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A22507 A commentarie vpon the fourth booke of Moses, called Numbers Containing, the foundation of the church and common-wealth of the Israelites, while they walked and wandered in the vvildernesse. Laying before vs the vnchangeable loue of God promised and exhibited to this people ... Heerein also the reader shall finde more then fiue hundred theologicall questions, decided and determined by William Attersoll, minister of the word. Attersoll, William, d. 1640.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Pathway to Canaan.; Attersoll, William, d. 1640. Continuation of the exposition of the booke of Numbers. 1618 (1618) STC 893; ESTC S106852 2,762,938 1,336

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but healed not some sorts but all kindes of sicknesses and diseases None of them though neuer so dangerous and desperate were to him incurable Lastly he could not bee staied from preaching sound doctrine and healing vnsound bodies by the vncharitable slanders and wicked reports of the Scribes and Pharisies who ascribing the working of his miracles to the power of Beelzebub the Prince of diuelles spake all manner of euill against him This worthy example and perfect patterne of all righteousnes the cheefe Pastour of the sheep ought we all to imitate that are entred into this calling let it be as a glasse to behold our faces and as a rule or squire to examine al our actions by it that thereby we may stir vp our selues to be diligent in our Ministery Seueral branches of this vse This hath sundry branches pertaining to it issuing out of the same roote First of all all Pastours must be diligent to know the state of their flockes and to take heed to their heards as Prou. 27 23 24. Forasmuch as riches are not for euer and the crowne endureth not to euery generatiō Such as are absent from them ordinarily cannot possibly know in what state they stand they must of necessity be ignorant of their condition When the master of the family is away the fellow seruants begin to smite one another to eate and drinke with the drunken Mat. 24 49. When Moses was in the Mount absent from the people they fell into idolatry and worshipped a golden calfe Exod. 32. The presence of the Minister ought to be an example of vertue and a stay to them in all well-doing Secondly we must not be discouraged by the vngodly speeches venemous tongues of wicked men thereby growing negligent in our functions Christ himselfe was euilly intreated counted a diuell called a Samaritan esteemed a wine-bibber and branded to be a glutton a friend of Publicans and sinners yet he ceassed not to teach and preach in euery city and village Eliah is charged to be a troubler of the state yet he shrinketh not backe nor spareth to rebuke the idolatries of the Priests of Baal 1 Kings 18 17. Acts 16 20 Paul and Silas are reported to trouble the City as Eliah before was to trouble Israel yet they continue and are not afraid to preach the Gospel of saluation Amos was accused to the King by Amaziah to haue conspired aginst him Amos 7 10. yet he would not giue ouer nor hold his peace This is a common practise of leud and prophane persons to perswade mē of great countenance and high places that we preach against them and that it is not the word of GOD that reprooueth them but that we single them out and so entitle them to our reprehensions verifying the saying of the Prophet They hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhorre him that speaketh vprightly Amos 5 10. But sinne must not be left vnreproued and we must with deafe eares and dumbe tongues and blinde eies passe ouer such slanders as vnworthy to be answered or regarded and let vs endeuouring to carry a cleere conscience goe forward diligently and earnestly in the course of our Ministery remembring the example of Christ our Sauiour whom no cauils nor quarrels of his enemies could restraine from preaching the word to instruct the soule neither from working miracles to do good to the body and considering that he pronounceth all those blessed that are reuiled persecuted and slandered for the truths sake Because after the same manner they dealt with the Prophets that were before vs Mat. 5 11 12. Thirdly we must not be afraid of the faces and frownes of men It is the weaknesse and frailety of many men that they are ready to stand still and start backe at euery high and bigge looke of the wicked and thereby waxe feeble and faint-hearted at the great threatnings of the mighty Hence it is that the Lord saith Ezek. 3 8 9. I haue made thy face strong against their faces and thy forehead strong against their foreheads as an adamant harder then flint haue I made thy forehead feare them not neither be dismaied at their lookes though they be a rebellious house So he willeth Ieremy to speake vnto the people all that he commanded him and that he be not dismaied at their faces 〈◊〉 1 17. lest he be confounded before them Lastly we must wisely apply the word to the capacity and vnderstanding of all To speake generally to all is as it were to houer in the aire and in effect to speake to none The hearts of men are stony and are not easily broken They are as tough wood that must haue many strong blowes to cleaue it This is to diuide the word of truth aright ●im 2 15. to giue euery one his portion of meat in due season Then doth the word become effectuall and is made profitable vnto vs and preached with power and authority when it is brought home to the doores of our hearts and applied vnto our consciences True it is we cannot abide to haue our sores touched and our wounds searched but this is the onely true and right meanes to be cured We must therefore make much of such teaching and of such Teachers and as we tender the saluation of our soules so wee must desire to haue the word thus opened when it is so deliuered and handled let vs submit our selues vnto it with all reuerence and carefulnes It is a spirituall knife to launce vs and to let out our corruptions which are ready to fester within vs and to hinder the worke of it Lastly this serueth for instruction in a necessary Vse 3 duty required of the people toward their Pastours that seeing they haue a great charge ouer them to teach them they ought willingly to giue vnto them recompence of their labour and a liberall maintenance for the worke of the Ministery It is the ordinance not of man but of GOD that they which spend their time their study their gifts their strength their substance and euen themselues in the most profitable and necessary seruice of the Church 1 Cor. 9 14. should be bountifully prouided for and haue no iust cause to complaine of want This will appeare very plainely vnto vs How the Leuites were maintained vnder the law if we consider what alowance was giuen to the Leuites vnder the Law and how the maintenance of the Ministery standeth vnder the Gospel First of all the Scripture teacheth that they had 48 Cities and two thousand cubites of ground from their walles which I may call as it were their glebe lands Numb 35. This was to them a liberall portion and in so small a country a great proportion Secondly they had the tithes of corne Num. 18 21. Leu. 27 30 32 of wine of oyle and of all fruites herbes together with the tithes of the heards and flockes Thirdly Exod. 34 19 20. they had the first
sometimes through couetousnesse sometimes through fauour and sometimes through a respect they had to aduance their kindred such as are altogether vnfit for such high places Pelarg. in 4. cap. Numer Hence it is that Sixtus the fourth is iustly charged and challenged to haue instituted the sonne of Ferdinand King of Naples beeing a childe to Ecclesiasticall orders which the heathen for a reuerent respect they had to sacerdotall dignities would neuer haue done and gaue him the ouersight and circumspection of the Church of Tarentum Leo the tenth of the house of Medices being a childe of thirteene yeares of age was made Cardinal by Innocentius the eight Thus hath the chaire of Moses beene defiled if Moses chaire haply were then among them whereof wee may dispute and demurre not without iust cause The wise man saith in his Ecclesiastes chap. 10 16. Woe to thee O Land when thy King is a childe so we may say truely Woe vnto thee O Church where thy Minister is a childe that knoweth not how to goe in and out before the people This is a foule abuse and cannot stand with the institution of God well may such vnseasoned timber serue to build vp Babel but in the house of God it can haue no place It is as vntempered morter fitte enough to set together a false church Where the people are children caried about with euery waue and are without knowledge nay refuse the meanes of knowledge it is Gods iudgement to send thē children to be set ouer them that so one child may leade another by the hand children in age such as are children in gifts We conclude then that the popish Church is a childish Church and the Romane Byshoppe is a childish Byshop or else he would neuer haue ordained children to that calling and laid his hands vpon them and appointed them to such functions Secondly it reproueth such as hauing the ouersight of the Church to make Ministers The second reproofe do indeed commit a foule ouersight through carelesnesse and neglect of their duty and so thrust vpon the church such as are vnwise and vndiscreete who are as vnconscionable in executing as they were carelesse in chusing of them For albeit these that are thus ordained be not young in yeares yet they are yong in manners There are two sorts of young men and there are two sorts of old men Some are young in age others are young in conditions so that albeit they doe not make choise of little children yet they make choise of such as are little better whereas men of grauity and entire conuersation ought to be elected and not rash headed persons obtruded vpon the Church This was the cause why Paul left Titus in Crete that hee should ordaine Elders in euery City and for this cause he chargeth Timothy that hee should doe nothing through partiality neyther lay his hand rashly vpon any man lest he were partaker of their sinne For when as a man is ordained through fauour and friendship or other sinister and sinfull respect who hauing the doore of entrance opened vnto him maketh hauock of the Lords flocke partly by teaching corruptly and partly by liuing scandalously hee that doth ordain him is guilty of those crimes and himselfe may be charged to be a false teacher and an euill liuer For whosoeuer doth not hinder the sinnes of others but giue way vnto them that they passe forward is partaker of them he that beareth with them and winketh at them is as well guilty as hee that walketh in them Hence it is that hee exhorteth Timothy to keepe himselfe pure and vnspotted But peraduenture they will obiect Obiection they knew not what he was they were ignorant of his wickednesse and loosenesse Answer But this doth not excuse them because they ought not rashly to haue giuen him admission vntil they had made diligent search and inquisitiō Such as were to buy a bondslaue were wont to demand the Physition touching him to aske of the neighbours and to require a time to make tryall of him and therfore much more ought there if in any thing else to be aduise and deliberation taken when any is to be admitted to the calling of a Minister and no place left either for feare or fauour Basil M●●● ● eyther for hatred or couetousnesse For iudgement is corrupted foure waies Sometimes through feare when we shake and shrinke backe from speaking the truth for feare of offending great persons So did Pilate wrest the Lawe and sinne against his owne conscience for feare of Caesar because they cryed out We haue no King but Caesar Iohn 19 12. if thou let this fellow goe thou art not Caesars friend Somtimes through couetousnes when we are corrupted through bribes and hired for money which blinde the eyes of the wise Exod. 23 ● and peruert the words of the righteous So did Felix gape after gaine and looked for rewards Acts 24 26. Hee hoped also that money should haue beene giuen him of Peul that he might loose him Sometimes through hatred and malice for as Naboths vineyard was Ahabs sicknesse a strange disease so he dealt corruptly with Michaiah because he hated him and could not abide him 1 Kin. 22 8 27. He put him in prison and fed him with bread of affliction and with water of afflictiō yet he had done nothing worthy of imprisonment or of death Lastly through fauour and friendship whē we seeke to gratifie and pleasure our kinsmen or acquaintance as Pilate did to please Herod and for that care not what wrong we doe to others Wherefore the Lord would not haue the poore man countenanced in his cause Exod. 23 3. And Festus the Deputy saith It is not the manner of the Romanes to deliuer any man to die 〈◊〉 25 16. 〈◊〉 7 51. before that he which is accused haue the accusers face to face and haue licence to answer for himselfe All which corruptions of iustice if they ought to bee farre from the tribunals of earthly Iudges much more ought they to be remoued from the Courts and Consistories of the Church-officers whensoeuer the question is in hand of admitting any to the holy Ministery or of remouing any from the Ministery This is a capitall sinne and yet alasse there is not that conscience made of it that ought to be It is a sinne that draweth on many others as it were with cart-ropes It giueth encouragement to him that is ordained to goe forward in his sinnes when hee considereth by whose meanes he was admitted For thus he strengthneth and emboldeneth himselfe to go forward If I were not in good case such persons as sway the matters of the church would neuer haue giuen me entrance It heartneth and helpeth forward others of like quality to resort vnto them for spirituall preferment and promotion who say to themselues Why may not I get into the Ministery as well as such a one I am not worse and more vnworthy then he I cannot be a more beast
al good men and seeing himselfe in a manner forsaken that none would keepe him company or vouchsafe once to drinke with him beganne to bethinke with himselfe what he had done for which he was shunned and shamed and abhorred Then he was throughly touched with sorrow for his offence then he asked forgiuenes of the Church then he desired to be restored and the Apostle writeth to the Church in his behalfe ●or 2.6 7 11. sufficient to such a man is this punishment which was inflicted of many so that contrariwise they ought to comfort him and forgiue him Lastly we must be careful ouer our wayes that we doe not commit close and secret sinnes which we may keep from the sight and knowledge of the world For albeit the Church iudgeth them that are within yet it cannot iudge such sinnes as are hidden in darkenesse for that were to iudge before the time Neuerthelesse we must know that albeit we be not bound on earth yet we may be bound in heauen as on the other side it may fal out that we may be bound on earth and yet not be bound in heauen For such as are appointed to handle the keyes may take a wrong key which will neither open nor shut But albeit all men should acquit vs and discharge vs yet if sinne remaine vpon vs vnrepented of God will not remit vs or loose vs we stand bound in heauen God cannot erre or be deceiued man may for he often bindeth those that should be loosed and looseth them that should be bound Ioh. 9.34 as the Pharisees cast him that was borne blinde out of the Synagogue who deserued better to be in the Church then themselues Thus they are stricken with the edge of the sword that haue done nothing worthy to be touched with the backe of it Notwithstanding whatsoeuer befalleth vs among men wee must remember that so often as we harbour any notorious sinne or sinnes in our hearts and can carry them away cunningly that none can condemne vs or accuse vs yet as they are registred in the booke of our conscience so they are sealed vp in heauen and bind vs to vndergoe euerlasting punishment except we repent Many escape in this world but none shall escape in the world to come many sinners are not known of men but none can be vnknowne to God before whom all things are naked and open heere they may walke and iet vp and downe as free men but when the Lord shall come to iudgement and make the counsels of the heart manifest 1 Cor. 4.5 he will bind them hand and foot as poore prisoners and cast them into destruction where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Thirdly this serueth to reprooue sundry abuses Vse 3 that are crept into this holy and wholesome ordinance of God There is no ordinance so iust but it may be abused as we see in the word and Sacraments First it reproueth the Church of Rome The first reproofe and all other Churches that doth draw out this sword of God vpon euery light and slight occasion He were not worthy to haue a sword committed vnto him that would alwaies haue his hand vpon it ready to pull it out For as Christ our Sauiour speaketh concerning diuorse betweene man and his wife It is not lawfull for a man to put away his wife for euery cause Mat. 19.3 9. so may it be said touching excommunication which is a diuorse betweene a Christian and the Church that it is not lawfull to cast out a member of it for euery cause It is a spirituall banishment from the citie of God and the priuiledges thereof No incorporation taketh away the freedome of the citie and the liberties of it for small matters it is for some heinous crime so should it be in the Church of God none should bee denyed the benefit and as it were the enfranchisment of the Church except by his offence and obstinacy therein he haue made himselfe vnworthy and vncapable thereof All lawes should not be written with blood nor all offences take away the liberties of the Church No Iudge wil draw blood and take away life for euery cause It is the next way to bring this high ordinance of God into contempt where this diuine iustice is executed for toies and becommeth as the fooles dagger that is alwayes ready to be pulled out to strike the standers by for triflles Matters of smaller weight and importance are to be censured by admonition and reprehension and are not to be punished with this fearefull sentence then which there cannot be a more feareful All the abuses of this ordinance proceede from the Church of Rome and are as it were the taile of that beast A Chirurgion that for euery swelling all superfluous proud flesh would cut off a member were not worthy nor fit to be so much as an horseleech nor to haue our swine committed to him The abuse of this that now we deale withal was practised in the Iewish Church Ioh. 9.22.23 and 12.42 and 16.2 and it creepeth also into other Churches among whom many times not onely the good are punished but also the bad are tolerated When this is vsed against any without iust cause and good aduise P. Martyr comment in 1 Cor. 5. as for default of appearance or want of paiment it is no longer a sharpe two edged sword but as a leaden dagger or paper shot or painted fire if it be so good It is but a shew or shadow of excommunication which maketh it indeed ridiculous and contemptible and not feared of any as it ought to be if it were rightly administred and executed Many times also it falleth out that such are not able to pay the fees and demaunds that are required of them who deserue rather to be pittyed then to be punished so deepely Hence it is that in the Church and courts of Rome they censure those that make default in appearing or in paying when as in the meane season they leaue adulterers drunkards railers oppressors incestuous persons and such like altogether vnpunisht Again as all things are set to sale among them and bought and solde for money so these couetous merchants these spirituall or rather carnall iudges binde for money and loose for money playing indeed fast and loose with the soules of men They excommunicate out of the Church for money and they receiue into the Church againe for money They keepe a market or rather a solemne Faire to set forth and sell and send abroad their pardons and indulgences absoluing men from their sinnes at their owne pleasure They neuer regard whether they repent or not but whether they haue money or not they say not vnto offenders Repent of your offences but Pay your fees and be gone discharge the court and get you hence It is noted touching Ireneus that hee earnestly reprooued Victor Bishop of Rome because hee went about to excommunicate many Churches in Asia not for matter of heresie or
apostacy neither for any other cause then this that they would not agree and consent with the Church of Rome in the celebration of Easter Thus we see how that Church was alwaies prone to draw out this censure for things indifferent and matters of a meane nature like quarrellers that haue their hand vpon their dagger for euery word speaking Againe as it is an abuse through lightnesse and rashnesse to pronounce and denounce so sharp a iudgement The second reproofe to cut off offenders as a razor from the body of Christ without iust weighty cause so it is a great fault when through remissnesse and negligence this wholesome seuerity is not executed Thus partly through leuity and partly through lenity due discipline is omitted when iust occasion requireth it should be practised For as letting of blood is not to be vsed for euery cause so to preserue life it is to be vsed Great is the reuerence that is to be vsed when we come to any of the exercises of our faith and religion and therfore the mysteries of God and godlinesse are not through great licentiousnes and without any punishment to be prophaned and so holy things to be prostituted and set open to adulterers fornicators drunkards blasphemers contentious persons and to all kind of vicious and sinfull liuers This were as Christ our Sauiour teacheth Matth. 7.6 To cast precious things before dogs and swine For as it is an offence to denounce the sentence of excommunication when it ought not and where it ought not so is it also not to denounce it both when and where it ought As iustice is one of the sinewes of the Common-wealth so is it of the Church Beside this there is also another danger to the Church it selfe For it is to be feared lest the rest of the body be infected with the same contagion forasmuch as one scabbed sheepe infecteth the whole flocke yea themselues that be such doe heape vp and double their condemnation when they presume to come without repentance to the Lords Table This fault was found by Christ with the Church of Pergamus and Thyatira Reuel 2.14 15 20. It had those among them that maintained the doctrine of the Nicolaitans which thing Christ hated and suffered the woman Iezabel to teach and to deceiue his seruants to make thē commit fornication to eat meats sacrificed to idols which things ought not to haue bene winked at It is the duty of the Church to purge the body from such and to ease it selfe of them It is worthy counsell giuen by the Apostle Hebr. 12.15 Looke diligently lest any man faile of the grace of God lest any roote of bitternesse springing vp trouble you and thereby many be defiled Where hee chargeth the Church not to suffer prophane persons to remaine among thē to the infectiō of others that they should prouide that no poysoned roote continued with them This is to be vnderstood rather of the persons then of the crimes committed by the persons as is that place also Deut. 29.18 from whence it is taken and to which he alludeth This is a fault in many good and flourishing Churches as it were a blemish in a faire face or a spot in a comely garment and this is a great occasiō of stumbling to those that haue separated themselues from vs. They thinke vs to be no better then a crew of conspirators against God and as a rout of rebels and a confused multitude of disordered persons Wherin albeit they are deceiued yet that is not enough to cleere our selues forasmuch as we ought to consider whether we doe not lay a stumbling blocke before them to make them fall True it is it may be a Church where this key is not rightly handled and where excommunication is not as life in that body that is full of euill humors which are not purged out So may it be where the Sacraments are disorderly administred and receiued and where they are not For excommunication is not of the essence of the Church ●mmuni●n not of ●ssence ●e church no more then the wall of a citie is essentiall to the citie or the hedge essentiall to the vineyard The wall may be cast downe and yet the City stand the hedge may be pulled vp and yet the vine remaine ●or 5.2 ● 1.2 The Church of the Corinthians was touched and blamed sharpely for this default in that they retained the incestuous person among them yet he writeth to them as to the true Church of God sanctified by Christ and Saints by calling The discipline is not the heart or life of the Church it is onely as the pulses and serueth as it were to feele the strength of it or it is as a purgation that serueth to procure the health of the body so the want thereof is the sickenesse and disease of the Church and maketh it not so faire so glorious and so beautifull as it would be neither so strong and mighty to keepe out wolues and other noysome rauenous beasts that wold root vp the vineyard or at least deface it and disgrace it because where it is practised duly executed it as a wal of brasse that the enemies cannot breake into the field of God We confesse therefore that albeit we haue the Church of God among vs which is the body of Christ yet is it not without some imperfection We haue very many trees of righteousnesse growing in this Orchard of God planted by the riuers of water bringing forth fruit in due season yet bushes and bryars that are fit to be burned are not cut downe by this axe of God that ought to haue beene laid to the rootes of them long agoe It is a foule fault to the garden to permit such bitter roots to spring vp in it and not to hook them and root them out by fit tools prouided for that purpose These noysome plants are to be displaced and displanted being more bitter then gall and wormewood and they ought to be so farre from remaining in the Church it selfe that they should not be suffered to sit in the Church porch They ought to be so far from comming to the Lords Table that we should not permit them to sit at our owne table We ought to be so farre from keeping them company that we should not bid them GOD speed We ought to be so farre from delighting in them and resorting to them that wee should not eat and drinke with them Wee ought to be so farre from suffering of them in the house of God that we ought not to come to their houses For so often as the word cannot preuaile with such the sword of God must be taken in hand against them Lastly The third reproofe it reprooueth the proud Bishop of Rome that taketh vpon him to excommunicate Kings and Princes to depose them from their crownes to depriue them of their kingdomes to free their subiects from their alleageance and to bestow their dignities
seates of them that sold Doues He purged the Temple of these Merchants and when he had made a scourge of small cords he scourged them out he poured out the changers mony and ouerthrew the tables as it is written Iohn 2 1 17. The zeale of thine house hath eaten me vp And he said vnto them Take these things hence make not my Fathers house an house of merchandise ver 16. This house was the house of prayer by diuine institution Marke ● but they had made it a den of theeues by prophane custome and corruption Let vs therefore all of vs remember to what end and purpose Temples were builded that God may be honored not dishonored of vs and consider the presence of God and his angels in such places to procure the greater reuerence vnto them Secondly it is required that these places be Vse kept in good order that they may be accounted of as the houses of God Is it meete that a Prince should rest in a simple cottage or dwel in a stie or in a stable and shall we entertaine the King of kings in a soule and vnfit place There is no man that goeth about to entertain a friend but he will make clean his house and purge it of all vncleannesse Shall we haue lesse care to receiue the Lord then man and of the house of God then of our own houses It is the will of God that all congregations should haue a conuenient place to resort come together to performe diuine duties Their zeale diligence is greatly commended that haue restored and repaired the decaies of such places as we see in the examples of Iehoash Iosiah As then it is required that the people haue a conuenient place to meet together for publike prayer for it is a good work to set vp such places ●●●e 7 5. The Iewes commended the Centurion that had built them a synagogue and made it an argument of his loue to their nation so like wise such places should be decently kept for publike preaching and prayers that the holie things of God may be reuerenced not contemned Hence it is that the Lord doth sharply reproue and greeuously plague the Iews after their return from captiuity ●●ggai 1 4. that they could find time to dwel in their setled houses yet suffer the Lords house to lie wast whereby it came to passe that they had sowne much but had gathered little they did eat but were not satisfied they did drinke but were not filled they did cloath themselues but were not warmed they did earne wages but were not enriched ver 6. If a man haue his priuate house wherein he dwelleth any way decaying and standing in neede of repairing he is readie to redresse and re-edifie it yea he will doe it to his barne for his corne to his stable for his horse and to his stie for his Swine Neuerthelesse how many thinke you are there that take themselues to be the people of God would bee accounted notable good Christians and thinke thēselues greatly wronged if any shold make any question of it who suffer the houses of God to runne to ruine and to lie pittifully complaining so wast and desolate as if some forraine enimy had made hauock of them by a sodain inuasion Thus do many places lie open to wind and weather and more deformed defiled and disfigured then any poore Cabin or simple cottage whatsoeuer Christ our Sauiour would not celebrate the Passeouer but in a chamber trimmed and prepared for that purpose Mar. 14 15. True it is the Lord standeth not in need of any mans riches the whole earth is his with all the frame and furniture thereof yea the whole world with all that dwell therein The siluer is mine 〈◊〉 24 1. and 12. and the gold is mine saith the Lord of hostes Hag. 2.8 our goods cannot extend vnto him Psal 16 2. yet it is his pleasure to vse men as his instruments to erect edifie to his honour places fit for his seruice and to bestow part of that which hee hath bestowed vpon them toward the maintenance of his house where the word may be preached and the Sacraments administred vnto the praise of his name and the saluation of our owne soules the soules of our families and of our brethren Againe obserue that the Oratories and places of prayer do not necessarily require or admit exceeding beauty and sumptuous costs to delight the eye whatsoeuer the Papists teach neither doeth superfluity of garnishing stand with the simplicity of the Gospell to haue Churches glister with gold and siluer and precious stones in gay and gorgeous manner as the Iewish Temple did Indeede the P●ophets doe foretell in many places of the glorie and beauty of the church that the glorie of Lebanon should beautifie the place of his Sanctuarie he will make the place of his feete glorious Esay 60 13. He will lay the stones of it with Carbuncle the foundation with the Saphires the windowes with Emerauds and the gates with shining stones Chap. 54 11.12 But we must vnderstand this of the spirituall beauty not of any earthly brauery of the inward glory not the outward garnishing of the wals and windowes And therefore it is said Psa 45 13. The kings daughter is all glorious within The faithfull that beleeue in Christ are this Temple of the liuing God 1 Cor. 3 16 17. 6 19. 2 Cor. 6 16. and the house of God Heb. 3 6. So then we must consider that there is an outward and an inward beauty of the church we must esteem of the glory of the church by the better part Wee haue an article to inquire whether the church chappell chancell and steeple be sufficiently repaired in couering walles glasing pauing seats bels And the enquiry is needfull and not without iust and good cause Neuertheles this is not the principall defect and decay to be repaired and amended This must be done but better things must not bee left vndone There are in all places almost faire pulpets but very many places want good pulpetmen There be bels more or lesse but manie of them want their clappers they cānot be heard The Priests vnder the Law were to come into the Tabernacle with their bels Exod. 28.35 that the sound might come to the ears of the people but the sound of the Ministers in many places is not to be heard they are tongue-tied and cannot teach the people like Idols that haue mouths but cannot speak Bern. ad milites Templ cap. 5. Bernard in his time complaineth of superfluous cost bestowed vpon churches sheweth that holines becometh Gods house which is rather delighted with vnpolluted maners then with pollished marble It is a better work to releeue the needy to feed the hungry and to cloath the naked then to garnish churches with gold and siluer It is said that in former times when the church had wooden cups it had golden Ministers
mad and franticke immediately after their reproaches and indignities shewed against the seruants of God and ran vp and downe iustifying those in words whom they had condemned in deed And scarce any of them escaped but the hand of GOD was strongly and strangely vpon them all before they dyed To tell vs and teach vs this trueth that the persecutors of the Church defiled with the blood of the Saints shall not alway escape vnpunished albeit for a time they doe preuaile The Reasons are these First because God Reason 1 is true in all his words iust in all his works He is a most righteous Iudge who will take his owne cause into his hands and be glorified in the confusion of his aduersaries It cannot therefore be that they should escape seeing GOD so tendereth them their blood is precious in his sight Matth. 23 35. Not one drop of it shall fal to the ground vnreuenged he hath said Psal 105 35. Touch not mine annointed do my Prophets no harm He hath put all their teares in his bottle such as touch them to do them hurt do touch the apple of his own eye Yea whatsoeuer iniuries wrōgs oppressions and indignities are offered vnto them he accounteth them as done vnto himselfe This our Sauiour testified from heauen when Paul made hauocke of the Church and breathed out threatnings against the Saints saying Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Actes 9 4. They haue not to do onely with men they fight against God and therefore shall not preuaile This reason is vrged by the Apostle 2 Th. 1.6 7. It is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you to you which are troubled rest with vs when the Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels Againe he is a gracious God and merciful Reason 2 to his people therefore in his good time hee will punish their enemies and those that hate them He is as pittifull toward his children as he is iust against all their aduersaries This the Prophet expressely handleth at large Psalme 136 1● 16 17 18. c. He ouerthrew Pharao his hoast in the red sea for his mercy endureth for euer which smote great Kings for his mercie endureth for euer and slew mighty Kinges for his mercy endureth for euer as Sihon King of the Amorites for his mercy endureth for euer and Og the King of Bashan for his mercy endureth for euer And gaue their Land for an heritage for his mercie endureth for euer euen an heritage vnto Israel his seruant for his mercy endureth for euer It remaineth to make vse and application of this Doctrine First it is a great comfort to the Church to consider how God is mindfull of vs in our distresses he doth not forget our afflictions he seeth the iniuries that are offered vnto vs as he surely saw the trouble of his people in Egypt and therefore we ought not to sinke downe in our miseries No chastising indeed for the present time seemeth to bee ioyous but greeuous but afterward it bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnesse to them that are thereby exercised Heb. 12 11. So that in the midst of them we must reioyce Knowing that tribulation bringeth foorth patience and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs. Rom. 5 3 4 5. Albeit hee make vs runne through fire and water hee will in the ende bring vs to a sweete place of rest Let vs not therefore be dismayed for tribulation all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer persecution Let vs not be ashamed of the Gospel of Christ Which is the power of God to saluation vnto all that beleeue Let vs waite for the day of our deliuerance assuring our selues that albeit the enemies of Gods people and Religion band themselues and assemble together against the Lord and against his Christ yet in the end he shall crush them with a Scepter of Iron ●m 2 2 9. and breake them in peeces like a Potters vessell not leaue so great iniquity vnpunished Thus doth Moses comfort the people Exod. 14. Feare ye not stand still and behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to you this day for the Egiptians whom ye haue seene this day ye shall neuer see them againe the Lord will fight for you therefore hold you your peace He will harden the hearts of the Egiptians and will get him honour vpon Pharaoh and vpon all his hoast and vpon all his Chariots and vpon his Horsemen to shew his power in thē and to declare his Name throughout all the world Thus doth God comfort Abraham Gen. 15 by foretelling that the same Nation which should deale so churlishly and cruelly with his posterity should not alway escape vnpunished but in the end he would recompence them according to their desarts Know for a surety that thy seed shall bee a Stranger in a Land that is not theirs foure hundreth years and shall serue thē and they shall intreate thē euill notwithstanding the Nation whom they shall serue I will iudge and afterward shall they come foorth with great substance Gen. 15 13 14. As if the Lord should haue said vnto him I would not haue thee dismayed and discouraged O Abraham by these heauy tydings which I haue told thee that thy children shall be strangers in a strange Land and not onely strangers but be made seruants and bondslaues and not onely made slaues but be euilly and despitefully handled thus God by a Rhetoricall Gradation seemeth to augment his sorrowes rather I would haue thee strengthen thy faith against this tentation comfort thy heart with this cogitation that I will in the end punish that barbarous Nation and bring vpon it all those euils which it hath brought vpon thy posterity when they haue filled to the full the measure of their sins The truth of this promise is set downe in the booke of Exodus from the seuenth chapter to the fifteenth which we may reade and in reading consider that God is true in all his promises and Prophesies and will accomplish whatsoeuer he hath spoken for the confusion and destruction of his enemies Let vs therefore comfort our selues and comfort one another in these things that God will arise and his enemies shall be scattered Secondly let vs refraine anger and reuenge Vse 2 toward such as deale euilly with vs. It is the nature of flesh and blood to rise in choler to desire reuenge and not to put vp wrongs and iniuries We must be more then a lumpe of flesh if we will be the children of God We see that Stephen when he was stoned prayed for his persecutors Lord lay not this sinne to their charge Acts 7 60. The like wee see in Christ our Sauiour toward those that crucified him The consideration of this truth that God
God vpon the people and places where vngodly sinners dwell and causeth him to turne away his face and fauour from them Deuter. 23 9 14. Hos 2 ver 5 9 10. We reade in the Prophesies of Daniel chap. 3 29 that the king made a Decree that euery people nation and language which blasphemed God should be cut in peeces and their houses made a dunghill in the same manner it is with God hee bringeth reproch and maketh infamous not onely the persons that prouoke him by their sinnes but also the places and habitations where they dwell He could haue destroyed the men of Sodome Gomorrha and yet haue spared their Citties and houses and substance but hee destroyed these also to make them more ignominious to all posterity Iude verse 7. This teacheth vs how iust it is with God Vse 1 and how warrantable it is for vs to disgrace and discredite and discountenance the City and Church of Rome that they might bee odious in the eyes and stinke in the nostrils of all good men as a dead carkasse without life and breath For although their faith was once famous through the whole world Rom. 1 8 yet inasmuch as they are fallen from that faith to heresie and from sincerity to hypocrisie wee haue iust cause to hate the same to disgrace it what we can It is iust with GOD that it should be so and lawfull for vs to do so Reu. 18 2. But to cleere themselues of apostacy from the faith Obiect they will tell vs that we cannot tell them from whence their supposed heresies should first proceed who was the author of them and the scatterer of them abroad as wee see in Campians sophisticall and verball challenge he demandeth at what time Rat. 7. quo tempore qua via qua vt c. vnder what Bishop by what steps and proceedings a new religion was spread ouer the church of Rome and the whole world I answer Answ it is not necessary to set downe the minutes and moments of time inasmuch as some alterations are insensible Many errors creepe on secretly and as it were in the darke The euill and enuious man in the Gospel sowed tares among the wheate in the night when no man could see Mat. 13.25 The hayres of our head are not all white at a suddaine and old age doth not creepe vpon vs in a day Take the oldest man that liueth vpon the earth who can tell when he began to be old We know by sundry infallible tokens that he is an olde man but what day or weeke or moneth or yeare when he began to be so who can assigne or determine This is manifest in al things that arise of small beginnings and grow by little and little to a greater quantity vntill they come to perfection If we see a man sicke of the pestilence or a City corrupt in manners with riotousnesse and wickednesse or an house ruinous and ready to fall or a ship in the midst of the sea ready to sinke shall we deny all these to bee because we know not when they first began to bee when that man began to bee infected or the City to bee corrupted or in what yeare the house began to be ruinous or in what day the ship began to leake We know not how and when weeds and thornes and thistles first tooke roote vnder the ground but whē once they are sprung vp and growne aloft wee see them we discerne them wee feele them wee plucke thē vp So the alterations of the church of Rome are as a mystery The mystery of iniquity 2 Thess 2 ver 7 and albeit we could not shew the beginning of them yet that such desolations and ruines of the ancient building are among them that they vtterly lay waste the foundatiō we proue by the word of God in the old and new Testament This is the triall of all errors and heresies And because the doctrines that they embrace and the religion that they professe are not agreeable to these ancient monuments and records which are as the Meteyard or the Standard to try all measures wee therefore say and conclude they are errors and wee wrong them not at all though wee bee not able to produce the first broachers and beginners of them all This is enough for vs we finde by the word of God that they are heresies and therefore iustly chalenge them and complain that Bethel is become Beth-auen and the Church of God become the Synagogue of Satan Hos 4 verse 15. How many heresies haue sprung vp in the Church like darnell in the fielde among the Corne noted by Epiphanius Austine and others of the learned and ancient of whom neither we nor they know the first authors The Scribes and Pharisies taught many things against the Law or else Christ would not haue reproued their false glosses Math. 5 neyther willed his Disciples to beware of the leauen of the Pharisies and of the Sadduces Mat. 16 6 that is of the doctrine of the Parisies and of the Sadduces verse 12 yet the circumstance of time when these corruptions crept in and the persons that deuised them are altogether vnknowne and who is able to tell vs In the primitiue Church there were a kinde of heretiques called Acephali because no man was found to be their head and master Alphons haer l. 4 The like we might say of many other heresies of which if any should aske as Campian doth In what age vnder what Pope vpon what occasion by whose compulsiō by whose power it came to passe I doubt the best answer would be silence Wherefore it is not necessary to produce the precise time and tokens of euery change because the alteration was not made at an instant or all at once as when a land is inuaded by a forreigne enemy that turneth all things vpside downe but it entred slily and slowly into the Church as a worme that gnaweth the roote of the tree by little and little to omit that wee in these last dayes want the histories and records of many things done before vs and the Romane tyranny hath suppressed or corrupted a part of them that are left vs. The Probleme is not vnknowne which the Greekes so curiously debated Plutark touching the Argos wherein Iason sayled for the golden fleece which at his returne and comming home was layde vp and reserued in the Road for a great and worthy monument This ship decaying by little and little for what is it that time doth not consume as a moth and eat as a canker they alwayes peeced and repayred where it began to weare away till in the ende the whole substance of the old vessell or bottome wherein Iason sayled and made his voyage and aduenture was vtterly wasted and nothing remaining of it but onely the later reparations successiuely made in the roome of the other Now the question was A probleme of the Argos wherein Iason sayled whether this were the ship wherein Iason sayled
1050 8 It is the duty of Magistrates to do iustice fol. 1057 9 Euill men proceed from worse to worse fol. 1061 10 Actions vnlawfull are made lawfull fol. 1060 11 When sin is punished God is appeased fol. 1070 12 Sin depriueth vs of Gods protection fol. 1074 12 Gods wrath being prouoked is full of rage fol. 1077 14 The faithfull bring a blessing vpon their houses and posterities fol. 1980 15 It is lawfull sometimes to reproue desperate sinners by name fol. 1084 16 God beginneth to chasten his owne Church and children fol. 10●0 17 The people of God may take armes fol. 1093 18 The seducers and the seduced shall bee punished together fol. 1100 CHAP. xxvi 1 Irreligion prophanensse and impiety make places and persons infamous and reprochfull fol. 1104 2 It is a most wicked impious thing to oppose authority and to withstand gouernment fol. 1108 3 It is no disgrace for godly children to descend come of vngodly par nts fol. 1109 4 It is hard to shun and breake off society with wicked men c. fol. 1112 5 God prouideth for all his people fol. 1113 6 It is a sinne to decline from the pure worshippe of God set downe in the word fol. 1117 7 An whole multitude cannot cleere it selfe from Gods iudgements when he sendeth them fol. 1118 CHAP. xxvii 1 In all wrongs and iniuries wee must resort to the Magistrate fol. 1120 2 Wee may make our selues guilty of other mens sinnes fol. 1123 3 Sin is the cause of death all misery fol. 1125 4 Propriety of goods is Gods blessing fol. 1127 5 Many want outward signes that are partakers of the inward grace of the Sacraments fol. 1130 6 Many are punished temporally that are not cōdemned eternally Ibid. 7 God is the Creator and maker of the soule fol. 1132 8 Kings and Princes haue and hold their places callings immediately from God fol. 1134 CHAP. xxviii 1 The first and cheefest care is to bee had of the Church matters of religion fol. 1135 2 Of the morning euening sacrifice c. fol. 1136 3 Of the Iewish Sabbath and the vses to vs fol. 1140 4 Of the new Moones and the vses to vs. fol. 1143 5 Of the Passeouer and the vses to vs. fol. 1146 6 Of the feast of first fruites or Pentecost fol. 1149 CAP. xxix 1 Of the feast of Trumpets with the vses fol. 1150 2 Of the feast of fasting or afflicting the soule together with the vses thereof to our selues fol. 1152 3 Of the feast of Tabernacles the vses to vs. fol. 1155 Chap. xxx 1 Lawfull vowes are to be performed fol. 1159 2 Great is the iurisdiction of parents ouer their children fol. 1166 3 The husband is the wiues head fol. 1169 CHAP. xxxi Sundry Doctrines directing warres and warriers 1 Before men go to battell an hoast of men must be mustered and gathered together fol. 1173 2 An army leuied must be sent out Ibid. 3 An army must be sent out by publike and lawfull authority Ibid. 4 He against whom we wage warre must be known to be an enemy fol. 1174 5 Al sinne must be auoided carefully by such as are emploied in warre Ibid. 6 Wicked men though they be suffered long yet at length God taketh veng●ance of them fol. 1176 7 Princes Potentates and great men lye open to iudgements as well as others fol. 1177 8 Sins of omission and neglect of duties which men are bound to perform are displeasing to God fol. 1179 9 Euery mans death and destruction cometh from himselfe fol. 1181 10 Things in themselues vnseemly to bee vttered are modestly to be spoken of fol. 1184 11 The Lord as he wil destroy the wicked so he wil do it fearfully and seuerely fol. 1186 13 For benefits receiued we returne praise to God fol. 1188 14 It is our duty to returne thankesgiuing to God speedily fol. 1189 15 It is our duty in extraordinary blessings to returne extraordinary thankes ibid. Chapter xxxii 1. The loue of this world is dangerous fol. 1191 2 The Ministers of God must reproue sharply and earnestly zealously and powerfully fol. 1194 3 It is a greeuous sin to giue offence to others or to discourage our brethren from wel-doing fol. 1197 4 It is an vsuall thing with the Lord to punish the sins of parents with the sins of their children 1200 5 We must haue a fellow-feeling of the miseries afflictions of Gods people fol. 1203 6 The onely cause of iudgement is sin fol. 1205 7 It is the duty of all Gods children to put foorth their hands to helpe the Church fol. 1206 8 The relikes of idolatry to bee vtterly abolished and all occasions that might draw vnto it to be taken away fol. 1209 Chapter 33. 1 God preserueth his Church in the midst of dangers and deliuereth it out of slauery and bōdage fol. 1212 2 The 42. Mansions of the Israelites in the wildernesse fol. 1214 3 No familiarity is to be vsed with idolaters fol. 1219 4 Coldnes in Gods cause is a greeuous sin fol. 1222 CHAP. 34. 1 God setteth bounds to euery mans possession and limiteth what he shall haue fol. 1225 2 The estate of Gods people is such that some among them do alwayes stand in need fol. 1229 3 Faith apprehendeth and applyeth all Gods promises as present fol. 1232 CHAP. xxxv 1 The Ministers must be prouided for fol. 1237 2 All men by nature are proue to reuenge fol. 1240 3 Murther is an hainous sinne in the sight of God fol. 1244 4 To do lawfull things without a calling is vnlawfull fol. 1247 5 GOD will haue no innocent person put to death fol. 1252 6 Inferiors ought to reuerence their superiors fol. 1255 7 Lawes touching the inheritance of the Israelites fol. 1257 CHAP. xxxvi 1 The marriage of Cousen-germans is lawfull fol. 1267 A Commentary vpon the Fourth Booke of Moses called NVMBERS Generall Obseruations out of the whole Booke by way of Preface or Introduction BEfore wee come to the Exposition of this Booke of Moses and to the handling of the particular points contained therein it may not be thought vnprofitable or vnnecessary to prefixe somewhat by way of a Preface that our mindes may bee enlightned and our hearts prepared and our iudgements setled for the better conceyuing and receiuing of that which followeth Now as in the Booke of Genesis Moses hath deliuered the creation of the world together with the originall and first beginning of the church laying as it were an happy foundation as wel of the one as of the other and in Exodus hath handled the publishing and promulgation of the Law together With the miserable thraldome and bondage of the people of God in Egypt and in Leuiticus hath particularly expressed the sacrifices and oblations as Types of the sacrifice and oblation of Christ the promised Messiah together with the inauguration of Aaron and his sonnes and the consecration of the Tribe of Leui so in this Booke of Numbers
before our eyes the example of Balaam hired to curse the people of God o Iohn 5 34 36. who gaped after gaine and promotion and gaue mischeiuous counsell to the Moabites and Midianites to worke their death and destruction This truth is confirmed by sundry the Apostles Peter Iude and Iohn in the new Testament who mentioning this history declare both that bee loued the wages of vnrighteousnes and laid a stumbling-blocke before the children of Israel to intrap them was reprooued for his iniquity by his Asse Who spake with mans voice and forbad the foolishnesse of the Prophet These things being duly weighed and throughly considered do sufficientlie teach vs who is the author of this Booke not man but God and that the authority of it is diuine and not humane Now let vs see what vse may be gathered from hence and how it may be profitably applyed to our instruction Seeing the Author of this Booke and so of Vse 1 the rest of holy scripture is not man or Angel or any creature but the Lord of heauen and earth we learne that they want not nor stand in neede of the confirmation and approbation of the Church or of men seeing they are approued vnto vs by a greater authority and as it were warranted vnto our consciences from on higher Court where God himselfe sitteth present and president of the same So then as Christ our Sauiour speaketh p I receiue not the record of man but I haue a greater witnesse then the witnesse of Iohn We may truly say the same of his word we haue a better ground to stand vpon and a fairer warrant then the testimonie of the Church to beare record of the dignitie and authority of the word Hence it is that he saith in the same place The works which the Father hath giuen me to fin sh do beare witnes of me that the Father sent me and the Father himselfe which hath sent me beareth witnes of me This serueth to conuince the Church of Rome of the spirit of errour which teacheth that the scripture receiueth authority and credite from the Church insomuch that some of them are not ashamed to auouch q Eckius in Euchirid de autho Eccl. That the authoritie of the Church is greater then of the Scripture and others feare not to blaspheme r Hermannus that they should haue no more authority in regard of vs then Aesops Fables except the authority of the Church did procure it And as they are bold to maintaine that the Church is aboue the Scripture ſ Bellar. de verbo dei li. 4. cap. 12. so they teach that the Scriptures are not in themselues necessary neyther were written to be a rule of our Faith Thus they fall from one heresie into another proceed from worse to worse as euill men doe But the assurance of our Faith touching the Scriptures is not builded on the Churches authority but vppon the illumination of Gods spirit shining euidently in the Scriptures thēselues The holy Ghost openeth the eyes of those that are his that they know discerne his voice from all others For as the Sun is not seene by any ligh● but his owne so we iudge of the truth and all false Doctrines by the Scriptures How do we discerne sweet from sowre but by it owne taste And how can wee better discerne the rellish of the Scripture t Psal 19 10. Which is sw●eter then the Hony and the Hony-combe to the taste then by the goodnes and excellency of it selfe True it is wee doe not reiect and refuse contemne or condemne the testimony authority of the true church as the Papists slander vs u What the office and authority of the Church is but wee confesse these points of the Church First it is as the keeper of the rolles and records to preserue them not to authorize them He that is custos rotulorum doth not giue authority to the writings but hath them of trust committed vnto him Secondly it is as a touchstone to distinguish them from bastard counterfeit Scriptures not to make that Scripture which is no Scripture The touchstone of the Gold-smith doth not make gold but discerneth and distinguisheth gold from other mettall what is base and what is rich stuffe so doeth the Church Thirdly it is as the voice of a x Chrisost hom 1. in Epist ad Tit. crier to preach and publish and promulgate and teach the truth as a cryer pronounceth and proclaimeth the Edicts and Decrees of his Prince but cannot adde to them nor take from them nor authorize them nor any way alter change them Fourthly it is as an Interpreter and expounder to expound and interpret them according to the Scriptures As the man of Law deliuereth the sense of the Law but doeth not make it to bee Law These are holy and honourable seruices of the Church and these wee willingly acknowledge to belong vnto it But that the Scriptures should receiue credite from it or bee of no authority without it we cannot admit or acknowledge For they are cleere perfect firme and worthy of all respect and reuerence without the testimony of the Church for the Authors sake The Apostle saith y 1 Ioh 5 6 9 It is the Spirit that beareth witnesse for that Spirit is truth and afterwarde If wee receiue the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater Thus then wee see that the chiefe cause why wee beleeue that the Scriptures were deliuered from Heauen is not the witnesse of the Church nor the authoritie of man but because the Spirit speaketh euidently in them so that we can no more doubte of the truth of them though the Church should hold her peace then if we heard God openly speaking vnto vs frō the highest heauens Let vs therefore detest the wickednesse and blasphemy of such as say the authority of Gods worde dependeth of the testimony of man which were to preferre man before God to make all his promises hang vppon the vncertaine credite of man and to make the hand-maid take place before the Lady and Mistris which were a presumption and saucinesse not to be endured Secondly we learne from hence who is the Vse 2 best Interpreter of the Scriptures and who is the sole and soueraigne Iudge thereof namely God himselfe who is the author and inspirer of them For as the authority of them dependeth not vppon the Church so the interpretation of them dependeth not vppon the will and pleasure of man according to the saying of the Apostle z 2 Pet. 1 No prophesie of the Scripture is of any priuate interpretation Euery man is the expositor of his owne worke euery Law-giuer knoweth best the meaning of his owne Law a 1 Cor. 2 For what man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him Euen so the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God for God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his
Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God Our aduersaries teach that the Church is the supreame Iudge of the Scriptures and hath absolute authority to expound the same and by the Church they vnderstand the rabble of Priests and Iesuites and Cardinals and Councels and by them all at last the Pope whoe holds the Oracles of God shut vp in his brest whose iudgement also they hold to bee infallible so that he cannot erre Thus they will haue Scriptures Fathers Councels and the Church it selfe passe vnder the sentence of his Consistory Thus b Reason why the ●pists refu●● the Scrip●●●● to be Iud●● all contro●●●sies they do partly because they know and their hearts condemne them that the greatest number of the causes controuersies debated between them and vs haue no foundation of the Scriptures to leane vpon and therefore must of necessity stagger fall downe c Andrad thod expli● vnlesse they bee supported by traditions and partly because they woulde make themselues Iudges in their owne cause which notwithstanding is against all Law of God and man For they disable the Scriptures from being the rule of our faith and cast them downe from the chaire of honour in which they were seated by the author of them and cast all power vpon the Church and then they define the d Bristo 〈◊〉 12. in ma● Catholike Church to bee the Romane Church Rhem. annot in Rom. 1 8. and make the Catholike and Romane faith all one who seeth not heereby and smileth not at it that seeing the Church is made the rule of faith and their Romane Church the true catholike Church of Christ that they meane to stand to no iudgment but their own and bee iudged by no other Iudge but themselues and to receiue nothing for trueth but their owne opinions Indeed we cannot deny but they cast many shaddowes to blinde our eyes and pretend at euery word the Catholike Church but they meane nothing thereby but the Popes determination which verifieth in them the common Prouerbe Aske my fellow if I bee a theefe Thus they are made Iudges that are parties and partially referre all thinges vnto the tribunall of their owne iudgement Wee teach and affirme that the Holy Ghost and the Scripture it selfe haue chiefe authority to interprete the Scriptures the Scriptures must expound the Scriptures and out of themselues the meaning of them must be taken Our Sauiour teacheth a Iohn 5 47. that they which beleeue not Moses writings will not beleeue him The Apostle teacheth b Ephes 2 20 Wee are all built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Christ himselfe beeing the Head-corner-stone in whom all the building is coupled together by the Spirite 2 Tim 3 15 and that the Scriptures are able to make vs wise vnto saluation Thus it is saide c Nehe. 8 8 that the Leuites read distinctly the Lawe to the people and gaue the sense and caused them to vnderstand it by the Scripture it selfe Thus did the men of Berea reade the Scriptures d Acts 17 11. and by them tried the Apostles doctrine whether those things were so or not So then we conclude that the iudgement of all men is vncertaine and doubtful that resteth vpon their sole authority and that the Scriptures are to bee expounded by the same Spirit whereby they were written for heereby onely we can know assuredly the vndoubted meaning of them and from hence we can appeale to no superior iudge Vse 3 Thirdly from this consideration of the Author of the Scriptures we haue a direction to the Minister what he must preach vnto the people not the inuentions of his owne braine not the conceits of his owne wit not the excellency of wordes not the entising speech of mans wisedome e 1 Cor 2 14 which Paul disclaimeth and disalloweth in his owne practise but he must come in the plaine eu dence of the Spirit and of power that the knowledge of God may be furthered and the conscience informed in the wayes of godlinesse He must deliuer nothing to the people but the pure and precious word of God hee must content himselfe with the simplicity thereof and bee able by the scriptures to warrant the doctrine that he deliuereth so that hee may truely say with the Prophets Thus saith the Lord. Thus doth the Apostle ground his doctrine as vpon a sure and certaine foundation f 1 Cor. 11 23 1 Corinth 11 23. I haue receiued from th Lorde that which I also haue deliuered vn●o you This doth the Apostle Peter require at his hands 1 Pet. 4. g 1 Pet. 4 11 If any man speake let him speake as the words of GOD. VVee see therefore what must be the matter and subiect of our Sermons and from whence as from a plentiful store-house we must furnish our selues not from Fathers or Councels or Doctors of the Church much lesse from Poets Philosophers Orators Historiographers to paint our exhortations with the flourishing colours of humane learning which may for a season tickle the eare and delight the outwarde man but can carry no weight to the Conscience nor transforme the inward man into the obedience of the will of God Such as seeke to please men that haue itching eares doe beate the aire and labour in vaine neither must they thinke to winne a sou●e thereby to the knowledge of the Gospell This doth the Prophet Ieremy set downe chap. 23. h Iere 23 22 If they had stood in my counsell and had declared my words to my people then they should haue turned them from their euill waies and from the wickednesse of their inuentions Heere then we haue a direction what to do and in what manner to furnish our selues to the worke of the ministery wee must bee as good Stewards set ouer the Lords house to feede the family with bread not with wine with wholesome food not with chaffe that wee may discharge our duties with comfort and the people bee builded vppe in knowledge and obedience Lastly seeing God onely is the Author Vse 4 of the whole Scripture and of euery particular booke and branch contained therein which are the rule of our life and the foundation of our faith it belongeth as a speciall duty to the people of GOD to reade them to receiue them to study them to reuerence them to obey and keepe the doctrines deliuered in them forasmuch as they proceede from such an Author Wee learne to put a difference betweene the speeches of person and person and wee vse to giue better audience and greater reuerence vnto the word of a Prince then to others wee will not lose a worde willingly that commeth from his mouth and according to the Maiestie of the person so is our respect and so wee attend vnto him If one shoulde contemne a Prince and not regard him speaking vnto him hee would bee iudged worthy of death or of some sharpe and seuere punishment
dispatching worldly matters they must needs neglect better studies For the greater their care is in the one the more their carelesnesse is in the other and the more deepely they diue into the world the more shallow are their meditations in the word The office of the Deacons to attend vpon the poore to receiue the almes with one hand and to distribute them with the other was meerely Ecclesiasticall and therefore being in part of the same nature might with more ease and lesse trouble be annexed to the Ministery of the word yet the Apostles as we heard before cast it from them as a burden vnto them how then shall we in these daies not to bee compared with the Apostles and for dispatch and expedition but children to them presume to mingle and shuffle matters of the world with our Ministery that are of diuers nay contrary nature and thinke to mannage and order them both very sufficiently He would bee accounted a fond and vnwise man who hauing an heauy burden already vpon his shoulders as much as he is able to beare endure should notwithstanding lay hold of another as weighty as the former and yet suppose himselfe to haue sufficient strength to carry it with the same facility But some man may obiect that Peter and Obiection 1 the other Apostles were fisher-men and did also go to fishing after they were called to be Apostles and Paul became a Tent-maker labouring with his hands and exercising a manuall occupation I answer Answer this doth not allow the Ministers of the Gospell to be trades-men or fi●hermen where there is a Church well established and reformed they are onely tolerated in the ruines and desolations thrreof In these cases it is lawfull for the Minister to ioyne to his calling another calling in the pouerty of his owne person not otherwise able to maintaine his estate and in the generall want and need of the Church not able sufficiently to prouide for him The causes and occasions of Pauls labouring with his hands were partly that he might not in that point be inferior to the false Apostles who tooke no wages or stipend thereby seeking to winne credite to themselues and to disgrace the true seruants of Christ in regard whereof he sought to cut away occasion from them which desired occasion 2 Cor. 11 12 and partly that he might helpe to ease and support the need and pouerty of the Church The Apostles did this in case of necessity but what is this to iustifie and beare out the practise of worldly minded men who do it to be great men in the world to grow rich and wealthy and to raise vp their posterity to be mighty vpon the earth These are so much choaked with the thornes of cares of this life and deceitfulnesse of riches that they can preach sildome and that so coldly and rawly and vndigestedly as that it may well appeare they haue earth in their mindes and mouthes that their voyces are stopped and their guifts are decayed and their zeale is quenched What then will Obiect 2 some say Would you haue vs alwayes poring vpon a booke or would you not haue vs prouide for our family that God hath giuen vs I answer Answer it is lawfull to do the office of the father of a family to order the matters of his owne houshold aright GOD commandeth it man willeth it nature requireth it and law alloweth of it so that Whosoeuer prouideth not for his owne 1 Tim. 5 8. especially those of his family hath denied the faith and is worse then an Infidell Neither are men alwayes bound to bee in their studies as in a Prison that which wanteth seasonable rest cannot long endure and continue The minde is as a man that trauaileth a long iourney in the end he will wax weary and must haue rest or as a bow that cannot stand alwayes bent lest it be ouermuch weakned If an archer should continually shoote in his bow and neuer vnbend it hee would in short time breake it into shiuers and make it vnprofitable So when the Minister hath wearied himselfe in the weighty workes of his holy calling he is not denied leaue and liberty to refresh himselfe other waies If it bee in shooting or grafting or planting or such like he sinnes not prouided that there be a difference made betweene recreation and an occupation and that they hinder not his generall or particular calling Euery Minister if aright hee consider of his place shall finde hee hath as much as hee can turne his head and hand vnto when they do their best endeuour Wee are commanded to giue no offence to Iew or Gentile or to the Church of GOD. 1 Cor. 10 32 But for vs that professe our selues spirituall men and yet to liue as temporall men is offensiue to the people and layeth a stumbling blocke before them and therefore it is to be auoided of vs. Let vs set before vs the example of Christ Iesus and his practise Luke 12 verse 13. who refused to diuide the inheritance among the Bretheren hauing respect vnto the boundes and limites of his calling declaring therby that it belongeth in no wise to the Ministers of the word to intermeddle in the iudgement of such causes Hee failed not in any duties that fell out in the compasse of his calling but perfourmed them willingly this office he vtterly refused and therefore no doubt was impertinent to the Minister Likewise when the people would haue taken him and made him King he conueyed himselfe out of their sight and would not accept such honour at their hands Thus he also refused to pronounce sentence vpon the harlot that was brought vnto him Iohn 8 11. saying I do not condemne thee goe thy way and sinne no more so that hee would not meddle with ciuill and criminall causes And as he practised himselfe so hee taught his Apostles and others that professed to be his Disciples When one that was called to follow Christ Math 22 25. Luk. 9 59 60 61 62 said Lord suffer mee first to go and bury my father Iesus saide vnto him Let the dead bury their dead but go thou preach the Kingdome of God Then another saide I will follow thee Lord but let me goe first and bid them farewell which are at mine house Iesus saide vnto him No man that putteth his hand to the Plough and looketh backe is apt to the Kingdome of GOD. To conclude therefore no man must ouer-burden himselfe with things that belong not to his calling And albeit some haue done such things in the pouerty of the Church yet wee must make a difference betweene those that doe it to sustaine necessity and others that thereby maintaine superfluity the one doth it thorough defect the other in all pompe and excesse Thirdly this reproueth those that albeit they doe not entangle them-selues in worldly businesse The third reproofe yet they entangle themselues with sundry liuings that it is not possible for them
that may not be eaten Whereby we see why some of the beasts were said to be cleane and some of them vncleane namely because some might be eaten and some might not be eaten Lastly in the Booke of Genesis Chapter 9. Where the eating of flesh is most of all expressed and mentioned there seemeth to bee made no new grant in those particulars which in that place are remembred but onely the old priuiledges renewed as the fruit of multiplication the dominion ouer the creatures and the replenishing of the earth Wherefore seeing all these were in vse before it is very probable Gen. 9.3 that as the greene hearbes were eaten before so was the flesh of fish and of the beasts albeit there be not expresse mention of them made before Euery moouing thing that liueth shall be meate for you euen as the greene hearbe haue I giuen you all things These things being true the former sect of the peeuish and peruerse Nazarees are more strongly conuinced and ouerthrown forasmuch as they make that vnlawfull which from the beginning was vsed and practised as lawfull These were the sects among the Iewes which they inuented vnto themselues when they departed from the purity and simplicity of the word of God D. Willet Hex in Gen. 1. qu. 35. This we may reade largely and learnedly handled else-where Vse 3 Thirdly this reprooueth the hierarchy of the Church of Rome from the highest to the lowest their Popes their Cardinals their Abbots Monkes Fryers Priors Nunnes Iesuites and the rest of that race and rabble which are as croaking frogges or deuouring locusts that couered the face of the earth and ascended out of the bottomelesse pit of which the word hath not spoken any thing but quite ouerturneth that whole generation For to set the gouernement of the whole Church vpon one mans shoulder and to put all other vnder his feete is a burden able to breake his necke and to cracke his shoulders which no man is able to beare This man of sinne they make the head of the Church The Pope is not head of the Church and the vicar of Christ This is to thrust downe Christ from his dignity and to depose him from the headship of the Church or else they make it a monster of two heads or rather of many heads For this is an high honour peculiar to Christ to be the head of the body which is his Church Ephes 1.22 23. and 4.12.15 and 5.23 Coloss 1.24 and 2.19 And that for these causes First by way of excellency Secondly by reason of fulnesse of grace Turrecrema sum lib. 1. cap. 44. Thirdly because from him floweth all graces of faith and other blessings into his members He it is that gaue some to be Apostles some Prophets some Euangelists and some Pastors and teachers to build vp the Church to the end of the world These he thought to be sufficient without Popes and Cardinals that is without such heads and shoulders He called his Apostles and made them all equall none superiour none inferiour to other but commanded them indifferently to preach the Gospel to euery creature The Commission which he gaue vnto them was equall in feeding in binding in loosing in remitting and retaining none was before or after other as Luke 9. He calling the twelue Apostles gaue them power ouer all diuels and to heale diseases and sent them to preach the kingdome of God They had all of them the keyes of it equally committed vnto them But they wil obiect Obiect the words of Christ to Peter Matth. 16. I say vnto thee that thou art Peter and vpon this Rocke I will builde my Church and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it And I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen and whatsoeuer thou shalt binde on earth shall be bound in heauen whatsoeuer thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen Answer These words we acknowledge to be the wordes of Christ howbeit they are too weak a pillar to beare vp the Papacy First let vs speake of Peter and then of the Pope that claymeth to be his successor For if Peter himselfe in those words had no superiority or Monarchy bequeathed vnto him or sole regiment of the Church then hee could not leaue it as a legacy to the Bishop of Rome nor make him his heire of so faire a patrimony that he might claime authority and supremacy from him This is without all question and both sides yeeld vnto it that Peter could giue no more then hee had himselfe and the successour can haue no more iurisdiction then hee had into whose roome he succedeth Now touching Peter obserue this as another rule which also is receiued without cōtrouersie that nothing in this place is giuen to Peter but promised only as appeareth by the forme and phrase of speech that is vsed and by the words vttered in the time to come For Christ saith vnto him I will build my Church vpon this Rocke I will giue vnto thee the keyes of heauen the gates of hell shall not preuaile whatsoeuer thou shalt binde whatsoeuer thou shalt loose so that the manner of speaking in the time to come argueth that nothing is heere really granted but onely graciously promised to be granted He doth not say vnto him I do build my Church I doe giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen but I will builde I will giue Bellar. lib. 1. de Pontif. Roma cap. 10. This is so plaine that our aduersaries are necessarily constrained to yeeld vnto it So then I aske the question and demaund of them where this is giuen and how this promise is performed Whatsoeuer Christ promiseth his word is not yea and nay he cannot lie hee will not faile his people Obiection If any reply it is no great matter where we reade the promise to haue been performed seeing no doubt Christ meant to be as good as his word Solution I answere It mattereth much to vnderstand where it is forasmuch as there can be no better way to make tryall of the promise then to know the gift To which purpose they are wont to alledge two places and we are content to stand to both of them The one is in the Euangelist Matthew chap. 18.18 Verily I say vnto you Whatsoeuer ye shall bind on earth shal be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen Where we see Christ speaketh to all the Apostles and not to Peter alone or to him more then to any other but applyeth the same power of binding and loosing to euery one without exception or limitation The other place is in the Gospel according to Iohn chap. 20. where Christ standing in the middes of them saith vnto them Receiue ye the holy Ghost Ioh. 20 22.23 whose soeuer sinnes ye remit they are remitted vnto them whose soeuer sins ye retaine they are retained In which words Christ also doth equally
riches and reioyce in it more then they that finde great spoiles Account the merchandise of it better then the Merchandise of siluer and the gaine thereof more precious then Rubies so that nothing that we highly esteeme can be compared vnto it Prou. 3.13 14. Magnifie it as a treasure of that value that rather then thou wilt leaue it thou wilt be ready to forsake all that thou hast Matth. 13. There is nothing that more slaketh and shaketh off our deuout attention then to account the precious word of God vile and base in our eyes according to the corrupt custome of many in our dayes that preferre huskes fit to feed swine before the fat of wheat that is sent to nourish the sonnes of God Fourthly we must know that there is great hope of those that refuse not the meanes but submit themselues vnto it but none at all of those that vtterly refuse it What God may worke extraordinarily who sometimes feedeth by miracle from heauen as he did the Israelites Exod. 16.15 1 King 17.6 and Eliah in the wildernesse we cannot affirme and they that waite vpon such vanities forsake their owne mercy But of this point we haue spoken already Lastly it is our duty to lay vp the Word in our hearts that it may not be taken from vs but that we may practise it and profit by it For all our hearing must aime at profiting We must desire the sincere milke of the Word 1 Pet. 2.2 that we may grow thereby Now it can neuer take root except we heare it with an honest and good heart Luke 8.15 If we haue it only running in our mouthes or swimming in our braines it is as the grasse vpon the house toppe Psal 129.6.7 which withereth afore it groweth vp wherewith the mower filleth not his hand nor he that bindeth sheaues his bosome Let vs therefore first of all giue our hearts vnto God pray him to reforme them and to open them that so we may attend to those things that are deliuered vnto vs. As for those that haue their mouthes open but their hearts empty of the word they are as sounding brasse or a tinkling cymball they may please themselues and deceiue others for a time but their hypocrisie shall be vncased their deceitfull dealing manifested and themselues prooued to be no better then vessels that make a noyse but are without all substance in them Verse 11 12. And I behold I haue taken the Leuites c. Hitherto we haue spoken of the commandement of God directed vnto Moses that he should present the Leuites before Aaron the Priest that they may minister vnto him now we are to proceede to the reason of the commandement where we see the cause rendred why they should be giuen vnto him because euen vnto this time the first borne had executed the Priests office being consecrated vnto God and preserued out of the common destruction when the first borne in Egypt were destroyed He putteth them in mind of Gods mercy toward them who might iustly haue destroyed them as well as the Egyptians if it had pleased him When we see a common desolation or destruction and our selues as a remnant taken out of the common calamity it ought to make vs thankfull vnto God and to acknowledge that wee holde our life of him in cheife Thus did Noah stand affected when he offered sacrifice to God after he was come out of the Arke and was preserued with his family from the flood of waters Thus doth Daniel Dan. 5.20 ●● teach Belshazzar the king to humble his heart knowing the heauy iudgment that God brought vpon his father and tooke his glory from him We must profit by the examples of Gods workes both of his mercy and iudgement vpon others We learne from hence Doctrine that the first borne were from the beginning the Lords The first bo● were sanctified to the Lord. and consecrated to serue him and to instruct others This dignity and preheminence of the first borne beganne among the sonnes of Adam and continued in his posteritie as well before as after the generall destruction of the old world the eldest euer succeeding in the kingly and Priestly office vnlesse for some open impiety or other secret cause best knowne vnto God and vnknowne vnto the Church hee were reiected so that there was euermore some excellency vntill that Israel came out of Egypt and the Church became nationall Hence it is that God saith to Caine the elder sonne of Adam If thou doe well shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest not well sinne lieth at the doore and vnto thee shall be his desire and thou shalt rule ouer him Gen. 4.7 To this purpose Iacob speaketh to Reuben Gen. 49.3 Thou art my first borne my might and the beginning of my strength the excellency of dignity and the excellency of power Thus he was by priuiledge of birthright and thus was euery sonne by creation that first opened the matrice Luke 2.23 Whereby we see that in the family of the faithfull from the first man that God created vntill Aaron was sanctified to be a Priest vnto God in stead of the first borne the eldest of the family ordinarily had both the kingly and Priestly direction of the rest of his brethren As we saw this before in the house of Adam so it appeareth also afterward For when Caine the eldest sonne of Adam to whom the dignity of the first borne did pertaine was for his iniquitie reiected from that honour and excommunicated from the Church which was a spirituall kinde of banishment God raised vp Seth who being taught by his father touching the fall of man touching the punishments of sinne and the promised Sauiour assisted him while he liued in guiding his family and succeeded him after his death in the gouernment of the Church of God which was as a little flocke in comparison of the race of Caines posterity that married many wiues and encreased in great multitudes In like sort Enoch succeded Seth and dying ●ield of the ●rch lib. 5. ● ●et 2.5 ●● 4. ● left that honour to Kenan Kenan to Mahalaleel c. These were preachers of righteousnesse and repentance some of them indued with the spirit of Prophesie to conuince that wicked generation These Preachers of God being contemned and despised in the world such entertainement haue his seruants euer found the flood came and swept them away Noah gouerned as a father the Church of God before and after the Flood and left the same dignitie and office to Shem his second sonne Iaphet his eldest sonne being put behinde for secret causes knowne vnto God euen as his father had committed it vnto him ●en 10.21 Thus we might proceed and goe forward to shew in succeeding ages of the Church how God continued this fauour to the first borne and thereby set as it were a crowne of honour vpon their head Hence it is that at the giuing of the
and Paul chargeth the Philippians to let their patient and equall mindes bee knowne to all men But of this vertue of contentation we haue spoken at large before ●he fift re●oofe Fiftly it reprooueth such as contemning their owne callings as vile and base become male-content and thinke better of themselues and their owne gifts then there is iust cause and better then they would indeed if they rightly and truely knew themselues Such are all ambitious and aspiring spirits that loue to be aloft and scorne to be below that seeke for themselues an higher place and a better estate then God hath alotted vnto them as if the bramble should seeke to be promoted ouer the rest of the trees If our first parents through the tentation and instigation of Satan grew discontent with that estate wherein they were created sought to be as Gods knowing good euill Gen. 3 verse 5 no marueile if their posterity draw this corruption from them as the childe that sucketh the brest of his mother Absolom through his high mind 2 Sam. 15 4. was moued to fawne vpon the people and to seeke his fathers kingdome and life also iudging basely of his present estate and climbing vp to an higher What caused the Scribes and Pharisies to contemne and disdaine Christ and his Disciples Mat 23 6 7. but this they loued the chiefe places at feasts and desired the highest seates in the assemblies and looked to be greeted and saluted by men Rabbi Rabbi What was the cause that Diotrephes would not receiue Iohn and the other faithfull Ministers of the word 3 Iohn 9. but did prattle with malicious words against them neither would he himselfe receiue them nor suffer others to entertaine the brethren He loued to haue the preheminence in the Church Loe here the horrible plague and as it were the ranke poison of pride vain-glory and ambition These are the causes of all confusion and disorder These weeds must be pulled out of our hearts by the contrary graces if we would haue any wholesome hearbs grow therein We haue many sharpe tooles lent vs put into our hands if we list to set them on worke to grub them vp by the rootes First we must consider the state of our bodies what it is We are but dust and ashes Meanes to pull downe pride and ambition and to dust we must returne Gen. 3. What a vaine and foolish thing is it to thinke so highly of our selues that were raised out of the earth do carry about vs the matter of our mortality If we had come downe from heauen and had our beginning aboue the Clouds we should haue had wherein to glory but being all of vs fraile and mortall creatures that are here to day and lye in the dust to morrow like the grasse of the fielde Math. 6 30. which flourisheth for a time and by and by withereth away what vanity hath possessed our hearts that earth ashes should waxe proud Our life standeth wholly in vncertainty it is appointed to all men once to die and after death commeth iudgement Heb. 9 27. Neither do we know at what houre the Lord will come Math. 24 42. Why then should we soare so high seeing we must lie so low Why should we say in our hearts I will ascend into heauen seeing our pompe shall be brought downe to the graue and the wormes must couer vs Secondly we are altogether set vpon sin and bring foorth the bitter fruites of our corruption in regard whereof we are more wretched then other creatures They sinne not against God they prouoke him not to anger but keepe their originall condition wherein they were created but we miserable sinners are turned out of the right way and become abhominable so that there is none that doth good no not one Rom. chapt 3 verse 12. If then we will glory of our selues or any thing in our selues we must glory in our shame hauing nothing of our owne but sinne and iniquity Thirdly we are not able of our selues so much as to thinke one good thought neither are we sufficiently furnished to doe the least and smallest duty that God requireth of vs we haue the spawne and seed of all sinne in our nature We are ready to fall into the most horrible sinnes except God sustaine vs and hold vp our heads and strengthen our weake knees We cannot set forward one foot toward the kingdome of heauen It is as vnpossible for vs to doe any good as for a dead carcase to flie We are as poore miserable wretches that are dumbe and cannot speak blind and cannot see deafe and cannot heare The Prophet acknowledgeth that he is a man of vncleane lippes Esay 6.5 and another confesseth he could not speake Ier. 1.6 our eares also are stopped so that we cannot heare the voyce of God that we might liue Ioh. 8.47 Matth. 13.13 our eyes are closed vp so that seeing wee see not but grope as blind men in the darkenesse The light shined in darkenes and the darknesse comprehended it no Ioh. 1.5 Men naturally take themselues to be sharpe eyed and quicke sighted Ioh. 9.41 but because they say We see therefore their sinne remaineth because the carnall mind is enmity against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God neither indeed can be Rom. 8.7 Fourthly whatsoeuer gifts are bestowed vpon vs we must thinke meanely and humbly of our selues and of them The Apostle willeth vs to decke our selues with lowlinesse of mind Phil. 2.3 and that each esteeme other better then themselues We know that our best gifts are stained with many blemishes we feele our owne corruptions more then the corruptions of other men so that Gods grace and our nature are ioyned together in one subiect We are not therfore to despise other men or dwell in the contemplation of their imperfections but be alwayes working vpon our selues and considering our owne vnworthinesse that so we may more and more mortifie the deeds of the flesh and grow in the graces of Gods Spirit Fiftly let vs set before vs the example of our Lord and Master Iesus Christ we must be ready to learne of him the lesson that he offereth to teach vs by word example Hence it is that he calleth all to him that are weake and weary and saith Take my yoke vpon you and learne of me for I am meeke and lowly in heart and ye shall finde rest vnto your soules Matth. 11.29 He disdained not to wash the feet of his disciples to teach them humility not only by doctrine but by practise He is a perfect patterne as of all other vertues so also of this and therefore the Apostle setteth him before vs for our imitation Phil. 2.5 6. Let this minde be in you which was also in Christ Iesus who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God c. He made himselfe of no reputation and tooke vpon
in heauen that not one of these little ones should perish Mat. 18 14. He commandeth that not one of these little ones should perish Mat. 18 10. He maketh vs to lye downe in greene pastures he leadeth vs beside the stil water he restoreth our soules and leadeth vs in the paths of righteousnesse for his names sake Psal 23 2 3. Iacob that fed the sheepe of his father in law testifieth touching his care that the drought consumed him in the day Gen. 31.40 and the frost pinched him in the night and sleepe departed from his eyes so that whatsoeuer was torne of beasts or stollen of theeues was required at his hands he bare the losse of it Much more then will the Lord care for the sheepe of his pasture his rod and his staffe shall comfort them and although they walke through the valley of the shadow of death they shall feare no euill Will a king regard onely the chiefe Cities and most populous places of his kingdome and suffer the rest to liue as they list without lawes good orders Or will the master of an house looke to some in his family and not to all If then God be our King if he be our Master he will looke to all his subiects and seruants whatsoeuer they be that they shall haue their meate in due season Secondly such is the grace and goodnesse of God that he would haue all his people Reason 2 come to knowledge Such as know not his will are none of his seruants If then he require the vnderstanding knowledge of his wayes not onely of rich men of great men of learned men and of the Ministers but of all the people of what calling and condition soeuer they be how meane and simple soeuer they be we must hereof conclude that he hath ordained that all of them should haue the meanes of knowledge and saluation offered vnto them and published among them To this purpose the Apostle saith He will that all men shall be saued and come vnto the acknowledgement of the truth 1 Tim. 2 4. And Peter in his second Epistle chap. 3. teacheth that The Lord is not slacke concerning his promise as some men count slacknesse but is long suffering to vs ward 2 Pet. 3 9. not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance This is that which the Prophet Ezekiel setteth downe chap. 18 11 23 32 and 33. Haue I any pleasure at all that the wicked should dye saith the Lord and not that he should returne from his waies and liue Thirdly the word of God was penned for all estates degrees and conditions of men It Reason 3 serueth as eye-salue to cleere the eyes of all persons and to make the simple wise Psal 19 7. and 119 99 100. It cleanseth the way of the yong man if he take heed thereunto with all diligence Psal 119 9. The booke of the Prouerbes of Salomon the sonne of Dauid King of Israel was written to giue subtilty to the simple and to the young man knowledge and discretion Prou. 1 4. The Apostle Iohn 1 Iohn 2 13. wrote to the Fathers because they had knowne him that is from the beginning he wrote vnto young men because they haue ouercome the wicked one he wrote to little children because they haue knowne the Father If then the word do serue for all sorts and sexes and ages whatsoeuer it followeth that all must be taught from the greatest to the least from the highest to the lowest Fourthly all persons whatsoeuer they be haue soules to saue simple persons small congregations Reason 4 little assemblies as well as others that are many in number We consist not only of bodies we must not onely prouide for this present life but we haue also soules to saue and must prepare for the life to come We shall all giue an account of the things that we haue done in this life whether they be good or euill forasmuch as the Lord will reward euery man according to his workes Rom. 2.6 The day of our particular death and the day of the generall iudgement are both of them dayes of reckoning and account and as the soule is most precious so the account to be giuen for it is very great and therefore from these premises we may necessarily deduct this conclusion that it is the will and pleasure of God that euery place and person should be carefully instructed Vse 1 It remaineth therfore that we come to the vses and as from a good tree gather such fruit as groweth from thence First we learne that it is Gods ordinance and appointment that euery congregation should haue a learned Minister to teach them the true religion and feare of God It is not ynough that there be a setled standing Ministery in one place or corner of the land or in euery great citie but he will haue his people in all places whether great or small to be cared and prouided for euery Church haue a sufficient Minister to instruct euery member of it Hence it is that the Euangelist declareth Acts 14.23 that the Apostles Paul and Barnabas ordained Elders by election in euery Church and then they commended them to the Lord in whom they beleeued And in the Epistle to Titus Paul saith vnto him Chap. 1. verse 5. For this cause left I thee in Creta that thou shouldest continue to redresse things that remaine and shouldest ordaine Elders in euery Citie as I appointed thee By euery Church and euery citie in those places we must vnderstand that wheresoeuer there is a body of people gathered together fit for a Congregation there ought a Minister to bee chosen appointed and set ouer the same For whersoeuer a Church is planted and a distinct congregation established there is an absolute necessity of a setled Ministery as we haue shewed before in the beginning of this Chapter so that it is altogether vnpossible that without it religion should prosper or continue The Lord had no sooner giuen his law concerning the erecting of the Tabernacle but Aaron his sons were annointed and the whole tribe sanctified to the office of the Ministery to attend on holy things to teach the people to offer sacrifices to performe such duties as were required of them He knoweth that euery man standeth in as great neede of food for the soule aa he doth of nourishment for the body and that as the body decayeth without sustenance so the soule famisheth and pineth away without the bread of life Wheresoeuer the Ministery of the word is wanting there wanteth one of Gods ordinances one of his speciall blessings Wee see by common and continuall experience when the corne is blasted and the haruest of the field is perished and the labour of the husbandman is destroyed what crying lamentation is made how much more ought we to be greeued to see the famine of the word brought vpon vs and thousands perish thorough want of this ordinance of God
the first borne c. We see heere that the Leuites were substituted in the place of the first borne who did first of all execute the Ministers office The Lord if it had pleased him could haue serued the Church with them for euer but for the causes before rehearsed he exempted them from this seruice after that for a small time and a few yeeres he had tryed their obedience to his holy wil and commandement Now in their stead he taketh the Tribe of Leui to minister vnto him and for his Doctrine 1 people We learne hereby The office 〈◊〉 the Ministery is an high and worthy ca●ling that the office of the Ministery is a most worthy and excellent calling This is that which the Apostle saith writing to the Hebrewes chap. 5.4 No man taketh this honour to himselfe but he that is called of God as was Aaron If then it be an honour to be called to this office it followeth to be an high and honourable calling Likewise writing to the Romanes and declaring that none can preach except they be sent hee addeth out of the Prophet How beautifull are the feete of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things Rom. 10.15 And instructing Timothy touching this office he saith This is a true saying If a man desire the office of a Byshop he desireth a worthy worke and afterward in the same Epistle cha 5.17 Let the Elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honour specially they who labour in the word and doctrine Seeing then the Ministery is an honour as the Priesthood of Aaron was seeing the office is a worthy worke and seeing the feet of the Ministers that bring the word vnto vs are beautifull so that they are worthy not onely of single but of double honour it followeth that the calling is exalted aboue many others and ought to haue a reuerent and speciall account among vs. The trueth heereof will farther appeare Reason 1 vnto vs by the force of reasons as so many proppes to stay it vp First we must consider the title giuen vnto them of an Embassadour what greater honour then to be the Embassadour of a Prince The Minister is more he is the messenger of the Lord of hostes Mal 2.7 2 Cor. 5.20 and commeth from the King of kings and Lord of lordes He is in stead of Christ appointed and sent of him to reconcile men to himselfe and to saue them So then the Ministers supply the office and sustaine the person of the Sonne of God who is the word and wisedome of his Father Not that he would haue the Ministery of his word lesse esteemed then if he should speake from heauen with terrible signes of Thunder and lightning but that he might by this meanes teach in a more familiar manner and so make the better tryall of our obedience Therefore the Apostle saith He that knoweth God heareth vs Ioh. 4.6 he that is not of God heareth vs not hereby know we the spirit of trueth and the spirit of errour We must heare the word preached by man not as the word of man but as it is indeed the word of God Thess 2.13 and so set our selues in his presence Hence it is that he saith to the disciples whom he had sent out ●ct 10.33 He that heareth you ●●rk 10.16 heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me If then the Ministery be an embassage sent vnto vs from God whereby God after a sort sueth to vs for reconciliation it serueth to set forth vnto vs the honour of this calling Secondly the honour of the Ministery is to Reason 2 saue mens soules which of all workes is the highest the holyest the heauenlyest the greatest What other calling can compare with it in this respect Other professions and ordinances respect the good of this life as peace or health or wealth and such like but the end of the Ministery alone is the saluation of soules Paul willeth Timothy to take heed to himselfe and vnto doctrine adding this reason Tim. 4.16 ●biection for in doing this thou shalt saue both thy selfe and them that heare thee It will be obiected we are saued by Christ onely as I haue beene oftentimes answered we haue saluation by no other then by him ●nswer It is true indeed Christ hath performed so much as is sufficient for the saluation of all yet none are actually saued but they onely to whom the benefits and merites of the Messiah are communicated Now his merits are applyed two wayes by the Ministery of the word and by receiuing of the Sacraments for which cause the power of saluation is ascribed vnto them We doe not teach that men are saued by the preaching of the word to driue men from Christ thereby or to build our saluation vpon any other for we preach nothing we regard to know nothing but Christ and him crucified We goe not about to lay any other foundation but the question is of the meanes how we shall come to the sauing knowledge of Christ which is ordinarily done by the sound and sincere preaching of the Gospel so that this calling is a most excellent calling Reason 3 Thirdly this truth is farther confirmed and strengthened by the contrary in that without it ordinarily no man can attaine to saluation as may appeare by the meanes whereby it is effected and by the degrees whereby it is finished None shall be saued but such as are effectually called but what is the Church other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then a company of men called and they are called by the Ministery of the Gospel made powerfull and effectuall by the Spirit of God Ye are called by our Gospel 2 Thes 2.14 to the obtaining of the glory of the Lord Iesus Christ By it our mindes are enlightened to see our owne miseries and Gods infinite mercies and then by it Luk. 1.79 Act. 26.18 Esay 53.1 as by the strong arme of God we are drawne vnto him Againe none are saued but such as are iustified being acquitted from their sinnes and accepted in Christ as righteous and as heires of eternall life But we are iustified by faith and faith commeth by hearing the word of God Rom. 10.17 1 Cor. 3.5 so that the Preachers are the Ministers by whom we beleeue Lastly none are saued but such as are sanctified by the Spirit of regeneration and whosoeuer is in Christ is become a new creature 1 Pet. 1.23 but we are borne againe by the immortall seed which is the word of the eternall God so that we are begotten into him by the preaching of the word In this respect the Ministers are called spirituall fathers 1 Cor. 4.15 because they beget vs as children by the Gospel of Iesus Christ Thus then we see the worthinesse and excellency of this calling and what we are to esteem therof As then we heard
to all Churches therefore hee reprooued them because they neglected an ordinary duty Secondly he commandeth them that themselues should take him away saying Put him out from among you but it had beene vnreasonable to require a myracle at their handes which he knew they were not able to worke Thirdly if he had intended such a miraculous action as they performed against hypocrites and enemies of the truth what neede had there beene of a solemne assembly and consent of the Church But in putting of him out the Congregation had an interest ver 4. When ye are gathered together c my spirit with the power of our Lord Iesus Christ ●r 5 4. Fourthly this appeareth also by the ende for which he was to be deliuered to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may bee saued in the day of the Lord Iesus ●r 5 5. that is that he may repent of his wickednesse in this life and so be saued in the life to come This also is noted to be the end wherefore he deliuered Hymeneus and Alexander to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme that is that they might renounce their heresies and imbrace the true faith and so repent of their former impiety and iniquity Therefore hee would not haue him smitten with sudden death and taken out of this life and so the time and gift of repentance to be cut off from him Fiftly what it is to deliuer to Satan and to take away the Apostle expresseth in other places keepe not company with them with such eate not purge out the old leauen that they may blush and be ashamed so amend their euill waies Sixtly if this had beene meant of such extraordinary punishments the Apostle might haue done this by his Apostolicall authority and needed not to haue troubled the whole Church with it Seuenthly that which the Apostle heere commanded the Church no doubt practised but they did not take him away out of this world by any myracle neyther deliuered him to bee possessed and punished bodily by the diuell but rather proceeded against him with the censures of the Church as appeareth in the second Epistle where he willeth them to comfort him being afflicted ●or 2 6 7. to receiue him being penitent and to cure him beeing wounded Lastly if he had willed them to kill him he had willed them to rush into the Magistrates seate which he would neuer doe for this is proper to the Magistrate alone that beareth the sword Seeing therefore we haue the commandement of Christ and the practise of the Apostle to warrant the sentence of excommunication there shall alwayes bee place for it in the Church euen where the Christian Magistrate is setled established Paul would haue them assemble together in the Name of Christ ●or 5 12. that is by his will commandement and afterward hee sheweth that the Churches office is to iudge them that are within albeit the Magistrate haue a sword put into his hand by the ordinance of GOD. What then There is a twofold sword materiall and spirituall he taketh vp the materiall sword and striketh with it The Church handleth the spirituall sword which is the word of God so that the Magistrate taketh away the wicked one way the Church another way The Magistrate killeth and taketh away life if the cause require the Church medleth not with corporall punishment and shedding of blood The Magistrate proceedeth directly according to the Lawes against offenders albeit they repent because he respecteth the execution of iustice and the reuenge of the dishonour done to God The Church proceedeth not in that order but obserueth the degrees appointed by Christ Math. 18 15. If thy brother shall trespasse against thee goe and tell him his fault betweene him and thee alone c and if the offenders repent they are ready to forgiue thē For this is the marke whereat excommunication aymeth and the end whereto it tendeth that the sinners being ashamed may be brought to repētance that such as liue in the church might not be corrupted forasmuch as a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe Lastly it may be said that we should rather Obiection 3 labour how and which way to bring more into the Church then to exclude any out of the Church Men are ready to goe fa●● enough out of it but they returne slowe enough to it We are to endeuour to call men to the Sacraments which are encouragements to godlinesse rather then to keepe them frō them for their wickednesse It is a signe we lacke charity toward them when wee hide from them that which should do them good I answer Answer it is our duty to do both of them to wit both to encourage them to godlines and yet to keepe them from them so long as they lye in open wickednes not repented of not the first without the latter nor the latter without the first lest wee bee compelled to giue that which is holy to dogges Did the Lord himselfe want charity toward Adam whē he sent him forth from the Garden of Eden Gen. 3 22. lest he put foorth his hand and take also of the Tree of life and eate liue for euer The Sacraments of God cannot profite or helpe wicked men The Supper of the Lord is onely auaileable and comfortable vnto them which come worthily to wit with true repentance with sound faith and with vnfained charity touching others it turneth to greater iudgement and condemnation This doth the Apostle teach 1 Corin. 11 27. Whosoeuer shall eate this bread and drinke this cup of the Lord vnworthily shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. Is it not a worke of charity to stay his course that is running into dāger and like to hurt himselfe to hinder our brother from such an action as that he eateth iudgement to himselfe and maketh himselfe guilty of horrible sinne This were a strange kinde of charity to suffer a man to thrust himselfe through with his sword or to cast himselfe downe headlong from a steepe Rocke when we may hinder him from so doing The Apostle Iude giueth vs other direction in his Epistle that we should haue compassion of some making a difference and others saue with feare Iude 22 23. pulling them out of the fire Wherefore there is no wrong done to impenitent persons if they be excommunicated and consequently barred from the Supper but rather a great benefit is bestowed vpon them and their saluation furthered by this means Neither let any say Obiect that the Church vsurpeth vpon the Magistrate and taketh from him his office For if this were a good reason Answer it was neuer lawfull neither euer shall bee for the Church to excommunicate any offenders because it belongeth to the Magistrate as his duty to punish offences whether he be a Christian or no Christian How then is it that wee take away this authority from the Church in the time of a
Christian Magistrate and yeeld it to the Church when a wicked Magistrate is set ouer it forasmuch as there is like reason and office of them both If it bee farther obiected Obiection that there are some sinnes which an euill Magistrate will not meddle withall as blasphemy against Christ heresie and such like as Gallio the Deputy of Achaia accounteth the mystery of religion concerning Christ a question of words and names and professeth hee will be no Iudge of such matters whereas if it were a matter of wrong he would heare thē Acts 18 15. Wherefore vnder a wicked and idolatrous Magistrate excommunication may be vsed not otherwise I answer Answer from the lawfulnesse of it vnder a Magistrate that is no Christian we cannot conclude the vnlawfulnesse of it vnder a Christian Magistrate for this is no good consequent neither is it a sufficient cause against the expresse commandement and institution of Christ Zanch. de redempt li. 1. c. 19 The cause of the institution of excommunication is not the punishment of sinne but the saluation of a sinner the edifying of the Church and the glory of God But the scope of the ciuill Magistrate and his office is to punish sinne and respecteth not either the saluation or damnation of the sinner so that albeit he repent yet he spareth him not but suffereth the law to proceede against him The Church according to the doctrine of Christ smiteth none with the spirituall sword but such as are impenitent and doth not this vnto death but vnto life and therefore receiueth them that repent Againe the manner that they both vse in correction is diuers the Church correcteth by the word the Magistrate by the sword or such like outward punishment To conclude this point The vse of excommunication ought to be perpetuall in the church the vse of excommunication ought to be perpetuall in the Church whether it haue a Christian Magistrate or not whether he doe his duty or do it not For first the doctrine of reprouing our brother betweene vs and him alone as also of taking two or three witnesses ought to remaine in the church and haue continuall vse whether the Magistrate be a Christian or Pagan Therefore that also which followeth If he heare not the Church let him be to thee as an heathen or a Publican whereby the doctrine of excommunication is established ought to be perpetuall If one part of this discipline stand in force at all times then doth the other also forasmuch as Christ maketh no exception betweene the one and the other Againe it is lawfull for the Church whether the Magistrate be a Christian or no Christian to loose them that are bound and to receiue into the Church such as are cast out for their contumacy and continuance in sinne when once they repent Therefore also it is lawfull to cast out and to binde those that are impenitent and as the first is alwaies ratified in heauen so also is the latter For Christ without any difference or distinction gaue both these iurisdictions authorities to the church Whatsoeuer yee shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer yee shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen Mat. 18 18. Lastly Paraeus co●ment in 1 C● ● where the causes of the Law are perpetuall vniuersall there the law must also be acknowledged to be perpetual and vniuersall But the causes of this power of the church are perpetuall vniuersall as first the comandement of Christ Mat. 18 18. 1 Cor. 5 5. Secondly that obstinate sinners being made ashamed may bee brought to repentance Thirdly that no others should be infected by their euill life and corrupt example Fourthly because it is the ordinary office of the Church to iudge them that are within Therefore 1 Cor. 5 12. the Church hath this authority when it hath christian Magistrates as well as when it is without them Thus farre touching the remouing of obiections Vse 1 The doctrine being cleered from all doubts that might distract vs let vs now come to the vses And seeing there ought to be excommunication of scandalous and impenitent offenders it should moue vs to enquire and learne what excommunication is not as it is commonly vsed but as it ought rightly to be practised to the end we may esteeme of this censure and sentence and stand in feare of it Excommunication therfore is a sentence of the Church whereby a member thereof Excommunication what it is conuicted of some greeuous crime and by no means brought to repentance is driuen out of the Church and cut off from the communion and fellowship of the faithfull that thereby he may be driuen to repentance This description consisteth of diuers parts first it is a sentence of the Church secondly it must be executed vpon him that is a member of the Church Thirdly the party delinquent must be conuicted of some greeuous crime or crimes Fourthly it stretcheth to him that cannot bee otherwise brought to repentance Fiftly he is driuen from the visible and outward communion of the Saints Lastly the end or vse of it is to make him ashamed that hath offended These sixe seuerall points touched before in the former description haue euident confirmation out of the word of God which I will breefely prooue and then make vse of euery particular First I say that excommunication is a sentence of the Church ●irst part ●e descrip● Our Sauiour commandeth to tell the Church Math. 18 17. Loe here to whom he sendeth vs. Againe he saith If he heare not the Church c. So the Apostle speaketh 1 Cor. 5 4. When ye are gathered together in the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ From hence wee learne sundry points first such as are themselues out of the Church and no true parts of it haue nothing to doe with it They haue no authority committed vnto them and therefore whatsoeuer they shall do in this behalfe is of no force and no better then a sword in a mad mans hand The keyes of the Kingdome of heauen are committed to the Apostles and to their successors by Christ himselfe that they should open the gates of heauen to the penitent and beleeuers shut the gates of hell on the other side open hell to receiue the impenitent and shut vp heauen against them Secondly we are taught from hence the honour and dignity of the Ministery how great it is to binde and loose offenders to open and shut heauen to remit and reteine sins so that it belongeth not to priuate persons It is accounted and most worthily a myracle to be wondred at that Elias did by his prayer shut vp heauen that it rained not on the earth and againe opened it so that the heauen gaue raine ●es 5 18. and the earth brought foorth her fruite But this power of the Ministery is more maruellous inasmuch as he brought onely a temporall punishment of famine vpon the land but they inflict an euerlasting
reiect Hereby then we see that a man is not to be excommunicated and put out of the Church for euery trifle or for euery sinne but for scandals and offences that are notorious A master will not discharge out of his house a seruant that hath serued him for euery trespas neither doth the Magistrate draw the sword for euery breach of the law So ought it to be with the officers of the Church Again excommunication must not be vsed at the first but as the last remedy A Chirurgeon accounteth lancing searing cutting a desperate cure When he commeth to his patient and findeth swelling and soares in the body he doth not by and by proceede to cutting off an arme or legge he vseth first purging and other gentle meanes to try whether he can do any good that way or not So should it be with vs according to the counsel and commandement of Christ he requireth priuate admonitions exhortations priuate reproofes and rebukes and then two or three with vs Mat. 18 1● that in the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word may be established There is required of vs patience and much lenity waiting whether he will by this meanes be amended Lastly we may gather from hence that whiles sinne is secret and vnknowne no man can bee excommunicated but then onely when it is made publike and manifest vnto all Now then it is made publike when the Church is acquainted with it The fourth point in excommunication The fourth part of the description is this that it stretcheth to him only that cannot otherwise be brought to repētance The cause then why the church is compelled to proceed so farre against some of her children is obstinacy impenitēcy For when there is in such offenders both open wickednes whereby the Church is offended notable stubbornenes wherby the church is contemned so that they can by no meanes of the word publikely of the admonitiō priuatly be reformed excommunication must follow of necessity that hereby if it be possible some good may be wrought in them Hereupon Christ himselfe saith If he neglect to heare the Church let him be vnto thee as an heathen or a Publican Mat. 18 17. Such therfore as haue offended and truly repent of their sins giuing euident testimonies of their vnfained conuersion ought to be spared not censured to be comforted not terrified to bee retained in the church not reiected cast out of the Church Secondly this sheweth that impenitency is a most greeuous sin and next to infidelity the greatest For as faith is the mother of repentance so is an vnbeleeuing heart the cause of impenitency Of all iudgements that God bringeth vpon the sonnes of men none is greater then the want of repentance to haue an heart that cannot repent To fall into whoredome drunkennes are greeuous sins and wound the conscience weaken our comfort and assurance howbeit to continue in them without feeling of them and turning from them is worse then the committing of the sins themselues This made the Apostle say Rom. 2 4● Despisest thou the riches of his goodnes and forbearing and long suffering not knowing that the goodnesse of God leadeth thee to repentance But after thine hardnesse and impenitent heart thou treasurest vp vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and reuelation of the righteous iudgment of God Among all the blessings of God giuen vnto vs wee must make great account of a soft and tender heart which the Prophet calleth an heart of flesh opposed and set against the stony heart Such are soone checked and controlled Lastly wee learne from hence to make a difference betweene sin and sin and betweene sinner and sinner All men fall into sin and if we say we haue no sin we deceiue our selues and make God a lyar Neuerthelesse some are penitent sinners they hate their sins and doe with might and maine striue against them They fight against them as against their enemies Others cherish sinne in themselues and are resolued to continue in them They make no conscience of them and cannot be brought to repent for them Such are not fit to be held members of Christ and Citizens of the kingdome of heauen therefore iustly deserue to be cast out of the church ●fth ●f the de●on The fift point containeth and includeth in it the substance of excommunication namely that it driueth impenitent offenders from the visible and outward communion of the Saints from whence also it hath his name Open sinners and scandalous liuers are not worthy to liue among the faithfull nor to come to publike prayers nor to be partakers of the Sacraments nor to be admitted to the assemblies of the Church forasmuch as they would prophane all they touch as Adam the tree of life and therefore was driuen out of the garden Hence it is that Christ would haue vs account them as heathen and Publicanes The Gentiles for religions sake were enemies to the church and therfore in religion the Iewes were to abstaine from their society fellowship whereas in common affaires of this life they were not so restrained ●t the ●icanes 〈◊〉 The Publicanes were such as had receiued an office from the Romanes to whom the Iewes were subiect to gathet tribute being as it were Collecters of subsidies taskes and tallages impoled vpon the Iewes who thought it vnfit and vniust that they beeing the Lords people should pay tribute and custome to the Gentiles as appeareth in the history of Hezekiah and of Ioachim in the bookes of the Kings and by the question propounded vnto Christ in the Gospel ●h 22 17. Is it lawfull to giue tribute vnto Cesar or not Wherfore they were accounted the enemies of the people and the betraiers of their owne Nation they coupled them with sinners and hated thē vnto the death albeit they professed the same religion and oftentimes met together in the place of Gods worship They abhorred these and could by no meanes brook abide these men who for the most part were extreme couetous and catch-polles ●e 19 8. exacting more then was due for them to receiue or the people to pay howbeit they hated them not as the enemies of their religion but as men of a wicked offensiue life The Apostle likewise decreeing and determining what should bee done with the incestuous person willeth the church to deliuer him to Satan 〈◊〉 5 5 7 13 to purge out the old leauē and to put away from among themselues that wicked person Heereby then we see that these obstinate offenders are to be separated frō those good things which the Lord commandeth communicateth in his church as the word sacraments praiers These are holy things for holy and sanctified persons but they are as filthy swine to whom holy things may not bee cast and as dogs to whom the childrens bread doth not belong Now one of the cheefest ends of the censures of the Church is
who threatned the Apostles streitly and commanded them not to speak henceforth nor teach any more in the Name of Iesus This is the beginning and first degree of the Church-censures The second proceedeth farther and that is suspension which taketh place when the former taketh no place Suspension is a punishment inflicted wherby the offenders are for a time barred from the Lords Supper This is not a separation from all the holy things but from some only which howsoeuer those of the separation that are fledde from vs scoffe at and deride yet it hath good warrant and sure foundation out of the word And as it is an higher censure then admonition so it is lower then excommunication Of this the Apostle seemeth to speake 2 Thess 3 14. If any man obey not our word by this Epistle note that man and haue no company with him that he may be ashamed yet count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother The person excommunicated must be counted as an heathen and a Publicane the party suspended as a brother these two to bee accounted as an heathen yet respected as a brother cannot well agree together This was shaddowed out in the booke of Leuiticus by the ceremonial law chap. 13. where the Priest is commanded to iudge of the plague of leprosie if at the first the leprosie did not appeare manifestly by such signes as are there described he should shut him vp seauen dayes and at the seauenth day he should looke vpon him againe and if as yet it did not appeare plainely and euidently what it was hee was to shut him vp seuen daies more and afterward should pronounce him cleane or vncleane according as he should finde by the tokens and arguments prescribed in the word of GOD euen so in iudging of the spiritual leprosie the like wisedome or rather greater is to bee vsed by the Gouernors of the Church vnder the Gospel If a brother should bee vehemently and publikely suspected to haue committed some notorious crime to the dishonour of God to the wounding of his owne conscience and to the scandall of the Church and thereupon the Church-Gouernors after citation of him should enter into the examining of the matter and at the first finde onely great presumption or some cause of suspition or probable coniecture but no plaine or manifest proofe against him it is meete they take farther time for more certaine triall of the matter and in the meane season suspend him from the vse of the Sacrament but not frō hearing the word vntill it may farther appeare and better be gathered if it be possible whether he be guilty or not guilty and charge the faithfull to haue no fellowship with him that he may bee ashamed The third censure is excommunication which is a separation from al holy things and the priuiledges of the Church casting out of their publike communion and priuate fellowship such members as openly offend by some greeuous crime Gen. 17. ●● Ezr. 10 8 Math. 18 ●● 1 Cor. ● ●● because to their sinne they adde the obstinate contempt of the admonitions giuen vnto them to the end themselues may be ashamed and others warned feared by their example and kept from the like infection We are forbidden to eate and drinke with such if they be knowne to be so and to keepe company with them familiarly as their friends fellowes and companions for this were to be one with him that is as an heathen and Publican and deliuered vp to Satan Seeing then this censure is so full of horrour and terror being vsed according to the word of God it followeth that they which do not reuerence and regard it are desperate sinners of whom we can haue little or no hope so long as they continue without the publike meanes of saluation They are as it were the forlorne hope and neere vnto destruction while they lightly esteeme this sword drawne out against them or do make a sport at it or are not humbled by it or seek not to be absolued from it They that are thus minded stand not in feare of God or the diuell they regard neither heauen nor hell neither saluation nor damnation They are vnder Gods wrath and yet feele it not they dwell in the suburbes of hell and yet know it not Satan hath set vp his throne in their hearts and yet they see it not they are shut out of heauen and yet they mourne not for it they are captiues and bondslaues vnder sinne and yet they haue no desire to be restored into the liberties of the sons of God nor any care to haue their liues reformed They cast vp a sauour in the nostrils of God men which annoyeth the house with the lothsome and filthy stench of it Such as are hotly pursued by enemies and flye to some Citty for succour or sanctuary if the gates bee shut against them they are left as a prey to the mercy of others that are mercilesse God hideth those that be his in his Tabernacle and keepeth them safe as it were vnder his wings but these are deliuered vp to the diuell who gouerneth them and worketh in them yet alas they are not afraid to serue such a master God hath left them and forsaken them who haue left and forsaken him and euen shut vp heauen gates against thē as it were with strong bars which were enough to astonish them if they had any life of Gods Spirit in them notwithstanding all this cannot enter into their dead hearts God giue them grace if they doe belong vnto him to thinke vpon these things and seriously to consider of them in their hearts while the acceptable time is if not he will glorifie his great Name in their confusion as he did in the destruction of Pharaoh Exod. 9.16 And we that heare these things this day must performe these foure things First we must mourne for them as for the losse of a member though themselues do not and pray for them earnestly to him that hath the hearts of all men in his owne hands that he would open their blind eyes albeit they cannot pray for themselues Secondly we must beware and looke to our selues that we come not into that estate Happy is he whom other mens harmes can make watchfull Thirdly we must take heed we be not a meanes to harden them in their sinnes but seeke to reclaime and recouer them While they stand in this desperate estate we must haue no delight in them but shunne them and auoide them What greater meanes can there be to mooue such to repentance then for them to marke how euery one shunneth them and separateth himselfe from them and accounteth them as Turkes and Pagans and no better The incestuous person that was at Corinth being thus censured and deliuered for a time vnto the power of the diuell then which what could be more feareful being I say thus thrust out of the Church and banished from the liberties of it and abandoned of
made light in the Lord that were sometimes darknesse and therefore they must walke as children of the light Secondly for the neglect of this duty the Reason 2 wrath of God falleth vpon the sonnes of men He is the God of order and requireth that all things in the Church be done in order Hence it is that the Apostle saith Col. 3 6. For such things sake the wrath of God commeth vpon the children of disobedience And we haue sundry examples of this in the people of Israel who were diuersly destroied because of their sins 1 Cor. 10 5. With many of them God was not well pleased for they were ouerthrowne in the Wildernesse If then notorious sins bring downe Gods wrath notorious sinners are not to bee winked at to the end that his wrath may bee turned away Reason 3 Thirdly we shewed before that they were as swine and dogges or as vncleane beasts and should not be admitted to the fellowship of Christs sheepe which are cleane lest they defile them and corrupt them through their contagion and tread downe with their feete the residue of their pastures The Apostle saith 1 Cor. 5 6. Doe ye not know that a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe Sinne therefore being infectious the sinner is not to bee tollerated in the assembly of the righteous The vses remaine to be handled First of Vse all it should minister great matter of much greefe and sorrow to euery society of Christian men and women when any of the Congregation grow to be thus prophane and defiled with the contagion of sinne Is it not a great greefe to haue any one member of the body cut off Or can any endure it without paine and anguish So should it be when any that is called a brother is put from the rest of the body of the Church and seuered from the externall communion of Saints This the Apostle teacheth 1 Corinth 5 2. Ye are puffed vp and haue not sorrowed This reprooueth those that regard not this censure whether it bee executed vpon themselues or others neyther are touched with the dishonour that is done to God when hainous and horrible sinnes do breake out of the bosome of the Church The Prophet testifieth Psal 119 136. that his eyes gushed out Riuers of teares because they kept not his law So the Lord speaketh to the man that was cloathed in linnen whom he appointed to preserue such as were his Ezek. 9 4. Goe through the middest of the City through the middest of Ierusalem and set a marke vpon the foreheads of the men that sigh and that cry for all the abhominations that bee done in the middest thereof If any man be present and behold the Chirurgian ready to cut off the arme or legge of another he is moued with a kinde of compassion and commiseration and is touched with greefe for it how much more ought wee to be greeued when a brother is cut off from the communion of the Church which is the mother of vs al The Prophet reioyced whē they said vnto him Let vs go into the house of the Lord so it ought to minister matter of mourning when any haue this greeuous punishment laid vpon them as to be turned out of the Church It ought therefore to be accounted neither matter of ioy nor matter of gain neither should we bee glad to heare that any are so proceeded against Secondly it is a cause of great mercy and Vse 2 of a wonderfull blessing from God whē such as transgresse are resisted and punished So long as sinne is suffered God is offended and his wrath is extended ouer those places and persons He hath a controuersie against those that sin against him Iosh 7 1● ● 8 1 2. The host of Israel could not prosper so long as Achan remained among them the enemies preuailed against them and they turned their backs vnto them but when he was taken away and the glory of God reuenged which he had defaced Israel prospered and had the vpper hand They could not stand before their enemies vntill they had put the accursed thing from among them And how much he hateth sin he declareth sometimes in his owne seruants for Ionah must be cast into the sea or else the Ship and the passengers in it shall euer be in ieopardy therfore he said vnto the Marriners Take me vp and cast me foorth into the sea so shall the sea bee calme vnto you 〈◊〉 12. ● for I know that for my sake this great tempest is vpon you If then he spare not his owne people how should he spare others that are his enemies We haue a notable example of this afterward in this booke when the people of Israel began to commit whoredome with the daughters of Moab bowed down vnto their Gods and so coupled themselues vnto Baal-peor God brought a fearefull iudgment vpon them 〈◊〉 8 9. and there died in that plague foure and twenty thousand But Phinehas the son of Eleazar rose vp from the middest of the Congregation and with his speare he smote the adulterer and the adulteresse so the plague ceased from the children of Israel the anger of God being turned away from them A contrary example is to be seene in Eli 1 Sam. 2. hee winked at the wickednes of his vngodly sons and it brought downe a greeuous iudgment vpon them and vpon himselfe and vpon the people Such churches therfore as are carefull to put from among them notorious offenders are blessed of God Sinne is the cause of all iudgement and the remouing thereof bringeth all blessings with it Thirdly euery Congregation is bound to Vse 3 purge their owne body from such excrements and filthinesse as annoy it We must haue herein true zeale godly courage in the cause of God and his truth We must not stand in feare of the faces of men though they be neuer so great and mighty The censures of the Church must not be like the spiders web which catcheth flyes and gnats wheras the bigger creatures break from it They must be administred indifferently without all respect of persons otherwise it laieth open a gap to destroy religion faith honesty iustice and equity maketh a way to wrong and all impiety This reproueth such as dare not deale with great mē rich men and mighty men they are afraid to touch them lest they purchase their displeasure 〈◊〉 in Phor. 〈◊〉 1. These are like to fowlers that pitch not the net to catch kites or Hawkes that do hurt but for such as do no hurt They suffer great men to do what they list and see thē not they let them alone either through negligence they will not or through feare they dare not controlle them according to the saying of the Poet 〈◊〉 satyr 2. Dat veniam coruis vexat censura columbas They that are censors or chastisers of the manners of others do pardon such as are most wicked and greatest malefactors but doe condemne them that
walke in innocency or at least sinne of infirmity But whatsoeuer the men are when they waxe impenitent the Church must spew them out as an vnprofitable burden that lieth vpon the stomacke It reproueth those also that would not haue the poore complained off or brought before thē whatsoeuer they commit and how much soeuer they offend because they are not able to fill their purses or to pay their fees or to giue them mony These are such Officers as regard their priuate gaine before the churches good and measure all things by their owne profit not by the Churches benefite and seeke to enrich themselues not to reforme the offender and to aduance their owne estate not to promote the glory of God But the Church ought not so much to looke vpon the persons of men whether they be high or low rich or poore as vpon the cause not so much what they are able to pay as what their sinnes deserue following the example of our heauenly Father who rewardeth euery one according to his desarts Lastly Is no Church to tollerate any open Vse 4 offenders among them then they must vse the censure of excommunication as an ordinance of God not an inuention of men and not onely know the nature and vse of it but practise it to the glory of GOD and to the good of others This is it which our Sauiour Christ hath left and commanded to be executed among vs Math. 18 verse 17. If he shall neglect to heare them tell it vnto the Church but if he neglect to heare the Church let him be vnto thee as an heathen man and a Publican This vse hath many particular branches but before wee come vnto them wee are to make it appeare that in this place Christ our Sauiour speaketh of excommunication For the words themselues going before and following after are plaine and euident In the circumstances before it is manifest that hee spake of priuate admonition this heere deliuered is a publike censure that was done before two or three this before many And afterward our Sauiour saith Verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer yee shall binde on earth shall bee bound in heauen and whatsoeuer yee shall loose on earth shall bee loosed in heauen What is it to binde What it is to binde loose but when the Church knoweth a man to be frozen in the dregges of sinne separated from the spirituall communion of Christ and the Church and made the bondslaue of Satan to pronounce and declare him to be an impenitent person and to remaine as a captiue bound in the chaines of Satan and to keepe him out of the Church as a prisoner kept in prison vntill by this sharpe remedy he be healed brought to repentance as it falleth out to the elect who are alwaies bettered by it And what else is it to loose then when the Church seeth by the true fruites of his repentance that hee is freed deliuered and loosed from the hands and bands of Satan by the mighty power of Christs Spirit to pronounce him set at liberty to haue communion fellowship with the members of Christ Let vs now come to the seuerall points to be obserued in this ordinance First obserue what excommunication is that we be not deceiued in the practise of it passing ouer those that ought not to be passed ouer and striking those that ought not to be striken For sometimes they are smitten with the sword that deserue not to be touched with the scabbert and they feele the bluntnes of the backe that deserue the sharpnesse of the edge Excommunication therefore is an action of the Church performed in the Name of Christ whereby a brother greeuously offending and remaining impenitent is separated from the Communion of the faithfull in those things especially that pertaine to the worship of God ayming thereby at the good of the Church the saluation of the excommunicate person and at the glory of God No man ought to deny that this authority is giuē to the church or to make any doubt of it and so call it into question Obiection But peraduenture some man will say that Christ saith not Let him bee to the whole Church an heathen or a Publicane but to thee against whom he hath trespassed and to whom he will not be reconciled whereas excommunication separateth from the whole body Answer I answer this is a friuolous obiection and a poore shift to shake this holy ordinance of God in peeces which is not able once to stirre and remoue out of his place For no man ought to bee esteemed and accounted as an heathen and Publicane of any particular member who is acknowledged by the whole Church to be a brother and communicateth with other of the brethren in all the priuiledges of the Church And as though he hath not offended the Church Z●nchi lib. 1. in quart praeep cap. 19. who beside the offence whereof he was reproued and wherewith being now reuealed and manifest he hath hurt the Church hath beene stubborne and obstinate against the same nay stubborne stiffe-necked obstinate and obdurate against the word of God by which hee was conuinced and exhorted The Church hath not one cause and I another to esteeme of him and to iudge of him but we proceede by one and the same rule Seeing therefore the whole Church hath the same cause which I haue why he ought to be reputed as an heathen and a Publican to wit sinne committed and perpetrated and ioyned with stiffenesse and stubbornnesse with contumely and contempt what reason can bee rendred the cause beeing common why hee should be to me alone as an heathen and Publican and not also to the whole Church Moreouer the ende why hee ought to bee vnto me as an heathen a Publican is the same with the Church in all respects namely that the brother not repenting nor returning should be ashamed and as it were by force compulsion be drawne driuen vnto repentance Therefore as well to the whole Church as vnto me he ought to be as an heathen and a Publican that is an excommunicate person so that vnder the person of one we must vnderstand the whole Church as if Christ had said Let him be vnto thee and to all the brethren and to the whole Church as an heathen and a Publican They thē that restraine these words Let him bee vnto thee to one member of the Church alone are like to the Doctours of Rome who because Christ said to Peter To thee will I giue the keyes of the kingdome of heauen Math. ●●● conclude that they were giuen to Peter alone that thereupon they may builde the foundation of a counterfeit and supposed supremacy whereas he gaue them to all the Apostles alike as if Christ had said I commit the keyes to thee and to the rest of the Apostles and to their successors So when he saith in this place Let him be to thee as an heathen and a Publican he meaneth
both to thee and to the rest of the parts of the Church one being named in stead of all the rest Lastly the text it selfe being rightly weighed and considered will make it plaine and apparant that this is a foolish cauill and a slender euasion to vnderstand the words thus Let him be to thee that is Let him be to thee alone and to no others for Christ hauing said Let him be vnto thee as an heathen man to the end he might strengthen and confirme this that he would ratifie all this in heauen aboue he annexeth immediately after Whatsoeuer yee shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer ye shall loose on earth shall bee loosed in heauen Behold heere the change of number vsed by Christ Tell mee then wherefore when he had said in the singular number Let him bee vnto thee as speaking of one hee spake afterward in the plurall whatsoeuer yee shall loose whatsoeuer ye shall binde as speaking of many What was the cause of this difference but onely to signifie that vnder one person he vnderstood the Church To shut vp this first point wee are not to doubt but that Christ gaue power and authority to the Church to excommunicate wicked persons that are obstinate and impenitent when by priuate admonition they cannot bee wonne as we shall shew more at large afterward Secondly we must consider when any man is to be excommunicated the fit season wherof is when he hath contemned all admonitions and exhortations of priuate men and is waxen proud and selfe-willed setteth himselfe against the Church and not before For then he manifesteth as cleerely as the light that shineth at noone day not onely his obstinacy resolution to goe forward in sinne but his contempt of the word and of the Church and of Christ himselfe the author of the word and the head of the Church so that hee is separated from the communion which all the faithfull seruants of GOD haue with Iesus Christ and the Church whereof wee say in the Articles of our faith I beleeue the holy Catholike Church the Communion of Saints Whereby it appeareth that he who is excommunicated is not properly by the Churches censure separated from God and his people but is declared pronounced to be separate forasmuch as properly it is sin which separateth 〈◊〉 ● 2. Your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your God and your sins haue hid his face from you that he will not heare Excommunication then doth not separate but serueth to shew who are separated euen as the fanne doth not make the chaffe but sheweth it manifestly which before lay hid among the good Corne. Whensoeuer therefore sinners grow obstinate it is high time to draw out this sword of iustice to cut off from the Citty of God such incorrigible persons Thirdly Christ our Sauiour sheweth to whō excommunication belongeth and who are subiect vnto it He is vnder it that is called a brother and being exhorted will not heare being admonished will not obey being reproued will not repent He must be a brother he must be admonished reprooued and conuinced He must be told of his fault or faults priuately and publikely He must be one that hath confessed Christ and called vpon God the Father together with vs albeit hee haue denied him in his deeds It is the Lord that will iudge thē that are without 〈◊〉 5 12. the Church hath nothing to doe with them God will punish those that are in the Church those that are out of the Church forasmuch as all belong to his iurisdiction it is not so with the Church they haue nothing to do with such as are infidels and neuer gaue their names to Christ as Turkes Iewes Pagans and such like For as they that neuer were in the Synagogue and of the Synagogue could not be put out of the Synagogue and as they that were not of the communion cannot be thrust out of the communion so they that were neuer of the Church or in the number of the faithful brethren cannot be cast out of the Church For these only are they that are spots and blots to the church these are they that cause the Name of God to be euill spoken off these are they that lay stūbling blocks before the weake these are they that regard not the first or second table of the Law these are they that tread vnder foot all counsels perswasions and admonitions made out of the word of God these are they that are setled and resolued to continue in euill whatsoeuer the Church say vnto them Fourthly he is to be excommunicated only that hath in this manner offended neither is it to bee suffered or allowed or practised that one should be excommunicated for another except peraduenture he also offend and be intangled in the same sinne or haue giuen consent vnto it The sonne is not to bee excommunicated for the father nor the father for the sonne The rule of the Apostle is to be obserued Gal. 6 5. Euery man shall beare his owne burden It is a common prouerbe among vs Euery vessell shall stand vpon his owne bottome that is euery one shall beare the punishment of his owne sinne This is it which the Prophet Ieremy teacheth chap. 31 30. Euery one shall dye for his owne iniquity euery man that eateth the sowre grape his teeth shall be set on edge To this purpose speaketh Paul Roman 14 12. Euery one of vs shall giue an account to God for himselfe If any obiect Obiect that we are to giue an account to God not onely for our selues but for these also that belong vnto our charge as the father for himselfe and his children as we see in Eli the Shepheard for his sheepe and the watchman for the soules of the people as the Lord saith His blood will I require at thy hands Ezek 33.10 and Hebr. 13 verse 17. They watch for your soules as they that must giue an account Answer I answer they shall indeed giue an account and be punished howbeit it is for their owne sins and no farther Parents Masters Magistrates and Ministers shall not answer for their sinnes that are committed vnto them for the sinnes of their children their seruants their subiects and their hearers but for the sinnes which themselues commit by their negligence because they do not looke vnto them nor admonish them nor reprooue them nor restraine them as it is plainely expressed in the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 33 verse 8 9. If thou doest not speake to warne the wicked from his way that wicked man shall die in his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand Neuerthelesse if thou warne the wicked of his way to turne from it if he do not turne from his way he shall dye in his iniquity but thou hast deliuered thy soule So then he that is impenitent is to be excommunicated euen he onely and not others that are not partakers of his sinne S. Augustine hath
what the Ephah was to wit ten times so much If wee follow the account and estimate that some of the Rabbines make which seemeth to bee the most sound and most certaine we may hold What the Omer is that the Omer maketh iust three pintes of our ale-measure so that the Ephah by this reckoning containeth neere halfe of our bushell not full out foure gallons For thus doth Rabbi Shelomo take the computation D. W●l●et Hex ap●●n Exod. chap. 16. as wee may reade in the learned and laborious commentary set out vpon that booke The Ephah containeth three of the measures called Seah Euery Seah held sixe of the measures called Cabi Euery Cabi held so much as 24. Egges So then the Omer being the tenth part of the Ephah containeth 24. Egges which maketh iust three pintes of ale-measure and as the Omer is three pintes of our ale-measure What the Ephah is so the Epha being ten times so much containeth almost halfe of our bushell Neither may this seeme strange or against that which we reade in the booke of Ruth that she gleaned Ruth 2 17. gathered euery day an Ephah of barley and carried it home to her mother but rather strengtheneth and confirmeth that which hath beene said for as it was not a burden too great for a woman to beare so it was not a measure too great for a woman to gather many in our daies sometimes vsing to do as much who haue not that extraordinary fauour shewed vnto them which she had albeit she were a stranger By all this that hath beene spoken we may easily see and perceiue that this tenth part of the Ephah heere mentioned which was also offered amounted to three pintes of barley floure of our ale-measure I am not ignorant that many enlarge these measures much more and in a manner double the account that I haue followed but this seemeth to be the truer computation neither will we contend with any in a matter of no higher nature let the Reader follow that which carrieth greatest shew of reason And thus much of the questions arising out of the first point Secondly hauing now declared what the husband did wee come to shew in the next place what the Priest did he must bring her neere which is suspected of adultery and set her before the Lord Verse 18. that is before the Altar of burnt offerings standing within the Tabernacle to the end she should consider that shee stood as it were ready to hold vp her hand at the barre of Gods iudgement seat where and when she should not escape if so be she were faulty and guilty of that crime He taketh holy water in an earthen vessell and dust from the floore of the Tabernacle and putteth it into the water so that they were mingled together Then hee vncouereth her head putteth the offering into her hand and holdeth the bitter water in his hand that causeth the curse In this part of the diuision containing the Question 1 actions of the Priest sundry questions are to be considered and dissolued As first whence the Priest had this water heere mentioned From what place did he take it I answer Answer eyther it was the water of separation sprinkled with the ashes of the red heiffer so called because it was applied vnto thē which for their vncleannesse were separated from the Congregation to the end that being washed and cleansed with it they might bee receiued againe into the host for which cause it is also named the water of sinne of which wee reade at large afterward Numb 19. or else it must be water taken out of the brazen lauer Exo. 30 19 21 wherwith the Priests vsed to wash themselues before they ministred in the Tabernacle And indeed many vnderstand it of the former But that was the water vsed to purge and clense as we noted before which hath no vse in this place forasmuch as the woman should after a sort be reputed as guilty and be condemned of the crime whereof she was suspected accused as if it were to be purged by it which were to condemne the person before the fact be proued a thing that cannot bee practised without iniustice This then is the difference betweene those waters that was to purge this is to discouer Forasmuch therefore as it could not be that water it followeth that it was the water which was set in the Tabernacle and taken out of the brazen lauer appointed for the Priests to wash withall Question 2 Secondly it would bee knowne why this water was called holy Was there any purity or holinesse in it Or was it better then any other Or had it any secret force in it to make any man holy I answer Answer it was so called not in regard of the substance of it or of any naturall strength it had in it but in regard of the vse because it was appointed and set apart to an holy vse 2 Kin● 〈…〉 Iohn 5 ● as the water and washing in Iordan clensed Naaman and the poole of Siloam healed the diseased Thus the instruments of the Tabernacle the Arke the Shew-bread the Candlesticke the Lampes and the rest of the vessels vsed in the seruice of God were all of them consecrated and hallowed not in regard of the matter whereof they consisted neither in regard of the forme after which they were fashioned because they had the one from nature the other frō art but in respect of Gods ordinance that had separated them to an holy purpose So we see in the new Testament whē Christ instituted his last Supper and thereby commanded his Church to keepe a perpetuall memory of his death and passion vntill his cōming againe the bread and wine that hee set apart to that purpose are said to be blessed Math. 26 26. 1 Cor. 10 ●6 Paul calleth it the cup of blessing not that they haue any holinesse inherent and included in them or any power to sanctifie all the comers and communicants that doe receiue them for then no man should eate of that bread or drinke of that cup vnworthily nor make himselfe guilty of the body and blood of Christ whereas the Apostle teacheth 1 Cor. 11 29. that whosoeuer eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation not discerning the Lords body And the Church of the Corinthians was generally chastened of the Lord for this abuse contempt as he sheweth in the same place Verse 30. For this cause many are weake and sickely among you and many sleepe It remaineth therefore that these outward elements are holy onely in regard of Gods ordinance and our vse and sanctified to them that come aright prepared vnto them So is it touching the water mentioned in this place it is called indeed holy water howbeit not in regard of any holines that was in it but partly in regard of the vse to which it was applied partly in regard of the person by which it was vsed partly in
in their best thoughts We are debters one to another and do owe a mutuall duty Rom. 1 12 14. Our duties are not arbitrary and indiffrent but necessary to which we are bound in an obligation tying vs to the performance thereof for euer For is it left to our choice and discretion whether we will pay the debts which we owe nor not Hence it is that Paul a worthy and excellent Apostle requested the prayers of the Churches persons to whom he wrote and the people were wont to bee mindfull of their Ministers When Peter was in prison earnest praier was made by the church for his deliuerance Acts 12 5. 15 40. They stand as it were in the forefront of the battell and Satan with all his instruments do most of all fight against them Zach. 3 ver 1. As then Christ giueth in charge that we should pray to the Lord of the haruest that he would send foorth labourers into his haruest Math. 9 38. so we ought to pray for a blessing vpon their labours which are sent forth by the gracious hand of God The want of this maketh their paines to be vnprofitable vnto vs. Ver. 24. The Lord blesse you and keepe you Now we come to the particular parts of this blessing First the protection of the Church is to be prayed for that it would please God to keepe it guard it and defend it The doctrine arising hence is this God is to be praied vnto to be the protector preseruer of his church Doctrine God is to be praied vnto to keepe and defend his Church This must we continually desire of him our mouth must be opened and our heart enlarged This we see to be figured out and represented in the couering of the tabernacle while it wandred in the wildernesse the which was as it were a portable or moueable Temple it had a large and sure couering made of Badgers skinnes sewed together to hide and preserue the same the appurtenances belonging vnto it this did signifie the safety and sure estate of the Church and of euery true member thereof sitting vnder the shadow shelter of the most High whereunto Dauid alludeth Psal 27 5. In time of trouble hee shall hide me in his pauilion in the secret of his Tabernacle shall he hide me he shall set me vpon a rocke To this also hath the Prophet reference Esay 4 5 6. There shall be a Tabernacle for a shadow in the day time from the heat and for a place of refuge and for a couert from storme and from raine This also was shadowed out in the order of the Tabernacle set in the midst of foure most mighty battailions or squadrons surrounded by the Leuites so that none of the heathen or stangers could approch by reason of these puissant and powerfull armies which guarded the same and were as a wall and bulwarke vnto it on euery side This protection was also promised vnto the Israelites in times of greatest danger when they might seeme to lye open to euident perils both of domestical insurrections of forreigne inuasions while they were celebrating their solemne feasts euery male was commanded to appeare before the Lord Exod. 34 24. I will cast out the Nations before thee and enlarge thy borders neyther shall any man desire thy Land when thou shalt goe vp to appeare before the Lord thy God thrice in the yeare We are commanded to pray for the peace of Ierusalem and for the building vp of the walles thereof Psalm 51 18 and 122 6 7. Our daily praier therefore must be that he would do good to Sion in his good pleasure for our brethren and companions sake we must say Peace be within thy walles prosperity within thy Pallaces The reasons warranting and mouing vs to pray that the Church may be secured are first Reason 2 because as the state of the Church standeth so it goeth commonly with the common-wealth The Church is the life of the commōwealth by which it liueth and as the soule by which it breatheth For as the soule quickneth the naturall body so doth the Church giue motion and strength to the politike body If the Church be well seene vnto it cannot goe amisse with the ciuill State Hence it is that the Lord willed the Iewes to seeke the peace of the City whither he had caused thē to be carried away captiues and to pray to the Lord for it for in the peace thereof shall yee haue peace Ier. 29 7. Secondly howsoeuer the state of the church standeth so our owne particular estate remaineth whether it haue cause to reioyce or to be sorry euen the same cause haue we both of the one and of the other For how can the childe chuse but prosper while the mother is in health and prosperity Or how can it but be weake and sickly by the weaknesse sicknesse of the mother The Church is the mother of vs all we sucke both her brests as it were the sincere milke of the old and new Testament We know that the man which goeth in a shippe vpon the sea his desire and praier is for the safety of the whole Ship no lesse thē for his owne particular because he knoweth his owne estate dependeth vpon the estate of the whole Ship and therefore he hath good reason to pray for it And what is the Church of God but as it were a Shippe floting vp and downe in the sea of this world tossed too and fro with the rough and raging windes of the wicked and therefore we ought to pray earnestly for it ● 11. lest as Iacob said of Esau the mother and the childe be destroyed together Thirdly it is required of vs to haue a fellow feeling of the wants and necessities of our brethren as well as of our owne as Rom. 12 10 15. Bee kindly affectionated one to another with brotherly loue reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe because we are all members one of another If one member of the naturall body suffer all the rest suffer with it so the troubles of the Church should goe as neere vnto vs as our owne priuate griefes and troubles Lastly the Church hath sundry enemies which plot the death and destruction thereof and seeke to ruine and subuert them that belong vnto it in body and soule The cheefest and greatest that setteth the rest on worke is Satan ●4 8 a man-slayer from the beginning a roaring lyon seeking whom he may deuoure The instruments that he imployeth like the wheele of a clocke that giueth motion to the rest are the flesh the world false teachers The flesh is full of darknes doubting the seed of al euil The world is an hook ready to catch vs baited partly with pleasures and profits with honors and promotions and partly with threatnings ● terrors and persecutions of enemies False teachers come disguised in sheepes clothing and armed with errors heresies which may be
30 1 Chro. ● Mal. 27. 1 King 21 5 7. Num. 15.34.35 both in his word and by his Ministers The Spirit speaketh euidently in the Scriptures by it he resolueth the Church no lesse then by an oracle from heauen besides for our farther direction he giueth the knowledge of his word to the Ministers who draw al their light from the word and doe thereby aske counsell as at the mouth of God The reasons are very euident First the Scriptures Reason 1 are all sufficient to improue and correct 2 Tim. 3.16 Rom 15 4. to teach and to instruct to giue patience and comfort Ioh 20 31. 2 Tim. 3.15 that we may beleeue haue eternall life and to make vs wise vnto saluation Secondly such as will not beleeue them and reply vpon them will beleeue nothing else no although one come from the dead Luke 16 31 It is therefore the foundation of faith to resort to these meanes to be resolued as to the oracle and ordinance of God Psal 85.8 Obserue from hence that all questions in Vse 1 Religion must be decided and determined by the Scriptures All doctrines are to be prooued by them and al errors to be conuinced by them The Scripture is the supreme iudge of all councels and controuersies The supre●● Iudge of a●● controuer●● it sendeth not the Church to the generall consent of the Pastours of the Church nor turneth them ouer to expect a general councel nor posteth them ouer to Rome as the Gentiles resorted to Delphos to consult with the Oracle of Apollo It is in vaine to neglect the straight direct way to seeke out by-pathes and vncertaine passages It neuer taught the Pope and his Cardinals to be the highest court and supreme Iudges of Scripture who oftentimes are ignorant of Scripture It cannot be interpreted but by the same Spirit by which it was written It is required of the supreme Iudge and interpreter of Scripture that he cannot erre that no appeale be made from him that he be no way partiall and that he haue power to compell the parties dissenting to yeeld obedience These properties agree not to the Bishop of Rome he is not free from error for many of thē haue falne into heresy haue taught contrary things one to the other haue made many foolish interpretations he is a meere man and can compell no mans wil to yeeld vnto him he is partiall in his own cause and therfore to appeale to him is to aske ones fellow if he be a theefe Secondly the Scripture containeth all Vse things necessary to saluation to withstand tentations Matth. 4. and to build vs vp in all trueth So that it is simply and absolutely necessary The doctrine of saluation cannot be learned but from it The knowledge of the law is necessary Rom. 7.7 the knowledge of the Gospel is necessary Tit. 2.11.12 Neither let any obiect that the Church wanted Scripture along time euen from the creation to the dayes of Moses for the Question is not what was necessary in the beginning but what is now necessary The mothers milke is sufficient for the infant while it is a childe but it is not sufficient afterward when once it is growne vp Neither is it true which the Iesuite obiecteth that Christ commanded not any thing to be written but is ouerthrowne by many testimonies of Scripture 2. Pet. 1.21.2 Tim. 3.16 Reuel 1.11 and 14.13 Vse 3 Thirdly it teacheth that the Ministers ought to be ready to answere the questions and doubts that trouble the people any way Therefore they must be faithfull in their places and skilfull in the Scriptures Hag. 2.12.13 they must not be blind guides dumb dogs Ezek. 34.4 their lippes must preserue knowledge and the people seeke the Law at their mouthes Againe it is required of them to be resident vpon their flocks attending on them as watchmen watch the citie alwayes in danger of enemies to discouer the approach of them and as shepheards attending their flock for feare of deuouring wolues 〈◊〉 56 9 10. The people are as a prey in the iawes of al hereticks where teachers are not attending and residing The Israelites fell into horrible idolatry when Moses was absent from them Exod. 32.1 But how shall the Ministers be consulted withall being absent from the people Vse 4 Lastly it serueth for instruction for the people They are not to consult with witches and wizards but to resort to the Ministers of God Deut. 18.15 and to the word to the law and to the testimonie Esay 8.19.20 Princes therfore must not contemne them nor respect thē as the lowest and basest of the people And all people high and low rich and poore must search the Scriptures who thinke to haue eternall life in them Ioh. 5.39 They are greatly commended that were diligent in the reading of them Acts 8.30 and 18.11 Dauid did exercise himselfe in them day and night Psal 1.2 None are to be forbidden the reading of them forasmuch as the Gospel is the power of God to saluation to all that beleeue Rom. 1.16 They are greatly reprooued and rebuked ●hat were ignorant in them Mar. 12.24 that were slow of heart to beleeue them Luk. 24.25 Euery man therefore must seeke to be assured perswaded in his heart of that which he doth 〈◊〉 14.5 and seeke to warrant his owne work All things must be done in faith Hebr. 4.2 Mar. 11.24 Iam. 1.5 without which no man can please God This reprooueth the ignorance that is in the greatest sort who thinke it enough to doe as others doe to heare the word because others do so to receiue the Lords Supper because they see their neighbours doe so and to come to Church because the most do so These thinke it enough to be present at diuine duties albeit they be indeed farre from doing their duties There are many that come and heare prayers Many do hear prayers which neuer pray who do neuer offer vp any prayers as if there were some hidden vertue in the place or in the praier albeit they neuer lift vp their hearts to God These haue not neither can haue any comfort in that which they doe They are without faith because they are without knowledge They haue no assurance whether they please God or not but doe all things with doubtfull hearts and wauering mindes and therein condemne themselues and sin against God Rom. 14 23. Iam. 1.6 being like a waue of the Sea tossed with the winde Verse 9.10 And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Speake vnto the children c. The determination of the question is heere set downe and vpon occasion thereof perpetuall lawes established for the direction of the Church The vncleane are put off to the 14. day of the second moneth the cleane must keepe the Lords Passeouer at the season appointed There are two causes alledged wherfore a man may for a time be excused for not comming to the Passeouer and is allowed as vnblameable
Tabernacle was reared vp c. The second part of the chap. followeth to wit the remouing from Sinai when once the Tabernacle was erected I will from hence obserue before wee passe farther Doctrine one point from the building and erecting of the Tabernacle a place for the congregation to meet together for the worship of God that christians also in the time of the gospel should haue churches and Temples builded and fit places appointed to meet together for Gods seruice Christians should haue some fit place for Gods seruice True it is in time of persecution when free liberty of publike meetings is restrained it sufficeth to meet in priuate houses if those houses may be called priuate which are separated for such a purpose yet euen they ought to be decent and fitted to so holy a work and sanctified to so holy an end God commanded Moses to set vp a Tabernacle for the assembling together of the congregation Exod. 25 Dauid prepared to builde an house to God would giue no sleepe to his eies nor slumber to his eielids vntil he had found out a place for the Lord an habitation for the mighty God of Iacob Ps 132 4 5. Salomon afterward built him an house which was called the house of prayer because chiefly it serued for that purpose Acts 7 47. Immediately after the captiuity when Salomons Temple was ruinated it was the principall care of the Iewes to build it again and though they were hindred a long time in the work Ioh. 2. yet being reproued for their negligence and stirred vp to diligence by the Prophets they finished the worke The Apostle speaking of the abuses among the Corinthians touching the Lords Supper sheweth that they came together into one place 2 Cor. 11 20. and therefore it is needfull to haue fit places by what name soeuer they be called wherin the church is to assemble Psal 74 8. Luk. 4 16. And so much the rather because the Lord hath Reason 1 promised his presence in them and to dwell in them by his grace Spirit Exod. 25.8 Let them make mee a Sanctuary that I may dwell among them for wheresoeuer two or three are gathered together in his name there will he bee in the middest of them Math. 18. Secondly prayers that are made ioyntly together by the whole congregation are alwaies more effectuall they send vp a stronger cry and therfore they are sooner heard The best melody is of more voices then one and moe stickes laide vpon the fire make the heate the greater We ought therefore to haue fit places for this purpose that we may as it were with one mind with one mouth glorify God Vse 1 Is this the end for which Churches are instituted and appointed Then it reprooueth such as inuert the right vses of them to wit that in them we should come together to hear the word read and preached vnto vs to make prayers and supplications to receiue the Sacraments to sing Psalmes to offer vp praise and thanksgiuing to almighty God of which the Romanists haue set vp false ends and established their owne deuices They will haue them erected for the externall sacrifice of the Masse for their Altars and Images such like trumpery for which they alledge the saying of the Apostle Heb. 13 10. but the Altar there spoken of is Christ himselfe on which euerie faithful man must offer The true ends of them we noted before for the reading of the Scriptures Actes 15 21. for the preaching of the word Luk. 4. for prayer and for the receiuing of the Sacramēts Acts 20 7. Again they teach that churches are of themselues more holye ground then other places and in regard of the holy nature thereof more auaileable to pray there thē any where els The place is to be accounted holy for the present while the exercises of religion continue but the congregation once dissolued there is no inherent holinesse remaining in it more then in any other place Churches therefore wee acknowledge to bee holy places nor in regard of the building and the beauty of them not in regard of the ground or seate of them Concil Gangr but of the end holy vse for which they serue and for the holy assemblies that there are made Here then is the difference between them vs they make churches to be holy in respect of the place we in respect of the people The people make the place holy not the place the people Wee are not therefore to pray to God with any opinion of holinesse in one place rather then in another Ioh 4 21. Euery place hath Gods presence and euery where wee may lift vp pure hands and therfore is alike sanctified for praier in it selfe considered Furthermore whereas su●● places should be dedicated and consecrated to the honor of God they wil haue thē also builded to the name and honour of the Saints and make them to be Patrons and protectors of them there they pray vnto them as to their mediators and intercessors But no diuine worship is to be giuen vnto them This is no better then flat idolatry to pray to those that cannot helpe vs. But to let these go let vs see how these religious places are otherwise prophaned Do we come to them as to Gods house Do we vse there that reuerence which is fit in his presence and dwelling place So did the people while Zachariah was burning incense the multitude were without in praier But we commonly come thither rather to talk trifle then to pray and hear In former times mens houses were their churches but now the churches are turned into their houses Chrysost 〈◊〉 36. in 1 〈◊〉 beeing ordinarily prophaned with babling laughing and sleeping and what not Many come hither for no other cause but to buy and bargaine and to meet with others for their earthly profits and worldly busines Where haue we commonly more brauling and brabling then at the church will not the least peny or occasion make vs iar and almost set vs together by the eares Wee should come hither to please God but when we are come we displease him and forget God and our selues and the word and the place and all There is an Article and it is a good one to enquire of Church-abuses whether there be any plaies and enterludes any feasts and bankets kept in our churches any suppers or churchales drinkings and tiplings musters prophane vsages in churches chappels or churchyards and whether the parishioners behaue themselues rudely and disorderly in time of diuine Seruice or Sermon as by walking talking ringing or any noise whereby the Minister or preacher is hindred and disturbed These abuses are committed and yet continue in many places Christ wold not suffer a vessell to be carried through the temple He went into the Temple and cast out all thē that bought and sold in the Temple Marke 1 and ouerthrew the tables of the mony-changers Math 21 and the
against him howbeit this is greater wherein not his enemies reproached him and those that hated him did not magnifie themselues against him but his deerest friends and acquaintance as befell also to Dauid Psal 55 12. The church maketh this complaint Cant. 5 7. That the watchmen that should haue bene both her guide and her gard smote her and wounded her the keepers of the wals took away her veile from her And Christ fore-telleth that a mans enemies shall be they of his owne house Marke 6 4. This befell vnto Iob a man full of sorrowes his owne wife that lay in his bosome and his friends that were as his owne soule were the cheefe causes of his greatest anguish Abel found no worse friend then his owne brother that came with him to the place of Gods seruice Gen. 4 8. So Ismael persecuted Isaac Ismael borne after the flesh him that was borne after the Spirit Ge. 21 9. Gal. 4 29. Ioseph receiued hard measure of his brethren who was by them sold for a bondslaue Ps 105 17. Moses was fain to fly out of Egypt because a Iew one of his owne brethren diuulged his killing of the Egyptian The same befel Zachariah the son of Iehoiada the priest who had saued the kings life and set the crowne vpon his head yet he remembred not the kindnesse of the father but slew his son the father had in a maner giuen him life but he took away life from his son 2 Chro. 24 21. Who vexed the church and trobled the Apostles more then false brethren 2 Cor. 11 26. The cause of this is the enmity betweene Christ and the serpent and the seed of them both which shewed it selfe immediately after the fall in Cain who was of that euil one slew his brother 1 Ioh. 3 12. The vses which wee must make heereof are Vse 1 First to marke the truth of that which Christ teacheth Math. 10 34 35 36. that hee came not to send peace on earth but rather a sword and to set variance betweene man and man And in another place I am come to send fire on the earth and what will I if it bee alreadi● kindled Luke 12 49. Hee speaketh not of the effect but of the euent not what the Gospell bringeth forth properly but what it worketh accidentally not what it procureth in the faithful but what it produceth in the vnfaithfull Secondly God will haue al his to be wel tried Vse 2 which are in the faith euen for their owne good that we may know what we can suffer for the truths sake when we haue sealed it vp by our patience in all tribulations Thirdly hence ariseth comfort in our sufferings For do we suffer affliction at their hands of whom we hoped for better dealing maruell not at it neither thinke it strange but let vs comfort our selues with the examples of Gods children who haue had the same measure measured out vnto them before vs nay let vs lay before vs the example of Christ himselfe who had experience of it not only in his owne countrymen the Iewes but in Iudas one of his owne disciples of whom the Prophets prophesied He that dippeth his hand with me in the dish the same shall betray me Psal 41 9. Matth. 26 23. Lastly from hence we learne in all discomforts Vse 4 to flie vnto God after the example of Dauid who gaue himselfe continually to prayer when hee was vexed by such vnexpected enemies Psal 55 16. when he had complained that his frend and companion rose vp against him hee addeth As for me I will call vpon God and the Lord shall saue me So it ought to be with vs that wee may finde comfort in God when we can find none among men Againe Miriam and Aaron were of great reputation among the people and sanctified in a great measure Aaron was the Lords high Priest consecrated and annointed with holie oile Miriam was a prophetesse and one that sung the praises of God after their deliuerāce from Pharaoh Exod. 15. yet loe how both of them faile in duty and sin against God oppose themselues against his seruant Moses whereby we learn that none are so sanctified but they faile many wayes None so sanctified but manie wayes they faile Let no man therefore dreame of perfection in this life Rom. 7 14 18 19 20 23. Moreouer from this example obserue that contentions are oftentimes in the church euen between the members of the same body Doctrine Contentions and strife are often in the Church True it is it were to be desired that ther were perfect loue and vnity peace and concord in the church but this is rather to be looked for then to be found There arose strife betweene Abraham and Lot Gen. 13 8. betweene Paul and Barnabas Acts. 11 2. 15 39. betweene Peter and Paul Gal. 2 11. So in the Church of the Corinthians though they were sanctified in Christ Iesus and called to be Saints yet there were contentions among them 1 Cor. Reason 1 1 11. And no maruell for first of all we know in part and we prophesie in part wee know somewhat but we are ignorant of much more Reason 2 then we know 1 Cor. 13 9. Secondly there must be euen heresies that they which are approued Reason 3 may be knowne 1 Cor. 11 19. Thirdly Satans malice is exceeding great he soweth the seeds of discord among the godly for his hatred is exceeding great against the church and he desireth nothing more then the ruine thereof Reuel 1.2 4. Lastly selfe-loue remaineth in the best men which is a remnant of the flesh this spurreth vs forward to spurne against one another and while we challenge too much to our selues we ascribe too little vnto others 1 Cor. 13 5. This offereth to vs this truth that vnitie is Vse 1 no note of the true church forasmuch as it is somtimes out of the church when as contention is in it The false Prophets were manie that conspired against Micaiah Eliah and Ieremy Christ was condemned by a common voice of the people and consent of the Pharisies which cried out Away with him Crucifie him crucifie him Luk. 23.18.21 Thus then the mouths of the papists are stopped which doe please themselues in an idle conceit of a generall agreement of many people and Nations which is oftentimes a maintenance of error vnwholesom doctrine when it is ioyned with it The vnity of one faith and of the same doctrine beleeued and confessed wee acknowledge to be a true marke of the true Church Where there is the preaching of this faith the doctrine of Christ and the sealing vp of the same with the true administration of the Sacraments there is a true church of God The vnity which is without that doctrine which is according to godlinesse is as the crie of the whole city in maintenance of their idolatrie Great is Diana of the Ephesians Act. 19 28. Or like to the house which the strong man
against no other then Moses himselfe a chiefe a most excellent seruant of God they strike at the head and not at the feet touch him whom God had lifted vp aboue the rest to gouerne his people ●●●●rine The Doctrine arising from hence is this that proud and ambitious men do shew themselues continualy most enuious and outragious against the most excellent and most painful seruants of God So did Haman against Mordecai the true seruant of God and faithfull subiect of the King of whom it is said He had spoken good for the king Esth 7 ● So did the high Priestes shew their malice against Christ and afterward against his Apostles Diotrephes against Iohn and the most painful Pastors That Antichrist of Rome hath alwaies beene most bitter against the chiefe teachers of the gospel and the best preachers of the reformed churches For first they stand most of all in their way Reason 1 and are a great eye-sore vnto them resisting their tyranny and pride and discouering to the world their Antichristian vsurpation This is the true cause that they haue raged against them both aliue and dead Reuel 11 10. The two witnesses are slaine and they reioyced in their fall because they were vexed by them This maketh the proud byshop of Rome euen vnder his owne nose better to endure the blasphemous Iewes or any other professed enemies of Christ and of the christian religion then such as beleeue in Christ because the other neuer trouble his kingdome but these are ready to cal him to an account and to answer for the destruction of the soules of men Secondly they are afraide lest if these continue and prosper their kingdome fall This feare of the high priests was it that mooued them against Christ and his Apostles Ioh 11 48 Thirdly cankered and corrupt enuy cannot abide them that do any good in the church or common-wealth much lesse them that do most good and labour more then others but it seeketh the ruine of such For their diligēce maketh the negligence of those to appear the more Saul enuied Dauid to the death especially for the gifts graces and blessings of God bestowed vpon him Vse 1 See from hence this truth that the best seruants of God oftentimes find the worst entertainment in the world and that at the hands of the highest and chiefest Thus it fell out with Moses who was driuen by Pharaoh to forsake Egypt 〈◊〉 4 1 2. Heb. 11 37.38 So Herod Pilate the high priests rulers of the people set themselues against Christ and his Apostles Wherfore when we see this maruel not at it neither be discoraged by it when we finde and feele the like measure let vs comfort our selues in the examples of the faithfull that haue gone before vs. We must not looke to be better then they nor dreame of a condition higher then theirs it is enough for vs to be made like vnto them The more our graces increase the more will the enuy of the malicious increase Vse 2 Secondly this sheweth the vnthankfulnesse of the world who hate them most and loue them least that do them most good The vngodly reape many benefits by the godly yet do they recompence them euill for good The creatures grone vnder the burden which they sustaine yeelding helpe and succor to the vngodly By meanes of Paul all that were in the ship had their liues granted vnto them yet afterward they would haue killed him Acts 27 42. Whatsoeuer the wicked enioy it is for the godlies sake They bring a blessing vpon the house yea vpon the land where they liue The faith of Noah preserued his whole family though all were not faithfull that were in it Gen. 7 1. The faith of Rahab beleeuing in God and shewing the soundnesse of it by a liuely fruite in receiuing the spies saued aliue her father and mother her brethren and sisters all that they had But doth the world respect them any whit the more or loue them one iot the better No doubtlesse they will not acknowledge themselues any way beholden vnto them or that they fare the better for them Whereas indeede the godly are their good benefactors and patrons whatsoeuer they esteeme of them The poorest man that feareth God doth after a sort giue life liuing to the vngodly The godly are the wicked mans good Benefactors They haue cause to thanke them for that which they haue and for that consideration to make much of thē The heauens could not continue as they do but wold fall vpon the heads of these prophane wretches if once the number of the elect were accomplished yet we see how badly and basely they are accounted of they hate them to the death and procure what hurt they can vnto them Lastly acknowledge heerein the prouidence of God that the giftes of his children Vse 3 should not exalt them for all are prone vnto vainglory euen they that are sanctified in the greatest measure are spotted with pride and ambition emulation and desire of superiority 2 Cor. 12 7. Paul saith of himselfe Least I shold be exalted aboue measure through the abundance of the reuelations there was giuen to mee a thorn in the flesh the messenger Satan to buffet me least I should be exalted aboue measure We see he repeateth this twice and beginneth endeth the sentence with the same thing that he had this tentation least he should bee exalted aboue measure To teach vs that this fell out by Gods speciall prouidence and dispensation Hereby doth God work out their great good turneth the enuy of enemies to the furtherance of his owne and his childrens glorie whereby much euill is suppressed which otherwise is ready to breake out And the Lord heard it This followed their sin immediately as a sergeant that doggeth the poore debter at the heels to attach him arrest him God heard the sin that they committed their words came vp to his eares and hee is determined not to keepe silence We learne hereby that God knoweth heareth and vnderstandeth all the wayes of men Doctrine God vnderstandeth all the wayes of men nothing can be hid from his sight nothing can escape his hearing hee discerneth and descrieth all the doings of men whatsoeuer they bee God knew what Adam had done so soone as hee had falne and eaten of the forbidden fruite and called vnto him Adam Where art thou Gen. 3.9 He saw all the wickednesse of man vpon the earth and knew that euery imagination of the thoughts of his heart was onely euill continually Gen. 6 5. He was not ignorant that the Sodomites were exceeding sinners against the Lord Gen. 18 20. he heard the cry of their sins which sounded shrilly in his eares and pierced the clouds and mounted vp to heauen so Prou. 15 3 11. Reason 1 He made the eyes the heart the eares Psal 94 9 10 11. yea hee hath fierie eyes Dan. 10 6. Many things hinder our eiesight the
Luke 13.6 7 8 9. 2 Chro. 36.15 We haue all experience of this point Reason 1 The reasons first he knoweth our weakenesse our corruption and inclination to euill he knoweth whereof we are made he remembreth that we are but dust Esay 57.16 Psalm 103.14 yea as a wind that passeth away and commeth not againe Psal 78.38.39 no better then vanity yea lighter altogether then vanity Psal 62.9 Secondly his nature is to be mercifull full of compassion 2 Chron. 36.15 Thirdly the sinnes of the wicked are not yet full they haue not yet filled vp the measure of them Gen. 15.16 Lastly he is not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance and therefore he is not slacke concerning his promise but is long suffering to vs ward 2. Pet. 3.9 Obiection Before wee come to the vses of this doctrine we must remoue a few obiections that seeme to make against this point And first how can God bee said to be very patient and to suffer long seeing his iudgements are often said to come suddenly speedily as a whirlewind and a tempest and when they shall say peace and safety his comming shall be as the comming of a theefe in the night or as trauell vpon a woman with child 1 Thess 5.2.3 Answer I answer to be long before he come and to be swift when once he commeth are not opposite or contrary the one to the other He waiteth a long time but when the dayes of his patience are expired then suddenly destruction commeth He giueth warning after warning and will doe nothing but hee reuealeth the same to his seruants the Prophets Amos 3.7 Dan. 9.5.6 but when his patience is abused and contemned then he commeth swiftly and stayeth not The Apostle Peter speaking of the second comming of Christ to iudgment ioyneth both these together and sheweth how and wherefore he is both long in comming and yet swift in comming hee forbeareth because he is patient and hee commeth suddenly in his glory because he is iust 2 Pet. 3.9 10. first hee saith that God is long suffering not willing that any should perish then he addeth the day of the Lord will come as a theefe in the night Thus we see how he suffereth patiently and yet withall how he cometh suddenly Secondly Obiect the question may be asked whether the Ministers should forbeare or abstaine from threatning and denouncing of Gods iudgements against the vngodly seeing God is gentle and mercifull slow to anger and of great kindnesse whereby they shall terrifie men without cause and make themselues lyars I answer Answer it is true that Ionah the Prophet was discouraged vpon this ground and consideration from threatning destruction against Nineueh Though he were sent against the citie with heauy tidings yet he consulted with flesh and blood fled to Tarshish from the presence of the Lord Ion. 1.3 because hee knew that God was a gracious God and mercifull repenting him of the euil chap. 4.2 But this was his infirmity and therefore he is reprooued ver 10.11 Wherefore it belongeth to all faithfull Ministers of God as a part of their function howsoeuer the iudgements of God be differred and their Sermons derided to open their mouthes boldly and to reprooue sinne earnestly that they may thereby deliuer their owne soules and saue the people that heare them 2 Tim. 4.2 Thirdly it may be asked Obiect whether it be lawfull for the godly to craue of God to be patient and long-suffering to beare with the vngodly and vessels of wrath especially considering the praier of Ieremy chap. 15.15 Lord remember me and visite mee and reuenge mee of my persecuters c. The prayer of Moses and of Ieremy seeme to be contrary Answer Answer The prayer of Ieremy is speciall and extraordinary and containeth no generall rule and direction for the Church He spake this as a Prophet not as a priuate man for hee foretold to his persecuters the vengeance and wrath of God certainely to fall vpon them the generall rule belonging vnto all is set downe by Christ Matth. 5 44. To pray for our enemies and them that hate vs. Lastly it may be demaunded Obiect whether the publishing and preaching of the doctrine of Gods patience and forbearing be not dangerous and hurtfull as seeming to tend to leade men into sinne and minister occasion of hardening the heart and delaying of repentance I answer ●ct from Gods delaying of his iudgements wee may not conclude the delaying of our repentance True it is the vngodly abuse this doctrine to licentiousnesse Rom. 2.4.5 as they do also other doctrines and the Scriptures themselues to their owne perdition the prouidence of God to idlenesse the predestination of God to wickednesse the mercy of God to prophanenesse the grace of God to wantonnesse iustification by faith to carelesnesse of good workes yea Christ himselfe to be a stumbling blocke and a stone of offence Notwithstanding we must vse the doctrine of Gods patience to our comfort and to bring vs thereby to repentance Vse 1 Now we come to the vses of this doctrine which are many seruing for instruction reprehension consolation and exhortation First of all it serueth for our knowledge and instruction and teacheth vs what a good God wee serue and worship such a one as willeth not and wisheth not the death of a sinner such a one as is gentle and gracious mercifull and pitifull Psal 145.8 9. Ezek. 18.23 and 33.11 Againe this teacheth vs what is the cause that God spareth so long both his and the Churches enemies to wit because he is patient Thus doth the Prophet tell the Israelites the cause why the Lord had spared the Assyrians so long Nah. 1.3 We see how prophane many are blasphemers of Gods Name prophaners of his Sabboth despisers of the word haters of good men iniquity aboundeth euery where We might wonder that such liue vpon the face of the earth and wherefore they are spared but that he is a God of patience and long suffring or they could not continue Is not the earth filled with cruelty oppression as it was with the old world that was destroyed with an vniuersall Flood Doth not pride fulnesse of bread aboundance of idlenesse and contempt of the poore abound as in Sodome and Gomorrha which was destroyed with fire and brimstone from heauen Ezek. 16.49 So Gen. 19.24 How then could our cities and houses stand and continue if GOD were not very patient Vse 2 Secondly it serueth for reprehension For it conuinceth those that scoffe at his threatenings because God a long time descrieth his iudgements against the vngodly Hence it is that they iudge them perswade themselues of them to be no better then Scar-crowes and therefore to bee vaine and not to bee feared Such persons doth the Apostle Peter describe that mocke at the second comming of Christ which shal come as a snare vpon all them that dwell vpon the face of the whole earth Luke 21.35 2
vpon you seeing all the Congregation is holy euery one of them and the Lord is among them Wherefore then lift ye vp your selues aboue c. IN this chap. we haue two other murmurings set down the latter arising out of the former as one sticke on fire kindleth another The former consisteth of a few carried away with enuy and emulation against Moses and Aaron the originall whereof arose from Korah of the Tribe of Leui The cause of Korahs Conspiracy who first blew the bellowes and tooke it greeuously that the Priestly dignitie was translated to Aaron and challenged Moses of partiality as if hee had preferred his owne Kindred and followed his priuate affection rather then the direction of God This seditious Korah associateth vnto himselfe Dathan Abiram and On of the Tribe of Reuben whom he knew to be ill affected towards Moses because hee being the eldest sonne of Iacob had by right of his birth-right the Principality and gouernement of the whole people belonging vnto him and therefore they thought themselues as worthy to haue the Soueraignty in their hands as Moses was to haue it in his hands All these ioyning together made a schisme or rent amongest the people and assemble two hundred and fifty others all Princes of the assembly which seeme to stand for the good of the whole Congregation as also all Rebelles haue euer had some pretence and colour for they plead that all the Lords people are holy that God is present among them and therefore they should no longer vsurpe the sole gouernment of the whole hoste It is vsuall in all ages of the Church to haue schismes and rents to arise in it and for men to separate themselues from the Church because forsooth it is not well gouerned as it ought to be Now albeit this open insurrection were a flat rebellion against the expresse ordinance of God yet they set many goodly shewes vpon their doings helping a bad cause with a beautifull colour lest they should seeme to be mad without reason alledging that all the Lords people are holy and the Lord is among them ●octrine We learne heereby that whatsoeuer corruptions breake out of men and whatsoeuer euils they doe ●hatsoeuer 〈◊〉 wicked ●en doe they some co●er vpon it and howsoeuer they decline from God from his word and from his ordinances yet they will labour to excuse it to defend it to colour it that it should not seeme as it is When euill men haue committed euill they are ready to iustifie their euils that they may seeme good We see this in Saul 1 Sa. 13.11.12 and 15.15 so Ioh. 12.5 6. Iudas pretended the poore and his great care of them albeit he cared not for them but for himselfe and chap. 11.48 So Caiaphas pretendeth the safety of the people to wit if Christ were not put to death the Romanes would come with a mighty army and ouerrunne them but the taking of him away and the putting of him to death was indeede the true cause why the Romanes came and destroyed the Temple the Citie and the people This we see sometimes also in those that are not the worst men The fact of Simeon and Leui against the Schechemites was no better then horrible murther committed against the Law of God and of nature and against the league and couenant that had passed between them which ought to be held inuiolable euen among infidels yet somewhat they pretend to couer it Gen. 34.31 should he deale with our sister as with an harlot So the Israelites touching their Idolatry Exod. 32.1 and Aaron verse 23. and our first parents Gen. 3. and in a maner all wicked men do the like that are vnregenerate without repentance and sanctification The reasons Reason 1 For men are affected to their actions as they are to themselues Though they be corrupt abominable yet they would not bee thought and iudged to be so so it is with their actions that proceed from them though they bee wicked and vniust yet they would haue them accounted iust and therefore they seeke excuses for themselues ●● 7. as Adam did fig leaues to Reason 2 couer his shame and his sinne Secondly if they should pretend nothing al would be ready to condemne them and to passe sentence vpon them therefore to blinde the eyes of others they cast a mist before them as iuglers vse to doe that they may not be espied This did Herod Mat. 2.8 he pretended to come and worship Christ For he knew well enough if hee had dealt plainely and told them hee sought the life of the babe they would haue detested his detestable cruelty This serueth to reprooue diuers sorts that Vse 1 goe about to varnish their actions with false colours thereby to blind the world and to put out their eyes These shew themselues to bee ranke hypocrites exceeding sinners against the Lord which serue to harden their hearts and to hinder them from a sight of their sinnes and sorrow for them For no man can returne from his sinnes and repent of his euill wayes so long as he goeth about to defend them because all such sinners doe declare a firme resolution to continue and goe forward in sinne and thinke themselues safe and sure because they haue some colours for their actions But the first beginning of repentance is confession a duty oftentimes commended and continually practised by the faithfull The first thing that Ioshua perswaded Achan to performe when he was taken as guilty for taking the accursed thing was that he should giue glory to the God of Israel and make confession vnto him Iosh 7.19 Prou. 28.13 1 Ioh. 1.9 Whereas such as hide their sinnes shall not prosper and they that say they haue not sinned doe make God a lyar and his word is not in them Wherefore we cannot giue a more euident signe of our want of the grace of repentance Psa 32.3 4 5. then by defending denying excusing or lessening of sinne Secondly this sheweth the cause why the Vse 2 dregs of Popish religion are so setled in the hearts of men that they are hardly rooted out euen because such deceitfull colours are set vpon them and their superstitious practises If they be accused for their idolatry worshipping of Images they pretend they worship God in the Image Touching the worship of Saints and praier to them they say they honor them as the friends of God and that they are vnworthy to approch or to come neere to God themselues and therefore in humility they goe to the Saints and Angels but this is nothing but to speake lies through hypocrisie Col. 2.23 Concerning their sacriledge in withholding the cup from the people they haue their colour that the labour of the Priest would be too great if he should deliuer the same to all himselfe or else that the blood of Christ might be spilt vpon the ground but these excuses cannot deceiue God hee seeth their open declining from the word of
by true and vnfained repentance 1 Cor. 5. Thirdly except we do renounce their company we cannot keepe the commandements Reason 3 of God and obey him The Prophet kept his mouth as with a bridle while the wicked was before him Ps 39.1 We must not cast pearles before swine lest they trample them vnder their feet and turne againe and rent vs Matth. 7.6 Therefore doth Dauid say Depart from mee Psal 119. ● yee euill doers for I will keepe the commandements of my God as if while he was in their company and they in his he could not doe it This sheweth the folly of such as taxe those Vse 1 with a note of purity singularity which vppon a good ground refuse to associate themselues with vngodly persons They taxe them of pride and terme them selfe-conceited brethrē reuiling them taunting them with one breath For they call them brethren no otherwise then in the spirit of scoffing selfe-conceited in the spirit of Shemei railing at them as he did at Dauid as if they did it for no other end but because they would bee thought better holier and wiser then other men or as if they said Stand apart for I am holier then thou Esay 65.5 Thus they accuse them to be vncharitable men and to disdaine their neighbours and to thinke no company to bee good enough for themselues All these are false accusations alledging false causes of their separation It is not because they are new fangled and so forsake their old friends and companions and cast off all good fellowship it is the commandement of God that doth require it and their owne both duty and safety that calleth for it Secondly it reprooueth such as can brooke Vse 2 and digest all manner of people and neuer refuse or finde fault with any It is no greefe to them to heare and see any thing 2 Pet. 1. ● they neuer vexe their soule for it as righteous Lot did and the reason is because they want his righteousnesse and therfore therfore they can brooke swallow and digest vnrighteousnesse They are not led by the same spirit that Lot was who greeued at the vncleane conuersation of the Sodomites neither is it with them as it was with Dauid who cryed out in the bitternesse of his soule Woe is mee that I remaine in Meshek Psal 120.5 that I dwell in the tents of Kedar If they bee in company with Ruffians swaggerers blasphemers and drunkards they can liue and conuerse with them as well or better then with others And yet euen these when they come among those that feare the Lord can discourse of points of Religion they can report what excellent Sermons they haue heard and giue a good testimony of many good preachers Thus do they gild and ouer-lay their tongues with fine gold whereas there is nothing else but corruption and rottennesse within Take these when they are at the best they are no better then hypocrites for certaine it is they must counterfet on the one side or on the other Prou. 26 7. But without crauing any pardon we may wel conclude of these that when they liue among the worst sort their behauiour is naturall but when they conuerse among the better sort it is meerely artificiall among the one they shew without any vizard what they are among the other they put on a vizard to appeare that which they are not Vse 3 Lastly it teacheth vs to beware of voluntary society and vnnecessary fellowship with wicked men least being partakers with their sinnes wee be also partakers of their punishment If the danger of the sinne cannot preuail with vs to cause vs to shun it let the consideration of the punishment teach vs to refraine from them 1 Cor. 5 5. and 2 Cor. 6 17. Come out from among them and be ye separate touch no vncleane thing and I will receiue you If any aske what society is necessary and what is vnnecessary I answer If it be in necessarie things it is either for this life or for the life to come As for example a man may conuerse with such in Faire or Market to buy and sell to trade and trafficke or in the priuate house if our particular calling and abode there doe require it or if a man goe to them to seeke their reformation by exhorting and admonishing of them or if a man haue publike society with them in the hearing of the word or in receiuing the Sacraments or in ioyning together in prayer this is also a necessary a lawfull and warrantable society and it doth not wrap a man in the guilt of those sinnes which are in them with whom we conuerse therfore such as are of the Separation haue litle reason and lesse conscience to separate themselues from the Church of God because of the wickednesse of some men which are therein For bee it granted that such are admitted to the publike exercises of our religion it will wrappe those onely in the guilt of their sinnes that haue power and authority to remooue them and not those that doe necessarily conuerse and communicate with them No man may forsake the Church because some wicked men are in it Notwithstanding heere we are to marke that albeit there be some necessary society which is lawfull yet vnder a colour heereof we may not plead for that which is voluntary and vnnecessary for thus their sinnes become our sinnes A blessed martyr sometimes made this prayer O Lord deliuer me from my other mens sinnes from my guilt of the sinnes of other men howsoeuer he did not commit them himselfe yet because being present he did not reproue them he acknowledged himselfe guilty of them So if we haue inward and priuate society with them and we freely go to their houses inuite them home to our houses and can be content to hear their oathes and blasphemies and not haue an hart and tongue to reproue them for the same wee are thereby made partakers of their sins whatsoeuer they be Thou hast power in thine own house to reprooue them there thou art both a Magistrate and a Minister Euery man is a King and a Byshop in his owne house a Magistrate to rule and a Minister to teach and to reprooue If thou doe not therefore discharge these duties it shall stand vpon thy score and reckoning thou shalt giue an account for it We haue sinnes in great number of our owne and therefore we need not draw the guilt of other mens sinnes vppon our owne head to answer for those also which wee did neuer commit in our owne persons The burthen is alreadie too great let vs not therefore by this adding to it make the burthen thereof altogether intollerable 27 So they gate vp from the tabernacle of Korah Dathan and Abiram on euery side and Dathan and Abiram came out and stood in the doore of their tents and their wiues and their sonnes and their little children 28 And Moses saide Heereby ye shall know
then it skilleth not whether men study or not or seeke to attaine to knowledge and to better their knowledge because they may doe more good with lesse gifts I answer Answer this ought to make no man negligent or carelesse but rather to double his care and diligence For what greater encouragement can we haue to performe the duties of our calling then to heare this voice full of comfort Well done thou good and faithfull seruant thou hast bene faithfull ouer a few things I will make thee ruler ouer many things enter into the ioy of thy Lord Mat 25 21. So then no man ought to grow carelesse because God will blesse small gifts for that were to continue in sin that grace might abound Rom. 6 1. Lastly from hence some will obiect that then it skilleth not whom the Officers and Ouerseers of the Church do chuse and ordaine how ignorant and vnsufficient soeuer they be I answer they are to follow the ordinary rule to appoint such as are apt to teach 1 Tim. 3 2. Again God supplieth the wants of such as he chuseth as appeareth in the Disciples which men cannot Lastly there is difference betweene such as haue meane gifts and such as haue none the one sort are Gods Ministers the other are mens not Gods Vse 1 The vses remaine First we see it is a speciall gift of God not a fruite of learning for a Minister to conuert soules to GOD by preaching of the word for this grace and fauour is often denied to many famous seruants of God Esay 6 10 and 53 1 and 49 4. Christ himselfe conuerted not all to whom hee preached he often complaineth of their infidelity and hardnesse of heart they would not be gathered whom he would haue gathered and gained to the faith Mat. 23 37. Neuerthelesse we shall be rewarded not according as we haue conuerted which lyeth not in our power but according as wee haue laboured which lyeth in our power If learning could do any thing of it selfe then the best learned should doe most good But as the most learned do not most labour so they doe not see the greatest fruite of their labour We must therefore all of vs whatsoeuer our gifts are depend wholly vpon God for his blessing forasmuch as Paul planteth Apollos watereth but God giueth the increase 1 Cor. 3 6 7. nay he beginneth and maketh an end of his owne worke it is he that giueth vs grace to will and to do of his good pleasure Vse 2 Secondly euery one ought to make it the speciall end of our Ministery the edification of the Church therby to bring many children vnto Christ This doubtles is the reason why so many great Doctors and deepe Diuines are very drones aad altogether vnprofitable in their places albeit peraduenture profitable enough to their owne purses they looke altogether to the rewards of learning as they call them to popular fame as though they that had greatest rewards had alwayes greatest learning or they that had greatest learning had alwaies greatest conscience wheras they shold looke to the benefit of the people These hunt after the praise and glory of the world desire to be called great Rabbines and therefore oftentimes God casteth dung in their faces that they may learne to bee ashamed so that wee may say vnto them as Christ doth Iohn 5 44. How can ye beleeue which receiue honour one of another and seeke not the honour from God onely Whereas we ought to bee like our Lord and Master to be able in some measure to say with him I seeke not mine owne glory there is one that seeketh and iudgeth Ioh. 8 50. Such a one as can truely speake thus so far as humane frailty will suffer him shall haue his defects supplied and God will accompany the labour of his Ministery with the power of his Spirit One such meane learned man that hath zeale with knowledge and knowledge with conscience conscience with diligence maketh the ends of his Ministery the good ●f the people the glory of God is worth an hundred of those proud Pharisies that loue the vppermost seates and to be saluted in the market Mat. 23 6. The Apostle sheweth in himselfe requireth of others another spirit He made himselfe a seruant vnto all that hee might win the more 1. cor 9 19. Neuer came there greater detriment in former daies or present times to the Church An vnconscionable learne● man is a plague to the Church then by vnconscionable vnfaithfull learned men Who vsurped greater tyrrany in the church then they Who hath starued moe soules and sent them headlong in throngs to hell then they Who haue fallen into the sin of Non-residency and idlenesse in their residency more then they Who haue bin greater hindrances to the free passage of the Gospel then they Who haue more disturbed the peace of the Church and bin the causes of atheisme popery carnall liberty and open prophanenes then they by reason of their reputed knowledge who stand so much vpon their sw●lling titles and places of superiority and yet want conscience of their dutie lowlinesse of mind loue to God and compassion to his people What shall all their profound learning auaile them when they want an humble heart to season and sanctifie their learning withall Obiection What then will some say doe you goe about to condemne learning so great an ornament in all I doe not goe about to disgrace learning Answ or to contemne any learned men or to barre the rewards of learning much lesse to bring in ignorance the mother of barbarisme Learning is a precious iewell it is a great blessing of God it is a notable ornament ioyned with true godlinesse wheresoeuer and in whomsoeuer they meete and are coupled together there followeth an exceeding blessing For as an vnfaithfull learned man is a great plague to the Church so I hold this as a certaine rule No greater good cometh to the church then by conscionable learned men there neuer came greater good to the Church then by a conscionable learned man I wish as Moses said to Ioshua that all the Lords people were Prophets and that he would powre out his spirit vpon them all Numb 11.29 I greeue at no mans learning I enuy no mans preferment I desire that all had the tongue of the learned to speake the language of Canaan Esay 50 4. yea the tongues and gifts of Angels 1 Cor. 13 1. whose names they beare Reuel 1.20 and 2.1 but withall I adde that as a sword is a good thing and of necessary vse to defend offend yet being put into the hand of a tyrant or a mad man it doth mu●h hurt because it is abused so learning is a great blessing of God and maketh vs differ not only from the bruite beasts but from other men also it is profitable to proue and improoue reforme instruct but being powred into a giddy spirit and an vnconscionable man as
betweene sinne and sinne both in nature and in the punishment due vnto them some are greater some lesser some worther of greater punishment and some of lesser yet the least sin committed in thought and motion deserueth euerlasting death and separation from the gracious presence of God if he deale with vs according to the rigour of his iustice and looke vpon vs without the satisfaction of Christ The writers and teachers of the Popish Religion publish to the world that wee hold the sottish Paradox of the Stoikes that all sinnes are equall The Papists slander vs 〈◊〉 make all si● equall the contrary whereof is manifest in the harmony of the confessions of our Churches And why do they slander vs with this dotish doctrine or vpon what foundation doe they ground this accusation forsooth because we hold that all are mortall But this is a weake consequent and will not proue the point for which they alledge it All men are mortall euen Princes as it is said in the Psalme 82.6 shall we hence conclude that the people are equall to Princes because they are alike subiect to mortality In the breach of the seuenth commandement there are sundry sortes of vncleannesse and incontinency forbidden as fornication when men defile themselues with filthy harlots and concubines adultery betweene them that are married incest committed with such as are neere in consanguinity or affinity the sinne of the Sodomites Who leauing the naturall vse of the woman burne in lust one toward another man with man working filthinesse Rom. 1.27 reuenged with fire and brimstone from heauen Gen. 19. Among all these seuerall kindes there are degrees of sinne one is greater then other adultery worse then fornication incest then adultery and Sodometry then them all and all these by the confession of the Papists themselues are mortall and yet by their owne confession also one is more heinous and horrible then the other If then their conclusion bee good against vs that we hold all sinnes to bee equal because we teach that they are mortall how should it not stand as strong and firme against themselues that they also hold all these sinnes to be equall fornication as bad as incest and adultery as heinous as Sodometry because they teach that they are all of them mortall The like absurdity wee might easily inferre against them in the rest of the commandements and that out of the Roman Catechisme But to vnderstand this point the better let vs consider that our Churches teach no other doctrine then the Scriptures teach that as all sinnes proceede out of the same fountaine of corruption and infidelity so all of them make vs guilty of eternall death and damnation vnlesse we obtaine pardon by faith in the Mediatour Christ Iesus Luke 12.47.48 All sinnes whether committed of ignorance or knowledge deserue stripes either many or few and these stripes are no other then eternall punishments as appeareth by the wordes of the Apostle 2 Thes 1.8 so that they which know not God neither beleeue the Gospel shall be punished in hel because according to the opinion of the Papists themselues when the Lord shall come in flaming fire to iudge the quicke and the dead Purgatory shal vtterly ceasse and be no more the prison dores shall be broken the fire shall be quenched the place shall be emptyed and the poore soules shall be discharged then shall be a gaile deliuery they shall be quit by Proclamation To vnderstand this the better we must know that sinnes may bee said to bee mortall or veniall three wayes ●s may ●d to bee ●ll or ve●●hree ●s First in regard of the euent Secondly in regard of the cause Thirdly in regard of the nature of the sinnes themselues They are veniall in regard of the successe or euent which doe obtaine pardon and when forgiuenesse followeth them though they be in themselues most greeuous as 1 Ioh. 5.16 where the Apostle calleth those onely sinnes vnto death whose reward certainely is eternall death and those not to death which may bee forgiuen howsoeuer in their own nature they merit damnation Thus we may say that Dauids adultery and murther were veniall sinnes because howsoeuer in the nature of them they were deadly yet were they veniall in regard of the euent because Nathan said vnto him The Lord hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not dye 2 Sam. 12.13 ●ss ordin in ●r 11. No sinne is veniall so long as we follow it and no sinne is mortall when once we forsake it Pro. 28.13 All sinnes are made veniall by repentance no sin is veniall without repentance Secondly sinnes may bee said to bee veniall in regard of the cause from whence they proceed whereupon they sooner obtaine pardon because they are not done of malice and a setled purpose but of ignorance and infirmity as Paul sheweth this to bee the cause why his sinne was veniall vnto him and why he obtained mercy and forgiuenesse because he did it ignorantly through vnbeleefe 1 Tim. 1.13 And in the fifteenth Chapter of this booke it is said the Priest shall make attonement when a priuate person or the whole Congregation hath committed any thing through errour or ignorance and it shall be forgiuen them for it is ignorance Numb 14.25 These sinnes springing from this fountaine are damnable in themselues from hence it came that Paul was a persecuter and a blasphemer but the Father of all mercies and compassions gaue him pardon because hee sinned of ignorance and infirmity So then his sinnes were veniall in regard of the euent and of the cause But sinne considered in the nature of the thing it selfe is not veniall but deserueth temporall and eternall punishment Now the Papists themselues teach ● Popish 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 sinne that sinne is truely and properly called veniall when it is so in it owne nature and deserueth onely a temporall punishment either in this life or in the life to come so that if God would examine it and enter into iudgement with it according to his most rigourous and seuere iustice hee could not punish it with eternall death for as much as in it owne nature it deserueth pardon or at least some slight or temporall punishment And of these the controuersie is betweene the Church of Rome and vs and not of those that are veniall by the euent or by the cause But the Scripture teacheth vs that all sinne is the transgression of the Law 1 Ioh. 3.4 This is a true and perfect definition of sinne for euery transgression of the Law is sinne and euery sinne is a transgression of the Law From whence wee reason thus Euery transgression of the law is worthy of death Euery sinne is a transgression of the Law Therefore euery sinne is worthy of death The first part is plainely proued by many places Gal. 3.13.10 Deut. 27.26 Matth. 5.22 whereby it is manifest that the Prophet the Apostle and Christ himselfe speake generally without limitation that whosoeuer committeth any
the stirring of vs vp to prayer We may now comfortably conclude to our owne consciences with the same Apostle I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shal be able to separate vs from the loue of God Let vs know then there is great vse of the crosse beeing assured that tribulation bringeth forth patience patience experience ●om 5 5 4 5. and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our harts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs. Vse 2 Secondly we learne heereby not to promise to our selues worldly peace prosperity but prepare to endure the crosse before it cometh and know that the end of one crosse is the beginning of another while we liue heere We must not looke to finde heauen vpon earth we must not dreme of the victory before we fight We think of receiuing the prize but we wold not run the race We would put on the crown but we shun the crosse like those foolish husbandmen that would receiue the fruites of the earth but care not for the labour And surely the reason why we are many waies impatient vnder the crosse murmure vnder the mighty hand of God is because wee are vnprepared vnprouided to beare any storme or endure any triall We must not thinke to liue at ease and pleasure but know that whosoeuer taketh not vp his crosse cometh after Christ cannot be his Disciple So Paul teacheth Timothy Thou hast fully knowne my faith and my patience my persecutions which came vnto me but from them all the Lord deliuered me yea and all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution 2 Tim. 3 10 12. For as the head was first crowned with thornes so the members must not looke to liue in pleasures Lastly be not offended at the great afflictions Vse 3 that oftentimes we heare to befall the faithfull or we see to be vpon such as feare God let vs not maruaile and wonder at it as at some rare and strange thing much lesse should wee start backe from our profession for the persecutions and fiery trials that come vpon the Church Therfore the Apostle Iohn saith Maruaile not my brethren Iohn 4 13. though this world hate you nay rather we haue cause to reioyce that God vouchsafeth vs this honor not only to beleeue in him but to suffer for his Name This made Paul say Acts 21 13. being entreated that hee would not go vp to Ierusalem What do ye weeping and breaking mine heart For I am ready not to be bound onely but also to die at Ierusalem for the Name of the Lord Iesus Doubtlesse if we were of the world the world would loue his owne but because we are chosen out of the world therefore the world hateth vs. It is noted to the euerlasting praise of the Apostles Acts 5 21. Heb. 10 33 34. Cast not away therfore your confidence which hath great recompence of reward God hath no need of vs to maintaine his glory he is able to maintaine it without vs therefore it is a great priuiledge and prerogatiue that God calleth vs out to suffer for his Names sake Besides such and so great are our infirmities that the Lord might worthily make vs suffer for our owne sins and bring shame and confusion of faces vpon vs according to our owne deseruings Now in that he mercifully passeth ouer our faults and frailties couereth our transgressions and maketh vs suffer taunts reproches persecutions for his truth and Gospel it is a great honour and dignity whereunto he exalteth and aduanceth vs and therefore our Sauiour saith Blessed shall ye be when men reuile and persecute you say all manner of euill against you for my sake falsly reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen Mat. 5 11 12. Wherfore let vs not shrinke backe for trouble but reioyce in our sufferings and praise God for our afflictions Ver. 16. But when we cried vnto the Lord he heard our voice therefore let vs passe through thy Country Heere we haue the third reason vsed to the Edomites to perswade them to giue them passage drawne from an experience of Gods helpe who seeing their misery and hearing their gronings brought them out of the land of Egypt out of the house of bondage Now it would argue great cruelty to forsake those and leaue them in their affliction The strength of the reason of whō God hath taken the protection If then God haue helped vs do not you deny vs helpe but God hath helped vs therfore deny not vs your helpe Thus the gracious dealing of God is propounded for their imitation This is a forcible and effectuall reason teaching vs this Doctrine Doctrine The consideratiō of Gods loue to his children must moue vs to mercy that the consideration of Gods loue mercy shewed to his childrē must moue vs to mercy The truth hereof hath the consent and agreement of many other Scriptures Hereunto cometh the exhortation of Moses Deut. 10.17 18 19. The Lord your God is God of Gods and the Lord of Lords a great God mighty and terrible who doth right vnto the fatherlesse and widow loueth the stranger giueth him food and raiment Loue ye therefore the stranger for yee were strangers in the Land of Egypt Thus the Apostle reasoneth 1 Ioh. 4 9 11. God hath manifested his loue in sending his onely begotten Sonne into this world that we might liue thorough him Beloued if God so loued vs wee ought also to loue one another Wher we see he perswadeth to brotherly loue in respect of the experience which we haue of the free loue of God toward our selues So our Sauiour concludes Lu. 6 36. Be ye therefore mercifull as your Father also is mercifull Hereunto cometh that which we reade in the Apostle Iohn in another place Hereby haue we perceiued loue that he laid downe his life for vs therefore wee ought also to lay downe our liues for the brethren 1 Iohn 3 8 16. There is nothing more effectuall to perswade brethren to vnity among themselues thē to know they haue a gentle father that loueth them all Nothing is able to binde faster those that are fellow-seruants in one family to seeke the mutuall good one of another then to consider they haue a good master carefull of the good of them all to giue them their portion in due season Reason 1 The reasons are euident First we are bound to follow the example of God which must be our direction and instruction This the Apostle teacheth Phil. 2 5 where he exhorteth to humility and lowlinesse of minde from the example of Christ Let the same minde be in you that was euen in Christ Iesus And the Apostle in the Epistle to the Hebrewes chap. 11.32 hauing propounded the examples of the
their enemies We do oftentimes feare enemies and inuasion by enimies but wee feare not that which bringeth in the enemies and openeth them a free passage to spoile and destroy without compassion to wit sinne So long as wee walke with our God and are reconciled vnto him we are vnder Gods protection and hee is a Buckler round about vs 〈◊〉 3 3. we are in league with the stones of the streete and the beasts of the field For if God he on our side who shall be against vs Rom. 8 31. If then the Ministery of the word be as a brazen wall and the Ministers thereof stand in the breach betweene the liuing the dead to turne away the wrath of GOD when his iudgements runne through the Land Nu. 16 47 48 Psal 106 23 there is great cause to bee humbled when God pulleth from the Church and Commonwealth so great posts and pillars that helpe to hold them vp Againe it is a signe of Gods wrath heauie Reason 2 displeasure and a fore-runner of a farther iudgement When God tooke away the good and godly King Iosiah a nursing father of the Church that reformed religion in his young and tender yeres sought vnto the Lord 2 Kings 21 19 hūmbled himselfe before him and wept when hee heard the threatnings denounced against the land he spared not Ierusalem and the inhabitants thereof long after If there be a good Pastor in the church if a good Prince in the land if a good Magistrate in town or city if a good Master in a family and God take him away ther is cause to lift vp our voice by mourning weeping and great lamentation this being a token of Gods displeasure a sign of taking his former mercies from vs so that the seeing and feeling of Gods wrath in bereauing vs of such as might do good along time publikely or priuately ought to be no smal greefe to vs. The prophet teacheth that when God hath any vengeance ready to be poured vpon a people hee taketh away the righteous from the plague as he did Lot out of Sodome saying The righteous perisheth Esay 57 1. and no man considereth it in heart and merciful men are taken away from the euill to come Therefore when God taketh excellent and principall members from the rest of the body it is as a threatning alwaies to those that are left behind and an euident testimonie to them that they are vnworthy of their company and presence as the Apostle declareth That the world was not woorthy of those faithfull men that shined as lights in the midst of a froward crooked generation Heb. 11 38. So then it is a right mourning and wel ordered greefe when we lament the taking away of good men endued with the graces of the Spirit which haue liued in the feare of God and done notable seruice in the Church or Commonwealth Let vs apply this point to our instruction Vse 1 edification First it serueth to condemne the Stoicall senslesnesse and blockishnesse of such as take it to be a part of manhood courage to be affected with nothing to be greeued at nothing It is lawfull to mourne for the dead so did Abraham the Father of the faithfull for Sara Genesis 23 2. nay so did Christ the head of the church in whom was no sinne 1 Peter ● 22. neyther guile found in his mouth mourne for Lazarus 1 Thess 4 13. These lamented the dead but not the state of the deade which they knew to bee most comfortable to all the faithfull as the Apostle teacheth Reu. 14.13 Blessed are they that dy in the Lord for they rest from their labors and their works follow them In regard wherof Reuel 14 13. Paul warneth the Thessalonians concerning them that are asleepe that they sorrow not euen as they which haue no hope 1 Thess 4 13. True it is we cannot so renounce or reforme our affections but that there wil be alwaies somewhat worthy of blame and fault in vs in our mirth and mourning in our loue and hatred in our hope and feare in our anger and such like passions and we finde it the hardest thing in the world to keep the mean between excesse and defect betweene too much too little yet it is absurd to dreame of such a kind of dulnesse and stupidity as ouer-turneth humane nature and cannot be found in flesh and blood yea standeth not with the condition of mankinde as he was created or as he became corrupted For so long as man remaineth in this life he cannot bee voide of affections and perturbations or bee senslesse like stockes or stones albeit wise men are to moderate their passions that Reason remaine mistresse of the soule as it were the gouernor of the house Wherefore wee must know that Christian Religion doth not abolish naturall affections or pull them vp by the roots but onely doeth moderate them and keepe them that they ouer flow not the bankes and doth bring them in subiection vnto the will of God So the Apostle as wee heard before did not forbid the Church to sorrow for the dead but putteth as it were a bridle into their hands only restraineth immoderate sorrow Againe he doth not absolutely condemne and reproue al anger and indignation conceiued in the heart but represseth the excesse abundance thereof Ephes 4 25. as a wise Physitian that seeketh to purge the ouer-flowing of choller And in another place hee doth not condemne weeping in aduersity or reioycing in prosperity but hee requireth that they which weepe 1 Cor. 7 30. bee as though they wept not and they that reioyce as though they reioyced not and they that vse this world as though they vsed it not Furthermore Christ our Sauiour doeth not forbid the louing of Father and Mother of wife and children of brethren and sisters as that which standeth with the law of God and man but onely ordereth it aright bringeth it into his compasse saying Hee that loueth father or mother more then mee Matth. 10 37. is not worthy of mee and he that loueth sonne or daughter more then me is not worthy of me Thus then we are taught to vse temperance and moderation in all the affaires of our life in speaking or holding our peace in ioy or in sorrow that wee giue not scope to our vnbrideled affections but alwaies order and dispose them as there is iust cause Vse 2 Secondly it condemneth such as are bereft of all sense and feeling of such greeuous iudgments of God Alas how can such assure thēselues to bee true members of Christs body For tell me Can a man lose a principall part of his body as his eye his hand his foot and not be greeued Or can a man be depriued of thē and make a sport of it as at a play or pastime Euen so such as in the suffering of the members of the Church do reioyce 1 Cor. 12 25.26
or in the publicke ioy of the Church do mourne cannot in truth perswade their owne hearts that they haue anie part or portion in the body of Christ Wherefore whensoeuer God taketh away any principall stay of Church or Common-wealth we haue cause of mourning and humbling our selues vnder Gods iudgement When the husbandman layeth his Axe to the root of the tree or vndermineth the ground about it we can not doubt but he meaneth the felling and falling of it Or when wee see a Gardiner take away the hedge or wall of his garden Esay 5 5 6. plucke vp by the roots the cheefest choisest plants disfigure the ornaments and beauty of it and lay it open for the beasts to enter we may gather hee mindeth not to continue but deface the Garden Or when a Carpenter pulleth downe the master-peeces and postes that doth hold vp the whole frame and layeth the foundation euen with the ground wee may coniecture by these meanes that he meaneth to remoue the building to another place So when we see the euident footsteps of Gods wrath and begin to discerne the fire of his iealousie breaking out by the smoake beginning to appeare in taking away seruiceable men as plāts of his own garden as pillars of his own house and as branches of the Tree which his right hand hath planted we must lay it to our hearts as tokens going before destruction This our Sauiour handleth Matth. 42 32 33. speaking of the signes going before his glorious appearance at the end of the world Learne the Parable of the Figge tree when her bough is yet tender and it putteth foorth leaues yee know that Summer is neere so likewise yee when ye see all these things know that the kingdome of God is nere euen at the doore And now beloued behold and consider lift vp your eies and looke how God hath dealt with vs and marke whether his dealings toward vs be not tokens of his anger and fore-runners of his iudgements Hath hee not taken from vs a most worthy Prince our late Soueraigne who by the course of nature might haue liued longer Of whom wee may truly say as Dauid did 2 Sam. 1 24. Ye daughters of Israel weepe for Queene Elizabeth who clothed you with Scarlet and pleasures and hanged Ornaments of Gold vpon your apparrell P. o● 31 2● Or else as Salomon doth speaking of a good woman Many daughters haue done vertuously but thou surmountest them all She opened the house of the Lord in the first yeere of her reigne as good K. Hezekiah did shee called backe the reuerent Ministers fled out of the land as Eliah into the wildernesse through the tyranny of Iezabel she brought in the pure worship of God cast out the Romish abhominations set forth the seruice of God in a knowne tongue repealed the bloody acts of the persecutors and therefore she thus honouring God and aduancing his Gospel he likewise exalted her Throne on high as the Throne of Salomon 2. Samuel 2 ver 30. so that she shined in her time in the world as if all the firmament thereof had bin but one starre and as if in all the cope compasse of heauē there had shined none but she This starre is now set and gone downe which should go neere vnto vs and pierce vs to the quicke and make vs seeing a great Prince is fallen in Israel neuer to forget the great works which the Lord did among vs by her happy hand Besides hath not the Lord taken from vs many lights out of the Vniuersity whence flowed many comfortable streames that watered the Garden of God many out of Cities and particular Churches wherby the Church hath receiued a deepe and dangerous wound and yet we seeme to haue feared consciences and to be past feeling When the vitall parts begin to faile or to languish the life of the body is in hazard While the disease or distemperature is in the outward parts farre from the head or the heart there is hope of health and recouery but when the liuely parts begin to waste and consume by little and little it is a signe of the decay of life and of the approch of death Howsoeuer therefore the greatest part neuer lay these things to their hearts nor interprete them as present tokens of imminent danger and iudgement yet we that haue learned better things ought to consider that as they are taken away from the euill to come ● 57 1 2. ●gs 22 20 rest quietly in the graue as in a bed euen so they haue left vs behinde for the euill to come Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty to pray to God to stay his hand to shew mercy to his Church and to poure out the full Viall of his vengeance vpon his enemies that know him not Psal 79 6. Ieremy 10 25 and vpon the Nations that call not vpon his Name This the Prophet practiseth Psalm 74 2 19 20 21 22. Thinke vpon thy Congregation which thou hast possessed of old and on thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this Mount Sion wherein thou hast dwelled We see how he putteth God in minde of his Couenant and entreateth him to strike through the loynes of his enemies to their destruction to maintaine his own cause and to spare his people the sheepe of his own Pasture the dwelling place of his own Name and the Congregation of his poore afflicted ones So when in like manner we behold the hand of God vpon his owne Sanctuary to begin iudgement at his owne house let vs call vpon him to consider whereof wee are made and to remember that we are but dust This did the Prophet Habakkuk when God threatened to enter into iudgment with his church O Lord I haue heard thy voice and was afraid O Lord reuiue thy worke in the midst of thy people in wrath remember mercy Hab. 3 2. Where hee teacheth that whensoeuer wee heare of the threatnings and iudgements of God we must pray him to repaire and restore the state of the Church which is ready to perish who is able to heale the wound that his owne right hand hath made True it is the great sinnes of this Land do cry out against vs may iustly prouoke him to make hauocke of all yet let vs call for mercy at his hands and stay the course of our sinnes that so he may stay the stroke of his iudgements CHAP. XXI IN this Chapter ●e diuition ●●es chapter we are to obserue four principall pointes First the battaile fought betweene Arad King of the Canaanites the Israelites Secondly another murmuring of the people the last recorded in this Booke which God punisheth with fiery serpents cureth them with a brazen serpent Thirdly their happy proceeding in their journey toward the Land of promise where God gaue them water and brought them to the borders of the Amorites Lastly the victories which Israel obtained on Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the
body Thirdly in this Type we see the nature of Vse 3 the Sacraments The brazen serpent in it selfe had no operation to work any thing in it selfe it had no vertue to cure or recouer any man of any disease The Sacraments of themselus cannot conferre grace onely they are instruments of Gods mercies which he vseth of his goodnesse toward vs to conuey to vs good things They are as the Kings gracious pardon that sealeth vp vnto vs forgiuenesse of sins so that being by his institution very auaileable wee must frequent thē with a feeling of our wants with reuerence of his ordinances with hungring after his graces with calling vpon his Name to fit and prepare vs to that heauenly worke God could haue healed his people with his word alone without the serpent as well as with the serpent as the Centurion confesseth to Christ Speake the word onely Math. ● ● and my seruant shall be healed yet he addeth the serpent set vpon a pole for farther assurance of his word and to be a signe of their recouery so God can saue by the Ministery of his word without the Sacraments if it please him yet he addeth and annexeth them as appurtenances to the word to confirme the weaknesse of our faith and to make good the truth of his owne promise And as it was not enough for them to beleeue the word of God to the curing of their bodies the taking away of the stinging of the serpents vnlesse they vsed the helpe of the brazen serpent no more is it sufficient for vs to beleeue the forgiuenesse of sins by Christ vnlesse we labour to strengthen our faith by the Sacraments Nay if any wold not vouchsafe to looke vpon the Serpent being the meanes that God ordained for their recouery it is certaine they regarded not the word of God it selfe that they should liue so if any contemne or neglect the Sacraments being holy seales of heauenly blessings they are plainely conuinced to their faces that they respect not the word it selfe whatsoeuer they pretend to the contrary notwithstanding This we see in Ahaz who neglecting a signe offered vnto him for the better strengthening of his faith is said to tempt God and to despise his word Esay 7 12. The naturall reason of man would neuer beleeue that he should be healed by a serpent of brasse hauing no vertue or vigour in it so carnall wisedome and vnderstanding cannot discerne how a little water sprinkled on the body should be the lauer of regeneration or how a small cantle of bread should bring and conuey vnto vs the body of Christ or a little wine offer and exhibite vnto vs the blood of Christ So that as in this bodily cure both their eye did behold it and their faith did beleeue in like manner in the Sacraments we must shut the eyes of our carnall reason and open the eyes of faith beleeue his word and we shall be comforted For euery man doth in them receiue through the promise of God so much as he beleeueth he receiueth This Christ assureth to the woman of Canaan who had shewed an vndaunted and inuincible faith taking no repulses ouerstriding all difficulties refusing all denials and striuing against all doubts that might arise in her heart saying O woman great is thy faith be it to thee as thou desirest Mat. 15 28. So when two blinde men followed him crying saying O sonne of Dauid haue mercy vpon vs he saide vnto them Beleeue ye that I am able to doe this and when they answered Yea Lord hee touched their eyes saying According to your faith be it vnto you Mat. 9 29. Moreouer albeit the Serpent restored life yet was not life present and inherent in the brazen serpent neither abiding in the matter or resting in the forme thereof so albeit Christ be offered and signified yea conueyed and conferred vnto vs in the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper yet he is not carnally and corporally present nor carnally and corporally eaten as the Capernaites imagined ● 60.66 but he is spiritual meat for spirituall men the rest eate the outward signes but are not partakers of the thing signified Thus we see how the consideration of the similitude of the brazen serpent directeth vs in sundry conclusions to be holden and acknowledged touching the Doctrine of the Sacraments of the new Testament Fourthly this present type teacheth vs that Vse 4 we are iustified by faith alone without the works of the Law For as the Israelites stung of these serpents were cured so are we saued as health was offered by the serpent so is saluation by Christ But the Israelites did nothing at all but onely looke vp to the brazen serpent they were not willed to make satisfaction for their rebellion or to goe on pilgrimage nor so much as to dresse and binde vp their wounds but only to behold the serpent set vpon the pole as Christ saith to the Ruler of the Synagogue touching the healing of his daughter Feare not onely beleeue Mar. 5 36 so is it in the saluing of the sores of the soule in the attaining pardon of our sins and obtaining the righteousnesse of Christ There is required nothing of vs touching our iustification and saluation but to fixe the eyes of our faith vpon Christ True it is many other vertues and graces are required to make vp the full perfection of a christian man that he may be complete wanting nothing yet he is iustified and doth stand as righteous in the sight of God by faith onely It is a great weighty controuersie in these daies betweene the Church of Rome and vs what is the cause of life and saluation they ascribe the cause of saluation in part to the merit of our own works and to a righteousnesse inherent in our owne persons and in part likewise to Christ who say they hath made vs able to merit the fauour of God and to satisfie for our own sins We ascribe all our saluation to the mercy of God and the merite of Christ wholly applied to vs by a liuely faith the which manner of sauing vs most fitly agreeth to the nature of God the chiefe Fountaine of our saluation who can abide no pollution neither can any wickednesse stand in his presence who is of pure eyes requireth our perfect obedience so that wanting the perfect righteousnesse of the Law of our owne wee must bee cloathed with the righteousnesse of another whereby we may be saued Euen as Iacob though hee were not by birth the first borne Ambr. de Iacob lib. 2. cap. 1. yet hiding himselfe vnder his brothers garments and hauing put on his coate which smelled most sweetly came into his fathers presence that vnder another mans person he might receiue the blessing of the first borne so is it necessary that we lye hid vnder the precious purenesse of Christ our elder brother that hauing the sweet sauour of his garments our sinnes may be couered with
the vncircumcised Philistim that reuiled and railed vpon the host of the liuing God 1 Sam. 17 46 47 and 14 6. This day shall the Lord close thee in mine hands and I shall smite thee that all the world may know that Israel hath a God and that all this assembly may know that the Lord saueth not with sword nor with speare for the battell is the Lords and hee will giue you into our hands It is not hard with him to saue with many or with few he maketh the weake strong hee causeth one to chase a thousand and two to put ten thousand to flight when the mighty God selleth them and shutteth them vp An example we haue 2 Chron. 24 24. when Ioash King of Iudah sinned against God shedding innocent blood and forgetting the kindnesse shewed to him the Aramites came vp against him Ierusalem was besiedged the Princes were destroyed their goods were spoiled and though the army of Aram came with a small company of men yet the Lord deliuered a very great army into their hand because they had forsaken the Lord God of their fathers Giue God the glory of his owne works and let vs not sacrifice to our owne Nets This is the cause why God oftentimes doth not blesse and prosper our warres wee glory greatly in our multitudes of men whereby God is robbed of his glory and constrained to shew vs our owne folly and to chasten vs for our presumption Vse 2 Secondly it behoueth vs to consult with him before we enter into it ●mb 27 21. to pray for a blessing and to depend vpon him touching the successe If nothing ought to be enterprised rashly or taken in hand vnaduisedly then should warres be seriously thought vpon and warily begun and wisely vndertaken The wise man teacheth Prou. 20 18 24 6 that by counsell the thoughts of the heart must be established and by counsell warres are to be enterprised Thus when God promised victory to Ahab by one of his Prophets ouer a great multitude of the Syrians that he might learne to know him to be the Lord Ahab asked of the Lord who should order the battell 1 Kings 20 14 22 5. So we must do nothing before we aske counsell of God to know his will pleasure as Iehoshaphat taught Ahab crauing his helpe against Ramoth Gilead Aske counsell I pray thee of the Lord to day whether he will make our way prosperous When the children of Dan sent expert men to view the Land and search it out Iudg. 18 5 6 they asked counsell of God to guide their feete in the way of peace It is dangerous to be cold and carelesse in co●sulting with him coming to his ordinance for it Good King Ioshua the Pillar of the hand and nursing father of the Church was killed by Pharaoh Necho 2 Chron. 35 22 because he consulted not with the mouth of the Lord but went out to try his owne strength Let vs not in the day of battell think the season lost or the time il spent that is imployed this way now is the acceptable time and it is no wisedome to delay or deferre it This was the wickednesse of Sauls heart when the noyse of the Philistims army came to his eare the Priest had brought the Arke to aske aduice of God he saide Withdraw thine hand 1 Sam. 14 18 19 that is the time serueth not to stand stay counselling and consulting with God haue away these things and let vs draw neere to the enemy an euident testimony that God had forsaken him and taken his Spirit from him that he might runne from one euill into another and so worke out his owne confusion Contrariwise we see that while Ioshua encoūtred with Amalek a malicious and bloody enemy Moses continued in prayer and he preuailed more to the discomfiture and destruction of the Amalekites by the force of prayer then Ioshua by the dint of the sword Lastly let vs not feare the enemies of the Vse 3 Church but be strong and valiant and commit the cause vnto God Thus did Ioab when he entred the battell for the defence of Gods people and true religion 2 Sam. 10 12. Be● strong and let vs be valiant for our people and for the Cities of our God let the Lord do that which is good in his eyes Thus Dauid comforteth himselfe when he fled from his sonne Abso on an● was driuen out of his kingdome by treason treachery Psal 3 6 7 8. I will not be afraid of ten thousand of the people that should beset mee round about O Lord arise helpe me my God for thou hast smitten all mine enemies vpon the cheek bone thou hast broken the teeth of the wicked saluation belongeth vnto the Lord and thy blessing is vpon thy people Be not therefore dismayed discouraged when the enemies breathe out their threatnings against the Church band themselues together against Christ his religion and make their vnholy leagues for the vtter extirpation thereof the Lord that sitteth in heauen knoweth how to vexe them in his sure displeasure and to breake them in peeces like a Potters vessell and therefore blessed are all they that trust in him Verse 16. Assemble the people and I will giue them water So soone as they were remoued from the Riuer Arnon they came into a dry place where they wanted water but haue it immediately supplied of God Somewhat we see they had profited by the former iudgements which brake in as a fire among them consumed many For heere being in need and necessity they do not murmure against God as they had done before nor rage against Mo●es as in former times but they wait the Lords leysure vntil he releeue them render thanks vnto him for his mercy receiued This benefit then is heere amplified by the cause I will giue them water From hence this Doctrine ariseth Doctrine The Lord supplieth the wants of his Seruants that the Lord supplieth the wants of his and helpeth them alwaies in time of neede When we are hungry he feedeth vs when we are thirsty he giueth vs drinke when we are naked he cloatheth vs when we are destitute he succoureth vs when we are in want hee supplieth vs when we are in any necessity he helpeth vs yea hee worketh myracles and changeth the course of Nature rather then forsaketh vs. He sent Manna to Israel when they wanted bread he strooke the stony Rock when they wanted drinke he sent his Angell to Eliah with food to strengthen him He neuer forgetteth those that are his he maketh the raine to fall and the sunne to shine vpon the very wicked and vngodly This the Prophet Dauid handleth Psalm 147 9 145 15 16. The eyes of all waite vpon thee and thou giuest them their meate in due season thou openest thine hand and fillest all things liuing of thy good pleasure He giueth to Beasts their food and to the yong Rauens that cry This the Lord
and fals past let vs cal to minde the remēbrance of Gods mercies past and rest in them as in a Sanctuary or place of refuge against all the stormes that Satan raiseth and the floods that hee sendeth to sinke our soule in the gaping gulfe of hellish despaire So long as God bestoweth vpon vs one drop of mercy let vs neuer doubt of his great goodnes to be continued toward vs and to dwell in vs for euer Wherefore the Apostle Paul saith We reioyce in tribulation Rom 5 3●● knowing that tribulation bringeth foorth patience and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs. This is an excellent notable vertue to be throughly acquainted with Gods prouidence dealing toward vs wrought in vs by patience to haue experience of his continuall eye watching ouer his Now we can say to our endles comfort in this manner God hath kept mee from many dangers he hath blessed mee with many graces he hath assisted me against many enemies I will therefore still trust in him and depend vpon him thus one benefit draweth on another From this experience we haue a certaine hope of his mercies to be continued toward vs and are assured of the truth constancy of Gods promises and of his good wil toward vs so that in all tribulations and afflictions we must consider with our selues the former benefits of God and from them gather new hope of the continuance thereof whose mercy is a Fountaine that neuer can be dry but springeth vp to euerlasting life and as a Tree that is alwayes greene and yeeldeth the sauory fruites of righteousnesse Thirdly this Doctrine teacheth a notable Vse 3 difference between God and man in bestowing of benefits We see men are soone weary of their liberality cannot abide continuall beggers It is not so with the Lord our God rich in mercy aboundant in kindnesse and plentifull in redemption toward all that call vpon him The more bold wee are in asking the more bountifull he is in granting It is a common thing in the richer sort to checke a man for often crauing and to vpbraid and reproch the poore with those things they haue bestowed vpon them as when they say Why do you alwayes come to me and beg of me I haue giuen you this and that at this time and at that time in such and such a place aske no more of me for if you doe you shall go without Thus do men reproue and reproch for often demanding But see the different dealing of God to our endles comfort vnto the faithfull be doth neuer vpbraid his benefits he is not vnwilling to grant he refuseth no mans person he giueth liberally and bountifully to all that come vnto him This is also a singular comfort to the weake conscience and afflicted soule whē he is tempted to reason thus Will God heare me or respect me Will he shew his louing countenance toward me a greeuous sinner a miserable and wretched sinner a silly and simple soule Aske boldly of him he reprocheth none as the Apostle Iames teacheth chap. 1 5 6. If any of you want wisedome let him aske of God who giueth to all men liberally reprocheth no man and it shall be giuen him The oftner we aske the better we are accepted The more we do desire the more alwayes we doe obtaine He chargeth vs to call vpon him in the day of trouble and assureth vs of our deliuerance Psal 50 15. He would haue all come to him that are heauy laden with promise to be refreshed and eased This is a notable encouragement to all persons to flye vnto God not to runne to Saints or Angels which neyther can heare vs nor giue any gifts vnto men Let vs alwayes be ready to craue of him praise him for his mercies receiued seeing they assure more vnto vs as we see the Apostle doth who hauing experience that God had deliuered him and gathering from thence that God would deliuer him breaketh foorth into this thankesgiuing To whom bee praise for euer and euer Amen 2 Tim. 2 18. Lastly let vs not stand in feare of any enemies Vse 4 that rise vp against vs and conspire to hinder the peace of the Church and stop the passage of the Gospel when God beginneth to take the cause of his people into his owne hand and smiteth any of his enemies on the iaw-bone the rest are reserued to the like destruction For wherefore doth God punish his aduersaries and enter into iudgement with them Wherfore doth he visite them strike them downe with his right hand Is it onely to take vengeance on their sinnes to shew his iustice in their confusion No it serueth for the comfort and consolation of his seruants that howsoeuer God be patient yet in the end they shall not escape This did Ioshua the Captain of the Lords hoast teach the people and men of warre chap. 10 24 25 when they had brought out those Kings vnto Ioshua which they had taken he called for al the men of Israel and said vnto the chiefe of the men of warre which went with him Come neere set your feet vpon the neckes of those Kings and they came neere and s●t their feet vpon their necks And Ioshua saide vnto them Feare not nor bee faint hearted but be strong and of a good courage● for thus wil the Lord do to all your enemies against whom ye fight Where we see that as God destroyeth not all the enemies of his Church at once but singleth out some that the rest might haue a time of repentance so if the rest despise the riches of his b●untifulnes patience and long-suffering Not knowing that the bountifulnesse of God leadeth them to repentance Ro. 2 4 they shall be bound vp in the same bundle and be cast into the fire as the Tree that being spared brought forth no fruite The Lord saide vnto Moses Feare him not for I haue deliuered him into thine hand and all his people and his Land This King of Bashan was a strong and dreadfull enemy descended as we haue shewed of the race of the Gyants mighty in body fearefull to behold terrible to the Israelites as may appeare by the comfort ministred vnto them For God neuer exalteth and raiseth vp in vaine he neuer willeth any to cast off feare where no feare is From hence we learne Doctrine The enemies of the church are not to bee feared That the enemies of the Church are not to be feared Howsoeuer such as set themselues against the people of God be many mighty growing in strength excelling in malice raging with cruelty yet must not Gods seruants bee fearefull and distrustfull by dreading the power of men but alwayes relye vpon God keeping faith and a good conscience depending vpon him in life and death Thus did the Lord strengthen the feeble hart of Hezekiah
behinde them no way was left them to escape the dangers in mans iudgement But as the Church in this world is euer subiect to affliction and to lye vnder the crosse so God doth not incontinently deliuer it out of danger but many times continueth their troubles and augmenteth their calamities to exercise their faith to try their patience and to proue their obedience notwithstanding in the end God maketh an happy issue and sheweth that the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against the Church Therefore when the Israelites began to murmure and not so much against Moses as against God and looked more to the danger of death before them then to the power of GOD aboue them and considered more what they did want then what they should beleeue Moses said vnto them Feare yee not stand still and behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to thee this day for the Egyptians whom yee haue seene this day yee shall neuer see them againe the Lord shall fight for you 〈◊〉 1. therefore hold you your peace When there was a great persecution raised against the Church at Ierusalem so that the sheepe of Christ were scattered abroad and nothing but threatnings and slaughter breathed out against the Disciples of the Lord 〈◊〉 2 3. Authority being giuen by the High-Priest to imprison all such as called on his Name rather then the Church should bee rooted out the Lord Iesus appeared in the Heauens to Paul as hee was in the way being now come neere to Damascus called him to the knowledge of the truth and appointed him to be a teacher of the Gospel that before hee destroyed 1. Sam. 10 11 so that wee may renew the ancient Prouerbe Is Saul also among the Prophets So when wee see the dangerous times and perillous seasons of the Church let vs not hang downe our heads but rather lift vp our hearts and cry vnto God saying Helpe Lord in the time of neede forsake not thine inheritance which thou hast purchased nor the Vine-yard which thy right hand hath planted And let vs assure our selues that when the cause thereof seemeth most desperate and helpe appeareth to vs to be farthest off 2. Cor. 12 9. then is his mercy greatest and his presence neerest then is his power made perfect through our weakenesse This is that which the Prophet Zachary witnesseth chap. 8. speaking of the returne of the people from captiuity vnto Ierusalem and of the louing kindnesse of GOD to bee extended toward them For albeit the residue that were left were reproached the Citty ruinated the gates burned and the wall broken downe yet hee prophesieth Zach. 8 4 5 ● That old Men and old Women shall dwell in the streetes of Ierusalem and the streetes of the City shall be full of Boyes and Girles playing in the streetes thereof For thus saith the Lord of hostes Though it seeme vnpossible in the eyes of the remnant of this people in these dayes should it therefore be vnpossible in my sight saith the Lord of hostes Vse 4 Lastly as this Doctrine teacheth vs to beleeue the promises of God so it teacheth vs not to doubt or despair of the saluatiō conuersion of our brethren for God is able to cal and conuert them to the sauing knowledge of the Gospel This the Apostle vrgeth intreating of the calling of the Iewes Rom. 11 23. to embrace the faith of the Gentiles And they also if they abide not still in vnbeleefe shall be grafted in for God is able to graft them in againe Likewise when the Disciples saw and heard the difficulty of entring into heauen for those that trust in their riches that they haue need of a singular gift of God to escape out of the snares subtilties of Satan Math. 19 26 Christ Iesus beheld them and said vnto them With men this is vnpossible but with God all things are possible Math. 20 1. He calleth at all houres of the day at the dawning of the day at the third houre at the sixt at the ninth and at the eleuenth houre For as he is bound to no person so he is bound to no time he calleth whom he will he teacheth and toucheth the heart when he will This we see in the example of the Apostle Paul which wee spake of before he was at the first a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1 13 a persecutor and an oppressor yet he was receiued of God to mercy to the encouragement of them which shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life Marke 16 9 So was Mary Magdalen a greeuous sinner an vncleane liuer Luke 7 47. out of whom he had cast seuen diuels yet many sinnes were forgiuen her inasmuch as she loued much was the first to whom the Lord appeared after his resurrection Wherefore albeit we s●e men run on in their wickednesse and shut theyr eares against the wholesome admonitions of the word of God albeit their whole life be a continuall practise of sinne and that they drinke in iniquity as the fish doth the water yet wee must iudge nothing before the time 1. Cor. 4 5. vntill the Lord come who will lighten things that are hid in darknesse and make the counsels of the hearts manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God God is not tyed to ordinary causes but as hee fed the people with Quailes in the wildernes so he can inwardly instruct the conscience he can make the least meanes powerfull and effectuall to saluation Math. 19 30. so that as many which are first shall bee last so sometimes the last shal be first He called Iohn the Baptist as it were in the dawning of the day whom he sanctified from his mothers wombe Luke 1 15. He called Timothie and Titus some others as it were at the third houre of the day 2 Tim. 3 15 and 1 5. Who were brought vp in the knowledge of the Scriptures of children which are able to make thee wise vnto saluation through the faith which is in Christ Iesus and honoured the Lord with the first fruits of their life Hee called Paul to be an Apostle Mary Magdalene to be a beleeuer as it were at the sixt houre who after their conuersion redeemed the time and though they were inferiour to other in respect of time yet they were equall vnto them or before them in regard of zeale other graces of Gods Spirit He called the theefe vpon the crosse as it were at the eleuenth houre to bee partaker of his kingdome Luke 23.42 43. to whom Christ said This day shalt thou bee with me in Paradise Let vs not therefore enter into iudgment against our brethren let vs commit them to God Acts 1 7. Seeing it is not for vs to know the times and seasons which the Father hath put in his owne power Let vs pray for their conuersion to God that hee would giue them repentance to know him
potters vessell So then when the wicked say peace peace vnto themselues and thinke themselues sure of their purposes they shall faile in the midway and suddainly come to destruction verifying the saying of Salomon Prou. 11 7. The hope of the vniust shall perish Reason 1 The reasons are first because as they set themselues against the Church so God setteth himselfe against them Can we then maruaile that they are confounded and consumed against whom God opposeth himself they are the enemies of God and God professeth himselfe their enemy Who euer arose against him and prospered Who euer fought against him and preuailed They shall consume as the fat of Lambes before the fire and melt as the waxe against the Sunne This hath beene the faith and assurance of the Church of God in all their dangers that haue threatned and assailed them namely that God would take their cause into his hands and reuenge the wrong done vnto them Therefore when the enemies tooke crafty counsell against them and consulted cruell things to compasse their destruction saying Psal 83.12 Come let vs cut them off from being a nation let the name of Israel be no more in remembrance and let vs take for our possession the habitation of God they prayed to God to confound their enterprizes to fil their faces with shame to make them afraide by his iudgments to turne them vpside downe as a wheele to persecute them with his tempest that they might be as stubble before the wind as the fire burneth the forrest and as the flame setteth the mountaines on fire Reason 2 Secondly they trust in lying words that cannot profit and consequently they cannot prosper because no man by his own strength or the power of his owne hand can bring any thing to passe God scattereth the deuices of the crafty and taketh the wise in their craftinesse so that man cannot by his care and confidence attaine to the fruite of his desire Hagg. 1 9. For God bloweth vpon it and it commeth to nothing The vses of this doctrine remaine to be Vse 1 considered and handled First marke heereby the vnhappy estate of those that haue onely eyes of flesh to rest vpon the things which they see Nothing shall be able to helpe them wofull therefore is their condition This the Prophet teacheth Ier. 17 5 7. Thus saith the Lord Cursed be the man that trusteth in man maketh flesh his arme and withdraweth his heart from the Lord but blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is So then all they that make not God their Lord are vnhappy If the vngodly did consider these things that they setting vp their rest vpon vaine things and putting their confidence in a broken reed cannot prosper it would bee a notable meanes to bridle their vanity and to suppresse their folly If we should see a man naked vnarmed to go into the field against his enemies and perswade himself with a blast or bullrush to thrust them through and throw them down on euery side and make no doubt to get the victory we would thinke him s●ttish and pitty his folly wee would wish him to keepe a good dyet and keepe himselfe and his head warme fearing the man were breeding mad But thus it is with all the enemies of God and his people that raise great hope by their owne deuices and imagine great matters by their own counsels they are as distracted and distempered men they are in a miserable and wofull condition leaning vpon a bulrush and setling their trust and rest vpon a rotten reede They build vp the tower of confusion God will come downe against them and diuide their tongues as hee did at Babel Gen. 11.8 Wofull therefore and wretched is the case of all those whose confidence raised vp to high attempts falleth on the ground they trust in an arme of flesh and are deceiued for GOD laugheth them and their inuentions to scorne They attaine not to the end of their desires but are disappointed and so their hope perisheth and this is chiefly in death when they shal remaine in misery for euer Secondly let vs not rely vpon such vaine Vse 2 things nor rest vpon deceitfull vanity nor waite vpon lying dreames and deuices of men for then all our expectation shall deceiue vs. What man is there in his right wits that would in danger leane on the spiders web and yet thinke to be deliuered Who would trust to a broken staffe who would lay his strength vpon a weake reed This is it that Bildad one of Iobs three friends vttereth ch 8 14. 20 5 6. where he teacheth That the reioycing of the wicked is short the ioy of hipocrits is but for a moment though his excellency mount vp to the heauens his head reach vnto the clouds yet he shal perish for euer like the dung they which haue seen him shal say where is he His confidence also shal be cut off his trust shal be as the house of a spider therfore it can minister no comfort to such as catch hold vpon it Heereunto come sundry exhortations of the Prophet in the Psalmes Psal 62 10. 20 7 125 1. If we rest vpon God we shall haue a sure staffe that shal neuer faile we build vpon that hope that shall neuer make ashamed They that trust in the Lord shal be as mount Sion which cannot be remoued but remaineth for euer Vse 3 Lastly seeing the glory of our enemies shall end in shame and their vaine reioycing be buried in confusion let vs all take comfort and cheere vp our selues and one another when we see the enemies of the Church plot and conspire against the Church Albeit they lay their heads together and be very busie to stoppe the course of the glorious Gospel yet this is our hope that their hope is but on the spiders web the gates of hell shall neuer be able to preuaile against the Church and themselues shall worke out their owne destruction Thus doth the Prophet comfort himselfe Psal 49.5 6 7. Let this stay our faith and comfort our hope when wee see mighty plottings subtill proceedings deepe deuices and conspiracies of the wicked For why should we feare seeing they wait on lying vanities and forsake their owne mercy See this in the example of Pharaoh of Haman of Sancherib of Herod and sundry others If other enemies in our dayes follow their deeds let them also feare their ends And for this purpose the Prophet speaketh vnto them Esay 8 9 10. Gather together on heapes O ye people ye shall be broken in pieces and hearken all yee of farre Countries gird your selues and ye shall be broken in pieces gird your selues and ye shall be broken in pieces Take counsell together yet it shal be brought to nought pronounce a decree yet shall it not stand for God is with vs. Thus the enemies shal be confounded thus their counsels shal be ouerturned so
common to all but peculiar to some It commeth not by inheritance but by grace Parents may leaue vnto their children their houses their lands their substance they may conuey vnto them their inheritance but they cannot conuey vnto them the gifts that accompany saluation Wherefore all parents that are faithfull are to intreate and craue of God the continuance of his couenant toward theyr children and to begge from his hands an holy and sanctified seede to his glory and theyr comfort Verse 14 15. The name of the Israelite thus slaine was Zimri the sonne of Salu and the name of the Midianitish woman that was slaine was Cosbi c. Wee heard before in the fixt verse how Moses hath layde open the shamelesse and impudent behauiour of this beastly adulterer who shamed not to bring the Midianitish harlot into the hoast and in the sight of all the congregation of the children of Israel which were grieued to behold such horrible villany neuerthelesse we see in this place that Moses is not content in a generall manner to describe his wickednesse but singleth him out particularly by his name by his father by his tribe Neyther doth he content himselfe to set downe the Midianitish woman by her nation but calleth her by her name and further openeth the name of her father and her fathers house So then Moses hauing shewed who they were that brought the plague of God vpon the people he now descendeth to marke them out by their proper names and of what calling and profession they were Doctrine It is lawfull sometime to reproue by name From hence we learne that it is sometime lawfull and conuenient to reprooue by name speciall people and particular men that offend in the Church and to record them in writing A particular reproofe of particular offenders sometimes standeth with the word of GOD. So did Eliah deale with Ahab and Iezabel he told him that it was hee and his fathers house that troubled Israel This we see practised by the Prophet Esay against Shebna who being a notable fauourer of euill men and a great hinderer of good things is by name threatned to bee carried away with a great captiuity Esay 22 17. Thus doth Ieremy deale with the false Prophets and other obstinate enemies Ier. 28 12. Likewise our Sauiour Christ denounceth many fearefull woes against the Scribes and Pharisies hypocrites Matth. 23 13. which shut vp the kingdome of heauen before men deuoured widows houses vnder a colour of long prayer compassed sea and land to make one of their profession tythed mint and annise and left the waightier matters of the Law as iudgement mercy and fidelity So did Paul withstand Peter to his face because he was to be condemned Gal. 2 11. And when he saw in the Church such as put away faith and a good conscience and made shipwracke of the doctrine of Christ he giueth the Church notice and warning of them saying Of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander whom I haue deliuered vnto Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme 1. Tim. 1 20. And in another place hauing to doe with such as cast off the doctrine of godlinesse hee noteth the ring-leaders and principall authors Of this sort is Hymeneus and Philetus which as concerning the truth haue erred from the marke saying that the resurrection is past already and do destroy the faith of certaine 2 Tim. 1 17. In like manner he specifieth Alexander the copper-smith which had done him much harme 2 Tim. 4 14. So the Apostle Iohn warneth the Church of Diotrephes who loued to haue preheminence among them Al which examples of the Prophets of the Apostles of Christ himself do teach that it wil not alwaies be sufficient to reproue the errors and heresies of obstinat sinners but somtimes it is expedient to lay them open by their names and to signifie them to the Church by a particular discouering of them The Reasons of this practise are to be considered Reason 1 First because the Church should haue warning of thē that others might shun them and auoid their company So the Apostle nameth Alexander to prepare Timothy not to trust him It is good to know false bretheren lest they spying our liberty take the greater aduantage against vs. Hence it is that Paul chargeth Timothy to beware of Alexander who had withstood his preaching sore 2 Tim. 4 15. While we are familiarly conuersant with the wicked it will be hard for vs not to bee entangled in their sinnes For how can a man walke among thornes not pricke himselfe or how can a man touch pitch and not be defiled We must flye from such as from a deadly plague We must separate our selues from them lest the like vengeance fal vpon vs also Secondly they must by a speciall note bee made knowne to the Church that they may Reason 2 be degraded and brought to reproch The Apostle vsed this remedy thereby to shutte their mouthes and to stoppe them from speaking euill of almighty GOD and his truth which ought to be precious to vs. This naming of them is to set a marke of infamy vpon thē as if a man were boared in the eare or burned in the hand for a malefactor God will haue them and their wickednesse registred to their perpetual shame in the Church for euer that they should not be of any more credit to infect the good and to draw the weake vnto destruction The vnnaturall sauage dealing of the Amalekites toward their brethren the Israelites is by God expresly commanded to be recorded in a booke to their infamy and confusion The Lord saide vnto Moses Write this for a remembrance in the booke and rehearse it to Ioshua for I will vtterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from vnder heauen Exod. 17 14. So we haue in the Scriptures set forth the vncleannesse of Sodome the hard-heartednesse of Pharaoh the conspiracy of Corah the couetousnesse of Ahab the cruelty of Iezabel the disobedience of Saul the treason of Absolon the treachery of Iudas and other infamous beasts the record of their shame is in perpetuall memory and stinketh vnto this day The like we might say of all bloody persecutors in all ages since Christs time they haue theyr names and facts remembred in the Acts and Monuments of the Church Seeing therefore obstinate enemies must be both shunned shamed in both respects we learne that it is lawfull for the Ministers of God to point out some by name that they may be knowne otherwise the Apostles of Christ would neuer haue done it the Prophets would neuer haue practised it Christ himselfe would neuer haue allowed it Let vs apply this to our selues First it serueth as a bridle to restraine euill men especially all such as bring a publike detriment and hurt to the Church and are the cause of common Vse 1 mischiefes they shall to the shame of theyr persons to the reproch of theyr names to the infamy of their posterities be
vnbeleeuers but letteth them alone and spareth them as though hee had forgotten their workes or had not seene their sinnefull wayes yet they must know that their transgressions are recorded in the booke of God and shall come to account For hee suffereth those whom he loueth not to waxe ripe yea to rot away in their sinnes and in the meane season hee chastiseth those whom he hath adopted to be his children Gen. 15. The state of the faithfull is in the fight of man and in the iudgment of the world more miserable then the state of the despisers of God which rest at ease and welter in all pleasures They seeme to bee forgotten of God and vtterly forsaken of helpe so that they pine away with sorrow of heart whereas the wicked lift vp their heads and set their hornes on high they are merry and make a mocke of sinne in the despite of God and in scorne of all godlinesse Alas how would this trouble and torment vs and bring vs to our wits ends if wee had not this doctrine that iudgement entreth first into the house of God and that when God shall haue finished all his worke vpon mount Sion then will hee not spare the wicked Esay 10 12. God will indeed keepe corrections first in his owne house seeing he loueth them most and seeketh to cleanse them from their sinnes hee will visit them in the first place lest they should be condemned with the world and then a most horrible vengeance is prepared and a stormy tempest is made ready for those that haue long abused his patience and hardned their hearts not knowing that his long sufferance ought to haue led them to repentance 1. Cor 11 32. This serueth as a notable comfort on the one side to all the godly that are tryed by afflictions of long continuance We must consider that the more the Lord loueth vs the more forward he is in visiting of vs and when he seeth wee haue stepped awry and are gone out of the right way of saluation hee watcheth ouer vs to bring vs home againe to him with speed This is that which the Apostle teacheth the Church of Corinth For this cause many are weake and sicke among you and many sleepe for if we would iudge our selues wee should not be iudged but when we are iudged wee are chastened of the Lord because we should not be condemned with the world Let vs not therefore despise the chastening of the Lord neyther faint when we are rebuked of him for whom the Lord loueth hee chasteneth and hee scourgeth euery sonne whom he receiueth if therefore we be without correction c. Heb. 12 5.6 Euen as when a man beholding two children committing euill correcteth one of them and letteth the other go free the standers by will say surely that was his sonne which hee did smite and chasten but the other was not Besides we are assured that the wicked shall perish and that the vngodly shall bee punished Secondly this serueth to set forth the wofull condition of all the reprobate for when they see how GOD dealeth with his owne deare children chastening them for their sinnes and sending them great afflictions as appeareth in Dauid that the sword departed not from his house that God did visit him with sundry other iudgements in his children all the dayes of his life it ought to be a feareful threatning to the wicked to make them afraid of the reward which is laide vp in store for them in the life to come This is that which Salomon calleth to their remembrance Behold the righteous shal be recompenced c. Prou. 11 31. And to the same purpose speaketh the Apostle Peter The time is c●me that iudgement must beginne at the house of GOD 1. Peter 4 17. If it first beginne at vs what shall the end be of them which obey not the Gospel of God And if the righteous scarsely bee saued where shall the vngodly and the sinner appeare Woe therefore to all wicked men how wretched shall their end be how horrible shal their destruction be when God commeth to giue them the hire and wages of their worke Let them therefore repent of their euill waies and call vpon God betimes before the euill daies approch and before iudgment do come vpon them Vse 3 Lastly from hence arise sundry duties to be practised as well of the children of God that lye vnder chastisement as of others that are beholders of it First seeing God will begin his chastisements vpon his owne children it teacheth them when they are punished to consider and search out the true cause therof and to call vpon him to pardon theyr sinnes True it is hee is able to preserue them in the time of trouble he is ready to regard their prayers but their sinnes are lothsome to him and doe turne away his louing countenance from them according vnto the saying of the Prophet Esay 59 1 2. Behold the Lords hand is not shortned that it cannot saue neither is his eare heauy that it cannot hear but your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your God your sins haue hid away his face from you that hee will not heare When our sinnes are heartily confessed they shall be freely pardoned and when they are pardoned God is reconciled vnto vs and when he is reconciled his iudgements shal be remoued Secondly let vs begin a new life walke in the wayes of righteousnes for as Salomon teacheth Righteousnesse deliuereth from death Prou. 10 2. Wee must turne from our wickednes and then God will turne from his iudgements Wee are ready to cry out in the time of our affliction but we are not so readie to practise true religion If wee would call in Gods iudgement we must turne to him by amendment of life Lastly when we see the Lord strike his owne children wee must behold it with an eye of compassion So soone as we see their miseries and calamities that ly heauy vppon them we must shew our selues to haue a feeling of their afflictions wee must expresse our pitty we must manifest our kindnesse and wee must declare the bowels of our loue toward them This is it which Iob requireth at the hands of his friends in the daies of his sorrow Iob 19 21. The wicked haue despised me when I rose they spake against me all my secret friends abhorred me and they whom I loued are turned against me c. Where we see he sheweth that God had chastened him that his brethren stoode farre from him that his acquaintance were strangers vnto him that his neighbors had forsaken him that his familiars had forgotten him that his seruants disdained him that his wife loathed him that the wicked despised him that his secret friends abhorred him thereupon hee cryeth out for some to pitty him in his misery and to comfort him in his extreamity This duty should be performed by vs to testifie our loue vnto the seruants of God and so
And as GOD requireth it so hee will accept of it and giue a blessing vnto it and to all those that with care and conscience shall vse it Albeit it bee of small value in it selfe yet GOD hath ordained it to an excellent end euen to humble the soule and it shall be auaileable to that purpose which is no small benefit As water in Baptisme and the bread and wine in the Supper of the Lord are little or nothing worth considered in themselues and as the rest appointed on the Sabbath can little further vs if we goe no further howbeit they bring a great blessing to such as vse them with reuerence faith and repentance Neuerthelesse we are not to trust in these outward things but these outward ceremonies must leade vs by the hand to higher matters lest God send vs away empty as wee came Ezra 6 21 or else the fast of the beasts in Niniueh shal be as good as our fast Ionah 3 7 for they were couered with sackcloth and did neyther feed nor drinke water These vertues are the acknowledging of our owne vnworthinesse also watchfulnesse humility zeale hope of mercy at the hands of God and assurance to obtaine that which wee aske of him in prayer These are no smal graces and benefits For the seruants of GOD by their abstinence from meate and drinke confessed themselues vnworthy so much as of a crumme of bread or of a drop of water by putting on sackecloth vnworthy of the worst ragge to couer their shame and nakednesse They depriued themselues of the benefite of sleepe and cut themselues shorter of it then at other times to stirre vp themselues to perseuerance and watchfulnesse in prayer and other holy duties They put dust and ashes vpon their heads to testifie what they had deserued euen to bee as farre vnder the earth as they were aboue it yea to be depriued of life and to bee stricken with death for their sinnes and to be worthy of eternall condemnation Fasting is to be ioyned with prayer And for the practice of all these they quickened their prayers and as it were added wings vnto them that they might more easily pierce the heauens and present themselues in the presence of God and therefore prayer and fasting were ioyned together Ezra 9 5. Nehem. 1 4. Dan. 9 3. Iudg. 20 26 Luke 2 37 and 5 33. 1 Cor. 7.7 True it is prayer is auaileable without fasting but fasting is neuer auaileable without prayer For fasting is not the worship of God but onely an helpe to it But heere obserue that notwithstanding this exercise of our faith be so often commanded so often commended so often practised so often blessed yet Satan hath not ceassed from time to time to mingle darnell yea poyson with it so thogh it remaine yet it remayneth without profit As hee hath corrupted prayer it selfe so he hath blended and infected the exercise of holy fasting If hee should haue gone about vtterly to take them away his craft would soone haue bin espied therefore he goeth about another way What the Popish fasting is And let vs a little see what the Popish fasting is according as it is deliuered and practised by themselues For contraries set together doe serue to illustrate one another Their fasting is defined to bee a subtraction or diminishing of our meate or dyet Alex. ab Hal●s Durand lib. 6 cap. 7. according to the institution or doctrine of the Church at times appointed vnder paine of mortall sinne to make satisfaction for sinnes and to merite the grace of God and life euerlasting Thus by appointing fastes they ouerturne the right ends of fasting and by their intention of satisfaction for sinne and procuring of eternall life and such like horrible detestable and intollerable blasphemies they destroy the onely sufficient satisfaction of Christ The Church of Rome charge vs to bee enemies to fasting and that our doctrine is a doctrin of liberty but we are enemies only to their abuses and corruptions not to fasting it selfe neyther doe wee allow the breach of fasting dayes Wee hold that it is a Christian exercise needfull to be vsed for the humbling of our soules and the enabling of our selues to the duties of prayer and repentance as often as the time shall require besides our Church hath publike fastes in the time of any generall infection or affliction and our people are instructed and called vpon to faste priuatly also when the cause is more priuate The difference betweene them and vs is this We reiect their set dayes Difference betweene the Church of Rome and vs touching fasting and their name of fast vpon those dayes by distinction of meates for conscience sake wherein they place the worship of God and in the endes which they propound to themselues to wit merit and satisfaction And as they bring in these inuentions so they neglect such exercises of Religion as of right ought to bee ioyned with the outward abstinence Their fasting is onely a forbearing of flesh and things that come of flesh on certain and set dayes allowing to themselues in stead thereof not onely fish which is as good and nourishable as flesh but that which is daintier as wines march-panes conserues and such like sweet meates in as great measure as can be so that they eate as often and as good as we doe euen when they professe to fast if not better 12 And on the fifteenth day of the seuenth moneth ye shall haue an holy conuocation yee shall doe no seruile worke and ye shall keepe a feast to the Lord seuen dayes 13. 14. 15. 16. And yee shall offer a burnt offering a sacrifice made by fire of a sweete sauour vnto the Lord thirteene yoong bulloakes two rammes and fourteene lambes of the first yeare they shall be without blemish And their meat offering c. 17 18 19. And on the second day yee shall offor twelue young bullockes two rammes fourteene lambes of the first yeare without spot And their meat offering c. 20 21 22. And on the third day eleuen bullockes two rammes fourteene lambes of the first yeare without blemish And their meate offering c. 23 24 25. And on the fourth day tenne bullockes two rammes and fourteene Lambes c. Their meat offering c. 26 27 28 And on the fift day nine bullockes two rammes and fourteene lambes c. And their meate offering c. 29 30 31. And on the sixt day c. 35 36 On the eight day c. Of the feast of Tabernacles or of ingathering at the yeares end The last feast mentioned in this chapter is the feast of Tabernacles and of ingathering of the fruites of the land in the end of the yeare when they had gathered in their labours out of the field Exod. 23 16 and 34 22. This also was kept in the seuenth moneth for the space of eight dayes and therefore how they should come before the Lord and what they should offer
and turning to God wee must not put off the matter from day to day The lepers that were cleansed delayed this duty all of them on onely excepted and in the end vtterly did forget it When wee delay a duty thinking to doe it better afterward it groweth quite our of minde The Prophet sayth To day if you will heare his voyce harden not your hearts Psal 95 7 8. Heb. 3 13 Esay 55 6. If we put off our repentance a while who is sure to haue the meanes offered him againe whereby God ordinarily worketh repentance Who can tell whether hee shall heart the word of God preached to him any more The word is translated from place to place we are translated from life to death frō our house to the graue and we know not whether wee shall carry our selues when wee are gone from the Church or be carried by others to the Church againe Besides the longer wee delay our repentance the more hard and difficult it will be because a thicke skinne will grow ouer the heart that it will bee past feeling and sinne will take deeper roote through custome and continuance and therefore wee must set vpon it betimes There lacketh not a man of vs therefore wee haue brought an oblation This was an extraordinary mercy receiued It is a great blessing of God to ouercome the enemy and to obtaine the victory but thus to ouercome and to haue such a victory required an extraordinary thankesgiuing We learne from hence Doctrine It is our duty in extraordinary blessings to returne extraordinary thanks that as men ought to returne thankes to God for al his blessings so they ought for extraordinary blessings to returne extraordinary thankes and praises As in times of distresse it is our duty to humble our selues and in extraordinary visitations to vse extraordinary humiliation so when God sheweth any mercy especially extraordinary the Church hath great cause to bee thankfull accordingly and vpon that occasion to bee stirred vp to set forth his noble praise Exodus 15.1 2 c. Esay 38 9. Hezekiah returneth great thankes for his great deliuerance Luke 1 46. Psalme 145 7. The grounds follow Reason 1 First all acknowledge that they are tyed to some duties for blessings receiued Now this is the onely recompence that we can make we cannot requite him to come before him with burnt offerings with calues of a yeare old hee will not be pleased with thousands of rammes or with ten thousands of riuers of oyle Mic. 6 6 7 hee hath shewed vs what is good and what he requireth of vs the onely accepted sacrifice and seruice is an humble contrite and thankfull heart Psal 116 13 14 this is more acceptable to him then all sacrifices that haue hornes and hoofes all the fowles of the mountaines are his the wilde beasts of the field and the cattel vpon the hilles and therefore he willeth vs to offer vnto him thankesgiuing and to pay our vowes to the most High and to glorifie him for our deliuerances Secondly the least mercies of God such as are most ordinary continuall deserue thanks yea the greatest thanks that we can possibly giue that the tongue and heart should ioyne together in that action for the least drop of his mercy is greater then our deserts then how much more doe his greatest mercies and blessings deserue the greatsst thankes and praise at his hand to performe the same with all our soule with all our mind and with all our strength Hence it is that the seruants of God as we see in Dauid Hezekiah and others after wonderfull and great and mightie deliuerances did vse to penne their songs and often to repeat them to quicken the memoriall of Gods blessings and his kindnesse that they had receiued and thereby to stirre vp their owne hearts and the hearts of others that they might be more closely knit and linked vnto God The like we see in Ionah when he was deliuered from the Whale that had swallowed him vp where the waters compassed him euen about to the soule the depth closed him round about and the weedes were wrapt about his head Ionah 2 5 9 that his deliuerance might seeme after a sort a resurrection from the dead as indeed his lying in the belly of the fish three dayes and three nights Ionah 1 17 did figure out the resurrection of Christ to be so long in the heart of the earth Math. 12 40. I say when he had receiued such a deliuerance what could he do but sacrifice vnto God with the voyce of thankesgiuing and pay that which he had vowed considering that saluation is of the Lord Thirdly Nature it selfe doth teach that the greatest blessings should haue the greatest thankfulnesse inasmuch as great blessings fill the heart more full of ioy now where the heart of a man is extraordinarily ioyfull there the mouth of a man also ought to be extraordinarily thankful Fourthly it standeth with equity that in all things that we do toward God we should do them in proportion and in this matter of thankfulnes wee ought to make out thankes to bee in some sort and in some weake measure proportionable to his blessings The vses remaine First how glorious ought Gods Name to be in all places who doth daily lode vs with Vse 1 his benefites He dealeth not sparingly with vs but liberally thereby to magnifie his great Name that all the world might acknowledge his greatnesse and sing to his praise saying O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the earth who hast set thy glory aboue the heauens Psal 8 1 2 3 c. Secondly this reproueth many of vnthankfulnes Vse 2 howsoeuer they seeme to themselues to be very thankfull yet they are not proportionably thankfull and therefore they may be said not to bee thankfull at all because they giue not according to his workes and therefore he requireth of vs that wee should praise him according to his blessings But alas which of vs doe not for the most part receiue much of him and returne little or nothing vnto him againe It is not enough for vs to say God be thanked and then thinke wee haue performed all that can be required of vs but as we receiue double mercy so should wee yeeld double obedience Lastly this teacheth Vse 3 euery man that he should consider Gods dealing toward him and what blessings hee hath receiued from him that so hee may see how much thankfulnes he oweth vnto him For where the gifts of God are encreased vpon a man there he hath much cause of thankfulnesse If others that haue receiued lesse blessings from God haue beene more thankfull vnto him for them how shall we escape that haue greater blessings if we shew our selues lesse thankfull Let euery one enter into the meditation of these things Wee haue receiued blessings of all sorts generall and particular what Nation hath beene honoured and aduanced like vnto ours what people haue receiued such deliuerances
sicknesses To follow them with greedinesse desire them as the hungry man doth after meate or he that is a thirst after drinke is the true misery Such as liue in sinne are the onely dead men Luke 9 60. 1 Tim. 5 6. Secondly it instructeth euery one of vs how Vse 2 we ought to walke before God namely to be greeued for our greeuing of God with our sins to be offended wit●our selues for offēding of him A father will be very angry with those persons which draw on their children to destruction it is not therefore much to be maruelled at that sin is so hatefull to God seeing it is that which is the ruine downfal of his chiefest creatures And as sinne is in the account of God so it ought to be esteemed of vs he hateth and detesteth nothing more nothing so much if then we wil approue our selues to be his children we must abhor it as Gods sworne enemy and ours Nothing can prouoke him against vs but our transgressions Hee will neuer hate vs for our pouerty or penury or necessitie or infirmity it is onely impiety that can make a separation betweene God and vs and therefore we must take heede we doe not prouoke him to anger by them and let vs rather bee greeued for our sinnes then greeue the Lord with them If a sonne see his father greeued with him for his wicked wayes he will bee greeued with himselfe for it So ought it to be with vs if we be the children of God and belong vnto him we must labour to bee out of loue with our selues for our sinnes and to hate them all whatsoeuer they bee least the Lord should bee compelled to hate vs and make vs greeue and weepe for them when it shall be too late Matth. 8 12 and when our shedding of teares shall be ioyned with gnashing of teeth and neither of them proue to bee acceptable vnto him or profitable to our selues Vse 3 Thirdly it leadeth and preacheth vnto vs repentance of our former sinnes and neuer to returne vnto them againe because they are so displeasing vnto God and so effectuall to bring downe all his iudgements and punishments vpon vs. If God were indifferent when we haue sinned and neither pleased nor displeased with vs then the matter were not great we also might be indifferent not regard whether wee repent or doe not repent but seeing sinne bringeth all iudgement it is time for vs to iudge our selues that so we may preuent his iudgements For seeing it is that which is so odious and loathsome vnto him we ought to auoyd it and to take heed of delighting in it They that loue feare to offend him whom they loue that we may therefore shew our selues to bee the louers of God let vs labour to the vttermost of our power to take heede of greeuing and offending him by our sinnes But when a man committeth sinne against God doth he thinke God will punish him or not If he thinke he will then what great folly is it for him to runne on still in his sinnes for which he must be punished If hee thinke he will not then what wickednesse vnthankfulnesse is it for him to offend so louing a God that is not offended with him for all his sinning against him All these things do serue as so many motiues to stirre vs vp to the practice of repentance that so God may repent of his plagues toward vs. Vse 4 Lastly this serueth for matter of imitation For if God be thus displeased with sinne which neuer leaueth or ceaseth to hunt after the sinner till it finde him out then euery one of vs that would shew our selues to haue any part in God or to beare his image must labour to be of the same minde and to haue the same affection against sinne that God hath to hate it as he hateth it and so to bee displeased as well at our owne sinnes as at the sinnes of others For he can neuer be truely displeased with his owne sinnes that is not also greeued with the sinnes and offences of others As then wee are touched and troubled for our owne sinnes so should wee be for the sinnes of our friends of our families and of those that we haue any way to deale withall forasmuch as it is that which doth so much greeue the Spirit of God 28 So concerning them Moses commanded Eleazar the Priest and Ioshua the sonne of Nun and the cheefe fathers of the tribes of the children of Israel 29 And Moses saide vnto them If the children of Gad and the children c will passe with you ouer Iordan c then yee shall giue them the land of Gilead for a possession 30 But if they will not passe c. 31 And the children of Gad c answered saying As the Lord c. 32 We will passe ouer armed before the Lord into the land of Canaan that the possession of our inheritance on this side Iordan may be ours The third part of the chapter followeth handling the full agreement of the whole matter and the execution following after the agreement wherby these tribes are put in possession Moses committeth the matter to Eleazar the Priest and to Ioshua the son of Nun gaue charge to them to see it performed For inasmuch as he was not himselfe to enter into the land hee taketh order that if the former conditions were obserued by the Reubenites and Gadites they should haue the land of Gilead for a possession if not they should bee compelled to haue possession among the rest in the land of Canaan teaching thereby that it is our duty to further promote the good of the Church and Commonwealth not onely while we liue but also after our departure out of this world And in the tribes we see that all lawful promises euen such as are made to our hindrance are faithfully to be performed But in the example of these tribes marke a further point how willing they are to ioyne together to procure the common safety and set the rest of their brethren out of danger Doctrine It is the dutie of Gods children to helpe the church to free it from danger which was like to be great long they would not forsake them til their enemies were subdued This teacheth that it is the duty of Gods children to put foorth themselues in the common cause to helpe the church and to free it from danger This point hath warrant both by precept practice It is the counsell of Salomons mother Prou. 31 9. Open thy mouth in the cause of the dumbe c and to shew the great importance of this precept hee repeateth it againe Open thy mouth iudge righteously and pleade the cause of the poore and needy verse 10. The Apostle chargeth the Hebrewes to remember those that are in bondes and in affliction as if themselues were afflicted Heb. 13.3 And they are remembred not so much when they are thought vpon
Word and Sacraments hee will haue his Ministers also vnder the Gospel sufficiently prouided not onely of sustenance and maintenance but also of houses and habitations fit for them that they might waite vpon their office without disturbance or distraction This teacheth vs Doctrine The ministers must be pro●ided of all things necessary for them that the Ministers of the church must be prouided of food rayment of houses and dwellings and of all things necessary for thē This is proued at large in this place heere it is commanded in the booke of Ioshua it is performed and executed as wee may reade in Chap. 2.1 2 3 4 c. where we see particularly what Cities euery tribe gaue as the Lord commanded by the hand of Moses The like we see in the prophesies of Ezekiel Chapter 45. verses 1 2 3 4 c. that when the Messiah is exhibited and the Gospel preached throughout the world the Land shall bee otherwise diuided so that part of it shal be assigned to the house of the Lord part shall belong vnto the Priests and to the Leuites verse 4 and 5. shewing thereby that the Ministers of the Gospel must bee maintayned By the law of nature euery man was bound to giue something for the furtherance of Gods seruice of such temporall goods as GOD had giuen him Gen. 14. verse 18. and 28. verses 20 22. Leuit. 27. verse 30 Numb 18. ver 28 Deut. 14. verses 28 29. 2 Chron 31. verses 4 5. It is noted touching the zeale of good king Hezekiah when hee had appoynted the courses of the Priests and Leuites euery man according to his seruice hee commaunded the people to giue the portion to the Priests and Leuites and by and by they brought in aboundance the first fruites of Corne and Wine and oyle and Honey and of all the encrease of the fielde and the Tythe of all things brought they in aboundantly Neyther doth this belong onely vnto the Reason 1 times of the Law but likewise of the Gospel For the ministery of the Gospel is much more glorious then of the Law and the calling of the Ministers of Iesus Christ is greater then of those that serued at the Altar for as Iohn was farre greater then any of the Prophets that went before him so hee that is least in the kingdome of heauen is greater then hee as Matth. chap. 11. verse 11. If then the Leuites were so bountifully and liberally dealt withall whose seruice was to take end at the exhibiting of the Messiah then much more ought they whose ministery and seruice must stand and continue for the perfecting of the Saints for the worke of the Ministery and for the edifying of the body of Christ till wee all come in the vnity of the fayth vnto a perfect man vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnes of Christ Eph. 4 12 13. Secondly that they may attend to the holy things of God be no way disturbed For seeing the Apostle giueth it in charge that they must giue attendāce to reading to exhortation to doctrine 1. Tim. 4 13. how can they watch ouer the flock and giue themselues to these duties except they haue prouision made for them accordingly or how can they prepare a Table wel furnisht for the people in the church when they haue nothing to set on their tables in their owne houses Or deale bread vnto the hungry when they are hungry themselues or how can they fil the people with the food of the soule when the people suffer them to bee empty and to want the food of the body Lastly it is required of the Ministers that they should be giuen to hospitality as well as to teach 1 Tim. 3 2. the Apostle ioyneth both these together But how shall they shew worke of charity when they haue not to supply their owne necessity Or how shall they entertaine strangers when they are not able to maintaine their owne families Or how should they doe this good vnto the Church when they themselues want it in theyr owne priuate houses Vse 1 The Vses remaine First this reproueth the corrupt dealing of wretched and miserable people who detaine from the Ministers their liuelyhood whereby they should help themselues and releeue others The Popish sort thinke nothing too good for their priests and shauelings but we haue those that thinke euery thing too good for Gods faithfull Ministers their maintenance is too stately their diet too dainty their apparrel too costly their houses too lofty they could be content they were put to earne their liuing with the spade and shouell They will not willingly affoord them any thing and they thinke it well saued which is purloyned from them They are accounted the best husbands that can most cunningly and craftily go beyond them and such as can thrust a new custome though it were neuer heard of before vpon them to defeate and defraud them of that which is due vnto them doth account himselfe to leaue his land in the best state to prouide exceeding well for his posterity and to rid his demeanes of a very great bondage In former times tythes were counted as a debt to the Minister now it is helde a bondage or slauery to pay them And yet these are they that cry out with open mouth against the cruelty and couetousnes of the Clergy like Iudah that exclaimed against the incontinency of Tamar when himself was guilty of no lesse crime Gen. 38. Secondly it reproueth such Patrons as enrich themselues with the liuings of the Church who present other to the place but retaine to themselues a share out of the same These doe bestow the benefice but they keepe the benefite neuer considering that it is a snare to the man who deuoureth that which is holye and after vowes to enquire Prou. 20 25. Now that is to be accounted holy which is dedicated to holy vses whether it be to the worshippe of God to the maintenance of the Ministers to the furtherance of schooles and good learning or to the releefe of the poore and therefore the abolishing or diminishing of these is condemned as sacriledge against God Deut. 23 23. Their forefathers were liberall in furthering the worship of Images nay of the diuel himself imagining it to be the seruice of the true God they spared not to enrich those that were seducers and ringleaders to eternall damnation thogh they were also vnlearned and vngodly vnfit for that calling yet somwhat they gaue them out of baptizings and the other counterfet sacraments out of burials trentals masses months minds euery thing yeelded some see and stipend whereby they grew rich in the world whereas the children of these grudge to giue any thing to their learned and godly pastors which God hath in mercy bestowed as a speciall gift vpon the Church but giue thē cause to complaine of their wants of meere things necessary The Prophet Malachi is not afraid to pronounce that such vnconscionable dealing
had the brest-plate and an Ephod of gold Sigon de rep Hebr. lib. 5. cap. 3. Eucherio which is to be noted because the rest of the Priests did sometimes weare a linned Ephod They might haue no blemish or deformity Leuit. 21 18. They might drink no wine nor strong drinke when they were to enter into the Sanctuary Leuit. 10 9. They might not defile themselues by the dead nor come nigh any that was dead except it were their father or mother sonne or daughter or sister vnmarried Leuit. 21 1. They might not shaue their heads nor beards nor cutte their flesh they might marry no harlot nor woman diuorced Leuit. 21 5 7. The first that were consecrated to this office were Aarons sons Nadab and Abihu Eleazar and Ithamar From Eleazar in Dauids time who established an exact order among them were issued 16 families 1 Chron. 24 4 and from Ithamar eight that is from them both 24 families These he sorted and separated into foure and twenty classes or courses named each of them after the name of him who was the chiefe of each family and concerning the ordering of them and setting one before another to auoide contention they cast lots All of them could not attend euery day without confusion and disorder they must haue intermission and times of vacation so that one course performed the seruice one weeke and another course another weeke Hence it is that it is saide in the booke of Chronicles 2 Chron. 23 8 that Iehoiada the Priest dismissed not the courses that is he sent not away the troopes and companies of the Priests that attended the seruice of the Temple when their time of waiting was expired so that according to the order appointed they should haue departed and the next course haue succeeded because hee meant to make good vse of them in the deposing of wicked vsurping Athalia and in the establishing of the royal throne of Ioash the lawfull King of Iudah This also appeareth in part in the new Testament Luk. 1 8 9. It came to passe that Zachariah of the course of Abia executed the Priests Office according to the custome of the Priests c. Thus much touching the Priests Office who were Aaron and his sonnes whom God chose out of al the families of the Tribe of Leui to minister before him It remaineth to consider Of the Leuites how the rest or residue of that Tribe were imployed They were not to be idle but to serue also first in the Tabernacle which Moses erected and afterward in the Temple which Salomon builded When these grew vp and encreased in great number they were sorted by Dauid for orders sake into foure rankes Sigon de 〈◊〉 Heb. lib. 5. ● 4 5 6 7. Some were appointed to bee Ministers of the Priests and Temple some to be singers some to be porters and others Scribes and Iudges Touching the first specially called Leuites that attended the seruice of the Sanctuary their Offices were to carry the Tabernacle and the Arke of the Couenant in the remoues of the people vntill God according to his promise fixed and setled them in one certaine place whither the Tribes should resort and then they were to take care of them and the vessels appointed to be vsed in the seruice of GOD. Vnto these offices in latter times were added the flaying of the beasts that were to be offered as 2 Chron. 35 10 11. Touching the second ranke to witte the sweete singers of the songs of Sion we reade in the first booke of the Chronicles chap. 25. 1 Chron. ●● they were to sing prophesies with harpes with viols and with cymbals Touching the Porters which were the third ranke they were appointed to see that no vncircumcised no polluted or prophane person should enter into the house of the Lord 1 Chron. 26 and to guard the same in such sort that all things therein might bee in safety as the sacred vessels the treasure of the house and the treasure of the dedicated things Touching the Scribes which are the last ranke they were such as read the Scriptures and expounded the Law of God in the Temple at Ierusalem and in the Synagogues that were in all parts of the Land who were also called Doctours that is Interpretors of the Law of God All which we may reade at large in a learned Treatise of the Church Lib. 5. Cap. 5 6. D Field of t● Church lib. 5. cap. 6. Hauing thus breefely considered the distinct offices of such as were set apart to the Ministery among the people of GOD who made his Couenant with Leui of life and peace Mal. 2 4 5. let vs now returne to the words of Moses and proceede to the second part of the Preface which is the presentation of the Leuites before Aaron to bee as his hands and helpers that they might minister vnto him Wherein we are to obserue two points first the commandement of God to Moses and secondly the reason of the commandement For touching the execution of it by Moses according to the commandement of God which is in other places most vsually added is in this place omitted but must be supplied and vnderstood from that which followeth for when once the Leuites were offered and presented then presently hee proceeded to the numbring of them so that his obedience in this respect is sufficiently iustified Touching the commandement of God directed vnto him we are to marke these seuerall points and of them the Author is GOD for in diuine matters nothing must be attempted without commandement from him hee must warrant thē or else they are not to be allowed First the substance of the commandement verse 6 7 8. The Leuites are giuen to Aaron the Priest that they may minister vnto him and that they may doe the seruice of the Tabernacle and that they may keepe the instruments or vessels thereof Secondly the order that Aaron and the Priests should be superiour vnto them and be as Ouerseers of them prouiding that no stranger should thrust himselfe into this calling contrary to the ordinance and appointment of God Heb. 5 verse 4. No man taketh this honour vnto himselfe but he that is called of God as was Aaron so that he excluded from the ministery of the tabernacle al other that were not Leuites ● 7 13. of the other Tribes no man gaue attendance at the Altar they were strangers from the Priesthood and the Priesthood from them Not as though in the new Testament there should be one onely family separated to which the administration of holy things should belong For after Christ was ascended ●bac in ●●b cap. 3. and had led captiuity captiue the distinction of Tribes and families was taken away in regard of the functions of the Church so that the Ministers may bee ordained and called out of any estate degree whatsoeuer being furnished with sufficient gifts for that purpose Thus much of the commandement
the reason followeth verse 11 12 13 in which God himselfe assigneth the cause why he did take vnto himselfe the Leuites to succeed in place of the first borne For vnto this time the first borne both in the priuate families in the publike assemblies of the Israelites did execute the Priests office as persons consecrated vnto God as we haue shewed and expounded Exod. 13 and 19 chapters and as we shall shew farther in this chapter Hence it is ●w the first ●ne are said be the ●ds that he saith Euery first borne is mine which is to be vnderstood not in regard of the common right of creation as sometimes the earth and all that filleth it is said to be the Lords and all the beasts of the Forrest but they are so called in another respect For the better vnderstanding whereof Things are said to be the Lords in three respects we must consider that things are said to bee the Lords in three respects First in regard of duty and seruice Thus all creatures are the Lords because he is their Creator and maker in regard whereof euery thing created oweth a duty to him as to the great Lord to whom all things visible and inuisible owe their homage as Psal 24. the Prophet saith The earth is the Lords and all that therein is and he rendreth this reason For hee hath founded the world c. Secondly all creatures are said to be the Lords also in regard of that power and authority whereby he ruleth all to which iurisdiction of his all men how wicked peruerse soeuer they be are subiect Thus Cyrus King of Persia though he knew not the Lord yet is said to be the Lords Shepheard and his annointed and to performe all his pleasure Esay 44 28 and 45 1. He did the worke of the Lord ignorantly and blindly yet God was his Lord and he his seruant in proclaiming that Ierusalem should be builded and the foundation of the Temple erected So the Prophet speaking of the world and of all things therein contained saith They continue this day according to thine ordinances for all are thy seruants Psal 119 91. as if he should say All creatures in heauen and earth continue safe and sound euen from the beginning to the present times wherein we liue and so they shall doe vnto the worlds end through thy word and appointment so that as they were created by thy word and are preserued in their estate so they are at thy commandement to do thy will euen as seruants obey their masters Thus the diuelles though they resist him and rebell against him may be saide to be his seruants because they are constrained to serue his prouidence They be farre from yeelding faithfull seruice and dutifull obedience vnto him yet they must stoope downe vnto him he hath in such sort put his hooke in their nose and his bridle in their lippes and his chaine on their hands and his fetters on their feet that they cannot start from him but they shall doe him seruice for the execution of his secret will Therefore the Prophet saith Psalme 135 verse 6. Whatsoeuer the Lord pleased that did he in heauen and in earth in the sea and in all deepe places To the same purpose the Apostle writing to the Philippians and speaking of the power of Christ Iesus who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equal vnto God saith chap. 2 verse 9 10 God hath highly exalted him and giuen him a name which is aboue euery name that at the name of Iesus euery knee should bow of things in heauen things in earth and things vnder the earth and that euery tongue should confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord vnto the glory of GOD his Father Thus also the beasts of the Forrest are the LORDS and the cattell on a thousand Mountaines Psal 50. Not only because all creatures owe a duty vnto him but because they are gouerned by his rule ordered by his power and ruled by his prouidence Thirdly some things are saide to be the Lords in respect of a propriety and immediate right that he hath in thē being separate from the vse of man For then they become the Lords when they are alienated from men Thus tithes in the word are said to be the Lords Leuit. 27 30. All the tithes of the Land both of the seede of the ground and of the fruite of the trees is the Lords it is holy vnto the Lord. Where the last words expound the former according to the vsuall manner of the Scripture and shew in what sense tithes are the Lords because the propriety is not in man but in God onely forasmuch as that which is holy to the Lord is separate from man and from his vse and cannot bee alienated by him without sacriledge and vsurpation So in this place the Leuites are saide to be the Lords and the first borne are said to be the Lords not onely in respect of their duty to him and of his power ouer them for thus all creatures are his all people and nations of the earth are his and in these respects not onely the tithes are the Lords but the other nine parts as wel as they But they are sanctified to him and are to bee imployed in his seruice being separated from the vse of man as the rest are appointed and left to the vse of man Thus then the Lord challengeth authority to bestow the tenths of their encrease so that man could not employ them to himself without sacriledge If any of the Leuites s●ould be taken from the Altar sent into the wars they had prophaned Gods seruice and abused their persons to another end then GOD had ordained The like might be spoken also of the Sabbath that is the Lords day he claimeth it to his owne vse he separateth and sanctifieth it to his owne seruice The sixe other daies are ours and God giueth vs liberty to call them ours and to bestow them as ours in our owne businesse Exod. 20 9. Reuel 1 10. Such therefore as make no conscience to take the LORDS day from him and vse it as their owne are spirituall theeues and meddle with that which is not their owne If their seruants should deale in such sort with them and imploy any of the sixe daies in their owne worke and leaue their businesse vndone they would quickly complaine of the iniury Or if any of their neighbours should come into their house and take away any part of their goods we would bid them learne to know their owne and be ready to call them theeues But we deale with GOD a thousand times worse then wee would suffer other men to deale with vs. We can take the Lords day nay the Lords daies one after another and spend them about our owne profits and pleasures and vanities and yet neuer consider the wrong iniustice we offer vnto the Almighty Oh that men would lay this vnto their hearts
for his piety and aduancement of true religion sent out his Princes to teach in the Cities of Iudah not that they did take vpon them the duty of the Priests or vsurpe the office of the Prophets but because they did backe countenance authorize the Leuites they did embolden encorage the Prophets This made an easy way and passage for the receiuing and entertaining of true religion among the people with much more readinesse and cheerefulnesse then otherwise would haue bene For when they saw and considered that such noble and worthy persons were the aduancers and vpholders of the common Faith they were the more stirred vp to a zelous professing and a carefull embracing and a sincere obeying of the truth that was taught Seeing therefore such good Princes are such great pillars of the Commonwealth of the Church and of Religion the losse of them when they are taken away is one of the greatest losses threatneth the ruine and hauocke of all that is good When the good King Iosiah was taken away Lam. 4 20. being taken in the snare vnder whose shadow they liued in peace all Iudah and Ierusalem mourned for him and spake of him in their lamentations to this day and made them an ordinance in Israel 2 Chr. 35 24 Zach. 12 11. For as the enioying of them bringeth many blessings that wee may quietly resort together to the hearing of the word and peaceably sit vnder our Vines and Fig-trees and reason of the wayes of the Lord as it was in the daies of Salomon when no man may doe what seemeth good in his owne eies as in the want of them so the taking of them away is the cause of many euils of much wickednes whereof we may say as Christ doth in another case Math. 24 8. ● All these are the beginnings of sorrows True it is that the religion of God and the doctrine of the Gospel do not so stand in neede of the help of man as though they must fal whē they fal because they are set vpon such a sure foundation that no force or power of mā can shake them or destroy them and they tooke firme root and spred far and neere vnto all quarters before any Christian Magistrates embraced them nay while they remained vtter enemies vnto them and open persecuters of them neuerthelesse it pleaseth God to vse them as his chosen instruments and by them to bring many thousands to the knowledge of the trueth and consequently to the kingdom of heauen who otherwise through their ignorance wold not see it or through their carelesnesse would not regard it or through their vntowardnesse would not accept of it 10 And the Princes offered for dedicating of the Altar in the day that it was annointed euen the Princes offered their offering before the Altar 11 And the Lord said vnto Moses c. We heard before of the offering performed ioyntly by the Princes now let vs see the Offerings which they brought seuerally For besides the Chariots and the Oxen each of these great Commanders of the people and Heads of the Tribes offered vnto God for his seruice in the Tabernacle a Charger of fine siluer waighing 130. shekels a siluer Boll of 70. shekles and one Spoone of ten shekels of Golde full of Incense al which they performed at the same time when the Altar was dedicated to God by Aaron and before they marched from Sinai where the Law was giuen toward their conquest of the promised land The waight of all the 12. siluer Chargers and 12 siluer Bolles amounted vnto 2400 shekels of siluer the waight of Gold in the Incense spoones did amount to 120. shekels of Gold which maketh of shekels of siluer 1200. euery shekel of Gold valewing ten of siluer so that the whole sum which they offred at this time was about 420 pounds sterling These Princes offered before with men and women yet now they come againe thinke they can neuer do enough toward the furtherance of the Tabernacle the worship of God The doctrine Doctrine from hence is this that they which haue most outward blessings greatest ability must be most forward in Gods worship and seruice They that ha●e t●e greatest ability guts mu●t bee m●st ●orw●rd in Gods seruice In Ezra it appeareth they al gaue according to their ability chap. 2 9. The chiefe of the Fathers when they came to the house of the Lord offered freely for the house of God to set it vp in his place So in Nehemiah it appeareth how bountifull he and the Princes and the people were They gaue much siluer and gold to finish the worke of the Lord. The examples of Dauid and Salomon in this kind are very euident and apparent for that which one of them prepared to the work and the other employed and bestowed vpon the worke is exceeding great as appeareth in the holy history 1 Chron. 18 11. c. And so much the rather we should employ our blessings and gifts to the seruice of God Reason and so giue them after a sort to him that gaue them first vnto vs because it is a sign that our affection is set vpon the worship of God and an assurance to our owne hearts that we loue him and his house 1 Chro. 29 3 4. where Dauid sheweth he gaue 3000. talents of golde of the gold of Ophir and 7000. talents of refined siluer because he had set his affection to the house of his God On the other side where is no liberality we may conclude there is no worship of God Secondly euery one is bound to glorifie God with his riches knowing that they are but stewards and dispensers of them of which they must giue an account vnto God Luk. 16 2. To this end hath God bestowed them and to this end we haue receiued them and therefore to this end they should bee employed Thirdly this is a certain rule that To whom soeuer much is giuen of him shall much be required Luke 12 48. Hee that hath little committed vnto him hath the lesse account and shorter reckning to make but to whom men haue cōmitted much of him they will require more so is it with God if he haue left vs fiue talents he will aske fiue of vs againe and according as God hath put vs in trust with litle or much we must know that he looketh for this at our hands that we bee ready to employ little or much vpon his seruice euery one according to his ability This serueth to reproue the forgetfulnesse and vnthankfulnes of such as neuer consider Vse 1 the end wherefore God hath blessed them giuing themselues wholly to carnall liberty and security and so are more backeward in good things then if they had neuer receiued so many and so great blessings from God Hee hath a plentifull store-house and a treasurie of all treasures out of this he dealeth with vs and distributeth vnto vs plentifully The Apostle giueth the Church a watchword
and it is very needfull he should doe so that in all things they should be thankefull 1 Thess 5 19. This is the cause why the Israelites were forwarned to take heed to themselues euen before they entred into the land of promise Deut. 6 10 11 12. and should possesse great goodly Cities which they neuer builded houses full of all manner of furniture and garnishings and ornaments which they neuer stored vineyards Oliue trees which they neuer planted Welles of water which they neuer digged and fieldes of Corne which they neuer sowed then they ought neerely and narrowly to looke vnto themselues And why then rather then at another time Because riches and pleasures abundance and ease would be such baits that they should then be in greatest dangers more then when they liued in the wildernesse to bee drawne by them to forget Gods mercies by which they were deliuered out of many miseries They thought they should then bee safe enough if once they were come to set foote in the land howbeit Moses telleth them that then remained the greatest danger of all They must stand in feare lest they be choaked with these thornes lest they bee entangled in these snares lest they suffer ship-wracke at these rockes lest they be ouercome with these tentations lest they be drowned in these deepe waters Luk. 8.14 1 Tim. 6 9. This is the corruption of our nature and the poison of sin it turneth good into euill as an euill stomacke doth the daintiest and best meates Wee doe commonly abhorre him and speake all maner of euill of him 〈◊〉 vnthank●●● person i●●●monly ●●●orred who hauing receyued manie benefits and good turnes forgetteth his Patron and benefactor when once he is aduanced and promoted to honour like Pharaohs Butler who hauing receiued good from Ioseph forgate him when he was restored vnto his office and deliuered the cup into the kings hand againe albeit Ioseph had said vnto him Gen. 40 14. Thinke on me when it shall bee well with thee and shew kindnesse I pray thee vnto mee and make mention of me vnto Pharaoh and bring me out of this house An vnthankful person euen vnto men is iustly abhorred how much more then vnto God the most bountifull Patrone Common experience teacheth that commonly men are much worse for Gods benefits ●●n are com●●nly the ●●rse ●or gods ●●●efits and grow more prophane and presumptuous in sinning against him through the plenty and abundance of earthly blessings Dauid we know was none of the worst men but one of the best according to Gods owne heart yet hee saieth of himselfe while he enioyed the world at wil I saide in my prosperity I shall neuer be moued Psa 30 6 And in another place It is good for mee that I haue beene afflicted that I might learne thy statutes Before I was afflicted I went astray but now haue I kept thy word Psal 119 67 71. And therefore his benefites did him not so much good as his chastisements they did not further his saluation so much as his corrections Ieremy speaketh of the church vnder the name of Ephraim 〈◊〉 31 18. that it was as an vntamed Calfe till God chastened it Manasses learned more at Babylon then at Ierusalem as he lay in prison then as he sate vpon his throne for in peace prosperity hee fell to Idolatry to sorcerie to cruelty and to all kinde of impiety but when he was carried away captiue he besought the Lord his God who neuer thought he stood in need of him before Chron. 33 ● 13. He humbled himself greatly before the Lord God of his father who despised him before in the pride of his heart and hee prayed vnto God earnestly who neuer prayed vnto him before The blessings of God indeede ought to vnite vs more closely and conscionably vnto him howbeit it is a rare thing to finde that benefits knit our hearts more neerely vnto GOD. Shew me that man among a thousand that can truly say A rare thing to finde that man who is brought nerer to God by his benefites the benefites of God haue made him sounder in the faith and better in his obedience vntil he haue bene taught and trained vp in the schoole of affliction and tried in the furnace of aduersity God hath two school-houses in which he doth instruct his schollers the first is the school of prosperity there he speaketh to vs but we are deafe and cannot heare there he teacheth but we are dull and cannot learne We are non-proficients thogh we tarry long in this schoole not through anie default either in the master or in the lesson or in the schoole but through defect in the scholler onely He is constrained therefore to put vs into his other schoole this is the schoole of affliction many profit here that could not profit before For the heart of man is naturally puffed vp with prosperity so that it cannot work in him the performance of greater dutie and sounder obedience as it ought to do Ther are ten lepers in the Gospel clensed of a foule and filthy disease but when once they saw they were cured recouered they forgat who had clensed them how they were clensed of what they were clensed and wherefore they were clensed only one of them was found to return and giue God thanks Luke 17 15. When Christ had found the impotent man that had lien 38. yeeres at the poole of Bethesda he saw it was needful to put him in minde to take heed he sin no more lest a worse thing come vpon him Iohn 5 14. for he knew he was ready to forget what he had bin how great things he had done for him and to please himself in the present condition wherein hee was made whole therfore would haue him consider what he might be in time to come and feare a future relaps into the same nay into greater euils He to whom 10000. talents were remitted shewed not mercy again for the mercie that he had receiued this was all the fruite of his thankfulnes that he yeelded Hee caught his fellow-seruant by the throat Math. 18 18. who owed him onely an hundred pence bidding him presently to tender paiment Iehoash the King of Iudah was preserued by Iehoiada and set in the kingdome that had bin vsurped by the tirany of Athalia and through the massacre of the blood-royall yet this was all the thankfulnes that he shewed for the Fathers kindnes 2 Chro. 24 22 he slew his son because he reproued their Idolatry and Apostacy and so he remembred not the benefite of life kingdom and education that he had receiued without which he had not liued nor reignd nor receiued the knowledge of the truth Seeing then we are so prone of our selues to forget what the Lord hath done for vs and to returne him the praise we must be watchful ouer our corruptions remembring what God hath done for vs. Secondly it reproueth all
respect of the largenesse and seeing the obedience of Christ is not lesse auaileable then the disobedience of Adam we feare not to auouch that the Church hath many children as a tree with many branches as a body with many members as a fountain with many streames and as an army of many souldiers making vp one Campe. But before we come to the vses of this Doctrine it shall not be amisse to answer a question Obiect and to remoue an Obiection that may be raised from hence For this may seeme to be contrary to other places of Scripture where it teacheth that few shall be saued that few are chosen Math. 7 14 and 20 16. Luk. 12 32. Esay 1 9. that a remnant shall be saued that the flocke of Christ is a little flocke that the way is narrow and the gate streight that leadeth to life and few enter into it If then they be few how are they many If a small company how are they moe then can be numbred To be few and yet to be many to be a remnant and yet moe then can be reckoned seeme not to agree together I answer the Church may be truely said to haue many children Answer and few members in diuers respects For it is considered two wayes First simply Secondly by comparison First in respect of themselues and the seuerall parts thereof Secondly in respect of the vnbeleeuers If they be compared with the world of Infidels and Hypocrites with Reprobates and Castawayes Lu. 13 23 24. with the vessels of wrath that shall be consumed they be a very few and as a little handfull like a sparke in respect of a great fire or like a drop of water in respect of a great streame for the number of the damned is farre greater But if they be considered in themselues not compared with others The multitude of them that are ordained to eternall life and shall be saued is very great and exceeding many yea so many as no mā is able to comprehend the number of them Hebr. 12 1. To expresse this difference by some similitudes and examples we see in a common collection and gathering albeit euery man can giue but a little yet when it commeth together the totall summe amounteth to a great matter When a Captaine is to leuy forces and to muster his souldiers if he should take but ten out of a Parish through this kingdome when they come together and meete in one place they make a great Army and a Campe-royall yet if they be compared with the multitude of men women and children that are left behind they are as nothing they are as an handfull and are scarce missed So is it with the true Church of God they are both few yet many they are few in respect of those that shal be condemned which multiply vpon the earth and couer the face thereof and yet they are many in number in respect of the particular parts as shal appeare in the end of the world when they shall be gathered into one place from all places of the world Hauing answered this Obiection and cleered Vse 1 the Doctrine before deliuered let vs come to the vses arising from hence First we learne from hence the great power of the word of God Albeit the Ministery thereof be of the world esteemed foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1 2 yet to them that are iustified to them that are sanctified to thē that are effectually called it is the wisedome of God and the power of God The Church is called our Mother the word of God is cōmitted to the keeping of the Church beeing the Pi●lar of truth 1 Tim. 3 ● so that by preaching of the word the Church bringeth forth children to God The word is the seed of regeneration 1 Pet. 1 23 it is milke for children 1 Cor. 3 2 it is strong meate for men of riper yeares Heb. 5 14 whose sences are expert and exercised in the discerning of things that differ If then it worke such a glorious effect we may conclude that it is liuely and mighty in operation entring through to the diuiding of the soule and spirit the ioynts and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Seeing therefore the encrease of the Church is by the effectuall preaching of the Gospel whereby the members of Christ are vnited into his body and the Sheepe of Christ are gathered into his fold we must acknowledge the power and force of the word to be exceeding great wherby it is brought to passe Heb. 4 1● Secondly hereby we haue matter of great Vse reioycing praising God to see the prosperity and flourishing estate of the Church encreasing and growing to so many millions or multitudes and to consider how glorious the Name of Chr●st shall be when all concurre meete together to praise him The honou● of an earthly Prince standeth in the multitude of his Subiects Prou. 14 28 then how glorious and excellent shall the Name of Christ be when so many thousands and thousand thousands that none can number for the infinite multitude shall assemble together to sing the praises of God saying Saluation commeth of our God that sitteth vpon the Throne of the Lamb Prai●e and glory and wisedome and thanks and honour be vnto our God for euermore Amen Reu. 7 9.10 12. Sing praises to God sing praises sing praises vnto our King sing praises for God is the King of all the earth Psal 47 6 7. What can minister more ioy vnto vs then to behold the beauty of Sion when one member is added vnto the Church We see how men reioyce when their house is encreased when they haue children giuen vnto them being the inheritance of the Lord and the fruite of the wombe being his reward Psal 127 3. How much more should we reioyce and be glad when we see the church which is the house of God to multiply florish That hee ma●eth a barren woman to dwell with a family and a ioyfull mother of many children Psal 113.9 It is noted by Christ our Sauiour that the Angels reioyce at the repentance of men when he saith I say vnto you Luk. 15 ● that ioy shall be in heauen for one sinner that conuerteth more then for ninety and nine iust men which need none amendment of life how much more then ought we to comfort our selues when the faithfull are encreased when the wayes of the Lord are knowne vpon earth and his sauing health among all Nations The Euangelist Luke testifieth That when the Apostles and Brethren heard that God had granted repentance vnto life to the Gentiles they praised and glorified God Acts 11 18. And this is that vse which the Apostle Paul teacheth Gal 4 27. It is written Reioyce thou barren that bearest no children breake foorth and cry thou that trauailest not for the desolate hath many moe children then shee which hath an husband So then the encrease of the Church when one member
is added vnto it is the ioy of the seuerall parts and the multiplying of many members is matter of great reioycing to the whole body and cause of stirring of vs vp to the praise of God who quickeneth thē that are dead and maketh them to bee found that were lost In the naturall body found deformed or defectiue if sight were giuen to the blinde or hearing to the deafe or speech to the dumb if life or limb were restored where it was wanting 〈◊〉 3 7 8. 〈◊〉 ● 24. what great comfort would this bring what great reioycing would it worke So in the mysticall body of Christ when any part or when many parts are added as ornaments of the body and helping to accomplish the number of the elect let vs break foorth into ioy of heart and reioyce that wee haue part and fellowship in this company Thirdly let vs not measure the Church by Vse 3 our owne outward senses When Idolatry and open wickednesse when superstition cruell persecutions ouer-spread all as an vniuersall darknesse couering the earth let vs not suffer our selues to be deceiued nor iudge rashly of Gods people We thinke the Church oftentimes like to perish and to be rooted out of the earth but the foundation of God alwaies remaineth sure and hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his Therefore the Apostle teacheth That the Lord hath not cast away his people Rom. 11 1 2 3 4 5. When Elias saw the Prophets of God killed and the Altars digged downe God said vnto him I haue reserued vnto my selfe seuen thousand men which haue not bowed their knee to Baal Euen so then at this present time there is a remnant according to the election of grace Wherefore let vs not iudge rashly of priuate persons whether they be in the number of the elect or not much lesse of whole Nations and kingdomes We say commonly he runneth farre that neuer returneth Paul was a persecuter of the Church 1 Tim 1 13 but Christ appearing vnto him made him a Preacher of the Gospel Manasseh was an Idolater a sorcerer and shedder of much innocent blood when hee sate in his Throne and kingdome but hee remembred God afterward in the dayes of his affliction 2 Chron. 33 12. Mary Magdalen who led a wicked life out of whom Christ cast seuen diuels Mark 16 9 had her sinnes forgiuen and loued him much of whom she had receiued so great mercy The theefe that all his life had runne astray Luc. 23.40 and hunted after the goods of other men was vpon the Crosse conuerted to the faith he abho●red his former life confessed his sinnes craued pardon blamed his fellow and longed after the kingdome of God This the Apostle auoucheth concerning the Corinthians when he had taught That neither fornicaters nor idolaters nor adulterers nor wantons nor buggerers nor theeues nor couetous nor drunkards nor raylers nor extortioners shall inherite the kingdome of God he addeth Such were some of you but yee are washed but yee are sanctified but ye are iustified in the Name of the Lord Iesus by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6 9 10. So thē we must iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who shall lighten things that are hidde in darknesse and make the counselles of the heart manifest 1 Cor. 4 5. and then shall euery man haue praise of GOD. And let vs not be daunted and dismayed at the great number of the wicked of Atheists Libertines Epicures Idolaters Hypocrites Scorners Blasphemers seeing there is an vniuersality of the elect and faithfull though few appeare to our senses as did to the eyes of Eliah who in heart soule ioyne with vs of whose prayers we are partakers Lastly seeing there are many elected vnto Vse 4 life and saluation let vs vse all meanes to draw others to faith in Christ and repentance from dead works Let vs exhort one another while it is called to day lest any be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Heb 3 13. Let vs prouoke to good workes and so much the more seeing the day of the Lord draweth neere Heb. 10 25. For what knowest thou O man whether thou shalt win thy brother The husbandman planteth and watereth 1 Cor. 3 7 he tilleth soweth and when he hath done he committeth the successe to God looking with patience for early and latter rayne So must all the Ministers of God which are his laborers preach in season and out of season diuide the word of truth aright and take all occasions to win soules to God And this is that vse which the Lord himselfe teacheth and prescribeth Acts 18 9 10. Feare not but speake and hold not thy peace For I am with thee and no man shall lay hands on thee for I haue much people in this City Where wee see that howsoeuer Paul found much opposition against him at Corinth some resisting and others blaspheming himselfe ready to depart yet the Lord appeareth vnto him and encourageth him to continue his labours with promise of a plentifull haruest a rich recompence of reward that hee should not labour in vaine but be the Minister of life vnto many This is the greatest comfort to the Ministers of God to turne many to righteousnesse This shall be our Crowne and glory in the great day of account when the cheefe Shepheard of the sheepe shall appeare Therefore the Apostle chargeth the man of God to be of a patient spirit gentle towards all men 2 Tim. 2 24 25. suffering the euill instructing them with meekenesse that are contrary minded prouing if God at any time will giue them repentance that they may acknowledge the truth and come to amendment out of the snare of the diuel of whom they are taken prisoners to do his will To conclude let vs remember the saying of the Apostles Iames chap. 5 19 20. Brethren if any of you haue erred from the truth and some man haue conuerted him let him know that he which hath conuerted the sinner from going astray out of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sins Where the Apostle teacheth that so manie of vs as haue receyued any gifts at the handes of God it is our duty not onely to vse them to our owne comfort but to labour diligently to profit others that so we may gaine glorie and winne soules to God by furthering the saluation of our brethren It followeth in the Text. Let mee dye the death of the righteous In these wordes is contained the second part of the conclusion of this first prophesie which is Balaams demand and desire that after the end of this temporall and mortall life hee may rest with the Saints and obtaine the blessed estate reserued for them This had bene a good and godly prayer if it had not proceeded from an euill heart and beene stained with a wicked life This desire of his was not constant and followed vnto the end but