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A09031 A plaine exposition vpon the whole 8. 9. 10. 11. chapters of the Epistle of Saint Paul to the Romans Wherein the text is diligently and methodically resolued, the sence giuen: and many doctrines thence gathered, are by liuely vses applyed, for the benefit of Gods children performed with much variety, and conuenient breuitie: being the substance of neere foure yeeres weekedayes sermons.: By Elnathan Parr, Bachelor in Diuinity, and preacher of Gods Word. Parr, Elnathan, d. 1622. 1618 (1618) STC 19319; ESTC S114074 348,782 462

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Horeb he goes for more safetie and to meet with the Lord. There passeth by him a mightie wind an earthquake and fire representations of Eliahs zeale But God was not in them Then comes a still voice to teach Eliah patience saying What doest thou here Eliah Eliah answered Lord I haue bene iealous for the Lord of hoasts complaining according to the words here vsed by Paul verse 3. In this storie it appeares that Eliah was a man subiect to infirmities as other men are being ouerheate in his passion his life being in danger by Iesabel yet his zeale in regard of the cause of it is exceeding commendable and for our imitation doctrine We are to be zealous for the Lord. So was Elias Moses Samuel Dauid as appeares in their stories Vse When thou seest God dishonored and religion troden vnder foote be not senslesse Would it not moue a man to see altars throwne downe prophets killed miracles take no effect as in Eliahs time Iames 5. ●7 Or now to see the Sabboth profaned the preaching of the Gospell contemned and many notwithstanding dayly admonitions to runne out some to drunkennesse some to whoredome some to pride c Surely we want an Eliah Whosoeuer hath but a dram of his spirit these things to him are as a dagger at his heart Meeknesse in our owne causes but in Gods zeale and earnestnesse become vs. Yet be not ouer zealous few I confesse are sicke of this disease ●et Elias was and we may be also for we are more sure we haue his passions then his grace Excesse of zeale is intollerable yea it hath bene found lesse dangerous to the Church when men haue come short of the due proportion of zeale then when they haue exceeded Auda Bishop in Persia in an excesse of zeale throwing downe a Temple of the Pagans was the cause that the King thereby insensed threw downe all the Temples of the Christians Theod. lib. 5. There are two things whereby we may discerne whether our zeale exceed due limits and bounds or no 1 If thou make thy selfe a partie so much is it in the wrong Elias was the more hot because his owne life was in danger So if there be a disordered person who hath prouoked vs then wee crie its pitie but he should be presented indited punished But when vnder a colour of zeale against sinne we reuenge our owne wrongs it s more passion then zeale Secondly Zeale should consume the faults not the persons of offenders if thine feeds on the persons not on the faults it s naught Quench it against the person inflame it against the fault Iames and Iohn would haue had the wicked Samaritans by and by to be consumed with fier from heauen but they are reproued by our Sauiour Luc. 9.53 And here Elias was somewhat faultie comming short of Moses and Samuell who made intercession for not against their people Eliah makes intercession against his people Moses and Samuell for them These rather then Eliah are to be imitated of Ministers It s a lamentable thing to see a father wringing of his hands ouer his child and complaining of his stubbornesse wishing he had neuer bene borne So it is very greeuious to heare an Eliah complaine to God of the stubbornesse of his people We are your fathers so liue you that we may haue no cause to sue against you either in the court of heauen or earth but rather to reioyce oueryou which we shall doe with much cheerefullnes praying for you if you forsake your sinnes and turne vnto God obeying his word If we in our prayers haue cause to complaine of you it will be vnprofitable to you for what followed Eliah his complaint The Lord speakes to him as if hee should say Eliah I see thou art in a moode well goe annoynt Hazael King of Aram Iehu King of Israel and Elisha Prophet in thy roome him that scapeth the sword of Hazaell shall Iehu slay and him that escapeth Iehu shal Elisha slay Of such force are the complaints of the Prophets and Ministers of God against their stubborne people as also are their prayers effectuall on the behalfe of such as beleeue and obey Now I beseech you presently to reforme your liues that wee may mutually ioyne together to blesse God you for vs and we for you that we may be all crowned together at the comming of Christ VERSE 3. Lord they haue killed thy Prophets and digged downe thine Altars and I am left alone and they seeke my life IN these words is set downe the complaint of Eliah more particularly in which are two things First the person to whom he complaines Lord. Secondly the matter of the complaint which is twofold First The killing of the Prophets Secondly The digging downe of Altars Both these aggrauated from the miserable estate of Eliah which appeared two waies first He is left alone in his owne opinion secondly They seeke his life also They not onely bellua multorum capitum the vulgar but Ahab Iesabel Nobles Commons and all from the highest to the lowest Especially Iesabel a diuellish and wicked woman who added to the Idolatry of the Israelites the abomination of the Sydonians and whose hatred against true religion was so great that it came into a prouerb such being called Iesabels Apoc. 2. Thy Prophets Thy is added for more detestation of the fact The Embassadors of a meane Prince are not to be wronged but they haue killed Thy Prophets Thine Altars An Altar was a building or Instrument of earth stone or other stuffe reared vp for the offering of Sacrifices Quest But what Altars means he God cōmanded that there should be no Altar in ordinary after the building of the Temple but at Ierusalem where only Sacrifices were to bee offered which is the cause that now the Iewes offer no sacrifices because they want their Temple Ahab could not come by the Altar at Ierusalem being out of his Kingdome What Alter then meanes Ahab Answ Some say that the signe is put for the thing signified and by Altars meant Religion which was by Ahab and Iesabel abolished But as the killing of the Prophets was a matter of fact so also I take this to be rather then of signification only They threw downe material Altars built in Abrahams Isaaks Iacobs Iosuahs and Samuels time before the Temple was builded and the Altars which were by Elias himselfe and other Prophets by speciall commandement after the building of the Temple set vp which were called afterward high Places and the good Kings of Iudah commended for pulling them downe 1. Kin. 18.4.22 Obiect Why should Eliah complaine of the doing of that by Ahab which done by others is commended Answ Those Altars remained as monuments of Gods worship and Elias complaines not simply against their demolishing but because it was done in despite of true Religion that no foot-step thereof might remaine to put the people in minde of the true God which if it had bin done in
the procreant cause of it for the zeale of the Iewes did not make Paul loue them for in this zeale they crucified Christ persecuted the Gospell and Saint Paul cals this zeale in himselfe blasphemie and therefore Paul would neuer commend it Indeede if I see a Papist zealous in his way I pitie him and wish his zeale were wel directed but I commend not his zeale When I read the Story of Alexander Cicero c. I loue their remembrance for some moralities in them as Christ loued that Y●…ng man in the Gospell but this zeale of the Iewes was no moralitie being considered in the manner in which they were zealous And therefore though Paul grant it yet as Chrysostome obserues he reproues it vehemently and takes away all Apology from them Here then I take it the Apostle comes directly to point to shew that Iustification by Faith abolisheth not the Law though their zeale bee cast away because it was not according to knowledge Paul here notably in the first place beating downe as was fit the admiration and opinion they had of their zealous obseruations In this verse there are two things First a Concession Paul grants that they haue the zeale of God Secondly an Accusation or Reproofe of their zeale But not according to knowledge The zeale of God The earnest study of the Iewes about the worship of the true God and standing for Moses Law Paul calls zeale Heb. 10.27 which is a vehement affection as a very hote fire is called the zeale of fire and may thus be described that it is an exceeding vehement affection or loue to a thing with an indignation against whatsoeuer doth hurt the thing beloued and an endeuor to redeeme it from all iniuries and wrongs Zeale of God Not as approued of God but so called because God was the end or obiect of it though they failed in the right way so as this is to be vnderstood comparatiuely in respect of the Heathen who are zealous for false gods So if we compare the Turkes and Papists The Turkes are zealous for Mahomet The Papists in comparison for Christ Not according to knowledge It was according to their owne conceiued knowledge but not according to the knowledge they should haue had by the Gospel and for this doth Paul reproue it The more of such zeale the worse doctrine Zeale if it be not according to knowledge is not acceptable to God The Iewes are a plaine example hereof See also Eccles 7.18 Q. Can a man haue too much zeale A. Not of true but of selfe-conceited A little of this is too much For whatsoeuer is without Faith is sinne Faith presupposeth knowledge Errour in knowledge breeds errour in zeale Vse 1. A good meaning will not iustifie our actions if otherwise euill as appeares in the Iewes who many of them meant well in persecuting the Gospell but they are to this day plagued for such zealous meanings Let vs meane neuer so well if that which we doe be not according to Gods meaning hee regards it not who hath giuen his Law not our meanings to be a rule of our obedience If a Wife play the Harlot and say she meant no harme will this satisfie her Husband And shall wee thinke to worship Images pray to Saints stay at home on the Sabbath day when we may conueniently resort to the Church vnder the shadow of a good meaning No. God will not accept of such bald excuses And if good meaning will not excuse ill doing What shall we say to them which doe ill and meane ill too What shall become of Drunkards Blasphemers Vncleane persons c. What good meaning can be in them Vse 2. Here we haue a rule for the ordering of our zeale that it may be acceptable to God For it is such a thing which if it be well ordered is most beautifull in a Christian but if not a thing of exceeding danger as Fire in moderation is most comfortable in extremitie most fearefull This Rule is sound knowledge out of Gods Word This knowledge must be three-fold First of the thing of the which we are zealous that it be in the Right For if wee be in the wrong the more zeale the worse as in a wrong way the more haste the worse speed Exod. 40.36,37 Therefore Saint Paul tels the Galathians that it is good to be zealous alwaies in a good thing 2. Of the wrong which is done to the thing we are zealous of that in deed there be a wrong done not going vpon hearesay and aduenture but vpon certainty being able out of the Word soundly to conuince the same For here is the indignation and if there be not sound knowledge we may become slanderers of our brethren and as they say beat them with the sword who deserue not to be touched with the scabberd 3. That wee haue some competent knowledge and abilitie thereby to iudge of the proportion of the wrong for the which we haue indignation in our zeale that so our zeale may haue a good temper For all sinnes offences wrongs are not of the same quantitie and qualitie As there is a difference in offences so must there bee in our zeale in greater things to be more zealous in lesser things lesse zealous wee must remember it is of the Nature of fire There is not the like fire for the roasting of an Egge and for the roasting of an Oxe but it is moderated according to the necessities of the houshold By this three-fold knowledge must our zeale be directed where the Word begins there must our zeale beginne and where the Word ends there must our zeale end whatsoeuer our opinion be For as he that trauelleth ouer the Washes or in some dangerous passage without a guide many times perisheth So is the man that is zealous not according to knowledge As therefore in the wildernesse when the cloud ascended the children of Israel set forward in their iourneyes and when that stood still so did they And if the cloud ascended not then they iourneyed not till it ascended Exod. 40.36,37 So is our zeale alwaies to follow our knowledge and to be directed therby There are two forts of men hereby to be apprehended 1. They which haue a desect not of zeale but of knowledge for the ground of their zeale 2. They which haue a defect not of knowledge but of zeale answerable to their knowledge Of the 1. of these may be verified the Prouerbe They set the Cart before the Horse The second may bee likened to Pharaohs Chariots when the wheeles were off so slowly doe they expresse their knowledge in their liues The first are like a little ship without ballast fraught but with a great many sailes which is soone either dasht against the Rockes or toppled ouer The second are like a goodly great Ship well ballasted and richly fraughted but without any sayles which quickly falleth into the hands of Pyrats because it can make no speed sooner making
and therefore much to be pitied that of so many so few should be saued Anselme notes the Iewes to be as the sand in regard of their barrennesse of Faith vvhich is true but here it signifies their great multitude and Number 4. The fourth Amplification is vers 28. which the Ancients haue expounded of the manner how the Remnant should be saued Amb. Hieron Anselm Aqum namely by a short word that is say they by the Gospell which teacheth Faith wherein the Law also is by Christ abbreuiated into the loue of God and of our Neighbour And this word is abbreuiated in Righteousnes because the Righteousnesse which the Law could not giue is giuen by the Gospell Chrysost Ambros Phot. Cyprian l. 2. cont Iad c. 3. Or because the Word of Faith bringeth a Consumption of sinne Or because another Gospel succeedes not this as this did the Law Or this Word is Christ The Word Incarnate so abbreuiated to the Nature of man that He whom the heauens cannot containe should bee contained in a Manger Hier. ad Alg. q. 10 The later Writers expound it as a reason why but a Remnant should be saued namely because God hath purposed to make a short word that is businesse or worke as it is well translated in his Maiesties Bible The Hebrue terme signifying both And thus it notes either the greatnesse of the Destruction of the Iewes by Titus and then the Remnant should teach and publish Righteousnesse in all the world Corneli Corn●…a Lapide Or the speedinesse as if the Prophet should say As I haue soone said it so shall the Lord in a trice bring it to passe Cōment Hieron ascripti Or the certaintie from the Decree of God which hee shall fully execute so that no strength shall resist euen as the course of a Riuer cannot be stopt Tremellius in Esay 11. In the other Testimonie verse 29. we haue also two parts First the Position Secondly the Amplification The Position A seede shall be saued By seede is not meant The Gospell or the Apostles or Christ but the same that is meant by Remnant that is a few That as but a few were preserued at the Captiuitie of Babylon So but a few shall obtaine the Promises Beza This Remnant is called a Seede not only because the life of things is preserued in the Seede but also because that of a mans whole crop the most is sold and eaten and the least part reserued to seede the land for another haruest Piscator This is amplified two wayes First from the Author of this Reseruation God here called the Lord of Hosts All creatures are his Hosts in regard of their multitude as an Armie consists of many troupes Secondly in regard of their order which is admirable as order makes an Armie-beautifull Thirdly in regard of obedience for no Souldier is so ready and prest at the command of his Centurion as all creatures are ready to fulfill the will of God Euen Flyes and Lice if God muster them together God can arme all the creatures against sinfull man the least whereof euen a Flye is able to make an end of vs if God giue Commission Secondly it is amplified from the grieuousnesse and totalitie as I may say of the Deletion of the Iewes if God had not beene mercifull Expressed by a Similitude of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorah where all perished saue Lot and his two Daughters The summe is that as many thousands of the Iewes perished by the sword of Hazael Ioash Sennacherib Nebuchadnezzar c. and had all if God had not preserued some few so but a few onely of them shall bee saued from euerlasting destruction of which those destructions before named were types doctrine But a Remnant of the multitude of the Iewes shall be saued Esay 8.18 24.13 Amos 3.12 Vse 1. Dignitie and multitude moue not GOD to haue mercie but hee delighteth in them that feare him though but a few 2 Esd 8.2 Though the wicked bee ten times so many as are the good yet they shall bee damned these shall bee saued Vse 2. As there is much Pot-earth to a little gold Ore so the Reprobates are many more then the Elect. These are a little flocke * Luke 12.32 in comparison though in themselues an innumerable company Yea in the Church Many are called but few are chosen c Mat. 20.16 And of foure sorts of grounds there is one onely good e Luke 8. Many haue stony hearts many haue thorny but they which haue good hearts are the lesser Number If we should suruey Town-ships alas how many Ignorant should we finde to one that hath sound knowledge How many Swearers to one who feares an Oath How many Drunkards Vncleane Persons Couetous Proud Hypocrites to one godly and true-hearted Professor Bee not offended then at the pouertie of Beleeuers and godly persons neither follow the multitude For the greatest part is commonly the worst part There vvere many that cryed Crucifie to one Nichodemus or Ioseph of Arimathea that spake in the defence of CHRIST It is a common Argument Doth not euery body thus or thus Shall I follow a few singular persons Better it is to follow a few to Heauen then a multitude to Hell and to be damned for company Why are the multitude of the Iewes reiected Had they not the Law Offred they not sacrifice They offred but to Idols They had the Law but obeyed it not They acknowledged not God g Esay 1.2,3 Were the worse for corrections i Ibid verse 5. Despised the Prophets till there was no remedie k 2. Chr. 36.15,16 Profaned the Sabbath l Neh. 13.17,18 Transgressed and turned back m Dan. 9.6.20 c. These were the causes O let England lay it to heart and repent for what corner of it is free from all these grieuous abominations As Ierusalem iustified Sodom so we may well iustifie Ierusalem abounding in all damnable transgressions and contempt of the Word Let vs be wise by the example of the Iewes lest others become wise by our example Seest thou any to feare God take a good course in these perilous times wherein sinne so abounds and so many occasions and prouocations to euill offer themselues Surely it is the great mercy of God Wee say its strange to see men so vile but indeed it is not strange that our corrupt nature should bring forth abominable fruites but this is strange that any hauing such a corrupt nature as we haue all and liuing in such sinfull dayes should feare God and make conscience of his waies Let euery one say If the Lord had not been mercifull and sowne in my heart the seed of Grace I had beene as a Sodomite yea as the vilest that can be named VERSE 30. What shall wee say then That the Gentiles which followed not after Righteousnesse haue attained to Righteousnes euen the Righteousnesse which is of
nimble and quicke but aboue the ground can make little shift so talke or deale with these men of earthly matters they are cunning but speake of Religion and you pose them as with a strange language Achitophel a great Statesman goes home in a dudgeon and in a sullen yet hangs himselfe Could any Ideot haue done more foolishly Pray that thy wit may be sanctified otherwise thou mayest proue an enemie and be besotted with the worst folly Enuy and malice towards the Gospell makes worldly wise men spiritual fooles which is the reason that when a worldly wise-man heares the Word and receiues no benefite some plaine man that loues it is edified by it to saluation He that would grow by the word must cast away enuy and malice 1. Pet. 2.1.2 It is a fearefull estate to enuy the Gospell such are giuen ouer to the Diuell to be blinded and what will not the diuell bring such vnto Needes must he goe whom the diuell driues as he tumbled the swine into the sea so wi●l he thrust such into all iniquitie Tell some swearer of his swearing and he will sweare the more to spite you this were not possible if men were not giuen ouer to the diuell as the Diuell tyrannized ouer Iob when God hath giuen him license so will he rage in thy conscience Pray with Dauid Psal 51.11 Pal. 143.10 Lord take not thy holy spirit from me and let thy good spirit lead me into the land of righteousnes Vse 2. To haue eyes and not to see to know the truth and to haue no power to apply it to our consciences is fearfull It is vncomfortable to be borne bodily blind much more is spirituall blindnesse vncomfortable When Christ came nigh Ierusalem he wept ouer it what was the cause euen the blindnesse of the Iewes Luk 19.41 Ioh 11.33 O that thou hadst knowne the things belonging to thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes thou art blinded When he raised Lazarus he groned in the spirit Why for the hardnesse of their hearts A grieuous plague must blindnesse of mind be when Christ so wept and groned for them which were stiken with it when he neuer cried Oh for all his owne bodily sufferings and bitter passions Repent of thy malice to the word that thou maist see VERSE 9. And Dauid saith Psal 69.22 Let their table be made a snare and a trap and a stumbling blocke and a recompence vnto them 10. Psal 69.23 Let their eyes be darkned that they may not see and bow downe their backe alway HEre is the other testimonie which is Dauids where it is auouched that the multitude of the Iewes are hardened and blinded and by consequence cast off Dauid prophesies of this in the 69 Psalme ver 21 22 23. Paul ties not himselfe to the very words of the Psalme but being guided by the same Spirit by which Dauid wrote addes and alters some words without diminishing of the sense Dauid began that Psalme with grieuous complaints against his owne enemies but the Spirit turnes his meditations vpon the enemies of Christ whom he curseth foretelling what crueltie and outrage they should commit and what they should suffer for it These two verses containe an imprecation where we haue three things first the matter of it secondly the persons thirdly the cause The matter is twofold first he curses them in good things ver 9. Secondly he wishes euill things vnto them ver 10. Their good things are set downe in this word Their Table Table signifies all creatures prouided for their nourishment meate and drinke Ansel Caieta Some say by Table is meant the Scriptures which are the Manna of our soules Peter calls them 1. Pet. 2.2 the sincere milke of the word Some vnderstand the passeouer which was made a snare vnto them when they being assembled to eate it at Ierusalem were there besieged and taken by the Romanes All these are good and to be comprehended As if he had said Let all such things which it is a blessing to enioy turne to their bane and be their ruine and destruction This is deliuered by three metaphors a snare a trap a stumbling As birds are inticed by a shrap laid for them and so taken or as a mouse is taken in a trap or as drunkards stumble at euery stone and fall so let them not receiue a blessing in any thing they haue but let their good things ensnare them to their destruction The imprecation of euill things is of all euil temporall and spirituall set downe in two phrases First Let their eyes not of bodie but of mind be darkened as if he should say Take away their iudgement and vnderstanding giue them a reprobate minde that they may not discerne betweene good and euil that so they may runne and fall in finall impenitencie Secondly Bow downe their backe This is diuersly expounded Piscator Aquinas Cornel. Corn. O curuae in terras animae et caelestium inanes Some according to the words of the Psalme Make their loines tremble terrifie and affright their consciences Some Encline their wils to euill that they may neuer be able to doe good though they discerne it Some Let them be alway like swine groueling vpon the earth hauing no affection to heauenly things Let their minds be vpon their money as they are the greatest vsurers in the world The mindes of such are bowed and crookned to the earth Some vnderstand it of the captiuitie and slauery they now endure Let them be in perpetuall captiuitie vagabonds and slaues ouer the face of the earth a reproach in the world and as slaues haue their backes made crooked by carrying heauie burdens so let them suffer extreme bondage All these expositions are good and to be comprehended for Dauid curses them in body and soule Heauie curses are they Secondly the persons are two First cursing Dauid no wicked man but a Prophet Secondly cursed the people of the Iewes Dauids owne nation Thirdly the cause Dauid a holy man curseth his owne people in this direfull manner surely there must be some great cause The cause is noted ver 9. to be a recompence vnto them why what did they Dauid foresaw that they would persecute Christ speting vpon him crowning him with thornes and hauing beaten him with their fists watching the whole night making him to carry his crosse till he faint vnder it piercing his hands and feete with nayles his side with a speare giuing him gall and vinegar to drinke dealing worse with him the sonne of God then with theeues Therefore Dauid wisheth Lord as they will serue my Lord Christ so let them be serued As when Christ shall come to enlighten them they will choose darknesse so let their eyes be darkned as they will giue him gall and vineger so let their table be their snare as they bowed his back so euermore bow downe their backs This is the law of retalion Iust it is with God that it should
be so doctrine Persecutors of Christ and his Gospell are iustly accursed of God Deut. 18.19 Ier. 26.4 Mat. 21. vlt. Heb. 2.1.2 Obiect We are forbidden to curse by our Sauiour Christ how doth Dauids practise agree with Christs precept Answ They are not prayers but prophesies not that they might be so but that they shall be so We must neuer curse our enemies but there may be a time when we may curse Gods enemies not such as are curable for them we must pray as Steuen whose prayer was effectuall for conuersion of Paul but such as are incurable If we know any such though wee must condole with them as men yet we must curse them as the enemies of God In the generall euery man may and must say 1. Cor. 16.22 Let him that loues not the Lord Iesus be accursed We must reioyce in the iudgement of God and subscribe vnto it 1. Cor. 6.2 For the Saints shall iudge the world But heere must be two cautions 1. That we mingle not priuat spleen turbulent affections with such imprecations 2. That we neuer follow Dauid or any other holy men herein vnlesse we be sure we haue the same spirit 1. Pet. 3.9 This therefore can be no cloke for wicked men who vse to curse and banne their cattle neighbours seruants wife children and whatsoeuer comes in their way a most hideous sinne for wee bee heires of blessing we may not curse Vse 1. The Iewes are cast off to this day for the crucifying of Christ though they be no Idolaters as they were in Egypt and Babylon neither haue any Prophet as they had then yet they are so blinded that they will not acknowledge it yea many of them complaine on their death-beds that our Iesus torments them and yet they cannot see the cause of their misery O Lord open their eyes Gualter hom 62. in epist ad Rom. Vse 2. As an ill stomack turnes good meat into bad humors so euen good things proue hurtfull to wicked men specially contemners of the Gospell Eccle. 5.12 I haue seene riches reserued to the hurt of the owner saith Salomon Make a wicked man rich he will be proud couetous profane Make Saul a King he wil runne from God to the Diuell make Iudas an Apostle it will be a snare a rope vnto him In prosperitie a wicked man will forget God in aduersitie he will blaspheme him Neither enuy the prosperity of the wicked nor be greedy of the riches of the world vnlesse they are blessed they are dangerous snares and it were better to be as poore as Lazarus then to possesse wealth without wisdome and grace to vse it Wisdome is good with an inheritance but an inheritance without wisdome is a snare Vse 3. Esay saith Eccle. 7. Let them haue eyes to see and not see They had eyes and would not see What then Then put out their eyes saith Dauid Let their eyes be darkened O remember this thou that liuest in the Church and hearest the doctrine of saluation and yet will neither beleeue nor obey it Wilt thou not see well then thou shalt not Hast thou a talent Occupie to thy Masters aduantage and thou shalt haue another if thou vsest it not it is pity thou hadest it take it from him He that hath the vnderstanding of a man and yet is as ignorant as a beast make a beast of him as Nabuchadnezzar Prou. 17.16 Why is there a price in the hand of a foole to buy wisdome and he hath none heart If hauing vnderstanding thou wilt not beleeue God will so smite thee that from henceforth thou shalt not be able to beleeue Vse 4. The Iewes are recompenced with curses for crucifying Christ so shalt thou be which contemnest his Gospell and dishonorest him by thy wicked life this is euen to crucifie Christ againe Nay in some respect this sinne is greater then the sinne of the Iewes for they crucified him when he walked vpon the earth appearing in weaknesse but thou dispisest him being now in heauen at the right hand of glory Leaue thy scoffing and be a reuerent hearer and obey to scoffe at the word is to giue gall an vineger to Christ which hee will reuenge at his second comming with flaming fire and in the meane time with vineger and gall too that is horror and anguish of minde through despaire When thou lyest vpon thy death bed and cryest in the bitternesse of thy soule then as thou hast laughed at the Gospell so wil God mock and laugh at thy destruction VERSE 11. I say then Haue they stumbled that they should fall God forbid but rather through their fall saluation is come to the Gentiles to prouke them to Idolatry IN the former part of this Chapter hitherto Paul hath shewed that the Reiection of the Iewes is not totall now hee proues to verse 33. that such their Reiection is not finall but that the multitude I say not euery Indiuiduall shall be generally called before the end of the world that Iewes and Gentiles may make one sheepe-fold and one flocke vnder one Shepheard Iesus Christ To proue this poynt diuers arguments are brought by Paul who alone plainely handles this secret in which he insisteth the longer which is our aduantage also in the vnderstanding of it for the comfort of the poore Iewes and for the admonition of the Gentiles as was touched in the beginning of the Chapter So haue we in this passage two things first arguments to proue the generall calling of the Iewes before the end of the world and an admonition to the Gentiles not to insult interserted at ver 17. to vers 23. I confesse that a very learned man makes all the verses to the 17. to be arguments of admonition to the Gentiles and that the Apostle comes not professedly to the poynt of the calling of the Iewes till the 23 verse In effect it is all one For if the Gentiles out of that reason ought not to insult then it must be taken for graunted that the Iewes shall be called But this in my opinion is more naturall and plaine The first argument is in this 11 verse From the end of Gods casting off the Iewes which is set downe two wayes first negatiuely secondly affirmatiuely The negatiue end is in these words I say then haue they stumbled that they should fall God forbid And it is set downe by a Question an Answere to it the more familiarly to take away all scruple out of the minde of the Iewes who might haue runne mad at the hearing of those direfull curses out of Esay and Dauid For from thence they might say if wee be thus accursed by those holy Prophets then there is no hope left for vs to recouer the fauour of God and be saued O sayth Paul despare not God hath not cast you off to that end he hath not made you stumble that you should fall and neuer rise againe for to fall is to