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A55917 A commentary upon the divine Revelation of the apostle and evangelist, Iohn by David Pareus ... ; and specially some things upon the 20th chapter are observed by the same authour against the Millenaries ; translated out of the Latine into English, by Elias Arnold. Pareus, David, 1548-1622.; Arnold, Elias. 1644 (1644) Wing P353; ESTC R14470 926,291 661

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and quarrels shall be farre from thence but on the contrary we shall sing to God everlasting Songs of joy Nor paine Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Labour which may be taken for any kind of trouble and metaphorically for Griefe as BEZA renders it after the Greeke Phrase Sophocl in Antig. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 griefe by griefe brings griefe But then there shall be no labour trouble paine or griefe of body or mind occasioning teares death sorrow or crying There shal be no cause of evill but on the contrary everlasting joy and pleasure at Gods right hand For the former or first things are passed away That is the miserable state of this present life in which all those evils doe abound because of sinne Then they shall passe or vanish away There shal bee a new heaven and a new earth A new state full of joy and happinesse Vnto the illustration of this place that in Chap. 7.15 helps very much where in the end of the second Vision one of the foure and twenty Elders explicated the Heavenly felicity of the Saints almost in the same words They are saith he before the throne of God and serve him day and night in his temple and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them they shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sunne light on them nor any heat for the Lambe that is in the midst of the throne shall feed them and shall lead them unto living fountaines of waters and God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes This place doth plainly confute their opinion who hold that here is treated of the state of the Church Militant in this world for it is certaine that this removall of all evils from the Church neither is nor shall be in this world neither is any such happinesse to be hoped for in this life but it is reserved for the Church in the world to come These things therefore cannot be applied unto the state of the Church on earth gathered of Iewes and Gentiles Neither do the Futures will dwell will take away contradict what wee say For these are retained emphatically out of the Prophesie as if he should say the things which Isaias foretold should come to passe shall bee then fulfilled the which the Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are passed away in the Praeter Tense doth easily evince 5. And he that sate upon the throne Here followeth the voyce of the Sitter on the Throne of whom above Chap. 4. where wee shewed it was either the Holy Trinitie or the Son of God gloriously reigning at the right hand of God in Heaven because he saith I am Alpha and Omega which above in Chap. 1 8. was the voyce of Christ I am Alpha and Omega the First and the Last Now he confirmeth unto Iohn the things before seen and heard All things were new a New Heaven a New Earth a New Ierusalem Least we should doubt or aske whence this innovation should come Behold saith hee I make all things new This innovation of things shal be effected by the divine power Neither speaketh he of the spirituall renovation of the Church which began long agoe by the grace and power of Christ but of the super-naturall change of the whole universe which shal be at Christs last coming 2. Pet. 3.13 as Peter sheweth And hee saith to mee write The Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith in the present Tense being the proper stile of the Evangelist Iohn argues that he was Authour of this Booke He is commanded to write this Vision of the future renovation and in speciall the most sweet voyce of Gods eternall abode with men and the future blessednesse of the godlie that it might allwayes remaine extant to future times for the Churches consolation for Christ knew that the Churches condition should unto the end be mournefull by teares death sadnesse paines c. Least therefore she might faint in her warfare the Lord would have this most joyfull Catastrophe of all evils to be set down in Holy Writ For these words are true and faithfull Above Chap. 19.9 after a like Commandement of writing Write blessed c. He annexed a like reason These words are true Here he addeth faithfull that none should doubt of the future happinesse Hee understands by WORDS here Gods future dwelling with men as also the eternall rewards of the faithfull and everlasting punishments of the wicked 6. And he said to mee It is done Above Chap. 16.17 the Angell of the seventh Viall in the same phrase proclaimed the end of Babylon and the whole world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 IT IS DONE It is a weighty asseveration that the thing is as certaine as if it were already accomplished I am Alpha and Omega As above Chap. 1.8.11 I will give unto him that is a thirst Hee confirmes eternall rewards unto the faithfull out of the Gospell For this is the voyce of Christ Ioh. 7.37 whence he that sate on the throne is knowne to bee Christ the Author of this Prophesie To them that thirst he promiseth the water of life freely that is everlasting joy without any desert of ours But then no man shall thirst any more But these Future Verbes I will give shall inherit and as before shall wipe away seeme to make against our opinion but they doe not as erewhile I shewed For because it is a Prophesie of future things he rightly useth Verbes of the future Tense He therefore that thirsteth to wit after righteousnesse in this life to him Christ will give the water of Life now in a beginning onely then fully as if hee should say then I will truely fulfill the Evangelicall promise of which I now grant a tast to the faithfull He that overcommeth shall inherit all things Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receive it by inheritance Not therefore of merit but freely All things As it were an only Heire that possesseth all the substance of his Parents But all the Elect are heires and yet every one shall receive the whole inheritance Therefore this shall not be after the manner of other inheritances Now the inheritance is promised to him that overcommeth to wit the world the Beast and Satan because before the victory there must needs be a fight Therefore the Faithfull are here exhorted to fight couragiously against all their Adversaries See Chap. 2.10 And I will bee his God From 2. Sam. 7.14 He then at last promiseth to them that overcome the fulfilling of the promise of adoption which now by faith they possesse in hope Now are wee the sonnes of God but it doth not yet appeare what we shall bee but we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as hee is This is Johns owne most true interpretation of this divine voyce 1. Ioh. 3.2 8. But the fearfull and unbeleeving From the contrary he extols the felicity of the Godly because contraries being set one by another
election through the last judgement of practicall reason for without such a determination the wil and choice of man should be nothing at all Now howsoever this judgement of practicall reason which the Sophisters confesse is the root of liberty be sometimes also determinated out of it self Act 14.16 that is by God I say sometimes not alwayes for God doth not determinate all acts of the will but oftentimes leaves men to their own wayes and suffers them to run headlong into destruction Notwithstanding this determination is not done without the voluntary judgement of our reason and choice of the will without any coaction yet in a manner to us indeed inexplicable but known to God Who worketh all things after the counsell of his owne will Ephe. 1.11 To the second Argument That which is governed by the divine providence acts not freely c. I ANSWER it is false unlesse it be understood with the same distinction to wit if it be governed by a providence without our own deliberation and choice For that which God governeth shewing the object to the understanding and efficaciously moving the will to chuse the same that notwithstanding man doth freely chuse although he be inclined by the will of God to whatsoever he pleaseth What it is to act freely For the creatures freedom in acting is not to act without the government of any but with deliberation and by a voluntary motion of its own will although this motion be raised and ruled by another And that I may return unto the determination of the will It is not repugnant even to morall Philosophie For Aristotle lib. 3. Ethic. Cap. 5. saith That man is the originall of his own actions as of his children and denies not but that in some occurrences the will is determinated to one thing the liberty thereof remaining suppose in vitious men drunkards and incontinent persons who after they have brought a vitious habit upon themselves do indeed commit their vices freely yet also necessarily and determinately because their will by a vitious habit which they are not able to shake off is determined to vice To conclude it is plain from these things in the Hypothesis that God put into the hearts of the Kings the liberty of their will remaining to doe what they did determinately and in the Thesis that the concurrence of God governing and determinating the will of man as he pleaseth doth not at all take away the liberty of the same II. Whether God after the same manner put good and evill into the hearts of the Kings and whether hence it will follow that he is the Author of sin Touching the good there is no question about it for this all that are godly doe willingly grant viz. that God as the Scripture saith workes both the will and the deed without overthrowing the liberty of our will as before we shewed Notwithstanding Pelagius did not grant the same and a Philosopher will no more grant the determination of the will in vertue then in vice But the Philosopher is answered by the doctrine of heathens themselves as erewhile wee heard out of Aristotle Pelagius and such as follow him object the Theologicall knot in evill things touching the cause of sin For if God also determine the evill of man as for examples the hearts of the Kings as touching things evill in their owne nature as suppose to conspire together with Antichrist and to fight against the Lambe hereby God seems to be the Author as it were of their evills and the Kings excusable This indeed Pelagius of old objected to Austin as at this day the Pelagian Relickes in pretence to maintaine the righteousnesse of God as if it could not be otherwise maintained but in the sense of bare permission viz. that God is said to do that because he permits it to be done But first the glosse of bare permission is a manifest abusing of sundry places of Scripture in which it is plainely affirmed that God did and that indeed most holily which men have done most wickedly Joseph touching the parricide of his brethren saith Gen. 45.8 It was not you that sent me hither but God sent me hither before you Touching the hatred of the Egyptians against the Israelites Psal 105. verse 25. God turned their hearts to hate his people to deale subtilly with his servants Touching Shimeis cursing 2. Samuel 16.10 The Lord hath said unto him Curse David Of Absoloms incest 2. Sam. 12.12 Thou didst it secretly But I will do this viz. give thy wives unto thy neighbour before all Israel and before the sun Of the Rebellion of Jeroboam and the ten Tribes 1. Kin. 12.24 This thing is from me And in the same place touching Rehoboams tyrannicall answer ver 15. Wherfore the King hearkned not unto the people for the cause was from the Lord. Touching the spoiling of the Babylonians Isa 10. ver 6. I will give him a charge to take the spoile and to take the prey Touching the seduction of the false Prophets Ezech. 14.9 I the Lord have deceived that Prophet So of the seducement of Ahab by the false Prophets and Satan 1. Kin. 22.20 Who shall perswade Ahab c. and the Lord said Thou shalt perswade them and prevaile also Goe forth and do so Of the Rapine of the Arabians Iob 1.21 The LORD gave and the Lord hath taken away Touching Christs crucifying Act. 4.27 Herod and Pontius Pilate have done those things which thy hand and counsell determined before to be done By these and the like places both the evill works of men and Satan are ascribed unto God not absolutely but in some respect viz. so far as God by the same accomplisheth his secret judgements not as the authour of mans wicked deeds God forbid but as a most righteous performer of his judgements in and by them for to imagine that God executeth not his judgements but barely permits them agrees not with faith and godlinesse Secondly the glosse of bare permission in many places would be blasphemous take for example the place in hand Wilt thou say that God put it into the hearts of the Kings that is permitted it to be put Who then put it into their hearts Thou wilt say the divell and hereby thou makest the divell to put that into the heart which the Scripture expresly saith that God did wilt thou make the devill to be God Besides the divell will never perswade the kings to oppose the whore Consider therfore whither this thy glosse doth not by an open blasphemy attribute satans work to God and on the contrary the work of God to the divell Thirdly the glosse of bare permission imports heresie for under it lies hid the Pelagian denyall of the divine grace and providence and the establishing of humane strength against grace For this glosse hath flowed if not primitively yet chiefly from the School of Pelagius as may be seen in Austin Lib. 5. Cont. Iulian cap 3 against whom Julian the Pelagian
disputes after this manner As God is to be considered about the will in evil so also in good but in the evil will he only works permissively by suffering the same to rush on by its owne motion and desire but not by moving the same Otherwise he should be the Authour of sinne Therefore also he workes good in the will onely permissively suffering the same to act by its own strength but not by moving the same otherwise the liberty thereof should be taken away This was Pelagius Logicke the which very thing now a dayes the Patrons of bare permission and Preposterous Defenders of Gods righteousnesse do unwittingly maintain But Austin shews both the premisses of the Pelagian subtilty to be false The Proposition is false because God workes one way in the good will another way in the evill The former he makes good of evill whereas by nature he finds all to be evill none good but being made good by himselfe he moves them effectually yet so as their liberty remaineth as hath bin expounded The latter he makes not evill but finds them so The assumption is also false for he not onely forsakes and suffers the wicked will which he findeth to rush on whether it pleaseth but also delivers the same over to Satan and their own desires yea moving and inclining the same how he will that by doing the evill it wills it becomes subject unto his judgement secret indeed but never unrighteous in a manner whither explicable unto us or inexplicable as Austin speaketh and as in the fore-alledged examples we have seen Notwithstanding he is not the cause of sin Lib 5 Cont. Iulican cap. 3 for he useth the wicked will to execute his judgements most holily neither is he any more the cause of the sin which evill men commit by executing his judgements by them then the ungodly are the cause of the good which he worketh through them Luther against Erasmus doth perspicuously declare the matter by similies A Rider rideth well though he use a lame or halting horse De ser arb cap. 148 The Artificer formes of putrefied wood an artificious image Notwithstanding there is halting in the riding not by fault of the Rider but by the defect of the horse In the image is putrefaction not through fault of the Artificer but by defect of the wood So by the selling of Ioseph the betraying of Iudas God brought to passe unspeakable good yet in both wickednesse was committed not indeed on Gods part but by the perfidiousnesse of the brethren and of Iudas But thou wilt say the same sinnes are attributed as to the wicked so to God True if thou consider the words onely and not the meaning of the Scripture Now this is done with great difference They are ascribed unto Satan and wicked men in regard of themselves and as they are wicked actions committed by them against the Law But to God so far as by accident they serve unto his secret judgements which he useth to execute most righteously even by wicked men doing most wickedly The reason of the diversity comes partly from the divers end partly from the forme of actions The rule of final causes for a different end makes different actions according to the rule Finall and impulsive causes make the differences of actions Hence two doing the same thing yet do not the same though both do somewhat which is either good or indifferent when as they have divers ends differing in morall qualitie Gods end is allwayes good wicked mens evill in the selling of Ioseph his brethren fulfilled their hatred against the Law Thou shalt not kill In the oppression of the Iewes the Babylonians enlarged their Tyranny to the injuring of their neighbours against the Law Thou shalt not steale And therefore both these and the other did sinne But God to whom both these are attributed Gen. 45.8 Isa 10.7.19 had a most holy end in both viz. Iosephs exalting Gen. 50.20 and his peoples chastisement according to the Law Isa 10.6 Therefore he sinned not Read the tenth Chapter of Isaiah touching this diversity of ends in the same worke and thou shalt learne that what the Chaldeans did most evilly God by them did the same most righteously In the forme of actions the distinction is more evident for three things distinctly to be considered concurre in those actions of wicked men which God is said to do 1. The Motion 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the vitiousnesse of the motion and 3. the secret judgement of God Motion is a naturall good thing And therefore it is from God in whom also the wicked live move and have their beeing The secret judgements of God are morally good even workes of justice and mercy And therefore are of right attributed to God The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or pravitie of the motion prohibited by the Law makes the motion vitious and sinfull This therefore is not of God but remotely flowes from the devill and more nearly from the froward will and malice of men whensoever therefore the workes of evill men are in Scripture attributed unto God as affirming that God doth them or that they are from God This is not to be understood simply but with limitation that is not in respect of the disorder and pravity but first in respect of the motions so farre as they are naturall motions secondly and chiefly in regard of the secret Iudgements which God executes in and by the same But here thou wilt happily demand whether it may not rightly be said that God doth permit sins yea verily yet with a twofold limitation First that to permit and to grant is not the same thing as if God did permit men to sin without punishing the same like as some Magistrates permit Brothel-houses where fornication is committed without punishment Now God doth not so for his permitting of sin is not to hinder but suffer that they should be committed through the vitiousnesse of men and concur with his Iudgements Secondly we must not understand such a bare permission as is a cessation altogether of the divine providence in the workes of evill men which thing onely is in question betwixt us and the Pelagians but restrained unto the vitiousnesse of their workes being repugnant to the nature and Law of God For herein God himselfe doth something something he doeth not but permits it to be done by men He permits sins to be done as they are sins not hindering the doing of the same nor correcting sinners that they should not sin whereas he could do both But he doth two things I. The motions and naturall actions themselves of evill men by a generall influence as the Schools speak sometimes also by a speciall II. His Iudgements or events agreeing to his goodnesse and justice the which if he did not respect he would never permit sins to be committed and this he doth by moderating and effectually directing as the sins so other means also comming in between to make them
saying of Christ Render not evill for evill Pag. 461. 82. How it stands with justice to render double Pag. 462. 83. Whether God in commanding to render the double according to Babylons workes doth command rapines theft wickednesse c. Pag. 463. In Chapter XIX 84. Whether Alcasar hath sufficiently demonstrated that properly the Church of Rome is the wife of the Lamb. Pag. 481. 85. Whether Iohn did well in proffering to worship the Angell and whether the Angell did well to prohibit him Pag. 484. 582. In Chapter XX. 86. Of the binding and loosing of Satan what when and how it was Pag. 502. 87. A disputation touching the thousand yeeres of Satans binding 506. whether they be definitely to be understood 507. where they take their beginning and ending 508. what was the condition of the godly in the thousand yeeres 511. 88. Who were the living and reigning with Christ 514 89. After what manner and how long they lived and reigned with Christ 516. 90. Who are the rest of the dead and how they lived not againe 517. 91. Of the first Resurrection how it is to be understood 518. 520. 92. Of the Chiliasts opinion the Authors thereof and its refutation 520. 521. 93. Of the first and second death 519 526. 527. 94. What Satan is said to do the thousand yeers being ended and when he was loosed 530. 95. A disputation with Bellarmine and Ribera about Gog and Magog 539. 96. Of the old and new Goggish war its occasion and beginning 536. 97. Of the perpetuall torments of the damned 540. In Chapter XXI 98. The description of the new Ierusalem whether it bee agreeable to the Church-Militant on earth or to the Romane onely 541. 99. Of the new Heaven and the new Earth 549. 100. Ludovicus his jest on Sophisters about the Lake of Fire 557. In Chapter XXII 101. A Disputation against Sophisters for the authority and perfection of the divine Scriptures 580 c. 102. Of the doctrine of Iustification by Faith 584. 585. A COMMENTARIE Vpon the REVELATION OF IOHN THE APOSTLE The argument parts and analysis of Chap. 1. After the title and Apostolical salutation to the seven Churches of Asia Iohn rehearseth the first vision namely the seven golden candlesticks and Christ his glorious walking in the middest of them and how hee was affected with the vision and received from Christ commandement for to write the same both concerning things present and to come The parts of the chapter are two the former containes the preface to v. 9. The latter the vision of Christ gloriously walking in the middest of the seven candlestickes from vers 9 unto the last THe preface containes the title and th●●postolical dedication of the booke The title shewet● first the argument of the booke that it is a ●●velation of things to come Christ the ●utho● of it as also the ministerie of the Angel vers 1. Secondly it notes the person of the author by a periphrasis or description vers 2. Thirdly it commendeth the profitablenes of the booke from the necessitie of it vers 3. The dedication containes the prosopographie or description of the persons who and to whom he writeth vers 4. Secondly the Apostles wish viz. grace from God and from the seven spirits as also from Iesus Christ whose threefold office he declareth v. 5. Thirdly the celebration of the prayses of Christ and giving of thanks for a threefold benefit received from him v. 5 6 His comming to Iudgement is promised by the words of Zacharie vers 7 and in the last place bringeth him in testifying his eternall Godhead and omnipotencie vers 8. The vision containes the preparation vision it self In the preparation Iohn sheweth the name how hee was affected the place of his banishment and the cause vers 9. Secondly the time and manner of the vision vers 10. Thirdly a command to write the vision and to send it to the seven Churches by name vers 11. Fourthly his Gesture vers 12. In the vision are three things first the form secōdly the effects thirdly the things following The form of the vision which hee saw is twofold first the seven Golden candlestickes Secondly the form of the Sonne of man in the middest of them whose habit and clothing hee describeth vers 13 His head Hair and eyes v. 14 His feet and voice vers 15 His right hand holding the seven starres his mouth armed with a two edged sword and his face shining like the sun vers 16. The effects are first Iohns Great amazement secondly his falling to the ground v. 17. The things following are first a twofold comforting of Iohn first by Gesture the laying on of the right hand vers 17. Secondly by speech bidding him not to fear and the reason is taken from the person adjuncts of the speaker viz. because hee is eternall God the Lord of life of death of hel vers 11 2 The command of writing the present vision following prophesies 3 The unfolding of the mysterie first of the seven starres that they are the seven pastors and secondly of the seven candlestikes to bee the seven Churches of Asia THE FIRST PART OF THE CHAPTER CONTAINING THE PREface title and dedication of the booke THe Revelation of Iesus Christ which God gave unto him to shew unto his servants things which must shortly come to passe and he sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant Iohn 2 Who bare record of the word of God and of the testimony of Iesus Christ and of all things that he saw 3 Blessed is he that readeth Exod. 3.14 1 Cor. 15.21 Col. 1.18 and they that hear the words of this prophecy and keep those things which are written therein for the time is at hand 4 Iohn to the seven churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven spirits which are before his throne 5 And from Iesus Christ who is the faithfull witnesse and the first begotten of the dead and the prince of the kings of the earth unto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood 6 And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen 7 Behold he cometh with clouds and every eye shall see him and they also which pierced him and all kindreds of the earth shall waile because of him even so Amen 8 I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending saith the Lord which is and which was and which is to come the Almighty A COMMENTARIE VPON THE REVELATION Chap. 1 vers 1. THe revelation this prophetical title doth expresse the argument of the booke called in Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concerning the meaning of which word there is extant in a colledge called wisdom colledge of which I have before spoken a manuscript in way of commentarie on this booke which Giveth us an
of Gods providence namely his vertue charity justice wisdom patience threatnings and wrath Which is a mysterie bringing along with it an inconvenience which he desireth to avoid for he makes question whither sound divinitie wil admit that grace and peace be asked from the seven vertues rather then from the seven created angels yea how grace and peace can be prayed for from menacings and wrath so he And from Jesus Christ In that he wisheth grace and peace from Christ in the the third and last place is neither against the former exposition nor any way derogateth from the dignity of Christ for as the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.14 doth not derogate from the order of the persons in the trinitie though he put Christ in the first place so here our Apostle for waighty causes sets downe the holy Ghost before Christ because he treateth of him not simply as being the son of God but also as he is the mediatour redeemer and revealer of this prophesie Notwithstanding great reason it is that he should pray for grace and peace from Christ Ephes 2.14 because it cometh by him Iohn 1.17 and he is our peace Who is the faithfull witnesse The following titles are so many reasons wherefore grace and peace is prayed for from Christ and they set forth as hath been shewed in the analysis both his threefold office with the benefit thereof as also declare his eternall Godhead The first title respects his propheticall office that faithfull witnesse which seemeth to be taken from Psal 89.38 witnesse because he hath brought forth out of the bosome of his father the testimonie that is the glad tydings of the redemption of man through his death and from heaven hath opened to us the true knowledge of God and way of salvation faithfull Because he not onely confirmed the heavenly truth by preaching by miracles meekly calling of sinners to repentance to the faith of the Gospel but also sealed the same by suffering on the crosse and by instituting the ministry he gave to the churches Apostles prophets Evangelists Pastors and Teachers who perpetually should be his witnesses Eph. 4.12 preach the Gospell to after ages for the perfecting of the saincts for the edifying of the body of Christ according to these scriptures Ioh. 17 6. I have manifested thy name to the men thou gavest me out of the world and 18 37. For this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnes unto the truth Io. 1.18 the son which is in the bosome of the father he hath revealed God unto us Who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession The father and holy Ghost are also said to be witnesses 1. Io. 5.7 Ioh. 5.37 there are three that bear record in heaven the father the word and the holy Ghost The father saith Christ himself hath borne witnes of me And of the holy Ghost he saith when the comforter is come c. He shall testifie of mee the Apostles are called witnesses Act. 1.18 And Antipas Rev 2.12 and two witnesses are mentioned called Martyrs for sheadding of their blood for the testimonie of Christ Revel 11.3 But Christ onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of prerogative is called that faithfull witnesse because he first brought with him the witnesse of the truth downe from heaven he first and he onely hath shead his blood for his owne testimonie whereas all other martyrs suffered not for their owne but for the testimonie of Jesus Christ Yea also the witnesse which the father and the holy Ghost gave of him was declared by himself and therefore Christ as by a speciall and proper right is called the faithfull witnes that is the true and constant revealer of the doctrine of our salvation whoever therefore hearkens not to him Deuteron 18.19 can not be saved but who so heareth him shall have life eternall This also confirmeth the authoritie of the revelation because it was revealed to John by Jesus Christ that faithfull witnesse who can notly nor deceive therefore this booke is trulie divine and we may safely trust and beleeve all things contained in it It serveth also to instruct us that if Christ onely be the true witnesse then those are not to be heard but avoyded as Liars which teach the Church such things as dissent from the testimonie of Christ It may also comfort us because Christ the faithfull witnesse will not forsake them who suffer for the cause of his truth but will at length reward them faithfully according to his promise The first begotten of the dead This title concernes Christ his priestly office who died for our sins and was raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 For the word dead shewes that he died and being the first begotten of the dead it teacheth us that he was raysed from the dead And the whole scripture testifies that the end and use of his death and resurrection was not a bare witnesse as Socinus blasphemeth but chiefly a propitiation to purge us from our sins and to justifie us before God Paul calleth him likewise the first begotten of the dead 1 Collo 1.18 1 Corinth 15.20 and sheweth that Christ is become the first fruits of them that sleep But how can Christ be the first fruits of the dead seeing the scriptures testifie that Elias and Elisha raysed up two persons from the dead before the time of Christs manifestation in the flesh Lazarus also with the widows son and Centurions servant were restored from death to life Answer First Christ is the first begotten or first fruites of the dead because he was the first that raysed up himself from the dead by his owne power whereas all before Christ were raysed not by their owne power but Christs alone Secondly Christ was raysed up to an immortall life not to dy any more but the other to an earthly life and became subject to death again He is said to be the first begotten or the first that did rise again Matt. 19.28 Act. 13.13 Rom. 1 4. because the resurrection is a kinde of new birth and so Christ calleth the last resurrection a regeneration And Paul applieth that in Psal 2. of the father eternally begetting the son to his resurrection from the dead and hence he is declared to be the eternall and omnipotent son of God This should greatly comfort us that though we are borne and brought forth in a corruptible condition yet when we rise again we shall be regenerated unto a state incorruptible even while we are in this life we are regenerated but it is spiritually onely and in part but when we shall by the spirit of God be restored to eternall life then we shall be regenerated both corporally and fully to wit when our mortall bodies shall be made conformable to the glorious body of Christ let us not fear therefore though we should suffer death for the testimony of Christ because he who is the first begotten of the dead
accounts him to be neyther hot nor cold but lukewarme who neyther is a professed enemy of the Gospel nor yet a faithfull professor thereof but an hypocrite that is one as it were betwixt both And it may be referred eyther to their life or doctrine As for the mixture of heathenish and Iewish rites in the service of God it began first to increase immediately upon the cessation of the persecution of the Romane Emperors and when the Christian Church began to enjoye ease and tranquillity And therefore I judge that these Laodiceans were not as yet guiltie of this evill but they were lukewarme as concerning faith and manners in complying with the gentiles to the end that beeing the lesse offensive unto them they might quietly enjoy their trade in that noble mart-towne which abounded with all sorts of merchants for however they desired to be accounted good Christians yet did they not forsake their former frande and luxurie The summe of all is this They mingled Christ and the world togither and made use of religion no otherwise then might stand with their profit and trade Thus they were neither open enemies to Christ nor yet his true friends but as it were lukewarme and neutrals that is fained and lying hypocrites and soo worse in Christs esteem then his professed enemies I would thou wert eyther hot or cold He wisheth they were hot that is truely zealous in faith and godlinesse for the law requireth that men should love the Lord with all their hart and with all their soul c. Thus we see that to be hot is to be upright in hart ful of love to God and our neighbour Now Christ wisheth they were cold that is altogither without faith and godlinesse not absolutely but comparatively in asmuch as they who are cold seem to be more excusable then such as are lukewarme and more easily to be reformed better avoyded then others and in this respect are lesse hurtfull then they For the sin of hypocrites is greater then theirs who are open enemies because it is a worse thing not to follow the truth in sincerity which we know then to be ignorant altogether thereof for such are more easily wrought upon by the means and sooner brought to the truth wheras hypocrites having faith onely in shew doe imagine they see but are blinde and mantaine their false opinions hating persecuting in the mean time the truth of God For example the Lutherans who beeing wedded to their false opinions are the more hardlie drawen from them For they hate and persecute the orthodoxe doctrine concerning our spirituall communion with Christ more then the blinde Papists Againe a Iew who is a professed enemie of Christ will easier be brought to embrace christian religion then an hypocriticall Iesuite drowned in Antichristian superstitions And therefore with great reason Christ wisheth that this Church were rather cold then lukewarme not that it is good to be cold but because a lukewarme condition is more dangerous and hurtfull then the other We see also in natural things from whence the metaphor is taken that hot or cold things are more approved then those things that are lukewarme Hot meats in cold weather and cold drinkes in hot seasons agree best with the stomack but that which is lukewarme is lothsome and disposeth to vomit Hence Christ desired that the Pharisees had been blinde rather then hypocrites who are uncapable of reproofe Ioh. 9.41 1 King 18.21 If saith he yee were blinde ye should have no sinne but now yee say wee see therefore your sinne remaineth And the like Elias said unto the hypocriticall and idolatrous Israelites why halt ye betweene two opinions If Jehovah be God follow him but if Baal follow him Not as if he approved the worship of Baal but sheweth that there is such a contrariety betweene it the true worship of God as that they cannot possibly bee joyned togither And hence we are taught whom we are to esteem in these our dayes to be lukewarme not such as are weak in the faith whom the scripture commandeth us to receive with all meeknesse but those who labour to joyne Christ and Belial together in faith ceremonies and manners Such also who though they glory as if they were come out of Babylon and would faine be accounted good protestants neverthelesse strive tooth and naile to uphold the superstitions of Antichrist his tittles orders garments surplices miters crucifixes images and the like Babylonish stuff brought by him into the worship of God But let us here take notice what Christ judgeth of such men 16 So then because thou art lukewarme The second part of the narration containes a threatning with a repetition of the cause thereof because thou art luke-warme I will spue thee out of my mouth Hee goes foreward in the metaphor comparing hypocrites to lukewarme water which is so lothsome to the stomack as it cannot retaine it but casts it forth with lothsomnesse and paine Even so hypocrites are abominable to Christ for he spues them out of his mouth that is he rejects them as strangers unto him I will spue thee out of my mouth Here we se the lenity and patience of Christ in bearing a long time with hypocrites yea inviting of them unto repentance preadmonishing them of their punishment before he spues them out for their obstinacie Gods threatnings therfore are to be understood conditionally I will spue thee out viz. If thou repent not Out of my mouth Here it will not follow that such as are cold are in Christs mouth or that any of the faithfull may fall from grace As Ribera subtilly disputeth For Christ threatens this not against the cold but the lukewarme who by profession and appearance are in his mouth that is in the Church of Christ but indeed are hypocrites having a forme of godlines but denie the power thereof But hence we ought rather to observe that there are allwayes many hypocrites in the bosome of the Church and especially among the Clergie this mixture therfore should not offend us for the divell wil alwayes sow tares among the wheat neyther ought we to be moved with the loftie titles of hie-priests cardinals arch-bishops bishops prelates and the like rabble of Antichrist 17 For thou sayest I am rich The third part is a confutation of the vaine boasting of this Church in which were manie rich merchants fallen into securitie and riot for riches doe often times befoole the owners thereof occasioning in them pride and luxurie And this seems to be the reason why they thus boasted to weet because they were rich and having need of nothing But it may also be rightly understood that they gloried as if they had been rich in spirituall things for hypocrites imagine that they are just and holy and need not grace and remission of sins as other men Thus these gloried of their faith but it was dead and voyd of sinceritie and love as is the faith of all hypocrites and so not
God with censers but these with vials Which are the prayers of the saintes Their prayers are called vials by a twofold trope First by a Synechdoche for the odours in the vials And secondly by a metonymical denomination or els a metaphorical translation as signifying the prayers of the saintes For as persumes ascend upward and give forth a sweet smell so the saints in prayer seeke after heavenly things and the same is acceptable unto God They are golden vials because as gold excels in puritie so prayers proceeding from a pure hart are precious to the Lord what their prayers are now followes 9. And they sung a new song Both Companies of the Church triumphant with a most sweet accord prayse the Lamb the redeemer which proveth that these beasts and Elders are not Angels but men redeemed by the blood of Christ It shewes also unto us the consent of both covenants in the point of salvation For all the Patriarchs Prophets and Apostles together acknowledge the Lamb their redeemer Act. 10.43 According to that of the Apostle To him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name whosoever beleeveth in him shall receive remission of sins And againe Act. 15.11 we beleeve that through the grace of the Lord Iesus Christ we shall be saved as the fathers For in him all the promises are yea and Amen 2 Corinth 1.20 Furthermore those prayers of the saintes Psal 40.4 96.1 97.1 144.9 149.1 caried here by the Elders in their golden vials are to be understood as their owne and not the prayers of others It is called a new song that is most singularly setting forth the great rare and excellent benefits of the Lambe For generally in the Psalmes a new song is taken in this sence The former Hymne Chap. 4.8 was sung unto him that sate on the throne but this is a song unto the Lamb. So Chap. 14.1 the saintes in heaven sing a new song unto the Lamb which none could learn but these hundred fourty and four thousand which had his fathers name written in their foreheads The argument therefore of this song is new because it is most excellent and containes the new benefits of Christ Thou art worthy They acknowledge him alone worthy to take the booke and to open the seales because they both know and confesse with all reverence that he is the onely mediatour of the Church and that the cause of this his great worthinesse is in the preciousnes of his blood For thou wast slaine that is by dying for the sins of the world thou declarest thy self to be the Messias Chap. 53. whō Isaiah foretold should be led as a sheep to the slaughter to take away the sins of the world Here we are taught that the mediatour ought both to be slaine for us that is to merit and also to take the booke that is meritoriously to bestow life and righteousnes upon others Seeing therefore he onely merited by his sacrifice it must necessarily follow that none else could take the booke that is reveale the counsell of God to the Church and by his power give salvation unto her And thou hast redeemed us to God by thy blood Now the Church triumphant prayseth the Lambe and applyeth the price of her redemption with the effects thereof unto her self Thus we ought so to acknowledge the benefits of Christ as to make them our owne not onelie in beleeving that he hath redeemed others by his blood and made them kings and priests to God but our selves also for true justifying faith is accompanied with a certaine perswasion of our own salvation I live saith the Apostle by the faith of the son of God who loved me Gal. 2.24 and gave himself for me Hence we observe two things First that the death of Christ is truly a ransome satisfactorie for our sins and that our redemption by it is not metaphorical as the new Samosatenians blasphemouslie affirme but proper for the redemption which is made by a price is proper But such is ours by Christ because by the shedding of his blood he hath paid a full ransome and satisfied the justice of God as the scripture witnesseth Matt. 20.28 and 1 Tim. 2.6 beeing the same with what is here said thou hast redeemed us by thy blood and ●hap 1.5 who hath washed us in his blood and Heb. 1.3 purged our sins by himself unlesse that by the word redemption is properly signified the whole worke of our salvation by washing and purging a part thereof viz. our justification or sanctification This place therefore and many others proving Christs satisfactorie ransome are to be opposed against Socinian blasphemies Secondlie that the redemption made by Christs blood is truely universal as sufficient and propounded not onely to one nation or a few but to all nations tongues and peoples yet not so as if all promiscuously should be saved but those of everie tribe people and language who beleeve in Christ And thus much the Elders teach us Thou hast redeemed us out of every tribe We adde in the third place XXX Argument of Christs deity that this redemption proves the Lamb to be God omnipotent For to redeem the Church from sin death and satan is a worke of divine power Psal 130.8 Hence the Apostle Act. 20.28 saith that God hath redeemed the Church by his owne blood 10 And made us to God They magnifie the Lambe for three other benefits 1. That he hath made us kings 2. priests 3. given us a kingdome on the earth The two former we have expounded Chap. 1.6 beeing meant of our spiritual kingdome and priesthood See Rom. 14.17 1 Pet. 2.5 But how shall we raigne on the earth seeing Christs kingdome is not of this world besides earthly things perish in their use and lastly the Church in this life is to expect nothing but tribulation Andreas saith that the Church shall reigne not in this present thick and cloudie world but in that new one which is promised unto the meek Matth. 5.5 But the saints may truly be said to reigne here on earth diverse wayes First by mortifying their earthly desires and trampling them under their feet Secondly as Christ raignes on the earth not by a secular but spirituall power by which he forceth the adversarie unto obedience Even so the faithfull doe raigne with Christ in the earth For the head raigning the members raigne also to be short the saintes with Christ shall judge the world and therefore shall rule the same however we are to understand this not of an earthlie but a spirituall dominion 2 Cor. 10.4 For the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mightie through God c. But thou wilt say how shall the saints who now triumph in heaven raigne on the earth I answer after the same manner as they shall judge the world and the Angels 11. And I beheld and round about the throne The third apparition is of Angels who sing the new
taught that the soules of the martyrs and other saintes departed are not in the paines of purgatorie but enjoy the presence of Christ their saviour in the heavens But touching this sight of Christ how and after what manner they see God and Christ I leave it to Sophisters to dispute of If they bee under the altar that is Christ then undoubtedlie they doe behold him Ioh. 14.9 And if Christ why not God also Forasmuch as Christ himself saith He which seeth mee seeth my Father the fulnesse of whose sight we shall enjoy at the last day 1 Ioh. 3.2 as the scripture teacheth For when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as hee is In the mean while the blessed vision here spoken of sufficeth for the present degree of happinesse unto the soules of the faithfull 10. And they cried with a great voyce Now he sheweth what the soules doe under the altar namely cry mightilie to God that their blood may be avenged which argues that their soules were not killed or died with their bodies but live eternally neyther are they asleep but watch But this we are not to understand of any vocal crying with the tongue which the soules cannot doe but of a visionall crying by which is signifyed their earnest desire represented here unto Iohn in the spirit under the forme of a great cry The phrase alludes to the death of Abel Gen 4.10 whose blood is said to cry for vengeance to God from the earth O Lord Now he comes to rehearse what their crying was and in what manner they implored him that sate on the throne and the Lamb. Holie that is pure hating the crueltie of tyrants True alwayes constant in performing thy promises and threatnings and just also both in rewarding and in punishing of men How long doest thou not judge c. Seeing thou art holy true why doest thou suffer tyrants to rage so long against thy saintes On them that dwell on the earth A paraphrase of tyrants and their instruments beeing unworthy to be named onely approbriously they are called inhabitants of the earth that is earthlie and foolish men presuming to rebell against heaven to their owne destruction closelie also implying their own present happy condition as free from the furie of wordlings How long They desire the hastening of Gods judgements But here it may be demanded how the soules of the saintes in heaven can be said to be thus impatient and desirous of revenge I answer their words import no impatient desire For the glorified saintes are altogether free from all corruption this way and therefore here is signifyed their earnest desire that Gods glorie be vindicated and the Church finally delivered from the tyrannie of implacable adversaries neyther doe they praescribe unto God any time touching his judgements or the deliverance of the Church but closelie submit unto the same as unknown to them when it shall be onely they intimate that to them it seems just equal that he should deliver his Church and no longer suffer the blasphemies and cruelty of persecutors And therefore not desiring to avenge themselves they commit vengeance unto the Lord How long O Lord doest thou not avenge not thristing after it themselves but desire that God in righteousnesse will administer the same as knowing the just God will not suffer the crueltie of the wicked to be unavenged and passe without punishment yet they leave the manner and time to the Lords own disposing desiring it no otherwise then as it may stand with his pleasure and will Thus we also here on earth pray to be delivered from that evill one in which we contradict not the counsell of God neither sin against him in praescribing the time and manner thereof but shewing our desire wee attribute unto God the prayse of his justice faithfulnes and omnipotency beleeving that he both can at length will assuredly deliver us Much lesse therfore doe the soules of the saintes in praying for the same thing sin against the Lord. Vide August serm 11. de Sanstis 11. And white robes were given to every one of them God heard the request of the martyrs and answers them according to their desire both in word and deed In deed for white robes were presently given unto everie one of them In word for a speadie vengeance is promised After a little season The cause of this delay is added not that the sins of bloodthirstie tyrants are not ripe and worthie of vengeance but because the number of the martyrs is not yet complete And this is the summe White Robes This notes out the beginning of their celestial glorie Were given them to wit by him that sate on the throne or by the Lambe Not as if the soules under the altar were naked before seeing even in this life they had put on Christ For as manie as have been baptised unto Christ Gal. 3.27 2 Cor. 5.5 5. have put on Christ and if we be not found naked here we shall be cloathed with our house which is from heaven and being purged from all filthinesse we shall stand before God and live with Christ in eternall happinesse Now I disaproove not their judgement touching the twofold robe after this life While we are here our robe remaines stained with the spots of the flesh August tom 10. serm 11. de sanct though covered with the blood of Christ to the end they may not appeare before the face of God After our departure a robe is given to everie one perfitly white indeed yet but one that is a new degree of happines in heaven But after the full deliverance of the saintes that is at the day of judgement the other robe shal be also given that is the saintes shal be fully and perfectly glorified This then is another comfort namelie that to the martyrs in stead of the bloodie robe with which tyrants here cloathed them there shall be given them a white robe of joy and glorie in heaven And it was said unto them to wit by him that sate on the throne or by the Lambe under whose shadow they rested neyther is it strange that Christ is represented as a Lamb in regard of his death and as an Altar in regard of his propitiation Here are manie things touched in few words First it is a mild admonition that the soules for the present should be contented with their white robes and cease crying expecting the time of Gods appointed judgement It is also a close commination of revenge after a litle season for however God for a while deferres punishment yet he certainly heares the request of the godlie and at last will be fullie avenged on their adversaries It is also a prophesie of the future condition of the saintes under Antichrist by whose tyrannie manie martyrs are to brought to their end with fire and sword And lastlie it is consolation for the godlie under this antichristian tyrannie seeing their afflictions shall
celebrated viz. The joy of the Church and the mourning of the adversaries with the causes of both The great voyce that Iohn heard signifies the multitude of rejoycers and the greatnes of their joy because of the victorie From vers 11. it may be gathered that they were the saintes in heaven who acknowledge the Church militant for their brethren Therfore all the heavenlie companies sing togither excepting the third companie of Angels and the fourth of other creatures The proposition of their song is in vers 12. rejoyce yee heavens and yee that dwell in them In calling upon the heavens themselves to rejoyce they amplifie the excellencie of the benefit for great joy is caused by great mercies This Prosopopoeja is often used as afterward in Chap. 19.20 so in Isa 1.2 heare ye heavens And yee that dwell in them that is the Angels of heaven whom they invite to rejoyce with them The arguments of their joy are the worthie benefits of the victorie which are three in number as we shewed in the analysis The first is that by this victorie comes salvation and strength and the kingdom of our God and the power of his Christ The like benefits were set forth in the foregoing vision at the sounding of the seventh Angel Cha. 11.15 but arising from a different cause There the dwellers in heaven rejoyced for the finall judgement and destruction of Antichrist and other adversaries here they exult for the first victorie of Michael against the Dragon by which is come salvation and strength c Now howsoever God and Christ had this evermore before yet the same appeared not so fullie because of the wickeds rage and tumult the which they seemed to winke at But then they openlie declared their power c. When Michael that is Christ by his death resurrection and exaltation brake the power of the Dragon and cast him to the earth Besides they had it not alwayes for us that is for our help and consolation But at last it came to bee ours and for us through the victorie of Michael For it is to be observed that they say not these things came to God and to Christ but that now the salvation and power of God and of Christ was come that is was gotten given and communicated to us For through Christs victorie the salvation of our God is come viz. unto us from our God Then the power of our God did manifest it self when it drew us as a lost prey out of the Dragons jawes Then Gods kingdom became ours when we beeing delivered out of the power of darkenesse Colos 1.13 Rom. 1.4 were translated into the kingdome of his beloved Son Then Christs power became ours when he having over come death and Satan was declared to be the son of God powerfullie according to the spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead This is the first argument of joy to the heavenlie spirits and to us in regard that our salvation is founded in the victorie of Michael and that the power and kingdome of our God is vindicated from the violence of the Dragon Our God so they call him that we might confidentlie trust that by this victorie God is reconciled unto us Ioh. 16.33 for so Christ bids us saying bee of good cheere I have overcome the world To this spiritual joy may also be added that outward rejoycing of Christians when Constantine the Emperour had driven the foresaid Dragons out of heaven to the earth Thus I say salvation strength kingdome and power of God and Christ did seeme to come when a Christian Emperour was set on the throne glorifyed God publickly maintained Christs power and freed the Church from tyrannie For the kingdome of God is visiblie seen as it were saith Brightman when godlie princes are placed at the stern The which indeed is true But here it is a secondarie sense For the accuser of our bretheren is cast down The second benefit of the victorie and argument of joy is the immunitie of the Godly from satans accusations Whom before he called a slaunderer adversarie and deceiver he now cals him our accuser It is an allusion to the court where the judge sitteth on the tribunal Satans Iudiciall action against sinners before whom is brought a guilty person with his accuser demanding his life This judge is God For he will judge the world in righteousnes and shall minister judgment to the people in uprightnes Before his tribunal we all stood guiltie of eternal death through sin Gods revenging justice stood against us requiring that we should suffer temporal and eternal punishments For what was committed by us against his infinite majesty Rom. 1.32 For it is the judgement of God that they who commit such things are worthie of death Against us stood the law of God pronouncing cursings against the transgressours thereof Our own evill conscience also arguing and convincing us of eternall guiltinesse But Christ our Michael pleaded our cause before God and by suffering death for our sakes most fullie satisfyed his justice and healed our wounded consciences from the sting of sin purging and sanctifying our harts through faith by his spirit Act. 15.9 Rom. 8.1 and therefore there is no condemnation to us who are in Christ Notwithstanding satan left not off to prosecute his action to accuse and blame us to stirre up God against us and to rage against the faithfull In that he is said to accuse us day and night before God it doth emphaticallie set forth satans malice he knowes God is ours that is reconciled unto us in Christ yet he impudently blameth us to make him if he could not to be ours But thankes be to God Michael hath cast this impudent railer out of heaven that hence forward he might no more molest the Lord with his lying accusations If this great benefit gave occasion of so great joy to the heavenly inhabiters then much more to us For the Dragon was not an accuser of them in heaven but of us who as yet walk in the slipperie pathes of this world Therefore they say The accuser of our bretheren to wit they who as yet have their warfare here on earth This is a worthie thing that the Church triumphant acknowledgeth us to be bretheren And indeed the Catholick or universall Church is a communion of all the Saintes both in heaven and in earth So Chap. 6.11 Hence first the doctrine of the Gospel touching free justification by faith is here confirmed For if our accuser bee cast out then certainlie Free justification by faith here established no man accusing us God the judge will not condemn but acquit and justifie them who by faith are in Christ Iesus It confirmes also the doctrine of the full assurance of our faith and salvation The full assurance of faith touching our salvation Rom. 8.33 For if Christ hath satisfyed Gods judgement for us and silenced our accuser then verely henceforward we may fullie perswade
This is my opinion touching the smoake untill I understand that something more agreeable is alleadged CHAPTER XVI The Argument Parts and Analysis The Preparation of the Vision we heard viz Seven Angells stand in the Theatre of Heaven with seven Vialls full of the wrath of God ready to poure out the same Now followeth the vision or the pouring of them out with the events namely horrible plagues and the effects thereof for the Angells having received commandement in order poure out the Vialls upon divers elements and places whence followes the joy of the godly the misery of the Antichristian adversaries and at last their rage and destruction THe Parts of the Chapter are two The former containes the commandement of God verse 1. The second the execution in the rest of the Chapter distinct in their pourings out according to the number of the Angells and seven Vialls The first on the earth with the effects thereof A noisome sore fell on the worshippers of the beast verse 2. The second on the Sea with its twofold effect The corrupting of the Sea and death of all living creatures in it verse 3. The third on the Rivers the effect whereof is first internall the waters are turned into blood ver 4. secondly externall a twofold gratulation 1. of the Angell of the waters praysing the righteousnesse of God ve 5. in rendring like for like ve 6.2 Of a voyce out of the Altar assenting to the former ver 7. The fourth on the sun the effect whereof is threefold 1. The scorching of men ver 89.2 Their blasphemies 3. Their impenitency ibid. The fift on the throne of the beast the internall effect whereof is the darkning of the Antichristian Kingdome ver 10. and a twofold externall effect 1. blasphemies against God and the moving cause viz. their paines and sores 2. Their obstinacie in sin ver 11. The sixt on Euphrates the internall effect whereof is the drying up of the waters thereof and the end of it to prepare the way for the Kings of the East The externall three unclean spirits who are described 1. by their originall out of the mouth of the Dragon the Beast and the false Prophet ver 13. 2. By their figure or shape they are like to frogs ibid. 3. by their disposition it is divelish ver 14. 4. By their cunning and impostures working miracles ibid. 5. By their function or office to raise up warre against God ibid. here an exhortation to the Saints is inserted in these troubles to be watchfull ver 15. 6. By the execution of their charge the gathering of the enemies into Harmageddon ver 16. The seventh on the aire the event whereof is the last judgement or consummation of all things This is proclaimed 1. By voyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is done ver 17. 2. It is figured in foure types 1. By horrible tempests verse 18. 2. By the division of Babylon and the ruine of the cities of the Nations And the efficient cause hereof Gods remembrance of Babylon ver 19. 3. The flight of the Islands and Mountaines ver 20. 4. Haile of a talent weight fals on the wicked the effects whereof are blasphemies against God v. 21. Thus we have the Argument and Order of the Chapter to the understanding whereof it seemes requisite in a generall way to premise a few things 1. Of the scope and of the seven Vialls whether they be the same with the seven Seales and seven Trumpets 2. Of the seven Angells pouring out the same 3. Of the last Plagues following thereupon I. Of the Scope and Vse of the Plagues and of the seven Vialls whether they be the same with the seven Seales and seven Trumpets COnsidering that I spake in the Preface of the Scope of the Vision I will now onely adde that the consideration of the Order makes very much for the comfort of the godly and terrour of the adversaries In the former Vision indeed are contained the plagues by which the beast with his associates afflicted the Saints In the third Vision the beast fought against and killed the two witnesses contumeliously abused their Carkasses and the inhabiters of the earth triumphed over them being slaine In the fourth Vision the Dragon persecuted the woman and made war with the remnant of her seed The beast also molested the Saints by Warre and overcame them to the great applause of his worshippers and to them onely it was permitted to buy and sell such as refused to worship the beast were slain Thus the tyranny of the beast stood in its vigour and his kingdom flourished and was greatly admired at Here on the contrary we shall heare of the Plagues by which the beast and his followers shall be tormented Now in the end indeed of the foregoing vision Babylon and the worshippers of the beast were vexed by the preaching of the Angells But in this Vision the Saints begin to sing in triumph over the beast and the Angells are joyned to them pouring out seven Vials c. Touching these it may be demaunded whether they agree with the seven Seales and seven Trumpets It is answered although there be some likenesse of effects in the six Trumpets and six latter Vialls yet the seven Vials do not altogether answer to the seven Seales and seven Trumpets The reason is plaine by verse 2. both of this and the foregoing Chapter from the time because the vialls begin to be poured out on the marked ones of the beast Chap. 16.2 long after the beasts rising even when he was already in part overcome Chap. 15.2 But the originall of the beast is first treated of in the sixt Seale and fift Trumpet as we noted on ver 1. of Chap. 13. The pouring out therefore of the vialls followed after the opening of five Seales and the sounding of foure Trumpets the sixt Seale and fift trumpet being almost ended and the fourth period of the Christian Church begun which as we noted on Chap. 15.1 tooke its beginning from the measuring of the Temple or Reformation of Evangelicall Doctrine in the West and is to endure unto the end II Of the seven Angells pouring out the Vialls Who they are and what the pouring out of the Vialls is THese seven Angells are thought by most to be such preachers whom Christ in the last times will raise up against Antichrist and according to their threatning inflict these plagues on Antichristians If so then these Angells of the fift Vision should analogically answer to the two witnesses of the third Vision and to the three angels of the fourth Vision because all these are publishers of the Gospell against Antichriste unlesse perhaps they so differ in time as what at first was done by two that is a few afterwards was done by three that is more and at last by seven that is very many were raised up to oppose Popery If we take this sense then the golden Vialls given to the Angels should be that golden and eternall gospell which
it selfe ver 3.4.5 III. The interpretation of the Vision in the rest of the Chapter In the first Iohn is invited by the Angell to contemplate a new Vision ver 1. The Argument thereof being the judgement or condemnation of the great whore ibid. Whose person is described generally by two adjuncts 1. Of her seat or throne upon many waters 2. Of her abominable fornication as the cause of her condemnation v. 2. with whom the kings have committed fornication c. In the second is noted 1. The place of the Vision in the wildernesse 2. The Vision it selfe A woman sitting on a beast ibid. 3. The monstrous shape of the beast ibid. 4. The attire of the whorish woman ver 4. The name on her forehead ver 5. and her cruelty ver 6. In the third is shewed a twofold occasion of the interpretation Iohns great admiration ver 6. and the readinesse of the Angell to interpret ver 7. The interpretation followeth 1. Of the Beast ver 8.9.10.11.12.13.14 2. Of the woman ver 15. unto the end The beast is unfolded first in the whole secondly according to his parts Of the whole Beast is shewed 1. The fourefold state also his authority among the inhabitants of the earth ver 8. to which is annexed an exclamation stirring up to attention ver 9. The parts of the beast are unfolded 1. The seven heads that they are so many mountain●s and so many kings ver 9.10.11 2. The ten hornes that they also are so many kings ver 12. 3. The conspiracy of the kings with the Beast against the Lambe ver 13. 4. The fight of the kings with the Lambe ver 14. To 〈◊〉 the woman here is shewed 1. her seat on many waters ver 15.2 her 〈◊〉 desertion and burning ver 16. The secondarie causes whereof shall be the hornes of the beast ibid. The first and chiefe the divine motion ver 17. 3. The surname of the woman the great city reigning over the kings of the earth c. that is Rome ver 18. CHAPTER XVII The first Part of the Chapter The Preface of the VISION 1 And there came one of the seven Angels which had the seven vials and talked with me saying Come hither I will shew unto ●ee the judgement of the great whore that sitteth upon many waters 2 With whom the kings of the earth have committed fornication and the inhabiters of the earth have bin made drunke with the wine of her Fornication THE COMMENTARY AND there came one of the seven Angells The occasion of the Vision is the invitation of the Angell unto a new Vision Now whether this Angell were the first of the seven by an hebraisme it matters not Brightman takes him to be the fift who poured out the Viall on the throne of the Beast But it may be as well any one of the other for every of them did poure out the last plagues on the beasts kingdom Notwithstanding it seems to be the seventh or last who with his Viall raised an earthquake whereby Babylon was destroyed for this shal be the judgement of the great whore to which Iohn is now invited to behold the same he had heard indeed by the preaching of the second Angell in Vision fift chap 14 8 the fall of Babylon and even now in the earthquake he saw the division or rent thereof chap 16.19 but the Type was something obscure here therefore in a more evident vision the tragical judgement of Babylon is manifested to him Come hither I will shew unto thee The sense is not I will reveal or expound unto thee in words but I will bring thee to the very beholding of the thing it selfe as if he should say I will no longer describe Antichrist in words but will now set him forth plainely before thy eyes Now as this was a Vision so it was a mentall transportation as appeares verse 3. The scope or drift was that Iohn should wrire these tragicall apparitions to the terrour of Babylon and comfort of the godlie The friendly manner of speaking Come hither and the whole matter teacheth us what the Apostle speaketh Heb. 1.14 that the Angells as ministring Spirits are with alacrity imployed about these things which serve for our consolation and salvation not to the end that we should worship them for thus Iohn is prohibited to do but that we might rejoyce and give thankes to God chap 19 10 22.9 who so careth for us as for our sakes to send forth the Angels as ministring spirits The judgement of the whore In one word he shews the Argument of the Vision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the judgement of the whore for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Condemnation which is not meant of a temporall spoiling and burning which the whore shall suffer by her lovers but to be cast for ever into the lake of fire and brimstone the which Christ the Iudge shall himselfe execute at the last day Of the great ●hore Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with a double Article Regula articulorum non semper perpetua as if he spake of a whore before known whereas indeed there was nothing formerly mentioned of her And therefore the rule will not alwayes hold that articles are never put but before things that are knowne Vnlesse perhaps he denotes this Whore by a double article because she was knowne to the Angell as if hee should say I will shew unto thee that famous Harlot or Strumpet well knowne to all the heavenly inhabitants and what her end shall be seeing as yet thou knowest it not She is not that woman Jezabell which seduced some of the Church of Thiatyra by her fornication Chap. 2.20 For the description shews that here a far more famous whore is noted For this Strumpet sits not in Thiatyra but upon many waters and upon the beast the meaning whereof shal be opened on ver 3. ver 15. By calling her a whore and a great one that is insatiable and far exceeding other Strumpets in lust and filthinesse he teacheth us that the guilt and cause of her horrible judgement shall be her fornication and not simply fornication the punishment whereof might happily not have bin so capitall but joyned with detestable perfidiousnesse namely her loathsome adultery as when a Bride forsaking her Bridegroome or a wife her husband shamefully prostitute themselves unto strangers which sin both by humane and divine lawes is punished by death This may not be taken of corporall fornication for this harlot is afterward called a Citie and fornication could not be committed with the walles or houses thereof Therefore it is rather to be understood of spirituall fornication viz. apostacy from God perfidiousnesse and Idolatry Now wherefore the scripture doth so often compare this to Fornication I have shewed in my Commentary on Hosea Chapter 1. and Chapter 2. Betwixt Christ and the Church is a spirituall mariage Eph. 5 32 Hose 2 18 He as the Bridegrome hath espoused the Church as his
of the Ancient Romane Empire onely as in these expressions He changed my wages ten times This people hath tempted me ten times for many times or often Now this could not be said of the seven former heads because the Angell did distinctly number them Thus it cannot be obscure who these Ten Kings are Vndoubtedly they are all such as hitherto have held the Christian world at the appointment and command of the Romish Pope Of which read Angustinus Steuchus touching Constantines donation against Valla Sect. 94.97.103 where he maintaines that all kingdoms in Christindome as Hungarie Spaine France England c. are subject and tributary to the Pope Which have received no kingdome as yet We have shewed who the Ten Kings are now of their originall when and with what successe they should reigne At the time of the Revelation they had not as yet received the kingdome for hitherto the sixt head reigned in the Romane tyrants The seventh head also was to reign a short space on the mountaines of the woman in Rome and afterward some while out of these mountaines at Constantinople in the Christian Emperours before this also the beast having swallowed up the seventh head was to be made the Eight king The word therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not as yet notes the time from the revealing of this Prophesie which was Anno 14. of Domitian and of Christ 96. untill the Empire of the West taken from the Greeks by Pope Leo and given to Charles anno 800. being I say 704 yeers But receive power For shall receive by an ennallage usuall to Iohn which the Particle not yet sheweth for if they had not then as yet received the same it shews that they should receive kingly power afterward But when In one houre with the beast Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 One houre and so rendred it signifies the little time their kingdom should continue But the Angell sheweth not how long their power should continue but when they should receive the same For what kind of kingdom would that be to continue but one hour Therfore the old Version and Beza do more rightly render it In one houre as in Chap. 3.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what hour I will come that is in or at what houre And Iohn 4.52 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yesterday at the seventh houre Now here an houre is not astronomically taken for the twelth part of the day 1. Ioh. 2.18 but metaphorically for an indefinite article of time as Iohn in his Epistle little children it is the last houre that is the last time so here in one houre is to be understood at one and the same time they shall receive their power with the beast namely when the beast shall come to be the Eight king usurping the Empire of the West and armed with both Monarchicall swords Thus undoubtedly the holy Ghost points as with the finger vnto the history of Leo III. that when he began to create Emperors and Kings then also he began to be the Beast and the Eight King With the Beast The old Version After the Beast as if it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it is in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the Beast Neither do I find it otherwise in any Copy though Alcasar saith he hath but alledgeth no Author The sense comes much to one for whither they shall receive power one houre after the Beast or at the same houre with the beast yet shall they reigne together but we are rather to keep to the Greek reading and sense They receive power in one houre that is at one and the same time with the Beast They receive From whom from the Beast who out of the fullnesse of his power shall give kingdoms unto them not so for the Angel sa●th not from the beast but with the beast for how soever they shall receive it through the wicked means of the beast yet they receive it from God to whom onely it appertains to give and transfer kingdomes and from whom is all power But the holy Ghost thus speaketh that they are to receive their power with the beast for two causes First The kings received power from God because although the translation of the Empire under which the welfare of other kingdomes is contained was brought to passe by the rashnesse and boldnesse of the Beast Notwithstanding God himself intending to punish the intestine dissentions and other sins of the Eastern nations did by means of a necessary and lawfull war of Charls against the Lombards the destroyers of Italy and the Empire justly translate the Imperial state from the Greeks unto the French seeing it is God that ruleth in the kingdoms of men Dan. 4.25 and giveth them to whomsoever he will And therefore the kings here received their power not from the Beast but from God although the perfidiousnesse of the Beast came in between like as in the Schisme of the ten tribes notwithstanding the sedition of Ieroboam yet that alteration of the kingdome is ascribed to God Return ye every man unto his house because this thing is of Iehovah 1. kings 12 2. Therefore by this circumstance the spirit again points unto the history of Leo that when he began to create Emperors and kings Then also he began to be the Beast and Eight king Whence it is manifest that when the Romane Pope boasteth of the translation of the Empire from the Greeks unto the French and Germanes he glorieth in nothing but in his owne wickednesse and seditious perfidiousnesse Secondly because the kings were so to receive power as to have the same with the Beast that is to reigne with his favour they should have it I say for his advantage not without the Beast but with him that so the Beast might reign with them and by them For the Pope will not be accounted an Emperor or king but will have with and under him other Emperors and kings of his own inauguration and making as his vassals Therefore are they said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As it were kings which indeed shall bear the title and ensignes of kings yet shall they not be absolute kings as the seven heads were and therefore Ribera saith most truly They shall have indeed the name of kings But in truth Antichrist himself shall reignt and they obey him For they shall onely be intrusted by the Pope and hold their kingdomes from him evther directly as Fee-Farmes or Coppy-holds or indirectly as sworn to the Church of Rome Thus I rather take the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As because of the following matter which confirms this sense then of the obscurity of these kings who in comparison of the former Mouarchy shall be but the shadows of kings as it were although this sense be also true and agrees with the former Notwithstanding that which is spoken of one hour is not so to be taken as if all these kings received their power together but with some
committed fornication with the whore Vntill the words of God that is his decree touching the rising of Antichrist revealed in the words of the Prophets and Apostles be fulfilled After the fullfilling whereof God put into their hearts to hate the Romish Strumpet that is detest Popish Idolatry embrace the Gospell of Christ forsake yea and oppose the Whore Why therefore should we wonder that so many great Emperours so many religious Kings of Germany France Spaine England c. have with such zeale defended Popish Idolatry the Romish Church and Antichrist the Pope almost these 800. years in defence of whose magnificence and glory they have made so great wars and shed so much Christian blood We hear that God did put it into their hearts that they should do so and not otherwise so that the Angell wills us to rise from the events and secondary means unto the secret yet just judgement of God Here againe we have cause greatly to admire that after so long fornication some of the Kings as of England Scotland Denmarke Sweethland Many powerfull Princes also of Germany Bohemia France Poland and Hungary having laid down their armes against the Lambe and embraced the heavenly Doctrine of salvation brought to light by the Two Witnesses in the ages of our predecessours do at this day hate the Romish Adultresse and make her naked We have cause I say to admire the Fact and extoll Gods judgement to Heaven Certainly the Kings did not repent either rashly or by their own understanding God put it into their hearts that they should repent of their whoredome hate the whore and make her desolate The LORD is to be intreated that he will put the same into the hearts of the rest of the KINGS that is to take knowledge shun and hate the Whore and to give their power no longer unto the Beast but unto the Lambe Some Textuall scruples do here offer themselves which I shall explain after I have opened what yet remains in the Text. 18 The woman which thou sawest is the City The Angell openeth the whole mysterie of the whore This woman is popish Rome see chap. 11.8 14.8 16.19 that we might not think the woman sitting upon the waters to be an Asian or Vtopian Nymph It is saith he that great City before he often calls it Babylon Now he sets it forth by a more remarkeable note Having dominion over the Kings of the Earth Now what is this Is it the whole multitude of ungodly men in the world as some of the fathers wanting the experience which we have now have thought Nay it is Rome yea Popish Rome For the Writers saith Ribera In cha 17 sec 20.22 who have otherwise interpreted it are forced by the truth it selfe to yeeld unto us that Rome is that whorish City to be destroyed and overthrowne Again The foregoing words God put it into their hearts belong to the desolation and burning of Rome for they shew the cause of so great desolation effected by them who rather were thought should have proved friends With this sense which is certainly true c. Thus we have the interpretation of one sworn Iesuite Let us hear another Lib. de P. R. cap. 2 Babylon saith BELLARMIN that great City standing on Seven Mountaines and having dominion over the Kings of the Earth is ROME Neither was there any other City which in Johns time had dominion over the Kings of the Earth then ROME and it is most notorious that ROME is built upon seven Mountaines Let us hear a third Vest pag. 817 This Verse saith ALCASAR causeth no small difficulty to them who expound it otherwise then of ANGIENT ROME But in our exposition nothing is more cleare What can we desire more The great City is Rome both because the same is built upon seven Mountaines As also because it onely in Iohns time had dominion over the Kings of the Earth But now perhaps it hath not yea but it hath For whatsoever it possesseth not by force Quicquid non possidet armis Relligione tenet it holds by Religion Wherefore the two latter Iesuites do in vain seek an evasion that not Popish but Heathenish Rome is this City for they are confuted by Ribera their own companion ingeniously confessing that Heathenish Rome long agoe burnt to ashes by the Gothes and Vandalls hath no place here but that it is Popish Rome that now is yet notwithstanding he saith that it is to be burnt before Antichrists comming which latter refutes the former It remains therefore that the whore sitting on the Beast is Papast Rome O Rome hearken to Clemanges De corrup Eccle statu Cap 26 What saith he dost thou thinke of thy Prophesie to wit of John in the Revelation Dost thou not beleeve that it belongs at least in some measure unto thee Thou hast not so lost shame and sense to deny these things Wherefore looke on it and read the damnation of the great whore sitting upon many Waters and there contemplate thy worthy actions and what shall befall thee Again therefore we gather this argument Babylon that Great City standing on seven Mountaines is the Seat of Antichrist Popish Rome is Babylon that Great City standing on seven hills Therefore Popish Rome is the Seat of Antichrist Furthermore He which ruleth in the Seat of Antichrist is Antichrist The Pope of Rome ruleth in Antichrists Seat Therefore the Pope of Rome is ANTICHRIST There remains three scruples to be discussed from ver 17. I. How God puts into the hearts of Kings that is worketh in the hearts of men without impeachment of their liberty II. Seeing God is said to put three things into the hearts of the Kings One in its owne nature good viz. The hatred of the Whore Two things in themselves evill viz. Their agreement with the Beast and fight with the Lambe Whither he puts this after the same manner into their hearts and whither it will not hence follow that hee is the Authour of sinne III. In granting which thing some maintaine that these Kings were not converted how then are they said in spoiling of the whore to doe the will of God seeing they were ignorant of it Neither spoiled they her so much out of affection to piety as of desire to the prey Now first how God workes in the hearts of men the liberty of their will remaining Of this Question both in the Hypothesis and in the Thesis the explication is the same being not a little difficult For if God workes in the hearts of men he seemeth to determinate or limit their wills to one thing Now if God limit the wil then man seems not to act freely seeing that is said to be free which is unlimited in respect of a thing Furthermore God seems to move and bend the wills of men according to his own will or pleasure But that which is moved and bent by anothers will seems not to act freely Now the Scripture on the
the profits and delights of Babylon had rather remaine in her and perish then obey the commandement of God Yea such also who being ensnared by her baites fall from Christ to Antichrist returning with the dog unto their former Vomit Like to the Israelites who loathing the Heavenly Manna in the Wildernesse desired to returne to the onions and flesh-pots in Egypt but remembred not their former miserable bondage Taskmasters Scourges Brick-ovens c. So these indeed greedily embrace the fat Kitching of the Papacy but thinke not upon the miserable slavery of the Conscience and Tyranny of Antichrist But as they lusting after their flesh-pots and onions at last miserably perished in the wildernesse and entred not into the promised Land So let these looke to it how in regard of their Apostacy they will satisfie their wounded consciences at the hour of death and what answer they will give Christ the Iudge at the last day Least ye be partakers Some weighty causes of the Commandement are added The first is least they be defiled with her sins for he which dwels near a cripple learns to halt and he that rubs a scabby person may easily be infected Our admirers of Rome plead indeed that they can without wounding of the conscience be conversant there and behold the Masse Idols and Pompe of Babylon But their pretence is false because God forbids the same and experience proves the contrary for they are forced at the least to uncover the head bow the knee to the Masse Idols Pope and by outward shews to give approbation to Babylons Idolatry except they would endanger themselves But that this is to participate in their sins cannot be denyed by any sound reason for to shun sinne is to avoid the occasion thereof Let such therefore call to mind that true saying Esto procul Roma qui cupis esse pius And of her Plagues Another cause Lib. 8. cap. 28. least being overthrowne by the fall of Babylon we suffer justly for our rashnesse and backwardnes Mice as Plinie writeth depart out of the house when it is ready to fall and the Spiders first fall downe with their webs A little before the Siege of Jerusalem by Titus there was heard a voice in the aire Let us depart hence whereby the Christians were induced to go over Iordan to Pella Having therefore these examples why should not the Godly depart from Rome being near to destruction that they be not partakers of her plagues for when a house falls all that are under the roofe must of necessity perish 5. For her sinnes have reached A third reason is taken from the revenging justice of God which although it sometimes deferre yet at length it requires the punishment of wicked deeds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath a revenging eye This reason is amplified two wayes First in respect of the sins which are said to have reached unto Heaven Generally all greek Copies have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They followed each other one begetting another so that like chaines fastned together with many rings What is meant by sins to reach to Heaven they reached as it were up to Heaven Andreas and Montanus have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glued together or as it were with lime or morter raised up to so great an heape as it reached even to Heaven This signifies the abominable heaping up and filthinesse of sins which is said to reach up to Heaven that is by excessive guilt to draw down vengeance from God By a like metaphor God makes Kains parricide detestable Gen. 4 10. The voice of thy brothers blood cryeth to me from the earth And the filthinesse of Sodom Gen. 18 20.21 The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is great the cry of their sinne is very grievous which is come unto mee RIBERA on this place saith well That there is no sinne though never so little but it comes even to Heaven that is unto the knowledge of God although the scripture useth so to speake onely of greatest sinnes ripe for punishment Now hence is refuted the distinction of veniall and mortall sins for to reach to heaven is not onely to come unto the knowledge of God seeing he takes knowledge even of the least that are committed but so to take knowledge of them as being a sinfull violation of the Law and therefore deserving the punishment prescribed in the Law If therefore all even the least of sins do reach and come unto the knowledge of God it followeth that all deserve the punishment of the Law namely death eternall and that none in their kind are veniall that is do deserve pardon not punishment yet indeed by accident they become veniall to the faithfull through the mercy of God Secondly the grievousnesse of her sins are aggravated on Gods behalfe who is said to have remembered them by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or humane affection often in Scripture applyed to God by which is signified not any forgetfullnesse but Gods goodnesse and lenity he is said to forget sinners when he differs their punishment and affords time of repentance and wholly forgiveth them that repent And he is said to remember when the time of punishment is at hand Thus in Chap. 16. ver 19. Babylon is said to come in remembrance before God to give unto her the cup of the fury of his wrath which is repeated in this place Hence three things are briefly to be noted the consideration whereof ought to recall us from sin and stir us up to repentance First that all our sins even the least are taken notice of by God and deserve to be fearfully punished especially if they be heaped up without repentance Let no man therfore think to escape unpunished as if his evills were forgotten or hid from the eyes of the Lord for all the actions of men as well evill as good are open and bare unto him with whom we have to do Secondly If we have a long time gone on in sin without punishment it is to be ascribed to the patience of God by which he leads us to repentance Let us therfore take heed that we abuse not his long suffering and forbearance unto security Rom. 2.3 Lastly that at last sins being heaped up God doth call them to remembrance and will certainly punish them the more grievously by how much he hath forborn the same Let us therefore not persevere in sin in hope to go allwayes unpunished but while God calls not our sins as yet to remembrance let us forsake them Now it may be demanded what is that chain of sin reaching to Heaven Ribera here is silent being conscious to himself that they are the abominations of Papall Rome for either they are of Old Rome or else of Popish Rome Of Ierusalem they cannot be forasmuch as this Babylon by the Iesuits own confession is Rome not Jerusalem though before he falsly and against his knowledge so seined in Chap. 16.19 Neither can they be sins of Old Rome seeing the chaine
by the Kings a long time or many years but be suddenly taken because of her security like as in one night Cyrus suddenly tooke carelesse Babylon being forsaken of her friends and driven to despair having no power to defend her self The grievousnesse of the punishment is aggravated by enumeration of four Plagues Death Mourning Famine Fire every one of which shall answer to her sins she promised her self perpetuall happinesse but Death shall cut her off she delighted in all kind of pleasures therefore sorrow shall overthrow her She continually gave her self to gluttony riot c. Therefore Famine shall kill her she burnt the godly Martyrs as Heretickes therefore with Fire shall she be utterly consumed by the Kings sometimes her lovers who shall fall from her and turne their swords which they formerly imployed for her against the Godly into her own bowels See Chap. 17. ver 17. For strong is the Lord He prooves that her lot and portion shall be irrecoverable from the omnipotencie of the Iudge the which he opposeth to the Romane power that we might not think the thing foretold impossible the which immagination hath beguilded many even to this day Stapleton hath writ a Booke of the admirable greatnesse of the Romane Church which he saith shall so remaine for ever Lipsius also had no other end then to flatter Rome in his Book which he published about the same time touching the admirable greatnesse of the Romane City Iohan. Paul Windek About this time also a certaine Parasite of the Romish Seat spread abroad a Prognostication about the future state of the Church wherein he affirmed that the Evangelicall Doctrine and Christian Churches should shortly perish The Romane Seat remaine stable and constant so is this opinion settled in the mindes of Papists that it is impossible the Romane Power should be overcome through any Plots or devices or the Romish Hierarchy linked and fastned together with iron bonds as it were should ever be overthrown by any But 2. Strong is the Lord which judgeth her Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judging in the present tence Andreas and Montanus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who hath judged because in his unchangeable decree he hath devoted her to condemnation some thinke because this shall happen in one day and suddenly that like Sodom she shall be burnt with fire from Heaven but because it was said before that the Kings should burne her it seems rather to be meant of fire suddenly thrown into the City by the Victorious army Hitherto the Exhortation the Lamentation followes 9. And the Kings of the Earth shall bewaile her The wicked lament the wretched condition of Rome First Kings then Merchants Lastly Shipmasters Now what and how great their mourning shall be and the cause thereof common to them all is shewed to be the losse of their former riot and gaine And therefore there is the lesse difficulty and reason to insist upon it This generally is to be noted from the lamentation that a temporall judgement on Rome is here described not the last judgement in the end of the World for wicked Kings Merchants and Shipmasters shall see and bewaile the same In the first place the Kings of the Earth are brought in mourning as being more worthy and powerfull who were chiefe in committing filthines with the Romish Strumpet They shall bewaile and lament for her That is because of her sudden and miserable destruction who these are is noted by two Epithites they are Kings of the Earth committing fornication and living deliciously with her By both we may understand that they shall be enemies of the Gospell Vassalls Sonnes Spirituall Lovers of the Romish Seat For the first Epithite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Earth is allwayes in this Prophesie taken in an evill sense for Kings Nations and worldly men given to earthlie worship By the latter Epithite the cause also of their mourning is shewed they shall lament excessively because they are deprived of their sweet converse with the whore by means of her unexcepted destruction What that converse was we have opened on verse 3. and divers times before It may be demanded who these Kings of the Earth shall be Ribera feineth that they shall be the same Ten Kings who burned her with fire who these Kings of the Earth are repenting and bewailing the destruction of the most renowned City like as Titus is said to have mourned for the burning of Ierusalem and the Temple But it is a vaine Fiction for those Kings shall be converted unto the faith These shall be Kings of the Earth Enemies of the Gospell Ioseph lib 7 de bell Iud. c. 24. The cause also of the mourning is different These shall lament because they can no longer commit fornication and riot with her But the former Kings after they had once by the divine mercie of God repented of their sinne refused any longer to commit fornication with her for it is said They shall hate the Whore and make her desolate Therefore we affirme that these Kings of the Earth shall be such of the Ten as still remaine with the Pope 10. Standing a farre off for feare The gesture and voice of these Mourners is noted standing a farre off and crying Alas alas In which he prevents an objection Why shall they not rather take up Armes and succour the distressed Citie Feare and trembling shall hinder them signifying that the Lord will so astonish them as that they shall not so much as thinke upon armes or succour for the feare of the divine judgement will make them to seeke shelter for themselves For in one houre Before In one day Her judgement shall be so sudden that before the report of her Siege be far spread the Citie shall lie in ashes Thus high things are on a sudden brought to nothing Trees of great height are long in growing but rooted up in one houre They call it judgement to wit of God the just Iudge whose vengeance shall be so manifest that the very enemies shall be forced to confesse that so great a Citie was thus suddenly overthrowne not by humane force but by the judgement of God being angry 11. And the Merchants of the Earth shall weepe Merchants succeed the Kings in mourning the Merchants I say of the Earth whom we have shewed to be spirituall Traders Treasurers of the Popish Court Paenitentiaries and Granters of Pardons c. The which plainely appeares by the adjunct cause of their sorrow and kind of Merchandize Because no man buyeth her merchandize any more But gold silver and pretious stones shall not be out of esteem because of the destruction of one Citie For by the overthrow of one Mart-Towne trading is not taken away from other places but the fall of one is rather the rising of another as not long ago in the low Countries Antwerpe sometime a noble Mart-Towne decaying was the flourishing of Amsterdam Therefore it is manifest that here properlie merchandable wares are not
Resurrection To have part in a thing is to become partaker of that thing as appeares from the contrary Thou hast neither part nor lot in this matter saith Peter to Simon the hypocrite And Christ to Peter refusing to be washed by him If I wash thee not thou bast no part with me for thou shalt not have no communion with me Therefore to have part in the first Resurrection is to be partaker of the first Resurrection that is through faith and repentance to rise from the death of sinne unto newnesse of Life with Christ For we clearly shewed erewhile that this first Resurrection is not of the body but of the soule By which we see the great benefit and excellency of the first Resurrection because in it consisteth true blessednesse and holinesse The necessity also because no man shall bee blessed and holy without the same But is it the cause of blessednesse yea verily not indeed the meritorious for that Christ onely is for he hath merited blessednesse for us but causa sine qua non a cause without which it is not for without holinesse which the first Resurrection bringeth Heb. 12.14 no man shall see God yea it is also the formall cause inchoated or begun For the first Resurrection is inchoated holinesse and part of the future blessednesse which shall be perfected in heaven Hence first it followeth that all having part in the first Resurrection that is being truly born again in this life shal be blessed and holy with Christ in the other Life and on the contrary that none which rise not againe with Christ unto newnesse and holinesse of life on Earth shall be blessed and holy with Christ in Heaven Lib. 20. de C. D. ca. 6. For none can belong unto this first Resurrection but such as shal be blessed for ever saith Austin They therefore which have no part in the first Resurrection shall not bee partakers of blessednesse for wee shall bee clothed upon with our house if so bee that beeing clothed we shall not bee found naked 2. Corinth 5.3 Secondly it followeth as before we proved that the First Resurrection is not corporall but spirituall for if it were corporall then by this Exclamation all that shall be raised at the last day should be excluded from blessednesse because none of them should have part in the first Corporall Resurrection But this is absurd because in the last day some shall rise unto blessednesse others unto eternall death The reason of the consequence is because all and they onely that have part in the First Resurrection shall be blessed All indeed thou wilt say but not they onely Yea because all therefore onely for in an enunciation of the property touching the subject or of the effect touching the cause without which it is not or else an Antistrophe such as this is not only a simple conversion and contraposition will hold but a contrary sense also which begets exclusives Blessed are they that have part in the first Resurrection therefore they that have no part in the first Resurrection are not blessed which is of like force with the exclusive Onely they that have part in the first Resurrection are blessed Ps 119.1 Psal 32 1. Rom. 4.7 Rev. 12.14 Rev. 19.9 like as it followeth Blessed are the pure therefore the impure are not blessed Blessed are they whose sinnes are forgiven They therefore are not blessed whose sins are not forgiven Blessed are they that keep his Commandements They therefore that do not keep them are not blessed Blessed are they that are called to the marriage Supper of the Lambe therefore they who are not called are not happy and a thousand such like places are found in Scripture But perhaps thou wilt say it will not hold because as in Chap. 1.3 a speciall blessednesse is promised to the keepers of the words of this Booke so here also some speciall and eminent felicity of the Martyrs is commended by which notwithstanding other beleevers are no way deprived of their blessednesse THIS is nothing for they that keep not the words of this Booke shall be deprived both of speciall and common blessednesse Therefore they onely who keepe the words and Commandements of this Booke are blessed and so are they alone who have part in the First Resurrection Lastly either they onely that have part in the first Resurrection shall be blessed or not they onely If they onely it confirmes what we sayd If not onely then Blessednesse shall not be a speciall priviledge of the Martyrs agreeable to the justice of God viz. that they who have suffered more then others for the Confession of Christ should bee longer in joy and glory as before they said For either there shall be some other Mart●●rs on earth in these thousand yeers who shall suffer as much or more also for the Gospell at the hands of Antichrist regaining as they say his strength or of other enemies then the former suffered by Romane Tyrants for the witnesse of Jesus or else there shall be none If some then either these shal enjoy shorter happinesse and glory in Heaven which stands not according to their opinion with Gods justice Or else it was not agreeable to his Iustice that those other should enjoy longer happinesse and glory If there shal be no Martyrs but that the Church Militant during the THOVSAND YEERS shall be free from all hostile invasion of the ungodly living in peace and security as they promise then it followes 1. Cor 2.18 that the Gospell shall cease to be the word of the Crosse and the true Oracles of Christ and his Apostles touching the difficulties of the last times Luk. 18.8 Mat. 10.34 Act. 14.22 2. Tim. 3.1 c. shall cease Thirdly we learne the certainty of the Salvation of all that are borne againe for if all and they onely that have part in the First Resurrection are blessed and that none can belong unto the First Resurrection but such as shall be blessed for ever then certainely all and they onely that are borne againe shall infallibly obtain eternall blessednesse Ribera objects that very many rise againe from sinne and yet die againe In cap. 20. N. 49.50 by their relapse into sinne and so depart out of this life in their sinne Answ This is true of dogs and swine returning to their vomit and wallowing in filthinesse that is of hypocrites who in appearance indeed rise againe from sinne and seem to others to be truly purged from the defilements of the world but yet are not truly purged before God which for the most part the event sheweth but of such as are truly regenerate and rise againe from sinne it is said 1. Ioh. 3.9 Ps 37.24 Whosoever is borne of God commits not sinne for his seed remaineth in him and he cannot sin because he is borne of God And Though the righteous fall he shall not be utterly cast downe for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand On such the second
Nicolaitans by open Antichristian Tyranny banishing the same out of the Church which thing indeed was justly abominable to Emperours and the Christian world Genebr chronol lib. 4. pa. 593. yet formidable because of the enchantment of the Apostolicall Church Notwithstanding Popish Writers doe glory in this most filthy Beast That HENRIE was the first among the Westerne Emperours whom the Pope deposed Histories also testifie that after those thousand yeeres the God of Strengths foretold by Daniel Chap. 11.38 that is the Idol of Transsubstantation and Stage-like Masse was chiefly erected and confirmed in which the whole strength of the Papacie hath hitherto consisted With this grew up the innumerable fraternities and families of Clergy-men Sacrificers Monkes and Religious Sects who all of them being exempted from civill jurisdiction are onely subject to the Popes Scepter Then were invented the Jubilees the gainefull trafficke of Popish Indulgences or Pardons and a thousand trickes to draw monies from all Provinces into Romes Exchequer Then infinite Ceremonies Superstitions and Idols were brought in and established so that if now thou compare Popery with Paganisme thou shalt scarce see any difference but in names Therefore it is not said without cause that Satan being loosed after the thousand yeeres should deceive the Nations of the whole Earth Neither was this horrible declining of Christianitie in the West onely For it is knowne that many most flourishing Churches of the East which yet stood in the first thousand yeeres were in the next five hundred yeeres either cut off and miserably dissipated or by the seduction of Satan filthily corrupted On the contrary we see that Mahumetisme although it began somewhat sooner yet within the latter five Ages was more generally spread both in Asia Africa and Europe This therefore was Satans former seduction Gog and Magog to gather them to battle Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which commonly is taken appositively That he might seduce the Nations Gog and Magog for which Nations are Gog and Magog but so Satans fury seemes to be lessened as if after his loosing he were onely to deceive and draw the barbarous Nations unto a civill battle Whereas he shall chiefly be busie about the intestine seduction of the Church within indeed labouring to trample her under foot by the slights of the domesticke Antichrist and outwardly by force of armes to suppresse her by a forreigne Antichrist It is therefore an Ellipsis or defect of the Copulative for And Gog and Magog because the Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ruleth the three Accusatives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the middlemost of which did least need the Copulative The seduction therefore of Gog and Magog shall be diverse from the seduction of the Nations being not Ecclesiasticall as the former but politicall For Satan shall stirre up not the nations but Gog and Magog to this cruell battell which appeareth by the Relative not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gog and Magog by whom he shall set all things in confusion and blood Now what manner of adversaries or peoples these should be may scarcely be guest at For there are almost as many opinions about the same as Writers both Ancient and Moderne Bellarmine reckons up ten Lib. 3. de P R. cap. 17. Vestig pag. 877. all which his own excepted not a whit better then the rest yea even that of the five old Fathers Lanctantius Eusebius Theodoretus Hierom and Austine he disproves Alcasar also brings in many more But we will not weary our selves in rehearsing the conjectures of other men Magog to begin with this as the more knowne was the second sonne of Iaphet Gen. 10.3 of whom Lib. 1. Antiq cap. 7. as Iosephus writeth came the Magogites so called after him or Scythians that is the peoples which inhabit beyond the mountaine Caucasus neer the Lake Maeotis and the Caspian Sea unto the Northern India Hierom therefore by Magog understandeth the Scythian Nations unto whom some doe joyne the Cappadocians and Arminians seated beyond Coelesyria lib. 5. c. 23 whose Metrapolitan Citie Hierapolis where Papias sometime was Bishop is in the Syrian tongue called Magog as Plinie recordeth Touching Gog there is nothing mentioned in Scripture save in Ezech. 38. 39. where you shall finde a long Prophesie against Gog and Magog of which the Phantisies of the Iewes Mahumetans and Papists are not much unlike The Iewes feine that Gog and Magog are the Northerne Nations shut up by Alexander the Great beyond the Mountaine Taurus who breaking out towards the end of the world shall by war wast the whole earth especially the Land of Israel and the Citie Ierusalem But then the Messias shall bee at hand and slay Gog and Magog according to the Oracle of Ezechiel which Fable Galatinus hath refuted Lib. 5. Cap. 12. The Mahumetans Fiction touching Gog and Magog is much like to this Alcor A 20.28.32 c. save onely that it is somewhat otherwise touching the Messias and Ierusalem The Papists dreame that their Antichrist shall come in the end of the world with great forces and that in his Army which mostlie shall consist of the barbarous Scythians he shall have seven Kings for so many and no more shall then be remaining in the world as Ribera affirmeth The Emperour therefore of the Romanes the King of France of Spaine c. shall then either have no being or fight for Antichrist among whom Gog and Magog shall bee most powerfull Lib. 3. de P. R. c. 17. Apoc. 20. yea Gog according to Bellarmine shall be Antichrist himselfe which Ribera denyeth and in the space of lesse then foure full yeeres most cruelly over-runne and bring into subjection the whole world especially Christendome and to this Antichristian warre they applie the Prophesie of Ezechiel and of Iohn in this place As the Iews therfore dream that their Messias is not yet come because Ierusalem hath not bin assaulted by Gog and Magog who are to be slaine by the Messias So the Papists feine that their Antichrist is not yet come because Gog and Magog are not come who with a most numerous Army shall fight under Antichrists banner Ezech. 39.4.6.9.12 The fiction touching Gog and Magog refuted and with him oppose the Holy City that is the Romane Church Both Fictions are alike frivolous and are easily refuted by the Prophesie it selfe for i● Ezechiel God threatneth that Gog shall fall upon the mountaines of Israel and that he will send a fire on Magog whereupon the Inhabitants of Ierusalem shall goe forth and burne the spoile with fire seven yeeres and that the slaughter of the enemy shall be so great that the land shall be seven yeers in cleansing because of the carkeises of the slaine But the Papists say that Antichrists kingdome and the Gogish warre shall not continue full foure yeers and that from this Victory of the Church unto the day of Iudgement there shall not
everlasting light But Everlastingnesse is not of this Life He saith also The dayes of thy mourning shal be ended Now the mourning of the Church shal not be ended in this Life but in the Church-Triumphant where God wil wipe away all teares from our eyes there I say shal be no longer mourning nor cry nor death nor sorrow as in ver 4. 24. And the Nations that were saved Thus much of the building and glory of the Citie Now also hee speakes of the Citizens who they shal bee what good things they shall enjoy and who shal be kept out of the same For the first he saith that the INHABITANTS of this Citie shall bee THE NATIONS THAT ARE SAVED consisting not onely of the common people but Kings also for he saith Kings shall walke in the light of it that is shall eternally enjoy the glorious presence and majesty of God How the nations are the City Citizens And the Kings of the earth do bring their glory and honour into this Citie Here first it is demaunded if this Citie bee the glorified Church how then are the Nations distinguished from the same seeing the Nations that are saved are nothing else but the Church it selfe I ANSWER The order of the Vision is to be observed for seeing he saw the glorified Church under the forme of a Citie it was convenient that hee should see also some Inhabitants of the Citie Although therefore the saved of the Nations be the Church it selfe Notwithstanding he doth not unfitly distinguish the Church taken collectively from the Church it selfe distributively considered for thus also an Earthly Citie may be collectively considered as a Common-weal or communitie of Citizens and distributively as many or particular Citizens Adde to this that the Nations are not the whole City for the Elect Patriarchs Prophets and Iewes belong also unto the same Secondly it may be demaunded how the Kings should bring their glory into this Heavenly Citie seeing all Authorities Kingdomes 1. Cor. 15.42 How kings shall bring their glorie into the heavenly Ierusalem and Powers shall then be put downe and that there shal be no Kings then and that in the Heavenly City no earthly thing can be brought Lastly seeing all shal rather receive their glory there then bring any into it Which seemeth to be the chiefest argument of them who hold that here is intended not the Heauenly but the Earthly glory of the CHURCH in this Life The Answer is easie First we are to note that this verse also is taken out of Isai 60.3 And the Gentiles saith he shall come to thy light and Kings to the brightnesse of thy rising the which is spoken indeed of the conversion of the Gentiles and Heathenish Kings But as before I said that whole Oracle speaketh not onely of the inchoated glory of the Church in this Life but with the beginning joynes the full accomplishment thereof that shal be in the Heavens as there it evidently appeareth in ver 11.18.19.21 Wherefore that place is to be applied unto the Heavenly Citie not as it began in this Life but as it shall be at last consummated in the life to come And the meaning is that then that oracle shall truely and perfectly bee fulfilled when as the Nations that are saved shall walke perfectly in the light of Jehovah And that the KINGS also who in this life have brought their glory and honour into the Church that is subjected themselves unto Christ shal enjoy the same light for ever and ever Therefore he intendeth not as if then there should be any Earthly Kings to bring their earthly glory into heaven for we shal al be Kings and Priests to God but that the Kings which now bring their glory to Christ shall together with the Nations walke in the light This sense is confirmed by the Participle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Saved So that then they shal be saved already and not afterwards Rom. 8.24 as yet beeing in this life I confesse we are saved also in this life but it is in hope But then they shal be saved in deed because they shall walke in the Everlasting light Thirdly also it may be demaunded How the kings of the earth are joyned unto the inhabitants of the heavenly Ierusalem seeing hitherto in the Revelation the Kings of the Earth are called for the most part enemies of Christ and followers of Antichrist Chap. 6.15 16.14 17.1.18 18.3.9 19 19. How they should here be reckoned among the Inhabitants of the Heavenly City ANSWER They are here called Kings of the Earth not that they shal be Kings when they enter into this City but because sometimes they were such For in Chap. 17.16 it appeareth that some if not all of the ten Kings of the earth which had given their power unto the Beast should desert the Beast eat the flesh of the whore and burne her with fire therefore some of them shal be converted unto the Lambe and with the Nations that are saved shall walke in the light of this Citie 25. The signes of assured peace And the gates of it shall not be shut This is the Second Part viz. the felicity and firme peace of the Citizens the which while Cities enjoy they flourish in riches and glory but the peace tranquility and security of this City shal be perfect and perpetuall This he sheweth by two signes One is because the gates shall not be shut by day But thou wilt say the gates of our Cities also are not shut by day It is so indeed in time of peace but in war the enemy besieging a City and labouring to break in of necessity the gates must be shut that the Citizens may be preserved from hostile invasion But the gates of the Citie on high shal not be shut by day but alwayes stand open to signifie that there shal be no danger of adversaries but everlasting peace to the Citizens thereof For there shall be no night there This is the other sign of their everlasting peace For in the night while the Citizens sleep the gates are shut least they should be set upon unawares in the dark There shall be no night because the glory of God shal expell the darknesse by everlasting light so that the rising or setting of the Sun or Moon shal not cause night or darknesse Therefore the Citizens shal never sleep or shut their gates for fear of danger These things being spoken after the manner of men do in some sort shadow out unto us that eternall security and peace which we shal enjoy in Heaven To this also is applied out of Isaias the 11. ver of the said 60. Chap. though there spoken in a sense somewhat different from what it is here Therefore thy gates shal be open continually they shall not be shut day nor night that they may bring unto thee the forces of the Gentiles and their Kings may bee brought where is signified another cause of not shutting
denyeth that this signification is agreeable to Christ is absolutely false and hereticall viz. that many things are more ancient and later in age then Christ For according to his Deity Christ pronounceth himselfe to be Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end the first and the last as beeing the onely begotten of the Father before the Mountaines were setled Nothing therefore is more ancient and later Christo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then Christ God-Man Fourthly he thus Syllogiseth Relatives are together by nature The son is a Relative having a correlative Father Therefore the Son cannot be before the Father and so neither the first and the last ANSWER I. It was never affirmed that the Sonne was before the Father II. The adversarie overthrowes himselfe with his Sophistrie for if Relatives are together by nature as indeed they are then verily God the Father and God the Sonne are together by nature But the Father by nature is the first and last that is eternall Therefore also the Sonne by nature is the first and last For the Father was never without the Son FIFTLY he dallieth out of Martiall that these words signifie the esteem or worth which men put upon a thing so that which is most excellent is called First and Alpha that which is most vile is called Last and Omega in which signification Martiall should have said Lib. 2 Epigr 57. Lib. 5. Epigr 27. Ioh. 14.28 Ioh. 01.29 Non ipse Codrus Alpha penulatorum And againe Quod Alpha dixi Codre penulatorum te nuper But yet that this signification cannot be applied to Christ both because the Father is more worthy then he himselfe confessing it My Father is greater then I as also because it should follow if Christ bee called Omega that he is the vilest and most abject of all things ANSWER 1. Martiall calleth Codrus Alpha Penulatorum by a poeticall taunt or scoffe not as being the most excellent but the chiefe or first of beggers that is poorest according to the Proverbe CODRO PAUPERIOR poorer then Codrus But whatsoever he may say touching Alpha where hath the Hereticke ever read that Omega is put for that which is most vile And though hee had read it will hee interpret the Divine Revelation by Martiall a scurrilous Poet II. Howsoever this signification is taken it is false that it is no way to be applied unto Christ For Christ is Alpha because according to his Deity hee is most excellent the beginning and the first of all things And Omega not as the vilest but because he is the end and last of all things for so he himselfe interpreteth the same That the Father is more worthy then Christ in respect of the assumption of the flesh it is true according to which hee himselfe said Ioh. 10.30 Ioh. 14.10 Ioh. 5.23 The Father is greater then I in respect of his Deity it is false for in this respect hee saith I and the Father are one I am in the Father and the Father in me The Father hath given all judgement to the Son that all men should honour the Son even as they honour the Father Wherefore as the Father and the Son are one by nature so in honour and dignity for which cause above Chapter 4.11 5.11 the Church-Triumphant ascribes to God and unto the Lambe the same honour glory and power Sixtly he reasoneth from the Metaphysickes That these words the FIRST and the LAST signifye the cause But Christ as the Trinitaries confesse thus the Hereticke termeth Orthodoxe Writers hath a cause Therefore he cannot be called the FIRST in this sense ANSWER 1. Nothing is more frivolous then this kinde of Logicke for there are foure termes in the Syllogisme to signifye the cause and to have a cause being put for one which are not one in the least and from two affirmatives in the second figure he inferres a negative then which nothing is more vaine II. The major is not true but of God being absolutely the first and the last the beginning and the ending and therefore he is truely the first and last cause of all things and so likewise of Christ saying absolutely of himselfe I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end the first and the last and therefore the first and last cause of all things but of all others it is false For of what are Alpha and Omega the cause Is it of the Letters that are betwixt them And suppose that the first man may in some sort be said to bee the cause of others of whom shall the last man be the cause III. The assumption unlesse it be understood with limitation is false also for we confesse that Christ hath a cause not absolutely but according to his humanitie beeing according to his Deity the creating cause of all things with the Father For all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made Ioh. 1.3 that was made Neither hath he any cause unlesse improperly by understanding the cause of the beginning of eternall generation from the Father otherwise the Son should be the effect of the Father which is false For God created all his effects or works in the kind of substance in the beginning of time Ioh. 1.1 Prov 8.25 Mich. 5.2 But the Son he created not in the beginning of time for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was in this beginning but begate him from eternity I was brought forth saith the wisedom of God before the mountains were setled Because his goings forth were from of old from everlasting Thus therefore let the Hereticke learne to correct his Paralogism or deceitfull arguing least he faile in the forme Hee that hath a cause is not the first and the last as the cause Christ hath a cause Therefore he is not the first and the last as the cause Thus the whole is granted touching Christ in respect of his humanity But in respect of his divinity in regard whereof he saith of himselfe I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end the first and the last the consequence is denyed because of the aequivocation of the word Cause or the assumption is false Furthermore he saith a thing is said to be first which is by nature before the rest Christ is not before the Father because correlatives are together by nature Therefore Christ is not the first after this manner ANSWER This we willingly grant of Christ according to the flesh but according to the Deity the adversarie dallieth by foure termes because before other things and before the Father are two termes or the major universally taken is false for in this signification he is not the first who is before God else God also should not bee the first by nature because God is not before himselfe But he which is by nature before others in whose respect he is said to be the first to wit before all creatures Besides wee may as before retort the adversaries weapon upon himselfe Correlatives are by
adversaries who perished by the ruin of the tenth part of the city But how some understand it of the bloody warres commotions which Antichrist to his own hurt hath raysed up against the Gospel For many millions of his followers have been consumed by this meanes to the exceeding losse of the great city But perhaps not lesse but rather more blood of the Saintes hath been shed by Antichristians in the civil warrs of France Spaine England the Low countries and other where Others therfore do rather understand it of the spiritual destruction of the adversaries by the preaching of the Gospel for by it many of the Papists beeing the more blinded hardened and enraged have eternallie perished Brightman interprets it of the Popish Clergy who by the rising of the Gospel being spoiled of the revenues yeerly profits of their Monasteries Colleges were bereaved of their delight former luxuriousnes put to such an exigent as either to labour or starve for hunger But I rather allow the former because of that which followeth And the remnant were afrighted The last effect is good The conversion of many to the faith of the Gospel noting the conversion of the ●est of men from Popery unto the faith of Christ For the ruin of the tenth part of the great Antichristian eity shall be the building of Christs little city Many therfore in the forsaid provinces observing the wonderful work of God in preserving propagating the Gospel were afraid any lōger to resist the truth but gave glory to God by forsaking the lies idols of the Papacy Now touching these things we may behold them as in a table by which we have a plain description the very events partly in the histories of our times and partly by what we dayly see with our own eyes so that we need not have recourse unto ancient commētaries 14. The second woe is past This is a transition from the third Act unto the fourth Woe He notes the calamities by the effect for calamities cause woe unto the flesh In Chap. 8.23 an Angel flying through the midst of heaven proclaimed three woes to happen under the sounding of three trumpets The first woe under the fift trumpet were the calamities of the Godlie under the Western Antichrist even from the time of his rising until the Council of Constance The second woe of the sixt trumpet is yet to this day under both Antichrists viz. the Turke in the East and the Pope in the West The first did praefigure the calamities of the godly alone The second the calamities commō both to the godly the wicked Now followes the third woe only belonging unto the wicked which shal come to passe under the last trumpet Is past Not in event seeing it was then to come but in vision description as if he should say hitherto I have described the second woe the third remaines to be described Commeth quickly For shall come This he opposeth to the security of the Antichristians as Chap. 1. v. 1.3 And if then they were not far off how much neerer are they now to us after so many ages the seventh Angel being at hand to summon men to judgment by the last trumpet The second part of the Chapter The scound of the seventh Trumpet at the last judgement Containing the fourth Act of this Vision 15. And the seventh Angel sounded there were great voyces in heaven saying the kingdomes of this world are become the kingdomes of our Lord of his Christ he shall reigne for ever and ever 16. And the foure twenty Elders which sate before God on their seates fell upon their faces and worshipped God 17. Saying we give thee thankes O Lord God Almighty which art and wast and art to come because thou hast taken to thee thy great power and hast reigned 18. And the nations were angry and thy wrath is come and the time of the dead that they should be judged and that thou shouldest give reward unto thy servants the Prophets to the Saints and them that feare thy Name smal and great and shouldest destroy them which destroy the earth 19. And the Temple of God was opened in heaven and there was seene in his Temple the Arke of his Testament and there were lightnings and voyces and thundrings and an earthquake and great hayle THE COMMENTARIE ANd the seventh Angel sounded Of this Angel interpreters write diversely The fiction of Lyra I passe by Gagnaeus understands thereby the seventh order of good men or preachers Who is this seventh Angel who after Antichrists death and neer about the last day shal preach the Gospel the which he takes from the common fiction that Antichrist shall die fourty five dayes before the last judgment But Antichrist shal be destroyed by none save by the brightnesse of the comming of Christ Alcasar speakes little of him but applies the trumpet to the obstinacie of the Iewes and election of the Gentiles Which thing is unworthy of any refutation For the nations here are not said to be elected but angrie besides the very matter it selfe sheweth that these things appertaine unto the last times Brightman takes this Angel to have sounded anno 1558. when there were great voyces in heaven that is much joy in the reformed Church for the restauration of Christs kingdome in Germanie at what time Q Elisabeth also began to reign restore the sincere preaching of the Gospel in England c. But it is plain the words are to be applyed unto the last day when both the living and the dead good and bad shall come to judgement and therefore cannot be restrained to such a sence More truly therefore Fox Alphonsus Bullinger Tossanus Marlorate The seventh trūpet foretels the last judgement with the rest of our interpreters a few onely excepted acknowledge that the seventh trumpet is the messenger of the last day in which the kingdomes of the adversaries being overthrown and abolished Christ will immediately restore his kingdome casting the wicked into eternall punishment and receiving the elect into endlesse glorie And this exposition of the trumpet plainly appeares to be right from Chap. 10. v. 7. where Christ the strong Angel expresly sweareth that the seventh Angel when he shal begin to sound the mysterie of God should be finished It is also evident from the text For in the last judgement and not before all kingdoms of the earth become Gods and Christs that God may be all in all Then shall be the time of Gods wrath and of the dead that they may be judged that the Martyrs Prophets and servants of Christ may receive an eternall reward of their labours and the wicked who destroyed the earth perish for ever and ever Therefore many of the Ancients as Andreas Bede Aretas A fained anticipation justly reproved Primasius others follow this opinion Ribera also acknowledgeth the same but faineth that these things are here brought in by way of Anticipation
which Alcasar justly reproveth For what probable cause can there be imagined of an anticipation or reason that Iohn by by should return again by a regression unto the warr of Antichrist This inconvenience they al run into who observe not the order and method of these Apocalypticall visions the which being neglected we must needs wander as in a wood So then here is described the fourth and last Act of the third Vision The fourth Act of the third Vision containing the third Woe that is Gods horrible judgments which shall be powred out in the last day universally upon all wicked men adversaries tyrants hereticks hypocrites Antichrist and his locusts the which indeed shall be an happie change of the Churches calamities Now touching the seventh Angel he is no other but that Archangel Who is the seventh Angel and what the seventh trumpet the publisher of Christs comming with a shout and great voice The seventh trumpet is that last trumpet of God with which Christ shal descend from heaven and call both living and dead unto judgement 1. Thes 4.16 and 1. Cor. 15.52 The members of this Act as we shewed in the analysis are three The first is the heavenly triumph because the kingdoms of the world are become Gods and Christs v. 15. The second is a triumphing song of the four and twenty elders rendring thanks and praises to Christ for the deliverance of the Church and intreating him to bridle the wrath of the adversaries by his judgement and render rewards unto the godly and due punishments unto the wicked ver 16.17 18. The third is the execution of judgement on both ver 19. The scope is to set forth the consolation of the godly at last for howsoever the Church on earth be in warr against Antichrist yet she shall at length triumph with Christ in heaven And there were great voyces in heaven These are not the voyces of mourners Great voyces of rejoycings but of them that rejoyce tow it of the blessed Angels and soules of the Saintes in heaven as appeareth by the subject of the matter But did not John threaten the third Woe Yea he did so but not to the heavenly inhabitants nor unto the servants of God but to the adversaries not in heaven but upon the earth Before the Woes therefore of the enemies called in other places of scripture gnashing of the teeth the worme that dies not unquencheable fire tribulation and anguish and here are named lightnings voyces thunders earthquakes and haile c. Iohn heard the joy of them that were in heaven celebrating with songs the equity and righteousnes of the judgement to come So then the third Woe shal fall not upon the godlie as the two former woes did on both Antichrists but upon the adversaries whom Christ will cast into the lake of fire and brimstone And thus the first apparition or companie of the 24 Elders shall with songs of triumph put an end unto this third Vision The kingdomes of this world are become Montanus in the kings edition hath it in the singular number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the kingdome of this world is made or become but al other bookes have it in the plural according to our translation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sense beeing all one Now it is as I said the triumph and joy of Angels and Saintes in heaven because the mysterie of God was finished according to the praediction in Chap. 10.7 that is because at last Christs kingdome was delivered out of all danger and the power of the adversaries troden under foot The sense is thus The adversaries had violently taken into their possession the kingdomes of the world thrusting out as much as lay in them Christ But now the kingdomes are returned unto Christ who henceforward all enemies beeing destroyed shall reigne alone Of our Lord and of Christ And here is declarative for of our Lord who is Christ So often the Apostle God and the Father for God who is the Father But doth not Christ even now also reigne Psa 2.6 Heb. 2.8 Phil. 2.9 Yea verily for he sits at the right hand of God God hath set his king upon his holy hill of Sion And put all things under his feet And unto him is given a name above every name But then at length he truely shall reigne that is declare that he reigneth when having thrown down the Pope Turke and all other tyrants and adversaries from their thrones he shall alone with the Father and holy Ghost rule the elect Angels and Men. The best interpreter of this place is Paul 1 Cor. 15. ver 24. Then commeth the end when CHRIST shall have delivered up the kingdome to God the Father shall have put downe all rule all authoritie power For he must reigne till he hath put all enemies under his feet and when all things shal be subdued unto him then shall the son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him that God may be all in all But thou wilt say How Christ shal deliver up the kingdome to the Father yet reigne for ever how shal Christ reigne for ever and ever if as it is there said he shall deliver the kingdome to God and the Father I answer he shal deliver the kingdom to God not by resigning up the kingdome but by ceasing to reigne after that manner as hitherto he had done Now he reignes by the meanes of his word sacraments and ministers gathering to himself and sanctifying the Church here on earth Then he shall reigne by immediate illumination and glorification of the Saintes in heaven Now he ruleth in the midst of his enemies Psal 110.2 1 Cor. 15.25 Then he shall reigne alone without enemies Now Antichrist Christs corrival with all deceiveablenes of unrighteousnesse and by the power of Satan doth subject the kingdoms of the world unto himself Then he shal be thrown down and abolished by the brightnes of Christs comming Now God and Christ have a divided empire so to speake with Satan the Pope and other tyrants who chalenge much unto themselves But then all enemies shall be abolished God and Christ shall have a full and entire kingdome over all because they shal be all in all things Christ the Son therfore shal reigne with the Father and holy Ghost for ever and ever and not for a thousand yeeres onely as the Chiliasts dreame of which afterward 16. Then those four and twenty Elders The company of the four and twentie Elders doe also with the other heavenly inhabitants give thankes to God for the vindication and deliverance of the Church and kingdome of Christ beseeching him to execute his last judgement Touching the Elders we have heard Chap. 4.4 One of them Chap. 7.23 concluded the second Vision and expounded to John the glory of the blessed Martyrs Here all of them shut up this third Vision with a song of triumph not much unlike unto that in Chap. 4.