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

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his power is not now weakened he can deale thus with all his enemies the enemies of his Church If he blow vpon them with the blast of his mouth they passe away suddenly as the chaffe is scattered before the winde An example heereof is recorded in the holy History 2 Chron. 20 23. when a great multitude of the Moabites Ammonites and Amorites assembled themselues to fight against Iehoshaphat after he had set himselfe to seeke the Lord proclaiming a fast throughout all Iudah asking counsell of the Lord and praying to him in the zeale of his spirit the enemies slew one another with the sword Thus doth God turn the edge of the sword drawne against the Church vpon themselues rescueth his people when there is none to helpe We haue had experience of Gods protection of his church our eyes haue seene and our eares haue heard how one hath butchered and murthered another whereby God hath giuen a time of rest and breathing vnto his seruants Hee is the same without changing with him is no variablenes neither shadow of turning if we turne to him with all our hearts he will turne to vs and not suffer the rod of the wicked alwaies to rest on the lot of the righteous lest they should put forth their hand to wickednes Therefore Israel dwelled in all the Cities of the Amorites in Heshbon and in all the Villages therof We haue heard of the murthers slaughters that were betweene the Moabites the Amorites in the which howsoeuer one sought to defend himselfe the other preuailed by vsurpation as might sometimes ouer-cometh right yet the purpose of God who ouer-swayeth all actions of men and draweth good out of euill was to giue rest to his people and to make them inherite and inhabite the Cities and Villages which the Amorites had wrongfully gotten Doctrine Gods childrē are oftentimes brought into the inhe●itāce of the vnfaithfull Hereby we learne for our instruction that God oftentimes bringeth the godly and faithfull that please him to inherite the Lands and possessions of the wicked and vngodly Howsoeuer the beleeuers that feare God are many times thrust out of house and home and haue their lawfull possessions taken from them as we see in Naboths Vineyard 2 King 21 15. Gen. 21 25. and in Abrahams Well yet sometimes God returneth in mercy to the faithfull and maketh the substance and inheritance of the vnfaithfull to descend vnto them This is confirmed in the Booke of Exodus at the departure of Israel out of the Land of Egypt at which time GOD recompenced the sore labours and heauy trauels of his people imposed vpon them by cruell taske-masters For they asked of the Egiptians Iewels of siluer and Ingots of gold and change of rayment then the Lord gaue them fauour in the sight of the Egiptians so that they granted their requests inriched the Israelites and spoiled themselues Exod. 12 35 36. This goodnesse of God the Prophet with praise acknowledgeth toward his people saying He cast out the Heathen before them caused them to fall to the lot of his inheritance c. Psal 78 55. This verifieth the saying of the wise man Prou. 28 8. He that encreaseth his riches by vsury and interest gathereth them for him that will be mercifull to the poore And in another place Prou 13.22 The good man shall giue inheritance to his childrens children and the riches of the sinner is laid vp for the iust In like manner Iob describing the condition of the vngodly fheweth that though he should heape vp siluer as the dust Iob 27.16 17. and prepare raiment as the clay hee may prepare it but the iust shall put it on and the innocent shall diuide the siluer Thus God taketh away the things of this life from such as vse thē wickedly and bestoweth them vpon such as will imploy them lawfully Reason 1 The Reasons remaine to be considered to strengthen this truth and to make it appeare to the conscientes of all of vs to be a necessary and apparant truth First of all the mercy of God toward such as are sealed vp to be his seruants is without end there is no brim nor bottome of it If then his mercy surmount our thoughts he will let passe no part of his kindnes toward them that do feare him Thus the Prophet reasoneth Psal 136 21 22. Where vpon these examples of Gods great kindnes toward Israel in ouerthrowing Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Bashan hee saith He gaue their Land for an heritage for his mercy endureth for euer euen an heritage vnto Israel his seruant for his mercy endureth for euer Whensoeuer therefore wee see this come to passe we must acknowledge the cause of it to be in God who ceasseth not to bee good to those that be his Reason 2 Againe God maketh knowne his power among his people to teach them to depend vpon him to shew vnto them that they serue not a weake and impotent God to instruct them to walke in the obedience of his waies This the Prophet pointeth out Psalm 44 2 3 and 111 6 105 44 45. Vse 1 The vses follow First this truth teacheth who is the soueraigne disposer of all things in heauen and earth namely God He ordereth kingdomes and disposeth Countries he giueth and taketh away hee encreaseth and diminisheth he maketh rich and maketh poore It is not our owne strength or pollicy it is not our owne care or labour it is the bountifulnes and blessing of God that is all in all We haue heere beneath vpon the earth Owners and Land-lords we haue such as account themselues possessours of houses and lands but we must know that wee are all Tenants at will we enioy nothing by Lease or Indenture for terme of yeares but hold the tenure of the Lands and liuings at the will and pleasure of the great and high Land-lord of all the world This is the confession of Hannah in her song of thanksgiuing 1 Sam. 2 7 8. The Lord maketh poore and maketh rich bringeth low and exalteth he raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth vp the begger from the dunghill to set them among Princes and to make them inherite the seat of glory for the Pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world vpon them Whatsoeuer therefore we haue let vs acknowledge therein not our owne desarts or merites but the goodnes of God toward vs filling vs with good things to serue him Secondly let vs from hence confesse that Vse 2 all the carke and care of man with his best endeuours cannot alwaies attaine to the benefit and fruite of his trauell but he prouideth that which another enioyeth This the Prophet Haggai testifieth chap 1 6.9 Yee haue sowne much and bring in little ye eate but ye haue not enough ye drinke but ye are not filled ye cloathe you but ye are not warme c. According to that which
another 1 Thess 4 6. for God is an auenger of all such things This is it that Moses teacheth Deut. 23 7. Thou shalt not abhorre an Edomite for he is thy brother neither shalt thou abhorre an Egyptian because thou wast a stranger in his Land Thus the people of Israel complaine against the rich and cry out vpon the vnequall iniurious dealing of their brethrē vpon this ground Nehem. 5 ● because their flesh was as the flesh of their brethren the sons daughters of the poore as the sonnes and daughters of the rich Lastly this serueth to reproue conuince Vse 4 three sorts of men First it condemned all railing at and reuiling one of another all words of reproch and contumely as if they were our slaues and villaines which practise Christ reproueth Mat. 5 22. Secondly it meeteth with such as delight in contentions as the begger doth his sores nourishing dissention in the Church or Common-wealth contrary to the amiable name of brethren that ought to bee acknowledged among vs. All contention is irkesome but especially that which is betweene brethren All war is lamentable but especially ciuill warre where brother is diuided against brother sometimes the son against the father This victory should not be sounded with triumph but passed ouer with silence Therefore the Romane Captaines after a ciuil war Va●er 〈◊〉 lib. 1. cap. ● neuer triumphed when they returned victors as we see in Cinna and Caesar in Silla and Marius So among all quarrels and controuersies those among brethren are most vnnaturall Wherefore the Apostle Paul saith Rom. 16 ● I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuision and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye haue learned and auoid them Ia. 3 14 ● So the Apostle Iames teacheth If yee haue bitter enuying and strife in your hearts reioyce not neither be lyars against the truth This wisedome descendeth not from aboue but is earthly sensuall and diuellish For where enuying and strife is there is sedition and all manner of euill works Wherefore let vs learne to cut off all occasions of contentions euen from them that seeke occasions Thirdly this reprooueth all vnmercifull dealing towards those that are in necessity such as was in the Priest and Leuite toward him that fell into the hands of theeues was wounded Whē we see a poore man or woman destitute of daily food in misery and want of this worlds good we must thus thinke with our selues This man or this woman is my flesh my brother my sister as good by nature and in creation as my selfe hauing the same Maker and made of the same matter and bearing the fame Image of God as well as my selfe It is onely Gods goodnesse toward me that I possesse those things which he wanteth the same Lord requireth of me to my vtmost power to releeue and helpe him This is taught by Moses Deut. 15 7. Thou shalt not harden thine heart nor shut thine hand frō thy poore brother Let it not greeue vs to giue and forgiue Let vs haue a cōpassionate hart a pittiful eie a liberal hand Remember it is an easie thing with God to bring thee into as low an ebbe though thou be now afloat as wee see it hath fallen out to many great Kings mighty Monarchs This is that charge which the Prophet giueth Es 58 7. Is not this the fasting that I haue chosen to deale thy bread to the hungry and that thou bring the poore that wander vnto thine house when thou seest the naked that thou couer him and hide not thy selfe from thine owne flesh Let this consideration moue vs to loue all mē vnder heauen and to shew the fruites of mercy vnto them in distresse as the Samaritan did to the poore wounded man Luke 10 33. Let vs pray for the conuersion of Iewes Gentiles as Stephen did for his enemies Ver. 15. Thou knowest our trouble how our fathers went downe into Egypt therfore I pray thee let vs passe This is the second reason before remembred drawne from the wofull experience of many miseries which they haue had in Egypt and out of Egypt Heere we see they alledge the afflictions endured in ●gypt to stirre vp the Edomites to pitty and to giue thē quiet passage This reason is thus contriued If we haue suffered many sorrowes and afflictions and beene euilly entreated in Egypt then pitty our poore condition and deliuer vs out of our distresse but we haue all suffered many sorrowes and afflictions c therefore pitty vs and giue vs passage Marke heere the force and strength of the reason ●●rength 〈◊〉 reason he perswadeth thē to graunt them free passage moued with this consideration that the miseries of the Church haue beene many and as yet they saw no ende of them They were bound by all good means to procure their peace and seeke a blessed end of their present sorrowes that entering into the Land they might sit vnder their Vines Fig-trees 〈◊〉 4 1. and reason of the waies and word of the Lord without feare Now the want of this liberty and freedome to serue the Lord and the distressed estate of the oppressed Church is made a motiue to mercy in these Edomites to redresse their troubles and so the Israelites might haue beene eased themselues no way burdened ●●ze ●●●es 〈◊〉 church 〈◊〉 z●●le 〈◊〉 to pit●●● From hence we learne that the wants and miseries of the Church should moue the hearts of others to pitty them and to procure according to their power the remedy thereof Whensoeuer we see the people of God in affliction if there be any consolation in Christ if any comfort of loue if any fellowship of the Spirit if any compassion and mercy we must be touched inwardly euen to the quicke and put too our helping hand to end their calamities as we are able This hath beene put in practise from time to time by the holy seruants of the Lord. When Nehemiah heard that the people returned from captiuity were still in great misery Neh. 1 3 4 Ierusalem troden downe the gates burnt with fire he sate downe and wept he mourned fasted praied before the God of heauen for the redresse of those euils and for a blessing vppon his holy endeuours The like affection we see in Mordecai Este● chap. 4 8 16. when Mordecai saw what euill was concluded against the Church and that a commission was sued out at Shushan to destroy and massacre the people of God in one day he rent his cloathes and put on sackcloth he goeth to Ester hee chargeth her that shee should goe in to the King and make petition and supplication before him for her people She vndertaketh the cause of the Church with the hazard of her life she relieth vpon the all-giuing prouidence of God saying If I perish I perish I will go in to the King albeit it be not according to the Law So the Prophet teacheth
principle in the heart of man that if markes and bounds were not kept and maintained an horrible confusion and disorder of all things would follow in humane society and no man could know what was his owne neyther possesse that which hee hath in peace Secondly this condemneth all encroching Vse 2 vsurpation one vpon another in kingdoms and Lordships as well as in priuate possessions when men cannot bee content with their owne but would stretch the wings of their power and iurisdiction farther Moses saith notably in his song Deut. 32 verse 8 that the most High diuided to the nations their inheritance when he separated the sonnes of Adam hee set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel Howbeit the ambition and vnsatiable greedinesse of great men hath put all out of order and nothing is so holy which can stay them creeping and encroching vpon the bounds and borders of their neighbours Thus they breake the law of God and nature in seeking to enlarge and encrease their owne dominions These iustly incurre the curse of the Prophet Woe vnto them that ioyne house to house and lay field to field till there bee no place that they may be placed alone in the middest of the earth Esay 5 8. Hab. 2 9 12. Ier. 22.13 Mich. 2 2. For wherefore hath God separated nation from nation and one kingdome from another people but that all should liue quietly communicate one with another that there might be no confusion or diuision and therefore ought all to be contented with their own bounds God hath made them great but they alwayes seeke to make themselues greater he hath set them bounds but they will know no bounds So then from hence we may gather that the warres which are taken in hand vpon ambition and the enlarging of the bounds of their Empire onely are a despighting of God a shedding of innocent blood and a peruerting of the order which hee hath set in nature and nations Euery man therefore ought to abide in his owne possession and inheritance not to trouble or molest one another The ambition of Nimrod first began with setting vp the kingdome of Babylon Gen. 10 10. and afterward many following his example became desirous to winne one from another So it was with Chedarlaomor who spread out his armes and subdued the kings of Sodome Gomorrha Gen. 14 4. Thus men peruerted the order that God had set in the world like vnsatiable gulfes and mighty hunters before the Lord that hunted for the precious liues of men And the cause of al is pride and ambition We all know how in the beginning the earth was couered with water and naturally the sea would stand aboue the mountaines so that all would be ouerflowen It is the speciall goodnes of God and a testimony of his almighty power that the dry Land appeareth whereon wee set footing and build and plant and dwell commerce one with another Seeing then we liue heere and that the earth doth succour and sustaine vs let vs assure our selues that GOD sheweth his pitty toward vs let vs serue him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind and let all men content themselues with that which they haue without intermedling within the bounds of other men and as hee hath restrayned vs by sundry closures as it were locked vs vp with barres not to be broken so let vs not seeke to break them and so encroch vpon that which he hath not giuen vnto vs. Vse 3 Thirdly this reproueth the greedy and couetous affections of priuate men that couet to be rich they care not by what meanes But as soone as the desire of getting gaine is setled in them they are enflamed to rake to themselues by hooke or by crooke All men doe shunne and abhorre the names of theeues and robbers they cannot abide them they are ready to sue them that brand them with such odious titles but if wee detest them indeede we must lay aside couetousnesse also Hence it is that Salomon saith Prou. 15 27. He that is greedy of gaine troubleth his owne house but hee that hateth gifts shall liue Couetousnesse is a corrupt affection of the minde greedily desiring and too much gaping after the riches of this life They dreame of long life forgetting that no mans life consisteth in the abundance of his riches Luke 12 15. They thinke they shal exceedingly profite them but by the iust iudgement of GOD they turne to theyr hurt They thinke they will be as a shield or buckler to defend them from the iniuries of this life but they are turnd into swords wherby they are wounded and destroyed They haue conceyued a strong opinion that they will bee as a wall on euery side to vnderprop the house but they proue as a double cannon to cast it downe to the ground As then he that eateth moderately is nourished by the meate and it abideth in the stomacke but when it is taken immoderately the stomacke is choked and it is vomited vp againe so hee that greedily heapeth vp riches shall be constrayned to vomite them vp againe Iob 20 15. Couetousnesse therefore is a sinne when a man is discontented with the estate wherein God hath set him and with those things that God hath giuen for the sustenance of this present life when he murmureth against God the more he hath the more he desireth when he heapeth them vp and keepeth them and bringeth them not foorth to any godly or necessary vses but hee distrusteth the prouidence of God and putteth his trust and confidence in his riches as if he could not liue with out abundance of them neyther be sustayned by the hand of God Motiues to auoid couetousnesse The Scripture offereth sundry good meditations to mooue vs to auoyd couetousnesse First because it is forbidden of God Matth. 6 19. Luke 19 13. Hebr. 13 5. His word alone ought to be of great force to perswade vs if we had no farther reason Secondly because it is no lesse sinne then a secret kinde of idolatry Col. 3 5 as the couetous person is an Idolater because he trusteth in his riches not in the liuing God Eph. 5 5. Marke 10 24. Thirdly it cannot agree with the worship of God but one of them expelleth another as it is with contraries with cold and heate with light and darknesse Psal 119 36. Matth. 6 24. Luke 16 13. Yee cannot serue God and Mammon Fourthly it is saide to be the roote of all euill and that because it driueth and enforceth to many sinnes to apostacy to iniquity to lying to treachery 1 Tim. 6 10. 2 Kings 5 22. Mat. 28 13 14 15. Fiftly no mans life consisteth in the multitude of his possessions Lu. 12 15. Sixtly we are called to a better life and we haue a kingdom promised vnto vs that cannot be shaken reserued for vs in heauen and therefore we should set our affections aboue where Christ sitteth
but meeteth with them one way or other eyther he striketh them with his owne hand that did lift vp their hands to strike others or he deliuereth them ouer to the Magistrate Some times he maketh them to be witnesses against themselues sometimes to discouer themselues in their dreames sometimes to feele the torments of hell in their owne consciences and sometimes the birds of the ayre to reueale them We see this in Caine that slew his brother for God set a marke vpon him and branded him for his wretched parricide Genesis 4 verse 15. This the very heathen themselues knew by the light of nature that howsoeuer the murtherer may escape out of some danger yet vengeance will pursue and ouertake him Acts 28 4. This we see in Herod that killed Iames with the sword and put Peter in prison intending also the like against him hee escaped not the hand of God long but his deepe vengeance did so dog him at the heels that he was smitten shortly after by the greater stroake of an Angel from heauen and was eaten vp of worms Acts 12 2.23 Thus did Samuel speake to king Agag 1 Sam. 15 33. As thy sword hath made women childlesse so shall thy mother bee childlesse among women and he hewed him in peeces before the Lord. The like we see in Ioab who was smitten with the sword as hee had killed others 1 Kings 2 31 32. And it is to be obserued what Dauid saith of him concerning the blood of Abner that he had spilled 2 Sa. 3 29. Let it rest on the head of Ioab and on all his fathers house and let there not faile from the house of Ioab one that hath an yssue or that is a leper or that leaneth on a staffe or that falleth on the sword or that lacketh bread Thirdly God doth so detest murther that if a beast kill a man it must bee stoned to death and his flesh not eaten Exod. 21 28. What is God offended with the bruite beasts or do they sinne against him and breake his Commandement No but thereby GOD would shew how much hee abhorreth the shedding of mans blood and that man should lay it to his heart Fourthly it is an offence against a mans owne flesh Eph. 5 29 No man euer yet hated his owne flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it now euery man is as our owne flesh Esay 58 7. We see Beares and Lions and Tigres and wilde beasts doe play together because they are of one kinde mankind is of one kind if we do not agree together but prey one vppon another we are more fierce then Beares more cruell then Lyons more mercilesse then Tygres and more sauage then wilde beasts Fiftly such as slew another violently were taken out of the Cities of refuge by violence God wold giue no protection to such beasts neither City nor Altar nor Tabernacle nor any thing could yeeld them any safegard Deu. 19 11 12 13. 1 Kings 2 31 32. Sixtly it is a crying sinne blood hath a very lowd voice and neuer ceaseth crying vntill iudgement fall vpon the head of the murtherer Gen. 4 10. Beholde the blood of thy brother cryeth from the earth Abel was now dead his mouth was stopped and he could not speak but his blood could speake the which called and cryed in the eares of the Lord GOD of hoastes from the earth for vengeance Hebre. 11 4. Seuenthly no pardon was to bee giuen to such as appeareth in this chapter and verse 32. Ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of him that is a murtherer which is guilty of death but he shall surely be put to death Lastly the Land is defiled by it ver 33 34. Blood defileth the Land and the Land cannot bee clensed of the blood that is shed therein but by the blood of him that shed it Defile not therefore the Land which ye shall inherite wherein I dwell for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel Now let vs come to the vses First we haue iust cause to feare the wrath of God and if he come to make inquisition of blood he shall finde much blood spilt vpon the earth like water that cannot be gathered vp again throughout the whole Land What abundance of iniustice and cruelty is there to be found in euery place and thought to be iust and vpright dealing How many are there to bee found that hauing once conceyued anger and malice in their hearts will remaine whole dayes and moneths and yeares before they will bee reconciled nay speake one to another thereby depriuing themselues of the mutuall comfort they might reape and receyue and by suffering the Sunne to goe downe vpon their wrath doe giue place to Satan to enter into them to possesse them Eph. 4 26 27. And what colour soeuer men set vpon their cruelty it is but a false painting of a foule face as Adams fig-leaues that couered his shame but could not hide his sinne If it be done vnder pretence of law it is a most fearefull sinne the pretence it selfe maketh it more fearefull because fained iustice is a double iniustice When the Law is so wrested that it is made the occasion of murther it must needs be offensiue displeasing vnto God And albeit this sinne be committed by the Magistrate in letting malefactors go vnpunished yet it must needs bee offensiue vnto GOD because it is that which bringeth the guilt of blood vpon the Land nothing can clense the Land from blood but the blood of him that shed blood This made the Prophet say to Ahab Because thou hast let go out of thy hand a man whom I appointed vnto destruction therefore thy life shall goe for his life and thy people for his people 1 Kings 20 42. Whē there was a famine in the Land in the dayes of Dauid three yeares yeare after yeare and hee enquired of the Lord the cause of that sore iudgement the Lord answered It is for Saul and for his bloody house because hee slew the Gibeonites 2 Sam. 21 1 and the attonement could not be made vntil seuen men of his sons were deliuered into their hands and they were hanged vp vnto the Lord that his inheritance might be blessed The sinnes of the sonnes of Eli became to be the sins of their father not because he was their father neyther yet because he was the committer of them but because he being a Magistrate did not punish correct them so likewise when iudgement is not executed vpon men for their sinnes the blood of those which are slaine must needs remaine in the Land If this be committed by way of reuenge it is also an heynous sinne against almighty God because he that doth it preuenteth Gods worke and so prouoketh Gods wrath for he taketh Gods office out of his hand and taketh vp his place who hath saide Vengeance is mine Rom. 12. And if we ascend to the higher degree of men shall wee not finde among them little conscience made of shedding
Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God Our aduersaries teach that the Church is the supreame Iudge of the Scriptures and hath absolute authority to expound the same and by the Church they vnderstand the rabble of Priests and Iesuites and Cardinals and Councels and by them all at last the Pope whoe holds the Oracles of God shut vp in his brest whose iudgement also they hold to bee infallible so that he cannot erre Thus they will haue Scriptures Fathers Councels and the Church it selfe passe vnder the sentence of his Consistory Thus b Reason why the ●pists refu●● the Scrip●●●● to be Iud●● all contro●●●sies they do partly because they know and their hearts condemne them that the greatest number of the causes controuersies debated between them and vs haue no foundation of the Scriptures to leane vpon and therefore must of necessity stagger fall downe c Andrad thod expli● vnlesse they bee supported by traditions and partly because they woulde make themselues Iudges in their owne cause which notwithstanding is against all Law of God and man For they disable the Scriptures from being the rule of our faith and cast them downe from the chaire of honour in which they were seated by the author of them and cast all power vpon the Church and then they define the d Bristo 〈◊〉 12. in ma● Catholike Church to bee the Romane Church Rhem. annot in Rom. 1 8. and make the Catholike and Romane faith all one who seeth not heereby and smileth not at it that seeing the Church is made the rule of faith and their Romane Church the true catholike Church of Christ that they meane to stand to no iudgment but their own and bee iudged by no other Iudge but themselues and to receiue nothing for trueth but their owne opinions Indeed we cannot deny but they cast many shaddowes to blinde our eyes and pretend at euery word the Catholike Church but they meane nothing thereby but the Popes determination which verifieth in them the common Prouerbe Aske my fellow if I bee a theefe Thus they are made Iudges that are parties and partially referre all thinges vnto the tribunall of their owne iudgement Wee teach and affirme that the Holy Ghost and the Scripture it selfe haue chiefe authority to interprete the Scriptures the Scriptures must expound the Scriptures and out of themselues the meaning of them must be taken Our Sauiour teacheth a Iohn 5 47. that they which beleeue not Moses writings will not beleeue him The Apostle teacheth b Ephes 2 20 Wee are all built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Christ himselfe beeing the Head-corner-stone in whom all the building is coupled together by the Spirite 2 Tim 3 15 and that the Scriptures are able to make vs wise vnto saluation Thus it is saide c Nehe. 8 8 that the Leuites read distinctly the Lawe to the people and gaue the sense and caused them to vnderstand it by the Scripture it selfe Thus did the men of Berea reade the Scriptures d Acts 17 11. and by them tried the Apostles doctrine whether those things were so or not So then we conclude that the iudgement of all men is vncertaine and doubtful that resteth vpon their sole authority and that the Scriptures are to bee expounded by the same Spirit whereby they were written for heereby onely we can know assuredly the vndoubted meaning of them and from hence we can appeale to no superior iudge Vse 3 Thirdly from this consideration of the Author of the Scriptures we haue a direction to the Minister what he must preach vnto the people not the inuentions of his owne braine not the conceits of his owne wit not the excellency of wordes not the entising speech of mans wisedome e 1 Cor 2 14 which Paul disclaimeth and disalloweth in his owne practise but he must come in the plaine eu dence of the Spirit and of power that the knowledge of God may be furthered and the conscience informed in the wayes of godlinesse He must deliuer nothing to the people but the pure and precious word of God hee must content himselfe with the simplicity thereof and bee able by the scriptures to warrant the doctrine that he deliuereth so that hee may truely say with the Prophets Thus saith the Lord. Thus doth the Apostle ground his doctrine as vpon a sure and certaine foundation f 1 Cor. 11 23 1 Corinth 11 23. I haue receiued from th Lorde that which I also haue deliuered vn●o you This doth the Apostle Peter require at his hands 1 Pet. 4. g 1 Pet. 4 11 If any man speake let him speake as the words of GOD. VVee see therefore what must be the matter and subiect of our Sermons and from whence as from a plentiful store-house we must furnish our selues not from Fathers or Councels or Doctors of the Church much lesse from Poets Philosophers Orators Historiographers to paint our exhortations with the flourishing colours of humane learning which may for a season tickle the eare and delight the outwarde man but can carry no weight to the Conscience nor transforme the inward man into the obedience of the will of God Such as seeke to please men that haue itching eares doe beate the aire and labour in vaine neither must they thinke to winne a sou●e thereby to the knowledge of the Gospell This doth the Prophet Ieremy set downe chap. 23. h Iere 23 22 If they had stood in my counsell and had declared my words to my people then they should haue turned them from their euill waies and from the wickednesse of their inuentions Heere then we haue a direction what to do and in what manner to furnish our selues to the worke of the ministery wee must bee as good Stewards set ouer the Lords house to feede the family with bread not with wine with wholesome food not with chaffe that wee may discharge our duties with comfort and the people bee builded vppe in knowledge and obedience Lastly seeing God onely is the Author Vse 4 of the whole Scripture and of euery particular booke and branch contained therein which are the rule of our life and the foundation of our faith it belongeth as a speciall duty to the people of GOD to reade them to receiue them to study them to reuerence them to obey and keepe the doctrines deliuered in them forasmuch as they proceede from such an Author Wee learne to put a difference betweene the speeches of person and person and wee vse to giue better audience and greater reuerence vnto the word of a Prince then to others wee will not lose a worde willingly that commeth from his mouth and according to the Maiestie of the person so is our respect and so wee attend vnto him If one shoulde contemne a Prince and not regard him speaking vnto him hee would bee iudged worthy of death or of some sharpe and seuere punishment
Iames 2 1. wee should haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons which is forbidden condemned by the Apostle Hence it is that our Sauiour speaketh to his Apostles b Math. 10 20 Luke 10 16. It is not you that speak but the spirit of your Father that speaketh within you And to the 70. Disciples and in them to all his true Ministers to the end of the world He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth mee and he that despiseth me desp seth him that sent me For this cause the Thessalonians practising this point are commended by the Apostle that they esteemed and receiued the doctrine deliuered vnto them c 1 Thes 2 13. Rom. 1 16. Not as the word of men but as it is indeed the word of God which is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth They are the Embassadors of God sent out of him to call vs to repentance and therefore their word or rather the word of GOD spoken by their mouth is to be heard with reuerence marked with diligence and practised with obedience The writer of this book was Moses Thus much touching the chiefe and principall Author of this booke as of the other Scriptures to wit God nowe followeth the lesse principall or instrumentall namely Moses The Lord could if it had pleased him haue written this booke as he did the morall Law contained in the ten commandements with his owne finger without the ministery of mortall man but it stood with his will and Heauenly pleasure to inspire his worde into the hearts of some holy men set apart for this purpose and to make their pen d Psalm 45 1 as the penne of a swift Writer The writer of this Book as also of the three former and of that which followeth was Moses faithfull in the house of God of whose stocke parents birth preseruation banishment and return into the land of Egypt from whence he brought the children of Israel wee reade at large in the Booke of Exodus Him God hauing set apart from his mothers womb to be the deliuerer of his people doth call as it is a Psal 78 70 7● 72. saide of Dauid and tooke him from the Sheepfolds euen from behind the Ewes with yong brought he him to feede his people in Iacob his inheritance in Israel so he fed them according to the simplicity of his heart and guided them by the discretion of his hands Him also did God chuse to be one of the Scribes to penne a part of his word the first and most an●ient Scripture sufficient to guide that people into all truth necessary to be beleeued of them For as Princes and Noblemen haue their principal Secretaries whose persons and pennes they vse to what purposes they please so hath GOD his selected instruments to write his will and to endite what things he reuealed vnto them by whose Spirit they were wholy guided and directed that they could not erre b 2 Pet 1 21. for the Prophesie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were mooued by the holy Ghost Such a one was Moses the first chosen vessell of God to pen publish his word that it might bee knowne and conueyed vnto all posterities to him c Num. 12 8. Deut. 34 10. God spake mouth to mouth and by vision and not in dark words like to him there arose not a Prophet in Israel whom hee knew face to face These Prophets of God may rightly bee called second Authors of the Scripture all of them Gods Secretaries but Moses as his principall Secretary This consideration of Gods choosing men to be as his organs and instruments to put his Vse 1 whole will and word in writing doth offer to vs diuers good vses which briefly wee will run ouer First it conuinceth all those that thinke and gather that neither this book nor the other foure were written by Moses as now they are left vnto vs but by Esdras or some other more auncient Scribe that liued before his time Adde heereunto d Iren. lib. 3. cap 25. Tertul. lib. de bab mul. clem Alex. lib. 1. strom Hieron aduers Helu Euseb in Chronic. that manie of the Fathers and Doctors of the Church maintayned that when Ierusalem was assaulted sacked by the Chaldeans all the bookes of Moses and other Scriptures were burned together with the Temple and were afterward written againe and brought to light through the help of the diuine memory of Esdras who remembred al that was written in the former copies But this coniecture so much stood vppon by the Ancients be it spoken with their patience and pardon is no better then a fable may bee conuinced by euident demonstration of vndoubted reasons True it is the fourth of Esdras telleth in sober sadnesse this dreame e Esdr lib. 4. c 4 23. cap. 14 21. but euery one knoweth that booke to bee Apochryphall almost as full of lies as leaues insomuch that the Church of Rome ouer bold to adde to the Canon yet f Bel. de verbo Dei lib 1. cap 20. lib. 2. cap 1. are ashamed of this booke to make it Canonicall And we neuer read that the Babylonians euer attempted this sacriledge and if they had it seemeth vnlikely and vnpossible that euer they coulde bring it to passe the bookes beeing dispersed into many mens hands and extant in sundrie copies in sundry places The Assyrians which were sent as certaine Colonies to inhabite in the waste roomes of the ten Tribes the Kingdom of Israel being ouerthrown by Salmanasar when they were disturbed and destroyed by Lyons that tore them in peeces g 2 Kin 1 7 27 were instructed by one of the Priestes in the Law of Moses and no doubt had it among them Antiochus a most bloody tyrant commaunded the bookes of the Law to be cut in peeces burned so many as hee could finde yet did the faithfull preserue them safe and sound with the danger of their owne liues 1 Mach. 1 59. Besides it is not to be imagined that Ezekiel and Daniel continuing in Babylon the seuenty yeares of the captiuity wanted the word law of God all that time to say nothing of Ieremy the Prophet and Gedaliah the Prince were they all so carelesse or forgetfull that in the ruine of the City and spoyling of the temple they would neglect the Law and not saue one booke out of the fire Was there neuer a godly man left that was mindfull of the booke of God But what place is there lefte for any such surmise and suspition seeing the prophet Daniel had both the prophesies h Dan 9 2 11 of Ieremy the Law of Moses Moreouer it appeareth by the testimony of Ezra himselfe the Scribe of God i Ezra 6 18. that the people beeing returned from their captiuity had the Law of Moses amongst them before
Epistle to the Hebrews teacheth touching the faithful Heb. 11 33 34 that through faith they subdued kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained the promises stopped the mouthes of lyons quenched the violence of fire escaped the edge of the sword of weake were made strong waxed valiant in battell turned to flight the armies of the aliants All these testimonies and examples of the old and new Testament set forth expresly this truth that it is a lawfull thing and allowed to the godly to follow the warres The reasons to confirme this truth do follow Reason 1 First God doth command it and therefore doth allow it as iust and lawfull For hee doth not will things because they are iust but they are iust because he willeth them Now the holy Scripture affoordeth sundry testimonies of this truth and setteth downe the precepts commandements that God gaue to his people to bee their warrant to vse their weapon So he commanded them to destroy the Canaanites Deut. 7 2 3. The Lord thy God shall giue thē before thee and thou shalt smite them thou shalt vtterly destroy them thou shalt make no couenant with them nor haue compassion on them Thus he commanded Saul to slay the Amalekites 1 Sam. 15 2. who set vpon the people of God when they were come out of the Land of Egypt and as God commanded the worke so he gaue a blessing vnto it so that those enemies were brought to destruction For we reade in the holy history that God said vnto him I remember what Amalek did to Israel how they laid waite for them in the way as they came vp from Egypt now therefore go and smite Amalek and destroy ye al that pertaineth vnto them and haue no compassion on them but slay both man and woman both infant and ●uckling both oxe and sheepe both Camell and Asse Many other precepts are found in the word of God which we cannot stand vpon But God the Lord of hoasts commandeth nothing that is vniust vnlawful therfore war rightly vsed is lawful warranted Secondly as God gaue direct and expresse Reason 2 commandement so the people of God going forth to battell were to call vppon him for a blessing and to sanctifie the worke by prayer and in so doing haue beene heard Things in their owne nature vnlawfull are so foule and filthy that no prayer and inuocation of Gods name can cleanse them nay they make such prayer foule and abhominable If an idolater going to worship his Idol and serue the creature which is the work of mans hands should poure out his praiers all day long 1 Kin. 18 26. as the Priests of Baal did to bee heard O Baal heare vs what were this but a bellowing or beating of the aire or what profit should they receiue by it But the people of God hauing praied for good successe building themselues vpon the commandement of God vpon the promise of blessing and vpon the example of the faithful haue earnestly praied and effectually obtained that which they asked and desired This we see in the practise of the sonnes of Reuben and of Gad and of halfe the Tribe of Manasseh 1 Chr. 5 19. Valiant men able to beare shield and sword and exercised in war when they made warre against the Hagarims they were holpen against them they deliuered into their hands for they cryed to God in the battell he heard them because they trusted in him Seeing therefore God commandeth and blesseth and heareth and deliuereth such as go to warre it must needs follow that war true religion may well stand together so that one and the same man may bee both a warriour and yet religious Let vs make vse of this point First it serueth Vse 1 to conuince the cursed sect of the Anabaptists and other spiritualists who glory of the Spirit and vnder a colour of seeking peace and establishing vnity and concorde ouer all the world do bring in detestable doctrines and absurd opinions as if none were the true Church but onely themselues True it is it were to be wished that all persons and nations maintained amity and league one with an other and that there might be no more vse of the sword but this is rather to bee wished then expected and may sooner bee spoken then it will be obtained and effected They obiect the Lawe of God Thou shalt not kill Obiection 1 Exod. 20 and the words of Christ Resist not euill Answere Math. 5. But these and such like places must be vnderstood of priuate persons and of priuate reuenge It is vnlawfull for any person without a publike calling to that duty to kill another but a publike Officer may and ought to do it So did Moses kill the Egyptian Exod. 2 12. with Act. 7 25 Numb 25 8. 1 Kings 18 40 so did Phineas those that committed fornication as appeareth afterward in this booke so did Eliah to the Priests of Baal that committed Idolatry and seduced the people And thus it is in all lawfull warres for souldiers haue a publike calling they seek not priuate reuenge and therefore the battell is saide 2 Chro. 20 15. Not to be theirs but the Lord of Hoasts Likewise there is a priuate reuenge which Christ forbiddeth and condemneth but the publike reuenge committed to the Magistrate who beareth not the sword in vaine must bee duely and diligently executed that euill may be taken away out of the City of God For as in necessity it is good for mans body to cut off a rotten and dead member betimes lest the sound parts be corrupted and the whole body perish so it is profitable for the safety and security of humane society to sweepe away as dung hurtfull and noysome Citizens before they infect others that liue among them Wherefore so long as wicked men liue vp on the face of the earth and so long as the Diuell stirreth vp his instruments to set themselues against God and his truth and his seruants so long there will be vse of the sword and of the Magistrate to handle it Wherefore the Apostle calleth vpon vs to cal vpon God for Kings and Princes and them that are in authority that vnder them wee may liue a peaceable and quiet life 1 Timoth. 2 2 Ro. 13.1.2 3. in all godlines honesty If then these be the ends of Magistracy to maintaine peace to settle quietnesse to establish religion and to confirme honesty of manners surely it may be discharged and perfourmed by one that is religious and fearing God Besides God promised as a speciall grace and fauour to the Church of Christ in the new Testament that Kings should be the nursing Fathers Queenes the nursing Mothers of it Esay 49 23. which could not be vnlesse a godly and faithfull man might beare the Office and discharge the calling of a Magistrate and take vengeance of the wicked maintaine the cause of the righteous Secondly wee learne heereby that no calling Vse 2 and
possession of theyr whole hearts and keepe not backe a part thereof Iosiah is commended for walking in all the wayes of God 2 King 23 25. Psal 119 6 and for taking away the abhominations of the land The Prophet Dauid witnesseth that he had respect to al the commandements of the law Moses professeth boldly before Pharaoh that they must carry their Cattle with them into the wildernes to offer sacrifice Exod 10 26 and he would not leaue an hoofe of them behind him Let vs labor after this sincerity otherwise our obedience is stained with hypocrisie for God that made all wil haue all or none at all Fiftly our obedience must bee a constant obedience it must not be by fittes and pangs as the comming of an Ague for a day or a short and set time Such as are sick of an Ague haue a cold fit at the first then an hot with these time-seruers it is quite contrarie they are hot at the beginning and afterward waxe colde at the latter ending But we must continue out to the end There is no promise made but to such as perseuer He that endureth to the end shall be saued Matth. 10.22 and 24.13 reuel 2.10 and if wee bee faithfull to the death We shall receiue the crown of life If we would giue right iudgement of a man how his case standeth with God and what his conuersation is wee must iudge of him by the whol course of his life not by this or that action no nor onely by his behauiour at the houre of death for that is a deceitfull rule and may leade vs into errour If a man in the course of his life yeeld obedience and seeke to approue himselfe vnto God wee haue good and firme hope of such a one that he is the child of God yea albeit at the end of his dayes by violence of some sickenesse and want of naturall rest and distemperature of the braine and impatience of the flesh hee should talke idlely raue greeuously and blaspheme horribly we are to iudge of such a one by the strictnesse of his life not by the strangenesse of his death If his life haue been sound and sincere his vnperfect obedience shall bee accepted and all his frailty shall bee remitted so that an euill end neuer followeth a good and godly life But if the course of a mans life be wicked and his wayes crooked though he die calmely and goe away quietly like a lambe and cry Lord haue mercy vpon me yet he may be a reprobate and goe to the pit of destruction Hence it is that the vngodly are described Iob 21. to say vnto God Depart from vs we desire not the knowledg of thy wayes Iob 21.13.14.15.23.25 who is the Almighty that we should serue him and what profit should wee haue to pray vnto him yet for the most part they liue pleasantly and hauing no bands in their death they die quietly they spend their dayes in wealth and are not tormented with long sickenesse They are not afflicted and affrighted as other men Contrariwise the godly are daily punished and chastened euery morning they die in the bitternesse of their soule neuer eate with pleasure Psal 73.4.14 Eccle. 9.1.2 Who doubteth of the integrity and sincerity of Iob and Ieremie wee know they were iust and eschewed euill yet they cursed the day of their birth and the night wherin it is said Iob 3.1.2.3 Ier. 20.14.15 there was a manchild conceiued And if they had died presently they had been saued vndoubtedly albeit the corruption of the flesh for a time preuailed euen as it fell out with Iacob who wrastled with the Angel but his thigh was so crushed that he halted euer after So may it fall out with many of Gods children the force fiercenes of sharp diseases proceeding from hote causes may so disturbe the head distemper the powers of the mind as that they may breake out euen into blasphemy yea be so distempered and distracted by the violence thereof as that they fare as men out of their wits and right minde yet they may notwithstanding all this remaine still in Gods fauor and die in his feare For they may say and say truely with the Apostle Rom. 7.17.18.19.20 21. It is not I that doe it but sin that dwelleth in me Hee saith his whole desire was to giue himselfe to the seruing of God yet hee was hindred and hampered by his owne nature which was ouerweake so that in striuing against sinne hee ceassed not to receiue many wounds and to take sundry foiles blowes and therefore could not accomplish the good that he desired Let vs all be constant vnto the death then our obedience shall haue his recompence of reward Lastly our obedience must not be delayed from time to time supposing we shall finde a fitter time heereafter to heare the Lord speake vnto vs. The longer we deferre the time of repentance the practise of obedience the more vnfit vnready and vnresolued we shall finde our hearts to be Euery sin helpeth to harden the heart vntill we be turned and transformed into stones Wherfore the holy Ghost saith Heb 3 7 8 and 4 7 To day if ye will hear his voice c The acceptable season is the present time So soone as God commandeth reuealeth his will vnto vs let vs not linger or prolong the time but immediately prepare our eares to heare our tongues to speake Bernard de praecep discipl our feet to walke our hands to work euery part of vs to performe his Commandements Hee loueth such a seruant he accepteth such a seruice Will we regard such a seruant as whē we speake vnto him shew him what we would haue done turneth his back from vs regardeth not our busines or saith he will do it another time when he is at fitter leasure If wee will not take such seruice at his hands or put vp such contempt shall we thinke the Lord will be mocked to his face dalied withal as with a childe When he saith Come shall we answere we will not come When he comandeth vs to heare his voice to day shall wee answere we will not heare it to day but the next day or peraduenture the next yeare When he saith This is the acceptable time shall wee answere I wil find a fitter more conuenient time hereafter If he shall say vnto vs the time of repentance is the present time shall we presume to crosse him and to reply the time to come is the best time which God hath reserued in his own hand is to vs vnknown How many are there that haue neglected the voice of God calling them crying vnto them that were preuented by sodaine vntimely death and thereby taken away in their sins The foolish Virgins delayed so long * Mat 25 10 that the Bridegroome came they were shut out of the Kingdome where they knocked but could not
essentiall parts of that Sacrament I answere Answer they are able to doe this but forasmuch as they doe it without a calling their doing is as no doing their powring on of water is no better then a defiling of it For who gaue them their commission so to do When possession of any house is giuen by deliuering a white wand and turfe another man may do as much in shew he may take a wand turfe as good as the others and make a deliuery of them and yet those actions may bee idle being done without warrant neither can assure the bargaine and sale It is no great matter or hard to doe to take bread and wine and deliuer the same by reciting the words of institution and yet if it be vndertaken without a calling it is a plaine and manifest prophanation of the Supper of the Lord. If they iudge this vnlawfull how can they hold the other lawfull The people of God or any among them were as well able to handle and carry the Arke as the Leuites they were an holy people to God they were all circumcised they did all carry about in their flesh the marke and impression of the Couenant yet the Lord sorted out the Tribe of Leui to beare the Arke of his Couenant Deut. 10.8 to stand in his presence to minister vnto him and to blesse in his Name He will haue vs wholly to obey his word he regardeth not our blinde zeale or purpose to serue him except it be ordered aright To proceede Hath God onely placed order in the Church and not in the common-wealth yes in the common-wealth also wherein euery one both superiours and inferiours must doe their duty He hath appointed the Magistrates their office to minister iustice without partiality and respect of persons 2 Chron. 19. 5 6. considering that they execute not the iudgements of men but of God who will be with them This is the comely order that hee hath set this is the way wherein he will haue them walke this is the ordinance that he hath established If then lawes be bought and sold or if they be made as the spiders webbe to catch the silly flie but to let the hornet escape or if they punish the poore and let the rich escape if the weake that cannot resist be intangled and the mighty be deliuered this is a great disorder and the Lord will not haue these things handled so confusedly Let such set before them the example of God who will reward euery man according to his workes He doth not spare the wicked Rom. 2.6 and reuenge himselfe vpon the Godly but he sheweth mercy to thousands of these and will not hold the other innocent So such as God hath called to execute iudgement and sit vpon the bench of iustice must know what God requireth of them they must not peruert the right ouerturne the Seat of equity they must not turne the edge of the sword vpon the poore because they are poore nor put it away from the rich because they are rich or from the mighty because of their might or from the greater sort because they haue many friends but they must smite them with the sword of Iustice that deserue to be smitten and defend them from that wrong that the malice of the oppresser would lay vpon the innocent On the other side God requireth that such as are inferiours should obey Princes and Magistrates submitting themselues vnto them reuerencing both their places and persons They therefore are reproued as breakers of this order of God and ouerturners of States and Common wealthes that rebell against them and moue sedition among the people Such walke in the steps of Corah and his company who were consumed and destroyed according to their deserts as appeareth afterward in this Booke ●hap 16. These proud spirits and ambitious men haue neuer preuailed but euer beene punished Such are they that Salomon speaketh off Eccle. 10. ●ccles 10.6 7 Folly is set in great excellency and the rich set in the low place I haue seene seruants on horses and Princes walking as seruants on the ground Such persons as seeke to take away the crownes and kingdomes of Princes are the very plagues of humane societie and goe about to take away as it were the Sunne out of the firmament and to leaue vs in miserable darkenesse nay to take from vs the breath of our nostrils and to expose vs as a prey to all violence and villany Let all such know that they fight against God and therefore cannot prosper or preuaile All sedition is pernicious to the contriuer and author thereof and no iniury receiued can bee any sufficient cause for any man to plot Treasons and rebellions Let euery soule therefore be subiect to the higher powers considering there is no power but of God and that whosoeuer resisteth the power resisteth the Ordinance of God and therefore purchase to themselues damnation Vse 3 Lastly seeing God requireth orderly obseruation of his ordinances we learne this duty that we must be carefull to obserue it and practise it with a due regard of his Commandement This is the generall rule that the Apostle commendeth vnto vs 1 Cor. 14. 1 Cor. 14 40. Let all things bee done decently and in order Order is nothing else but the meanes of peace and the auoiding of confusion or it is a disposing of diuers things August de ciuit dei lib 19. cap. 12 C●cer de effic lib. 2. giuing to euery one his proper place The end of all good order tendeth to profit as on the other side the end of confusion to losse and destruction The more common generall a good thing is so much the better it is and the more to bee esteemed aboue all other The benefit of good order stretcheth farre to the land and Sea and to the house and ship to the Common-wealth and Church If it be commendable to appoint a profitable order in the lesser charge of a priuate family it is a great deale better and more excellent to manage a Common-wealth prudently and to gouerne the Church wisely Gouernment that is right presupposeth order because it is vnpossible that any man should rule rightly and duely without order For gouernment is a right disposition of those things whereof a man taketh charge to bring them to a conuenient end This is done in the Church of God when there be Pastors and Teachers to preach the word truely and to minister the Sacraments sincerely when the people hearken to them are ready to seeke the law at their mouthes This is seene also in the obseruation of these rules First Rules of order to be obserued in the Congregation when one alone prayeth for many cannot pray with a loud voice together without confusion The Minister is to bee the mouth of the people to God his voice is in publike place to be heard that the people may ioyne with him with pure and humble hearts and
them might flourish also If they had bin grieuously afflicted the Church must also haue tasted of the same cup in some measure Thus were the people of God commanded to pray for the peace of Babylon the place whither they were carried captiue which was giuen them as a Sanctuary and place of retire Ier. 29. Ier. 29 7 Seeke the peace of the City whither I haue caused you to be carried away captiues and pray vnto the Lord for it for in the peace thereof shall ye haue peace God giueth the Infidels prosperity and blesseth them with an extraordinary peace howbeit hee respecteth the good of his Church therein Lastly herein we are to consider also the iustice of God For the Lord purposing to execute his iust iudgments vpon the Kings of the earth for their idolatries oppressions violences tyrannies murthers adulteries and such like impieties hath raised vp from time to time some to serue him in the execution of his high iustice against them punishing those that are euill by others as euill as themselues For this cause to make way for the accomplishment of his decrees hee maketh some Nation to grow strong and mighty as the oakes of the forest and to flourish for a while as the Cedars in Libanus that he may vse employ them as a staffe in his hand to chastise the rebellions of the vngodly and when he hath poured out his wrath vpon them and executed his indignation to the full he casteth the rod into the fire raiseth vp another for the consuming of them The Assyrians The foure Monarchies ouerthrowne one another the first Monarchy of the world ruled in a manner all Nations for many yeares After them arose the Persians who subduing the Assyrians obtained the Monarchy and reigned likewise a long space many Kings succeeding one another in that royall seate Then came the Grecians who preuailed against the Persians as they before had done against the Assyrians made themselues Monarches and masters of them and almost of the whole world Last of all all these being cut downe and so grubbed by the rootes that the place of many of them is no more to be known the Romane Empire abolishing the former succeeded in the souereignty possessed the dignity first in Rome and after in Constantinople Thus the sword of one hath bin drawne out against another al hath bin ruled by the iust iudgment of God to punish those that neither loued nor imbraced the truth The like we might say of Tamerlane the Tartarian the scourge or God terrour of the world he was raised vp of God and had his time who whipped the Turks by him as they had serued others All these horrible tyrants prospered in the world but it had a sudden end because it was neuer wel grounded But to leaue them and to come home to our selues let vs learne what maketh vs to prosper what shall make our names great and our families to flourish when all other shall wither as the grasse that to day is greene and to morrow is cast into the Ouen it is the imbracing of true religion Bethlehem was in it selfe little among the thousands of Iudah ●ich 5.2 ●ath 2 6. yet it was notwithstanding exalted and aduanced because out of it came Christ to rule his people Israel The Temple of Salomon was of wonderfull glory and renowne yet the Lord telleth the people after their returne out of captiuity that the glory of the second Temple ●ag 2 9. euen of that latter house should be greater then of that former and in this place he would giue peace by him that is the Prince of peace In like manner hee telleth Iosua that if the book of the Law depart not out of his mouth but that he meditate therein day and night obserue to do according to all that is written therein then hee shall make his way prosperous and shall haue good successe in al his enterprises ●osh 1 8. Do we then desire to be happy Do we wish blessednesse Labour to bee truely religious and to haue the power of godlinesse dwelling in thy heart Aduance it And it shall aduance thee Prou. 4 8. and ● 4. it shall bring thee to honour when thou dost imbrace it This is the way to finde fauor and good vnderstanding in the sight of God and man As for others that make a mocke of religion and doe not chuse the feare of the Lord that neuer regard to set it as a precious plant in their soules and in their houses they may peraduenture builde their nests on high for a time and make their children great vpon earth for a season but in the end their names shall consume as dung their roote shall bee rottennesse and their bud as dust that is suddenly blowne and borne away with a violent winde Vse 3 Thirdly must the ministery be established among all people vnder heauen Then let euery one of vs be careful for our parts to plant it among vs and to bring it home to the places of our abode In the most corrupt and ruinous times of the Church the people were carefull of this duty Micha in the booke of Iudges is saide to haue entertained and maintained a Leuite to instruct him and his family and said Now I know that the Lord will do mee good seeing I haue a Leuite to my Priest Iudg. 17 13. It is noted in the Acts of the Apostles that when Paul and Barnabas were come to Salamis they preached the word of God in the Synagogues of the Iewes they had Iohn also for their Minister Euery place therfore ought to haue their proper Pastour as euery flock their Shepheard and euery City their watchman Dauid was carefull aboue all Princes to settle good order among the Leuites that God might be serued and the people edified He diuided them into certaine orders Acts 13 5. 2 Sam. 6.2 1 Chr. 23 6. that so their labors might be equally indifferently diuided for the benefit of all persons He was zealous in bringing home the Arke of God Iehosaphat sent out Leuites to instruct the people This is a duty that doth neerely concerne vs our families not onely to be content to heare it abroad and to resort to it in other places but to ioyne together to bring it home to our owne doores or parishes that we may haue prouision of food our selues and not be driuen to seek for it elsewhere A point wherin alas we are too carelesse and thereby make little conscience to seeke after knowledge For how many thinke themselues discharged frō hearing the word and attending to the ministery of it because they haue not the word ordinarily taught among them If it were setled among them they could be content to giue the Ministers the hearing but if they haue it not they neuer thinke it any part of their duty to resort to the places where they may be instructed 2 Kin. 4 23. as
family which was the Church of God not onely Isaac the sonne of promise in whose seede the nations of the earth should bee blessed but Ismael that was borne after the flesh that mocked his brother persecuted him that was borne after the spirit and in the end was cast out of the Church Gen. 21.9 10. Gen. 21.9.10 Gal. 4.30 Gal. 3.30 And as it was with the father so was it with the son for we see this in the children of Isaac who stroue and struggled within the wombe of their mother Gen. 25.22 and when the time of her deliuerance came she brought foorth not only Iacob Gen. 32.24 who afterward was sirnamed Israel obtaining a farre more honourable name then all the Affricani or Germanici or Asiatici among the Romanes whose praise was wholly from the earth and a blast of the mouthes of mortall man whereas he wrastled with God in Peniel and preuailed but also prophane Esau Heb. 12 16. so branded as it were in the forehead by a marke of yron by the Spirit of God who sold his birth-right for a messe of pottage For the children being not yet borne neither hauing done any good or euil that the purpose of God according to the election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth It was said vnto her Iacob haue I loued but Esau haue I hated Rom. 9.11.13 Rom. 9.11.13 Samuel was a man that feared God exceedingly and gouerned the people vprightly so that he appealed to the people and to the consciences of all men to witnesse his innocency and integrity what wrong he had done them whose oxe he had taken and whose asse he had taken or at whose hand he had receiued any bribe to blinde his eyes 1 Sam. 12.3 1 Sam. 12.3 Yet when hee was old and made his sonnes iudges ouer Israel they walked not in his wayes but turned aside after lucre they tooke bribes and peruerted iudgement 1 Sam. 8.3 1 Sam. 8.3 Dauid was a man after Gods owne heart yet he had not onely Salomon that was beloued of God 2. Sam. 13.14 and 15.16 1 Kin. 1.5 but also incestuous Amnon ambicious Absolon and trecherous Adonijah the first defiled his owne sister and wrought folly in Israel the other two rebelled against their father and sought to take away the kingdome from him The like we might say of Eli who sate vpon a seat by a post of the Temple and by his residence on his charge and daily attendance to giue answeres to the people that came vnto him gaue testimony of his godlinesse yet his sonnes were the sonnes of Belial and knew not the Lord 1 Sam. 2.12 1 Sam. 2.12 To conclude for the examples that might be brought to this purpose are infinite who was more Godly then Iosiah who remembred his creator in the dayes of his youth and reformed religion betimes in his kingdome yet his children followed not the wayes of their father but did euill in the sight of the Lord according to all that their wicked forefathers had done 2 King 23.32 37. 2 King 23. Iere. 22.18 Iere. 22.18 To all these testimonies of Scripture if we adde also the testimony of common experience of all ages and times and places and persons we may gather that all the children of the faithfull haue not beene alwayes continued vnder the covenant of God nor followed the steppes of their faithfull parents to be like vnto them Now because this is a point diligently to Reason 1 be marked of vs let vs consider the reasons whereby it may be better confirmed vnto vs. First to shew the election of God which is the highest steppe of our saluation to stand vpon the free wil and purpose of God and not vpon ordinary succession or naturall generation or any causes in our owne selues to the end that all both parents and children should confesse that such as haue receiued this power and prerogatiue to beleeue in the Name of Christ Iesus are borne not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Ioh. 1.13 Ioh. 1.13 This reason is noted concerning Iacob Rom. 9.11 that the purpose of God might stand according to election not of any workes but by him that calleth this was it that made difference betweene him and his brother Secondly that the best seruants of God Reason 2 may acknowledge that they can by no means conuey to their posterity the graces of God the gifts of sanctification repentance from dead workes which themselues haue receiued from God by supernaturall meanes and not by naturall they begetting naturally children of wrath as well as other men euen sinfull children tainted and defiled with originall corruption Adam begate Seth in his owne image that is in his naturall inclination to euil Gen. 5.3 Gen. 5.3 Hence it is that Dauid acknowledgeth he was shapen in iniquity and that in sinne his mother did conceiue him Psal 51. Psal 51. So then as the corne that is purged from the chaffe and made cleane bringeth vp corne againe together with the chaffe and as the father that is circumcised begetteth children that are vncircumcised so such parents as are sanctified themselues cannot leaue to their issue any sanctifying graces which must come onely from aboue from the Father of lights Reason 3 Thirdly God hath a purpose to shew his iustice in the destruction of the stubborne and disobedient as he doth his mercy in the saluation of those that are godly and obedient This is the reason rendred by the Spirit of God that albeit the sonnes of Eli were reproued by their father yet they hearkened not vnto his voyce because the Lord would slay them 1 Sam. 2.25 ● Sam. 2.25 God is determined to glorifie himselfe and his great Name in their destruction as they resolued and setled themselues their whole liues to dishonour him to their confusion Reason 4 Lastly the children euen of faithfull and godly parents doe oftentimes want the good meanes of a godly education and therefore no maruell if their hearts not being ploughed vp doe bring forth cockle and darnell in stead of good corne For the children of God doe themselues through humane frailty and infirmity sometimes faile in the performance of this duty They cocker them and are too choice and nice ouer them they dare not offend them or speake a word against them which ouerweening and suffering of them to haue their will too much God punisheth in their children whereof we haue a worthy example in Dauid toward Adonijah who exalted himselfe against his father saying I will be king and he prepared him chariots and horsemen and fifty men to runne before him The occasion of this presumption and rebellion is noted to be thus King 1.6 His father had not displeased him at any time in saying Why hast thou done so He failed toward him more then Eli did toward his sons for he said
sinne that is their offering strange fire with strange fire we shall speake afterward in the fift Chapter Heere we will obserue that this fact of theis may seeme in the eyes of many to be a small offence and not to deserue so heauy a censure and so grieuous a punishment For it may be said in defence or them either that they had a good intent and meaning though they missed in the manner or that this fire which they offered would serue to burne the incense as well as any other and what skilleth it by what fire it be done But all these are Doctrine 3 vaine pretences forasmuch as God had commanded the contrary a Gods wor●●ip we must ●ot be led ●our owne ●euices but ●y God di●ection We learne from hence that nothing in matter or forme concerning the worship of God or the administration of the Sacraments ought to be added or altered or detracted but all must be done as God hath determined and directed Our owne dreames and deuises must not sway vs in the matters of God but it is his will and word that must will and gouerne vs. The Lord himselfe challengeth and defendeth his authority in laying downe the maner and way of his own seruice not leauing it to the liberty of any creature men or Angels to intermeddle with it forasmuch as he will haue all things done as himselfe hath prescribed He is well pleased and contented that men shall make Lawes and statutes for humane matters concerning their temporall estates in this world as shall be fittest for the places where they rule and for the persons whom they rule as touching treasons murthers thefts oppressions slanders routs riots and such disorders but for the diuine worship how God shall be serued we must leaue it vnto him he onely can prescribe what must be done he onely will appoint what must be left vndone It is true the strange fire that Nadab and Abihu tooke was as well able to burne the incense as that which burned euermore vpon the altar and yet because God had not sanctified it for that purpose they were fearefully and dreadfully deuoured with fire from God When God instituted the Passeouer in remembrance of his mercifull deliuerance in passing ouer the houses of the Israelites when the first borne of the Egyptians were destroyed Exod. 12.3 the whole order is set downe both for the matter and manner of celebrating and solemnizing that ordinance hee instructeth what they shall take what ceremonies they shall vse what gesture they shall obserue and what he will haue them not to do Moses doth many times in the booke of the Law giue this direction Deuter. 4.2 Deut. 4.2 and 12.8.32 Ye shall not adde vnto the word which I command you neither shall you diminish ought from it that ye may keepe the commandements of the Lord your God which I command you and in the 12. Chapter ye shall not doe after after all the things that we doe heere this day euery man whatsoeuer is right in his owne eyes and afterward What thing soeuer I command you obserue and doe it thou shalt not adde thereto nor diminish from it On the contrary we see how Saul was punished with the losse of his kingdome because hee would offer sacrifice contrary to the expresse will of God made knowne vnto him 1 Sam. 15.23 The like might bee saide of Ieroboams two golden calues erected at Dan and Bethel without warrant and worshipped without warrant it was the ouerthrow of himselfe and his posterity 1 Kings 14.7 c. For this cause the Apostle speaking of the institution of the Lords Supper saith 1 Corin. 11. 1 Cor. 11.23 I receiued of the Lord that which also I deliuered vnto you that the Lord the same night in which he was betrayed tooke bread c. whereby it appeareth that it is no small matter it is no toy or trifle to worship GOD otherwise then he in his word appointeth vnto vs considering the saying of the wise man Adde not thou vnto his words Prou. 30.6 lest hee reprooue thee and thou be found a lyar This crosseth mans deuises which are Reason 1 bolde to steppe vp in Gods place and therefore let vs see the reasons First God will be acknowledged to be the only Law-giuer the king of his Church and the onely Prophet to instruct it in the will of God This is that which the Apostle Iames witnesseth Iam. 4.12 chap. 4. There is one Law-giuer who is able to saue and to destroy that can cast body and soule into hell fire Matth. 10. He is the master of the house that must set downe orders for the gouernement of his house None can make a Law in the kingdome but by authority of the king none can alter it being made but the king So is it in the Church none can appoint any word any Sacrament any worship but God himselfe none can reuerse any institution without him So that additions or detractions or alterations or any mixtures whatsoeuer are so many abuses of the Sacraments of the word and of the worship of God Reason 2 Secondly there is promise of blessing to them that serue him with a perfect heart and there is threatning of most heauy curses and iudgements to come vpon their soules that worship him after the commandements and precepts of men Our Sauiour chargeth his disciples to obserue all things whatsoeuer he commandeth them Matth. 28.20 and then he addeth Loe I am with you to the ende of the world Matth. 28.20 It appeareth in many places of the booke of Iudges the Israelites are deliuered ouer to their aduersaries for transgressing in this kind Iudg 2.12.14.15 2. Chron. 26.18 19. euen for worshipping him after other waies then he had appointed There is a fearefull denuntiation in the shutting vp of the Reuelation against all that shall dare either to adde or detract any thing in the holy things of God Reuel 22.18 19. I testifie vnto euery man that heareth the wordes of the Prophesie of this Booke If any man shall adde vnto these things God shall adde vnto him the plagues that are written in this Booke and if any man shall take away from the words of the Booke of this Prophesie God shall take away his part out of the Booke of life and out of the holy Citie and from the things which are written in this Booke Wherefore it is no small matter to follow the priuate willes of men in the worship of God and not to suffer our selues to be guided and directed by his word and commandement Obiection This may seeme to tye vp the desires of man too strictly and therefore his wisedome that he hath by nature Ministreth many obiections against this trueth to which wee are to giue answere as briefly as we can First the question may be asked whether Princes haue not power to make lawes in the Church haue they nothing to doe with the Church may they
the first borne c. We see heere that the Leuites were substituted in the place of the first borne who did first of all execute the Ministers office The Lord if it had pleased him could haue serued the Church with them for euer but for the causes before rehearsed he exempted them from this seruice after that for a small time and a few yeeres he had tryed their obedience to his holy wil and commandement Now in their stead he taketh the Tribe of Leui to minister vnto him and for his Doctrine 1 people We learne hereby The office 〈◊〉 the Ministery is an high and worthy ca●ling that the office of the Ministery is a most worthy and excellent calling This is that which the Apostle saith writing to the Hebrewes chap. 5.4 No man taketh this honour to himselfe but he that is called of God as was Aaron If then it be an honour to be called to this office it followeth to be an high and honourable calling Likewise writing to the Romanes and declaring that none can preach except they be sent hee addeth out of the Prophet How beautifull are the feete of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things Rom. 10.15 And instructing Timothy touching this office he saith This is a true saying If a man desire the office of a Byshop he desireth a worthy worke and afterward in the same Epistle cha 5.17 Let the Elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honour specially they who labour in the word and doctrine Seeing then the Ministery is an honour as the Priesthood of Aaron was seeing the office is a worthy worke and seeing the feet of the Ministers that bring the word vnto vs are beautifull so that they are worthy not onely of single but of double honour it followeth that the calling is exalted aboue many others and ought to haue a reuerent and speciall account among vs. The trueth heereof will farther appeare Reason 1 vnto vs by the force of reasons as so many proppes to stay it vp First we must consider the title giuen vnto them of an Embassadour what greater honour then to be the Embassadour of a Prince The Minister is more he is the messenger of the Lord of hostes Mal 2.7 2 Cor. 5.20 and commeth from the King of kings and Lord of lordes He is in stead of Christ appointed and sent of him to reconcile men to himselfe and to saue them So then the Ministers supply the office and sustaine the person of the Sonne of God who is the word and wisedome of his Father Not that he would haue the Ministery of his word lesse esteemed then if he should speake from heauen with terrible signes of Thunder and lightning but that he might by this meanes teach in a more familiar manner and so make the better tryall of our obedience Therefore the Apostle saith He that knoweth God heareth vs Ioh. 4.6 he that is not of God heareth vs not hereby know we the spirit of trueth and the spirit of errour We must heare the word preached by man not as the word of man but as it is indeed the word of God Thess 2.13 and so set our selues in his presence Hence it is that he saith to the disciples whom he had sent out ●ct 10.33 He that heareth you ●●rk 10.16 heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me If then the Ministery be an embassage sent vnto vs from God whereby God after a sort sueth to vs for reconciliation it serueth to set forth vnto vs the honour of this calling Secondly the honour of the Ministery is to Reason 2 saue mens soules which of all workes is the highest the holyest the heauenlyest the greatest What other calling can compare with it in this respect Other professions and ordinances respect the good of this life as peace or health or wealth and such like but the end of the Ministery alone is the saluation of soules Paul willeth Timothy to take heed to himselfe and vnto doctrine adding this reason Tim. 4.16 ●biection for in doing this thou shalt saue both thy selfe and them that heare thee It will be obiected we are saued by Christ onely as I haue beene oftentimes answered we haue saluation by no other then by him ●nswer It is true indeed Christ hath performed so much as is sufficient for the saluation of all yet none are actually saued but they onely to whom the benefits and merites of the Messiah are communicated Now his merits are applyed two wayes by the Ministery of the word and by receiuing of the Sacraments for which cause the power of saluation is ascribed vnto them We doe not teach that men are saued by the preaching of the word to driue men from Christ thereby or to build our saluation vpon any other for we preach nothing we regard to know nothing but Christ and him crucified We goe not about to lay any other foundation but the question is of the meanes how we shall come to the sauing knowledge of Christ which is ordinarily done by the sound and sincere preaching of the Gospel so that this calling is a most excellent calling Reason 3 Thirdly this truth is farther confirmed and strengthened by the contrary in that without it ordinarily no man can attaine to saluation as may appeare by the meanes whereby it is effected and by the degrees whereby it is finished None shall be saued but such as are effectually called but what is the Church other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then a company of men called and they are called by the Ministery of the Gospel made powerfull and effectuall by the Spirit of God Ye are called by our Gospel 2 Thes 2.14 to the obtaining of the glory of the Lord Iesus Christ By it our mindes are enlightened to see our owne miseries and Gods infinite mercies and then by it Luk. 1.79 Act. 26.18 Esay 53.1 as by the strong arme of God we are drawne vnto him Againe none are saued but such as are iustified being acquitted from their sinnes and accepted in Christ as righteous and as heires of eternall life But we are iustified by faith and faith commeth by hearing the word of God Rom. 10.17 1 Cor. 3.5 so that the Preachers are the Ministers by whom we beleeue Lastly none are saued but such as are sanctified by the Spirit of regeneration and whosoeuer is in Christ is become a new creature 1 Pet. 1.23 but we are borne againe by the immortall seed which is the word of the eternall God so that we are begotten into him by the preaching of the word In this respect the Ministers are called spirituall fathers 1 Cor. 4.15 because they beget vs as children by the Gospel of Iesus Christ Thus then we see the worthinesse and excellency of this calling and what we are to esteem therof As then we heard
according to the number of the persons there might be an equall diuision and distribution of their functions Now for the better vnderstanding of this numbring heere commanded and executed we must know that the reckoning vp of the Leuites is not done after one manner but is much differing not only from the other tribes but also from it selfe so that this Tribe is numbred diuers waies The first is from a moneth old and vpward as we haue learned out of the third chapter because then they were fit to be offered to the Lord. Numb 3 15. The second is at fiue and twenty yeare old at what time they began to be tried and proued whether they were fit or not this is set downe chap. 8 24. The third is at 30. years of age vntill 50 when they executed their office fully without any denying or gainsaying Thus we see the different account that is taken of this Tribe and the reasons thereof now let vs proceede to the order obserued in this chapter Heerein we are to obserue two parts The first containeth a commandement touching the numbring of the Leuites from 30. yeares old vnto 50. together with a description of the proper and distinct office of euery family Secondly the obedience of Moses in the execution of the commandement of the Lord. Touching the commandement of God we are to consider that the whole seruice of the Tabernacle is parted according to the wil and pleasure of almighty God the author of the Ministery among the three families springing out of Leui and spoken of in the former chapter namely the Kohathites the Gershonites and the Merarites Heere Moses doth a little inuert the former order and beginneth with the Kohathites because the Priests were chosen among them and he insisteth longer vpon them then vpon other both because many things are spoken of them which notwithstanding are not properly to be restrained to them alone but generally to be applied to the rest and likewise because they had a more worthy honourable office so that the chiefest charge was committed vnto them The commandement is generall in this diuision then particular in the verses following The generall sheweth who among them were to be numbred to wit all persons from thirty yeares old to fifty to do the seruice of the Tabernacle Thus much touching the order ●o obiect ●wered Before we come to the doctrines we are to answer two questions thereby as it were to vnloose the knots that might trouble those that are weake in knowledge and slender in iudgement ●estion As first of all it may be demanded why the Lord commanded the Leuites in this place to be numbred that were full 30. yeares old ●swer and not before I answer it was because he would haue those that serued him in the Sanctuary and did as it were represent his person to the people and were to teach them to be ripe in knowledge in iudgement in experience in moderation in learning and such like gifts of his holy Spirit Young men for the most part haue greene heads light braines rash wits shallow iudgements head-strong passions being altogether vnsetled and vngrounded Thus it was in Rehoboams Counsellers 1 Kings 12 8. where we see young Counsellers young counsell graue Counsellers graue counsell as the men are so is their counsell Such as were to follow the warres were numbred from 20. yeares old and vpward Moses the muster-maker tooke their names and enrolled them at the age of twenty but such as were the Lords warriers to fight his battels ●ings 2 12. and as it were the Chariots horsemen of Israel must not be fresh-water or white-liuerd souldiers they must not turne their backes to their enemies nor be afraid to looke them in the face nor shrinke backe at the push of the pike nor haue their sword rusty in their sheath but alwaies be prepared stand ready for the encounter But if such had beene admitted to this office as were yong in yeares their lightnesse in gesture and behauiour might haue cast a contempt vpon the holy things of God and caused the people to abhorre the word which they deliuer and the Sacraments which they administer whereof we haue an example 1 Sam. 2 in Elies sonnes The sinne of the young men was great and they caused the people to contemne the offerings of God To this end the Apostle aduiseth and admonisheth Timothy chap. 4 12. Let no man despise thy youth but be thou an ensample to the beleeuers in word in conuersation in charity in spirit in faith in purity But of this we shall haue occasion to speake more afterward Secondly a man may aske the question Question whether the Priests and Leuites ceassed the execution of their office at the age of fifty For seeing God commandeth in this place all to be numbred that were imployed in the worke of God and none were numbred that were vnder thirty and aboue fifty it may seeme to some that they did nothing afterward What then Were they as souldiers dismissed of their seruice and put to their yearly pension Or were they released from all labours as those sword-players Horat. epist lib. 1. epist 1. that had a rod deliuered vnto them in token of discharge I answer this was done for diuers causes Answer First such as execute this holy calling ought to be qualified with iudgement grauity sobriety integrity diligence yea with power courage strength and to haue agility and ability in mind and body that they may doe all things wisely exactly studiously constantly But all these agree to a man most fitly and fully betweene the age of 30. and 50. limited in this place Youthfull age may be adorned with strength courage and earnestnesse but it is not so well furnished with iudgement grauity skilfulnesse and staiednesse On the other side old men in their declining age albeit they be filled with knowledge and vnderstanding and seasoned with moderation of affections yet through weaknesse of nature debility and other infirmities that follow them grow dull and heauy Analys Iun. in 3. Numer slowe and cold and haue not that quicknesse and readinesse of dispatch which they had and others haue so that their body is not answerable to their mind nor the outward man to the inward Againe this was the ordinance of God that they should giue place to younger men that vnder them they might be trained vp to the seruice of the Sanctuary that he might neuer want any to attend in that calling Whereas in the multitude and encrease of that Tribe to so many thousands if they had all serued during the terme of their liues many of them could neuer haue beene imployed whose labor might be profitable in the church So then they were at that age to ceasse to make way and passage for the imployment of younger men Thirdly as religion is more precious then all earthly things so God heereby tooke order and prouided that the weaknesse
ignorantly like the blinde man that hitteth the white cannot be accepted of him or looke for any reward at his hands God will accept of none to be his seruants that know him not Will any man receiue into his seruice one that cannot see to dispatch his businesse and shall we thinke that God will admit blinde men that regard not to vnderstand his wayes and want their spirituall eyes to discerne betweene good and euill This we see by sundry examples as Psal 95.10 where the Lord rendreth this reason why the people erred in their hearts and greeued him forty yeeres in the wildernesse Psal 95.10 because they had not knowne his wayes It was the cause why the Sadduces denyed the resurrection Matt. 22.29 Ye do erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God This caused the Iewes to crucifie the Lord of life Act. 3.17 Now brethren I wote that through ignorance ye did it as did also your rulers for if they had knowne him they would not haue crucified the Lord of life This is it that maketh the proud iusticiaries of the world to rest in their owne righteousnesse Rom. 10.3 because they know not the righteousnesse of God This was the cause of the idolatry of the Gentiles Gal. 4.8 When ye knew not God ye did seruice vnto them which by nature are no Gods So what was the cause but ignorance that moued Paul to persecute the Saints he rendreth this as the reason 1 Tim. 1.13 I was before a blasphemer and a persecuter and iniurious but I obtained mercy because I did it ignorantly in vnbeliefe And as it is the roote that brancheth out into many sinnes so it is as pitch that defileth whatsoeuer it toucheth turneth good affections into euill and maketh them to decline and degenerate into sinne Religion deuotion hope feare being ioyned and guided with the eye and light of knowledge please God whereas without this sight they highly displease him For religion ioyned with ignorance begetteth and bringeth forth idolatry deuotion accompanyed with ignorance is no better then superstition hope ioyned with ignorance worketh presumption feare ioyned with ignorance engendreth desperation If we haue not knowledge to support and season vs we erre out of the right way and are deceiued beyond all measure Loue blinded with ignorance becommeth sottish Zeale patience and such like corrupted with ignorance are turned into brutish and sauage passions This reprooueth three sorts of men First the practise of the Church of Rome ●re● that taketh away the key of knowledge from the people and seeketh to bring in palpable darknesse These false teachers cannot endure that the people should enioy the light of the Scriptures They reade them in an vnknown tongue perswading them they may be most deuout when they are most ignorant that it shall goe well with them though they haue no faith of their owne but an implicit faith to beleeue as the Church beleeueth albeit they know not what it beleeueth These are they that notably abuse the people to their perdition and bewitch them with spirituall socery as they that bring Gods iudgments vpon their heads ●●8 ● 13. and 〈◊〉 1. ● 10. ● 1. 8. for when a land is destitute of the knowledge of God al things are couered with darknesse and the persons are liable to his fearefull iudgements as is euident by sundry places of Scripture Dauid saith the blind and lame that mocked at him were hated of his soule so that such should not enter into his house 2. Sam. 5.8 Such as are spiritually blinde shall neuer enter into Gods kingdome they are all seers that shall come thither The want of naturall sight is nothing in comparison of the want of the eyes of the minde Our Sauiour pronounceth them blessed that are pure in heart ● 5.8 because they shall see God This sight of the minde is two fold partly in this life partly in the life to come one of them vnperfect the other perfect when we shall see him as he is This is eternall life to know God ● 3.2 it is eternall death not to know him and to be ignorant that God is our father that Christ is our redeemer and that the holy Ghost is our sanctifier ●●econd ●ofe The second reproofe is of those that are children in knowledge that liue in the light and yet can see nothing The Sunne shineth brightly in their faces yet they shut their eyes Many thinke they haue religion enough if they haue a good mind and meaning and leade a ciuil life among their neighbours who like not such busy fellowes that will be medling euermore with the Scriptures They are accounted honest men and are well liked of all they pay that they owe they are iust of their word they deceiue no man But this ciuil conuersation and honest behauiour shall profit them nothing nor be able to bring them into the fauour of God nor giue them any title to the kingdome of heauen so long as they are destitute of knowledge forasmuch as they haue God their aduersary who will contend with them and plead against them neither will he know them that regard not to know him Others despise it and contemne it like the foole or idiot that casteth away a pearle or precious stone not knowing the value or worth of it These come to the Church sometimes and heare the word of God both read preached and yet are not so much as acquainted with the histories of the Scripture the principles of religion which are as milke for yong children They know not what faith is they are not acquainted with the meanes of our iustification they know not the difference betweene the Law and the Gospel neither the vse of the one or the other they cannot discerne any thing betweene the religion of Christ and of Antichrist Lastly The third reproofe it serueth to stoppe the mouthes of all proude and malicious slaunderers of the Gospel that accuse the preaching and publishing thereof as the cause of the sinnes and enormities that abound among vs as also of the plagues and pnishments that God hath inflicted vpon the land These men vttering the froth and scumme of their soule mouthes and belching vp the venome of their poisoned hearts cry out It was neuer wel since this new religion sprung vp since there was so much teaching and preaching that we haue so much knowledge and learning that we are well the worse for it The cause of Gods iudgements is not the preaching of the Gospel but the contempt of the Gospel and because we haue the light but loue darkenesse more then the light God iustly giueth ouer such prophane beasts into a reprobate sense Our great ignorance is the cause of our sinnes and that we are children of darkenesse rather then of the day of the night not of the light Are not these ashamed to say that the light of the Sun causeth men to stumble and goe
Christian Magistrate and yeeld it to the Church when a wicked Magistrate is set ouer it forasmuch as there is like reason and office of them both If it bee farther obiected Obiection that there are some sinnes which an euill Magistrate will not meddle withall as blasphemy against Christ heresie and such like as Gallio the Deputy of Achaia accounteth the mystery of religion concerning Christ a question of words and names and professeth hee will be no Iudge of such matters whereas if it were a matter of wrong he would heare thē Acts 18 15. Wherefore vnder a wicked and idolatrous Magistrate excommunication may be vsed not otherwise I answer Answer from the lawfulnesse of it vnder a Magistrate that is no Christian we cannot conclude the vnlawfulnesse of it vnder a Christian Magistrate for this is no good consequent neither is it a sufficient cause against the expresse commandement and institution of Christ Zanch. de redempt li. 1. c. 19 The cause of the institution of excommunication is not the punishment of sinne but the saluation of a sinner the edifying of the Church and the glory of God But the scope of the ciuill Magistrate and his office is to punish sinne and respecteth not either the saluation or damnation of the sinner so that albeit he repent yet he spareth him not but suffereth the law to proceede against him The Church according to the doctrine of Christ smiteth none with the spirituall sword but such as are impenitent and doth not this vnto death but vnto life and therefore receiueth them that repent Againe the manner that they both vse in correction is diuers the Church correcteth by the word the Magistrate by the sword or such like outward punishment To conclude this point The vse of excommunication ought to be perpetuall in the church the vse of excommunication ought to be perpetuall in the Church whether it haue a Christian Magistrate or not whether he doe his duty or do it not For first the doctrine of reprouing our brother betweene vs and him alone as also of taking two or three witnesses ought to remaine in the church and haue continuall vse whether the Magistrate be a Christian or Pagan Therefore that also which followeth If he heare not the Church let him be to thee as an heathen or a Publican whereby the doctrine of excommunication is established ought to be perpetuall If one part of this discipline stand in force at all times then doth the other also forasmuch as Christ maketh no exception betweene the one and the other Againe it is lawfull for the Church whether the Magistrate be a Christian or no Christian to loose them that are bound and to receiue into the Church such as are cast out for their contumacy and continuance in sinne when once they repent Therefore also it is lawfull to cast out and to binde those that are impenitent and as the first is alwaies ratified in heauen so also is the latter For Christ without any difference or distinction gaue both these iurisdictions authorities to the church Whatsoeuer yee shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer yee shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen Mat. 18 18. Lastly Paraeus co●ment in 1 C● ● where the causes of the Law are perpetuall vniuersall there the law must also be acknowledged to be perpetual and vniuersall But the causes of this power of the church are perpetuall vniuersall as first the comandement of Christ Mat. 18 18. 1 Cor. 5 5. Secondly that obstinate sinners being made ashamed may bee brought to repentance Thirdly that no others should be infected by their euill life and corrupt example Fourthly because it is the ordinary office of the Church to iudge them that are within Therefore 1 Cor. 5 12. the Church hath this authority when it hath christian Magistrates as well as when it is without them Thus farre touching the remouing of obiections Vse 1 The doctrine being cleered from all doubts that might distract vs let vs now come to the vses And seeing there ought to be excommunication of scandalous and impenitent offenders it should moue vs to enquire and learne what excommunication is not as it is commonly vsed but as it ought rightly to be practised to the end we may esteeme of this censure and sentence and stand in feare of it Excommunication therfore is a sentence of the Church whereby a member thereof Excommunication what it is conuicted of some greeuous crime and by no means brought to repentance is driuen out of the Church and cut off from the communion and fellowship of the faithfull that thereby he may be driuen to repentance This description consisteth of diuers parts first it is a sentence of the Church secondly it must be executed vpon him that is a member of the Church Thirdly the party delinquent must be conuicted of some greeuous crime or crimes Fourthly it stretcheth to him that cannot bee otherwise brought to repentance Fiftly he is driuen from the visible and outward communion of the Saints Lastly the end or vse of it is to make him ashamed that hath offended These sixe seuerall points touched before in the former description haue euident confirmation out of the word of God which I will breefely prooue and then make vse of euery particular First I say that excommunication is a sentence of the Church ●irst part ●e descrip● Our Sauiour commandeth to tell the Church Math. 18 17. Loe here to whom he sendeth vs. Againe he saith If he heare not the Church c. So the Apostle speaketh 1 Cor. 5 4. When ye are gathered together in the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ From hence wee learne sundry points first such as are themselues out of the Church and no true parts of it haue nothing to doe with it They haue no authority committed vnto them and therefore whatsoeuer they shall do in this behalfe is of no force and no better then a sword in a mad mans hand The keyes of the Kingdome of heauen are committed to the Apostles and to their successors by Christ himselfe that they should open the gates of heauen to the penitent and beleeuers shut the gates of hell on the other side open hell to receiue the impenitent and shut vp heauen against them Secondly we are taught from hence the honour and dignity of the Ministery how great it is to binde and loose offenders to open and shut heauen to remit and reteine sins so that it belongeth not to priuate persons It is accounted and most worthily a myracle to be wondred at that Elias did by his prayer shut vp heauen that it rained not on the earth and againe opened it so that the heauen gaue raine ●es 5 18. and the earth brought foorth her fruite But this power of the Ministery is more maruellous inasmuch as he brought onely a temporall punishment of famine vpon the land but they inflict an euerlasting
both to thee and to the rest of the parts of the Church one being named in stead of all the rest Lastly the text it selfe being rightly weighed and considered will make it plaine and apparant that this is a foolish cauill and a slender euasion to vnderstand the words thus Let him be to thee that is Let him be to thee alone and to no others for Christ hauing said Let him be vnto thee as an heathen man to the end he might strengthen and confirme this that he would ratifie all this in heauen aboue he annexeth immediately after Whatsoeuer yee shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer ye shall loose on earth shall bee loosed in heauen Behold heere the change of number vsed by Christ Tell mee then wherefore when he had said in the singular number Let him bee vnto thee as speaking of one hee spake afterward in the plurall whatsoeuer yee shall loose whatsoeuer ye shall binde as speaking of many What was the cause of this difference but onely to signifie that vnder one person he vnderstood the Church To shut vp this first point wee are not to doubt but that Christ gaue power and authority to the Church to excommunicate wicked persons that are obstinate and impenitent when by priuate admonition they cannot bee wonne as we shall shew more at large afterward Secondly we must consider when any man is to be excommunicated the fit season wherof is when he hath contemned all admonitions and exhortations of priuate men and is waxen proud and selfe-willed setteth himselfe against the Church and not before For then he manifesteth as cleerely as the light that shineth at noone day not onely his obstinacy resolution to goe forward in sinne but his contempt of the word and of the Church and of Christ himselfe the author of the word and the head of the Church so that hee is separated from the communion which all the faithfull seruants of GOD haue with Iesus Christ and the Church whereof wee say in the Articles of our faith I beleeue the holy Catholike Church the Communion of Saints Whereby it appeareth that he who is excommunicated is not properly by the Churches censure separated from God and his people but is declared pronounced to be separate forasmuch as properly it is sin which separateth 〈◊〉 ● 2. Your iniquities haue separated betweene you and your God and your sins haue hid his face from you that he will not heare Excommunication then doth not separate but serueth to shew who are separated euen as the fanne doth not make the chaffe but sheweth it manifestly which before lay hid among the good Corne. Whensoeuer therefore sinners grow obstinate it is high time to draw out this sword of iustice to cut off from the Citty of God such incorrigible persons Thirdly Christ our Sauiour sheweth to whō excommunication belongeth and who are subiect vnto it He is vnder it that is called a brother and being exhorted will not heare being admonished will not obey being reproued will not repent He must be a brother he must be admonished reprooued and conuinced He must be told of his fault or faults priuately and publikely He must be one that hath confessed Christ and called vpon God the Father together with vs albeit hee haue denied him in his deeds It is the Lord that will iudge thē that are without 〈◊〉 5 12. the Church hath nothing to doe with them God will punish those that are in the Church those that are out of the Church forasmuch as all belong to his iurisdiction it is not so with the Church they haue nothing to do with such as are infidels and neuer gaue their names to Christ as Turkes Iewes Pagans and such like For as they that neuer were in the Synagogue and of the Synagogue could not be put out of the Synagogue and as they that were not of the communion cannot be thrust out of the communion so they that were neuer of the Church or in the number of the faithful brethren cannot be cast out of the Church For these only are they that are spots and blots to the church these are they that cause the Name of God to be euill spoken off these are they that lay stūbling blocks before the weake these are they that regard not the first or second table of the Law these are they that tread vnder foot all counsels perswasions and admonitions made out of the word of God these are they that are setled and resolued to continue in euill whatsoeuer the Church say vnto them Fourthly he is to be excommunicated only that hath in this manner offended neither is it to bee suffered or allowed or practised that one should be excommunicated for another except peraduenture he also offend and be intangled in the same sinne or haue giuen consent vnto it The sonne is not to bee excommunicated for the father nor the father for the sonne The rule of the Apostle is to be obserued Gal. 6 5. Euery man shall beare his owne burden It is a common prouerbe among vs Euery vessell shall stand vpon his owne bottome that is euery one shall beare the punishment of his owne sinne This is it which the Prophet Ieremy teacheth chap. 31 30. Euery one shall dye for his owne iniquity euery man that eateth the sowre grape his teeth shall be set on edge To this purpose speaketh Paul Roman 14 12. Euery one of vs shall giue an account to God for himselfe If any obiect Obiect that we are to giue an account to God not onely for our selues but for these also that belong vnto our charge as the father for himselfe and his children as we see in Eli the Shepheard for his sheepe and the watchman for the soules of the people as the Lord saith His blood will I require at thy hands Ezek 33.10 and Hebr. 13 verse 17. They watch for your soules as they that must giue an account Answer I answer they shall indeed giue an account and be punished howbeit it is for their owne sins and no farther Parents Masters Magistrates and Ministers shall not answer for their sinnes that are committed vnto them for the sinnes of their children their seruants their subiects and their hearers but for the sinnes which themselues commit by their negligence because they do not looke vnto them nor admonish them nor reprooue them nor restraine them as it is plainely expressed in the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 33 verse 8 9. If thou doest not speake to warne the wicked from his way that wicked man shall die in his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand Neuerthelesse if thou warne the wicked of his way to turne from it if he do not turne from his way he shall dye in his iniquity but thou hast deliuered thy soule So then he that is impenitent is to be excommunicated euen he onely and not others that are not partakers of his sinne S. Augustine hath
enemies to their brethren they draw an heauier enemy vpon themselues to wit God himselfe Before we passe from this so necessary a duty it shall not be amisse for vs both to obserue such motiues as may stirre vs vp to the practise of it and to answere such obiections as may hinder vs from yeelding obedience vnto it First of all let vs lay before vs the example of Christ the author and finisher of our saluation who had greater wrong offered vnto him then he had who was more innocent then he that was as a sheepe dumbe before his shearer and opened not his mouth and therefore the Apostle Peter saith chap. 2.22 Christ suffered for vs leauing vs an example that ye should follow his steps who did no sin neither was guile found in his mouth who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe when he suffered he threatned not but cōmitted himselfe to him that iudgeth righteously This farther appeareth vnto vs in that he prayed for his enemies that persecuted him He had power in his own hand to haue resisted their force 〈◊〉 34 reuenged his cause He could haue praied to his Father he would haue giuen him more then twelu legions of Angels yet notwithstanding he suffered patiently 〈◊〉 ●6 53 the iust for the vniust 〈◊〉 18. that he might bring vs to God If any thinke or alledge that this example is too high for vs aboue our reach and too eminent in regard of his person who is God aboue to be worshipped let vs set before vs the examples of the faithful seruants of God that haue liued in all ages in the time of the law and vnder the Gospel ●ed mo● that this may be another motiue vnto vs. How often did the children of Israel murmure against Moses and Aaron and sometimes went about to stone him yet he neuer sought reuenge against them albeit he had bin able to right his own cause by force When Miriam Aaron spake against him by reason of the woman of Ethiopia 〈◊〉 12.2 3 and said What hath the Lord spoken only by Moses hath he not also spoken by vs Moses held his peace and gaue not taunt for taunt rebuke for rebuke he was a very meeke man aboue all the men that were vpon the earth Thus was it with Dauid a man indeed after Gods owne heart though he were a king and wanted not seruants to execute his will yet he would not himselfe reuenge neither suffer any other to take reuenge on Shimei albeit he cursed the king with an horrible curse Saul sought his life 〈◊〉 16.9 and preferred him to be his son in law for no other cause but to lay a snare before him when Dauid had his life oftentimes in his hand to saue it or to destroy it ye he was so farre from seeking reuenge 〈◊〉 26.9 〈◊〉 24.5 that his heart smote him for cutting off the lap of his garment When Stephen had made a worthy defence for himselfe and his own innocency that the enemies could take no iust exception against him their hearts brast asunder and they gnashed at him with their teeth ran vpon him violently all at once 〈◊〉 60. but he kneeled down and cryed with a loud voyce Lord lay not this sin to their charge The Church of Rome are not ashamed to teach thereby to strengthen the hands of traitors rebels that rise vp against Princes that Christians of old deposed not Nero and Dioclesian and Iulian the Apostata and Valens the Arrian and such like persecutous and heretikes 〈◊〉 de Rom. ●●b 5. c. 7. because they wanted temporall power and if they had had power they would haue done it If this be true all their patience was perforce and is not thanke-worthy But they testifie in many places that they had power sufficient but held it vnlawfull to resist and rebell They had filled all places Cities Ilands castles boroughes tents tribes bandes palaces ● Apolog. the Senate and Court not excepted so that they wanted neither number nor strength to make their party good They professe that albeit they be equall in power yet with them it is more tollerable to be killed then to kill They affirme freely God forbid that his religion should be maintained with fire and sword They acknowledge no other weapons to be put into their hands but praiers tears Arma nostra sunt pre●es lacrymae Tert. They neuer practised any reuēge against their persecutors and those that hated them One night with a little fire would haue serued and sufficed them largely to be reuenged of their enemies but they accounted it vnlawful to requite euill with euill But to leaue this consideration to another occasion let vs come to a third motiue A third motiue that is the office which is proper vnto God to whom it belongeth peculiarly to take vengeance and is therefore in holy Scripture called the God of vengeance Psal 94.1 O Lord God the auenger O God the auenger shew thy selfe clearly It is a grieuous sin to sit down in Gods seat and to rob him of his right and royalty Let the enemies of God and his people know that he is the God of reuenge as well as the God of saluation and that he wil as wel right their causes as saue their soules He is a iust God wil recompense tribulation to all that trouble those that are his and therefore hath said Deut. 32 3● Vengeance and recompense are mine but he neuer said to priuate persons Vengeance is thine neither did he euer put the sword into their hands A fourth motiue A fourth motiue to perswade vs to lay aside priuate reuenge is drawn from the gracious promise that God hath made vnto vs namely that he will take our causes into his hand and pay them home that do oppresse vs. For God doth not restraine vs as it were tye vp our hands to expose vs to all iniuries and to leaue vs as a prey in the iawes of the Lyons but because he hath passed his word vnto vs I will repay Rom. 12.29 saith the Lord. So then we must know that God is called the authour and executer of vengeance not only because the power and right belongeth vnto him that he is able to take vengeance of all our enemies how many and mighty soeuer they bee but because he hath vsed this power executed this office from the beginning of the world and as yet vseth it and will vse it to the ful in the great day of the general iudgement He knoweth best of all the greatnes of the iniury that is done vnto vs because he searcheth into the thoughts of the heart and vnderstandeth not only what is done but the manner how it is done Seeing then he hath promised to pay them home into their bosomes that wrong vs it were a fruit of infidelity in vs not to beleeue him at his word
Ver. 38. Ver. 39. and to let them alone If this counsell or this worke be of men it will come to nought but if it be of God ye cannot destroy it lest ye be found euen fighters against God They agreed vnto him and left off their consultation of killing them and putting them to death and albeit they could not conuince them of errour neyther were able to lay false doctrine to their charges Ver. 40. 4● yet they suffered rebuke and were beaten for the Name of Christ Thus doe the enemies of God deale in all ages with the godly they hate them for no other cause but because they follow goodnesse Psal 38. and will not follow them into all excesse of riot 1 Pet. 4. They can lay nothing to their charge and yet they thinke them worthy of punishment They can accuse them of no crime and yet they ceasse not to accuse them They are not ashamed to cry out vpon them and to speake all manner of euill against them and yet when they haue deuised what mischiefe they can against thē broched what slanders they can and vttered all their malice the greatest fault that they can finde in them is this that they serue God in the sincerity of their hearts and labour to please him with vprightnesse of life When the enemies of Daniel sought occasion against him to bring him out of fauour with the King and into danger of his life they could finde no matter against him in the affaires of the kingdome albeit they desired nothing more so that when after all searching and watching of him they were at their wits end in the end they concluded thus Wee shall not finde any occasion against this Daniel except wee finde it against him concerning the Law of his God Dan. 6 verse 5. This was the hainous crime that they laide to his charge as if he had committed fellony or treason that hee praied to God and made his petition vnto him verse 13. Thus fareth it with all those that are the worshippers of the true God and make conscience of their waies the wicked wretches of this world reuile them and make hue and cry against them as if they were some great malefactors and had committed somewhat worthy of death and yet when all cometh to the vpshot what hath the righteous done or what matter is it that they haue against them Surely no more then the Presidents and Princes had against Daniel the cause they haue against them is concerning the Law of their God they cannot abide them because they are too precise in keeping the Sabbath they will not sweare and blaspheme the Name of God they will not drinke and bee drunke with them they will not runne riot and play the good fellowes with them they are neuer well but when they are reading or praying or reasoning and conferring of the waies of God they are alwaies reproouing vs and finding fault with vs for one thing or other I thinke wee shall do nothing for them shortly To be short they deale with the faithfull as Ahab spake concerning Michaiah 1 Kin. 22 verse 8. There is one man by whom wee may enquire of the Lord but I hate him for hee doth not prophesie good concerning me but euill But did he not speake the truth the King did not nor could not charge him with vttering lies He prophesied euill vnto thee O Ahab because thou wast euill if thou hadst beene good he would haue spoken good vnto thee And this is the cause why the vngodly hate the godly If then wee bee thus dealt withall at any time let it not discourage vs but therein let vs reioyce because wee are made like vnto the Prophets that were before vs wee are made like vnto the Apostles nay wee are made conformable vnto our Sauiour Christ himselfe We must not looke it should goe better with vs then it did with them forasmuch as the world wil alwaies be like it selfe and vnlike to them Secondly no man is to be condemned vpon Vse 2 suspicion onely or vpon presumption or bare surmise or another mans accusation for if it were enough to be accused innocency it selfe cannot escape and the most innocent shall be soonest made away True it is the godly must giue no iust cause to bee euill spoken off but abstaine from all appearance of euill and cut off occasions from thē that seeke occasions howbeit whether occasion be giuen or not euery man may suspect what they list and how farre they list and of whom they list and who can say against them So that it is not enough to condemne a man or to account him guilty to be suspected Some haue such iealous heads and vnsetled braines that they will make occasions of suspicion ●d in Trinū which are no occasions Suspicion is in another mans heart or head therefore we cannot alwaies auoide suspicion except we had the gouernment of their hearts and heads the which thēselues euermore haue not We must be carefull to auoid the fault though we cannot the fame we must take heed of the sinne though we can preuent the suspicion The fault and offence is in our selues 〈◊〉 Ethic. l. 1. suspicion is in another Euen as honour is in him that honoureth not in him that is honoured and as contempt is in him that contemneth not in him that is contemned forasmuch as it lyeth not in our power to be honoured or to be despised so it is with suspicion 〈◊〉 comment Tim. 4. it hath place in the minde of another and it lyeth not in our choice whether we will be suspected or not no more thē it doth in him that is despised who would willingly be honoured The brethren of Ioseph were suspected to be spies and to come to see the weaknesse of the Land Gen. 42 9. True it is he dissembled with them concealed himselfe from them but if indeed he had so conceiued or rather misconceiued and misiudged of thē who could hinder or helpe it or how could they preuent or redresse it as it fell out with the messengers of Dauid that he sent to Hanun the sonne of Nahash King of Ammon for his Princes said vnto him 〈◊〉 10 3. Thinkest thou that Dauid doth honour thy father that hee hath sent comforters vnto thee Hath he not rather sent his seruants vnto thee to search the City and to spie it out and to ouerthrow it This they suspected returned euill for good These messengers behaued themselues vprightly in their Embassage they gaue no more occasion of these surmises to Hanun then Iosephs brethren did vnto him yet who could stoppe them in so doing Who was more innocent then Ioseph that hearkened not to the tentations and allurements of his mistresse nor desired or delighted to be in her company 〈◊〉 9 19 20. yet his ouer-credulous master hearing the words and accusation of his wife not onely held him in suspicion but tooke him as guilty and put
him into prison and Ioseph could by no meanes satisfie his master nor blot out the wrong opinion he had conceiued of him The like we might shew touching Saul toward Ionathan his sonne and Dauid his seruant that were notwithstanding loyall faithfull vnto him He conceiued in minde that all had conspired against him 1 Sam. 22 8 29 4. yet there was none would shew him that his sonne had made a league with the sonne of lesse there was none sorry for him or sheweth vnto him that his sonne had stirred vp his seruant against him to lie in waite to take away his life from him These two innocent men had made indeed a league together but not against the King their father a league of amity not of conspiracy neither had they giuen the least cause of suspicion to be so hardly cēsured and sinisterly iudged off yet who could remoue out of his minde that iealousie or perswade him that they intended no hurt or mischiefe against him In like manner dealt the proud men with Ieremy Ierem. 43 3. they charged him to haue spoken falsely and that the Lord had not sent him to charge them not to goe downe into Egypt they suspected that Baruch had set him on against them to deliuer them into the hand of the Caldeans that they might put them to death and carry them captiues into Babylon This was the deuise of their owne braines the imagination of their owne harts yet what could Ieremy doe against it or which way could he stay them from suspecting thus Whē as Paul hauing appealed to Caesar had escaped shipwracke and was come safe to Melita the Barbarians seeing a viper fastned on his hand Acts 28 4. said among themselues This man surely is a murtherer whom though he haue escaped the sea yet vengeance suffereth not to liue Thus we see that albeit we do not commit any crime worthy to be accused or censured yet we cannot hinder those that are credulous from misdeeming and mistrusting of vs. It lyeth in vs wholly to giue no iust cause of suspicion but lyeth not in vs wholly to preuent suspicion For euil persons may suspect what they please without ground and foundation without reason and occasion The Magistrates censured Paul to be a troubler of the Citty Acts 16 20. the Iewes traduced him to be a polluter of the Temple Acts 21 28. and a Preacher against the Law Tertullus accused him to be a pestilent fellow and a mouer of sedition among all the Iewes throughout the world and a ring-leader of the sect of the Nazarens Acts chap. 24 verse 5. Thus he is suspected and how could he auoide it Wherefore good men depend not vpon the opinion of other men but stand vppon their owne innocency they do not rise or goe downe stand or fall as it shall please other men to conceiue of them for that were to walke vpon other mens feete or to leane vpon the staffe that resteth in another mans hand that may deceiue thē but they builde their house vpon the foundation of their owne vertues and haue or at least ought to haue matter enough within them to commend themselues It must not seeme strange to the godly when they feele the bitter fruits of these suspicions It hath euermore fared thus with them This then ought not to make vs wauer or to weaken vs in our profession but rather encourage vs to walke through good report and euill report and to furnish vs to passe through fire and water life and death knowing that God is able and will in the end bring our cause into the light and make the innocency of our persons and the iustice of our cause manifest to the glory of his Name to the comfort of our hearts to the confusion of his and our enemies as we shall shew afterward Thus he dealt with Ioseph after he had tried his patience by suffering for well doing Psal 105 18. Gen. 3● 21. for though he were laid in irons and his feete hurt with fetters yet the Lord was with him and shewed him mercy gaue him fauour in the sight of the keeper of the prison to whom no doubt he shewed his vprightnesse and cleered himselfe of that wickednes which was laide to his charge So also he dealt with Dauid with Ieremy and the rest of the righteous This doth Dauid intreat oftentimes when he was laden with the reproches of his enemies when he was bitten with the teeth and smitten with the tongues of the malignant Psal 7 3 4 5 6 Thus we see if suspition were cause sufficient to condemne and censure any no man could stand in iudgement but equity should be turned into iniquity truth into falsehood innocency it selfe should receiue a checke and counterbuffe Let not then the wicked triumph as if they had gotten the victory and giuen the godly a foile when they can alledge against them how many waies of how many persons they are suspected for that as much may bee suspected of them when as nothing at all can be proued by thē It is not the suspicion or the accusation or the condemnation or the execution that maketh a man guilty of euill or to deserue death but the offence that is committed worthy of punishment If then they be free from crime they are happy when they are iudged vnhappy and may reioyce and be glad when their enemies haue cause to weepe and waile Vse 3 Lastly let Magistrates and all that are in authority whether in the common-wealth or in the family put this in practise For seeing euery one should be tried before he be censured and that examination must goe before condemnation let them not receiue euery cōplaint and accusation but let them do iustice and iudgement defend the poore and fatherlesse releeue the weake and oppressed rid them out of the hand of the wicked Let this be the end of their gouernment to sing mercy and iudgement and diligently to consider the causes that come before them To this purpose there is required of them two things wisedome and patience without which they shall neuer proceed aright in taking away euill but sometimes plucke vp good corne instead of weedes or suffer thistles to grow instead of wholesome herbes Wisedome is required to finde out particular offences to know the number the nature the measure the proceeding in them the encrease of them and all circumstances as we see Eccl. 7 20 21. This will teach vs when to correct and when we may deferre correction in hope of amendment it being the discretion of a man to deferre his anger Prou. 20 30. And albeit the blewnesse of the wound clenseth away euill yet a man ought not to giue scope to his anger neither yet exceed measure Secondly there is required patience that we be not too hot and hasty vpon those that haue offended but to quiet our mindes and heare their answers what they can alledge for themselues as Iob
handled before Now wee come to consider the yssue and effect of the whole matter according to the determination of God For as he foretold what should come to passe so hee faileth not in it but accordingly verifieth the same Whatsoeuer hee hath spoken shall fall out whether hee promise any thing vnto vs or threaten any thing against vs. Hee is not as man that he should lye neyther as the sonne of man that hee should repent as Balaam by the Spirit of God prophesieth heereafter in this booke Chapt. 23. verse 19. And Christ our Sauiour teacheth Math. 5 18. that Heauen and earth must passe away but one word of his mouth shall not passe away but all shall be accomplished and fulfilled This euent heere mentioned is two-fold First respecting the guilty in the 27. Verse where it is shewed that shee shall perish according as shee sinned and her name shall turne into a Prouerbe of cursing Secondly in respect of the innocent because by drinking of the water shee shall receiue and feele no hurt but God will turne that wrongfull suspition and causelesse calumniation into a great blessing and so reward her innocency that he wil turne the heart of her husband toward her who hath the hearts of all men in his power and turneth them about as pleaseth him so that they shall mutually loue one another and be blessed in their children that shall be giuen vnto them Now the question may be asked Obiect whether this force to discerne betweene the guiltie and the innocent and to bring to light the things that were hidden in darkenesse were in the water it selfe and a qualitie inherent in it and infused into it I answer Answer we must ascribe no power to the water it selfe which in regarde of the substance was no other then common Water forasmuch as both the guilty and the vnguilty did drinke of it or at least might drinke of it The whole force proceeded from the operation of God and his holy institution The brazen Serpent set vpon a pole and looked vppon by them that were bitten by the fierie Serpents did heale them so that albeit they were stung yet they dyed not Howe came this to passe Was it in regard of the matter or of the forme Surely of neyther but all the vertue proceeded from GOD the author of it When Christ healed the blinde man Iohn 9. verse 6. He spate vpon the ground and made clay of the spettle he annointed the eyes of the blinde man with the clay and bad him wash in the poole of Siloam who went his way and washed and returned seeing All men know and can easily iudge that this could not by any naturall operation restore sight to the blind so that it was Christ that healed him not the spettle not the clay not the annointing not the washing This may bee expressed and conceiued by the miracle that Christ shewed vpon the woman that had an issue of blood Mat. 9 20. Marke 5 28. She came behind him and touched the hem of his garment for she said If I may touch but his clothes onely I shall be whole what then Did his garments heal her or were they the cause that her fountain of blood stanched and dried vp No it was the power of Christ that gaue a blessing to the weake meanes and therefore he saith to his disciples Some bodie hath touched me Luke 8 46. for I perceiue that vertue is gone out of me He saith not out of the border of my garment which shee hath touched Shee touched indeede the garment of Christ but it was her faith in Christ that made her whol So in this place both sorts that came to be tryed drunke of the water and according as they were either innocent or not innocent so it fell out vnto them howbeit it was God that vnderstandeth all secrets that brought the trueth to light not any inherent strength that was in the waters Verse 27. And when he hath made her to drinke the water c. Heere wee haue obserued that the successe of the whole busines is contained wherein Moses declareth what doth follow and most certainly come to passe if the woman haue beene abused Heere is set down the temporall punishment that shall come vpon her The more she hath stood vppon her purgation and the greater her impudency and shamelesnesse hath beene the more notorious is her sinne and the more notable is her punishment God hauing all meanes in his owne hand could haue punished her if it had pleased him otherwise but to make it the better appeare that he is the maintainer and preseruer of marriage which is his owne institution and that all might acknowledge the iudgement to be from his hand hee punisheth her in those parts wherewith shee had offended Hee hath all diseases in his owne power to bring vpon the breakers of his ordinance and the transgressors of his Law he might therefore haue stricken her with the leprosie or with plague and pestilence with the consumption with incurable agues or with such an issue of blood as we heard off before in the woman that was cured by touching of Christs garment but to brand her with a perpetuall marke of infamy and to shew how hee hateth adultery hee meeteth with her in her owne kind and punished those parts of her body which she had abused Ezek 16.25 She had opened her feet as the Prophet speaketh to euery one that passed by so that shee became as a wife that committeth adultery which taketh strangers in stead of her husband Her filthinesse was powred out and her nakednesse discouered her belly and thighes communicated to another howbeit her pleasure should be turned into paine and she should be iudged as women that breake wedlocke she should feele the curse of God end her daies in reproach for as she had sinned with her belly so her belly should swell through greatnesse and anguish and as she had opened her thighes so they should rot away so that she shold be punished where she most deserued and become a fearefull spectacle of a forlorne creature and a liuing carkasse consuming in her flesh and dying being yet aliue We doe all learne from hence Doctrine God punisheth in the same things wherein men and women offend and in the same maner that God doth not onely punish sinne but he punisheth sinne in his owne kinde He dealeth with men and women in his punishments as they deale with him in their transgressions so that according as we sinne so we are punished We see this by infinite examples laid before vs in the word of God Consider with me the enemies persecuters of Daniel that sought his life and caused him to be cast into the Lyons denne but how doth God meete with them he might haue reuenged himselfe vpon them by his owne immediate hand but hee would not for they perish and are punished the same way Dan. 6.14 for the king commanded to bring
there cannot be a greater benefit God the Father offereth and assureth his owne Sonne whom he hath sealed to be the Mediatour of our redemption he deludeth and deceiueth no man that commeth to the Supper as a guest prepared for the marriage feast 2 Cor. 2.16 For as the word turneth to be the sauour of death vnto death to the vnreuerent and vnregarding hearer so in truth is the Sacrament the sauour of death vnto death to the vnworthy and vnwise receiuer Let vs therefore throughly examine and prooue our selues whether we be in the faith or not 2 Cor. 13 5. and consider diligently what is set before vs and hunger and thirst after Christ that we may obtaine this hidden Manna This we shall neuer do except we obserue these few rules First we must try our selues by the law of God whereby commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3 20 7 7. It is a cleere glasse to shew vs our faces or rather our hearts Iam. 1 23. From hence we must frame an editement against our selues Secondly we must labour to vnderstand and beleeue the common corruption of all mankinde standing partly in originall sinne and partly in the fruites thereof wherewith all are tainted as with an vncleane leprosie from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot Rom. 3 9. Thirdly we must feele the curse of euerlasting death due to vs Gal. 3 10. Fourthly we must learne what couenant God hath made with vs touching grace and mercy that we may be raised vp to comfort in the Sonne of God our Redeemer Fiftly we must desire to be made partakers of the Lords Supper and feele how much we stand in need of it which will follow necessarily vpon the former Lastly we should fit our selues the better vnto the worke by considering the proportion betweene the signes and the things signified The beholding of the breaking of the bread the powring out of the wine should enforce vs to remember the body of Christ broken and his blood shed for vs. When wee looke vpon the Minister comming to vs and reaching forth these elements We should consider that the Lord Iesus himselfe commeth to vs and offereth himselfe with all his mercies and merits vnto vs if wee haue faith to receiue him And as we lay hold vpon the bread and wine and take them in our hands so we must stretch forth the hand of a liuely faith to lay hold of Christ for with him we shall entertaine all his sauing benefits to our endlesse and euerlasting comfort CHAP. X. Ver. 1 2. And the Lord spake vnto Moses saying Make thee two Trumpets of siluer c. HEere wee haue the conclusion of the first part of this book Doctrine Of the siluer Trumpets the vse of thē In this chapter we are to consider two thinges First the commandement of God directed to Moses to make two siluer Trumpets Secondly the remouing of the Israelites from Sinai to Paran Touching the Trumpets they are described by the matter they must be made of siluer by the forme of an whole piece Thirdly by the ends for the calling of the assembly and for the iournying of the Campe. Fourthly by the manner prescribed how to vse them to what purpose one alone is to be sounded to what purpose both when an alarme is to be blowne and when the alarme is to be blowne the second time when they must blow but not sound the alarme Fiftly by telling who shall be the trumpetters or sound the Trumpets the sonnes of Aaron the Priest Lastly by the time how long this vse shall continue to wit as an ordinance for euer euen so long as the Commonwealth of the Israelites shall endure This is the present vse of them there is a double vse of them commanded for the time to come one in time of warre to assure them that God will then remember them for good and saue them from their enemies ver 9 the other in time of peace at their solemne feasts at their burnt offerings and peace offerings Vse 1 The vses of them follow which are partly ciuill and partly ecclesiasticall And first seeing these siluer Trumpets serued for the Camp and the Congregation to assemble and to remoue and that the power of making them is committed to Moses who hath the sole prerogatiue to call and to dissolue assemblies about publike affaires we learn that it belongeth to Kings and Princes as their proper right to gather together The authority of K ngs and Princes what it is and to dismisse them that are gathered together Euery one hath not authority and iurisdiction to draw multitudes together we shall haue no small ado if that may be suffered Acts 1● 23. We must haue lawfull and orderly assemblies vers 29. and such as do not sauour of confusion So it was in Egypt without Phar●oh no man might lift vp his hand or foot in all the Land of Egypt Gen. 41 44. This right is annexed to the highest power by an estate indefeizible and by a perpetuall law that cannot be dissolued throughout all generations As this power together with the Trumpets was giuen to Moses so did he and his successours practise the same who commanded in chiefe as Deut. 33 ver 5. Numb 31 6. Ioshua called and dismissed the people and they obeyed him in the execution of that power no lesse then they had done Moses before Iosh 1 17 and 24 28. So did Dauid vse these Trumpets 1 Chron 15 4 23 2 3 6. When the Arke was to be remoued and when the offices of the Tabernacle were to be ordered which are things meerely belonging to true religion The like we might say of Salomon 2 Chron. 5 2. of Asa Iehosaphat Hezekiah and Iosiah Thus were all generall Councels congregated and called together and there were none otherwise called for a thousand yeares after Christ but by the Trumpet of Moses that is by the authority of Caesar Thus did Moses also in gathering assemblies about publike affaires both for consultation and action For consultation The nece●● of gatheri●● assemblie● because many eies may discerne that which few cannot For action because many hands may discharge that which is troublesome cumbersome for one to do Exod. 18.18 This serueth to reproue three sorts first the Bishop of Rome who as a theefe and vsurper hath encroched vpon the Princes right and stollen away one of these siluer Trumpets and carried to it Rome He would leaue Moses but one Trumpet and would limit his office to ciuill and temporall things challenging power in all spirituall causes and ouer all spirituall persons Howbeit Aaron the High-Priest neuer offered to wring and wrest out of the hand of Moses this power he was content to blow them at the commandement of Moses or rather at the commandement of God Nay such is the tyranny of this proud Bishop that he contenteth not himselfe with one Trumpet though he haue indeed right to none
the wound and it is he that must and can heale restore againe The mitigation of the punishment followeth which is restrained to seuen dayes amplified by an vnequall comparison drawne from the lesse to the greater from an earthly father to his children who if hee should shew any the least token of his anger and displeasure to his children they wold be afraid and ashamed for a season to come into his presence how much more then ought she to be ashamed to lift vp her head and to come vnto the hoste among whom the Lord dwelleth and walketh being stricken with his iudgement For by spitting in the face is ment any token of reproch or disgrace 〈◊〉 ●5 8 Therefore she was shut out and separate from the hoste seuen daies during which time the people iourneyed not till that one member as it were cut off were againe recouered restored to the rest of the body Thus much touching the order of the words to the end of the chapter ●●●●rine 〈◊〉 ●rath of 〈◊〉 kind●●●ainst 〈…〉 ●ers 〈…〉 ● 2 3. 〈…〉 34.7 〈…〉 ● 4 〈…〉 ●9 2 〈…〉 ●1 2 3. First let vs come to the signification of the punishment the wrath of God was kindled Wee learne hereby that the wrath of God is kindled against offenders Deut. 32.22 41 42. The reasons hereof are euident First the nature of God is most pure and holy and hee hateth euill whersoeuer he findeth it Secondly sin maketh a separation betweene God and his people it hideth his face from vs that hee will not heare Thirdly he punisheth sin and executeth iudgement vpon the sinner yea hee spareth none no not his owne children that prouoke him by their sins much lesse others as we see in Adam in Caine in the old world in Sodome and Gomorrha in Pharaoh and the Egyptians and sundry others Vse 1 The vses remaine First we see that anger is not simply to bee condemned in man but the excesse or defect thereof when it is too much or too little It is a naturall affection graffed in man when it is mooued as there is iust cause 〈…〉 ● 5 it is an holy affection noted to bee in Christ he looked angerly vpon them mourning for the hardnes of their hearts And whē he saw the buyers and sellers in the Temple the zeale of Gods house did euen eat him vp Now zeal is partly compounded of anger and partly of sorrow and partly of loue So must we be angry and greeued if there be any loue of God in vs at sin whersoeuer we find it Anger indeed for euery trifle or more then there is cause is sinfull as also not to be angry when there is cause But of this see farther chap. 16. Secondly feare to offend him that is a consuming Vse 2 fire Matth. 10.28 and is able to destroy body soul into hell fire Euery one must learne to know what it is that doth offend him It is the breach of his law he is offended by blasphemy by contempt of his word by swearing by idolatry by breach of the Sabboth and such like impieties forbidden in the first Table These sins for the most part men do little thinke vpon and because the lawes of men doe not take hold of them they regard them not one whit wheras God hath most seuerely punished thē and reuenged the dishonor done to his name The like we might ●ay of adultery drunkennesse malice couetousnesse and such like they are for the most part thought to bee no sins at all and slightly considered off whereas he is alwayes the same his law is alwayes the same his iustice is alwaies the same and his wrath is kindled against the children of disobedience Ephe. 5.6 Eccles 8.11 Psal ●0 21 Let no man make his mercy an occasion of sin neither turne his grace into wantonnes Lastly let vs giue our selues no rest till we Vse 3 be reconciled to God It is a fearefull thing to lie vnder his wrath Be not quiet vntill he be appeased toward vs the sword put vp into his quiuer Prou. 20.2 The wrath of a Prince is compared to the roaring of a lyon he sinneth against his owne soule that prouoketh him much more may this be said of God Vse therfore the means and remedies to call in his anger How Gods anger is to be called in send an ambassage of peace vnto him the procuring of our peace standeth first in seeking aboue all things the fauor and friendship of God When Herod was displeased with the Tyrians and Sidonians they perswaded Blast us the kings chamberlen to stand their friend they desired peace because their country was nourished by the kings countrey We are nourished by God in whom we liue and moue and haue our being and therefore we haue more cause to come to him with one accord and seeke his fauour Secondly in repentance and turning from our euill wayes whereby we prepare our selues to meet him Amos 4.12 Thirdly in prayer and humbling ourselues before him Thus doth Aaron seek peace by stirring vp the spirit of Moses to pray for them and hereby did Moses procure their peace Thus did they stand in the gappe afterward when the hand of God had made a fearefull breach among the people and the pestilence had slain many thousands wherby they made a blessed atonement Num. 16.47 48. Lastly the procuring of our peace consisteth in beleeuing in Christ and laying hold vpon his merits and righteousnesse which was signified by the incense that Aaron offered when he stood betweene the liuing the dead Christ Iesus is our peace-maker who hath broken downe the middle wall of partition betweene vs he hath reconciled vs vnto God so that by him we haue an accesse vnto the Father by faith we are ioyned to him and lay hold vpon him to eternal life Ephe 2.14.16.18 If we be earnest in seeking these meanes of peace we shall be safe for the danger of his wrath is gone and past Psal 2.12 11 And Aaron said vnto Moses Alas my Lord I beseech thee lay not the sin vpon vs wherein we haue done foolishly wherin we haue sinned 12 Let her not be as one dead of whom the flesh is halfe consumed when he commeth out of his mothers wombe Here we see as we noted before that God would not heare the offenders vnreformed speake vnto him neither abide any talking with them but Aaron is faine to goe to Moses to intreat him that by his intreaty and intercession vnto God the punishment of leprosie may be remoued which is amplified by a comparison of likenesse Doctrine God heareth not such as lie in their sinnes Ioh. ● 31 Psa 66.8 that she may not be as one dead whose flesh is halfe consumed We learn hereby that God heareth not their prayers that lie in their sinnes and are not reconciled vnto him Iob 42.7 8. Esay 1.15 Gen. 20.7 The reasons why God heareth them not
though one be surbordinate to the other yet both of them as good friends ioyne hand in hand and neyther of them ouerthroweth the other The Sunne doth not in vaine rise and set euery day thogh God as the first cause created the light The fields are not in vaine ploughed and sowed by men and watered with the early and latter raine from heauen although GOD bringeth foorth corne out of the earth and giueth bread to strengthen mans heart Psalm 104 verses 14 15. Our bodies are not in vaine refreshed with food albeit God be the life and the length of our daies Acts 17 28. And thouching our soules it is not in vaine to beleeue in Christ to repent from dead works to heare the preaching of the Gospel and to yeeld obedience thereunto although our saluation and eternal life be the free gift of God Rom. 6 23. Secondly whosoeuer is predestinated to the ende Z●nch de ●tribut 〈…〉 cap. 2. they are also predestinated to the meanes without which the end cannot possibly be attained Such as are appointed to eternall life are also appointed to the meanes by which life euerlasting may bee got and obtained For almighty GOD hath from euerlasting decreed both the ends and the meanes not the end without the meanes nor the means without the end but both of them and none must make any diuorce betweene these God himselfe hath prescribed vnto vs the meanes to bring vs to the ends all that shall be saued wil carefully vse them No man well aduised will reason thus If it be determined by Gods prouidence that I shall recouer my health there is no need that I vse either food or physicke and if it be otherwise determined I shall vse in vaine the helpe either of the one or of the other forasmuch as Hezekiah receiued such promise of deliuery and recouery yet he must take a lumpe of figges and lay it for a plaister vpon the boyle that he may recouer Esay 38 21. No man in his right mind will argue thus If God haue ordained that I shall come to my iournies end I need not goe ouer the bridge I may leape into the water I am sure I shall be safe and not be drowned Or if it be determined that theeues shall not rob me nor haue any power ouer me I may thrust my selfe into all companies I may trauaile into dangerous places at all houres of the night and though I stand there of purpose they shall not be able to lay hands vpon me nor to spoile me of my goods If this kinde of reasoning be extreme folly how is it that we see not the vanity of the other Lastly as God appointeth good meanes to Vse 5 bring vs to the end of our faith so it is required of vs to beware of euill meanes and euill waies which leade to hell and tend to destruction There are many in the world that perswade themselues they may follow their euill waies with greedinesse and delight and yet that they shall escape death and damnation well enough that albeit they sowe to the flesh yet they shall not reape corruption Thus hee tempted and seduced Eue in the garden that she might eate freely of the forbidden fruite and yet she should neuer die the death but be as God knowing good and euill Gen. 3 4 5 But we must know that God hath linked together as with a brazen chaine that cannot be broken the pleasures of sinne and the punishments of sinne Rom. 6 23 and 8 2. The Apostle ioyneth sinne and death together coupleth them together as the cause the effect for the wages of sinne is death Thus we see the diuels cunning to beguile teaching that we need not to do good things and yet wee shall come well enough soone enough easie enough to heauen and that we may follow euill things and yet we shall escape hell and destruction See more of this afterward chapter 20. 17. And Moses sent them to spie out the Land of Canaan and saide vnto them Goe you vp this way Southward and goe vp into the Mountaine 18. And see the Land what it is and the people that dwelleth therein whether they be strong or weake few or many 19. And what the Land is that they dwell in c. Albeit the Lord had promised to Abraham and his posterity to giue them the land of Canaan for a possession yet hee will haue them beare themselues wisely and warily prudently and circumspectly in the search and viewing of it to enquire into the people their Cities their Land their multitude their strength and so to get a perfect knowledge of them and for this cause doeth Moses so carefully instruct them The doctrine Doctrine The faithfull must deale wisely in all their enterprises Wisedome is a gift required of the faithfull in all their enterprizes to doe nothing headily rashly rawly and ignorantly We must deale not onely lawfully iustly honestly and godlily but wisely prudently politikely Rebecca hearing of the purpose and intent of Esau waiting opportunity to kill his brother and being desirous to preserue them both but especially Iacob conueyed him away Gen. 27 verse 43. The like appeareth in Abigael 1 Sam. 25 18. she preuented Dauid and the mischiefe hanging ouer her owne head and is therefore commended by Dauid himselfe So 2 Sam. 20 16 17 18. And 2 King 4 verse 23. we haue a notable example in the Shunamite she wisely dissembleth the cause of her iourney lest she should greeue the heart of her husband onely she desireth leaue and liberty of him to goe ●o the Prophet So Acts 23 verses 6 7. Paul knowing the great iarre and diuision in iudgement among those of the assembly which consisted of two sorts or sects partly Saduces which denied the resurrection and partly Pharisees which acknowledged it he taketh aduantage of the present opportunity to seuer them and to deliuer himselfe Prouerbs chap. 13 verse 16. Rom. chapter 16 verse 19. For first wisedome is more worth much Reason 1 better then all weapons of warre Prou. 21 verse 22. A prudent man is to be preferred before the valiant and indeed he can do more Hee can by counsell take a City wherein the valiant are and by his stratagems throw downe the bulwarkes and Castles thereof Eccl. chapter 7 verse 12 and cha ver 9 13 14 15 16. Secondly if Gods seruants should not Reason 2 deale wisely they should lie open to euery enemy to be hurt and destroyed to be ouertaken and circumuented in an excessiue hand The times wherein we liue are dangerous the persons with whom we deale are pernicious the sleights of Satan that dealeth against vs are mischieuous his instruments are growne cunning and crafty Prou. 1 verses 11 12. If then wee should not deale as well wisely as lawfully wee should not bee able to withstand them If we should not order our affaires discreetely and with good aduise forecasting the issues and preuenting their attempts we should
he had beene said Thy seruant went no whither 2 Ki. 5 25. Or if they slāder and belye their masters or any way falsely accuse them as Ziba did Mephibosheth 2 Sam. 16 3. Or if they run away from their masters and will not tarry in their houses like the seruants of Shemei that fled from him 1 King 2 39. Or if they picke and steale from them as Onesimus did from Philemon or any way deale fraudulently falsly with their masters goods which he hath committed to their trust as the vniust steward did with his Lord Lu. 16 5 6 7. Let these look for no better dealing in times to come at the hands of their owne seruants but be well assured that it is iust with God to send them the like false and disobedient seruants as themselues haue beene to their masters Thus then we see how all inferiors shold be encouraged to honour their superiours because God will cause them to be honoured and on the other side be terrified from despising and dishonouring them lest another day he cause them also to be dishonoured Your children shall wander in the wildernesse forty yeares and beare your whoredomes c By whoredome we must vnderstand the punishment of the idolatry and infidelity of their fathers falling from God and ceasing to trust in him For as idolatry so infidelity is spirituall whoredome They were as a wife that had forsaken her husband and broken the couenant of her God So then obserue that according to the number of the daies in which the fathers had searched the Land euē forty daies the children must beare their iniquities and wander too and fro forward and backward forty yeares before they should enter into the Land The doctrine from hence is this Doctrine The iudgements and punishments of God God visiteth the sinnes of the father vpon the childrē deserued and procured by the fathers sinnes and rebellions do oftentimes fal vpon their children and posterity they do not end and ceasse in themselues but descend to their stocke issue that liue after them Exod. 20 5. and 34 7 8. The reasons First because the children of Reason 1 men and their posterity though they be oftentimes infants and haue not vnderstanding to conceiue of sinne yet the same iudgements that belonged to the fathers sinnes shall light vpon them because God would therby shew his anger sore displeasure against their sins in that when it pleaseth him hee will punish those for their sinnes which as yet had committed no sinne at all Rom. 5 14 Gen. 7 4 and 19 25. Secondly touching those that are of ripe Reason 2 years they are of two sorts either wicked so like to their parents and then it is iust with God to bring his iudgements vpon them because he would shew himselfe displeased with their sins or else they are godly not tainted and defiled with them yet neuerthelesse there is other corruption enough in thē which may lustly worthily call for temporal iudgment Obiect But some haply will obiect that this may seeme to bee quite contrary to other Scriptures as Ezek. 18 4 ●0 where it is said The soule that sinneth shall die the death and againe The sonne shall not beare the iniquity of the father neither shall the father beare the iniquity of the son the righteousnes of the righteous shall be vpon him and the wickednesse of the wicked shall be vpon him I answer Answer we must marke the occasion of these words The children of Israel tooke vp a taunting prouerb against God and in their afflictions said The fathers haue eaten sowre grapes the childrens teeth are set on edge v 2. that is the fathers haue sinned and the children are punished These were quick-sighted to looke vp but they could not looke downe-ward vpon themselues they could see farther off but were blinde neerer home These were ranke hypocrites who had rather accuse God then themselues and as Adam cast the fault from himselfe vpon his wife Gen. 3 12 so do they from themselues vpon their fathers They neuer thinke of their owne eating of the sowre grapes they thought themselues free frō any sin that should procure such iudgements but God taketh the sons in the sins of the fathers and then punisheth them for their owne sins taking occasion from their fathers sins Euery mans sin shall be vpon his owne head so that though a wicked father be condemned yet his sonne not treading in his steps shall be saued And though God punisheth temporally for the sin of the father yet he doth not condemn any eternally for the same For as the godlinesse of the father shall nothing helpe the son to eternall life so his wickednes shall not hinder his saluation except he be wicked himselfe and walke in the steps of his wicked father Obiect But it wil peraduenture be said that Dauid sinned in the numbring of the people yet the people were punished many thousands were plagued for his offence 2 Sa. 24 15 17 and he escaped scot-free Loe I haue sinned and I haue done wickedly but these sheepe what haue they done Let thine hand I pray thee be against me and against my fathers house I answer Answer this is a certaine infallible rule that there is no vnrighteousnesse with God who is the Iudge of all the world Deut. 32 4. Lament 3 33 And touching the people though they were free from this sin of Dauid yet they had many other greeuous sins for which God might iustly punish them and God either for some secret or else some open sin had a quarrell against them as is plaine by these words 2 Sam. 24 1. The anger of the Lord was againe kindled against Israel and therefore he moued Dauid against them to say Go number Iudah and Israel It is not said that he moued Dauid against himselfe but against them So then their owne sin was the cause of the kings sin and the kings sin brought this punishment vpon them The cause he cause the cause the thing caused and therefore their sin was the cause of the cause of their punishment It may be they abused the peace plenty giuen vnto them after the three yeares of famine after the foure great battels which they had fought against the Philistims for it is hard to vse Gods blessings wel our corrupt nature being ready to turne good into euill and blessings into curses Deut. 32 6 15. Therefore the people are especially plagued because their sin was the first cause of al which sin he punished with the sin of Dauid God punisheth one with anoth● and both of thē with that greeuous pestilence And touching Dauid we cannot say he altogether escaped vnpunished for God by one and the same plague and iudgement striketh many waies and many persons his sword hath many edges and cutteth euery way he vseth no rod that hath not many sharpe twigs nor no whip that hath not many cordes
hast and speede were requisite then power and yet neither were wanting to him beeing a spirit Sampson was able by Art and cunning to gather together 300. Foxes in short space that with his foxes and firebrands he might annoy the Philistims Iudg. 15 4. Much more is satan able who may most truly bee called a mightie hunter before the Lord to bring together on a sodain a great number of these Frogs which could not be far to seek in the bogs marishes fens of Egypt Or else this was done in outward shew and appearance onely not in deed and in truth If it be further vrged Obiect that it is expresly written that the sorcerers broght forth Frogs and turned water into blood c. Answer I answer the Scripture often speaketh of things as they appeare and are offered to the sight not as they are in themselues As he that appeared to the witch at Endor is called Samuel yet it is certaine it was not the true Samuel but the diuell in his habit and likenesse 1 Sam. 28 14. Daniel saith ch 9.21 the man Gabriel appeared vnto him because he appeared in the shape of a man whereas he was one of the Angels that stood in the presence of God Luk. 1 19. Exod. 32 1 Nehem. 9 1 Ioseph 〈◊〉 Iuda 〈◊〉 so haue Images oftentimes the names of those whom they represent Thus Iosephus testifieth that the serpents of these Magitians did creepe in the shew likenesse of true serpents And Iustine Martyr one of the most ancient saith Quaest Orthod 16 that they did dazle and deceiue the eyes of the beholders and cast a mist like Iuglers before them 〈◊〉 in cap. 3. 1. ad Ti And Ambrose calleth their fact a counterfeit emulation of that they had seene Moses do before them But howsoeuer this were done whether by a reall transportation or by a deceitfull apparition certaine it is they could not make true serpents true blood true frogs and that for these causes First because it is holden that God only hath power to change and conuert a dead substance into a liuing substance a rod into a serpent Secondly these sorcerers could not doe a lesse thing therefore not possibly the greater They could not by all their power and art preserue themselues from the botches other plagues of Egypt for the boyles blaines seized vpon them that they could not stand before Moses Exod. 9 11. which notwithstanding is more easie then to make or change a creature nay they could not bring forth lice but saide This is the finger of God ● 8 18 19. Thirdly the true serpents of Moses deuoured the other Serpents Exo. 7 12. 〈◊〉 in Exod. From whence Iosephus and Ferus conclude they were no better then images and representations For it is not ordinary that one creature should deuoure another of the same kinde as a serpent a serpent or a Lyon a Lyon And if this were found either wee must imagine that the Magitians serpents and frogs were exceeding little or else it is incredible vnpossible that one creature should receiue into it selfe another creature of equall quantity with preseruation of it selfe Lastly if any such power had bin in the Magitians to make true frogs and serpents they might also by the same power haue remoued those that Moses brought For he that can build vp can also pul downe and it is one and the same art to knit and vnloose nay it is an argument of greater power to make them thē to remoue th● Now they could not take them away albeit they were annoyed by them but were constrained to intreate Moses to pray for their remouall Exod. 8 8. And if they had bin able to make them they should be more cunning artists and craftesmen then their master I meane the diuell Thus much of the slights iugling tricks of these cousening sorcerers Vse 2 Secondly we must learne to feare God and to obey him he commandeth Nature it giueth place to him who is the God of power and he shall reigne for euer and euer Exo. 15 18. He stopped the mouthes of the Lyons quenched the violence of fire True it is that ordinarily the Lord gouerneth the world by second causes howbeit he is free to vse them or not to vse them and he can change the course of them to the preseruation of the godly and to the destruction of the wicked A singular comfort to all such as belong to him to moue them to cast their care vpon him and to cleaue vnfainedly vnto him with all our hearts by a liuely faith He neuer wanteth meanes to doe vs good or to procure our safety Vpon this foundation did those seruants of God builde that were threatned to be cast into the hot fiery furnace for they considered that the God whom they serued was able to deliuer them and therefore they feared God more then the King Dan. 3 17. And albeit God do not ordinarily in our dayes work myracles yet he hath the hearts of all men in his owne hand and hee turneth them as it pleaseth him and maketh oftentimes our enemies to bee at peace with vs Prou. 16 7. On the other side this serueth for the terrour of the vngodly that God hath infinite waies to worke out their destruction the least of all the creatures once armed by the Creator are of wonderfull force and shall bee sufficient to destroy all his aduersaries This doth Moses teach touching the drying vp of the red sea a worke farre exceeding all the limits of nature Exod. 15 14 15 16. The people shall heare of it and be afraid the Dukes of Edom shall be amazed the mighty men of Moab shall tremble and the inhabitants of Canaan shall melt away Now they knew they had not to do with a weake impotent God such as were the gods whom they worshipped but with him that could command sea land and this doth Rahab confesse to the spies whom she receiued into her house Iosh 2 10 11. Let all these therfore know that they must feare him that is able to destroy and to cast both body and soule into hell fire Thirdly we must learne to giue God that Vse 3 which is his owne and due vnto him We must acknowledge him to bee the sole author and worker of all the myracles that haue beene or shall be in the world Neither Saint nor Angel neither Prophet nor Apostle neither Satan the prince of darknesse nor any of the diuels is able to work any myracle it is the prerogatiue royall of God Let vs not stand in feare of the diuell and his angels they cannot of themselues do any thing vnto vs but that which the Lord willeth The common and ignorant sort of men stand pitifully in feare of witches and of their practise as the cheefest plagues of a Parish they confesse they haue bin as glad to please them as their mothers as much afraid to displease them as
of knowledge as is giuen of God to a spirit which cannot be little There is much more knowledge in man then is in a bruit beast by reason of that nature which God hath giuen to man aboue the beasts And there is much greater knowledge in the diuell then in all men because of his spiritual substance He hath not a body which may hinder him to see the nature quality and operation of a spirit A bruit beast is only corporal and visible man is partly corporall and visible and partly spirituall inuisible the diuell is wholly spirituall and inuisible so that being a spirit hee hath the knowledge of a spirit and consequently greater familiarity with our spirits then otherwise he could haue Secondly by his creation for he was in his first estate by creation a good angell before his fall and set by God in the Paradise of heauen as Adam was in the Paradise of the earth so that he had the same measure of knowledge giuen of God which hee gaue to other Angels So then what knowledge soeuer is in a good Angel by creation the same knowledge is in Satan by his creation and therefore must be exceeding great I will not dispute whether this knowledge be any way diminished forasmuch as hee still beareth the stampe of his creation this way Thirdly since his Apostacy he hath encreased his knowledge both of things on earth and of the wayes of God by long obseruation and continuall experience he knoweth the age of man his affections inclinations nature and disposition hee knoweth what pleaseth him best in his youth and in his age If any one man had liued from the beginning of the world vnto this day perfect in sense in body in memory in minde in reason and the like and had daily obserued all things that had fallen out heretofore he might be able to discouer wonderfull things and make himselfe much admired in the world Therefore the diuell must needes haue great knowledge seeing he hath had all these he goeth about in euery countrey and kingdome he compasseth the earth to and fro Iob 1.7 and 2.2 obseruing what is done in euery place and is well acquainted with their conuersation Fourthly he encreaseth his knowledge by communication with God or rather by receiuing commandement from God to execute his will which hee maketh knowne vnto him The Lord commanded him to appeare before him to giue an account of the works he had done God had no sooner named Iob Iob 1.8 9 10 11. but by and by he knew him well enough he knew his substance and how God had blessed him therfore neuer asketh who hee was or where hee was hee knoweth euery man by Name and hee knoweth that man is ready to make shew of religion in prosperity and in aduersity through impatience to fall away from his profession God gaue him liberty to afflict Iob in his goods in his children in his body whence then hath he this knowledg but from the reuelation of the Lord he knew that Iob should be visited with great sickenesse and with great losses in his children and goods and thus hee knoweth many other things which are to come to passe afterward And when hee hath them thus reuealed and made knowne vnto him hee goeth many times to witches and wizards and telleth them thereof and they tell it to others before they happen by which meanes he many wayes enlargeth his kingdome Fiftly by the reuelation of the Prophets in former times he attained to great knowledge by whō many things were foretold in which also he hath knowledge can alledge Scripture to serue his turne Matth. 4.6 Lastly by continuall obseruation of naturall causes An Astronomer that is skilfull in the starres can tell nay foretell many things but Satan is skilfull in all Artes he can speake all languages in the world he is the best artist and linguist that any where can be found The second thing wherin Satans power consisteth is in his deeds and actions He mooued Caine to kill his brother and preuailed He tempted our first parents and preuailed He commeth to a witch in the shape of Samuel and taketh vpon him to tell what successe Saul should haue in the battell with the Philistims and Saul thought it had beene Samuel Hee was wont to talke familiarly with men and therefore God gaue a Law that if any consulted with familiar spirits he should die Deut. 18.11 Leuit. 20.27 which law had beene in vaine if none had consulted familiarly with them So he was a lyar in the mouth of all the false Prophets of Ahab though themselues did not perceiue it So hee possessed mens bodies as we see in the Gospel whom Christ oftentimes cast out Matth. 8.28 and being cast out they entred into an heard of swine and threw them headlong into the waters where they perished And when certaine Exorcists would haue cast out diuels in the name of Iesus the euill spirit ran vpon them and ouercame them so that they fled out of the house wounded Actes 19.16 Thus we see that Satan is of wonderfull power to teach vs not to be carelesse in resisting of him but to looke diligently to our selues 1 Pet. 5.8 9. Neuerthelesse this is our comfort that his power is limited he is as a raging beast but is tyed vp with chaine he is the strong man armed but a stronger then hee commeth and taketh all his armour from him wherein he trusted Luk. 11.21 22. And albeit he make shew to worke miracles he hath no such power and therefore hee doth them not openly but closely and in the darke as they that doe euill Lastly it reproueth the miracles wrought Vse 3 in the Church of Rome of which they talke and write so much The works wherof they boast and wherein they glory are darke and obscure they are not plain open and euident They tel vs many a sober tale in sundry legēds of Saints liues of puling souls that haue appeared out of purgatory and haue taught prayer for the dead adoration of Saints worshipping of images such like superstitious practises all tending to abuse the people and to confirme false doctrine repugnant to the Scriptures August de vnitat eccles ca. ● of all which wee may say as Austine doth that they are vel mendacia fallacium hominum vel portenta mendacium spirituum That is either cosening trickes of deceitfull men or wonders of lying spirits But to passe ouer these let vs by this property of a true miracle examine the miracle of all miracles much made off and mightily maintained to bee in the Sacrament of the Altar so called by the Church of Rome wherein after the Priest hath vtterred and muttered a few words they teach that a great miraculous worke is brought forth because the substance of the bread which was vpon the altar is changed into the body of Christ by a strange Metamorphosis If this were true Transubsta●tiation no ●racle it were indeed
of professours because we see the hand of God sometimes to bee heauy vpon them and more then vpon others but rather consider it is or may be for the sinnes of their profession and that afflictions fall out a like for Iudgement must first beginne at the house of God 1 Pet. 4 17. hee will first set in order his owne house and his owne children and will deale more seuerely with them for smaller sinnes in this life then he will with the vngodly for greater in this life whom he specially reserueth for his wrath to come Nah. 1.2 Let all those therefore that make an holy profession of seruing the Lord in truth lay these things to their hearts and not suffer themselues to bee carried away with the force of sinne for God will surely meete with them his hand shall first finde them out howbeit alwayes for their good whiles he seemeth not to regard nor reward the sinnes of the wicked so that we must beware of those sinnes which are against our place and calling wherin God hath set vs. Lastly euery one must be carefull to walke Vse 4 carefully in the duties of their particular callings with a good conscience that so they may please God and take occasion to reioyce before him looking to the ordinance of God who hath set and appointed distinct callings in the family in the Church and in the common-wealth 1 Cor. 7.7 21 22. Ephe. 4.11.12 Actes 20.26 There can arise no comfort to vs that wee belong to God though wee seeme neuer so carefull in the generall duties of Christianity if we faile in the speciall parts of our seuerall callings That Minister which liueth in all the common duties of other Christians and yet doth not or cannot guide the people and feed them with the foode of life is a wicked Minister and there belongeth to him a fearefull woe Woe to the shepheards of Israel that feede themselues should not the shepheards feede the flockes Ezek. 34.2 Ier. 23.1 Zach. 11.17 Such are not able to blow the trumpet and therefore shall not deliuer their owne soules That gouernour of a family which regardeth not to prouide things necessary for them so farre as he may and according to the meanes giuen vnto him is an euill gouernour he is worse then the infidell and hath denyed the faith 1 Tim. 5.8 Again he that regardeth not the education of his children in the nourture and admonition of the Lord Ephe. 6.4 is an euill and wicked father howsoeuer he may deceiue himselfe in thinking himselfe to be a good Christian For heereby we shall indeede try what is in euery one if we marke and regard what is in them in regard of priuate and particular duties in their seuerall callings I haue oftentimes obserued that many people when they come abroade behaue themselues in the company of others very religiously and deuoutly they are ready to ioyne with others in all holy duties but marke what they are at home and within the walles of their owne houses and you shall see them to be quite other men and women and not the same neuer a whit carefull to discharge their duties in their speciall callings There are sundry persons that would bee iudged of others to be Christian men but they doe not shew themselues priuately to bee Christian gouernors nor Christian husbands And many women beare themselues publikely as Christian women of an holy conuersation who notwithstanding want the ornament of a meeke and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price neither shew that subiection toward their husbands that ought to bee in Christian wiues 1 Pet. 3.4 5. It is not enough to professe our selues to be Christian men when God hath blessed vs with children and seruants but heereby we shall bee tryed what is in vs whether Christ be in vs dwell in our hearts by faith or not if wee approoue our selues to be Christian parents and Christian masters 5 And ye shall keepe the charge of the Sanctuary and the charge of the Altar that there bee no wrath any more vpon the children of Israel 6 And I behold I haue taken your brethren the Leuites from among the children of Israel to you they are giuen as a gift for the Lord to doe the seruice of the Tabernacle of the Congregation Heere the Lord teacheth how Aaron and his sonnes should behaue themselues toward the Leuites and likewise the Leuites toward Aaron and his sonnes For hee willeth them to admit the Leuites to the administration of holy things but so as they helpe them onely in inferiour things not in the chiefest part of their Ministery He will not haue them come neere to the Altar to sacrifice neither to enter into the inner parts of the Tabernacle which belonged onely to the Priests themselues ●iffrence ●eene the ●g of the ●s and ●es Heere then we see that God maketh a difference betweene the Priests and the Leuites and also wherein the difference consisteth the more excellent dignity is committed to the Priests the lesser to the Leuites They that had the higher calling were not to contemne the others and they that obtained the lower place were not to greeue at it or to enuy at others but God maintaineth peace and vnity among them so that both must be content and one be ready to helpe another And whereas God permitted not the Leuites to offer sacrifice or to enter into the Sanctuary and that if either any of them or of the people should presume to doe it he appointeth death to them that brake this his ordinance the cause is that we should know that none hath power to reconcile vs to himselfe and to giue vs entrance into his presence but Christ himselfe onely whose person and office was figured out in Aaron and his sonnes Wretched therefore and blasphemous is the practise of the Papists who goe about to make reconciliation betweene God and his people by their idolatrous Masses offered vp for the quicke and the dead whereby as much as lyeth in them they crucifie againe the Lord of life and are no better then the betrayers and murtherers of him Euill also is the practise of all hypocrites who by the merits of their owne good workes doe thinke to procure and purchase vnto themselues the fauour of God for they are so farre from attaining heereunto by their blinde deuotion that they offend God the more and prouoke his wrath and indignation against their owne soules Againe note in this difference which God maketh betweene the Priests and Leuites how necessary and profitable it is that there should be order kept and obserued in the Church Marbucch comment in Nume There is not onely one office and function in the Church but many and diuers neither can one man discharge all places without presumption nor all discharge one without confusion and therefore to auoide both there ought a comely order to be obserued of which we haue often spoken before As then in
trauell by sea and occupie by the great waters that the windes and stormes tosse them vp and downe so that all their cunning is gone Then they cry vnto the Lord in their trouble and he deliuereth thē out of their distresse So immediately before their captiuity ●on 36 ● 7. they mocked the messengers of God despised his words misused his Prophets which spake vnto them rising early and late and abused their peace when they dwelled in their Cities and abode in their houses but in the daies of their affliction when the enemies insulted vpon them their hearts were smitten they could not sing the songs of the Lord in a strange land ● 37 4. ●5 26 27. then they remembred Ierusalem and the Temple the sacrifices and seruice of God in the Temple which they had frequented and too much prophanened verifying that sentence in the Prouerbes chap. 27 7. The person that is full despiseth an Hony-combe but vnto the hungry soule euery bitter thing is sweete This the Prophet Esay setteth downe in the song of the faithfull chap. 26 16. Lord in trouble haue they visited thee they poured out a praier whē thy chastening was vpon them Now let vs come to the reasons Reason 1 For from whence come they or who is the author of them Are they not from GOD There is no euil in the city which the Lord hath not done Amos 3 6. He hath his quiuer full of arrowes Hath he not the sword to strike vs Hath hee not the pestilence to consume vs Hath he not the famine to pinch vs and pine vs away Hath he not all creatures in his owne hand to send out against vs If then afflictions be the work of his hand there is great reason and cause the church should turne to him that sendeth them that by returning to him the iudgement may be remoued put away This the Prophet teacheth Lam. 3 37 38 39 40. Who is it then that saith and it cometh to passe and the Lord commandeth it not Out of the mouth of the most High proceedeth not euill and good Let vs search and trie our waies and turne againe to the Lord let vs lift vp our hearts and our hands to God in the heauens saying we haue sinned and rebelled therefore thou hast not spared Seeing therfore afflictions are from God not from men from heauen not from the earth they must needs be of necessary and profitable vse to the children of God to whose good all things tend and fall out Againe none else in heauen or earth can Reason 2 helpe vs. To whom then should we turne but to the Lord Can any other releeue vs or deliuer vs Is there any helpe on the right hand or on the left hand Can any take away that which GOD hath laide vpon the children of men He is God and there is none beside him he killeth and giueth life neither is there any that can deliuer out of his hand This is that which the Prophet vrgeth Psal 142 4 5. I looked vpon my right hand and beheld but there was none that would know me all refuge failed me and none cared for my soule then I cryed vnto the Lord c. If then God be the author of afflictions and if none can take from vs the smallest crosse and the least touch of his little finger that lieth vpon vs there is great cause that in all our troubles we should flie vnto God and draw neere vnto him Now let vs consider the vses of this Doctrine Vse 1 First seeing the Church is brought to the Lord by afflictions obserue heerein the mighty power of God that hath many waies and sundry meanes to turne the hearts of men to humble them and bring them home vnto himselfe to call them and cast them downe at his footstoole Indeed among all meanes that God hath sanctified to further our saluation the cheefest is his messenger one of a thousand to speak to them out of his word to preach vnto them his truth which is the power of God to saluation to all that beleeue But hee hath also many other waies that he vseth when it pleaseth him as he saith by the Prophet Esay chap. 5 4. What could I haue done any more to my Vineyard that I haue not done vnto it He hedged it he gathered out the stones of it he planted it with the best Plants he built a Tower in the midst therof and made a wine-presse therein He beseecheth vs by his sweete mercies and when no faire meanes will serue yet affliction is often made powerful to turne our harts to prepare the way for repentance as the needle doth for the thred This vse is made in Iob 33 16 17 23. God speaketh once or twice in dreames and visions by his Messenger and Interpreter euen by their corrections which he hath sealed that hee might cause man to turne away from his enterprise and that he might hide the pride of man Let vs therefore heereby all of vs learne to acknowledge the greatnesse both of the mercy and power of God in working out our saluation effectually by so many means who being infinitely good Aug. Enchir. ad Laur. cap. 101. is able to bring good out of euill as hee did light of darknesse Secondly we see that albeit afflictions bee Vse 2 greeuous and bitter yet they are not vnprofitable to those whom God hath chosen to better graces Albeit tribulation and anguish perill and the sword nakednesse and famine fall vpon vs And though we be slaine all day long and counted as sheepe to the slaughter Rom. 8 36. yet in all these we are more then Conquerors there is a sweet issue and a comfortable end of them that therby we are made better This appeareth by the confession and experience of the Prophet Dauid Psal 119 67 71 94 12 13. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word And againe It is good for me that I haue bin afflicted that I may learne thy Statutes And in another place Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him in thy Law that thou maist giue him rest from the daies of euill whiles the pit is digged for the wicked True it is we ought to make vse of the mercies and patience of God to be led forward vnto repentance that so where grace aboundeth our obedience may abound also But because wee make his blessings and benefits an occasion of euill and turne the grace of God into wantonnesse I am perswaded it were a great deale better for many of vs in respect of our soules and saluation that we were in affliction and in persecution that the enemies were at our backes and their swords at our throtes that the pestilence did walke among vs that the sicknesse destroyed vs at noone-day that a thousand did fall at our right hand ten thousand at our left hand that we heard the sound of the Trumpet the roring of
when Rabshakeh with his bold and blasphemous mouth had ●ailed vpon the strength of Israel and had proudly threatened the King and his people that they should be compelled to eate their own dung and to drinke their owne water Be not afraid of the words which thou hast heard behold I will send a bl●st vpon him and he shall heare a noise returne to his owne Land and I will cause him to fall by the sword in his owne Land Esay 37 6 7. And afterward chap. 43.1 5 when the people of God were greeuously oppressed by their bitter and bloody enemies so that they were robbed spoyled snared thrust and throwne into Dungeons fettred in prison-houses and euery way euilly entreated he speaketh vnto them on this manner Thus saith the Lord that created thee O Iacob and he that formed thee O Israel feare not for I haue redeemed thee I haue called thee by name thou art mine feare not for I am with thee So Christ forewarning his Disciples what entertainment they should finde in the world Mat. 10 26 28 and how hardly they should be tryed as to be betrayed hated persecuted imprisoned scourged railed vpon and in the end brought to their end hee prepareth them to this duty and repeateth it oftentimes Feare them not And the Apostle Paul after he had earnestly instructed the Philippians to grow in all graces to leade their conuersation worthy the Gospel of Christ he remembreth thē of this point In nothing feare your aduersaries Phil. 1 18 Answerable to these precepts are the worthy practises of the faithfull Hereunto cometh the example of Moses Heb 11 Exod. 11 8. 27 when he led the people of Israel out of Egypt notwithstanding the threatenings and bloudy words of Pharaoh he feared not the fiercenesse of the King but endured a constant maintainer of the Church of God ceassed not to encourage the people aga●●●● their enemies whose hearts failed and q●●●led when they were pursued and ouertaken by the Egyptians Likewise the three seruants of God beeing threatned by that great Tyrant Nebuchadnezzor to be cast into the fiery Furnace were not daunted or feared by his high power fierce displeasure but answered him We are not carefull to answer thee in this matter Dan. 4 15. This appeareth at sundry times vpon sundry occasions in Dauid whē he waxeth bold and couragious in the Spirit saith I will not be afraid for ten thousand of the people that should beset me round about Psal 3 6. Reason 1 The reasons follow First God is with his people If he be with them shall we feare any to be against them If we haue a protection from the Prince shall we feare the face of the subiect If the Lyon fight for vs shal we feare the flye or the worme that are weak in strength This is the reason vrged by the Lord in the Prophet Feare not for I am with thee Esay 43 5. Now God is with vs by his power and prouidence If we consider these things that are in God as his generall speciall prouidence which guideth and ouer-ruleth all things for the glory of his Name and the benefit of his children the holy meditation hereof ought to remoue from vs all distracting and distrustfull feare When Christ had disswaded his Disciples from the feare of men he saith Are not two Sparrowes sold for a farthing and one of them shall not fall to the ground without your Father Yea the haires of your head are numbred Math. 10 29 30. And indeed the cause why in trouble we faint and faile for feare of men whose breath is in their nostrils and whose malice is limited is because we distrust Gods promises and prouidence which is indeed a fearefull sinne Againe if we consider that God is with vs by his power which being endlesse infinite is able to redresse represse the greatest tyrant and tyrany in the world we shall finde nothing more auaileable to keepe vs from the excessiue feare of weake man seeing he can restraine them when it pleaseth him This the three seruants of God acknowledge in their danger Behold our God whom we serue is able to deliuer vs from the fiery Furnace and he will deliuer vs out of thine hand O King Dan. 3 13. Againe let vs haue our conuersation without Reason 2 feare in regard of the persecuters themselues and the power which they haue For consider the difference betweene that which God can do and that which man can do The most vile and cruell tyrant that breatheth out threatnings and slaughter against the Saints when he hath done his worst and raged to the vtmost when he hath disgorged al his malice and quenched his thirst in bloud can goe no further but to kill the body but God can goe further who hath the keyes of hell and death Nay these enemies cannot so much as kill the body or touch the skin with all their power without the will of God as our Sauiour speaketh to Pilate when he boasted of an absolute power in his owne hands to binde or loose to crucifie or to absolue Thou couldst haue no power at all against mee except it were giuen thee from aboue Iohn 19 10 11. This is that reason which Christ himselfe expresseth Mat. 10 28. Feare not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in hell Thirdly the enemies shall be destroyed Reason 3 They fight against God they fight against his people therefore they cannot prosper True it is they may for a time preuaile and proceed in their euill enterprizes and God may for a season vse them as his Rod to try the faith of his children but when he hath vsed them as instruments to bring his iudgements to passe they shall preuaile no longer This consideration serued to encourage the people of Israel when Pharaohs hoast pressed vpon them and marched toward them Feare not stand still behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to you this day for the Egiptians which yee haue seene this day ye shall neuer see them againe the Lord shall fight for you therefore holde you your peace Exod. 14 13 14. The vses remaine to be stood vpon First this teacheth that the childe of God must be Vse 1 a man of valour and courage and as a mighty man of warre not to be daunted with any terrour to forsake his faith a good conscience but such an one as is able by the fortitude power of Christ to vndergo all tryals to ouer-stride al dangers to ouercome al enemies and to triumph ouer all things that oppose themselues against their peace So then the godly whose faith ouercommeth the world are not onely souldiers but valiant souldiers 1 Iohn 5 and victorious conquerors The Apostle hauing commended Moses that he forsooke Egypt feared not the fiercenesse of the King addeth this
in the Morning and sadled his Asse and went with the Princes of Moab Hitherto wee haue heard the message and sending out to this cunning man seeking to draw him to come to curse the people Now followeth the second part of the Chapter wherein is published how Balak preuailed with him by offering him present gifts and promising to him future honors And because in the former message Balaam had rather cunningly delayed then flatly denyed them and rather craftily allured them by protracting the time then withstood them by giuing thē the repulse to the end they should buy his cunning the dearer as well became a man of his trade and occupation therefore heere the Spirit of God proceedeth to declare how the message is continued the suite renewed and their purpose obtained Wherein we are to obserue these three things First the departure of the Magitian with the messengers Secondly the anger of God for his departure Thirdly the entertainment which Balaam sound at the hands of Balak when he was come vnto him The first part touching the iourney of Balaam hauing obtained leaue or rather wrung it from God by his importunity is contained in the words before remembred and recited wherein behold how the desires of men are kindled encreased by delay Greg. hom 23. and giue them no rest vntill they enioy the things hoped for Balak the King and Balaam the false Prophet are heere described being pointed and painted out vnto vs in very liuely colours Balak proud in his Riches ambitious in his honours prodigall of his gifts scorning to receiue foile or repulse On the other side Balaam base in minde couetous after money thirsting after honour as vnwilling to giue a deniall as the other to take it Wherefore as he sendeth a new ambassage so he imployeth more honorable men to credit and countenance the action the better hee furnisheth them with other gifts he promiseth him in the word of a king to promote him to some place of dignity and omitteth no humane policy to draw him to his lure The messengers mindefull of their charge and commission and considering the waightinesse of the cause doe bend all their wits and set on worke all their cunning to effect the matter committed vnto them they stir him vp to be forward they adde great promises of high honours they allure him with great hope of rich rewards which were effectuall baites to intrap and indeede the mightiest Rhetoricke to perswade and to preuaile with a couetous man This was the Message of the King thus was the employment of the Messengers Now let vs consider the answer of Balaam wherein a man at the first sight would thinke hee carried himselfe most vprightly toward men and most religiously toward God like a true-harted man and a faithfull Prophet hee telleth them If Balak would giue him the Riches and reuenewes of his Kingdome he cannot goe beyond the will of the Lord his God But all is not Gold that glistereth as the Prouerbe teacheth sometimes a subtile Serpent lurketh in the greene grasse A man would likewise coniecture Whether God were not ple●●d with Balaams iourney that when God bad him goe with the Messengers hee was pleased with his iourney but the wrath of the Lord was kindled against him for his disobedience and presumption which was no better then a tempting of God So in this answer of the Wizard we are not to consider the outward sound of the words but the inward purpose and intent of the speaker For his replye is thus much in effect as if hee had said vnto them Why do you thus solicite and importune me Do you thinke it resteth in my will to come or not to come Or if I doe come that I can in this case do what I list Or that the God of Israel is like the gods of the other Nations Hee compelleth me to tarry heere he forbiddeth me to go with you he is stronger then I and I am constrained to obey him You know my desire but it lyeth not in my power to curse your enemies vnles I can charge and charme their God to leaue forsake them albeit the King would giue me a great reward What saide I a rich reward Nay if he would fill for me this Pallace with siluer and gold replenish all his storehouses with treasures I cannot accomplish mine own purpose I cannot performe the desire of mine owne heart The God of the Israelites is too powerfull and mighty for me he it is that restraineth me by whom notwithstanding I must onely worke in this my businesse or else I cannot profit you nor pleasure my selfe nor effect my purpose Neuertheles be not discouraged and discomfited I am yet in good hope to preuaile and I will yet try him the second time although before he vtterly denyed mee to go with you This is the summe and effect of Balaams answer which consisteth of two parts First he stayeth them to be aduised what to do Secondly he granteth their request to goe with them Touching the staying of them when he hath excused his former refusall and deniall to go with the former messengers inasmuch as he could not alter and change the decree of the Lord whom he saw to ouer-rule him in all this busines he promiseth to try him againe whether he could draw him to stand with thē and to withstand the Israelites And here againe as before v. 8. Iohn 11 9. obserue how bee worketh not in the open day and in the light of the Sunne which is the fittest season to worke in Gal. 5 19 20. but as Coniurers vse to do he chuseth the night season for his purpose For as Sorcery is one of the fruites of the flesh and the worke of darknesse and proceedeth from the Prince of darknes so it fitteth best the children of darknes serueth to be practised in the time of the night according to the saying of him that is the author of life and light Euery man that euill doth Iohn 3 20 21. hateth the light neither commeth to light lest his deeds should be reproued but hee that doth truth cometh to the light that his deeds might be made manifest that they are wrought ●ccording to God Well God appeared vnto ●im and made himselfe knowne vnto him whatsoeuer his purpose and intent were not ●y any force of his sorcery but for diuers and sundry other reasons first Why appea●● Bolaa● Sorce●● because he would put an hooke in his iawes and a bridle in his mouth to stop him from cursing Israel For his whole drift and meaning was to curse thē in the accomplishment whereof he is hindered and stayed by the appearance of God vnto him Secondly because he would hinder the diuell from giuing Balaam an answer and so deluding him as in former times hee was wont to do when he was hyred and sent vnto for such purposes Thirdly it serueth greatly for Gods glory to make his Name knowne euen among
for vs when we sleep he heareth when we are deafe he riseth vp for vs when we lie downe hee is a buckler about vs when we are assaulted he is the God of knowledge when wee are ignorant And if euer there were people vnder the heauen that hath experience of Gods watchfulnesse in this kinde it is this Nation of great Britaine O vnthankfulnes if we doe not acknowledge it O wretchednesse if we doe not euer remember it O wickednes if we do not teach it to our posterities For hath not God deliuered vs from the most cursed and execrable plot of desperate enemies that euer was contriued against the King the Queene the Prince and the rest of their progeny against the Lords the Commons the whole Church kingdome ●hen the fift 〈◊〉 No●●● An. 〈◊〉 5. determining suddainly to haue blowne vp the whole house of Parliament with gun-powder Now as this was an inuention bloody an intention barbarous and inhumane See Act. 〈…〉 3. so by what meanes were wee deliuered was it by our fasting and prayer was it by humbling our selues before our God and crying strongly in the eares of the Lord of hostes was it by our teares and weeping for our sins saying spare thy people O Lord and giue not thine inheritance into reproch that the Priests and Iesuites should rule ouer them Nay we vsed none of all these we suspected no danger we feared no enemies we dreamed of no diuelish deuices against the land so that to detect and disclose the fore-named cursed conspiracy was the Lords doing onely and it is marueilous in our eyes When an inuasion in the yeere 88. was intended by the supposed inuincible Armado glorying in their strength munition shippes preparations confederates it was indeed the Lords mercy toward vs to crosse and curse their attempt and to raise the windes and seas against them howbeit this was not without vsing of meanes as rigging of shippes arming of men mustering of souldiers yea it was not without sanctifying of fasts calling solemne assemblies and crying vnto the Lord. If then wee did sing songs of thanksgiuing for that deliuerance how should our hearts be kindled and inflamed with ioyfulnesse and with what praises should wee expresse our thankfulnes 〈…〉 but euen vow vnto the Lord our selues our soules and bodies to offer them vp a liuing sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto him For as many haue bene the practices of the malicious and bloody Papists yet this surmounteth them all so many haue bene the deliuerances of our Princes of our Rulers of our Magistrates of our Ministers of our people but this surmounteth and surpasseth them all Psal 95 1 2. Let vs therefore reioyce vnto the Lord let vs sing aloud to the rock of our saluation let vs come before his face with praise let vs sing loud vnto him with Psalmes for the Lord is a great God and a great King aboue all gods He sitteth in heauen and laugheth to scorne the deuices of the wicked He ruleth in earth and maketh all his enemies his footstoole Verse 28. Then the Lord opened the mouth of the Asse When Balaam had smitten his Asse three times that had saued his life it pleased God to worke a wonder to alter the course of nature to giue speech to the Asse to make her able to reproue her master God indeed could otherwise haue set his sin in order before him but a dumbe beast is teacher fit enough for the fals Prophet We see hereby Doctrine God oftentimes worketh aboue nature that God so often as it pleaseth him worketh aboue nature ordinary meanes Hereunto come al the miracles which God hath shewed from the beginning of the world He gaue vnto Abraham Sarah a son in their old age who quickneth the dead Rom. 4 17. and calleth those things which be not as though they were He stayed the course of the Sun diuided the red sea fed his people with Manna Heb. 11 33 34. stopped the mouthes of Lions quenched the violence of fire opened the earth to swallow his enemies brought water out of the hard rocke Hee sent signes and wonders in the land of Egypt vnto this day in Israel and among al men hath made him a name as appeareth this day Hee brought his people out of the hand of Pharaoh with signes with wonders with a strong hand with a stretched out arme and with a great terrour He gaue power to a virgin to conceiue beare a son that he might saue his people from their sins Ier 32.20 Math 1 21 23. The reasons remaine to be considered and Reason 1 handled to confirme vs farther First marke the nature of God he is great in counsell glorious in holines fearefull in praises mighty in his workes and in his enterprises Who made the heauen who framed the earth and laide the foundation thereof vpon the depth who brought light out of darknesse Is it not the Lord that doth whatsoeuer he will in heauen in earth in the depth and in all the world This the Prophet Ieremy teacheth chap. 32. Ah Lord God behold thou hast made the heauen and the earth by thy great power Ier. 32.17 by thy stretched out arme and there is nothing hard vnto thee he maketh the barren fruitfull Psal 136.5 ● he brought all things out of nothing who onely doth great wonders for his mercy endureth for euer who by his wisedome made the heauens and hath stretched out the earth vpon the waters for his mercy endureth for euer Againe therby he maketh his name known Reason 2 and his power to bee acknowledged in the world This is declared by Nehemiah in the prayer of the Leuites chap. 9. Thou hast considered the afflictiō of our fathers in Egypt heard their cry by the red Sea and shewed tokens and wonders vpon Pharaoh and on all his seruants and on all the people of the land for thou knowest that they dealt proudly against them Neh. 9 9 10. therefore thou madest thee a Name as appeareth this day Wherefore to the end the power and presence of God may bee knowne both to the Church and the enemies of the Church hee breaketh and interrupteth the naturall order and course of things Heereupon it is that Ioshua calleth the children of Israel and telleth them that by the miracle of diuiding the waters of Iordan Iosh 3 10. they should know that the liuing GOD was among them and would cast out the Canaanites before them Vse 1 The vse of this doctrine may bee made in this manner First it serueth fitly to condemne all Atheists and earth-wormes that aduance nature to throw downe the power of God Indeed if GOD onely wrought by ordinary meanes and according to the strength of second causes some pretence might bee alleaged and some colour of reason produced to doubt of the diuine power But seeing GOD worketh not onely by nature and by meanes but sometimes aboue
behinde them no way was left them to escape the dangers in mans iudgement But as the Church in this world is euer subiect to affliction and to lye vnder the crosse so God doth not incontinently deliuer it out of danger but many times continueth their troubles and augmenteth their calamities to exercise their faith to try their patience and to proue their obedience notwithstanding in the end God maketh an happy issue and sheweth that the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against the Church Therefore when the Israelites began to murmure and not so much against Moses as against God and looked more to the danger of death before them then to the power of GOD aboue them and considered more what they did want then what they should beleeue Moses said vnto them Feare yee not stand still and behold the saluation of the Lord which he will shew to thee this day for the Egyptians whom yee haue seene this day yee shall neuer see them againe the Lord shall fight for you 〈◊〉 1. therefore hold you your peace When there was a great persecution raised against the Church at Ierusalem so that the sheepe of Christ were scattered abroad and nothing but threatnings and slaughter breathed out against the Disciples of the Lord 〈◊〉 2 3. Authority being giuen by the High-Priest to imprison all such as called on his Name rather then the Church should bee rooted out the Lord Iesus appeared in the Heauens to Paul as hee was in the way being now come neere to Damascus called him to the knowledge of the truth and appointed him to be a teacher of the Gospel that before hee destroyed 1. Sam. 10 11 so that wee may renew the ancient Prouerbe Is Saul also among the Prophets So when wee see the dangerous times and perillous seasons of the Church let vs not hang downe our heads but rather lift vp our hearts and cry vnto God saying Helpe Lord in the time of neede forsake not thine inheritance which thou hast purchased nor the Vine-yard which thy right hand hath planted And let vs assure our selues that when the cause thereof seemeth most desperate and helpe appeareth to vs to be farthest off 2. Cor. 12 9. then is his mercy greatest and his presence neerest then is his power made perfect through our weakenesse This is that which the Prophet Zachary witnesseth chap. 8. speaking of the returne of the people from captiuity vnto Ierusalem and of the louing kindnesse of GOD to bee extended toward them For albeit the residue that were left were reproached the Citty ruinated the gates burned and the wall broken downe yet hee prophesieth Zach. 8 4 5 ● That old Men and old Women shall dwell in the streetes of Ierusalem and the streetes of the City shall be full of Boyes and Girles playing in the streetes thereof For thus saith the Lord of hostes Though it seeme vnpossible in the eyes of the remnant of this people in these dayes should it therefore be vnpossible in my sight saith the Lord of hostes Vse 4 Lastly as this Doctrine teacheth vs to beleeue the promises of God so it teacheth vs not to doubt or despair of the saluatiō conuersion of our brethren for God is able to cal and conuert them to the sauing knowledge of the Gospel This the Apostle vrgeth intreating of the calling of the Iewes Rom. 11 23. to embrace the faith of the Gentiles And they also if they abide not still in vnbeleefe shall be grafted in for God is able to graft them in againe Likewise when the Disciples saw and heard the difficulty of entring into heauen for those that trust in their riches that they haue need of a singular gift of God to escape out of the snares subtilties of Satan Math. 19 26 Christ Iesus beheld them and said vnto them With men this is vnpossible but with God all things are possible Math. 20 1. He calleth at all houres of the day at the dawning of the day at the third houre at the sixt at the ninth and at the eleuenth houre For as he is bound to no person so he is bound to no time he calleth whom he will he teacheth and toucheth the heart when he will This we see in the example of the Apostle Paul which wee spake of before he was at the first a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1 13 a persecutor and an oppressor yet he was receiued of God to mercy to the encouragement of them which shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life Marke 16 9 So was Mary Magdalen a greeuous sinner an vncleane liuer Luke 7 47. out of whom he had cast seuen diuels yet many sinnes were forgiuen her inasmuch as she loued much was the first to whom the Lord appeared after his resurrection Wherefore albeit we s●e men run on in their wickednesse and shut theyr eares against the wholesome admonitions of the word of God albeit their whole life be a continuall practise of sinne and that they drinke in iniquity as the fish doth the water yet wee must iudge nothing before the time 1. Cor. 4 5. vntill the Lord come who will lighten things that are hid in darknesse and make the counsels of the hearts manifest and then shall euery man haue praise of God God is not tyed to ordinary causes but as hee fed the people with Quailes in the wildernes so he can inwardly instruct the conscience he can make the least meanes powerfull and effectuall to saluation Math. 19 30. so that as many which are first shall bee last so sometimes the last shal be first He called Iohn the Baptist as it were in the dawning of the day whom he sanctified from his mothers wombe Luke 1 15. He called Timothie and Titus some others as it were at the third houre of the day 2 Tim. 3 15 and 1 5. Who were brought vp in the knowledge of the Scriptures of children which are able to make thee wise vnto saluation through the faith which is in Christ Iesus and honoured the Lord with the first fruits of their life Hee called Paul to be an Apostle Mary Magdalene to be a beleeuer as it were at the sixt houre who after their conuersion redeemed the time and though they were inferiour to other in respect of time yet they were equall vnto them or before them in regard of zeale other graces of Gods Spirit He called the theefe vpon the crosse as it were at the eleuenth houre to bee partaker of his kingdome Luke 23.42 43. to whom Christ said This day shalt thou bee with me in Paradise Let vs not therefore enter into iudgment against our brethren let vs commit them to God Acts 1 7. Seeing it is not for vs to know the times and seasons which the Father hath put in his owne power Let vs pray for their conuersion to God that hee would giue them repentance to know him
and not through impatience accuse God neither impute the euill successes of our affaires to him but to our selues euen as he that stumbleth and falleth against a stone should not accuse the stone but his owne hastinesse and heedlesnes Now then if wicked men want the knowledge of God and the feare of his Name to guide them in the search and suruey of their owne wayes to enquire into the true cause of their euill successes wee cannot maruaile if they wander vp and downe in their owne imaginations and can neuer finde the fault to bee in themselues Secondly the vngodly are blinded with a Reason 2 selfe-loue and selfe-liking of themselues aboue God or his Word The loue of the creature or of our selues more then God or equall with God hindereth vs in good things and quite swalloweth vp the loue of our brethren and darkeneth the light of vpright iudgment that it cannot shine in our hearts The conceited person thinketh himselfe a wise man and imagineth his owne course to be the best vsing no aduice of others as if he himselfe were in all things sufficient of himselfe to see what is best for himselfe This Salomon excelling in wisdome teacheth to these conceited persons abounding in folly Prou. 12.14 The way of a foole is right in his owne eyes but he that hearkeneth to counsell is wise So in another place Prou. 18.2 A foole is not delighted with vnderstanding but with those things which are in his owne heart And againe Prou. 26.12 Seest thou a man wise in his owne conceit There is more hope of a foole then of him These selfe-louing and selfe-liking fooles are delighted with their owne folly which they labour to publish and make knowne to all men and may worthily beare away the bell from all the fooles in the world For these are proud fooles that highly esteeme of their owne wisedome and scornfully disdaine the counsell and wisedome of all other men Seeing therefore euill men want the wisdome of God that is from aboue and abound with selfe-loue which descendeth not from aboue but is earthly sensuall and diuellish we cannot greatly maruaile if wicked men will acknowledge no fault in themselues but wholly looke to second causes and lay the blame vpon the most High when they faile in their purposes Vse 1 The vses of this doctrine First of all wee learne this truth that no euil man can look for any good successe in the matters he taketh in hand but let him alwaies be sure to be crossed cursed of God Albeit thou lay in thine own conceit neuer so strong a foundation work neuer so wisely in thine own imagination yet if thou make not God thy Counsellor 〈◊〉 119.24 and his Word thy director thy wisdome shall be turned into folly and thou shalt be taken in the snare of thine owne hands For all sin against God bringeth with it the wrath of God and the euill life of a sinner drawes vpon his owne head sundry crosses and calamities causeth him to haue ill successe and raiseth vp infinite iudgments against him Whensoeuer we despise his word prophane his Sabbaths defile his Sacraments and practise any vnrighteousnesse against men and impiety against God then followeth and falleth vpon vs some sicknesse or trouble some crosse or affliction one way or another as the Apostle sheweth For your dissention and vnreuerent receiuing of the Lords Supper 1. Cor. 11.30 many are weak and sick among you and many sleepe Now when the rod and scourge of God lyeth vpon the backe of transgressours and they feele themselues sore plagued either they accuse God as the authour of their trouble or murmure against his punishment or rest vpon second causes which are ordered by him who is the principall cause Vse 2 Secondly we learne that if we would haue God blesse vs and the lawfull labours of our hands we must be godly in Christ Iesus If we leade a sincere and sanctified life purge our hearts to be a peculiar people to God zealous of good workes wee haue a sure promise of good successe and strong assurance of a plentifull blessing to follow vs all the dayes of our life There is no good successe in any thing without Gods blessing And this is the cause why God blesseth vs not because wee blesse not his Name wee liue not as a people vnder his protection wee do not deny vngodlines worldly lusts liuing soberly righteously and godly in this present world hauing our conuersation in the heauens and looking for the blessed hope of glory and immortality Hereunto commeth the saying of Salomon Prou. 16 3. Psal 37.3 1 Pet. 5 7. Commit thy workes to the Lord and thy thoughts shall be directed This is a worthy saying to redresse our weakenesse and distrust and to make vs rest and rely our selues on Gods good prouidence This also the Prophet Dauid teacheth Psal 127 1 2. All the fruit of our labours cares dependeth vpon the prouidence of God yea all our industry and studie shall be vaine and vnprofitable vnlesse he guide all our affaires To this purpose the Prophet speaketh in another place that the godly Psal 1.1.3 refusing the counsell of the wicked the way of sinners the seat of scorners shall bring forth fruite in due season so that whatsoeuer he shall doe shal prosper It is God alone that directeth the wayes and works of the faithful and without him is no good successe This wee see verified in Ioseph Gen. 39 2 3. The Lord was with Ioseph he was a man that prospered and was in the house of his master the Egyptian And his master saw the Lord was with him and that the Lord made al that he had to prosper in his hand The like the Scripture● testifieth of Hezekiah that hee prospered in all his workes 2 Chro. 32 30 and 20 20. So Iehosaphat spake to the people Heare ye me O Iudah the inhabitants of Ierusalem put your trust in the Lord your God and ye shall bee assured beleeue his Prophets and ye shall prosper Thus also the Lord exhorteth Ioshua after the death of Moses Iosh 1 8. We do all of vs desire the blessing of God vpon our labours and to haue good successe in our seuerall callings this is the pathway that we must walke in namely a godly life and conuersation without this his blessings shall turne into curses and wee shall neuer attaine the end of our hope This appeareth by the words which the man of God spake to the King of Israel saying Thus saith the Lord Because the Aramites haue saide 1 King 20 28 the Lord is the God of the Mountaines and not of the Valleys therefore will I deliuer all this great multitude into thine hand and ye shall know that I am the Lord. Lastly we are bound euery one to consider Vse 3 the true cause of euill successe to be in our selues When the hand of God is any way vppon vs that he plagueth
were alwayes in sight of his parents the seruant of his master the souldier of his Captain the subiect of his Prince they would not haue an vnseemly gesture a disordred action how much more doth it stand vs vpon to behaue our selues honestly and in order and to looke to all our wayes that we offend not before the maiesty of God in whose presence we stand When the Minister prayeth and preacheth when the people attend and hearken wee must know that God looketh vpon vs. If any thing bee done vnreuerently and wickedly hee seeth it and beholdeth it when it is committed We cannot hide it from his sight and therfore we should do nothing that may greeue him This is that vse which Moses setteth downe in giuing directions to the people when they went to warre Deut. 23 12 14 That they shold haue a place without the hoast whither they should resort for the necessity of nature and couer their excrements for the Lord thy God saith he walketh in the middest of thy campe to deliuer thee and to giue thee thine enemies before thee therefore thine hoast shal be holy that he see no filthy thing in thee and turne away from thee The truth of this Ceremony leadeth vs as it did them to a farther matter Let vs let the figure passe come to the substance which teacheth that wee must be an holy people to God in soule and bodie and take heede of stayning and defiling our selues And what is it that doth defile vs It is not that which entereth into man but that which commeth out of a man as our Sauiour speaketh of the meates we eate Matth. 15 18. All the euill affections that wee haue within vs are so many stainings of vs before God Euill thoughts murthers adulteries fornications thefts false witnesses slanders are so many infections and as filthy dirt and dung in his sight We must all of vs learne to purge our selues from such foule and filthy corruptions if wee will haue God to rule and be resident amongst vs. If a man bee to receyue any honourable guests or strangers into his house he will haue it swept and kept cleane that he offend not those that he would entertaine It is a great honor vnto vs that God will dwell with vs and rest among vs and vouchsafe so to abase himself as to walke among vs ought not we then to bee carefull how we walke before him and to be wary euery one of vs lest we should displease him Ought we not to behaue our selues with all feare and reuerence seeing he beholdeth vs and eyeth whatsoeuer we do throughout our whole life For as he is come neerer vnto vs Iames 4 8 so vnlesse we draw nere vnto him cleansing our hands and purging our hearts he will withdraw himselfe from vs if we make not our soules and bodyes pure Temples for him to lodge and abide in Hee will dwell with vs vpon no other condition if wee doe not marke and obserue this wee make our soules guilty of driuing GOD away that he should no longer remaine among vs to blesse vs. Lastly we are put in mind by his presence Vse 4 to waite and stay our selues vpon his prouidence in all things depending vpon his protection and deliuerance Stephen a faythful witnes of the truth being perswaded of the presence of Christ stood out to death and boldly maintayned the cause of God against al his aduersaries Acts 7 56. Wee are alwayes in such sort vnder his protection that wee shall not neede to feare that his power will fayle to maintaine and preserue vs. When the Lord Iesus sayde vnto his Disciples Matth. 28 20. Goe into all Nations preach vnto them and baptize them he addeth Loe I am with you vnto the end of the world Whereby hee meant to confirme and strengthen them in all the combats they were to suffer and conflicts which they were to endure in the preaching of the Gospel So Christ appearing vnto Paul and promising his presence to be with him gaue him boldnes to vndergo great dangers and not to account his owne life precious and deere vnto him so long as he might doe seruice vnto God he sayd vnto him Acts 18 9.10 Feare not but speak and hold not thy peace for I am with thee and no man shall lay hands on thee to hurt thee for I haue much people in this City Thus the Lord speaketh to the Prophet Ieremy Bee not afraid of their faces for I am with thee to deliuer thee Here we see the presence of God is made as a reason to strengthen him in the duties of his calling We meete with many dangers and incombrances that assault vs and set vpon vs in the running of our race and finde many enemies that seeke to stop our course such is our weaknes that we shall neuer be able to ouermastet them and to go lustily forward in a resolute and constant course vnlesse we set before our eyes this doctrine that Balaam published as a priuiledge belonging vnto the Church that God is with vs and will neuer forsake vs. Let vs therefore consider Rom. 8 13. If hee be with vs we shall not neede to feare who bee against vs. He will smite our enemies vpon the cheeke bone break the teeth of the wicked He wil scatter theyr counsels and deuices and cast down whatsoeuer riseth vp against our peace And the ioyfull shout of a King is among thē This is the third prerogatiue graunted to the Church which God as king of the Church granteth vnto it being as it were the Scepter of his kingdome the lawes by which it is gouerned For as no kingdom can stand without statutes nor the subiects be gouernd without lawes so it is in Gods kingdom He is the King the church is the kingdome the word is the statute law the diuel al his Instruments are Traytors to this kingdome the faythfull and elect are the natural subiects which willingly yeeld obedience to the word Esay 13 1. This word being the arme of God and the kingdome must be preached to draw the elect into his kingdome This Balaam calleth a ioyfull shout and the Prophet is commanded of God Esay 58 1 to cry alowd and not spare to lifte vp his voice like a Trumpet shewing to the people their sinnes and the house of Iacob their transgressions This teacheth vs that it is a great honor and priuiledge of the Church to haue the ioyfull shout of the word to sound among them Doctrine It is the churches priuiledge to haue the pure vse of the word The Scripture or word of God is a priuiledge belonging properly to the Church the vse thereof When God gaue his Law in Sinai it was giuen onely to Israel as appeareth Deut. 4 1. Exod. 20 11 2. where Moses stirreth vp Israel to hearken to the statutes ordinances that should be deliuered vnto thē So the Prophet speaketh Psal 147 19 20. He sheweth his word
God that it may not be laide to their charge Notwithstanding the Lord assisted me strengthened me that by me the preaching might be fully beleeued 2 Tim. 4 16 17. This appeareth in that worthy prayes of Asa which he made going to battaile against his enemies 2. Chron 14 11. Lord it is nothing with thee to helpe with many or with no power helpe vs O Lord our God for wee rest on thee and in thy name are wee come against this multitude O Lord thou art our God let not man preuaile against thee Let vs not therefore be discouraged and discomfited when we see many against vs and few to stand for the cause of God but consider that he whose cause it is is able to defend it whose power and glory is most of all seene in the weakenesse of those that are stirred vp to maintaine it Vse 3 Lastly it is our duty not to fret at euill men when they are exalted and lifted vp on high but consider the end that the Lord will make Nah 1 2. Who will take vengeance on his aduersaries and reserueth wrath for his enemies Though they practise against the iust and gnash their teeth against him though they watch the righteous and seeke to slay him though they abound and prosper and set their mouth against heauen yet this is a comfort to the godly Psal 37 7 8 9 10. That yet a litle while and the wicked shall not appeare thou shalt looke after his place hee shall not be found Waite patiently vpon the Lord and hope in him fret not thy selfe for him which prospereth in his way nor for the man that bringeth his enterprises to passe for euill doers shal be cut off they that waite vpon the Lord shall inherite the land The destruction which God hath con●luded against them is sure he wants no meanes to ouerturne them he can make things that are not of greater power then they that are There is no safety to the enemies of God and his truth there is no way for them to escape for the Lord is the God of vengeance This the Prophet Esay declareth at large chap. 30. 14.10 shewing that their destruction should be both certaine and suddaine This is that which the Prophet assureth Hezekiah of that God would put his hooke in his nostrils and his bridle in the lippes of Rabshekah that rayled vpon the holy one of Israel 2 King 16 6 7. Be not afraid of the words which thou hast heard I will send a blast vpon him he shall heare a noise and returne to his owne hand and I will cause him to fall by the sword in his owne land Let vs therefore remember alwayes the exhortation of the Prophet Psal 37 1 2. Fret not thy selfe because of the wicked men neither be enuious for the euill doer for they shall soone be cut downe like grasse and shall wither as the greene herbes trust thou in the Lord and doe good dwell in the Lord and thou shalt be fed assuredly Verse 9. Blessed is he that blesseth thee cursed is he that curseth thee This is the conclusion of this prophecy wherein is shewed that God will powre out his blessings vpon his people in such a gracious manner and measure that it shall runne ouer and fall vpon those that are the friends and fauourers of the Church on the contrary side such as hurt or persecute them shall vndergoe the heauy curse of God as God long before shewed vnto Abraham Doctrine God will be mercifull to such as be mercifull to the Church From hence ariseth this doctrine that God will be mercifull to all those that shew mercy to his Church and such as are without pitty and compassion shall finde iudgement without mercy at the hands of God God will blesse those that doe good to his people they shal not lose their labour that fauour the Church but such as are enemies vnto them shall finde God an enemy vnto them We see how God blessed the house of Laban for Iacobs sake so doth Laban confesse Gen. 30.27 I haue perceiued that the Lord hath blessed me for thy sake Thus God blessed the house of Potiphar for Iosephs sake that was sold vnto him for God was with him and his master saw that the Lord made all that he had to prosper in his hand Gen. 39 3 Thus haue worldly men beene blessed for the godlies sake This is it which Isaac vttered in blessing his sonne Gen. 27.29 Cursed be he that curseth thee and blessed be he that blesseth thee Hereunto commeth a worthy example recorded by the Prophet Ieremy chap. 38 9. chap. 39.16 17. when Ieremy was cast into the dungeon where he stacke fast in the myre through the false suggestion of his enemies Ebed-Melech the blacke Moore spake to the King for him drew him out with cords and tooke him out of the dungeon and therefore the Prophet is sent vnto him with message Thus saith the Lord of hoasts the God of Israel Behold I will bring my words vpon this city for euill and not for good they shal be accōplished in that day before thee but I will deliuer thee in that day sayth the Lord and thou shalt not be giuen into the hand of the men whom thou fearest for I will surely deliuer thee thou shalt not fall by the sword but thy life shall be for a prey vnto thee because thou hast put thy trust in me saith the Lord. Thus did God recompence his zeale and reward his fauour which he shewed to the Prophet in the miseries and troubles which hee sustayned Rahab the harlot receiuing the spyes sending them out another way and preferring their life before her owne life was her selfe saued from the common destruction and had her fathers houshold and all that she had giuen her as a prey because shee had hid the messengers which Ioshua sent to spy out Iericho Iosh 6 25. Iam. 2 25. Heb. 11 31. The widow of Sarepta giuing hospitality to Eliah and offering him part of that poore pittance which was left her and her sonne in those dayes of dearth and drought was with all her family miraculously sustained in the famine continuing three yeeres and sixe monthes 1. King 17 10. The Shunamite receiuing the Prophet Elisha making him a chamber prouiding al necessaries for him setting him there a table a stoole and a candle-sticke that he might turne in thither to lodge when he trauailed that way and eate bread at her house receiued both the blessing of a sonne her husband being old 2 Kings 4 8. and the raising of him from death to life to her great comfort She shewed some mercy but receiued more mercy she ministred comfort to the Prophet but her self receiued more comfort This also our Sauiour testifieth shewing that wee shall lose nothing that we bestow on any of the faithful we serue a bountifull Lord and a liberall pay-master Math. 10 41 42. He that receiueth a Prophet in
many men of a proud and prophane spirit in our dayes For when the wife who ought to bee an helper vnto her husband shall with modesty and meeknesse of spirit it admonish him for the bettering of his estate for the benefite of his wealth for the comfort of his family an● for the profit of his owne soule to forsake his euill company to renounce his drunkennesse or other wickednesse wherein hee delighteth what is more common then for his companions to say vnto him Wilt thou bee ruled and gouerned by her Wilt thou endure her to be thy master Wilt thou suffer her to crow and to carpe ouer thee And thus while they think to become wise men they shew themselues fooles For are we wiser then our father Abraham who accounted it no reproofe or reproach vnto him to obey the counsell of his wife when she perswaded him to cast out the bondwoman and her sonne out of his house No woman in Scripture more renowned and commended for subiection and submission to her husband yet she gaue him good counsell to her great praise and Abraham is commanded to listen vnto it for God sayd vnto him In all that Sara shal say vnto thee heare hir voice Gen. 21 12. Away then with the pride peeuishnesse of all those that take it as a discredit vnto themselues to be put in minde of theyr duty by others and refuse all counsel whereof themselues are not the authors Let vs put on the spirit of humility and decke our selues inwardly wi●h lowlynesse of minde to hearken to euery one that can direct vs in the which is good On the other side it behooueth vs to beware of euill counsell and of euill counsellors for they are as the instruments of the diuell and lye in waite to entrap vs. It is impossible to be free from these sonnes of Belial we shall be assaulted by them and therefore thou must be so throughly prepared against them that if thy father that begate thee or thy mother that bare thee or thy wife that lyeth in thy bosome 〈◊〉 13 6. or thy friend that is as thy owne soule shall entice thee secretly or openly to any impiety against thy holy faith or obedience remember from what b●tter root it proceedeth and say vnto him as Christ did vnto Peter Come behinde me satan For when Peter began to disswade him from that g●eat worke vnto which the Father had sanctified him and sent him into the world he sayd vnto him Get thee behinde mee Satan thou art an offence vnto me because thou sauourest not the things that are of God but the things that are of men A notable example for vs all to follow when we are moued any way to dishonour our God and to wound our owne conscience by committing of sinne 15 And he vttered his Parable and said Balaam the son of ●eor hath saide and the man whose eyes we●e op●ned hath s●●●e 16 He hath said that heard the word of God hath the knowledge of the most High and saw the vision of the Almighty and being in a trance had his eyes vncouered 17 I see that but not now I behold it but not neere there shall come a Starre o●t of Iacob and a Scepter shall rise out of Isr●el and ●hall smite the coasts of Mo●b and shall destroy all them that are behinde me 18 And Edom shall bee possessed and Seir shall be a possession to their enemies for Israel shall do valiantly 19 Hee also that shall haue Dominion shall bee of Iacob and shall destroy the remnant of the Citie 20 And when he looked on Amalek he vttered his Parable and sayde Amalek was the first of ●●e Nations but his latter end shall come to destruction 21 And he looked on the Kenites and vttered his Parable and said Strong is thy dwelling place and put thy nest in the rocke 22 Neuerthelesse the Kenite shall bee spoyled so long as Ashur shal hold them c●ptiue We haue shewed already that the prophesies of Balaam doe concerne either Israel or such as were strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel The prophesie belonging to the Israelites hath bene already handled Now Moses proceedeth to set downe other speciall prophesies which Balaam vttered concerning other particular Nations For it pleased God to vse the meanes and ministery of this wicked man to foretell the troubles and destruction that should come vpon them The first of all those prophesies is against the Moabites and Edomites the second against the Amalekites the third against the Kenites Against all these he prophesieth and foresheweth the ruines of their seuerall States and Dominions Now because al these were great weighty matters belonging to the subuersion not of priuate persons or families but of whole Countries and kingdomes he vseth that preface and introduction which he did before to procure credit and authority to his prophesy declaring that he was inspired by the Almighty to speake of which we haue spoken already in the beginning of this chapter Touching the prophesie against the Moabites and Edomites which is the fourth in number The fourth prophesie of Balaam and the first of those that concerne other nations that were strangers from Israel hee sheweth that the glory of the Israelites shall bee so great their dominion so large theyr kingdome so mighty and magnificent that it shal shake the Moabites Ammonites and Midianites and men of the East in peeces yea shal subdue Edom and enter into their Cities and country as their owne possession This shall be the victorious conquest of the Israelites whose glory is expressed by the name of a Starre and whose kingdome is vnderstoode by the name of the Scepter which is amplified in the beginning of the words and prooued in the end of them It is amplified by the preuenting of ●n obiection which is ●●●ting and may bee thus supplyed When shall this be Obiect Or is the time thereof neere that it should bee by and by looked for The answer Answer followeth I see and plainly perceiue the certain and vndoubted trueth thereof howbeit the season is not yet at hand thou O King hast no cause to feare it for it is not reserued for thy dayes b●t must be fulfilled after many generations For Dauid liued foure hundred years after the vttering and deli●ering of t●is prophesie in whom it was accomplished Thus he comforteth the King and declineth enuy against himselfe He proueth and confirmeth his prophesy by the courage and valour of the Israelites for they shall doe valiantly and destroy the enemies that remaine Now in this prophesie thus propounded wee are to obserue two things First th● interpretation of som things mentioned herein and then consider when it had his accomplishment and fulfilling which is the soundest way to vnderstād a prophesy The words that require interpretation are in the end of the 17. verse It shall destroy all them that are behinde me Some reade them thus Shall destroy all the sonnes of Sheth
their eyes and will not see his brightnesse yet remaineth he the light of the world For the Sun shineth in the firmament howsoeuer some are blinde and cannot see and others might see yet make themselues blinde Therefore the Prophet I say saith chap. 60.1 2 19. Arise O Ierusalem be bright for thy light is come and the glory of the Lord is risen vpon thee thou shalt haue no more Sunne to shine by day neither shall the brightnesse of the Moone shine vnto thee for the Lord shall bee thine euerlasting light and the daies of thy sorrow shall be ended When the Sun which is called the eye of the world and is the light of the day riseth vpon vs and commeth toward vs it doth quicken and reioyce vs it causeth life fruite to appeare in those creatures which seemed to be dead dry before so if this Day-starre do truely rise vp in our hearts it will not onely enlighten our vnderstanding but so heate our frozen and dead hearts as that it will put the life of righteousnesse into vs and make vs walke as children of light that need not be ashamed who mark theyr steps and behold theyr wayes Therfore the Apostle speaketh to euery one of vs that considering the season it is now time that we shold arise from sleepe for now is our saluation nearer then when we beleeued it the night is past the day is at hand let vs therefore cast away the works of darknesse and let vs put on the armour of light walking honestly as in the day not in gluttony and drunkennesse not in chambering and wantonnesse not in strife and enuying Rom. 13 11 12. We haue heere a notable direction how to know whether this starre be risen vpon vs or not If he haue wrought these effects fruites in vs if by the bright beames of his Spirit sweet influence of his grace he hath cast out of our mindes the darke clouds of ignorance and blindnesse and caused vs to see what the acceptable will of God is if he haue sanctified vs by the holy Ghost whereby the kingdome of sinne is euery day more and more suppressed and we reformed according to the Image of God to serue him in holinesse true righteousnesse if these things be in some measure in vs we may be well assured that this starre of Iacob hath shined vpon vs. But if these things be not wrought and effected in vs but that wee remaine still in our sinnes and ignorances we haue no part in Christ we haue no portion in this Sunne of righteousnesse He hath neuer entred into our hearts his beames of grace and mercy haue neuer shined vpon vs we are still holden vnder the dominion of darknesse and in the condemnation of him who is the Prince of darknesse to wit the diuell Therefore the Apostle exhorteth all of vs Awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee light walke circumspectly not as fooles bu● as wise redeeming the time because the daies are euill Ephes chapt 5 verse 14. And the same Apostle in another place saith If any man bee in Christ hee is a new creature 2 Cor. 5 17. If yee haue heard him and haue beene taught by him cast off the olde man which is corrupt and put on the new man which after God is created vnto righteousnesse and true holinesse Eph 4 21 22. Let vs all remember this truth and no more deceiue our owne soules in perswading our selues to be in Christ when as yet we neuer tasted of his Spirit nor were made partakers of his heauenly graces Verse 20. And when he looked on Amalek he vttered his Parable and saide Amalek was the first of the Nations c. Hitherto wee haue spoken of the Prophesie of Balaam against the Moabites now followeth his prophesie against the Amalekites in these words which is the fift in number and the second among them that concerne the heathen that were not of Israel wherein we haue already seene in what sence the Amalekites are called the first of the Nations not that simply they were first of all people for they came of Esau as Moses witnesseth Gen. 36 16 but because they were the first that fought against Israel after they were come out of the Land of Egypt therfore shold be themselues destroyed In setting downe this practise of the Amalekites Doctrine Warres are of great antiquity we finde it warranted that warres in the world haue beene ancient among men To gather armies and to muster men to battaile is no new deuice but an old and ancient practise among the sonnes of men In the tenth chapter of the booke of Genesis verse 9 Nimrod began to be mighty vpon the earth and is saide to be a mighty hunter before the Lord the beginning of his kingdome was Babel And in the 14 chap. we haue mention of two armies one raised by Chedor-laomer and his confederates the other by the Kings of Sodome and Gomorrha these rebelling the other punishing their rebellion betweene whom was a cruell battel fought This we see in the sonnes of Iacob raising a force against the Sheehemites Gen. 34 25. vnder the conduct of Simeon Leui who were the firebrands of warre and the trumpets of sedition they came vpon them on a sodaine and slew all the maies among them and after this violence offered vnto their persons they spoiled the City We shall not need to stand further vpon this point the books of Ioshua of Iudges the books of the Kings and of the Chronicles together with lamentable experience of all ages and times confirme this to haue beene a common practise among men of olde to raise warre one against another and to try their causes and quarrels by the dint of the sword The Reasons heereof are not hard to finde Reason 1 For first howsoeuer men are carried headlong with rage and reuenge one against another yet the diuell is the bellowes to kindle the coales who was a murtherer and a man-slayer from the beginning as our Sauiour speaketh vnto the Iewes Iohn 8 44. Yee are of your father the diuell and the lustes of your father ye will do he hath bene a murtherer from the beginning and abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him This he declareth to the Church of the Smyrnians That it should come to passe that the diuell shall cast some of them into prison Reu. 2 10 and afterward chap. 12 17 it is saide The dragon was wrath with the woman went and made war with the remnant of her seed which keepe the Commandements of God This is it that Michaiah spake to Ahab Who shall entice Ahab that he may goe and fall at Ramoth Gilead Then there came foorth a spirit and stood before the Lord and saide I will entice him 1 Kings 22 20. Seeing then the diuell is the stirrer of diuision and the kindler of contention between man and man
if there were no witches Secondly the diuell cannot kill man or beast at his pleasure to gratifie a witch Thirdly the sending of the diuell by a witch cannot giue him any power and commission to do any thing Fourthly he is more forward and ready to do euill then the witch can be and therefore it were peeuish and preposterous to imagine that the lesse forward vnto wickednesse should set on him and procure him to euill that is more forward so that the witch doth not prouoke forward the diuell but the diuell bearing sway in her heart setteth her on Fiftly the diuell is the commander the witch is but his seruant hee ruleth with power in the children of disobedience and is the god of the world she by the righteous iudgement of God is seruant and subiect vnto him Can any then be so silly and simple to beleeue that the lesse can giue power vnto the greater the weaker to the stronger Lastly as the diuell cannot hurt a poore Fly before hee haue power granted vnto him by a greater power then his owne so when he hath liberty is he so sottish that he will not execute his power vnlesse some witch or sorcerer send him So then wee conclude that witches sorcerers enchanters are the bond-slaues of Satan and haue themselues no power to doe or to authorize him to doe any thing But whensoeuer God giueth him power to afflict as the executioner of his vengeance he vseth them as his instruments not to receiue helpe by them but onely for a colour that he may draw multitudes into sinne and carry them he along into condemnation Let vs not therefore stand in feare of any sorcerers but of God from whom al chastisements come whether such as he inflicteth with his owne hand or such as hee giueth the diuell power to lay vpon men as we see in the history of Iob chap. 1 and 2. and therefore they should humble vs and bring vs vnto repentance The vngodly look no further then to the witch they fret against her they neuer looke vp to God nor consider the cause why the diuell hath power ouer them they seeke not to appease Gods wrath But the godly seeke to take away the cause that they may remoue the effects If our sinnes haue prouoked God and the enemy touch our bodies or goods we must fal down before his Throne humble our selues in prayer entreate the Lord to turne away his displeasure stand fast in faith and patience and waite vpon God for our deliuerance If we endure tentation we are blessed and shall be crowned with the crowne of life Iam. 1 12. And thus much touching the vaine attempt of Balaams sorcery CHAP. XXV 1 NOW whilst Israel abode in Shittim the people began to commit whoredome with the daughters of Moab 2 Which called the people vnto the sacrifice of their gods and the people eate and bowed downe c. 3 And Israel coupled himselfe vnto Baal-Peor wherefore the wrath of the Lord was kindled c. 4 And the Lord saide vnto Moses Take all the heads of this people and hang vp to the Lord before this Sunne 〈◊〉 21 6. that the indignation of the Lords wrath may be turned from Israel 5 Then Moses said to the Iudges of Israel Euery one slay his men that were ioyned to Baal-Peor 6 And behold one of the children of Israel came and brought vnto his brethren a Midianitish woman in the sight of Moses and in the sight of all the Congregation of the children of Israel who wept before the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation WEe heard in the last verse of the former chapter how Balaam arose and went his way from Balak the King of Moab A man would now in reason suppose that the danger were past and the storme cleane ouerblowne after his departure and the Israelites wholly set at liberty But euen as a piece of Ordinance being discharged it is too late and in vaine to wish it may not hurt where it lighteth so Balaam had put that in the head of Balak before hee departed and tooke his farewell which was a snare vnto the people of God whereby it came to passe that he hurt more being absent then he could hurt present and wounded them being further off whom he could not strike neere at hand For he annoyed thē with this counsell that could not touch them with his coniuring sowed that seed whereof sprung vp so plentifull an haruest that albeit he were gone yet his aduice remained and cast forth such a stinking breath and filthy sauour as smelled rankly in the nostrhils of God and infected greatly the people against whom it was plotted and contriued Now wee haue noted before chap. 24 14. that this was the crafty and diuellish deuice of this sorcerer when hee saw hee could not curse and bewitch them to entice them to whoredome to eate of things sacrificed to Idols reproued by the Apostle 1 Corinth 10 14. and after to worship their false gods and the Idols of their owne inuention Balaam knew that Gods fauour was a sure defence against all inuasion of enemies hee knew that sinne leaueth vs naked of Gods protection bringeth in the flouds of his vengeance vpon vs. This wicked wretch knew that they could not be plagued and brought vnder vnlesse theyr God were offended with them whose fauour and friendship is a wall of brasse and as armor of proofe that no weapon can pierce it no engine can batter it no force can make a breach to enter vpon it But when we sinne against him we are stripped of our armour and are left open to all violence Exod. 32 25. This is such a principle as was not vnknowne to the vnbeleeuers Iudith 5 20 21. And thus did Balaam teach Balak to lay a stumbling blocke before Israel to prouoke and entice them to sinne against God by setting before them the beautifull women which might allure them to fornication and draw them to Idolatry by inuiting them to theyr Idoll-feasts and bringing them into theyr Idoll-temples which thing we see heere to come to passe For the childrē of Israel did commit fornication with the daughters of Moab they went to theyr sacrifices worshipped Baal-Peor Psal 106 28 29. did eate the sacrifices of the dead and prouoked God with theyr owne inuentions as t e Psalmist teacheth In the former part of this booke we haue seene how through famine and wearinesse and want of waters they fell to murmuring impatiently and vnthankfully against God Now hauing passed ouer all these disaduantages discommodities and being entred into part of the Country where some of the Tribes had ●heyr habitation Possessing Cities that they builded not Fields that they sowed not Vineyards that they planted not houses that they filled not they fall from God through lustes and pleasures committing bodily and spirituall fornication with the daughters of Moab Deut. 6 10 11. Thus they are ouercome by allurements and enticements of
of warre so it teacheth them to commit themselues and theyr liues into the hands of God as vnto a faithfull keeper to consider that an hayre cannot fal from our heads without his prouidence Matth. 10 30. and to be perswaded that if they stand conquer they conquer to the Lord if they be wounded and fall they fall and dye to the Lord. Lastly the word of God teacheth that the battell is the Lords and the victory is also the Lords that the honor and glory thereof may be returned vnto the Lord. He giueth and taketh away he saueth with many or with few to teach vs to depend vpon the mouth of the Lord to be guided by his wisedome to follow his counsell and direction in all our affaires that so our battels may be the battels of the Lord. To this purpose did Ioab speake to his brother going to fight with their enemies when he saw the front of the battell was against him before and behinde If the Aramites be stronger then I thou shalt helpe me 2 Sam. 10 11 12. and if the children of Ammon be too strong for thee I wil come and succour thee be strong and let vs be valiant for our people for the Cities of our God let the Lord do that which is good in his eyes Thus did Dauid cōfort himself 2 Sam. 15 25. when he was driuen out of Ierusalem through the treason of Absolon saying to Zadoc the priest Cary the Ark of God againe into the Citty if I shall finde fauour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me againe and shew me both it and the Tabernacle thereof but if hee thus say I haue no delight in thee behold heere am I let him do to me as seemeth good in his eies Thus then we see that all the Lords soldiers that fight his battels and inroll their names in his muster booke must be men of stout courage and valiant men at armes as they that go about a good worke he receiueth none into his camp that are faint-harted and white-liuered soldiers which are not able to incorage themselues but are able to discourage others Hence it is that the Lord charged the officers or Heralds a● armes to make proclamation in the audience of the people Whosoeuer is afraid faint-hearted Iudges 7 5. let him go and returne to his house lest his brethrens heart faint like his heart Deut 20 8. God would haue wars made in his name and therefore he would haue souldiers go to them without feare If a man be afraid it is a token he hath no trust in God for he hath power to ouercome fearfulnes This serueth to reproue all those which wanting the vertue of valor and this gift of magnanimity do betray themselues and yeeld vnto most vnequall conditions and make an agreement with dishonorable termes When Benhadad the king of Aram laide siedge to Samaria and sent vnto Ahab saying Thy siluer and thy gold is mine also thy women thy faire children are mine 1 Kings 20 4. Ahab stooped and submitted himselfe vnto him hee did not make resistance with courage but yeilded vnto him like a coward saying My Lord king according to thy saying I am thine and all that I haue Our trust confidence must be in God and then we shall not feare what man can doe vnto vs. Vse 2 Secondly seeing wars are lawful being vndertaken vpon iust causes wee must depend vpon God for good successe Wee must not trust in speare or shield in horse or man but arme our selues with the shield of faith put vpon vs the helmet of saluation we must put on patience and humble our selues in prayer vnto God when we go into the field and are to buckle with our enemies For how should the Lord helpe vs when wee do him not the honor to call on him in the day of trouble We must looke vp vnto him from whence our helpe commeth that he may couer our heads in the day of battell This we see practised in Iehoshaphat when he went into battell against enemies strong in fortifications valiant in corage and infinite in multitude both by word and deed he confirmed the hearts of the people 2 Chron. 20 20. Heare ye me O Iudah ye inhabitants of Ierusalem put your trust in the lord your God and ye shall bee assured beleeue his Prophets and ye shall prosper and he appointed singers and them that should praise the Lord in going forth before the men of armes and saying Praise ye the Lord for his mercy lasteth for euer We are commanded to sanctifie all our works by prayer we haue promise of no blessing from God otherwise then as we aske it from him The food of our bodies the affaires of our life the workes of our hands the successe of our iournies our sleeping waking our health and wealth are sanctified by prayer and are not sanctified without prayer For except the Lord builde the house and watch the city Psal 127 1 2. the worke of the builder and the labour of the watchman is in vaine If then in the dayes of peace where the danger is not so present nor so certaine wee are charged to commend our selues our soules and bodies vnto God and al things that any way concerne vs and belong vnto vs much more ought we so to do when we go into the battell where the sword deuoureth one as well as another and taketh away life without difference This vse condemneth two sorts of men which runne into two extremities and forsake this meane propounded heere vnto vs and required of vs. First such as presume vpon their owne strength Luke 12 15. doe not make God their strength For as in peace and plenty men trust in their own store and abundance which they haue prepared albeit no mans life standeth in his riches so in time of warre if once forces be leuied munition prouided and all things prepared to take the field men grow secure and thinke themselues to want nothing But no mans life consisteth in his armour no mans defence standeth in his weapon It behooueth the Lords soldiers before euer they put on armor to reconcile themselues vnto God and to make euen reckoning with him that he may turn his wrath vpon their enemies knowing that hee which putteth on his armour cannot boast as he that putteth it off And as many sin against God by presumption so do others by despair their hearts and hopes are gone they cannot lift vp their eyes with affiance vnto the heauens then which there cannot bee a greater dishonor done to the Lord. So then our surest and safest way is to rely vpon God for our deliuerance and to intreat his protection to be a buckler round about vs before vs behind vs on the right hand and on the left Let praier be esteemed our best armour and defence When Ioshua fought with the Amalekites that fought to keepe Israel from the land
others euen in priuate houses and families The Law of God and man allow not nay they condemne the common practice of brawling fighting quarrelling or challenging one of another into the field for priuate and personall wrongs whereby the seedes of murther and shedding of blood are sowne which soone grow vp to ripenesse and perfection and yeelde a dolefull haruest of sorrow and repentance when it is too late if they bee not weeded out of the heart betimes Whosoeuer shall thinke it a disgrace to refuse such challenges let them also thinke it a disgrace to walke in the wayes of God and to obey the good Edicts of Princes and the wholesome lawes of the Commonwealth It is the greatest grace that can be to yeeld obedience to God and contrariwise it is no credite to sinne against him to saue and salue vp a supposed honour and reputation among men It is the duty therefore of all that liue in priuate societies when they haue hard or wrong measure offered vnto them to go to their fathers or masters for they are Magistrates in the house and are within their owne doores as Kings to rule and Officers to gouerne and no man ought to reuenge his owne cause and quarrel he is as a Marshal to right euery mans cause that is vnder his roofe and to maintaine their credite and reputation The causes of these duels are euill Zedegin loc commun pag. 457. sometimes pride vain-glory sometimes couetousnesse and greedinesse of gaine and the cause of all these causes the diuell himselfe who was a murtherer from the beginning The effects thereof are no better for they cause deadly feudes breed hatred neuer to be appeased nourish contention and confusion hinder prayer and holy exercises of Religion shed mans blood made in the Image of God and bring downe the vengeance of God vpon our owne heads For how often doe such quarrels beginne with brawling and end in blood which once being spilled cannot be gathered vp Let all such therefore as eyther challenge or accept of challenges consider this point that hee which killeth maketh himselfe guilty of execrable murther before God and the blood so shed cryeth as it were with a loud voyce against him to heauen and neuer ceaseth till it hath called downe vengeance and touching him that is killed let him know that he is no better then one of the martyrs of the diuell For as God hath his Martyrs that dye in his cause What we are to thinke of Duellists so the diuell also hath his martyrs that dye in his cause and such as shed their blood are the diuels executioners and no better We can hold no other opinion either of the one or of the other neyther of him that killeth nor of him that is killed whatsoeuer they thinke of themselues and therefore let them looke to it that are so prodigall of their liues or of the liues of others 3 Our father dyed in the wildernesse and he was not in the company of them that gathered themselues together against the Lord in the company of Korah but dyed in his owne sinne and had no sonnes 4 Why should the name of our father be done away from among his family because hee hath c. 5 And Moses brought their cause before the Lord. The plea of the daughters o● Zelophehad In these words the daughters of Zelophehad plead their own cause to haue their part in the diuision of the land not to be shut out from their inheritance The plea is good and well grounded and they vse sundry reasons of no small importance First because their father dyed in the wildernesse in his iourney toward the land of Canaan and therefore the same inheritance that was due vnto him being aliue should not be denyed to his issue being dead For seeing hee died in the way before any of the Israelites could take possession of the land of promise hee could leaue to his daughters nothing but the promise of GOD and a liuely faith appprehending the same which no doubt was truly grafted in them or else they would neuer haue beene so earnest in this matter but haue let it alone till the conquest of the land and the displanting of the Canaanites They plead that he was not partaker with Korah in his conspiracy but dyed in his owne sinne that is as all other men do and must do that are sinners forasmuch as the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6 27. Now vnder this conspiracy of Korah heere expressed we must vnderstand all other mutinies of the same nature that he ioyned not with any in their rebellions neyther was partaker with any seditious persons whereby hee should deserue to be excluded from his possession of the land If any aske Obiect why this conspiracy of Korah is named and singled out aboue any of the rest of the murmurings which were many and of many I answere first because this was late and yet fresh in remembrance Secondly Answer it was more eminent then any of the rest and as it were swallowed vp the memory of all the former Thirdly because it seemeth hee died at the same time that Korahs treachery brake out and therefore hee might more easily bee thought to bee destroyed with them But though he dyed at the same time yet he died not of the same crime as likewise it fell out that Methushelah died immediatly before the flood it might be after it began to raine vpon the face of the earth but was not swept away with the flood And heere it is not to be forgotten that some of the Hebrewes as also we noted before chap. 15 21 are of opinion that this Zelophehad was the man that gathered stickes vpon the Sabbath day others thinke Vatabl a●●●● in hunc locum that he was one of them that died by the biting stinging of the fiery serpents chap. 21 6. But the purpose of his daughters was to bring to their remembrance that their father had committed no act whereby his issue should bee denyed or debarred of their inheritance because he died a naturall death and went the way of all flesh and when he had serued his time was gathered to his fathers An other reason is because he left behind him no sons or heires males of his body lawfully begotten whereby it might and would come to passe that the name of a family in Israel should perish if no portion of the inheritance were assigned to his daughters In al this plea we may perceiue in them a notable example of honouring parents in that they are careful that the Name of their father should not be buried in perpetuall forgetfulnes but bee honourably remembred preserued which all ought to follow Likewise an example of faith beleeuing the promise of God for except they had assured their hearts that God would performe his promise and make good the wordes of his owne mouth spoken to Abraham Isaac and Iacob they would neuer haue made such
earnest suite that they might bee heires also of that land by right of succession in which as yet they had not the bredth of a foot and therefore the Apostle teacheth that faith is the substance of things hoped for and the euidence of things not seene Heb. 11.1 Thirdly Doctrine We may make our selues guilty of other mens sinnes we see that we may be made partakers of other mens sinnes and therefore we heard before that the people were commanded to depart from the tents of Korah and his partisans lest they should bee defiled by the euils of those euill men Tit. 3 10 11 2 Cor. 6 7. 1 Tim. 5.22 This may bee done many wayes somtimes by counsel and perswasion and thus was Achitophel guilty of the rebellion of Absolon against his father 2. Sam. 16 and Balaam of the whoredome of the Israelites because they committed fornication with the daughters of Moab by his counsel Numb 31 sometimes by commandement as Herod the great sent forth and slew all the male children that were in Bethlehem Math. 2 16 and so did Herod Antipas behead Iohn Baptist in prison Math. 14 22 thus was Dauid guilty of the death of Vriah his faithfull seruant and is therfore himselfe charged to haue killed him with the sword of the Ammonites 2. Sam. 12 sometimes by consent and so was Saul guilty of the martyr Stephens death because he consented to his death Act. 9 1 and they that sate in iudgment to condemne Christ to whō Ioseph of Arimathea would not consent and therfore cleared himselfe from his blood which otherwise he could not haue done Luke 23.51 sometimes by flattery as those that call euill good and good euill Esay 5 such are the ministers that sow soft cushens vnder euery elbow Ezek. 13 and such people as would haue the Prophets to prophesie flattering words vnto them Esay 30 sometimes by receiuing as they that take and lay vp stollen goods or buy them of those that haue stolen them these are as bad if not worse then the theeues themselues and to be punished as they are likewise they that receiue false tales to the hurt of their brethren though they doe not first deuise them Leuit. 19 16 sometimes by partaking with theeues and sharing with them as Prou. 1 they tooke part of that which was stollen sometimes by defending those that haue done euill and iustifying them in their vngodlinesse Rom. 1 sometimes it may bee done by holding our peace and saying nothing at all when we may speake and cleare a matter so is hee a false witnes that will not speake in the cause of the dumbe as well as he that vttereth an vntruth thus also is the watchman guilty that should giue warning and blow the trumpet but becommeth as the dumbe dogge that cannot barke Esay 56 10. Lastly by not resisting or withstanding when we are able Psal 82 4. If God giue vs power we make our selues weake the euill that we suffer shall be required of vs. Likewise in the example of Moses we learne to haue recourse to GOD in all matters of doubt we must not runne on vpon an head but go into the Sanctuary and aske counsell of the Lord. Doctrine Sinne is the cause of death and al misery Lastly obserue that sinne is the true cause of death mortality corruption and all the misery that hath taken hold of all mankinde when sinne entred then entred all plagues and iudgements in this life and after this life Gen. 2 17 3.19 1. Cor. 15 21 11 30 Rom. 5 12 21. Iames 1 16. Hebrewes 9 27 28. Reason 1 For sin is the sting of death that is the power and strength and the very armour of death it is as a sword which hee holdeth in his hand to wound vs withall It is as a stinging serpent 1. Cor. 15 and if remedy be not sought against the biting of it it woundeth soule and body to death Secondly it standeth with the iustice and righteousnes of God which will not otherwise be satisfied Wee see how Magistrates whose breath is in their nostrils do punish malefactors and offenders with bodily death their eye doth not spare them no marueile then if the Lord who is a consuming fire Heb. 12. whose person is of infinite Maiesty take hold of soule and body and punish them both spiritually and eternally and therefore the Apostle iustly calleth death the wages of sinne Rom. 6.23 Thirdly sin hath pestered and poysoned our nature corrupting all the powers and parts in vs our mind our will our memory our affections our conscience Eph. 4 17 18.19 Rom. 6 12 13. It is as a worme that is alwayes gnawing at the root of life vntill tree and all fall downe Lastly sin giueth strength to Satan the prince of darknes without which he could not hurt vs it is hee that hath power ouer death Heb. 2 14. 1. Cor. 15 56 and therefore was the Son of man manifested that he might destroy the works of the diuel 1. Ioh. 3 8. But it may be obiected if sin be the cause of death Obiection how commeth it to passe that Christ dyed who knew no sin in whose mouth was no guile found Answ 2 Cor. 5 21. Answ Though Christ were without sin in himselfe yet he that knew no sin was made sin for vs c. he tooke vpon him the sins of all the faithful as a surety taketh vpon him the debt of another And albeit he were not a sinner by transgression yet he may be said to be a sinner by imputation and therefore he must dye yet so that dying hauing no cause of death in himselfe he might destroy death and him that had the power of death that is the diuel Heb. 2 14 Hos 13 14. Againe Obiect if death be a fruit effect of sin how commeth it to passe that the faithfull which haue in Christ remission of sinnes do notwithstanding dy Answ Answ Albeit they haue forgiuenesse of sinnes yet they haue in them alwayes the reliques of sinne through the corruption of nature though it be not imputed vnto them through the mercy of God The guilt of Adams sin followeth vs as the shadow doth the body it cannot in this life be wholly purged it shall bee at the last cleane put off by death It is necessary therefore that we should dye or be changed at the last day that sin may be vtterly extinguished that we may by death as by a dore enter into euerlasting glory Sin is euery day lessened and consumed in the faithfull howbeit still we beare about vs the body of death Psal 51 5 2 Cor. 12 7 Eph. 2 3. We learne from hence what a horrible and hideous thing sin is that bringeth with it such bitter fruit for sin death are coupled together Rom. 8 2. Sin came not in by creation Eccl. 7 31 but by transgression for from the beginning it was not so Sin hath wroght this confusion euen the first sinne of
no Ministers or teachers to instruct them Matth. 9 36 for as the one sort are in danger of the destruction of the body so are the other of the losse of the soule whereby subiects should learne to be obedient to their Magistrates to be thankfull to God where he hath set them and vnder them to profite in the wayes of godlines lest for our vnthankfulnesse and other sinnes they bee taken away from vs. But the point which is cheefly heere intended Doctrine Magistrates haue their calling immediately from God is this That Magistrates haue their calling and holde their places immediately from God for the good of the people 2 Chro. 9 8. Salomon was set in his throne by God himselfe not by the high Priest or the people Dan. 2 21 37. It is sayde of Dauid that God chose him to be King hee delighted in him to make him King 1 Chron. 28 4. He chose him from the sheepefold to feede his people Iacob and Israel his inheritance Psal 78 71. It is sayd of Saul The Lord hath annointed thee to bee Gouernor of his inheritance 1 Sam. 10 1. God said to the Prophet touching Hazael Iehu Annoint Hazael king of Syria and Iehu shalt thou annoint king of Israel 1 Kings 19 15. So then they hold of God in cheefe and not of men Reason 1 The grounds heereof follow First of all the Scriptures call kings the Lieutenants and ministers of God Rom. 13 4. There is no power but of God the powers that bee are ordained of God c. For he is the minister of God to thee for good and not onely so but they are called gods on earth Psa 82 6. Exod. 22 28 because they sitte in his place and are to execute his iudgements Reason 2 Secondly they are bound to giue an account onely to God and not to man for as they are next and immediate to God and inferiour to none but to him so for all their actions they shall reckon with him The officers sent out by him the Iudges that execute iustice the Ministers and all that preach the Gospel and al that rule in the Church in Commonwealth or in the house must giue an account to him but he to none sauing to him that hath called him Tertullian sayth well Hee maketh him Emperor Apolog. cap. 30. who made him a man before he was Emperor from him hee holdeth his Scepter of whom he hath his soule Obiect But it may be obiected that Peter calleth it an ordinance of man 1 Pet. 2 13 Submit yourselues to euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake If then it be an humane ordinance how may it be diuine I answer Answer the magistrate is so called not because men are the authors of it or may dissolue it but first because men do execute it not God or the Angels Secondly because it is ordained for the vse benefit and profit of men it is ordained for men as Heb. 5 1. So wee may say of the King he is taken from among men and he is ordained for men Vse 1 This reprooueth the Church of Rome together with the great byshop mighty aduancers of that See that giue temporal power to the Pope and make him the soueraign Monarch of the earth as if all the world were one body and he the soule that quickneth mooueth nourisheth and vpholdeth that body or as if Kings and Princes held their temporall possessions dominions and iurisdictions of him as it were their land in Capite and as if that proud byshoppe had power to cite these as his subiects or vassals iudicially to appeare before his Consistorie Howbeit the Pope himselfe hath no more then hee can claime from Peter if so much neyther can Peter haue any more then hee can deriue from Christ But Christ himselfe while he liued vpon the earth tooke vpon him no temporall iurisdiction he refused to be made a king Iohn 6 hee refused to be a Iudge in ciuill causes and in diuiding inheritances Luke 12 13. He payd pol-mony as others did Matth. 17 he submitted himself to the iudgement of Pilate and commaunded all to giue vnto Cesar the things that are Cesars Mat. 22. This was the doctrine of Peter his example also What then shall the seruant be aboue his master or will he that calleth himselfe the seruant of seruants vsurpe that which neither Peter the supposed founder of that supremacy nor yet Christ himselfe euer challenged or vsurped The answer of Bellarmine to this is to bee marked which is as the egge whereof the treasons and rebellions were hatched that haue abounded in these last dayes De pont Ro● lib. 5. cap. 6. For he and his fellowes sound out the trumpet of sedition and secretly instill damnable poyson into the hearts and eares of their hearers and readers that Christ refused to diuide the inheritance lest the office of the Prelacy shold be stained with such base and abiect Offices and that Peter submitted himself to Cesar because then he was weak and not able to recouer his right but if he had bin strong enough he would neuer haue yeelded to him I answer first it is no base calling to be a iudge of inheritances it is an honorable place to sitte in the courts of iustice and in the seat of iudgement Againe as Christ refused to be a Iudge so hee refused to be a king also taught them that his kingdom is not of this world Is it a base office to be a king or dishonorable to rule a kingdom Besides as he refused ciuill honor so he performed ciuill subiection and thereby acknowledged his obedience and homage vnto Cesar by his doctrine practice Wherefore it is certaine hee refused to deale in these causes because they wer not befitting his calling who came to preach not to rule to diuide the word aright not the wealth of the world Secondly where they teach that Peter putteth the church in mind of obedience because it was not then able to resist this is to despise gouernment to arme the subiect against the prince to make way for treasons insurrections and is contrary to the doctrine of the Scriptures and the practise of former times as we haue shewed at large elsewhere Secondly it reproueth such as teach that Princes Vse 2 excōmunicate by the Popes sentence are not to be obeyed and that their subiects are discharged of their oth of alleageance toward them so long as they lye vnder that censure But the Apostle willeth that obedience should be yeelded euen to wicked and idolatrous Princes such as are enemies to the Gospel of Christ and that for conscience sake Rom. 13 5. The Christians in the primitiue Church wanted not number nor strength to haue resisted and deposed Pagan Emperours as Tertullian teacheth Tertul. Apolog. for they had filled euery towne and citty euery campe and corner yet they neuer stirred or offered to make insurrection but offered themselues to be killed for
5 Lastly it is the duty of all Gouernors to looke to theyr families and therefore GOD beginneth with them and directeth the commandement vnto them Why the commandement of the Sabbath is directed to gouernors and that for these causes First because they must giue an acount of theyr gouernment to God of whō they haue receyued it who is the high Commander and generall Master in Heauen and Earth and of all theyr soules that are vnder their charge forasmuch as hee will search and enquire not onely how ciuill and iust among men and toward men our gouernment hath beene but how godly and religious Secondly GOD setteth them in the first place to teach them that God requireth at their hands to teach theyr families to command theyr sonnes and housholds to feare God to bring them vp in his faith feare and in true religion Eph. 6 4. Gen. 18 19. Thirdly because they must go before them by good example and practise of all holy duties as Paul wold haue Timothy to do 1 Tim. 4 12 as we look for any comfort at the Lords hand in that great day of his dreadfull iudgement when he will bring euery worke to light with euery secret thing whether good or euil Eccl. 12 12. If we haue beene examples in good things we shall receyue euerlasting life if examples in euill euerlasting death Fourthly the Lord singleth out the father and master in the first place because if they go before and leade the way the rest of the house wil quickly follow after Iohn chap. 4 verse 53. Acts chapter sixteene verse 32 contrarywise if they yeeld not obedience for conscience sake to the duties of the Sabbath they may by the abuse of their authority hinder frustrate the holy endeauours of his children seruants Hence it is that many fathers vrge their children many masters command their seruants to go about their owne busines and send them from place to place at that time when they should attend to the holy commandement of the Lord whereas both of thē might well and lawfully reply to their fathers and masters and say with Christ our Sauiour Luke 2 49 Wist yee not that I must be about my fathers businesse Lastly the Lord layeth this waighty charge vpon them that such as are vnder their gouernment may yeeld willingly and cheerfully to Gods will considering how straight a charge God hath giuen to all gouernours If they should do it of their owne head or lay an heauy burden vpon thē which themselues would not touch with their little finger the charge could carry no authority It is not therefore their fathers or masters that restraine them of their liberty tye vp their wicked and wandring affections but GOD himselfe to whom all obedience is due The father doth shew loue to his children whē he restrayneth them from wickednes the master doth no wrong to his seruants that brideleth them from following theyr owne willes and pleasures So then the poynt to be learned and practised is that we must first keepe the Sabbath in our owne persons and begin reformation within the doores or closets of our owne hearts or else we will be very remisse negligent in reforming of others or if we be forward we shall bee charged and chalenged to be hypocrites while we teach others but doe not teach our selues Rom. 2 21. Secondly we must cast our eyes vpon others and looke to them that belong vnto vs that they may sanctifie the Sabbath as well as our selues It is not enough for vs to come to the house of of God alone but wee must come with the trayne of our families as a Captaine with his army Psal 110 3 and 42.4 The father oftentimes is praying in the Church when his children are playing in the streetes The master many times sitteth in the house of God when his seruant lyeth at the alehouse The wife sometimes goeth with her husband to the sermon when the daughters and maid-seruants eyther are sent or suffered to runne to lasciuious dancing and wanton company whereby theyr mindes and oftentimes theyr bodyes also are defiled as it fell out to Dinah Gen. chapter 34 verses 1 2 and so the saying of Salomon is verified Prouerbs chap. 29 verse 15. A childe left to himselfe bringeth his mother to shame But haply some Masters will alleadge for themselues that their seruants are vnruly Obiect as the vntamed heyffer and will not be ordered by them that they are much greeued they can preuaile no more with them and that they breake out and will not be holden in by them I answer Answer this is not a good plea but a vayne excuse and no better For if thy authority serue to bridle them and keepe them vnder in the sixe dayes how commeth it to passe that thou wantest power to preuayle ouer them on the seuenth day Can wee rule them in our owne cause and can wee not rule them in the cause of God Haue we meanes to enforce them to looke to our businesse and want wee meanes to compell them to do Gods busines It seemeth therefore to me to be rather want of will in vs Obiect then of power If we pretend farther that they be incorrigible and will haue their owne swinge and be at theyr owne liberty that day Answ we haue no warrant to burden our houses with such persons that will neither serue the Lord nor obey vs but rather infect others that liue with them The Prophet Dauid professeth that they should not serue him that were vngodly his eyes should bee vpon the faithfull to dwell with him but the wicked should not tarry in his house Psal 101 6 7. Why then should wee keepe them in our house that loue not the house of God Wee will quickly discharge that seruant which hath no care of our businesse why then will we trouble our selues our house with him that is vnfaithfull toward God Thus then wee see the care that all ought to haue of the Sabbath both master and seruant father and sonne husband and wife But alasse the prophanenesse of our times is so great that the Sabbath is in a manner vtterly contemned we giue him least seruice on that day wherein we are bound to giue him most duty For we see heere vnder the Law how the Lord commandeth that the daily sacrifice which euery morning and euening was offered should bee doubled vpon the Sabbath But our people for the most part performe single seruice and double impiety vpon that day The greatest seruice is done to our selues or that which is worse to the diuell But of the Sabbath we haue spoken before chap. 15. 11 And in the beginnings of your moneths yee shall offer a burnt offering vnto the Lord two yong Bullocks and a Ramme and seuen Lambes of a yeare old without spot 12 And three tenth deales of flower for a meat offering c. 13 And a seuerall tenth deale of fine flower mingled with oyle
sorted out sufficient in shew that thereby hope assurance may arise to counteruayle the contrary part Eccl. 4 9 10 11 12. Luke 14 31. Iudg. 20 17. and 7 2 7 2. Chron. 14 8 9 10 11. Secondly for order that by warlike policy euery man may be fitted to stand in his place 2 Sam. 10.9 10 11. and 18 1 2 3. 1 Kings 22 14 15 in regard whereof it is fit requisite that men be trayned at home before they go to fight abroad 1 Sam. 17 33. 2 Sam. 10 9. 2 Chron. 14 10 that military discipline be not broken to the destruction of the whole army 1 Sam. 11 11 and 30 16 17 one such souldier is worth an hundred others that are vntaught and vntrayned This serueth to reprooue sundry abuses Vse 1 First of such as send not out a iust hoast or sufficient forces but sparingly now some and then others whereby the people are smitten downe with the sword and made a prey to the enemies 2 Sam. 11 15 17. Secondly against eyther raw or desperate souldiers that couetously or proudly and presumptuously go to battell against the enemy in a tumultuous and confused manner as if they went rather to the spoyle victory then to the battell This is a wilfull tempting of God and a making of themselues guilty of theyr owne death and of many others Thirdly this reproueth the carelesnesse and negligence of such as are Gouernors in gathering mustering men and in prouiding armour and furniture when the cause is instant and requireth haste 2 Sam. 20 4 5. If in any other earthly thing the Prouerbe taketh place in this that delay is dangerous Fourthly it meeteth most iustly with the murmuring of retchlesse people at the labors and charges of often mustering and are vnwilling to bestow one penny for the safety of the state of the kingdome of the Church of our Cities and Townes nay of theyr wiues and children and theyr owne goods Iudg. 5 16 17. and 21 9 10. 1 Sam. 13 8 and 11 7. Lastly this serueth for comfort vnto vs when these meanes are vsed and affoorded when we see them taken in hand carefully and religiously 2 Chron. 14 8. Whē all things are ordered aright and sufficient forces leuied who should not be ready and willing to go foorth For as the want of men and munition and all kinde of prouision taketh away the heart and slaketh the courage of such as are to fight and aduenture theyr liues so on the other side the hauing of all things fitte and necessary giueth comfort 2. Chron. 14 8. Neuerthelesse wee must take heed that we do not relye vpon them and put our trust in them for no man is saued by the multitude of an hoast how great and strong soeuer it be 2 Chron. 13 8 13. Esay 2 22 and 3 1 2 3 and an horse though prepared for the battell is a vaine thing to saue a man forasmuch as an army are men and not God and theyr horses are flesh not spirit Esay chapter 31 verse 3. Againe the army heere spoken of is not onely gathered together but it is sent out Doctrine An army leuied and prepared must be sent out First it is furnished and prepared and then employed The Doctrine An army assembled must go forth in a seasonable time if the cause remaine and continue for which it was gathered Iosh 11 7. 1 Sam. 18 5 27. The Reasons First because it is not the Reason 1 sight but the vse not the hauing but the employing of men of warre that hurteth the enemy 2 Kings 19 32. It is not the hauing of a sword that sufficeth but the drawing of it out against the enemy that profiteth Secondly otherwise it argueth want of wisedome or courage or constancy or all these vpon the distrust of the cause or force Iudg. 9 36 37 38 Thirdly it giueth edge to the enemy to prouide meanes of preuenting by a more speedy resolution if they go not foorth being prepared 2 Sam. 20 6. whereas it is the part of a wise and politike Captaine to take heede hee do nothing to hearten the enemy or discourage his souldiers This serueth to reproue those that in a brauado Vse 1 make much preparation but are nothing at all for execution such are they that go not out at all or go out too late hauing too credulous hearts to beleeue that the enemy will not come or not come as yet 2 Sam 20 6. Secondly it reproueth such as refuse to go or to be sent out Some had rather be hanged before theyr doores then be employed in the Princes seruice Others hide themselues or hyre others or make friends or excuses of insufficiency because they would not performe this businesse and would slippe theyr heads out of the coller Numb 16 12 13 14. Lastly it serueth to warne such as are mustered and haue giuen theyr names to prepare thēselues and to think seriously of the matter that they are to bee employed in a weighty businesse that so they may be ready to fight the Lords battels 2 Chron 20 ver 15. for theyr Prince Country wife and children Neh. 4 14. In the next place marke that Moses spake vnto some of the people Arme your selues vnto the warre At the commandement of Moses the people must arme but before hee command they may not put on armour The Doctrine Doctrine An army must be sent forth by lawfull authoritie A lawfull army must be gathered and sent out by publike authority 2. Chron. 14 9. The grounds heereof for first publike enemies must be resisted by authority power of the publike Magistrate 1 Sam. 11 7. Secondly Reason 1 the Magistrate beareth not the sword in vaine 1 Sam. 8 20. Thirdly they intrude into the seate of Iustice that take this vpon them without authority nay they sit downe in the place of God Numb 16 11. But it may be obiected Obiect that the examples of Abraham who armed 318 men and pursued the Kings and of Sampson proue the contrary for what warrant had they I answer they had both sufficient warrant and authority Answ Sampson was one of the Iudges chosen of God to saue his people and he was stirred vp and guided by an extraordinary spirit to smite them hip and thigh with a great slaughter Iudg. 14 ver 19. And touching Abraham hee was no priuate man nor subiect to any other Potentate but a free Prince and at his owne command Againe he did no more then as if a man should defend him and his against a theefe and resist violence with violence by the sword The vses remaine Vse 1 It is the duty of the Magistrate when intelligence is giuen of enemies and of theyr approch or preparation not to be secure or to suffer them to take the start but he must take order against them 2 Chron. 20 1 2 3 that he suffer not the Lords enemies to preuayle or to escape 1 Sam. 15 3 9 35. It is a great
There was no king like him ouer all Israel neuerthelesse euen him did out-landish women cause to sinne This was the cause of the great wickednes of Ahab who solde himselfe to worke euill in the sight of God because he tooke Iezabel to wife 1 Kings 16 31. And wherefore did Iehoram forsake the steppes of his godly father and commit grosse idolatry but because hee linked himselfe in an idolatrous stocke and married the daughter of Ahab 2 Kings 8 18. Mal. 2 11. Ezra 10 1 2 3. Lastly they are to be reproued who are present with their bodies before the abominable idoll of the Masse whether it be of a fansie or for fashion whether of curiosity or for feare of punishment and to bow downe to an image thinking to be excused if they reserue theyr hearts to God Discommodities of being present at the Masse whereby they robbe God of his glory they giue scandal and offence to the weake brethren they spoyle the Lord of his right they cast themselues wilfully into desperate danger they depriue themselues of a good testimony of their owne saluation and lastly they deny the Lord IESVS and his truth before men and therefore must take heed that he deny not them before his Father in Heauen Math. 10 33. Obiect Neither let them think this any defence or comfort vnto them that they reserue their hearts to God Answ and for his pure worship For if this were true then were the holy Martyrs of God simple fooles that were content to endure all torments yea to lay downe theyr liues for a testimony to the truth rather then giue the least outward approbation to idolatry Then were those three seruants of God greatly deceiued who chose rather to be cast into the fiery fornace then bow downe to the idol that was set vp Dan. 3 18 we are bought with a great price and therefore we must glorifie God in our body and in our spirit for they are Gods 1 Cor. 6 20. Rom. 12 1. Mat. 4 9 Exod. 20 4. 1 Ioh. 5 21. What husband would endure that his wife should prostitute her body to commit whoredome albeit she should pretend and protest that shee reserued her heart chast and pure for him only Then how much lesse will the Lord admit such a bad and blind excuse when they that professe themselues to be his spouse shall commit spirituall whoredome with idols in their bodies Secondly we must learne from hence that Vse 2 it is impiety to worship images with any kind of worship whatsoeuer For if we be commanded to abstayne from familiarity with them that be idolaters much more are we charged to abstayne from idols and from all worship of the idols It is a greeuous sinne to giue the honour of God whereof he is iealous to any but onely to himselfe To robbe God and thereby to enrich another must needes be acknowledged to be a sinfull and wicked practice much more then is it a sinne to giue the same to such base stuffe as stockes blocks and stones and images Not to honour the king is wickednesse To giue the honour due to the King to his Peeres and Nobles must needs bee a greater sinne and offence but to giue it to a base and contemptible person must needs be greater wrong and wickednesse then any of the rest So is it in this case for men not to honour God is euil Idolatry much abuseth the dignitie of man to giue his honour to any mortall man is more sinfull but for a man made after the image of God to giue it to base and senselesse idols is most wicked of all which are the workes of mens hands The basest image-maker that liueth is farre better then the image that liueth not as the workeman is better then the worke And what a grosse and senselesse thing is it that the liuing image of the liuing should performe worship or seruice to the dead image of a dead Saint It were much better therefore and lesse absurd to worship him that made the image who is the creature of God then the image it selfe which is the creature of man So then we oght carefully to take heed to our selues that wee worship not any image or idol with any worship whatsoeuer It is not lawful for a subiect to worship his Prince or for a sonne to worship his father with any religious worship much lesse lawfull is it then for a man to worship such things as these that haue eyes and see not eares and heare not feete and walke not neyther doth any sound passe from them A man would be much ashamed to be found or seene worshipping a tree that groweth a bird or beast that liueth much more then ought we to be ashamed of this grosse kind of worship that we should bow downe to such things as are beholding to vs for theyr forme and fashion so that there is farre more reason that the image should worship his maker then the maker worship the image that hee made Let vs learne to feare GOD and reuerence his worship and flye all kinde of worshipping of images whatsoeuer to abhorre the same as the imiattion of the Gentiles and the very excrements of Antichrist himselfe Whosoeuer they be that practise such impiety in these dayes of grace are fallen from grace It may be that in time of danger and persecution a man may be forced to doe that which goeth against his conscience to saue life but for a man to stand out in these times and to approue such maner of worship he is certainly fallen from Christ and deserueth iust condemnation and destruction and therefore let no colour or pretence or perswasion whatsoeuer draw vs away to the committing of this sinne but let vs labour to keepe our selues pure by cleauing to the worship and seruice of God and by giuing honour and glory vnto him Obiect But they tell vs that they worship not the image of any false God The Scripture indeed cryeth out against the images of false gods and such as are no true Saints but wee for our parts worship nothing but the Images of the true God and of true Saints I answer Answer there is a great difference betweene the Images of true Saints and of false Saints but there is no difference at al in the action it self forasmuch as it is idolatry to worship the Image of the true God as well as of the false And the reason is because it is to giue worship to that which by nature is no God at all Paul and Barnabas were true Saints yet if the men of Lystra had worshipped them they had sinned against GOD as much as when they worshipped Iupiter and Mercurius which were no other then fayned gods Acts 14 12. Therefore that distinction falleth to the ground Deut. 4 15. Obiect Esay 40 18. Rom. 1.23 1 Cor. 10 20. Deut. 27 15. Psal 97 7. But some of the Papists tell vs that images are Lay mens bookes to looke vpon
Salomon was not ignorant but knew well enough what was true honour yet he giueth this counsell not to seeke any honor by reuenge Prou. 24 29. Say not I will do vnto him as he hath done to mee I will render to the man according vnto his worke It is the common sicknesse and disease of the world to requite like for like taunt for taunt and rebuke for rebuke and they thinke they may doe it lawfully and measure to others that measure which they haue measured vnto them whether it bee in word or deede stripe for stripe blow for blow wound for wound But this is a part of our naturall corruption which did appeare in the auengers of blood mentioned in this place Vse 2 Secondly as it reprooueth errors in opinion so it doth likewise errors in conuersation in the practise of life which meeteth with many abuses First here is reproued the common practise of fighting and quarrelling which alwayes beginneth with hatred oftentimes endeth with blood These are they that make no conscience of doing hurt and iniurie vnto others 1 Thess 4 6. 1 Cor. 6 7 8. Many do hold it vnlawfull to strike the first stroke and to offer the first blow and minister occasion of strife but if another strike them and begin the fray they thinke they may lawfully strike againe and return as good as is brought and that with an ouer-plus and aduantage This is to make Magistrates stand for ciphers and Lawes to bee of none effect or to waxe rusty in bookes as a sword in the scabberd Christ reproueth this retayling of like for like both by word and by example By word Matth. 5 39 40 41. Ye haue heard that it hath bene said An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth but I say vnto you resist not euill but whosoeuer shall smite thee on the right cheeke turne to him the other also c. By example for when he was smitten before the high Priest he smote not agayne Iohn 18 22 23 but defended his owne innocency So did Micaiah the Prophet 1 Kings 22 24 25 and Paul the Apostle Actes 23 3 they defended their cause by word but smote not with the fist These examples of the best we ought to haue before vs to bee guided by them who were ledde by the good spirit of God But in our daies when men are charged with contempt of Lawes and Magistrates of God himself in pursuing their priuat grudgings and quarrels if they can say Why did he giue the occasion Why did he begin with me Why did he strike the first stroke They thinke they haue spoken wisely and answered the matter very sufficiently But thus might the Prophets and Apostles as well haue pleaded for themselues and giuen as good a reason of their dealing if they had stricken againe yet they stayed their hands and would not giue blow for blow and they are commended in the word of God The Apostle would neuer haue set foorth the patience of Christ for our imitation who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe and when he suffered he threatned not but committed himselfe to him that iudgeth righteously 1 Pet. 2. vers 13 if he might haue done wrong for wrong but he sheweth that Christ suffered for vs leauing vs an example that we should tread in his steps Secondly this condemneth the practise of many masters who doe after a sort nourish quarrels and contentions as much as in them lyeth within their owne doores For if they haue a seruant who being prouoked stricken by his fellow-seruant will not by and by flye in his face and strike again or being challenged the fielde will not take vp the bucklers and answer the challenge they account it the tricke of a coward and esteem such as vnfit seruants to dwell with them For if hauing a defiance giuen him he take not vp the gantlet they thus reason and conclude with themselues If hee will not draw his weapon in his owne cause he will neuer draw it in mine if he will not strike for himselfe being prouoked he will neuer strike stroke for his master if he be assaulted This may be a rule from humane policy but it is no rule in Christian piety neyther is it after the doctrine which is according to godlinesse It is the duty of seruants being stricken to complaine vnto theyr masters and it is no disgrace or reproch to do so except it be a shame and dishonor to submit themselues to Gods word Euery master is a Magistrate within the walles of his owne house to order his seruants family aright Euerie master is a magistrate in his owne house Hee must giue no approbation to priuate reuenge but make peace among them teach them to suffer wrong rather then to offer and prepare to beare a new iniury rather then seek to reuenge an old as we heard before by the expresse commandement of Christ Not that we should vnderstand his words literally to turne the other cheeke to him that hath stricken one or to giue away our cloake vnto him that hath taken away our coat for Christ him selfe being smitten did not so but hee speaketh comparatiuely do so rather then reuenge thine owne cause But as challenges into the field are vnlawfull so none is bound in honor to answer such challenges Neyther let any man thinke it is a disgrace and discredit to refuse a challenge No disgrace to refuse a challenge For besides that true grace and glory standeth in obedience vnto God wherefore I pray you serueth the master in the house and the Magistrate in the common-wealth but to take vp quarrels that arise the one among his seruants the other among his subiects It is a principall part of their office to decide and determine the differences betweene seruant and seruant betweene subiect and subiect And remember this rule that there can bee no credite gotten by sinning against God Vse 3 Lastly we must take notice of this corruption and shew the duties of loue one to another euen toward our enemies Luke 6 33. Esay 11 6 7 9. Matth. 5 44. 1 Pet. 2 21 23. Now the holy Scripture layeth before vs sundry motiues to moue vs to lay aside all maliciousnesse and desire of reuenge Motiues to moue vs to lay downe reuenge and to shew our selues courteous and gentle kinde and tender-hearted one toward another First except we forgiue we can haue no hope or assurance to be forgiuen but iudgment shal be mercilesse to them that shew no mercy Matth. 6 14 15. Iam. 2 13. Matth. 18 35. We shall finde such measure at the hands of God as wee our selues measure vnto others And Christ enforceth the truth of this by doubling of the sentence both for greater certainty of the matter and for deeper impression in the conscience Secondly God hath forgiuen all his children for Christs sake He might haue many iust quarrels and controuersies against vs for our
blood Do not our Gentry for the most part think it their glory to haue their hands embrewed in the blood of innocents What conscience is made of fighting quarrelling for point of pretended honour but in truth for assured dishonour and disgrace vnto them to their names and to their posterity for let thē set what varnish soeuer they please vpon their combates they shall carry the marke of an horrible sinne to their graue God grant it bee not to hell and the place of perpetuall torment and if euer GOD open their eyes they will weepe day and night for it and bee humbled for it all the dayes of their liues Secondly Vse 2 it is the duty of Magistrates especially and of all men generally in their places to make diligent search enquiry when blood is shed by whom the blood hath beene shedde and if the murtherer bee not found they shold craue pardon at the hands of God And touching the Magistrates and others I would commend to them the consideration of two things first that they be carefull that no man dye innocently that they put no man to death without cause Ier. 25 14. of which we shall speake afterward in the end of this chapter Secondly when murther is committed all men must do their endeuour to the vtmost of their power and meanes to detect the authors of that bloody acte Hence it is that God requireth that when a body is found slaine vpon the ground in the Land which he had giuen the Israelites to possesse and it is not knowne who killed him then the Elders and Iudges shall come forth to the dead body and wash their hands ouer a Bullocke whose head was striken off and protest and say Our hands haue not shed this blood neither haue our eyes seene it O Lord bee mercifull to thy people Israel whom thou hast purchased and lay not the guiltlesse blood vpon them and the man-slaughter shall be forgiuen them Deut. 21 7 8 9. Where we see that the killing of one man is a defiling of the whole country and what care the Lord hath of the life of euery man For murther is so hated of God that albeit the dooer thereof be vnknowne yet hee would haue a solemne cleansing and cleering thereof to be made And see what God requireth at the hands of the Magistrates and ministers of iustice It is not enough for them to protest that they haue not committed or supported or fauoured any euill when causes and complaints haue beene brought before them but they must search carefully and enquire diligently of disorders albeit no man sollicite or seeke vnto them yet themselues must be watchfull in their places Howbeit this duty is oftentimes ill obserued and slenderly practised For how many are there that thinke themselues fully discharged and flatter themselues with a fond imagination that they are greatly to be commended when they patiently giue men the hearing and make countenance to helpe them But God is not contented with this he will take an account of them of a farther duty and will not take it for a sufficient discharge to bee able to say though it be truly There was no information giuen no man made any complaint If then Magistrates that haue the sword of iustice put into their hands to cut off euill doers from the City of God shall suffer any wickednesse to lurke in any Citty or corner they themselues are guilty thereof and it is as much in Gods sight as if they had giuen theyr consent to the practising of it These are they that must after a sort answer for the whole body of the people if euill doers be suffered to nustle vnder them through their negligence Vse 3 Lastly it is the duty of euery one to beware of all occasions and allurements that may draw vs to this bloody sinne For as there is a murther of the hand so there is a murther of the tongue which is therefore in holy Scripture resembled vnto a Razor to a sword to coales to arrowes to poyson to fire all which kill and are the instruments of death and likewise there is a murther of the heart of which the Apostle Iohn sayeth Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer and yee know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him Iohn 3 15. So then we are guilty of this sinne euen by anger and malice in the heart onely and shall haue our portion in the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone If any man haue not a feeling of this in his heart hee is more then dead and if he labour not to repent of it it argueth him to be past all grace and so out of the number of those which shall see God to their comfort For albeit such haue the shape and forme of men yet they haue the hearts of the very beasts If they had the right vse of reason in them and the gouernment of theyr corrupt appetites and affections it could not be but that they would haue a care of the life of their brethren and which is more of theyr owne liues also So then euery man should examine himself and try his owne heart how farre he hath bin guilty of this sinne of murther in euery kinde and branch thereof that so wee may humble our selues Albeit it bee but the anger of the heart yet it is murther in the sight of God is therefore as well to be repented of as the outward acte of murther it selfe To this wee may ioyne the sinne of enuy when men so repine at the good of others that they cannot bee quiet or contented because they want that which others haue and haue not so great a portion as they for this also we should humble our selues and labour continually against it To conclude we see also what crueltie and hard-dealing is oftentimes vsed against poore labouring men that get their liuing by the sweate of their browes and yet many thinke they may vse them as they list eyther with turning of them off with an halfe-peny for a peny or else in exchanging other things for their worke which haply are not worth halfe the money or in keeping backe their wages for weekes moneths or yeares which Saint Iames speaketh of Chapter 5 verse 4. Behold the hyre of the Labourers cryeth and the cryes of them are entred into the eares of the Lord of Sabbath Let vs labour by all meanes to keepe our selues free from bloud and not onely from the outward acte it selfe but from the inward thoughts of the heart as enuy hatred and malice as also from the slaughter of the tongue by cruell and cursed speeches Such a murtherer was Shemei when hee railed vpon Dauid True it is hee charged him to be a murtherer but the murther might iustly and fully bee discharged vpon himselfe for he was the man of blood and a sonne of Belial 2 Sam. 16 7 8. Indeed if a man haue an iniury done vnto him it is lawfull for him
how farre shall wee haue such cousins restrayned once onely remoued or twise or how many degrees And if any answere onely the first degree I would know why the first more then the second or the second more then the third seeing that the one is no more to be proued out of the Law of God then the other As for those that alledge the words of the Law Leuit. 18 6 None of you shall approch to any that is neere to him to vncouer their nakednesse if they be rightly weighed they giue no colour to such interpretation nor liberty of such extension but rather serue as a barre to seclude them out of the prohibition For if any other degrees then are after expressed should bee meant then all cousin●●n any degree though neuer so farre off euen an hundred times remoued should be included within the former prohibition which no wise man will affirme Neyther may wee imagine that the Lord would giue such a Law not to come neere any of the kinne and neuer expresse what kinne hee meaneth but leaue vs at randon euery man to coniecture and euery man to hold what he pleaseth So then it is euident that the wordes are not to be stretched so largely but are to bee gathered into a more narrow compasse and to a more strict senfe such as may bee inclusiue to all the degrees afterward in particular rehearsed and recited and exclusiue to al others Fiftly the Law of God setteth downe sundry threatnings of most horrible iudgments vpon the heades of such as breake the bounds of Nature and are pursued with the censure of abomination of wickednesse of villany of filthinesse committed Leuit. 20. and with the sentence of blood of death of cutting off of fire and of barrennesse not onely vpon the one party but vppon the other neyther onely vpon the man but vpon the beast neuerthelesse among all these the cousin germans are no more touched in the punishment then they were before in the prohibition Lastly as the threatning is noted so also is the execution of the threatning remembred For there is no incest committed against the holy Law of God mentioned in the Scripture but it alwayes carrieth a note of reproof and a brand of Gods iudgement with it but in the examples of the marriages of cousin germans which are many in Scripture not the least touch of any reprehension or correction Ruben went vp to his fathers bed and defiled his concubine Gen. 35 22 49.4 1 Chron. 5 1 and hee is punished with the losse of his birth-right Abshalon went in vnto his fathers concubines which he had left to keep the house 2 Sam. 16 21 and he is punished not long after with a violent death and liued not out halfe his dayes 2 Sam. 18 14. The incestuous Corinthian committed fornication with his fathers wife and hee is censured by the Apostle with excommunication and deliuering him o●●r to Satan 1 Cor. 5 1. Lot in his drunkennesse committed incest with his owne daughters and is plagued with the birth of obstinate enemies of Gods Church the first fathers of the Moabites Ammonites Gen. 19 33. Iudah defiled his daughter in law Tamar indeede in ignorance yet duly reproued by himselfe effectually repented so that he neuer lay with her Gen. 38 16. Amnon fell in loue with his sister Tamar and lay with her and immediately after his lust he is punished with lothsomnes in himselfe hatefulnes in Absolon toward him plagued with a sodaine and violent death in the end 2 Sam. 13 14 15. 28 29. Lastly Herod tooke his brothers wife and hee is reproued for it by Iohn Baptist Mat. 14.4 10. Iohn Baptist is taken away from him and the vnthankfull world who was as a shining candle in the darknes of the world which was no small plague And if wee may giue any credit vnto ecclesiasticall histories touching this Herod who was called Antipas hee that defiled his bodye with most filthy Incest and embrued his hands with h●rmelesse and innocent blood Centur magd ce●t 1. l 1 c●●● and abused his tongue to mock Christ our Sauiour with his cursed Courtiers felt not long after the vengeance of God For as he gaped after honour and sought ambitiously to be entituled with the name of a king he and his proud minion with him were in the second yeare of the Emperour Caligula condemned to perpetuall banishment and at Lyons in France they ended their daies in shame contempt reproch and misery A fit death for such a life Ioseph Antiq. lib. 18. cap. 9. Euseb lib. 2. cap. 4. In all these examples wee see that although the Magistrate leaue these sins of incest vnpunished yet good men doe not passe by them without reproofe euen in the greatest personages and God doth not let thē alone without a iudgement and the Scripture doth not record them without a due note and censure of the abhomination And may we then in reason thinke that God and good mē and the Scripture it selfe would be silent and haue let passe so many mariages of Cousen-germans without any one checke or chastisement if they had bene against the law of God godlinesse Nay rather we may wel think that seeing they go away so cleerely without any the least note of reproofe yea and some of them with no small approbation and commendation at the hands of GOD and good men they are not at al incestuous impious but most lawfull and allowable Vse 1 Now let vs come to the vses First this serues to reproue the Church of Rome which as it is corrupt in the cheefest parts of christian religion so is it in none more corrupt thē in the matter of mariage because they restraine that which God hath left free and they leaue that free which God hath restrained an euident profe among other things that the Roman Church is an Antichristian Church And first it is plaine that they maintaine the lawfulnesse of mariages within the degrees expresly forbidden For whereas by the law of God Leuit. 18 touching consanguinity they which are placed in the transuerse vnequall line cannot marry at all because they are to be holden as parents and children yet if they bee distinct foure degrees from the common stocke they may lawfully marry by the Popes lawes and canons which is filthy incestuous and abhominable And as they are loose when they should be strict so they are strict when they should be loose For wheras cousen germans are left free by the law of God as wee haue already shewed proued they do condemne the same for no other cause but to make way for popish dispensations Againe they teach that the Pope hath power to dispense with the degrees directly and expresly prohibited in Leuiticus and that many of them are onely iudiciall positiue constitutions not grounded vpon the law of nature but seruing peculiarly for that commonwealth of the Iewes Hence it is that that Antichrist
is to bring them vnto him and to make them seeke him early and vntill affliction worke in vs repentance newnesse of life we haue no right vse nor true fruite of it Fourthly it is required of vs to praise the name of God for his mercy and goodnesse in sparing of vs and not pouring out the full viols of his wrath and indignation vpon vs and not coming out with all his fury and forces against vs. The practise of this praise we see in Dauid after the plague was ceassed 2 Sam. 24 25 hee built an Altar vnto the Lord and offered burnt offerings and peace offerings and the Lord was appeased toward the Land and the plague ceassed from Israel Hee did not onely call vpon God but offered the sacrifice of thanksgiuing vnto him Except we follow his example and practise this duty we rob God of his honour and prouoke him to take away his blessings from vs. When we are in affliction we are eloquent enough and haue tongues to vtter many prayers to haue the plague vpon vs remoued from vs but when we are helped and the iudgement is taken away we forget both Gods mercy and our owne dutie we consider not from whence our deliuerance commeth nor what it challengeth at our hands Fiftly we must remember that we thinke not our selues hardly dealt withall but take heed to our selues that we be farre from murmuring and complaining against God The Lord complaineth by his Prophet against such hypocrites Iere. 3 4 5. Ieremy 3 Diddest thou not still cry vnto me Thou art my Father and the guide of my youth will hee keepe his anger for euer will he reserue it to the end Thus they flattered with their lippes when malice was in their hearts they spake faire to God and pretended a great desire they had that they would faine please him while his hand is vpon them and while he striketh them with his rodde But what answere doth GOD giue and they receiue It followeth in the next words Thus hast thou spoken but thou doest euill euen more and more And as it was with this people so is our case when God at any time taketh vs in hand we speake him faire we humble our selues before him and stoope downe to take correction but eyther wee thinke the time too long while his rod is vpon vs and so wil prescribe him the time when to take it away or else we fret fume against him as doing vs wrong and wee sustained iniury at his hands But if we were acquainted eyther with our iniquity or with his mercy we would be otherwise minded and would confesse that all kindes of punishments are due to vs and indeed too little for vs yea we would easily perceiue that GOD is more sorrowfull for the correction which he is constrained to lay vpon vs then wee are greeued for the sinnes which wee haue committed against him If these things be found in vs if we acknowledge Gods mercy toward vs in our troubles if we call vpon him earnestly if we turne vnto him vnfainedly if we praise his name cheerefully and do not think our selues hardly dealt withall we shall not want comfort in our sufferings but be able to comfort both our selues and others Lastly it is our duty to bee patient vnder Vse 3 the crosse not to discourage our selues in our troubles whatsoeuer or how great soeuer they be nor to murmure and repine at them seeing our doctrine teacheth vs that he neuer powreth vpon vs all his wrath nor giueth vs a full cup to drinke vp euen the dregs thereof but tempereth seasoneth it in such sort that together with the affliction we may taste of his compassion Now to the end we may not despise the chastening of the Lord neyther faint when we are rebuked of him but may possesse our soules with patience and endure constant vnto the ende we are to consider three things First of all we must remoue all lets and impediments that may hinder vs in the course of patience Secondly we must learne and marke the motiues that may moue vs to the embracing of this Christian and heauenly vertue Thirdly we must examine prooue our selues whether this grace of GOD be in vs or not seeing vpon it as vpon a pillar resteth the life of our christian profession as we shall shew afterward Touching the first it standeth vs vpon to cut off and to cast away from vs all such things as may any way hinder our patience The Apostle writing to the Hebrewes and commending the constancy and patience of the Saintes draweth this exhortation Wherefore Heb. 12 1. let vs also seeing that wee are compassed with so great a Cloud of witnesses cast away euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth so fast on let vs runne with patience the race that is set before vs whereby he declareth that the meanes to hold on our course with patience is to remoue the lettes and impediments that stand in our way The first hinderance is selfe-loue The hinderances of patience the very bane and poyson of all good and holy duties Wee loue our selues and our skinne so well that we shrinke backe our shoulders and pull in our heads when any perill beginneth to hang ouer vs as if some storme and tempest were imminent and ready to fall vpon vs. So long as this thorne sticketh in the flesh wee cannot loue the Lord nor yeeld obedience vnto him in bearing the crosse Hence it is that our Sauiour Christ saith Math. 16. verse 24. If any man will follow me let him forsake himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me It is to our nature and the naturall man hard to suffer who desireth to sleepe in an whole skinne The second hinderance is desire of reuenge For these two patience and reuenge are as contrary one to the other as peace and warre as fire and water as light and darkenesse If Ioseph had looked to the iniurious dealings of his brethren toward him and to their wicked purposes intended against him he would neuer haue saide vnto them Gen. 45 5 8. Bee not sad neyther greeued with your selues that yee solde me hither you sent me not hither but God who hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh and Lord of all his house and Ruler throughout all the Land of Egypt If Iob had rested and contented himselfe in the attempts and robberies of the Sabeans and Caldeans hee would neuer haue broken out into these wordes The LORD hath giuen Iob 1 15 17 21 and the LORD hath taken away It belongeth not vnto vs to take or to seeke reuenge but to commit our selues and our causes to the God of vengeance The third lette is infidelity when we haue in vs an vnfaithfull heart and cast off all confidence in God who maintaineth the lot of all those that trust in him and depend vppon him What was the cause that the Iewes suffering want in the wildernesse
sometimes of bread and sometimes of water murmured against God and his seruant Moses And albeit they had most manifest experience both of the power and mercy of GOD in helping them in all times of neede yet they brake out into impatiency Exod. chap. 16 verse 3. Oh that wee had dyed by the hand of the Lord in the Land of Egypt Exod. 26 3. when we sate by the flesh-pots when wee did eate bread our bellies full The cause of this was an vnbeleeuing heart to depart away from the liuing God If therefore wee beleeue not in him ●●m 20 12. ●●al 78 22. to sanctifie his Name and to trust in his helpe if we doe not commit all our waies vnto him who hath promised that he will neuer forget vs nor forsake vs it is vnpossible that euer wee should possesse our soules with patience The last impediment is want of premeditation and consideration how we may continue and go through stitch without starting backe from our profession This is the cause that maketh men impatient and to giue ouer when we are tryed because wee neuer weigh the danger before we are tryed We must cast our accounts what it hath cost others what it may cost our selues It is worthy counsell giuen vnto vs by our Sauiour Christ Luc. 14 28 29 30. Which of you minding to build a Tower sitteth not downe before and counteth the cost whether he haue sufficient to performe it lest that after he hath laide the foundation and is not able to performe it all that behold it begin to mocke him saying This man began to build and was not able to make an end It is a dangerous case to be found vnprepared and vnprouided for the assault It hath wrought a relapse and apostacy in many so that they haue denied the faith and made shipwracke of religion Hitherto of the hinderances of patience now let vs consider the motiues that may perswade vs to seeke after it and to lay hand and hold vpon it Motiues to moue vs to patience First of all we must know that as all affliction is of God so he will be with vs haue care ouer vs vnder the Crosse Why then should we bee dismaied or discourage our selues in any troubles whatsoeuer seeing we are still in Gods sight and haue him ready to heare vs otherwise it could not but go hard with vs. It had gone hard with Moses being cast into the Riuer among the reedes except God had looked downe from heauen vpon him and directed Pharaohs daughter to take him vp The like wee might say of Ioseph when he was in irons and his feet held in the stockes Psal 105.18 1 Sam. 24 2 3. Iere. 38 6. Ionas 1 17. Dan. 3 21 6 16. of Dauid when he wandered in the wildernesse on the Mountaines and in Caues of the earth of Ieremy when hee was cast in prison of Ionah in the whales belly of Daniel in the den of Lyons and of his fellowes in the fiery furnace all these had experience of Gods assistance who was not farre from them in the day of trouble So it shall be with euery one of vs his countenance doth euermore behold the iust in all their sufferings calamities as the Psalmist saith The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous his eares are open vnto their cry Psal 34 15. And indeed we should be most wretched and miserable in all our afflictions in warre famine and pestilence and whatsoeuer chastisements befall vs except God had an eye to see vs an eare to heare vs an heart to pitty vs and an hand to saue and succour vs. Secondly we must consider what we haue deserued and how we may iustly be punished not only in that manner but in a greater measure This was the confession of the penitent theefe hanging vpon the Crosse and speaking thus vnto his fellow Luc. 23. Luc. 23 41 42 We are indeed righteously heere for we receiue things worthy of that we haue done but this man hath done nothing amisse We shew our selues to haue a sensible feeling of our sorrowes but are many times without feeling of our sinnes If GOD should lay more vpon vs he were not vniust inasmuch as we haue iustly broght it vpon our selues We see this in the Prophet Dauid acknowledging the same Psal 119 75. I know O Lord that thy iudgements are right and that thou hast afflicted me iustly We must confesse that nothing belongeth to vs but shame and confusion of faces Thirdly this meditation must enter into our soules and neuer depart from vs that God will turne all our sorrowes sufferings vnto the best so that neither tribulation nor anguish nor persecution nor famine nor nakednesse nor perill nor sword shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. This is it which the Apostle teacheth Rom. 8 28. We know that all things worke together for the best vnto them that loue God euen to them that are called of his purpose This promise is assured vnto vs that he will sanctifie vnto our singular good not onely his blessings but his very chastisements and afflictions so that they shall bring vs neerer to God as the Prophet Dauid confessed he had receiued good by thē Psal 119. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word Fourthly we are made to suffer heere that we might not suffer elsewhere For wee are chastened in this life lest we should bee condemned in the life to come If therefore wee be without correction whereof all the sonnes of God are partakers then are we bastards not sonnes as the Apostle speaketh to the Hebrewes Let vs call to our remembrance what Abraham answereth to the rich man Luke 16 25. Son remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore is he comforted thou art tormented The rich man enioyed the desires and delights of his owne heart in this life therefore he was tormented in hell in the life to come Let vs patiently abide that which God layeth vpon vs wishing rather to suffer heere such troubles as are temporall then the torments of hell after this life which are eternall Fiftly it is the will of God that we should suffer to which wee must readily obey and humbly submit our selues as the Apostle sheweth Phil. 1 29. Vnto you it is giuen for Christ that not onely yee should beleeue in him but also suffer for his sake The heathen were wont to vse this as a reason to beare the cros because there is no remedy or redresse that it cannot be otherwise Seeing then they could not choose but suffer they taught that it is better to make a vertue of necessity then brutishly or childishly to despaire vnder it and seeing it must needs be so they must bee contented resoluing as Christ saith Acts 9 5. It is hard to kicke against prickes
withall For he endured as he that saw him which is inuisible Some were racked Heb 1● tempted tormented burned stoned would not be deliuered A wicked man is a very dastard and coward He feareth euery creature which is a great iudgment vpon him that will not feare God The darknesse of the night the solitarinesse of the place the falling of a leafe the crawling of a worme the flashing of the lightning the cracking of the thunder the guilt of conscience doth terrifie them But the godly are endued with true fortitude magnanimity of minde springing from the grace of faith and are bold as a Lyon Prou. 28 1 they are resolued of Gods presence with them and of his prouidence ouer them being ready to say with Dauid The Lord is my light and my saluation of whom shall I bee afraid The Lord is the strength of my life whom then shall I feare Though an hoast pitched against mee mine heart should not be afraid Psal 27 1 2 3. This made the Apostle when he heard that bands and afflictions abode for him in euery Citty to say What do you weeping and breaking mine heart For I am ready not to be bound onely but also to die at Ierusalem for the Name of the Lord Iesus Acts 21 13. The faithfull indeed walke thorough ma●y tentations on the right hand and on the left and enter into many combates yet they sh●nne not the brunt of the battell nor feare to loke the enemy in the face nor shrink backe from the push of the P●ke because they haue put on the whole armour of God and haue their hearts setled and their heads co●ered in the day of triall Therefore the Apostle exho●teth that we should be strong in the Lord and put on the whole armour of God that we may be able to stand against the assaults of the diuell to resist in the euill day Eph. 6 11 12 13. It is not enough for vs to prouide armour and to haue it lying by vs as we see men in ●heir houses haue Pikes and Halberts Corslets and Muskets hanging by the wals waxing rusty through want of vse but we must put them on and buckle them about vs wee must alwayes haue our loynes girt ●●e 1● 35 our lights burning hauing on the brest-plate of righteousnesse taking the shield of faith and drawing out the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Neither is it sufficient to defend vs to put on armour but we must put on the whole armour of God We must be armed from top to toe and leaue no part vnarmed and vnguarded lest the enemy espye his aduantage and worke our destruction We must be armed within and without before vs and behind vs in soule and in body in tongue and eare in head and heart For if Satan who as a roaring Lyon seeketh whom he may deuoure finde vs in any part or member naked vndefended we lye open to him to surprize vs at his pleasure and to bring vpon v● swift damnation Dauid was armed with the armour of God being a man after Gods owne heart bu● because whē he saw the beauty of Bathsheba 〈◊〉 11 1 he made not a couenant with his eyes not to lust Satan ensnared him to commit folly At another time leauing his eares vnarmed and setting them open to the false information and accusation of Z●●ba 〈◊〉 1● 3 he was drawne away to peruert iustice and to betray the cause of the innocent and to condemne the iust without hearing So four eare be at any time vnarmed it is ready to heare and receiue and beleeues slanders false tales against our brethren If the Helmet of saluation do not couer our head if the toong be not fenced the diuell will set th● on work to deuise euil slanders and to publish them to the disgrace and discredite one of another Ionah was a man of God and a Preacher of repentance to the Niniuites yet because he left his tongue vnarmed and did not set a watch before his mouth he brake out into an open and insolent contempt of God saying I doe well to be angry vnto the death chap. 4.9 Seeing therefore we are compassed about with such an army of enemies that watch all occasions and seeke all opportunities against vs they are greatly deceiued that make the life of a christian to be an easie and ydle profession take the Gospel to bee a profession of liberty as the enemies of the grace of God obiect against vs for it may cost vs dearly euen the resisting vnto blood and the forsaking of all earthly commodities that the wo●ld holdeth in greatest price Let vs therefore as wise builders Luke 14 28 sit downe and cast our accounts before hand what our worke may cost vs. For such onely as continue to the end shall be saued Secondly let vs goe boldly forward in the Vse 2 duties of our calling The Church of God is not alwayes in one state Sometimes it liueth in quiet and peaceable times when the Gospel is publikely preached professed taught receiued with liberty of meeting together with freedome of conscience without opposition or gain saying as by the blessing of God it is among vs. Sometimes the truth of God is resisted the professours are persecuted the Gospel is suppressed and oppressed by the rage of the enemy the faithfull are slaine and put to death with all kinde of cruelty Notwithstanding let vs not feare their feare 1 Pet. 3.14 15 neyther be troubled but sanctifie the Lord in our hearts be ready alwayes to giue an answer to euery man of the hope that is in vs with al meeknesse and reuerence So then the godly should not feare the threatnings of the vngodly nor so be troubled as therby to abstain from such necessary duties as their callings do leade and direct them vnto but on the contrary make the Lord theyr feare and theyr dread and make a bold confession of the precious faith they conceiue as those that labour to maintaine a good cause with a good conscience Let vs all goe forward with courage and constancy in our callings let vs performe with diligence the duties laid vpon vs and albeit crosses do crosse vs in the way and many dangers meete vs wee must not shrinke backe but stand fast and goe forward in our profession This should be in all Magistrates that are as the Gods of the earth and the Ministers of iustice they must bee men of courage to performe the duties of theyr calling Exodus chapter 18 verse 13 they must bee endued with the spirit of power and of godly boldnesse to goe through with euery good worke with a constant resolution and not stand in feare of any man considering that the cause is the Lords which they handle They must call and compell others to walke in their duties that so the sword of the Magistrate may be ioyned with the word of the Minister This
should bee also in all Ministers of the Gospel though the power of man rise vp against them they must depend vpon him that is highest in power This christian courage appeareth to haue beene in the Apostles Acts 4.2.29 when they were persecuted imprisoned for preaching in Iesus Name the resurrection from the dead considering the multitude of enemies the assembling of the Rulers the corruption of Pilate the malice of Herod the cruelty of the Pharisies the rage of the Gentiles the tumult of the people they praied saying Now O Lord behold their threatnings and grant vnto thy seruants with all boldnesse to speake thy word And this generally should bee practised of all the godly that haue in mercy receiued to beleeue they must go forward in their holy faith and obedience and arme themselues against the tentation and feare of restraining their liberty of losing their goods of laying downe their life and when men persecute vs for imbracing the faith and professing of godlines we must remember Gods care ouer his seruants and his speciall prouidence ouer them that feare him with the most blessed end that shall certainly follow 2 cor 4 17 18 to wit the kingdome of heauen and an exceeding waight of glory Lastly seeing the godly must lay downe all Vse 3 feare which the wicked seeke to cast vppon them for righteousnesse sake let vs labor truly to feare God For if we may not stand in feare of men let vs know whom we ought to feare and reuerence euen the Maiesty of God fearing to offend him as a good childe feareth his Parents as the Prophet teacheth A sonne honoureth his father and a seruant his master If I be a Father where is mine honour If I be a Master where is my feare saith the Lord of hostes Mal. 1 3. This feare is the beginning of wisedome as the wise man sheweth Prou. 1 7 for this feare the holy man Iob is exceedingly commended in the Scriptures this feare should be stronger in vs to keep vs from sinne in respect of God then in respect of mē This is the vse directly made by the Prophet Esay chap. 8 11 12. Say yee not a confederacy to all them to whom this people saith a confederacy neither feare ye their feare nor be afraid of them Sanctifie the Lord of hostes and let him bee your feare and let him be your dread Where we see that hauing remoued from them the false feare of men he planteth in them the true feare of God hauing shewed where it should not be he teacheth where it should be hauing declared what feare is euill he toucheth the remedy The ready way to take from vs the feare of men dangers that may fall vpon vs from men is the feare of God For whosoeuer feareth God aright How the fe●● of God ●●ueth away th●● fea●e of m●● he will not prouoke him to wrath for feare or loue of any creature knowing that God is stronger and mightier then al and assuring himselfe that if God be offended no creature is able to secure him and safegard him from danger of iudgement Againe whosoeuer hath God his friend shall not need to feare man to be his enemy If then we seeke to feare God with all our heart aboue all things we shall be free from the immoderate and excessiue feare of the mightiest enemies But if we doe not feare to offend him we shall bee constraind alwayes to tremble at the least occasion and to feare the wicked the diuels death hell and damnation Euery storme of troubles shall be able to ouerturne vs. Let not our hearts therefore be troubled let vs rest in God and beleeue in him Let no danger driue vs to deny h●m Mat. 10.33 lest we be denyed of him in his kingdome And let vs consider the heauy punishment determined and reserued for all distrustfull and fearefull men which shall feare man more then God and so make ship-wrack of faith and a good conscience they shall be punished with vnbeleeuers with the abhominable with murtherers and whoremongers Reuel 21 8. with idolaters and lyars in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone CHAP. XXII 1 AFter the children of Israel departed and pitched in the plaine of Moab on the other side of Iordan from Ierico 2 Now Balak the sonne of Zippor saw all that Israel had done to the Amorites 3 And the Moabites were sore afraid of the people because they were many Moab fretted against the children of Israel 4 Therefore Moab said vnto the Elders of Midian Now shall this multitude licke vp all that are round about vs as an Oxe licketh vp the grasse of the field and Balak the son of Zippor was King c. 5 He sent messengers therefore vnto Balaam the sonne of Beor to Pithor which is b● the Riuer of the Land of the children of his folke to call him saying Behold there is a people come out of Egipt which couer the face of the earth and lie ouer against me 6 Come now therefore I pray thee and curse this people for they are stronger then I so it may be that I shall be able to smite them to driue them out of the Land for I know that he whom thou blessest is blessed and he whom thou cursest shall be cursed 7 And the Elders of Moab and the Elders of Midian departed hauing the reward of the soothsaying in their hand and they came vnto Balaam and told him the words of Balak 8 Who answered them Tarry here this night and I will giue you an answer as the Lord shall say vnto me so the Princes of Moab abode with Balaam 9 Then God came vnto Balaam and saide What men are these with thee 10 And Balaam saide vnto God Balak the sonne of Zippor King of Moab hath sent vnto mee saying 11 Behold there is a people come out of Egipt and couereth the face of the Earth come now curse them for my sake so it may be that I shall be able to ouercome them in battaile and to driue them out 12 And God said vnto Balaam Goe not thou with thē neither curse the people for they are blessed 13 And Balaam arose vp in the morning and said vnto the Princes of Balak Returne vnto your Land for the Lord hath refused to giue me leaue to goe with you 14 So the Princes of Moab rose vp and went vnto Balak and said Balaam hath refused to come HItherto we haue seene the prosperous and happy successe which the Israelites had against three mighty enemies and the threefold triumph ouer them But here ariseth a new enemy with a new deuice or rather a knotte and band of many enemies to stoppe their passage to lessen their multitude and to weaken their strength Moses therefore first declareth what lets and impediments they had as blockes lying in their way and what stopping of their quiet and peaceable proceeding Thus they meet with many stayes and encounter
and betweene kingdome and kingdome no maruaile if waging of warre effusion of blood be deriued from him as frō the principall and chiefe cause Secondly sinne is so vgly a monster that it Reason 2 hath separated vs from God and disordered al the affections of men and made them enuious cruell bloody couetous ambitious and treacherous one against another as great loue as among Wolues as great mercy as among Lyons This the Apostle setteth downe Titus 3 3. And to the very selfe same purpose the Apostle Iames speaketh in the fourth chapter verse 1. From whence are warres and contentions among you Are they not hence euen of your pleasures that fight in your members By the law of creation we were created to abide in a fellowship with God and in an vnion one with another But when sin brake in we fell from God and one from another into all misery Thirdly the wise God disposeth all things Reason 3 by his prouidence and turneth the actions of men to set foorth his glory the glory of his mercy in preseruing of the good and the glory of his iustice in ouerthrowing of the vngodly True it is among all the works of men nothing seemeth so vnbrideled and vnlimited as warre yet it is ordered and determined of God so that not a Sparrow falleth vnto the ground without the will of our heauenly Father This is noted in the holy history touching the rough answer of Rehoboam whereby the tenne Tribes reuolted from the house of Dauid and bloody warres continued between them where it is saide It was the ordinance of God that the Lord might performe his saying which he had spoken by the Prophets 2 Chron. 10 15. and 11 1. So the people are prouoked both to praise the Lord for the auenging of the cause of his seruants by destroying theyr enemies and preseruing them aliue Iudg. 5 2 21. and to acknowledge his iustice in ouerthrowing and consuming all theyr aduersaries Iosh 1 5. Numb 31 1 2. insomuch that there was no man able to withstand them The vses are now to be made of this Doctrine Vse 1 First seeing warres carry an ancient stampe vpon them that in all times man hath risen against man nation against nation and kingdome against kingdome and as mighty hunters haue chased and pursued one another to death let vs not maruaile when we heare of warres and of rumors of warres nor bee dismayed when wee perceiue people in fury carried like wilde beasts one against another these things should not seeme strange vnto vs neyther need we to admire them as the wonders of the world Rather it behoueth vs to enter into this meditation to consider that iniquity doth abound Mat. 24 7 ● that the charity of many waxeth cold For the more these stirres tumults and insurrections do encrease gather strength the more doth charity decay the fruites of loue languish and pine away among vs and the more ought we to be prepared for the approching of the second comming of Christ to iudgement Then will he make an end of al diuision and contention that are now sorife and common in the world Secondly seeing the mischiefe of war hath Vse 2 bene from olde not lately bred as a new birth but the childe of former times say not the old times are better then these grow not wanton weary of things present to loathe the blessings we do enioy as the manner of many men is We complaine that wee are fallen into euill times we praise the dayes that are past consider not we murmure against God who hath made all things good gouerneth all things well Such is the impatiency of men at the feeling of present calamities that they are ready to breake out into a mutiny and murmuring against him vpon whom they lay the cause of heauy and hard times The present state of things is greeuous because present troubles are neerely felt and former discommodities are forgotten long ago This we see notably expressed vnto vs in the example of the Israelites whose present condition was loathed and that past was desired they cryed out the former times are better would God we were againe in the Land of Egypt where we sate by the flesh-pots whē we eate bread our bellies full Exod. 16 3. Numb 26 3 and 11 5 21 5 we remember the fish that we did eate for nought the Cucumbers the Pepons the Leekes the Onyons and the Garlike But they had forgotten the fiery furnace and making of Bricke they had forgotten the drowning of their Infants and the hard taske-masters that were set ouer thē they remembred not theyr seruice sore labour with all manner of burdens and bondage and cruelty insomuch that they vttered many sighes and grones grew weary of their liues And thus it is with many of vs though former times were more lamentable yet the present are more loathed How many are there that commend the dayes already past and magnifie the times of the forefathers then all things were cheape then all things were plentifull now all these are deare and hard to come by These are like those Idolaters that Ieremy complaineth of in his prophesie that saide Wee will burne Incense to the host of heauen as we haue done we and our fathers for then had we plenty of victuales were well felt none euill but since we left off to burne Incense to the heauenly bodies and to poure out drinke-offerings vnto them we haue had scarcenes of all things and haue bene consumed by the sword and by the famine Ieremy 44 vers 17 18. Thus do many of the men of our times they esteeme religion by the backe and belly and measure the truth of GOD by the line of their owne making to wit by feeding and filling of the body But we must consider that plenty and dearth warre and peace sicknesse and health are sent of God and acknowledge them to be his works who is constrained for the abuse of his blessings and the contempt of his word to take them from vs and to scourge vs with his roddes to bring vs to repentance This is that vse which Salomon teacheth in his Ecclesiastes chapter 7 11 12. Be not thou of an hasty spirit to be angry for anger resteth in the bosome of fooles Say not thou why is it that the former daies were better then these For thou shouldst not enquire wisely of this thing What sinnes breake out in these last dayes that were not in the former Were not hatred malice enuy murther debate whoredome adultery idolatry sedition couetousnesse pride treason and such diuellish practises and inuentions in all ages from the beginning When Adam had but two sonnes borne vnto him Gen 4 8. 1 Iohn 3 12. was not one of them a murtherer Did not Caine hate his brother and slay him And did not his posterity fill vp the measure of theyr sinnes and make the earth to stinke with their vnsauory works of
the Apostle say Blessed are they that die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes doe follow them Reuel 14 13. This must make vs to make light ittle account of this transitory life and of the vaine profites pleasures honours and friendship thereof all which are as dung in comparison of the profit pleasure and honour that shall be enioyed in the next life Let vs lay a good foundation in this life and beginne our heauen while wee are here vpon the earth Let vs make the first entrance into it in this mortall body which wee carry about vs that so this work may be finished and fully accomplished in the life to come 50 And the Lord spake vnto Moses in the plaines of Moab by Iordan neare Iericho saying 51 Speake vnto the thildren of Israel and say vnto them When ye are passed ouer Iordan into the land of Canaan 52 Then shall ye driue out all the inhabitants of the land from before you and destroy all their pictures and destroy all their molten images and quite plucke downe all their high places 53 And ye shall dispossesse c. 54 And yee shall diuide the land by lot c. 55 But if yee will not driue out the inhabitants of the land from before you then it shall come to passe that these which yee let remaine of them shall be prickes in your eyes and thornes in your sides and shall vexe you in the land wherein yee dwell 56 Moreouer it shall come to passe that I shall doe vnto you as I though to doe vnto them The second part of the Chapter followeth in these words which is the Commandement of GOD touching the Israelites when they should come into the Land The Law hath two parts the charge to cast out the Canaanites and to destroy Idolatry To theyr obedience he promiseth possession and dwelling in the Land but if they suffer any to remaine they should be dangerous troublesome and hurtfull vnto them and God wil punish them for theyr coldnesse and carelesnesse in the execution of his will In this place we see that God is very patient and of much long-sufferance he had suffered the Canaanites foure hundred yeares but when in the meane season they repented not they are appointed to destruction We see also the horrible iudgement of God against the sin of Idolatry for which kingdomes and cities are destroyed Obiect The question may be asked whether Idolaters be now to be killed and Idols to be pulled downe and destroyed as God in this place commandeth the Israelites I answere Answer this commandement is not generall neyther belongeth to al without limitation and exception nay as it was giuen to the Israelites it did strictly pertaine onely to the Canaanites whose land was giuen them to possesse And now it belongeth to Christian Magistrates to pull downe all idols and to abolish superstition and the occasions of both and to purge their dominions from all such abominations 2 Kings 18 4 and to cause the word of God to be truly preached to roote the same out of their hearts and to offer meanes of conference to turne the seduced from their blind deuotion As for priuate men they haue no warrant to pull downe images which is the next way to moue sedition and rebellion it is sufficient for them to withhold worship from them and they must tollerate those things which are not in their power to reforme Againe it may be demanded Obiect whether all pictures are to be defaced and destroyed and all molten images to be quite pulled downe I answere pictures and images are not all of one sort neither are set vp for one end Answ Some haue a ciuill vse and some a religious Such as are for ciuill vse onely may be retained but such as are set vp for Religions sake are to bee defaced and this is the meaning of the commandement Thou shalt not make to thee any grauen image Now in that the Lord forbiddeth his people to spare the idolatrous Canaanites and commandeth them to root them out vtterly we learne that no familiarity is to be vsed with Idolaters Doctrine We are ca●fullie to au● the compan● of idolaters but we are carefully to auoyde their company Hos 4 15. Deuteron 7 5. Psalme 16.4 and 106 35.36 Iudges 2 2 1 Corinth 8 9 and 10 21 2 Cor. 6 17 Esay 52 11. The grounds follow First because whosoeuer Reason 1 will auoid any sinne must also auoid the meanes whereby they may be induced and insnared to fall into it Now among all inducements to draw vs to a communion of wickednesse the society and familiarity with wicked men is one of the greatest most dangerous This Dauid acknowledgeth and therefore being resolued to yeeld obedience to God first he banisheth vngodly persons from his company and then goeth cheerefully forward in his course Psal 119 115 Depart from me yee wicked doers for I will keepe the Commandements of my God Secondly our nature is prone and inclinable to idolatry and therefore by their company by their example by their practice by their perswasions and by theyr doctrine we may easily be corrupted as the Lord himselfe threatneth that their gods should be a snare vnto them Iudg. 2 3. Hence it is that the Prophet perswadeth the people of Iudah not to go to Gilgal and Beth-auen lest ioyning with the superstitious Israelites they should bee infected with theyr idolatry Hosea 4 15. This serueth to reprooue such as delight in the company of idolatrous Papists to be their Vse 1 inward and nearest frends which are guilty of most palpable idolatry no lesse then the Iewes that set vp the golden calfe and danced before it Exod. 32. Secondly such as trauell for pleasure and delight into popish and idolatrous places where they expose themselues oftentimes to ineuitable dangers by cōsorting and conuersing with such as are ready to allure them to commit idolatry to go into their idolatrous temples to see and heare and afterward to fall downe before their images These are led by curiosity or by commodity to do that which is not conuenient Thirdly this meeteth with their corruption who for wealth or friendes or other worldly I may say wicked respects linke themselues in the nearest society of mariage with Popish idolaters taking and nourishing in their bosomes a serpent which is euer at hand day and night to tempt and entise them to forsake their couenant with God to renounce his pure worship and to embrace idolatry and superstition 2 Cor. 6 14. This was the sinne of the sonnes of God before the flood when they saw the daughters of men and ioyned themselues with them Genes 6 1 2 this matching with them brought a flood of wickednesse and the flood of wickednes brought vpon the whole world a flood of waters wherein all flesh perished This was Salomons sinne notwithstanding all his wisedome whereby he was drawne into idolatry 1 Kings 11 4. Nehem. 13 26