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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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Affront that she a Lady should be Mockd by an Hebrew Slave The Hebr. lits chack ad Illudendum to Sport c. which Moses mentioneth in a good sense Gen. 26.8 is here taken in the bad sense for Whoredom as Terence Tacitus and others use it 5. To make Joseph the more maligned She doth not say to mock me only but she saith to mock us in the Plural Number as if she did mean This Hebrew Slave would not only abuse me in such a manner as to make others mock me but she intitles the Injury in more general terms as if it had been a National Offence wherein this vile Hebrew had affronted the whole Nation of her Honourable Egyptians well-knowing that the latter were very apt to be offended with the former seeing they were naturally an Abomination to them not only as they were Shepherds Gen. 46.34 but also as the Chaldee more plainly saith because the Hebrews did feed upon as well as Sacrifice those very Cattel which the Egyptians worshipped and therefore their Persons and Sacrifices too were an Abomination to them Exod. 8.26 6. She basely belyes Joseph saying he came in to me to lye with me as if he had come in to commit a Rape upon her by force and not to do his Stewards Business as the Scripture saith Gen. 39.11 and more fully the Chaldee Paraphrase to search the Book of his Stewardship or as Paulus Fagius explains it the Scrolls of his Receipts and Disbursements whereas in truth this was his only Errand of going into the House and then the Devil who counts a fit opportunity the one half of a Conquest drives her furiously to fall in with this fair occasion and to commit a Rape upon him hoping that his corrupt Nature that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Seed-Plot of all Sin would be set on work to comply to the Act when it was so well watered with an happy concurrence of Secrecy Security Sweetness of the Sin and so much the more with an Honourable Lady that offer'd him her Service 7. When this cursed Curtizan had thus loaded poor and pure Joseph with this loud Lie and sluttish slander then she backs it to make it look more plausible and probable in the Eyes of her Servants whom she designed for Evidences against him to her Husband with two pretended demonstrative signs 1. I was compelled to cry out and call saith she for your Assistance 2. When I cry'd out for help he fled away leaving in my Hands this his Garment which I caught hold of endeavouring to hold him By that time she had thus well prepar'd her Witnesses sometimes foaming with rage against Joseph and sometimes beseeching them with many Crocodile Tears to vindicate her upon him her Lord was returned Home and finding her as Josephus saith in an horrible Agony demanded the cause with a much troubled Mind to behold his Wife in such a sad discomposure though indeed he could not expect better if that be true which is supposed by some that she feigned her self sick at his Departure Hereupon she judging it worthy of a Womans wit to become the first Plaintiff and to Ride upon the Fore-horse in fist Accusing him who might have been more justly her Accuser lays load upon the Innocent Hebrew uttering with fierce words and with not a few Tears After this manner did thy Servant unto me c. shewing him his Garment Gen. 39.16 17 18. All which afore mentioned she seem'd to prove substantially by her wheedled Witnesses This was the second part of good Joseph's malady or misery to wit his Mistrisses false Accusation of him to Potiphar to whom she makes her Appeal not only as to her Lord but also as to a Chief Magistrate who was invested with a power over Liberty if not over Life as he was Provost Marshal in Chief to King Pharaoh and from whom she demanded Justice against the pretended Offender against whom she makes most bitter Invectives before her Husband Her Pathetical and Passionate Harangue or Oration is Recorded by Josephus wherein she a Black-moor blackens white Joseph rendring him all Black and her self white she represents him who was not only his Earthly Fathers White-boy but his Heavenly's also far blacker than her self yea more ungrateful than Ingratitude it self as Josephus phraseth if Thus this heinous Impostrix addeth one sin to another and hideth one sin with another her own Adultery with a Capital Calumny cast upon Joseph and thus this notorious Strumpet accuseth a most Chast and Innocent Man of that very crying Crime whereof she alone was most deeply guilty NB. 'T is then no new thing now Alas How many Innocents in all Ages have even perished by false Accusations 'T is the very Godless guise of a wicked World to charge that Home upon the guiltless whereof they themselves are known to be notoriously Guilty This measure our Lord Christ met with meted out to him to be Branded a Blasphemer by the Most Blasphemous Jews Mat. 26.65 What wonder then if the most Orthodox Christians be now blackened with the Brand of Hereticks by the most Heretical Antichristians How did the malicious Heathens traduce those pure Primitive Christians purer than Snow whiter than Milk ruddier than Rubies Lam. 4.7 as so many Murderers Man-Eaters Church-Robbers Whore-Masters Traitors c. all which as is most manifest in Historical Records were their own common and customary notorious practices And is it now to be wonderd at if wicked Men of our day do slander the best Servants of God and the best Subjects of the King for being so many Troublers of State as wicked Ahab did holy Elijah 1 King 18.17 when not they but themselves are those that trouble it No doubt but as the Accuser of the Brethren as Satan is call'd Revel 12.10 set this wicked Woman on work to denigrate fair Joseph so the same Devil ever since and in our day sets on his Infernal Instruments and Incarnate Devils to traduce the Saints of the most High God NB. 2. Hence observe the right Difference betwixt bare Lust and proper Love the former is a fleeting changeable and unconstant Humour mostly changing into the other extream and from Love doth degenerate into hatred whether it be satisfied as in Amnons's Case 2 Sam. 13.14 15. or it be unsatisfied as in the case of this frontless propudium whose unruly Lust after Joseph turned into inveterate and implacable Hatred against him insomuch that both this Harlot and that Amnon added Inhumanity to their Impiety both being Bewitched with the like Bait of Beauty yet herein if either the former in some sense exceeded But true Love it more fixed and constant than meer Lust it being not so much an Humour as a Principle and therefore though some Jarrs and Contests may casually arise betwixt true Conjugal Lovers yet are they wrought off again by this Principle which is like the Springing Fountain that when troubled in its Waters will clear it self again Neither can proper Love pick
cannot be unjust to any because he is bound to none and as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies there is no chatting or wording it with God about those profound points v. 20. God may pass by whom he will and do with his own what he will Mat. 20.15 and who can say to him VVhat dost thou Eccles 8.4 He rejects some as Cain here that his Mercy might the more appear in the Electing of others as of Abel that he might be a Vessel of Honour as Cain was of Dishonour for God hath his use of both in his great house the VVorld 2 Tim. 2.21 He hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth Rom. 9.18 Inference hence is Oh how ought we to magnify the glory of Gods Free-grace Eph. 1.6 for we were all alike Cast aways in the faln and lost Estate Abel as well as Cain we were all Children of wrath by Nature even at others Eph. 2.3 and who maketh thee to differ from another that proud Arminian Gervinchovius undertakes to answer with a stinking Breath that question of the Apostle 1. Cor. 4.7 with egomet meipsum discerno I do make my self to differ from another but we have not so learnt Christ Eph. 4.20 We are taught in Christs word to say that God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us even when we were dead in sin hath quickened us together with Christ by Grace we are saved Eph. 2.4 5. and to cry with that Blessed Disciple How is it Lord that thou manifests thy self to us and not to the VVorld John 14.22 Christ is our all and in all we are nothing in our selves Col. 3.11 and of all the good that is found in us we may say as the young Prophet said of his Hatchet Alas Master it was borrowed 2 Kings 6.5 for in us that is in our flesh or corrupt Estate dwelleth no manner of thing that is good Rom. 7.18 until we borrow both the good will and good deed from a good God Phil. 2.13 Therefore when we see others wallowing in wickedness and committing sin greedily and with both hands earnestly Eph. 4.19 Hos 7.3 then should we reflect upon our selves and say such were some of us This was our natural condition but now we are washed c. 1 Cor. 6.11 Now through Grace we find a Law in our Hearts to be more careful to please God and more fearful to offend God Can we say this our Consciences bearing witness hereof in the Holy Ghost Rom. 9.1 Oh how should we bethink our selves that it is God who putteth the difference snatching us as brands out of the fire Zech. 3.3 Ascribe to him all the Glory 2. As God putteth the difference so he beholdeth the difference 'twixt good and bad as here between Cain and Abel And this latter flows from the former as doth the stream from the Fountain for after God hath made a difference he must needs have a prospect of what himself hath made Hence was the cause and ground why Abel was righteous Mat. 23.35 and so accepted in his Person but Cain was wicked 1. John 3.12 and so rejected of God Whence observe 2. That the Holiness and Righteousness of Man it not the Cause but the Effect of the Electing love of God The former is the Branch but this latter is the Root from whence it springeth Paul that great Assertor and Preacher of Free-grace not of Free-will doth Divinely both affirm and confirm this Truth saying According as God hath chosen us in Christ before the Foundation of the VVorld that we should be holy not because he foresaw we would be Holy and without blame before him in love c. Eph. 1.4 5 6 7 8 9. where the Apostle Teacheth 1. That Christ was assigned and designed the Mediator from Eternity to wit by vertue of that Humane Nature which he should assume wherein to be slain Revel 13.8 2 That God ordains to the means holiness as well as to the end happiness 3. That Holiness is the Effect of Eternal Election not the Cause thereof 4. That all the Causes of our Election or Predestination to Life are meerly without us As 1. The Efficient God 2. The Material Christ 3. The Formal the good pleasure of hit VVill. 4. The final Cause to the praise of the glory of his Grace So that the difference 'twixt Cain and Abel did wholly flow first from the Counsel of Gods own VVill that put a difference between them v. 11. God doth all by Counsel and ever hath a Reason for his VVill which though we cannot comprehend it here on Earth we shall be sure to apprehend it hereafter in Heaven mean while we must adore what we cannot compass or fathom crying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oh the depth c. Rom. 11.33 Hence observe 3. That Difference which God putteth the same he beholdeth betwixt one Man and another 'twixt good and evil and accordingly he respects or disrespects their Persons first and then their Actions As here God had respect first to Abel 's Person and then to his Offering or Action Gen. 4.4 But unto Cain's Person first and then to his Action or Offering God had not respect v. 5. though God put a difference in his Eternal purpose yet Men also put a difference by their personal performances the godly through Grace and the wicked through want of Grace c. From whence observe 4 'T is the piety or impiety of Mens Persons that do commend or discommend their Actions and Services to God 'T is not the work that so much commends or discommends the Man but the Man the work As is the Man so is his work good or evil at least habitually quo magis aliquid tale est illud est magis tale or qualis causa tale causatum As is the Cause so is the Effect and the better that the Cause is the better must the Effect be These are Maxims in Philosophy which hold true in Divinity also A good Man worketh good Actions and the better the Man is the better are his Actions As the Temple is said to sanctifie the Gold and not the Gold the Temple Mat. 23.17 So the Person gives acceptance to and sanctifies the Action not the Action the Person Solomon saith that a Gift will make room for the Giver among Men Prov. 17.8 with 18.16 but it cannot do so with God because Man looks first on the Gift and then on the Giver measuring the Giver by his Gift but God doth just contrary for he first looks upon the Giver and then on the Gift first upon the Person and then on the Action as here and as he finds the Man he doth accordingly accept or reject approve or disapprove of the Gift Action or Offering This Truth is further demonstrated by Prov. 12.2 and by Prov. 15.8 in both which Solomon setteth out two famous Antitheses or Oppositions betwixt the godly and the wicked as two contrary opposites the former
hand and so escape the Snare and the Sin No that I dare not do for she hath already threatned to accuse me to my Master whereby I shall be endanger'd to lose my life as well as liberty and good name for my Garment left in her hands will be brought in as an Evidence against me Oh what shall I do Yea his strait was the greater if as some say she held him with such strong hands and struggled with him for so long a time till some of the Servants she complained to v. 14. were returned from the Feast of Triumph Oh what Man what Good-Man nay what of the best of Men would not have been bewitched with the Charms of this Flesh-pleasing Temptation under all these aforesaid Circumstances Yet Joseph's Bow abode in strength being strengthened by God his Chastity cannot be conquered though in a strait not betwixt two but three or four great Evils Behold here how this Goodly Person so call'd Gen. 39.6 was entangled in Satan's snare wherein he had been hurry'd head-long to Hell had he not been more goodly on the inside than he was on the outside Gratior est Pulchro veniens è corpore Virtus Vertue has a better Grace that shineth from a comely Face His Brethren had rob'd him of his Garment but not of his Grace which enabled him here to abide the shock of this Temptation and fortify'd his Soul so in this desperate Conflict that he comes off Conqueror If ever any one Mortal man were famous for having all the four Cardinal Vertues at once surely it must be this Joseph at that Juncture where we may behold as in a Mirrour 1. His Temperance in his not being inticed to folly no not by his own over-kind Mistriss or Lady inticing him she the Tempter knock'd at the Door of his pure Heart and chast Soul with the Hammer of Temptation but found none to open the Door and to give either Entrance or Entertainment to so great a wickedness 2. His Justice in his not being perswaded to do his own very kind Master such a manifest Injury as treacherously to defile his Marriage-Bed 3. His Fortitude in his not being overcome by so many and daily renew'd Assaults yea and Violence at last but persevering to the End in his Holy purpose 4. His Prudence in his nor being altogether at a loss when surrounded with all those straits aforesaid but prudently Answers the Dilemma or rather Trilemma the Two-horned or rather Three-horned Argument aforementioned Shall I yield or shall I fly or shall I leave my Garment He at length in profound Wisdom answereth E duobus malis minus è Tribus minimum est eligendum of two Evils the lesser of Three the least of all ought to be chosen Though this Philosophical Maxim hold not true as to Moral Evils none of which are matter of choice the least no more than the greatest none of which must be chosen for God never necessitates any Soul to sin yet stands it good as to Inconveniencies either when opposite one to another or when an Inconvenience is opposed to something that is morally Evil as all Sin is and this was Joseph's Case to yield unto his Mistriss was a plain and palpable Sin to leave his Garment in her hand and so to flee from her and from sinning with her had no Sin or moral Evil in it 't was at worst but an Inconvenience and might produce bad effects as it did afterward yet Joseph's Prudence suggested to his Soul that the least sinning was far worse than the greatest suffering how much more this Sin which he call'd a great wickedness and whatever were the evil Consequences he might suffer by leaving his Garment behind him yet therein he did not Sin Hereupon he resolves with himself to break from this brazen-faced Curtizan and to flee away without his Garment trusting Providence with the Issue of Life Liberty and good Name rather than he would offend his God his Conscience and his kind Master by committing such a filthy Iniquity Thus he being as it were environ'd round about as with manifold Temptations from Hell so with those four Theological Vertues or Graces from Heaven did stoutly Resist the Devil Despise the World and Subdue the Flesh his Bow abode in strength being strengthened c. This is the second time that poor Joseph was strip'd of his Garment before by his Brethren and now by his Mistriss before by the Canker of Envy and now by the Violence of Lust before through Necessity but now out of Choice before to deceive his Father but now to incense his Master Joseph stays not to parley with her he had done that before to no purpose and now the Temptation was got too high for either Pleading against it or pushing at it 't was safer to flee from it than to fight with it and though he was strong enough to rescue his Coat out of her hands he runs from her These Premises produce the third Archer that shot sore at Joseph also to wit Potiphar his Master whom his Mistriss basely perverted from a kind Friend to Joseph to become his cruel Enemy because she could not pervert Joseph from his Chastity to commit Adultery with her And his overmuch Credulity to his wanton fallacious wife was the cause of his overmuch Cruelty to his chast and innocent Servant This wicked Woman shoots two Arrows at Joseph 1. At his Soul in foully tempting him to Sin 2. At his Body in falsly accusing him for Sin This succeeded casting him into Prison that though he could not be cast into Sinning yet is into Suffering The History hereof consists of four Parts all relating to Joseph's Malady after which follows the mitigation of that Malady in the close of all First His Malady or Misery l. Began in her clamorous Exclamation against Joseph Gen. 39.13 14. upon Joseph's Escape she crys out to those few that went not to the Feast and call'd Whore first as the common Saying is causing them to become her prepared pick'd Witnesses against poor Innocent Joseph where her Incontinency brought forth still more and more Impudency to cry out and say to those few about the House See he hath brought in an Hebrew to Mock us c. v. 14 15. in which filthy Calumny many Remarks are before the Eyes of an intelligent Mind She belches up and blusters forth out of her black Mouth it being as black as her Body her self being a black Gypsie or Egyptian a whose bundle of Rage Revenge and Lies all at once As 1. She dissembles high Displeasure against her Husband for bringing this Hebrew into the House calling him He by way of Scorn and contemning to call him by his Proper or Common Name 2. She calls her faithful Servant an Hebrew in the way of contempt also for the Hebrews were abhorred of the Egyptians Gen. 43.32 3. She wishes her Husband Hang'd as it were for buying and bringing this Hebrew into her House 4. She aggravates her pretended
against Joseph Yea they furiously raged at him as the Hebr. Vatelah signifies and is so rendred Prov. 26.18 where and here only that word is used in Scripture they were transported into such a fury by their sore Famine that it made them Mad Men and furiously to cast their Firebrands at him even the Devils Arrows and so became they Arch-Archers indeed letting fly at Joseph for want of Bread He had foretold them of the seven years Famine but Saturity and Security had so besotted them that they feared nothing till they felt it fulness had bred forgetfulness and now when they are pinched with that penury which they might have by a prudent Provision out of the seven years plenty prevented they come with their outragious clamours to Joseph crying Why should we die in thy presence c. Gen 47.15 when it is in thy power to save us alive in this our extream indigency This Speech And why or for why savours of strong passion spoken in a murmuring mad mutinous manner agreeable to the word Labah v. 13. which is the Radix of Vatelah and which signifies to be frantick or out of their Wits both Junius and Tremellius and the Tigurine Version renders it fùrebat extream Famine made them extream mad And that they were so may seem also more probable even from a Natural Cause it might be the effect of their feeding upon course and foul matters such as Carrion Hem●●● and other sordid stuff that Brutes do devour of bad juice to humane stomacks as well as of bad tast to their Palates this is done in Famines as both Civil and Sacred History holdeth forth as 2 Kin. 6.25 c. Thereby might they fall into a Phrenzy which was the farther punsh'd on by the permanent power and lasting force of the Famine besides the many aggravations they lay under to blow them up into this Madness against Joseph As 1. Their loss of Meat Famine is such a merciless Tyrant that it hath made even a tender Mother to use her Teeth instead of her Lips to her own Dear Child to bite it without pity whom she used to Kiss with love and instead of giving it Suck to let out its Blood Deut. 28.57 Lam. 4.10 yea sometimes it hath made Men Eat the Flesh of their own Arms Isa 9.20 the People here lay under the lash of this fierce Tyrant the loss of Meat 2. The loss of Money they come and complain to Joseph all our Money is exhausted and expended Gen. 47.14 15. Now Money bears the Mastery with most Mortal Men and with some Worldlings the loss of their Wealth hath cost them the loss of their Wit they have run distracted upon it Misers will assoon and as easily part with their Blood as with their Good yet here Meat was better than Money and therefore so they may have the former they will part with the latter but now all their stock is spent they can purchase no more Meat for want of Money they Gaze upon one another as Men out of their Wits Gen. 42.1 what to do they know not yet sobering better upon it They come to Joseph with a 3. Complaint who gave them Meat in exchange for their Cattel This was their third loss now they soften yet more as to words at least saying we will not hide from my Lord Gen. 47. ver 17 18 c. NB. Alas all this time they could not plead Kindred they were Aliens to Joseph and he to them but our Joseph our Jesus is not ashamed to call us Brethren Heb. 2.11 if we hide not our wants from him he will supply us with food much more than Joseph did these Aliens even for Soul and Body Then comes their 4. Loss the loss of their Lands in the second year to wit of the extreme Famine which was the sixth year thereof for the fifth year of it was the first year which brought them to such straits as they had no Money left but bought bread with flesh even the Flesh of their Cattel and when no Cattel were left by the fifth which was the first year of extremity as is express'd Gen. 45.11 they come to him at the beginning of the sixth year call'd here the second of cruel hardship and sell their Lands to Pharaoh for Bread and then 5. Their Bodies themselves as Slaves Gen. 47. ver 18 19 20 23 25. It may not therefore seem absurd to suppose that this Hunger-starv'd people were sometimes enraged at Joseph according to the genuine signification of the Hebrew word Vatelah to be mad or transported into phrentick and furious Fits and to be reckon'd as the last sort of those Arch-Archers which let fly their Arrows at least words of Reproach against Joseph We say Losers may have leave to talk and greater losers than these who lost their Meat Money Cattel Lands and Liberties cannot well be To want Corn Coin and Cattel must needs pinch them much but when Joseph will have their Lands and Liberties too destroy their property in their Antient Patrimonies by removing them into Rented Farms ver 20 21. and so set up Imperium Despoticum un Absolute Monarchy the Property of their Lands must be altered and they must all turn Tenants and Farmers to Pharaoh whereas time out of mind they and their Progenitors had been true Proprietors and right Owners of those Antient Possessions yet now had made no new forfeiture of them they knew of no Praemunire in their case therefore may it seem strange that this many-headed Multitude so pinched with penury c. should not part with those five near dear and precious things especially the two last rather with great passion than patience when of Free Subjects they must now be made the Kings Slaves and Vassals all the Free born people must hereby become the Princes Peasants Solomon saith that oppression makes wise-men mad Eccles 7.7 which he sets off with a surely and he further saith that therefore Oppressing Princes are no better than Fools void of understanding Prov. 28.15 16. they are out of their wits themselves for driving their poor people out of their wits by exhausting their All from them and utterly undoing them Though they think they deal wisely as another Pharaoh did Exod. 1.10 yet these Lion-Rampants do foolishly in inraging their Subjects for they usually come to untimely Ends as most of the Caesars till Constantine did If Oppression makes Wise-men much more these half-famish ' d-men Mad 'T is a wonder saith Rivetus that the Mad multitude being made Mad by the Famines Extremity did not meet Tumultuously make a Mutiny and having now lost their Minds as well as their Means by force break ope the Barns so plunder all the Store-houses in every City where the Corn was kept Thus Junius and Piscator in concurrence with Rivet Interpret Vatelah to signifie that the Egyptians made Tumults the Famine bereaving them of their wits Assuredly they could never give up their Liberty and Property had not stark hunger
grows stale and putrefies after a nine Days wonder and in celebrating the high Praises of God as they were so should we be punctual and particular insisting upon every distinct Circumstance of our glorious Deliverances Note 1. This is the first mention of Singing in Scripture yet no doubt the Patriarks used it as they kept the Sabbath though not mentioned till Exod. 16. 2. The Enemies of the Church are the Enemies of God Thou hast overthrown those that rose against thee Exod. 15.7 What men Act against her he accounts as done against himself Act. 9.4 There is a League Offensive and Defensive 'twixt God and Her Hatred of Her did harden Pharaoh's Heart to the highest and hurried him to bid Battel to God who was too hard for him 3. They were all Men Women and Children Baptized in the Sea 1 Cor. 10.2 and so saved Baptism is said to save us 1 Pet. 3.21 when 't is Inward also and Christ when Baptized was proclaimed then well pleasing to God Mat. 3.1 4. God will by his Mercy when we merit it not lead his People to the Habitation of his Holiness Exod. 15.13 as Jacob Gen. 32.10 Psal 78.52 53 54 Jer. 50.19 Isa 33.20 His Promises are his Performances The Lord will reign Exod. 15.18 and the Time shall come when God shall strike his Foes and make them as still as a Stone and sink as Lead with Sin into Hell then Saints shall sing Hallelujah Rev. 11.15 17 c. Exod. 15.14 15 16 17 c. This being the most famous History of the Church's Conflict with and Conquest over the Egyptians her Enemies and containing in it so many eminent Gospel mysteries I cannot conclude my Discourse upon it here without making some more Remarks upon that great Text of the Apostle concerning it Heb. 11.29 where we have these two great Points 1. The Church's Danger And 2. Her Deliverance After He had given many excellent instances of the Efficacy of Faith in particular Persons then comes He to this Efficacious Faith which was seated and most effectually Acted in the Church in general of that Day 1. The Danger was more especially before and behind Not unlike the Protestant's danger at the Battel of Newport in the Netherlands when that brave General the old Prince of Orange said to them Ye must either eat up those Spaniards or drink up that Sea The Church here had the like choice or if the could not do either they must climb up to Heaven which because they could not do Heaven comes down to them and both drinks up the Sea and eats up the Egyptians for them The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11.29 signifies swallow'd down 't is said God bowed the Heavens and came down Psal 18.9 And 't is the Church's Prayer bow Lord the Heavens and come down Isa 65.1 as if she should say Let not the Lord lay hid any longer there as to some it may seem but break through all Letts and appear powerfully as out of an Engine speedily for thy distressed People who had here a Sea before them yea a Red-Sea which if so called as some say because of it's Red Complexion had the Colour of Wrath. God breaks open all doors and comes to melt down Mountains c. Here Moses was involv'd in the same Danger with the Church and undoubtedly step'd the first step into this Red Sea as Israel's Leader and Mediator drying it up for them c. Thus our blessed Messias imbarks himself in the same Bottom exposing himself to the same Danger with his Church when the Devil the Prince of the Air Eph. 2.2 that Red Dragon who pour'd out a floud to drown the Woman when he could not devour her Man-child Rev. 12.4 5 15 16. rais'd up a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Storm Aristotle calls a Town-swallower and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a mighty Tempest to drown both her and him Math. 8.25 Mar. 4.37 Luk. 8.22 Isa 54.11 The Church Militant is a rowling tumbling Ark as Noah's Ark was sailing here upon a Sea of Glass a brittle World which as it will not so it cannot support her and that Sea is also mingled with Fire Rev. 15.2 meeting with many Combustions in it Joh. 16.33 Dreadful Tempests and Temptations from a Tempting Devil whose Shop is this wicked World out of which he takes all his Tempting Tools Acts 14.22 2 Tim. 3.12 The Church hath not all dry Land call'd Terra firma but some Sea yea an Ocean of trouble in her way to Canaan Oh that we would not suffer Christ to sleep still but awake him with fervent Prayers as the Disciples did crying Lord save us we perish Math. 8.26 And Master carest thou not that we perish Mar. 4.37 c. The Church Triumphant is above Motion Mutation and Molestation being safely landed in Mans●ons of Glory where Jesus our forerunner did leap first to Shore and took the first handsel of Heaven Heb. 6.20 being the first Fruits of them that rose from the Dead 1 Cor. 15.20 2. The Deliverance from this Danger and Distress which was Miraculous in many Respects 1. In respect of Time it was wrought when Israel knew not what to do as Jehosaphat 2 Chron. 20.12 or which way to turn themselves as David 1 Sam. 23.24 25. and were at their Wits end as the Mariners in a Storm Psal 107.23 c. The Tide of second Cause was at the lowest Ebb with them and then seasonably steps in the first Cause the Cause of Causes as Aristotle calls the Great God and saves them by a way they little expected even such Terrible things as we look not for Isa 64.3 the Lord Works for his Church such as never were done before Deut. 4.32 33. c. Where the Lord extolleth those Magnalia or wonderful Works We read how our Lord raised from the Dead 1. One in the House not yet carried out to be buried Mat. 9.25 2. Another upon the Bier in order to his Burial Luk. 7.14 3. A Third after he had been Dead three Days and was laid in his Grave beginning to stink Joh. 11.43 All which was to demonstrate that his Church is never brought so low nor ever lost so far but still Christ is able to recal and recover her The Eternal God is her refuge and Everlasting Arms are underneath her c. Deut. 33.27 Who after two days will revive her and the third Day she shall live in his sight Hos 6.2 Yea though nothing be left of her but dry Bones God will Prophesie over them inspire the Breath of Life into them and they shall stand up in their Lot alive before him Ezek. 37.2 5 12 to 15. She shall say as the Mother of our Lord did being his beloved Spouse and Bride The Lord hath looked down from Heaven upon the low Estate of his Hand maid Luk. 1.48 c. 2. It was Miraculous in respect of the Way as well as Time Israel went not over it but through it It had been easie
Plantation and therefore they removed saith the Rabbie Omnia Vasa Mobilia all their Moveable Goods out of their Hous●s they had in the Southern part of Canaan where their first lot fell into the most remote Northern part thereof and that which made those Men thus bold and daring was chiefly the Oracle in Micah's Idol-Chappel had assured them of Success No doubt but when they found themselves so successful in their Exploit and found their Conquest so easie they hugely hugged Micah's Mawmets and thought they had wrought a Work of Supererogation in stealing them from him and therefore resolved to make the best Improvement of them for the future N. B. In order hereunto when they had taken and burnt Laish in part only to strike a Terrour into the Inhabitants and Rebuilt it for themselves they set up the Graven Image c. constitute Jonathan as a True Prophet to them in this Expedition to be their Priest whose Sons succeeded him in that Tribe secretly lurking in private Idolatrous Families all David and Solomon's time and so successively until the Grand Captivity as it is called the Captivity 1 Chron. 5.22 by way of Eminency whereas Micah's Graven Image was not permitted to be in so publick a place and manner for so long a time therefore its continuance is restrained to a shorter Date namely while the Ark continued in Shilo only N. B. Here we may learn three great Lessons First That Men may bless themselves for a long time by the Idols set up in their Hearts Ezek. 14.4 promising great happiness to themselves by them as the Danites do here and as Micah had done before them Judg. 17.13 but they little consider how there will be Bitterness at the latter end 2 Sam. 2.26 Jer. 2.19 Secondly God oft punisheth the wicked by the wicked as he did here those wicked Inhabitants of Laish by those Wicked Idolaters the Danites here Clodius accusat Maechos Vice Corrected Sin But when God hath worn this Rod of the Wicked to the Stumps he then casts it into the fire Thirdly Security is a sad Symptome of Approaching Destruction this Character of Security in those Inhabitants of Laish is oft repeated here ver 10. and ver 27. God bless us from such a fearless stupid careless secure frame of Spirit If we cry Peace then comes sudden Destruction 1 Thess 5.3 Philosophers say before a cold Snow the Weather will be warmish When the Wind lies the great Rain falls and the Air is most quiet when suddenly there will be an Earthquake The Thief surprizeth in the Night and giveth no warning of his coming c. CHAP. XIX of Judges THE Nineteenth Chapter holds forth the most horrible and prodigious Lasciviousness found of Gibeah in Benjamin whose Last was of such a Monstrous Nature that they forced the Levites Concubine to Death This most hainous Sin is described 1. By its Antecedents 2. By its Concomitants And 3. By its Consequents First The Antecedents relate the Causes and Occasions of this Horrid Impiety to wit the Anarchy in Israel ver 1. this was the Remote cause but the causae proxima was the Levite's fetching back his Fugitive Concubine from ver 2. unto ver 21. Secondly The Concomitants of the Sin together with the Sin it self are declared from ver 22. to ver 25. at large Then Thirdly The Consequents thereof which were the Concubines Death the Levites dividing her Dead Body into Twelve pieces and sending them to the Twelve Tribes and the Twelve Tribes Astonishment at such an Unparallel'd Action are set down from ver 26. to ver 30. The Remarks upon the first part namely the Antecedents are First The time when this foul Fact was committed It came to pass in those Days saith ver 1. when there was no publick Magistrate to restrain private Vice This is oft repeated not only here but Chap. 17.6 and 18.1 and 21.25 to denote that all those Stories were Contiguous and Contemporary For Israel never stirreth themselves up to punish either Micah or the Danites for their Idolatry but rather tolerateth it in them this Toleration breedeth all manner of Iniquity insomuch that Gibeah a City of Israel becometh as abominable as Sodom Thus the Prophet sheweth where there is no Ruler to be an Healer of Disorders their Ruine rusheth in and all manner of Confusion to provoke the Eyes of the Lord's Glory against them Isa 3.6 7 8. look what a Ship is without a Pilot or Steersman what a Flock of Sheep is without a Shepheard what a great Family is without the Father of the Family or what a numerous School without a School-master Such is a State without some Supream Government This present Anarchy begat a General Ataxy an Universal Disorder though Israel now lived in God's good Land Hos 9.3 yet did they not live according to God's good Law Quod sibi placebat id solebat facere Every Man did that which was right in his own Eyes Judg. 17.6 And again Chap. 21.25 not at all doing what pleased the Lord but what pleased their own Lusts. The time of these Transactions is well supposed to be soon after the Death of Joshua c. for then began Israel to decline from God and to incline unto all manner of Ungodliness yea before Othniel became Judge and seeing Jerusalem the Vpper was at this time Inhabited by the Jebusites and this very Levite calls it a City of Strangers ver 11. and 12. here Hence some suppose that those Stories did happen while Caleb was Living However this is certain this matter did fall out while Phinehas was alive as above Judg. 20.28 and not after Samson's Death as 't is set down in this Book c. The Second Remark from the Antecedents is A Levite takes a Concubine to be his Secondary Wife for she was Contracted to him though not Solemnly Married which differ'd her from common Concubines and otherwise she could not have been charged to break her Faith with him as she is against him ver 2. and hereupon she is call'd his Wife and her Father is call'd his Father-in-Law ver 3 4 5 6 7 9. and he is call'd her Lord ver 26 27. because he was her Husband as 1 Pet. 3.6 so Judg. 20.4 calls him This Concubine played the Whore ver 2. Josephus saith she was a fair Woman and not affecting her Husband as she ought but lingring after other Lovers great strife grew betwixt them whereupon as he saith she went away to her Parents within four Months after Marriage The Scripture tells us that she went away from him to her Father's House who like a Fond Father entertained her whereas instead of countenancing her in her Sin he should rather have Rebuked or Punished her and sent her Home again to her Husband and not to have received and retained her four Months Her Kind-hearted Husband goes to her when he saw she would not come to him whereas she should have sought to him first being the peccant Party and
may well be supposed that Joash might threaten with Punishments from God as well as from himself telling them in Defence of his Son That God had appear'd to his Son and had commanded him to do all that he had done and that it was their Worshiping of Baal for which God had punished them by Midian's Tyranny seven years and that if they persisted therein still God will punish us seven times more c. It is usual in Scripture to give only some short hints of those things that were more largely discoursed But his Third Argument is From the Office of Baal himself by an Ironical Concession saying If Baal be a God let him plead for himself as the God of Israel hath done often times when any Indignity or Injury hath been done to him as when Nadab and Abihu offer'd strange fire Levit. 10.1 2. and in the case of Corah and his Accomplices Numb 16.31 35 c. The sense of his saying thus was this If Baal have such a Divine Power as you imagine then is he able to maintain his own Honour to right himself and to revenge the Wrongs offered to him so needs none of you to plead his Cause but if he be only an idle Idol and Image then is he not worthy to be Worship'd and defended by you who is unable to defend either you or himself such as dare any farther to plead for so silly a God as could not protect himself deserveth to die for their own Folly and Impiety The Tenth and last Remark in this Chapter is Gideon's undertaking to deliver Israel from the Tyranny of Midian from ver 33. to the end No sooner had Joash thus prudently stop'd the rapid Torrent of the Rabble's Fury with those Three forcible Arguments afore-mentioned but he Knights as it were his Son with an honourable Title calling him Jerub Baal that is let Baal plead against him that hath broke down his Altar this Name of Honour was given to Gideon by his Father as a Memorial of his Sons Noble Exploit and to Stigmatize Baal with this black brand of Infamy a fair caution for those foul Successors that would needs Worship Baal in after Ages Gideon's undertaking Israel's Deliverance is described First By the occasion of it the Midianites and their Confederates made a new Invasion as far as Jezreel ver 33. where the Kings of Israel afterward had a Royal Palace 1 Kings 21.1 and not far from Ophrah where Gideon dwelt therefore well might he fear their sudden coming upon him to surprize him but this proved the unhappiest time to the Enemy now to invade Israel when Gideon had begun a Reformation in the Land ver 25. c. N.B. He began at the right end first to abolish false Worship and then to set up the true Worship seeing there can be no Concord betwixt Christ and Belial betwixt the Temple of God and the Temple of Idols 2 Cor. 6.15 16. and if we will serve God the Service of Baal must first be rejected 1 Kings 18.21 Gideon's suppression of that Superstition and Idolatry which caused God to give Israel up to Midian's Tyranny and his begun Reformation of the true Religion must needs make him more couragious and consident of Victory for hereby a door of hope was opened in order thereunto A good Cause a good Call and a good Conscience could not but breed a good Courage in him all these are needful in Civil Sacred yea and in Military Undertakings more especially because they carry their Lives in their Hands and by these they die in peace though they die in War as many good Men do The Second part of the Description is by the efficient Cause namely the Spirit of the Lord came upon him and cloathed him as the word signifies with extraordinary Wisdom Zeal and Magnanimity ver 34. this was a rich addition to that Courage he had from the goodness of his Cause Call and Conscience and hereby the Qualifications of a Judge of Israel did so shine forth that even the Men of Abiezer those of his Father's Houshold ver 27. who were so corrupted with the Idolatry of the times and so zealous then for Baal that he feared to acquaint them with his design of destroying Baal's Altar yet now they are so convinced that God had called Gideon to this great Work both of Vindicating God's Glory and his Countries Liberty that they are the first Voluntiers that will follow him as the person whom God had not only protected in that dangerous attempt of destroying Baal but had also pick'd him out of all the Tribes and pitched upon him by whose hands the Lord would work Israel's Deliverance from Midian Thirdly This Expedition is described by its Instruments whereof Gideon's own Family were a part Joash is call'd an Abiezrite ver 11. the first Soldiers that offered themselves willingly to be as Instruments in God's Hand for this undertaking were the Abiezrites when Gideon an Abiezrite also blew his Trumpet and when he sent Messengers to the other Tribes ver 35. they freely Muster and march up to meet him even the Tribe of Asher it self which was justly blamed by Deborah for their backwardness to fight against Sisera Judg. 5.17 God never starves his Work for want of Instruments but always stirs up those that he will employ therein and where Men are not at hand an Oxe's-Goad in Shamgar's Hand or the Jaw-bone of an Ass in Samson's Hand shall be enough The Fourth part of the Description is the Motive that bore up the Spirit of Gideon in this great Enterprize namely the confirmation of his Faith by a double Sign of the Dew and the Fleece of Wooll ver 36. to the end These Signs he beg'd of God not out of Infidelity but in all Humility not only for the corroborating of his own Courage and Confidence but also for the Encouragement of his Army now gathered together at their Rendezvous in Ophrah that they might more faithfully follow him in this Heroick and Hazardous Attempt we do not read that the Lord answered his Prayer by any words spoke to him but by Deeds he did in this double Sign which was by a wet and by a dry Fleece A proper Representation of Israel which was wet with the Dew of Divine Doctrine when all the World besides was dry and now dry when all the World besides was wet namely with the Dew of Peace answerable to the Prophet's Vision wherein he saw all the Earth sitting still and at rest but Jerusalem only under grievous Indignation Zech. 1 11 12 13. We must suppose their Floors then were not under a cover as ours are now but placed in the open Air as this floor was upon which the Fleece was laid so that nothing interposed to receive the falling Dew N.B. This Fleece was Israel which properly belonged to the great Shepherd of the Sheep Psal 23.1 the God of Israel but now alas how was Israel fleeced and sheared of their Corn and Cattel by the
by the Cursed Jews to his blessed Body Gal. 5.24 4. When we have wounded it by the Sword of the Spirit even to Death then must we bury it as he was 5. We must rise again out of the Grave of Sin to serve God in Newness of Life so get gradually out of the Dungeon as Jeremy did Jer. 38.12 6. We must Ascend like him into Heaven in our Desires c. Phil. 3.20 Col. 3.1 Nor is it the Pattern of Christ that doth effect this only as the Socinians say but 't is also the Vertue and Power of Christ's Death and Resurrection c. that works all these Things effectually in his Called and Chosen not as an Exemplary Cause or as a Moral Cause by way of Meditation but as having a Force and Power Obtained by it and Issuing out of it Phil. 3.10 Even the Spirit that killeth sin and quickens the Soul to all Holy Practice N. B. To know Christ aright is a most excellent work and the worthiest part of Heavenly Wisdom Yea satisfactory and salutiferous to the Soul of Man Isa 53.11 Joh. 17.3 1 Cor. 2.2 Gal. 6.14 and Phil. 3 8. This Divine knowledge consists of lively Affection as well as of particular Application and a Notional Consideration 'T is the common Rule of expounding Scripture that works of knowledge imply Affection 'T is not enough to know Christ notionally The Devils do so nor must we barely know Him either as God or as Man or as a Jew of Judah's Tribe or as Judge of the World but especially as a Redeemer and as our Redeemer by whom all God's benefits both Temporal and Spiritual are convey'd to us and Received by us The Three grand benefits by Christ Are 1. His Merits Price and Ransom whereby we are Reconciled to God c. 2. His Vertue or Power of His Death and Resurrection Phil. 3.8 10. 3. His Example To which we should conform Simply and Absolutely without exception not so to that of the highest Saints who had sinful frailty as well as holy Graces c. The Second Thing after this Caution is the Counsel God's word gives us concerning this imitation of Christ N. B. In the daily Practice of true Piety both as to Inward and Outward Life all Christ's Actions are for our Instruction not All for our Imitation we may not Imitate the Works of Christ that were Miraculous nor such as were Personal and Proper to Him as Mediator The Ignorance of which hath carried some Impostors to Counterfeit themselves to be Christ Nor need we Indeavour to imitate Him in his Natural therefore unblamable Infirmities which had weakness in them but not Sin we are not to strive to be Hungry Weary Sleepy c. because He was sometimes so But we must imitate our Lord Jesus in all his imitable Graces and Actions both walking in Christ Col. 2.6 and walking as Christ 1 John 2.6 and following his steps preaching forth the praises of him that call'd us out of Darkness into his marvelous Light 1 Pet. 2.9 21. And though we cannot follow him Passibus Aequis taking such long strides as he did yet must we shew our Good-will Mark 14.8 Stretching and straining out our outmost as Paul did Phil. 3.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reaching forth his Head Hands and whole Body as do Runners in a Race to lay hold on the price proposed Conformity to Christ and Nonconformity to the World are both the certain commendable and comfortable Duties of every good Christian Rom. 8.29 and 12.2 The First is Conformity to Christ which may be inforced by these three Arguments 1. Seeing Christ condescended so low as to Conform Himself to us in taking our Humane Nature Attended with Hunger Weariness and all other Infirmities Sin only excepted Heb. 2.17 4.15 1 Pet. 2.22 c. How much more ought we to press after a partaking of his Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 that we may be Conformed to his Holy Image unto which we are Praedestinated Rom. 8.29 The 2. Argument is Seeing the Image of God favour from Him and Fellowship with Him be the Branches of Man's Antient Glory in the State of Innocency which the Subtle Serpent did Deceive us of in the Fall 'T is but rational and requisite that we put our selves forth to the utmost for recovering them by Conforming them to Christ that we may Gain again by the Second Adam All the Three Gifts lost by the First Adam And the Third Reason is Where there is no Conformity to Christ there can be no Salvation had The Means must not be separated from the End as Acts 27.30 Except these stay in the Ship ye cannot be saved So here except we be Holy we can never be Happy God hath chosen us in Christ before the Foundation of the World that we should be Holy Eph. 1.4 and without Holiness no man can see the Lord Heb. 12.14 Blessed are the pure in heart and life for They shall see God Mat. 5.8 We must purifie our selves as Christ is pure 1 John 3.3 And this Purity or Holiness is our Conformity to the Image of the Holy Child Jesus for undoubtedly God gave Christ to be a Samplar as well as He Gave Him to be a Saviour 'T is the mistake of the Arminians to put Christ to an Arbitration in their assigning Ninety Nine parts to Him in the work of Conversion and the Hundred part to Man contrary to Col. 3.11 where Christ is call'd All and in All. The whole of that Divine work flows from the Free Grace of Christ and not any part of it from the Free Will of Man and we have no Commission to bate one Ace in that point Yet the Errour of the Socinians is of a far grosser Brann In their Asserting Christ to be a Pattern only and not a Propitiation at all They suppose Him only a Samplar for our bare Imitation but no way a Saviour for our Sins Expiation Thus they quite exclude Christ from the Justification of the Penitent and Believing Sinner quite contrary to the whole Tenure of the Holy Scriptures and they make Christ no more than a Mere Martyr for all the Holy Martyrs were Patterns and Samplars of Sanctity both in their Sanctimonious Doings and Sufferings If Christ signify'd no more than a Samplar N. B. This Conformity to Christ is twofold The First is partly in this Life And the Second is partly in the Life to come 1. That in this Life we should all Learn of Him and from His Pious Pattern All those Works of Holiness which we find Recorded of Him such as these His Subjection to his Parents His Loving of his Brethren His Painfulness in his Calling His Perseverance in Prayer and many more of the like Nature We should strive what we can to Resemble Christ in his going about to do good Acts 10.38 In his fidelity for his function Heb. 3.1 2. In his Diligent and Patient Obedi●nce Heb. 12.2 3. In his Constancy of Profession 1 Tim. 6.13 In
Instance which Christ himself uttered as a Specimen of the Management of the Day of Judgment both for Matter Manner c. Mat. 25.31 to the end of ver 46. Where the Lord Judge Denounceth the Final Doom both upon the Sheep at his Right Hand and upon the Goats at his Left ' and all by way of Dialogue c. ye saw me naked c. Now 't is farther Alledged that seeing the Father Judgeth no Man but hath committed all Judgment to the Son John 5.22 And that the Son will Judge the World as he is Man in Humane Nature and that none of all the Posterity of Adam shall be excused for their Absence from this General Assizes none shall be allowed to appear by a proxy but every Individual Man Woman and Child Poor or Rich Jew or Gentile shall be compelled to appear personally before this Judge's Tribunal 2 Cor. 5.10 And there have a fair and full Tryal either for Weal or Woe Now upon this Supposition the Day of Judgment may take up a much longer time than most do imagin for it Requires as much time to speak a Mans Life as to read it c. we may well believe that this General Just Judge will not suddenly shuffle up any Matters for Eternity in that Day Upon these Considerations that Holy Man of God Mr. Shepheard in his Sincere Convert page 37. saith that this Day of Christs Kingly Office in Judging the whole World shall haply last longer than his private and less Glorious Administration in Governing the World shall do c. this saith he may be made evident both by Scripture and by Reason c. N. B. Note well 3. This is the time however long or short wherein all Mankind both the good and the evil Servants must Reddere Rationem give an exact Account of their Stewardship whether they have wasted their Lords Goods either Pounds or Talents or have improved them in Tradeing Luke 16.1 2. and 19 15. c. Mat. 25.19 c. All Persons must appear before the Judgment Seat of Christ to Reckon with the Judge about all things they have done in the Body 2 Cor. 5.10 whether they have received the Graces or Gifts of God in vain 1 Cor. 15.10 Oh! Blessed is that Faithful and Wise Steward who giveth a good account to his Lord at his coming Luke 12.42.44 Now the particular account Men must then give is Threefold First of their Thoughts which are known to God Hebr. 4.12 13. in that day God will Judge the Secrets of Men by Jesus Christ c. Rom. 2.16 Then the Book of Conscience shall be opened which is Index Vindex Judex 'T is Gods Spye and Mans Overseer faithfully Recording every Vain as well as Villainous thoughts Rom. 2.14 15. John 8.9 1 Cor. 10.29 Hebr. 10.2 Tho' sinfull Thoughts be free as to Men yet are they not free to Conscience which is better Sore than Seared much less can they be free to an All knowing God John 21.17 Acts 1.24 Secondly They must Reckon with this Lord Judge for their words Mat. 12.34 35 36 37. If idle and wast words must be accounted for in the Day of Judgment how much more for evil and wicked words Cassiodore saith that among ten Thousand Talents of Mens common Communications there is scarce an Hundred pence no non decem quidem obolos not so much as ten half penny 's of Spiritual and Savoury Discourse Alas How much frivolous and fruitless Speeches do frequently slow from every Mans Mouth hereupon Wise Xenophon and Plato did propose this profitable practice that Mens Speeches and Discourse might be written down in a Table Book both at Meals of Meat and at all Meetings c. that they might be brought to shame when they Reviewed their many Extravagant Expressions Thus the Psalmists Heart was greatly grieved when he Reflected upon what he had spoke amiss but a little before Ps 73.13 21 22. Therefore did he pray Set a Watch O Lord before my Mouth keep the Door of my Lips Ps 141.3 well knowing what an unruly Member the Tongue is which no Man can Tame Jam. 3.2 3 4 5 6 7 8. where the Tongue is called not a City of Evil or a Country of sin but a whole World of Iniquity hereupon we ought to put our untameable Tongues into the Hands of God as David did who alone is able to tame them the Difficulty of which Work we are taught by the God of Nature who hath given the Tongue its place and Situation betwixt the Head and the Heart that it might take Counsel from them both before it utter any words c. and the God of Nature hath fenced the unruly Tongue within bounds by a double Wall the one of flesh to wit the Lips and the other of Bones to wit the Teeth that it may be kept the better within Compass from all Extravagant Speeches c. For this very cause of the Tongues unruly Nature God hath ordered not only that Children shall not be able to speak untill they grow up to some wit and understanding whereby they may the better order their Speeches with their Tongues but also that all they who are born Deaf must be Dumb likewise because they being Deaf cannot hear Instruction for Teaching them the Right use and Government of the Tongue Even a fool when he holds his peace is accounted wise c. Prov. 17 28. Thirdly Then an Account must be rendered as for all their Thoughts and for all their Words so for all their Works Namely for all such Works wherein there hath been any Omission of Good and wherein likewise there hath been any Commission of Evil It may be Succinctly Reduced into those distinct parts the Reckoning hath a double Relation both unto good and unto evil First unto the first of Good which is thus Expressed Either 1. De bonis Omissis of good that is waved or De bonis Demissis of good that is wasted Or 2. De malis Commissis of Evil that is committed or De Malis permissis of Evil that is permitted when it is in the power of our Hands to prevent the Perpetration of it hereby we make our selves partakers of other Mens Sins 1 Tim. 5.22 N. B. Note well Participans Nutans non obstans non Manifestans c. Which the Grave and Godly Mr. Greenham Interprets thus saying we become Accessories to other Men who are the principal Actors of them either by commanding or by commending or by consenting or by counselling or by countenancing or by communicating or by concealing if we be not Admonishing nor Mourning nor Praying for the Offenders c. And Accessorium Sequitur principale saith the Maxim in Divinity he that is but Accessory to other Mens sins is likewise Involved in the Guilt of the principal sinner and so he may partake of the Plagues thereof Revel 18.4 1. Sam. 3.13 Rom. 1.32 see much more upon this point Dr. Ames Cases of Conscience pag. 299 c.
Name and immediately she acknowledgeth him and Reciprocates this Answer Rabboni that is my Lord Thus when Christ calls us by Name Isa 45.3 and John 10.3 then he boreth our Ears Psal 40.6 and causeth us to hear his Voice also Cant. 8.13 'T is a vulgar yet a True saying the Ear is first up in a Morning for nothing ordinary can so soon awake us as to be called by our Names How easily can Christ call up our drowsie Hearts and slumbring Souls if he do but speak to us with a strong Hand Isa 8.11 and say Awake thou that sleepest stand up from the Dead c. Eph. 5.14 crying to us by Name Lazarus come forth John 11.39 This he can do when he pleaseth and when we are even turned away from him as Mary Magdalen was here makes us Reciprocate and answer Rabboni thus was it with David when the Lord said to him Seek thou my face his Heart Ecchoed immediately again Thy face Lord will I seek Psal 27.8 This is frequently called in Scripture our effectual calling which is an Act of God's free Grace wrought imwardly upon our Souls When God first finds us to call us Home from our out-strays to himself the Voice of his Spirit comes behind us being secure passing by and not regarding any good having our Backs turned upon God and all goodness Therefore saith God in his promise Thou shalt hear a Voice behind thee saying this is the way walk in it c. Isa 30.21 and in his performance of that promise 't is said I heard a great Voice behind me c. Revel 1.10 11. and Mary here turned her self as soon as Christ had called her by her Name John 20.16 but because 't is said ver 14. that she turned her self back from the Angels ver 13. and saw Jesus c. therefore Augustin distinguisheth in his converse corpore corde her first turning was with her Body only and therefore she thought him what he was not to wit the Gardener but now her second turning was with her Heart and then she knew him as she was known by him and acknowledgeth aright who he was Rabboni my Lord. The 3d Remark is As Mary wept where she had no such cause of weeping for she wept because she thought that her Lord was lost when he was Risen indeed and was at her Hand though she could not see him for her Tears disturbed her Sight so too many weep and bewail when there is no such cause as Jacob did for Joseph Gen. 37.33 34 35. when his Son was Risen to the greatest Honours this fault is found among Women especially who would do well to keep their Tears for better uses and not wash foul Rooms with such sweet waters Needless Tears must be unwept again Suppose it be for a lost Christ know he is nearest those that cannot see him for their Tears If they seek him in sincerity The Second Personal Appearance of our Lord. Redeemer after his Resurrection was to the Holy Women in company with Mary Magdalen as they returned all together from the Sepulchre The Evangelists Mark and John give an Ample Relation of the first appearance of Christ to Mary Magdalen alone Mar. 16.9 John 20.13 to 18. but Mathew only Records this second Matth. 28.8 9 10. Luke also mentions something of it but speaks short and not all or fully Luke 24.22 23 24. speaking only of the Vision of Angels that told them he was alive but not of any Vision of Christ himself to them and the Reason is supposed to be this because though the Women began now to be removed a little more from their former conceit that it was only a Removal of Christ's body as Mary Magdalen three times conceited it John 20.2 13 15. and not a Resurrection of it yet now seeing Jesus appear to them they had some clearer Conceptions of Christ's Resurrection than before but now without their doubts and fears still since Christ refused to be touched by them thence did they doubt and fear that it was still but a Spectrum and Phantasm which they saw now and which refused to be touched And no doubt but there was such a like doubt not only in those good Women and in Thomas whom nothing but a Touch of Christ's Body could convince but also in the other Disciples therefore as Christ said to them a Spirit hath not Flesh and Bones as I have Luke 24.39 So he said to those Holy Women fear not ye to wit that I am any Phantasm only and not that very Body which was laid in the Grave Matth. 28.10 Hence Luke Relates no more because I say though they saw Jesus then yet did they still doubt that it was not Jesus himself but only a Spectrum Therefore it is said there Him they saw not ver 24 for at the least Cleophas the Relator thereof did not as yet believe that Jesus was really Risen However Mathew speaks fully supplying the shortness of the other Evangelists and saying that as the Holy Women went at the command of the Angel to tell the Disciples they met with Jesus in the way behold Jesus met them saying all Hail 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gaudete Rejoyce ye Matth. 28.9 and now are they more fully perswaded that it was the Lord who was Risen indeed from thence is their double posture 1. Of falling at his Feet and 2. Holding him fast by his Feet as loth to let him go whom they had now and Adored I am not ignorant how those Learned Interpreters who would reduce the number of Christ's Appearances into seven only do Interpret Mathew here Synecdochically and by an Enallage Numeri as if Mathew's plural Number speaking of them to wit Women should be understood only of one Woman to wit Mary Magdalen which John speaks of only and of no other Women or because of Magdalen's Waiting-Maid as Maldonate saith was with her Mistress c. but Augustin Gregory Nyssen c. among the Antients with whom Pareus and other Worthy Modern Authors do concur make these two to be differing Relations of two distinct Apparitions John Writing distinctly of the first only and Matthew of the second These Reasons do seem to render it probable 1. The place was differing the first Appearance was at the Sepulchre the second was in the way to the City 2. In the first there was a Prohibition of Nols me tangere to Magdalen but none in the second but rather Incouragement be not afraid John 20.17 Matth. 28.9 10. 3. The Person 's are differing Mary Magdalen was alone in the first but many other Holy Women had the priviledge of the second Appearance St Mathew indeed doth Name only the two Maties but St. Mark adds Salome and Luke not only adds Joanna but also other nameless Women Mar. 16. v. 1. Luke 24.10 All these were together when our Lord made his Second Appearance So that Mary Magdalen had the Honour of Christ's two first Appearances Inquiry But where was
then in confirming it by a proof of their senses in beholding and handling him v. 39.40 2. By deeds in his eating with them v. 4● 43 Which a Phantasm or Spectrum doth not for eating is a real demonstration of a corporal Life Then Christ farther demonstrates the Truth of his Resurrection by the Testimonies of the Prophets which be first alledged ver 44. And then explaineth ver 45 46. After this he Instituteth a Gospel ministry ver 47 48. Promiseth the Holy Spirit to attend it and commands Obedience ver 49. N.B. But John's method differs from Luke's thus He relates the time place and manner of this Fifth Appearance to the Ten Thomas being absent John ●0 19 then gives he us Christ's sayings to wit that customary form of Salvtation Peace be unto you which he Repeateth twice ver 19 21. Then his Doings to wit 1. An O●●●● Demonstration of his Resurrection ver 20. And 2. An Institution of the Ecclesiasrical ministry Declaring both in what manner and with what ceremon●es it was done ver 21 and also why and to what end ver 22.23 Then doth he shew the events and effects of this Apparition in those Disciples that were present to wit great Joy when they were now assured that it was verily their Lord and no other Body ver 20. But in Thomas only it had a contrary effect to wit Incredulity the cause whereof was his absence from that Assembly when Christ appeared ver 24. and the greatness whereof is also expressed that he would not be content with a bare beholding him but he impiously and obstinately requireth that he must handle him too c. ver 25. Having drawn this Scheme out of both these Evangelists I come now up to the. N.B. 5th Note that to convince them he was no Spirit he did Eat with them this is mentioned by Luke to be done by him at this time which John passeth by here yet mentioned Christ's Dining with his Disciples afterwards Jo. 21.12 13 This 〈◊〉 Lord did not for any necessity of nourishment no more than did the Angels Gen. 18 8 and 19.3 but ut se Vivum hominem verum esse ostenderet that he might declare hereby to them that he was a true Real and living man This cogent argument Peter presseth as most pungent and convincing that Christ was risen indeed saying We did Eat and Drink with him after his Resurrection Acts 10.41 Though we do not Read of his Drinking at all after he was risen yet do we Read of his Eating Luke 24.43 and and of his Dining John 21.12 Which assuredly was not done without Drinking also because Meat every where comprehends Drink under it as Matthew 15.2 Luke 7. v. 36 c. Therefore there was no need to express it His eating of that Poor provision the Disciples had and handed out to him did cure them of their Unbelief more than their handling his Hands and Feet which they saw and felt pierced through with Nails c. Luke 24.39 40 41 42. Though certainly there might be made a greater doubt how a glorified Body could retain wounds c. To which I shall more amply speak in the next Appearance when Thomas was present as likewise to the Testimonies alledged and explained and to the institution of a Gospel-Ministry c. Together with the Events All which I adiourn from this to a more proper place having inlarged much upon this Head already adding here only N.B. That Christ's Eating here was not done by deluding the Disciples senses as is done by Witchcraft and Diabolical Arts which was far from him who was Truth it self and most contrary to his Holy and Glorious design But we must believe that our Lord here did really take Chew and Swallow the Food yet in such a manner that his Body now glorified Received thereby no natural nourishment c. As in the State and condition of an Animal Life Thus Food could not incorporate with his Body to increase the substance of his flesh for now he had put on the Qualities of a Spiritual and Eternal Life so had no need of any Support from without c. But most probable this Food was Reduced into nothing by a miracle seeing the Act and End of the whole was only to confirm the Disciples by covers sensible demonstration● 〈◊〉 the behalf of his Resurrection N.B. Oh that we could sab●wid● ●●●er that Christ hath Appeared to us 〈◊〉 for●ondained of God though not to all other people and that we have Eat and Drunk with him c. Act 10.41 This may ●●●●id the Saints 〈◊〉 two ways both at the Lord's Table and at their own daily and common Table If this King of Saints sit at either of these Tables 2d Ca●● 2.10 and we s●● the Lord always before us at our right hand as David did Psa●● 6.8 then do we ●●ed with him and he is with us both in our ordinary and in extr●ordinar and Sacrmen●●h 〈◊〉 T●●● do we not only Hat and Drink a natural but as 't was said of a Grave Divine even Eternal Life too 〈◊〉 CHAP. XXXIX Of Christ's Sixth Appearance THE Sixth Appearance of Christ This is 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 only John 〈…〉 at large Wherein we have the 〈…〉 The 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 was made not only the Ten as the former was wh●● Thomas was obsen●●y 〈◊〉 But ●o all the Bl●ven as the Chorus or Colledge of Apost●●● was called 〈◊〉 Maithi●● was Chosen in Judas Room Acts 1.26 when 〈◊〉 was presen● now with 〈◊〉 Ten. some do suppose the chuse of Thomas's Abse●●● upon 〈◊〉 very Day of 〈◊〉 Resurrection was either 1 Because he probably 〈…〉 business that 〈◊〉 necessitate his Absence at that time upon some worth●y Ca●●● O● 〈◊〉 As some say Because perhaps he say still lurking and keep close in his ●iding hol● into which he had re●●ed for se●● of the Jew● ●hen all the Disciples like ●●●lock of Sheep scattered with a Dog forsook Christ and ●ed into p●●●● pla●ed for●●●●conding Mark 14.50 And when all the other T●● crept out at the News of their Lord's Resurrection by the Holy Women's report and Adventured to meet together yet Thomas who had the deepe●t 〈…〉 of Incredulity lay longest obscure and came slowest to the Convention O● 3. Because ●●ough he might come to the convention and be present at the beginning of thei● 〈…〉 conference 〈◊〉 't is said Luke 14.33 that the two Disciples 〈◊〉 from D●●●ans found all the Eleven together and might ●ear the good Women's Relation of the Lord 's being risen c. Yet did he then withdraw himself from his fellows as being more obstinate than the Rest and more wilful in his Unbelief for though his fellows at the first did look upon those Tidings to be only Women's talk and Idle tales Luke 24.11 yet were they all sooner convinced than he would be of the Truth N.B. God per mitting this that we through his doubting might ●e better confirmed c. Or 4. Because he was now upon
of Felix's Guard at Caesarea c. Acts 23.24 was a Devout Man The second Remark is 'T is a good evidence of true Devotion and of the Religious Fear of God when a Master obligeth all his Family to observe the same Family-duties in the fear of God with himself as much as in him lieth This was God's commendation of Abraham I know that he will teach his Children and his Servants the knowledge of my ways Gen. 18.19 And David would testifie his sincerity by his being sacredly serviceable to his Sons and Servants at home Psal 101.2 c. in a faithful discharge of that Family-Trust committed to him A good Housholder is like the Bee which whatsoever Honey it gathers abroad brings home to the Hive and House The lips of the Righteous feed many Prov. 10.21 those under his own Roof especially N.B. Every man is in truth what he is at home He is really what he is Relatively Follow Hypocrites home to their Houses and there you shall discern what they are Like Stage-Players who act the part of Noble and honest persons while you look on them upon the Theatre but follow them to the Tyring-Rooms where they divest themselves of their borrowed Robes then are they discovered to be but Shabby-persons and the vilest of Varlets This conscientious Cornelius was therefore Really because Relatively Religious As he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Devout Man Acts 10.2 a right Worshipper as the Greek signifies not resting in the King's Religion which was Heathenism as the Melchites which Nicephorus mentions who would be of the King's Religion whatever it was so had their name from Melech Hebr. a King or as the Herodians Matth. 22.16 who were meer Courtiers joyning in a conformity to Herod the Conquercur's Religion which was a Mongrel hodge-podge of Heathenism and Judaism Mark 8.15 So this Centurion tho' not circumcised which was not imposed upon the Gentiles Acts 15.10 24. yet forsook his Gentile-Idolatry and devoted himself to the Worship of the true God becoming a Proselyte of the Gate observing the seven Precepts of Noah and lived without any offence to the Jews and others call'd Proselytes of the Covenant who submitted to Circumcision and the whole Mosaick Paedagogy Yea he not only stands Recorded in Scripture with a famous Character of being a Religious Man in his private Devotion betwixt God and his own Soul but also in his Relative Duties and more publick Family Exercises This good man will not go to Heaven alone but would have his Houshold to go with him thither The third Remark is Oh how good God is to those that fear him The Lord would not let this Religious Souldier lose his labour in the practice of his Piety but Respects Records and Rewards all Though this man was no Jew nor lived under the Law no not so much as a Proselyte as some say because the Jews at Jerusalem cavilled at Peter's Application to him whom they looked upon no better than as an Heathen yet the great and gracious God who is no respecter of persons Acts 10.34 had respect to this man's person as he had to righteous Abel Gen. 4.4 Heb. 11.4 Matth. 23.35 First God had respect to his Person and then to his Performance It may justly be marveled at how this man a Gentile came to this Religious Devotion especially to such an high pitch of Piety as to abound so both in his much Alms to poor People and in his many Prayers to the Almighty God As this People to whom he gave much Alms were principally Jews whom he had the greater kindness for because they worshiped the True God So his Prayers are commended here with a double commendation Acts 10.2 1. From their Object He prayed not unto dumb Idols with the blind Heathen nor to Creatures Saints or Angels with the superstitious Romanists but to Jehovah the great Creator And 2. From their perseverance he prayed not by certain fitts and sudden starts in some pang or passion as of fear or danger thus did even Jonah's Heathen Mariners devoutly in a Storm c. Jonah 1.6 but he prayed always or at all times not taking time in a natural sense for then he must have neglected all other duties N. B. God will not have our General Calling to justle out our Particular There is a time for all things and every thing is saith Solomon beautiful in its season Eccless 3.1 11 17. But he prayed always taking time in a moral sense for the seasons and opportunities of that duty This he would not neglect whatever else he neglected gaining some suitable hours for secret communion with God and endeavouring to keep his heart alway in a praying frame and in a devout disposition Thus Rom. 12.12 Eph. 5.20 and 6.18 Col. 4.2 are to be understood to be constant and instant in prayer earnest as Hunting Dogs who give not over pursuing their Game till they do gain it While Prayer stands still the Trade of Godliness stands still also Nor may we say with Austin that Peter laid the Foundation of Cornelius's Faith for without Faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 Therefore must it be asserted that this Centurion had the seed of Faith at the least and some saving knowledge of the Messiah who was vulgarly discoursed of at that time in Jerusalem otherwise neither this man's person nor his prayer could have pleased God much less so rewarded for being so faithful in his little Matth. 13.12 as to have first an Angel and then an Apostle sent him for his farther Instruction and Comfort The second part of Cornelius's Conversion is the Organ or Instrument namely Peter the Apostle who undertook a special Journey to convert this Gentile Wherein the Causes and the Accidents are to be considered First The Causes of Peter's Journey and Passage from Joppa to Cornelius the Centurion in Caesarea which be twofold 1. The Remote Cause to wit Peter's Vision which is described in all its Circumstances as time place manner matter and end Acts 10.9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18. but the principal and proximate Cause was both Divine in God's commanding him to go verse 29 20. and Humane by the Embassage whereby Cornelius call'd for Peter to come verse 17 21 22 29. Peter obeys the Call both of God and of Man verse 21. Secondly The Accidents hereof are three 1. Who were his Companions verse 23. 2. How he was Expected verse 24. and how Entertained verse 25 26 c. The Remarks hereupon are these First The Apostle must be the Organ of Cornelius's Conversion and not the Angel that appeared to him The Angel indeed told Cornelius of the Acceptance of his Person and Performance which he might know as having not only a natural knowledge that attends the Angelical Nature and an experimental knowledge beholding daily the manifold Wisdom of God in managing his Church as in a Mirrour or Looking-glass Eph. 3.10 but also a revealed knowledge as Dan. 9.21 22 23.
started by that Do-evil contracted the Devil bred no small dissension and disputation which caused that most Meek Apostle Paul who was willing to become all things to all men to undertake an holy war against them that would Introduce Circumcision into the Christian Church because he could not become sin to any man verse 2. nor could he abate one Inch of the purchase of Christ which was so perfect in it self in order to Salvation that it needed no Eeks or Addittions to it out of the Ceremonial Law Therefore alloweth he not of any works of the Law to be an Ingredient into our Justification and Glorification but he must have the free Grace of God in Christ to be all in all Col. 3.11 N.B. Besides He well knew that the retaining still of Circumcision would have rendred Christ and his Gospel less acceptable among the Gentiles and also have kept possession for all the other legal ceremonies and their Re-entring amongst them for the Circumcised person was obliged by his Circumcision to observe them all Gal. 5. verse 3 4. there being the same reason for the one as for the other This was that which moved this Meek man to contend so earnestly for the Faith of the Gospel as Jude v. 3. being well assured that every small parcel of Divine Truth is pretious none of the least filings of Gold are to be carelesly cast away Oh how Zealous was mild Paul therefore in this Case Gal. 1.7 and 2.5 and 5.12 He wished that those troublers non modó circumcidantur Sed abscindantur not only to have their praeputium or foreskin but their very persons cut off to trouble the Church no more N.B. When these false Apostles pretending the Authority of the Church at Jerusalem for the maintenance of their Heresy had greatly disturbed the peace of the Church at Antioch the Church sends Paul and Barnabas who had chiefly the ministration of the Gospel among the Gentiles from Antioch to Jerusalem that the Apostles of Christ there might decide the Controversy which those Apostles of Satan had started in this New Constituted Church N.B. Humble Paul for he had learnt of his Saviour both Meekness and Humility Matth. 11.29 could be content here to be only a Messenger of this New-Church tho' he was nothing Inferiour even to the chiefest of the Apostles 2 Cor. 12.1 willingly Submitting to the Judgment of those Apostles that were then at Jerusalem hereupon he with Barnabas and other Companions undertake the Embassage who were brought on their way by the Church verse 2 3. not only to shew their due Veneration and Respect to them but also that there was no Dissension betwixt them and the Church which sent them as their plenipotentiaryes to treat about a remedy upon that Emergent mischieuous Scruple and that therefore these were the Ambassadors of Antioch and came not on their own Heads N.B. So they passed thence through Phaenice and Samaria declaring the Conversion of the Gentiles to the brethren in those places who when they heard how the Gentiles were brought from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to the ever living God Acts 26.18 This caused great joy to those believers for nothing can more rejoyce the heart of a gracious man than the hearing how heathenish Souls are brought ●●●e to God and the Increase of the Kingdom of Christ Thence they came to Jerusalem when they had filled Samaria with this second Joy added to that first Acts 8.10 where they were received with all respect and reverence verse 4. Acts 15. for their great labour in the Lord's Vineyard among the Gentiles Acts 14.27 N.B. Paul and Barnabas who had been imployed in the Ministry of the Uncircumcision made their application peculiarly to Peter James and John who were the Ministers of the Circumcision first in private the other Apostles being gone to preach the Gospel in all probability to other parts of the World The result of this private conference was that the three of the Circumcision did kindly concurr with the two of the Vncircumcision without either detracting from what they had done already or super-adding any more things to be done by then hereafter And all was well concluded betwixt them that as the Three should mind their Ministry among the Jews so should the Two among the Gentiles requiring only that the poor of the Circumcision must be charitably remembred by those of the Uncircumcision N.B. Notwithstanding this Amicable Agreement betwixt the three and the two in private The Zealotes for the Mosaick Ceremonies in the Church at Jerusalem who abetted the opinion of the necessity of Circumcision would not be so satisfied but the matter of Controversy must come to a publick Canvasse So the Elders and Brethren met together with the Apostles in a Solemn Synod to debate the point Acts 15.6 12 22 23. The debates that were principal in this Christian Council are Three to wit First That of Peter who defending the cause of Paul and Barnabas Argueth from particulars instancing in the Conversion of Cornelius to an Vniversal namely the Justification of all the Gentiles His Syllogism consists of three Logical parts 1. His Major proposition is There is but one and the same manner of Justification toward all men 2. His Minor is Cornelius with his whole Family was justified without Circumcision which he fortifies by declaring that this was done by the Command of God ver 7. and that God had given his Testimony for approbation in giving them the Holy Ghost so their Justification was evidenced by their Sanctification ver 8. putting no difference betwixt Jew and Gentiles but purifying their Hearts by faith as well as ours having broke down the partition wall c. ver 9. Then 3. Follows this conclusion from these two premises namely that therefore justification cannot come by the works of the Law which was an intolerable and an inefficacious Yoke ver 10. but by the grace of God the Father through faith on Christ the Son by which way all the Patriarks Prophets and the Holy Progenitours were saved ver 11. Thus Peter proposeth that he would have none of Moses's burdens imposed upon the Gentiles because in a word he himself had seen the Gentiles to have been made partakers of the Holy Ghost in as free and full a measure as ever any Jews had been who were formerly the most Mosaical c. The second Speech made in this Council was that of Barnabas and Paul who affirmed that they had seen the same Divine Testimonies in the Justification of the Gentiles so they confirmed the Proposal of Peter by declaring what Miracles and Wonders God had wrought by them among the Gentiles verse 12. which was an Evidence God was pleased with their Ministration among them therefore the Gentiles being as eminent in Gifts as any of the Jews what could these Mosaick Ceremonies add to them and what need was there to trouble them with such Observances N.B. The third Speech in this Council was
those mischievous Actings both of the powers and of the people against the Apostles cannot be call'd Concord but a Conspiracy against Christ like that of Herod and Pilate's Concurring to Crucifie Christ The third Remark is No place can be improper no time can be unseasonable for praying to God and for praising of God N.B. Here Paul and Silas prayed to God in a prison and sang Praises to him also and that at midnight verse 25. yea their Prayers and Praises were both acceptable to God and praevalent with God Oh how soon were they answered with the signs of God's audience and his comforting presence and suddenly there was an Earthquake verse 26. so nigh is God to all that call upon him Psal 34.17 and 145.18 The sighing of his prisoners come before him and he can at his leisure and pleasure deliver those that are appointed to dye Ps 79.11 N.B. Satan's design here was to make Paul and Silas blaspheme by the grievousness of their sufferings and to desert their Apostolical Office or at least to call into question their cause and calling into Europe at this time as proving so Inauspicious and Unfortunate to them but on the contrary God's comforting presence with them in this comfortless confinement converts their Prison into a Pallace yea into a Paradice so that they testified the confidence they had both in a good cause and in a good conscience by their singing praises to God and so loud that their fellow-prisoners who knew not God heard them This they did not as the Pharisees do only to be heard by others but because they rejoyced that they were accounted worthy to suffer for Christ's Name Acts ch 5. ver 41. and the more they were afflicted the more they rejoyced and praised the Lord without any Pharisaical Ambition after the praises of men giving thanks unto God for all things Eph. 5.20 and being assured that these very things they suffered God would over-rule for good Rom. 8.28 So that there is nothing more vain than violence against the truth quae florescit Vulnere the more men labour to suppress it the more it shineth c. 2ly Upon their deliverance these Remarks arise The first is Behold how great is the power of faithful and fervent Prayer Luther saith it hath a kind of an Omnipotency it hath had a command over all the four Elements in Moses and Elijah It hath shaken the Heavens and the Earth The Prayers of those two Prisoners together with their praises brought an Earthquake verse 26. which was a Token that God had heard their cries and was come down to deliver them as Exod. 3. 7.8 by his power out of their Imprisonment hereby God assured them that their prayer was soon answered and the time of his delivering them was fully come N.B. God could without an Earthquake have delivered them as he had done Peter Acts 12.10 yet to make a more manifest Demonstration that their deliverance was no force or artifice of their own but done by a divine power therefore did he send this Earthquake such as usually be fore-runners of some eminent Matters as Matth 28.2 c. hereby the foundations of the prison were shaken and immediately all the doors were opened as Acts 5.19 and 12.7 9. and every ones bands were loosed not only those of the praying prisoners Paul and Silas's but also those chains upon all their other fellow-prisoners that the Apostles and others might know N. B That as the bodies of those men were set at liberty from their bonds by the Lord for the sake of his praying prisoners so the Souls of those men and of many others should be freed by the Apostles Ministry from the bonds of iniquity Acts 8.23 N.B. How all their bands came to be loosed is uncertain whether it were done by the force of the Earthquake or by the invisible Operation of some Created Angel as Peter's was Acts 12.7 or it was done immediately by God himself is not Recorded The second Remark is How miserable are the Resolutions and Consolations of the Unregenerate when a day of distress doth suddenly surprize them This Jaylour was so shaken and so awakened out of his sleep by this Earthquake that it wrought an Heart-quake within himself and herein he silly Soul could propound no relief nor comfort to his quakeing conscience but by killing himself verse 27. for fear of suffering a more cruel death because all Jaylors who suffer Prisoners to escape were to suffer the same Punishments that the Prisoners were thought to have deserved N.B. Now had not this poor blind Heathen been altogether unacquainted with the power and providence of God that wrought all these wonders he might have thought it ridiculous to say that the Prison-doors opened themselves that the Prisoners bands did fall off of themselves c. His Self-murder had been Miserable Comfort to have ended a Temporal Trouble and to have begun his Eternal Torment thereby The third Remark is The Servants of God are nothing so solicitous for their own lives and liberties as for the Propogation of the Gospel and the Salvation of other Mens Souls N.B. As it is here the Apostles might have been silent and suffered the Jaylor to have slain himself in this desperate Agony whereof God who wrought this miracle for the Jaylor's Salvation and not his Destruction might inform his imprisoned servants in that midnight darkness therefore they cryed out to him Do thy self no harm for we are all here verse 28. N.B. The other Prisoners were probably so amazed with the Earthquake that they might neither mind that the doors were opened or that their own chains were loosed nor know any thing of those desperate attempts of the Jaylor towards his self murder therefore their silence and sitting still in their prison-state need not be wondered at But Paul and Silas understood all these things and as they might have been silent so they might have made their escape N.B. Nor was this their not starting or stirring any tempting of God nor a losing the benefit of the miracle by their staying still in the Stocks because the main end of all this which was done was that God might vindicate and magnifie that Gospel-Doctrine which they had preached and which the Philippians had vilifyed and that this Jaylor and his Family might be saved The fourth Remark is Affliction when Sanctified hath a marvelous Subserviency for promoting the Salvation of the Soul N. B. The Earthquake as before had wrought an Heart-quake in this Keeper of the Prison and so it had done in his Masters the Magistrates but not to so gracious and effectual an operation upon them as upon him 'T is said when it was day the Magistrates sent their Mace-bearer saying Let these Men go verse 35. Whereunto there is in one Ancient Coppy this Addition The Magistrates met in the Market place next morning and calling to mind the Earthquake in the night they feared and sent their Sergeants to dismiss the