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A71123 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy by ... Mr. Richard Stock ... ; whereunto is added, An exercitation upon the same prophesie of Malachy, by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation vpon the prophecy of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing T1939; ESTC R7598 653,949 676

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you will heare his voice harden not your hearts Meeting by this with the voice of Satan Mihi hodiè cras Domino nosce obsecro inimici dolos ut omnino à Deo averteris consulere non audet novit enim hoc grave admodum Christianis verùm artibus insidiosis aggreditur intelligit autem quemadmodum nos praesens tempus libenter recipimus omnisque actio humana in praesens contendit spectat Quamobrem hodiernum tempus nobis furatur astutè spem facit crastini postquam cràstinum venerit rursus malus divisor sibi hodiernum crastinum verò Domino dari petit Basil Exhortatio ad Bapt. saith Basil exhort ad Bapt. who saith Serve me to day and God to morrow I beseech you be acquainted with the craft of the Enemy he dares not advise thee altogether and presently to forsake God for he knows Christians would not endure that but he deales craftily being a Serpent and subtle to beguile hee steales upon us for the present and puts off the next day for God and when that day comes still he puts it off to the next Therefore the Lord to meet with that comes thus calling upon us to day partly quia qui non est hodie cras minùs aptus erit Because hee that is unfit to day to morrow will be more unfit and partly for that this is the time lest judgment doe come upon us and we have no evasion for wee cannot tell what to morrow may bring forth Before God Though he deride these yet he directs others and teacheth them that in prayer they are before the Lord. Doctrine They who pray are before Gods face and in his presence If they who heare be as Cornelius said Hee and his company were Acts 10.33 before the Lord to heare one speake in his Name and him speaking mediately to them more when they speake immediately to himselfe Therefore was the Arke of Gods presence ever in the Temple before which they prayed and from which they received answer Psal 84.7 That he may have mercy upon us It is that they were commanded to pray for before and to require for the people Doctrine In prayer men must not aske what they list but that for which they have a commandment to aske and a promise to receive Vse 1 To reprove all those praiers those who frame their praiers not according to Gods will but their owne lusts and fancies whatsoever their vaine hearts desire that they utter before the Lord and make their requests unto him for it never regarding whether good or evill how agreeable or disagreeable to the word having their owne affections the rules of their prayers such prayers they would be ashamed to put up to men as they preferre to God making Christ a mediator for them if hee will doe it for them for things they would blush to desire the helpe of man in some praying as Saint Augustine who confesseth of himselfe that hee prayed to God to let him live a little longer in his sinnes so they in their corruptions desiring still meanes and opportunities to fulfill their lusts and desires Some aske temporall things simply as they Psal 78.18 who asked meate for their lust who importune the Lord to prosper their journey endeavour for honours as Balaam be the means what may be who have their prayers sometimes in mercy denyed as Jam. 4.3 and sometimes in wrath granted to them as Psal 79.29 30 31. Mercy That is be gracious and favourable unto us and lift up his gracious countenance upon us Doctr. In prayer men ought especially to pray for Gods favour the chiefest thing they ought to desire is his mercy and loving kindnesse 2 Cor. 7.14 this is called seeking Gods face Reas 1 Because this is the fountain from whence all things else come all good things we receive for Rom. 8.32 He who spared not his owne sonne but gave him for us all to death how shall he not with him give us all things also And the cause of that was his favor and love Joh. 3.16 For God so loved the world that he hath given his only begotten sonne that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Reas 2 Because no temporall blessing asked never so earnestly nay though it be sought with teares as Esau his blessing can be obtained till a man have his sinnes forgiven Hence Math. 6.11 12. the petitions are joyned with a copula as inseparable Vse 1 This reproveth their folly and error who pray more for the things of this life then for the favor of God or remission of their sinnes 2 Chron. 7.14 Vse 2 To teach us to pray for temporall things but specially Gods favor and the remission of our sinnes For us Both Prophet and People he would bee prayed for as well as the people acknowledging as it seemeth those things in himselfe which he reproved in them the better to affect them Doctrine No man is so excellent in the Church of God so indued or abounding with gifts and graces that needeth not the prayers of the rest This the Prophet sheweth that he exempteth not himselfe but would be prayed for as others So Hosea 14. sure including himselfe This our Saviour Christ shewed when teaching his Church in the person of his disciples to pray hee taught them to pray one for another and taught them they had need of the prayers one of another Math. 6. This is shewed by Saint Pauls earnest request unto them Rom. chap. 15.30 repeated to the Corinthians 2 Cor. 1.7 so Col. 4.3 2 Thes 3.1 and for the Saints Ephes 6.18 Reas 1 Because his excellency excludeth him not from the communion of Saints as the excellency beauty or proportion of any part doth not exclude it from the fellowship of other members Now one part of this communion is prayer one for another Reas 2 Because his excellency is imperfect for here all things are but in part 1 Cor. 13.9 Therefore he hath need of prayers as his owne so others many prevailing more with God then one Reas 3 Because the excellency and goodnesse a man hath is as Basil exhort ad Bapt. brings in some making the objection The saurus servatu difficilis a treasure hard to be kept Therefore as he said Opus est vigilia wee had need to be more watchfull and he adviseth to take three adjutors Orationem Jejunium Psalmodiam Prayer Fasting and singing Psalmes Now as for keeping of treasures a man will use other meanes and helpes and all little enough so in this should he be carefull Vse 1 This reproveth those who think they have no need of the prayers of others but can pray well enough for themselves their owne private prayer is sufficient they need not the prayers of others or the publique congregations as some men thinke they have no need of publique teaching they can instruct themselves well enough with reading of good books at home so for prayer they can inrich themselves of
Rom. 7.18 In me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing And if no good then much evil for there is no medium twixt these which are more opposite then health and sickenesse Vse 1 To let every man see what he is by nature as blinde and darkenesse so unholy and sickenesse full of corruption and uncleanenesse Vse 2 This may teach us why men can so hardly endure the Ministry of the word specially that which reproves and threatens why they account the Ministers grievous and offensive to them and their enemies rather then friends which labour to reforme them t is because sinne and corruption is naturall to them and men can hardly endure to have a naturall sore defect or infirmity pointed at or noted much lesse to be dealt withall when it is not to be cured or removed without force without sharpe medicines cutting or searing or the like Is it any wonder it should be so here when to deale with sinne is like pulling out a right eye or cutting of an arme specially when custome is added to nature and pleasure and profit to both This makes them when they heare of sinne not to entertaine it as an admonition but to shunne it as a reproach and receive such not as Physitians that would cure them but as enemies that would kill them Vse 3 The reason why they account the Law and Commandements of God such a burden and the obedience of them so tedious is because they are sicke men and want health and we know small things are burdensome to the sicke S. Paul complaines though he was in health and had an inward man Rom. 7.22.23 much more such as have nothing but the outward and the carnall man And ye shall goe forth If Christ bring liberty it intimates a bondage before Doctrine Every man naturally is a slave in captivity and bondage to Satan sinne and death Rom. 7.14 Carnall and sold under sinne Rom. 6.16 To whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey John 12.31 The Divell is the Prince of this world 2 Cor. 4.4 The God of this world 2 Tim. 2.26 Who takes men captive at his will Reason 1 Because they serve and obey sinne then they must needs be in subjection to it especially when the service they doe is willing John 8.34 Whosoever committeth sinne is the servant of sinne So Rom. 6.16 and 2 Pet. 2.19 They are the servants of corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought in bondage Reason 2 Because if they be slaves to sinne then to Satan also for sinne is the worke of Satan and also to death for by sinne death entred into the world Rom. 5.12 Sinne the only cause saith one which enlargeth deaths dominions and made all the world to become his tributaries Adam had not died had he not sinned Vse 1 This will teach us and warrant us what to judge of those men whom we shall heare if any man speake of liberty and freedome to chalenge it as much as any like those John 8.33 We be Abrahams seed and were never in bondage And yet they live very profanely and wickedly no iniquity subdued but sinne raigning and they subjects to their corruption yea captives to their lusts uncleanenesse ambition pride anger c. When they are Masters of families Magistrates of Cities Captaines of bands Coronels of fields Generalls of Armies Commanders of countries yea Princes yet one base ambitious or covetous or voluptuous lust doth rule over them miserable slaves and if they feel not this their bondage is the greater sinne and Satan have the surer possession when things all are at peace The captivity is the more dangerous the more willing as the malignity of poyson is neere the lesse though it be sweet if yet it be poyson Vse 2 This will confute the Doctrine of Popery who teach that man hath free will to good or to use Bellarmines words that a man may doe things morally good and keep or fulfill the law according to the substance of the things prescribed without the help and assistance of speciall grace But how should this be if he be the slave of sinne We deny not to any man free will for else we should make him no man But we must understand that free will is either good or evill and so according to the distinction of Bernard All that have free wil but to evill are their owne and Satans all that have free will and to good are Gods Gregorius Ariminensis is expresse that to affirme that man by his naturall strength without the speciall helpe of God can doe any vertuous action or morally good is one of the damnable heresies of Pelagius or if in any thing it differ from his heresie it is further from truth And grow up as young calves A further benefit promised of growing up and encreasing in grace and sanctification daily by degrees Doctrine They who are Gods elect and called shall grow up and encrease in graces as in faith hope love and such like As the waters of the Sanctuary they shall rise higher Ezech. 47. They are branches in Christ that beare fruit and are purged that they may beare more fruit Joh. 15.2 Phil. 1.6 Jam. 2.5 1 Cor. 1.4.5 Reason 1 Because he will restore in them by Christ that which was lost in Adam and by him his image of righteousnesse and holinesse therefore shall they encrease and grow up towards it which must be got againe in long time and divers progresse though it were lost in a moment Reason 2 Because some doubt else may be whether their graces they have be true sanctified graces which generally ever encrease though some let there may be as a temptation or some sinne but they doe recover themselves and encrease after the more as fire kept down Mat. 25.25.21.26 Vse 1 This may put many a man to a quaere with himselfe and his owne soule if he encrease not but rather goe backeward and thrive not under good meanes but shame their master as if they had no good food like the blasted eares and leane kine that Pharoah dreamed of These may feare themselves that if they approve themselves in this condition and thinke all is well with them they are not right but if they dislike their dulnesse and backwardnesse in profiting and growing on in sanctification if they bewaile their wants and earnestly use the meanes they may be perswaded that what God hath begun he will performe in them to the end and that he will fulfill the desire of them that feare him Vse 2 To perswade every one to endeavour to goe forward and to grow in grace and piety as the wicked grow worse and worse 2. Tim. 3.13 Phil. 3.13.14 To presse forward like runners in a race who looke not how much they have runne but how much remaineth Upon which place Saint August He had said I am not already perfect and yet afterward he saith as many as be
preaching of the word Vide Cap. 3.7 Doctrine 2 The Ministry of the word works upon all old yong rich poor noble base c. This was manifest by Iohns preaching Mat. 3.5 Luc. 3.10 c. By Pauls 1. Cor. 1.26.27 We read of Noble Theophilus Luc. 1.1 Of the Shop-keeper Act. 16.24 Of the Iaoler ver 34. Of the devout Greekes and the honorable women Act. 17.4 And of the elect Lady 2. Epist Iohn Reason 1 Because God hath decreed to save of all sorts some then must the word needs worke upon them it being the means of salvation 1. Tim. 2.4 Reason 2 Because that when he converts by it the wise rich and mighty he might shew his power and the power of the word in the weaknesse of man 1. Cor. 1.25 when by it he shall make them account their wisdome folly c. Reason 3 Because when he calls of all sorts it might appeare that when they are not wrought upon it is not their state and condition that doth hinder them as if God had given it them to snare them but it is from the corruption of their own hearts who abuse them seeing others their equalls are converted Vse To encourage the Ministers in the diversity of their hearers as different in conditions as complexions in hearts as faces yet to go on and deliver the word with faithfullnesse expecting that the Lord shall make it profitable to the saving though not of all yet of some of all sorts that as he wrought effectually in Peter towards the circumcision and was mighty in Paul towards the Gentiles Gal. 2.8 So he will this day be powerfull to some of the rich the next to some of the poore this Lords day to one of honour the next haply to one in disgrace and vile to all according to the pleasure of his own working A Table of the Contents The letter a sheweth the first Alphabet the letter b the second the figure sheweth the Page A. ACcepting of persons a great sin b 74 75 Adversity b 158 Adultery b 192 Adultery annuls not marriage b 119 Affection how farre necessary in Gods service a 159 160 Affliction a burden a 3 It befalls Gods dearest children a 8 Why it befals them b 236. 248 Almes of oppressors a 223. 224 226 Altar what it is a 126 Anger of God a 187. 188 Angels the name to whom given b 166 B. Banishment a proofe of Gods anger a 29 Blasphemy a great sinne b 152 It much displeaseth God b 153 some kinds of it b 156. 157 248.249 Blessings abused aggravate sinne a 208 Bread what meant by it a 126 Bondage of naturall men b 281 282 Bounty in Gods service a 150. 151. 152. Bounty of Idolaters b 213.214 Burden what it signifies a 2 C. Calling of Ministers b 26. 27. 49. 50 faithfulnesse in particular calling b 36. 37. How children to be ordered by their parents for their callings a 66. Sinnes against ones calling are more hainous a 120 Catholike Church and the members of it b 102 Children their duty a 57.59 60.64.67.69.71.73 Children of God their happy condition b 237. 238 Christ to whom he comes b 167 his comming desired by Patriarkes b 168. his comming promised long b 170.171 he is our Prophet b 172. 173. he purifieth his people b 175. 176 Church now Catholike a 194. it is the most excellent society b 178. it may erre b 59.60 61. it must be holy b 89. the honour and prosperity of it b 240.241 Church-robbers b 219.220.221 225.228 229. Conference of godly b 261. Creation binds us to Gods service a 91.92 Creatures have all power from God b 12. Credit not got by sin b 17 19. It is gotten by honouring and maintaining of Ministers b 239 Customes injurious concerning tithes b 225 D. Dearth and famine for sin b 14 Death how Gods children freed from it b 278 279 Deceivers in Gods service a 231 233 Desire of Christ b 179 180 Disgrace brought by sinne foretells ruine without repentance b 20 Divorces for needlesse causes b 122 Divorce may only be by authority b 118 119 unlawfull but only for adultery b 141 142 143 144 Dominion of sinne b 278 Donatives their original b 228 E. Elijah who he is b 286 287 Election bindes us to Gods service a 94 95 Encrease in grace b 281 282 Error not to be taught b 41 Excellency of the godly b 267 Excommunication a 129 130 131 132 Executors of wills their sinne b 198 199 Exhort we must exhort one another b 258 259 Extraordinary providence of God for his people b 237 F. Famine for sinne b 14 Fatherlesse children not to be injuried 198 199 Favour of God how to be esteemed b 205 206 Feare of God a 97 98 the want of it causes sinne b 201 differences of filiall and servile feare a 98 99 the effects of Gods feare a 101 servile feare what it is with the effect of it a 110 111 Forgetfulnesse of benefits a 25 Free will b 138 281 G. God his power a 37 his anger a 187 188 the Lord of hosts a 37 Godlinesse causeth prosperity b 250 H. Hearing required b 51 52 53 Heart must be kept pure b 137 Honour of God a 97 Honour lost by sinne b 19 Hopes of wicked men vaine a 38 39 Hosts God the Lord of hosts a 37 Husband may not grieve his wife b 105 106 Hypocrisie a 156 157 b. 187 188 It is a great sinne a 220 Hypocrites thinke all too much for God a 218 Hypocrites justifie themselves when under judgements a 251 252 I. Idolaters liberall in their worship b 213 214 Imitation of predecessors vertues b 58 Impropriations of Churches b 228 229 Inconveniences must not hinder obedience to God b 45 Ingratitude a great sin a 16 17 25 208 Injuriousnesse is against nature b 79 it is against religion b 80 81 Injustice is joyned with irreligion b 150 151 268 Invocation of Saints b 181 Ironies whether lawfull a 167 163 Irreligion b 187 268 Iudgements are for sinne a 41 they should restraine sinne a 5. Of profiting by them a 10.11 They profit not the wicked b 13. How wicked carry themselves in them b 98. How vaine their course is b 98 99 Hypocrites justifie themselves under them b 251 252 Iudgements may be upon things belonging to men as well as upon their owne persons b 235. No person freed from judgements b 10 11. The causes of judgements b. 96. God brings them not but upon knowne causes b 185 They are equall a 52. God will be justified in them a 43 44 47 God hath glory by them a 54. God can bring them with a word b 16. The difference of them on the godly and the wicked a 45 46 Iudgeing of others a 146 147 148. 149 K Kingdomes disposed of by God a 40 Knowledge of God how needfull a 152 153 Knowledge excuses not hearing b 6.7 God knowes the wicked and their waies a 184 260 L Lame service a 156 Law the false pretence of
cognosce quid debeas habere in correptione tuo te vitio non habere in oratione unde accipias quid vis habere De corrept gratia c. 3. what strength thou shouldest have in every reproofe what strength by thy own fault thou wantest in every prayer whence thou mayest have what thou wantest Doctrine The hands must be purged as well as the heart the outward man as the inward VERS XVI If thou hatest her put her away saith the Lord God of Israel yet he covereth the injury under his garment saith the Lord of hostes therefore keep your selves in your spirit and transgresse not I Hate putting away saith the Lord God of Israel In this verse the Prophet proceeded to the third maine sinne here reproved in this people Divorces not simply condemning divorce as if in no case it were lawfull but for every vaine cause and light dislike when they hated or disliked them for that to put them away is that he reproves In the verse we observe two things First the reproofe of this sinne secondly an admonition generall including the particular In the first which is the sinne we observe the amplifications of it which is first from Gods hatred Secondly from an effect of those husbands who used and practised divorces that they made the law of God a covert to cover with it that violent injury and indignity they did to their wives as men cover the body and defaults of it with their garment If thou hatest her put her away Some thinke this dependeth upon the former as an objection made by this people in their own defence against the former accusation as unjustly cast upon them because they had not committed Polygamy seeing they had put away their first wives and that according to the Law Deut. 24. The Prophet answeres the Lord hates putting away and will not indure that they should make his Law a cover for their iniquity Some as S. Hierom understand them as words of the Priest and people in their owne defence pretending the law of God for that they did but most take them as Gods words shewing his dislike of their dealing And if the words be read thus as our vulgar translation hath them then they think them spoken by an Irony which they manifest as they suppose by the words following by which they take a judgement to be threatned And they thinke it is manifest by the like Eccles 11.9 but seeing the words in the originall will not beare the reading neither the second sentence will carry the sense they would have of them They must be thus read For I hate putting away or putting away is an hatred unto me It is a thing that I am so far from approving and liking that I utterly hate and abhor whatsoever Moses for the hardnesse of your hearts did grant unto you and so remitted the judiciall law that it proceeded not against you to death as adulterers when you had put them away for slight causes and married others yet that hath not excused it before me but that it is still a sin and odious unto me It is that which my soule abhorreth Saith the Lord God of Israel This he addeth for confirmation of the former That the Lord God of Israel doth affirme and testifie this who hath before professed himselfe Author of the conjunction betwixt them and witnesse of that covenant And doth professe himselfe protector of the whole Nation of the Israelites and therefore with what indignation must he needs behold their dealing with their wives and how can he suffer that indignity they are offered to be put away and others taken in their places specially when they are strangers and infidells Yet he covereth the injury under his garment The second amplification because they pretended law for that they did covering it by that as the body with a garment which maketh him to abhorre it the more to pretend his law for them when it is cleane against them and all that was was but a permission by Moses in his care and compassion of the women who were abused by them To the former sentence some adde for being a particle which hath the force not of a cause but oftentimes of an affirmation and to this because shewing that therefore he hated it the more because they thus covered it Saith the Lord of hostes He that is able and can command all the hostes of heaven and earth to revenge the injuries and indignities done to his people and daughters Therefore keepe your selves in your spirits The admonition such as we have had before that is seeing you know what the Lord hates and what he loves and likes look well to your selves and your owne hearts take heed of transgressing and dealing perfidiously with your wives Doctrine Divorce that is for a man to put away his wife for any cause save onely for the cause of adultery and for adultery is utterly unlawfull and forbidden of God a thing that doth dislike and displease him so the Prophet affirmeth here This our Saviour the oracle of his father more faithfull in the house then Moses doth shew and teach Mat. 5.32 Mat. 19.9 It hath his force I say unto you that is many assigne other causes but I this one onely adultery To this we may adde that the Apostle allowes not a man to put away his wife for infidelity 1 Cor. 7.12.13 onely if the infidell will depart and make a desertion he sets then the beleever at liberty but else he allowes him not to put her away And if not for Idolatry then not for other causes of farre lesse weight Reason 1 Because as Christ himselfe giveth the reason the bond betwixt them is greater then that which is betwixt parents and children Mat. 19.5 for it was before that for Adam and Eve were man and wife before they were parents and they were man and wife that they might be parents And againe the bond is greater because the good is more publique for this for the propagation of mankinde that onely for the good of the parents Now then if the bond be greater and that is not to be broken for any cause then not this If that rather then this then not this for small and frivolous causes but onely for that which he who bound the knot hath allowed the dissolution of it Reason 2 Because this were for man to take upon him to fever that which God hath joyned when it is done not for such a cause as he hath allowed it to be for for when it is for such a cause then is it God and not man that hath dissolved it Vse 1 To reprove all those who allow and contend for many other causes that divorces may be made besides adultery which opinion of theirs they would establish first from the law Deut. 24.1 When a man taketh a wife and marrieth her if so be she finde no favour in his eyes because he hath spyed some filthinesse in her then let him write her a
the mouthes of those who should give evidence against him To informe the Judge and the Jury when the Judge himselfe was a witnesse of the fact and is ready both to informe the Jury and to give sentence according to his owne knowledge A witnesse i. As a guilty person is condemned by testimony of witnesse the crime proved and manifest so will I give sentence against the wicked of those things which I know they have done Doctrine The Lord proceeds not to judgement to condemne or punish any but upon knowne and manifest causes upon the knowne deserts and merits of men sometimes secret to others sometimes knowne to them This is proved Numb 20.12 Ananias and Saphira Acts 5. Infinite are the examples of knowne sinners as the old world Sodom and Gomorrah Nadab and Abihu Core and Dathan c. Matth. 25. Reason 1 Because he is most just and therefore must proceed upon known cause for it is as well injustice to punish for an unknowne cause upon jealousie and suspition as for no cause for an unknown cause is no cause De non existentibus non apparentibus eadem ratio Reason 2 Because he would manifest his justice to men therefore he usually proceedeth upon knowne causes to them as sometime upon knowne causes knowne to them onely knowne to himselfe to manifest he is not bound to give a reason of his judgements to men Vse 1 If we see one afflicted punished we accounted upright to know Gods proceedings are upright and upon knowne cause And hence may we learne how to free our selves from such doubts when we see what befell Chorah and all their company Achan his when some sinned onely in the known sin yet others were punished We must conclude that it is most just from this ground that he proceedes never but justly though it be secret from us Vse 2 For imitation first for the Magistrates Gods upon the earth they ought not to proceed against malefactours but upon knowne and manifest proved causes not upon slender conjectures or suspitions for so will God himselfe doe and they executing his judgement ought to proceede no otherwise lest they fall into injustice They ought to not to proceede for any hatred to their person or their profession or for any other sinister respect upon accusations halfe had and slender or no proofes The Lawyers say that it is unjust not to weigh and consider the whole Law but to give sentence from some part of it * Veritatem inauditam si damnent leges praeter invidiam iniquitatis etiam suspitionem merebuntur alicujus conscientiae nolentes audire quod auditum damnare non possunt Tertull. Apolog. adversus gentes Cap. 1.10 If the lawes condemne truth unheard besides the note of injustice they will cause a suspition that they are conscious of some unwillingnesse to heare lest after they had heard they could not condemne As Tertull. speakes So of Magistrates Therefore in things not manifest not proved or by such witnesses whose persons are infamous their credit suspitious such as may be suborned or doe things of spleene and malice which may happily appeare to them they ought to take heede how they judge and as they have power rather reprove then condemne Againe in the second place every man ought to judge righteous judgement when he judgeth and censureth the actions of other men but secundum alligata probata not out of his owne humour out of the dislike of their person justifying some because they have affection to them condemning others and their actions because they dislike them or condemning some mens doings onely for the name they have Like unto those who being sick of a feavour or frensie being deceived by the similitude of right lines drawne upon the wall thought they saw some deformed and ill shaped creatures ut Aristot So they out of sicke diseased and corrupt mindes doe not onely deprave the right lines that is the famous and good actions of others but account them as vices and turne them to their reproaches and infamy If that for mens words be true which Luther used to say * Sceleratū est cū noveris esse pium sanū alicujus sensū ex verbis incommodè dictis statuere errorem Luther T is a wicked practise when you know a mans minde and meaning to be good sound yet to catch at his words it may be not so fitly delivered to accuse him of error So for mens actions out of some infirmities or upon some suspitions when they know nothing but good in them and yet beleeve every report against them As Tertullian said it was with him and other Christians in his time Credunt de nobis quae non probentur nolent inquirere ne probentur non esse They beleeve things of us without tryall or proofe and will not examine whether they be so lest they should be proved to be otherwise Against the sooth-sayers He numbers up the particular offendors he would deale with not that he would deale with men no but alledging these as a taste of others or as the sinnes which then ruled and raigned amongst them but we may observe that here are numbered not sinnes of one kind not against the second Table onely or first onely but against both Doctrine The Lord will judge punish and destroy men for irreligion aswell as dishonesty for the neglect or the breach of the first table aswell as the second and è contra and for both manifested here for they are joyned together as it were in one condemnation proved further from the threatnings and executions laid downe in the word where we shall finde the Idolater the Sabboth breaker the swearer c. threatned and punished as well as the Adulterer murtherer and other dishonest and unjust persons In Deuter. 28. All the curses repeated respect the whole law and all the commandements as well as any one or of either of the tables Ezek. 22.6.7.8 Hosea 4.1.2 1. Cor. 6.9.10 1. Tim. 1.9.10 Galat. 5.19.20.21 Revel 21.8 Every where offendors against both Tables are joyned together Reason 1 Because as Jam. 2.11 He that said thou shalt not commit adultery said also thou shalt not kill now though thou doest none adultery yet if thou killest thou art a transgressor of the law So he that commanded obedience to the one and forbad disobedience did so to the other and so he is disobeyed and provoked in the one as well as the other Reason 2 Because the curse was not an appendant to one Table but to both and every precept and every branch of every precept Deut. 27.26 Vse 1 Then under the Gospel there is use of the law morall for this is spoken of Christ which thing would he not neither could he in justice doe if the law were not to them under the Gospel Vse 2 This may teach many in the Church to expect Christ a terrible Judge and swift witnesse against them seeing if they seem to make care of