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A11454 Ten sermons preached I. Ad clerum. 3. II. Ad magistratum. 3. III. Ad populum. 4. By Robert Saunderson Bachellor in Diuinitie, sometimes fellow of Lincolne Colledge in Oxford.; Sermons. Selected sermons Sanderson, Robert, 1587-1663. 1627 (1627) STC 21705; ESTC S116623 297,067 482

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by their Power nor their wisest Counsellors by their Policie nor Balaam himselfe by his Sorcery could bring vpon them This damned counsell was followed but too soone and prospered but too well §. with the successe thereof both in their Sinne The daughters of Moab come into the Tents of Israel and by their blandishments put out the eyes and steale away the hearts of Gods people whom besotted once with lust it was then no hard matter to leade whither they listed and by wanton insinuations to draw them to sit with them in the Temples and to accompanie them at the a Num. 25.2 feasts and to eate with them of the sacrifices yea and to bow the knees with them to the honour of their Idols Insomuch as Israel b Psal. 106.28 ioyned themselues to Baal-peor and ate the sacrifices of that dead and abominable Idol at the least for all Idols are such if not as most haue thought a c quem Graecia Priapum dixit Hist. Scolast in Num. c. 34. alij secuti Hieronymum in c 9. Osee 1. cont Io. 12. See Vatabl. in Num. 25.3 Seldem Synt. 1. de DIs Syr. c. 5. Lael Biscio● 3. hor. subces 20. beastly and obscene Idoll withall That was their sinne And now may Balak saue his money §. 8. and Punishment and Balaam spare his paines there is no need of hiring or being hired to curse Whoremongers and Idolaters These are two plaguy sinnes and such as wil bring a curse vpon a people without the helpe of a Coniurer When that God who is a a Exod. 20 5. iealous God and iealous of nothing more than his b Esa. 42.8 honour shall see that people whom he had made c Deut. 7.6 choise of from among all the nations of the earth to be his owne peculiar people and betrothed to himselfe by an euerlasting d Ezek. 16.8 Couenant to e Ibid. 38. breake the Couenant of Wedlocke with him and to strumpet it with the daughters and Idols of Moab what can bee expected other than that his iealousie should be turned into furie and that his fierce wrath should f Psal. 106.29 breake-in vpon them as a deluge and ouerwhelme them with a sudden destruction His patience so farre tempted and with such an vnworthie prouocation can suffer no longer But at his command g Num. 25.4.5 Moses striketh the Rulers and at Moses his command the vnder-Rulers must strike each in their seuerall regiments those that had offended and hee himselfe also striketh with his owne hand by a plague destroying of them in one day h 1 Cor. 10.8 the other thousand Num. 25.9 it seemeth were those that were hanged vp by Moses and slaine by the Rulers three and twentie thousand §. 9. Zimri's prouocation If that plague had lasted manie dayes Israel had not lasted manie dayes But the people by their plague made sensible of their sinne humbled themselues as it should seeme the verie first day of the plague in a solemne and a Num. 25.6 generall assembly weeping and mourning both for Sinne and Plague before the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation And they were now in the heat of their holy sorrow and deuotions when loe b Ibid. 14. Zimri a Prince of a chiefe house in one of their Tribes in the heate of his pride and lust commeth openly in the c Ibid. 6. face of Moses and all the Congregation and bringeth his Minion with him Cosbi the daughter of one of the d Compare Num. 25.15 with Num. 31.8 fiue Kings of Midian into his Tent there to commit filthinesse with her §. 10. and his execution Doubtlesse Moses the Captaine and Ele●zar the Priest and all Israel that saw this shamelesse pranke of that leud couple saw it with griefe enough But Phinehes enraged with a pious indignation to see such foule affront giuen to God the Magistrate and the Congregation at such a heauie time and in such open manner for that verie sinne for which they then lay vnder Gods hand thought there was something more to be done than bare weeping and therefore his bloud warmed with an holy zeale hee a Num. 25.7.8 starteth vp forthwith maketh to the Tent where these two great personages were and as they were in the act of their filthinesse speedeth them both at once and nay●eth them to the place with his Iaueline And the next thing wee heare is God well pleased with the b ibid. 11. zeale of his seruant and the execution of those malefactors is appeased towards his people and withdraweth his hand and his plague from them And of that deliuerance my Text speaketh Then stood vp Phinehes and executed iudgement and so the Plague was stayed The Person the instrument to worke this deliuerance for Israel was Phinehes §. 11. The Person of Phinebes considered Hee was the sonne of Eleazar who was then High Priest in immediate succession to his father Aaron not long before deceased and did himselfe afterward succeed in the High Priesthood vnto Eleazar his Father A wise a godly and a zealous man employed afterwards by the State of Israel in the greatest affaires both of a Num. 31.6 Warre and b Ios. 22.13.31.32 Ambassy But it was this Heroicall act of his in doing execution vpon those two great audacious offenders which got him the first and the greatest and the lastingst renowne Of which Act more anon when we come to it In his Person wee will consider onely what his calling and condition was and what congruitie there might be betweene what he was and what he did He was of the Tribe of Leui and that whole Tribe was set apart for the c Num. 1. ●9 c. seruice of the Tabernacle And he was of the sonnes of Aaron and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Familie and Linage of the High Priests and the Priests office was to offer sacrifices and to burne incense and to pray and make attonement for the People Neither Leuite nor Priest had to intermeddle with matters of Iudicature vnlesse in some few causes and those for the most part concerning matters either meerely or mixtly Ecclesiasticall but neither to giue sentence nor to doe execution in matters and causes meerely Ciuill as by any right or vertue of his Leuiticall or Priestly office §. 12. The Spiritual Power doth not include the Temporall The more vnreasonable is the High Priest of Rome to challenge to himselfe any temporall or ciuill iurisdiction as virtually annexed to his spirituall Power or necessarily deriued thence Templū and Praetorium the Chaire and the Throne the Altar and the Bench the Sheepehooke and the Scepter the Keyes and the Sword though they may sometimes concurre vpon the same person yet the Powers remaine perpetually distinct and independant and such as doe not of necessity inferre the one the other Our Sauiours a Luk. 22.26 Vos autem non