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A00753 Comfortable notes vpon the bookes of Exodus and Leuiticus, as before vpon Genesis Gathered and laid downe still in this plaine manner, for the good of them that cannot vse better helpes, and yet are carefull to read the Scriptures, and verie desirous to finde the comfort in them. By the Reuerend Father in God Geruase Babington ... With a table of the principall matters contained in this booke. Babington, Gervase, 1550-1610. 1604 (1604) STC 1088; ESTC S100580 531,878 712

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forget This maketh the child vndutifull to his parents because hee forgetteth what they haue done for him which made the olde father Tobiah call vpon his sonne earnestlie to remember what his mother suffered for him when he was in her bodie what care after when he was brought into the world to make much of her as long as she liued when she should die to burie her by him The good father doubted not but due remembrance would work gratitude as he well knew vnkind forgetfulnes would do the contrarie This is the sinne of seruants to their Maisters of Maisters often to their seruants Of one neighbour towards another of all the world almost this day But could such seruice may you thinke as Ioseph did to Egipt be euer forgotten yea yea we sée it héere noted by God himselfe and therefore we must know it for truth that ingratitude will make no bones to swallow vp any vertue any merit any goodnes whatsoeuer Which causeth a saying to be most true Si ingratum dixeris omnia dixeris if thou canst truly say he is vnthankfull in that one word thou hast saide all the euill of him that may be spoken Honourable therefore was it and thrice honourable in King Henry the 3. King of this land so to remember the seruices of his oppressed seruant Hubert Lord chiefe Justice of England thereupon to frée him from the malice of his enemies and to saue his life I sée no reason saith he why we should deale so hardly with Hubert when his enemies vrged his execution and expected the Kings cōmandement for the same for first from the time of his youth he serued mine Uncle King Richard then my father King Iohn in whose seruice as I heard say beyond the seas he was driuen to eate his horse and in my time he hath stoode constantly in the defence of that Realme against forreigne Nations kept the Castle of Douer against king Lewis and vanquished the French-men vpon the seas also at Bedford and Lincolne he hath done great seruice If hee should be guiltie of anie thing done vntruly against me which is not euidentlie proued yet by me he shall neuer be put to such a villanous death For I had rather be accounted a king foolish and simple than to be iudged a tyrant and séeker of blood especiallie of such as haue serued me and my Auncestors in manie perils so dangerously weighing more the few euils which yet be not proued than so many good deserts both to me and the whole Realme euidently knowne vnto all men As then remembrance and forgetfulnes of a good are contrarie so you sée the effects of them are contrarie the one bringing forth all honourable actions the other oppression and crueltie as in this place These were the foure causes of this great affliction of Gods people and let vs neuer forget them nor their vse 3. In the next place let vs note their manner in bringing their purpose to passe first they haue a méeting and a consultation then an exeeution of what they haue deuised Their méeting the king caused when he said Come let vs work wiselie c. In which wee sée the guise of the world the wicked haue a Come as well as the godlie but farre and farre differing for the godlie haue their Come as a word of encouragement to religion and the exercises thereof as when they say O come and let vs sing vnto the Lord let vs hartily reioyce in the strength of his saluation But the wickeds Come is to conspiracie and practise in which they are more diligent than the children of light are in their good for their bodies méete their heads méete their hearts méete both outward inward they are earnest in euill Such a Come we reade of against holie Ieremie Come sayd the wicked and let vs imagine a deuise against Ieremie let vs smite him with the tongue and not giue credite to any of his words Such another haue Kuffians and théenes and swaggering fellowes in the booke of the Prouerbs Come and cast in thy lot with ours for we will haue all but one purse c. Such another hath the harlot to the young man Come my husband is not at home c. But against such cursed Comes let vs euer remember what the Psalme saith Blessed is the man that hath not walked in the counsell of the vngodly nor stand in the way of sinners and hath not sit in the seate of the scornfull And that Arnobius an olde Writer well noteth vpon those words Primus psalmus vnde scit beatitudinem perijsse inde recuperat In consilio impiorum abijt Adam id est in serpentis et mulieris Et nunc Adam noster id est consensus noster beatus erit si non abierit in consilio serpentis et mulieris id est inconsilio carnis et diaboli aut si abierit non ibi stet aut si steterit non sedeat c. The first Psalme saith he where it knew happines was lost there beginneth to recouer it againe for Adam walked in the counsell of the wicked namely of the woman and of the serpent And now our Adam that is our consent shall be blessed if it doo not walke in the counsell of the woman and of the serpent that is of flesh and the deuill or if it happen to walk yet standeth not still or if it stand still yet sitteth not downe in the same that is abideth not and tarieth in it but remembring the law of the Lord taketh his delight therein and in the same doth exercise himselfe both day and night This cursed conuenticle and malicious méeting albeit wholely it sauoreth of crueltie and blood yet if you marke it it is couered and smeared ouer with a vizard and die of wisedome for Come faith the King let vs wisely worke So still is the Deuill like himselfe if you marke it and euer in his colours His followers learne of him and they also delight in colours The proud man is cleanlie the couetous man is prouident the drunkard a good-fellow and such like But the day will come wherein all such colours will be washed away and the cleare sunne breaking out and dispiersing all clouds sinne will be discerned to be sinne and eternally punnished Thus of their méeting and their counsell 4 The conclusion resolution of their counsel if you marke the text is to lay burthens vpon this people and to kéepe them downe Burthens of labours as appeareth and burthens of payments as some write So that by this way their strength should be shaken and their liues made wearisome vnto them that thereby lesse encreasing might be amongst them and lesse feare had of them Where marke if you doe not sée the deuises of some in our daies wise as they thinke but héerein wicked as we know séeking by such practises to breake both backs and hearts of those that deserue better then
is Christ known but frō the rising of the sun to the going downe of the same c. Thus may we profit by their multiplication 2. The second head in this chapter is the crueltie of the Egyptians by meanes whereof a very bitter and heauie affliction followed this great and glorious multiplication The vse to our selues may bée this that euen so dooth aduersity follow prosperitie and therefore prosperity should euer prepare for aduersitie A wise man in his good day thinketh of his euill and dayly beholding the sunne ouer shadowed at times with a darke cloude maketh vse of it to his good Sorrow and ioy wil not dwell togither but by composition they were thus agréed as the Poets feigne that as soone as the one hath had a time the other shall enter and haue his time also the former passing away and giuing place Let no wise-man therefore say as Dauid said tush tush this estate shall neuer decay for the Lord turned his face and Dauid was soone troubled Iob on a day could not thinke on such a change as after happened to him and yet all to the glorie of God and his good No earthly father louing his childe doth forbeare to chastice him much lesse dooth the father of Spirits leaue his children without fit corvection since both hée loueth more and knoweth how better to correct for their good The path to heauen is beaten out through many tribulations and vp must euery man and woman take their crosse that will bée his in eternall comfort Let vs note againe in this place the causes of this their affliction oppression as the Spirit of wisedome for our good hath héere laide them downe The first is their very increasing and multiplying For the king saide Behold the people of the children of Israel are greater and mightier than we come let vs worke wiselie with them lest they multiply Where wée sée that Gods fauour bestowed in mercy where hée liketh is still an eye-sore to euill men matter inough for them to grinde and grate their téeth at and to cause them to enter into plots and conspiracies against them The eye of enuie looketh euer vpward who is aboue who riseth who prospereth who is well spoken of well thought of or any way fauoured by the Lord and as much grieued is a spitefull spirit at the good of an other as at the harme of himselfe Which Diogenes noted when hée saw a knowne enuious man looke sadde No man saith hée can now tell whether harme hath happened to this fellow or good to his neighbour for both alike vexe him It was the blot of Athens that renowned Citie to haue few of any excellent vertue escape the rage of enuie in it but that either they were disgraced or banished or put to death in the end Those whom no sword of hating foe could daunt in the field enuie vanquished at home in the Citie deprauing their seruices blotting their names and breaking at last their guiltlesse hearts Which made the Philosopher prescribe this remedie against enuie whē one asked him how he might auoide it Euen neither to do nor say any good thing Thus did enuie rage against their multiplying héere And if Gods actions escape not mans malice shall yours shall mine shall any mans no no praemoniti praemuniti forewarned forearmed the streame ran euer so and God make vs euer patient and strong to go on in our duties A second cause of this affliction is a suspicious feare which entreth into these Egyptians that if there should be warre the Israelites would ioyne themselues to the enemie fight against them and so get themselues out of the land Such fruite groweth vpon such trées misdéeming thoughts causelesse iealousie vaine feares and all vniust opinions Why surely because it is the course that God hath in his word threatned to wicked persons which feare not him as they ought to doe Astonishment of heart a trembling heart feare both night and day c. reade the scriptures and you shall finde much proofe of what I say Suspect bewrayes our thoughts betrayes our words suspicious eies are messengers of woe Well fares that man howsoeuer his meate doth tast that tables not with foule suspition Better to die then to be suspitious Trust not too soone nor yet too soone mistrust for mistrust will treason in the trustiest raise The heart being once infect with iealousie the night is griefe the day is miserie Jealousie is the torment of the minde for which no wit or counsell helpe can finde Suspition wounds and iealousie striketh dead Causelesse and vndeserued suspition sendeth manie an one too swiftlie to their end These sayings of wise and true experience should much moue euery wise person We sée what we nurse when wee nourish this vice And if all this should not moue vs yet let our owne credite moue vs which by this meanes is shrewdly drawne in question the knowne versés saying thus Too much suspition of another is A flat condemning of thine owne amisse A third cause of their affliction was a new King she former being dead vnder whom they felt no such miserie Which may iustlie occasion vs to note carefullie what danger often is in change of Gouernours if the Lord be not mercifull Salomon may haue his wants but when his sonne commeth in his place he thundreth and telleth the people that his little finger shall be heauier vpon them than all his fathers hand This might we as déepelie haue tasted of as euer did these Israelites if God almightie had not thought vpon mercie in stead of iudgement The great neglect of those gracious daies which vnder the blessed gouernment of Quéene Elizabeth our late renowned souereigne wee comfortablie enioyed deserued punishment in a high degrée we must néedes confesse if we will say truth yet in steade thereof our most swéete God whose goodnes knoweth neither bottome nor measure hath raised vp ouer vs such a King againe as both so firmelie is fastned to the loue of the Gospell and so enriched with all other princelie vertues either of nature or grace as not onelie we with bowed knées may euer praise the name of God but all forreigne Nations speake and write of so admirable mercie vouchsafed vnto vs God for his Christes sake make vs thankfull That the King knewe not Ioseph Diuines say it was either for want of reading the Histories or because vnthankfullie hee contemned the good that was done in other times and to other men S. Augustine héere giueth a note how men may know what King ruleth within them to whose words I refer the reader And let this forgetting of Ioseph that is of the seruice and good that Ioseph did to all that land of Egipt in the great famine mentioned in Genesis be the fourth and last cause of this affliction And this indéede if you marke it is a mother of great mischiefe wheresoeuer it is euen this forgetting of such benefites as we ought neuer to
Thus saith the Lord that cretaed thee O Iacob and he that formed thee O Israel Feare not for I haue redeemed thee I haue called thee by thy name thou art mine When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee and through the floudes that thy doo not ouerflow thee when thou walkest through the fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle vpon thee For I am the Lord thy God the Holy One of Israel thy Sauiour I gaue Egypt for thy ransome Ethiopia and Seba for thee c. reade the Chap. your selfe and I stay héere 10. Now sée an Accident in the way When Moses was in his Inne the Lord met him and would haue killed him That is by either a sore sickenesse or some other way the Lord made him know his wrath conceined against him as also the cause to wit the omitting of the circumsicion of his Sonne as by the euent wée may sée although it bee not expresly named Where to our profit let vs stay a while and consider diuers things First why Moses so well acquainted with the law of God in this behalfe should omit or neglect to do it And for answere herevnto marke with your selfe how of two sonnes which Moses had and carried with him the circumcision of one is onely here mentioned whereby you may well see the other was before and alreadie circumcised or else Gods wrath would not haue stayed in this place vpon performance of dutie onely to one Now the one hauing before beene circumcised why should he not haue done the like to the other but that out of all question his wife béeing not sonndly perswaded in this point tooke offence at the first grew vnquiet offered vnfit speathes and happely stirred vp her father also Iethro to ioine with her to rattle Moses for such crueltie as they estéemed it to his sonne Wherupon the good man milde soft of spirit in humane frailety chose rather to forbeare the second son to haue his peace than to circumcise also him and please God A notable example to teach vs this doctrine how néedefull it is euen to the great Doctours and Diuines to the great Masters and Teachers and rulers and leaders of others still and continualy to be vnderpropped and held-vp by Gods powrefull ayde and blessed Spirit in their duties when as otherwise euen they they I say that seeme so strong play Moses part here and faint in the way to the offence of God and danger of themselues Nay if Moses faint how much more fall they flat downe that neuer had such measure of grace as Moses had Pray therefore and pray continually for increase of strength for courage and fortitude for constancy and power to repell al the darts that Sathan shall throw at vs and prepare we to buckle with men and women and Diuels that shal assay to quench or to coole our zeale in our places and to bring vs to omit this and that and euerie day somewhat which God expresly requireth and will not abide to be omitted See you Discouragers and discomforters of Gods seruants in necessarie duties what venome is in your darts and poyson in yonr doings Moses this great man is ouercome and brought into daunger by them and O how shal athousand others of farre weaker strength be turned out of the way by you Will God be angry with Moses for yéelding and shall you safely escape that are the causes of his sinne the cut-throates of his zeale and the ouer-turners of his well doing No no assure your selues the wrath of the Lord shal consume you when it hath profitably corrected his childe vnlesse you repent and leaue-off such Deuillish dealing Sée you also you brawling and vnquiet women what your ignorance and obstinacie bringeth your husbands vnto though they be as Moses holy and vertuous they cannot serue God a-right for you they cannot doe what God requireth but you breake their hearts you coole their zeale you turne them out of the way and in the end you bring them to a fearefull danger of Gods destroying of them For the Lord met Moses héere and would haue killed him saith the Text. Shall this euer be vnpunished in you no your Husbands shall bee schooled for their frailtie and you shall be consumed for your arrogancie so proudly and so disobediently contemning both their religious instructions and holy actions If God be in you this will be a warning 11. Then Zipporah tooke a sharpe knife cut away the fore-skin of her Sonne The two things that héere might be considered namely that doctrine of Poperie concerning the danger of children dying vnbaptized and secondlie of such an absolute necessitie of Baptisme as that women must administer it in time of supposed néede I forbeare to stand vpon now I haue sufficiently touched them in my Notes vpon Genesis Therefore doo but remember with your selfe touching the first that wee make a great difference betwixt want of the Sacrament and contempt of the same contempt damning and want not through the strength of Gods promise meaning by want when God so preuenteth by death that it cannot be had according to the manner allowed in the word And touching the second obserue that this act of Zipporah here in circumcising her childe was méerely extraordinarie and doth no way warrant women to baptize now-a-daies Her bitter words to her husband that hee was a bloodie husband to her shewe but what spéeches are often giuen by women that haue their tongues a little too much at liberty His wisedome in not answering her is to this day his praise and her fact her fault in so vndutifully speaking Let this suffice of this Chapter and nowe reade the Text ouer in your Bible and sée how these Notes haue helped you My drift you sée and I leaue it to God I would haue all men encouraged to reade CHAP. 5. The chiefe Heads of this Chapter are these The comming of Moses Aaron to the King The greeuanees of the people Their impatiencie 1. TOuching the first héere wee sée that although Moses was very backward a-while to obey God and goe to this King vpon this errand yet at last hee yéelded faith ouercame feare and all conceits steeped to the obedience of God A happie thing and happie is that man and woman euer which can likewise say truly I haue had my feares and fancies my errors and mine ignorances my pride and my preiudice against that which was good and right but they are all gone I thanke God and I much ioy that they are gone as likewise that I am now sincerely his whose I ought to be and in this obedience doe not doubt but shall end my dayes by his grace 2. Wée may againe thinke héere why God should thus send Moses and Aaron to pray deliuerance for his people when hee was able without stretched arme to haue deliuered them at his pleasure And wee may aunswere our selues in this sort euen for the reasons
Lord giue vs vnderstanding in all things 17. Then after thus thou hast acquainted the Heads of the people of Israell with it and they by my working in-wardely with them willing to obey both thou and they shall go to Pharaoh the king and say c. Sée againe and still still most carefully note it how God regardeth Gouernment For now Pharaoh must bée vsed as was fit for his Place He being the king of the lande in which they were wicked Pharaoh I say must not be disorderly dealt with by such as liue vnder his gouernment within his Territories although strangers and not his naturall Subiects how much lesse then by naturall Subiects But hee must be gone vnto with all dutie and acquainted with all reuerence with their desire that neither themselues may be iudged factious neither others by their examples moued to any disorder They must acquaint him with the Author of this desire not their owne heads lusting after liberty or nouelitie but the Lord God that is that Lord which is God and that GOD which is Lord and Lord of Lords to worke some touch in Pharaoh of feare Secondly the Lord God of the Hebrewes that is that hath euer had care of them and dealt for them as séemed good to his Wisedome Thirdly that their scope was Religion not rebellion nor any vndutifull practise against the state Shall not this moue vs to reuerence authoritie when God thus notablie sheweth his liking of it It is enough in this place if God be with vs. Lastly obserue the long sufferance of God who though by this Pharaoh verie much offended yet before hee will smite he will admonish and doe all things so as his owne hart shall testifie his owne inexcusable wickednes Certainly euen thus the Lord dealeth with our selues if wee had eyes to sée it still forewarning and calling to a touch before hee determine Judgement and iust destruction His Preachers and Prophets his rods and his crosses his fauours and bounties be all Admonishers of vs to auoide his wrath 18. But I knowe that the King of Egypt will not let you goe but by strong hand Therefore will I sttetch out my hand and smite Egypt with all my wonders which I will doe in the midst thereof and after that shall hee let you goe How well doth the Lord sée what the wicked thinke is secret and hidden to wit their thoughts and purposes their dispositions and nature yea before themselues knowe what they will doe he knoweth and shall not this moue them Their stubborne and stiffe harts contemning admonitions and all meanes of their reformation the Lord knoweth and séeth before How may this comfort the zealous Minister that is wearied and wasted with longing after the life of them that wish his death with praying entreating and crying vpon men for their good that they would hearken and consider that they would be reconciled to God and saue their soules I say how may this comfort him that this blockishnes and hardnes this ingratitude and vnkindnes of theirs was knowne to the Lord euer And therefore to content himselfe that he hath giuen warning like a faithfull Watchman that hee hath loued like a faithfull Pastor and endeauoured their good as a true Minister leauing the Lord now to his further pleasure euen to stretch out his hand and to smite such Pharaohs with their Land that is their possessions and goods their friends and associates as héere hee did for till Pharaoh féele it hee will not thinke of His might The Preacher speaketh in the aire the friend priuately looseth his labour and honest aduise Pharaoh féeleth not but thinketh himselfe wise and them fooles Their loue returneth therefore into their owne bosome being noted in Gods Booke for a Witnes against them and that swéete comfort sheweth it selfe to be taken hold of Wée are a swéete sauour to the Lord in them that perish After this consider with your selfe héere againe in that it is saide Pharaoh will not let them goe but by strong hand How far more easie it is to come into Egypt than to get out So it is assuredlie a smooth way to Hell by many pleasant delights but to returne and giue ouer the sinne once entred into to forsake that pleasant way This is a worke This is a labour nay This is a Grace indéede Any man may leape into a pit at his pleasure but hee must come out with more difficultie if euer hee come out Therefore in my conceite the good woman dealt wisely with the Frier that solicited her to sinne and told her hée would sing and say prayers for her that should cleanse her from all her offence and deliuer her presently out of Purgatorie if shee should happen to die whilest hee was aliue when shee appointed a pit to be digged in the way where the Fryer should come in the night and to be couered with some grasse that it might not appeare into which as soone as euer the Fryer came he fell and not able any way to get out againe Anon when hée had cooled himselfe well the woman came also as though shée had come to méete him to whom the poore Fryer pittifully complaineth that hee was fallen into that pit there and could not get out praying her to vse some meanes for his deliuerance But shee wisely tolde him hee should remember what hee said vnto her to wit that out of the pit of Purgatorie hee could sing her or any that should offend with him and now there was a good place to trie the power of his Musicke and Songs that shée and others might beléeue him the better If hee would haue his Portesse sent for shée said shée would but other helpe hee should get none of her And so shee left him to sing himselfe out if hee could So sleight a matter made those Hypocrites then of fearefull sinne easily purged and easilie pardoned were it neuer so wittingly and wilfully committed But this Figure of the hardnes to get out of Egypt when once they were in may shew vs as I say apparantly the contrarie and giue vs iust and good cause to beware of sinne The deuill is not such a foolish Fowler to let slip easely the bird he hath caught Euery mans owne experience telleth him how hard it is to leaue a wonted wrying from the right way and God graunt wee may thinke of it 19. Lastly the Lord addeth that Hee would make them fauoured of the Egyptians so that when they departed they should not goe emptie c. Where to our comfort wée sée that all harts are in the hands of God euen as the riuers of water and that hee turneth them hither and thither at his pleasure Hée can make them loue hate they neuer so much and they shall not bee able to withstand his will Yea hee can make them so loue that fruites from thence shall flowe to his people of their loue euen as hee best liketh Be they Jewels of siluer or Jewels of
workes how hée had not to doo with man but with God and so be voyde and naked of all excuse But This that the Lord saith Hee will harden his hart troubleth some and they séeke to temper it according to their fancies lest it should séeme iniustice in the Lord first to harden and then destroy not remembring what the Apostle saith God will haue mercy on whom hee will haue mercy and whom hee will hee hardneth And if any obiect and say why doth he then complaine for who hath resisted his Will His mouth is stopped by the same Apostle in the same place with this O man who art thou that pleadest against God Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus Noting that no reason is to be demaunded aboue Gods Will for who will goe further shall tast the reward of his rashnes and the Maiestie of God shall ouer-whelme him Hath not the Potter power ouer the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessell to honour and another to dishonour And shall lesse authoritie bee giuen to God Aske the Potter a reason and it is but his Will and yet dust and ashes wil demaund more of God Againe if we be all of one Lumpe of corruption as wee must needes confesse wee are if it please God to exempt some from the death due to so sinfull wretches dooth hée any wrong to others that hée vouchsafeth not the same vnto leauing them but to their owne natures No he may doe with his owne as it pleaseth him and what hée dooth still is iust holy and good Let the wicked then accuse themselues and not God for still in themselues they shal finde the cause if rightly they looke into their owne will 9 It followeth in the Text Then thou shalt say to Pharaoh thus saith the Lord Israel is my Sonne euen my first borne Wherefore I say to thee let my Sonne goe that he may serue me if thou refuse to let him goe beholde I will slay thy Sonne euen thy first borne Marke then the Title God giueth to his Church and meditate on it earnestlie Hée calleth it his Sonne yea his first borne noting therein to all flesh that it is to him as a man-childe to the Father yea as the first borne which commonly is loued most tenderly and in greatest honour Now then thinke with your selfe what heart is in you to the fruite of your body and to your first borne thinke how you could endure to stand and looke vpon the abuse offered by any to the whole or any parte as to sée but a legge or an arme cut-off iniuriouslie by bloody butchers and then thinke of God to his Church and euery part of it whose affection so-much excelleth yours as God excelleth man and holinesse and perfection misery sinne and corruption What a comfort is this when the Deuill roareth and Tyrants his instruments rage breathing-out blood at their nostrils and nothing but death and destruction at their mouthes with furious phrases and spéeches of pride as though there were none that could stop them or controle them in what they will Thinke on the difference of GOD and man in this point that many harmes may be done to our Sons and our first borne which wée sée not neither know of and therefore at the instant féele not any touch for it or by it But God séeth euer and euery where all actions all intendments and purposes all thoughts and secret attempts whatsoeuer and still is aboue man in his tendernesse of loue to his sons children as far as God excelleth dust and earth and sinne and corruption as I saide O what a touch giue these raging cruelties then against his Church vnto him what a féeling hath hée of them and how doo they pierce his gratious bowels wherein he hath wrapped-vp his people as his Sonnes and as his first borne Still thinke of your selfe what heart would be in you and then try the difference of God and you But you will say vnto mée it is comfortable to consider this tender loue that you note indéede but why then doth God suffer such iniuries and oppressions béeing able to auert them as man is not for the most part This is the loue of a Father that he neither can sée nor suffer to be done to the childe hée loueth any outrage and crueltie his power béeing able to saue his childe from it To which if I answere I must pray you to continue euen still in your owne resemblance and to tell me if you dayly sée not most tender Fathers perceiuing cause for a further good to suffer their children to lie in prison to bée tossed in lawe to bée schooled many wayes by suffering want and biting vpon the bridle for a time yet in the midst of al these things haue an eye to them a loue to them and asetled purpose when they know themselues their strength the world his practises men and their humors and many such things not otherwise of many well learned often but by these meanes then to set-hand-to to helpe them that then a loue may bée knowne a loue and a good a good with a liuely taste in comparison of that which would haue béene if sooner the Father or friend had stepped in So so is it with the Lord for our capacitie though indéede no comparison betwixt Him and vs. Hée knoweth his times and turnes and our wants perfectlie fitting the one to the other most mercifully that both onr corruption and his goodnesse may best appeare to the greatest benefit vnto vs. Therefore let him alone in his own waies tarrie we as the Psal saith his blessed leasure Be strong and he shall comfort our hearts put we our trust euer in him Of the earthly father or friend the Prouerbe saith wel he may sée his childe or kinsman neede but he cannot endure to see him bleede So our sweete God wel he may see vs humbled schooled and tamed wained from the loue of this wretched world but vndone cast away finally for euer he cannot endure it he will not suffer it he will not sée it O blessed bée his Name for euer euer for it Haue this in your remembrāce therfore as a swéete Comfort the occasion of this Note Israel is my Son euen my first borne And therefore tell Pharaoh he were best take héede what he doth for I will make his Sonne and first borne féele it if he hinder mine and will not let them go to serue me The world you know contemneth despiseth vs counting vs the refuse of the people and what may bee base or vile but this loue is life and this regarde with God is honour most high in the comfort whereof we may sup-vp these earthly scornes if his Grace bée with vs. The Prophet Esay in his spirit tasted this when so swéetely hee prophecied and published to this day to bée séene and heard
slaunder and slaughter and such like but that heere they were idle was an error in the King and a malicious lie in those that so enformed him By which wee may learne and sée how wicked men haue no eyes often to sée the true causes of a thing but most apt and readie to deuise a false Let a man or woman be gréeued extraordinarily with the burthen of their sinnes and with groanes and sighes trauaile vnder the bitternes of it leauing thereupon those recreations which erst they vsed and delighted in what say the wicked oh it is a melancholie and the body would be purged c. But oh they are blinde and haue no eye-sight into the combates of the godly may wee truly say and so leaue them Festus imagineth Paul is mad when he speaketh the words of truth and sobernes and that much learning maketh him mad when learning is wisedome and maketh wise Yea Heli himselfe mistaketh Anna a vertuous woman and déemeth her to be drunke when rauished in her holy féeling shee was crying to GGD with feruent prayer Wherefore the Apostle teacheth To the end Christ might be mercifull a faithfull high Priest in things concerning God it behooued him in all things to be made like vnto his brethren And in another place Wee haue not an high Priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sinne c. 8. And let them not regard vaine words saith Pharaoh Such taste and such conceipt haue vaine persons of Gods word In the 14. of the Acts the truth of God you knowe is called Heresie of the wicked And in the 17. Chapter it is called Newe of vaine Phylosophers that knewe not what it was Examples of vse to giue vs contentment in patience when like ignorance in our dayes bringeth forth like blasphemies Be stayed strong 9. Then went the Taske-maisters of the people and their Officers out and tolde the people saying Thus saith Pharaoh I will giue you no more straw Goe your selues get you straw where ye can finde it yet shall nothing of your labour be diminished Then were the people scattered c. Sée againe what was said before how the néerer that God draweth to his Church and Children to doo them good the more rageth Sathan in and by his members against them Hard hard therefore are the beginnings of deliuerance out of Egypt spirituall Egypt I meane as well as out of this earthly Egypt And therefore when the Lord shall touch thy hand and open thine eyes to sée where thou art how farre out of the way that leadeth to eternall life and giue thée a desire to returne and be saued Remember what the wise-man saith and bee comforted with it My Sonne if thou wilt come into the seruice of GOD stand fast in righteousnes and feare and prepare thy soule to temptation c. Reade the place to the ende Remember that Example in the Gospell how the foule spirit being commaunded to depart rent and tare the partie more and worse than euer before Wee cannot leaue anie sinne wherein wee haue continued but by and by some contrarie winde will blowe and wee shall be discouraged if it may be somtimes with threatnings and bitter words sometimes with shew of perils and losses that may ensue sometimes with mocks and taunts in very spightfull manner and in a word if wee haue done euill wee must doo euill still and so be cast away or else Sathan will want his will But be strengthened with this Example and others in the Word Here now their burthen and miserie is greater than euer before For now they must haue no more straw but gather it where they can and yet make vp the tale and number of their bricke before which was a great extremitie yet the end is still as the Lord hath decréed his purpose is to deliuer them from this slauerie and when his time commeth they shall bee deliuered and let goe whosoeuer saith nay Though discomfort encrease for a little while to drawe sighes out of the heart to him that can helpe yet it shall end with ioyfull comfort put in the place of it and so much the sooner by how much it groweth the sharper O stand then and shrinke not and say in your heart now now is my God at hand For now I féele and sée the enemie maddest to oppresse me if hee could Come therefore swéete Lord I humbly beséech thée stay not and till thou commest vouchsafe thy hand to stay me that I faint not Thou art strong and I am weake thou art good and I am bad but thou art mine and I am thine O Blessed Blessed support thine owne that I may euer praise thée 10. And the Taske-masters hasted them saying Finish your dayes-worke c. And they beate them Then they cried to Pharaoh c. A Storie to shew you if you note it how the Law worketh without the Gospel euen roughlie sharply and rigorouslie For doo this doo this finish finish the work is stil the voice of it Whereby sin and the Deuill rageth as here Pharaoh doth For sinne saith the Apostle tooke occasion by the law c. So sinne reuiued But I died and the same commaundement which was ordained vnto life was found to be vnto mee vnto death c. Then crieth the true Israelite O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death as heere they cried vnto Pharaoh to bee deliuered from their miserie Blessed therefore bee the Lord for his swéete Gospell which helpeth all this rigour and giueth vs comfort and deliuerance in his Sonne from this great rage to our endlesse comfort Sée also how Tyrannie once begunne encreaseth more and more from words to blowes verse 14. And when they crie vnto Pharaoh in hope of remedie verse 15. shewing him the iniquitie of their vsage and how their offence in not making vp their tale of bricke grew by other mens faults that gaue them no straw verse 16 this pittifull complaint which should haue moued him to commiseration worketh but a confirmation of tyrannie in the wicked King first mocking and scoffing at their Religion as wicked men vse to doo verse 17 and vttering his crueltie with his owne mouth There shall no straw be giuen you yet shal you deliuer the whole tale of Bricke ver 18. Wherefore how happie Kingdomes be to which the Lord hath graunted mercifull and gracious Princes full of pittie and clemencie flowing from a true taste of holy Religion and from an immoueable loue of their true Subiects I leaue the Reader if he haue any bowels in him to féele and consider sending vp his thanks where it is due for what hee enioyeth in abundant measure 11. Then the Officers of the Children of Israel saw thēselues in an euill case c. And they met Moses and Aaron who
Ver. 8. vnto the 13. you sée the sixth plague of Egypt euen a foule scab breaking out into blisters vpon man and beast Whereof Iosephus saith no small number died yet could not this moue them to sée the hand of God Such vglie sores and maladies our age also hath and as far from leading to true repentance as these héere That gréeuous Disease began in Spaine but afterward crept into Fraunce and there so abounded as euer since it hath caried the name of that Country not of Spaine Be it that by diuers meanes it may happen as by a cup a combe a stoole and such like so that euery one is not guiltie of lewde life who happily is spotted with it yet which way so euer it commeth the Lord toucheth and it is euer good to sée his hand distinguished from other causes and to fall downe before him in humble acknowledgement of our sinne making our peace by true submission and beséeching him either to remoue such punishment frō vs or to seale vp our hearts in the assurance of his loue notwithstanding all earthly trials Let vs also in this place marke how the Sorcerers were smitten with this plague so that they could not stand before Moses They had séene many things before to make them giue place the deuouring of their roddes their inhabilitie to make that base vermine spoken of before yea their owne mouthes then said it was Gods Finger yet they will not giue ouer their gaine-saying and crossing of Gods Ministers till the Plague of God light vpon their owne persons in these vglie soares which surely is a very effectuall warning to all Kebellers against good things that they giue ouer betimes and yéeld to God so auoiding his wrathfull stripes either vpon themselues or their goods God is the same as iust as euer as strong as euer and will flesh and blood prouoke him A better course shal be our wisedome 6 This seuenth Plague now following ver thirtéenth hath also his Denunciation his Execution and his Effect Which in order obserued will yéelde vs sundry Meditations And first the Denunciation will more and more beate into vs the wonderfull hardnesse of Pharaoh and his People who neither by any nor all the Plagues before mentioned of Blood of Frogges of Lice of Flyes of Moraine of Botch could be mooued and turned to the obedience due from man to God Can we wonder at waywarde creatures in our times when wée sée this No no the heart of man Woman is a most wonderfull peruerse thing whē God worketh not these often Repetitions are made by Gods Spirite that we should marke it know it and continually pray against it 7 You sée God willeth Moses to Rise vp early in the morning and stand before Pharaoh Let the vse of it be to teach with what diligence and care God would euer haue his businesse how he hateth negligence and loose slubbering ouer what belongeth to our charge saying in plaine tearmes Cursed be he that doth the worke of the Lord negligently Ministers then forasmuch as their calling is to doo the worke of God and to stand before Pharaoh they must be diligent zealous carefull and painfull doing what lieth in them euer Magistrates also must doo the like for they execute not the iudgments of man but of the Lord and he will be with them in the cause and iudgment For there is no iniquitie with the Lord our God neither respect of persons nor receauinge of reward Parents and Maisters doo the worke of God and therefore they must be diligent calling vpon their children and families with blessed Abraham to feare the Lord. There bee also in Parishes Church-Officers Sworne-men with such like who for their yéere haue Gods worke in hand and therefore they should haue a great conscience to doo their duties diligently for feare of the curse aboue mentioned But surely their grosse dulnes crieth for great vengeance and I pray God it reach not to their posteritie also and to all that they haue gathered together for them For so good Offices to so good vse both of the Church and Common-wealth cannot be so wilfully and wittingly so careleslie and presumptuouslie neglected as they are but it will smart one day When thou seest a thiefe saith God in the Psalme thou runnest with him and thou art a pertaker with the Adulterers When thou seest a thiefe that is an euill doer any way thou consentest vnto him that is either thou doest as he doth or at least doest ouerlooke him and conceale him not bringing him by thine Office vnto the ordinarie correction of his fault and hast beene pertaker with the Adulterers in not presenting them and following the presentment with zeale vntill there were Justice had These things saith God hast thou done and I held my tongue and thou thoughtest wickedly that I am euen such a one as thy selfe but I will reprooue thee and set before thee the things which thou hast done That is I will make thée knowe and the world also shall know by my dealings with thée that thou hast not risen vp earlie in the morning as Moses did héere that is thou hast not had care and conscience to doo the dutie of thy Place zealouslie and carefullie as thou oughtst for his sake whose worke it is and who hath raised thée to credite and accompt for thy Prince his sake who watcheth ouer thée for thy peace and is greatly abused by thée for thy Countrie sake which by thy negligence becommeth wicked and sinfull hastening to destruction most due and deserued Oh consider this better you that feare God saith the place lest I PLVCKE YOV AVVAY or teare you in peeces and there be none that can deliuer you 8 Obserue againe the word All in the 14. verse when God saith I will at this time send all my plagues vppon thine heart meaning many sundry and seuerall plagues for God did not bring All according to y● Letter diuers others following after as the 8. 9. 10. Plague The vse is this that wee consider the perill of rebellious obstinacy against God For first he wil punish it with one rodde then with another happely with a thirde and if these single chastisements will not serue then will he go to many plagues heaping wrath vpon wrath and woe vppon woe with a fierce hand yea he will lay euen All his plagues vpon vs at once as he here speaketh to our greatfall and confusion Add vnto this proofe here those wordes in Deut. But if thou wilt not obey the voice of THE LORD THY GOD to keepe and to doe all his Commaundements and his Ordinances which I commaund thee this daie then all these curses not one or two but All these curses shall come vpon thee and ouertake thee Cursed shalt thou be in the towne and cursed in the field Cursed shall thy basket be and thy dough Cursed shall be the fruite of thy body and the fruite
offices were all giuen away where hee least wished them and yet the Lord stayed not héere but fearefully destroyed also his posteritie Was not this thundering was not this lightning and was not this Judgment as vpon a stage O let it euer be remembred of all that reade it with their eies and God for his mercy sake make it profitable 14 Only in the land of Goshen where the children of Israel were was no hayle In which words as heretofore so stil stil is noted the vnsearchable goodnesse of God to his Church together with his Almighty power to doo euer what He wil. He can saue and He can spill He can make such a wall about his children that no storme or tempest no calamitie or euill shall come nere them though it compasse them round about and others perish with it on euery side Two shall be in the fielde the one receaued the other forsaken two shall be grinding at the mill the one accepted the other reiected c. Blessed therefore is that man and woman who haue the Lord for their God And say vnto my soule I am thy saluation saith Dauid in one of his Psalmes noting thereby the comfort of this aboue ten thousand worldes Let vs therefore euer be carefull to be of the number of those that abide in Goshen where the Sauing hand of God shall defend from al euil 15. In these smooth wordes of Pharaoh verse 27. That he had sinned that the Lord was righteous and he and his people wicked That Moses should pray for him c. returning neuerthelesse to his old byas when the Plague was gone stil obserue as you haue done before the déepe falshood of mans hart making faire shewes without fruite and if God be thus glozed and dissembled with all thinke whether it séeme strange to mortall man to taste of it No no we must reckon of it to be praised to our face to be sclaundered at our backes by the one and the same person Yet let it not discourage vs to doo any good but onely let it make vs carefull to giue no iust cause and tenne thousand times thankfull when wee are released out of such a world and taken into his kingdome 16. Lastly that often repeated Sentence of Pharaohs heardened heart let it remember vs of that Saying in Saint Augustine Corda mala patientia Dei durescunt Euill hearts wax-heard by Gods long-suffering and patience Also of that in Saint Bernard Cor durum dici quod non cōpūctione scinditur nec pietate mollitur nec mouetur precibus minis non cedit flagellis duratur ingratum ad beneficia ad consilia infidum ad iudicia saeuum inuerecundum ad turpia impauidum ad pericula inhumanum ad humana temerarium ad Diuina preteritorum obliuiscens praesentium negligens futura non praeuidens It is called a heard heart which is neither rent with compunction nor softned with piety nor mooued with prayers which giueth no place to threatnings is hardened with stripes in benefits vnthankfull in Councill vnfaithfull in iudgment cruell vnshamefast in foule things not fearefull in perils in humane things most inhumane in Diuine things rashe forgetting things past neglecting things present and not foreseeing things to come Surely such a description if we our selues haue not Pharaohs hardnes will euer mooue vs earnestly to pray against such hardnesse Thus endeth this Chapter and thus end I hauing giuen you some taste how we may profit by reading of it CHAP. 10. Here you haue following two Plagues more to wit the eight and the ninth The eight from the beginning of the Chapter to the twenty verse and the ninth from thence to the end Concerning the former the Holy-Ghost layeth downe 1. A Commaundement to Moses to goe 2. A Denunciation 3. An Execution 4. The Effect that in the Seruants King 1. TOuching the first the Text saith Againe the Lord said vnto Moses goe to Pharaoh c. Diuers times you know hee had sent before and all in vaine yet ceaseth not the bottomlesse and incomprehensible mercy of God still still againe and againe to send This was euer his gratious dealing with miserable sinners and a swéete comfort it is to a troubled minde to thinke of it The Gospell saith in like sort He sentagaine and againe other and other seruants to those wicked husbandmen to remember them of his due and their duetie At last he sent his owne Sonne vnto them saying they will reuerence my Sonne Againe to Hierusalem how often how often would I haue gathered thy Children together euen as a Hen gathereth her chickens vnder her wings and yet would not O tender Father what a certaine Seale is this thy goodnesse in these examples that true Repentance shall neuer be reiected A sorrowfull sinner neuer repulsed a broken and contrite hart neuer despised Let it profit vs vnto increase of faith for his sake that dyed for our sinnes Our owne experience hath taught vs as much if wee did obserue it For how long haue wee béene sinners haue not some of vs béene 20 yéeres some 30 some 40 and more all of vs too long walking the way that leadeth vnto death And what haue our sinnes béene surely great foule vglie odious to God dangerous to our selues and offensiue to the world yet hath the Lord neither swept vs away in his most iust wrath neither ceased to send Moses againe and againe vnto vs for our reformation Should not this infinite goodnes much moue vs to returne to so swéete a Father Knowest thou not O man saith the blessed Apostle that the long suffering of God leadeth thee to repentance How entertained hee the Prodigall Sonne when hee returned how reioice the Angels in Heauen ouer one sinner that repenteth far be it euer then from vs euer to resist a God so powerfull to confound vs and so mercifull to receaue vs. 2. But the Lord saith héere that he hardened Pharaohs heart and the hearts of his seruants how then was the fault in them that they yéelded not for answere let mee aske you another question whether you thinke it not lawfull that God should punish a sinner as himselfe liketh and whether hardnes of heart be not a punishment if both be true then might the Lord punish him this way Yet all men doo not thinke this such a punishment as it is for if wee be sicke wee looke for helpe if the eye faile the eare growe dull or any sense be weakened we quickly féele it and readily with for remedie onely if our heart growe dull and our vnderstanding féeling and profiting in Gods Schoole be taken from vs wee are not mooued neither thinke it goeth ill with vs preferring the outward sense of body far and far before the light of the minde But let it be lawfull you say with the Lord thus to punish yet it must néedes excuse the partie so punished for how can a man féele and relent whose heart God smiteth with
I say of this nature very limmes of Sathan the world hath euer had and still hath too many Now these causes were all naught and therfore this warre ill grounded ill prospered For enuie I haue often touched it but if the Lord also touch not such hearts nothing will serue I say no more now but wishe they woulde earnestly think of the Saying of GODS SPIRIT in the Psalme The vngodly shall see it and gnash his teeth The vngodlie the vngodly be these gnashers And Let him that hath eares to heare heare For that filthy desire of hauing from others still still that their heape may grow infinite I wisse that Heathen Africanus wel remembred who when he should haue ioyned with the Priest in praying for more and more increase to the Romanes answered no no our state is good all readie and aboundantly rich I will therefore rather pray that God will keepe it and maintaine it as it is Surely this man shall rise-vp in Judgment against such vnsatiable mindes and bée a swift witnesse against them The Old Saying is wise enough is enough and enough is as good as a feast Mediocria firma Meane things be firme when great things be fickle In Plutarch is mentioned a reason why the Kings of Sparta reigned so long namely because they were content with their owne limit and desired no more The thirde vice is as bad as either of these namely To be vnquiet And al Books of learning by occasion speake of the blot it made in that worthy Alexander when the Scithian Embassadours trulie tolde him That if there were no men to fight quarrell with all he would fight with the woods and the mountaines and the wilde beasts Such an other was Alcibiades an excellent man many waies but so vnquiet that the Saying grew how Graece was not able to beare two Alcibiades Beware then of these causes of warre and contention and learne by the Rod of GOD vpon Amalech to liue in peace and to let Gods children passe by vs without trouble I could héere with iust honour remember Her late Maiesties most happie gouernment Her blessed contentment with her own not séeking nor desiring the right of others no not taking that which was earnestlie offered vnto Her In regard whereof she renownedly flourished when other enuious gréedy and troublesome natures fel. But I end this Note here 3 And Moses saide vnto Ioshua Chuse vs out men and goe and fight with Amalech wée may obserue in this the antiquitie of Musters and a warrant for them All did not goe heere but some and those chosen out by a Muster and view taken by Ioshua Such vse remaineth still amongst vs and in all gouernments els for it is fit it is necessarie and I would haue all Menne consider well how full of honour and credit it euer was in these cases to bee chosen as contrariewise what a blotte it caried often with it to bee omitted as that either hee was guiltie of some fowle vice or not trusted c. Then woulde not men run away and hide themselues as soone as they heare of a Muster towardes as now a daies they doo Such base mindes and cowardly spirits were not wont to bée in English-men I would it were amended for no friende can heare such a one but with blushing and shame And againe it worketh an other great mischiefe namelie to haue our armies that stand for God and Religion for Prince and Countrie to consist of such a scumme as no blessing can be expected where such instruments are vsed Non recepiebantur olim mili●es aliquo publico iudicio damnati non relegatus ad tempus multo minus deportatus in insulam ad bestias damnatus immo nec reus tantum criminis c. Ex quorum foece tamē nostri exercitus sunt refertissimi In times past saith One They were not taken for Souldiers which were condemned by any publique iudgment or banished for a time or finally or to be cast to the beasts or guiltie of any crime with which froath yet al our armies are ful Obseruauit illud antiqua disciplina militaris vt armapro iustitia et repulsione immicorum hominibus non vitiosis darentur c. Old Militarie Discipline obserued this carefully that armes for iustice and repulsing of enemies should not be giuen to vicious persons c. In Rome when the Empire flourished hée thought himselfe not a man that had not serued in the warres per decennium by the space of tenne yeares And with vs hee thinkes himselfe a Kill-Kowe that neuer sawe hostem aut castra either enemy or campe that can better skill to swagger and sweare in an Ale-house or in a market-towne with long shagged hayre like a birde of Newgate than how to serue among men like a man A foule degenerating from the vertue of our Elders and of our Nation Let it bee vile hereafter to such as taste of Manhood or haue true ENGLISH bloud in their hearts 4 To morrow I will stand on the top of the hill with the rodde of GOD in my hand namely to praye for so it appeareth he did Where see and Note a religious ioining of godlie Prayer with the meanes of outwarde force This is no newe thinge but as olde as Moses acceptable to GOD and very powerfull euer Asa did thus and he was a godlie king There came out against him the king of Ethiopia or Egypt with an hoste of Ten hundreth Thousand and three hundreth Charets a huge companie And Asa went out before him and vsed both these waies First they set the battaile in arraie withall those things then ioine they prayer also as most requisite And Asa cryed vnto the Lord his God and said Lord it is nothing with thee to helpe with many or with no power helpe vs O Lord our God for we rest on thee and in thy Name are we come out against this multitude O LORD thou art our God let not man preuaile against thee Then the Lord smote the Ethiopians before Asa and before Iudah and the Ethiopians fled c. Ichoshaphat did thus and prospered his notable Prayer is also expressed Mauritius did thus against the Persians and prospered Our Chronicles tell vs of Oswald the King of Northumberland how he did the like prospered against Cedwall How Ethelred being at prayer and hearing that his brother Alured was shrewdly distressed in the battaile yet went on with his prayer and would not stirre till he had ended that dutie after he went and had a notable victorie and relieued his brother The men of S. Edmondsburie prayed against that cruell Tyrant Swanus and the Lord heard them smote Swanus that hee died roaring and yelling and they were deliuered Edward 3. against the French did thus and prospered Many moe might be recited Wherefore good is that Saying of S. Ambrose to Gratian Nosti fide magis Imperatoris quam virtute militum victoriam queri solere Thou
from his body And his head not plucked from his body to signifie he should not be taken from his Church which is his body by any death but raise himselfe vp againe and bée with his to the end of the world Thus then the Elect of God comfort themselues both in aflictions of the world and in death it selfe that forasmuch as their Head thus liueth and neuer was nor can ●e plucked of from them therefore as he hath ouercome so shall they by him ouercome both the malice of the world and the power of Satan and enter into ioy with him for euermore 4 The Maw and feathers were not offered but cast-away as vncleane so still noting that which I haue often noted the puritie of the Lord Iesus our true Sacrifice 5 The Priest did cleaue it with his wings but not deuide it in sunder againe to shadow that though Christ dyed yet hée was not quite extinguished but should rise againe and liue To which end also it was that not a bone of him was broken as were theirs that dyed with him That being also figured in the Paschall Lambe Lastly it is repeated here for a sweete fauour vnto the Lord and not in vaine but to the great comfort of all such poore offerers For thus are they assured that albeit they were not of abilitie to offer vnto him Oxen and Shéepe or sacrifices of great cost yet were they as déere to him as those that could so doe and their Sacrifice of Turtles or two Pigeons yéelded as swéete a sauour O swéete still for this God is not changed but the same for euer and therefore still euen two mites of a poore widow graciously accepted still a little spice a little Goats-haire or what my power is to bring vnto him is accepted So that I haue no cause to grieue at my pouertie if my heart be sound and therefore looke vnto that and be chéerefull in this Thus haue you viewed this Chapter And now a little with your selfe thinke of the maner of Reuelation then and now What a darke and dimme light I say again was that to this vouchsafed vnto vs now Surely so darke as the Apostle feareth not to call that Night and ours Day saying The night is gone the day is come God for his Christ his sake make vs thankefull But now that these kindes of burnt Offerings and Sacrifices are gone is there no sort left vnto vs Christians yes indéede First it is a Sacrifice to God most exceptable To preach the Gospell and it is euen as that song which Dauid speaketh of pleasing the Lord better than a yong Bullocke that hath hornes hoofes Thus S. Paul offered vp the Gentiles to God for a sacrifice winning thē by his Ministrie vnto the truth Rom. 15. verse 16. A Sacrifice so farre passing all others as man passeth all brute beasts And the faithfull Preachers of the Gospell dayly doe the like Secondly it is a Chiefe kinde of burnt Offering for Christians To beléeue in Iesus Christ by the Gospell because he that beléeueth offereth Christ dayly to God for his sinnes than the which nothing can be more pleasing to Christ and his Father Thinke of it early and thinke of it late when you are vpon your knées desiring mercie and pardon fauour and comfort both presently and to death yet laden and ouer-laden with a great burthen of gréeuous sinnes blemishes and imperfections hatefull to God and hatefull to your selfe through Grace giuen What hope haue you to spéed and preuaile but by his Sacrifice you will take Christ your déere Sauiour in the armes of your Faith and say holy Father looke vpon him not vpon me without him For then I dye in iustice but vpon me in him and then shall I liue in mercie Thus you offer Christ dayly and it is the Chiefest Sacrifice still of all beléeuers Thirdly it is another kinde of burnt Sacrifice left vs To offer-vp our selues wholly to God our selues I say our soules and bodyes a liuing holy and acceptable Sacrifice enery member to doe his Will and not ours Of which S. Paul speaketh to the Ro. Chap. 12. 1. Fourthly euery good worke commaunded of God and done of vs in Faith is a pleasing Sacrifice in this sort to God As Almes Coloss 4. To doe iustly to loue mercie and to humble thy selfe to walke with thy God Mich. 6. vers 8. To offer spirituall Sacrifices sée S. Peter Lastly all our aflictions paciently indured according to the Psalme The Sacrifice of God is a troubled spirit c. Doe therefore what God willeth or suffer what he appointeth as you are taught and you offer Sacrifice dayly to God Thus let this Chapter profit you CHAP. II. FRom bloody Sacrifices now to Unbloody and because the Burnt-offering described in the former Chapter could not bée without the Meat-offering as you may sée Num. 15. 4. therefore before he procéede to other kindes of Offerings Moses describeth in this Chapter the Meat-offering laying downe thrée sorts of it The first Of raw Flesh vers 1. to the 4. The second of Flowre not raw but baked fryed sodden vers 4. to the 14. The third sort of Corne not ground to Flowre verse 14 to the end For the institution of these Meat-offerings it was not because God hath néede of any meate or smelling sauours in the Psalme he telling vs that if he be hungry he needes not shew vs c. Neither yet that the déede done might merit and turne away Gods anger For he that offereth an oblation is as if he offered Swines blood and he that remembreth incense as if he blessed an Idoll saith God by his Prophet but by these the Lord would teach to his Church and children good things concerning Christ their Sauiour and his comming good Lessons also for life and maners as by particulars will appeare First This Meat-offering of Flowre and Corne might greatly comfort them touching their labours and assure them that yearly God would blesse their Corne and their fields because it pleased him to be a partner with them in those fruites 2 The Meat-offering of flesh might draw their hearts to God in all times of their dyet teaching them that God giueth and God sanctifieth God prospereth and is the staffe both of bread and meat They are not vpon our tables by chance but by his kinde prouidence and great goodnesse and therefore to forget him were to become most vnworthy of those blessings 3 The Flowre must bee fine Flowre to signifie still vnto them the cleannesse and puritie of CHRIST in whom there was no sinne neither any guile found in his mouth Of whom is all puritie in any of his members our foulnesse being washed by his blood It taught also that our best things should be giuen to God and not our worst as our manner is 4 The Meat-offering taught that Christ is the remedie against all hunger As am I gréeued with sin and hunger for
his word séeing it is so sure a way for mée to walke in Or why should any Teacher deliuer to me that which hée neuer receiued of God to be deliuered to his people If they craue obedience why should they bée angry that I pray to haue it shewed out of his word whom onely I must obey Hée hath prescribed a forme of seruing him that forme hée will accept and blesse with eternall peace all other formes hée will abhorre and punish Nadab and Abihu preach so vnto vs and all flesh They wish vs to take héed by their harme God is in other things full of patience but in this he is full of wrath and his authoritie to appoint his owne worship he will not indure it to be taken from him by any man Let Popish whisperers then make good out of Gods word Latine Prayers when we vnderstand no Latin Calling vpon Saints that heare vs not Flying from the sufficiencie of Christs Passion to our owne merits crossings and creepings with a thousand deuised toyes and we will obey them But if they cannot let them leaue vs to serue God according to his word that we may bée accepted 3 You may also well note it here that Nadab Abihu were two of Aarons eldest sonnes which after their father should in his place haue succéeded him yet there is no mercie with God to stay his iudgement when they will not be ruled by his word No prerogatiue therefore of any man shall saue him from wrath if hee thus offend but the eldest shall die aswell as a yonger the richest aswell as the poorer a great man or woman aswell as a small There is no regard with God of these things But the soule that serueth him according to his owne will reueiled in his VVord that is regarded and euer déere vnto him c. Build we not therefore vpon any titles and so swarue from the rule laid downe vnto vs. If so little a transgression cannot be qualified any way by any circumstance O what will bée their case one day that so many wayes stray from the Law of God and almost in no one iote of their worship haue any warrant Thinke with your self more of this matter and meditate further of it at your times 4 Then Moses said vnto Aaron This is that the Lord spake saying I will be sanctified in them that come neere mee and before all the people I will be glorified You can conceiue what wo it was to Moses to sée this end of two of his brothers sonnes but he must stoope to God and so he doth telling Aaron the trueth of the fault and so consequently defending God that he did but iustly In déede saith he we must confesse that this is that we were told before how God will be sanctified in them that come neere vnto him that is how he will haue his Law obeyed and followed in his worship and not any way else how though he vse the Ministerie of man yet no man liuing must be wiser than Hee to swarue from the forme appointed and to follow his owne libertie but man must thinke it his wisedome to doe as God biddeth c. 5 But Aaron held his peace saith the Text that is was so astonished with the fearefulnes of it that he had no spéech but all amazed and shaken with the woe of it held his peace He howled not out with any vnsé●mly cries neither vttered any words of rage and impatiencie but méekly stooped to Gods will kissed his rodde and held his peace If thus Aaron in so great a iudgement how much more we when our friends dye naturally swéetly and comfortably so that we may boldly say Nō amisimus sedpraemisimus VVe haue not lost them but sent them before vs whether we our selues hope to follow Lay to this heauie harted father yet silent and patient the example of olde father Elye the Priest to whom when Samuel had related such fearefull things quietly he answered It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good The example also of Dauid who in his distresse very bitter and heauie yet notably said Let the Lord doe to me as seemeth good in his eyes These are most excellent Paterns for vs to follow in all our crosses and griefes not forgetting that golden Saying of Iob Wee haue taken good things at Gods hands and shall we not take euill O yes yes The Lord giueth and the Lord taketh and euer euer blessed be his Name for all The fish groweth greater in salt waters and the Lord for his mercie make our Faith Pacience and Comfort in him great in the saltest and bitterest waters of this world Amen 6 Obserue here againe with your selfe the strange and admirable change of these worldly matters in the turne as we say of a hand For but Yesterday as it were Aaron and these sonnes of his had a famous and glorious consecration into the greatest and highest dignitie vpon earth nothing vnder the Sunne being more glorious than that Priest-hood in those dayes And how may you thinke his heart reioyced to sée not onely himselfe but his children which Parents often loue more than themselues so blessed and honoured But O change now sudden and fearefull O fickle fading comfort that man taketh hold of in this world whatsoeuer it be if wordly These sonnes so lately exalted and honoured to their old Fathers swéet and great ioy now lye destroyed before his face to his extréeme and twitching torment And how Not by any ordinarie and accustomed death but by fire from Heauen a sore and dreadfull iudgement For what also Euen for breach of commaunded dutie by the Lord all which doubled and trebled the fathers sorrow As it did in Dauid when his sonne Absolon died not an vsual death and in rebellion and disebedience against his king and Father You remember his passion then vttered O my sonne Absolon my sonne my sonne Absolon would God I had died for thee O Absolon my sonne my sonne He considered the cause wherein he dyed the manner how he dyed to a father so kinde as Dauid was both of them full of woe and sorrow Let neuer therefore any prosperitie in this world puffe vs for wée little know what to morrow-day may bring with it The glasse that glistereth most is soonest broken the rankest corne is soonest layd and the fullest bough with pleasant fruite is soonest slit hauing more eyes vpon it moe stones cast at it than all the other boughs of the trée Pleasant wine maketh wise men fooles and fooles often starke mad Thousands fall at the left hand but tenne thousand at the right Multos frāgit aduersitas sed plures extollit prosperitas Many saith Saint Bernard are crushed with aduersitie but more are puffed vp by prosperitie Lacertus Milonem perdidit ambitio Caesarem Nimis alter Naturae nimis alter Fortunae credidit Milo his strong arme ouerthrew him and Caesar his ambition The one
But yet God knoweth them and ●ee is iust if they amend not No gaudie gallants can deceiue him but his eyes pierce through all Maskes and colours whatsoeuer Allegorically some haue saide these things in the Leaper shadowed the state and case of all wicked men and women As the rent clothes that they are vile and odious before God his bare-head that in Christ their head they haue no portion but are depriued of him his lippes or mouth couered that such gracelesse persons cannot open their mouthes before God in any praier to be heard his shutting out of the Campe that such are to bée excommunicate from the number of the faithfull and are depriued of the heauenly inheritance c. Sée more the 22. Chapter 6 In the 47. ver you read of the Leprosie of garments c. Which kinde of contagion and infection the Lord in his infinite mercie hath made vs ignorant of The washing commaunded here of such garments admonished them and in them still vs that our dutie is to abstaine from all vncleannesse and to purge our selues from all pollution both of body and spirit If garments may haue such things layd vppon them by God how much more our flesh and our bodyes and therefore againe thinke with all thankfull thoughts of the blessing of health and of the meanes vouchsafed of God for health as Prayer Physitions Chirurgions Hearbs and Medicines many whereof the wise Syrach speaketh in his 38. Chap. reade it often and with feeling One sight of your face in a glasse as the Lord could smite it in a moment would make you féele and sée what God doth for you in giuing health and fréedome from such strange sores c. 7 Much more might bée noted in this Chapter but it is fitter for Physitions and therefore I passe it ouer Onely I will remember a Question mooued whether for any such fearefull infections a man and wife may bée diuorced and leauing all large discourse which they that are fit may haue in many Writers I answere bréefly that more causes of diuorce than wée read in Scripture wée may not presume to make and that is but in the case of Adulterye This excepted the Rule standeth firme Whom God hath ioyned together let no man put asunder Secondly it were a kinde of bitter crueltie to adde such affliction to the afflicted so sore alreadie as to take husband from wife or wife from husband who mutually should comfort each other in all extremites and crossing woes of this changing world and with that condition haue béen ioyned and plighted their troth one to the other that in sicknesse as well as health they would cleaue together forsaking all others till the death of one of them But then againe on the other side as cruell and inconvenient it were to bynde the partie cleane to company and due beneuolence with the infected For this were euident danger to the cleane and to the seede that should come of them in that case and so consequently to the Common-wealth also by the spreading of such a fearefull maladie in it Wherefore the middle-way is best for all parties Namely that the knot of Mariage remaine vnbroken and the partie cleane performe all Offices of helpe and comfort to the vncleane sauing coniunction of bodyes that the partie infected sée how hée is called of God vnto Chastity during this case of his and therefore by Dyet by Watching and Prayer and all good meanes indeuour to kéepe his body vnder from such desires laying his sinnes to his heart for which this much more is due vnto him although happily imposed vppon him not for his sinne but for his tryall and the glorie of God and yet taking a true and comfortable hold vpon his God whose mercie hath neither bottome nor measure and who hath promised most graciously that hée will neuer lay more vpon any childe of his than hee shall be able to beare but will giue an yssue to the temptation and tryall that he may beare it Thus God hath his time to heale as well as to stricke to comfort aswell as to afflict and to wipe all teares away aswell as to cause them any way Looke vp then to him and euer trust in him Say with Iob in a holy chéerefulnesse If the Lord shall kill mee I will not shrinke from him With Heli and Dauid It is hee it is hee let him doe his good pleasure His correction hath an ende but his loue shall neuer haue an ende if I submit my selfe and bée patient Let friends also be full of comfort to such a one and not by the least looke word or action adde griefe vnto griefe God will sée it and reward it CHAP. XIIII NOw that it is most true God hath a time to heale as well as to strike and to comfort aswell as to grieue behold your selfe in this Chapter where you shall read that many thus afflicted were in God his goodnesse healed againe and restored both to their houses in the host and their places in the Tabernacle as sound as euer they were The Ceremonies of this restitution are here also appointed both to the one place and the other whereof let vs labour to make some good vse to our selues 1 Hee was brought vnto the Priest as to him that must iudge whether hee was cleane or no and why the Priest was so appoynted to be Iudge you had the reason in the beginning of the former Chapter But where must hee be brought vnto the Priest into the Campe Congregation where the Priest was No but the Priest saith the Text shall goe out of the Campe and consider him So is it still the dutie of all faithfull Ministers to goe to the sicke to sée them and consider their estate toward God ministring comfort to them in due season whilest their hearing is good their vnderstanding good and their memorie good For when these things are decayed we labour often to little purpose And would God both they that are sicke had more care often to send for their Ministers to them in due time and the Ministers when they know it to goe and with all care and diligence to labour with them whilest time serueth For it is too late for both parties when Death hath stricken his strooke 2 If the Priest thus comming to him found him cleane then did hée so pronounce him to be and appoint him to offer his guift c. But except hée were cleane the Priest durst not pronounce him cleane Thus remayned the glory of his health to God that had giuen it and to the Church the vse of the Ministerie both for order and comfort Sée héerein the manner of our Absolution reteyned in the true Church of Christ and practised Wee doe not heale the sinner from his spirituall disease of soule by forgiuing his sinne as the Priest here healed not the reall disease of the body by making him sound but when wee sée heartie repentance and
vncertaine as I will marrie one of the Daughters naming none Of all which points the Law hath large discourse and many questions which you may best learne of them that are Professors of that knowledge vnto whose good aduise as I said before I hold it the safest way euer to haue recourse vpon any occasion For a building well made and vpon firme ground will stand with comfort against all assaults and obiections cast out either by Satan desirous to trouble our consciences or by euill tongues enuying our peace Tenthly touching Poligamie whether it is lawfull for any man at once to haue two or more wiues The truth is plaine No. For God made but one Adam and one Eue that neither man might expect moe Wiues nor woman moe Husbans at once than one And in this first institution expresly it was said A man shall leaue father and mother and cleaue to his wife not wiues and they two not they three or more shall bee one flesh Also when Lamech brake this Lawe by hauing moe wiues and after him both Iewes and Gentiles followed this libertie Christ the true teacher calleth them to the first institution and plainely saith From the beginning it was not so repeating the former Scripture they two shall be one c. The Apostle S. Paul following this truth saith for auoyding of fornication let euery man haue his wife not wiues let euery woman haue her owne husband not husbands Againe let the husband giue to his wife due beneuolence not to his wiues And the wife hath not power of her owne body but her husband Let a Byshop be the husband of one wife not of many as then was vsed of too many still and euer vsing as you sée the singular number not the plurall Further you know that marriage representeth the couenant betwixt Christ and his Church and therefore is called a mysterie but Christ hath onely one Church and the Church hath onely one Christ therefore pluralitie of wiues or husbands is a fault and may not be indured The good peace and vnitie that ought to be in married couples is thus broken and the house filled with brawlings and heart-burnings factions diuisions and all vngodlinesse Therefore very Reason teacheth vs to abhorre Polygamie Good Gouernours mooued herewith haue euer by their imperiall and godly lawes punished it and forbidden it as might be shewed if it were fit But you will say the godly Fathers in the old Testament had many wiues God suffered it c. You must then againe consider with your selfe touching them that suffering and allowing or commanding differ much Suffered it was commaunded or allowed simply neuer Secondly latter lawes take away former and Christ by calling men to the first institution of Marriage tooke away that permission and sufferance of Moses Thirdly Priuiledges doe not ouerthrow a rule And therefore although God hauing promised to make Abrahams seede as the starres of the heauen for multitude was pleased to suffer varietie of wiues for a time as a fit meanes spéedily and greasly to increase that posteritie of-spring yet was not a taking away of his certaine rule but when the cause ceased by a multitude procéeding from Abrahams loynes the thing suffered only for that end ceased also and may net any further be followed Fourthly wee truely answere againe that we liue by lawes and not by examples And touching faultes in the Fathers wée well must remember the wordes of God to the Iewes by Ezekiel his Prophet In Praeceptis meis In my Commandements you shall walke and not in the commandements of your Fathers And againe in this Chapter After the dooings of the Land of Aegypt wherein yee dwelt shall yee not doe neither after the maner of the Land of Canaan whither I will bring you c. But after my Iudgements shall yee doe and you shall keepe My Ordinances to walke therein for I am the Lord c. Thus of marriage making kéeping Now a litle of Diuorce and seperation might be added if there were not more cause in these sinfull times to ex●ort al married couples to mutuall loue faithfulnes to patience and quietnes to the vtter abandoning of al vaine wicked imaginations suspicions ielousies than to speake of breakings departing one from the other to the great offence of God grief of friends ill example to others euermore apt to learne what is euill than what is good I wil therfore spare this paines and rather intreat all those that feare God often to remiber yong Tob●e his prayer that God in mercie would grant to him his wife that they might become aged together to which she said with him Amen We read of the Indian womē that though their husbands haue diuers wiues yet they did by al means indeauor to continue in loue with him and when he dieth she that was best beloued with great ioy and glorie that she was so goeth into the fire with his Corps and burneth with his dead bodie Such continuing affection in those that know not God must needs be a condemnation to all tickle tickle starting aside in such as know God and his commaundement in this behalfe Holy constant and continued Matrimonie is like say some to that little Citie Zoar where Lot was saued when to the Mountaine he was unwilling to goe and in filthy Sodom could not be safe To liue licentiously is to liue in Sodom to liue single hauing the gift is to escape into the mountaine Such as flying from the one cannot attaine to the other hauing not the gift giuen of God in litle Zoar that was betwirt both that is in holy wedlocke which is the middle estate may be saued Euer therefore make much of it and lightly and vniustly breake not in sunder that holy knot Sweetnesse is the Sister of Loue as bitternesse is the Sister of hatred Marriage loue then being an holy loue will in all troubles tast contentment and comfort though not one way yet another still to the preseruing of the knot and of Christian cohabitation The two Kyne that carried the Arke of God kept one path turned neither to the right hand nor to the left so should married couples doe saith S. Gregorie seeing by the profession of the Christian faith they also carry the Arke If the Glasse which you looke in should returne your countenance sad when you are merie or merrie when you are sad were it not a great fault in the Glasse Certainly so is it if married couples differ and be not merrie together sorie together contented together and either of them euer as a true glasse to the other shewing such agréement as is fit for them till God and time shall breake their dayes of and take the one of them to him The Wife of Augustus Caesar Liuia being asked of one how she did liue in such peace with her Husband the Emperour who had his infirmities some
extremity to make the waters sweere withall 4 There he made them an ordinance and a lawe and there he prouoked them and said If thou wilt diligently hearken O Israel vnto the voice of the Lord thy GOD and wilt doo that which is right in his fight and wilt giue eare vnto his Commaundements and keepe all his Ordinances then will I put none of these diseases vpon thee which I brought vpon the Egyptians for I am the Lord that healeth thee Where the Lord tryed them by want of water there he also admonished them by his Word declaring vnto them their inst deseruing of such Plagues and diseases as were inflicted vpon the Egyptians from which they had béene frée hitherto onely by his frée mercy and goodnesse and acquainting them that the only way for them so to continue still was to hearken to his Will and to obey the same otherwise he being the only Author of health it could not be so with them Which word of his let it informe vs what also is our defence from all euill certainely euen the same LORD and none but Hee The way also to obtaine it the very same that was then To hearken and to obey not our willes but his not our wisdomes but his 〈◊〉 our lawes but his This this shall abide and 〈◊〉 and only this All mans deuises and will worship shall varnth as vile from before him Consider well of the Psalme where first is put forgiuenesse of Sins and then the healing of all infirmities 5. Then came they to Elim where were twelue fountaines of water and seuenty Palme trees and they camped there by the waters So commeth comfort after sorrow and plenty after scarcety For now they haue 12. fountaines of water and goodlie trees to yéelde them cooling shadowes for their comfort And surely the trialls of the Church or of any particular member therein shall haue a ioyful end and though they be neuer so many yet the Lord deliuereth out of them all Who would not trust then in such a God and tarry his time that neuer faileth God for his mercy sake giue vs faith and constant patience Amen Amen CHAP. 16. The generall Heades of this Chapter are chiefely these The grieuous murmuring of these Israelites The gift of Manna from heauen The lawes and Orders concerning the same 1. BEfore their murmuring there is in the first verse mention made of another camping namely in the Wildernesse of Sin which was the 8. place they had pitched in since their comming out of Egypt And in the booke of Numbers a particular Record is made of all the places together as likewise in an other place of that Booke That at the commaundement of the Lord they iournied and at the commaundement of the Lord they pitched By all which wée comfortably may sée that the Tabernacles or Tents of the Church and euery particular member are pitched where the Lord will and taken-vp and remooued when hée will and whither hée will For hée it is that gouerneth and guideth all these things euen as hée dooth all other matters in this world nothing is done without his Will. The lot is fallen to me saith the Prophet Dauid in a faire place I haue a goodly heritage Thereby ascribing to the Lord this honour that by him euery mans portion and place in this world is appointed He diuided the Land of Canaan and gaue to euery Tribe that part which by his seruant Iacob he had foretoldlong before Whi●h doctrine may yéelde euery heart patience and peace to be quiet and contented with Gods Will howsoeuer it be For beggars may be no choosers and wée are all his beggars that ruleth these things Haue I little it is his Will and I ought to be pleased Haue I more it is more mercy and God make me thankfull Thankfull for the one and thankfull for the other and euer contented with his Will My pitching is here or there by his prouidence in a faire house or a foule in a rich liuing or a small in a good countrie or a bad in England or in Fraunce and wheresoeuer or howsoeuer it is aboue my merit and therefore I should bée pleased and thankfull 2 The time is named to wit the fifteenth daie to let vs all know that euen so much more detestable was their ingratitude by how much the remembrance of so great and wonderfull a deliuerance from their enemies was more fresh in me 〈…〉 rie béeing solate And will it not bée so in vs Therefore thus w●ulde I haue vs profit by it euen to thinke in the Morning of our safety by his mercy all the Night And at Night of our safety all the daye And still 〈◊〉 of freshe fauoures which vnlesse I bee thankefull for I must née●●s bée a great offender séeing it is not possible to pleade forgetfulnesse in such fresh and newe thinges Nay if it were a fault in these Israelites to forget or to be dull in a matter of fiftéene dayesolde how much greater a fault in the morning to forget to bée thankfull for the nights mercy last before and but euen now ended but you sée my drift follow it further by yourselfe Surely surely fresh fauours would haue fresh remembrances and zealous and hearty thankes for them 3. Their murmuring is next spoken of and next by vs to bée considered A foule and grieuious fault euer but in this people so blessed with happie experiences of care and loue of might and mercy in their Allsufficient GOD more 〈…〉 nable and more odious than in others Whereupon the Apostle giueth them for an example to all people in all ages to learne to auoide this wickednesse saying Murmure nor as some of them murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer Numb 14. 36. For all these things came vppon them for examples and were written to admonish vs vppon whom the ends of the worlde are come The whole course of Gods sacred Scriptures crieth out of this sin in men and Women chiefely professing God For doo al things saith the same Apostle without murmuring reasoning And S. Peter Bey● harb●●durs one to an other without murmuring The care of Ielousie saith Wisdome heareth all things the noise of grudgings shall not be hid Therefore beware of Murmuring which profiteth nothing and refraine your ●onge from slaunder for there is no word so secret which shall got for nought and the mouth that speaketh lies flayeth the soule Caine murmured and the Scripture noteth it as his sinne These Israelites were grieuous murmurers sometimes for their labour sometimes for drink sometimes for flesh sometimes in distrust to obtaine the Cittie so strongly walled sometimes for feare to bée killed of their enemies sometimes at GODS iustice vpon their disobedient bretheren sometimes for want of dainties as Figges Pomegranats Uines c. sometimes for that they were ouerdoied with Manna 〈◊〉 and for other like causes vpon all which the
Holy-Ghost setteth a brand of dislike and so by their sinne admonisheth vs to beware Miriam murmureth against her brother Moses the Lords faithfull Seruant and how fearefully was she smitten with a Leprosie Let this sinite the heart of euery Christian Reader and make him consider what may quickly happen to himselfe if hée bée a murmurer From the Old Testament come to the New and obserue as much The Pharasies murmure at Christ his mercy to poore Publicans there is murmuring for good done on the Sabbath day For not washing before meate that such as came late had a penny as wel as those that had borne the heate of the day that the ointment was powred vpon Christ and not rather sold and giuen to the poore that the Widowes were neglected and that Mary doth not helpe Martha but sit and heare Christs words But still obserue how all these were sinfull and grieuous to God and what a diligent record is made of them and of the seuerall causes that wee might learne and see no cause to warrant this lewde behauiour For either all or most of these occasions might haue much saide in defence of them And therefore these Quotations of Scripture with that of Iude short and sharpe These are murmurers complainers walking after their owne lustes whose mouthes speake proude things hauing mens persons in admiration because of aduantage c. Murmurers and grudgers and complainers such as mutter murmure and grudge groan if all things fall not out to their contentment such as mislike their places callings Estats and conditions and are angrie with God if in all things hee please not their humors If they be restrained of liberty if they be touched with pouerty if they be pinched with penury if they be subiect to affliction and aduersitie if they be not in highest places eralted to greatest authority they ●ret they ●ume they are offended and discontented with the Highest These are the greedy dogs spoken of by Dauid which run about the Cittie and grudge if they bée not satisfied Irenaeus the auntient Father giueth them a fit name but a foule name calling them or a Piaboli the Deuils mouthes And the words of Plato are as fit of vnbridled mouths sending-out iniury both to Heauen and Earth The end of which mouthes Euripides by the light he had could well discern that it would be misery and woe as indeede it will trye who list Circumstances increase this sinne very much as Who numbreth against whom and in what matter who murmureth A subiect a sonne a friende to whom much fauour many waies hath béene shewed A professor of the Gospell well acquainted with the Word and vpon whom many eies are cast c. Against whom Against Prince against Parents against Friends to whom obedience duty and loue with al the Testimonies therof are due and most due against God whose Word is in our hands in our mouthes and whose seruants wée would gladly bée estéemed In what matter In a small matter in a trifle and wherein or for what we ought rather giue thankes in a matter lawfull tollerable good and no way to bée grudged at These and such like Circumstances I say make the fault much fouler and greater Old Writers haue vttered these kinds in these wordes Est murmuratio contra Deum per displicentiam contra Praelatumper inobedientiam contra proximū per inuidentiam There is a murmuring against God by discontentment against our superior by disobediēce against our Neighbour by enuie But from what fountaine floweth al this filthy water which so offendeth God so grieueth man and so infecteth the very aire Surely either from impatience or from pride both bad and very bad fountaines Of the first that was an example in the Acts of the Apostles about the Widowes of the Graecians For not able with patience to endure their conceited griefe till there might bée declaration made thereof and order taken accordingly they fell to secret carping and biting vnfit for the professors of the Worde and in that heat touched euen the Apostles themselues with want of care Of the later that is a most fearefull example in Numbers of proude Corah and his company whose pride enuie ambition brought them to so strange and dreadfull a death They grieued that Moses should haue such authority they thought them selues worthy of some of it and what they thought fit not what pleased him God must doo Of which kinde of Murmurers and enuiers Saint Gregorie hath a good saying in his Morales Qui contra suprapositam sibi potestatem murmurat liquet qúoa● umredarguit qui eandem potestatem dedit Who so murmereth against authority set ouer him it is manifest that he reproueth him who gaue the same authority And vpon the seuenth Psalme murmurantes dicuntur intrare in iudicium cum Deo Murmumurers are saide to enter into indgment with GOD They are like saith An other to a filthy sooyne who whether hee wake or sleepe is euer grunting Murmuratores similes sunt versantibus in gyrum donec capite sensibus perturbaris caetera omnia perturbari putant Murmurers are like vnto such as turn roūd about til their heads senses being turned they imagin al things to turne round Sednoli aduersus quemquam murmunare est enim abiectorum But be not thou a murmurer against any man for it is a base thing and the quality of a base person Erratapropria magis quam aliena reprehendito Rather reprooue thine owne faults than other mens Ediscat non murmurare qui mala patitur etiam si ignoret curmal patirur per hoc enim quisquis ●e iustepati arbitrari potest quia ab illo iudicatur cuius iudicia nunquā sunt iniusta And let him that suffereth harme not murmur although he know not the cause why he suffereth it because euery man may thinke he suffereth iustly seeing he is iudged of him whose iudgments are neuer vniust A very notable sentence if you marke it not allowing this vice in our hardest estate and when we know not any reason of it Qui in poenis murmurat fertentis iustitiam accusat for hee that murmureth at Gods punishment or any iust punishment accuseth the iustice of him that punisheth But goe we forward Felicitie consisteth not in things of this life therefore wee should not murmure for the want of them Iob blesseth the Name of God in his greatest affliction and murmureth not Of the Godlie it is often saide The praise of GOD is euer in their mouthes Then not murmuring Murmurers want Dauids staffe so comfortable to him therefore we should auoid it No Artificer can like that his worke bee dispraised of one which hath lesse skill or euill will And shall God like to haue his predestination his prouidence his iustice and mercie and whatsoeuer is holy and good to be censured and grudged at by dust and ashes No no. The Wise mans Counsaile is excellent in