other polluted persons out of the hoste the second part followeth concerning falsehood committed wherby our brother is damnified beguiled and deceiued to the 11 verse Our neighbour trusteth vs and reposeth confidence in vs at our word but we often make no conscience to deceiue and defraud him so it may be to our owne gaine and commodity against the common rule that nature taught the Gentiles themselues Whatsoeuer yee would that men should doe to you doe ye euen so to them for this is the Law and the Prophets Matth. 7.12 In this diuision therefore we are to consider two things first the promulgation of the law instituted of God to amend and correct this fault Secondly the application of this particular to the generall law touching the Priests maintenance The law is first propounded and enacted and then amplified by a prouiso or exception set downe by way of preuenting of an obiection The substance of the Law is this If any man or woman haue dealt falsely with his brother in any part of his goods by circumuenting of him fraudulently or detayning any of them wrongfully whereby he is iniured and God is offended so that his owne conscience accuseth him witnesseth against him this course is to be taken he must seeke to blot out and wash away his trespasse and offence which he hath done three wayes First by confession secondly by restitution thirdly by reconciliation First he must confesse his sinne and craue pardon from the bottome of his heart he must submit himselfe vnto God and acknowledge freely willingly what he hath done knowing that he can by no meanes hide his sin nor by any colour keepe it from the sight of God It booteth him not to deny it or defend it or excuse it or diminish it or turne it ouer vpon others If he would receiue pardon and forgiuenes it is necessarily required of him that he vse hearty confession both of this and all other trespasses and transgressions Secondly we must make satisfaction to him whom we haue wronged and from whom we wrested any thing It is not enough to make open confession vnto God vnlesse also wee make actuall restitution vnto men For the sinne is not pardoned except that which is taken away be restored Wherefore that the party offended should be recompensed and the party offending should be punished hee must together with the principall make good the dammage and put a fift part more thereunto and giue it vnto him against whom hee hath transgressed This is done to discourage iniurious persons and to make them afraid to doe wrong whether by fraud or violence For if they should onely restore the principall they knew if their offences were found out they should be no losers Thirdly he must seel ● reconciliation and atonement with God by offering vp of a ramme in sacrifice which figured out the suffering of Christ and offering vp of himselfe once vpon the Crosse for the discharge of our sinne and appeasing of the wrath of his Father It is in vaine to make satisfaction vnto men except we know how God will be satisfied and it shall profite vs nothing to be at peace with men except we be at peace with our God This is the enacting of the Law an exception is annexed by way of preuention For the offender that hath trespassed against his neighbour might obiect and say How can I restore that I haue taken it may be the party is dead it may be he hath neither sonne nor daughter neither brother nor kinseman may I not then lawfully conceale it and iustly retaine it vnto my selfe I answere nay the Lord answereth Thou shalt by no meanes detaine the goods that are not thine own if thou look for any good at my hand as if he should say when thy neighbour is any way damnified let the losse be recompensed and the damage restored prouided alwayes and be it farther enacted that if the owner be dead or vnknowne and he haue none of his kinred and aliance liuing to be his heire it shall not
peace when there is no peace So then we must know that wee make our selues accessaries to other mens sinnes except we admonish them for albeit we are to conceale their imperfections yet we are not to abstaine from admonitions If any be fallen through infirmity Gal. ● 1. they that are spirituall must restore such a one by the spirit of meeknesse considering themselues lest they also be tempted If any man doe erre from the faith we must labour his conuersion assuring our selues that he which conuerteth a sinner from the errour of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sinnes Iam. 5 19 20. It is our duty therefore to couer their frailties while there is hope of amendment but if by this meanes the sinne concealed bee not reformed and repented of we are bound to proceed farther euen in loue and charity to declare it and make it knowne to those that may correct the persons and amend the sins So did Ioseph deale toward his brethren Gen. 37 2. He brought vnto his father their euil report And Christ saith If he heare not thee take with thee one or two more that in the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word may be established Mat. 18 16. 15. Then shall the man bring his wife vnto the Priest and hee shall bring her offering for her the tenth part of an Ephah of barley meale he shal powre no oyle vpon it nor put frankincense thereon for it is an offering of iealousie an offering of memoriall bringing iniquity to remembrance 16. And the Priest shall bring her neere and set her before the Lord. 17. And the Priest shall take holy water in an earthen vessell and of the dust that is in the floore of the Tabernacle the Priest shall take it and put it into the water 18. And the Priest shall set the woman before the Lord and vncouer the womans head and put the offering of memoriall in her hands which is the iealousie offering and the Priest shall haue in his hand the bitter water that causeth the curse Hitherto we haue spoken of the allegation or propounding of the cause which is put in the former words Now wee must goe forward to see the proceeding in it how it is decided and determined wherby it commeth to passe that the same which before was doubtfull vnknowne and vncertaine to wit whether the woman were defiled or not now becommeth plaine and manifest That which from the beginning was knowne onely vnto God and the persons themselues that sinned or else are suspected to haue sinned is made knowne to others both to the Priest and to the whole Congregation This is done two waies first by setting downe such things as goe before the triall secondly by adding such things as are ioyned more neerely with it The things going before are of two sorts to wit the workes or actions that are vsed and then the words that are spoken The actions vsed are in this diuisio● the words of execration that are vttered are to bee considered afterward These workes that are commanded and are here in order rehearsed in the text do concerne either the duties of the husband or of the Priest to whom she was brought First the husband must bring his suspected wife to the Priest with an offering to wit the tenth part of an Ephah of barley meale that is an Omer as appeareth Exod. 16 36. but he is charged to powre no oile vpon it nor to put any frankincense to it forasmuch as it is an offering of iealousie and bringeth iniquity to remembrance either committed or supposed and suspected to be committed Before we proceed any farther we are from hence to answer sundry questions that may be Question 1 asked and demaunded in these words For wherefore is the husband charged both to accompany and bring his wife and to set her before the Priest that triall might be made of her and not rather some other man I answer ●●swer first because he supposeth himselfe to be iniuried and no man else and therefore seeing it most concerneth him it is fittest to be done by him Or if he be not wronged he wrongeth his wife by needlesse suspitions Besides he was to be an eye-witnesse either of her innocency or of her guiltinesse that he might esteeme of her accordingly and know where the fault resteth in himselfe or in his wife Lastly it behoueth that the people of God be free not onely from crime but from suspition of crime and to abstaine not onely from euill but from all appearance of euill 1 Thess 5.22 as we shall shew more at large afterward Question 2 Againe it may be asked why hee bringeth barley meale rather then other and why without oyle and incense I answer ●●swer is was an offering of the lowest and meanest graine vsed of the poorest of the people forasmuch as this was a signe that should put the woman in mind to humble her selfe being now brought by her husband not onely into the presence of the Priest but into the presence of the Lord himselfe It must be offered without oyle and frankincense because they haue no affinity or concord with this matter neither was this offering of the nature of others Oyle did signifie the graces of Gods Spirit and therefore it is said that Christ was annointed with the oile of gladnesse aboue his fellowes Psal 45 7. Heb. 1 9. Psal 133 2. Incense was a signe of sweet sauour and delight that we should take in the seruice of God and of Gods acceptation of his guifts and our duty performed vnto him in his Sonne Christ Psal 141 2. where the Prophet saith Let my praier bee directed in thy sight as incense and the lifting vp of my hands as the euening sacrifice so that neither of them did accord or agree with this oblation wherein there was no gladnesse nor ioyfulnes of heart forasmuch as the cause or originall of it was sadnesse pensiuenesse and discontentment And this is the reason rendred by Moses himselfe verse 15. For it is an offering of iealousie not an offering that they could goe vnto with alacrity and cheerefulnesse For wheresoeuer there is either a party suspecting or a party suspected there can be nothing but feare sorrow care and a traine of such like tormenting affections Thirdly heere is mention made of the tenth Question 3 part of an Ephah The question heereupon may be asked what the Epha was a measure much vsed and oftentimes mentioned in the old Testament both in the Law and the Prophets I answer Answer the first place that mention is made of it to my remembrance is at the gathering of Manna when the people were in the wildernes where it is said that euery man was stinted and had an Omer for his allowance and Moses addeth in the end that an Omer is the tenth part of an Ephah Exod. 16.36 If then we learne what an Omer was we may quickly easily and readily know
we do not deny that the Scripture being vnderstood doth enlighten our mindes but it is not therfore lightsome because it is vnderstood of vs for then the light therof should wholly depend vpon our vnderstanding Thus if we vnderstand it it shall be lightsome but if we vnderstand it not it shal not be lightsome Nay which is much more absurd if one man vnderstand it it shal be light if another man vnderstand it not it shall not bee light thus at one and the same time it shold be both light not light The truth therefore is that the Scriptures are lightsome two wayes ●●e holy ●●●iptures are ●o wayes ●●●●t●ome First in respect of them selues secondly in respect of vs. In respect of themselues they are alwaies lightsome of thēselues and haue light in themselues In respect of vs they are lightsome when we vnderstand them and receiue them and light by them But to returne to the former matter the Minister should be the principall light to hold out the Lanthorne to bring men to heauen and to worke in them repentance as Iohn the Baptist is said to be a burning and a shining light Ioh. 5 35. But euery one also in his place must be a light to shine in knowledge and obedience in doctrine and in life On the contrarie when men are as candles put out there falleth great hurt to the church The danger heereof may be discerned by common experience in an hauen towne if the Lanthorne be taken downe or the candle put out which should direct the ships in the night season into the hauen al the ships and the soules that saile in them are left to the mercy of the winds which are without mercy and so all perish by miserable shippewracke In like manner if men haue no light in their hearts to guide them into the hauen and harbour of the church and consequently of the kingdome of heauen they doe as much as in them lyeth betray their owne soules and drowne themselues in eternall perdition Verse 3. And Aaron did so c. The obedience of Aaron is here described and the Candlesticke set in the Tabernacle described It is saide to be of golde as Reuel 1. the most precious of all Minerals for two causes First because as Gold excedeth all other mettals so the Church exceedeth all other societies of men because in it saluation is only to be found Esay 46 13. all other beeing ordained to preserue this safe and sound Esa 45 14. 49 23. Reuel 21 24 26. Ye● it is the glory and honour the beauty and ornament of all other societies kingdomes cities townes houses and persons to be parts of the church inasmuch as otherwise they are parts of the world of the kingdome of darknesse yea a● dogs swine and vncleane beasts Ephes 22 11 12 13 c. Secondly because it is most precious deare to God and to Iesus Christ as gold is to man because it is an holye company sanctified by the blood of Christ whom it cost deare to redeeme it Acts 20. The Candlesticke in the Tabernacle was to hold the light for the direction of all that were therein from Euening to morning continually Exod. 27 22. It is the vse of euery Candlesticke to hold to keepe to preserue to continue and to yeelde forth the light to the benefit of others This doth mystically represent the church Doctrine teacheth that the church is as the Lords golden candlestick appointed to hold and keepe the light treasury of the Word for euer It is the office of the church to holde and keep the word for euer that it should neuer bee lost or embeselled from vs to the end of the world And as the Candlesticke was to hold the light to the first comming of Christ so is the church to preserue the truth vntil the second comming of Christ It is therefore the office of the church and of euery true member thereof to keepe in it and to publish abroad and to hold out to those that are in it the truth of Gods word to direct their pathes aright as Deut. 31 20. The booke of the Law after that it was written was by the Lord himselfe committed to the Israelites to be kept in the side of the Arke of the couenant The Prophet Esay sheweth That the Word should go forth out of Sion where it was kept into the middest of the earth Chap. 2.3 And the Apostle declareth that the Iewes had the Oracles of God committed vnto them of trust Rom. 3 2. and that to them appertained who were the onely church the adoption and the glory and the Couenants and the giuing of the Law and the seruice of God and the promises Rom. 9 4. And Paul is said to haue written vnto Timothy that hee should know how he ought to behaue himselfe in the house of GOD which is the Church of the liuing God the pillar ground of the truth 1 Tim. 3.15 By all which testimonies wee are taught that the Church holdeth and bringeth the truth Esay 41 27. and conueieth it vnto vs and that wee can no otherwise receiue it or be partakers of it For further proofe heereof obserue with Reason 1 me the titles that are giuen vnto it It is a safe keeper or treasurer to keepe as it were vnder locke and key the holy Iewels of the olde and new Testament that they be neither corrupted by Heretikes nor destroyed by other enemies It is as a cunning Goldsmith to try euery thing Whit. de Scrip. quaest 3. Cap. 2. for as he discerneth pure gold from counterfet mettalles so the church discerneth true Scripture from false or forged books and writings It is as a crier to publish and make knowne the decrees of almighty God It is an Interpreter to expound the sence and to open the meaning of the Scriptures according to the proportion of faith set forth in other parts Secondly it is a great honor and wonderfull preferment that God giueth vnto the Church aboue al other societies and places of the world besides And indeede there can bee no greater honor then to be put in trust with such a treasure If a man should vpon trust commit vnto another a great treasure and make choyse of him to leaue it with him it is a signe he honoreth and respecteth him before and aboue others so is it betweene God and his Church he hath laid vp his trueth in his Church as in his store-house Ps 147 19 20. He hath giuen his word to Iacob his statutes and ordinances vnto Israel he hath not dealt so with other Nations as for his iudgements they haue not knowne them This made the Apostle say What is then the preferment or aduantage of the Iew Or what profit is thereof circumcision much euerie day shewing thereby that God committing his Oracles vnto them did aduance and prefer them farre aboue all other Nations Thirdly the church is the house
vnto vs. If an earthly Prince should send a messenger vnto any of vs hee is regarded for the Princes sake that sent him We are Ambassadors for Christ saith the Apostle as thogh God did beseech you by vs we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled vnto God 2 Cor. 5 ver 20. and therefore we should bee heard receiued and respected for our Masters sake Again they must submit themselues to our doctrine not onely when wee heare pleasing things precious promises and gracious comforts but when we heare the word sounding an alarme in our eares vttering reproofes deliuering threatnings and denouncing iudgements We see in humane things we are content to accept of the excuse of men that say they are but seruants and messengers they craue pardon because they are seruants and they obtaine it So standeth the case with vs we are sent of God who hath put his word into our mouths The Lord God hath spoken who can but prophesie Amos 3 7 8. Let vs not therefore be blamed we are Messengers we cannot but doe our message for the loue of almighty God of his people constraineth vs. How then shold we hold our peace when we are commanded to speake Lastly this Title importeth a limitation for no more is to be ascribed vnto vs then vnto seruants We are indeede as the Stewards of the house not in the number of the lowest and meanest seruants howbeit yet we are seruants as 1 Cor. 3 5. What is Paul or Cephas or Apollos but the Ministers by whom ye beleeue And therefore when Cornelius ascribed more to Peter then should be yeelded to a seruant he forbad him saying Stand vp for I my selfe also am a man But not many in our dayes offend this way we haue turned honouring of them into contempt and are so farre from falling at their feete that we are ready to trample them vnder our feete and make them our foote-stoole who are for no other cause accounted our enemies but because they tell vs the truth Verse 23 24. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying This is it that belongeth vnto the Leuites from twentie and fiue yeare olde c. In these words we haue a limitation annexed by the expresse commandement of God touching the time of entering into the office of the Leuites to wit at the age of 25. yeeres This may seeme to be contrary to that which wee noted before Obiectio● chap. 4 23 31 33. where the age of thirty yeeres is appointed If then it be asked how it commeth to passe that in these seueral places seueral times are assigned for their election into the office and how it falleth out that fiue yeeres are cut off which before were granted I answer Answer here is no contrariety these Scriptures are thus to be reconciled The fiue yeeres restrained in this place which were enlarged before serued for triall and probation of such as entred into the office and seruice of the Sanctuary For when they were fiue and twentie yeeres olde they began to ioyne themselues with the rest and to minister before the Lord but being thirty and found fit they entered fully and wholly vpon their calling and therefore Chapt. 4. verse 3. Moses saith Fit to do the worke but in this place they are said to goe in to execute Euen as such as must go to warre are first trained and mustered and taught how to fight and skirmish that afterward they may know how to buckle on their armour in earnest and to looke the enemy in the face so was it in this spirituall warfare they were for a certaine time trained which yeeres once expired they were admitted The Doctrine from hence is this that the Ministers must be proued tried Doctri●● examined before they be admitted to teach the people The mi●●● must be ●●●ued and 〈◊〉 before t●● be admi●●● to teach 〈◊〉 people The Apostles did not by their sole authoritie appoint one to succeed in place of Iudas who was faln from the Apostleship but they broght two forth and presented them or set them vp before the people that they might iudge whither they were fit or not Actes 1 23. The Church ought not to appoint any to the holie Ministery without good triall of their ability and sufficiencie forasmuch as two were set vp and caused to stand before the congregation that it might bee knowne whether they were such persons as ought to be chosen and that any man might obiect against them if he had ought to obiect Obiect But it may be saide Is this apposing or examining necessary at all times and to be vsed toward all persons I answer if they be fully and famously knowne to them that haue the right of choosing and trying it is not needfull howbeit it is necessary that they should offer themselues to this examination We see this in schooles of learning such as are to be preferred to any dignity that is voide there is an examination required albeit the parties to be chosen be neuer so sufficient and their sufficiency fully knowne to such as haue the voices of election in their hands how much more then ought this to be in this most weighty businesse of the Church This is farther apparent out of the Apostle 1 Tim. 3 10. Let these also first be proued then let them vse the office of a Deacon being found blamelesse so that they ought not before they be proued and when he saith Let these also he signifieth that the Ministers of the Church ought to vndergoe this triall Besides they must be without reproofe and haue good report of all Tit. 1 6. But it cannot be knowne whether they bee blamelesse without examination and triall going before And this standeth vpon good reason Reason 1 For first he is to take vpon him a greater charge then they that haue most costly iewels and precious pearles of wonderfull price cōmitted vnto them forasmuch as he is to gouerne the sonnes and daughters of the King of heauen and earth and hath the price of the blood of Christ committed vnto him Acts 20 28. Secondly there be many subtill workers and deceitfull dealers transforming themselues into Angels of light 2 Cor. 11 13 14 and into the Apostles of Christ they haue indeed sheepes clothing but inwardly they are rauening wolues Math. 7 15. They seeke craftily and cunningly to creepe in that they may hurry and weary the flocke and then destroy and deuoure it Acts 20 29 30. They speake peruerse things to draw away disciples after them ver 30. If then there be not a narrow search and triall made of their doctrine and conuersation before they be admitted into the Ministery they haue a gate and gap opened vnto them to enter to the ruine of the Church Thirdly the office of Deacons was a function of lesse duty and danger in the Church they were onely to attend vpon the poore and yet they must not haue admission without due triall and examination as
there cannot be a greater benefit God the Father offereth and assureth his owne Sonne whom he hath sealed to be the Mediatour of our redemption he deludeth and deceiueth no man that commeth to the Supper as a guest prepared for the marriage feast 2 Cor. 2.16 For as the word turneth to be the sauour of death vnto death to the vnreuerent and vnregarding hearer so in truth is the Sacrament the sauour of death vnto death to the vnworthy and vnwise receiuer Let vs therefore throughly examine and prooue our selues whether we be in the faith or not 2 Cor. 13 5. and consider diligently what is set before vs and hunger and thirst after Christ that we may obtaine this hidden Manna This we shall neuer do except we obserue these few rules First we must try our selues by the law of God whereby commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3 20 7 7. It is a cleere glasse to shew vs our faces or rather our hearts Iam. 1 23. From hence we must frame an editement against our selues Secondly we must labour to vnderstand and beleeue the common corruption of all mankinde standing partly in originall sinne and partly in the fruites thereof wherewith all are tainted as with an vncleane leprosie from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot Rom. 3 9. Thirdly we must feele the curse of euerlasting death due to vs Gal. 3 10. Fourthly we must learne what couenant God hath made with vs touching grace and mercy that we may be raised vp to comfort in the Sonne of God our Redeemer Fiftly we must desire to be made partakers of the Lords Supper and feele how much we stand in need of it which will follow necessarily vpon the former Lastly we should fit our selues the better vnto the worke by considering the proportion betweene the signes and the things signified The beholding of the breaking of the bread the powring out of the wine should enforce vs to remember the body of Christ broken and his blood shed for vs. When wee looke vpon the Minister comming to vs and reaching forth these elements We should consider that the Lord Iesus himselfe commeth to vs and offereth himselfe with all his mercies and merits vnto vs if wee haue faith to receiue him And as we lay hold vpon the bread and wine and take them in our hands so we must stretch forth the hand of a liuely faith to lay hold of Christ for with him we shall entertaine all his sauing benefits to our endlesse and euerlasting comfort CHAP. X. Ver. 1 2. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Make thee two Trumpets of siluer c. HEere wee haue the conclusion of the first part of this book Doctrine Of the siluer Trumpets the vse of thē In this chapter we are to consider two thinges First the commandement of God directed to Moses to make two siluer Trumpets Secondly the remouing of the Israelites from Sinai to Paran Touching the Trumpets they are described by the matter they must be made of siluer by the forme of an whole piece Thirdly by the ends for the calling of the assembly and for the iournying of the Campe. Fourthly by the manner prescribed how to vse them to what purpose one alone is to be sounded to what purpose both when an alarme is to be blowne and when the alarme is to be blowne the second time when they must blow but not sound the alarme Fiftly by telling who shall be the trumpetters or sound the Trumpets the sonnes of Aaron the Priest Lastly by the time how long this vse shall continue to wit as an ordinance for euer euen so long as the Commonwealth of the Israelites shall endure This is the present vse of them there is a double vse of them commanded for the time to come one in time of warre to assure them that God will then remember them for good and saue them from their enemies ver 9 the other in time of peace at their solemne feasts at their burnt offerings and peace offerings Vse 1 The vses of them follow which are partly ciuill and partly ecclesiasticall And first seeing these siluer Trumpets serued for the Camp and the Congregation to assemble and to remoue and that the power of making them is committed to Moses who hath the sole prerogatiue to call and to dissolue assemblies about publike affaires we learn that it belongeth to Kings and Princes as their proper right to gather together The authority of K ngs and Princes what it is and to dismisse them that are gathered together Euery one hath not authority and iurisdiction to draw multitudes together we shall haue no small ado if that may be suffered Acts 1● 23. We must haue lawfull and orderly assemblies vers 29. and such as do not sauour of confusion So it was in Egypt without Phar●oh no man might lift vp his hand or foot in all the Land of Egypt Gen. 41 44. This right is annexed to the highest power by an estate indefeizible and by a perpetuall law that cannot be dissolued throughout all generations As this power together with the Trumpets was giuen to Moses so did he and his successours practise the same who commanded in chiefe as Deut. 33 ver 5. Numb 31 6. Ioshua called and dismissed the people and they obeyed him in the execution of that power no lesse then they had done Moses before Iosh 1 17 and 24 28. So did Dauid vse these Trumpets 1 Chron 15 4 23 2 3 6. When the Arke was to be remoued and when the offices of the Tabernacle were to be ordered which are things meerely belonging to true religion The like we might say of Salomon 2 Chron. 5 2. of Asa Iehosaphat Hezekiah and Iosiah Thus were all generall Councels congregated and called together and there were none otherwise called for a thousand yeares after Christ but by the Trumpet of Moses that is by the authority of Caesar Thus did Moses also in gathering assemblies about publike affaires both for consultation and action For consultation The nece●● of gatheri●● assemblie● because many eies may discerne that which few cannot For action because many hands may discharge that which is troublesome cumbersome for one to do Exod. 18.18 This serueth to reproue three sorts first the Bishop of Rome who as a theefe and vsurper hath encroched vpon the Princes right and stollen away one of these siluer Trumpets and carried to it Rome He would leaue Moses but one Trumpet and would limit his office to ciuill and temporall things challenging power in all spirituall causes and ouer all spirituall persons Howbeit Aaron the High-Priest neuer offered to wring and wrest out of the hand of Moses this power he was content to blow them at the commandement of Moses or rather at the commandement of God Nay such is the tyranny of this proud Bishop that he contenteth not himselfe with one Trumpet though he haue indeed right to none
his brother of Cham that mocked his father of Ananias Sapphira that dissembled with God of Iudas that betraied his master of Eutychus that slept at the Sermon of Paul by these and such like we must bee admonished to auoid maliciousnesse mocking hypocrisie couetousnes and drowsie affections when we come to heare We must learne good out of the euils which befell all these Cain and Cham were both accursed Ananias and Sapphira were stricken with sodain death Iudas hanged himself 〈◊〉 ● 11. and 〈◊〉 4. Mat. 27 ●cts 5 5.10 〈◊〉 20. and Eutychus was taken vp for dead If from these examples we do not learn some instruction doubtlesse it shall turn to our greater condemnation Thus much of their first murmuring Ver. 4 5 6 7 8 9. The second murmuring followeth which is the second part of the chap. handled to the end thereof wherein obserue 3 things First the peoples blasphemie against God lusting after flesh and loathing Manna Secondly the communication betweene Moses God touching their murmuring Thirdly the issue and euent of al containing the execution of Gods wil after the communication was ended The murmuring is amplified by that occasion by the manner by the substance and effect thereof and lastly by the greatnesse of their sin and offence all which are set downe at large both that the iustice of God in punishing of them might be cleered and his gracious goodnesse in sparing and pardoning of them might be manifested The occasion of this sin which is the first circumstance arose from the multitude of the Egyptians that came out of Egypt Exod. 12 38. and ioyned themselues to the people of God Now albeit they had left Egypt when they saw the plagues that fell vpon it yet they sauoured still of the Egyptian manners and longed after their Egyptian diet they lust after flesh and gaue great offence to the people of God they laid a stumbling block before them caused many of them to fall that they neuer rose vp againe Their sin is ex●ressed in these words Who shall giue vs flesh to eate Then they remembred their former life in Egypt when they did fill their bellies with store of fish and did eat Cucumbers and Melons Leeks Onions and garlick which they preferd before the most heauenly meate and Manna bestowed vpon them in great plenty Nay they shew themselues to be so bewitched with these Egyptian trickes and besotted with the desire of their former food that their soules euen pined away and consumed euery day as if they had bin vtterly famished so that they cried out Wee can see nothing but Manna In this their sin that we may see it in his true colours iudge of it accordingly obserue these particulars First a manifest contempt of Gods ordinance for they do point it out as it were with the finger and say there is nothing at all besides this Manna before our eyes Secondly they must haue their eyes satisfied as wel as their bellies filled It could not content them to haue their necessity supplied they must also haue their sight pleased such was their wantonnesse intemperance vnthankfulnes and loathing of that meate wherewith God did diet them Thirdly here is a notable tempting of God as Psal 78.18 they tempted God in their harts in requiring meat for their lusts they wold try his power what he could do he must waite vpon them and doe whatsoeuer it pleased them to enioyne and appoint vnto him Fourthly blasphemy against God and open contempt of him setting him at nought They spake against God they said Psal 78 18. Can God furnish a table in the Wildernes For could they more blaspheme God or flie in his face with opprobrious speeches then to charge and accuse him of pining away his people and staruing of them Fiftly a vilifying contemning of their deliuerance out of Egypt they had forgotten the bondage of their persons the cruelty of Pharaoh the beating of their officers the destruction of their children they renew their old complaint which they vttered more euidently Exod. 16 3. O that wee had dyed by the hand of the Lord in th● Land of Egypt when we sate by the fleshpots when we did eate bread our bellies full As if they shold say we care not for our departure and deliuerance out of Egypt we think not our selus any way beholding to God for it for then it was better with vs then at this present Sixtly they loath their present estate of present blessings though they had store of Manna and had not experience of any want yet they must haue their dainty and delicate food like tumultuous and rebellious subiects that alwaies are weary of the present state Thucid lib. 1. lib. belli pelopon Seuenthly they shew their intemperance and concupiscence lusting after the worse whē they had the better of which the Apostle saith We should not lust after euill things 1 Cor. 10.6 as they lusted For this cause euen to lay open the greatnesse of their sinne doth Moses sundry waies describe this Manna Plin. lib. 12. nat hist cap. 9. by the similitude of it it was like Coriander seed by the colour of it as B●elium that is like the gum of that tree For it is a tree of the bignesse of an Oliue whereof Arabia hath great plenty which yeeldeth a certaine gum sweet to smell Plaut in curcul Histor of the world l. 1. c. 3. but bitter in taste It is farther also described by the sundry vses of it by the taste of it and that it came to them without any labour or pain-taking except in the gathering onely for God did send it downe with the dew euery night as we reade at large Exod. 16. Out of this diuision thus sorted into his parts arise sundry instructions part whereof I will onely point out And first behold wonder and be astonished how quickly they sin againe They had bin chastened immediately before the fire entring vpon the hindermost of their tents Pelarg. comme in sacros Num. was scarse quenched the footsteps of that fearefull burning might yet bee traced out and the smoke thereof was fresh in their eies yet they fall to lusting and murmuring againe Doctrine Sinne is dangerous Quà data porta ruit Virgil lib 1. Obserue therefore and marke it well that the entertainment of sin is dangerous It is not satisfied with the first committing it goeth and groweth on apace the practise of one maketh way for another and openeth the gates wide to all wickednes Whē sin is suffred to take roote it buddeth by and by and beareth fruite which is more bitter then gall And no maruaile for God leaueth such Reason 1 to themselues that they commit sin with greedines Such is his iustice that he will withdraw from them when once they forsake him all meanes that should do thē good that they abuse them no longer and he will punish sinne with sin the first with a
darkenesse of the night the distance of the place the weaknesse of the sight the excellency of the obiect and the infirmitie of olde age Psal 139 7 8. but nothing can hinder the light of his eye no darkenesse no distance no age Reason 2 Secondly he is infinite in nature he cannot be excluded out of any place wee may shut out the company of men and haply the light of the Sunne but it is impossible to shut out him that is euermore present in euerie place euen as the light is present to those that walk abroad at noon day whether they open their eies or shut them whether they see it or not so the Lord is present to all men though hee be not seene of al yet they cannot go from his presence If then he cannot be farre from euery one of vs it will follow from hence that he must needs know all our workes and words Reason 3 Thirdly he is omniscient hee knoweth all things nothing can be hid from him Prou. Reason 4 15 11. Fourthly he iudgeth all things and all men according to their workes It is his office to be the iudge of all the world Gen. 18.25 therefore he heareth knoweth and vnderstandeth all things 2 Cor. 5 10. otherwise he cannot do righteous iudgement Hee will not proceede vpon the bare and naked information of others or by vncertaine gesse and coniecture but hee iudgeth according to his owne knowledge which is euer certaine and neuer doubtfull Euery iust iudge proceedeth vpon a knowne and manifest cause Vse 1 We inferre from hence that it is in vain for any man to be high conceited of himself like the proud Pharisee seeing God knoweth his estate and condition more truly and throughly then himselfe Miriam and Aaron in this place holde themselues as great Prophets as Moses but GOD knew the pride of their hearts and the vanity of their words He knoweth what each man thinketh in his heart speaketh with his tongue In vaine do any highly esteeme of themselues and ouer-value their owne worthines seeing they are so well knowne within and without to God as he valueth of them so they are indeede and not otherwise If a man know one good thing in himselfe the Lord knoweth ten euill things in him that are sufficient to make him vile abhominable in his sight Of the pro● Pharisie in the Gospel● The hypocriticall Pharisie in the Gospell knew a few things in himselfe which he thought and prized to bee exceeding good but alas the Lord that seeeth not as man seeth knew for these seeming good things many inherent euils that made him hatefull to God The church of Laodicea was very greatly conceited of it selfe saying I am rich and increased in goods and haue need of nothing but the Lord heard this and knew that it was wretched and miserable and poore blind and naked Reu. 3.17 It is not so with men as they value themselues but as God valueth thē for he knoweth all things yea those things in them by them which they know not or see not in themselues There are three errors which did deceiue the Pharisie in esteeming of himself at too high a price which deceiue also many thousāds in the world as well as him The first is his error of comparison Three 〈◊〉 which did ●ce●●e the pharisie in comparing himselfe with another person which was to behold his face in a false glasse For he thought he had found out a man worse then himselfe and this made him come boldly and confidently to God with these words Lord I thanke thee that I am not as other men nor as this Publican Lu. 18.11 This comparison was that wherein he was greatly deceiued he thought himselfe iust and that he must needs be singular good because one stood by him and many others liued with him whom hee thought to be worse then himselfe A second cause of his error was his freedome from some grosse sins of the second Table which he iudged others to be guilty of I am not an extortioner vniust or an adulterer therefore he thought he must needs be a right honest and iust man His third errour sprang from his performance of some duties of religion to God I fast twice in the weeke I pay tythe of all I possesse thereupon he perswaded himselfe that he was truely religious and holy in Gods sight These were his fond conceits and all of them erroneous because he went away condemned by Christ notwithstanding all these gay and glorious workes verse 14. These things touch vs also neerely who are carried away with the same deceitfull pretences For first we also lay the foundation of godlinesse vpon a comparison if we can find out any worse then our selues we take our selues to be simply good men as a wise historian saide of the Popes that the bounty or goodnes of the Pope is praised Guic lib. 1● when hee exceedeth not the malignity of other men This course will vtterly deceiue vs for when the Lord shal come to iudgment he wil not iudge by cōparisons what we are to such a one but according to his law thogh he find vs better then some other men yet wil he enter into iudgement with vs because hee findeth vs to be worse then we ought to bee by his word wherby we must be iudged at the last day Io 12 48. The second errour deceiuing the Pharisee and others in our age is because they are free from some grosse sinnes and therefore take themselues to bee iust and vpright men if they can make it good that they be no vsurers no vncleane persons no drunkards no murtherers oh then they are as honest perfect men as the best of them all but God wil not saue vs for some euils which we want but condemne vs for those which we haue For though thou want these thou maist abound in other Lastly they thinke if they performe some duties of the first Table which sauour of religion they are in very good case if they can say I heare often I pray often I receiue the Lords Supper they go away with this strong fond conceit that they are to bee holden religious persons This therefore cannot serue our turnes for this we may doe and yet bee proud hypocrites We may pray yet without any feeling zeale or good affection We may heare and yet practise nothing but liue in disobedience We may reuerence the Minister and entertaine him in our houses and yet reforme no sinne that he reproueth We may come to the Lords Table and yet come as Iudas did and goe away as he did that is without a sound heart and a right faith So that we may say of such as Christ himselfe doth Luke 16 verse 15. Ye are they that iustifie your selues before men but God knoweth your hearts for that which is highly esteemed amongst men is abhomination in the sight of God The Lord knoweth how we pray how we heare
and how we receiue the Sacrament how highly soeuer we esteeme of our selues by reason of some few good things which wee seeme to haue yet God cannot bee deceiued and it is certaine he will not be mocked Secondly there is no dallying with God Vse 2 or shifting from him or hiding our waies and workes out of his sight neither can we reape any comfort in the flattering perswasions of others It is a vaine thing for any man to esteeme highly of himselfe because other men as vaine as himselfe sooth him vp and tell him he is in an happy estate and condition that he is a faithfull and religious person and professour and shall without all doubt inherite the kingdome of heauen when in the mean season his owne heart shall condemne him and conuince him that it is nothing so It is I say a vaine thing to thinke one whit better of our selues for this for GOD knoweth thy heart better then thy selfe 1 Iohn 3 20. who knoweth all things If thine owne heart condemne thee God is greater then thy heart There is no true comfort that resteth vpon the breath of another mans mouth Tell me when a man lieth on his death bed what comfort can the approbation of another man giue thee that thou art a good man when thy owne soule proclaimeth the contrary and God knoweth thee to be euill Doubtlesse no more then if he tel thee thou art sound and in good health when thou feelest thy selfe to be heart-sicke and at deaths doore So if all the world should acquit thee and thine owne conscience condemne thee what good can the vaine applause of sinfull men do thee It is true indeed in an earthly estate it is a great matter to bee well thought off by others because then he shall be sure to be cleere from the censure of earthly Iudges but it is otherwise betweene God and our selues for he is both witnesse Iudge of all our actions and can make our owne hearts to speake for him against our selues What should it profite a man if all his neighbours round about him should conceiue an opinion of him that he is rich and wealthy worth many thousands and in the meane season he know himselfe to bee poore and beggerly many thousands worse then nought what benefit could any man take by such a perswasion So likewise what comfort can a man take to heare others tell him of his good estate before God that he is iust and vpright before him a man fearing God and eschewing euill when his owne conscience knoweth by him that which all the world did neuer know and God knoweth a thousand times more then them both Thirdly from hence comfort ariseth to all Vse 3 Gods true children and faithfull seruants because he knoweth what they are what their condition is he cannot misconceiue through suspition or surmise nor be deceiued by misinformation of others because he knoweth them well and therefore their estate is happy and blessed before him True it is it hath bene the lot and portion of the godly to bee falsely accused and traduced in the courts and accounts of men yet in respect of GOD they may take comfort from this doctrine for they shall appeare iust before him therfore they may defie the malice of Satan and of all their aduersaries If they labour to keepe thēselues pure and holy before him howsoeuer they be esteemed of before men let them rest and bee content vntill they appeare before the throne and tribunall seat of God who will bring to light the hidden things of darknesse and will make manifest the counsels of the heart and then shall euery man haue praise of God 1 Cor. 4 5. Psal 7 8 9. the malice of the wicked shall come to an end This is the consolation that euery soule may haue if he leade an vpright life for when men charge him God will discharge him and when they condemne him he will iustifie him and it should moue vs to bring all our thoughts words deeds as into Gods presence being well assured that he knoweth all of them This will worke in vs a care to walke warily as Enoch did before the flood Gen. 5 22 Abraham after the flood Gen. 17 1. The want of this meditation causeth all sinne to breake out of vs. Lastly it will teach men to be patient vnder the hand of God Are we in any trouble Vse 4 and do we not know any particular cause why it should be so Yet let vs not murmure but beare it with patience because though wee know nothing yet God knoweth there is cause enough As affliction cometh from him so he knoweth wherefore he sendeth it and we should stoop downe vnder his hand Whē Eli heard all that the Lord had threatned against him and his house 1 Sam. 3 18. this was his resolution It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good We also ought to be patient and to hold our peace and say with the Prophet Psal 119 137. Righteous art thou O Lord and vpright are thy iudgements Ver. 3. Now the man Moses was very meeke aboue all the men that were vpon the face of the earth The reason is rendred why he put vp this wrong he was a man lowly in his owne eyes of great patience and singular humility he did not storme and rage against them hee did not raile at them and reuile them he drew not out the sword of iustice against them or execute his authority nor complaine to God against them though he himselfe were wronged the people offended and God dishonoured greatly therby He sought not reuenge in his owne cause neither desired God to be reuenged of them They could not be ignorant of his meeknesse for this is such a vertue as cannot be hid Obiect Now a question may heere be moued how the pen of Moses could thus praise himselfe in the highest degree and call himselfe not onely meeke but very meeke and not so onely but meeke aboue all the men vpon the earth considering the counsell of Salomon Prou. 27 2. For answer hereunto it may seeme that some things in the bookes of Moses are heere and there inserted and dispersed Answer which could not be written by his hand and therefore may seeme to be added by Ioshua or some other of the Prophets after him as Exod. 16 35. it is said that the children of Israel did eate Manna forty yeares vntill they came to a Land inhabited which is not set downe prophetically but added historically not by way of foretelling what was to come but of telling what was already come to passe but in the daies of Moses they were not come to a land inhabited it was Ioshua that conducted them into the land of promise Likewise the history of the death and buriall of Moses recorded in the booke of Deuteronomy chap. 34 could not be penned by himselfe but must of necessity bee annexed by some of the Prophets
from vs Mat. 25.28 My seruant Moses is not so who is faithfull in all my house In these words we haue a notable description of Moses to his perpetuall commendation and praise with God and men It is a notable dignity and prerogatiue to bee the seruant of the high God How doe men delight to shroud themselues vnder the liueries of great men and how much do they take themselues to be honoured by it how much more ought wee to labour to approoue our selues in the presence of the mighty God and to shew our selues to be his faithfull seruants Obserue farther the title giuen to the church What is ment b the house of God it is called the house of God wherby he doth not meane the Tabernacle but the people of God ouer whom he was made ouerseer so that he putteth the place for those in the place the house for the family of God in the house as Cornelius the captaine is said to beleeue and to be baptized with all his house that is his houshold so heere we vnderstand the family and church of God committed to his charge which he led ruled and gouerned aright as a faithfull seruant to his master Doctrine The faithfull are the house of God The doctrine is this that the Church or faithfull are the house of God Hebr. 3.6 1 Tim. 3.15 2. Cor. 6.16 The reasons are plaine God dwelleth in it Reason 1 as a master in an house there doth manifest and communicate himselfe familiarly to his people as 2 Cor. 6 16. Secondly it is called his portion and his inheritance Deut. 32 9. It is his treasure and his flocke Acts 20 28. 1. Pet. 5 2 3. Thirdly it resembleth an house which hath some builder owner and lawes by which it is ruled God is the owner of the Church he hath builded it by his Sonne Pro. 9 1. Hebr. 3 4. who hath purchased it to bee peculiar to himselfe through his owne blood and therefore the Church may fitly and iustly be called his he bought it with a great price it cost him deare before he could redeeme it It was before the diuels house Math. 12 44. He layeth claime to vs and chalengeth man to be his owne the Lord Iesus tooke them out of his hand purchased them by giuing his life whereby we are become his possession This serueth to proue Christ to bee true Vse 1 God equall to the Father against such heretikes as deny his deity This house wherein Moses is commended to bee faithfull is his house he is the heire of it the owner of it the great Sheepheard of the sheepe it is he that dwelleth in our hearts by faith Eph. 3 17. This house belongeth to none properly but to God it is not the house of Moses or of any man or Angel but the house of God Now this is truely called the house of Christ Heb. 3. and therefore Christ is God It is he that did build it and set it vp No house can build it selfe for nothing can be the cause of it selfe but must be caused by some other so must the house be builded and made by another Secondly conclude from hence that there Vse 2 is one onely true Church of the old and new Testament The house of God and of Christ is one wherein Moses long agoe was faithful and it is that which we our selues are Therefore his dwelling house is the same This house hath continued from the beginning shall continue vnto the end It needeth indeed often repairing but it shall neuer be abolished and taken out of the world True it is the Iewish Church had many types and ceremonies howbeit in substance it is the same with the christian Church Thirdly we may gather the safe condition Vse 3 of the Church For who shall fight against the inheritance which he hath purchased or ruine the house which he hath builded or enter vpon the possession which he hath obtained and bought lawfully at a deare price and bee able to preuaile We see by experience that a man will spend limbe and life for his house land where he dwelleth and which he bought and paid for dearely And will not God defend his inheritance which he knew before whom he chose to be his before the world whom in time he called iustified sanctified will glorifie for whom he sent his onely begotten Sonne from his owne bosome to lay downe his life This made the Prophet say Israel is an hallowed thing whosoeuer eateth it shall be consumed and come to nought Ier. 2 v. 3. Iohn 10 28 29 We are his giuen vnto him by the Father and he will neuer lose vs no man can take them out of his hand This is a singular prerogatiue of the faithfull that Christ dwelleth with them and abideth in them Ioh. 14 23. Eph. 2 19 20. He will neuer suffer his house to perish but giueth them his assurance and assistance to continue with them which cannot agree with popish doubting and wauering 2 Tim. 2 19. 1 Pet. 1 5. True it is such is our weaknesse that we are ready to giue ouer our hold of God but he will neuer giue ouer the hold that he hath of vs. His ancre is so firmely setled and fixed vpon the ground of our heart that no stormes or tempests can shake or loose it We are prone to leaue him but he is resolued not to leaue vs or to lose vs. The Lord hath bought vs too dearely to part so lightly from vs. Our state therefore is sure and certaine we shall not fall away for euer whatsoeuer the Church of Rome holdeth teacheth and defendeth Lastly let vs labour to be of the houshold of faith Let vs not be prophane in life and Vse loose in conuersation but separate from the wicked of the world which are no part of Gods house We cannot be of the houshold of faith and of the houshold of infidelity and impiety forasmuch as there is no concord or agreement no fellowship or communion betweene light darknesse 2 Cor. 6 19 20. Let vs prepare for Christ a good lodging and entertainment in our hearts that he may dwell in vs. Let vs not offend him or greeue him or driue him away by our sins and disobedience as Heb. 3 6. His house we are if wee hold fast the confidence and the reioycing of the hope firme vnto the end Who is faithfull in all my house Moses receiueth this commendation from the mouth of God that he was found faithfull a faithful teacher a faithfull Prophet publishing the will of God to the Church The doctrine is Doctr●●● The M● 〈…〉 their p● It is required of all the Ministers of God that they be found faithfull and conscionable in their places 1 Sam. 2 35. Math. 24 45. Luke 12 42. 1 Cor. 4 2 17. The Prophets of God did stand vpon their watchtower they hearkned and heard what the people did So did the Apostles and so they taught
the wound and it is he that must and can heale restore againe The mitigation of the punishment followeth which is restrained to seuen dayes amplified by an vnequall comparison drawne from the lesse to the greater from an earthly father to his children who if hee should shew any the least token of his anger and displeasure to his children they wold be afraid and ashamed for a season to come into his presence how much more then ought she to be ashamed to lift vp her head and to come vnto the hoste among whom the Lord dwelleth and walketh being stricken with his iudgement For by spitting in the face is ment any token of reproch or disgrace 〈◊〉 ●5 8 Therefore she was shut out and separate from the hoste seuen daies during which time the people iourneyed not till that one member as it were cut off were againe recouered restored to the rest of the body Thus much touching the order of the words to the end of the chapter ●●●●rine 〈◊〉 ●rath of 〈◊〉 kind●●●ainst 〈…〉 ●ers 〈…〉 ● 2 3. 〈…〉 34.7 〈…〉 ● 4 〈…〉 ●9 2 〈…〉 ●1 2 3. First let vs come to the signification of the punishment the wrath of God was kindled Wee learne hereby that the wrath of God is kindled against offenders Deut. 32.22 41 42. The reasons hereof are euident First the nature of God is most pure and holy and hee hateth euill whersoeuer he findeth it Secondly sin maketh a separation betweene God and his people it hideth his face from vs that hee will not heare Thirdly he punisheth sin and executeth iudgement vpon the sinner yea hee spareth none no not his owne children that prouoke him by their sins much lesse others as we see in Adam in Caine in the old world in Sodome and Gomorrha in Pharaoh and the Egyptians and sundry others Vse 1 The vses remaine First we see that anger is not simply to bee condemned in man but the excesse or defect thereof when it is too much or too little It is a naturall affection graffed in man when it is mooued as there is iust cause 〈…〉 ● 5 it is an holy affection noted to bee in Christ he looked angerly vpon them mourning for the hardnes of their hearts And whē he saw the buyers and sellers in the Temple the zeale of Gods house did euen eat him vp Now zeal is partly compounded of anger and partly of sorrow and partly of loue So must we be angry and greeued if there be any loue of God in vs at sin whersoeuer we find it Anger indeed for euery trifle or more then there is cause is sinfull as also not to be angry when there is cause But of this see farther chap. 16. Secondly feare to offend him that is a consuming Vse 2 fire Matth. 10.28 and is able to destroy body soul into hell fire Euery one must learne to know what it is that doth offend him It is the breach of his law he is offended by blasphemy by contempt of his word by swearing by idolatry by breach of the Sabboth and such like impieties forbidden in the first Table These sins for the most part men do little thinke vpon and because the lawes of men doe not take hold of them they regard them not one whit wheras God hath most seuerely punished thē and reuenged the dishonor done to his name The like we might ●ay of adultery drunkennesse malice couetousnesse and such like they are for the most part thought to bee no sins at all and slightly considered off whereas he is alwayes the same his law is alwayes the same his iustice is alwaies the same and his wrath is kindled against the children of disobedience Ephe. 5.6 Eccles 8.11 Psal ●0 21 Let no man make his mercy an occasion of sin neither turne his grace into wantonnes Lastly let vs giue our selues no rest till we Vse 3 be reconciled to God It is a fearefull thing to lie vnder his wrath Be not quiet vntill he be appeased toward vs the sword put vp into his quiuer Prou. 20.2 The wrath of a Prince is compared to the roaring of a lyon he sinneth against his owne soule that prouoketh him much more may this be said of God Vse therfore the means and remedies to call in his anger How Gods anger is to be called in send an ambassage of peace vnto him the procuring of our peace standeth first in seeking aboue all things the fauor and friendship of God When Herod was displeased with the Tyrians and Sidonians they perswaded Blast us the kings chamberlen to stand their friend they desired peace because their country was nourished by the kings countrey We are nourished by God in whom we liue and moue and haue our being and therefore we haue more cause to come to him with one accord and seeke his fauour Secondly in repentance and turning from our euill wayes whereby we prepare our selues to meet him Amos 4.12 Thirdly in prayer and humbling ourselues before him Thus doth Aaron seek peace by stirring vp the spirit of Moses to pray for them and hereby did Moses procure their peace Thus did they stand in the gappe afterward when the hand of God had made a fearefull breach among the people and the pestilence had slain many thousands wherby they made a blessed atonement Num. 16.47 48. Lastly the procuring of our peace consisteth in beleeuing in Christ and laying hold vpon his merits and righteousnesse which was signified by the incense that Aaron offered when he stood betweene the liuing the dead Christ Iesus is our peace-maker who hath broken downe the middle wall of partition betweene vs he hath reconciled vs vnto God so that by him we haue an accesse vnto the Father by faith we are ioyned to him and lay hold vpon him to eternal life Ephe 2.14.16.18 If we be earnest in seeking these meanes of peace we shall be safe for the danger of his wrath is gone and past Psal 2.12 11 And Aaron said vnto Moses Alas my Lord I beseech thee lay not the sin vpon vs wherein we haue done foolishly wherin we haue sinned 12 Let her not be as one dead of whom the flesh is halfe consumed when he commeth out of his mothers wombe Here we see as we noted before that God would not heare the offenders vnreformed speake vnto him neither abide any talking with them but Aaron is faine to goe to Moses to intreat him that by his intreaty and intercession vnto God the punishment of leprosie may be remoued which is amplified by a comparison of likenesse Doctrine God heareth not such as lie in their sinnes Ioh. ● 31 Psa 66.8 that she may not be as one dead whose flesh is halfe consumed We learn hereby that God heareth not their prayers that lie in their sinnes and are not reconciled vnto him Iob 42.7 8. Esay 1.15 Gen. 20.7 The reasons why God heareth them not
is highly to be praised and his goodnesse to bee acknowledged toward vs whiles others are hardned in their sinne and freedom from punishment emboldneth them to their destruction 13 And Moses cryed vnto the Lord saying Heale her now O Lord I beseech thee 14 And the Lord said vnto Moses If her father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seuen dayes let her be shut out of the campe seuen dayes and after that let her be receiued in againe In these words we haue the prayer of Moses and the answere of God when we cry God heareth Where we see it is our duty to pray one for another to commend the causes of others vnto God When we see them in misery and affliction we must be intercessors for them We must doe it for our enemies and them that hate vs and haue done vs wrong So it was with Moses in this place Againe it appeareth hereby that the rebukes of parents are not lightly and slightly to be regarded of children when they threaten or shew an angry looke or a frowing countenance it should worke shame and sorrow in them 2 Sam. 14.24 Great is the authority of parents ouer their children and great should be the reuerence of children toward their parents of which we shall speake more chap. 30. They are ouer their children in the Lord and must gouerne them in his feare Neuerthelesse the authority of God is much more ouer vs then ours is ouer our children therfore his chastisements ought to goe neerer to vs and more to humble vs then the threatnings and chastisements of earthly parents Heb. 12.9 10. We haue had the fathers of our flesh which corrected vs and we gaue them reuerence shall we not be much rather in subiection vnto the Father of spirits and liue for they verely for a few daies chastened vs after their own pleasure but he for our profit that we might bee partakers of his holinesse The power of parents is a limited power for they must rule in the Lord and the obedience of children is a limited obedience for they must obey in the Lord Eph. 6.1 but the power of God is absolute ouer his children and our obedience to him must be in all things Besides we may gather that God heareth the prayers of his seruants diuers wayes sometimes hee granteth whatsoeuer we aske sometimes he giueth more then we aske sometimes he heareth in part that which we desire and in part heareth not part the granteth and part he denyeth and sometimes he giueth not the same which wee aske but some other blessing like it or greater then it and sometimes he granteth our petitions when he asisteth vs comforteth vs and giueth vs patience to beare that he layeth vpon vs of al which we haue sundry examples in the word of God And howsoeuer it pleaseth him to deale with vs and whether soeuer of these wayes he heareth our prayers wee must submit our willes to his will and rest our selues contented with that he sendeth Moreouer greeuous sinners and open and grosse offenders should bee shut out of the Church wherof we haue at large spoken before chapter 5. where we haue handled the whole doctrine in a maner of excommunication but when they be penitent are throughly humbled for their sins they must be admitted into the Congregation againe and receiued into the bosome of the Church to be partakers of the priuiledges thereof Howbeit through the corruption of Church officers and the abuse of the censurers of the Church ●e abuses of ●●communi●●●ion some are cast out that ought to be kept in and nourished as obedient children of the Church Thus it befell to the blinde man he gaue glory to God being made to see but he was cast out of the Synagogue by the Pharisies Iohn 9 34 35. Hee was a worthy member of the church hee beleeued in Christ and worshipped him It is a comfort to all such as are thus intreated Againe others are kept in the church and fostered in it who iustly deserue to bee throwne out by the power of the keyes and to haue the spiritual sword drawn out against them so it was with the incestuous Corinthian that married his fathers wife 1 Cor. 5 1. hee deserued iustly to bee put away from among them yet they suffered this sword to rest in the sheath and purged not out that old leauen but suffered him to remaine among them 1 Cor. 5 1 7 13. Such remissenesse and negligence was found in the churches of Pergamus and Thyatira Reu. 2.14 15.20 Others that are iustly banished out of the Church for some notorious crime committed against God and offence giuen to the Church are notwithstanding vniustly kept out after their repentance and humiliation so it was with the penitent Corinthian he was much humbled for his sinne and offence 〈◊〉 taketh 〈◊〉 for re●ing the ●mmuni● 〈…〉 into the ●ch aswel 〈◊〉 put●ing 〈◊〉 out of ●hurch yet the Church was not so careful to receiue him in as a member againe as they ought to haue bene but as before they kept him in when he should haue bin reiected so now they kept him out when he should haue bene receiued 2 Cor. 2.7.8 9.10.11 And if any be thus dealt withall as many haue bene in former times let vs consider that our cause is not strange and singular it is no other then hath befaln sundry the deere children of God before vs. Let her be shut out of the Campe seuen dayes c. Notwithstanding the former prayer of Moses Miriam must be put out from among them Moses though he were much wronged yet neuer complained to God against his brother sister nor against their wrongs yet God will not pardon but punisheth for those wrongs For albeit he did passe ouer those iniuries yet God will not passe them ouer and though he did not cry to God yet their sinne did cry and God heard that crie The Doctrine is this that though Gods children pray not against their enemies that wrong them and oppresse them ●●●●rine 〈◊〉 Gods 〈◊〉 put 〈…〉 yet their wrongs cry out aloud and God heareth and punisheth the doers of wrong The faithfull are of a patient nature and holde their peace when they are laden with cart-loades of iniuries and reproches neuerthelesse God will not hold his peace they are meeke as Moses was and put them vp but God will not put them vp nor suffer them to go vnpunished When Abel was slaine by the treachery of his brother he could not cry out but after his death his bloode cried out for vengeance Gen. 4 10. Heb. 11 4. and 12.24 Hab. 2 10.11 Iames 4.5 So did Naboths bloode cry for vengea●●● when he was dead and that cry was heard And no maruell For it is the office of God to execute vengeance hee is the Lord the auenger Reason 1 that will not hold the wicked innocent nor cleere the guilty Exod. 34 7. Hee hath said Vengeance is
though one be surbordinate to the other yet both of them as good friends ioyne hand in hand and neyther of them ouerthroweth the other The Sunne doth not in vaine rise and set euery day thogh God as the first cause created the light The fields are not in vaine ploughed and sowed by men and watered with the early and latter raine from heauen although GOD bringeth foorth corne out of the earth and giueth bread to strengthen mans heart Psalm 104 verses 14 15. Our bodies are not in vaine refreshed with food albeit God be the life and the length of our daies Acts 17 28. And thouching our soules it is not in vaine to beleeue in Christ to repent from dead works to heare the preaching of the Gospel and to yeeld obedience thereunto although our saluation and eternal life be the free gift of God Rom. 6 23. Secondly whosoeuer is predestinated to the ende Z●nch de ●tribut 〈…〉 cap. 2. they are also predestinated to the meanes without which the end cannot possibly be attained Such as are appointed to eternall life are also appointed to the meanes by which life euerlasting may bee got and obtained For almighty GOD hath from euerlasting decreed both the ends and the meanes not the end without the meanes nor the means without the end but both of them and none must make any diuorce betweene these God himselfe hath prescribed vnto vs the meanes to bring vs to the ends all that shall be saued wil carefully vse them No man well aduised will reason thus If it be determined by Gods prouidence that I shall recouer my health there is no need that I vse either food or physicke and if it be otherwise determined I shall vse in vaine the helpe either of the one or of the other forasmuch as Hezekiah receiued such promise of deliuery and recouery yet he must take a lumpe of figges and lay it for a plaister vpon the boyle that he may recouer Esay 38 21. No man in his right mind will argue thus If God haue ordained that I shall come to my iournies end I need not goe ouer the bridge I may leape into the water I am sure I shall be safe and not be drowned Or if it be determined that theeues shall not rob me nor haue any power ouer me I may thrust my selfe into all companies I may trauaile into dangerous places at all houres of the night and though I stand there of purpose they shall not be able to lay hands vpon me nor to spoile me of my goods If this kinde of reasoning be extreme folly how is it that we see not the vanity of the other Lastly as God appointeth good meanes to Vse 5 bring vs to the end of our faith so it is required of vs to beware of euill meanes and euill waies which leade to hell and tend to destruction There are many in the world that perswade themselues they may follow their euill waies with greedinesse and delight and yet that they shall escape death and damnation well enough that albeit they sowe to the flesh yet they shall not reape corruption Thus hee tempted and seduced Eue in the garden that she might eate freely of the forbidden fruite and yet she should neuer die the death but be as God knowing good and euill Gen. 3 4 5 But we must know that God hath linked together as with a brazen chaine that cannot be broken the pleasures of sinne and the punishments of sinne Rom. 6 23 and 8 2. The Apostle ioyneth sinne and death together coupleth them together as the cause the effect for the wages of sinne is death Thus we see the diuels cunning to beguile teaching that we need not to do good things and yet wee shall come well enough soone enough easie enough to heauen and that we may follow euill things and yet we shall escape hell and destruction See more of this afterward chapter 20. 17. And Moses sent them to spie out the Land of Canaan and saide vnto them Goe you vp this way Southward and goe vp into the Mountaine 18. And see the Land what it is and the people that dwelleth therein whether they be strong or weake few or many 19. And what the Land is that they dwell in c. Albeit the Lord had promised to Abraham and his posterity to giue them the land of Canaan for a possession yet hee will haue them beare themselues wisely and warily prudently and circumspectly in the search and viewing of it to enquire into the people their Cities their Land their multitude their strength and so to get a perfect knowledge of them and for this cause doeth Moses so carefully instruct them The doctrine Doctrine The faithfull must deale wisely in all their enterprises Wisedome is a gift required of the faithfull in all their enterprizes to doe nothing headily rashly rawly and ignorantly We must deale not onely lawfully iustly honestly and godlily but wisely prudently politikely Rebecca hearing of the purpose and intent of Esau waiting opportunity to kill his brother and being desirous to preserue them both but especially Iacob conueyed him away Gen. 27 verse 43. The like appeareth in Abigael 1 Sam. 25 18. she preuented Dauid and the mischiefe hanging ouer her owne head and is therefore commended by Dauid himselfe So 2 Sam. 20 16 17 18. And 2 King 4 verse 23. we haue a notable example in the Shunamite she wisely dissembleth the cause of her iourney lest she should greeue the heart of her husband onely she desireth leaue and liberty of him to goe ●o the Prophet So Acts 23 verses 6 7. Paul knowing the great iarre and diuision in iudgement among those of the assembly which consisted of two sorts or sects partly Saduces which denied the resurrection and partly Pharisees which acknowledged it he taketh aduantage of the present opportunity to seuer them and to deliuer himselfe Prouerbs chap. 13 verse 16. Rom. chapter 16 verse 19. For first wisedome is more worth much Reason 1 better then all weapons of warre Prou. 21 verse 22. A prudent man is to be preferred before the valiant and indeed he can do more Hee can by counsell take a City wherein the valiant are and by his stratagems throw downe the bulwarkes and Castles thereof Eccl. chapter 7 verse 12 and cha ver 9 13 14 15 16. Secondly if Gods seruants should not Reason 2 deale wisely they should lie open to euery enemy to be hurt and destroyed to be ouertaken and circumuented in an excessiue hand The times wherein we liue are dangerous the persons with whom we deale are pernicious the sleights of Satan that dealeth against vs are mischieuous his instruments are growne cunning and crafty Prou. 1 verses 11 12. If then wee should not deale as well wisely as lawfully wee should not bee able to withstand them If we should not order our affaires discreetely and with good aduise forecasting the issues and preuenting their attempts we should
is euermore the companion of hypocrisie Fiftly to be confident in good causes and couragious especially in time of perill Prou. 10 9. 28 1. Whereas the hypocrite hauing a corrupt conscience is ouertaken with feare and trembling Esay 33 14. Prou. 28 1. Lastly to be constant and to perseuere to the end in good things to bee resolute neuer to giue ouer a continued course of piety vntil we giue ouer this course of life such bring foorth fruite with patience Luke 8 15. and shall neuer be remoued Psal 15 5. Whereas the double-minded man is vnstable in all his wayes Iames 1 8. his godlinesse and religion is as the morning dew Hosea 6 4. By these signes we may sift and examine our selues whether this grace of sincerity be in vs or not And as the gift is excellent so there are sundry motiues to stirre vs vp vnto it Sundry moti●es to 〈◊〉 vs to sinc● For God is good and gracious vnto such as are pure in heart Psal 73 1. and 125 4 5. hee is the Sun and shield to them Psal 84 11. This is the life and substance of all other graces without it the best things are but counterfet and no better then sinnes against God Our faith must be vnfained and loue without dissimulation and our conuersion must be a renting of the heart Consider also that God is present euery where and knoweth all things Psal 139 7. Prou. 15 verse 3. Moreouer wee must meditate oftentimes vpon the iudgements of God which hee bringeth vpon the world but especially of the last iudgement in the end of the world and of our particular iudgment at the houre of death Ro. 2 16. Eccl. 12 14. The heart is the store-house keeper of the graces of God Pro. 4 23. Mat. 13 18 19. Lu. 6 45. Math. 23 26. therefore we ought carefully to looke vnto it CHAP. XIIII 1 And all the Congregation lifted vp their voice and cryed and the people wept that night 2 And all the Congregation of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron and the whole Congregation saide vnto them Would God that we had died in the Land of Egipt or would God we had died in this wildernesse 3 And wherefore hath the Lord brought vs into this land to fall by the sword that our wiues and our children should be a prey Were it not better for vs to returne into Egypt WE haue seen in the former chapter the occasiō of this fourth murmuring arising from the report of the spies whereby the seed was sowne which in this Chapter groweth vp to an open obstinate mutiny The fruit was answerable to the seed the successe to the report And who can stay the streame driuen by so violent a winde and tempest When the arrow is once shot out of the bow it is too late to wish it may do no hurt where it falleth because where it hitteth it hurteth But to come to the present matter in hand the people giuing eare to these false reports dream of danger where no danger is like the sluggard that saith There is a Lyon without I shall bee slaine in the streets Prou. 22 13. To minds that are fearfull and perplexed all fansies and coniectures seeme things of truth Consider in this chapt two points first the generall murmuring of all that is of the greatest part of the people secondly the proceeing of God against thē for their murmuring Their murmuring is accompanied with impatience disobedience vnthankfulnesse blasphemy infidelity and tempting of God Psal 106 24 25 c. and it is set downe generally and particularly Generally they murmured against Moses and Aaron amplified by the effect 〈◊〉 cause 〈◊〉 the Isra● wept all 〈◊〉 they wept all the night The cause why they wept is the feare of death and the sense of their sinne they supposed that they were led as sheep to the slaughter and brought into the wildernesse as to a place of destruction had forgotten the promise made 400. yeares before to their fathers Wee see heere how quickly and easily they obey euil persons that seduced them they listen with both their ears vnto them ●●●trine 〈◊〉 are natu● ready to 〈…〉 ●ken to ●cers and ●ers and forget what they had often heard and seen Caleb and Ioshua warned them but all was in vaine The doctrine This is the corruption of our nature we are prone to bee peruerted and ready to hearken to seducers to follow euill liuers and euill teachers while in the meane season wee are hardly drawne to hearken and attend vnto those that tell vs the truth without flattery or forgery Exod. 4 1. The prophet of God sent to prophesy against the Altar at Bethel is easily seduced and forsaketh the word of God 1 Kings 13 21. Our Sauiour complaineth of the peeuishnesse of the Iewes 〈◊〉 11 27. Wee haue piped vnto you and ye haue not danced we haue mourned vnto you and ye haue not lamented c. And Iohn 5 43. I am come in my Fathers name and ye receiued me not if another shall come in his owne name him yee will receiue 2 Tim. 4 34. Gal. 3 1 2. and 5 7. Titus 1 11. Mat. 24 5. First because in the minde and vnderstanding Reason 1 howsoeuer there remaine certaine generall notions concerning good and euil as that there is a God that he is iust and a rewarder of them that do well that wee must honour our parents and not hurt our neighbors yet euen these are corrupt and serue only to take away excuse Ro. 1 19 20. and besides wee haue all receiued from Adam ignorance or want of knowledge of the things of God 1 Cor. 2 14. Ro. 8 7. Likewise disability to vnderstand spirituall things though they be plainly taught vnto vs Lu. 24 41. 2 Cor. 3 5. vanity of the mind thinking truth to be falshood and falsehood to be truth Eph. 4 17. 1 Cor. 1 21. Prou. 14 12. So then the originall or seede of all errors and heresies is in our nature Secondly satan is mighty and subtle he can Reason 2 transforme himselfe into an Angel of light he employeth many instruments in his worke to seduce vs as he did Eue which also worke mightily with strong delusions 2 Cor. 11 3. False Apostles are deceitful workers transforming themselues into the Apostles of Christ 2 Cor. 11 23 24 25. they come in sheeps clothing though inwardly they bee rauening Reason 3 wolues Mat. 7 15. 2 Pet. 2 1 2. Thirdly it is Gods deepe yet most iust iudgement vpon all that obey not the gospel to send them strong delusions that they should beleeue lies This is a punishment sent vpon the vnthankfulnesse of men when they haue the light and yet shut their eies heare the sound of the Gospel and yet stop their eares and vnderstand the truth yet harden their hearts against the truth Mat. 13 14 15. 2 Thess 2 11 12. This serueth to reprooue and conuince the Vse 1
they may be bold and confident in dangers Psal 23 4. No enemy shall hurt them no danger shall ouerthrow them The enemies may oppresse them for a time but God is not farre off if he be on our side who shall be against vs Vse 2 Secondly woe be vnto all the enemies of God they cannot stand nor prosper which serueth to terrifie all euill dooers They are as out-lawes or rebels that liue no longer vnder the protection of law or Magistrate so are the vngodly proscribed of God and lye open to iudgement They are as souldiers without weapons they haue neither shield nor buckler nor brest-plate nor helmet nor sword their loynes are vngirt their feet are vnshod their heads are vncouered in the day of battell they lie open as naked men to be wounded and destroied They haue nothing to defend them or to doe them good all creatures are against them nay the Creator himselfe Vse 3 Lastly it is the duty of the faithfull to look to their waies seeing the Lord is with them and dwelleth among them He is a God of pure eies he seeth vs and all our waies let vs therefore carry our selues vnspotted of the world and labour to be holy as he is holy Leuit. 11 44. and 19.1 and 20 7. lest we giue him iust cause to leaue vs. If we haue any friend come vnto vs we are willing to giue him the best entertainment we can we are loth to depart from him we are willing to content him how much more ought wee to receiue the Lord for we may expect more of him and bee assured of defence protection from him greeue him not therefore nor his Spirit by our sinnes So long as they are fostered in vs he cannot be welcome vnto vs neither shall we be welcome vnto him They will driue him away make him depart from vs. Our bodies should be the Temples of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6 19. and therefore we must remember that as we are not our owne but bought with a price so we ought to glorifie God in our body and in our spirit which are Gods 10. But all the Congregation bade stone them with stones and the glory of the Lord appeared in the Tabernacle of the Congregation before all the children of Israel These rebels had raged against God no maruaile therefore if they raged against his seruants who notwithstanding had not vsed any rigour or force against them onely they perswaded thē to trust in the promise of God and boldly to proceed on their iourney toward the Land But this is accounted as an hainous crime and they deale with them as men worthy of death according to the saying of Salomon Prou. 9 7. He that reproueth a scorner getteth to himselfe shame and hee that rebuketh a wicked man getteth himselfe a blot Thus we see how wicked men can abide no reprofe nay they cannot suffer a word of exhortation they cannot abide that others should do better then themselues Againe such as are carnal and corrupt are prone to hatred malice and reuenge yea when no cause of offence is offered vnto them See also how God protecteth his seruants in times of danger But to passe ouer these points from hence obserue that such as are Gods seruants Doctrine Such as are gods seru●●● shall be e● intreated and stand for good causes shall be persecuted maligned and euilly intreated as if they were murtherers and malefactours Though they deserue to be fauoured and loued yet they shall be hated cursed and contemned So it was with Moses when he came to Pharaoh moued him to let the people goe Exod. 5 1 2 5 6. Dan. 3 19 and 6 16. Acts 4 20 21. and 5 18. Iohn 16 2. 1 Kings 13 4. Thus was it with Eliah and Elisha thus was it with Michaiah Ieremy and thus it was with all the Prophets Math. 23 34. The reasons because the world hateth the Reason 1 truth and the professors of it The Preachers and professours of it because they manifest publish the truth Gal. 4 16 The truth it selfe because men loue darkenesse more then the light inasmuch as their owne deeds are euill Iohn 3 19. They are chosen out of the world therefore the world hateth them whereas if they were of the world the world would loue his owne Iohn 15 19. Secondly Satan is their enemy and seeth Reason 2 that by them his kingdome is in danger to be ouerthrowne hence it is that he rageth and raiseth persecution that thereby he may stop their mouthes stop the course of the truth Reuel 2 10 and 12 13. Thirdly God will haue his seruants tryed Reason 3 in their faith patience constancy and obedience Reuel 2 10. We must learne to walke through good report and euill report and bee ready to renounce all rather then the truth which we must buy at any rate Prou. 23 ● but neuer sel it though we might gaine all the world because all such gaine is the greatest losse Math. 16 verse 26. The vses follow First maruaile not at it whē Vse 1 we see this come to passe neither condemne the truth or the professours of it 1 Iohn 3 13. Maruaile not if the world hate you Let vs comfort our selues with this consolation that it is no rare thing neither is our case singular neither do we suffer alone it hath beene the lot of all Christians nay of Christ himselfe let vs not seeke to be better then he was the seruant may not be aboue his Lord if they haue persecuted him they will persecute vs Ioh. 15 2. Christ himselfe pronounceth such as suffer for righteousnesse sake to be blessed for so did they persecute the Prophets that were before vs Math. 5 12. Many men in the world are discouraged from godlinesse of life and walking in a sincere profession because they see the godly persecuted and the vngodly to prosper and flourish therefore Iohn doth forewarne not to maruaile heereat because this ought not to seeme strange vnto vs it hath beene so from the beginning and so it hath continued The world though it be full of changes yet changeth not his nature neither taketh vpon it any other shape Wherefore we must not ceasse from godlines for hatred of the world but rather goe more zealously forward remembring the words of Christ Math. 11 12. The kingdome of heauen suffereth violence and the violent take it by force Secondly we must reioyce vnder the crosse Vse and be glad when we suffer for the truth not as euill doers 1 Pet. 3 17 and 4 15. but for well doing So did the Apostles Acts 5 41 so did the Hebrewes chap. 10 34. They considered with themselues that they had in heauen a better an enduring substance they accounted it a great honour that they were accounted worthy to suffer for his Name they knew that they were made partakers of the sufferings of Christ and that the trying of their faith would worke patience Iam.
filleth vp the measure of their sins bringeth downe a plague vpō his own head Mat. 23 32 35 Fulfill yee the measure of your sins that vpon you may come all the righteous blood that hath bin shed frō the blood of Abel c. Verily I say vnto you all these things shall come vpon this generation 36. And the men which Moses sent to search the Land who returned and made all the Congregation to murmure against him by bringing vp a slander vpon the Land 37. Euen those men that did bring vp the euill report vpon the Land died of the plague before the Lord. After that God had giuen sentence against all the murmurers together now he proceeds against the captaines and ringleaders of the rest I meane the men that were sent to search out the land which opened the mouths of the rest against the Lord these were smitten downe died by the plague and pestilence according to the threatning before ver 12. I wil smite thē with the pestilence and I wil make of thee a greater and mightier nation then they and this had bin no hard thing with God who had before as it were hewed them out of the rock multiplied them to many thousands out of small beginnings Doctrine The Doctrine from hence is this Such as are leaders and drawers forward of others and soliciters of them to sinne The cheefest offenders shal be chieflie punished are capitall offenders the burden of the sinne of the punishment thereof lieth cheefely vpon them Iudgments are principally intended directed against those that haue the chiefe hand in misleading others we see this euidently in the fall of our first parents the serpent is first punnished then the woman and lastly Adam Gen. 3 14 16. The iudgement of God lay heauy vpon the idolatrous kings of Israel which in a few descents were rooted out Thus is Ieroboam branded that hee made Israel to sinne 1 Kings 12 30. 2 Kings 13 2 and 10 29. 1 Kings 15 2 3 34. The reasons Reason 1 It is a sinne for man to erre of himselfe and bringeth iudgement to goe out of the way though he be nor set out of it but it is a greater sinne and bringeth a greater iudgement to cause others to do soe for now he sinneth not alone Satan that old serpent was chiefly punnished because he was the chiefe procurer of mans fall but Adam escaped not who was seduced but was no seducer he was deceiued but was no deceiuer the diuell was a deceiuer but was not deceiued the woman was both deceiued and a deceiuer also They that cause others to fall haue a greater iudgement belonging vnto them We obserued this before in Miriam chap. 12 10. she was a leper white as snow who drew Aaron to ioyn with her against Moses and therefore as she had the chiefe hand in the sinne so shee was striken with a foule leprosie Reason 2 Secondly principall offenders in ciuill states are chiefly punished before such as are onely accessaries In euil we may say Two are worse then one because if one determine to giue ouer he hath a fellow to stirre him forward if he be ready to ceasse he hath another to helpe him vp Vse 1 This serueth to reproue such as draw on others to sinne as they are capitall offenders so they shall be punished as capitall offenders Wo to such as lay a stumbling blocke before others to cause them to fall In this number I range those that keepe common houses of drunkennesse to tempt and seduce others and such as haunt them continually meet there and intend to make others drunke of which places I may say as Salomon doth of other Pro. 7 27. Their house is the way to hell going downe to the chambers of death These men are capitall offenders are so hardened in sinne that they make a mocke and a spott at it as at a pastime yea they make a mocke of those that set themselues against it It serueth also to reprooue those that any way make others partakers of their sinnes whether it be by commanding or by counsell or by perswasion or by euill example We shall finde the number of our own sinnes to be great enough and the account hard enough which we are to make for them that we should be afraid to heap vp more and so to make the weight greater and the burden heauier Secondly this must teach all such as are Rulers Vse 2 and Gouernours to looke to their waies and to take heed they be not any cause of the fall of others A Gouernour lifted vp aboue others is as an high Cedar or mighty Oake aboue the lower shrubs The Oake neuer falleth but it beareth downe the lesser trees that stand neere vnto it So is it with such as are set before others in what calling soeuer it be they stand not alone they fall not alone If they stand fast and vnmoueable they are as firme pillers to beare vp others If they fall they wrap others in their owne ruine Gods iudgements will lye heauy vpon them and vpon those that belong vnto them This doeth the Prophet teach touching negligent watchmen that keepe silence and doe not blow the trumpet and thereby cause many to perish in their sins Eze. 3 18. Their blood will I require at the watchmans hands This may be spoken likewise of other Gouernours God hath made the Magistrate a watchman and requireth of him to cause his lawes to bee obserued and godly Nehemiah acknowledged it to be his duty to see God to be serued and his Sabaths to be sanctified chap. 13 17. What euill is this that yee do and prophane the Sabbath day There was buying and selling vpon the Sabbath day and he reproueth the buyers by name as if the fault were chiefly in them for as we say commonly in another case if there were no receiuers there would be no theeues so we may as truely say if there were no buyers there wold be there could be no sellers And it is certaine that because these finde readily such as will buy of thē it encourageth the sellers to come and offer their wares For if the Iewes had not beene willing to buy their wares the Merchants of Tyre would neuer haue brought their commodities to vent them vpon that day If therefore the Magistrate doe not his duty but hold his peace the blood of such as perish shall be required at his hands also The like we might say of fathers and masters that ought to teach and instruct such as belong vnto their charge and this haue all godly Gouernours obserued such then as are negligent in this duty open not their mouthes make themselues guilty of the sinnes that their seruants and children commit as it is noted of Eli and bring vpon themselues many greeuous iudgements Thirdly we must neuerthelesse vnderstand Vse 3 that it shall bee no iust plea or pretence for such as are ledde aside out of
God from the example of Christ and from the practise of the Apostles their hypocrisie is made open and euident to all they can now no longer hide it They teach and maintaine that heretical Princes especially being excommunicated shold not be obeyed Thus they blanch the matter whereas Paul taught and practised obedience for conscience sake Rom 13.2 5. and that such as resist purchase to themselues iudgement Vse 3 Thirdly we are to iudge no otherwise of all such as transgresse the Law of God whatsoeuer their allegations be How many men are there that thinke euen grosse and palpable sinnes to be no sinnes at all because they can blanch and colour them ouer How many thinke to excuse their ignorance as if it were no euill at all why is there no more store of knowlege in our dayes among masters and seruants why so much store of blindnesse in the matters of God O say they We are dull and forgetfull we haue our callings to follow we must prouide for wife and children This is a wilfull ignorance this shall excuse no man Such can finde and take time enough for the world but they lacke time to lay a good and sure foundation for the world to come Some pretend their age and infirmity which hinder them from comming so often to the house of God But many of them haue resorted no better to it in their youth and as yet they haue strength enough also to walke farther for their pleasure God knoweth their hypocrisie that they are able to doe more in ciuill things It is a common practise in the common sort to pray for the dead God bee with him the Lord rest his soule God haue mercy on him God send him a ioyfull resurrection and such like What say these ignorant persons this testifieth our loue and our charity This is a blanching of the matter and the casting of a new paint vpon a rotten post For who are these that pray for the dead but such as neuer prayed for them being aliue nay doe not indeed know which way to pray When the Scripture taxeth shewes of hypocrisie and reprooueth priuate prayers in publike places they haue their answere ready they doe it to stirre vp to deuotion and to fill and prepare themselues to performe holy duties 1 Cor. 11.21 22. Yea but this ought to be done at home priuate places are appointed for priuate actions and publike for such as are publike They kneele downe to their owne deuotions that sildome or neuer pray at home and haue no care to prepare themselues priuately before they come whereas GOD knoweth and man knoweth and the Minister knoweth that these men that are so deuoute at priuate prayer in open places sit most prophanely most vnreuerently and vnseemely at publike prayers Touching the Sabbath day it is notoriously knowne what blanches they haue to couer their vile blemishes or rather their sores as that a man may learne as much at one Sermon in the forenoone as he can wel meditate vpon in the afternoone and practise all the rest of the weeke O how doe these deceiue themselues God knoweth the heart of these hypocrites It is not the care they haue of meditation and practise that causeth them to speake this for how doe they spend that time but in pleasure and vanity So for the Sacraments they say they cannot come to communicate because they are not in charity with their neighbours they are not prepared as they ought to be Thus they thinke to creepe away in the darke and to bee holden excused But this is to excuse one sinne with another and to adde sinne vnto sinne Lastly this must teach vs on the contrary Vse 4 that we must not colour our actions like hypocrites and pretend to iustifie our selues when we know they are euill This is a signe of an euill heart and of a guilty conscience this is no better then to binde two euils together in one bundle first to dare them to doe euill and then to colour it And this latter is worse then the former it sheweth lesse grace and more corruption God cannot be deceiued by any pretence cunningly contriued though man may be because our most secret actions and imaginations are manifest before him This prouoketh Gods wrath the more and when we must appeare before his righteous iudgement all things shall appeare as they are and all colourable pretences shall vanish away as smoake and all things shall appeare as they are indeed God is a perfect light he dwelleth in light that none can attaine vnto 1 Tim. 6.16 and yet if he bee not light enough hee will take other lights to helpe him and search Ierusalem with candles that hee may punish the men that are setled on their lees that say in their hearts The Lord will not doe good neither will he doe euill Zephan 1.12 Then certainely he will discouer all euen the secret parts of thy heart which now thou goest about to hide and conceale Then he will make vs know that he knew all things which are written in this booke of remembrance 4 And when Moses heard it hee fell vpon his face 5 And he spake vnto Korah and vnto all his company saying Euen to morrow the Lord will shew who are his and who is holy and will cause him to come neere vnto him euen him whom hee hath chosen will hee cause to come neere vnto him 6 This doe Take your censers Korah and all his company 7 And put fire therein and put incense in them before the Lord to morrow and the man whom the Lord doth chuse the same shall be holy Ye take too much vpon you ye sonnes of Leui. Heere beginneth the proceeding against these seditious first by Moses and then by God himselfe The Lord first setteth his Ministers on worke to deale with this people if that will not serue then he will take the cause into his owne hand First Moses fell on his face a common gesture vsed in prayer thereby no doubt making supplication to God to appease the multitude Then hee turneth his speech to Korah and appealeth to the iust iudgement of God that it would please him to decide the question whom he had chosen to bee his Priests as Eliah did 1 King 18.24 in their halting betweene two opinions Then in the end he returneth their false accusation iustly vpon their owne heads and sheweth that hee was not afraide of their faces they had said to Moses and Aaron Ye take too much vpon you seeing all the Congregation are holy he payeth them home in their owne language Ye take too much vpon you ye sonnes of Leui Heere Moses setteth forth the dignity of the Ministery that there is a speciall couenant and agreement betweene God and his Ministers ●ctrine The doctrine It is a speciall fauour that God maketh a couenant with his Church ●e Mini●rs are in ●ciall grace 〈◊〉 fauour 〈◊〉 God that they shall bee a precious people in his sight
but it is a farre greater fauour that among or out of his Church in generall the Lord should make a more speciall couenant with his Ministers that he should take them to bee a peculiar people to himselfe 1 Sam. 2.28 and 3.20 Exod. 19.22 2 Cor. 2.15.16 Mal. 2.5 6. Reason 1 The reasons follow First the Ministers are Gods seruants and Ambassadours 2 Cor. 5.20 they are in speciall place about him such as stand before him and minister vnto him vpon earth as the Angels minister vnto him in heauen Mal. 2.7 and 3.1 Reuel 1.20 and 2.1 and 3.1 Reason 2 Secondly they are as it were of Gods priuy counsell not to giue him counsell but to take counsell from him and to reueale his counsels to the sonnes of men Amos 3.7 for therefore he teacheth them that they should teach his people Mal. 2.7 True it is God reuealeth his secrets to his people neuerthelesse it is by the meanes of the Minister Vse 1 This serueth fitly and fully to reproue such base persons that thinke basely of the Ministery and those that account the Ministers as the scumme or refuse of the people who indeed are little better themselues I will not giue them the titles which they iustly doe deserue dishonouring that calling which God himselfe hath highly honoured and throw downe that which he hath aduanced and lifted vp I range among such those also that thinke the Ministery too base for their birth or quality yea they thinke their kindred exceedingly debased and disgraced if they haue a Minister of their name We would thinke it an high honour for any of our children or kindred to be preferred as a speciall fauorite about a Prince and yet we cannot bee content that they should haue this speciall calling and iudgement of the Ministery which is not inferiour to any place or calling whatsoeuer in the common wealth as we haue shewed often before True it is the greatest part of the world thinke otherwise and I confesse it but it is because they haue corrupt eyes which the vaine pompe and glory of the world doe dazle so that they cannot see nor perceiue the glory of God in the calling of the Ministers of the Gospel For if they had a better and a clearer sight they would thinke it the greatest honour and highest fauour to bee set in that calling Secondly this is an admonition and warning Vse 2 to all men that they should not in any case abuse offend disgrace wrong and reuile those that are called of God to be the Ministers of his word whom he hath set to be neere vnto him because they are in speciall grace and fauour with God Dare any oppose against him that is the kings friend or fauorite Doe not all desire and seeke his fauour how then dare wee disgrace and dishonour those whom God would haue honoured and speake contemptibly and contumeliously of their Ministery seeing God hath said they are the men whom hee would haue honoured When the king would haue Mordecai honored for the good seruice hee had done to his person he said Ester 6.6 What shall be done to the man whom the king delighteth to honour The Ministers are Gods speciall fauorites and therefore such as wrong and molest them shall not bee left vnpunished for those whom God will honour they shall be honoured especially of those that know the vse necessity profit of the Ministery Thirdly from hence ariseth matter of comfort Vse 3 to the Ministers themselues Hath hee made a speciall league and couenant with them to fauour and protect them Then we are assured that the iniuries and wrongs which are done vnto them rest not in their persons but extend to God himselfe who is wronged with them so that he will reuenge their wrongs and protect their persons Deut. 33.11 Smite through the loynes of those that rise vp against them that they rise not againe We haue also comfort as a shield and shelter from the base estimation of the vnthankfull world 1 King 22.8 though they hate vs as enemies yet God honoureth vs as his seruants nay as his friends and receiueth vs into speciall fauour so that he often maketh vs to be had in great honour estimation euen of those that before had so basely esteemed of vs. Let it not therefore trouble vs though wee bee not regarded of men seeing we stand or fall not to them but to our owne Master who hath thus farre honoured vs to be put into his seruice and therefore let vs say with the Apostle It is a small thing that I should be iudged of you or of mans iudgement yea I iudge not mine owne selfe 1. Cor. 4.3 Lastly it teacheth what the Ministers of God ought to be they should bee men of an vnblameable life and holy conuersation because they come so neere to God lest it bee said to them as Psal 50.16 What hast thou to doe to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my couenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behinde thee If all the people of GOD must bee holy much more then ought the Ministers to bee endued and adorned with integrity of life They must be neither ignorant nor vaine because they come neere vnto God He that loueth his friend will bee very wary and circumspect what maner of seruants hee commendeth to his friend to be in his seruice and yet how vnfaithfully do many deal with God that dare commend to him idle wicked Ministers to be his seruants and to carry his word to his people It were to be wished that such as haue authority in their hands would turne all such vnworthy seruants out of his seruice and put them to silence which cause the holy ordinances of God to be prophaned and polluted by their wickednesse 8 And Moses said vnto Korah Heare I pray you ye sonnes of Leui. 9 Seemeth it but a small thing vnto you that the God of Israel hath separated you from the congregation of Israel to bring you neere to himselfe to do the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Lord and to stand before the Congregation to minister vnto them 10 And hee hath brought thee neere to him and all thy brethren the sonnes of Leui with thee and seeke ye the Priesthood also Moses proceedeth and goeth forward to see if he could draw these proud conspirators to a sight of their sinnes and thereupon putteth Korah in mind how graciously God had dealt with him and the rest of the Leuites to suffer them to come neere vnto him to do the seruice of the Tabernacle and to stand before the Congregation to minister vnto him vppon which consideration he mooueth them that they should not bee carryed beyond the bounds of their calling Doctrine We learne hereby that the moe meanes and helpes wee haue to preuent sinne and to keepe our selues from offending against God The greater our meanes are to preuent sinne the more wee offend if we
this reprooueth such as know not what this holy and sanctified anger meaneth which can prosecute their owne causes and quarrels with the greatest desire of vengeance but know not what it is to be angry in the cause of God It was not so with Moses as we saw before Some are prouoked by euery small and trifling occasion Heereby charity is violated which suffereth long 1 Cor. 13.7 and couereth a multitude of sinnes Prou. 10.12 Anger looketh in a deceitfull glasse which maketh euery Moul-hill to seeme a mountaine euery small slip is esteemed a capitall offence and euery word of disgrace worthy of a stab Others are prouoked when there is no ground but their own suspition as Eliab was angry with his brother Dauid because he suspected him to haue come to the battell in the pride of his heart 1 Sam. 17.28 And this is the common cause of much anger and heart-burning in our dayes want of loue causeth men to interprete the actions of others in worse sense and vpon their owne false surmise they ground their anger One is angry because saluting his neighbour he did not salute him againe and speaking friendly to him he would not speake againe albeit haply he saw him not or obserued him not Another because he heareth his vices reprooued out of the word of God beginneth to rage through impatience in which regard oftentimes it falleth out that he incurreth more anger and danger that reproueth sinne then hee that committeth it Of this euill anger doth the Apostle speake Eph. 4.31.26 27. and Salomon Prou. 14.17 29. and 29.22 Many are the euils and mischiefes that follow this euill affection forasmuch as it ouerturneth both the Law and the Gospel ●r is a 〈◊〉 of the ●e Law It were an easie thing to runne ouer most of the commandements which it causeth men to breake and in a manner defaceth the whole image of God For first how should we loue God whom we haue not seene if we doe not loue our neighbour whom we haue seene 1. Ioh. 4 20. Secondly it ouerthroweth the principall part of Gods worship which standeth in the inuocation of Gods Name Ps 26.6 1 Tim. 2.8 Mat. 5.23 Thirdly it causeth the breach of the third commandement by causing men through impatience to fall to cursing and banning to swearing and blaspheming the Name of God For when they grow cholerick against others they vtter sundry horrible imprecations and begin to fret and rage against God himselfe Fourthly it maketh men altogether vnfit for the exercises of the Sabbath hauing their mindes distracted and disturbed with thinking vpon the wrongs and iniuries of others and their owne reuenge No man can heare the word of God aright that is choked with this thorne Iam. 1.19 20 21. 1 Pet 2.1 2. Neither doth this passion worke any better effects in the second Table for as much as it turneth iustice and charity vpside downe Iustice it selfe which requireth that the same be giuen to euery one which belongeth vnto him whereas anger maketh men not only to neglect doing of good duties which they owe to their neighbours but to oppresse them with iniuries and reuenge Charity which is the summe of the Second Table the effect wherof is this that we loue our neighbour as our selfe But anger maketh men hate them as mortall enemies It often bringeth forth murther and shedding of blood Ge. 34.25 1 Ioh. 3.12 15. Wherby we are also made like vnto Satan for he is the spirit of dissention as God is a Spirit of loue and of peace It is the nature of Satan to delight in rage and fury for he is a murtherer from the beginning Ioh. 8.44 Besides it is a sinne against the Gospel and maketh vs subiect to Gods anger and bringeth impenitency and stoppeth the course of Gods forgiuenesse toward vs. For as we forgiue others so doth he forgiue vs Matth. 6.14 15. if therfore we retaine our anger toward our brethren God will retaine his anger toward vs. Lastly we must examine our selues whether Vse 3 our anger be iust or not We are of our selues prone to breake out into choler and to bee mooued otherwise then there is cause We must therefore marke two things the causes thereof and the effects If the causes bee Gods glory iniury offered to our selues or our neighbours if the cause be weighty and the affection moderate If the effects which it bringeth forth bee dutie to God and man then it is a lawfull anger but if otherwise it is vnsanctified and vnlawfull Let vs learne to be most moued in Gods cause as Moses was the glory of God was precious and deare vnto him So it was with Phinehas Numb 25.7 8. so it was with Elias 1 Kin. 19.14 because the children of Israel had broken downe his Couenant cast down his Altars and slain his Prophets Happy are we if these things moue vs and go neere vnto vs. Verse 15. Respect not thou their offering It may seeme strange that he which before had spoken against them should now pray against them We are commanded to pray one for another so that Moses may seeme to break the rule of charity I answer this toucheth not their persons nor their liues but hee desireth their amendment that they may be ashamed of their own folly confounded in their own pride He craueth of God no more thē to shew and make manifest his owne innocency and vprightnesse which was to be decided by that offering We learne hereby Doctrine that God respecteth not the works of euill men God respecteth not the workes of euill men be they performed neuer so religiously outwardly Gen. 4.4 5. Esay 1.11.12 and 66.3 Prou. 15.8 and 21.27 Ierem. 6.20 The reasons follow First whatsoeuer they doe is sinne 1 Tit. Reason 1 1.15 their minde and conscience is defiled Secondly Reason 2 their persons do not please him Gen. 4.4 5. Mal. 1.10 God regarded not Caines Oblation because he regarded not Caines person and he regarded not Caines person because he was a wicked and faithlesse man Vse 1 The vses First we may therfore conclude that such workes as God hath not commanded shall not be receiued Matth. 15.9 In vaine they worship me teaching for doctrines the commandements of men Many doe thinke to please God by their good intents but that is a vaine worship God will be serued according to his owne will not after our owne fancies He hath set downe and appointed how he will be worshipped he hath not left it to our discretion whatsoeuer the Papists prattle Vse 2 Secondly it reprooueth such as thinke it enough to come to the place of Gods worship and to be present at prayer the word and Sacraments albeit they bring with them no true deuotion These doe exceedingly deceiue themselues dishonour God and prophane his holy things which is a greeuous sinne These men doe lay the foundation of all their hope and the stay of all their comfort vpon the broken staffe of an outward sacrifice
good master will not turne out of his dores an olde seruant that hath beene faithfull to him but keepe him for the seruice hee hath done him in his youth and some will doe as much to their very dogge when hee is growne olde Much more then ought it to be so with the Minister hee should not bee turned out to the wide world but reape the fruit that hee hath sowne in his youth Others while they are in poore and low estate preach diligently but when they are once growne warme and haue feathered their nests and haue caught that for which they fished can bee content to holde their peace and hang vp their nets and say nothing at all These lye vnder a fearefull curse ● 16 Woe vnto them because they preach not the Gospel These men grow rich themselues but it is to be feared they make a poore people The flocke hath fedde them to the full but they will not feed the flocke but suffer them to remaine empty Secondly this teacheth what loue ought Vse 2 to be betweene the Minister and the people seeing there is so much required of one toward another If there bee true loue on the Ministers part toward the people it cannot be that he should giue ouer but rather spend his strength and his time onely for the good of those that are committed to his charge This made the Prophet Esay answer the Lord Esay 6.8 and 8.18 Heere am I send me When he heard the voyce of the Lord saying Whom shall I send and who will go for me Behold I and the children whom the Lord hath giuen me So doth Christ charge Peter as he loued him to feede his sheepe and his lambes Ioh. 21.15 On the other side it is a great discouragement to the Minister if hee finde not some loue againe from the people answerable in some sort to his care and diligence Neuerthelesse if he finde no fruits of loue from them it shall not excuse him if hee hold his peace forasmuch as God will giue him his reward vpon whom he is to depend Lastly great comfort should arise from Vse 3 hence to euery faithfull Minister and make him conscionable in his calling to know that God requireth of him to perseuere in teaching and therefore he must neuer giue ouer to speake in the Name of God Such as lay their hand vpon the plough and looke backe are vnfit for the kingdome of God Luke 9.62 As then it is said of euery Christian man that if hee be faithfull vnto the death hee shall receiue the crowne of life Reuel 2.10 so it is true of euery Christian Minister if hee bee faithfull in preaching the Gospel vnto the death hee shall receiue an incorruptible crowne of glory not otherwise The prophet Ieremy would haue ceassed crying and haue holden his peace but the word was as fire within him that it could not bee smothered and suppressed but the flame of it brake out We haue no promise except wee continue Let no man therfore faint and waxe weary let no man giue ouer but hold out constantly to the end 20 And the Lord spake vnto Moses and vnto Aaron saying 21 Separate your selues from among this congregation that I may consume them in a moment 22 And they fell vpon their faces and saide O God the God of the spirits of all flesh hath not one man onely sinned and wilt thou be wroth with all the Congregation 26 And he spake vnto the Congregation saying Depart I pray you from the tents of these wicked men and touch nothing of theirs lest ye perish in all their sinnes Now doth the Lord take the cause into his owne hand and reuealeth to Moses what hee will doe that he would vtterly destroy these conspirators and al that belonged vnto them Touching the prayer of Moses and Aaron who humbled themselues so soone as they heard the threatning of God it teacheth that Gods children haue soft and tender hearts if they heare the sound of Gods threatning behind them for it is as the cracke of a terrible thunder like to rent the hard rockes in sunder whereas the vngodly are senselesse and feele nothing albeit the threatning doe concerne themselues see more of this before chap. 14. Againe Behold the loue of God to the faithfull behold how in this destruction God prouideth for the safety of his seruants hee could doe nothing till they were departed and separated from the wicked The like we see in Gods dealing toward Lot hee being mercifull vnto him Gen. 19.16 for the Angels professe that they could doe nothing till he were gone v. 22. and chap. 18.32 We see then how the vngodly doe fare the better for the company of the godly for why were these seditious persons spared so long but because many good men were among them and so soone as they were departed from them the earth opened and swallowed some of them and a fire came from heauen and consumed others When the Sodomites were taken prisoners and carried away as captiues they were rescued and deliuered but it was for Lots sake because he was among them So then wicked men may thanke the godly for their deliuerance 2 King 3.13 14. Iob 22.30 Act. 27.24 And why doth God spare this wicked world Doubtlesse it is for his childrens sake but when once the number of them is accomplished then will he raine down fire and brimstone vpon the reprobate Now from this commandement of God giuen to Moses and by Moses to the people for the separating of themselues from the Synagogue and departing from the assembly of these sinfull men Doctrine we learne that they which haue society and familiarity with incurable and incorrigible persons Such as haue society with wicked persons shal be partakers of their punishment whē God commeth to iudge and punish shal be partakers of their punishment Gen. 14.12 The Sodomites had much good in that Lot was among thē but Lot had no good by his being among the Sodomites They were freed from captiuity because they had him in their company but he was led captiue by the enemies because he had them in his company The Scripture is plentifull in this point Pr. 9.6 and 4.14.15 Act. 2.40 Re. 18.4 Reason 1 The reasons are first because either they commit the same sinnes with them or els they are drawne after a sort to consent vnto them if not in word or deed yet at least by their silence and then it will follow in equity that they which consent with offenders shall also haue one punishment with them So it is with God in this case they that partake with other men in their sinnes shall also partake with them in the punishment For as there is an euill in word so there is an euill in silence Secondly all vnnecessary society is a countenancing Reason 2 and a confirming of them in their euil and consequently it keepeth them from a sight of their sins from turning vnto God
by staied and repressed it winneth ground and spreadeth farther like a canker Whereby we see it is an easie steppe and descent from one euill to another as it is to go downe a steepe hill Now the sinne of these men is three-fold First they are as blinde men that cannot see the iudgements of the Lord but accuse Moses of murther and impute to him the death and destruction of those that were buried in the earth consumed to ashes with the fire Moses was onely the Minister of God in their destruction the cause of their owne death was in thēselues as if a malefactour neuer considering what himselfe hath committed should cast the cause of his condemnation vpō the Iudge and cry out against him as a shedder of blood Secondly their vnthankfulnesse who will by no meanes confesse that they were saued the day before and sundry times besides from destruction by the intercession of Moses if he had not praied for them they had perished as one man with the seditious For they were all become as one sicke body wherein no part was sound but ful of wounds and bruises and putrifying sores Esay 1 6. They seeke his death that after a sort had giuen them life and they rise vp against him that had beene the meanes of their deliuerance Thirdly as they did condemne the innocent so they iustifie the vngodly both which are an abhomination to the Lord Prou. 17 15. Such wicked persons as God had rooted out of the Land of the liuing and turned them into the earth which was weary to beare such vnprofitable burdens they call them the people of God which were no better then a cursed crue of conspirators against God and such as he had appointed to manage the State Ciuill and Ecclesiasticall These men therefore rising vp in their stead that were fallen into the pit and defending their cause of whom GOD had taken the account doe make themselues guilty of their sinnes are iustly swept away with the iudgements of God Doctrine We learne heereby The wicked will not bee warned by former iudgements that such is the corrupt heart of wicked man that it will take no warning by former iudgements though they be neuer so fearefull and euident They had often seene how great things God had wrought among his people yet they are blinde and doe not see them they are wilfull and will not regard them they are sottish and will take no knowledge of them Psal 10 5. Esay 22 12 13 Psal 24 38 39. Luk. 19 42. Dan. 5 22. This maketh sinne out of measure sinfull The reasons First because they see God Reason 1 is a mercifull patient God he beareth long and holdeth his peace and therefore they thinke he is like vnto themselues Psal 50 21. so they abuse his patience and will do nothing Secondly they thinke the day of their iudgment Reason 2 is not neere they set it farre off from them It may be it may come in time but they hope there will be peace in their dayes Ezek. 12 27. The people iudged that the Prophet had prophesied for many daies to come and of such times as were farre off and thereupon they concluded that the daies were prolonged and euery vision failed Thirdly they loue their owne sinnes and Reason 3 out of that great loue to their sinnes they are vnwilling altogether to take notice of any iudgement due to their sinne cannot abide that the Minister or any other should giue thē warning of the same for they hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhorre him that speaketh vprightly Amos 5 verse 10. The vses remaine Vse 1 First of all are men naturally so vnwilling of themselues to set before them Gods iudgements Then this serueth as an admonition to the Ministers that they should often threaten Gods iudgeme●● against the wicked seeing they are so dull a●d vnwilling to take any notice of them or to be warned by them God worketh out his iudgements in euery place and he setteth his Ministers on worke that they should cry ou●●nd not spare to publish them and make them ●owne though men be neuer so much hardened in their sinnes sometimes by reason of the profite that they make by their sinnes sometimes by reason of the pleasure that they finde in their sinnes But howsoeuer they be admonished of any iudgement present or imminent they are little affected with it they are ready to say with the Atheists 1 Cor. 15 32. Let vs eate and drinke for to morrow we shall die Let vs alone with our doing for the present and we will take order for those iudgements that are to come hereafter well enough Obiect If any say it behoueth not the Minister to be so feruent and earnest in his reproofes but to handle sinne more gently because many are the worse for sharpe rebukes and few or none the better Answer I answer this is our greefe and causeth vs often to mourne in secret but yet this cannot be our discharge for we must labour to free and deliuer all men so farre as we can from the fierce wrath iudgements of God otherwise their blood would light vpon our heads and be required at our hands if they perish through our negligence It is the nature of the Cocke as some obserue that at the dead time of the night hee croweth most loud and shrill whether he doth so or not I know not but this I am sure of that the Ministers of God ought to do so when they see men to be most dull and dead in their sinnes they should be most earnest and vehement euen at the deadest times of all they must bee most zealous that so they may deliuer their owne soules and not be constrained to answer for the sinnes of those that perish Vse 2 Secondly this reproueth the age wherein we liue of much corruption because it can sleepe so securely at the noyse of Gods iudgements These murmurers in this place had heard the pittifull cry and fearefull noise of those that were swallowed vp in the earth yet they haue already forgotten that which fell out but a day before We commonly say A wonder lasteth but nine daies but behold how they had seene one of the greatest wonders in the world when the earth whose foundation the Lord hath laid to bee firme and stable that it should not be remoued for euer Psal 104 5 opened her mouth and swallowed these vnbeleeuers and they had heard with their eares their outcryes when they descended into the deepe yet this wonder lasted but one day nay not one whole day for on the morrow it was quite out of their remembrance We haue had all sorts of warnings whatsoeuer generall particular by his word by his workes by his iudgements vpon others and vpon our selues yet we take generally and particularly little warning by them How hath God dealt with many of vs and how neare hath he come vnto vs with his particular
his mercy that we are not vtterly consumed Lam. 3.22 When Eli heard the punishment that God had determined to bring vpon him and his house for the wickednesse of his prophane sonnes he answered with all humility It is the Lord let him doe whatsoeuer pleaseth him 1 Sam. 3.18 God loueth a broken and contrite heart it is a sacrifice wherein hee greatly delighteth Lastly let vs make our whole life a continuall practise of vnfained repentance and labour for godly sorrow that wee may mourne and afflict our soules for sinne because it is sinne a breach of Gods law and displeaseth him Sinne will not lodge long where it is not cherished and made much off and entertained with delight It is as a ghest that will not lodge in such houses where he is not welcome but if once you make much of him and delight in him then he is an importunate and a shamelesse ghest you shall hardly rid your house of him In the word of God wee finde sundry meanes and motiues to moue vs to enter these meditations Motiues moouing vs to repentance First the commandement of God himselfe so often vrged and repeated Ier. 3.12 and 8.6 and 18.11 This was the voyce of Iohn crying in the wildernesse Repent bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life Matth. 3.8 This doctrine was preached in Paradise to our first parents and was afterward figured out by circumcision before the Law and by their purification after the Law Esay 1.16 Wash you make you cleane Againe such as repent not lye vnder the bondage of Satan they are as captiues prisoners bound to obey his will and to doe him seruice 2. Tim. 2.26 Thirdly such as die without repentance remaine for euer without remission and forgiuenesse They are lost children and must needs perish if they repent not before 2 Pet. 3.9 Luke 13.3 Fourthly the threatnings denounced executed vpon the rebellious and disobedient are made examples and admonitions vnto vs his vengeance iustly fallen vpon others should serue to amend vs 1 Cor. 10.5.6 2. Pet. 2.3 4. Psal 7.11 12. Fiftly the certainety and suddennesse of the last and generall iudgement which shall come as a theefe in the night when the heauens themselues shall passe away with a noise and the elements shall melt with heate and the earth with the workes therein shall bee burnt vp What manner of persons therefore ought wee to be in holy conuersation and godlinesse 2 Pet. 3.10 11. and 2 Cor. 5.10 Wee must all appeare before the iudgement seat of God that wee may receiue the things done in this body whether good or euill This last day is called a day of Reuelation Rom. chap. 2. ver 5. Lastly we must bee all ledde to repentance by the vnspeakable fruits that follow it as pardon of sinnes reconciliation with God peace of conscience hearing of our prayers and in the end blessednesse in the heauens Ezek. 33.11 CHAP. XVIII 1 ANd the Lord said vnto Aaron Thou and thy sonnes and thy fathers house with thee shall beare the iniquity of the Sanctuary and thou and thy sonnes with thee shall beare the iniquity of your Priesthood 2 And thy brethren also of the tribe of Leui the tribe of thy father bring thou with thee that they may be ioyned c. 3 And they shall keepe thy charge and the charge of all the Tabernacle onely they shall not come nigh the vessells c. 4 And they shall be ioyned vnto thee and keepe the charge c. IN the latter end of the former Chapter the people are brought in confessing their sins and crauing pardon of God Wee heard their greefe and sorrow for their sinnes and bewailing their transgressions past and saying Shall we perish vtterly and is there no hope of forgiuenesse Now we haue in this Chapter the answer of God to this question which did proceed from a feeling of their sinne and a feare of present death which they had iustly deserued For Moses declareth how God shewed himselfe reconciled notwithstanding their manifold prouocations he cannot keep his anger for euer but returneth vnto them in mercy when they turne vnto him by repentance The deuision of this Chapter Concerning the which reconciliation we must consider in this Chapter two points first the persons procuring the attonement which were the Priests Leuites attending to the Ministery of the word and Sacraments secondly the things appertaining vnto them and to their charge as also the next Chapter deliuereth such things as belong to the people Now the commandement belonging to them both to wit both to the Priests and Leuites which are heere said to be brethren All the M●nisters ough to be as children Matth 23.8 2 Pet 15. Heb. 13.22 1 Pet 12. is directed to Aaron and not to Moses because this was a meere Church matter Ecclesiasticall not ciuill and his Priesthood was newly ratified to him by the authority of God and by a notable miracle in the flourishing of the Almond rod Chap. 17.8 The summe and effect is this that the Priests should minister in the Sanctuary at the Altar but the Leuites should minister vnto the Priests and both of them both for themselues the people First therefore the charge of the Sanctuary is committed to Aaron and his sonnes and to the ouersight of the Leuites to the eight ver that the seruice of God might not be prophaned either by themselues or by any other lest they made themselues guilty of sinne whereby the Lord would signifie that there was indeed no cause why any should enuy them this dignitie forasmuch as it was ioyned with such danger and difficulty The burden of the Priesthood was so great and lay so heauy vpon their shoulders that they were threatened to be punished if the worship of God which ought to bee performed with all reuerence were prophaned through their default From hence we learne that as euery sin is in it owne nature great so are these sinnes the greatest and most heinous which are committed against a mans particular place and calling wherein God hath set him ●e ●nnes ●test ●e ●ed ● mans ar Iob 2.9 The Prophets denouncing iudgements against sundry persons doe single them out for neglecting of personall duties The Prophet Micah threatneth the Rulers and men of might that they hate the good and loue the euill Who plucke off their skinne from off them and their flesh from off their bones they breake their bones and chop them in pieces as for the pot and as flesh within the cauldron Mic. 3.2 3. Thus also he noteth out the falsehood of the Prophets that made the people of God to erre and cry peace ver 5. The idolatrous kings are most of all taxed for the abuse of their calling not so much for priuate faults as other men but for their erecting or suffring of idolatry which they ought to haue pulled downe yea the good kings are often blemished that way because they reformed not the
of it wast thou taken because thou art dust and to dust thou shalt returne Where the reason is thus framed Thou art made and taken out of the dust therfore thou shalt returne to the dust Secondly we must all die the death because Reason 2 all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God for the Scripture concludeth al both Iewes and Gentiles vnder sin True it is man was created to immortality and if he had euer loued God and neuer sinned he should euer haue liued without seeing death But whē sinne entred death followed in the world as the wages doth the worke according to the threatning of God Gen. 2 17. In the day thou eatest of the forbidden fruit thou shalt die the death For as they that are adiudged and condemned to dye ●sost hom ●●en 3. are accounted as dead men albeit they be kept aliue in prison so our first Parents although they did not immediately die yet immediately were subiect to death by desart of sinne So the Apostle Rom. 5 12. By one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men in whom all men haue sinned Where he proueth the cause by the effect that sinne was before Moses and the Law giuen by him because death was in the world which seizeth vpon young and old infants sucklings whereby euery one is conuinced of sinne 〈◊〉 3 19. euery mouth is stopped and all the world subiect to the righteous iudgement of God Seeing therefore wee are all made out of the dust and carry about with vs this body of sin we haue here no continuing City but are placed in the world for a season as men set vpon a Stage to play our parts then must be gone to giue roome to others according to the saying of Salomon One generation passeth and another generation succeedeth Vse 1 The vses follow First the rich the mighty the learned and men of high degree must acknowledge that there shall be no difference betweene them and the poore the lowly and vnlearned in the graue vnto which all must descend True it is there is a difference and distinction betweene rich and poore high and low great small in their life time in friends in honours in houses in lands in liuings in food in apparell in duties in dignities such like externall priuiledges and prerogatiues which shall haue an end yet all these shall ceasse and all degrees must equally meete together in the graue so that albeit an vnequall life haue gone before yet an equall death shal follow after ●rat oda li. 1. This is it which Iob pointeth vnto chap. 17 which we named before where he sheweth that all worldly prosperity and hope shall faile They shall goe downe into the bottome of the pit surely it shall lie together in the dust And the Prophet Psal 49 9 10 11. sheweth that neither wit nor wisedome neither might nor mony neither fauour nor policy can preuent or put away death that all without difference respect of persons must yeeld to Nature and that all meanes which they can deuise for the continuance of their names shall come to nought For hee seeth wise men die and also that the ignorant and foolish perish and leaue their riches for others Secondly let men of excellent and eminent Vse 2 places liue iustly and deale vprightly in their callings wherein they are set As they are placed aboue others so they are seene marked before others and notwithstanding all their honour and estimation their riches and retinue they must die and depart hence when it shall be said to them ●● 16 2. Come giue an account of thy stewardship for thou maiest be no longer steward The remembrance of death must therefore admonish them of their duties that they dreame not of immortality and they promise not to themselues continuance heere and perpetuity This Dauid toucheth and teacheth Ps 82 2 3 6 7. How long will ye deale vniustly and accept the persons of the wicked Doe right to the poore and fatherlesse doe iustice to the poore and needy deliuer the poore and needy saue them from the hand of the wicked I haue saide yee are Gods and ye all are children of the most High but ye shal die as a man and ye Princes shall fall like others So then when we are tempted to euill we must remember death and the estate that followeth death Therefore the Apostle chargeth them that are rich in this world 1 Tim. 6 17 18. that they bee not high-minded neither trust in vncertain riches but in the liuing GOD because we brought nothing into this world and it is certaine that we can carry nothing out Thirdly this consideration of the common Vse 3 condition of al flesh must stirre vp our affections from resting relying vpon men whose breath is in their nostrils to depend vpon the eternall God which continueth and liueth for euer Let vs beware of all vaine confidence We are ready to rest vpon creatures and stay our selues vpon an arme of flesh as vpon a broken Reed whereby we deceiue our selues of our hope and rob God of his honour This we learne Psal 146 3 4 5. Put not your trust in Princes nor in the sonnes of man for there is no helpe in him his breath departeth and he returneth to the earth then his thoughts perish Blessed is hee that hath the God of Iacob for his helpe whose hope is in the Lord his God Man is vaine and all his pompe is lighter then vanity If then we make him our stay and staffe we beate the ayre wee labour in the fire we build vpon a weak foundation and rest vpon the vncertaine life of mortall and miserable man Psal 144. who vanisheth as a shadow passeth as a dreame flieth as an Eagle speedeth as a Poste consumeth as a garment and goeth away as a thought that cannot be recalled His life is as a span soone measured as a vapour soone gone as a tale soone told as an hand-bredth soone measured as a winde soone ouerblowne and as the weauers Shuttle quickly sliding Lastly it is our duty to prepare for it before Vse 4 it cometh that we may bee found ready and haue oyle in our lamps whē the Bridegroome cometh For death spareth none it respecteth no person no age no Sexe no State or condition no power can withstand it no wisedome can preuent it no bribe can corrupt it no cunning can ouercome it And albeit we often recouer of some diseases yet in the ende we are taken away The whole life of a Christian should be a continuall meditation of death to teach vs as it were to die daily and to number our daies that we may apply our hearts vnto wisedome not to set our whole loue and liking on the world which wee must shortly leaue Will a man bestow cost and charges on an house and tenement in which hee shall not long dwell
we may be assured he will deliuer our soules from death Psal 33 19. Rom. 6 ●2 Luke 12 32. preserue vs in famine For if hee spared not his owne Sonne but hath giuen him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Feare not therefore the want of outward things which perish with their vse for it is your Fathers pleasure to giue vnto you a kingdome If he haue promised to giue vnto vs the greater nay the greatest blessings that can be rehearsed or remēbred we may ground our selues on this assured truth that he wil not leaue vs nor forsake vs so that we may boldly say The Lord is my deliuerer I will not feare what man can do vnto me Indeed the iudgement practise of carnall men is otherwise who esteeme earthly things aboue heauenly and preferre their Swine before Christ-like Esau Matthew 8 Heb. 12 16 who prized one messe of pottage aboue the birthright If these men bee a little pained and pinched with famine and suffer a little want of food that they haue not their necessities supplied their bodies cloathed their bellies filled they cry out aloud in the anguish of their spirit What shall we eate What shall we drinke How shall wee liue How shall we maintaine sustaine our selues and our families But alasse though their soules be hunger-bitten and hungerstarued ready to pine and consume away throgh want of spirituall food they are neuer greeued or vexed it troubleth them not at al. Let vs learn better things let vs value spirituall things at the highest rate and set them in the cheefest place If thus we set as our honorable friends all heauenly things in the cheefest place and turne all transitory things with shame into the lowest roome and ranke as saucie aspiring guests vsurping climbing aboue their betters we shall beare all earthly losses and troubles with patience and stay our selues from murmuring at the feeling of them Ver. 6. Then Moses and Aaron went from the face c. We heard before the complaint of the people now let vs see the behauiour of Moses Aaron They do not rage nor reuile thē they do not fret and fume against thē or aske the life of their enemies but possesse their soules with patience and declining the violent rage of the people as a beast with many heads they goe to the Tabernacle declare their causes and cases before the Lord. From this their distresse we learne this truth that in all wrongs iniuries offered vnto vs we must seeke helpe and comfort of God Doctrin● In all wr● and iniuri we must 〈◊〉 to God I say it is the duty of all the seruants of God when they are wronged and oppressed when they are euilly entreated and spitefully handled at the hands of sinfull men to vnlade disburden all their cares into the bosome of God depending for counsell and comfort vpon him alone In the performance of this duty the holy seruants of God haue gone before vs. Reade the booke of the Psalmes as a plentifull store-house and schoole-house to teach this truth as Psal 3 1 2. and 7 1 2. where we see that in his troubles he had recourse to God who smiteth his enemies on the cheeke-bone and breaketh the teeth of the wicked but was a sure Buckler to him not such as men hold vp that can defend one part and in one place onely but a buckler to safegard him round about before and behind And being greeuously accused of some heynous crime by some of Sauls retinue ● 14.10 he flyeth to God he trusteth in him who preserueth the vpright in heart So when Iob had his camels and cattell taken away by the enemies he did not through the greatnes of his affliction and greefe of mind rebell against God but said Naked came I out of my mothers wombe ● 13 17. and naked shall I returne thither the Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken it ●●g 19.3 blessed be the Name of the Lord. The like appeareth in Hezekiah when Ierusalem was besieged This is a day of tribulation and of rebuke and blasphemy for the children are come to the birth and there is no strength to bring forth Now therefore O Lord our God I beseeeh thee saue vs out of his hand that all the kingdomes of the earth may know that thou O Lord art onely God All which examples teach vs that when we suffer wrongs or fall into any wrongs or fall into any dangers wee must haue recourse to God and craue of him that the malice of the wicked may come to an end Reason 1 The reasons of this doctrine are first the gracious promise of God who hath mercifully promised to heare and to helpe vs in all our troubles This the Prophet teacheth Call vppon me in the day of trouble ● 50.15 ●h 5.14 15 I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me And the Apostle Iohn This is the assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs and if we know that he heareth vs whatsoeuer we aske we know that we haue the petitions that wee haue desired of him Let vs not doubt and wauer like a waue of the Sea tossed to and fro by the violence of the winds but by faith beleeue that God will grant our requests which wee make according to his will and word Seeing therefore he is willing to heare and able to helpe and promiseth to grant our requests our duty is to come when he calleth to aske seeing hee giueth and to knocke seeing he openeth the gates that leadeth vnto his treasures Some put their trust in chariots some in horses and some in Princes but we must remember the Name of the Lord our God who neuer faileth and breaketh promise with these that depend vpon him that feare and trust in his mercy Reason 2 Secondly as he is our helper who deliuereth our soule from death our eies from teares and our feet from falling so whither shall wee turne our selues to find comfort and consolation besides in him When God denyeth to send succour who shall saue When hee refuseth to helpe who shal deliuer When he shutteth who can open If wee looke to men or Angels to heauen or earth to the liuing or the dead we shall be deceiued and deluded The Prophet saith Psal 62.8 9. Trust in him alway ye people poure out your harts before him for God is our hope aboue all yet the children of men are vanity the chiefe men are lies to lay them vpon a ballance they are altogether lighter then vanity Vse 1 Let vs now come vnto the vses First from hence we gather that such is Gods great goodnes to his children that he neuer leaueth them without comfort For if he require of vs to repaire to him in our troubles surely he will not send vs away empty nor cause vs to depart
their sicknes trust in the Phisition as Asa did 1 Chro. 16 11 12. 1 Sam. 2.5 not in the liuing God who killeth and maketh aliue bringeth downe to the graue and raiseth vp againe hee maketh the wound and bindeth it vp he smiteth and his hands make whole he shall deliuer thee in sixe troubles and in the seuenth the euill shall not touch thee In time of warre and day of battell we trust in our strength armor men munition and defenced places and make them our God Nah. 3.8 ● whereas the Prophet teacheth that this is a cursed confidence and shall not leaue a blessing behind it Lastly we learne from hence not to reuenge Vse 4 our own causes quarels For if we be taught in this practise of Moses to go vnto God in all our wrongs who will iudge his people then we are not to render like for like or to requite euill for euill or to repay wrong for wrong taunt for taunt rebuke for rebuke railing for railing but contrariwise blesse knowing that we are thereunto called that we should bee heires of blessing This vse is concluded Prou. 20.22 Say not thou I will recompence euill but waite vpon the Lord and he shall saue thee This is the direction of the Apostle Ro. 12.17.19 Recompence to no man euill for euill dearely beloued auenge not your selues but giue place vnto wrath for it is written Vengeance is mine Psal 94.1 ● I will repay saith the Lord. Where we see God claymeth and challenge vengeance to himselfe and taketh it from vs so that such as seeke reuenge sit downe in the seat of God and as much as lyeth in thē wrest the scepter out of his hands taking vpon them the person of the accuser witnesse iudge and executioner contrary to all true forme of lawfull iudgement And albeit it bee hard and harsh for flesh and blood to put vp iniuries yet if we wil be the children of God we must haue more in vs then flesh and blood For they that are after the flesh Rom. 3.5 ● fauour the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit so then they that are in the flesh cannot please GOD. Wherefore when Zachariah the Priest a faithfull and fruitefull witnesse of God was vniustly and cruelly stoned to death he raged not he reuiled not he reuenged not but said The Lord see and require it When the Lord of life ●● 24.22 Christ Iesus was accused condemned and crucified the iust for the vniust he prayed for his enemies Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe ● 23 34. leauing vs an example that we should follow his steps When blessed Stephen who was full of the holy Ghost and saw the glory of God and Iesus standing at the right of God was cast out of the city and stoned with stones hee kneeled downe and cryed with a loud voyce Lord lay not this sinne to their charge ● 55.58 When the Archangel mentioned by the Apostle Iude saw that the diuell went about to corrupt the pure worship of God hee would not vse railing and reprochfull speaches ● ver 9. but desireth the Lord to rebuke him and repay him for his malice Seeing therefore this duty hath beene practised by Priest and people by men and Angels by the head and the members of his body let vs follow those things that concerne peace let vs be of a patient and meeke spirit which is much set by of God and let vs commit our causes to him that is the God of vengeance It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God Verse 9 10. Then Moses tooke that rod c. Hitherto Moses Aaron haue behaued themselues vprightly in respect of God meekely in respect of themselues and patiently in regard of the people Now we shal see how they offend by transgressing the commandement of God by distrusting his word by raging against the whole assembly God chargeth them to speake to the rocke they spake vnto the people Againe as if it were vnlikely or vnpossible that the rock should yeeld water they smote it twise through impaciency vnbeeleefe Thus they that had beene the instruments of God in so many miracles that had seene him face to face as a man seeth his friend that had stood so often in the gap where the hand of God had made the breach that had diuided the red sea Moses I say and Aaron the Ministers of God the witnesses of his workes the pillars of the truth now begin to faile to faint and to fall down to shew vs and themselues the weakenesse that is in flesh and blood From hence we learne that many are the failings and fals of the children of God ●trine ● are the 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 Howsoeuer the faithfull be borne againe and endued with the spirit of sanctification howsoeuer they desire to please God and endeuor to serue him with all the powers of soule and body yet they often stumble in their race thorough the burthen that presseth down and the sinne that cleaueth so fast vnto them This truth is confessed and confirmed by many testimonies Salomon in his worthy prayer at the dedication of the Temple acknowledgeth it 1 king 8.46 So Iob. 15.14 15. Likewise Prou. 20.9 And the Prophet Psal 14 2 3. All which testimonies doe plentifully teach this truth that howsoeuer through the grace of God giuen vnto them the faithful fight a good fight hauing faith and a good conscience yet all are sinners and no flesh is cleane and cleere from sin which Moses and Aaron here fal into The reasons of this doctrine are First because Reason 1 the Scripture hath concluded all vnder sinne Gal 3 2● Rom. 3.19 That euery mouth might bee stopped and all the world be subiect to the iudgment of God Al matter of glorying in our selues is taken from vs we are found guilty before God wee haue no excuse no defence no cloake for our selues to couer our sins there is no difference Wee haue all sinned and are depriued of the glory of God and euerlasting life so that all both Iewes and Gentiles are proued to be vnder sinne Secondly we see that death the wages of Reason 2 sinne hath raigned and doth raigne ouer all without difference yea it taketh hold euen on children that sinned not actually like the transgression of Adam If then old and yong taste of death all the posterity of Adam are corrupted in him when he wittingly and willingly wilfully sinned against God We flow from an vncleane fountaine we grow out of a bitter root we are as branches of the wilde vine Thus the Apostle reasoneth Death raigned frō Adam to Moses Rom. 5.14 euen ouer them also that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam which was the figure of him that was to come So then sinne and death goe together as mother and daughter
continuance of the Church and truth of God that it may flourish after vs and not dye with vs or bee buried in the earth for euer This appeareth by the Apostle Peter I will endeuour alwaies that yee also may be able to haue remembrance of these things after my departure 2 Pet. 1 15. Heereunto accordeth the care of the Apostle Paul writing to Timothy Watch thou in all things suffer aduersity do the worke of an Euangelist cause thy Ministery to be throughly liked of for I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departing is at hand 2 Tim. 4 5 6. This we see many waies in Moses who would not leaue the people without a guide as sheepe without a Shepheard and therefore praied for a fit Gouernor Let the Lord God of the spirits of all flesh appoint a man ouer the Congregation ●●b 27 16 who may goe in and out before them And therefore it is said Deut. 34 9. that Ioshua the sonne of Nun was full of the spirit of wisedome For Moses had put his hands vpon him and the children of Israel were obedient vnto him and did as the Lord had commanded Moses ●●ro 2● 9. Likewise Dauid at the point of death exhorteth the Officers of his kingdom and Salomon his sonne which was to sit vpon his Throne to know the God of his fathers and to serue him with a perfect heart with a willing minde assuring him that if he seeke him he will be found and threatning him if he forsake him that God will cast him off for euer Reason 1 And great reason it is wee should haue this care and consideration of the good beauty of the Church For the Church is our Mother who hath conceiued and brought vs forth to liue a spirituall life to God wee haue sucked her breasts and through her we haue here begun our heauen happinesse What vnkindnesse and vnthankfulnesse were this to leaue her destitute who hath trauailed in paine of vs vntill Christ be formed in vs and to withdraw all duty and endeuor from her touching her condition to come Were it not a note of an vnnaturall a lewd a shamefull childe to forsake his owne mother who bare him in her wombe nourished him with her brests dandled him in her lap refused no base seruice for his good cared for him whē he could not care for himselfe in whose eyes he was tender and deare were it not I say a note of great infamy to leaue her in misery or as a prey to the enemy 〈◊〉 19 16 27. We see the Lord Iesus Christ being on the Crosse prouided for his Mother committed her to the care of the Disciple whō he loued In like manner the Apostle requireth this duty 〈◊〉 5 ● 16 If any faithfull man or faithfull womā haue widowes let them minister vnto them And if there be any that prouideth not for his owne hee denieth the faith and is worse then an Infidell Whosoeuer therefore hath beene brought vp in the bosome of the Church begotten by the immortall seed of the word nourished at the Table of Christ and taught to looke for an eternall inheritance in the heauens can neuer assure himselfe to bee the true childe of his mother but rather a base and bastardly brood vnlesse he shew it by the continuall care hee hath of the safegard and protection of the Church Gal. 4 2. which is the mother of all the faithfull Besides greeuous and greedy wolues enter Reason 2 vpon the labours of faithfull and painfull Pastours to make hauock of the Church and to seduce the people of God For Satan is neuer idle though neuer well occupied and as a reuerent father once said Latimer he is the most diligent Bishop in his Diocesse he neuer resteth but alwaies compasseth the earth too and fro Iob 2 2. and walketh therein He hath his instruments which he setteth on worke that poison the church with the leauen of false doctrine and sowe the Lords field with the Darnell of their diuellish deuices Therefore the Apostle exhorting the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20 28 29 30 saith Take heed to your selues and to all the flocke wher of the Holy Ghost hath made you Ouerseers to feede the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood for I know this that after my departure shall greeuous wolues enter in among you not sparing the flocke Moreouer of your selues shall men arise speaking peruerse things to draw Disciples after them Now it remaineth to see the vses heereof Vse 1 First we learne from hence the con●inuance of the Church vpon the earth and the perpetuall remaining of it so long as the earth endureth and so long as the Sun abideth a faithfull witnesse in the heauens Though it bee sometimes driuen from place to place and abideth not in one stay and state like the Moone that sometimes shineth in the full Aug epist 48. sometimes in the wane and sometimes in the eclipse Reuel 12 6. as the woman constrained to flie into the wildernesse where she hath a place prepared of God that they should feed her there and as the reigne of Ahab when Elias thought himselfe left alone as a Sparrow vpon an house top 1 King 19 10. Psal 102 7. yet there alwayes hath beene a Church from the beginning and euer shall bee a Church to the end from Adam the first to the last man that shall stand vpon the earth This the Prophet teacheth Psal 72 5. 102 26 27 28. Let the enemies fret and storme let them rage roare neuer so much they labour in the fire and sweate in vaine they shall perish fall down but the Lord that is able of stones to raise vp Children vnto Abraham holdeth vp the heads of his people that they stand as an house built vpon the Rocke the raine falleth the floud cometh the winde bloweth and beateth vpon that house yet it abideth firmely and falleth not for it is grounded on the Rocke Math. 7 24 25 like the bush that burned with fire but was not consumed Exod. 3 ● Secondly seeing our care must be that the Vse 2 truth of God may liue when we are dead and remaine after our departure It is the duty of all the Ministers of God to preach the word of God in season and out of season 2 Tim. chap. 4 verse 2 3 to be instant in reproouing rebuking exhorting with all long-suffering and doctrine yea to do these things with all their power seeing there is neyther work nor wisedome in the graue whither they go For alas how shall they minde the future good of the Church after their death that mean not the present good of the Church in their life Wherefore let vs take all occasions opportunities to promote the Gospell Act. 20 27 28 Let vs keepe backe nothing that is profitable but reueale to the people the whole counsell of God knowing that
God and to serue him in the simplicity and sincerity of their hearts This wee must do in health this we must do in sicknesse this we must doe in death and so wee shall glorifie God liuing and dying Thus did Abraham teach his children and seruants and for this is he commended of God Gen. 18 19. I know Abraham my seruant that hee will command his sonnes and his houshold after him that they keepe the vvay of the Lord to do righteousnesse and iudgment Thus said Iacob when he dyed Gen. 49 1 2. this must all of vs be carefull to practise if we will bee the children of faithful Abraham to speake of the lawes of God in our houses 〈◊〉 11 13. whē we walk by the way when we lye downe and when we rise vp Verse 27 28. And Moses did as the Lord had commanded he caused Aaron to strippe off his garments and he put them vpon Eleazar his son Wee see the obedience of Moses to the Commandement of God for Aaron pulled off his Priestly robes and they are put vpon Eleazar to whom lineally the Priesthood did descend whereby we see that there was a personal succession belonging to the Priesthood from father to son from one man to another Hereby we learne ●●●●rine 〈◊〉 Leuitical 〈…〉 from 〈◊〉 that the Priesthood vnder the law passed from one to another The Priesthood begunne in Aaron and continued in his line rested not in one man but continued by succession from age to age This we see euidently proued throughout the old testament for as they were cut off by death so others arose in their rooms that serued at the Altar As Eleazar succeeded Aaron so did Phinchas succeed Eleazar 〈◊〉 6 ●0 so the Priesthood proceeded from father to son and from one generation to another 〈◊〉 ● 16. as appeareth in the genealogies of the Priests This the Apostle to the Hebrewes plentifully prooueth 〈◊〉 23. Many among them were made Priests because they were not suffered to endure by reason of death declaring that the Priestes after the order of Aaron succeeded each other and confirming it by the reason cause thereof because the Leuiticall Priests were taken away by death and could not endure for euer This then we must hold to be one reason forcible and powerfull to prooue the continued Reason 1 succession of the Priesthood of Leui from father to son because they were cut off by death and so not suffered alwayes to execute theyr Priesthood Seeing therfore these Priests were mortall there must be a succession from one to another This is that reason which was remēbred before out of Heb. 7 23. shewing that they had many Priests because they were all subiect to mortality and could not continue through necessity of death Secondly the promise of God made vnto Aaron and to his posterity must be accomplished Reason 2 and performed Hee consecrated Aaron and his sons and made a couenant with them not with Aaron alone not with his children alone but with their posterity Exod. 28 1. hee established it as a testimony in Iacob and as a law in Israel that their posterity might know it and the children which should be born of them shold stand vp and minister before the Lord in the beautiful garments and glorious robes of the Priests Exod. 28 2. Therefore the Lord saide by Moses Exod 29 29 30. Num. 3 10. 18 7. The holy garments which appertaine to Aaron shall be his sonnes after him to be annointed therein and to be consecrate therein That son that shall be Priest in his stead shall put them on seuen dayes when he commeth into the Tabernacle of the Congregation to minister in the holy place So God made his couenant of peace with Phinehas the son of Eleazar the son of Aaron Nu. 25 12 13 confirmed the Priests office to him his seed after him because in the zeale of his Spirit hee had turned away the wrath of the Lord from the Children of Israel This teacheth vs first of all the imperfection Vse 1 and insufficiency of it both of the Priestes themselues and of the Priesthood it selfe It pointed out a better Priest and a better priesthood and directed them to rest not in it but in some other So the Apostle Heb. 7 11 12. declareth that the Leuiticall Priesthood was vnperfect because another Priest is promised a long time after according to the order of Melchizedek If any perfection had beene by the Priesthood of the Leuites what needed it furthermore that another Priest should arise after the order of Melchizedek and not to bee called after the order of Aaron c. Where we see he sheweth to what purpose there must bee a Priest after another rule and fashion not after the order of Aaron euen because perfection is not in the Priehhood of the Leuites nor vnder the Law which was established vnder it so that wee must acknowledge it hath an end forasmuch as with the ceremoniall law the ceremoniall Priesthood was cancelled and abolished Vse 2 Secondly from hence we learne to acknowledge a difference betweene the Priesthood of Christ and the Priesthood of the Leuites This standeth in diuers points and circumstāces as the same Authour of the Epistle to the Hebrewes euidently declareth The Priesthood of Christ is eternall as the Prophet declared long before Heb. 7 17. Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchizedek he was made with an oath by him that saide vnto him The Lord hath sworne and wil not repent But the Priests of Aarons order were mortall Heb. 7 20 21. not eternall they were made by the word of God but without an oath Heb. 7 26. Besides our great high Priest Christ Iesus holye harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners and made higher then the Heauens hath a * Aparabaton Heb. 7 24. Priesthood which cannot passe from one to another wherefore he is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God by him seeing hee euer liueth to make intercession for them who by his own blood entred in once into the holy place Heb 9.11 14. and obtained eternall redemption for vs purging our Conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing God Hebru 10 4. for it is vnpossible that the blood of buls Goats shold take away sinnes Thus we see that the Priesthood of Christ can haue no succession inasmuch as being once performed it hath no imperfection and whereas the Iews in the time of the law had Aaron and his posterity which were but mortall and miserable men we haue Christ the immortall and blessed God who liueth for euer to be our euerlasting Priest Vse 3 Lastly we learne that seeing the Leuiticall Priesthood passed from one to another so as by death they were not alwaies suffred to exercise and execute their Priesthood we see I say that the Church of Rome bringing in againe such a Priesthood such Priests as
doe in the rest when it pleaseth him We know by experience in all ages and learne by relation and report of all histories that the diuell hath spoken in the mouth of other creatures what impiety then is this to yeeld that to the diuels which they deny to God and detract from the most High Hitherto of the reproofe of the Asse reprehending his master now of the reproofe of the Angel True it is hee was vnworthy of any other teacher then his owne Asse being a fit master for such a scholler for such as refuse to heare the Lord speaking are worthy to bee sent to learne of bruite beastes and senselesse creatures Notwithstanding because this proud Prophet scorned so base a teacher and disdained to learne wisdome in the Asses school to the end he should not be exalted out of measure nor insult with contempt ouer his beast the Angel of God appeareth vnto him represseth his folly and giueth light and sight to his blinde eyes This sheweth that his eyes were first of all closed and shut vp whereby he was withholden from discerning the Angel And this restraint was rather miraculous then naturall For if it had beene naturall it would haue fayled in the discerning of other obiects as well as of this one But his eyes being opened then hee began to behold the Angel to cast himselfe downe before him to confesse his owne wickednes and ignorance to submit himselfe wholly to his pleasure after that the Angel had reproued his cruelty and testified the Asses innocency who if she had not been warier and wiser then her master had procured the speedy death and destruction of the Sorcerer Lastly Balaam hauing acknowledged his sin and confessed his ignorance the Angel giueth him leaue to goe his iourney so he goeth merrily with the messengers hoping that as he had obtained liberty to resort repaire to the Moabites which before was denyed vnto him so hee should in time likewise draw the Lord to giue his consent that hee might curse the people Question But here the question may be asked who or what this Angel of God was that had this conference communication with Balaam whether it were one of the created Angels or not Some suppose it was Michael the Archangel that was appointed ruler ouer that people Theodoret in hunc locum Iustin Mart. Athan s Some that it was another of the elect Angals and inuisible spirits Others affirme that it was Christ Iesus the Angel of the couenant the Prince of the Angels of God and the head both of men Angels What is meant by the Angel appearing to Balaam And this I rather assent subscribe vnto for these causes and considerations First because so often as Moses doth make mention of the Angel of God for the most part or alwaies hee vnderstandeth Christ the leader and conducter of his people in the wildernesse and therefore the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 10. They tempted Christ in the wildernesse and were destroyed of serpents Whosoeuer shal diligently reade the books of Moses carefully obserue his maner of speaking shal easily find that when he speaketh of the Angel of God and the Angel of the Lord he meaneth Christ Iesus calleth him sometimes the Lord as Gen. 16 7 13 22 20 12 16 31 11 13. Exod 4 19. So in this place he cals him sometimes the Angel sometimes the Angel of the Lord sometimes the Lord vnderstanding by them al one the same Christ Secondly it is said verse 31. that Balaam fell downe and worshipped him which no one of the elect Angels and blessed spirits albeit excel-cellent and glorious creatures would euer haue accepted but all of them would with one consent haue refused and reiected the same For when Iohn rauished with the glory of the Angel fell at his feet to worship him he forbad him and shewed the reason thereof Reuel 19 10. 22.8 See thou do it not I am thy fellow-seruant and one of thy brethren the Prophets of them which keepe the words of the prophecie of this booke worship thou God Now the Angel of God in this place doth not forbid diuine worship to be exhibited vnto him but if he had bene a creature and had vsurped the honor of God he should be an angel of the diuel not of God Neither let any say Fu●k on Reuel 19. that he bowed himselfe vpon his face adoring God when he saw his Angel ready to take vengeance of him which doth doth not appeare by any circumstance of ●he Text but rather that he vnderstood this Angel to be the same Lord that had before appeared and spoken vnto him This Angel of the Lord talketh with him as God himselfe Ver. 32. saying I came out to withstand thee because thy way is not straight before me he doth not say his way was peruerted before the Lord as Peter speaketh to Simon the Sorcerer Acts 8 21. Lastly Balaam speaketh to him as to that God which had before appeared vnto him restraining him from cursing the people and the Angel repeateth the same words verse 35. which the Lord himselfe had vttered before verse 20. For the Lord Iehouah had said vnto him Forasmuch as the men are come to call thee Rise vp Verse 2● and goe with them but onely what thing I say vnto thee that shalt thou doe so here the Angel is brought in speaking in the same manner Go with the men Verse 3● but what I say vnto thee that only shalt thou speake He saith not what the Lord saith vnto thee but what I say vnto thee Now then if it were the Lord that said before vnto him What thing I say vnto thee that onely shalt thou doe then the same wordes being also pronounced by this Angel making himselfe equall with the Lord must needs be accounted to be vttered by God himselfe Neither let any thinke it vnfit or vnlikely that Christ should appeare to a Sorcerer for we heard before how the Lord oftentimes appeared vnto him and wee see that when Agar was fled from Abrahamt house Gen. 16 and 1● ● the Lord spake vnto her from heauen Thus much touching the order of the History the interpretation of the words and the clearing of the Obiections that arise out of the same Now let vs come to the doctrines which the Spirit of God offereth to our considerations to be marked and remembred of vs. Verse 22. But the wrath of the Lord was kindled because he went and the Angell of the Lord stood in the way to be against him Here we haue to weigh and ponder in our hearts in these wordes the care of the Lord watching ouer the godly The Israelites after the fresh discomfiture of their enemies doe thinke themselues out of all danger and imagine not either Balak to be consulting and the Midianites to be assisting or Balaam to bee practising and all of them ioyning and confederating against them they know
vnskilfull Surgeons that make a deepe wound instead of applying a plaister and therefore kill where they should cure For wee cannot admit any faults in memory in the blessed Apostle who wrote by the direction of the Spirit of God as also the whole Scripture was inspired by him 2 Tim. 3.16 and wee cannot giue any reason to warrant why it should rather be a slip of memory in Paul then in Moses both of them beeing guided by the same Spirit Againe others say that Paul is not contrary to Moses forasmuch as if there were foure and twenty thousand as Moses teacheth there must of necessity be three and twenty thousand as the Apostle gathereth seeing the greater number includeth the lesser and seeing he doth not say expresly there were iust so many neither more nor lesse True it is to make vp around summe a full number the Scripture vseth sometimes to adde and sometimes to detract but in this place there is no reason why the Apostle should vse the lesse number rather then the greater considering the greater number is heere as full and perfect a number as the lesser and therefore no iust cause to change alter any thing Besides the Apostle maketh the number as directly to bee 23000 as Moses maketh it to bee 24000. Wherefore to let passe these gesses coniectures the best and truest answere is Iu● par●● that Moses distinguisheth the history into two parts First touching the heads of the people that were hanged vp Secondly touching the people that were slaine with the sword If we ioyne both these together as Moses doth in this place it is truely saide There dyed foure and twenty thousand For he speaketh first of the chiefe Captaines and Ring-leaders to this rebellion against God then of the rest of the people that walked in their wayes and followed their example afterward he casteth vp his accounts setteth downe the totall sum as it did accrew out of them both But if we speake of the principall malefactors by themselues and of the rest of the people by themselues a thousand of the principal were hanged or crucified and among the people were slaine three and twenty thousand of which latter Paul onely speaketh omitting the thousand Princes to shew how fond and friuolous their excuse is who defend theyr offences by the example or authority or counsel or commandement of theyr superiors seeing the people in this place following the foote-steps of theyr Magistrates were no lesse punished then the Magistrates themselues So then these are most true both that which Moses saith to wit that foure and twenty thousand perished ioyning both Princes and people together and that also which Paul affirmeth mentioning three and twenty thousand only omitting the Princes and reckoning the people and hence it is that the summe in Moses amounteth to a thousand more in Paul to a thousand lesse Hitherto of the execution of iustice by Phinehas vpon two audacious and open offenders and of discussing the questions that arise thereupon now followeth the approbation of God in whose nosthrils it smelled as a sweet sauour This fact is commended his zeale is praised his person is blessed and rewarded For albeit good works wrought in faith and dyed with the blood of Christ doe not merite eternall life which is the free gift of God Roman 6 23 yet they are rewarded of mercy in this life and in the life to come The blessing of God to rest vpon him and his posterity is set downe in two respects First generally I will make my couenant of peace with him so that he shall haue me a mercifull God Secondly particularly where the manner is set downe that the Priesthood should remaine to him and to his posterity for euer so that both his seede should flourish so long as the Iewish Church should continue and the honour of the high Priesthood should abide among his posterity Vntill the high Priest of our profession Iesus Christ should come to make an end of all Ceremonies Hebr. 3 1. The accomplishment whereof is not hard to shew in the holy Scriptures and in other approued Histories For the lineall succession of the Priesthood from him to the carrying away into captiuity to Babylon is expressed in the books of the Chronicles 1 Chron. 6 4 15 from the father to the sonne and from one generation to another From the captiuity vntill the time of Alexander the Great to whom the Persian Monarchy befell and whom Iadduah the high Priest met in his Priestly robes coming to conquer Ierusalem the genealogy is remembred in the booke of Nehemiah Ioseph antiq lib. 11 cap. 8. chapter 12 10 22. Neyther may it seeme strange vnto vs that Nehemiah should set downe the succession so farre seeing from the reigne of Artaxerxes whom he serued being in chiefe place about him to the Monarchy of Alexander the Great who ouercame Darius were not aboue sixty yeares as the Chronology Computation of the reigne of the Persian Kings declareth And from the times of Alexander the Great Ioseph antiq lib. 15 cap. 3. to Aristobulus and his sonne who was the last whom Herod treacherously and cruelly caused to be drowned the pedigree is to be seene in Iosephus and others Afterward the Priesthood was set to sale and those promoted that made their owne way by sums of money or by fauour of friends or both together After this promise made to Phinehas Moses annexeth a description of the whoremaster and the whore that prouoked Gods wrath and troubled Israel who are set forth by their names by their family by their condition and degree The name of the man was Zimri his family was the tribe of Simeon touching his estate hee was one of the Princes of his tribe by whom no doubt being a man of sort and quality hee was accompanied and countenanced yea it should appeare he was a mouer and perswader of others to commit the like wickednes whereby it came to passe that the greatest number of this tribe perished with him as may be gathered by the new suruey and numbering of the tribes which is taken in the Chapter following Numb 26 14 and 1 23. For they which in the former mustering and numbering amounted vnto the number of nine and fifty thousand and three hundred were now diminished and abated to two twenty thousand and two hundred for their idolatry and fornication so that with this Zimri the greater number of this tribe perished They did partake with him in the sinne of whoredome and therefore they communicared with him in the plague and punishment of it Hence it came to passe that whereas all the other tribes in a manner amounted to more then forty thousand this tribe attayned onely vnto the number of two and twenty thousand and two hundred The name of the harlot was Cosbi her stocke and kindred was of the Midianites in respect of her place shee was the daughter of one of the chiefe Princes of that people
the sinne might be knowne and the men also knowne that do commit it And to what end doth the Apostle Iohn tell vs 1 Iohn 5 ver 16. There is a sinne to death and of seeing our brother sinne vnto death If then it may be seene it may be knowne And hence it is that when the Church saw Iulian the Apostata who had bin enlightned with the truth and bin zealous in the profession of it to despite God openly to lift vp himselfe against his word and to make a mocke of all religion they would haue no more to do with him they accounted him as a diuell and they prayed with one consent against him that God would confound and destroy him They did not pray vnto God for his conuersion and to giue him a new heart but because he could not repent being past amendment they called vpon God to hasten his condemnation that he might shew thereby what account he maketh of his most holie truth Last of all we ought to haue a care to bee Vse 3 helpfull and profitable to the Church and to be zealous in the seruice of God that thereby to the comfort of our selues and our posterity we may carry a sweet remembrance a blessed report in the Church for euer The loue of Mary in annointing Christ with the precious oyle which she powred on his head is promised by Christ to bee remembred for euer in what place of the worlde soeuer the Gospel shold be published Verily I say vnto you whersoeuer this Gospel shal bee preached throughout all the world there shall also this that she hath done be spoken of for a memoriall of her Matth. 26 13. The praise of Iehoiada is recorded in Scripture he dyed an old man and full of dayes they buried him in the City of Dauid with the Kings because hee had done good in Israel and toward God his house 2 Chr. 14 16. This serueth to reprooue such as care not at all what men thinke or speak of them and regard not what name they haue good or bad what report is giuen of them honorable or dishonorable sweet or rotten so they may preuayle in their purposes Cicer. of f●ic l 1. and bring to effect their diuellish deuices An heathen man could say It is the part of a retchlesse and dissolute man to neglect what a man sayth of him Salomon teacheth vs that a good name is more to bee desired then great riches and a louing fauour more then siluer and gold Pro. 22 1 Eccles 7 3 This is not attained by flattery or falshood but by godlinesse and righteousnesse by humility and an vpright conscience Riches are fraile and transitory subiect to vanity and corruption but a good name and louing fauour remaine for euer So the Prophet describing the blessednes of the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth in his commandements sayth that he shal neuer be moued but the righteous shal bee had in perpetual remembrance Ps 112.6 A good name is better then a great name And albeit the godly be despised in the world yet God will aduance theyr estimation giue thē a sweet sauour among all good men True it is sinfull men are magnified of sinners for euen the sinners loue those that loue them Luke 6 32. to receyue the like of them againe yet they shall bee made abhominable vnto the Saints and their name shall bee cursed and as much loathed as the filthy fauour of his carkasse that lyeth rotting in the graue So then seeing shame shall be as an vnseparable companion of wickednesse and no man can separate those things which God hath ioyned together on the other side heere is comfort to the godly that GOD will vndertake the protection of their names so that no creature shall bee able to rob them of it but as he preserueth them to saluation so he will maintayne their credit and estimation Wee see this in many the deare seruants of God who albeit they haue had their names for a time diminished impayred yet they haue beene restored and recouered The name of Naboth was greatly blemished with the slanderous imputation of treason and blasphemy but that momentary shame is swallowed vp and recompensed with euerlasting honour throughout all generations 1 King 21.10 The like wee might say of Cranmer Ridley Latimer Hooper Bradford Philpot and many other the deare seruants of God that gaue their liues for the truth howsoeuer they were condemned for heretikes yet they are renowned for Saints and shall be so acknowledged to the end of the world 16 Againe the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 17 Vexe the Midianites and smite them 18 For they trouble you with their wiles wherewith they haue beguiled you as concerning Peor and as concerning their sister Cosbi the daughter of a Prince of Midian which was slaine in the day of the plague because of Peor We haue hitherto in this chapter handled the transgression of the Israelites and the reconciliation of God Now remayneth the decree and determination of God against the Midianites For after that God had chastened his owne people and iudgement hath begun to breake out against the house of God hee riseth vp in wrath and indignation as a iust Iudge against his enemies Heerein we are to marke two things First the commandement Secondly the reasons or causes of the commandement The commandement and charge directed vnto Moses in this Smite and slay the Midianites Thus doth wickednesse returne vpon the heads of the authors thereof These enemies being drawne into the league to take part with the Moabites had conspired against Israel soght to subdue them not by strength but by sensuality nor by force of warre but by lasciuiousnesse and wantonnesse of women Now the wheele is turned vpon themselues the stone is rolled vpon them that first stirred it and mischiefe falleth vpon the first contriuers Obiect But heere out of this commandement arise two questions fit to be mooued and worthy to be discussed First inasmuch as God euery where forbiddeth reuenging of our owne causes and quarrels why doth hee now permit and prouoke the people of Israel therunto as if they were not by nature prone enough to vengeance I answere Answ there is a double kinde of reuenge one priuate the other publicke Priuate reuenge is that which proceedeth from the priuate motion of our corrupt nature seeking to satisfie our owne malice with the hurt of others This is forbidden by our Sauiour Christ Mathew 5 44 commanding vs to loue our enemies and to ouercome euill with good Publique reuenge is that which is commanded and warranted by God being imposed vpon vs either mediatly by authority of the Magistrate or immediatly by the secret instinct of the Spirit This is allowed and lawfull as we saw before in Phinehas and others inasmuch as it proceedeth not from the corruption of nature but from the inspiration of God For God the iust reuenger of all wickednesse may vse the ministery of
much the rather because it is so generally neglected Nay it is not onely shamefully omitted but the contrary is commonly practised For how many are there that make a mocke at the miseries of the Church as Shemei did at the troubles of Dauid who cursed him when he should haue comforted him 2. Sam. 16 7. Thus are the deare Saints of God dealt withall thus they are reuiled and railed vpon with horrible taunts thus they are slandered and reproached with bitter imputations such as the diuell deuiseth and malice setteth abroach The bowels of their pity are breathings out of cruelty Their shewing of compassion is the adding to their affliction Their visiting of them in their aduersity is a casting vppon them of the greatest miserie These are the daies of the patience of the Saints which are filled with reproaches and giue their cheekes to him that smiteth them Lamen 3 30. Let them commit their causes to God who in his good time will looke vpon them for good and reward their enemies according to their workes Verse 17. Vexe the Midianites and smite them Heere is the commandement giuen by God to Moses and by Moses to the Israelites to execute vengeance vppon the Midianites because they drew the people of God into sin allured them to whoredome enticed them to idolatry and brought vpon them a most fearfull iudgement that entred in among them destroyed many thousāds of them This commandement giuen in this place is afterwards renewed and executed according to the direction giuen vnto them For inasmuch as they troubled Israel the Lord troubled them to be put to the sword so that their cities were burned their goods were spoiled their Women captiued their Kings destroyed and all theyr males massacred This is set downe more at large in Numb 31 1 2. where the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Reuenge the children of Israel of the Midianites and afterwards shalt thou be gathered vnto thy people And Moses spake to the people saying Harnesse some of you vnto war and let them go against Midian to execute the vengeance of the Lord against Midian Seeing then that they haue such a charge commission from God to destroy them we learne from hence That warre is lawfull Doctrine The people of God may lawfully make warre The people of God may lawfully make wars both offensiue and defensiue against their enemies The truth hereof appeareth in many places of the word of God This is charged vpon the people of God Deu. 7 2. 20 10 11 12 13. Whē the Lord thy God shall bring thee into the Land whither thou goest to possesse it and shall roote out many nations before thee then thou shalt smite thē thou shalt vtterly destroy them thou shalt make no couenant with them nor haue compassion on them And afterward in the same book when thou comest neere vnto a city to fight against it thou shalt offer it peace but if it will make no peace with thee but make warre against thee then thou shalt besiedge it and the Lord thy God shall deliuer it into thine hands and thou shalt smite all the males therof with the edge of the sword So when Amalek fought with Israel in Rephidim which was the first of the nations that encountered with thē after they came out of the land of Egypt Moses saide to Ioshua Choose vs out men go fight with Amalek so hee discomfited Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword Exod. 17 9. The like we see in Ioshua the Generall of the Lords hoast at the taking and winning of Ioshua so soone as the wall fell down at the sounding of the Trumpets and the shouting of the people they tooke the City and vtterly destroyed all that was in the City both mā and woman young and old with the edge of the sword Iosh 6 21. 10 13. This the Prophet teacheth when hee praised the Lord for deliuering him from the hand of all his enemies Psal 18 34 37 38. He teacheth my hands to fight so that a bow of brasse is broken with mine armes I haue pursued mine enemies and taken them and haue not turned againe till I had consumed them c. Reason 1 And howsoeuer these testimonies may seem sufficient to perswade this truth yet we shall be better confirmed therin if we consider the strength of reason to inforce the former truth First it is a title proper to God to bee called the Lord of hoasts and al warres lawfully vndertaken are called the battels of the Lord so that as God is serued in the day of battell so he is the Captaine and Leader of the Armie Hence it is that Moses saieth The Lord is a man of warre his name is Iehouah Exod. 15 3. This is it which Saul said to Dauid when hee promised to giue him his eldest daughter to wife Onely be a valiant sonne vnto mee fight the Lords battels 1 Sam. 18 17. And it is saide that many of the enemies of Gods people fell downe wounded because the war was of God 1 Chron. 5 32. Seeing then God is the Lord of hoasts a man of war the Captain of the army the onely author and sole giuer of victory wee must needs hold that warres are lawfull and may bee lawfully vsed and taken in hand Reason 2 Secondly as wee are taught the lawfulnes of war by the titles of God so we are farther assured of it by the speciall commandements which God giueth for the carrying of armes against common enemies as also by his gracious and mercifull promises made vnto his people for good successe and prosperous proceeding in their iust cause honest quarrel To this purpose tended the law of God charging Saul to smite Amalek and to destroy all that pertayned to him and to haue no compassion vpon them but to destroy them all 1 Sam. 15. Iudges 8 1 3. Likewise the Lord charged Ioshua to take all the men of war with him and to lye in wait on the backside of Ai to take it and to slay the inhabitants thereof with the sword Neither had the people of God onely the charge of a commādement but the comfort of a promise the commandement to warrant them the promise to strengthen and incourage them When Ioshua was to go against Iericho which was shut vp closed because of the children of Israel the Lord said vnto him Behold I haue giuen into thy hand Iericho and the king thereof and the strong men of war Iosh 6 2 3. And afterward when sundry kings gathered themselues together against the Gibeonites that had subiected thēselues to the Israelites the Lord said vnto Ioshua Feare them not for I haue giuen them into thine hand none of them shall stand against thee Iosh 10 8. Thirdly as the children of God haue prayed Reason 3 for the help of God in the successe of their busines and in the workes of their hands that they haue attempted and haue beene heard so when
more ease but rather the lesse ease the more torment because of the multitudes and thousands of them so on the earth there are many desperate sinners yet when once iudgement commeth they cannot by any meanes ease one another who shall not bee able to helpe themselues and therfore it is one of the vainest things in the world for any man to deceiue himselfe by following the corruption of the times and by dooing as the greatest part of people doe Be it that no extraordinary iudgement come vpon vs generally or particularly yet when wee must dye the common death of all men and bee visited after the common visitation of all flesh Satan shall come charge vs for our sins what comfort can this minister vnto vs at that houre to alledge for our selues that we haue done as the multitude did haue walked with them in the way that leadeth to destruction And be it further granted that we feel no check of conscience or tentation of Satan but end our dayes in peace as one that quietly falleth asleepe yet when we come to stand before the seate of God where euery man shall beare his owne burden and receiue according to his owne workes Rom. 2 6. 2. Cor. 5 10 what comfort or confidence can this giue vs to plead for our selues and say O we haue followed the multitude Let no man therefore dally with himselfe so delude his owne soule for this must come to passe we must all dy and appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ that euery man may receiue the things done in his body when the heauens shall passe away as a scroule and the elements melt with heat Be it some generall plague donot come before in this life or some particular iudgment do not seaze vpon vs yet in the end we cannot escape when euery one must answere for himselfe in his owne person CHAP. XXVII 1. THen came the daughters of Zelophehad the sonne of Hepher the sonne of Gilead the sonne of Machir the sonne of Manasseh of the families of Manasseh the son of Ioseph these are names of his daughters Mahlah Noah and Hoglagh and Milcah and Tirzah 2 And they stood before Moses and before Eleazar the Priest c THe former Chapter hath opened vnto vs the order to bee obserued in the diuision of the land that the greater tribe should haue the greater share and portion in the land the lesser a lesser portion therby to giue contentment satisfaction to euery one this was to bee done by lot to take away contention which often ariseth in like cases vpon like occasions as we see when some commons or wasteground commeth to bee enclosed one thinketh his fellow hath too much another thinketh himselfe hath too litle one wil haue his part lye in such a place another thinketh that parcell the fittest morsell for himselfe The diuision of this Chapter In this chapter obserue two things first touching the persons that should enioy the inheritance and of the right of succession secondly touching the designing and deputing of Ioshua the seruant of Moses to be his successour to be set ouer the people to conduct them vnto the land to fight the battels of the Lord and to giue to euery tribe his proper inheritance Concerning the first point to wit what persons should haue inheritance consider two things the occasion of a question and controuersie heere arising and the deciding and determining heereof without any farther doubt or contradiction by the sentence of God himself The occasion fel out in this maner When the families of the tribe of Manasseh came amōg the other tribes to bee numbred fiue sisters all the daughters of Zelophehad came likewise in their order hoping to receiue as the rest did and thinking themselues as capable as any but because their father was already dead and left no heyres males behind him some of their Tribe would haue put them by theyr inheritance that themselues might obtaine the more not regarding what they gained by the losse of others A common euill of the world a common practise of worldly men These women being left fatherlesse comfortlesse and friendlesse exposed therefore to iniuries and like to be ouerborne finding few or none to stand for them and to take their part complained to Moses and to the rest of the Princes heads of the people which is the lawfull remedy left vnto vs in all wrongs whatsoeuer They do plainely declare the truth of their cause the equity of their request that they were Israelites of the seed of Abraham of the Tribe of Manasseh whose father dyed in the wildernesse not in the rebellion and conspiracy of Korah Numb 16 whose companies were worthily destroyed and disinherited neyther yet perished he in any murmuring of the people neyther for any publike and notorious offence committed against God but dyed a naturall death when his time was come as all men must dye inasmuch as all haue sinned Rom. 5 and therefore they shew that their kindred their flesh and their bones had no iust cause to exclude thē from such inheritance as their father should haue had if he had bin aliue But of this more afterward both of the yssue of their request the deciding of this question The daughters of Zelophehad stood before Moses and Eleazar and before the Princes c. These women after the decease of their father were left as we say to the wide world and were like to sustaine great wrong to the preiudice both of their father and of themselues and their posterity and of the whole Tribe when one family was like to perish in Israel Heere we see The fatherles do lye open to wrongs iniuries that aboue all other such as are left destitute of protection as the fatherlesse the widow the stranger the poore and such like lye open to receyue wrongs and iniuries Such whose forlorne distressed estate ought to moue speciall pitty and commiseration euen they are least regarded and releeued Zac. 7 10. Iob 31 21. Hence it is that God promiseth to take care of them and to protect thē and to punish their oppressors Exod. 22 22 23 24. A great comfort to all that are in distresse to consider that God is on their side he will be a father to the fatherlesse and an husband to the widow These daughters of Zelophehad appeale to the Magistrate they do not side themselues with others to make a commotion as turbulent spirits vse to doe but they go to Moses as supreme and to the Princes vnder him Doctrine We are to go to the Magistrate ●o redresse our wrongs Wherby we learne that in al wrongs and iniuries we must go to the Magistrate and seek helpe of him we must make our causes knowne to him and seeke remedy and redresse at his hands This hath bene the practise of Gods seruants from time to time Heereunto commeth the Parable of the wise woman
brethren his vnkles Lastly if his father haue no brethren the inheritance must descend to the next kinsman whatsoeuer he be of his tribe and family Here a question may bee asked whether this law binde in conscience all Nations and persons for euer Quest And many things may be saide of it and for it as most equall and the voyce of nature it selfe Neuerthelesse all things considered Answ I rather take this law to be among the Iudicials that do not necessarily tye all places persons to the performance of them Hence it is that it is saide afterward verse 11 that it is a statute of iudgement and to whom not to all Nations but to the children of Israel so that though some of their iudiciall and politicall lawes do binde yet all do not as we see in Exodus where they are handled in the 21 22 23 chapters Secondly this law appointeth that the inheritance must of necessity passe from one to another from the father vnto the childe c. without any interruption if then this order must hold as a perpetuall ordinance for euer it should be vtterly vnlawfull to sell a mans inheritance for any cause or vpon any occasion or to buy a mans inheritance because the Iewes were as well tyed to that and if they did it must returne to the owner again at the yeare of Iubile as wee reade in many places of the Law of Moses Leuit. 25 23 24 Numb 36 8 and it appeareth farther in the practise of Naboth 1 Kings 21 3 when Ahab required of him his Vineyard eyther by way of sale or exchange he answered The Lord forbid it mee that I should giue the inheritance of my fathers to thee Thus doth God ordaine that euery mans Land should keep and continue within his owne tribe and not passe from tribe to tribe which would bring much confusion and an intermingling of one tribe with another all which were peculiar to this people Thirdly God ordained it as a statute also in Israel that the eldest should haue a double portion of all that a man hath because hee is the beginning of his strength therefore the right of the first borne is his this is grounded vpon the same reasons that this is yet who accounteth this precisely imposed vpon all as a morall ordinance Nay M Dod exposit on 5. Command some of good note and name in the Church are of opinion that they should receiue the best portion that are best and inherite most that haue most grace in theyr hearts and therfore they take not this precept to be as a president to binde all posterity And if this do not necessarily binde why should the former Fourthly the words of the law in this place do not seeme to mee as a law of annexing the inheritance to these that it should not be lawfull to alter this course It is saide if a man dye and haue no sonne or if he dye and haue no daughter then shall the inheritance descend thus and thus but this hindreth not but a man while he liueth may by will or otherwise make conueyance of his estate and this law is nothing against such conueyance Lastly we find that the Israelites themselues did sometimes giue inheritance to their daughters euen while they had heyres males as appeareth in Caleb Iudg. 1 15. 1. Chron. 2 18. Salomon was not the eldest sonne of Dauid yet hee succeeded his father in his kingdome and had more then all the rest To conclude if grace must haue the first place vertue must make the heyre then nature must giue place to grace But to leaue this doubt Doctrine Propriety of goods is the ordinance of God let vs come to the Doctrine for heereby wee learne that the propriety of goods is the ordinance and blessing of God he hath appointed that men should haue theyr possessions peculiar to themselues in this life So did Abraham buy a possession for buriall and paied for it currant money among Merchants Gen. 23 16 he layde no clayme to it before he had purchased it as if it had beene no lesse his thē any other The Patriarkes chalenged as proper to themselues the Welles which by theyr owne labour and industry they had digged and complained of wrong and violence when they were taken from them Gen. 26. To this end did God appoint that euery Tribe should haue inheritance giuen them by lot Hence it is also that wee reade that the faithfull haue had possessions and retained their possessions and are saide many of them to bee exceeding rich to haue possession of flocks possession of heards and great store of seruants and others are saide to become great to haue siluer and gold and iewels Gen. 26 24 as Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph Obadiah and infinit others In the New Testament wee reade of Iohn the Euangelist of Ioseph of Arimathea a Disciple of Christ who honoured the buriall of his Master of Lazarus raised vp by Christ his two sisters of Simon the leaper of Ioanna of Susanna and these liued in the daies of Christ and had possessions After his ascension many beleeuers solde theyr possessions Tabitha was full of good works Cornelius the Captain gaue much almes to all the people Philemon and Philip and sundry others all which professing and some of them preaching the Gospel are no where commanded to abiure their possessions and to renounce their houses and lands neyther did they betake themselues to a supposed community knowing that priuat possession and Christian profession stand together and do not one ouerthrow the other as hath bene plentifully declared elsewhere Reason 1 The grounds of this doctrine are very apparent First God approueth of buying and selling or else the first Christians might not haue solde their possessions and taken money for them and they did alienate them from them not because they could not lawfuly be possessed but because the poore should be releeued Act. 4 34. The Lord likewise giueth rules in the Law for the right ordering thereof Leuit. 25 15. Secondly God commandeth almesgiuing to the people as an holy and Christian dutie which he also promiseth to reward to a cuppe of cold water Matth 10. and euery where he commendeth the releeuing of the wants and necessities of their poore brethren threatneth the contrary Deut. 15 11. Thirdly hee forbiddeth stealing and wronging one of another in temporall things and hurting one an other in their goods Exod. 20 15. As also the defrauding one of another Mark 10 19. Lastly euery man hath his children proper to himselfe euery man knoweth his owne children and can say These are mine these are not mine Now children are part of their fathers goods as appeareth Iob 1 As then they are proper vnto euery man so also ought other goods that euery man may know his owne Vse 1 This reprooueth the Anabaptists that would bring in a communion or rather a confusion of all things who while they goe about to
conuersation of their wiues Againe the Apostle Paul teacheth the wife to feare her husband Ephes 5 33 and Peter teacheth the same Shee must haue her conuersation with feare 1 Pet. 3 2. This duty is seated in the heart and helpeth to set in order all other duties This will shew it selfe in meeknesse of Spirit which is in the fight of God of great price and in obedience in all lawfull things that not by constraint but willingly and readily as seruing Christ without murmuring or gainsaying If they performe these things they shall be christian wiues and the daughters of Abraham and Sarah to their great comfort Such will do their husbands good and not euill all the dayes of their liues Prou. 31 12. Hence it is that Salomon sayeth A vertuous woman is a crowne vnto her husband Prou. 12 4 but she that is stubborne and disobedient maketh him ashamed and is as rottennesse in his bones A good wife is not onely an honour but an ornament vnto her husband and therefore is compared vnto a crowne of gold If shee had beene compared vnto the ring vpon his finger it had bene a great Ornament if to a Chaine of Gold about his necke it had beene a farre greater but behold while shee keepeth her selfe in her place and dischargeth her duty with loue and subiection she is said to be a crowne vnto him then which what greater honour and glory can there be And therefore in another place he saith Houses and riches are the inheritance of fathers but a prouident wife is from the LORD Prou. 19 14. On the other side he sheweth that it is better to dwell in a corner of the house top thē with a brawling woman in a wide house Prou. 21 9. And againe A continuall dropping in a very rainy day and a contentious woman are alike Prou. 27 15 and 19 13. Lastly it is the duty of husbands seeing Vse 3 authority is committed vnto them ouer theyr wiues and as it were the brydle put into their hands to loue them tenderly to defend them from euils and to cherish them as their owne flesh as Christ Iesus doth the Church Eph. 5. The heathen king could tell Sarah that her husband was as a couering of the eyes Gen. 20 16. It is his duty therefore to dwell with his wife according to knowledge giuing honour to the wife as vnto the weaker vessell 1 Pet. 3 7 as beeing heyres together of the grace of life that their praiers be not interrupted And why are they commanded to dwell together but that the husband should yeeld to her these 4. things first good example secondly instruction thirdly maintenance lastly employment in her calling for his good and the good of his family CHAP. XXXI 1. AND the Lord spake vnto Moses saying 2. Auenge the children of Israel on the Midianites afterward thou shalt be gathered vnto thy people 3. And Moses spake to the people saying Arme some of your selues vnto the warre and let them goe against the Midianites and auenge the Lord on Midian 4. Of euery Tribe a thousand throughout all the Tribes of Israel shall ye send to the warre 5. So there were deliuered out of the thousands of Israel a thousand of euery Tribe twelue thousand armed for warre 6. And Moses sent them to the warre a thousand of euery Tribe them and Phinchas the sonne of Eleazar the Priest to the warre with the holy Instruments and the Trumpets to blow in his hand MOSES hauing taken order for the Church now commeth to the ciuill plantation and to the inheritance of the Land This had beene promised to theyr fathers Gen. 15 now they begin to preuaile and to receiue as it were the first fruites of it to assure them of the full and finall conquest of the rest Obserue in this Chapter the history of the battell fought against the Midianites The contents of this chapt who combining themselues with the Moabites as we see saw chap. 25 drew the Israelites to whoredome by the counsell of Balaam when they despayred to preuayle against them by the sword By this meanes they defiled themselues with Idolatry also and prouoked the wrath of God to the destruction of many thousands among them The parts of this Chapter are three First of the procuring causes of this warre Secondly the manner how it was followed fought Thirdly the euent and yssue of the whole The first part is in these words wherin we see the Commandement of God and the preparation vsed to accomplish this commandement For Moses sendeth them foorth and with them Phinehas the Priest appointeth souldiers to execute that which GOD commandeth out of euery Tribe Obiect From this arise diuers doubts that are to be discussed First why doth God command vengeance in this place that forbiddeth it else where Rom. chapter 12 verse 19. Deut. chap. 32 verse 35 Answer I answere this may not seeme strange vnto vs neyther should we thinke there is any change in GOD but wee must know the difference and distinction betweene the reuenge of God and of priuate men True it is God will haue his children beare iniuries patiently and to giue place to wrath and to ouercome euill with good Rom. 13 4 yet hee retayneth power to himselfe to execute vengeance against his enemies and neuer disclaymeth that office nay he challengeth it as proper to himself For he wil execute iustice and iudgement by himselfe and his ministers so often as it pleaseth him Numb 25 16. So then albeit the faithfull must bridle the desire of reuenge and not retaile like for like yet when God calleth and appointeth them to be executioners of his wil and wrath he putteth a sword into their hand and when the cause is iust their calling is lawfull Thus we see This is called the reuenge of the Lord verse 3. how souldiers are warranted to shedde blood for they are called to be magistrates onely it is required of such that they be carried kindled with an holy zeale of Gods glory not with priuat hatred grudge and reuenge which make a thing lawful to them vnlawfull Secondly Obiect the question may be asked what is meant hereby that Moses shall be gathered to his people I answere that he should dye Answ the body returning to the earth the spirit to God that gaue it Eccl. 12 7 for with him are the spirits of iust men made perfect Heb. 12 23. So it is said of Abraham Gen. 25 8 he gaue vp the ghost and died an old man full of dayes and was gathered to his people that is to his fathers Gen. 15 15. So then heereby wee must learne the immortality of the soule for Abrahams body was gathered to the body of Sarah onely for he was buried in the sepulcer with her So it is said of Isaac Gen. 35 29 hee was gathered to his godly forefathers and of Moses himselfe afterward Deut. 30 50 as also of Aaron before chap. 20 24. But it will be
as wee haue receiued from forraine enemies and domesticall And what blessings wee haue all receiued in particular what tongue can expresse what heart can comprehend Doth not GOD on the other side requyre much at our hands O let vs beware and take heede lest these blessings bee turned into curses and his mercies into iudgments CHAP. XXXII 1 NOw the children of Reuben and the children of Gad had a very great multitude of cattell tand when they saw the land of Iaazer and the land of Gilead that behold the place was a place for cattell 2 The children of Gad and the children of Reuben came and spake vnto Moses and to Eleazar the Priest and vnto the Princes of the congregation saying 3 At aroth and Dibon c. 4 Euen the countrey which the Lord smote before the congregation of Israel is a land for cattell thy seruants haue cattel 5 Wherefore said they if we haue found grace in thy sight let this land be giuen vnto thy seruants for a possession and bring vs not ouer Iordan COncerning the great victory giuen ouer the enemies of Israel wee haue already spoken now wee come to the diuiding of the inheritance among the Conquerors according to their estate and condition wherein consider three things The contents of this chapt First the occasion of distributing the land of the Midianites the victory being obtained Secondly the conditions of this distribution Thirdly the agreement and sending of them into the possession The occasion is in these verses the two tribes and the halfe had many cattel vpon which occasion they come to Moses and request this land which they had lately seazed into their hands the chiefe townes whereof are reckoned vp that they might sit down there not bee compelled to passe ouer Iordan they thought they might speed themselues nearer home and neuer trouble themselues to goe so farre The sons of Reuben are in the first verse set before the sonnes of Gad because Reuben was the eldest and first borne and yet oftentimes in this Chapter the sons of Gad are set before them the cause whereof seemeth to be this Why the sons of Gad are set before the sonnes of Manasseh because they were the authors of this counsell to shift and prouide for themselues and to aske of Moses the land of the Midianites From hence sundry doctrines may bee pointed out Doubtlesse euery tribe had store of cattell for Gen. 46 32 they are said to bee shepheards men of cattell and Exod. 12 38 there went vp with them out of Egypt flockes and heardes euen very much cattell yet the tribes heere mentioned did especially and aboue the rest abound with cattell We learne heereby that God doth distribute his blessings differently hee giueth things temporall to one more and to another lesse as in his owne wisdome he seeth to be expedient and profitable for them He would haue vs stand in need one of another one nation of another one land of another one person of another that we might hold a communion among our selues al depend vpon him as vpon our soueraigne Lord. It is therefore the duty of one member to help another and to do good one to another euen as it is in the members of the body al haue not one office but euery one his speciall function but for the good comfort of the whole And as it is in temporall blessings so also it is in spirituall God giueth disperseth them variably These tribes do come to Moses to obtain their suit They attempt not by force or by fraud to get it they vse lawfull meanes they haue recourse to the Magistrate It is our duty therfore to go to the Magistrat to obtaine our right to make petition of lawfull things to him Again albeit the children of Israel smote this land of the Midianites yet it is said the Lord smote it because the labors endeauors of men come to nought of euery good action God is the principal agent the creature only the instrument is supported by his power From hence this ariseth that all good actions of the second cause are to be ascribed to the first cause as the chiefe worker therof See also the maner of their speech if we haue found grace in thy sight thus they speake to the Magistrate which teacheth that we ought to vse shew all reuerence humility both in word gesture to Magistrates and to our superiours Al these things are good serue for imitation but there is one thing more also must serue for our instruction though it be euil These tribes do seek their own profit altogether forget their brethren their mind was more vpō their own cattel then the procuring of the good estate of the rest Wee learne heereby Doctrine The loue of this world draweth from duties to God and man that the immoderate loue of this world is dangerous drawing to sin against God and to breake the bonds of nature Where the loue of the world of our selues is throughly settled it worketh a carelesse neglect of all others Abraham Lot loued as natural brethren nothing could separat them they went out of their countrey and from their kindred together Gen. 11 31 what seuered these but matters of the world when Lot looked on Sodome saw it fruitful as Eden he left Abraham and dwelled there which brought great trouble vpon himself Gen. 13. And afterward what caused Lots wife to looke backward c. was it not the loue of the things which he had left behind Gen. 19. Luke 17. Saul looked vpon the fattest of the sheep fel into disobedience lost his kingdom Achan looked vpō the wedge of gold the Babylonish garment set his hart vpon thē prouoked God against himself the host of Israel Ios 7 The like we might manifest by sūdry other examples of the yong man that came to Christ Ma. 19 of Iudas that betrayed his Master Math 26 of Demas that forsooke Paul and embraced this present world 2. Tim. 4. Reason 1 And no marueile For the loue of God the loue of the world are contrary the one to the other there is no affinity betweene them they are enemies and one cannot abide the other These can neuer looke each other in the face but by and by they turne their backs 1. Iohn 2 15 If any man loue the world the loue of the Father is not in him These two are as two contrary Masters no man therfore can serue them both for both require the whole seruice of a man both command contrary things Mat. 6 24. Secondly the desire of these worldly things is a ranke thorne Luke 8 and is the roote of all euill 1. Tim. 6. The hearts of men are hardened by it when once they are ensnared and taken in loue with it The world is a very harlot it speaketh faire promiseth much good it hath a painted
how the houre be spent so it be spent and respect not what they say so they haue said somewhat which is as fond a thing as if hee that buildeth an house should neuer regard with what stuffe he buildeth or hee that soweth whether he sow in the highway among the rockes and thornes or in his field Many there are that goe vp into the pulpit that neuer spend themselues nor waste their spirits nor decay their strength they are rather like those that are halfe asleep or stand vp to tell a tale or to vtter a dreame Whosoeuer is ignorant of the state of his people that neuer considereth hee speaketh to a deafe people that cannot heare but is carelesse in his place endangereth his owne soule and the soule of the people committed to his charge Hee then that would teach aright must put on zeale and be earnest in the Lords cause that so he may worke vpon their hearts and leaue stings in their consciences as Acts 2.37 while Peter preached they were pricked in their hearts and said Men and brethren what shall we doe Wee say commonly that cold coales heate no body It must therefore first come from his owne heart there must be heat there or else there shall neuer come any heate to others We see by experience that cold iron and hote can neuer be mixed together but before they can be tempered they must both of them be well heated in the fire so except the heart of the Minister and of the people be heated hee shall neuer fasten any thing vpon them or worke any good in them It is true it is the worke of the Lord to heate the soule as it is he that warmeth the body this hee doth by instruments the fire and the Sunne so hee doth the soule and conscience by his Ministers and by his word All parents are charged to whet the Law vpon their children Deut 6 7 if parents must do this to their children then much more ought the Ministers of God to be earnest in this duty If any aske wherein this earnestnesse and feruency consisteth I answer not barely in crying out with a loud voyce as many suppose For many men haue no voyce to speake loud and there are many that speake loud who haue little heate or zeale in them Some will be as earnest in alledging a bare testimony of Scripture as others can be in making application These doe it more out of vse or custome then from any feeling or touch of conscience in themselues Seeing then the earnestnesse that we require may be without the loudnesse of voyce and the loudnesse of the voyce may bee without earnestnesse wee must find it elsewhere to wit in the power of the Spirit that speaketh in him It is not the earnestnes of the voyce that is so much required albeit it falleth out many times where the heart is truly affected that there the voyce will be extended to the vttermost and yet euen in a weake voice proceeding from a weak body a Minister may truly shew the zeale of his heart as well as if the word were deliuered with a loud and powerfull voyce and God requireth no more then a man hath 2 Cor. 8 12. The Apostle saith that his bodily presence was weake among the Corinthians and his speach held as contemptible 2 Cor. 10 10 whereby it seemeth he was not one of the sonnes of thunder that had a great voyce neuerthelesse we find that the power and efficacy of the Spirit did both appeare and abound in him So then the Ministers of God must be zealous and feruent in their places that so they may the better discharge their consciences and also bring the more profit to those that are committed vnto them Vse 3 Thirdly it condemneth those that censure the Ministers of God for their earnestnes and zeale in deliuering the word of God Such persons as are ready to commend a seruant that is earnest in doing his Masters will with a good affection will condemne the Minister of God when hee deliuereth the word with such earnestnes These spare not to say to him as Paul did to Festus Act. 26 24 that they preach as if they were mad or beside themselues But if the answere of Paul will not serue and suffice these men who replyed to that accusation I am not mad most noble Festus but speake forth the words of truth and sobernesse Acts 26 24.25 let them take the words of the Prophet Hoseah chap. 9 7 the spirituall man is mad for the multitude of thine iniquity The abundance of iniquity and the obstinacy of wicked men running on in their sinne as a violent flood that runneth ouer the bankes were able to make the Minister mad with crying to them to leaue their sinnes and to forsake their euill wayes when they are so set vpon them that say the Minister what he can and let him cry out as loud as he list they will not abate one haire or a pinne of their pride or remit one houre of their prophaning the Sabbath or drinke one draught nay not one drop the lesse or the couetous person giue one penny or halfe penny the more to relieue the needy members of Christ I say the consideration of this were able to make the Minister euen mad in deliuering of his message which God hath put into his mouth If a father should be beside himselfe for the wickednesse of his gracelesse children would not euery man pitty the father and spit in the faces of those children and hold them worthy of all punishment but what would they say to such children as should go vp and downe and boast themselues that they were the causes of their fathers madnesse Are there not some graceles hearers O that there were not too many that when they haue made their Minister as it were mad with reprouing them that will insult ouer them and glory among their companions that they haue made their Minister preach as if he were madde howbeit if it be for the glory of God and the benefit of his people they need not care nor esteem to be iudged of men or account it any disgrace from the mouthes of gracelesse people to be accounted mad we must walke through good report and euill report it skilleth not therefore though wee be reputed madde so it bee for a good cause for the beating down of prophaning the Sabbath of contempt of the word of oppression pride couetousnes and such like enormities There was not a man more meeke vpon the earth then Moses yet when he came from the mount and saw that the people had sinned he presently grew so angry that hauing the two Tables of the Law in his hand written by the finger of God he threw them downe to the ground and brake them in pieces The people of this generation account their Ministers for a lesser matter then this to bee mad and out of their wittes but while they cry out aloud that their contempt
two points First The contents of this chapt the seuerall mansions and stations where the Israelites rested and stayed Secondly a law and commandement how they should behaue themselues toward the Canaanites and how their land should be diuided among thē Touching the first that is theyr iournies in the Wildernesse it is set downe generally v. 1 and 2. and then particularly how God led them from place to place first he noteth the place from whence they went till they came to the red sea afterward notwithstanding theyr often infirmities and fallings from God he brought them in despite of their enemies and all opposition of flesh and blood to the borders of the Land which many of the faithfull before them desired to see but did not see it onely they beleeued the promise in theyr heart The people of God had long bene deteyned in slauery and bondage now GOD brought them forth with a mighty hand and an out-stretched arme killing all the first born of Egypt and destroying their Idols in which they trusted whereupon the Egyptians were striken with such a sudden astonishment and amazement that they were not able to resist and withstand the Israelites but were compelled to open them a free passage to depart Thus thē they went out early in the morning hauing eaten the Paschall Lambe the euening before they had liued many yeares in great heauinesse and endured many tentations in the Land of Egypt but they go out thence with their young and with their olde with their sonnes and with their daughters with their flocks and with their heards in great ioy much comfort of heart so that they might say with the Prophet Psal 126 1 2. When the Lord turned againe the captiuity of Sion wee were like them that dreame then was our mouth filled with laughter and our tongue with singing then saide they among the heathen The Lord hath done great things for them the Lord hath done great things for vs whereof we are glad Thus doth the Lord turne the ioy of the wicked into heauinesse and contrariwise the heauinesse of his children into ioyfulnesse This teacheth vs Doctrine The Church is preserued from all dangers and deliuered from bondage that God preserueth his Church in the midst of dangers when it wanteth humane defence and protection and deliuereth it out of bondage and slauery wherein it is holden Exod. 12 22. Ezek. 9 6. True it is God doth many times giue ouer his people to serue hard masters and to suffer many calamities for a time yet in the end he deliuereth them when they call vpon him Ier. 25 11 12. Mic. 2 10. This truth standeth vpon good grounds Reason 1 For first when he deliuereth them into the enemies hands he doth it to correct them and not to corrupt them to bring them the neerer vnto him not to cast them farther off from him wherby it appeareth that he hath a purpose and meaning to redeeme them and to bring them out of their hands Secondly God will neuer cast off his people he loueth them with an vnchangeable loue and therefore will accept them and receiue them vpon their repentance and humiliation He hath a speciall feeling of their miseries and therfore he will giue them deliuerance Thirdly God will magnifie his owne mercy and power toward his people by giuing them deliuerance It would haue beene a great dishonour to the great Name of God if he had suffered the Egyptians to hold their rodde euermore ouer the Israelites and the loynes of his people to be clasped and compassed therewith therfore to shew his mercy and power toward them to magnifie his owne honour he sent them deliuerance and brought them out of that horrible seruitude and captiuity Vse 1 This gracious dealing of God admonisheth the enemies of God into whose hands hee hath for a time deliuered his people to bee Lords ouer them not too much to tyrannize and triumph ouer them because howsoeuer God suffer them to bee vnder their power for a while that they lift vp their hands against them and trample them vnder their feete yet the Lord will not forget eyther to bee iust or mercifull he will take them out of the snare of the hunter and the more they haue insulted ouer them in the pride of their harts the greater shall be their deliuerance yea their deliuerance shall bee the cause of the destruction of these enemies Thus did Moses speake to the Israelites These Egiptians which yee haue seene ye shall neuer see them againe any more for euer Exod. 14 13. So then we may conclude the wofull and wretched condition of all the Churches enemies because albeit they seeme for a time to be as it were Lords of the earth and to haue power in themselues to doe what pleaseth them yet their turne shal be the next and their destruction sleepeth not For when the Israelites were deliuered out of the hands of the Egyptians that were cruell masters ouer them it was not onely the cause of their shame but of their destruction also as appeareth in the death of all the first borne and in that hee drowned Pharaoh and his host in the red sea so that these things being duely considered the wicked haue no cause at all to triumph and insult ouer the children of GOD when they haue gotten them in subection vnder them Secondly this teacheth euery soule that Vse 2 belongeth to God if he fall into this captiuity and estate to be ruled by cruell Lords that they should suffer it with all patience this is but for a while Heauines may abide at euening but ioy cometh in the morning Psal 30 for God will surely deliuer them What though the bondage bee sharpe and bitter yet this must be their comfort they shall haue deliuerance out of all and ought to nourish such hope in them that although they see no meanes of deliuerance yet they must looke vp to God and waite his leysure and in the ende they are sure of an happy yssue Exod. 3 9. God neuer afflicteth vs without iust cause and therefore we should looke vpon our selues and search our owne hearts and labour to beare patiently our afflictions whatsoeuer they be whether they come before or after repentance For doubtles whosoeuer shal search his owne wayes shal not onely finde that God hath bin iust in punishing his sinnes but that hee hath also bene mercifull in not laying greater iudgments vpon him as iustly he might haue done and therefore hee ought not to murmure against him but patiently to beare his hand knowing that the greatest punishments that almighty God inflicteth vpon vs are nothing so great as those which wee haue deserued at his hands Thirdly we ought all to labour to be members Vse 3 of the true Church that so these priuiledges may belong vnto vs. It is a very great honour to liue vnder Gods protection and to abide vnder the shadow of the Almighty If we be deliuered at any time
and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart much more must wee acknowledge the author and giuer thereof to bee the searcher of the heart so that there is not any creature that is not manifest in his sight but al things are naked and open vnto the eyes of him with whom wee haue to doe Hebrewes 4 12 13. Will any that is brought before a Iudge and standeth in his presence beginne to mocke and iest as with a childe But the Lord is the Iudge of the whole world and he will reward euery man according to his workes Genes 18 25 and 21 49. Deuteronom 10 17 Acts 17 31. Romanes 2 5 6 and 3 6. So then they are desperately euill that dally with their owne saluation halting on both sides swimming betweene two streames and losing their first loue whereby they glorified God and adorned the profession of the Gospel Lastly it is required of euery good and Vse 3 faithfull seruant of God to bee zealous and amend This serueth to giue a watch word and warning to the greatest number of our professors among vs such as are accounted the most peaceable of the kingdome honest men iust dealers and ciuill liuers who can say with the Pharisie in the Gospel they are no theeues nor adulterers nor drunkards nor extortioners they hurt no man they wrong no man they meane well to all they follow their businesse quietly they liue among their neighbours peaceably they are no medlers nor busie-bodyes in other mens matters these think themselues therefore to be in good case to be assured of Gods loue and fauour to need no particular repentance yet in the meane season they haue no zeale nor care of religion in them But some wil say Are not the former points that you haue named good things Do you shalt passe but no farther and heere shall thy proud waues be stayed Iob 38 11. Vse 1 This serueth to reproue the cursed secte of the Anabaptists who bring in a confusion of all things that set the heauens out of theyr course and remoue the earth out of his place and breake vp the barres of the sea and turne the order that God hath setled vpside down For they can abide no priuate mans possessions but would haue all things common Thus they thinke to make themselues like to the Apostles but indeed they thereby resemble rather some of the Philosophers If we should see a man come into his neighbours ground pull vp the hedges teare vp the enclosures rend vp the fences fill vp the ditches take away the pales through downe the wals and remoue the bounds wee would hold him an enemy to humane society and to the expresse ordinance of God For wherefore hath God seuered and diuided people from people with bro●d seas deepe riuers and high mountains but that they should not passe those bounds nor inuade the possessions of others And this was the cause why in this place he bounded so exactly the Land of promise and teacheth thē where it should begin and where it should end on the East-side and on the West on the North-side and on the South And in the booke of Ioshua the seuerall bounds limits of euery Tribe is seuerally and largely expressed and described Hence it is that Salomon saith Prou. 22 28. Remoue not the ancient land-marke which thy fathers haue set This is the law of God and man a law vnder the Law and the Gospel to continue for euer True it is the Romanists would conclude from hence Obiect that their errors which haue gotten foot for a few hundred yeares climbed vp into the chayre of Moses ought to preuayle and take place But this is no better then to draw the words frō the litterall meaning to an allegory Answer which by the doctrine of theyr owne schooles cannot be sound Tho Aquinas Againe howsoeuer in worldly possessions prescription of time may carry some credite and be of some force Iudg. 11 26 yet in the matters of God no time thogh the hayres be neuer so gray can prescribe against the ancient of daies Dan. 7 22. For if it be a prerogatiue royall in a temporall kingdome as the lawyers teach that nullum tempus occurrit regi that is no time shall barre the king nor preiudice him of his right then much more must we hold that no time shall barre the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords of his right but his law must take place for euer against all other lawes customes immunities priuiledges and prescriptions whatsoeuer Lastly the doctrine of the Gospel which we professe is more ancient then all the deuices and inuentions of men which hath beene receyued and beleeued from the infancy of the Church and from the beginning of the world and therefore the late and new start vp religion of popery must rise vp before the hoary head thereof as the young man is commanded to honour the face of the old man Moreouer Obiect whereas they alledge this and vrge it to procure credite and authority vnto the works and writings of men as if the sayings of the Fathers were to stand for a law it is of no greater weight then the former And albeit it were sufficient to say Let God be true and euery man a lyar Rom. 3 4 yet we answer Answer farther that the Fathers are for the most part against them and refuse to be witnesses for them as might easily appeare in the maine controuersies betweene them and vs. Againe as they dissent from them so sometimes they dissent from themselues Lastly all the Prophets Apostles as a cloud of witnesses stand on our side and we teach nothing but what wee haue receyued of them and they are our warrant To returne then vnto the former point wee see the Anabaptists are iustly reprooued who cannot abide any bounds or buttelles or land-marks neither that any should be master of his owne possessions but would haue all go to spoyle and hauocke And as God would haue iust weights and measures obserued betweene man and man that they might buy sell one with another so he wold haue bounds and markes also vnchanged that equity and vprightnesse in all our dealings might take place For this cause Moses saith Cursed is he that remoueth his neighbours landmarke and all the people shall say Amen Deut 27 17 and 19 14. Diony Halic antiq lib. 2. The very heathen by the light of nature saw that such markes ought to be inuiolable which of old time had beene set in inheritances and they all thought that God himselfe was wronged and iniuried in such false dealings And because it should be accounted an holy matter they made a god of it according to their common manner which they called Terminus and dedicated a feast to him which they called Terminalia True it is this was a diuellish inuention to set vp an Idoll for the maintainance of equity yet nature taught engraued this
whereunto they are receiued so shall it bee taken from the lot of our inheritance 4 And when the Iubile of the children of Israel shall be then shall their inheritance be put vnto the inheritance of the Tribe whereunto they are receiued so shall their inheritance bee taken away from the inheritance of the tribes of our fathers WHereas Moses had spoken before of the diuiding of the inheritance in generall among the tribes in this place a certaine speciall case is propounded by the Manassites touching the right of inheritance before assigned to the daughters of Zelophehad to wit how prouision might bee made that the same portion might remaine in that tribe and not be conueyed or translated to some of the other tribes For they propound these 2 as repugnant one to the other the right of succession which these women had obtayned and the priuiledge of the yeare of Iubile which they thought was weakened by this meanes if happely these maydes should marry to any other husbands then men of their owne tribe neyther did they know how to cleare this doubt But Moses instructed of God setteth downe a Law that inheritance should not passe from tribe to tribe and that such as were inheritrixes might not marry any of other tribes but among their owne onely which was carefully obserued by these women This is the summe of this chapter wherewith the whole booke is concluded In this obserue three points The contents of this chapt first the question of the Manassites secondly the resolution of Moses thirdly the marriage of the daughters of Zelophehad Touching the first it is handled in these foure verses The question was moued by the chiefe heads of the tribe of Manasseh how the inheritance might rest without a manifest detriment to their tribe For if they should marry in another tribe it was as much as to cut off an arme from the body And by this meanes it might come to passe in processe of time that the chiefe portion assigned to one tribe might be possessed by men of other tribes which would breed great confusion and disorder This practice and proceeding of theirs teacheth first that the Magistrate is and ought to bee the supreme Iudge in causes of inheritance Secondly no man ought to bee Iudge in his owne cause Thirdly wee see how they come to Moses not in contempt or with a commotion as if they meant to gaine that by force which they could not obtayne by fauour but they beare themselues lowly and dutifully as became them to the Magistrate when they say The Lord commanded my Lord and againe My Lord was commanded Doctrine Inferiors must reuerence their superiors c. From hence wee learne that it is the duty of all inferiors to reuerence the superiors in gesture in word in deed We might also shew that Magistrates must acknowledge themselues to rule vnder God and to be Lords vnder that highest Lord. But wee will onely handle this point that inferiors must vse speeches of reuerence such as betoken subiection this we saw before chapt 11 28 and 32 5 25 31. 2 Kings 5 13 1 Peter 3 6. Nehem. 2 5. Esther 7 3. 2 Sam. 24 3. 1 Kings 1 23 24 31. 2 Kings 2 12 and 13 14. Mal. 1 6. 1 Sam. 25 24 25 26 27 28. Gen 16 9. The grounds first because superiors beare Reason 1 the image of God and are to their inferiors in Gods place as Moses was to Aaron when the Lord sayth Exod. 4 16. Thou shalt be vnto him in stead of God Secondly it is the expresse law of God To honor father and mother that is all superiours Exod. 20 12. Psal 82 6. 1 Tim. 5 3. They are set ouer inferiors for their good not for their owne 1 Tim. 2 ● where the Apostle teacheth that Princes are appointed vnto eminent place not to lift vp their hearts against theyr brethren and to maintain themselues in all riot and excesse but that the people may leade a quiet peaceable life vnder them Fourthly such do adorne the Gospel 1 Tim 6 1. This serueth to reprooue such as are so farre Vse 1 from giuing of good words and vsing soft gentle speech sauouring of Christian modesty and subiection that they reuile them rayle at them and speake all manner of euill agaynst them which they ought not to do vnto any much lesse to their fathers or masters or Magistrates to whom they are bound in a neerer band and tyed to a farther duty Hence it is that Moses sayth Exod. 22 28. Thou shalt not reuile the gods nor curse the ruler of thy people It is deliuered as a generall precept binding all that will be the children of God Blesse them that persecute you blesse I say curse not Rom. 12 14. Iam. 3 9 10. It is a thing acceptable to God to speake euill of no man Titus 3 2. It is therfore a thing detestable to speake euill of our superiors vnto whom all dutifull language is due that sauoureth of peace and loue nay of submission and subiection The Apostle exhorteth seruants to bee obedient vnto their owne masters and to please them in al things Tit. 2 9. not answering againe with stout and vnseemely words Such then must learne by the feare of God to bridle their tongues that they offend not that way Iam. 3 4. Many there are who in their seruice are reasonable but they haue no rule ouer theyr tongue they will not onely mutter and murmure but giue curst and cutted answers It is the fruite of an euill seruant to bee euill tongued and to take liberty to taunt in vnseemly manner against those that are set ouer them This was the sinne of Agar that despised her mistresse not onely in her heart but likewise in speech Ge. 16 4. Let such consider the words of Salomon Prou. 15 1. A soft answer turneth away wrath but greeuous words stirre vppe anger Iames chap. 1.20 Iudg. 8. verses 1 2 3. 1 Sam. 25 32. Secondly we see the place of subiection is Vse 2 not an vnlawfull calling● neyther must wee think that Christianity hath abolished Magistracy and ciuill authority but rather ratifyeth and establisheth it Titus 3 1. 1 Tim 6 1. And it is lawfull for good men and especially for Magistrates Ministers to haue seruants as Abraham had many Eliah one likewise Elisha Ioseph had a Steward of his house Iacob had men-seruants and mayde-seruants Gen. 14 14 and 15 2 and 44 1 and 32 16. Mephibosheth had a seruant and that seruant had twenty seruants 2 Sam. 9 10. This ouerthroweth the damnable sect of the Anabaptists and Libertines who teach that Christians may not be subiect vnto any Obiection They obiect that they are the Lords free-men I answere Answer it is true but this freedome is inward and spirituall from sinne and Satan and condemnation Obiect Againe they alledge that wee are forbidden to be the seruants of men Answ 1 Cor. 7. I answere the meaning is
is to bring them vnto him and to make them seeke him early and vntill affliction worke in vs repentance newnesse of life we haue no right vse nor true fruite of it Fourthly it is required of vs to praise the name of God for his mercy and goodnesse in sparing of vs and not pouring out the full viols of his wrath and indignation vpon vs and not coming out with all his fury and forces against vs. The practise of this praise we see in Dauid after the plague was ceassed 2 Sam. 24 25 hee built an Altar vnto the Lord and offered burnt offerings and peace offerings and the Lord was appeased toward the Land and the plague ceassed from Israel Hee did not onely call vpon God but offered the sacrifice of thanksgiuing vnto him Except we follow his example and practise this duty we rob God of his honour and prouoke him to take away his blessings from vs. When we are in affliction we are eloquent enough and haue tongues to vtter many prayers to haue the plague vpon vs remoued from vs but when we are helped and the iudgement is taken away we forget both Gods mercy and our owne dutie we consider not from whence our deliuerance commeth nor what it challengeth at our hands Fiftly we must remember that we thinke not our selues hardly dealt withall but take heed to our selues that we be farre from murmuring and complaining against God The Lord complaineth by his Prophet against such hypocrites Iere. 3 4 5. Ieremy 3 Diddest thou not still cry vnto me Thou art my Father and the guide of my youth will hee keepe his anger for euer will he reserue it to the end Thus they flattered with their lippes when malice was in their hearts they spake faire to God and pretended a great desire they had that they would faine please him while his hand is vpon them and while he striketh them with his rodde But what answere doth GOD giue and they receiue It followeth in the next words Thus hast thou spoken but thou doest euill euen more and more And as it was with this people so is our case when God at any time taketh vs in hand we speake him faire we humble our selues before him and stoope downe to take correction but eyther wee thinke the time too long while his rod is vpon vs and so wil prescribe him the time when to take it away or else we fret fume against him as doing vs wrong and wee sustained iniury at his hands But if we were acquainted eyther with our iniquity or with his mercy we would be otherwise minded and would confesse that all kindes of punishments are due to vs and indeed too little for vs yea we would easily perceiue that GOD is more sorrowfull for the correction which he is constrained to lay vpon vs then wee are greeued for the sinnes which wee haue committed against him If these things be found in vs if we acknowledge Gods mercy toward vs in our troubles if we call vpon him earnestly if we turne vnto him vnfainedly if we praise his name cheerefully and do not think our selues hardly dealt withall we shall not want comfort in our sufferings but be able to comfort both our selues and others Lastly it is our duty to bee patient vnder Vse 3 the crosse not to discourage our selues in our troubles whatsoeuer or how great soeuer they be nor to murmure and repine at them seeing our doctrine teacheth vs that he neuer powreth vpon vs all his wrath nor giueth vs a full cup to drinke vp euen the dregs thereof but tempereth seasoneth it in such sort that together with the affliction we may taste of his compassion Now to the end we may not despise the chastening of the Lord neyther faint when we are rebuked of him but may possesse our soules with patience and endure constant vnto the ende we are to consider three things First of all we must remoue all lets and impediments that may hinder vs in the course of patience Secondly we must learne and marke the motiues that may moue vs to the embracing of this Christian and heauenly vertue Thirdly we must examine prooue our selues whether this grace of GOD be in vs or not seeing vpon it as vpon a pillar resteth the life of our christian profession as we shall shew afterward Touching the first it standeth vs vpon to cut off and to cast away from vs all such things as may any way hinder our patience The Apostle writing to the Hebrewes and commending the constancy and patience of the Saintes draweth this exhortation Wherefore Heb. 12 1. let vs also seeing that wee are compassed with so great a Cloud of witnesses cast away euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth so fast on let vs runne with patience the race that is set before vs whereby he declareth that the meanes to hold on our course with patience is to remoue the lettes and impediments that stand in our way The first hinderance is selfe-loue The hinderances of patience the very bane and poyson of all good and holy duties Wee loue our selues and our skinne so well that we shrinke backe our shoulders and pull in our heads when any perill beginneth to hang ouer vs as if some storme and tempest were imminent and ready to fall vpon vs. So long as this thorne sticketh in the flesh wee cannot loue the Lord nor yeeld obedience vnto him in bearing the crosse Hence it is that our Sauiour Christ saith Math. 16. verse 24. If any man will follow me let him forsake himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me It is to our nature and the naturall man hard to suffer who desireth to sleepe in an whole skinne The second hinderance is desire of reuenge For these two patience and reuenge are as contrary one to the other as peace and warre as fire and water as light and darkenesse If Ioseph had looked to the iniurious dealings of his brethren toward him and to their wicked purposes intended against him he would neuer haue saide vnto them Gen. 45 5 8. Bee not sad neyther greeued with your selues that yee solde me hither you sent me not hither but God who hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh and Lord of all his house and Ruler throughout all the Land of Egypt If Iob had rested and contented himselfe in the attempts and robberies of the Sabeans and Caldeans hee would neuer haue broken out into these wordes The LORD hath giuen Iob 1 15 17 21 and the LORD hath taken away It belongeth not vnto vs to take or to seeke reuenge but to commit our selues and our causes to the God of vengeance The third lette is infidelity when we haue in vs an vnfaithfull heart and cast off all confidence in God who maintaineth the lot of all those that trust in him and depend vppon him What was the cause that the Iewes suffering want in the wildernesse
sometimes of bread and sometimes of water murmured against God and his seruant Moses And albeit they had most manifest experience both of the power and mercy of GOD in helping them in all times of neede yet they brake out into impatiency Exod. chap. 16 verse 3. Oh that wee had dyed by the hand of the Lord in the Land of Egypt Exod. 26 3. when we sate by the flesh-pots when wee did eate bread our bellies full The cause of this was an vnbeleeuing heart to depart away from the liuing God If therefore wee beleeue not in him ●●m 20 12. ●●al 78 22. to sanctifie his Name and to trust in his helpe if we doe not commit all our waies vnto him who hath promised that he will neuer forget vs nor forsake vs it is vnpossible that euer wee should possesse our soules with patience The last impediment is want of premeditation and consideration how we may continue and go through stitch without starting backe from our profession This is the cause that maketh men impatient and to giue ouer when we are tryed because wee neuer weigh the danger before we are tryed We must cast our accounts what it hath cost others what it may cost our selues It is worthy counsell giuen vnto vs by our Sauiour Christ Luc. 14 28 29 30. Which of you minding to build a Tower sitteth not downe before and counteth the cost whether he haue sufficient to performe it lest that after he hath laide the foundation and is not able to performe it all that behold it begin to mocke him saying This man began to build and was not able to make an end It is a dangerous case to be found vnprepared and vnprouided for the assault It hath wrought a relapse and apostacy in many so that they haue denied the faith and made shipwracke of religion Hitherto of the hinderances of patience now let vs consider the motiues that may perswade vs to seeke after it and to lay hand and hold vpon it Motiues to moue vs to patience First of all we must know that as all affliction is of God so he will be with vs haue care ouer vs vnder the Crosse Why then should we bee dismaied or discourage our selues in any troubles whatsoeuer seeing we are still in Gods sight and haue him ready to heare vs otherwise it could not but go hard with vs. It had gone hard with Moses being cast into the Riuer among the reedes except God had looked downe from heauen vpon him and directed Pharaohs daughter to take him vp The like wee might say of Ioseph when he was in irons and his feet held in the stockes Psal 105.18 1 Sam. 24 2 3. Iere. 38 6. Ionas 1 17. Dan. 3 21 6 16. of Dauid when he wandered in the wildernesse on the Mountaines and in Caues of the earth of Ieremy when hee was cast in prison of Ionah in the whales belly of Daniel in the den of Lyons and of his fellowes in the fiery furnace all these had experience of Gods assistance who was not farre from them in the day of trouble So it shall be with euery one of vs his countenance doth euermore behold the iust in all their sufferings calamities as the Psalmist saith The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous his eares are open vnto their cry Psal 34 15. And indeed we should be most wretched and miserable in all our afflictions in warre famine and pestilence and whatsoeuer chastisements befall vs except God had an eye to see vs an eare to heare vs an heart to pitty vs and an hand to saue and succour vs. Secondly we must consider what we haue deserued and how we may iustly be punished not only in that manner but in a greater measure This was the confession of the penitent theefe hanging vpon the Crosse and speaking thus vnto his fellow Luc. 23. Luc. 23 41 42 We are indeed righteously heere for we receiue things worthy of that we haue done but this man hath done nothing amisse We shew our selues to haue a sensible feeling of our sorrowes but are many times without feeling of our sinnes If GOD should lay more vpon vs he were not vniust inasmuch as we haue iustly broght it vpon our selues We see this in the Prophet Dauid acknowledging the same Psal 119 75. I know O Lord that thy iudgements are right and that thou hast afflicted me iustly We must confesse that nothing belongeth to vs but shame and confusion of faces Thirdly this meditation must enter into our soules and neuer depart from vs that God will turne all our sorrowes sufferings vnto the best so that neither tribulation nor anguish nor persecution nor famine nor nakednesse nor perill nor sword shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. This is it which the Apostle teacheth Rom. 8 28. We know that all things worke together for the best vnto them that loue God euen to them that are called of his purpose This promise is assured vnto vs that he will sanctifie vnto our singular good not onely his blessings but his very chastisements and afflictions so that they shall bring vs neerer to God as the Prophet Dauid confessed he had receiued good by thē Psal 119. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word Fourthly we are made to suffer heere that we might not suffer elsewhere For wee are chastened in this life lest we should bee condemned in the life to come If therefore wee be without correction whereof all the sonnes of God are partakers then are we bastards not sonnes as the Apostle speaketh to the Hebrewes Let vs call to our remembrance what Abraham answereth to the rich man Luke 16 25. Son remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore is he comforted thou art tormented The rich man enioyed the desires and delights of his owne heart in this life therefore he was tormented in hell in the life to come Let vs patiently abide that which God layeth vpon vs wishing rather to suffer heere such troubles as are temporall then the torments of hell after this life which are eternall Fiftly it is the will of God that we should suffer to which wee must readily obey and humbly submit our selues as the Apostle sheweth Phil. 1 29. Vnto you it is giuen for Christ that not onely yee should beleeue in him but also suffer for his sake The heathen were wont to vse this as a reason to beare the cros because there is no remedy or redresse that it cannot be otherwise Seeing then they could not choose but suffer they taught that it is better to make a vertue of necessity then brutishly or childishly to despaire vnder it and seeing it must needs be so they must bee contented resoluing as Christ saith Acts 9 5. It is hard to kicke against prickes
reiect those meanes the greater our sin is and the greater sinners we are if wee breake these bands and cast these cords from vs. The sinnes of the Israelites are often aggrauated and made the more grieuous and heinous because the Lord had sent his prophets among them Ier. 7.13 14. and 11.7 8. and 35.14 Psa 78.17 31 35 56. Matth. 11.21 22 23 24. Dan. 9.5.6 Reason 1 The reasons First because those men sinne against knowledge hauing the word to informe them and their owne consciences to conuince them Knowledge maketh euery sinne the greater Luk. 12 47. Ioh. 15.22 and 12.48 They are like to a man that hath much meat and digesteth nothing Bernard so that it corrupteth in the stomacke and doth him no good at all Now they that haue many meanes for the soule are like him that hath much meat for the body for they that heare much and haue many instructions and yet do not bring forth fruits answerable thereunto their sinne is the greater and themselues thereby made inexcusable Reason 2 Secondly it argueth obstinacy and hardnesse of heart they haue many strokes giuen them but they feel none of them For such as transgresse in the middes of those helpes that serue to restraine sinne do not sin of infirmity or weaknesse but of obstinacy and wilfulnesse Now the more wilfull a man is the more sinnefull hee is and the greater is his sinne This conuinceth our times of much sinfulnesse Vse 1 and in these times some places and in those places sundry persons to be greater sinners then others And why greater Because our times haue had more meanes to preuent and keepe from sinne then other times haue had What could the Lord haue done for vs that he hath not done We haue beene as his vineyard which he hath fenced he hath gathered the stones out of it he hath planted it with the choicest plants and hedged about it that the beasts of the field and of the forrest should not hurt it he may therefore iustly looke that it should bring forth grapes but it hath brought forth wild grapes Esay 5.4 5. Luke 13.6 or as his figge tree which he hath digged and dunged and therefore he may well seeke fruite thereon especially hauing waited with patience for it What hath not God done for vs and to vs to reclaime vs Our times and people haue had many deliuerances from dangers that other times and people haue not had which threatned vs both within and without both forrain and domesticall We haue had greater blessings bestowed vpon vs then others we haue had the word more plentifully preached to vs then others All these we being vnthankefull and disobedient doe make vs greater sinners then others which haue wanted these blessings Thus doe wee turne our blessings to be our bane and Gods mercies to be curses vpon vs. We see many Congregations where God hath risen early and late giuing them his word and faithful Ministers as diligent watchmen to admonish them and to threaten his iudgements are oftentimes more sinfull then other places that haue wanted these meanes and no worse persons in the world then some that liue vnder the standing Ministery of the word God in iust iudgement giuing them ouer to Satan If such be giuen to common and continuall swearing and abusing of the Name of God to contempt of the word and of the Sabbath they are greater sinners then others and are more guilty in his sight and consequently shall be more sharpely and seuerely punished Secondly it admonisheth all that enioy the Vse meanes of preuenting sinne as benefits and blessings the Scriptures and word of God his corrections and chastisements his promises threatnings his patience long sufferance that they labor to make profit by thē to fulfil all righteousnesse lest God account their sinne greater then others For we must know this whatsoeuer is a sinne in others is a trebble sinne in them because they haue the sword of God to cut the knots and sinewes of sinne in sunder when others haue not had that means We may with griefe speake of many places that Israel hath beene without a teaching Priest and without Law 2 Chro. 15.3 they haue wanted the gracious meanes of saluation to teach to reproue to instruct and to correct therfore no maruell if sinne abound But they that liue where sinne is daily met withall and encountred do make their sinne out of measure sinfull Let vs therefore diligently examine our selues how we are affected at the hearing of the preaching of the word and of the threatnings denounced against our sinnes Vse 3 Lastly learn from hence that the word is neuer preached in vain whether we be conuerted by it or not For it is like the raine and snow that falleth from heauen that returneth not thither againe Esay 55.10 11. So the word of God shall not returne to him as a voide and vaine thing but shall accomplish that which he pleaseth and shall prosper in the thing whereunto he sendeth it But some will say ●iection Then it is better to be without the word then to haue it if mens sinnes be so much the greater because they haue beene so much taught and it may seeme better not to heare it at all ●sw I answere this is true in some sort howbeit not simply in it selfe Let no man thinke his case the happier because hee wanteth the word for as Paul saith they that haue the law if they contemne it shall perish by the law and they that want the Law shall perish without the law Rom. 2.12 Besides they may be said to haue the meanes that want them when they may haue them No man must reiect the word because they that refuse it are made worse by it Would a man be willing to cast away his wealth because he seeth himselfe made worse by it more couetous more cruell more hard hearted more high minded We see no in the example of the rich man Matt. 19. rather then he would cast it away hee would labour for a liberall hand and a mercifull heart to vse it aright so is it in this case Indeed it had beene better wee had neuer knowne the word and the way of righteousnesse by the direction of the word then to depart from it better I say in respect of the end of our estate and the iudgment that hangeth ouer vs yet we should not therefore wish to be without the word but rather to haue a sanctified heart that we may keepe our selues from the sinnes of others Then we will account it an happy thing to liue in such places where the word of God is truly preached Let vs therefore labour to make good vse of the good meanes that our good God hath afforded vs for our good and labour to profite by them in faith and obedience or else our sinnes shall be made so much the greater and consequently our iudgments the greater also 11 For which cause both thou
and all thy company are gathered together against the Lord ● and what is Aaron that ye murmure against him Heere Moses farther layeth open the sin of Korah and his confederates neither doth hee charge them behind their backs as if he were afraide to speake to them but to their faces that if they had any thing to say they might answer for themselues It is the maner of many men to be liberall of speach of those that are absent but are ready to holde their peace when they are present to plead for themselues Now he telleth them that the contempt of Aaron was the contempt of God and their murmuring against him a murmuring against God We learne hereby Doctrine that to rebell against the message of God to scorne and reiect it To despise and resist the Ministery is to despise and resist God is to rebell against God to scorne and reiect God himselfe Exod. 16.8 1 Sam. 8.7 Esay 7.13 Whatsoeuer is brought vnto vs whether it be the promises of God for the establishment and confirmation of our faith or instructions for our obedience by the messengers and Ministers of God if it be refused and resisted God himselfe is reiected and the Spirit of grace is despited Lu. 10.16 Ioh. 13.20 1 Thess 2.15 16. The reasons because first they come not in Reason 1 their owne name neitheir doe they discharge their owne message they are no other then the mouth of God they come not from themselues neither for themselues their authority and calling is from God Therefore Moses saith in this place What is Aaron that ye murmure against him And the Apostle saith of himselfe the other fellow labourers 1 Cor. 3.5 Who is Paul or what is Apollo but the Ministers by whom ye beleeued euen as the Lord gaue to euery man neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that giueth the encrease is all in all Secondly God doth account all things Reason 2 done to thē in the execution of their Ministery as done to himselfe Matth. 10.40 Hee that receiueth you receiueth me and hee that receiueth me receiueth him that sent me therefore he that receiueth the Minister receiueth with him God the Father It is the duty of all to prepare themselues Vse 1 when they come to the Ministery of the word because then they must consider that they are come into the presence of God himselfe to receiue not so much from the mouth of the Minister as from the mouth of God direction and instruction concerning his will Deut. 5.27 28. Gal. 4.14 1 Thess 2.13 O my brethren if we did beleeue this to be the trueth of God wee would not stumble so much against it and be so often offended at it wee would not reiect it and set so light by it as too commonly we doe Let vs be like to Cornelius Act. 10.33 We must set our selues in Gods presence whensoeuer we begin to heare the word of God We ought as much as we can to suppresse all thought and consideration of men and weigh with our selues from whence the word commeth from whom the messenger commeth in whose Name he speaketh vnto vs. This is a forcible meanes to make vs profit by hearing He that can see in the person of the Minister the person of God and settle his affections wholy vpon God whom he knoweth to be present with him I neuer doubt of that man but he will heare to his saluation Vse 2 Secondly acknowledge from hence that the despising of the word of God the not beleeuing or not consenting to it when it is taught by men like to our selues is one of the greatest sinnes of all other that can fall out among the sonnes of men As it is most common so it is most fearefull and shall receiue the greatest punishment from God Matt. 10.14 15. Act. 13.51 O that all men would take a scantling of this sin by a right consideration of the doctrine which I handle and you heare For the doctrine teacheth that the withstanding of the Ministery of the word and murmuring against his ordinance is an open standing out against God and a resisting of him Can there be greater pride insolency contempt vnthankefulnesse rebellion and disobedience then to resist the Lord The Apostle speaking of the Magistrate saith Rom. 13.2 Whosoeuer resisteth the power shall receiue to himselfe damnation if this be true of man much more may we affirme it of God that whosoeuer resisteth him shal bring vpon himselfe swift and sudden damnation For are we stronger then he Now we must vnderstand that all such as set themselues withall their might and cunning against the Ministery of the word they do as it were take God to taske they single him out to combat with all but they shal find in the ende themselues vnequally matched Shall he that is dust lift vp himselfe against his maker shall he that is no better then a blast or puffe of wind contend with him that rideth vpon the wings of the wind and is able to scatter vs as chaffe before the winde O then how fearefull will the account be of many among vs that shew as great scorne and contempt as great security and infidelity as the Iewes did 2 Chron. 36. for which they were carried away into captiuity and swept out of the land of their habitation Such persons do in a manner bid God defiance to his face For when the Minister preacheth God preacheth when the Minister threatneth God threatneth when the Minister promiseth God promiseth when the Minister comforteth God comforteth It is he that speaketh by his seruants the Prophets Heb. 1.1 When they beseech vs to be reconciled God beseecheth vs by their Ministery 2 Cor. 5.20 True it is they speake but God speaketh to vs in them by them This made the Apostle say We then as workers together with him beseech you also that ye receiue not the grace of God in vaine 2 Cor. 6.1 That which is spoken of the Sacrament of Baptisme may rightly be spoken of the Ministery of the word It is said that Iesus came into the land of Iudea and baptized Ioh. 3.23 but it was by the hands of his disciples Ioh. 4.2 The Baptisme was his but the Ministery was theirs So doth the Lord preach vnto vs as Christ then baptized he preacheth to vs by the mouth of his Minister he speaketh whē they speake vnto vs. Such then as yeeld not to the promises or threatnings or admonitions that are offered vnto them what doe they but say plainely I will not beleeue God I will not commit my selfe and mine whole estate into his hands I doe not thinke that he will do as he threatneth This is no other then to giue vnto God the lie to his face Lastly this giueth comfort and encouragement Vse 3 to all the Ministers of God in the thanklesse labours of their wearisome calling God will care for vs howsoeuer men reiect vs. Hee will