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A93917 A learned and very usefull commentary upon the whole prophesie of Malachy, by that late Reverend, Godly and Learned Divine, Mr. Richard Stock, sometime Rector of Alhallowes Breadstreet, London, and now according to the originall copy left by him, published for the common good. Whereunto is added, An exercitation vpon the same prophesie of Malachy / by Samuel Torshell. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626.; Torshell, Samuel, 1604-1650. Exercitation upon the prophecie of Malachy. 1641 (1641) Wing S5692A; ESTC R184700 652,388 677

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sicke S. Paul complaines though he was in health and had an inward man Rom. 7.22.23 much more such as have nothing but the outward and the carnall man And ye shall goe forth If Christ bring liberty it intimates a bondage before Every man naturally is a slave in captivity and bondage to Satan Doctrine sinne and death Rom. 7.14 Carnall and sold under sinne Rom. 6.16 To whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey John 12.31 The Divell is the Prince of this world 2 Cor. 4.4 The God of this world 2 Tim. 2.26 Who takes men captive at his will Because they serve and obey sinne Reason 1 then they must needs be in subjection to it especially when the service they doe is willing John 8.34 Whosoever committeth sinne is the servant of sinne So Rom. 6.16 and 2 Pet. 2.19 They are the servants of corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought in bondage Because if they be slaves to sinne Reason 2 then to Satan also for sinne is the worke of Satan and also to death for by sinne death entred into the world Rom. 5.12 Sinne the only cause saith one which enlargeth deaths dominions and made all the world to become his tributaries Adam had not died had he not sinned This will teach us and warrant us what to judge of those men whom we shall heare Vse 1 if any man speake of liberty and freedome to chalenge it as much as any like those John 8.33 We be Abrahams seed and were never in bondage And yet they live very profanely and wickedly no iniquity subdued but sinne raigning and they subjects to their corruption yea captives to their lusts uncleanenesse ambition pride anger c. When they are Masters of families Magistrates of Cities Captaines of bands Coronels of fields Generalls of Armies Commanders of countries yea Princes yet one base ambitious or covetous or voluptuous lust doth rule over them miserable slaves and if they feel not this their bondage is the greater sinne and Satan have the surer possession when things all are at peace The captivity is the more dangerous the more willing as the malignity of poyson is neere the lesse though it be sweet if yet it be poyson This will confute the Doctrine of Popery Vse 2 who teach that man hath free will to good or to use Bellarmines words that a man may doe things morally good and keep or fulfill the law according to the substance of the things prescribed without the help and assistance of speciall grace But how should this be if he be the slave of sinne We deny not to any man free will for else we should make him no man But we must understand that free will is either good or evill and so according to the distinction of Bernard All that have free wil but to evill are their owne and Satans all that have free will and to good are Gods Gregorius Ariminensis is expresse that to affirme that man by his naturall strength without the speciall helpe of God can doe any vertuous action or morally good is one of the damnable heresies of Pelagius or if in any thing it differ from his heresie it is further from truth And grow up as young calves A further benefit promised of growing up and encreasing in grace and sanctification daily by degrees They who are Gods elect and called shall grow up and encrease in graces Doctrine as in faith hope love and such like As the waters of the Sanctuary they shall rise higher Ezech. 47. They are branches in Christ that beare fruit and are purged that they may beare more fruit Joh. 15.2 Phil. 1.6 Jam. 2.5 1 Cor. 1.4.5 Because he will restore in them by Christ Reason 1 that which was lost in Adam and by him his image of righteousnesse and holinesse therefore shall they encrease and grow up towards it which must be got againe in long time and divers progresse though it were lost in a moment Because some doubt else may Reason 2 be whether their graces they have be true sanctified graces which generally ever encrease though some let there may be as a temptation or some sinne but they doe recover themselves and encrease after the more as fire kept down Mat. 25.25.21.26 This may put many a man to a quaere with himselfe Vse 1 and his owne soule if he encrease not but rather goe backeward and thrive not under good meanes but shame their master as if they had no good food like the blasted eares and leane kine that Pharoah dreamed of These may feare themselves that if they approve themselves in this condition and thinke all is well with them they are not right but if they dislike their dulnesse and backwardnesse in profiting and growing on in sanctification if they bewaile their wants and earnestly use the meanes they may be perswaded that what God hath begun he will performe in them to the end and that he will fulfill the desire of them that feare him To perswade every one to endeavour to goe forward Vse 2 and to grow in grace and piety as the wicked grow worse and worse 2 Tim. 3.13 Phil. 3.13.14 To presse forward like runners in a race who looke not how much they have runne but how much remaineth Upon which place Saint August He had said I am not already perfect and yet afterward he saith as many as be perfect perfect and yet not perfect perfect travailers but yet not perfect comprehenders Let it alwaies be displeasing unto thee to be as thou art if thou meanest to attaine at length to that which yet thou art not for when thou thinkest well of thy selfe thou goest no farther but if thou saiest it is well thou art undone forget what is past looke not backe lest thou staiest where thou now art Remember Lots wife VERS III. And ye shall tread downe the wicked for they shall be dust under the soles of your feet in the day that I shall doe this saith the Lord of hosts AND ye shall tread downe the wicked The last thing promised to those that belong to God is victory over their enemies A comfortable promise to them that were oppressed and under the winde that God would change the condition and make them now aloft and the other under It is usuall with the Lord when he promiseth redemption and comforts to his to joine also a prophesie of the destruction of their enemies lest they should be grieved with too much emulation at their present prosperity Thus God workes patience in them seeing he would give them after a while cause of triumph over their enemies and that they shall be the Lords Ministers to act this judgement You shall treade downe the wicked they shall be made your foot-stoole And it is added they shall be as dust or ashes shewing their utter and ignominious destruction In the day that I shall doe this Which noteth the time spoken to restraine their
considered and so he is in two respects of his Creation and Election out of both we have somewhat to learne Men in regard of their Creation being so the sonnes of God Doctrine ought to honour him and doe him service and obedience thus much the Lords reasoning imports and inforceth It is manifest also by that Deut. 32.6 Doe ye thus requite the Lord O foolish people and unwise Is not he thy father that hath bought thee Hath he not made thee and established thee Thus much David prayed Psal 119.73 Thy hands have made me and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learne thy Commandements this shews he ought to pay so much to God Because by all Lawes humane and divine of God nature Reas 1 and Nations a man owes as much as he hath received and ought to repay it as it is due and is called for Therefore owes a man all he hath unto God and ought to pay it to the service of his Creator unlesse he will be accounted a thiefe and an ungratefull man to him who hath bestowed so great things upon him for he hath received from him his being that is his body with all his senses and his soule with all the powers of it then is he debtor to pay all these Because as nothing else Reas 2 so man is not borne with all perfections he hath many things perfect but many things wanting which must be perfected afterwards Now it is a rule that he must give the complement and perfection who hath begun the worke or given the beginning Therefore it is that every effect lookes to the cause to receive from it his last perfection The Trees search for the Sunne and stretch their roots into the earth which brought them forth Fishes also will not out of the waters which bred them The Chicken no sooner out of the shell but shrowds it selfe under the feathers of the Hen and follows whithersoever she goes The little Lambe after it is borne seeketh to the Dams teate and if there be a thousand sheepe of the same wooll and colour it knows the owne damme and will follow her whithersoever she goes as if she said here I received that I have and here I seeke for that I want Then ought reasonable man not to doe lesse than unreasonable creatures but being not perfect seeke to him and serve him that made him that he may receive perfections This will serve to confute the dreame of Libertines and Valentinians Vse 1 of which not a few in our dayes who have the name of Christians but not the thing who think that the Gospell Christ being come men are not bound to obedience as before whether the Gospellbind or no that will follow after in the next point for this that men are still bound and by the Law for all the Gospell to obey appeares plainely because the Reasons are the same to us now which were then to them Receive they not now all their bodies and soules all the members and parts all the faculties and powers of them from him and as they have those beginnings must they not have the proceedings also and perfections from him If any have not let him goe out free he is bound to no such thing but if all men have then is every one bound even by the Law now in time of the Gospell as before Gods reason stands thus now if I be a father if I have made thee and created thee honour me if thou haddest that thou hast else-where I challenge it not if thou canst have any thing from others without me to perfect thy defects and supply thy wants I challenge no such thing but if not then give me my honour Know thus much that the Law requires honour to God as a Father in regard of Creation which if it be a continuall worke of God for all times and to all men then it follows that now as then To teach men Vse 2 and every one if there be no other reason that this requires of all obedience and honour to God because they are his he their father that made them For if a man build the house whose turne must it serve but the Lords that built it if he plant a Vineyard who shall gather the Grapes but he that planted it If a father beget a sonne whom shall he rather serve and honour than his father which begat him And if this then how much more to him that is the Father of Fathers and of all things in earth and Heaven It is heard from many men when they reprove others for some dishonouring of God and often but as they thinke It is not for your profession doth it become a man of that zeale you make shew of professing so greatly as you doe If they speake it that they are more bound it is true but if that they themselves are not bound and more than they can performe it is false for wherein have they dishonoured God by the profession that thy Creation binds not thee to doe or from doing Set faith and repentance aside things invisible not commanded in the Law what is it thou art not bound to either for piety or honesty and that by the Creation for the Law holds fast there and Creation onely binds to all such duties For even as the Heathen man saith Aristotle A man can never returne so much to his father as he ought how can he to God who hath given us more than all the fathers in the world And if to dishonour a father be a vile crime in a sonne what is it to sinne and rebell against God who is father so many wayes Let every man then bethink himselfe of this and see in himselfe how many things he hath to move him to honour God though he never looke without himselfe body soule all the faculties and powers and parts of both because his hands made them And if the Axe may not boast it selfe against him that heweth with it Isa 10.15 how may it against him that made it How may man dishonour his Creator if not the Axe against the hewer how the heart against the master Shall those hands made by him those eyes enlightened by him that tongue made and made speaking by him dishonour provoke and revile with oaths and blasphemies if they doe know that as all things are possible with him and like easie to him he can destroy them as easily as he made them in a word both Oh then let those hands worke the workes of God let those feet walke the paths of God those eyes delight in the wayes of God and that tongue speake the praises of God and that whose man honour him that hath made it for thus he calls If I be a Father where is my honour if I have made you where is the service you doe me Amongst men a Chapman of credit payes as much as hee received and he would scorne not to be accounted a good pay master and yet such deale
in all honor and high esteeme that if God for the generall doe remove it yet his sinne be not a provocation to it The removing of it will be griefe enough more when he shal be guilty himselfe as a procurer of it As sicknesse and trouble is heavy so more when a man is guilty by his own intemperancy or miscarrying of himselfe by surfetting and such like he hath brought it upon himself and pulled it with his own hands upon him so in this In that you say the table of the Lord is polluted This is the first particular their thoughts according to the phrase often used in this Chapter whence it is not only manifest that the Lord knowes the thoughts of Men and the things they doe in secret but he reveales them to others his liefetenants upon earth his Ministers and Magistrates to reprove or correct and punish Table polluted They contemned the Table because it was but rudely built and the offering because it was burnt to ashes Hierom. The thing that makes men contemne holy duties Doctr. and the worship of God is because they looke too much upon the basenesse of the meanes Vide vers 7. ut ante And the fruit thereof even his meate not to be regarded The Priests part they thought any thing would serve them contemning Gods worship they contemned the meanes of his worship The contempt of Gods worship Doctrine and the contempt of his Ministers goe together they are in one people one age one place the fruit of the Altar and the meate of it despised together So it is here so 1 Sam. 2.17 It is all one whether the cause be just and they justly despised or no. 2 Chron. 36.14 15 Reas 1 16. Nehem. 13.10 11. Because all the honour and account that the Ministers can have or looke for is for their worke for the worship and service of God they performe amongst them 1 Thes 5.12 13. Now if their worke once grow into contempt and disgrace they needs must which was the reason why Demetrius pleaded so hard for the honour of Diana for their owne gaine and honour knowing that they were honoured for her who if once dishonoured would make them to be dishonoured Acts 19.24 c. so in this of the true worship Because the corruption of man is such Reas 2 that when he should respect the Minister for his worke the chest for the treasure he respects the worke for the Minister the treasure for the chest Therefore if he once grow to dislike him he will dislike it This noteth the cause why the worship of God and his service is in these dayes in that contempt that we find it to be in all places Vse 1 it is amongst us still God hath not taken away the Arke of his presence but it is in small account little esteeme and reverence It is no marvell seeing the Lords Ministers are in such contempt as they are what difference or distinction soever men make of them yet herein they differ not but are all in contempt No sort nor condition of men no men of any profession in the Land are any thing like neere in the like generall contempt and disgrace that they are by Courtiers and Countreymen by Citizens and men abroad by rich and poore by old and young they are as 2 Chron. 36.16 marked despised misused Is it then any marvell if the worship of God be contemned when the Embassadour is contemned the embassage will and must be worse liked of when the Physitian the physick he brings Nothing that Micha can say or doe can be liked Ahab dislikes his person And againe è converso this layes out unto us why the Ministers are in such contempt the worship it selfe is in contempt They are deprived of their double honour in the most part because the most honour not the Word and worship of God When as the message of David sent by his servants is misconstrued by the Ammonites then are his messengers abused 2 Sam. 10. so when the worship of God then the Ministers These are two twinnes as it were the contempt of the one and the contempt of the other it is hard to tell which first comes forth happily some may thinke the one some the other as with the twinnes Gen. 38.28 c. This must instruct the Ministers of God Vse 2 if they have any desire that the worship of God should be had in account and reverence and not in contempt that they carry themselves wisely and discreetly sincerely and soberly both in the worke of their Ministery and in other carriage of their life that they give no just cause of contempt of the Word but that they may rather adorne it So Saint Paul perswades both Timothy and Titus and in them other Ministers for his charges were not personall nor temporary 1 Tim. 4.12 2 Tim. 4.5 Titus 2.7 8. for if all must so live and carry themselves that the Gospell of God may be well spoken of and his worship regarded if servants Titus 2.10 if women even young women verses 4 5. if all professors Titus 3.8 much more ought Preachers they ought so to handle those mysteries and worship of God that they may strike reverence and esteeme into the people so to carry themselves that they may get account and estimation to themselves and so to the worship of God for when the Ministers of God handle the Word simply and profitably and other parts of Gods worship with great reverence and when they practise it carefully then will it be better affected and reverenced of others but when they handle them corruptly and carelesly when they are not the same men in their lives they seeme to be in the Pulpit they make the ordinances of God to be out of request and to be loathed as Elies wicked sonnes made men abhorre the offering of the Lord 1 Sam. 2.17 both by their using of it and carriage of their lives for even wholesome meate-men loath an unwholesome and sluttish huswives or Cookes dressing This may admonish all those who contemne the Ministers of God who doe scoffe deride and disgrace them most Vse 3 who seeke most that the worship of God should be had in honour whatsoever profession they make outwardly it is yet manifest they have no inward love to religion nay that they contemne and despise the worship of God They may use the works of his service and performe worship for the outward act but it is without any love and reverence to it but as the Heathen man would have his Tyrant to seeme religious that his people might feare him because they might think the Gods would helpe him if they should rebell or rise against him so these for one sinisterrespect or other It hath beene a continuall portion of the Ministers of God Doctr. to be contemned and not regarded to be basely thought of and spoken of though in this place it may seeme to be a just judgement upon these yet the best and the
inveterate trade of sinning From mine Ordinances Vulg. A legitimis meis that is as they tell us who being bound to receive the vulgar Latine as Authentick doe study to make the best sense of it a legibus meis You are gon from my lawes The Tigur My Statutes Pagn My institutes The things which I have described drawne out constituted of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. That they would not yet bee convinced which is urged I. By a declaration of Gods Grace in exhorting them and encouraging them to Repentance 1. Exhorting them Returne unto me saith the Lord that is by Repentance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among many other uses that it is put unto signifies to repent as Deut. 30.2 1 Kings 8.33.35 Lam. 3.40 Hos 7.16 and in many Texts God though he might consume them offers them mercy and shewes them a meanes to prevent his wrath II. Encouraging them And I will returne unto you saith the Lord that is I will shew you favour This is another use and signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when it is applyed unto God So Zach. 1.3 2. By their stiffenesse and difficulty to be convinced But yee say wherein shall we returne As if they were righteous and needed no repentance This is the nature of man to make contradiction to Gods grace and resistance to the motions of Gods Spirit either convincing the world of sinne or perswading to obedience And this people did alwayes so as Saint Stephen testifies of them Act. 7.51 and the Apostle Rom. 10.21 To Israel he saith all day long I have stretched forth my hands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the disobedient or unperswadeable and againsaying people So the translation of the Septuagint whom Saint Paul followed did with severall words expresse that which in the Hebrew text Esa 65.2 is delivered in one A rebellious people But thus much of the sixth Contestation VII The seventh Contestation Seventhly hee contests with them for their Sacriledge vers 8 9 10 11 12. both I. Arguing against their sinne vers 8. and 2. Expostulating with them that it were better for them yea even in their outward estates to deale righteously with God vers 9 10 11 12. I. He argues against their sinne vers Verse 8 8. 1. From a ground of equitie 2. By an application of their fact unto the ground 1. He argues from a generall ground of right and equitie Will a man rob God Yet ye have robbed mee Will fraile weake man Adam doe violence unto or defraud Elohim the great and mighty God Yet you have done so Robbe The French Pillage Geneva Spoile will a man spoile God So also Pagn and Vatab. Crucifie wound or pierce so the Vulgar and the Tigurine and that is indeed the first signification of the originall word So the Translator of the New Test into the Syriack useth the word Coloss 2.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And nayled or pierced it unto his Crosse But by a Metaphor it signifies to Oppresse or To rob or To spoile as Prov. 22.53 The Lxx. here taking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a Metathesis for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is To supplant or Deceive reade Will a man supplant his God But in the sense there is an agreement Will a man or is it fit that a man should grieve defraud pierce or spoile his God as you doe who rob his Priests and Ministers of their maintenance whereby you undermine and overthrow even Religion it selfe and Gods worship When the portions of the Levites were not given them the Levites and Singers that did the worke of Gods house fled every one to his field and so Gods work that is his worship was left undone as Nehemiah observed Neh. 13.10 The truth is When the Ministers of God are kept under the burden of Poverty The Lords work is either not done or done deceitfully when the Priests are forced to comply with their humors from whom they expect their maintenance and so serve not God but them flattering them that feed them as it is Micah 3.5 They bite with their teeth and cry peace which I interpret according to the Chalde Paraphrase He that maketh them a feast of flesh to him they preach peace But hee that putteth not into their mouths they even prepare war against him And so they make the people to erre And it cannot bee otherwise whiles as it is in the eleventh verse of that chapter The Priests teach for hire and the Prophets divine for money that is are faine to maintaine themselves with sordid and unworthy flatteries To prevent which it was a most pious and commendable care in King Hezekiah which is recorded 2. Chron. 31.4 He commanded the people that dwelt in Ierusalem to give the portion of the Priests and Levites that they might attend upon the Law of the Lord so the Vulg. That they might confirme themselves in executing the Law of the Lord. So Tremel but as we reade that they might be encouraged in the Law of the Lord. Dependancie and expectation of arbitrary maintenance is a great Alay to the purer temper and spirit and zeale that ought to be in them that serve at the Lords Altar in whom according to the usuall Apothegme of a reverend Divine of ours Innocencie and Independencie breeds the best courage And by such is God best served The scandals that are given by Ministers doe much diminish the reputation of Religion and undermine it but Scandalous livings are a great cause of Scandalous Ministers Which was the observation of a learned Gentleman and worthy member of the House of Commons in the Parliament Anno 1628. who also promised that he would never give over solliciting the cure and remedie of this while Parliaments and he should live together And well may he or some other effectually pursue it especially having so much encouragement in it by the pietie and tendernesse of our present Religious and most gracious Soveraigne who according to the example of his Royall Father for planting a setled competencie for the Churches throughout Scotland hath shewed so much readinesse and gracious disposition this way that as he deserves it I doubt not but such as shall deliver his reigne hereafter to posterity will among his other vertues give him this Title The Patron and Father of his poore and injuried Clergie and will mention that great Councellour of his in Ecclesiasticall matters with his due honour for promoving it in him with so much zeale to the welfare of this Church But of this obitèr and Currente calame 2. He argues against their sin by an application of their fact unto that ground of generall right Yet yee have robbed mee But yee say Wherein have we robbed thee In Tythes and in Offerings They deny the Assumption and he proves it That they robbed him because they dealt deceitfully about the portion of his Priests The Tythes he had of old assigned unto them There were three sorts of Tythes The first were given to the