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A03464 The Christian exercise of fasting, priuate and publike plainly set forth by testimonies of holy Scriptures, and also of old and late writers: wherein is shewed how religious families priuatly, and the congregations publikely, haue humbled themselues before almightie God, making vse of iudgements past, auoyding euils present, and preuenting future calamities, &c. Together with sundrie abuses of fasting in three generations of hypocrites: the first in the dayes of the prophets: the second in the dayes of Christ: the third in the dayes of Antichrist. Hereunto also are added some meditations on the 1. and 2. chapters of Iob, to comfort and instruct all such as be afflicted with any crosse, either inwardly in minde, or outwardly in bodie. By H. Holland, minister and preacher of Gods word. Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603. 1596 (1596) STC 13586; ESTC S104147 181,008 249

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other or both if it may be I am now come by Gods good prouidence to tel thee that thou maist pursue and followe after them with all the power and speed that may be 1. The 14. verse teacheth vs how neer Sathan may be in this world vnto vs whē we think him furthest off if this wicked spirit may thus rush vpon Gods good people whē they are well occupied in their lawfull vocation place and charge what maruell is it if hee bee let loose against the wicked and slothfull men which lie and sleepe in idlenesse and in sinne Peter thought little Sathan had been so neere when he warned his master louingly Let Sathan euer find vs wel occupied to spare and to pitie himselfe Math. 16.23 and when hee promised so confidently that hee would dye with his master Matth. 26.33 Iohn 15.37 Sathan lyeth in waite for vs euery where Sathan shames Dauid in his slothfulnes 2. Sam. 11.2 hee is an olde serpent 2. Cor. 11.3 Reuel 12.9.10 and by all his artes seeketh to circumuent vs to vnderprie vs 2. Cor. 2.10.11 to deuour vs as here we see by all the meanes he can 1. Peter 5.8 Therefore let vs put on our compleat armour euery day Ephe 6. 1. Thes 5. 2. Here againe the Lord aduertiseth vs what need we haue to be garded continually by the holy Angels of God Psal 3.8.91.11.12 Sathan is our common aduersarie but the Lord hath appointed his good Angels to preserue vs otherwise both we and our substance should bee consumed euery day euerie moment of the day The 15. verse teacheth vs Theeues and robbers Sathās speciall hands and instrumēts to worke by 1. How Sathan maketh the children of rebellion his vassals and slaues to serue him and to worke his will Here is no mention made of Sathan yet all this murder and theft by the Sabeans came from him as the chiefe head for that bloudie and cruell spirit worketh spiritually inuisibly and strangely in all the children of rebellion Ephe. 2.2 It is hard to demonstrate in what manner Sathan worketh in the wicked because the scripture When this packe commeth against vs let vs remēber then that Sathan is let loose to proue vs. No mercy with Sathan and his instruments if the Lord rebuke them not they murder all Gen. 45.5 as here so elsewhere doth not so cleerely reueale it But the scriptures full often beate into our eares that Sathan is neere vs and worketh in the vnbeleeuers to the end we might watch and resist him by faith and prayer Iam. 4.7 2. We see here there is no mercie with Sathan and his instruments if the Lord stay not their rage Sathan had leaue and commission granted hee would haue all Iobs seruants murdered theeues and robbers were readie to execute and so bee also this crue but the Lord often cuttes them all short Sathan would haue murdered Ioseph by his brethren but God rebuked him and bridled them God saith he sent me hither for your preseruation So Sathan than and Saul his instrument sought euery day to murder Dauid 1. Sam. 23.14 But GOD deliuered him out of his hand Let vs learne to rest quietly by faith in the Lords sweete protection vse Psal 91.1 And Dauid himselfe so long as hee was caryed away with the spirite of whoredome and murder hee shewed himselfe a most mercilesse man It is a great comforte for a man in miserie to haue some louing friends about him a good wife or a good child or some good faithful seruāt but Iob had none of all these No doubt Sathan slew al the best seruants and left the worst aliue hee spared not his owne best beloued seruant good Vriah the proselyte 3. Sathan did rob Iob of all his faithfull children and best seruants which might comfort him in his miserie but he leaues him some fewe hirelings which hee knew would be meete instruments to scorne him and molest him in his afflictions Hee complaineth of a number such wretches which were about him to whom hee had done good often Children of fooles or of villaines or without name or of an euill name more vile then the earth now I am their song and their talke saith he they whose fathers I haue refused to set with the dogges of my flockes And yet was he a father to all the poore and fatherlesse 4. We may learne here againe how artificially Sathan prouides to wound Iobs hart hee kils al this companie excepting this messenger If none had beene left to make relation of this stratageme Sathan artificially playes his parts against Iob giues him no rest or intermission till al the tragedy be ended Iob had not knowen it may be this euill for some daies after in which time he might haue recouered some strength by prayer otherwise by some good meanes from the Lord. For this cause Sathan striues to play all the partes of this tragedie in such good order in one day as that it may most amaze Iob in beholding it and fill his heart with sorrowe and griefe without any ease or intermission Vers 16. And while he was yet speaking another came and sayde the fire of God is fallen from heauen and hath burnt vp the sheepe and the seruants and deuoured them but I onely am escaped alone to tell thee ANd while he was yet speaking c. Before the first messenger had ended his message another seruant came with the like or worse newes The fire of * Like phrase Gen. 50.8 Ionas 3.3 God is fallen from the heauen That is a strange fire or some sudden flashes of lightning in a grieuous tempest a fire which had some secret and diuine causes He speaks after the common manner of speaking the people thinke those fiery meteors which are bred in the highest region of the aire come from heauen God sent it wee knowe not how it came from aboue the heauens or highest region of the aire or the fire of God that is a most great and strange fire as Psalm 36.6 Thy righteousnes is like the mountaines of God that is most great and mightie mountaines And hath burnt vp the sheepe That is this cruell fire hath destroied and deuoured thy 7000. sheep seruants they be all consumed to ashes And I only by some diuine and speciall prouidence of God am escaped to tell thee 1. This verse againe teacheth vs first the subtiltie of our common enemie the great dragon that old serpent Doctrine hee hath begunne his tragedie hee hath begunne to wound Iobs heart Iob is an old souldier and therefore must be beaten downe all at once before he can recouer any strength hee will now giue him no time to gather newe strength He knowes Iob an old souldier which must be beaten downe all at once otherwise all his labour is lost For might Iob haue some rest to turne to God by prayer before hee bee so broken and amazed as hee knowes not where to
all the congregation 3. When the congregation is gathered what is to be done 1. The people yōg and olde must vers 16.17 1. Mourne and weepe 2. They must fast 3. They must all assent in prayer with the priests 2. The priests must principally in this action 1. Weepe and mourne for Gods people 2. Pray earnestly for the Church of God 4. What good effect and happie issue this solemne fast humiliation of the faithful shal haue 1. The Lord will be carefull ielous ouer his people vers 18. 2. The L. wil spare his people and end their afflictions Ioel. chap. 2. vers 12. Therefore also now the Lorde saith turne you vnto mee with all your heart and with fasting and with weeping and with mourning THerfore also now As if the prophet said Sense I haue now taught you sufficiently the causes of your miserie first of that great dearth and famin which hath wasted al your store greatly weakned the whole land you haue heard that your sinnes were the cause of all that euil but you would not harken not beleeue Now I come againe the second time and I tel you how the Lord hath determined alreadie to bringe vpon you a merciles bloudie people Wherefore rent your hearts with sorrow for sinnes past and testifie your vnfained repentance by fasting weeping and mourning 1 This v. teacheth vs Doctrine how the holy prophets did carefully watch and obserue their times occasions and other circumstances when where and how they might best speake vnto a dead hearted people The wicked will not heare till their corrections come So did Azariah the prophet watch his time to call vpon Asa and all Iudah to reforme the church of God in their daies for when Asa had gotten a wonderfull victorie by Gods free grace mercie then Azariah moued by gods spirit spake these words The Lord is with you while you be with him 2. Chro. 15. v. 2 3 4 5. and if you seeke him he wil be found of you but if you forsake him he will forsake you then hee sheweth them their capitall sinnes Now for a long season Israell hath beene without the true God and without priest to teach and whithout lawe i. Looke vnto it O king and O ye people of Iudah The three speciall pillers of the Church and common-wealth you haue wanted for a long time the maine greate pillers of your common welth therefore no maruell though your kingdome were so in daunger of ruine and destruction 2. This v. teacheth vs that all the time the Lord threatneth vs til his iudgements be executed Passe not the acceptable time for that is dangerous now is the time when he speaketh by his holy word and chastisements Reuel 9.20 Esa 55.6 Hebr. 3.12.13 is the time wherein the Lord calleth vs to repentance and therefore most carefully to be regarded as the Lords acceptable time and as the daie wherein God offereth vnto vs saluation 2. Cor. 6.1.2 Es 49.8 3. This verse teacheth vs what true repentance is namely a conuersion vnto God with all the heart The Lord will not be serued by parts or by halfes but with all the hart the Lord wil not part stakes with the diuel the world the flesh no more thē with Baal he is God alone must haue the whole heart This is it the law commandeth and Christ requireth all the heart al the soule all our strength al our thoughts to loue worship and serue him Deut. 6.5 Luke 10.27 chap. 14.26 The holy spirit giues the good K. Iofias this cōmendation * The minde discourseth disputeth the soule desireth the heart lodgeth and embraceth c. 2. King 25.25 He turned to God with all his heart with al his soule with all his might according to al the lawe of Moses When we do God any seruice he would haue vs to doe it with such cheerefulnes as that no part of vs within or without sit idle we must thē straine all parts and speciallie these here mentioned the heart soule mind his great chambers wherein he doth erect and set vp his throne and kingdome 4. Wee be taught that fasting is an holy exercise very needefull and profitable to testifie our conuersion and repentance as is afore shewed 5. This verse teacheth vs how the holy saints testified also their vnfained repentance and conuersion vnto God by weeping and mourning and how that when they humbled themselues in their fasts priuate or publique they did expresse their vnfained sorrow for sinne by weeping and mourning And surely fasting will drawe vs to a more earnest searching fight and feeling of our owne vnworthines and so to a deeper sorrow and mourning for sinne for which cause the exercise which the other Euangelists call fasting Compare Mark 2.20 Luk. 5.35 Matth. 9.15 S. Matthew cals mourning Because that must leade vs vnto this We haue many notable examples and presidents of the saints Chap. 8.9.10 to teach vs how weeping mourning follow fasting The people in Nehemias time when they humbled themselues in fasting wept and mourned so exceedingly for their sinnes that the noble captaine by much intreating could not stay their weeping So the Leuites which preached in euerie congregation for the whole multitude was deuided into diuerse assemblies called vpon the people to cease weeping and mourning Verse 11. 1. Sam. 6.6 And in Samuels time the people fasting and mourning for their sinnes wept so much that they are saide to haue drawne whole buckers of water which the depth of their sorrow for their sinnes the anger of God against them had ministred We reade often of Dauids teares 2. Sam. 3.31.32 So likewise of Christes weeping Luke 19.41 Iohn 11. but of his laughter neuer 2. Kin. 8.12.11 Act. 20.30 Phil. 3.18 Hezekiah wept and mourned 2. King 20.1.2.3 so did Elisha to Hazael and Paul at Miletum because they did foresee the euils which were to come vpon the Church of God And Ioseph wept often being occasioned by his brethren Luk. 23.62 Luk. 7.38 Genesis 50.17 43.30.45.1.2.14 Peter in his conuersion wept bitterly and Maries teares were so many 2. Kin. 22.19 that she is sayd to haue washed Christs feete with weeping Iosias heart melted and wept before the Lord for his owne sinnes and the sins of his people And the Psalmist sweetely teacheth what ioy followeth all the crosses of the faithfull The teares of the faithfull haue a happie end if with ioynt hearts they weepe and mourne and cry vnto God Psalm 126. vers 5.6 They that sow in teares shall reape in ioy they went weeping and carried pretious seede but they shall returne with ioy and bring their sheaues And thus wee see how the faithfull can shed teares plentifully for good causes which assuredly are neuer lost on the groūd Psalm 56. ve 8. but bee registred with the Lord and preserued as in his bottels 1. Quest Doe the godly weepe for themselues
onely Ans No First they weepe for that by their sins they haue dishonored and displeased God Secondly they mourne also to consider the euils which are imminent and readie to fall vpon their enemies Psal 35. vers 13.14 For this cause Dauid he fasted wept and prayed for Saul when that tyrant sought euery day to kill him Thirdly they weep for the Church of God when Gods people are afflicted These bee causes of the teares of the faithfull But such as weepe onely because of their owne plagues Teares of hypocrites they are no better then dogges for they will crye when they bee beaten and the diuels also will rore when they must goe to hell as we heare in the Gospell 2. Quest What affections and causes moue teares Ans First sorrow and griefe of mind as in Ezras time because the temple reedified was not comparable to the first many in great griefe wept with a lowde voyce Ezra 3.12 Secondly great ioy of heart example for this cause we finde in Ioseph who was filled with exceeding ioy when he saw his brother Beniamin and this affection caused him to shed teares exceedingly Ioseph made baste for his affection was inflamed towards his brother and sought where to weepe and entred into his chamber and wept there Gen. 43.30 Thirdly a vehement anger being a mixt affection of ioy and griefe causeth teares for this euill affection doth reioyce in reuenge and will otherwhiles breake foorth into teares for very griefe of minde when it cannot reuenge Fourthly Compassion and mercie draw teares from the godlyfull often because of their sympathie and griefe they haue in the miseries of their brethren Ioh. 11. verse 34.35 Fiftly all our earnest and vehement desires may prouoke and draw teares from vs. Vers 13. Rent therefore your hearts and not your clothes and turne vnto the Lord your God for he is gracious and mercifull slow to anger and of great kindnes that he may repent him of this euill THE first part of this verse dooth yet more plainly expresse what vnfained humiliation conuersion God requireth at their hands the latter part containeth notable arguments from the Lords free goodnes and mercie to moue them to attend carefully vnto the former exhortation Secondly the Lord promiseth to change his minde from their affliction if they be changed Rent your harts c. That is Sense do not as the people of the East coūtries rend their clothes in signe of sorow c. Iob 1.20 Matth. 26.65 but rent your hearts Let your hearts bee broken and contrite sorrow ye and lament and this doe so as your hearts may testifie with you that you bee sicke for sinne and agrieued in your hearts for that you haue grieued the almightie God and his holy spirite Ephes 4.30 For he is gracious and mercifull slow to anger and of great kindnes That is the Lord is indeede such a God as he hath long since described and declared himselfe to bee vnto his holy seruant Moses when hee desired to see his glorie and to know his maiestie he proclaimed made knowne himselfe first in these words Exo. 34.6 7 8. I will shew mercie to whom I will shew mercie and I will haue compassion on whom I will haue compassion And againe in these words The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gracious slow to anger and abundant in goodnesse and trueth reseruing mercie vnto thousands for giuing iniquitie and transgression and sinne c. God is first Chanun gracious that is one that giueth great gifts freely Secondly Rachun one that like a father hath bowels of mercie Thirdly Erek apajim one that is long winded very patient not soone offended Fourthly Rah chesed very bountifull or beneficiall That he may repent of this euill That is the Lord himselfe will not afflict you with warres other iudgements as he hath threatned if you * Al this is spoken to our capacitie comfort God is sayd in Scripture neuer to change alter or to repent of any decree his decrees are immutable Rom. 11.6 repent vnfainedly but he will embrace you as a father in his armes of mercie For as a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him Psal 103. vers 13. This verse teacheth vs First that true repentance is no light change of minde opinion or iudgement onely no sayth the holy Prophet it must haue a deeper impression in the heart The heart must feele it and finde it as well as the minde and reason see it and knowe it for the heart must be rent and sicke that herein also wee may be * Rom 8.29 but when he is said to repent the meaning is that he changeth his menacings into blessings when his people are changed 1. Sam. 15.35 compare verse 11.29 c. conformed vnto the image of our Lorde and Sauiour Iesus Christ For his heart also was rent Ioh. 19.34 Neuer trust to any outward action if thou feelest no inward griefe nor change of minde 2. The way to conuert soules vnto God in miserie is by preaching the glad tidinges of Gods mercies in Iesus Christ Speake to men afflicted of iustice and iudgemēts the more they despaire and runne from God Psal 130.4 Mercie is with thee that thou maiest bee feared Rom. 12.1 I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that ye giue vp your bodies a liuing sacrifice vnto God Christ and Iohn began their Sermons of repentance with this argument Matth. 3.2 Repent for the kingdome of God is at hand 3. The inspeakeable loue and mercie of our heauenly father is here taught vs where he is sayd to repent when we repent There can bee no greater argument either to testifie his loue or to moue our affection Is not he a most gracious and blessed God that when wee poore forlome sinners repent and are grieued for displeasing him he repents also is agrieued that he hath beaten vs And is not that God full of bowels of mercie that when werepent leaue off to sinne he repents also and will cease to afflict vs We can no sooner mourne but he mournes Gods repentance and ours compared no sooner bee affected towards him but hee also is affected towards vs. Nay he affects vs before wee affect him and his affection is cause of our affection and his repentance cause of our repentance and our repentance but a signe of Gods repentance This the Prophet Ieremie also assureth vs that God is full of * A tender harted father can mourne and weepe euen when he beateth his children Ier. Lam. 3.32.33 ex animo heauines euen when he dooth chasten his people chap. 3.32 Though he send affiction yet will he haue compassion according to the multitude of his mercies for he doth not punish willingly So then wee see here a most comfortable doctrine that if we be truly humbled the Lord thē assuredly is minded to shew mercie for he first softeneth
second reason is this The kingdome of Christ is spirituall Ver. 22. and doth not consist in things which perish but meates and drinkes doe perish with the vsing Therefore his kingdome his worship and seruice doth not consist in these things The third argument Wee must place no religion nor worship of God in obseruation of mens traditions nor in will-worship but these be meere vaine traditions sowne by Sathan in the braines and minds of men Therefore auoyd them Obiect But these men which teach and practise this fasting abstinence are wise iust holy deuout religious men not sparing their owne flesh for the mortification of their corruptions for pleasing of God c. Ver. 23. Ans First they haue but a shew of wisedome and but a shadow of the sound knowledge of God Secondly their worshippe is but a will-worship which God abhorres Thirdly God regardes not this beating of the flesh no nor the cutting or launcing of it 1. King 18. 1. Thes 4.4 as wizards doe but willeth vs to keepe our vessels in holines and honour and to humble the soule the minde the heart and spirit before him in a sound knowledge of his word and will in faith and repentance c. Wee see then the Apostle here speaketh against traditions of men concerning differences of meates for euen in those dayes the diuell indeuoured to thrust into the Church certaine decrees concerning meates and fasting vnder pretence and colour of humilitie iustice wisdome great holines and deuotion 1. Vnder colour of wisdome and holines c. they decreed to keepe certaine set fasts on certaine daies appoynted 2. This fast consisted in abstinence from certaine meates which they commaunded no man should eate taste c. 3. They accounted this fast a speciall worke to serue and please God being yet but their own will-worship neuer prescribed of God 4. They taught men to hold it a matter of great holines to defraud the bodie of the honour and refreshing due thereunto The superstitiō of the 1.2 and 3. age came from one spirit of error and differ little but that in corruption the 2. doth exceede the first the 3. farre surpasse them both So then these words serue to admonish vs against the superstitious fasts of all ages albeit this Scripture was written principally against the Pharisees and Essees blind aduersaries to the trueth and the pure worship of God in the dayes of the Apostles The abuse of fasting in the dayes of the Prophets THe opinions which depraue and corrupt all this exercise and depriue vs of all good by it 1. Opus operatū 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. are these and the like to esteeme highly of the worke done 2. to account it a worke meritorious a speciall worship acceptable vnto God a cause of righteousnes a cause of pardon of sinnes a satisfaction for the quicke and the dead We may not doubt but some of these opinions infected the false worshippers hypocrites and vnbeleeuers of all ages The 1. generation of hypocrites Gen. 4. Cain thought his sacrifice and seruice as worthie of acceptation as Abels scornfull Ishmael as good as religious Isaacks prophane Esaus as holy Iacobs For vnbeleeuers are so blind But ther is no accesse to God nor pleasing of him in anie worke without faith in Christ Heb. 11.6 that they iudge the worke to be accepted for the very workes sake Therefore can they dreame of no iustice but of that of workes or of a mixt kind of iustice lately inuented in the dayes of Antichrist as hereafter shall appeare That age of the Prophets was corrupted not a little with this leauen of superstition as may appeare by the often complaints and cryes of the Prophets Superstitious fasts in this time Esay 58. The Lord commandeth Esay to cry aloude against the superstitious fasts of his time and so hee doth leauing to all posterities a record of the same First he sayth vnto them that they haue a shew of wisedome as the Apostle speaketh and of deuotion for they seeme to seeke God early They seeme to be righteous and to do righteously They seeme to draw neere to God as desirous to learne his lawes but they renounce his statutes vers 2. Secondly he accuseth them of flat superstition by testimonie of their owne words Wherefore haue wee fasted and thou seest it not Here appeares the sowre leauen of that opinion that fasting was an acceptable work and might alone commend a man with God vers 3. Thirdly that they thought this worke meritorious For thus spake the blind people Wee haue punished our selues meaning with abstinence and thou regardest it not we receiue no good by it These words very fitly agree with that the Apostle speaketh Coloss 2.23 They spare not the body neither haue they it in any estimation because they deeme fasting to be a matter of great deuotion and a work greatly pleasing vnto God Fourthly he addeth by the way of answer to these blind hypocrites that albeit they hang downe the head like a bull rush shaken with a tempest a whole day at the least yet so long as they bee emptie of grace and goodnes faith and repentance iustice and mercie and care o● the Sabboths their fasting and emptines can nothing please God The Prophet Zachary briefly noteth the same opinions and corruptions of fasting in his time chap. 7. and 8. Zach. 7.3 8. The Iewes then had their solemne set fasts certaine dayes and moneths of the yeare the fast of the fourth moneth the fast of the fift moneth the fast of the seuenth moneth and the fast of the tenth moneth The occasion of these fasts First the miserie of the Iewes began when Ierusalem was first besieged by the King of Babylon in the 9. yeare of Zedekiah the tenth moneth the tenth day of the moneth Iere. 52.4.5 For this cause a generall fast was kept in all the land this day and moneth Their second calamitie was in the 11. yeare of Zedekiah in the fourth moneth the ninth day of the moneth for the famine was then sore in the citie the citie broken vp the King taken c. Ier. 52.6.12 This was the occasion of the fast of the fourth moneth Their third calamitie and miserie was in the 5. moneth the tenth day of the moneth the miserable desolatiō and destruction of the temple kings palace and the citie the Babylonians consumed and defaced all their best buildings and palaces with fire The house of the Lord the kings house and al the great houses burnt he with fire Iere. 52.13 This was the cause of the third generall fast of the 5. moneth The fourth and last calamitie the Scriptures haue recorded was the bloudie conspiracie and death of Gedaliah a good man whom the King of Babylon had left as chiefe gouernour and ouerseer of all the Iewes which were left in Iewry 2. Kin. 25.22 to dresse the vines and to till the land Iere. 52.15 for
Ishmael one of the kings seed hauing escaped the Babylonians in great indignation enuie malice and pride of heart with certaine princes conspired his death and slew him with many Iewes the same time 2. King 25.25 Iere. 41.1 This euill was committed the 7. moneth Iere. 41. vers 1. 2. King 25. vers 25. And for this cause al the Iewes then fasted mourned in like manner These fasts then of the 4.5.7 and 10. moneths had good beginnings and were kept for good causes to auoyd present calamities and to preuent by prayer the like future mischiefes Now then it followeth that we consider how these became superstitious and vaine Superstitious fasts in Zachacarias time 1 fast acceptable for the worke sake First they thought the very worke of fasting to bee a seruice very acceptable vnto God and therefore they continued these fasts al the daies of their captiuitie in those foure moneths yearely till 70. yeares were expired Zachary 7.5 * Ne existimes inediā ad vesperā vsque ad salutem nobis sufficere nā notum est quod peruersis Iudaeis dicit dominus Zach 7. Chryso hom 3. in gen Binding consciences to set fasts yet Bellar the sophisticall Iesuit saith the holy Ghost here commendeth the Iewes for these fasts Tom. 3. page 1412. 3. The Iewes thought their set fasts a speciall part of Gods worship 4. Will worship 2. Thes 2.11.12.1 Tim. 2.1.2 Secondly they binde mens consciences by lawes and decrees to doe this otherwise that obseruation would haue dyed before 70. yeares had past Thirdly when they returned from the captiuitie some more wise and religious reiected these fasts some more superstitious then wise would retaine them still as a speciall part of Gods worship therefore the resolution of this doubt is demaunded of the priests and prophets Should I weep in the fift moneth c. and separate my selfe as I haue done these many yeares Fourthly the Lord answereth by his prophet Zachary that their fasts were not according to his will they were but a part of their owne will-worship Did ye fast vnto me vers 5. or doe I approue it Fiftly hee warneth them to giue diligent heede to his holy word spoken and written by his prophets and so to learne not to abuse fasting in a counterfeit and fained deuotion chap. 7. vers 5. Sixtly he teacheth them to know the times and that now seeing God hath giuen them such a happie deliuerance it is a time to feast and not to fast a time to offer vp vnto God the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing in ioye and gladnesse chap 8. vers 19. Seuenthly and lastly he warneth them againe to auoyd superstition errors and all false worship that they loue the trueth of God and endeuour to liue in godly peace and honestie And thus farre of the abuse of fasting in the first age the second generation followeth The abuse of fasting in the daies of Christ or the second generation of hypocrites IN the next age which followed from the Prophets to Christ superstition so grew and preuailed The prince of darkenes did then sowe the seed of superstition that when Christ came this exercise of fasting was not onely peruerted but also the whole worship of God in a manner euerted For this second generation did farre exceede the former ages in all superstition and this shall sufficiently appeare if wee conferre with the Scriptures but two Iewish writers Philo and Ioseph 1 Binding consciences to set fasts Luk. 18.14 both Iewes of the best name and credit First then the Scriptures they speake much of the pride ambition and hypocrisie of the Pharisees for these blind guides bound consciences to the traditions of men and taught openly and professed the doctrine of merits commaunding set fasts the second and fift day of the weeke as a special worship and seruice of God When they fasted Christ sayth they looked sowre 2. Pharisaicall pryde in fasting Math. 6.16.17.18 3. Traditions of men Math. 15.6.9 9. cap. 14.4 Fasting meritorious 5. A speciall worshipe 6 Cause of iustification of pardon of sins 7. Binding consciences 8. Legall differences of meats commanded that it might appeare vnto men that they fasted this was pride and hypocrisie Againe when they fasted they disfigured their faces to be seene and knowne of men that they were very regular and precise obseruers of all the rites ceremonies and traditions of their fathers concerning fasting And againe these blind guides count this worke a principall part of Gods worship and seruice greatly accepted and desired of God Luk. 18.11 O God I thanke thee that I am not as other men are c. J fast twise in the weeke a cause of pardon of sinnes and iustification for it is added that the Publican went to his house iustified and not the Pharisie for all his fasting This superstitious generation continued disquieting the Church in the dayes of the Apostles binding ●onsciences to the legal ceremonies concerning meates as appeareth by Pauls disputations of this argument often Rom. 14. Acts 15.29 Titus 1.15.16 1. Cor. 10.25 But to thrust out of the Church doore these opinions concerning meates hee teacheth and warneth the Corinths and all men in these words Whatsoeuer is sold in the shambles eate and aske no question for conscience sake ver 27. Againe Whatsoeuer is set before you eate and aske no question for conscience sake Rhemist Annotat. Obiect But the Baptist kept his fasting daies and his disciples followed him in like manner Ans First it is not sayd Matth. 9.14 that Iohn himselfe fasted as the Phrisees did but some of Iohns hearers so fasted Secondly Christ giues the Pharisees and disciples of Iohn no countenance nor signe of like of their set fasts but rather of dislike Thirdly Iohn did vse an austere and strict kind of life and diet wherein hee was very abstinent continually Matth. 3.4 Fourthly Christ followeth not Iohns austeritie least any should ascribe any holines or religion to these things therefore these superstitious enemies blasphemed often calling him a glutton a drunkard a pot companion c. The Iewes had yet in those dayes a more insolent and blinde generation of sectaries which for their great holines Math. 9.11 a Philo. To. 2. page 1181. This Philo liued much about the Apostles time and wrote many bookes a man very learned eloquent Euseb lib. 2. cap. 16.17 Liber impres Basil Anno 1558. Coll. 2. were called Essaei as writeth Philo the Iew in his treatise De vita contemplat Siue supplicum virtutibus These men would as farre surpasse all the Iewes in deuotion and holines as the Carthusian Monkes all the popish sects of their time They kept very strictly certaine decrees of their owne inuention concerning meates and fasting vnder pretense of great wisedome humilitie holines and deuotion Secondly their fast consisted in abstinence from certaine meats which they forbad any to eate taste or handle Thirdly this fast they accounted a special
turne him hee would soone beate backe Sathan with all his force For this cause doth this wicked spirite play all his partes without any intermission The saints of God haue had some skirmishes with him but after a little breathing time they haue euer foyled him This wee see in Dauid hee was often in great straites and yet by Gods goodnes he soone recouers strength againe in Ziklagge hee and his men lost all they had wiues children 1. Sam. 30.17 Act. 5. last vers c. and to adde vnto his miserie that wicked crue which was with him all in a rage would haue stoned him here was cause sufficient of inspeakable griefe of heart But Dauid gaue himselfe to prayer and comforted himselfe in the Lord his God So we see the holy Apostles and disciples in the primitiue Church being much beaten of Sathan yet in small time they recouer greater strength againe 2. We bee taught that Sathan and wicked spirits are of great strength Psalm 103.20 and could soone set on fire all these inferiour parts of the world Wicked spirits haue greate knowledge in things naturall and greate strength if they were permitted For this cause the Apostle cals them the princes of the ayre Eph. 6.12 They poysoned the waters of Egypt Psal 78 49. Exod. 7. and destroyed their fish They poysoned and infected the ayre of Egypt and so brought in the pestilence vpon men a murrein vpon beasts Psal 78.50 They poyson and infect mens bodies most daungerously and diuers waies as we see by many examples in the Gospell Matth. 17.15.18 Mark 5.25 Luk. 13.16 and by this of Iob himselfe chap. 2. 3. Note here the more to amaze Iob how Sathan hath for him varietie of plagues He could haue as well stirred vp either the same Sabees Sathan hath against Iob variety of plagues or some other men to take away Iobs sheepe but hee would not now vse these base helpes hee thinkes it best to bring downe some straunge plague as it were from heauen vpon him A rot or any such euill would not haue destroyed them al in an instant as he desired The deuill must haue against Iob some exquisite and strange plagues he must therefore haue some speciall meanes to deuoure the sheepe all at once and for this end purpose nothing like some wilde fire or straunge lightning this will destroy wee see and know by experience without mercie And thus would Sathan make Iob beleeue that heauen and earth haue conspired against him for his destruction Be as carefull to preserue life as Sathan is to destroy life Vse 4. Ignorant people in the like euents as these are can not conceiue of Sathans practises because they be rude in Gods booke and bee not lightened by the holy trueth to see his workes For this cause to fill them with illusions Sathan hath inuented from the beginning of the world in all ages and hath set foorth and practised his abominable arts of Magicke and witchcraft By which faculties hee hath so preuailed If any of our ignorant sots and vnbeleeuers were thus plagued in his cattel he would straight waies crye out onely vpon witches and seeke after thē for redresse that he hath brought the greatest part of the world to worship and to adore him as a God For being sent of God either to correct and chasten his people and holy seruants as here wee see or to plague vnbeleeuers as full often wee haue seene and knowne hee perswades the blind people in their extremities to seeke help of witches And these wretched manciples of the diuell perswade themselues and others that what Sathan doth at Gods speciall charge and commission is done by vertue of their arts inchantments characters and other cursed illusions which wicked spirits haue taught them And thus the greatest part of the world followes after Sathan and his mates because they haue not the trueth or hauing it 1. Thes 2.11 haue no sound loue thereunto Vers 17. And while he was yet speaking another came and sayd The Chaldees set out three bands and fell vpon the camels and haue taken them and haue slaine the seruants with the edge of the sword but I onely am escaped alone to tell thee ANd while he was yet speaking another came The 3. message and cause of Iobs miserie or Iobs 3. rack There was no intermission no breathing or resting time for Iob. Sathan had most artificially brought all his matters so about that all his bloudie instruments were all at once in a readines as if they had been of a long time of one league heart will and minde and now had so consulted together that they knew their time and place and all circumstances c. vers 16. The Chaldees set out three bands Sathan hath found out another sort of theeues stronger then the first The bloudie Chaldees which liued by oppression and robberie these came against thy seruants marching forward in battell aray well prouided against vs and they haue taken away violently thy 3000. camels Thy seruants fought against them but being fewer in number and weaker in strength they were al slaine without mercie and the Lord in a strange prouidence hath deliuered me I thinke for this end that I might come and tell thee Doctrine 1. This verse againe teacheth vs that Sathan is not a stranger in any countrey or part of the world He is acquainted and can commaund the Sabeans to serue him Sathan is a stranger in no parte of the world but familiarly acquainted in all partes with the wicked he is as well acquainted in Chalde in like maner And so in all countries and nations of the worlde in the Church and without he can commaund the children of rebellion when and where the Lord permits him to bee his hands and instruments to effect any mischiefe 2. This nation or people of the Chaldees did serue Sathan as here in theft The Chaldees great men with Sathā in his artes of witchcraft so also in all the arts of magicke and witchcraft more then any of the elder nations excepting the Egyptians for that by Astrologicall speculations this people could better vaile and couer Sathans practises thē any other people This appeareth in the 2. of Daniel ver 2. The King commaunded to call the Inchanters and the Astrologians and the Sorcerers and the Chaldeans for to shew the King his dreames All these wizards would bee called Chaldeans Disciplina Chaldaorum Socatur diuinatio Cicer. diuinat vers 4. as if al wisedome and knowledge dwelt among them and all other countries no way for diuination comparable vnto them The hebrue word Casdim Chaldeans is interpreted of some as diuels or as robbers and spoylers Casdim A fit name for such a people This countrie was Abrahams natiue soyle as it is storied Gen. 11. from whence he was commanded of the Lord to depart and to come vnto the promised land of Canaan Gen. 12. vers 1. it lyeth
THE CHRISTIAN EXERCISE OF FASTING PRIVATE AND PVBLIKE Plainly set forth by testimonies of holy Scriptures and also of old and late writers Wherein is shewed how religious families priuatly and the congregations publikely haue humbled themselues before almightie God making vse of iudgements past auoyding euils present and preuenting future calamities c. Together with sundrie abuses of fasting in three generations of hypocrites the first in the dayes of the Prophets the second in the dayes of Christ the third in the dayes of Antichrist Hereunto also are added some meditations on the 1. and 2. chapters of Iob to comfort and instruct all such as be afflicted with any crosse either inwardly in minde or outwardly in bodie By H. HOLLAND Minister and preacher of Gods word Psalm 141. vers 5. Let the righteous smite me for that is a benefit and let him reproue me and it shall be a pretious oyle that shall not breake mine head AT LONDON Printed by the Widow Orwin for William Young and are to be sold at his shop in Canon lane neere the great North-doore of Paules Church at the signe of the white Horse 1596. The principall poynts and questions handled in this booke 1. What kinds there be of fasting 2. What the religious fast is 3. How the religious abstinence is diuided into two branches 1. Priuate 2. Publike 4. What priuate fasting is 5. What the publike fast is 6. The corruption and abuse of fasting 7. Some obseruations vpon the 1. and 2. chapter of Iob. To the right worshipfull and his very Christian good friend master Robert Chester Esquier c. mercie and peace in Iesus Christ THe pure worship seruice of God right worshipfull hath two dangerous extremes superstition is the one impietie is the other The people of this age seeming wise to auoide the vnsauerie leauen of popish corruption are fallen asleepe in carnall securitie prophanenes If the prince of darknes had not so blinded men that they can not see the beautie of Gods house nor reape any comfort by his seruice this exercise of fasting should little need any letters of commendation For the booke of God so commendeth it in the practise of the Saints Patriarches Kings Prophets Apostles and Church stories in the fathers and seruaunts of God in all ages that I can thinke a man but meanely acquainted with Gods worshippe which doth not otherwhiles exercise himselfe herein This wil good Bucer testifie with me in these very words Bu●er de regno Christi lib. 1. cap. 12. Cum ieiunia Dominus ipse Apostoli tantoperè Ecclesiijs commendârunt de Christi certè spiritu regno gloriari non possunt qui omninò nulla seruant ieiunia That is Seeing the Lorde himselfe and his Apostles haue so commended fasting to the Churches surely they can not glory of Christes spirite and kingdome which fast not at all I haue endeuoured in this treatise to lay open this exercise to the vnderstanding of the simple in the best maner that I could I must look for many aduersaries for the greatest part hath euer declined from pietie to superstition and prophanenes Therefore right worshipfull I come vnto you for protection of Gods trueth being the more bolde to aske this fauour because I am so well assured of your loue thereunto and full resolution to defend the same with al your might during life Againe I haue nowe for many yeares knowen your Christian loue towards me for the truths sake I desire to testifie my hearts affection towardes you in the best manner that I can The most blessed spirit of Iesus Christ guide and gouerne your spirit keepe and comfort you and all yours Februarie 12. 1596. Yours assuredly euer to vse in Iesus Christ during life HENRY HOLLAND To the Christian Reader mercie and peace in Iesus Christ I Haue endeuoured in this treatise Christian Reader to lay open this argument of fasting plainly and truely according to the Scriptures First the religious abstinence is described next the branches of the same the priuat and the publike with their speciall notes and differences Thirdly I haue shewed what causes and reasons haue moued the faithfull to exercise themselues in the one and in the other The priuat fast is onely commended in the practise of the faithfull of all ages The publike is both commanded by precept and commended by practise and was both ordinary and extraordinary And first for the ordinarie we haue Gods great charge and law written 1. The 10. Leuit 23.27.16.29 day of the 7. moneth ye shall humble your soules 2. Ye shall doe no worke at all vers 29. and it shall be a feast of Kippurim a day of reconciliation Generall ordinary fast 4. throughout their dwellings vers 31. 5 an ordinance Leuit. 16.31 for euer The practise and obedience of this lawe wee haue noted Heb. 9.7 But into the second Tabernacle went the high priest alone once euery yeare c. that is this solemne day appoynted This law of a general ordinary fast for the Iewes may seeme to binde vs and might no doubt bee profitable for the Christiās vnder the Gospel if it were obserued The cause of this fast sayth one was that the wrath of God might not break out or being broken out that it might bee a meanes to returne it home againe the same cause remaining wise men will conclude the effect shall continue Againe sayth he this exercise being a meanes to humble a man before his God was there any degree of humiliation necessary for that people which is not as needfull for vs Nay we hauing receiued vnder the Gos●ell more benefits then they the abuse of Gods good gifts and graces in vs should driue vs to the lowest humiliation that can bee so it bee lawfull and warrantable by the word of God Generall extraordinarie fast Ioel. 1. chap. ver 14. 2. cap. ver 16. The extraordinary was either signified by prophet and so commanded of God immediatly as wee see by Ioel or published by Gods Vicegerents princes and priests the presidents and gouernours of Gods people as shall appeare by sundrie examples of the Scripture in this treatise following Superstition hath euer preuailed in the world where Gods grace and light was wanting to corrupt all the pure worship of God but neuer so much abused any one exercise of religion as this of fasting The very Heathens abuse fasting in the worship of their false gods The priests of Egypt euer abstained from flesh and wine and thought this a matter of great deuotion The wise men of Persia their diet was but farina olus course bread and hearbes The wizards of India when they came to the priesthood of the Sunne did euer after abstaine from flesh The priests of Egypt fasted 3. dayes before they sacrificed So the diuell commandeth coniurers to fast three dayes before any magicall practise of coniuration And to be short Mahomet extolleth fasting for the Turkes fasted in the siege of Constantinople hauing wonne
intended and meant politikely for the increase of Fishermen and Mariners repayring of Port-townes and nauigation and not for any superstition to bee maintained in the choyce of meates be it enacted that whosoeuer shall by preaching teaching writing or open speech notifie that any eating of fish or forbearing of flesh mentioned in this statute is of any necessitie for the sauing of the soules of men or that it is the seruice of God otherwise then as other politike lawes are to be that then such persons shall be punished as spreaders of false newes are and ought to bee And this is the Christian policie which our friends of Rhemes haue stumbled vpon This abstinence commaunded by our lawes is an abstinence for order sake as the learned Ierome speaketh which whosoeuer disliketh is no friend to the common wealth Ordinis causa com in Gal. cap 5. A good rule for things indifferent Epist 118. Note the word contrary and may well be accounted a man of weake iudgement for as Augustine speaketh wisely Quod neque contra fidem neque contra bonos more 's iniungitur indifferenter est habendum pro eorum inter quos viuitur societate seruandum Looke whatsoeuer is inioyned by order that is not contrarie to saith nor contrarie to good maners that we must repute as a thing indifferent and obserue the same for that societie sake wherein we liue And yet I further answer the Rhemish aduersaries that our godly wise gouernours Church and people doe also truly and in heart imbrace the religious abstinence described and commended of God in his word haue doe practise the same when occasions are offered and as need requireth And this shall well appeare also by a publique fast commanded by our gouernours and kept in our Church in Anno 1563. For then first our most gracious Queene meued with a motherly affection for the mortalitie of her subiects and people signifieth her good liking of a Christian fast by her princely and expresse charge Archbishop Canterburie Math. Parker to the Archbishop then being all which as a worthie president for all posterities I haue inserted as followeth Most reuerend father in God right trustie and right welbeloued we greete you well Like as Almightie God hath of his meere grace committed to vs next vnder him the chiefe gouernment of this realme and the people therein so hath he of his like goodnes ordained vnder vs sundry principall ministers to serue and assist vs in this burden And therefore considering the state of this present time wherein it hath pleased the most highest for the amendment of vs and our people to visite certaine places of our realme with more contagious sicknes then lately hath beene for remedie and mitigation thereof wee thinke it both necessarie and our bounden dutie that vniuersall prayer and fasting be more effectually vsed in this our realme And vnderstanding that you haue thought and considered vpon some good order to be prescribed therein for the which yee require the application of our authoritie for the better obseruation thereof amongst our people we doe not onely commend and allow your good zeale therein but wee also commaund all maner of our ministers ecclesiasticall ciuill and all other our subiects to execute follow and obey such godly and wholesome orders as you being primate of all England and Metropolitane of this prouince of Canterburie vpon godly aduise and consideration shall vniformely deuise prescribe and publish for the vniuersall vsage of prayer fasting and other good deeds The order of the fast commaunded by the Queene and published in print by the Archbishop of Canterburie Anno. 1563. during the time of the visitation by sicknes and other troubles Giuen vnder our Signet at our Mannour of Richmond the 1. day of August the 5. yeare of our raigne The order then prescribed by this Archbishop and practised by the people was commended as followeth It is most euident to them that read the scriptures that both in the old Church vnder the lawe and in the primitiue Church vnder the Gospel the people of God hath alwaies vsed generall generall fasting both in times of common calamities as warres famine pestilence c. and also when any waightie matter touching the estate of the Church or the common wealth was begunne or intended And it cannot bee denied but that in this our time wherein many things haue been reformed according to the doctrine and examples of Gods worde and the primitiue Church this part for fasting and abstinence being alwaies in the scripture as a necessarie companion ioyned to feruent praier hath been too much neglected Wherefore for some beginning of redresse herein it hath beene thought meete to the Queenes maiestie that in this contagious time of sicknes and other troubles and vnquietnes according to the examples of the godly king Iehosaphat and the king of Niniuie with others a general fast should be ioyned with generall prayer throughout her realme 1. Chro. 20. Ionas 3. and to bee obserued of all her godly subiects in manner and forme following 1. First it is ordained that the wednesday of euery weeke shall be the day appointed for this generall fast 2. All persons betweene the age of 16. yeares and 60. sicke folkes and labourers in haruest or other great labours only excepted shall eate but one only cōpetent and moderate meale vpon euery wednesday In which said meale shal be vsed very sober and spare diet without varietie of kinds of meate dishes spices cōfectiōs or wines but only such as may serue for necessitie comelines and health 3. Item in that meale it shal be indifferēt to eate flesh or fish so that their quantitie be small and no varietie or delicacie be sought Wherein euery man hath to answer to God if he in such godly exercises either contemne publike order or dissemble with God pretending abstinence doing nothing lesse 4. Item those that bee of wealth and abilitie ought that day to abate and diminish the costlines and varietie of their fare and increase therewith their liberalitie almes towards the poore that the same poore which either indeede lacke foode or els that which they haue is vnseasonable and cause of sicknes may therby be relieued and charitably succoured to be maintained in health 5. Pag. 5. Item that a Sermon bee had preached by such as bee authorized and the preacher to intreate of such matters especially as bee meete for this cause of publike prayer c. 6. Last of all this day being in this manner appointed for a day of generall prayer and fasting ought to be bestowed by them which may forbeare from bodily labour in prayer studie reading or hearing of the Scriptures or good exhortations c. And when any dulnes or wearines shall arise then to bee occupied in other godly exercises but no part therof to be spent in plaies pastimes or idlenes much lesse in lewd wicked or wanton behauiour I haue thus purposely set before thine eyes Christian reader
for distinction sake the miraculous fast and of this wee haue three speciall examples set downe not for imitation but for instruction and confirmation of our faith The first is of Moses hee fasted 40. dayes and 40. nights M. I. Calu. vt legem tanquā è coelo afferret Com. in Exod. 34.28 to teach that rebellious people that his heauenly prophecies and diuine sermons came from God immediatly Exod. 34.28 The second is of Elias 1. King 19.8 he fasted also 40. dayes and nights as a second Moses to seale vnto the Church of God his prophecies and to conuert that idolatrous people vnto the true faith of Christ againe The third example is of Christ who for the same end and purpose as they did fasted so many dayes and nights to testifie to all the world that his holy Gospell was of like authoritie and came from the same spirite Matth. 4.2 And here it is to bee noted that these three Moses Elias and Iesus Christ fasted but once this miraculous fast in all their dayes on earth Mad therefore are they which for imitation of thē prescribe command and binde consciences to doe the like yearely But of this abuse hereafter 6. The sixt kinde of fasting is that which is most commended by Gods spirite in the practise of the faithfull throughout the whole Scriptures this for distinctiō sake againe The religious fast we may call a religious fast and this is the onely fast our Lord and Sauiour commendeth in our text and therefore we haue endeuoured to describe it in this manner following according to the holie Scriptures The true description of a religious fast A religious fast is an abstinence more then ordinarie not only from all meates and drinkes but also from all other things which may cherish the bodie so farre as nature will giue leaue and ciuill honestie for one whole day at the least proceeding from a true faith and a cheerfull willing minde principally to testifie our repentance and to worke in vs a greater humiliation that our prayers may be more effectuall and better preuaile with God to obtaine such blessings as concerne our owne wants priuatly For so the poet warneth breuis esse labor● obscurus fi● and the publique state of the Church and people of God I would not be shortlest I should be obscure for that I only desire to instruct and teach the ignorant the trueth of this doctrine according to the Scriptures The confirmation of this description followeth 1. An abstinence from all meates So much doth the word signifie in Hebrue Greeke and Latine as all good writers testifie For the Hebrue word Tsome signifieth to afflict and appaire the bodie with abstinence from all meates and drinkes c. as appeareth Ionas 3.7 Let neither man nor beast taste any thing neither feed nor drink water The same sayth Dauid in his fast for Abner So doe God to me and more also if I taste bread or ought els till the sunne be downe 2. Sam. 3.35 The Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not signifie to liue sparingly and sober onely but to taste nothing at all And as for the Latin ieiunium Marc. Cic. lib. 7 epist 27. the best Orator saith the very same of it that himselfe being sicke of a bloudie fluxe he was ieiunus fasting so as sayth hee J tasted not so much as water 2. From all other things which may cherish the bodie So generally bee Dauids words We must abstaine sayth one Quantum natura ferre sustinere potest quantumque ad excitādos facit non extinguendos animi sensus Eccle. 22.6 if I taste bread or ought els 2. Sam. 3.35 They were commaunded also to put away their best rayment Exod. 33.5.6 Againe they were to abstaine from the marriage bed Ioel. 2.16 1. Cor. 7.5 and from all mirth and musicke Dan. 6.18 recreations delights and pleasures and from all ioy of temporall delights sayth Augustine quaest Euang. lib. 2. cap. 18. and to giue themselues to mourning weeping and heauines for their sinnes c. Nehem. 1. vers 4. J sate downe J wept I mourned certaine daies I fasted I prayed And for this cause also they had their sackcloth and ashes to signifie that they were not worthie of any attyre and that they were but ashes This also was ment by rending their coates But now Christ in our text sayth that we may fast wanting both sackcloth and ashes yea euen when wee haue washed and perfumed our selues sweetly for the Lord regards not the outward ceremonies but will haue vs cheerefully to worship him and to reioyce euen in mourning to rend our hearts that wee may see our corruptions and abhorre them and ourselues for the huge masse of sinne which lieth hid within vs Iob. 42. vers 6. 3. For one whole day This sayth Dauid in the place before cited 2. Sam. 3.35 So doe God to me and more also if I taste bread or ought els till the sunne be downe So Saul 1. Sam. 14.24 So the children of Israel when they went to battell against the Beniamites they went twise foorth against them to their great losse the first time they lost 22000. men Iudg. 20.21 the second time 18000. men ver 25. but the third time it is sayd all the children of Israel went vp and al the people came also vnto the house of God and wept and sate there before the Lord and fasted that day vnto the euening vers 26. and the next day preuailed against their enemies vers 35.48 So for Saul Ionathan c. they wept and fasted vntill the euening So Cornelius desirous to receiue that foode which was better to him as Iob sayth chap. 23.12 then his ordinarie foode he fasted also vntill the 9. houre of the day Act. 10. 30. The 9. houre of the day that is about the euening saith Epiphanius Chemit exam Trid. Con. tom 4. de ieiunio And when at euen sayth Chemnitius they came to eate they neither made choyce of delicate fish or fruites neither did they fill themselues with wines or strong drinkes or fare daintily as Daniel sayth no pleasant bread flesh or wine but they fed vpon such poore things as came next to hand they fed euer as the Psalmist sayth vpon the bread of teares Psalm 80.5 and mingled their drinke with weeping Psalm 102. bread of aduersitie and water of affliction Es 30.20 1. King 22.27 that is a poore portion of bread and water So Iudith all her widowhood excepting the Sabboths for to dine and fast are set as opposite with August epist 86. And so Anna Luk. 2. they had no dinner at all but a light supper when they fasted for the diet of fasting must bee contrary to feasting which is permitted sometimes the faithfull Nehem. 8.10 Go and eate of the fat and drink of the sweet In your seasting remember the poore send part for them for whom none is prepared 4. At the least This is added
consent for a time that yee may giue your selues to fasting and prayer 1. Cor. 7. ver 5. where againe least any should thinke ouer highly of this exercise or conceiue any opinion of holines merit c. hee addeth also not vnmindefull of our infirmities and againe come together that sathan tempt you not for your incontinencie Ieiunijs preces alere ingemiscere Lichrimari mugire dies noctesque ad dominum Tertul lib de poenitent Ieiunium preces nostras subuheit in coelum Fasting giues wings to our prayers Basil Homil. de laudibus ieiunij This appeareth plainely in the wordes of Ezra that one principall ende and vse of all fasting publike and priuat is to make vs more fit for prayer Ezra 8.21 I proclaymed a fast that wee might humble our selues to what end that wee might seeke of him that is by prayer begge of God or put vp our petitions vnto God a right way to escape the enemie for vs for our children and for all our substance and that this seeking was by prayer appeareth in the wordes following vers 23. So wee fasted and besought our God for this and he was intreated of vs. In prayer the soule must bee lifted vp to God Psal 25.1 and powred forth as it were before the Lord 1. Sam. 1.15 a worke which no naturall man can performe before hee hath receiued the spirit of faith 2. Cor. 4.13 Rom. 10.14 and the spirit of prayers Zach. 12.10 Rom. 8.26 Yea the faithfull themselues when they haue their consciences loaden with sinne or their bodies farced with meats they shall finde themselues barren and bound vp in their harts drye and vnapt for this heauenly exercise I conclude therefore Looke what moued the faithfull and holy men to fasting must moue vs They fasted to prepare and to stirre vp their spirits and soules vnto prayer Therefore so must we Sixtly the faithfull seruants of God A sixt cause of priuat fasting to beare the crosse more patiently in persecution for the professon of the gospel c. when they were called to beare Christs crosse in times of persecution for their religion for the gospell and their profession sake then they gaue themselues againe in speciall manner vnto fasting and prayer Vt ad ferendas afflictiones c. That they may saith Chemnitius accustome themselues and learne to beare afflictions more patiently And this Christ teacheth to be a speciall time for this abstinence answering Iohns disciples of their priuat fast Mat. 9.14 Why doe we and the Pharisees fast often and thy disciples fast not he saith can the children of the mariage chamber mourne as long as the bridegroome is with them but the dayes will come when the bridegroome shall be taken from them and then shall they fast Where he teacheth first that there is a time of mirth and ioy and that season is vnfit for fasting and that there is a time of sorrow mourning when men ought to giue and applie themselues more humblie vnto fasting and prayer Secondly We must fast when we shall feele our bridegroome Iesus Christ absent from vs. Cant. that hee shall depart from them and then many euils shall follow great persecution for the Gospell as came to passe vnder those ten bloodie Emperours then and in those dayes men must not forget fasting The holy martyrs therefore as Christ admonisheth euer vnder the crosse gaue themselues to fasting and prayer The Iewes fasted much priuatly and publikely during their banishment and captiuitie Zach. 7. 〈…〉 for 〈◊〉 soules howbeit after a time they became superstitious and for this cause also fasted no doubt Paul often for speaking of his afflictions and reioycing to remember how many euills hee past through for the gospel sake he saith in watchings often in fastings often 2. Cor. 11.27 Againe 2. Cor. 6.5.6 In stripes in prisons c. by watchings by fastings And thus the good Martyrs in all ages did exercise themselues M. Bradfords abstinence vnder the crosse of Master Bradford Master Iohn Foxe writeth that Preaching reading and praying was all his whole life he did not eate but one meale a day which was but little when he tooke it Acts and Mon. 1555. Iulij and his continuall studie was vpon his knees in the midst of dinner he vsed often to muse with himselfe hauing his hat ouer his eyes M. Bradford mingled his drinke with teares from whence came commonly plenty of teares dropping on his trencher So likewise Alcibiades a good man liued very sparingly in the primitiue Church for he fed onely on bread and water and would haue continued this dyet in the prison for he thought it a special time of fasting but because of his weaknes he was taught of Attalus the martyr to doe otherwise and he receiued the admonition Euseb lib. 5. c. 3 and obeyed it and vsed the creatures more freely with thankes giuing vnto God A seuenth cause preparation to heare the word and receiue the Sacraments And let the seuenth end of this exercise bee a diligent and godly preparation to heare the word and for participation of the sacrament to our edification and comfort for thus did the faithfull in all ages receiue benefite by the publike ministrie of Gods word and sacraments here we must regarde principally these three poyntes 1. Preparation before the word and Sacrament 2. Attention and reuerence in hearing the word and participation of the Sacrament 3. Meditation after 1. Of preparation before the word and Sacrament THe Lord for this poynt warneth vs that wee enter not rashly nor vnaduisedly into his holy sanctuarie but with preparation and reuerence Eccle. 4.17 Take heede vnto thy foote when thou enterest into the house of God and bee more neere to heare then to giue the sacrifice of fooles for they know not that they doe euill This preparation is principally of two partes 1. Of the minde 1. By reading and 2. By meditation before 2. Of the heart and spirit 1. By fasting 2. By prayer Preparation of the minde BEfore the minde be inlightened with some measure of the true knowledge of God there can be no faith no repentance no saluation how can men loue that which they knowe not how can wee trust him whom wee loue not c. It is a wonder to see how Sathan doth bewitch men in these dayes to seuer these two reading and preaching which GOD hath euer so coupled together for some would content themselues for their faith and saluation with reading onely and they are many and some would haue but preaching onely and they bee not a few The scripture indeede doth ascribe most for the breeding 1. The minde prepared First by reading of the Scriptures increase and growth of faith repentance vnto the preaching of the word Rom. 10.14.17 Mal. 2.6.7 Pro. 29.18 Hos 4.6 Matth. 15.14 But yet they command vs full often publikely and priuatly to reade the same Deut. 6.6.7 Psalm 1.2 Act. 13.15 Daniel
first cause of their meeting was that the remembrance of Gods great and wonderfull benefites might neuer dye among them Vse of the Passeouer therefore in the feast of the Passeouer they did celebrate the remembrance of their miraculous deliuerance out of Aegypt secondly in the feast of Pentecost the remembrance of the lawe and holy couenant which they receiued in Sinai Thirdly in the feast of Tabernacles they were put in remembrance how they dwelt fortie yeares in the wildernes in tents and were graciously preserued and thankesgiuing was then vsed for their come and other fruites receiued So they were yearely put in minde of these three the greatest blessings that can be in any commonwealth For the first great happines of any weale publike is to be freed from al bondage to inioy freedome and to haue speciall liberties and immunities graunted this mercie the Lord shewed them in their admirable deliuerance from Aegypt The second thing which maketh a flourishing commonwealth is that Gods lawes and holy couenant be receiued Gods pure worship and holy religion be established This was done by the Lorde in a most wonderfull manner vnto that people in the wildernes of Sinai The third poynt to be desired for the preseruation of the happie state of any people is that nothing to preserue this present life be wanting this mercie also they receiued at Gods hand yeerely and their fathers had receiued miraculouslie in the wildernes fortie yeares as the holy stories haue recorded Secondly they were in these generall meetings yeerely confirmed in their consent in holy religion and in the forme and manner of the pure worship of God Thirdly then the most godlie learned Prophets Priests and Leuites did assemble from all their colledges and schooles of learning to instruct the people of God and to resolue them in all their doubtes Fourthly by this generall meeting also mutuall loue and affection did increase and was euer confirmed among the Tribes for then they feasted and reioyced together Fiftly by this also the holy ministerie and the place of Gods seruice was the better prouided for and the Priestes and Leuites were incouraged in the seruice of the Lord Deut. 12.6.7 2. Chro. 31.4 Because that great assemblie multiplied sacrifices and offerings in those feastes 6. Againe this serued for the confirmation of their faith in their supplications and prayers there for the Lord had made a speciall promise to his people in that place Deuter. 12.28 1. King 8.7 And the Lorde woulde haue them by this trauell to testifie their obedience also vnto his lawes for the place was appoynted by him and stoode not in their own election as is before shewed 8. Lastly this trauell was a notable exercise of their faith for at that time they were to leaue their substance albeit in danger of the spoyle by the enemie for all the male-kinde of any strength went vp to Ierusalem and so they did recommending all things to Gods holy protection And yet we neuer reade that this people were euer in damaged by their enemies by reason of these holy assemblies vnto the place of Gods worship the times God appoynted For the Lord most graciously according to his promise preserued them and their land Exod. 34.24 I will cast out the nations before thee and inlarge thy coastes so that no man shall desire the land when thou shalt come vp to appeare before the Lord thy God thrise in the yeare 3. Sanctifie a fast THat is as some thinke vse a holy fast Sense or fast for a holy and religious ende q. d. Hitherto you haue fasted for the famine you could not otherwise choose now come to a voluntarie fast that so you may bee truely humbled before the Lorde Againe some fast for bodilie health but fast you a religious fast that so you may be better prepared for Gods seruice But I had rather giue the sense thus sanctifie a fast that is sanctifie and prepare the people for this generall fast or commaunde them that they bee prepared and sanctified in this sense I finde a like phrase vsed in the like occasion for when the solemne assemblie was to meete in Sinai to heare and receiue the lawe the Lorde himselfe giueth Moses a charge in these wordes Exod. 19. ver 10.14 Iosh 7.15 Ignorant people can better prepare themselues to a feast then to a religious fast in these dayes Goe to the people and sanctifie them that is commaunde them to vse all holy meanes that they may be sanctified The meanes were these first they must be purified they washed themselues secondly they were commaunded to abstaine from the marriage bed during that time thirdly they added prayer and fourthly priuat fasting as the Apostle commaundeth in the like speciall causes 1. Corin. 7.1 2 3 4. 4. Call a solemne assembly Kiru gnatzarah proclamate festum retentionis Call a feast day to restrain the people Leu. 23.28.39 THe word here vsed doth signifie to keepe in and to restraine because the whole day was solemnized and the people kept together to confesse their sinnes to pray and giue thankes to heare learne and conferre together and for other speciall causes which hereafter shall bee shewed So they made the whole day a solemne holy day and did none of their ordinarie workes the Lord so commaunded You shall humble your selues and do no worke at all And surely the Lord so prouides for vs in wisdome and mercie because our spirituall labours this day will aske our whole strength which will not bee great because of our abstinence So then we see here this day must be kept * The romish sinagoug hath a kalendar farced full of idle holy dayes for canonized saints of whō it is like a greate parte are gone to the neather-most hel see Bales english votarie but this holy day here commanded of the Lord is quite blotted out of al their bookes of remembrance Our people are to take head lest they so abuse the saboth holy vnto the Lord. The Iewes mispent this daye many wayes for when they were commaunded by their magistrates and ministers to assemble thus together for generall fasts the carnal worldlings were glad of it not to make it a solemne daye to the Lord but for their own speciall vses Some thought it a fit time to meete for quarrels and contentions with their aduersaries and to bring in false accusations against their brethren so did bloodie Iezabel against poore Naboth on the fast day Some thought it a good time to meet their creditors and to gather their debtes so * Es 58. ver 3. The first cause of a generall fast to preuent future euils imminent dangers ver 3. 4. 6. 14. ver 9. Esay complaineth Question What speciall causes might moue the Princes and priestes to publish generall fastes and to prepare the people as is before shewed for such solemne assemblies Answer It is very expedient for all good magistrates and faithfull people to learne out of
their faith confirmed and that so they might bee mutually comforted one by another This meeting was not in common Tauernes or Innes or Alehouses or in other places of resort with the prophane Edomites the people of the land but in their owne houses For albeit as yet they were young and as it seemes vnmarried yet had their father prouided them houses and such necessaries as did belong to their families as carefull was Iacob in this respect Gen. 30.30 as his words to Laban can testifie But now when shall I trauell for mine owne house also hee that prouideth not for his familie is worse then an Infidell and wee may procure things honest before hand the care which is forbidden is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a distracting and vexing care Matth. 7. These seuen sonnes did thus feast together 7. daies not 7. daies continuing or if they feasted a whole weeke certaine it is not euery weeke or euery month for we must not imagine that they gaue any such president of a luxurious life vnto others but certain times whē they thought best or had most cause of meeting for it is sayd that euery one kept his daye The modestie of the Virgines of elder ages no more but one day Lastly the sisters they came also to the same banquet from their fathers house as it is like they were virgines yet but withall modestie and shamefastnes they came being sent for and being called not before for so it became well their virginitie to bee sober modest and very watchfull ouer their waies Wherefore he mentioneth in the beginning of this booke the banketting of Iobes childrē 1. The holy spirite here speakes of this feasting and banquetting for these speciall causes First that wee might see the religious loue of Iobs children and by what meanes they desired to comfort and edifie one another Secondly that wee might also see and consider the religious care of Iob for them expressed in the verse following Thirdly that wee might obserue where and when Sathan murdered them it was in their feasting time that hee might turne Iobs great mirth by a sodaine desolation and destruction into the greater sorow If his sonnes had died in their beds by some continuing sicknes where he might haue seene some testimonie of their faith it would not haue so moued him sodaine deaths the best doe feare and the foolish think it a great argumēt of Gods great wrath as we may see both in this booke and Luk. 13.1.2.3.4.5 Lastly this banquetting is here touched that wee might note what men Sathan so murdered not Epicures * Sathan knew the wicked would soone take occasion to exclayme against righteous Iobs children nor hypocrites extortioners c. as Iobs friends thought but godly and religious persons 2. Note here the religious loue and happie consents of these good children mutually comforting one another No doubt they were no small ioy and comfort vnto their father Adam had but two sons the one murdered the other Noah had three sonnes one mocked his owne father and was accursed Abraham had two sonnes the one scorned and persecuted the other Isaac had two sonnes the one hated and desired to murder the other Iacob had twelue sonnes ten would haue murdered Ioseph and dispitefully sold him into a strange countrey Dauids children murdered one another and hee had great griefe and sorrowe by them all the elder despise the younger the younger enuie the elder If such holy men had such wicked children what maruell is it that our prophane parents breed and bring vp such a wicked generation 3. Feasting and banquetting is lawful vnto Gods people if that they keepe the rules appointed and follow the godly practise here set before vs by the holy spirit Abraham feasted at the weaning of Isaac Gen. 21.8 Isaac feasted Abimelech Gen. 26.30 Ioseph his brethren Gen. 43.31 Dauid Abner and his friends 2. Sam. 3.20 Salomon his seruants 1. King 5.15 Matthew feasted Christ and his Apostles Matthew 9. So did Simon the Pharisee Luk. 7. with others many Luk. 14. Vers 5. And when the daies of their banquetting were gone about Iob sent and sanctified them and hee rose vp earlie in the morning and offered burnt offeringes according to the number of them al for Iob sayd it may be that my sonnes haue sinned and * Heb. blessed Or thought euill or spoken euill blasphemed GOD in their hearts THis verse giueth vs to see some part of the practise of Iobs life in the wise and godly gouernment of his familie thereby to teach vs that his life well agreed with his faith and profession and iustly deserued the former commendation vers 1. This verse laieth before our eyes the religious care of Iob for the gouernment of his children where these pointes are to be cōsidered 1. When Iob sacrificed for his children When the daies of banquetting were gone about earlie in the morning 2. How his children were prepared for the sacrifice hee gaue charge they should prepare and sanctifie themselues 3. What sacrifice he offered Burnt offrings according to the number of them all 4. What reason moued him so to sacrifice he feared lest they had sinned in their feasting 5. How often did Iob so all those times in the yere when they banquetted And when the daies of their banquetting were gone about Vaikadshem Exod. 19.13.14 supra pag. that is when the 7. daies of their feasting was past for the 7. brethren did feast euery one his day vers 3. therfore here wee must vnderstand 7. daies whether 7. daies continued or some intermission between the feast of each brother it is vncertaine Iob sent and sanctified them that is he sent a messenger vnto them to charge them to sanctifie to wash and purifie them selues and so to prepare themselues by prayer c. against their day of meeting to sacrifice The word here vsed signifieth to prepare as Numb 11.18 but I vnderstand it here as it is vsed Exod. 19.10.14 vers where wee see their sanctification and preparation to heare the Lord speake contained their purification and their abstinence from the mariage bed as the Apostle also doth exhort in the like occasion 1. Cor. 7.4.5.6 And no doubt with all these outward things they were to pray instantly Eccles 4.17 that they might be fit to appeare in Gods presence for his most holy worship and seruice And hee rose vp earlie in the morning The morning is a pretious time for all actions The morning a precious time for al good actions and specially for Gods worship and seruice and so commended by Gods spirite vnto vs Psalm 5 3.55 17.59 16.90 14. Iob was very carefull concerning his children he would let passe no time when their feast was ended but very earlie he sought the Lord that God might be pacified if that by any meanes in thought word or deed they had offended him in that dangerous and loose time of feasting And hee offered burnt offrings according to
vpon the East side of Iurie betweene Babylon and Arabia Iere. 50.10 and 51.4 3. Here againe as in the former verse we may see how bloudthirstie Sathan is and all his speciall instruments Great theeues and robbers in whom Sathan ruleth and rageth they haue no mercie There are some sort of base and poore theeues in the world which saith Salomon men despise not because they steale for hunger and to preserue life A number of these poore wretches dye with vs Theeues and robbers sathās instruments but the great master theeues Sathans speciall instruments which robbe and spoyle and sport themselues in euill and shed bloud full often most desperatly they will euer finde some fauour and meanes to escape racke and gibbet or some one cloake or other to couer all their bloudie practises Vers 18.19 And while he was yet speaking The 4. message of Iobs calamitie and 4. racke which Sathan prepared for him came another and sayd thy sonnes and thy daughters were eating and drinking wine in their eldest brothers house And behold there came a great winde from beyond the wildernes and smote the foure corners of the house which fell vpon the children and they are dead and J onely am escaped alone to tell thee THe 18. verse as before vers 13. They banketted euery one his day vers 4. Now the day came by course to be the eldest sonnes day which peraduenture had more substance and wealth and therefore better prouided for such a feast then all the rest could be Synecdoche Drinking wine That is banketting together a part of their banket for the whole Wine was not then their ordinary drinke no more then with vs but in feasting and meeting of friends they drink wine for their comfort c. There came a great wind The diuel stirred vp a strange tempest of winde against Iob. Wicked spirits are marueilous cunning to winde themselues into all natural causes The wicked spirits are very artificiall in all regions and partes of the aire to stir vp meteors and such like imperfect bodies and to effect many things by them as the Lord shal command or permit them They work in the fierie region and can stirre vp Comets and blasing starres there they work in the watrie region and can stirre vp lightnings thunder there and in the lowest region and can gather together the moyst vapors and hot exhalations and so temper them that they may cause great windes and tempests as the Lord shall permit them Senec. natur 7. lib. 5. cap. 1. Ventus esse fluens aer in vnam partem c. Like as the sea flowes by some secret instinct of nature so the ayre is purged by windes breeding of hot exhalations and colde vapours in some one parte whence they are driuen also into that parte of the ayre which is emptiest of all such matter From beyond the wildernesse That is this winde had a fit place whence it might rush violently vpon Iobs house as in a champion and open countrie And smote the foure corners of the house This is a strange winde that can strike foure corners of a house for no ordinary windes can hurt It is a strange wynde that can strike 4. corners of a house at one time but that side of the house which hath an aspect vnto those poynts and parts of the world where the winde is bred and whence it bloweth If from the South the South part of the house is most battered if from the North the North part of the house is most indangered c. But this was such a tempest as ouerturned the whole frame of the house in one instant Which fell vpon the children That is all thy sonnes and daughters banketting in the same house are dead with the fall of that house vpon them This plague came more neere Iobs heart and was more grieuous then all the rest What circumstances shew the greatnes of Iobs last calamitie Sathan meanes now to dispatch him and vtterly to confound him Circumstances which shew the grieuousnes and greatnes of this calamitie are these First the good father here hath no losse as before of beasts and mercenaries onely but now all his most deere and sweete children are swept away from him as it were with one beesome of destruction in one moment of time Could Dauid so weepe for a cursed Absalom 2. Sam. 18.53 how much more Iob for his religious and godly children Could Iacob so heauily mourne for one good Ioseph and shall not Iob haue farre greater cause of lamentation for ten and for all 2. This mischiefe was sudden and was strange and they were in their mirth and thought little of sorrow much lesse of any death at that time This no doubt greatly grieued his heart that they were so straungely in their mirth time destroyed for this made the wicked speake freely against him and his children 3. This euent could no way be seene to fall out for any defect want or weakenes in the house Iob was well assured and therefore hee seeth herein a speciall hande of GOD set against him 4. Lastly the number must grieue him all his children all his good and faithfull seruants foure only excepted Here may some questions be demanded 1. Q. It may bee here demaunded first 1. Quest whether Sathan did not proceed beyond his commission before mentioned in murdering so many men and so many children A. Children and seruants are a part of the father and masters possession and substance and so haue been both by Gods law and mans law for many ages Exod. 21.7 The Iewes might sell their children but not to bee perpetuall slaues or bondmen as the Pagans see Lèuit 25.39.40 Deut. 15.12 2. Q. This may also seeme hard and straunge 2. Quest that the Lord to try one man would so permit Sathan to trample vnder feete and to destroy as brute beasts the liues of so many men A. 1. Wee may neuer prescribe vnto the Lord or circumscribe him 2. God is not moued hereunto but of his owne free-will and free motion vox dei sit pro ratione voluntas and his will is the rule of all iustice other whiles secret euer good and iust 3. Of his owne free-will he doth the greater Ergo 1. Pet. 3.17 Psal 44. ver vlt. much more the lesse of election and reprobation the only will of God is the chiefe cause And here the Apostle stops all mouthes of men with this sentence Rom. 9.15.20 O man who art thou that pleadest against God shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus 3. Ques 3. Q. It may also bee here demaunded whether these men thus destroyed by Sathan were saued yea or no A. The rule of charitie must cause vs to bee well perswaded of this point because of their education vnder the gouernment of so religious and so faithfull a seruaunt vnto God And in the great deluge not euery
his answers Mine houre is not yet come And Ioh. Reu. vers 3. Ye shall haue tribulation ten daies chap. 12. 6. The church must bee fed in the wildernesse a thousand two hundreth and threescore dayes 3 Looke not to sleepe quietly after the first conquest or victorie had against Sathan He must be let loose often against thee and the next time hee comes with greater strength For this cause thou must not giue thy selfe to any slothfulnes after temptations but to greater watchfulnes prayer meditations c. that thou maist be more fresh better prouided against new assaults * Such as make them nests in this life looke for no crosses and when they come cannot beate them I saide in my prosperitie I shal neuer be moued But be strong cōforted for here thou seest thy God eyes all thy combats and the heauenly father hath giuen vs a free gift vnto Iesus Christ we cannot bee lost for he is a strong and faithfull keeper Onely let vs watch in prayer fasting and godly meditations * A bad signe when men after the crosse are not more watchfull then before they were Ioh. 10.29 when daungerous assaults of Sathan come neere vs. 1 In this second and third verse the Lord lets vs yet further see our enemies the wicked spirits And how that much like their instruments they either speake against their conscience and knowledge as before wee heard in the accusation of Iob or els they dissemble as here we see For when the Lord would take accounts in speciall manner for the execution of his first commission whether Sathan preuailed against Iob and therfore purposely asketh of his comming in the first question Whence commest thou commest thou not from Iob what canst thou doe what are not my words true art not thou a lyer confounded He giues a generall answer againe as before and comes not to the thesis or question in hand till hee is prouoked in speciall manner so to doe For this cause in the second place the Lorde driues him to answer directly to the question as before 2 Here againe wee are to obserue how the Lord delights to commend his righteous seruants euen to Sathans face Psal 147.11 The Lord delights in them which feare him and attend vpon his mercie * Sathan is galled and greened in nothinge so much as to see Gods people prosper and proceed in Gods pure worshippe The Lord delights to commend his seruants And what the commendation is Iob is a sound man righteous c. as before chap. 1. 8. First a sound man admit a man haue all vertues yet if he haue a false heart and wicked vncleane conscience albeit all the world clap their hands in his commendation yet is he but dung and filthines before God 2. A righteous man not boasting of inward sinceritie which hath not the warrant and witnes of a good conuersation and righteous life 3. Fearing GOD not onely a righteous iustitiarie blameles before men c. for a number thinke themselues as angels if they can boast of this albeit they be farre from the knowledge and furthest off all men from the practise of the pure worship of God Iob is sayd therefore to feare God truely that is to worship God sincerely and deuoutly albeit all the countrey went a whoring after false gods 4. He eschewed euill he carefully auoyded all occasions and shadowes or appearances of sinne 1 Thes 5. like as when we smell a stinke wee turne away our face incontinently so did Iob. 5. Lastly hee perseuered constant and faithfull vnder the crosse an especiall signe of grace and of the presence of Christ Philip. 4.13 For the holy Spirit testifieth If thou bee faint in the day of aduersitie Pro. 24.10 thy strength is small 3. When the Lorde here speaketh that he was moued by Sathan to yeelde to his former commission wee haue before cap. 1. vers 12. shewed how the Lord had decreed and purposed the same before Sathā came in his presence howsoeuer he seem as it were to yeeld vnto his accusatiōs and to hearken to his calumniations against Iob. Sathan moued the Lord that is true but his motiues were not of force to bring the Lord to his conclusion The Lord was moued before Sathan came in presence as wee sawe before 4. Wee are to note here againe how the Lord calleth the former euill vpon Iob his owne worke he sayth it was hee that deuoured his substance c. so speakes Iob himselfe The Lord taketh away and yet we know the wicked impes of the deuill and that tempest and fire consumed all Wherefore let vs here learne againe and againe to fasten our eyes vpon the Lord he doth all things in heauen and earth And howsoeuer things seeme to vs to fall out accidentally yet the Lord still abideth in the sterne * The Lord God leadeth vs into temptation as he did his own sonne Iesus Christ Mate 4.1 Lu. 4. and it is he which deliuereth vs from euill gouerneth all things in heauen and earth let the instruments be what may be and intend what they list yet God in the end will turne all to the good of his elect 5. The Lord telleth the deuill to confound him al that euer he hath done is in vaine He hath sweat much to obtaine the commission next in the execution of it c. But al his labour is lost he cannot bring Iob to ioyne in league with him to renounce his God blaspheme c. all his labour is lost Verse 4. And Sathan answered the Lord and sayd skin for skin and all that euer a man hath will a man giue for his life Verse 5. But stretch out now thine hand and touch his bones and his flesh * Let me vndergoe any Curse to see if hee will not blaspheme thee to thy face These two verses containe Sathans aunswere vnto the Lorde wherein hee laboreth with more new reasons for a new commission 1. Arg. An hypocrite will freely giue all that hee hath to saue his lite to saue his skinne as the prouerbe is that he may lie in a whole skinne Iob is an hypocrite Ergo Iob will bee content to lose all to saue c. as the prouerbe is 2. Arg. Is from a kind of abiuration cursing c. If thou touch his bones c. if then hee blaspheme not let me vndergoe the curse wherefore now grant once again I may proceede against him to search him and to discouer his hypocrisie Skinne for skinne Guor begnad gnor This was an vsuall prouerbe and signifieth no doubt that a man would giue the deerest thing he hath to saue his life yea a man would bee glad if the euil come neere our bodies to leese some part of the skinne which may be best spared to saue the rest and so the life A man would hazard to beare a great blowe on his arme legge or thigh rather then on his head wee euer care for
was a citie in Edom Ierem. 49.7 Baruc. 3.12 which did beare name of that man and this Eliphaz might bee Lord of it so hee may beare the name of the towne and his fathers also Bildad the Shuhite Of Shua the sonne of Abraham by Ketura his second wife Gen. 25.2 Zophar the Naamathite Some say of Zopho sonne to that Eliphaz Esaus eldest sonne Gen. 36.11 Some say his name is set downe figuratiuely Metathesis of Timna one of the Dukes which came of Esau vers 40. And yet it may bee this man came of a towne called Naamah which afterwards fell by lot to the tribe of Iuda Iosh 15.41 They were agreed together to come That is they came not by chaunce they came purposely with one consent they thought to ioyne their counsel heads hands hearts together to doe him good To mourne with him and to comfort him They came in loue they would ease his sorrow if they could any way beare any part of it and they desired to comfort him by prayer and conference 1. First behold in these three men a singular president for loue and wisedome For loue they were deere friends they mourned and were touched in their hearts for the calamities of their friend they desired to comfort him and mourne with him Their discourses following shew they were men of rare gifts for wisdome and knowledge These men follow Christs counsell faithfully Math. 18.18.19 for godly wisedome they agree together with all the best meanes and counsell they can to communicate vnto him all the signes of their loue So Esay came to Hezekiah to comfort him and admonish and to pray for him 2. King 20.1.12 1. They agree together They know no prayers can preuaile with God without consent of mindes Verely I say vnto you that if two of you shall agree together in earth vpon any thing whatsoeuer they shall desire it shall be giuen them of my father which is in heauen for where two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the midst of them 2. They mourne with them which mourne Rom. 12.15.16 Reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe be of like affection one towards another 3. They came to comfort his minde with counsell admonition exhortation Comfort the feeble 1. Thes 5.14 minded beare with the weake be patient towards all men Thus they had a good purpose meaning But they so failed afterwards in the manner and forme of consolation and conference that Iob found no greater torment by any calamitie then by their speeches Iob. 16.2 howsoeuer wise and godly yet vndiscreetly and vnaduisedly applied vnto him insomuch that he complaineth against them all Iob. 16.4 Ye pretend a good purpose that ye came to comfort me but miserable comforters are you all They came not we see to mocke him but to comfort him and yet in their contention and heate of disputation against him they gaue him some hard and ironical speeches For he saith I could shake mine head at you meaning I could scorne you as you doe me for my miserie but I will not requite one euill with another Vse 1. When God giueth vs loue towards our poore brethren let vs aske him wisedome that we may know how to relieue and comfort them and when God giueth vs wisedome to know how to doe good let vs pray for loue to moue and stirre vp our affections to doe all the good we can for them 2. It is hard to finde a man of such wisedome and loue that is a right sound Phisition to cure the sores wounds of distressed soules and troubled consciences These men be so rare that as Elihu saith afterward Chap. 33. 23. ye shall hardly find such a messenger such a comforter one among a thousand 3. The world is full at this day of such friends as will agree with you to mirth and feasting but fewe come to the house of mourning or if they come they are vtterly vnable to speake one good word to comfort the heart of the afflicted So farre of their affliction before they came Now of their loue and compassion being present Verse 12. So when they lift vp their eies a farre off they knew him not therefore they lift vp their voices and wept and euery one of them rent his garment and sprinkled dust vpon their heads towards heauen SO when they lift vp their eies a farre off * Many arguments of loue They were told of his miserable state they therefore before they came neere him they look vpon him a far off and know him not he was in such a pickle that hee had lost all forme and fashion more like a dead beast then any liuing man Therefore they lift vp their voices and wept These teares were not counterfeit they did proceed from true loue and sound affection howsoeuer afterwards they were so amazed with the greatnes of the calamitie that they thought him such an abiect and so farre from grace The thought afterwards no word 〈◊〉 be sp●… vnto him but law and iudgment 2. Signes of great sorrow lamentation as not worthie of any good worde of comforte for they reprooued him sharply because they desired to humble him for they thought him a very hypocrite Euery one of them rent his garment Such was the custome of those times in all strange accidents and calamities as Gen. 37.29 vers 34. supra cap. 1.20 This the hypocrites also did and therefore Ioel cals for a new rending of the heart chap. 2. 13. And sprinkled dust vpon their head That is they humbled themselues acknowledging that they were but dust and ashes as Abraham Gen. 18. and vnworthie to bee aboue the earth so Ioshua and the elders of his time Iosh 7.6 1. Now such as visite the ficke may learne here what affections and loue they must cary with them to the house of mourning if they will doe good First such as meet for this purpose must be of one heart and mind 2. They must bee men knowen or well heard of friends if it may bee 3. They must be wise men and of an vnspotted life 4. They must bee such as both can and will mourne and take to heart the miserie of the afflicted Psal 41.1.5 These men must come prepared and of purpose to comforte him 6. They must make themselues readie vnto prayer and for this cause before the sicke humble themselues carefully that he may ioine with them in prayers vnto God 7. They must iudge wisely of the sicke according to their knowledge of his former life and present afflictions They must be thankfull to God for his patience 8. They must neuer conclude of the fauour of God concerning him by the greatnes or qualitie of his torments Eccles 9.1.2 For no man knoweth loue or hatred of all that is before them all things come alike to all Eccle. 9.1.2 By the euents of this present life it cannot be discerned who is in who is out of Gods fauor These points wee haue noted at large in the treatise of fasting Verse 13. So they sate by him vpon the ground 7. daies and 7. nights and none spake a worde vnto him for they saw that his paine was * Or that his paine was inc●sed exceedingly exceeding great BEholde here arguments of great sympathie and loue considering his state for Iob infected with a most venemous and pestilenciall plague his sent lothsomnes was intolerable and yet they sit on the ground 7. daies c. by him But the meaning is not that they neuer departed frō that place 7. daies and 7. nightes nor that they fasted so long But that they spent the greatest part of 7. daies and 7. nightes sitting and mourning in silence by him And none spake a word vnto him They came to comforte him by speech and prayer but now they stand so amazed as that they cannot speake a word to him but no doubt speake much to God in their hearts For they saw that his paine was exceeding great or did increase exceedingly They kept silence for a time not only for the strangenes of the euill but also to see if his paine would any thing decrease that so hee might the better attend to their words but all this time of silence they shewed great signes of loue one cause therefore of their silence was they waited for oportunitie and time to speake and herein they did well Prou. 25.11 For a worde spoken in time or a word spoken in his place is like apples of gold with pictures of siluer c. Another cause was they were of a doubtful iudgement concerning him they thought verily God had forsaken him set marks of his anger vpon him Therfore they doubted how what to speak as after appeareth by their long speeches and conference with him 1. Learne here what wisedome is required in them which would comfort afflicted consciences They must not onely shew signes of 〈◊〉 they must be also very circumspect and prudent as in wordes so in gestures when they come to the sicke They must not exceede in mourning and lamentation they must not bee so amazed as these good friendes were because of straunge afflictions for what will this effect in Iobs heart but astonishment griefe and sorrowe and desperation if God helpe not speedily as here we see They should rather after a time haue reioiced with praising God for his faith and patience This now argueth in them great want of iudgement and no maruell though Iob complayned afterwards Miserable comforters are you all 2. Lastly note how Sathan deales with Iob in this sicknes we see he smites him not all at once but rackes him againe by degrees to see what he can wring out of Iob for it is sayd that his paine torment did still increase 7. daies and 7. nightes And besides this racke in his bodie the silence and gesture of his friends did so torment his mind that at the last he cries out in that bitter maner we see ca. 3. like a man in frensie which through some grieuous sicknes hath lost his wittes FINIS